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The Huron Expositor, 1920-10-22, Page 2IMPROVED TOP NICKELLED COP- PER RESERVOIR, LARGE OVEN AND ..DOORS,.. EXTRA HEAVY GRATES, .IMPROVED .ASBESTOS' LINED TOP OF OVEN.. ,SPECIAL HEAVILY BRACED FLUES. ALL AT THE PRICE OF A CHEAP- ER STOVE CoalpHeaters-wilt also burn wood. e...,..�i 6 to $24 Stove ' Boards - Ave ..... ... $ i.9$5 to 52.75 Oil Heater, Genuine Per fection, No Smoke, Great Heat Little Fuel. Special .... $8.95 Halters We have a stock of gen- uine Army Halters 1 Inches, double sew- ed straps. . Extra Heavy Rings. 1.90 G. A. Sills; Seaforth THE McKILLOP MUTUAL WIRE INSURANCE COT.. HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS J, Connolly, Goderich, President Jar. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President T. E.: Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS Alex. Lerch, R. R No. 1, Clinton; Ed. ehley, Seaforth; John Murray, B�r}ace ell,Ph phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; , J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- Brodhagen. DIRECTORS Siam Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;` George McCartney, No. 3; Seaforth. G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 11 a. m....- For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine. 5.53 p, rn. - For Clinton, Wingham, and Kincardine. 11.03 p. tn. - For Clinton, Goderich, 6.51 a. in. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 5.12 p. m. -For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points .-east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going North a.m. p.m. London 9.05 4.45 Centralia 10.04 5.50 Exeter 10.18 6.02 Hensall 10.33 6.14 Kipper 10.38 621 Brucefield 10.47 6.29 Clinton 11.03 6.45 Londesboro 11.34 7.03 Blyth 11.43 7.10 Belgrave 11.56 7.23 Wingham ... 12.11 7.40 Going South a.m. p.m. Wingham 7.30 3.20 Belgrave 7.44 8.36 Blyth 7.56 3.48 Londesboro 8.04 8.56 Clinton 8.23 4.15 Brucefield 8.40 4.32 Kipper} 8.46 4.40 Hensall ......... e 8.58 4.50 Exeter ......... 9.18 5.05 Centralia . , , 9.27 5.15 London 1,0.40 6.15 1 Toronto, leave 8.10 Guelph, arrive- 9.30 iWalton 12.03' Blyth 12.16 i Auburn 12.28 Goderich 12.55 C. P. R. TIME TABLE GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH TO TORONTO a.m. p.m. Goderich, leave 6.20 1.30 Blyth 6.58 2.07 Walton 7.12 ' 2.20 Guelph 9.48 4.53 FROMTO T ROiVTO • 5.10 6.30 9.04 9.18 9.30 9.55 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon- don, -Detroit, and Chicago, and all in- termediate points. HOW YOU CAN TELL GENUINE ASPIRIN Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross" are Aspirin --No others! There is only one Aspirin, that marked with the "Bayer gross" -all other tab- lets are only acid imitations. Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" have been prescribed by physicians for nineteen years and proved safe by mil- lions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis. Handy tin boxes of.r1Z tablets -also larger "Bayer" packages, can be had 'at any drug store. Made in Canada. • Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture, of Monoaceticaeidester of Salicylicacid. While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the' Tablets of Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped with their general trade mark, the "Bayer Cross." , W E ARE c CARMOTE EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR Floor Dish WE INVITE HOUSEHOLDERS • GENERALLY TO CALL AND SEE :n.d. SAMPLES OF THESE FINISHES. t :. EVERY PRODUCT GUARANTEED FOR tJA 1 Q L"TYA AND inisesh• SERVICE. H. EDGE, SEAFORTH, ONT. CA.STOR I A For Infauts and Marta did Ya Ilan Always BtuAt SUM #14Bleilattlre 'Rm Vests, Refreshes, Soothes; seals -Keep your Eyes Strong and Healthy. If they Tire, Smart, Itch, or Burn, if Sore, Irritated, R Inflamed or Granulated, i use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult. At all Druggists in Canada. Write for Free Eye Book. Marine Company, Chicago, U. S.1, THE NEED FOR MEDICAL EDUCATION IN CHINA (By Chas. W. Service, B.A., M THE AMON EXPOSITOR .D., Chengtu, West China.) China is accepting Western, civil- ization. Prejudice has largely gone. Intercouse with other nations has brought, about enlightenment. China is now seeking those things = !hich will benefit her. This is especially true. in the medical field; although the change has scarcely begun. Western medicine has gradually won its way into favor, owing -to the convincing results of medical and surgical cures, , combined with the spirit -in Avhich they were wrought. Until quite recently the work of the medical Missionary was of a pioneer- ing nature. Graduailly an atmos- phere of receptiveness had to be created. The conditions in which medical work had to be 'done were most unsatisfactory, because build- ings and equipment were incomplete, colleagues and assistants few, and whims and superstitions were pro- nouncedth. Butthese pioneer efforts have re- sulted in a change of mind, and' this has wrought a changein the scope of medical work, ;,Moreover, medical science is much More exact and ex- acting than formerly. This means a closer study of cases, which result in reduction in the number ' of cases a physician can care for. Coincidently there is the problem of handling ethe ever increasing number of patients. Either the number of foreign phy- sicians must be greatly increased, or adequate facilities for training Chin- ese students, male and female, in accredited medical schools must be provided Obviously the former alternative is impracticable. "Plant all the hospitals and all the doctors in civil and military practice in Great Brit- ain and Ireland in the one western province of Szechwan, with its pop- ulation of 70,000,000 and provide for the rest of China in the same pro- portion and you have some idea of the goal to be reached." A large in- crease in the number of foreign phy- sicians (and the same is true of dentists and nurses) will be necess- ary for years to come. But it is be- coming increasingly doubtful whether -even given the necessary funds -it would be possible to find in Europe and America a sufficient number of highly qualified doctors and nurses adequately to staff the existing med- ical institutions in China, to say nothing of attempting to cope with the sum total of the medical needs of the country. Even if the quantity of work done is not to beincreased, a large number of highly trained Chin- ese doctors and nurses are needed at the earliest possible moment 'to carry it on properly, and for this personnel the hospitals must look -to the schools. Naturallly, Chinese doctors, grad- uate§ ofaccepted medical schools, can be more and more used in exist- ing hospitals. .There should be a closer relationship between the Chin- _ese and the foreign physicians, with a gradual shifting of responsibility to the Chinese, Given a sound medical training, the Chinese -with their knowledge of- the language -and cus- toms of their own people will be very efficient. The position of the foreign physician would be event- ually that of consultant, Afyth spec- ial care of particular cases. What is urgently needed is a• large increase in the number of duly qualified, -grad- uate Chinese physicians, dentists, nurses end pharmacists, so as to greatly augment the good done by their foreign colleagues. Since the future of medicine in China must be in the hands of her own physicians, wisdom dictates that Western aid should be considered in the light of the future output of Chinese physic- ians. The system of 'medical education will not be completeu nless there are available a small number of teaching with connected w th the medical schools, in which the n edical students cap be given theirclinical instruc- tion, and in addition large number of other well equipped hospitals where nurses can be trained and in which Chinese doctor as interns, resident physiciansand surgeons, and finally as mernb_ e s of the visit- ing staff, can get, in a stimulating atmosphere, under roper super- vision, the practical xperience that they need to prepare them for as- suming independent responsibility. Otherwise, serious d terioration in professional efficiency is the certain result. In other words, good hospitals are needed to suppler ent the school training and to conse ve the men whom the schools tui out. 1 c a p s a x e e n r n The leaders in medical science in China are agreed that in medical education lies the strategic basis for adequate future development. In order to -accomplish most for China, and to confer' a permanent blessing on her people, they realize the neces- sity of conserving the comparatively insufficient resources of men and money, and of utilizing to the best advantage all available effort in the training of Chinese doctors• The present opportunity is superb for medical men to do educational work and thus shape the medical 'situation for China. Delay now means per- manent loss. Medical education is sure to go forward. Other forces are now in the field and the work of Christian institutions must not com- pare unfavorably with that of others. The need of uniting all missionary forces - in establishing union schools in strategic centres is imperative. Moreover, to no other group of professional men is there afforded, such -intimate opportunity for in- fluencing society. And it is here that 'sufficient ground is found for press- ing forward with medical teaching in Christian institutions. The men who go out with the Christian ideal of service and sacrifice, together with professicmal training of the highest type, are men who are sure to in- fluence the China of to -morrow. What has been written above ap- plies also, in almost every particular, to the allied professions of dentistry and nursing. These three healing professions should develop synchron- ously and uniformly in China, because they constitute anessential trinity, each element of which supplements the others. HIS LIFE RUINED BY DYSPEPSIA Until He Tried "FRUIT-A-TIVES" The Wonderful Fruit Medicine MR. FRANK HALLL, Wyevale, Ontario. "For some two years, I was a • sufferer front Chronic Constipation and Dyspepsia, I .tried every remedy I heard of without any success, until the wife of a local merchant recommended I procured a box of `Fruit-a-tives' and began the treatment, and my condition commenced to improve , immediately. The Dyspepsia ceased to be the burden of my life as it had been, and I was freed,of Constipation. I feel that I owe a great debt to `Fruit -a -rives' for the benefit I derived from them." FRANK HALL. 50o.a box, 6 for $2.50, trial else 25e. .At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives• Limited, Ottawa, Ont. . IS JESUS COMING AGAIN? • • Dear Readers of The Expositor.- I have lately read _a tract with the foregoing title, written by Rev. John Linton, B.A., pastor of Parkdaie Baptist ' church, Toronto, and I have been so forcibly impressed with its contents that I deem it wise to give you the benefit of the same, condens- ed and, interwoven with my own ideas on the same truth based on Scripture. The doctrine of the sec- ond coming of Jesus is no new doc- trine; it is as old as the church on ear h -Yes it goes back into proph- ecy. h- ecy. Of the forty-six prophets less than ten predicted Christ's first ad- vent; at least thirty-six predicted His second corning. The Doctrine is mentioned over three hundred times in the New Testament, yet some Christians never hedrd a sermon on it in their lives. "The hope of His coming was the dynamic in _the church for two cen- turies. It persisted, through the dark centuries=that followed its origin un- til 300 years ago, when Daniel Whit- by invented post millennalism. He was the first to preach a spiritual millennium to be introduced through the instrumentality of the church. He taught that the world is to grow bet- ter .and better until the -whole earth is to be converted. This "new -hy- pothesis," as Whitby called it, was almost universally adopted and preached as a fundamental truth. Before Dr. Whitby died he became an Arian, he denied • any millennium, spiritual or literal, and in my humble (Rev. John Lipton's) judgment did more harm to the cause of Christ than'any infidel who ever lived." Is it not true that many of our preachers and bible teachers (lave fal- len into the same error as Dr. Whit- by? hit-by? Many tell us to -day that there is no literal corning of Jesus again. They tell us the world is getting bet- ter, and that,our mission is to convert the world -a commission never given by our Lord; They speak of the "dips" the world enters, but out of these eventually the world will em- erge by man's preaching and educat- ing the masses. In the face of the fact that all the Apostles were pre- millennialists as were such noble AN HA$NO PAIN:NOW. What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Did for Mrs. Pease; of London. • London, Ont. -"I suffered with per. iodic pains, was weak and run down, could not eat and had headaches. The worst symptoms were dragging down pains so bad I sometimes thought I would go crazy and t seemed to be smothering. I was in this condition for two or three years and could not seem to work. I tried all kinds of remedies and had been treated by physicians, but received no benefit. I found one of your booklets and felt inclined to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I received the best results from it, and now I keep house and go out to work and am like a new woman. I have rec- ommended your Vegetable Compound to my friends, and if these facts will help some poor woman use them as you please." -Mrs. J. F. PEASEY, 200 Rec- tory Street, London Ont. The reason women write such letters to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. and tell their friends how they are helped is that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound has brought health and happiness into their lives. Freed from their illness they wants to pass the good news along to other suffering women that they also may be relieved. If there are any complications you do not understand write to Lydia E. Pink - ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. toomoiremue divines as John Knox, Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Wesley, John rWiciiff, all believers in the personal 'coming of Jesus;, still our •niodern theologians either do not believe in it or are afraid to preach a _full gos- pel. The second coming of . Jesus is not only a prophetic doctrine' but it is a practical doctrine -a doctrine cal- culatedto be an 'incentive to the Christian and a warning to the unbe- liever. It was the great hope of the early church and has been to the true, believer ever since.- If ince.If Jesus comes again; what will happen? There are five main events included in God's programme for the future, viz., The rapture, the tribula- tion, the revelation, the millennium and the last judgment. The signs of the times point for- ward to the last four. I cannot in so brief space 'go into details re these signs, batt just name them, at least a few of them. The Jewish sign, the Gentile government or democracy sign, the material earth sign, the un- veiling . of Scripture, the Apostasy and: the comme cia1 signs -all bibli- cal. Prior to the fulfilment these signs ---the rapture will occur, the church, the Bride of Christ will be caught up to meet the Lord in the air, lst Mess. 4:13-17, 1st Cor. 15: 51,52. This rapture embodies three events: Resurrection, transformation and translation. All these are shown in the above quotations. Theetribulation immediately follows the taking away of the church, a period of seven years, the seventieth week mentioned by Sjaniel. The Holy. Spirit will be cast down with the Bride. Satan will to cast down to the earth. A period, of wars, famines and trials, such as never= existed since the world began, will prevail, Matt. 24:6-18. This period ends with the descent of the Son of Man coming to the earth in jt\;lgment. The revelation. There a• re two di - tinct advents mentioned in Scripture -one shows Jesus coming in humilia- tion,- the other speaks of Him coin- ing as a mighty resistless sovereign. In, His second advent he shall put down all wickedness, complete pre- liminary judgment and then establishi 'His kingdom on the Barth, "The Lord Jesus . shall be revealed from heaven with His mighty angels in flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that -know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ." The millennium, which means 1,000 years, during this time the Lord will be in person on the earth and will reign over all the world, • Every knee will bow and every, tongue confess Him. • "He shall .shepherd the n -- tions with a rod firm." There will be no war then, peace will be uni- versal, no divisions, no politics, no rule but that of Christ. It will be a wonderful age. The .longlevity of man will be restored, the curse will be removed from th e earth and from the animal creation, Joa. 35th . chap. The devil will be bound. He will have no power then. What a glori- ous age awaits elect Israel and the redeemed. But this age ends in judgment. The White Throne judge- ment, the last or final judgment. The wicked dead- will be raised and the book opened. The wickeddead resurrected, judged out of these books their names not being in the Book of Life. Their, doom will be cast into the Lake of Fire with the devil; the Beast and the False Prophet, Rev. 20:10-15. Yes, it is true He is corn- ing. 'He may come at arty time when the last convert shall be made, the bridge complete, the church will go. Then judgment falls on the earth. Reader, if saved, comfort your breth- ren with the hope. Be engaged only in, that which you would love Jesus to find you. Be in no questionable work or enjoyment or place. Unsav- ed reader, He is coining. - Unless you are washed in the Blood of the Lamb unless you accept the death of Christ for your only safety, you will be left for judgment, and if a Christ rejec- tor, left for the Lake of Fire. Yours truly, Jas. S. Delgaty, Dashwood. NEWEST NOTES OF -SCIENCE - A nursing bottle has been patented that is made of a collapsible material which can be folded from -the bottom. To become self-supporting in wool production Japan is planning to raise 1,000,000 sheep within the next 20 years. A native oyster 'grows. 21 per cent. in weight in four months and a trans- planted bivalve 31 per cent. in the same time. Sheffield, forty miles from the near- est seaport, has asked the British Government to build a deep waterway to the ocean. A patent has been issue& for a triple mirror that enables a person to view his ears and much of the sides of his head. Experimenters in Mexico have pro- duced flour, starch, vinegar, textile fabrics, alcohol, paper and cardboard from bananas. From each 240 pounds ,of camphor chips about five and' a half pounds of crystals and a pound and a half of oil are distilled. Loops of wire that surrounded the gas bags vertically have been develop- ed in Europe for wireless antennae for spherical balloons. New in the electric cook stove line is one• that folds for carrying in a space six inches square by two and a half inches high. The area planted in sugar in the Phillipine hillipine Islands this year is esti- mated at 550,000 acres, a 20- per cent. increase from last year. About 2,430,000 short tons -of gyp- sum were mined, in the United States last, year, -an increase from the previ- ous year of 373,000 tons. By the addition, of recently invent- ed wheels and casters any rocking chair can be converted into a wheel chair in less than a minute. To overcome delays in wire com- munication Paraguay has arranged for radio service to outside countries through stations in Argentina. Japanese deposits are estimated to contain 822,000,000. metric tons of easily mined coal and nearly 3,000,000 more tons lying at greater depths. I For dental casting a machine has '- been invented that employs centrifugal force to throw melted gold from a WONDERFUL NEW TEA• WAREHOUSE The magnificent building shown above, and : situated at the corner of St. Lawrence. Boul'evard and La Royer Streets, Montreal, will be' occupied: by the SALADA TEA COMPANY about February -1st,` next. The build- ing uilding at present occupied by SALADA, at the corner of St. Paul and St. Sulpice Streets, Montreal, was erected by them eleven years ago, but for some time has proved inadequate for their business. Other SALADA warehouses are situated at TORONTO and BOSTON. crucible into every crevice in a mold. London will hold an exposition in 1923 to demonstrate the natural re- sources and the inventive and manu- facturing possibilities of the British Empire. By a new .German process benzine and kerosene canbeobtainedfrom m liquid coal tar distilled from lignite. The inventor of a motor -operated safety razor claims it works perfectly without the use of soap and water. A stove using sawdust for fuel and which will heat a fair size room is a British army officer's invention. Seaweed, chemically treated, fire- proofed and made into pads, forms a new material for sound proofing w.alia. A London woman is the inventor of a wheel that can be strapped to a vacuum cleaner to aid in moving it about. . Continuous lubrication is afforded a new automobile spring by cup - cc shaped oil reservoirs in the end of each leaf. ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN Nearly 31 per cent. of the stock of the Pennsylvania railroad is held. b3 • women, In Arabia it is the custom for the husbands to ride while the wives walk behind them. Since 1902, there has been a steady increase of women -entering the edu- cational du-national profession. Chaponniere Chaix of Switz- erland, has been. elected president of the International Council of Women., Lady Motague and Nettie Adler". Jewesses, have been appointed city magistrates ,of the Greater Cityeof London. grand nd Duchess Marie Adelaide -of Luxembourg, has entered a- convent at -Modena, Italy, where she will be - gin e -gin a carnielite novitiate. A In 2 and 5-16. cartons 10, 20 and 100-16. bags _ 66 Crcaf �' utter with t sugar :.the Cook -Book sags H, ,come on, Mabel, I want to go shopping. rt needn't take all afternoon to make a caket Here, let me cream the butter and sugar. Watch. how quick I can do it! If you'd ever used Lantic before you'd realize how quickly a fine sugar. . creams." - Lantic is a quick -acting sweetener, because it is fine, It distributes; the pure cane sweetness speedily, thoroughly and -economically. It saves time in the preparation of cakes, puddings and sauces, in the - cooking of preeer ves, in tie making of candy," in the sweetening. ofbeverages, hot ox cold. Not whiter are the snowy doilys and serviettes on the mahogany table than the tiny crystals of Lantic- that gleam and glisten in the sugar bowl. Not finer ;s the silver with its hall -mark. Yet, in horns where every penny collets, -Lantii goodness helps in the saving. It does go farther! ATLANTIC SUGAR REFINERIES, LIMITED, TRY MONTREAL THESE RECIPES The Lantic Library, three new cook -books on Preserving, Cakes, Candies and Desserts, will be sent to you FREE for a Red Bali trade -mark, cut from a sack or from the top panel of aLantic carton. A 7B THE l -taxa ' varzn and c bring unless tight 'There 1 .ores, seh. •l cords "Tablet ter by "The Brucker To n enrol, theles •-1ul. cal eason' _ las u attentil tin ea tai{ iisuall cog •raised' lastly, mazer h stiidi is •pastur W11 to a until_ : +or stall iStraW $11 • e .should •cunni.• -winter: kept - dile tas eehve the co *art. cow s %d th led ve to ten ficient the ca to " fo ettren carri - period milk t tin wh ever a are a' j.t 'th sum 3' iehang: - snilk shout spoo seed fxs ne3 three roun to be_ the fl eigth Vauns� At t may ratio port' 4 It ' littl sible, quart vats after grow repla cats shoal' po'. pouni skim - hie -may s per worn lea ram Sling ' calve towa ter, .l tete f vide calve the man, as w they shop a wL Th 'aaa rem