HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-10-26, Page 2T
loor Mops
rke to suit any pocket, all ready
(Hy isalanl *When-
, • .
To t4 to aU
the"" 444-Ihnt G04,
is' Light;
That He who made all nationeAs not
One wii
soul should parish, lost in
shades of night.
Behold how many thousands still nre
Bound 'the darlosonae Prif3ore,
IUJIL.
• .
Beg00t' h—rpliwifter-
Tatifi'-"Fra4UVISs''''
The Metlene Made Frim' Fruit
Tim aag 'get rid of Riviumietism:
house of sin, nan'baAltee of paio—of awoken
Use wit special hinged handle, just With none to tell them Of the Saw.
hoods 84 toet__of oobiog,orio, lege
lessee dyingil and 'beak, "44
imported
olike
stairs
d -one
clown at
C.
Or of the life .e died tor them- "Frtiittiltes" wIljeltive'theeltus4
to win. OfIthom in outof.theeyetemitm‘
A window
full; while
they last
at
8
Cocoa- Door Mats.
Do not rot, is easily cleaned, save
floor
and extra work
89c
z
giveFor three years, I was you pertsnent relief.
' ore, .
Proclaim to every people; tongue
and nation .. • \ confined tg, bed with Rheumatis
That God, in whom they live and Finally I . u•old
move, is Love;
Tell how tie stooped to save His lost
creatith,
And died on earth that man might
live above.
(Mary Ann Thomson.)
,.• PRAYER
C0 Thou King Eternal, hasten, we
beseech Thee,' the cooling of' Thy .
kingdom upon earth, and draw men , •
into obedience to they holy wit. "flowed.the strc,,eis that were to.wai-
Cast out all selfishnes and every- ter the desert k‘a[ id.", The effect ef
thing that leads to enmity and strife, the growth of the Christian church
and make wars to cease to the ends is here stated. l. idversal peaceis to
of the earth. Thou alone canst be the outcome or world-wide -preach-
guide us in • the paths of righteous- ing of the gosta I. for wherever it
ness and peace. _ Unite all peoples prevails it makes men .gcntle.and
the in the bonds of truth and love that easy to be 'el" ated,• No matter
ed to try "Frultet.
tlyes”. Before using half box,
noticed instirovement. I continued
taking "Fruit -a tives" Improving -all
the time. I tee now walk about'two
milesand &rah, e es a.round the place".
ALEX. M UNitO, Lorne, Oat.
• 60e. a boi, 6 r 32.50, trial size 280. -
At. dealers or from Fruit-a-tives
Lislitid, Ottawa, Ont.
deo. A. Sills & Sons
UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you
are not getting Aspirin at all
•
Accept only an "unbroken package" of ",Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by
physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for
- Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles dr 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin le the trade mark fregietcrcd in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono-
acetricacidester of Salicylicacid While it le well known that Aspirin means Bayer
manufacture. to ,,,it the public against imitation. the Tablet. of Bayer Company
will be mamma with their General trade mark, the "Bayer Cross."
•
Thy name may be glorified in Thy
children. Through Jesus Christ 'our
Lord, Amen.
saw
S. S. LESSON FOR OCTOBER 28th
Lesson Title—Some' Missionaey
Teachings ot the Prophets.
Lesson Passage—Isa. 60:1-3; Jon-
ah 4:10; II; Micah. 4:1-3; Zeph. 3:9.
Golden Text—Isa. 60:S.
Isaiah was commissioned by God
to show his people their trangres-
sions: "Cry aloud, spare ,not; lift
up thy voice like a trumpet, and
show my people their transgression,
and the house of Jacob their sins."
(58:1). God saw all their sins and
that "their iniquities had withholden
good things from them," but for.his
own, name's sake he promised that ,a
"Redeemer shall come to Zion." He
made a covenant with his church,
saying, "As for one, this is ray cov-
enant with them, My spirit that is
upon thee, and my words which I
have put in thy' mouth, shall not de -
adies' Overcoats
CLOTHES OF QUALITY
FEATURING
Miss Canada' and 'Miss Chadwick'
MAN -TAILORED
Ulster Overcoats for Ladies
II' MADE TO 'ORDER ONLY
.. . .
II
'aMISS CANADA"—A two -button single breasted niodel, with all
rotind belt and all round stip on sleeves, both belt and striffer ere
nished with eyelets and leatherbuckles. Sleeves are "set in" and
ha he% pleat feature, in centre of back is repeated on pockets, which
'Walled with fancy flap and three leather buttons. This coat is
11111',,, etiglits linedwith Marquis de -Luxe in shades to snatch.
.„:„
MUSS CHADWICK"—A two -button double bredsted style featut,
%Raglan sleeves with all-round tufts and inverted -pleated back
., Ofensitt0d-pleat patch pockets. The all round belt is finished
eYelet holes ant leather buckle, while pockets ,,have fancy' flap
' 111•4: _1st xvir,IT one leather button. Like "Miss Canada" this Coat
ehghti lined, with Margolis de Luxe.
..Prices $32 Up.
,,.
ardrobet't Seaforth. .
how far-off that day may appear to
be it is certain fulfilment for the
mouth of the I.ord has spoken\ it.
"Nation shall not lift up sword a-
gainst nation, !wither shall they
learn war any more."
Zeph. 8-1.— t' t cr the captivity.
there was , need f,;r a reformation of
the language of the Jews, for "their
children spoke half in the speeph of
,Ashdod, and could not (speak in the
Jews' language, hut according to the
language of each people." ' (Jet.
13:24). That i:. not all: It must be
purified„of all unclean Words that
they may' call upon the name of the
Lord. In order that the words of
our mouth and the meditation of our
hearts may be acceptable unto God,
our language must be pure. We
read in the ,Epistle of James, "Out
of .the same mouth proceedeth bless-
ing and cursing. My brethren,
these things 'ought not so to be.
Doth .a. feentain send forth at the
same place sweet water and bitter ?"
James 3:10-111. Thus their lan-
guage being purified they serve God
* „
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to4 h kit a ,
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s‘taswtis%iiiidirisicketll°fel4oL
•s'ansiask 'ist;t es
us has clone fOr yo! , liay.4 : we
xesPileil kiwiimit? . iivtive facof ''Es -
love We Nis cAll there be any limit
to ots.r resgensal ' • , '
, P$ 0,..1("10 • • c- tilll .49'
:gave,' The heart that truly Ioiea
doefi not ha to, be externally, Alunk.
Itil
yed to v‘. 'Its devotion is
cured out n a spontaneous gift of
gratitude. "God so loved
that He gave "Hie SOU." ,He could
not give more, for in that on "dwelt
all the fulness of the Godhead bod-
ily." "God so - loved . -, . •
that He ,,gave Himself." Can ye do
less? As we gave upon the cross of
Jesus, the highest symbol of redeem.
ing love, must we not give ourselves
---,--our all, in gratitude to Him?
part out of thy mouth, nor out of "with one consent.Purity is the
the mough of thy seed, nor out of way to unity, the reformation of
the mouth of thy seed's seed, from manners the way to comprehension;
henceforth and forever" (60:1-3). the wisdom from above is first pure,
In these verses there is a call to ac-
tion. God, having given his promise
that the Church should be enlight-
ened and shined upon, in spite of the
gross daeknesS of irreligion cover-
ing the earth( calls upon His people
to spread the gospel light. He then
gives them the promise that great
additioneshall be made to His church
for "the. Gentiles shall come to thy
light, and kings to the brightness of.
they rising" (verse 3). Those who
have the kospel, the children -of
light, ought to shine as lights in the
world that those places of gross' hea-
then darkness, those parts . of the
earth that are full of the habitations
of cruelty- may see the glorious light
of the Sun of !Righteousness so that
they may come to "thy light" and
their kings to the "brightness of
thy rising." All who have accepted
Christ as their redeemer. are in duty
bound to give to others that same
knowledge that brought them out of
darkness into light—"Arise, shine."
Jonah 4:10, IL' We 'have here a'
lesson, from the rapid growth, and
,as rapid destruction, of the guard
which sheltered Jonah from the heat
of the sun. God wished to convince
Jonah that he was very wrong in
murmuring at his sparing Nineveh.
Jonah said, "I did well to be angry"
but ,he couldn't prove it. God did
prove that he did well to spare Nine-
xph. It was a great city, having in
it many little children who wve,,in-
nocent of any actual transgression
and should not God have pity on
them who were of "more value than
many sparrows?" Then there was
;much cattle in the , city, The gourd
Jonah was so solicitous about was
not of his own making. The little
children and the cattle were God's
and He cannot despise the work of
His own hands. The gourd grew iii
a night and perished as quickly, but
the soul of a little child is immortal,
takes time for God to nurture and
bring to perfection, and ,is therefore
of more value than many gourds.
God took infinite pains to enlighten
Jonah's mind that the gourd he had
pity on withefed and that was the
end of it, but the precious souls in
Nineveh that God had pity on were
not so short-lived, were immortal.
From this we learn that though G'od
may permit His people to sin, He will
not suffer them to remain unmolest-
ed in that condition; and that though
His ways of dealing with sinners
may not be understood by us, yet He,
being Lord 'over all, is rich in mercy
to all that call upon Him, and that in
every nation, in Nineveh as well aa
in Israel, He that. repents and turns
from his evil ways shall be saved.
Micah 5:1-3. These .are encour-
aging Words for those who are con-
cerned fie the welfare of the church.
n the last verse of the preceding
chapter. jt wan prophesied, that Zion,
would be ploughed as a field and
Jerusalem destroyed, but' for all God
had ndt cast off'His people, but "rath-
er, Through their fall, salvation is,
come unto the Gentiles," Rom. 11:11.
This is the mysterious doing of God
which is in this chapter ,sown.,' us,
and which we in our days know has
been in part accompliehed, The
Church of Christ has been. establish-
ed. The law has gone, forth of, Zlon
raid the word of the Lord from Jer-
usalem for there Christ preached and.
did miraclestiled: and rose ,again,
there the spirit was poured out Upon
the disciples and they who were' sent
Sc, preach rep ritistate :Were orriered,
then peaceable.'
The missionary teaching ,of all
these prophets is the same that God
is the same yesterday, to -day and
forever, willing not the any should
perish, but that all should come un-
to Him and be saved.
gave My life for thee,. •
My precious blood I shed.
That thou mighiestiansomed be
And quickened from the dead.
I gave My life'for thee,
What hast thou given for Me'? '
WALNUT AS SHADE TREES.
Why plant shade trees for shade
only when har4y English walnut
trees are the cleanest, meat valuable
shade tree known?. They may Rve a
thousand' years ,and produce $400.00
worth of.nuts annually as the Braider
Valley tees did. They will grow a-
long ,the roadside, on lawns, in fruit
orchards, or on barred hillsides, in
sand; claydr gravelly looms.
The consumption -of nuts is increas-
ing among all cilfilized nations to -day
faster than that of' any other food.
The United States is not producing
one-quarter of the nuts they con-
sume. .Last year's Import was over
635,000,000. Why not raise them
here, even if all the English Walnut
groves of Europe are • not destroyed
during the war. They grow in Can-
ada as well as in California; or Flori-
da, and will flourish in any soil suit-
able for fruit trees.
The pistilate and staminate blos
somas start' late in the spring preclud
ing any set back, from late frosts
making them sure and heavy. bearers
TK1s nuts are thin shelled and fal
free from the outside husk in Octo-
ber. The meat is very sweet an
plump and will not turn rancid in ho
weather. One pound of walnut mea
equals eight pounds of steak in nutri
ment.
English walnut trees should bu
transplanted while very small as the
will often double in size the year th
top root reaches the aub-soil moisture
November the 1st to`the 15th,' in th
spring from May 1st to 15th.
WORLD MISSIONS
Have We Reached the Limit?
A letter received from a friend in
Canada not lung ago contained these
words: ""it almost looks as though
the Church's limit of giving had been
readhed." The words started a train
of reflection. Is'there a limit to our
giving as Christians? If so, when
is it re,aChed?
In Atte letters of James . Chalmers,
the great apostle to.New Guinea,
who gave all, even his life, in order
to bring the savage people among
whom his lot Was cast to a know-
ledge of Jesus Christ, there occurs a
very significant passage. Chalmers
had. felt the need fo:. colleagues in
his difficult and trying task and he
was writing to the officials of the
London Missionary. Society urging
thern to strive to send him help., He
told 'of the need; he showed•how im-
possible it was 'for him to do all the
work alone. Then he Went on in
words to this effect: "Don't speak
to the people about' sacrifice, for we
have made no 'sacrifice. When -we
look at the cross of our Master and
see what He did for us, nothing
which we can dd for Him can be call-
ed a sacrifice." Was he mit right?
Think of a Word •yevithout Jesus!
to began at thence
=9,
•
•
MRS.ANDERSON
TELLS WOMEN
How 'Backache and Periodic
'Pains Yield to Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable C6mpound
CA4ADIAN HORSE SETS NE
WORLD'S JUMPING RECORD
A world's record for the triple b
jump is believed to have been ma
at the central Canadian exhibition
cently at Ottawa, when Balleycloug
an Irish bred hunter owned by Mi
E. Vlau, of. Montreal, jumped 31 fee
6 inches.
The longest jump for a horse pre
iously recorded was 28 feet, made
the exhibition here last year a
equaled 'at Calgary this spring.
1 Leslie, Sask. —" Fcrit shoat a year I
wap troubled with a distgassmg down -
bearing pain before anti during the pe.
:lode, and from terribli? headaches and
uackache. I hated to gp to a doetor,
sod as I knew several *Omen who had
taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound with good results, I finally
bought some and Vicar four bottles of it.
I certainly d6 recommend it to every.
woman with troubles like mine. I feel
, fine noceand hope to ,be able to liteep
your' medicine on .hand at all timer:, as
no woman ought to be without itin the
house." — Mrs. OSCAR A. ANDERSONr
Box 15, Leslie, Saab. . •
Mrs. 'Kelsey Atlas Her Testimony.
Copenhagen, N. Y. — "Lread. your
advertisement in the papers and ray
husband inducedimeto take Lydia E.
Phskham's Vegetable Conund 'to get
relief from pains alto weakness. I was
so wealc that I coukInot walk at times'.
No* I can do my honsework and help
toy husband outlitoots-i- too. lam willing
for you to ublish this letter if y_on think
it' help others -'Mrs. Honoca's
REtseV, &F.D.; Cdpe gen, N. 1.
,
• Sick and ailing Worn is everywhere
in,the Dominic> should dry Lydia E.
Pinkhasn's Vege le Carlipouud,before
,they-give_up'hope of recory. .,
NATIONAL FISH DAY;
OCTOBER 31st, 1923
If the young of one single sveci
of fish—for example the 'herring.
Were allowed to mature, without
terference by man or molestation
natural enemies in the sea, in t
matter of a few years the seas woe
be unable to contain that sin
species? alone. And if all the' the
sands of fishes matured one .hund
per cenea. of their progeny, in a a
prisingly brief time the, seas won
be impassable • to ships. This pr
ably -illustrates better than anythi
else the copiousness of the fishery
sources of the world, and fortune
ly for Canada, we dominate wets
which are the midst fertile on ea
and which of themselves are cape
of supplying the fish demands ,of
entire populatiort
'Even before Columbus struck q.
continent, it is believed that Masai
regularly visited the waters' off
shores in quest of the silvery h
vest. Icelanders, too, records wo
indicate, came in the wake of I.
Ericson long years before Colum
and fished off our coast. Four h
dred years ago there were fish
stations on the Gaspesian sho
Not long afterwards thriving fish
villages sprang into life in Nova
tia. But with four hundred years
written history behind the indus
in Canada and an unverified and
endary history antedating by c
tunes the 'coming off Oolumbus,
fishery resources available to Can
are tin -day' ip the infancy of t
development. Eath year fleets c
from France,Portugal, Iceland, lIz
Britain, ansometimes from 'on
remote countries, to reap a hare
on our North Atlantic 'hshing ba
Yet we here in Canada, with tit
vast storehouses right at our d
spurn the food. Our natural Ii
tage is wantonly cast aside. An
who may comes to claim it, but
proverbial contemPt that comes f
proximity sets us seeking, for
'less accessible and less econom
and generally without the admen
qualities of sea Mode. -
The North Atlantic fishing b
Are undoubtedly the Most produc
fishing areas in the world. They
directly off our shores and are
readily reached from our marl
ports than from anywhere else.
our American 801181712 take t
times , the &entity of fish that
take thete. Other comparisons
Herb* illustrate our negligence'
short-sightedness. Only recently
decline of the North Sea fish
has hinted the attention of
Britain to our Atlantic Musks an
isnot hisprobtible that in a few y
It fleet of: .Britiali. trawlers
invading 'tor waters to' secure
us 4
,
75
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'This/ institutil -,• ,
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' - • " riheiego/ointo,. googiounded
,evenkts.,454, p 4
, ,, 14, case 9 . ..„,,,,,, ''...; '''•
. ' '15e1Ji Utito at
7 . ''SaVinPtii:'
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/.C. . ', , 71HANCHAS x$ X
, .. peueefield ',. ' Ft:, Mary 8 ' . ,
i * ''''''"" '10111eter, ' illiSiton - ' ~ WinSaii:14' .'
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plias of freah fish for Old Country
folk. ,
Es it not tine that we simulci, make
greater use • of our friast natural ,
source of food,? We, have Ow mel [
chehical reeources apd the \ intrepid,
hardy citizenship to prosecute our I
fisheries to 'the maximum, but un- I
fertimately our 'population'does net I
patronize the industry to justify more ,
intensive fishing than at present. Our
inshore fisheries are being teduced be- I -
cause demand will not maintain the I
former population engaged in the ,
industry.
National- Fish, Day—October 31st -1
ie ,set aside to 'focus , attention upon 1
our great natural resource and 'o i
commemorate the brave fishermen I
who have sicrificea their -lives to se- j
cure food for'us. ,The most practical:
way in which Canada cap help the.I
industry, and ehow appreciation for 1
theNfishermen, is td make'greater use
of sea products ,thus making the 'call-
ing a/more remunerative one for the
men *he go down to the sea in ships.
It is an appreciation of patpre's gift
to recognize fish as a fobd and a is
also wise policy from a antritive asid
• economic viewpoint. - 't
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waste time wishing you had a good buirinesis education, and
, °MISS a splendid position, which is waiting to become YOUR
,.. OPPORTUNITY to a high place in the COMMERCIAL world.
MAKE
TUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 4th, 1923
I YOUR LUCKY DAY
by beginning a Commercial, Stenographih or Secretin"al Conte° in
THE MOST SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS SCHOOL lathe Province.
THE SCHOOL OF COMMERCE, CLINTON, oNT.
\ For information, write or phone.
B. F. WARD, B.A., M. A. STONE,
MAccts., Prin. Phone 198. , Com, Specialist, Vice.Pria.
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sot.
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Chieftain Feed /
per urn,
Low drade Flour 1 • - $1.00
cwt
Chopped Oats
per owt ...... .••..... - 1200
.
'ROB ROY MILLS, Limited
iSear rat,- ,•••4 rc,,,,, ,' ' ', ',. . . - '02intiario
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