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The Huron Expositor, 1924-11-21, Page 2bin large and short gloms. •.$t 45 iBoi1ers$340 ani $540 Cookers $1,35 and iiVunlinum Potato Pots $140 70c $1.00 $1.50 $1.15 15c Jai Floor Wax, large tins JOhnson's Waxer Johnson's Liquid Wax, 1 -qt. bottle Hair Floor Brooms (special value) Separator Brushes 22 Short Cartridges, box 12 Guage Shells, black powder, box 30c 11,10 12 Guage Shells, smokeless powder, box $1.25 22 Rifles $5.00 and Geo. A. Sills & Sons y. fl tikt.4 ' b1 ab ow ei wilth TI ay d.ivine. -aa .. . •RTeatleeo me, Brea of God, '.S hall 1 /lever die, Put ltrie with Thee the perfect life Of Thine etereity. • (Edwin atch). =DoYou Remember= The days not so long ago, when you could get a good custom- tailored Suit for what a cheap ready-made costs now? Remem- ber too, how that suit -would stand the wear and retain its good appearance? It was considered a good investment. No! Those days are not gone for ever! A good suit is as much an investment to -day as it was then. And it is just this with the ten lines af Genuine Scotch Tweeds we have received samples of by to -day's mail. These materials, from Scottish looms, were woven to meet the requirements of the custom -tailoring trade. Woven, not from reworked stuff or shoddy, but from pure, virgin wool, -in genteel grays which are always fashionable and of extra weight, making them particularly desirable for Fall and Winter wear. With such virtues, they will appeal to the man who appreciates good appearance and demands maximum service at the minimum price. We will sell this line at the popular price of $35.00 made -to - measure with extra trousers at $8.00 -while they last. " My Wardrobe" AGENT FOR ART CLOTHES MAIN STREET - SEAFORTH PRAYER Almighty God, thou art light, and in Thee is no darkness at alt May we walk in the light as Thy children, called to thy glory and called to thy service, and capable of rendering thee continual praise. May we know the high meaning of our being, may ev- ery impulse of the soul be towards thyself. We have beneid the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world, and in his sight all other sights have perished. We are trans- figured by his power and emancipat- ed by his grace. Amen. CANADA'S LARGEST RETAIL GROCERS Frequent Sales and Rapid Turnover Mean Fresh Goods at Lowest Prices The rapidity with which our million customers or more clear out stocks of groceries every week at our 335 DOMINION STORES means that our lines are always fresh and clean and that the saving you make is well worth while. Shopping here is quick and convenient Every article is marked in plain figures_ Every article is guaranteed -the prices consistently low. G • APE FRUIT 4 for CRANBERRIES per pound LAU BARS s 25c 20c s •ROLLED OATS 101b© 49e Valencia RAISINS Timm SEEDS 2 1b 25c 4 lb. Tin Lilac Brand APPLE & RASPBERRY JAM 49c SEEDED OR SEEDLESS AISINS lbe 25c 135 LARGE ASSORTMENT CA1 iES 4:7THEART 6 'I- "141*. AS 2 but out , c 6c I." • (Selected). S. S. LESSON FOR NOV. 23rd, 1921 Lesson Title -The Transfiguration. Lesson Passage -Luke 9:28-36. Golden Text -Luke 9:35. The transfiguration is the name given to that event in the life of Christ on earth when He was visibly changed in person before the eyes of three of his disciples -Peter, James and John. This event is des- cribed by three of the evangelists - Matthew, Mark and Luke, and these descriptions agree in the essential features. None of them gives the exact location of the mountain where this occurred, but it is generally sup- posed they were still in the neighbor!. hood of Caesarea Philippi, and if 'so then it would be on one of the high peaks of Mt. Hermon. Jesus had been alone with His disciples for a time, questioning them and talking with them about His Divinity and His Atonement. His telling them that He must go unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised again the third day, must have sent a chill to their very hearts. Had He not accepted Peter's confes- sion that He Naas the Messiah as true ?- This further confession that He was not to be their earthly lung as they had expected paralyzed them. How then were their drooping spirits to be revived and their courage re- stored? How shall they be lead to see that death does not end all? The transfiguration is the answer. After six days, of which there is no record given by any of the disciples, they got a vision of divinity -given in Christ's own words thus: "Now, 0 Father, glorify Thou me with Thine own self with the glory which I had with Thee before the world was." Verses 28 -29. -The Great Change. What they saw was Christ's own person, His own. fact, own garment but how changed! The figure, the face, the dress, all became white and .glisteriug. Prayer was with Jesus a habit; the atmosphere in which he lived and so in this great crisis He went up into the mountain to pray. What was the subject of His prayers to which this great change seems to have been an answer? We can gather it from the topic of coeversa- tion with His Heavenly visitants. They spoke of that which He had just a few days previous, told His disci- ples -His sufferings and death which He should accomplish at Jerusalem. "The vision was in some way God's answer to His prayer, giving Him the solace and strengthening that He sought, as the Father's voice attest- ed His Sonship, and celestials came forth to salute the well -beloved, and .to hearten Him on toward His dark goal." (H. Hurton). Verses 30 -31. ---The Witnesses. Besides His three most intimate disciples there were two persons pre- sent from the spirit world. Jesus said He had come not to destroy but to fulfil all the law and the prophecy, so now with Him were to be seen the chief representatives of the law and the prophets, and the disciples did not need to have Jesus introduce them. They knew them to be Moses and Elias. This knowledge was a part of this most mysterious phenomenon. It was night time when they ascend- ed the mountain and the disciples were heavy with sleep and were soon overcome with it; but it was no dream they experienced, for on wak- ing, possibly by the bright light, they found Jesus all changed and talking with two men that stood with Him. The earthly life of Moses and Elias had ended centuries before, yet as they appeared on the Mount they were still "men" with bodies resem- bling the old body of earth and with minds following their old bent. Again we quote from H. Burton: "They have read the Divine thought and purpose of redemption; they are initiated into its mysteries; and now that the cross is close at hand, they come to bring to the world's Saviour their heavenly greetings, and to in- vest Him, by anticipaiion, with robes of glory, soon to be his forevermore. Verse 33. -The Interview Ended. How long the vision lasted we can- not tell. It might have been but a moment of time. It was long enough to reveal to the disciples that the great hope of earth's salvation is the central thought of heaven. The ef- fect that this vision had OTti the dis- ciples was evidenced by the strange utterance of Peter. He wished to pro- long the stay so, in. the ecstasy of the moment, he proposed to build a temporary dwelling place. He did not realize *hat he was saying when he spoke of makirigelling places w on earth for glorified aints who have heavenly mansions todwell hi, Verses„,34-25,-..-A Voles. A cloud, symbolising Gots iMak sence, descended 'Upon them and • ireksted them, eattaint tbe ditel 1.641to fear. Wle read in the tYld Tea Mnitt that *hen the Cloud - &tared tfte'tab. ernacle, "Moses Was net able to ep • ter," and whenit filled the teMpTe fithe pfietta. eotild tot,ataiid to nalitl., later by tenant Of ft," then tteavatindei Yeti ChSti froltLa. The Well erielFrdT ,NWHOhlii.' Anyine, o suffers with'miserable health; W)14 is tortured with Ilead. saws; meawho is unable to getam7 real plena* out of iife will be inftercosteC In this letter 'of Mrs. Marti* chic. Wolfe of East Ship II4rbers. Mrs. de -Wolfe say, "Fox yeara wee dreedeul sufferer um Coe ati pa - thus aodtteadaches and 1 was miser- eraery way. Nothing in the way of anedielne seemed to help me. Thenl tried " Fruit-a-tives " and the effect was splendid; and after taking only one. box, 1 wus completely relieved and now feel like a new persorit%."... ' 50e. a, hoe, 6 for $2.50, trial sizei 25o. At dealers or from Froitaotives Limited, Ottawa, Oot, the disciples were afraid to enter into it. Oueeof the cloud a voice spoke preclahning the divinity of Christ and commanding the disciples to hear him. This 'was done to strengthen the faith. of the disciples when they should go forth to preach the gospel. After this vision and voice it was lin:- Possible .for them to doubt that He was truly the Son of God. When the voice ceased the disciples saw that Moses and Elias had vanished and Jesus was again alone. What they had seen they kept to themselves un- til after His death and resurrection. It was given to them, to cionfirm their faith in the truth that: He wee the 1VIessiah. There were •three witness- es to it; ss many as the law required, so that the proof wasclearly established. Besides if they had told it on going down from the Mount it would have, provoked his enemies and hastened his death, but His time was not yet come, so He enjoined sil- ence. As there is a time to speak so there a time to keep silence. Their time to tell all they knew came on the 'flay of Pentecost, when the spirit was poured out upon all present and Peter proclaimed Jesus to have been a man approved of God -the Messiah. We learn. from the lesson the value Jesus put upon prayer and the out- come of it in His own experience. It was while He prayed that His face shone, reflecting the glory within. Character is portrayed in the coun- tenance and prayer determines char- acter. if „ 140 its 'ogriatEiro: 410.000401itrWc. In ththe somth.. „ t...7644,1447; 14t lef..1fre sarno good-natured, enSfreee PariPate .P' peeled which thateiga it Motor caMPe., climbs • its inountaina, bathes in its Wt S, a d melees over its-- pelted surface. e24/tri.iltis'IOg=4.131= Oleg the whole coast fram British Colombia, to Mexico. 1t was "probably the eenception, in the . first • instance, of Southern Californians, whe, for half a century, have beep selling sunshine to the rest of the world, and of-wlioin the -cynical have declared that they have two crops each year, a, erep- of lemons and • a crop of tourista, and thatthey pick them both, green. But from the time a dozen' years ago when an enterprising Victoria mai drove his two-seater through from •Mexico to his home on Vancouver Island, the vision has been an expanding one. It first led to inprovements in exist- ing highways, and then to the com- pletin.g of necessary links between established stretches of road. Then came extensions at each end WORLD MISSIONS God's Plan for Canada What will the Canada of to -morrow be? It be what, by the grace of God, we make it. We can get a vis- ion of ()Ur cities vastly increased, of our land Med with a hundred million people, of"the empty places filled with happy homea, of a people exalted by righteousness. These are only glimpses but God knows His own plan for the nation for which He pre- pared so magnificent a foundation. Sufficient for us if we do our share according to the -measure of the plan He reveals to us. In His own good time the full glory of His plan will stand revealed, "a crown of beauty in the hand of the Lord." , (His Dominion). PACIFIC HIGHWAY NEW WOND- ER ROAD The Pacific Highway is a new con- ception. It runs north and south be- tween the mountains and the sea. It is international,traversing three states and three countries, beginning in Mex- ico, finding its greatest extent in the United States, and ending in Canada. It passes through orange groves and pine forests, over rolling hills and flat plains, through the sub -tropical heat of the lower American coast, and the exhilarating air of British Colum- bia and Alaska. It crosses lands long regarded as waste and desert, but now fertile. The Pacific Highway is more than a road. It is a great street with a cosmopolitian population which for six months in the year flows un - PAINS IN LEFT SIDE AND BACK Other Troubles Women Often Have Relieved by Lydia E. Pinkham's 'Vegetable Compound Lachine, Quebec.-" I took Lydia E. Pink ham 's Vegetable Compoundbecause I suffered with pains in my left side and back, and with weakness and other troubles women so often have. I was this way about six months. I saw the Vegetable Compound advertised in the Montreal Standard' and I have taken four bottles of it. I was a very sick wo- man and I feel so much better I would not be without it. rids° use- Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I recom- mend the medicines to my friends and I am willing for you to use my letter as a testimohiai."-Mrs. M. W. Roso, 680 Notre Dame Street, Lachine, Quebec. - Doctor Said. nn Operation Provost, Alberta.- 'Perhaps you -Will remembersendingme one of your bodsa a year ago. I we in a bad condition and would suffer 4,4111 pains at tinea and could not do &$. ytiting The doctor said Leould not i'e chfldren unless I went «iider ' Abbrattom I read''athnonfts, stitnotiMla R;•rinodoe eta Comp t4i the ierid. V0040101 lifer ter taliinK% th ,• an finally, two years ago, the practical completion of a great avenue all the Way from San Diego' on the verge verge of Mexico to Vancouver and Victoria in British Columbia. In that whole extent of 1,800 miles, there is now less than 100 miles unpaved, and that will be completed this year. This crosses the summit of the Siskiyou range on the California -Oregon bor-- andamouth • disease, which during der, where manzanita, mountain the period covered • by the report laurel, and flaming madrome first was- unusually ' larevalent . in Great announce to the traveller that he is Britain, and invaded the United entering the sub -tropics. States in February, 1924, the Veter- The states and provinces, atimu- inary Director General says: "The lated -by automobile sesociations, presence of this disease on this nadian swine raisers chiefly *rough tourist associations, chambers of continent seaiously menaces the reports of trouble from the source commerce, and boards of trade, spend. whole existence of our live stock in- in the United States, has net alumna -- lavishly on the project. In the United dustry, as well as the whole of our ed an epizootic nature for years," SAYS, States, the federal 'authorities came to agricultural prosperity, and every- the report of conditions in 'Canada... theaid of the coast with liberal thing that depends on it." He "And it has,. therefore, been. Peeaftde- grants in 1916. They also constructed points out that, in view of the close ,to control and eradicate promptly the roads and trails and provided auto proximity of 'this tcpentry to the limited ninnher of outbreaks which camps in the numerous forests which United States it is most fortunate have occurred. The prohibited use of a wise prescience has preserved for that the American authorities main- virus for immunizing purposes, the future generations. Tributary and,tain an efficient veterinary sanitary licensing of garbage feeders and the intersecting roads followed. In 1921 force, which is at all times , most periodical inspection of their premises Montana spent five millions on her vigilant in protecting their country are undoubtedly' factors in the control roads. The five hundred miles from from invasion of foreign diseases, of the disease." In 29 outbreaks historic old Astoria through Portland energetic and modern measures en- dealt with by the Contagious Diseases and up the marvelous gorge of the forced in 'controlling the outbreak Division of the Health of Animals Columbia river, 560 miles to the Idaho of foot and mouth disease in Cali- branch, the source of hog cholera in - boundary, the Oregon authorities re- fornia, give promise of the early , fection was traced in some eases to stored the road of the old Oregon eradication of the infection, he de- the feeding of raw garbage, while intrail, trail, and made of it one of the won- clares. Fortunately for all • con- others it is remarkable, that the most der scenic roads of the world. -"the cerned, the period under consideration searching investigation failed to re - road of the falling waters" -with 96 was not noted for any serious or wide veal any exposure to infection. In miles of cliffs and cataracts, and at spread outbreak of animal disease in the two year period covered in the re - some points 700 feet above the Colum- the Dominion. , • port no evidence of hog cholera was bia, a view of which can be obtained With reference to bovine tuber- detected in the Maratixae Provinces for 35 miles in each direction. culosis, the report states that the nor in Alberta. Then Wyoming put the Cody road control of this disease has always The report makes short reference through the Buffalo Bill country to been a different problem, chiefly to dourine, no case of which has the Yellowstone. British Columbia because the full support and co- been found for several years* an - Explain to your NY#4,tke amyopiplef4;;:oilk, ioulfsgh* oqvingo,:.4P)Ortei Or Pr#V.,,W411.07., drop In With heir at 07 branch ot The Masons Baidt.r-,andjet ope,naAapcoroo. rIgtANICIMS IN TIIIS PISThWVI ' • Brucefield '‘.#t‘.'llfairTa.::* •• "' Kirigian Exeter' Clinton 110)450 Zigirth in that section of the Veterin.1 arr -11- Maintain tuberculosis free h The Restricted Area Plan, w eltx has as its object the establishment tubereulosia-free areas, makes necessary the -testing of all classes of cattle in a given territory. • This. plan was tried out in the Carman. district of Manitoba, comprising 2G townships with 16,550 cattle, of rector'Generara report for the 'two years ending March 31„, 1924, which deals with the administration of the Animal Contagious Diseases Act. It is shown thereby that in compliance with'the provisions of the British. Min- istry's Importation of Animals Bill, close supervision of store cattle In • - tended for export to Great Britain re- which 992 or 5.57 per cent. reacted suited in the landing of 29,219 Can- to the first test. These reactors adian cattle of that class at British were promptly slaughtered and the ports during the period from April 1. premises on which they were located 1923, to April 1, 1924, without a single were thoroughly cleansed and, disin- animal being rejected for disease by fected. "The first test cost in com- the British officials. pensation five and a half times as Dealing with the matter of foot- much as all retests and the annual general retest of all herds in the. atea combined, and there is, there- fore; every prospect that this ares will soon be free from bovine tuber- culosis," says the report. . cholera' ", • known to Ca - the wonderful Ba'riff-Windermere road in the heart of the rockies, an in- describable highway of startling beauties and wonders. The Sunset Trail was run from Setttle to Spa-. kap.° for 350 Miles. The Inland Em- pire road was run -from the Yakima Valley nearly 500 miles to Spokane and north to meet the mountain roads of Canada. The Dallei Road in Cali- fornia opened nearly 300 more miles, and the John Day road an equal dis- tance. And now the great Ropsevelt Highway is being built down the coast. Vancouver Island has its own system of fine gravelled roads ppen- ing up Alpine heights, and pastoral beauties, and lake and river wonders that make of it the playground of the continent. In another year one hun- dred or more miles of road from Van- couver easterly will connect the coast system with the whole interior road- beds of that province, enabling the traveler to traverse by easy passes three great ranges -the Coast, Selkirk and Rockies, and emerge on the south- ern borders on a circuit that will carry him through the Yellowstone. Or, if he prefer, he can proceed by routes far north of the old Grand Trunk Pacific and out through the Yellowhead passes to Edmonton and northern Alberta. The old Romans who set the pace in world road - making, insisted on straight highways. The Pacific High- way prefers instead to follow the foothills rather than the valleys; to employ geometric curves, and in many instances to loop and figure eight its way down mountain sides. This helps to give to it the continual charm of the unexpected. There are 300 motor camps between Vancouver and San Diego. The best of them will accommodate from 500 to 1,500 cars. A small fee generally of fifty cents per car per day is the charge. Great stoves and ranges with free wood are provided. Hot and cold water shower baths, laundry and ironing facilities, electric and gas ranges for cooking, covered dining rooms and tables for dining, and al most every facility available in the modern house is now provided free at these camps. In many of them a large community house at which con- certs, lectures and dances are staged is provided. When he hears all that Hamilton has to demand of him, Sir Henry Thornton will wonder if he is the guest of the city or the victim of an attempted, hold -up. -Hamilton Her- ald. Be not discouraged if so far you have failed to acquire great wealth. Canada's richest man is its "timber king," and he is only 98 -years old.- Detroit Free Preskt. - • Von ehould never Osk.peoplo'hot to telk /It :Alta ,tho ldea4hto heatis, etde er Rador a: lb a lot of Ile never etpeotect,to ihe ie? When a bather Would'iun litottail00.ther , mouth. lull a ko'rk- • t Nowt, . tick 6 trot, 0' : diri 01*:roti 'ow.;nld. ir,Ide .siy ,o0 work and boiti.t,t, 1 ,the 1 reerelhihohd r, reiti to at Mend Alt :/tt, irfory're u e t is Vat ADAM BC* operation of the live stock owner is essential. Moreover, bovine tuber- culosis is unfortunately a chronic disease and does not excite suspicion except in advanced cases. While the limitations - of the tuberculin test are recognized, it is declared to, be nevertheless the most practical and best method at present available for the detection of infected animals. Of four policies for the control of bovine tuberculosis that have been available to the stock owner, the Accredited Herd Plan, limited to pure bred herds, seems to be the most popular„ judging by the num- ber of applications which are con- stantly being received by the Health of Animals Branch, and it seems possible under its provisions to thrax, of which three small out- breaks, involving a few animalis only, were dealt with; glandersa with which the agretsive policy for control has given most satisfaete resiiitst- mange' itic'Cdttle,-.:whithhiik - given considerable trouble in the prairie provinces; horse mange, limited to tvaenty-one -Minor outbrialltia in the two years and sheep seeb, with a record of five outbreaks, all told,, - confined to Alberta and..B. C. The serious disease, rabies, was not de- tected. It was, however, necessary owing to th,e prevalence of this disease in the United Kingdom, to prohibit the importation of dogs from the United Kingdom and- Ire- land from May 22nd, 1922, until the following October. • ae• Plenty of eggs, winter and summer; don't let your hens loaf or just be boarders. We GUAR- ANTEE your hens will lay more eggs, or your MONEY BACK from your dealer. We will send you a copy of PRATT'S POULTRY BOOK FREE. Write for it TO -DAY. PRATT FOOD CO. OF CANADA, LTD., TORONTO t01/4i7414.1r94 • k CegaSUMCV` O'O0OO'0OOOOO • W. J. Walker & Son 0 0 O W. J. Walker, Funeral Dia • rector and Embalmer. O Motor or Horse Equipment. 0 0° Cars or Flowers furnished '0 as requested. Day or Night, Phone 67. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .0 0. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 W. J. CLEA Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director, Up-to-date Horse and Motor Equipment. lee 0 Night and Day Service. 0 Phone 19-22, Dublin. 0' 2921-52 0 0 0 0 .0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eIfeellienEllenee Wonderful Value in ur NEW FALL LINES. Grand bargains in Men's soled leather work shoes. Double nailed and sown at the shank, at $4.25 Misses' box calf shoes, sizes 11 to 2. Won-• .clerful value at $3.25 • Girls' lOite13. 'fall Oxford, the latest buckle effect, at , Boys' Tan' $hoes, sturdrgiake-a,real water $3;69 .: inany g'o©d values. We „ 40:0,41* „tines to oo'ftw„rano, •••,;, epee.' aree a'.e.e.ereee.e.e.reeeer.),"• .• .r, , • ' If.