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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1925-05-15, Page 2P ..urfat Paint Now ' tOS. Paints have been rightly named—high for purity of materials used; delicacy of colors and durability of the finished work. Ask for LWEs PAINTS and VARNISHES ALABASTENE htpup our loam "s CHURCH'S DOT azCOLD WATER i1 Let us teach you to grain the Chinamel way. A les- son costs you nothing and you can imitate the natur..,1 wood after one lesson. Chinamel has all the bea- tiful colors of the various woods. Its varnish flows without a brush mark, and will stand the hardest abuse without scratching. stwqmr44,010300 My Isabel Hamilton, Gederieh, Oast.) ft is the velee of Beaus that I hear, Tarsa ire the heads stretebed out to draw apse near; And tis the blood that can for all atone,. And set me faultless there before the throne. is not a whitening. It is a cement that does not rub off. Can be painted or pap- ered over without washing off, and its colors do not fade. A package of § 4 s. covers 50 square feet -75c. PER PINT QQ 'Twits He who found me on the death- ly wild, And made me heir of heaven, the Father's child, And day by day, whereby my soul may live, Gives me His grace of pardon, and will 'give. (S. J. Stone.) PRAYER 0 Almighty and Eternal God, who hast so loved a guilty world as to give Thy Son Jesus Christ to die upon the cross for its sin, we draw near to Thee through Him, and implore ac- ceptance for the Saviour's sake. We have made confession of sins, for which we never mourned, and made promises of amendment, which we never kept. Create in us clean hearts and renew in us right spirits, for Thine own name sake. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR MAY 17th, 1925 Lesson Title — Saul Becomes a Christian. Lesson Passage—Acts 9- : 1-12, 17, 18. Golden Text -2 Cor. 5 : 17. Following close on Stephen's death came a bitter persecution of the Christians in Jerusalem. One who took a very active part in this was Saul, the young man at whose feet those who witnessed against Stephen laid down their clothes when they be- gan to stone him. So zealous was he that he "made havoc of the church, entering into every house, and haling men and women committed them to prison!' With the passing of time the persecution did not lessen for in to -day's lesson Saul is found going in- to distant parts following those who were scattered abroad when the trou- ble arose in Jerusalem. Verse 1—Antichristian Hate. Saul, who afterwards had his name changed to Paul himself, in his writ - Geoo A. Sills & Sons ltpcxys to use MARTIN ®SE WOOD -LAC STAIN for Furniture—Floors A Woodwork Write to Head Office. Montreal for Free Bookiet HOME PAINTING MADE EASY SOLD BY GEO. . FE "` GUSON & CO. 1 Seaforth, Ont. Much Benefit by g Lydia E. Pinkh wee t ; bite C¢DmpiNje 'r to ani, Ontario: "l started: a get wean ter my second child bol'aa, rrra rwmv,tr,�.,,, and kcept ting worse uutii E' c�. notdo pay ownhouses work and °fats so bad with my nerves that I was hfresi to stair alone at any time. d had a giri working for me a whele_. year before 1 was aiple'to domywashing.again. Through a friend I learned of Lydia E. Vinkhaui's Vegeta- ble Compound and took four bottles of it. I gave birth to a baby boythe 4th day of September, 1922. I am still doing my ownwork and washing. Of course I don't feel well every day because i don't get my rest as the baby is so cross. But when I get my rest I feel fine. I am still taking the Vegetable Coii- pound and am going to keep on with it until cured. My nerves are a lot better since taking it. I can stay alone day or night and not be the least frightened. You eau use this letter as a testimonial and I will answer letters from women asking about the Vegetable Compound. " --.Mrs. CHARLES CARSON, 27 Forsythe Street, Chatham, Ontario. Mrs. Carson is willing to write to any girl or woman suffering from female troubles. Come in and see Our Spring Styles We Have Just What You Need In ) ir g hoes Lovely Light Tan two tie Slippers Latest novelty in Ladies' Light Tan Pumps Ladies' Black Patent and Kid two tie Slippers A Misses' Black Oxford at a good price Also a new Patent one strap Oxford, sizes 11 to 2 A Man's Light Tan Oxford Also the latest Black Calf Shoes All at a Reasonable Price qav d4. 1t' 11�g leo' gra vulntir� p pit trig se leo ix deseendlnp s' Airs ea r+On a. 8544, ,19ad• Reilwway ,orter a or.m d Se e 'act .t `Laugloan°Station, I100; ;CO bridge, when he ,.eaadeavomeai to save .n passenger ';'fho fell frons .the plat-- fem. .lat-'f'e n . -on to the grails , ,jurat" ae ; :i, tVaili approached.. The porter jumped 1!1 front of the train and endeavored to pull the passenger clear of the rails. Having no time to accomplish this, he laid 'hilt flat between the, rails, and then jumped to the side too save him- self from death. Unfortunately the passenger in his dazed condition rais- ed his head, and was killed instant - 7 does it by calling him "Brother Saul." Up to 'this -moment the two men were total strangers to each other, but rom this on they are brothers in Christ: Laying his hands upon the clouded eyes, he bade him rise and see, and he filled with the Holy Ghost "Be .baptized," he added, "and wash away ,thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord." These words of blessing and trust were to the troubled nerves ings describes, time and again, his and aching heart of the sufferer a hatred of Christians. He never could healing in themselves. He rose and forget the intense hatred with which saw, andtook food and was strength - he had originally followed, "breath- ened, and received from the hands of ing out threatenings and slaughter," the disciples of the Master. (Acts 26:9-11). Verses 2-9.—The Damascus Journey. The high priest had the fullest jur- isdiction over the Tews wherever they dwelt, in things pertaining to their own religion. It was therefore in ac- cord with Roman law and custom that when Saul wished to arrest members of the synagogue at Damascus, he should make application to the high priest for a warrant to enable him to carry out his purpose of carrying them back to Jerusalem for judgment by the Sanhedrim. As he and his companions neared the end of their long journey—Damascus is one hun- dred and thirty miles northeast of Jerusalem—they came, so tradition says, to a bridge near the city and there the happening of such stupen- dous moment took place. Next to the life and death and resurrection of our Lord the conversion of St. Paul Twenty yeaus ego a schoolubo r l?i on an errand to the Bathge,te',.,.. lithgowshire, Co -Operative ' Sod lost a purse containing £1 Qs,. 9d. ($C31 ' He has received from America a mon- ey'.order for £1 4s. 8d. ($6) with the_ following note: Dear Friend: En- closed money order and confession from a former resident of Bathgate. I picked -up the lost purse in the street, and I later found it to be yours, but I failed to return it. It is. twenty years ago, when I was a boy of 12 years. I make restitution, with interest, and ask your forgiveness, and hoping in God's mercy to receive His." Blaze at Wishaw in the wood yard of D. & W. Nimmo, joiners and con- tractors, did damage to the extent of £15.0(10. Large stocks of timber were stored in a shed in the yard, and in a short time this erection was a raging furnace. Motherwell and Wishaw Fire Brigade was early on the scene. Fanned by thecwind, the blaze spread from the yard to the . wooden work- shop, which contained much valuable machinery. In a short time this shed was also gutted. The firemen were successful in confining the outbreak to the yard and workshop, and in an hour's time the blaze was well under control. Claim to Scottish peerage by Sir Bruce Seton Gordon, which comes be- fore the Committee for Privileges of the House of Lords shortly, is expect- ed to recall many romantic episodes of Scottish history. The petition is being opened by the Marquis of Hun- tly. premier marquis of Scotland, as representative of a line which once held the title. It is stated that one of the main problems of the case will be the unravelling of a marriage tan- gle of about 490 years ago. The first Earl of Huntly was a Seton, and he also held the title of Lord Gordon. It is said that he rid himself of his first wife on the ground that she was too closely related to him. Then he married again. Fred W. Wigg, Seaforth I GQOD LOT Must embody good Fabrics, good Tailoring and good Style. The Style of the garment graces the figure. Good Fabrics and good Tailoring safeguard the Endurance, Style and Wear. The longer your receive service from these factors, the greater the value of your investment. Economy is what you gain in the long run, not what you save at the start. It is our policy to sell only Good Clothes—Good Safe Values. CLOTHES OF QUALITY Softs --$20.00 to $50.00 STONE MADE CL IYTHES Suits—$30.00 t.r $50.00 ART CLOTHES $35.00 to $70.00 ardr his humble. brother that sacrament by which he was admitted into the full privileges of the new faith. He be- came a member of the Church of Christ, the extirpation of which had been for months the most passionate desire and the most active purpose of his life. Henceforth to Paul Christ- ianity was summed up in one word Christ (Farrar). was the most important event the world ever saw. It was natural, therefore, that a supernatural agency should have been employed. Moses is converted from mere worldly thoughts and pastoral labors on which his soul is bent, and sent back to tasks which he had abandoned for - forty years, to the great work of freeing the people of God and lead- ing them to the lanai of promise; and then a vision is granted, where light, a supernatural light the light of the burning bush, is manifested. Isiah and Daniel had visions granted to them when a great work was to be done and a great witness had to be borne, and supernatural light and glory played a great part in their cases. (Ex. 3, Isa. 6, Dan. 10). When the Lord was born in Bethle- hem, aid the revelation of the In- carnate God had to be made to bum- ble faith and lowly piety. then the glory of the Lord, a light from out of God's secret temple, shone forth to lead the worshippers to Bethlehem. And so, too. in St. Paul's case, a world's spiritual history, a great turning -point in the Divine plan of salvation had arrived .Aid it was most fitting that the veil which shrouds the unseen from mortal gaze should be drawn back for a moment, and that not Saul alone but his attendants should stand astonished at the glory of the light above the brightness of the sun which accompanied Christ's manifestation (The Expositor'h Bi- ble). There was not only the supernat- ural light, there was a voice not un- derstood by the attendants, but St. Paul explains this in his speech be- fore King Agrippa when he says that the voice snake to him in the Hebrew tongue which would convey no mean- ing to the servants who attended him. When Saul inquired who is speak- ing to him the Lord said: "I am Jesus whom thou persecutest." As an an- cient English commentator who lived more than a thousand years ago, treating of this passage, remarks with profound spiritual insight, Saul is called in these words to view the depths of Christ's humiliation that he may lay aside the scales of his own spiritual pride. Verses 10-12. 17, 18—Sail's Baptist. Saul, after the vision. rose up from the earth and was led by the hand in to Damascus. He was there three days without sight, during which time he .did neither eat. nor drink. His whole soul was so wrapt up in the wonders revealed to him that the wants of the body were quite forgot- ten. He went to the house of 3'udas in Straight Street and there the mes- senger of the Lord Jesus found him. Just as Philip did when cosri Landed to set out as seen in out last lesson so here Ananias followed exactly the' explicit instructions of Jesus. Ananias was probably the chief teacher of the local Chrietiati eyna. Bogue and he Pied heard of Snit's uurpose in starting out for riarrflasotis. What aStonldhinq Wet& 'hihh to'r'e( U3 & lilts kcii ettititae .tn � in�fi ie i '7101'60 bass ll r e 4-fi • SCOTLAND Three thousand steps a day are climbed. by Glasgow postmen deliver- ing letters to the tenement district. The tenement buildings of Glasgow are one of the worst torments of the postal service, said an official of the Post Office Workers' Union, which is ToYourFord With a Set of "A Necessity, with Balloons" The easiest Riding Car is a Ford H & D equipped The safety of � OF ONTOO Guaranteed b Ontario Government Interest paid on all accounts. eafort► branch,: J. N. ran Milllan, Manage out by the governor of Durham Castle, Cod. Hales, while making a speech at Durham. • He said the pre- sent conditions in England were working for the manufacture of young criminals at a far greater pace than they could reform them. This was due largely to unemployment and the dole, loafing, idleness, and the fact that whole families were on the dole, and there was no connection between daily work and daily bread. Review- ing recent calendars of the Durham Assizes, he -observed that 20 out of 38 prisoners were persons aged from 16 to 20, a most appalling state of things. Seized by sudden madness, a Nor - Not only will you enjoy your trips more but- you will find that the car suffers less from t h e pounding of the road. H & D's hold the body of the car still while the wheels follow the con- tour of the road. 131 ff.a D9s are ammee®a0it2r with balloon tires. "Balloons" are not a substitute for shock absorbers, -they are too "bouncy" on rough roads. But balloons and H & D's ars the last word in easy riding. The Vibragraph (a machine forregister- ing vibrations) has demonstrated that a Ford equippdd with FI & D's is the easiest riding car on the market. PRia ES1NSTLLED Passenger Cars $20 Ford Truck..,. r $3.5 FOB ,SALE BY J. 'A` . DALY Sensorth Sherlock—"That fellow must live in a jolly small flat!" Watson—"How do you arrive at that conclusion?" Sherlock—"Observe that his Wig wags its tail up and down, instead of sideways." wegian man cin, .the stmer Gn pen jumpedseashrieking on eato` the quay'a at the Royal . Dock,~ Grin>bbty, mounted• a bicycle. Riding at full speed, he steered the machine, over the edge of the loading dock, despite all efforts of 'a constable to intercept him, and crashed to the railway line below. His skull . and collar bone were fractured, and he was removed to a hospital. He is believed to have been driven mad by the hardships and terrors of the Gaupen's voyage from Iceland tq Grimsby, the vessel losing her rudder in a gale and tieing. in grave dangeg until succoured by the crew of the' Grimsby trawler Wil- liam Wisney. ENGLAND AND WALES Famous painting by Titian, "Venus and Adonis," has been purchased from Earl Spencer's collection by Mr. Jos. Widener, of Philadelphia, U.S.A., ac- cording to newspaper reports. The value of the picture is estimated at $1,000,000. Prehistoric arsenal has been acci- dentally discovered near Rochester. Scientists are investigating the dis- covery. Some 4,000 stone implements, tools and weapons, have been un- earthed, and the exports are of the opinion that about 55,000 years ago the place was a considerable arsenal as things went then. Isolated speci- mens of similar implements have fre- quently been found, but the discovery of such an accumulation is hailed as an archealogical event. The King has refused a legacy of £50,000, and a castle in Wales, which were bequeathed to him under the will of Winnifred, Countess of Dundonald, who died January 16th, 1924. The bequest was accompanied by a re- commendation that it be utilized to keep up the castle as a permanent residence in Wales for the King and the Prince of Wales. The King, how- ever, disclaiming all interest in the legacy, the castle goes to the Order of St. John of Jerusalem in England, and the £50,000 for its upkeep. To save a drowning boy, a passen- ger on a railway train at Sale, Che- shire, made a dash from the train. The passenger had noticed the boy struggling in the water as the train passed a canal. When the train stop- ped at the next station he alighted, dashed down the line to the canal, flung off his coat and, diving into the water, secured the boy, who was then unconscious. Under treatment the boy recovered, and the rescuer con- tinued his journey by the next train without waiting to dry his clothet: He died thankfully, may very ap- propriately be said of a Northamp- tonshire man, who disposing of his estate of £8,000, said in his will. "I give my soul to God and my body to the earth, or better still the sea, or better still to my university, but all as my wife shall appoint, and I thank her for 40 years joy of living. I won't say anything to thank my son for what he did for us. Everything that I have is settled upon him. Thanking everyone concerned for a happy life." He left £500 to each of his daughters, Mary and June, thank- ing them "for standing by us in the war -time?' Twelve thousand miles a second photography is possible, said Sir Ern- est Rutherford, famous Brit tilt, in a lecture at the noInstitu- tion, London, when he described how the properties of radium are Used to determine the size and massof the atom. A speek of i adiuin,. Weighing about one -thirtieth : of - an ounce, ex- pels something like 10,000 atoms of helium every second. Meet -flea meth- tidm time beet devised of counting these atoms and of dcteeting a single atom It ie liossrl % said:.. Sit Ext ear •. °chord ahotogralriieally t'hh '0,6f Moo, atx,•I t °" Ontario. UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN .ONTARIO Summer School SPECIAL -COURSE FOR TEACHERS In NATURE STUDY AND AGRICULTURE To equip teachers to meet the new re- quirements of the Department of Educa- tion in this subject. (Two credits towards a B.A. Degree will be given for this course.) Courses offered also in Astronomy, Chemistry, English, French, (;erman, History, Latin, Mathematics and Zoology. A splendid social and athletic program throughout the en- tire six weeks. Beautiful new Uni- versity Buildings. Start on a B. A. Course nowt Six de- lightful weeks of study and recreation. JUNE 29th to AUGUST 8th For information write the Director, Dr. H. R. Kingston, or Dr. K. P. R. Neville, Regis- trar. Easv io Was Se1FEm 'Bowl THE parts cannot be put, together '-wrong. The distil go together in any order. The enamel bowl casing hinges open and may be wiped out with a cloth. The bowl empties itself by gravity. All discs washed at once. Every woman appreciates the Melotte for it is a time and labor saving feature. Ask us to demonstrate the (44\k`4 ORICINA.I_ 12.1f\,‘, AL, J CivamSe MOORE BROS, Hensall, Ontario -o r THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY 11.10 a.m. to" 3 p.m.—Four Hours of Continuous School Six weeks free tuition given on 8 months' course to make up time for short school days. —COURSES— Stenographic — Commercial — Secretarial — Special SCHOOL OF COMMERCE, CLINTON, ONT. ecialist, Vice Principal; B. F. WARD, M. A. STONE, Commercial Sp B.A., Principal. Phpne 198. Students may enter at any time. 1 Churning Cream Wanted Keep the wheels of Industry running in your oven Community. end or deliver your cream to us and receive the utmost returns; this is your Creamery. Your .satisfaction means our success. Highest prices paid for good cream cdnsistent with accurate and careful weighing and testing. Cash paid for cream to all patrons wishing same. 0