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The Huron Expositor, 1925-07-31, Page 2F3+ n � d t %`nd d last is ef43`1Filow, tr leright read o things ba i4 !a word',where'er we turn t3tn nal Thar keen .fie e d 4 e f discern p tf � , l' every •bottom'.% mare. tFlto t at: has. felt tilt' glance of dread Thrtli through `itis hearth remotest cells, pp ut his path,about his • bed .i7. , Can dout what spirt it in thee dwells. (Keble). PRATER • U L=ord; who slleakest to the heart and; callest tt>: our affections, we pray, that we may serve thee for love's sake; Thou hast taught vis to crave thy, Sympathy in our sorrow, in our doubt to seek thy faith, and in our temptations and in our despair to ask for thy courage. As we face the cir- cumstances of each day may it be with the assurance that is born of faith and hope! Arisen. (Selected). S. S. LESSON FO AUG. 2nd, 1925 Lesson Title—The Epistle of James. Lesson Passage -James 1:19-27. Golden Text—James 1:22. This epistle was written, it is gen- erally agreed, by one of the most striking and impressive figures in the Apostolic age, James the Just, a bro- ther of the Lord, and the first over- seer of the Mother Church of Jerusa- lem. He was, along with the other brothers of the family, for some time not a believer in the Messiahship of Jesus, but he was, through his near relationship, constantly hi His socie- ty, witnessing His 'acts and hearing His words. fc- 11 'yrs. and ei pedlar rcvelatien a the : esu' Lord aeexap to,- have ileren .granted, ted, to St JtRilea QA CRfi. 15:7) ea Sit, Pa 1. After 1de conversion be tapes ' e lead, etv'ea when the chief of the Apas- t1es was preeeaat. It is to lona that St. Peter reportshimself when lie $ >rniraetliously released from prison. It is he ,who presides at the council of Jerusalem, and it is. told= that St. Paul specially turns on his last visit' to Jerusalem, to report his success among :the Gentiles. St. Paul places him befora St. Peter and St. John in mentaoni �thusa "who o wets reputed to be pillars, oiF the church. It is such a man, a,a Hebrew of the Hebrews" who writes a letter to those of his fellow -countrymen who were far removed from personal inter- course with him. He wishes to com- fort and warn them. By his fre- quent use of the term "my brethren" is seen how strongly the writer feels, and wishes his readers to feel, the ties of race and of faith which bind them together. • The main thought the writer ex- presses in the first chapter and one of the main�itgrughts of the whole epistle, is the bj'essedness of enduring temptations, and especially such temptations as are caused by .extern- al trials and adversity. Verses 19-27.--A Concltasion- Summing up the advice already given he points out to them the all - importance of Christian activity and service. The essential thing is con- duct Suffering injuries, poverty, and temptation, hearing the word, teach- ing the word, faith, wisdom are all of them excellent; but if they are not accompanied by a holy life, a life of prayer and gentle words and good deeds, they are valueless. "Be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deluding your own selves." This warning is similar to that which closes the Sermon on the Mount: "Every one which heareth these words of Mine, and doeth them, shall be likened unto a wise man, which PARIS GREEN Berger's English Paris Green, recognized as having no superior in strength, Ib Arsenate of Lead, in bulk, lb. In larger quantities, lb. SPRINKLING CANS Our Own Make, Made of Heavy Galvanized Iron Large Size $1.45 Medium Size s $1.25 85e 45c 45c 40c Sprayers with glass reservoir, each Carboru nd um Files Cut what a steel file cannot. Save time as a knife can be whetted while the team waits. Ask for the Genuine No. 57 File. Price $1.00 EON= To get more milk from your cows Spray them lightly with Creonoid be- fore milking. The odor of Creonoid is objectionable to flies. The cows will then stand more quietly and yield more milk. Use Creonoid in stables, barns, hen horses and hog pens to get Sid of in- sect pestes Half gal. size, 90c. One gal. size, $1.50 Geo, A. Silis & Sons HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS You have three or four years' High School work; you think you wouldn't like teaching, and anyway the profession seems overcrowded just now, yet there seem=s no other way to use your training. There is another way—With your foundation in English and Mathematics and a GOOD COMMERCIAL. COURSE, you would fill a place as PRIVATE SECRETARY—work that would be interesting, in touch with the real business life of our country—also work that would be necessary and work that would be well paid. Doesn't this appeal to you? SCHOOL OF COMMERCE, CLINTON, ONT. PHONE 198. Write B. 1?. WARD, R.A.. PrInetgal. GOOD CLOTkIES Must embody good Fabrics, good Tailoring and good Style. The Style of the garment graces the figure. Good Fabrics and good Tailoring safeguard the Enduraance, Style and Wear. The longer your receive service from these fedora, the greater the value of your investment:. Economy Is what you gain in the long ran, not What you save at the start. lit ie star policy te sell only Good Clothes --diced Safe Vs1. CLOTHES OF QUALITY Suits -420,00 to $50°00 STONE MADE CLOTHES Suits—$30.00 to $50.00 ART CSS $85.00 to $70 1 r rob rr ie'Oat 111044e; axed T. 14 the tali ttkereei r, L 7114-21.). The .Tee .knave • e, Saying t pian who hears Without practising is like a husbandman who pioaghs and sows, bat neves reaps; but St.. James, here uses a far more ,striking illus: tration.He whoie a. hearer and nO:t a door is like tanto a mann beholding hisnatural face in a glees, and[ gee= _ a way and straightway forgettelt what 'tanner of man he was, The, spoken or written.rword is the mirror which shows us ourselves.. But does this quickened kntewiedge dealt, *tea it lead to action, or influence our con duet? But this need not be eo for instead of straightway forgetting there may be a continuing to hear, listen, study, followed by a desire to Obey and thus St. James says the moral law becomes the "law of lib- erty." Otherwise men may seems, but never be truly religious. The danger against which St. James warns the Jewish Christians of the Dispersion is as pressing now as it was when he wrote. We study Lives of Christ, but we do not follow the Life of Christ. We pay Him the empty homage of an intellectual in- terest in His words and works, but we do not the things which He says. —(Condensed from the Expositor's Bible). "If any man among you seem to be religious, and bridleth not his tongue, but deceiveth his own heart, this man's religion is vain. Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Fa- ther is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their afflictions, and to keep himself unspotted from the world." • io 4 WORLD MISSIONS A Leper. His name was Ah Tak. He was only a Chinese "boy" helping in a mission hospital in China, but he was an earnest Christian, rejoicing in his Lord and Master, ever ready to speak for Him, faithful in his work and be- loved by the missionaries. Among the out-patients who came and went were eometimes lepers who had found friends at the mission hospital and al- leviation for their terrible disease, the most dreaded by the natives of all diseases. Ah Tak helped and preached and loved because of the love which he found in Christ. One day he came to the doctor and show- ed him some skin trouble on his neck and asked for some medicine to cure it. The doctor looked and his heart stood still. Was it possible that their faithful Ah Tak had contracted lep- rosy? He said nothing, gave the "boy" some medicine and told him he would look at it again. In a couple of days he made another examination and found that it was indeed as he had feared. The doctor was silent so long that Ah Tak looked up to see the rea- son and the look on his face told the "boy" that something was wrong. As gently as possible the news was broken to poor All.. Tak. He was a leper, it was his death sentence. For a long time he was silent and then he asked if there was no mistake. The doctor told him how he had made the discovery and that there was no mis- take. Another long silence. Ah Tak seemed turned into stone, and then he spoke again just one sentence, "The Will of the Lord be done." He arranged for his wife and child. and taking a few things with him went voluntarily to the nearest leper settlement, never to leave it again tall he was carried out for burial. Some time had passed away and one of the missionaries was making a visit to the -settlement As he passed through, a maimed and disfigured leper came forward and joyfully greeted him. It was Ah Tak, the same Ah Tak in spite of the terrible sores, for, from the day he entered the settlement he had not ceased to preach and teach Jesus Christ and many of the lepers had through him been led to the living God. Incident & Story. FAIR PROSPECTS FOR ALFALFA SEED SUPPLY The alsike seed crop is expected to be poor in Western Ontario and fair in the Eastern and Northern districts, says the most recent issue of Seed, Feed and Vegetable Markets, publish- ed by the Dominion Department of Agriculture, Seed Branch. Prospects for alfalfa seed in Ontario are re- ported to be fair. From present appearances and on account of the greater acreage there should be a normal average total yield of alfalfa seed. If the weather continues favorable, the cereal crop will be fair in most sections. Pros- pects for alsike and red clover seed in Quebec are varied, some farmers anticipating a very good yield and others. only a fair yield. The ap- pearance of the cereal crop is gen- erally good throughout the pro- vince. Prices quoted by the trade for graded seed may now be coraddered as normal in the domestic market. Prices at Toledo and Chicago show red clover to have advanced about $1 per bushel during the past two weeks. Cash alsike strengthened $2 per bushel. Cash timothy has ad- vanced from $8.25 to $8.70, with September timothy quoted at $4 per bushel!. These prices are 'higher than on the sante date one year ago. CURRTT WIT AND WISDOM We press a button and demand the best of eomimtdlties, charged to our account, delivered quickly by oven. speedy ante service and then sigh for the old cost of living status.- -girt adofl 51111. Ate entelletit prifirtiple is for 410a - tor to find eat' rat et patient rill l in a tIstiar of food and let hies have its -1 , Woody littitihincen. a I 'til B elt l mantles dt tixlt e t� e, lei to make ood bread with vest half ripe and the freight rates question half settled. — Vancouver Province. Two Italian fencers fought a duel with pistols to settle a quarrel as to which was the best swordsman. As neither was hit, the issue is still un- decided.—The n - decided: The' Montreal Gazette. A motorist who threw sand in the eyes of, othera would be hauled up in short owlet); so vdhy permit the glare headlights ---,Soo Star. We haven't the slightest idea when the neat federal election will be held, but "wouldn't'it be a pity if all the campaign literature written into Han- sard during •the recent session were allowed to,grovv stale ?—Regina Lead- er. The family doctor was loved as well as respected. He knew the inner life of many honies. He was friend and counsellor, as well as healer. HeWas the best known man within his baili- wick, and that is why he often got into Parliament. Having got there, he was usually ruined; for, while he was at Ottawa for from three to five months each year, some bright young graduate from the medical college moved in and appropriated his prac- tice.—Kingston Whig. Some meta s 'unhappy because they want nothing but money and oth- ers are: unhappy because they have nothing but money.—Kingston Stan- dard. "Empire Bread," which is to be supplied in London, made of two- thirds Australian wheat and one-sixth Canadianwheat, is evidently being baked by an Australian. --Calgary Al- bertan. It is said that Rembrandt painted himself forty-eight times. That's on- ly a month's record for a modern flap- per.—Ottawa Citizen. Bachelor Clerk: Does your wife pick all your suits for you? Married Clerk: No, she only picks the poc- kets.—Good Hardware. A smile costsnothing, but gives much. It enriches those who receive without making poorer those who give. It takes but a moment, but the memory of it sometimes lasts forever. —Chicago Weekly Bulletin_ Once the victim tried to remember the number of the car that hit him; now he tries to remember: the number of cars.—St. Thomas Times -Journal Coal strikes seem to be the annual FOR nor of GOOD HEALTH Manitoba Woni n Thanks Lydia E. Plr sham's Vege- table Comiouncl Crandall, Mardtoba—de When I was a young girl at home and working I had terrible pains, almost' niore.than I could bear, and I was not regular. These troubles kept mento tired, all the time that I had no strength and no ambition to join in with my friends and have a good time. I was jurt'tired and, miser- able lways and life $uudt seemed as if it Caasn t worth livid I so'niuch in the papers about Lydia' E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound, and them I had a friend who had taken it wid told me about it, so I got 'some. Every month after taking it I get etronnger. and I soon did notsniler evegV, ,+ • t66. It stopped the pains and NAP e i ; e other ways. Then when my babi ere conning I was tired and worn out t �te Petthr`'esi nlonthe and ached badly. I teak 'the Vegetable Compound right along and Sadat say it made a neer «colla of inc tied" 'able to do my work, and it 'helped lisle through confinement. You see I din a -•fernier'% wife With a big hots lookafter, and three babies now. I.bn»e ld ever no many rnomen about Yraremedicine. Just last week I _gut a Ics'ttet front my old chum in the os= Her,bslny was born fifteen days befo `` One and she told me she was not fe in> very Well her back a � est eo meth and • that .she 1 o'ohoed D, B01101, Cr.ii 1 ii,M te €l•. iia,,, .• ,tbiEap bR�' . ;ateieaPed Tan.44atinu4 are. are so many, wwaystag being•all ti.V/It,days that it 314 atronst innposalli �'.a r'oid them al1.. Lonabst Dail cant e we saved?d? All t 4tn eeslsd is all otolulkort care. If�►therers will. nfine•their piekingi. to l a dy. and very yabup a va e` . a>ttd never tear alb §gildo: rs'-uup the 'roots ..their tteatit *ill main glorious heritage forlhe fttture.- Ot- taws Journal. The Royal Hiss- in 18215. From the Observer, London. His „M!ajesty*'s Drawing Room. --eke, long deferred drawing -room was •belrl Thursday with; the enstoniary apien- dot, but it was by no means "so hunt= orously attended as on former occas* ions. ' Hie Majesty Was in excellent health and spirits, 'and did "not fail to kiss the fair blossoms ' of beauty as they were presented. It was amusing to watch the degrees, of fervor with which his Majesty performed this ag- reeable ceremony. There was the kiss direct, the kiss oblique, and the kiss en passant:,The antiquated damsels were forced to be content with the whisker kiss, their cheeks being mere- ly brushed by that luxuriant append- age to his Majesty's countenance. Pedogogic Market -Glutted From the Chesley Enterprise Teachers with school's will be well advised to seek re-engagement if they are giving satisfaction to •the trustees as there is a superabundance of teachers. In No. 2 EIderslie after a few days' advt in a daily and three issues of the Enterprise there were 105 applications, the salaries ranging from $700 to $1,100. The trustees decided to .accept the application of an. experienced teacher who offered her services for $700. LION ATTACKS YOUTHFUL MATE AT WALES FAIR There was a terrifying incident in the Bostock & Wombwell show. tent in Cardiff, Wales, recently. Two lions fought and one of them was so badly mauled that it had to be killed, says The Cardiff Times. This is the mating season. In ac- cordance to custom Wallace, the male African lion. and a fine beast, was in- troduced to Juno, a young lioness, three years of age. As soon as the partition between them was drawn, Wallace sprang at Juno and caught her by the throat. A fight ensued, in which Juno was badly mauled. The two were hastily separated. Mrs; Bostock wired the condition of the lioness to • headquarters, and re- ceived an order to kill it and put it out of pain. Thisas dome by the show veterinary surgeon with human- ity. A hundred years ago this dead lion would have meant a small fortune. One is reminded of what happened in 1825 at Saint Bartholomew fair, London, where Wombwell was exhib- iting , in competition with Atkins: The Wombwell elephant fell ill, and was dead on the morning the fair be- gan. Atkins heard of the loss and immediately placarded the neighbor- hood with the announcement that his menagerie contained the only living elephant in the fair. Mr. -Wombwell was not caught napping. In a few hours he had posted up an immense cloth, on which were painted the words. Come and see the only dead elephant in the fair! The dead ele- phant proved a greater rarity than a live one, and the menagerie was crowded from morning till night with people clamoring for admission. Bar- ricades had to be erected to keep back the pressure of the crowd, while At - kin's show was nearly deserted. LONG WORDS IN COURT The inability of illiterate witnesses to understand the questions put to them often makes trouble for the court. Experienced cross-examiners learn to simplify their English—to discard "prior" and "previous" for "before," and "subsequently" for "af- ter." "Simultaneous" is another word frequently convenient, but to be used with. care and only when it is cer- tain that the witness understands its meaning. In a murder case, a negro was asked if two shots were simul- taneous—a matter of prime import- ance. He answered promptly and de- cidedly: "Yas, boss, dat's it-isackly simul- taneous." Then to further emphasize his statement, he added in another form a repetition of What he supposed it to mean: "Zippety-zip! Plung! Dat's how dey come, boss—one right arter de odder!" More rarely, it is not the echoed words of the lawyer's questions but the original language of an unedu- cated witness with a taste for long words that creates trouble, or mirth or both. Snell a witness is also often a col- ored person. Only a short time ago an industrious and respectable laund- ress whose worthless husband had abused her was forced to appeal for protection to the law. But in the very beginning of her testimony she surprised and somewhat ,puzzled the court by repeated complaints of in- compatibility. "What do yon mean ilii inoompsS- bilivy V' sale was aakcett etDo ycu mean that the only trouble heititeen you and Soiree vas inicoiipafibfiiit ► Of telitper fae shlitlihnlvatibipt,it d al's het:ithat. 1 said' tented. a e boon, ,uinh' d *tee hre., . (tad .:: o bah ata en� Mitt° it '..lY Ft',, 1t {�. ! 11I :I, 'ly s ! MJ -� p�j. "i,�:#. s� •t y'r j. ` " 41°. $i+ni: J ., : iC• � #. �M '- fI�B � '� I �' 4G'�i,;{}��•�. ;%�-.4f "Y+�,t i ,' V:tY 4 �) N_h,�A{�ffi.�•bp k' sW'Siy a�y�• G L"; 4 5' 0 �- T �Y.M6R, t• •. 8•"~ } in •> rt ..1 zA*�! i P. 33���r �" r6N`F , '1 1ris:r,^y- {� bf" l ifiY�4'�`,y,'Ad,i�, 1 L r 4� •y(It �, t. a �I ;a.+,I &°i ���> P ,ata ,, -b 3 P!res^1 _, �r �qfS a}g✓ti �3 � _j "�ti}Y•eCA a .s',f �1., •K, ji �.. ,fp` �.v � ,.R2 �'� gni . '+.NS 7I. �s fi 8, 7sa'f ..0 T li E 1 R jO�!' rr '<; tit � Seaforth` r N11the 4 •juy�) J % i *AVMBRAND SLICED BACON 39c ib. a• ' '":, SPECIAL BLEN � ', `a 3c '�a PLANTOL SKensington AP OD 4 CAKES 29c PERFECTION 241b. 1$25 BREAD FLOUR BAG . ALL HARD MANITOBA SPRING WHEAT 2 IN 1 2 TINS SHOE POLISH 25c , HANDY 5 FOR AMMONIA 10... Pit G. 25c could sten'. But dis year, judger— and dis las' month in perticlar, judge, --lie's tuk to ninkumpattin' wid Skis. boots an' de iialfwood an' aech, and so_' I's 'here." TO TIP OR NOT.. TO TIP Strange yet comforting news conies front New York. ' The union .of restau- rant employees, .which 'calls. itself by a not wholly happynaive, the Amal- gamated Food Workers, has declared that the tip must go, and that, if it. doesn't go • at once, 'fifteen thousand menwill throw downtheir trays or their soup ladles or their rolling' pins, or whatever it is they work food with, and go on etri'ke. No subject has been. of grea"tei' ser- vice to editorial writers or to those who delight to send. "communica- tions" to the newspapers .amain the. evil of tipping. That the practice is a kind of blackmail, that it embar- rasses the diner and saps the self- respect of the waiter who receives the tip, has been asserted, and proved again and again in the public, press. Hitherto . we have , not observed that much progress was being_ made. Here and there a few restaurants have put up "no tipping" signs, and a certain proportion of therm have actually meant what they said and have paid their waiters enough to satisfy them. But in most eating -places 'the old system prevails. The waiters get lit- tle and sometimes nothing by way of wages; accordingly they eye you cold- ly and serve you badly if you don't tip. The 'most .eloquent prgstantiti against the practice 'lose their .sour- age when: face to face with the em." battled bearers of the tray and shame= ' . facedly hide a dime oil a rater be- neath the napkin when the ,Leave the table. The tip has even, 'gained ground. in the face of all arguments a ainst it; barbers and. manicurists an girls and bell -'boys amid' allthe 'AO a who •of the hotel and- restaurant' world expect it—and :usually get it. ` We have often wondered -whether the sense of "self-respect" in most peo- ple, is strong enough to lead them when they engage in such occupations as- these; to prefer better wages and no tips, or whether they find the cross- ing of the palm more profitable and therefore more desirable than a de- cently filled pay envelope. The news from New York is di- - tinctly encouraging on that point. More power to the Aniaiganiated roots Workers, in spite of t?heir name. ¶Fey have a venerable and firMbr. intrench ed system lto overthrow;nd'if they win 'their battle for, reasonable wages and no tips, it will be only the first skirmish in a long campaign. Hotel •hee_pera ;and' restaurant.. keepers can help if ,they will, though they are us- ually cynical about the real desire of the public to be .protected against the tip. They know that there are a good many persons who, from ostentation or from a wish to get a little better or quicker service than anybody else, really want to tip. It is those per- sons, rather than the employers or the waiters, who will form the last battalion to rally to the defense of a pernicious practice. k 4 DOM I • i ,,,,, CANi.D, LABCES"�',•:, Satisfaction—Service-Sure There is a real , satisfaction DOMINION STORE. The service and the saving on your complete RES i t „,.., IL.'GROCERS Saving in chopping at your nearest ,is complete in every detail grocery orderr well worth while. PALM. SOAP 6 Bars • • , r 25c • OLIVES 16 oz. Mason ,lar LUNCH QUEEN 39c . it �• C , LS I V LIQ '.. TEA *AVMBRAND SLICED BACON 39c ib. PATERSONS Custard BISCUITS- 35c SPECIAL BLEN � ', `a 3c '�a PLANTOL SKensington AP OD 4 CAKES 29c PERFECTION 241b. 1$25 BREAD FLOUR BAG . ALL HARD MANITOBA SPRING WHEAT 2 IN 1 2 TINS SHOE POLISH 25c , HANDY 5 FOR AMMONIA 10... Pit G. 25c LARGE, ' SMA 23c 9c FOR CL®1`i CLOTHES—FOR DISHES A . Churning Cream Wanted Keep the wheels of Industry running in your own Community. Send or deliver your cream to us and receive the utmost returns; this is your Creamery. Yotir satisfaction means our success. Highest prices paid for good cream consistent with accurate and careful weighing and testing. Cash paid for cream to all patrons wishing same. Seaforth-Creamery Company y j! 1, ''';1 t1 , re se c1>