Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1925-08-28, Page 2„ r (Piaui, 0a40 ewe how any del re the lesson .:.esus' side! never vex me, lay me low; tan coons to tempt me, secret place II go. Beni is faint and thirsty "lake shadow of His wing ool and pleasant shelter, and a *Pah and crani epriiraZ; And my Saviour we beelde ZS.?, see we hold communism sweet, If I tried, I could not utter whet he says when thus we meet. ---Gee. C. Stebbins. PRAYER 0 God, help us to live in such vital connection with the"source of power, that we may develop in godliness and in knowledge of Thee and Thy word. Teach us to be faithful, cour- ageous, utterly devoted to Thee, 0 o dl y caur 1?x aeleun tokne gee Del we PTeel:aiaa'u. elle ells to wile many er Thee and Thy 'c> 1140. .A,MaIt.' fleeted). S. S. L It'SBON FOR • U GU.IST ellitie Lesson Title` --Paul and the Philip. plan Jailer. Lesson Passage—Acts 16:19441. Golden Text—Acts 16:31. The writer of the Acts had joined Paul and Silas on this second journey and he was an eye -witness of the in- cident that led to the rioting and ar- rest of the two apostles. He, St. Luke, says: As they were going to the place of prayer, they were followed day after day, by a female slave, the property of some crafty men. She was possessed of a spirit of divination. Her masters made much gain by her sooth-saying. She recognized in the apostles something which caused her to cry out that "these men are the servants of the most high God, which show unto us the way of salvation." Paul, after her repeated proclama- tions, turned and, in the name of Jes- us Christ, commanded the evil spirit to come..out of her which it did. This expulsion of the evil spirit was a sig- nal proof of the fact that the apostles were really from God. Verses 19-24.—Arrested. • H :P. TY • We carry I:,e,rti l ord Harvest Tools only. These have been the stan- dard of excellence in this line, with nicely finished second growth handles, well fitting ferrules, pro- per lift, and steel in the tines, at Flo greater cost than ordinary tools. ASK F I DFO':IID FO s Preservin Kettle 0 0 0 in Granite and Aluminum, from $1 to $3 Special value three coat Blue and White Granite Kettles $1 m and $1 any G. A. Sills & Sons SEAFOR$H m - ONTARIO. 1 rs lte , . j Allcast Moi�te (G. i u _ 2 an Tests have pr o v e d important savings in fuel where the warm air from the furnace is properly moistened—the saving has reach- ed upwards of 20 per cent. The Hygienic Vapor Pan in the Allcast is designed to supply the correct amount of natural moist- ure required for health and com- fort — atmosphere that protects the family from winter ills. Other exclusive, fuel saving features of the Allcast are the free -draught Shell -bar Grates which insure perfect combustion, and the fuel - saving air - blast which burns the smoke and gases. The All -cast is easily oper- ated. It burns soft coal and all other fuels equally well. It is reasonably priced. Come in and let us show you its many important fea- tures or write for complete details. There is a size and type of Happy Thought Furnace for every kind of home. Hygienic Vapor Pan Made in Pipe and Pipeleao W. A. MACLAREN, Phone 55. NIA02 AT B, "t LNTiF ENSALL 51 FOUNDRY COMPANY, LIMITED GESS , ��. CES you can easibe inakt the most delict® The slave owners, recognizing that their hopes of gain had fled, seized and dragged the apostles before the rulers and accused them of disturbing the peace of the city, and teaching strange doctrine, which was not au- thorized by the Roman laws. They cared for none of these things until their own interests were destroyed and then they became very 2,ealous. This is one among many instances, where wicked and unprincipled men will endeavor to make religion the means of promoting their own inter- ests. If they can make money by it, they will become its professed friends; or if they can annoy Christians, they will at once have remarkable zeal for truth and order. The accusation was sufficient. No proof was demanded, no time for pro- test allowed. The magistrates, with their own hands, dragged the clothes off the backs of the apostles and they were flogged at once and then sent to the common prison where they were secured in the stocks and thrust into the innermost cells reserved for the worst sort of criminals. No ill treatment could, however, de- stroy that secret source of joy and peace which St. Paul possessed in his loved Master's conscious presence. "I take pleasure in weaknesses, in injur- ies, in necessities, in persecution, in distresses for Christ sake,” is his own triumphant expression when looking back, a few years later, over the way thief was discovered and confessed his by which the Lord had led him and guilt. therefore at midnight the astonished There was great gladnessand re- priso::ers heard the inner dungeon joicing when these two were finally TH Must embody good Fabrieo, good Tailoring nr„(+ goad Style. The Style of the garment graces the figure. Good Fairies and geed Tailoring safeguard the Endurance, Style and' "'ear. The longer your receive service Brom theme factorn, the greater the value of your investment. Economy l what yen gain in the long rue, not what you save at the start. It €e OUT policy to eelll only Geed Clothe Seo Ta . CLOTHES *I? QUAL Suits—$20.00 to $50. ST f NE MAD I': CLOT 5Uits—$3101.1 $50.00 ART Jr.S / $31," to $70 01110011,6 s9 fliscuits9 Doughnuts Cookies etc. with MAG1C BAKING POWDEP MADE IN CANADA CONTAINS NO ALUM �. W. GILLETT CO. LTD. TORONTO. CAN. eateebliebblg s pr ia.tto po, `lvda Ae#tor :1t1 eat tri40 09= 094 Ao r , AA* IP in 1t t� .0,1*`. •Golgi 14100vat fiats £� „ . aw material and atA demi ii 3011,= facilities and connections:; °w'lih. the Orient, is attracting a large share Qf the interest o these visitors. North Sydney, N. S. --The.- eo14 storage plant here has the distinction. of having received from local *bei. men a catch of five fish of au one known species in these waters. Thee fish resemble the porpoise in general appearance, but are very much larger, weighing approximately 250 pounds. Four of them were shipped to Boston in ice, and the fifth is be- ing frozen and will be sent to the fisheries department at Ottawa for the purpose of determining in what class or category of deep-sea fnsh it belongs. "N fl h"•'�,J of weeping and wailing over their lot and ill -fate and returning to the old national superstition of the spirits for aid, they were preaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ to their fellow prison- ers. They assured the missionary that he need not worry about them, they were perfectly happy and glad of the opportunity to give to those with them who had not heard of the Gospel, the light which they had re-. ceived. During the remaining days that they spent in prison they contin- ued to preach the love of Christ and give thanks to God for the opportun- ity of reaching their fellow -prisoners in this way. After some time they were released on bail, 'but they were not satisfied to sit down and thank God for their release, but in the day that followed they returned to the prison to visit and preach to those who remained. In due time the real GUM SALVAGE s::RIGA rE NEED- ED IN ;s IG STORES Shoppers in the large department stores resent finding one foot glued fast to the floor in the section devot- ed to the lowly "pots and pans" when speed is vital to reaching that fascin- ating sale of millinery before the best one are gone. When such mishaps occur womankind will vote unanim- ouslythat all the joy has gone out of shopping. This resentment may ac- count for the harassed appearance of the general manager of a leading de- partment store. He hastened to say that he was doing the best he could under the circumstances. The prob- lem had had his earnest considera- tion. As a result, did not his store have the finest, most expert gum salvage brigade in the wide world? The gum salvage brigade, said the general manager, is just one more evidence that we live in a day of specialization. Its one -and only job is scraping second-hand chewing gum off the store floors at night so that during the day the questing shopper may pursue her way with assurance that a foot put down in good faith will rise again unimpeded. The gum salvage brigade does not quite justify its large name. In reality it is more nearly a platoon. There are three members now, but every last man is an expert at his highly specialized job. Gum salvaging in that particular store adds $3,500 a year to the cost of doing business. ringing with unwonted songs of praise raised by the Jewish strangers. An earthquake, too, lent its terrors to the strange scene, shaking the prison to its foundations and loosing the staples to which the prisoners' chains were fastened. The jailer, roused from sleep, and seeing the prison doors opened wide, would have com- mitted suicide were it not for Paul's authoritative and restraining voice; and then the astonished official rush- ed into the presence of the Apostles crying out in words which have ever since been famous, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" to which the equally famous answere was given, "Believe in the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved, thou and thy house." The jailer, when he rushed into St. Paul's presence crying out, "What must I do to be saved?" was cer- tainly not the type of a conscience- stricken sinner. He was simply in a state of fright and astonishment. Paul's reply to any ordinary Jew or any ordinary pagan was unintelligible but, the question and answer gave Paul the opportunity of speaking of the nature of sin and the meaning of salvation. It was a midnight confer- ence on sin, repentance, belief and baptism. The jailer then took the Apostles, bathed their bruised bodies, set food before them, gathered his household to listen to the glad tidings and they and he were baptized. The jailer, feeling for the first time in his life the peace which passeth all understanding, realized the truth in the immortal words: "Thou, 0 God hast formed us for Thyself, and our hearts are restless till they find rest in Thee." (G. T. Stokes). released from suspicion, but they re- turned with no hatred nor ill feeling towards those who were responsible for their imprisonment. Their one great joy was that they had been giv- en .this privilege of working for the Master. CANADA Regina, Sask.—Creamery butter produced in Saskatchewan during the month of June, 1925, amounted to 2,508,476 pounds, as compared with 1,787,056 in the same month a year ago, an increase of 721,420 pounds, or 40.3 per cent., according to a state- ment issued by the provincial dairy commissioner. The cumulative pro- duction for the first six months of 1926 was 6,392,462 pounds, compared with 5,109,090 in the corresponding period a year ago, an increase of 1,- 283,372 pounds, or 25.1 per cent. WORLD MISSIONS Prison Preachers (By Rev. George C. Wannop, M.D., Kon gmoon). Allow me to relate a remarkable in- cident which occurred in our midst a short time ago. It will perhaps open the eyes of some who read it and lead them to see how Christianity works in the hearts of the Chinese just as it does in the hearts of our own people. It may open the hearts of some who still look upon the Chinese as a kind of inferior class, for whom Christian- ity is not intended. Let us forget their racial features and outward characteristics and with that will go the vulgar word "Chink." I am con- vinced that inwardly they have a sim- ilar construction as ourselves and surely the heart is the same. A few months ago there was a rob- bery in one of the foreign houses here at Kongmoon when some valuable jewels disappeared. Needless to say it was not a missionary's home. It apparently took place during the day, though none seemed to know when or how. It was murmured about that two men, carpenters by trade, who had some days previously been mak- ing repairs in the house mentioned, were responsible for the loss. They were immediately arrested and thrown into prison without any evi- dence whatever of having committed the crime. Both of these men were members of our chureh and devoted Christians. Regardless of the in- fluenee the Minion body brought to bear on the Vie, for We were eatis- fled they were innocent, they wore de- tained in prison. A rear flap lour one of over vain- eimearien Went to limit them Irl 150011 111111 gb %Ottt lib fOtSIi 1. totetti Toronto, Ont.—Production of mo- tor vehicles in Canada during the first six months of the current year has shown a substantial increase over the figures of last year. Accord- ing to a bulletin of the bureau of statistics, 77,603 passenger cars were produced in the first half of 1924, while in 1925 the number had risen to 80,209. Motor trucks manufac- tured this year numbered 10,605, as compared with 10,102 in the first six months of last year. Vancouver, B. C.—More than 40 re- sponsible officers of important manu- facturing companies of England are in Canada looking over the market LTTER IN EVERY WRQ Aftoir Taking Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound Dpen your amount with us and your .savings are secured by the entire resources of THE PROVINCE Become a depositor to -day and receive security coupled with courteous servni e The PROVINCE OF ONTARIO SAVINGS annes Seaforth Branch , J. M. McMillan, Manager. 14 other Branches. lishing too much crime news. Worse than that, however, is the eireum- stance that the people are .come sitting too many crimes.—Owen Sound Times. Ingommr, N. S.—"I took your medi- cine for a run-down condition and inward troubles. I had pains in my right side so bad at times that I could not walk any distance. I saw about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in the newspapers and have taken five bottles of It. I am better in every way and you can use my letter to help other women." Mrrs. ALvrrA M. PERRY, Ingomar, N. S. Nervous Breakdown Relieved Toronto, Ontario. — "It is pretty hard to explain your feelings in nervous troubles. I felt low eplrlted, had pains in my head and eyes, always crying, and did not want to go anywheee I cjq knitting and fancy work, and I would get irritable after a few minutes of work. I have beep ins Canada five yeare and have been this. way ever since I came. I em taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Con'1�ppoo,M_mo and I glee better and ft seem 'o o Make o eat and I must ay I am fey ' Mere jolly. I have great faith in in our Medicine because of what it has One for m husband's bode it to me." le h Avenue, 0. ne deble aned- arotil these !Ea ehottld sinter and she re' —Mrs. A. &MR, I Todmorden, Toronto. Andeugglotettii lo` ,, and t onia .. tio,ti less 60 common OM ' a rural 1 *. 444444.+414*0 Works Only One Way. Confession is good for the soul, but it is bad for the reputation.—Vernon News. 4.444444,44.4.4444.4444 Slow But Safe—Another aid to longevity is utter lack of curiosity concerning how fast she will go.— Toronto Star. A Sober Thought—At times one can't tell Which will get here first, prosperity or posterity.—Brockville Recorder & Times. Breaking It Gently—Dancing frocks have done much to keep us from being shocked at bathing suits.—Kitchener ADVERTISING DID IT W:•igley, the chewing gum man, has explained how he built up a business of millions of packages a day. He has done it by sticking to his one line and advertising it. He spends over a million dollars a year in buy- ing newspaper space to tell the world about five cent chewing gum. He has educated people to chew gum and to chew Wrigley's. He did not stop shouting as soon as he attracted at- tention. He says you must keep it up or the buyers will forget you. Whether yours is a 5 cent or a $50,000 business, keep telling about it. WIT, WISDOM Keeping It Lively—Most women can keep a secret --in circulation.—Fernie, B. C. Press. Look Like It—Looks like summer is here to stay awhile. Our fly did a shuffle on the butter yesterday.— Brandon Sun. A Nasty Crack—Chicago man gave his wife up to his best friend. Thus ending a beautiful friendship.—Cal- gary Herald. A Subtle Difference—In the country life is what you make it, while in the city life is what you make.—Toronto Telegram. This Is the Explanation—It isn't that marriage makes men meek, but that meek ones are easily caught.— Calgary Albertan. Possible—One thing to remember while driving an auto is some other driver may be as crazy as you are.— Carleton Place Canadian. The Juvenile Look—IA Pullman con- ductor says that judged by clothes most women passengers would ride for half fare.—Lethbridge Herald. What Bobbed Head Embroiders?— Another sign of the times is the find- ing of an embroidery magazine in a barber shop.—Indian Head News. Pessimism.—All that a wave of prosperity means to most of us is the privilege of watching others buy better cars.—Woodstock Sentinel -Re- view. This Looks Like a Dirty Crack— After a Toronto man had sobered up he found he had married, but nothing seems to stop drinking. — Hespler Herald. No Evidence ::. ere—If there's any- thing in this talk about the modern craving for luxury, how do you ac- count for the popularity of the sum- mer camp ? Vancouver Star. We Want This Service—We often wonder why they don't have Wrong Number down in the book among the W's, so we could get it even more promptly.—Blalifax Chronicle. No Other Alternative — "Should wives be paid wages?" asko a writer in a national weekly. We11, if they aren't, a lot of birds will have to get out and look for jobs.—Toronto Tele- gram. It'a Simple, Too—When you've wasted your money on eouresee to teach you to "eoinmand suceetta,'b you `villi flied that the 'eapieat way to get what you lilte is, to like jnat wit you get.----Vanaeonver Stlfl Ola, Quito 6.—. in Amtierli aft Oro - e or nal t a �►�.. l r ulr Record. < ,. . For the Privacylof the 40104 — Home ties are the ones a woman 1: for her menkind. They can't be WOE outdoors.—Vancouver Star. Not Responsible --Give the devil his due, Ananias was dead before any of the resort literature was written. Port Arthur News -Chronicle. Who's Grumbling—Even if girls have a fondness for nifty clothes, it can't be claimed they are all wrapped up in them. ---London Advertiser. Bludgeoned But Unhurt --Among things that will rise again when crushed to earth are truth and a swatted fly.--Kamloop Sentinel. NL272`t2CG�, CAN4\DA'S: LARCIE ST R TAIL ru RtiS Where Quality Counts I1' IS EASY to bray inferior groceries cheap. When you buy at DOMINION STORES the prices are always low and the quality of every article you buy is guaranteed with a real "money -back" guarantee. G 17 bars andGold Soap 1 KIPPER SNACKS 4 n, s 25c COFFEE SPECIAL BLEND 53c lb. KING'S PLATE SARDINES 2 TINS 25c 5 flb. PAIL CLOVER HONEY 75c RICH TEA OUR SPECIALTY THE CHOICEST BLEND OF ALL 5 b. 1 lbs TOY PAIL PEANUT PUTTER, 3 '.a,.'. MAYFIELD BRANDC BACON 391b. ALL THE BEST LINES CHOCOLATE BARS 3 FOR 1 do BAYSIDE BRAND PEAS SIZE 4 NEW PACK OLD DUTCH � �C � 5, CLEANSER /PsO A LARGE SMALL �e 9c SAVES YOUR TIME AND STRENGTI-I 67C UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO V IN this complex age the ambitious youth deems a university education essential to his career. It opens the door to opportunity and helps a man to make the most of himself. Leaders are needed everywhere; In the professions, in commerce and In- dustry, in agriculture, in politics, in community and social life. The cost of a university coursel s email eoneldering the benefits received. The mot profitsble invest- ment pposalb oj a young map is toputhlsmon tntoaneducitba Pacts Have 7a1 (moldered WV) For information write, to: l r.S.P.R.NRVILLE. Registrar Edon, Canada 14 Cann Nam hlb(tkTO Tor ;nto 47th Aha The Annual Worldrs Fair 1itl, xc a'oi.nti �r�.tciBi1'ORONT if( n ss, reolor .(42�1C6Ill , tat etnenng yf"-3''Stpa 100ermo Aug'e sem 12 ilnclautteve l6 -tr./ N. a