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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1925-10-23, Page 2.J means equipment in Guns, Shells, ete. We have a beau,h, tifully balanceddouble barrelled hammer Shotgun :with twist barrels to stand smokeless powder, one choke, the ether modified, walnut stock A REAL BARGAIN Single barrel Shotgun, bolt action; extra hard enpfin hitting. ONLY n+ The famous Bayard .22 Rifle with extra long y $7050 5tl barrel and walnut stock and positive ejector UU ° 0 Full Supply of Auauuunitions, Ro , Oil, Etc. THINK OF WINTER Quebec Heaters at $16t°$23 Quebec Cook Stoves to at Special all white Enamel Quebec Cook Stove, the daintest and most durable stove on the market. $9 00 See it and be convinced e G. A. Sills :: Sons SEAFORTH ONTARIO. DO YOU SELL AUTOMOBILES ? Even when the sale seems lost Long Dis- tance may save it! Q"Don't wait," says Henry Ford, "use the telephone!" • DOMFNION STARES CANADA'S LARCEST_RETAILPA.,OCERS A Guaranteed Satisfactory Shopping Servit THERE is a satisfaction in shopping at DOMINION STORES that you cannot obtain elsewhere. The savings are guaranteed, the quality unexcelled, the service a complete and personal one. Grantulated Sugar, $6.40 per cwt., or 10 lbs. for 67c 1 Ib. JAR STUARTS PURE ORANGE MARMALADE >25c 19 c AREAL BREAKFAST FOOD WHEATLETS 5u25c A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE RICHMELLO COCOA 3f Ib. TIN REG. 5c 21c FOR REAL GET YOUR SUPPLY NOW BREAD PERFECTION FLOUR USE 981b. $479 BAG DOMINIONAUNT DINAH BAKING POWDER 21 c MOLASSES 10c CONTAINS NO ALUM BULK DATES 2 lbs. 23c MOLASSES SNAPS 2 lbs. 25c DOMINION STORES QUALITY TEAS >DSLL>l� 59C BU SELECT 69c RICHMELLO 79c 2IN 1 SHOE POLISHES 2 TINS 25c COTTAGE ROLLS 25c lb. P & G %COLI) SOAP 10 cAus 59c SOMA OU PTJT The capacity of the Clothes of Quality establishment is 2500 Suits a week. 5000 Suits and Overcoats to be sacrificed at a discount of 15 to 25 per cent. Our Fall and Winter Samples are now in. The choice in clothes is not confined to a few patterns, but varied in weights and color- ings, from the best makers. The tremendous price reductions Will in- vite buyers from all over the County. It will pay you to see our goods before buying, No trouble to show goods. LITS, $18.00 UP OVERCOAT%, $20.00 UP drub atilthICh 'Qh44190.1,, •. els from. nes° sphere o a Less tlabv,: 4 R God of ha, rey and o pity look on 'those 'Whe stray, Benighted in this lane, .of light Send forth Thy heralds, Lord, to call The thoughtless yopng, the harden ed old, A scattered, homeless Bock, till all Be gathered to Thy peaceful fold. Wm. Cullen Bryant, PRAYER Co God, who art the author of peace and lover of concord,.in knowledge of whom standeth our eternal life, whose service is perfect freedom, defend as in all assaults of our enemies; that we, surely trusting in Thy defence, may not fear the power of any adver- saries; through the might of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR OCTOBER 25th Lesson Title—Paul in Ephesus. Lesson Passage—Acts 19:23-24. Golden Text -1 Tian. 6:10. In the preceding chapter we read of a short stay Paul made at Ephesus during vvthich he entered with the syn- agogue, and reasoned with the Jews. They tried to persuade him to prolong his stay but he "bade them farewell, saying, I must by all means keep this feast that cometh in Jerusalem; but I will return again unto you,..•,f God will. And he sailed from Ephesus." After spending some time going over all the country of Galatia and Phrygia, strengthening all the disci- ples, the returned to Ephesus, and there he began those labors which he continued for the space of three years, At this time Ephesus was one of the commercial centres of Asia Minor. It had a fine harbor which attracted commerce of all kinds and thus men of all nationalities met in the streets of the city. One object of much in- terest was the temple of Diana, ac- counted one of the .w`onders of the world. "It took 220 years to build and was 425 feet long, 220 feet broad and had 120 columns of which seven were the gifts of kings. All that now remains of the temple are the arches on which the raised platform on which it stood was reared; but it is said that eight of the pillars may still be seen in the Mosque of St. Sophia at Constantinople." (W. M. Taylor). According to his custom Paul went first to the Jews in Ephesus and lab- ored among them three months, but when some of his hearers were hard- ened and believed not, he withdrew from the synagogue and began to teach daily in the school of one Tyran- nus and continued this work for two years, laboring all the time at his trade to support himself. At this time God gave to Paul the power to work miracles. The worship of Diana had associated with its sorcery. Mys- terious symbols were said to be en- graved on the crown and girdle and feet of the image of the goddess and when pronounced these letters were regarded as a charm against evil spirits. The sorcerers thought, when they saw Paul working miracles, that he belonged to their craft and one of them Sceva thinking the name of Jes- us, so much on the lips of Paul, to be a spell like that used by themselves tried it on a man which had an evil spirit. But the man turned on him and his seven sons and assaulted them so that they fled. Thus the contrast between them and Paul was clearly demonstrated and the name of the Lord Jesus was magnified and might- ily grew the word of God and prevail- ed as is seen in the burning of the pre- cious books pertaining to their craft. After all these stirring incidents Paul purposed to set off on another jour- ney, desiring greatly to see Rome. He stayed on in Ephesus, however, to be present when the city would be fill- ed with visitors attending Diana's feast—a season given over to pleas- ure and games. Paul determined b make it a sowing time for the gospel message. Verses 24-27—Self-Interest Roused. Under the shadow of Diana's temple there had sprung up a place for the making of silver models of the god- dess to be worn as charms and this trade was especially lucrative dur- ing the feast month. On this occa- sion the demand was seen to be not so great and one of the leading man- ufacturers, named Demetrius, traced the cause back to Paul. He called his fellow craftsmen together and deftly pointed out to them the state of affairs and the reason, appealing to their self interest and to their re- ligious interests. Verses 28—A Mighty Uproar. The people became aroused by De- metrius' arguments and cried out "Great is Diana of the Ephesians." The noise quickly gathered a crowd which apparently went to see Paul. Not finding him they seized his friends andahurried them to the theatre, the favorite place for gatherings of all sorts. History tells us that this thea- tre could seat on its stone benches twenty-five thousand people. "A mob is the same in all ages and in all countries so everyone who has wit- nessed an excited public meeting com- posed of fiery spirits who are deter- mined to refuse every speaker a hear- ing, and at which the densely packed multitude sways to and fro like the waves of ocean in a storm, while a continuous babble of sound is kept up, may form an accurate conception of what took place that day in the Ephesian theatre." (W. M. Taylor). When Paul learned what was tak- ing place and how his friends were in danger he at once decided to take his place beside them, Ills disciples and also some influential friends dissuad- ed him, thinking his presence would increase the uproar. He was prevail- ed upon to remain away. In the meantime one Alexander, a Jew, tried to get a hearing but for the space of two hours the multitude kept an pro- claiming the greatness of Diana. We are told that "four hundred years lat- ter at the third General Council 'held at Ephesus "n 431, an extraordinary power of keeping up the same cry for hours wars displayed. The cry "Ana. therm Go Nestorius,'� the heretic, against whom the cotuteil declared, was Mair#a.3ned so long and so con- tinuoiroly that Otte woiild heatable that orthodoity depended on strength of FULL • /RECTI !SNS ON EVERY P.ACkA`GE E.W.GILLETT CO.LTD. TORONTO, CAN• *Rk 1b ;o'ex 437 Iltd..�� S ire wl,l 14,141 ehr.au qi potatoes lh143 ed:4a 4 ht's,4.;. 11)^0 P9W9ge. filo the4, W1114 0/0101''740t rtheceaxleytea'e any last, atafi toza> .this Ifs ° reverted .lrte t anvn� or carpet, By t e.'? die of winter. it wall be nacesserry o ' care, ,ft�Uy sort over the tnhers and remove' any which have eoxarmeneed :to""decay. Possibly in the month oi' March the potatoes will have eomitienee4 to. Slu'out, and they must be again sort- ed 4er and all the sprouts removed. It le advisable that these sprouts be removed before they are of any length as they can then be easily broken off by a gentle ppressure •of the thumb. Beets, Carrots, Rto. These are handled "somewhat differ- ently from other vegetables. They require more moisture than the others for best results, and should. be im- mersed or covered with moist sand. Packing boxes may be used for this purpose. An inch of slightly moist- ened sand is placed in the bottom, of the box and then a layer of vegetables and so on until the box is filled.. If you have not grown a sufficient quantity of beets and carrots to al- low you a surplus for storing, it would, be advisable to buy your win- ter's supply now and store them your- self. Celery. Celery should be stored during the early winter month. Before any sev- ere frost in the fall the plants with roots on should be taken up and plac- ed in a box containing a couple of inches of moist sand. The roots should be placed as close together as possible. The room should be kept practically dark and a free circula- tion of air should be allowed. To- wards Christmas the heaths should be taken out and used. Cabbage. In the late fall before permanent freezing up; the cabbage should be .pulled up and stored for winter use. A few of the outside leaves may be taken off. They may be piled on shelves so arranged that the air will circulate freely around them or they may be tied up in bunches of three- and suspended from the ceiling. A pit may be made in the dryest part of the garden and the cabbages piled heads down, the succeeding layers bringing the pit to a peak at the top. Earth should be thrown over them as the season advances. If the pit is at alI large an air vent should be left. lungs." •(C. T. Stokes). WORLD MISSIONS From the very opening day of Mis-. sions our Lord has taught us that our work is in partnership With -Him "all the days." An dwhen the disciples opened their campaign we read that they went everywhere, "the Lord working with them." And thee ages have confirmed the testimony, that God has joined Himself in a gracious fellowship -with His missionaries. Martin Luther was so sure of this that in the times of great crises he cried, "Lord, Thou are imperilled with us " 2ittzendorf cried, "I have one passion, that is He, He only," and to- day wb 'have the Moravian Missions. When the night of Burmah was un- relieved by a single star, and the com- mittee at home would have withdrawn Judson writes: "If they ask us what prospect of ultimate success is there, tell them there is as much (and no more) ' as, that there is an Almighty and faithful God, who will perform His promises." (Rev. Dr. Fraser). • ROD AND GUN The Kennel Department of the No- vember issue of Rod and Gun, the Canadian hunting magazine, contains a notable feature in an article on the Canadian field trials ' of bird dogs from the pen of A. F. Hochwalt, who may be said to be the greatest field trial authority on the American con- tinent. The winter feature Along the Trap Line, edited by M. U. Bates, commences its season in this month's issue and contains a full synopsis of the trapping Iaws for the season 1925-26 all through the Dominion. The first of a series of splendid cartoons on the humorous side of out- door life, by the famous James Frise of Birdseye Centre fame is also a good new feature. The November issue might' be call- ed a hunters` number from the amount of hunting interest it contains. An Old Timer's Story of Hunting in the Rockies is a real old timer's yarn, written in a care free style that marks the man of the open and inter- ests his fellows In Breezes from the West, A. Bryan Williams, the well known B. C. sportsman, strikes the same note that is felt in all the stories and regular features of the magazine. WINTER VEGETABLES SHOULD BE STORED NOW Potatoes. In the city home there is no better arrangement for storing potatoes than building bins which hold two or three ABLE TO DO HOUSEWORK NOW Sick a Year. Got Great Ben- efit from Lydia E, Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound Bloomington N. S._"I took Lydia E. Pinkham's {Vegetable Compound for pains and backache, also for nervous- ness, sick headaches and sleeplessness. I was troubled in this way for over a year, and a friend told me about the Vegetable Compound and induced me to take it. I must say I have received great benefit from •it•and am -able to do my housework now. I recommend the Vegetable Compound myself and am willing for you to use this letter as a testimonal. ' —Mrs. WILLIAM Moaea, Bloomington, Aniilne:ills County, N. S. Do You know that in a recent canvass among women users of the Vegetable Compound over 220,006, replied were re- ceived. To the question, " Have you received benefit by taking this medi- eine?" 98 per cent. replied "Yes," This means that 98 but of every 100 women are in better health because they have given this: m$didine a fair trial. Mrs. Morse is eimpli atrotlaer ease of a woman receiving: "gat betrt" Women suffering -from the ttoublea'.so common to their sex• Anna listen to what other women,'say Whtt'iaaVe ea(re- rienced the same tsiifi"erifgn,and found relief. Give this dependZbbbbble itt divine. chance—and at enc.. , t ip uloid est all drug Stokes, ' WHAT TO DO WITH SUMMER THINGS Bundle up cards received from va- cationists. Soak bundle in oils. Great for starting . a fire. Cut tennis ball in half. Grow fur inside with hair tonic. Makes a beau- tiful set of ear -muffs. •Take down porch swing. Set swing on floor in parlor. You can keep the baby behind it all winter. * 1 1: Most sunburn cures are better than lard for frying meats. p 7 Take flower bdx from window. Place on floor. Fill, box with iron. Nice for burglars to stumble over. Bore two holes in edge of light summerthimble, fastening wire for handle. Dandy coal scuttle. White summer trousers may be worn in winter by coating with strip- ed paint. Buy small pin stripe. Bore hole in baseball bat. Fill hole with lead. Use bat on first man saying, "Is it cold enough for you?" NEGRO PREACHER WAS BRYAN OF HIS DAY One of the most notable of Ameri- can fundamentalists was the Rev. John Jasper. His name is not fam- iliar even to the fundamentalists, but he is universally known as the author of the solemn asseveration "The Sun do move." It is true that the Rev. Jasper has been a subject for levity rather than reverence, but those who know him best know that he ought to be an object of respect if not devo- tion. They have, in fact, dedicated a handsome church to his memory, in the hope that his stout resistance to science and what it might be daring to call common sense in those pre- cincts would be bravely carried for- ward. The church is the Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church of Richmond, Vir- ginia. He was for thirty-seven years the pastor of this church or rather of this congregation, for the church was moved or rebuilt several times while he was holding forth in the pulpit. Rev. Jasper died in 1901 a very old man for his birth occurred in 1812 when he was a slave. He was born into slavery like his parents be- fore him, though his father was also a preacher. He was twenty-seven years old when he became a Christian, and some time after he became a preacher. In 1867 he organized the church that has recently uncovered before his memory. The original congregation consist- ed of nine persons, negroes like himself, and his first salary was nine dollars a week, probably a good deal more than any of his parishioners was earning at the time. Obviously they did more than tithe themselves. The original church was in a stable, but in a few months he owner needed the space and the ixth Mount Zion Baptist Church had to move into more commodious quar- ters which were found in the home of one -ef the congregation. Then 'a earpenter shop was used until the White people in the neighborhood ob- jected and another shift had to be made. By this' time the congregation numbered sixteen, and it moved into a rented room. In 1869 the first church was built at a cost of a couple of thousand dollars. The church re- cently dedicated was the fourth of the Climates actually reared by the .fol- lowers of this Carious negro. He was a big drawing card among the -white pdople after he had made his memorable pronounce/nett about the sun, and he had the power to sway large Multitudes, irrespective of.coi or. .. If a worshipper 'WAS at all ei't eh 'trental, Rev, ZaSper •could becottn°ted, upon to concert turh tie the Anode'. entallet Bieck ' abtYitt t 6 redone ,6f; Get More_''` of More Use in Sickly, Run .own. There are people Who lack the red blood to give .. color to their lips, warmth to their handsand brightness to their eyes. These people tire easily and can- not compete in school, store or shop with the more energetic. Their blood being thin they are nervous and do not sleep well. Arising in the morn- ing unrefreshed they begin each day badly and miss much of the pleasure of living. To become active and energetic, Help ffor ervolt Peo $e; p. Are you pale' and 'weal++, trred;. ins of the time, out of Breath, do ;t iighu exertion? Are you nerroous, is your. sleep- ; disturbed so that rest does not re-. fresh you? Is your appetite poor, your diges- tion weak and do you have paihe after eating? If you have any of,these symptornss . you need the elp of such a reliable: tonic. as Dr. Utilliams' Pink pill s> like most red-blooded , Canadians, t Read what Mr; W. W. Francis,.of Cal» i .. these people need a blood -building guy, Alta , says of this, tonic: 4'After ; tonic. returning from overseas," writes .31r-,, A tonic that gives strength, that re- Francis, "my whole system .was an .ea vitalizes weak nerves, that increases badly run down'conditi'on. I became the appetite and aids digestion, will .nervous, irritable, pale and . 1os16; - put color'in the cheeks and lips and' weight. of course Lwas. given treat• give vigor to the step. That means meat and recommended many tonics,; new joy in' living, increased useful -some of which I took, but with no ap- I ness and longer life. parent result. At -last I could not Where ever you find a person who even sleep. My sister, who is in Eng-;. has taken Dr. Williams' Pink .Pills land, wrote and urged me to give Dr_ faithfully you_ find an enthusiatsic Williams' Pink Pills a trial, and T friend of the tonic that has made life can scarcely say haw glad I am that' mean more in ninny ways. These I- took tier advice. My friends were blood -making pills have ben used by helsepeeeed . at myalmost every community, howeVer complete .recavex ya three generations of Canadians and in but I assured, them it furs, due en,..;'" tirely to Dr. ' Williams' Pink' Pills and T now always keep a box on bandies case of emergency." - Keep Your System Toned' Up. Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills assist di gfestion, correct the lassitude, the pale pitabltaon of the heart, shaky 'nerges; and the pallor of the face and lips` that are the results of thin; impure` ood. Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for, anaemia, rlieumatidm, neuralgia, ner- down system and impoverished blood. vousnnss. Take them as a tonic if ` Any little exertion would cause . my you are not in the best physical eons legs to tremble and my heart to throb dition and cultivate a resistance that violently. I could not sweep a room will keep' ou well and strong. Get or walk fifty feet without being ex- a 'box and begin this treatment now. haunted. Then I began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and after taking only six boxes I am as well and strong as ever. I can walk and run without stopping every few seconds gasping for breath as previously. Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills will be my stand-by in the future if ever my blood needs building up again, and I shall always find pleasure in recommending them by mail, post paid, on receipt of price., to anyone needing a tonic. 50 cents per box. small, can be found those who owe health and happiness to this famous household remedy. Weak and Run Down; "I wish from my heart I could per- suade every person who is• run `down in health to give Dr. Williams' Pink Fills a ,trial." Thus writes Mrs. Louie Mitchell, Oak Point, Man., who fur- ther says:—"About a year • ago I was a weak woman, suffering from a run- t Send For These Health Books. -Two useful books, "Building Up the Blood," and- "What to Eat and How to Eat," will be sent free by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont., if you mention this paper. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold byr all dealers in medicine or will be sent the sun and earth. Writing in the New York World, Lester A. Walton says that not in- frequently the Rev. Mr. Jasper open- ed his services by singing the hymn, "Let the heathen writers join to form one perfect book, Great God, when once compared with Thine, How mean their writings look," etc.. His text was found in Exodus, xv., 3: "The Lord is a man of war. The Lord is His name." His first canon on the subject was Joshua's command to the sun and moon to stand still— their obedience. He would ask the question: "Would the Lord with all His wisdom be fool enough to com- mand the sun to stand still if it was still already?" Next he would quote from Malachi, first chapter and llth verse: "For from the rising of the sun even until the going down of the same, My name shall be great among.. the Gentiles." Then the passage from Ecclesiastes, first chapter and fifth verse: "The sun also riseth and the sun goeth down and hasteneth to his place where he rose." Jasper would ask: If God's word says it ariseth and goeth down, who is it who would dare to say that the sun does not move, or how could it arise and go down without moving? One of his sure-fire applause -get- ters was when he read from Isaiah, thirty-eighth chapter, from the first to the eighth verse, in which refer- ence is made to the Lord sending Isaiah to tell Hezekiath to get his house in order for he would die and not live, and the King prayed and the Lord sent back the prophet to tell him that he had added -unto his life fifteen years, and as a sign he should know by looking at the sundial and hg would see that it would return fifteen degrees backward by which degrees it had gone down. Ridicul- ing the views of astronomers the Revs. Mr. Jasper would say some people did: not believe God, but believed astron- omers, although they radically die-- agreed is-agreed in their calculations as to the exact distance from the earth to the sun; that some of the estimates were 3,000,000, 27,000,000, 931,000,- 000 and 104,000,000 miles. Another - of his characteristic statements was:. "Philosophers claim it would be a cannon ball, travelling in its orbit at the rate of four Milne a second„ twenty-four _years to reach the sun.. As far away from the sun as we are, we are affected by its heat. Them how could anybody get to the sun? "Who is it that could go to the sun?" he would shout. "In the month. of August people succumb to the heat.. The one who wouldattempt: such a journey would have to carry h • along enough food and clothing to, 1 last twenty-four years, and would t have to take a cook, a laundress and enough tape to measure the dist- ance from the earth to the sun," he argued. What puzzled' Jasper the most was who would attach the tape to the sum. Rev. Jasper will be remembered as a remarkable man among a remark- able people. He did little for edu- cation and thus is not to be compar- ed with Booker Washington, but he did a great deal in reminding his colored brethren that there was ss spiritual life. His ideas of theology and astronomy were not greatly dif- ferent from the ideas current among preachers black and white in all -re- ligious sects in. the United States at the time he worked. He merely ex- pressed his conceptions in more ar- resting language. arguments did' not appear puerile' th his hearers. To' them he seemed "to be another proph- et. He was the .black. Bryan of his day. hit) t+I to Maims Tour ens Lay More %Ws Pratte Poultry Btq�k andrwt Advice FREE Wrtte fa PRATT F000 CO. of CANADA ,LImfted,Tamil) I toot 1ike•i< ft�Cheese betausc etifsinimitable flavor. . 'o be sure yeti` g/t ft =Always look, for this tracltark... !lbw➢Ott i6-afG:Maai.sr eb C'oi.• Ltd, ltlotitedsta`;:" 1�{