HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1925-11-20, Page 2IRON, G 4NITEW
A.LUI01" UM
Roasters Th anclj
$225
sue and s315
4
A
lute ()asters, large size
train= Roasters
SEAFORTIlit
111
Str
j.
AUTO ST OP SAFETY
RAZORS, with free
strap 55c
REGULAR RAZOR
STRAPS, on sale
for
30c
RUBBERSET LATHER
BRUSHES, guaran-
teed 50c
rse
Sons
ONTA
IOE
Kraft is not a lidnd of
Cheese made by DlIFFER-
• ENT firms. It is the cheese
originated by the Krafts,
made in Canada by the
Kraft Company with the
original] patented Kraft
process. You can identify
it by this trade mark.
"Iei by Lg
t poi ts 2
awg-79 and
the e st
ils
ever see
rs"
—writes a Hardware Merchant
Why take a week to sell customers
who can be sold in a morning
—by Long Distance?
gloutoi 094fgek$14 0013
•
P7(1e Vet aabA,Med tie linVeL4Ce'ds
' Or te advna 4.14
intens the.•g117 of Itis cross,
d honor 'all His laws.
e-.4%eac Watts,
PRAYER
Teach us to .be faithful, courag-
eou,e, ritterly devoted to Thee, 0
Lord! May our lives adore the gos-
pel we proclaim. Help us to Will
many for Thee and Thy cause.
Amen.
S. S. LESSON )FOR NOVEMBER 22
Lessen Title—Paul Before Felix.
Lesson Passage—Acts 24 : IO -16;
22-25.
Golden Text—Acts 24:16.
When Paul was given permission
to speak he beckoned to the people
and when there was silence he ad-
dressed them saying, "Men, brethren
and fathers, hear ye my defence."
He told them the story of his conver-
sion and of his call to be an apostle
to the Gentiles. The people listened
attentively up to this time but at the
mention of the Gentiles they cried
out, "Away with such a fellow from
the earth; for it is not fit that he
should live." The captain command-
ed him to be taken into the castle
and scouraged, but Paul, claiming to
be a Raman citizen, escaped that
torture. The chief captain on the
following day assembled the chief
priests and all their council and
brought Paul before them. Again,
he pleaded his cause but had uttered
only one statement when the high
priest ordered them that stood by to
smite him on the mouth. The out-
come was dissension between two
parties of his accusers and again the
chief captain had to return Paul to
the castle for safe keeping. That
night the Lord stood by him and
said, "Be of good cheer, Paul; for as
thou hast testified of Me in Jerusa-
lem, Eo must thou bear witness also
at Rome."
The Jews plotted to take Paul's
life but it was discovered and the
chief captain made haste to send
Paul, carefully guarded, to Felix the
governor. Along with him was sent
a letter explaining the case. When
Felix read the letter he said to Paul:
"I will hear thee when thine accusers
also come." He then commanded
that Paul be kept in Herod's judg-
ment hall. Five days afterwards the
high priest, his elders and their coun-
sel, Tertullus, an orator, appeared
against Paul. Tertullus began his
address by using flattering words to
Felix in order to secure the judge's
favor and have Paul given over to the
Jewish courts and thus his death
would be assured. As soon as Ter -
tulles ceased speaking, Felix beckon-
ing to Paul to speak.
Verses 10-16.—Paul's defence.
He does not, like his opponent,
commence with flattery but states his
pleasure at being given an opportun-
ity to answer his accusers before one
who possessed the highest judicial
authority in the country and who, be-
cause of his long experience, was
well fitted to pass judgment on his
case.
Paul pointed out that the time of
his sojourn in Jerusalem was short
and therefore it would be very easy
to trace his movements, and he em-
phatically declared that his accusers
could not prove the things whereof
they accused him. He referred to
the statement by Tertullus that he
was a ringleader of the sect of the
Nazarenes. He boldly confessed
being a follower of Jesus of Nazar-
eth. He maintained that he still
worshipped the God of his fathers
and the fact that he was in the tem-
ple at Jerusalem was ample proof of
his statement. He further pointed
out that he believed all things that
were written in the law and the pro-
phets and that his chief desire was to
keep a pure conscience in all things.
It was the leading habit of his life
even before his conversion as was,
seen in the way he persecuted unto
the death the Christians. "I verily
thought with myself, that I ought to
do many things contrary to the name
of Jesus of Nazareth."
Paul ended his defence by saying
that the proper witnesses against him
were not present, showing that there
was really no well founded charge
against him. Felix then adjourned
the trial until the chief captain should
come down. And he commanded ' a
centurion to keep Paul and to let him
have liberty, and that he should for-
bid none of his acquaintances to min-
ister or come unto him.
Verses 24-25.—Felix Disturbed.
Felix had a very beautiful wife
who was not his lawful wife for he
had induced her to leave her hus-
band. He, no doubt, told her, of the
Jewish prisoner who belonged to the
sect of the Nazarenes, and she at
once became interested and went
with Felix to see Paul. Neither of
them had any idea of the real Paul
they were about to interview. He
knew all about their particular case
and he chose his language according-
ly. He made a strong appeal to the
conscienee of the guilty pair and as
he reasoned to them of righteousness,
temperance and judgment to come,
Felix trembled. But, then as now,
"procrastination is the thief of time."
Habits of sin were too strong and he
temporised with his conscience.- "Go
thy way for this time, and when I
have a convenient season I will call
thee unto me." How different was
Felix's answer to that of the jailor
of Philippi who, when aroused, asked,
"What must I do to be saved?"
Though Felix often saw Paul again,
and "comMuned with him," yet there
is no account of his having been
converted.
or this Ili •
Ng Flour
'Ye
unless it meets with your entire satisfaction.
A written guarantee wee with every bag of
Maple Leaf Flour, enuring satisfaction'ar
your money back.
Try a bag for your nem baking. It is made
from the finest Canadian bard wheat expertly
milled and tested at every stage of the milling.
You will find that Maple Leaf Flour maker
light, white, wholesome bread; fine textured
and full flavored cakes and biscuits, golden
flaky pie -crust that melts in your eunith—
and you can depend on Maple Leaf Flour for
the same good results every time.
Ask your dealer tcclasr about a
valuable course on "Cookery Arta
and Kitchen MantaAasalarat,"
written by Anna Lee Scott. Free
to users a Maple Leaf F7our.
Maple Leaf Ml Ce,, Limit
Had Office - roronte, Ontario
Ott
tft
ss
htuits4
oolkiess, etc.
witti
WORLD MISSIONS
Bedtime Prayers in Hinghwa (Cldna)
Mary Brewster Hollister.
I love to walk down our Arent In
Thinghwa City between half -past
eight and nine o'clock in the everting,
for it is then one heats our Chinese
Christiane families having theft bed -
%Erie "prayers." •
Front one 'house comes "0
Day," and frona another, ''Coe; Than
Fount of *leery Bleseing." A firtrote;
ite ia:+.'The Get Phylalai�ttr
pitit ,ohtt: ,the volset„ao
I N
CANADA
CONTAINS
ALUM
E.WtLLErr CO. LTD.
TO DONT°, cere
++.
Olega,"
o,fto# fella '.474.0
ceat, 'top, is triftingi(fp Ir
e§ ootl, motfni: boo` b
PieSitiorC there 14, vert.1141e,
Volved. At present tho:t#0,6i+,40 tct
employ a woble • arm. f neenneerely
• 44 ',Petit And shake the $ree§ (qr.. to,
erect --it from rain. On a tar-i-
141§re,.411,,eleetrie Plot is inStansi
no swat labor i neceseary.
9Re-aie11 441(P- the electric en-
ergy to prodneed", by re,bydro-gener-
• a.tor situated ell thejneeePet "++4 on olcl
Prom thle'14(40,the, Mite
There ia the fine trained voice that
leads, the daughter or son in the mis-
sion high school, and the lusty shout
of the ten -year-olds. They're in boy
ish mischief at least half the day as
the joy and fervor of that bedtime
song are Eilixiost if not quite enough
to absolve them. There is the shrill
piping of the toddlers,—they always
wake up for the song. Let me tell
you now, the kindergartners can
strike the right notes quite the sur-
est of all! -For I must be confessing
to you that grandfather and grand-
mother are likely to take liberties
with the tune. But that makes no
difference. in their love of singing the
Jesus -songs.
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
ARE OF GREAT VALUE
To All Mothers Having Young
Children in the Home.
No other -medicine is of such aid
to mothers of young children as is,
Baby's Own Tablets. The Tablets
are the very best medicine a mother
can give her little ones during the
dreaded teething time because they
regulate the stomach and bowels and
thus drive 'out constipation and indi-
gestion; prevent colic and diarrhoea
and break up colds and simple fevers.
Concerning Baby's Own Tablets,
Mrs. John A. Patterson, Scotch Vil-
lage, N. S., says:—"I have six chil-
dren, and all the medicine they ever
get is Baby's Own Tablets. I would
use nothing else for them and can
strongly recommend the 'Tablets to
all other mothers."
Baby's- Own Tablets are sold by
medieine dealers or by inail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
GROWING CROPS WITHOUT
SUNSHINE
Notwithstanding improved machin-
ery and improved methods of cultiva-
tion, the farmer's success- or failure
still depends very largely on the
weather. Nevertheless it is quite
probable, says a writer in a London
paper, that twenty years hence a
wet summer will not be so much
dreaded as it is to -day.
During the last few years move-
ments have been afoot to make the
farmer almost indeperident of wea-
ther,. and one method at least hos
come very near achieving this end. If
the system discovered and _put in
practice by a Sussex farmer develops
on the right lines it should revolu-
tionize agriculture.
With the help of an electric current
PAINS IN BACK
AND SIDES
Ended by Taking Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Conivound
Fusilier, Sask.—"For two or three
days every qo often I would' have such
pants in my back and sidne that I could
not do anything -,could not even lie
quietly it bed, and ray head gelled, too.
I was tide way about; three Years, but
was worse after I wee marled. Irried. was
on a farm with not a hoheinearer than
five miles and there waSnot a person to
advise me, as my folks lite in Manitoba.
My sister-in-law *Ad me shoutItydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable CoMpoiand and
told me to trgektkitook het, advice and
have been t for it triter sinee.
After takhig t tnedielne for three
months I ean eatithtitrhalPednie altit
and I am doing ne. re* glad nit me.
oromeed the yew,* uompound to
others • :Ind:you _mar publish to testi,
• +—Bara.liorxxBALiacol+Dtrusi-
liet, Saskate.hewen:
along which the current Ilene, hae§-beeP o id btai in.. th rf 11 and • "
carried on poles across the neighhcir; eden ceevenient place, and it not
1.11 ne a a +,
ing fields. Thus'wherever '.420f110‘ i.eneagfr,Au.. plnthod, comer -
the current can be switched off to' fertiliAer-"41W )4ed' q4: to. sAit
drive reapers, tractors, or other agri- the. ipeidal:4reqUiresi*ite"
cultural machinery, Its main use, howevere thdrii riot
however, is to drive the numerous cause ia wellPlanneC,'
fan i by which the stacks are dried. manure is* used quite -
The ordinary haystack is composed should render the soiken fairly -geed:
of grass which has already' been
condition fat the Purpose. • thoroughly dried, but an the electric When it is not convenient to oh-.
i
farm it is quite unnecessary to dln" tain a sandy loam soil, And heavier
the material beforehand. It is, there- soil has to be used, 'clean sand may
fore, !Milt on to the stack in a damp, be added tintil the proper consistency
green condition, which, according to of soil has, been obtained girder
all rules, should eventually cause normal coeditious it is alwaYs :pos-
spontaneous combustion. Under the sible_to water, but attention must be
stack are placed two wooden tubes,
about two feet square, connected with
the electric blower. There are also
several iron tubes fixed in the sides,
containing thermometers walla can
be moved out and in. Otherwise the
stack is constructed in the usual man-
ner.
Whenever fermentation begins the
thermometers are closely • watched,
and if the temperature rises above a
fixed limit the fan is started and air
blown through the stack. Generally
it requires about half an hour's blow-
ing to reduce the hay to the teniper-
ature of the air. When this process
has been repeated a dozen times the
stack is perfectly dry and ready for
use.
Hay dried by the electric fan is
often actually superior to that dried
by the sun. Several farmers have
recently realized this, and a fair
quantity is now produced annually.
A large colliery, for instance, has
grown the food for its pit -ponies in
this new fashion during the last two
years
sure of .the tiieS: ++,thylit,;:4t
eourssonay niche the eat harder rid+, _
ing by interfering with the eetion, of
opring tire, or lapth. • -
hatelyz :however, if the ear ..is
'1+#14++.1aPtlikelY fillet
Ond' One-
The electric motor has still another
use. Not content with taking the
place of the sun, it even takes the
place of the daylight. In early spring
and late autumn the poultry sheds
are lit up long before the dawn by
the pale light of electric lamps. These
lamps are marvellously adjusted, for
they automatically shine de,y and
night only during the hours of semi-
darkness. As the times of dawn and
sunset change every day, the process
is little short of miraculous.
The organ was in use in Greece at
an early time, having been carried
there by Greeks who obtained it in
Alexandria. It began to be used in
Christian churches about /the year
657. In the following year it yerteh-
cd some of the churches of Western
Europe. The organ at Haarlem, Hol-
land, is one of the largest in Europe.
It has 8,000 pipes and 60 stops.
The lime or linden tree, known in
many parts of Canada as the bass-
wood, was introduced into England in
the sixteenth century. A lime or lin-
den planted in Switzerland in 1410
existed in 1720, the trunk being 36
feet in circumference.
FEEDING LAYING PULLETS
Especially gold results were ob-
taieed from alielfa leaves in an ex-
periment conducted at the Branden
Experimental Farm to determine the
value of oiffErent supplements when
fed in conjunetcn with the regular
ration Alfalfa leaves fed in an
en rack rack kept before the pullets ern-
tInueusly, mange's split and rid
fresh each day, and canner's meat
cooked and mixed with the mash,
were the supplements used. During
the 62 days of the experiment the
hens given alfalfa leaves laid an av-
erage of 26.9 eggr as compared with
ansverage of 22.9 laid by those giv-
en meat and 20.1 by those given man -
gels. The alfalfa leaves gave, there-
fore, the greatest profit over cost of
feed, and in this test were shown to
be worth 10.8 cents per pound as a
winter feed for laying pullets.
PREPARATION' OF BOIL FOIL
IMBEDS
Soil -for hotbed work requires pro-
per preparation, to give best results.
Too little attention is paid to its pre-
paration by the majority of growers,
and to this may be attributed much
of the diffieulty encountered in the
production of healthy plants. It
costs very little more to prepare thd
soil properly, than to follow the ques-
tionable method of using the name
soil over again or obtaining sell with-
out regard to its condition. the lower the pressure the greater
A clean piece of sod should be se- the tendency to shimmy.
lected, preferably on sandy loam soil. There are a great many factors
Cut and pile the sods carefully with
alternate layers of manure. The
cutting and piling Shahid be done
either in the slain -en er during the
month of June, at any.,,Tate the pile
should be left standing over the sum-
mer, when the Whole pile, or the part
required may be eut down and piled
in a conv'enient plaee for the hotbed
work the following spring This
given to drainage or it vvill be dif-
ficult to keep conditions Tight for
plant growth. Those who have not
been preparing their hotbed soil in
advance should make a start now, as
it is a step towards greater Altura
profits.
DO TRUCKS DAMAGE ROADS?.
A great deal has been said au4
written about the damage dime to
the roads throughout the country by
the motor truck. Any sane thinking
individual will admit that damage has
been done the roads by overloading,
but too few stop and consider .--the
benefit which the truck does for re-
building, and how any damage done
can be repaired.
There are many laws regulating
the loading capacity of the motor
truck to insure that tee& owners do
not so overload, but today we have
the newest step in the progress Of
the motor truck—the tractor -like com-
bination.
To the average person the tractor -
trailer is a combination which appears
to be heavy; ungainly and ruinous to
everything it touches; on the contrary
it is the- greatest step forward in
transportation that the industry has
taken in years.
The tractor -trailer combination dis-
tributes the load over six to eight
wheels and •allows the carrying of
heavy loads without damage and en-
sures a sm.00th-running surface on
the cement or macadam road at all
times.
Damage to the roads is 'done by
overloading and speeding resulting. in
the road -surface 'being hit heavily at,
all times, as the springs, which are
supposed ,to act'aa cushions for shocks
are so weighted down that it_AS
jni-
possible for them, to set . properly,.
Small holes appear; often they are
not irmediately repaired, resulting in
larger holes being formed by . wear
and by water seeping through:
But let us stop for a. moment and
consider the benefit done to roads by
the truck. One rides. smoothly along
in one's car, and a construction truck
looms ahead. You blow your horn
and swear because you cannot get by
immediately, and you blame the truck
for destroying the road.
Probably hundreds of trucks were
used in preparing the road for rem
pleasure. 'Moreover, this road was
constructed at a great deal less east
than it could have been ten years
ago, and all because of the motor
truck. The truck hauls the cement.;
the stone and the gravel; it brings
the workmen material with *Mat tk;
keep busy, and does it Much *Aar
and with a great deal more eeorierny
than would be possible with horses.
Days are saved in constructing the
road, and many dollars in tastes are
cut from your bill, and all due to the
motor truck helping to make the road
you are blaming them for dentrOy:.
ing.
In other words, every motor truck
on the road saves money for you. If
it did not it would not be there. No
operator keeps a truck on the .road
which is losing money, and hence
money is saved for you on every truck
in operation.
BALLOONS AND SHIMMY
The balloon tire is not a fad. It
has come to stay; because it provides
increased riding comfort. There
seems to be no perfect cure for front
wheel shimmy when balloon tires are
used, and it is doubtful if there ever
will be; also it is doubtful whether
it makes much difference. , ,
With a perfect cure,of: eourse:,+.1,
car equipped with fall balloon tires
billeted to standard pressure should
fail to shimmy when travelling be-
tWeen one and sevefity-five miles. per
hour. Regardless of the type of tire
method of preparation will provide a
soil With 'ample fibre, which is very;
essential, aud, *Web contains suffici-
ent plant food for orclitiaty work1!Often scene slighttrenble dailies a
gonetal upset -t 'din bee vi. slob the eon is not cOusidered rich
enouigh
omptorote.euertottkossi,puihfultrist .for p fat wort-1nm* Monate It
ititlieste novae forni 61116% eviviatnetif. • supplenunit, the IneutOltOkti
4 afire present 661
Coat 6116 While the foregoing Inethed.'is th
e diord iroos salitfuetierr, this.,,titeee411f0
hth %OS', *44*
lit 1 1 , hea a' ed to be lidded or commercial...fertiliser -1
t1idr oast 16 ',.,4454
otr olrhOgi4t.$0 the,iejeatte,i.6tA. 04
which make the shimmy better or
worse, but the main shimmy factor is
tires inflated to a low pressure.
Shimmy may be prevented by various
expedients, such as increased friction
between the spring leaves; the uee
friction shock absorbers or rebohnd
lChecks; by the use of inverted tp-riug
eaves or by increasing tlie tillerless
of the springs or the. inflettioe pres-
eo1e os
hat'Ae
their front tires-, sigfcientli'l,
prevent shienuy.
Iii°4ess:eetir:aevs7eangde::hbiasit°1aogjieWitelZ::'::'''.1•'
delivering greeter miloage .than•V
the ballooh tire is essentially a sheer,-
oyersize tire, and just.. as we have"
learried .to expect greater ne g.
kr*, an oversize tire, it is rightful to' ,
expect- super -mileage from a ballodti.'
Those who feared that pineetttr,
havwouldep tb9Sv ent400roeo-rfrperltrkinettsitV404-
eneetunves. It,.quires Uv-eEy sharp
object- to: puncture .a lOW-pressnre,„
tire. —Stones and. -other ObjeetSwlneh
will, Cut A higb-pressure.tire. the bele.:'
leonetire mieees eirereigeth littleeor-irre
injury, -duo to its yielding
Incidentally it should be rernarked
that the balloon tire has 'named a Te-
aligureent,of the elements of the auto-
mobile. Steering gears have been
changed, as have also axles and
springs.
Of ,the 50,000,000 tires manufactur-
ed in 1924, about 5,000,000 were 1a1 -
loons. Ineidentally it is worth add-
ing. that 11,000,00 fabric tires were
mae. Assuming five tires per car,
there are a million cars with balloora
tires—out orebout 15,000,000, ,or one
car in fifteen has low-pressure equip-
ment. •
...+1
Out Goes All
Rheumatic
Poison ,
Rheuma Acts on Kidneys, Liver and
Bladder the Very First Day '
Get a bottle of Rhenniet.todaY And
wear a satisfied smile on Your tees to-
morrow.
It's a remedy that is astonishing
the whole country, and it's just as
good for gout, sciatica, lumbago and
kidney misery as for rheumatism.
It drives the poisonous waste front
the joints and' uniscles—tbat's the
secret of Rhetunals suceess. -
But we don't ask yon to take our
word for it; go to C. Aberhart or any
geed .droggmt and get a bottle of
Rhetuna -today; if it doesn't do as we
promise get your money back. It
will be there waiting for you.
Father won't kick
" at the price
- added adyantage for Baby%
• Oirri Soap—The sternest father won't
.find:10c too dear. In fact -At is won
derfull little for such an excellent
soap with so delicate a perfume. One
demo feel so freshened up--endearries
aleng so exquisite a fragrance, after
a warm bath+ with -
Baby's -Own-Soap
"les Be.stfor You dad Saba too"
•
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