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The Huron Expositor, 1926-04-16, Page 2eel ROC vantages protection coat snnot bars Saws iilre Lumber Non -warping Can be painted or 6 d Alabastined Can be Papered Vermin Proof Leftists heat and Cold Easily Handled I,SEliinates Repairs Win not crack Keeps out moisture Keeps out dust andhdirt Essiiy, quickly applied Protects year stock. GYPROC—the fireproof wallboard, durable as rock and workable as lumber—adds inestimably to the value, comfort, utility and economy of your house and garage. Gyproc your house and garage this year Gyproc does away with the fire hazard. It pays for itself by the fuel it saves. It keeps out dust and dirt, fosters health and comfort and increases the_"liveability'",, of your house a hundredfold. For additional Gyproc facts see THE ONTARIO G. A. SILLS & SONS SEAFORTH, ONTARIO GYPSUM CO. LIMITED, PARIS, ONTARIO Why build to SAVE THE BABY CHICKS 1y+ Make them strong, sturdy, productive, EGG -LAYING Pullets, with Pratts Baby Chick Food. It costae trifle more but is CHEAPEST in the end, judged by results. The extra chicks you save and raise, more than pay for all the 4/5 Pratts Baby Chick Food you use. Ask your dealer—there's one near you. liabr�r Cher o �ti Write for Pratt, Poultry Book --FREE PRATT FOOD CO., OF CANADA, LTD. 328 Carlaw Ave., Toronto MONARCH Green L' Stripe—$1. Pure thread silk — smooth and beautiful; reinforced with fibre silk, to prolong the wear; every newest shade; and doubly protected against "runs". A typical instance of the kind of values in all Monarch -Knit Hosiery, from 75c to $2.00. At all good dealers. Dunnville, Ont. v w e a " e NY a W&t--,—� C1 A.rTSMEN IN BEEPING 'THINGS NEW Langley's Now Return Your Dress orSuit in a New Patented i Container GARMENTS, Curtains, Draperies, ete., shipped by mail from Langley's reach you just as fresh and beautiful in finish as if they were delivered personally by our drivers in the city. Jost an indication of the superior service given by Langley's! There are homes all over Ontario which send ns, suits, dresses coats and other personal apparel to be cleaned, altered repairdd or restored to style by our "Valeteria shape - moulding" process, And we have hundreds of customers who send as such items as rags, carpets, draperies, etc. We Pay Return Shipping Charges and •charge only our Toronto prices. Simply send ytsnr pateed to Mr. Geo. S. Langley and write a Letter saying what yea have sent and - *bat you ,*ant done. He'll give your order hie pinrgonal supervision. Rpj��p, ei Hand Ito Lord,, in WSh eftpassler a n nor 1000 :we .•. rant, us 'nea ' ►y Lace. Lest lite lose. hi* day O, grace , Ere we shall behold Thy face 'lean* Williams. PRAYER Ever merciful God and Father, we come to Thee in the name of Jesus, our Redeemer and Advocate. We confess our "many acts Of disobedi- ence and ask for pardon and peace. Amen. S. S. LESSON 'O APRIL 18, 1826 Lesson Tititlt-The {Beginning of Sin. Lesson Passage—Gen. 3:1-24. Golden Text -1 Cor. 15:22. Our first parents were in the full enjoyment of God's favor and the peace and beauty of the whole crea- tion. God had put -but one restric- tion upon 'their freedom, "Of every tree of the garden, thou mayest freely eat; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat . of it, for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." They lead been given dominion over all the lower erea- tures; but one day the subtlest of them, the serpent, got dominion over them. Eve was alone in the garden near to the forbidden tree and the serpent, evidently walking, came up and spoke to her. No doubt she was surprised butshe listened to him. The evil spirit that had entered the serpent had once . been an angel of light and, though he bad lost the holiness when he rebelled and was cast out of heaven, he retained the wisdom tend knew how to go about separating God and man. He sug- gested to the woman that she must be mistaken in thinking the fruit was forbidden. She listened and that gave the devil his chance to sow the seed of doubt in her mind. Instead of refusing to hear more, she gave him a full account of God's restric- tions and the penalty attached. The adversary became- bolder and denied the likelihood of the punishment being executed. He plainly lied, for from experience he knew God iwould be true to His word. lIe followed up the advantage he had gained over Eve's mind and pointed out the bene- fit they would derive from doing the very thing God had told `them not to do. He suggested they mould become equal with God in intl0i- gence and would know everything' it was desirable to know. He thus started up and fostered discontent with present conditions and soon she was longing to possess. She saw, she took, she ate and she gave, for, her husband joining her, was pre- vailed upon to do as she had done. Possibly she used ' the same argu- ments to Adam that the serpent had overpowered her with. "As was the devil, so was Eve, no sooner a sinner than a tempter." When they had eaten, the -eyes of their understanding were opened. When it was too late they saw the loving favor of God forfeited, his image lost and their dominion over the creatures gone. Shame, sorrow and fear entered in where so lately all had been peace, perfect peaee. They feared for they heard the vofee of their creator and they hid from His presence. Then followed the arraignment of the culprits before the judge. They tried to excuse their conduct by laying the blame on some one else. Adam blamed Eve and God for giving her to him. Eve blamed the serpent. These very confessions proved their guilt if God had needed ...proof. God passed sen- tence first upon the tempter. He was degraded and accursed. Hence- forth he must crawl and lick the dust. But God intimated that henceforth there would be warfare between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of satan out of which man would eventually emerge victorious through one, .the seed of the woman, even Christ. Thins when the sin of disobedience, with its wages of death, entered the world, there entered also the promise of a Saviour who should conquer sin and death. The woman was told she would have much sorrow and be in stihjection. This sentence was not, however, a curse but a chastisement to bring her ,to repent- ance. Enmity was not put between the woman and the man as it was be- tween the serpent and the,woman. Adam was told he must leave his beautiful garden of Eden and earn his daily bread by the sweat of his brow, wresting it from the ground God had cursed. God turned them out of Paradise and kept them out, cutting off r'.1 chance of return. The way was ;carded for fear they, on gaining access thereto, might partake of the fruit of the tree of life and live forever in their wretch- ed state. WORLD MISSIONS A young Japanese theological stud- ,lt, whose home is in the city of 1'ottori, oovees his present purpose to the devotion of Mrs. Bennet, an American woman missionary. He was formerly a railroad conductor, and one day while intoxicated be in- sulted a young woman who was tra- velling alone. A( missionary mother, Who w'as also on the train, interfer- ed in behalf of the young •.vonnan. The conductor beeame very angry, but when he bad cooled down a bit the missionary persuaded hini to dome and see her at her home when he was off duty, lite did so, and be- fore he left her house he had prom- ised never to drink again. tut the iniesion. ry did not let the matter endwit-b this 1roTnit'ei A few days late;, to her o n, slue foetid ;[lie flian hart drunk. lint; elf aeri- fir a and evident „iietitherIseehtteteet n his Welfare ED ovircainn the irlau tfiat thertimidler de a soler n o a it r nk, h h- s ked for drag.,-` tion,1,' my'blj' my le I went, would 1 my Loo lihnkha' saved 1 two bo so I ke Lydia, > have -- then and tli�gt'j%perfectly well. I used to havelin1,10 down two or' three times a 4a,. and now I do all m housework eetithout trouble. I al- ways. keep i e Vegetable Compound in the old " ; I find a dose now and then helps e•, I am willing for yeu to risen* +fitter any way you seefit and Ieeele = erletters. If I can help anyother. om;an I'd be only too glad D. ESTHER HOUGHTON, "I am g *. at Lydia Jul Ie Compound,. done`: eyed very ba y wit. pips andinflan et-, s y right eer q(ln minto whole side it nearly a year when doctor and be said 'I Have an operation. But to take Lydia table Compound as it years before. I took °I found I was better, -king it and also used am's Sanative Wash. o more children since to try sx 712 A,titieMe 'W., MooseJaw, Sas- kate,hewan Lydia Piinkham's Vegetable Compound is a dependable medicine for all w>e me n, Forsaiebyd;ruggists everywhere. o The station master on the East In- dian Railway'had been given strict orders not,to do anything out of the ordinary evethout authority from the superintendent. This accounts- for him sending .the following telegram, "Superintendent's Office, Calcutta:— Tiger on platform eating conductor. Please Wire enstructions." "Sedexntay work," said the college lecturer, "tends to lessen the endur- ance." "In othe ,words," butted in the smart 'student, "the more one sits, the less one On stand." "Exactly,'+' retorted the lecturer ; "and if .one Aes a great deal, one's standing islost completely." FROM AN OLD 1VIcKILLOP CORRESPONDENT 29 `Elm St., Toronto. Dear Expositor: How is everybody up there? Down here there is a great deal of'suffer- ing, especially among children. Whooping cough, bronchitis, pneu- monia and tonsilitis are very preval- ent with many little sufferers. On SC Patrick's Day 1,500 women and girls were on the streets bright and early; it -'was a tag day to estab- lish an orphanage to be known as tie Sacred H,eaxt Orphanage up at St. Clair Avenue.' Around $8000 was realized. Mast: one could get their contribution -in the box, ac- tive feminine fingers had a tag pin- ned on ,You, which happened to be an artificial shamrock. A great warrior and his wife, Lord and Lady Allenby were in the city for a few days. They went the rounds of the hospitals and spoke words of cheer to all. They finished up with a big meeting at Massey Hall. In passing the Yonge Street Mis- sion the other day, noticed upwards of a hundred, mosey low-browed fel- lows under 50 years of age, waiting to be fed at the mission. They are part of a gang who gather at labor meetings and use abusive language towards those who have some wealth and yet these are the ones who sup- ply the money to .buy the food which they eat at perhaps a dozen missions, as well as the Salvation Army Hostel. They are mostly low -bred things without any pride. In regard as to what has been go- ing on at Queen% Park, it has cer- tainly been more amusing than in- structive. In my last letter to The Expositor, r think I told about the resolution of Col. Currie, but one, Brackin, a member•up Chatham way and a good speaker, moved to cut out the O.T.A. and have Government Control, pure aed simple. This was seconded by Pinard, member for East Ottawa. It was then. in order for Sinclair, the Liberal Leader, to get up and give these two fellows a tongue thrashing, as they are both grits. The next day Mr. ' Sinclair said he did not want to read them out of the party; he Aust wanted to discipline them. "No," said Brackin, "you didn't take us out to the wood- shed, just placed us across your, • knee and spanked us fn public." Pinard assumed more of a defiant attitude. Then the Premier declared they would not adjourn until a vote was taken, so they kept it up all night. Fergie declared it wasa motion of non- confidence in the Government, and if carried the House .would be dissolved After sunrise the nein morning the vote was taken.. jl'rotn crowded gal- leries until midnight the speetators had all left the galleriesexcept five, three of these were ladies --goof seta* I playfullychided an M.P.P., who comes to see hie for being out all night. "Oh," aairl he, "we are . not ,ready for another election yet." J. J. I. A LETTER FROM MANITOBA A friend w}io has. lived in the West several years, wrote''to- hie at Christ.- rnas: "Well, we acre back in dear old Ontario again." A t back home, no matter .-whsle t Old home jis, back to the scenes 'sof ;ones . e 'ldhood while loved onen mill fr'e to give.vreleonie, folkto sA'f Itig' shall. a trip to Europef "Isn't Ontarii > 's 'Ben asked of a young Wo f",�i htitn.+a for his vacation fr' r �ifOi1 +I1 nivers- ity. rrbh, it's all • , Cg a it , ► : �tl d ht.gpyyy'yy/yglad yto . 'i.,o 44 ,. T P i nc eats'), • M T 1 A f e y, t 34 ¢eta `Idttle a °,¢that to end the M.o d hash<�s)s httlho+,. a niueiel� " p . f to lie , hand to the, plots0 file ,last f N' years >of t ih 1aandii ta'R is no mean asset to the Canna aa: t7�rt#ti loawl!.eafth. risks"` at, to • crops i)rtr � en re •rthan in the Valii Hest% tout in "n ► co l,�this% ;' sl aria : a bu nail[per cr Oce sional iye> .�s. ppt'alr nla :iii a, see*: andfit#A@Br trusts rust ea � m" »b Mg the past'thalentc ;ree� float. wheat—the great db$41aA. 'bpi supplanted Eby wife i--•heti aloes rust resistant variety^' is -pre dened " Soil drifting has l to the cultiiiva- tion of corm and sweet clover, the latter putting fibre back into the soil which, or many yeah, has been "mined" by •grain cropping. Thus circumstance is leading up to an 'evolution in western farming. Stock raising, dairying, hog and poul- try raising can scarcely be spolten of as side lines, but as an essential part of mixed farming. Mixed farming means smaller farms and more people on the land; so the necessity of a great immigra- tion is obvious. When we read /of the tragedy �f- unemployment in Britain, we wonder why there is not greater emigration from the homeland. British settlers ane most wanted here. Others may be all right, but the English-speak- ing are preferable. When, we meet a neighbor it is much pleasanter to be greeted with a cheery "Good day" than an unintellig- ible expression in a foreign tongue. 'Some time ago an article' appeared in an Eastern paper quoting the words of a man by the name of Hatch or Patch, or something like that, but his name is unimportant as far as this is concerned. He was in some way connected with the Manufactur- ers' Association, and evidently had their interests at heart. He said: "The Western farmers were all foreigners and ate out of tin cans!" Probably he thought they should •eat out of tin cans, so that he and others of his ilk might feast from troughs! Anyway, it is certain that the poor fellow had never travelled far or seen much of the things that count most in life: "That man to man the world o'er Shall brothers be for a' that." Let us go back to the years 1914-18. What province sent-, the highest per eentage of its men overseas? This same province has some of Britain's best blood on its ranches and farms. This great West has hardly start- ed out yet. Many more people are needed to cultivate its stretches, to develop its wonderful resources' of minerals and forest, and to build up a land of homes for the multitude. J. R. l.)a5 TAVII44*A EI . 44L1 E.xTR t; IJNDREDS of them—and all we ask is that yo1L'uae a postage atanep and learn how to find them. Probably for mamba' . or years your old separator has ' been wasting away, each week pounds of rich butter fat from your herd that a Melotte would have saved had you learned about it sooner. `That's the reason it is so urgent that you mail this coupon now. Thousands of Canadian farmers will tell you these facts are true. They never realized it until they used a Melotte Separator_ and discovered the amount of cream their old separator skipped over: There is only one original Melotte Separator. It is iishde in Belgium and has special snechanical fea- tures no other separator has. . A suspeaided bowlalwaye In balan *sque egcut gears -that 'last • a .. lifetiree. Ws a frlctionleser easter taming separater that far -ere ea* never we** out and:give[i week after week extra pounds butter fait from your herd. - Nti thrifty:ftaxer ran affexrd to. overlook such a aedving, Don't: delay a second Inner. every can of slrini Milk you:.giil'e"to the calves you feed there dollars of such cream besides. Pick up I your pen this very minute and mail us the at- {� tached coupon, Remember you do it without obligating your- •lt e self in any way. t I CO: ((Can ldu i iced HACv1IL', O j . NT. '•. Please send n tau[. ��� plaming the spec l a • AR r I ONE OF OIL LABOR-SAVING, MONEY- 1 o-zart TMS P� of •Malone C. Sep- SAVING FARM IMPLEMENTS BROUGHT Ta) Now; NameCANADIAN y: , • Town. "... HAMILTON oNTAaI ' R.D.. , Provinces .. . .... LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE: C. A. BARBER Seaforth, Ont. "RED LAKE ANOTHER PORCUPINE" SAYS DOUGLAS WRIGHT OF DOME MINES CHUKUt4I RED LAKFI CLAIMS IN A FEW MONTHS IT MAY BE WORTH HUNDREDS Douglas Wright, .chief geologist for the Dotne Mines, which has an option on the Howey Red Lake property, states that Red Lake district will be a gold camp of very great importance. Chukuni Red Lake Mining. Association properties uelust east of the famous Howey claims and are'tlrought to be on tits same "break". PRI E 1.0 oo UNIT - (Limited to 5500 Units,)_ PRICE MAY BE ADVANCED AT ANY TIME Positively No Personal Liability The present offering of Chukuni units is to secure working capital for property development.' This is your opportunity to "get in on the ground floor' and reap the big harvest. Units allotted en the order received. Don't Delay) ---Send your order tOdart E. B. deCAMPS. ME - Engineer in charge of development hvorks JAS. R. ROAP Solicitor for the Association Rankers ROYAL BANHof CANADA Reservations may be tele. phoned o1r' wired at OtI 'a0etae l'l(Ur8�'glall�. efi tog at. alta • w ;.0 t ...+,.fa'r .,out ph sauna. °lig