HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1926-05-07, Page 2Sz
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ibie Fencing is noted because we have re-
dueed the price, for cash, lower than any i;'ther fence.
• ware fence, 40 inches high 38c Cash
• wire fence, 40 inches high 40c Cash
' wire fence42 in. high, , 22 in. st
ay 45C Cash
8 wire fence, 42 in. high, 161/2 in. stay. 50c Cash
Poultry Fence, heavy, 18 wire 72 c Cash
Poultry Fence, heavy, 20 wire 78c Cash
Iron Fence Posts, each 45c Cash
Full Stock of Fence Supplies at Bottom Prices
Geo. A. dills & Sons
Internal and External Pains
are promptly relieved by
De THOMAS' ECLECTRIC OIL
THAT IT HAS BEEN SOLD FOR NEARLY FIFTY YEAR
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BEFORE IS A TESTIMONIAL THAT SPEAKS FOR IT8
NUMEROUS CURATIVE QUALITIES.
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the eight "ppc of excellence are in the Fischman Inner Spting
ltttrass.
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marded' rat the Limited, and to decision of the
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tina M� ora" a1 . alto mato* alatameut of what jai
conn tier to he tits eight �otnte eY
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RING CO. LIMITED'
LIMITED
VNER, Vire• a ,
dei
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G9,
P
aait
owfl
o O; ke to glory,
clued tae ° faith, .xtd 'winged by
prayer,
oven's eternal days before.. Oise,
9944'a .clan hand shall , guide thee
three. '
Lyle,
PRAYER •
Help us aur Father to realize More
teach day we li'v'e that in every con-
flict with temptation and sin Thou,
though all unseen, art upholding and
aiding. Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR MAY 9th, 1926
I, ess ,t t ` Title -.—Abram and the
Kings.
Lesson Passage—Gen. 14:1-24.
Golden Text:—Item. 8:37.
After the -
floe . theearth itbe-
came
as
came more fully peopled, was divid-
ed by Noah and agreed upon by his
sons that certain tribes should
spread out in certain directions, re-
moving farther and farther as the
increase of the colonies should re-
quire. But the people were loath to
separate and so to prevent dispersion
they resolved to establish themselves
by building a city and a tower whose
"top may reach unto heaven." God
took notice of their intention and
their doings Ind ' checked them. If
they had rined one people with
ane language much of the earth
would have been left uninhabited, so
God caused them to be scattered
abroad upon the face of the earth
departing in companies according to
the language they spoke to the sev-
eral countries allotted to them in the
division made before but which they
refused to take possession of.
In the genealogy which is given
we see the beginning of the story of
Abram whose name is famous, hence
forward, in both Testaments. Goa
assigned him to a land to which he
wou'l'd guide him 'and make of him
great nation. They went forth to g0
into the land of Canaan; "and into
the land of Canaan they came." In
the course of time the land was not
able to bear both Abram and his
flocks and herds and his nephew, Lot
with his substance, so they decided
to separate, Lot choosing the plain
of Jordan and Abram dwelling in the
land of Canaan. The land was peo-
pled and amongst these Canaanites
Abram was permitted to sojourn.
While sojourning there a war began,
the first we read of in the Scriptures.
We have the account of it because
Abram and Lot were concerned in it.
Four kings invaded the country over
which five kings ruled. They laid
the country waste and enriched
themselves with the spoil. Lot liv-
ing in the invaded country, the plain
of Jordan, was involved with the
other inhabitants and carried off
with them. Abram, hearing of Lot's
plight, with allspeed armed his
trained servants and set off in pur-
suit. This is the only military ac-
tion we ever find Abram engaged in.
He was (prompted to it not to enrich
himself but to help his brother's son
and one commentator says of it that
never was any military expedition
undertaken, prosecuted and finished
more honorably than this of
Abram's.
He divided his small army so as
to attack from different quarters at
once and he made the attack at night
that he might surprise the enemy.
He succeeded in rescuing his kins-
man with all that belonged to him.
On Abram's return as victor the
King of Sodom -went out to meet
him to express his respect for and
gratitude to him but, before the par-
ticulars of that -meeting are record-
ed, we have the story of Melchizedek
told. He was king of Salem and
priest of the most high God. As a
king he made provision for the
wants of Abraham and his men. As
(priest he refreshed Abram's spirit
by a blessing. He blessed Abram
and he blessed God who had caused
him to triumph over his enemies.
In return for this blessing and in
gratitude for victory Abram gave
the priest tithes of all the spoils he
had taken.
The king of Sodom considered
himself under great obligation to
Abram and he requested him to keep
the goods, giving up the captives only.
Abram had not gone a war -faring for
enrichment so refused the least bit
of reward. To prevent further per-
sistence on the part of . the king,
Abram affirmed his refusal by an
oath.
He would be guarded in his con-
duct so that there would be no cause
for the king at any future time to
say he had acted from mercenary or
covetous reasons. He made the ex-
ception of the food his men had eat-
en and of the portion due those. who
had joined him on the expeditipn.
He spoke only for himself, knowing
he was under the direction of the
King of Kings who would see to his
being rewarded. After these things
the' word of the Lord came unto
Abram in a vision, saying, Fear not,
Abram; I am thy shield and they ex-
ceeding great reward."
•
WORLD MISSIONS
An instance of the way in which
good has come out of the evil of
war -time perils and hardships is giv-
en by the Rev. E. W. Doulton, a mis-
sionary, of the Church Misdionary
Society - in Tanganyika Territory.
He writes: "At one of our outsta-
tions, Nyandwa, there is a promising
little work going out, the comrnenee'..
ment of which' is of interest. One
of our teachers, to escape capture at
the hands of. the German's fled to
this place, and when in hiding,
taught some of the people to read
the Nevi Testament, and was the
means of bringing to Christ wto
Wagoga, Who Were baptized lig` Yrre
about four,.. years ago. These two
Men, have 'since , won , several for
Christ, Ike of whom have been brip_
txz'ed since my return, d they now
oa y ren a ianf •and` have birth s
slain!! ehureh,.tand ere.+( ing all their'
can m bifittentiv theme fellow-' man:
y are trot, (raid a ants, but. are
dollig the Word; qut voluntarily.
The;fail, trt§e tc ',1114'15,
ver Sieh Iryl cattle and ; furIotli .tit
; .bn-- - -. ,.a,•I fYli
�t1
Y).
➢
3y
4f
its,
nuts,
es, etc.
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zine
Talrg
tn'oulp a
ma3‘' 1 °
hreef tci!es: a da
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MADE` .
1N
CANADI.`
MAGCC..
BAKING
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CONTAINS
NO.
ALUM
a. W. AN LETT CO. LTD.
T'QRQNTo, CAi1.
BLACK EkE IS QUITE A PET
What should be done for a black
eye?
To relievethe condition, we should
first •help;rture to reduce the swell-
ing by ap flying to the closed lids
every three•'x four minutes, little
squares or circles of clean, white ab-
serbent cotton or linen, four -fold and
about as lardas a sillier dollar,which
have laid on a piece of ice until thor-
oughly. eoldi;.
The trea#.ment is most effective
when kept u more or less continu-
ously for some 12 to 24 hours. Do
not permit'the compresses to overlap
the nose or the patient may develop
a cold. '
When the swelling has subsided, the
removal of the discoloration may be
hastened by -applying more or less
constantly blow the lower lid, little
pieces of flannel dipped in water as
hot as can be•..borne. Keep up the
treatment for half an hour; then let
the patient rest for a couple of hours
and repeatethe treatment for another
half hour, 'continuing in this alternat-
ing manner until the desired result is
obtained.
Wounds and burns about the eyes
—slight wounds of the inner surfaces
of the lids may be treated by dropping
into the eye a tepid solution of boric
acid, 10 grains to the (sunce or as
much as will .dissolve,
Burns prodri`ned by lime may be im-
mediately trateet by dropping a solu-
tion of one part of vinegar to four
parts of water into the eye and wash-
ing. the eye with clean water freely.
If the eye is burned by acids, and you
see it immediately afterwards, you
may wash the eyes with lime water
or water to which a little baking soda
has been added—one-half teaspoonful
of baking soda to a glass of water.
If you have none of these remedies,
then wash the eye by pouring clean
tap water gently, but freely, into the
eye from a small clean pitcher, until
you are sure that you have thorough-
ly washed out d1i of the caustic sub-
stance.
Later wash the eye at intervals
with boric acid solution and apply cold
compresses until you are sure there
is no serious damage or until the pa-
tient can see a physician, preferably
an oculist.
Congestion of the eyelids may be
regarded as a very mild conjectivitis
or inflammation of the eyes. It may
be caused by smoke or dust or by ex-
posure to an excessive glare as in the
case of firemen. Sometimes, congest-
ed eyelids are due to constant read-
ing or to embroidering or steady use
of the eyes, particutarly when the
work is done in a poor light.
The germs which accompany a cold
in the head may be carried to the
eyes by the fingin rubbing or they
EXPECTANT
M11THERS
Read Mrs. Merrard's Letter.
Her Experience May Help
Chatham. Ontario.—"I want to tell
you how much good your. medicine
has done me. Be-'
fore my baby
came I felt so
*auk and run-
doWtt that I mad
Ta'artily do my
^Work. My head
a . ed, continually
. I was so dis-
cp dted that I-
or teore
•irltirim:R 't night.
IrArti4 anettlier
baby jtustoneyear
've urea. lot to
lila" ttey Lydia
14 'Compound* d,
it -bathe.
VIA l Ri F �ce}rig l
ed and
' sis
hid s
d it
d:to de
and I
and a half 1 d and
do. So I thought"
E. Pinkham'se
as I had read so inti'
little books, I fo
away as my he
my, tired fee'tin,,,
had been deme ni
Continued doing
might set me bak
hs en,
It
te
e
baby carie. ge
new nearly hod
ng your inedi
blo'to domywor
always reco 11;.1
Conipouud to
td iecgant: r .•
;
le
IxlS . 1
The fo ,
to b Dr , I
y
Beaver, )544.30
bars of the. Wor'ld.txt1 4
mentals Assegiation'-iln d"
Baptist Churchin ..their eighth anhui
convention. $ie cited. the "Bartley.
incident of 1895, reported in the Mall
and Empire of April 12, 1896," in sup-
port of his expressed belief in the lit-
eral interpretation of Jonah being
swallowetl by the whale:
"The Journal Des Debates of Paris,
one of the mos=t conservative publica-
tions in the world, has become can
-
viewed that the -experience of the pro-
phet Jonah in the belly of a whale has
been duplicated by an adventure that
recently befell James Bartley,aii Eng-
lish seaman, one of the crew of the
whaler Star of the East. Mr. Henri
De Parvillef-the scientific editor of the
Journal Des Debates, is a man who is
accustomed to weighing .evidence with.
painstaking care and of reaching eon,
elusions only when they have been
approached with the utmost conser-
vatism.
Sayq. M. De 1'arville: " I have al-
ready had cause to remark in these
columns that gigantic stomachs over
two metres in diameter have been
found in whales of thirteen metres
in length. The - whale belonging to
the Prince of Monaco which died the
other day, was found to have in its
intestines many hundred kilogrammes
of fishes in various stages of decom-
position.- Even Goliath in his- time
could not have weighed more. than
that, to say nothing of ' Jonah. The
scientific editor of the Journal Des
Debates, having carefully considered
the details of the following story, re-
marks that the accounts given by the
captain and the crew. of the English
whaler are worthy of belief. There
are many eases reported where whales
in the fury of their dying agony hav,.
swallowed human beings, but this is.
the first modern case where the vic-
tim has come forth safe and sound.
After this modern illustration' I end
by believing that Jonah really did
come out from the whale alive.
"The story which has received the
support of one of the most careful and
painstaking scientists in Europe, is as
follows:
"On the 28th of August, 1895, the
man in the crow's nest at the mast
head of the Star of the East sighted.
two enormous . sperm whales. The
steamer iminediately gave chase and
soon came within half a mile of on
of them, a huge male. Two boats,
fully equipped in the usual way, were
lowered and rowed toward the animal.
James Bartley's boat was the nearer,
and•from the bow was fired a bomb
lance, which struck the whale in a
vital spat. The sailors backed water
with all, their might, but were not
quick enough, for the monster in the
agony of the %'flurry" seized the boat
in his jaws, smashing it like kindling
wood.
"'The sailors leaped into the water
in all directions. James Bartley, who
had been steering the boat, was
thrown up with the stern, which for
the moment was almost perpendicular.
His comrades in the other boat saw
him leap, but, unfortunately on the
instant the whale threw himself for-
ward and the luckless seaman, in fall-
ing, struck within the ponderous jaws,
which immediately closed over him.
"'The men in the water were pick- -
ed up by the other boat and the whale
was in due time killed and brought
alongside the steamer and work was
begun removing the blubber. A day
and a night were consumed in the op-
eration. Finally they opened the
stomach. There to their great aston-
ishment, they found Bartley, peace-
fully relining as in a bath tub. He
was unconscious, but still living. He
had been in the whale's stomach for
nearly 36 hours.
"'They hauled him out, laid him
upon the deck and began to rub
his limbs, which were purple' and
besmeared with the blood of his late
host, They gave him brandy to
drink, and at length regained consci-
ousness, but his reason was gone. For
three weeks he remained in this con-
dition, raving about the deck and call-
ing upon heaven to save him from the
horrible furnace in which he imagined
himself being consumed. After a
while all hallucinations wore away
and he had lucid intervals, and then
his recovery became permanent. Nat-
urally the first question that his Cot&
rades asked him were what had been
his emotions and impressions while in
the stomach of the whale.'
"I remember very -well," he said,
"from the moment that I jumped from
the boat and felt my feet strike some
soft substance. I looked up and saw
a big ribbed canopy of light pink and
white descending over me, and the
next moment I felt myself drawn
dowaiWard feet •firat, and I realized
I was being swallowed by a whale. I
was drawn lower and lower; a Wall of .
soft flesh surrounded me and hemmed
me in on every side, yet the pressure
was not painful and the soft flesh
easily gave way like soft India rub.
bet before my slightest mover ant.
a:Suddenly 1 'foundOrryself in a sack
much larger than my body. blit serif-
let f ane. felt about ine thy
In c ntaet''Wi-1i -:0076114.
s 1 ry.seine ' Of d Bill ,s eernedC to h
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o sqs..ne ss
ao'rdanary ad -
t ed :for h9' thesailors',
tar, Of the
Bart(
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ry
�P,a t�a
ialios to
age, 6A� ;I1stl elf ;'
e esstte4 Manyo Wera oft en de r i s
oust .en ' ' 1�+zs st +
h been l� sit r 9 a, o
qx three occasiox a►erered , •
t
he old halluoinatiyaia�„,ti
freed that he was being aa'stimed id
a
tofiery%
e. Itbec
ana neeessa
send 404,04 ItOTO
ds general health seelnsgAm
>` "
his shin retains .a peeultar bluish tinge,
'► ch1°seeTs•inde`ible,and wvhieh w' e;
dou;'btless. caused by � ,e action Rof .tliiei'
gastric .;lure of the.'w;haie's stpmseh, . .
a—..1.+.
tee
•
•
TREA
IED'''
J
In days gone by folks buried their treasure' to
keep it safe. Even then it was frequently lost or
stolen.
To -day, with no trouble to you, you can place
your savings with us and enjoy a security unknown
in the old days. The Government of the Province
of Ontario guarantees the safety of every deposit
with us.
_
PROVINCE OF O Si e ' -'
• ► AV GS OFFICE
f' .r
BOY DEPORT TI/ ' %��%� MR/0 COV�RNMINT
/4
��s
HEAD OFFICE »" ' se £ay''ga 15 QUEENS PARK
a,oEus ,ei
Seaforth Branch: J. M. McMillan, Manager
14 other branches throughout Ontario
s
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fill out the cou-
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HAM�IL
Please Bend
/pla;roing tlaa epee
N O _ NIL LABOR -SAYING, G MONS - a tte
SAVING FADA IhiftEMENTS BEOIIG1R TO Ar /"Plaine
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE:
C. A. BARBER
Seaforth, Ont.
•
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CO.
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Don't litnityoutettioymeatof Mustard toOOCdsiot
with Cold a te.:. 'It gives more flavor tui hot.ment'd
sharpens ;the ppetite, neutralises the ri of fat
and-malost ` fere a #sier to digest.
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