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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1926-06-18, Page 2Screen Doors &Windows ForCornfort and Health Window • Screens, 10 in, bigh, open 36 inches, each Window. Screens, 14 in, high, 50c open 36 inches, each it Window Screens, 18 in: high, 60c open 36 inches, each oil Window Screens, 14 , in.. high, 5 5 C open 44 inches, each Window Screens, 22 in. high, �p open 44 inches, each aUC Long Springs 10C each `f urnbuckles each to prevents sags, 25c Screen Doors made of Selected Pine, Grained Quarter Oak, plainand vara. Wiest complete with hinges, pull and hook: Not varnished, plain .at el Not varnished, with brackets at sr5o Vaarnished and fancyi J Vaarnished, with oval $4.75 Automatic - Door Catcheach 25C Geo. A. Sills & Sons 1 FOR YOUR BARN ROOF Use Brantford Arro-Lock Slates. Neither gales,rain; snow nor frost can budge them and they last for years. The low price and small laying cost make them the most euostomicsi roof of exceptional value. You can lay theca over the old *Wes.. >u gooliniCaLinthej Brantford, Ontario Stock Carried, Information Furnished and Service on Brantford Roofing rendered by N. Cluff & Sons, – – – Seaforth 1 A snbstitsde will disappoint you. Best for your White Shoes NUGGE1' White cleaner It will NOT rub off, neither will it " soil the clothes. 11 ppetite. When you see an elderly man eat= ing his dinner vvith'the relish and enjoyment of a school boy, watch him help himself to Mustard. If it is not on the table] he will very quickly ask for it. Those who acquire the habit of , eating Mustard --of keeping their digestion keep, and their appetite young ---how a decided preference for freshly mixed Mustard. Colman -Rees (Canada) LIQ 1000 Amherst Street MONTREAL m • THE HURON EXPOSITOR JUNE 18, 1926. SUNDAY AFTIRNOON (13y Isabel Ham)lton, Goderieh, Ont.) There is ,a holy sacrifice Which God its heaven will not despise Nay, which is precious in His eyes, The contrite heart, The holy Spirit from on high Will listen to its faintest sigh, And cheer, andheal, and purify. The contrite heart. Charlotte Elliott. PRAYER Bestow en us, 0 Lord, the contrite heart se that we may plead for mercy and receive cleansing from all our sins, For Jesus' sake. Amen. S. S. LISBON FOR, JUNE 20th, 1926 Lesson Title -.Judaic'+ Plea. Lesson Passage --men. 44:18-34. Golden Text= -,Ps. 51:17. In hest day'S lesson we left Joseph in prison. A succession of : events all tending to the release of Joseph, follows until we see,him standing be- fore Pharaoh, King of Egypt, inter- preting a dream. The outcome was the appointing of Joseph, as one in whom the spirit of God- is as prime minister of state, than whom there was none greater than Pharaoh. "He that, in the morning was drag- ging his fetters of iron, before night, was adorned with a chain of gold." Pharaoh bad been warned in his dream that a time of famine was at hand so the prime minister showed his wisdom in following out the plan he had outlined to Pharaoh and stor- ed . up corn a -plenty. Amongst those who came from a distance to buy were Joseph's brethren whom he re- cognized. He did not reveal himself to them, reminding hent of their conduct towards him for the time was not ripe when they could be brought to repentance. They en- countered ncountered many disturbing situations on their several journeys to and frail Egypt, even imprisonment P.r three nays. This terrifying experi- ence quickened their memories and consci,.i les until they cried out that they were verily guilty concerning their brother. They came another time bringing, as commanded, their youngest bro- ther and then followed, more and more distressing events all leading up to the revealing of Joseph to his brethren. Benjamin, on the suspicion of hav- ing stolen a silver cup found in his sack, was condemned to become Jos- eph's servant. Their dismay filled the heart of Judah for he had become surety for the lad to his father. These brethren were not the same cold, hard-hearted men as they were in the bong ago, for' they prostrated themselves before Joseph and Judah began to plead their cause. He, in beginning his plea, showed much def- erence to the high position of the accuser and judge and begged for a patient hearing while he would state the circumstances of Benjamin's pres- ence with them. He told how dear he was to their father, making the case the more pitiable because both his mothbr and full brother were dead, although of the latter he was not certain. Then he reminded Jos- eph that he himself had urged Ben- jamin's coming and that the father had been most unwilling to let him go, saying if anything should happen to him, "ye shall bring downs my grey hairs with sorrow to tWe grave." Upon this Judah told how he had be- come surety for the lad and ended his pleading by begging to be allow- ed to become a servant to Joseph in Benjamin's stead. • "H.ad Joseph been, as Judah sup- posed him, an utter stranger to the family, even common humanity could not but be wrought upon by such powerful reasonings as these; it was enough to melt a heart of stone ; but to Joseph who was nearer akin to Benjamin than Judah himself was, and who, at this time, felt a greater affection, bath for him and his aged father, than Judah did, nothing could be more pleasingly, or more happily said." (M. Henry.) WORLD MISSIONS A Prince of the Church in India. Born, a blue-blooded Brahmin, into the strictest caste tradition, Dr. Kali Chaffin Chatterjee became, during his more than sixty years of life as a Christian, an unanswerable argu- ment, to the subtle 'philosophies of India. He became an outcast to his own people, but every one of his children have played distinguished roles in the awakening- of India. He lost wealth and social preertige, but he became the widest known and the best loved native Christian in the Punjab, and was honored by British and American Universities. He gave up hie instinctive pride of race,but he received that heavenly grace, "the fragrance of the knowledge of Christ," which impressed every one he met. (Selected). • POULTRY LICE AND MITES At this period of vermin, anima controlled, multiply very rap - The fowls at the Central E>ri- mentml Farm, Ottawa, are, treated Periodically for lice. Blue ointment, to which two parts of lard leave been added, 18 used to kill the lice tail nits. The 'addition of .little tallow-willve more bene. This. ointment -is app ed to rise skin bele** As vent and under the wings. Fnwle treated ' in this cheap and effective manner will re - mein free from -Hee or several months unless exposed to farther infestation. Blue ointment should not be used on sitting hens until after the hatch. The' fumes from the ointment will kill the germ in the egg. Unsanitary poultry houses encour- age the most troublesome of vermin, the red mite. These mites get ' thei r 1111 of blood at night and leave the fowl before awn, to hide in cracks and crevices. The blood reddens the mite, hence the name, red mite. The houses at the plant are thoroughly deemed, and sprayed each spring, j! , BAKING. Ptd Df.R Most Canathan Housewives use MAGIC BAKING POWDER to ddssu re SUCCESSFUL BAKING Node /n Canada ./Vo A/um summer and fall with a spray com- posed fief one part of carbolic and four parts of coal oil. The roosts -- are painted twice each month during warm weather, with common crank case oil. The above treatment' is very penetrating and plays havoc With the mites. The cleaning and spraying is done during a sonny. forenoon, which al- lows time for the house to dry thor- oughly before evening. Fresh air and sunlight are wonder- ful disinfectants for the poultry house and combined with- cleanliness are preventives against most of the poultry yard ills. A good spray pump should be part of every poultry. keeper's equipment. A MEDICl"NE TH tT ALL MOTHERS PRAISE Baby's Own 'Tablets Banish Baby- hood and 'Childhood Ailments. Mrs. H'. Oaken, Sarnia, Ont., says: "I have used- Baby's Own Tablets in my home for the past fifteen years and I believe the good health my chil- dren enjoy hi, .tfne entirely to this medicine. The -Tablets are helpful at teething time; relieve colds and a always beneficial in the minor ail- ments of little' 'cues. I have-recom- mended ave-recom-mended Baby's OWiiTablets to other mothers whose experience with them has been as satisfactory as my own." 'Baby'ls Own Tablets} do one thing only, but they do it welL They act as a gentle laxative which thoroughly regulates the bowels and sweeten the stomach, thus banishing constipation and indigestion; colds and simple fevers and turn the crosssickly baby into a well, happy, eiaaugiting child. Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or direct by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. HOW TO HANDLE NATURAL SWAMIES A swarm of bees win not abscond unless it is accompanied by a queen but, should another,swarm, having a queen, be in the air at the same time, the first swarm may Join it, leaving its own queen behind.- The first step then in the handling of swarms is to clip the wings of all mated queens early in the season, preferably at the beginning of the $ow from dandelion and fruit bloom. Clipping the queen's wings prevents her from leaving with the swarm, and the bees, . finding the queen is not with them, will return to their hive. When the colony swarms, and while the swarm is still in the air, look for the old queen at STRATFORD WOMAN Restored to Health byLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Stratford, Ontario. --"After my first baby was born I started to work on the tenth day and did a big wash- ing on the twelfth' day. Being so p (I was married at 19) I did not know�owwhat was the matter, so let it go until I Vas all run-down, weak and nervous, and had a bad displace- ment For nearly two years I could not steep and I would always complain of having 'not a bead -ache, but a brain -ache,' My mother is taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound during the Change of Life and she recommended it to me. After taking two bottled. I began to get a little sleep and to feel better and I have never left off since then, except for about three months. I can safely say I have taken thirty bottles since my second baby was born. I think it makes child -birth easier as I had terrible pains with my first three children and very few with my fourth as I was so much, stronger. I am glow able to do my work bee I am still taking the Vegetable Ond as I am nursing baby, "---Ma. MER Paint 49 Cherry- Street, Streit. ford, Ontario. if you are nesse whichau1 snug any weak- ness Imo as patns in the d and nervous feel ham's Vagegj a 1�dr1 ►• o the entrance of the hive. Having found her, place her in a small box or cage and then move the aid hive from its stand and in its place put a new hive fitted with dawn combs or foundation. On to this new hive place the supers from the old hive. As the swarm returns, release the queen at the hive entrance and the bees, hav- ing satisfied their swarming instih,.ct, will immediately start work in the supers. The old hive, or parent col- ony, can now be moved to another lo- cation or left standing -alongside the new hive for a week and then moved. If the latter, the entrance of the old hive should be facing at right angles US that of the new hive for the firslt three days, and then gradually mov- ed around until it is facing in the same direction, and on the seventh or eighth day, moved away. Within seven days after swarming, all the queen cells, except one, should be de- stroyed in the parent colony to pre- vent afterswarms. A swarm that has clustered can be brushed or shaken down into a hive standing directly beneath it or into a box and taken to the hive it is to occupy. SOME AIRY TRIFLES PROVED WILL FORGED Edwin A. Oliver, editor of Yonkers Statesman, was for ma years one of the most popular anon Mous humorists of the United State He 'was the inventor of the so -call conversational joke in which "Knit er" says something and "Booker" plies, or "Jiggs" gets the snappy a ewer from "Briggs." Newspaper ed tors always watched the Statesm closely and usually Were rewarded getting out of it a joke or two fit republication. In his lifetinne M Oliver is said to have written 75,00 jokes, many of which were translate into foreign languages, including Scandinavian. At his death he I an estate of $60,000. Now his neph has just been sentenced to the peni tentiary for his unlawful efforts get hold of the estate. He forged will in which he appeared as practi ally the sole legatee, and but for couple of trifling slips, one no mo important than the tail of a coma, is possible that his forgery wou have succeeded. One of his accom lices has preceded him to the peni tentiary and the other will b senten ed later in the month. George -Stavin Cowles, the nephe grey-haired and debonnair, has Ion been a familiar and perhaps disti guished figure in Yonkers, thou not always a popular one: In fac he was mixed up in a forgery cas some eleven years ago but could nt becausebe proceeded against, of th death of an important witness. H is an architect and a man of culture He did not practice hi prof'essio with any great assiduity, and per haps on this account was bitterly dis appointed when his uncle died, �l�eav ing him only $4,000. His will was o fered for probate five days after hi death on April 22, 1925, dietributi the estate among •relatives. Alm a month later, Cowles appeared wi apother will, purporting to have bee drawn on September 29, 1924. The first will was dated June 30th of the same year. ' The second will gave an the estate to the nephew with the exception of $2,500 to Miss .Elisabe Stanley, Mr. Oliver's housekeeper Cowles said that the second will ha been given to him by William Weekes, that Oliver chauffeur, s that he had every reason to believe it genuine. The l neficiaries under the first will immediately contested the second document. They said it was a forgery. As the case 'proceeded, varions confessions were nrade and f them it is now possible to tell th story that sent Cowles and his co federate to jail. Cowles was not involved in the first trial though h Was. the beneficiary, and was no dragged in until the confessions of Weekes and Miss Nellie Drummond had accused him. It appears that Cowles learned before his uncle death that the will left him only $4,000, and he prepared what he considered a much better wilt. He had letters from his uncle in his pos- session, and therefore had a model from which to fabricate e a signature. He worked with great care, irepair- ng to a library where his read all bout inks and learned that there was certain ink which dried in such a anner that it would be impossible for experts to say how old it was. Then he went or sent to Julius Blumberg, New York law -blank publisher, and t several will forme. He practised on them -untij he got a reasonable ooking document Then he approach - d Weeks and said that he would give fin $5,000 for swearing that he had witnessed the will. The other cant- pirator, who also came forward as a witness to the will, was Miss Dram- ond, at whose home Cowles had liv- for years. He said that he and iss Drummond would be married hortly after the estate was wound p, and that thus she would get her hare of the loot. Weeks agreed. When the two wills were presented fore the probate judge .the lawyers or the relatives were able tot' prove that the blank form upon w the second will had been written, had been bought from B1>tserg. It had pan it various eode tater and die. r examid ng : of Blom, re's stall' was '� _ to swear that this partie ut forma had been rim off October, 19114, after Ott will was pp' to have been witnessed. ovules had carefully clipped off the nblisher'ss, name from the will form, ut had matted the tail of :the, Catania, betwveen the -word '*Bt eef" and the word's No* York in the address. By various • milks On the paper it was that 'Mille this coma W' mid At trto the forms pr lied In October It uld not stanch with the forms nted earlier. Obvionsla then -the per had been printed after the Will w► as supposed to have been drawn. is proved it spnrions. There was other difference in the form itself, lch clinched the matter. The epae- g between the two f's in the word sailed" was wider in the lot -printed October than in any previous' lot. was when these descreepencie a were ?dad vat theft the tortured Weeks the ny s. ed k- re- n- i�- an by for r. 0 the eft ew a c- a re it Id 13- c- w,- w, gh e e e n ot n f-, s. os th n th nd tom e n- e a a m a go e edh s M u be te u be to SU b Pry wo Pa Th an wh in in Pei Flit spray clears your home in a few minutes of dis- ease -bearing 'flies and mosquitoes. It is clean, safe and easy to use. Sols All Household Insects Flit spray also destroys bed bags, roaches and ants. It searches • out the cracks and crevices where they hide and breed, and destroys insects and their eggs. Spray Flit on your g ta. Flit k moths and their larvae which eat home. EIstes�v' e =showed that Fist spray did not stain the most delicate F)tit Is the result of exhaustive research by expert entomol- ogists and chemists. It is harmless to manlnnd. Flit has replaced the old methods because it kills all the ins, is --end does it quickly. Get a Flit van and sprayer.today. STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) Diatoluted in Canada by Fred J. Whitlow & Co., Toronto. and Miss Drummond broke down and confessed. Handwriting experts were called to prove that the (signature of the second will could not have been written by Oliver, and even to the naked eye there is a marked differ- ence between the genuine- anpd the forged. ,Cowles had sought to ex- plain this 'by having Weekes swear that he had guided the testator's hand on the afternoon he was called in to witnees the document. Miss Drwnmond swore 1t she had been passing the Oliver home w Oliver saw her from the window and Nekoned her to ,sitter. A photo- graph was put 'in showing the win- dow in question, at ibis 'time of year, to have been covered with vines like a curtain. It was impos- sible that Miss Drummond could have seen Oliver- through the screen. There was also evidence concerning the tendency of terriers to bark at the approach of strangers. A terrier was Mr. Oliver's constant. companm ion, and Miss Stanley, his house, keeper, swore' that the dog would certainly _ have barked had ., lid Drummond entered the house as sl*ei said, and Miss Shenley swore that the dog had not barked. It is recalled that one of Mr. Oliver's quips- waits. "Where there's a will there's a tela. tive." e HI MAJESTY S MAL SAFE AND SURE It brings to your vett' door our Savings service. It's easy to operate a banking account by full particulars. Writs to our nearest branch for particulars. Seaforth Branch: J. M. Mchfilian, Manager 14 other branches throughout Ontario AS an example ,of the vaines of Monarch -limit Hosiery'presents at every price from 75c to 0.00, take 1 1 Monarch' Green Stripe at Ole Made of eu`-re silk for the sheet and Sish .. wo- men love ere forced withfibre silit, ft* f •- Every newer cr. And 'runz'.t d t slmow —the Giant Strfprr, or the second "stop run" a few inches bye lb* stops them. Double safety. Ws shrill be pleased to show you our '6"ery complete stook of Monarch Hosiery, Yarns, Knitted Outerwear and "Radiant" Linde Stewart Bros., Seaforth