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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1926-08-27, Page 2rnolk ilntlti` �Your AVMS tIx vdth ,�reosoodbikntinro et- ddb .;t9H $ .Thd,•Ova:w�vilt d .a►Bre Rept and Ilea noid in stables. barns„ ken and.hos Aeras to >Fet aid of to FOR SUMMER We stock Crenoid in bulk. Bring in your cans and have hen house and stable disin- fected for winter, as no pre- paration reaches microbes, Tice, flies, etc., just the same as Crenoid. Per gallon $1.25 Per one-half gallon 65c Per quart 35c HEAVY ;Lasso SIRE POT BEEP ASH PI< FOR WINTER It is time to prepare now for your heating, and as the greater part of furnace heating is the location of registers, the proper size of pipes, we have no hesitancy in offering our opinion as no one in these parts have a longer, wider or more suc- cessful experience, the bene- fit of which goes with our furnace. ° Geo. A. Sills & Sons it CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION TORONTO --Aug. 28th to Sept. 1 1 tib_ Be sure and visit our booths in the Pure Food Building The Dominion Stares Limited stand for Groceries of High Quality. Merchandise under our own label carry our Personal Guarantee- Look for merchandise under these Brands: "Domino", "Braeside", "Bayside", "Mayfield". "RIchmerlo". You can be assured that such merchandise is the best that money can buy. You also get the added advantage of Dominion Stores Low Prices. Bays and Girls—We have something for you at the Exhibition STRONG GOOD itR® CORN SOVEREIGN BRAND SOCKEYE SALMON 1 lb. TIN 39c i/2 Ib. TIN 20c s 39C Reg. 45c Each CHRISTIE'S ASSORTED SANDWICH BISCUITS 35olb BRUNSWICK SARDINES 3 TINS 15c BRITANNIA SPINACH Delicious. As good as the fresh vegetable Oc TIN We especially recommend merchandise under our own private label Guaranteed quality and the best that money can buy DOMINO BRAND TOMATO CATSUP le oz_ bot. 19c RICHMELLO COFFEE 1Tibb.. 65` Ib2 35` THE CHOICEST TEAS RIC1iMELLO 79c DOMINO 73c D.S.L. Bulk 63c lb. Ib. Ib. OMIN10N CORN AYFIELD BRAND SLICED FLAKES BACON 3 Puts- 29c 47c lb. CROWN JARS For Preserving Small $1.09 doz_ Menem $1.19 a._ CERTO JELL 32cBot_ FINEST MILLED ROLLED OATS516.25 WHOLE MIXED PICKLING SPICE 25c lb. These Prices in effect for one week from date of this paper 140-C 'UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO WHAT HAS THE UNIVERSITY 1—A wide range of excellent courses in Arts, Medicine, Public Health and Nursing. 2—New buildings and up-to-date equipment. 3—Splendid library facilities. 4—Highly developed work in Physical Educa- tion; a chance for every student to take part in games. 3—An attractive social life. 6 --Close personal contact be- tween professors and students. 7 -A systematic effort by the University to help worthy students to got placed after graduation. TO OFFER? Write for informa- tion to:— K. P. R. NE'trrt.LE. Pb.)., Registrar, London, Canada PR Fireproof Wallboard Won't burn or warp. Saves time, labor and money. Resists heat, cold and sound. E TH1NG ituuphi &ere Makes stronger wallse cold Iliad beat, (and Is easily and For Sale By & Sons SUNDAY AFTERNOON (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderieh, Out.) Let earth, and all that live therein, With reverence fear the Lord; Let a.11 the world's inhabitants Dread him with one accord. That nation blessed is, whose God Jehovah is, attd_those A blessed people are, whom for His heritage he chose. Psalm 33. PRAYER 0 Lord, our Lord, how excellent is Thy Name in all the earth. Thou hast ever been mindful of Thy creat- ures leading and guiding them into ways of truth and righteousness. Continue to show us Thy loving favor and grant us pardon for sin and life eternal, for Jesus' sake. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR AUGUST 29th Lesson Title—The Ten Command- ments; Duties to Man. Lesson Passage—Exodus 20:12-21. Golden Text—Lev. 19:18. Dr. McLaren in his exposition on this lesson says: "The fifth com- mandment, which prescribes rever- ence for parents, makes a bridge be- tween the precepts relating to duties towards God and those enpoining du- ties to man. The family is the social unit• if that bond is slackened, much else is weakened; if it is kept strong and pure, society is sweetened and hallowed. What this commandment enjoins is not obedience, nor love but honor. The Romans made much of the parental authority, and the Jew- •ish father was to "command his household after him." To this conunand was added the promise of lung life, or, as it is ex- pressed in Deut. 5:16, "that thy days may be prolonged, and that it may go well with thee, in the land which Lit 2. Lord thy Gad giveth thee." A remarkable instance of the truth of this is recorded in Jeremiah, 35th chapter. "Jeremiah said unto the house of the Rechahites, Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, Because ye have obeyed the command- ments of Jonadab, your father, and kept all his precepts, and done accord- ing unto all that he hath commanded you; therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, Jonadab the son of Rechab shall not want a man to stand before me forever." The sixth, seventh and eighth cum- mandments prohibit acts against life, marriage and property. Man's re- lationship with man must be safe- guarded against everything that would tend to injure, maim or destroy life, for all such is an assault upon the image of God. "Who so shedde'h man's blood, by man shall his bleed be shed; for in the image of Ged made he man" (Gen. 9:6). The sanctity of the marriage rela- tionship is safi•guarded in the seventh commandment. and along side is found another dealing with the property be- longing to ethers. In all these three we are forbidden to injure our fellow- man in act, but the ninth forbids us to injure him in word, and the tenth in thought. The coveting heart is known only to its owner and to Him to whom all things are naked and open, but we read in James 1:14, 15 that the heart is the root of all sing against our neighbor in word or in creed. The principle of love between roan and man is found in these com- mandments as Jesus taught in his talk with the lawyer, who asked him, "which is the great commandment in the law?" Jesus said unto hire, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heats, and with al thy smut, and with al the mind. This is the first and great ramal:,n.:meat. And the second re like unto it; 'Thou shalt love thy • ndighhnr its ti:yself," (Matt. 22:37- 39). WORLi) MISSIONS George Mc[)ntga1I was Canadian Methodism's greatest missionary to the native sons of Canada. To the Indians of Rama on i.ake Cnuchich- inr;, of Garden River near Sault Ste. Merle, N"pray l!nuse in the Hud - en': Bay Northland, Victoria on the banks of the Upper Saskatchewan, and westward and southward to the 'toneys and the Blackfeet he carried the gospel of love. A vast tenderness for the Indian prey of his own passions and the white man's greed, determined his career. Ho became a brother of the ' native sons. Believing fully that Christ died for the dark-skinned also, during his twenty-five years of ser- vlee, he saw many miracles. Garden River, on the day of his arrival a drink -crazed pandemonium, was soon sobered, and many were sanctified, their garments made white. Thomas Woolsey, Cree local preacher, dying of smallpox, forgot his sufferings and spent his last night on earth in ex- hortation, prayer and praise. George McDougall's career suffers the sneer as to wasting men and money on the inferior races. He is in good company; Livingstone, Chal- mers, Geddie and Paton ; Damien among the lepers; Girling, searching nut the Copper Eskimos; Armstrong, dedicated to the negroes; Grenfell, friend of Labrador "14veyeres"—and Christ, Saviour of thieves and harlots. Canada owes to McDougall and his sort a debt not paid. Christian mis- sionaries, presenting as they did the better side of the white man, once again, because of the trust reposed in them by the Indians, quieted the war drums booming in the Indian camps, and saved the occasion. For the com- paratively peaceful contact between Indians and whites in the Canadian West, large credit must be given to the Men of Peace. They aided nation build!ng. —Onward. TIME DOES FLY Theatrical scene -shifters have a profound sense of humor, and when things go wrong they are generally ready with an explanation. This is by way of introduction to a story told by Miss Madge Tither- adge concerning an incident that oc- curred when she was rehearsing her part of the bara.seed heroine in "`Cha Beit of 1.4(3X" e opening 00110 hi tIIJs play 'baked •i place on board a Spanish galleon, which is extremely difficult to set end "unset," The second scene is sup- posed to occur three hundred years later. Now, at one oi' the final rehearsals it took no less than half an hour to make the cnangc of scene, and the stage manager expressed himself em- phatically on the importance of speed- ing up. "Well," said one of the scene - shifters, "wha.'- half an hour when three hun Ire d years go by?" CHOLERA INFANTUM Cholera infantui i i., one of the fatal ailments of childh ed. It is a trouble that comes on : uddenly, especially during the sumnl• r months, and un- less prompt actieh is taken the little one may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets are :rn ideal medicine in warding off this a.,uhie. They regu- late the bowels a11.1-weeten the stom- ach and thus ere\ent the dreaded summer complain;-. They are an ab- solute safe wee •• ti , being guaran- teed to contain !.'.::her opiates nor narcotics or ether harmful drugs. They cannot pi : ''.} do harm—they always do good. 1'ne Tablets are sold I. y medicine di- 1!!•15 or by mail at 25 cents a box rn The I)r. Wil- liams' Medicine 1 •' . Brockville, Ont. Attacked by I..I!;, Mr. Malcolm Fraser, Cuicairl , r, rt•ived severe in- juries, but is a (proving, and it is confidently hope,i h, may fully recov- er from the injuol••<. The hull knock- ed him down and trampled on him, and it was very (,r:unate that his dog went to his rescue. AN ENGi.ISH COLONEL KITCHEN ER'S HOU BLE There are thousands of persons in England who do not believe that Kitchener i• dead. Part of them re- fuse to credl: his death because they or their friends saw Kitchener alive on the stre, ttf London many months after the tumor that he had gem, down with a torpedoed battleship ; part will net relieve in his death h.• cause of the g.amor of his reputation. These do Cal think any one could have kilned K. of K. because he bor•' a charmed oft.. Kitchener, in 1915, suddenly tii•appeared from view. The rumor began to spread that he had gone down .t:th a ship which had been tarped 1. Of course, during the war nm a. knowledgment of such a disaster •.%;i• made_. Subsequently, it was ,';1 r1:, I that the battleship Hampshire h:..I been lost, and it was rumored the. Kitchener has been an her. -1h1< a;,- in the summer of 1915. In the A ti, 4' un:n of 1917 many per- sons saw kI•.•hener on the streets in Londen ; •o; hers saluted him and civilians e)ed him. No one spoke to him, nor dol he speak to any one, het. his steely blue eyes, his rows of war rihhens on his uniform, his height and figure, all identified the great. P.ri'Ish general. In 1:121 "-me American tourists were in Greece. At Mycenae they shared their g•tide with a tall British officer in 01i ftr and his wife and EXPECTANT MOTHERS Read Mrs. Menard'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 weak and run- down that I could hardly do my work. MI' bead ached contmnally and I was so dis- c otiraged that I could cry from fli*Tnffgtill night. I had another baby justone year and a half old and it gave me a lot to do. So I thought I would try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as I had read so mush about it in the little books. I found et difference right away asp my head was'• relieved and my tired feeliugg gone. . My sister had been doing my Washing and she continued doing it, as she said it Might set me btiieltJf X noted 't° do it again. It Burt—did help, me and 1 find taken just tWO betties wheelmy baby came ETON a fine big' noyc nearly fiv�2 ttkintbs olds % aus. taking your medi'i`citi siltand I alar able to do my watt elf now. i always reeorlt l aid i eget ble (elmpoand to wo to eltpeetant ey need hel Chatham, O�LtvEa. Chathaml, to lob : of irlJ e eek aVVe.°.flee e>tdvt, Mealy eyed sol, f)lttr Itt tri dulous , interest, A flew 4,41* - er 'the parte reached tee t* lin I iixl aftother toWn Iasi 46 t ;o .)6rithh " ser•and bis Ames were I0& ng' is xtalxid w* an the botel• rpg)ster 4•as. Celonel p'tt•'aiid sin,. but the party supposed that was his incognito. The two • parties fell . in with each other the next day axtd joined forces, and for several days thereafter were together, to their mutual pleasure, One morning ons of the tourists, himself an army man, came obit of his room to go to breakfast and met the English party in the hall. The colonel happened that morning to be in uniform. The American seemingly could not help it, for he blurted out: • "Good morn- ing, Lord Kitchener!" The Britisher smiled entd went on down the hall with his daughter. His wife said to the American, "How did you come to say that?",to which he replied:"Well, of cousee we know he says he is Colonel So -and -So, but if he isn't Kitchener then he is certainly Kit- chener's twin brother." Then the Colonel's • wife told the following story: "Kitchener and my husband were junior officers together, and were both at Khartum in 1884-'86. Even in those days, when they were cap- tain and lieutenant, they were often mistaken the one for the other. My husband served in most of the same campaigns as did Kitchener and, therefore, he served out in the East. and was in Egypt and Palestine. In 1917 he was ordered to Londop for some special duty and was in London for ten days. He went back and forth several times a day be- tween his hotel and the War Office. After the ten days were over he returned to his billet in Palestine." This story, to my knowledge, writes Ralph V. D. Magoffin, was told in 1922 to a gathering of men in one of our Atlantic' seaboard cities. After the meeting a man came to the speaker, showed papers which proved that he had been a drummer boy in the Khartum cam- paign. He said he had known both Kitchener and the other officer by sight and reputation and that they were often mistaken for each other. But he went further. He said that no matter what people said about mistaken identity he was one of those who did not believe that Kit- chener was dead, for, said he: "I don't believe anything or anybody could kill Kitchener!" There spoke the voice of the many to whom the charmed life and superhuman repu- tation of K. of K. are beyond the explainable. The party of Americans mentioned was the School of Classical Stu- dies at Rome the year I was di- rector, 1921, and I am the person who had the conversation with the Colonel's wife. He is Lieutenant- Colonel Gray Donald, who was with Allenby's forces. Since his retire- ment he lives oft. a little oasis in the Jordan Valley, below Jericho, and 1, one of the English officers who are trying to make the lower Jordan Valley bloom again. In this episode of odd coincidences lives the truth of the Kitchener legend. Soldiers and civilians in great numbers pass- ed Kitchener's double on the Lon- don streets in 1917. He was his double in every way—height, color of eyes, age and service ribbons. No wonder every one who saw him was sure he had seen the great K. of K. His reappearance and disappearance t' ould only tend to make all specula - nen mare thrilling, hut there was nn passibility of convincing those who hall seen Colonel So -and -So that they had not. seen Kitchener in the flesh. I'OPULARi'i'1' OF WHIPPET FOUND IN ENGINEERING 1larlern European engineering, as inn -educed to America in the Over - i: n l WWhippet., will work a change in the general acceptance of motor pwer. Already the term "activity tarter" is being used by engineers t,. describe the performance possi- ihiiity of the new type motor cars. ' With the older type of engineering, the rated horse -power, was accepted as the basis of comparison. In the Whippet the developed horse -power 'is 100 per cent. greater than the rated horsepower. Such a difference in the indicated power as compared with the realized power has never Lefere been shown in the light car field in this country. It has been common in England and on the con- tinent for the past several years. Ac- tivity factor is the means of compar- ing the power development of the car with the actual developed power. Innovations in the four -cylinder motor as huilt for light. cars, and shown in the Overland Whippet, in- clude such features as extra long cylinder walls to keep the pistons from sliding below the lower edge of the walls at the bottom of the down- stroke, the use of full bond hearings which eliminate the use of shims, ex- tra heavy construction in the crank- shaft and in the cam shaft, four - point suspension in the motor and equally distinctive elements of de- sign in other parts. The same excess of developed pow- er over rated power is brought about by European principles in the "70" Willys-Knight Six Seventy, a car which develops a full fifty-three horse -power from motor dimensions which are usually associated with considerably 'less power than this. It' presents the best achievements in modern engineering as worked out for the Knight sleeve -valve motor. The Overland Six and the Willys- Kndght Great Six show equivalent advantages in engineering through the use of modern engineering: In actual results so far as owners are concerned, greater mileage to the gallon of fuel, greater acceleration, faster speed over the road, longer Life to the motor parts, are the dis- tinguiahing features of modern en- gineering. In the. ehaasis, the strength of the reinforcing members, the depth of the ebanatet in the frame, the efli- •oieney of the {tout -''wheel brakes and tlxe ea11 tri of the 'weight ail the o Oe treint4 aro prom'- f, ifilGtietia migitteerirlg, &irk, bacon,,: dais 1eli- ` digesn, tzT.,ever,Y None of the features of design which are included in the moderniz- ing of motor car construction are untried. They have all been proved in the hardest, kind of us,ige. The high developed horsepower in relation to the rated power has been proved in the racing cars which, with 91:5 cubic inches of piston dis- placement, have achieved speed in -excess of 130 miles -an hour. It' has been proved in the tiny Italian motor which turns over at 7,000 revolutions per minute and develops enormous power at this speed. It is demon- strated every day in the English cars which, with a rater power of from eight horsepower to 15 . horsepower show a developed power of from 14 horsepower, to 30 horsepower. The entire trend among motor car - manufacturers is along the lines of modern .t?rngineering. A study of the cars Which are popular to -day indicates modern engineering to a certain degree. - With, abed two here An' abed bv8 there Here a bum there a tori �/ Frere an! tEere abed bier • The morning after it was discovered BED BUGS—the most disgusting of all insects! Get rid of them with Flit. Flit spray destroys bed bugs, roaches and ants. It searches out the cracks and crevices where they hide and breed, and destroys insects and their eggs. Hills All Household Insects Flit spray also clears your home in a few minutes of disease - bearing flies and mosquitoes. It is clean, safe and easy to use_ Spray Flit on your garments. Flit kills moths and their larvae which eat holes. Extensive testa showed that Flit spray did not stain the most delicate fabrics. Flit is the result of exhaustive research by expert entomol- ogists and chemists. It is harmless to mankind. Flit has replaced the old methods because it kills ail the insects—and does it quickly. Get a Flit can and sprayer today. STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) Distributed in Canada by Fred J. Whitlow & Co., Toronto. DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches "The yellow can with the black band" 1 OOF MAKE YOUR HOME BEAUTIFUL —with a Brantford Roof of Asphalt Slates. You can have a soft toned roof of any color or combination of colors that pleases your taste. They add permanent beauty and value to any kind of home and give years of weather protection and fire resistance. 15 e- 45 i viii&& ' '"�'4.3s fir\ +ilii ''EL-,, iii/ � �������'�i I� M'41711771111. Mir LI \v riil+irri�� 'A�/ r►vrwafire,isii I-- l\�tr_Afii4111rl if 00.0000...0.00000. r: 131FOrd ROOfingCOLimitecl Brantford, Ontario Stock Carried, infformation Furnished and Service on Brantford Roofing rendered by N. Cluff & Sons, 9 Seaforth Wortt1', largest Anneal 'Expedition. Soo acres• -8o Dam• u est ,bu(ldiage `Attendance rgag, 4,491,50p I.efs-- New Ontario Gofrernaler't Building to be opened thfa'ysat. CANAIIIAN NAT I ONAL 4 1.• t•