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The Huron Expositor, 1926-10-22, Page 2ii ri STOCf T lY —For building or whitewasbrig', WALL PLASTER—For immediate use.. AND CEMENT—Always fresh. Also isole agents for GYPROC O. A. Sills & Sons T.j fr ti It' 4a` kl 6 More Economical The higher duality of the ingredients is responsible for the fact that you use only half the quantity of polish, when you shine your shoes with "Nugget". GGE nth 99 Black -Tan -Toney Red -Dark Brown and White -' 18 the EN UP THE CANADA STARCH CO., LIMITED, MONTREAL. 8G5 Fine Shetland Pony To be Given Away Free Ape ■ How many votes have you got in the Pony contest or how near the toP? is you favorite...,,..,. The boys and girls are making a wonderful showing and the list is changing every week. You girls and boys who have not entered yet— lots' of room for you, both' from the town and coun- try, and your friends will be glad to help you win. met wait .any longer, start to -day. Ballot -box at E. Drug Store. littp, fell -Owing Merchants will give you votes on all east par- i lia3 i alid cash 'paid an accounts of 25 cents and up:' Ask for them. GO, I. E. KEA.TING, es. Seaforth Pharmacy. ►AT, BEA BROS., I%''ar & CIna«-It *WA/it, r�. �r- Isaw s1f� ,. r ena�e.14:4' . ",tIAem titust g ven „ia 4 o>ir 'Ilxqugh Jesup` Amen.' $. LESSON VG* GC 24th Utmost Title 09499, 1stttel'a Neevv:. Leader. !rIohuaPa 1.1`a 19- era 27:1; 8- Golden Teat,-,Josh'a.-19. When Moses was 'warned of God that his life -work was drhwi near its close he did not look aboutfor a suitable successor. He . might have done ito, selecting one from among the rulers and judges, whom, upon the advice of Jethro, he had set over the people or one of his own family, Instead he took -counsel with God, who alone could choose a worthy and competent leader to take the children of Israel .over theborder and settle them and keep them true to Himself in their new surroundings. Moses prayed to God saying: "Let the Lord, the God of the spirits of all flesh, set a man over the congre- gation, which may ge out before them and which may go in before them, and which may lead them out and which may bring them in; that the congregation of the Lord be not as sheep which have no shepherd" (16-17). In this prayer Moses ac- knowledged the suprernity of Gpd over man and that He alone could - therefore appoint the man best fitted to be "a shepherd over the sheep." In using this expression he showed his yearning concern for the people over whom he had been appointed as leader in the beginning of their wild- erness journey. In answer to this prayer God instructed Moses to or- dain Joshua for he is "a man in whom is the spirit." Joshua had shown himself to be a map of cour- age when sent by Moses to fight with Amalek: he had shown his faith in witnessing against the report of the evil spies and his humility always in his hearing towards Moses. This was the character of the man upon whom the choice Of God fell. Moseswas instructed how to or- dain him to his office. He was to lay his hand upon him in token of the transferring of the government from the one to the other. He was to pre- sent him to Eleazar, the priest and the people, that they, might recognize him as chosen of God and consent to that choice. He was to give Joshua a charge—the sheep were to be sol- emnly committed to the shepherd's care and he was to be madeaccount- airle for them. Moses was to take -Joshua into partnership with him, while he lived, acting as his assist- ant, and thus receiving a share of the honor given to Moses. The people would thus become accustomed to his rule and would obey more readily after the removal of Moses. "Thou shalt put some of thine honor upon him, that all the congregation of the children of Israel may be obedient. Moses was also to charge Joshua to use the ministry of the high priest. Though he was full of the Spirit, yet he must do nothing without asking counsel of God. Their going out and their coming_ in must all be under the guidance of God. Moses did according as he was di- rected and thus resigned his leader- ship into other hands, passing over the members of his own family, leav- ing them in the rank of common Le- vites. Bishop Patrick says this shows Moses to have had a principle which raised him above all other law- givers, who always took care to establish their families in some share of that greatness, which they themselves possessed; but hereby it appeated Moses acted not from him- self because he acted not for himself. After the death of Moses God spake directly to Joshua as He had done to Moses. Though Moses had charged Joshua to approach God through the High Priest yet for his encouragement God came to him with instructions to proceed to carry on. "Now, therefore, arse, go over this Jordan, thou, and all this people." At the very beginning he was faced tV by a situation that called for faith. He was to cross the Jordan, whose banks were at this time overflowing, it being the time of harvest (2:15). Going over Jordan was going into Canaan, and God had said RP had riven it to the children of Israel. "Every piece that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, that have I given unto you, as I said unto Mosen.". God gave Joshua the promise that me presence would go with him in this great work to which he had been called. As God had been with Moses directing and sustaining him all through the wilderness journey, eo Re would he with Joshua in his task of settling them in the new land. "T will,not fail thee, nor forsake thee." He also had God's assurance that no enemy would overcome him but rather that he would triumph. "There shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of the life." What he began he was assur- ed would be carried through if he had faith and courage to do as .Moses had commanded him. "Only be thou strong and very courageous, that thee mayest cheerers to do according to till, the law which Moses my sers vant commanded thee: turn not front it to the right hand or to the left that thee mayest prosper whitherso.:• ever thou goest " Joshua wais then told to eolifo•'ni himaelf in everything in ,the law of Ood, making ft the rub o his life He Wats itt the stilet df isi busy'' life act take, time to teeniest upon autll. lett:. It was to Ice a lamp -tuft Itis feet and a light unit hisi. path aitd bj+°. bathif good heed tcs t?3 ettern ,heli Mid 'hy snettingg tli-en ieifore ilio. ped- Ole for ;coir direeti:b God (p>h1fded., Irt ee i 31r 1i1s fe'Oats ^k. tli 1' t tli7C;41.4.0� itialfe f. ha t • >", ra ?mid tli+"tr s` dk ViS *ERA: L e i't Q i ix t • 1 ieS, CANAL { 7.411:07. 41LLETT CO. LTD. 11401•410, `Are, , • Christiaer ation in North Am- erica was: `'Ottganized at Hamilton, New York, -Sept. -'nd to 6th. Few people realized; at that time the sig- t� nificance .f :the organization and even fewer ..people realized' the in- fluence that -was to come fives the great men eielis wore in tire making in that group:. - Then they were com- paratively n'nknown students. Now the unknowfl tudrnts are well known men. Amon ;the officers elected in 1909 were- f,ten, Tsao, Kuo, Han, Yui, and Wastes Dr. Chen is now First Secretary of the Chinese Em- bassy in London, Mr, Tsao, President of Tsingbu ::;,College, Peking ; Dr. Kuo, President of Southeastern Na- tional University, Nanking; Dr. Han, Director of • Goet•rnment Forestry Bureau, Peking; IIr. Yui, General Secretary of the National Y. M. C. A. of China; Dr. Wang, Commissioner for the Reltabilita t i"n of Shantung. On Marclz-7 to 'i, a group of Chris- tian Oriental,etteisnts from the Col- leges of Iowa representing India, Crina, Japan; Korea and the Philip- ine Islands,• ;met in the State Con- ference of Orientals at Coe College, Cedar Rapid's„ Iowa, and were the guests of the .people of Cedar Rap- ids. Fifteen yeas from now another story wile be•wr'ittsn of who they are and what they ha a done. A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOR AILING CHILDREN MILLER'S WORM POWDERS ewers,e NO NAReorea. KAM, T AK EN. gt,ip(,-Y AND 7140Ro lo"t, v 4.awNsekvioi TNAL MOST ottlACIC.1111OVOITION. As BW E art At gWAR WILLINGDON cop), BUT "GOOD F ELLOW." In the smokereom-of the House of Commons, where theydo.not as a rule pay compliments, it. -vas said of Free- town Freeman -Thomas, now Viscount Willingdon and the new Governor- General of Canada, that he had a career before him, because he dressed so exceedingly well and concealed his feelings so admirably, , It was beyond dispute, says a London correspondent of the New York Herald-Tribune,tbat Mr. Freeman-Thon'ras bad other qual- ities that make for success, but it was CRRIED WIFE TO BED Suffered So Stie Coded Not Walk. Rtestorrcb to, Health by Lydia E. Plnl Barn's Vegetable cot ipiound Minesing, Ontario.,-•t°Y am a•prac tical nurse and I reentinnend Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetablecompou nd to suffering women. Fuitlirtie months I was almost helpleaa: and meld not sit at the table long enough to drink a cup of tea. Many a',time;my. hus- bangbd carried en me he retatare rerlie1:would be weak. Thd)n a paper of a woman suffering --as did who got betterafter tekinikle4 Vegetable Compound, eo he ' 4114.0t.t for Me. When, had ia�ti:rebottles I was just like Wit , woman std have had splendid ,11 ever since. When I feel any h -down pains 'bottle always take .a Lt ishmif only medicine andd died" act aa' y one about it. An t knowinot%et tL + ii• `Pinkhsna'a Ye- Mee 'Coln a > . i t ii '�`iadklr honto rep. or Id ` t o I spa andsn t� oftt'e41 1, oI 5 r; 11 9t? ells his part ll 'he ;w totater .and Woe o a `� Q Mr. oyd Gcoxge in.' btori ny , s.,when he latter, as Ch: cellon o t the ue , s t la? Pell a , e slten ce o his i a io arse budget;: `high the House of Lox" had threatened .to t.�trow;04..Th'c. h 1p_L rel Willingdon gave 'Mr ;Lloyd. ti a Ion is ed :ntlanly°- t'he 'v.:pst axra . of figures and facts Which ' `he :00 0110. ;for his chief, with laborious came': Mr; Freeman -Thomas got his reward for his servieee- in the: sli'ape' of ,e peerage, and in 1910 became: orozl Willingdon. In :the ' House;•of Lards .he;wa,'s 'izt an etn;osphere• that. suited him far -better than -that of ,.the. House' of Commons. Althouggh� ad entered Parliament as a_ -Liberal - he' _ Liberal - he wire an aristocrat by birth anti,: steered in the traditions of an ancient and :wealthy family. He was a• good" sportsman. As a young Man he was • regarded as one of the crank shots of his_ native county of Sussex, and one of_ the -best in England. t a shoot at Chatsworth in the time, 'of the ' late• Duke pf Devonshire, he first toot Kittg George, then'Prinee of Wades. '.His MajenVe Majestyat the end of the' day compiimentc d Mr, Freemaan- Thomas on hie shooting,` and said to 3ilrri, "Waith practice yoi will become o ane. of the best shots in' England." "I neat afraid, sir;" was the" reply, "I will not -have much- time for-prec- tiee. I want to enter Parliament." Lord Willingdon, had he followed his own inclinations. night have re- mained Mr. Freeman -Thomas. He might have become one of the crack shots in England, and almost certain- ly a test match player in cricket, for he captained the Eton and Tater the. Cambridge- cricket elevens. After he had been rained to the peerage King George appointed him a lord -in -wait- ing. That was in 1911. Lord Wil- lingdon had met his Majesty on a few oeeasions since his first meeting with him, but the King had made no refers ence to the brief conversation that had then taken place between them. But it was clear th-et his Majesty had not forgotten it and had watched Lord Willingdon's career with interest. In 1913 he was appointed Governor of Bombay, and later Governor of Ma- dras, and for his services was raised a step in the peerage and created Vis- count Willingdon. Though reserved in manner, the new Governor-General is a man of the kindliest disposition and widest synipathies. When he was a junior Lord of the Treasury someone once remarked to Mr. As- quith, then Chancellor of the Exchequ- er: "What an icy fellow that Junior Lord of yours is." "Very icy," was the reply, "until you come to know hon. Then you discover what' a good fellow he is." In the division of Cornwall, which he represented in Parliament front 190d until he was raised to the peer- age, Ford Willingdon won a personal popularity not easy to gain for a man who was a stranger to the county, for the Cornwall people are extraordin- arily critical of outsiders. At the first big gathering, Mr. Freeman -Thomas addressed at Bod- min, when he was standing for the division, someone asked him, in lan- guage more forcible than polite, why in the name of something they should vote for a man who was aimegt a stranger to them. "Let us get to know you and we'll see what we think of you," said the speaker. The candi- date replied: "All right. I'll go for a walking. tour here, and perhaps at the- end of it you'll know more about - me." And that is what Mr. Freeman e. Thomas did. And when he was elect- ed by a majority of 4,000 over his Conservative rival, the latter, when the result of the election was declared, said in his speech: "My opponent, I am bound to admit, has walked away with this electron." And the joke is still told in Cornwall. SKILL IN DRIVING 15 SMOOTH,- QUIET MOOTH,QUIET OPERATION THAT PRO- LONGS CAR'S LIFE Anyone can soon learn to sit behind the driving wheel and drive in such a way that the ear is kept on the right side of the road or -driven in at car tain direction, but yqu have probab'- ly noticed that some. drivers are Mare' akillftrl than others. - A skillful driver shows hitear+tfrioirt,, the moment the etelmeis strcrt it) move. For a start the °good driver never races 'up the engine so that'lt roar, as he is letting an the clutch to n-. gage firrt spied The engine should: be accal_eraterl-Jtls•t fot enough Sb that•'as the cluteli fa':let 3it'fbte ear -moves :4! swaothlyl And y is e ft out 3ugderi J . k o crke If ;volx rivit eIo a to •hila'. sy}idqep, oy�f,y, t11 b, ill 1 asri Wheel* �egq�L filiiie telae a the ste•t tUecesa ver e 1S II t : A a e 2. e : dt MACARONI OR SPAGHETTI 3 Ib .- M!NCIEMEAT 21b a, DOMINION CORN:, FLAKES 3:pkts.: • k-Rfst MOL.ASSES SNAPS 3Ibs. CRISP " Ot.'E PAPE (Verything 6 rolls CENTS :. Bot oQU,EE OJ.LVESS.2 loft,. • .DOMINO 8 O 1 -Ib. tis: 1DOI9NIION STORES "tiiR`a"J Ther*" Prices its effect for one weeXt,.fxam daterpf` Disse to top, Change from first to second gear when you are moving betereeni 7 and 8 miles an hour and; change' from second to top when yon. are moving between 12 or 15 miles ' an hour, The good driver can change gears so skilfully that if'you are sitting in the rear seat it is difficult to tell from the motion of the ear or the speed it is travelling just when the gears were changed, so smoothly is the operation carried out.' Once on top gear the skillful driver shows his skill in a member of •ways. First on the way the, accelerator _in handled. The poor driver will step, on it one second and let it up the next, easing the car to shoot' for- ward with a jerk one second and Slott' down the next. When the aecelerato* is depressed suddenly the engine is; accelerated• violently and the suddenh application of power to the tranasnis- cion throws a heavy strain, on it and is the cause of broken axle and pro- pelled shafts, stripped ,.gears, etc. f 1 +a1, 44 o �!o-41%�[°c'�6wa `� /^^_' 1"1i ti: a ` . L8 '9XX:F, �►�' Just a Lithe Girl. Who Loved to Sing If you have a young daughter, tins ,story is for • ou:a v �. Ii s true story of an Ontario girl --a little girt who ..,,,k n'juao� because she was happy Without knowing the child had any exceptional talent, the parents bought a piano and engaged a teacher. The girl was ih her teens and had absorbed the fundamentals of music, playing with considerable skill, before she realized that piano study in her case was to be a stepping stone to vocal study. She had a voice --a voice to make others happy as well a herself. It was a Mason & Risch that led her along the path to success: Today -and she is still a young girl -rhe is acclaimed as one of Canada's greatest dramatic singers. 41 The 'Music Teacher Then is one in your nrighb thood wh Will both inertia gnd'incpire your -dila MASON, tt YOUR DAUGHTER may have latent talent --to play the piano superbly, to sing, to be a great iriolinist:< Whatever her,. maceicgtl •ability it can 'best be discovered throng h picssjo study—the -basis of tell music.. Give- her the advantage of tuning her ear to the ` pure tones of a Mason Bs Ruth -- "Ther Piano with a Soul," 97 comm IO STREET,; STRATFORD, ONT. �:n (1 ° �tl a ��� ha "est•'" �� "'""�,e°•. itn4 -, o:, Yu rt�iS Q�� /'nn 4,4 f d fX 'f$O d Atrd'.Lock slates 17elthat galest,r' :es*. 414017 can budge .'them = and, they last for; ;ears.,.; v.. Tho low, :Oita and ami.laying east''make . ke 'tIfein tke Y1 batt- econoin i •roof of . optional +**.mile:° You• Bari lay.' plena over' d 4 :44 it 5 1 -t e ,M AAA V 5•