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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1927-01-28, Page 2Tee .t �if'� itws;rtid, ixlgd9Ykl ,, VRAa a pmt, Oge encth prew s a. r awas areae�ne$kaidowmelet. 'oaax co ild be, simplef thin to settle whole, issue ?�y using the,powe'r ta. ixkeel the: xieedn of the moment? Here we And the' uniqueness of Christ. Be raw that spiritual experience, the sours experi- ence of God was not to be proved by any purely physical manifestations." (Prof. S. H. Hooke). "The temptation to win the empire of all the kingdoms of the world by an act of worship to the Evil One was manifested only a symbol of obedience to the universal Jewish conception of the coming kingdom as a vast structure of materia) force. It was a temptation which every worker for God, weary with the slow progress of goodness, must often feel and to which even good and earnest men have sometimes given way—to begin at the outside instead of with- in, to get first a great shell of ex- ternal conformity to religion and af- terwards fill it with the reality."— ( Stalker). "With the swiftness of •thought. he is transported to the Temple. He sees the busy throngs of worshippers and pictures to Himself the rapture and enthusiasm with which He would be received by them if He should sud- denly appear amongst them, descend- ing, as though upborne by angels in- to their midst. "The suggestion is striking, and the temptation subtle enough. There is Scripture sanction both for the particular form of the expectation and for angelic support if such a-'verl- ture were made. "But the same clearness of vision, always undimmed in Christ, showed Him that if He had found for Him- self that the Father's way of revela- tion was purely spiritual; if He could Himself learn who He was only by way of spiritual experience no other way was possible for others. They must come to know Him, and knowing Him learn what the Kingdom was to be, by the same way, not easy save to little children, the way of spiritual experience."—(S. H. Hooke). Another writer takes a somewhat different view. "The first temptation may very na- turally be supposed to have consist- ed in the suggestion that He should choose comfort rather than hardship. _ This He rejoiced on the ground that there are higher goods than comfort the story is told in Mark, Jesus seems and security; 'man shall not live by • to have waged His great struggle bread alone.' The great question to throughout His wilderness sojourn, be next faced was if He was to aim but as told in Matthew and Luke the at establishing a kingdom of the poli - specific temptations seem to have tical kind which the people generally come at the end of the period"— expected or a kingdom of a spiritual' (George H. Hodges). order. To found and maintain 00 The period in the wilderness mark- earthly kingdom meant the use of ed a crisis in the life of Jesus. No violence, craft, and other Satanic in- human mind can fully comprehend' struments; and of such means He re - all that was involved in the struggle 1 fused to make use. This decision that took place there. Many schol- reached the question remained as to the way in which He was to win be- lief for Himself and His cause. For one with perfect trust in God it was AC"T . , sAirz G erlet5 ed by customers who trade at Dominion Stores. Here is. trier' list of Money Savers. Start now and save regularly by buying r groecriea at the nearest Dominign Store. ri r +� Sil . VALENCIA I. �MINS 151. Pure Orange Marmalade lb. Jar 35C Cwispo Fig Bars 2 lbs. 29C „Shelled Walnuts Imo= la. 15c "TASTY" BREAD MAKES A 0000 PItEAI3QAST —BETTES BOYS AND GIRLS Did yoga get youe Cutout Game yet t Take Sia Tasty Bread m rappers to your nearest Dominion Store d exchange them—FREE of than SEALED— Just as it leaves the owes+. e Bearer Brand Boneless c Chicken 35 t " TEAS RICH)!ELLO Oxo Cubes X916 Toy ran .aatain ng 4 cubes Domino a !).SL. 59- . Peanut C 2 dna 256 ��'k''�'"' 71h. r,ln;Butter i9 Domino Aylmer Smyrna Santa Clara 5 lb. Pail iVOry ilTand Celery Cooking Prunes Corn Soap Tomato 6 oz. Cake !` RelishCatsup Figs Large Size Syrup I9.ot. 15C 216x.21c 2tbs.27c 34C Victory Broad s...et r.tr:ed 400 •'� "Yeast Cakes 6°„,„.1 i�iemes 5_.ot " �..rLorca 0.1.172 d Loal Tarragona Almonds 211 In ShrU •1' ..• • l • • sB SUNDAY AFTERNOON (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) By Thy helpless infant years, By Thy life of want and tears, By Thy fasting and distress In the savage wilderness. By the dread mysterious hour Of the insulting tempter's power, Turn, 0 turn, a favoring eye, Hear our solemn litany! —Sir R. Grant. PRAYER Almienty God, whose Son, our Sa- viour, didst overcorne, in the wilder- ness, the temptatiim of the evil one, grant that we may, by Thy grace, so live in purity of soul, that we may readily discern the approach of sin, and may ever seek refuge and safety in Thee through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR JANUARY 30th Lesson Title—The Christian Over- coming Temptation. Lesson Passages—Luke 4:1-13; 1 Cor. 10, 12, 13. Golden Text—Heb. 2:18. "Yielding to the control of the Holy Spirit, who bad come to Him in a special way at His baptism, Jesus went from the Jordan into the wild- erness, there to meditate undisturbed upon the work God had given Him to do. During forty days spent there He was "tempted of the devil." As Si i^p h ,2„2 or t'htiety�41t, i nice t flex % k�ep `several days •irk pee �r „t walr� �`r A $, ebV diCiy .•aid` s o n hear, ga fid, and Willi the pickle. Rite Surprise. "One cup loot cooked rice, 1, table • spoon gelatie, 4 tablespoons of . su- gar, lee teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon van- illa, 1 .cup cream, whipped. Method. Soak the gelatin*in three tablespoons water for five minutes,. then mix with the hot rice. Add the sugar, 'salt and vanilla, and beat well. i ,.,•sintate= coughs and colds ' lead to serious trouble. You can, op� theca. now with Oregpntulsiop, an emu ified creosote t ha tis pleasan-t to tate. Cr ornnlsion is,,a new medical discovery with two -fold action, it soothes. and heals the inflamed mem, bislilea and inhibits gerw growth. Of all known drugs creosote is recognised by ldghn sedical authorities as one 4f the gre:6test :healing agencies for Persistent coughs aridcolds.and other fornix et tluoat troubles. CCrcpmulsioncontains, inaddition to creosote, other healing elements'''whioh- soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach is absorbedinto the blood, attaoks'the seat of the trouble and cheeks the growth of the germs. Creopmlaion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respiratory diseases, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold is not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist. Creomulsion Co., Limited, Toronto, Oat. required. Mahogany Cleaner. Mahogany tables and desks are fre- quently disfigured by the appearance of white marks caused by the stand- ing of hot dishes upon them without a mat to protect the mahogany. To remove the stains rub on a few drops,, of sweet oil and afterwards polish with a little spirits of wine, using a soft cloth. ars have sought, reverently, to un- to us the results of their search. eepless when Quotations from some of these writ_ a natural suggestion to challenge God s 1 ii st hopeless and helpless—arid when ers will, perhaps, help us to see what to own Him by facing risks in which weakness caused me the most in - our Lord faced during those forty His life could be saved only through ' n'Y Aluminum Cleanser. Dissolye 20 grammes of borax in water and a third as much ammonia as you have water. Shake well to gether, apply the polish until tla. white glittering effect is seen that always on new aluminum articles. Cement For Broken Glass. Plaster of paris mixed into a paste with white of egg makes a strong cement for mending broken glass or china. Bladder Troubles Bother Many Past 40 Seven out of Ten Are Victims, But Writer Tells How "Uratabs" Bring Swift, Amazing Relief ST fa Set aside until it begins to congeal., Beat the cream stiff and fold it in: Pour into a mold . and let it harden. When serving turn it on a platter and pour orange marmalade sauce over it. Devil's Food Cake. One-half cup butter, 11/4, cups white sugar, 2 eggs, 1 cup shaved choco- late, % cup boiling coffee, 2-3 cup chopped walnuts, 1 cup flour, 11.6 teaspoons baking powder, 3 teaspoons vanilla. Method: Cream the butter, add sugar gradually, then add the well beaten eggs. Dissolve the chocolate in boiling coffee and add this and the flavoring to the first mixture. Grad- ually add the flour, which has first been sifted several times with the baking powder, then add the nuts, over which •a little of the flour has been sifted. Beat well, and bake in a moderate oven in a square cake pan. Ice as desired. Spiced Date Cake. One-half cup dates, one-half cup raisins (seeded), 1 teaspoon soda, 1 cup boiling water. Boil ten minutes, then cool. To mixture, add 2 eggs, well beaten, 1 cup white sugar, one- half cup butter, .2 cups flour, 1 tea- spoon nutmeg, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, one-half teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon baking powder. days stone kettles were strewn every- where over the shale, and that granite boulders were scarce' as hen's teeth. In those days, 'too, 'tbe'iwaters of Lake Huron were higher titan they arenow and the stone floor,' now- very much exposed, was then pretty well covered with water. - The question naturally suggests it- self, "What is a kettle?" And the answer is, "Nobody knows." Though, in these latter days, ite seemingly never is. A "kettle" is a mars of stone-. ap- parently a sort of limas' one or sand stone—in the for -I of- a flattened sphere. 'In shape i., is very much like an ordinary household kettle, minu.e handle and spout. Whence the name. Scientists are still puzzled as to the origin of these kettles. It is true, you can find scientists who speak with authority and not as the scribes; but unfortunately they do not all agree upon any one explanation. The average's man's first idea will undoubtedly be that the kettles, like the other boulders, were rounded by water action, and ultimately washed up by the stormy lake. But where the common boulders are usually of granite, the kettles are of something like limestone. Limestone is a sedi- mentary rock; and where sedimentary rocks are formed into boulders, the stratification can always be traced. And, finally, the fragments of broken kettles found here and there on the beach clearly show that the stone kettle is invariably formed from a central pore. In fact, formed a good deal like a snowball, starting small, and constantly growing by symmetrical accretions. • One theory holds that the stone kettles are relies of a tremenduous fusillade of meteors that bombarded this section of mother earth, long aeons before0Ontario was thought of. The theory is interesting. Known meteorites, however, do not resemble the kettles; they have, indeed, a clos- er affinity to the granite boulders with which they are interspersed. The stone kettles undoubtedly have lain for ages buried in the black shale which, exposed at Kettle Point, ex- tends for a long distance into and be- neath the soil of Lambton and prob- ably adjacent counties. Were they there before the shale itself was formed, and was the shale heaped over them by sedimentary ac- tion? This seems doubtful. Hera and there at Kettle Point can be found kettles still partially embedded in the shale, and in every case the shale has warped upward and laterally as well as downward. From this it is argued that after the shale was laid down, the kettle; were formed by the gradual.: accre- tion of certain substances about small central cores. The process must have been a good deal like that whereby a tiny bit of hard substance is intro- duced into the pearl -oyster, and the ' jetted to expertLtests. These showed latter, to relieve the irritation, gradu-' that the shale at Kettle Point, though ably coats the speck of sand with a it undoubtedly contained oil, did not substance of its own making which contain oil enough to make the ven- ultimately forms a pearl. ture worth while. So, in_ course of n_ ntold ages, these Meanwhil , Kettle Point is being denuded of�its kettles; and even to- day the interested visitor finds only a vast scattering of half -rounded granite boulders, with a few lingering kettles too heavy for even a truck to haul away, or too badly broken to interest even the hunter of cheap souvenirs. The tourist from the east had. stopped to change tires in a desolate region of the far south. "I suppose," he remarked to a na- tive onlooker, "that even in these iso- lated parts the bare necessities of life have risen tremendously in price?" "Yer right, stranger," replied the native, "and it ain't worth drinkin' when ye get it." "Parson," exclaimed Ephraim, "I'se got ligion, I tell you." "That's fine, brother! You are go- ing to lay aside all sin?" "Yes, suh.' "You're going to church?" "Yes, sur-ee." 1 "You're oing to care for the "No one knows better than I, the 1 widows " "Sho' am!" hurror of joyless days and • hts Th hive been time "Are you going to pay debts?" "Suh? Dat ain't 'ligion. business." derstand its meaning and have given tense humiliation. Only those who have gone through such tortures can possibly realize my great satisfaction brought me quick relief. URATABS are truly wonderful, and I give them full praise." Such amazing evidence serves as convincing proof of the. distressing ailments so often a handi- cap to those in middle life. Overworked, sluggish Kidneys, Bladder Weakness and Prostate Gland Trouble bring on so many distressing ailments which so often lead to seri- ous diseases that every sufferer from Lameness, Pains in back and down through greins, scanty but frequent urination, "Getting -up -Nights," Ner- vous Irritability and Lack of Force— should try the amazing value of Dr. Southworth's URATABS at once! Any good druggist will supply you on a guarantee of satisfaction or :money days of solitude. "In dealing with the temptation of Christ it is especially necessary t at we should seek to understand the rea- lity of the Temptation, its relation to the actual circumstances in which Christ found Himself, and why it was a 'temptation' at all. It is so neces- sary because here, if anywhere, the life of Christ must have true human meaning. So the writer of the Epis- tle to the Hebrews felt., and he surely. reflected the mind of the early church when he said, 'who was in every re- spect tempted after the same fashion as we are, without sim" "The opening words of the first way alone. He refused to exchange , tat' all it—thou h obedience to God for any other meth -1 really it is all one temptation passing od, and 'In that He himself suffered through successive and related phases being tempted, He is able to succor —show that it is the direct outcome them that are tempted."—(Prof. the.experience at the Baptism. 'If son)• Thou be the Son of God' directly challenges and questions this experi- the interposition of a stupendous mir- acle. But this He put aside as im- pious and cast upon His Father the care of making His path plain while He awaited prudently as well as brave'v, the gradual disclosure of His Patterson in the Bible Dictionary). "It is perfectly obvious, from the Saviour's example, that temptation in some form must be looked for where - ever men are called to serve God or to undertake some task for Him. The Saviour overcame Satan by re- fusing to presume unworthily on God's love. He chose the spiritual 'These lettere, properly rearranged spell the name of a late famous Canadian premier. Can you gness what hi B name was? If you are clever enough to solve this fascinating, but simple problem, you stand a.- chance of becotning the owner of a valuable and highly profitable lot—AT NO COST TO YOU WHATEVER—situated in the valuable oil producing district of the Province of Alberta. All you have to do to stand a chance of becoming the owner of this valuaPle leasehold property is to send us your solution of this problem. If you are declared the whiner you vvill receive a certificate of ownership from a well-known'Canadian 1f:hist company. 'This is an opportunity you should uot neglect. This evening, etetight now, work out the solution of this puzzle and send ye your answer. THIS COUPON -- iLand Lend do. Limited 04 at., lames Street, Montreal 0,0 00000 SENTENCES FOR THOUGHT "You can judge a man by the size of His temptations. The devil never wastes his strength on anybody. When a heart's small and mean he comes to it with small and mean temptations. When it's big and strong and aims high, then he puts out his awful power." — Eden Phill- potts). "Men cannot get rid of temptation hy changing their place of abode. The victory must he won in the soul." —(Archer Wallace). HOME-MADE PASTES AND POLISHES Although there are many excellent varieties of pastes and polishes on the market, it is interesting to put tip one's self some satisfactory pastes and polishes which can be made at little cost. Furniture Polk& One tablespoon turpentine, 1 table- spoon vinegar, 2 tablespoons olive oil. This can be kept in a bottle and should always be well shaken before using. Here is another formula for furni- ture polish which is alai) quite effec- tive: Fusniture Polish. One ounce beeswax, tee ounce castile soap, 1 pint turpentine, Pare the soap and wax and pitiee in a quart bottle, adding the, turpen- tine. Let it remain. for ttienty.four hours and shake the bottle well to mix the Ingredients. Next day shake it well again, and fill the bottle With, water. On the following day it Aoki be of the consistency cif thick email, and it then ready for use. Always shake well before lining. Cement Per Paper Thrit. A good Content Can% Made mho. log powdered rice with, i little told' yaw, stalky ed4g4g, e boiling itaterytill the tiglitc.cotsla 0.1g taloa& 'Alien '4'11A tattd0 BEST REA IPES FROM READERS Combination Soup. • One-half cup rice, 4 cups cold wa- ter, 2 cups raw, diced potatoes, 11/2 cups chopped celery and celery leaves 1 grated onion, 3 cups milk, 2 table- spoons butter, 1 teaspoon minced parsley, one-half teaspoon salt, one- quarter teaspoon pepper. Method: Soak the rice in water until the grains swell up. Put on the stove, add the potatoes, onion and celery. Simmer gently until almost done; then add the milk, butter, salt pepper and minced parsley and finisn Egg Nests. Separate each egg so that the yolk is not broken. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and season with salt. Butter slices of toast and make a nest on each one, using the stiff egg- white. In the centre of each nest place a yolk. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and a metal piece of butter. Put in a moderate even and cook un- til the white is puffed high above the yellow. 'Serve ,stt once. This makes a nice supper dIsh. Clean a two *mild fresh mackerel, mob' agnalmatofts. CHILDREN LIKE THEM Baby's your Dat's Own Tablets Are Effective and Easy to Give. You do not have to coax and threat- en to get the little ones to take Baby's Own Tablets. The ease with which they are given, as compared with liquid medicines, will appeal to every mother. None is spilled or wasted; you know just how big a dose has "reached the little stomach. As a rem- edy for the ilLs of childhood arising from derangement of the stomach and bowels they are most satisfactory. Mrs. Rose Veyer, Willimantic, Conn., says:—"I used Baby's Own Tablets in the Canadian Northwest and found them a wonderful; medicine for children's troubles, especially in- digestion and constipation. I have also given them to my children for simple fever and the restlessness ac- companying teething and they always gave relief. I can recommend Baby's Own Tablets to all mothers." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. THE VANISHING KETTLES OF KETTLE POINT It looks as though the famous ket- tles of Kettle Point will shortly be- come as extinct as the Great Auk, the dodo, the moa, the hairy mammoth, the pterodactyl, the brontosaurius and other creatures the noise ef whose comings and goings once filled the earth. So, at le,est, say a goOd many west- ern Ontario citizen who, having dec- orated their own front yards and gete posts with these unique products of nature's workshop, are now solicitious to preserve the few survivors for pos- terity. The stone kettles of Kettle Point are, it is claimed, unique, or almost soe Nowhere else,irretheee___,wcrerld is to be seen just suchi, a display as con- fronts the eye of the wayfarer as, cresting the low bluff. which marks the northernmost point of the Indian reserve, he gazes across the wide ee- parse of fiat black shales stretching away into the blue of Lake Huron. lid teach Kettle Point you go to Forest; and thenee motor to the Io- nian reserve. A drive through the well-*ooded reserve bring% yon, ulti- mately, to 04) Point, and you of trees to What looks at filet sight like a far-reaChing but some -What broken stone paveteent. But before yen sersiinble down, you obsetve that tide We expanse is strewn with What leek tinge, reunded 4Jouldeo. ;Ana wieet. el, 'the store's, You see distarec.:ptore, et closet tr. o ort, to.:. houltiers--fiething ere, ,,,POt here and there a linger- ntinivOr of lb) tanaella Stene .rt fairways thott,ad tbsto'. 72 7 • ' beneath . the soil of tl1 Soutktweste Q.ntall0 pgninsLs1'a. ,; -Bo fa'r as settlement• xs, 0010er2ed, - this`'northern oa:tio o Inalatom county is one of the neWest.-io orris of Ontaarlo.- The kettles of • tittle Point were known to chance travellers a century or more ago; but fifty years ago, according to eld-timers,, they seem to have still remained untouch- ed. When some hardy .pioneer was seek- ing an inexpensive ornament for the _ new house which, replaced- hie first log cabin, he was seized with the idea of decorating his premises With one of these curious rounded stones. Af- ter that, there was a boom in kettles —and the marvelous display of the earlier days dwindled, as the kettles were carried to various points in southwestern Ontario. One of the new bridges in this part of Lambton county has a quartet of kettles decorating the bridge ap- proaches. They would probably have been carted away by tourists long ago if the precaution had not been taken of firmly anchoring them in cement. The Indians of Kettle Point are re- puted to deeply resent the removal of the kettles. Early tourists attributed this feeling to some Hagan supersti- tion which endowed the rounded stones with supernatural qualities. A few years ago a visitor searched the_beach vainly for a kettle of port- able proportions to take home as a trophy. He ventured to interrogate the first noble red man he met as to the possibility of seeuring one. The noble red man glowered and uttered a deal of guttural anathema, so that the visiting paleface had via-. ions of the threatening warwhoop, the deadly tomahawk, and a scalp with, as it happened, relatively thin hair, decorating the smoky interior of a tepee. He produced a propitiatory $5 bill. Instantly the noble I'M man sound- ed a different note. The growling gutturals gave place to a glad falset- to. And the brave promptly waded into shallow water and by dint of prodigious exertions fished up from the lake bed three beautiful, hand- somely rounded and very attractive kettles, which to -day decorate the visitor's front lawn, in a community some sixty miles away. The black shale itself is an inter- esting exhibit. On several occasions it has taken fire from camp fires built on the beach ;and one such fire inl the shale is known to have smoldered for three months, the burnt shale turning frome a dull brown or black to a blood -red. It is unquestionably an oil shale, somewhat similar to the famous Albert shales of New Brans" wick. A few years. ago local men inter- ested themselves in the possibility of mining the shale and extracting the oil. Samples- of the shale were sub - kettles ing' the softer shale up and down and out to either side. And in course of still other ages, the encroaching wa- ters of the lake, breaking up tha shale, have released the kettles—or at least some of them. Myriads of others, undoubtedly, are still buried 222 Door that Sags 'Come he (TORONTO BRANCHES : 649 Danforth`Ave.• Cor. OTHER BRANCHES AT: Aylmer, eleatitfoele Ottawa, Owen Sound, Pembroke, Seaford:, St. Catharines, te, - Mary's, Wafkerfon, Woodstock. spirit of cordiality that pervades every branch of your Govertivnt Saving's Office. Remember, this is your cgin. institution and it exists only serve you. You may deposit—either in person 6r by Alail—any amount from a dollar- up. You may make withdrawals any time without notice. 7 V