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The Huron Expositor, 1928-12-07, Page 2
fY JI 144 it rr 114 GAM we are faced with the importance of con Trig our Chris as Diving te, eft. that are practical. A,gaini, we roust exhibit true economy in our choir ogpresents ifor father, +rother, sister and broc I',er. You should realize that the place to as s, n this kin of tuft is in a hardware store—for in our business nothing is placedhi stock that is not a truly needed rticlle. hi elms Hardware Shop you, will find everything necessary from which to make groans Via? selection for the entire ffaannnIly. 7t°a� BEirsiki some re:DI ua NII I alp pv Ste rill OUNCES ,14.9tiTER & STRONGER.' CS Noes of s- o :721uE u -.-, 4a®taoa S T yland:Dicovred= WE HAVE IIT . ©vs ©l LE desarIlp he AlS9 C ETS9 Guns, attach©re 11ociis9 Sunes,L63.1, ,akbowds, E ©Tang neelEnAcaL e Gods The Emesjes SKATES. The famous AUTO sionals, in tube and solid frame Special Tube Skate at Brand, used by all pro£es- C1L to MOO $2058 IPt SLE lig IffIS` snail elleEsiti 1 rpeu h ocrIEZY STICKS Fla Spaulding's own brand of Hockey Sticks. Great values; finest material at 26© to L2E SLEIGHS, in bob or steeringI ❑57�� ' patterns �'O ta to (1 SIIILVIERWARIE AND CU'II'ILIEEff—Kn ives9 Forks, Spoons, Trays iys In Adam or Mary Stuart Patterns—A full gine Pocket Knives in Pearl, Stag 28© to mat �O of single pieces. or Horn handle ej o Stainless Knives ill i to $57 0O Carving Sets in Stainless (�/� [� to $(C 00 per set of six u oe1 a U n e�j'�} c�O �lol steel, per set n 9 FOR TIIHIIE HOUSEWIFE Flour Cans, 100 pounds in white Bread Box with roll for top New CoIexnan Lamps instant light Pyrex Ware from • $3u75 5 V3.00 $1.25 t° $2.75 $3,50 Pyrex Casserole, with frame for Pyrex Pie Plates, with frame for Hot Dish Mats, fancy 3 for Nickel Plated Tea Pots from Granite Roast Pana from 50c $2.00 t° $2A $ .50 t° S3.0 I:: BASS GOODS East Indian hand carved Bowl u 5Q06 Chinese Brass Bowl $2.50 with stand hand carved Chinese Brass Candlesticks $2o2 pair Brass Ash Tray • for Dutch Silver Dishes at Alarm Clocks at V AG t° $L25 Granite Tea Pots, fancy ti at Nickel Tea Kettles from • ,$1.50 Tea Kettles from Percolators from Trays from ALUMINUM $L q 110 tO $ .75 Il a0® to $I.25 Dozens of WA I',: IE Sauce Pans pet set Double Boilers at Pudding Dishes per set Other Items. JOIARD V 1% Alit+,lE, PLUMBING C( C`I Madam i IT your husband or your brother chews tobacco, ask him to try I::lig ;ten, the famous plug chewing tobacco, for every plug of ]Big l:,en carries a "Poker Hand," and in exchange for four (4) sets of "Poker Hands" (Nos. 1 to 52) you will receive FREE one pair of Kayser Pure Silk Pull _°ashio4ned' Stockings. These stockings are excellent qualify, conform to the deg, and retain their shave. Sizes, 9.3.6 and 10; its Patio (f aawn), Hoggaa (flesh), an Somata (grey). ng Gra mighty in tobacco mad Jit�l!(�Ctdl u iba Y c�ftIl lD� � o (. 11) _+1• y� Z. 'i r 1L FURNACIg W WRIM $lil+D2 11 .00 $1.06 SUNDAY AFTERNOON (By Is'abel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) I'm not ashamed to own my Lord, Or to defend His cause, Maintain the glory of His cross, And honor all His laws. Then will He own His servant's name Before Has Fat'her's fpce, ,And• in the new Jerusalem Appoint my soul a place. Isaac Watts. P i'. AYER We pray Thee our Father that in all experiences through which Thou makest us to pass, the assurance of Thy rule in the affairs of men may be our confidence and consolation. Strengthen us for all endurance and may we have victory over self and sin through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR DECEMBER 9th Lesson Topic --Paul Goes to Roane. Lesson Passage—Acts 28 : 11-24, 38, 31. Golden Text -1 :, nn. 1:16. After wintering on the island of Melita, Paul and his companion, un- der the escort of the Centurion, took passage in a ship of Alexandria and in due time reached their destina- tion. 'The Roman congregation had been notified of the corning of Paul, and so the brethren, despatched a de- putation to meet an apostle with whom they were already -well ac- quainted through the epistle he had sent them. Two deputations from the Roman Ohureh met hitt, one at Appii Forum, about thirty miles from. the city, another at the Three Ta- verns, about twenty railee out. Hem wonderfully the heart of the Anile must have hewn, ehs,re-d by there kindly !Christian alert -Wad Support and synaoatity were im snndfeS TIcQ- ed than every before, ger Si;. l?aul was saint up too 'Aline not litasoredtkOMTria should ]nap an to lain wae; ani what should, los kit sentence at t tw kualvll ol .Vbalb 3' tnapaar* what teal arse-:. ter was now famous. When Paul saw the brethren "he thanked God and took courage." No doubt the thoughtful centurion gave then op- portunities for private conversation. Having arrived at the imperial city cam menl,scgarmuzwegn ffov ge1gszno.si al Ccalltis ]For any weakness of throat, or chest, for a troublesome cough, for bronchitis, grippe or other respiratory' affec- tions—the best remedy is ANGNE]R'S EMULSION. It l osens and helps bring up the phlegm,soothes the throat,chest, stomach and "intestines — aids digestion and assimilation, over- comes constipation, and exerts strengthening, tonic inlhiaence upon the whole; system ANG1IlER'S is an emulsion of specially purified petroleum oil with hypophosphi tes of lime and soda. P1 e a s a n t to take, ANGli]E r 'S agrees perfectly with delicate, sensitive stomachs. ariticlo actorvrltaor "Thom lofordribod GSaelgka,'e for d6goordlo f vosaoblo happ in ronorotfdblfYotor ahooff a8eo- o.ona u^oal--E.D. J J•i cl l ll> l: S.' ii4' Its;' • Ai" fie lL�Y ld'sr' 1p3i 11-4 !i iid Pie sir r. 111) Julius hastened to present himself and his charge to the captain of the praetorian guard, whose duty it was to receive prisoners consigned to the judgment of the Emperor. Upon the favorable report of Julius, St. l'aul was not detained in custody, but saffered to dwell in his own hired s:on station whence he labored most effectively both amongst Jewe and Gehtiles during two whole years. He began his work at Rome exactly as he did everywhere else. He called tegether the chief of the Jevas three days after his arrival. How, it may be thought, could an unlcilown Jew -entering Rome venture to summon the heads of the Jewish commonity, many- of them men of wealth and position? But, then, we must re- member that St. Paul was no ordin- ary Jew from the point of view tak- en by Roman society. He had arriv- ed in Rome a state prisoner, and he was a Roman citizen of Jewish birth, and this at once gave him position entitling him to a certain amount of censicleration. St Paul told his story to theee chief men of the Jews, recounted the bad treatment he had received at the hands of the Jevrs of Jerusalem, and indicated the charac- ter of his teaching which he wished to expound to them. "For this cause therefore did I entreat you to see and ,speak with sne; because that for the hope of Israel I am boundewith this el.ain." Having thus briefly indicat- ed his desires, the Jewish council in- tintated that no communication had been made to them from Jerusalem They, howesree, being desirous of healirig .hied. at length, appointed a time and gathered at his Iodgirtgs. As he bad done on previous occasioins peetieularlY before Algrippa, Paul poieted otrt the gradual development of Goch purpose. in the law and tilt, proptiptq, showing hbw they bad all with the JevOn at Bone it htvil been Sm. 'Ma tiettim vat; 0210 Ittett • t• .YR11SLiy..' 7 ???777 i 1 ,�• � ;.,519' t� i1'. !!: �� a+ x, .) ki yap d+i ' ' ,, 1 v r rx'�„ �' u..i. -t. 1*, .4 i 11 u l r {�;� I ' 112 ygi r. p3�1 y1neva v j M• n M a n LIQ I K E 1i E ► OF AN ACC S' " C You will want your oar. repai sd a>d gd41d as new. We have fthe largest, most eeral ]lit + nglglpw ped Auto Body Repair Depal''tmcnt ),u y Western Ontario and do ail our own work. If it's a badly, wrecked or 'or ust .a fender dint let us do it and be assured of a; `agoedas new" job. in 4o -d - --Drive out to ntrnr . nem Metcalf 5n4— Verses Testi 4 'll' et $4c. ° ' sews ;, ill `< ;; 3 Y Y iYaG:1 1Qi:(r la..l. V I ],..41,41,1,..,m kiW 11,kda, .11.14.0 'P r tt a', 1r 11310,10, 117r110,..,,,,,,,,, �N s ,-•'.^ .., to 1 v �r ,r i� r w ¢ ��Tiii!lIlNNJ���"'''����\\ "���^^^"'KKK ii ses From morning till evening the As if fear ever did any. good? Ile disputation ccntinued till at last th3 . the spirits of men action is equal tit' Apostle dismissed them with the stern words of the Prophet Isaiah where he depicts the hopeless state of those who obstinately close their ears to the voice of conviction. But the Jews of Rome do not seem to have been like those of other cities, for they did not actively oppose or attempt to silence St. Paul by violent means, for the past ,glimpse we gt t of the Apostle in St. Luke's narrative is this: "He abode two whole years in his own hired dwelling, and received all that went in with him, preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching the things concerned the Lord Jesus Christ with all boldness, none for- bidding him."—The Expositor's Bible WORLD MISSIONS Shall We Slhorten Our Lines? A Strong Argument from the London Times. The prudent policy for an army hard pressed is to shorten its linen. I may be assumed that the Church is hard pressed, both in men and in material; its wisdom, therefore, would appear to lie in a bold shorten- irg of the lines, and that must mean a concentration upon the miss'ons which wait at its door—its "far-flung battle -line" must be surrendered, and the Church must call upon its sons to defend its cause, threatened by skep tkism or indifference at home, So the argument runs. But the Church with one voice has rejected this logic in obedience to a lrgic of its own—the log of spiritual experience. eflhe ablest minds in the Church will not hear of a shortened line; and at no time have there been so many powerful minds' concerned with the foreign missionary enter- prise as there are to -day. The un- pardonable sin for a modern man is t) despair of the human family, or demand a safety for himself or ha people which is not offered to all. We are not saved, it has been well slid, except in a saved race. The Church, believing as'it roust de that in its Gospel there is a sure "pit itual foundation for mankind. canno- limit its vision or its service. N - can it do its work piecemeal: it can- not finish its task in Europe and e terwards eh -gin in Asia. "Through oe.t Asia there is in process a com- plete transformation of socia; 'nsti- tutions, habits, standards, anal be- liefs. The movement is unceasing it will as little wait on our conven- ience as the tides of the sea." The Church, indeed, so far from thineing that the missionary enterprise can be delayed, is stricken by remorse to know that it is late, almost too late, with the offer of a faith to which all the spiritual strivings of the East have moved. In the early days of Protestant missions, with an audacity and a pas- sion beyond all praise, the mission- aries sought to win individual believ- ers for the faith. Afterwards the Church was able to dream of a Church arising in the East and in the South, and the dream, in a measure, has come true. There has now come to the seers a vision of nations ac- cepting as a basis of their life the spiritual values of the Gospel. They read the missionary enterprise in terms of, the statesmanship which alone can be tolerated in the coming age—the statesmanship which' thinks internationally and takes into its range the whole world. The vision glows before the Church of the day when nations shall come to the Light, and kings to the brightness of His ap- pearing. First in the list of Canadian Farm papers is the., Family Herald and Weekly Star, Montreal. It's only $1 a year or three years for $2. It is attracting world-wide attention. THE CRUELTY OF FEAR "The cause of atrocities," says John Galsworthy, "is generally the violence cf fear. Panic's at the back of most crimes and follies." Never was a truer word spoken., Pear has many and hideous whelps. Despair and suicide, failure and spoil- ed work, quarrels, disloyalty and crime; als.o cruelty, worst of all. They all take after their mother, who is the arch enemy of men. Many a dog has been driven mad because being abused lie :became a- fraid, and in his demented confusion snapped at his pursuers, bit even those who tried to befriend hint The stag at bay will fight like a tiger. The horse unnerved by terror will try to kill its keeper. The gen- tlest animals, ,stinaulated by terror, are dangerous. Drive a man into eorner and there is no telling Whet he will do. Under the mad instinet self-preservatioe he will forget all moralities, all ern- pathies1 be will be a man ITO 11/16113, but a wolf. trttoltieg of the underworld are due to the eonstant teereelzhag watched by the police, Ofireaened; browbeaten, clubbed., thitelelegeeeda:- All under the worldOld delusion that .e fear prevents crime. reaction. The mere fear, the moeee violence. Every reign of terror ends in a reign of blood. Keep a child in a state of terra - and every !vicious, heartless arid vine dicative trait in him grows. It is the surest way to bring up a criminal. Kindness ia the sister of Coinne, belong only to the unafraid. Fele shivels the heart, darkens it, nute. only the batlike brutalitieis remain. War is caused by fear. It new seem a proud. thing to make other, nations dread us, to impose upoD. them by superior fleets and armies; But never so was peace .preserved, Intimidation is but unstable sand upozu which to erect national security. The Freneh people were afraid, and there broke out the bloodiest of rev- olutions; it was the inhumanity of terror. The station: *hose ambition is to be feared invites its own destruction. Fear at last always sinks into the filthy mire of cruelty. Women re- vert to hyenas, men become mad dogs, nations, are transformed into bandits.. �c.ne $iv asfte ata for lame ever disa feel befit Zee- Aim fie (2 rg ass When you consider the beauty,- the cleanliness,' the permanence of hard— wood floors . tit= arduous housework ey do away wi, year-round comfort 1 tey bring to all e family .. Why ot order elm now, so that they can Raid by Christmas? Bo N. CLUFF Seafort S NS A four out If ihave spinal th ealu roof one dad rvec elucti easef she I will her the o insta Th to b atm tural imam for cogn the Th the eery avhie beef Co turn Sher be c son the amen a co the that farm tribn as w succ It' ther der, atie It ful, mato Tv goes ado The happy Never before in the history of the world has it been pos- sible for a merchant in good credit to do so snitch business. with so little capital locked up in stock. One important reason for the. present prosperity is, that in- --stead of having to buy a big stock at the beginning of each season, he is now able - to buy small stocks and re- plenish them promAT by - Long Distance. Keep your customers for miles around coming- to yule for whatever they need. 'In- vent ways of inducing tkent to visit your store, or to or- der frorn you by Long Dis- tance and — they tell us —you will not be seriously bothered by competition. Long Distanee is making happy merchants in hem TI- gh of tt way vine knoe The the boys hour pied It tolls in that sant that Inlet holm was qr the corn cem was thes ing, did Trrie earl Fra