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The Huron Expositor, 1929-05-31, Page 2
111111 141tirarsienal dao reroliket MIIII/li//01rl111i•.1l>•y rlillindillealltell.11111111111111111111111.1e iiiiiiiiiiiimenota..r��ra�r��/��r�a��rrr� PtANTEIEIID FIVE YEARS AGAINST RUST Strongest by acttin, test PULL MEASUREMENT LENT 1LEAST EXPENSIVE CLEH CES 0 'Tare (Fence an per Rod 5Wire Fence c2© per Rod Wire, even spaced, 9 stays X86 per Rod 2 Wire, even spaced 12 stays 50© per Rod I arbedl Wire, race and Clack Wire, Stainlles at attractive prices. lington U Iron Post 45© each I., 11, Ge©o Ao Sill & Sono WARE, PLUMBING \ FURNACE WORK blit Terivnall expense G 1. roc will convert space mow wasted into one or more extra moms. Hj ''evrdlrl li$a 3U G t ' 37 CLe©oo MHz • li>a 0 0 0 geaket.11t, ©unto 215 co -11210 ., ewes �9 VV oil k 1L11 orlleV If= Delco -Light, your change flro>mn Ilsmmipa email Ilaulmiteuuns to bright electric inghitts iram Lama Fnn>npn 1'manmlkiaatt.atto nnn�I'�cn1 lawman mai rumnimag water. 'lill»e emaaveraiennes of itJk cr my come to your wherever youa live. If have nope nniterrsttnnng • )TDel oo -Deka lookli which I woffiilail Me you to mandlo DELCO-LIGHT SALES & SERVICE CAMPBELL & HUT'TON, Box 1, Komoka, Ont. W':. BENNETT, Walton. 0 r �p g Fl! agic k e KING DM a 1lrcthctionn Oil nesse in every (fit 2X1 its wrecks by gas, Ere amity people tune, Eit nal larger sham electricity and f F faster than homing wood oottag. There's rmo wsa ti ng at alll)L No dellays. If your its Ilna> s t721ter, sly, yen COSI boa it in no time. Me New 1929 ramoleilo Ece wall wortzb inning. Com para, otztxte 1huddt, positively ffellnab?(e, easy on oil, a lhn+ ssmme a Ni 'dorm to our f'gntrawn. All sizes, p.? nuke pries froxla PM to 225d01D4 260 t; tip MAY Si, 19294 azinAsr A lr > ITOON (By Isabel Huailton, Goderich, Ont.) A safe stronghold our God is still, A trusty shield and weepon; By His right arm He surely will Free from all ills that happen. Fqr still our ancient foe Doth seek to work us woe; Strong mail of craft and power He weareth in this hour; On earth is not his fellow. Luther. PRAYE We thank Thee, our Father, for the promise that Thou art a very present help in time of trouble. When temp- tations meet us, if we look to Thee for strength, we come off more than conquerors. "The Lord of Hosts, 'tis He who wills the victory." Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR JUNE 2nd, 1929 Lesson Topic — Later Experiences of Jeremiah. Lesson Passage—Jeremiah 38:4-13. Golden Text—Matthew 5:11. The following exposition of this in- cident in the life of Jeremiah is taken from The Sermon Bible. Help always comes from above. Jeremiah found it so. It' was useless to try to climb out of the dungeon— it was only to fall deeper into the mire. "Salvation is of the Lord." Ebed-melech is only a very poor pic- ture of Jesus. The Saviour does more than send down a rope. He comes Himself and lifts us up. Though Ebed-melech may be a very poor type of Jesus Christ, he is a very good picture of the style in which one man may help another. He had sympathy. His kind heart bled as he thought of the suffering prophet. Sympathy is the mother of help. Etbed-melech did not allow difficulty to deter him. He knew that the enemies of the prophet were un- scrupulous, but he did not give up because of that. If you mean to help others you will have to pull. hard against the stream. Ebed-melech teaches us to spare the feelings of those we help. The rope of deliverance should not cut the flesh of those we save. We may wound men in helping them, and they may like the remedy less than the disease. Among the practical lessons of this story there is the great truth that one man may set others going. Ebed melech went to the king for help and he gave him thirty helpers. "So they drew up Jeremiah." The great mass of people are not original, they can imitate, and if you can show them the way they will follow. Let us learn the value of despised and cast-off things. The prudent chamberlain had seen "under the treasury the old cast clouts and rot- ten rags." No one else saw any value in them, but he knew where they lay and put them to a good use. WORLD MISSIONS Good Friday, April 10th, 1852, stands out in the Life of the Founder of The Salvation Army as a day of remarkable interest. It was the twenty-third anniversary of his birthday. Moreover, it was on that same day that he obtained his free- dom from the ties of a business car- eer. As he afterwards wrote of it— "I shook hands with my cold-hearted master and said good-bye." He was now committeed to the task of an- swering God's call to the ministry. More momentous still it was on that same day, as his own words express it, that he "fell head over ears in love with the precious woman who after- wards became his wife." More and more as one, reads be- tween the lines of the letters which she wrote him before their marriage, one realizes that the careful watch- ing and profound anxiety of Cather- ine Mumford regarding William Booth's popularity and destiny as a preacher reacted upon him for good. At the same time her association, ev- en by this medium, with the man who became the Founder of The Salvation Army, was productive of much which came into full employment of the Glory of God in later years. How wonderfully this rare woman mothered the man with whom later she toiled in raising The Army is al- so revealed in the correspondence to which we have referred. Says Mr. Begbie, "It will probably come as a revelation to those accustomed to think of William Booth as the white- haired, gentle, and patriarchal head of The Salvation Army that he had to fight for his faith, that he was of- ten cast down into an abyss of des- pondency, that his heart cried out from the depths of an exceeding bit- terness for the sympathies and con- solations and domestic kindness of humanity. . . That which must chiefly interest the student of this man's extraordinary career is the im- mense influence exerted on his spiri- tual development by the woman he loved: so great and high indeed is this influence that one may even doubt if his name had ever risen above the level of ordinary preachers but for the constant pressure and the heaven -lifted consecration of Cather- ine Mumford's beautiful spirit."— From The War Cry. WHEN ONE HAS A GARDEN It was Frances Hodgson Burnett who said: "As long as one has a gar- den one has a future; and as long as one has a future one is alive." Probably no better motto and in- spiration could he found for the am- ateur gardener. In Florida. along the Gulf Coast and in Southern Califor- nia, Nature is beginning to stir i the gardens this month. In the Nort ern states the snow still lies deep, and from our windows we look longingly outsider to where vague outlines of the hardy bed show through its soft white blanket, the tips of the rose bushes stick up bate and brave, and the slender branches of the gay for- sythia bend and crackle beneath a coat of ice. Now it is that the seedaman bring% our future to us. 111'or this is the month of the catalogues ---brighter harbin- gers of the sliring4o-'be than any primrose, crocus or pussy willow. `nll1g6 votal8 not garden no ✓--�hsferre an op. Ore'? Ddlphinintna,. Mat WM till CR s Cho Drains Cleans andDisinfects Remwes®9tht Yylakes6ocd1$ i J eepsall things , cleats / agnivi strain with two -foot spikes of deep blue bloom; dahlias as big as a baby's hear; zinnias four inches across; coreopsis, calliopsis, pachysandra, sca- biosa—all happy dreams for the prom- ised future. A rock garden here, a water garden there, with bird baths, sundials, hollyhocks all in a row. Around our cities bare fields are growing crops of houses as thousands of families move to the suburbs, and every house stands in a setting of green foliage and bright blossoms. Village streets take on the look of a florist shop where spring arrives, and farni homes hide their drab clap- boards under trellises of climbing ros- es and clematis. Even in the cities tiny gardens lurk in courtyards and on window ledges. Who can say that we are not becoming a happier nation because of all this gaiety? "As long as one has a garden one has a future"—and one needs a fu- ture now, with February, March, well into April lying bleak ahead of us. Will springtime never come? in I©i Saved] IIIIiIIM ©pertain Ir®IIDU B. C. MAN RECOMMENDS DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS Mr. Ed. Holmquist Suffered With Bladder Trouble. Vancouver, B.C., May 28,—(Spec- ial)—There is no more enthusiastic believer in Dodd's Kidney Pills any- where than Mr. Edward Holmquist. 6373 Prince Albert St., Vancouver. He writes:— "I took two boxes of your Dodd's Kidney Pills and I still think that they saved me from an operation. I suf- fered with bladder trouble and was relieved of my trouble. I will recom- mend Dodd's Kidney Pills to anyone troubled with bladder trouble." Availing oneself of the best infor- mation, the broadest and most prac- tical system of relief in the world to- day, is the one in which the sufferer ascertains for himself the nature of his disease and then chooses the most certain means of healing; this has been known for the past thirty years as the Dodd's Kidney Pill treatment. Dodd's Kidney Pills act directly on the Kidneys. They have become a family remedy all over the world be- cause people have tried them and found them good. That reparations bill probably looks as big to Germany these days as our last call looks to us from friend brok- er.—Stratford Beacon -Herald. REWARD AND WORK Some of life's greatest lessons are to be learned from the simplest meth- ods in living it. Everyone desires to do well, to improve his lot, to solve his problems, to get on sin the world; but not everyone is wise and patient in the management of himself. We think too much of luck and not en- ough of work; of getting started on easy street, without suspecting it to lead into lazy street; and we wonder at the slowness of success. What we are getting at is this: There is too much looking up and off from our jobs and seeing things we would rather have or be, instead of looking for visions in and through our jobs and discovering possibilities we may actually achieve. Most of the troubles we have ob- served have arisen from careless work neglected homes and unfortunate hab- its—the most common, inevitable and basic vehicles of our everyday human expression, the places where we are being made over. How many people ask for help, influence or pull to ad- vance their prospects, while many of them need only a new attitude to- ward what they have in hand. "Go show yourselves unto the F TVEnicootVaiza To get prompt relief, bathe the affect- ed parts with hot water once daily; ngprpply Absorbine,jr., two to three times daily for rst two weeks, then every morning thereafter. Each night apply a cloth saturated with a solution one ounce Absorbine, Jr., to one quart wItyr. Leave it on overnight. Absorbine, Jr., Is made off oils and extracts which, when rubbed into the skin, are quickly abeerbed,by the pores and stimulate blood circulation. Grease- less and stainless. $1.25 --at your drug- gists. Booklet free as request. B e not/ling e _ A air priests,'? said Jesus to some lepers; and "as they went, they were cleans. ad." The detail here is of no value, but the principle is. lit is in the do- ing of things that a fine destiny is reached; in a, brave walking on that matters work out; in a fine persist- ent use of the task to which we are committed that a fairer prospect comes to view. If possible, Jose yourself in your work. Forget what time it is; when you ate last; what you are worth; how you will spend your leisure. One may put it down as an underlying fact of life that there is not a single piece of work, no matter what, which if it is well done, does not assist the general furnishing of life. We may not suspect it at the time, but it will prove out sometime. There you are, with your faith in God. What is it but faith in life, in yourself, in work and in other lives? That man has a queer God whose faith does not mix -divine providence with direct privilege. Of all heresies we ever heard the careless use of life and work are the worst. Better to have a fracture of some creed than to sustain one in character; better to be deficient in a statement of theol- ogy than in the spirit of life. If a man lives in a big, sincere, 'brotherly, hard-working, trusting spirit, he has the only orthodoxy worth his confi- dence. Our religion is our life, whatever that is. Take care of life, and the rest may be trusted to take care of itself. It was a very wise prophet who said, "His reward is with him, and his work before him." That is not twisted; it is truth. The big re- ward is right there now in the big way you go about your work. PRIMA 11 h OF ENGLAND BARRED FROM JERUSALEM It cannot have been so soon forgot- ten that Jerusalem was taken by Gen- eral Allenby, an Anglican, represent- ing a nation which has a state relig- ion, nor that Palestine is being ad- ministered by Great Britain under a mandate from the League of Nations. Yet a short time ago when it was an- nounced that the Most Reverend Dr. Cosmo Gordon Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury, would pay a visit to Jer- usalem in the course of his tour, there was excitement, even conster‘ nation. Mgr. Barlissina, the Latin patriarch, was greatly distressed, He communicated With Rome, and the Vatican communicated with Mussolini. The next communication was made to London, and then there was an an- nouncement that in view of the deli- cate situation in Jerusalem the visit had been postponed. It is understood that the British government appealed to Dr. Lang not to cause trouble and since this was the last thing he wish- ed to do, he acquiesced. Similar agi- tation would, no doubt, have been provoked had some Zulu chieftain, with battle axe and war plumes wav- ing, announced his intention of calling upon the Pope. Had Dr. Lang persisted it is pos- sible that the diplomatic difficulties of several European chancelleries might have been further increased, but there is also a possibility that they might have been dissolved. The pres- ent system however, congenial it may be to ecclestiastical politicians, is not one that has much to commend it to laymen of all those nations which re- gard Jerusalem as a shrine. It need hardly be pointed out that the city is holy to Jews, Mahometans and Chris- tians of all denominations. They do not worship the same shrines, but they agree in holding Jerumlem to be different from all other cities in the world. It would seem reasonable that they should have equal rights there but apparently the rights of the Americans are regarded somehow or other as inferior to those of other re- ligious denominations. Otherwise it is not easy to understand why Dr. Lang should have been baulked in what must have been one of the strongest desires of his life. The trouble that exists may be blamed on the hundred warring sects spoken of by Omar Khayyam. In 1230 the Roman Catholic church ap- pointed itself as the custodian of those holy places in Jerusalem which were not held in particular reverence by the various Oriental sects already there. In the nineteenth century the Turkish government established from Constantinople something approach- ing control of Palestine, which prev- iously had been in the hands of the local sheiks. Gradually foreign con- sulates sprang up in Jerusalem, their chief function being to give protec- tion to nationals who were visiting the city and to put forward what claims they could for a special inter- est in the various holy places. But Jerusalem was in the heart of a non- Christian country as it had been since the days of the Crusades, and of the Christian religions none was so well established as the Roman Catholic. It was a signal triumph for the church when on June 30, 1855, the cross was borne through the streets of the city for the first time since Saladin's reign. A few years later the mosque on the site of the temple of Jerusa- lem was thrown open to Christian vis- itors. Through Russian influence in Constantinople the Greek church had been able to gain a foothold in Jer- usalem and had become official cus- todian of some shrines. .There was jealousy among the various religions. which is easily understood and by no means discreditable to them when the matter at issue is considered. Their dissension were intensified when, in 1856, Dr. Theodore Herzl made his announcement on behalf of the Jews. That the original owner of the palace and the builder of all that tradition has since made sacred should put in a claim toward the close of the 19th century appeared more shocking to rival ecclesiastics than to the. man in the street. The end of the war produced a new situation. J'e1'usalemwas in the position `of a city In the heart of a country con- quered by British arms.This Turks were a defeated nation 'and heal to accept what terms were imposeup- on them, It seemed that the claims of the Ohristians and the Sews would be regarded as paramount. Only the position of the Greek ehtnro'b was w aheued 'became there wan' i1e Son. ger onus inglit. Christin , . Swaim v government to uphold It. Nor did it appear that the position of the Roman Catholic Church was a strong as it had been since Austria, traditionally the champion of all claims from the Vatican, was in ruins, and Italy seemed to be rather drifting toward some kind of secular- ism or socialism through Mussolini. The competition lay between the Anglicans supported by the Greeks, and the Latins for the custody of the shrines. Another turn of the wheel was given when Mussolini and the Vatican composed the old quarrel 'be- tween church and state. But for thiq it is difficult to believe that the Arm bishop of Canterbury would not have visited Jerusalem and 'been accorded the great reception which had been planned for him. Papal claims now 'be set forth as confidently ass they were in the days before the war and the League of Nations may be cbliged to give them respectful at- tention, particularly if Rome, as n miniature secular state, gains admis- sion to 'that body. CO.AILRYANIZIEED SIIThIGLLIBS for The Iomff Handsome, inexpensive, fireproof, easy to Layover old roofs—permanent.. - Get the facts. Ash your tinsmith or carpenter. MEET STEM CEIOLINGS fr+nieg plaster: ere unsightly cracked cell• y to put up muddy and once up they stay. No dust or litter. Hsu to man or palm 7060. • saran You All neves tregrett the paarcha:s off a Bozell Cain. L'.BAUF/IPUIL==. 1'F li-]PROOF Sheet Steel Ceilinsslook well, resist fire effect ively. Add brightness to halls, stores, churches, schools. kitchens bathrooms. Do nothing till ou get the pd. and ffull particular& s GALVANIZED SIDING fax Ouaaide W'clEo Three attractive put terns. With building paper are warns dry windproof. 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