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The Huron Expositor, 1929-06-28, Page 2
T n1400,75gXreArra JUN Screen Doors, well leashed, made in three did- ferent sizes and four 'ffeeent designs, quoted complete with hinges, pull and catch Stencilled Door, unvarnished, complete $2.25 Stencilled, unvarnished, but with brackets, complete As illustrated, varnished, complete 53.25 With Panel, varnished, complete 54.75 Screen Windows, hardwood 45c to 75c Fly Swats lec Fly Oil, per gallon 51.25 Sprayers, with glass jar 75c PAILS 5E117, in all weights of tin, 25c to $1 Strainer Pails, heavy tin $1.45 Galvanized Pails, Special 30c Other designs 40c to 90c BAIRN DOOR HANGERS Anne enclosed square track of special strong design. all Bearing $2.00 Pair Track., 25c Foot Gummy animwooN (]8y Laahel =Alton, Goderich, Ont.) The hots of God encamp around The dwellings of the just; Deliverance He affords to all I/Pao on His succor trust. For God preserves the souls of those Who on His truth depend, To them and their posterity His blessing shall descend. Tate and Brady. SHOVELS AND SPADES Sterling Brand, solid neck, re-inforced blade $1.35 each D Handle $1.65 Scoops 51.85 Ditching Spades 51.65 GLASS WASH BOARDS -50c each Geo° aliEa & Si EARKDWARE, PLUMBING t FURNACE WORK -111Life__ Tom cam eff©LeC._.- ¶ti wommiteeliai coriveuianice oft Deace=11.iSt S. S. LESSON FOR. JUNE Nth, 1929 Lessem Topic - Review ; Prophets and Kings of Judah's Decline. Golden Teat -Jeremiah 31:3. April 7th -The Ministry of Isaiah. -Isa. 6:1-8; 20:1, 2; 38:1-5. -Isa. 6:8. In the same year that King Uzziah died Isaiah had a vision of his hea- venly King, the courtiers and choirs. The sight affected him deeply and lead to a confession of guilt and un- worthiness. He was given a further vision in which he was called to the office of prophet. Later on in the lesson he is seen warning first the na- tion and then the king. April 14th-Hezekiah Leads His Peo- ple Back to God. -2 Chron. 30:1-9, 25-27. -2 Chron. 30:9. Hezekiah was a second David in his love for God's word and God's house. Immediately on ascending the throne he set to work to demolish idol worship and restore that of Je- hovah. To this end he sent out a call to all the tribes to come to Jer- usalem and observe again the pass - over feast. Those who responded praised the Lord and rejoiced great- ly and went to their homes greatly blessed. April 21st -Comfort for God's People ---Isaiah 40:1-11. -Isaiah 66:13. In these verses the prophet gives expression to the desire on God's part to comfort his people in their captiv- ity with the knowledge that He is about to release them from bondage and bring them •back to their own land. The prophet is led to look on down through the years and sees their release from the bondage of sin by the corning of the Messiah -the Good Shepherd. April 28th -The Suffering Servant of Jehovah. -Isaiah 53:1-12. -Isaiah 53:5. The prophet described in this chap- ter the person and ministry of the Messiah just as accurately as though he had been an eye -witness. He told that his lowly birth would be spoken against and that his miraculous works would not prevent his being rejected of men. =His sufferings, death and exaltation were fully fore- told. May 5th -What Hilkiah Found in the Temple. -2 Chron. 34:14-16, 29-33. .----Psalm 119:105. Some eighteen years after Josiah ascended the throne of Judah he re- paired the temple. While this was in progress Hilkiah the priest found there the "book of the law." It was given to the king who had it read aloud to him. The result was that he called together the elders, the priests and the people and observed the passover as described in the "book" found; thus signifying his willingness to have himself and his people counted among the servants of Jehovah. May 12th -The Early Jeremiah. --Jeremiah 1:6-10 ; 26:8-15. -Acts 5:29. Jeremiah was called and prepared for the work of a prophet but for many years no notable incident was recorded of his ministry. Then God gave him a special message to deliver calling the people to turn from their evil ways to new obedience. He faithfully performed the command and stirred up enmity that endanger- ed his life. Being tried by the prin- ces of Judah he stood by all he had said and warned them if they took his life they would be shedding innocent blood. This would in no wise prevent his prophecy from being fulfilled. May 19th-Jeremiale Calls to Ohed- C.0.30.•••••••, seldom has over $75,05411,-whicia isn't enough to justify inee'ryin g a fellow that.-Aanheret News, Our Does -The word "reallocate" was new to radio fans, but now they unkderstand it means an arrangement that enables them to get three sta- tions at once. -Toronto Star. Pidgin Philosophy -In the course of an interesting address upon conditions in China delivered before the Van- couver Canadian Club, Sir Cecil Clem- enti, Governor of Honk Kong, repeat- ed a classification of Chinese man- power as given to him in pidgin Eng- lish by one of the war lords: "No, one man, he able walk, able fight -he robber. "No, two man, he able walk, not able fight -he coolie. "No, three man, he not able walk, not able fight -he soldier." vk;) i3n y laqza. AVE elleetaileilty at dee tuuyini a at owillena wherevez you nizeeil fit iha tle Loma maxi elm the farm. Fay alemoicautrante Delleo-TrizlInt far yous-shew you. hew ramda kulpuofier iit 7.7211 =Le your whole famailly ? Ye= win otaamthz' eci Rem= hew greatly Delleo-LIght enna 1.30EZED. N,7acrE Emit 'Lae -maws ff Froats. DELCO-LIGHT SALES e SERVICE CAMPBELL & HUTTON, Box 1, Komoka, Ont. W. C. BENNETT, Walton. you live 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11111713111111,11M111 I 11 lit, E151 limaamigml.11111111111P1111101111Kowdll"-- Hig4ege Qallyldi c4omforate.P.o-nce. MADE O CANADA • NG ALUltl ct.W. GII La_ LEIFIT VD. Clene. TOR °MVO, el,16C0. ':e1"i'grVIRMIMMOW Ministry of off King Jehoiachim of Judah captive to his own land he appointed Zede- kiah to reign as his deputy at Jer- usalem. In time he rebelled and brought ruin upon himself, his family and the city. His sons were put to death in his presence and then his sight was destroyed. He too was tak- en as a captive to Bablyon and the city beautiful for situation, with its magnificent temple, became a heap of ruins and all because of the sin of rebellion against God and man. June 23rd -A Psalm of Praise. -Psalm 103:1-13. -Psalm 103:1. This psalm is one of recollection and of thanksgiving; recollection of benefits received and thanksgiving for God's loving kindness and tender mercy to those who sincerely desire to praise and serve Him. HARRY THAW'S MOTHER A WOMAN OF SORROWS Harry Thaw's mother is dead in Pittsburgh at the age of e7. One can imagine that death was a happy re lease for her, and that a thousand times since her hausband passed away she wished she never had been horn. Yet through disgrace and haunting fears that waited on her for many years she never bowed her head. If ever there was an indomitable fighter it was this woman whose murdering son brought to her the compassion of the world. If it had not been fcr Mrs. Thaw there is little doubt that Harry would have been happily hang= ed shortly after he shot and killed Stanford White, one of the most dis- tinguished architects the United States ever produced. It was she who not only financed his defence, but planned it. It was she who overruled Harry for the first time in her life and also his lawyers. The slayer wished to defend himself on the ground that he had acted as a normal human being when he murdered White. The mother decided that he would plead insanity. He resisted, but the mother conquered, although Harry had said at the time that he could ,always talk his mother round to his point of view. This Freedom -The prize optimist is the man with an old -maid sister. who remains a bachelor in order to keep his freedom. -Montreal Herald. ience. -Jeremiah 7:1-11, 21-23. -Jeremiah 7.23. Jeremiah was told by God to go and preach to the people assembled in the temple at the time of a special sacrifice on behalf of the nation. His first utterance startled them for he told them to amend their ways or God would destroy both the temple and the city. He told them their sacrifices were not acceptable to God bemuse their lives were a living con- tradiceion of the moral law, and that God desired obedience rather than sacrifice Mai 26th -God's Law In the leleart. -Jeremiah 31-29-34; John 1:17. -Psa. 1119:111. The children of Israel were still in captivity and in these verses Jere- miah tells them that God will enter into a new covenant with them. The law that was given by Moses would be fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ who would give to every one that would believe, grace and truth, taking possession of and dwelling in the heart by the in -dwelling spirit. June 2nd -Later Experiences of Jere- miah. -Jeremiah 38:4-13. e -Matthew 5:11. Jeremiah had been cast into a dun- geon and there seemed no way of escape. Some one thought of and felt for him in his trouble and ap- pealed to the king on his behalf. The king gave him thirty helpers and they drew up Jeremiah. Help often comes from most unexpected quarters and by the use of seemingly worn-out methods. June 9th -The Story of the Reerea- bites. -Jeremiah 85.5-11. -Jeremiah 35:6. The Rechabites, true to the tradi- tion of their fathers, refused to drkbak wine when it was set before them by Jeremiah who, as the servant of God, had been instructed laY Itins to make an object lesson of them in order to teach the men of jutlatt that obed- ience was better that sacrifice. Sante 15th -Judah Ta Captive. -2 ITEiraga 254142. -Proverk 1444. MAI Ma tistg at Sale= egrrict Expensive, Too -Someone says we must marry young or take the conse- quences. And, of course, there are those who do both. -Sarnia Observer. Oversight -No wonder people scoff at detectives. Some thief stole Louis man's cornet and they didn' even interview the neighbors. -Li say Post. Why $75,000 --The chap who thinks girls want to marry him for laiSmoney kookk Kerie 3©m Stay Shy2 P-&SrrilliNG tap after a meal cooked on a Perfection f113 =CV 'wV work. The rots and pans keep dean became avec no coo0„ menus you cm r your things co chitty and cleans with 1' tem& Perfection oit moves are as fast as gos, cooed by city folk, caul cos peer ahem clear* 7anges. me Tighe up -to -slate. See the 1192 tee del PeariaceneHno. Well nun=4,,,, nice &sigma. All sizes. Popnlas, p*.an Sena 0.cs, ese P25.Sere. o urnmg 4.Vbe3Coadvavolvt. rerel .zr&- Ree . vc=.:...1, eseed:&..n IMPet ineereamee tee:leen-a neeere cen ray-, .... ei410,e).4.5C44:6t 0444 lid1C9 Yiiiftfitliti.50e.Sliall414,11:14U;1411tbb Are you rrilld t® 'eat ihearly ma] 7 771HAT does rmeal- \-7\7 dude mean to you? Is it the pleasure that it should be to restore the energy your work has taken from yeas'? Off 10143011 you pick and choose - in dread of esticsa? Here remedy that hen brought relief to men and women the world 072r. De. Williams' Pin& ?Ms are taken every day in many countries., speci- fically for afigestive trou- bles and stomach dis- onraerea, cod have brought happiness to thousands of one-titne suferers. For, besides strengthening de estive nermeas, they In- vigorate and purify entire cyst= and 11.7 be foundation lex conedeseesed health. tny Dre,, Mama& Inth 211111a noni rat pout vIrm.- gives et any sled= isa medicine, or56 =L, cents, peatvii, Ire= The Ehmrofmiiis., Ont. 9.41 • "'a et;01 lee; eene ne et ,eleeeeeee*. The late Mrs. Thaw was born Mary Copley, at Appleby Manor, Pa., in 1842, the daughter of Josiah Copley, a pioneer editor. Four of her broth- ers fought in the Union Army in the Civil War, and Mary Copley's enthusi- asm for the cause was so intense that she auctioned off her dearest posses- sions, a diamond ring, for the benefit of the army sanitary commission. This ring was bought by William Thaw, a rising young Pittsburgh fin- ancier, who was to become a high of- ficial in the Pennsylvania railroad, vice-president of the Red Star and American steamship lines, and one of the financial powers of Pittsburgh. It was through the selling of the ring that Miss Copley met Mr. Thaw, who, later on, married her. The died in 1889, leaving a large fortune divided among his children and his wife. The will contained a "spend -thrift clause" directed against Harry whose wild imbecilities were well-known to the r, although they had not taken criminal tinge which was later to make him internationally notorious. It left his share of the estate in the control of his mother. But Mrs. Thaw's foolish fondness for the young man defeated William Thaw's inten- tions and he had all the money he could spend, and his chief ambition iI. .• 11 ( y.,,, • - IlLs, / `.. • •-• •St....,. At` 1 . 1 • .:•- .,.•:. itOk„t lila% yew V 1 44.419h 1 V - :" "1, Lto Ver=„....,,vgu t!110 -A Build up, by regular savings from your current earnings, provision for the developments of the future. Put by a definite proportion of your salary every pay-day.. Regular saving leads to financial. independence. THT-4 DOMINION SRAFORTH R. 1111. Jones 1,11 EANCIHI Billautager A .4 NK 230 1915 the courts held that he was sane again and he Was set at liberty to continue nis crazed career which seemed to light just on the borders of the underworld. Two years later he was again under arrest for alleged sadist practices on a bell boy named Gump in the Hotel McAlpin. Thaw" then tried to commit suicide. Nor did his mother fail him this time, but her protective instinct took a more sen- sible form. She har him examined by a lunacy commission and he was committed to a Philadelphia asylum. But she had him out again when he seemed to be a trifle more rational than was usual with him. Since then he has conducted himself much as of old, though he has not since fallen into the clutches of the law. He was at his mother's bedside when she died and now may expect to come into a considerable share of the $3,500,000 to which her original massive fortune has dwindled. was to spend it. The other children gave Mrs. Thaw little concern. One became the Coun- tess of Yarmouth, and the other the wife of George Lauder Carnegie, a nephew of Andrew, of Toronto librar- ies fame. After the death of her husband Mrs. Thaw devoted herself to charitable works and planned to spend the evening of her days as a busy philanthropic dowager. She built churches and endowed fellow- ships. If she had a care in the world it was the wildness of the beloved Harry, 'which she hoped and expected time would mellow and subdue. And twenty-three years ago this week Mrs. Thaw sailed for England to visit her married daughter, while Harry re- mained in Nev York where he had be- come a noted Broadway character. By this time he had married Evelyn Nesbit, a professional beauty. Two days after Mrs. Thaw left America, Harry shot and killed Stanford White in the Madison Square roof gardens. Mrs. Thaw did not hear the dreadful news until she arrived in England. She immediately returned home. In the meantime the brothers and sisters of Harry stood about uncertain what to do. It was Mrs. Thaw who rallied them. She ranged herself beside her boy and said that she would back him to the limit of her fortune. We refer to the Thaw trial merely for the purpose of pointing out that it established new standards in ex- penditure and the summoning of ex- pert witnesses. It brought into prom- inence the famous hypothetical pues- tion, the longest on record, and a- mounting to many thousands of the phrase "brain storm." It estab- words. It brought into common use ed new standards for reporting. Papers thousands of miles from New York published columns of reports daily for weeks. The prosecution ac- cused the Thaw family of trying to bribe juries and defeat justice by the expenditure of staggering sums. in the end Thaw was pronounced insane and sent to Matteawan. Mrs. Thaw then moved from Pittsburg and took a cottage near the gates of the asylum so that she could see Harry. every day. Six years passed quietly away, and then one morning a large auto- mobile drove up to the gates in charge of our old friend Dick Butler, of New York; Harry slipped out and into the car. It roared away. There was a tremendous hue and cry but Harry crossed the herder into Quebec from New Hampshire. He was arrested and there was some more fine legal play before the Cana- l= government conducted him firm- ly to the state line and pushed bhn across. He was then arrests& by New IBlanspalaire authorities and later en- tradited to, New York. was gain put on trial for conspiring c rimin- 'alb to escape, but tene exceeetentil. lizsease Gama haven't a Chautcces Absorbine, Jr., spells death to demean - germs and infection. As a gargle and mouthwash, this 0afe, dependable entre septic and germicide kills germs mos' in the mouth and throat. Apple ta ogres, wounds, cuts, bruises and sprain° it not only relieves the pain and, sore- ness, but also heals quickly and pro - vents inflammation. Always keep Absorbine, Jr., in your medicine cabinet. It is Nature's "Finn - Aid" -non -greasy and stainless. $1.25 -at your druggists. Booklet free. 10' e 11, 2 SUPREME VAN'AGES HIEN building a new home or mak- ing over an old one, use this greates¢ oE ali wallboards. You will get these ffous supreme building advantages: Pull WP thickness -giving greaten struc- mtal strew s and rigidity. 23asier Application -Goes up quiddy, without muss -saving thole, labor and money. Are -Proof - Noz-W g - Gyproc walls are ire barriers. Cannot crack, warp or shrink. rakes any Decovation-IInciluding Mao hastine, wallpaper, paint and panels. 2us ING Geo. A. MHz & 135'w iEnk) • •„,cee, 0 5) cz, .eeele stiao Ont. Does it pay to wear tires OUTT Irt does not pay to run tires till. they go to pieces -because- -It's dangerous. A blowout may easily lead to a crash. -It's false econotny. You can't afford the time, the trouble and the inconvenience that blowouts bring_ -It's not worth the worry. You can't ride in comfort if you know a blowout is due any minute. It will pay you to let us pull off those old tires put on a set of brand new Dominion Royal Cords or Royal Masters. They wall free you from worry. Royal' Cords will coot you less in the long run than any other tire in their da -Royal Masters are in a class by than- aelveo. v •111 SEALTOSZEI.,.. J. InlV .... ............................. Smaiith1:22;otillIrmstilYs ( 111 41k== iv .1 1