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The Huron Expositor, 1929-08-09, Page 2
:r^ SUNDAY 4M=ON rebel Hamilton, Goddxieb, Ont.) Be of good cheer; your cause belongs To Hint who can avenge your wrongs; Leave it to Him, our Lard; Though hidden yet from/ all our eyes, He sees the Gideon who shall rise To save us and His word. Gumfra. mttnc1 bet I li-®of a Must Turn OUT Fed _; iuiito ikons r as we Need the 8 WERE FENCE E (FOR TIBIIE PRICE OF 7 Here is our stock to be sold at once for Cash: O rods fence No. 9, even spaced, 8 wire fence at 426 per kcal, Cash V.41) rods 6 wire fence as© per Rod, Cash i bed Wire, 4 pt. x 6 in.; 80 -rod spools M.75 .Geo0 Ao SE Sono 11k R0) MUM, MITERING RING I (FURNACE WORK M EYE] S:TT OF WESCE : ©1`r 3:© °THHE University Course in Medical Science consists of six years' resi- dent work. Two years are devoted to Arts and Science and four years to pure }Medicine. Not more than fifty students are per- mitted to enroll for the first year. The Medical School has the best - equipped plant of its size on the continent. Lon- don's Hospital and clini- cal facilities are excellent. The School of Medicine has made its reputation through the quality and high training of its graduates. For additional infor- mation, write:— TI P.R.nOVIne,Ph.D., Registrar, London, Ontario As true as God's own word is true, Nor earth nor hell with all their crew Against us shrvll prevail. A jest and byword are they grown; God is with us, we are Mitis own; Our victory cannot fail. PRAYER Our Father we pray Thee to allay all malice and suspicion and ill -feel- ing, and bind Thy children together in brotherhood and mutual goodwill. Thus may Thy Kingdom come and Thy will be done on earth as it is done in Heaven. Amen. egg, ono teaspoon of salt, one-eighth teaspoon of pepper. • Cut the stems of sorrel and tie them in a bunch. Throw stems and leaves in staid water for n few minutes and remove wilted or brown leaves. Af- ter washing thoroughly, lift sorrel frown the water. Root the four cups of water, and when boiling add sor- rel leaves and the bunch of scarel stems. Cook oven a slower flame for thirty minutes. Then left out the bunch of stems and throw them a- way. Add salt and pepper and cook five minutes, then remove from ire. Beat an egg in a bowl, gradually add the soup and let cool. Then place on ice. Serve in individual bowls with a few heaping tablespoonfuls of thick sour cream piled in each one. The tops of the beets may be cook- ed the same way, but the stems and leaves can be cooked together, as they are all tender. aporismanys nodise — ODIEVI1EsL`G' OTf AGADE7S'U La' Green forests ensure an even flowof clear run- ning water; burned timber means muddy torrents in flood time and stag- nant pools in dry weather. The good sports- man, in his own interest, is care- ful with fire in the woods. Issued by authority of Honourable Charles Stewart, Nl,nister of the Interior. Selected. S. S. LESSON FOR AUGUST 11th Topic—Daniel Among the Passage—Daniel 6:10, 11, . es Now that reduced evening rates on "long distance" begin at 7 p.m. (local time) it is possible to get one's telephoning done before evening engagements begin? From 7 to 8.30 p.m. the rate on Station - to -Station calls is about 25 per cent less than the day rate. Further reductions are in effect from 8.30 p.m. to 4.30 a.m.—about 50 per cent off day rates. (The minimumr n' uced evening rate is 85c; and the minimum reduced night r tt 25 cents). Tata service ..—particularly the early ovenin.g type of message from 7 p.m. — gJ a real CeSnVen.imeaa MO= Ch=ehatni Lesson Lions. Lesson 116-23. Golden Text—Psalm 34:7. After the death of Belshazzar which ended the dynasty of the Bab- ylonian kings, we read "And Darius the Mede received the kingdom." The first part of the sixth chapter tells us that it pleased the new king to divide the kingdom into one hun- dred and twenty portions, and place over each a satrap or little king, whose duty was to maintain order and raise the necessary taxes, and over these he set other three to sup- erintend them, and see that they did their duty and sent the required tri- bute to the imperial treasury. Dan- iel was one of these superintendents and he by his excellent spirit com- mended himself to the king so that he entertained the idea of further promoting him. "The king thought to set him over the whole realm." Then as now outstanding merit and marked success were not without their disadvantages in the evil world. They are prone to excite the hateful feelings of envy and jealousy. The satraps were filled with rage end they determined to bring about Daniel's ruin. They had to admit to them- selves that they could find no fault in the discharge of his duties. "Then said these men, we shall not find any occasion against this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning the law of his God." They consulted to- gether and prevailed upon the king to sign a decree that he was to be re- garded not only as a god, but as the god for the period of a month. And so, without the slightest suspicion that it was intended as a design against Daniel "King Darius signed the writing and the decree." Now we see the heroic piety of Daniel. "When Daniel knew that the writing was signed, he went into the house; and his windows being open in his chamber toward Jerusalem, he kneel- ed upon his knees three time. a day and prayed, and gave thanks before his God, as he did aforetime." There is something sublime in the calmness of his heroic decision. As Daniel did nothing to conceal his devotions the satraps had no dif- ficulty in finding him guilty of a breach of the statute. At once they went to the king and said: "Hast thou not signed a decree, that every roan that shall ask a petition of any God or man within thirty days, save of Thee, 0 King, shall be cast into the den of lions" Then it was that his eyes were opened to the real design of their actions and "Then the king was sore displeased and set his heart on Daniel to deliver him; and he lab- ored till the going down of the sun to deliver him." No way of escape was possible so Darius was constrained, sorely against his will, to give orders for the infliction of the penalty. As they were taking away Daniel to cast him into the den of lions, Darius said to him: "Thy God, whom thou servest continually, He will deliver thee." Leaving the den, which was pro- bably in the palace grounds, the king returned home to pass a sorrowful and sleepless night. Like Job lie was "full of tossing to and fro until the dawning of the day" (Job 7:4). So when the first streaks of dawn began to appear in the eastern sky the king himself, instead of sending a servant, went in haste unto the den of lions. "And when he came to the den, he cried with a lamentable voice unto Daniel; and the king spake and said to Daniel, 0 Daniel, servant of the living God, is thy God, whom thou servest continually, able to deliver thee from the lions?" He was hop- ing against hope. In reply Daniel in the den answer- ed the sorrowful king. "0 King, live for ever. My God hath sent his an- gel, and hath shut the lions' mouths, that they have not hurt me; for as - much as before him innocency Was found in me, and also before thee, 0 King, have I done no hurt." The, safety of Daniel in the den is a strik- ing illustration of the psalmist: "The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear Him, and delivereth them" (Ps. 34:7).—'(Con- densed from Kirk's Daniel the Proph- et). to assure SUCCESSFUL BAKING Made in Canada No A%urn E. W. GILLETT CO. LTD• TORONTO - C.AN. Suddenly the rope broke and the boy Was flung into the deep well. The force with which his body struck the water stunned and bruised the lad, and he should have drowned had not a strong man grasped another of the ropes and let himself down to rescue the drowning boy. He was dragged up more dead than alive, but artjfi- cial respiration and hot applications soon restored the lad. His first thought was: This is the second time I have been saved.First in the terrible famine time, and new from a watery grave. He decided then and there to consecrate his life to Him whose loving care was so manifest in his life. He started in as a distribu- tor of tracts, next as a seller of Bi- bles, and added his own testitnony as well. Year by year he grew in know- ledge and in grace, and now he is a graduate from the theological school, and endeavors to bring the Water of Life to thirsty souls. TASTE THE JOY OF LIFE IN M USKOKA Cold Tomato Soup. One pound of ripe tomatoes, four cups of , Water, two cups of sour cream, one onion, one teaspoon of lemon juice, one teaspoon of flour, one-eighth teaspoon of ginger, one teaspoon of salt. Cook onion, tomatoes and water for twenty-five minutes, then strain. Dis- solve the flour in a little cold water, add the strained tomato juice and cook for a minute with the salt and ginger, remove from the fire and add the lemon juice. Set aside to cool, and serve, when chilled, with sour cream in each plate. Many of the thoroughly ripened fruits make delicious fruit soups. They must always be thoroughly chil- led, and this is done not by adding cracked ice at the end (which will spoil the flavor), but by preparing the soup early in the day, letting it cool off, then placing in the refriger- ator to get really cold. Fruit Soup. One pound of blackberries (or other fruit), one cup of water, sugar or lemon juice to taste, one cup of sweet or sour cream. Cook the fruit and water slowly for about ten minutes, then pour through a fine sieve. Flavor with a little lemon juice if the soup is pre- ferred sour or a few gratings of nut- meg or a little preserved ginger. Cool and chill. Serve either with sweet whipped cream, or iced, thick sour cream. You enjoy every moment of a Mus- koka holiday, be it week end or month. Such an enticing array ,of pleasure:3 that bring the joy of living to all— golf on six fine courses, tennis every- where, lawn bowling, hikes through avenues of fragrant pines, canoe or steamer trips among the clustered islands of this lakeland paradise, sail- ing, motor -boating and bathing, then dancing in the cool of the evening un- der ideal conditions. By using Canadian National Rail- ways you reach your chosen spot in this realm of pleasure, whether cosy cottage or comfortable hotel by any one of three entrances—Muskoka Wharf, Bala Park or Lake Joseph Wharf—all within a few hours run from almost any part of Ontario Ask your nearest Canadian Nation- al Agent for information and litera- ture on Muskoka and its various re- sorts, hotels, etc. WORLD MISSIONS The Indian Pie Well. Claud Ram Seth's Bauri--or well —is called the pie well (a pie being the smallest copper coin in India at present). This well is 122 feet long, 54 feet wide, and 70 feet deep, and has 74 steps down to where the water lies in the dry season. At the east end 'fre four sats of pulleys over which run four sets of ropes. To the ends of each are tied leather water bags, and to the further ends of the ropes are attached four pair of wren, and as they are driven back nd forth, or rather are driven forward and dragged bacicvatamd, the bags of water arm drawn from thewell el➢l Which lmurn the water that irrigates the _and nd garden adjoining. At ouch a well m boy was engaged in "drawing the water." Its order to fflacEitate matters be rode cm the maps while it tr✓aa taut, the uta ble on one end and the oven on the other. COLD VEGETA tLES, SOUPS G000 HOT WEATHER FARE If you think a boowl of milk and crackers is a good lunch on a hot day, try some of the cold soups for variety's sake. They are even more refreshing, and some of them are quite as nourishing if they contain milk or cream and egg. Tomato, beet and sorrel are delight- ful as cold soups. Sorrel, dock and sourgrass are the same kind of herb, except that sorrel has a slightly more sour flavor. Indeed, it is one of the two vegetables naturally sour in fla- vor. It is a very thin leaf which grows in clumps, wild, but comes to market tied in bunches or sold by the peck or pound. You can cook sorrel by itself, or use equal parts of sor- rel, beet tops or radish tops, cooking all together and serving complete. The leaves should be eaten with the soup and not strained off. The stems of sorrel are not quite tender enough to eat. However, as they contain much of the delightful sour flavor they should be cooked with the leaves and then thrown away, as per direc- tions: Cold Sorrel Soup. One pound of sorrel, four cups of water, two cups of sour cream, one To get prompt relief, bathe the a Pim,,. cd parts with hot water once daily; apply Absorbing Jr., two to three times daily for first two weeks, theme every morning thereafter. Each night apply a cloth saturated with a volution of one ounce Absorbine, Jr., to ono quart water. Leave it on overnight. Absorbine, .pr., lo made of oils and extracts which when rubbed into the okin, are quickly absorbed by the poreo and stimulate blood circulation. Gears - leas and stainless. 81.25• ---at yam. drug- gists. Booklet free on re4ueat. a 'Al 4N oft -tem thesiixt. Reduce /the stVz:t.7vTtz, ik-r I+L nn�t4rsep"ir art+IMrr.; tasted queer. She went to the kit- chen to get something to take the taste out of her mouth, but became violently ill and died in six hours. The only visitor to the house that day had been her son, Thomas Sid- ney, who lived nearby. The house- keeper testified that she had not ad- mitted him, but had been surprised when she saw him standing in the hall. She had supposed that his mother had given him a key so that he could come and go as he pleased. She suggested that he go in and see his mother, but he said that he was in a hurry and went out. At the in- quest Sidney said that he had seen his mother after her seizure and that she had told him what she told her doctor, namely, that she feared she had been poisoned. He denied that he had spoken to the housekeeper. A detective testified that when he had accompanied Sidney to the exhuma- tion of his sister's remains he had said in reference to the poison, 'If they found it in mother there is no reason they should not find it in Vera." At this time nobody knew what the home office experts had found in the mother's body. He had also exclaimed: "Thank God, I was indoors with the flu for a week at the time." Yet the housekeeper test- ified that he was in his mother's house just about the time she must have taken the fatal dose. Evidence came to light that Sidney had bought a tin of mineral poison supposedly for the extermination of rats. The fact that he was seen op- ening this tin preceded his own ad- mission that he had bought it. He has resented the inquiries which have brought out some embarrassing facts. One of them was to the effect that he was sadly in need of money, hav- ing overdrawn his account at the bank and being pressed by creditors. He has denied that he is insolvent, but has admitted that he knew his mother's will disposed of an estate of between eight and nine thousand pounds which was to be distributed equally among her children. He also inadvertently admitted that he knew a good deal more than the average layman about poisons but explained this by the fact that he has read a good many books in his time, and has especially read criminal cases in which arsenic figured. When asked by the coroner to explain why he had said that if poison was found in the body of his mother it would probab- ly be found in his sister's, he excited• ly exclaimed: "I shouldn't mind be- ing charged with the murder of my mother and my sister. I should sleep quite soundly at night. And I should have the experience of going to jail. and it would be very useful to me in my lectures afterward. I expect I should get my expenses back in writ- ing it up for the press." "IT'S ONLY THE PADRE AND DRUNK AS USUAL!" Archdeacon F. E. Scott, who has earned fame as a warrior, preacher and poet, has been, for close on fif$y years, an ardent temperance worker. Perhaps because he understands the psychology of youth he employs an unusual pledge. It consists of a post card stamped and addressed to Arch- deacon Scott, St. Matthew's Rectory, Quebec. On the reverse side is print- ed the pledge which reads to this ef- fect: "I undertake not to drink intoxi- cating liquors while in possession of this pledge. Should I wish to break the pledge I will first return the card. Signed." The pledge is sometimes broken, bur it is never thoughtlessly broken, for the simple act of slipping the card into a letter box is sufficient to snake the holder think twice. In spite of the fact that he has al- ways been a firm believer in total ab- stinence and an exponent of the be- lief, Archdeacon Scott has not always escaped the breath of scandal. He tells the following story himself. It was at a rest camp during the war. To reach his tent from the of- ficers' mess it was necessary to pass through the lines. One dark night he was limping to- wards his. tent when he stumbled ov_et a guy -rope. A head was thrust out of a neighboring tent and quickly withdrawn. The padre heard a very audible voice within say: "It's only old Scott—drunk as us- ual." and her mother, but who sine ti earlier was bereaved/ of both herr Ilff tie daughters. She and her huahaL't0 were devoted to each:other. lira. stn fortunately has an,independent hi - come and is thus in a dii`erent pool— tion to . her brother, who, however much he might profit from the deaths of his mother and sister, could hard- ly have been benefitted by the mur- der of Mr. Duff. No motive for the- murder of Mr. Duff has been sug- gested, and it proves one of the most baffling features of an extraordinary case. ENGLAND HORRIFIED BY POISON MYSTERIES One of the most extraordinary pois- oning mysteries within the memory of living man has now reached that stage in which an English coroner's jury bluntly tells Scotland Yard that three people have been murdered and that it is the business of the police to find the murderers. The victims were Mrs. Amelia Sidney, widow cf a Croydon barrister; her daughter, Vera, and her son-in-law, E. Creigh- ton Duff, formerly a government of ficial in Nigeria. The coroner's jury after sixteen sessions, reported that these three people had been poisoned by someone who evidently knew the habits of the various members of the family, since the medium in which the poison was introduced was dif- ferent in all three cases, and seemed to have been chosen so that there was no danger of anyone but the particularly designated victim being removed. The coroner was careful to say that the evidence did not make it certain that the poisoner was a mem- ber of the family, but a review of it points very steadily in one direction. The first victim was Mr. Duff. A year ago last April he returned to his home in South Croydon after having spent a month fishing in Hampshire. He seemed in excellent health and spirits but had not been back long when he complained to his wife that he felt "absolutely rotten," and thought that he must have a fever. The next day he died suddenly. An inquest was held and the coroner or- dered the stomach to be sent to the home office for an examination. At the resumed hearing the report from the home office experts was read and it said that no poison had been found The jury reported that death had been due to natural causes. On February 13th, 1929, the next death peeurred. This time the victim was Vera Sidney. She had lunched at home with her mother and her aunt. Soup was served to Versa and herr aunt, the mother not taking anv au she never touched soup. .ut 'both the others became ill, and the aunt immediately lent home and summon- ed her doctor. In a few days ohne re- covers d but Vane died. Three t✓eeiss Yater T'ro. 'Sidlney took a dose of the medicine that she had been seen; ; ,'t s- ed to taking and complained that it 1"! There is no doubt that when the home office experts examined the organs of Mr. Duff they blundered, for when his grave was re -opened there was no difficulty in establish- ing the fact that he had been poison- ed. Had this been known at the time there is reason to believe that the first victim of the poisoner would have been the last. The tragic fig- ure in the case is Mrs. Duff, who has lost not only her husband, her sister wife are OMEN of ail ages, ail over the world, are fnnnew healltlh inn Dr. Williams' Punk Pilils- A c tuts IL microscopic tests have shown that the mr..I'cnunal ell¢nnenn • con- tained in them nsacvease the blood comae and build up and revitalize the en- tire system. Miss Juliette Seguin, of Dalkeith, One., testifies as follows "Two years ego l[ became weak, nervous and run-down. Various prescribed treat- ments did not help me. II began ta&ing Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and it was not long before II noticed a big im- provement; and noon 11 was in the best of health. A year ago also soy mother was badly run-down; her nerves were shattered and life be- came a burden. She began taking the pills and as a n'e- sult she is in perfect health." I:'•uy Dr. Williams' Pink Pills now at your druggist's or any dealer in medicine off by mail, 50 cents, postpaid, from The Dr. 'Williams Medi- cine Co., i:'.roclwi le, Ont. S-87 HOUSEHOLD NAME pq ad COUNTRIES" Tfre Sensation ®f 1929 Frankly, we can't quite see how so much tire quality can be made to sell at the price asked for the new Endurance. It ie a wonderful tfrc made of the ri r'ru t stuff —and plenty of it—and backed by Dominion Rubber Company. A keen buyer will get hie moneysa worth in as &rafl'nee.99 Come gz ezng Arai os abarat 1 SIEAIr°�Ii�°ll'I5 »... »....»».»».»...» .»»»».«....» »...._._. _ _ ...JJ. IF. I U r DUBLIN ».......»....» »» » w....Siimiltlhr I63>z'antllinerra •a .ft, • -c i