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The Huron Expositor, 1929-10-25, Page 2
tczln ake Pastry lap= says -0 'Since Purity is a strong„ rich flour, with great expanding qualities use L ablespoon less per cup if your cake recipe calls for orrlinsty pastry or soft wheat flour. If it calls for milk use half Milk and half water (luke-warmg with Purity. Weer Recipe for Fitalsy ie Claes For two pie shells use 2 cups Purity Flour. 36 teaspoon salt, 34 cup shortening 3,4 cup cold water. Mix flour and salt, cutting m the shortening until the mixture is like fine meal. Mix thoroughly with the water. Roll out thin, beeping it quite dry. For extra rich pastry use half butter and half lard. Send 30c for Purity Flow Cook Book. Western Canada Flour Mills Co. Limited Toronto, one 96R *.;2FM.1:;ligid ..ita Beat fur llirecall decree P., ..,, -4,--40‘.--.....- imettin/YMYYMAIX/XZWYWYXXX5ii , -ii . 1 hibil 1111111111110111111 L1Jmmufloommilmmilill 11 1 "1 ill ililligoommoolloi, P' 4 /536i 40,04, 'MI VI o .. .o. ,. o 071V io .041111 I SI 1131;:ica ricazIANT,01 Erma glpotIlege Btu'e ID au ma of home Toni& ofign ©f ZeirAran lancrocafiall Stove IPtDllWLn00mairnml off good koignmennt too, lbs.= tine Zekra aDne qi-unnekeza, cameiegt callesimeca Dlasarly .11 tweattmerm.t yoran'•cam stove tto tanall IlittacItt rflH If L. e r no s Imre ,2477e kok litnrrmin MilkTID4Vir ALTIMIONCODT (By /easel Hoesilton, Goderieda, Ont.) o Jesus, Kinte most wonderful! Thou Cenquerer reneevned! Thou Sweetness meet inegahle, In whom all joys are timed! Thee may our tongues forever bless, Thee may we love alone, And in OW lives express The image of Thine own. Bernard of Olaireaux. PRAYER Help us, 0 Lord, to pander over what it means to lean not upon our 0,W16 understanding but to look to Thee foe direction so that in our work and in our Flew we shall glorify Thee. For Thine Own Name's sake. Amen. S. S. LTRASON FOR OCTO ER. 27th Lessors ¶'opie—The Christian View of Reereetion. Lesson Passage—Mark 2:18-28. Golden Text --John 19:10. During our Lordis days fasts were numerous, every Monday and Thurs- day being observed by the stricter Pharisees. He did not approve them, nor disapprove them, by any distinct declaration. He ordained, in short, that none were to regulate the piety of others by the rule which they might fairly make for themselves. There should be differences between Jesus Christ's disciples and the disci- ples of all other men. It is notice- able how soon these differences were detected by the critics of the day. In reply to the question these crit- ics put to Jesus he gave to them the secret of gladness. John's disciples came and said, "Why do not your dis- ciples fast?" And •our Lord reminded them of their own teacher's words, when He said, "The friend of the bridegroom can only be glad." What was it that made these rude lives so glad when Christ was with them, filling them with strange new sweetness and power? Was it not the charm of personal character; the charm of contact with one whose lips were bringing to them fresh revela- tions of truth, fresh visions of God? Fasting would be appropriate when the bridegroom would be takerf from them. The time of counting for an ab- sent Christ was only three days. He is now the present Christ, "Lo, I am with you always." The illustration about pieces of cloth and the wine shows the perfect uniqueness of Christianity. There is to be no patching; there is to be no compromising; Christianity is to have a distinctiveness and specialty of its own. A Pharisee was a man who loved and worshipped institutions as insti- tutions, while he was thoughtless, perhaps, of the real spirit which they embodied. Now Jesus, when He came to face these men, saw that He must teach them and through them the world, a lesson. And the lesson which he taught them and the world was this: That man, in his rights, in his privileges, that are inalienable, is greater than any institution, nobler than any form of government, and more holy than any observance. He declared that the Sabbath was a day to be used; used, not according to the dictation of selfsconstitutedi guard- ians, but according to individual ne- cessities, individual opportunities and individual profit. The perfect and inalienable su- premacy of Jesus Christ is tasserted in "The Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath." He proclaimed Him- self Lord over time, over institutions, and over human affairs.—Condensed from The Sermon Bible. Christmas at Ranigani, Bengal. "We had the feast on the morning of Christmas Eve. While the food was being served out I went around dealing out mufflers to those who had only caps at the first distribution. When the cold weather started I gave out all the mufflers and caps by me, and subsequently a box turned up from Australia. Every child also had two toys. As is usually done here, they ate a portion of their share and then wended their way home to make the remainder last for the other meal of the day. "On the afternoon of Christmas Day we had a sankirton (singing pro- cession) in which all the men joined, Hindus and Mohammedans as well as Christians. This went on until dusk, when all assembled in the church and I gave out the prizes for the weeds which had the best gardens in front. This had been promised long before, and when the prize actually material- ised I daresay a few of them regist- ered a secret vow to make a more energetic effort to win it next time. "Then all trooped out to see the fireworks, mostly made by a local man_ It was really quite a good dis- rplay. There was no lack, of course, of the well-known Bengal lights which we used to call silver foun- tains, etc., as children, and we had plenty of rockets but only one or two were made to throw out stars. At the commencement of the pro- ceeding•s we sent off a couple of fire balloons; they sailed off as if to con- vey our greetings to Bankura, but it is doubtful if they got there! "Qta New Year's Eve we had the usual Watehrbight gatherings. It was very cold, and so the men collected on the sheltered verandah of the shop and rice store. It was much warmer there, than in the church. We stayed awhile there listening to the singing and I gave a short address. Then off to the wornees comipound. The ren- dezvous in this case was the prayer - room, and it wen absolutely pack They all looked so cosy end happy there, it was a pleasure to visit them and wish them a 'happy Ile/ year.' "All say that It was the best Christmas they remember. — F. W. Rose. Be Sure You Get The Gamlen* OLLETTZ FLAKE LYE ape; „et -r seater; nr ,r. stee ewe le FOR AMLE IAMB AND thARMALADMS ishing and "filling" desserts and pud- dings for the cold weather. Apple Butter. To every three pecks of tart cook- ing apples, measured after they are seeded, cored and quartered, allow nine pounds of brown sugar and two gallons of water. First boil the sug- ar and water then add the apples. After they begin to cook, stir con- stantly until "butter"is done. Try it by putting a little in a saucer, and if no water appears around it the preparation is ready for flavoring with cinnamon and nutmeg to taste, Pour into hot, sterilized jam pots, seal at once. Apple Ginger. Six pounds apples, 5 pounds white sugar, 4 lemons, 1 small teaspoon cayenne pepper, water, two ounces of ginger root. :Method: Peel, core and cut apples in quarters. Boil two pounds of the sugar with one and one-quarter pints of water. Boil for five minutes. Re- place the cut apples in a bowl and pour over them the hot syrup and let stand for forty-eight hours. Turn in- to preserving pan with the juice. Grate yellow part of lemon find on bo remainder of sugar and add this to the apples, with the strained juice of the lemons, and the ginger and cayenne tied in a bag. Well bruise the ginger before putting into bag. Simmer all together for about one hour, when apples should look quite clear and the juice a thick syrup. Store as you would canned fruit. This is an excellent imitation of preserved ginger and is delightful for Christ- mas tables and parties. Apple Pr= and m.Trmalades are Wholesome and are GlaVi 2712610. the use of lemons, cinnamon, env , etc., for flavoring, a IfillAtter 02 cA lavas may he produced et =al cost ItUrg arta ut.;afaa neg 0-47 at et,'preakd," tut attu] for maing MOW-. a 9 1 esia Eesr OT Your mikesion Most people, who suffer either oe- casisnally or hbronically from gas,„ sourness and indigestion, have now discontinued disagreeable diets, pat- ents foods and the use of harmful drugs, stomach tonics, medicines and artificial digestants, and instead, fol- lowing the advice so often given in these columns, take a teaspoonful or four tablets of Bisurated Magnesia in a little water after meals with the result that their stomach nto longer troubles them, they are 'able to eat as they please and they enjoy much better health. Those who use Bisur- ated .Magnesia never dread the ap- proach of meal time because they know this wonderful anti -acid and food corrective, which can be obtain- ed from any good drug store, will in- stantly neutralize the stomach acid- ity, sweeten the stomach, prevent food fermentation, and make digestion easy. Try this plan yourself, but be certain to get Bisurated • Magnesia especially prepared for stomach use. CHURCHILL PUTS COLOR INTO BRITISH POLITICS Winston Churchill, who has been captivating the imagination of Can- adian audiences in his visit to the Dominion, is perhaps the last roman- tic figure in politics, the last of the cut -and -thrust cavalier type, the au- dacious adventurer Whoseajelight is to reach his ends by unconventional methods. The son of a celebrated antagonist of Gladstone, Lord Ran- dolph Churchill, and a grandson of the seventh! Duke of Marlborough, Winston Churchill, has inherited rare old fighting blood. As a boy at Har- row he was asked what he would do when he was a man. "Oh, join the army, of course, while there is any fighting to be had," he said. "Then I'll have -a shot at politics." His "shot at politics" has carried him in- to several of the highest ministerial posts in the British government. In the army he fought on three continents. He fought with the Span- iards against the Americans in Cuba, he campaigned in India and in Egypt and in the Sopth African war he was sent out from London as a war cor- respondent. During the journey in a troop train the British were attacked by Boers under Smuits. The young newspaper man was one pf the most active leaders of the 4fence. At last he fell into the hands of Smuts, Mr:4M= will quid:thy and tboroughly clears ofd a hunch or bruise on vo horne's ankle,hoch stifle tame or throat cif ut laying 4iim cif cork during treattfient. This famous antlsep liniment does not bolster or remove hair. 52.59 Sar bottle—at druggisto or general merchants A Booklet ota the horse cent free. . 76 W. P. vounc, line.. getafet iildzr, Montreal Reduces :Tivrtillugg‘ • who told him 1i wo$ too mood o gam. er to he treated es a newspaper eor- respondent, and lie 'wM! held as a tary prisoner. Within n month , he escaped akd went through the re- mainder of thecampaign to its.finish. In parliament he found the same call to high adventure. He was as first a poor speaker but overcame an impediment in his speech and by meticulous care in the preparation of his subject matter and delivedy ev- entually became a notable orator and debater. He admitted, after his first great success its the House, that he had written out his address by hand six times before delivery. It is said that he still rehearses his speeches aloud. He became an object of such dislike by the opposition the,t once, while he was in opposition, the whole government paety, two hundred and fifty men, walked out of the House when he rose to speak. It was an un- precedented compliment to his powers of debate and smacked something of flight. In 1911 he was made first lord of the admiralty and after a stormy re- gime when war came in August, 1914, it found the navy mobilized for man- oeuvres. In 1915 he resigned and to prove «his versatility he took com- mand as colonel of a regiment of Scottish Fusiliers and served in the field in France. He had served in Liberal and Coali- tion cabinets, but when the Coalition was breaking up it looked as though his position was precarious. 1: ow ever, in the election of 1924 he came off , with flying colors and was male chancellor of the exchequer in Bald - win's Conservative government. He has been a prolific writer, writ- ing on war and political subjects, and his life of his father, Lord Randolph Churchill, is considered the finest piece 'of political biography of the times. Most of all Winston Churchill is an Englishman, proud to his heart's core of the traditions of his race and fam- ily, not content with what the British commonwealth has achieved but ea- ger for a bigger and a better empire. He is a man with the eagerness and spirit of a youth, in spite of his long, exciting and sometimes grim political experiences. Winston Churchill has lived abundantly in the very heart of affairs. He knows men and nations, war and peace, politics and the press, he is fearless and adventurous. GUARD THE CHILDREN Are you usually tired and out of sorts? If so take Gallagher's Herbal Tonic. It will make you feel like new. Sold by A. W. E. Hemphill, Hensall. LEON TROTZKY JOINS ARMY OF EXPATRIATES Unless there should be some turn of the wheel in Russia, of which there is not the slightest present warning, Leon Trotzky may be ac- cepted as a permanent exile from the nation which he helped to bring into being. There are few countries where he would be an acceptable citizen, for the doctrines for which he stands are repugnant to all governments outside Russia, and in Russia Trotzky him- self was more objectionable than he is likely to be anywhere else. He is perhaps entitled to be regarded as the most important of ordinary citi- zens to suffer the penalty of banish- ment. But the war brought many new recruits to what must be regarded as a most distinguished company, though we are not prepafed to say that any of them brought new lustre to it. The most conspicuous is no doubt the former Kaiser of Germany. He remains at Doorn, in Holland, where he fled when the German peo- ple revolted against the war. For a time the Kaiser hoped that he might be able to return to Germany and for about the same time there were op- timists among the Allies who hoped that they might lay hands on him and hang him. But these thoughts and hopes have faded. The prospect is that Wilhelm will remain in Holland for the rest of his days and how few and mournful they may be we for one do not care. King George II. of Greece is a somewhat nobler exile. He had to leave his country in 1925 and has spent the time since then wandering over Europe, his favorite temporary homes being London and Bucherest. The former King Ferdin- and of.Bulgaria, also a war casualty, dwells in Germany. Prince Carol of Rumania, lives in Paris. His son has fallen heir to the crown which the father forfeited, but he is supposed to be not without hope that some day a coup d'etat may restore him to the purple, and perhaps earn for the pres- ent little king a sound spanldng. Manuel of Portugal has been se long away from home that he is con- sidered a British citizen. Whether Manuel has any notion of returning to his former throne we have no idea but probably he has not. He is a wealthy man, who enjoys the good things of life and has a better time in his Twickenham villa than ever he had at Lisbon. The Indian Pripce Aga Khan, who is one of the most en- thusiastic supporters of the British turf, has a home in Paris. The form- er Shah of Persia is also a French- man by adoption. We • do not know the present post office address of Am- anullah, formerly ruler of Afghanis- tan. He was not forced into exile in consequence of the war, but because he attempted to thrust upon his Asiatic subjects European customs and morals. It has been said that a little learning is a dangerous thing and the former Amir found that this was true also of a little travelling. He made a visit to Europe and was so impressed by what he saw that he returned home filled with evangeli- cal zeal and sought to turn his bar- barian Afghans into a lot of civiliz- ed Bulgars or Finns. But he does not regard his exile as permanent. We turn now to more illustrious exiles, and mention first Napoleon. Twice he was banished from Prance though not at the wish of the French people. e went to Ina where it woe hoped and expected that he would bo stanillized in military sense. tut he returned rather than escaped and liv- ed to be exiled to St. Helena where he died, leaving behind reasons whr others &tea be exileda ic wl.fo, co ,a6e hat itis wife of yhe larlt52 the kftellteze died fin ikslomi vtove Y© Summerff fme Cuok Twk© az Attracthe p1ly=Teo she wens s4t cella s vat optth, eighs-ar.ing obaus off Gyp= IF eRnazof N.11howd-,-trieosate. Gypect willlagsto make ag codex on los ys—vvaz ex pan cold highs& • ©Q oSills geNa= c ce g. USN she had lived since long before the death of her husband. She had struck a golden thread through the tapestry of British history through her son who perished in Africa on Zulu spears. There was something noble and even dramatic in the careers of these expatriates and no stigma at- tached to them either in the land from which they were expelled or in that which accepted them. Indeed it is not to be taken for granted that a person banished from his own land is unworthy. Dante, for instance, was one of the greatest sons of Italy, but he became involved in civil strife and had to leave the land he loved. Ovid, the poet, was another victim of censorship. A poem which he wrote was considered by Augustus to be detrimental to public morals, the emporor being unduly sensitive because of the lamentable conduct of his daughter, Julia. Hipparchus, Kan- thippus, Aristides, Themostocles, Thueidydes, Damon and Cleisthenee were great souls whom ancient Greece would not tolerate. It was from Greece that we derive the word "os- tracism," just as we derive the act itself. It comes from the word "os - trace," which was the name of the fragment of pottery or potsherd up- on which was written thename of the person to be sent to Coventry. In the days when the name and the prac- tise were in common use there were many offences which the Greeks deemed worthy of ostracism. They ex- iled a man as we now send him to jail and escaped the expense of sup- porting him in idleness. In Rome ex- ile was an escape from punishment rather than a punishment itself. Con- demned men had the option of fleeing before sentence of death was pro- nounced upon them. So long as they remained Sway they were safe, there being no extradition laws. If they re- turned the sentence of the court was executed upon them. 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