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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1930-03-14, Page 2Tug UURQN JF$ ORM. MARCH 14, 1930. BEST IN SAYS lbottar but reatiuts d than, I got li;; It hale me feel like an eat man. iza M. M. COOK "For the past three years my health gradually went back on me and finally 1 got in sugh a weak, rundown condi- tion that for days at a time I couldn't put my foot out of the house. I had such s:trothering spells at times I'd actuall a have to sleep propped up in a sitting position in bed. Five bottles of Sargon overcame my indigestion and heartburn,, my appetite is lots better end I eat hearty meals without any 'bed effects. I enjoy my sleep and a':e stronger and more active than I have :,e,•n in years. "Saeg r. Pills toned up my liver and regulate'" nie perfectly. I only wish 1 coele .a' o gotten held of this won- derful c'eo gbn treatment sooner."— M. el enok, 414, Willard Ave., To- ronto. Sargo.:nay be obtained in Seaforth from Cl: -.les Aberhart. • SUNDAY AFTERNOON .(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) All the world is God's own field, Fruit a 'to His praise to yield; Wheat.nrd tares together sown, Unto joy or sorrow grown: First tee blade, and then the ear, Then the full corn shall appear; Lord o` the harvest, grant that we Wholescr._e grain and pure may be. Henry Alford. PRAYER O Lei •' make it my job to do some- thing f ' Thy cause in the earth. If I forget Thee do not Thou forget me, but parr -n my sins and accept me in the na •e of the blessed Saviour. Amen. ' T. W. Chambers, S. I. gSSON FOR MARCH 16th Lesson Topic—Parable of the King- dom. Lesson Passage—Matthew 13:31-33, 44-52. GeSeer Text—Matthew 14:17. The I •r gess of the kingdom of hearecr illustrated in this parable by con••naring it to the least of all seeds g- :veng into a great tree. God is net a -lamed of small beginnings— a se ^ 1 0•' truth is dropped into the indivi-lu': heemt, setting up there a good c-nviction, nourishing • an d cherish'i g a holy purpose and thus the king;.lom grows in individual life. We se" in this the connection be- tween the kingdom of heaven and the law of growth. Then, if associated with this law, it must proceed silent- ly. Th' great oak makes no noise as it stretches up through the grow- ing years. So is it withe kingdom of heaven; it grows silently in the heart, yet men take notice of the re- sults and acknowledge that this is growth in grace. How mysterious is growth? Wrho knows haw much goes to the making up of it—the earth, the sun, the rain, the dew, the Light, the wind—the whole combin- ing to express a purpose in the mind of the Creator. So the larger king- dom, tee heavenly one, is pust like that—as silent, as invisible as my- sterions, as certain. It will grow until Christ shall have the heathen for his inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possessions. Verses 41-.52.—Treasure and Pearls. "The kingdom of heaven is like un- to treasure hid in a field." There were no banks in ancient times, and therefore persons possessed of prop- erty of a valuable kind were in the habit of hiding it in fields and out-of- the-way places. A man not looking for a treasure came upon one of these lidding places. He came upon joy unexpectedly. Jesus says the king - I Could Hardly Move, My Back Ached So. tONTARIO LADY ALWAYS USES DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS Miss V. Logan Finds Them Excellent For Backache. 'Hamilton, Ont., March 13.—(Spe- cial)—"I have used Dodd'as Kidney rills for a long time and would not use any other," states Miss V. Logan. 108 Main See 'D �<l Hamilton, Ont. "M§ zaok has ltrrtl'/so at times that I' leou1d .hardly 4nove. I have used Dodd's KidneyPiIIs, and found relief MMediately. There is no other pill that can equal Dodd's." Prom coast to coast Dodd's Kidney Tills are recognized as suffering wo./ dzie�' Best friend': They act directly e Kidneys, making them strong Itea1thy : Diseased Kidneys are [6 t+0ude of nine -tenths of all ills ori are heir to. Sound Kidneys ptire blood. Pure blood means healtfw Weak, nervous, run- p&nen alitruXd give them a trial fillet' l ' 11s .¢411 •be obtain. gi %el Dodds? rya-; olbrrta 2; Ont dorm •of heaven ie a continual sur- prise. This is the testimony of Bible students. Every page is a field in which there is hidden treasure. Jesus said, "Search the scriptures; for in them ye Chink ye have eternal life; and they are they which testify of me." Verses 45-46. Life is a search for goodly pearls: In business, in thinking, in art, in music, everywhere, this is the inner- most truth, that we are seeking for pearls of the greatest worth. Get what pearls we may upon the earth, there is always ai{other pearl beyond. Verses 47-52. The fisherman's net has in it, when drawn out of the water, a mixture of good and had. So it is in'society and in the church. Out of the net both kinds were taken. A separation was made by the owner and only the good kept. Jesus says so shall it be in human life but it is not man who is to be the judge of quality. "The angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the just." Verses 51-52. Jesus Christ uttered a gosep that was meant to be understood so he asked his disciples if they had grasp- ed His teachings. "Have ye under- stood all these things?" They an- swered, "Yea, Lord!" He immediate- ly spake another parable to them— the parable of the householder who is the possessor of treasure which is his only to use—"bringeth forth." The true purpose of all having is sharing. WORLD MISSIONS India's Outcastes Rising. The greatest movement in India at the present time, in the opinion of the Dynanodaya, the Christian news- paper of Bombay Presidency, is that of India's untouchables towards com- mon recognition by their fellow -men, and it is a most encouraging fact that this movement, initiated by Chris- tian missionaries generations ago and encouraged at every stage by the Bri- tish Government, is receiving the sup- port of a growing number of India's leaders. "Untouchability," says the Forward of Calcultta, "is the great- est obstable to our nation -building, and is a slur on humanity. From the standpoint of national reconstruction, of our political and social regenera- tion, untouchability is a curse and a standing monument to our weakness. No chapter in the census reports of India, not even the alarming death - roll or the dark figures measuring the depth and extent of our ignorance is more appalling, or gives a greater sense of shame and waste than that of the 'depressed,' or we should say oppressed classes." The American Board states in its Bulletin, that "thousands of outcasts in Southern India have been forming processions and marching through forbidden streets, drinking at public wells and encircling the temples from which they have always been exclud- ed. Advised •b,y Gandhi, they have exercised remarkable restraint, using only the methods of passive resist- ance. In such ways not Less than one hundred million people are ris- ing to self-consciousness and a sense of personal and social worth. It is possibly the most far-reaching social movement of our time, vastly signi- ficant in respect to the approaches of rhristianity."—Missionary Review of the World. Tells Dyspeptics What To Eat Strict diets are often unnecessary in stomach trouble. Wlhile some foods do produce excessive acidity and many stomach do generate "too much acid" causing gas, sourness, bloating and after -eating pains, the trouble may be safely and quickly corrected by the use of a good alkaline. Bisurated Magnesia—powder or tab- lets—is ideal for this purpose. Just a little after meals neutralizes all the excess acid, prevents souring, breaks ip gas and ends digestion. Favorite foods no longer upset stomach and di- gestion is easy and painless. It will •lo all this for you or money back. Druggists everywhere sell Bisurated Magnesia with this guarantee. WITH WHAT FORMULA DO YOU END A LETTER? How should a letter be ended? What form of words should precede the signature? The question has been revived by the discovery of an old let- ter from George Washington, the well known American, who wound it up thus: "1 heave the honor to be with senti- ments of esteem, "Sir, "Your most obedient servant, G. Washington." The objection to this form is, of course, its insincerity. We seem • to remember that in one of the most famous letters on record, that which Dr. Johnston addressed to Lord Ches- erfiekl, he also called himself "your lordship's humble obedient servant" after having removed the patrician hide from his lordship in a manner that has since delighted millions. Dr. Johnson was nobody's humble and obedient servant, yet it was his habit thus to subscribe himself though he was neither a servile man nor a hypo- crite. Probably the custom of spch terminology arose in the days when only a few people, holy clerks for the most part, could write and their com- munications were almost invariably addressed to their superiors or pat- rons from whom they expected some- thing. Nothing was more natural than that they' should humble them- selves. In Washington's days a lot of new ideas were blowing about the world, and one of them suggested that the conventional butter -like manner of concluding letters was either mis- leading or degrading, and while Wash- ington was most punctilious in re- ferring to himself as an obedient Ser- vant when he was addressing a public •body, in his personal casual corres- pondence he was wont•to write "ydlir vbat, vt:" or "gala lThle, s'vt:1s thus CUT THIS OUT OLD ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CA- TARRH, CATARRHAL DEAF- NESS AND HEAD NOISES If you know of some one who is troubled with Catarrhal Deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh cut out this formula and hand it to them and you may have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. In England sci- entists for a long time past have re- cognized that catarrh is a constitu- tional disease and ne: essarily re- quires constitutional treatment. Sprays, inhalers and nose douches are liable to irritate the delicate air paesages and force the disease into the middle ear which frequently means total deafness, or else the dis- ease may be driven down the air pas- sages towards the lungs which is eq- ually as dangerous. The following formula which is used extensively i .., the damp English climate is a consti- tutional treatment and should prove especially efficacious to sufferers here who live under more favorable clim- ate conditions. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce of Parmint (Double strength). Take this home and add to it 14 pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one table- spbonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from distress- irg head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and hearing improve as the inflamma- tion in the eustachian tubes is reduc- ed. Parmint used in this way acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system and has a tonic action that helps to obtain the desired results. The preparation is easy to make, costs little and is pleas- ant to take. Every person who has catarrh or head noises or is hard of hearing should give this treatment a trial. calling attention to the fact that he was continuing a form while repudi- ating the content. Franklin, who more than Washington was influ- enced by the Democratic spirit which was arising abroad, did not refer to himself as an obedient servant except in his formal communications as pres- ident. By this time few indeed took it for granted that the phrase which was in general polite usage was any- thing but a form, a shallow polite- ness that was not even hypocrisy for the idea had become general that the first paint of courtesy should be truth. Lincoln generally signed himself "your friend" or "yours, etc.," or "re- spectfully," with "your obedient ser- vant" only very occasionally. By this time the phrase had come to signify no more than "I am at your service," which does not mean much of any- thing. Roosevelt used "yours sincerely" and Wilson made "cordially and faith- fully" prominent and at time "affec- tionately" when he wrote to; his sec- retary, Joseph Tumulty, in the days when he had affection for him. We frequently see "yours very sincerely" or "yours most sincerely" but not from anybody who has a rudimentary notio'n of the origin of the word "sin- cere," which means literally "without 1,vax" or without fraud or pretence. So, if one is without deceit he can- not be very much without it. The word does not bear comparatives. In this connection we recall seeing a film version of "Oliver Twist" in which some person' signed himself "your esteemed friend," though'no evidence was ever submitted to show that he was esteemed by anybody but him- self. There is not much to be said against "yours truly" except that it is a protestation that should not be required. "Yours, etc." discharges the duty of ceremony and does not commit the writer to anything. In business communications especially, such phraseology as "Ever thine" is generally frowned upon, though there are some here and there who say that,it tends to break down sales re- sistance. The London Times recently has been carrying some correspondence on the question as to how an editor should be addressed and how a letter to him should conclude. The phrase "your obedient servant" has been 'justified somewhat jestuitically on the ground that the person writing to the editor was presumably a reader of the paper and therefore a natural subscriber to or sympathetic follower of the editor's ideas. We are bound to say that in this office no such illusions would long flourish. The notion that if the editor is approached with great de- ference he will more readily grant a request may have inepired those who declare themselves to be his servants. But one writer said: "I do not address you as 'dear sir' because you are dear Trouble Signs For Those Past 40 Bladder Weakness, Nervousness, Headches, Frequent, Painful, Scanty Urination, Getting -up -Nights. The embarrassing annoyance and genuine misery of Bladder Weakness, oftep bfings "discomforts of old age" to those who really ought to be in the very prime of life. Countless thousands, perhaps seven out of ten, of folks near middle life are pitiful victims of Headaches, Nervousness, Pains in back and down through groins, frequent but scanty and painful urination -Getting -up - nights. While serious, if neglected—it is ordinarily a simple matter to relieve these troubles by the pleasant home use of Dr. Souihworth''s URATAIBS, which have been victorious in thou- sands of cases, after other treatments have failed. No matter how serious or of how long standing your condition may be, you can quickly prove the value ' of URATABS without; risk of cost—for any good druggist will supply you on an absolute guarantee of satisfaction or money back. If IIRAPAAS bring you Oink and certain 'comfort, you will ,be greatly pleased.. "If they do not fully satisfer, their use 'will cost you nothing. "'Try* tt114ATAI today, and see' what a difference they make. to e. I decline to acce that I must sign yourse ent servant.' I cannot t any chance of success,; your obedient servant. 'Yours etc.' is horrible, 'yours sincerely' is insin- cere, 'yours truly' is untrue, 'yours faithfelly' seems to hit the mark." The editor of the Times in summing up the debate declined to issue any bull on the matter and while the Times, like other newspapers, has its own accepted form, it refuses to de- liver a judgment which could only re- sult in another outbreak of corres- pondence. The editor remarked, however, that the sentiment expressed in the letter has no concern with the signature and in Latin countries though men may engage in furious correspondence in which they impute the vilest motives and qualities to each other they end with expressions of ceremonious re- gard. The "etc." has been found by many to be a kind of compromise be- tween the polite usages and the in- dignation of the writer. Thus Pope closed an angry note to his printer with "etc., etc." We can sympathize with the First Lord of the Admiral- ty, who when he was writing a note to a medal winning sailor felt that it was somewhat incongruous to subscribe himself the obedient and humble servant of that worthy tar, although he probably signed in con- formity with usage. Another famous phrase was that with which Lord Fisher closed a letter to Von Tirpitz, "Yours till hell freezes over," though a short time later nothing would have given either of them greater satis- faction than a view of a hell that re- fused to freeze, containing the other. The editor of the Times believes that the "one perfect signature" was that of the famous painter: "I have the honor to be James McNeil Whistler." It strikes us as redundant. Iihe dictum °your ebedi-; 1 a lie with d I am' not THE RESPONSIBILITY OF A FOND MOTHER Her child is a never-ending source of joy anda never -failing responsi- bility to the fond mother. It not in- frequently happens that minor ail- ments of the child distress and puzzle her; she does not know just what to do, yet feels them not serious enough to call a doctor. At just such times as these it is that Baby's Own Tablets are found to , be mother's greatest help and friend. tMost childhood ailments arise from a derangement of the stomach or bowels. Baby's Own Tablets will immediately banish them by cleansing the bowels and sweetening the stomach. Thus they relieve colic, correct the digestion, banish constipa- tion and make teething pains disap- pear. Baby's Own Tablets are guaranteed to be free from injurious drugs such as opiates and narcotics and may be given to the newborn babe with per- fect safety and beneficial results. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A CORNISH JOKE Mistress:—"I am Cornish by birth." New Maid:—"Yer don't say so- I always thought they was caused by tight shoes." FROM' THE HEART Mrs. Emily Ferguson Murphy, o Edmonton, is a lady—nay, a "personIf —of many and a varied talents. When she left her native Ontario som years ago for the prairie west, th new country appealed to her s strongly that she Pet dowi some vivi impressions under the signature o "Janet' Canuck." As Janey Canuc she became famous overnight. There was humor in Janey Canuck but there was deadly seriousness i her later onslaughts on the drug traf fib, regarding which, as a social ser vice worker, she had acquired a goo many facts. flier enthusiasm for cial service led Mrs. Murphy som years ago, to accept the position o women's police magistrate at Edmon ton, which she' has held ever since. In her capacity as police magistrate Mrs. Murphy has done a great deal o good. Tempering leniency and sever ity alike with sound common sense she had usually prescribed the sor of" judicial medicine best calculated t meet the needs of the individual case And she had won, and continues to enjoy the gratitude• of a good many women ,.whom she has helped back to the straight and narrow path, not merely by counsel and advice in her judicial capacity, but by genuine help- fulness as an individual. Sometimes, though, the gratitude of those she befriends becomes embar- rassing. A case in point occurred a few months ago. Jessie (surname considerably sup- pressed) appeared before Magistrate Murphy an a charge of intoxication. It was all too evident that poor Jessie had looked upon the wine when it was red; the sole doubt was whether she had looked upon it sufficiently to become intoxicated. Jessie pleaded her case desperate- ly. "Well, what are you going to do with me? -Send me to jail or let me go? You know I think the best thing to do would be to let me off. I wasn't drunk. I was just swearing. You know I always swear, don't you? You remember the time 1—?" "Don't tell it," laughed Mrs. Mur- phy; and, discerning some slight hope for Jessie, gave her the benefit of the doubt. Jessie lost no time in expressing her gratitude. She climbed out of the prisoner's dock and rushed up the teps to the magistrate's chair. "You are a friend of mine for life," she gushed. "If there's anything I can o for you any time, junk let me know." And she was all set to give Mrs. Murphy a resounding and some- what inebriated kiss when the magis- trate put up her hands and beat a trategic retreat. "Gee, ain't she nice?" Jessie asked thee 2" police matron. "Ain't—she--- nic And before the : astotzndedi police matron could sidestep, she herself be- anie the recipiexlt; of the, grateful kiss. , . , p t, e e 0 d f k n a se- e f f t 0 s d s c The . Appointment is Announced of DUNLO & • ARNETT Seaforth, Ont. Authorized pealerslo EV 'OLET With great sgtisfaction, we announce the appoint- ment of Dunlop & Barnett, as authorized sales and service organization for the New Chevrolet in Seaforth The New 1930 Model, featuring a more powerful six -cylinder engine, luxurious refinements in ap- pointment and equipment, and colorful new Bodies by Fisher, is now on display. You are invited to visit the show rooms and in- spect the new Chevrolet Six. A road demonstration will be gladly arranged without obligation. All models of this smoother, faster, better six are avail- able at new, extremely low' prices, with the added convenience of the G.M.A.C., General Motors' own plan of deferred payments. To all Chevrolet owners, Dunlop & Barnett makes available the advantages of the most complete and up-to-date service facilities. CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED Subsidiary of General Motors of Canada, Limited. Factories at Oshawa, Ont., Walkerville, Ont., Regina, Sask. k 14 WHAT A DIFFERENCE 90 DAYS MAKE TODAY A TODDLING CHICK... in 90 days a proud pullet about to lay. There's some- thing to think about! Tiny bones and little muscles have grown several times in size ... a delicate fuzz has sprouted into hundreds Of feathers ... a chick weighing grams has grown into a pullet weighing pounds ... all in 90 short days! A wonderful change ... and only' one thing can do it ... good feed! This year consider Purina Startena Chow (mash) and Purina Chick Chow (scratch) or All -Mash Startena allihow for the first six weeks ... and then Purina Gro*ena and Purina Intermediate Hen Chow until your pullets are lay- ing at 16 weeks. Put these Chows before your chicks. You will see pullets that are built right ... pullets that will lay eggs aplenty in fall and winter when eggs are always worth good money. THOS, DIFKSON, Seaforth rr Ii tiyeet k ft etre .1 ?hone Nei 13