The Huron Expositor, 1930-06-06, Page 2ru
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8 wire even spaced stays, 161/2' apart 50c Rod
SPOT CASH PRICES
Burlington U Posts 45c Each
Poultry Frence, 18 wire with No. 9 tops and bot-
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Long handled solid neck shovels $1.25 each
Steel Garden Rakes 75c each
Full Line of Fence and Gardening Supplies
GEO. A. SILLS & SON
HARDWARE, PLUMBING & FURNACE WORK
SITISTDAT AFTRallOON
1:11
Isabel 'Hamilton, r; oderich, ?Ont.)
On An dart Gethsemane,
'Xe that reel the tempter's power;
Tow Redeemer's conflict see;
'Weaker. With Him one bitter hour;
Turn not from His grief away,
Learn from IHlim to watch and pray.
Blames Montgomery.
PRAYER
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•
Oh, Thou who are still unsheltered
in the night of time, abide with me.
Come into my poor heart and rest
awhile. 'I would speak a word from
my heart into thy heart, to let Thee
feel that it 'beats with thine. I would
give Thee what strength the little can
led to the great—the response of a
kindred spirit, the Amen of a com-
mon prayer. °
George Matheson.
•
the
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* Always oven -fresh in the tvaxtite
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F13 LIZ
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"A severe attack el iufl�,ienza left
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I could hardly hold a (broom to do my
sweeping. X was so nervous that
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S. S. LESSON FOR JUNE 8th, 1930
Lesson Topic—Jesus in the Shadow
of the Cross.
Lesson Passage—Matthew 26:31-46.
Golden Text—Matthew 26:39.
Jesus Christ stood always upon the
written word. When the devil first
tempted Him, He answered, "It is
written." Now when the devil has
returned to Him, he quotes the Scrip-
tures once more: "I will smite the
shepherd, and the sheep of the flock
shall be scattereci abroad" (Zech.
13:7).
It is the Shepherd that is calm,
though he is going to be smitten and
whilst he sees the uplifted rod, he
says to• the flock, "But after I am
risen again, I will go before you into
Galilee."
Peter in his onest ignorance
asserted his devotion. "Though ail
men shall be offended because of thee
yet will I never be offended."
When Jesus quietly but emphati-
cally foretold what Peter would do --
"Thou shalt deny me thrice," Peter.
with equal emphasis but with a boast-
ful tone replied, "Though I should die
with thee, yet will I not deny thee."
George Matheson, the well kn•owr
blind preacher, author of "0 Love that,
will not let me go," has a sermon
on Gethsemane from which the fol-
lowing is condensed. He says: "I am
new cone to the suppressed hour of
Jesus. I can use no other expres-
sion. The sorrow which Jesus luau
kept under lock and key,broke forth
and filled the air with its presence as
he entered the garden. Ile had said
"I have finished the work which Thot.
gayest me to do" (John 17:4). It is
when work is done that the sorrows
of the soul assert themselves. The
tense of a lost occupation, the feeling,
that we have nothing more to do, i:,
ever the occasion when the troubles
of the heart emerge from their hiding
place. Not in equal degrees did Jesus
admit his disciples to a vision of his
grief. He allowed the eleven to entee
the Garden; but He took three apart
from the rest—the same threg who
had witnessed His transfigured glory
—Peter, Jamtes and John. Not ever
these had a perfect view, he stood
somewhat apart from them also.
Let us look at the form in which
His sorrow expressed itself. Thi.
forms even of the same grief are b,;
no means uniform. There are some
whose sorrow takes the form of
numbness; they present to the by-
stander the attitude of stony apathy.
There are some whose sorrow takes
the form of rebellion. And there are
some who pour forth the torrent of
their grief. His third form was that
of the grief of Jesus. :Hle made no
effort to hide it from His followers
There was no rebellion, no question-
ing of the goodness of God. "My
soul is exceedingly sorrowful, even un-
to death. Tarry ye here, and watcn
with Me."
What was Christ shrinking from?
Was it physical pain? Hundreds for
the sake of Jesus have gone to the
stake. Is the disciple to be above his
Lord? Did he not say, "Fear not
them that kill the body and after that
have nothing mlore that they can
do." It was nothing personal that
oausecl the agony in the Garden. He
shrank not from the cross, btit from
the world's share in it; that was the
cup He wanted to pass from Him. He
wanted to save it from committing
the blackest deed of sin ever perpe-
trated by the sons of men—a deed
which"- He feared might fix fol ever
an MI:passable gulf between the life
of the creature and the heart of the
Father.
,His cry for help rings through the
Garden, "Father, if it be possible, let
this cup pass from me!"
Jesus craved human sympathy and
in this bitter hour his chosen friends
failed him. IHIe still says, "Could ye
not watch with Me one hour?" It is
like the head nurse in a hospital re-
buking the sleep of the under -nurses.
In the great Hospital of Time,
Jesus keeps watch by the couch of a
sick world. Wouldst thou have com-
munion with Jesus? Then must•thou
share the watch of Jesus! Canst
thou watch with him in the infirmary
of broken hearts? Canst thou heal
with Him the bruises of those beaten
in the world's battle? Canst thou
calm with him the nerves unhinged by
life's fitful fever? Canst thou keep
awake through the night in sympathy
with His vigil? Then, in the days to
come, shall thy Father say to thee,
"Did I not see thee in the Garden' with
Him."'
wo
let their
bait to
thiswaq
Your pride prompts you
to keep your hair well
groomed ... then for the
same reason smarten
your dull, unpolished
shoes regularly with a
glossy "N'ugget" shine
—waterproofs the
shoes ars it polishes. sp
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is the .subject' of AA article in the
dV)
American ercurY by Flatten 0144er,
better known as a :biographer of. Mae-
fadden, the 'physical culture ptlbiisl�.
er,. Of Leslie Mr. Oursler says that
he was the grandfather of all the
sensational picture papers of to -day.
Even before the civil war his once
famous weekly printed drawings
showing the spots where the bodies
were found. The name of Leslie,
once renowned in the world of pub-
lishing and journalism, is to be seen
no more on the news stands. It van -
''shed finally with the death' of Mrs.
Frank Leslie, who left all her money
to the futherance of the feminist
novement. But though the name was
worn by three people, each of whom
cut a notable figure in journalism, it
was owned by none of them. It was a
pseudonym, originally adopted by
Henry Carter when he determined to
become an artist ands sought to con-
ceal his shame from his respectable
middle-class English parents. Later
it was .assumed by his son who start-
ed a rival paper, and finally by his
widow, who restored the shattered
Garter fortunes.
Carter's father was a glove manu-
facturer and sought to have his son
follow the same profitable trade, but
he secretly studied wood engraving
and at the age of 17 was an expert.
Hee earned his first money in the
Illustrated London News, but decided
that there were fewer engravers and
more opportunities in the United
States. So to that land of hope and
glory he set sail. But his success was
slow in coming and he toiled for sev-
eral years without much to show for
it. Then he met Barnum, at that time
joint proprietor of the Illustrated
News, published in New York. Soon
Barnum, in need of money and pes-
simistic over the prospects of the pa-
per, sold his share to Leslie. ' The cir-
culation of the News bounded upward
and Leslie was well on the ways to
leadership in a business', which he
ornamented for more than 20 years.
He was greatly helped by his wife, a
meek little woman named Sarah Ann,
and his three sons. All of them toil-
ed in the shop and saved the dollars
with which Frank Leslie was to
launch an illustrated newspaper after
his own heart. 'It made its first ap-
pearance toward the end of 1855, full
of woodcuts depicting scenes of viol-
ence and crime, the indisputable pro-
genitor of the tabloids of to -day.
It was crude., sensational, spicy not
to say sexy, although for a long time
Frank Leslie deplored displays of the
female leg in his publications and on
one occasion chided his managing
editor, Sam McKeever, and told him
that any further legs that should ap-
pear in his paper should be cut off
abruptly at the garter. McKeevei
solved'he problem of making his
paper thrilling and at the sam• time
placating his emplo,'er by altering the
position of the garter in a whimsical
manner not justified by the fashions
of the period. The Crimean War was
to help him with his circulation for
he gave maps with his paper and il-
lustrations of ' various battles. Mr.
Ourslcr notes that the contents and
editorial complaints of Leslie's paper
were strangely like those to to -day.
He says: "One article maintained that
prohibition was only a sorry jest and
told how enforcement officers had
been burned in effigy by the free -
hearted sons of Maine. Another la-
mented that the New York public
; a
neu-
lded.
•r
MRS. V. M. BOOKER I
sound sleep was almost impossible, I
had very little appetite and my stom •
ach was so disordered that I couldn't
retain solid foods at all. My liver
was inactive and I was badly consti-
pated. I started Sargon and it is
wonderful what it did for me. 1 have
a splendid appetite, every trace of
stomach trouble is gone, I sleep fine
and have so much strength and en-
ergy I do my housework in no time.
Nothing depresses me now and I'm
happy all the time.
"Sargon •Pills, regulated my live.
and overcame my constipation."—'Mrs,
V. M. Booker, 92 Peter St., Hamilton,
Ont.
Sargon may be obtained in Seafortl:
from Charles Aberhart.
for
for the witness of the China Inland
Mission. It stands, as' it always has
done, and by the grace of God always
will do, for an unreserved acceptance
of the Bible as the Word' of God—'in-
deed, by its principle of faith it has
practically staked its very existence
on this belief. It believes from it
heart in all the great evangelical
truths which stand at the very four--
dation of its missionary activity and
every member of the mission shares
this belief to the full. The Lord has
very graciously set His seal upon the
ministry of the mission, based on
these convictions in giving us to see
the power of the Gospel of Christ in
changing the hearts and lives of tens
r,f thousands of men, women and chil-
dren in China. During the past two
years the Lord has been bringing us
through the fire and water of persecu-
tion, opposition and great difficulty
in China, but we believe that this is
hut the prelude to the 'wealthy place
of even greater spiritual blessing and
enlarged opportunity in coming days."
WORLD MISSIONS
In the current issue of "China's
Millions," it is refreshing to read this
brief restatement •of the stand of the
China Inland Mission for those evan-
gelical truths on which this great
mission is founded and which have
led so many souls from the darkness
of heathendom .to Him who is the
ight of the world.
'The passage of years may have
resulted in tremendous changes in
China since our revered founder, 'Mr.
Hudson Taylor, first went to that land
but China's spiritual need is, as urg-
ent as elver, and those fundamentals
the faith for which Hudson Taylor
stood, and the glorious Gospel which
he set out to give China, have not
changed in the slighest degree. In
these days, when there is so much re-
grettable departure from the old
faith, both in the home lands and in
the mission fields, it would seem that
there is just as great a need as ever
c.•; -;tine
�zNl
AGON` 0'k' NEURITIS
A Story of Intense Suffering ant
Relief.
"Do I, recommend Dr. Wiliiams
Pink Pills? You may believe I do,'
says Mr. John H. Jamieson, of Wal
lace•burg, Ont.
"For five years I suffered day and
night from neuritis. The agory was
terrible. I lostcontrol of my arrn
and shoulder and my hand oecame
shriveled. Nothing helped me till I
began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
Even then the improvement was slow
and I took ten boxes before I was on
the way to recovery. After that
though, relief was rapid. My hand
gradually filled out; the pain left me
and I could sleep in peace. That was
two years ago and I have not had a
twinge of the trouble since."
Sufferers from neuritis, neuralgia
or rheumatism should try the com'mor
sense method of banishing these trou-
bles by enriching the blood and
strengthening the nerves with Dr
Williams' Pink Pills. These Pills. are
sold by all medicine dealers or by
mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr
Williams' Medicine. Co., Brockville
Ont.
ENGLISHMAN SIRE OF THE
PICTURE PAPER
Lacking the Scotchman, James
Gordon Bennett; the Irishman, Rich-
ard K. Fox, and the Englishman,
Frank Leslie, the press of the United
States to -day would hardly be recog-
nized. These three.men probably con-
tributed more to its development than
any other half dozen native sons who
Might be named. The influence of
Leslie, hitherto not generally known,
" After Baby Came
I Was Weak, Skinny.
Gained 22 Lbs."
"After baby was born I was very
• ` • •- r taking Ironized
re:1 Ca . ICa-n d 22 ibs."
Thou: .ds =Ito new Ironized
Yeast adds 5 to 15 lkbs.I in 3 weeks.
Ugly hollows fill out. Bony limbs
gets clear and rosy like magic. Ner-
vousness, indigestion, constipation
vanish overnight. Sound sleep, new
pep from rvery first day.
Two great tonics in one—special
weight building 'Iran. Pleasant little
tablets. Far stronger than unmedi-
cated yeast. Results in '/a time. No
yeasty taste, no gas.
So quit being "skinny," tired, un-
attractive. Get Ironized Yeast from
druggist to -day. Feel great to -mor-
row. Money back from ri anufac-
turer if not delighted with quick re-
sults.
i {J
r 4 C
{r a
7
would not support grand oper�
third cried out that the farce of
trality in Nicaragua should be e
The subscribers read that the p&lice
force in New York must be turned
inside out because the city was a
prey to highly organized and desper-
ate criminals. There were pictures
of strong men with dumbbells and 'art
pictures' on such subjects as 'The Sav-
iour and the Aulteress- 'Ge and Sin
No More.' The advertisers were tell-
ing of the disadvantages of bad breath
and offering scented remedies; they
were eager to improve the complex-
ions of the subscribers and polish up
their English.
Leslie displayed his genius in col-
lecting news pictures and later by a
simple but revolutionary process of
getting them engraved swiftly. As
soon as the artist completed, a draw-
ing it was cut up into half a dozen
or even a dozen fragments. An en-
graver was set to work on eacn one,
and the result was that the completed
engraving was ready in a fraction of
the time which such work pre: iously
had consumed. Leslie knew that for
such a paper a vital matter was get-
ting it early on the streets and his
agile brain grappled successfully with
this problem which was worked out
by many a dodge then new but now
a commonplace. The Civil War pour-
ed a golden stream into his lap for he
had correspondents and artists with
all the armies. The accuracy and
merit of the engravings, considering
the haste with which most of them
were produced, cocmand respect to
this day.
With growing prosperity the gen-
eral tone of his papers was sligthly
lowered in conformity with good
taste, and now and then Leslie would
attract the attention of the whole
country by crusading for some good
cause. His. decline set in when he
met and fell a victim of the wife of
Ephraim G. Squiers, American min-
ister -at -large in Central America.
Mr. Squiers had formerly been the
source of considerable news to his
papers and later joined them as an
editor. He brought his wife along,
and presently it was obvious that the
ageing Leslie was infatuated with a
woman who had had several other
rather noisome affairs. For a time
Squiers seemed to hang on as a kind
of messenger boy, walking a (block be-
hind his wife and his employer strol-
led about arm in arm. The three
went to Europe on a triumphal tour,
and in England when Squiers was
driven to protest against the conduct
of his wife and Leslie, who behaved
like a couple on their honeymoon, he
was arrested and detained in jail as
a defaulting debtor, while the tour.
proceeded. Later he was released, and
after two divorces Leslie married
Mrs. .Squiers. His inattention to
business and the vast sums he squan-
dered on his wife brought his enter-
prises perilously close to bankruptcy,
but Mrs. Leslie, showing unexpected
ability as a 'businesswoman and journ-
alist, put them on their feet again
and, died a rich woman, sone thirty
odd years after Frank had passed
away, almost a forgotten pioneer.
FIRE can hurl your
home to destruction
unless a fire-resistant ma-
terial such as the new
Ivory coloured Gyproc
Wallboard is used in its
construction.
Inexpensive, perma-
nent, easy to apply, Gyp -
roc Wallboard does not
burn. It is exactly what
you want for fire -safe
walls, ceilings and par-
titions when you build,
remodel ,qr repair.
Ask your dealer today
for full information on
Gyproc Wallboard or
send for interesting free
book, "Building and Re-
modelling with Gyproc."
GYPSUM, LIME AND
ALABASTINE, CANADA,
LIMITED
Paris - Ontario
lP
For ads Pe
Geo. A. Sills et San Sesforth, Ont.
OCT •OF-TOWNCA.LLS—QUICKER AND cur, TonIAZ; EVE
She almost trembled
at the thought
Evening rates on "Any-
one" (station -to -sta-
tion) calls now begin
,at 7 p.m. Night rates
begin at 8.30 p.m. Just
give "Long Distance"
the number you want
—it speeds up the ser-
vice. If you don't know
the distant number,
"Information" will
look it up for you.
Mrs. Kane was a timid soul—no doubt
about it! Modern efficiency rather
terrified her. '
She wanted so much to talk to her sister
in a town 80 miles away because a friend
had told her how she enjoyed weekly
long distance chats with her home. But
She didn't know how to go about it.
"There's nothing to it," her friend
told her. "Just ask the operator for
'Long Distance' and when she answers
tell her the number you want. If you
don't know your sister's number, ask
'Information'—it's so very simple."
Mrs. Kane felt encouraged. She tried
it out one evening; found the operator
helpful; and in two minutes was talk-
ing to her sister and enjoying herself
thoroughly.
And the call cost her only 40 cents—
the evening station -to -station rate (after
7 p.m.).
The Friday night 3 -minute talk to het
sister is now an institution. it has made
such a difference to know she is so
near! And Mrs. Kane calls after 8.30
p.tn. now, at a cost of only, 25 cents—
the night rate.
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