HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1930-06-20, Page 2is
it
oven Fence
INVINCIB!E farm fence, made of open hearth
No. 9 steel copper bearing wire.
GUARANTEED RUST PROOF
S wire even spaced stays, 22" apart 46c Rod
8 wire even spaced stays, 161/2" apart 50c Rod
SPOT CASH PRICES
Burlington U Posts 45c Each
Poultry Frence, • 18 wire with No
tom
Long handled solid"'neck shovels
Steel Garden Rakes
9 tops and bot -
75c Rod
$1.25 each
75c each
Full Line of Fence and Gardening Supplies
GEO. A. SILLS & SON
HARDWARE, PLUMBING & FURNACE WORK
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
Blest morning! whose first dawning
rays
Beheld the Son of God
Arise triumphant from the grave,
And leave His dark abode.
Hell and the grave combined their.
force
To hold our Lord in vain;
Sudden the Conqueror arose,
And burst their feeble chain.
Isaac Watts.
PRAYER
O God, grant unto us a willing
mind and an understanding heart
that we may be ready to go forth to'
give to others the message of the i
WILL KILL MORE FLIES THAN
\SEVE RAL DOLLARS WORTH �''
OF ANY OTHER FLY KILLER/
10c
WHY
PAY
MORE
Best of all fly killers.
Clean, quick, sure.
cheap. Ask your Drug-
gist, Grocer or General
Store.
THE WILSON FLY PAD
CO., HAMILTON, ONT.
Risen Christ. In His name we pray.
Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR JUNE 22nd, 1930
Lesson Topic—The Risen Lord and
the Great Commission.
Lesson Passage—Matthew 28:1-10,
16-20.
Golden Text—Matthew 28:19.
"As it began to dawn towards the
first day of the week the women came
to see the sepulchre." Luke in his
account says the women came "bring-
ing the spices which they had pre-
pared." These women had been told
by Jesus Christ himself that he would
rise again on the third day. Having
stood by the cross and seen Him die
His reassuring words had faded from
their memory and they came to see
the sepulchre, prepared to embalm
his body.
They came "to see the sepulchre,"
and they did see it—they saw it turn-
ed inside out. They saw the stone
roiled away and being put to another
use—an angel sat upon it. Thev saw
the keepers not on guard but at, dead
men.
'The angel spoke to the women say-
ing, "Fear not ye: for I know that ye
seek Jesus which was crucified. He is
not here, for He is risen as He said:
Come, see the place where the Lord
lay, and go quickly and tell His dis-
ciples that He is risen from the dead,
and behold He goeth before you into
Galilee, there shall ye see Him; lo, I
have told you." What a full, concise
speech! If we look into it we see
that it was sympathetic "Fear not
ye." It was an understanding speech
—"For I know that ye seek Jesus."
It was explanatory—"He is not here,
He is risen, as He said: "It was com-
forting—"Come, see the place where
the Lord lay." It was inspiring—
"Go ye."
The angel was the first to preach
Keep FIRE
at Bay with
GYPROC
VIRE seldom visits
houses having
Gyproc Wallboard
ceilings, partitions,
walls and sheathing.
On the contrary
Gyproc has saved
many homes.
This pioneer anadian
fire -safe gypsum board has a
new Ivory coloured finish
this year that makes decora-
tion unnecessary (when pan-
elled). It is just the thing to
use for making extra rooms
in the cellar or attic.
Quickly/erected, inex-
pensive, structurally strong,
GyprocWallboard gives per-
manent fire protection.
Your dealer's name is
listed below. Ask him today
for full information or write
for interesting free book,
"Building and Remodelling
with Gyproc."
GYPSUM, LIME AND
ALABASTINE, CANADA,
LIMITED
Paris - Ontario
?ieNEW [IVO
anthe Resurrection and the
ill were the first t4 proclaim it.
was the effect of /the preaching
ie angel: "And theydeparted
lr frkm the sepulchre with fear
mat ray; and did run to bring
isoipies word."
"Anil as they went"—it always so
happens, a thing is never complete
in itself; incident runs into incident.
"And as they went," Jesus met them!
No man goes a warfare at his own
charges. Jesus always meets His
messengerS'or joina them, or over-
takes theist, "And as they went to tell
His disciples Jesus met them and said
unto them, "Go tell my brethren that
they go into Galilee, and there shall
they see "Me."
Verses 16-20—The Final Commission.
According to appointment the dis-
ciples went into Galilee . and to a
mountain, probably the same on which
Jesus Christ was transfigured and
there he met them.
We are told that they worshipped
Him .but some doubted—possibly
Thomas. In the end they were fully
convinced and were willing to stand
by their conviction even unto death.
Jesus came near to them and told
them that henceforth the world was
placed under His control. He had a
perfect right then to give them the
command he did. "Go ye therefore,
and teach all nations baptizing them
in the name of the Father, and the
Son, and of the Holy Ghost."
Then Jesus added to this command
words of inspiration. "Lo, I am with
you all the days, even unto the con-
summation of the age." He did not
send them out alone; he divided the
birrden and shared the peril. The
program he planned for His disciples
is the program of Christianity to -day.
and the Saviour is the present Christ,
the Son of God at the very side of
His workers.
WORLD MISSIONS
How the Gospel Reached Uganda
In the year 1875 Henry M. Stanley,
the great explorer, visited the coun-
try of Uganda in Central Africa. (He
found a splendid country inhabited
by an exceptionally fine people, who
had reached a fair degree of civiliza-
tion. They lived in comfortable hous-
es, and Stanley remarked that they
had good manners, always washing
their hands before meals. The land
had an organized government `hough
horrible cruelty was exercised by the
king and his chiefs.
The king, Mtesa, had sent canoes
to escort Stanley across the Victoria
Nyanza, and received him in state.
The king was eager for knowledge,
and when he learned that the travel-
ler knew the "words of God," he wish-
ed to be taught; and Stanley wrote
the Lord's Prayer and the Ten Com-
mandments on wooden tablets.
Previous to Stanley's arrival, Arab
traders had introduced the Koran to
Mtesa, and he had been influenced to-
wards Mohammedanism. Naturally
he was now nuzzled about the two re-
ligions, •and the matter was discussed
by him and his couriers.
"How are we to know what is
true?" asked one.
"Listen to me," said the king. "The
Arabs and the white men believe as
they are taught by their books. The
Arabs come here for ivory and slaves.
The white men, when offered slaves,
refuse them, saying: "Shall we make
our brothers slaves? No, we are all
sons of God. The words of Stam -
lee's book are good."
The' chiefs with one voice replied:
"We will take the white man's book."
When the time cane for Stanley to
depart, Mtesa said in a tone of de-
spair: "What is the use of your com-
ing to disturb our minds, if, as soon
as we are convinced that what you
have said has right and reason in it,
you go away before we are fully in-
structed?"
Stanley
n-
structed?"
Stanley explained that he was a
traveller, but if Mtesa wished for tea-
chers he would write to the people of
England to that effect. Mtesa said:
"Then write, Starlike, and say that I
am like a child sitting in darkness,
and cannot see until I am taught the
right way."
So Stapley- wrote. The letter was
entrusted to a Belgian officer who had
been sent by General Gordon to Ug-
anda. The officer was murdered on
his return to Egypt by the Nile; when
his body was found the blood-stained
letter, thrust for safety into his top -
boot, was brought to light. On
reaching England the letter was pub-
lished in the Daily Telegraph.
The letter met with a great re-
sponse. Gifts poured in. In a short
time $120,O{)0 was subscribed, and
within six months eight volunteers
had started for Uganda. One of the
party was the heroic missionary pion-
eer, Alexander Mackay, with the
story of whose life every boy and girl
should be familiar.—From The Church
Record.
HE SAW A MASTERPIECE TAK-
ING FORM IN PARIS
More than forty years ago two
young Canadian art students mount-
ed a bus each morning on one side
of Paris and rode together across the
city to the ateliers of the masters at
which they worked. 'One was Paul
Peel. The other was George Reid.
Peel died many years ago, a broken-
hearted man. and the pictures he left
have mounted in value to heights he
would never have conceived of in his
depression and discouragement. Otte
of those pictures, the Tired Model,
hangs in the Toronto Art Gallery.
George Reid, saw it being painted ir.
Paris.
Paul Peel remained abroad and be-
came practically a European. George
Reid, on the other hand, returned to
Canada and settled down to a long
career--o€-painting-and .teaehing.--H
has now concluded a half century of
painting and is a link with the pion-
eer artists, such as Cresswell.
Mr. Reid was born in a pioneer log
cabin in Huron county. However, he
had a chum who had the same ambi-
tions as his own. Together in the ev-
enings the lads went on drawing with-
out any instruction, but from a pure
love of the doing it. Twenty miles
away at Seaforth, so they heard. there
was an artist named Cresswell. He
was an English gentleman who found
few within the neighborhood to sym-
pathize with or encourage him. But
the two lads decided to see Mr. Cress
well. They started out on .foot, and
when they got to their destination
they met their • first artist and were
1hr 4�:
17s
DIDN'T ": HIN.I< SUCH
BENEFITS 'ROSS.IBLE
"Rheumatic ' in in my arms, legs
and back were so severe at times I
couldn't even sleep. My food its-
IDSZSitia
THOMAS J. HEWER
agreed with me and I was habitually
constipated. My strength and energy
left me and 'I felt tired and wornout
nearly all the time. Sargon rid me
of every rheumatic pain I had, restor-
ed my appetite, and I never have a
sign of trouble with my stomach. I'm
stronger and more active than in
years. I didn't believe such results
were possible!
"Sargon Pills entirely rid me of
constipation."—Thomas J. Hewer, 7
Hollis St., Halifax, N. S.
Sargon may be obtained in Seaforth
from Charles Aberhart.
shown the first original paintings
they had ever seen. He was gruff but
kind, but he would not encourage the
two raw farm lads to go in foe art.
When at last he got to Toronto to
study he worked during the day in a
machine -shop and studied at nights
at the school for the first year. Two
years of school were all he could suc-
cessfully finance, so he then returned
to Wingham and hung out his shingle
as a portrait painter. There must
be a great many of those charcoal
pictures of pioneers of Huron county
Still hanging in the homes -in and
about Huron.
But Toronto was his goal and ev-
entually he got back there. By dint
of hard work he got together enough
money to betake himself to art school
in Philadelphia, and then at last to
his ultimate goal, Paris. And there
he met Paul Peel.
For many years Mr. Reid has lived
in a charming home of his own plan-
ning in Wychwood park, Toronto.
There, in a great studio, hung with
pictures, he works with a roaring fire
in a great recessed fireplace for com-
pany.
DEAR OLR IRELAND AND HOW
DOESHE STAND?
It is a long time since anything
about Ireland has appeared in this
column and the fact that the Labor
parties of Irish Free State anc,North-
ern Ireland have recently come to an
agreement that may ultimately be of
national importance suggests a few
remarks on the subject. On the invi-
tation of the Labor party of Northern
Ireland, Dan Morrissey, Deputy
Speaker of the Dail and one of the
most influential members of the La-
bor party in the South, attended a
meeting at Belfast. As a result of
this meeting it was agreed that a
joint council of the two parties should
be formed to meet alternately in Bel-
fast and Dublin and discuss problems
of common interest. It is possible
that this innovation may mark the
beginning of a closer drawing to-
gether of the two countries. It may
even be remembered 'in the future as
one of the first definite steps toward
a united Ireland. On this point Mr.
Edward F. Roberts, an Irishman,
writes in the New York Herald -Tri-
bune, "The politicians on either side
do not dare to talk aloud of a peace-
ful union now, but it is in the hearts
of many men who are discussing the
vision in whispers to -day, but who will
demand its realization loudly on some
not distant to -morrow."
Mr. .Roberts, in chronicling the
changes that are taking place in .Ire-
land notes that the Unionist party has
wholly disappeo.red in the Irish Free
State. This was the party of the Pro-
testants in Southern Ireland, the main
plank in whose platform was the pres-
ervation of the bond with England.
Some of the best and most patriotic
of Irishmen belonged to the Unionist
party and they firmly believed that a
severing of the link with Great Bri-
tain would prove disastrous. This con-
viction was based on both sentimental
and economic grounds, and they were
convinced that since England in the
very nature of things must remain
Ireland's best customer, tariff walls
between them could not fail to make
Ireland suffer. But now that the sep-
aration has taken place, and the first
soreness of the wounds have been re-
moved by time, they find their worst
fears not realized. In any event, they
find that there is nothing to be done
about it but do their 'best for the Ire-
land under whose Government they
live. There is no longer a. choice be•
tween Unionist theory and British
connection and the Home Rule theory.
There is only a choice between Cos-
grave and De Valera. For the Union-
,.'- - efse . --' De' Valera is all rtrr id§,.
regarded by
^;t !'g ::'. e'tizens of the Irish
But if the Southern Unionists have
to some extent accommodated them-
selves to the new order it will take
much longer for any such reconcili-
ation to take place between North and
South. 'Mr. Roberts quotes a remark
made a few years.ago by a leading
Belfast business man who was at the
time a member of the Government of
Northern Ireland:
"In our hearts we know that union
with the Free State is inevitable, but
feeling is too bitter now to permit us
to say that openly.. If I were to Make
such a statement in public in Belfast
I Would be torn to obits, but it is inr-
possible for a little county like Ire-
land to remain divided. T e North is
the manufacturing and wh lesale em-
its pros-
tre and it cannot Inainta
perity when artificial walls are erect-
ed between it and its natural market,
in the South." Northern Ireland to-
day is not in a flourishing condition.
Unemployment is like that in Eng-
land and industries are languishing..
Taxation is twice as heavy as it is in
the ,South. Indeed in the South taxa-
tion is remarkably low, which is na-
tural enough in a country which suf-
fered so little from the war. New
Southern Ireland is proposing to
abolish its -super-taxes on income in
the hope that many wealthy Irishmen
who left the country when the Free
State achieved its independence may
be induced to return.
This seems a fitting place to make
a handsome acknowledgment of a
prediction frequently made years ago
by our friend the Globe. In arguing
for Home Rule which would apply to
all Ireland the Globe said that the
South of Ireland could not get along
without the special business ability
so common in the North andpredict•
ed that the day would come when a
Northern businessman would be Min-
ister of Finance. To some extent
that has already happened. The Min-
ister of Finance in the present Free
State 'Government is Ernest Blythe,
a Presbyterian who is by birth a
Northerner. The Government itself
is overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, of
course, but the most important post
in it, after the Premiership, is held
by a Northern Protestant.
1
4i
•4
i4
4,
is
•,
♦♦
JUNE 20,. 1930.
for Economical Transportation
Authorized
Sales and Service
DUNLOP & BARNETT
Seaforth, Ont.
E. W. FAWM
Mitchell, Ont.
*i
4.
4.
+,
.4
,`
4►♦
4+
4,
44
Canadians generally are indifferent
to the form of Government that suits 1
Ireland and if two Governments are
desired by the Irish people they will
be satisfactory to Canadians. They
will hope, howewer, to see the day
when the bitterness produced by re-
ligious intolerance will have passed
Iaway and when North and South,
!first
divided or united, will thank
i first that they are Irishmen and sec-
ond that they are Protestants and
Catholics. At the last Dublin Horse
Show an event took place which gives
promise that much of the ancient
hatred and hostility is evaporating.
1 n the international military compe-
tition teams representing seven coun-
tries competed. The day before the
event was to be decided the star Eng-
lish rider, a soldier with a brilliant
war record, met with a fatal accident
in practice. The Irish papers expres-
sed deep regret at the incident ansi
the next day when the English team
rode -into the ring the 70,000 specta-
tors with few exceptions rose to their
feet and saluted the British military
riders with a prolonged ovation which
rivalled that 'given later to the Irish
riders. It was almost as noteworthy
an incident as though the Germans
had cheered the French departing
from the Ruhr.
Tires almost
worn out are
dangerous..
DRIVE IN SAFETY ON
IIOMINION ROYALS
Look to your tires early this season.
Ha:ve them inspeeted by a Domin-
ion Tire Depot expert.
Your old tires may be worn to the
danger point. Replace them with
Dominion Royals, standard equip-
ment on many of Canada's finest
cars.
Dominion Royals—the tire of today
for the car of today—are sold and
serviced by Canada's greatest tire
organization, the Dominion Tire
Depot System, each independent
unit distinguished by its blue and_
orange color scheme.
�.f
To make it more digestible
. this delicious food is
Shot from Guns
How 125 million explosions in
every grain makes Puffed Wheat
and Puffed Rice ,as nourishing
as hot cooked cereals
T ASTE
these deliciously flavory Puffed
Grains! ... They are the invention of Pro-
fessor Anderson. He seals grains of wheat and
rice in huge bronze guns.' Revolves the guns
in a fiery furnace. When the guns are fired,
125 million explosions occur in each grain.
'This opens every tiny food cell. It makes
Puffed Grains as completely digestible as though
they had been cooked for hours. Hence they
----become-virtually as-nourishing-as-hurrookezr
cereals.
And how crisp ... crunchy ... delectably
good to eat Puffed Wheat and..Puffed4Rice are.
They melt in your mouth. They give just the
splendid grain nourishment everyone needs.
Serve them for breakfast, luncheon and supper.
Toast them with butter to make a new deli-
cious kind of popcorn. Your grocer has Puffed
Wheat and Puffed Rice, The Quaker Oats
Company.
UA ER PUFF D WHAT ANS►::
e 6,
♦h r
I '