The Huron Expositor, 1930-09-12, Page 2•
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tilts INA . 1 4644 PLEASANT AS SUGAR
SUNDAY AFTERNOON ; Golden Text—Romans 14:12.
From the Expositor''s Bible we
glean the following information about
Jeremiah and his life-worke-a cotn-
mentary on the passages for to -day's
lesson.
A priest by birth, Jeremiah be-
came a prophet by the special •call of
God. His priestly origin implies a
good literary training in times when
literature was largely, in the hands of
the priests. The priesthood, indeed,
constituted a principal section of the
PRAYER Israelitish nobility. Kings, princes
and priests are often named together
Our sins of ignorance and of knowl- in the prophets' writings as the aria -
edge, the sins we remember and tocracy of the land.
those we remember not, all these Even before his birth Jeremiah had
things we humbly confess unto Thee, been predestined by God for the work
0 God. We praise Thee for the of his life. He speaks of this in con -
assurance that with Thee is forgive- rection with his call from God to his
ness and plenteous redemption. Cast prophetic work.
the mantle of Thy charity over our In verses 5-10 we see him under
sins, and lift us to our feet again in divine influence. God said to him
the sure confidence that Thou dost that He had called and ordained him
trust us once more. Amen. to the office' of a prophet. On hear -
Selected. ling that he gives expression to his
lack of preparedness and fitness for
S. S. LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 11 such a high calling: "Ah, Lord God!
behold, I cannot speak; for I am a
child." Jeremiah does not refuse to
obey his call; the use of the words
"Lord God" implies a recognition of
the divine right to his service; he
merely indicates a natural objection.
The objection that he is, on account
of his youth, naturally timid and an
inexperienceds aker is me
t the
pe by
encouraging promise of divine assist-
ance: "Say not, 1 ant a child; for
thou shalt go to all that I sha;l send
thee, and whatsoever I command thee
thou shalt speak."
Oriental mode of thought and
speech invests everything with bodily
form so in verse 9 we read that "The
Lord put forth His hand and touched
my mouth, and the Lord said unto
me, Behold I have put my wprds in
thy mouth." Stripped of its symbolic
form the verse eie 5 im1itS • asserts that
the spiritual change which came over
Jeremiah at the turning point of his
career, was due to the im t ediate
operation of God; and that the out
-
o Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
Moly Spirit, Truth Divine,
]awn upon this soul of mine!
Wiard of God, and inward Light,
Wake my spirit, clear my sight.
HolySpirit, Power Divine,
31 and nerve, this will of mine;
By Thee may I strongly live,
Bravely bear, and nobly strive.
Samuel Longfellow.
•axil anauitestetien oaf this, ilaward
huge was that Pee04114,preaching
of divine tell*by '°gvhieh ire was
he,nne lath known. The scare of ` his
horeediesioe tie preach' es seen in verse
10, See, 1 heave this dale set :thee
ever the n+at1ores and over the king-
dereer to root out and to pull down,
and to destroy, and to thrown down, to
build and to plant," The word of
God is a rock upon which the faith of
Hlis metssenggersmay always repose.
They know that, while their own ef-
forts may be thwarted, that will is
invincible; that though they niay fail
in the conflict, that word will go on
conquering and to conquer, until it
shall have subdued all things unto it-
self. "Behold I am the Lord, the God
of all flesh; is there anything too
hard for me?"
God had made a covenant with the
children of Israel in the day that he
took them by the hand to bring them
out of the land of Egypt. Now by
the mouth of his prophet God env -
claims that He will make a new cov-
enant with the house of Israel and
the house of Judah. It is spiritual
blessings that He promises. The law
given to their fathers was written on
tables of stone, but now the law shall
be written in their hearts by the fin-
ger of the Spirit. He promises that
there shall be a widespread know-
ledge of God among all sorts of peo-
ple. This refers to gospel times
when there shall be such a plenty of
public preaching, that there shall be
less need than there was in the days
of the Iaw for. neighbor or brother to
say, "know the Lord."
To this end iniquity must be for-
given and sin remembered no more.
"It is sin that keeps good things from
us, that `stops the current of God's
favors; let sin be taken away by par-
doning mercy, and the obstruction is
removed, and Divine grace runs down
like a river, like a mighty stream."
—Matthew Henry.
Lesson
Lesson
31 27-34.
Topic—,Jeremiah.
Passage—Jeremiah 1:4-10•;
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--Kellogg's Corn Flakes and
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Easy to digest. Kellogg's fur-
nish energy without "heating"
the body. They help you feel
cool!
CORN
FLAKES
* Delicious with fresh or canned fruits
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nAXES
•
The Highway Traffic Amendment Act 1930
?
•
This
May Happen
To the Most Careful Driver
•
If you are directly or indirectly involved
The Safety Responsibility Law
effective September 1, 1930, among other things, says:
That you must remain at, or return at once
to the scene of the accident.
That you must render all possible assistance,
give your name and address and a written state-
ment if requested.
That if the damage apparently exceeds $50
you must report to the nearest police o jJicer.
That if you are at fault and do not pay for
damage done to the person or property of others
AND HAVE NOT INSURANCE to indemnify others
on your behalf you will have your license
suspended.
A pamphlet explaining the provisions of the new law
can be procured without charge from the agent of any
company a member of
The Canadian Automobile
erwriters Association
'tfea
10
alva+
welds;
uTs .rr,�a
thtn,xloCtiSf;e
'Triteitl�xTb �• ad
ethers nnl#d: °jSootha-
es,..ti ser; boils, burns.
a;�lilce': hiss. All druggists.
'4111.: - If the COW is heated to the
fyoiundation walls, the, problem will be
much more di eultl .and mai hQ .i. ,-
possible of solution:'` The 4ifleu1t t
will be in reaching the nest with the
liquid. If the nest. is lecated, endV
the door, it Halle be necessary to re-
move a. piece of the flooring in order
to gain access to the dolony.
In the use of carbon bisulphide, it
must be remembered that the gas is
inflammable and explosive and no
form of fire or light should be brought
near the place that is being fumigat-
ed.
A. temporary expedient, and one
that may discourage the ants enough
to finally stop them from coming, is
to soak small sponges in sweetened
water and place them where the in-
sects are most numerous. The ants
will crawl into the pores of•_ the
sponges in great numbers and may
be killed by dropping the sponges into
boiling water. This process should be
repeated over and over, and thousands
of the werkers may thus, be dest}•oy-
ed. In instances in which this prac-
tice has been given a thorough and
persistent trial, the ants have become
so discouraged and`bewildered by the
sudden loss of so many workers that
they have finally abandoned the house
entirely.
Ants may be discouraged from en-
tering houses by keeping shelves,
tables and floors in kitchens and
pantries, as free as possible from
crumbs and other food fragments, and
by storing foodstuffs in ant -proof
containers. In, addition, openings
in floors and walls through which
ants may gain entrance should be
carefully plugged.
•
ran, with the sweat pouring from
their sides, and their eyes starting
out of their heads—and won.
Mr. Lambton's attention was riveted
to the problem by the case of a horse
which, after winning a race, dashed
madly into a stone wall and killed
itself. 'The placed the matter" before
a steward of the jockey club, who,
however, took a sceptical view of it.
Mr. Lambton had several "rogues"
in his stable at the time, and he. in-
formed the stewards that he intend-
ed to dope them, so that they could
see for themselves what the results
were. ,
"The first horse I doped," declares
Mr. Lambton, " was a chestnut geld-
ing called Folkestone. I sent him to
Ponaefract, where he beat a field of
fourteen very easily, and nearly went
round the course a second time before
his jockey could pull him up. He won
a race again the next day, was sold,
and never won again.
"I had told my brother, Lord Dur-
ham, what I was doing. So much did
he dislike this doping that he was in-
clined to object to my having any-
thing to do with it. But when I ex-
plained that my object was to open
the eyes of the stewards, he withdrew
his objection, but begged me not to
have a shilling on any horse with a
dope in him. To this I agreed."
The famous trainer then procured
six dopes from a veterinary surgeon.
He did not inject these with a needle,
but just gave them out of a bottle,
The effects of these were amazing.
Mr. Lambton used fiveof thein—and
had four winners and a second. Not
one of these horses had shown any
form throughout the year. One of
them, Ruy Lopez, who had previous-
ly entirely defeated the efforts of the
best jockeys in England, "ran away''
with the Lincoln autumn handicap.
But that was a score of years ago.
The penalties against doping are now
so severe, and the watchfulness of the
jockey club so acute, that it is un-
likely that this practice could ever be-
come frequent in this country.
WORLD MISSIONS
Japanese Reformer (Continued)
Afterwards I heard of the new
Temperance Society formed with ten
prominent villagers already signed
up, and many of the others interest-
ed. To be sure the -present mayor is
a "sake" dealer, but that's merely a
matter of time, as already ttie citi-
zens are asking for a temperance
mayor. I heard of five young couples
-
rr•ie�d in the villagesince "Nang
ma
yakuso" opened its doors to Decem-
ber, who are to be invited to a special
"tea-party" in their honor and given
some wholesome advice about the
right way to establish a new home.
Mr. Wakao's is a happy, Christian
hone, the wife voluntarily staying
on in the town house, to keep the
children at school, but interested in
her husband's work, and the accounts
he brings home on his weekly visit
I heard too, of the hope that wed-
dings niay take place at the "Centre"
without wine and with Cnristian
ceremony. Soon will come the bus-
iest time of year for the farmers.
Mr. Wakao, too, will don. overalls and
strive to make his bit of farm a mod-
el. He knows a great deal about
crops, and mixed farming — both
theoretical and' practical—and feels
sure these villagers could live much
more comfortably and with leisure
for culture, if only they knew better
ways of farming. He wants to hell
them. It is all a part of his plan to
make this place, "an ideal Christian
village."
Mr. Wakao has a beautiful humble
spirit, and his face lights up radiant-
ly when he speaks of his work and
plans. It is a life job and he knows
it, and has laid his all on the altar.
Shall we not all support him in his
great undertaking by our sympa-
thetic prayers?
THE SERVICE ARMY
More than 16,000 persons carry on
the telephone work of the Bell System
in Ontario and Quebec, operators—
linemen—installers—commercial work-
ers—all co-operate to maintain "the
talking wires" for a busy populace.
Talks to distant friends are bezoming
a weekly habit with thousands of us-
ers.
STEEL USED FOR HIGHWAY
BASE
Steel foundations for public roads
in prospect
is the latest developmentros � p
in highway engineering. The idea is
to provide a real super -highway that
will be at all times smooth, will last
several times longer than pavements
now in us and over which traffic may
move with increased safety at a speed
ranging ebtween sixty and 100 miles
an hour.
The first test road embodying this
new steel construction is being built
on a section of the Sangamon coun-
ty, Ill., highway system. As by engineers, explain-
ed en freers the road will
have a
carefully rolled and prepared usb-
grade on which s eel base and curb
will be'laid. Next will follow a mas-
tic sand cushion, upon which will be
placed a layer of two and half or
three-inch brick, with an asphaltic
filler poured into the interstices be -
DO YOU VALUE tween the brick. The result will be
YOUR HEALTH 7 an indestructible base with a smooth
riding surface built into the structure
If your health is poor; if you are with sufficient flexibility to meet all
pale, nervous and easily tired; if changes of temperature without
you suffer from headalchee and breaks or cracks on the surface.
backaches; if your digestion is bac i Steel engineers, by means of ex -
you may depend upon it that these tensive research and tests, have de -
symptoms come from an impoverish- veloped a type of steel base construe -
ed state of the blood. That unless tion which, used in connection, with
this condition is remedied a complete proper surfacing material, would not
breakdown may follow. Dr. Williams' only give an exceptionally strong
Pink Pills are a perfect medicine for highway, but would permit a wearing
any one in this condition. They • en- surface of some flexible type such as
rich and purify the blood and thus asphalt or bituminous filled brick,
promote health and strength. which would be ideal for the wheels
Mrs. G. M. Andrews, Halifax, N.S. of traffic. By using certain methods
writes:—"I always keep Dr. Wil- of construction developed in their
liams' Pink Pills in the house. When tests, they have been able to get the
I was a young, anaemic girl they cost down to a price comparable to
completely restored my health. Af- other present-day pavements of the
ter marriage my health broke down higher types.
and once more these pills brought
me back to health. My friends all
tell me how well I look and for this
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills deserve all
credit."
Yau can get these pills at all medi-
cine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a
box from The DT. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
T
DOPING OF HORSES IS STILL
COMMON
Proposals were made recently in
this country for establishing a series
of tests to determine whether race-
horses were doped or not before they
went on the course.
These suggestions met with general
ridicule in the press. It was argued
that those who were responsible for
putting them forward had been in-
spired by sensational films in w.hicli
crooked race horse owners a n d
jockeys injected dangerous drugs by
means of a hypodermic syringe intu
horses that, but for these artificial
stimulants, would stand little chance
of winning.
While it is true that the prevalence
of the practice has been greatly' ex-
aggerated at times by writers who
should know better, there is else no
doubt whatever, in the mind of any
experienced racing expert, that horses
are occasionally doped --especially in
America. Britain, however, has an ex-
tremely clean record in this respect.
Indeed, apart from the moral as-
pects •of the case—and the standard
of racing in this respect is probably
higher in this country than anywhere
else in the world—it would be ex-
tremely difficult for any unscrupulous
owner, trainer or jockey to "get a-
way" with such a practice for any
length of time. The vigilance of the
jockey club—the 'Scotland Yard of
the race-course—is too keen and un-
remiting for scoundrels of this type
to prosecute this type of racing crimp
for long.
Race -horses are sensitive beasts,
and they are trained to such a pitch
of efficiency that the effects of even
small quantities of "dope" on their
highly -strung organisms become evie
dent at once to a skilful observer.
Yet cases of doping are not , un-
known in Great Britain, as the Bon.
G. Isambton•, for many years trainer
to Lord Derby, and an acknowledged
authority on the turf, has just reveal-
ed in his book, "Men and Horses I
Have Known" (Butterworth). In
1900, he says, it began to be a seri-
ous menace to horse -racing, and by
•I911,8 it had 'become a scandal.
Hdrses which were obvious "rcgues"
fii�laY:ud�tSth
t
•
ilt
•i i�
HOW TO RID A HOME OF ANTS
"Will you please tell me how to get
rid of ants. I have put cayenne pep-
per along the window ledges, hut they
do not seen to come in there. We
live in upstairs rooms, so I do not un-
derstand how they get in."
The only method of getting rid of
ants permanently is by locating their
nests and treating them in such a
way that the queens will finally be
destroyed. No more eggs will he laid,
and the production of workers will
cease. One of the •best substances
for treating nests, in order to kill the
queen and ekterminate the workers
is carbon bisulphide. It is often dif-
ficult to locate the nest, and some-
times when found it will be in en in-
accessible situation; for example., it
may be discovered in the foundation
walls, under the floor, or in some
other equally secluded and protected
place. One writer suggests that black
ants may be traced to their nests by
baiting them with tiny broken pieces
of rice, farina, or cream of wheat. The
ants will carry these pieces of white
food to their nests and may be easily
traced in this manner. When the col-
ony is located it may be treated with
carbon bisulphide by pouring an ounce
or two of the liquid into each of sev-
eral holes made in the nest with a
sharpened stick, after which opera-
tion the mouth of each hole should be
quickly stopped with a clod of dirt.
A heavy wet blanket thrown over the
nest will aid in retaining the gas and
will tend to make the fumigation more
effective. The liquid evaporate
quickly and the gas permeates the
whole nest, killing the queen and the
workers and exterminating the col -
Wakeful Nights
From indigestion
BOOKS OF GANSTER REVEAL
MANY CRIMES
What a great convenience to graft-
ers and other criminals it would be if
such inventions as cheques had never
come into existence! A coin or a
bank note may change from hand to
hand and in a day or a month it will
be impossible to trace •it. But when
a cheque is given there is also given
a permanent engraving of the trans-
action. Names appear on cheques,
and time does not obliterate them.
Cheques are deposited in banks, and
months or year later bank officials
will come forward to testify to the
fact. Why was the cheque given?
What were the services rendered ?
Were they such as can stand the light
of day? Or does each new revela-
tion make more damning the chain of
circumstantial evidence that Iinks the
criminal to the crime? There is a
law which compels companies to keep
books, and these books must reveal
how much money was received and
how much disbursed. Experts rang-
ing over the books years later will
scent out discrepancies and detect
fraud and perhaps send guilty men to
prison, which is quite satisfactory to
everybody except the parties immedi-
ately involved who must as we have
said, curseethe business system that
finally brings their schemings to
naught.
But it is something quite new for
a man engaged in wholly criminal ac-
tivities to keep an accurate account
of money received and distributed.
That is why the revelations .pouring
from Chicago almost daily concerning
the hidden boxes of Jack Zuta have
attracted so much attention. Inves-
tigators have found several of these
boxes, and in each one of them they
have found evidence of a criminal
relationship between Zuta and var-
ious public officials. Naturally every-
body is astonished because nobody
ever supposed' that a gangster would
keep evidence which would b e
damning to himself no less than to
those he was bribing. Zeta for •sev-
• eral years before his murder in Dela-
field, Wisconsin, a few days ago, was
a well knoZvn figure in the Chicago
underworld. He was popularly credit-
ed with having been the brains be-
hind the murder of Lingle, the Tri-
bune reporter, and it is presumed
that he was murdered by friends of
Lingle's, that is to say members of
the Capone gang of which Lingle was
also a member. For years he was
the "pay-off man" of the Aiello -Moran
gang, and this gang was the phief
rival of the Capons.
Zuta was, in effect, the treasurer,
and like any other competent treas-
urer he kept books to show what
will prove its 'value beyond ,question. money passed through his haiids.'tTow
ai Cr!pn n..,led With Rheumatism—
.
211
hes matism—
THANKS TO KRUSCNEN
Once he was the object of his neigh-
bours' sympathy—a rheumatic cripple.
To -day he is the object, of their
astonishment — a stenuously active
man. It was Kruschen that accom-
plished the startling change. Here are
the vital facts of his story :—
SUNDAY
-
"•Roughly about 10 years ago I was
crippled with rheumatism, and for
about four years it was impossible for
me to get about. When I wanted to
get, in a taxi, I had to get in on my
knees. I tried everything—a potato
in my pocket, sulphur in my socks,
rheumatic ring, soaked my feet in
proof whisky; also rubbed my joints
with it ; tried all sorts of liniments
and pills—it did no good. Then I
started on Kruschen Salts, and never
missed a morning, taking my dose 20
minutes before breakfast. My age now
is 56, and if you were to see me
you would take me for not over 40.
I can handle anything that comes into
our shop ; lift over my head settees,
sideboards, wardrobes, etc.; in fact,
people who know me say it is mar-
vellous. To -day I am in perfect health.
This is the honest truth."—T. R.
Here is a plain statement of the
facts :-Two of the six salts of which
Kruschen is composed dissolve the
OW Fit
•
needle -pointed crystals o uric acid
which have settled in :our joints,
causing them to swell, ache and
inflame. Other ingredients i f Kruschen
assist Nature to flush out these
dissolved crystals through the natural
channels. Other ingredients still
prevent food fermentation or decom-
position taking place in the intestinal
tract and thereby check the further
formation not only of uric acid, but
of other body poisons which under-
mine the health.
The threefold action of Kruschen is the
secret of its effectiveness in ' those
stubborn cases of rheumatism which
will yield to no other treatment. Put
Kruschen to the test yourselt. The
benefit will have begun before you
have finished the first bottle.
Kruschen Saks is obtainable at all
Drug Stores at 45c. and 75c. per bottle
that he is dead his books are open for
inspection and they reveal every dol-
lar he paid for protection' or good-
will, not only far the Aiello -Morgan
gang, but for such other houdlums
as Dion O'Bannon, Hymie Weiss and
Schemer Drucci—all slaughtered long
ago. He even struck trial 'balances,
and in one of them reported the dis-
bursement of $400,076 for the "period
ending November 12th." He was not
explicit as to the length of this per-
iod, but from other sources it has
been calculated at not longer than a
month and perhaps even less. One
of his safety deposit boxes revealed
cancelled cheques and notes for $5,-
500
from a former municipal judge,
.
and a. cheque for $250 made out to a
former Superior Court judge. Two
cheques each for $200 were made out
to a former' State Senator and a note
for $600 bears the signature of a
Chicago police sergeant. There was
a cheque for $5Q made out to "Cash"
and signed by a Chicago newspaper
editor. There was also in this little
cache a letter from the Evanston po-
lice chief, asking for a loan of $400.
The chief signed himself "Your Pal."
He has since said that he will resign.
One thing which we find significant
about these disclosures is the presence
of the cheques. Only two explanations
occur. Either the officials accepting
the chequeswere so confident that
there never would be an investigation
that they saw no risk in permitting
their names thus to be ominously
linked with the gangsters; or else the
gangsters, and not the officials, were
the masters of the situation. The offi-
cials might demur at accepting
cheques and ask for cash instead. The
gangsters might insist that they ac-
cept cheques or nothing. In other
words, the gangsters may have been
so powerful that they were able to
force the men they corrupted to sign
practically a confession of their com-
plicity before they would pay them
their share of the plunder. Thus
Zuta was providing himself with pro-
tection, for there must have been
many people in Chicago who had the
liveliest interest in his continued
health and prosperity. Had the oc-
casion arisen, we imagine that he
might have called out a formidable
bodyguard of judges, senators, poli-
ticians and police, ready to perish ra-
ther than see the Zuta dossier expos-
ed.
The Zeta 'books, according to the
Nothing wears you out more quick-
ly than a period of wakeful, restless
flights or fitful slumber marred by un-
pleasant dreams. The -cause is often
digestive disturbance and the remedy
is a little "ittisurated" Magnesia after
the last meal or before going to bed.
This calms the stomach, neutralizes
excess acid, banishes the fermenting
unrest and induces healthy, restful
slumber by the sensible means of pro-
ducing peaceful normal digestion.
"Bisurated" Magnesia is obtainable
at any good drug store in either pow-
der or tablet form and a simple trial
fit
r^.
•
u §,,
,2l�ihl!iti
.WiLL`KILL :MORE FLIES THAN /;
'SEVERAL ' DOLLARS :WORTH
or ANY OTHER ELY Ktl.LER •
1 Oce'
WHY
PAY
MORE
Best of all fly killers..
Clean, quick, sore,
cheap. Ask your Mug-
gist,
ruggist, Grocer or Generale
Store.
THE WILSON FLY PAD
CO., HAMILTON, ONT
anxious to get hold of the documents,
which proved their complicity. There-
fore he kept various safety deposit.
.boxes under various navies, calculat-
ing,that if he should be bumped off
he would take a post-mortem revenge
on his slayers. But it seems that his
slayers' were of his own type, and not
the more respectable rascals whom
he paid for favors. Taking a little
holiday from Chicago he was amusing
himself in a Wisconsin hotel feeding
nickels into an electric phonograph to'
provide dancing for the benefit of a
dozen youthful dancers. Several mere
armed with portable machine .guns
suddenly appeared on the floor ands
Zuta fell dead with a score of bullets
in 'his plump little body.
Baltimore Sun, are what one might
term a "Who's Who of Cook County
Politics" and one might speel it Crook
county without materially altering the
sense of it. Some of the evidence
disclosed crimes now protected by the i
statute of limitations, but Pat Rothe,
the special investigator, remarks "a
lot of men will be leaving town."
There are other hidden books yet to
be brought toe light and the investi-
gators are searching for them. Zuta, I
apparently, felt that some of the men i
to whom he paid money might be
No other sweet lasts
so long, costs so little or-
does
rdoes so much for you.-
RIGL Y'S
Promotes good health when used;_
regularly after every meal.
It cleanses teeth and throats.,
sweetens mouth and breath, and.,
strengthens the gums.
Your health is aided
while your pleas-
ure is served.
Good and:
ai
be sockl
lion liar
witt?
A faded, battered hat is hardly
respectable ... yet no worse
than dull, gray -looking shoes
... your morning toilet should
always include a "Nugget"
shine—which waterproofs the
shoes as it polishes. ,•; ��
'U
4,f
SHOE PO Illi S 11
Ilse NUGGET TIN Om wiiticaa 't
xs
li.
1 •
rii'f�`rs i A yf � r,v
d } t
Is
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