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SUNDAY AFTERNOON
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
In the land of strangers
Whither thou art gone,
Hear a far voice calling
My son, My son!
See the door still open;
Thou art still my own;
Eyes of love are on thee,
My son, My son!
Horatius Bonar.
PRAYER
"Jesus, whose love rekindles dying
{ares,
Flickering to ashes in our aching
hearts,
Be Thou the goal of all our best de-
sires,
The dawn from which our longing
ne'er departs."
Selected.
S. S. LESSON FOR APRIL 12th, 1931
Lesson Topic—The Prodigal Som..
Lesson Passage—Luke 15:11-24.
Golden Text—Luke 15:10.
In this beautiful parable there are
two prominent figures—the prodigal
son and the father. The former is a
type of man and the latter of God.
The prodigal goes step by step down
to ruin. He becomes restless under
the restraint of a pious home and de-
termines to seek liberty of action by
breaking home ties. Relying on self
he seeks new surroundings, new work,
new pleasure and goes to excess in
the latter until he finds himself re-
strained not by home restrictions and
responsibilities but by hard circum-
stances and the truth begins to dawn
upon him that "liberty without law
is a lie." Seeking happiness he finds
only misery and cries out in his dis-
tress, "I perish with hunger." Hera
instead of descending still lower he
begins to retrace his steps. Memory
comes to his aid and his thoughts go
out thus—"Behind yonder blue hills,
away in the dim distance, lies my
father's house—a house of many man-
sions, and such full supplies that the
servants, even the hired servants have
bread enough and to spare." Longing
thought leads to action, so we see the
young man, ashamed and repentant,
resolving to go back home and ack-
nowledge he was in the wrong and
asked to be taken back as a servant.
The father and the father's house
have never 'been the same since the
day the younger son turned his back
on them. The father on recognizing
the wanderer rejoiced. The gloom is
lifted and joy holds sway. The serv-
ants are called and to them the mas-
ter unburdens his bursting heart say-
ing, "We must• make merry; for this
my son was dead, and is alive again;
he was lost, and is found." Before
the sinner, who is a prodigal son of
God the Father will repent, he must
feel hunger of the soul. Dr. Jessop
in a sermon on this topic says: Why
did God make it so natural for us all
to grieve aver the past, and to lament
so bitterly for sin? Does it not seem
as if this same penitence and sorrow
for misdoings were like to the pains
of hunger in the body, which at once
tells of weakness and waste and toil,
1
PADRE
DEPENDABLE
THAN EVER
and lower in price
THE NEW
SMOBILE
More dependable than ever I Think what that means
to a car noted for its dependability for more than
three decades. Then, bearing in mind its new, reduced
prices, considerthe remarkable value offered by this
new Oldsmobile.
lSyncro-Mesh Transmission brings new ease and silence of oper-
ation ... a new Quiet Second Gear permits swift get -away .. .
Down -Draft Carburetion and a more powerful engine contribute
new heights of speed ... and Insulated Fisher Bodies resist cold,
heat and noise.
We have a new Oldsmobile at our showrooms
waiting for you to drive ... to test ... and to
judge. The General Motors Owner Service
Policy is your guarantee of satisfaction ... and
the GMAC, an easy way to buy an
Oldsmobile on remarkably easy terms.
r( i1f
PRICED FROM
$ 1 0 8 5
at factory ...
Taxes Extra
NEW SILENT SYNCRO-
MESH TRANSMISSION
permits smooth, silent shift from
first to second to high ... and
back to second.
AUTOMATIC MANIFOLD
HEAT CONTROL
warms up engine quickly and
gives it improved performance
at al! speeds.
NEW EASY STARTING
starter when engaged, auto -
mailed Ily opens throttle to
pinker starting position.
01111RAL
DOWN -DRAFT CARBURETOR
WITH NON -FLOOD CHOKE
gives increased power, higher
speed, faster acceleration, and
greater smoothness.
INSULATED FISHER BODIES
are warmer in winter, cooler
In summer, and exceptionally
quiet
NEW OUIEIT SECOND GEAR
assures smooth swift accelera-
tion rivalling high gear per-
formance In quietness'.
00.20
WO
MOTOR! VALug
1"d t4 "dAlt i b A' O W gh3Y h'fi't"
41.41'104.0.f4 "1 s e illXl@ Ototlit .'.
us to seep f k A,10. tWI. Ant:1'9r,
the Pan If'440 i .1)0t nll o eat,.
the 11:441144 Acv:-***,t1i0OOT ins,
fallibly;
Oa pain that •is go terrilyle.
ie the iyery eaµse of bili qj ntinuin$
to Ansi such, a pain i ' xt which
the reanensbrance a sin aooases; it too
tolls of a waste that has /been going
oil within; the waste of spiritual pur-
ity and faith and earnestliess; the loss
of spiritual strength and devotion;
the wear and tear which the frivoli-
ties and vices of the world around us
must produce upon us all; (but it is a
pain which 'Goal gives us, not that i't,
may be painful and no more, but that
its painfulness may tell us of an evil
state of things, and not suffer us to
be content therewith.
Therefore, if on you there comes' at
times, as God 'grant there may:
"A sense of emptiness, without the
sense
Of an abiding fulness anywhere;"
a sense of weariness and self-reproach
as you see to how little purpose you
have lived; a sense of pain and grief
as you reflect how you have been mas-
tered in the evil language and bad
passions that tempt us all to wrong
-then thank God for the pain and
shame and penitence, and do not strive
to check it, pr forget it, or drive it
off. Arise, and go to your Father,
"and say unto Elm, Father, I have
sinned against Heaven and before
Thee, and .am no more worthy to be
called Thy son."
WORLD MISSIONS
The Healer of the. Nations.
Again and again in this Congress
we have been thrilled by a sense of
how far we have come toward a Chris-
tian North America. But again and
again we have been arrested by a
sense of how far short we are of the
ideal of 'Christ for these nations.
In the wards of Stanley Jones: "We
cannot go further until we go deep-
er." Nineteen hundred years ago a
band of men went out and transform-
ed the world under the conviction
that "Neither is there salvation in
any other, for there is none other
name under heaven given among men
whereby we must be saved." This
conviction was born out of a great
personal experience. Christ had made
their lives pageants of triumph in
Him. Through Him they had been
empowered to do all things. Hence
they felt He was sufficient for the
inner transformation of all their fel-
lowmen.
Under His leadership we have come
to think of the salvation of society
as well as of individuals. The con-
viction that Christ is sufficient for
meeting the problems of collective
life in North America must likewise
come from a great personal experi-
ence of Him. It must be even great-
er personal experience than the early
disciples had, for at times our task
seems more difficult than theirs. If
Christ means enough to us we can
make Him mean enough to others.
Throughout this Congress there has
been manifest a deep yearning for
Christ and a feeling that in very truth
we are thrown back wholly on Him.
Especially have we become sure that
while we have made progress in im-
proving our organization and there is
yet progress to be made, this progress;
can only become permanent as it is
shot through with a deeper experi-
ence of Chrigt. Even co-operation
and unity will be an empty gain un-
less He vitalizes it.
How shall this deeper experience be
attained? Just as the early disciples
attained it. They followed Him. They
learned from Him. Their lives were
a daily experimentation in His way
of living.
The further they swung themselves
out on His way of living the greater
He became to them and the bolder
they became in their proclamation of
Him. In like manner we shall find
that He saves us from disillusion-
ment and despair by giving us His
own radiance, and we, too, will dare
to take Him into every problem and
need that lies athwart the nations re-
presented in this Congress.—Finding
of the North American Home Mission
Congress.
A RED-LETTER DAY
With Tem away at college, Sunday
was pretty lonesome for his parents.
But it became a red-letter day when
he started to telephone in the even-
ing. There was so much far him
to tell them, and they, in turn kept
him in touch with the home news.
!Nothing could have been pleasanter.
THE TRUTH ABOUrT CANCER
During the last twenty years sur-
geons, researchers, and the health
authorities have preached unceasing-
ly the necessity of early operation in
cases of cancer. Every doctor who
sees a cancer case or a case which is
even slightly suspicious of cancer,
immediately sends the patient to the
surgeon. The number of cancer op-
erations has increased (prodigiously
during the last 20 years, and the
number of early treatments by
means of radium, etc., has increased
to an incredible extent. And yet, all
these frantic attempts have been prae
tically useless, for whereas the mor-
tality from all other diseases has
greatly decreased during the two de-
cades under review, the cancer mor-
tality has increased by no less than
72 per cent. This is a terrible situa-
tion because cancer is a disease of
middle and later life, and one which
is an enormous drain upon our .na-
ture population.
It is futile to state, as Lord Read-
ing stated in his foreword to "The
Truth About Cancer," recently pub-
lished by the British Empire Cancer
Campaign, that "Nowadays there is
far more reason for a hopeful out-
look on cancer than there was twen-
ty years ago." One can only assume
that such a statement was made
without a proper acquaintance with
the facts of the case. Undeniable
statistics which are not always men-
tioned by those who extol early, radi-
cal surgical treatment of eancer as
"the only cure," Condemn such a
treatment.
Unfortunately many of the statis-
tics published, even officially, db not
tend to advertise, failure. Surgeons
i5.Now eII pi `Strong as fixer
b Dr. Williams'
Pk Pi Is (Tonic)
4 wish from my
heart," writes Mrs.
Louie Mitchell, of Oak
Point, Manitoba, "I
could persuade every
person who is run dowa
in health to give Dr.
Wdliams' I nk FDi s,a trial. About a year
ago 1 was suffering from a run-down
system. Any little exertion -would cause
my legs to tremble • and my heart to
throb violently. I could not sweep a
room or walk fifty feet without being
exhausted. Then I began taking Dr.
Wdliams' Pink Pills and after taking only
six boxes I am as well and strong as ever."
The iron and other elements in Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills (tonic) increase the
number of red corpuscles in the blood
stream. They form a tonic which toms
up the nervous system.
Be sure to say "Dr. WiTran+q"' so
that the druggist wIU know exactly what
you want. 100
A Great.
Spring
Tonic
and public institutions report a prod-
igious percentage of cancer cures by
operation, but their figures are con
tradicted by the British Registrar -
General and by corresponding author-
ities abroad, probably because the
statistical period of cure has been
arbitrarily chosen, and is far too
short. A large percentage of those
who have been "officially cured" of
cancer and who are paraded among
the hosts of cured cases have actual-
ly died of that disease a little after
the end of the theoretical cure per-
iod. There is a difference between
being statistically cured and actually
cured, and 'between being statistically
alive and actually dead.
It is generally accepted that can-
cer is amenable to treatment, if 4ac-
cessible. But the vast majority of
cancerous tumors occw; in inacces-
sible quarters such as the stomach,
the bowels, the womb, etc., where
their existence is discovered only
when the growth is well advanced,
for cancer is painless at the beginning.
Surface cancers, which can be dealt
with at an early date, are compara-
tively rare. The popular assumption
also, that cancer is at first a purely
local disease is not supported by
many eminent and thoughtful physic-
ians and surgeons. Men like John
Hunter, John Abernethy and Sir
James Paget, the greatest surgeons
of their time, have emphatically ex-
pressed the opinion that cancer is not
o local, but a constitutional disease
If this is the case, then local treat-
ment such as the knife and radium
cautery, etc., is not the "only nure.'
In fact, it may be that the fearful
progress of cancer is due to our ex-
clusive reliance on surgery for fight-
ing the established disease. Possib-
ly the prospects of curing cancer
would be better if we relied more on
prevention which is at present abso-
lutely disregarded by surgeons, re-
searchers, and physicians.
Cancer is treated as something un-
avoidable, and yet daily we are told
that nothing Ls known ,about it. There
was a time when cholera, typhus, ty-
phoid, malaria, yellow fever and
many other diseases were also con-
sidered unav'oidable, unpreventable
Visitations of God. Before the time
of Lister half the people operated up-
on in hospitals died of lack of surgi-
cal cleanliness, 'but men of science
gravely maintained that there was a
specific disease (known as "hospital
fever." Antisepsis and asepsis, mere
commonsense cleanliness, as practiced
by the distinguished surgeon Lawson
Tait, who refused to adopt Lister's
antisepsis, caused the complete dis-
appearance of hospital gangrene and
hospital fever. 'Something similar
may happen in the fight against can-
cer when medical men and the public
in general refuse to believe any long-
er that cancer is inevitable, that it
has nothing to do with our methods
of living and that it can be fought
only by those surgical treatments
which are recommended to us as "the
only cure," a cure which has lament-
ably and disastrously failed.
However, although doctors, sur-
geons and researchers tells us that
cancer is unavoidable, they are not
always right. The overwhelming ma-
jority of doctors and surgeons sneer-
ed in the beginning at the discover-
ies of Harvey, Pasteur, Lister, Koch
and Semm'elweiss, and refused for de-
cades to use the clinical thermometer
and stethoscope. It may be that thee
cancer researchers are on the wrong
trail. For decades they have been
searching for a micro-organism re-
sponsible for cancer, but without suc-
ceeding. Even if the responsible or-
ganism were discovered, such a dis-
covery would not necessarily lead to
a specific with which that organism
eould be cured. Since the time of
Hippocrates, tuberculosis has been
treated by fresh air, good food. rest,
etc., although nothing was known a-
bout the causative organism. Half a
century ago Koch discovered the mi-
cro-organism of tuberculosis, but
millions of pounds in money have
Neuritis—Lumbago
Sciatica
You can expect and get instant
relief when you rub in Joint -Ease
One man wrote a letter and in it he
stated: "Joint -Ease knocked out my
lumbago over night." Yes! Joint -Ease is
like that—it has knocked out thousands
of 1 umbagoes over night—it has brought
speedy relief to tens of thousands of fine
people who have suffered with Sciatica
and Neuritis.
Joint -Ease is something splendid to
always, have in the house—Great for
backache, strained or sos�s�ee., muscles, lame-
ness, stiff neck, sore, inflaniedfeet, chest
colds and swollen knuckles.
And of course everybody kndws that
for joint troubles such as stiff, swollen,
painful, creaky ,joints its influence for
good is marvelous,'
But rub it in od (oint-Ease is
made in 'Canada and .031d by all stores
that sell good Medicines ---a generous
'tribe 60 cents..
failed to And .a specific which will
destroy* the baoillus of tuberculosis
without dehifp grave harms to the t'ub-
aerqularand patien , and the treatment still
rernaine chiefly fresh air, good food
rest.
f 'cancer is not a local disease, but
is from; the beginning a constitutional
disease, which leads eventually to a
local manifestation, then the present
method of flg1 ting Fancer by the de-
struction of that local manifestation
is by no means the only cure, al-
though surgery may be a cure in a
considerable number of cases.
Although many predisposing caus-
es such as jagged teeth, broken clay
pipes, tar,. heavy petroleum oils, ars-
enic, aniline dyes, gall stones, chron-
ic inflammatory conditions and chron-
ic nelers and moles are mentioned,
there is no mystery about the causa-
tion of cancer. It is quite possible
`that cancer may be due to our way
of living and to our food. In a very
interestingset of figures published
by the Registrar -General, we find
that brewess, "butchers and seamen
are almost three times as prone to
cancer as clergymen and agricultural
laborers. It is simple to deduce that
the one class leads a natural life, with
fresh, simple food and plenty of walk-
ing exercise, while the ether lives an
abnormal life, and, in the case of the
seamen, has a diet chiefly of vitani-
inized foods, artificial, preserved, tin-
ned and smoked provisions, and an
abundance of meat.
There is no simple cause for can-
cer. Broadly speaking, it is the pen-
alty of faulty, unnatural living and
to chronic poisoning, as in the ease
of people who have absorbed arsenic
or aniline poisons over a long period
of years. Self-poisoning from the
bowel, through habitual constipation,
is extremely frequent among the civ-
ilized but not among savages and an-
imals. Cancer is a disease of middle
age and old age because the process
of degeneration which culminates in
the cancer growth is extremely slow.
ffn every country in the world the
cancer mortality is vastly greater in
the towns than in the agricultural
districts, even making full allowance
for the fact that many country peo-
ple die in city ]sfospitals.
After years of study of the sub-
ject of cancer, it seems to the writer
that cancer is a disease of faulty liv-
ing and of chronic poisoning. Heat
acts like poison. Extensive burns
kill, not owing to shock but to the
poisons developed by the burning. It
may be that the excessively hot
foods taken by civilized people is a
direct cause of cancer. That and ha-
bitual constipation over may decades
have proven to be factors in thous-
ands of cases of stomach and bowel
cancer. It is even quite reasonable to
suppose that careful feeding and a
return to normal living may allay,
if not actually cure, cancer. Cer-
tainly the knife is not the only cure
for this disease of civilization which,
unless some steps are taken to pre-
vent it, may eventually exterminate
civilization.
KING TRAPPED QUEEN BY
INVISIBLE RAY
When he was attending the Persian
Art Exhibition at the Royal Academy
recently the King crossed the invis-
ible ray that guarded the crown jew-
els of the Shah of Persia with the
result that he "trapped" the Queen in
one of the nearby rooms.
'His majesty laughed heartily when
the attendants explained what had
happened and her majesty shared his
amusement when she had been "re-
leased."
The King in the company of one of
the directors of the exhibition was
standing before the Shah's treasures.
The director was explaining to him
that an invisible ray guarded the
crown jewels and that if anybody
crossed this ray an alarm would be
sounded throughout the academy and.
burglar-proof doors would swing a-
cross the entrances to all the salons.
Very much interested and quite
curious the King stepped across the
beam. Off went a siren that sum-
moned attendants from all corners of
the academy, on went warning red
lights and great burglar-proof doors
slammed shut.
The Queen was inspecting rich car-
pets in the next room when the up-
roar started and she exclaimed:—
"What's
xclaimed:"What's that?" to her escort. It was
explained that the invisible ray was
working and the Queen then discover-
ed that she was a prisoner. She did
not know what had "trapped" her un-
til she was released, but she got as
much fun out of the situation as did
the King.
HOUSEHOLD DISCOVERIES
Home -Made Tube Pan.
Use a deep round baking tin or
pudding dish, placing a 'small weighted
baking powder tin in centre. Makes
a splendid angel cake tin.
* * *
By using shoe bags on closet doors
for stockings, on cupboard doors for
cook books, and on cellar door for
garden gloves and rubbers, lone
raves much space.
To make—Use plain cotton or ma-
terial for back, make pockets on front,
not too deep, using a box pleat in
each pocket for fullness,' and binding
at top to finish.
* * *
To make a handy button (bag, take
a piece of strong material, cut a cir-
cle about the size of a dinner plate,
run a piece of bias tape round the
edge, and put in a draw string. When
a button is required, all one has to
de is open the bag out fiat on the
table, when one can select a button
of the desired calor and size without
trouble. It is a convenience to have
two bags. -,one for large buttons and
one for small.
* * *
Now is the time to start saving all
the gummed flaps of envelopes which
have been delivered without first be-
ing stuck down. I refer to the en-
velopes in which circulars, etc., are
delivered. Cut off the gunned por-
tion, place in an envelope, and keep
on hand until preserving time. Then
yota will find that you' are Well stip-
plied with,gummed labels for your
fruit and pickles.
* * *
Blending Sweater Coats and Pullovers,
065°
C, ,After two days old, Baby Chicks should
have the "Starter" before them all the time. Let
them eat all they want of it. There is nothing provided. Oy
nature or science that so fully supplies the baby chick requirements
for developing health, sturdiness and growth as does the famous
is ve Mci1'1i1//I
Chick Starter
gives phenomenal results. Itis a food that'is
highly digestible. It contains vegetable and
animal proteins, with minerals, vitamins
and carbohydrates, carefullyproportioned,
fortified with Nepco Cod Liver Oil.
Marmill Chick Starter will bring chicks into
the pullet stage with minimum loss. When
they are six to seven weeks old, change
their feed to Marmill Growing Mash grad-
ually as a sudden change in diet is bad.
mA
ILS
Growing Mash
has 23 different ingredients each one with a purpose sand correctly prroopportioned
for a perfect ration. Marmill Growing Mash also fortified with Nopco Cod Liver Oil,
will make pullets lay from three weeks to a month earlier, and lay larger eggs. If you
are in earnest about making poultry pay, don't overlook this guaranteed method.
REESORS MARMILL, LIMITED, MARKHAM, ONT.
also Manufacture Marmill 24% Dairy Supplement, Marmill Calf Meal
and Marmill Hog Grower, etc.
BUY FROM YOUR LOCAL DEALER
11
�CHICKSIARJER)
REG. No 2667
:_ab 61 WS,
PROTEIN 1T h
FAT ,45 `r.
PIBRC %
IIEESORS MA til
;`14411.47.',"W4',00°
l!s 8T wnlM P.OLC
Sold by ANDREW A. MOORS
SUNNYVALE POULTRY"FARM AND HATCHERY
PHONE 137 r 3 : SEAFORTH.
Match the wool of the sweater, and
on the wrong side darn stitches across
the rent from side to side; then with
a crotchet hook do the chain'stitch all
up the darned ladder, taking up one
of the threads at every stitch.
* * a,
Stale Bread.
Put the thoroughly dried pieces
through the food chopper and use in
equal parts with flour in batter
compounds, such as griddle cakes,
puddings, bread and biscuit sponges.
* * : •
Whipping Cream.
Place the cream in the upper part
of a double boiler, having fine ice or
cold water in. the lower section.
* . * *
!Should the knob of a kettle come
off, take a screw, passing it through
the hole, having the head on the in-
side' of the cover, and screw a cork
on the end.
* * *
Instead of using twine or string
for hanging up brooms, mops, brush-
es and kitchen) utensils, use ordinary
picture wire. It wears indefinitely,
and, being stiff, catches on hooks
more readily than string.
*
A Stitch in Time.
For many years I have kept a small
pincushion in my top dresser drawer,
keeping in it needles threaded with
black, white and several other colors.
With these I keep a small 'pair of
scissors and a thimble. Thus, I have
everything in readiness for the quick
stitch in time which often has to be
taken when one is busiest.
* * *
Ever Useful.
Clever little 'dishes for your fern
and house plant pots can be made by
using the tin lids of empty pound
coffee tins. Give them a coat of gay
enamel—♦varied or solid colors --.and
you have neat little protectors for
your table or shelf!
* * *
I found, when using my white en-
amelled kitchen step -ladder, that I
was constantly afraid of failing be-
cause the steps were slippery. I us-
ed an old stair tread, cutting pieces
to fit the step ladder, tacked them on
each step and now the danger of fall-
ing has been eliminated. Incidentally,
footprints which previously soiled the
enamel do not show on the rubber
treads.
* 4. *
The following method has saved
me both time and labor spent on laun-
dry work. fI painted my breakfast
room suite with a quick -drying lac-
quer in a Flemish blue shade. Dish-
es of any temperature can now be
placed on the table without marking
the surface, and after each meal all
that is necessary to keep the table
bright and glossy is a quick wipe off
with a damp cloth. This has done
away with common table oilcloth,
which, I think, makes children—wand
sometimes grown-ups—cereless about
their table manners. A fresh linen:
d.oiley at each place, and dishes which
harmonize with the color scheme of
the room, transforms the ordinary kit-
chen table to an attractive table .-'al-
ways ready for the unexpected guest.
* * *
When stoning and cutting dates,
glace cherries, etc., have a pitcher of
cold water standing near, in which to
dip the knife or scissors and wet the,
fingers. The fruit will be found eas-
ier to prepare as it will not stick to
the 'knife or the hands.
A
Great Deal
of pleasure
YOU get in
WRIGLEY'S
the most that
chewing gum
offers.
Try a package
today and see
how good good
gum can be.
The day's work
goes much
easier with
WRIGLEY'S.
RIGLEYS
CHEWING GUM ass, ,
SAVE THE BABY CHICKS
Make theru strong, sturdy, productive, EGG -LAYING
Pullets, with Prat tsBaby Chick Food. It costs a trifle more
but is CHEAPEST in the end, judged by results. The
Extra chicks you save and raise, more than pay for all the
Pratts Baby ChickFood you use. Ask
rtt your dealer—there's one near you.
Y Odell .FO
PRATT FOOD CO., OF CANADA LTD., Guelph, Ont.
IINPOR
!1. T.icL
anldswceter
syrup buy
BENSONS
ooLttsump
c
You ant gem
GREA711E- [�
NOBiR1SiiMENT
Li1 MONEY
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