Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1931-04-17, Page 2FF. „"TO am and Paschen Bell 0.144-140 Bishop had been xoubled with rheumatism and con- stipation. , He tried Kruschen Salts. '; he results impressed him so much at he wrote to tell us about it. uld any testimony be entitled to greater respect than that of this high dignitary a He writes ` I'; cave Kruschea Salts for two pur- ses. ---to ward off recurrent attacks of eumnatism, and, against Constipation. A have now no trouble in either direc- tion, since I began your daily doses, ,and I could not do without them." Asked if he had any objections to his -remarks being published, the Bishop . replied : " You may publish the text of toy letter—but not my name." Do you realise what causes rheu- matism ? Nothing but sharp -edged uric acid crystals which form as the result of sluggish eliminating organs. Kruschen Salts can always be counted upon to clear those painful crystals from the system. The six salts in Kruschen are bound to dissolve away all traces of uric acid. And more ! They ensure such perfect internal regularity that no such body .poisons as uric acid are ever able to accumu- late again. Prove this for yourself by buying a bottle of Kruschen. Think what a lot you get for so little. Not just one salt. Kruschen is a perfect blend of those six natural salts which are vital to your bodily well-being. Every day you must have these Salts or things go wrong inside, you. Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all Drug Stores at 45c. and 75c. per bottle. For pleasure Pofit Steele, Briggs' Seeds. Specially selected for purity and germi- nation and most suitable for Canadian Gardens.To grow the best—sow the best. For bigger, better crops sow NW A It `% +SEEDS ST EEIEBRIGGS.: PIPER PAPER STEEL, BRIGGS' SEEDS Sold everywhere in Canada. Send for illustrated catalogue. STEEL, BRIGGS SEED Mrsit ‘"CANADA'S GREATEST SEED HOi/SE" TORONTO- HAMILTON -WINNIPEG -REGINA- EDMONTON New Bodies by Fisher for t e New Chew iiet IN the new Chevrolet Six with longer wheelbase, you will quickly notice that Fisher Body craftsmen have created the roomiest and most beauti- ful body styles in Chevrolet history. Yet prices have been substantially reduced. The smart, modern lines of the car are emphasized by the deepened radiator and new de luxe .wire wheels .. . distinctive color harmonies and chrome -plated trim- mings add a finishing touch. Interiors are roomier ... beautifully upholstered .. . and fashionably appointed. The front compartments are fully insulated against heat, cold and noise. See the new Chevrolet Six at our showrooms. You can own it with even more pride ... buy it for even less money. Your Chevrolet dealer is luted under "General Motors" in the classified section of your 1931 'phone directory Ask hire about the GMAC plan of deferred payments, and the General Motors Owner Service Policy. Twelve smart, fine -performing models . . . priced from $610 at factory, Oshawa, taxes extra. It forward Canada 1 " Across the Dominion is sweeping a wave of national enthusiasm . free and unbounded. Canadians everywhere are striking forward on the rising tide of a fresh and vigorous prosperity. General Motors of Canada, Limited, pays tribute to Canadian achievement with "Canada on Parade", a radio hour every Friday evening. typifying the spirit of Canada's progress. You are cordially invited to tune in on this all -Canadian broadcast. ghe NEW CHEVROLET SIX CENE,RAL . MOTORS VALUE ,.x . DUNLOP swum, cm. CIS -24 WNW( AFTERNO.! I (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderi h, Ont.) Christian, work for Jesus, Who on earth for thee Labored, wearied, suffered, Ivied upon the trel, Work, with, prayer unceasing, 'Borne on faith's strong wing, Earnestly beseeching Trophies for the king. Mary ITaslock. PRAYER Teach us Lord to put the best value on our lives, seeking ever to lay up for ourselves treasures in heaven while doing the work of each day, ever keeping in mind that "He to- day and He to -morrow grace suffici- ent gives His own." Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR APRIL 19, 1931 Lesson Topic—The Rich Man and Lazarus. Lesson Passage—Luke 16:19-31. Golden Text—Matthew 6:20. FROM S1HQOL . Now WOO and Strong —Can'tPraise Dr. Williams' • Pink, Pills (Tonic) Too Highly —Helpful In Spring "When my daughter was eleven years old," writes ,Mrs. James Renaud, R.R. 1, Martin - town, Ontario, "she be- came nervous and weak. So bad I had to keep her from school. I read about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, so I bought a couple of boxes. She took them and felt better. So she con- tinued taking them and get well and strong—goes to school every day. This was two years ago, and she has not been sick a day since." Look back over your life. How you suffered! Don't let your daughter make the same mistakes. Look at her. Is she pale? Languid? The iron and other elements in Dr. Williamg' Pink Pills (tonic) increase the number of red corpuscles in the blood— improving the complexion, increasing body vitality. Any druggist will provide you with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Or write to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville. Price 50 cents a box. toe In this lesson we have plainly stat- ed the future results of present in- difference. We read every little against the rich man; 'there's nothing said against his wealth; but his char- acter is plainly portrayed. It is drawn in two strokes—his ordinary life, and his treatment of Lazarus. His daily life was luxurious. But most certainly we have no right to condemn him for that. With the Jewish nobility in practice, as with the Jewish law in theory, luxurious living does not seem to have been thought to involve any sin whatever. Lazarus is a type of the poor gener- ally. The treatment meted out to him is to be regarded as a fair speci- men of the rich man's general con- duct towards the poor. The portrait of the rich man, as drawn by Christ, is that of a man habitually careful of the gratification of his own appe- tite, and habitually careless of the suffering which was around him, ev- en at his doors. And from this sel- fish disregard of human misery, "IMoses and the Prophets," had he listened to them, would certainly have saved him. There was no point on which they spoke more plainly. Love to his kindred the rich man cer- tainly had, and his anxiety, in the midst of his own suffering, to salve from the same fate the brethren whom he left behind is almost sublime. The charity which is so often said to be- gin at home—the love which, strong but narrow, expends itself wholly up- on the small circle of relatives and friends—that he had. The love that looks more widely, not refusing pity and aid, because the applicant is a stranger—that he had not. Some advantages we all have in common; we all have the public prayers of the church; we all have the Holy Spirit striving within us, and convincing us of sin and of right- eousness; we `all have our Bibles, which we can read; we may all par- take, if we will, of the Holy Sacra- ment of Christ's Body and Blood. These, and such as these, are our "Moses and the Prophets," they are the rvoice of God speaking to us, and telling us of the beauty of holiness, the ugliness of sin, of the glories of heaven and the horrors of hell. Do we want any other voice? Nay, if we shut our ears to these, a voice from the grave would be in vain. The same message of repentance and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ has come to us all, and it is for us to attend to it; and if we shut our ears and hard- en our hearts to such messages as this, we have put ouselves into an attitude of resistance to God, and have so injured our own perceptions of right and wrong, have so blinded our eyes to the Light which lighteth every man who comes into the world, that no miracle, not even a resurrec- tion from the dead, will have any power to convince." Verse 25—"Abraham member." Memory will be so widened as to take in the whole of life. We believe that what a man is in this life he is more in another, that tendencies here become results yonder, that his whole moral nature, be it good or bad, be- comes there what it is only striving to be here. Whether saved or lost, he that dies is greater than when yet living; and all his powers are intensi- fied and strengthened by that awful experience of death, and by what it brings with it. - Abraham said: "Between us and you there'is a great gulg fixed." There is a great impassable gulf fixed be- tWeen the spiritual condition of those whom Jesus represents by the rich man, and those whom He represents by Lazarus. The great gulf is not between the rich and the poor, not between those who have been favored of God in this life and those who have been chastened by Him, but it is be- tween those who have so used this world as to starve; their spirits, thus leaving their souls uncared for and those who seek first the Kingdom of Heaven.—(Condensed from The Ser- mon Bible). "Not Sick a Day Since" THE W LIYS 1.4ARtlEST BIEL CLASS If you looked for the biggest Bible Class in the world in London or New Y rit. you would be disappointed. It me is in Metropolitan 10hureh, To- rowhich holds close to' 2,000 peo- ple, and is always packed to the doe . The service is designed to meet ev- ery kind of taste. At one moment the church rocks with laughter, at an- other heads are bowed; later on there will be announcements as businesslike as those of a Rotary luncheon, and presently the voices of the choir sug- gest the dim cloisters of an old cath- edral. The order of service is ar- ranged to .produce an effect of var- iety, contrast, and culmination. Show- manship 'is the secret of its success and the main feature is the address of the leader. 'Denton Massey. Massey is a young man, big physi- cally and mentally. Although he is now superintendent of the Massey - Harris plant which his family built, he has worked up through factory and office, and thinks of himself as a working man. He can be jocular, dramatic, solemnly earnest, business- like and sentimental—all in as many breaths. His method is simple. He tells stories and asks questions. His sermons are a series of jolts; his -fav- orite question, "Why?" the enforcement of the Act. He said the borer was just as dangerous as ever and the only safeguard against serious loss to the corn lay in a thor- ough clean-up every year; each farm- er doing his share. 'It was pointed out that the weather was a very im- portnat factor in determining whether we could get a reduction in the num- ber of borers any particular year. Some years the weather would favor the insect so much that all a good clean-up could do would be to prevent a very large increase. Other years the weather would help us and there would be a decrease. Farmers should bearin mind that there seems no prospect of its being safe to withdraw the Corn Borer Act for many years to comae; in fact we may have to require a compulsory clean-up for ages just as they have to do in parts of Europe, the home of the borer. Hence the wise course for farmers to follow is to adopt the best method of handling their corn fields each year so that they will have lit- tle or no handpicking to do. Many farmers have already reached this stage, other should try to follow their example. The inspectors will gladly give any helpful suggestions in their said, Son, re - He draws large crowds because he doesn't preach. He puts it up to his audience to behave. He has no dog- ma. His evangel is athletic; an up- standing, go-ahead call to the virility of the younger generation. He as- sumes that everybody knows what is conducive to the general happiness, and what is not, and he gets his ef- fect simply by shedding the light of that knowledge on Mite lives of his listeners. Denton Massey was born to big- ness and grew up in an atmosphere of achievement. At the age of four- teen he took over a Bible class con- ducted by his brother-in-law, who was leaving the city; a class of sixteen boys only a few months younger than himself. From the seed planted then in boyhood has grown an organization of young men unparalleled anywhere in the world;—a class of more than 2,300 registered, regularly attending members, besides an associate memo bership of five hundred, a radio audi- ence club of 3,000 registered mem- bers, and an unattached audience of radio listeners estimated at some- thing like 250,000. power. Owing to economic conditions all over the province it is specially de- sirable this year that clean-up of corn fields be completed early, so that ex- penses be kept as low as possible, con- sistent with efficiency. Hence farm- ers and also corn growers in cities and towns are urged to co-operate by having all corn remnants destroyed not later than May 20th. Any person wishing to get further information on the borer and the best methods, of control should write to the Director of Statistics and Publica- tions, East Block, Parliament Build- ings, Toronto, and ask for a copy of bulletin No. 368. WORLD MISSIONV Livingstone Knew It Would Come The night before his departure for Africa David Livingstone said: The time will come when rich men will think it an honor to support whole stations of missionaries, instead of spending their money on hounds and horses. Commenting on this, the Christian Observer says: This has literally come to pass in some instances, and the awakening of the interest of men in missions indi- cates that men are learning to put God's kingdom where it should be every life --in the forefront, in the place of most importance. This is the deep significance of the Layman's Movement. --Baptist Cour- ier. INGENIOUS JANE Jane had always been ingenious. When she went to another city, she knew at once the quickest way to go home and back. It was by Long Distance -every week. She found it the nicest possible way to keep in touch—and inexpensive, too! CLEAN THE CORN FIELD There have been rumors that the Corn Borer Act 'would not be enforced this year. 'Such rumors are unfound- ed. The Provincial Entomologist in March called a meeting of the Corn borer inspectors, discussed with them their deities and gave instructions that there shruld be no sleekening up in Feed tot a Finish. Farmers who are feeding cattle for beef are asked to note that consider- able numbers of half -fat cattle have been brought in by shippers. The market has enough depressing fac- tors to contend with, and shippers are requested in their own interest not to sacrifice half -finished stock and thereby adversely affect the market as a whole. Feed your beef cattle to a finish, and get all the market has to offer. A Word to Corn Raisers. The corn borer is not the greatest enemy of the corn raisers of West- ern Ontario, according to Prof. L. Caeser. The farmer's own failure to choose seed suited for Canadian con- ditions and poor judgment in plant- ing are responsible for quite as much damage as the corn borer. Prof. Caesar points out that United States varieties of corn are for the most part unsuited to growth in Western Ontario and there is plenty of seed corn of the right type avail- able in this part of the country. Ile further declares that corn is planted too quickly in the majority of cases. Poor varieties of seed and too thick planting caused more loss, to growers in 1930 than the corn borer, he points out. Magnesia Best For Your Indigestion Warns Against Doping Stomch With Artificial Digestants. TO JANE A► TIRIID Tl� TOWN Your, banking transactions may be accomplished easily and quickly by mail.. Deposita subject to cheque withdrawal may be sent to the dearest branch of The Dominion Bank. The amount will be entered and your pass -book promptly returned. THE DOMINION BANK ESTABLISHED 1871 SEAFORTH BRANCH, R. M. Jones - - - Manager The York Bible Class is something more than just a men's mass meeting. It is a highly organized institution. A. man must attend one Sunday in three, or be dropped into the "associate" class. The average attendance is a- bout 65 per cent. of the membership. The Class is run like a business, with a president, a board of . directors, ex- ecutive committees, and a paid office staff.. The governing group — long ago labeled the Sages—numbers a- bout 200. There is the leader, a chairman of the board, ,a president and general manager, a radio director and announcer, and secretaries and group captains who keep in closo touch with the various members (each captain has a group of fifteen). The service work includes assistance to unfortunates, summer camps for boys, d a The war and a period at college in the States interrupted young Mas- sey's Bible Class work for a few years. While he was at the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology at Bosun, taking an engineer's course, the three leading strings of his life— sports, mechanics, and what he calls "Practical Christianity"—formed to- gether a varied and rich pattern of activities. He married during his junior year, and after a honeymbon abroad, came back for two more years of study, before graduating in 1924. It was during these last two years that he formulated the particular type of religious message that has made him internationally famous. The young Masseys kept open house in Boston. Friends and fellow students dropped in at all hours and discussion on every topic was energetically pur- sued. It was a confessed agnostic, a young athlete from South Africa who gave Massey the jolt that woke him to the real religious need of•his gen- eration: Up to this ,time Massey's religion had been of the kind that accepted everything as a matter of belief; something to be swallowed, "hook, line and sinker," without question. But•the agnostic's "whys" and "where- fores" set him thinking, and he began to evolve a message for those who were daring to understand. He re- alized that his religion had held too much of the negative. Since then heffi has adopted the popular form of ques- tions and answers, with emphasis al- ways on the "yes" angle, the affirma- tive the positive. When he returned to Toronto with these ideas incandescent in his mind, an opportunity presented itself in 1925. Six discouraged young men, the remnant of his first Bible class, came to him and asked him to go back. They had no idea of starting the world's largest Bible class. They just wanted a leader; but it shows what can happen when the right men get together. They were the stickers and young Massey had developed as a leader. The class was started the next Sun- day with eighteen young men present Since then the story of the York Bible Class has been a succession of such incidents. The leader has al- ways been head of the class, demand- ing that this and that should be done. And the class has always produced re- sults ahead of expectations. By the autumn of the same year the class had grown to ninety, and the first service was broadcast. It appears to have been the first „broadcast by a Bible class in America, probably in the world. The ninety of them sat on uncom- fortable chairs scattered over a warp- ed floor in the church basement, fac- ing an old table on which was .plac- ed a reading -desk, and beside it the thing called a microphone, which many were seeing for the first time. H. C. Fricker, son of Dr. Fricker, had ar- ranged the broadcast over CKOL. Standing on tiptoe to reach the `mike' which had been set for six-foot Mas- sey, he announced the speaker, con- scious that the little crowd of them were making a daring experiment. Until that afternoon the class 'had!' grown gradually and with few in• novations, but'from that day forward ee the mmlbers were forced to adjust themselves to quickly changing and expanding conditions. When it was necessary to move from the original church in the East end, a special street car was charter- ed and run for a few weeks, until the members became accustomed to the new quarters. Then, in 1929, came an invitation to meet in the great new Metropolitan Church, with a cathedral -like atmosphere. Through tai. and careful, handling, the mem- bers were won over to this idea. Now the classes are so large that many, have been turned away. Most people who suffer, either occa- sionally or chronically from gas, sourness and indigestion, have now discontinued disagreeable diets, pat- ent foods and the use of harmful drugs, stomach tonics, medicines and artificial digestants, and instead take a teaspoonful or four tablets of Bis- urated 'Magnesia in a little water af- ter meals with the result that their stomach no longer troubles them, they, are able to eat as they please and they enjoy miuch bettdr health. Those who use Bisurated Magnesia never dread the approach of meal time because they know this wonderful anti -acid and food corrective, which can be ob- tained from anygood drug store, will instantly neutralize the statue& aci- dity+, sweeten the stomach, prevent food fermentation, and make digeg,- tion easy. Try this plan yourself, but be certain to get Bisurated Magnesia especially prepared for stomfch use. Christmas cheer, and so on, an sorbs more than 23 per cent. of the total income of the class, which, of course, runs into; thousands of dol- lars a year. On the memlbership list 157 occu- pations are represented, from jockeys to ministers, and earning power var- ies from $8 a week to $10,000 a year, the average earning power of the whole class being $22.84 a week. All shades of religious opinion, including Jews, Protestants, Roman Catholics, Christian Science, Unitarians, Latter Day Saints, attend the meetings. Var- ious activities keep the members to- gether, but the Sunday service is the great central magnet. Everything has been carefully worked out to appeal to a diversified audience. On boards in the lobbies are buttons bearing each member's name, arranged in alphabetical order by districts. These pins, which smack of Rotary, serve a triple purpose. The identify l oy me rf mlbe s their lack 334 denotes a visitor or prospective mem. ber; and the pins left on the boards, when all are seated, provide the names of absentees. There are secretaries present each Sunday to look after clerical details, and ushers and greet- ers. When the 1,850 seats and 150 chairs are filled the doors are dos- ed, and the class is opened with a brief invocation. Then a hymn, a responsive letter read alternately by the leaders and the audience, an an - Giem by the choir, the apostles' creed, the Lord's prayer, sung by the choir, collection, another hymn, announce- ments, and then, Denton Massey, "thee big fella," as he is affectionately call- ed, alled, rises to talk on some topic of great human interest. y ; . RHEUMATISM KIDNEY AND BLADDER WEAKNESS People who almost constanly suf- fer from Rheumatic aches and pains, stiffness and soreness, swollen feet and ankles, Kidney and Bladder dis- turbance, irritation, scanty and burn- ing Urination, troublesome annoy- ance day and night, Backaches and a feeling of weight in the lower abdo- men—should try, the amazing far- reaching power of Karafin tablets at 'once! Made in Canada, with true list of ingredients plainly printed on every package, "Karaftn Tablets" can be ob- tained at small cost, from any goo& druggist on a binding money back guarantee of RELIEF IN 24 HOURS. IHE SAFEST PLACE FOR BABY IS ON SEAMAN -KENT IIARDWOOD FLOORING SO EASY TO KEEP CLEAN Sold in Seaforth by N. Cluff &i Sons nst try Kellogg's Corn Flakes if you want to make the children's appetites stir! Crisp flakes of healthful corn, full of. flavor they are simply reat CORN * Delicious with milk or cream—add' fruits or honey for variety GI 4 f w •