The Huron Expositor, 1931-08-14, Page 2ii
r-0
9 IA*
this '::!4
• fiacewa. covered
- Bat this
)sympatliises witethara who
Oieharats*geenditionwhic•li
rte os•entirely of her own
ing.tker name and address—
shaee gratitUde and a desire to.
Others. This is the letter whidh
On oar
„. files :—
'q*ue time ago my sister recom-
14",aendecl me to try Krusehen Salts for
laiy blood, as my face was covered with
I am now using my second
and I am delighted with the -
1`001,11#1,. My face is almost clear and
feel better in health. I have advised
several of my friends to give it a trial,
: ns 1 want themto benefit the same as
IE have done. You are at liberty to
publish this, as I cannot be too
generous in my praise of Kruschen
Salts."—W. C. S.
Pimples, acne and blackheads are
caused by a rundown, disordered
system, by those harmful acids and
toxins Which make your skin break out,.
. So if you want swiftly to rid yourself
of that ugly, blemished complexion
and to obtain beautiful, smooth and
soft skin—take Kruschen Salts.
Kruschen Salts are a perfect blend of
the six vital salts which nerves, glands,
blood and body organs ought to receive
from food if they're to work properly—
but it's simply impossible to obtain
IIMONEMe.
ter
these salts in these days of modern,
cooking !
Kruschen provides just that gentle
assistance your body organs need to
rid your system regularly of all
clogging waste matter. When your
inside is clean and serene your blood
courses through your veins pure and
.uncontaminated. You are healthier
and you feel it. Your, clearer com-
plexion and your brighter eyes proclaim
it. And your persistently high spirits
prove it.
Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all
Drug Stores at 45c. and 75c. per bottle.
W
inviting on a warm day! A bowl of crisp
Kellogg's Corn Flakes with milk or
cream. How sensible! For Kellogg's
are extra easy to digest. They really
help you feel
cool!
fedeag
CORN
FLAKES
* Always oven -fresh in the inner -seal
waxtite wrapper. At all grocers.
•
suNo.kx , '
(Byl HAMMON 1C+14:Oileb, Out.)
•
Men die in darkness at yOur skis,
Without a hope to cheer the Ora/
Take up the torch and wave it Wide,
The torch that lights time's thick-
est gloom.
Toil on, faint not, keep watch and
pray;
! Be wise the erring soul to win;
Go forth into the world's highway,
Compel the wanderer to come in.
Horatius Bonar.
PRAYER
Our Father help us when we pray
"Lead us not into temptation" also to
pray that Thou wilt constrain us to
So watch our ways that we may not
beguile others into wrong doing.
Amen.
S. S.- LESSON FOR AUGUST 16th
Lesson Topic—Sowing and Reaping.
Lesson Passage—Galatians 6:1-10.
Golden Text—Galatians 6:7.
Paul in this part of his letter to
the Galatians refers to the duty of re-
storing the erring one and he tells in
what spirit it is to be performed:
"Restore such a one in the spirit of
'meekness, considering thyself, lest
thou also be tempted." Surely this is
the very opposite to the spirit of the
world. Our blessed Lord spent His
life and shed. His blood in devising
means whereby His lost ones might
be recovered to Him; and every fol-
lower of His is exhorted not to look
only on his own _things, but also on
the things of others.
There was one law in which the
Master summed up His social and
practical precepts, one which peculiar-
ly belongs to Him: "Whatsoever ye
would that men should do unto you,
even so do unto them."
"Bear ye one another's burdens, and
so fulfil the law of Christ." This text
is to be found in the sphere of real-
ism to -day. Nations, communities
'and individuals are face to face with
industrial burdens. The term "social
service," is written large across life
and man is face to face with the stern
necessity of helping his fellow -man,
as never before in present d'ay his-
tory.
The way of selfishness may present
itself as the more excellent way to
same; it may seem the most prudent
course but such a line of conduct
which shuts out the sorrows of others
shuts us up also against their joys.
If the one fountain is sealed, so will
also be the other. He who will not
weep with them that weep, neither
shall he rejoice with them that re-
joice, and thus there are sealed from
him the sources of some of the pur-
est and truest delights which the
heart of man can entertain, namely,
the pleasure which we derive from
the happiness of others. It is a course
that is as blind as it is sinful for
"Care finds the careless out." He who
resolves not to bear any part of the
burdens of his fellows resolves not to
fulfil the law of Christ. e
e. 24,
112
1931
•
PORESIGHT, ,fiptionissn, faith, characterise the
fifty-third Canadian National Exhibition. Year
after year, in times normal and sub -normal, this,
the • world's largest exposition, makes a decided
contribution to the commerce and general welfare
of this country.
Another million -dollar building will be opened this
year. Earl Jellicoe, „ one of the Most noted end
fearless of great Britain's Naval Heroes will
officially set in motion the 1931 Exhibition on
-Friday August 28th. Sport afloat and ashcan,
will again abound. And througlaeut the entire
fourteen days and nights, thepageants, diversions,
eadithits and music will awaken a sense of pride in
the hearts of at Canadians—will amaae and delight
visitoan from other lands.
•
SAM FIARR1S l -L W. WATERS
Pwrident
Valenti Manager
CAPNiADIAPti NATIONAL
T IE X /I § o TORONTO
4
?6'.fl"'"1.1 tt
Poverty, infirmity and trouble are
burdens which we may lighten for
others. Poverty is twin sister to
famine. "Lest I he poor and steal"
is the argument by which the wise
man's prayer, "Give me not poverty,"
Is prefaced. It is a great burden rest-
ing upon many, and we are to bear
it with them and for them. Infirmity
or human frailty is a common failing
and Paul says that is where charity is
to suffer long and be kind. There is,
'perhaps, nothing in which we 'are
more deficient than in Christian sym-
pathy. The more sympathetic people
become the more will they find the
truth of the great paradox that those
who lose their life for Christ's sake
even they will find it.
"For every man shall bear his own
burden."
The Apostle reminds us in this
verse that there are some burdens
which cannot be shared, which each
must bear for himself alone. The
'burdens of personality, responsibility
and guilt cannot be separated from
the individual'. Man is moral and
therefore responsible. Man many and
does deceive himself and others but
he cannot deceive God. Therefore
"whatsoever a man soweth, that shall
he also reap." God leaves us free to
sow what sort of seed we will, and,
having chosen -our own course, we
reap our own harvest. There is none
to whom so much mockery is offered
as God. Men walk on His earth and
deny His existence, but by their lives
defy His power. "And let us not be
weary in well doing; for in due sea-
son we shall reap, if we faint not."
There is often a good while be-
tween the seed One and the harvest,
and there may be a good' while be-
tween the seed time and the harvest
in a man's doing that which is right;
but go on; be not weary; in due sea-
son you shall reap, if you faint not.
The law is as operative on the one
side as on the other, in relation to
the good as well as to the evil. Be
upright, and true, and loyal to- Christ
and In God and if the blessing tarry,
wait for it. It is a good thing for a
man both to hope and quietly to wait
for the blessings of Gad.-1(Condensed
from The Sermon Bible).
eett
044 iitit,eseePe
ati the kits
,Lehildreav
aco'nttbie.et, but
she an do ranch.
to relieve their
severity,
Iffyour child is
constipated — if
he has a cold, a
fever, no. appetite
or a coated
tongue, don't
wait until a more
serious illness results.
Own Tablets at once.
For your own peace of mind don't
be without Baby's Own Tablets -25
cents a package at any druggist's.
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
(Dr. Williams') 174
Get Baby's
iaPt ., Reset pf DalAaatOwU,' ,
xxx the Overage ngtnethey WM,
ea,. the fresh oil reaches its table
operating ,viscosity After OW; .50.
miles, und maintains that cOliditioil
inclefinitearking Very loose rings
kr Way scored cylinders.
Additieual Melina seeping into the
oil aftex the 'stable operating point
Is reached seem to evaporate as
rapidly as it is added.
'Besides the dilution with gasoline,
deterioration of the oil is caused by
dirt drawn into the crankcase and
oxidation of the oil into "sludge"
particles. Both of these latter are
removed by efficient filters. Oil losses
are caused by leaks and burning.
Engineers have known for some
+time that oil might be filtered in-
definitely, but little explanation of
the phenomenon has been given to
the public. The Penn State. research
determined the point in driving at
which the oil viscosity becomes
stable.
Haw this German toured Europe im-
mediately after the war and went in-
to enemy countries, playing, lecturing
—"bernstorming for God," as he said.
Dr. Schweizter is in Africa now, al-
ter a flying trip to Europe for a 'rest,'
which he used in writing another
book and raising more money for his
hospital. 'Honors' were heaped upon
him and they tried to keep him at
home. Prague and St. Andrew's uni-
sities made him an honorary doctor
of philosophy; the city of 'Frankfort
presented him with their Goethe
prize, whi,ch is awarded for disting-
uished service to humanity. West-
minster called him again and he
ed. Ramsay MacDonald sent for him
to come to Downing Street and talk.
But he went back. Schweitzer will
die in Africa, helping the Negro poor.
Who dares to suggest that knightly
days are dead or that Crusaders have
ceased to ride?
WORLD MISSIONS
Crusaders Still Ride.
Without doubt, one of the half dozen
greatest men in the world to -day is
Dr. Albert Schweitzer, "the poor
Negro's doctor" in Africa. The son
and grandson of Protestant ministers
he was born in Upper Alsace, at 23
was a doctor of philosophy and at 28
was organist to the Bach Society in
Paris. As a boy he always cham-
pioned the unfortunate, and when he
snuggled down between the blankets
at night he used to say a prayer of
his own; "And heavenly Father, pro-
tect and bless all things that have
breath; guard them from evil and let
them sleep in peace." Ere lie had
reached mature manhood, we read,
PEttrope came to look upon him as
their greatest authority in the play-
ing and construction of 'organs." But
one day the infinite sadness of a
Negro's face in stone caught his eye.
He resolved to study medicine, and
in four years graduated, and together
with his wife and a trained nurse set
out for Africa. Ms amazing, story
is told again in the Christian Herd&
The New Outlook.
TIRE PRESSURES
That tires which are not properly
inflated wear out more quickly should
be known by all motorists—whether
they use the knowledge or not. But
that under-flation plays queer tricks
with the speedometer is not generally
known. In the calibration of the in-
strument, however, everything is bas-
ed on the proper inflation of the tires.
Accuracy from it cannot be expected
on any other basis.
WESTERN FAIR
'Officials of the Western Fair at
London have already started prepar-
ations, which this year is to be held
between September 14th and 19th.
This is perhaps the earliest in his-
tory that plans have been started for
this second largest Canadian Fair.
This year, according to W. D.
Jackson, secretary of- the Fair
Board, there will be over $50,000
spent in prizes land attractions.
The prize lists have already been
published and are larger and more
offer the widest opportunities for
extensive than in previous years and
offer the widest opportunities for ex-
hibitors in Agricultural products, live
stock, poultry, etc.
The Industrial and Commercial
exhibits also promise to surpass
anything that has gone 'before and
already reservations are being receiv-
ed for booth accommodation in the
splendid new exhibition buildings.
The Midway, this year, and the at-
tractions before the Grand Stand will
be supplied by the famous Wirth &
Hamid, Inc., and the famous Model
Shows of America. These shows have
played all across the United' States
and have an enviable reputation as
being among the most entertaining on
the road.
Although the date this year is
rather late, owing to a number of
circumstances, the directors in view
of the weather for the past number
of years, feel confident that tile week
of the 14th to 19th of September will
bring even better weather and bigger
crowds than 'the first two weeks of
the month.
Residents throughout Ontario are
cordially invited to attend the
Western Fair this year and enjoy
one of the biggest shows that
London has witnessed.
IS CHANGING OIL AN
ADVANTAGE?
If an automobile is equipped with
a proper filter, there is no advantage
in ever changing the oil.
This is the conclusion based upon
same research just completed at
Peunsylvania State College. The
work was done under direction of
F. C. Stewart, associate professor of
mechanical engineering, by Franklin
Speise Jr., of Philadelphia, and Wil -
600411 Bye
Fly
and all the little flies
They can't get away, once
they touch Aeroxon. There's
something in it, that has an
irresistible attraction for these
household pests. A wider and
longer ribbon provides a
greater area, and the glue
does not dry—good for 3
weeks' service.
At drug, grocery & hardware storm
Sole Agents:
J. EDGAR M. GENESI"
P.O. Box 2Z Sherbrooke, Quo
CHER
Gets Ole By eve tune
LLOYD'S, OF LONDON
If you enter the doorway of Lloyd's
in Leadenhall Street, London, you
will meet an attendant in scarlet and
gold livery. At your request, if you
have a friend among the underwriters
of Lloyd's, he will summon him. Make
no mistake by calling this scarlet and
gold personage a doorman. He is a
"waiter," and derives his title from
the days when the institution was a
coffeehouse where individual merch-
ants met to exchange news and write
marine insurance. Two and a half
centuries ago thEs "waiter" would
have brought you a dish of coffee and
the latest news -letter to read.
To -day, with your firend the under-
writer, he will permit you to enter
the Room—the Subscribers' Room,
the coffeeroom, that is, where there
is no longer any coffee, but many
tables and pew -like benches. Insur-
ance brokers are wandering from
table to table, offering risks to under-
writers who sit there. If an under-
writer accepts an offer, he simply
takes the broker's slips, writes down
the sum which he insures, and places
his name or initials after it.
In the center of this busy room
stands a rostrum, the successor of a
pulpit (mentioned by Addison and
Steele in their essays) that once stood
in Lloyd's Coffee House. From this
pulpit auctioneers formerly sold ships
"by inch of candle"—that is, a short
length of candle was lit and the ves-
sel knocked down at the instant the
flame burned out. To -day a ship's
bell (from H. M. S. Lutine, sunk in
1799) hangs over the pulpit. When
the clear tone of the Lutine bell rings
through the room, silence falls among
the underwriters. From the rostrum
a caller announces a ship overdue or
foundered.
Such is the unusual setting of
Lloyd's. More unusual, and centur-
ies old, is the way in which the or-
ganization feinctions. There are no
insurance companies in Lloyd's there
are only individual underwriters—.
men who singly, for a fee, will guar-
antee you against loss and, if neces-
sary, will have to pay you with their
every farthing. If the particular un-
derwriters who sign a policy are un-
able to make good on it, the insured
has no legal claim against the other
underwriters, although he is protect-
ed by guarantee policies by which un-
derwriters insure one another.
At' the beginning of the year there
were 1,423 underwriting members of
Lloyd's, grouped in about 140 syndi-
cates. A syndicate is formed when
someone, often an insurance broker
familiar with Lloyd's, decides he
would like to be "agent" for one (i.e.,
manage it). He approaches a num-
ber of wealthy friends and persuades
them to join. Each is introduced to
the chairman of Lloyd's. Generally
a prospective member must erpect
to show assets of at least £100,000.
If elected an underwriting member,
the newcomer makes a minimum de-
posit of £10,000.
These underwriting members are
insurers, but business is done not by
them but in their names. Hence the
designation "names." The agent who
organized them hires a man who sits
in the Room and does the actual un-
derwriting, for which they are the
sureties. In practice, if anyone wish-
es to obtain an insurance 'policy from
Lloyd's, he must go to a broker. The
broker takes a slip, describing the
risk, from one to another of these ac-
tive underwriters, each of whom sub-
scribes the sura which he undertakes
on behalf of his syndicate. When the
total desired insurance is subscribed,
Lloyd's Policy Signing Office issues a
policy which is signed with t
"names" of the several syndicates. g
A "name" must be a man of means.
From the beginning, interest on his
original deposit and premium balance
is credited to him, but for three years
he cannot draw a penny. He has to
pay income tax on his profits, though
he cannot take them. The first year
that he may draw profits, a "name"
expects to get £500. Thereafter, as
he draws year 'by year, he hopes to
get £1,000 and perhaps 'eventually
£2,000 a year. The amount depends
on the active underwriter's ability to
pick good risks. This active under-
writer's profits grow with his syndi.
cate's. His percentage may amount
to £2,000 a year. A good many make
£10,000.
The corporation of Lloyd's stand's
apart from all this trafficking in in -
en -ranee. Its function is to see that
none but proper subjects of the King
become members; to guard the de-,
posited funds; to audit -the accounts.
A side light too typical to omit is
Lloyd's marine policy, a hand-me-
dow-n from ages of romance. It bears,
near the head, the mysterious symbols
"S.G." Four years no one has known
their meaning; they are merely part
of the ritual. The policy is a guar -
ante of reimbursement against, "Ad-
ventures and Perils of the Seas, Men -
of -War, Fire, Enemies, -Pirates, Rov-
ers, Jettisons, Letters of Mart and
Countermart, Restraints and Detain-
ments of all Kings, Princes and Peo-
ple of what Nation, 'Condition or
Quality soever, Barratry of the Mas-
ter and Mariners, and Of all other
Perils, Losses and Misfortunes' . . ."
—risks which, for the main part, are
not assumed; and a lower sentence di-
rectly denies these words. None of
the contradietionS is ever stricken out
and there are a number of blanks
which are never filled in. On this
•,„„. te •;, ; • '
411
THIS week, test the outstanding
U value contained in every General
Motors car. At your convenience, a
car of the size, price and body type
you prefer will be brought to your
door, by your General Motors dealer,
for you to drive and inspect. Remem-
ber, General Motors issues with every
car, a generous Owner Service Policy
which states the exact service to which
en owner is entitled—and which holds
41.
good at any of the thousands of
General Motors dealers throughout
North America. Call your dealer to-
day. You will find him listed under
"General Motors Cars" in the class-
ified pages of your 'phone book. If
you wish, you may buy economically
on time payment through G M AC.
9 CHEVROLET •
The world's lowest
priced Six. 14 models
listing from $610 to
$840 at factory, taxes
extra.
e PONTIAC
6 models, listing from
$875 to $1,015 at fac-
tory, taxes extra.
*OLDSMOBILE,
6 models, listing from
$1,085 to $1,230 at
factory, taxes extra.
McLAUGH LIN.
• BUICK •
22 models, listing from
$1,290 to "$2,660 at
factory, taxes extra.
• CADILLAC •
Over 50 models avail-
able, ranging from the
Cadillac V-8 at $3,520,
to the Cadillac V -I2 at
$5,130 and up to the
Cadillac V.16 with cos -
tom bodies for $15,000
and more. All prices
at factory, taxes extra.
GM1128-15
curious document are written, stamp-
ed, pasted and pinned various clauses
often entirely contradictory to the
text, which define what the insurance
really is. One authority has declar-
ed that if such a policy were drawn
up to -day it would be considered "the
work of a lunatic endowed with a
private sense of hurnor." Lloyd's
does not change it, partly because
Lloyd's does not change, partly be-
cause a change would make obsolete
all the legal decisions which have
grown up about the old document.
There is not a calamity that has
affected the world in centuries that
has not had a momentous effect on
the underwriters of Lloyd's. In times
of war, losses are high but premiums
are higher. The worst condition for
the underwriters is that which they
have now—when thousands of ships
are tied up idle, carrying no insurable
cargo, paying trifling premiums.
Lloyd's prides itself on the fact
that its underwriters will write virtu-
ally any risk by which a man may
lose mone. Insurance against having
twins is fairly common, and the de-
mand for the policy comes mostly
from the United States. (The rate
of about $7.50 per $100, has, accord-
ing to press reports, recently been
raised to $20 per $100 as the result
of the successful prediction of Mrs.
William K. Vanderbilt's twins by X-
ray.) Insurance is written on good
weather for outdoor amusements, on
blooded stock, on the feet of dancers.
In days gone by far stranger risks
were written—pure gambling risks
such as insurance on marriages, on
the death of public men (who, read-
ing in the newspapers what their
odds were of -survival, despaired of
life and died), on the fall of cities or
of politicians.
Lloyd's is kept out of the United
States chiefly by the insurance laws
of the 48 states; but it gets consider-
able business from our own insurance
companies who reinsure a part of
their policies—to distribute risks, to
make a profit -on insurance already
written, and to make way for writing
more—just as banks rediscount their
bills. With low overhead—with half
a dozen clerks and no offices except
the Room—an underwriter at Lloyd's
may take in for his syndicate as much
in premiums as a good-sized U. S.
insurance company with offices cover-
ing perhaps two floors of a large
building.
WIMMICMO
antigmEgmalgasgarannia
THE UNIVERSITY OFFERS:
1. A wide range of excellent courses:
in Arts and Science, in Medicine,.
in Nursing and in Public Health,
2. Up-to-date buildings and equip-
ment
3. Splendid library Facilities.
4. Physical education, athletics and
military training.
5. An attractive social life.
6. Close personal contact between'
professors and students.
7. The co-operation of the staff in
helping worthy students to get
placed after graduation. 53
UNIVE S1TY
at
WE ERN
ONTARIO
LONDON CANADA,
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A4°1%%eo't•
SPECTACULAR BEAUTY'
A summer trip to the Far West offerstt
spectacular' sights and unusual
opportunities to enjoy oneself. -It la-
the premier vacation choice of the.
season—a few weeks of rapidly'
changing scenery, of new friendshipsi
and new experiences. You'll see -
beautiful Minaki ... the Prairies .•
Jasper National Park ...the Canadian
Rockies... the Pacific Coast . .•
Vancouver and Victoria ...an&
Alaska.
Take advantage of the low fares—go'
west this summer. Full information
and illustrated booklets from any
Agent of CanadianNationalRailways,
T-21 Rev.
CANA DI A N'
to,
et
NATIONAL
It A 1. iAS
. Ater • •Ii oftti;,.