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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1932-02-26, Page 2•i• 11. Cooks in 2% mins. after the water boils • 2066 'SUNDAY AFTERNOON (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderieh, Ont.) Jesus calls us o'er the tumult Of our life's wild restless sea, Day by day His sweet voice soundeth, Saying `Christian, follow Me.' Jesus calls us; by Thy mercies _ Saviour may, we hear Thy call, e• Give our hearts to Thine obedience, Serve and love Thee best of all. +1 . C. F. Alexander. a- - PRAYER We thank Thee our Father, that 1- 'Thou hast called ' us to go and wore. .k, to -day in Thy vineyard. In Thy boy - ';')••••: • 4110 444 les Jr CHOCOLATE CUP CAKES aa cup shortening! , I cup sug_ar 2 eggs g. cup milk • 2 cups pastry flour (or rg cups bread flour) 2 teaspoons Magic Baking Powder, X teaspoon salt teaspooneoda 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 234 squares unsweetened chocolate Cream shortening; add sugar slowly; add well -beaten eggyolks. Sift dry ingredients together and add, alternately with mine to first mixture. Add vanilla and melted chocolate; fold in egg whites beaten stiff.' Put irito greased muffin tins and bake in moderate oven at 375°Y. about 25 minutes. Cover with chocolate .......•••••••••••••...-)))•:•)•'•))),,*),;•..)1)•••• Why MisslaillianLoughton's Chocolate Cup Cakes are famous "I use Magic Baking Pow- der," says Miss Lillian Lough- ton, Dietitian and Cookery Expert of the Canadian Mag- • azine. "My successful baking results are due in large part to is freshness, uniformity, and consistent high quality. "My own recipes are planned for Magic, and 1. recommend it for all recipes calling for baking powder." Miss Loughton's high praise con- s the judgment of other Cana- an dietitians and cookery experts. The majority of -them use Magic exclusively, because it gives con- • - vistently better baking tesults. Magic is , first choice of Canadian housewives, too. It outsells all other baking powders combined. ' FREE COOK BOOK—When you se'es ' bake at !emit, the new Magic Cook Book • • will give you dozens ofeecipes for deli- •••,, • situs baked foods.Write to Standard &ends Ltd., Fraser Ave. & Liberty Sts, Xoronto, Orit. );)))•-• ed from s b to Ilkereelay Witi17,:ei:1014 ever, lesaitesilatela after his resurrection geataie !sepal doing it, Mid if all had continued equally faithful the work 'would, leng, long ago have been stecterapiiehed; but after a „while men i)eKe.e. asking,"• "Is it worth while?"' Med disloyally ceased obeying. And, many who are called by His name and have shared many of the lower benefits which have re.ached them because -others were more obedi- ent, thus question instead •of obey- ing.. . I feelashamed to answer—as if my word were more than His to any of •Ilis people. ••• But if I must, then I say that, before my very eyes, in Central ladle, far one Indian Chris- tian when 1 arrited. there, there eta several thousand e new, 'besides the. many who. have, ineanwhile, thanking God for sending es to 'them, died in peace and gone tosjoin the "ten thee - send times ten thousand, and . thou- sands of thousands, saying with a great voice, worthy is the Lamb that hath been slain." 'Asi koksback on-eny -Iong• life I say....emphatically, if another lifetime -were tube -even me, I should unliesi- tatiftle choose to spend it in pro- claiming Christ and His Salvation to those who had not yet hear it. Yes, indeed, missionary work is certainly worth. while. ----From The Missionary Review. ing administration Thou art training us for a larger and fuller ,service in the world to come. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR FEB. 28th, 1932 • Lesson Topic—Jesus raises Lazarus From the Dead. Lesson Passage --.John 11:32-44. Golden' Text—John 11:25. The following exposition of to -day's lesson is condensed from Dr. George Matheson's Studies of The Portrait of Christ: On the secluded ,coast ,of Judea— beyond Jordan, Jesus has been sing- ing one refrain, "Earth not sufficient 'without Heaven." He has been teach- ing His disciples that immortality is necessary to vindicate the glory of • God. Suddenly there comes tp Him a message from the outside—from a spot very near the place of danger. It is from Bethany—from the home of 'Martha and Mary. However se- cluded Jesus may have been, He was not secluded from them; He had left them His address; they knew where to find Him. The message of the sis- ters is a very sad one, "Lord he whom Thou lovest is 'Sick" What does Jesusu do under circum• stances? Does Ile hasten to the bedside of him whom He called His friend? No! "He abode two days still in the same place where He was. Jesus said, "I can save these sisters a great deal of pain, but the world will lose thereby a great deal of rev- elation." For the sake, of a larger good two human souls are subjected to' a pain which aright have been spared them. Martha and 'Mary would as soon have gotten their bro- ther back from the sick bed as from 'the grave. But the very -essence of the .pietuise lies in the fact that the proposed miracle is proposed not for the • 'good of any individual but for the glorifying of God Himself. It is the only recorded miracle of Jesus which is :wrought exclusively for the glory of God. The widow's son is raised for the sake of his mother; the daughter of sJairus is given back for the sake of her father. But Laz- arus is to be raised for something Helier than any family consideration. When sickness has ended in death, Jesus comes to the house of the two sisters in Bethany. He , finds it crowded with "Visitors of condolence— men from Jerusalem, men of the party opposed to Him. The sisters are both grieving but differently; in their fast as in their feast they keep their respective characters. Mary's grief takes the form of stillness; she sits indoors. But Martha is again in bustle—on the alert for what is out- side. She discerns Jesus afar off; she comes out to meet Him; and there follows a dialogue which has become historical. Says . Jesusu: "Thy bro- ther Will rise again!" says 'Martha, "I know he will rise again in the resur- rection at the last day." "No," re- plies Jesusu, "I am the resurrection and the life; he that believeth in Me shall live in the hour of death, shall live in the act of death, shall neeer, on one side of his natpre, be partaker 'of death at alL" "Martha," He say, "you have a wrong thought of • death; I bring you a higher and 'a ' holier one. You call death the sus- pension of life. No, it is the transi- tion of life. I am come to replace your thought of resurrection by my thoqght of immortality." At the meeting which' took place between Jesus and Mary it is re- corded that "he groaned in the spirit and was troubled." Why did Jesus weep? It was not for Lazarus, nor yet, methinks for death. It was for the false' view men bad formed of death. It was ebecauee the world could/ think so meanly of the Father as to believe that He could extinguish in an hour a life to which He had given the powers of eternity. "Then follows the actual raising of Lazarus from theedead, preceded by Martha's protest and the 'Master's re- minder, "Said I not unto thee, that • if thou wouldett believe thou 'mildest see the glory of God." WORLD MISSIONS . I Is Missionary Work Worth While? •, (By Rev. J. Fraser Campbell, D.b.) 1 On the lowest -ground the answer may -bot from high officials of • government, commercial and other Ittavellers, who, as outsiders, have written of the great benefits not only • to those to whom the Missions Were sent 'but also to the Empire, to the world, to trade, to ship -wrecked mar- iners, etc. In our great famine, over ; thirty Years ago, our own Dr, Ane nand sent me aid limn the Cannibal I Islands of the Soath Seas. Thanking him I. asked if the money had really been sent by former cannibals. Send- ing another contribution he replied that part was from formes' cannibals and part from the ehildren of canni- bals. Even on- the lowest greand, a fiiitsion was "Worth While" which had so changed -cannibals. j "To rise higrher, if there -is a holy, •'hiving God, gild ait eternity to be sfit in contineed sin or in holiness ,and eensetnient happiness, if Christ spike the truth, thee sdrely it- id avainth while to do as He seld—to • make the Glad Message known to all el -so that those Who heed may be sate AobietttittN4 1/4) a --•ltasat." anti atitioMent tin '• aka. fa foist thee • eito'Befitoo awaer nt tree Itittit" t Os - Time Does Not Dwarf , Figure of Lincoln Year after year the memory of two great Americans is recalled by their countrymen, and two only. They are George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. 'Since Lincoln's death there 'have been, presidents whose names have become part of their nation's history, but the anniversaries • of their birth and death are permitted to pass with merely perfunctory ob- servance. This is the anniversary of Lincoln's ,birth. The passing years aave notadwarfed that gigantic fig- ureealt is true that the muckrakers halve been busy with him, and Mr. Edgar Lee Masters ' particularly has been at pains to show that he was not the demi-god whom the Ameri- can, people have chosen as one of their two immertal heroes. But the less Lincoln is made to appear as a genius of supernatural gifts, the more does he ppear as a man, the, closer he moves to the hearts of the people not only of the United States' but of all countries where courage and pat- ience and tenderness and humor are honored. In his earlier methods Lin- coln may have been the typical pol- itician; a mixture of Will Rogers, David Harum and P. T. Barnum, but he rose with his responsibilities to such heights as have 'been attained by few statesmen in the history' of any coantry. • It is idle but fascinating to specu- late upon what might have 'been the course •of subsequent 'American his- tory had Lincoln not been chosen the Republican candidate by the convention of 1860 in Chicago. Could any other president have averted' war? Could any other man have proved that Lincoln was. wrong wheh he said a nation could not exist half slave and half free: Or did it lie within the power of human wisdom to devise a plan whereby two Ameri- can nations might, have grown rup, one of them cherishing slavery, the other abhorring it? ,Our personal opinion is that the war which most Americans believe was the holiest and most necessary a nation ever fought, was perhaps the most dreadful and least inevitable. Would Canadians think they killed and were killed in a sacred, cause if the Western prov- inces, for instance, determined to secede from the rest of the Domin- ion? Would it be possible 4that the boys front Ontario could go forth with' any enthusiasm to shoot down their cousins in 'Manitoba or Sas katchewan? We doubt it. But to believe now that the American civil war was a ghastly and inhuman af- fair does not necessarily mean that it was in the pewee of any man or group of men in 1860' to persuade the American people that it was a kind of martial -incest in -which they' were abeut to engage. There is a theory which has seem- ed to work out in many of the great crises of history that the great occa- 5 leseresseeasee sseas•SleS/„easS'. Mrs!, Do* irls :t)144 Oink PW RoStOreir 04irghter to Health. "Baty cl4ughtel was runclZwii hOlsealtit, took weak spells and could net go to school," writes Mrs. Asa Dow, Port Dan- iel West, Qtiebec. "While visiting ;heratuit, a friend told her about a little girl in similar coital - tion who had been completely restored to health by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. My daughter has since been taking the Pills, and they have certainly made her stronger. Shehasaist that tired, sluggi*- feeling and has never missed one day's school since September. The 'Pilla•alaa gave her a goo4 appetite ; Iter nerveaare better and she has more pep. I recom- mend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to mothers of daughters with similar trouales." Don't let anaemia rob your peering daughter of health ancavigor. Give her Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. They are no temporary relief, They !Allah the condi- tion by creating new blocid which parts health, vigor and vitality. Equally good for all rundown oe nervous condi- tions. At your druggist's. 50c. 274 Neva Misses Day From Schoil. • sion brings forth the great man. But one may take the iview that 'Abra- ham Lincoln was the great man awaiting the great occasion, or that h was an ordinary man made great by the occasion. The latter view commends itself as the less super- natural, and the more flattering to the most of us. It might be im- paired somewhat by making a list of men who were unequal to the great roles in 'which they were cast. So far as ILineoln is concerned, the m'at• ter is of no importance. It is suf- ficient to know that once the issue was joined and the North and South engaged in war he rose magnificent- ly to his destiny. Perhaps the•thing that more than any other gives us his measure is that througheut the. long heart -breaking struggle he never hated. He was the least belligerent man, who ever presided over a war of any magnitude. The blood shed by the North seemed to come from his own veins not legs than the blood dhed by the South. As the war con: tinued he seemed to take on more and More the aspect of a father watcbing two sons trying to mangle each other. : We believe that • the greatest tragedy that grew' out efethat war, except the war itself, *as the assassination of Lincoln. No other man was b well fitted to bind up the wounds of the South as he. That • task fell to others, with consequenees that endured for a generation: One - likes the little stories about Lincoln, and whether they are all true is not important. He was at least thekind of man of whom they might be true, and if they did not record actual incidents, they did illustrate an actual character. The pardoning of the boy who went to sleep when on sentry duty as typi- cal of the kindly 'Lincoln, of the man of peace who interposed himself between the iron discipline ofwar and its victims Whenever the chance offered. One ,of the most famous of the tales,is 'that about the advisers who complained to him that General Grant drank too much whiskey. Lin- coln said he wished he knew what brand he drank, so that he coulkl send it to some of the other gen- erals, who were not winning as many 'battles. His second inaugural ad- dress, his letter to Mrs. Biabee and his speech at Gettysburg are models of eloquence and restraint and, among the noblest literary memorials a public man ever raised to himself. When one thinks of the hardships, of his youth, the disappointment of the lover which perhaps never lost its -power to burn, and the double weight of private anxiety and pulblic responsibility he had to bear in his days at Washington,'where his wife was suspected of being a Southern sympathizer, if not indeed a Southern spy, it is easy to understand the psychological necessity' tar the es- cape he found in' telling stories per- haps not fit for a drawing room; and why he could interrupt a meeting of his cabinet by. reading Artemis Ward aloud to his scandalized colleagues. Withcret this emotional release, his burdens would have been too heavy to carry. Nobody novathinks the less of him for it. Who knows butaerhat the murderer's bullet brought him a welcome release? ie • „ea lame; as to ihy theY should al*,ent themselves from 'this pew, butetheiv oeagle-eYecl" father would have none of ib --it .) WAS the duty of tile ter s children to sot .a good eXample to ethers! Ourse, in -this front pew they were directly under the eye -of their father and also in fell view of the entre congregation, De- spite this fact, 1V1ex (so the story getes.),...was responsible for a good deal of paint being kicked and, scratched ofg the said pew. - Here is a new story of this. form- er 'Newcastle ''boy.' Hearing, that the boy he used to sit, with at school had met with an accident and would likely 'be lame for life, Lord Beaver, brookaat ,onee settled a yearly sum 'of money on him, sufficient to meet his needs for'the rest of his life. The .Emperor of Japan A WOrker And Student 'There was novel- a king more ben- evolently disposed toward his sabjects than the present emperor of Japan. He is the best tape of modern rul- er; takes his job seriously, works as hard as. the successful business man, is always learning, is as con- cerned as an enthusiastic young dock - aide parson for the good of his peo- ple. If, without betrayal of trest, he Might step down from his throne and become) an ordinaryecitizen he would be one of those quiet, youngish men whom 'everybody trusts and a few love and 'nobody slanders. He would grow old doing quiet acts of 'kindness and when not in the lib- rary, the laboratory or the nursery he would be taking exercise—on prin- fortunately for hint he is cast in the philosophic mould. For 'it is ne joke to be the) 124th emperor in the sante line and to sit on the Phoenix throne. 'To, do that and yet fulfil the modern aspiration of "living one's own life" is possible only when ones conception of life is simple. The Emperor Iiirohitp is an almost passionate believer in simplicity. Hi' temperament is not easily ruffled. Hie, mental processes are logical. His spectacles never gleam. lake all industrious 'kings he is an early riser and has accomplished some solid hours' work 'before' the gilded youth of Tokio is disturbed by the arrival of shaving water. 'By the thine he retires to bed—be tween ten and ten-thirty—he has liv- ed as virtuously and laboriously as Longfellow's blacksmith' and a dea more intellectually. The emperor is always at school No special creelit 'belongs to him for that. He was a happy schoolboy. He is the happy scholar. TROUBLED ALL LIFE • WITH CONSTIPATION But Kellogg's ALL -BRAN Brought Real Relief If you are subject to headaches, loss of appetite and energy, sleep- lessness and other effects that so often result from constipation, read Mrs. Turner's voluntary letter. -"For the past six months I have been eating Kellogg's ALL -BRAN, and ca.nno-apraise it too highly. "Am fifty years of age. All my life have been troubled with consti- pation. Kellogg's ALL -BRAN has not Only helped me, but has cured me. "I thought I couldn't like the taste of bran, but Kellogilas ALL - BRAN is 'delicious." — Mrs. C. 4. Turner (address upon request). Tests show Are -BRAN contains two things which overcome consti- pation: "Built" to exercise the in- testines; Vitamin B to help tone the intestinal tract. Ate -BRAN also sup- plies iron for the blood. The "bulk" in Attalla/la is much like that of lettece. Inside the body, it forms a soft mass, which gently clears the intestines of wastes. Certainly this is more natural than taking pills and drugs—so ofterrharrriful. AreeBstees is not bait-fotrning. Two tablespoonfuls daft Will correct most typee of ton- atipation. Lf you hreid intestinal troable not frelieted this 'war, see your doctot. Get the red -and -green package at your greeet's. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontoriti. • .. ..)4)10).). 4•11)). '))) P•))))))) Y;):0)/1)trY.4;)•))).4).•21.q•eY)) .4)3'f.) More Atlantic Treasures When Walter Hagen crossed in the Mauretania td win the British golf championship -804e Sir Arthur Ros- tron, her commander, in "Home From the Sea"—he came on board with no fewer than 600) golf balls. These he hit away one by one in- to the broad Atlantic during the trip over. "II love a long drive and what better• practice could I have than this," he remarked when sarne'body ventured to ask the reason for his extravagance. ' Naturally the other ' -passenger:. were as delighted as he to see bail after ball splash into the sea, their only regret being that they could n'oc bet on the distances. The `Stormy-iletrel' •'Remembered a Chum "How did he come to be called 'Max'?" an interviewer asked a 'bro- ther of the "stormy petkeL" Lord Beaveebroca " 'For "Max-w•ellton' in `.15/1axwellton's Braes Are Bonny'—Annie Laurie. You know, my father was a great Scotcbman, so he named us all after some place in )Scotlattd. I'm 'Tre- ven,' after another." The Rev. James Aiken, the father of Lord IBeatterbroOk, was minister of the Presbyterian churci in the little town of Newcastle in 14w Brun- swick for thirty-three years and is buried in the cemetery adjoining that church. In 'Max's young, day ta the "manse pew" was ,at the very front of the church and alrways full, tit there Were ten children in the manse • family. Many were the excuses front time to • 4 hti.11 ,dren's ));.)• ))) Mothers 'testify that BABY'S OWN tABLET$ are inquahle for children's head colds and feverish colds. Mrs. Frank A. Tanen, Harrows:0.A,, Ont., writes: "It was next to marVel- kus, after giving Baby's Own Tablet, set how quickly the fever disappeared." When you see your ,child with a cold coming en, dont lose any time in giv- ieg Baby'SOwn Tablets. They are effective, aleo, for teething troubles,' colic, constipation, vomiting, sleepless- ness, and whenever a child is •reetless and fretful. Absolutely SAFE—see the analyst's certificate in each 25- cent pavkage. Over 172.59,-000 packages sold 22Z "At the first sign of a.cold," writes Mrs. Isaac Kellar, 4 Shaftesbury Place, To- ronto, "or if the children have been out • iii damp weather, I give Baby's Own Tablets, and they are all right again the next day." • Mrs. Albert E. 1 wies, R. R. 3, Gran- ton, QM., writes "Baby's Own Tab- • lea relieve colds so easily—I wouldn't be without there if they cost twice as much." .„ ... Mrs. Tanies'O'Connor, Godfrey, Ont., writes: "Baby's Own Tablets are.woa- derful for children's col 4 f ;?' •• Dll.. BABY'S OWN Make and Keep Children WellAs- Mothers Know - TABLETS Spades after running off his •Heart tricks. The only trouble with the above solution is that the premises are all wrong. East ie. more likely to hold the King of Spades and the Suggested play enables him to take the setting trick with it. Why is East mom likely to hold it? As the problem is given South must decide at the second lead, at which thne he knows: that: Either— (1) iWest holds three hearts and eight cards of other suits, while East holde eleven cards all of suits other than hearts. (2) West holds twohearts and nine cards of other suits, while East holds one heart and ten cards of 'Other • suits. • (Note: In this analysis we can eliminate the situation where West held six Hearts originally as this would show up before the Ace of Hearts is played). ,However, President -Hoover has haa so much tough luck it would not sur- prise us a bit to see him get the Re- publican nomination in '32,-4udge. So long as the Canadian navy sticks to rescuing Canadian missionaries and such in Central America, there will be approval for its actions.— Sault Star. • 'Why certainly things might ' be worse. You might be a Chinese and living in Shanghai.—Nashville Ban- ner. The snow man is one more who cannot stand the experience of hav- ing a place in the sun.--Oeklaud Tri- bune. Mathematics Enter Game Of 'Contract Bridge The aspiring contract player ;must have some clear idea of the probabil- ities of card distribution if he would rise above the standard of play re- cently given prominence in the daily press. For his benefit m,atherriatic- ians have worked out these probabili- ties by simple „though laborious cal- culations in the verdant field of per- mutations and Iconabiliatio••rts (crap- shooters take note—the "verdant" is for you). For all games of the whist tribe the general method has been to base all such calculations upon 52 cards distributed among four play- ers. The results are embodied in the accepted playing trick requirements for an opening bid. When added to information received in the course of the bidding they also settle many of the later bidding questions and an- swer the problem presented' by the opening lead. But with the first card led, condi- tions have changed; only • 5 unseen cards are now involeed—the leader's card, Dummy and the player's own hand accounting for the balance and with each succeeding card played front one of the unseen hands the probient changes again. Every play- er has a working basis of adjustment to these ehanges. The main thing to he kept in mind is that, other things being equal, the fewer cads there be remaining, the greater the Chance of an even break in any snit. Where only one card of a suit is in question a very simple, yet accurate, method is often available. For instance, here is a problem from the March, 1931, issue of the Bridge World: South, the dealer, bid 2 no-trump, North raised him to 3, East and West passed. North. • rSpades,--A, 6, 5, 4. Hearts -e6, 5, 4. • Diamonds—Q, 9, 3. Clabe-eK,, -7, 2. • South. (Spades -,-Q, 7, 3, 2. Hearts—As 7, a. Diamonds—A, K, 3. Clubs—A, Q„4. • West leads the King of Hearts upon which East plays the- 3, De - darer and Dummy their lowest Hearti. West now leads the Queen of Hearts. 'West now leads the Queen of Hearts. How shall 'Deelarer plan the play of the hand? The 8oIiition, given in the next *tee started - out the best chanee of leaking a game is to play on the assurntition° that West held o-niginally, not more than S /hearts and that,h4 also hoIde, the Spade Xing." The bgelatat is then tow to emlniiik *Weet. of tRannnids and idUbt and then throw hittiin with a Heart. West mast then lead In case (1), the chances that East holds the king of spades are eleven in nineteen or about fifty-eight in one hundred. • In case (2), ten in 19 or about fifty-two and oite-half in a hunched 'As the difference between making the game and going down one is 705•• (605 plus 100), taking the 58 per cent. and 52% per cent. chances of gamer (by_ playing for. the, King of Spades , inatast's hand) is worth 16 per cent. of 705 or about 112 points per hand! played in. ease (1), and 5 pee cent. of 705 or about 35 points per hand played in case (2). The rough aver- age of the gain made by assuming that East holds the King of Spades and playing accordingly is thus in the-, neighborhood of 75 points per hand. - Of course the correct solution , is to lead Spades from Dummy up to De- clarer's Queen before losing control of 'Diamonde, and 'Clubs. .The loss of 75 points per hand on the other play is over seven: times the average dif- ference in the recent. imbroglio in New, York which, the winners claini, proved something, or other. There - is a further possibility of loss for South if he follows the Bridge World's plan 'Cif campaign. East will be able to read the situation as soon as. West is thrown in with the Heart and may diseard down to the King of Spades solus and one Club or Diamond Thee wh,est West leads a. low spade for the twelfth trick and North plays low, East makes- the King of Spades and his Club or Diam- ond, setting the Contract '2 tricks. A nourishing and delicious food that builds healthy bodies. 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Jim said k was the best •-••• cake he aver tested, and I said that Ws lucky: we boa alelObane, ))) „sissesesseessass.SeSsal-,"e's,a),See;•;SSSeS" ",•.,;.•Seie•,,•••••;$S.,••••"""•••••;,`..4").'•' •',";'••••••'S 0, • 4). . ' ,s•