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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1932-07-29, Page 2- tor Eno Cleaniiness Means Geo itgaith t. 0 Water alone will not remove grime from your .you need soap, toot It's the same with inward cleaning . . . it takes more than a mere laxative. to remove oisonous matter. That's why ENP'S."Fruit Salt"is so good for you. It helps to make and keep you healthy by thoroughly Cleansing the intestinal tract. Take it "daily, morning or night. But be sure it's ENO'S! cavee . • SCISTDAY AFTERNOON (By Isabel Hamilton; Goderich, Ont.) 'rom Thee all skill and science flow, All pity, care and love, All calm and courage, faith and hope; 0 pour them from above. And part them, Lord,. to each and all, As each and all shall need, To rise like incense, each to Thee, In noble thought and deed. Charles Kingsley. PRAYER ,Lord, alre have a busy world a- bout us. Eye, ear and thought will be needed in all our work- this day. Now, ere we enter on it, we commit 'to Thee eye, ear and thought. Bless them and keep their work Thine so that, as through Thy laws our blood Bows without any thought of ours, so our spiritual lie may hold on its course when our mind cannot con- sciously turn to Thee to commit each particular act to Thy service. Hear „a; toe a le e 'AUG. 26 t sEpt 10,1932 OUTSTAN DI NF IMPRESSIVE EPOCHALH, I • • • • • Brilliant pageantrymusic— . instrumental and choral— famous bands from Great • Britain and this continent; costlydisplays of manufactured and natural products from far-off lands; horse show; automobile show; fashion show; dog and cat shows; stirring military tourna- ments; Kaye Don with ' "Miss England III"; British Schneider Cup Plane; Seventh Marathon Swim for world's professional championship; two art galleries, engineering, electrical and scientific achieve- ments; indeed, outstanding things to see in this gorgeous lakeside park and, its costly permanent buildings. Send a postcard for free descriptive folders. 7'o aooid disappointment and in- convenience, the management have arranged to accept advance Reser- vations for Grandstand Pagea-nt The Triumph"; and for any of,te four Z0004'oice Exhibition Chorus converts. GRANDSTAND , RESERVED StEATS: z 50c and $1.00. Sox Sears $1.50 ea. (5 chairs in each box) 2000eVOICE EXHIBITION CHORUS: - Aug. 27, Sept. 1, Sept. 6, Sept. 10 Ground floor reserved 75c. Box chairs, $1.00. Settd cheque or' money order with- out delay to ,Canadian National Exhibition, TorontV, .latot woettesae gle °, eueeteat , 1932 Exeosinoeret eaw IL W. Waters ti aft, Gene annul, this our eesrayee for our Saviour's •sake. Amen. Thomas Arnold. S. S. LESSON FOR JULY 31, 193Z Lesson Topic -The Giving of the Manna... Lesson Passage -Exodus 16:1-5, 14, 15, *5. . • Golden Text--aames 1:17. Wehannot but marvel at the large- ness of heart which it is possible for God to. beetow on man as is seen in the capacity of "faith given to Moses. It enabled him to befieve that the im rruense host which he had led from amidst the fatness of Egypt would, by the power of God's bountiful riglif handy be sustained in comfort in the •wilderness. Having spent 40 years of his life in that very region, he knew, when he led them into the vj3ii-ness, that without a miracle, incoreeivable in its extent, ,and con- tinuous in its duration, the 'whole Multitude must perish. • Does it not seem. that this is second to no act of faith which the sacred history re- lates? It was soon put t� a severe test. In about a month after their leaving Egypt they arrived at Elim. By this time their stock of provisions taken with them from Egypt, appears to have been wholly exhausted. They had had a proof of God's ablate to supply their needs when they drank of the water at Marah and found it bitter. But as they looked upon the country round about and compared it with the district through which they had come they saw no . prospect of finding subsistence foe their myriads. The more they considered it, the more gloomy their views becarne. It is the nature of man to ender -rate past evils, and to over-rate past advant- ages in comparison with the present., So now the Israelites thought much of the' plepty of Egypt, while its slavery and its toll faded from their view; and they were keenly alive to the privations of their present posi- tion, while regardless of the land that they were seeking with its freedom and hope. But God was dealing with them as a man deals with his chil- dren. They are tried, trained arid disciplined. God was dealing, with His children in a.,way that they- could learn the great lessons of His school. The thoughts of the people found expression in murmuring against Moses and Aaron. WT.' have sald. these thoughts were natural, but thea are not on that account to be excus- ed. Had they reflected as they oug}it to have done, they should have thought of what the Lord's high hand had marvellously wrought on their behalf, and from that experience have gathered hope and confidence. Their cry was for bread and meat as they looked longingly back to the days when they not only "sat by the flesh- pots," but when they "did eat bread to the full." Although their murmuring and dis- trust were ostensibly levelled at Mos- es and Aaron they were really di- rected against the Lord who had made them •his peculiar care. Bread from heaven, rained cloven daily for 'six days in the week, was promised. The very next morning the face 'of the ground around the camp was seen to be covered with "a small round thing, as small as the hoar -frost on the. ground.' The people asked of one another, "What is this?" The Heare-w of that expression being- "Manhu" gave the name "Manna" to the feted miraculously provided. Mos- es was able to answer that question for them. ale told them this was the substance Which, in .place of bread, God intended for their staff of life. Go,1 stated His reason foe this miraculous dealing with them. It was teat I may prove them, whether they will walk in my law, or Chadwick in tae Expositor's Bible has the follawina to say about the proving of the children of Israel at this time by God: "While the Lord dioconta rived the test of need . and penury, which had proved to be too severe a discipline, He suastitued the test at fulness. And in doing so it was seen that worldly and unthank- ful natures are not -to he satisfied; that the disloyal at heart will com- plain, however favored. They were fed "with sienna , which they knew not to make item know that man doth not live by bread only, 'mit by every woraat•hat proceedeth out of the mouth of God doth man live." And this food was eniversally even, and univdrsally saitable. The strong and the weak, the eged chieftain and lit- tle ehildren ate and were neuriehed, No stern device excluded any mem- ter of the viaihle church in the wild- erness frum sharing the bread from aeaven; they aid eat the same spiri- tual meat pee ided only alet they tethered it Their part was to as in earnest in accepting and so la aur; but if we in whom Aria we blame except our eanner in the myatery 'of its origin, 1., the silent and seetee mode of its descent, from atiove, in - the o its bestowal, and in its Sttitability for all the camp for closes and for the youngest ii -e manna preigueed Ohrist." — - WORLD MISSION'S School Homes. A, week -end "Canadian Girls In Training Conference was held in Sep- tember, at Kolehreekie• School Hanle, 8.1110.ky..Lake antacommunity„ and the conference gave splendid opportunity for getting togetheiaand becoming ec- quainted, not only with each. ()thee ant also with the leaders and with the provincial secretary. :;Yliss Gil- hoaly, who was present, and contrib- uted largely to the program. The conference opened with a ral- ly O4 Friday evening. A jolly sing- song, election of officers and a help- ful talk on "Being a Girl is a Great Adventure," made up the program. The following sessionsconsisted of thole Study and discussion .periode end also. included a hike on Saturday afternoon, with its camp fire, its sun- set vespers in the yellow forest ,a - mon the hills, and as daylight faded, dramatics, reports from Ce G. L T. camp at Fallis, and the camp 'fire stories. Sunday afternoon's session wita its talk on. "Being a Girl is Ruling a Kingdom," and the closing ceremony brought the conference to a close. - Mary L. Mansfield. Horse History Was Made When North Met South On May 13, 1845, there came a horse race at the Union course on Long Island in New York which gave rise to the supposition that -if you wanted a champion thorough - .bred you had to go into the south to find it. The theory has been handed down with more or less truth in it from that day until this. And argumeets are heard front the beginning of one year to anoajoer over whether our fleetest, gamest, . and noblest ithor- oughbred horses acom,e from the south, suh!" or whether they kaid front the north. The race which apparently settled the question as far as those folks in 1845 were concerned was a match between the mare Fashion, the cham- pion- of the north, and Peyton, an Alabama mare, which had takereethe measure of all contenders in the south. There had already been four fa- mous Match races between -horses, representing the north and thorough- breds which came from the south. The northerners won two- of them. The horses from the south had cap- tured the other two. So it was agreed 'by the sportsmen and horse lovers of 1845 who arranged the match that it' would settled "for all time". the sectional question of thoroughbred supremacy. Thomas Kirkman, of Alabama. owned Peytona. He was a cotton grower and horse fancier. He agreed • to race his champion of the south against the best the north, copldnus- ter, providing the northerners were willing to make him a side wager of .$20,000. Fashion, noted for her speed and • regaraed as the champion of the north, was owned by William Gib - bona and trained by Samuel taird of Colt's Neck, N. J. Thea were will- ing to race their -fleet mare agv.ittt-,; the southern titleholder. However, that didn't clinch the match, for they didn't have the money to cover the Alabama sportsman's $20,000 wag- er. Burt Henry K. Toler, who also put in, much time at Colt's Neck, did have $20,0,00, and he was willing to wager it that Fashion could beat Peytona. It was arranged that he would enter the mare And bet his $.20,000 that the north could whip the south. So Peytona was ,matched with Fa- shion for the championship race. The horse that won two heats of three miles each was to be declared the, winn,er. . Now we'll go back to that balmy aftetnoon of •May 13, 1845, on Long Island, where bright sunshine was beaming down on the largest crowd in America. 'We'll let the reporter who covered it tell you the story from the yel- lowedfiles of the New York Herald of how Peyton&frone the south beat Fashion from the north. Here he goes: Botai horses looked fine and fit. Mr. J. Lair "topped" the pigskin across Fashion dressed in purple, jacket and green cap. The "indomi- table Barney" whose real name was Francis J. Palmer, of 'Connecticut, had the leg up a on Peytona. Two finer animals and abler jockeys it is supposed there is not in the etates. Many thought Fashion had a aeetle' too 'mach upon her in the way of weights. 'Peyeona had the pole, but it was a most beautiful start, nose and nose. They kept thus together for most of the first mile, but at the drawgate Peytona pulled out and led to the Judges' stand a length and a half in front. For the second mile they appeared to keep in this position, but owing to the clouds and dust prevailing only an occasional glimpse could be caught ot them. But they seemed to maintain a similar posi- tion round the top and to the draw - fate, whep Fashion offered to come in front, and on reaching the judges' chair Fashion's nose was dose up, with that of Peytona on the inside. "For the third mile they kept thus well together. At the drawgate Fashion appeared two. lengths in front, but on nearing the judges' • Every 10c Packet of WILSON'S FLY PA DS \ WILL KILL MOPE' FLIES THAN -a: DOLLARSVORTH" \OF Alla OTHER FLY KILLER"/ 1 Op WHY PAY MORE Best of all fly killers. Clean, quick, sore. cheap. Ask your Drug- gist, Grocer or General Store. Teta ealLsON FLY pm) co., eimenarote, Mfr. 14.4444411141411111111111114 miner Ms "Baby's Own Tablets are wonderful for suramer complaint", writes Mrs. Laura Wheeler, Toronto, Ont. "Whenever pay children get cross and peevish and refuse to' eat, I give them the tablets". Equally effective for teething, colic, simple fever. Easy to take as candy - and absolutely safe. 25c a pack- age. 239 Dr. Williams' sAers OWN TABLETS stand- Peytona had her nose close in the flank of her opponent. It was now pretty evident that Barney had it all his own way, could do just as he pleased with the affair and some faces became elongated -while other onlookers were in ecstasy. ''They kept well together until they reached the. drawgate tolerant home, where Fashion appeared to have the lead, but it was immediately, taken from her and Peytona came • hone two lengths 'in front, • making the three miles in seven :minutes 34% seconds, amid the most. unbounded 'cheers. The 'betting nor took a very dif- ferent turn -50 to 30 was offered on Peytona, but there was great shy- ness -50 to 25 was taken. to some extent. "At the start a the second- heat Peytona was leading by a neck, Laird welleupe round the bottom- to the quarter; on approaching the half, Fashion went to the front and led to tke three-quarters. Here the crowd brok' in at the lower draw - gate which caused some confusion, but circler was soon restored. They came together to the judges' chair head and head, no telling who had the lead. They kept so up the back stretch, at the three-quarters it was just , so. It was, thus to the draw - gate, Fashion having the track... But Peytona moved and at the end -of the second mile had a head in front. For ,the third mile they kept so to the last quarter. A tablecloth might have covered them. At the drawgate Fashion •led on the inside but Pey- tcrim came horrie a length in front." Some Freak Inventions , Make Amusing Book We .do not know how many patents have been issued here and elsewhere to inventors who were at the time inmates of asylum' but we naturally doubt that the product of their -har- assed brains would be of much value to humanity. In other words, while we can imagine in psane man writ- ing a great poem; aaaecannot imag- ine him impro-ving on 'the fountain pen or the safety razor. The men- tal processes which issue in the new patented article seem to us to be im- bedded in an underlying practicality. the very antithesis of lunacy. But on reading te recently issued book, Beware of Inatailems, complied 'from the records of the 'United States Pet- it:ft Office by A. E. Brown and IR. A. Jeffcott, Jr., 'we feel' inclined to re- vise this idea.. The book lists s.ome 12'5 inventions for which patents have actually been granted, and we can only assume that the patent comen sioner does not deem it any part �f his duty to decide whether. a thing for which a patent is applied has any earthily use, but merely whether it in- fringes upon some other patent pre- viously issued. • an -consequence the book is ex- tremely amusing. It derives this quality not from the comment of the authors but from the actual il- lustrations of the various devices for which patents have {been issued, and the patentees' serious descrip- tions of what they have contrived and what they expect their contrap- tions to achieve. The first is- an apparatus for propelling and guiding balloon. The apparatus consists of eagles or other large birds which are harnessed to the halloons and guided by the -balloonist. In 1895, an American citizen tookaout a patent by means of which a train meeting or overtaking another train on the same track could 'continue over the top of it by means d rails support- ed by the roof of the ether train. In 1922 a patent was issued for a mechanical device which is s-uppos- ed to change the shape of the upper lip into a perfect Cupid's bow. A much -more elaborate mechanism would produce dimples, and so far as we are aware both of these de- vices may be in operation to -day. Patents have been granted for sev- eral variations on the alarm clock theme, one of which arouses the sleeper by turning a spray or water upon him. A very complicated mechanism was devised for the extermination of rats. After- luring the rat into a trap it decorated it with a little collar to which a small bell was fastened. The rat would then be turned loose and the noise of the bell would ause the other rats to vacate the premises. Somewhat akin to this, but showing a somewhat more opulent imagina- tion is a device which marks eggs in different colors as they are ejacu- lated from. theahens. Another inven- tion, no' doubt the work of an animal lover, arranges that just as a dog is about to commit a nuisance it will be shodked by an electric current. We note also a kind of removable hood or mask which is guaranteed to prevent hens from flying, and also to discourage them from setting. To prevent dogs worrying sheep, a genius devised an apparatus which is supposed to be attached to the dog's nose, Suspended fro* it is a cluster of fishhooke. When the dog's nose touches the sheep the hooks .become entangled. This alarms the sheep which Thill away, giving the dog's nose a peetty darned good twist and thus breaking him of a revolting habit. There is a rocking chair whose chief feature is a set of bellows un- der the seat. AS the chair is rocked the air is xpressed from these bel- low§ and -by • wears of a pipe ie diedharged over the fevered brow of the person sitting in the chair. Another fresh air. fiend devised a frame with awo tprongs each resting on the shoulder. They formed a kind of apex over the head. anti on this apex the hat is supposed' to rest, inoteacaually clapping the and, but encircling it without touching. This patent did pot,apparently ,in- fringe upon a much more compli- cated patent Which would spare the wearer from the insufferable bore- dom of raising his hat to ladies. He would merely nod his head and the hat as if by magic would' rise and perform the salute without being toached. When the : nod was com- pleted the hat 'would swing (back into position again with eiebody a whit the . worse. As recently as 1898, a patent 'was issued for an electrical machine supposed to ex- tract poinons from the body and deposit them on an electric plate. Not so ,plainly from the realm of Alice in Wenderland is the pair of suspenders which in case of a fire .eould be unwound into a single 4strap4 which then could be lowered fro* 'a window and -either permit a spider to make its escape or be at- tached to a heavy lope ladder, whieh then could be drawn into the roam. The immodesty of ptitan trying to save his life without pair of sus- penders in which to face the outside, and only two censorious, world is lightly glossed over. Quite an ele- gant doo-dad is a • combinatiott necktie and watch guard, the end of the tie culminating in a spring attached' to the watch. There is also a device attached to railway engines whieh will 'direct a stream of hot water upon animals cluttering up he -right-of-way, an electricalma- chine for exterminating bedbugs, a fish lure, redolent of sex .appeal„ and a leery complicated mechanism which would permit mothers to nurse their 'babies in public without the tongue of gossip .assailing them. There is a plow tbat can be turned into a field gun, a container for gum, used and' unused; a method • for preserving the dead in ice, and. also a patent coffin from which a person might escape if inadvertently buried alive. • • , • And in Australia another explorer' fourid another tribe, the men of which speak in grunts all the time, not merely at breakfast- when they Are reading the -morning paper. - Boston Herald. Under the new form of govern- ment in Siam,. the, king has been made back-seat driver with occasion- al privileges of leaning over 'and tooting the horn.-Oolumbus, Ohio, State Journal. , `Middle age isn't so bad if you dis- card a sport mind when you get a truck chaasis.---(Schenectady Gazette. Rates On air' lines are being re- duced again. Even the cost of going up is coming down. -Goshen Daily News Times, . St.. Thomaa Times -Journal wants smething done about Canadian golf championships going to the Unit- ed States. Might put on 'a tariff, be.. cause 'tariff begins , with a tee. - Stratford Beacon -Herald. , "Join the Legion" (By Capt. H. W. Hiltz, 25th Batt C.E.F.) Have yeu served with British Forces in the air, on land or sea? Home or "Foreign", east or westward Illelgiu(ne France or Germany?- aire' don't ask about religion, nor it '• you were in -"the line," Comrade, for thesake of comrades, join the Legion, now's the time. Think ,one moment: were you back- ward when the nation wanted men? - • You braved dangers, suffered hard - sales; are you softer now than then? No shame in the King's good khaki 'when a"the Corps" was all our ,pride, And for ideals they could not utter, many comrades fought and died. Will you let all memory perish? Time ,wash out united blood OfiCambrai, Lens and Yin*, Ypres, Serniree and Sanctuary Wood? You grasned the torch still"gleaming; will you let its flame burn low By forgetting of the lesson that you • learned not long ago? ,Do you shirk a bounden duty? Is it that you do not care? Have you lost your pride of service, is the burden hard to "bear? You've a duty, then perform it . • all for one and one for all, Join the Legion all you veterans, for divided we must fall. ••••••••1 It's not what as individuals you will gain from Legion aia, Youave a debt to kin and comrades and it's time the debt was paid; You're the keepers of the altar, yours the voice of voiceless dead, Will yon let -their memory perrieh? Time wash out the blood they shed? t o How Game 'of Crap, Came to America Many tames have we read of the game of hazard, with net the faint- est notion -what it was, and suppos- ing probably that it was something - like piequet. No* our education has been expanded by the delights bit of information that it in nothing but 'crap. The enlightenment has come through reading an article by Edward Laroque Tinker in The New York Times Magazine. Crap is not only hazard but it comes to tae United States from London and not from the backwaters of the Zambesi oe the sonrce of, the Nile. The 'bene- factor who introduced it was aconative of Near Orleans whieh has other and peculiar honors to the matter of spreading civilization in the United States, It was in New Orleane that the Ramos gin fizz and the Sazarae • t t OA!, t'eneetliturievutee..,einteetro • , CHILDREN so often feel better when they eat light, crisp foods instead of hot, heavy dishes. Give them Kellogg's giewas Corn Flakes- and milk–for supper. CORN Easy to digest. They'll sleep like a top. FUtkES For breakfast, lunch, late snacks — Kellogg's are healthful, delicious and, economical. Quality Guaranteed. 4 cocktail were invented, or if not in- vented, were brought to such a high state of perfection that we entertain wistful and poignant memories of them to this :day. It was from New Orleans that jazz spread through Europe. It was in New Orleans that the name Dixie, as applied to the Southern States, was coined, its ori- gin being a ten dollar note which a Creole bank printed bearing. the French numeral "dix." The benefactor who 'brought crap to the United States wasI3ernard Xavier Phillippe de Marigny de Mandeville, whom we propose to cell Barney for short. He was left at the age of 16 the sole heir of the rich- est planter in the State of Louisiana. His father had spoiled him, and after his death the lad became un- controllable, His guardian thought that he might acquire some sort of discipline or at least, a sense of responsibility if he had the advant- age of an English education, and to England he was sent. But it was not to tbe academic groves. that he turned his footsteps on arriving in the old world. Instead he found the coffee, and gambling houses of the period' much more to his taste. The bloods of tlie day were greatly excited over a. new game recently imported ftierri France, which was called hazard and at whieh vast sums were lost and Iron. Nobody proved a handsomer loser than Barney, and news of his gambling and other ex- travagances reached his guardian who ordered the youth to return home. • This he did, bringing With him as the chief fruit of his 'European visit a thorough knowledge of the new game. This was at the begin- ning of the nineteenth century when Yankees were flocking into New Orleans -which was then populated' almost exclusively by negroes and persons of French and 'Spanish descent. The Yankees were despised lay the Creoles as uncouth, low peoe ale who worked like negroes, While the Creoles provoked the contempt and derision of the Yankees because of their aristocratic airs and their reluctance to engage in productive toil. The Yankees called them con- temptuously Johnny .Crapauds ("frogs") and the game they found them so intensely absorbed in was called Crapaud. This was later shortened to crap, and was none other than the game of hazard which the young Creole had imported from London. The game proved as popu- lar with the Yankees as with the 'Creoles, for the simple reason that it gave quick action and could bean- 1101.1•14et derstood easily even by persons who. could neither read nor write. As long - as they could add up • twelve dots, - that was all the scholarly equipment. required. Well, that is how crap got its name -and it is important to know - that the name is crap, and not. tra:ps-l'but something -more is necese sary to complete the column andi can easily be found in the ,subse- quent history of Mons de Mandeville- • His enslavement by the new gam continued and while he had his nights of great winning he more frequently had his weeks of contin- uous losing. No fortune could with- stand the drain and the time came, when he had to sell some of his- property. After a particularly dis- astrous night he sold land on both.: sides of a newly opened street to, which he gave the name "rue de Craps." This it bore for more there fifty avers until a church was built in the neighborhood. The worship- pers objected to walking through a. thoroughfare withsucha repellent. name and it was later changed toe Hargunda Street, this being long be-, fore the day of ,prohibition senti- ment. More and more property had - to be relinquished as time went ora. and Barney found himself in a des- perate position. In this extremity he rememberect that his father had on -one occasion. lent a large- sum: of money to the Du c d' Orleans in the course of a. visit to this continent.. In- the mean- time the duke had -become Louie. Phillippe, King of France. So' Coe ‚France sailed the Creole, no longer a youngmart and no longer rich.. He was cordially received by the, King was) invited him to the -palace • and overwhelmed him with eompli- ments. But when the subject of the - loan was brought up the King was., uneespon•sive. He was hard pressed.' and said that the expenses of keep- u'a a king's position were con- siderable. However, he offexeel give the American a margaisate, which would cost him nothing. This. was refused and eventually our hero+ left France' bearing with him noth- ing more substantial than a snuff- box, and a promise that his somi would be given a cadetship at St- -a Cyr. In a few years the former mil-• Bonaire became almost penniless: and lived in a little cottage attended 'by a faithful negro woman Who ;hada served ban in the days of his prosperity. 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