HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1932-08-19, Page 2• . •
• 'TILE illatON EXPO4ITOlt •
AUGUST 19, 1.32.
(s.
*019)A117. AFTERNOON
I1)belaSsen1lion, .Goderich. Ont.)
110- Lord he with us as we bend
,
bleslaing to receive;
s giftof peace on us descend,
Before His courts we leave.
'The laordalee with 'us is we walk
Along. our homeward road;
Sileut thought or friendly talk
Our Ihearts be near to .God.
JohnEllerton,
PRAYER
Grant unto us, 0 Lord, to realize
eat when we pray we are speaking
face to face with Jehovah as did Saes -
es a old, May we ever [be humbly
grateful for the privilege of prayer.
Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR AUGUST 21st
Lesson Topic—The Tent of Meet-
ing.
Lesson Passage—Exodus. 32: 7-16.
Golden Text—Exodus 3311.
• Jehovah went before the people in
the 'pillar of cloud and of fire to
show and to reveal His presence un-
to them whether they were on the
way or in their tents. ,He promised
this in these :words: all places
where I record my name I will come
ante thee, and I will , bless thee."
(Exodus 20:24). To make this place
of blessed -meeting a visible reality
God showed Moses a modernpattern
of the tabernacle when he was in
the Mount. He was also given 'ies,
%tractions about the part the people
were to have in, the making of iti
"Speak unto the children of Israel
-that they bring me an offering: of
-every man that -giveth it willingly
with her heart ye shall take my of-
fering." -
The sin of the making of the gold-
en calf delayed the making of the
tabernacle.
The children of Israel were com-
manded to depart unto the land God
had. promised to give to Abraham's
;descendants 'but through Moses He
let them see He was sorely displeas-
ed with 'them. He turned them over
to the leading of Moses and the con-
voy af a guardian angel. It was
evil tidings to them to hear that they
could not have God's special pres-
ence with them and they mourned and
were in bittenness.
God bid them lay aside their o.rna-
mente, and they did so; both to show
in general, their deep mourning, and,
in particular, to take a holy revenge
upon themselves for giving their ear-
rings to make the golden calf (1-6).
Verses 7-16.
. A' mark of humiliation.- put upon
-them for their. sinning was the 'plac-
ing of the Tabern.acle of the congre-
gation without, afar off from the
caanp; whereas the Tabernacle the
pattern of which was revealed to
Moses by ,Ged was to have been se'c
up in the midst of them.
aZattihevr- "Henry Saye that perhaps
this talsernaele wassa plan, or model
rather, of the tabernacle that leas
afterwards to be erected, a haste
daft from, the pattern howed him
on the mount, designed for direction
to the workmen and used, in the
%meantime, as a tabernacle of meeting
between God and Moses about public
affairs.
Though the tabernacle was removed
yet every Israelite that sought ' the
Lord was welcome to this tabernacle,
as- well as 'Moses, the man of God.
When Moses went out to go to the
place of meeting, the people looked
after him, in token of their respect
to him whom before they had slight
ed. By this they showed their de-
sire to be at peace with G-od. Their
hopes of a reconciliation were raised
when they saw the cloudy pillar, that
symbol of God's preeence, descend
and stand at the 'door of the tent of
Imeeting. Then every: man worship-
ped jest where he stood adoring the
Divine Majesty and showing in thrs-
peiblie way their allegiance to God
and Moes. They were the seine peo-
ple who eoshortly before publicly
worshipped the golden calf. They
had, however, been going through ex-
periences which had humbled them
and given them to know that they
rightly had nothing to expect but the
wrath of God.
God was, in moses, reconciling Is-
rael to Hienself and showed that He
Wag 'very willing to be at peace for
we re -ad that "God spake unto': Moses
face to face, as a man speaketh unto
his friend." lHe spake, not a
prince to a srubject„ hilt- as to one
whom he loved andwith whom he
took sweet counsel. This was great
encouragement to Israel to see their•
advocate so great a favorite; and
-that they might be encouraged the
snore Moses turned again into the
camp, to tell the people what hopes
he had of bringing this business to'
d a good issue, and to encourage them ,
not to despair should he again be
long absent from thetn. 9. Because he
intended returning speedily, he had
leffefaschtia in the tabernacle in case
God had anything to say out of that
pillar.of cloud.
On Moses' return he pleaded the
cause of the Children of Israel before
God. He pleaded for His presence
with them for the rest of their jour -
Acids in Stomach
Cause Indigestion
Create Sourness, Gas and Pain.
How to Treat.
Medical authorities state that nearly
nine -tenths of the cases of stomach
trouble, indigestion„sourness, burning,
gas, bloating, nausea, etc., are due to
an excess of hydrochloric acid in the
stomach. The delicate stomach lining
is irritated, digestion is delayed and
food sours, causing the disagreeable symp-
toms which every stomach sufferer knows
so well.
Artificial digestants are not needed
in such cases and may do real harm.
Try laying aside alt digestive aids and
instead get from "any -druggist some
Bisurated Magnesia and take a teaspoon-
ful in water right after eating, This
sweetens the stomach, prevents the for-
mation of excess acid and there is no
sourness, gas or pain. Bisurated Magnesia
(in powder form—never liquid or milk)
is harmless to the stomach, inexpensive
to take and is the most efficient form of
magnesia for stomach purposes. It is
used by thousands of people who enjoy
their meals with no more fear of in-
digestion.
ney, notwithstanding their great pro -
v ocations.
Moses filled his mouth with argu-
ments. In verse 12 he pointed out to
God that it was from Him he re-
ceived his cam:Mission bo lead the
people out of,Egypt into Canaan. It
$ as though he said: "Now, Lord,
Thou hest ordered me a great work
and yet left ate at a loss how to go
1.1,out end go through' with it."
He referred to God's interest in him-
self and adds: "Now, therefore, I
-pray Thee, if I have fund graoe
in Thy sighf, ehaw me new Thy way."
Divine direction is one of the best
ev;dences of Divine fever:
He further nitimated that the peo-
ple, though 7nost unworthy, were still
His :chosen race—a :people for whom
He had dons s;any miraculous things
and with whom Ile had covenanted.
When God said. "My presence shall
go with the Moses laid hold at
once on the', promise and spoke as
cne who dreaded the thought of go-
ing forward without God's presence,
knowing that their marches could not
ie. safe, nor their encampments easy,
if they had -not God with them.
He concluded his argument with
reference to the effect it would have
on the, surrounding nations 'if God's
leadership were removedfrom them:
"For where in shall it be known here
that I and Thy people have found
grace in Thy sight? Is it net in
that Thou goes -t with us? So shall
we be separated, 1 and Thy people
that are upon the face of the earth."
WORLD MISSIONS
The: Story of Rama
'Miss Elizabeth M. -McLeod, Cen-
tral India, send this story of Rama,
told by himself: "My younger bro-
ther left home when he was a boy
during the famine long ago. Many
years later when he had become a
Christian he came to seek •me, After
a long search he found me and told
me and my family about the Lord. •
"The next year my brother carni
again to visit me and stayed longer
and again he taught inc and my fam-
ily the things of the Lord: He wish-
ed to send my eldest : son to school,
so -I agreed. Then he took me to
R-urtlarn and said to the Sahib, "Please
'send a preacher to tell :my relative
the Word of the Lard." So the., Padre
Sahib sent Itsvo preachers. When
they arrived I had gone away, to
Gajan Pass, but they followed me
there and stayed for a week. All the
people heard the Word of tlhe Lord.
Before this my brother had told me
about the tide God and now for a
week these preachers taught me.
Then I went with them toirtutlam and
was; baptizer].
"A month later, the Sahib came to
camp in my village, and -while he was
there one hundred and twenty-two
people were' baptized. At Wet time
Ranieri had come as a visitor from
another village. So he beard the
Gospel for the first time. Ile, too,
became a believer and later on ebout
four hundred people in his village be•
came Chrietians. The Christians of
the Maori ka Mal district now num-
ber about six hundred. So 'through,
my brother a,nd me at this time, in
both churches together, there are a;
bout a thousand Christians.
FARM NOTES
Base, To Tell Poison Ivy.
An evor• present clanger ste the
vacationist in any part of Canada is
poison ivy. It is very similar in
general appearance to the Virginia
creeper bet is easily identhi !"..Nd by the
fact that its leaves are in clusters of
three,' very similar in appearance to
the leaves of the strawberry plant,
while tlhe leaves. of . the Virginia
creeper are in clusters of five. On
poison ivy dimes may also be seen
clderters of small white flowers ani
later in the season a round' white
ummer Sickness
Mothers Tell How BABY'S OWN TABLETS
Relieve Children's Distressing Troubles
41,1y baby was so bad with summer
.complaintateet We despaired of saving
her", writes Mts. Hazel Allard, Whitby,
Ont. "A friend'adyised Dr. Williams'
Baby's Own Tablete. After the third
dose baby fell asleep. By noon the next
day: she took the usual bottle feeding".
the first sign of baby's peevishness
or illness in the trying months of sum-
tiergive him Baby's Own Tablets,
drid'in &short time he is well, and smil-
hag Ifig 'thanker, writes Mrs. Alton
1atier Gknalthond, Que,
DR. WILLIAMS'
"Baby's Own Tablets are wonderful for
summer complaint", writes Mrs, Laura
Wheeler Indian Road Crescent,
Toronto.
When your childten get cross and fret-
ful, refuse to eat, and manifest recog-
nized symptoms of summer complaint,
it is time to give them Baby's Own
Tablets. Easy -to -take as candy. Effec-
tive, and absolutely SAFE nee ana-
lyst's certificate in each 25 -cent package.
Over 1,250,000 packages sold in 1931.
228
liIYartjtsie Children W Know
e ---
fruit about the size of a pea. The
;poison element in the ivy comes from
resin which rises in the sap. In
treating poison ivy avoid dusting
with dry powders such as baracic
acid or baking powder, usually ap-
plied- to blister sores; amd rubbing
and localize the infectieis by paint-
ing iodine around tike Ogee of the
.sores, An effective treatment is to
,daulb the affected •partr with a three
per cent. solution of :potassium per-
manganate. This 'leaves a ibrown
:stain which disappears ,after a time
but may be removed slowly by the
inc ef suet) and water.
To Improve Bacon.
Hjon. Thomas L. Kennedy, Minister
of Agriculture, has announced that
new regulations have been adopted
by the Province and Dominion joint-
ly to improve the standards of bacon
production. Under these provisions
vihat is known as an advanced reg-
ister . of sows -is to be established.
Pigs from a fist litter will have to
make•200 pounds of pork in 200 days
will be slaughtered and their Car-
casses judged by the Dominion grad-
ers and scored for value as bacon. In
the event that they are scored as
"extra good bacon," the sow will be
placed on the proposed advanced re-
gister with proper ear -marking or
tagging, and the farmer owning her
will be .bonused to the extent of $15,
to which the Province and the Do-
minion. will contribute ,equally. Any
boar that is secured from this ad-
vanced register of sows will be look-
ed over by judges at the age of six
months, and if showing the right
conformation, will earn for its owner
the amount of $15 from the Govern-
ments.
. Hen -House Mathematics.
Under normal conditions it takes
57.2 eggs ti ,Pay for the cost of „feed
for a pullet during the pullet year,
fig -urea supplied by the Dominion Ex-
perir.neetal Statioe at Lennoxville,
Que., show. As this figure is arriv-
ed at front an average of twelve
years' results it is of more than ord-
inary interest. The number of eggs
required as, pay the cost of- feed per
bird varies, of course; with prevail-
ing- market prices from year to year:
During the period of the report it
has ranged from as low as 50 eggs
in 1922, to a peak of 69 :in 1928,
while it took 51 to pay the feed cost
in 1931. It is also interesting to
note that the same cost study shows
that an average of 15 eggs is suf-
ficient to pay the cost of feed per
bird during the winter months only.
Conqueror Of Darkness
When recent news dispatches re-
lated haw Helen Keller had been
presented to their majesties at. a
Buckingham Palace garden party
and that Queen Mary and) the blind.
deaf, ditimb woman had converged
when the latter :placed her fingers
en her majesty's lips and throat, the
world recalled one of the most thrill-
ing conquests of physical tribulation
ever imposed upon a 'Inman being.
Victim •of three -dread afflictions,
Helen Keller yet succeeded in earn-
ing a Bachelor of Arts degree with
"especial mention for excellence it
English literature." She dresses and
unufresses herself, types her own
ma escripts, eats unaided, plays soli-
taire by -using cards with raised
markings, plays checkers on a board
whose sq-uares are hollowed out to
hold the pieces, and walks in the
garden of her home with no one but
Hans, the Great Dane dog, to guide
ber. Two years ago, she spent the
summer at a 'Canadian lake and in-
sisted on having ropes strung along
the paths and out into the water in
order that she might walk and swim
alone. tEstsentially gay and spirited,
she still must know intolerable mom-
ents of depressien. She hides these
moods and permits "no one to express
his pity.
:Daughter of a land-poor southern-
er, Helen Kellar was born a normal
child in June, 1880. At the age of
nineteen, months, ,ate: attack of brain
fever left her. blired; deaf and dumb.
When bee father became a district
marshal at a salary of $6,000 a year,
he had the money enough to provide
expert care for his daughter. He
wrote to the Perkins Institute at
Boston and -a young teacher, Anne
Sullivan, was sent as Helen's men-
tor and companion. The ch i 1 d was
then eight. The two have been in-
separable companions ever since.
Miss Perkins brought a doll with
her. She would put this into Hel-
en's hand and spell "d -o-1-1" by the
symbols of the hand -manual alpha -
het into the child's pahni. Thee she
would hold one hand open, and ,with
the other, move Helen's fingers to
spell "d -o-1-1" into the palm again.
Because her illness had come at such
an early age it must be remembered
that the child was, to all purposes,
asif he had been born blind, deaf
and clismfb. She had no caneeious
memory of ever having :heard a
sound, seen a ray of light, or uttered'
a word.
Gradually, by epelling words and
repeating single .I•etters, her concep-
tion of names as entities was broker
down and the ides of individual let-
ters, out of which words could be
built, was stibstitieted. It required
on the part of 'Miss Sullivan- tre-
mendouts patience arid resourceful -
nese; on the part of 'Helen Keller, a
miraculous philosophy.
Mies Sullivan then devised a meth-
od of speech based on the classifica-
tion orf all eoureda. as meal-, labial or
guttural. Accordingly, the child' was
taught to place her thumb on the
epeakeds throat, the first two fin-
gers on the lips, and the third ak the
side of the nese. BY this inetans, she
learned to recognize the various
sounds and then to pronounce them.
The first sentence she learned to
epeak was: "I am not dunilb now."
Pee of those epic sentences, it has
been used in lectares and reeently
an the newsreel. It -proves a4 in-
finitely moving climax when Mies
Keller rep -eats; in herr queen laboring
voice: "Abseee amnnsn neriot ha-
durremen m-mrowool"
The rest 'a her training was rap-
id. At a women's college, Anne Sul-
livan smelled the lee -bares bite her:
euspirs hand and read evatigistitents
••
: • :"'S.4,1 ,:t d:Ois „ , • •
.e.,spesist4arinesicskileak"
e'-rwewrs 'is
.tr
lue Sunoco
Needs
NO
H EL
Here's a motor fuel Famous for its premium
knockless Octane Rating of 72, obtained
without the help of any cost -increasing non -
petroleum substances.
There's only one grade of BLUE SUN
°tke best—and it sells at regular gas price.
Just one tankful will add irviibie wings of
knockless power to your motor 1 Get that
lltankfurtoday and tomorrow you'll be con-
vinced that premium performance does not,
in this one case, sell at premium price !.
THE ONLY TRUE-ISLUE
aloud while Helen placed herr fingers
on the formers lips. She took her
degree, 'graduated to the accompani-
Take them
every so
often. They'll
Keep you
HEALTHY
Sold everywhere in
25c and 75c red pkgs.
RS =PILLS
ealedlid,lted"d%
iment a front-page news, went on a
lecture tour. In subsequent years,
she wrote three books—"Optimiem,"
"The Story of -My Life and "The
World I Live Ira" All have had wide
sales.
Anne Sullivan fell in love with
John Macy, the poet and critic, and
married bine Helen Keller stayed
with them, hat later Mrs. Macy and
het husband separated. She remain-
ed -.With Helen. Mrs. Miaey is now
past sixty and her own eyesight is
Helen Keller is still a busy woman.
She still has a heavy daily mail.
Curiously enough, she holds a strong-
er appeal for men. ,Strangers offer
to ;guide her through a factory; the
carptain of an ocean liner s:entle her
a little eopepass, its poinitg marked
tit raised type; a globe-trotting re-
porter writes her of his wanderings.
She is now 51. Herr hair is graying.
She is stoeky rather than tall. Her
eyes are blue and have none of that
lack -lustre quality usual to the blind.
When she tallesr, her eyes take on
an animation and, look at you as she
talks. A friend of hers plays his
'banjo; she touches the rilm of the in-
strument and "hears"" the melodies;
she "listens" to the radio by the touch
,wismaareamssoarmalmaawassamsommii•
of her fingers; recently, she went
for an aeroplane ride and was thrill-
ed by the vibration. One enjoyment,
however, has its aftermath. After
attending theatres and having MrS,,
Macy ,spell the action in her palm,
Helen Keller dreams fitfully and tor- "
mentedly that night, vainly tryitie'to
;picture the progress cif" the dea.ma
she has been told about but never
SOW.
De J. D. K. EA., La 0,,G G's
.STHMA KEMIED
A flAFE`ARD EFEICIENT RELIEF FOB ASTHMA AND HAY FEVER,
IT IS COMPOSED OF HERsS WHICH, WHEN SuRNED AND THE
FUMES INHALED ACTS PROMPTLY. ALLAYIND AU. IRRITATION
A TRIAL. WILL CONVINCE.
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