The Huron Expositor, 1932-08-26, Page 2'eh
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• TBE HURON EXPOSITOR
4
AUGU1ST 26, 1932.
a.
string Vacation
SIDNEY FOX--•
Universal
Pictures star
REMEMBER Kellogg's Corn Flakes dur-
ing your holiday. Rich in energy. And
sso easy to digest, they leave you feeling
cool and fine. Kellogg's are sold by
grocers and served by hotels and res-
taurants wherever you travel. Delicious
for. any meal. Quality guaranteed.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
To Thee, 0 God, our hearts we raise
In bash= of adoration,
To Thee bring sacrifice .6f praise
With shouts of exultation,
Brightrobes ()egad the fields adorn,
The hills with joy are ringing,
The valleys stand so thick with corn
That even they Are einging.
W. C. Dix.
PRAYER
Thou who hast blessed us so a-
letrndantly, grant unto US a grateful
heart and a. spirit Oohed:ens of our
indebtedness • so that we may know
that in making an offering in Thy
House wehutgive Thee of Thine
OWI. Amen. •
S.: S. LESSON FOtt AUGUST 28th
Lesson Topic -Gifts fer
the Tabernacle,'
Lesson Passage -Exodus 35:21-29.
Golden Text -Proverbs .3:9. •
-What eheuld have been said and
done by Moses when he. came down
from *. Mount the first time is red
corded in this ehepter.
When Moses returned to the camp
atter an absence of forty days 'and
forty nights for the .se•cond time,
spent with God on the Motent, he,
gathered' together the •heads and
rulers of the congregation, the re -
presentatives of the several tribes,
and gave them the instrucions he
'had received from the Lord. These
they were to .pass on to the people.
for their acceptance and observation.
He began with the law for the ob-
sehven•ce of. the Sabbath and then
gave orders that preparations be
made for th•e setting up of the tab-
ernacle.
Having had the will of God reveal-
ed to them byt Moses, the leaders went
back to the people and began to put
into practice *hat they had heard.
Being convinced that God had call-
ed these. to do a special work we read
in .sserse 21 that they did not let
their ardor cool but, considerieg that
eo time would be any more convene,
lent than the present, they departed
to their tents and at once brought
their offerings. "Everyone whose
heart stirred him up, :and everyone
whom his spirit made • willing,
brought the Lords offering- to the
work of the tabernacle of the con-
gregation, and for all his service add
for the koly garments." We see that
it was notany external inducement
that made them contribute as they
•tiid. It was from a principle of love
to God end his service; also a de-
sire for His presence with them in
His ordinances and from gratitude
:ea His east, merciful 'dealings with
thine Now as then what we give
and do fur God is accepatblo when
It comes frorn a good principle ir tht•
heart and spirit.
When it is aid, as in verse 22,
that as many as Neel* willing -heart-
ed, brought their offerings, it 'would
seem as if there were some that were
not who loved their gold better than
their God, and would not part with
it, no not for the service of the tab-
ernacle. They are of those who are
for bhe true religion, provided it be
cheap 'and wili cost them nothing.
The offerings were. of various kinds
according as they had; those that
had, gold and peeciouss stones brought
them, net thinking anything too goad
and too rich to part with for the hon-
or of God. Those that had not pre-
cious stones to bring, brought goats'
hair and ra•miss skins. When they
could not do as much as others they
did not sit still and do nothing but
gave of what they had. The meaner
offering, though not gaining for
them such a reputation among their
fellow men, would not fail of accept-
ance with God, who requires ac-
cordg to what a man hath and not
according to what he hath not (2 Cor.
812). God hath ever an eye to the
heart of the giver erso're than to the
value of the gift.
Weeny of the things they offered
were their orn,aments, bracelets- and
rings and lockets, all jewels of gold;
and even the women parted with
these. These rich things were no
doubt the spoils of the Egyptians;
for the Israelites were kept poor
.while in servitude. Who ever would
have imagined that the wealth be
Egypt would be mit to .such a ,use
the furnishing of the house of God?
It was by a special providence and
promise of God, that the Israelites
• got all that spoil, and therefore it
was highly fitting that 'they should
devote a part of it to the service'of
that God to whom they owed it all.
The furnishings of the tabernacle
with the riches of Egypt was per-
haps of good omen to the Gentiles,
who, in the fullness of time, should
be brought into the gospel -tabernacle
and their silver and their gold with
them.
. Might it not be that the serpent
brance of the offerings made for the
golden calf made .them the. more
willing in these offerings? "Fo,
godly sorrow worketh repentaree tie
salvation not to be repented of" (2
Coe 7-10). Thus some goodwas
brought even out of that evil,
We read in verse 29 that "the chil-
dren of Israel brought a willing of
fering unto the Lord:, every man an.l.
woman whose heert made them will-
ing to 'bring for all manner of work,
which the Lord had comn-banded to be
made by the hand of Moses"
The women did spin wills thei •
hands; some spun the week, of bue
,an.cl purpl`er others coarse work, o'
goats' hale and yet theirs also -'
said to behidne ip wisdom. As it is
net enly rich gifts, so it is not only
fine work that. -God accepts. The
meanest hand employed, the mean-
est service performed, for the honor
of God, shall ha:ve an honorable 're-
compense. Mary's annointing of
„Christ's head shall be told for a
memorial, and .a record is kept of
the womeps that labored in the gos
pel-tabeenacle and were , helpers to
St. Paul, everu those that are not in
a cap'aeity to give, may yet work in
love. - (Condensed from Matthew
Henry).
• WORLD MISSIONS
Her Bible.
She gave away her Bible.. Not
of
UN PARALLELED
ENTERTAINMENT
The dawn of Friday, August 26th, ushers in the fifty-fourth
consecutive Canadian National Exhibition. From the impres-
sive opening and up to midnight of Sept. 10, hundreds of
thousands of happy visitors will cast away dull care and enjoy
in full measure the varied and inspiring programme of the
world's largest annual exposition.
Each day something different. On Opening Day the women's world
championship Marathon swim. Saturday, Warriors' Day— features
the largest veteran's parade and re -union held. in Canada with
military and haval tattoo in the evening, combining the first presen-
tation of the romantic pageant "The. Triumph" with 1500 performers
on 1000 foot stage, pyrotechnic display, scarlet -coated Dragoons on
steeds that perform to music, and a marvellous, entrancing tableaus.
Spare the time for many a day at the Exhibition this year.
DAYS OF EXHIBITION, 1932
Pri., Aug. 26 -Opening Day Ceremonies -
Women's MarathonstSwim.
Sat., Aug. 27 -Warriors' Day --Mammoth
Veteran's Parade -Naval and Mili-
tary Tattoo -First showing of
grandstand pageant "The Triumph."
Exhibition 2000 -Voice Chorus.
Mon., Aug. 29 -Young Canada's Day.
Tues., Aug. 30 -Highways and Auto-
motive Day.
•Wed., Attie 31 -Retail Merchants' and
Service Clubs' Day, 7th Marathon
Swim for world championship.
Thurs., Sept. 1 -Music, Radio and
Women's Day. ExhibitionChorus.
Excursions on all transportation lines.
WILLIAM INGLIS, President H. W. WATERS, General Manager.
Fri., Sept. 2 -Press Day.
Sat., Sept. 3 -Manufacturers', Athletic
and Floral Day,
Mon., Sept. 5 -Labor Day,
Tues.,Sept.6-International and
Aviation Day. Exhibition Chorus.
Wed., Sept. 7 -Agriculturists' Day.
Thurs., Sept.8-Tr a nsporlati on and
Commercial Travellers' Day.
Fri., Sept. 9 -Live Stock Review Day.
Sat., Sept. 10 -Citizens' and Public
Utilities Day -Exhibition Chorus.
• CANADIAN NATIONAL
EXHIBITION TOR01410
•
•
• .1„;•, ;
Magnesia Best for
Your Indigestion
' Warns Against Doping Stomach
With Artificial Digestants
Most people who suffer, either occa-
sionally or chronically frorn gas, sourness
and IndigestiOn, have now discontinued
disagreeable diets, patent foods and the
use of harmful drugs, stomach tonics,
medicines arid artificial digestants, and
instead take a teaspoonful of Bisurated
Magnesia in a little water after meals
with the result that their stomach no
longer troubles them, they are able to
eat as they please and they enjoy much
better health, Those who use Bisurated
Magnesia never dread the approach of
meal time because they know this
wonderful anti -acid and food corrective,
which. can be obtained from any good
drdg store, will instantly neutralize the
stomach acidity, sweeten the stomach,
prevent food fermentation and make
digestion easy. Try this plan yourself,
but be certain to get Bisurated Magnesia
especially prepared for stomach use.
that she did nut value it. Very pre-
cious to our Christian women are
their Bibles and hymn beaks, And
she •hadrpaid alihost a dollar for this
Bible with itis large clear type. Why
then did 'he give it away? The 18 -
Year -old son of a. neighbor, a lad
with considerable schooling, had be-
come quite interested in Christianity.
He was coming regularly to her home
to use her :books and to listen to her
explanation of the Gospel message.
In her zeal to help hilm to the Light,
she reasoned to herself .after this
fashion: "He reads so much more
quickly than 1 do. It will be a long
time :before I master .all the charac-
ters in my Nov j'esetarne.nt. • Mean-
while let him havel-th•e larger book."
•• Greatgrandmamma Wang..
When the missionaries were invit-
ed to live for a week in her .village
home, the old, old lady had to give
up her room to: .accomrmodate the
guests. This she did most gracious-
ly, with neve e a sign of impatience
at the crowding: with the doubling-ur,
inevitably caused in so restricted an-
establishm'ernit. But she was over 86,
and the force of habit is strong, so
each morning and evening she came
back into the old room to say her
prayers. Down bn the hard brick
floor' she knelt -in front of the table,
where, no doubt, 'in meter days in-
cense was burned before the paper
gads. Now it is to the • One True
Gad that the old lady ,prays. One
simple five-eentence prayee is 'as
much as most of the old grand-
mothers ean master, but the old lady
has memorized several prayers, and
sometimes puts in a petition or two
of her own as well. And always at
rn'eal-times she carried in her bowl
of food, that ehe might return thanks
in her accustomed epee. Yet, so
short a time as six years sego, she
had never even heard the Gospel
story. When already 'ver 70, she
made a right -about-turn, and has had
the joy of seeing her whole family
lett to Christ, her sisters family 'tee,
and several •of her neighbors. Such
is the power of the gospel to change
the hearts and lives of men -j. H. S.
-(The Henan' Messenger).
Maligned Cucumber
Really Splendid Food
The poor, misunderstood eucumbeil
Of all tie, vegetables it is the most
maligned. Serne . people think it is
pois•onous; others that it is the big-
gest indieestion •producer in fonts;
and a few that it is flat and flavor -
lees.
Under all this criticism. the arniabli.
cucumiber carries on, delicately flav-
ored, cool in color, and terepsing in
ctis,pness. Its uses are legion fo.
the housekeeper who knows her cu-
cumbers and is willing to do a little
experimentieg for the sake of achiev-
ing something that is really different
and refreshing in flavor and consis-
tency.
Thin slices of cueumiber, dipped in
vinegar, or just sprinkled with Re-
price, give added piquancy to salads;
chopped cubes of cucumber give an
almost nu'tty substance if added to
chicken or vegetable salads, and ev-
en the form ofthe cucumber lends
itself to all sorts Of attractivb rings,
boats and cups to be filled with other
ingredients in the name of salads.
'If you have never thou•ght of us-
ing cucumbers in stuffing for fish, do
try this recipe which is printed be-
low and if the man of the house has
been among those who cared nought
for the cucumber, he will he com-
pletely won over after eating it.
Cucumber Stuffing For Fish.'
2 eups chopped cucumber
2 slices bacon
1 onion
14 cup mushrooms •
1 table's'poon .melted butter
1 cup soft 'bread crumbs
• Salt, pepper, paprika ,
2 eggs slightly beaten
-
Chop together the bacon, onion and
mushrooms, add the ()tiler ingred-
ients and mix well. Th?4 will make
about 3 cups stuffing or enough for
one large baked fisih.
Cucumber Canape.
1 (3 oz.). package cre-Ztn. . cheese
1 tablespoon 'butter
2 tablespoons chopped lcumber
5 drops '011ien juke,
Salt
4 hottered rounds of bread
Sliced stuffed olives
Green pepper
• Paprika.
Cream the cheese and butter to-
. other until soft, then mix thor-
oughly wih the c ucumfben, onion
juice and salt. Cut thin slices of
fresh bread with a round cutter,
butter and spread with above Mix-
ture. Garnish with thin slices of
:stuffed olives and"thin shreds of
green pepper. Sprinkle with paprika.
They should. he served soon after
they are spread or the cream :cheese
may harden on tep. This quantity
will make four large canapes or
eight email ones.
• 'Cu.cumber conserve is a novelty.
Cucumber Conserve.
1 cup diced cueuirtibers
1/2 eup shredded pineapple
1 'cup eider
1 cup lemon juice
2 cups sugar -
1/4 cup walnut meats.
Peel and dice eucumbers, add pine-
apple. Boil cider, lemon juice and
sugar together for about 15 minutes;
it will then start to thicken. Then
add cucunsber, pineapple and walnut
meats and cook slowly for 45 min-
utes or until thick. Fill sterilized
glasses and seal. This quantity
makes about two 8-ounee glasses.
Cucumber Canape No. 2.
Select round unsalted soda crack-
ers, crisped in the even. Spread with
equal parts anchovy paste and sweet
butter. Place a very thin slice of
onion the size of the cracker on this,
then a •slice of cucumber, which has
been marinated with French , dress-
ing and cap with a 'spoonful of tart
mayonnaisle. Sprinkle lightly with
chopped parsley and a das'h of pa-
prika.
Cucumber Chips With Cheese.
2 cucumbers
1 •beaten egg
1 cup cracker crumbs
Salt and pepper -,
4 tablespoons fat
1 tablespoon flour
%
• cup inilk
1/4 pound Canadian cheese
Cayenne pepper.
Pare and slice cucumbers 1/4 inch
thick. Salt them well and let stand
a half hour at least. Place on an
absorbent cloth and press moisture
out. Dip in egg, then in crumbs with
salt and pepper. If salt crackers, are
used do not add more salt. Saute
about three •minutes or until brown
in three tablespoons of hot fat. •Place
the cucumbers on .a platter and sur-
round with the cheese sauce made
by melting one tablespoon of the
fat over hot water,' striaing in the
flo•ur, then the milk: When this starts
to thicken, stir in the eheese. Sea-
son with salt and: a dash of cayenne
pepper. Continue cooking until thick-
ened and smooth.' This, makes four
servings.
Do You Believe These
Queer _Legal Fables?
Legal fables is the term lawyers
apply to them. - Erroneous interpre-
tations sof law that seem to have
been handed down from generation
to generation; so that now they are
hard to dislodge. They crop out ev-
erywhere; in tenancy, wills, debts
and loans, and even color the courts.
For example. "Listen," says the
client to the• -•lawyer. "I bought an'
old car from Bill Smith for fifty
dellars. A rattlestrap, and I only
paid him twenty on it. That was
two months ago, and to -day he meets
me • on the street and, • right there
on the street, dernands ,them other
thirty bucks. Now I don't hafta to
pay ,him do 1? The debt is camel -
led when he duns me right on the..
street 'that way.::
"No," /whet the legal sage, "you
still ewe Bill the thirty dollars." •
"How's that? Didn't he ask me
fees it right on the street."
-"That may be, and he could ask
you ten times on the street, or in
the theatre or in church and you
would still owe him the money.,
There is nothing in any law book
that state.; that because payment of
a debt is demanded in" public the
debt becomes null er void." • •
"But, I ale•ays heard—," begins.
the client.
"Yes, I know, but it just isn't
true. You'd better' pay
Bill what
you owe- him."
And so the client disappointed
withdraws, perhaps to seek another
lawyer* before he is finally convinced
that he was not freed of debt by
those words of Bill 'On the Street.
Lawyers offer the opinion that this
legal fable arose long ago, "when
knighthood was in power." Eitebstr-
ra.ssing a friend- by reminding him
of a debt before other friends was
severely frowned upon and might
cause strife. -Being publicly charg-
ed with a debt must, somehow
through the years, have come to • be
considered sufficient to wipe out the
there is • that.ancient fiction,
debt.
Then,
a landlord cannot ott a tenant
duiting the winter. "There's noth-
in? to this," quoth the lawyers. "Any
tithe'of the year a tenant, given due
notice, must •viscate."
In connection with tenancy another
fable exists. This is the prevalent
epinitm that if a tenant is paying
rent in advance he does not have
to give the landlord notice before
va.cating. Notice is always required,
even if no papers have been signed,
say the lawyers. In case of farms
which are rented generally by the
year, a notice of six months is re-
quired by law.
1.•
"How is business?" a merchant in
New York'wes asked. "Fine," he re-
plied: "I am away ahead of 1933." -
St. Catharines Standard.
The D.ernocratic platform has 22
planks and A brass rail.-Celumbus
State Jburnal.
A man of fifty who still writes
poetry, is either an unfortunate who
has never developed intellectually
beyond his 'teens, or a conscious buf-
foon. --H. L. 'Meneken.
A chemist says the first alcohol
ever istilled was Alrabian; which
may explain those nights. - Punch
(London).
Roosevelt Nearlypat Chicago
). the nd
Missed
Prize
(By JV. MIcAree, in e Mail a
an
Among those professionally at-
tending the Demeeratie National Con-
vention at Chicago was Alva Johns-
ton, a veteran Airea•ic.an newspaper
(1/11£1D, and his accotint of some Of the
happenings there, embodied in in ar,
tide OrD Mayor Hague of Jersey City
in the New Yorker, is the most in-
teresting we have tome across. Re-
imtpliea if he does not State franklf
that Governor Booteyelt came closer
to defeat, and that Only treachery 'by
Withal Gibbs iVickdoo, Who threw
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••
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26
•Ve44.•••.6,1,1, ,••••..• • . 4,4•0
the ,California delegation to Roose-
velt, made the. victory possible. We
heat a good dear new about a recon-
ciliation between the Smith and the
Roosevelt forces but if Mr. Joliaston
is right this will he extremely dill-
ficult to' bring about, for Smith left
Chic:Igo feeling that he had been .be-
trayed and offered as a sacrifice to
hie bitterest political ellen-dee:McAdoo
and William Randolph Hcaret. Hague
enters the picture as the Democratic
:political bees of New Jersey and .the
most active of Smith's suppoitees.
This curious 'hose, a puritan in poli-
tics, a te.etotaler, circulated airope
the unpledged delegates assuring
them that the daily editorial writers
of the • United States had already
turned the independent voters against
Roosevelt 'because he was a dodger.
It was a cut -lobs argument, for the
average politician despises or 'Inn -
tends to despise newspaper influence.
Nevertheless it was effective and
the Stop Roosevelt movement became
overnight a .smooth -running Hague
machine. It was Hague's :unexpected
success that caused the overconfident
Roosevelt otees to show sudden pan-
ic when they 'proposed to change the
two -third nominating rule. Then an-
other wave of 'panic forced them to
abandon this scheme which Seniater
Carter- Glairs denounced as a "gam-
bler's trick." , This encouraged Hague
and lent point to his argument that
Rooslevelt was an opportunist, that:
the public knew it and that there-
fore he could not he elected. Says
Mir. Johnston: "But the effort to win
unpledged delegate's to the Stop
Roosevelt movement was impeded in
various, ways. For one thing the
chairman of two of the 'pivotal dele-
gations, apparently distrusting their
own eales resistance, went en strata..
gee benders, and could not, th•tough-
out the converstio-n, be sobered up
sufficiently to listen to reason." The
Tammany delegation, though favor-
able to 'Smith, was ready at any time
to desert him. Boss Curry seemed
to exercise no authority whatever.
Tammany's pcnOiblems remained un-
solved and the delegates were left
free to vote as they chose. •
' tut even without McAdoo'
treachery, Smith could hardly have
won because he was too late in the
field. Having arrived too, late •he
stayed too long. In Mr. Johnston's
opinion he could at any time have
ebiliterated Roosevelt by withdraw-
iseg with a speech in praise of
Ritchie, Reed, Baker, Byrd, Murray,
Taylor and 'Garner as worthy and
fit 'men of the nen-dedging and non,
wavering pattern, omitting ail men-
tion of .Roosevelt. But 'Smith would
not consider withdrawing. It was a
• psychological impossibility for a man
who has been for twelve years a
presidential candidate to be a real-
ist. When he heard the first report
that 'bhe California delegation was
about to vote for Reesevelt he could
not believe it. "Xt meet be," he said,
"I have NIcAdoo's personal promise
to the ,contrary." Then he tried to
get !Speaker Garner in Washington.
The reply cattle back, d'IM,r. Garner
does not want to talk to Mr. Smith,"
11,6t an easy one to take, that. But
Smith, remained in there, and, as
the Saying goes, took his death. His
refusal to withdraw, Okairding
Roosevelt by refraining ,frorn men-
tioning hi•rn, made it iinpossible for
Hague to do what he had planned,
namely, throw the strength to
1 another candidate and 'block the
Governor of New Yeek at ehe last
merrent..
Through•out the convention the
elmehe of -the galleries had been for.
Smith. He was the popular hero ina
Chicago as Much as he had been
in New York in 1.024. Then it Was
(he galicrits that had defeated Mc-
Adoo. for every time • he spoke or • ,
his name was Mentioned the" took
up the chant, "Erl, erl, eel,' which
I eine. transl.a,teel, means oil, and re-
ferred to the vast sums the Mc-
.Adoo law firm had. drawn from .
Doheny of Teapot Dome infamy. But
in Chicago McAdoo had his revenge- -
It was a 'strategic blunder of the first.
'importance for the Roosevelt ad-
visers to have. 'permitted 'McAdoo to
make the announcement of the Cali-
fornia switch to Roosevelt, the price
of the deal being the nomination of
Garner as vice-president. But Mc-
Adoo may have insisted on his pound' ,
of flesh. Exultation was written on
his face as he made his announce -
merit, and he leered and shouted'
'back at the galleries.'He had brought
down at last his old rival and '
cal enemy. As 'Mr. Johnston signifi-
cantly ,remarke, "It was on this ac- •
count that Governor Roosevelt was
nominated to the accompaniment of
thirty Minutes of booing."
But if Smith and Hague failed of
their main objective they succeeded!
in another. They wrote the party's
platform' an liquor. .They made it
wringing wet, where Roosevelt had
favored .some such sort of straddle -
as the Republican's achieved. It was
the fear they' inspired in the Roose-
velt camp that won them what they
wanted in the matter of the imme-
diate legalizing of beer and the re-
jection of the lath amendment am
soon as is Possible. Both Hague and
Smith aro loyal partymen but it
is difficult to see how thesr can be-
come enthusiastic for their party'
candidate after what happened in;
Chicago. If this -miracle is aceom-
plished Al Smith will be entitled to
the belt as the best sporteman. ise
American polities..
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10 CENTS PER. PACKET,
WHY PAY MORE?
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1.
r •