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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1933-05-05, Page 2:L. ete R'TEQON ;* ') US "Q % e.. 41411 oft r>Rzr^rasws,, !king WOO. sa113! .'hard '++e'aY, rte'1es'b, Weary, sighing, wing Outer sin, anus) Satan's 's sway? "TIO our God, our glorious • Saviour, Who above the starry sky $iww for us a place prepareth;e-- Where no tear can din 'the eye.. W. W. Howe. PRAYER CI Lord our God, teach us the way f life; leading us on to recognize *hat the discipline that brings res iewlts must come to us all; but we wank) learn, -too,°. ';hat Thy .grace is all sufficient. In Thine own name we pray. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR MAY 7, 1933 Lesson Topic•—Jesus Faces the Cross. Lesson Pastsage—,Mark 10:32-45. • Golden Text—Luke 9:51. We learn from John's gospel that the raising of Lazarus from the dead precipitated the determination of the Jewish authorities to put Christ to death; and that immediately there- after there was held the. council, at which, by the advice of Caiaphas. the formal decision was conte to. Then it was our Lord withdrew Himself into the wilderness which stretches south and east of Jerusalem and re- mained -there for an unknown n period, preparing himself for the cross. Then full of calm resolve He came forth to die. We have here What, for the want of a better name, we would call the heroic Christ., He is the pattern 'of heroic endurance, and reads to us the lesson, "resist and persist" what- ever stands between us and our goal. We see here not only the heroic but the self-sacrificing Christ. The very fact of our Lord's going .back to Jerusalem with that decree of the • Sanihedrim still in force was tanta- mount to his surrender of himself to' death. He reeobgnized that now that "hour" of which die spoke so. much had come, and of 'His own loving will lffe offered Himself as our sacrifice. This also gimes us a glimpse of the shrinking Christ. May not part of the reason for Christ's haste (and Jesus went before them) have been file desire which we all have, when some inevitable 'grief or pain lies be- fore us, to get it over soon aria to abbreviate the moments that lie be- tween us and it. Was there pot some- thing of that feeling in our Lord's sensitive nature when He said: "I have a baptisms to be baptized with, and how eel I straitened until it be accomplished?" Christ did shrink from his cross. There was shrinking which was instinctive and human, but it never disturbed the fixed purpose to die. - Lest , is to be seen the lonely Christ. There never was such a lonely span in the world as Jesus (Wrist. Those that were nearest hire and lo'v'ed Him (best, loved .Him so • blunderingly and so blindly that their love must have been often quite as much of a pain as a joy. All Their solitude was borne that no hu- man soul, living or dying, might ever be lonely any more.. "Lo, I," whom yon all Deft alone, "amwith you," who left nue alone, "even -till the end of the world."—(Condensed from the Clnistian Commonwealth). As they journeyed towards Jerus- alean two of the diaci`ples were con- cerned about their future relationship *to the Master after he should have entered into His Kingdom. Their am- bition was to be near Christ and that was worthy of praise. Jesus being Mere conscious of the cross than of anything else, asked the two aspir- "'HAU CNSTIFATION $1NC[)LR1H QF MY FIRST CHILD" Then Mrs. King Discovered ALL -BRAN We quote from her voluntary letter: "I have suffered from terrible constipation since the birth of my first child —9 years ago! I have tried everything and nothing had any lasting results. Very reluc- tantly I tried your `ALL -BRAN' with no faith in it at all. Much to my surprise, I have not had to take any medicine since starting to use ALL-BaAN, 4 months ago."— Mrs. Doris Eyre King (address furnished upon request). Laboratory tests show ALL -BRAN contains two things which over- coinE constipation: `Bulk". to ex- ercise the intestines; vitamin B to help tone the intestinal tract. The "bulk" in ALL -BRAN is much like that of leafy vegetables. In- side the body, it forms a soft mass, which gently clears the intestines of wastes. . Certainly this .is more natural than taking pills and drugs—often. harmful. Two tablespoonfuls daily are usually sufficient. If not re lieved this way, See your doctor. ALL -BRAN also supplies iron for the blood. At all grocers. In the red -and -green package. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. ants whether they' were prepared to suffer as He must. That at least he could promise them, but no more. And his service was more than .ser- 'v'ice; it was sacrifice. Then he called the ,others to him and again pointed out His mission and said theirs most be likewise. He had come to minis- ter unto the world and give His life a ransom for many. 'l'Whosoever will be great among you shall be your ,m•inister; and whosoever of you will be the chiefest, „shall he servant of all," WORLD MISSIONS Christ In A "_Mountain Village ..'My .colleague, the old Chinese pas- tor, and I have been living for some days in a village in the foothills of a range of mountains to the North- west of Weihwei. Although it is only six or seven miles from One rail- way, it seems scarcely- to. have felt the touch of the New China. In the summer they till their small fields at the fort of the hills. In the winter they drive about donkeys heap-ily lad- en With coal or persimons. About four years ago two men in that village decided to be Christians. In the nearby village there are two others. These men asked us to go up and help them teach their rela- tions and friends. They take it ser- iously. 'In their slack winter season they go twice 'a week to the neighbor- ing villages to share what they have found, and even in this short time there is a noticeable difference • be- tween 'their homes and others. In the whole of that village there is only one girl who is able to read at all. She is the daughter of one of these men. Her father has taught her during his spare moments. In the whole area there are only three women who 'know any characters at sale. _ and these are the women of these. Chris�bian°llgar, ). In the village where we 'lived them is poly one girl who, has no'b boilgd fleet She As the daughter of one o ribose men, It is true `.that where Jess comes men re- alize the place Qf wenien, and the women realize what they might be. "And Jesus loved Mary and Martha and their (brother Lazarus." The old Chinese pastor could tell them, too, that already in their evplllage, Jesus is .making the blind to see and the lame to walk. Of course it takes courage to do what this mother and father have done. ifiV'lien she knows the girl has unbound feet, the future %other - in -law, with whom her'marriage was arranged 'as a child, may refuse to take her into the 'home, and thus ..she may be left on the hands of her parents, an unheard of, awkward and disgraceful situation in China. This group did a plucky thing some months ago which bucked me up tremendously when I heard of it. I saw a flag in the (tomer of the room, a white cross on a red back- ground, and the characters, `Chris- tian,' sewed on the red. •"What do you do with the flag?" I asked. It seems that when last year -the coun- try was overrun with bandits, the village people organized a Red Spear, Society for theirs own protection. It is so named because their only wea- pon is a long spear with great red tassels flying front it. In order to make them invulnerable to bullets of the enemy, the members of the or- ganization go through a series of in- cantations to strange deities. One clay the officers of this society came around to the Christian home. "You must, join the Red Spears," they de- manded. "We Christians can't go through all those prayers to, false gods," was the reply. "Nevertheless you must join and help us on pain of death." "Harm us as you will, we . will not join. . But we will go with you to fight the ?bandits whenever danger comes to our village." "Very well, you shall fight with us," said the Red Spears. "But,10 said the Christians, "there is one condition, we must have our own standard and fight ht under our own flag." One day the group attacked the `Tiger's Cas- tle.' 'What a r egged sight, these rough 'farmers out to protect their village and their families armed with spears, marching up through •• the mountain pass, and under two flags - Which flag is in front? Judging from. the story I would imagine that the Cross was up in front—I hope so, for ithat',too would be like Jesus, for it says, "And they were en their way to Jerusalem, Jesus walking in front c,f them."—The Honan Quarterly. This 'Ever -Changing Business World Pipe organs for the home used to cost 315,000 to $20,000; also, they re- quired a lot of space. Facing these facts, the Aeolian -Skinner Organ Co. :'ought to broaden' its market. ,The, result is an organ which can be hous- ed in the space of a large. clothes eliset and which costs from $5;000 to $6,000, the price of a fine automo- bile; it is designed for- a new scale of `1i'4-in:g . based on small town -houses amid city apartments rather than the baronial castles of the early, pluto- cratic era. * * * Remarkable among new modes of transportation is the seatrain which takes a mile of cars out .to sea at Hoboken and sets teem back on the rails at New Orleans'. Seatrain Lines, Inc,, offers non -break -bulk service; the railroad car serves as the pack- age for the freight. Most remark. able is the fact that these vessels, built with aids (particularly a ship- 1r1114 MIRON EXOOSITOR -• inthe St9mach Is Dangerous Daily the of Bisurated Magnesia Overcomes Trouble* Caused by Acid Indigestion Gas In the stomach aceompanled by a tuff, bloated feeling after eating is almost certain evidence of too much hydrochloric acid In the stom- ach, causing so-called "acid indiges-• tion." Acid stomachs are dangerous. Too much acid irritates the delicate lin- ing of the stomach, often leads to gastritis accompanied by serious stomach .ulcers. , Food ferments and sours, creating the distressing gas which distends the,, stomach and hampers the normal functions of the vital internal organs, often affecting the heart. • It is the worst of folly to neglect such a serious condition or to try to treat with ordinary digestive aids which have no neutralizing effect on thea h acids. atom c a Ins• sad get little Blsuated Magnesiafroany druggist and take a teaspoonful in water right after eating. .This will drive out the gas, wind and bloat, sweeten the stomach, neutralize the excess acid and prevent its forma- tion and stop sourness, gas or pain. Blsuated Magnesia (in powder form —never in liquid or milk) is harm- less, inexpensive, and a fine remedy for acid stomach. It is used by thou- sailds of people who enjoy their meals with no fear of indigestion. ping board loan) intended for Ameri- can shipowners competing on foreign trade routes, shcild be operating in the protected coastwise trade in com- petition With American .steamship lines that put up their own capital. The railroads, too, are upset by this new-fangle,d conspetition for. traffic l between the Atlantic 'seaboard and the 'Southwest, and have tried to cut off Seatrain's car supply. , • a: * Last year a Toledo scale was de- signed on the premise that a lady's weight was her own business, A small. illuminated dial shielded by a hoo kept private what used to be pro- claimed to the World by a foot long pointed. The.. first year's sales equal- led the, sales for the last ten years of. the old type. * * * Refused a blanket reduction in freight rates by the railroads, Flor- ida citrus fruit growers are' shipping a large portion of this season's crop into Northern markets 'by steamship ,and truck. Shippers assured the steamship lines last fall that they 'would route their traffic by water if arrangements were made with reli- able truck lines ,up North for deliv- ery into the interior. Glutted mark- ets are avoided by providing wide truck distr'i'bution as far as 200 miles inland from Baltimore, -Philadelphia, Netv York and Boston. • * * On demonstration in New York is the micro -ray typewriter, a practical application of short wave radio. com- munication. A typist operates a stan- dard typewriter keyboard; the mes- sage is typed on a duplicate machine at'the receiving -point. It is a two- way system. A short aerial at each end suffices and the apparatus is very comvpact. Uses ;suggested are for ship -,shore nvessages, . receiving of news reports on trains, intercommun- ication in large offices and industrial plants. It iss only recently' that radio en- gineers have learned to harness the ultra -short waves. Now, Radio Cor- poration, of America is ready to en-. ter the-d'omestic cosnnrlu ,icatians field if the Radio Commission will assign it chan?niels ,between''7 t/Z and 10 met- ersy R. C. A. proposes to set up a service which will transmit facsimile messages` from point to paint throughout the country, thus com- peting with the telegraph syst'em's for ordinary communication, and with Om telephone companies which now give a limited ;asinine service. ''Chain stores have been inclined to let perishable.* alone. New 'Packages and pactking methods are changing all Ws; chains, always package - minded, are putting 'in green grocery departments, with ''packaged celery, tomatoes, brussels sprouts, spinach, asparagus; green !beans, cauliflower, and various fruits. 'Such staples, as onions and potatoes have been pack- aged for some time in net ;bags and fibre cartons. Store managers found that packaged celery stayed saleable for days longer than the unpackag-' ed; 'housewives found it did not dry out and wilt in the electric refrigera- tor. Tomatoes are now being sold in trademarked "window'' cartons which keep them fresh. * * * More accurate than the human eye is a new portable color -snatcher de- veloped veloped by Westinghouse engineers. It mvatches colors at three points, so to speak, by the use of red, green, and blue screens. One sample is put under the the red light,. for. example and the indicator adjusted to 0. The ether sample, is then inserted. Un- less it reflects exactly the same amount of red light, the needle will be deflected. Even if it does reflect the sande amount of red light, it must undergo the same test under blue light, and under green. The device is independent of daylight, * * .5 The Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. has changed. the office building at 1 Park Avenue, New York, from a mere .address into, what may even- tually prove to be a portent. Pre- viously the owners of the building paid a utility company an average of $45,000 annually for current to run elevators., pumps and lights. low a 1,080 h•p. automatic Diesel power plant has been installed ,by the Chi- cago company, which assumes re- sponsibility for permanent operation and maintenance. Owners of the 'building began making monthly pay- ments only when the plant went into operation, at a predetermined rate which at the end of ten years will represent a. saving of $189,950 or approximately 42 per cent. from what in the same .period would have been paid to the power company—repres- enting a material reduction in one of the major items .of -operating over- head, * *. * • In Texas, grocery stores are open- ing drug departments and selling not only cut-price toilet articles but those .ancient and reliable - trade -makers, the proprietary medicines. Food' Field Reporter reports the grocers entirely unabashed and somewhat in- clined to thirfk that they can do as well on such fine old pharmaceuticals as ' Listerine, shaving cream, cough drops, and poker chips as the drug- gist can on coffee, tea and jam. Hous- ton grocers are said to have diverted $247,000 of sales from local drug stores in a single month. Another $1,000 Offered For Names in Cake Contest The judging of another ,'Magic Mystery Cake Contest has been come pleted and a few days ago cheques totalling one thousand -d niers were !mailed by the makers of Magic Bak. ing Powder to the lucky contestants who'suggested nan es, for theMlarch Magic Mystery Cake originated by Miss !Lillian. Loughton, found final favor with the judging •comimittee. "Mosaic Loaf Cake," the name sub- mitted by Mrs. William Harmer, of Drumibo, Ontario, won first prize of $250; second prize of $100 was award- ed to Mrs. A. D. Davis, Sherbrooke, A WORD TO TRAVELLERS' .. , about Funds It is desirable when travelling abroad to carry Travellers' Cheques and Letters of Credit rather than any considerable sum of cash. Apart from the extra- risk it entails, Canadian currency carried abroad involves exchange, with consequent delays and inconvenience. Letters of Credit and Travellers' Cheques issued by The Dominion Bank are honoured innit tat U ed States,' Great Britain Continental Europe, and throughout the world. Our nearest branch manager will gladly arrange your requirements. Consult him. THE DOMINION BANK ESTABLISHED • 1871 -. SEAFORTH BRANCH E. C. Boswell - - Manager BRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA AND OFFICES IN NEW YORK AND LONDON 380 1. P.Q., while Mrs. 0. V. Thada. IHiaw- arden, Sask., was the winner of third prize $50. Sixty additional prizes of $10 each were sent to other success- ful contestants in various parts of the Dominion with every Province having a generous representatlion in the list of prize winners. Entries in the April :Magic Mys- teryy Cake Contest are now being judged. 'Mean'wthile on page 2 of this week's paper the announcement of the fifth Magic Mystery Cake recipe appears, together with full de- tails of the contest. This month's cake sounds very appetizing and no doubt Seaforth will have its fair share of entries in this widely dis- cussed contest sponsored by the mak- ers of Magic Baking Powder. The contest is open to everyone, it costs nothing to enter, and the prizes tot- alling $1.000 are well worth winning in these times. Turn to page 2 now and read_ the recipe contest rules. Yours may Ibe the lucky entry to win the $250 first prize, or one of the, other 62 cash prizes offered for nam- ing the May Magic Mystery Cake. The Ideal Tree to Plant In selecting a tree for planting. the ideal tree is one that has a straight whip -stock or fishing pole trunk and leader, and ranges from 11/2 to 2 niches at the butt. If the trees are to he obtained from wood- ed lands, those growing in open plac- es rather than these in the interior of woods should be selected. Such trees are not only More symmetrical in crown but, having grown more or. -less in the open, are better able to withstand the exposure they must endure when set out as shade or orn- amental trees. The trunks of young trees which have been much shaded are frequently subject to sun -scald when planted in the open: , While it is advisable to select trees with well -formed eravens, says the Dominion Department of Agriculture it 'is even more important to 'secure those with well-developed and com- pact root systems. The more small. Another Si First Prize x$250, 'Second Prize x$100, Third Prize $50, 60 Prizes. of $1O each MAGIC MYSTERY CAKE Suggest a name for Miss /Ilice Moir's verybody's ody's naming Magic Mystery Cakes ... What's your suggestion this month? JUST think of the things you could do with that $250 prize! There's nothing hard about this contest, either. You name the mystery cake—that's all! Miss Alice Moir has contributed the recipe for this Magic Mystery Cake, It's a cake you'll like. Attractive. Delicious. Easy to make and inexpensive. Start right in today to think up a name for this Mystery Cake. Read the recipe. Sounds good, doesn't it i' And it is good. If • you make the cake, be sure to follow Miss Moir's advice—use Magic Baking Powder. MISS ALiCE MOiR is the dietitian of one of Montreal's finest apartment -hotel restaurants. "I always use and recommend Magic Baking Powder," Miss Moir states. "It combines efficiency and economy to the highest degree. Besides, Magic always gives dependable results." - Here's Miss Alice Moir's recipe . • • Can you name it? Mix and sift 2 cups pastry flour (or 13 cups bread flour) with 3 teaspoons Magic Baking Powder and lei teaspoon salt; cream tS cup butter, add 1 cup fine sugar, beat until very light. Add well -beaten yolks of 3 eggs, then sifted dry ingredi- ents alternately with 3a cup milk; add 34 teaspoon vanilla. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Fill buttered pans ?b full. Bake in moderate oven 350° V. 25 min. FILLING: Cream 3 tablespoons butter, gradually add about 13, cups confec- tioner's sugar, 1 teaspoon very strong coffee, '4 teaspoon vanilla and enough cream to make mixture of consistency to spread. Fold in 2 tablespoons of almonds Magic,ives,consistently better baking re- sults. 1nat's the reason the majority of dietitians and cookery experts throughout Canada use it exclusively. They know from experience that Magic is always depend. able. • Don't put off entering this Magic Contest. There are 63 prizes—and the name you suggest may easily win one of them. which have been blanched and lightly , browned in oven and rolled fine with rolling pin• Spread between layers. FROSTING: Place 1 cup brown sugar and ;•5 cup boiling water in saucepan. Stir over lost heat until sugar is dissolved. Boil gently without stirring until a soft ball is formed when tried in cold water, or syrup spins thread 3 in. long when ' dropped from spoon. Cool gradually. Add slowly to stiffly beaten white of 1 egg. Beat until it thickens. Add tea- spoon vanilla. Spread thickly over cake and sprinkle With,rolled burnt almonds. When you bake at home e :4 Made in Canada CONTAINS NO ALUM. This state- ment on every tin is your guarantee that Magic Bak- ing Powder is free from alum or any harmful ingredi- ent. the new, FREE Magic Cook Rook contains tested rec- ipes for dozens of tempting dishes. Send for it. Address Gillett Products, Fraser Avenue, Toronto 2. Contest Rules Read Carefully 1 Contest is for residents of Canada and Newfoundland only. 2 All you do is name the mystery cake. Only one name from each person. 3 PRINT at the top of your paper ih ink (or typewrite) "Miss Moir's Mystery Cake." Under this, print yoursugges'tion for a name. Then, in rhe lower.right-hand corner, print your own name and ad- dress, dearly and neatly. Do not' use pencil. • 4 Do not send the cake itself—just the name and your own name and address. It is not essential to bake the cake to enter the contest. 5 Members of our own organization or their relatives are not eligible to take part in this contest. 6 Content doses MRY. 31, 1933. No en- tries considered if postmarked later than May 31 midnight. No entries considered if forwarded with insufficient postage. 7 Judges: Winning names will be selected by a committee ofthree impartial judges. The decision elf these judges will be final. • 48 Prize winners will be announced to all entrants within one month after con- test closes. 9 In case of a tie, the full amount of the prize money will be paid to each tying contestant. 10 Where to send entrier:Address your en- tries to Contest Editor, Gillett Products, Fraser Avenue, Toronto 2. • • • .n NOTEe Other Magic Mystery Cakes cam. fag. Watch for them in later issues et this aewepaper. ra Vancouver Man Had Almost Lost Hope Vancouver, B. C.—J. Waugh, 3270 49th Ave., W., recently said: "After six years suffering with stoniach dis- orders and other trouble, T almost gave up hope of ever being well again. Sargon and Sargon Pills over- came every ailment I had and I feet' like a brand new man. 'I'll always be- grateful er rateful to this remarkable treat- tnent for the way it brought back my health, .strength and energy." (Your Firm Name Here) C. ABERHA,RT fibrous roots the trees has, the great- er will be its chance • of siirviving the shock of transplanting and the more readily will it establish itself in the new site. Trees procured from a commercial nursery are often more desirable for' this reason than these dug up from woodlands. Nursery trees as a rule have been taken up and transplanted several times and as a result have a better and more compact root system than those grown naturally. In taking up a tree, do not par- tially dig it out and then drag it free of the soil, thereby sacrificing many of the feeding rootlets. It is importe ant to retain not only the thicker roots but also the smelled fibrous{ roots. Start about 18 inches or more away from the trunk and', pushing the spade straight down, cut a circle completely around the tree. Then 'gradually, work under the root sys- tem until the tree is freed, and tarn be lifted out with the ball of earth attached. Do not remove this ball of • earth unless the conditions are such that it cannot be retained on the roots. Wrap the roots and ball in old canvas or some other material, taking great card that the roots are •protected 'from becoming dried or exposed to the air. Carelessness in this regard is responsible for ,many, failures in transplantitg. The Story Of Superphosphate Dissolved bone, or bone superphos- phate, is now rarely found on the market, but the term "bone super- phosphate" is often erroneously ap- plied to ordinary superphospbate. In 1834 :Sir John Bennet Lawes experi- menting with bone as a fertilizer found that, Iby their treattr'irent with {sulphuric acid, part of the 'phosph- ,oric acid in the bone was rendered soluble in water and, therefore, more readily available to plants. The name given to this product was superphos- phate. Later on, the discovery of mineral rock phosphates, says the Dominion Department of Agricultui.e furnished a new material which, treated in the same way, produced similar results, save, of course, that the ':product contained no nitrogen. Nowadays, superphosphate, also •known as acid superphosphate, ac- "ording to the Fertilizer Oct of Can- ada miest contain at ,least .16 per cent' of available phosphoric acid. WIT AND WISDOM Another war would not settle any- thing. -Lord Arnold. Love at first sight is where the groom falls in the first engagement, --Florida Times -Union. fwwlien potatoes are very cheap they are despised by the poorest of the poor and the consumption' goesrap- ,idly demon. -Mr. Andrew M'Dowall. Emiployimient official declares few- er women are now working for pin money. Naturally. They have so little to pin.—Border Cities Star. . We can understand the feeling of those British engineers who are be- ing expelled from Russia. Naturally they will feed kind of put out. -- Stratford ,BeaconeHerald. The new bil.l.ion dollar tali bill is nonpartizan, in (fact: it. fall:; upon Democrats and Republicans dike.--• San Antonio Evening News. Proving roan's ability to hold his own under all conditions, in India last year 1,033 men were killed by tigers, while 1,068 tigers were killed by men—Rutland Daily Herald. A distinguished educator says that about 86 pe'r cent. of school arith- metic ought to be deleted from the auricula., Shucks, we thought ,of that forty years ago.—IMilwauikee Sent. lneL• 1, 1 e • G be ise be tm idle the pa: rut on Prc ane by :Thi we: cal the the qui we! Ito 2 itwc ;Tea eta ]Cal +wh, fas ito tray the yea are I,•