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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1933-06-23, Page 2a.;
R•.
310-6141141*
In linter
We 'p
Thou T wi
raise a
$, S. LF
Lesson
Lor
Lasso
Golden
April ;2
' and
' Less
--Mar
--Joh
Jesus
the {Jen
Sidon a
needy in
for her
bier how
a hard
clad to
oprportu
Lord ov
Jews.
Onth
was age'
ineeidy o
tial Hie
could see
Jeri tihroai
healing
Who wit
yond ml
April
and
-Mar
--Mar
On t.
Jesus a.
tions: "S
sand "
The& 're
true it
Him. not
#ie sero
,accompa
•istry ha
Son of
art the
show th
to Pass
• with lHt
'aces.
xi&e
'must ;
enter in
April 1
Mar
r•• -Joh'
In the
of the
ctioipa,te
the Son
He'd helot
His
lbegott
second
God in
by the
of a'hn
cip4es t
Sag are
fat CShri
April 2
ing.
-Mar
-1Rom
(Jesus
ashild poi
Meaning
ever sill
*err in
Froim t
conferee
to work
IdesInge
B ing
is a si
April 30
of I
' -Mani
-Luk
here
in this l+
,children
blessed It
placed in
11Nssbe'i .
•Than is
tested 'bs
way. W
i
L
Eaf
he
TI
ge,
$e
Br
m
fits �i rwwtiri ,. q
a'',I� f' uta
r'.
.1
r0 SEAM
r_.,..
1'
e "siA l ` r
IW' f,•P!a� ,,�ql,,§pti~,,4''{�,�rtrX.^,Af :,,�.SW41?
�i �CID
G�oderlib, Ont..)
4 'd ."i.+'•atrher of mankind, "
d
n
-,Jesus
n
tile
nd
ught
nit
to
eas
9
heir
eked
W
indeed!
eRtd'ing
to
6
n
disciple's
ry,
Jiver:
herrlby
3
all
his
on
ttri
�
��i
'
�t ,1
h� ���
(*�
,�,+
� rrmale
'V
-Mark 15:2249.
•�•••'Ro><inana 5:8.
RIi this lesson we �lal!e the fulfil-
eluent of the px+gphesy as found in
Isaiah '53 where all that Christ suf-
�
-
k
`' ----
k►renkaiown.
!or the +lau�tac'tiq�: of the chzld,
fruits and vegetables must be
inclesi,ed in his diet. They are in no
sense luxuries. They are essential
r
' l f Q
�.#j y�
,111 t1lC4i
ALWAYS
" WEAK
NERVOUS
t
RUN-DOWN
LOSING WEIGHT
p
RHEUMATIC
re
�(�
li
TIREDBelief
•
'
.00k
•
•
�
10 our
lilOOClS'trea,n!
1
g (lutavolislh;
eite in our rightful mind;-
Jives Thy service 'fmd,
pear reverenoe praise.
J. G. weeder.
PRAYER
ay Thea aur N;atJhe'r that
It water' the •seed Sewn 1n
ve as these lessons were
Sufferers from Indigestion
CUT THIS OUT
"Stomach trouble, dyspepsia, Judi-
gestton, aoueness, gas, heartburn.
food iermentatien, etc., are caused
nine times in ten by chronic acid '
stomach," says a well #mown
authority.
Burning hyd'roohlorio acid de-
veiops in the stomach at an alarm-
ing rate. The acid irritates and in-
flarnee the delioate stomach lining
and often leads to gastritis or stem-
fered for the sins of a diseased world
is eeeomd'ed.
June 18 -Jesus Rises From the Dead,..,
-Mark 16;1-11.'
'-Mark 16:5.
The Were of Jesus' women friends
-
did not cease with His death. They
went to the tomb ive earl on the
f>stat day of the week to finish what
ha.His
hard !been hurriedly done
`, �;�
lwas
f
/
RE�,�,y.
*' '
'
�
��"[[
N.
�
•D r
to proper �mawth and healthy de-
uelo: ant and
Pru to the txtainteparnce of
'health. Jay planning expenditures, it
is pessiible to: provide these foods on
a anhnirmen; budget and so safeguard
healthi�,which is as valuable to -day as
it ever was- The children of to -day
must be rovided with sound bodies
p years.
for their adult
and to Thee will be all the
ad glary. Amenswill
1SSON FOR JUNE 25, 1933
Topic -Review: Jesus Our
and Saviour.
Passage -1 Peter 1:3-9.
Text -Matthew 28:18-20.
ach ulcers. Don't dose vs_ aeld stow-
ach with pepsin a artificial relief
tants that e y give temporary relief
from pain by driving the sour, Per-
+the intestoodout of the stomach into
Instead, neutralize or sweeten
your acid stomach after meals with
a little Bisurated Magnesia and not
only will the'pain vanish brit your
meals win digest naturally. There
is nothing better than Bisurated
Magnesia, to sweeten and settle aning
at 'bur -
Their lave was wonderfully re-
war'd'ed- Tiley were given the fist
chance ori telling the wonderful news
't'ha't Christ was, alive. 'T'hey began
what will continue ale long as time,
and' we sed what is still present in
the wot•ld, the news being met by un-
belief.
pad kills flies all day and every
dayfor - or 3 weeks. 3 pads in each
packet. -'No spraying, no stickiness,-
no bad odor, Ask your $ruggist,
Grocery Qr General Store.
10 CE11 PER PACKET •
��y PAY MORE?
TH$ WILSON ELY PAD CO., Hemit�en. Ont.tined,
Treasures in Tins and . Jars
;Don't throw away old cans,bed-
ding, stoves, safes, tin boxes, jars.•Recezttly
cracked teapots, or anything with a
hale in it,without first examining
them very carefully. no tell -
but that the old tin can stuck
a praclrisnng physician, who knew'ttaie foxtmrula of
�, Wlillia¢ris' Pink Pills, tested bite 'blood of• eleven people
before and after taking this widely -known Iblooldebn piing
remedy At the start, these patients ware all easily
Bloodeed, lStked energy were and vete underweight. t: . . Thein
Streams found to be deficient in haemmiglolSan
and red corpuscles. . . . In a 'short tinnier, hovve�ver, Dr.`
their condition in a manner
Pink Pills he 'physician,
that was, to quote the physician, "nothing short of re-
markable." -
Increases Oxygen Gives New Strength
�' g •
Dr. Williani''S. Pink Pills recon- and Vitality
dition and revitalize the Blood With the reconditioning of our
g y
Stream, which is „your Life blood ,s�treia•nt�, new vitality, new
Stream. They create new red- plower, new energy course
through your arteries tet, e cry
blood cells. They stimulate the g y
orgae of the body, Your alppe-
Blood Streams to ,, carry more tite, paicks up. ,Your digestion
Oxygen -lifers great.vitalizer- improves. Day by day you feel,
to all parts of the body. This yourself becoming stronger and
Oxygen rebuilds tissue and better able to resist dangerous
clears away system poisons. diseases. .
Don't w a too long -get a supply of Dr. Williams'
g' g pp Y
Pink Pills from your Druggist,. 50 cents a package.
acid stomach. Your stomach acts
On
Ministering 'to Jews
and teals fine in just a few minutes,
J
,� .
a rafter in the attic may hold a gem
Gentiles (World Friendship
on),
'7:24 37,
10:16.
and His disciples went into
country round Tyre and
Bisurated Magnesia can be obtained
from any, reliable druggist. It is .
sate, reliable, easy and pleasant tqWilliams'
use, is not a laxative anis not at
an expensive.
Braggarts Of Poverty
e
A well-known ibillianairess was
speaking of her magnificent castle.
She was asking a friend to find a
of rose, gold and emerald greens and
the rolling billows of smoke ie every
shade of gray,brown and purple. It
p
was beautiful as a spectacle while it
lasted, but what remains must be
of purest ray serene. Ducats and
pieces of eight have been found in
Ars, stoves so dilapidated that they
ane readyfor thejunk pile, wooden
legs, shoes, goloshes and what not.
And if you're digging up the gar-
there He Imdnistereci to a
"Mild. He had fihct His teach
to a' roach "Him. It was
lesson p.prt her love for her
her, and gave Jesus an
Y to show that He was
er all peoples, not just the
e'ir return Jesus
ut approached to on Galilee behalf ofes a
z: He used a new method
miracle working.The man
and feel aril so Jee'us work-
gh'these faculties. in bringing
hearing and speech. Those
le.s, e 'the• miracle "were be-
ee astonished."
-Jesus Requires Confession
Loyalty.
k 8:27-38.
how' easily it is for children to love
and obey Jesus and how hard it is
for yot7ing manhood to learn the les-
son of self-denial.
May 7 -Jesus Faces the Cross.
-Mark 10:35-45.
-Luke 9:51. • ..
Jesus returning to Jerusalem know-
thug that the Sanhedr•inds fudgneent
against him still stood virtually took
his life in his hand's. In this les-
son we see the heroic, self-sacxific-
ing, shrinking, lonely Jesus sa His
way to give His life a ransitm for
n•any. 'rwo of His distipluas make a
r•e•duest of Jim that they be given
the chief seats in His kingdom. He
tells them the only thing He can
Inoreise them is service and each-
fisc
-91ay
•buyer for 'her ('little place," for she
w' Littleas hout a flattering es 'this may be
for human dignity, we must however
adrnd'tt that a r epidemic of "snobbery
of poverty" s at preserjt raging in
the whole world. This particular
variety of snobbery would not deserve
to be met with more irony, than any
other of its manifestations, were it
not for the fact that it sometimes re-
veals a frame of mind =akin to heroism
and Commanding the respect of the
more fortunate ones.
A certain category of people, who
are misers' by nature, but with whom
the desire to keep up with the Jones-
es prevailed even over their avarice,
made a chow of luxury before the
war, , 1ilady had her Rolls-Royce,
Milord played polo, etc. Now these
people are in a position to bey their
something• definitely ugly for nionths
1 ssn ssent. to ,'the result of a little thought-
* * *
They look ahead in the motor, in-
dustry. One of the latest accessory
developments gives real point to that
observation. It is a diaphragm type
of valve which is inserted in the rad-
ietor cap, attached to the overflow
pipe.. IS is arranged in such a fa-
shion hat gasses, created by the boil-
ing of, the cooling system content can
escape,butyears
not the liquid. The anti-
freeze Ions is greatly reduced.
The all -steel truck body is another
new .departure. It is a stainless steel
creation, which, • in the case of larg-
er capacity. trucks, permits a big in-
crease in payload by reducing the
weight of the vehicle itself.
den this spring and happen to strike
toonpullinuphthat -you
lbras-ibaurid oaken
chest which some old pirate or hoard-
er 'bur'ied •t'hrere p
years ago and for-
got.
'Meantime, ie you want the thrill
of anticipation and the pleasure of
spending your treasure 'before* you
find it, just let Lucy Dickinson Urqu-
hart lead the way in the Baltimore
Sun:
,About three ago cy southern
Virginia, $6,165 .in currency and goldwart
was found' in' two boldus powder tins
and a molasses can'secreted in asloe-
et in a farms house. About ra year
before 'an elderly woman, w•ho long
had made 'her home with the fatmil
had died. A jur=y decided that the
money had 'been hers and • should,
therefore, go to her heirs and not to
But he makes no suggestions for the
pronunciation of these cherished
words.
'And Bernard Shaw says proudly
that his recreation is "anything ex-•
„
sport. •
of enlistment he •will •serve'rwith the
colors for seven years. After 'this,
fie will be transferred to the 'army
reserve for five years. During this
time he will de no training, but will
draw reserve pay of' 10s. 6d. or 7s. a
week.
k 8:34.
way to Caesarea Phillippi
His disciples two-. gwes-
Vhom da •nicn say' that I ant"
sem do ye ay that I ani."
p
ply to the first showed hawFor
wias that "His own ,received
" whereas Peters answer ei to
14 -Jesus Asserts His Kingship,
-Mark 11:1-10, 15-18.
.,..�•• Zechariah 9:9.
In the first t
part of this, le.s on we
reg the fulfilment of prophesy Zech-
ariah foretold the entrance of the
Mes
took 'ash into Jerusalem as it actually
took place as given in \Sark.
true instincts and do justice to icon-
omy and i'a4ltion at the same time:
Milady takes the bus and! Milord has
gold his stable.
So fashionable is f�his parody of
poverty that it is about to became
the fashion st word in elegance. its is
be because theYet
people
stupidp p
• •
!ways F�nds Relief
Her Aching BackProvision
the estate of the family with whom
she had lived.
!Last springs 'an Illinois man picked
up a'piece of old iron pipesept
from a
junk heap and used it as a hammer.
Out of it flew a cement plug and two
cans in which he found $3,500 in gold
pieces.
,�
The Army Absorbs Its
Men
The British. Army is making its an-
noel 'bid for recruits and although
so many men are unetitiployed,. 'no
overplus of applicants is expected,
except for the Air Force.
• Last year the• Army wanted 27,000
recruits and there were 70,418 appli-
cant.s•,_.but 42.,000 were turned away'
itec•ause alley "-were "tmsvibalrle; -ani
over 1,000 changed their minds at the
last moment about a military career...tween
Among Britain's 3,0001,040 unem-
pl°yed' some 400,000 are young• men
of the eligible. ar:rty age of twenty-
five and under.
The recruit,flavin g• proved him-
self eligible by means, of a birth
certificate and a good reference as
to character, is put through physi-
cal anfl mental tests. If be emerges
stiocessfully 'from these, ' he is sent
to the depot of the regiment he has
chosen, is provided with a complete
and 'begins a course of six
.months training.: .
He works forty-eight hours a week
and is paid 'fourteen shillings as a
start. He has plenty of games to
play and recreation -rooms. His even-
tags are his' own, and he will also
'be• able to get away for week -ends.
After six months he takes his
place in this ranks of his regiment.
pay rises to 15s. 9d, a week, and
in another six months to 1'7s. 6d.-
or, if he does.well and 'becomes a
�n�e corporal within a year, to 24s.
6d, ' •
If he is very' good 'at his work
he may qualify to fill one of the
thirty
is made for some 3,000
men, to undergo a course of training
in one of many trades during •the
last six months of their service, so
that they may have an occupation to
whtelt they "ran turn when they have
left . to army.
In a Juan who serves in„the army
for twenty-one years receives a pen-
Sion for life.
Like the army, the navy does rat
yet 'find it necessary to• turn away
any gond men.•
-•• 'The -navy.. has. �l.enty of openings
as stokers for able-bodied men be-
:eighteen • and twenty-five . It
will also take on men with ex=
:perienee as engineers; blacksmiths,
'carpenters, electricians, ' painters,
plumbers, or cool, -s. The Royal Air
Force has to keep a waiting list ue
youngellen anxious to join because
the air force has only 3,000 openings
annually - not because it is over-
tear -
wlielrned by en avalanche of appli-
cations.
Of the applicants who are medi-
cally examined; by the, three services,
about 50 per cent. are physically un-
fit -mainly through 'each reasons as
insufficient weight, diseases of, the
middle ear, defective eyesight, the
loss 'or decay of seven or more
teeth, heart trouble, leg defects and!
flat feet.
The British army requires that a:
recruit be British -born of pure Euro -
Paan descent, the navy that he bea
the son of British -born - parents ors
both sides, and the air fore that he
be of pure European descent and the
son of British parents.
'Subjects of the Dominions are
eligible for any •of the three forces.
•
•
id showed that they who had
Hied with H4rut in His min-
d' come to recognize in the
!fan the Son of God -"Thou
On teaching the teml>Ie,Jecus found
condmtion_ as they were three years
previous and He, in soxrb and in
who still own property have not zeal-
ly gi'vlen up their comforts and hate
its, 'I he rhythm of their life is the
same as of old; but they have usurp-
ONTARIO LADY 'USES DODD'S
KIDNEY PILLS"'
A few .,years ago a father went toQuotaOf
a second-hand bookshopfor a die-
tionary his children needed. He
thought he had
Christ." Then He began toed
stn what thingstreat cometo
sad what part they must take
n if they would be Has lis-
--His was a life of sac
in the Cross. Theirs
erossehearan:g if they would
eternal life with Him,
--Jesus Transfigured.
k 9:2-8, 17, 18, 2529.
1 :14. •them
first part of this lesson three
were chosen to par-
in the.manifested glory of
of Mian. He was tranGfigur-
e their eye =trey "beheld
y,the glory as of, the only
.the eFather."tl-In the
part we see the poefer of
Ohr•ist Jesus• severely tested
worst kind of 'evil possession
scud. He taught His die-
that prayer. and fast-
essential factors in suc'cass-
stian life and work.
-Jesus Rebukes Self -Seek-
k 9:33-43.
n b.
13:10.-
anger, once again. cleanses' it and
made it a fit place for worship.
flay, 21st -Jesus Answers His Ad-
versaries.
-Mark 12:28-40.
john 7:46.
The pharisees, b-„odiana and Sad-
ducees all failed in their efforts to
etch Jesus in His answers to their
q es:tions. One in the audience see-
frig hobs well Jesus had ens yered
,a approached Him and inquired,
Wltich is the first cerntrandment of
. ?"
all - Jesus seeing in him a <liffer-
eat spirit explained .to-hirn•• not only
which was the first but the second
,an both were Love. That was the
last interruption.. 'Hie then proceeded
to prate •from their own . 4lessianic
calm that he was their 'Messiah. Af-
p'
ter which addressing the comaizon
people He urged them to beware of
the teaching of the Phari ees for they
were *''blind leaders of the blind.,,
May 28 -Jesus and His Friends. •-
-Mark 13:33-14 c9.
-John 15:14.•
!In the first part of this lessen Jes-
us warns His disciples to watch and
the right to question every bill,
reduce every fee and to boast of
their debts. The wave Of depression
which is the cause of many a real
catastrophe, 'has created a frame of
mind which makes people feel asham-
?ci, of the money they may still own.
A rich young riian; sighing, under the;fQY1de'1'e+
burden of his millions, whmn I con-
I gratulated upon his magnificent new
e.•ght-cylinder Chrysler,• found no
better reply than that it was ''just a
depression time tin can !,"
In shoe these ie wish to; give
people
up n°thing-but they dare not adrift
They ate like ostriches hiding
their heads in the sand,
The pessimists, the doubters, the
•hypocrites, the defeatists 'bear a large
share of responsibility' for our res-
ep
ent distres It was thei•r greedinesspaned
that sped ulp the •course of gold• be-
gond any reasonable limit, and it is
thei•r greedine .. that is now Halting
it and sapping the vital juices of icon-
omy. Where the blood does not cir-
cu ate, an abscess forms,: Where the
•' metal is paralyzed, a crisis origin-
its. Those who keep the metal un-
der lock deserve $o die of congestion:
Mrs. F. Leferriere Recommends Dodd's
Kidney Tilts To All KidneySufferers.
tPowassan, Ont., June 22 (Special)
- I have used Dodd's Kidney Pills
°'n' many occasions and have found
'S►'eat relief in them, writes Jlrs. F:
a well-known re.sideaat. o%
this place.
, 4 fly back used. to trouble me so
•rtvu'ch. I, was unable to work at tames.
I always keep a box, of D'odd's Kid-
Hey Pills in the house and take plea-
P
sure in recommending them to any-
one suffering with sore back ar kid�
ne tionlble:
' Y i
Thousands , of grateful people have
publicly .t stifled to Dodd's Kidney
Pills. Why not :benefit Iby their ex-
Fienience? •
Make no mistake: Backache, dizzi-
Hess, rheumatism, -sciatica, lwrrubago
and.other symptoms of kidney weak_
neseaxe jiar too serious to be .reg
lotted. They show that harmful
poisons are being left in the ,blood-
that the 'kidney's urgently need the
, y g y
'stimlulating and strengthening that
peelers Kidney .Pills so' sparely give.
picked. up a bargain
until after he reached home, when he
found many of the leaves had been
glued. together. • He concluded his
p,ur°base was a poor one, but .became
interested in working • wsoxne of the
leaves apart. Between their were
gold, coins which invade his investment
remarkabl. zrn
y mood. -
One of the larger deposits.found
g .
in home-made 'banks came to light
in Austria as the result of the death
of an American who had lived in
Vienna. His American relatives were
sure he 'had left a fortune but noth-
ing was found' except some unprom-
icing personal effects,
Three years after his death, on
repeated urging, a consular official
in •Vienna again went to look through
these belonin g
g .gs This official hap-
to be lame, and the man had
left an artificial leg. Examining it°utfi.t,
with a 'view to buying it, the of,
fici•al accidentally touched a spring
and it disclosed $88,004 in 1,000 bills.
Int some reason manyof the
p their pe0
,pie who like to keep. cash near
them consider shoes a good deposi-
tom Same, time ago newspapers
told of a Grand Rapids
.
by His treatment of a little
pray and live in expectation of His
In•
man Who ap-
pea in court to furnish bail for
rated out to His disciples the
of true ' greatness. LVhos°-
receive one of each chi!-
My rtalnne, receiveAh 'Me:"
lesson John was lead to
that they had forbidden one
who followed not them.
Jesus taught them not to
the wreak in faith. The ex-
of symlpathy towards such
of di cipleiship.
--Jesus Sets New Standard
iv
k 10:13-27.
• 6:31.
are two striking incidents
aeon. e In the first the little
are seen being caressed and
y Jesrac in spite of the mis-
77
tercet of the disciples in their
In the second the rich yoning
r�een coming to J'egs•tts, being
Hi'm and moving sadlya-
R
e learn from these incidents'
rn• ,the second part Jesus
commands Mary of Bethany for her
gift of love -a costly ..perfume with
which she anointed His head. He
said that this- she had done would be
told while thee should last. She did
what, she could and so earned the
commendation of the one she loved.
June 4 -esus Faces Betrayal and
Denial.
-Mark 14 17-31.
-Isaiah 53:3,
.� In to -day's lesson St. 'Mark tells of
Jesus lettingHis disci les know, that
p
He knew one pf them would betray
Him. This is followed by a rim le
frit realistic account of the institu-
tion of the Lord's Sumner After-
pvi '
wards He notes the leaving of the
upper*
room and the warning Jesus
gave to,Reter who vehemently assert-
ed he would never desert Him, even
though death should result.
Il
Gossip From Motor' Row
per cent. of the as con-
Fifteen Z;
cured by taxis in the big cities is
used in staffing, stopping and idling
because of raffle jams. What this
means in the case of a single large
taxicab company is seen in the fig-
ores issued by Harvard University's
Erskine traffic bureau.
The totalfood
gas consumed by this
company in one year is just 'over
6,700,0'00 gallons. Of that 1,048,000
gaalbans are wasted because of abnor-
mal congestion in the streets. A mil-
g
lion gallons would be enough to take
one car 30 times on a trip to the
Ir.00n anti back!
*
Lo•3 An eles, lou _
g g famous for filet
stars rr o eat home-pquestion
grown, sun -kiss-
ed oranges for breakfast, and for
bathing beauties who inevitably Pose
Children First
Nowadays, the problem of serer-
ing a well-balanced diet has become a
matter of particular concern. When
there is only enough money available
to buy' the food which is'Teeded,
every cent must be spent to the best
advantage,
'Children should conte first when,
consideration is being given to, the
•budget for the •• family.• The
child's needs as re arcs food are
' g • '
greater than are those of the adult.
If the child does not receive a well-
balanced diet, he will mot delve' as
he should, and he will be handicap-
ped for the remainder of his life.
It is fortunate that we have in
formation which enables us to pian
a well-halaliced •diet at a minimum
of expenditure. It is nota
of ci
pending ahpre to secur•e such a
diet, hut rather of buying to, the best4.
his sister. He neededHas
$2,500 and
Prom�rtly produced it from his shoes.
Another shoe , banker journeyed
around New York for some time with
her life savings, $1,573 tucked away
in her overshoe.
'One day she lot it. She advertise
ed and a subway guard returned it
which mayor maynot'men
thing prove some-•
as to the luck of the hoarder:
. If you buy an old farm house make
a thorough search of the place.
A fewyears a o a laborr e.ngag-
g
ed •in taeariti•g down an old buildin on
g
a Michigan farms, brought do light a
jug filled with $2,000 in gold coins,
r
bearing dates of 1'H x0 to 1890.
A New Jersey farmer made a more
surprising find. Some year •ago,'
Y
chopping with an axe on what he
thought was solid wood, he struck a
g
plug which opened and revealed $6
040, most of it in silver. -
,y
places reserved each year for
from the ranks to become of -
hers. Or he, may be selected to
specialize in same particular occupal
tt°nith, in some cases, additional
pay`
Ar£te>' a period of duty with this•
some service battalion of his unit
•he will probably be posted abroad
for a spell. Under the normal terms
-
lAn Empire preference of four shill -
cwt. and sixpence,(over given by per'
cwt. of 112 pounds is by Erie
rain on alI apples and pears ex,vorteci
from Cansda, on the unciersta idin tb
that Canadian growers make every
effort to increase production.
,
■
®� f"e
ou f Y
-
tol"oronto sooaf 0 s
Why not enjoy the comforts of the KING EDWARD ?
-comforts born of a thirty-year tradition found
y y
under no other hotel roof in Canada.
The charm and converiie'nce of this good old hostelry
gives you -whether for business or pleasure -the
that hotel life can offer.
RATES THAT MEET THE TIMES
et ,• -The choicest foods in Toronto.
ai -Many of the chief events of the season,
.June -Jesus on the Cross.
for photographers at a safe distance
from the Pacific Ocen, has
advanthge which means the inclu-
jion of the essentials in proper pro -
���follows:
something
else' to crow about. Ascot track there
is now the United States' automo-
bile , racing centre, 'from ' the • steed-
paint of the
p°+tion.
The moneythat is available for
food should 'be used approximately as
28 per 'cent. for milk; 20
'Who's Who Oddities
„ ,>
The new British "Who's Who
contains 40;400 names.
�i
�" ,
���=
]
4111r
1
i e a .‘ kO
•fT
•
w e r
-
number raf track, held.
True, there' is :only one but,
an an average, 35 races are held
here annual!}. Moreover, most of
the' best known drivers have made it
their stamping ground.
*, * *
'A combination of automobile ac-
celerator and _.brake pedals into one
control upon which the foot .can he
kept constantly while' driving has
(been• invented by Camenissioner-'Gren-
eral of Imimigratinn, Harry E. Hull,
of Washington, D.C.
The accelerator pedal is so corn-
tined with the brake 'pedal that
when the 'brake is pressed with the
foot the accelerator automatically
disengages. For an emergency stop
there is el need of moving the foot
from accelerator -to brake and there
is no chance of "stepping on the gas"and
instead of the brake as sometimes
.happens with to -day's conventional
cars. New automobiles could he
equipped with the new accelerator-
brake pedal control ,at practically 110
additional cost while old cars could
be convened to the new safetyde-
vice at -little cost, Commissioner Hull
per cent. for fruit and vegetables;
�� g
per cent. for bread and other ser-
eels; fS per 'cent. for meat and
cheese; 0t•per •cent. for butter and
other fats; 5 per cent. for sonars,
The comparatively large amounts
set aside or milk maybe notices!.
This i,4 done Ibecanse of the nutfitive
vzl.ue of milk .and its richness in vii_
amine and minerals. Milk cannot he
replaced economically or practically
br °tkrer foods.
yr
tande is also given to fruits
and yr getarbles. These feeds •also
are rich in vitamins and mvinerals•
They supply natural laxative mater-
ia1 and maintain the proper chemicalbest
7r p
reaction of the blood.
, ilk, fruits and, veg•etablee are
dnsser1 as protective foocjs, ,because
tltr,.v protect the body against the
serious upsets and disabilities which
arise out of an unbalanced diet. The
adult rbcs not suffer a much as does
the child froth falack of protective
foals, hut even for the adult, the de-
firier;cy of these foods over a period
°f time Ives rise to loss of vitalityBritain's
and energy, and finally to a physical 'bent,
Sir Ernest.Budge, veteran Egypte-
get°
!osier and foxmer keeper of Egyptian
and Assyrian anti cities at the Brit-
i:,h Museum; gots the most space.
11e has published 124 books since 187S
and it takes fourteen and a half in-
cher of s acetobest
p give their titles.
'There are 290 Smiths, 166 Jones,
Wilsons
the ani 121 ;Campbells in
the book.
Ex -King Alfonso of Spain, Bing
Albert of the Eeleiaus and Stalin
r p
the Russian' 'dictator, are out.
Amy Johnson's ex) lo' are re-
re -
corded and it is also announced that
she only commenced flying after vi%in-
nitxg a degree in economics.
Charlie Chaplin is mentioned.
Though he 'is announced as a film
fact�that he is a no tooniedianion is ad Douglas
factbanks is "an all-round sportsman
but does not indulge in hunting or
fishing," Will Rogersrs almost un-
recognizable as William Penn Adair
Rrngers, well known writer on, prohi-
hition and the League of Nations.
Greta, Garbo is not mentioned, nor is
laughter -maker,' Jack Hill-
'•`
int,• �� "staged" at
Y -Fine ballrooms
"� �,• Luigi Rgmunctli
in person.
Fashionable,
Toronto people go to the
CHARGES FOR
-Double room and ha�-iroortt,
bathroom, from $2.50:
CHARGES
=I❑ the Restaurants - Breakfast
d'h6te $1.5o; or in the Cafeteria
cost. ,• "
Dancing in Oak Room nightly
•"'fi'�
Irl
I�:seals
NT�it Of EVE
C "'slljj"os�iM'
��II 1dl
\s- VI e1 41a'�1
M ItA M!♦
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ell
o414111111
p "'4�
�� ! �I
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4, ®
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this
King
ACCOMMODATION
Suites
FOR
(except
'
�; ;
(II�1
I•
III
0
Central
at
i
. w
RYTH
�
1
la
1<,p,
(m
1P
hotel.
with music by the original
s Orchestra, with Luigi
and C�rarmin g -the
Edward to dine and dance.
from. $4,00. Single room
from $8,00a
MEALS
50c; Luncheon 85c; table
correspondingly lowered
Sunday.)
P. KIRBY HUNT
Manager
i=,
e.�
11yG ik %
Q
• R�Nrp
,•,'' 'f
• �1�
� is .:,
.: c ;Rr
, U ' �
:CEPT BETTER! Kellogg's Corn Flakes
gg ✓�-_...:�,,..�
says,
The Gaekwar of, $erode and the
Ip you feel cooler all day through.
* *
Mahar a,jah of Kashmir receive '2 sa-�
Lege delicious flakes' are so easy to di-
`�
� "heat up." y
at they dont you
For comfort that lasts, enjoy a bowl of
y
llogg's instead of hot, heavy foods.
eakfast, lunch, the children's evening
_'
COR N
FLAKES
cavvE
37F,Wee
>"--'
'
+
,;carelessly
f ,
,%
A
!
d`
/
,
,one
What ha
happens when motorists
lightedSite
toss ci axetfea
foam their ears evert in opeb coon-
try? Frequently nothi ng; occasion-
ally something extremely unhappy.
An English 'motor journalist .describes
of the latter results in a fashion
designedfors
to make it memorable andy
lute
Was "Never So 'Maharaj'a'h
Crate`rxllnHerL:fe
ct, ,inhn, can'tN• B. -"It's almost utrbe-
11eve,ble--7 Myself realize it- spent
but Sergen ended my stomach trod- the
ble thU lia.d been pulling me down
eight years," recent! declared volume,
of twenty-one
y -one gutr�s, and the
of Kapurtha]a a salute of
fifteen guns. The Gaekwar of Bar-
oda also announces proudly he has
a million and a half rupees for
purehaae of motor vans.
There are three Gandhis in the
One is secretary the
:al. Made b Kelloggin London,Ont.
y>
nM"•'••M,•-•
4a.,�,.• �
-natructvv+e. He
May Kelley, 94 Protection,
of In-
,r.,et,•
,���_ . ��
di ii
writes:
9 have seen a whole field on fire,
As a result of someone's carelessness
a once beautiful tract of land,
resplendent in its spring garb of pale
greens and looming gorse was re-
diced to a Iblaeakened waste by flames
that seemle'd to liek the clouds. They.
were a 'beautiful sight, those flames
.dian
Street. "why, I lived a,imost, entirely'
on milk and crackers for a, Ion cotta
time, but now I can eat anything Y
'want without a sign of trouble. I've
also been entirely freed of constipa berme
tion by Sargon Plug. They didn't space
have tb�, elft ripirig effect."
was
C. ADbAIEl1' RH- his
chamber of commerce at Cal-
and. another is professor of
mining at the University of Benares.
The most famous of the three, Ma-'
Gandhi, receives the least
It is mrentioned that Lloyrl George
educated! at Llanystym'dwy and
wife came frown 'Mynyddednyfed.
l
aw
yy.xlNDr pc�y"�'y c;,d
PY �i��.rXf A[a .Q.t !r {.W,;�,IRJl'),y� ..;r
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