The Huron Expositor, 1926-11-12, Page 2Every boy is interested in
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Why Every Farm Home
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The farm home is no different from the city
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Music is a recipe for happiness—the piano
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Name
Address _._...__.. _..
SOW
Isabel RAia.Liltans Ggdertabr 00t4
I?'orth it► Thr DAM% 0 Lord Wu,
My daily lebtie to puisne;
Thee, only Thee, reselved to know,
In all I think, or speak, or do.
The task Thy wisdom bath assigned,
O let me cheerfully fulfil; .'
In all my works Thy presence find,
And prove Thy good and perfect will.
Charles Wesley.
PRAYER
Almighty God, help us to under-
stand the meaning of the gift of life
with which we have been blessed.
Thou hast entrusted us with solemn
responsibilities, enable us to under-
stand their meaning, to feel their
pressure, and to respond with all our
hearts to their demands. Let thy
blessing rest upon us for Jesus' sake.
Amen.
Joseph Parker, D.D.
S. B. LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 14
Lesson Title—Caleb's Faithfulness
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Lesson Passage—Joshua 14:6-18.
Golden Text—Joshua 14:8.
The children of Israel in all their
desert life had kept together as one
body but now that the land of Canaan
was entered and conquered, it must
not be left desert. They must dis-
perse but every man could not go just
where he pleased.
Two *and a half tribes had chosen
to remain on the east side of Jordan
and the other tribes were to be given
their inheritance by lot, as the Lord
commanded by the hand of Moses.
But before Eleazar, the priest, Jos-
hua and the heads of the ten tribes
began their work of distribution Ca-
leb, accompanied by the heads and
great men of the tribe of Judah, ap-
peared before them and reminded
Joshua that Hebron had been prom-
ised him for a possession and there-
fore it should not be included in that
for which lots were to be cast. Caleb
appealed to Joshua to confirm his
claim, saying, "thou knowest the
thing that the Lord said unto Moses
the man of God concerning thee and
me in Kadish-barnea." He then re-
hearsed the thing he had done in spy-
ing out the land and reporting favor-
ably and contending against the ten
men who brought in an evil report.
He said he acted as it was in his
heart to do because he followed whol-
ly the Lord his God. For this Moses
had commended him and had sworn
to him saying, "Surely the land
whereon thy feet have trodden shall
be thin inheritance, and thy child-
ren's forever, because thou hast
wholly followed the Lord thy God."
Caleb then referred to the long
time that had elapsed since the prom-
ise was made, saying, "And now, be-
hold, the Lord hath kept me alive, as
he said, these forty and five years,
even since the Lord spake this word
unto Moses, while the children of Is-
rael wandered in the wilderness; and
now, lo, I am this day fourscore and
five years old." In spite of the lapse
of years he expected the promise
should be made good and he urged his
fitness for entering on his promised
inheritance as another reason why it
should be given over to him. "As
yet I am as strong this day as I was'
in the day that Moses sent me; as my
strength was then, even so is my
strength now, for war, both to go out
and to come in." Having thus as-
sured .Joshua of his fitness now that
he was actually in Canaan he again
claimed the land in which were -the
Anakims who had caused the ten
spies to fear that they could not he
conquered. As he then affirmed they
were able to drive them out and pos-
sess the land so now he declared that:
"If so be the Lord, will he with me,
then I shall be able to drive them
out." He had all these years wholly
followed the Lord so that neither
strength of body nor of spirit had de-
clined and Joshua, seeing this noble
heroic spirit willing to choose the dif-
ficult niece, blessed him and gave him
Hebron for an inheritance.
Caleb rendered a most hazardous
and important service to the nation
when he claimed the fulfilment of a
promise made to him so long before.
The driving out of the Analcim was a
formidable task, one that most men
would have shrunk from undertaking
instead of pleading for it. So suc-
cessful was Caleb that the land had
rest from war. Th' proved that "He
is faithful who bath nromised; he lis
able to do exceeding abundantly above
all that. we ask or think."
WORLD MISSIONS
There is nothing we admire more
in military annals than a solace vol-
unteering for the most hazardous and
difficult of posts. In tke spiritual
warfare, too, we do not want instan-
ces of the same spirit. We recall
Captain Allan Gardiner choosing
Tierra del Fuego as his mission
sphere just because the people were
so ferocious, the climate so repulsive,
and the work so difficult that no one
else was likely to take it up. We
think of the second band, who went
out after Gardiner and his compan-
ions had been starved to death; and
still more after these were massa-
cred by the natives, of the third de-
tachment who were moved simply by
the consideration that the cease was
simply so desperate. We think of
many a young missionary turning
away from the comfortable life which
he might lead at home, that he may
go where the need is greatest and the
fight is hottest, and so render to his
Master the greatest possible service.
A crowd of noble names comes to our
recollection—William, Judson, Mor-
rison, Burns, Patteson, I;eith, Fal-
coner, Hannington -and McKay—men
for whom the Anakim had no terrors,
but rather an attraction ; but who,
serving under another Joshua, differ
ed from Caleb in this, that what they
desired was not to destroy these fer-
ocious Anakims, but to conquer thein
by love, and `to densonstratO the power
of the gospel of Jesus Chris's to
change the vilest reflrobates into cons
of God.
1{►.. Q. Male D. D.
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TOR ONTO, CAN.
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says "We hu'Sbahel is 'hes lead nl:;
the family," He may know the hi*
on
on that point, but the womeaa . do net
seem to' bpi much perturbed by bis
ruling. --Toronto Man and Enrplr§,
That's ' Our Viewpoint,—We see''
Where an automobile has , turned
turtle. If we ,bought, an automobile
we would want it to stay an automo-
bile. Because if we wanted a turtle
we would buy a turtle, -.—Vancouver
Sun.
FALL PASTURING OF NEW
SEEDLINGS
During the months of September
and October a great many inquiries
are received by the Forage Crop Di-
vision of the Dominion Experimental
Farm as to the advisability of pastur-
ing new seedlings of grass and clover.
During a favorable growing season
such new seedings particularly red
clover and alfalfa may attain suffici-
ent growth to make excellent pasture.
When winter feed promises to be
scarce the temptation is great to take
advantage of the new pastures thus
provided, by turning the cattle on to
it for a few weeks. During the early
fall months such a practice may not
result in serious damage to the re-
sulting crop. Late fall pasturing,
however, is almost always followed
by a partial or even total failure of
the succeeding year's crop. It is
much safer to clip new seedings high
"rith a mower early in the fall, if
they promise to be too rank in growth
rsther than to take the hazard of
pasturing. At this season of the
year the safest policy is to leave new
seedlings alone.
Piles Go Quick
Piles are caused by congestion of
blood in the lower bowel. Only an
internal remedy can remove the
cause. That's why salves and cut-
ting fail. Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid,
a harmless tablets, succeeds, because
it relieves this congestions and
strengthens the affected parts. Hem-
Roid has given quick, safe and last-
ing relief to thousands of Pile
Sufferers. it will do the same for
you or money back. C. Aberhart and
druggists everywhere sell Hem-Roid
with this guarantee.
FAMILY OF A HERO LIVING IN
DISTRESS
There is grim philosophy back of
the story about the lawyer called to
a jail to see a client, and after hear-
ing his story declared with certainty:
"Why they can't put you in jail for
that." Things that seem incredible
have a way of happening just like
things that seem probable and even
inevitable. For example, it seemsin-
credible that the mother and two sis-
ters of the late Sir Ernest Shackle-
ton, one of the great heroes of ex-
ploration, should be left to suffer the
pain and shame of poverty. But it is
true. Is it due to a mistake? Is it
the result of their sad plight,•not be-
ing called to the attention of the
British nation which was wont to ring
with the name of Shackleton? Are
they too proud to accept the help that
ought to be so eagerly and humbly
extended to them? Is it the result of
any fault of their own, any mistake
now repented of but irrevocable? To
all of which rhetoric the inelegant
answer is, No, it ain't. The Shackle -
tons are in distress because things
happen that way even in England
where hearts are no colder than else-
where. No doubt if a persistent and
dramatic effort were made to call the
attention of the nation to the plight
of the Shackletons many would
spring to their help. Lacking that
appeal they remain in distressing
circumstances.
We learn from Dorothy Duces, in
the New York Herald Tribune, that
the Shackleton family motto is "By
Endurance I conquer." What survives
of the family now has need of that
endurance. Mrs. Shackleton, a frail,
white-haired lady of eighty-one, con-
fined to her bed ,as the result of a
fall, and perhaps doomed to remain
there, does not complain. She does
not feel that she need worry about
herself, but she does Worry about
her two daughters, both of whom
are invalids. At present Mrs. Shackle-
ton receives the interest from the
fund raised to erect a statue in the
heart of London to the memory of
her illustrious son. When the mem-
orial is completed, which she hopes
will be before her death, the little
income ceases. She has also been in
receipt of a hundred pounds a year
from some anonymous benefactor.
This will cease at her death. The
total income now is meagre. How
will Alice and Amy fare when it is
withdrawn? No doubt something
will happen to prevent them going
to a workhouse, but in the meantime
their keen mental anxiety must cause
them snore suffering than if they
actually had become charges upon
the public.
After the breakdown and death of
his father, Ernest was the sole sup-
port of the family. When he became
an explorer he found it a heavy task
to raise sufficient funds for his ad-
ventures. When he started on his
last fatal expedition five years ago
he left behind sufficient money to
keep the little home at Sydenham,
where he had been born, running
comfortably for a year. When news
came of his sudden death in his ship
when he was in the very act of mak-
ing an entry in his diary, England
felt that one of her great sons had
Odd.— seems funny that a man fallen. Condolences poured in on Mrs.
named Damrich should he sent to the Shackleton and no doubt assuaged
poorhouse a, a pauper, hut it happen- something of her grief. Nothing
ed in Kansas the other day.—Toronto much happened after that until some
of Shackleton's friends, knowing his
Telegram. constant anxiety for his mother and
The Prevalent Variety.—Explorers sisters and being aware that he was
in Africa hnee found a bunch of wom-
en who do just as they please. Was really a poor man, attempted to col -
it necessary to go to Africa?—Wind- lett a fund for them. A public ap-
sor Border Cities Star. peal was issued by Sir Philip Dawson,
it
The Obvious.—A Toronto dentist
says that the jaws of Canadian men
are becoming weaker for lack of ex-
4ercese. He probably refers to the
married fraternity. — St. Thomas
Times -.Journal.
Tired of Lizzie—The five cent cigar
was responsible for the sign "No
PAINS ALL
OVER BODY
Two More Cases of Feminine Ill-
ness Relieved by Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound
Barrington, N. S.—"I had terrible
feelings, headaches, back and side
aches and pains all over my body. I
would have to go to bed every month
and nothing would- do me good. My
husband and my father did my work
for me as I have two children and
we have quite a big place. I read in
the paper about Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, and then got a
little book about it through the mail,
and my husband sent to Eaton's and
got me a bottle, and then we got
more from the store. I am feeling
fine now and do all my work and am
able to oo outnrbund more. I tell my
friends it is Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Comppoundd� that makes me feel
so well. "—Mrs. Vwzoa RSCBAB,DSON,
Barrington, /stove Scotia.
Dull Paitelis m Back
S Thomas, Ont. --"I took four
bottles of. tibia l ham's Vege-
table Com r I I • s, and found great re-
l
della' prunes in the
alI Of my ewe akness
Which I ' for Jive years
ray -boy . After taking
t hit VO Its and using
tive Wash d
tan fe• eling bet � have for the
Rise tny
a'tefake �" ... �.eTdiert luntl t
, Ont. 0
h. 1 11
M.P., whose family were Dr. Henry
Shackleton's last patients, and a
number of other explorers and back-
ers of the expedition. Extraordinary
as it may seem no golden shower be-
gan to fall upon the parched home in
Sydenham. Not until after publicity
had been given to Mrs. Shackleton's
accident did any donations begin to
arrive. Most of them had been an-
onymous and for small amounts.
No man over owed more to his
mother than Sir Ernest Shackleton.
It was from her that he got his
courage. It was she who shaped his
career. As a lad he couldn't decide
whether to become a sailor or an
engineer. it was his mother who
suggested that he should try the sea
first, for she said that if he didn't
like it he could become an engineer
in plenty of time. It was a curious
strain in a mother that she should
choose such a roving and adven-
turous life for a beloved son. But
she seemed to feel that he would
make a tremendous success of it.
She used to read him books of travel
and tales of adventure as though to
fire his spirit. When his name was on
everybody's tongue after he ' had
planted the Union Jack within a
hundred miles of the South Pole,
nearer than any man had ever got to
it before, she took the acclaim much
as a matter of course. She 'was proud,
but gave the impression that had he
done anything else she would have
been astonished.' It even seemed as
though he might have got a few
miles further on.
The pride of the mother is shared
by all in the bustling little London
suburb of Sydenham. It was a great
day for Sydenham when The Quest
sailed up the Thames bearing the ex-
plorgr who was returning after his
fourth attempt to reach the South
Pole. Flying from the foremast above
the crow's nest was a flag presented
to Sir Ernest. by King George. Now
it is said that the King may offer
Mrs. Shackleton and her daughters
rooms in li'ampton Court Palace,
where they may remain for the rest
of their days hen:bred guests. But
Ala *0014 "be a mistaken *keep,
Sealed }"reels► and thiel ltioi.
for their hearts are entwined with
their home, and it would seem like
abandoning their hero entirely if they
had to leave the house haunted by
his memories. A short time before
his death she was asked "How do
you think of your son now, Mrs.
Shackleton?" She replied: "He was
the prettiest baby, with the loveliest
golden curls." It is true that a few
r
months after his death, four years
ago, the British Government voted
£500 to Mrs. Shackleton, of Which
£145 went immediately to settle
debts, but it does seem that some-
thing more is long overdue, unless
one is to admit there is truth in what
Bernard , Shaw said—"Really, the
English don't deserve to have their
great men."
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