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The Huron Expositor, 1928-04-13, Page 21,(1irrI)It THINK...... VENCitiliLIR FENCE is Rustproof. •,DrinNCIBLE FENCE is made from Coliner Beariing WIre, -INVINC MILE FENCE is 1 pen IBlearth --INVNCILeLE FENCE is not medium Fencing. It means you buy a- fencing guaranteed Enstga-oof for 5 years. teing open hearth steel, it has greater strength than Besselter steel fencing, just as an inch stick of oak is stronger than. a two-inch stick of basswood, altho gh both are wood; so Open Hearth Invincible Fence h. greater strength than other larger t es Berner m es. - LOOK AT THESE PRCESY, 6 -wire Invincible Fence, per rod 36c cash 0wire Invincible Fence, per rod 40c cash • 8 -wire Invincible Fence, 9 stays, even spaced, per rod 44c cash 8 -wire Invincible Fence, 1.2 stays, even spaced, • per rod 49c c sh 9 -wire Invincible Hog Fence, 36 inches high, per rod 55c Cash SPECIAL Low prices Barlsd Wire, Heavy Poultry Fence, Fencing Tools and Supplies. '.!!! SUNDAY AFIleRNOON •al; y Isabel Hmilton, Goderich, Ont.) My soul, be on thy guard, •'; Ten thousand foes arise,, Antdohosts -draw on Thereslicir hard • Oh, wat,ch and fight and pray; - he battle ne'er give o'er; • laenew it boldly every day, And help divine implore. NePera think the victory won, Nur lay thine armor down; Thine arduous work will not he done Till thou obtain thy crown. George Heath. PRAYER Almighty God who desirest tha,t • a Thy children should be like Thy - 1f, 111 us with Thy spirit that -we mitay he lights in the world, helping •, ea the time when Thy kingdom of aighteatesness and peace may fill the whole earth. In Jesus' mete we •away. Amen. S. LESSON FOR APRIL 15, 19,28 ,., lesson Toaie—Teansfiguration and "ltiteasols Passage—Mark 9:2-8, 17, :olden Text—John 15:5. 4 1=11ilintertt=ittft sattgs and death % e went up into a mountain to pray. He took with Ham the three disciples who had been spe- cially privileged to be with Him wben he raised Jairus" daughter from the dead. During the night the disciples became heavy with sleep but, rousing themselves they beheld a glorious sight. Jesus was •transfigured be- fore them. "The light shone not up- on him from without, but out of him from withn," one commentator re- marks. The period Christ had now reached was a critical and anxious one and he sought strength by paay- er. His strong cryings and tears pierced the skies; they entered 'into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth and "for once, he appeared to he what he really was—the Son of the Father, and the Lord of the world. It was testimony very powerful and very ef- fective, and produced its impression upon those who were privileged to be- hold that great sght." Peter rorrit- ing afterwards makes a striking ref- erence to the experience on this oc- casion (2 Peter 1:16-18) saying "we were eye -witnesses of his majesty." In The Pulpit Commentary we read that "after Abraham, no per- sonages in their history were more honored and venerated + by the Jevvs than Moses and Elijah; Moses, the giver of ?their Law, and Elijah the head and leader of their prophets. These two had not only in life fulfil- led the will of God, they had at the close of their life service been taken to himself by their Lord in every re- markable and singular 'circumstan ga coliecegas disizeo fr© posirig to buil tempo/vary ere for them, wut reality he did t realize what ha 111,93, ProPORIAV •PagSqg and plias owstw. -mut anit• uovir, the Father Z1inagelit Waaa. witaess Quiet, 2,Ea. declares _be•a beloved Son and it4de the ed; "Hear ye Hirai" •Zt *Hear Zia teeclaings ata yoga Mas- ter! hliear proageets as your rier* and Saviour! Hear•Ilia con". mantis aa your Leader anal• Lora Hear to rejoie to .respond, to obe1 Upon their descent from the m,ouna tails work Waa waiting that the Mas ter alone could der: An epilaatie,baY, great sufferer from .is cail4od, had been brought by ais diatireased father nd the disciples had -beea en- treated to use their powers on his behalf. They had tried. but in vin. Beth the father and othey said to Jesus biat they' could /ot east out the demon. The fatheS then appear - to Jesus saying: "If thou czarist do anathing, have compasaion on us and help us." Jens Treplied: "if thou cant believe, all things are possible to him that tbelievtla." The great need together with the gra- cious and majestic presence of Christ drew the father and he exclaimed fervently and earnestly, "Lord, be- lieve. Help thou mine unbelief.? A great crowd was gathering when Jesus exercised His authority over the evil spirit. The demon dis- played his malicious power in trying to kill the boy as he took his depart- ,ure; but the Lord of life took him by the hand and he arose. Thus we see there is no case so desperate that cannot be reached by the power of Christ; nor is there as faith so feeble that will not justify an appeal to Christ for help." When alone with Jesus the disci- ples inquired the cause of their fail- ure for they had been given power over evil spirits. Jesus by His an- swer showed them that great and difficult duties require special pre- paration and self-denial. "This kind can come forth by nothing but by prayer and fasting." WORLD MISSIONS A group of men in North India were sitting watching another man crossing the street with, a burden on his head. He had lost one of his sandals in the water that lay in the road where he was crossing, and waF standing not knowing rwhat to do, for he could not lay his burden down to recover the shoe. He was a low - caste Hindu, and the group of high - caste men watching him were laugh- ing at his predicament. At that moment they saw Dr—, a well- known American missionary, passing by, and seeing the poor fellow in the middle of •the road, the great man hastened over to hrn, picked up the shoe, einptied it of water, and with a cheery word restored it ta the grte. ful Hindu. It was an amazing thing to the watching men that a "high- castea foreigner should so stoop to serve. It was a little thing, done in the name of Jesus. But there sip a Mohammedan convert in North %dist to -day who was in that group of laughing men, and was won to Christ Thatpre ee has not been so rap- id as in ),other i3adustris gees withou. aaVings That the industry has been 'ruined is far from truth. These aareatalle days of short skirts and azalea 'dies"—wool is becom- ing unpopuClaktarthat accounts in part at least folix elow progress in the in- dustry. Miss MaaPhail turned up the a ouse for a fulladaY's debate on a rather novel ideatenot novel in the sense of being out place, but becarise it was unusual. Slie"asked for the establish- ment of ei.',Oovernment Department devoted to the development of Peace and Internatierval Understanding. The resolution iiIrte, remarkable in that ft brought forth a number of excellent speeohes -ntong them being the mover heraralf, Mr. Ralston mad the Prime Minister. Mr. King is espec- ially good on a subject of that kind. It plays up to his imagination. He loves the broad sweep for Ms oratori- cal 'effort—the stern economic issues cramp his style. One pecalierity appears in a great many of the -Prime Minister's speech- es. He drifts along in an amiable sort of way. There is no particular fire in his action. Then quite casu- ally he drops a remark which calls down pretests from the Opposition. Then Mr. King whips in—he has plan- ned for these protests. He reaches for his proofs. He quotes authori- ties. He- leas down the facts. It is the trained debatorls art and he us- es it frequently. Mr. King is rather dangerous ea- such moments. Of course a resolution such as this nev- er reaches a vote- it was talked out. Eleven o'clock comes and the curtain falls and another day is over. -* * * • The Judges want higher pay. The Conservatives would have given it to them. Not :having the responsibility of pro-Val:bagthe money gives a bit' of jiilarity to the spending thereof. The Judges have been hanging round the Government or some time on this matter. Of eouree judges after sal- ary inereafses do it deftly. There are no strike taoties in evidence. Peter Heenan has not been called in to set- tle -with his bland Irish methods a bunch of striking judges. They want the thing done by parlor methods, but they want the salaries raised just the same. The Matter hear been re- ferred to a Comanittee. The Commit- tee will not be full of enthusiasm. Thera is quite a touch of the former element in the Liberal Party and if these boys are sprinkled in too thick the judges may lose out. There is a suspicion that the- move is fathered by ambitious lawyers with forward visions or as asie man feeetiously ex- pressed it—"Lawyers who daily look faiaerepe on the judgea) doors.' lrfr. Cahan is also ambitious for titles to be restored. He feels that the abolition of titles was a rash act. It rvias, in his opinion, a flare up of a democracy in those decadent days when Union Government was in the saddle. This, too,islikely to coins a cropper. Not Many of the sitting members feel they would be eligible and so they cast cold eyes at fevers for the few refused ,to the bucolic multitude. Titles would be very nice if they were granted by unanimous vote of the House ad .Comaaaons. A iman's chances then woald be redue- ees because he was startled by that bits of service. That missionary had learned the secret of greatness. He and the other missionaries have gene to India in the same spirit that Jesus Himself told us controlled His life. THE WEEK IN OTTAWA (By R. J. Deachman.) The House of Commons has had a busy weak. The Members work hare er with a holiday in sight. That is only natural. The small boy in the old days turned the grindstone faster if coupled with the work was the knowledge that he would soon be free to go fishing. The Budget Resolutions have wound their way through Committee. In the main, the fighting was done by Ben- nett an5d Stevens for the Conserva- tives, Donald Kennedy for the U.F.A. Group and Finance Minister Robb for the Libefals. The Committee of the Whole gives a better fight on the bud- get than the set Budget -Debate. There is a chance to cut and thrust in Com- mittee. Members may aslaqustionii. There is a touch of real argument. In the House the setting is oratorical— and oratory, as practiced in Prlia- ment is not eonducive to bringing out facts. Minor amendments were mad. The West seared a point. Heretofore there has been a habit of adding transportation eharges to value -for duty purposes on all autos entering Western Canada from. WeStern points. Now valtteaticrn will be on factory basis and thus the West will save a bit of money. Traction) engines and automobiles are also to enter as set- tlerseffects if they are not too few and are really what they seem. The big bone of contention in these rows in Committee has been the wol- len schedules. Conservatives de- nounce the changes as fatal. They cite closed' factories and idle looms in proof. .Liberals point out that im- ports 'have not increased and assert that after due allowance has been made for increase of population pries ehertgen the per topaz imports of woollen goods eve lest to -day than they were back in the gay '80's in the early days of the National aally, nib badattiy gav, %rot be proOsperous.fit fact it la admitted SA it is Mt perous anywhere in • the •world. Cbeaaaaetintttafn matt= tif dott. tile are l'arOalY responsible tor that Still the aignantift, that tag rapidly stmt to be 6alakida 2E06 or It ta 6" the ogireag pieo. duotim. ,,ttoro Oink ator. Vrm. row own •Pre04•:11041trtate.' Woollezt 4,1,101540M 015,0Meg, Wool mai ifieg040 „ ,14066011 eruleeta .-4400.0S g4820-09, 0010 Vlicakv.5.' tignide -A7D414.0 TV ' :;,•P' 't: •1;4,01,1ACt..t00,103,4004k ‘:jkli4Mt0t4 '041441;104g0,104,' VritatL74: Ili*T47„ , tW0,01(it.'? 140, TOPPINF ,PAI.Plillo, ti4ou.,. iigi',. 11,ear ' hag 140:.belart .4 :,,04' Oer ItFr • willmrs-, Ppm .01k. len ad br 1:314 .fozavar° , $a7m.e 4As that id by annual•atatornant the OZA-rigt; •t'Tha result a the yeaea, opastiona Ofilga SeaMely tea OCIASi4ara4 -gAtite** tory due to heavy .increases wrk,t, ca9anzes and would' halm been suilastantially betoe h. -pi •» for decreaea, in rates on grain z*cle efectiva during the summer and creased wages to all classes of • ployees gr tad dnrin the ear The situation on the "Nationar was paaeisely the same. • Faced With the problem both rellways resonded' tathe sere maner. They bnproved the row3be-4nereased the weight of rails and lacillght heavier engines. RalikalSadtagia Ctlatada is a strenuous fight btreen increasing casts aild. lowering ratela That the bottle b going as well as it is for the raiT- ways is a tribute to the lousiness ad- ministraUon of both Collegian lim. Auti the railways aa winning! Net earnings on the National This dui'.: ing the 'first two months of this year were $5,789,21 in comparison with $3,989,812 during the first two months of 1927, an increase of $1,799,408. That sum would pay quite a bit of interest on eapital improvements. The operathig ratio (relationship of op- erating expenses to operating re- ceipts) was 89.63 during February of last year and 82.29 in Februar, 198. Decrease of operating ratio is the test of the efficiency of management of the road. So Parliament will vote $39,000,000 for the C.N.R. this year. If the judgment of the management of the Toad is soulad the expenditures will be justified by results. There is every prospect that this wilt; happen. The C.N.R. has made greater relative improvement in the past few years than any other road on the continent. To the inanagement and the staff be- long a great deal of the credit—the balance goes to Parliament, which in the main, has been reasonable in its criticisms, and to the Government which has kept the road out of pol. ities. It would have been a simple matter to ruin the whole proposition. Governments now are possessed of more sense. After all, political life in Canada grows better. AlR114, 13, 192S. aa 50001 le we - a 0 wfilf sh Ativatow se • terwards tranait?red that 115 414:ef ndvt .114„ oo4tin oat a-aoropa" 044 not poseihly be 5ic+patva voli*out korzto raissio.n.. of t60;10elee, • 774terlaa! tionalsigraffeauca 'hnd tlapkttei that be would be upsetting nt-leaS half 14uraPe by 'shooting ilato: As st4, matter- of fact, If was purely on a pleaeure trip!' emild 'only meat the joUrnelis with the *sable pen tir.iat ilrat OVA ine raY totally unalegeried _title o GREAT HELP TO _ • YOUNG MOTHERS Baby's Own Tablets Have Many Uses and Are Absolutely Haradess. To have in the house a simple, harmless remedy for the minor ills of babies and little +children is a great boon to young mothers, and this is exactly why Baby's Own Tabletsshave been found in thousands of house- holds. The Tablets regulate the stomach and bowels, break up colds and simple fevers, allay the irritation of cutting teeth, yet they have zio drug taste and the children. like them. Concerning the tablets, Mrs. Ruth- ven Cronnniller, Rurthven, Ont., writes:—"Kindly send me your little book on the Care of the Baby. I have two children, one four years of age and the other a year and a half. Both are in excellent health and the only medicine they have had is Baby's Own Tablts. I always keep the Tab- lets ip the house and am happy to recommend them to other mothers." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cts. a box from The Dr. Williaans' Med- cine Coa Brockvilfe, Ont. WH% I AM THE "MYSTERY MAN" OF EUROPE There is really no mystery about me at all! For years I have been called the "Mystery Man of Europe" simply because I have minded any own business—and have given all those who wanted to pry into any business clear indication that I resented peo- ple meddling in my affairs.- I have engineered some of thebigest ques- tions and have been "behind the scenes" in countless affairs of diplo- matic importance—but because I have refused to talk about such affairs to the newspapers, or even to my closest friends, I have been given a halo of "mystery" which I really do not de- ' serve. I do not absolutely believe in hid- • lag my light beneath a bushel—so to speak; but discretion has always. been the first law of my lif, and I have re- , gretted on countless oceasiOns that others had not belen more discreet ancl "inyeterio-us" about matters la which 1 was engaged. Whenever I travel, Zrherever It go, people whisper, "Lok, there is Sir Beall .taharoff. They calf him 'The Mystery raan of Eurepe'l' •• Net long ago I was travelling with ray late vrife the Duehess of „Villa -franca, from France into Italy, and at the border 1 hmapened to be carrying a ease that • contained my wife's jewellery but vrhich contained nay 017n1 papers, As I presented it to the Custoras authlorities for exandmation, alp tat young officer in an Italian trilfortn • Maned up to the Chief CUstems Of •Eicer and said ,torcitedly in Italian.:--:-- • That is. Bar azil Zahraft. las is eel -Wadi. an ami ituportant raisSion. • Alt, Aim a pi+diesr ,. Watti...tyt awed 4001/„tri hie ,Oe tile Custolna officer eillallted law cae, bo •ed lott, .0.11d 1 .tet*31%1.61 to the traini •On that addiestiOn,14r 41111Sthbrr" ttota, Me in good e,, do ;for It om fiMr6 thoi ft *z %oiled* thr,eozo votaina44 It not t toardp og'.tvi4 4kan a- Inta. rieoar to ta toter&•get' itla;'61). Oette ,foreign Petaltrell ..,", •.004116ot •et ' ,, ib wk-rtivey long These • 77,4Foungl Relief Taking Lydia E. Pnkh,Rz* •Vegetabie Com d Ayer's' Cliffalatabee.— 11 -have ken teaching.'pr. three gears, and at the end of the year always feel tired sand have no oppetite. If was w2u1 sick each vorathi too, hevin ligizz in ray back until sometimes ttriffrtt ribti Mtn e de al 4.0-4131.4' 'stable" ca#00.thit to ,racts. end I hoard toliPag. WV. . tofottitt7000.0„zittott 4.4totWonlal help ARld 4711rift*,t tbk6 •lit& dvarr altemigiread lt •tglk others." -W 404 p4tristair ROI ire'4 Oklaftrerittik tSt• 6e *Mint • , .,,rtiosa'ItNih* • " • 6-'2Onl aggktatiiit, tiOni6 Id be '41$10416!AiE;:Ziu Thren,a00.* 0. 17410 ,t1r421b 2t6" ;',14h1t4 hplolPaget0.o,06 '"6,41 0-J4'W Itcjagl \ 4!, !," , tag .ingsti Ot31,00,1,4141, ',Kto‘4,t tos 4?a,k1,17:074e. - 11, tec: dstilatt etoaa'Ad`41W;1114 41440 040 bir.p Myter" 1 would -well, bette not Say v* I would do with him At times it becolnes a replay bore 44 a talqaaViae te be Wattgled QU'id talk et!' alboht becaibe one is thouOit to 'P continually ngaged-on someBeene mission, planning the Overthrow of some throne os" thel establishment of some new ciynesty. • During the time I held some control in the Monte Carlo (Casino I was sa ways the object of great interst, and again some journalist took unto him self the privilege of a "king -maker' and gave me the title of the "Ma crowned King of Monte Carlo"—much to nay annoyance. My "mystery,' coupled with my "crown," became a source of real nuisance to me when ever I was in the principality. There l e were those who, knowing may financia interest in the Societies des Babas d Mer, the company that controls th Casino, repeatediy sought me ou when they had lost and asked me i I could get the admiration to return to them their money. What a foolish idea—as if I would do shell; a thing! There was one dear lady who canie up to rue on the Casino terrace one morning and, introducing herself no said,: "Sir Basil, you awn the Casi --can you tell -me how I can ma;ke some money?" "Firstly, madame," I replied, "I do not 'own' the Casino and neither am I able to tell you how you can win— but I cat tell you how to make some money!" "Haw?" eagerly asked my interlo cutor. "By staying out of the gaming rooms," I replied, and raising any ha passed on. There was another dear lady -5e wife of a very famous politician of a p neutral Power during the war. She came up to me in a Paris hotel, and leading me mysteriously into a corner said: "Sir Basil, you are such • a wonderful •inan—you can do things • that no one else can—can't you—er— can't yon—stop the war?" This was too much even for the "Mystery Man of Europe"—and while complimenting this kind lady, 1 he,d to regret that I was unable to take the Kaiser by the ear and ask him to ask for peace at encs. It is with such foolish impreseions that that journalist has •saddled rile when he called me the foolish and totally in- accurate title that has stuck to me ever since—and I would give much to get away from it. I am afraid it is like Sir Thomas Beecham—who is always being mix- ed up with the pills much to his an- noyance. We are fellow-martyrs— and he has any sympathy, for I know the penalty of such a public "label." M. Clemenceau will always be the "Tigr." Sir William Jeyesen-Hicks will always be "Jix." Sir Austen Chamberlain will always be associat- ed in the public raind with a monocle. may the ritVa sins And retribatoirisin: thomizA!. atter -tand that the giving :or names to plablia Meng a-44111"tavii4 a al71 „tv,& tit vo,hoild itt b0441P`: .740014 bne 0440 Irt tracked in off street doesn't matter sc). muth . when yott have hardwood iisgirs It can be cleaned p 1if.Y2 and evErYthing made spic ant span with practidally ns effort. And hardwood Boors are so inexpensive Ji N. CLUFF & SONS Seaforth TiiEREST T'S;;- KADE • 1P11 Re -roof ihislrearwitin • RIB -ROIL the Permanent Roofing for Barns, Houses, Shed. LOW% initial cost comes big sheets -easy an quick tie ' permanent—leak-proof.... handsome in appearance. Pre- vents fires ...increases value • of property. Made of faiaaous "Council Standard" galvanized sheets. Give size ofrooffor free estisnate. Write to: Eastern $teel Pdu .,6miteaf PRESTON. ONT.- Suceeesor to Metal Shingle and Siding Co. Ltd. 0 C OWE r )11. • , . With new brillianei .0 erfol klievoin ,, fir:i,- bell nityi,gt6 el, -A46. t,indlaid•o:t'.*,‘ 614.,,t1 to •$4..A.06selling a$,Vai.16, ' ' ifrSa"'' le no model itottn nkove its ,43111t QMPAY.4tto of Strad*- 0,tol4fe 17„1:,0,1ttnit tc ditIonlioistkati65 daaal'alte,+gtatlale • ett •Ntolfidohni • • dJ Th• e,ver4tet'V''0,6p000-00 eustomert eta me did :OW "r o jije?oi*Ooir traltoritop rate fret I one oft' • • ara -