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The Huron Expositor, 1928-06-29, Page 2jJ 4.441i4,P.F-4--,4.4 Jt Sotao.;i; --..--- .' t OIDIVZ47,?' files, cock - Moths, mosqui- does not illjure ourtains or furni- , WHIZ is double th. WI -HZ is not un - ant. o $1.00 with Sprayer C ENOID Nakes contented cows; keeps off flies, kills lice. Itallk, $]L2 per Galion W'k allantb13411.:%46il. 0.414 Vlrt,kt U :0 .0hrist, is be . Vadat VIralaee God the beat— ' aeleatito, sowcishq4 adedenee holy breast 44014414043 Ey her goad nurture let us Thy little ones, be fed, And by her guidance gentle Our wandering steps be led. Clement of Alegandida. Window Screens 4nd Doors made of hardwood, well finished, a com- fort in hot weather. Screens, 45s to 90c. Screen° doors, $2.25 to $4.75 Screen Door as illustrated, 3.25 FIy Swats, 10c EDGE TWINE - Made by the largest twine factory in the ire. Absolutely tested and guaranteed. void shortage. 3A.IRN JA For garages, • outhouses, barn doors, etc, in gallon tins Olaily. $2.25 11) ritish &n- ook now and OOF RIAlLWT Saves the composition roofs ; is ma. of pure sphalt and 1 preserve corrugated --Or galvanized iron roofs. Per gallon, $L35 5 Gallon Rots, per? gall., $1.20 OPE Long fibre, pure manilla rope makes the ideal hay fork rope. Look over your rope now. We stock tarred %-inch rope, the proper kind for hay In FURNACE WO dBSTYS is. your mail, too, and you can use it at any time to bank wi rn, the Bank of Montreal. it is safe and convenient to deposit or withdraw money wi is r ough the Post al. ee. Ask for folder telling how to do k. • • ,477;.r.-21 •.----..- ,.„1-:-..- :i.L. . __, , - .. ,,... ------ - . .."•4.F=0—'4 ------ _ . , ---------__. - . - - — - — . --- - -- 1--- i--;''''er24*.erhohee 14° •NP,1416 (4"' • • e4\ ,, ;4•°•°- ' kell '.•4•Zi.-,e4 ''''. '':4- _k, :•"'" *?..-4:--e- , -4.4.4.4Z7....;',--fr e%7,.",4 44-,h _........ -- wo, elitamea. Sea es4 e.6;4 LA'r v 9°1 I r 07'4. • 10 ,•;‘, P,7,-,s3st20,01.4.?? e eleetrie., late .mepta, Eiktodi fllUY. alocillIrikacte Wiallag, lavcrr,, arnoto 4t8s4.7's .gg4 .aligiCass3 ez7 geoceoe,oce L 1 COLS, Menager tqs'i.*4*.)hgt. • _ 'LL .51!Aitt00 7,,kntrov .,attt Tdkr#R,,r. &t"rd 8i.eltmresv, .Prayer We praise Thee, 0 God, for the ase auranee given in Thy oly Word that if 'Qve train up a child in the way he should go that, when he is old, he will be found in the way of righteous- ness. May this thought •futd lodg- ment in hearts and, minde of all to whom the instruction of the young is entrusted. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. S. S. Lesson for Jelly ist, 1928 Lesson Topic—The Early Life of Saul. Lesson Passage—Deut 6:6-9, Phil. 3:4-6, Acts 22:3, 27, 28. Golden Text----Eccl. 12:1. We cannot state with •perfect ac- curacy the date of Saul% birth, yet it is reekoned to have been in the same decade as that of our Lord him- self. But all the circumstances which -surrounded the cradle and in- fancy of the infant Saul were widely different from those amid which His Lord had grown to boyhood. It was in an obscuTe and lonely village of Palestine that Jesus "grew in wis- dom and stature and favor with God and man;" but Saul passed His earl- iest years in the famous capital of a Roman province, and must have re- called, with his first conscious rem- iniscences, the language and customs of the Pagan world. Saul himself is a d, to gives us some information about h family connection. In Acts 22:3 w read, "I am (verily a man which am Jew, born in Tarsus, a city in Cili- cia." Again in verse 27 we rea "Then the chief captain said un him, tell me, an -O. -thou a Roman He said, Yea And the chief captain answered, with a great sum obtained 1 this freedom. And Paul said, But was free born." If he was a Jew how was it he was born out of Ju- dea, away in a Roman city situated on the southern coast of Cilicia on the ,Mediterranean Sea? And how him, Tell me, art thou a Roman ? Tradition has it that his parents or grandparents were Galileans and had from some cause or other, been com- pelled to migrate; and that they took up their residence in the Pagan city of Tarsus where many of the Jews of the Dispersion had sought refuge. They thus came, though retaining a knowledge of Hebrew, to speak Greek as their native tongue. Thus it was that Paul claimed to be an "Hebrew of the Hebrews" (Phil. 3:5). _How he claimed to be a Roman citi- zen is based on supposition. How his father or grandfather obtained the highly -prized distinction we have no means of ascertaining. It certainly did not belong as a citizen of Tarsus. The franchise may either have been purchased by Saul's father in his early ays, or obtained as a reward for some ,ervices of which no trace remains, he father would no doubt be glad e could pass on to his son such a pro- ection in the perilous days in which hey lived; but the posseesion of such made no difference in the training which he -gave to the young boy Which was, as we shall see, the ordinary raining of every Jewish boy. We read in Deut. 6:4-9 the words Thich Moses spoke to the Israelites oncerning obedience. They were to each the commandments, the statutes red the judgments, diligently unto heir children that they might observe o do them. From the Acts of the Apostles and aul's Epistles we gather that Saul'sducation was not neglected along hese lines. He "was- taught accord - g to the perfect manner of the law f the fathers" (Acts 22:3.) In Phil. :5-6 he tells, us he was very much a ew--"Circumcised the eighth day f the stock of Israel, of the tribe of njamin, an Hebrew of the Heb- ws; as touching the law, a Phari- e; concerning zeal, persecuting the hurch; touching the righteousness hich is in the law, blameless." Every Jewish boy at the age of five gan to study the scriptures with s parents in the home; arid even rlier than this he would ,doubtless ve learned to recite Psalms 113-118 hole or .in part. At six he would art to go to his "vineyard" as the lehie called their schools-. At ten would begin to study the Law. t thirteen he would by a sort of onfirmation "become a 'Son of the ominandment." At twenty, or earl - r, he would marry. During many ars he would be ranked among e "pupils of the wiser and be airily occupied with the "traditions the fathers." It was in studies nel habits like these the young Saul Tarus grew up to the -age of thir n, which was the age at which a elvish boy, if he were destined for e position ,of a rabbi, enteredthe hool of Gorse great master. The ster among whose pupils Saud s enrolled was the famous Rebhan maliel, "a doctor of the law had reputation among all the people." the feet of this eminent Sanhe- t sat Saul of Tarsus in allepro- bility for many years. (Ialuch that learned denting these yeare con- ed to be, till the last, an afliena- 1 part of his knowledge and exper- oe. The 'effects of his study of Seri/atm.-es are more or less tTao0-- e in every Epistle which he wrote. the day of his death he neither 'etl nor under -rated the advent - es of the Jew.—Contierited Teem non Parrar's Life of St. Peal. T r d s h t t t c t a t P e t in 03 J 0 Be re se c w be hi ea ha w st ra he A c ie ye th of a of tee J th se ma wa Ga in At dris he (ha time tie ien the abl To densCa 1 Warta Dlleafiarac. ft is a very easy thing to oonie these splendid meetings and (Ant. ljettus. Altai Mgt Whezeier tho sun." 'Teo,3 knew that; it is spits true; but after fl the Litoit vre4e.itn- riltdCda. iC2 ttitonit !..yortt, Sects •tvill aii tt thlirba tettp? imeom-26rtab1s -for stcoa ,wiag Vasie llis&Sae rdgiao341,0*-the -et 'have tor Wleet, 4i.6041 . -aSatdSeaatee ag, e iFP44. cir,a, • , t) gla, 4440K44.4'4::*44::, liiiV44. ;4141404 aostacay 4444 ;it irrazit.ge!qq.44 6.1;0, L7^ F4*,,,,Opragazot It? gag*, unc.azga lati44\44,- ccE 040WOU Eugl QlkeztIkie system• fruit SkillAid OrQati. 4'*a,Z&CGilli4 ArdP.AtelaeSVP V0044., Oiyaket401441a1110.D.VoilaA. aut4040. Try at4p101. alrutatafatri,tale araeGia,gcreAuca. 14,0,4v- • nothing fog His kingdom." Oh, that we might heable to look back and say, "Praise the Lord, I had ray part in it." There are, we know, many earnest fathers and mothers who look forward .,with the deepest, earn- est longing *at their children may go out as missionaries, and who teach them from the beginning to look forward to it, and rejoice when the war opens for them to dedicate their lives to the preparation for such a life service. — Mr. SEugene Stock. HOW DELICATE GIRLS ARE MADIE STRONG Rich, Red Olood Needed to Keep Up °Iritteir Vitality. It should be borne in mind that pale, bloodlesa °girls need plenty of nourisbraent, plenty of sleep and regular out-of-doors exercise. But a lack of appetite and tired, aching limbs' tend to -hinder progress. To save the weak, thin -blooded sufferer, •she must have new, rich blood, and nothing meets a case of this kind so well as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills not only enrich and in- crease the -blood supply, they help the appetite and aid digestion, relieve the weary back and limbs, thus bringing new health and strength and trans- forming anaemic girls and women into cheerful, happy People. The value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the case of anaemic girls is proved by the case of Miss Lucy Stod- dart, Margaretville, N.S., who says: 'From the age of 12 to 15, 1 was in an anaemic condition. I was eery thin and nervous, had no appetite and had no desire to take part in the doings of those of my age. My mother got tonic after tonic for me, but they did me very little good. Thee DT. Williams' Pink Pills were recommend- ed an altiost from the first they seemed to be just what was needed to restore my strength. After taking the pills for a time 1 felt an alto- gether different girl. I got up in the morning feeling bright and active, and ready for -work or play. Since then 1 have always taken a couple of boxes of Dere:Williams' Pink Pills in the spring as a tonic and have thus kept in the best of condition." Every weak girl should promptly - follow the example of Hiss Stoddart, feeling sure that the pills -will renew her health. You can get, the pills from -any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 'IPO MOVE IN SPIRALS A UNIVFV.SAL INSTINCT From time immemorial it has been noticed that a man lost on the open space will walk in -circles, and that blindfolded people will do the Jame thing. This has been explained by those prone to bright misconceptiols and ever prompt with erroneous an- swers by the fact that there is usual- ly a slight difference in the length of a man's legs or- at least in the strength of there, and that unless he had a mark to get his eyes upon the longer or stronger leg would natur- ally cover more -ground than its fel- low, and in time tend to move the body in the direction of the shorter or weaker. This is now shown to have been a mistake, of which notice is hereby given. The learned scien- tist to whom we are indebted for striking the shaekles_ of this e-rror from the mind is Dr. Asa A. Schaef- fer, of the University of Kansas, who has made three hundred experiments on 'human beings and different living creatures. As a result of these he reports that there is some mysterious instinct in all creatures from the low- est to the highest to make them trav- el in spirals when. they are travelling without purpose or when the differ- ent aids to their direct progress are withdrawn. He was led to the expeiirnents when TKO, EAK, ERVOUS BENEFITED tti Firth's= ly *a. Pilarc az* Vegehblo mon! &halo= Mince, 4ssbee•—:"Aftez the birth of11217 6-rerene»y4lic;ftw111.,1.c172, Ot-l'ous ad weak toild knit headache; ka*Schte and ter- tab/a' "alba every suiler,:so ydava before '64,1 liV'dis a Vies Voce. :COmp on rad. Itat bottle -nad it did 6.6toylil Of goad, atet. he tVItheut ASPS*Dtigt1PP411112" &Ate detiL te&ad to ovary =mot ratzgpv, go• iiteem3' qultbs„. A4,1I:r Inla. Titia , 1 ..,. ,Iy.t,-,,,,, .,. :777,,, Jiit„7,7:7, „,. . . ill; 040.,,,„1,'*80,74414,t1gta .01.4.*.' lb '141,0'0!11'171..4:4c' ''1,344:.k.A-t. ''' : ''' ' ' '' ''' :41,14470*.:1* V.4.0101404 'b144'M.'01Prii1141 .rt'S44.4' drocm4#4,114..-•idoiroE4,A0 ,,5.6,.! ter tkilea'40,014.trotair tide. `iittLIF -004. "t tura . it : vt,Q,' ali$poe. ev4mIca400 till 1 latao 17.4. Now the elootor la a man i 0 aetion ad Paw -Idle poem -mance ,.'.'(.4241:111:hid.Wfii.:11,i,,ilillz° th,R1:.ft.Ill'eciaantaut4ad:eupTtItrtralcia9:: Mtcyc101dth11/1S 4131,4! 14,17M ilMarli, 'le. Chertswere kept' of -thap, Peregrin, [..i ticks. Othrs were indfOlded 'and asked to? perform in 4lth gaiAlrariV 1100/s, using all the knowp stroke. Severed were blindfolded and 'Shed to drive a motor ear in a Sao place. Others were blindfolded and instruct- ed to dired the chauffeurawho had th o use .,of their eyes but followed orders. Zven an insane patient and an imbecile with the mind of a smell Child were among the instruments employed by Dr. Schee er, and was- ticaliy all of them gave the same re- sult. All proceeded net in straight lines, nor in zig-zag fashion but in spials. The only noticeable difference ne ed among the various performers w that those who were ordinarily ab to concentrate themselves swiftly u on any problem walk in smooth spirals and fell More quickly in them. This would indicate that th better control a man had of his brai the sooner he would get lost on th trackless desert or in the heart the forest. -Circls made by peop who have Yost their way are mac larger than the eircles made by tho who are blindfolded, because thos who are lost have their eyes to gui them for a •short i distance. Blind folded persons driving in a motor Niri make larger circles than when walk Mg, and in an airplane, we suppos the circles would be wider yet. fore the 'Bremen landed on Greenl Island it is supposed- to have flown in circles for twelve hours. Thi S I not to suggest -that mechanism is sub jeet to the same mysterious force tha controls the at,eps and strokes o wandering humans and swimmin amoeba, but because the plane w under human direction even when th instruments became ueless. Contrar to popular belief one does not nature ly circle tm o the left ore than to th right or vice versa. In the 'maid of course, the deflection may be du to walking round a tree or rock, an this May give direction to the tu of the subsequent spirals. There is no eonneetion between right-handed or a right -lower -limbed person and the direction he is at as le p - • to of be se de 11 5, e - as s, /13. a to 4,4 take when lost or temPorarily depriv- ed for the use of his eyes. Nor is there any particular tendency either to right or left. One may begin to spiral from left to right and present- ly switch- to right to left and back again. Villhether one walked back- ward or forward he continued to pro- ceed in this curving manner, and the fact that he knew he would probably do so did not help him to conquer the -weakness. Blindfolded mice, young jelly fish, young king crabs, tadpoles and sea worms all swam in the same way as blindfolded college students. In some organisms in which there is no sense to guide the direction of spiraling is fixed. Thus, one species of water animal will always spiral to the lft, and another, not to be out- done, will always spiral to the right. In all blindfolded tests put together the number of right turns was equal to the number of left turn, but in the walking tests alone the number of right turns was almost twice that of left turns. What is the meaning of this and what is the cause? There is no sat- isfactory answer. The presumption tion is that the spiral movement is a universal property of moving, living matter. It is believed to be a simple mechanism that has developed very little in the past few millions of years, being not appreciably different in power in the amoeba and the human being. In man the headquarters of this curious mechanism is supposed to be somewhere in the brain, but since when in action it does not send direct reports to the consciousness this is no more than a speculation. It has been called a sixth sense, but for what purpose it was evolved nobody knows, nor is it easy to guess in what re- spect it must at one time have con- tributed to self preservation, the ob- ject of all senses. Yet it is in every living thing, the - mechanism of the spirochaete, an organism about one two -thousandth of an inch long, be- ing the smallest spiral known in liv- ing matter. Revived—A recently appointed 'vic- ar, he his first seTmen, spoke severely against betting. Aften the sermon was over a parishione-r told the clergy- man that one of the wealthiest mem- bers of the congregation was a notor- ious gambler. The vicar, not wish- ing to begin badly, approached the rich man after the service, and said: "PM afraid I must have &fended you to -day, but—” "Don't Mention it," was the an- swer. °Ws a mighty had sermon that doesnft hit me somewhere."— London Daily Chronicle. Mamas Boy—The closing of the Central Reserve of Minesweepers brings back to my mind a stoty of the early day of the war. A hefty yowng fellow of nineteen or there- about was asked by a local worthy why he did not jein the Allay. 'Mother won't let meat' said the Ind; "she says it's too dangerous in the trenches."? "Mother!" snorted the other. "What's yon mether got to do with it?" "Alt!" was the reply. "Ye don't know Mother." , The next time they met the lad was in sailr's rig. allellor said the older man. "What you up to, eh?" "Mlnesweenin9," was the resonse. 44stit thats more sl rigerous than the treacle" "Yes." said the lad, "I know that --bt Mother don1.9"--Itndon Mrn- ing Post. 4 AStronormical Note itilleeltie. may. be alogiolop..0. gtrr• if ytu• 7iyup 1td lott,-. a .41tor ht &Mt 'and Sta*-t-.40tet .rat 01068t. to. klf0,S,Iiiitht.10 iitivora • • 44 •r. 4, 4., , ' •" 1.4 1NTEVE F.before ligaQ single araanlifac- -1-urersvietet7 'ce boards a all official records. lOrakes, twice as e cient as those estab- `.ed as standarcil bp the A. A. A., safeuard) Studebaker engineering Studebaker's great speed. enus, quality materials, pre- St u deb eke r's o primp is i'eci c34on ,,,anship and rigid manuUcturing facilities en- a,.„spetion, snake brilliant able us to sell every model aa apeecil and stamina Bsossble. alow One -Profit price. ICIorivta Drive t \.ese. Canadian -built aStudebakerchanapion oday. 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CANADA YP'311144 XLAIBASTENE, ELIMMISILD ?Arno Canada ‘.'a4 • Elrepro f Wallboard Catacc, AL Silk Pam Zak SF cm tO elte see, >WM, (1) Tiire sno w y to test itS1 NIX 2 pressure gauge can ever give you a true indication a El -illation. There is a correct pressure for your tirez 2t pegnds on Ulla size of the tire- and [g, r wheel Road. , t that pressure your tiro will give you stani. mom mileage. /3 your tire inflation goes three pounds below that correct ?resre you cut • e a frostai the life of ykur tires. Um a gage. IS:tatteri.1.1 drop in et a IIIonniraion Th e Imepet once cveals mud Lave every tire inspecte, and the prams= ceelte& Iet n =part march for eta° aild beldam Min a alight ra* will prevent a blo-t. Yon o„:7.e tt,evc1 far away Arm eg •