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The Huron Expositor, 1929-02-22, Page 2•,11•44,' OILINDA7 4 ENTTOON •.•••,•• (ay zszw. mxvint05, Oeiderich, Oat) Ohl what, N we are Christ% lis earthly eliame or lose? Bright shall the crown of glory be, When we have borne the cross. Enough, if Thou at last The word of blessing give, Aud let us rest beneath Thy feet, Where saints and angele live.' -st927,4 .4,434 QW•ta0911,41§ eicatOlriuld 14%7=4 ' tlriteu.w1410 visia tc, 'helm> bad ,Atiosac ano ,nicace, fr,:aqUept eizaLasas OE Tai Pu. who is allowed to phileeophize all. too seldom. is 'is a setatleanam" "You mean that—that-- ?" "yes; time will work things out—always." "Time' is'a gentleman," by Charles G. 1‘,1• Thomson, is published y II/Lace naillans, Toronto, 285 pages, price ••••••0•••••••••••• Afire , •eeie , • 0.1,2•la • ereee seam= &ma piles believe tint eirparticulax cases are either hopeless or can only be relieved by net operation. Those people have aver tried NATURE'S PILE =MDT Twee herbal preparation not only zelieves the sufferer, hut it acts upon tba cause of the disease and effects n much more Lasting riddance than any other form of treatment. In the est 0 years hundreds and hun- eds f men, women and children lave cceededi in clearing them - Galva? d piles with MATURE'S 111111 - ELLE IDIP aar giviEng wip hope with other trete .44.ente. Ilf ,,ou have piles, no matter how bornarhopeleas they may seem, give thia remedy a trial. It has proved successful in 97% of cases, to the great gratitude of thousands of users. Get a box from youur druggist at once. Take accord- ing to directions—if you are not satisfied with the results after a fair trial, return the empty box and we will refund your money. Forest -Field Remedies„ Limnited., Toronto A ;•4• ' «•04", ova a•C eenaiine einame ••,,m • " .4r•• ••41%•••••-)&r• v4,* KEATIING'S DRUG STO ••-••1•,. s yeLo-rs sonicc The years are kind to stoves that are polished regularly with ZE''' RA, the wonderful new liquid stove polish. Not a spot. . not a bit of dullness just a raven -black as when it was bought—that's the way Zebra keeps your stove? Yet it is the easiest and cleanest polish you ever used. Try 1t2 STOVE ?CUSH OM BOTTLES For those who prefer it, Zebra Paste is still obtain- able. In both Paste and Liquid the Zebra is the sign of a good stove polish. 34 frni,ciroMM e«, • • Wow @xliesnia Wss4e McDoniT9 DatES39 Z@T020 Sold everywhere in CM4(fiE SEND FOR MEW "11LL1JSIMATED WALCSIDE S cseta9L3002 ERE61717Z27 .9agE) MORISTZ `iTC:)-FFmoigsm-TulagEter;)'"(t3 -CMOOMe EDVANUTaq • 444 PRAYE May that spirit ;be in us that en abled the saints of old to fight the gond fight of faith. May we grow daily in grace as we grow in knowl- eage of our God and Saviour. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR BEBRUARY 24 Lesson Topic—Christian Growth. Lew= Passage — John 1:40-42 ; Matt. 16:15-18 ; John 21:15-19 ; 2 Peter 3:18. Golden Text -2 Peter 3:18. John 1:40-42. Two of the disciples of John the Bat:fist turned from following him to Jesus. One of them, Andrew, imme- diately after an interview with Jesus went in search of his brother and brought him to Jesus. He was the first -fruits of Christ's disciples— small indeed was the beginning of the Christian church but it was the dawn of the day of great things. Matt. 16:15-18. We have related in these verses a private conference which Christ had with His disciples concerning Him- self. He inquired what people were saying about His identity and was told there were different opinions. It was admitted that He was some great person but because of His meati- ness of appearance, so different from what they expected, they would not own Him to be the Messiah. He then inquired what they, His intimate companions, thought con- cerning Him. In the reply which Peter made we see how far they had advanced in apprehension of their Master's mission from the day He called them to follow Him. "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God." John 21:15-19. The Scribes and Pharisees who should have been the foremost to give honor to Christ, were His worst ene- mies. The children were in the tem- ple, perhaps playing there. The rul- ers bad made it a market -place so it is quite probable the children, had made it a play -ground. The Jews taught their children to carry bran- ches at the feast of tabernacles, and to cry Hosanna; but here taught of God they cried "Hosanna to the Son of David!" This displeased the chief priests and they told Jesus so. He quoted what no doubt they knew by heart, though they did not compre- hend its real meaning, and then turn- ed and left them. On the morrow as he returned to the city, he being hun- gry, went to a fig -tree to gat -her figs. Finding none he cursed it. "Let no fruit grow on thee henceforth and forever." Jesus comes to many pro- fessed followers and finds nothing but a name; they have the farm of godliness but know nothing of the power of it. He came to the Jews but He found them barren. They called Abraham their father, but did not do the works of Abraham; they profes- sed to be expecting the Messiah, but. when he came, they did not receive Him. After they crucified Him saying let "His blood be upon• us and His children,'" the nation withered away as did the fig tree. His disciples and those out of the nation that received Him grew and flourished and great and strange things came to pass. Jesus is indeed the Messiah, the Light of the World shining more and more unto the Perfect Day. 2 Peter 3:18. But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To I -Em be glory, both now and forever." Religion in general is often repre- sented as grace to 'grow in grace' is to increase in that which constitutes true religion. Religion is as suscept- ible of cultivation and of growth as any other virtue of the soul. It is feeble in its beginning, like the blade° of the plant and it increases as it is cultivated. There is no piety in the world which is not the result of culti- vation, and which can -net be measured by the degree of care and attention bestowed upon it. No one becomes eminently pious any more than one ;becomes eminently learned or rich, who does not intend to. If these things are so, then we may see the propriety of the injunction to "grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ." Then, too, there is no wish more deeply cherished in the hearts of Christians than that honor and glory should be rendered to the Redeemer and nothing will enter more into their worship in heaven. 1SR. DUPIERROP4 Mr. Donald Duperron of Maxville, Ont., is only one of thousands of men who feel that "Fruit-a-tives" is their sure protector against Bilious Head- aches, Sick Stomach, Indigestion, Kidney Trouble, which are usually caused by constipation. As Mr. Duperron says: "After trying many remedies for Constipation, `Fruit -a - lives" was recommended—and the results were marvellous. All the ill effects of this disease left me, and 'Fruit-a-tives' really made a new man of me." Try this great fruit medicine. 25c. and 50e. a box—at dealers every- where. e --- ------- twits usually were made up of cop- pers. When asked what she was go- ing to do with her silver piece which had made her so happy, the surpris- ing, happy answer was given; "I am going to give it in at Sunday school, as God receives only coppers, and I want to make Him happy."—Dr. Mc- Kellar in the India Torch. A PERFECT MEDICINE FOR LITFLE ONES Baby's 04sit Tablets Should Be in Every Horne Where There Are Children. A IForty-Niner. Dermod' D'Arcy, an impeeunious young Irishman, arrives in California in 1848, just as the gold rush started and was received most hospitably by the ispano-Californians who, not re- alizing how their lands were to be w.' ung from them, accepted the early newcomers with true Spanish besPi- tality. One of their greatest interests was horse racing, and D'Arcy, riding his marvelous Pathfinder, augments his small store of gold by winning at one of these meets. Here, too, he meets Guerrero, with whom he falls violent- ly in love, but everything seems to conspire to win her scorn rather than her regard; but in the end her love for this extraordinary Gringo con- quers her pride and she realizes she is giving her love to a "man." For such D'Arcy proves himself to be. Acknowledged leader of a strange party—an ex -gaoler accompanied by eight ex -prisoners --a Chinese cook, a medical officer deserter from H.M.S. Invincible, and Rev. Obadiah Poppy from Boston—he makes sensible pre- parations—stakes his claims—works them arid attains remarkable success. Fair play for all works out in their strange community. "H,appy Camp," where they built their cabin and staked their claims was actually just their camp until in 1849, when that incredible rush was at its height, a town sprang up almost instantaneously and this picture is a. most interesting one. D'Arcy's band stayed and worked their claims. They were not allured by every tale of new and richer "finds." But D'Arcy re- alized from the first that the wealth of California was in her fields and valleys rather than this surface gold, and makes his plans accordingly. It would be hard to imagine more action than is contained in this book —"fights galore, hangings, the round- ing up of cattle rustlers, a deadly battle with an epidemic of smallpox, and an avalanche that destroys 'Bart' end Poppy, but a splendid° and lasting picture of a country experiencing a mad inrush of fortune seekers is giv- en and one of the great gold rushes of all time described faithfully and thrillingly. "Tideof Empire," by Peter B. Kyne, is published by the Copp -Clark Co., Ltd., Toronto, 397 pages, price $2.00. The perfect medicine for little ones is found in Baby's Own Tablets. They are a gentle but thorough lax- ative which regulate the 'bowels, sweeten the stomach; drive out con- stipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fever and promote healthful and refreshing sleep. It is impossible for Baby's Own Tablets to harm even the new-born babe as they are absolutely guaranteed free from opiates or any other injurious drugs. ;Concerning them Mrs. Earl Taylor, Owen Sound, Ont., writes:— "I have four children and have al- ways used Baby' e Own Tablets. I am never without the Tablets. in the house as they are the hest medicine that I know of for little onee." Baby's Qwn Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a beezIrom The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. L. WORLD MISSIONS BOOK LOVERS' CORNER (By Jane Holbby) "A Gentleman—Always" To a Phillippine Island, where his father, an American army officer, had been mysteriously betrayed and driv- en to suicide, Mackenzie Duell, armed with his small patrimony and a sci- entific knowledge of sugar production, goes to re-establish his father's aban- doned plantation—and to clear his father's name. He is joined Fu, a 'Oiliness father as cook. Duell, by his lovable nature and fair play, gathers about him a little band of loyal followers, but he is un- able to make any headway with the other planters, and disaster after dis- aster overtakes him, all directed and incited by Sotto, the native "bohh." Sundu, a Malary mystic, plays an important part in the issue. Ma - vane, an Irish sea captain and his lovely niece ye principal actors—the stage is set 111 wondrous beauty, and plenty of action abounds. Altogether it is a splendid and un - At Christmas time we had a happy surprise when two little friends— Sheila and Michael—children of a British Officer, arrived with their English nurse and a mysterious look- ing "medicine" bottle! "Why carry coal to Newcastle?" However, the contents of this special bottle turned out to be a "silver -copper" tonic. The children had been commissioned to bring the bottle to me to he open- ed. All throng% previous months it had received through a slot at the top all that was given to it, now, the time had come for it to offer up its gifts. Great was the interest and the excite- ment as I removed with difficulty he glued sheet that sealed the bottom opening, but at last amid clapping of hands and great rejoicing there rain- ed out of the bottle, as 1 shook It, silver rupees, smaller ailver comb and copper ones, and ev-en a note, snaking a total of Rupees abrtesn, 01.111040 tWelve, and' piessisx even as a Citelatrnara &mai. to tlo,. medi- cal vtork. I'essings on the chill They, too, had learned the cpirit of the little atri, Vito had heells ek•e% aTidaing eenti piece br a fond reia- tiva, atltem 'l2t ii rhoov rpm thltrisistb, ,eivert i?or dittva day CAOtill otegtkvio. no ph«. aetirilithe ettild (t-7701 pilid go triton Tiata zotiog ttlet I° Oveutv toraog orket. ; in Hong Kong by Tai who had served his ‘11FENiEact gszem ttio gewitealq9 •• •••,. • • • •••• • ' G.,76E 9 The Weolsgg Nanzaario Roe Connene mmail ©cad For any weakness of throat, or chest, for a troublesome cough, for bronchitis, grippe or other respiratory affec- tions—the best remedy is ANGIER'S EMULSION. It loosens and helps bring up the phlegm,soothes the throat,chest, stomach and intestines aids digestion and assimilation, over- comes constipation, and exerts a strengthening, tonic influence upon the whole system. ANGIER'S is an emulsion of specially purified petroleum oil with hypophosphites of lime and soda. Pleasant to take, ANGIER'S a s perfectly with delicate, sens stomachs. 11ThritioN,Dootorvalnor "1/usvo nrnenribnd .tidier'a for 16 yotlfb an a valarabla help in rsurnp;oncan of dadlity after client offea•• ttinno.' (874n00-•-7-11C.D. 6Se aid world has never seen before, what are and the British shipowners did the, we going to do about it? I don't rest. The London market once dons - mean by that, that a short-lived inated 'by prime Scots beef s now Shorthorn boom such as we have seen controlled and to a very large octets. t before but the mature' development supplied by the South American un - of a healthy demand such as can portationsd-Scottish Farmer. come only from the people themselves when they begin to want something "right now." The demand for Short- horns in the West is just like that for Forel cars, n.ot a -mushroom sort of a thing that has happened over night, but a thing founded on economics, on utility, net show ring performanee. Where can you find any breeder who is not reporting sales ahead of his supply? If you want a bull you have to put in your order way ahead of time just like you were going to get a new model Ford. Here is another thing that is un- doubtedly going to mean a bigger de- mand for all kinds of improved stock, and I believe ;because the Shorthorn domes the nearest being a general utility animal, that it is going to ef- fect the Shorthorns, and probably the dual purpose Shorthorns most of all. There is a strong tendency toward farm managerization, so that a hired manager will have charge of a dozen or more farms. A farm manager is pretty apt to be a college man with a strong lean- ing toward improved stock. What are those fellows going to do when it comes to locating good reliabe an- imals in large enough numbers to supply their farmers? "The Last of 5,000" represented ti loss to some few but on the whole it meant a gain to the world at large. Now we are facing a similar condi- tion and Shorthorn growers are on the winning side. "THE LAST OF 5,000" SHORT- HORNS FOR THE WEST Charles Russell, the "Cowboy Art- ist," once painted a picture of a scrawny cow, on a postcard, and in- serted the information that she was "The Last of 5,000." When the owners of the "5,000," who lived in the East, received this card they were far from pleased for they knew that their company would not be able to pay any dividends that year. But, some one among them had a bright idea and followed it. The cowboy who could paint pictures like that ought to go to school where he could learn to •become a real artist. Soon after that Russell went to school and in due course came. forth a "real artist." He has succeeded in painting the West in a way that it lives, breathes, smells of sage brush, branding fires saddle leather, and mountain juniper. His little picture, "The Last of 5,000," has been sold for far more than the original 5,000 Texas longhorns would have brought had they been allowed to live and reach the market. We are in a rapid age of changes, and maybe it is necessary that some one shall lose "5,000' more or less in order that some one else makes a "killing." The cattle business as see -n west of the Missouri is pretty scaly in spots and then again it is better than ever. 'Here is the idea in a nutshell; Peo- ple are calling for certain things and they want them "right now." The meat animals are not grown "right now." The idea seems to have set- tled in the minds of so many cattle men that when they get their cattle ready to market, no matter when, where, or in what shape they happen to be, that they ought to be bought at top prices. More than likely these same people have bought them high- er than they had any right to and then expected to cash in at a profit. The average American housewife goes to the store to 'buy a number of things, and nobody has told! her any- thing about the need of upholding the stock market by buying an armful of meat. More than likely she will see so many things she wants that by the time she gets to the meat mar- ket she has made up her mind to get a "quarter's worth of hamburger" in- stead f the nice juicy steak she had set o' to get. Well what of it? Well h e is just what: the fellow who has been growing the steak finds that there is not the demand for it he had expected and more than like- ly they Will have lost "5,000" more or less. On the other hand we have the fel- low who keeps his ear to the ground and is trying to give the public What it wants. This fellow is having no trouble doping this thing out and just as fast a he possibly tan he is swing- ing over from the old system of hit and miss, "catch as catch can into where he is growing something he lies already bargained for—old tnd'OA. tract raaybe—or knows« pretty nearly what be can sell it for and tfitere. Mere!" a mitt lnaiYara what he, h a got and 14-iat bo can eitpect it -lb ter- tedittr tb Mtn to iltipteVeo' 'Cade be is feel if doee not ritep up elm be /agie8 0l0&Z ow, 'Igor n minute ; 01.41406 • gtooto hofaAteipil to go 4 ati:ifog vitt tgiad.11110 opportbiftv. Who itro 41% Vait loco bave Was:hi lho vat of0iL teW:1500 =POO .601 thOugget260 O When men boast of common sense it generally means a contempt for common people.—G. K. Chesterton. GOOD BLOOD DID IT The above phase summarizes the old argument of the thoughtful paper read to the Farmers' Club (London) on the Monday of Smithfield week by Sir William S. Haldane, W. S. • The address was along lines with which we in Scotland are more or less fa- miliar. Sir William Haldane has on previous occasions focussed t h e thoughts of his fellew-countrymen up- on the topic which he enforced in London. He early saw that the ser- ious competitor with the British beef producer was the Argentine, and the superior quality of chilled beef from that quarter has enabled the Argen- tine patrons of high class British pedi- gree stock to capture the British and in particular the London beef market. The full significance of this fact has not been realized by the home breed- er of commercial cattle. If it were there would be, no occasion for an agitation to eliminate the scrub bnp. The capture of the British beef mar- ket by the South American cattle breeder is th'e natural and inevitable consequence of the liberal patronage bestowed for the past thirty or forty years upon the highest class of pedi- gree Shorthorn and Aberdeen -Angus bulls. Had there been no exports of British pedigree stock to the Argen- tine there would have been no capture of the British beef market by chilled meat from the • Argentine. Science and its application to ocean transit rendered possible the chilling of beef, 1•Ii• 55 t • 4 •lFik VO kR9EIT[111__ r -DBRHAPS Iby motsre.s. se -,. other means, gime lave been treating eratptottra, rather than 4.4i..e c4.115r5 Li=3 ef capip*tite, heartburn, cone croamach, are symptoms that the blood k impure. This explains the successful um of 1124, Willtimus' &in& Pilk all catch Elena io a typical ernpbei— JI to feel easby tired," writes Miss Margaret White, of Parry Sound, "and when It sat down to a meal 11 felt11 did not niIflt 50 eat. A doctor told me It was anaemic but I made little progress with Lk medicine. Whets 11 started =thing Dr. Willdarats' Arch Ma I =on noticed that may appetite was improving, at the headaches came lern frequently and that I was not co easily tiredl. Now acri vicighr has increased, nay cheeks are rosy and every cache and pain has win - . .1.• atrare 41114.17 2119 151=3 pour appetite. Ihry De. Mi- llman? Pink Pills from razz dareaggist's or by rina-.1, 53005 - at 50 caret a boa fro= 1171}car.VSliEnama arledicino Cap.,I3rccrrville, Oast ark% Send for free boolt--9;764:2 Ificut mad TEEce Mae. :11A 41 vin isp- 4,,,cr•••• s -tis „h• COMA Co P71114NA 6',CS aousawoLo mama Tim5.0 COURITRIZIS" <=1 Westin (0) 4701, louse TRIC Chew and Save the "Poker May ig e'en by the VOCW111771 (air- tight) fin, which kee,,,a gimp/up in The same perfeot condition as they were when they the faotavy. nas" There are two big pleasures in chewing ig men. One is your enjoyment of this fine, rich, full-flavotared tobacco. The other is receiving, FREE— handsome (Westinghouse) Electric Toaster for 26 sets of " Poker Mande!. •t• A "Poker Markel" le attachA ts every plug of ig et ciriewitag Tobacco,