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The Huron Expositor, 1929-05-17, Page 2�F. lr/l1111i1111111r11111111 ass ot■■■um■■r1■ir•■■■ ute MCS.1■ ■ ■■■ ■■ ��■ ■■■�■■ mosimmviii is gra ���� ,r GUARANTEED FINE YEARS AGAINST ]IWST Strongest by actual' test ULL MEASUREMENT LEAST EXPENSIVE CASTE -1-R CES G Wire Fence 37c per Rod ' Wire Fence (12© per Rod O Wire, even spaced, 9 stays (jicper Rod 3 Wire, even spaced 12 stays 50© per Rod arhed1 Wire, race and Clack Wire, Staplles at attractive prices. Dirlington U Iron Post © each In II. Sao, A° I A DWARIE, IPLITR1 I., fins Soma II G FURNACE WORK Everywhe're,. -from Coast to Coast-- ayouwill,: find it in the - Best liornes.. ' - 1 I 1(111i11i1ii11ii111111111111]11111111(II1I81111(flIiN(!li1111Il111(111111011111111101!1►1li1i1l1l1►11r 11111.11 11i11i11111 111 I11i' 1 (l {11'I .1 ii 1i 2stirnates g ,.lu Arm's' heti for any pole, in any Grade of &mmaan-LKent Oak, Maple or 1:,irdn ' it �E � � I (1��f �!'I. �`Il I'I i' "llij `' 1 ; , I 1 1 lII�►1i11yi111 {(4l,tll�Eli►{,i�,l�!(11� {,I�(I!r���►�{�II{I►►�� t lil i,l lll!liJ X411 ill11i►i 11111111if 11111 h;aa N. Dolt Trine Deico- ve you Itt®IP' an Das al tibiae youerre nun ttowm condi I aemmomn+tt tto LE,1014 ]for your. 'Yoe -2 Iia Ilnn�nT(y iimaares2eil urm Ileac uni tale u-stl i?z zao aPzemlla Doke = IL L ¶orca9Il11 Fr�„ !„ a! b, Ily F i sariTipmnizse wham your hear(' tJ'mn monney stud carr $a Erffez, Low &tII nu DStg9 alnamil Poem, easy rEsaaim Pam- =mak dne ipayumre.m2 tr nmo DELCO-LIIGET SALES & SERVICE CAMPBELL & HUTTON, Box 1, Komoka, Ont, W, C. BENNETT, Sub -Dealer, Walton. A INessuze ao Coon cma Them 73=9 Repanctkc Ram OMEN who owns Perfect ts sa Rarmgeo Te.sity enjoy cooking, becgranao ahem in tom cmkires around flow a olovy,sok ire. Perfect- ism 11'. If .i snr cooPrnrrngr in am fast rat gat, far fainter dm= onal and wood. Et gives a nootl¢ma flame;" rm® Ilcingrca>ned pots tam wash. Itt in cafe and altmrayo dperadahla. IPerics'a imam IIBangen iisa good( . A Eli= aa'mtc tro choose from f odlarci Fin= Ing P.g9 to c 225.00. t ill \1 (In L -41 g an LSle6CSCYCS1422Ci-a:-'4C G1ftti•-Caen ettrm Sd mrmcmtata NA.11Cysitcs ttc ,6s - Cy"s�e tal +"•^'- c o9c"WitiwWit? SUNDAY AF'IlIEII,NOON (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) Not all the blood of beasts On Jewish altars slain, Could give the guilty conscience peace Or wash away the stain. But Christ the heavenly Lamb, Takes all our sins away, A sacrifice of nobler name And richer blood than they. Isaac Watts. PRAYER Saviour and Lord, who in Thy gen- tleness and righteousness didst come to heal us all, heal the sinful diseases of our hearts and bring us bank front the paths of error, that by Thee who art the way we may attain to Thee who art the Life. Amen. Selected. S. S. LESSON FOR MAY 19th, 1929 Lesson Topic—Jeremiah Calls To Obedience. Lesson Passages-Jerenniah 7:1 -ll, 21-23. Golden Text—Jerenniah 7:23. In the twenty-sixth chapter of this book we are told that it was in the beginning of the reign of Jehoiakim, son of Josiah, king of Judah, that Jeremiah received the command to stand in the fore -court of Jehovah's house, and to declare to all the cities of Judah that were come to worship there, that -unless they repented and gave ear to Jehovah's servants the prophets, He would make the temple like Shiloh, and Jerusalem itself a curse to all the nations of the earth." No doubt it was in the history of the nation a time of great public anxiety. Probably a public fast had been ord- ered and so the people had crowded into the temple to make a special of- fering to the God of Israel. In the Expositor's Bible we have the scene described thus: The peo- ple are standing in the outer court, with their faces turned toward the court of the priests. The prophetic speaker stands between his audience and the throne of Jehovah—a visible mediator between them and their God. His message is not one of ap- proval. He does not congratulate them upon their costly offerings and manifest devotion. His message is a shock to their self-satisfaction, a warning of wrath and destruction up- on them and their holy place. His first utterance—"Amend your ways and your doing," was a startling one. They might ask, "Where was the need of amendment?" Were they not at that very time keeping the law of sacrifices, and were not the Levitical priesthood ministering in their order, and receiving their due share of the offerings which poured into the tem- ple day by day? Proceeding Jere- miah accuses his countrymen of theft, murder and other transgressions of the moral laws. Elle lived amongst them and knew them well and could be contradicted if his charges were false. He tells them plainly that by their frequenting the temple it has be- come a den of robbers. He further tells them they have confused the God of Israel with the gods of heathen- dom, burning incense to Baal and`now offering sacrifices to Jehovah. The people of Judah had been misled, but they were willingly misled—"Behold, ye trust in lying words that cannot profit—Behold, even I have seen it, saith the Lord" (verses 8-11). Jeremiah proceeds to tell them God's word about burnt offerings and sacrifices (21-23). It is as though God said through the prophet, "I am as indifferent to your burnt offerings, your most costly and splendid gifts, as to the ordinary sacrifices, over which you feast and make merry with -.your friends. The holocausts which you are now burning on the altar before me will not avail to alter my settled purpose. To obey is bet- ter than sacrifice." "Obey my voice, and I will be your God, and ye shall be my people; and walk ye in all the ways that I have commanded you that it may be well unto you." WORLD MISSIONS Youth and Peace. Again the young folk have set the world's tongue wagging, They have met, five hundred of them, from thirty-one countries, at Eerde, Hol- land, for the first World Youth Peace Congress. The British paper, Youth, cham- pions them in the following: "There are older people, perhaps, who think that this effort on the part of youth is presumptuous; that such important matters must be left to those who are ripe in years and ex- perience, to statesmen, and diplomats and politicians. Our answer is two- fold: Firstly, we do not claim that we, independently of older people and institutions, can solve all the world's complicated international problems, but we believe we can help to create the spirit of friendly understanding and mutual trust in which alone they can be solved, and by our study we can spread a better knowledge of the actual facts governing these pro- blems. "Secondly, we realize that it will be the younger generation which will be called upon to fight the next war, if it comes; to maim and kill, to be maimed and killed; and, therefore, it 's particularly the concern of youth to prevent that war. In other words, we claim a voice in the disposal of our own Iives." ANIMAL TOO BIG TO LIVE Mr. Ray Chapman Andrews, the American explorer, who has just re- turned from his fourth expedition in- to the Gobi Desert, Central Asia, un- der the auspices of the American Museum of Natural History, discuss- ed in London recently some of the dis- coveries he has made. These are re- garded by scientists as of first class mportance. "We have found this re- gion to be a great incubator, where many of the great beastp and animals started existence," said Mr. Andrews. "it may have been the birthplace of man. We found the bones of an en- tirely, new prOhistoric animal, the largest animal yet rzne' n• to uciease. Proud likto km62 fetati tv; &Ia or<mti E.W. G I L'LETT CO. LID, TDRON'TO•. - CAN. that the monster, which roamed through the world not less than eight or nine million years ago, was twen- ty-five feet long, fourteen feet high to the shoulders, had a neck twelve feet high, was as big as a freight car, and weighed over ten tons. It is just terrifying to think of the size of its bones. The upper bone of the fore- leg, the humerus, was four feet long and weighed 200' pounds. The monster is related to the rhinoceros family, but had a long neck and fed on leaves from the tree -tops. They died out, probably, because they became too big and vast to secure food." Mr. Andrews and his little party of nine other sci- entists and twenty-seven men found two complete skulls of the great beast, and enough bones for the skelton to be reconstructed. A skeleton of the beast was found intact, but so huge was it that it was impossible to move it without more preparations, and Mr. Andrews hopes to recover it next year. Another discovery was of a great mastodosi—+a prehistoric ele'phant— with a paw eight or nine feet long and shaped like a coal scoop. "We al- so found four titandthere skeletons, which had only been found before in Nebraska," said Mr. Andrews, "and this gave further proof of the migra- tion whiehaatatast have taken place in prehistoric times from Asia to Amer- ica." In the same district the party found traces of a great colony of people of the Stone Age. She Fee'. New Womm ml !©w SAYS ONTARIIO LADY AFTER TAKING DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS Mrs. IL Mitchell Was Troubled With ]Hier rack. Chatham, Ont., May 16.—(Special) —"I was troubled with my back so much I could hardly work," writes Mrs. L. Mitchell, 85 Baxter Street, Chatham, Ont. "I used three boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills and I feel like a new woman now. I have also used two jars of Dodd's Antiseptic Heal- ing Ointment and find it is the very best thing." When your back and limbs ache, and you experience dizziness and blad- der irregularities, be quick to give the overworked Kidneys fortifying help. Dodd's Kidney Pills stimulate the Kidneys. This treatment relieves you of discomfort, and wards off Rheumatism and Sciatica. Dodd's Kidney Pills have been tak- en by thousands of men and women all over Canada with very beneficial results. Obtained from druggists every- where, or The Dodds Medicine Co., Ltd., Toronto 2, Ont. THE BRAINY ANT IS OFTEN DUPED It will come as a surprise to many people to learn that the ant, which has held a great reputation for intel- ligent ability all down the ages. is occasionally outwitted and duped lay a creature whose mental capacity is far inferior. This creature is none other than the caterpillar of Lycaena trion or Large Blue, which is dis- tinguished for having, in the middle Fol Lumbago .go amei At the very first indication of nagging pains in the back or sciatic nerve, apply Absorbine, Jr. Relief will be prompt because this powerful liniment provides the necessary warmth which stimulates the circulation and breaks up the con- gestion. Absorbing, Jr., dm be depended upon to do its• work promptly and well. It takes the stiffneshout of your back, and being greaseless, does not stain the skin or clothes. Get a bottle to -day at your favourite druggists ---51.25. 7 Mar 279 am of its back, a gland 'which secretes a sweet substance akin to honey. Now ants are passionately fond of honey, and they will go to strange lengths to get it. The butterflies know this and make a special point of laying their eggs on wild thyme plants actu- ally growing on ant -heaps. The little caterpillars which hatch from these eggs feed on the thyme flowers until they have cast their skins for the third time; then they descend from the plant to the ground, where they are quickly discovered by the work- ers from the ants' nest. Now this is what each caterpillar is waiting for. No sooner has the ant appeared than it is deceived in a manner which can give points to the cleverest confidence trick ever work- ed on an unsuspecting greenhorn. The caterpillar deliberately exudes a drop of honey, and this the ant greedily swallows. Then, in a most inviting manner, the caterpillar arches its back. The ant takes the hint, and, seizing it round the middle, carries it into the nest. Once safely inside, the caterpillar shows its true colors. It makes no pretence of producing honey so the ants leave it to its own devic- es. The caterpillar wishes for noth- ing better now that it has been brought willingly into the nest, where it could not possibly have gained en- trance against the wish of the ants. With a right good will it sets to work to eat the young of its hosts, and continues doing so until it has attain- ed its full growth. Only then does it leave the nest to seek out some se- cluded place, where it develops into a beautiful winged creature. Although the electric eel that in- habits South American rivers some- times grows to be eight feet long, four-fifths of it is tail. Must be quite a wag.—Border Cities Star. Those who play whoopee must not only pay the fiddler these days, but pay the] whole darned orchestra.— Detroit Free Press. It appears difficult for anyone to get on in these times without giving a pledge.—Lord Grey. The only people I have heard speak English as it should be spoken were an Indian and a Scotsman. — Miss Sybil Thorndike. Fiji Islands report that the grand- son of a cannibal chief has become a great surgeon and has "operated suc- cessfully on many Europeans." So did his old man. .Detroit Saturday Night. BOOK LOVERS' CORNER (By Marjorie M. Powell) A Good Sport. Jane Cassell goes to Storm House as governess to Carol, the child of Jerome and Elsie Delafield. Elsie is much older than her husband, but she brought him back to peace and power after the devastating effects of the war. In this quiet Californian home he finds himself and the means of ex- pression in his books. A brief visit from Elsie's half sis- ter,Sylvia, and her husband, has a rather upsetting effect on all of them. Through the husband Janes realizes what love could be. When Elsie dies suddenly, after a brief interval, unhappily for all of them, Jane returns as Jerome's wife —quite a businesslike arrangement; but Jane loves him and has strength and character enough to admit it, and unrestrainedly shows her love for him. Their life is ideal until Sylvia, now about to be divorced, returns and de- liberately, in spite of her earnest pro- testations that dear Jane mustn't be hurt, engages the affections of the lovable but inexplicable and easily - led Jerry. In the end he returns to Jane, broken and racked by illness and is only called back to life by Jane's in- sistence. The development of the character of Jane is a joy. From a young, in- experienced, imaginative girl she de- velops into a fascinating, steady, ad- mirable woman and withal so human. Kathleen Norris' characters are al- ways appealing, but she has created none more lovable and engaging than Jane. "Storm House," by Kathleen Nor- ris, is published by Doubleday, Doran & Gundy, Toronto. The Land of the Midnight Sun. In "High Hazard" the adventures of two American girls begin even be- fore they board the Lady Rathlin, the ill-fated Arctic coastal steamer that was to mean fate to all her crew. The girls are lured into a Chinese opium den and robbed of a valuable pearl necklace, but are rescued by Eric •Gilchrist, also a fellow passen- ger. One of the party proves to be an international crook. All along our credulity is taxed but in the midst of so much excitement one is not sup- er -critical. After extraordinary ad- ventures, escapes, marvellous feats of endurance and ingenuity the survivors land at Hell's Gate. There our im- agination is sorely taxed, as when they discover gorillas as the demon guardians of a volcanic cave and a herd of white elephants, "white and woolly as white and woolly could ev- er be." However, Mr. Watson has told a tale that is easy to read and will cer- tainly provide any number of thrills. "High Hazard," by Robert Watson, is published by Louis Carrier and Co., Ltd., Montreal. Juvenilia. "Three Boys on the Yangtse— House Boating in China," by M. McKinley, is published by McClelland & Stewart, Toronto. Jack Martin, who had been at school in America, returns to China for the holidays accompanied 'by tWo school friends, Pat Murphy and Alex. Mackay. Jac'k's parents litre in the interior and arrangementa have been made for the boys to ee'eonipany friends of Tifr. Martin's on the ascent of the 5tarngtee River --the only. r>'lrieenu off tll* vottat on tto 'got l ,1 Of' 0..1e !Idwit r��, oeff 8&a,&4 z ana interior. The friends are delayed but it is decided that the boys—the only white people—must proceed. Jack is the only one who has any misgiv- ings; to the others it is a glorious adventure to be "on their own." Their adventures aren't all glorious, but in spite of the dangers of whirlpools, where their boat is almost sucked un- der, the danger of robbers, they '• are forced to apply for a guard of armed soldiers—they reach their destine - tion. The return journey is even more exciting, as they are the bearers of a large sack of silver money to sa. man in one of the large cities. Prom the beginning they are watched ala& their clever devices, deeds of daring, miraculous escapes and dauntless courage will prove fascinating to mull' readers. The book would perhaps be - particularly enjoyable for boys from twelve to sixteen. 7a,,h,:h.-a, .,...„....--r_i....7.,:s.,7.?"\--a:Iallree;sil,27,5;!--ear. ,:::::::::.r 1," a , \,..,1,1.r.r.s.%-•-..).s._;W:,:,07,,r,e_ci)<IE/4/3-cp->'. 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