The Huron Expositor, 1930-02-07, Page 2l�.
d Pas't'y Eipert says
in �s a strong, rich flour, wird great expandinpe
gto use 1 ►blespooa less per cup i your.ke. e for
Fit a dluae or soft wheat flour. fit
use half half water (luke-warns) with Purity.
lielF,Oteeipe fox Flaky Pie Crust
Fold 'two pie. ,shells use 2 cups Purity Flour.
�3 teasepoa salt, 4 cup shortening '/a cup
. fold water. Mix flour and salt, cutting in the
shortening until the mixture is like fine meal.
'thoroughly with the water. Roll out thin,
chalf buit tter and half lard. For extra rich pastry
Send3bc for Purity Flour Cook Book.
Western Canada Flour Mills Co. Limited96R
Toronto, Ont.
4/r
c �
r= 1.ith(
Still the Best for Bread
SUNDAY AFTERNOON' -
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
'Ga, labor on; 'tis not for nought;
Thy earthly loss is heavenly gain;
311 en heed thee, love thee, praise thee
not;
The Master praises; what are men?
Go, labor on; enough, while here,
If He shall praise thee, if He deign
Thy 'willing heart to mark and cheer;
;No toil for Him shall be in vain.
H. Bonar.
PRAYER
0 God, who hast set before us in
Thy Word the way of life, help us by
Thy spirit to heed the warnings and
cherish the promises so that our lives
shall be spent in Thy service to Thine
honor and glory. Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 9th
Lesson Topic -Warnings and Prom-
ises.
Lesson Passage -Matthew 7 : 12,
15-27. -
Golden, Text -Matthew 7:19.
In the preceding five verses Christ
talks of prayer and of the relationship
of God's giving to man's giving. "If
ye then, . being evil, know how to give
good gifts to your children, how much
-more shall your Father which is in
Heaven give good things to them that
ask Him? "Therefore," Christ adds,
-"all things whatsoever ye would that
alas 'panda a sudden flight. into Egypt
and 'wandered about homeless for
some time, who says to these disel-
pies that at a certain time people
will be calling him, "Lord, Lord,' and
He will not know them.
We ea* him by the quiet river, 'we
'watched him driven into the wilder-
ness, again we saw Him by the sea-
side; now we behold him seated upon
a mountain from which He, asit
were, projected Himself across' the
whole abyss of time. Henceforward
He takes the name of Lord; hence-
forward "these says of mine" are to
be the root and core of the only dur-
able principles of life and men are
wise or foolish according as they
build or build not on Christ.
men should do to you, do you even so
to them; for this is the law and the
prophets." The law is fulfilled in one
word -Love. Thou shalt love thy
neighbor as thyself. This is the law
and the prophets. It is more necessary
for our soul's good that the diseases
of our affections should be cured than
our intellectual mistakes should be
corrected. If a man love not his
brother whom he hath seen, how can
he love God whom he hath not seen?"
Verses 15-27.
"Beware of false prophets," Jesus
says. "False, prophets." To think
the word false should ever be used in
corjunct'on with the word prophet
They are so contradictory in mean-
ing, but in all ages the false has fol-
lowed the true and brought it into
trouble. How then are we to know
the false from the true? Jesus
Chr•ir,t tells us -"By their fruits ye
shall kr.•ow them." See how rapidly
Christ changes the metaphor in his
discourse. He was a moment agr
sneaking of a wolf in sheep's cloth-
' ing and now it is grapes and figs and
thistles; but he makes the same in -
!fel env... It is ever "by their frlits
ye shall know them." Christ, all of
a sudden seemingly, drops the sub-
ject of good and bad fruit from go
and bad trees and calls attention to
Himself. "Not every one that saith
unto Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into
the kingdom of heaven, but he that
doeth the will of My Father which is
' in Heaven." Here is a man who be-
gan life in a manger, and whose par-
HURON EXPOSiTOR
WORLD MISSIONS
The Red Man's iountry.
In June the last bit of Canadian
territory belonging to the Red Man,
comprising about 128,320 square
miles, 'passedinto possession of the
Government. It stretches from the
Albany River to the Manitoba boun-
dary. During preceding years the
Governments of the United States
and Canada have gradually acquired
the lands that were once the Indians.
History is repeating itself; nations
come and go, and the North Ameri-
can Indian, as a separate people, will
be soon no more. There is sadness
in such changes when we remember
that once the Red Man roamed at
large on a continent all his own, but
his last years are peaceful, thanks to
a kindly Government and to Chris-
tian people; and those of then who
are left, are being helped to a life of
usefulness and independence.
This does not mean, however, that
the Indian problem is no more. The
United States Government has lately
brought out a survey which seeks to
find out just what service is best
suited for the Indian of to -day.
Greatest stress is laid on education,
as only by education can the Indian
fit into the complex life of the White
Man. To make himself independent,
industrious and useful to his own
race and country, is surely a worth
while ambition.
The survey frankly criticizes much
of the secular and religious teaching
hitherto obtained. The former has
not always been practical, and in the
latter the missionaries have not al-
ways been able to "connect religion
with Indian life in any real way."
Regarding the physical welfare of
e people much is still wanting.
Thr..In.:n is peculiarly susceptible
to to rculosis and trachoma, and he
requires a more adequate health pro-
gramme, especially along preventive
lines.
Again, the survey has something to
say about the need of more co-opera-
tion between the missionary and the
Government, and less overlapping on
the part of denomination. A great
unified programme, which will bring
to the front leaders of the race and
train them for specialized service
among their own people, is the goal
of all those who are warmly interest-
ed in Indian work.
Each
package
marked
Chinaware
contains a
piece of fine
English ware,
old ivory
tint, new irregular
borders.
Qwcic
UAKER Oars
am
D /NAM/C!
!--in beauty •- performance -- value
THE NEW
EFSKD
Tire New Erskine is big, fast, powerful - dynamic by every measure.
its z x4 -inch wheelbase is low -swung, with lavish legroom. Its 7o -horse-
power engine, with new full -power muffier, provides more power per
pound than any other tar under z goo. It embodies such advance-
atents as Duo -Servo 4 -wheel braes .. hydraulic shock absorbers . .
self-adjusting spring shackles .. rubber engine mountings . . thermo-
* Notice ly controlled cooling .. and many more.
$1155
A•"
Regier's Garage
SEAFORTH. ONT.
AA/C1 IA B'C LO FIR 01' c AMPIq
Painful rheumatism is quickly re-
lieved by the use of Gallagher's Kid-
ney Remedy. A purely Herbal Medi-
cine sold by -
J. E. KEATING, Seaforth.
A. W. E. HEMPHILL, Hensall.
How well you look!
.1 am writing you again to express my
sincere gratitude for the continued success I
have maintained through my daily dose of
Sruschen. Only last week a man ntet me (who
saw me a few months ago when I was crippled
with rheumatism). His first remark was how
well I looked. I replied, ' Yes, I have only
S ruschen Salts to thank.' He said he was
feeling ' off colour' and would start the Ifrus-
chen habit next day. I always recommend
S rusclten Salts." Jas. F. WOOLSEa.
original letter uu 9I'e for Innpenttou.
Kraschen Salts is obtainable at drug and
department stores in Canada at, 75c. a bottle.
A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or 5
months -good health for half -a -cent a day,
larger than ten by twelve feet. There
is, therefore,'no restricted district nor
zoning -each abode sets on a 25 -foot
lot, facing the highway. There is nu
electricity. Water is drawn from a
common well.
Nevertheless, this unique settlement
is rather prosperous, highly satisfied
with itself and quite helpful to the
neighborhood because of its store-
house of labor available to nearby
orchardists and berry growers. Also
tobacco planters call upon this colony
for help in .springtime to plant the
slips, and in autumn to strip the
leaves.
But it is the tomato that furnishes
steadiest employment. Planting in the
springtime, picking in late summer
and early fall, with work for every
hand, big and little, in the nearby
cannery.
HOW TO PLAN THE HARD TIME
PARTY
The following suggestions are pub-
lished in response. to several requests
for ideas regarding games and the
serving of refreshments for a "hard
time party."
Everyone should home to the party
looking as poverty-stricken as pos-
sible. The hostess greets her guests
in a faded house -dress, patched apron
and house -shoes; the host appears
collarless and coatless; guests are
equally as amusing.
Roll up the rugs; hang advertise-
ment calendars on the walls in lieu of
pictures; tomato can vases holding
single geraniums, a red and white
tablecloth on the table;- candles stuck
in bottles or tin cans are just a few
suggestions.
After an exhibition dance every-
body should vote for the neediest
looking friend present. Appropriate
games should be played.
Serve the punch from a large soup
tureen, using enamel or tin mugs and
a tin dipper.
At supper time, invite the guests
into the kitchen, and from a table
allow them to help themselves to a
tin tray, knife, fork, spoon, cup and
saucer, plate and paper napkins.
From another table, allow them to
help themselves to hot rolls, butter,
sugar and cream. The next stop is
the kitchen range, where plates are
supplied with bacon and eggs, and
cups of coffee. If the kitchen is a
large one, the guests may seat them-
selves around a long kitchen table,
covered with a red cloth; if not, per-
mit them to return to the dining or
living -rooms where card tables, cov-
ered with red cloths, have been plac-
ed.
Griddle cakes' with maple syrup --
and broiled or fried sausages are
favorite dishes for serving at this
type of party.
ch a diet without showing or feel-
ing any noticeable injury." 7t is em-
phasized that fruits and vegetables,
in providing the neeessary minerals
and vitaminee, are "protective foods"
as they protect Ili front all the ill
effects resulting froth the lack of such
substances when we live too largely
upon 'bread -stuffs and meats. T he
"most important of the protective
foods is milk" -a statement which
cannot be too often reiterated.
"It is a sobering thought that su-
gar, as it now comes into commerce,
is the most completely devoid of pro-
teins, vitamins, and mineral elements
of all the foods which we give our
children. From the nutritional stand-
point, therefore, it would seem that
sugar should be of all foods the most
cautiously used in feeding children,
lest it displace too much of the food
which can do what it cannot, in sup:-
plying
up-plying the proteins, vitamins, and
mineral elements which children need
so urgently and so abundantly for
their healthy growth and develop •
ment."
It is pointed out that in nature,
sugar is not found in concentrated
forms, and that too much sugar may
spoil the appetite for valuable foods
with less pronounced flavor," in gen-
eral, the proper place of sugar . . .
is not in such concentrated forms as
candy, nor in the indiscriminate and
excessive sweetening of all kinds of
foods, but rather as a preservative
and flavor to facilitate the introduc-
tion into the child's dietary of larger
amounts of the fruit and milk, the
importance of which to child health
has been increasingly emphasized
with each year's progress in our
knowledge of nutrition.
Questions concerning 'Health, ad-
dressed to the Canadian Medical As-
sociation, 184' College Street, Toronto,
will be answered personally by letter.
HUNGARIAN BABY WORLD'S
SMALLEST
Manci B—,ewho is believed to be
the smallest baby ever born of a
normal-sized mother, has happily dis-
appointed fears for her survival, and
is now beginning to walk and talk.
When Manci, the child of a Jewish
locksmith, first saw the light in a
Budapest clinic she was found to
weigh only 600 grammes (21 ozs.).
Her weight rapidly decreased to 550
grammes, but she was kept in life by
transfusions of blood taken from her
mother and father.
At the age of three weeks Manci's
height was twelve and a half inches,
and though she is still far below nor-
mal size she is the pride of the clinic
in which she was born, and has been
visited by medical men from Vienna,
Berlin and Paris. The Pesti Napb
learns that at the forthcoming sit-
ting of the doctors' association, Manci
is the subject scheduled for debate.
A SIMPLE TREATMENT
FOR CHILDREN'S COLDS
Cold in the head is very common
at this time of the year, especially in
the very young. Neglect of a cold is
prone to lead to serious conse-
quences. To relieve all congestion
of the system is the first step in
treating a cold, whether in infants
or adults. For the rv'e'r'y young,
Baby's Own Tablets are the ideal
means of doing this. Containing no
narcotics or other harmful drugs
they soothe the child's fretfulness,
relieve its suffering and ensure con-
valescence.
• Baby's Own Tablets are without
an equal for relieving indigestion,
constipation and colic. They check
diarrhoea; break up colds and simple
fevers; promote health -giving sleep
and make the dreaded teething per-
iod easy. -The Tablets are the one
medicine that a mother can give her
little ones with perfect safety as
they are guaranteed to be free from
injurious drugs. They are sold by
all medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
PYGMY HOUSES ONLY HOMES
OI' OIA12K COLONY
When one passes Carey's store on
U. S. 65 just north of the Arkansas
lne and observes a group of tiny -box
like structures, it is easy to imagine
this is just another tourist camj. But
it, is not. One will be observing the
largest aCsembly of smallest perman-
ent homes in the Ozarks.
More than a dozen tiny houses sup-
ported on corner posts and each ten
by twelve feet square, with one door,
two windows and a flue, are housing
substantial families, very likely, also
one or more dogs and an occasional
chicken. Ask any of the "wimmen
folks" how they make out in such
cramped quarters and' they will as-
sure you of "room aplenty" even for
visiting kin and a Chance aplenty,"
This village, about Carey's store, is
growing, too, but always 'with atrne.
tures Of identical type and size, lions
HEALTH SERVICE OF THE
CANADIAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION
The Problem of Sweets for the
Children.
Under the above title has been pub-
lished report of the Committee on
utriti nal Problems of the American
Pu Health Association. Judging
from the quantity of correspondence
we receive, asking for information on
this subject, we believe that our read-
ers will be interested in having a
summary of this authoritative report.
The report points out our 'need for
several substances in our, foods, and
the danger in allowing a one-sided
food, such as pure sugar, to take
the place of the many-sided foods. It
is stated are'
while bread -stuffs and
meats are de`sira'ble foods, "they can
never make a properly -balanced diet,
and least of all for a growing child,
even though a hardy explorer may
be able to live for a long time on
PEEVISH
Chikren
Wim ,elute wrsT.�Motrt� rd'.IbJeNT aNe
IBI NE/ICIAL REP.[DY THAT Yrbu CAN •YY.
TNIhr COMMA, Nha NAACO/ICC M-6
MIL LER'S
WORM POWDERS
49
British Isl s, the nroads made by
foreign eompetitors will become still
more serious.
Ontario Mattes Ready.
Hon. John S. Martin is chairman of
a committee just named to see that
Ontario is represented at the World's
Grain Show in Regina in 1932 by her
outstanding grain producers. Special
ribbons will be awarded at all fairs
in the province for high-class exhibits
and all exhibitors will be given every
consideration. The committee will
build up a list of men who have done
well at leading shows in the past
and add others who appear to have
a chance in competition with the best
of other countries. At the Chicago
show Ontario annexed 30 awards and
the Department will try to beat this
record and bring home some of the
$200,000 offered in prizes. A sub-
committee has also been appointed to
see that prospective exhibitors secure
the very best seed available.
NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR
THE BUSY FARMER
Canadian butter leaves room for
improvement both in quality and
quantity. This improvement, accord-
ing to a prominent dairy authority,
will be brought about by improving
the quality of the raw material
through paying a higher price to the
producer.
Uniform Price and Quality.
Prof. H. H. Dean of 0. A. C., has
some timely advice for distributors
of milk and other dairy products. He
declares that milk and milk products
of goocl quality provided at a fair
and uniform price throughout the
year will satisfy the consuming pub-
lic better than variations in quality
and price. He suggests the following
aids in this direction: Daylight and
no "moonlight" delivery, the use of
mono -service bottles for milk, cartons
for pound print butter, sell varieties
of cheese like cottage and thus use
profitably the skim milk, the "zone"
system to save duplication of milk
routes, and courteous consideration of
customers by all drivers and sales-
men.
Canadian Milk Drinkers.
Statistics have shown that Canad-
ians eat more butter and eggs per
capita than the people of any other
country. A recent survey shows
that one of the favorite beverages of
the people of Canada is milk. To
satisfy this demand for fresh milk
alone, over 4,625,000 gallons per year,
or about one pint per head of popula-
tion per day is required. This should
serve to give some idea of the prom-
inence which dairying has attained.
The total value of Canadian dairy
products exceeds 250 millions annu-
ally.
Winter Care of Pigs.
The main factors in the successful
rearing of pigs during the winter
months are:
1. Early litters. Pigs' intended
for winter feeding should be farrowed
not later than the month of Septem-
ber. This gives them time for a
good start before cold weather.
2. Clean yard. A good clover field
or yard with clover sod is ideal for
them to run in. Avoid all old yards
and wallows.
3. Clean and dry sleeping quar-
ters. These should be entirely free
from draughts, but provided with
ventilation.
4. Suitable rations. From weaning
until four months of age, .the follow-
ing ration will be satisfactory: 200
pounds of finely ground oats, 200
pounds of middlings, 50 pounds of
wheat bran, 50 pounds of barley or
corn, 15 pounds each of linseed oil
meal and 'tankage, 5 pounds of bone
char and 3 pounds of salt. This should
always be fed as a warm slop mixed
with skim milk or buttermilk. As
the pigs get older increase the pro-
portion of barley or corn. Be very
careful not to overfeed; every meal
should be all cleaned up quickly and
more looked for. A supply of alfalfa
or clover bay should be on hand at all
times, and a few mangels or apples
given daily. Keep all pens clean and
supply drinking water each day.
The Scrub Bull.
In a recent address on the scrub
bull and its effect on the dairy in-
dustry, W. E. Thompson, president of
the Ontario Cattle Breeders' Associa-
tion, claimed that a scrub sire was a
liability to the breeder.
The good purebred sire was the
logical one to head a herd, since with
a registered sire there are greater
chances of getting results in the way
of building up the herd than when a
grade or inferior breed is used. The
purebred has a long line of descent
of the one breed. Mr. Thompson de-
clared that a cow must give at least
6,000 pounds of milk to pay for her
keep. Better breeding and better
feeding are necessary to profitable
returns 'in his opinion.
FEBRUARY. 7, 193%
NEVER SAW EQUAL OF.
SARGON, HE SAYS
"When I was in the States last
September, several of my friends re-
commended this new Sargon medicine
to me, so I bought a treatment in
New York, and I want to say right
Change Weed Act Regulations.
The Hon, John S. Martin has an-
nounced changes in the regulation of
the Ontario Weed Act to be effective
this year.
Road superintendents or foremen
will not be eligible for appointment
as weed inspectors. The reason for
this regulation is that the weed in-
spector must report on the enforce-
ment of the Act with respect to roads.
To simplify enforcement of the act
the following less important weeds in
Ontario have been removed from the
noxious list.
Cinquefoils (potentilla sp: , field
peppergrass (lepidium campestre),
stickseed (lappula echinata), Russian
thistle (sal'sola kali), wild barley
(hordeum jubatum).
Municipal councils are encouraged
to appoint men capable of giving lead-
ership in an educational way. Weed
problems are not simple and the best
then available are essential if pro-
grese is to be made. It is not suf-
ficient for a council to appoint a man
and instruct him to wait for com-
plaints before taking action.
The Export Market.
W. A. Wilson, Agricultural Pro-
ducts Representative' for Canada in
Great Britain who has been snendirfg
some months in Canada, addressing
agricultural organization's and service
clubs, emphasizes the importance of a
steady volume of export in order to
hold the market.
The limit in consumption has by
no means been reached, be declared.
Canada's position in the world is be-
coming increasingly dependent upon
her ability to hold her own in world
competition In reference to Canada's
exports of agricultural produce Mr.
Wilson points out that these have
shown a marked tendency to decrease
in recent years. Unless Caniadif Can
brei ltaiit, a policy of supplying it
ri neenable volume for extort to the
awui it
Pir�Nzkt';k
4�6
A Work of Value to Farmers.
During 1929 an increasing interest
was shown by experimenters in the
work of the Ontario Agricultural and
Experimental Union. According to
the secretary's report a total of 2,559
farmers received material for co-
operative experiments. A steady in-
crease in this regard has been re-
corded, the last five years showing
an increase of 39 per cent. in the
number of experimenters over the
previous five years. Last year ma-
terial was distributed for a total of
47 distinct co-operative experiments,
including variety tests with field
crops, dates and rates of seeding,
methods of seeding, mixtures of grain
for grain production and for forage
production, thinning plants at differ-
ent distances apart in the rows, and
fertilizer experiments. The Union
has been a moat potent factor in the
improvement of field crops in the
province for the past 50 years by sup-
plying farmers with the very best
seed of selected varieties and encour-
aging the distribution of this mater
ial to the farmers.
all
WILLIAM H. JOYCE
now that the results I've gotten have
been worth many times what it cost..
"I have the Canadian Sales Agency
for the Latherizer Corporation of
New York, and in .working with my
men over the Dominion, eating in
cafes and hotel restaurants, I devel-
oped a bad case of stomach trouble.
I'd feel so bloated and uncomfortable
I could hardly breathe. Sometimes
I'd wake up at night with this
:.'mothering sensation and have to got
up and walk the floor for hours. 1
suffered a great deal with headaches
and dizziness; and my whole system
was in such a toxic condition from a
sluggish liver that I had to take laxa-
tives every night to keep my bowels
open. I didn't seem to have a bit of
resistance -just caught one cold after
another -and becamei so weak an
nervous that at times even the rust-
ling of a newspaper annoyed me. It
certainly wasn't in any shape for a
real day's work.
"If this new Sargon had been made
for my case, I couldn't have gotten
finer results! It's different from any
medicine I ever took, the way it
strengthens and tones up the entire
system, and 3 showed a marked im-
provement from the first bottle. Now,
after completing the full treatment of
five bottles, I eat three hearty meals.
a day and don't know what it is to
have heartburn or gas bloating.•I quit
being nervous; sleep like a top and
get up in the mornings alert and full
of energy, ready to go out after the
business. I don't catch cold easily `
like I used to and feel ,.iu.:better shapes
physically than in years.
"I also took the Sargon Soft Mass
Pills and they stimulated my liver tt
a healthy action so that I'm no long-
er troubled with constipation, head-
aches or dizziness. I haven't had to,
keep on taking them either because
my bowels now stay regulated per-
fectly.
"I'm on the road most of the time
and I've made it a point to tell other%
about this remarkable new treatment..
I'Ive never seen its equal."
The above enthusiastic statement
was made recently by William IL.
Joyce, well known Toronto business
man, who lives at 326 King St., W..
Mr. Joyce has the Canadian Sales
Agency for the Latherizer Corpora-
tion of 452 Fifth Ave., New York, and
works a group of sales under his di-
rect supervision.
Sargon may be obtained in Seafort t
from Charles Aberhart.
P.i
Bier, Ben Telephone is a Long Distance Station
Yon can call
by Number
and now
reverse the charges
If you want td geverse the charge
on a long distance call you do not
need to give the name of the per-
son you are calling. It is enough
now just to give the NUMBER
you want
You can now reverse the charge'
on an "anyone there" -- or. "sta-
tion -to -station" — call and get a
lower rate as well.
When you are away from home
you can get Your house or office
more quickly and more cheaply
in calling by NUMBER and you
can still have the call charged to
your bill at bo> e.
ti
•
i?E^
5: