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The Huron Expositor, 1933-12-08, Page 2Its hi A Service to Investors The Bond Department of this Bank is available to investors daily during business hours. Orders to buy and sell securities are executed with promptness and despatch. Consult the manager of our nearest branch. THE DOMINION BANK ESTABLISHED 1871 SEAFORTH BRANCH E. C. Boswell - - Manager 373 •BRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA AND OFFICES IN NEW YORK AND LONDON asssaunuuu,ur11,uuuunuuuunuuuuuuIUuueuueumnusuuuausw SUNDAY AFTERNOON (By Isabel Hamilton, ,Goderich, Ont:) Jesus, with Thy church abide. Be her Saviour, Lord, and Guide, While on earth her faith is tried; We beseech Thee, hear us. May her lamp of truth be bright, Bid her bear aloft its light; Through the realms of heathen night, We beseech Thee, hear us. T. B.' Pollock. S. S. LESSON FOR DECEMBER 10 Lesson Topic—Paul in Caesarea. Lesson Passage—Acts 24:10-23. Golden Text—Acts 24:16. After Paul had been in Ephesus for over two years he sailed across the Aegean Sea into Macedonia to visit again the churches he had establish- ed in Philippi, Thessalonica and Ber- ea: .Afterward he travelled south- ward in Greece and followed up with this bodily presence the two long let- ters he had written to the Corinthian Church. There he impressed upon .them their obligation to the poor Jews at Jerusalem and in Judea who, because they had embraced •Chris- 7tianity, had been cast off by their fel- low country men. From each of the churches men were chosen to accom- pany Paul to Jerusalem to carry the gifts. At every place the ship stop- ped where Paul had been tprfore, friends gathered to listen again to his words of council and instruction. .Pett length they were in Jerusalem and for Paul it proved to be his last ,visit to the city of his own people. One day a false accusation was brought against Paul and a great riot ensued, At length he was sent as a Prisoner to be judged by 'Felix at Caesarea. When he was brought be- fore the Governor the officer in charge of him gave letters to Felix concerning the case. '`After reading them he said to Paul="I will hear your case when those who bring charges again.st you have come." He then handed Paul over t� a soldier to be kept in one of the guard -rooms at- tached.te the old Herodian palace. A Roman judge to whom a prison- er had been sent was .bound., if pos- sible, to try him within three days. It was, however, the fifth day before his accusers were present and ready to proceed against Paul. They had brought with them a barrister named Tertullus who was a noted orator. He made a speech in which he charged Paul with many evil deeds and, in addition, that of being a ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes," being the name by which they called the Church of Christ. Then Felix motioned to Paul that he might make defence to himself. St. Paul's defence was very different in style and manner from that of his accusers. He too made a personal reference to Felix but it had the ring of truth whereas that of Tertullus was fulsome flattery. Then in simple language he set forth his doings while in Jerusalem and as it was but twelve days since the feast of Pente- cost to which he had come to worship —not to make disturbance, Felix. could'easily learn the truth of what had actually taken place by challeng- ing his accusers to produce their wit- nesses to confirm or deny their se- ditious accusations. -.Then Paul turn- ed to the statement that he belonged to the sect of Nazarenes. He readily admitted., it and followed it up with a statement of his faith and practice, saying: "But this I confess un.to thee, that after the way which they call heresy, so worship I the God of my fathers, belierving all things which are written in the law and the pro- phets; and have hope towards God, which they ,.-themselves also allow, that there sh ll he a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and the un- just. And herein do I exercise my- self, to have alw:ldy-s a conscience void of offence toward God, and toward If you're Secretary of a lodge or club or business association—and you really like the job—you'll find it a great help to supplement the usual meeting notices with reminder telephone calls. And of course Long Distance now is so easy to use --as simple as 'phoning next door. For 30 cents you can telephone about 100 miles bymaking an "anyone" call tation-to-station) after 8.30 p.m. See list of rates in front of directory. !at Vii, t(S it '> Pater 4b L. TRE I.T1'RON EXPOSITOR • men." (Paul then stated how he had been five years absent from Jerusalem], and on retul nine; with aims for the poor of his people, and offerings to the temple, they' found him in the temple, a quiet and legally purified worshipper. For the riot which had arisen he was not responsible. It had Ibeeii"stirred up by .some -Asiatic Jews, who ought to havebeen pres- ent as witnesses, and whose absence was % a. proof of the weakness of the case against him. But if their at- tendance could not be secured, he called upon the accusers themselves to state the result of their trial of him before the Sanhedrin, and whe- ther they' had a single fact against him, unless it were his exclamation as he stood before them„ that he was being tried about a question of the resurrection of the dead. St. Paul's statement of facts direct- ly ,contradicted the only charge brought against him. Felix was not, therefore, going to hand the prisoner over to the Sanhedrin, which might ,over dangerous, and would certainly be unjust; but at the same time he did not wish to offend these important personages. He, therefore, postpon- ed the trial on the ground of the abs- ence of Lysiasl who was a material witness, ,promising, however, to give a final decision whenever he should come down to Caesarea. Paul was remanded to the guard=room but Felix gave particular instructions to the centurion that his oversight was not to be a strict one, and that Paul's friends were to be permitted to visit him. St. Luke and Aristar•chus cer- tainly availed themselves of this per- mission, and doubtless the weary hours were lightened by visits from Philip the Evangelist residing there at that time, and also by '-.-embers of the little Christian community to whom Paul was very dear. WORLD MISSIONS The Grandeur of the Bible One dark December day, in a quiet and, peaceful room, a sneall body .of Christian men (Wilberforce was a- mong the number) felt the need of mankind for the Word of ,God, and in the following .:‘Lai -ch, in 1804, the Bible Societywas founded, its object being to print the Scriptures without note or comment, and scatter them broadcast over the whole world. The history of the Bible • Society must be read with the din and smoke of conflict present, for, during the whole of 1804 and for eight months of the year 184) Napoleon was wait- ing for that six flours' mastery of the Channel that never came. Even in those• anxious and difficult days there never wavered in the English people "that passionate• impulse of human sympathy with the wronged and afflicted, which raised hospitals, endowed charities; built churches, sent missionaries to the heathen, sup- ported Burke in his plea for the Hin- du, and Clarkson and Wilberforce in their crusade against the iniquity of the slave trade." \What a stupendous faith to believe that a Book, without note or com- ment, could - travel to the farthest isles of the sea, from Sagaland to Kalmuk tents; from the Old World to the New; to the shrine of Kali and the Great Wall of China;- along the Mediterranean, and in Darkest Afri- ca; from ' Labrador to Patagonia ; through eastern lands and southern seas! What a Man must He have been who supposed that there was something in Himself which all the world needed! Truly, Christ is 'bold when He says to His Church: "Go ye into all the world." Has He considered the dif- ficulties of travelling? Has He con- sidered the difficulties of language, one set of people writing from left to right, another set writing from right to left; another knowing notli- ing about grammar and literature; one speaking nothing but monosyl- lables. another speaking hardly any- thing but poly=yilable, one language a rhythmic, stream, another some- thing between a grunt and a growl? Has He considered the expense of the undertaking? Men cannot live on nothing; men cannot travel for noth- ing. The Bible cannot be translated and printed for nothing, Yet Christ said: '•Go; go everywhere; go at once."—From The Bible in the World. Potatoes in New Dress The potato is a wholesome and economical food and is, without ques- tion, the most versatile of all the vegetables on our tables, 1.. Why not provide the necessary va- riety in the family meals by serv- ing potatoes in new and interesting ways, instead of in the four common ways—boiled, mashed, baked and hashed? Here are a few suggestions for potato .dishes. that will be found suitable for either luncheon or din- ner. Best Mashed Potatoes 'Scrub 4 mediumpotatoes, and boil in ,salted; water until soft. Drain and remove .skins, then put potatoes through, potato ricer. Add 2 table- spoons of butter and 1/4 cup hot milk, a few grains of pepper, and more salt if necessary. Beat until light. Chantilly Potatoes Cover well -seasoned mashed potato with white sauce or with 1-3 cup of creaiibeaten stiff. Sprinkle with paprika and with 1-3 cup grated, cheese, and bake in a moderate oven (350 deg. F.) until heated through. Baked Stuffed Potatoes Cut ,baked potatoes in halves lengthwise, ,scoop. out the potato and prepare same as mashed pota- to. Refill the shells and bake five to eight minutes in a very hot oven (450 deg. F.). If desired, grated cheese or chopped cooked meat, ham or fish may be added to the potato before filling into the shells. Potato Cheese Sticks Mix thoroughly one cupful of fresh- ly mashed potato, 1/2 cup of flour. 2 tablespoons melted butter, 4 table- spoons grated cheese and 1/2 tea- spoon salt. When cool, roll or pay in oblong shape one-quarter of an inch thick. • (Cut in twenty strips 4 by 1r%a inch each. Brush with .egg yolk and milk. Bake in a hot oven "(500 deg. b".) for 10 minutes. Serve hot. They '-nay ibe prepared for bak- ing in the forenoon. r,. PERSONAL "1 w111 pot be responsible fit any me*aber of my family who tVlim stomaob 'tonics, in. , digestion remedies, sada, oslo- zosi laity laxativei1L eto, to try -"!o got rid of indiges- tion, oonsti ation bloating, sour stomach, bay{ breath or headaches. 1 have told them all to use Sargon Soft Mess Pails the new liver medicine which makes the liver get busand furnish enough bileto digest their food and stop ooaatlyation. Everybody ought to tike Sargon Soft Naas !Ills two or three times a mouth if they want to feel bare theem." gOOd druggists Potato Puffs 3 cups mashed potatoes. 1. egg. - Season the mashed .potatoes well and beat until fluffy. Add well -beat- en egg and mix well. Drop by spoon- fuls on greased balking sheet and bake in a moderate oven (375 deg. F?'until browned. O'Brien Potatoes Wash and pare potatoes and shape in cubes. Soak in cold water, then dry and parboil three minutes in boil- ing salted water to cover. Drain and plunge into cold water. Dry between towels. Fry a few cubes at a time in deep fat (370 deg. F.) until deli- cately !browned, and drain on brown paper. Heat fat to a higher temper- ature (395 deg. F.) return all pota- toes to fat, using frying basket, and fry until crisp and brown, keeping the basket in motion. Again drain on brown paper and sprinkle with salt. Cook 1 slice of onion in 1112 tablespoons of (butter for three min_ utes. Remove the onion and add 3 canned pimientos, cut in small pieces. When thoroughly heated, add the pot- atoes. Stir until well mixed; sprin- kle with chopped parsley and serve at once. Delicious with chops, steaks and mixed grills. Lattice Potatoes From six medium-sized raw pota- toes and with a vegetable slicer lat- tice potatoes. Let stand 3 hours in cold water, drain and dry on a cloth. Cook in hot fat, a few at a time, using a basket. When soft turn from the basket on to hot tissue paper. When all are cooked soft, return, them, a few at a time, to the reheat- ed fat, where they will brown quick- ly. Drain again on paper, sprinkle with salt and serve at once. Heart Beats 1.. The menace of heart disease is brought home to us when some friend dies suddenly from this condition. More deaths occur from heart dis- ease than from any other disease. Nevertheless, the picture is not as black as this statement would sug- gest. There is one bright spot, name- ly that the number of deaths from heart disease in early life are de- creasing. The increase in heart disease after forty-five is due, in part, to the fact that more people are now reaching adult life as a result of our better control of the diseases of early life. After forty-five, the body 'begins to show signs of wear and tear. The. heart is one of the first organs to show such changes, and heart disease, in this case, is simply a wearing out of the organ. Heart disease, other than the form that is due to actual old age, or to premature old age, is the cause of much suffering and of the cutting short of inra'ny lives. 'In order to pre- vent its ravages, we must consider what causes these cases, because the hope of prevention lies in the pre- vention or control of the causes. 'Heart disease may follow any of the ordinary communicable diseases of childhood, such as diphtheria, scar- let fever or measles, but it is espec- ially apt to occur after a rheumatic fever, even of'the mildest form. This means that if heart disease is to be avoided, all such cases of illness, 'no matter how mild the attack, must be carefully cared for, and before the little patient is allowed to go back to school or take part in games or ae- tive play, he should be given a thor- ough examination in order that the doctor may determine whether or not the heart is all right and that it is capable •of meeting the strain of ac- tive life without injury. NEGLECT OF COMMON CONSTIPATION IS A SERIOUS MATTER Prevent This Condition With Kellogg's ALL -BRAN The first question your doctor asks is whether you are constipated or not, • He knows that this condi- tion may cause headaches, loss of appetite and energy, sleeplessness. It is often the starting .pbfnt of serious disease. You can prevent and relieve core= mon constipation so easily. Just eat a delirious cereal once a day. Laboratory tests show that Kel- logg's ALL -BRAN provides "bulk" to exercise the intestines, and vita- min B to further aid regular habits. ALL -BRAN is also a rich source of blood -building iron. The "bulk" in ALL -BRAN is much like that found in leafy vegetables. Within the body, it forms a soft mass. Gently, it clears out the in- testinal wastes. Isn't this "cereal way" safer and far more pleasant than taking pat- ent medicines—so often harmful? Two tablespoonfuls of ALL -BRAN daily are usually sufficient. With each meal in serious cases. If not relieved this way, see your doctor. Enjoy ALL -BRAN as a cereal, or use in cooking. Get the red -and - green package at your grocer's. Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. „s earIts4 ,,QACetiV, etl,l i"+ iJ�w..l�' nJVt C.4. 0.!,,.! The periodic health examination is of great value in detecting the early signs of any heart trouble. The doc- tor -will discover any infected teeth, tonsils or head sinuses, which may be the focus from which the heart is be- ing poisoned and damaged. He will also bring to light any 'unsuspected chronip disease, such as syphilis, which, if untreated, insidiously under- mines the heart and arteries. If the heart -is damaged, the doctor will give advice on how to live so as to con- serve the strength of the organ. The. correction of defects and the proper treatment of chronic infec- tions will protect the heart from dam- age. Thus, the periodic health ex- amination protects those who take advantage of a medical check up at regular intervals, in order that they may keep well and not find them- selves stricken by a heart condition which could have been detected, at least, kept under control through med- ical supervision, Questions concerning !Health, ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical As- sociation, 184 College Street, Toron- to, will be answered personally by letter. profit From Pullets At present, prospects look bright for the poultryman and farmer who has a good flock of well -matured pul- lets. The cold snap will probably stiffen egg prices that are now of- fering a fair !Margin of profit over cost of production in flocks that are laying satisfactorily. At the present prices' and with bete ter prospects in view ,it will pay to feed a good balanced masbsration lib- erally and to give ,sufficient grain at night to ensure awell ,filled crop. Plenty of fresh Water, with the chill off on cold days, should always be provided. A frozen water pail left too long means a serious crimp in production, At this profitable season a falling off in egg yield is a calam- ity that will seriously affect the whole year's profit. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS MAY BE OVERCOME if you have Catarrhal Deafness or head and ear noises or are growing hard of hearing go to your druggist and get 1 ounce of Parmint (double strength), and add to it 1/4 pint ,of hot water and a little granulated su- gar. Take 1 tablespoonful four times 'a day. !This 'will often bring quick relief from the distressing "head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breath- ing become easy and the mucus stop dropping into the throat. It rs easy to prepare, costs little and is pleas- ant to take. Anyone who has catarrhal deafness or head noises should give this prescription a trial. .Approximately 200 species of in- sects have been listed as attacking citrus fruit ,n tropical Asia. The mosquito bug is the cause of stem canker of tea in Nyasaland. �14F�r I 1 DECEMBER 8, 1903. tV , Dizzy Spells for 3 Years A Result of Indigeston BETTER IN THREE WEEKS —WITH KRUSCHEN "Before taking Kruschen," a woman writes, "I had very bad dizzy spells and, hot flushes, bad spells of indi- gestion, and I was so nervous at times that the least thing would upset me. I was about three years in that condition. "I could not tell you in words how happy and glad 1 am to -day that I gave Kruschen Salts a trial. I have now taken them for 18 _months. I would not miss them one day. They are the most wonderful remedy any- one can take who suffers as I did. I feel in better health to -day than I have ever been. After taking Krusch- en for three weeks the dizzy faints and hot flushes left me. I now feel so light and cheerful. Kruschen Salts also keeps one from gaining weight, -as so many women do at middle age: They sure keep you feeling fit and fine."--Olrs.) J. M. Kruschen Salts is Nature's reckpe for maintaining a condition of internal cleanliness. The six salts in Kruschen stimulate your liver and kidneys tc' smooth, regular action. Your inside is thus kept clear of those impurities~ which, allowed to accumulate, lower the whole tone of the system. But Kruschen has more than this, necessary aperient effect upon you 'it works directly upon your blood- stream, too, invigorating. it so that it floods every fibre of you with tingling energy. Kruschen Salts is Obtainable at 411 Drug Stores at 45c and 75c per bottle, Detail in Experi- mental Work Sorting of the 1933 flue -cured to- bacco crop on the Harrow Experi- rmaental Station was completed during the week. Grading out the various lots is no small job in itself. At harvest time, at least three printings are made of, each plot treatment. This means that several lath of over 1150 lots are tagged and kept sep- arate, from harvesting until the ,weights are recorded of each grade at sorting time. When four to six grades are made of each priming, more than 5,000 individual grade weights and leaf quality values are recorded. The average tobacco grow- er may 'think this amount of detail unnecessary, but to obtain reliable ex- perimental data on varieties, fertiliz- ers, and cultural !methods, it is very eslsential to follow certain definite procedures that may look ridiculous to those who are not familiar with experimental work. Even winter does not check the dis- tribution of weed seeds, for the wind carries seeds for long distances over the surface of the snow. Whoever bites againrst Britain, hop- ing to find her decadent. or unaware, bites upon rock Walter Elliott. E,AWARDSBURG CRO N The economical delicious syrup ARCH CO. ;` tli -; zr',. LIMITED, MONTREAL cb • pecia the NEW. SPA TON " Radio's Richest Voice” battery Radios Dual Wave Reception, including police and.. ambulance calls. Economical Batt rY operation, TWO MODELS 50 COMPLETE • Nothing else to buy. TABLE MODEL Large Figured Walnut Cabinet Equipment: 2 B Batteries, heavy duty. 1 C Battery, 15 volt. 1 A Battery, two volt, re- chargable, 13 plate heavy duty. (Air Cell extra) EXCLUSIVE FEATURES of the SPAR TON BATTERY MODELS Sensitive (superhet- erodyne circuit, us- ing latest dual per- formance tubes . all new . . Perma Magnet speaker . . Figured walnut cabinet . . . Dual wave reception . . Low "B" battery consuviption. v 500 COMPLETE' • Nothing else to buy. CONSOLE MODEL Beautiful Figured Walnut Cabinet Equipment: 2 B Batteries, heavy duty. 1 C Battery, 15 volt. 1,A Battery; two volt, re- chargable, 13 plate heavy duty. (Air Cell extra) LY'S GARAO i Seaforth, Ontario. Phone 02; Edmund Daly, in charge of Expert Radio Service. 1r' .t,)..Pw.,, o- tailrl!te i?ss ,t1r, i ,;.,rt at.. 5'