HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-08-27, Page 3•
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A>lt il*teres 'ting Study
lm a Mats
-By n . '
Atit4 eeST . .
•'To begin well is ~good, to Glut well is
-better.
• ;,
A Most Delicious Cake
.1 cup :white sugar, % cup butter, 2
eggs.1/a cep our milk,' 1.' tease. soda,
level, 1 orange, 1; ripe banana; 1 • cup
raisins, rdi, ea p., vanilla, 2,Lcups flour.
Method: + t up the orange chunks
, „and put it it through a grinder. Grind
t o raisins a d banana • as well. 'Atli
le:not ciuite fine put it all throfigh the
, grinner •twice.,
In another dish: bream the. butter
and sugar; •'add• the eggs and' beat, 'put
in the; fruit, then• add: the• milk and
. 'flour • alternately Butting the "sod In
"the milk. ' - T • e mixtlrre • ,should" be
light but • not running, Put Into ' a
greased: pan on buttered wax paper to.
,St thefiot-tem-and-bake-4n-=a moderate
:. o.ven.. Allow the caketo to .cool a little,
then turn out on board, and remove
paper. When cool ice the cake. '•
•
those big hens might hurt them Yes,
very likely they wonld. In feet, I'm
pretty sure they • wou!Id. Big, chickens
some way or other don't, like smaller
chickens to come affd live with them.'
They don't mind so much sometimes
if, they .grew right up with' them; but,
just 'to go and put them' into their pen
suddenly and leave them ''there would
make the liens real cross: They would?
not letJthe little .fellows• +haveany-:
thing to,'eat. or go••'to get .a- drink o€
water out of ,;the ;pan or do aiything.,
If, the: ehiche wouidetry-they,' *mild, get
1 a' hard peck that hiirt like. everything.,
•' In fact, t'he Only thing' for ti ens to • do:
Would '1)e'to. glitio-lruikdle tip'in
n an s n -move :so .the hens would .
:forfet'ti>ey'were,there, Now why dq:
• Icing ..
Boil.,% ,cup white sugar and % cup
oro Wei sugar with 1/4 _.cup water -until,
It threads,,, well. • . Add .this' syrup to
about. 1'4' niarshniallo'ws, cut up, and
beat till it is sm'oot'h, Spread-. on the,
cake. The is ng 'should be smogth a'iid'
;hens tet like that? Well, . I don't
know I guess it-'% 3iist'elifekens'-
ways.' • Oh, there, are such a , lot' -of"
things we dont knew''about, •don't'you;
think so?. . But we do -know a few
thi don't w ? And if we keep
ngs,
hunting ••arou . - and 'earning , some-
thing here ,and 'spmething •. there, first
thing we know we'll be: knowing quite
a bit. We know ,this Much, and thatis
that strange little. chickens, even if
.they are half grown; mustn't be put in
with big ones.''. •
;soft but' not sticky..` Billy's daddy wasn't very busy, just
Twilight 'Hour 'Story " then, so, he and 'Billy bunted around
• Chicks and Other Furry"Frlends.' ,for a place to put them.' There;was.a
-"" 'Ne. 33 little room is , the barn' which they
' i told you last time.about the chicks' used in the spring when they raised
house ,getting )woo_small for then. It' little chickens in. ,the incubator, My,
wasn't very !'warm outside, either, as but this, is a 'big word, isn't it? You
• Billy would ,soon tell you, but you see • ask your mamma, whatpn .incubator is.
the chicks were covered so complete- I'm pretty sure she will know,' end
l ' .with those , warm white•. feathers then some other time we 'might, 'ell
• •that- they didn't mind . the old One you' more -about it Well.„ 'th'ey hadn't
bit:' Did. you ever notice how one used, this room for a long time because
' .;;_,feather lies .on :top of the other so it wad' 'too small.. It was just .filled
neatly and closely? • Then ` besides with, a lot. of 'things' :like a couple of
that,.underneath thefeatlexs_0loseto pas ad_.b.oxe
thng, like
their warm ,bodies was a layer of down that. - • ,
as soft as the"drees they had on when 'There . now, Billy, you can get to
L'
r
i �n.•
i.ttl�.-. .- .
-'o th sem:. 40 �.
_ : , -„.cls . tet=
ar =-a.nd
�_. - w k
.o ••ire
-.b � es,- Dom . u
e' . obi
=•th re tee's Y �--
e-
Y
Member? -You se's, they had on' such q or:you�"rhe'ts'.:,"I"I't"Yet"°ycln"'imf"tkexm-i r
.
very war. clothes note, even when here if you keep it clean," said Billy's
tire ' tv:: l blew they.didn't need to care. 'daddy, ,•
'
unless, of course, 'it blew- toohard.
Well, what did' they do about,hav1-n
a bigger, home? ,;.:T,hat*box wascPrtain-
•
ly getting too 'small: You see, Billy
"Oh, daddy, this will be a One place'
for them," laughed Billy, as he jumped'
around 'in' great glee.
And now next time we are going to
couldntt put those little :thickens • with t find out just 'how beautifully .Billy:
the other: hens; • because, 'isn't it queer, ,fixed upthislittlel room. ,
A Father's 'Plea .. ' -
Lord, let mado the worrying,
On, me let allthe burdens fall.
Let ''those 'around me laugh and sing
- And never guess my care at all:
So .long as they can liap'py be
And still have heart for .ninth and
son- ii
Let all th, troullles -fall 'on. me
BUt peep „me 'well -`and ; keep' me
,strong.
Lord, if I falter at the door, •
Remind Me that the 'day .•is done.
My children romping 'on, the floor
Kiiow naught of struggles • lost or
won.
Grant',ine. the"'courage to `,go 'in
As 'though I had no pain to bear
And hide behind a fatheris , grin ' L
All dismal signs of doubt and care.
Lord, let me carry on 'alone! '
To ;them my griefs I' y euld not tell,
Nor rake m'Y heavy burdens known.
I'd • have them think 'that all , is
well. '
They are so young .and'still so small;
Care, does not yet., to them be -
On me let all the troubles fall.
My only .'prayers is: ."Keep • me
strong!"
Edgar A. Guest, in TitBits• ,
(London).
' • England ranks, fifth in the. list so
far as first-line strength in the air'
is concerned. ,
The present percentages of • un-
married women between thirty and
fifty Years of •age are ,stated to 'be
the highest 'ever recorded, due in a
• • great p:y,rt to the,. lasses,' of man=power due •to ,the Great' War.
NOT ,KEEN
A young man who had failed to
make ;good in England was settled
'On a 'farm • 'in Kenya , by -indulgent
pare'nts.' .In a• few, days one, of his
neighbors called. ' ' ;,,
' 1 say," said the visitor, "'we'd like..
to. knew if you'd care to join, a few-
of :us who are . going to hunt for
e lions _- _ _
M. or thayou,—sa
n-lt:.id--•the-
young . Man, somewhat taken 'aback.
"It's awf�n11decent of you, but—
er
—I don't think I"ve lost any liops...
._-RE'P'E'NTi4NCE_.__.__ •
Many who think they are repent-
ing are thinking more of sin's . pun-
isliinent than •of its power.
Seaside .Romeo: '"I've had no luck
with' that girl: I'ye passed her
every day for' the last fortnight and
she hasn't smiled mile:" Friend:
"Some woman liaee no sense 'of
humor." -
"I understand De Poet is' ,doing
much better than formerly in -the
poetry ling." •
'"Why, he told Italie hadn't writ-
• ten a line for six months:'.
"Yes, he told me the same thing?'
Lord 'Duncannon,• young son , of
Ear.1 . 'of Bessborough, , Canada's
�govevnor-general. -......_..
'd.
-Sunday Schon!
Lesson •
August 30. Lesson IX—The Mission
to Cyprus—Acts 12; :2& to. 13: 12:
Golden Text -;•i 'am. not ashamed
° of the gospel of otsrlsf: for it• is
the power of God 'unto salvation to
every one \that bel ieveth.—Romans
1: 1:6.
• ANALYSIS
I, A MISSIONARY Cli'URCH, Acts 13: 1-3.
TI. TKE.FIRST 'M>,SSIO& FIELD,, Acts 13;
Is. A MISSIONenv.eguitCR, Acts 13:•1-3.
. (a) .The Leaders. In the list of five
leaders in the church, •the name ' of
'Ba•rnabasis pl'a'ced'• first, and that of
Saul fast, v 1.•. They , had not ;yet
"discovered” Stub Or was �j.t that
their mern'ory of .:the man he -was' :9b,
scured the mar he .had -become? ' But
he :will not a air long'in the•baekr
ground,..: f the other. three :we•.;know
little or nothing..•,' They ,are forgotten.',
Yet; the 'unheralded wo',rk they -did, in
• AlitroclLseat ristianity_:ont'ti, rntL_the:_
Gentile world- •Where • would: the
ch,prch-_he . without the, devotion:.: and.
sa'exiefice f=the• ",lpknOVOLi.drsciples"Y
(b) -God's Separated men. "As they
"thin'istered to 'th'e. Lord, • and 'fasted,'
the Holy 'Ghost' said, '"Separate me
Barnabas'and :Saul;" v. 3. The con-
v'ictien was growing upon them.. that
these two- men were the ones sliecially,
gifted for the work they had:in'rnind.
Does the Moly Spirit speak like that
today?' Assuredly. But in our mod
ern way of, putting it,' we speak, not
of the One who inspired the deed, but
of his agents, a riinister-perhapsor'a•,
mother, o'r• a church co•irt. Who, gave
them the impulse?. ',Saul and,:�Barna-'
:bas responded when the call" came.,
laxnabas; had the encouragement of.
past. successes, 9: 27';•.11:24f. •S'aui:
still carried the dream that flashed
•upon his in .Jerusalem—"I • will send'
'thee' far • hence unto ,the Gentiles."
+,God and, Barnabas and Saul had •been
getting' ready for This` day.
1I. THE FIRST'MISSION FIELD, ACts,,13;
(a) Cyprus. The-,w'ork to,.which
"Barnabas and Saul were called was
..>:I.et.inerc1•v':niissionar .-:work,._it..was_:a.
mission 'to Gentiles. That was, the
't forward step • The baptism of Cor-
;�.,8 •L.
etter ate rebus'Was •ratified„it is true, .but 'he
The late -comer to •a London`.•cane 'was considered a "special ease!” The
Ethiosia • eunuch was
cent, hall, olio imagined he was visit baptism of the n, _
j, enterta,nmanty ar4vh� -gni"-"•unoflrctal:" Gejti es had. beo'i C
in time: to heat a performance not
at all to his taste.
: He ,nudged the man :next to him.
"I say,'". he asked, "what's.this' stuff
we're 'getting?
What New or,
Is Wearkig
ANNEBETrLE' WOIilTHtNgTON
Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson F,t,(r-
• Wished With, Every Pattern ,
"eider Rac1
Trials Started
R A.; F', Pilots° Determined
to Win Famous Cup
. Outright
Calshot,, • Ha:emigre, England.--
Roaring
England.—
Roaring in swift ,seaplanes over
Southampton water and' the Solent,
picked speed pilots 'of the Royal Air
Force are ' preparing to battle hard. '
for • the Schneider ,trop'hy they have, •
already won. twice in succession. 11 '
they Win. again, they win the trophy
outright :and' permanently... 7 ,
• British planes :last time, 'in 1929, • '
tore over the • 200 • m. ile .,course at sial '
miles a minute, el., defeat France and
Italy. ,Outside , the actual , eScllnetder
rates, , the British high ' speed .pilots'
made . world records which, still re-, •
main.• unbroken . This year they •
. want! •to .eat then• on • records,,'• •
They; "have:'"liusir•hush' planes whose;
-exact . speed..capai 9lities.. are �car.0:,• n
fully, ,guarded' eecrets,
The race will' take. place; „on Sept
12' and Italy ''and 'France 'are' again
expected. to be •Britain's opponents,
.,
'Which three',machines vulYl ac'tuall'y
represent: Britain -- in the world's.
-greatest speed • te'st,, ,and the,.-classie •
• �: ® of aviation, will not, be decided MIT
•311'7 • ° ° ' , the eve •of: the. contest. Eight pill to
g • i° ° r of the, Royal Air Force have been in,, '
strict training '•for months and thee'•
of them will, be Chosen' later to .pilot
the machines:. •
The contest again •will be. largely
an affair of, Governments. In• this
respect it 'is ••unique in:the world oi•'
sports, if. indeed, it .can be .classed'in•
'the world of Sports and its highly.
important' strategic aspects put
the background. '
•'" Engines ' Concealed `
The,. second` of two, new, British
• • seaplanes reached Calshot recently.
-rhe, engines of both • planes are'on-
Pealed
on-
ceagetsPer
•the
l most part, with few
Visible,' :and to the ley, oh
server they, convey little; except per
A charming model' for matrons: haps a slight _impression of • great,
Its slenderizing lines so• :beautifnlly__ ower •1if reserve. They''seen ..ratb"_:_.-.
disguise overweight. The- dip in the
hipline seaming especially •conceals
breadth, adding height to the figure. -
And it's so sinartly appropriate for
..genet-11-dayetwear for-autMer-fashions -Tli coarse;=agai'fi'over=tire waters a
received into the church', but they
d o€�'p irrted--ba4•stc, primted-lingnr o
carne in' through: the doer of the synaL voile print..' . Why not Make •it now?
Bogue and observed Jewish law. Now,.
You'll .enjoy,:wearing.it 'when the hot
however,' the church turned directly days arrive: • '
to. 'the Gentiles , and established , Style No. 311,7 May be had in •sizes
churches, based,' hot on Jewish privi- 36,' 38, ,40;,42, 44 and 46'• nch'es-• bust.
Size, 3rr requires 3 yards' of 39' inch
Material with %. yard' of 39 -inch con-
trusting and l.13 ,yards of 2�inch -rib-
TO
make it! ' The bodice cuts all._.iri
one until it joins. the skirt The belt
Mak be worrnlet most. becoming line:
Shantung, cotton mesh, dotted 'dim-
ity, men's shirting' fabrics and flat
washable crepe ''silk are'also 'suitable
for this model.• • •
- HOW ,TO 'ORDER .PATTERNS.
Write you nanie� and address plain-,
ly,. _giving-, nundier_aneb.size__of_such_
patterns as you want. .Enclose 21)c in'
tamp rcoin colpreferred; Wrap
s s -o n
P f
it carefully) for each number,' and
•addrress your order to Wilson Pattern
_Service,: -'73 West Adelaide• St., Toronto,
er, like • strange, lean • sharks. ' which
s ddenly dart froni .',the, water • and
rose 'the horizon 'din a • roar.: of ,pow
er and, a oleic •o
e speed.
' "Hash,", 'came.. the-shocked--reply.e1 ee,. but --en Ond's • universal '1uvt..'
'"this . is .Beethoven's . Ninth .Sym-
phony:"
Cyprus was the first port of call: It
was familiar ground to: Barnabas;.
"•�Veh," muttered the ton -musical since his home was there. Apart from
:man; "if the 'other '' eight were like snsme Jews in Salamis ' and Paphos,;
this thank goodness'.I was late!" • tliee'popu?ation' o€`the:isla'r"id•was•'pa-
gan. Thei', stay in' Salamis;was .un-
,even'tful,.Their method was to•'preach.
Easy • • •in'the synagogues wherever possible;,
The'• eale:us Wife of a 'theatrical' bringing. their., •riessage "to' .the Jew
j first," and then: to;the Gentiles. When
manager was. !reeved when he tame 'the' Jews refused too respond they
•home' and announced' that he . had tLrned`to the Gentiles, ignoring their,
t11at-tiny selected_ frozri a big gro4vd_.awit-race: --From-Salamis they work,
. twenty -Pour wonderful. chorus girls., • ed their way \westward '. toward Pa-
ee Lsuppose " _ she declatell _ sa; cacti- _Acts,. the capital of. Cyprus.: °
-caliy,---art�as-very-dilenlieworkeier• Fl )Th-istia—nity-atGeuriA_Friwi C:
you?"� s, •i} Pap
hosthe
missionariesuaries were s
um-
"bli, no, dear," he • told her: "Sim-: mored before the Roman pro-consul,h!
ply a .matter' of form:" Sergius Paulus. • Attached to. his
"Humph! Blown absent, again to- household was a sorcerer, y. 6. .Seeing
.inthe--cls" r _argwments._af : the;. straug
day?!' - T'1.1"het'li. got `some'sort tif• ors a „danger to his (Aril sta'ndin:g,
lame excuse, "Yes,, sir. Broke Elymas, as he was called, `began to
his' leg, 'sir." • - , , •- dispute...?' Blind ta.,the, truth..,himself,
' ' • he tried to' prevent bis master from
To An Unfortunate Mouse seeing; it. It 'wase critical moment
1
for Christianity an this its first'Ap-
I've caught you, •'prying ,'mouse! But nearance 'before Roman aristoeracy:
• now . Saul's• trained mind instantly, grasp -
I wish I'd never set the 'spring, ed' they situation: He ' stepped for
That. snapped your life,—you inost,uu_ .ward, s.e.; his eyes on.,Elymas�t(v..i
•—one thinks of Nanoleori s, Olym-
loyed n•• '!Tran -'anger" and the- "unbeatable.
Of any living Lhing. flash" of his 'eye—stabbed him With.
that terror -inspiring i'ebilkee a'id the,
Perhaps you've left a family.! . •. overwhelmed sorcerer was, led, blind-
I wonder if you've ever sinned ... 'ed, from the. room. Sergius, amazed:
Or if your'tiny, shattered. bones at the "doctrine of tli'e Lord;" he'.iev-
Will rattle in the wind.. •' • ed', that is, believed that Saul' was • a
•
• true prophet, • We do not know that
,' ,.' '
And let them: have dominion . Ie he became a Christian.
(c) Paul Conies Forward. When,
;the
'' I've .done°a tiling, that .'wasn't. !•!gilt, iniesiona'ries vet out they -mere "Bar
Your' little .ghost Will cross my floor • nabas and 'Sant". ' When. they left
Aitclehttpiit ine through the alight. ; Paphos thev. were "Paul and his cons-
. —Madelyn G. Cobham,
Tact
pang." Barnabas, generous soul could even him rest! e in the presence of
say, like' Collier of.•M,anchester,•"I. am g" p g
out° for, the kingdom; it is the 'king- the nonan deputy. Itis new faith was
dom that„matters'to me and the nig- Brea ing down his Jewish pride. The
Tact is the knack of keeping quiet ment I find a man who is a- quarter refusal of the Jews to accept 'Christ
at the right time; "'of being so agree- of an inch bigger than I a,' and Can was turning his thoughts to his°other
able yourself thit no one eau be dis- do the work better, nithan I can I tin kinsmen -of •the Empire. His triumph
agreeable 'to .you; ,of making„ 1trer•' ready to• get him his crowd', to hold. before Sergius mutt have fired • his
i'ority feel. like equality. A tactful Min his coat and back him, while he does imagination empire.
with the
heIthought of Orth hen
can,pull the sting from a bee without it'Not only' did Saul come in„to pram -
getting stung.—G. H.
Lorimer: inerice, at Paphoa,..be adopted' his Ro-
Correct •
• An actor entertaining a party of
friends to lunch was annoyed by the
slowness of the service', The waiter
seemed ' casual in the extreme,. and
refused to' luirry. , ”
, ',When the hill was p•resPnted the
actor doled out the •exact sugi„ add-
ing one solitary halfpenny
The' waiter coughed.
"Made a 'little mistake, ' haven't
you, sir? i .This here is • a •ha'penny.”
"N.o. mistake, no. m -!stake,"• said the
actor, with a'biticr's -ITe---7T-revel;`
give less.' ' -
man. name, Paul. Saul. of Tartus had
Nen' such an ardent Jew that perhaps
he did not value -very highly, .hfs' Ro-
Man °citizenship. Now', however, hie
attitude- v-as'c1iangng. It must have
•
ver ing the P . ; ' Paul, the•Raman citizen, and his work a Christian democracy.—E. B. .ledoa.
lies in the Roman world. , wick. ,
S eitli ' -d -aird this;-•S•o-1eift;--covers.----•'
7' statute mile- Conditions intro•'
(limed , for -the' first time this year ..,
require all aircraft to carry out cer-
taro. preliminary .trials on the 'day of
the race before:the actual contest.
And these,.preliminaries.have neves
s'itated Some , changes in 'design. To •
cover both.' preliminary. trials and
the. actual speed contest thea oma -
chines have. :to carry a•_ _ greater,
weight , of petrol, .which, of course -
tends to• increase weight' - in other • - .
directions. The' new. conditions are
roughly ,estimated to laniountto- an -
extra lap- of. the race.
It is 'doubtful whether the great,'
increase in speed marking the sue.:
cessive races "so Par -will be main. •
tained -this year, in view of' the nem
requi:re•nrent,, mut file .I: 14'.
•
high speed flight will be ' fully'pre.
pared and ready to .try' for.hitherto _
unheard of rates of speed.
°
"Sir, I should like, to. -work only
-halt •time_elusifig_.the.
• "Keep right on, my bpy; youare
working only half the time. nos."
- EXPERIENCg
One tholn of experience is worth
' whole wilderness - of warning.
Lo well.' -
•
•
Wh.ene, er men err:ve at the know!- . I'
edge, of the fact that what Ane man '
gains at another's cost or loss is never
a real gain, and. that the same thin,
is .true- of. -national advantages ac- .
quired upon similar conditions; •a „ •
great advance will. be made towards •
T
MUTT AND JEFF- He's•.Breahirig Our Heart.
11
By BUD. FISHER
d
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