The Clinton News Record, 1938-03-03, Page 7THURS., MAtCI :3, -1l.
THE CLINTON NEWS -RECORD
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HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS
HEALTH
COOKING
PAGE 7
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CARE OF. CHILDREN.
Tea for every Taste
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THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
MARCH 6TH.
Introduction to the Lesson by
REV. GORDON A. PED'DIE, B.A.
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Lesson .Text—Mark 6:1-13. self the form of a servant, and is
'Golden Teat --Acts 1:6. made hi the likeness of men (Phil 2:
For our Introduction this: week we 6,7). When GOD enters the arena of
we have singled out verse three, Is ,our life to reveal HIMSELF—that is
not this the carpenter, the son of His hiddenness—to man, He comes as
- Mary, the brother of James, and the one "who hath no foam nor come
-
-Joses, ! !Mess; who . when we se Him there
•-Joses, and of Jude. and Simon. and � , e .
-are not his sisters here with us? is no beauty that we should desire
• And they were offended at Itim."• lIin't: despised, and rejected of men"
The Holy Scriptures are most em- (Is. 63:2,3). Itcertainly does not fit
phatie in the assertion that the true in with our idea of GOD that He
• and living God is One who is alto- should be found a helpless "play-
gether beyond the understanding of thing" in the hands of evil then; and
man. The Creator cannot be rams that, friendless and forsaken of men,
aged", or imagined, by the creature. He should die a shameful death a
To attempt to represent God to •our- mong the thieves, providing a bloody
selves, even in the fens of "ideas" os..and horrible spectacle for the curious
bout Him, is to be guilty of idolatry. eyes of man!
God is not a Being whom His crea-I No wonder that they were offended
tures may ,define. Indeed, any attempt at Himl No wonder the New Testa -
at definition can be made only by trent so emphatically asserts that
erecting a negative sign before ev- "Christ crucified was a stumbling-
• ••+cry positive attribute which we would block to the Jews" (1 Cor. 1:23),
spiny to God. He is in -finite; He is There is . indeed no human power
invisible; He is "eternal", that is, whereby man may -know that this
non temporal, Ile is the One whose Jesus is truly the Christ: that, eon -
"thoughts are not our thoughts, and cealed beneath the flesh and blood of
whose .ways are not our ways" (Is. this 1'carpenter, the son of Mary, the
• 86:3), God is ithe "Holy One of Is- brother of James and Joses ." is
rael"-i,e, the One who is "set apart" the Hidden, the Eternal, and the Liv -
"•even front His chosen people. As the ingGOD. "They were offended at
Holy One He suffers none to look flim!" So must the natural man al -
«upon Him, "Thou canst not see my; ways be offended at Him: for 'there
face; for there shall no than see rte, can be nothing more offensive to the
and live" (Ex. 33.20). •'mind of the natural man (who really
The testimony of the New 'Testa- desires to think of GOD) than that
inert is equally emphatic, 'rNo nian I He who is really GOD should be also,
hath seen God at any time" (John and at the same time, one particular,
1;18; 1 John 4:12). )oven the grand- humble, and (in the end) completely
ear and beauty of the natural world helpless, man! The only reason why
gives testimony to the fact that God we in this age are not equally ioffend
is not seen in this world: the visible led as were the scribes and pharisees
things telling us of His invisibility at Jesus, and at the audacious claims
and of the nonetetnporal power of Ilis which He makes for Himself, is be-
'Godhead
e'Godhead (Rom. 1:20). The fdllmding cause, unlike God's people of old, we
equotation from 1 Timothy (6:16, 16) Have ceased altogether to believe in
can leave no doubt in our minds that One who is really GOD—in the Sevin -
'the God in whom Paul believes is One tural sense described above -and have
"who -as we have already shown -is turned to a sheer paganism which
'the Hidden, Unknown, and Unknow- finds "divinity" within the soul of
able God, "the blessed and only Po- every man. One can hardly be of-
' tentate, the king of Kings, and Lord fended at nny claims of this kind of
of Lords: who only hath immortality, 'divinity' which Jesus might make:
• dwelling in :the light which no man for we do not naturally hate oursel-
ean ap*,roach unto; whom no man ves!
` hath seen, nor can see"! 1 For the New Testament, however,
It is THIS GOD whom Jesus comes the acknowledgement that Jesus of
to reveal! But because this God re- Nazareth "whose father mid mother.
mains eternally GOD, therefore, even we know" (John 6;42), is indeed the
in. His revelation it is His hidden-ness Christ, the Son of GOD (really
which is made known. Every possi- GOD): this acknowledgetnent is al-
-bility of a visible apvearance of the ways regarded as the great impos-
Invisible God upon the human stage stbility for the natural man (John 11
of life is successfully resisted when 12,13; Matt. 11:27). That which is
Jesus defeats the wiles of the -devil impossible with man becomes, nev-
in the wilderness (Matt. 4:1-11); and ertheless, a possibility because of the
again (for example) when, having merciful and miraculous working of
power, Jesus nevertheless refuses' to the Father who bestows upon man a
come down from the cross (Matt 27: new power, and a new insight: the
80-42). Because Jesus Christ is truly power and the insight of faith.- Faith
GOD, therefore His Godhead becomes is the gift (Eph. 2;8) which God
bidden beneath his "manhood" --being creates within men by the working of
GOD Jesus nevertheless makes Him- the Holy Spirit. The "flesh profits
`self of no'reputation, takes upon Hint- nothing"—neither the flesh of Jesus,
t Have you ever noticed that when a for GOD does not become visible in
it; not yet the flesh tee man, for with
the fleshly eye no man can see GOD
, in Jesus of Nazareth—but "it is the
'Spirit that quickeneth" (John 6:63).
I To see Jesus is to see GOD (John
1:18; 14:9): But in the New Testa-
' meet 'to see ,:esus' 'always Means to
"How to Become a Hockey have perceived what flesh and blood,
Star" ly that great authority
T. P. Tommy" Gorman, a. ei.e, every natural power of man, can
Great Book profusely illus- not perceive; it means that by the in-
trated and containing many sight which comes "from above"
valuable tips on how to play
the game. (John 3:3), and by Use wonting of the
also AUTOGRAPHED PICTURES . , working of the Holy ' Spirit- (Mott
y.: of unteafoe fr m ng 16:17; 1 Cor 12:8),' man is enabled to
S
(moD�teu fDr<jramiag)
Group Montreal "Maroons"' penetrate beneath the veil of the -fisib
r. Gramn L,lsjauriona^ Of the Son r4 men, and to confess
Dave nattier
iciuraro)r
D ve rott er Johnq Gagnon Merbla Cain Him as the Son of God, arknawledg-
MalayNorihmtt Wi1f.Cud° +iinul'Haynm
M.1691 ince ''13ab,1 Siebert Tale brolly - ing that this "Carpell'er, the son orTurk Ttobinson Anrel Joliet Marty Barry• - -
Bob Greek, -WSowell Joitren,nilole (Mary".
18 the revellers of the true and
Carl woes. George Mouth. "Ace" 734110Y ' the >liv!n GOD, the Father IN -.IRA-
GIN Market Stow Evoes Frank Bouoher g" ' '
Dave noir TodAld ee sins" .Caney �, VD,N, the. Hidden' and the Holy One -
or app of the moab prominent pia+:cr, ou
the"Marson,"or"Leeaouadienaauba ,- sof Israel. (See Matt. 11:6).
l' • Your choice df'Ithe above +s
For a label from a tin 'of
"CROWN BRAND" or'"LTLIY
WHITE" Corn Syrup. -Write
on the back your name and
address and the word's "Hoc-
key Book" or the name of the
picture you want (one bock
or picture for each label).
Mail label to address `below.
EDWARD'SB'URG
EE!
OKE ON :HOCKEY
'CROWN BRAND
CORN SYRIJ
THE FAMOUS ENERGY FOOD
' `TheCANADASCARCHCGMPANYL4rltel
TORONTO prt
Have you ever noticed when a
garage man makes' a mistake, he adds
lit re yore' hill; when a cerpent_r
makes a mistake, its Sunt what he ex-
pected; when a preacher snakes a
mistake, ,nobody r knows the differ-
ence; when a lawyer makes a lois-
take, It was just what be wanted, be-
cause he has a chance to try the case
all over again; when a judge makers
a mistake, it becomes the law of the
land; when a doctor makes a mistake
lre buries it; but when the editor
Males 'a mistake ---good night!
.«
Nfr i 4Nf f NtO“ :HI � ? NfMM
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Tested J
• Z
Recipes
Favorite Onion Dishes
Bermuda ,Onions Stuffed
With Beans
6 large Bermuda onions
8 tbspns, butter
1 medium can oven; baked beans,
vegetarian style,
Half cup dry bread crumbs
Quarter cup tomato ketchup
1 tbspn. salt
Quarter tspn. pepper.
Peel the onions carefully, scoop out
centres, leaving hollow cup with op-
ening at top about as big as.a 60-eent
piece.. Chop half am • of the onion
removed from centres and let simmer.
in butter 10 minutes. Remove from
fire and combine with beans, ketchup
seasonings and bread crumbs, Fill
onions with prepared mixture. Place
in a. deep covered baking dish with
little water. Bake in moderate oven
lei hours or until onions are tender.
Serve six.
Lamb 'Cutlets With
Braised' Onions
Have the butcher cut the neck or
breast into cutlet sized pieces about
one inch thick. Wiese with a damp
cloth and then dip in flour and brown
quickly in hot fat. Now add 6 table-
spoons of flour and brown well. Add:
1 dozen onions, 11/2 euros water, 1 cup
of diced carrots, 1 cup of diced green
tops of scallions. Cover and cook
very slowly until meat is tender, us.
ualty about two and one-tia!f hours.
Season. To serve, lift the meat on
Pieces of toast and pour over some
of the vegetables and gravy, then
mask with a tablespoon of Holland
aise sauce. Sprinkle with fine -chop
ped parsley.
Favorite Onion Soup
Cook one-quarter cup dieed carrot,
1 cup sliced onion, 1 sliced stalk of
celery and a sprig of parsley in half
cup butter until soft. Add 1 table-
spoon flout' andblendwell. Add 11,4•
quarts well seasoned white stock
(chicken or veal) and simmer gent-
ly about half hour. Sculdsl cup cream
and add very slowly to 1 slightly
beaten egg yolk so that egg will not
cook and curdle. Add to the soup
and stir over heat for 2 minutes, stir-
ring constantly. Strain and serve
with toasted croutons buttered light-
ly, and sprinkle with grated cheese,
Onion Pie
(To be served with baked fish)
Line pie Mate with paste. Fill with
sliced onion, sprinkle with salt, and
put top crust on, Bake about 40 min-
utes,
Scalloped Onions
Melt one tablespoon butter, add 1
heaping tablespoon flour, stir well,
adding g1'adually 1 pint milk, or half
milk and half water. Stir while cook-
ing until smooth. Boil onions whole.
Butter' bread crumbs, using 1 table=
spoon butter to 1 cupful crumbs.
Sprinkle a layer of these crumbs in
bottom of baking dish, then layer of
onions, seasoning with salt and pep-
per as you go. Pour abovecream
sauce over onions, and have top layer
of the buttered crumbs, Bake in oven
until crumbs are brown. (about 20
minutes). This is a nice way to cook
left -over cauliflower,
French Fried Onions
1 cup flour
2-3 cup water
1. egg white .
Half tspn, salt
2 tbspns. oil
10 or 12 large onions.
Milk
Mix and sift dim ingredients: Add
water; beat until smooth; adcl oil.
Fe'cl in stiffly -beaten ,egg white.
Slice onions eighth inch thick, "Sep-
-mate into rings. • Reserve small rings
for other use. Soak in milk to cover
for one how'. Drain and thy, clip in
batter and fry in creep, oil at 390 de-
crees F. until light brown." Drain on
soft paper.
lief to the victim of a burn or scald.
If the burn is from acids, a soht-
tion c -f bicarbonate of sodawill neu-
tralize the chemical. If from alkali,
such as caustic soda, clean with a
water containing citric acid, Gas or
limn burns of the e375 ma.y temporar-
ily be treated by flushing the eye'
with water containing citric acid, and
a chop of boiled castor oil rut in thb
eye. -Mustard pbs humps are treated
by a solution of hleachine powder.
Sunburn is at once relieved by the ap-
plication of a strong solution, of Ep-
som traits or tea. In case of burns or grecs to 450 P.) until tender, about
scalds never target the teapot, 115 minutes,-C,N.R. Magazine,
MILLIONS OF ROSES
Everybody who knows anything a-
bout flowers is familiar with the tu-
lip beds of Holland and the Laster
lily beds of Bermuda, but compara-
tively few Canadians have any idea
that •withip their own borders is the
largest rose and tilt flower garden
on this continent, where blooms each
year are counted in their millions.
The little' Ontario town of Bramp-
ton is the centre of the cut flower
industry of: Canada. What is believ-
ed to, be the first flower fanii in that
district w a s founded about sixty
years ago by an Old County garden-
er and his son. .The growing of
roses was their hobby. F'ollowt(ng-
the success that attended their ef-
forts others became interested, and
so yearr by year the greenhouses
spread on the Brampton countryside
and the superb quality of the Bramp-
ton roses became known fax and wide
amongst horticulturists, who lifted
then hats in acknowledgement of a
triumph. Millions of roses are pluck-
ed each year in 'this district along
with uncounted trillions of other
flowers, to say nothing of the pro-
duction from asparagus beds, hot-
house tomatoes and all kinds of choice
garden: things. ,
Horseshoe And Good Luck
According tp Brewer's Dictionary
of Phrase and Fable the legend that
a horseshoe. brings good luck is sup-
posed to have originated with St.
Dunstan, who was noted for his skill
in shoeing horses. One day Satan
himself is said to have appeared and
demanded that his "single hoof"
should be shod. St. Dunstan, recog-
nized his customer, tied him rightly
to the wall and proceeded to do. as he
was bid, but purposely inflicted so
much pain that his Satanic Majesty
begged for mercy. Thereupon St.
Dunstan released his- captive after
having extracted from him a, promise
that he would never enter a place
where a horseshoe was displayed.
Thus reads the legend. And se, for
many centuries, observes a writer in
the New York Herald Tribune, the
horseshoe has been looked upon as a
charm against evil and a bringer of
good fortune. At one time it was
affixed to the front door of the house
as a protection against witches, Lord
Nelson caused one to be nailed to the
mast of his flagship the Vietory and,
today, we still findthis emblem of
good luck installed in many homes.
Use Of Glass In Decorating
Favoured.
There is nothing new about glass
but the modern homemaker is find-
ing new uses for it. Walls, mantels,
fireplaces and screens are being
manufactured from this material
Glass tile -walls conte in many .col-
ours for bathrooms. Spray panels of
glass frequently replace shower cur-
tains, dressing tables of glass and
occasional tables ineyoften be found.
Mirror panels for mantels and even
wall partitions are found of glass-
brick,
Glass is rapidly gaining in impor-
tance in modern decoration. The use
of large rnirrors to reflect a room and
increase its apparent size is a trick
that has long been lenient to decora-
tor's.
When room's are small there are
many things to keep in mind. Don't
crowd too much furniture into. the a-
valiable space. Don't use massive
furniture if it is avoidable. Mirrored
Panels will reflect a room, making it
seen larger and cooler.
Baked Onions in Tomato Juice
8 medium sized onions
4 tbspns. tomato juice
1 tspn. salt
Parsley
2 tbspns. melted fat
3 tbspns. honey
Quarter tspn. paprika,
Peelthe onions, cut in halves,
crosswise, and place in a buttered
casserole. Mix the fat, tomato juice,
honey and seasoning. Pour over the
onions and bake 1 hour covered in.a
moderate oven (360 degrees F.). Add
no water.
Baked Stuffed Onions
- 6 medium to large onions
Half enu soft bread crumbs
Half cup • milk
Half tspre. salt.
Half eup chopped celery or chopped
green pepper
Fine dry bread omens
Pepper
1 tbspn. butter
Remove a slice from the top of each
onion and parboil the onions until al
most tender. Drain, remove the ten-
tres.' Chop, combine with the celery
and crumbs. Add seasoning and re-
fill the onion. cues, • Place ina bak-
ing dish, cover with crumbs, add the
milk and bake in hot oven (400 de -
A HEALTH seeviee OP
THE CANADIAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION AND LIFE
UNSUPANCE COMPANIES .
HN, CANADA
PNEUMOTHORAX
When tuberculosis is diagnosed,
what is the patient to do? The answer
to this question is REST. This is what
the doctor will tell him to do, because
everyone, will agree that in the treat-
ment of tuberculosis, the most inner
-
ant point is rest,' physical and mental.
In tuberculosis,' the lung is diseas-
ed, and through rest the activity- of
the lung is diminished and so the heal-
ing forces are given a better chance
to arrest the disease process, halt the
progress of the disease, and bring a-
bout. a cure
At birth, air first enters the pings
when breathing begins. This air,
which is at atmosphet'ie pressure,
causes 'the lungs to expand, filling the
chest cavity. Owing to their elasticity
the lungs tend to- contract against the
atmospheric pressure, and this creates
a slight negative pressure of suction
in the chest cavity outside of the lung
itself.
Between the lung and the chest
wall there is the pleura, a smooth cov-
ering of two layers, the larger one
of ivhiehscovers the- lung, and the
other, the inner side of the chest
wall. In theact of breathing, these
two coverings glide the one over the
other. -
Within recent years, artificial
pneumothorax has been used to, place
a diseased 'lung at complete rest,' in
order to increase the chance of heal-
ing. This is accomplished by intro-
ducing air into the pleural cavity, the
space between the two coverings of
layers of pleura- The introduction
of air into the pleural cavity reduces
the negative pressure that is normal
in that, cavity and so equalizes the
pressure that is exerted on the lungs
from within and without. The result
is that the lung collapses and is a'`
rest.
Not all patients require pneumoth
orax, nor all cases suitable for such
treatment. For those eases which are
seliected after ;peeper examinations
and studies, there is no doubt that
this form of treatment has revolut
ionized the outlook. The treatment
must be maintained by injections' of
air for months and possibly years
This does not mean that any less
care is to• be given as regards the
other points of treatment. It does
mean, however, that much can be
done for cases that were considered
hopeless; ie speeds up recovery in
many cases, lessens the chance of
spread to the other lung, reduces
sputum and so minimizes the chance
of spreading the disease and, alto-
gether, represents a great adi;auce
in the treatment of a disease which
is still 'one of the most common and
persistent enemies of mankind.
Questions concerning! Health, ads;
dressed to the Canadian Medical
Association, 184 College St,, Toronto
will be answered personally by letter
How Word Honeymoon
Originated
Among the northern nations of
Europe, in ancient times, it was the
custom for newly married couples, to
drink metheglin or tread (a kind of
wine made from honey) for thirty
days after marriage. Antiquarians
say that from this custom the term
"honey month" or "honeyincion" ori-
ginated. Whether or not that is its
origin, it is known that in the days
of marriage by capture the bride-
groom remained in hiding 'with his
bride until her kinsmen tired of the
seareh for her. Later, when love en-
tered marriage and elopements were.
freqent, the bride and bridegroom re-
mained in hiding for a `while. Both
of these "hiding periods" seem to
point to possible origins of the honey-
moon trip. --Exchange.
"The Value of A' Smile"'
It costs nothing and gives much.
It enriches those who receive. without
making poorer those Who give. It
takes but a moment but the memory
sometimes last forever. None are so
rich that they can get along without
it and •none so poor that they cannot
be made richer with it. A smile er'e-
ates happiness in the home, fosters
good will in business and is the coun-
tersign of friendship. It brings rest
to the weary, cheer to the discourag-
ed, .sunshine to the sad, and is eat -
en's best antidote" fort trouble. Yet
it cannot be bought, borrowed or' sto-
en and is something that is of no
value to anyone until . to 1s given a-
way. Some people are too tired to
give you a smile,-.•gine them one of
yours, as none need a smile more—
so much as he who has none to give.
THIS MODEST CORNER IS DEDICATED
TO THE POETS
ere They Will Sing You Their. Songs—Sometimes
Gay, Sometimes Sad—But Always Helpful
and Inspiring.
GREY DUSK
Grey fold on fold, the twilight cur-
tains fall
Softly, like warin grey homespun,
over all
The patient mother hills, in whose
embrace
The quiet country folkhave dwell-
ing place.
The furry children of the fields will
rest '
In dens and burrows; weary birds
wilt nest
In close-knit cedars, in some valley
deep:
But sharp-eyed deice, blind bats and
toads will creep
From little crevices to meet the night.
In farmhouse windows, cheerful yel-
low light
Shows where the human folk who
At night find rest around the fires
of Boma.
Grey • fold on fold, night's darks
curtains fall
Upon the hillside homes. God • bles
then. all.
—Mary C. Roby
r
9F•
A SERMON IN RHYME
If you. have a friend worth loving,
Love him. Yes, and let him know
That you love him, ere life's evening
Tinge his brow- with sunset glow,
Why should good words ne'er be said
Of a friend—till he is dead?
If you hear a song that thrills you,
Sung by any child of song,
Praise it. Do not let the singer
Wait deserved praises. long.
Why should one who thrills your
heart
Lack the joy you may impart?
If you hear a prayer that moves you
By its rumble, pleasing tone
Join in, Do you let the seeker
Bow before his God alone,
Why should not your brother share
The strength of "two or three" in
prayer?
If you see the riot tears falling
From a brother's weeping eyes,
Share then:. And, by kindly sharing,
Own your kinship with the skies.
Why should any one be glad
When a brother's heart is sad?
If a silvery laugh goes rippling
Through the sunshine on his face,
Share it. 'Tis the wise man's saying
For both grief and joy a place.
There's health and goodness in the
mirth
In which an honest laugh has birth.
If your work is trade more easy
13y friendly helping hand,
Say so. Speak out brave and truly,
Ere the darkness veil the Iand,
Should a brother workman dear
Falter for a word of cheer?
Scatter thus your seeds of kitldness,
All enriching as you go—
Leave them. Trust the Harvest Giver,
He will make melt seed to grow.
So, until its happy end,
Your life shall never lack a friend.
—Rochester Democrat.
THE GLORY OF THE SNOWS
Without rey window, matting
Breaks enchanted on my eye!
I know some Angel of the Snows
Has surely passed us by.
Not chains of iey coldness
Encases all I see,
But woolly, carded whiteness
Enfoldeth bush and tree—
So soft, so still .the whiteness,
Like cherry trees in spring!.
The great elm dressed
In bridal tress;
An angel surely must have pressed
Her wings' impressions, there at rest.
In Heaven itself no sight more sweet
'A tired, pilgrim's soul could greet.
--Andre R. Simpson -Scott.
ON THE AIR
Time was, the farm wife standing
in her door
And peering through the dusk across
the hills,
Could almost hear behind her on the
floor
The shadows creeping, creeping to
the sills
Like ghosts of black Minoreas' comb
to perch
There in the dark, so still the country
night,
While sometimes from the rising .
mists, a biroh
Would beckon till she turned and
struck a light.
Time was .. now always there is
company:
An orchestra usurps the kitchen,
while
A prima donna often comes to tea
And Presidents revolve the creaking•
utile
For' neither mire, hub -deep, nor
drifting snow
Can block the road against a radio,
—Ethel Romig Fuller,
FROM NEWFOUNDLAND
Here the winds blow,. '
And here they die,
Not with that wild, exotic rage
That v a in l y sweeps untrodden,
I shores,
But with familiar breath
Holding a partnership with life;
Resonant with the hopes of spring,
Pungent with the airs of harvest
They call with the silver fifes of the
sea,
They breathe with the lungs of men,
They are one with the tides of the-
sea,
hesea,
They are one with tate tides of the
heart,
They blow with the rising octaves'
of dawn,
They die with the largo, of dusk,
Their hands are full to the overflow,
In their right, is the bread of life,
In their Ieft are the waters of death
,: —E. J. Prat.
A REMINDER
I cannot hold the leaves in circling
flight,
Nor keep the crimson i n t h e
smallest flower;
But I can dream of that soft April
night,
And see a promise in this sombre
hotu'.
I cannot help the friendship won and
lost
(Because I failed in some too sub-
fle test),
But I can sha:ie anew (nor reek the
Cost)
To stronger, finer codes, niy soul's
behest.
I cannot help if half a world in.
strife
Has str'tiek my hearth in passing;
left it bare;
But I can bridge across to larger life
(Having a future hope), and find
it there.
Richard Scrace.
GOD HOLDS THE KEY
("Casting all your cares upon Him,
for He Gareth for You." —2 Peter,
4-7.
God holds the key of all unknown,
And,I am glad. •
If other hands should hold the key,
Or if He trusted it to me,
I might be sad.
What if tomorrow's -cares were here
Without its rest,
I'd rather He unlocked the day,
And as the hours swing open, say:
"My will is best."
• The very dimness of my sight
Makes me secure;
For gleaning in my misty way,
I feel His hand; I hear liim say:
"My help is sum"
j
THE GATE OF PEACE
Ah, isito will build the city , of our
dreamt
Where beauty shall abound and truth.
avail,
With patient -love that is: too wise
Sin strife,
Blending in power as. gentle as the
fain 1
With the reviving earth on full spring
days? -
Who now will speed us to, its gate.
of peace
And reassure us on. our doubtful
road? '
1 —Bliss Carman.
I cannot read I3is future plans.
But this I know:
T have the smiling of His face,
And all the refuge of His grace,
While here below.
Enough, thin covers all my wants,
And so ,I rest.
For what I cannot, He can, see,
And in His care I savedshallbe
Forever blest.
—J. Parkers
According to sane lumbermen, a:
piece of pulpy- poplar •wood is better
for keeping an axe -head on than anee
metal wedge
eele