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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1928-07-05, Page 7Our gulers 4 i Siva School Lesson Oh. 8:1: A great pereeeu ton, Now began those attacks upon the Quite tem church which were to prove 30 forinideble at different periods tithing the next threw centuries, and by whieh many confessor's of Jesus were called upon to seal their faith with their bleed, Few stories are more moving „ , .-.,limn these whish tell of the courage July 8 --Lesson iI—Acts 7: 54 to S: 3; 'end Heroism of these early martyrs, 22: 19, 20, Golden Text --pe thot netny of •the -young mon and !'rail , Who wouldder faithful unto death, and I will give Iifecensitxelf than deny thethe r T ori an thee a crown of Ilfee-.Rev, 2: 10. 0!Oar, ANALYSIS I ,r At Jerusalem. It ie not unlikely 1, ewe Dam ora THC I`IRST Menne, that an immediate attack was now 59-60, a jmade upon those who were known to II, TUE YOUTH WHO ' LOOKS ON, be followers . of the Nazarene, and INTRODUCTION—Stephen occupies an probably Paul led the attack. So keen important place in the story of Paul, was the persecution that it led to the He was the first official to be appoint- breaking: up of the eon'gregetkon at ed by the early church, chomp, with Jerusalem, and the members, were six 'others to help in the distribution scattered throughout the whole of Sa- of alms among the poor Widows. He maria and Judaea, thus extending the was also a man oil great intellectual gospel to new places. Ability, belonging probably to the more I V, 3, Saul' , '. , nialce havock of the liberal -minded' .Jews, and Was able to church, He is evidently the most see very clearly what was involved in prominent among the persecutors, and the teaching of Jesus. He saw that he says himself that he was exceed the attitude to the temple and mosaic ingly mad against these'heretics,. He legislation was now entirely changed.' searches them out in their homes 'hes Tlis great speech in Acts 7, reveals his � them shut up in prison where they originality and entitles him to be; call- wait :'their trial: Before ,the ,JeWieh ed the first theologian. Also his bold -'courts which would pass sentenme en ness i nas'serting his conviction raised them. It is doubtful whether. these up the stricter party of. the Jews Jewish judges 'ventured to execute gainst him so he became the first any more, but they robbed them of martyr. 'their property, took away their homes, X. THA DEATH OP run FIRST MARTYR, refused to give them any work, and 54-60, I condemned them to poverty—a condi- V. 64. Gnashed on him with their tion which remained in the Jerusalem teeth, An example of the fury and , church for a long time and which later lsatrecl which so -often {accompany rets- called forth the generosity oe the Gen- gious bigotry, as was also seen in the tile churches. Thus we are presented attack made on Jesus, I with a situation of great dramatic V, 55. He . , , looked up stead- interest, The leaders of the Early fastly into heaven. Stephen's cairn -Church are attaked with fierce hatred, nese stands out in striking contrast; while' he who is the 'nest prominent acid he is sustained by three things, among among the opponents'' is soon; to' be He is • filled with the power of the i won over and become the most aggres- heavenly spirit, he sees the eery of,sive preacher of the new gospel, God and looks upon Jesus standing -- Spirit represents the active bel P pp givenr by God. The Holy Spirit is God in Steve 50 I' C In Ice action, The glory of God may be il- lustrated by the vision which Isaiah had in the temple (see Isa. ch. 6). Recent experiments by the Home have the first manifestation of th e n, a appeara ce esus we:.Institute of "Delineator as described . el -stifled, Christ who was soon to ap- eln the July issue of the monthly con - pear to Paul on the. road to Damascus elusively prove'that a cheap refriger- • d whom John afterwards saw en ator is a waste of money. "Performance shows that the cheap icebox uses about' 50 per cent. more ice than the more expensive onee,•and that the temperatures within the toed compartment are 17 per cent. higher.: Food remains fresher in both flavor. and appearance in refrigerators which at the right hand of God. The Holy Good Ref rgerators the island of Patmos. Jesus is stand- ing and therefore ready to step' in to help his servant. His position at the right hand of God shows that he fills the office of the mediator, while ,l se is also waiting to receive anis execute the messages of God. HHiIiltintut�asnttptp�euunt�y q tosmoismitoonosow tomti11a4DuYhpN}qoM 1M1: nunntituiinesiuniutieainiuuutinutil ni THE KING AND.,THE PRINCE OF WALES Snapped at the recent review of the "Guards" at Whitehall. People are Queer Household Hints p To keep scorched or burned pots, Lady Rhonda's Paper Attacks toes from tasting, set the pan of pota- toes quickly into cold water for a few minutes, It scorched badly, and you wish to mash or season, put them into mist reaction to Miss Amelia Earhart 's a clean pan, A salad that few people use and that fight across the Atlantic Ocean was almost all.like • is fresh cabbage and pwb11s1ied 'there recently,. and was de -'sliced orange and salad dressingg. Mix cidedly unfavorable. It'was registered thoroughly and•serve soon au Crowd Mind on Ear - hart's Flight London,—The first distinctively fem. in TIM d d Tide a weekly paper I could never' get my family to eat edited by Lady Rhonda, which con - many beans until I was told by a traded the case of Miss Earhart wi,ith neighbor not to use soda, and to put, V: Q, 'I see . the Son Of man: those of Lady Heath and Lady Bai1T3y This was the title which Jesus chose maintain adequate temperatures. Tem- into them a few tiny bite of sliced expressed' i Mee- peratures within the food Ohamber as "an interesting illustration of the onion about a half hour before they for himself, and itexpxe ed hie esf today towards women. genic claim in a way that revealed should average under 50 degrees Fah, crowd mind ofinish cooking. Now I can hardly cook btcth his glory and also his humility. A glossy white exterior and a Lady Heath and Lady Bailey recently enough of them. They do not taste It is, very rarely used by any other in smooth white porcelain interior do not made solo flights between London and of the onion but the flavor is greatly the New Testament, insure good refrigeration—it is rather Cape Town, South Africa, the materials which come between the two and the manner n which they are placed. In the good refrigerators which the institute has examine there have been from six to fourteen separ- ate layers of insulation material seal- ed into place—the number depending somewhat on the type and thickness of these materials. The thickness of "It would seem,"' Lady Rhonda's improved. V. 57. And ran upon him. The Here is breakfast fruit more apps- Judges, as' in the trial of Jesus, are i hi h paper commented, "as 15 the public tiring than cantaloupe. Take a thick filled with indignation, and look upon were infinitely more thrilled by the slice of tomato out of the icebox, pour him as a blasphemer. But the: marks spectacle of women as passengers hot bacon grease over it, put the thin of deliberation are even fewer here than women as pilots. It likes to sae slice of bacon on top and serve. I than in thehey r trialofChrist. In them brave dangers and take risks, wild fury they rush de andedo the but appears to feel that it is more wouldn't believe how good it was until city because their law demanded this, b d di I tried it. and there they stoned him to death, 9ttfhg, and therefore more suitably I have always had good luck making Much'• discussion has been given to the spectacular, that they should only do over my husband's suits for my son question how these Jews could per- the walls varied from 4 to 5 inches." so under male guidance. When Lady and ge...eg. results that look like a Bailey and Lady Heath set out on form so unlawful an act. In the case i tailor's. The secret of it is in stretch - of Jesus the Jewish authorities had to their respective Journeys there was a ing the seams, When I do the ma• obtain the permission of the Romani lm'general feeling (which crystalized in chine stitching I pull the clods to - ruler (see John 18:31), where it is dis- ii./Q You Know 'some parts of Africa to the point of ward me just as hard as. I can. tinctly stated that the Jews did not have the right to pass sentence of death. But in this case their anger carries them beyond their rights; and, the fact" that they did so has been explained by the suppositon that the s Roman law was not so strictly enforc- soap and brush ed during the latter years of Pontius Pilate Who left Palestine in A.D. 36, These Short Cuts official refusal to permit them to fly without escort) that women should resit --moi' be permitted to take such risks. To Keep Jellies To draw threads . easily for . hem -1 "But when Miss Earhart is carried titohing make a stiff lather of white as a bundle might be carried across ,. tft over the linen where the Atlantic the press of two great the threads are to be.brawn, Let it I countries echoes and re-echoes the dry, and the threads will come out excitement and President Coolidge i easily. himself telegraphs congratulations. while cooking; the contents will not If, when baking juicy pies, the Juice Truly, the crowd mind to -day has elates itself with this spectacle of a boils out into the oven, sprinkle salt changed but little from the 'crowd rise up and boil over. One does not great,city-the most colorful city in over the spilled Juice, and it wilI"hot mind that liked Princesses to' be at- burn, half of the skimming to do, al ll the world—rising full panoplied, burn, or cause a disagreeable odor in tacked by Dragons, but preferred that by the old way, and 1t comes out nice es it seems, from the equatorial and clear, too, with less work. jungle. • Singapore is a name that has aecom- Homemade Pillows panted our dreams of far wanderings Are Mone Satisfying ever since our earliest school days. It has symbolized to the imaginative or else it may be that under his suc- cessor'special priveleges were granted to the Jews in this regard. Vs. 59, 60. These verses- describe the death of Stephen (see Luke 28: 24): He kneels down in the attitude 'of prayer, places himself in the hands of Jesus, while as he looks upon his wild and angry persecutors, he asks God to forgive them, thus following` ei the example of his Master. He., . . fell asleep. Into .the peace- ful sleep which was also to be an awakening into eternity, and into the immediate presence of'his Saviour. whom he loved. II. THC. YOUTH WHO LOOKS ON. V. 58. Laid down their clothes. at a young man's • feet, whose name was Saul. This is the first mention' of one who is to prove such a leader in the church, He may have been as old as thirty, was probably a member of the Jewish' court, or Sanhedrin. It is doubtful whether Paul had been in Jerusalem -during the trial of Jesus, -but at a later time he may have re- turned as a rabbi or minister in one of the local synagogues. His Active par- ticipation in this trial isshown by the fact that the witnesses placed their clothes at his feet, while he after- ward confessed that he gave his vote against Stephen. From BoilingOver SINGAPORE Hell for Horses The hunger for thinpa of the A Word to Conjure Romance, Cglor and Adventure To The country, *nos felt, n ever vies, no mat,, Minds. This British Post is Described by M. T. C. in The Christian Science Monitor A DREAM CAME TRUE Singapore,—It was not so many ience that all are different from what years ago, as the course of history we expected. Mark Twain, in his char runs, since a man whose foresight was aeteristic language, declared that only snatched by his determination, Hawaii waS the only part of the world sailed eastward in a little vessel bear- that "comes up to the brag," After ing the British flag. He came after a seeing' most of the places which be long time to a narrow waterway visited and a good many that he:did where the sun blazed white -bot upon not, I am inclined to think that he a glassy sea, and where on either side must have been singularly hard' to the low shores were fringed with bail- satisfy. For it seems to me that every limit green foliage growing in man- place, if not in one way certainly' in grove swamps. Behind lay the jungle, some other, "comes up to the brag," uninhabited save for reptiles and But of whatever the latter might con- manY wild beasts. Likewise the shores fist there is one bit of the globe that for many 'miles were silent and de- far transcends it, an that is Sings- sorted save where, from their hidden pore, which must be visited properly to, lairs, Malay pirates peered out at the be appreciated, ships of the far -wandering' white men You have heard of Singapore, per - and considered the possibility of a sue- haps as "the hottest place on earth," cessful attack. • and that is about all you have heard; of There was .little to appeal about the' it. Finding it in your atlas not very scene, but Sir Stamford Raffles looked far from the equator you have con - upon 11 and found it good. "Here," he eluded that all there was to it was declared, "I will found a city that heat, and you have let ,it go at that. shall presently rise to the benefit and But here, my friend, you have been glory of Britain. Where stands yon- greatly in error; for Singapore is der impenetrable jungle with its rep- neither excessively hot nor, from the tiles and its beasts, it shall come about viewpoint of the tropics, at all uncom- that broad streets lined with hotels forta'ble. But in any case, all that' is and shops and. commercial structures a trifle. shall be placed, and' fvhere runs yon -When you step ashore from your der silent and forbidding shore line ship at same one of the great docks there shall be found to -morrow docks and take a motor or ricksha or ont of and warehouses, and great ships from who curious little pony carriages all the ports of .the Seven Seas. And icnown ns a 'Sghaizy," then and there it all, shall be a monument, here at the commences the unfolding of a ehnor- place which shall presently become the ama of such a variegated sort as no crossroads of the East, to empire, other place in the world can show; a builders of England." So it came to pass. And to -day, as we enter the roads at Singapore, we regard' from the decks of a modern steamship the full realization of such a dream of empire as perhaps no man but Sir Stamford Raffles ever had the high courage to entertain. For the swamps and the jungles have gone, the wild beasts have fled, and the Malay pirates are but'a legend. The hotel's and the shops and the :commercial houses, the docks and the go downe and the'great' ships, the villas and the gardens and broad highways, all are here and in such measure as even the man who conceived Singapore surely never could have foreseen. Backward from the sea foot' by foot, rod by, rod, mile by mile, the jungle has been forced. Acre by acre the mangrove swamp has been turned into rubber plantations. .And along the once silent and. forbidding shore line there has been` built a splendid esplan- ade where one may walk or drive of an afternoon and look upon a harbor full of ships from all ports and all the •seas. Singapore is a name to conjure with, and its very existence where a cen- tury ago and less all was swamp and jungle seems to have followed the wav- ing of the conjurer's wand. Of empire building it is the climatic feat; of colonization it is the master achieve- ment. Dairen and Tsing-tao were monuments to the Russian and Ger- man advances in the Far East. -Hong' Kong is a British marvel—but Singa- pore is a miracle.'In the singing euphony of the very name lies a sug- gestion of the. romance which asso the house. Do not use powder to clean rough or chased brass. Wash the article in soap •and' water, dry, and then rub over the surface with a freshly cut lemon, Rinse, and rub dry with cha- mois. Save your celery leaves, dry them them in a paper bag and mix an equal quantity of salt, This b, an excellent Princes do all the rescuing." To Keep Butter In making Jellies leave a flat skim- ming spoon or dipper in the kettle "Have you discovered the thrill of thought all the mystery and magic in Hot Weather satisfaction one experiences on vlew-1 all the of theestand East: ing a bed or chaise lounge made bili, and mag how to lowy by quilted silk pillows of one's i The pronouncement of that one word A helpful suggestion as to has been an open -sesame which' has keep butter firm is contained in the own make." asks a writer in "De11ne- flavoring for soups and stews, and current issue of "Successful Farming. - - ator. thrown wide the woor to all the won - It reads: "When ice cannot be had of the room, they are very decorative dens of the Orient, to its rich color, to economical. and their fashioning is really quite its teeming activities of every race and Sterling silverware can be quickly l butter' may be kept cool in been plate nation to its green and gold of palm cleaned if boiled in a solution of bak- Put it on a dish which has been placed simple, especially if they are worke and sunlight, to its strange blend of ing soda in an' aluminum pan. An a shallow vessel of cold water and with a conventional . floral designthe East and WesOf all the lure of electrolytic action fakes place, which cover with an inverted hew earthen whose regular outline is easily traced he t all world's far places, of the rare causes the tarnish, to be thrown from flowerpot which has been scalded and with the needle. Boxed shapes are alln the exotic and the enchanting, the the metal, which itself Is not injured, left to cool. The pot should rest in the smartest things for pillows. They most compelling has lain in that assns �- the water and water should be can be made of satin, taffeta, crepe de pe g changed from time to time. Cared chine, radium or sateen." with which to conjure—Singapore! Modest Suitor—I am going to maw- for in this way, butter will keep firm' Few of the places of which we have ry your sister. Willie, but,I know I. n in hot weather." - "10 you ,read all the health hints?" ong'dreamed are as we have conceived. am not good enough for ter. Candid eve _,• J "Not all," answered Mr. Chuggins, them. Some disappoint us, although tittle Brother—That's what Sie says, ' "My .wife has run away with a man' -"In my efforts to keep out of the hos- much of that is the fault of the indi- but ma's been belling her .she can't.. in my car!" "Good heavens, Not1 pita`(L limit myself to a study of the' vadual. Others outstrip our most vivid I traffic regulations." do, better, lyour new car?" MUTT AND JEFF—Bud Fisher. ter -beneath how many ysfxs of urban ,' imprisonlitent it may be ss:bmereged. lit' is a nostalgia distinct from the nebe-f lows dream of every city captive of escape to a Little place in the country and quiet, Given fulfillment, there are few who would not shrink from husbandry of OW place and flee the quiet, The craving for the things of the country is more tangible. It may be for the feel of soft earth, for the hoot of an owl, for the bay of a moon.. mad hound. Or for horses, Paris has neither owls nor hounds' and :little unpaved earth, but it bas horses. Five minutes out of the Gare Saint Lazare and the boat train, and the most urban of visitors may sus- denly'be swept by the discovery that the hunger' for the sight of such horses never has been lest. The team-'' • iters of the central markets still re- member the American who decided one morning last summer that their horses were not properly harnessed, and at- tempted a demonstration, He was an Eastern banker and had not been back to Wisconsin for twenty years, The sight and smell of so Much horseflesh awakened old memories. A French proverb says, "Paris is the hell of horses; the paradise of woe men.." Hell is relative, and the pro- verb is old, Other cities since have 'condemned the horse to worse. Isere the horse still is honored. The. Par- isian horse is the only thing of flew ,and blood that can safely scorn French taxi drivers. The fiery gray 'Percheron stallions of the Magasin du Louvre may sweep through traffic with a disdain worthy of, the descend- ants of the chargers of knights and kings. The hill leading to the Senate series of fascinating pictures which is tortuous. On a wet day the great^ pass before youwith the rapidity of a est of Senators may pass =saluted cinematograph; a moving, kaleido- while the guard deserts the gates to scopic spectacle which banishes at once i spread sand for a struggling truck all thoughts of such trifles as temper- ature or emperature'or climatic condlticns. For here is China, the China of a dozen pro- vinces, more colorful and exotic than China itself; here is India, the India of Burma,. of Bengal, of the Punjab, of Ceylon; here is Malaysia, the tFed- erated States and all the islands; here. is•Tava and Sumatra, the isles of Con- rad, the Philippines and the South Seas; and here, too, is Africa and the Near East, all of it blending with Europe and the Western world, which here at the crossroads of the East rubs elbows with the world "East of Suez-" It is, in effect, like a mighty spectacle, epitomizing the habits and customs of all the world, this vivid, teeming, richly bued 'Singapore That is the first impression. And'. when you are driven out of the seeth- ing, energetic city itself and into the residential suburbs, you come upon a beauty of villa and garden and drive and palm' grove that rivals Hong Kong and Honolulu. And beyond that you find yourself amid the rubber 'trees, where the great groves have replaced the swamp and the jungle. There are vast forests, and through them over well -metaled roads you may drive for miles wondering at the marvel that has been brought about in the realiza- tion of one man's dream. On each tree, if you examine it closely, you will find the little alit in the bark down which flews, drop by drop, the white viscous liquid into its little cup quite as the inaple syrup runs on a Canadian hillside, presently to expand into broad sheets of the pre- cious, wealth -bringing rubber. And then, by another metaled highway, broad and lined with majestic royal palms, you may motor back into Singa- pore tarrying, if you like, at a massive hostelry which is one of the many forms in which has been commemorn ater the name of a great span, Now that the cool of the day is at hand, you will find all of Singapore abroad, the motorcar of many a wealthy Chinese' vying in luxurious- ness with those of the European rub- ber growers. For the commercial' ca- pacity.of the Chinese race has found its most impressive manifestation here in this wonderful city on the equator. The Chinese is as important as any in Singapore, and an its blended activities' and far-reaching commerce he plays an influential part. a A -- Wife of well-known snan.—"You loved me more when we were only en- gaged." Well-known Man.—"Well, to tel bite truth, my dear, I never car- fancies. arfancies. But it is the common exper- ed for married women." a of 5f�r x. :• u ;:de %ti•. 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Black plumes waving, a squad of guardsmen gallop- ed into the doorway of the reception hangar,—and ewung the heels of their horses to the mob. Fashion's annual horse show and the daily parade along the bridle paths of the Bois de Boulogne are diversions of the bored rich. They flatter but do not honor the horse. The equine glory of Paris is its work horses. This is the only capital of the world that still holds a Horse and Mule Day. The first Sunday in each June, Pantie revels in the odors, the dust and the lies of the ancient profession of horse trading. In the hours before dawn, when the bleating of the taxihorns has died away, the horning voice of the city is the crash of unhurried shod hooves, the rattle of trace chains, and the argot of teamsters. Up from the Leeks of the Seine toil the magnificent blacks that draw the street wagons, and the crack of whips over their backs is a defiance meant for the Renaults, the Fords and the Mucks. Four o'clock in the morning is the hour when every city is most free of its people. 'Mtn its sounds are most distinctively of its own breeding. New York speaks in the rumble of the milk trucks and the elevated, Paris in the trot of Ph, citerens. Impropriety ''"Z There is a very proper man Who walks with me, as lovers do. I hanker after him; he is • Most sober, wise and true. Yet wheel walk with him I love My soul flies outward, indiscreet, And I would gladly leave my shoes ' To feel the rain upon my feet.' And I would leave my hat and gloves To catch his hand and run and sing, To be a part of wind and rain, And earth that bursts with spring. Yet when I let my soul creep out In ways like this I do not please He dare not fling his hat and run For fear his next-door neighbor, sees him. —Dorothy Collins Alyea, in Delineator. A Use for Old " Jar Rin a When Jelly glasses without lids ars used, cover with manilla paper, then use a jar ring to hold paper in place. These can be labeled on top. an Tamm New York Beheld -Tribune: New York City has been dominated politi- cally for a long time by an organiza- tion Welchis in reasing'in adroitness and intelligence with every year, i0 support comes In a 'large measure from graft, and it is learning how to "graft and get away" far more rapidly than the public, whose money gupports it, Is learning how to' con- struct a graft -proof City government. Mrs, Jay—I understand that she bnarrled one of the landed gently. Mire Jay—He was, when elle landed litre. "What is the point at issue In the case of laggs vs♦ llendorson which has been dragging through tate Courts se long?" "'l"ho troulale bereft over the ownership of a clog, The litiga- tion:has boon going on for six years, and has cost the pa,'ties $1,0.00 so far." "Who wis; get the dolt eveutualiy, do you think?" The dog? 0h, he died early in the second y-nri,"