Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1928-08-30, Page 3-17r - We are t,ol( nbat the leliabnte were Mere netile, whicli likely means More generone and open-minded, and MAY Sunday School a 'them 'w'o ennverted and devoted theineelveie to the careful study or the ' Lesson .‘ 1 V, 12,.. Aigairo we have an aceeant of ecripturee, the different classee who joined the ,e111.1,rell HU Berea, wheel) wee ovidnelbY 1very renresetitatine. liewever, the September 2' Lesson x,--Petd In inevitable pereeoution broke e4 and Thessalonloa,—Acts 17; 1.12, Goleethe preaohere have to leolc„,for ROW den' 'Text—The entrance of thy fields of reiselonarn actierit'y. Tine needs, to thaw d'epartore from Mace - Words glveth 119: 131 dontn and their entranee into the lead 1of Greece of which Paul newit have ANALYSIS • ' I, A NEW CHURCH COMMUNITY 1-4 I wheard' and 141i°' n° 6)1114 h9 1G1 tgcd ee LI. THE INEVITABLE ATTACKS, 6-0. ore Se SERA, 10-12, beenoDuesion—The church at These •saloneee, is one o great interest, Mime it is quite likely that Christian liter- ature began with the letters which Paul wrote to this °community of sun- -leering believers. This wee about the • middle of the, first century, at a time, ( 'when Paul heel come to Oarirubbe a"d was no distreseed about the affairs of the little band Which he had let be- hind, that lae diepatched Timothy With •a letter, in which he tells them of his great lova for lane:elf& his anxiety; and qf ens tripe, that they will remain ' steadiest. It nae out of such circuan- 44tancee as these that the ea'rliest of int -the letters of the New Testament arose. L A NEw cetime/ 001AMuferrY, 1-4. thirty - Main Business Problem Said to be Selling Must Sell in Volume What' Mass Methods Produce, Says Moto P Official Greater production means work; work means wages; wages mean. con- suming power. Thus is the cycle of biusiness prosperity outlined by Floyd V. 1. Alter traveling for A. Allem of the General Motors Cor - three miles incase the great noma.g portion, discussing "Trends and Poll - road, called the Via Egnatia, Paul se,- cies in Modern Bustnees," leeferemenn rives at .A.mphipolie,, where he pron.. bore of the Buttery Club in Boston. ably rested overpight, leaving next Advocating conaplete reversal of old .naorning for Apolionna, another jour- methods in business and the unlearn- ney of thirty miles, .After another tag ot many old traditions and habits, ealonaca, where he makes a longer as the leading factors in the _modern thirty-seven miles he comes to These stay. It woultil seem as if this die,i rave ut on z ng o 1 1 1 1 fin Mr.All ia nese, en Melee represented the average for a I stressed the urgent need of fair play and simple business. "The old idea to reduce costs and expense of doing business by reducing wages seemedlogical," said Mr„, Allen, "but now it is the policy to increase Wages and the queer thing about It is that it works, for all that it appears Paradoxical and inconsistent. "We believe it pays to promote the individual prosperity of our employ- Beauty for ees. In that way, we increase their consuming power, and while we can- the Sports Girl not solve the problem of mass con- • day's journey, no mall feat in the exercise of walking. From the re, mark that there was a synagogue of the Jews at Thesealonic we may con - elude that Paul passed through the other °taw, beeaute there were none, of 'his own people there to form the beginning of a church. Thessidonita was named after the daughter • of • Philip of Macedon and was a seaport of considerable importance. The prose ent name is Salo Id., and it had some • prominence. le the Great War. k V. 2. Paul follows' his -usual prac- tice, and his preaching makes zo pro- found eni impreesion that they ask nini to return the followingSabbath. His sermon was an exposition o• n din. fe;ent paesages of the Old Testament Scriptures. Further light is thrown on this if we read 1 Thees. 1:5-8; 2 :7. V. 3. The 'nein purpose of his sta- men wan to sheev how Christ is re- vealed to them in the Old Testament. "The most difficult fact in this Chris, - tam message was the cross, and many were the attacks made on there Chris- tians for having a Saviour who had euffered such shame and indignity. Aceordingly, Paul brings out proof' passages to show that the prophets had told beforehand of the euffering The Seed in the City Street That afternoon or Aug,ust London wee mere aria Oleo ever. I looked with despair for any sign of beauty, something that could take my Mind away from dinglueee. . Tho blue sky overhead muds me miserable; I thought of the waves lapping the sun- lit sands or the West Country that. I knew so well. There the gray stook - doves flew front the bushes growing on the headland sides, and the larins song was ever in the air bet their in thoroughbred% The annoy -nee - True, Mere were pigeons, merit was cabled from Armageddon by wings were tinged with voot, and they the Oriental Institute & the Univer- were alienated from the wild dove city of Chicago and made public here whose nest was amen the black - !by Dr. James Henry Breasted, diree- thorns. Even the bark of the plane trees was unrefreshed, and guarded /3t.' 13reabt4 *w':°t`vading authority on Oriental history, pro - by Iron cages. . . Everything wee ugly, to competition, the smoke, the muneed the find "(d the greateet grimy buildings. And then I saw, floating across the shimmering roadway, a few downy seeds. They Came from the direction or the Thames. They swung In the motion of the streenair, and the light glistened on their filaments. One drifted to the pavement at my feet, and released a curved brown seed. By its'elze I knew it to be that of the Yellow Ooatsbeard, or Johu-go-to-bed- at-noon, Immediately the bus -rattle, the whir of cab -wheels, and the burnt - oil smell sank away, The seed bloom- ed in the palm of my hand, and I saw its flowers of pure yellow, and a white - throat was slipping through the nettles of the ditch. The city was old, but the brown seed was older. Men rallied their buildings anew after the great fire, hundreds of years ago; the flower did not change. My mind reached back before the time of the •••••••••••••••••••••• • '- • ..."-•,••••••••... • 7=1 Sol mon's Stables Early Peddlers Are Revealed by -- TN. • Ver a lorig time rie active feral or Chicago lilggers was0L11%111014 tt110:r were often called, hailed from New Dr. Breasted Calls Discovery Elagland, Conneetient Opt:Many. "of Greatest Historical braTniThiers. trsetephere fewliereintt4oe Ye:ureter:1 Importance eeddlere, wbp havrked arisortment Chteago,—The famous stables of of useful "Yankee netions"—pina, Salomon have been =earthed in needles, boas and eyes, Weser's, Paleptine 'bearing out an indication razors, eombs, coat and vest buttons, given in 'the Old Testament that the spoons, small hardware, •children's great Hebrew monarch was a dealer books, cotton gooas, /ace and Per' fume. Besides there were the special- ized itinerant dealers—tin-peddiere, clock -peddlers, •ehair-peddiers, ped- dlers of epices, essences, dyes, wood- enware, pottery, brooms, books and a host of other items; and even these specialists, as we shall see, often car- torical trapertance," vtheerralthilinnless8 beside selling their of goods and did The establishment *were over hex ,IwtaleeacirneYes,°e &Ilan 7,190e ttedtheivitorwnp.siLte 001. Armecily, Tel- chines, , cumbersome articles,— washing ma - Sometimes they vended Verl director for the Institute, who au_ ansdpinwniinn:owwihnegelsm, acehaibnineset floiard- emend it. The stables of 3,000 Yes corn shallere. Eveu wagon -makers ago can be visualised from the ruirre, hawked their product and they could according to his etatement. The states be met driving through the country wore arranged deuble rows. The with a train a light carte or earn hordes, about 12 to a row, stood fee- riages; and in winter they had a ins each other with a D • Sa*Mg° tring of sleighs laehed together. There the were, in addition, the peddlere on the tween the rows of beetle for grooms. Mangers andnhibehing posts canals and rivers, and the wholesale equipped the front of each stall, The itinerant merchants. A still further original tie holes for halter straps remain. distinction can be made between local peddlers with a relatively small The discovery will enable histor- route and bhose who travelled great WAS to re00111DtrACt 1133.2y pages of the distaneee. • past, accenting Praes'r Breeeted'e The dealer in small wares, essences , e ,..,egmann and such, was called a "trunk -ped "Few people are aware," he "that S°4°M°T1' 1111° to ""°°"°-"." dler," because he carried his goods in of his race, was not only an Oriental one or two small, oblong, tin trunks sovereign, but likewioe a successful slung on his back by a webbing har- rnerchant whoes dealings extended Hess or a leather' strap. n Although in Colonial times the ped- dler's stock was limited to a few items, by 1830 it nad extended to all sorts & merchandise. Large wagons loaded with drygoods, hats, boots, shoes, clocks, firearms, hardware, and even furniture became a common sight on our country roads. From house to house the peddler went, from town. to town And quite a flutter he caused when he appeared on the village green and opened his pack. Women dropped their chorea and men their work, and gathered. about to hear goa.sip of the neightecne. hoods the peddler had recently left, and to see his wares. A peripatetic merchant, he showed up wherever there was a chance for a sale. Not only did he visit the isolated country homes with his stock of goods, but he managed to be pre- sent on market days in town, at yen - dues or auction sales, •on military s training days, and at the spring and autumn country fairs. May and November were the usual months for these fairs, and sometimes they lasted three days. To them • farmers brought their horses and cat- tle for sale and •sundry goods of household manufacture. There were sports and bouts of all kinds, accom- Panted by a noise of blaring trumpets aunmde.scrateby fiddles and screeching whistlers and of people having a good Training of regimental muster-dars, when the local militia paraded, were also exciting events to which ped- dlers and mountebanks flocked- In Colonial times they were called Train Bend Days. For a week prior, the town would be renuded of boards and Joists to make booths', and the shops of molassesto make gingerbread and candy. The country people brought in cider and apples and nuts and Mina for sale. And everyone felt generous and proud of the militia and all were intent on enjoying themselves. It was the sort of occasion when than didn't mind spending a penny or two on the trinkets the peddlers offered. The early peddler, If contemporary e - documents are to be believed, was a lanky and hawk -beaked youth; an ad- venturous, brave, mercenary fellow, who had a rare understanding en hu- man nature and a ready tongue. The fact of youth is important. The first peddlers had to be reckless, bright young fellows with abundant grit and Virility, capable of taking care of themselves. They had to cope with the potentialities and dangerti of land and solitary stretches of wil- derness between towns—the trackless "Haw' kers and Walkers in Early America." Eine Ma 0 Romans with their tiled baths and EVER POPULAR PRINCE The Pineal of Wales at the opening of the Cadogan planing field at Tun- chariots; further still, when the first into.the neighboring kingdoms about bridge Wells. wild settlers made their but circles rateetine• Not the least of his win- , by bbs — f the wooded river vilties was his enterprise, air a horse All the while the dandelion had been dealer. When You Travel blooraing so that the seed should be "Hie marriage to the daughter a Irma of straws with you to drink When going on a meter trip take a formed. No haste, no strife, no mis- Pharaoh of Egypt gave him close con' ery; growing in the sunlight. A lovely nection with the Egyptian court and comfortably at springs and brooks A little vinegar will come in handy disk of gold, a summer day, a wan- he therefore enjoyed inside oeportun- dering bee, and the mother -beauty be- %les for eeeuring the finest Egyptian th childleed • ' hereee The ancient reoced of the Old sumption for the whole country, it came girl could usually be singled out of the outside of the windshield from tte I dropped the seed and went away, Testament etates, 'And the horses still has its effect in increased pro- At ono time the apen.air sports in case of rain. A cupful poured over "Volume must beincreased in order a crowd by her weather-beaten coin- , top and letting it run to the bottem no longer stifled by the weary menet- which. Salomon had were broieght out duction. of my useless work. Then I of Egypt; and the King's merchants to maintain a satisfactory net profit pleanan, seneeent often. with the red, win insure the chauffeur clear vision °" at the end of the year and thls idea unbecoming sunburn, freckled, aud even in a downpour.• thought that I would like to keep it, received them in droves, each drove and combinations and clieln store Sys- to the world diet she thought more light but these have been knaowlinastilo and plant it iu some known corner in at, a price.' order to watch its increasing joy as The Megiddo exnedition is in its is back of the epidemic of mergers with coarsened skin, she procIMmed Of course you will. carry tems that is growing all over the coun—; of games than of beauty. fail to ignite. For this emergency the plant grew in spring, and to take third year. It is digging in a remold to myself some of its laappiness. I which contains Several layers of cities men to -day is largely one of selling Given reasonable care, it is possible moue pocket. Then Jest get some searched on the pavement, but it was dating from different cemeteries, F,ael- try. So the problem facing business That is now a thing of tbe past. have a newspaper handy in the auto, and advertising and distribution ol to sPend the greater part of the day one to told this in front of the turn- Bo small and commonplace I could not ier excavations in upper layers re - goods, because we seem to have whip- playing games In the hottest sunshine , ed on headlights while you hunt for see it. 'A passerby asked if he might waled ecattered builder:ea livrt now for ped the problem of mass production and yet emerge in the evening, nor the trouble or make needed repairs. help me; had 1 lot anything and was the first time the archaseingists have in all lines, but we have not solved the theatre or'etlance, wi1b. •a complexion When you go campiug or motoria g it of any value—a gold ring, perhaps? were uton a etrabem which reveala a problem 'of mass coneumption. Our thatanybody might enVY.'' dip the sulphur ends or matchea into I replied in my enthusiasm that it was well laid out tDIVD. It is hoped that , which the Memel must suffer. .. Job now seems to be to scientifically Value of Olive 011 melted paraffin. This will not inter- of more value than a gold ring, hoping remnants of Gee of Solomon s pi ' tean es V. 4. A senall number of the Jews dispose of these goods Meet we so eel- . fere with their bighting and they will (as, ever Um dreamer has) that he will be found. The expedition i •joined the new sect, but there was a entifically manufacture. Very strong sunshine, if allowed to burn even in the ram because tbe would share my wonder of this seed warking on a five-year program. great response from the Gentiles, come into dieect contact with the in London. He was interested and while some of the women, likeily sons "Five factors contributing to bust - akin, bas a very drying effect on it. sated wax runs down and keeps of the wives of some of the leaders of mess success to -day are the employees. not only causes sunburn • and t puzzled, so I told him it was the seed e.,,e Imperial reeogrnzed the higher teaching of Paul the source of supply and the public. theslittle lines and wrinkles which lis stared at mo as though I had said Nation and Athenaeum (London): The imperial Wireless Merger em from going out. the city, were amply inwres,ged aerd the agent In the field, the stockholder, If freckles, but is often responsible for of a sort of dandelion that I sought. and Silas. Fair play is the basis. We have to The Forgiving British that God was in the Strand, and had The British Empire is SD =UMW/ II. THE INEVITABLE ATTACKS, 5-9. P aY a r P • Th Lieut -Col Newman Crate in the Just spoken to ine; and then he turned througboat the world that command- , eie norm around thee eyes and mouth so eV. 5. The Jewish leaders, being an- proverb. 'Let the w buyer bevrane' is RrematurelY on the face Cr the open ' ' away with a smile.—Henry William- eatione are of vikel importance and National Revie(London): The „ able to find any jnet cause for arreet- obsolete by to -day's code of ethics in air sports . f son, in The Lone Swallows. • the question is of first importance to peal to the lower classes of the city. Britain towards ex-enemles, the Govainireent itself. Other tele- • They go out into the market places 1 'ware' whether he Is selling a yard skin before that teach of vanishing Great B who, not so long since, would have The Parasite Zoo graph organizations having their and persuade them, possibly with he is selling agricultural machinery, AS a protection ageing these bleat-• ce past year the Inaperlal Bureau of En - 1... ndon Daily Herald: During the bcoalsial 1:boPerathtie°4nOsregrinanAndirj5a:Idaltetriarev- • where there were crowds of loungers ° goods across the counter, _whether cream, which' most girls use, will act ruthlessly* dismembered the Empire, o money, to start a riot by aesaulting withi hsg for something else close to world new preacleers. the Empire Marketing Fund to estab- monepoly. The organization of Brit - the. house of Jason, in search for the tomology had employed a grant from 'Phe, charge brought egatir* tisk in a Thickinghamshlre country ish Imperial cemanundeations ought to them is that they are disturbers 'of house a central laboratory, wnich had be saeh that there is not the slightest the peace. This is ecidence that Paul danger of their falling under alien ing Paul anal Silas determine e.n- business. I say, 'Let the seller be- A little olive oil, applied 51. to the large -minded and generous attitude of or real estate Or automobiles, becauee ishes. Before applying the oil add a 0 , , , , uame of nokng • so, would be difficult to he has more at stake than the buyer." few drops of simple tincture of ben - parallel in the history of civilized na- "Complete knowledge of the busi- zoin (ten drops to each Dunce of the No one desires that the old ness is a fundamental essential to sue. oil). The addition of the benzoin dens. hatreds, the rancor, and suspicion of cess," continued Mr. Alien, "knowiug helPe to whiten the skin and prevents the facts of our. business, the facts of any possibility of the oil giving it a .the war -period and years immediately ,engineeringS the facts of production, yellowish tinge . succeeding should be perpetuated. No the 1i -tots of sales and advertising and come to be known as the "Parasite eenkeei, er eye., ge their ether enema pression on the town. The Jews had had proved their capacities to destroy with alien organizations by males of must have made a oensiderable im- Zoo." Here were bred parasites that doubtless heard of the new sect from evilich their freedom would bo cramp poriments were being planned for the long eeed,„ in anteing a warden, u , ed. The whole problem oalls for a their triends at Jerusalem and Phil certain types of insects, and •here ex - V. 7. See Liight from the East, testing of parasites of yet unproved —0 -- Paul's Jewish enemies pointed out that capacity. Already among other ship- Paulevras preaching about the coming ments from this new station para- Unemployed and Empire a one desires that bitter memorise and • ell experience should inspire or color To Remove Freckles the facts Of finance, and we cannot Light-colored freckles, which have our present foreign policy! int be - only recently appeared, can_general- iy be removed by lit:Jetting them with a mixture- 'of equal parts of peroxide guess on any one of them, because it is not safe nowadays. We can take nothing for granted." Men at the top of big business to - of hydrogen (10 -vol.), strained lemon day, he pointed out, realize that lead- rosewater, and glyeerine. This ership can be maintained only by the lute°, nhould be applied, with a fine camel's most extreme care, by the most watch - hair brush, to each individual freckle and allowed to dry on. If you burn and freckle easibi 'don't use hot water for washing tne face. Lukewarm water is better, and after drying toe skin dab with a mixture of equal parts of elderflower water and -rosewater. Neither soap nor water should be applied when there, is any sign of the red, painful type of sunburn. Warm milk and 'water or orangeflower water should.be dab- bed on after the skin has been clean -ed with a good witch hazel cream. fore being swept off their feat by pic- turesque accounts of the sad pligbt of former enemies, the British public should remember the claims of our former friends and allies. The Westerner In my hands is the pleasure Of the helm wheel; Of plow and hoe and harrow; Of hamreer, square and tape; Of cant hook, ax and ueavY; Of saw and brush and pen; But the greatest pleasure of all Is the feel of reins, Of guiding reins. —Pierre .T. Sandberg. • First Farmer: "I've got a freak on my farm—a two -legged calf." "Seco:ad, Farmer: "I know. He called on my, Honey, I'm not a quitter.—eTeeas order.. One may well admlre her daughter list night." I Guinan, adaptability and realism of a new kingdom or rule, suggesting sites of the blow -fly had been shipped that this new icing would be a rival to Australia, New Zealand and the New York Herald-TrIbune: (The to Caesar. -Falkland Islands, and parasites of the British Industrial Transference Board ly reasonable men, a -rid saw that earwig to Canada. declare in their report that 200,000 British unemployed ninet be moved to V. 9. The magistrates were evident, Aecordingly they take, as we would A Prayer °then countries if they are to live. say, bail of Jason, making him give Give nie, 0 God, a gardlSn, Even if the government Inc to go there was no real cense of offence. pledges for the goad conduct of ham quite far in financing its emigrants, III. OFF TO 13EREA, 10-12. That I may plant within its ground alone ikould probably be less in the the oosk from the monebary ebandpoint elf and his guestn. Small AS it may be V. 10. The Christians are anxious A lilac tree. • long run than to continue the dole. and they secretly send thent off by Fashion it with care, Fiem the standpoint of morale it bo secure Paul and Silas front arrest, Give me, 0 God, a garden, • night, probably against the wishes of would benefit both the emigrants and Paul, who desired to remain and And eluiltered by the lilac tree, those wino stayed behind. One can &hare their dangers: The pirreacution --Gordon Higham in the Detroit Free solution of this very thorny problem I'll find You there. only wish Great Britain well in the caused him greet awciety, and macle —0:--- She Deems to be adjusting herself to which brolce out after his departure PreSS. hi/A very eager to return, as we see the time ancl to the peeving of the obil frorn 1 These. 2:18. tress—"Oh, that's all right, Mary, I — Mauve is the most miserable color V. 11. Berea lay eolith of Theasal- thought you were talking to Fidel" in the world. -2 -Sir Charles ARom. mica, and is now a town. of 20,000. MUTT AND JEFF—Bud Fisher tub vigilance, by getting every point and having the best brains they can in the country to focus their attention on every single angle of every prob- lem, so"that they can. see it in its en- tirety. "And so long as that kind of policies continuei in big business," he concluded, nee long I think nig busi- ness 10 sari." Mistress—"Mary, did I hear you use the expression "yonslittla brat!. juet now?".Nurrie—"Yes, madam, but Miss Nancy is so contrary to -day." MIs - 4, Jeff Thought This Out All By Himself. tvo.mr, tot.) sTuntee AsTIZ oto oi\k`i Tau.. EAR ts FRom *me GARTH To Ttt mood! 1 T. s Kout.t. SAY IT'S Ardour steeo. 1. 71-to.IsPkt4b mtLes: AND t\ow•VAR ts t'r ,rwm *ME M001\1' Ts rite C-AtertiZ bot.rr Be LLL"(t •Tttd VRom.Tria tloot0 •rs "rtia AftT1-1 IS 'rtte'sAMe AA, TtAes bts'netmce Fliroan, The! EftniTtill/ Tho moon.): NOT Nd4C-SSA-fettnn, OLb teAR, NOT Neces sAR1 : WHAT irtc.. NtG A ni) Alp -C NeCESSAren-Y? (W&LL, f -C Ns. Wadi Finetee E tkInlSTMAS Tb NEW %WV T?) .. • . • • - y _ • WELL LttAAlIJ StGlAT LONGER.. Tlinifel 6 We•Gle. r-'100 tni tee • ne4Sin'S ttit-etSTMitS,; r,f4 i, 41, • Alipiii,,_ q..••••,•• -'14010107 r 10111L' The Deserts of Australia W, IL, in the London New Statesman; Australia has deserts— ate has several very large, very dry, very unpleasant deserts. , Our Magma itch to tear Yvan 'the geogra- phy books those sneering pages which „ . hint that asparagus does not flourish at Oodnadatta. We long to. shoz, to the world that we can matte' asparagus flourish anywhere. But we dare ilob. We cannot de without our deserts. For thirty yeare they have been essential to the pre, peganda by whiell we have jaattite4 to tt,antislikixolitsive gpSZpAtost, ri a few million people of a country as terse as the United States. --esoninneenneers ossenneeennee—e. • " •e British Settlers for the Dominions ,....e", London Spects,torl The Dominions hey° a perfect right to ohoose the _,-- ,, • ..---„,,, 4=7: % ,. ' typo of man they want, OM there are the vast unoccupied epaces, and Creat Britain in bar distress ie not • it asking anyoso to harbor wastrels,