HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1928-10-11, Page 6Sunday School
Lesson
OW iW11y, foiee.to xrinato. "Now" 'here
teleanti "and
es,Nth, These
r ioj,
etieh
three
bidinggla ax tY
ee
first even
iritrWhy love to the eatesst
Paul does not say, but we may remind
loureelvee that God ie love
Here therefore,
conclusion.
we bring the siibe
est to concluon. All gate urs to
October 14, i-esson iI—Spiritual
!Jed
eultivated, let no Chicetieli dee/pine
'Gifts, --1 Cor, lei 4.7,31; 13: 1-0, 13. them, Every accomplishment, every
Golden Text—Now abideth faith, indllgrrn
ate humann
ynture,hat `ehot�idan olxt
cultivated and polished to ire highest
capability. Yet these aro not the
things that bring us nearer God. "If
we love one another, God dwelleth in
us and his love is perfected in us."
hope, charity, these three; but the
greatest of these Is charity,--Oor,
13: 13.
INTRODup1'ION--From the 12th to
the 14th chapter Peal gives his teach-
ing on spiritual gifts among modern
interpreters. The Greeks were: on con-
tentious people: Ile emphasizes the
truth that the purpose of all these
gifts is that those who possees them
stay use them for the whole church.
VIE, HYMN Oe LOVO, 18: 1-18,.
This chapter has been called "the
greatest, strongest, deepest thing Paul
ever wrote," and in order to get the
colmeetion one must read it along with
the last verse of chapter 12, which is
A kind of bridge. Paul was glad to
think that the converts in Corinth
have received these manifold gifts
from the Spirit, and he would strongly
Hilltop Home
We never dreamed such lovellness'
could be,
As where our garden overloolcs the
sea,
With rolling moors around,
And the tall gum trees droning harp -
string sound,
Such cradling heaven, such tides of
crystal air
Opening the perfumed cups of roses
fair
ir
urge every ane to dese these Pitts Suah wealth of wings
and to develop what he may have. But
even the greatest of these gifts is net Of siugnabirds and little gauzY
to be compared with the graces of the
Christian character, of wh.ch the
leading one is love. The more excel- Each dawn unrolls the broad horizon's
lent way of 12: 31 is the way of chap-
ter 13, the way of love,
(a) The Central Place of Love, 1-3.
' V, 1, By "tongues" here Paul likely
means the ecstatic utterances which
these Christians at Corinth were priz-
ing so highly: but it may also include
articulate as well as inarticulate Jan- Down, Clown to where the many color-
guage. With love these gifts are not ed phlox,
able to -win any great blessing, and Round steeples of rosetted holly
are like a clanging cymbal, a mere hocks,
noise, If one is cultivating eloquence Laughs at our feet,
merely for its own sake as an accent- And every homely, friendly flower is
plishment, that can have no religious sweet!
value. —Bisie Cole in the Australasian.
V. 2, This verse may refer to Intel- '
lectual gifts, and to the faith which is
able to make outward demonstration.
Some one has said that here we have
"the intellect of the philosopher joined
to the inspiration of the seer." But
without love even these great endow -
which is the real standard of value, h 1reasonem and
V. 3, Acts of benevolence and of
blue
Across the glassy paddocks grey with
dew,
While gladdened eyes
Drop from the changeful wonder of
the skies•
• Distress in Scotland
Edinburgh Scotsman: The report
of the Board of Agriculture on the
farming acreage in Scotland as at
June last makes melancholy reading.
. , if this department of industry
!AO, Sad Rites For Members of Lost Sub;maFiane
Turn Your 'army.
Into a Palace
'''you can make your home a palace
ley establishing an almos1hore of
comradeship and understanding,
A 1928 model 'toolmaker must be
a inany-slded, 1liglily talented, "thoro-
ughly trained executive: It is not en-
ough for her to be a skilled speciallst
in one particular branch of home econ-
omies or business admntetration but,
Rke the Juggler in the circus, she
•must contrive to keep three or, tour
different tasks in operation at the British isles will this year receive
same time. Tho glory is; this wornover 100,000 copies of a descriptive
an actually delivers the goods, with atlas of Canada provided by the ele-
out a single order missing, partment of immigration. This; is part
She is achieving through the ante. of an intensive publicity scheme to
tance of her husband that standard induce migration to Canada,
of having her home "economically The atlas is distributed, free to
sound, mechanically convenient, pbyel- students in the old country through
ertis tally sat, morally motally some, the central office stiini- London. Agents lofte department in
the department
artistically olailyy re,
ulatfng; socially responsible, spirit -travel through the country in demon-
ually inspiring, and founded upon mu- stration vans carrying exhibits dis-
tual affection and respect.' Women eriptive of Canadian industries and
have been made economically, Indus-, lecture at the various schools. Copies
trially and politically free. The testi of the atlas are then left with the
of a Real 1-lome is the type of <people seboolmasters. Large wall maps are
who collie out of it. When you have also .provided.
been away from a home a few days) The book comprises 80 pages and le
at some convention, on a vacation or stated to compare favorably with gee-
at the fair, do you get a real thrill! graphiee used in \Canadian schools:
out of getting back home? If you do, I Besides a large number of colored
you have a veal home, a place where
there is Joy in labor, a plane that
draws you to it at any season. If
you see only the acres, and the toil,,
and yon return with disgust to the
toil, there is something wrong some-
where, Maybe you have not put en-
ough of yourself into the home part,
11 ing, to make it attractive,
Advertise Canada
in ritish $410o1a
Immigration Officials Distri-
bute Descriptive Atlas of
Dominion
LECTURES GIVEN
Requests For Copies .Receiv-
ed . From American
Institutions. -
gttaWe—School children ' he the,
VICTIMS OF SUBMARINE L-55 BURIED AT i-IASLAR
Moving scenes were witnessed in Portsmouth at the funeral. A, general view, showing the sad .procession
Passing through country lanes on way to the cemetery. The L-55 leyed Por nearly ten years at the bottom of the
Baltic, victim of Bolshevik marksmen,
easily made by putting cheese through they his lunch compares favorably
the food ((hopper and ad44ng cream with the ether children's.
and softened. butter until the cheese is Here are a few of the favorite recl-
of creamy consistency. Then add nuts, pee used to packing lunches for my
The Lunch That
Goes to School
It Needs to Nourish Active,
Growing Bodies and be
Well Packed
By PAULiNA RAVEN MORSE brown bread.
(Master Farm Homemaker) Vegetable sandwiches are not raatis-
In Michigan Farmer factory because they become stale
The school bell is ringing, calling soon after they are made.
of
The
The bread for sandwiches should be
ho .
to sct
Both
childreno
4B
o old.
an armyat least twenty-four hours
majority ie children living in rural should
communities is obliged to carry side o s tbuttex keeps l the filling from
chopped olives, or pimentoes. The children;
amount of cream and butter used will Spillage Cake
depend upon the dryness of the Two eggs, 1 cup cugar, 1 cup floor,
cheese. Be sura to cream together 11/4 ISP. balling powder, 114 cup hot
well, Cottage cheese makes very milk, 1 tsp. melted butter, 3/s tsp. flay -
good sandwich filling when used with oring, 1/s tsp. salt.
Beat eggs until light, add sugar and
baking powder together three times,
add to first mixture, add hot milk,
beat; then add melted butter and flav-
oring. Is suitable for cup, layer, or
sliest cake.
Raised Brown Bread
the optimist might seek a lunch. To some this will be a new tete a Five caps boiling water, 2 cups roll-
a remedy with some certainty, but experience this year and if the child- soaking the bread and gives needed ed oats, 3 tbs. shortening, 1 tbs. salt,
are other vita: industries ren are to maintain good health and fat content to `the luucli• 1 cake of compressed yeast, 1/4 'cup
there There Must be Fruit lukewarm water, 2 cups graham flour,
rate -
which are equally depressed. The physical vigor throughout the year, Fruit is one of the most valuably 1 cup molasses, ' box seedless coal, iron and steel trades are not -'rite mother must give care and foods of the lunch box. It may be ins, bread flour.
able examples, and to crown existing thoughtto the planning a school
distances to school, eat hurried break• fresh, dried or canned. If canned, 11 Pour the boiling water over the
fasts and cold lunches, and rush out
lununch.h. The children oftenen walk long should be packed in a jar with a screw
rolled oats and add the shortening
cover. Fresh tomatoes at this time and salt. Stir thoroughly and let
to play. Is it any wonder they fall of year are a pleasing addition to the stands until lukewarm, Then add the
Prey to colds and disease? lunch, leave the fruit as attractive cake of yeast dissolved in the luke-
The teacher should supervise the as.possible when the lunch is packed. water. d ,,.,,,, flour, ,,-
noon luncheon Period the same as any It may be well to add extra fruit' for lasses,a" d enough bread flour
class. This period affords an excel recess time, especially apples.
lent opportunity to bring out little Cakes and coolies provide the des -
points in table etiquette. A supply of
sort part of the lunch. Sponge cake,
plain white paper napkins to serve a8 chocolate cakes, plain butter cakes,
lunch cloths should be kept on hand molasses ashes, a coolies
at the school.
The receptacle in which the lunch
self-denial, even though these are of
an excessive nature, do not bring any
blessing frim God unless they are
mingled with love. Thus love is shown
to be the one essential factor in the poor trade In these and other quar-
ters, there are other gloomy remind-
to
The Qualities of Love are Now ers. The pick of Scotsmen are 1eav-
given, 4-7. ing the country to seek work else -
Most of these are described in a 0e- where, and tbe Irish "invasion' pro-
gative form, and in his description ceeds unchecked.
Patel is evidently keeping in mind the
defects which he sees to exist in this The Canadian Wheat Pool
church. C. R. Fay in the Nation and Atheu-
V. 4. Love is gentle. and long -suffer- ante (London): The Pool, now five
ing. It exercises a merciful delay in years old, has not defied tbe laws of
inflicting merited punishment. It has supply and demand, nor has it
the grace of kindness. Love is no brag- brought millennium. Nevertheless,
gait, does not make any ostentious d ra
display, neither is it proud, blowing
its own trumpet and making arrogant
display.
V. 5. Love has a feeling of propri-
ety, nor does it fly into a rage on every
slight cauee of provocation. Some of
the heathen writings had said that ane
should never be displeased over any-
thing', even wrong -doing, but Paul
would not go that far. He knew there
was a place for just indignation. Love
also takes no account of evil, which
may meaty, either, "doth not entertain
evil thoughts," or, "doth net suspect
evil in others." Love puts the best
construction on the actions of others.
. V. 6. Love is happy. The gladness
of the early church was one of the
most attractive features, Acts 2: 46.
Jesus came that his joy night be in
us. A great poet has a line, `happy
as a lover." Here joy is found because
the cause of truth is prevailing.
V. 7. Four stages in love are men-
tioned, (11 Love bears the burdens
of others, hiding their faults. (2) It
believes the beat of ethers. (3) If
faith hesitates t}.en hope still remains.
(4) When all else fails, then Iove will
patiently endure.
(e) The Abiding Nature of Love, 8-13.
V. 8. Paul selects three of the gifts,
prophecy, tongues, knowledge, to show
that these are not eternal. Iu v. 2 he
said that these gifts were of no value
without love. Now he says that even
with love they have merely a tempor-
ary place. Love is the only one of
these that abides.
V. 13. In this verse the word "now"
is not temporal, as if Paul meant to
say that now faith and hope could
abide, but that hereafter love would be , alined globe trotters.
MUTT AND JEFF—Bud Fisher
it is an epochal step towards the -
tionalizatioa 'of Agriculture. While' is to be packed is alwr es one of the
it gains nothing from the hyperbolae first consideration. Many children en -
of suspicion or praise which it has ` joy carrying
rttthe
gaily
we like them
d tin
received in some quarters, it re- boxes. At o
ces to have riveted the attention of I better because the cover 15 ffastened
ned
jot `to the box, allows for vents
this continent by reason of its loom- I be packed in them
entails effect on the morale of the the lunch may
Canadian West. Where in 1923 more compactly. They are more sant-
groups of farmers all over the tary than the pasteboard or fibre
prairies were talking revolution, debt boxes for they can be washed and
adjustment, or moratorium, now they scalded. The thermos lunch kits are
are talking pool. very good, if one can afford them, as
they permit the carrying of a hot
ATTENTION, FELLOWS! drink of milk.
Between Two Slices of Bread
The sandwich is one of the most
desirable foods for the lunch box.
There are many kinds which "can be
prepared from white bread, graham
bread, whole wheat bread, and nut
bread with different fillings. I often
prepare:
Meats chopped fine and moistened
with cream, gravy, or salad dressing.
Dried fruits such as figs, raisins,
dates, and prunes, chopped flue and
cooked to paste. Lemon juice may be
added for flavor.
Preserved fruits, as jams, jellies,
fruit butters, marmalades and con-
serves.
Nuts chopped line mixed with salad
dressing, cream cheese or honey added
to the dried fruit pastes.
Eggs scrambled with crisp bacon, or
hard boiled eggs chopped fine and
mixed with dressing.salad
odethe fruit
dressing, honey,
marmalades as orange marmalade.
Cheese paste for sandwiches can be
an d1•o1
de from oatmeal and graham flours, 'for forty-five to fifty minutes. This pt0petw--
"A mother through lack of under-
standing
Brown Sugar Cakes standiltg may be the cause, by faulty
brown sugar, 1 cup short- and injudicious handling, or produc-
Two cups glug in her little one, e, fear of water
ening, 3 eggs, 6 tbs. sweet mills, 1 euP that may follow the child throughout
dried fruit, 2 tsp. baking powder, 1/ its life," says this authority, "A
tsp. soda, 1 tsp. cinnamon, 4 cups flour. child who screams when it. is put into
Cream butter, add sugar, then eggs the tub is undergoing a shock to its
well beaten. Mix and sift other dry nervous system, and unless it is a
ingredients. Add alternately to first very robust child it may not be able
mixture with mills. When partially to regain this lost nerve force and
Isere are some rules laid down that
will aid bachelors of all descriptions
in selecting partners• for life:
1 Choose one that is neater and
cleaner than you are.
2 Choose one that doesn't consider
You merely a meal ticket.
9 Choose one who cannot find the
last word without a dictionary.
4 Choose one who is not acquainted
with first -love affairs that might spoil
yours.
5 Do not expect too much. Do not
look for perfection. Remember that
perfect ones have taken wings and
can be found only among the angels,
It will cost the U.S.A. $40,000,000
this year to enforce prohibition. Will
some U.S. citizen. inform us where it
is effective?
It is said that a joke will travel
around the world in sixty-seven days.
Some of them seem to be wellsea•
maps; it contains literature healing
with the physical characteristics, cli-
mate and industries ot. the various
provinces. Special a npltasie-is placed
on the opportunities open to those
who wish to settle on Canadian farms.
The maps have been prepared by the
natural resources intelligence branch
into clic of ill department of the interior and
Maybe you have had your faces so are stated to be of the most modern
lose to the grind of daily toil you type.
cannot see the beauties of nature, the
sunsets, the cloud Pictures, the roll-
ing Panorama of beauy around you.
Maybe there is something wrong
with your attitude toward everything
in general which has poisoiibed your
attitude toward your own home.
You pass this way but once.
Live your .1110, and do not slave
to hoard up for a generation that may and thousands of requests for copies
not stay on the place after' you leave have been received from American
It. Heroic sacrifices sound well but schools. In congratulating Canadian
do not get recorded upon the tomb- officials • on the excellnce of the
stones. If you .would have yourbook, teachers overthe
d-
ehildren live better than you Have mit that geographies used in their
lived, set them the example now. schools give a very restricted and of-
ten an inaccurate conception of this
f - country. The atlas is particularly in
Be Careful With demand in the farmingrareas in the
W� Central States.
Eageri'y Received
The atlas is eagerly received by '
teachers, officials indicate, and is
claimed to have much to do with the
increasing desire of young people to
look toward Canada as their future
home.
Large numbers of . the book are
also in demand in the United States
Baby's First Bath
raisins, an '.Extreme care should be taken
to knead into a stiff dough. Knead when the time comes to give the
thoroughly and let raise over: night, baby its first real bath. Cornelia.
Put into loaves and let rise until light. Browne, D.C., N.D., wr•itgng in
Bake in a hot oven for ten minutes,' "Physical Culture Magazine" for Sep -
decrease heat to moderate and bake tember advises the mother ou the
to avoid trouble
containing nuts and raisins, are al makes four large loaves.
ways acceptable. Some of the cake
batter may be baked in patty tins or
patty paper cups. The cakes present
a daintier appearance and will keep
moist longer. Nuts, dried fruit, co-
coanut, chocolate; or sugar sprinkled
on top of the cake before it is baked
make a change. -
Cup custard, junket, Jello, fruit
salad, rice pudding, taPioco pudding, added, add fruit which can be raisins,
therefore may suffer from a lowers
cottage cheese, or baked beans may currants, or dates cut into small nerve vitality all its life.
be Packed in glass Jars and added to pieces. Drop from teaspoon on „Be sure that the room is 70 de•
u
the lunch in, season. I try to have
rise in the lunch box several
greased and floured
times :luring the week in the way of of Jelly, or nut 'meat may be placed
sweet chocolate, dates, figs, raisins, on the top of each cookie. Makes green for an infant. You may grad-
chocolated coated raisins, nuts, animalually lower the temperature to about
cookies or special fruit. If the lunch Spice Cake four dozen, 90 degree when he is a year old.
"A good Castile soap is usually re -
1 i omitted i
Pans. Bake in green F. wbeu Yon bathe 'the baby,
a hot oven. A half date, raisin, a bit
and that the water is 98 to 100 de-
•
Rubber May Be
Made From Some
Products of Oil
Possibilities of "Cracking Pro-
cess" Indicated by Dr.
Gustav Egloff
is not eaten, the sure rSe sant One cup sugar, 1/8 cup shortening, 1 cotiimended. but once in a wh ie a
for a time. e 1 cup sour milk, lee cup molasses,
The individual likes and dislikes of 1gtsp. cinnamon, 1i4 tsp. cloves, x/4 tela soap.s Inrai that ltca el,eoraformprickly
st anY
the child must packing taken into con- salt, 1 top. soda, 2 cups flour., heat or any simple skin eruption, the
siderationx,for
when the lunch child Follow directions for making but -
box, for we cannot expect the bran bath is most efficacious. Make
to eat at school what he or she will ter cakes. a thin muslin bag eight incbes square
not eat at home. All food should be
neatly wrapped in wax paper before
Packing, then packed in the order in
which the food will be eaten. If at
times there aro empty spaces, fill them
with crushed paper to prevent food
from shaking about.
The psychological effect upon the
child who carries a well -packed lunch
is interesting to note, He is not
ashamed of the contents of his box
and does not try to cover it UP so
others will not see what he has for
lunch, A child is quick to note who -
LOOMS To Me t.licCr
JEFF'S Ge•TTING A.
` 13IT BALMY /N
\ The. tt6An'.
==s
NeLLO,
MuTT oLD
(JEFF) alfa t'S •'\E
ODEA of TNG sto1s3
`(Ou'1tc IN LONDON -
NOT ICELPot' i
I'M As STUPID AS A
LMT eUGNT s \vA$
cAUGHT !N THAT
DENSE LONbohl F06:
IT tees so T1 -acre
COt)LteN'T euetu
.see mYNose -
AND
M
A
Ifi
Chocolate Cake
Two cups brown sugar, 1 cup sour
milk, 21/4 cups flour, / cup shorten-
ing, 2 ozs. chocolate, 2 eggs, 1 tsp.
and fill with wheat bran. Let it
soak in the bath for ten or fifteen
minutes and squeeze it until the wa-
ter is turbid or milky. During the
soda, 1 tsp. vanilla, 1 tsp. salt. warm evenings when, baby is fretful,
. Follow directions for making butter try one of these bran baths before
cokes. Makes a large loaf, a layer the evening feeding.
"Be careful bow you lift him from
cake, or good for cup cakes.
London.—The fascinating possibili-
ties of the day when rubber may be
made from some products of oil in
American factories, instead of being
tapped from a tree in the tropics, were
suggested by a paper on the "Cradle-
ing
Cradle
ing Process," read before
ebo eDr. Gustav
Egloff of Chicago,
d
Fuel Conference here.
Recording the isolation from oil of •
substances called "dioleflnes,'I of
which butaditene already has been
isolated, Dr. Eglon says: "Being
closely related to rubber hydrogens,
'diolefines' may well serve as starting
materials for the Successful produc-
tion of synthetic rubber. Likewise
they can be polymerized into resins
which are usable as insulating ma-
terial and may find employment for
other multitudinous use to which the
familiar aldehyde -phenol type of resins
have been put. They should also be
usable as lacquer and -varnish bases."
- Acetylene, aromatic hydrocarbons.,
"paint -thinner" and a whole host of
other products, in addition to such
better-known substances as gasoline,
kerosene, Diesel oil, coke and gas, arec
among the other products Dr. Bg
enumerates' as derived from the oil-
cracking processes he described.
Dr. Egloff also blew to the wind the
often discussed supposition ,that - the
world supply of oil can give out in any
period of time within sight of human
civilization. He estimated that while
16,000,000,000 barrels of oil had been
so far produced, 64,000,000,000 remain
to be recovered from the existing field
and that this does not touch the
enormously vaster amounts available
in coal measures, shale and other de-
posits, which neweanethods are now
beginning to render available as
soyrces of the world's oil supply.
The tendency of evil ultimately
to
destroy itself is strikingly
at -
ed in the remark of Carlos Ibanez,
the young President of Chile: " Some-
times when fruit gets rotten enough
You don't have to pick it. It drops
from trees to the earth with no
sound.' III
It is claimed 'alai ilii pllteilig Of
street lamps in tlto City of Lflllde
did ntioro to prevent crime than 300
gallows, and the opening of the roe-
Wes. to immigration ,more then 1000
policemen, It is remarkable what a
little light on a subject will do,
the tub," warns 18155 Browne. " Clue
area have been paralyzed for life by
• Henry Ford sent John O. Rocker improper lifting. Never pick him up
feller a Ford Sedan as a birthday re- by his arm. This cpplies not only
memberance. Gosh, and Henry over- to an infant but also to all small
looked us on our birthday, children,'
IN CRoSStNG A SVC -1T
STEPPED (Ny) AN OPeN
ANNb1e! FON, Now
oN1 $6F[ ' FN(eST
is my MOTTbi -
Well, In a Way Jeff is Right.
i
•••
eeeeeleeeee
i/
' 1E13111
� I` °' tri �,1 •I
Ikll
When it conies to farm relief, tine
common garden toad 'Is a bard and
willing worker In Its small way, and.
payment 1n kindness and protection
should not be overlooked.
zee