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The Seaforth News, 1929-06-27, Page 3Sunday School Lesson. • June 23, Lesson XII ----N Psalm of Praise—Psalm 103; 1-13. Golden Text—Bless the Lord, 0 my soul, -- Psalm 103. 1. ANAIaYSI I I. ORAISE, INDIVIDUAL' AND UNIVERSAL, VS, 1-5; 19-22, II, TIIE JUSTICE, MERCY AND COMPAS- SIONATE LOVE QV GOP, vs. 6-18. INTl;onuOrial --- "There are n Clouds in the horizon', nor notes of sa xtess in the music, of this psalm, No purer outburst' of thankfulness en- siches the °hul'ch. It is well that amid ;the many psalms which give voiceto mingled pain and trusA there should he ono of unalloyed gladness, as un- touched by sorrow as if sung by spir- its in heaven." So writes a great preacher whose expositions of the Psalms are unsurpessod for, their in - eight and beauty --Maclaren in the Expositor's Bible, The Psalm is attributed to David in its title, but there is much in it which bears the marks of a later age. It Seems to be a cothpanion to Psalm 104. They both begin and end with the high praises of God. The one dwells upon his goodness and his mercy. . manifested in his 'dealing's with his people, the other upon his mower, wis- dom, and goodness revealed in nature and sin providence,, "There , are no clear marks of division" in this psalm, Maclaren says, "but the river broad- ens as it runs, and personal benefits and individual praise open out into gifts which are seen to fill the uni- verse, and thanksgiving which is heard from every extremity of his wide dominion of loving kindness." I. PRAISE, INDIVIDUAL AND UNIVERSAL, vs. 10 19-22. The poet, wi"h true feeling, blesses God first of all for forgiveness of sins, then for the healing of all diseases.' By this latter we May believe he uteane diseases- of mind and spirit as well as of body. The deeper need of the coul:is the need of forgiveness. Jesus recogn;zed this when the man .sick of the palsy was brought into his presence. Ile first declared to the sick man that his sins were forgiveL, then he healed his bodily affliction, Mark 2: 3.12. Compare Psalm 85: 1-3 and 147: 3. It is true that health of, mind and :spirit ministers to health of body. It is also true in our human experience that there are diseases of the body 'which the mind, even though depend- ing in strong faith' upon God, cannot heal. Nevertheless,' faith' conquers the disability, rejoices. in God's redeeming love, and in his forgiving grace, and " endures in hope of immortality and Sternal life. In the highest and truest 'sense the man of faith may, with the psalmist, say to his sout, He healeth all thy diseases; he redeAmeth thy life from destruction. And he bears upon his uplifted brow as a wreath or erown, the lovingkindness and tender mercies of God. The , meaning of v. 5 is not quite icertain. The Hebrew word rendered "mouth" is isendered in the ancient Greek version "desire." So Moffatt translates, perhaps correctly: "He gives you all your heart's desire, Renewing your youth like en eagle's." The -second clause of v. 5 is possibly explained by the ancient fable which represents the eagle as from time to time renewing its youthful vigor by plunging into the sea. The last verses of the psalm (19- 22), lift us to, . the throne of .Gad, whence hie kigdom ruleth over. all. There the hosts of the Lord, his an- gels, "strong spirits who obey his word" (Moffatt), ministers of his that 'do his pleasure, and al his vast crew- tion,: are called upon to join in a uni- versal chorus of praise. In like man- ner Milton writea (Paradise Lost, Book V.) tie°, esge1iially as'revoaled in his deal - Inge with the pesPle' of israol, Ye. 6, '7, The Hebrew poetswere not blind to the seeming inequit)aa'and injus- tices of the world, Again and again they to11 as of doubt and questioning, and complaint anddistress of mind, of the prosperity of wicked men, and the suffering' of the righteous. See ?Salm 78: 148; 89; 38-51; Job, ch. 9; and eompare Jer, 12: 1-2; 13; 15-18; Heb,, ch, 11 and Mai, 2; 17; 31 13-15,, Nevertheless, their faith in God, to Itis truth and justice, prevails over every doubt,' perplexity, and fear, Compare chili. 73: 16-28; 89; 1418, In him justice, mercy, and love are in- separably joined, eh, 85; 9-11, The poet dwells upon the mercy and forgiving grace of God, vs. 8-12. With bhle memorable passage compare c Exod, 34: 6, '7; Pselni 86::15; Ise, d- 55: '7; and Jer, 8: 12. Net wrath, but lave rules the World. His loving mercy reaches beyond our highest thought, Not only does God forgive, but he puts away, out of sight for over, the sins of which we have been guilty. Com- pare Isa. 43: 25. And by the grace of his spirit given to those who love him, ho c}elivers them front the power and dominion of sin into the freedom of the children of God. The heart of God is touched with the weakness of itischildren, the{briof period of their earthly life the sor- rows with which they yare encompass - ,ed. It is a great comfort to knew that he cares, Like as a father (vs. 13- 16), and that his merciful kindness is unfailing, vs. 17, 18. Surely they who come under that lovingcare, who claim through obedience that ever- lasting mercy, may rest in hope of life eternal: So when this earthly mist Fades in the azure sky, • My soul shall still be close to thee, And in thee cannot die. Speak ye who best can tell, ye sons of light, ", Angels: for ye behold hits, and with songs, And' choral symphonies,' day without night, 'Circle his throne rejoicing; ye, in heaven, On earth, join, all ye creatures, to extol. 'Him first, hitn last, him midst, and without end. And' so still, to the . understanding and to the vision of faith, the order, Might, and beauty of the world, both 7)f the seen and of 'the unseen, 'unite to praise end magnify the Creator God. Compare _Psahn 19: 1-2 and Psalm 148.. II. TEE JUSTICE, MERCY AND COMP: 8— SIONATE LOVE Or GOD, Vs., 6-18. This central part of the psalm be- gins with an 'assertion of God's jus- - IT'S MODERN. A toast -tan silk crepe with new classic lines, achieved through clever designing. It's typically modern, smart and slender. The back of dress is straight, with circular flare at left side at front of skirt. Style No. 467 which comes in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36,' 38, 40 and 42 inches bust, is very effective in printed silk crepe, par- ticularly in grasshopper greenwith small white polka-dot. Featherweight woolen, canton -faille crepe, crepe de chine, crepe znarocain, printed cotton an foulard, georgette crepe, printed pique, printed handkerchief lbnen, and flowered chiffon,, also chic. Pattern price 20c in- stamps or coin (coin is preferred), Wrap coin carefully" The Trans -Canada This is how thie:Trans.Canadn appears, as elle leaves Montreal each evening,The all -steal a ut l trail, which was built te1 I qe 1 meat of this at tip Angus Shops of the Canadian pacific Railway la epitomized is the Solarium car which Is carried at the rear end. With a vita -glazed solarium, two shower baths, men's and ladies' smolkiu •roam and a large observation -lounge, this canis the most luxurious g ons to ,pointe over Canadian linos and is open in Its en- tiroty to patrons of theTi'ans-Canada limited; Faag"Il'iiIl Notes HEMP FOR FIBRE. Hemp, the fibre of which is used for snaking rope, binder twine and other cordage, is grown to a limited extent in' Canada: In Western Ontario soon es the larvae hatch in the old one firm grows upwards. of 250 acres brood chamber the combs are cleaned per year, while a cordage company in thy the bees and used for the storage Manitoba grows two or three times of honey, 'Swarming was overcome its this acreage:- Both these growers use all the colonies- treated in this way special heiilp machinery which is too i at the Scott Station last' year. The expensive for the grower who might Scott Station carried no other work in devote a portion of his farm' to this' apiary management described in this report available at the Publications Branch of the Depart. of Agriculture at Ottawa. - NEW EGG GRADING STATION Co-operation among farmer produc- ers in the matter of the sale. of eggs has been advocated and assisted by the'Federal Dept. of Agriculture for Many years. Last year the Trenton Egg Circle did a business amounting to over 518,000, and the members of the circle received an average price Of 31.8 cents a dozen. chamber with the"old queen. The re - Tasty Recipes mainder_of the brood chatnber.is filled with drawn comb or foundation, At the end of a week all queen oells are again destroyed. These, the Superi tendent points out, are to be found the old brood chamber above, A CREAMED CRAB M1!1AT. n- One slice of onion °hopped, 1 small in can of crab meat, Fry together in 2 s tablespoons of butter five minutes, be- ing careful not to burn. Add 2 table- spoons of flour and cook 1 minute. Add 1 cup of milk and 1 beaten egg yolk, Stir constantly until thickened. Serve on squares of toast. CASSEROLE OF PORE. crop. The Fibro Division of the Ex- perimental Farms has made tests of this crop,, using the ordinary grain reaper and the horse-drawn hay rake for handling the crop- Tho hemp 'fibre being cut by the reaper requires to be spread by hand to give it a chance to ret properly. When the proper stage of netting has been reached the crop is gathered up by drdinary horse rake and . tied in sheaves. The cost of the work done this way amounted to $1 an acre for the cutting, $5 per acre for the . Farmer poultry producers in Tren- spreading by .hand, 'and 53 for the ton and vicinity are taking steps to lifting and tying. The crop handled- extend their operations, with the ulti- in this way yielded from two to two 'mate object of forming a Poultry Im- and a half tons of retied straw to the pi evement Association that willem- acre. Commenting on this work in his brace every phase of the poultry work - report for 1927, Mr. R. J. Hutchinson, ni the district. In this the 'co-oper-. Chief of the Fibre Division, observes; ation of the business men has been that while the cost of harvesting the sought by the farmers, and,at an Egg crop in this manner is higher per acre Banquet, which the Egg Circle mem- than when the special hemp hativeste bons gave to the merchants, one of- ing ,machinery is. used, it has shown the latter' remarked, "In supporting that "it is possible for the average you, we realize that we are really sup - farmer to grow and handle a crop of poring ourselves. h,,. Any proposition hemp with such machinery as he may which is of interest to the„farmer will have for the ordinary farm harvesting receive the hearty support of the operations. Trenton merchant body, as a unit.” Tests for growing helnp were made As a result of this trade and gro- at several of the experimental. farms ducer co-operation a gradingstation and stations. 'At Fredericton as high ` as 1,325 pounds of fibre were procluded was opened May thth the Trenton, and 'up -to- per, acre. This was from seeding done date hatchery with customlarge bhing on the 30th of May. At Lennoxville, and hatchery doing hatching 1,246' pounds were obtained from an dthistributing' atmg brganized falld l stock, seeded about the first of May. tand air, spill eventually organized basis This erop reached a height of nine ofy fair, will enentually fIrm the basis feet, eleven inches. .A. full account of the Trenton Poultry Improvement the work of the Fibre Division, which Association. devotes its attention to flax and hemp The from toa Trenton buyn theira 1 eggs from the'Grading 'Station, and carried on at Ottawa and different as one of them said, they can softer Experimental Stations, is eont'ained in them for sale without fear of a Gov - the' report of the Division, published ei'nment Inspector. Previously the by the Department of Agriculture at grocer was inclined to hide the' e Ottawa. he was offering for sale if he knew the Inspector was in town. Beekeepers multiply their colonies by either a f' two systems. The bees may be allowed to swarm or the col- oniestray be divided by the beekeeper and queens added when necessary. At the Scott, Saskatchewan, Experiment- al Station, swarming is not permitted, as it is considered at better way to crease by division. In the report of INCREASING THD COLONIES. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin prefered; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern. Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by an early snail, i Among those afflicted' with the foot and mouth disease who should be iso- lated aro those motorists who step on the gas and yell at the pedestrian to get -out of the way. on he Station for last year the Super- intendent explains two systems that are followed, oneof dequeenin'g and requeening an dthe other separation of queen and brood. In the first of these methods the queen is removed and all queen cells are destroyed. The colony is left queenlese for ten days when all queen cells are again de- stroyed and a young laying queen in- troduced. Where this system was followed in the .Scott Station no fur- ther signs of swarming were evident during the season. The other system is to separate the queen and brood. This plan is preferred by many bee- keepers on the grounds that it is more easily done andis very effective. The rpooedure is to destroy all queen cells and move all brood to an empty super 'above the honey super, leaving only e frame of stores in the lower Z+ _ MUTT AND JEFF —By Bud Fisher. :i t.t< ABouT eivi LI ZATIOAJi: TNG TWENTIETH 5CNTURYS BAfy�lts:14,k Goi IHiS cou7(t's ' I.0p rNG' COCj�CYCD' f1 NCUJ }YOR!d -Gyroim uilL # BV p oF�A .LAw ABib1i.,G GI'i•Izi ljl s ,�yM,; ry 14FOR TPN 19V4kS, r_ alfyN. ANb .IoIC' Reggie: "I have a cold fit my head, Miss Sharpe." Miss S.: "That's better than inking in your head, Mr. Sapp." • b o,DAutlol2�t do,. Addu,Ted ioAD bmf �fi. ! NY 64 "0/t,r A id 6- tg;- iMs OF'A A"S$N5rE,P 4GTs""'vr'e' ,gip �o lo1u125C<V Two'cups,of roast pork, 1 large car- rot, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 green pepper, sprigs of sweet herbs, 1 apple, salt, 1 slice onion, % cup fat, 5 tablespoons flour, 6 small onions, 2 cups of water, 1% cups cooked macaroni, pepper, '1 teaspoon mustard. Brown chops in fat, place in casserole, add onions, macaroni, carrot, pepper and apples cut in pieces. Tot fat in pan add sliced onions and cook until brown, Add flour, brown, add stock or water, salt, pepper, mustard, Stir sauce until it boils, pour'over neat and vegetables 'and bake; cover for 134 hours. DATE PIE. Two heaping cups of stoned dates stewed in a little water until soft, and put. through :;icer. Add 3/4 cup sugar, butter size of a walnut (melt- ed), Si teaspoon salt, 1 well beaten. egg and a scant cup and a half of milk. Put into pastry -lined pk plate (small size if it's deep) and bake in a quick oven for 1 minutes, reducing heat for remaining 45 minutes. • DOUGHNUTS. Cream % cup sugar with 2 table- spoons shortening and -nix in 2 well- beatn eggs; add s/4 cup milk and then stir in 3% cups of flour with 3 tea- spoons baking powder sifted in, ys teaspoon salt and Sfi teaspoon nutmeg. Roll dough on well -floured board and cut -with doughnut cutter. Test fait with a cube of bread; if it browns in one minute fat is of right temper- atures -365 degrees V. is right. Fry doughnuts until delicately brown and drain on brown 'taper. Sprinkle with powdered sugar while still warm. Dog -in -the -Manger - Quebeo Chronicle -Telegraph (Ind.): The farmer—and particularly the n western farmer—is not interested in 1,1 schemes of immigration, however scientific, being resolutely opposed to ye any artificial increase in our popula- se tion.... The home market Is always to the best market and it there were en- tip ,ugh people in Canada to enable the ett western fainter to sell the bulk of hislly produce in this country, exporting the IN remaining surplus afterwards he di would be mucic bettdi'`off than he is or I can be under present conidtions. And considering that, in the majority of cases, he himself entered Canada as an immigrant, it is singularly 1A• ha gracious of him to attempt to shut wi others out from the opportunities that, ye have been freely accorded to himself. tie Fr West Indian Trade w Moncton Transcript (Ind.): Al- L though Canada buys from the West rah Indies only a small proportion of its tropical importations, it sells in the market an equally small proportion of the purchases which the West Indies make abroad. There is ample room for the extension of the trade between Canada and the West Indies, in both directions; and the proposal to estab- lish a trade commissioner service in led this country appears to be a reason -i wo able one. as What is Home Without a Name? Family Crest on Car Must Pay, Why Not the Luncury of a "Bellevue" or "The Chestnuts" on Saul,, ban Bungalow Asks Perplexed Mailman London.—Post-war years In Eng- land have seen a tremendous develop, ment of suburbs and garden "cities. Ap Mealy every purchaser of a' sub urban villa feels that he is entitled to paint whatever seems to him :an an• propriate name on the front fence, Be it ever so humble, 1t still becomes Sans Boni, The Chestnuts, Rudder Grange, or somothiug equally impree sivN'oe. w the potsinea are showing signs of rebellion. Too many letters are being mailed to such _addresses as "The Willows," Golders 'Green," with- out adding the street and number, and St has been suggested that the proper remedy is a tax on such names. A tax is already exacted from anyone who wants a family crest ou a car- riage or motorcar, and the question is asked whether a High-sounding name on a cottage is any less an exhibition of vanity. Sometimes, however, all the neigh. bore are not in accord on the subject of names. A writer in the "Man- chester Guardian" says he knows two small villas side by side in a Thames- side village which face the great wall of an estate. One owner put the name ''Bellevue" on his gate, and his neigh- bor matched this with "'Wallview." Another villa name in a northern sub- urb of London seems to hint that all of the family were not agreed in choosing the house. The cottage is called simply "Mary's Mistake." The Reparations Conference Sisley Huddleston in the New Statesman (London): Prom start to finish the conference at Paris has been an affair of bargaining ,and not an af- fair of precise reckoning, The Allies want to extract as muck money from Germany as possible. Germany wants to pay as little stoney. as possible. On one side are the Allied needs— and these can be, and have been; cal- culated in accordance with a number of systems. On the other side fs Germany's' capacity of payment, winch, dependent ou unknown factors, present and future, is utterly indeter- minate ad this capacity is influenced by Germany's willingness to pay, Ger, ,msny'e interest In paying, and the de- gree of pressure of various kinds which can be put. upon her to compel payments. The problem, therefore, Is more political than financial and economic, or, using the word In this connection as a synonym, psy- chological.' Stock Market Gambling.. Ottawa Journal (Cons.): No coun- try can be in a wholesome state when a lot of its citizens think that all they need to do to get rich is buystock n some enterprise one day and sell at a profit the next. To that crazy notion, prevalent for the past few ars, too many of our people sub- rfbed. They thought, or appeared think, that stocks must always go , not stopping to reflect what effect ch continued soaring must eventual - produce upon stational economics. ow, and perhaps not too soon, their siliusiountent has come. Bilingual Difficulties Guelph Mercury (Ind.): Those who ve become intimately acquainted th the history of Ontario in recent ars are well aware of the d[Ricul- s caused by the spread of the encli language into New Ontario,. here the overflow of population frail ower Canada" itas been for years using social and linguistic troubles t future generations will find it difficult to overcome, Bat these will be trifles compared with the linguistic and other social obstacles that ',the Dominion Government is confronted with in tete Canadian West. Women uow control nearly half the ividual wealth of North .America, men millionaires being as plentiful inen, They Get Ready to Dodge The Rolling -Pin. es' ri y livid g`i �Yl °:A• (/ Swedish Flier to Blaze New Trail Capt. Ahrenberg Flans 4,300. Miles' Flight Across TO TOUCH CANADA Refueling Bases Axe Estab4 lisped in Iceland and. Greenland Stockholm. --.An airplane flight frontSweden to the United States via tee, land, Greenland and Labrador and ,Canada—a distance of some 4,300 miles -is planned by Captain Albin Ahrenberg, one of the crack civilian pilots of the Aerotransport Company, Sweden's national flying cones which. ini'tintaiug inland and for,: air routes, The rt ate will go from Stockholm over Bergen in Norway to Reykjavik, in Iceland, where a fuel dspot will be established in advance. Siinilar des pots will' ba put up in Greenland, prob- ably at Ju,inneliecb, and sit •some lake in the Province of Quebec, From Canada Captain Ahrenberg expects tomake the final flight direct to New i { rk, arriving at his destination some 56 hours after his take -off in Stock- holm. On his kig)t he plans to use a Junlcer amphibian plan; specially built at the Swedish Flying Industry Company's plant at Matinee, under Juuker patents. Aside from himself, mr- the machine will carry a ebiesi.•ian, who also will serve as radio operator, and'posaibly a third person, In outlining the proposed venture, which probably will take place during June or July of this year, Captain. Ahrenberg states in the Stockholm papers, that he: does not intend to break any records of speed or sustain- ed flight His purpose is to investi- gate the chances of establishing an air line from Stockholm to New York; in other words, retracing in the opposite direction' the route which the Swedish- Atiherican flyer, Bert Hassel, tried to blaze last year, At home the flyer is known as: the "Lindbergh of Sweden," having made several propaganda flights around the country to stimulate interest in civil aviation. Last summer he spent five months on such a tour, making 2,388 ascents and carrying over 10,000 pass_ aengers on short trips. These flights were started from primitive fields in mots cases and in all kinds of weather. STIRS INTEREST IN SWEDEN The proposed flight has created a tremendous interest in Sweden, and the route which Captain Ahrenberg will follow has convinced aviation ex- perts of the soundness el his plan. Thus, Captain Carl 'german, presi< dent of the Aerotransport Company, and one of Sweden's pioneer airmen, has expressed himself as confident that the venture will be a success. "Ahrenberg is wise in using an am- phibian," he states in a newspaper in- terview. "The reason 'Hassel failed was largely due to the fact that he flew a plane which could not land on water. I believe in the undertaking and I believe firmly i n ren erg., Another optimistic view on the transAtlantic flight was .offered by J. W. Sandstroem, of the government meteorological and hydrographical bu- reau, who accompanied the Swedish Nobile expedition last year as wea- ther expert. "Ahrenberg has better chances to succeed:than any other flyer," says Mr. Sandttroem. "He in- tends to use an amphibian plane, and he expects to hop off in June or July, when there is but little danger of fog along the northern route. He should succeed." Thoroughbred or Mongrel? Toronto Globe (Lib.): Counties arguments against Indiscriminate mix- ing of peoples can be derived ori the way from IToly Writ t5 the decline of Greece, or the forces behind the as: saesiaation of the Austrian Archduke which precipitated the wa Canadians the lesson of Chicago will seem the most timely. Nowhere on this continent is the population so mixed. Nowhere but in Chicago could gang leaders with names testi- tying estitying to half a dozen foreign extiae- tions sit down and write "rules of war" which are a scandal to a sol& respecting Civilization, Cowardly Felons Calgary Herald (Ind. Cons.): (Wo re snaking a grave mistake, says resident Hoover, in admiring the ill and daring of tate modern bandit,) Whatever may be said in extenuation the old -tine robber who plundered e rich to help tbe. poor, from the ys oC Robiu Hood to the period of ck Turpiu,cannot be said in defence tate modern bandit. The modern actice is to point a loaded revolver an unarmed man or, in the case of !ding up institutions, for: a group et ugs. to shoot down everyone who a- s any opposition. The modern ug is a cowardly creature whoIves on the element of surprise' dthe eatraueous aid of high-Power- automobiles igh-power automobiles and machine-guns. He deserving of no consideration. There must be something wrong It American stockbreeding 'ueuo " "wiry?" "I hear the 'United ten is absolute* Overran with nd pigs." ar P sic of tit da DI of pr at •iso tit lar th thr an ed is wit ods Ste bi{ A grocer .says that some people who' buy on time don't seem t0 know when e time leaves off and eternity begins.