HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1929-10-10, Page 2Sunday School
Lesson.
Qcteber 0, Lesson 1 ---Recognizing
Our Debt to. Others -•Mark 121 28-
. 34; dames 2; 14.17, Golden Text—
Look not every tram on his own
things,but every man 'also on the
things of others.—Philippians 2: 4.
ANALYSIS
L A TesSSON Il•[ co-OrenterioN, Neh. 4:
16.23.
CL LAWS OF LOVE AND MeteNESS, Mark
12: 28-34; Rom. 15: 1-7; Col.
8: 12; 4: 1; James 2 1417,
III. TIM MIND: OF CHRIST, Phil, 2:1-8.
INTRODUCTION -The Bible freely
and fully recognizes the duty mon owe
to their fellows, From the beginning,
the human race vvas set :n fau)ilies.
Out of the family grew the family
group, the clan, the tribe, and, in
course of time, the nation In many
a Bible story, and many a law, and
XII Itamans 16; 1.7 we have a lino
exhortation to unselfish living', The
strong should bear the rnfrrmrttee of
the weals, Life is act to be found
just in pleasing ourselves. 'J'o seek
to give pleasure to others is to follow
the example of our, Master, Jesus
Christ. He sought no life of pleasure
or repose. He !night very well have
applied to himself the language of
Psalm 69: 9 (see v. 4). "To be like
minded one toward anobbar according
to'Christ Jesus" is surely the prayer
of all true Christians, Moffatt ren-
ders vs. 6 an 6, ''May the God who
inspires stedfastl,ess and encourage-
ment grant you such harmony with
one another, after Christ Jesus, that
you may unite in a chorus of praise
and glory to the God and Father o'r
our Lord Jesus Christ," And verse
7, "Welcome ono another, then, as
Christ has welcomed yourselves."
The positive. attitude of kindness,
gentleness, good will, humility, com-
passion for ethers! troubles, forbear-
ance, and forgiveness, with love 'as
"the link (or bo,rd) of the 'perfect
life," le urged in Paul's letter i•c the
Gslossiens, ch. 3 t 12-14, So also is
custom, is seen the duty of father and ,the fair and just tre.ttnent of slave
mother, of sun and daughter, of bre- or servant. ch, 4: 1:
then and sister; of kinsman and neigh- Faith declaring itself in conduct is
bar, of master and servant, of ruler
and peo(tle, or priest, prophet, wise
man, arta judge, There is taught res-
pect fur the aged, hospitality for the
stranger, fair dealing in the market,
consideration for the slave, justice for
the suspected evil -deer, fair wages for
the employed, loyal service to the
state. The men who are held in honor
are in practically every case men who
render high service to their fellows—
the tribal leader, the prime minister
who saves a nation rem starvation, the
veteran law -giver, the captain, the
just judge, the king, the prophet, the
builder of temple , and forts, the
maker of music and of song, the wise
teacher, the skilful artisan, and the
preache" of the gospel, The Bible
reaches its highest point of interest
and of value in the life and teaching
of Jesus, who sought, not his own good
but always the good of others, who
"came pat to be ministered unto, but
to minister,"
1, A LESSON IN CO-OPERATION, Neh. 4;
15-23.
The familiar story of the building
of the well of Jerusalem under the
resourceful leadership of Nehemiah
never loses its interest. Beset by
powerful and Treacher us enemies, the
builders were consta,,tly or the alert,
that they might not betaken by sur-
i.rise. Half of them "wrought in the
work," Nehemiah tells us, in his me-
moirs of those rnmxious days, andthe
other half "held both the spears, the
shields and the bows." The rulers
shared the labor and the danger. Be-
side the governor, Nehemie stood,
his trumpeter ready to soc.nd the in-
stant alarm if the enemy should be
seen approaching. The whole presents
a scene of orderly, courageous and
loyal activity anc co-operation in ren-
dering a patriotic service of high
value; indeed, a service necessary at
that time for the very existence of the
little Jewish communit,.
14. LAWS OF LOVE AND KINDNESS, Mark
12: 28-34; Rom. 15: 1-7; Col.
3: 12; 4; 1; James 2: 14-17.
For parallels to the first of these
passages, see Matt. 22: 34-40 ard Luke
10: 25-28. One of the scribes came to
Jesus with a question. It was during
the week in which he was arrested and
crucified. The shadow of -his great
sacrifice was already dark upon Isis
path. On Monday, and T•resday of
that. week he was in the temple and
was meeting ninny adversaries who
were stirred to activity by his tri-
umphal entry into the city on Palm
Sunday, and his rebuke of the dis-
honest traffic in the temple courts on
the following day. The Jewish scribe,
or lawyer, was apparently not' un-
friendly (v, 28), but, as Matthew puts
it, was "tempting him," that is, trying
him with a further question to see
whether or not he could really trust
and honor him :a a teacher.
Jesus' answer goes directly to the
heart of the matter. Love is the high-
est law,love to God and to one's fel-
low mere The passage first quoted is
in Deit, 6: 4, 5. For the second, see
Lev, 19: 18, 34. Both were well known
to the Jews. The first was repeated
daily ' y devout Jews. Jesus puts the
two together and makes them insep-
arable. The supreme passion. of the
soul is love to God, springing out of.
the revelation of his great love, :It., us.
And this love of God binds us to him
in inseparable union (Rom. 8: 35-39),
and becomes the law of our life, gov-
erning all conduct and all relations
with those about us. See further Rom.
13: 8-10; Gal. 5: 14; James 2: 8.
In the story as told in Lire 10: 25-
28, 'Jesus said to the scribe, "This do
and thou shalt live." Evidently, to
obey the law of love was, in the mind
of Jesus, true living, So said the
famous missionary to the Moslems,
Raymond Lull, "Ile wile loves not lives
not; and he who lives by 'the life (of
love) can never die."
the theme of James 2; 14-17. No other
profession of faith has in it reality
or truth, There is no contradiction
between this statement and that of
Paul in Ram. 5: 1. See, for example,
Paul's insistence upon the good life in
illustration omans 1used alby Janes mikes atians The
hiis
argument clear.
III, era MIND or C]0UtnT, Phil. 2:1-8.
Paul exhorts the Philipn"an Chris-
trans to harmony and loving' fellow-
ship, This will make his own joy and
pride it them complete, This, above
all, is the appeal of Christ to thein
through his apostle. The culminating
words of Paul's exhortation are in v.
5. Moffatt render, not very clearly,
Treat one, another with rho same
spirit as you experience in Christ
Jesus," The meaning seems tt be the
they should endeavor to preserve in
all their relations with each 'other the
mind, or spirit, of Jesus, who, that he
might f"lfill his mission of salvation
to men submitted himself to the utter-
most humiliation.
And Good Bread :is Male in These RQuob Ovens
PRIMATIVE METHODS ON THE TRAIL OF' STEEL
Types rat bake oven used by workgangs tilcng I•Iudson Bay railroad con-
struction_ to Fort 'Clrurclrtil.
Farm Notes
Marking Hogs For Identification
Where hogs are bred in large herds
it is ueeessary to follow some sort of
narking for identification, One meth-
od which is followed by some is that
of nicking the ears, pigs in each litter
being marked on a similar . part of
their ears. By means of various com-
binations of marks quite a large num-
ber of different litters may be mark-
ed. and subsequently identified, This
method is faulty in that the ears may
be torn and the !narks destroyed. It
has another weakness in that it does
not serve to identify the individual
Litt Th use of
Rules For Safety
In'Thunder'Sto ins
The uurnbal' of persons )eillecl by
lightning is very small iu comparleoa,
+with the total number of fatalities due
to accidents, says Chariots Fitzhugh
'lalman, in hie Stento Service Feature
Why the Weather? (Washington). in
the. United States for example, the
census reports allow an annual aver-
age of about 500 lightning iatalitiese:
while iu a recent year there were
more than 90,000 fatal ;accidents of all
kinds. He goes on;
"Tire actual danger from lightning
is, io general, very sulalt, except un-
der certain circumetarices of exposure
out-of-doors which, as a rule, can be
avoided. Within buildings of consld-
erable size, and dwelling -ileuses of
modern construction, cases of death
or injury. 'by lightning are, I'elatively.
rare, They are more frequent within
small unprotected buildings of older
type. Isolated schoolhouses and
(Mulches, where nnrriljers may congre-
gate during thunderstorms, present a
considerable hazard, if unprotected by
lightning -rods. Tlie United States
Bureau of Standards has published
the following rules for avoiding dan-
ger from dila cause; 'Do not go out -of -
doom er remain out during a thunder- capable of landing on water.
storm unless it is necessary, Stay Speed has also taken on a new An olds wen a was an of snot soevenbyoid when the
t it d i EIf is are now under WaY Welt,
French Luck
Of Seaplanes
Stirs Protest
Schneider Cup Reveals Deft-
ciency--Bleriot to Give
Trophy for Land
Planes
Paris,—French aeronautical build
ers are being urged to turn their at.
tention to seaplanes and hydroplanes,
Examination of the rosette of Lite
recent Schneider Cup contest has
caused a Profound stir in flying cir-
cles Retie, for it is admitted that in
this branch France lege'behind other
loading countries.
A symptom of this feeling was the
holding of La Baule of the fleet sea-
plane tournament singe the war. In-
vitations were seat to British and
Italian liters who. had participated ab
Calshol for the Schneider Cup, and
eyeu though they wore unable to
coins, nevertheless the event at La
Baule aroused cousiderable interest,
Articles - have been appearing in the
ingss 09 Ue`vGo'ernmeing the ntato supportila
drive for superior French machines
TALL' TALES
Tluillirig experiencee were related
by Theodore Roosevelt on his return,
recently, :from a .year in wilds'- of
Asia, from where Ise brought back a
rare collection of animal life.
The
Old Wte;men
Of Seventy
By Ercta Lang
inside of a building where is ry, mean ng, or world was kinder!
d i t fl l a s t 'drawmise from the Govern -
with bird's that Have been confined a preferably away from
fireplaces.
e . o a pro
mall quarters serer having been am stowed, and other• metal objects. If meat that French craft will not be The midwife, the wise woman,
q xt Shuerdet C P
customed tc tree range, Twenty -tour there is. any choice of shelter, choose missing from the ne
hears of Elisting are recommended at
in the following order: 1. Large metal meet. This will entail the necessity
this stage• After alto birds have be- :or metalframe buildings. 2. Dwellings- 01 adequate funds and more. co-opera-
mane
a-op
came accustomed to confined quarters or other buildings protected against tion in Industry than was evidenced
when the start was made to get the
o machines ready for the last Selmelder
day all they are agile to talcs, and atter t e•d void contest.. The plans had to be given
each feed the trough should be clean. able, Beep away from small sheds and up, to the disappointment of many.
ed. Plenty of water at al times is shelters, if in au exposed. iodation, iso- Louis Bleriot, :first cross-channel,
necessary and a feed of grit several laced trees, wire fences, hilltops, and pilot, who witnessed' the Schneider
times a week is advised. wide-open spaces. Seek shelter in flying, has promised a new speed cup
. There are many ways of Preparing dense woods, a grove of trees, a cave, for land planes, and predicts that air-
Che feed. This Bulletin, obtainable a depression in the ground, a deep planes will be reaching 750 miles au
ram the Publications Branh, Depart- { valley, or canyon, or the foot of a steep hoar within. 10 years. This shows
meat of Agriculture at Ottawa, re- 1, or overhanging cliff," how greatly the French were impress -
grain ted in a wet state of a coasist-1 commends that the use of only ground ` _-, _ _ ed by the British and. Italian Por-
newer el—tie
aand
t
•u The sweet grandma= in her _ lase,
by merely increasing the feed they
should o fed two or three times a
lightning. 3. Large unprotected build -
legs. 4. Small unprotected buildings,
IE1 remaining' ou -o - o0rs is ung
pigs within the el'• a eney that it may be peered iron the
metal tags is a general practice
some hog farms. These are stamped
With combinations of letters or fig-
ures, and as each lag hes a different
combination a ready means of ideati-
flcatioa is assm'eca. The most satis-
factory type is that which is sett -
clenching, and when inserted is the
ear' remains' there permanently un-
less torn out. When this happens,
which is but rarely, a duplicate may
be inserted. In order to avoid con-
fusion .the tag should be inserted iu
the ear at or before weaulag time- coarser hulls removed. If water has
The Dominion Animal. husbandman, to be used instead of Wilk in prepar-
who has a wide experience ib mark-
ing the feed from 8 to 10 per cent, of
ing hogs for ideutifiation, calls atten-
tion animal foods such as beef scrap or
in his report for 1928, Published blood meal should 'be added to the
by the Department 01 Agriculture at grain mixture.
Ottawa, to th use of the tattoo in Instructions for killing and packing
marking swine ,officially recognized hY'for market are included in rite Balel-
the National Pig Breeders' Associa• tin,—Issued by the Director' of llub-
G t Britain. Tl t method of
marking is undergoing tests at the
on
pail or dipped out. with a ilat ladle.
Buttermilk is recommended as the
best liquid with skim mills next in
preparing the feed. When skim milk:
is used it is reComntsnded to allow it
to sone slightly and 'to mix one feed
ahead. A little Bait added to mash
encourages chickens to eat more of
the feed. Practically all of the coarser
grains are suitable, Corn, .oats, bar-
ley, buckwheat, and wheat, etc may
be mixed in any combination but they
should be finely' ground and the
cap and shawl
(Dearest and best of counsellors)..
They were all seventy` hire hair and.
't'bey had wrinkles and v
strong, clever, or delicate white
hands,
They helped in travail, cured sickness
or knitted and. advised;
The older they grew the wiser they.
became,
Storing knowledge and perfecting ex
perience;
—Until one night, at eighty or so,
Death laid a gentle hand on their
sleep,
per-
formances tos to English waters
points to -a new French challenge for And the rnothersto-mo regretted the
clever midwife,
And the farmer and the rheumatic re•
stetted the wise woman, •
And the children and grandchildren
mourned long for the vacant`
chair and the kind dear face.
1
will be nosed otrt in the competition Air old woman of seventy!
for the Europe to South America ser- There was a war
vices. e. And there is hustle and grasp and
I hold and tug;
And Life to the addled .old brain is
1 Can You Answer? not worth sitting down with,'
jI _ What is Life?
Which is the longest night in the Just tithing drat,day. by day she must .
year?—A fortnlgist, shoulder till site dies.
• Soars were killed in the war, and,
daughters are tar away and are
What is that wltielr never asks goes- cold-hearted,
tions, but often gets an answer?—The • Money is hard to get and everything
front door, is so dear,
i vi9ty is a grievance like a baby?— Food and free must be skimped and.
Ellie -
tion of tea t s ue the shrivelling limbs grow cold,
licity" Dom Departthent of Agricut• aQ ti Because the longer you nurse -them (Grandma -ma's limbs slid not shrivel,
Experimental Farms l t the object the bigger they grow.
tti
.,n o ' '� o,. In her armchair by the goad goal fire
of determining ws galea as a means`
of identifying swine.
•. The Journal t&idustrielle points out
that, Italy, instead of France, was of-
fered a section of the England -to -In-
dia route because France was not pre-
pared for oversea flying, and adds
that if France does not get ,busier t
with tl b' t lure, Ottawa, Ont.
Finishing Market Poultry
The Cotton Crisis "Girls who never practice can still
London Observer (Ind.):Tbe mon
opoly which Lancashire enjoyed for a
The time would seem to be past century is definitely at an end, so
when poorly finished poultry can be tar as the coarser counts are concern -
marketed with profit. Indeed it is :ed. Lancashire herself admits that
held by authorities that putting the ;the days of her sppl'emacy are over.
finishing touches ou market Poultry But she still reckons 00 an beats'' their wings folded,--Oltve Schrein-
650 before offering it for sale yields the puted mastery of the finer branches er.
greatest proportionate return of any ,of the trade. It is a false reckoning.
• d ti
play on the piano."
An Angel
Deep in the heart of every a
01 man lies an angel, but some h
on
ave
650—Slip on dress, with diagonal
closing at front, attached sh.wl col-
lar and inset vestee, long dart -fitted
sleeves with applied cuffs, removable
belt. For ladies and misses, 16-18-20
years, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 inches bust.
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 preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each number, and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by an early mail,
labor done on the poultry term, We It is based upon the inherited aP - Truth
finished broilers or roasters uudoubt-rude •of the Lancashire worker com-
edgy cost less per pound, to the pro-: biped with the perculiar humidity of
ad-
ducer than those that are poorly flesh.,
1bbs Lancashire climate. These
ed, and are much more desirable to vantages are no longer' proof against
the consumer. . i assault. German perseverance is pre -
The past methods of finishing Poul- parsed to acquire the one,. German
try for market are described by Mr, i science to duplicate the other, and
F. C. Elford, Dominion Poultry flus- Japan is ready enough to' reiterate a A modesty in delivering our sena-
bandnlan, in Bulletin No. 20 of the German challenge: meats leaves us a liberty of changing
them without blushing.—Bishop Ne it -
KNOWLEDGE son.
Make truth lovely and do not try
to harm her—mankind will then be
far less inclined to contend with her.
—Joubert.
' Modesty
Department of Agriculture at Ottawa.
Grate feeding, especially for cockerels
is highly recommended, but it is also All the knowledge we possess of ex -
Maimed by Mr. Elford that it will pay ternal objects Is founded upon experi-
to adopt this method with pullets and , epee, which furnishes facts; and the
hens when they are to he sold in a comparison or these facts establishes
dressed condition. Grate feeding Is i relations from which induction the
Fair Flowers
God hath made many fair flowers,
but the fairest of Bhem all is heaven,
Goodness and Mercy done both in small crates suitable for intuitive bold that like causes will ad the flower of all flowers is Christ,
small flocks, and in feeding batteries !produce like effects leads t ogenerll Samuel Itutheralt 1
There is dew on one flower, and not ter those who buy in chickens to flu-
It up laws.—Mrs. Somerville.
TRUE GLORY
to take it in, while the other Moses
dwelt • warmth 'and nourish -
Why is a piece of soap on the floor
t r l3't makes meat).
ince the letter —accuser This one lives alone and trudges to
all fall.
collect small rents and. pay big
Four letters to my name. rates:
I am something eaten by all, Her tenants call her a miserable old
Cut off my tread, and 1 will be woman:
Just what yon do with my alt. The bottom lip that turns over drops
_ still more at the corners,
Why is the crocodile the most de- Her skirts are long and draggled,
ceit1ul 'animal?—Because he takes She cries often, and all her weepbngs.
everyone in with hie open counteu- are for herself,
anoe. —Her poor old self that people cheat
__ and despise:
What is hundreds and hundreds of She hoards, combats expenses, and
times bigger' then a football, and yet worries over days of ten years
everyone an catch it—even a baby? hence,
—A train. She falls sometimes from•wealcness,in
her room,
Which is the best butter' in the For worries and stress and exaggeee.
tion of worry sickens the old'
world? --The goat.
brain:
Why is next Thursday like a chick- She is no nee in the world at all for
en that cannot lift its heady Because
_ the world has: no use for her,
it's .neck's weak (next week). But she holds to her earthly posses-
_ arena, a small row of houses
Which two lash would be most use• That bring her a pittance and kill her.
ful to a carpbnter?—The saw -fish and in body and mind.
the hammer -headed shark' The ambulance takes. her to the Ob•
servation ward,
And later the hearse takes her to the.
cemetery;
Relations wino never carred for her,
claim her houses,
And agree that it is'a "happy release."
haw may summer pass too quietly?
en soother, because one opens s e ish in S large way,
tl True glory Consists in doing what When there Is often an evening inlet.
itself and the drops run off, So God In Putting in a batch of ahieicens to LABOR deserves to• be written, in writing tbsn 0
Ire fattened it is recommended to al- ` The labor of the body relieves us
--
rasps goodness and mercy is wide as low them to rubes a meal and then to from the fatigues o fthe mind; and what deserves to be read, and so lfv Which is the heavier the full moon
the dew, and !f we lack them, It is Teed sparingly for several days. This ,this it is which forms the 1uo spiness ing as to make file world happier and or the new moon?—The new moon be.
because we will not open our hearts butter for our living, --Pliny. :cause the full moon is much lighter.
to receive them, plan is necessary to avoid indigestion of the poor.—Itocheeoucauld. I
Bridegroom Geevem Flashes Some Cave -man Stuff.
MUTT AND JEFF— By BUD FISHER
(MUTT, TDO l AD KOU MAD
Reet/MATIsee So DAD YotI
COULDN'T ATTEND GUS
GceVeM'S WEDDING:
tT WAS A SWELL AFFAtie
Tits ltR1Nc0 ace eaALcs wAs
SesT MAN:
THE wci)DING WAS ,HeLes
ON Tlie LAWN AND THE
C f<dAN\ 0 SOCt5T''O' J
WAS ri•1C-I5: MISS
Toon) Tt1E t3ieto ,
•Ltsiol<Eb GRcA•
i
Sh(e'S Al
SWEET
LITTLS
THING!'
Y
%Etc4SG MC A i✓tomeNT:�
-ft-HEY useb The iO4N5
GC-CeeMoN`i AND
't1 -1d MomeN'C The'
941N15Tcft PRONOUNCED
ll'lGh•!t MAIN j)ND
Wt f=Ce wRA"t '7
De You Tellhit'et
-
TI.atN''
WC -LL, GGGVCM. HAULED OFF AND
HIT HIS,Biztbc Ate) AWFUL 5ocl<
RIGI-4T lid The FACe% al•le hRDpiEn
Like A L0G1 l°INALLY'$he sTA1Z'5eb
To P el<THE 5ole OvT oe' HER
"CC- -tYl PND I,Nowees.a,e . --
G1 At tT, WAS ALL ,S m/r:
TNcnl Gee -vena Rep\cheb
'aoUN
, 1,
j /{till Net:Pea, H5t2 17-1a
He --la Fe ET AND SAipl l
e MG MB G. Ce-,
i-ru-MT wits ,J?
Fula NUTt- Wert --f
s
ul!lilllllln,•tir
ill!�ll!�9�U�illll i ,I I 1
They pass you often to -day=
These poor, unhappy, balf•crazee old
women of seventy.
Many old people did not survive the
war in England, but there were some,
of course, such as The Quarterly "Lis•
tra" of the Poetry Review (London);
presents us, who live on in a changed
state,
1
The famous library of law and othe*.
books in the Middle Temple, London,
now contains something like 70,000
volumes. It was founded In 1041.
Serenity
'She good are joyful and serene, like
travellers . brat are 'going -toward
Immo; bile wicked but -by intervals
happy, like travellers that are going
into exile. -•Goldsmith.
"Afo.tltcr," maid lithe Dorothy, ons
moraines after having fdlien out of
bed, "I think I know why I fell out of
bTtohodolmna,e. aat rfnierrglhea t, p'mlIaotcmewaensWti'trcteagott, slisenhpe"
added. "No, that was not the rduson
11 was boeanse"1 slept too near whore
I fell out."