The Seaforth News, 1930-06-26, Page 7Sunday. School
Lesson
Jelae Qtr Lesson XU—The Risen Lord
and,,-Itie+ Great Comntission-Mat•
thew 28; 1.10; 16-20. Golden Text
—Go. ye,itherefore, and teach all na-
tions --Mathew 28: 19.
ANALYSIS
I. THE APPEARANCE TO THE WOMEN,
1-10.
II. :THE GREAT COMMISSION, 16-20.
-�'INTRODIICTION—It is upon the're-
surrection of Christ that the church
rests. It was the belief in this fact
that arqused the disciples from their
doubt, and started a new joy in their
hearts. It was as wibnesses of the re-
., ,ug
reetion that they event forth as the
• t missionaries. It still ie the foun
s ion of the 'Christian hope. 3f Christ
has not risen'then out faith is in vain.
There are narratives of the resur-
rection in. eachof the Gospels,' but
these have certain discrepancies which
cannot easily be reconciled; but the
general impression -is the same in all,
the Messiah. Jesus 1cos risoh from
the dead, never to die again, and now
Ms spiritual po ser is -offered to all
believers Ile is with the disciples as
a permanent Saviour, to guide, in-
struct, protect and rescue,
Thrilling Take -off
Occurs in Forest
One of the most thrilling airplane
take -offs that has ever -been Performed
was accomplished recently by Captain
Charles I{ingsford-Smith, the Austra-
lain, who flew from the United States
to Australia in 1928, Recently, when
one of the pla.teo of a commercial fleet
made a forced landing in a forest near,
Bornaldo, New South Wales, it seem-
ed to everyone that the ship would
havo'to be dismantled before it could
be removed, Captain Smith hit upon
another -idea. He tied the plane's tail
to a tree and set the engines going full
Speed. When the inaobine lifted from
the ground and strained at itsleash,
a farmer was signaled to cut the rope
with an axe. In a flash, the plane was
away, It barely cleared the tree tops,
but Captain Snaith brought it safely
home.
I. THE APPEARANCE TO 'THE WOMEN,
1-10.
"r V. 1. In this double reference to
the time; the end of the Sabbath would
•include any time after sunset on Sab-
bath, while the ;same statement places
the event very near to. the breaking
of the morning' light of our Sunday.
V. 2- four Marys are mentioned in
-the Gospels' as connected with the dos-
ing ministry' of Jesus, (1).Mary the
-mother of Jesus, (2) Mary_Magdalene,
-out of whom Jesus had 'cast seven
.devils, and who was well known to the'
-church, (3) Mary the mother of James
and Joses, (4) Mary -`the mother of
.James and John. It is said that they
came .to see the sepulchre, but we learn
' from the other Gospels that they also
brought spicesforthe anointing of.
the body. .
V, 2. Matthew alone mentions the
-earthquake, and this explains the fact
given in Mark and Luke that the stone
lad been rolled away. .
V. 5. The angels urge the women to
abandon all fear. They do not need
have the alarm which the watchmen
have evidently shown:
' V. 6. Their -fear is needless because
their Saviour has risen in accordance
-with his Prediction. Besides, the angel
bids them'look at the tomb, the mean-
ing of which is more clear when we
read John 20: 5-7,, where the position
-of the clothes ie given.
V. 9. There are five accounts of the
- appearances of the risen Christ. The
four Gospels contain one each, while
Paul gives us his list in 1 Cor., chap.
15. It seems evident that the first
appearance was made to Mary Mag-
;dalene. Altogether there are eleven
' •distinct instances on which Jes'.is
manifests himself to his disciples. In
Matthew and Mark the chief interest
is in the appearance made in Galilee,
where the apostles had gone after the
crucifixion. In v. 7, they are bidden
to meet him in Galilee. Luke and
John are more concerned with the ap-
pearances in, or; near to Jerusalem,
though in the last chapter of John we
have the beautiful story of Christ re-
vealing himself by the shore of
Galilee.
In general these narratives point
out several facts. (1) There is no
doubt t at it is -the same Jesus whom
they Lad known before. (2) Yet there
are very great changes, for he is no
longer subject to the laws of natural
orm. He passes through dosed doors.
(3) He appears only to believers.
II. THE GREAT COMMISSION, 16-20.
V. 18. His words are those of a great
ruler. We should put the word "math.,
ority" here instead of "power." Jests
claims that he has the supreme control
of the universe. Nor is the claim any
usurpation, since it has been ,given
to him by the Father. This rule or
power, of Jesus has ;to limit, it includes
heaven and earth. There were signs
of the authority of Jesus while he was
in the flesh, as when he said that he
had authurrty 1.0 forgive sin and to
control the Sabbath.
It is chiefly in the sphere of religion
that we think of the authority of
Christ. He is the great teacher on the
problems of the soul. His message,
alone is final. Moreover he is himself
the message. He is the way, the
truth and the life.
V. 19• The peat commission. Since
Christ has universal power he will be
a universal ruler. His sphere of ac-
tion will not be confined to one coun-
try, but will include all the nations of
the world. Hence his disciples must
go forth to make disciples of all na-
tions. They are also commanded to
use baptism as the sign of admission
into the new kiingdnm. This rite was
not unknown to the Jews; but it was
in the Christian' Church that it, came
to have its richest meaning. It signified
washing away, of sin through faith in
the living Saviour.
V. 20. The conclusion of the Gospel
,is reached in this grand climax. There
is a promise of the eternal presence of
What New York
Is Wearing
BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON
Illustrated 137•e0sn cathing Lesson I'ur-
nished With, Every Pattern
Where They Land the Big Fellows
Patience rewarded on, the Capilano River in which three prize -winners
in the continent -wide contest ',conducted by "Field 'and Stream" for the
heaviest steelhead taken with a fly in Canada and the United States, have
been caught. The fisherman is snapped taking one of the many five -pounders
in which the stream abbunds. " The river lies back in the mountains of the
North Shore not more than ten miles from the Canadian Pacific- Railway sta-
tion at Vancouver, British Columbia. Hp to eight -pound steelheads have
been taken in this river. `
Spain Up -to -Date
Has Bootleggers
The axiom that the world is a
pretty small place after all evidently
holds true not only in regard to dis-
tance but to some customs as well.
A Madrid newspaper ran a news item
recently which impresses the fact
that America is not the only home of
bootleggers.
The item reads: "Jorge Ifolrenger,
aged 20 years, went aboard a -French
ship lying in the harbor at Barcelona
and was offered the opportunity to
Purchase contraband tobacco. He re-
fused and alleges that in the midst of
the ensuingdiscussion he was over-
come and bound. The police went
aboard the ship, where they were in-
formed that no such incident had op-
eurred. Search revealed no contra-
band."
As the news item suggests, ships
coming from foreign ports, probably
without knowledge of their masters,
often. carry English or American
cigarettes as the case may be. Smokes
obtained in this manner are cheaper
thau diose bought through the mono-
poly, One man boasts that his .poet -
man keeps him supplied with tobacco
smuggled in this manner, and busi-
ness houses sometimes have their
workers canvassed by vendors, This
indicates that people in other lands
are lust as willing buyers of contra-
band and that enterprising bootleg-
gers and officials are just as numerous
in one part of the world as another,.
Which isnotto say that the business
is done on a wholesale basis, as in
the case of liquor in the•United States,
but nothing is done that way here.
Smart women favor this new femin-
ine mode ecause it's so extremely flat-
tering.
Itis emerald green tubsilk printed
in tiny polka -dots. The ,ever collar
and vesteo are of white crepe silk.
Style No. 3434 is delightfully cool
and smart: It comes in sizes 16, 18
years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 incites bust.
For summer, printed dimity, em-
broidered batiste .and flowered voile
are interesting cotton fabrics for its
development.
Itis perfectly adorable in aqua-
marine blue silk pique. Make the
vestee and rever collar of same shade
pigpe printed ih by French blue dots.
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.
BOON TO HUBBIES
A radio authority reveals that su-
perthinking can be induced by heat-
ing the brain cells with rays from a
high -frequency vacuum tube. Men
who can never remember what it was.
their wives asked them to bring home
will welcome this priceless invention
with cheers.
The Cry of the Little Brothers
(The Good St. Francis of Assisi called
all animals his little brothers and
' sistere)..
We are the little brothers,
Homeless in cold and heat,
Four -footed little beggars
Roaming' the city. street.
Snatching a bone from the gutter,
Creeping thro 'alleys drear,
Stoned and sworn at and beaten,
Our hearts consumed, with fear.
You. pride yourselves on the beauty
Of your city fair and free;
Yet we are dying by thousands
In coverts you never see.
Steam Heat To Go
Say Scientists
Detroit. -A' rival for steam heat,
diphenyl, the world's newest comnter-
clal substance, was introduced to the
American Institute of Chemical En-
gineers here recently.
Dipheuyl—prouotmced dy-Yen-ill- is
a synthetic chemical, something that
Probably never existed anywhere in
nature, but better than water for one
purpose, -
Heat transfer is the thing that
steam does when it warms the radia-
tor and through it the air in the room.
Diphenyl carries great beat without
the dangerous, explosive pressure of
steam. '.A 700 degrees the new chemi-
cal has only about 65 pounds' pressure
compared with about 1000 pounds for
steam.
Diphenyl is not at present a substi-
tute for steam ,teat, but it.foreshad-
ows the sort of stuff likely some day
to make it easier to pipe heat into
the house from a central station much
as water now is piped. Professor Bad-
ger revealed some of the peculiarites
encountered. in using diphenyl in the
manufacture of caustic. For one
thing, it can leak out of joints Impel,
vious to steam and water.
Strangely enough dlphenyl is made
from explosive benzene. By heat two
hydrogen atoms are forced out of two
benzene molecules, which thereupon
unite to form the new substance, a
yellowish, white solid. It melts at
about 155 degrees Fahrenheit.
It already has given promise of be-
ing a worthy child of benzene, which
is one of the most widely used chemi-
cals. Front diphenyl already have
been made amber -colored resins, black
pitches and gray crystalline solids. It
has been used in making varnish, in-
sulation,
nsulation, flame proofing and water
proofing.
You boast of your mental progress,
Of your libraries, schools, and halls;
But we who are dumb denounce you,
As we crouch beneath your walls.
Americans Get
Turkish Monopoly
Istanbul, Turkey—Angora advices
reported that the Turkish Cabinet has
approved the American and European
Match Company's offer 05 a 00,000,-
000 advance to the Turkish Govern-
ment for. 25 years' control of the
Turkish hatch monopoly. Lee, Mg -.Soviet Russia Cows
g neon & Co. ot New York will iia:; ;:w Wear Spectacles
the -financing. Soviet. Russia has originated many
novel social turd economic experi-
ments, but perhaps it has never be-
fore tried to do anything quite so un-
usual as to make cows wear specta-
cles. The purpose of this experiment
has no connection with the ancient
joke about the cattle raiser who put
green speetacies on his cows so that
they would eat sawdust and believe
it to be grass. The new invention
has if serious purpose—to defend the
eyesight of the cows against storms.
Rose and Anemone
A Greek Myth
By Lockwood Barr
Once upon a time there was a very
fashionable wedding on the Olympian
Heights where the Greek gpds lived.
Eris, the goddess ot Discord, was not
asked; thereby hangs the tale. She
passed by and into the midst of the
wedding guests threw an apple of pure
gold, upon which was written - "Por
the most beautiful,' A scramble fol-
lowed,
When the battle cleared three young
ladies claimed the apple. Zeus called
for order, and made Paris judge of
this Brat beauty contest. The apple
was given to Cytherea, a mermaid:
Naturally the other two did not have
a chance: She was bora of the sea -
foam and landed at Cythera. The
Greeks knew her as Aphrodite, and
she was called Venus by the Romans.
Venus was a flirt, but she finally
fell in love with Adonis, the handsom-
est of; all young men, and deserted
Olympus to live on earth with him.
Their romance came to a tragic end
when Adonis, still in the Rush of his
Youth, was killed by a wild boar.
The gods willed that a summer fes-
tival called the Garden of Adonis, be
held in his memory. This festival
symbolized the annual arrival of
spring, the blossoming of: flowers and
their death and decay with the com-
ing of the frost and winter winds. To
the Greeks it typified the cycle of love
and life itself, for to all men in all
times Venus and Adonis have been the
Great Lovers, and their romance has
been sung until this day,
Roses were sacred to Venus be-
cause, so goeth the myth, when Adonis
was killed there sprang up from his
life blood a red, red rose, and the
tears of Venus turned to anemones, as
the Greeks called them, which word
means wind. And so in England these
flowers of Venus were commonly
known as wildflowers.
Girls Grab Your
Measuring Tapes
You sit in your tinselled playhouse
And weep o'er a mimic wrong;
Our woes are the woes of the voice -
lees,
Our griefs are unheeded in song.
You say that the same God made na.
When before His throne you come
Shall you clear yourselves in. His pre-
sence
On the plea that He made us bumb?
Are your hearts too hard to listen
To a starving kitten's cries?
Or too gay for the patient pleading
In a dog's beseehing eyes,
Behold us, your little brothers,
Starving, beaten, oppressed—
Stretch out a hand to help us
That we may have food and rest.
Too long have we roamed neglected,
Too long have we sickened with
fear;
The mercy you hope and pray for,
You can grant us now and here.
—Ethelred Breeze Barry.
Pygmies Still -Live
In Darkest Africa
Paris—There still are plenty of
pygmies in the interior of Africa, Mrs.
Carl Akeley, widow of the noted
American explorer, reported upon her
retina here recently after a year's
exploration among the little peoples
with camera and typewriter.
Mrs. Kkeley said that the legend of
the pygmies disappearing was due to
their shyness, which had taught them
the art of making themselves all but
invisible.
She said she found many villages
of the little people who are the size
of normal 10 -year-old children. They
live in tiny hats made of leaves,
which they crouch. They move away
at the slightest alarm and constautly
are shifting from one food source to
another.
"When I visit the Grand Canyon of
the Yellowstone I realize the iusigui-
licence of man. Ever been there?
"Never. You can get the same sen-
sation by going to a woman's club
meeting."
It is fine to be unselfish, if you can
keep quiet about it.
Forgotten Rubens Found
Vienna—A forgotten early work of
Bathos has been discovered among a
number of other paintings in the cel-
lar of the Austrian Historical Museum
of Art by its director, Dr. Gustave
Glueck. The picture, a portrait of
Margaret of Austria, the wife of
Philip II of Spain, has been more than
100 years in Austria, having been a
gift to the old Austrian Imperial fam-
ily and forgotten.
Scientists Force.
Rain From Clouds
• For the first time in history man;
las succeeded iii,making rain. Curl•
ouslyy enough, tins -object sought iu the
experiments was quite different
namely, the removal of tog, The rain-
making
ainmaking was incidental,
Fog is the greatest enemy of aviat-
ors. If it were practicable to sweep
a landing field clear of fog and to ,deep
it clear as longus the fog lasted many,
lives would be saved.
That is exactly what the expert•
mentors are trying to. find means for
doing. Serene has already been suc-
cessful in some degree; and there is
little question that the problem wiill
soon be solved,
A fog is a cloud resting upon the
surface of the earth; it may. be 300
feet or 2,500 .feet high, A cloud is
fog floating in the sky. Iu both cases
the cloud consists of droplets of mois-
ture condensed upon particles of dust
suspended in the atmosphere.
To clear a landing Held of- fog, Slee-.
tricity is used to*drive the particles of
moisture t3gether, .so that, forming
large drops, they wilt fall to the
ground by gravity. The fog is washed
out of the' air.
Science—The Rain•Maker
The apparatus employed consists of
water' tanks, an aeroplane engine flW
ted with a propeller, and a 75,000 -volt
transformer, the whole affair being
mounted on a track. Connected to the
tanks and mounted in front of the pro-
peller is a pipe ring perforated with
small holes. The water, charged in
the tanks to a high voltage, is blown.
by the propeller outward through the
holes in the ring, which acts as an
atomizer, and is dispersed in the form
of a fine mist, which evaporates al-
most instantly, leaving an electrical
charge in the foggy atmosphere. The
electrical charge causes the fog drop-
lets to run together, forming big drops
that fall to the earth.
On a number of occasions, even
when there was no fog but when the
air was humid, scientists have, by the
means described, caused rain to fall.
It ie their belief that when the
method and apparatus have been per-
fected it will be practicable, under
suitable conditions, to produce rain-
fall
ainfall over a large area.
"A fiction writer is any husband
away oa a vacation corresponding
with his wife."
Washington.—A woman's waist, that
mysterious line so fascinating to poets
and lovers since time began, has at
last been definitely designated by
Uncle Sam himself.
Acting as referee for a group of pat-
tern mailers, the Bureau of Standards
of the United States Department of
Commerce has decreed that a wo-
man's waist line is lust seven inches
above her hips.
Here is the new set of proper mea-
surements which will be put out by
the pattern makers (all measurements
in inches):
Gander Guards Home
Martinsburg, Mo. --A giant gander,
given, to Dr, U. S. G Arnold of this
city 10 years ago as part payment for
his services, is his household pet and
guardian of his automobile. The
humble gray goose is rated with an
unusual intelligence and protects the
doctor 's car from its .perch next to
the doctor on the front seat while he
is busy making a round of calls.—The
Hiuniane Pleader.
A wasp has nothing to say, but its
action is right to the poinit.
Woman:
Bust: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46,
Waist: 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38,
44.
Hip: 37, 39, 41, 43, 45, 47%,
56.
M lsses:
Size: 14, 16, 13, 20.
48, 50.
40, 42,
50, 63,
Indians Prosper
On Prairie Reserves
Filling the Lunch
Basket
'Pith the approach of warmer days
the housewife's fancy turns to
thoughts of—picnics. No lunch bas-
ket is complete without some of the
following sandwiches:
Boil three eggs for eight minutes,
then plunge them' into cold water and
shell, Cut in halves, remove the yolks,
and pound with a generous amount of
butter, one teaspoonful anchovy paste,
and a pinch each of salt and pepper,
Spread liberally over daintily -cut
slices of white bread, cover with thin
slices of the whites ot the eggs, and
cut the candwiches into squares or
diamonds.
A sandwich that is certain to be DX-
preciated by children is made as fol.
lows: Mix together equal amounts of
Peanut butter and dates, spread thick-
ly
hickly over thiuly-cut slices of wheaten
bread, and cover with a little salad
dressing. These sandwiches are neur-
ishing and refreshing.
Mince 4 oz. tongue; then, with the
tips of the lingers, work in 2 oz. of
butter and a pinch each of salt and
pepper. Stir in one tablespoon of thick
cream, and rub the mixture through a
sieve. After spreading on the bread.
sprinkle over a little finely -chopped
Parsley' or cress,
Beat one egg to a stiff troth, and
add alittle salt, sugar, and one tea-
spoonful of prepared mustard. (feat
in a small saucepan three tablespoon-
fuls of vinegar, stil in the egg, theta
add slowly one cupful of milk or
cream, • Chop finely some shelled 'wal-
nuts, a small stalk of celery, and twd
hard-boiled eggs. Mix with, the dress-
ing, and spread over thinly -cut slides
of white or brown bread.
Edmonton, Alta.—"Lo, the poor In-
dian" can no longer be resigaated by
this phrase as daring the past year
the Red Man living on the reserves in
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
marketed cattle to the value of $250,-
000 in addition to the live stock they
raised for their own consumption.
The Department of Indian Affairs
has announced that the Indian ranch-
ers and farmers on the prairies will
this year seed over 100,000 acres of
grain crops and in addition they own
some 25,000 head of cattle which
range over the Indian reserves.
George Rector, well-known restaU-
ateur, has related in his mentor's that
at an Army and Navy Club dinner,
Willie Collier, the actor, arose to
speak after a dreary boor's eulogy by
a general. Collier's entire speech was:
"Ladies and gentlemen: Now I know
what they mean by the army and
navy forever." Which is somewhat
longer than Wilton Lackaye's witty
speech before an amateur dramatic
society after a two-hour introduction
by the chairman, who wound up by
saying: "The guest of honor will now
give us his address." Lackey° arose
and said: "My address is the Lambs'
Club," Then he sat down.
1VILTI°T AND JEFF—
WELL,Bo'(S, IT'S
SIX A.M. AND B
GoT To GCT
Some SLEER:'
By BUD
FISHER
E•WAS,TOLD Tb LO01v FoR.
TM° suSpIClouS CHARACTERS
.AND You Loot< Llt<E
BoTI oP •
Ttie.M :
THIS office( Pick% )(chi OP
AT SIX IN. 'ME MORNING— AND
YoU DARE To TELL ME You
Atte GOING To wofei< IN A
BROADCASTING
Z %tA`6.6ON:1
Amos and Andy - - and Mutt.
SURE. . TELL
BEDTIME STORES
1-o POKER.
PLAYERS! ® �:
Ground Work Essential
Miss Amy Johnson new alone front
England to Australia in nineteen days,
and in a. Moth airplane with a seconds
hand engine. But it does not follow,
that any pretty mise who happbi1
to take a notion cad fly to the ends of
the earth at will. Miss Johnson tools
a lob as mechanic's assistant, and;
made up her mind to master the en?
(ire craft 01 flying, And before She
attempted her great adventure in tttp
clouds she qualified for an Asir Minid
try's license as a ground engineer%
Organize!
The spectacle of a bread -line at The
Pas in Northern Manitoba has serva,4
to call attention to a problem that i
becoming acute in Canada. In the
newest section of a .new countryit
reports be true men have been oblige
ed to line up in a parade and ask fol;,
food. With the tremendous'possibil1,
ties of development in this county i
there should be`few idle men between
early spring and late fall. The troth
•ble seems due to lack of any seriotil •
organized effort to arrange a fair did'
Vitiation of work.
A proposed new use for rubbs
now much over -produced for the
'world's markets, and a new article o$
clothing, have been created in. Prance
On the form el a rubber necktie.