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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1932-11-03, Page 2PAGE TWO The Wingharn Adv�a nee*Times Publishet WINGHAM - ONTARIO Every Thursday Morning by The Advance -Times Publishing Co. Subscription Rate -- O, ne Year $2.00 Six months, $1.in addvane •To U. S,A,S2 p ya Foreign rate, $3.00 per year. Advertising rates on application. During this year both the United Kingdom and France converted. large outstanding obligations into new bonds with yields lower by 1J to 2? per cent. So it wouldseemthat the investing public are being given a chance to buy these Dominion Bonds at a price that gives an attractive rate of interest, though lower a great deal than the last great issue, the National. Service Loan. The prospectus for this issue ap- pears on another page of this paper, and people who desire bonds which are most highly secured and pay,. reasonable interest rates will do well to read it carefully. * * * Buy a Poppy in remersbrance of those who lie in Flanders' Fields, CANADIAN WOMEN AS NATIONAL ASSET last Premier Bennett at Ottawa week praised the work of the Wo- men's Institutes and rightly so. We :men are so apt to take our for granted, but, if we consider for ! and also help the many who carne a moment we will really be intros i back, and + now need your assistance. surprised that `women are one of o It is said that indications of a very THE WINGHAM ADVANCE -TIMES 1n him 'm The king shall be blessed in Politics. Could it be that, in the in- terests of economy, the ratepayers will send the . present. Council back to office without an• election, greatest national assets. The pal• the mother takes in the home life of any nation is indispensible. Her care of children and the responsibil- ity which she takes in this import- ant part of national welfare, has Bal ways been a recognized fact. , fiber field of endeavour has in the last number of years gone much further than that. The Wotnen's Institute is .one of the greatest examples of this. 'Then there are the various organiza- tions operated by women in every church in the Christian world, and their efforts in this regard have been responsible for great growth of the Christian work in all parts of the world. 'The general make-up of our wo- menand their kindly understanding also fits them for charitable work to which they give so much of their valuable time, and so often in this respect she makes with the needle and thread articles of necessity for the needy, that bring cheer and hap- piness to many who otherwise would lose faith in humanity. One could go on writing indefin- itely of the good these people do but this short article is just a re mi *der that their efforts are appreciated. DOMINION OF CANADA 4% LOAN The Canadian Government has never floated an issue which has not been successfully absorbed, and this new issue which has just been re- leased will, no doubt, meet with a very favourable reception. Large in- surance companies have applied for large blocks of these bonds, showing that the rate at which they are be- ing offered is in accordance with present -clay yield on high class sec - cold winter are shown by the very large migration of birds. Better get your heavies sorted out from among the moth balls. * * * =Y• Casa Loma, Toronto, is to be sold for arrears of taxes. These amount to $27,305 and the castle ' -cost Sir Henry Pellatt hundreds of thousands of dollars to build. It would have been much better if Sir Henry had built his castle in the air, * s= * * A Chicago man committed suicide because his young wife bobbed her (hair. He would most likely have died of shock if he had seen her smoke or do some other modern stunt. * y; * * An editor recently remarked that the season for fowl suppers and sour stomachs would soon be over. The fowl suppers around these parts are really a cure for loss of appetite and not creators of indigestion. * * After seven years of crooning Will Osborne has decided that he will croon no more. Too bad he didn't make this decision seven years ago. * * * s: The engagement between Princess Ingrid of Sweden and the Prince of Wales is again rumored. The Prince has been news in this respect for so long he will soon be known as the "Prince of Tales." * * * * Here is one for Ripley to enter in his book. Brulette won the. Jockey Club cup at Newmarket, Eng. He was the only horse in the race. * * * _* Nomination day is less than a month away. So far, we have not 4arities.. heard much in the way of municipal ITHE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON him. ''The king shall be to them the very type. and living image of all blessing, so that they eau wish for nothing higher or more glorious than his blessedness should flow forth up- on them. All nations shall call him happy, The psahnist remembers God's promises' to Abraham and, Isaac, Gen. 22: 18; 26. 4. CHRIST OUR PEACE But now in Christ Jesus ye that once were far off are made nigh in the blood of Christ. Paul is writing to converts from dense heathenism, former idolaters, far removed from the blessedness of the knowledge of God and from communion with hien. But Christianity has brought them so near God "as to be embodied in- to the very life of the true Israel; for Christ suffered to `sanctify his people with his own blood,' the blood of death, of expiation, nay, of wond- erful propitation; and they, believing in his name, had taken place among his people, the people of his coven- ant." For he is our peace. The image present to the apostle's mind is that of an imperial power sending mess- engers to provinces with which it had been at war, messengers whose first business was to make known that the war was over. Who made both one. Both Jew and Gentile, as husband and wife are one, as Christ and the Christian are one. And brake down themiddle wall of partition. Paul' may have had in his mind the stone fence in the temple area, beyond which no circumsized person was al- lcwed to pass on pain of death, and of which a stone bearing an inscrip- tion to that effect has been found. Having abolished in, his flesh the enmity. Christ's death on the ,cross became the u4iifying bond between. Jew and Gentile, as he died for all. Even• the law of commandments con- tained in ordinances. God's law, binding on Gentile as well as Jew, was satisfied by the Saviour's expiat- ory death. That he might create in himself of the two one new .man, so making peace. Paul . did not think of the Christian church as part Jew- ish and part Gentile, but as one body, a newly created individual; and so a warless world will think of the once sundered peoples as one nation. And might reconcile them both in one body unto God through the cross. It was both Jew and Gentile that hung there upon Calvary, all mankind in one man, a propitiatory offering for all men to a justly of- fended God. Having slain the en- mity thereby. That is, by his death on the cross. And he came. Christ came preach- ing by his Spirit in the apostles and other messengers of his. And preach- ed to you that were far off. To you Ephesians, far removed from the knowledge and hope of the Messiah, and so far off from God. And peace to them that were nigh. • To the Jews, to whom in their synagogues, in whatever country he might be, Paul carried first the good news of Jesus Christ, just because they were already near the gospel. For through him. Through Christ. We Both. Both Jew and Gentile. Have our access in one spirit unto the Father. We are to come in one Spirit to the Father. The reconciled join hands again with each other. LESSON VI—NOVEMBER 6 THE CHRISTIAN WORLD PEACE,— Psalm 72: 9-17; Eph. 2: 13-19 Golden Text.- Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be call- ed sons of God.—Matt. 5:9. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. Times and Places. - David was born in Bethlehem about B.C. 1092. Isaiah called to be a prophet, Jeru- salem, B.C. .755. Christ's appearance to more than 500 disciples in Galilee, spring of A.D. 30. Paul writes is letter to the Ephesians during his first Roman imprisonment, A.D. 62. THE ABOLITION OF WAR. They that dwell in the wilderness shall bow down before him. "The wilderness -dwellers are the "nomad Bedouin, who call no man master:" And his enemies shall lick the dust. They shall bow to the ground in humility and hide their faces from him, terrified, in the dust. Thvekings of Tarshish and of the isles shall render tribute. "The most distant west and south became sub- ject and tributary to him; the kings of Tarshish in the south of Spain, which was rich in silver, and of the islands of the Ivfediterranean and of the countries on its coasts." The kings of Sheba and Seba shall offer gifts. Sheba was a rich and famous country in southern Arabia whose queen brought gifts to Solomon. Yea, all kings shall fall down be- fore him. Not merely the rich and powerful, such as have been named, but the least monarchs and less con- sidered potentates of earth — all are to worship this Prince of Peace. All nations shall serve him. There is to be not only lip adulation, but practi- cal service; they are to be his slav- es, and that gladly. For he will deliver the needy when he crieth. The best ofreasonswhy men will serve him—because he serv- es him. And the poor, that hath no helper. No other helper, save the best of helpers, the most powerful, the most loving! No wonder that Christ placed among his beautitudes, "Blessed are ye poor!" He will have pity on the poor and needy. Since sympathy is the best of gifts, far better than mere money; though the King gives that also. And the souks of the needy he will save. This is the climax -of his blessings. He will redeem their soul from oppression and violence. How can it be if at the same time God re- deems man from violence? As a matter of fact, wars are uniformly inconclusive, and after all the battles the real issue must be met by peace- ful methods. Revolution does not work lasting reform. And precious will their blood be in his sight. This is an idiomatic expression of the idea that a person sets such a value on the life of another that he will not suffer it to be destroyed. And they shall live. There shall be life at its fullest, at its highest and best. And to him shall be given of the gold of Sheba. The worship- pers of the King of kings shall be wealthy and shall freely and gladly give of their riches to the Lord. And nien shall pray for him continually. Prayers of rejoicing, of praise, and of gratitude. They shall bless him all the day long. Driver translates this, `May he be blessed all the day!' and interprets similarly all of verses 15-17. 370 There shall be abundance of grain in the earth upon the top of the mountains. The psalmist , does not shrink from pointing to actual temp- oral benefits, anticipated to result from this gentle yet strong king's dominion, The fruit thereof shall like Lebanon. ,Lebanon, up to whose summits the northern Israelites con- tinually gazed, is here introduced not merely with reference to its height, but as the mount of richly, waving cedars; the image befpre the mind of the psalmist being that with the same exuberance with which in his own day the cedars of 'Lebanon wav- ed on the northern mountains, abun- dant harvests of grain shall thereaf- ter wave on .every prornineet upland in Israel. And they of the city shall flourish like grass of the earth, Not only shall the fields, and even the mountain -tops, where the verdure is Thursday, Noverber 3, 1932 efill with FINEST PENNSYLVANIA MOTOR OIL Crown -Dominion Oil Co., `.Limited, Distributor Toronto St.Catharines ;i HamiltonHamilton,, • .!,' of a,..3i .4444..45x'". r'!'� $.�+ .. :it r„M�r„r : COLD -PROOF Pours freely at zero. Lubricates perfectly at 200 below. 100% Penn- sylvania at its best .. yet it costs no more. Wingham Dealer: ST 2 eggs Little cream if too thick Salt and paprika Rounds of buttered toast Method: Beat eggs light — mix well with cheese — add seasoning. Add cream if necessary, Spread on bread. Toast in hot oven. Serve•m- mediately. EXC ANGE With fully equipped offices in London and New York, and banking connections of high standing in all commercial centres, this Bank offers its customers throughout Canada prompt service in all foreign exchange transactions. Our managers will quote the latest exchange rates. Private wires connect our Head Office at Toronto with our offices at Montreal and New York. THE DOMINION BANK ESTABLISHED 1871 WINGHAM BRANCH J. R. M. SPITTAL - MANAGER ----.-- Lobster Omelette Souffle Nice Luncheon Dish 4 tablespoons of thick white sauce 4 eggs beaten separately Method: Beat eggs separately. Add yolks to white sauce. Fold in whites of eggs beaten stiff. Bake in a slow oven. Serve with lobster sauce. —0— Lobster Sauce 1?, cups of thin white sauce oned with 1 cup of lobster. BAKING HINTS Sponge Cake Pans With sponge cake, angel food and all cakes that depend on air—do not grease pans. —0— Pie Crust Where baking powder is used in pie crust it is necessary to prick pie crust with a fork before baking. Mr. Newrich entered a restaurant and said to a waiter: "Where can I get a wash?” "A wash, sir?” repeated the wait- er. • "Yes, yes," said the man of wealth. "A wash, confound you. How many seas- -o— • Ham Souffle i; cups of milk 1 cups of dry bread crumbs 4 tablespoons of melted butter 1 cup of cooked chopped ham 2 egg whites beaten stiff. Method: Scald milk. Pour hot milk over bread crumbs and let stand until soft. Add butter, ham and last of all beaten whites. Season. Bake in buttered dish or dishes 20 min- utes—in a moderate oven. Fill dish or dishes, two-thirds full. Serve hot with cream sauce. --o-- (Copyright, o—(Copyright, 1932, by The Bonnet - Brown Corporation, Chicago) So then ye are no more strangers and sojourners. `Sojourners' denotes persons dwelling in a place, but without •citizen rights and Privileges; as such persons are usually foreign- ers, it is immaterial which term is used. But ye are fellow -citizens with the saints. • The saints are all those who are joined in the Spirit with Jesus Christ. And of the household of God. Paul thought of the Christ- ian Church as a great and blessed family. To be a Christian is to be an intelligent participator in a cor- porate life consecrated to God. THROUGHOUT CANADA AND OFFICES IN NEw YORK AND LONDON RANCHES THR we B enniYnueuepeelieunnaei 9Yea1uaaeuuuuanauananeaneaenaenanuaean,ueueaah ■iA■■IS®■■■9f■EO■M#■ IMINMOMMM NISOMERZEME ®i ■ Maitland Creamery M ■ ■ • Buyers Of 111 Cream, ggs Here's to the man who plans things— Builds things -makes things; Who prattles not of wonders of old Nor gloats over ancestral gold, But takes off his coat and takes hold And does things! "You know Bill? Well his wife Sarah jumped off the bridge into the canal and—" "Poor Sarah!" "And a fellow passing by jumped in and sav- ed her life." "Poor Bill." ■ ■ ■ And Poultry M, ( usually scanty; spring forth in abun III dant harvests, but the cities shall be THE UNITED FARMERS CO OPE w TIVE COMPANY* LIMITED Wiitgllllaroo.t w Ontario. Phone hone SI ;`tints for the Household By Betty Webster Squab Trim A novel way of trimming squab truly an :amazing departure from the usual store of frills is to use stuff- ed olives. That is, using the large stuffed , olives by simply .removing. the fillings and placing the green ol- ive caps on the bones. This also gives a tempting touch of color to the dish. R GE times do you want me to repeat my- self." "Well, sir," said the waiter, "the toilet saloon is in the basement. You will see a notice on the door :"Gen- tlemen Only," but don't let that stop you:" $1,000 Cash for You in a Few Years Features of a Policy for a Young Man, or a Young Woman who Earns Her Own Living: (1) No Medical Examination Required. (2) Pays $1,000 Cash in Twenty Years; (3) . $1,000 immediately if death . oc- curs: (4) $2,000 if death occurs as the result of an accident. (5) If disabled through sickness or accident for six months or longer it will not be necessary for you to pay any premiums falling due during the period of dis- ability. (6) Your annual deposits earn interest. Each year a dividend is declared which may be used to reduce the premium or allowed to accumulate as a special fund. This requires very moderate savings on your part. We shall be pleased to send full particulars regarding a policy for you, with annual deposit required at your age. e. THE Mugu if Assurance Company of Canada Head Office: Waterloo, Ont. Established 1869 Please sendparticulars of your Non- medical 20 Year Endowment Policy Name Address Age W. T. Booth, C.L.U., Dist. ,agent, Wingham, Wm. Webster, Agent, R.R. No. 2, Lucknow, Ont. R. H. Martyn, Agent, Ripley, Out. uy _ I. /-• •, r. -_=, ; j A OZESIDENTI -:...?::1 C., l..• �. It a �. . , . EK°.• , �s i , > ......-1 ..e as thickly populated with men: as the meadows witlt grasses. His name shall • endure for ever. And if his name, then of course his kingdom. His name .shall be contin- ued as long as the sun. Like the sun, forever pouring out light and warmth, the source of all 'prosperity and ;joy: And tncnshall be blessed --0-- To .--o -•To Make Good Soup ° Save all water that potatoes and vegetables are cooked in. It makes a delicious sotip, ---o--• To Wash Lace Successfully Add ammonia or borax to the suds that the lace is to soak in. This loosens dirt and lace, washes with less handling. COOIt',ING HINTS Cheese Dreams pound of grated Arnerian cheese easier 7.7Tr, 4 '""T'' jJU J,`l��.4.1' �t v`,0 •"' x fi v-. err s,