HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-01-17, Page 6IIx
Ithrott h Christ, See Romani' 1;16,.
dere ghe ascribes salvation to the love
Sunday
! of tied, He was impressed with the
�o+ ,of
in which Christ carne in the tut-
rtes of the time. It was a moment in
history when things had reached their
.,s1 lowest, when we were meek, The law
had failed, men had found 'rut that
'they could not save themselves, and it
sent forth his Son.
was then that GodJanuvey 20• Lesson 111—Christ The i In the death of Christ 'we have the
Saviour—Luke 1i : 3-7; Romans 5: love a God made manifest in all its
• 6.10, Golden Text ---And thou shall !power and mystery, He died for the
call his ,name Jesus, for he shall save ungodly, 'for wren who had gone fat'
his people from their stns,_Matt, from God, and had wandered into sin.
, 1; 21. ' God was not, therefore, selecting out
.A.NALYSIS lthose 'who had preserved the divine
1Ilikeness. He came to the tingodty,.
L A „'ARABLE QN TI -IU LOVE O1' COD, I V. This shows 11o\v Christ's death
Luke 15:3-7. ; gives evidence of the marvelous nature
II, TITS SUPREME EVIDENCE OF CHRIST'S of God's love, It is scarcely possible
LOVE, Romans 5: 1':10. Ito think that one would Make the su-
INTRODUCTION' -• Many different ; preine sacrifice for a merely just man,
titles have been given to Jesus, Re;that is, for one who was just without
was called "The Messiah," "The Sen:being loving; it was perhaps possible
of David," "The Lord," "Prophet," 1 that one would die for a good man,
"Priest," "King," but amongl of thehise
! one who V. 8. $as t (ene s ean d exce<ndl all
y.
titles none is more eloquent
work and character than the term these bounds, for he died for us when
"Sayioi.w." In this capacity he saves we were neither righteous nor good,
us front guilt, evil, and death. Christ's Ibut when we werethsinners.
rs.well take
great work was to save the world. confidence 9. for the future. may and. rest a e
I, - Luke
ON THE LovF or GOD,+sired that he will protect us for ever.
Luke 1U i 7, i This passage is one of the classical
V. 1. The parables are among the • savings on the love of God in Christ. r � ^� N�
most heals:WM of the sayings .ef Jesus, It is not because of the presence.. or•
,�,?
and there is nothing that can be corn- absence, of .any merit in es that he
pared with them. They reveal the loves us; but it is simply because his
I i of s ' on I'G
Drawl ag a Flee Line
AVIATOR'S COMPAS CAUSE of CUSTOMS DISPUTE
we
and
insight of Jesus into the world heart is so full ofcompassi tcasler, aviator, who flew from London to Australia, c�'1s
nature and into the heart of God. look at ourselves alone we may well Capt. Lae in rays thatwas held by customs officials when Often we find help for the interpreta- have cause to, question the doctrine of Lancaster inspecting compass tion of the parables in the shop in- forgiveness, but if we look at Christ, Lancaster arrived at New 'Sees. because
't eon ma four ot?ttc+e' 0f alcgtiol
trocluctions which are given In the we see there on exhibition of
p esent instance we find the occasion which wakens new hopes and starts
in the people who made up the audi- us on the upward path. Dr. MontleJ
epee ' One cannot wonder that the quotes the saying of a dying French VitalBlood
common people crowded to hear hire. saint to her daughter "My child. I
He had a message for the forsaken
?rhave loved von because of what you
and the fallen, and it is no sui,ise are; my heavenly Father, to whom t
that the publicans and sinners drew go has loved me in spite of what I
near. ani."
V. 2. But along with these came .an-
other and more critical class. The
Pharisees and scribes were the official�-�+ •
leaders of th, nation and sought to Higher Tariff
maintain unchanged the traditions
and practices of the past. The pubii-
eans were not religious in their out-
ward observances. They did not at-
tend the services of the Sabbath, and
did not exhibit the piety of the scribes.
The sinners included all .hose who 46 000 000 Dozens Annually
bad turned their back on the religious Im erred Into U.S. From of Israel. So that it natur- p
ally created a great sensation when China, Parsons Says.
Jesus was willing to speak ti -this
• class. When they carne to his se 'vices Higher tariff on eggs, to stem the
•*il d in
' 11 I 1 e tells 000 dozens annually, is advocated l o I 9
thoseh offended at his action Leavitt C. Parsons, publisherthe 1lnrueh Cli_ ilncirlutecl
On Eggs Urged
By' U.S. Publisher
El
Antifreeze Solutions
Te ch r g Habits of Courtesy
Helen areeg Green 1 man sells hia4 wares to win. or•der�l?
"Flail ye small, sweet .courtesies of How does be do It? Partly by being
life, for smooth 4e ye make tate roan , friendly and oourteoule Can we ex.
of it.' --•Sterns ( plot to Hold the love .and respect of
RsoenUy, I overheard the story of a our o.wn. 'lisle family circle in- the
.young• lad. applying for a posttiort awl; fullest, 200astt.r0 unlsss Yee use sirnila;e
getting it, because of the "How do', methods?
you do, Sir?" with which ire addressed' Courtesy wins the love of our faun
an elderly ofticlal of a big corporation, :'lies and ottr friends, Let, us teach
"S'Qtt See, tl]e llla'o w110 engaged our children that not many become
the courteous young chap ettplained, great or famous, but ell can be
"so many young men are not properly , courteous and thoughtful of others--_
attentive to those. who are older, That-' a practical applieatloa of the Golden
young mall's courtesy was genuine.! Rule.
It's true," he quoted, "that 'acorns oft iii our town,; there is a big'; jovial,
Courtesy .in business, usually , develop Policeman who stands guard at a
lute oaks of financial I'eturn'."
Teachers and parenits, alike, need to
take time to think and teach courtesy,
If such habits are inculcated in boys
and girls while they are still in the is their idol, always ready to look at
Blastic, just-tlte-corner-from-ba- their report cards and eager to hear
byhood age tihey will, in all probabil- their little tales -of happiness or woe.
it'y, carry these lia.biis through life. One day, I happened to be passing,
It 1s generally agreed that courtesy when I saw three little girls wave'a
is indeed a most desirable quality to cheery, "Good morning, Mr. Rey
develop in children, het parents and nolds," to the smiling man.
teaebei's who expect their children to • I nodded to "him and said,. "Really,
be uothgbtful of.'others must renzem' Mr. Reynolds, I believe you're one of
bei that courtesy begets courtesy. the happiest' men in the world."
They must set an example of courteese ; And quickly he replied, I am, 1
Is it not true that we often. save our wouldn't: trade places with anyone for
most courteous, gracious selves for, a much larger'salar . You see my
our friends anti acquaintances outside cllildl•en.are all so polite and thought -
the Moine? Husbands and wives of-' fel."
• ch other and to their "Yon have helped to make thein so,"
ten sneak 10 each
children in a way they would not, I told him.
think of speaking to a stranger, Howl "Perhaps,'_ lie admitted, "I've. found
,foolish! Must we not continualy "sell , that courtesy and good -will often wire
ourselves" to each other as a sales -'where gruffness fails.
Element The question of an antifreeze solu-
+ tion. is of interest to both tr actor an
Synthetically
automobile owners. Some of the pos-
sibls antifreeze solutions az•e:
Alcohol and Water
Most commonly used for intermit-
tent used autos and trucks. d Alcohol
8 pints and water 12 pints makes 10
per cent. solution freezing 20 below
aero, and alcohol 8 pilts and water 8
'alecessity of Transfusions May pints make 50 per cent. solution freeze
2 below zero. 1`0
After 17 Years German Prod-
uces Synthetic Hemoglobin,
Carrier of Oxygen from
Lungs
•c1
street corner where many clzildt'e=.t
pass on their way,to school. :E:xpect:
aptly, he waits for them iu the mop—
ing,. at noon and in the evening. He
ing ibad effects on
Be Obviated by Product, metals, hose, or radiator. Alcohol
Doctors Say evaporates before water, and must be
tested frequently and more alcohol
Lenin After seventeen yea's of added.Quite expensive for. tractor
research work. Professor Hans Fisch- use and for autos and trucks under
er of the Technical College in Munich heavy ser i Tem tuteryo tient as uvea
he seemed to make a point of sh Ig rash of dried and frozen eggs being cooling
how full and free the folgivens of poured into the United States from has succeeded in producing s'nt0001-
heating engine 'because of cooling
God was. Indeed, he had severalsolutiorL,
China at a rate of more than 46,000,- tally the important ferruginoue com-
occasions to defend his procedure._ by f h oalobin he informed Light Oils
Thus, in one passage
m ar i, 1 '] Ilellte 0 n em n ,
who were of the I - Chemical Society recently: kerosene used to consicl
"I came not to call the righteous, but New :England Poultryman, writing in.s The achievement is bailee' here as enable extent as kerosene
used for autos
sinners to repentance." Especially
angry were the Pharisees when they
I "Current Affairs"
issued by the Bos Although no and trucks hi light servicer Some
ton Chamber of Commerce. d to the piactl smell and perhaps
; of primary importance.
a little danger from
Jesus had actually* ac The curbing of this Import. to -f estimates were made as
in ted house
invitation to take a meal; h r with eliminating over-produc-, cal applications of the synthetic prod- fire, n utlneith rhserioos rubber efcect
P eget e
in the .Louse parable,f the tax -gatherer Levi.' tion in the baby chick industry, more net, whicll is called henna -tine, it is, on
V. 3. Thiseofhistherefore, is ale,:
1laudling and systematized regarded possible that it might he eine: s 1 eat. and might er l)e)oor Some conductor
of
other defence It his mayreatment of rhe ..enginan oveilteati 1) tinder heavy serf
sinner -class. ue compared i market, were named by Dir. parsons pl.oi•ar at a remedy in cases g
with Matt. 18: 12-14. Bat the figure as means of aiding a depressed pool poisoning. f Oxygen 1 vice Used crank case oil cavy me -
of the Shepherd is quite familiar to try business whose ani x tunics
•1 bel an oaganle matter N th
yearned that <I
;` Conveyor o xy en
ival turnover ! used as antifreeze, very similar.
us from the different parts O' of scrip -1 exceeds $1,500,000,000. ; Heuicge is
�• . he 2 00 \\L^ieh constitutes about Bine-tenths to^kerosene for this purpose. ei
tare. Psalm 23, John 10: 1, T In 1926 the equivalent of 5 ,000 0
three parables here. the Lost Sheep, doyen eggs -was imported, Mr. Parsons ,of the weight of dried red bloo1e�cor-i er
ere Spic no roil makes a safe prix
Glycerine or Glycol
Lost Pieces of Silver, Lost Son, all, said while "during recent tariff ?rear-; pestles and serves as a ca
deal with the love and forgiveness of l
God. t Ings the import of Chinese eggs in oxygen .from the lungs to the general
V. 4.• In the first and second par-; creased tremendously, one part -am -1 tissues of the body. It is an exceed
,able, Jesus defends his action by ap-; lar shipload alone, displacing more lzigly en
peoplex substance, and prior .to
aling to their own action in lesser - than 5,000,000 domestic eggs."1 102 7 itsxaet formula was not known
;natters. If they are merciful in the/ "Despite the present tariff of G , Its extreme physiological impor-
way in which they will hunt but a!
cente a pound on frozen eggs and 18 1 tante arises from its function as a con at higher temperature than water,
lost sheep, surely the heart of. God, „stets a pound on dried eggs," he con- veyor of oxygen throughout the living .hence only water needs to be added.
whoy metals, and
made us, wall be his o equally merciful linuecl "the Chinese product comes in 'tissues. Hemoglobin combines with Has no bacleffect
little11effect on rub -
"You
S trying, mightto rescuea test shepherd,
pherd, such volume and so far undersells do-, oxygen as the red blood corpuscles the purer grades
Some one in say n they b then mestic products that there is now 0211 pass through the lungs, forming ani ber hose connections. Does not rutin
ab ou have ninety-nine, s e, why bother
about one poor stray sheep?" But the American dried -egg industry. The exceecliugly�`hemounstable
lobiu. As fire 'compound
red, our fir' sl� like
Hasalcohol.
some 'when
endencylled
Y
shepherd cannot do that. He has an dried -egg business is an important . known as -o , g nin
interest in each member of the flock, business. We have in this country all. blood corpuscles • circulate
lebi through
Gogh 2nent clots' 11 th ech rust 1 sr her sedi-
Iii
so also o God has a particular knewl- the essentials for establishing the in the body, the oxyhe o
edge of each one of.his children. He dustry—labor, capital, machinery, and; pound breaks down, leaving the oxy-; many ways is the most satisfactory
nte3 not neglect the others in the raw material. I gen in the tissues and reducing tire' antifreeze for autos and trucks.
satisfactory -
interest of the.one, but he will use I Somewhat expensive in first cost, but
everypossible means to hunt for the Turning to New England conditions compound to hemoglobin again. byfiltering can be users over and
vei"y in the poultry industry, Mr. Parsons In poisoning by coal gas, or oilier' .
lost one. showed that only 10,000 cases out of gases containing carbon monoxide, over. -
V. a. The tenderness of the shep-Commercial reparat!oris '
nerd is here displayed in th:e way in every 1,000,000 eases of eggs, and 1000: the carbon monoxide.% the lungs cont-} Various commercial antifreezes are
which he carries back the lostseep outofIt that with the 'hemoglobin to forma also on to market, . f 11%h•
Mach used for late' ''ears for an
antifreeze for autos and trucks,'
Steads a very low temperature and
makes safe mixture with water. Boils
TIS
aria - - -%Mry yo.t'0�•
binding for the 36inch size., Pattern
price 20 eents in stamps or coin (loin
is preferred). Wrap coin carefully,
. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS,
Write your :.arne and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in
stamps or coin' (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for ear:h number and
address yoi..r order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West• Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by an early mail.
"The Simple Life."
"My lite in the country did at least
teach methis—that the really stitw -
lating' things were the quiet, natural
things, and the really wearisome
things were the noisy, unnatural
things," writes Beverley Nichols in
The Londou Magazine.
"'Among my discoveries I may men-
tion these:. That It was more exelt-
ing to stand still than to dance, that
silence was more elocitterit than
speck, that water was more stimulat-
ing than wine, that fresh air was more
intoxicating than cigarette smoke,
that sunlight was more subtle than
electric light, ,that the .scent of grass
was more luxrious., than ills most ex-
pensive perfume and the -slow, simple
observations of the average firmer
.more wise than the most sparktiug
epigrams of the latest wit."•..,•
Sentiment and the .Empire
Lord Melchett in The Review of ,Re-
views (London): Sentiment and good-
will will not indefinitely keep togethei •
' far distant communities like those
comprising the British Empire unless
there is added an economic complex
of'sonre kind. Yet to anyone like my
self who has recently returned from
the great and flourishing Dominion 01
Canada, and who for many years has
1 been intimately connected, in trade
and commerce, with practically all•the
Dominions and Colonies, the idea of
PRACTICAL --SMART I separation, division, or even minor
Very slim 'and simple too is a divergence, is not to be contemplated.
The mere idea of it amounts to an
charming house frock o:f linen ill anachronism belonging .to last cen-
dainty . garden flower print. '£he re- tory,
b k h 100 000 pounds of poultry bines a j t1 n arket some o w
without any upbraiding, but only with come into the Boston market are pro -i compound called carboxyhemoglobiu versihle fronts which is an interest,
iu11 joy in the heart.
V. G. The joy of finding must be
communicated to others for true hap-
piness is social and desires to share
its blessing with others.
V. . The conclusion is drawn. We
observe how Jesus speaks with auth-
ority on the conditions of the hea-
venly life, He finds the greatest oy
in heaven to consist in the return of
the lost and wandering sinner. The
righteous are probably those who are
outwardly keeping the law,and the
word is used iconically. God's love .is
nowhere seen an frilly as in the for-
giveness he bestows on the repentant
sinner.
1 . THE • SUPREME EVIDENCO OF CHRIST'S
Lows;, Romans 5: 6:10.
V,. 6. Patil is convinced that full
salvation has untie to the world
duced in Massachusetts. Indicating i weich'does not break down as usually.,compounds based o
thus the demand, he urged education oxybemoglab n. .As the poisoning the foregoing materials. Before lie
among poultrymen, coupled with edu-' ,continues, therefore. an increasing: ting any ng mates into a Before
of the public to buy products' amount of hemoglobin is rendered use-, care should ti taken to see that itbr,
marked with the New ) nglaud label less as an oxygen -carrier. 1 clean sebeita and see at is
Oiling sponsored by the New England Heretofore, in severe cases of cnal-. to of that all leaks are stopped,
gn
Council.
(l0es give 5atiefaCtpl'y results. They are ing feature are piped in plain linen in
n some of vivid tone, which is also used to bind
Criticism
ma ,.
gas g
poi sonil ' t ,
blood transfusion has,
that hose connections are all soird,
been necessary to introduce a suede'-
oxygen clic , tight' and do not leak. Also it is
the blood to effect proper er p It important that cylinderbead and
seui]natithroughout the s\stem, other gaskets are sogltd and do. not
is considered Possible that at some leak, -incl that puitm lands and petit
time in the future, when Professor ins are tight enough to pievent leak-
g
1Fiscb.er's hematine has been further age.`
studied and tested, the synthetic,-'g''''
emo lobin can be injected into the A fool manages to keep - the fact
h g 1 of gas victims, thereby "
from himself longer than he - does from
anybody else.
ent quantity of fresh hemoglobin into
Treaty Stands ds th
eT
Test I
Washington Post: Try as they will,
the opponents of the Kellogg Treaty
can not suggest a convincing reason
wliy it should not be ratified by the
United States and all other nations.
Some books are to be tasted, others
and that hose connection clamps are
and some few to be I syscei
to he swallowed,
chewed and digested— inFrancis Bison. g blood transfusion,
narrow belt that fastens at either A, A. Milne in the Boal:. Window
side of front and ties in bow at back. • (London) : Criticism does not so int'e'r
and to edge patch pockets.' It's easily matter with a book, or Bather it mat
made! See diagrams! Tussah silk in- ters artistically but not financially,
soft rose piped in deeper shade, print- which 3s bow it should be. Criticism
ed cotton broadcloth, orchid, gingham! of a play matters finau4ially but not.
with purple binding, dotted pique in 1 Artistically. It matters financially
Ir eench blue with white, washable i because a play cannot afford to watt
striped radium 'silk, tiny yellow and for public opinioli, and the only int -
white checked gingham, and striped
men's' cotton shirting fabric are ex-
ceptionally attractive for serviceable
wear. Style No. 189 designed in, sizes
16, 18, 20 years, 86, 38, 40., 42, 44, 46
and 48 inches bust takes 2% yards of
36 -inch material 'with 11 Z yards of
mediate opinion available is that of
the critios, It doss not matter artis-
tically, because . the join twork of
author, producer and actor is being
criticized by somebody .Wllq has no
idea where on ends and the other
begins.
Now ,1eff'11 F
ve to Hide His Wallet in His Shoe.
MUTT AND JEFF.-lud Fisher.
z'LL Ls Ave IT
WitS� T11c NtGIiT
CLC--Rk AND
fkiGN z IA's;ky.
1 -lave To wORR1
I'M AFRAID To NIDE
M`! WAr.LST UNbeR Nt"
plLi oW �- St)Menob`Y
M%dtiT s'reAt. IT
' Lv1- LG I'M ASLO -EF':
T1•LI5 RoTec• IS ht5Ustl4G,
Some ' -euGli LOokwl1
BIi2b S!
SAY,
`(Gs, tT wris
5ofne ScieAP•
‘A.Ilitt.e. it
sleetsb, ANb
CALL "(MU
C.-ATElz'
NOTA
"THING!
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