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The Seaforth News, 1930-07-10, Page 3Sunday School Less e1n July 6. Lesson I — Abraham (A Pioneer of Faith)—Genesis 12: 1-3; 7.12; Hebrews 11: 810. Golden. Text -8y faith Abraham, When he was called to go out into a place lit and his associates may prove to which he should after receive for an iiave been as short-sighted as they inheritance, obeyed;. and went: out, are criminal,says Wickham Steed in not knowing whither he went—. the Review of Reviews '(Lohaon), Bolslievism has built many of .its hopes upon its . propaganda •.in the East, But the`Eas.t-atany rate the Islamic and Bnciclhist Bast—is es- sentially religious and is unlikely to welcome rho advocacy of atheism hi any form. Neither in Iadle where political movements are invariably colored by religious beliefs nor in the world of Islam, nor in Jewry, is'blat- ant and aggressive irreligion a pass; port to lasting ,esteem or influence. Great Britain, who is now confronted in Palestine and India with problems that will teat both her fair.mindedness and her statecraft, should have .little reason to fear Boleheviet propaganda when its true characted is made plain, IV. AN EXAMPLE OF FAITII, Hebrew 11: 8-10. The devout Moslem remembers and' honors Abraham as the friend of God, To Jew and Christian he is the father of the faithful, obedient to the 'com- mand of the Highest For he looked for something more ;than a material in- heritance, a city which hath founda- tions, whose builder and•maker is God. Russia and the Orient In the long run, the etacties of Sta- -Hebrews 11: 8. ANALYSIS I. CALLED Oh' COD, Gen. 12: 1-5. H. A PEAGE113ANEii, Gen. 13: 1-12. III. COVENANT AND INTERCESSION, Gen. ' 17 '1.8; 18: 22-33. IV. AN EXAMPLE OF FAITH, Hebrew 14: 8-10. . INTRODUCTION—We begin, with this lesson, a series of studies of men and women •of the Bible, more especially of those whose names stand out promin- ently in t:ible history. Of these none is more interesting and none more dis- tinguished than Abraham. He is inter- esting as a than of his own age, with the ideas and with the limitations of his age, who nevertheless rose above those ideas, transcended those limita- tions, and went forth upon a great adventure, because he heard and obey= ed the voice of God. He is distinguish- ed for his courage, ;or his magnanim- ity, for his love of his kinsfolk, for his; humanity, but, ,above all, for his faith in God and his great obedience. I• CALLED OF GOD, Gen. 12: 1-5. Abram, as he was first Anted, had come originally, with his father, his wife Sara:, and his nephew Lot, from the city of Uron on the lower Eu- phrates River, to Haran, an important place more than five hundred miles, to the north-west, Here the road from• Nineveh to Carchemish was joined by the road from Damascus, and Haran was therefore a meeting place of car- avan tradc from tl east, the west, and• the south, whose merchants many cen- ti ries after the time of Abram are. mentioned as still trading with the greatseaport of Tyre (Ezek. 27: 23). Now the Lord had said unto Abram, speaking no doubt through some pro- found -inner conviction of duty or obli- gation; So -writes one of the beat. known interpreters of the book of Gen- esis, "lod's yoke is to be thought of not as something external, but as heard within Abram's inmost soul." What conditions Of life in Haran may have affected the mind of Abram at this time and made him more recep- tive of the divine call we do not know. Haran was a great centre of the wor- ship of the moon -god, and he may have desired to escape from the corrupt atmosphere of is h inples to the freer and cleaner 11of tl v land of Canaan where h mist, r :••hin God in a bet- ter war, tor'c tri 24: 2). With the call to a aioh Abram was obedient came the promise of blessing -the blessing of God upon himself and through him upon all families of the earth, One can imagine this man in the vigor of comparative youth, chieftain of a small tribal community„ thrilled with this high ambition and hope, leading his followers out on the way to a new country where there would not only be plenty of room for their flocks and herds, but opportunity for a purer worship which would bless the world. TI. A PEACEMAKER, Gen. 13: 1-12. The story so frankly told in the lat- ter atter part of chap. 12 is not creditable to Abram. It may' have been that he met again in the populous and hich land of Egypt some of the evils which he had sought to escape when he left Haran•. The way of cowardice and falsehood did not prove to be the way of safety, and he richly deserved the rebuke of Pharaoh. The true character of the nian appears when he returns to Bethel, in his magnanimous treat - anent of Lot. Ilere he counsels peace instead of strife and gives the younger Man , his choice ea the land. Lot made a selfish choice, the plain of Jordan- well watered everywhere—even as the garden of the Lord. This was the re- gion north of and surrounding the Dead Sea, part of which (that near Jericho) was very fertile. The later destruction of the cities of the plain seems to have rendered much of it barren and desert. Lot's selfish choice was his undoing, and the tragedy of it began when he.pitched his tent toward Sodom, v, 12. The generosity of Abram was rewarded by a renewal of the di- vine promises, 13: 14-17. III. COVENANT AND INTERCESSION, Gen. 17: 1-8; 18: 22-33. The story of Abraham's (17: 5) in- tercession for the doomed cities of the plain shows, his true greatness. Boldly ho pleads with God to save the cities for the sake of the righteous who may have their homes there. For shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? Aviatrix Finishes 12,000 -Mile Air Trip New York -Miss Anne Peck, ,ex- plorer and lecturer, returned June 13 from `.a 12,000 -mile airplane trip in South America. 'Miss Peck began the, South American journey about Christ- 'mos time last. Year. She landed 'tin Ole .coast of Colombia, and, taking her first airplane ride, flew into the in- terior at Bogota. She continued the air journey .down. the west coast, over the Andes to "Buenos Aires up into Paraguay' and 'finally on to Pernam- buoo and Miami, Fla. Miss Peck set a mountain -climbing record when she sealed NIt.Hiias- geran, Peru, said to be the highest climb in the Western Heriiisphere, 1903. Britain's Moral Supremacy America has not yet produced a race, or a racial type, or . a .racial mind, and this fact -to be very frank —is a guarantee of Great Britain's moral supremacy for the next few hundred years, says Mary Borden in Harper's Monthly, After that, when the population of the 'United States has added to itself another hundred million people, Great Britain may have to take second place. In the meantime, I back England' and the enduring power. of England and Its curious, slowly developing ,life, and its obstinate, invincible unity, which is so little understood by foreign politicians and which I attribute en- tirely to its geography, or, in other words, to its climate, Canada To Be Visited By British Farmers Winnipeg, Man.—Under the auspices of the British National Union, a tour Of British farmers is to be conducted through Canada toward the end of this summer. The tour will com- mence August 23 at Liverpool, and will be the sixth that the union has organized. The object of the visit le to en- courage intercourse between the peo- ple of the mother country and their kinsfolk, - 100 -Ton Carillon Goes to New York London—What is said to be the world's largest carillon -72 bells— for the Rockefeller Baptist Church in New York, was shipped on June 20 on the liner American Trader, Cast by Gillett & Johnston of Croy- don, the total weight is over 100 tons, the large Bourdon bell being nearly 20 tons. The 0 bell is the largest tuned hell ever glanufa0tuaed in this country. Plane Breaks Speed Record Over Andes Santiago, Chile -A new speed rec- ord between Mendoza, Argentina, and this city over the Andes was set June 13 when a New York, Rio and Buenos Aires air liner made the flight in one hour as compared to a normal flying time of one hour and ten minutes. Travel time by train between the two points Is 161 hours, • Prime 11/finistet' and Yshhel '/Air-1'dlinded" Prime Minister and Miss Isobel MVlaoDonald about to enter plane at Croydon, recently, in first air excursion:froni London - to Glasgow, inaugurated by Imperial Airways. Crafty Chinamen i 'Deported by Police London—Visitors to London during the coning season w111 look'in vain in Chinatown for the mysteiy and glamour of the .Orient which onee'ler. ed sightseers from ail ,parts of the world to that smallcorner Of the East End. • Gone are the opium dens' andgam, Wing hells which for so -long"•provided Matfett writers with their .requiste thrills; the police have .unearthed all the secret lairs and the crafty money- makers who lurked therein have been deported. At the present time there are not mmre•than a hundred Chinese families left :in Chinatown—and they have earned the reputation of being one of the most ,honest and generally well- behaved Sections of the East End community. The Sussex Shepherd He sleeps to -day in waxen abroad; His gentle hands are full Of snowy may; with dntcr-bold Upon a wisp of wool He ,carries to the Heavenly Throne To show the waiting Lord He could not leave in, lambing -time. To hear the Blessed Word. No lark will 'ever waken him; The mists will climb the slcy; And in the dew -pond on the Downs His shadowed sheep go by. -Mary Marquis in the New York Times. Clearing the Air. Ml's. Blank used to take great in- terest in visiting hospitals and asy- lums\ During her visit to one of the latter, a certain old man aroused her special compassion.: "How long have you been here?" she asked him. "Tikelve years," was the 'reply. After asking a few more questions she passed on. Turning to her guide; she noticed a smile on his face. On asking him the reason, she reard, to her consterna- tion, that the old man was no less than the medical superintendent, In• great haste she rushed back to make her apologies. "I am so sorry, doctor," she said. "This has taught ;me a lesson. I'll never judge by appearances again." Window Hints Strange Fishing A curious sight in the city of Win- cheater le angling for trout in the pub: lio streets, As ,most of you ]chow,- Winchester in England is on the River Itchen, and into the main stream there run numer- ous'small tributaries: The water of these, brooks is exceptionally clear, and trout, often of a good else, abound. In the main\thoroughfares of the city the brooks, which run along by the edge of the roads, ate mostly cov- ered in. in order to allow , surface water to flow away gratings are ar- ranged at. intervals, and it is through. these that cunningly baited lines are cast, and a good trout often captured. Now and again a fish may get away with hook and line and swim rapidly down stream, Then the fisherman makes a wild clash along the bank un- til, sooner or later, the flowing water comes more definitely into the open, and there occurs an opportunity to re- trieve lila feat ]life and hook, and per- haps secure the fish as well. Wh:.; t New York Is Wearing Econoitrty Corner Prase for Doas Ham Roulade In ExpL1e;ration Cut cold ked nm --- -thin slices; Spread theVirgifollowingiahamix'into- Stefannson Says Large Island tura on each slice very thickly. Mix May Be Found in Arctic one cream cheese with a halt tea - Regions R8 ions spoon salt, 2 tablespoons fresh grated g horse radish and sufficient cream to Quebec—"While RearAdmiral .Byrd make a soft filling. Roll each up aitd accomplished a great deal of good serve on lettuce leaves. I have sere, work in his recent expedition to the ed :this with. vegetable salad for a Pole, he was accompanied by a num- luncheon, with hot biscuits, and teal ber of expert scientists," according rhubarb sauce vanilla wafers' and It to Vilhjahmen Stefai,nson, noted ex- was good. plorer, who sailed ,for London and Dixie Jumbles Europe recently. One and one-quarter cups sugar', c/a Explmjng nowadays is not like It c�4 shortening, 3 eggs, 31/2 cups Hour, was in my time; for now it is atre- 1/zpteaspoon mace, 2/3 teaspoon salt, mendous organized thing, much litre a 3 teaspoons baking powder, juice of 1 military campaign, whore ne in my orange or lemon, chopped nuts, own time it was more individttal, In Dream sugar and shortening; add addition, exploring expeditions are well -beaten eggs, fruit pulse, sifted much more costly now than was the shy. Turn onto floured board, curl -case 20 years ago, for my' expedition into shape, bake about 12 minutes In) was Considered a very expensive one, moderate oven, Leave a little space] yet we operated for five and one -halt between the cakes and you can use 2 Years ,at a cost of roughly $500,000 or eggs and 3 cup water if you care to.l a little less than a hundred thousand Potato Spl'oe Cookies One cup 'molasses, 81 cup shorten- ing, 11/4 cups hot raced potatoes, 2 dollars a year, Rear -Admiral Byrd's expedition, which has operated for a year and a halt, has cost In the neighborhood of $1,500,000, or roughly cups flour, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 2 tea-' a.'miliion a year. These are public BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON spoons baking powde:, •1 teaspoon' figures that I am stating, for I have cinnamon, 1/ teaspoon each of soda, n0 ,private information of my own," Illustrated Dressmaking Lessors Par. cloves, nutmeg, mace and 1/4 cup chop- eontinnod the explorer, nished With Every Pattern ped raisins. Likes Dog Teams Heat the molasses and stir in short- Discussing the use of airplanes in ening until melted; add hot potatoes,• connection with Polar Sights, ant] then sifted dry ingredients and rain their superiority, over dogsleds and sins; mix well and drop by teaspoons teams Mr. Stefannson expressed the on baking sheet. Bake in moderato opinion that airplanes were superior oven For washing windows, usually noth- it g. more than clear warm water is necessary. If the windows are particu- larly grimy, as. In the kitchen where there is apt to be a film of grease on the panes, a few drops of ammonia will facilitate the cleaning, some ex- perts use a small amount of kerosene. instead, because besides cutting the grease it leaves a brilliant luster. Denatured alcohol is also good for cleaning glass. It evaporates rapidly and leaves a brilliant sheen. Although it is most effective when used concen- trated, it need not always be used that way, for a small amount may be added to the wash water just as one would use kerosene or ammonia. When cloths or chamois are to be used in cleaning windows, it is an, excellent plan to wipe the panes first with a wad of dampened paper, that of the tissue toweling type being es- pecially good for the purpose. Tile removes most of the grime so that the other cleaning agents do not get soiled so quickly. Some women follow this plan by merely, rubbing with a dry piece of old taffeta sills, which leaves the windows bright and clear, Many home makers• who use chamois for this purpose do• their window washing between times of loading the washing machine on wash day. Instead of tak- ing the time to wash out the chamois, this arrangement does that work for them by merely dropping the shin in- to the machine, whence it emerges ready for the rest of the windows or for drying, In 'winter, windowpanes may well be wiped with a handful of tissue• paper dipped in ammonia or alcohol, then polished with dry paper. Alcohol, not only leaves a sparkling glass, but it also prevents its gathering frost as fast as it does otherwise, so the idea is especially applicable to the washing of the windows and the windshield .of the car during very cold weather, "Don't Bend I1" "Did your. little - boy enjoy the party?" asked Mrs. Brown. "I think so," sighed the little boy's mother. He wasn't hungry till half - Past live the next afternoon!" ' A coiner of phrases says "The worid's tears have their source on the hills of misunderstanding." Might he not have added: And form lakes of love in the valleys? Dots seem to be growing in popu- larity more and more every day. In this model the French couturier has chosen a sheer crepe that displays charming femininity in its ceil blue coloring. The capelet collar is plain blue crepe and has picot -edge. It's the modified Princess silhouette with low -flared circular fulness that 'will make you look charmingly slender. Style No. 2510 can be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust, Tulip -rouge crepe de chine and par- rot green flat sills crepe with eggshell crepe collar are stunning suggestions. Printed chiffon voile, printed batiste and pastel handkerchief lawn are lovely for summer wardrobe, tOW 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. Golden Conversation Stockholm—Telephone connections between Sweden and the Dutch 1'n - dies is now open. Tiro cost for a call of three minutes' duration le about $24, each individual minute costing about 38. THE ONE EXCEPTION The well-known film actress, Miss Janet Gaynor, famous for her per- formance in Seventh Heaven, is fond of telling what may not inaptly be called spoof adventure stories. One that she is keen on relating tells how a party of globe-trotting .tourists were cast away upon an is- land where the natives were report- ed to be cannibals. "Well, what happened?" some un- wary listener is pretty sure to in- quire, "Oh, nothing," Janet will reply, "It turned out that the natives were veg- etarians," "And so, I presume," hazards the unwary one, "the tourists escaped with their lives." "All but one woman. She was a grass widow," MUTT AND JEFF— By BU FISHER 'dgetting reconnaisanee work,' but that for Luncheon Dish. 1k ge:ting Information from close guar. One cup colt] chopped roast po I ters ,there was nothing; to beat dog - (or pork chope), 14 cup bread crombsa teams. salt, pepper, 1 cup of milk, 1 egg, but-IOne of the great problems of north - ter. Beat the egg anti add milk, ern exploration is oceanography, and pork, crumbs and' seasoning: Pour just as you cannot get any 'sight of into casserole, sprinkle crumbs over codfish over the Atlantic in an air• top and clot with bits of butter, Bake plane so You cannot obtain any kuowl- about half .an hour in a medium hot edge 00 oceanography by flying over oven. Northern seas," he declared, adding Maple Mousse "Mr. Byrd, however, has a number of Heat 1 cup of maple syrup; dilute dog -sleds and teams with him, and the well -beaten yolks of 4 eggs with they helped considerably with his 1 cup of milk and stir into amp work." until thick and smooth. Cool and add Addressing Meeting 1 'pint of cream whipped, and the 11r Stefannson declared that he had stliily-beaten egg whites. Pack in ratiri.d 10 years ago, after his third ice and salt for 4 or 5 hours. expedition into the extreme north, Vegetable Hash Iand that he was going to London for One-half cup of chopped cooked the purpose of addressing a meeting carrots, 1 cup of chopped cooked po- of the Polar congress during the sec- tatoes, 31 cup of chopped cooked tur-' and week in July, and that he then nips, 2 cups of chopped cooked cab -'intended to spend three months work- bags, 1 cup of cliOpped cooked beats, l irtg on his book. 2 tablespoons of beet fat, '4 cap oP 7 enjoy myself Lost when 1 am 600 milk, salt and pepper. Melt the fat utiles from my nearest neighbor, or in a frying pan. When sizzling hot else in a city of five million people," Pour in the above ingredients, spread the explorer stated. He spoke of exist - evenly, cover and cook slowly one- ung land which might not have been half hour. Fold, turn and serve, discovered In the Arctic by any of Strawberry Whip the explorations, and declared that there was the possibility of finding an Hull 1 quart of fresh, ripe straw• island the size of Cuba, but it was not berries, sprinkle with a liberal amount probable. of sugar, mash, add the juice of 1 ora i "We believe that there ie no lapid ange and let stand one hour. Beat not discovered in the Arctic, The the whites of 4 eggs until stiff, then Inst human beings to discover islands add berries previously rubbed through in the Arctic were my third expetll- a sieve and beat until stiff and tion, which discovered Borden Island," smooth. Line a dish with sponge orf concluded Mr. Stafannson, as he said delicate cake, fill with the whip end good-bye to newspapermen. garnish the top with whole betties. Serve at once. Rhubarb Pudding Using Garlic Wel Cut up and cook together, with 1 Tn the best French cook re w ain0 cup water, 14 pound of rhubarb. When garlic is used, the rosultailt flavor soft, add 1. cup sugar and a pinch of is so elusive that ite JIM:1-101k.ro l i salt. Let come to a (lard boil and many a delicately seasoned dim: thicken with 1 heaping teepsoon of hardy suspected. potato starch dissolved in cold water, The French housewife u,os garlic 1 Cook 1/4 minute, stirring. Pour into sparingly and with discretion. 'i';;s dish and coal. Serve with top milk] word of warning is wor'h retao t r- or thin cream, slightly sweetened.I Ing as it is "discretion that is noaca. Very good for children. Sure Sign "Did ye hear that McGregor fell in- to the water while he was fishing unci was droonecl?" "Are ye sure he's dead?" "Ol1, he's dead richt enough. When they got hint oot they went through his pockets and he didna move." Expresses on the 'Phone While ti'avolliag at fifty miles an hour on the Canadian National Rail- ways passengers can now ring up 'either their hone or business ad- :0resses by telephone._ Muilter-•-'•Johnny, what are you do- ing in the pantry?' Jrnlinny—"Oh, just putting a few things away."' One of the Big Shots Was a Blank. sary if the addition of this particular seasoning is to be sufficiently delicate to be enjoyed. The use of „halm in a mixed ve etable salad is perhap, is best known form In the average 11 un,. In all such uses of garlic, St ,ivey Smith's familiar recipe for 1 ,;rain salad should be borne iu maimd and paraphrasrd to read: "Let garllo flavor lurk within tice bowl ' And, scarce suspected, animate the whole." Another method of using gal r,. so that it may be "scarce suspvid d • t^; especially adapted to baked en, ,'e, such as escalloped P c p tt ..i,;..+ or vegetables, meat, fish baking dish Is rubber )01 i rift clove of garlic before ;mina I, t t ycl, the garlic flavor will be a eaanly distributed a.5l to b: hardly dist:f 't- able and x1111 add ar, n t ..•,t1,' ,,.its- genet' to the contents of the 1,,1- in preparing a cooked sauce a out (lore of garlic added for three or fear aria utes and then removed will Impart sufficient flavor to suit most tastes. Like the onion and the leek, garde belongs to the lily faintly, thonvh Its bulb has an entirely different forma tion. Each bulb is composed of a number of "cloves" or "kernels" quite distinct from one another anis encased in a smooth, strong skin. Each clove must be peeled and cut Into halves or quarters in order to release the Savor, on of these subdivisions often being snflicieitt for seasonin, a good-sized dish. The remainder 00 the bulb can be left intact and auoth• sr "clove" renlove0 when ncededl. There is no odor front garlic until peeled and cut, s0 that its ale ace with other vegetables on hand. e •e3 in a small space, is not objectionable. A single bulb can be bought at a time and costs but a few cents, Now comes the news that petrel can bo made from grass Does this Presage an added Inducement to prow the lawn before starting 00 a lung motor trip? MUTT'S IN 1inrli vie Bi,G SHOT S - KE fohD me tic ' WP,S GONNA SIT IN it1E MAYOR'S BOY. wtT'ri Tt-1e eoveNoR., �- AND' otNc-t2 IM4oRTANT s tuAS BUT NC 71'1OIGHT NE LY IN6 -- r IS. /// // Ho -n TM / poste, , .. ,./ !%!?` 111: ; '(PAR'ooki : % � MG, `(OU SVG � ''�/� tE E. 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The use of „halm in a mixed ve etable salad is perhap, is best known form In the average 11 un,. In all such uses of garlic, St ,ivey Smith's familiar recipe for 1 ,;rain salad should be borne iu maimd and paraphrasrd to read: "Let garllo flavor lurk within tice bowl ' And, scarce suspected, animate the whole." Another method of using gal r,. so that it may be "scarce suspvid d • t^; especially adapted to baked en, ,'e, such as escalloped P c p tt ..i,;..+ or vegetables, meat, fish baking dish Is rubber )01 i rift clove of garlic before ;mina I, t t ycl, the garlic flavor will be a eaanly distributed a.5l to b: hardly dist:f 't- able and x1111 add ar, n t ..•,t1,' ,,.its- genet' to the contents of the 1,,1- in preparing a cooked sauce a out (lore of garlic added for three or fear aria utes and then removed will Impart sufficient flavor to suit most tastes. Like the onion and the leek, garde belongs to the lily faintly, thonvh Its bulb has an entirely different forma tion. Each bulb is composed of a number of "cloves" or "kernels" quite distinct from one another anis encased in a smooth, strong skin. Each clove must be peeled and cut Into halves or quarters in order to release the Savor, on of these subdivisions often being snflicieitt for seasonin, a good-sized dish. The remainder 00 the bulb can be left intact and auoth• sr "clove" renlove0 when ncededl. There is no odor front garlic until peeled and cut, s0 that its ale ace with other vegetables on hand. e •e3 in a small space, is not objectionable. A single bulb can be bought at a time and costs but a few cents, Now comes the news that petrel can bo made from grass Does this Presage an added Inducement to prow the lawn before starting 00 a lung motor trip?