Zurich Herald, 1930-04-03, Page 6Sunday School \
Lesson
• 1.610011111.11Ms....01,•••••1*............0.0*.••••-*
April 6. Lesson I—The Law of the
Cross—Matthew 16. 13-26, Golden
Text—If any man Will come after
me, let him deny himself, and take
up his cross, and follow me. ---Mat-
thew 16: 24.
ANALYSIS
I. THE GREAT CONFESSION, vs. 13-20.
II, THE SUFFERING MESSIAH, vs. 21-23.
M. THE TERMS OF DISCIPLESHIP, VS.
vs. 24-26.
use the prirteiple of adaptation. He
knew how hard it was to prepare them
for this truth—that the best things he
bad to bring could come only through
suffering.
III. THE TERMS OF DISCIPLESHIP, vs.
vs. 24-26.
V. 24. Jesus now lays down the same
principle for his disciples. Those who
come after him trust be ready to face
th same hardships. They will meet
ition
INTRODUCTION—This lesson marks a
change in the method of Jesus. He has
thus far been preparing Ills disciples
for their perso:_al confession of his
greatness a.s the Messiah. He had not
-openly revealed his great dignity; but
now that these followers have advanc-
ed thus far, he proceeds to reveal to
them the true nature of his office. He
corrects their wrong idea e of mere
-worldly glory, and shows them that he
must first suffer many things before
his purpose can be realized.
I. THE GREAT CONFESSION, e. 13-20.
17. 13. Jess had reached the most
northerly point in his journey, and
had come to Caesarea PhiNot, a town
in the territory of Philip, and so
called to distinguish it from Cmsarea
on. the seacoast. It was i•nder the
shadow of Mount Hermon, and is now
called Banias. Jesus asks the disciples
concerning their opinions, which are
etrrent about himself. We notice that
he uses the self-selected title, "Son
of man."
V. 14. The replies of the disciples
show that Jesti.: had not thus far
openly stated that he was he Christ,
but they also show how p:oaund was
the impression which he had made,
since he is compared with the great-
est men of the nation, John the Bap-
tist, Elijah, Jeremiah.
17. 15. Jesus is, however, less con-
cerned about public opinion than about
their opinion.
17. 16. Simon Peter answers for the
twelve, and makes his memorable con-
fession. It is a reply that reveals the
great advance -which he has made.
Their views had become n ore spirit-
ual, and they were ready to accept
Jesus as their Lord in spite of the out-
ward failure of many of their expec-
tations. The words of Peter wereas such
woula imply the divinity of Christ.
et, is said that lere we reach the high
water mark of apostolic faith, during
the pre -resurrection days.
V. 17. Jesus is greatly effected by
the reply, and lays great store by this
notable confession. He say:, that this
could not come from human wisdom,
but must be due to the direct action
of the spirit of his Father in heaven.
V. 18. Now the church may begin,
shaft it is upon such confession that
Christ may build as upon a rock. Faith
in Christ and attachment to him are
the essentials for all true, disciples.
These foundations are neenaanent. No
death will come to this church—it will
never pass down through the doors
that lead to Hades, the realm of the
d -ad.
V. 19. This promise is n.t made to
Peter alone as a personal gift, as is
taught in the Roman Catholic theo-
logy. One who is called in the sequel
Satan, ;:annot a.- the infallible guide
of all Christians. The meaning seems
to be that the :hurch, in the future,
will make wise and just decisions on
questions of conduct and policy. There
will be a guiding spirit in the church.
Christ will be present to open all these
doors.
IT. THE SUFFERING MESSIAH, vs. 21-23.
with much clanger and p
They will be scoffed at and rejected meat.
Not only Etre the livestock men
simply because they claim to follow
Jesus.
V. 25. This is one of the few say-
ings common to all the gospels. It has
already appeared in Matt. 10: 24. It
must, therefore, be a kind of key -
verse in the New Testament. It makes
manifest this great truth, that un-
selfish and self -forgetting service is
the condition of discipleship, but at time the same me such sacrifice is the
path, not to death, but to life.
Farm Notes
Beef Grading
On his return from the annual meet-
ing of the Western Canada Livestock
cion at Regina recently Dr. .3, IL
Grisdale, Deputy Minister of Agricul-
ture, reports keen interest in and good
general support of the beet grading
policy inaugurated. by the Depart -
w
By A
Must
hat New York
Is Wearing
NNABELLE WORTHINGTON
themselves taking a real interest in
the opportunities presented by the
new system, but the packing houses,
the retail stores and the consumers
are all taking a growing interest in
the graded beef policy.
For the liveetock man it means ear-
lier returns for better quality live-
stoCk, for the packing house it means
better business with the speculative
element reduced to a minimum, to the
housewife and the retailer it means
better relations through dealing in
qualiyt branded products.
The new system is taking hold well
in the West, and as more beef fit for
grading conies through from the Cana
dian livestock men graded beef will
be better known on the eastern mar-
ket with resultant advantages to all
a
rated Dressmaking Lesson Fur-
nished With Every Pattern
•
T. i. It is distinctly stated that a
change now took place in the method
of Jesus. The disciples had discover-
ed the messianic secret of Jesus, but
they were far from understanding what
• his meaning of that office was. They
had associated it with outward success
and triumph But Jesus i.ow pro -
victory is possible only by the way of pattern:I as you.4vnt. Encloe 20c in1 ford finest quality registered seed oi
.ceeds to give them further instruction
on the nature of his messiahship. His ly, giving number and size of suc
• the .c.aeoss. Jesus sees quite c,learly that stamps or coin..tcoin prefeired; wrap planting, but you can always afford
he is' to have a fatal ending to his clean seed for planting. The Seed
career, and he new make a prediciton it carefully) 'for each Inuinher, arid ,.
Branch- of the Deminion..Departinent
evidently pictured the futtre in its Service, es , ,
• 73 W t Ad •cl St T t
eke e . oron o. of Agriculture•are urging the, planting
On the details of this. His mind had 'addrese your order Ito`Wirsori Pattern
. of clean s'eecl this year more than ever
3371
conceaied •
1",..........,.....-*"*...........rowoosaMrawoosoMaNWII:L0•0*•111.•106•10•101•0014.••••••11.1.4....*Moraela
Ocean Greyhound Remarkable Show!
Otrio
Will Be Replaced
The naAgricultural Cok,
Cunard Line to Have Ship -
e is
l
be of Great Value
ez
Teac ng Practical
Show Work to the Stud -
Larger Than Any Other exits Which Should
Planned
in the Future
London—Preliminary inquiries are
for sPecifications for a new ocean During the past few years a new
.greyhound to replace the rapidly az- feature of unusual interest in the
ing Mauretania. Shipping cireles un- educational work of the College has
derstand that the Cunard Line is now been developing. This is an, annual
convinced that its picturesque flagship
which held the Atlantic blue ribbon exhibition known as the College
for many y by the students, and year by year it
Royal, The show is staged entirely
ears, is incapable pi wreat-
men, , and it therefore behooves the is improving so rapidly that It is be
British line to bolster up its fleet by ginning tt, attract the attention of
ling speed laurels from the faster Bre-
replacing the Mauretania with a faster the people of the province as it euro'
17 should.
Rumors and conjectures to this ef- As its name indicates, it Is a sort
of miniature Royal Winter Fair, and
feet have been floating about for some
ship.
time, but recently was tho first de- its purpose is to develop in the stud-
ents the ability to plan and supervise
finite information that the Cunard a fair, and to properly prepare and
Line was taking the necessary; steps exhibit all kinds of live -stock and
to recapture the record for the fastest other farm products, as well as to
Atlantic crossing, stage educational exhibits along the
However, the Bremen's recerd-hold, lines cf country life.
ing performances is not the only rea- This year's College Royal was held
son. It is painted out that the Matire- on Tuesday, March. 4th, and proved
tante is already 21 years old, ard that a real revelation, not only to the VA -
by the time she is replaced, she will tors who came, but also to the in -
and students themselves.
now being made by the Cunard Line
Better Feed Standards
Better feed oats and barley is as-
sured by the new regulations of the
Seed. Branch of the Dominion Depart-
ment of Agriculture which require a
More careful elimination of -weed
seeds. Under these new regulations,
while wild oats and other grains pre-
seut are taken into consideration, the
quality of the grain itself now mainly
determines the grade.
In the past there have been frequent
complaints, especially from the east-
ern feeders, of the excess of weed
seeds contained in feed grain from the
west. 'Under the grain inspection
practices now in force even the low-
est grades of feed seed oats and bar-
ley may have not more than 3 per
cent. of weed seeds.
With this new system of inspection
in operation eastern feeders Will be
able to buy feed oats and feed barley
on certificate, and with much greater
assurance as to the cleanliness and
quality of the grain so purchased.
have reached the age limit for Atlantic
Ea
service. Neverthelese, there is a The way most of the live anima1 s
good deal of astonishment in shipping were exhibited would certainla have
circleahere that the Cunard Line has done credit to the great Royal at To -
taken the plunge, for it was thought re nto, and several of the educational
that, in view of the great activitiy in- exhibits were good enough to be real
ternationally in building up merchant attractions at any of the large shows
fleets, the Cunard Line would prefer of tbe continent.
In the live -stock classes prizes were
toboldnot awarded on the merits of the ani -
It
off construction for the pres-
It is emphasized that the invitations male, but on the proficiency of the
for bids • just sent out relate to the exhibitors in preparing and exhibit-
ing their entries, and this was so
construction of one ship, not two, as
uniformly well done that the judges
ever, the new ship will be larger than n meat cases found it very hard to
make awards.
has been erroneously reported. How;
any othereplanned by any nation, and The Home Economics students as
will be outfitted with water -tube boil -
"AUTO HELP"
Here is seen. one of the new tele-
phones inaugurated on. roads near
Berlin, Germany, as an aid in case of
automobile accidents.
ore Kick for Less
Scotsmen Rejoice in New
Drink But III -effects
Chicken Training School
In preparing the Canadian exhibit
for the Fourth World's Poultry Con-
gress in the Crystal Palace, London,
England, next July, a special training
school for the select poultry which
will be featured has been started.
This school la novel and unique.
At the traiuing centre a Canadian
specialist in the art of showing poul-
try will put sixty of the finest cocker-
els and hens it has been possible to
get in Canada through a short course
in. how they must act wheu.at the
Crystal Palace. •
It A, of course, far too early to say
anything about the Canadian exhibit
for the Congress beyond the fact that
it will be fully representative of Can-
ada, and will feature Canadian poultry
in a most unusual and effective man-
ner.
Fine as the birds which have been
selected. for the Canadian exhibit now
are, when they have finished their
"•education" they will be quite as fin-
ished and clever as birds can be. The
etiquette of the show ring will'add
much to :their natural qualifications,
and the birds will add the final touch
to what will prove to be one of the
most interesting features at the big
show.
A charming adaptation of moulded
silhouette in navy blue silk crepe.
The shirring and curving up at the
front of the bodice gives a marvelous
slimming effect.
The clever skirt treatment is inter-
esting. It just hugs the figure, with
gracious fulness in hem provided by
flaring dipping lengths.
The vest is powder -pink crepe silk.
Style No. 3371 conies in sizes 16,
18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust.
It's irresistible in aquamarine blue
crepe silk, flowered chiffon crepe silk
print and Paquin red chiffon.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
; Write your name and address plain -
erS and turbines designed for a speed evell as the .Agricultural students are
involy,ed this unique show. An
close to 30 knots.—Montreal Star.
—.a educational exhibit placed by the girls
Resumes
Warwon second prize, and in some re-
Insectspects was superior to the first. Fax
A mighty army of mites wages this exhibit a light frame structure
ceaseless warfare on all forms of plant containing two rooms of equal size
Are Stressed life and .just as ceaseless is the wat- was set up. Phe first room had
Loudon—Scotland is rejoicing in a I fare waged by skilled entomologists dingy, blue-green walls, broken plast:
new drink named "Red Biddy," which to protect and preserve farm, field er, an cld-fashioned, high-backed bed,'
and. garden crops. Experts of tile and a dickey home-made stand. It
er, fallowing an over -dose the previa Dominion Department of Agridulture well deserved the title whih hung
has the supreme merit that the drink -
have already planned intensive cam- above the door—"Wher Girls Leave
ous night, may, by simply drinking a
paigns against field crops pests fax Home". The second room was test -
intoxication. The disadvantage of 1930e including grasshoppers, the 11 but very inexpensively decorated
glass of water, revive all the .sense of
the new drink, according to declare- • 1
thins in the House of Commons, is
that it is extremely bad not, only for
the lining of the stomach, but for the
nerves as well.
Just what ingredients go into the
new drink neither the Royal Licen-
sing Commissions nor the House of
Coinmons has so fax been able to de-
termine, but the general impression
is that it is made from cheap wine
from southern England jazzed up with
a sizable injection of raw alcohol.
Because the basic wine is made in
England, the duty is only 35 cents a
gallon as against $2.10 per gallon on
the lowest -priced imported wines from
Sapin and Portugal: For this rea-
son it can be sold very cheaply.
The main indictment against "Red
Biddy" is that the barrels in which it
is brought to saloons become corrod-
ed instead of preserved as would be
the effect of good wine on the wood.
It has somewhat the same effect, ac-
cording to ite opponents, on the hu-
man stomach.
wheat stem sawfly, ,wnewoi ,
pale western cutworm and his ally
the red -backed cutworm, the bertha
armyworm, the early cutworm,. the
Colorado potato beetle, the imported
cabbage butterfly, and the root mag-
•
flR
brief against the forest pests, includ- the avails were a few magazine p c -
got. The -y also have a
ing the aphids on maple, willow and tures mounted on white,- cardboard.
t The high head-piecce of the bed was
Plant Clean Seerl
You niay not always be able to af-
t
in a color scheme of 'limy an
which was carried out. in the wall-
paper, furniture, and drapes. Dyed
flour sacks were used in making the
drapes for dressing tale, window seat,
and wardrobe. An old braided rug
was dyed to match the drapes. On
sad and painful outline, though in all
before—clean seed pays, particularly
these prophecies the resurrection is New Plant Brings New . - with the weed menace reaching the
' included. , , alarming proportions it does in inner
V. 22. The words of Peer make it
c:ear that it was very difficult for
these disciples to accept this irlea of a
suffering Messiah. Evidently they had
not applied the great passage in Isa-
iah, chap. 53, to this office, and they,
ti erefore, shrank from the thought.
V. 23. We notice the severity of the
reply of Jesus, He who recently was
called the reek of the church is now
referred to as filling the place of the
tempter. Peter is a stumbling -block.
The entire passage reveals the
dam which Jesui exercised in the im-
,1 planting. of new ideas in the minds of
the disciples. Ile could not give them
all the truth at one time, but had to
MUTT AND JEFF— By BUD FISHER
Industry • ;
I Parts of Canada to -day.
Canadian. farmers are finding a new
There are many effective ways of
opportunity in. the cultivation of the
Soybean. . During 192a soybean 'oil
and other products to a -value of near-
ly $2,000,000 were imported by C,aner
Man industries. Experimettal work
.conchicted by the Dominion Depart-
ment of Agriculture shows that eigh-.
teen varieties can be successfully mil,
tivated in Canada. It greys under
essentially' the same conditions -
as
corn, and generally speaking, can be
grown anywhere corn grows, and
with about the same results.
cleaning seed, depending upon the
quantity to be cleaned, location and
equipment. In inEtny parts of. Canada
seed cleaning machinery is readily
available fax the purpose, while in.
others suitable screens can be adapted
to the fanning mill, and. 111.SOMO of the
mare remote sections the old pioneer
method. of wind -cleaning is. always
available.—Issued by the Director of
Publicity Dont. Department of Agri-
culture, Ottawa, Ont.
th elm, the spruce spider= ,
tent caterpillar and the box elder leaf
roller and twig borer.
Dwellers of the Slums
Spectator (London): Millions of
men and women and children are
alum dwellers through no conceivable
fault or failure in efficiency. . . The
Majority, of shim dwellers need not
moral referm, but material opportun-
ity... They do not a.slc for pity. They
ask for nothing. Yet, unknown to
themselves, they are our judges, and
may become our destroyers. Some will
become Communists, seeking blindly
to overthrow a system which toler-
ates such misery. The progress of
the disease of slumdom, Wave do not
take a knife and extirpate it, may de-
velop in various ways; in. increasing
physical and mental deficiency, in. de-
cline in energy and eselt-eellance, in
loss of trade, in hopelessness; and in
fantastic political experiments. The
' fection will spread to ,the whole
11
cut down to o more mo es
height, and the bed given a coat of
ivory paint. A commott chair was
brought up from the kitchen, painted
to match the bed, and decorated with
a small. design ;in harmonizing colcrs.
The room looked extremely attractive
and tasty, and the entire cacsh eost
-was only $4.23.
Tbis exhibit constituted a very
striking lessonin taste and economy
yet it stood second to the Canadian
Bacon Exhibit set up by the students
of Animal Husbandry.
We predict great things for the fu-
ture of the College Royal.
1st Critic—"I hear they're going to
give Scribbler's comedy 'a' presenta-
country unless we face the facts in a
their implications. ,historical, eugenic,
that the countryisilaboringtowaed an
uncertainafuttre: ess is, 4 b
cause less i 'said, about !the ninryet- ;
bons manner in which the 'nation to
carrying on despite p11 the handicaps,
and especially in _spite', of the ,disor-
ganilation foreign m'arktits; 'for "
which British industry andconitterce. '
are in no way responsible.
Its Dogged as Does It
Auckland Weekly Nevis: It • says
much for British financial and indus-
trial power that there are More people
employed now than before the war;
Much 'is heard of 41epiessed: I3ritish
industries, of the difficulties of public
and private finance,. oa emnloyment
nd of similar conditions' "sitggeating
Political.
The Independent Girl
Here's to the maiden
' Who knows her own mind,
Who' in ways of the .World
Is a long way from blind;
Who knows her own mind •
And holds a good lease of it:
And heaven prevent us
From getting a piece of, it:
; • Aerial Amenities
Said the lightning to the areonaut,
"You'd better get from under."
Said the"aeronaut to the lightning,
"Aw, will you go'..to thu4der?"
2ncl Critic—"When A it coming off?".
lst•Critic—"About a week after it's
put-on, 1 guess." 0
Fifty milliou powder puffs were sold
in. England last'year, - Some lucky
manufacturers are making hay while
the nose shines.
GOTTA • KM' OATH
v.10 GMLS. WANTTA
• 60,AL0NGr •
`ifOLI TAtG TG
'MGT-CY owe —
AND M`l GiRL.
ALWAYS LOok<S-
Ltvt's Lot.)
-fixict.A4't\lsk.c.s;te.‘2,;.'
tizi• k ;Cr, s.
• • „ t. I
••= I \
•
c`
NeTTA
ciViNcel
• r , TRUTH • •
To truths house therev•ii"a' single1•,'
door, which is experience. He teaches
best' who.feep the • heart, bf all men
in his breast and knows their Strength'
or weaknesf throvgh,ltis own.—Bay-
ard Taylor. • ' ' f7, ' • 1: ;
Jeff's Tired of Being a Spare Tire.
Alka 'IOU GONNA,
MAT DATeT,
MCG
6tRLS:
'YOURS MM VG
We. - 'Bur =AWAY
,6ET Ttie, it:We
1/A Thel-HiCK
LASSES
•