Zurich Herald, 1931-09-03, Page 3(Home Chats
9,y •
111114146 AlIN BEST
Sunday SO,
Lesson
'a
September 6. Lesson,."a ' P
to the Gentiles—Acta
Romans 1: 14.16. Gel t
1 have set thee to be a 19
Gentiles, that thou ebsasai sit be'
for salvation unto then'ti8 of the
earth.--Actt 13: 47.
I. Plum's 'SERmoN IN ANTIOCH, Aets
13: 14-41.
II. REJECTED .BY JEWS, Ads 13: 42-471,
III. RECEIVED BY GENTILES, Acts 13:
48-52.
IV. EVERYMAN'S GOSPEL, Romans 1:
11-16.
INTRODUCTION—Paul andhis coeffa
panions sailed from Paphos to'RfliSie
the capital of Pamphylia.
evidently changed, their plola/aam. -
stead uf preaching in,Perga, 4.74 d
cided to make their way to the ints'lr'r
ior. This expansion of the wor
too much for John Mark's Serif"
He booked his passageback 114,
13.
I. PAUL'S- SERMON 1 ANTIOCII,
13: 14-41.
The man that hath no tmusic in his
soul is fit for treasons, stratagems and
api,—Shakespeage.
Sound Waves
Why not learn to be responsive to
music? Its chords truly touch a cord
in the human soul notaing else can
reach.
wash and covered the walls so that It
looked as though it had all been paints
ed white, only it smelled much nicer
than paint. Did you ever see or smell
whitewash? Billy just loved to dip
his big brush in the pail full of thick
white cream and then slather it over
the wall, all smooth and nice. I tell
You it was great fun. Then they
Sound, the source of music, we can cleaned the floor with a broom and a
imagine first rumbled through count- pail of water in which Daddy put some
less years of chaos echoing through disinfectant to kill any bugs that
the rushing waters, the bursting of might be around. After that they open -
the volcano, the eternal beating of the ed a window to let in the air and the
winds on land or sea as the primeval sunshine and left it like that for two
elements were let loose. Then it was days to dry out, because, you know,
heard in the cry of the wild beast, the chickeu houses must always be very
song of the bird, the music • of the dry so the chickens won't catch cold.
human voice, and from it all came Now isn't it queer chickens like cold
rythm, melody and harmony until the weather when they have all their
soul of music had its birth down here feathers? In fact, it doesn't matter
below on this old earth. Then great
masters came one by one and sang
insistently into humanity's faintly un-
derstanding ears and brought from either.
the spiritual world the poetry of sound In two days they went an to see how
until now on every side we harken it looked, and Billy thought it was so
with a more and more apprehensive nice that he said: It's so bright and
ear the ever swelling chorus as each clean out here I'd like to sleep here,
new master leaves us his life work. wouldn't you, Mamma?"
In these days we hear the radio "But how about the chickens. They
everywhere. It throws out its music
of all grades. Much of it is good,
more is very mediocre and superficial-
ly everyone enjoys it whether they
understand good music or not. We
grant the instrument is a great boon
to the world and. very wonderful, but
to know and receive the highest en-
joyment from real music we must
study it ourselves right from. the very
first primitive exercises of a, b, c, d, e,
f, g, on up through years of learning.
The reward is boundless, for the good-
ness of music dwells in n world of
limitless dimensions and the more we
study the more she shows us her own
possibilities when we try to interpret
the works of her gifted children such
as Beethoven, Schubert and Bach, all
down the line of her great family, and
as we develop she sings us through
sickness, trials, troubles, sorrows,
through joy and pleasure.
If you have had the opportunity of
acquiring a musical education do not
deprive your chilcl of the similar en-
joyment of becoming intelligently ap-
preciative of music if it is at all pos-
sible. The growing girl or boy for-
tunate in having parents who insist on
his receiving that training often only.
fufly appreciates the ga-at pleasure
-which comes from such knowledge
when. maturity is reached, because
the hand of discipline seemed heavy
at times as it guided over the difficult
places during the early years of studY.
He is repaid a thousand fold when. he
is able to produce harmonies for him-
self as he intimately unfolds the com-
poser's thought. Fortunate indeed is
how cold it is, but they don't like the
least bit of wet in their houses. Well,
I guess we wouldn't like damp rooms
are getting so impatient in their box,
I believe they know some other place
is being fixed up for them," said Mam-
ma Lady.
"Oh, yes, of course, it's their house,"
apologized Billy. "Let's put them in
this morning. What must we do now,
mother.?"
"First of all you better fill that big
box in the corner with sand. Then
put a lot of fresh straw all over the
floor, nice and thick. You do that
while I fix up their water dish, the
feed box and the box for grit and
stone. Why, this is real fun, Billy
boy," said Mamma Lady gaily.
"I just love doing it. Do you, know,
Mamma Lady, I am going to be a farm-
er when I'm a man."
Mamma lady laughed. "How about
the time you said you were going to be
a baker wheu you were helping to
take the warm, spicy cookies out of
the oven? You can't be both very
well."
Billy scratched his head and thought
awhile. "Oh—I don't know what I
want to do. I guess be a farmer,
for right now, anyway."
Feather TririgningsrFe.atur.4-
of Autumn Millinery
New York.—Feather trimmings are
stressed on fall hats. Whether the
model be one inspired by the ambiti-
our Empress Eugenie or a derby, sail-
or that hat must have a feather.
The much talkel of Rembrandt
crown has a bright -colored contrast-
ing feather stuck through it.. The
the child who in his early years has less dressy and modified cloche, with
learned the rudiments of music. a soft brirn, has a side ornament of
feathers. A pretty gesture is the
Chicks
Twilight Hour Story
Other Furry Friends
No. 34
out and just see the
said we could have
exclaimed. Billy en -
a id
"Mamma, come
fine place daddy
for the chicks,"
thusiastically.
"All right, dear, in a minute. -I want
to finish this bit of work first."
"Could. I help you, mummy, so' you
can come out soon and see it?"
"Why, yes. Little boys can always
help mothers,"she said, sniffing. "It
will help me it you bring me a pail
of water."
So off Billy ran to get the water,
then very soon he and mamma lady
went out to see the little room.
"Daddy told me before he went out
to plow that I could fix it up any way
I liked."
"And what is it ye.. are going to do,
dear?" she said as she looked around.
"It will certainly bo a nice airy room
for them and perhaps now that Daddy ,
is not so very busy 4 might help you
to fix the window so you cau open and
shut it easily yourself."
Daddy did help Billy the very next
day. It was great fun to work with I
him and the • hammer and saw could
be heard as they fixed the big win-
dow. Then they made some white -1
lifting of brims at th4 back, where
clusters of tiny ostrich tips nestle.
Birds, mercury wings, tail feathers
of barnyard fowl and ostrich plumes
vie with each other as popular hat
trimmings. Bi -color effects are fa-
vored, as in black wings tipped with
red, orange or green.
i; New York
.1) Wearing
,NZBELLE WORTHINGTON
Dressmaking 'Lesson Fur -
With, Every Pattern
"How's the climate out yoi r
way ?"
"Well," replied the farmer, "it
does well enough for summer
hoarder purposes. It looks nice
and cool on a picture -card."
Currents of hot air produced by
a motor are a novel substitute for
towels in use in one Paris railway
station. The hot air dries the
hands in a few seconds.
Climbing the rugged sides of Tani',
us "in perils of watersrin perils o
robbers" (2 Cor. 11: 25): they traveI
ed the hundred miles Ircim •Ferga upi•
to "Risidian Antioch," v,. 14. The
latter was so named because\it bor.:7
dered on Pisidia, and alsio.„,te„.-distiri-
guish it from other Antiechl. Iler,
the party was delayed.V1 wa,
taken ill. Writing to ••'..,";,4alatia
churches afterwardr, iiii,!..-0eininde
them, "Ye know howthrougttfir
ity of the flesh I preached th, gosp
to you at the first," Gall 4 .13. V N'
was probably one of the; *frequentli
recurring attacks of hIs:uthorn in the "t
flash" (2 Cor. 12: 7, 8), which, as
Professor Ramsay suggests,may liavi ...'"
been malarial fever.
Attending the synagogue service,
the visitors were asked to speak, v.
15. Paul's address was short and.
diplomatic. Perhaps he'remenibered
Stephen's long and noir too •tactful
sermon. Beginning with"an outline of
Hebrew history—which 1,Iews**, never
tired of hearing—he concluded with
the story of Jesus, whom,aq. said,
was the Promised One. InAis love
and humility Paul associateellimself
with his hearers,Jew and''Gentile. "To
us is the word f this salvationrsent,"
v. 26. "You," in the Authorized Ver-
sion, should be "us." "Those,,,in Jer-
usalem," Jew and Gentilesaarad.reject-
ed it. Hence it had now come2to those
outside. ,,
II. REJECTED BY JEWS, Acts 13:s 42-47.
Paul's message was the talleof the
town. Next Sabbath the regular pew -
holders found themselves crowdedamt ,
by "those dogs of Gentiles."774:Ar't!'"1-aass, in bine, yellow ceh-
ce,gregations repentrcrawdaara &raraa-t. Al 1:4.
411':fMr: waa- Mernetaa„ Iona.
Preachers 'ate orkitisq, :,, ' ''-" • c'n .-0-,"``.- ' 4-' e I '
jjeeawlosusby:ganSotiot wcoanstgarl,i3Octiliclad ,•,. .:1, ,, • -a47.4 ''•" on Prmt
in green iidri'orelnd self -:patterned
doubt they contended 'that "4yery one 6
"•
?, So attrAtive.
d
§ize 16 requires:-'1,43'yards 39 -inch.
blasphemed, this is, cursed Christ. Ma Fe
that hangeth on d'tree is accursed"; ,HOW 'TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Gal, 3: 13. The situation was critical.
Paul turned on them, So did the ' '4Write your name and address plain -
gentle Barnabas. The apostles saw14tgivil'g
, number and size of such
that the moment had come when they '
must choose between Jew and Gentile.,
Was there a sob in Paul's voice as 'h.!?
said, "Well, here we turn to the GenT
tiles"? • -1
et;
3144
Scotch Drizzle
There Is no wind, A9 the soft cares.
sing ramn. sways to and fro over the
landecape like smoke—thin, fine and
veil-like, It settles pp. all around,
turning the leafless hedges into grace-
ful silvery forms, It hangs in clear
crystal globules from every tiny
branch—In uncertain drops like pearls
from a dark pendant. It clothes the
grass with a sparkling eheen, rests
lightly on the brown upturned earth,
and seeps through the trees upon, the
golden leafy mold beneath. It brush-
es the trees on the height with a
feathery tone of gray, so that they
melt into one another with a delicious
indefiniteness. It speaks quietly to,
and pats gently, 'the flat leaves of the
rhododendron bushes and they accept
its ministrations with gratitude, while
Paris has such an easy way of
.taking a Mew of fabric and 'turning
it into a stunning dress.
fen% this one irresistibly lovely?
' it has such a charming neckline, so
softly 'pretty and youthfully becom-
ing.
:And the three modish peplum frills
are arranged in new interesting man-
ner so as not to interfere with the
pf the moulded hipline.
The heNline,is comfortably full.
It's'-xquiSitely lovely fashioned of
printik' ehiffon.
"Style Niv3144 may be had hi sizes
14, 16, 1:3;-;20 years, 3.5 and 38 inches
bast DI= •
cupping its fr9shneAS on their broad
capacious palms. The bridge over the
wide dark river Is black an glossy
with wetness, the road gray and poi -
billed. There is satiny softness in the
air and a benign quietness resting
over all, like a benediction. Even the
hills lose their rugged aspect and as-
sume a gracious roundedness; the
river ceases from troubling, under the
pacific influence, to burble contentedly
along between dark green banks.
There is the faintest of swishing
sounds in the air, so faint that only
those attuned can hear—a restless
moving, indefinable and unreachable,
as if the earth, while lifting its brown
scorched face to the sky, wer, steadily
acknowledging and appraising this
gentle Influx of moisture.—Writer in
Christian Science Monitor'.
How to Select
Potatoes for Chips
Specialists of the United States De-
partment of Agriculture have devised
a simple method for selecting storage
potatoes which will make good chips
or French fries. A. test for the soluble
sugars in potatoes is the key that un-
locks the secret of their culinary quali-
ties, since an excessive amount of
these sugars produces a discoloration
in French fries and chips and a sweet-
ness in baked or boiled potatoes that
is distasteful to some persons.
Potatoes stored at temperatures
ranging from 32 degrees to 45 degrees
F. accumulate certain soluble sugars
as a result of the breakdown of starch.
In general, the loiver the storage tem-
perature the greater the amount of
soluble sugars and the darker the col-
or of the chips.
T-1 make the test, a sample from the
centre of the potato is placed in a yel-
low solution of picric acid and sodium
carbonate In a small test tube and
heated over the flame of an alcohol
lamp until it boils for one-half minute.
Samples from potatoes that have not
been stored at too low temperatures
change the color of the solution to an the cog -wheels, levers, hands and
orange yellow, but the excessive dials. A'stone served as weight and
the regulator was a small wooden
horizontal beam equipped with small
weights which could be moved to
accelerate or retard the works.
"An old house on the Roedeck
near Waldau bears a memorial tab-
let with the inscription:
" 'In this house, the so-called Glas-
hof at Waldau, the Kreutze broth-
ers ronstructed abovt 1640 the first
Black Forest clock.'
"The skill and inventive spirit of
the Black Forest clockmakers soon
made it possible to increase their
production by simplifying and mech-
anizing the methods of manufacture.
An important step in this develop-
ment was the invention, shortly 'be-
fore the beginning of the eighteenth
century, by Matthias Loftier of Gu-
tenbach of a device for producing
cogwheels in a semi -mechanical man-
ner. At about the same time wood
was abandoned as a material in
' favor of brass, which made possible
both an increased production and
more precise clocks.
"The joy in handwork and in mak-
ing toys whcih is inborn in the in-
habitants of the Black Forest has,
since the invention of the cuckoo
clock, resulted in a great variety of
ingenious mechanical, clocks which
also helped to spread the products
of this industry all over the world."
Boys Transform Dump
Into Beauty Spot
Chester, Mass.—Fifty boys turned
a blot into a beauty spot in this town
when they volunteered their services
to aid a roadside stand proprietor im-
prove the appearance of his property,
writes a correspondent of The Chris-
tian Science Monitor. The boys clean -
III. RECEIVED BY GENTILES, Acts 13:•
48-52. . ..; members that Jesus died for every
In contrast with the miserable att..? Me, `kern. 1: 14.
tude of the Jews was the glad5, ' •.°aul must have seen the first sinis•
come of the Gentiles. They reed
the gospel enthuziastically. "As ma
as were ordained to eternal life, he,2L.
lieved," r.. 49. Were they fore-ordainF4Aejst-lciller," ringing behind him.
ed to eternal life in any case--mpartilA itwish lawyer recently said, "It,'
from their own will or desire? Not ..:li:Winlice against Jews) exists be -I
The Greek word which is translated '..q...1 the world remembers our people, i
"ordain" means "to set in ordea," "to qtips the nation that produced Jesus,'
marshail," "to dispose." It was orig- 4 4,4the nation that killed him." The
in slly a military term. Troops were' Ai'stians must begin to look upon
"marshalled," statiOned at athal, TI 041r: as "brother."
post." Romans 13: 1 would , Li- •
read, "the powers that be are stat. a,
•,„ -
ed at their post" by God. Verse,: P4' .uga1 Favors
then, should read, "as many as 1 , 34.-1,
marshalled themselveS° on the sidete, si,'4941 • 2 Types Drugstores
Is,
ed!" It is God's will that all slit 4 ,:omtugal there are two classes
t, g , stores: the "pharacia,"
be saved. All are called. But ''';''' ittikloes a strictly defined business,
were disposed to, eternal life
have the power to accept or ref * ,,,:qilizing in prescription filling,
Our salvation de- - -'s ultimately; .1 . 41.V.perfumes, toilet articles and
our own attitude.
TOp,17.,!..ad and proprietary medicines;
.5 .
-
...., l'
IV. EvERYMAN's GOSPEL, nomani -14.&"drogaria," which sells pro -
14 -16. .,
3))404‘y medicines, laundry and toilet
Paul's joy at findingChrist; g.'t'
a.S,roponges, brushes, the more com-
rather, at being founC. by Christ,' . , 9.,&ude drugs, paints, oils and var-
sulted in a passion for 'sharing lifk 'es.—United States Commerce Re -
with others. Missionary zeal in ,a
Christian is not a duty added on, it k
an inner compulsion. Dne simply must'
spread good news. Racial and, rraa
tional distinctions disappear when '&
erns as you want. Enclose 20c in
,pl
ps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
1..',afefully) for each number, and
4alreSa your order to Wilson Pattern
rirVieffa 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.'
',,s4ritris of that Gentile hatred which
-'41.many a city chases a little Jewish!
iv# down the street with the yell,'
Black Forest Famed
For Cuckoo Clocks
Few products of industry have
found their way into so many cor-
ners of the world as the Black
Forest cuckoo clocks, according to
the tourist information office of the
German Natinal Railways. Plain
elockmaking is, of course, much old-
er in the Black Forest. About 1730
Anton Ketterer of Schoenwald is re-
corded as having for the first time
added two tiny bellows to the
works of the then. well-known Black
Forest wooden clocks. These tiny
bellows produced the flutelike cry of
the cuckoo.
"While the cuckoo clock is a spe-
cific Black Forest product," the in-
formation office continues, "clock -
making in that region dates back
almost a hundred years more, into
the time of the Thirty Years War.
The first timepieces were naturally
very simple in material and construc-
tion.
"They were made entirely of
wood, the material so abundantly
furnished by the forests, from which
the clockmaker carved out by hand
amount of sugars in tubers stored at
low temperatures changes the color to
a deep red or brown.
This test has proved satisfactory in
selecting potatoes for chip making,
French frying, baking, and under cer-
tain conditions, for boiling. It was
designed especially for chip manufac-
turers, who must have potatoes with
a low content of soluble sugars. The
test is so simple, since it involves a
small portable outfit, that it can be
used by buyers for hotels and restaur-
ants -where there is a demand for high-
grade, mealy -cooked potatoes, free
from a sweetish taste and discolora-
tion.
SOULS OF MEN
ways of God are as the num-
4l.$ the souls of men.
'A fish ate the halt uff my
hook this morning."
"Cheer up. He'll be all the big-
ger when you do catch him."
A GREAT AIM
One great aim, like 4 guiding star:
above—
Which tasks strength, wisdom, state-
ed up a section near the stand, long
liness, to lift.
used for a public dump, then they
His manhood to the heights that takes built a dam and established a swim -
the prize.
1 ming hole in the Westeld River near
lombeb. Woodland across the road was
_
—Co's Birthday.
cleaned and converted into a picnic
grove and the establishment is now a
Pictures and sculptures bY mod -1 pleasant roadside attraction.
ern artists are to be loaned out on
time at rates varying with the value
of the work by a newly formed soc- PEACE . •
iety in London. After love comes peace. .A. great
,a— many people are trying to make
We hold that the most wonderful peace. But that has already been
and splendid proof of genius is a great doue. God has not left it for us to
poem prodaced in a civilized age.— do; all that we have to do is to
Lord Macaulay, enter into la—D. L. Moody.
•
MUTT AND JEFF— A Kiss In The Park.
1niszte. ON, NoDori Daum),
TAREC A]) Two ON
Tumt.crotJ— AND 'mite
l'etrnit up kmx-11, , •
I SM.!, ot.b
HAPPle,
exPt.A0.)
ThAT DALIN
JArGoN?
4744
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