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Port Perry Star, 3 Mar 1932, p. 3

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cosphibr } a I a _ Troop attended a dedication service NeCessary ter's Gilwell Training Course whic includes ten days under canvass and which intended' to .assist men to train as efficient Scoutmasters. Gradu- ates of this course wear a badge, when in uniform, which consists of two wooden beads, suspended around the neck on a leather bootlace. : We join with all Lonies in congratu- lating Mr, Hutchison. Lone Scout Work Dedicated We hear from St. Thomas, Ont,, that the members of the 5th St. Thomas on February 14th at Trinity Church, in that town, when two flower baskets, which Boy Scouts are trusted, and the | esteem in which the Boy Scout Move- ment is held in Government Circles in this province 3 : Badge Lone Scouts will please note that at the recent Annual Meetings of the Provincial Council for Ontario it was decided that in future the Cloth Ten- derfoot Badge (or the Ontarlo Official Badge as it is sometimes called) will be worn on the Left Pocket instead of above the pocket as previously. 2,000,000 Scouts in 45 Countries World Scout census figures at the end of 1931, as received by the Inter- national Scout Bureau, show a total of 2,039,347 Scouts and leaders. This which were donated to the church last Christmas for permanent decoration in the church, were dedicated. Those flower baskets were the handi- represents a year's increase of 168, 033. 800,000 Scouts In the Empire At the end of 1931 there were 808,307 work of Lone Scout Charlie Roberts, 'pg, go,uts and leaders in the British of Sparta, from whom the 6th St.: Thomas Church had obtained them at Christmas time. Will Soon Be a Patrol We are glad to hear from Colborne and to know that the Lonies in that!Movement, such dificulties as are now place are still as keen as ever. They have all passed their Tenderfoot Test and hope to shortly organize into a Patrol. Good work, Colborne. We wish you every success. Cenotaph Custodians { Empire, an Increase during the year of 51,424. Canada's total was 58,568, an incr@hse of 5,996. It all thése boys remain true to the ideal taught them in the Boy Scout 'being experienced im China will not be possible when they are grown up. Boys Trained For Public Service During 1931 a total of 4,566 Canadian Boy Scouts p d Proficl Badge "| personal health tests, and tests quall- Boy Scouts are the official custodi- ans of the Cenotaph at Hamilton, Ont. A Scoutmaster and four boys from each troop in turn mark war anniver- saries by running up new flags. The duty was turned over to the Scouts in consequence of anniversary dates be- icy overlooked at the City Hall Perhaps Lone Scouts can undertake this duty in the communities in which they live? Get Into touch with the local authorities and suggest it to them. Other duties in conmection with the fying for public health and safety ser- vice. Of the total 1,019 became Am- bulance men (advanced first aiders), 517 Missioners_ (junior nurses), 256 became Public Health Men, 326 Public Safety Men and 318 qualified as Res- cuers (from drowning). 474 passed the Healthy Man Tests, 510 qualified as Athletes, 268.as Masters-at-Arms, and 876 as Swimmers. For particulars of how to become a Lone Scout write to The Boy Scouts Asseclation, Lone Scout Department, 330 Bay Street, Toronto 2--"Lone E." Flaring sleeves, tightened at the wrists are interesting feature of a jacket-like woolen dress in Spanish tile shade. The bodice is cut on slightly fitted basque lines. Brown wooden buttons give a double-breasted effect. The revers are of plain brown Woolen. Note the snappy partial belt and the slender gored skirt. Style No. 2514 may be had in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3 yards b4-inch, with % yard 85-inch trasti His Disciples' "Feet--John 13: 1-18, 'Golden Text--THe Son of man came _ransom far many --Matthew 20: 28. : ANALYSIS. 1 LOVE AND TREACHERY, 13: 1, 2. 3-5. III. THE DAILY CLEANSING, 13: 6-11, | IV. Ax 'Bxamens, 18: 12-15. INTRODUCTION--The first twelve but the world rejected him, 1: he turned to "his own," 13: 1. longer are we in the atmosphere of controversy. All is now tenderness and intimacy. We are in the "Holy of Holies" of the Gospel. These won- derful chapters preserve for us the last discourses of our Lord. 1. LOVE AND TREACHER., 13: 1, 2, The key to all that follows is in the words, "Having loved his own, he loved thém unto the end," or "unto the utter- most," He was prepared to face for them whatever the situation demand- ed, suffering, apparent defeat, death. It was a love which grew more. tender and intimate as dangers gathered. He was troubled at the thought of leavi his disciples behind "in the world, like sheep among wolves--while he was departing out of the world unte the Father. In harsh contrast is the picture of, Judas, v. 2, Stubbornly there still lod, in Judas' mind--and indeed, in the others' also--the popular idea of what Messiah's kingdom should be, namely, power, prosperity, independ- ence, for Israel. But how Judas began to suspect.that when he left father, mother, houses, lands, to follow this new Muses, he had been deceived. In | blind resentment he had bargained to strike at him whom, until now, he had followed. "If he be indeed Messiah he will rout his enemies when his hand is | forced. If he will not deliver nimsalf and vindicate his claims,.then let him die." Perhaps this may have beeh the motive that drove Judas out into the night. II. THE HUMILITY OF GREATNESS, 13: 3-5. A very smart idea you'll like that's rather sportsy is to make the skirt of One River--and No Rain! A country about the size of England, peopled by agricuturists, but practical- ly without rain, and dependent for its water supply on a single river--that 1s the province of Sind, in India. Under-British. rule the primitive canals have been greatly improved and extended, and now the province has the largest irrigation system in the world, with a dam about a mile in length, plerced by sixty-six sluice gate openings, and seven great canals, every one bigger than the Suez The new system, known as the Lloyd Barrage, has just been opened. The value of the dam is that, during the period when the Indus is normally low, the shutting of the sluice gates will keep the water at a sufficiently high level to feed the canals, Then when the river is in flood the gates will be opened --"Answers" (London). -------- lodine Content of Egas Raised By Hungarian Farm-Wife Budapest--The race, supposed to be exclusively between American and G {entists, to prod an egg containing a large amount of iodine, apparently has been won by an outsider, Mrs. M. Janosi, a poul- try farmer, living in Zugulo, near Budapest. It aid that iodine can be far more easily assimilated by the human system if the iodine is con- tained in eggs, than when it is ad- ministered direct. Mrs. Janosl is said to have suc. ceeded in producing eggs which con-|' tain 0.169 milligrams of iodine with- out any unusual taste being percept ible. Her purported achievement is regarded as of great importaoce. Well System Installed in Bermuda Hamilton, Bermuda.--A great engin- eering achievement came to fulfillment recently with the opening of a system of horizontal wells, capable of supply- ing millions of gallons of fresh spring water to the colony of Bermuda. These wells have now begun to supply the city of Hamilton. They wliil soon be extended to care for the water needs of the entire colony. Bermuda has been dependent upon rainfall as its source of water. The island is the cap of a submerged mar- ine mountain and the water is quickly shed by the rock underlying the soil. Prof. W. D. Turner, of Columbia Uni- versity, having been called upon for advice on the possibility of developing a permanent supply of water, found that b of the geological stratifi- cation of the limestone rock in Ber- muda, the water travelled in horizontal veins before finally reaching sea level. 'The problem was to intercept these water veing and collect the water in a central pool. A trench, four feet deep and 250 feet long, has been exca- vated along a hill at a point just above sea level, Interlocking pipes have been laid at the bottom of a pit inter- cepting the water veins, and this pipe leads to a concrete-bottomed reser- voir. The new plant was officially opened by the Governor, Lieut.-Gen. Sir Thos. Cubitt. Unique I <n SELF Some persons can neither stir hand nor foot without making it clear they are thinking of them- selves, and laying little traps for ap- probation.--8S. Smith. brown diagonal len and the bodice of Persian green woolen, Repeat the brown for the revers and sleeve cuffs and trim with brown buttons. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it earefully) for each number, and | address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. --y- Portrait _ But you are green and giving and like grass, Restful and taking rest, So soft you are that when you walk in trees You move among them only as 2 wind, ! A stream of life, A rhythm of the air. --P. A, in the London Spectator. Sin An Li 1 wouldn't associate with him. I understand he served a term in prison." "That's true, but it was for an offence involving a million dollars or mors; notliing really disgraceful, you know." By BUD FISHER hed by the sadness and ten- derness of this farewell meal, blind to the situation still, they argued among themselves who should be first, Luke 22: 24. No one was willing to per- , form the menial task of washing the feet of his companicris--a customary and necessary service. Imagine the feelings of the Master as he looked upon his disciples--Judas, uneasily looking for an opportunity to slip out to betray him--the others, standing on their dignity. Without a word he performed the lowly task him- The greatest men are often the most humble. It is the "small" man who is always standing on his dignity. True humility is not to doubt one's powers, but rightly to understand their scope. Jesus knew what he was--he was con- scious of his divine mission and des- tiny (v. 8), and by his act of kindly courtesy he put their pctty striving to shame, Years afer, Peter, in one of his letters, admonished, "All of you gird yourselves with humility to serve one another," 1 Peter 6: 6. He had not forgotten the lesson of that last night together. en Sir Bastle Frere was coming to visit a Scottish home, the master of the household, sending his servant to meet him, sought for some description by which the visitor might easily be recognized. "When the train comes in," he said, "you will see a tall gentle- man heiping somebody." Such was Jesus. Such is the Christian ideal. III. THE DAILY CLEANSING, 13: 6-11, To Peter's objections, Jesus replies that this is a symbolic act, the mean- ing of which will be mada clear to him later on, v. 12ff. Peter, disciplined by life, purified, enlightened, some day will be able to exclaim, "I understand now what my Master meant," The insistence on the washing (v. 8), is John's way of saying that only Christian fellowship, As one who has c~m2 fiom the publié baths needs only March 8. Lesson X--Jesus Washes | | fot 'to be ministered unto, but to] minister, and to give his life af 11. THE HUMILITY OF GREATNESS, 13: Chapter 13 marks the point at Which : 0 through baptism can one efiter the, to have the stains of travel removed from his sandalled feet, so the man typified by baptism, does not need to JIEEE'S OKAY, WHER HE Found fout TE UNPATRIOTIC J ' WELL, WHAT DIO You BUY TODAY 2 as I Decided To HELP out However, \T STIMULATE BUSINESS You BUILD A L A BIT SURPRISED, WiLL who has been cleansed spiritually, | oF LUMBER FOR mY TEETH. I Here is "Miss Britain 1932" leav- ing for Paris and-the internation- al pulohritude display. She hopes to be crowned "Miss Europe." be re-baptized after he has lapsed into wrong conduct, but to have the daily impurities removed by daily con- tact with his Lord. The absence of daily fellowship with Christ is the secret of our "travel-stained" church 1gembership. IV. AN EXAMPLE, 13: 12-15. When Jesus aid, "Ya ought, also, to wash one another's feet" (v. 14)} he asked them not to perpetuate tha act ifself, but to practice the spirit of it. The truest fo.lowing is service to our fellows in the spirit of our Master. Arion Drink More Milk La Presse, Montreal: In all the highly civilized countries of the world the milk industry is looked upon "as being of the first importance, as much because of its profits as of its importance with regard to health, Milk plays a preponderating role in the nourishment of all people. If, for example, ten million pints of milk were consumed daily by the in- habitants of Canada, the health, strength and vitality of the popula- tion would increase from day to day, from year to year, and from gen- eration to generation. Illnesses would tend to be diminished in an amaging proportion. Spr mn. AFFECTION Just as the diminutive wren wlll fight hard in her nest for her young against the hungry owl, or just as a hen will gather her chickens be- neath her wings, and herself bravely meet and repel the swoop of the ravenous eagle, so will maternal af- fection nerve her who gave us birth to shield us from all dangers which jmperil either our bodies or our souls. Hence maternal affection, for this and other reasons, is truly sublime and God-like!---Dr. Davies. Applicant--"My former employer | will tell you that my character is beyond reproach." Boss--*"Above or beneath?" of the West-end will look as thoi !they have left their golf clubs in the lounge. They will not have done so, of course, for thelr wind-tanned appear ance will be purely synthetic. In com- plement with the new open air modes dark brown cosmetics are already on the market. No garmeat has been missed so much from the feminine wardrobe as the woollen jumper, which has been more or less out of fashion for several seasons. It will return in the spring. The new version is short and must be hand-knitted. Many of them will have light colored tops and sleeves joining a darker foundation. Light blue with emerald green and pale pink on dark red are the two smartest combinations. Accompanying them will be knitted woollen cravat scarves in a three-col- ored scheme, the Smartest being a tri color design. These scarves are more than fashionable, they are a craze, Everything that comes under the heading of "woollens" must look sim- ple and home-made, even the suits which are actually man-tatlored and pressed to perfection. ens ant Mexican Kitchens I wish I could show you a Mexican kitchen, They are quite out-of-the- ordinary. It is a little room with a floor of red bricks, The range is a number of oven-like holes in a ledge of brick and clay, extending two or three feet from the wall with its top about four feet from the floor, Each of the holes is one cooking place. It is filled with charcoal and the draft comes in from an opening underneath. The Mexican cook wants no other stove. One visitor here recently sent for one of these cooking ranges. He had to tear a hole through the rear wall to make room for the chimney. After setting it up in his daughter's house, he gave instructions that it be usad. Later his daughter reported that al- though the servants had struggled for hours, they could not make the new ! stove burn. When he went to investi- gate he found they had built the fire | in the oven. Home baking is almost unknown in Mexico but many of the Indian vil- lages have great ovens which are used in common, The family desiring to bake brings its own fuel, or sometimes several join together in a baking day. The cooking pots, which are some- times copper, but more often red clay, are set on the live coals, and water is boiled, soups are made, meats are fried, and, in short, first class meals are prepared in this way. The fuel is comparatively cheap, so that a workingman's family can.do its cook- ing on about two cents' worth a day. --Frank G. Carpenter, in "Mexico." mien Fashion Nuggsts Light-weight woolens continue to grow fn favor. The weaves, color- | less and oppressive silence, he learned that the forests were im deed tenanted. But many creatures were in the tops of the tall trees, and many others had that, although they were on the 'ground before his eyes, he could not see them. As for noises, although the forest was silent by day, directly the sun went down it became vocal, and there was one great insect which set up a shrill whistle only to be com- pared to a railway engine's. The climbing power of some frogs is remarkable, and not only can they climb, but they can also glide through the air. The traveller say them climb up great posts at night to catch the moths which had been attracted to am electric lantern, and that they appar- entely "jumped up into dark space. After watching them for some time he tried an experiment. He took one of the frogs up a water tower 140 feet high and lef it go from the summi The frog streiched out its arms an legs and glided down, taking several seconds in the descent, and landed un- injured, thirty yards from the base of the tower. One giant toad, over six inches long wis found making meals of birds, though how it caught them the travel- ler could never discover. Then there was a bird-catching spider whose body was as large as the palm of a boy's hand. The traveller brought home an ant- eater, which was fed every day of the homeward voyage on six eggs. The ant-eater is about the size of a fox. terrier, and is perhaps the strongest animal for its size in the world, When this specimen was allowed on deck everybody had to be very careful and respectful, because with its' fearful claws it would make a mark that would never disappear. ingratitude You may rest upon this as an um- failing truth, that there neither is, nor never was, any person remarkably un- grateful who was not also insufferably proud; for as snakes breed on dung- hills, not singly, but in kmots, so in such base hearts you always find pride and ingratitude twisted together. Im- gratitude overlooks all kindness, but it is because pride makes it carry its head so high. In a word, ingratitude is too base to return a kindness, too proud to regard it, much like the tops of mountains, barren indeed, but yet lofty; they produce nothing, they feed nobody, they clothe nobody, yet are high and stately, and look down upon all the world.--South. aioe men m-- TAKEN AT THE FLOOD There is a tide in the affairs of mem | ings, and styles are so ohic that they. Which, taken at the flood, leads om walked in where a eilk would fear | to tread. The colors are as deli- to fortune; | Omitted, all the voyage of thelr life cate as evening shades, Salmon, pink, | 13 bound in shaliows and in miseries. azure-blue, and pistachegreen are among the shades. Fabric bags in rough, loose weave will be in demand to carry with the woolen frock or suit. Cotton mesh bags are suitable for the wash frock and novelty crepes and twills for the silk ensemble. -- cLouDS I'he inner side of every cloud Is bright and shining. 1 therefore turn my clouds about, And always wear them inside out To show the lining. " A PURPOSE Yet, I doubt not through the age One increasing purpose runs, And the thoughts of man are wid- ened With the process of the suns. --Tennyson, Lool< TOOTHPICKS! lug Big Business. MUTT, W MAKE MG BUY THIS SCOTTISH LAYOUT AND WEAR \T? On such a full sea are we now afloat. | And we must take the current whem it serves. Or lose our ventures. ~William Shakespeare, in "Julius Caesar." a -- IN KEEPING 2 Our lives are not in our keeping; whatever is to befall us originates in sources beyond our power. Our wills may indeed reach the length of our aims, or as far as our voices can penetrate space; both without ue and within us moves one universe that saves us or ruins us only for its own purposes. -- James Lane Allen tee Qe ee Science Institute in Clouds A new institute of science has been built above the clouds in Switzerland. The building is 11,340 feet up in the Alps. AGE Tha foundations of an honourable and comfortable age are laid in the minority of children; it the plant be not kept straight at first, the tree will ba crooked imcurably at the last. --<Bp. Reynolds. ACTION Action is the end of all thought, but to ect justly and effectively, you must think wisely. --Lord Stan. ley. ep em FICTION Piction uttered solemnly is much more like probability than truth ut tered doubtingly. i} iin wd Should a bottle that has been used

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