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Port Perry Star (1907-), 25 Feb 1937, p. 6

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8 A Rhy SRE BHAD LIAR DATES LESSON IX, . The 'New Commandment John 12:12--13:38. Printed Text John 12, 20-33; 13: 34,35 Golden Text.--A new .commandment I give unto you, that ye love one an- other; even as I have loved you, that _-ye also love ¢ another, John 13:34. The Lesson In Its Setting Time.--The entry into Jerusalem took place on Sunday, April 2, AD. 30. The discourse that followed took place on Tuesday, April 4. The en- tire scene of the washing of the dis- ciples' feet took place on Thursday evening, April 6. , Place.--The triumphal entry was made as Christ came over the Mount ot-Olivés on the east of Jerusalem. The washing of the disciples' feet took place, of course, in the upper room in Jerusalem, 20 Now there were certain Greeks among those that went up to worship at tho feast. 'These were Gentiles, citizens from Hellas, or their descend- ants living throughout the Mediter- ranean world who had become prose. lytes of the Jewish faith and, once a year when possible, came up to Jeru- salem, in order to worship there at the feast as the Hebrews worshipped. 21. These therefore came tp Philip, who was of Bethsaida ot Galllee. They came to Philip "not only because he had a Greek name, and therefor: pre sumably belonged to a family fn which Greek was spoken and Greek connec: "tions cultivated, but because, being of Bethsaida of Galilee, he might be ex- pected to understand and speak Greek, if, indeed, he was not already known to these strangers In Jerusalem." And asked him, saying, Sir, we would see Jesus. At the birth of Jesus, wise men came from the East to behold the Lord (Matt. 2:1-12); now, at the end of our Lord's public ministry, there came men from the West, speaking the language identified with learning and scholarship, "asking that they might see Jesus. 22, Philip cometh and telleth An drew: Andrew cometh, and Philip, and they tell Jesus. "Andrew" is an other Greek name. "Andrew solves his difliculty in the way in which all difficulties of disciples are resolved, referring them to Jesus himself." 23. And Jesus answereth them, saying, The hour is come, that the Son of man should be glorified. Pre- viously it has been said that "his hour" had not.come (2:4; 7:30; 8:20). The hour in the life of Christ was the hour of his death (13:1; 16:32; 17:1). --of course not a literal time of sixty minutes, but, - nevertheless, a brief period. ES ; 24. Verily, verily, 1 say unto you, Except a grain of wheat fall into the --earth and die, it abideth by itself alone; but if it die, it bearcth much fruit. There are four things that can happen to a grain of wheat: it can be hoarded, with the possibility of ulti- mate destruction by mould, mildew, or rust; it can be immediately con- sumed, in various forms, especially as bread; it can be ignored, and there fore lost for all purposes; or {it can be sown in the ground,-thus-multiply- ing itself, the highest use to which it 'can be put. 256. He that loveth his life loseth it; and he that hateth his life in this orld shall keep it unto life eternal. [he word twice translated "life" in the first part of this verse Is the word "'psuche" (from which comes our word {'psychology"), a word that Includes all man's. mental, sensual being; the word' translated "life" at the end of the verse is the word "zoe," a word referring to the higher life which is fn men, the spirit. "Self-love leads to destruction and death, From begin- ning to end of his earthly history, CHOO| Esso | . 3 laid down his life for men, .- It any man serve me, let him follow: me; and where: I am, there | shall also by servant be: if. any man serve me, him will the Father honor. Christ himself is the great example of denying one's own life; if we are to truly serve the Lord, then, fn his sacrificial ideal, we are te follow him, with the result that whoever serves the Spn, will be honored by the Fa- ther, . 27. Now is my soul troubled; and what shall I say" Father, save me from this hour. But for this cause came | unto this hour, TFhere is no shrinking from the cross here, but a glorious determination to endure it in the consciousness that, for that hour, he had come into the world. 28, Father, glorify thy name. There came therefore a voice out of heaven, saying, 1 have both glorified it, and will glorify it again, "It {s the high- est utterance of faith, love, and hope, that whatever experience of pain °'s ordained, the outcome may be all to the glory of the name of God." 29. The multitude therefore, that stood by, and heard ft, said that it = 1 thundered: others said, An ange] hath spoked to him. "For tb mass the voice was mere sound, The appre- liension of a divine voice depends up- on man's capacity for hearing. Others felt that the utterance was artic :late, though they could not hear the words." 30. Jesus answered' and said, This voice hath not come for my sake, but for your sakes. "The voice came to test their faith and to str ngtken fit; and, at the same time, to make clear the importance of the crisis reve-~l!ed by the Gentile rcquest." : 31. Now is the judgment of this world: now shall the prince of this world be cast out. "The passion was the judgment of the worll, «ich showed both men's thoughts towards Christ, and the true nosition of the world towards Cod. Jew and Gantile are alike included in the sentence." 32. And 1. "The position of 'I' is very emphatic, and Christ, by this phrase, places himself in opposition to the 'prince of this world." Tre cru- Conwade Pilot The Soviet government is bend- ing every effort to make its air force supreme, and offers many inducements to attract the youth of the country. The young Rus- sian student pilot above is typi- cal of the hundreds answering the call to modern adventure. Mobile Hospital Unit Toa ~~ Pictured is the interior of an operating room, mounted on a sympathizers of the Spanish Loyalists are rush. front lines, Note two Frenchmen giv- truck, which French ing to Madrid for use in the ing the clenched fist salute. \ . | i cified Christ will rue. men's hearts in| ' ---- er a I Democratic Conservatives To Protest Supreme Court Charge SEA The President's Supreme C Above are Democratic Re split, as they met to organize protest program, EE iia aa ------------ ia ourt message brought such jitters to Congress as to threaten a party presentatives Robertson and Drewry of Virginia and Cox of Georgia . Producing Best Class of Horse Without the presence of the best horse on every farm, efficiency. in transforming farm feeds into hor:e power, will never be realized with any economy or profit." There i; a wide field in Canada to preduce horses with more gower and cndur- ance than the average draft horse seen around many farms. Ani it is well also that t' ere are mary farm- ers who are frst coming to rezard as poor property that horse which, does not fully fit the tast Ly which he pays Lis vo. place of the devil" if | bo Ii from tlhe arth. Probably this p has a donb'a moaning, and both the Bftine vay of Christ fe earth on tha creme und +03 gut a going up from the earth into banyan. at his ascension. Will draw all ono unto mys". "The words emnh oe ly prove that the ¢ 078 is bor bi 4 ofl Ido +. " IN i Christ's sway over all whom Fe brin- out of Satan's empire and draw: himself as [ovd. paraso, will draw," Christ elearly intmotes that, thonzh crucified, he was pot to abide in death, but wes doon to live and set up a kintlem, drawing cob jects unto it." 33. But this he said, sionfyic~ by what manner of deeth he should die. This verse is certain'y added Ly Cy author of the Cospe', John the arostle (See Phil. 2:8). Christ's insistence upon his death provoed a re nahie question on the part of the Je who were listenninz to him, for they be lieved that the Chritt who shou'd come would be the king of an eterna' kingdom," and hence, of course, be eternal. (Sce Dan. 7:13, 11; Psalm 110.) - There seemed a contradiction between an-cternal Christ of Cod, anc a suffering Messiah who must die. 34. A new commandment | give un to you, that ye love one another; even as | have loved you, that ye also love one ancther. "Thére is a sense in which it was not a new command ment, In the Mosaic economy tie word is found, 'Thou sha't love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with a'l thy mind'; 'and thou shalt love thy neigh- bor as thyself' (Lev. 19:18; Deut. 30: 6). Thijs word for 'new' means some. thing that is fresh, as opposed to that which is effete. 'I am giving you, said Jesus, 'a command that is new in its inspiration. 36. By this all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another. It is certainly by our be- Het jn Christ that we become his dis- ciples, but it is by our love for one another that we become known to others as the disciples of Christ. About 65 per cent of the earth gets less than 20 inches of rainfall And a Hearty Time Was Had by All "Love, here is my heart," CL : sings willing victim Gay, Hayden to Cupid Dicky -Meschendore---in--Miami, -Fla.,; Valentine tableau. . rd . Dominion and Trade Quotas Canada has certainly made full use of the quotas covering Canadian 700- pound cattle and potato 'shipments to the United States. Exports of both across the border had reached the potatoes continued to be sent through at the rate of GOc per hundredweight, or 15¢ above the Trade Agreement concession, Canadian lumbermen, however, did not take full advantage of their gen. erous quota allowance in the United 'States. Trade Agreement of 250 mil lion board feet of Douglas fir and western hemlock. Instead, prelimin. ary figures for the year indicate that they shipped well under 200 million board feet, Mainly on the Pacific coast, lumbermen did a $100 millions annually. of business with the United States, quota limit last September, although | because of the Agreement concessions, | * Under the Imperial Agreements, we have the famoug British bacon quota; By this quota, 2,500,000 = hundred- weight of Canadian hams and bacon| - per year 'may be shipped to England duty 'free. In the twelve months end: ing' November, 1936, 1,4 million "hun. dredweight had been taken by British buyers. Reason is that the Canadian packers have not yet beem able .to ship more, and British breakfasters are not fond of Canadian bacon to the ing November, 1936, 34 million hun- dredweight per year. Canadian ship- pers. are energetically trying to bring up production and to make Canadian bacon:as popular in England as Dan- ish which now holds first place, The Canadian government does not make: a: habit of quotas. The system is artificial and hampering to natural trade. The only quota now in effect on Canadian imports is that on Russian anthracite coal, * Fis Scene in microscople anatomy class at For "est Catholic university which hold 'enviable record of only et fe BE dents of biology. Leading Students of Biology "i University, ~ New York City, the 'world's Jarg- ten failures in ten. years among. its stu- Nia \ 'ery time we think of a flood victim 'eagerly reading the accounts of his hold back the waters. --New Yorker, p-- | =gossip m= By DOROTHY ST 1" - Any girl who can make an out- standing hit in a picture in which the smoothly expert Myrna Loy and William Powell appear is mot just good, she is marvellous, That is what "directors on the M. G. M. lot have been telling Dorothy McNulty ever since her appearance in "After the Thin Man" made 'audiences burst into spontaneous applause. In the midst of all the enthusiasm ovér her at the studio, everyone neglect- ed to make sure that she had been put "ander contract, She didn't mention it because nobody asked her, And Paramount slyly came along and signed her up for their pictures. iy ---- Many actresses would be more than satisfied if they could sign a contract - with Paramount guaran- teeing them four hundred and"fifty thousand dollars a year. But Carole Lombard insisted on adding clauses guaranteeing that Teddy Tetzlaff, her favorite cameraman, would al- ways photograph her. And that Pat Drew, studio electrician, who lost a leg in a plane crash, would always be employed on her pictures. Letters .» have + poured into the Twentieth Century-Fox studios by = : ! the thousands, be « Temple play + win- some little girls parts instead of the smart - aleck, beyond - her - years blues singer of re- cent pictures, Most of thie letters came from mothers whose daughters model their behavior on Shirley's latest pic- ture. Taking their advice to heart, the studio selected "Wee Willie® Winkie" as Shirley's next picture. If she does any imitation of Alice Faye or Tony Martin singing, or of Bill Rob- inson dancing, it will be away from the camera. aa 3 ODDS and ENDS: --Not to be out- done by National Broadcasting Company which has Minnie, the Singing. Mouse, under contract, Hollywood has found a trio of sing- ing mice and is featuring them in "The Three Legionnaires." : s mice, to be 'different, all sing bass Gary Cooper and George Raft-are the latest camera fiends. They hang around Bing Crosby's set whenever they are not 'working on; their own, snatching candid shots of the players. Simone Simoh takesf all the jokes about her name with good humor. Shé¢ had her birthday gift to John Swope inscrib- ed: "To Swope Swope." es ad Shirley Temple Youthful Defendant charged with killing his father, is 16-year-old Billy Meagher, of Denver, Colo. He slew dad for mistreating mother, Mrs, Ethel Meagher (lower). In court, Distusbing Genius Man's genius for self-destruction {s consistently disturbing. Wao flinch av. own deluge in a newspaper made from trees whose roots were designed to c-3 ging - that Shirley | ovie-radio| A New Method Is Devised to Se- ~ lect the Best Fruit Are the oranges that you buy granu- lated? Did they freeze on the way to the fruit stand? Arg they dry inside? One way to answer is to cut a sample . orange-open. It is-an expensive way, especially to the. retailer who has paid transportation to New York. Ca: lifornia fruit growers hope to substi. | tute X-ray examination for it, In East Pasadena the -first machine is now .- proving its capabilities, Already the results are so promising that the advertising copy boys dream of tel- ling the world that not only are Cali-. fornia oranges "sunkissed" but that they are good 'because we know just what they're like inside," : The oranges are carried by a con- veyor belt over a 100,000-volt X-ray tube. At each side of the belt are the windowed boxes 'inclined at 45 de- grees. Testers look through the win- dows of the boxes and on a fluorcs- copic screen see silhouettes of the passing oranges, with the interiors presenting patterns of contrasting lights and shadows that mean some- thing. If an orange is sound, with a rich heavy juice, it appears dark; if it's unripe, sour, frozen or: granulated it is light, Rejection is purely mech. ° anical. The tester moves a handle, whereupon two arms throws the ci- trus offense off the belt. X-rays can be .dangerous., - Hence ~ this testing machine is protected by lead. The glass through which the. testers look is a quarter of an inch- thick and is composed of 57 per cent: lead! sheet lead an eighth of an inch. thick completely surrounds the ma. chine; the openings throush which. the oranges pass as they enter and heavy rubber charged with lead. So much lead helps to explain why the ¢ machine weighs a ton. 'Style News Is wise-! In Color, Detail Fabrics and Accessories Meke Collections Exciting i PARIS, -- The first ononings re- veal no startling changes in the sil- houette; however there is a welath of news in colors, details, fabrics and = accessories, which makes the collec- 'tions very exciting. Dress shoulders are normal, neck- lines are generally high, with a ten- dency for lower ones in. afternoon frocks. Bodices are fitted and - often draped, or finished with sashes to { accentuate snugness. Sleeves are very simple, varying from short to full- length straight ones. Skirts are fre- quently dramatized, detracting atten. These { tion from the upper silhouette. This is interpreted in many ways.. Circular full 'or shertish pleated skirts -- are especially good. Some woven fabrics give the effect of Kknife-pleating. The - pressed ridges in flared and gored skirts are strongly developed by a great many houses. Very full gypsy skirts, are shown for formal afternoon cocktail frocks by Rochas, Schiapar- ell, Mainbocher and Patou, Schiapar- elli makes this gypsy 'skirt in ° long afternoon length with low evening de- colletage, Patou shows the same -length-and decolletage.--Phis may-in-- dicate a .new trend. Patou's dresses with beaded skirts and plain tops and Rochas' printed taffeta ~ full skirts with plain taffeta bodice are examples of skirt importance. Pack Hatching Eggs Big End Up Gives Better Results for Healthier : Chicks Eggs, especially 'those to be. ship- ped for hatching should be packed snugly with the large end up, as the hatching eggs are less likely to be broken when in this position than if they. are packed with the small end up, Each norma] egg has an air cell at the large end and it is necessary that the membrane separating the inner portion of the egg from the shell membrane be neither broken or shaken looge. - x : Research has hown that eggs with tremulous air cells hatched only two- thirds as well as the eggs which had normal air cells. Packing the 'eggs with the large end up removes.. the pressure from the inner membrane. The egg case should never be plac- ed on the bumper of an automobile, 'ag the vibration at this point is pos- sibly greater than on the floor inside the car, If the hatching eggs are haul. ed in a wagon or truck the bed should be matted with straw which serves as a shock absorber, Scantygrease Feels Name' Is Undignified KELSO, Wash.--The populace of Scantygrease Nas gone dignified, Citi- zens are .tired of being "Scantygreas. ers," and, furthermore, they believe the name of the'r community no long- leave the machine are curtained with-" A again in the"limelight; box pleats are eQ. Be 4 ) RAL orig accurately descriptive, 86 they have petitioned county commissioners to rename the town "Delameter," The reglon won its name half a century ago because fat was 50 scarce house- wives used turnips to grease tha fry: ing pans,

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