Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 25 Oct 1922, p. 2

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THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON '' of the Lord. Israel's and blessing is to overflow toj e Gentiles are to be- part ners in the blessings, 'nut pre-eminence of the Israelite as be willingly recognized. They are ests and ministers of God. V. 7. For your shame ye shall have double. Not only pre-eminence, but OCTOBER 29 World Wide Prohibition, ha. 61: 1-9. Golden Text- Righteousness exalteth a nation; But sin is a reproach to any people. Prov. 14: 34. Lesson Setting The chapter in a restoring people, . A society right- Isuiah which we study to-day from ly organized will be a productive so- th* standpoint of temperance is bound ciety, hrimrirg the best out o' every- vwry closely to the preceding chapter. ' thing. The earth will respond to the Both deal with th return from cap- i heavens. A pcoplo free from the ; ttvrty. Chapter 60 shows the external burden of sorrow will be a people free groatneae and glory of Jerusalem for work. Intemperance is cno of| wfeen the Gentiles shall come to her the greatest of desert producing light and Icings to the brightness of forces. Temperance is a great build- h*r rising. Chapter 61 deals with the ing force. ph-itual and inner mission of Jeru- 1 ,, i grae ,. s Minion to the World, 5-9. ssuem. It Iy before us the spiritual .. . u ,i, n if programs of God's restored people. Vs ' 5> ' stra "K ers 8na11 This program was fulfilled by Chrit. In Luke 4: 17 we read how Jesus eotred the synagogue at Nazareth , -- and read from the scriptures the flrst the > vwrse of Isa., Chapter 01, and began to say unto them, "This day Is this scripture fulfilled in your ears." The OH TeMamt-nt prophet testifies of the New Testament Messiah. 1. Th Servant's Mission to ferae). 1-4. V. 1. The Spirit of the Lord God is ' recompense for all' the sorrow and upon me. These words are the words suffering of the exile there is to be of the servant of the Lord spoken of a double blessing. by Isaiah, chapter 53. The picture of V. 8. I, the Lord, love judgment, I tfce servant is realized in Christ. The hate robbery for burnt offering. God Program outlined by the prophet is demands sincerity in worship, for he <**e prompted by the spirit of God. ge es how even dctit and injustice The program of service that has not ma y mask itself behind the external this compelling motive lacks the re- forms of worship. On the other hand, quwite beginning and fails to reach he will deal with his pejp'c faithfully, n real end. Service must be the lift j n his promises and covenant. I Uod and the lift to God. Anointed V. 9. Their seed shall be known me. As priests were set apart to their among the Gentiles. This fidelity of sacred office by anointing with oil, so God to his everlasting covenant shall the servant is sot apart by the out- not only be experienced by the Israel- pouring of the Holy Spirit. Preach ites, but it shall be manifest to the good tidings. This is what the gospel world. The world of the Gentile will 2^!l eW JL* W9 ' true neu " s> Kood news - confess freely that it sees the favor Meek; afflicted. Broken-hearted . . Jof God resting: upon his people. The aptives . . . bound. The mission of temperam-e implication of the whole servant is to be a mission of ser- passage is that while the fountain of vice for the needy. This involves not blessing flows from God an<] from a only a savin* of people from heart- divine height, yet men arp to be dig- MMMac and enslaving conditions, but gers of channel* for this fountain's also the removal of the cond'.tmns that flow. They are to be the agents of bring heart-breaking and enslavement. God, removing all that prevents the from heaven. World prohibition one day will be inevitable. It U coming with that coming of the Lord which makes all things new. Hallowe'en. A witch and an cwl began to prowl around the house one night; The witch had a broom, and bats filled the room; the kiddies all ran in fright. | And a cat with a tail us high us a sail, talked "meow-ow " found the house, | A pumpkin grinned, "Glad I never! sinned and was always as meek as a mouse." "Hoo-hoo-hoo," cried the owl with never a scowl, "A game I have for tho kid, Has, Donkey's tail is off, pin it on, and' aloft, a fine game, too, for the widdies;" I When doorbells start to ring, and back doors to swing, and ghosts tread ! lightly the hall, A creep and a shiver dwn your back till you quiver and want to fall, thro 1 the wall. Jack o' lanterns aswing, lights hob- goblins bring, be good in your own happy home, For the awful'st things, Jacks can sure bring, to boys and girls who roam; Once a little brother sassexl back at mother and a ghosteas caught him in his bed, Took him and shook him moat out of his skin, that bad little brother in bed. When I was a girl a sort of a whirl -a hobgoblin saw me one night, j Washin' dishes o.i Hallowe'en, worst-! est face I'd ever seen, popped atj that winder in sight; My heart pit-a-pat, didn't stop e'en! at that, my face as white as a] ghost. And a pie-face was there, "No!" "No!" "I wasn't scared" (?) that Hallowe'en night with that host. THE CHILDREN'S HOUR Telling Fortunes at a Hallowe'en Party Toll means that people must some- times he saved from themselves. World-wto prohibition is advocated because intemperance not only brings about social condition* that are heart flow and the overflow. *nni;,.;,, ... Application. * " 1S t-ha P ter from one est o{ Lhe (**** proclaims the good I breaking, and soul destroying, but news of deliverance from a foreign' makes men and women helpless slaves, yoke. The days is coming, says he in "We must change the character of effect, when your captivity shall bej conditions by changing the conditions turned, when your people, instead of cf character." being the slaves of others, shall have V. 2. To proclaim the acceptable 'heir start in the ascendant, v. h .t, in of the Lord; the year of the toad of sitting in the di*t with ashes; upon their heads, they shall ride onj fortune's novk with a garland about i their brows. This surely would be favor to Zion. V. S. To appoint unto them that mourn; to offer or provide. Beauty for anht-s; a crest or adornment of the greeted as a political gospel. head, denoting joy instead of ashes i Our Ixjrd standing 1 up in the syna- Bprinkled on the head as a sign of gogue as a young man of thirty-two mourning. That they might he called and referring to the still jrroater de-' trees of righteousness. God's people, 'Jiverarx-e which he proposed to achieve under God's blessing, are to become f r mankind, mak^s a bold appropria- lik* to a great, flourishing forest of , tion of this chapter. This diy, said he, oaks, instead of broken trees. A ref- is this scripture fulfilled in your ears. : erence to such chapters as 28 will give us very clearly the prophetic attitude to intemperance as a barrier in the way to alt spiritual progress for the human soul, and to all programs of service that seek to lift burdens and wipe away tears. V. 4. They -hnll build the old waste*. The mission of the servant of the Lord is to bo more than con- solation. It is to be a mission of reaoration. The desolating effect of the Ertte is to disappear. The people restored t.-> God's favor are t) become For this the rulers of the synagogue had him thrust out of the city, but a Christian posterity took him into its heart and testified and still testifies, "Thou Christ are all we want." j For many years paM another tyrant Jiaa reigned King alcohol. To a great many men, weak and strong, he has been saying, a-s did the infamous Ges- slcr to tho brave inhabitants of Swtt- iZerliand, "Bow down, ye slaves, bowj down." Of late many prophets, pew- 1 ing into the future, have affirmed that, they saw this Satan, Hko lightning fall Do You Realize That You Can Own An Overland Motor Gar Fully Equipped For Dairying a Permanent In- dustry. No matter what trials beset agri- culture, dairying is and will always continue to be one of its profitable and its most secure ventures. The reasons arc not far to seek. Ever since the days of primitive man the human race has used terpe propor- tions of animal food. As population presses, meat is partially replaced by vegetables in the diet. Nowhere, how- ever, has animal food lx>?n entirely nl>andoned. Since the. dairy cnw is the most economical producer of hu-! man f<xxl from the grain and rough- ages of the farm, the increased con-i sumption of dairy products is coinci-l dent with the increase of human popu-j lation. This is one vital reason why dairying must continue. Of all the enterprises in which men engage, Hve stock husbandry is th most alluring and the most enjoyable. But live stock husbandry rests wholly upon mammalian life life that de- pends upon mother's milk. In ordinary; farming the milk of the cow is freely! substituted for that of other animals in the nurture of the growing young.! But this reason, important as it must[ bo, is one of the least of the reasons why dairying must continue. The cow hus been most appropriate- ly desipnatH "the foster mother of tho human race." ChiM'hood's depend- ence upon milk for its normal prowth and healthy development is so abso- lute and so vital to our national wel- fare thst dairy farming is rapidly coming to be the one indisper.sable industry. Textiles may be "fatirii'nt- ed," fowls produced by "synthetic pro- cesses," building materials "substitut- ed," but "there aro no substitutes for milk. It is the one protective food in the human dietary." Hence, dnirying cannot he overdone f.nd the dairy cow will never be re- placed, neither in the nurture of the race nor the fundamental economics j of tho farm. A big woodpile will be worth money this winter. Save a finv of the best heads of .sunflowers. We pick them from the I tallest and stoutest stalks with the largest heads that are well filled with plump seed. The heads are thorough- ly dried and then shelled out in a large box where they can be stirred occasionally to prevent mould. A "Spooky" Hallowe'en Frolic. Of course, you will want to have a Hallowe'en party, for that is when stiffness and formality are thrown to the winds, and every one has a jolly, frolicking time. Have your guests wear the regula- tion HuMowe'en costume a sheet and a white mask. Or the boyg may come as ghosts, while the girls represent witches. Every one loves to dress up, and boys and girls talk more freely if they think their identity is not known. The masks can be oblong pieces of cloth, with slits for the eyes, and strings at side for tying around head. The entire face should be covered. Cut a witch from black paper, to fit any envelopes you may have on hand. Write your invitation on this in white ink. The invitation might read: "Hallowe'en we'll celebrate On Tuesday evening jost at eight, Come as a 'spook' and don't be late."j The first part of the evening should' be a very quiet, "spooky" affair. Havej the rooms lighted only with Jack-o'-l lanterns. You know it would not bei Hallowe'en without the corn-stalks,' the witches, the black cats and the pumpkin faces. Use these for de- corating. Queer -shaped squashes make even more comical faces than the pumpkins. When the guests begin to arrive, station a "spook" in the hall to open the dc-or and point the way upstairs;! another should stand in the upper hallj and point out the room in which! guests are to take oft* their wraps and don masks. Neither should speak, but| each should wear a sign on which the 1 words, "SPEAK NOT," should be printed. Each guest,, when ready,' should receive one of these, then be' taken by the han<! and led downstairs. | Those assembled will rise from the| floor to meet the newcomers, and boW| low. Seat the guests in a circle, and ; try to keep absolute silence. If any are inclined to whisper, point to your sign. When enough have gathered, one person who is a ROW! story-teller! should begin to tell ghost stories. 1 1 1. iv,- the late guests detainexi upstairs' until a tale is finished. Here is the outline of ono you could use, filling in the details to suit yourself: "Once upon a time three sisters lived alene in a great woods. The two elder sisters were very homely,' but Slyvia, the younger sister, was noted for her beauty, especially for ( her auburn hair and her white, perly| teeth. Sylvia had a lover who had given her a large diamond ring. Now I the eWest sister coveted both the lover and the ring, so one dark stormy night she killed Sylvia and hid her body.' (Describe the storm and the hiding' of the body.) One night a short timej afterward, the eldest sister heard footsteps descending the attic stairs; a tall, white figure entered her room| and stood beside her bedside. "Who are you?" asked the sister. "I am Sylvia," came the reply. "Where is your beautiful hair?" "All gone." "Where are your beautiful teeth?" "All gone." "V. here is your diamond ring?" "VOU have it." Jump up suddenly as you say "YOU," nnd at this point have some one who knows tho story scream. When all have quieted down, tell an- other one cr two. Then place a tnble in the centre of the room nnd have your guests join hnn:ls and stand in a circle around it. Placo on the table a bowl containing water. Have ome ona play a dirge on the piano while the guests dance around the Uible. Ifnve ready a suf- ficient number of fortunes wrapped in tinfoil. Toss thwe into the water nmV ask ench guest to snatch a fortune HS all continue to dance. Such fortune; as these would bo appropriate: You'll mevt your death, I fear, '.v!u>n. in your eightieth year. Far to dis'ant hinds you'll roam; but when you're broke you'll coins back home. A handsome youth with eyes of blue longs to steal a kiss from you. Happy and jolly you'll still be when your twenty-fifth grandchild sits on your knee. You're a gay coquette, I fear, But your capture now it near; And before your romance closes, You will be a* meek as MOM*! Make some tittle cakes in muffin or. gem pans, dropping an imitation dia- mond ring (wrapped in waxed paper) into cno of them. When ready to] serve refreshments, place on a plate' as many cakes as tlwre are girl. ' Go in for agriculture Serve the cakes to the girls, and the| As a modern farmerette, one finding the ring is exected to be And you'H raise the biggest cabbage the first one to become engaged. That the world has seen a*. yet. ped in wax paper. One of the squares should have wrapped with it a small mitten cut out. of cardboard Jt^out of a white kid gtove. Of courWno one wants to "get the mitten." Fortunes in verse are always popu- lar, so the following may be copied separately and placed between the 6he>l!s of English walnuts which have been carefully opened and emptied. The shells are then fastened together with a touch of paste and the nuts piled in two dishes, one for the girls and the other for the boys: For the Girls Get your "hope chest" ready, Never mind the cost; Living's high, but he or she who hesitates is lost. You will have a proposal Placed at your disposal E'er for'y-eight hours roll away. You needn't start humming You know it is coming And you know very well what you'H say. You like the military And the navy you adore; A soldier or a sailor You never find a bore. I see a little cloud in your sky; Engagement "showers" will fall by and by. Your love is dark and ruddy With a dashing btack mustachr. He'll ask you to elope with him, But do not be so rash! You are naturally fair enough To need no help from a powder puff; And the man who wins you will surely bless The girl who looks well in a gingham dress. Before next moon shall wax and wane Your fate will meet you, it is plain; Your love will run neither smooth nor fast, But aH will come out right at last. You feel a restless longing discontent You think for bigger things that you were meant; 'Tis woman's day, tet all your powers be spent To make you the first woman President. You're never more bewitch-in' Than when you're in the kitchen, With the color in your cheek like a rose. And a little smudge of flour on your nose! You would surely be welcomed with smiles, If you'd go into business in Paris To doreK>p Canadian style*. For the Boys You will take up aviation, And, discarding boats and train, You will travel over country In your private aeroplane. You'll be a farmer up to date, You'H accumulate wealth and marry late, But this delay you will not -regret For you'll marry a famous farmerette. You're saving up for a diamond ring; You think it's a secret it's no such a thing! The girls all like you; Find your voice. Step boldly out And make a choice. A scientific farmer Of reputation rare, You'H have a prize exhibit At every county fair. You'll be a breezy auctioneer, You've such a winning way! You'll hold the crowds and sell th goodis. And how you'll make them payt Doomed to be a bachelor? Too timid to propose? Brace up; perhaps real courag may Reverse your fate who knows? A taste for showy neckties And for fashions up to date! If these go wrong it puts you In a very nervous state. You are looking melancholy, Cheer up, brother, wear a smilt*. Girls have never cared for moping: Cultivate a different style There's a picture that you carry She's the girl that you will marry. If walnuts are not available, blind- fold the guests and lead them one at a time into a dimly lighted room just before refreshments are served. Re- move the bandage and to weird music produced by tin pans, whistles, etc., the fortune seeker advances to a witch who is seated in a diim cave and re- ceives his or her fate, written on coarse, brown paper and tied with black thread. Thos who enter first are allowed to remain in a dark corner to watch the others. When the for- tunes have been distributed the witch disappears to the clatter of pans, and the guests all file into the dining-room where they open and read their for- tunes. There's one here fco-night who loves ! you well, but this one's name I never i will tell. Northwest Historic Sites. The Canadian National Parks Hranch of the Department of toe lu- When you're too old to chew, a mil- terior is collecting historical material lion dollars will be left to you. of such historic sites as may be Identl- Now it is time to unmask and com-' netl in Northwest Canada with the in- pare fortunes; then they will want tentlon of preserving them from ob- to test the fates again. The tiny literation and erecting thereonsult- raiulles usenl on birthday cake>s can be able monuments and tablets as land- fastened in the halves of English wal- marks of Canadian history. One of nut shells, if you will drop a little t!"? must dramatic epioodes of the Kiel melted tallow into the shell and press rebellion in 188f> was the battle of Fish the cand'le down in it while it is still Creek, situated between Saskatoon soft. Paste a letter on front of shell, ' m'-d Prince Albert, on the Saskatche- ligrht the candles and set the little wan river, where the rebels intercept-' boats aflivat in a large pan of water, ed General Middleton's march to their Give each guest a letter so he may ; headquarters at Batoche -and from watch his own t>oat, and have some their hiding places in the ravines shot one interpret the movements 'of the down ten ot the advance guard and different boats. Some will cling to the' wounded many more. At tha clos* of sides of the pan. and their owners will the eucounter the volunteer forces lead quiet lives; some will fl >at to- buried t!~eir dead comrades and after Aether; some will collide and be ship- collecting one- hundred wagon loads of wrecked; the one \vho=e caivl-le burns, stone erected a huge cairn surmounted the longest will be the first cue mar- by a wooden crass and containing the TOURING ROADSTER Now $786 Now $785 SEDAN COUPE Now $1295 Now $1005 Frliht frsm Toronto and Taxei Extra. Wlllys-Ovtrland Limited Toronto. Otnada Without obligation on ma, pleai* lend. postpaid, your latest Catalogue to NAMH POtT OFFICE R R. No. ricd. Any of the old games, such as "bob- nanie-i of the dead. It Is the Intention ol the National Parks Branch to pre- bing for apples," taking a ring with serve and care for this historic slt the teeth from a dish of flour, are ap- ' *** to P lace thereon a permanent re- propriate, for they belong distinctly ! rd f thtsjiotable event, to Hallowe'en and we would miss them if they did not appear once a year. When tt Is time for refreshments, line the boys up according to height. Have the girls form a line in the The Vagabond Song. Tltere is something in the autumn that is native to my blood Touch of manner, hint of mood, CELEBRITIES ATTEND NATIONAL BOY SCOUT CONFERENCE Left to right: Jyjm Stiles, representing Canadian Scout move- ment; Captain Francis Gidney, official representative of England, next in rank to Lieut. Robert Baden-Powell, who started the Scout activi- ties; James E West, Chief Scout executive, for America; Mons. J. Guerin-Desjiuiltns, representative of the combined three Scout move- ments of France. At the conference where 400 executives assembled t Blue Ridge, N C, a presentation of the only polid Qold Eagle Badge ever presented in scouting, was made to Daniel Carter Beard, National Scout Commissioner. Thlt la the highest honor that can be attained. The conference took place September 12th-19th. swme manner facing the boys, but And my heart is Kke a rhyme, have the line turned airound so that ; With the yellow and the purple and the shortest girl stands opposite thej the crimson keeping time. t t >1 ?** boy - J hU I tJ T ""? . atld JThe scarlet of the mapl n shake shortest go together to the dining- m . lflt a room. Have apples, gingerbread, | ^ b ^ ^ b ' doughnut*, pop-corn balls and older Am , fonely litai on the table; let each one Uke a paper 1^ ^ f / plate and napkin and help himself; or herself; then the couples can find a! upon the hiMs thpiHa There is something in October sets th gypsy blood astir; We must rise ai.d follow her quiet corner in which to enjoy their meal. And they will e-njoy it. When baking the doughnuts, put in one a ring, in another a small key. in! ^hn from every hill of flame another a thimble; a penny, a b-itton, bhe calh aml C * H Mch vagabond by etc., in others. Say nothing about iti name. Bli -3 Carman. to your guests. The one who is sur- prised with the ring will speedily! A fnlit cen trpiec to appropriate marry; the key moans a long journey; the thimble and button denote spin- sterhood or bachelorhood, as the case may be, and the penny stands for wealth. To rotkke pop-corn batts, take one- half pint of molasses with a pinch of soda stirred into it, one-half pint of sugar and one cup water. Cook until it makes a soft ball in water. Pom- over six quarts of popped corn and press into shape. for any autumn entertainment, but especially so for Hallowe'en. Select a well-shaped pumpkin and cut it into a bowl. A piece of cardbc.ard cut in scallops could be used as a pattern, tracing it flrst, then cutting through the pumpkin with a sharp, slender knife. Remove the. seed's tnd piit* tho improvised bowl high with choic* fruit. A mat of ferns or autumn leaves can h placed underneath tht * :1: jbowl with good effect.

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