Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 3 Nov 1927, p. 2

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Cast down upon nt run down as sness as a mighty stream. 5: 24, E tion ch am! na | ore ANALYSIS, AND AN BXBORTATION, 5: tice, a 1:10-17 1 y God. tuary of Bethel, multitudes who offered their sacrifices at the altars and their tithes, and who were [ to observe the ancient forms, "him it was not worship, but rather transgression against God. He knew the lives which these Beople Hved, their many acts of injustice, their cruel conduct toward the poor, greed, their self-indulgence, their deeds of violence, and their dis- Joyalty to Jehovah in the ition and worship of other gods. He saw doom coming upon a wicked nation and declared that Jehovah ould not caref but to with favor, nd. hie bo yg ied ry. f hope to which feast days, solemn assemblies, |ang of have in them of true worship. For the nd Woon Pree worsh lied Ep 7:1-16; Hos. same and dus see Isa. 168; Micah uestion of verse 25 seems to imply that such f of worship were not used in the wilderness iod, but that is quite inconceivable, The intention seems to be to intro- duce a comparison between the simp- ler and purer worship that early period, and the ornate and idolatrous rites of Amos time (compare Jer. 11:21-24). IIL VISIONS OF INTERCESSION AND A PRIEST'S OPPOSITION, chap. 7. ~In a series of dream visions Amos pra in| turn it away. He r ©" peop of the warnings which they have had, drought and famine, blight and locust swarm, Plague and quake, yet they have not repented. Tn the greater calamity that is comin upon them they will meet an offended God whose laws of justice and human kindness they have not obeyed. And Je mos, true prophet of a merciful God, hoping against hope that a way of deliverance may yet be found, exhorts this sinful ple to repentance, and intercedes on them with God that they may be forgiven. I. 'A DIRGE AND AN EXHORTATION, 5: The lamentation; pr dirge (v. 1) is cast in the form of la verse of poetry (v. 2) with a peculiarly mournful rhythm, which may be imitated in English as follows: "Fallen, no more to rise, the virgin of Israel; : her land, none to lift T up. Here Amos is anticipating the cal- amity which he expects to fall upon Israel as a punishment for its sins, and in his prophetic vision he sees it as already present, and the land fallen into ruin and decay. The pro- het's messages of warning and of ex- rtation were spoken as early as C. 750, and in 722, after a long period of civil strife, and a long siege of the capital city of Samaria by Assyrian armies, the kingdom of Israel came to an end, and many of her people were carried away into captivity, see 2 Kings 16:8-31 and 17:1-23. The pre- diction of Amos was fulfilled. In v. 8 the prophet describes the condition to which the country will be reduced as the result of internal strife and invasion by foreign ene- a recent earth-. B.| Toronto recently. seec little these he predicts the fall of the royal house of Israel. The king mentioned is Jeroboam II. a short account of whose reign will be found in 2 Kings 14:28-20. This declaration made at Bethel, a sanctuary under royal pat- | ronage, aroused the wrath of the chief | priest, who ordered Amos to return at once to his own country of Judah. The prophet's simple defence of his divine ission and stat t of his call to the prophetic office (vs. { 14-16), is very impressive. British School System Praised They Express Genius of Em- pire's People, is De- claration Toronto.--"The public schools are {an expression of one of the best and finest sides of the genius of the Bri- tish peoples, and do their part to strengthen and develop this genius," sald Dr. R. W. Livingstone, President and . Vce-Chancellor of Queen's Uni- versity, Belfast, Ireland, speaking in Dr, Livingstong admitted that there were certain drawbacks in the public | school system, but expressed com- plete assurance that it serves -more than any one factor to bring out the best and most desirable qualities of English youth and develop unselfish community service to a high plane. ; Commenting on the Irish situation, the speaker sald that Northern Ire- land is no less peaceful than Ontario rings are not acceptable, be- @ no t mies. Only one-tenth of the men able at present, while the political situa- to bear arms will be left in the cities of Israel. { Nevertheless he believes in the mercy of God and urges repentance and the secking of his favor, if by any means his anger against them may be appeased and he may yet deliver them, Jehovah is to be sought, he declares, not in the gorgeous and corrupt ritual of great sanctuaries at Bethel, -Gilgal and Beersheba, but in just and upright * dealing, by putting away their manifold transgressions and their weighty sins (v. 12), by loving and doing good and not evil. For Je- hovah is not only the great God, the , Mm: of the starry heavens and ruler of light and darkness, of sea and land, but he is able to read the innermost thoughts of men's hearts, and he is the defender of the spotled against the strong (vs. 8-0, compare 4:18) : The Gate was both the entrance to a walled city and the broad square within, 'The latter was the market place and the place .of public. con- course, where the judges of the city held daily session, An upright judge who rebuked evil-doers was hated. phet indignantly denounces the rich who oppress the poor, who posed as feudal lords over their poorer rs, exacting from them gifts of the produce of their labor in re- turn for their patronage, who took and ustice, a par- deepieable kind of sinners . The day of calamity, and , for such is surely com- 0 'tion in the south is rapidly mending: He affirmed that "everyone would be glad to see the south settle its own ! problems, with prosperity and - suc cess to Itself." Aw' They Breezed Along "I'm out to raise the wind for a very necessary thing these hot days" "And what is that?" : "I'm going to blow myself to a new electric fan." tpt N Bloody But Unbowed. Beat ms, kick me, cheat me, lick me, Throw me down the stairs; : Gash me, pound me, slash me, hound me, i Make me say my prayers; Though %e'll always have a fight, Life, I'll love you just for spite! ~New York Evening Post. y \ A SMART NEW FROCK. Exceedingly smart is this attrac- 81 {ive one-piece frock having thé modish two-piece effect. The skirt has an inverted plait at each side, front and back, ana is joined to the bodice hav- ing a V neck, long sleeves gathered to wrist-bands or short sleeves with cuffs. A chic bow is placed at the left shoulder and a buckle finishes the belt in front. No. 1648 4s for Misses and Small Women, and ie in sizes 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 18 (36 bust) re- quires 8% yards 89-inch, or 2% yards 64-inch material, and 3% yard 39-inch contrasting for binding. Price 20 cents the pattern, Foe HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain. ly, giviosg number and size of such 1 stamps or coin. (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each aumber and address your order to Pattern Dept, Wilson Publishing Co., 78 West Ade- aide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by yeturn mail Se Capital and Labor Edinburgh Scotsman (Cons.): Be- tween capital and libor in the ab- stract, as used by there is and always must be a fun- damental identity of interest. Each is necessary to the othef, and the pro- duct -of both; in harmonious: and ac- tive co-operation, is essential to the well-being of the whole----namely, the community. The divorce of the lab- orer from the ownership of his tools and instruments of production, com- bined with the divorce of economics as a study from philosophy and the humanities, ~have caused this great truth to be overlain or forgotten, to the great hurt of industry and the na- tion. ~The change has produced in the mind of the workman distrust, suspicion and rancour, while it has bred in the mind of the capitalist the tendency to be selfish, hard, and in- human in his regard for and treat. ment of his fellow men, his co-work- ers, in the production of wealth, A new spirit is abroad, and let us hope. that it will grow, deepen, and broad- en, so that peace and prosperity may abound to gladden the hearts of meh. oH oe ° wap Easy Way to Clean Silver Put a teaspoon of salt and a like amount of soda in a new aluminum pan and pour boiling water over them. Place. your tarnished 'silver in the solution. When the tarnish is re- moved, wash and dry with a soft cloth, The method will not injure the silver, which 1s cleaned as thor- 'oughly as by hard rubbing and is not scratched. ag. it may be Noon: pleted to see if it would become like Thantk | or powders are used. This leaves the silver with a soft dull fin- ish, which can be' heightened to a high polish by rubbing with a chamois. or soft cloth and the use of silver paste. AT RI Aussi "Looks like rain to-day," sald the milkman, as he poured the customary quart of milk. i "It always does," replied the house: * EEE, MY POWER OF DEDUCTION TELLS ME YOU, HAE RECENTLY, PARTAKEN 0¢ Foob! ; YOUNG A event FUL LIFE: T HAD A MUSHRO x OMELET For THE : FIRST ne i. EEL {o'clock to come. . Mr, Master. talked patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in! the, economist, | On the Friday afternoon before the! Thanksgiving holiday, the boys sat] restlessly in school 'waiting OF four to "them about ~ Thauksglying.. He sald something about the Tranksgiv- ing Spirit and dropped a hint that} this Spirit was a magician, But the | boys did not pay much attention to him, they were too busy planning their 'heliday. J x When the gong sounded the boys i" rushed out of &chool and Thank Yous, and Gim Me rodé' dway in an auto- mobilé, for Thank You was to spend the 'holidays at Gim Me's house, The night before Thanksgiving, the two boys went to bed in Gim Me's room as usual. "What dld Mr. Mas- ter say about the Tranksgiving Spirit, the other day?" asked Thank You. MI don't know," said Gim Me, "I wonder if we could see the Thanksgiving. Spirit?" sald Thank You. But Gim' Me did not answer "him, becauseshe was asleep, Thank | You shut his eyes for a moment and when he opened them he saw, sitting on the footboard of the bed, the heartiest, happiest, and hand t Thanksgiving ~~ Spirit = you could imagine. He wore a Jong crimson sit that was buttoned up with great shiny buttons. It was furnished transatlantic aerial na | Montreal is to be used this part of the 8t., Lar _ To encourage, flying clubs in Can- ads, the Government has just placed an initial order for ten "Moth" aero. planes. to be purchased from the De Haviland "Corporation ' of "England. The contract price is $51,000, By 'the policy recently enunciated, the National. Defence, Department agreed to supply one extra aeroplane wherever a local club purchased an- other, and it Is to prepare for this de- velopment that the 10 planes have just been ordered. They will be 'sup- plemented later.' : - The Government has also decided to i ptain wag on the bridge un: der. . He rang for the engines to stop but the pirates in the engine room forced the engineer to contthue. The submarine then d a shell into the engine room. . The engine was disabled." A pirate. who was] about to shoot the engineer was kill- od, The crew of the Irene started to jump overboard" and the submarine came. alongside, . -& The crew and passengers were res- cued with great difficulty begause of the heavy seas at the time, - o> 3 convert the old Rockliffe Rifle R at Ottawa into a central aerodrome and seaplane station for carrying on experimental flying by air and over water, and also to explore the possi- bilities of winter flying. With that object in view the site is to be en: larged by the addition of 31 acres. BE fh ga | with many pockets all of which were bulging, » "Come with me and see my room," invited the Spirit. "Wrap a blanket around you and step out of the win- dow into my aeroplane." The wo boys got in and whirred away. They could not see where they stopped, be- (cause it was so dark. "Is this where {you live?" asked Thank You. "One of the places," answered the Spirit, "I 1 Obs6éver (Ind): (Appalling | always live in other folks houses, and | . ings this summer has: ruined the I have a room here." He lighted a posien tarmer.) Its onset has no par candle and set it on a table. allel unless in the memorable '79. ur "This 1s al pretty small room," sald in the earlier season which "rained Gim Me critieally.s a the Corn Laws." The ravages "Small?" sald the Tranksgiving of flood and t are stupend Spirit, "Why I think it's big. At that, Many a crop has sustained not merely the walls and celling began to move, | damage, but obliteration. The: labor going farther away until the room of a whole season has been washed was like a great reception hall. |evay, an the Huskaudman loft with ." are 8.1 a y to Tow, dhat hye some; throw a host of cultivators bankrupt, 2 leave much soll derelict ,and--what is give each of you one of these," sald still worse--strike despair into the i {8 beautiful, sir!" . me's room. | the Spirit, as he handed each boy a 4 x little box with a silver ring fu ft. |DOAHS A A at "Oh, thank you," sald Much, At nyehe of 'agriculture has become a these words the ring turned to gold. patter of national urgency, ft would "Thank you very much!" A diamond 4nqorse: the most cynical views of ; came out { nthe middle. Thank You y,)itical psychology. » { was too surprised "to say another BE i. (Tamer word. ; Gim Me looked at his ring, "Give me a gold one," he said. = Af that the ring turned to brass. - "I want a | gold one, like Thank You's." At that the ring turned to tin, "Just so that you may know when Thanksgiving Day * comés around, I { will give you this," 'said the Spirit, as he handed each boy 'a fine sliver watch. ba "Oh, thank you!" sald Thank You. |. At that the watch turned to gold. "It The face 'Became so shiny that you could see what time it was éven at midnight. % ! Gim Me watched his gift a minute No Doubt They Did. ; Ready Orator---"Oh, yes; I can get up any time and make a speech think nothing of it." SheX-Don't your audience usuall think the same way?" g ; hy An auto-renting ¢o ; 'has you's, but it did 'mot. "Give me a nicer one," he sald. The watch stop- ped ticking, "One like Thank You's." The watch shrank and be- came small and light. "Now it is time to go," sald the magician, buttoning up his crimson coat, In less time than it takes to|earth: tell, they were i in Gim}: The Th ving Spirit tucked them into bed, "I hope that v is recharged' 'and | Ot Course He Turn "After he kissed Sall did tice how he turned red?" "That cheap stuff she uses always comes off." - a A AHH NA A The Decay of Agriculture London Daily Mall (Ind. Cons.): No great nation has ever yet lived without a rural populaticn. The health and stamina of the race ust deteriorate if a people is entirely di- you' no- vorced from the villages and the flelds, and if the great swarming mod. ern cities cannot draw fresh. blood into thelr veins: from: those whole- some sources. An England Whelly made up of the "street-bred people" seems unthinkable. Yet we may have to think of it if the decay of agricul ture is not arrested. a Sot 1 Charge Radio Battery on Car "I take the six volt battery that'is used in my car, and switch it to the radlo, putting the radio battery in the ittery on the one in the car id nates the cost of a charger and also the expense and trouble of taking it to a battery colored se! ls you die first, I want you to tell me what it's like d {If T die first, I'll come back and tell} Jay 'you What it's Sb lke." "Dat sults 1 | Leeds Yorkshire Post: sg 1 Route Favor Wins from the Great: Lakes to. the. carried out at once was advocate Orra L. Stone, general recently. "Once the project becomes an actuality I Yeni ite opiuion that the economists and historians of the future will marvel that in the year 1927 there. were -iconoclasts so" obtuse sul the results wil] be compar ma Canal" ing of the Plum and Apple Jam There was a time when Army 8 were notorl- 0 bad, : Even when they cease 'to be bad they remia oF pablus. That is mo longer. true. I late war, in spite of the regu with which bully beef and "plu: apple" appeared, our ¢) well fed: but in peace oA and needs are considered to an extent [hich the musket and powder genera. on would have: considered fareial, - We are assured that such dainties as: fruit salad and sardines figire on his menu. Presumably they. are mot served together, even though war time foured Tommy. to some curious art But the broad fact remains that variety\smd Jaigt bleness are considered, as well dd' the scientific - of p ds and calories and vitamines:- : 4 Br CH i SAE TE War Guilt London Eveniiig News (Ind. Cons.): | No kind god has given the German or any 'other natfon the gift of seeing it- self as others see It, and it was inevit- aie Lua sooner or later: Germans |-should come to- look ui ar as a, ort Of Teasers of ha' taseents. and a with themselves as' the hero 'and | high-minded innocents. It has been sald that you cannot indict a nation. throughout the civilized world indict- ed Dermat. and, having carefully guilty. It is trie, hoWever; that you It, in_the "bitterness of rout and, re: a desperate cry "of "peccavi" the mood of penitence evap- ( 8 terial nee Salaries A ES Ra That is not true, for public' opinion BE iy ag to fail to realize what this out- standing development of the St. Law. rence meant as an ecopomic asset, I © able to those that followed the open- th ta the ovidence, found her - "U1 cansiot force a mation to indict Stself. i Oe ty A] 5 nl 3 el 1 ent the sting of defeat - : 'es of digdster | A AE F tte a SR the Associated Industries, at Boston |

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