Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 14 Aug 1930, p. 3

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: 'nore the Prophet, 0 IL. A FATAL WEAKNESS, chaps. 13; 165; | duct seemed nothin, Saimel his dis- 16: 14-23, 19: 9-12. badiehes to the Ite whe won have III. THE TRAGIC END, chaps. 28 and 81.] in; 4 Eom gn endur. a INTRODUCTION--Saul was the first mf rae TRAGIC END, chaps. 28 and 31. © of the kings of Isra-l. The days of| It is story that is told in the judges, when "every man did that Shap. 28 of the king who, facing the i which was>right in his: owa eyes," crisis of his fortunes, sought the help were ended. Samuel, first of the great of Samuel now d. ,d whose Felp an prophets, last of the judges, ever soli-| °f Samuel now dead. w 1p an citous for the welfare of the people | Phet lived. But he heard no word of "and for their unity in the pure wor.| comfort or of hope 'rom the spirit ship of Jehovah, had been startled and | of Samuel. Next day, with his brave | displeased by the demand of the elders | $011: he died J. the battlefield of § of Israel, assembled at Ramah, that| Mount Gilboa {ehap. 81). Boma ams King Taher be 2 e dissatis wi s govern- ® Tem? Jad he not ruled them fairly What New York : and justly ut the people had no : + fault to find vith Samuel, though Is Wear mg a 2 they did not tru-t his sons, 8: 1-6; 15: a 1. "What thoy canted was a strong | BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON against their Philistine oppressors, T: 7, When Samuel found Sau' he be. | [lustrated D ressmaking Lesson Fur- lieved he had found the right man, "a nished With Every Pattern ' young man and a goodly, and there ™ was not among the children of Israel a goodlier person than he" (15: 2). It was not an easy lesson that Samuel 7 the prophet had to learn, the lesson ~ t "Ther Lord seeth not as man ; for man looketh upon the out- ward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart," 16: 7. 1. CHOSEN TO BE KING, chaps. 8-11. It seems clear that Samuel himself, both as prophet and judge, did much to preserve the Baily of the great self- Joverning tribes of Israel. He was nown and trusted by all, 3: 19 to 4: 1. e bled rep tives of the people frum time to time for com- mon. worship, and that he might in- struct them and exhort them t, serve Jehovah and not the Baals, 7: 3-4, 5-6. H held circuit court in cities of west- ern Palestine, 7: 16-17. The way was thus prepared for th: closer union of the tribes in a kingdom. It seemed at first to Sumuel that the demand for a king (8: 4-7) was not only a rejec- = tion of himself, but was disloyalty to Jehoval, Israel's true Lord and Ling. 8: 7-8. He yielded tu their demand, but warned the elders that under kingly rule they wuld lose some of their much-prized freedom and inde pendence, 8: 10-22, The story of Samuel's meeting with Saul (chap. 9) is well known. Saul and a servant are seeking his father's lost asses, When they were returning without he t prov a visit to the seer of Ramah, At Ra- mah Samuel met them. Saul's good'y appearance attracted him and moved by the inner voice, "Behold thc man," Samuel invited them to a bnguet in "the high place, made them sit in the chiefest place," and gave Saul.the choicest: portion of the meat, reserved 3 EA for pe most distinguished guest, 82 aul's surprise must have been very| A stunning outfit for deb and the great, especially an he Prophet little suo-deb who follow closely in the sire of Israel? Is it not on thee?" styles of her debutante sister. i(9: 20, R.V. margin), and when, on Style No. 3282 is printed tub silk following morning, Samuel talked | that would appeal to any smart miss long with him and poured upon hia|in its attractive dusty-pink tones, The heay d the Joly Shointing oil Samuel's shoulder and hipline bows are of plain rati e i nce iy assembly (1 Bis % Saille ibbon in the deepest shade of yet again, after his heroic rel of the besieged city of en By, The long-waisted bodice is caught by an outburst of approval on the with Plaits at left hip beneath the bow, part of the people, whom Samuel then which makes the right side quite deep , 'summoned to the anc'ent sanctuary of hasizing its di 1 line. The Gilgal that they might "renew the | gathered tiers of skirt are decidedly kingdom there" with sacrifices and re- | youthful. Joieing, 11: 12-15. * This versatile model comes in sizes lyn reign began well. He receiv-| 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. wei lente. ws ck Di an : It i Saito for afternoon in chiffon things of him. But at first he had | wool halls saints. printed di meither crown nor palace, neither oul challis prints, printed dimity, court nor army. He returned to his printed batiste, pastel flat washable father's house at Giebah, There were | crepe silk, printed lawn and printed certain worthless fellows, "sons of | Voile are smart, Belial, who said, "How cor. this man HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS save us? His opportunity came Wri hen "following the oxen out of the|. V Iie your name and address plain- field" he heard the pitiful appeal of ly, giving number and size of such ithe messengers from Jabesh-gilead| Patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in and rallied the men of Israel to their| Stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap rescue, chap. 11, Here and in other|it carefully) for each number, and events of the earlier years he showed | address your order to Wilson Pattern "courage, energy and resourcefulness.| Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto, i He gathered about him Israsl's fight- Sg AR ss ; £ men and made them into an army} what two letters of the alphabe able to meet the Philistines a . ; mort of equality Rod igi Je "that Te destructive?=DK (decay). MUTT AND JEFF-- wid 1 Fh i a Le Lt 0 oss reigned, It ts always & mystery to overweight --1 Samuel 9: 15-17, 26.27; 10: 1;| must have longer than two years. | people how or why the Vo orgrwaight 10: 911; 313 44. (Golden Text--| The tories told of Saul in| bo aissatisfied and wish to add to her Wherefore fet him that thinketh he| S08 and 15 reveal a serious and | = PT TC OL om placently - standeth take h in the end fatal weakness in 'ia char- it. > They ; _ Corinthian acter, The friendship and coun. | eating all she wants of the good eats nthiang 10: 2: y of Samuel ndehip 4 from tha be. | Which they consider so delicious, with ANALYSIE finning. 'But, nervous and impatient| many o pang of onvy. 5 re , a I moment, he chose to ig-| However, there are underweight 1. COASEN TO BE KING, chaps. 8-11. people who wish to gain, and try as they will, they have as much difficulty putting on pounds as the overweight has in taking them off. amounts, main thin, Of course, these people are not normal, and we sometimes hear df tne food around." This is because the By Marie Ann Best Article 3 Some thin people eat astonishing exercise little and still re them say: "It makes me thin to carry surplus goes to disease instead of to fat. So, if you are eating far too much you will also need to cut down, perhaps go to your doctor. Most thin people, though, eat too little of the nourishing foods, and are more inclined to form a habit of worry- ing which uses up a tremendous amount of energy and burns up a great deal of fuel. : Sleep more, and if you haven't learn- ed how to sleep, dont' worry about it. Relax every muscle and rest; knowing that if you do not sleep it doesn't mat- ter--Hush, dont' say anything, just lie still. If you do not care, that's when sleep creeps in all unknowingly. Next comes exercises. One needs exercise to be able fp rest properly afterwards and also to stimulate the appetite. But don't go at it so strenu- ously, that's one of your failings. You eat up al the little fat you have in the nervous energy used. Then, last but not least, stretch your stomach gradually by eating more ood, and when you do eat be sure it is nourishing food. Try an extra glass of milk between each meal, and a hot cup of milk or cocoa before retiring to induce that sleepy feeling. Cod liver oil is an excellent builder begun in small doses, and, of course, all the foods enjoyed by Mrs. Plump are on the bill of fare, ice cream, chocolate, malted milk, cream sauces, butter, etc. Oh, how good it sounds-- The old nursery rhyme fine right here with an variation. Jack Sprat could eat no fat His wife could eat no lean, And so, between the two, you see They made the platter clean. Jack Sprat should have given his wite some of that lean, then she might give him some fat to even things up a bit. How is this for a good boiled dinner on a cool day? Scar a chunky piece of beef on both sides. Cover closely and cook very slowly for a long time, adding water occasionally, If you are fond of on- fons cut one up and add to the broth. When dinner time comes put the meat in an iron frying pan with some of the fat, leaving the bone in the pot. Cdver it closely and continue slow cooking, turning once in awhile. Season with 'salt and pepper. Pour oft some of the broth for soup, then prepare carrots cut in rings, tur nips cut in chunks, and whole onions. Put them in the pot with the bone an hour before serving, add hot water to cover, In half "wp hour put in whole peeled potatoes with large chunks of cabbage (cabbage mot over-cooked is easy digested). Do not put meat back into vegetables. It seems to toughen it. 5 comes in important 'When all vegetables are tender, put the meat in the centre of a hot platter and pile the vegetables around it. It doesn't need gravy. A little lemon juice on the cabbbage is very good. Jack Sprat may have a big serving of the meat and potatoes and a small helping of the other vegetables. Mrs. the cabbage, carrots, turnips and onions and a tiny potato with a small piece of meat. The platter 1s empty and both are satisfied. Jack gained Spratt will now want all the rest of This find of pheasant's eggs in nest on Petef Graham's farm, Grimsby, Ont., indicates plentiful supply of the birds In Niagara Peninsula this fall, -------------------- friends about It, which is a good plan when you need courages to keep at it, for above all, if you start, stick to it. A few months soon passes after which you may increase your intake to a maintenance diet after you are suf- ficiently reduced. The maintenance diet is the amount of food taken in which will keep you normal. You will find you wil not have the desire to go back to your old way of eating after you have reduced and you will feel so much better if you reduce in this sow] and natural way. Before the article, 'What is a Cal- orie?" appears next week, paste these headings on a page by themselves in your note book for easy reference, then enter each item with its calorie value in average helping quantities, Make similar headings for meats; fish, dairy products and--eggs, soups, | fruits, bread, breakfast foods, etc. candy and patries, pickles and sauces, nuts, (Unless otherwise stated, the food applies to quantity when cooked. H. means average helping. 1 Example Vegetable Quantity of a. h. Cal. value carrots 4 h. tablsps. 25C uncooked lettuce 1; solid head 20C Recipe -- Consumme (Is not fattening but is satisfying) 2 Ibs. steak beef, 2 tsps salt, 2 lbs, veal, 2 cloves, 1 marrow bone, 1-3 tsp. thyme, 1 carrot, 1 bay leaf, 1 turnip, pepper, 5 stalks celery, water, 1 onion. Cut meat, brown halt rest of the bone and meat into water. Heat slowly and simmer 3 hrs., skim- ming sometimes. Add the vegetables chopped. Season and cook slowly 1 hr. then strain, cool and emove fat. Clear it by putting in slightly beaten white of egg, egg shell and lemon rind. Boll two minutes, simmer 2 minutes and strain through a cheese cloth. Chicken may be added or substituted with veal. > li | il) 5 1] "Old. man Cayne makes a great dis- play of his wealth." "You're wrong again." "How do you know?" "I'm an assessor in the tax depart ment." a My Wife Trusty, dusky, vivid, true, With eyes of gold and bramble dew, Steel-true and blade-straight, The great artificer Made my mate. Honor, anger, valour, fire; A love that life could never tire, Death quench or evil stir, The mighty caster Gave to her. an ounce, His wife lost an ounce. Next week you will start to learn how to count 'calories which makes one feel something definite is going to be accomplished. : Since you are in earnest about re- ducing perhaps you have told your Teacher, tender, comrade, wife, A fellow-farer true through life, Heart-whole and soul-free, | The august father Gave to me, --By Robert Louis Stevenson. | And the song of the thrush 2 qts. cold | of it on its own fat; put that with the | , doing nothing? Ever a Song There is ever a song somewhere, my dear; | | There is ever a something sings al- property. skies are clear when the! skies are grey, sunshine grain; the robin trills in the orchard tree; in and out, when the eaves drip rain, The swallows lessly. The And And are twittering cease- There is ever a song somewhere, my dear, Be the skies above or dark or falr, There is ever a song that our hearts may hear-- There is ever a song somewhere, my dear-- | There is ever a song somewhere! There ls ever a song somewhere, my dear, In the midnight black, or the mid day blue; # : The robin pipes when the sun is here, And the cricket chirrups the whole night through; The buds may blow and the fruit may grow, 1 And the autumn and sere; leaves drop crisp the snow, 'There is ever a song somewhere, my dear. 3 A James Whitcomb Riley -- rat Doiag Nothing Is there anything more boring than To be condemned to an existence of worklessness must be the height of misery. Yet there are many people who positively pray for a life of doing nothing. Such a life is surely no life at all. It these lovers of doing nothing had any gumption, they would realize it is but the beginning of the end. They little realize that such an aimless existence speeds death. It may not be obvious to thelr lack of vision, but surely enough the end of things is gradually stealing over them. It must be so, because a workless life 1s a dead life. In these days, more work than ever is needed. If people will not work, there is no justification--hard as it may sound--for their existence. Those of us who spend our days building up the world by hard apd unremitting work view with some impatience those who delight In doling nothing. Unfortunately, there 1s too much tendency to pursue that delight. Peo- ple who are lazy are, to say the laast, a nuisance. nb st ttm PATHS As ships at sea, a moment together, when words of greetings must be spoken, and then away upon the deep --s0 men meet in this world; and I think we should cross no man's path without hailing him and if he needs giving 'him . supplies.--Henry Ward Beecher. tructible things world is the hair thats on' your head. "Hairs may forsake you. Hairs may turn gray. lovers 'locks of hair have been found | But whether the sun, or the rain, or Lovers' Locks Date Film Record Made Back to Early Era Chicago.--One of the most Indes in the whole wide But did you know that] bulletin of that organization just made public. - In a survey on the many usages to which various kinds of hair have been adapted in the modern home, Miss Lee is of the opinion that no modern house- hold could properly function without this every-day necessity. Human hair may have a sentimental value. But it is of little commercial use, Miss Lee finds. Most manufac turers use blended cattle hair for their products, "Such hair pads the pit! lows of your couch with a resiliency | that will not mat down like jute or ordinary vegetable fibre substances," the bulletin states. "When used as ozite it cushions rugs and carpets and doubles the life of all floor coverings. Hair deadens noise as an acoustical It insulates against both cold and heat and has wide application ay; | There's the song of the lark when te, in the fields of science ,art and indus- try. "Hair as a padding fills out sags in | shoulders of coats and other garments, | Indian. showers across 'the It makes seeming six-footers out of be with the Indian scouts of friendly | shrimps. It is used for brushes, robes and hats, It grows even after death. | | When ozonized it becomes as sterile | as breakfast food and next to granite wears longest." | But a hair in the soup will start a war any time, just as a blonde hair on' the shoulder of a brunette's husband has frequently made her hustle to the divorce courts, the huiletin concludes.' r | ™ "A dumb-bell is not even a (fair- minded Nell." | a Airman Talks By Phone In Air to Amy Johnson | New York.--Capt. Lewis Yancey, fly- ing 5000 feet over the airport at Buenos Aires, talked for 20 minutes | with the radiotelephone station at , Sydney, Australia, more than 14,000 | miles away, on July 28. Captain Yancey spoke with Miss Amy Johnson, whom he congratulated on her flight from England to Aus- ; tralia, and with the techunical chief at the station. The conversation was heard distinctly and was said to have established a new distance record for telephoning from an airplane in flight as well as being the first public de- monstration of radiotelephona be- tween Buenos Aires and Sydney. | The voice was transmitted from the International Telephone & Telegraph | Corporation's radiotelephone station | at Buenos Aires to its station at Ma- drid, where it was transferred to the land lines of the Spanish Telephone Company and the French Government ag far as the English Channel. A sub- | marine cable carried it to England and the British Post Office land lines took it to the radiotelephone station at Rug- by, which put it through to Sydney. PUSSIES NERUAR "Men and women of all creeds know that religion 1s lived and not argued about."--Abbe Ernest Dimnet. Mutt Takes His Without Musie. excuse Mme, Bux I GOTTA dees ™e B M-M-MUTT, EoR THe LOVE OF MIKE, WHAT'S -RIG IDEA? MUSTN'T I FORGOT ™ TAKE MY 'DAILY DozeEN' THIS MORNING AND THe Doc SAYS T MY GXGReISE! NEGLECT Of Sign Language Indians Converse in Sign Language at Big Gath~ erings Princeton, NJ.--The white man who {3 sald to possess the most come dating back to the early Christian era, prehensive knowledge of th and that wisps of the same substance | language of the EO nd ses have been unearthed from the mummy | tombs of Egyptian kings?" writes | Adela Lee, director of the Household | Government which will Economics Service Council in the June il Se produced begin soon the preparation of a per- manent record for the United States in part by means of talking pictures. The man is Major-Gen. Hugh Ia Scott, one-time chief of staff of the United States Army, now retirea from military service and at present chairman of the Highway Commis | sion of the State of New Jersey, whe for many years has made his home in Princeton. While much of the work will be done in the East, General Scott Im tends to make a trip to the Blackfoot regervation in Montana, where he will lavite Indian representatives from a dozen tribes to meet in order that the common sign language which they all speak may be recorded by motion pictures. General Scott, who many times has been sent by presidents om difficult and delicate diplomatic missions among the Indians, told how he first became interested in Indian philology more than 10 years ago. "It was in 1876," he said, "that { first began to study the Americas As a young officer, I liked to tribes who on expeditions would travel 10 or 15 miles ahead of our detachment, because by living with them I learned to understand the In dian and what he wants. "I found that the language of the plains was not a vocal language at all, but a sign language which waa common to all tribes east of the Rocky Mountains and south of the 3askat- chewan River to eld Mexico "This I found was a rich, expressive language which was much older than white man's civilization in America-- a simple language devoid of all gram- mar and parts of speach. All expres. { slons of thought In the {n'ertribal language ara expressed hy gestures of the two hands. The language (a based fundamentally upon limitation of arts and qualitiec at which tha Indian Is tinguishing. "There ara some 56 Indian lan guages In America Norih of Mexico and more than 300 dialects. so when Indians met Indians with whom they could not converse by speech they learned to master a language of Signs which was thoroughly understandable to all. "The Indlan today has sisn-wo~ds for every modern thing any Indlaa | of the plains can meet an Indian of | different dialect ani tetk fluently with | him about atrplanes, automobilss and radio. When the Indians of a dozen diffarent dialects meet me on the Blackfoot Reservation for the record ing of the lagguase In moving ple tures, without ever having seen A movie' camera with sound apparatus, they wil talk among themselves about it" particularly gifted at dis mms lias atin | Lindbergh Explains Attitude to Press New York.--Col. A. Lind- bergh's views on the responsibilities | of the press were described in an ar- | ticle in the cerreuc sue of Editor and Publisher, and hLis refusal to co-oper- ate with certain nawsepapers who, In Charles his estimation, are guiliy of "invading the private rights ot citleens, fa ex- plained. > The article, which was based on an bergh by interview with Co'ousl I | Marlen Pew, queted tne filet 2s say- | ing he believed thé coust ive press should be interested in "tulags, ideas and ideals,' 'and that, as "a matter of principle," he could not co-operate with newspapers that "have no serious purpose." Colonel Lindbergh "draws the line strictly," Mr. Pew wrote, "between the right otf the press to report his ac tivities as they relate to the scientific development o fair travel and what he calls personal curiosity. He said he valued and deeply appreciated the 're markable liberality' of the press In support of what he terms his 'work'." ey A Gentleman "You meet the greatest gentlemem where you least expect, says Lord Lonsdale. "A gentleman is a gentleman, ne matter what he Is. "It is not In the birth of the mam, but what 1s in his mind. "So long as a man does what ls right in any walk of life, sport or otherwise, then that man is & man and a gentleman." a-------- ------ Water Makes Crops In the production of one Sahel i wheat nature uses over studies of soll moisture and orop pres ction by experts of the partment of Asgleutury EAA re "We are what the foraought of ! of forethought of onr 3 Jat, us"--Benito Mussolint. Barber Raving : * Js WW 'you have anything on " Tye finished, eir® 1 dossu't seem likely." tons of water. This is but one of ; very Interesting facts disclosed 5

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