Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 20 Apr 1939, p. 3

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Teach Em Music | Before Theyre 5 . Extensive Possibilities For Musi. cal Development Lie In - Small Children. The extensive possibilities for musical development in small chil dren were revealed last week by Miss Ethel Proctor, of. Sarnia, to: the Child Study Club, Before Five," she traced the musi: cal inclinations. fn children, from the first Impressions of infants. to their musical laughter, later thelr recognition of-melody. Soon, in the speech, they learn pitch, volume,' tone and time, All sounds, like the mewing of a kitten and the whistl. ng ot birds, are harmonious to the : ittle people, she sald, "Up to the age of elght or ten, * sho sald, it is difficult to judge the éxtent of a child's musical ability, = _ for such development is very Ir » A regular, It {s modifjed by environ. ment, and thérefore the adults in the home should cultivate beauti- ful speaking volces, and pleasant laughter, and give the child oppor- tunity of hearing a limited amount ot good music at a very early age before final: music lessons com: mence. ©. _ ey Australian Premier Dies Suffering from a. complicagion of ailments following a heart attack, Prime Minister Joseph . Lyons of Australia succumbed to his last illness. His death is mourned, by friends all over the Empire. Disease Afraid Of Cleanliness vihole 'Category Q Of Human [l1- nesses. Are Banished By Soap And Water ~The sources of diseaso are part: ly In the habits of the individuals, We ave well on the way to getting our-environment under control, fn - ~ other words, we are tearnfng how = to be collectively clean, Collective cleanliness has banish. ed a whole category of ills -- those queer devastating diseases various: 1y described in old books' and re- cords as slow fever, putrid fever, -jall- fever, ship fever and so on. 'Those diseases were dirt diseases. They began to disappear with. the | ' t . eee A SENOS 56 application of sanitary regulations, and the manufacture of soap on a large scale. The provalence of diseases that ------ 'require Aan_insanitary environment foor thelr propagation; --such-_ as. cholera, typhus, plague, dysenfery and malaria, has dropped enorm- ously {n the last-centruy. and water cleanliness of the person and the home, the efforts of _the public. health department are gravely handicapped. Soap and water. are front line weapons in the fight ag- alnst disease. * India Revising Marriage Laws ! +. Abolition Of Dowry System Is Being 'Pushed ~The Province of Hihar's Assem- bly (india) has :sent to a select committéo a private blll prohibit. Ing dowries, the extortion of which > "when, marriages are being negotiat. ed. _§3 "often" "protested by Hindu speakers , in, many parts of India, 'Btrict Hindus consider it a dis: grace to have. daughters unmar- , Hed, and {t is alleged that bride- grooms' relations demapd a fat dowry before the ceremony takes place, a demand that cannot. be _ evaded. Women members "supported the, bill, attacking the pressure put on brides' parents and asserting that the dowry. ald not benefit . the young pebple but was wasted, in ex- . teavagant marriage ceremonfes. Some reformers doubt the bill's effectiveness. They «LY a better - remedy {3s to abolish the.prajudice co SARs a daughter's earning her n lving and agafost marrying . outside. one's caste, . Laundry Tips.--Before you put new curtains intd the washer, soak them in four tablespoons of salt to. each four cups of water. Speaking an fh diboct: "Musto [Golden Téxt -- "A man Is not. Ju | "mixed blos1 with théir food. Tone Sebo Lesson .~., LESSON IV Paul Wins Recognition For Gentile : CHRISTIANS Acts 15:1-35; Galatians 2:1-10 Printed Text, Acts 16: 23b- -29; Qal, 2i1,2,9,10° ified by the works of the law, but through falth In Jesus Christ," Gal, 2:16. . The Lesson In Its Setting Time, ~ The council in Jerusal- em was held in AD, 61; Paul wrote his letter to the Galatians about AD. 57, Place. -- The council of Jerusal- em was held, of course, in the great center of Jewish lite, the Holy. City, Jerusalem, which twen- ty years later was to be ulterly destroyed. The Antioch of this les- son was located on 'the Orontes River, In Syria. The ghurch at Antioch determin. ed, with great wisdom, to send a group of their members, together with Paul and Barnabas, up to the _ city of Jerusalem to discuss with the apostles and elders there this ~ entire question, In Accord With One Another 23. The apostles and the elders, brethren, unto the brethren who aro of the Gentiles In Antloch and Syria and Cilicia, greeting, 24, Forasmuch as we have heard that certain who went out from us have troubl:d you with words, sub- verting. your. souls; to whom we gave no commandment; 25, it seomed good unto us, having come to ono-accord, to choose out men and send them unto you with our beloyed Barnabas. and Paul, 26. men that have hazarded their lives for the name-of our Lord Jesus Christ. At the beginning of the Je- rusalem conference Paul and Bar nabas were being severely criticiz- Jed by some members of the Jerus- * alem.church; now they are spoken of as "our beloved Barnabas and Paul". The intention of tho whole letter is to show the honor which the church in Jerusalem felt was due lo these missionary laborers. 27. We have sent therefore Ju-' das and Silas, who themselves also shall tell you the same things by word of mouth 28. For it scemed' good t~* the- Holy Spirit, and to us, te-lay upon ~ You no greater "burilen than these necessary things. They "boldly treat -the- Holy Spirit a3~one 'of thelr number, a fellow«counselor, who unites with them in the announce- ment of a joint conclusion, What a radical revol tion w-old = "e pa in all church assemblies if the senso of the Sp" ° rresence were actually felt, and it everything were said and done as in his pres- ence . , .-Perhaps no one lesion ----among all those taught in this book is designed to leave a more deep nl lasting impression." 20.-That--ye ¢bstain (rom things --saerificed-to h'----. This question of what to do in regard to meat offer- ed to idols often troubled the early "church, It these Gentile Christians standing 'in the liberty - wherewith Christ had made them frec, should _be_found eating meat offered to tdols, which was an abomination to the Jews, they might thereby keep as their 'Savior; end, while they bad a right go to eat tL. church at Jerusalem urges them that 'they de not stand on their own rights, but think first of their un- saved brethr~r, A~1 from blood, ~The --|- and from things strangled. heathen often dr ~k blood at their _other Jews from accepting Christ -- {dolatrous feasts, and frequently } 'nd from fornicatlon;: ffom which :t ye * keep yourselves, it shall be well with you, Faro ye well, Don't Stand on Rights 1, Then after the space of four- teen years I went up again to Je- rusalem with Barnabas, taking Tit us also with me, 2. And I wont up by "revelation; cand 1 laid before them the gospel which I preach all -among tho Gentiles but privately before them. who were of repute, lest by any means I should be run- ning, or had run, in vain. there is some disagreement among scholars as tg whether this .pisode which Paul now describes [s the samo as that found In the fifteenth chapter of Acts, the opinion of the most to-day is that here, we have two records of the-same-event, Jhis- problem of Titus s-an im- portant_ont, and reveals Paul's real attitude toward . the whole question of conversion, Paul vigor- ously opposed all those who-taught the necesgjty of Jewish rites so far as salvation is concerned. "ut, on: the other hand, 8t' Paul had not serving the law and submitting to circumelsion, it hey only realized that these things werp mere nat- » fonal customs, and even ag relig-' fous rifes, but not as necessary re-- gious rités. He rofused to clrcum- 'cise Titus, for instance, be, ice the Judaizing parly at Jerusalem wore 'insisting upon the absatyre necessity of clrcumclsing the G-: tiles It they were to be :aved. Four Great Men 9. And when they perceived the grace that was glved unto me, James and Cephas and John, they who were reputed to; be pillars, gave to me an' Barnabas the right "While , 3 meat, the | DFR SOA A over New Zealand Cheese, . to the -circumeision. - Would Improve Cheese se Quality Premier Hepburn Sees Oppor- tunity To Offset Loss On - Butter Output The government is taking steps to safeguard the quality of Ontario cheese through improved Super- vision of its manufacture, Premier Hepburn said fn -his budget ad. dréss--imford "thy Legtslature, Canadian cheése 1s selling at premium - in the British market from * which it-recelves its keenest Yom . petition, "At present we cannot Sion butter and compete--therefore ave ery effort should bg put forth to place our cheese industry upon a basis whereby the Jement may be~ filled with a product of quality to equal that of our past seasoms and up to-the expectation of the fmporter," Mr. Hepburn sald. Continued demand at good prices for Canadian cows and heifers in the United States and British mar- kets Is a real compliment to On- tarlo farmers us breeders and feed. ers of purebred dairy cattle, he, went on. --Hlgh butter prices carly in 1938 induced not only importations of butter but caused diversion of fluid milk from cheese factorles to creamerles. The percentage spread in 1938 butteir prices was probably without - precedent, the Toronto wholesale price of creamery butter falling from 36 cents in March to 21 cents in Dateien; National Policy For Agriculture Is Urged By Premier Bracken Of Manitoba--Thorough Or- ganization By Farmers Advo- 'cated -- Means Of Handling Surpluses. The way out of the difficulties facing agriculture in Canada, was declared by Premier John Bracken . of Manitoba, speaking at the East. era Canada Conference on market: ing of farm products to be thorough hands of fellowship that we.should go unto tho Geatile., and they un- James, Peter, John, and Paul -- it was a memor- abl: day when thes-- four nen net face to face, Amongst them they've virtually made tie New Testament and tho Chrlstian el, James clings to the »~=* und embodies™ the transition from Mosalsm (to Christianity. "Peter ia. the man of the present, quick fm thought and action, eager, b oyant, susceptible, Paul holds the fiture in his grasp, and schools the unborn nations. John g.'hers.pres - past, and fu- turo into one, lifting -us into the region of eternal Jife nd love. 10. Only they would that we our- selves should ~uember the poor; _ which very thing 1 was also zeal ous Lo do. " 'The poor' to whom re: terenco Is Lere made were un- doubtedly tie ncedy Christians in Jersualem, ~ Horseback Across Canada. ---- organization within the industry with such support by the Govern. ment of Canada as- would give the industry an opportunity to solve its own problems. "I suggest --that ~organlzation means the development of a nation. al policy for agriculture," he said, a policy that when once it ig form. eq will have the support of those within the: industry, That policy should provide a means of handling agric@iltural surpluses: without fm. them.and a means of bringing . a larger share of the national fncome to that one-third of the(people- of Canada eRzaged In + agrieultural ia- dustry." . Sces Danger to East "=Alr, Bracken, alter declaring that the 30. million acres.of wheat land in the: West formed a potential (danger fo the 17 million acres of farmland in the East, If the wheat' growers were forced to turn to oth- er products, -said that thero was 'an immediate threat to the eccon- omic foundation of Canadian agri culture that would strike Western Canada. {irst, but: it- would strike ~ the East second, and just as hard it it was not solved In the way it was meant to be solved when the _national policy 'of Canada 'was formed 60 years ago. Seaweed For Cattle Now comes the news that Cana: dian seaweed has been proved to be remarkably good for cattle meal, and far away New Zealand has actually come into the market as a buyers-- These farmers of New' Zealand, some of them de- scendants of the men who long ago built a ship and sailed to that country from Nova Scotia, know quite a lot about cattle and about dairying, and we know very well that when they ask for Canadian seaweed; made into meal, they are asking for something that will be a benefit to their already power ful and efliciently conducted in- __poverishing fhose who produced. - Four Copies Kept Of Magna Charta Document Was Drawn Up 724 Years Ago Establishing Legal Rights Of English e, There are four copies of the Great Charter, the document which ostabtished thp legal rights of the people of England 724 yedrs ago. the Common Law of England, the British Empire and of the United States. Tho people: of England were in revolt because there was . No system of law and order and they suffered many hardships and injustices, «The - barons. compelled owed a duty to the. people. The laws wero 'inscribed in Latin oun Windsor Castle, the document was read to King Jolin by the only man present who could read -- Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury who had drawn it up. The King himself could not read or write. He "aftixed his seal on wax, After that' the Charter was taken away and monks and clerks made copies for every important centre, Few wore taken care of. The one preserved «at Lincoln Is believed to be the or- iginal. The King pnt his' seal on cach one of them. Of the three oth- erg in existence, ono is illegible |. owing to fire, another in the Brit- Museum, lacks the, seal, and was partially destroyed © ish tho other vellum Extra Milking Witllout any anne in feeding or management, an extra milking per day will result in 20-per cent. more milk, according to the lowa State college. Usually it does not pay-to milk cows three times per aay, however, because milk is cheap and labor is high in price, relatively speaking. Tests have shown that the greatest amount of Apon--this-document wits gqumded =| ~~ ~ King John to admit that the Crown; "sheepskin, and at Runnymede, near _could not sign his name tq it, so ho - by a tailow who was cutting up oll ) ter the udder is empty, and that a proportionately decreasing am- ount is secreted in the hours that follow before the next milking. Most of the high record producing cows are milked three times per day, and some of them four times. ~ His grandfather, father, uncle, brother and two cousins--having-- been killed following. riding acci-. dents, Johannes J, Erasmus of Bloemfontein, South Africa, has vowed never to ride a horse again, By William. | THis Curious WORLD Ferguson He ONIN GSE, eg HAS AN ESTIMATED RADILIS i OF 3000 MILLITN] A LIGHT VIARS... AND A GA LTT EARS EQUAL TO i Ae gr 3, 000,000, COO 4 MILES, ! NONKEYS WE "WHORLS" ON > "IR PALMS, |. NOT OM THEIR, FINGERS, ~A5 DO HUMANS, [SL] ESTIMATES of the radius of stantly, and various authorities ri tween 2000 million and 20,000 million light- years." photographic evidence to a distance of 500 million light-years, and larger telescopes of the future w into space. 7 the universe are changing" con- X eckon it.as being somewhere be- ! #7 Tdday we have - \ ill enable us to ii netvate farther nite Charlie McCarthy. The story is § | that Vallee will join the Chase & Edgar Bergen and Don Ameche take their vacations. Vallee will carry on his. Thursday. night pro Sanborn Hour on Sundays while. Symphony Orchestra and Menot-. ti opera . . . April 23, 12 Noon NBC & CBC--Tabloid version of Mozart's p.m. CBC--""And It Came to Pass" We 3 pam. 36 Half an .em. 37 To soak flax. young man. 54 He became a dustry of dairying. milk is secreted immediately af- tert : . a : NE XT: To what is the rainbow coloving in a peacock's feathers, 3 . i ~ duce? ] TL inn. : Rl RADIO sl NOTES TF ather of His Country ' : 5 1 a A N D 'N £ Ww ~ HORIZONTAL Answer lo Previous Puzzle 13 El ic unit. Carded MADGE 'ARCHER I Fivst-Presi- _ ----TATMIATZION]. 16 Coffee pot. = ~ dent of the HIE RI COATOF AMG IAL 0 Sit ~18 Moore -- HM A Ea 2 , vw . JUSIA, SEIT]. el INE 20 He gained 0 QUIZ PROGRAMMES teen weeks during the summed. "George ---- [AES E PE U BIEIA fame as « it ! a CP bags hoes The more interesting one will star Ba. . cITHR TIEINES[T w Small fan 8 i such an integral part of radio ¢n- i. obtain 11 Liauid par ] 21 2] Sma ap. -- ry? raiment Un as ver or fo | Brees Meredity woetatte |! vl oicipl ORSMTIQRGINON 3 iad on -that- their important place in the Gilled "Prosecuting. Attorney." 15 Money. 2 BIAINIS BID AlClE O SITIAIR p= 0% 4 programme schedule is now freely ou other will star ar Tone 17 Wrath, C COMRIES HP OAA em acknowledged 4s permanent, Cas a pod: doctor face to face 18 Evergreen +s ARITIMPIA INJAIL 20 Lon ne - Thes radio games-began-with ~~ 5 = Fen) BOLT eon, Wang CICIAITIE BALLS] 27 Meadow ; "the simple spelling bee. As they J hy Th tend ES 0 oy : 19 Makes luue. clop AE C 5G Li) 2 Don in "gained in popularity so they be- 15. the tentalive date. 20 To observe. RIL ! TER Kio 1- § To ie) BY oo came more elaborate, . Now ideas | SOR 21 Slum. E[NIAIVITID EIS 3 ay % are being thought out so fast that psi ine I. Zuolling. 39 Street. man of -----. - 35 Threat. competition is keen in the race to TO BE HEARD . ©. Apiil 2 a 10 Swimming VERTICAL 37 To tear produce a_mental test" which will | 00 pm, CBC--Bowling Chan. 24 Upon. organ of a 1 Grief. stitches. be as interesting and novel to the pionships from Toronto . . . 8.30 1 25 Skillet. a "2 Stranger: 38 Mother. _ studio audience as to the listéner p.m. CBC---Miss- Trent's Children 26 Chest bone. 41 Wedlock. 3 Withered. 39 Nose noise. and.in.which the listener-cap take |" 9 p'm. CBC & CBS--Orson 27 Tennis stroke 46 Divided. 4To hasten. 40 Fright. as active a 'part as those in: the Welles' Playhouse . . .-Aptil 22, 28 Measure of 48 Stir. - 5 Within. 41 The hand. studio, 4.00 p.m. NBC & CBC--Club Ma- _.area. © 49 Blue grass. 6 To smile 42'To scatter. _. AROUND THE DIAL tinee . . . 5.30 p.m. CBC--Satur- 29 Prophet. 50 Furnished broadly. 43 Road. A 'rumor of unusual interest, . day Matinee... 9 p.m. CBS--Phil 30 Action. with rattan. © 7 Gastropod. 44 Evils, ; --which-looks-like becoming ndefi= |~ Baker .. . 10.00 p.m. NBC-Red--- 32 Inlet. 51 Trumpet -8 Bone. 45 Land right. possibility as the - summer Arch Oboler's Plays . . . 10.00 33 Snaky fish. sound, 9 Short letter. 46 French coin. "schedules are mapped out, is that p.m. NBC-Blue & CBC --- NBC 34 God of war. 53 He was a 10 Crude. -. i 47 Beam. nN Rudy Vallee will substitute for 35 Insane. as a 11 War fiyer. 49 Postscripl™ 51 To exist. 52 Exclamation, 12 Permanently attached. YorkbPHilaTionic Symphony . . . Pictured as she arrived in" Monts: real is 25-year-old Mary Bosan- quet, of Devizes, Wiltshire, Eng. Miss. Bosanquet will spend a vaca- tion in Canada by making herway eastward from Vancouver astride a cow-pony, taking the best part of seven months for her trip. --C.P.R. Photo gramme and stay in Hollywood for the summer. If true, the moye will double his salary and keep him working twice as hard. Winners of the nation- wide drama contest inaugurated by the CBC last November 1, will be an- nounced during the first week in May. The four best plays will be specialy "produced over the Ca- nadian network, The authors will get handsome cash prizes, in ord. er of merit $2560.00, - $150.00, $100.00 and $50.00. 'Ambitiods Canadian playwrights have. sub- mitted more than 200 original scripts, Tws' new dramatic serials are being considered by NBC to re- place Bob Hope's show for thir- 8 p.m. NBC & CBC Carthy and the Chase and San; born Hour . , House String Quartette .. p.m. CBS--H. V. Kaltenborn toed April 24, 11.45 a.m. NBC & CBC -- Dr. William L. ting the Most 'Out of Life" . . . 12,15 p.m. Farm Programme Se. & CBC ~#eccil B. De "Mille's Radio Theatre ". . Marek Weber in "Bohemia" " April 25, 9 p.m. CBS & CF RI - We, the People © . . p.m. NBC & CBC---- One Family -- 49.30 p.m. sic by Faith . . . April 27, p.m. Mutual-----Running of the Blue - Grass Stakes from Lexington, Ky. Varieties. REG'LAR FELLERS--{ Up to Date "Don Giovanni" . . . PE (] CCE) [a AN Ca ON (TO (2 CBS & CBC-- New 4 - 6 > 1 : % Charlie Mec- " 19 9 p.m. CBC--Hart 20 E 10.30 J 7 ra Stidger's "Gel- = 29 R CBC--Ontario Region 30 | '3 53 A pom, CBS [| 34 + 10.00 p.m. NBC-- 3 [| 156 April 26, 8 0 y BA Man's . i CBC--Mu--- 7 4.30 4 50 é 8 p.m. NBC--Rudy Vanes 53 Si J By G GENE BYRNE ES WHO'S THIS LITTLE FELLOW, PINHEAD? ° HE LOOKS LIKE A NEW PLAYMATE / ' AAT Ta v a Fan! THIS 15 A SIGHTSEEIN TOUR, MOM/ THIS FELLER 15 PAYIN ME A PENNY JUS' TO LOOK. AT OUR CELLAR 'NATTIC MY. GOODNESS / HAVENT WE BETTER - LOOKING ROOMS IN " THE HOUSE TO SKOW HIM THAN THOSE 7° * YOU DONT KE ren RRR on, MoM THIS hl y L FELLER HAS NEVER i SEEN A CELLAR CA OF A AN ATTIC 1! IN 2 ; HE WAS a °° "UP IN 2 T AILER! »

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