yt A \ 'rebellion and fellowship, failure - Image in which he was created "One 'Déctor In His By Rev R. Barclay Warren B.A., B.D. God's Greatest Creation 4 Genesis 2:4-9, 15-22 Memory Selection: The Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul. Genesis 2:7. For the remainder of this quarter our studies will be in Genesis. The Bible begins with a Hebrew word which we trans- late 'in the beginning' or 'Gene- sis'. The book is well named. It records the beginning of the heavens and the earth, darkness and light, life and death, man and woman, marriage and so- ciety, arts and crafts, sin and sacrifice, judgment and mercy, and promise, degradation and redemption, differences in langu- age and much more. Our knowledge of the universe is steadily increasing. The galaxy of the Milky Way, of which our solar system is an insignificant part, is shaped like a dish and has a diameter of about 400,000. _ light-years. A light-year is ap- proximately six trillion miles. With recent sfudies by means of the new Mount Palomar tele- scope we are told that nearly a billion of these galaxies some- times called 'island universes' <- can be seen by means of photo- graphs, We have been learning much in the submicroscopic realm, The infinitesimal atoms with their electrons are as marvellous as the great systems. we can, see. And God made it all. But God's crowning work was man. Man is no revision of the ape but a creature distinct from all others. When God had made man from the earth's dust He breathed into his 'nostrils the breath of life, Man was made in God's image. He could reason and make moral choices. The story, of his disobedience and conséquent fall from the moral we shall see in the next lesson. We shall see also the beginning of God's provision for man's redemption from the curse of the broken law. Truly the mercy of God is from everlasting to everlasting. Through faith in Jesus Christ we can'come bac to happy fellowship with our Creator. LN Signed Cheques "Your Sincerely" Dr. Bethel Solomons, former Irish Rugby international, once managed the famous Abbey Theatre, Dublin, and the actors came to him for their salaries. As he had no ready money available it was suggested that he- should write cheques. Two signatures were required, so he asked the poet W, B. Yeats to sign, and the actors read on their cheques: "Yours very sincerely, W. B. Yeats." Dr. Solomons thinks he must be one of the few men in the world who've heard a famous pianist perform on the harmoni- ca, accompanied on the piano by a famous harmonica player. It happened at a club dinner. Ben- no Moiseiwitsch played several piano solos, then Larry Adler came on to the platform looked around for an accompanist, and asked Benno if he would oblige. "Impossible," Benno said. "Your music is far too difficult." Persuaded to try, he looked at the music, shook his head, again said "No." "All right," said Larry hand- ing him' his harmonica, "you play my instrument and I'll play yours." And after a few trials they launched into a duet! In hs entertaining memoirs, Time," Dr. Solomons tells of a strange ". 'came a devoted husband. experience he had when a wo- man living some distance away consulted him, saying her mar- riage was breaking up because she had no children, and her husband was ill-treating her on this account. She had seen several - gynaecologists, but the outlook was hopeless. Desperate, she felt that she would lose husband and home if she couldn't produce a child, and asked the doctor to aid her in a plan, She told her husband' that she-was going to have a child and his whoe manner changed, From beinga cruel brute, he be- She .arranged to adopt a baby and asked the doctor to put her in a nursing home for her "confine- ment," ordering that there were to be no visitors. He wasn't happy about this, but after con- sulting her clergyman, agreed. At the appropriate time she went to him for two weeks, then returned home with a fine child. The plan was so carefully carried out that there were no complications, and an unhappy marriage was changed to an ideal one, ALL-OVER UMBRELLA--Curtain- like extension of this umbrella's Rison can be raised or owered with a draw string. Invented by Enid Parmenter, of Capetown, Union of South Africa, it's one of hundreds of gadgets on display at the First International Gadget Show. Sold His Beard Hair at a Time "A so-called "holy man," wan- dering round the villages of the Upper Chindwin River valley in Central Burma, did a brisk trade selling strands of his flow- ing beard at around two dollars. each to people who believed that it they burned the hair and drank its ashes in water thay would be protected for the rest of their lives against all disease. It's astonishing what some gul- lible people will believe when they 'are seeking cures for minor ailments. Up to a few years ago' spiders' webs were still being used in some parts of the West of England for healing cuts. Old .people living in the Peak District used to believe that if they shredded horse-radish in a jug and poured hot ale over it, the resultant brew would cure rheumatism if taken three times a day. . A bygone "cure" for a stye on the eyelid was to rub it with a black cat's tail. In some paris of Southern France, poultices were made of swallows' nests. Equally silly was the belief that a piece of string. worn round the waist would ward off sciatica. There was one old Sussex shepherd who always carried a "cramp bone'--the patella bone of'a sheep--to prevent attacks of cramp in bad weather. Devon housewives .of 200 years ago firmly believed that clover dew could be successfully used for the removal of moles on the face. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Cancel 6. Water resort 8. Speck of dust 14 Malignant 4 Fusible pgetimers Fibitne 3. Tardiness 4. Uncle (Scot.) 5. Slow-moving animal 8. Group of five ¥ Donkey 10. Food 36. 21, Gunning 23. Vigor 43, 24. Pronoun 45. Fastener 25. Uncanhy 41. 27. Revere 28. Stirs up, 49. Emblem of 29. Chin. herb 9. Baking 33. Catch chamber Roman suddenly galley containers 11. Otherwise 38. Silencers 18. Annoy 39. Automobile » 1 Knocks address" 42. Musleal instrument Blast of wind Where the i sun séts morning . Ignited . Bottle ton - 17. Leading i 12 1B [4 aviator . 6 9 oI 18. Qutfit 3 . 19. Parsonage | 20. Character in "The Faerle (1 : Queene" $ 22, Canadian 4 1) province ' 7 24. Cubic meter 26. Performed 74 217. Cask. 30. Hotel 32. Riding School 34. Bitter vetch 6 3 Body bone 7. Madness ' 38. Type of fron ry 37 41, Rascal 44. Corded cloth 46. Cold and dam » 48. Border on 49, Consecrate 51. Attitude 62. Comes forth 8. Hardens '84. Small tumor 85. Nulsance Pp OVER 1. Hindu deity %. Enforeer Answer elsewhere on this page, ' / -Lovelorn Captain Forbids Wedding They met during a holiday cruise in the Mediterranean-- a pretty English widow of 23 and a handsome young Irishman, Swiftly they fell in love under the stimulus of sun-drenched days and starlit nights. Then, in the shadows of Pom- peii, with the dazzling Italian sky overhead, he proposed and she accepted. But it was to be a wedding with a difference--the * ceremony was to take place aboard hte liner as she was crossing the Equator. The fellow - passengers were thrilled at this romantic idea; an archdeacon on the ship offer- ed to tie the knot and plans seemed complete," Then the captain stepped in--he was a bachelor who had been disap- pointed in love during his youth. "No wedding will take place on board while I'm in charge," he snapped, ; " So the wedding had to be post- poned. But it took place a fort- night later in church, on shore, with the same archdeacon of- ficiating. Owing to a last-minute hitch in their wedding plans, a Kent | couple had to go to sea to be married some years ago. b The bridal couple had taken their seats in a Ramsgate church when the vicar suddenly dis- covered that the banns had not been read in the bridegroom"s parish--and he straight away forbade the ceremony. The best man, who had served in the navy, then suggested that the couple could be legally n.ar- rled at sea provided the cere- mony-was performed outside the three-mile limit by a skipper holding a Board of Trade cer= tificate, The couple dashed with their relatives and friends in taxis to the harbor where they chartered a large motor-boat under a skipper holding such a certifi- cate. Off went the boat, and the full service was carried out near the East Goodwin lightship -- despite a choppy sea! Cupid sometimes plays strange pranks in connection with ocean weddings. ) An attractive, forty-year-old woman left Liverpool for the United States to marry a school- days' sweetheart. NE Aboard the liner she met a middle-aged stranger and the pair fell in love at first sight. One moonlight night he proposed to her and they were married by a clergyman-passenger before the liner reached America. Her old lover met her and there was an awkward scene on the land- ing stagel . SMALL BUSINESS -- In Com- munist Poland the new} limited freadom from Russia is [illustrat- ed by this aged woman who turns to free enterprise--~wait- ing for customers to weigh themselves on. her scale, in Warsaw. The price is about 20 groszys, or about one penny. Real Scots Thrift Inverboyndie, Scotland. The Scottish Hydro-electricity Board went to great expense in run- ning power lines to the lonely cottage near here of 84-year-old Granny Chrystal. The board brought the new- fangled electricity" to her in linking this little Banffshire vil lage. to the national power net- work, . TA Later the board discovered that Granny had only used five cents worth of electricity in three months, Officials sent to her cottage to investigate = reported that Granny only switched on the current at dusk -- so that she could see to light the kerosene lamps. Don't be a wacky walker -- walk safely, always, warns the Canadian Highway Safety Con- ference, . nest. litter should be . egg sii' #7104 ke 4 F 3 - 58 Pa AYi% t L! = . * * Ai" » . A Sit ia i $F .--- # AS - 3 ' 5 iF ' * $ 4 PL J i fs. 8 Fos o A td SR TT ky R LC} : i340 Ved {ire IR AEN Fo ey Fie > oa hist sl deat con dn DE LUXE HORSE HOTEL--Carpeted with 10 inches of packed dirt over four inches of gravel, portion. of horse barn pictured, above, is only a small part of a de luxe horse hotel for the elite of the equine world now under construction at Yonkers Raceway. Eight 84-stall, two-storey barns will be in the group, "Apartments" on sescond floors will be staggered so that guests walking about above won't disturb the temperamental occu- pants of first-floor "suites". Ramps will lead to the second- storey accommodations. Cost of the project: About $2,700,000. THEFARM FRONT ohn Russell The Minister of Agrciulture, the Right Honourable James G. Gardiner, announced recently that the Agricultural Prices Sup- port Board had been authorized to provide a support price for "Canada First Grade dry skim- med milk. on the basis of a price of 17 cents per pound for spray' process and 14 cents per pound' for roller process, f.o.b, storage at certain designated storage points throughout Canada. The Minister stated that he hoped by introducing this addi- tional support for the dairy -in- dustry that sufficient stability would be provided to encourage . producers to maintain their present production of milk. Con- sumption of dry skimmed milk in Canada is increasing annual- ly so it has been considered de- sirable to maintain approximate- ly the present market price for dry skimmed milk during the spring and summer flush pro- duction period. ° L * * When an egg is first laid it is free from stains. However, as hens are not the most careful of creatures nor the ordinary hen house the tidiest of places its fresh appearance does not last long without protection. Perhaps the most persistent enemy of egg cleanliness is dampness." Stains found on eggs are due to moisture. Wet litter, for instance, is the pad and the birds feet the stamps that put a good many stains on eggs. Ex- cessive moisture in litter is a serious problem in itself but if it can be eliminafed by more Insulation in the house, proper ventilation or suitably managed deep litter, fewer dirty eggs will be one of the general benefits. LJ] * Ll . Best design is also Important . in egg cleanliness. A nest not built to hold litter to at least a depth of three inches should. be remodelled to this capacity. Ample litter helps cover soiling materials and provides a cushion against breakage. Although straw is often the handlest material on the farm it has the drawback of sticking to eggs and it damp causes staining. Wood shavings, available at a low price in many parts of Canada, make an excellent litter, Any changed from time to time. The ratio of hens per nest is also important, the recommended number being not more than five per nest. * - Ld Cleanliness of eggs is such a general requirement that most poultry supply catalogues depict cleaning devices. These range from simple hand buffing pads to .automatic egg 'washing machines with special deter- 'gents. One of the features of the new wire cages with sloping "floors, as well as the modern laying cages, is their ability to reduce the number of soiled eggs. Community nests for which easily read plans are available from the Canada Department of Agriculture, have also found fa- vour with many poultrymen, PEE I Gathering time is when some soiling might occur. Baskets made of wire, either plastic cov- ered or plain, have the advantage of allowing eggs to be cooled quickly but careful filling is re- quired. Considepable cleaning .is necessary if a broken egg runs down through the basketful. The procedure at the Experimental ¥ar mat Harrow, Ont,, is to fasten a small wooden box, a little larger than a half egg case, on' wall in each pen at head level. The eggs from the nests are put in trays in this box until it is convenient to take them to the egg room. A square of cloth tacked to the cupboard top and let hang curtainwise in front acts as a door to keep out dust. Tacked on the bottom of. the cloth is a light strip of wood to keep it hanging in place. Remov- ing eggs from the nest at fre- quent intervals is very import- ant in keeping down the number of soiled eggs and this cupboard is always handy as a temporary holding place. [ * * . With most red varieties of ap- ples, colour development is basically of a striped pattern. On young trees and trees well ex- posed to sunlight, good colour develops, but on old crowded trees poor colour is Xommon. Since apples are graded and sold on a colour basis an eans for increasing colour #8 of great . economic importance, Fortunately, sports or muta- tlons resulting in apples of high colour intensity have been dis- covered for almost .all known red varieties of apples. These sports usually are found as a small branch on a tree, and de- velop from a single bud muta- |' tion. Buds taken from the sport reproduce the colour mutation. Toe [ * The best known red sports are of the Delicious variety, The first two of these were the Starking in 1924 and the Richared in 1926. Since then many red strains of : ' eu J 4 ' pL Fa ¢ .' 2 Lora SIAL erro ' EE I a gh al TERY ET rai a |e A A ka 3 4 A | H = / i (SN 5 ¥. aL How Pioneers Made Hominy Before winter was quite over was when our pioneer grand- mothers made that tasty dish, fried hominy, It was home- butchering season and the per- fect side dish to fresh pork was pearly hominy, fried in the fresh meat well It could be served as a cerefil with milk and sugar for brepkfast, as a vegetable at noon, or combined with honey or sorghum, eggs and milk as a pudding for sup- per. Grandmother had a fire built under the big black "kittle" out- doors to cook her big batch of hominy , . used for making soap and apple " butter. If she had no lye from the store to start _her- hominy she could use the lye water she made by leaching rain water through a hopper of hard wood ashes! The modern cook can use the deep well on her electric range Delicious and other varieties have been introduced. In the last five years a number of im- proved red strains of Delicious have been propagated, most of these being higher intensity colour sports of Starking. Ex- amples of these are Red King, Hi-Erly Red and Bisbee Red. A high colour bud mutation of the Richared is being sold as Royal Red. All of these strains are characterized by early develop- ment of red colour. [] ® * With the McIntosh variety the Summerland Red and Rogers New York Red are blush strains with greatly improved colour over standard McIntosh, and in British Columbia, at least, are almost exclusively planted. Red strains of Winesap have been grown for many years, but solid red or blush strains such as the old Seeando have proved - unsatisfactory because of a ten- dency to russetting and shrivel- ling. It appears today that the best red strains of Winesap are the Improved Seeando and the Ruble Red, both originating from the Mosebar strain. - . the same "kittle" ' for the long, slow cooking and she may prefer to use soda rather than lye, If she wishes to make a reputation with hep hominy, she will use Hickory King corn -- a white corn ralgs ed just for hominy and havi big grains twice the size of tho, from ordinary ears, Select six, or eight ears of white corn having large kernels, Shell and put into an iron' of enamel kettle. Cover with wate and add two tablespoons of bake ing soda. Let stand overnight at least fifteen hours. Drain end wash thoroughly and most the hulls should slip off. Rubb the hominy in a cloth sack he to take off the hulls and blah tips, write Hallle M. Barrow ig The Christian Science Monitor, Add water to cover, two table. spoons of salt and boll v slowly or simmer for four ho or untll the starch is w cooked. As the corn swells, k adding more water to keep wef covered with water. Sho there be a slight soda taste, change the cooking water onos, Test by pressing a kernel be. tween the fingers; it should b® soft. When the grains are do let cool and store in a cove glass or eathenware dish. and she placed the co hominy in a clean white sa not more than a gallon to th "sack. She pinned her sacks ® the clothesline or other cone venient place in the open and allowed the hominy to rema until it'was frozen dry. Then . was stored like dried corn. ~ Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking On Ola] Ow of -||w| Eihw Zi<|OENU|(< Zidjo|<| SHC |~|2 Liniill > | Sllw|wlcl|<iz Wie} --|w WE wi =I E(S]-wwv RHEE NER Er sS H=[z[ull <|O] =H <|-w]n o> wz >| wiz[ule |<] jw wolwnuliliFlwl< Salle] ajwZ| Lo wixXiwlv|3|=|0 Wx Eluwl- 4 Ford PUNCTUREPROOF--Lying on a bed of na ils isn't the easiest thing in the world but fakir Tarha Bey Increases its difficulty by letting two people ride over him on a motor scooter at Paris' Olympia Music Hall. Korat A BARREL OF FUN----Cadets of St. John's Military School try to shake "Cowboy" Sammy Bertram loose in a training session for rodeo riding. A barral sus "broncho", Boys' tugging provides the bucking. pended on four ropas acts os the N | yy ' 23 CANA if RPI ll 8 Ply NR PY, Now grandmother made enough hominy to last weed 0 Fb oto i in a