Ontario Community Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 7 Jan 1931, p. 7

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4 V : ! \ Qiome Chats By . MMQEAN'N BEST Sunday School Lesson Edison Presented ! 20 Million Year II/'j.! /"\ L* * \1T 1 With UCStlOnnairC WOOd " often break down in earlv life, be-' cause, being strong, they are tempted to over exertion. Jesus was a strong,! " sturdy, active boy, full of life, yet!.-. -.-, ' ML T c j using his strength in helpful and wise) LJecIares 1 hat Inventions or .Northern Alberta lar oands A New Year's Suggestion | "-ver it is pos.-lhlc to give it. The oM Speak h r,hade more ki:nlly than the proverb "Do as you would be done by." a:' before, still holds good and is as true as in Pray a little tftaaer, love a little more. \ Wen days. On stariiujt out in the Cling a 'mile closer to the Father's ^'sw Year of 13^.1 ivmeniiier your love: tiiwn. Be loyal. Thu- !i?f aelmv shall grow likei to th l:?f :ibove. A Subscriber. IT i- The Little Town ' (!od must have loved the Twilight Hour Story Chapter 6 What Mamma Hen Did About fummur ; -nple fer He made so many! The the Cold Wind next morning Mamma Hen o( them. Likewise He must love that little tcwn for He made so many oC them ac>> its popularity grows since the automobile makes it more and more pr.--<ihle to enjoy rural life no matter what the occupation. Is is ar.y wonder that many people thought perhaps it wonld be warmer outside after the nice warm bright sun would come up, for she wanted to give her babies some fresh air and take them out of the barn. So as soon aa they were wakened up and each little baby stretched Itself and flitt- prefer th* little town to the congest- ' 'ered its tiny wings they all started <*1 city ::h its crowded streets filled I ou to U near the big burn door. They with btrer.cers. its hurry and the deaf- *' er8 Hcmtchlitg around in the straw euing nc:** of traffic. It feels good to finding little tiny stones to eat. For return to the quiet ami clean fresh air miud y w chicken* like stones to eat of the !it-!e town where everyone with the rest of their breakfast. Their know* Avvvyone else. It is true Mrs. i little stomachs are different from ours Grundy f/'metimea allows her tongua ' because they eat them to keep their to be a fttle sharp at times, but peo- ' "le stomachs from aching. But if pie are mr,tly kind and considerate. ' w ate these little 3tones we woul(1 Kven -M:-. Grundy. during a crisis. ! have s stomach ache, wouldn't we? turns ic with a willing desire to help then the door opened and the if occa<-!f n demands it. j farmer man's boy. Billy, came and The nwi-hy meadow and woodland , opened the door to get George, the are quickly -reached if de-sired where' e - f tlm he saw the^chickies. the plump little gray squirrel with hi.s | saucy ern-t plume, balances himself high CD a topmost branch, gently owayintr with the breeze and busily eating a :iut precariously nipped off from th- very end of a twig. Oh. lit- I'.-i gray -inirrel, you too have your troublts, but who would guess it, see- Ing you gaily swinging there. The gentle roll of the far off hill slowly comes to view, as the warm sun's rays quietly di-pel the mist, saturated with the atme-i>here o fthe fresh country air. How good it makes one feel to breath it in and rest the eye on the hill's cm tain of green. lime he came iu, don't you re- member? they hurried and hid under Mamma lien before he saw them. But this time they were not so much afraid. When Billy saw them he laughed like everything because they were so cute; not loud though, for he didn't want to frighten them. Ifi al- ways best not to make much noise when little shy birds or animals are around, isn't it? For they are just an afraid of you if you make a big noise a you would be afraid of a big horse it all at once it would jump around and stand on its hind legs. But. Billy knew how to act with the"e But if we have a preference for the e babies, for early in the summer little town and enjoy the privileges they had a lot of them running around whtcb it offers, it is also up to us to ' witn their Mamma Hens. In every possible way. AI- 1 He said: "Well. Mamma Hen, you support . * are Uie merchant, farmer, were a foolish chicken to hatch out d M-tor. :;=wyer. editor, clerk, house- four poor little chicks so near winter wife, etc. \\e are one of tke?e. each ' time. How are. you going to raise hi* or her livelihood. them. I'd like to know, for it is cold Then 11 create community happi- outside even now? you are ss our support is needed at every not a very good Mamma to have little turn to fc*p the- wheels going smooth-) chicks this time of year. Why. all the lv. Sercetime. thoughtlessly per- other chickens were litlle long ago." bajM. it is felt a few cents can be Mamma Hen began to think she was saved by going to the city, which, by foolish too. and wished she had spoken the way. is more than eaten .up in to the older Mamma Hens instead of gasoline -o carry us there. It is even running off by herself. Now. because f.Mind to ;:enuoiitly happen that things she acted like that, she didn't know can be brnieht cheaper at. home than, what to do with her babies. Yes. I'm in the c!;y. At any rate, what does ' just sure these little chickens really tli- until taring amount to anyway didn't have a very good Mamma. uhen - consider (hut to exist the Next Week 'The Cold^Wlnd and sni.iil t, :!> needs our support where- the New .Mamma." New Air Stamp Very Distinctive Color or" Smaller Denomina- tions Changed to Agree With World Postal Requirements toric chapel at drand Pre, X. and the well of Evangeline. The one- dollar stamp is dark green and bears a picture of Mount Edith favell in British Columbia. A prairie scene is used in Ihe red iO-cent stamp. It shows grain being reaped by modern machinery. In the background are main elevators. The Quebec C'itadel is i>ortrayed on the dark grey 12- cent stamp. The ten-cent stamp, January 11. Lesson II. The Child- hood of Jesus Luke 2: 40-52. Gol- den Text Jesus advanced in wis- dom and statute, and in favour with God and man. Luke 2: 52. The tarly Church oved to invent and ix-11 stories of the childhood of .Je-n!s. .dany of these have come down to us in the so-calle 1 "Apocryphil Gos- pels"; dreary and untdifying leading; they nuke for the T.ost pan, and they bear .heir incredibility on the face c-f them, ""his story of the boy Jesus, argruing with the doctors in the Tempie is the only narrative of his boyhood preserved for us in the Gospel.?, and there is nothing improbable about : :. In the boyhood stories given in the "Apocryphal Gospels," the writers are anxipu* to show that his divinity manifested itseif, evei.in his earliest years, by the amazing, and often gro- b sque, miracles which he is said to have accomplished. Here, however, the writer seems to wi.-h us to under- stand that his divinity shewed itself in his being a good son of his parent-., and in his wonderful character and spiritual insight. The occasion of this story seems ., be a special visit t,- Jerusalem in Jesus' thirteentn year, when he would undergo a ceremon., which was some- thing like a combinatijn of coming nf age and of confirmation, or reception, into full Church membership: he be- came, in the phrase which the Jews still use, "a son of the Law." It was. therefore, for him a great ano" mem- orable occasion in his life. He would partake of the Passover meal with his family. The ceremonies attendant on the Passover lasted a f uil week, but only on the first two davs were worshippers obliged to v ; sit the Temple. On the thiH day, therefore, most of those who h<d come from n distance would retuir hcme. for there was little to detain them. We may assume, therefore, that on the third day Joseph and. Mary took their de- parture, and supposed, it seems, that Jesus was somewhere in the caravan. There was no synagogue or school building in the Temp e, but from time to time lectures wtre given there by the rabbis; some of these would deal with technicalities of ihe Law, and t/e intended for thos-e who were making a professional study of it. Others wou!d be of a simpler and practical kind, where, doubtless, questions from the audience and free discussion of diffi- culties would be allowed. Jesus, who was now a "son of the Law.' 1 woulu certainly be admitted. Imagination likes to consider what questions Jesus may have asked, and what may have been his responses to draw forth the astonishment of the hearers. We can easily suppose that into some discussion upon a matter of ritual or legal detail he might inter- ject a question, or saying, penetrating to the very heart of religion. I ut this is only guess work. Jesus' answer to his anxious parents may be translated. "Knew you not that I must be about my Father'.} busi- n<-<-." or "Knew you not that I must be in my Father's house." On the whole, perhaps the former is morj probable, but the meaning might be, simply, that, of course, he would ba found in the Temple. The passage does not necessarily or even naturally. imply that Jesus supposed God, and not Joseph, to be 'tis Father, nor can we say. with any confidence that even in his boyhood he knew himself to be the Son of God in some unique sense. We speak sometimes as if we knew just what passed in the mind and soul of Jesus but the Gospels are reticent about his self-consciousness; his inner life was "hidden" in God, and must always be mysterious to us. None the less, the passage suggests a considera- tion of great importance. It suggests that to Jesus, even as a child, God w:is ways with the result 'hat his body wa- , wholly free from disease, and in the' full powers of his manhood he was' capable of great exertion. He took i a valuable instrument for the ,-arrvin* the Future Will Be In Health Field Xew York. Thomas A. Edison said the future will be in the Held of Contain Most Ancient Deposit Ottawa. The oldest deposit of p re- served wood in the world, in age esti- millions , out of the great tasks of hi* public hpa!tl1 and tllat will ministry." mated between 15 and JO be | years, has Iwen discoverert by Cana- dian Oovernnieut engineer-) at For? What New York Is Wearing BY AXXABELLE WORTHINGTON fd Dffn.tinlci)ig Ltason Fur- niahed With ><>;)/ Pattern biologists and chemists. Mr. Edison replied to a qnostlou- j Ill-Murray in Xorthoru Alberta. S. C. naire from the Review of Reviews. Edison himself i-j :';ITIVHIS for !iis ques- tionnaires. "Sickness is pretty hard OH the workman now," said the S4-year-old wizard. "It's hard for them to get a good doctor, and proper care is ex- pensive. There is tno much sick- :ie-.*. Sonn-f.'ii!!.; wi';! hav- ',, 'ie done about it, and that is wlitre Klls. an engineer in the federal depart- ment of mines and internationally known as an expert ou bltiiniin depos- its, made the find which geolou.-^i claim to be one of the most import am scientific discoveries in ivoent years. Deep- in ths far lamed fort McMiir- ray tar sands, the wood has lain for millions of years. Sealed tight from and chemistry come in." , tlle devastating effects of air. \Vuea Here are some of the question:, and > im , ml)ed last Summer, it was found "wan , |, e j,, perfect pr^ervation. Tha Q.-Do you think your work would K1 . nw th-ringii could be counted iusid be easier if you wer* beginning now with business ready to give money and facilities f,,r r.-^u-.-Hr: A - Y-s. ' even , iny iu!ipl . ts which fed oti t'i I was for 4--. years hustling for pay- ' j p . ( ., es a j (l tt?mler sUoots of the grow- -,,,. -i-t-Hs .>! preserved in the air- Q. Do inventors r.iine from !iec?s- ' (i( , |u t . hami)Br T >,^ leaves, them- sity "The mother of invention" or Sp , V( ^ w>>rt . , lllrtlrtll ^, iu fair ro ,,<H. the trunks; t:i wood might l>e> whit- tled with an ordinary ja.-k-knife; from scieujlrtc curiosity? A. Most inventors work t<> earn money to get tion. Dr. I. W. Bailey of Harvard L'uiver- a modest living for their families. All ! ,. W , R> has )lt , el , t . (H1(ltl( . tiag a se nes they want in enough money to - { m i CPO8cop | c studies of the wood penment wit] . !) ,.. u . Ut . all> . , m , established the fact Death* Due to Overeating > ,| 1Kt at [ ea3t one ^ t ) lM preserved A swagger t'rcck ot' wool jersey Q. Will science tell us to eat le-s. as it has told us to drink less? A. - Eighty per cent, of our deaths are due to overeating. After the i-:- of 21 a large variety and quantity of trees is ot a type that srows today in Japan. Cenlogisl* look upon this as still another link i:i the chain ol evide-ii-e pointing M the establish- ment of the theory ;uat North America food is unnecessary. All those things j and Asia at one time were parts crowd the stomach and cause poisous. <>tie liuee- continen-. It takes courage to learn restraint, > Q f j urass i c p e nod. but all that eating is unnecessary. [ flnd that my weight keeps up on a glass of milk alone, every two hour-. Q. Is there danger that life will grow too complicated, too speedy. with so many new inventions? A. No. People will live up to it. The brain, if used, has enormous capacity. lM ^ A ll " w " lari;e rlve " , aml lodeed People don't he*!,, t,, .uapec. wha t Un sand bars. The log* aad trees wen i;eoU>sists. W!ID !iave lx>eu working ou the discovery say the wood heluuio to the Jurassic period. wliirU ilatea back between 1J and -" million yea'-s In cunstruoting the process of preser vation. the K^.iU^:-.- ^ay t'ne wtxid the mind is capalile of. buried by the action of the waves but Q. i s ' th ere any inherent .lifflcul- " efore "* illatio " ** in ' '"" salld al " in making television as cnainnm -nrbed au inflow of heavy petroleum a* the telephone. A.-Ye*. cost and ! wlrivh was '' l " " ril?in ot Uie ' complexity. Locomotives are pretty . - Northern Alberta tar deposits. At fashionable rust-red shad* shows in- W H developed, but you teresting buttoned front closing thai' w 'ant to buy one and have !t in y. mi- adds a tailored air. i house Just to be different, it gores it* tliat - i bouse, would yon" Ottav.o. A new pictorial issue of j Rreell j,, color, bears a picture of the t" uiadi.li, ': mi>s. conceded by phila- -lists to N? of the highest artistic tjiiality. !t bolus sent to post offices Nf rlie comiry by the depart- The must distinctive production of the groir,'. according to departmental ,.;fu !.:.-. ' Uie new five-cent air mail -M.np. it bears the figure of the \vinged :>i-;vury against a background of the globe with the North and S null A:r.'T;can continents delineat- ed. Tile color is brown. Many ex- pressions of admiration have already i ,i r.v. :V.H! by the department from s;;iv.i> collectors, who describe : a< t/ '.uo-it attractive air mail stamp :-> led by any country. Anotli, -.trilling example of the en- L . over's arl i" the blue ."ni-ient stamp a picture of the Ills- parliamentary library. in the smaller denominations the colors have been changed to a;;ree with International postal conventions, as follows: One-cent, green: two- cent, red: five-cent, blue, and eight- cent, orange. These all bear a por- trait of the King. circular flaring skirt and attaches i' to the hip yoke in deep scalloped ou"- line. The collar and cuff* are of linen. It's so distinctive and so practical. It's simple to make. Style N'o. 'JTO.'l may be had in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 yenrs. The 8-year sizes requires l!' a yards of :j9-inch ma- terial with "-3 yard of 39-inch con- trasting and 'J 1 * yards of binding. It i also very smart in lightweight Poison Gas Not So Deadly Q. Do you think the a:; tweed in brown and white diagonal bombs weave, just like the elders are wear-, ing. It may be worn with a brown 1 the coming thing i:i aviation the best principle so far developed? A. Yes. and it came from Spain. They say that Spain is dead. But that man (the inventnri has the egg ni Columbus. Q. Is it your opinion that poison ias in warfare :s efficient and m.-rci- ful. or a horror to be barred' A. -I think it less deadly than bullets and wouldn't 1 f!tmf time, the bitumiu insulated the buried wood from the air. leaving i; ;.i; of preser- of man forced tha --. :et many millions of years later, t'uriously enough, the basic prin- ciple of the wood's preserve ion, la rot bitiimin. was the *ain<' as taat ftupiuy- Television is like] i:l Us '"i-i"- 1 ' intil tht hand :s heir li-^.ni. Make Further Studies. Th- Dominion Mines Depart m. 'lit iit- ruakiut: fur' her ttelil studies at not rpsort to avoid the real la- Time The dearest friend to we mortals is Time. Wo can make up for a great many bereavements, but the loss of Time is irrevocable. Pauley. Living Words Of our great men l'.i<> not from door to door and out agaiu. But sit within the house. lir-t and foremost the Fathir. To John the Baptist, perhaps, and to the Phai >ees. ho was first or chiefly. Judge, but not to Jesus. The idea that Jestn dunes to save us from the wrath of tiod has little support in the Gospels. But the title' "Father," is open f.o misunderstanding today. According lo some modern ideas, a father should be the jolly and familiar playmate of his children, but Httle removed from a big brother. The Jewish conception of fatherhood was very different: in the New Testament the name. "Father, ' has in it awe and reverence and "godly tVur.'' The Jewish father ruled his household, and his word was law in ,1 way strange to modern democratic ideas. Still, no doubt, not sternness and authority, but mercy, patience, gentleness and love are dominant ; n Jesus' thought of the Father. "Jesus 'waxed strong.' This odd phrase refers to his whole nature., both suede belt. Make the collar and cuffs of white pique with pert bow ot" brown grosgrain ribbon at neckline. Trim the bodice with brown bone buttons. Covert cloth, wool crepe, ehallis [ bor o( thinking." Pointing to It. Mr. prints and tweed-like cottons smart. I Edison said to his interviewers. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. "That is whufj the matter with Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Patten Service. T:: West Adelaide St.. T.>n>n:->. 1'ori Me Murray n-\: Summer and it is jirobah!- :ha. n"oi ( ii;!-.t.-t :':'om - ' Canadian and rnit^d Surns u-.iiver- -i'ies will be invited to participauv On the wall of Mr. Kd;su:i - Bee I In preliminary exruvation work ia-fr in West Orange. N.J.. where :he HUPS- . Summer, tiin luro-sr ir.-e sectit^n '.in- tionuaire was presented, hangs a j earthed was 4" feet in leiigiii with a quotation from Sir Joshua Reynolds: diameter of II in. '[!>*. Dr. Bail.-y of "There is no expedient to which ma:i i H.irvunl University, who i- an author- Plans to Record Speeches Berlin An attempt will be :na,ie to get phonographic records of all , speeches and interruptions to , speeches during the Reich.si.u' ses sions of tha coming year. If the, effort is successful the records will be ] substituted for the stenographic rec- ord of the debates. Many members of tha Reichstag look upon the proposed innovation dubiously, realizing that they will lose the privilege of striking from tha of- ficial record those of their words which on second thought they deem unsuitable. Hut others who are not members of the Reichstag favor the ity ou siji-ii nurters. has attached much importance tu the tlnd that :M has -i4ti::i-ii hla iir.entioti of . ; b'ort Mt-Mnrray tu'xt Sunnii'-;-. In .1 !"tter to Mr. Klis. li- desi-rlhed '.! dis- covery as "a most valuable Mnd. de- serving ,.' -ttuly.' >ay tile tlnd :n.o i or, if not revolutionize, some m. Hit-ill theories on what phehi.-toric vtn-:a- j tion covered this i-outin-ir. I' - M mily known deposit of Jurassic period i vnetation preserved in its 01 and is looked upon as a more ' important discovery than the ;>ety:i-"l trees of Southwest, >r:i Tiiii-ii St.,- 'the si>mi-carboni7.''ii woml found in coul-h-d--. "I'i.i you sjt u 'i , :i 111-1 in'.'" "Yep. Our btiby is :e,:!i;:i_i " Thoughts Thoughts worth repeating will come ID any man if lie will, with patient at- tention, step from thought to thoiiKhr. He may ibiis, happily, climb to a view plan strongly in the bell. ' , .strengthen his own soul, brin S more distrty and Coretnou ana Faaii illto ^ ^.^ ^ I oMives and years. Dog Whip Saves Life Prince Albert. Sa*!;.- - -l"n-rr : .:i j i in of the whiphand of I'larke fli.-'i-y veteran dog-driv-- i- north, re- d-ill iy saved th.' of a 1 raci ir ilrivot- at I.ac '..i Kon-^-- The trac- tor driver was hauling a "swinu" <! lish across I.ac la Kuns". J-m miles north of !iHr. whn tile machine pinned thronuli ,'.ie ire. > uacotjbd tin? loiiji. a:iaky d.'4 wh:j). and whirled i: t.Jwanl the driver, who araspi-i! th < ul \\a-i i mled : -.1 ' MUTT AND JEFF- By BUD FISHhH f r A Non-Stop Flight Across A Sirloin. |MlTT TO PROM fAJTT SIRLOIN l-S GR MoRC

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