Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 15 Feb 1923, p. 15

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no t 'v|~`I nst an op- d of smut; inn chuck- spiritual ariarv, are be dennled 15, 1923. - P` 0 LJJULN- Pan. 25, Ff: to. `V `IL I.IJ,. IILPAT- `mar 11 Scott can- the unnot- yjygh or ununn It okal of` y juvene urtgny \ nulynn in THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 1;, 1923, ` ~.~r- '-F1. . . _ A JEWISH coon sAMAR:`rAN . is this a contradiction in term;~"?, It may be. But it is not a contradiction in fact. It is an old-world parable`tran.-daterl into modern actuality, and.` that too by a man who probably never had read_ that wonder- ful old story. ' . L 1 1-. .......un- n n nnnnnn `fI;YI`\ it Jnuritsl ms (nu story. i In answer to a question from 3 Jewish` mu-her of the law, Jesus had given as one The Real Flavour Jane . _...B...u_, 1 given to if he had Canadian true goal underlies cause ' less ._ _ t`|-.l Superior to thebstAJapans,`Gunpowder or Young Hyson. Sample F:-ee-Sa1ada. Toronto. MATCHES `naggamx and um Certain of the genuine GREEN Tea is in every. packet of._.'_. - "s m 13:`:c :n-n A -non The Canadian Match Co. Limited. Montreal 12 Aonnsn. FROM YOUR m e. '- ea, two Bay Wellare Bonkl. Their added length prevents scorched ngers when lighting ranges and lanterns. They give goner. brighter light in the In One gentle stroke them. They do not glow when blown out. Their heads do not-drop. They contain no poison. Rats won't gnaw them.~ . II HLI IXLl' `persuade long as gainst it- the ser- - lW__I Just a trace.of sooth- ing Boracic--to make it the perfect _ for mother, baby _ all the family. ` InrAu1's Daucnr --.O\ (11-IrrI'I.1'l$lE `l'c'>if~:TwSmo}. baking when A slow oven will not spoil your you use rrfs WEIHEE -0 C` f'(T2'l':':'l'E:'1?l"'.'1!I "" . NEicsHz.:c>:-at-zoom GRQCER`; ilf ng of the two great commandments. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. Tknn OF... Inunvnr nalrntl Whn `E HIV l`|lH aI_l IUVC lily HUIEHUUT NH Lllytill. Then the lawyer asked. Who is my neighbor?" ' Jesus reply was in the form of. a story, that immortal parable of the Good Samari- tan. A Jew travelling along the dangerous | road from `Jerusalem to Jericho was attack- ed by highwaymen, stripped. wounded. and left. for` dead. A priest and after him` a Levite. both Jews. came that way. Each looked at the unconscious man, and then` hurried by on the other. side of the road, each `excusing himself that the man was a .stranger to him, and that it was none ofz `his -business anyway. He hadn t_ time to` `care for every unfortunate. 13- n, (`I ,, ,,! __, ;__.,__ II-.. -.._..- ..I...-.. |\ou|\v gun I.- vI.v un - - \ - . . u a - u - `fl Finally a Samaritan traveller came along. i `and forgetting all the racial and religious; ' animosity between his people and the Jews, `he hurried to the victim, bound up his; .wounds, set him on his beast, took him to 3 an inn. paid for his keep and care, and; .promised more when he would pass that way again on his return. . ~ I 1-. Hun non`-m H-m nnnon-marl kannfnninr `way ugmu on ma ruuru. 1 In that sto'r_v the unnamed benefactor has gained all the fame as the Go'od Samm-i~ tan, and all who hear it. are taugh that the measure of our love to God is the love ; we show to our needy brother men. ` sub- .,, .,.._u___ _.____ __-. _p.x;4 _~1_: 1,___[ ` WV nllvvv vv vun uvvu; unvvu u - . . . v .- `Here is another story, not of'the old land of Palestine. but ofthis new land of Cana- , da. not of nineteen centuries ago, but of less } than ten years ago. ` A Ivnunn I Tniumnoihy ahninnf `nunrl om- lullll IUH ylf H50. A young University student found em- 1 ployment for the summer as a fire-ranger 1; in the woods of New Ont-ario. In the course of the summer he developed blo_od- H poisoning from infected black`-fly bites. ; Alone and far from medical care his case ; became serious, and when he reached the - railway` somewhere` north of Cobalt, he - I was very ill. He was put on the train for . 3Toronto, sick and helpless, with no one to care for him. There were lots of passengers f on the train; but they just looked at the A; sick man and passed by on theother side. 3 He was a stranger to them. It was none of i their business. He might give them trouble. Besides who could tell but what he had Igiight be contagious? So they passed him; 31- ' No. not all. There was one exception. He was a young man goirfg from a northern - town to Montreal on- a business trip. He -was to change from the T. and ND. rail- way to the C.P.R. at North Bay. But so far as he was going he would take care of the sick lad. And hedid care for him as. if he were a brother. When he reached North Bay he refusedto leave him; got his ticket changed to read. to Montreal by way' of Toronto, adding over two hundred miles to his journey with the consequent. time and expense. He never left the sick youth till he delivered him into the care of friends at Toronto. Then he continued his business trip to Montreal. `[4 nvnn um Info in mum tho nf.|Irionf.`n lifa_ mp to monu-em. _ It was too late to save the student's life. He died of the blood-poisoning. But the kindly stranger had done hisbest. 1 TI. lnbkmn nf H:-at ntnnnf. in n PI-oshvfnr. Kmary SI-ruuger nuu uuuu ma-ucm. The father of that student is a Presbyter- ian Minisler. The man who showed the love or God to a sick stranger is a Jew. And ever afterwards alongside of _the noble figure of The Good Samaritan of the pur- able will the young man's family and friends see another noble gure they met in a time of need..that of The Good Jew. Hl\l` .. 4_..aL `I .....--..2uu. Hun} nnr` in nnl OI neea..mar. U1 Luv uuuu ucw. . Of a tru1h I perceivehat God Is noi .1-especter of persons; but in every nation he that feareth Him and worketh righteous-` ness, is accepted with Him. Q- um um onnatln Pntnr when he awoke` So said the apostle Peter when he awoke to the fact that Italians, Gentiles, were ac- -cepted of God as well as Jewson the uni- versal condition of doing right. We need to shake ourselves every once in a while to re-awaken ourselves to the same great fact. -7 -1' 77------ \Y-1LL.._ Is accepteu Winn nun. ` ills - ill: rt:-u-wruxcu uuluvavuu vu nag ul-Innlv auvuvv -_-.. God isno respecter of persons. ' Neither` is He 9. stickler about creeds. He. is im-I measurably broad-minded. He is much` concerned about the essentials abouti religion, loving God and loving our fellow-`7 men. He cares very little about the non-! essentials, `the tags and trappings withi which we deck our religionsnnd distinguish ` the'm. ` Jesus taught the Jews of His day, His` own people, that at Samaritan, a half-i breed in blood and a heretic in i-eligion,3 who did a deed` of love and mercy was near- I er the kingdom than orthodox priests and} Levites who passed the needy by. We followers of Jesus'must awake to realize, that a" Jew in blood and a Jew in religion 2 who manifests the love of God to e suf-I ferer. is nearer the kingdom of God than the `E most sanctimonious Christian whohas no; eye for a sufferer's need. I flax} nnvnr fnranfs: no in never umn'ate- i eye :01 u uuucuu a uccu. I A God never forgets. He is never ungrate- } ful. Not even a cup of cold water shalil, fail of its reward. He will remember The i %Good.Jew as well `as The Good Samaritan. i ~--W. Lowe & Son have a bigii atock of mattresses and springs on ; and. Call and see them. 35tfc` -in: -Solemn and still this scene of ended strife, No noise,` no toil pervades the earthly hour.- . The struggling life of daylight slips away, And leaves to me, the quiet gloaming x_......... __ _. :$&$$%%%&%&*&%**&*&&%&**:! ~_;x - IN WOMAN'S REALM -xoni .[. ' %% w%$$a**&&w%*&$$$a*%&*w&$&&, The sombre trees are bathed in reverent _ ' THEVCLOSE OF `DAY l TIPS T0 i-IOUSEWIVES The sun's last gleam `had kissed the. dying ` When washing curtains it is a good plan day, to tack the top and bottom edge together. And evening shadows steal from out the They are thus more likely to keep in shape. West, ' I_After washing, stretch each curtain on T While night with brooding wings in silence 3 two rods, and they will dry easily and will i folds ` `not need ironing. `V } The sweet child sleep, serenely to her To dry woollen jumpers it is a good idea ` `-----* ' ` .'1-n fm-m a l-mmmnnlc nf a towel or small: Deep are the -trailing garments of the night, They onward move, and bid `farewell again. _ e To one bright orb of daylight in the sky--- It softly ebbs away in darkness to re- main. ole lth di- and the awe. `. l With cool night vapors from the earth around. . ` And from the evening cisterns drink repose, ~While slumbering souls in tranquil mood`, abound. ' Our lives are like the scene here newly fled. The radiant morn too soon doth pass away. Into the silent landwith golden tread Bogne on the. wings of night to endless 1 . --_-_'j__._-:-_- l _ That it would cost half a billion dollarsi to deliver enough electric energy to heat {the homes of Toronto, and that a capital ;investment of about $5,000 per home. for jthe provision of this power. wouldbe re- quired, is the estimate made by Assistant Electric Commission, the Hydro expert on electrical heating. In an article written by ihim and published recently in the Com- mission's Bulletin," he. frankly under- took the task of demonstrating the im- .praticability of heating by electricity with- [out the use of other fuels. and _he deprecat- ed the statements that have from time to -1 Engineer A, S. L. Barnes. of the I-Iydroil time been made that electrical heat will [some day replace coal, oils, etc. I Than- nnnnlnairmc nrn I-maul nnf. nlnnn `some may replace Isuzu, uua, cm. 2 These conclusions are based not alone `upon the cost of generating electrical power and transmitting it; but also having in mind the 100'per cent. efficiency of elec- trical heating. The trouble is, that the heat that can be produced from a given quantity of coal is 100 per cent._. although perhaps as much as 50`p.~.r cent. of it is wasted. However, the remaining 50 per cent. does -service in heat?-.nv. the.ho:ise.. But in con- {vetting the total. 100 per cent. heat from ithe coal into electrical energy. there is obtainedslightly less, by actual tests, than 15 per cent. of the original 100 per cent. (heat energy in the coal. So that the heat available from a quant- ity of coal for heating. is 50 per cent. of the heat: produced by the coal. And this may be increased by improved combustion and radiation methods. While on the other hand the heat available from -the electrical energy produced `from the same amount of coal. is only 15 per cent. which is all the heat there is. . Therefore the heat from `coal direct is to the heat from electricity made from the coal as fifty-plus is to fif- teen. l. :. _.L.......LL.. l.I...L - not-vnnn ant` lteen. It is noteworthy that Mr. Barnes and other engineers of repute are coming to the -point where they urge that all houses be built in a manner to provide maximum insulation against heat losses. This. it appears. is the solution ofrthe fuel problem so far as Ontario, and Toronto particularly, is concerned. Architects are being urged to give greater atfention to the prevention of heat loss in the houses built by them. In that way. coal bills can be cut in two, and heating can be provided at rates very materially lower than the cost-oi electric heating. T6 :3 chnnnvn ;n M!` Rn:-nan : RI'f.il`.`P. nezmng. . It is shown in Mr. Barnes s article that 2,000,000 h.p. would be required to heat Toronto homes, and he says: The climate of `the greater part of this country is so `severe in the winter that even the mense potentialities of its water powers, if fully developed, would be altogether inad- equate to cope with the demand for power for electric heating if this were fostered to `any considerable extent. Thu `unnuru inunn A` Sninnnn and Inven- any considerable extent. ` The January issue of Science and Inven- `tion says: The future will no doubt see great changes in the heating of our houses." lTh e present construction of our dwellings ';is scientifically all wrong as we pointed out before in this journal. In the summer our `houses are `hot---in the win`er they are lcold, for no reason at all. Slowly the { thought is percolating through that a build- `ing built-_ with solid walls is a monstrosity. A solid stone wall, particularly. if rein- forced with steel, is an excellent con- lductor of both heat and cold. Nu -.... .._-L:4-..L. ....'...I.l min. Hm .h'nnl1lA lauctor 01 Dow neat. and com. V - 3 If our architects would take the trouble lto study a thermos bottle; they would soon `change the construc`ion of our dwellings. Slowly. bricks with air pockets are coming : into use. This, however. is not enough. .1The importanttpart is the construction of -lthe windows. Glass is` a fairly good con- riductor of heat and cold. Moreover, the varadiation which we get from our big-glass [windows is tremendous. A window should Vibe co_nst-ructed of two or three. panes of lgglass, with air pocketsabet-ween the panes. a iThe'panes should be about an inch. or even . lhalf an inch, apart from each other. If `three such panes were used. we would g ihave an ideal window." 1 ; :_ ._..:_;...l ....L H..- ah-ulu AC Han nncnihil- HEAT|N(;`. BY ELECTRICITY NOT : PRACTICABLE LIIU BVVCV breast. lull LCG VI bower. n of God ch would the great no other involved. ch union strength- =veral de- od it will gdom on the world 1 the ade- meet the shave ideal window. It is pointed out the study of the possibil- ities of electrical heating has opened up for discussion and study the necessity for constructing houses with double walls and some efficient insulating material in be- tween (as in the roof also). Walls and roofs insulated with cork. seziweed, `saw- dust or insulating brick, triple windows. improved. combustion and `radiation sys- items are advanced as being the true solu- tion. to the heating problem. Electrical heating, without fuel. says Mr. Barnes, is practicable only in mild sub-tropical coun- `n: But Houses Could Be Built to Cut ` Fuel Bills in Two At the same crossing wuerc ma muuuu - was ki!!ed several years ago. Harry Prouder vvss struck and killed by avtrain at Piqua. Ohio. ` HI - AI... -...o.-A nnnnra` nun nf fnhnm-n hv I 01110. . Is the more general use of tobacco by - g women responsible for the tremendous fire 3103: due to smoking?" This is being asked {by the U.S. Board of Fire Underwriters. III ~1Ul II. tries. At the crossing where his mother -- I_m__I ............1 ....-... nan `I-Iurrv 'P|-nnrhrr Tl-IE BARRIE EXAMINER DOE neeu Irumug. `dry ideal "to form a hammock of a towel or small: sheet slung in a warm but shady place and lay the washed jumper on this in ex-9 actly its original form, carefully placing the iulness in front. This is quite the- best way of ensuring a good shape, n..c...... ............n:.... .. :.-m. hulamnd 1-nlnl memateiy. 1118 starcu W111 uusuru uuu coloring matter of the fruit. After this treatment, wash the linen as usual. Rusty irons can be made beautifully smooth in the following way: Tie a lump of beeswax in a piece of muslin, heat the iron and rub it alternately with the waxed rag and a cloth sprinkled with salt. ! Ilnlrl unur `n`.-n\.'I' vnrmtahlps in 1818' D651 W8) 01 ensuring a guuu auupc, Before enamelling an iron bedstead rub all over with fine glasspaper, dusting after- wards with a slightly damp cloth to re- move all particles of grit before applying the paint. . T4`-nil chain: non ha 1-nrnnvntl nllinldv Ul \JU\4l confront ristians dows all als. To- which is union of but one perativo gdom in ent of 81 Christ- ITAFIVFD l the paint. Fruit stains can be removed quickly if powdered starch is put on the stain im- mediately. The starch will absorb the `D....c.. :..-.... nan Inn murlo I-mnutifnllv I : | Mrs. Stella Vituli testified in New York` ,court that four years ago her father sold I her in marriage for $300 and that when she could not induce herhusband to pay him E` the money, her father beat her continually. o - u n....I 4....:..., 1-nnllma mv mile: in lemzthi End ($101311 sprlmueu wuu alum. Mold your left-over vegetables in gela- tine and they will add an appetizing salad ? to any menu. A ` Vnnn lnffnnn ant` l|D`AI'V in i bOXl " her father -beat her contmuauy.i Coal trains totalling six miles in length and carrying nearly 36,000 tons of anthra- cite, leave Hazleton, Pa., every night, | equalling wartime records. to menu. . Keep lettuce and celery in the ice box until served. It must be cold and crisp to be appetizing. OR sister_ s party he sure you have a choeolate cake. Even if the F cake itself is simple, the dainty coating of FRY S Baking. Chocolate Icing will make it quite distinguished, and irresistibly delicious to everyone. ` 9 FRY S Baking Chocolate is veryisimply and easily prepared br-ewse ?- ; is in ne powder form, ready for immediate use." its pwitjv is aE}:;O;:.2V:e and its avour exclusive and idelicious-because it is a .=_*';I.i.\." product. GE course, remember ' Nalthng \wiIlll G10 but :Ry9g 9 V Page Fifteen edi- rbed sent

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