Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 19 Aug 1914, p. 7

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four tablespoons of half cup of milk a e of butter, one-fourth salt, one-half teaspoon of , & pinch of er, Mix gredients well . together; uble boiler, add fore taking from fire. cially good for cooked Tomatoes.--~Wash and gash twice across blossom 'bake in a small pan. They done almost as soon as they I} heated through. If stuffed "they are baked, do not use crumbs unless your toma- as ripe as ripe can be. Bak: réh preserving, ed. p Present "at Waterloo, whi mersed in sour milk will Beef i "keep for months. Two quarts of soup will serve 'from six to eight persons. Scraped raw potatoes put into de- canters will clean them if left for two or three days. One gallon of ice cream, if served on plates, will serve 24; if in gher- bet glasses, 30 at least. : : A daily bath, into which a little bicarbonate of soda is put, will al- lay the burning of the feet. When selecting poultry see that the feet are soft and moist, the eyes clear and the flesh plump. One medium sized loaf of bread will make 20 three-cornered sand- wiches, or 10 large squares. Pack glass and china in hay that is slightly damp. This will' prevent the articles from slipping about. { tH not named on: the map, but is Tocated just west Metz, and near Epinal, lower down on the French border. The North Bea is also THE SUNDAY SGHDOL STUDY INTERNATIONAL LESSON, AUGUST 23. nn Lesson VIII. The Wedding Feast-- Matt. 221-14. Golden Text, : Luke 13.84. ~ Verse 1. Jesus answered--Replied to the angered Pharisees when they sought to lay hold on him because of his 'alluding to them as the wick- ed husbandmen (see preceding les- son). His reply is couched in the words of another parable even more pointed and direct than the one which so greatly offended them. 2. A marriage feast--In accord- ance with Oriental custom, the fes- : 'tivities connected with the wedding 1d last for days; Judges 14. the number as seven. . His servants--The messengers' whom these Pharisees had héard were John the Baptist and esus, though other prophets still d spoke to them through their writ- ten messages. |. Them that were bidden--The com- pany to whom invitations had al- | ready been gent. Perhaps Jesus si | had in mind that the first invita- 'tion had been given by Moses, the | lawgiver, and the earlier prophets, th wi hose writings his hearers ere all familiar, and that the sec- because it shows in greater detail than indications are that the Germans' mai. Brussels. priests and rulers, persecuted those i io gave the invitation, 7.-The king was wroth--Their re- fusal of the invitation implied dis- loyalty and defiance of his author- ity. Sent his armies, and destroyed those 'murderers, and burned their city--This was done at the time of the destruction 'of Jerusalem by the Romans. 9. The partings of the highways --Very likely the places where the roads from the country came to- gether to enter the city gates. As many as ye shall find, bid-- The" Talmud says that is was cus- tomary among rich men to invite poor travelers to feasts, so that this parable would not seem strange to Jesus's hearers. Being interpre- ted, it of course means that the gos- pel invitation was to be 'extended to all peoples. This was done by Paul and others before the destruc- tion of Jerusalem, and after that event its proclamation and accept- ation among the #Gentiles bzcame general, : 10. Both 'bad and good--As in the parables of the net and of the wheat #hd the tares; this implies that bad as well as good will re- spond to the invitation, and may be found together in the church of Christ. It may also mean that ad- mission into the church is not to be denied to any except known evil doers." If the heart of a bad man responds to the gospel invitation, should, not the church receive him and endeavor by means of sympath- etic training to help him correct his faults, put away his sins, and lead a new life! § 11. But when the king came in to behold the guests--Not td: look for' possible offenders but to greet his guests and bid them welcome: is peat. : 3 : By packing 'finely powdered salt around a candle wick it can be made to 'burn slowly and last many hours. 'Experiments are under way in Eng- land with a compound rail for street rallways, the worn portions of which can be replaced without disturbing the roadbed. ; Fallure in power transmission ropes generally begins at the core, where the flbers are subjected to greater friction against one another than at the surface. ed A German scientist has invented a process using superheated steam for treating sewage sludge to remove its fatty acids and increase its value as _| fertilizer. i yl nib \ A 'do most small atlases the part of Europe in which the issues of the main attempt to reach Paris will be through Belgian territory. The out- will be fought around Brussels, Liege, and Namur, and it may be that another conclusive engagement will take place ty Other German armies are operating to the west of shown, with the principal ports plainly indicated. 12. And he was speechless -- Be- cause consciously out of place. 13. Bind him hand and foot, and cast him out into the outer 'dark- ness--To our democratic views this punishment seems out of' propor- tion to the offense, but not so to the hearers of Jesus, who knew how seriously matters of etiquette are viewed at Oriental courts, There shall be the weeping and gnashing of teeth--A common phrase descriptive of the misery of one turned out into outer dark- ness. One commentator mentions that the suggestion may have come from the howling and snapping of teeth of hungry wolves, heard by a lonely traveler in the darkness. The expression is used five times jn Matthew and once in Luke. 14, Many are called, but few chosen--This was especially true in our Lord's time. His message was for the "lost sheep of the house of Tsrael,"' and of the multi- tudes who followed him and heard his message only a few were chos- en. In its application to the church of to-day it means that not. all whe belong to the visible. church are members also of the smaller "com- pany of those who have brought their lives into harmony with the teachings of the gospel. The Test, "What made you think Mr. Lov- etwet had been drinking?" "Why, when the charlotte russe was set before him he tried to blow off the foam." A Woman's Opinion. Mistress--Haven't you any refer- ences? ; "Gir Maid--I have, but there're like my photographs--none of them do me justice, = Ja Fo on March of Progress. Bass | "Great times we live in 1A It has been estimated that the heat received ln.a year by the earth trom the Bun is sufficient to melt a 1 of dco 100 feet in thickness covering the globe. a Yawning is favored as beneficial to the health by a Belgian scientist, who sayf that it aids 'all the breathing or- gans 'and exercises the throat and chest muscles. Doctors have decided that an elee- tric shock kills a man by destroying the rhythm of the heart beats and acting upon the lungs like an over- dose of an anesthetic. As an improvement on the telauto- graph a German has invented appar- atus which uses light rays to repro- duce on photograph films writings or drawings made at a distance, As a substitute for red in danger signals, which is the color less easily distinguished by the color blind, ex- perts have advocated blue circles with wide yellow rims. . EE LIVERPOOL'S GREATNESS. Always Reigned Supreme in the Shipping Service. No account of Liverpool's mari- time greatness would be complete without a passing reference to the vastness and variety of her oversea traffic. A myriad vessels of every type and size ply between it and the other great ports of the world, Here it is that the argosies of na- tions meet, richly laden with the products of the globe--East India merchantmen, whose fleecy cargoes of finest wool from far Bombay and Calcutta are soon to be turned in- to cloth in the textile mills of York- shire, and whose dusty cargoes of Karachi wheat are destined to be ground into flour in the numerous corn mills of the port ; steamers and sailors laden with similar commodi- ties, and with. frozen meat from the River Plate and the far-flung porta of the Antipodes; schooners of the huge four-masted type bringing ni- trate of soda from the Chilian ports of South America, and others whose freight consists of grain from the Pacific slopes of North America; large steamships laden with mons- ter packages of provisions, tobacco, timber, leather, and other products from Canada and the United States, and with bales of raw cot- ton from. the great Gulf ports of the Southern States; vessels with silks and cereals from China and Japan, rice and timber from Ran- goon, sugar from Java, Germany, and Cuba, barley and other grain from the Black Sea, fruits from the Mediterranean, . brandy and li querurs from Bordeaux and Char ente, rubber from the Brazils, palm-oil and palm-nut kernels from the West Coast of Africa, and cop- per and silver ores from Callao and other Peruvian ports; tank-steam- ers, specially constructed for carry- ing oil in bulk, bring thousands of gallons of that useful lubricant from American and Russian terri- tories; tramp steamers that have sailed uncharted seas, with nondes- cript cargoes from wherever they can find a freight; fishingtrawlers .} with' their finny freights from neigh- boring waters and Icelandic seas; and last, but by no means least, the great. Atlantic liners for, i Liverpool is noted. for 1t this port that the largest and fastest steamers' en the North Atlantic 'trade start 5 '| their journey to "the other side"-- | the latest giant of. the Lusitania, the Mauretania, and : 8 th reigned Som Agyltanin. whizh Hae Fi adde. to the Cunard fleet. port Liverpcol has always supreme in this service. times no fewer than six stately ships, each with its

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