Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 24 Jul 1941, p. 9

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}- "'and clothing especially Carrots Are Streamlined Common Vegetable Is Belng Improved in Color, Vitamins Carrots have become news, They are improved beyond all knovl- edge. Their color is deeper and richer and their flavor Is greatly fmproved over their former rather insipid taste. They are carrots with a college education, Scientists have been working over them, and give them high honors as one of the best sources of carotene, the yellow pigment human beings can convert into vitamin A. Vitamin A is such an important ftem in a good diet that expert nu- tritionists recommend at least one serving a day of carrots or other: leafy vegetables.' green or yellow It is the vitamin that keeps the eyes fn good condition and preser- ves the health of teeth, bones and nerves. If your eyes tire easily, or it you have to make frequent visits to your dentist, it may be that you should eat more carrots and kale, drink more rich milk and eat but- ter and cream. Deep Color Best Generally speaking, the deeper the color of the carrot, the better . the source of vitamin A. Besides "this vitamin, they also are a good source of calcium and of. ribo-fla. vin, which with nicotinic acid help to keep away digestive disorders and skin troubles. Taken all around and eaten frequently, they do much to keep the human system in good order. Proper Cooking Essential Perhaps the carrot is best In salads. It is delicious served in long slender sticks. It combines with celery and the combination sug- gests silver and gold -in color. A grand thing about this gem among vegetables. is that its color is not destroyed by cooking nor its vita- min value lessened by ordinary cooking temperatures. Only you should be careful to use as little water as possible to con- serve tho calcium content; and serve the liquid with the cooked vegetable or use it in soup. Don't cook them too long; sliced, 10 to 15 minutes are long enovgh to make them just right. And try baking them in a casserole with just a bit of water, sprinkle them with a little lemon juice and melt- ed butter and you will sing the song of the carrot. Military Magicians FER British are getting- camouflage down to a fine. art, as these pic- tures show. Shrubbery uniforms may make defenders appear to be playing games now, but these hoys will be giving Germans sonie- thing besides a laugh when and if invasion is attempted. SUND SCHO LESSON U.S. Acquires Arctic Outfits Heavy Purchases of Skis, Snow Shoes by the Army Re- flect Iceland Move Recent heavy United States Army purchases of skis, snow shoes designed for sub.zero temperatures has tak en on new significance in the light of American occupation of Iceland. FOR SUB-ZERO TEMPERATURES In addition to substantial quan: tities of Arctic equipment already being delivered for troops serving in Alaska, the War Department contracted for 6,419 pairs of skis, 3,733 pairs of snow shoes, 27,416 toques and 40,000 wool blankets, The Army Quartermaster's of- fice too has been studying suitable equipment for troops in cold clim- ates, Several thouand men have been dispatched to Alaska. In the course of a year the dogs in Great Britain eat less than one 'week's supply' of food sult- able for human consumption, LESSON 1V THE HOLY SPIRIT. INSPIRES NEW TESTAMENT LETTERS © Gal. 1311, 12; 1 Thess, 2:13; 2 3:14.17; 2 Pet. 3:14:16) Jude 3 GOLDEN TEXT---Every scrips ture inspired of God is also pro. fitable for teaching, for reproof, Tim, for correction, for instruction which is in righteousness. 2 Tim. 3:16. THE LESSON IN ITS SE1TING Time. -- The Epistle to the Galatians was written about A.D, 58. The first Epistle to the Thessalonians was written about A.D. 54, The.two Epistles to Timothy were written at the end of Paul's life--perhaps A.D. 66 or 66. The Second Epistle of Peter was written approximately at the same time--A.D, 66; while the Epistle of Jude was also writ- ten between A.D. 65 and 70. Place.--Galatia was one of the great provinces of Asia Minor in Paul's day. Thessalonica was a city located in what we would call northern Greece, then known as Macedonia. The designation of 2 Peter and Jude are not given in these respective epistles. Paul's Gospel Inspired Gal. 1:11, "For I make known to you, brethren, as touching the gospel which was preached by me, that it is not after man. 12, For neither did 1 receive it from man, nor was [ taught it, but it came to me through revelation of Jesus Christ." The Apostle Paul is here defending the supremacy of his message over all false teaching, which had been brought into the Galatian Churches by Judaizers and by those who were mixing works with the truth of salvation by grace. - Verse eleven miglit be said_to present the negative side of the question--his Gospel did "not come from' men; the twelfth verse presents the positive side-- it came to him through revelation of Jesus Christ. How Théssalonians Received it I Thess. 2:13. "Ad for this cause we also thank God without' ceasing, that, when ye received from us the word of the message, even the word of God, ye accepted "it not as the word of men, but, as it#s in truth, the word of God, which also worketh-in you - that believe." Paul had himself preach- ed to the Thessalonian Church, a record of which is found in Acts 17:1-0. The First Epistle to the Thessalonians is the firs} episile, as far as we know, that Paul ever wrote as an apostle to one of the great Christian Churches of his day. He is commending the Thes- salonians for receiving his mes- sage not as onc based on human speculation, on man's wisdom, but as one given to him by God, though spoken through mortal lips. Paul was but the instrument, God was .the primary = author and origin. : ~ The experience of the Apostle Paul with the Thessalonians ought to be; even if in a lesser degree, the experience of all true mini- sters of the Word of God, as they stand before their people to preach. His Doctrine of Inspiration It is interesting to note that fn Paul's last three epistles, the two to Timothy, and the one to Titus, he speaks more often of faith, of teaching, of doctrine, of the truth, of the Word, of Scrip- "ture, than in any other part of any of his writings of similar length. It is quite significant that the greatest statement Paul ever made about. the Word of God, he makes here at the end of his life, a conclusion resulting from long years of absolute de- votion to Christ, and the Word of God. Towards Complete Lives 2 Tim. 3:14, "But abide thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learn- ed them. 15, amd that from a babe thou hast known the sacred writings which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. 16. Every scripture inspired of God I A ASS SEES SS Old Glory is getting to be a common sight in England. Above, it is being raised over typical London rooftops. i Peter's Testimony Peter 3:14. Wherefore, be- loved, seeing that ye look for these things, give diligence that ye may be found in peace, with- cut spot and blameless in his sight, 16. And account that the long- suffering of our Lord is salvation; even as our beloved brother Paul also, according to the wisdom given to him, wrote unto you; 16. As also in all his epistles, speak- ing in tem of these things; wherein are some things hard to be understood, which the ignorant and unstedfast wrest, as they do also the other scriptures unto their own destruction." . The apostle has just been speak- ing of the coming of the Lord, and especially of those who, in a scoffing way, insisted that the Lord was not coming because thus far they had not seen Him. But, says Peter, the day of the Lord will come. [If such is so, and righteousness is to reign at his coming, an ye are to be in a new world by His frrace, then we ought to give diligence to our personal life. These things, said the Apostle Peter, Paul himself, their beloved brother" had unfold- ed in some of his' epistles, which; * he admigted, were quite hd N and yet should be by the help of the understand, understood Holy Spirit. Contending for the Faith Jude 3: 3. "Beloved, while I was giving all diligence to write unto you of our common sal- vation, I was constrained to write unto you exhorting you to con- tend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered unto the saints." If, then, we have in our hands not only an inspired Word from God, but the only in- spired Word that God has given to men, permanently recorded in writing, how tragic if this Word should be lost, if its glory should be minimized, if its truths should be perverted, or twisted, or denied. ' Television Arrives on July 1 television became a commercial actuality in the United States. The [Pederal Communica- tions Commission removed the ban it had imposcd on the ground that television had been sufliciently de- veloped to protegt prospective buy- ers of receiving sets. Two New York stattons were feady to start, with 20 others preparing in various parts of the country. La > +f | This Curious WorLD By William Ferguson "cp PARADISE VALLEY, - MT. RAINIER NAT'L, PARK, ANNUAL SNOWFALLS OF 100 FEET , ARE COMMON. * COPA. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE, ING, ov MA NATURALISTS NOW ARE OF THE OPINION THAT THE LOWER. ANIMALS ARE CAPABLE OF THINKING / [> . Pd [2442] % 2-29 DEVOURING PLANT-LICE, INSTINCT plays a tion part in the lives of the so-called lower animals, but experiments have convinced most naturalistg that they do. have limited capacities for' thinking. The fact that dogs dream {ndicates the p ion of i tion. NEXT: The hearth fire that has WW burning fof 147_years, SCOUTING... Each summer Boy Scouts In various parts of the Dominion are called upon to help search for lost persons, One of the first calls this summer came to the Scouts of Bobcaygeon, Ont., to assist in the search for a woman cottager who had disappeared in swamp and bush land crossed by numer- ous crecks. She was found where she had fallen down the side of a small ravine, suffering injuries which prevented her moving. . . * When Montreal High School en- tered the local National Salvage drive, Patrol Leader Teddy Stan- ley of the school's Boy Scout . Troop brought in one of the big- gest €ontributions; in a double sense, This was the 400 pounds of tinfoil he had Veen saving in order to secure an artificial arm from a firm advertising such a project. He had suffered ampu- tation as the result of an infec- tion, . . . Two London Boy Scouts, -Pat- vol Leader Jack Olden and Patrol Second Dennis Edwards, were one fire watching duty in their dis- trict when one of the last heavy Nazi bombing raids occurred. At 2 o'clock in the morning they were in the thick of the fight to quench incendiary bombs, At 3 am. a new and heavier wave of bombs, high explosives and incendiaries, fell further down the street. One incendiary had gone through to the hase, ment of a dentist's premisd§ and lodged in a cupboard. When the [two Scouts arrived the fire was blazing furiously, but they at- tacked it with their stirrup pumps and sand, and eventually succeed- ed in putting it out. Then they made their way to a burning school, where they took over the hose and tackled the fire while the firemen attacked the blaze in a hall next door. Next, seeing a blaze on the roof of a five-storey building, they climbed in through a wijn- dow and made their way to the top. No hand-pumps were avail- able there; but they found some buckets. With these they ran down to the lower floor for water, and hastened back, yp a ladder, through a trap door to the roof. The incendiary bombs were still falling, and the bofs turned to "roof hopping," sanding out bombs as this they outstripped the men. Several times the blasts and vi- bration from high-explosive bombs nearly blew them from the roof tops. At 6.30 a.m. two weary Scouts went home for a wash and break- fast before going to their office jobs for a day's work. Reduce Car Speed To Save Gasoline Record of Consumption of Gas on Slow Drive Shows Vast Difference From Record on Fast Drive A letter from a reader of the Ot- tawa Journal gives proof of the importance of speed in consump: tion of gasoline by motor vehicles. This reader drove a new car to Montreal and back, keoping rigidly within a 35-mile speed limit, and had an average run of 25 -miles per gallon, the same trip "in a hurry." and the mileage per gallon was cut to 17 or by 32 percent. Put it another way, he made tho first round trip on about ten gallons of gasoline; the second time, because he was "in a hurry," the engirie consumed about 14. gallons. Every driver of experienco knows he pays heavily for speed, not only in fuel but in wear and tear on his car, sapogaliy if he gets into the upper reldches beyond the legal limit of 50 m.p.h. For most cars, it is said, the economical speed is 35 to 40, and that is fast enough,: usually, to get the driver to his destination as quickly as he needs to reach it. And just now there is the added point, that tho use of gasoline in this country must be reduced, by compulsion if not vol untarily, and thé general adoption of a moderate speed In country driving might save thé necessity for more drastic measures, or at least defer them. 2 for Joe Chrysdale fast as th fell In A fortnight later he made RADIO R By DAVE ROBBINS EPORTER RADIO TIES EMPIRE The sons and daughters of the British Empire are getting to know each other better. The strongest tle Is that being ¢ mented through mutual participation in the Em- pire's cause on democracy's front line. But there are other efoctive influences. New Zealanders and Australians, in Canada under the ..dr Training Plan, are participating in the home life of this country. Canadians, do fending the shores of Britain, are tasting once again the unbounded hospitality of the Euglish, Scottish and Welsh. Englishmen, stationed at every post from Rangoon to Baflin Bay, or sweeping the mar auder from the seas, arc sharing ideas and courage with men whose skins are black and red as well as white. Their free interchange of ideas is the proof of thelr will to preserve a free world, Radio takes its place among these forces strengthening the bonds be- tween the men and women of the British Commonwealth. In collabor- ation with the BBC, the CBC Is conducting a number of interesting trans-oceanic quiz broadeasts. "Quiz for the Forces" is an established favorite with Canadians overseas and their friends who listen at home on Saturday night at nine Dial in this program and enjoy ft too AROUND THE DIAL Havo you enjoyed "Toast and Marmalade" CKOC's peppy morn ing feature starting at S.107 If you haven't, you have missod a treat, and Jack Wilk ington take you through a merry round of music and gags over your toast and{ coffee. This feature Is a breezy eye-opener for your day. Dial in and start business with a smile! Benny Goodman, king of the clarinet, and his orchestra are fea- tured in a new series, "The House Warming," Thursday evenings ab 8.00 o'clock over the NBC red net work, With Benny will be Don McNelll as em-cee and the weokly guests, starting with Dorothy Lamour of film fame, and the Smoothies trio, Other visitors' during the summese will be the King's Jesters and- the Andrews Sisters. Goodman was the first maestro to bring wide popularity to "swing" music, His recently-reorganized band has such stars as Trumpeter "Cootie" Willams and Benny's sep- tet featuring Charlie Christians oa electric guitar, Towards a more picturesque sports speech: Interviewed on Red Barber's WOR sport program the other night, that great ballplaygr, Ty Cobb, characterized a dumb out- fielder in these words: "That guy had charley horse of the brain" TRIVIA © -- Plenty of "big names' along radio row are now in the cast of Ransom Serman's new series as "Hap Hazard" on WBEN Tuesday evenings at 9.30 o'clock. Phillips H. Lord, who starred tor years as "Seth Parker" and origla- ated the "Mr. District Attorney" dramas, becomes a bank president known as "Damworthm" in Ran- sem's fun episodes. Cliff Soubler, comic character actor, Is the grum- by vice president of "Crestfallea Manor," which Sherman hdads. , , , Kathryn Card, , Elmira Roessler, Mary Patton, Loretta Paynton and Ray Grant round out the cast, Kdna Odell is the songstress and Bill Mills batons the land. RECORDS OF TIE WEEK: Top of the popular record lists: for the week were: Hut Sut Song... Things I Love ... Intermezzo .... Daddy ... Maria Elena ... A Little Bt South of North Carolina lL. I'll Be You in Apple Blossom Time .... You Aro My Sunshine .... My Sister-and I... The Band Played On. J ROMAN RULER | J-- El HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle many oY 1, 7 Powerfyl countries. a» Roman 18 God of love, 1 emperor. 20 You, = 112000 pounds. 22 Wages, 12 Behind the 25 Call of ti distress. imes. ) t 27 To preserve 15 Stomach, food. 16 A descendant. 17 To store in a silo. 19 To handle. 21 Salamander. 22 Learning, 23 Southeast {abbr.). 43 Hils with 24 New England the hand (abbr.). 48 To repair. 25 Sorrowful, 50 Each. 26 Therefore. 52 Dyeing 27 Bashful apparatus 28 To query. 53 Joker 30 Arrow 54 Wireless poison tree. music box. 32 Cooked in fat, 53 Neck scarf. 34 Bird of prey. 56 He was a 35 Schemed. famous war 37 Railway en (abbr.). 57 He was a 38 To deposit. Latin -- 39 Sorrow or historian 40 Embryo (pl) flower. VERTICAL 41 Chewed. 2 Practical. 28 Cohstellation. 29 Insight. 31 Curious inspection. 32 To soar 33 Moisture. 35 Writing 3 Weaver's tablet. frame. 36 Dower 4 Wayside property. hotel. 38 Sudden thrust. 5 To expedite. Ral dink ; rain produc 6 He was killed 41 Grandparental or ---- by associates. 42 Assam 7 Anglo- 44 Framework Saxons board. 8 Type standard 45 Exchange 9 To undermine discount 10 Shoe repairing 46 Nobleman. tools. = 47 Senior (abbr.) 13 Conjunction. 49 Reverence. 14 Crime. "50 Period of 16 He ---- or time. defeated 51 Ye. is also profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for instruction' which is in righteous. ness." Of course this passage refers primarily to the Old Testa- ment Scriptures. If the Old Testament is inspired, how much more so the New, which records the very words and acts of the Saviour Himself, and was written by those who companied with the Lord, or were in fellowship with those who did. man of God may be complete, fur- nished complete unto.every good work." Verse sixteen tells us that the Word of God is inspired, and' what it can do for us, but verse seventeen tells us that all these things are to the end that we, belonging to God, may be complete in our lives and: equip- ped for every good work, "17, That the' POP--Pop's Interpretation By J. MILLAR WATT " * COME AFTER SUPPER ! IT BE WHAT TIME will READY ? With

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