Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 17 Sep 1942, p. 7

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"them "as "cleanable™ as porcelain Don't Put Honey In A Refrigerator Kitchen Shelf and Dry Cel lar Are ideal Spots For Storing Honey In order to preserve the dell- cate flavour of the essence ot flowers In honey during storage, attention should be paid to sev- eral 'Important points, Firet and foremost, wherever honey ls stor- ed, the place must be dry, Hence a dry kitchen shelf is a sultable spot for comb honey in which all the aroma of flowers Js lock- ed in its cells, while a dry cellar fo ideal for the storage of. ex- tracted honey, but the cellar mugt be really dry. Honey, states W. A. Stephen, Bee Division, Dominion Experl- mental Farms Service, should not be stored In an icebox or In a refrigerator, because, just as hon- ey has incorporated the smell of 'flowers, so It will gather up the odours of other foods. Further, as tho relative humidity In ice-boxes or refrigerators Is high, honey will ebsorb the moisture in the air, It is for this reason - should not be kept in a damp cel lar. Comb honey should be kept until it is to be used in the carton in which it was packed, and with reference to liquid honey in con- tainers, its should be remembered that the. friction top lds are not airtight. They should be replaced and pressed down after removing what honey was required. This will help retain the essence of flowers in the honey. . DRUMMER BOY Little Tommy Tigertail beats out a victory call on his tribe's war drums at the Seminole Indian Village in Silver Springs, Fla. House Of Future Will Be Washable Revolutionary Changes in Furniture and Fabrics Pre dicted A bachelor remarked that the kind of house ho wanted to llve in would be one you could turn the hose on for all cleaning jobs. Well, he has something there, and the house of the future will come prelty near fulfilling his require- ments, says the Kansas City Star, ~ Most of us- are conditioned by aow to the fact that we'll be living in a different word when the war is over. And that these changes will be nowhere more decisively expressed than in the kind of homes we'll have. Not only will democracy in action change pre: tentious homes but scientific pro- gress will have been enormously of living. 5 2 Plastics wlll be the important new material. These will make it possible to have wooden bath tubs and other plumbing fixtues with surface coatings that will make Bo, bathroom fittings will be much more versatile and less heavy and expensive. We can have chintz floors with plastic coating that will make them as durable and oleanahle as linoleum, or most any 'other material we fancy "can be protected with a clear plastic eur- faco. That will moan furniture of many other unusual materials and designs, all entirely washable. tection that will make them easy to wash off, whatever the material. Furniture will undergo revolu- tionary changes. Chests of draw- ors may vanish altogether becauso closets with built-in storage com- partments will serve the same pur- pose more efficiently. Most beds will double for sofas by day. Mat- tresses and upholstery filling will undoubtedly be of artificial rubber foam. Fabrics will be firéproot and molsture resistant, and many will be of synthetic fibres that goil or stain cannot penctrate, Upholstered easy chairs will have much simpler structure with more formal versions of beach and desk chairs and other lighter weight, lesa expensive constructions, Altogether a house built and fur- nished In accord with the dreams 'of the forward thinking architects woild almost bear having the:hose turned "on it for cleaning! King Christian X of Denmark and King Haakon of Norway are Brothers, ec Ea that honey | Wals,--too,--will-have plastic _pro-__ --will-die:-and-thy ta ou YANKS LOOK AT LONDON U. 8. soldiers in the British Isles head for London when on leave, Once there, they do the things "visiting firemen" do the world over. Popular pastimes include feeding the animals at the London Zoo, SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON . LESSON 38 JUDAH: AN EXAMPLE OF SELF-SACRIFICE Genesis 42--44 PRINTED TEXT Genesis 44:18-34 GOLDEN TEXT.--Hereby know we love, because he laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down, our lives for the brethren. I John 3:16. . THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.--The events of this les- son occur somewhere near 17156 to 1710 B.C. Place.--Shechem, eph's father lived, was located in southern Palestine, For the most part, Joseph resided in Zoan, at this time tho capital of Egypt, in the eastern part of the Nile delta, some 200 miles southwest of She- chem, Judah's Plea 18. "Then Judah came near let thy servant, 1 pray Thee, speak & word in my Lord's ears, and let not thine anger burn against thy servant; for Thou art even as Pharaoh. 19. My Lord asked his servants, saying, Have ye a father, or a brother? 20. And we said unto my lord, We. have a father, old age, a little one; and his brother is dead, and he alone is left of his mother; and his father loveth him. 21, And Thou saidst unto thy servants, Briig him down unto me, that I may set mine eyes upon him, 22, And we said unto my lord, The lad cannot leave his father: for if he should leave his father, his father would die. 23, And thou saidst unto thy servants; Except your youngest brother come down with you, yo shall see my face no more, 24, And it camé€ to pass when we came up unto thy servant my father, we told him the words of my lord, 25. And our father said, 26. And we said, we cannot go _.down; if our yonngest.brother..be-- with us, then will we go down; for we may not sce the man's face, except our youngest brother be with us. 27. And thy servant my father said unto us, Ye know 'that my wife bare me two sons: 28, and the one went out from me, "and IT said, surely he is torn in pieces; and I have not seen him since; 29. and if ye take this one also from me, and harm befall him, ye will bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to Sheol, 30. Now therefore when 1 come to thy servant my father, and the lad is not with us; secing that his life is bound up in the lad's life; 31. It will come to pass, when he secth that the lad is not with us, that he will "lad go up with his brethren. where Jos- unto him, and said, Oh, my Lord, - an old man, and a child of his Go again, buy us a little food. youngest son again, Now, said Judah, if they go home to their aged father without the lad, what will they do but bring their father quickly with. sorrow to the grave. Judah's Self-Sacrifice 82, "For thy servant became surety for the lad unto my father, saying, If I brig him not unto thee, then I shall bear the blame to my father for ever. 33. Now therefore, let they servant, I pray thée, abide instead of the lad a bondman to my lord; and let the 84, For how shall I go up to my father, if the lad be not with me? lest I see the evil that shal come on my father." Finally, said Jud- ah, he, himself, had beconie sure ty for the lad to his father, and he pled with Joseph to allow him, Judah, to remain as a bondman in place of Benjamin, so that Ben- Jamin could go up with his bre- thren to Jacob at Hebron. The sublime heroism of this noble act of self-sacrifice on the part of Judah it is impossible to overestimate, In behalf of one whom he knew was preferred in a higher place in his father's af- fection than himsclf, he was will- ing to renounce his liberty rather than see his aged parent die of a broken heart. The self-forgetful magnanimity of such an action has never been eclipsed, and sel- dom rivaled, After words so ex- quisitely beautiful and profound- ly pathetic, it was impossidle for Joseph to doubt that a complete change had passed upon his breth- ren, and in particular upon Judah, since the day when he had elo- quently urged, and they had wick- edly consented, to sell their broth- er, Joseph, into Egypt. The word here translated sure- ty refers to one person pledging himself that another person will do a certain thing in the future, as . he promises to do, or he, the sure- ty, will offer up his own life as * 'a penalty for failure, God In Qur Lives God isin all the events of our lives, Many of us are ready enough to admit. that he is in the prosperous things, but when trouble comes upon wus we at- tribute that solely to others, and in that way we lose' the comfort which otherwise we might have enjoyed under its endurance, The .mercies of a lifetime are often ignored by us under the. bitter- ness of a single trial; and God, who has been our friend for years, is forgotten altogether, while wo passionately condemn some others as the authors of our affliction, but we shall never find consola- tion that way. Th efirst thing we ought to say regarding every trial fs, 'It is the Lord' No matter what may have been the human instrumentality through which we may think our trouble has come upon us; no matter what may have been the material causes which have apparently operated against us--in and over all human actions and all material operations there Is God. His providence is univer- sal and supreme, and the first thought of our spirits should be, 'It is the Lord. 'Then that will steady us; for did he not give his own Son to dic for us on the cross? Has he not shown his kindness to us in multitadindus and unmistakable ways through- out our lives? Can it be, there- fore, that he means anything but good to us in anything, even though it should be a terrible af- fliction? Thus, so soon as we trace a trial up to God, we are on the way to comfort and support under it, For there are not twa Gods -- one of providence,s and ono of redemption. Jehovah Is one, and he who 'so loved the world that he gave his only-be- gotten Son, that whosoever be- lieveth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life,' is at the same time he who orders our lives and sends and superintends our affliction. We may, therefore. have absolute faith in his good- © ness, not only in spite of trial, but through trial. By William Ferguson | THis curious worLp . WAS CAUSED BY BAD AIR, ARISING } FROM A14 bring down the gray hairs of thy servant our father with sorrow to Sheol." Judah's Sorrow The plea that now pours from the masterpieces of Hebrew com- position." Its simplicity and its of vibrating compassion, of un- uestionqed earnestness, make ft worthy to be. compared to the great pleadings of history. First, he acknowledges that they are guilty, and that their guilt is dis- covered, Then he proceeds to tell him In a moving way of the aged father, of the brothér who has died, and of the great love which Benjamin, The child of his old age."Judah vividly describes to Joseph the scene in the parental home as the old man, with great reluctarice and sorrow of heart, allowed 'them: to take Benjamin down into Egypt, persuaded, how- ..ever, that'he will never see his ¢ Judah's lips is consideerd "one of - , is no san ARP, official, . * RADIO REPORTER DIALING WITH DAVE: This is the newest pleture released of the Happy Gang--and the miles of smiles and fun the 'Gang' promised for their new 1942 fall and wirfter series of broadcasts, are well on their way. Their «Initial broadcast on September first, was a 'honey,' and the plans | ' } they outlined for the pleasure of our listening cars augurs well for the sixth and greatest year of broadcasting by the Happy Gang. The time -- 1.15 to 1.45 p.m. EDT daily -- CBC network! Claire Wallace digs out the stories that no one else gets, She 'armchair' reporter. She spent one day as a department store detective -- that was one story! She put a sly 'want ad' in the paper, and got a story from two hundred and fifty Toronto gigolos who answered it. She is the only woman who ever spent a night atone in Toronto's 98- room Casa Loma. She did it for a wager and a story! And now Claire's stories are culled from thousands she digs up from across the 'broad Dominion -- and they are told Canada wide each Mon- day through kriday at 1.45 p.m., right after the Happy Gang. CKOC, with stations of the CBC National Network, are indeed three-quarter hour period, Mon- day through I'riday, from 1.15 to 2.00 p.m. Give the Happy Gang and Claire Wallace listen --- you'll become daily friends! . Ll] . Just a note for the serial mind- ed folk--and some of those who mayn't be! 1f you haven't heard Betty and Bob, NBC's great daily dramatic story of radio's best loved couple, catch the show from CKOC in Hamilton, daily at one o'clock. We might add the quar- SCOUTING . . . Discussing the serious increase in Juvenile delinquency, Dr. Ken- neth H. Rogers, General Secretary of the Big Brother Movement, said that this presented one of the 'major problems of this country. Never was the need so great, he aid, for increased activity among such organizations as the Boy Scouts, Girl Guides, Y.M.C.A., and Sunday Schools, upon which were placed added responsibilities in these abnormal days. To neglect these obligations will mean stead- ly increasing delinquency now, and will entail graver social pro- blems in the post-war days, Dr, Rogers said, . * * Scout Jerry Tichopad, 14 years old, of Toronto, has good reason to remember the Gestapo. Jerry with his parents escaped from Czechoslovakja about three years ago. The Gestapo, he says, took over his scout hall for their head- quarters, and robbed the Scouts of practically all their equipment. Jerry was able to save only two bits of his personal equipment, his belt, which he wore, and his Scout knife, which his mother -J-- placed--among-- the" kitchen knives ~ they were taking with them. _.derry_is_now-preud--to-be-a-Can=" adian Boy Scout. * * * Boy Scouts of the Sudbury district are undergoing an inten- sive course of training to make themselves available for messen- ger service with the Sudbury ARP. organization. "You will | be-used to-carry -messages--from place to place, and will be grouped In tho transportation service branch," the boys were told by * "I've still got those stockings," His Majesty the King told the Chief Scout, Lord Somers, on a recent visit to Imperial Head- quarters in London, The King wag shown a photograph of him- solf--in-R. [3 pl oe "7 "88°Yeéar (abbr.). 12 IZ [4 [5 6 fortunate in having that top-flite . ter hour to the Happy Gang -- Claire Wallace period, and sug- gest that one to two p.m, daily, from 1150 en your dial, is stan out listening! . . Gene Autry, cowboy hero of wiltions of young and old from both screen and radioland, is in the Army -- in fact, is a technical Sergeant in the U, 8. Army Air Corps! Ezra Stone (Henry, of the Ald- rich Family is also in uncle Sam's forces! Rudy Vallee has enlisted and there are rumors current that Edgar Bergen, single and in ex» cellent. health, has been inducted. However, they'll all still be heard --with theie own shows, or guest- ing from the growing nurhber of shows that originate in, or are produced by "the various Army Camps throughout the country! . . yl J Fred Allen is due back the first, Sunday night in October -- that being the Fourth, and for no coincidental reason, your scribes birthday, Can't think of any way he'd rather celebrate the day than turning his radio dial to either CKOC or CFRB and hearing the great and mighty Allen again, The show this ycar is of half hour length, and will be broadeast from 9.30 to 10.00 p.m. cach Sunday evening, Further news will be forthcoming! . . * A few notes from 1150 on the dial: The Lone Ranger is now a night time CKOC show -- Monday through Friday at 7.30 p.mn.! Joo Petersen has returned to Sunday on CKOC at 1.15 p.m, and the Old Refrains are back on the air again at the usual Sunday 5.15 p.m. time. The Mystery Club, new drama thrill headliner pre- micred just two weeks ago Sun- day at 1.30 p.m., is proving a fine show. If you're within listening range of CKOC, give it an car, especially Sunday, for an excel- lent day of variety broadcasting! Fighting Veteran Skipper Joseph Dixon, of San Diego, "70 years old amd dying to get into the fight," is off for his third war. A veteran of the Boer war and commander of a troop- ship in World 1, Dixon has taken a berth as second 10,000-ton steamer on war duty. FRENCH HEROINE ~~ ° HORIZONTAL Answer {to Previous Puzzle found guilty 1 Greatest of French heroines. 8 Paleness, 9 Palm lily, 11 Jockey. 12 Room recess, 14 Onposed to weather, 15 Malicious foe. 17 Pronoun. 18 Contract. 20 Noun ters mination. 21 Dismounted. 22 Wooden pin. 0 Devices for 42 You and I. 24'Bone. oi 2 More antique. 41 By, 28 To be sick. id Yanrlwind, 3 Toward the - 42 To sink. 27 Jejune, 45 Cupidity. lee. 44 Measure of 29 Feline 46 Egyptian god. 4 Neither. length. animal. 47 Appeases. 5 Either. 46 Portuguese 31 Painter's 50 To do wrong. 6 Fable. oin. stand. 51 Center of 7 Court (abbr.). 47 Company 82 Organ of action. 8 Pair (abbr). (abbr.). sight. 84 She turned 10 Neuter 48 Myzelf, 83 Hair defeat into pronoun. 49 South ornament. victory at the 12 Ozone, America «34 Leg. joints... .Qity-0f ree, 13 Data abbr) _36 Large barren 55 She led the 15 Obese. 51 Dye. ain, eo French =----s_ 16 Ta immerse....52.Road (abbr): in battle, peeling bark. 17 She was 3 of --, 18 Soldier's assigned quarters. 19 Drink of the gods. # 21 Legal claims, 23 Profits, 25 She was burned at the ------. =] 26 To query, 27 Requests, 28 Hunters' calls 30 Peasant. VERTICAL 35 Unit of work. 1 Prison 37 Guided." keeper. 39 Bellow, 53 Measure. 8 20 2 26 z7 32 33 mate on a | * . x A <j. ANSWER: In the English me bin millions in a billion i: tates, a billion is only a tho! of imeration there 'grc-a 000,000,000. In the United) millions 5 ve 1,000,000,000. "NEXT: Mushrooms that frow om nsects, a-Boy-Secont--uniform taken about 15 years ago. Not only did His Majesty recall that he still had the stockings, but he was able to recall the names of all the officials shown in the photo- graph with him, - 43 4S 47 C48 50 51 [52 95 manifestation of strong emotion, ; the father has for the little one, : : POP--Pain in the Purse Now - By J. MILLAR WATT ' COMPLAINT o : WHAT'S THE TROUBLE, POP? SAME OLD EE KO, boc, I'VE 7 GOT A NEW ONE ! YOUR OUTRAGEOLIS BILL tad 3 Fans 3 0 H sr Nl J aC "a ' RO Pe mrs

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