Ontario Community Newspapers

Stouffville Tribune (Stouffville, ON), August 9, 1928, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

i knowledge that salvation comes by faith alone teter was followed by paul and barnabas who gave a re- hearsal of their work and then jame made a statement supporting the views of peter and adding a quota tion from amos predicting the return of ihe gentile- to the true- faith the decision was the reached and it was august 12 lesson vii the council in favor of the policy of freedom cir- at jerusalem acts 15 t11 golden ccmcision was not to be regarded aa text if the son therefore shall sunday school lesson make you free ye shall be froe in deed john 8 30 1 analysis i tllk ivint 0j- isslk 13 ii tllk asskmuiy at jkrlsalem 411 intkobfctton no body of thought ful noii and women can unite their forces in service and worship without sooner or luter experiencing soma shades of differenco in opinion and conduct human nature is very var ied there are minds that ara natur ally consewativo and cleave to old traditions others are eager for change and see the golden age ahead and are impatient with those who can not see with them nor is this neces sarily an evil since difference of opinion and discussion are not perils unless we exercise them in an unlov ing spirit of rivalry in the story of tho first council we have an instruc tive instance of this fact while we also have a model by which tho church may in every ago try to settle the differences which break out among us i the point at issue 13 v i the difficulty arose out of the forward step taken when the off or of the gospel was made to tho gentiles it had already been decided that mem bership in the church was open to all those who came in faith but the method in which this was to be dono had not yet been settled some claimed that the gentiles should receive cir cumcision and observe all the laws of the jewish people this was tho atti tude of the pharisaic party who evi dently had sent down their represen tatives to the church at antioch a further question was whether the gentile convert could enter into full social communion with the jew thus the issue was very real affecting the social and religious rights of the new converts if the narrower view pre vailed this became a denial of the uni versal mission of jesus v 2 the teaching of these emis saries came like a thunderbolt to tho new church at antioch and created a great confusion paul and barnabas evidently were leaders in the discus sion and they denied the principle which these jews proclaimed the claim was so impossible that paul felt impelled to us all his power in op posing it the only course to follow was to appeal to the church from which these leaders pretended to come and it was decided to send a largo and important delegation paul and bar nabas and certain others if the pas sage in galatians 2 describes this visit we may notice that paul says definite ly that he had also received direct commandment from god to attend it was in consequence of a revelation that i went up at all we do not know the other members of the depu tation but titus wa3 apparently with them v 3 tho entire church was evident ly greatly concerned in this matter and they all accompanied tho mem bers for some distance probably to seleucia the port as the apostles journeyed to jerusalem they visited the cities of phoenicia and told of their reat work among tho gentiles to tho great joy of the brethren ii the assembly at jerusalem 411 v 4 the brethren are cordially welcomed at the mother church and paul and barnabas publicly tell of tho work which they had done among the gentiles v 5 tho sect of the pharisees liko- jy consisted in this instance of those who had gone to antioch and who now repeated their demand that circumci sion was essential to salvation v 6 it is not very easy to follow tho procedure but if we may use gal 2 it is possible that after the first cneral meeting there were several private conferences when the matters were carefully thrashed out in com mittee this is the usual method in all councils and is the only way by which any harmonious settlement can be gained v 7 then the entire church was called together and the first speech is given by peter his impulsive and generous nature led him to make a very definite contribution to the dis cussion his speech is summarized in vs 7- 11 v 8 he refers to his own exper ience when he was sent to baptize cornelius then god had given the essential to salvation but the gentile converts were to observe certain of -j- young china uptodato the laws of the jews a tool kit in every home a repair kit containing tools that can really repair is an essential for every home there are always shelve to be put up racks to bo made screens to be flxed and a thou sand and one other odd jobs for do- ing which a carpenter would charge a small fortune the tools that one has to have in any kit are listed as follows a real hehammer a crosscut saw not too fine medium toothed so you can use it for most any job a rlpsawnd a compasssaw a mltersaw with a mltorbox a good brace with one- eighth onefourth onehalf and threo- fourthlnch bits a countersink a mallet and two or three lighter screw drivers two or three chisels one- fourth onehalt and threefourths of an inch as well as two or three gouges the same size an awl with a hollow handle containing a half dozen or so small tools such as a chisel gougo screwdriver several bits sood pair of pliers a good hand drill with eight or nine small drills- two adjustable angle wrenches one very large one and a smallersized one a sixfoot fend ing rule a steel square and a good oil stone the tools should bo of medium games of educative value for the children in vacation oriental beauty takes to air miss barbara young a 17yearold chinese girl has enrolled at curtis j and f field ny for a course in aviation poultry problems by w c smith some one has said truthfully that eternal vigilance is the price of suc cess with poultry and if there ever is a time when vigilance becomes more necessary than at others it is during the hot days of summer on our own farm we place feeding first we give price cheap tools ara always break- feeding prominence because failure to ing or bending the bost placo for do s0 has cost us considerable money them is in the ash acn ish paper easily distinguishable as to limaginary values finances soon be- mentioned as to color of beak eye quite as an j part of rim and comb these experiments have the store game as tho y o goofo not been sufficiently general or run tho accuracy and rap with over a long enough penod to warrant which the ama figured sales the thrr exclusive use in the hands of a casnier madc change and the customer novice counted and verified it repaid the the hens which have yellow sianks i mother for tho time spcnt in put yellow beaks and small pale combs i eoucat value into this game in in july and august have undoubtedly tho same mapner oi play the children been poor producers and there is no- vacation days offer an excellent op- it becomes instinctive to recognize th portunity for resourceful mothers to of linen and cotton and to put in practice some excellent ideas in i qkly distinguish satin silk wool i andother familiar dress goods these regard to the development of chil- seem liks pie details but they drens play with a little loving j form a basis for general information guidance and tact almost any of tho j as to the texture and grad- cf fabrics familiar games and amusements can and trimmings so that the little girl bo turned imperceptibly into educaj grown to womanhood will be a mora tional channels competent buyer and discerrer of val- storekeeping for instance has uea costuming is another develop- many bypaths of interest and informent of doll dressing and with the mation and can bo planned to include various national and character dolls several children of varying ages and now to be had even in paper form tastes which is often an advantage this phase of amusement can easily bo each detail of the game can in turnl nado informative the dainty caro be constructively enlarged upon andof dollys belongings the art of trunk each child in succession can act as packing and tho laundering of tiny clerk cashier customer and the one clothes can all form parts of a delight- who delivers the goods to tho homejful game while unconsciously tho even such a childish amusement offers child is learning tho correct way of admirable opportunity for a drill in performing useful work j tho handling of small amounts of for the child whose idea of work is money although these play coins are expressed in drawing or coloring made of pasteboard marked to reprej there is a wide field for easily acquir- sent their value an ingenious mother jed facility and knowledge a famous who was a business woman before her j illustrator claims that he actually marriage has taught her children and started his career when as a child his their little playmates how to make practical mother attached big sheets change quickly and accurately by of brown paper to the walls of ono means of silver and copper colored j corner of his room and called it his cardboardcoins cut of the proper size i studio as this paper was fastened there were only by thumb tacks i was esily re- also one and fivedollar bills of green- newed so that the youngster wis al- wiys sure of a fresh field for tiie dis play of his talent mother- sucge8tin lessons in domestic scitnee cai bo easily evolved ani much practical in formation gained in measurements and methods of imaginery cooking two little girls made an interesting picture on the- beach where they had built a play oven nf pebbles and wero j usirg shells for cooking utensils and dishes they had a tin measuring i63j a modish daytime frock decidedly smart is this chic frock hav ing a tucked vestee setin pocket long or short sleeves and a trim belt the plaited skirt front is joined to the bodice thereby giving a twopiece effect and the back is plain no 1657 is for misses and small women and is in sires id 18 and 20 year size 18 36 bust requires vi yards 39inch or 2 yards 54inch material and h yard additional 39inch contrasting for view b price 20 cents the pattern in times past when wo had less ex perience than now we used to har bor a very prevalent and erroneous idea that tho birds would be ablo to pick up most of their feed on tho range during the warm months on a farm where considerable live stock is being fed in close prvximity to a few hens thoso few hens a hundred per haps may fare very well but where little feeding is done even a hundred hens will show a drop in productioi when several hundred hens are kept the practice is fatal to profits the most profitable plan at least for us awd one which has been suc cessfully used by others is to keep feeding right through the summer j we havo dono best with an allmash ration which we havo been buying commercially for the past two years tho allmash ration lends itself ad mirably to summer feeding as it les sens labor it can be kept sanitary in good hoppers and the hens have a long day in which to consume enough of it to meet thoir body needs and make eggs an allmash ration by the hou a11 equipment and cspe- thc way brings better results in iati- j ciall that used for rjdng water tudea of but eight to nino hours of j and feed snould bc cleaned regularly daylight during the fall and winter ft is advisable to add a small months when lights are used in con- 1 amount of a standard disinfectant to junction with it in the spring sum- the water and scrub them thoroughly mcr and early fall lights are unnec- where the hens are on range the essary houses naturally do not accumulate ii- a filth as rapidly as they do in winter failuro to continue a good ration r which has been in use prior to tho learned tho relations of pints to thing to warrant keeping them tho unces to pounds and howl t j laying hen wil have a bright eye kbei raade foot and howl- faded shanks and beak her plumage fe a vard a dav ooods turns ln ac n a will show siims of wear esoeciallv in i y y u each day s half and a quarter cup the way they the touteaxs where hfhave rub i t stlj eled off even spoonfuls of sand and bed the nest boxes and her comb will be large warm and full of color she will- be kept for despite the usually lowered price of eggs during the sum mer they are nevertheless profitable on the well managed farm i sanitation is very important during the warmer months it is during this timo that disease and parasites multi ply most rapidly and a good supply of disinfectant and a spray- outfit is a necessary part of every poultry- mans equipment oils are fatal to red mites and lice so we make about two or three spraying jobs during tjpe summer the chief disadvantage of using oil is that it darkens the in terior of tho house and it becomes dif ficult to make whitewash stick to walls which have been continually sprayed with oil solutions for this reason many farms are using a commercial solution which docs not darken the wolla sanitation should go farther than a lesson in weights and measures for the little girl with dolls then with a sharp edged shell divid ed the contents into halves and quar ters would have dene credit 10 any littlo girls who like to dress dolls cooking teacher whil tho children can be gradually interested in names it was mothers wi of playing tho and qualities of different fabrics until i paite the new sitabout frock there is a tend- other favorite method of bestowing a certain firmness on an otherwise limp edge of a flounce or tier binding jald over a small cord is still another way of finishing these skirts trim- as a companion to the practical mings in order to acceunate tho runabout dress there is now shown fashionable jutting effect anything an equally convenient sitabout that accomplishes a decided flare on frock obviously for indoor wear and a slender foundation is tho idoal for this roason indulging in many de- model for a sitabout frock and the llghtful whimslcalltes that would be more interestingly this result is out of place for the street the brought about the bettor especially sitabout whllo as easily donned as if the sleeves rpat th flared detail its popular companion dress should chosen for the skirt be attractive enough for any after- 1 a de example of this type is an outdoor dress with five finely pleated flounces forming an apron front matched with bell sleovos trim- noon occasion or even for dinner and evening wear when a semidressy frock is sufficient such a dress is the joy of the woman who robels at a uniform silhouette for this typo of indoor attire is judged ohiefly by its becomingness and has no acquain tance with monotony at outline a notlccablo dotalj of the mapority of these models is tho somowhat vo luminous skirt the fullness being med with three tiers o pleating in deep cuff effect this correspondence between skirt and walsttrimmlng is seen ln many somldressy afternoon frocks where a surplice closing or a bolero effect is gained by applied tiers or rills apparently extending the curving or slanting linos of tho skirt warm months drastic changes in the l fjf care should nes with slightly jutting outline- in achieved in many interesting original j bome reaching even to tho ways while some designers have shoulder where a cascade or jabot successfully exploted allround full- a fluttering bit of prettlness ration or a reversion to the old timo be taken that there are no pools of i filthy surface water where hens may plan of allowing the hens to shift for jji u r htmmic that tic hnj1 frtwl athdr rjir- themselves very often brings on disastrous moult hens cannot bo drink that no dead fowl other car casses or sources- of infection are on efficiently culled which have hiz jz whole or partial moults forced upon them and it either becomes a proposi- of valuable hens through failuro to locate some dead rabbits which the dog tion of allowing them to go unculled had evidently left in the yard or to follow a hit or miss plan which tz f ml tlz jx i due infertile eggs by either disposing is bound to bo unsatisfactory of tho males in summer or by keeping culling is a very necessary part of r ilhan yarded separately often they o summer work heed is much too c tho high to bo wasted on nonproducers and if no moult has been forced upon i can bo placed with a few hens which nro being kept for breeding or whose the hens through wrong feeding or ek t v 1 th rkjf t iw o ml jiotbe kept very long infertile clean other mismanagement tho condition it carefully for each number and nitiius xnkii uou naa given tne i u j r- t holy ghost to these gentiles thus nddr m wilo n pattern showing that their hearts wore fit to servlc 73 wcst adelaide st toronto receive such a grace and that there i patterns sent by return mail was no difference in gods sight uarly isfens ha i f had felt the yoke of the law and he wl1 ay reason sll0 teo1 llow pleads with the church to ac- s someone had loft you without it the secret of distinctive dress lies in good taste rather than a lavish expendi ture of money every woman should want to make her own clothes and the hom dressmaker will find the designs illustrated in- our new fashion book to be practical and simple yet maintaining the spirit of the mode of the moment price of the book 10 cents the copy how 1u order pattekns write your name and address plain- of tho plumage color of shanks cyos iy giving number and sizo of such and b toke with an exa these few extra cents which often patterns as you want encloso 20c in tion of the abdominal cavity is still stamps or com coin preferred wrap vcry d criterion of the hens abil ity to produce eggs and sufficiently indicates her past performance to de termine whether sho shall bo kept in tho laying pen or go into the pot rccontly some rather extensive ex periments havo been made in regard to head points and their relationship to productivity aside from those eggs usually sell at a premium and it i makes tho difference between a profit and a loss total power installation by the end of 1927 canada had a total hydraulic installation of 4777- 921 horsopower of which 82 per cent was installed in central electric sta tions lends itself to amateur designing the fir tree lampshacie andi minaret silhouettes preference is ther ls much latltodo permit- generally accorded to modlflod styles tad in this type of indoor dress and it of thse models with skillfully cut iend bo easl t0 combinations front flares and godets tho back be tabric and color that tue woman ing left almost plain and straight tho wita aptltudo for designing her own front fullness continuing only across tro a mils and flounces its lower edgo wltn as muca individuality as sho flares on 8lender foundations i chooses particularly appropriate for the these dresses are also the joy of sltubout dress is tho modish up-ln- the woman who has tho knackof re- front and downlnback movement as modelling as the trimming detail of it concentrates the fluffy prettlness the typical sitabout is so placed as on the lap and upper part of tho artistically to conceal any signs of frock where it shows to the best ad- wear and tear an the front of a dress vantage while tho elongated back is otherwise wearable two frocka can gracefully arranged wheu tho wearer often be combined with the happiest 13 seated the popular tiered skirt of results an originally plain dress whether flat or with circular flounces of cropedechine or silk being utlllz- that give tho juttingout silhouette ed for the slim foundation and a is capable of almost unlimited varla- flowered chiffon for the frills or tiers tion fne horsebar tape accentuates on the front of both waist and skirt the outline of some models from fa- that give the necessary grace and mous french establishments and softness tec becomingness of thoso gives a certain erispness wcich is far j indoor dresses and tho variety so removed- from anything stiff ma- 1 easily possible in their construction chine stitching in several close rows has done much to reestablish in with heavy silk or metal tread is an- popular favor the afternoon frock mutt and jeff bud fisher their landlady is still holding their trunk for back rent

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy