Whitchurch-Stouffville Newspaper Index

Stouffville Tribune (Stouffville, ON), June 18, 1936, p. 2

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i womans world by mait m morgan favorite biscuits the old mammycooks inspirni the legend of southern hospitality by al ways serving the finet food they veio famous for their quid breads tner flaky biscuits and delicious it lis many people believed that old mammy never measured lie ingredi ents but carelessly threw them to gether and by some magic sot re sults hut they were wrong mam my was an experienced cook she al ways measured but she used her hand instead of a measuring cup and she was never careless about ingredients she knew that flour was the basis of good quick breads and cakes and she always insisted on the most finely milled flour she could get now mammys magic cooking has been modernized for everyone so that the newest bride can make biscuits that suggest southern hospitality dainty smock dress for all day wear 1853b this smock dess is perfectly good for afternoons at home as well as mornings even if unex pected visitors arrive you will have the comfortable knowledge that you are attractively dressed note especially the sleeve treat ment the wide eyelets and bow- knots are smart anil new a perky sash round the waist can be tied in a bow or buttoned as shown the front panel also buttons at the shoulders its comfortable for any household duty and when the warm davs come youll lind it cool and lovely for the beach garden porch or even marketing barbara ilell pattern no 1853- h is available for sizes 32 34 3g 38 40 42 and 44 size 31 re quires i 78 yards of 35inch fabric how to order patterns vrito your name and address and number of pattern wanted enclose 20c in stamps or coin coin preferred wrap it care fully and address your older to barbara bell 73 adelaide w toronto downsouth biscuits 4 cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon baking powder vi teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon salt cup lard cup but termilk or sour milk sift flour once measure add bak ing powder soda and salt and sift again cut in shortening add milk gradually until soft dough is formed turn on floured board and knead lightly 2 minutes roll l inch thick cut with small floured cutter bake in shallow pan in hot oven 450 f 12 minutes makes 2 dozen biscuits orange marmalade rolls ginger rolls 2 cups sifted cake flour 3 teaspoons baking powder teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons butter or other shorten ing 4 tablespoons milk 1 egg well beaten 13 cup orange marmalade or preserved ginger finely cut sift flour once measure add bak ing powder and salt and sift again cut in shortening combine egg milk and marmalade or ginger add to flour gradually and mix to a soft dough turn on floured board knead lightly 2 to 3 minutes roll inch thick and cut with 2inch foured cut ter butter m of each circle fold place or wellgreased pan and brush tops with melted butter let rise in warm place 15 minutes bake in hot oven 425 f 15 minutes brush tops with melted butter and finish baking makes 18 rolls this weeks winners peach surprise v mix chopped nuts and mayonnaise with chateau cheese place a spoon ful of cheese in onehalf of a peach cover with other half and serve on lettuce this may be served with mayonnaise or french dressing as desired this is very good mrs henry metcalfe rr 1 alvinston ontario waldorf salad arrange lettuce leaves on indivi dual saucers slice bananas on the leaves sprinkle with chopped nut meats then pour mayonnaise dress ing on the whole this is a simply made salad for hot days anna ella milligan rr 4 tottenham ontario just around he corner how to enter contest plainly write or print out the in gredients and method of your favor ite maincourse dish and send it to gether with name and address to household science room 421 73 west adelaide street toronto homecoming garett oppenheim in the new york sun let us go by the kitchen door and the back stairs lightly to the top floor where the dim years lie stored in the attic theres a bottle qf old wine and a broken ratter and a ball of red twine and a sound of laughter echoing enigmatic we will make no sound moving there together though dead leaves rustle on the ground this is spring weather remembering enraptured theres an cd moonbeam at the lop landing and there like a childs dream an old clock still standing telling forever one moment forever captured australias wandering jew mr philip lewis during his thirtyseven years of evangelism has travelled 27o0o miles walked 75000 miles worn out200 pairs of boots read the bible fifty one times when with your wife and family on a little pleasure bent and you hear the children laughing with their glee the air l rent vblle you roll along at twenty and you all enjoy the trip and you think there is no danger but from me you take a tip when with our wife youre chatting and it seems so good to live and have the little pleasure your car to you can give but just around the corner and hard ly yet in sight a road hog speeds along your lane and hugs the shoulder light he hits the miudle of the road then swings upon your side just aburning up the pavement with the throttle open wide for a road hogs speed is seventy nothing less will satisfy you have a moment for to act or perhaps you all will die when scarce throe lengths in front of you he swings to miss your car ills car which is a heavy ono will hardly feel the jar but when he hits your running board your ear will give a hitch in spite of all that you can do you land into the ditch the toad hog never looks around and hardly bats an eye hes thinking only of himself he dont care if you die he will not stop to help you nor bis assistance lend but steps still harder on the gas and hides around a bend you are safer in hie jungle where the lions prowl and roar than you are upon the pavement that runs smoothly by your door with all the road hog nuisance that endangers life and limb lt would be a public kindness to rid this world of him keep a sharp lookout for road hogs when out upon a trek you can always recognize one by the bristles on his neck if speeding down the highway by chance one you should spy drive your car clear off the pavement and let the brute go by now there are many road hogs on the highway 1 am told cut they will never speed their cars where streets are paved with gold then where will earthly road hogs go when they no longer dwell there is no loom for such in heaven they have a place in well your guess is as good as mine mrb walla walla wash unday choo need we fear by john oren in baltimore sun those who are anxious over some new trend in the colleges and un dergraduate thought ought to look at the results of the princeton poll of the senior class the favorite poems in onotwothree order are kiplings if of course grays elegy and matthew arnolds dover beach the favorite novelist is dickens the favorite dramatist is shakespeare the favorite book is a tale of two cities and the only concessions if they may be called that to the one time spirit of the age are made in behalf of masefield whose poetry ranks fourth after arnold and an thony adverse which takes second- place among the novels and ah wilderness a favorite play which is by the by full of nostalgia for dear days of 08 could one ask in this year of 193g for a more nstonishng com ment upon the tastes and mental habits of the undergraduates of rather a gay college the only liquid which i can hon estly say ever impaired me is bath water applied externally j b s haldane 39 lesson xii june 21 jesls exalted luke 24 3653 printed text luke 24 3653 golden text wherefore also god highly exalted him and gave unto him the name which is above every name ihilippians 2 9 the lesson in its setting time the appearance to the ten disciples took place on the evening of the resurrection sunday april 9 ad 30 the exact day on which the words recorded in vs 4249 were spoken we cannot say the ascension took place on thursday may 18 aa 30 place the appearance to the dis ciples was in an upper room in jerusalem the ascension took place on a hil near bethany on thu mount olives amid as they spake these things that is as the two disciples return ing from emmaus were giving an account of their wonderful afternoon experience with the risen lord and as the disciples gathered together in this upper roefm in jerusalem v 33 were confessing to them that christ had actually risen from the dead and had been seen by simon peter he himself stood in the midst of them the greek indicates a sud den appearance john 20 19 tells us that the doors were shut at this time and his appearance would be cause for astonishment and saith unto them peace be unto you this b- nediction was and had been from the time of the patriarchs the char acteristic salutation of the jews be ing enshrined in the very name of their capital city jerusalem that is habitation of peace but they were terrified and af frighted and supposed that they be held a spirit they became con scious of a presence in their midst a form was seen standing before them a voice greeted them with the customary salutation and he said unto them why are ye troubled this is a different word from the two used in the pre- cedng verse to describe the terror possessing the hearts of the disciples it is the same word used in the 1eautiful admonition of christ let not your heart be troubled john 14 1 27 and wherefore do question ings arise in your heart the word here translated questionings means literally to bring together different reasons to resolve in ones mind to deliberate see my hands and my feet that it is i myself handle me and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye behold me having see the significant passage in 1 john 1 1 which seems to have a direct refer ence to this occasion it would ap pear from this verse that the feet of jesuj had been nailed to the cross as well as his hands the disciples would recognize in his body the marks of his crucifixion on the fri day preceding one would like to think that these sacred scars left in hii body by the cruel death which he suffered for us will be ever visible in his glorified body as they were this evening to the disciples and when he had said this he showed them his hands and his feet we should not fail to observe how our lord condescended to satisfy the senses of his disciples whei he show ed himself to them after his resur rection and while they still disbelieved for joy and wondered he said unto them have ye here anything to eat and they gave him a piece of a broiled fish and he took it and ate before them the fact that jesus actually ate and drank with the dis ciples after ho was raised from the dead is one of the proofs appealed to by the disciples acts 1 3 4 10 41 compare the action of our lord in a later postresurrection appear ance john 21 12 13 and he said unto them this new introduction points to a break of some kind between verses 43 and 44 but whether of moments or of days we cannot be certain this section vs 4449 seems to be a con densation of what was said by chiist to the apostle3 between the resurrection and the ascension part ly on easter day and partly on other occasions these are my words which 1 spake unto you while i was yet with jou this last phrase refers to his intercourse before his death a mode of intercourse which is entirely at an end cf acts 9 30 not that the new intercourse will be less close or c mtinuous but it will be of a dif ferent kind that all things must needs be fulfilled which rc written in the law nf moses and the pro phets and the psalms concerning me no other person has ever lived on this earth who could ever truth fully say that he was the fulfillment of the predictions of a great body of writings circulated hundreds of years before he was born then opened ho their mind that they might understand the scriptur- es cf v 32 psalm 119 18 without an understanding of the word the apostles could never fulfill the mission to which jesus chist had callel them with a true insight in to the meaning of the scriptures they would be equipped to convince the jews that christ was the mes siah and would have within them a power adequate for each emergency see eg acts 18 28 and he said unto them thus it is written that ths christ should suffer and rise again from the dead the third day the fiftythird chapter of isaiah is one of the great passag es of the old testament predicting the suffering of the lord jesus and that repentance and remis sion of sins should be preached in his name unto all the nations be ginning from jerusalem here is lukes account of christs great commission to evangelize the world cf matt 28 1820 mark is 13- 18 acts 1 8 ye are witnesses of these things a witness is one who is convinced of a certain truth who has yielded his life to that truth who is transform ed by that truth and who makes it his business to proclaim that truth it does not take a great man to make a good witness and to be witnesses of christian facts was the main busi ness of the apostles and behold i send forth the pro mise of my father upon you it is the gift of the holy spirit that is particularly referred to here cf isa 44 3 ezek 30 27 joel 2 28 zech 12 10 john 14 16 15 26 16 7 but tarry ye in the city l until ye be clothed with power from i on high cf acts 1 4 how many days actually elapsed between this command and the fulfillment of this promise we do not know all we do know is that pentecost oc curred fifty days after the resurrect ion of christ and ten days after his ascension into heaven and he led them out the verb here is one of power he did not ac company them out of jerusalem but actually led them out christ is al ways leading us out of the bondage darkness and habits of this world into the light and liberty of the world to come until they were over against bethany this lovely village just over the brow of the mount of olives on the eastern side thi home of martha mary and their brother lazarus and also of simon the leper was a town to which he loved to retire especially during the last few days of his earthly sojourn and he lifted up his haids and blessed them in those hands were arguments scars of battlt stigmata of pain the insignia of loyalty it was the high priestly act he up lifted his hands upon men whom he led out from all the forces that seemed clearly in the vorld to deny to these men the protection of these forces and as he did so he gave them fullness of life he gave them fellowship with god and it came to pass while he blessed them he parted from them the verb would indicate that chrit deliberately walked away from the disciples and was arried uc into heaven his ascension was the in evitable consequence and climax of his ministry on earth and they worshipped him if man does not worship christ he re fuses to render him the homage which is due his name rev 4 10 5 1214 7 11 and returner to jerusalem with greac joy the disciples rejoiced because they were now convinced that jesus christ was lord of all that the work he had unde taken had been ecomplished by god that the promises he had made were now being fulfilled and were continually in the temple blessing god continually is a populai expression implying great frequency in attendance both at the services and at other times underwriters sit in lloyds build ing leadenhall street london in seats resembling those of the original coffee house kept by edward lloyd in 179h from which the present cor poration developed yon clean men as you clean milk pails by scalding them george bernard shaw shirley entertains an overseas visitor shirley temple and teru kurusu 10ycarold daughter of saburo kurusu japanese ambassador to belgium have a great time together in hollywood as teru presents a japanese doll to the young movie star the kurusu family stopped off in hollywood while en route to belgium so that keru could visit shirley fu manchu by sax fiohmer conflict kages bisi my norvos bristling with oieitomont i dashed through tho passago and down hie stairs tho front door was open and through it mr info tho moonlight and the j fragrant country sconts i hurried to catch up with nayland smith a eltharn is mad pelrie smith cried as i camo up with km and wo both ran on hoavcn knows what hirb in fhorol a terrible conflict ragod in tho shrubbory bo- twoen tho dog and somothing else i smtt guided by the v ctv thems lantern wo struggled forward stumbling over stumps and lathed by low branches i tho sounds of conflict suddenly coascd as wo camo upon elrham who glancod up with tears in his oyos from whoro ho biclt noar a copper beech tree o im v si rbmmt a tu mi wu took eltham ex claimed tho body of i ho dog lay before him winning will of child important dr c a bishop of fergus delivers interesting address at rotary luncheon stratford declaring that the first business of the teacher should be to win the will of the child and that this was the basis upon which modern educationists were working rev charles a bishop ma dd delivered a most infor mative address hert recently his subject was new developments in education education the speaker pointed out was like almost every other branch of modern life in that it was passing through substantial changes the more important changes had not yet appeared on the surface or rather had not yet appeared in the curricu lum of our system of education but were most decidedly coming for the past thirty years experi mental work has been going on in isolated centres particularly in eng land and in the scandinavian coun tries on this new type of education i i canada it was known as th- progressive educational movement and in the old land as the new educational movement the ideas involved are not par ticularly new and have as a basis the achievement of a new and more widespread grasp on the attitude and will of the pupil and scholar educationists have found that the will of pupis fall into three chief categories there is one group witli a more or less passive will and on either side two contrast ing attitudes one group having an active and keen desire to learn and the other group that goes to school with an adverse attitude toward it the modern education group feels that is the key to the whole luestioi and that upon the attitude of the wiil depends greatly the qual ity of education that goes on just as industry is strong on efficiency so it should be wit education two important processes depend on the degree of intensity and the other being the degree in the oppo site direction nd it is the aim of modern educationists to make more of what is registered register in tensely it should be figured out how much is retained and how much is not or rather how much waste there is in education the most favorable circumstances possible under which knowledge or skill may be acquired is when the thing being learned comes about in the form of a project which the pu pils themselves have come to regard as their own if the pupil does a thing as a project of his own he is getting an education several limes greater than if he did it because he was told to do 0 teacher training i- a big fa- tor in putting across this idea the teacher must be trained how to be an inspher and an inducer of pro jects of the minds of pupils the wills of the children must be brought to such o stage that they will have an enthusiasm for their work anil not simply go to school to put in time and it is to gain the proper approach to this end that modern educationists are now putting in their time daintiness is the basis of all beauty for a woman the basis of modern beauty is daintiness says a girl who is always immaculately groomed and i think daintiness is achieved only by thinking of and enrinft for all the details of ones appearance to blend her makeup hairdress and clothe into a completed picture of loveliness i wo man must analyze herself and her looks and learn the little tricks that she alone needs of course there are certain often overlooked or neglected features that should be given regular attention by every woman elbows for example not only should they be scrubbed with a brush but massaged with rich cream several times a week she advises meticulous scrubbing and frequent creaming for the heels too she spoke also of eyebrows lcnientiiig the fact that many girls allow hair to grow on lids and be tween brows we all know that brows should not be tweezed into thin pencilthin lines of course but neither should they be allowed to spread beyond the edges of the neat normal eyebrow line untidy polish draws her condem nation few women neglect their hands these days buofitiiny do go around with chipped and cracked nail polish i think everyone ought keep a bottle of nail polish at home using it between weekly visits to the mani curist the minute polish on oiis ril starts to peel remove the ojrf and apply a fresh coat of lacquer what would happen if you spoke in italian to a dog that had been raised in ethiopia prof maurice langhornc psychology emory univ ga

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