Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 8 Nov 1939, p. 3

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] LESSON VII PUTTING GOO'S KINGDOM FIRST Mattbaw 6:19-34. tfoUcB T«xt. â€" S««k y* first kU kiagdom, and kii rirkteoutnat*. Matt. 6:33. THE LESSON "IN ITS SETTING Ttaae.â€" Sprimr, A.D. 27. Place. â€" On aome mountain in Falastine, the location of which w« do not know. 19. Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon the enrth, where moth and rust consume, and where thieves break through and steal: 20. but lay up for yourselves trea- â- nres in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth consume, and where thieves do not break through nor steal. The King does not say that it is wrong to lay up; it is the purpose at the back of things which matters. Christ says we are to remember that we are not the child of today, nor of the earth; we are of the eternities. Where Your Treasure Ii 21. For where thy treasure is, there will thy heart be also. Christ warns us against the accumulation of wealth for wealth's sake, be- cause of the influence of that which a man lives for on the man himself. The heart, he says, seals the fate of the treasure. Life it- self may become a victim of mold and rust and thief. We lay up treasures in Heaven when our lives are bearing fruit, s.piritually, when we employ in service for the King the spiritual gifts and talents he has intrusted to us. Inner Illumination 22. The lamp of the body is the eye; if therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light. 23. But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be •full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be ilarkness, how great is the darkness! The single eye , sees everything in proper proportion, related to a whole. Here the body represents the man himself in the complete- ness of his personality, and the eye is the outlook on the v.orld and his fellow men. A good eye is the condition of spiritual illumination. Freedom From Anxiety 24. No man can serve two mas- ters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other: or else he will hold to one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon. One cannot obey God when one is enslaved to rich- es, material possessions. To be wholly yielded to God is to be the ~ "Master of all material things. 25. Therefore I say unto you, Be not anxious for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than the food, and the body than the raiment? Christ is here warn- ing us against having an anxious temper of mind. If we spend all our energy and thought in worry- ing about what things wc are go- ing to eat and wear, we have little time for the inner, precious things that make life really worth living. 26. Behold the birds of the heaven, that they sow not, tieither do they reap, nor gather into ^ams; and your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are not ye of much more value than they? 27. And which of you by being anxi- ous can add one cubit unto the measure of his life? Worrying about death does not prolong life. 28. And why are ye anxious eon- eerning raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin; 29. yet I say unto you, that even Solomovtin all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. The plant referred to Here may be the anemone, which grows in the spring of the year on the hillsides of Galilee. 30. But if God doth •o clothe the grass of the field, which today is, and tomi>rrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith? If God has spent all this labor on what passes ?o soon, how easy it should be to trust him to care for us with that same wis- dom and omnipotence, when we are his children forever. Live For Today 31. Be not therefore anxious, laying. What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink? or. Where- withal shall we be clothed? 32. F«r after all these things the Gentiles seek; for your heavenly nttber knoweth that ye have no need of all these things. By Gen- tiles here, is meant pagan peoples ef the world, then and now. 38. Sat seek ye first his kingdom, and kis righteousness; and all these Iklags shall be added unto you. The first lesson taught by these pHMges is that anxious thought is Miitrkry to all the lessons of lu- tvc, which show it to b« unnectt- tBf; iMondlj. it *s Contrary le all \ thtt leivons of re\«l«t{on or rdB- (Imi, wUch show It to be heatkm- ! Mk; thirdly w« most hare » goal te Ufk. • spiritual objective. | Huge French Tanks Cniih Brick WalU As Though Paper t Whale Census This \i-w.s Or the Day series shows the power of th is terrific and far exceeds anything known in the last w of paper mache, and snaps trees as if they were twigs, the west front when the fighting gets heavy. At the it encounters a wall, and then, BOTTOM LEFT, we see RIGHT is a head-on view of the tank as it goes through appear to an unfortunate soldier in its path. On the B crashing through the wall. e new French 70-90 ton tanks. Their battering power ar. It plows through brick walls as if they were made It is believed that they will be an important factor on TOP LEFT, the war monster is being tipped nose up as it from the rear as it crashes through. On the TOP a breach in the wall, and ^ves an idea of how it must OTTOM RIGHT is a side view of the tank in action Various Types Of Handshakes Hand Analyst Claims He Can Judge Character By That Method A band analyst of New Vork, Dr. Josef Ranald by name, says he can judge characted by a handshake. In his list of hand g<-ips is what he calls the leathery or Tarzan type. "This fellow," he says, "will grab your hand in a first-rate imitation ot a vise, and will smile perfectly satisfied when he sees you writh- ing inwardly at the strength of his grip.'" "This sledgehammer or bo&e- crusher type," the good doctor con- tinues. "repr.»sents the domineer- ing, stubborn and intolerant fel- low who will stop at nothing to achieve bis end." The six remaining classifications according to the doctor are: The clammy type, traced to bad glandu- lar conditions; the nervous, or un- certain (he recommends more ex- ercise) ; the inept, or negativ&K)ut- ward expression ot a man who can- not make up his mind about any- thing; ' the grab'ay or dead fish" which is a red signal that the hand- shaker is not to be trusted; th"^ passionate grip with its alternate pressure and release with which a man tries to carry on a tlirta- tlon; and the timid. Would Beautify Rural Schools Ontario Agriculture Minister Thinks Into-est of Young People In Such Projects Would Spread to Thew Ovm Homes Interest school children in im- provement ot houses and lands and the Interest will spread to the home Hon. P. M. Dewan, Ontario Minis- ter of Agriculture, told the Oxford County Home Impi-ovement Asso- ciation !n a recent address at Woodstock. The meeting was held to honor Oxford county entrants who won awards in an Ontario home Im- provement contest based on perm- anent improvements made around rural properties during the year. The contest was won by Lome Richardson of Walnut Grove Jer- sey Farm, Oxford Centre. E. â-². Monteith, of E}mbro placed third, and Alex. Muir, of Woodstock, was eighteenth. "I feel that much improvement can 00 done by promoting Improve- ment about our rural schools," Mr. Dewan said. "I believe that the ichool Is one place to make a be- ginning that win prove fruitful. RADIO NOTES AND N .t W S By MADGE ARCHER Whey that watery liquid re- maining after cheese has been ex- tracted from milk by the cheese industries of the United States amounts to 5,500,000,000 pounds a year â€" enough to float a good- sized navy. Swept Out Of Office lOx-Pre.nier Duplessis of Quebec province who.'-e Union .Vationale party went down to defeat in the recent elections. NEIGHBORLY CO-OPERATfON An example in international re- lations â€" that might well be a les- son to some nations' in Europe â€" was a discovery I made the other day while doing some investigating on programs heard across the bor- der. For In Buffalo 1 came to a pro- gram that might well be called "Hands Across the Border" rather than its present title "Internation- al House Party." I found that while the hour variety show employed the best of American talent, the Canadian touch Is supplied with scripts that are written in Mont- real, one of the highlights of the program "The Story Within the Song" is the product ot a Toron- tonian, the dramatic feature â€" a five minute sketch â€" is the regu- lar contribution of Walter O'Hearn a Montreal newspaperman, and John Sturgiss, the baritone solo- ist, is also Toronto's gift. The pro- gram can be heard from Buffalo over WGR any Tuesday evening from 9:00 to 10:00 o'clock. REMEMBRANCE DAY The Annual Remembrance Day ceremony on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, which will take place in the presence of the Gjveruor Gen- eral, Lord Tweedsmuir, Prime Min- ister MacKenzio King, Can.idian dignitaries of Church and State, the Diplomatic Corps a:id consular representatives from many coun- tries, will be broadcast to the peo- ple of the Dominion by the Canad- ian Broadcasting Corporation through their coast to coast net- work ot stations, on Saturd.ay, .Nov- ember 11, from 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. A choir conducted by Cyril Rick- wood will open the program with "0 Canada", Brigadier W. W. Fos- ter, and Maurice Olivier will read short messages of remembrance, after which the guns will signal a two minutes' silence. The Last Post and the Reveille soimded by trumpeters far above in the gallery ot the Peace Tower will end the ceremony. In the evening a special Remembrance program presented in co-operation with the Canadian Legion ot the British Empire Ser- vice League from Convocation Hall in Toronto will be heard from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. During this program a special message from Lord Tweeds- muir speaking from Ottawa, will be conveyed to the Canadian peo- ple. TO BE HEARD Nov. 10, S:00 p.m., CBL, Deer Hunting in Canada special broad- cast from Metagamf, Lake, Ontario . . . Nov. 11, 10:45 a.m., Remem- brancG Day from Ottawa . . . 2:15 p.m., CBL, Football . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Hockey, Maple Leafs vs. New York Rangers ... 10:00 p.m., CBY. NBC, Oreh. under Toscanlnl .... Nov. 12, 3:00 p.m., CFRB, N. Y. Philharmonic . . . 8:00 p.m., CBL, Rudy Vallee Joins cast of Chase & Sanboi-n Hour . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, CanadL-in Red Cross Appeal .... Nov. 13, 8:30 p.m., CBL, Appoint- ment with Agostlni . . . 9:00 p.m., CFRB, Radio Theatre ... 10:00 p.m., CBL, Contented Hour . . Nov. 14, S:.30 p.m., CBL, [ntormatlon Pleaso . . . 10:00 p.m., CBL, Les Concerts Symphonliiues under Wil- fred Pelletier . . Nov. 15, ^:30 p.m., CBL, Serenade for Strings . . . . 9:30 p.m., Percy Faith 3;id his music . . . Nov. 16, 9:00 p.m., CBY- Rochester Phil. Orchestra ... 10 p.m., CBL, Blng Crosby If the gentleman who thought washing an elephant was s big job will come abound, Milton Lo- bell will UU him a few things. Lo- bell is going to count whale noses In the Antarctic. Accompanying the Byrd .expedition to Antarcti- ca, the 26-year-old University of Wathington graduate, as a repre- sentative of the United States reau of Fisheries, will take a ot whale census around the eoull polar ice cap. The study will k« made to determine what m«tho4t of conservation may be necessarf to keep the whaling industry ttma becoming extinct. America produces S,GOO,(Mi barrels of oil every day. Tm CuRKXJS World ^.Zir ANIMAUS Of THC CAT f/HJAiU:^ sheathe: their claws for tvwo fS.£ASC>f^S/ IT KJSP5 THC CLAWS FIZOAA BElKMs DUUJEO^ l| AND ALSO ALLOWS TMe ANIAAAL TO WALK. NOISELESSCy. <>.. ^:- 4i ANIA<»ALS OP THE DOG TVPE DO NJOX SHEATHE THEIR CXJkV^IS/ SINCE THE?/ »?UN DOWN THEIIR. PREV, AND SEIZE IT INJ THEIR. AAOUTHS, NOISELESS FOCTTWORX, AND SHARP CU^WS ARE UNMECESSi«<RV. COPI!. 1 937 BY MA SERVICE. INC V -%, >^ /â- '/. Age »<ilU_ED CASILV BV A BLOW ON THE: SfiMMjT, \A/hKRE. THE. BRAINJ LIES CLOSE TO TME SURKAdEl. 9-i9\ WSSE it not for the cat's ability to retract its claws, they soon would be worn down by constant contact with hard ground and' stones. Without its sharp, curving claws, a cat would be unable to hold prey of any size. A dog, however, uses its claws only tor dig|gng, scratching, and possiSly for better contact while run- ning, ns prey is hera in the powerful Jaws. SLEUTH FROM FICTION 1 HORIZONTAL t, 8 Detective hero from fiction. tS Opera melody 14 Possessive pronoun. 16 Fence bar. 17 To let fall. 18 Charming. 20 Plural pronoun. 22 Type standards. 23 2000 pounds. 24 English coin. 25 Poefm. 26 To suffice. 27 Ever. 28 Enemy. 29 Coffin stacd. 30 Stripped. 33 Constant companion. 34 Plant shoot. 35 Secreted. 36 Pussy. 37 "Whirlwind. 38 Five plus five 39 Fish organ. 40 Keels over. 41 Exists. Answer to Previous Puzxie 42 He is a most imaginary sleuth. 44 Mouth part. 45 Officers' assistants. 47 12 o'clock a.m. 49 Dined. 50 Musical note. 51 Explosive. 53 Still. 54, 95 He was created by Sir . VER^CAL 2 Concords. 3 Cupid. 4 To tear stitches. 5 Note in scale. S Point of under jaw, 7 Relatives. 9 Measure. 10 To loiter. 11 Tone E. 12 To evade. 15 Hair flUet. 17 He has remarkable powers of â€" â€" » 18 Religious homage. 19 Fury. 21 He is the hero of a of tales. 23 Golf device. 25 To lubricate, 27 Sea eagle. 28 Gave food to, 29 To abate. 31 To put on. 32 Wound. 33 Nominal value. 36 Cautious. 37 Upon. 39 Dandy. 40 Vulgar fellow. 42 Feather. 43 Falsehood. 44 Diving bird. 46 To surfeit. 48 Indian. 49 Preposition. 52 Within. 53 Out of the way. POPâ€" Robin's Afraid His Pet May Leave Him By GENE BYRNES WHY ARE YOU HOLDING YOUR UTTLE BROTHER 50 HE WONT JOIN THE NAVY /

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