Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Dec. 19, 1935, edition 1 / Page 17
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^^^improvecT^^5 UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday 1 chool Lesson By REV P. B F1TZWATER. D. D_ Member of Faculty w . |n?rlt-j:?* of t Western New i Lesson for December 22 ialachi foretells a new day I KSSON TKXT- -Ma la.-hi : 1- : ; M?EN TKXT?B-i.oi.i T .. send y messenger. and h?- ;?T1 prepare . xv.iv before m?> M t1a*?hl 3:1. I I'KIMAHY TOPIC ' ni. IP p: m. .. t True. .1! NI??R TOPIC?H w ?. "I Kept Ui?g ' i: !t M ': DIATE MAND S::N*P? PIC -Prinsrinu in a l'-''ter J1 ' N C, I'KOPLG AN|.? ADULT . ' PIC?Preparing Co- Way ..f the Lord (The lesson committee has provided I Kerr t - - ng the text Muttl'- w - :1 12) The subject of today's lesson Is r.,;Mior ban the printed text. In ler effectively to teach this lesion, 1i?' entire Rook of Malflchi should be i: \eyed. The prophet pointed out the sins of tlie corrupt priesthood, mixed .n irriage.s. and failure to pay tithes, with the portrayal of the coming judgment and glorious new day with Christ r going in his glorious kingdom. 1. The Base Ingratitude of Israel God npnroachpd them with the tender affirmation, "I have loved thee.** It was the burden of the prophet to deare this fact unto them (v 1). So orldly were the people that they ' lied to discern God's good hand upon them. Israel's attitude tm^ml G?el is shown in the skeptical question. Wherein hast thou loved us?" (v. 2). Malnchi answers this question hy showing God's choice of Jacob and his passing hy of Esau, his destruction of i'Mnhi and his saving of Israel. II. God's Severe Indictment (1 :(V 2:17; 3:7-15). 1. Against the priests (1:0-2:9). They were guilty of a. Profanity (1 : ?). Their profanity consisted in despising the name of Hod. To fail to honor God Is to be profane. To use his name In any unt! way Is to be thus guilty h Sacrilege (1 :7,S). Their sacrilegious acr was In offering pollnted rend and blemished sacrifices, c. Greed (1 :10). They were not s illing oven to open the doors of God's house without pay. Service to God should be out of a heart of love for him. <1. Weariness (1:12,13). Because of the absence of love, the routine of riestlv duties became irksome, e Not teaching the law to the peo ie (2:1-9). Those set apart to teacn God's law to the people have a great responsibility and God will most as airedly demand an accounting. 2. Against the people (2:10-17; > : ?- i.M. a. For ungodly marring#-* (2:11. 12). bid's purpose in the prohibition of nixed marriages was that he might raise up a holy seed (v. 1">). Marriage with the heathen would frustrate this irpo-e. Mar- in _o or the believer v.ith the unbeliever today brings eonision into the fold of <Jod and turns aside nis purpose. b. Divorce (MMil). Divorce In '-rael was the source of great sorrow. 'vert the tears "f the wronged women covered rhe altar (v. 13). The offeri:.-.s of thc? man who had thus treated ?i> wife would i>e an abomination to :.>.i Public wrongs d>. 1 1) Sorrerv in tl arts. rips uchide* tin practice of cult sciences. - eh ns spit itism. necromancy, fortune filing. (2). Adultery. This is a -in of wider ovtenr than the direct parties oonrned \t is a canker which gnaws ::i the very heart of society. 1'nfaithfulnoss to the marriage relation should bo regarded as a public sin. Such sinners should be ostracized from society. (3) False swearing. (4) Oppression of the hireling, the widow, and the fatherless. (">) Turning aside the stranger from his rights. d. Withholding tithes from {?#> J (3:7-l'J). Jjiilufc to pay limes is roubory of Co.|. if is claim upon Israel was a tenth, plus free will offerings Our responsibility is to irive as G<><! prospers us (I Cor. 10:1). e. Blasphemy (3:1" lo). T >;>eu ly spake against God, saying that it was profitless and vain to serve him. 111. The Avwful Judgment Which Shall Befall the Nation (.'CI": 1:10). 1. By whom executed (v. 1) It is to be done by the Lord. All judgmer.r hath been committed unto the Son of God (John o:22. 30; cf. Acts 17:30,31) 2. The time of (3:2-4:1). It will be at the second coming of Chrisr. John the Baptist was the forerunner of his first coming. Klijah will be the forerunner of his second coming. 3 The result (3:3, 4, 10 18: 4:1. 2). For the righteous It will he a day of healing and salvation: for the wicked it will be a day of burning and destruction. I he Cherokee Scout, M K EMPIRE Shirt Factory i.fl I ' " " ' "r*"i, ' 1 'ivsr I vast agricultursil lands. where sne '1 I s?.n rlvor Hows placidly from th- north . ., t. .uuj wht?re tlio NiI asara river spills a portion ?f it- w? t.rs and Mr... hundreds of ;h...:-uu> I | But few laynnm are aware >'-f the j ^B.tate's economic and industry. feuIll'y;,riv one-fifth of nil the life In na.\ ana industrial, is held in N>\v VoK. Approximately half the na- I lion's imports, mousured alike hy ton- ; nage ami value, enter the I." Hired Stat? < through the custom house at 1 the mouth of the Hudson. and more ' than half of our total export tonnage 1 clears through that port. One-seventh of al! tlie net retail sales in the United States wore made In New York in a . M s7 i M MI .?,jt Sja (KNUXHMMXl. The Umpire state's role in the m;inufaetnrinj? realm is a particularly interesting one. There ire some HI in dcsirics in wni< h I's products constitute more than one half of the total output of tin* entire country and about :t0 others in which its share of the nation's production is more than a third. With the gradual growth of tnanufac- ; taring west of the Alleghenies. there has long been a fa'ling off in New York state's relative standing in many industries: hut as there has been a recession of rank in the making of these ware;, there has been a corre t spending expansion in the Fabrication of clotliir g. This expansion has betin j so notable that it hns more than made lip for all the losses in other fields and ; en Mi - New York still t<> stand out as the leading Industrial -ta*e of the Union, with about one-seventh of all J ho ration's manufactured wnrcs to its credit. Leads All in Clothing. There are only seven states in the 1'hlon whose total output of manufactures of every kind surpasses <h>rhint? alone in the Km pi re state. These sev en ?tat are Masci hu- trs. Now Jer sev. ronn-jivanta. Ohio. M chijan. Illinois and California. In l'.Ct) New York made clothing at factor;- pricr< was \nlued at approxi inately $2,700,000,1hk?. Ii included threefourths of the nati ei's production of v nil ni's apparel a ad nearly one-half of the country's clothes < >: men. TIe? Hutch praotieally hetran their coh'tfy ??n the strength of the tar trade. the ! .ir>: census shor. s that New VerU i - still active in ^rketinjr furs, 1 account iaj; for $22$.0(N?,0 to w >rth of nan . rtr-iared fur uoods out of a total s-jTT.uim.mmki f.?r the whole Inited ' states. Practically all of the Rlusti h-s in wa'ch N a York hoPN tliis Mir of leadership are of the liarhter kind. The Scepter for tie heavier industries has largely passed into the hands of other cicnmunliles. Spe. ai'/ation in industry applies to coniM unities as well ;.s to ware-. Rome calls iixvlf the copper city. and makes about one tenth of the notion's output i of eopperware. <?lo\ orsville is pre- I esnii - at in the manufacture of gloves, i nn<! turns out more of them than any j other eomraunity in The country. Itochesf er is the optical ami photographieequipmj&nt capital of the nation, producirnr more than a third of the optical ?oo?ls ??: the United Stat.-s ami mos* t.f Its photographic supplies. Sometimes those who are me Now Yorkers have been inclined to complain that the Umpire state seems to iret more t an its share of benefits. particularly more than its share of the country's income. When tints *! < > <omplain. perhaps it Is because they i??se sight of the other side of the ledger the measure of i how much Now York produces for the ' country. If you were told that every great irrigation project of every state in the 1 West, from Yuma and Yakima to Sho lurphy, N. C., Thursday, n v ' In Troy. N. Y. !!r! ^"ri!lJ!i"'' Hv :- from bar citizens, vou v.ouitl Pays Huge Sums in Taxes. I.il;?'\v.ae, : wore told That every dollar of ml me federal aid money I the - m:. :: - s.-.-nt so utistiri I, ]|y in i.Jpiti- ill the States to do r.ur v iit ' As the oM s iowboat cap j I tain of radio fame oxclaltiis, "That Is o!ity The ''o-'inttiiia'." I'or when 1 tielc 1 Sam sat down to reckon up what the state of Now York did to ln-lp him pay for the running of hU government iu 19152, lie discovvied licit she supplied him with income taxes and internal revenue receipts reaching the grand total of S74-l.dtn.UMio. He next found that if New York had paid le-r taxes on a per capita basis, her share of the national excise would have called for only $2G!MRKMXm>. W'hcSi he deducted this amount from the S7H.?mmhioo actual 1\ paid in, he found that New York had given liitn .S47fi,<nm,u<K? more than would have been required under a per capita quota. That s i7.~o*ni.(mio certainly proved a godsend to Uncle Sam In meeting his ever-intensifying problem of financing the : i...u- > I an increasingly ex acting household. He f< and that with it he could pay for each and every one of the following items In his budget: every dollar voted to every stale for federal aid, whether to roads. National retard, forest protection, or agricultural experimentation, the entire expenses of the legislative branch of the government, including the Library ?: 1'engross; the entire cost if the judicial branch, Including all federal courts and prisons; the cost of the independent otliccs and bureaus, from the Smithsonian institution and the National museum to the interstate commerce, the federal trade, and the civii service commission; the cost of tlio Department of the Interior, including th?? ! 1 nrl ntfiii1 the hiii'i-all of - 3 reclamation, the seohwioal survey, the bureau of Indian affairs, the cvlliee of ?<!u> ation. etc.; the whole outlay for :ho I>. ; .'i tinont Labor : The <-??-r nf. the Department of Justice; and tho exp< n required in the scientific bureaus of tho I >epart m -nt of Commerce. from the bureau of standards : :. ! ihe eoasr and .'Code: ;< survey j the bureau of fisheries. the patent of nee. and bureau of mines. In ??ther words, u'.l that Vnele Sam skives the states in federal aid, a-- '.veil as all - :r he - to maintain two of The throe bra no i - of ? u -nluent arid three de[ artmtjbts of the third branch, plus ail that he spends for seierititic research in a fourth d<i-artaicnt. plus the maintenance of rive Independent offices. can be met out of New V e k*s ! ?? I ?T: i B fa \: ii Abounds in Dairy Farms. The traveler roundabout the slate of Ww York readily discovers ;::n mnch of the ait race ;\>>ness of iis rural scene is due to the marks ? !' careful ribase upon The face of it< fertile acres. With a population that is five parrs urban ami one part rural, there 5s a vast demand for tnilk- Ww York c" itself must reach out 300 miles for i's ripply. Dairy farms thcre'ore abound everywhere. And they call not only for grasslands, but also for v-vMiM ; and general crops. with the resultant mosaics of color, alike in the H i :- -:, valley, the St Lawrence region, and the Mohawk country. In 30J0 the state produced mkhmmi.000 gal'ons of milk, enough to Ml a vat ten feet deep and four and one-half wide. extcudin?* from the s-anlmrn end <>f Manhattan to the eastern end of Lake Erie via Albany. The vineyards, the orchards of small i '"raits, and the truck gardens that nourish on the slopes that environ the in land lakes, because, the warming waters of the latter cut short the frosts of the springtime and hold back those of the fall, add as much to the beauty of the area as they add to the prosperity f the region. BB?M December 19, 1935. AW ylround /he House ;ffly Soot water U excellent for pbuts. Put soot taken from eidninoys. turIV;:t an e? m-i fiU<t gradually until Some:iiin^ unite different in the way of a- : ?rays are elUtr'n?:n;r little ! oak leaves mad" of pamrnered silver. they li:?v*? the added virtue ??f 1 :11*_r j in keeping with your table silver. S?? . Hmany ash trays look put of place if i you want to put t.luun on the table. to Inside nf on sea:;;. . Then sew one-hult* <?f snap fastener onto shoulder seam and the other on The loose end of 'he rape. To remove g'ass stoppers from bottles, take a piece of twine, double and put it around nook of bottle twice. Have someone hold bottle, then take ends of twine, one in each hand, and work back and forth until ? neck of bottle become^ warm. Stop per can then be removed. * C J reuse spots may he removed from tan shoes with gasoline. Wet sponge with gasoline (keep away from fire). I rub over spots, dry and polish. * * When making tomato bisque dis ; solve .1 pinch of soda In the milk used in blsqtio and there will he less danger of it curdling. * if cake Is to he baked a long time it is wise to line the bottom of pan with oiled paper. . . . Custard pies snould be baked In | a hot oven for the first ten minutes. The crust will then he set and filling will not soak through crust. Hedmv I ; heat after first ten minutes so that i filling will not boil. ? A.-<ocia: I N< ,.\?WNI S? rvloa. i Fairy Story Is Told on Danish Postage Stamps A 1 story from the post office is very unequal, but the Danish po--. I . -em:: II..: them out t'l mil j lions. It is a hundred years since II Anderson was 1* rn. and running i through the leaves in tie books of stamps' that hear his pi. lire i- : famous but snd story of ii: tie girl who sold matches and stru.s ! f.i ke 'i? warm htvfi '.*?? she ?lif i. Islands Being Built tion.s. far from tlr.vinu ? a\. attract thousands to the -roue. How Calotabs r-?ro r, - ? ? f I o i iirow 1 Millions have found in Calbtabs a mo:-! valuable aid in the treatment of colds They t d:e one or two tablf-the first ni-ht and repeat the third or nfth r.. :. u : -d. How do Calotabs help Nature throw off a cold? Fir r. C.Jotabs ?s one of the most thorough and dci pendable of al) intestinal el.minants thus cleansing the int er tin ; h tract 01 the germ-laden mucus and toxmes A Dressy Frock Fitting Fudget ??\rn:it \ 0:0s "As easy as pie" to tit betweea 2 t\\ > grucHi! rau-'an si. a v . apod yoke is :t distinguishing feature of rids rather drss>\. yet inexpensive afternoon frnek. You'll find i* hard t?? jki'ido v.hieh sleeve !r??atwi - . L?.m "r forget to note the v? ry n?'v.. gored skirt with its subtle ?545 t I 4 I dare. If it's a dressy .Iress you want, black ^ at11? Is ideal; but if you're out for < olor. -e a richly hued novelty synthetic. r .ttern may hgj ordered only in - f J !, it., is jit. ."j, ;t-i, .'H?. :;x, K> and -I-. Sizo lt? requires 3'^. yards 3H inch fabric and yaru contrastinir. t'oinplete diagrammed sew chart Included. So riFTi:i:\ rr.NTS In coins or > mips (el: s jipoforr?'?l) for this putI - - : WTiU: j.i;i, rUv your N v STVI.I-: M M BKU and SIZE. j > !.? n?.. Sowing < - J ' . I '?12 w.-st ICi^ht* ? mli St., New York* N. V. Jumping Tower Popular \: Minled Russia Par... Hi- up x lias iHVmr.e a \< -i and is a " >v?v t 11?k I'ark ol Oul: mv and I . > In \Ioseotv \vhetjf you The :u',.k ?< ill-- i' lnu-hutt* a i as i i a '.v k : ,;s a jump i and ;:? >; ? u ' ys ml mrls lii? ? ; :ia?I " >S-f 1 om anp1 ~r o'.T the ' 1 r =?: ...-I i. arly all day ncpiom ; ' ? Vt'!lil:CT. i i i. .> .is 1 by the Mjshr' i till' ?': -? Sj? OH Ciurkj* ! ' '"tn of an I i.lr:v.;in v. itii |?ar.i'-' :i;o shade. Help Nature )ff a Bad Cold 1 Second. CaJotabs are diuretic to the . TimniA'irnr i!i.. ' iinini ' ii\? of cold poisons from the y -tem. Thus Caiotabs serve the double purpose of i a purgative and diuretic, both of which are needed in the treatment i of colds. Caiotabs are quite economical; only twenty-five cents for the family package. ton cents for the trial I package. <Adv > sily-irritated, sensitive skins relet soap that w ill do more than ansc. It must keep the skin in tion, freeing it from all cause of Cutic*ura Soap contains the Dedicated, emollient properties of I which bring to the skin a conealthful cleanliness. ice 2*>c. Sold nt all druggist*.
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 19, 1935, edition 1
17
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