Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / April 28, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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;'. v ; ,.' v.- : 1 t mm i: ft I. 1 I i I i I 1 f t: v THE WILMINGTON DISPATCH, SAl UKU AY iTHIIlO DOTE I I If MIOLY RECALLED i t. - The International Sunday School Lesson For May 6 is "Jesus, The Servant of All." i John 13:1-17. (By William T. Ellis.) What is the greatest from of ar tistry in the worW? It is to be found In yoHr town and my town, and occa sionally, when it gets' into the art galleries, it holds the interest of the epectators as does nothing else. Life, the great artist, has done his work so well that the lesser painters can only hope to reproduce his master piece. ' .This picture, the finest in the world, is usually wrought upon a woman's, face, and, that womaii a mother and. a liome-mafcer. The lines are Rftft but deen. There are snaa- laws of etiquette required it of a host. Perhaps never before had it been done' by a man of standing for his equals or inferiors. How the company must have started and protested! Impossible! Preposterous! The Orient cares more for form and ceremony and dignity than does the West; and this was an oriental scene. The Great Teach er doing a slave's work and the echoes of , the hosahnas of the multi tude scarcely yet died away? In credible! We have had the story for nineteen centuries, and it is impos sible for us to comprehended how radi cal the procedure was. There is no modern parallel for it. When The Way-Showers Stoop. Great way-showers have not been afraid to stoop. President Wilson helped dig the White House lot, as a remainder of garden-patriotism . King George has been a total ab- n k:.k 1n-V.-fc A tr-n-ar I Siamer QUriUK l lie will. UUnuui o like sunset peace suffuses the picture have repeatedly doffed their .coats 'light that never was on land dUU WRCU, Strcnirth in PndllTfi and tO . nuaus --3 raau, cmmcui mCu i every raftsman at the oar,. Hewing wood and drawing water, Luting stones and cleaving sod, All the dusty ranks of labour, in the regiment of G.od, . March together toward His trumph, .. do the task His bands- Prepare: Honest toil is holy service; faithful work is praise and prayer. "They ho tread the path labour Few Casualties Slight Dam- follow where My feet have trod; age to Property 'tnemy They who work without complaining f Driven Off. in tho holv will of God. I u"vil w toil together, tnere GEfilfj 1BSHIP5 ATTACK AiSGATE Where the many am I among my own; Where the tired workmen sleepeth, there am I with him alone. I the peace that passeth knowledge, dwell amid tne aauy su-ue; (By Associated fress.) . London, April 28. German destroy ers attacked Ramsgate Thursday, ac cording to ah official announcement issued by the War Office. A large number of shells, were fired, but the I, the bread of heaven, am broken destroyers were driven off by the fire in the sacrament oi me, Every task, however' simple, sets the soul that does it free; Every deed of love: and mercy, done to man,'. Is done to Me. Thou hast learned the open secret; Thou hast come to me for rest; Nevermore thou needest 'seek Me 1 am with thee everywhere ; ; Duty cf Schools in War . Time. Boston, Mass., April 28. A. con- f eeneeS3b,of i Maj(arohfflBtt?ai BCaol superintendents- met jat the of fice of the State Commissioner of l&aiicai.um in, iuih city to euuaiuei nuiui it is Denovofi - uuiviw "ie oesi course in lowed by. the. public educatii bc foI- responsibilities of the public school! arising out of the .war., President ClaSSncegzH.. Qemwey; qfehe Mass chusettsTeachera- Ae&oeiatjon, 4ook tflltpJWLvthroMghjput the con, : 1 . 'Nj. charging the responsibiliii... ' n the initiative in calling the confer- them by the war. laid from the land batteries. dhfe man and one woman were killed during' 1 the bomibardmeiit and one man and two women were in- The statement of losses and dam'- age Was contained in an official " an , riouncernent embodying a report from Field Marshal Viscouut French, com- with a or sea. do is there, laid on by the pigments of anxiety and suffering and experi ence of the deeps of being. The title of the work is "Love In Service." These faces of the mothers of men and especially of our own mothers how they fortify our souls! Slow- proudly worn the title of "Commoner; for, as says the proverb: "A. gentle man can do anything." Famous gen erals have fraternised with their troops. Once though, and only once, a great king has voluntarily assumed the task w Amv -KAAMtffnifv tTPr hpR hPPn 1 of a slave. "Menial" is an inadequate TOVrt info thpm hv'lifA th firm. I word for this feet-washing service by. tr0i l-moJ nf ministrv and solici-1 Jesus. It was entirely tude and patience and tireless love. Thev are strone in their beauty, and beautiful in their strength. No cos m'etic that a souhisticated world can jdevise has yer bee.n a substitute for the srene and spiritual beauty wfijch is !!6rn, of self-forgetting serv- J Jesus. It was entirely beneath the jdignity eVen of the disciples. Not one of them had offered to do 5 it, even for the Master. Every one of them would have resented the proposal. They were like the modern busi ness man and public official, jealous of their position. Most of us are ice for loved ones. Sometimes, Mrs. (pretending to be more than we are. Grundy calls these faces "plain" and, It is fun to watch the pretence "old-fashioned': but she has never been able to devise a substitute for them. They have been adorned ac cording to the pattern- set by Jesus "bluff" is the modern word of all sorts of men claiming credit for more than their due. Great business or ganizations are full of it, down to the Christ, when, in an upper room, a ! omce Doy. n.acn omciai over-magni-f ew nights before He died, He laid i fies his own position and importance, aside His kingly dignities and gave Knowing this, the closing manufac himself to lowly ministry, say-! turers advertise shamelessly that ing, "I have given you anexample.'v they can dress a man so that the The religion which holds the world ' world will be deceived into thinking steady today is that of the mothers i that he is somebody of importance. who have learned this secret, of Je- A" the world is bent upon exalting sus -love in lowliness of service Raise the stone, and thou siialt find mander of the' forces in ' ihe United Me ; cleave the wood, and I am Kingdom: Th3 statement reads: there." j "ILrcrrd French states that the dam- !;i age and casualties occasioned by the "This is' 'the gospel of labour, ; ring1 enemy during' the bombardment of it, ye bells of the kirk! the east Kentish coast last iiight are: The Lord of Love came down from Killed, one man and one woman; tti- above, to live with the' men who jured, one man; ; and two women. work. :"! Damage was done 21 dwelling houses Thi is the rose that He planted, here and two stables. One horse was in the thorn-curst soil: Heaven is blest with perfect rest, but the blessing of Earth is toil." The Call To Our Day. War is changing many things for mankind. Uncounted institutions and usages are being transformed. A new day is dawning for humanity. All who are seers of God should be preparing the mind of the world for the changed order. Life after the war cannot be maintained on the old basis of narrow selfishness and pride and provincial ism. "Old things have passed away; behold, all things are become new." Not to the ambitious and to the vain glorious, but to the humble and to the helpful; not to the getters, but to the givers, will the transformed world look for salvation. killed. The larger number .of . the projectile's fell in the; open country." Tonoline Is Beauty Aid, Announces Specialist . vrr'.. - IFMS(D)ira Mildred Louise Talk of Women. Interest to As health is a first aid to beauty this story, told by Mildred Louise, beauty specialist, of Boston, Mass., is of unu sual interest. "I can recommend no better health giver than tonoline," said Mildred Louise. In this hour there comes from the j "I was for many months a victim of old Bible the very word in season. stomach trouble and nervousness. I It is this message of Jesus, spoken ( had suffered terribly from pains that at the climax of His life. All who! followed eating. Headaches also would Daring To Be Radical. It was at the apex of His life that itself. Whereas Jesus, when He said "I have given you an example," deliber- the peerless Philosopher, the match- ately abased himself. He knew what! less Master, the " Teacher of Truth, iHe was about. The full significance led His closest friends into this su-,or His action was clear to Him. It preme lesson of the sublimity of self-seems as if He invested himself with abnegation. It was a kinglier . deed I ful1 royal panoply before He took than the triumphal entry; and truer towel and basin. As it were, He ex to the genius of His life than the bibited His .crown and sceptre and smiting of the moheyjehangers1 or lfuI1 royal state before He showed the healing5 of the blind. himself a servant. As runs the rec- He had come to the hour of re- '7esus Rowing that the Father vealing the innermost meaning ofha? vf aI1 thmSs into ni hands- His mission and His message. Time tt"u wmB'rom uou- ana wag short. Only a few crowded hours remained in which to final teaching that was whole world for all the centuries. There was no room for non-essentials. The uttermost power of the Christ was crowded into the expres sion of His message . j Rramatically, the Master took a ' tovtel and basin, and girding up His cloak, lie washed His disciples' feet uae wouw almost have to be a first century oriental to appreciate that deed fully. Shoes were not worn In doors. The laving of the feet, after a dusty journey against which san dals were a poor protection, was ei ther done by one's self or by slaves. It was not the work of an equal. No I went to God . . . took a towel." In impart the ie64li uie rving siep- n effi,.o o 'Ped down from His royal throne to do the work of lowliest ministry; that all would save the world must serve the world. Only the ministers of men are the real masters. A new mood of lowliness and helplessness must possess us. Christianity needs to be interpreted afresh, in terms of serv ice. A Christ-like passion for unsel fish ministry alone can save the church . We are entering an era of broken heartedness. Burdens beyond belief, wounds worse than war, sorrows that sting" the soul, await us all . Even the least thoughtful of us knows that that the old way, of pdile and self terest and indulgence and vainglory, has not paid. May we not, as our Gethsemane draws near, do as Jesus did, on the verge of the garden, and accept the fpfogram of self-abasment and service ?7 Let us go forth Into the new day, and Into' the dark night, in the spirit of feetwashers people with a passion for ministering to our fellow men, at whatever cost to our own pride and profit, and in the. divine spirit of Jesus, who is newly our Master. Then ministry might thereafter be royal, j He will stamp His likeness upon us, Ye call me Master and Lord; and ye say well; for so I am. If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet; ye also ought to wash one another's feet. For L have given you an example, that ye should do as I have done to you." Dr. Henry van Dyke has caught the genius of Jesus in his poem "The Toiling of Felix": "Every mason in the. quarry, every builder on the shore, Every chopper in the palm-grove. and enable Us to share in His work of redeeming the world. SEIZED VESSEL WILL BE REPAIRED. (By Associated Press.) Baltimore, Md., April 28 The Hamburg-American steamship Bulgaria, the largest of the three German liners seiz ed at this port, left hare yesterday in tow of tugs for Norfolk, where the sieamer win unaergo -extensive re- pairs. add to my worries. Poor digestion fi nally brought on nervousness. "Relief came, however, when I took Hie advice of several women who said. "Take Tonoline." "Not long after I started the Tono line treatment, my patrons began to re mind me of the improvement in my condition. And because health is the quickest way to beauty, the improve ment was particularly noticeable in my face. "What Tonoline really did for me I cannot say. I am so grateful that I am very willing to recommend Tonoline publicly." Tonoline is a purely vegetable prepa ration which goes to the, seat of com mon maladies stomach and kidney trouble, catarrhal affections of the mu cous membranes, liver 'ailments .and imprities of the blood and fuickly re stores proper action. Tonoline is be ing explained daily to many people at Elivington's Pharmacy. Notice: As Tonoline is a wonderful flesh builder it should not be taken by any one not wishing to increase his weight ten pounds or more. Although many reports are received from those who have been benefited by Tonoline in severe cases of stomach trouble and nervous dyspepsia, chronc constipa tion, etc. 50c BOX FREE FREE TONOLINE COUPON AMERICAN PROPRIETORY, CO., Boston, Mass. Send me by return mail a 50c box of your celebrated flesh builder. I enclose 10c to help pay postage and packing. ins" Wi Your Local In The Dispatch Find you another Position Rent your furnished room Find you a desirable hoarder Dispose of unused household goods Tenant vacant apartments and houses ( Sell your used automobile advantageously Locate a purchaser for old clothes Restore your lost valuables Put a good cook in your kitchen Supply your office with efficient help Fulfill any want with the least expenditure of time and money. The Call of THE WILMINGTON DISPATCH'S Daily or Sunday Business Local Columns Catches Countless Ears The Business Local Columns of The Wilmington Dispatch is the voice of the people it is heard everywhere, by practically every one in Wilmington. These wonderful, willing Business Local workers carry your mes sage on week days and Sundays t thousands of listening ears they talk to people who can best supply your wants. Every Sunday morning and afternoons during the week The Sun day Dispatch and Daily Dispatch goes- into thousands of worth while homes of Wilmington and adjacent territory. The Dispatch's Business Local way is the quick, convenient, mod ern way of getting "what you want when you want it." Just pencil your Local NOW o n paper and bring it to The Dis patch office, or phone 176. for a messenger- There is some particular message in these little columns tha t WH appeal to you today. Read Them Carefully! jhungton lisiatch He W Read Every Afternoon Just Before - Slipper. i Give tike Plebeian Peanut a Chance ': , -i -sir -c .';",. i Peanuts are the cheapest and most commonly used of all nuts, and yet their real food value is not generally appreciated. There is a class of vege tarians who use nuts, and particularly the peanut, as a substitute for meat, but most nuts are more expensive than meat as sources of protein and energy, the peanut" being the exception, f .. Theugovernment analysis shows that peanuts are richer ta protein than any other nut except the pine nut or pig. ifoUa. Ten cents spent for peanuts tfttll purchase more than twice as much protein and six times as much energy &i wfll the same athount spent for por terhouse steak. f "The cost of a pound of protein ob tained from peanuts Is only 32 cents, While . that amount from porterhouse eteak costs at least $1.31, and a pound 'of protein from cheese about 58 cents, W in these days of soaring meat prices tfpeanuts if intelligently used can be Shade a valuable and economical part tat the diet. I Betar a highly concentrated food ;!tSteriKuM: 6f course be used in con ibection -with' more bulky carbohydrate foods, uc!b as green vegetables, breads, eraefters-; potatoes, rice, etc., and should form air integral part of the diet in vfea'd of being eaten in addition to an otherwise well balanced meal. like all Stents, they bould be thoroughly mas Kfcated. i Petout butter is a favorite and Jcrholesome way of using the peanut iff not "convenient to boy it it can be Cheaply and easily made at home with (good trattera a medinau Fresh roast- peanuts! of the &efled and salted atiely are most -convenient to use, jrithenf throogn the nut buttep at'- of the ' food chopper and mix- e the iiaste with ari equal amount of freSb butter or any. proportion desired, wltfr salt ttf &At tfi taStBT tf the but ter is fresh and the mixture is put in BinaH jars in a cool plae it fll keep for som time without becoming ran- following recipes roasted peanuts are used: Whole Wheat Nut Loaf. Two cupfuls whole wheat flour. One cupful white flour. Two heaping teaspoonfuls baking pow der. One-half teaspoonful salt. Two tablespoonfuls sugar. One-half cupful chopped peanuts. Three- tablespoonfuls melted butter. One and one-half cupfuls sweet milk. Mix all the dry ingredients together, including the peanuts, add the milk and mix thoroughly, lastly the melted butter, and beat well. Bake in two shallow tins or in gem pans for one half hour in a moderate oven. For an ordinary nut loaf mix into the sponge for two loaves of bread one cupful of finely ground peanuts just before adding the sponge to the flour and work as other bread. Peanut Biscuit. One quart flour. Three heaping- teaspoonfuls baking pow der. One-half teaspoonful salt. One-quarter cupful sugar. One-half cupful ground peanuts. One-half cupful sweet ittilkV -One-quarter potind butter. Three eggs. Sift together the dry ingredients and rub in the butter. Then mix in the peanut thoroughly, also with the hands. Beat the eggs, add to them the milk and mix into the flour, adding more milk if needed to make . a soft dough. 1 Boll out, cut and bake like ordinary biscuit. Scalloped Toimatoe With Peanuts." "Two cupfuls canned tomatoeb. Two cupfuls breadcrumbs. Two tablespoonfuls butter. ' One-half cupful finely chopped peanuta. One teaspoonful salt, . A little pepper. : " Mix nuts,, crumbs and seasoning with the melted butter. . Put a layer Xa the bottom 4f pudding pan, then half the tomatoes, another layer of crumbs, the rest of" the ; tomatoes and over the top the'balance of the nut' and . crumb mixture. Bake in a quick oven until brown and acrrg ho.t- : Peanut Soup. Two cupfuls saelled peanuts. One pint of soup stock. One-quarter cupful butter. One stalk of celery. Salt and pepper. One quart water, One pint of milk. Oiie slice of onion. One- cupful flour. - Cook toe peanuts with the onion ttnrt celery until tender in the water: 'Press through, a sieve and add the soup stock. Heat and stir in a sauce made of the butter, flour and milk. : : Season with the salt i and pepper.: ... .. i Nut Pudding. One cupful ': chopped peanuta. Two cupfuls breadcrumbs. .. . One pint or sweet milk. Two eggs. ' Salt and pepper. : Mix the nuts With the breadcrumbs. Add the eggs mixed with the milk. Season with . the salt d pepper, bake untile firm.; andu bcowA and. serve jhot, as a vegetable; - Potatoes With Nuts. Three pints eoid, sliced boiled potatoes. One cupful chopped nuts. T. One aha one-half cupfuls swt raCk. J On pirit bifeadcrutftbs. Saft and pepperV : : : : r. : r n- - Mix5 the nuts ami crumbs and put in a greased taking pan. Alternate lay ers of potatoes and this mixttire, finish ing with the latter, ani pour over all the milk Iwell seasoned with salt and pepper.' Baki0 slowly about one hour. . ..Nut Ceokiee or Drops. Two cupfuls chopped peanuts. One cupful sifted flour. One teaspoonful baking powder. One-half cupful butter. Two eggs (yolks). One teaspoonful salt. One-half cupful sugar. One-quarter cupful milk. One teasponf ul lemon juice. Cream the 'butter with the sugar, add the yolks Of the eggs, beat well and mix in the milk. Stir in the flour with the salt and baking powder; last ly ' the lemon Juice and the peanuts. Beat well and drop from the tip of a spoon on a buttered baking pan. Place three nut halves on each nnt iui Kir. :t ttntU a light brown. ' A Star In the Photoplay Sky Hints For Housewives If You Burn Your Tongue. If you burn your- tongue with hot soup, chocolate or. any hot food, -a bit of butter allowed to melt on the burnt spot will give immediate relief and prevent any soreness later. Mrs. H. L. P. Charlotte Walker, star of "Sloth," one of McClure's Seven Deadly Sins, a group of flve-reel'dramas, is the wife of Eugene Walter, famous playwright, author of "Paid In FuII,'The Easiest Way' "Fine Feathers," "Boots and Saddles," "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine" and other successful dramas. When she married, Miss Walker didn't have to change her name; all she did was to change one letter. - Miss Walker was born in Galveston, Tex., and educated there, v She went on the stage in 1895, joining Richard Mansfield's Company, i; Before she be- ers as Marie Dressier,' James A. Hern, James K. Hackett, E.' H. Southern and Kyrle Beliew; In the speaking drama Miss .Walker starred in many of het husband's most celebrated plays. In motion pictures, before she joined McClure Pictures, sh was starred by" Lasky and Thanhouser, appearing on the screen in "Out of the Darkness," "The Trail of the Lonesomef Pine" and other weir known-.flllBtt plays. - -: plvfi "Sloth"? Miss hWaEkers undispn ed ability: is tested, to the utmost, and in the three, parts 'that she plays she To Clean a Gas Mantle. If your gas mantles are smoky and so dull that the -light is dimmed you can easily dean them. Simply sprinkle a pinch of salt over the mantle and light the gas. The light will burn them clear. Miss E. R. B. Short Lengths of Insertion. I watch' the remnant counters for short lengths of lace insertions, which I use to 'bind the seams of thin fabrics, such as dimity, lawn, mull or batiste. Bought in this way, th cost, of the lace is but a trifle" (as the pattern goes not matter), and it; la much less clumsy as a binding thanua strip of tbe ,fabric wouia De. Mrs. Jr. p. v,.-. Uses For Old Linen Shades. If you are putting up new shades this spring dont throw away the old ones. If they are of white Holland linen bofl and wash out all' the starch and make them into pfilow cases or glass towels. If your shades ' are of colored linen wash out the starch and make them into dresses for the children or aprons, or bleach the material in the sun if yon prefer it white. Mrs. W. J. B, Shirley Mason Says: v y i F "I can give you a tip on carpet swet ers," boasted Shirley Mason, tne Crore Pictures star. . Tn listening," said tbe nousew- OnK little IrAmoonA ClT PaS0ll0e 1Bl the brush, and your rugs wUl iooi bright as new ones. About Hard weod Floors. Perhaps the simplest and easiest way to keep wood floors dean, free from dust and in good condition generally, whether painted, varnished, stained", shellacked or waxed, is to dust them daily with a Iong handled, ; dustless, dry mop. - These mops are chemically treated so as to pick up the. dust, re tain it and leave the floor .clean and polished In 'appearance. - P.. v When scratches or heel: marks ap pear or an extra cleanlngor polishing. m - ir in ntten CD m two or inree weto -v- to use this mop. In this way tne is- done quickly, stooping is v" and the hands are not soiled. the-mops become too dusty for4ful;olp service they may be washed inj and water, making them as b- new. New Use For Pillow Tubn8' Easily laundered and qulcklJ ' & underskirts- may be made for tne tots-out of the bleached low luotng. wer a gw trltl Widest-wldtb and make simply l fhA mihlAfirhMT tnhlnjr are Plpu caihbrle r' embVoidery rufle for ming;: Bags made of a cheap wruch to store away com, during the 'swnnner. In these tney be kept free from dust and sJr- the depredation! 0? mouia iff: 0 -.:-tr:
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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April 28, 1917, edition 1
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