Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / March 9, 1934, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO The Market Basket ORANGES A GOOD PROTECTIVE 1 OOD Oranges, thanks to modern science find enterprise, are nowadays com mon in every part of the United States. This is important, not only because they add so much to the “pleasure of the palate” but because they are one of the most valuable of what the nutrition specialists call the protective foods They are one of the foods that help to keep the gums in good condition, and to make good jppth—this because they are such an excellent source of vitamin C, which has to do also with the general health and is necessary to prevent scurvy. Orange juice is good for babies es pecially. They can take it easily and htey need it because milk does not give them enough vitamin C and be cause they do not eat enough of the other foods that contain this vitamin unless special care is taken. There are other good sources of vitamin C, of course—tomatoes particularly, raw cabbage, raw turnips, and raw fruits, especially lemons and grapefruit and tangerines—all the citrus frfuits, in fact. Oranges, however, are at their cheapest this time of year. For that matter, even a bountiful meal is impr oved if oranges or orange juice arc served. The additional vit amin C—from oranges or tomatoes or any other good source—gives that STQRiMJf DRIFT « OhetWlDM UHAPTTTP. ** VIOLA’S clutching ringers sffrred m Tiffgie’s, but so: the i*.»ssage of many terrible seconds sr.e only gasped out her anem-h in a silence more poignant thin any attempt a! speech. At last, after an interval ol suffering which to him seemed w< i nigh unendurable, -die moved n bead slightly so that her face w, partly visible to him. Her breothir grew quieier and the grip ot m i hands became less tense. She spoke very faintly, so that lie scarcely j caught the words. 'l'm so sorry." "Sorry'” whispered Tigeie into her natr. "Sorry! Oh. you noor little girl! Poor darling!" She moved a little further so that her white forehead was r inse to his bps. She said nothing, yet after a moment or two the knowl-dge came to him as though she had spoken that she would have him take that which she had not the strength to offer. He bent a little lower and very softly kissed her temple. Her fingers moved again, gently closing upon his. The paroxysm had passed, but she still gasped fitfully from time to time. He thought that her breaking was growing slower, and an awful fear gripped his heart. He gat, holding his own, listening to It. And the long rhythmic wash of the waves on the shore rose up like a solemn chant, seeming to fill the sunlit spaces with music from an other world. It was as though they two, alone on their raft, drifted in from the stormy waters to a strand unknown. He still kept her hand, fondling it against his cheek, but he made no attempt to rouse her, dreading a re turn of the suffering almost more than the possibility that she might ellp beyond it. Motionless and silent, he knelt there, watching, till pres ently she stirred again and opened her eyes upon his face. But yet for a apace she did not speak, lying there gazing at him with those deep misty eyes that seemed to he trying to tell him something that words could not utter. It was he who at length broke the silence, softly stroking the thin child ish wrist. “You're feeling—a little better now?" Her faint, smile showed like a far off gleam of sunshine. She spoke, haltingly, with effort. “.[ wish—l could 'ell you—how I feel. But it’s btfUejr-wpeihpps —you should never khow. It. was nice of you—§%jt. you loved fate.” "1 do,” he said. "Child, T love you with all my heart.” She caught her breath in a sigh. "That is—so like you,” she said. There followed another spell of alienee. She lay relaxed —too weak, he thought, to suffer any more. Then again her voice came to him. very low. with a touch of pleading. "Tiggle," she said, “don’t —don’t tell an^onA-rAbout you and me! Let’s kepp it—a secret!—Do yon mind?" will do whalever you wish,” he told her steadily—“ Just whatever you wish.” She smiled at him again—her eye lids slowly drooping. “Thank you, Tlggie,” she murmured. "Thank you." And then, as her eyes closed, "Good-by, dear — good-by!” She uttered another short sigh and Jay still. And to Tiggie, watching, It seemed as if a dark shadow crept over her face as though a veil h af j fallen between them. He got so his feet, without sound, with a bewildered feeling that he ought to call someone, just as the nurse entered, spotless ano practical, and came to his side. Tiggie turned to her helplessly, “Look! What is it? Is she— is ehe " "No—no!" .kindly she reassured him as though he had been a scared child. “It’s just a little faintness. She’ll be )>etter presently. You leave her to me. It’ll be all right.” Tiggie felt that he had been given a definite order and there was noth ing left but to obey. Silently he drew back from the bed, giving place as U were to the higher authority, and then, no further notice being taken of him, crept away on tiptoe, refrain ing from looking back because of the fear that lay like a dead weight at his heart. Harvey joined him outside the cot tage, took him by the arm and gave vent to cheery prognostications which, so far as Tiggie was con cerned, might have been uttered in a foreign language. He steered him Rently at the same time in the direc tion of "The Sea Lion”, and when h* got him there, impelled bim to the bar-parlor and called to Joe Fenny for a drink. The laudiord, delighted to oblige brought drinks for two and showed A disposition to linger for a gossip Parables of the Kingdom ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON The four kinds of soil into which our Lord as Sower casts the good seed of his Word are the hard, stony ground of the impervious heart, the •hallow soil of the impulsive heart, the thorny •oil of the indulgent heart and the good soil of the receptive and fruitful heart much more protection to the the gums and teeth. Oranges contain other vitamins — A, B, and G. The outer peel, as well as the juice, contains vitamins T. B, and C, which means that the sliced rind contributes some vitamin value 1 "Child, I love yon with all my heart.” which was Instantly and rather bru tally frustrated by Harvey. “No, we don't want to talk. We’re busy. You go and attend to the rest of the world! If we want any more, I'll let you know.” So Joe Penny retired, and Harvey stood over Tiggie with grim insist ence while he gulped down some of the drink provided. That accom plished, he relaxed somewhat and sat down to drink his own at leisure. “You stay quiet for a bit, old chap!” he said. “You’ve had a damned trying time, but there’s nothing: more you can do, so stop trying!” Tiggie leaned back on a horsefhair sofa and wiped his forehead. agoing to die, Harvey,” he said* / \ “Rot!” said Harvey. “That’s all you know about it. Girls of that age don’t die so easily. Besides, there’s your friend Spot. He wouldn’t let. her.” "Spot can't stop her,” said Tiggie. Be sat miserably bowed, his hands clasped between his knees, his eyes on the floor. Harvey clapped an ur gent hand on his shoulder. * “Pull yourself together, man! What’s the good of believing the worst? Don’t you know it never hap pens? Drink a little more! It’ll put life into you.” Tiggie obeyed witli pathetic docil ity. Now that, there was no more to be done his courage seemed to be ebbing away, it had been a terrific battle. To a man of his easy tem perament little, accustomed to make any great fight to attain his own ends, it bad seemed colossal. And now, apparently, it was all to no pur pose. He was to stand by while the edifice of bis hopes raised by such painful effort crumbled into dust,. The hand he had grasped in the height of (tie storm had slipped once more from Iris. Me, was powerless to hold it, powerless to help her. He had pitted himself against the in evitable, and he knew now the bit terness of utter failure, Anri because of the fight he had made, his defeat was all the harrier, for that for which he harl fought had become tenfold more precious to him during the con flict In losing her now, he lost everything that made life worth liv ing. It was as though he had multi plied his stake In the hazard to the utmost limit anti beyond it., and now all was gone. Mo faced total ruin. But. Mar veii remained Harvey, the bizarre of soul, who viewed the drama of life from the extraordinary angle of a critic seated comfortably in the stalls, an independent witness of its tragedies and its joys. He was so sure that all would end well that it almost needed an effort of com mon sense to disbelieve him. Not that he wanted to look on the dark side, hut he had seen too much to allow any self-deception. The shadow of death w'as too near to be Ignored. He lra-i seen it on her face a*d in her eyes. Notwithstanding the opti mism so resolutely pressed upon him, he could not rid himself of the ulti mate conviction that when next he looked upon that foco those eyes by Ethel Mary (Savage) HENDERSON, '(N. CJ DAILY DISPATCH, FRIDAY., MARCH 9, 1934 to the dish in which it is used for flavoring. Scurvy is a very ancient disease and is the extreme form of illness due to lack of vitamin C. For centuries soldiers and sailors died of it in great numbers, hceause they could not carry would be forever closed. The drink that Harvey pressed upon him restored his self-control, though it scarcely altered his out look. He got up when it. was fin ished with a weary sense of restless ness. Impossible to remain quiescent while up there in the little stone cot tage, on the cliff the’life that meant so much to him hung in the bal ance! He turned to the door and wan dered out aimlessly, conscious o< Harvey swiftly gulping the rest of his own drink to follow him. The noonday sun beat fiercely upon him, but'he only realized it when Harvey pushed his hat into his hand. Then, cramming it over his eyes, he rriqved j blindly towards the shore/ Fot 1 the next hour or more he would live an eternity. No doubt Spot would final ly come and tell him, very gently, when it was all over. He had got to fill in time until that happened. The children had gone in to their midday meal and the beach was de serted. With a kind of stubborn endurance, he tramped down to the dancing waves that swirled over the low rocks. His pipe was in his pocket and he felt for it mechanic ally, but when he found it he *dld not take it. out. He stood on the very edge of the sea and looked out to the skyline, like a lost dog washed up from a wreck seeking his master.' Kverything in the world seemed to be aliva and joyous except himself. The sparkle and the beauty hurt him vaguely. Had it been a day of gray desolation. It would have been some how easier to bear. He was glad that Harvey did not accompany him. He needed solitude Just then, and it was decent of old Harvey to realize it; though what he was going to do now that he was alone he did not know. Bast night, in accordance with little Joyce's earnest desire, he had made a defi nite. effort to pray, but he did not feel that it had been a great suc cess. It had been like knocking feebly at an iron door that barred all progress, and after a lime he had lost heart and ceased to knock. To day lie had not even the strength to attempt it, weighed down as he was by the awful conviction that nothing that he did now could make any difference. He was worn out with vain effort All that was left was to stand and endure. / After a time he began to walk along the edge of the spreading wavelets, his feet crunching, through the shingle on which they broke with a soft tinkling sttund in strange con trast to the roar of the breakers out side the bay. He came to the rocks and began to climb over them. The tide was coining in, and each wave that ran curling up the beach was a little deeper than the last. It was like life, he reflected. What w&s the good of trying to stave off the in evitable? Even the granite of which the cliffs were made couid not do that forever. They had to crumble, everything crumbled before th* overwhelming forces of Destiny. (TO AS CONTINUED) The parable of the mustard seed pictured the day the church would aspire to worldly, political power and the parable of the woman hiding leaven in the meal foretold the spread of false teaching against which Jesus often warned his disciples. ffresh green foods in the army or ship 3lores. Finally, the doctors dis covered that lemon juice would pre vent scurvy, and the concentrated juice became a part of the sailors’ ra tions. Admiral Byrd’s expedition now in the Antaractic has the benefit of the latest scientific discoveries about vitamin C. Among the medical sup plies is a little bottle of the vitamin itself —highly concentrated, and en ough, the expedition’s doctor says, to protect the forty-odd men from scur vy for two years. To get the most for the money in vested in a bag of oranges use the Parables of the Kingdom THE WEEKLY SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Che (Soldett (Text ■— . * j. .. . ' —i iiaiah 9:7—‘‘Of the increase of his government and of peace there shall be ne end” (The International Uniform Lesson on the above topic for March 11 is Matthew 13:1-52, the Golden Text be ing. Isaiah 9:7, “Qf the increase of his government and of peace there shall be no end.”) By DR. ALVIN E. BELL. Having met with Increasing op position in his efforts to establish his kingdom in the hearts of men, Jesus, in this series of seven kingdom par ables, forecasts- the results of this op position. In doing so he pictures pro phetically God's program, in all his tory from that day to the end of this present age. The Parable of the Sower is a por trayal of attitudes toward Christ’s Word, the gospel. There would be the attitude of the impervious heart re presented by the hard beaten way side where the Word was given no change: ‘‘Then cometh the wicked one catcheth away that which was sown in his heart.” Then there is the im pulsive heart where the Word is given but a little chance, as with the seed sown on stony ground, the attitude of shallow emotionalism that withers Under trial. The thorny ground heai er represents the indulgent heart where the Word is given a divided chance with carnal interests which choke out the Word and make it un fruitful. The good ground hearer re presents the receptive, retetive, pn*. ductive heart where the Word is given a full chance to bear its intended “M” SYSTEM STORE Fresh Meats, Fresh Fruits and Vegetables, Staple and Fancy Groceries. NR A Member. Free Delivery. Phone No. 177-J FRESH PORK |*7 l-2c FRESH -| A HAMS, per lb. . . 1 ■ TOMATOES, per lb. lUC TASTY RINDLESS OA FRESH STRING 1A BACON, per lb 4iUC BEANS lUC westerFsteak on fig barF *k Extra Choice, per lb. fc>»UC p er lb lUC BONELESS STEW *1 A VANILLA WAFERS 1 r BEEF, per lb lUC per lb IDC The parable of the treasure hid in the earth rep resents Israel in this present time, while the par able of the pearl of great price represents Jesus’ love for his church and his plan to "present it to himself a glorious church —holy and withou* blemish.” rinds in cooking. Sweetpotatoes scal loped with strips of orange rind make a most inviting dish. Slice the orange skin and boil it for about 5 minutes in half a cup of water. Scatter the slices of orange skin in the dish with the sweetpotatoes, sprinkle with a fourth of a cup of sugar ( to <5 sweetpotatoes) and pour the orange water over all. Sandwiches for lunch or supper can lie made by mixing grated orange rind with butter for the sandwich spread. As flavoring for puddings, cakes, or other disserts, in biscuits, or muffins, the grated orange rind adds a very attractive touch. fruit, “Borne a hundred fold, some sixty, some thirty.” The Paralbie of the Tares deals with Satan’s attitude towards the Word growing in this good soil. The seeds of evil are sown to counteract, the Word. It explains the origin or evil—“An enemy hath done this.” It answers the question, “Is the world getting better or worse?” Its answer is, “Let both grow together until the harvest.” It forecasts the ultimate triumph of good and destruction of evil as God’s plan for the ages. Two Parables of Church Tendencies The Parable of the Mustard Seed and Leaven forecast unfortunate ten dencies that were to be taken in the development of the church in unin tended directions. This forecasts the day when the church aspired to world ly, political power and became the haven of forces of Satan represent ed by the birds here as in the first parable. The Parable of the Leaven hid in the Meal forecast the spread of false and corrupting teaching, for here as everywhere in the New Testa- Notice Oser’s Poultry Market Now Located Under Cooper’s Warehouse The final parable of the group of seven foretells the final judgment and the separation of evil from good, the destruction of the evil and the triumph of the good. r GOLDEN TEXT—lsaiah ment leaven is a symbol of false doc trine (see Matthew 16:12.) Two Parables of Israel and Church The Parable of the Hid Treasure re presents Israel in this present age. As Jesus wept over Jerusalem he cried, “Now all these things are hid from thine eyes”. (Luke 19:42.) Paul in Ro mans 11:15-25 speaks of Israel’s “cast ing away” and ‘receiving” and of a “blindness in part befallen Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in.” (Similarly the Parable of the Pearl of Great Price represents the pre ciousness of the Church of Christ, his love shown for it in that “when he had found one pearl of great price, he went and sold all that he had, and bough! it ” Or as Paul says in Ep hesians 5 27, “That he might present the church to himself a glorious church—holy and without blemish.’ A Parable of Judgment The concluding Parable of the Net Cast Into the Sea forecasts the final judgment and the triumph of good over evil. ‘‘He that hath ears, let him hear.” , It .was said of John J. MCGraw that he never failed a friend, and that may he why he never had an enemy, „ akgmiiK PHON^^RIN^JSYOURORDER M. G. EVANS Phones 162-163. Bl GRANDMOTHER’S ROUND |ROLLS2-9< I SPECIAL LOW PRICE ON I s. COFFEE-19- BELMONTE DCADQ O LIKE QC. BARTLETT I CM It O L CANS JJ C [cojjjjjjr BEEF dressing ■„ yM M PT. JAR QT. JAR “■ls* 15° 25° VIENNA SAUSAGE 1 can« 15c LUX 1 *O. 19c|^ et S0AP3cM9c ENGLISH PEAS—Fresh green, 4 lbs., 25c CARROTS —Texas Green tops, bunch 5c TOMATOES—FIorida fancy, 3 lbs., for 25c CELERY—WeII bleached stalk _ 6c LETTUCE*—Fancy Iceberg, 2 for 15c BEANS,—Round stringless, 2 lbs., 25c Load not upon thy day the bur den of thy year.—Eastern Proverb Come To TURNER’S For Best MEATS And Service TURNER'S MARKET Phones 304-305
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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March 9, 1934, edition 1
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