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International Sunday School Lesson for January 17 THE HOLY SPIRIT John 16:7-11; Romans 8:12-17, 26, 27. Rev. Samuel D. Price, DD. s This lesson study is the introduction to a Person. It is an amplifica tion of the confession in our Apostles Creed, “I believe in the Holy Ghost." While multitudes make that crccdal statement they do not have an inti mate knowledge of this third Person in the Triune God. The Holy Spirit is as distinct a Person as is God the Father, and Christ the Son. All Three are equally, externally existent. Revelation, however, of the personality and activity came in time. From the first Jehovah God was known as the Father. Far back in history there were evidences of the Second Person and there were repeated promises of the Advent of the Son, which were fulfilled in the coming of the Messiah. There are also many prophecies concerning the Holy Spirit in the Old Testament, one of the most distinctive being that in Joel 2:28-29, which was specifically ful filled in the Day of Pentecost, after the Ascension of Jesus Christ. Jesus spoke clearly, though He did not explain the extent of the meaning when He told of the eagerness of the Father to bestow the Holy Spirit on His beloved. Much more than earthly parents delight in giving good things to their children does Jehovah have joy in making the Holy Spirit available to those who are willing to meet the conditions. Am ng the many references in the Bible the following are selected for specific study t" lay by the Lessons Committee: Joel 2:2S-29; Luke 11:9-13; John 3:5-8: 14:16, 17, 26. 15:26-27; 16:7-15; Acts 2:1-21, 32, 33; Romans 8:1-17; 26, 27. I Corinthians 12:1-13; Ephesians 1:13-14; 3:14-21; 4:1-6, 30. Turn to y> ur concordance and Bible Dictionary for many other portions. A very help ul book for collateral reading is “A Help to the Study of the Holy Spirit,” W. E. Biederwolf, D.D. i Obediently the disciples waited in prayer for ten days after the Ascen sion. Then came the advent of the Holy Spirit to them in Jerusalem as miraculous signs were wrought. The abiding personal evidence was their new possession of spiritual power for service, as witnessed in the con versions which followed Peter’s sermon on that day, when 3,000 believed Such evidences were repeated in the abidfllg Presence with them both for companionship and power in service. The Holy Spirit is graciously helpful in prayer, Paul states. The Holy Spirit takes our “unuttered groanings” and makes right and specific peti tions to the Father on our behalf. He is always convicting us of sin and making the work of Jesus effective as our Saviour. The life of the Chris tian is not materially lived. It is lived resultfullv only through spiritual possessions. _ _ Boy who Works His Way in College Most Valuable in Business, Says Irving T. Bush New York, Dee. —. The boy who works his way through col lege Usually proves himself far more valuable in business life than his classmate whose education has been prepaid by checks from home. This is the judgment ox a man w'ho has hired thousands of both classes, Irving T. Bush, head of the huge Bush Terminals system here and a dominant figure in in ternational commerce. “I prefer to employ men who have wrorked their way through college,” Mr. Bush says in his newly published book, “Working With the World,” in which he stresses the point that even the poor American youth today has opportunity to obtain education un equalled in the world's history. “Those men who have worked their way, I find, have their abili ties sharpened by the struggle. Their feet already are firmly on the ground and they realize that worth-while ideals mast be practi cable,” he says. Wealth Can Be Handicap Although he himself was born to wealth, the industrialist created the great industrial terminal sys tem which spreads for many blocks along the Brooklyn waterfront through his own effort to prove that wealth is not necessarily a handicap to individual success— and he believes that proportion- j ately wealth may deter as many ( from achievement as poverty does. | “A few foolish men and women j who bring no value to our world, j but who have inherited great ; wealth, may loom large in the so- j cial columns of the press, but their j effect on American life is nothing,” < Mr. Bush declares. “They are < barnacles which are swept along ! by the upward nish of new brains ] which are creating our new pros- 1 perity. , “In the United States we have done away with the aristocracy of heredity and have put in its place the aristocracy of brains fed from the springs of education. living T. Bush “The United States has become i self-governing democracy of edu cated people. And the average Is >eing raised rapidly by the higher standards of our schools and the growth of our universities. The roung men of America today are >orn under a lucky star—at the be ginning of our Golden Age. But rven those who do not have to jam their education should mix iome work with study during col ego years. They will be better Ltted to adjust themselves to the vorld when the time comes. ” European Stronghold of Styles Invaded by American Fashion:; r American figures with a French ac cent! That’s the latest development In world-fashions! For Paris, the fash ion-teacher of the world. Is about tc have her first American faslilon hoi. e. a designing and manufactur ing plant of foundation garments ri^'.it in the very midst of hei own wfamous salons Henry Barnard, who has been a fashion arbiter in Paris for 25 years, Is establishing the French branch of the great American foundation-gar ment Industry. The new fashion house, which will be opened within the next few weeks. In the center of the Parisian fashion salons, is unique In the history of fashions, and was necessitated by the increasing demands of the French de signers for the modern American type o? foundation garments, adapt able to the new feminine styles, ac cording to R. C. Stirton, president of the H W. Gossard Company. “Parisian styles In frocks are al wavs months ahead of the mode In the rest of the world," Mr. Stirton said, "but Paris is years behind Amer ica in the creation of really modern figure-fashions. Where Paris has on9 :ouudation garment, poorly adapted even to their own latest styles, Ameri can has twenty. The world looks to America, especially to Chicago, for Its fashions in figures. “A Parisian plant, where figure-fash ion designers can work hand In hand with the modistes Is the necessity ol the world of fashion of the near fu ture. An American foundation-gar ment house In Paris, dispensing the latest American creations in feminine figures has been necessitated alike bv the demands of American buyers travelling In Europe and the contin ental designers, who appreciate the superiority of the American-designed garments. American foundation de signs. specially adapted to French needs, will bo produced !n the plant." Dr.Fraitk Crane Says CoprnghtCiMM HOW TO PICK A WIFE The most important question in tne world. ior a man decide is not his attitude toward the tariff, or prohibition, or the income tax, but what manner of woman he is going to live with all his life. Other questions may come and go, but this 1 one goes on forever. To use a term of Bacon's, “It comes home to men’s business and bosoms.” - t 1 A preacher once came to John Wesley and asked his ad vice as to whether he should marry a certain “Why ask me?” said Mr. Wesley. “You have already * mind or you wouldn't have consulted me.” But a few words of counsel may not come amiss. 1. Marry for love. Any other reason, money, fame, con venience, or anything else, is disastrous. 2. Marry some one approximately of your age. A mar- ; riage between May and December usually does not turn out : well. 3. Marry a healthy woman. It may be all right to love a sickly woman, you may make all sorts of poems to her eye brow and cherish her as an ideal, but, generally, do not marry her. 4. Do not marry a bad woman to i norm her, and let no' woman marry an evil man to reform him. Let the preachers do that. Marriage is not a reformatory institution, it is for pleasure. 5. Select a woman with a sense of humor. If possible find one who is cheerful. You can overcome almost anything but perpetual gloom. You will find that you need, more than any- j thing else, to be perpetually cheered. Not that you want a Cheshire cat, perpetually grinning, but you want a reasonable amount of cheer. 6. Select a wom^n with common sense. This goes farth- j est in the long run. Do not select a fool, even if she has a pretty face. And some fools are beautiful. Do not be determined solely by passion, but use your brain a little, if any. Of course, passion is essential, but marriage i» , . a matter of every-day life. . J President Machado Heartily Endorses Kraft-Phenix Cuban Development Plan Officials attending the opening of Kraft-Phenlx plant at Bayamo, flrst cheese factory on the Island. Second from left, Dr. Anrello Mendez; center of photograph, hat In hand, President Machado; at right, R. O. Haines; James A. Ford. Cuba’s new Industry, cheese-mak ing, is a seven days’ wonder In the Island. When the Industry was for mally launched recently with the es tablishment of the Kraft-Phenlx plant at Hacienda Santa Isabel, Just outside the village of Bayamo, Gen eral Machado, president of the Island Republic, and numerous distin guished guests of state participated in the ceremonial. Hundreds of guests travel dally to see the new cheese factory, first of Its kind In Cuba, and herald of a new economic Independence for the Island, which has long depended al most exclusively upon the sugar In dustry for its wealth. The national Congress of Cuba is so vitally concerned with the estab lishment of 'new industries for Cuba that It is initiating laws to protect the milk, butter, and cheese Interests. The region around Bayamo; in fact, all of Cuba, has been found to be literally a land flowing with milk. Conditions on the Island are Ideal for quantity production of milk and cheese its most valuable subsidiary product. Milk In Cuba may be had in abundance for about three cents per litre. Island offiicials are look ing forward to the day when Cuba may manufacture all of her own milk products, 60 vital to the health ox her people, and when she may be* come. In addition, an important ex porter of cheese. Certain kinds ot cheese, produced in Cuba, are supe rior to those produced anywhere else In the world, according to R. G. Haines, administrator of the cream ery. Thirty-seven thousand litres oi milk are dally converted into butter and cheese at the Cuban factory This figure will be doubled within a month’s time, and tripled and quad dupled before next year. It is be lieved. The factory at Bayamo Is Just the first of many faetorles which will go up on the Island as rapidly as con ditions warrant, according to officials of the Xraft-Phenlx company, which has been the pioneer in opening up the milk and cheese Industries In many sections of the western hemis phere—in all parts of the United States. In Canada, and now in Cuba The chief operator of Cuba's first big butter creamery is a young Cu ban, Emilio Rodriguez, who was pre sented to President Machado a: th» recent ceremonies When the cream ery was first opened, young Rod riguez churned ten pounds of buttei dally by hand. Black Hills Sky Pilot Brings Gospel by Plane The first real "sky pilot” Is preach ing the Gospel from an airplane in the Black Hills of South Dakota— the country that In the days before the Chicago & North Western Rall iray brought It out of Its pioneer re moteness, called all priests and clergymen sky pilots. The Dev. C. H. Loock Is a Methodist minister In charge of the parishes of Caputa, Wr.sta, and Piedmont. At each little town, Mr. Loock has his plane driven os near as possible to the church and then holds a thirty minute service, reading the scripture, i offering prayer, and preaching from 1 the cockpit of the plane. He can | make the entire trip In less than an hour and a half, an accomplishment that would astonish his father who was an old-fashioned clrcult-rider. He has performed a wedding above the clouds, brought In the sick and injured to the hospital, and once used his pl°ne for a funeral p~:eva sion over a way that neither automo bile nor horses could travel. It Is a curious coincidence that the first “sky pilot” of the Black Hills, “Preacher Smith,” who trudged into Deadwood with n freighting out fit In the summer of 1C73 and a month !at::- was killed by Indians, also was a idetiiodist minister. Dumb Doras Out NEW YORK—Gone is the day of the dumbly beautiful. Any woman with brains may be as beautiful as the Venus de Milo pro vided she spends five minutes a day on her appearance. So said that internationally famous beauty authority, Mme. Helena Ru binstein of London, Paris, and New York, before the American Cosmeti cians Society here. "The day when women's lives cen tered solely about their external charms," declared Mme. Rubinstein, “the days of feminine inutilities are of the dead past. Fashionable anae mia, fainting spells, and an ethereal type of languishing beauty have passed into oblllvion. “Much more Is expected of the modern enchantress. She must be self-reliant — swim channels — fly oceans—compete In tennis matches —discourse learnedly on art, drama, and literature—delve Into science, not as a precocious amateur but as a savant. Yet she must never for a moment cease to be adorably and be wltchlngly winsome. "Standards have changed. The r’-v c* th? dumbly beautiful Is over. ? :o thp woman who attempts .ce sheer beauty on the altar c. a career. Fortunately, the world cf modern femininity cannot be ac cused of such short-sighted folly. On the contrary, a chic type of brainy beauty, vastly more Intriguing than the vacuous enchantress of the past, prevails today. "Gone with these brainless Circes of yesterday are prolonged milk baths, fantastic youth potions, and witches' charms. In this modern world, a five minute dally ritual with scientific aids creates such beauty as the much-romantlclzed sirenr of the sixteenth and seventeenth cen turies would have given fortunes to possess." On Vital Mission Photo showi Ru/iii Dawes,; prominent Chicago banker and brother of the Vice-Presi dent, Charles G. Dawes, who, with, Owen D. Ypynfc haj been chosen to represent America in thfe* German Reparation Settlfj -y In Boudoirland CLOCKING COMPLEXION If your chee.ts confess the artlflc lity of your blush, and your eyes '•v>-n up to their synthesized lustre, nd your lips admit their nlluring ■ upld’s bow is not their own. then ,'ou are guilty of breaking beauty's • rst commandment. For crime on the code ot make ' up Is—detection Make-up should merely supple ment one’s natural coloring. Prop , erly applied It should produce a clear, 60ft. translucent effect of the skin, > Intensify the color of the eyes, bring out the beauty of the brows, enhance the effect of a wt-ll-shaped mcuth. in short, create a picture so charming as I to force the most rabid antl-cunmeti clsers to admit make-up aids beauty. However, the complexity of our modern life requires that women ! change their appearances with their clotnes The feminine golf champ •••ho Is such a wow on the links would t • a total Joes on the dance floor were < not possible fui her cosmetize *way all traces of her outdoor life oe < f°re donning her indoor evening c'othes. Every feminine occupation, whether it be business or pleasure, nas lt3 Identifying make-up For in stance: ILI.USTRA I ION ON K— hor morn injM and outdoor spuria, olend r.iupe from outer corner of eye tow.ir. 4 lips, with lipstick lightly ncconiitrit* naturul lip-line, use powder Slightly darker th:n ycur si.in. ILLUSTRATION TWO-For bndgs luncheuus. teas and afternoons, ap ply rouge directly over cheek-hones and carry color towards ears and temples, lipstick generously, usa powder exact shade of your skin ILLUSTRATION THREE—For eve nings. rouge high on cheeks to ac centuate eyes, adding daubs of color on chin and car lobes, lipstick free ly. use powder lighter than vnur skin. ILLUSTRATION FOUR—Under no circumstances, go to hed without lirst removing with cleansing cream all traces of your make-up. To be throughly up-to-date, the w.’tnan of today must learn to clook her complexion. Business Now Offers Greatest o Opportunity to Youth—Mellon Tho young man's chances are much better today than they were fifty years ago, says Andrew W. Mel lon, Secretary of the Treasury, who declares opportunities for successful careers In business In the next fifty years will be the greatest of all time. With a younger brother, “Andy" Mellon made his start In the realty : and lumber business In Mansfield, Pa., now Carnegie. That was fifty five years ago. The development of tblg business organizations since that time, he explains, has given the average young man, who might not have survived those days of keen In dividual competition, an opportunity to succeed. , “I remember the time when we lived In a world of small competing units and it seemed to me that the casualty list was very great,” declares the Secretary, in an article in the Cosmopolitan magazine, under the title "If I Were a Young Man Today.” "Today there are still plenty of i opportunities for a man to start his own business; and of course profes sional opportunities are greater than ever. “The same rule of success holds good now, as It always did, and that Is that whether a man makes good or not depends almost entirely upon himself. The fact that the young man has a father or an uncle who Is ithe head of the business or owns a large part of the stock does not mean 'that he enjoys an overwhelming ad vantage In the race for success. Busi ness openings are not saved for sons or nephews cr cousins, as in the Old ' World, where opportunities to gSt a start are fewer and harder to h-id. j “Business here Is democratic and t Is run on merit alone. Dead wood Is soon eliminated, and the man who contributes most to the success of j the business is given his chance to run It.; f “I know one case where a man who had built up a great bank ardently desired his only son to succeed him. A--fc>-Ci-Z^SL-£i AHOACW W MELLON But the son, although a man of char ! acter and intelligence, did not have I the particular qualifications needed i In the bank, and his father, recog* j nlzing that fact, made other arrange ' ments for his son and pushed ahead a young man who had nothing but his own native ability and character to recommend him, “This is true of the heads of most of our great banks and of our busi ness and Industrial concerns. It is true also of our leaders in public life, of our professional men and of our successful writers. They are Invari ably men who have fitted themselves by study and hard work so that they t might be ready for the opportunity when It came. "They are the best proofs that America Is still the land of oppor tunity.” Urge Higher Tariff Against Cuba - To Save U. S. Beet Sugar Indusir 6££T S/CA&B AT THe /=sACTOAV DENVER, Colo.—Unless Congress-1 levies a higher sugar duty against Cuba every bcc-t sugar producing company in the United S.atcs wi.lj eventually be nut out of business and 100,000 American farmers will j be deprived of a crop that returns j them 850.000.C30 annually, according to a buUcttn issued here oy the. Mountain States Beet Growers Mar-' ketlng Association. “Domestic sugar producars are faced with ever Increasing nroduc tion costs." says the bulletin, "yet the tarifT that once expressed a fair j rate to the domestic producer affords j totally Inadequate protection at the present time. Cuba's excessive sugar production, turned out at low costs and shipped Into tills country under; s preferential rate hangs like a cloud threatening the American market. | “With the beet sugar producers making sugar at present day costs j and selling It at pre-war prices, a eerie ns crisis l.a.s been precipitated. This may seem In favor cf the con sul:::". cut 't Is .'.n unsound eco nomic condition Injurious to those engaged in sugar beet culture and ultimately worts tc the disadvantage of both producer and consumer. The consumer's guarantee of a con tinuation cf cheap sugar Is the preservation of a domestic supply. Without a domestic sugar supply to chock foreign competition, the house wife is at the mercy of extortionate ju^tr lets. ‘Tew countries in the world pro ducing sugar In any groat quantity have as low a tariff as the United States. The present Inadequate tar iff favoring the foreign producer is causing American capital to ntaire in vestments In foreign sugar c ‘tr priscs rather than In cur own country." Burins Public Protected By Bonding oi Sal Self-men .incl sal- -r.-mon soHin’ f.cn: house-to-houie will be unitc: sally bonded and registered, and the public in genera! and the housew.:-; tn particular will probably refuse In the future to deal with any salesper son who cannot produce prep • cre dentials according tc Frank 1 An drews. president of the Direct Selling Federation with national headquar ters in Chicago and comprisin'! * ! group of the large t d rect selling! hrms m the United States Press advertising oy these li: nu will include notice to the public ana the housewife regarding the 'pecia. bond their sales representatives will carry, and the purpose of the move ment in general will ce to protect the public from loss through dishon est salespeople anc to raise the standard of sales represent stive oy rejfcctlng all who cannot ce cciiatd Local restrictions on chrect selling vhich still exist under mttnictp-. code? in various communities will probe. :• oe withdrawn c: modi'lea *.? a rosu.t c: the new mrvcmc i* t employ only condeu representative believes G E D:r;_t com,.n:.«s;''r.''r (f the Direct 3?ll;i><! Federation Ail con^anles operating quest.onaoie and shady enterprises undoubtedly will be driven from the field the commis sioner declared “The bonding ol all dlrec* sales people. and the rejection of appli cants who cannot obtain bond under a strict standard of investigation." said he. “will mean absolute protec tion to the public and should per manently establish public confidence in direct sales representatives once the bond is in effect “The new bond will completely pro tect the public from any fraua oil the‘part of any sales representative! and will be reinforced by the backing : of a national surety company and the ' investigating resources of an interna- j tionally known detective agency To make the proposition watertight, the i _ t-'KAHK. T A MO/-Caw'S. J . t>ond fee will nave to oc lurnished ov the sales representative himself, or herself, as the case may be. and will not be refunded until his or her sale quota has reached a prescribed total at which time the individual company will assure the most of the bond. •"X’he Direct Selling Federations purpose is to obtain the oe t possibW class of sales representatives. t< guarantee all direct sales personne who can qualify for a bond, to insure the public unlimitedly against any loss of fraud and to Justify the pub lic's confidence and good will as cre ated by advertising.”