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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-10-04, Page 6unday Schoo Lesson d.r • Worahip,- which they Chose near the river for the sake of those iustrations which formed part of the service. The , audience consisted mostly of women who welcomed Paul when he caMe, Was hie custom, to the place where hie own people worshipped.. One of thee() women ‘was a remarkable char- acter. It would seem as if she wa• s itoncling s ^fullest 19.. Lesion - V1.11, --Paul Cr ueta businesIn her own name, " '143,01a- ,:‘,(aa a elin Asia , the Geenelf• t e u Into Europe,-ACe )1' • th • f . • . inor ame or e Man, acture o • 16:- 9-10., 13olden, Text--7401'ne, over purple dyo. Inacri ticns hive been , Into Macedonia, and. kiln discovorea in which .mention 1. Made • 16:‘ 9. 0.4 ' • a guild Of purple Beier% It is ••ANALYSIS.' lable that this •Werniiii took her 'nate° • I; THE visioN riloAS' 9411: l'froin•thie city, and that she represent- _ • _ _ _ 'cad SOMQ firm from, Lydia She had 14. ciwitcH,Ity T#E,P.tvifrosSIDE, 1,2-hlo. • - • • „ :evidently:AO:fled the Jewiph , Church; Itrtliblibeile•-:..Tlia,Cteineil at Jer-• and had beeorne n,leading iiiember, It nsalene Cleared the air, and the way , Was to her expected; that One. 'Of her • new lay 'oPen- for Taut to make fur- Openmindwould' be the orst to wet, 'tiler adventures' in missionary work. come the Message of Paul, This it But at the outset there arises a differ- beautifully described in v.15, 'Whose • epee, or "sharp Coritentioq! Kett 14: heart the Lerd,Opened,". • 39,, • The immexate cause was the un-' • V. 45. Her 'houSehold is baptized. willintness of Paul to take, Mark who Thil :may have included the slaves had turned back during the first jour- who worked for het, or the hired peck. neYibut it is possible that behind thisphi whom, she had With her:It:is prob- laY, some further reason, and that Paul able that she would Select such as were felt that one with. fall Roman, citizen- in :sympathy with her religious' views. able like Silas would be more suitable Perhaps the names Of some of 'these for the eainPaign in heathen territory, are mentioned in Phil.'4: 2, 3. Shein- • Snag belonged to the' Jerusalem .vite.s; Paul and his companions to be church, ws.d in high standing and was her guests. Thus farthe missionar- ; equipped in many ways. At a later ies had followed their.- esual • custion „. • time he acted as secretary for Peter of supporting themselves- with their and helped considerably in the.compo- own hands, and, of hiring their own sitionof the first letter which Peter lodging: Paul was a tent -maker; Luke sent to the churches of Alia Minor. was a physician. The letter which • These men pass hurriedly through Paul wrote to the church .;at Phiiipei the scenes of the first campaign in is 'full of tender feeling, and shows Smith Galatia; where they found the how kind these- people must have been .sinall ',Christian communities in it to these' missionaries Of the cross. . flourishing state. • They choose Tim..1—;;42; : otliy, a , convert • of I;ystra. s eoni- On' tne 'mac' .pamon, and start west with rnani- . • - • fest purpose of going to Asia, but the Spnit forbids.themand they thee tern :north intending to enter the Previnee • • i of. Bithynia;',.where there was a con- siderable .population • of Jews, but • to andalay A GOOCI SPOrt ' . . • , sKipi,4R WHO *iir.4°)riCErr RAGE e — Captain Barr whptleted the. Yacht "Elena ' acroae,the Altentie to win.... He? I. find *that my inte,rest. In -riatiyes jacent rice paddies- .and its cyrainetrh. does 'not,;Perinit 'me •te, ,remairi long in : cal pagoda dominating 'tho,. landscape, the privacy of the "first elass". space. 'clusters comfortabty upon the green This is my .first actual' contact with banks: As we' -come into , tho. riv,er the Burmese .folk and 'it. is quite. the . iteelf there are more villages, and as sort of contact that the ,student of, my i the distance, from Itangoen increases type 'peeks.... On the lowerdbelt which.; they partake less and leas'of tho. char- ts but i few inches above.the •arater, ' a.ctet /of . what .vie'' call "civilization," and. about .the 'lamer, they squat .and and thus hecoine more interesting. • recline and lie, these btirme,se.. of the Here and there narrow, creeks, lead Irrawaddy'. villages, yonxig . and . old,, from .the river; and far among thertce women and children. There are, of •fields the Sails iot,,native ' craft are eming to move mysterious course, a few Ohinele among' 'them; visible,' sely , . . . - and the blends of ..the two . peoples across' the land 'teen. '• •One longs to . . . . '. RANGOON. „ strongly feVor `the Chinese,. especially navigate mane such toylike waterway, . . . ' , .• in'the case of the women, 'And there if only to see. whore 11 might lead and again the are stopped;and the • 'Scarcely have the .eun s rayereveak is 'as, inueli. difference between the .what might, be at, Its -end: . At every -therefore COMO, to Treas,., on the Hel- ed'th.e jeweled glory ofthe greet Shwe Bengalis, •among i whom , I have 'lately riverside • village the.:,little, steamer - lespent, 'Which Is , to, be • the ' starting ,•Dragon' e golden crown' when the miles spent a few,'weeke, and theIiiurmese, pauses while.„13011p of the, Passengers I. THE WSIONAT TR0IFI, 9-11., ', into a seething activity that continues dues . of Calcutta and Rangoon:. . Maces, to the accOmpaniment.of much point for the. new cooquesfe; of docks along the ye , . I 'yellow river bre. ak - • ' . +. ,. . .•• . as there 7is betweengreat leave and others promptly take their • , the two • .. V. 9. At this time Macedonia was until well Into 'thetropic night. As . an eXtenaive province including. not many craft as :throng ..the Huang-pu „ It is: .impossible not te like these 'ehattet, much laughter and ..nothieg, only ,Macedenia• hilt Thessaly, .Illyri- at Shanghai Or the •Hoogly al: Calcutta ' • Burmese at the yeti,: :first encounter resembling haste: Little in, existence' - . cum aricL, Preece. The' Artsion 'which :with' . the 'strong tidrilcur. They are a light-hearted folk; always is of less, censequence than time.to the Ways in which. he obtained ditiinesi- rents •Which sweep ever past the Icing ,he.., Rangoon water front: ' The sampan -2-17eetiow'for-his-future-sictiOnsi-',-and '.„.'illiW gets an explanation Of '.. the many 1 threads A 'Iti,borlous way.through the hindrances which had been 'placed in maze Vessels from all the East and • his, attempts, ,to kc, elsewhere.. Thero. most- of the world, drifting un or down . cornea over him a great feeling' of re. ' 'stream • with the . violent tide. 'faster • lief as he'resdizeethat his plans •are than it can- be prepelled4acreas ' the '. made clear,. and that he is now to seek narrow river. ' The far2eotne liner a new . scene for his labors.. in 'Mace- op.,, so or .double ,moorings as tho. clonia... it Was the peace Which' all .' -7- --.- 'T - r004. ,Of ,ttqgi4 . water 'surges against people . 'feel , who. have 4ilieen confused I her. , And the broad paddle wheels' of as to their duties and •pians and sue' denly have all things /glade dear. toia dozen river . craft splash wildly as • Paid receives at Troas was one Of the ' struggle V.- 10. It is evident _from_the_way in - whichthe is mentioned -thrice in four- verses that the author regards this mission as of the first the .Irrawaddy fleet pittl, off and heads.' for th'e canal. entrance Which is the gateway of theroad-to-,Mandalay. • For•inyself 1 have chosen -one of the - smaller craft which ,iny?'ricksha man Importance. . But, the .significance of has found with constderable diftimilty ,this. has,' beennti'differently explained. in the turmoil of the riveefront; and Some ,atteon. to' the geographi- .. cal iwortannein;thatt,tionnpni Rasa, only, just„ In time, And once more I es now, from ;Asia to_ Europe. The find myself in the 'not 'uesiitistactorY ..-apo.stre is now, for the first time, on Position of . being the tole European the great highway that leads Ultimate- passenger,...for this is ,a IIttle river' • .ly to Rome. The church is to be n boat which teaches at many villages • . ,planted in Europe. wheb is henceforth' through 'the 'delta and along the tribu-• to -him the great _scene -of Christian- tartee of the winding Irrawaddy; She victories. ,.Others, seek for the signifi- is not ealike the Stern -wheeler ''upon tance.not in geography but,. in the .• 4 ± wet& 1 esene the Bagdad-Basrah trip graintear of •Acts. • The personal pro- noun "We",- now appears, and it; is down Ihe Tigrisa f.v months ago, but no further. tomparlon; ler . suggestive that. at this , point .Luke there is joined the &eagerly and now begins this throng of gayly adorned and emil- _to_describe-Whatbe_had :himself seen:._ Ing Burine,se' 'Is ad _diff., erentio the Henceforth we meet this personal grave and silent Arabs as the vivfd -cider eking...the Irrawaddy' is in aharp. contrast to. thel*dull monotone of the' 'their friendship as / walk aReti there, and .this Is etrerigthenedieYOnd the passibility Of,. arupture as I bey several handfuls 'of tite native sweet- meatd for the bright-eyed, Children who crowd , around me.' • ' For such Europeans as may' chance to travel, by 'this leisurely and, utile- . note in several chapters. :- enti , V. 11. The sea journey vOtts short ,.-,--•,-••-,--'--'--;,---f-,----nndL-witheut--anf-,•,-,imporAa•rit inaid ' Luke has a liking for geographical narrative and he here say/ that the croir,..e was straight, implying that the • winds were fatioreble. Samothraee was r- imnortant island, where they prob- ably rested for . the night, . while Nea- •:pelis is to be distinguished from the Much more farnotis Na.ples of Italy; N. A'llIURCH' BY TIIE RIVERSIDE, 12-15. ••• , smiling, it ' eeerne; always apparently 'happy. As irresponsible as children," LhaVe.heard. than Called; and. It maY- he that they are. But I like that sort Of. "IirePpensibtlity" when it pi•oduCes cconteeted faces, hright eYes. ready Burmese. ' Clocks' and Calendars hoTd for him ,as little „significance as to a ilve-year-old:, Haste IS merely ,misdi- rected energy, anethe, four -mile -an - hour Irrawaddy steamer, with her long Wayside tarries during - whichplenty smiles. Their keen glances fellow. me of toelei Intercourse Is possible is, the 'abon't the. deck as I stop carefully' ideal. method of travel,_ 1 • . among the family .groeps, Their in- terest le-aVidas-1-putcheee• something - at the "canteen." ; "What,: is the With° 'inan• going . to buy?".I.,caa fancy them saying, to one another. 'What •will he eat?. Where is he.going? • Why is he irpeling,,the on_ yl JEtironean,__oll;thisz=little_-b.Orit?"_ • • As the son trcipicar twilight gathers, thea,quickljr_yielda,to.ntglit, while the ;blazing stars of the low latitudel dad their reflections in the. gently • tiny/tug river, a' conviction conies to me that there is .something to be Said 'for the Burmese itiewpoint, especially, when. one la in.Eurmajand_leisurlY-traveling, If I conld but.. talk to. them An their Itre•-road-t6.:Mana_dalay.—(bI. T. G., in Own tongue, the only. true -Means of ,CliristianSeleace Monitor).7 • -, - gaining the 'confidence of an alien ' : , • . " , --.+-4—. , 4'7 . People!' Ari• a 'handfed times before . ' ' Sunday Everirit3g* Supper ., , . . I deplore the lack Of untiersal lan- Cold 'Bouillon : ,. ' ,, Saltines guage in which all, of 'whatever. flatten, race 'or. creed, inight:taik to each other and, 'thus develop , a• friendliness be- yond the possibility of further misun- deretending. or coaftict.. • . However; the sante ,posseesea, a tort of universal significance in its mani, festatioli of ' kindly intent, And I have found the. world over that it rarely three-quarters , of a 'quart of sweet' fails ' to. find its response :, And the Milk, 2 -cupfuls Of ' cooked peas, one Burmese are. •Iike the Polynealans a in quarter teaspoonful of 'salt,. a , dish of that they would far rather smile than white peliner, one quarter teaspoonful Thet-' :You cat' go-leiillurma'viliege,-44-:-papriki,_. one and one halt .., table, ,as yeu. can. Into a Polynesian; - cein- spoonfuls '-oCtiutter:: • -' - - - ''' t -,, •_:' .mence -With a broad smile, cont!Inue. ' Heat Ole' milk in ,e.! 'doub e hoihr, with -ii• chuckle ; .and conelude :with thickee with Pim,. wet ,wIth • bold hearty, laughter, arid in a. few minutes water, "add salt Pepper, butter .and you will have ,old and . young .about •paprika. Cook ' until of the .right con you • merrY. •as school children' at . re- cess. They May not, know • What it ...- sisteney, then add shrimpe Which have means—indeed, it may not mean any, .iibairne`, rtihnesedi n it ee s t cion le ds , ,wra:::;,.§4dpr,thasend, toadish friendly'. relations,: , . -- peas; drained .and rinsed, and,, last a . prefixes also will tacit tate, identiflca- thingHiut it, is ,a certain, way to es. t kn.: frequencies. • It is expected that these dash of \ nutmeg. . • ' 'broadcast English and. tb, protect . . ,, • I. . • ma eu. - three different cities, arid' hiost effee_ scornin man a m 11. 8 ' ,1 ' Here on this. little, Irrawaddy river " Sgii.ve on , fresh white bread ;toast .nouncers aia • , .. . g s a . pace s pro- . . • - ' • • '' inst criticism " - • tt .. a t r different .„ • r_ ' Annotincers. hereafter Will therefore on when`- V. 12. Paul carries on a mission in s on con Deviled Eggs --Pickles • . • Shrink') Wiggle • , Tomato, Cucumber 'and. Lettuce Sated Fresh Fruit Small Cakes ' Iced Chocolate Flavored With Crushed Mint Leaves ' Shrimp Wiggle One and one-half cupfuls of shrtinp, ,^•^tn 4 New _Process Enables; Antatuer to Take Color Motion Pictures George Eastman ShOws,Filter'fihn Which Plays, Partiof Lens, • Producing Delicate Tints—Edison and Others• .. . ' ' See Demonstration. . • . ' 14:0:che.4t§r.;.' "N,17.--20.olor . Photo; Each. filter :strip Adir4ta only, Its Own graph)! for motion pictures by a 'aeW color, , the 'embossed 'douses diffneinit the ca.elera lens. ' ' ' • '''`. • .. * • 'through here. en route ,to.Kartsa a:K.1. they i'- D:k11:11::::-.;larhed 'affectedtiliTh7n14!4°':Ighica71:01e:enfrog:°:01f:itS., wherewlir. eheepn'. tly4;1.1:.PsaIses,d.e:;‘°,.' possible autenuAtieallY by the 7d11179-61" .:the. ancient past • Of,.'those. reitlete • cif!' tlohsstlee.rimsw,eseioolirsit4ansdpsaprrite• aeci.mungi al iu:ssor , geore Et .crosoy, .h4lig.ho of the. primary, colors, by the film 0106, a oi: . ,.. . them ' Marco Polo Will be followed OY Pro - on • lea New evidence .or the. ' origin'pf Man • inaY be ineeriber,', by ..PRODUES NATURAL COLOR ProfesSoh Creiniei in his. attunes eV- i3.1.4./cnIt,,ansctri:,whdin4tolobn• iee‘. ta.thae•r:e,:ictipffixitui.requdiny 'theugh'.tis prinein,alstudies,' will •bc,,, the =ether direction through the. eln- P1141117 fteh::°?°11141'11°°°7 of ears. :tesaira*C'1°WhrilrigE4.11theer. ' trithe.'tle.ett41;. totlwthr Sciecre4telir, 1-6;bsenri'O2d ':°t. h! e c Plic; , 09 Pa I, 6, will be thhe9-,a7Jeerl.t.cet7:1411764iraaPntid:1!ntii...:.:1'. aqt is.perfett aniannaturari'dor, ; :•,` the ',great ex,PaheeS, 'of 'emPtY end revolutionary ' 'media : which the film itself plays the 'Part of a camera, lens repdreclUte „its:subject iir'perfect ao.d. tiaturalPelers haejtist :been presented to the irorid!by: Goo* Eastman 'Chairman Of the board Of Eastman Kodak 00MPATIY. ' The -new pretiass . hailed 'here as tho goal Sought by photographers and inventors for"half Center), was wit- nessed at its first. public. showing bY- '1.9', of '-the Nation's leading natural scientists and journalists. •Kenneth' Mees,' director of the Kodak' research laboratOries, . demonstrated and ex- plalned'the invention. -••• ' • Besides outstripping for perfeet re- production all know'n methods of color photography, the process also does away with expensive and detailed ap- paratus which ed.far'has kept the art out ,of -range of the amateur. • DEVELOPED FOR 'AMATEURS., . Developed for amateur! at the out- set, the process, photegrapls objects on amatenr,sized -,film which us later developed without negative: No color chine, thread through a. special film, • is. apparent on the film. The objects; appearing in brack and white, are fuied on the sereen' by a color lens, and the film itself. • .. , The according to tor. Mees, Is embossed with tiny cylindrical Hotta Placed lengthwise on the surface of the side ,facing the lens -:-Light is ad., mitted through a three -color filter striped in green, blue •and red, the three primary colors of the epectruni• Will Follow Footsteps of - Marco Polo. • d Shanghai College Geologist to Study Ancient Past of Inner Mongolia': Hankow, ChlnaL*The feetsteps ,ef ' ... Mongolia, as ionic writers have erg - The proceeses, according ,. to Mr. ,:e.d, may he aeterrehled by agricul• Eastman, represents 'yearsof itudy tural studies to be ralide by Professor . and experiment in the koclak labor- ci.essey. , atories: it was evolved only after the ' . The area to be explored lies In west, principle 'of the separate embossed ern inner Mongolia,. north of the lenses by Which eolors Could be receikr- Great Wall' from Kaman.. Except for ed; set down and rediffused, had been, Irrigated strips along the Yellow , disc‘Pered; ' ' . River all of this region Is a desert.: The -amateur "movie" operator will, In the center.ef the. area Ile the great have only to ineert a filter in his ma- •Meehan range of mounialas which pull a trigger and operate. Among those at the first demonstra- tion was Thomas A. Edison, personal friend of Mr. Eastman and inventor oe,motion pictures. Mr. Edilon's in- vention was made possible by Mr. , Eastman's discovery of flexible film. Frederick E. Ives,holder-of a Boys' Photographic Society medal forearly work in color 'photography, was an- other Olest the, gelatine and stir until disselVed.. Add vinegarsugar and ke.,.IT __z_ lie_e " . ., This asPic may be used with. yeti, Wiil Know ,- . , , INUTV cies comblnations,' suitable for tomato, "K." ' and "VI" To Be Pre - or molded separately and placed on -lettuce-and &eased with mayonnaise fixed to U.S. . Amateurs' , ' --^ ' ' --- ' . C11 Signals 7 0_....L..—. . . .ILet 'LYS Follow • Wasiiineton--Beginning' October 1,, . some 16 000 radio 'amateurs in the , , ' 'United States will be required to use ‘,076.1iiit.. ih. Piirt: call, .Rt.i..i..o:AnnirricAer!,A,L.ic.....Fe.1,7e4 Iteli,tet,e',ti3sreilinie accordance ..: .;i'Wce".. . : • , From the tNttaexs. or, - ; • - • . , • .. . - ..-, -•-.,e,eroa7 Critics :,,All.. shipe; .both. governmental and ,Londen.13iitish ' radio announcers , , e,re e , must.,,have.- four call Jet-: who have. 'suffered • much critietani to ters,.• and lied, stattons ,must have the peet_en thetr_eiteged faulty-pr&Z,three,ccl.11.-letters. , '... -:. '. , -fitinelationror- English are .--rejoichig ' • . .The'_,-Inteinall'onal'. .Raclieteiegriiph_ in: the• pulificetion. Of the .recornatencla- . Conventhin ' Stipulates 'that Stations . - • . tion of the, Adirittory 7.C9railiittee—Oit . must liave call 'eters ‘desigeating the ‘.PrODURciatiOiti,,.whABli was headed .by country of their location.. The re_ .Robert Bridges, Poet Laureate : ...• , , guilt:thins of,:t the "convention Will bet; ..eommitte,e. Come effective January :1, , 1929. ..TO ' • . At the' lametime '' the . felt it necessary' ,to protect . tte ,de -..enable.' the, radio.' division of :the p- cistens regarding. Certain Words: from .8Poaprt6intseins.otroyt.u.Tidin,.iinteortpettii.ets.. national •assault by ' •the, aeaderniciaas, and PlOyd Jones', lecturer On Phonettes and :ill oiler tor the other chenges, rules a member of :the comniittee;, Said: "It toreagdaerdiengffegItihve0;tainitlheltste:troaulintaivyti ,i3betoen. \.iiiiist tiotbe• forgotten that.a pronunci-, "Mien, 'is not behind to be right .meielY, .beTriil.i., i;ad'io.k,.0'.fft, 'olia' is . . . . decidedthat. the becease it appettra. In a dictionary; It three all letters. requirement for land appears in a dictionary tetause it was 4ations is:: not. „ixpplioiiie , try .!,,i.oad.. cOttect. In the view, ' of the ' lexico, : gtapher at . the time. It hi,. evident ,casting stationei , as the change' .Would that we are not .:entitled to conclude bw.rootaltclonastilsres7vtteht.)h,.haardiisehb,ipo.00mone,weeimd: that there is one standard -ptonuncia; :43., kown.w.havo won, prcstoge .with tion—one, and only , one right way of . speaking English:7 There., lite,---Iowi-their-PreseeLfenfletter, destinations: 'ever, varieties • , that , are acceptable p, .6 asesarst.eiolinrrotintnelt,..hUntrer*dS6rtatieess,-:s7clid,. throughout the, eennity and others' ' that., are not ' No:, •seecial. degree of ,as Alaska and the itillipPine Islendi.. authority .attaches to :these ...recOni, : li"R4V;:' ;13Tell3en ,kes's'y lettersgidt,haetenfreotfixth el pttlierr-" ,mendatione.' Which' are primarily , In ' tended.: to., Secure., Setae measure of Poseof IdentificatiOn in case the sta- tieOs *antler .. from their • assigned uniformfty in the pronnnciation Of . . . tional, regulations. • tunny in Philippi.. This city had been vided onqlre upper deck at the tip , of steamer, making its leisurely way with small Points of toast as a ga ' Macedonia on the banks of the river • seealts English,or-French,. Or German, . • chairs, is partitioned off front the rest 'fonnited by Philip the great. king of the bow. Tbia, With a table and a few along the toad to Mandalay, no One nIsh., sprinkied,bwith very little 'pars. prontunce "celtio" with "s" instead of Iinents converse /with each other. • • "k"; rind .Will.saY ado'ficit" Instead- of ,• The key • letters' .'of„the Canadian • amateur ate "C" or "VE;", the Cuban • Gangitis. The surrounding plain was og, the crowded steaMer. . cie,s, the three languages In Which I.' am "detzicit" and "airplarie" • instead. of in mineral?: Hete also."was a military proyide own equipment, but he less limited fashiori. But 1.1fave been "oil." , "Esthetic" IS new "eesthetic.' , If fertile and. the neighborhood was rich journey be through the night' he must a le, to express myself in ,a.more or • "aeroplane." "Dal" must rhyme with Is -CL , . and the Mexican A. Pre- . Tomato AsPlo . fixes in other- countnies are England d PIM/ 8 • • • One, tablespoonful ot gelatine, .44, . ' an . , Pa n, ; Italy, land had been made, and who, would hi•• . ' ..... able. Moreover fare ()Vim h t sometimes a little- •of insecurity 'at- cu fill of told water, 1 Shce Of odien, irhe e.ettleinent or 'colony, 'Consisting of di--- will be undisturbed 'and quite comfort ' ' . • • ' . In far •worse linguistic dilemmas, .with "h" is 'sou, tided in "humor;" and c sort ae P - • , . ."pat-rlor' must . be , used Instead of ,, , • "I' - Nora, "LA"' S . " " . Australia; "VII"; • South, Africa, '`Z8"; Norway , weden, SM , handed .**).•oldiers . to o'whom grants of inspire the native population With res- ,1 stalk' of celery (o. • "pa-triot." ), , , - .• • r .1A teaspoonful of • • . „ , e may quill:ay will,,lie • prepared for , . , — celery satt),. 1 No. 2 ca lending. them as well. And so I com- • . . . "ZK"; 'Argentine; "LO"; stove at the stern "'reserved for Euro.' sure way' to the ,heart's Of; the, elders n of tomatoes 4, ' "The educated speeCh of London" Ilew .Zealand„, pect for the,rule of the Enipire Paul hini hY the ship's cook on a small 'mei:ice with the• children,, tieually a being himself a Roman citizen was , 2 tablespobinfuls of vinegar, ,1'. tante- (Pf Which the foregoing Words are- Brazil, "DP," and ChM), 'ICI." .' ' .'• .. specially fitted to bring: fAiS new ges.. -peens., Then, too, here, Is a "can... among Oriental folk; and before long. spoonful of sugar,' % tabiesp.00nful et pet of Christ to this this's of people teen" oE sorts where plenty of .fi• it we .are all friends, and 1 Abend salt; ' ./.. . , . .. ., ' ' ° °u c'n'' Soak the gelatinn in cold , water, .• awl we know'from the letter he wrotZ is procurable, . together with a• tirely the silly privacy ef the ,,"first to this church ,how' well he Stieceeded i variety of edilites, some familiar and class" apartment. , ., , • . . boil the tomatoes, onion and celerY• or celerysalt, together for . five Mtn - in winning the affection of the PeOPle• more interestingly mysterious. Bottles. , The road to Mandalay, by whatever utes and strain. There should be 1% V. 13. '1 he here were evidently .ciyppeally labeled "Iiinonade" are steamer, leads first through 'the 20- cupfuls of juice. ooled by a gnerous supply of ie Pour, het juice over ' few. in numlier` and were 'unable, to , ec have a, synagogue for their worship, c , and of 'filtered water there IS enough 'so that the small number of), Jews had to he content with at outdoor place of to provide for everyone ort- board. MUTT' AND JEFF—Bud Fisher Mile canal_ whiCh connects, -Rangoon. with the Irrawaddy. Manya native yillege of thatched ,litite, With its ad- ' . In a emelt way .1 am a journallet inYself.---Sir Arthur C�ttan Doyle. . examples); • colicludee Mr. • Jones, „"stexte with 'a beay handicap in, tie favor." When will. our. Toronto. stations insist that • the proper pro- utinciation• of ' ordinary every day Wads and .firet-hook grammar ,'he the 'first qualifidation Of, their announcers? What we are Petting up with at ,ptes- ent is a shame. •' • • • Safety First' Another of ilife's uneolved mysteries is why, when you have a swatter in your hand,. ,the fly nearly' alwaye alights on something fragile—Detrol Ffee Press. . • ' No. Mystery about It brother; the .fly is simply too fly for.You. • For the Love of Mike, Can You' Blame Jeff? JEF.F, 'eve GOV P, 6Re-• AY' IDEAL. • '4F ihyrs oo.r.-cr4.ext1N • A biSTuRVAAI4P . iG cAt.eT ite.G11`' ot.,fe TAWOK Or SAek, dko: yes.Yes GO DO, m4T11 BbIZRoilieD SAXOPIAONG (=ROM silONSYttebAL. Soot.; Gat -TA bo i PLAY -IT AND iAitict,l tic P.R -ate TetiRtai-e NotSe Yok.eAe we.t.L.,GooD Th (A.IGALt. L.e•AVG boor'PEN: /-nk,kr.s TereRtDLE.: lrLL GGT ttGA 60611, Qh.)c • • PARbOW.nk4 INTPUS1010, 6dNT LC MEM, BuT - lAite. 'You GoNnol,k ()kitus.out E01. (AGAtleiG A tits.rtAZI3PiNce.. e mADAml., • tee tiaGli Doerr 134 so sii.t.:41. _ wenitiGte tF siGS 000ke-h PLAY KeEunit",, c-='ote met Hs %9 DC.Pe.a.t Fut-1;f: • At, .•••• "I. 6 440; 45.16, • 4,10 411,040%111r INC, 111111 • 41 V ' v •••:•.••• • •••••••:,'": • riseqo over 10,000 feet and. divide • the „ desert into two distinct regions; the. Meehan 'desert on the. west' and the, Ordpa, on. the ..east. The Ordos in . chides, the district with tit the , great i •northward ..berld Of ..the yellowlriver Alitaide the '.Great Wall.. •,.••/".- . , Although an ancient. ,Mongolian' ' trade route, crosses this. district, it: • has seldom been 'followed, by foreign, ,l ete,i, ' Eircept .,for • the. feW. tra.ils, inest • of ' the, Ordoe-and 'Meehan 'ts,.,quiteim-., known, both geographically and legically.•.- ,1VInnco ., Palo crossed , the • • area, On his. journey to Chtea,. and ,dur, - Mg Muchof the etrm-nier the 'exeedi- tion".will be following .in • his footsteps ' The,. Chinese,..citY., of • Nirighsia and the, .'aVicirtgel trade,' ceriteAof Wang Veh.:',s -,Ftr-Will. be thiTheadefeerteri for werk. ' ' • • •Arija Was Free From Ice . ..: 'Oaring .the Glacial ,Period hi Ent, "Opeand•North America Asia was free . from foe piofossor .Cres.sey explain • ed. . "lVIOngOlia, 'further...more, apear-. ,entlY hed, a much. more :,inoiSt Climate...I. Iiiie problemi is more than theoreti- ., cal interest for. cinnete controls vege- . • , tripoli; and. thus hifluentee animel, life.. ' Since,' Asia- • seems ••to have - been the . . „ ., . . center of 'human evolution ; • climate ' . throws -light on the fiabfahilifft ar-thia':::7'. : area ' The record. Of 'clira,ate is writ, '. ten, In :sediments and ..erosion .eyelek: . and the, preliminary ' StUdiee niade.,in,' 1924, indicate''that, this, area contains critical informatioe, ,While no direct search .is, to be made, tor .ancient Man, . it Is Important to note. that the best evidence, Of early man so far found in • central Asia is on, the herders of the Ordos near 'Ninghsia,,,, , The desert Is the geologist's ',pare- - dnie, All. the agents of eresion.. and. transportation are ,...actively at. work, :. for: despite the limited .rainfall,.with • Which they carty. on. their work. there Is ,no protecting vegetation: Geoiegie. ..-. protease's are demonstrated : on every hand,. :often in. text .b00)C. perfection., . "Geologlealiy , the : , map. is .wilite, s, *White: and' large areas al,e :geOgraphl- : • ,_ __ _ -*fly-lin-1111,o v.'it-- al..-..well:-.-'-P.rejevaisk-Y,-. ,and ObrucheY. two Russians,' vielted . ' ... '. • the region shity:,Years ago, ,and most ' of ..our .knowledge• -dates ',back ti.iTeuira"veled .2000'; Miles . in ':-Nion.g,0*1 la . , Professor.,.Cresspy , has over tvio thonsend :.miles.,"op. travel in ,Inner . and Oilier Mongolia ,to .his • credit' . Both fh.a.pidos..ancl. the Alashan were visited by Professor CresseY in 1924 ' 'oe. the return from. an .expedition to , Koko. Istor •in 'Tibet, „There was no op- ... portunity ':fOr detailed •studies 'At that time, but hasty". examination ,Indicat, ed several promising ,areas. , Singe ;that time the; few ,fiVall'able reports . Of earlier explorers 'hair° ;been ex...., antined, and ,definite ptejecte'mapped,' ' out, - ' . . • ' • ' An • attempt to eontitiue work in 1926. resulted 'hi enattack by brigands ' before . the, area, was:. reached. ;Mon... gotta IOW iecheracteriltically peace,' - fill; but the Chinese borderlands are .often In an %unsettled coxiditien. Re,,, Porte indicate • that'. conditions along th e route. Which it is non PropOSed t ' • :.• -,Thie . le the ' laed, of -wandeti A it. foildw are quiet ‘• : '., ...... nomads 'wile' Posture . their flocks of sheep . end camels oli-the sparse des- " ort grass., - The .rainfali is lege, than ,• ten inches, and wells are few and far betWeen, ' :It .is .often necessary to perry. water, ,Camela are tomeionly, uSed; .hut they eravel arlilo, . and eery ten mileS„ a ' daV; for the most part the, eXpedition, • will ' ie .peek.'.. Mille% . .....-;,,,, . , 4. . r: ..,,,;;:,',..,,...:•;,,,A,„,,i„, •rI Hear Both,. Sides First , . „Nosy. York Sun : int err) ret the orotm of oho individual in textns 244 TP surd- ,Pf 2 -• . , with all t,,b0 eireti tit :tfttiittr:.11yZ' troVeraY arises,. _caso ef,th.a. ink the siitiatTiiii f:reth the con - tat m 11141 foleillarliY., • •lgAiet "Wo1430.'fihad, by ally until the .stories of .f,LIllaro• al hand . iuiil eith bo read irigi 1 i W4T1,4: of -re - %Mike are dfstinel1y.0(11 Of • plae• ' ".! , • Tho ,Saskalehowalv 'Moat 'Peel Is •,riumblOg coinpiplion 1(1(111 lonal ,.grain (NV/tiers 'Thr htlnditsg. Of the' .. .142a -crop; This' will give, the Pool A. tit'ii6,0.elovatot's.ht countiv•'points In Basicatehewali; • •