HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-11-22, Page 2.3.
day.
Lesson_
•,,,,-,.--r ,-..r.,-",r.-'7,r,",""'"' ,
1 . . .
ftarMeASsgre (011i 11047, Bat In the
second: Prayer, he thinks net se, Macb.
of light as of strength, _
V. 18. This stfength can only come
as Christ 4Wella * us. 13ut Jesus has
rinisVd to relreal'himself to his fol -
ewers, fon: ini-will, abide -with usfer
ever. Three, theings are here empha-
sized. .(1) That it is only by, the spirit
that men, may cane tolmour the ful-
ness of tbe &TY in Christ. We do not
NOYember4, 25. ! Lesson. V11.1.,.-rThe
Prayers!, of Pau!—Acts 26: 36-38/
EPt.i.". 16, 3; 1421. •Geitlett
Te/tit-^lieieice evermo„ Vray with"
•Pet Pealing. everYthinlV give
Thess, 5: 1048.
• ,
ANALYSIS;
L Tng FaitE„ Pakilia or PPArOuSi
Acta 20: 36-38. '
• . PAUL'S craisnaraS. THaisKaGivING
15,J6-: • •
PgeONO 4P-ktmer EPI1- 31
3,4-234 . ••
•.INTRODIjaiON--pra4-F :ought .to
•.have t412 central Plate in• the life •of
, every J:esa-s." !,Seer
" leader in thie'regaird, as in all others.
He taught his 4;iciPles definite -1Y on
•the principle§ , of ?tree prayer, ; gave
thermal!. greet model,•clled the Lord'
Prayer.,, and.. recast of all 'set them an
4;inple of. the value and of
•sineero comMunion with God. Paul
follows his Lord hero veryclosely, and
We find that the :sante Stress is laid
Irwin thia great sobject in the.Enistles
as in: the gosPels..
TnE. rAliminqz ritAirn Or rArRY.slis,
' 'Acta 20a:36738. ."
36. In, time of deep emot:on or of
• danger it .was natural that these
Christie/re should turn to God, and in
. this incident we have a fine exampie ot
the way,in,avhich Paul tarried on the
ilanights cif his•converta from the sor-
rows of theiminediate parting to WA
- great union with GO; who is above all
•, change and: who' call geard And keen
•- There renothing_that
can cahrgthe sorniwful Mimi like a
•, real attempt tconnter into .thepresence
of the loving Father. We ere not given
any- part Of :the actnal prayer, Put in
theletter 'to the •Ephesiena we Pave
'two; :Whole', passages from which we
,ma gather absonidea of the thought
which:lutist have filled. Paul's' mind at
t the tirae.
• Thal. :mimeo are aufficie.nt
to Lbartiali., image/Aim that 'Paul
astern, hazd,. cold man, %differ-
- ent to all the warmer eraotiOnn of the:neut.- "His heart was very soft -.and
- tender.Prayer....had-dohe rwciraders -in
deePeninghia SYsxgathrWith those
wha loVed,the ',Iesnsto '
• PAUL'S.itiAszip18— MGIVING,
Enk 1: 15, 16. ;
rise by. our oWri efforts. strength. has
'to hOOVen to us, from Olive and we
anhatirhig.ls.,0:ne, 14,:the leading
elementa Le -titre' prayer. There , are
no ,many ",lovely, glacienna and good
people'and 'things in the World that
we may 'awe:ye:have -cause forgiati-
tudi and. jay:, In. Paul's heart there
'Wait a' fountain of thanksgiving. -.In
one'letterhe writes.'7n, athings give
thanlii.° His.- generous fnature is. re-
flected 1Vair in:whieli he always
picked out the good' qualitiesin his
converts. • There .are several: thingS
Which may be rioted here: (1) Pail
believed that in all?true.prayer, Man
• was not 'denendent merely on his own
will and effort,. since G-Od's wat
always suggesting, and inspiring and
.helping the- worshipper."The. Spirit
bears witness with our iPirits.'t (2)
He was a firm believer in intercessory
, prayer.- •Be Must, have had long lists
• of those whom he meritionci: daily in
his prayer. This duty must have made
• great inroads upon his . time, but he
reaped great results. Perhaps there
Ureic* Ways in which someyeeple can
• do .fliote" service than in eincere and
.cotratent petition for those whore they
love, and whose welfare they desire.
can only obtain_ this strength aa We
live in UnitY and hare -HAW with others
who are'wershipping the came Christ.
It is along with the saintsthat we
know truth. (3) This love of God. can
never be exhausted, We may see More
of its greatk dimensious, its length,
breadth, height, &nth, but atill it re-
maies unknoWn, in all its Wilma. ,It
sarpaspeth-larowledge..
V. 20.; Therefore all glory innat he
ascribed to him who came to. give us
this blessing. Paul's prayers are
great descriptionofprayer to Jesus.
TheYei
re, as is said n theological lan-
guage, chriatologital-7Cl1ri8t ,is ' the
eentre,t-J
III. 'PAUL'S SEC,OND PRAYER, Eph '3:
V. 1.1: • Tiie is the 'second of the
• PreYfys Enhesiansoindifis exceed-
ingly rich in its teaching and the light
,thrown -upon the nature .of true wor-
• ship. Paul knelt to the "Father."
• Everything is a religious turn upon
• the nature of the God who is worship -
PO. Those :wire worshipped a cruel
. Molech-thought it was -necessary to
make their children walk through the
fire as an act pleasing to their God.
•. Today the heathen think. �f a revenge--
ful God whoni they attempt to appease
• by acts of torture. But when the idea
• of God is pure,. then prayer also is
pure. Jesus first reVealed this beauti-
ful grim and love of God wlen he
•, taught his folloners te say, "Our
Father Which -art in heaven." He
thereby madetrue prayer possible. We
• know that God is our Father who is
constantly • -Contemplating the - best
•things for all his children.
V. 15. 'These tweprayers in Ephe-
".. sus should be. mpared as one is the
• complemerit of the`other. In -1: 17-23,
, Paul thinks of the magnifiCence a the
hope which Christ brings and of the
'grandeur of the inheritance which is
laid up for believers. No hinnan eye
ean see it. so he, praysthat the eyes
. of their minds may be opened by the
.Spirit of God that they may See the
,
Animal Stories
Are Also News
Some Headlines of the Year
. Show That IVlan'S Interest
• in Other Creatnres HAS Not
Dimmed Since the
; fie-fitatciric pays;
By 'Warren -Irvin- in N.Y. Times -
}len. are. a few 'headlines that ind.1-
cat° the extent to which animate
figure in the day's news; : •
"Porcupine; 'Ate Mgiamite:''
bits Had Hand in. Ainevlea'S Discov-
orY,". !VIM- Tunes Lure Deer- to
Parked Car," "Giraffes, in Egyptian
.Art," "Lion Visite' ,City' ""Flood
,Control • . Considered '• from ,A.ngle
worm's -Angle," "JapanPlanning Big
Bullfrog Crap." • •. ' •
Probably the oldest of all stories is
the 'arilmal 'Story; :new is this ser -
prising when ;one considers that
early _men subsisted largely,bY bind-
ing rind fishieg. .The most primitive
Cuneiform systems 'contain 'animal
figures, :and centuries before the
fables Of Aesop were thought of
Paleolithic men were acratching, ant -
mai forms upon rocks. The rock pic-
tures of the Australians,' the hearse
earnings of the Eskimos . and the
drawing§ of the Bushmen are alike.
remarkable • fortheir faithful repro:.
,Seritation of animals: • ,
•, Notwithstanding its antiquity," how?
ever, the animal story 'has, lost 'none
at is faseinatien. ' Newspapers de -
'Vote thousands ot colurnes to It an-
nually.- NO -longer is it ,cOrifined to
tales ot Lfattlifel, _dogs imaxiiing fami-
lies of ,fire, 'cats, causing aSphyriatien
• by 'carelessly; walking gas
• stoves, or runaway monkeys drawing
crowds in pursuit through: busy city
streets". • : ••
Interest Does Not Flag '
• Tina Pack over lastyear's files
and: note the variety of animal news
• that has: been printed. Headlines
peak for themselves. Here, between
two: small Items 'telling • respectively
• cif the: loss •of, Texas, Guinan's:pet
terrapin and the_gIft.....oLa kangaroo'
to President 'Coolidge, :'one finds • the
,
A New Willi to: Buy, St4inTA
k
A
- KIOSK FOR POST OFFICE IN LONDON ,
• These small vending places are being eatablithed in Londoa in' districts
away from post office. •••if •
•••••••101M11••••
Meg. Leek at the:headlines! 'Tat's'
of Rome Lose Their Forum,". "Cat
'Passes 'Hours Vainly,,Snatchiag at
Mail Chute," "Prisens Cat Sacrifices'
Life for Baby. Rabbit" �r «Jall ,
De-
livery Scare'. in Bronx: Caused by Cats .1
On Fixe -Escape."., The tales range;
from:the account of .the eat whO held
Up traffic 'in Lafayette Street hile,1
with her kitten In her Mouth, she,
strolled nonchalantly frOni one side;
to the other, or that, qf a frightened
Maltese treed by 4 -gog and reseped
by .the, fire- department- after -'-three--
de7s",'Isolatiori, to the story of the
• ,caption, "African White Rhinoceros Locarno eat whose Claire to fame is
Rabidly :Nearing,Extincticia." I that f e s,httred a . terra? :with Herr
' Or, among a' Cluster of small sterie.s I Luther and M..: Ilriaad • When they
headed Variously: "beer Eat $3t held ' their memorable ,conference.
Worth of Paneles," "Train' Interrupts
• Pee's Sleep on Tracks Near Middle-
• tOwn," "Canoe-I:Insetting Hippopotami
• Sentenced to Death ' -Uganda,"
• "Film Lion to Cross Country.in Air-
• plane", or 'Trogs Enlighten Savants,
• 'Then Tiekle Their Palates"—among
• all these stories is an: account Of how
•5 in the' province of Khorassan, one of
• the Termite districts of. Persia, earnela
andother baste.of burden. are taxed
to previde for the. upkeep of the
muniCipal hospital. ' • .
There arestirriag aaccariats tit duels
to the death between buffalo bells:
pine there eating an. ereplosive stick.
The ranger beat a hasty. retreat, but
to his 'ecinsternation the animal: fol.:
lowed him. He feared it might fall
and blow up. • He dared' not shoot it.
But when the porminine had diaa07.
peered into; the woods the ranger.
again mounted the timer and tele-
phoned for aditee. He was told the
dynamite Was persenoup.
• The Eastland „(Texas) Teed
Eastland, Texas,- reports that, ' ri
liOrned toad sealed in the corner -stone -tit -the court -house the thirty:one
years age was found alive recently
NEW FLARE.
or fierce fights. between. lions and
,
1es. There are tales' or; savagi
-velvet that subscribes to new flared •
j,
treatment in tiered effect, which gives ungle beasts whichOaCe having
a raceful ripple to hem.
tasted of human nflesh, will have no
gThe •flatter-
• A charMing dress of printed sheer
tigers, or between tigers 'and croco-
fugcascading jabotfrill
is caught, at :other. There, are stories Of wolves
, ' '
shoulder and -waistline • with orna-
Mental buckle.' To assure a :perfect' fit,
after the bodice and skirt are joined,
it is stitched to slip at waistline, which
creates slight blousing, .and flat hip. -
line.: Bodice is also tacked to shoulder
traps of slip; pattern for which is in-
cluded. Style No. 287 lendeitielf beau,
tifullyto chiffon, georgette crepe,
.
crepe Roma, crepe: satin,'. crepe de
chine,, canton crepe and crepe Eliza-
beth. 'Pattern for this fascinating
dress can be had hi sizes.'16, 18„20
years, 36; 36, 40 and 42 ineles •bust.
Price 20e in stamps ,.or. coin (coin is
preferred). 'Wrap coin carefully. •
• HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your ::arse, and address plain-
, ,
1Y, ,giving number • and sire of such
patterns as you want., Enclose 20c 13
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) • for each initialler and
address' your order.to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St, Toronto.
Patterns sent by return ,
, Those who seek the secret of Angle -
American. understanding can find part
of it in the ambassadorship of Shakes-
peare. - . ,
•
Advocates . of simplified spelling
woiild not indite. indict, while ' pro-
ponents of simplified language indict
Indite. '"
'
MUTT,AND JEFF.t---Bud Fisher.,
inl.teRe
13Seta, SEFe?
'1;
. • •
driveneby hanger to invade towns or,
viliages, or stories of. wolves adopt
irig "hiiman children and caring ler
There are scientific studies :of ani-
mal behavior,. or accounts Of strange'
animal 'cuttemS like that '.of the fe:
male scorpion,. which devours its own
Mate, and sometimes Its offsPring.
There are toughing storiee 'of animal
•
gratitude like . that , of the :London
lioness 'whose cubs Were sick; and
•who •attacked 'her Mate 'when ; he
sprangupon a keeper Who was tend-
ing there:: • And there are -.endless
• comic aneedotes like , that of , the,
seelding drillsstork: who Set upon
foarteen noes in the ;circus- and. sent
them' scurrying to 'shelter in. their
cages. • . •
'Travel Law' Saves. Wolves" tells
ho,w two. Portuguese -Who discovered
Wolvea attacking their: cattle , chased
thento the Spainishherder, where
they, Fere - compelled abandon 'pur-
suit for want of Spanish 'passport
itiSaa. "Lion in Flathush. Proves
RaCcoen". yeeounts the struggles of
Gaetano Plarascio; A laborer; With 'a
full grown raccoon four stories • above,
the street ' on the scaffolding , on e
part1Y. completed apartment house.
The raecoon :wont to the police sta.:
tion 'and,111artiScre 'to the hospital.
• Cat Stories alone would 'fill Vol-
allia.M.0~01...WallimagamagiMr.g.~/. NM)
when the: stone was rep:Mired. ,It is
a Teiris tradition that h horned toad
can 'live a; century without :feed or
water.' :According .to County Judge
•But..there are atories. &wilt an end- 'Edward S. Pritchard, when the toad,
less ' Variety:4 apimals.. Weird coma - Was disentorabed it, at first appeared
froth Berlin that 'the only orarigeut911,1ifeleas, but after a littlewhiie opened
..known to have been Porn . in eaptiv- fits eyes and Showed -Signs Of breath-
ity :died because : his mother did: not ing: • The _Mouth, however, appeared
know hew to take Care of him... AP; Ito have grown together: • -.
1
parentiy regardieg :him as some ,new 'Here is still 'another eontritiutiori,
kind of, My, she bounced ‘ him on the this one from London,. In the diselis-
floor and ie. an ' excess . of, affection sion Of the text „et the Rabbits bilk -by
squeezed him to death. ' .-. .1 which the British Parliament hopes
. Why not" . scientiats.s. ask.. ".No to Stimulate andregulate rahhit feria-
. .
mother' they say -"Wou'd knew bet f lug Professor E. H. L.: Schwartz
i ter 'unless . teight. mother . arm: tag i' disclosed. that . except for these "de -
nothing to •do withthe instincts ' but, structive rodents Christopher Colum
Is 'due ,to training:" : 1 bus might not haa,e discovered Amer'• ,
awnat accounts ' • tot, - ...tan- zebra's! ca.. Columbus, he pointed • oat' .
: ,.
„ mar -
queer. a 1 ried. Felipe Munnis daughter 'Cif Pere -
. stripes?". is the questiOn• raised , . -
Y'- . / -inais .•, .1
' • strello, one of Prince • Henry's cap-
' ' ' ' I 'th
. the , deposition :of -piatnent .. is aorae-' tains, and part of "her dowry was the.
. of!'Island•of Porto Sento.: The YOUrig Pei). -
times determined 'I1Y, the coukse
bleed vessels;:bY the course of nerves •.; Ve. •estaldished . thernselves:. taere,"' but
k ran k•Sag •
Bulbs for Winter •Can 'Motorcar.,
Hyacinthe •. •• Be Maintained
Soft, delicate coloring,s.;, enchanting
fragrance; sexture of Wax. bUndreds ,
f l•14pink, rose, ,oweebes :11dingplump • •
On •$2 500 a Yeall
la:vender, white, blush, 'porcelain -01e, British judge is °rumen ,
t7g 14e:nW sweetba4de s%pCIrt h:4690, 7mh6904,41:r4ne :41ie;alenderof . Three- Tunes That .Surg!.
Is Is Insufficient
. •-• • „
will4ortyert.:altvipaociton*fOL,dthteln. th..a hr,Pag 7eztr a ffora 4 motorc40,..nis
4 gong.
' • got heat 'clitalitr!- largq, Anwoth t:1740°71v:tcca:" the earnedJudge
bulbs
Crawford
atNimi°4Ct.intY
Plan ahead i fOVIni0rthsveincase, re -
1
la s
before the blsao
better; onisare . in the negative, . .1
wanted.. milt Inv not rtoi. oxa, pliedIlesineas Poll"
war ot pure sand, loam, lar .-Goycipirk og000 ai4o Motor,
and Well decayed -cow ..ruanuro,.. n g authnritleq .11aWeveri.
assert that , ltywOukl be ea'sr---Undfg.
equal.portions„. Let this: Staled thre • •
Or fear weeks •before • , 1 °,1••rtull:digAle ectrriw4ifost:,cheits4. prq' usii, de-;
0:04lhoUt4t .,clared that a motorcar COUld •not • be
aintained on 21,500. a• year. has • . •
several 'hours. to *Move d le- In.
taigas'. Matter, Cover the hgle%linitile. ,aprno4.1'illur.rcaet"br..yy'aograititinSgt, ;IX'rel es "p17 pejlxj:
sra4aa pottery as buld up
over the
draftYccoart rooms,
ap the pot with a• SOckings,gainat ,
of this a„ *canal of ano. graaa .,aad_the..:Intance" of'1?'graal, hti:latera
. ;
mogS. There 'gnat be . free drainage °.APavmeleirentcl'a-r- an •: he • ,Used, toward
ae-third tent it would SAVO its oill the pot Mlessening expenaesi and to that SiP.
Oleg the outlet: F '
and this, will keep the soil .from. clog-
fun of .the coalp9st and pross it dein wner : •
11 edxocinlido te dp..a c1C‘aes .ttIlonealr mustiPaln4d Stehlfriggee4.'eran.14: ticcirlicliwzn9sutia:411. e:4e71'
not cit....the owners. .1 should rather. LIP-
bulba should .4.1eft•level. With the Bar-
w
4.ca 01 :the soil, which should be med.. and, the :enterPrise :of 71,1
Of 1
elli
enitely 'bolst; set the. bulbs in,' about caci:IpTeviS4Z749gaoen'W4as5°a..aeYareeaturlikiripttlii
el-
an inch apart, and fill , in :With more. ,
•
.soil, Working "and Pressing
it iii,arounii. ligent .• •• ' • • .
Mr. Fryer, -deputy secretary of the ,
'Autonieldie Associatioa, Said,,"I' know ,
Iota of ,young men; !Angle and Wring '
at .honte and earning .4500 :a. year,
who are well able to. afford •a C#1%
Usually. the'' -have a Second-hand one„.‹.
coiling; bay, .450. 'Another factor
Judge • Crawford overlooks is that one
'cannot,. udge.:a man's' , finances .aolely
by his hank '-balance.: His earning. ,
capacity also has to be taken into .
tion,. such , as a ivelaventliated cellar account On On the other hand, the judge
without heat. , Corer with coconut might havebeen right if he had ape. ,
fire to ,a .depth of aboutfive inches; affIceity referred to the cage of arniar;
and leave tccroot for three. or. four '"ried. Man with a .large family ad cer- ,
maths. "Suceessfut, .de- Min Obligatiene., Evenin', those casee,..
pends almost. completely on this point.: hiorever, 'there Would be eiceptions.
Occasionally supply -with .liquid sara.L ,n depends on the general • financial
nure when growing t� keep: the loll- eireumitanceii. There are lot of •
coloring of the ficaVerS, ." ' ' • !afford:a Car." ,,' • • ,
Instead of planting la compost, fibre .. The . ecenernies Of 'keeping a.. car
,
Can be. ,ised:' ..in this :case, till the. Were , outlined-. try' Mr Royston
ot
pots :with the fibre and :press it llghtly Stewart & Ardern, who said, •"Talre'
around 9ach bulb, Water, a; little and Man, with 4.'4200 car: It would; cost
Set •S.WaY. to root. Thereafter ;keep,: him, roughly,. X3' a IN•eek to keen up
the :fibre: uniformly damp and since an anhual mileage of 12,000 or A. ,000,
the .plantiage -Must ..have .iiir,..nerer';:miles it he had to use a public gar. '
place there ie it' closet; but :hi a Weil- 'age., It be , had Ids oivii garage bo,
ventilated.. place. , • •' „ -Mild 'gave Ds:" a week.. Depreciatien.
• At. the end otabout four 'Meths one mayput at Lia Week. -
remove: to a.,. Warm;.,*eltlightei win the total eipenditare of : 2 .10s.er' £3'; •
. . . . •
den-, te bate: • ..: • • life-. may have- savings. " For —ex-' •
itripes have no relation either, to Orel t.°A
hut scientists insist that the zebra's rabbits and the were ruined and had
•
theicnr6diapeslaoan.wtatiiyio.nstsorwieesregod. es,t,_rwaoyeadt ,Dby0,
or by the' direction Of the bony tract;
ribs or to the course of 1 nerves or
"Bullfrogs and 1-".te , Rats," says AlliniTestsalsolvVehtiokgsAEbotiuut:l RaInttinelgligweniettle
blood . vessels. .
Some Human Children—Also Proving
one headline, "Are in Constant De- That Birds, Fish and Insects 'Are Not
mand..§Biologists Use Them to Work Mormons in Their Species"; "Shells
Out Problems. Connected With HU- Of the Armadillo Make' Basket Indus.
niaa Progress." Annie the Anteater try"; "Beaver Culture Advocated to
--Loses Caste," says 'another, describ-
Add to Saurdyof Fur; "Best Weatlo
ing haw the mascot of the flagship er Prophet is Turtle, Says Tennessee
Seattle turned out to be neither ant- Weiman." They are of all kinds and
eater nor lenlinine, and subsequently all sorts, and they come from every
became Andy the coatiroondL • section of the. ebbe
Fronk Calcutta comes the news' that _______......... . - '
Americans are the greatest collectors
, ' -----.--,--:--• ,
•
..........
i." " q 1 f, .4 .. •• " r. an 1
'''z " .....: ''. • ."--- -.—: .___,..... at-. -, a.
--;.0'1--:' • 7 ,....., ..... .
... ,
lid 4,..• #1; \\
........,•0 4
.„ ,....:,-
of, wild. inintals. Ilefore the World
War European 'robs Used to be; the
• • .:
chief purchasers. : •
, :Mamma' CRY: contributed an anies,,
ing anecdote of the :recapture of 150
wild steers that had esCaPed 'froin
Wrecked cattlo tar , the heart of
the town. People returning h�me
from the'theatre,Patrolmen, etreet,
car company eniploYes, motorists and , A WARNING'
Citizens .geeerallYdteek part in .the Angle Worm: You'd better Mire
rOund-up._ • . ' • : outOf that house; Mr.. • Chestnut
. ,
. A pOrciiiiine 'full' 'of dynamite :give Worm; you're liable to get roasted! *:
a Pennsylvaniaforest ranger in: Tleigti
COuntir an , Unpleasant time. recently, Anthropologists: always away
says , anotheranimal/. story. • Thefrom home tO search' for ,the 'mlasing•
ranger' returned in his terrier sixty link. Thanks for the eontplitnenth-
'feet 40ve ground to tind the Perciu, ToledO',13,1ado, '•
liewar
• rHe Dock ,-ro:
See 1 -1 -ie COutoT,
' HOB in• celo •
SAIL FoR Tilt*
• StnealsA IttArshi:
O‘iaze,' -NCR
MAO` Liao'
TatineR S ON
,HAlksb In BID \
Boni
VoNfAGC? •
the bathe with the' fingers until the
tops are barely covered. Thesoil
should be at least a half-inch below
the rim ot the 'Pot..
Special Points
• Water thoroughly and tura the pot
on its side, so that any surplus water
will run off; and set on a bed of
ashes, moss, sand or' sawdust placed
on the floor:in a cool, dark; airy; loca-
•
• „..
. , . In Glasses of Water.' emPle, reP*eY tares. It he ,II'Sei. the
_ 1 car fer wthat ork, and at might be a '
:
Growing hyriCintir's ' in' glasses at
• large Sam weekly., I should 'pet it at .
water is a •simpler and ly . probabmore '
interesting :. method' than growing _ anything up to R1 a week., A man., '
, especially . with. a family, would ,EaVO
them in pots . of soil.. Each new de- '
v,elopManfiow
eat of root, foliage d •er a' great deal during the holidaye. .Al- '
• - • together, on the •flgures,'I think Judge
can be observed continually and regu- ,Crawford'e 'statement is incorrect" '. •
latecl as . desired. . , ' ' . '.,
The opposite iihint of view wan' • Hyacinth • forcing glasses provide taken by an official of,the Income, Tax
amble space for spreading -root growth Ph'yers': Society, , NN'ho 'declared that
and, at the saute ' time, the bulb is from experience :they had discovered
held at such a height that It does not . that a eat could not ,be. satiefeeteirity
come In direct cantapt,With the water, maintained on EWA: a year.
th,a•water •being filled 13 s� as,,almost •
to tench the ',base •
of the bulbs. A .• .-.
few, pieces • ot charcoal should be., put
keeping the : water 'pure and affords
some nourishment., 'The' next simple
proceeding ia to ,pace the. glasses 111
any: dark. room, .cellar or cunboard for
about 'roar 'weeks, or until' the rocks
nearly touch the bottom:of the glass:
As the water evaporates, replenish it.
When iiiiftielent' root growth , has. been
attained the glasses :may
gradually,to the fall light, Where they
are, wanted to, bleenn. •
in the - glees; as this Is of service . 1a ritish Town May
4 Perfect poise, we would say; is not
looking self-conscious in a rumble-
seat...Ham:lean' Lumberman,.
•
It is gathered from the many arti-
cles printed that the secret of ;health.
is still a •secret.—Wall Street Journal.
Honda*. Maker: ."Yes I'm oft for
ray holidays Can you tell me ef a
decent book to..take away with MO"
Returned Reveller: "You'll fled . a
eheque hook most useful." •
"I see Madge is going in for avia-
"Madge who?" "Madge Bahr,
You kapiv, that ,girl who wears such
skinny clothes." "Ch. Well,' she
ought to make a good aviatrix; she'd
had lots of practice M taking off." :
-
The Lion Tamer's Had a 'Spiffy Time at the Farewelitiven the Count
NePtet oast:, The ..
ACCoRDION Selef*T..
.Sineweb: uP: •
TELL •aik.i
v./A.S rtle-
, GANG
OR Colter
en -k WeLL,
71-1O1/4( ." WEROa'
. EXAcIt.',/
1130 „
LTO ou -
NOPE I'D s °...)
THEY Lu,c.e ',Just*
ABoyt . 1 -iv)
• i=NouGi-1 kg,'oR
THe occASION:
• 'Try.'
'Newport /May 13e1 First- Eng-
lish MOniCipalityto Adopt
• American System • •
, ic, . ,
London-AdoptiOn of the. American
"city • Manager" plait 10 advocated: by'
:John AdaMion, an: . expert eniplOyed. .
by the , municipal authorities of: New.;
pert, Monmouthshire, to adviiie them': .:.
on reorganization. and eeonorny.. Itt •
,adppted,, hebelieved it Would: be • the . •
first oceaslonthal England has eX
,perimented with a System which 'ban
proved so suceessful' 13 'Many .citkii
on the other side of the; Atlantic. '
• '• The Adamson report on ..Nesitiort,'
*affairs' gays: . "Thereis a' noticeable..
lack ',in :sonie eases of that, manage-
ment oi Control arid stipervislon, witIch„
is: exerc se, by a general manager or
controilertia any. suCeepsful COMMOV,.
;dal nndettakingr, and which is not lees
essential for :the eennemleal",adrainiii-
tration of a. nianiCipayty,."
Ile recomMendd the ,appedninient a city' Manager, who would contra ;,•
all. Municipal :experiditure ; by Strict.
SUP.ervidien cif all departments. , The
heavy,capitat involved, lie says; alone .
Stays . the tecommendatimis for tho.
conipleita serapplug ot 'the ttiunlclpal
tramway and oninibire sYstems, hut.
the Corporation should. now .consider,
be .Urges; whether or not private:Op
eratiOne are desirable. •
Mr,. AdaniSoil Weald, else. 'create a .
nutideinal labbr department.. radial
Overtime to the' niinirainn, cOnsolidate
Municipal. Water work& . rearrange'
mai:1.101prd onicee, and !edam the
ex-
cosstve reports. ordered published 0c�wictlloni..
'
e'
.11 12.filii4tel..1.1111i1 11[15,11
• RIG ORDER-
•'dtistoiner•t, "bo You maita' lifeelse
enlargements troin. :photographer?'" ,
'.0,110tographert.4"Yessit:' .thires'ene „.
:of nue spac1el7Iiiics?"
- ens
•
• -
.1
NOT:.THAT KIND'
•°SSrliat yon thirik Of the -he*
1 ellen tonftlS
•'"YoUmeah oaaotlat
"Well', t often won,let how 4e 1007
earriveg a biattliii. ,„
.=iiI•finneirmo