HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-07-02, Page 7,
x':; til �.i.•.��.,`;
IIe ye to 'praysas he ought .will en
doavor to live est 'he. praye•,-Owen. -”
' "N.ew Vy Vas Dat" '
The story. is told of 'a 'Pennsylvania
Dutchmen wh.0 was not, very learned
•
bat who 'was' not ashamed: of hie• re'
ligion. ' �.•
'Sea a
in ".1ils rleighberheod ''• skeptic
•
Iwo said very, positively,; "'You :know,
•Berson• can't reall ,belev
Y �, o anything
yen Cane: explain." .
,
•
One dal ane..of • •„j;),t ,'I'7'utchinan's
fr reads ratite, tq hint avnd 'natde„ "I'd
like' To hear"•you, i ut- n1), ,xg_umen.t
M ' to my
'Skeptical frfend. W1I1" yoµ •talk
to him?" • •
"All light,. if you think beat," he
said. With' Ft. twinkle in his eye.
"Have•: you • any .:objeetiong •_to'-netgh-
hors, coming in?" • a
"No; sheet, as You 'tank 'best,"
So they,` -had a, meeting. The. old
Gent'lem'an .came •in;'put down his hat,
eessild was introduced to the skeptic.
`He begat-su'ddenl: sarin
Y by Y .g,. Veli •
•now, look here; I;pleefs the Bible. 'Vat
you • ,leef ?." a..
• I don .t believe 'anything f can't. un-
gavel:and, ' ha ',:said ..loftily,
"Oh, I see, you must be. von smart
• , man. I ''as- very glad to meet mit You:
I as. k you some questions:, The older
day' I yes' riding, along the road and
Met von dog, and .that .dog h® had viol,
of his ears .stan{{1�.ing,up this way, and
the -odder' he stands` down so. Now
' Yy'vas dat?"
I do•n't know," admitted• his o•ppon-
out wodl. •Now vy vas dat?" '
Again his opponent had. to answer,'
"I 'don't know."
"Veil, you are not : half So -mail as
You auk Now I ask you one' more
q ,stlou. "Do you' pleef dere is a
"No,' 1. don't 'believe :ante such non-
sen e
" Qh,yes," 'e'aid t7 e' Diiteliinan:; '`I he1i-
e.
about .13y long ago .13y bible, says;
"The,. fool' Said In. ,itis 'hea'rt th re . is iio
God,' .but you bigger fool, You :blab
rigniebut, ; • "7.7x
,=`Twiligh�t'Hou'r' Story;
-Chicks 'and .Other Little. Friends
• . No.:29 .
• Mamma 'Lady was right. As soon
alt; Fluffy got to her: little new: babies,
.away 1nider . the' •attic' --floor they all
woke up when she washed each one
with tier tongue. and ;'they made the
funniest, little -noises, Me -m -m=m.' ' Did,
• you •ever hear it?• Well, it sounds so'
sweet. Billy looked at 'his. motherland
was nearly bursting with ;joy, to thunk
they were found. ' +a
But .there .was that old •floor " .It .war
as 'selid as a.. stone. .
"Oh, 'Mamma we'"must :Pet. them.'•
.don: think • it is 'very Wood
for them i j there •w th such bad air•';
and I. guess it is pretty. dusty, too: Any-`
way, .we want to see them,: don`t: we;
son?" 'Billy nodded, •. feeling pretty
bars. They'sat and 'thought and 'thought
what they could- do •about it.
"I've got an ' idea,':' said Mamma
Lady,. "But it' is getting 'rather, late
to start `to -day, :so we'll leave.' them
ent. '
"Oh, then, you are. •not ,so smart after
all. I ask anodder question.. While I
was .riding along 1' saw Chon's clover
patelli The :clover came tip so nice,.
and. over , dere vas. his pigs and: dere,
'Conte out hair on dere backs, and over'
in ' very Came clover patcheating
oloze'r, wez-hie Sheep' and ;dere came
here to -night 'and, then stry it .in the,
mornieg." .
"What ie. that, can'•I help? "tae asked,:
his face Brightening.. •
"Indeed. •you can. , I .couldn't do.
much •without my. big. boy'.' around to
help mews • Wel.' get up bright.and ear
ly andesee what we can. do."
Apples and ;Oranges •
Montreal Presse: Professor 'T. G.
Biluting,-af—lVlacBonal'd 'Ccllege
says people prefer ',oranges to pies, because. apple -growers- doe not
entploy enough • propaganda , to° win
a prosper "appreciation of the Gana:
t -diah -apple. But beforeentering on a'
- Publicity. :campaign' to iricrease ;con`
sumptio.n; producers,• says f''rofessor.:
;Bunting, should° 'first of all concen-
trate their energies:obi putting on the
market fruite. whose attractioiis''and
'qualities 'will gain• the ' permanent••
�. preference,. of ,the consumer. If ,eye_
•-watt the apple to keep its reputa't%n,
, as the queen of ;fruits; it should really
be 'tire queen; and -this, will not be
° until it fulfills' all the conditions
which assure to it 'the sovereignty,
oVerIt rivals -the fruits of the
tropics.
,'' • Prune Black Knot; Now .
Early slime' is one of 'the essential
,periods of the year,' particularly in
Ontario, then plum orchards' should
be carefully pruned' 'to 'remove- all
'trace of Black Knot, tire Division of
�..
Botany -of -the Dom.iat'•Ion . Department -
or Agriculture advise. At this :sea-
s.oti- the knots the yellowish-bro n in
color and the summer spores ''fvhich
'spread the disease have' not yet ma-
ttu•ed.In `cutting out knots cut brek.
at' least four or 'five inches' beyond
the- ext -ern -al' 11lflitiitiorr rrf" "the Mot
as
Infection from dile ,black°1;:no„t fun -
'extends ,some distance 'beyond
the 'actual knot. •
How. the- Dollar
Sign Originated
In f'Aniniateur des. Temps Nouveaux,
Charles Prince explains. for . French
readers the origin of the :A'iu.erioan
.dollar • Sign., He: relates; writes a eor-
responde'ut of The Christian ' Science
Monitor, that• 'Spainin`the .fifteenth
century,, when. practically all, • • the
world's 'gold was carried to the Iberian
'peninsula from the.mi.nesi' of'Sehtli
America, ,designed' a coin of eight
reals' value which bore on one Of 'its
faces, a represeiitation•'of,two columns
_ethe-colunursof Hereu-les •intar-twine$
by 'a riliend-'in the form of a „letter S
bearing the inscription "Plus ''Vitra."
Eng?i-shmeh-caller ,these coins 'pillar
dollars," taking the, word d tsar from.
the,Germae coin known es, a "dieter.'
When the 'United States 'Congress in
1787 decided -o t.,strike a. coin known
as a dollar, with,the'same value as the
' Spanish ,"pillar dollar," accountants
naturally need as the sign for this new-
go'in'the• old: device of pillars inter-
twined with a'garland which is so well
known today in the form of an S with
a dollar bar. - •
•
•
• Barley Proved Best •
Continuing feeding testsa s• to the
relative 'value of snnemer feeds foie
pork production- under Arai ''ie • condi-
tions, the ' Dominion Exp eriniental
Statio_ n •at Scott, Sasic., in is opera-
tions last j;ear again' foto d barley
alone superior, as a fed for growing
pigs,' to either• oats alone r a mix-
ture'of barley and oats. Barley gave
t
i
t
0
t
greater gains, cost less to feed, and,
showed a.striking increase in net re-
turns per head over cost of feed.
•
MITT AND JEFF
MutT, z iiAD ELEVEN •
DoLektas YESTERDAY-'
`iVb# ( L ONLY Gdt'
TWO.-
-
What New York
Is , Wearing
. lsIV t•B"h Tefe_ ; THI ON.
Tht'ustrated DI-es;making' ssbn
na'shed
TV i‘ b. Ii'or'•"i Pattern
Australia's Deficit . •
Stated' $170,000,000•
C.aub.erra, Justrath,-A total, Coni-
monwealtb. deficit at the end of the
next fise:al.year- of $,17„(400O,.QQ for ,thee.
a_ =eat vwc- hist
y 'rime Mints •er"dames S'cuiliri• in
the Douse of Representatives.
The Prime Minister moved . second
reading•of the Debt Conversion Agree-
ment Bill, providing for epnversio.n of
the: -entire internal loan to lower ine
terest rates. He 'added that national,
income had taken -by •$1,000„000,000,
while expenditure lead • increased by
$55,000,000 ...since th.e fiscal .yeas of
• 192.7-28 •• •
Hon, E. G. ede e _Commonwealth•
gr-
`fl
Chosen-Oueen
July 12. Lesson II -The Preaching of
The. Apostles --Acts 4: 1-14. ' Go:ld.en
Text' --We ought to 'obey God rather
than ,men ,Acts 5:29.
ANALYSIS,
I. PETER'S PREACHING,';,ets, i3: 11-26,
II. THE o.irz'corn; Acts 4: 1722. ,
III,
THE CHURCH THAT 'WINS, Acta
23-31,
IV., PAUL'S. PREACHING, 1 -.or••' 1: 21=25.
treasurer, announced new taxation, as°' -
•agreed upon,'hy the recent conference' , u INTRODUGTIor,t..='rhe' believers i tet
for ether specifically -Christian ser='.
vices :.ii••each other's homes.: They did
•trot, ;however,: separ'at'e. therriselvee
ras'tic 'from •Judaism. T1•ie ':took their` part
in rile synagogue sei:eg's. ]n Je;itr
reductions In= tire; scales of sol'dfei•s, ,eaten they vfeiit�lor ,Pullin ra er,to,
aild ottrer Leri ions,-„ w .tiro"rein 1'e It.;v as on ''' h r Y
The, ,Smote approved the bill to sill • .seri' t err way nt
$25,000;o0') goid'to.Londoiii to meet imp of ealinge ip that -the-dnc dent
ofd heating, the 'cripple occurred which •
mediate 'Australian liabilities' and . the led to the sermon'which sounded the
n'easure�•became law. it was approved key -note of; the ea iy postoTic_preach-,:
at the House of Representatives. --
The
The'•measure reduces'the statutory
gold- "reserve' is the' Commonwealth _After,the-Temple-service, preaching,
-Bank from. 25 per cent; to 15 per cent., to the' amazing crowd, Peter did not
but. under an amendment forced by the , capitalize the healing to win popular
Opposition it provides for the progress ity for himself. He• gave all the credit
sive return to the .25 per cent., level. to 'Jesus, The preacher's 'loyalty was
within three years. • . • .i -matched by his . courage., Boldly he
The shipment Will leave 'a• reserve Proclaimed that the one whom they,
651;250,000 'against a; note; issue total- had crucified• ,as. „aj crini'inal was,. the'
ling '$255 000,000. promised ' Deliverer : The healing of•
-. ,-ot-prem'ers; whieris e e -ere -d 19 -pro -
1 duce an additional x•$37,500;0.00 afinual-
•This,itteludes,•"1zicresses ""sin`•tbe�
'sales tax . and' itkcoute ta,X and d
I: rgete!S PREACHING; Ade 3:•
i1 26
the beggar:Lwas ;an: etraLiple
Britain's Wheat':Problem' Peter then appealed to, his' hearers
y Lotion .filmes' Trade 'Su: lernenfti' to repent ':and thus' -win• forgiveness
PP and have theirpart in' e' "' g
(Ind.) :, The international: aspects of M Orem sn in
the wheat problem 'are 'entirely differ- dont. Messiah wou.d'' remain in;
heaven until the Mime prophes'ie'd
ent from those that concern theft ' <restitution" -Would. arrive.' Peter
rslande. The problem in this country terpreted Jesus in'the-light .. of tradi-
is to;ensure`the Profitable production tional Jewish•,hopes. ; Christianity was,
of Wheat' at, home without depriving , still bound 'to-'Judelem.
the nation of the benefits of. 'cheap
food For that purpose the quota sys-
L<'veryone knows•Dante l?ashion: ]t'ars l ptem seems to. hold out the mose,prac-
ticarospects • If bake'r`s were comp
'placed' much emphasis. on jackets this •'•
season. They appear 4a,' sm'art eoni: gelled to use .a. •definite • proportion f
plements for • pajamas - to evening
gowns,' and; are especially favored fur.
There's . atislfght,.:di_i%renee_._abaut
today's model' that tneakes it. so ,indi
ee
•vidual. It is the. becoming' collarlese
type; so- entirely comfortable, : There
too, it has the chic seven -eighth` length .
sleeve show:i.ng.the-dr-ess-sleeve. 'neath
A belt •make the normal waistline.
:It's sportive in navy blue c
repeslk
tiT4ith hi_oerePe silkcontrast
that
has huge •coin dots ;in ,snatching b•1uee
Style. No. 8080•inay' be had in rsizes'
14,' 16, 18, 20 years,:36 and 38'.i'nches
bust. ' , t
Thin' woolens; printed crepe Bilk and"
many rayon novelties .also' suitable.
Size 36 requires 43' yards 39 -inch
,with • 2, yards- 39 -inch for blouse. -
." HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your name and address plain-
ly; •giving number and size -71f such
pat ens--as-you want::-`Enclos-e`y": fit
•`stamps or :coin (coin' preferred; wrap
I. it . carefully.) for each number, and
address ,your order to Wilson Pattern
Screice; `'3 West Adelaide St ,'Torah a.
Miss Maxine Weaver seventeen
1ears' old, who has been chosen
as queen of patro'nal. cherry:fea-
tly-ire.
fes-
twat' .-Traverse Olt -Ye- Mich.- She
was /.chosen from among sixteen
candidates.. • ;-' '
to 'brother Jews; .Jesu, s. was the fore.
shado'"wed Messiah in whom ',theyWere,
to: find t'he realizatio'n of Jewish hopes.
His Messiahship was'. verified by his
suffering; . resurredtion and:', risen
aul, • on the -other hand; proclaimed
al universal gospel. • He' liberated early, '
II• THE of CO a Christianity from;its. Judaistic frame-
1 ,ivl Acts 4: 1-22. ,"work. He refused. to trouble himself •r•.
(a) ;Antagonists The 'cure and the 'about Jewish "signs" or Greek '"e13--'
preaching attracted • the attention/. of don•'' He "knew" only Christ cruet-';
the ecclesiastical authorities'. The rut'- filed, the povt.er'of 'God;. the wisdom of .`
o ers were alarmed- lest the people• god.
Power
home;grown and Eirgpire, flour in -their -.should :follow this new'' 'sect: "-The -�"
loaves the millers would' have to buypriestlyauthor: 'i s 1' .!------ j.
t o ,. acing 'Sadducees,
those• grades of Wheat ` The British did: not believe iri a :resurrection. The Doctor l epudlBteS
were onto onized because the a ties
proble;n can. scarcelybe:s�elved'..whi e a _ ' • _ a _ nos . � Old :KISs'ing •; >>�ll8Cyr. •
-,Gdver`,.ntii nt `ii ete-d toy -free -flat e re. Prociainred the •rpstaTrrect>ion oi"Jesus. ^ ,ugby," Eng =IIr:- josrah pl 'eld
-mar isen-office, oia-ventionally religious people, :auctt
as they Were, are certain to come in;
--~ conflict, at one'tirne or another, with
...Causes of Failure Spirit -filled, and, therefore, fearless
In dn'extensrve sur-vey.of rax bent preaching. Tire -apostles -were -arrested=
P .and lodged; in earl for the night.
plantations in British ,Columbia six .;(b), Conversions- Peter. and John,
principal reasons for decreased yields • n,
true. their Master, ,did not mod fy
were determined •'These - are ;;-(1) -their message in order to win the in-
Poor management: 'w'here : the 'farm,. • fiueetial, worldly -minded' people. But
owner devotes only a part of his time men were won for the kingd m. The
to •fruit proddnction or makes it.a 'see- number of Peter's converts, not' count.
ondary .cosrsideratio i,;' (2).' the „al
ing the';women,,. was about five' thou=
once of diseases of which cane `blight salad,' •
and mosaic are';the .most important; '' (c) A. 'Brave Defence- Before •the
(3)'the presence of, inseetS and ani- „Sanhedrin the next •morning, Peter
mals -, proclaimed his message again. Loyal
of which crown borers and moles
are the most important; (4) depletion` to his Master, he again gave credit to
or lack soil•
fertility; Christ for all that had 'happened
'(5) winter in- With mag'nificent' boldness the man
jury; 0) poor cultural ';practices:--- who not so •ton - o h .
-Dept.of--A;gric tlt-fi e','Ottawa: _...._.fore `a _ i ____ ; ag , se flinclierhigh
girl now ae usetd the high
Yy priests of crueifyrng their 1ifessiah.
PerfectIt Was Messiah's power that had heal -
Attendance Record: ed the cripple. Only through him could
Charleroi; Pa, -Samuel Ciii'ford Win salvation come to -Men
nett; 17, Long Branch; nearhere, was'
'.graduated ' ' from ,the Charleroi High
School thisyear with a perfect attend -
alto recur ort e` our -year' term. "
Sulphur-.Mixture.Prevents a a f` n f d
.. 1Vl�ildew and Black -Spot. • ``Added to this ie four years: of per- ;v
'' For' the prevention' and cure of mil-' feet attendance ; et the . Jackman S
dew' and blaclepot 'a good remedy .School. Records at 'tire grade school! i
consists oil nine . parts dusting . sul show youaag Wiune'tt was neither tardy 'J
phut, one part lead 'arsenate .an. •nor absent, during the four.:years.,' i
part tobacco dust. •- ; • `- The Nearest street car line' is foul• 'v
Any of . the ard'inary •sulphur •dusts; miles .from the . n innett farm.. When w
particularly one colored green 'so' as, the' started ` to attend the Charleroi" NO -
not
to be too cohspicuus on ''the leaves High, School; he was ,too young to .drive .toI
and blooms, will serve to prevent an automobile'so he walked to the fth
a
thinks a pseudo -scientific ban' on kiss
ing,•is a"fallacy... "A'kiss does'not
create the.scare; mongers'' million mics �I
-robs which Sreesaid to be given with r
a kiss,' Dr Oldfield • told me iters of
this womene- meeting eeting at Bir
dngton, near here, recently. , •
If Jack, kisses Jill and transfers to•.'
her a million microbes; he gets ' Writ-
turn
a rite''
turn a'million of hers, and from .w'hat'
we know of evoilition, the 'probability.,•
ie that this exchange of microbes ' is
beneficial."
The' 'kiss was'.poientifically , defined
as "the' result .of two gets of cellular
emotional vibrations which.. attract
each other' and become iharmo'niousiy ' -
merged into a rich chord by Contac!" ;•
. To keep --its:-" eeaous 'steendard"-•-the •
kiss should '-combine ..the._..three_,in•
gredients of affection; respect 'and 'pas-
sion, Dr, Oldfield said, '` ' -
Oldfield is a prominent advocate'
Such Preaching front air uneducated °f,a fruitarian diet. He was a founder
ayman astonished and indeed irritat- of the society for the abolition, of caps-,
e •
d the rulers. These Jesus-followerstal'punishmeut.
w. ere . dangerous., - Th-eir' popularity •
ith" the people,, however, ..niade,'it tu-
ise. toinolest.them. Accordingly, the.
anhedrin declared J -their preaching
l
legal 'and let th±m go•. But Peter and
ohn exclaimed; "Whether it be right
n -the sight of God-to-:heanken-unto`
ou more than unto God, 3-udge'ye. For
e cannot but.speak the things which
e have• -seen and heard." The epos -
is prea:chin was Characterized by
at bold`nes , 'which -`'feared lint the•
'ce of any• man."'
these .diseases . if applied early' en- Street 'ear. Every.sc,hool .day.'for 'font.
ought -Tobacco. p-owder--inchhic cert i' years -tie youth; as regular as, .the med-
• any of these dusts• is' effective against carrier, trudged roads ;and at the end
• ' the aphids, early •eneedies of roses,, of rile day walited the four miles„honk,.
- and caterpilars, beetles' and other
chewing insects are. attacked by the
lead arsenate. ' •
T.Works Own 240 Acres
Ilolntes . is taking' boxing :les- ,chatted 430 head, .pedigreed...-Short-
Soviet
edigreed.•Short-
Soviet Buys • Heavily
of 'Pedigreed Cattle'
London',. --Soviet ld.ussia has pur-
sons. Farmer Claims Record 'horn and ltereford cattle from British
"Getting ready' to fire the cook. Neponset Ill, >- .Elmer .,P:robanz herds. All the Shorthorns, about 230
I guess.” • _ ' claims' the record :as a one-man farm= head, were supiilied from Scotland. •ly to ,prayer. For what did • they,
red
•
111. THE diiURCH•THAT WLNs, Aets..4
. 23-31. ' . •
.Upon being • '.reli'aed, Peter'
Joint reported to the others what had
happened The believers gay th'eta-
selves to prayer '"with' errord'---.
that is, with united eagerness_' . They
prayed • intensely, passionately. Zn
similar case, -ntany Chr,rstians might
decide• that a 'delegation to. the , San-
hedrin would be,a better. pinn.. These
believers gave 'themslves passionate='
Remember that y �s•hat• pulls the
strings is the, fot-ce •hidden within;,
there lies the power, to • persuade„
._Metre the life -there: if bite :must'
speak out, tier_ .real man.• --•Marcus
Aurelius.
'rhe el intent is descriF a sr the: pray? For safety in the threatening
He ,is doing; all they work• on a 240 largest 'single •consignment• of pure- .future? No, they prayed for more of.
that gpnlity of character which had so
recently made so much trouble for two
of their • nuniber-mm e . boldness in
acre tract and- with the aid of a frac- bred stock ,ever seat from this rota-
tor has planted •ori en .apperage• 33 try, .and owing to the depression in
acres .of corn daily. .I. . • . the market the Russians are, said to
• He has also been plowing at the' have •secured t any of .• the Scottish IV
rate_of .2.acres_pei--da=itort.hoi n hit,+ r a
° Feter'•s preaching was 'that of a Jew 1 t: Coln. Seicond story.,
Convict:
Y s a g tr let ms.
Orily the.' Best
The latest .report of ' Canadian • Na-
tional Egg • Laying Con•tests", (Bailee.;
tin 139;N,S.) :provides further ton.:
-eine-i:ve-Proof-that -only--•the; •best
lets -irav' the beet - flocks gf theDomn i
i
ion make the' grade for registration, •-,
and only about.One .in four of care-
fully bred and selected 'pullets quality.
In the 1923-29.contest otit' of a -total
of 4,370 birds ed_
nteneoirly-1,202 fully-.
qualified for registration. . Other 420
birds laid a suOicient number of eggs•
bait failed t:o qualify -en account• dt.
egg size. •
•
lady: Alt •yo'.n mtist have been
eaching! i. Liter irnian. Yoti say you 'were
r'41'L's-eP...>,;i K.i-atG,;--1-•k; oa•-,-1: 21'26. ' No•iii story Work -Short' story?
•
• Everybody Means 'verybody---including the Scandinavian.
YES, elER'4BobY'1nl TOWN
kivecKE'b' a 61` a Folk
SWAG- 'Tut St9Ezwe-
'[tia.cl'rttiuos - TMC
HorEL. kt.e,PEQ
EUcl xBo'bY'1'
EVERY'BotY
VERY13oDY
• vitt-Homes-r
iN T1jtS-raw.)
Dp1111
e..ellieet -Rot
•
By BUD .. ; i z =.-1"
EUCRYBH�c sa�ou�.t� _
Aptitcmume
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