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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-09-10, Page 3Sunday _ . orl Lesson - . 'September' 13:., lesson. XI S.on'-e Missionary, Experiences -Acta 14: 8-23 .Golden Text -Blessed are they which' :ace persecuted.._ -for righteousness'. sake:, for theirs is • the. kingdom of heaven. -Matthew 6: 10. ANALYSIS I _Ar:CItIPPLE 1LEALEDa..Acts14 2:10 II. DEIFIED . AND • STONED, Acts 14: 11-20a. 111. COMPLETING THE TOUR,, Cts 14: , , • 20b-28. INmon'tIc 'ioxf-In Asia Minor ,the, ,apostles' experiences were, in general ,outline, the 'same; preaching first in the .synagogues,, rejected; .there;:' ap., pealing to the Gentiles, _received : by Mein,. attacked 'by, :the unbelieving Jew's, fanallynfgxced to leave and'there ,b •arr •:.th e1'farther �fi Y c Ye,fiosl? 1 f a gla, .1., A CIiiPPLE 1IEALEi), Acts 14: 7-10.. • Tuckedaway in a. remote highland. gkn,, twweri'ry free-'mi•les from Iconium-' .lay ,::e little Lycaoniai town of L.ys-. • • tra. Its people were chiefly .native: • Asians, enough: Greeks and Rornans to ,. have built a. temple of Jupiter;:and e few Jews, but_ not enough to form a • synagogue:' This country -side was , sacred, to Jupiter.. Was it not in he Lear ,vicinity-Phrygia.-that ,he, with his attendant Mercury, once visited an • old eouple, Philemon and' Bands? The humble. peasants alone "recognized and entertained their magnificent guests. and Were by them magnificently re-, warded::. The populace, however, were solemnly warned that another failure to recognize visiting, deity, ,would be properly punished. Into this primitive paganism came the messengers of the „`" gospel. ' What New York . - IsWearing ., BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON lliustrated D.resamafi ng L,eseon Fur - niched With Every Patterns i• i ? y 11 A�� into the broth, so many that the broth Amusing g l►,necdotea, lr u$�n will be stiff 'enough.. Then make .fa • i coffins and 'couch three pieces -or four It. ,• iscurious how soinetimes, quer- of the gash in a coffin. Then take tion and answer between "grown up" 1 dates and cut them, and east thereto. 'anal child entirely raise" their mark, Then take powdered 'ginger and a Chri li,t- :Sreflect Nies,. to he in tie. verjuic. e, and put into the broth and, : eto:u s P r "IAN's Ltttle'Laugha"), For instance: salt. And :'then putt the •broth in the "A n •lad y r aying to a .little girl coffins,, bake a little. with the flesh .be- ��I tear ear yoyen were born , '.i India, -.1 I fore thou put thy liquor 'thereon, and. what part?" received the somewhatlei all bake t ether till it he' 'rough. une netted reply:• • .(done). 'The ((take) it out, and serve ;t. e' ,_•... -,-,. , . .._ forth' •.. ._.. _ There" are, 'points out 'John' ix (in Like most airmen, Captain' ,Frank ::":Strange ,As It Setts"), 52. cards ln. ,Hawks, • the '`Sneed King," won't ad - aa deck and 52 weekg,,in a year. There mit to being superstitious, but. on his ire• 12. •pieture ':cards. in ,a deck .an, first wild journey across -the United there are 12 months. in a year,. There States," as, he e calls his record, •flight ate 4 suits in'a•deck and 4 seasons' in .from Los Angeles to' New Yorks• :there a year:. There are 13 tricks in a deck was. a, rabbit's 'foot tightly wired to a� and' •i-3 -*Mai in a quarter. The num •his"airplane: It was th'e, gift . of a hers of the cards -in), deck total 365 friend :: • and there ar4d;;38,5 days in••'a year. "Because: I, fared so well, .on that i ht;'have added,' the odd, yip.."; have. kept it ever' since though' , And, he m g. . n triclt is :the seventh• •and there'' are ham not at .all inclined t' o .be 'su..per- seven da s in a week'.: •,x stitious,,' says •Hawks, ,(in •the reminis- v y,. ' w '* b•,,, • �cences '?Speed"). • ;•� -„,c nein .r ra :li its' ;feet., ..effeetxe, W.. e b t. ld � 6• u, • � . Popple .:who.` tel ”' ;abouts. oii'r° o PO' ' - •rn-Mete or�not=Haw s-:deesn'-t pretend s ..rein :ked •Edmund . osse. ai' •a ,k Pep~' a a celebration of the diarist's„ birth- . to -know, but he, does th'i'nk' they are' •--airould•»remember-that ...he :wa-not/such hot luck -bringers to the bun_ tea., vies rato igtnaily- own'e'd~th m, - )luring the past" geneiatiffCaet;era1 * * • * ' partially, successful attempts have ; Captain ; Ha,wks spent five delightful • bee made to isolate ' and' study the days with Will Rogers not so longago at the humorist's ranch' near •Santa Monica,. California. • ' "There 'are two -good-sized boys and a * * * girl in addition to Will. and, his wife However, in -south London, in' the -'Ma' he`cai'is her;" says Hawks: "My Borough of: Deptford, which ' for over host's favorite •pastime, . I ',discovered, 300 'years has. had .:close affiliations ,is to go out, to the corral:back ,of:the with the P.epys .family there • i's a. houge and put: in a ,half hour or an Pepys Road. , Should a visitor to, -Dept- hour ,roping calves. fie is ,a', sure ford ask , to• be directed to Peeps. Or enough cowpuncher both on and off Peps ,Road,he would be told "There the stage!" ain't :no such 'road." But. should he . s'pel'l out the name, a smile would Invited -As :a . newspaper corres- pondent daring the4i��arld 'War -to' Stevia e p Plant Yields ' ern A»un 300 Tithes Sweeter Than Sugar • Paris. - A natural. substance 300 times sweeter than cane sugar, rival ling some of 'the coal -tar -products of .chemical laboratories, has bees shown py two 'French chemists to• consist of Tit the coursee"oniis preaehing,:'Paul healed a cripple, v..8. )St .was•the im- pact of a; superior and dominating mild upon a ;feebler one. The same • kind .of ' thing 'happens: whenever , a powerful will acts upon•a weaker one: What is ; the transforming power ,of God, but the action of 'Mind and Spirit ' in humanlives? a ~ 11. DEIFIED AND STONED, Acts 14: 1.1-20a a:. Tlie cure electrifi d` the whole town.. •• The •Old legend flashed into these un- cultured_ nunds.:._3lip_ ncultured_nunds._..,5-lip nom. into.heir • particular substance in'the plant that' • mads' it so intensely sweet. 'It has re-. ained, . however; for the French • • chemists, M. 'Briddel and.T,tavielle, to aecompfish 'the final purification, They have discovered, to their syr - a chemical union of common glucose prise;' that the aweet'crystals'of sievI - and another • compound whih has little side; upon .chemical treatment .to . are- or no taste. United,'they'are intensely • Move a .part o fthe combined water in sweet; divided, they are not even as' them, break, apart into about' 60 <per sweet as ordinary sugar. cent, anti:ton glucose and,40 per cent; • The compound bears the chemical of a new stuff which they called' "ste- naiiie "stevioside,'!because itJoccas-`viol "-The latter -hal no taste; but. com=; in. a South American 'plant known to' bilked ' with the, glueose•:It'produces'an- , botanists as atev'ia. The plant itself lost :poignantly sweet suhstance. , Was first introduced to the scientific 11f. 13riddel and' Lavielle made am world about - the beginning., of the; pre- other interesting , discovery,;• • the Big-• -Sent century;,, it is a 'close relative of nificance of which,ITs• not yet Clear Ii ' Stich familiar North Amerieaa.weeds they.•freez-e a :50, percent. solution of. • as bonelet, joe-pyo-weed; and .the plant; the intensely sweet, stevioside they,: ob- that sauces occasional' outbreaks' of tain',' "a mat : of fineneedle-crystals; milknees'in the Midwest. After its which .contain' more chemically ,coup- • •• diseover},r•'i�y Europeans• it4„rapidly ac- bined water' than the ,.original sub... quired • '•khe ,name of,' 49.1e,' : sweetest'. stance,` and which ,are only ..faintly • _. , ant' ilf`the e- it l:'-'-^A-very` mall�Ifiece' -Sywweet - hr sweetnesartraf^~-stevioside sufficed to s'iveeten a cup of .coffee or seems: to _depend en.- .the presence' -of • ' an exact a'mquilit of water in,'combina- •' • ". tion-w'itii.the�gliicose-tend-atevioi - a. trifle .mora .or a trifle less spoils the • efi'ect. m• only twenty=six whey he. , commenced his diary." But_.' hat interests•'me - more is the -pro unciation of his -name. by, the people 'w110 talk about Pepys. There are, .to \"my. knowledge, three variations:. Peeps, Peps and Pep -is.' Which 10 correct I''do"ttot know. • ►r native tongue, the crowds cried out, "Tire-godT'are-go--down flows -in the likeness' of men!" Paul and •Barnabas, ignorant of the local speech, were con- -scious only-of--the-entlinciagra Swift 'ly the. news spread. On it - came to. the ears., of the priest of Jupiter. He was equal to the. occasion. Not'this :ime ' a' ould the popnlace'be caught napping when the gods•ai•nved. Sacrifice :r►ust be made. —When -the. apostles.. heard of it they immediately stopped the proceedings. "We,also are'men of like passions with you," they said., .and Paul began to , preach to them. . His address is fine exanrnle of what all preaching should • be. ' He used the knowledge which they possessed to bring them to she knowledge of God: • The work of evangelization was , sden interrupted. • The persistednt h tree:• of the unbelie,in'g Jews followed the apo:,tles, even til Lystra. The new arrivals had little difficulty in per. suadinb the .people that these.men were -impostors. :The L strians stop ^d Paul. He, however, must have lien - aged somehow, in tho hail of stones. to .protect his temple•• and his heart. Toward evening, as they watched, his • astonished friends saw the body --move. • "He rose. and carie into the city" v. 20 One would tliihk it was quite the come over"the-face of-the-native-whu- GENBRAL-;- — .L,__TRAvi58 join a destroyer of.the famous Dovei' wowld say: , i :' p' 'Patrol far' a 24 hours' stretch iif duty • � "Oh, you mean Pep -4 Road.' Why at•s'ea, •Cecil• Roberts, the novelist, that is down'by New Cross• date! tells, of • being on the ' bridge. when .a Which it. ie. ' Wireless message was delivered to •,the * *- * skipper, . who,' •after .'reading it cram famous Chinese med it in his 'pocket. Roberts, scent - Li Hung Cheng, in a "scoop," was 'curious as to its statesman; when visiting New York contents and •tactfully' began to ques on- the taken-feria-trip, his g r p tion the skipper; but to •no arall - sive on the subway. • Told by, his guide * * that they had to Change'_ from a local th point of in -''year,'. cycle, i especially. marked in the ,has, only about 14 ''Eskimo_inhaliit^ ___ "I .became bold, to e• therted b_ ---t.-•an-ex ress�tra'in,' the wondenng'" b recoids_of thP:�oaitliern California sta-:.ants, sg the tii'rds• are little molested. titre lar type: It is long y -a,. o p , siting. a snub, -. relates- oberts-ein•'his lar o❑nee The white handker- Chinaman r asked guide ie change was i ," alf W -., - t last tion. It' is brought out by''computing Their nests are'• scattered through :the . circa fl romaniseeti.Gex- H y ) chief: linen' frill at the neckline. and. necessary. The guide. replied; that' It kes�grznera ly close to-tlCe shoe, :4s' alreadybythe would• save five, minutes, the skipper yi4ided. . He pulled the . _e frequency,of occurre ,'ce o sefieuns '. sleeves' may be bought wve.'flimsy' out' of his , pocket and passed with' two or more consecutive months 'grass, ranges ,feta een,. the' 'numerous if.ybu choose. 'However, pattern "But," returned •Lig "what are we to a Elated•,I peered, at it. It of decidedly. abnormal rain -the San soon as the. young .are able to take proV e, ou' , n+ ..e• •going to do w.a ve inirtes'+"- as 3iego reEord.coniain'ng'thirteen-sit e-oY QhemSeives-tlte-geese-move s. provide''s': for gamread,: • A didn't know. Changing salons in seventy-two years." land in family, .groups; feeding :until'°' collarless 'jacket just'as easy as Thee guide g M t Shp Blank •to His J s Y B. C.'io make it. was just a habit, he admitted. _.Silks,, -light wool and jersey Y▪ outhful 'aunt;ness perfectly ex-: J ,presses this simple little outfit. A fascinating 'scheme made th; .. origi�ital: A.nd'"iinrbt:Ti�vably--i�rxexper�- And to the making of it, you'll be amazed. The dress is Just a straight -Analysts Reveals Rain' Falls Cycles Summer Quarters . of Blue'Goose.Found Existence of wet and dry ticks is Discovery of; 'a :second breeding .` revealed by mathematical ,analysis, of ground of the mysterious -blue goose the'rainfall•records of California, Dr. on Southauipton'Isl'and;in Hudson Bay A. F. Gor•'ton of the,Scripps Institutten' is• reported•�n. the Auks organ .of the .• ' of .Oceanography reports. to the Ant- American Ornithological ;,Association, 'erican Geophysical. Union: ;' by Dr. ,George M. Sutton, of .'Cornell . "Fluctuations. of rainfall,". he say's, University.: , "occurs at' intervals of'from two to The blue goose .ie very abundant in three years, five'. to six years, mid winter about tlxe mouth of the ,Missis- i• _ twenty-two to twenty-six years, the' sippi but,. until two Years egg, its sum-• first being more noticeable in-`the-rec= ;mer -quarters -ere- unknown. it seem - Ord of the 'northern stations and the ed to disappear entirely over the , second in southern, California°: Los northern horizon. Then a large nest-. Angeles shows successi've wet and dry Rig ground was found in Baffin. Land. periods eleven years'. in `length, with.a On Southampton Island, 000 Miles total ,4 total., cycle of approximately .twenty- to the westward,:and with an'area of two years , t1 addition to these there:' 10,000 square miles, Dr. Sutton found is' evidence: of a longer ;.cycleof fifty -',an enoi•mous, summer bird .population five to sixty years. ling„ with their close relatives, .the _ _geese .min -_ • • •'. ...: thousandls.,:of, ,slue. _g. a g ... .__.__. __.,.- :m .ortant...far._.foxecaut_-. many ... .., s-most=moi p T whole island le ern snowgeese h - if ss a •u r 'se isI the 'five -a n d -a be in S. g p1>O. 0 6 • Rl • up attiactively. "'His ayes y s i oints lateAugust; when all reassemble for' Ma•'esfy's Ship Blue; Is the journalist The tIv✓enty.-two year cycle, he p, 1 h the migration southward.., • • - me blue' • goose.•' family, , Pr. Sutton --•.x- . � , found, 'is ; a rather, stable --organization, ' • _tlie-zna:l-e- and ..female_ remaining • de - Voted .to e-voted,to each' other'. and their young '• ' through the summer. ' Whether these families are. broken up :after -tyle mi• gration is 'unknown. make A disease, you mea out, app b 1 h • sick, Yet'?',' Style No. :3156. may be had in sizes 12, 14,, ].6, T1i-, 20. years, -.16• and-33- inches nder inches bust. `• • • Size 16 requires .3,?,S, yards 35=inch for dress with• 1'i4 yards 35 -inch for .,Jacket. • -' • • • • HOW TO ORD:.R FATTEENS. • Write your name and address' plain- ly, giving .number 'and 'size' of. such patterns•as-you want. -Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin'prlferred;-wrap! it- carefully) for each number. '-and address your order to Wilson Pattern- Service,-73 attern Service,: -73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. to preach. Back in Antioch they told • how God had "opened the door of faith unto the Gentiles," v. 27.' It' was the door which led into the kingdom, but not through the works of Judaism. n" corrected' Liears to a universe w r e t e • Hung. '' , *' , Roberts was Jolt' -, in more ways'•1 others may be more, dependent on local than oi�ie. ns cond%tio 1rat�vuuld-asotlerit-digs th•inle of • l ;' a feast like this -provided at the in -I stallation • of, Archbishop Neville ' at • York in 1467: , A partial list of the food 'includes ' 360: quarters .of wheat, 300 tuns of ale, i 100 tuns of wine, 104 oxen, 6 wild bulls, 1,000 sheep, 304• calves, 304 "pokers," , 400. swans, '2,000 geese, 1,000 capons, ' • 2,000 pigs, 103` peacocks; besides over - 134500 birds, large and small, of vari- ous 'kinds. • • lit-.addition_..there-�vere.stags, hueks_�' - "naalitit'ull view here. Reminds and roes, 500 ,and more; 1,500 hot pas- mo •. so much of Scotland, , you ties of 'venison, .608 pikes and breams, -, know'." 12 porpoises and sears, besides 13,000 dishes of jelly; -cold baked tarts, hot and e'old custards, and; `"spices, sugar- "Olt,- then you went" to. that lec- ture, too?" - Many Jews also were converted, 12: ed delicacies, and wafers plentie." Scientists Discover Ancient' d3; 14: 1; 16: 'Luke. evi" en i s rue • The Summer Goes How swift the summer goes. • Forget-me-not; pink, rose, • - ' The, younig grass when I started, And now -the hay is carted, And 'now my Song is' ended,. • And all, the. snmmelendid; • The blackbird's second broad•- Routs beech leaves in the wood; Tlie pink and rose' have speeded, Forget-me-not has seeded, Only the winds that blew, , The rain that makes -things new, The. earth that hides things. old, And blessings manifold. ' O lovely lily clean. O lily springing green, ordinary thing •for'men- to walk bade 1 L k d t t Tt i t `` that there were said to t , O -lily bursting white,,,. ±• tliei3 would-bemurderers! Mist - i�ve •been Some 6,000 guest3-at this C.tY Under Black S D lily ._..�-...----_.-.._ men taould�aave gone in s�`e�s'tlicn'-'ri-r them. •. ' • 'famous feast`-iii`t`a-sTfsrt-"cTcuiaifo�i---"�1Fiosc�w°r,�-U:S:Sa:='��e""sou'th= Inws did not s • much about 1 n er ac ea ear of delight, rection. Years after, writing to Tilly T_ _• ••othy, whom, as a boy, he had w'an for • • Ili E Mead Peninsula near Sebastopol, the floor �dnhn,llase•feld, shows: that the a1lewance for each western extremity of the *Crimean The . That I may flower to men. was enormous, says, William , ie Everlasting • whom I have believed," 2 Tem. >: t2 • To -day, whatever may annoy, • - (in "The English Medieval ,Feast"(• 4feicy. It was that knowledge that kept him • * * • * • stead.~ in Lystra.• - The' word for me is joy, just simple Soy; . The custard included iu the -above 111. coM;r-28tNck dI1� Telt u, Acts .la: The joy of .life, the ley of flowers, menu -bears no resemblance to the cul - 20b -28. The joy' of bright blue skies; - tard of to -day. It, was then a serious ' `"Anthe. next .day' he departed with Barnabas to.Derbe." Derbe was not The •joy of rain; the glad surprise undertaking, as will he seen from the recipe; i ht far froth the "Ciliciarr, Gates;" the pass Of twinkling stars that shine at n g , which crossed the Taurus Mountains- The joy of winged things • ou their down to Tarsus. Just arot,nd the bend - flight. ' • • hf the Metditerranean front Tarsus The joy of tioonday,and the tried, teas Syrian• Antioch. • It was now True joyousness of eventide; , , Autumn. The travelling season was The joy of Tabor and of mirth, •drawing to a close, Atter their un i sea and ear • interrupted success in 1)erbe. (v. 21) what snore natural than that tine twn I- peen would head for home? Not they i Work -was still to be done. Back to the cities from which hatr!d had driven them they went, steenzth- en'ing the faith o£ the Unsteady Gala - -I Christ in Lystra,. Paul said, "I know - Joy of the Black Sea has revealed to So- viet- archaeologists an ancient buried - city which is believed to have ;shrived Wheri Hope Lies Sick • between the fourth and second centur- ies B.C. - , • When hope lies sick ou '-bed of•fear, An expedition which was sent there And •clouds are dark acid days are three months ago • by the •State Ac's- , .drear, tians. Paul -organized the. various groups, under elders, nd, commending the ufiito�-ted The joy ofa: r, andearth- The cotetless'joys\that ever flow from peppo1r, cinnamon, cloves, mace,. saff- expedition's divers and notion, pt. - Him ron, and let them boil together and a ' ture photographers found the ruins of Whose vast beneficence doth dim good deal of wine therewith. ; a city in the shape o a gigantic horse - The ,estrous light of day,, 5 • * • ' * * shoe, with walls, towers, houses a':d And lavish gifts divine' ulnen our way, Same ens:tard: under -ground tunnels; •honeycombing, ,I"'aiti "'s. cup. of ,Peace, Love's bowl of IVFate'r there be of sorrow ' "When"Whenthe flesh is boiled, take ,It the whole.• grace, IV put off e tilt to-moi'i•oti+, from the broth all clean, and let the 'Archa�eologistsf, here believed, that Shall bring 'the smile (lack to thy And when tcj-morrow comes, why thea,, broth cool, ;and when it 'is cold, take the city was destroyed by the gradual face., 'll-lye°-tie day and joy again a gs, the white 'and the yolks, and sinking of the shores Of the sea and -Charles H. Hunter, in, Echoes from leer "'Take veal and smite in , little tinny 'of Arta reported -recently that Faith waits with .cup of loving cheer: pieces 'into a pot and wash it clean; its operations had uticov-eyed, the re• To hasten .Hope's reviving, then take fair (i.e, clean) water and mains of old Khersoness, the existence And Love comes with a golden.bowl, let it boil together with ,par's ey, sage, of which has long been suspected, but' -To warm' and heal her sister -soul; • savory, and hyssop cut small enough; never verified. • • • • • She steals a smile past Sorrow's toll, and when it is boiling take powdered About 40 feet under the sea; -the With winsomest contriy1ng. Ah, Hope look 'up! Arise! Partake Of these sweet' ministrations; Thou Must be well for their dear:sali:e; Who bring these inspirations. i -John Kendrick Bangs. cast through a strainer,, and put them by an earthquake.• and down to Perga where they stoppe,l 11 their way across the moiintaans aga'r,► • - G d•Turn Desert Ve$ A:nother. e' H'i11s.' W -Power • : Man ,las one power in particular' Which is not sufficiently dwelt on.. It is the power of making the 'world .• 'happy, or at least of to greatly dimin- ishing the amount' of ;unhappiness in it 'as to make quite a - different world from *hat it is at present. The power is called kindness. -F. W.'Faber. • T ru h it T t • Truth is always consistent ,with ' it- seif,. and needs nothing to help, it out; - it s always near at hand, and sits up. en o3iC and_;is reariy_tehlropont,, •: -=k before we are aware; whereas• a lie is - troublesome,. and sets a, emu's isven• tion upon the rack. -Tillotson. • I' 'IA. fry • u i, �hlhn 11 We'll. old roan, li rn' are t;iings??" _Bad, with .shirts lower this year a fellow has a hard time getting a 'square meal.", ' By BUD • FISHER J 1 1 AND JEFF ne o0 -` SlR, i7C: Slt� SIDNs:Y,' SNAIL ' RtpP'IN�s, b�Ia Z HAVEWE 7 i 115`fEObt�'Bt=,;.: SY�yDON1�T YOW --- .7-z_---__„ � 6rA,vRi<tsrl- LATER e4u EEr s SY M Sl0 AT tliE C� 118fToppeit. ��N'1 i DEAogLWA`IS Go FoR A WANTEDTOWCC oW MAN`/ _ — ,bM161{C f�N'TlzRYE�Ri$E OVEtt THE -�SEEWts1At'DET65�EQV A _ AND SbM sofvP 'Tl�1ts ` out k'1 _1E.ALMo5'T' WombeRmlit ucoweD -- - U_ ,fi1ME1ZtCA '. j �4U To�R •, .-rou — rtztca Y - _ •a� . .--, ((� tfi -. ' r �»(.' , � ..�, �� :��... 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