The Lucknow Sentinel, 1929-04-04, Page 7,mt,t1r4yottr-rg,
zIonvik.V.r,"
• ;
•
•
•
. „.
' , " • •••• „
, • •
•
f -"t•
Lesson
• , Apell.,Z. teaeon I -The Minietei of
61.47820:-.1, 2I AI;
, .
1,51 ,Goweiir.Text„,erheo,iald, t -Here
• .am.1;•nend --reer4lealah 8.;
• LftE''Pr4V0F' 46-atalf.,-ChalL 6 ;'• 146.:
WAVIVATIt SYRIA. AND isRAEL„.
.• 4t.10
' • •••.• Chap; 7 I-17.• . '
111'poN4upsT, • ey EGIChTilsY;
. • , ,
eiipeicrEP, Chap. 21/';'"146;
• ••• IV Tim- RING'S ILLNESS AND REOVERY
'Chap . as: ••• . •
: • .. • .• •
Or Old
Testament studies •which begins with
..this Lessen. .entenda. from Isaiah.' td•
• Malachi,•fromthe• latter part- 'Of the.
• , eighth -to -the latter part of th,e, fifth
• , „ centery.• B.C.. It covers the period
: of , the i gre a t Prophets Whose .ingskages.
to:the peciple of thear••thrie:haVe coine
.down 'to. eta,.lo books : )eNch -hear
• their .naffies.• •• •
The •period of Isaiah'sministri in
•Judah. and Jerusalem, about P.C. ,7e1.0
to 100, saw the rise of the ,fi.rst of,
• ' those great nliita, empires
:sought to rule the ' world by gritted
• • force. The tapid*•exPansion .and in-.
••, erease,of power of Assyria began with
• he'. reign 'Of Ttglath•-pllesei
wirKis mentioned underthe
• name of Pul in 2 Kings 1-5.: 19 and 29,
' •
as interfering:in. the afraits Of -•Israel
•end carrying off Many c.aptives.'From
• its, 'capital city �f Nineveh, on: the
upliet waters Of the Tigris Itiver,: the
• •. power of„ Assyria, ender . Tiglath-
pileser • and his suecessors..• Shalniaii-
, • eset , IV (2 Kings 1'7: 3):-, Sargon 41sa.
) rapidiv-S-read.7. • ••
•••• • .2d: 1)kniid Sennacherib• (2 Kings 18:
, -over •a tesmaj1er countries as fat
as the Mediterranean Sea and the
• Nile, convertin4'• them into: provinces,
Or; ributery states of •'the einpire.
Against that power there as vain
resistanceb or equally futile and vain
tebellion, which only ;resulted in more
• tz•agedis fif war, and heavier burdens
of tribute, 'or in inor'e deportations. of
• vaptives. In this way both Israel and
Judah suffered during- the lifetime of
- .„ Isaiah....• It _was.:;•given-tehiniL•and--t
•• his contemporaries, Amos and Hosea
• in the northern kingdom of Israel, and
Micah in Judah; to interpret k the
people of their 'ne these distressin,;,-
, • events, to show the the hard , of a
• .just and merciful God in all that haii-
pened, to call, to repentance, and te
• promise a brighter ant happier future
a repentant and purifi.d nation• ,.
tong centuries afterward. a. Jewish
• scholar and sage wrote Of Isaiah that
he "was great and faithrul in his
••viSimi," and that "he sew by an et-
' cellent spirit what -hould come to pais
At the last, an coinfertcd• them
• that mourned in Zion." •
•
This, chapter is , generally, and it
' would seemrightly understood aS tell..
.•
ing the story • of Isaiah's call to the
prophetic 'ministry. It will be inter-
• esting and helpful to compare this
' story with that of the call of Moses
• (Ex. ch. -2 , of Samuel (1 Cam. ch. 3),,
•of Elisha (1 Kings 19: .19-21y, of
•,• Amos (Amos 7: 1445), of Jeremiah
(Jer. 1: 440), and of Ezekiel (Ezekiel
• ehaps,:l to 3): •It is' evident, in every
case, as•in many others that might be
"Cited, that there is an assurance and
l•
certainty :of th-e: divine call and coin-
.. mission to a great task.
• he date (v. 1) may be apprxi-
.
nately fiked, by a comparison of the
Biblical "chronohogy with that of the
° Assyrian monumental records, aS B.C.
I • 140, •r Li• year or two later. The story
wan probably written seine years
• ,
later, and the Vision, therefofe, inter-
.
preted in • the light of stibsequent
r • lictual experience in the prophetie
office and minitry. '
The following elemen' in the vision
. _
re, worthy of specialnotice: (1) The
• sense of the immediate presence of tl-
Lord, 'enthroned in holy mjesy., in
• his heavenly temple; (2) the asigaken-
'
ed Sense of unfitness, both his oWn•
, and his peope's • te lin in that holy'
• , preenee; (3) the Unspoken prayer
•'answered bedfi experience of cleans-
- -ing asby fire from"Gd'a altar _f
' ' - - • sacrifice; and (4) the call to service
, and the ieady response.
•
-/ , • The serapmm (vs, 2-6) are eVident.
. .
1.! an atia.. beluga 'attendant upoll the
✓ II - &---ar 'T
bey mine Int: Ihe.y are now ..., else
h,,,--.•
•
. . mentioned in the Old Testament, .out
' ' -•'''' • the saeHebrew werd is • Used of the
,.. , 'fiery serpents in the wilderness ,(Isum.
'. • 21: 0). Since the angelie figures
sired "cherubim" are associated in
... • poetic imagery- with clouds mid wind
(Psalra 18: ,9-11), it may be :assumed
' • ' that the figure of the seraph is sitg-
tested bythe flashiglightning. Here
the seraphs are winged human forms,
pith voice,s, hands arid feet.
•The discouraging results of his
pre:tlling and teaching (vs. 9-12) are
a .
•
• •
' •
•••
y
to.
•
#41
7 • ...14
•
•
•
" • , ,
•
•
• !.
• 1
•
,Nriew of. Wrecking Train Clearing theUnc-
• .. • ..... ....... .. , .
•
•*Colonist cat tejetcoped by baggage car on train' No:y.3 which Was on its rai way car that atleastthree rat A enip oyee .o . an a not
known 'mintier of: people were Creihated. Passengers after the crash pushed the cars In the rear. of this ear, awa'3,' from the burning 'Inferno.
•
Radio omotes •, What U.I 8,11 hi
r e e otKac Aait-Seair�
• Radio promoted ttue democracy
and has Served to Ahab) partitsanallii)
American polities, Clamp :General'
4 pm,
ages1',41,1a.s:ptittrIelive'ar:th:de.e.
run" !-°TO detlees,
Of thd. ()rater,' the, mYstery of personal,
ri1gnetsn, the kikt•of,leedership, and:
the ' •et :melOtsetleg. . hate
eViayektio.,ereiwd In all • APpei,'
• it'As cme of the initincts• ot
ittan•.being" when they, came together
le -Place themselves under anther!.
,ltof a Chief; The multitude alWays.
• listenS, te the,' strong. willertaitan. Whd"
loMws"h(t*tirsimPosie himdelt upon it.
The audience la such cases does, no
rep:ening; ci.nClusions May bear,
no relation whateverto theMerits'of
Carrled 'along by :Mob ea-
•timateare, it merely 'follewa the tear.
'One -Change' that -has been firelight
-about by radio the elimination of
'mob feeiing, gram Political audiences;
The' magnetism 'of .the orator cools
transmitted' through.:the micro -
Phone; the impassioned gesture "
wasted ntipon. it; • the. parole. period
.iacleatiefore it; the ilashingeke meets
in it iie_eneweting
lie ;One .of thirty' millions, each indi-
vidual in the audierice..hecemes,a SOH -
ASO the privacy of his tiWn
home:" • • • ' ' • • .
"A:•zersistent Weahnekia Ow Am-
en
*can ' scheme of government has
. been' the 'lack. of _popular, intetes't.....in.
politics • an the•• failure of a great
number et, citizens to vote. The lain
Presidential •eleCtion, however, With its
'greatly increased.inierest in. the af-
fairs 9f geirernment„ It is not unrea-
sonable. to attribute a• large -.part of
thiS to the:broadcasting. of politica;
speeches..• Radio brought the candh
' dates and the issues•within the tainify
circle and Made them topica ofdisCits-
• sionat every dinner table. In a word
itbiught out •citizens into closer con-
tact with:their government and made.
them. more '• which
they should play in
.ftfily•
'such . as 'could. hardly hee•-•
• gated by Isaiah at . the. beginning,. of
ministry, "but..they become appar-
ent as •hi s work proceeds. Compare
the experience of jeans.' (Matt. -.1,3:
•14.1.5),..and of. Pant (Aets 28; .2348).
•II. THE WAR WITH SYRIA AND.. ISRAEL,
•
AND.. THE SIGN' OF' IMMANUEL,
••• • •.Chap. ' .
• • Isaiah. took • a keen•interest :in. the.
• litieal-Laffaire-444s4inae.--41e-Ita
very pionouriv ,views retard ink. what
was best ter country, and. what he
'believed te, be the mind and, the will
of .God: .was young • Man
when •the . kings • of Syria and 'Israel-
fotmed a league against' the advancing-
pewer• of. Assyria.. They invited• Akita,
king. of Judah to juin them. When
Ahas refused, they •invaded Judah,' in -
'tending to take the kingdom frain him
and give it to one wh • .was favorable.
to- their •deSigtia..-7-Allat, •lin•great fear,
sent ambassadors' to -.the' king of • As-
syria. imploring his aid; Ise. 7: •14,_
•and. 2 .Kingt 16: 59...Assyria respenda
ed 'by, invading %vela and Israel, 2
Kings' 15`:. 29;. 16: Isaiah, knowing
that this act a. Ahaz„inarolved the sub
leotion of his country taAssyria, op-
posed . it • with all: his might.' In a
series of nieseages to-the:king-he:team-,
'wiled patience, strict 'neutrality :and
fifth in God, -Vs; •3.9.. The final mes-
s
.ge. char .the king with the sign
of Immanuel, "God :with Am', .Which
contains the first definite predictien in
Helarevi:prophecy-of a coming Saviour, -
V. 14.
/'
111. CONQUEST. OF BYN.T, BY ASSYRtA
- PREDICTED, Chap. 20; 1-6.
• An inscription of Sargon (B.C. 722-
• 705) fixes the date of the siege of
Ashdod in theyee- B.C. 711, The for-
tunes of Jida, tveraclosely bound Up
with those of the F'hilstines and both
•Were being incited by Egypt te war
against Assyria. • Isaiah,...both then
and aftrwatd, was profoundly dis-'
trustful of 'Egypt, and here prediett
its ultimate cnquest:" Wearing-onlk
the simple dress of a ,captivelle pre-
sents in his own 'Omni, to the king
and _leo* of arusaltn, what he &-
dares will be the fate 'Of Egypt.
IV. THE ICING'S ILLNESS AND RECOVERY,
, Chap. 38: 1-22:
• Hezekiah, son a Aha, was a, good
king. The histtoriansi speak well :of
hint, 2 EingA-7_.'.....1-7*____e seeMs • to
have held Iia % in high esteeni and
.the. prophet's influence over, him
throughout his reign ' to fi
been very great. rhe•
appeal's also in 4 Kings 20: 1-11. It
shows us Isaiah as spiritual adviser
Ito the khig, bearing t shin messages
,from the Lord. The psalm that fol-
lows ill :States ..or us the simplicity
and strength of Ht-zekiah's7'faith.-
Forestry Aids
Palestine Hills chiek.„),.
ne that
,
How -to Tell a qood thund effi,:lcioug. • • ..
condition, • a ! way which they have
Egg From • a Bad.
..qt is simple: store the eggs in
place filled with a low. concentratie
• of carbon. dioxide. That keeps a car,
'What is a. •bad egg? tine that, bon dioxide, balance- within and with:
stialts with hydrogen sulphide; or one out the eggs. Cost is lc per tase,Of
that. contains a partially formed eggs, .03c per dozen." 1'
Large Contribution Toward
Planting Work Reported
• Forthcoming -fron Tree
tosr's Society—Tim-
bei Declared -First
• Need of ' New
Zionist Horne
Jerusalem -"The future prepperity
of Palestine -is' bound up with totes-
-try," : declared RiChard St.- ,Barbe
Baker, of London, founder of "Men
of the Trees!" Society, visiting Jeru-•
salein in connricion. With a revival
of the ancient Jewish festival known
as. the "TreesNew Year."
'"The ancient prosperity has: dtaap,
• peered with the'hill forests," said ihir.
Baker, ,
lime burners have been -draining the
resources . ofl the 'forests and nit;st,
of what remained was swept away;
during the 'war •tosupply armies and
military railways. •
"Theebairenllills of . Judah are call.
ing out tot: trees. Their rain -washed
elopes are bared of.. humus. . The
stiuggling peasant' in scratching. a,
poor existence •froM •the soil, looks
up- to- the hills 'for forest. and protec-
tion for his -crops, but finds .there
no help. Iflh
ose- hill tops cotild be
bl planted, it would make his task
the lihter-hMen-d41ie TreeN2
Said Mr; Baker, "are anxious to help
Palestine in the work of reafforesta.
tion, 'ad have 'formed a fund for
-this purpose..
•• It is learned 11 13 pOssible that. "The
Men of ate Trees," of whicli Sir Fran-
-
'cis, Younghushafid • is chairman, will
make Sernealetn the -centre Of the
world movement, In any event ar-
rangements May scion he made to
-spend $250,000 of thi4 'rganizations
funds on 'tree planting in Palestine
story here 'told .
has a 0 -ick -Jelly-like white; an -np-
standingyelk, a firte lembrane.sear-.
ating, whitean yoke, a sheen over' the
whole content. . • : , • '
• 'What is a poor ..,egg? One with -
either •watery Or turbid white, a yolk
Bah* Weather
Seerils to Predict
Early Spring
that ,flattens out or bursts because of
its 'thinned men:dire/1e; a dull appear- City fellts find themsehits at a dis-
ance throughout the contents."
• Tliis egg advice is taknfrom the
scientific deliartinent of the. current
issue of 'Tithe." s. •
• 'Toot eggs are practicly as edible
and nourishing as good eggs, .merely
Jess pleasant to look at and lieuce
less appetring," continues the "Time"
article.. . •• • .
"Cornell University has !leen mak-
ing a studY. of egg deterioration anti
prservation. Leif Week Paul francps
Sharp, Cornell's professor of dairy
• ehemistry, who has .been werking on
the Matter with other Cornell men,
advantage when it conies to -comparing
dates' from one year -to another such:as
the early •or late arriva'-: of spring.'
Farmers are ,:obably mote: pure ef
the corning and going of the seasons
but =Idle subject Oi3ring they are
rgumntative as . •George! •Godfrey
points out in th' April issue of "Suc-
•cesfill Farming." , • • ,
"Every sring,". he says, "eu hear
a lot of complaint about the lateness,
of the ,season. It is mighty •easy" to
forget from one , year to another just
'When we de start iteth fild 1 was
wrote a preliminary report to Science. township trustee felt several years arid
annually attended e meeting as pre-
scribed by lay, •,i;he first' Mentlay in:
April./ Only once 'did that; meeting
come after we had started work in the
field, Often there was stilt Much
snow. Every year, however, except
tnO on4early spying', We diecubsedtbe
backwardness • of the•,seasm. I have
decided that for ne in this latitude we
are- about in.. noinial time if we get
into the -field by the
Egg spelt, he stated, because: (1)
they contain germs caught from the
hen or absorbed through the shell
pores; • (2) they lose Water by evater-••
atien through the shell,' -a•eondition
Which helps break • down the meta -
Indite between yellow and white:. ,(3)
they are kept it a temperature too
high, 'which ceases dheinical reaction,
1(1ot the formation of embryos (4)
most imliorant. and only newly discOv.
end, -the alkalinity of white and -yolk
has hicrefigct.."'
"Alkalinity increases becatise car.
bon dioxide escapes through the shell
froin the. White. 'Then the White ab-•
sorbs carbon dioxide from the yolk,,
nIy to lose it again through the shah!
Result of ' tlhe lost 14 that the ytillts•
Vt...1.11111V; the whitewatery.
"These obseTVatiktis suggested. Jo.
Professor Sharp's group the way of 1 plunks
preserthig eggs in their newty,laid To get another She.
•
. GLAD IT ISN'T YOU •-;
Cockatdoodte-del ,
. My- hm has lost tier shoe:.
• My" master holds hid pocktbeok.
• Looking mighty•blue:
Cock -a -doodle -cloy! .
The careless -worthless 'brew!
cost thy master twe:ve good
•
, . . .
Swap Wives 'and ..i.:,
., .
' .., Split the Expense
the subjeCt ' of an item in the. ':cur-
rent who, issue of "Time". " • •
, "The Willis • Ifirighte had been mar-
ried for:•17 years' and had fin, clithk,roargt_flaskee_paka,,the...grandsta-1,,..------,-1,-,
Laistence. Rikanstuds • had beeit mar- ..
• . • ellfe-7*1110"•" story: "The
children... The ., two faniiiies were .23141 nines.: poi!, hour; the second at.
Its' return joerney. fairly alcimMing •, ,, ,• • ..
friendly atm neighbors,'neer ,Minot the a.and.s. • The first ,itille." said the . ... .
ried far twelve Years- and , had two
•"Two divorCes were grantee, 'last
. • ,. . .. 7 ', 23121 mi es. •_-
announcer, was, traveled at.the rateof
.,
fortnight; ,in Minet. One_a-utom;obil:e' I Even this wasAtet .fitat , ••
\orth Dakota.
containing four persons immediately quote
the teaU• ' , •• - ' . , • ' ' '
enough for MaYot Seagrave, who 4ii ..., • ,, .
set out for Mellta, Canada,' where two d in dispatches as ,saying, , after
marriages were Performed. • Having."I have alfee' ling of . clisapPointOlent
and the Ilikansruds tabulated ' and oVer_this fob th-day. The !car is good .
• Shared eipenses:, . ., for 240 miles Sn hour; but I could not :
re_a Hanged • themselVeS, 'the knights
Divorces at 666 eaCii . •L
get that, out of it. The beach was
r •
Marriage licenses 'at $5 each - 10
, , . , not nearly so • good . as it -was two
Gaseline, incidentals .... I; ....t :., 10 years ago, when I made 203:79 miles.
au hour with the "Suitheam."' • . ,.• \- '
$130
What the AmericanPress *...•
Said •YVtien . Major SegraVe • • •
- . . • .
• teped-: 1(t . '",• • •
•. . • • i. ..•••
The' as rage who Seldom
drives Niter:than.sixt7 wiles an lioni„. •-
gl;!d.tt .14thicult; reinarks thejlerh. ' •• ',
de° t rearze what It '
feel like to travel.it,itheilt, tour . .•,,
,thai. gen; one •/;44 '
• • , •
,breath
tatting speed -Maj. Hegraye, 5, ,:••••,,.
rof;dreat, Britain! 'hie American drive.r,
Who attempted to' hteak the, Major's •
recOrd,'-establiShed eit"'..MarCh .14 at • . • , '••
Daytona BeaCh,„ as killed,. along :with
• t when tits: 1500 ' • • ••• • .
machine:got out 'of •control. „ • ...,„ -
• • Tha" Major's Irv.ing-Napier • SpectaW ••• • ' • ;
worlde•anid.: '
Moline record
'Steered pa:ftly by an airpiane-tYpo
indder, and is held , to the ground - so • ,
that its wheels traciion-
by tiny lyianes. which,,•if :tined epWard, „, • •
, •
says the Philadelphia Inquirer, "en. • •
doebtedli Would. make it soar through . •, ,
the Air •in giant:leaps." As -the Hurrah? • •
CaririerExpress .bserves: • .
-----"f/ne- it- ratherat a -less -whether ,tei • -
Marvel firdi at the Man- or his machied.' •.!--,7.• • • „ ,
There Mimi have been. as high a
gree of perfection •in one as in the . , •
other to 6.441 oVer Dayton's .speed- •
• .. ,
Way in bOth •direetiona at an,.avezage
speed of ;lss .than,sitteen SeisOn4:c •
mile. .,Afault in mechanism; A htiman. • ,,
netveout of plae,,WOuld .ha:veeen " • ,
•, • • • •
equally fetal.•
• ."Mot -of." -u- itaiena•_cleiqe What.' • ' •••.
ever' to drive an AU om
rate Of iiearl y four: miles • minute.••• • ,
Such ,slieed we „are • (Mite willing" to '••• . • ,
leave to the' other .fellow. ••• However. , !.
if ' it -weren't 'for the other •'tette*,
neither the automobile nor the air.••
plane motor woud••he in its present .
high degree of perfectioe. • .. • „ ,
• 'Throngs' of :breathless, spectaor' . • '
packed: the . grairditind • at Dona , •
BeaCh on the dayOf the race againist . • "-
tim. , Thousands ofpeople stretehed • " ••
along the sand4Onea. , Obtaining. a • .. •
four-inite • start, the British Major
*drciVe his glistening• -12 -Cylinder
chne at a. dazzling pace along the
sandytreteh, steering -by. Meas. of 0- • ' •
peep -Sight-, trained 'On a target 1111m:-. •
miles awa., 'The • "Golden Arrow."
says an Associated press :observer,
appeared a• bltir before the. eyes
of 'the awe4tricken spectators, :as, It
deed down. the course and' came to a • • • ; • .
• •
stop four miles off. With a mighty • ' •
•
• ''The Worst Minnent was when, -dile.'
Ing the second' Tun; the offside ratite-•
tor buret and /ell& out a , great cloudi
of steam and water. 'do water hit
Me in the time, end the eteam.flotited
Shorter Distance tla Europe across my, fielvi
Winnipeg, • ManitbbiL-The World is ingSinsu.chhetri.eemf
d ':'ought
eudoo:soaupg0heta ofintattais; • •:,
being made Sinaller not only by auto- form of psefiil transportation,' the
mobiles and aeroplanes; but by short- question 'naturally -coined up.:' Whitt .. 1
er routes between its •chief centres. le the good Of •suelt ',Performances;
A table of distances recently compiled which are always accompanied with.- , •
shows that the Hudson Bay -rite wilt serious risks? The :Value, silks the
effectively Shorten the :ditarice • he- IndienaPolia News, "lies in the :erect!. •
tween the grata fields of Western cal demonstration • of the sturdiness,
Canada end Ake markts' of Europ. and reliability et 'engine and motor- •
For example, trOm Saskatoon t� Liralier desin.' . • .. • •. .
erpool 'via the Great Lakes. and the TNew York World, on the other
St. LaWience is :4878 miles.- but from hand, maintains that "the Iiigh•Speed• •
Saskatoon to Liverpool via the Huth racing -car is. merely an expensive toy,
Won Day Iaitwav• and Churchill. Will be ittuLtta: aecmPlialintents..arenot-holp
3,733 mile', a saving Of 1,095. miles, tut t� the great industry of car Pr&
From: EdnuintOn to Liverpool Via the &lotion." 1'We may clip- a few split-.
St. Lawrence is 5,224 Miles but via seconds off the taliteathers of. Time:
the Hudson BO the 4istane . will, binits the' New York Herald Tribune,4;f2 mules- e saviug of 1,042 miles.- "but Time has the laugh on es •in , '
The ' Hud' s 'Has Railway, now be-' the end:* . ,,'' •
ing• built by the eanadan Om . .
Govern.. ' • " , '
rnent to fort Churchill on FIudion'ss -,
Ba -y therefore- ironniserstorhe an int-
pertant factor in reducing distancei
Item the . Canadiaa prairies to the
markets Of She wot& :•
'.
VIM' AND .JEFF–:
JEFF, wtiti LIO. 111ATL.
fitAto You'uv .t.00k _ v
LiKe A MCKANiCAt. ROOT.
vie' CRO/N1-EA S4k1SATION
IN IlrSCOCINORV INou'LL'
eAS• t ifoft
—By Bud •F
• ,
%crag suPPosib
• A M4-1A1ViCL MAN.
EVERY MOM 14'0%) t'i
tS CioleiTRotA.D By
Pot4Gr *NAT:
Jeff Impersonates a 1101echainca1 Robot, and the Deception is Perfect
4 •
ML0VE,11.11$ IS MY RBoT.PL:
CEOJNk 0V •
ft4ACKINC-PN: 04TAb oe
G4n.16 to ItiezcuilAt
NIGHT Z'u. STAY HoMe
ANb PLAY CARDS
"Th MIS 'THING:
•
•
/440'1', 1812ING
111•t ANIMAD
eS4-CAN tOwN
wc-2(G utitmG iN A
wonibe;,12-eut.. AGe:
GtVG MV
Ltombree$s •
Am AO SAVG..
MOIVEse.
.. • •
••
" •
•1
Should a Mother
iGo Gadding?
Tlie•noderirmohr, ;)s 1:eot6sented ".' .
oy •Stella }lay Ilex ,in "Children; The
Parents' Magazine" • believsthat a
little 'adding" away Iron:, home esch . ... •
. - week •is not Ott"' toneficial to the
• mother but also to the children.
-1 „in .onvinced that.mi oceasional' , ••
4gaddiivg',' aS my conscientious •neigh. • -
,, bor callS iny outings, makes me a far 1 *
„ • betier :nether than it is •toseibie for ' • ,
me co 4e it i were with My' children •
;
. constantly. Varadoxiaf as it limit ' -.•
.. • . scu.ii4/ I air a 1-19ttet 1.11ter by let-
.
, .
theit•-•,,lititial ,
sometime. . 'Meeing •othi; Motion
'sitli.Childreti. :the It 1114,1/440,.,55-,...,'... • -- .
_: : _ct,u-n, filiStuslirg, ...ogr. nobetaS. et-
cnitheng ' iclerta. • gottini ' a :breeder
-44:44.-48' ;1',-"A44 Nr4gO. iOr" .7`%".-
st'Wtr,-I rettfro heiii" to iny OWti family ,, . .•:- ;
a better Duren t --At ore understanding* •• • ' • : • ,
mom telerot- -.6f-tit-wily •'-frglitS,.. -Meta ' •: ••• - •• ••--'---- • '' :;4 ' •
pattellt "tvittl•. thy irital•ti4.*: -7- --:,;- - ...
-'13fif-:,Ii6W •krt- the inoiher et three,
wild" does 'rost-ofiter own werk.fitul. '• :..- '
time to ko.out? That is the eines:fiat • •
•'•• '• •
[ a,,ked turself, and wh,ic it seeeret •• ! •• •
. ,
ilanerative thi 4 le ,i,„„gLl16 an .
A.Wee r. anir-o-t-triett- -'15tt--d7-ifi1isTiitt " 7-- ' ••••--7' •;-:-
X. .
tithe"' . , •
••
I ' • •'
•*1
t • .
. c
cetstred. Tnitly & orOs
•
. • •
• k • t.1 41.11r!..1.11
•••
lidette """
04,,,004,,ioguagstestIvp‘Kvauz4.4.,E,A., ; . .
7 • •