The Clinton News Record, 1914-03-12, Page 10•Y .
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Are skilfully combinedwitli1otber valuableingredientsin Hood's Sarsapaa
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Gil R
THE SUNDAY ScIODL,STDOY
TNT'ERNATIONAL LESSON,,
MARCH 22.
Lesson XII. Lessons by the Way.
Luke 13. 18-35. G -olden Text,
Matt. '7. 21.
Verse 16. Therefore -;this word
implies that the parables of the
tnus•bard seed and of the leaven
were spoken directly after the inci-
dent recorded in the preceding
verses of the chapter in whi'c'h Jesus
rebuked the ruler of the synagogue
for hit treatment of the woman
-who was healed on the. Sabbath
day. 'It seems prisbable from this
connection •that the parables were
spoken in the synagogue, possibly
az a part of the regular address..
This is the only instariee in which
parables are connected with Jesus'
synagogue addresses.
Unto what is the kingdom of God
like 1 -Itis difficult to find an earth
Iv parallel for the kingdom of God.
19. A. grain of meetard seed -
Jesus wished to emphasize the.
smallness of the seed in compari-
son • with the largeness of the
growth.
Into his own garden -The plant-
ing was not carelessly done. The
grain was not thrown into the
earth, but into his own garden, that
is in Israel.
And it grew and became a tree -
Those familiar with the vegetation'
of Palestine differ as •to 3vhiolr of
two plants Jesus meant by the inns-
tard, but either would answer' the
description, as both have tiny seeds,
one growing to'the height of about.
twelve feet, while the other some-
times reahches twenty-five.
20. It is like unto leaven -The
parable of the mustard seed de-
scribes the external growth of the
Kingdom. The leaven refers to the
unseen influences which giuelly but
surely permeate and.traneform so-
cieey.
21, Three measures of meal -Tile
amount used for an ordinary bak-
ing. Compare Gen. 18. 6.
22. Journeying on unto Jerusa-
lem -With the sending out of the
seventy, Jesus left the province of
Galilee, which had been the Scene
of his labors through.ma,ny months,
and started on a:cirouitone route,
occupying probably several -months,
to Jerusalem. The lessons which
'we ll ve studied and will study from
the beginning of this-p„"`any t11 -tilt
hia.1?n ,1-aili.ita. in Jerusalem at the
triumphal entry are incidents that.
occu•r'red on this journey. See Luke
13. 22, 33; 17. 11;18: 31; 19. 11,'28.
23.:'One said unto him -Was this
a disiip'le or had he but a paesing
inteYest in the Great Teacher 7 Was,
he an easnesb seeker for truth or
was the question prompted by idle
curiosity 7 We have no means of
knowing. But Jeeue, made this ques-
tion the occasion for en earnest ex-
hortation to his listeners to make
ib their continual business to enter
in by; the narrow door.
24. Struve to enter in -,Strive is
a stronger word than seek. It int-
plied "strain every nerve."
The harrow door -Only those who
are thoroughly in earnest can pass
through
Shall seek to enter in, and shall
not be able. -Jesus does nob, say
that many who strive now will fail..
14lany-will be just suflioient•.ly inter-
ested to "seek" admission, hat "0
main unwilling to' put forth much
effort for the sake of the Kingdom.
23. When once the anaker. of . elle
house is risen up, and ]labh shut to
the door -This clause seems to be
connected with the preceding, and
the`>'period'now ,following the ward'
able should probably be placed af-
ter door. Thos the, passage Would
reach, -"Many shall seek to enters in
and stall not be able. when once
the roaster of the hoiusey is risen up
and bath shut-' the door.'' This
passage allggest3 an attempt to
force the door which' the master has
closed.
Lord, open to its -After the itt-,
tempt to force, the door bas failed
they 'begin:, to plead.
26. We dpi eat and drink in thy
presence, and thou dads, teach in
our streets -How foolish that one
should otter•, this plea: "'Po .have
known Christ after the .Rest gives
HOME SEEKERS' ]i;XOURS ION S.
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Agent, Phone 57.
4. 0, Pattison, Station Agent.
Pheno 26a,..
Pardoned •Him.
'Be has some sins," Se. Peter said;
"hne cover them with chane;
He't often. listened for 'two hoii'rs
to other ,people tall:." '
year ago
he couldn't eat
•
Today he cari,ea4 three square
meals' and. sometimes one
"eetra" brsause Chamberlain's
Tablets cured Stomach Troubles,
and gave him a good digestion.
You try then,. 15c. a bottle.
A11 Druggists and Dealers or by
1 Illaii, 1
61maborlp}o 181,11tkro Ca., Tovoate
no olairn 10'admission into hisryking
•
31RS. SNOWDEN'S HUSBAND.
'The cleverest woman in.Eng-
land," Mts. Philip Snowden, who
has charmed Canadian audiencee.
with her militant pleas for woman's
suffrage, ,is very proud of her bus-
band, who is Labor ritenrber' 'of
Farliatnent, Speaking -the other
clay n Sheffield,, England,. on,
Peeps t at Parliament'Througit"a
Wpman'a yFyea,' : ". f lrfl •:Snowden
talked for ere, rn hour without the
Itid of a nota, and her oratory and
charming personality captivated tate
•
Rich Indian teas
b1e dad with f 1avory ,Ceylon&.
efraassa
nitre. Philip Snowden.
auclience. -Referring to nicknames
in use in the House of Commons,
Mrs. Snowden said that. her "own
particular :private member" had
cue, which he ecoldedher for using;
'then,'''she said, "1 tell it again."
It is "Philip, the Incorruptible,
and she added that she was very
proud of the "Incorruptible." Al-
though Mr. Snowden's name was
some times coupled with that of Ro-
bespiero in an undeserved fashion,
he was as meek acs Moses and as
gentle as a lamb.
6
HUNTING WITH A CHEE'iA.li.
An English Clergyman's Experience
IB India.
Daring a.ye.ar's stay in India as
the guest of the Maharaja Gaekwar
of Baroda, one, of the three premier
princes of India, Mr: Weeden, a
young English clergyman, had a
great many strange and interesting
expetienoes. He 'wri'tes thus of a
hunting expedition that , was aa' -
ranged for him. The cheetah, of
which he speaks, is a spotted, long-
legged animal that seems almost
like an intermediate species be-
tt'veen the cat and the dog families.
When we reached Makarpura, we
e>sclranged our carriage fora tonga
with a pair of horses, and drove
through, the country lanes to a vil-
lage some five miles farther on.
Here the cheetah was ,gaiting for
us, pacing impatiently about at the
end of his tether. He wee so tame
that I went up and patted him, and
be linked my hand witheleaOilgue as
rough as a.file
T•hrteetiailotk carts were waiting,
one for us, one for the cheetah, and
one for "drink water and all that,"
as Sampatrao put it. They put a
hood over the cheetah's Tread, and.
we setoff;; I sat next to the driver,
ywith my legs swinging in front, and
almost touching the bullocks, Sam-
patrao called out, "Don't get too
close, or they will kick you 1" which
was not reassuring; however, they
seemed quiet enough. A greatoamel
came satallring along behind us to
carry the "hag," and three men on
horseback followed the camel.
There were several heeds of black
buck about, and when we had cho-
sen one, we followed them slowly
over the fields. As I wanted to see
as much of the cheetah as possible,
I changed into the core where he
was; it was a strange sense/6°n to
feel his sleek 'hide : brush against
my hand' and his trail curl around
my neck now and then. At last we
got within about,.thirty yards of the
herd ; they took the hood from the
cheetah's eyes, the 'leash was slip-
ped, and lIa vv54 off, clearing the
ground with easy, swinging, noise-
less bounds,
As soon as the bucks were aware
of his •approach, they made off at
a great speed, but the cheetah ,bas
10o swift for them. Going like light -
ping; lie picked out Lite biggest buck
in the herd, and soon overtook him.
With, a mighty spring, the cheetah
caught the buck a tremendous blow
on the flank, and'kltocked Trion over.
Tien the cheetah sprung` on his.
prey, ft,acd his teeth in the buck's
throat, and soon finished hirer.
'We all ran up, and the huntsman
healed the cheetah off with some
difficulty, for he had become very
fierce. When they bad at last se -
cereal him,
'ecereal'him, we set off again after an-
other herrd., and the sante perform-'
S1100 was repeated. Go the way back
we hunted with a kind of lynx,
whish they called by irts,Persian
mime. of Shish Gosh ; a fultir :`-look-
iing little chap with long -,pointed
ears. 1t is very clever et, catching
a large bird something like :a c1'- w.'
Tt walkii eery ([1100tly itp. to tire.
bird, and then leaps quickly upon
it j,o•st.es it 4111e0,;(10 its wings to fly
away,
The People. of Israel Believed That Clod Had
Down Certain Laws for Their Guidance
"Thws' earth the Lord." -Isaiah
xli>;, 7.
This 'text is described as appear-
ing. an one verse et one chapter of
Isaiah. But there is no reason why
co•unthIess other verses in 'other
chapters of this book -or, for that
matter, of any of ,the prophetic
books of the Old Testament --
should, not be uamied, as it's source:
For i't appe'ars again and again in
all of ithes'e ancient writings as a
'kind of sign or symbol by which the
word of the prophet in:ay be known:
We shall be making a serious mis-
take, however, if we interpret 'this.
phrase as in any sense a catchword
by which the headers sought to at,
'bract the ears of the multitudes:
Rather must it be regarded as 'a
'.keynote to whieb, all their utter-
-awes and actions were attuned.
Behind al'l khat tlhese men said
and did was the profound conviction
bhreb'there was a God in Israel. They
believed that this God had ]aid
down certain laws for
The Guidance of His People.
They believed that .these Tawe were
absolute -superior therefore to all
coneidera,bions of expediency, un'a1-
berable by any whims of the pas'sfng
hour and subject to no amendments
or compromises of any kind. And
they believed that these laws must
be obeyed at the peril of individual
calamity and national destruction.
Therefore was it in no timid or half-
hearted "spirit that these prophets
rose up one after another, before
kings and people alike. to rebuke
them for 'their .aim's and to r•e'mind
them of the- will of God. They wast-
ed no 'trine offering apologres or
finding reasons, but began and end-
ed with command's. They did net
plead, or argue, or even point the
better way, but iesued orrlees. They
never said "perhaps," OT "1Yos-
sibly," or "it seems to me," or 'ex-
perie,nce teaches," or "ib le part; of
wisdom," or "it would be better on
the whole," or "it will -pay in the
long Ton." The law ways to them
the law I God had spoken it, 111u4
must obey it! Therefore did they
Laid
say, short, sharp and decisive, Like
a bul:letfrom a gun,.''Thus gaith the.
Lord l"
Just here, now, in this imperative',
and absolute clraraeter of their
message lies the secret of the en-
during power of these prophets as
teachers of individual and Social
morality. Most of us are beset con-
stautly by the temptation to lower
our standards and compromise our
Ideals -perhaps even to do the illic-
itand evilk
'thin' -for the sa e of
6
comfort, pleasure or success. It is
so easy .to do the thing which will '
Gratify Our. Passions,
indulge our weaknesses or win the
applause and fortune of the world;
so easy to avoid deprivation and
suffering by deviating a-1•ibtl'e'to the' .
right or to Ibhe left' from the nar-
row path or -rectitude; so. easy Ito
live on good terms with all sorts .
and conditions of men by acquies-
cing and perhaps joining their
foibles, faults, and even sins! "No-
body will know!" "Nobody will
care if he does know 1" "Every-
body does it I" "It's the way of
the world !" "Why' be a prig_ or 10
prude 7"
Thus you and I, as we tread "the
primrose path of dalliance" ! But
not so the true man who vallienitly
seeks "the steep and thorny pa,bh to
heaven! 1' 'With him the right is
the right, and the wrong the wrong.
The right he must do without eva-
sion or -compromise, though the,
earth yawn and the heavens fall.
The wrong he must not do, tht>ugh
all the passions of the flesh beset •
him and all the olamo•r of the world
heat hard upon his ears. What
matters 'what he may want, er the
world may reward, or other seen
may think 7 Is tt1ere not still a God
God nob speak-
ing
eak-
s this Goc
in Israel? 1p
ingstill his law And is it not as
true of man to -day as ever, that it
is
"His not to make reply,
His not to reason why.
His but to do and die" 7
-Rev. John Haynes Holmes.
POINTED' t'ARAGR,AP115.
A:poor reputation may be better
don none at e11.
After a, self-made than finishes a
job he closes the fadory.
A man's wife' always agrees with
hint when he doesn't want her to.
The tvfse man does hisduty and
lobe the other fellow do the explain -
1115.
After a girl getsmarried she helps..
her 'girl friends to the same sort of
trouble.
A friend may be a ohap who. hopes
that he,can use you before you can
nee Iltim.
No man can appreciate the best
of it untilafter he has gob the worst
of it a few times.
A bore is a man, who, when he .has
an hour to spare, goes and spends
it with some oma who hasn't.
A man never questions a ,woma-n'e.
sanity as long as she doesn't inter-
fere with ,any of his crazy projects.
Even if a mon has no other had
A Sensitive Protest.
"You'vego ' ne-to it great deal of
trouble and expense to give your
boy an' education,''
"I wouldn't mind that,'" replied
Farmer CorntOssel, "if Josh wotticl
n't corne home and eypect to learn
11je as 15113011 bn. two 01", three week -a
a -s he• -found out during the whole.
`term.' i
Cleave to the good and use a clew
ver en the rest
habit the is apt to send souvenir
postcards to his friends every time
he has occasion to visit another
town,
Question Time.
Ellie : "Mummy, -when you anal
daddy was engaged did' you engage
him or he engage you 7" .
Dr. Morse's
Indian, Root Pills
owe their singular effectiveness in
curing Rheumatism, Lumbago and
Sciatica to their power of stimulating
and strengthening the kidneys. They
enable these organs to thoroughly
filter from the blood the uric acid
(the product of waste matter) which
gets ntto the joints and muscles and
causes these painful diseases. Over
half a century of constant use has
proved conclusively that Dr. Morse's
Indian Root Pills strengthen weak
kidneys and • tlr
Cure Rheumatism
a�
THIS 15 A STORE OF
DEPENDABLE V A U S
`y y irk'•:.-: � .,•,t,.: arc
LABATT'S STOUT
The very best for use in ill -health and convalescence
Awarded Medal and Highest Points in America.
at World's Fair, 1893
PURE -SOUND -WHOLESOME
JOHN LABATT, LIMITED, LONDON, CANADA 29
A store that keeps in touch with the 'constantly;
changing'ewelr ) r'st les.
1 Y
A store that sells ;the same good's as those sold in
the better stores all over the country, -
And sells them, too, at as low prices as ANY STORE
CAN.
Everything we show you can be :depended upon ,to
BE exactly what we tell you it is.
This is so from Tie Holders at a quarter to Diamdndo.
ft re
And. it matters not what you may require uire' nor when,
if it belongs to a Jewelry stock, it's here.
Prove these things any time occasion arises.
C
qtr
JEWELER and ISSUER OF
MARRIAGE LICIT N ,ES