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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1928-06-07, Page 2"t0 de the Awls a favala," Ofs fared to grant clerneney to One prisOns Sunday Schooler, theJaws,incrtigiaetedn4, by ity1a;,ear(tileitti/t that 3s heat leed to support Lesson sajoeto their national hepee naked fel* Sstrahs will regarding Jesus, and they reply by demanding that he be soaten'to awns 10, Lesson 01.—The Arrest and death. And ao Jesus Woe rejected by Trlaa—Marls la: 1-15. Golden Text the nation. The SOO Of God is deliver - men.„ --leo. 53: 3. himeelf, he es made to suffer for the SUBJECT sane of the nation which he came tO save. The crimes which he had con- apetIS OR UAW:MIAs? boa ThereliPora Pilate enquires their e , an ed into the hands oS the heathen rto be scourged end crueified, Sinless —Hwas deapised demised are ladd upon his owl 1lin • cl" Itebetrays ntonocalON—What Judae ed to the authorities is not certain callt head. on our earratives. It may have been the personal laim of Jesus to be the lllessiah. It may have been his anolat ing at Bethany. (Marls 14: 3-11), which his enemies 'might construe as Is public proclamation of his royalty. It may have been his whereabouts on the night of his arrest. It may have been all three. In any case, Jesus was set upon in the Garden of Gethsemane at a moment when he had no protec- tion other than the presence of three disciples, and taken to the High Priest's house, Mark 14 42-52, Them an informal examination of witnesses took place, 'and Jesus was asked by °Milpitas to declare whether he was the Messiah. His affirmative answer was pronounced to be blasphemy, a crime for which the Law appointed the penalty of death. But the Jewish Sanhedrin had no Power to inflict the death penalty. This belonged entirely to the Roman pro- curator, w 0, s ice Pontius Pilate, au officer with a very had record, The Jewish authorities, therefore, conaucted Jesus to Pilate, and formally indicted him as a rebel who claimed to be "the king of the Jews," No accusation in history ever signified a worse perversion of the facts than did this accusation. Jesus had from the beginning refused. to give any kind of political complexion either to the kingdom of God or to his own Messialiship. His enemies .brought the charge out of hatred, will- fully misrepresenting his real claims. l They knew that this particular rale - representation would have the desired effect of procuring his condemnation at the hands of the Roman authority. In the present lesson we have some accoant of the proceedings before IRRESISTIBLE Pilate. It features the moulded hipline that V. 1. The official seat of the Roman Paris decrees is the smartest move - procurators of Judaea was not Jeru-; meat of Fashion. Style No. 928 is de - Belem but Cesarea. But it was the cidedly feminine, and is irresistible custom of the proCurators to move to e Jerusalem at festival seasons, such as developed in her figured georgette 'crepe with harmonizing bows of can - the Passover, hi order to keep an eye ton faille crepe ribbon. Chanel red on the proce.ectings. There was a dan- ger of insurrection occurring at times georgette crepe, Marine blue silk, lue- r 'eaten the city was thronged with ma. grims. V, 2. The Jewish accusers of Jesus would have already instructed Dilate trous flat silk crepe and black can- ton faille crepe. Pattern in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 88, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 2% regardung the case against esus. asraa. of 40 fnch material with. 1% They appear to have put a political aa-- -- in order yards of 2% -inch ribbon. Price 20c oomplestion upon his claims In awaken the suspicions of the Ro- the pattern. man authority. Only thus do we understand Dilate's abrupt interroga- tion, addressed to Jesus, "Art thou the king of the Jews?" Jesus' answers, "Thou Fayest," means that he does indeed claim to be king (Messiah) of the Jews. but that be will not further discuss the nature a the claim. All this lie had made plain to the nation, nnd he will not farther argue with them. V. 3-5. For the same reason Jesus will not any longer defend himself against the misrepresentations of the Jewish authorities. 11e had declared the truth by bis life and not even Pilate's expostulations, will draw him into further explaratioes. Jesus' atti- HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain. ly, giving number and size of sucb patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin ',referred; wrap it carefully) for evah number and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. Recipes Mock Raspberry Jana Use tame or wild mulberries and mix with red plums, tame or wild, Mae recalls the 01(1 Testament de- using equal parts of each. Cook until scription of the servant of Jehovah tender. Rub through a colander and. in isa'ah 58:7: As a sheep before her to this pulp add an equal weight of shearers is dumb, so he opened not sugar. Cook until thick. Seal in ster. Me rroeth." Ile jars. This, makes a delicious Vs. 6-10. Pilate is baffled. He was spread from fruits that usually go to a man who in his official asniaistra- tion had been guilty of crimes and waste* a miscarriaoes of justiceRhubrb Marmalade against his Jewish subioets. Now for once, iron- Use 1 quart sliced rhubarb, 5 large Wily eanuab. he is anxious to be con- apples, sliced, 2 cups raisins, ak lemon cillatoty: and as it was the governor's or 1 orange, sliced, and 4 cups sugar. prereealive to Vent amnesty to a Place the ingredients ira a kettle and political prisoner et each Passover add water barely to cover the fruit. season. he proposes to dismiss the Cook until the mixture is thick. Pour present' ease a oainat Jesus. But this in sterile jars and seal. Cherry Marmalade TT., 2 pounds cherries, 1 pound rale - was not to the mind of the Jewish authorities. Pilate made the offer cynically reene,nizing that the Jewish attitude of Jesus was inspired by Ins, 3 oranges, juice and rind, grated, malignity. Put the Jews recalled the existence of another prisoner Revel- and 4 pounds sugar. Add barely has, who was in custody for a political enough water to cover and cook until crime, and this enabled them to turn thick. Seal in sterile jars. the edge of Pilate's skillful overture. The rebellion, for complicity in which A famous beauty thinks there is Baratibas was condemned to die, is no man good enough for her. Well, thought by some scholars to have had she may be right and she may be— some emmection with Jesus' appear - ante in Jerusalem. The report that a lett- Messiah had appeared kindled political That London hospital patient who inclinations to which Jesus himself laughed continuously for seventeen gave no countenanre, but which never- theless asserted themselves in revola... hours had probably just heard of "Big tionary quartere. Bill" Thompson's war on King George. Vs, 11-15, When Pilate, therefore, —Louisville Times, esseeseseseeees MLITT AND JEFF.—By Bud Fisher A Strong Addition To Britain's Sea Power "ODIN" 19 THE NEWEST OF G BEAT BRITAIN'S SUBMARINES Title undersea craftwas launched a short time ago at Chatham doolcyards by Mrs. Stirling, wife of the admiral superintendent of the dockyard, when this picture was secured. Oxen Still Pull Plows in River Counties of Ohio Planes Drone Overhead as Ancient Carriers Plod On Over Hills and Fields Gallipoliss, Oldo.—Oxen still do the heavy hassling for many hill farmers in the southern Ohio River 'counties, nor is it uncommon to see the beasts drawing a plow. Time has not moved so swiftly in these isolated hills as it has outside and the people cling, often by neces- sity, to methode of their forefathers. While airplanes drone overhead the farmers laboriously till by hand their ,patches of grain on the steep hillsides, Eometimes calling oxen into service. The ox teams, consisting of as many as four yokes, also are used for log- ging and for hauling heavy loads over the soft roads where trucks would pounder helplessly. When the family needs bread, a sack of grain is thrown .across old Dobbin's back and Johnny rides to the water -propelled grist mill and waits until the grain is ground into coarse meati These mills, once located at every settlement, are now scattered, operating only In the innermost hill regions and taking their power from streams There are some homes of compar- ative modern construction, but log cabins chinked with clay dot the bill - sides. Many reasons are manifest fox the igraph. seeming halt of time here for a cen- tury or more, The clay hillsides do not yield mops willingly. The region is so hemmed in by hills that many of the residents refer to the reit of the world as "the outside." Tree Maladies Afflict Half of World's Timber More than half of the trees in the world are sick. Many of thertl RTC, afflicted with incurable diseases. Like human beinga, says "Thrift Maga- zine," trees are the victims of numer- ous ills.. They are constantly the prey of deadly parasites which attack evert part front roots to topmost branehes Dog Holds His Own in Arctic It shows a fine degree of skill. Con- -- SportananShip When the Prince or Wales present. ed the Withal open golf champlonsbip cisu to Walter 0, Hagen at SandWich, it was the fifth straight titne, and the novenas time In the last eight years, that this eheriehed trophy had been. won from Greet Britain by the United States. This in itself lo an accent. 01Jahmeat worthy Of note; but there were two phases connected with the 1928 tournament which must, ge down in history as worth -while features of sporting oorapetition. The drat and foremost was the splendid sportsmanship which pre. veiled throughout the eventespecially that shown by the British. To have their trophy won by an outsider could but be a disappointment, and when the Prince of Wales could pay such a fine tribute in presenting the trophy ae to say, "Overseas entries have added keen competition to our open chant- Pionslaps, We are getting a little Jealoue, but always want the best border of India. The area surveyed man to win. We hope the overseas as, icaoivi:tisan55d,00w0 assicieus7amndile:noftaincm:ntrye , Mg to the world that the British. are golfers will continue to come until, 'Put one over' on theta," he was show - just as big in defeat as in victory. and sportsmanship they say in America, we are able to (mining the cup, he said that he was The second was the fine "comeback" of Hagan. In ac,-, finally closed in March, 192. A sec - highest peak, Mt. Everest, which is abT1(:10addition to geograPhical kneed - over 29,000 feet above sea levol, edge, began in Noveruber, 1924, and (spproximately equal to that of Enif* ;work, which conetitutes Yalu - "lucky to win, very lucky indeed. Cood fortune may have followed him tion of the Surveyor.Genoral's report in the tournament; but when a golfer deals with the nomenclature of Hiraa- Call go throttgli an open championship laYaTpeaks. The Nepalese, it isi stated, ouly give specific names to a with a card of 292 for 72 holes of play, Regionsfew enovaccetered peaks of remark- able aspects, but each group of snowy peaks is called a Himal or "abode of snow," and receives name. Thee Mt. Everest dominates the Malta Mangur Minutia Kinchinjunge, the Singallia Himal; Dhaulagiri, a Himal of the same name; Gauri Stin- ker, the Rolwaling Himal, and Api, the Viyas Himal, Mt. Everestltselt, itself, whose steep southern face car- ries little snow, is inconapicinous from the south, and has received no Ne- paIlteslemaenarzenee. ntly been suggested that the Tibetans gavo Mt. Everest the name of Chomoiomo, but Lt...Colonel Ganesh Bahadur of Nepal considers that this name la used .for the whole of the northern side a the Malta Langur Himal, end that It la not the name of the peak. Highest Peaks Charted Now After Three Years' Work Himalayan Heights of Nepal ' Mapped by Survey of In- dia Department — Tract Includes Mount Everest and Endless Vistas of Snow -Clad Range BonsaYa-The (surveying of the territory of Nepal, in the Himalayas, Which ineledes some of the greateet mountains of the world, has at length been accomplished -by the Survey of Teak; Department after three years of work under highly difficult conditions. The survey, which involvert the preparationa of a complete contoured map of the territory, was' undertaken at the request of the ruler of NePal. an independent state of the northern sidering the fact that he had just Will Not Be Displaced by Air. been defeated by an English player plane, Says Dr. Nansen —Dirigible Finds Place by the overwhelming score of 18 up in a 72 -hole match, his playing in this tournament must be regarded rut a splendid comeback. Some of the British professionals plan to compete in the United States open championship this slimmer, and It will be tip to the American's to show them the same fine sportsmanship which they have just received.—Eda toilet in Christian Science Monitor. New York.—Dr. Fridtjof Newell, veteran polar explorer, is couvinced that the airplane will not displace the dog -sled as the explorer' most useful equipment in polar regione, and that the dog continue to be his staunch companion and colleague in the arctic. In a lecture before the American and work into the very heart of the Geographic Society, Dr. Nansen said wood. Millions upon millions of fine that in the expedition to the arctic trees every year die needlessly because which he plans to undertake next their owners failed to appreciate their year he will use a dirigible and dog - mute appeals for help. Seventysfive per cent. of all shade and fruit trees are afflicted, wish V- shaped crotches, which are sure to spread and kill the trees unless taken care of in time. Many trees die of hunger or thirst, or both. Trees are living things and they must have water and nourish- ment. The top of a tree is a perfect index of the general health and vital- ity of the trunk and banches, al- though the health of the top has no direct connection with internal decay. Good rich green foliage indicates, as sleds. The dirigible, which has a gas content of 105,000 cubic meters, will leave Murmansk, North Siberia, next spring, for the unexplored polar terri- tory, he said. Dr. Nansen said that airplanes are unsuited to arctic exploration because they cannot land on rough places and cannot carry enough men and sup- plies. In the antarctic, he said, the ice is smoother and airplanes could be used to better advantage. Dr. Nansen said that polar explor. ation is Just in its infancy. "Now that the pioneer work is a rule, excellent vitality and an active done," be said, "we will have to go condition of the roots. in for some real exploration." Among the problems which chal- lenge the explorer, he mentioned map - What men like: Girls with brains ping of the polar basin through enough to tell them how wonderful , soundings, exploration of the higher they are.—New York Morning Tele-1atmosphereby means of kites and his MUST BE BIG SECRET Whatever it is that the confiding kitty is whispering to the patient Pu expression indicates that be can hardly believe it. fit A A A balloons, study of the northern lights and correlation of arctic atmospheric conditions with weather conditions all over the world. A National Church The Dean of Durham in the Man- chester Guardian (Llb.): If I may speak for myself alone, I have always felt a certain anxiety lest the Oburch Assembly should deliberately or even uudesignedly change the character of the Church from that of a national Church into a sect. It has seemed to me that a good many speakers in the Church Assembly are inclined to dis. cuss such notions as are brought be- fore them with a view to the real or supposed interests of the Church alone and not to those of the nation as well as of the Church. But there is all the difference between a Church which decides as far as possible her moral and religious policy by a sense of responsibility for the highest wel- fare of the natiou as a sabots, and a Church which thinks only of her own members and not of all Christian or even non-Christians outside her pale, an dtherefore exercises little or no influence upon the nattonal life. What- ever may happen now in Parliament, it will not, I hope, prove impossible to preserve the national character of the Church of England. 2121610.2101161.11.1.1111.293a. * HER PREFERENCE "Madam, do you like the Cinema?" "Well, yes I do, but 1 believe I like the pepper mint better.". .:._ Women and Work W. L. As in the Leeds Mercury: (In Victorian days unmarried women who were not of the working class "would have turned pale at the idea of shelling their white hands with rough work. They clung to old and pathetic traditions of Iadyhood, and, like the old soldier in the Army ciasebc, slowly faded awe,/') We are beginning to look back upon all that wasted womanhood as one of the great blots on Victorian common- sense. It is better for women that they should work, and it is better for the country. When economists tell us with one voice that if this country is to make an end of its troubles it must work harder, how can we or- der home all those women vabo are working cheerfully and helpfully, making money, gaining in self-respeot, and, enriching the resources of the country? Intelligence Glasgow Herald (Cons.): Intelli- gence Is an inherited characteristic which grows year by year in child- hood, and is fully developed about 10 or 17, after which you may cultivate the mind through study and experi- ence; but not by the measure of a brain cell can you increase your "in- telligence."Many grown-ups, and some of therh successful as the world counts subeess, If tested scientifically, would find that their "intelligeuce" was no more than that of their school. boy eon of 12. assaesasess.e.esessas Is There No Limit to Jeff 's Inventive Ability? rnivrc, tr -mu) .you OJVENTEb A WAY TO MAK* socks so-rasvisoN-r went:. our AT THE fie'4 00 Toe masa' tootsat, saw SAY ALL RIGAT e/.1. 'Mare IT TO stov: GGT THAT NEW PAIR oe sov. You leoUOise s•lesiabh\f! PINE; VSE DISCItOT 1064 Ps% TWS is. -flis, ONLY .EXTRas PAIR 'E. OWN:r Now,te roga.c- NWT\ i/ r, ttset.s 00 Tees' To A PAIR of Soe Val cASST Luz -AR. ovt -rtt6 t-teeLs otz.-roes, cAN •yeo: So ALL You 6orTA Do is cur 'EA" oPF: - - mu -r, Fora LoUE OE MACE, CoNTROL ‘iotAtS41.,F: FooLS) -11/411P:: 411 To _ -roe> MINRUNOND mime 1.t.".0.111011.111111Z 0/4 4 4er. Imperial Preference Melbourne Herald: The next gen- eral election in Great Britain is likely to be fought on the question of pro- tection, ...If BrItatn has been slower than we would like to respond. to the preference requests of the Dominions, she has made up for her tardiness in ether ways ... To -day, throughout the United Kingdom, a strong bias in favor ot purchasing Empire products exist. It is the strength of that senti- ment that is premising a change In the British fiscal outlook. If the hopes of many British and all Aus- tralian people are realized, that sem tanaut will, before long, be reduced. to a cash basis, to the great advan- tage of those countries. Overseas Settlement London Daily Chronicle (Lib.): In some of title Dominions alio mistaken view is still current that the British wleh to make use of them as a dump- ing ground for their =employed. This Is a fundamentally wrong con- ception. The whole history of emigration from our shores during the last 50 years goes to prove the contrary. It has involved a certain element of sacrifice to this country. Some a our most skilled agricultural workers have left British farms to seek and find their fortunes in the Dominions. Many thousands of high. ly expert workers were taken from Britieli industry year after year to help in the building up of the great industries of the United States, The Revised Prayer Book Leeds Yorkshire Post (Cons.): Real religious sentiment can never bo the product solely of coldly intellectual process. The forms of public worship must, no doubt, accord with estab. lished canons "understanded of the people." But without the 'fire of imagination and emotion they will re. main terms and nothing more, Tho Revised Book is intended to provide a way of escape from excessive stand- ardization, and to give freer scope for the play of those deep forces Which characterize the inner religions life of the people. Members of Parliament can surely do no better service to religion in the country and in the Em- pire than by endorsing the conviction of the Churn Assembly, The American Society of Newspaper Editors solemnly decides that it is ethical to publish newe, even if it wounds people's teenage. Always eitocrekpetri.ng, of course, the feelings owned by full-page ailvertisere.—New Yorker. The class had been having a lesson on prominent men of the day. Alter the lesson the teacher asked the child- ren individually to name the promi- nent person they would most like to see. Some said the Kin, others Charlie Chaplia, and many of them Mentioned famous athletes, After a time, one small boy shouted; "Please; Miss, I'd rather see my father's boss."' 'Well" replied the teacher, "I shoUld hardly think one wand, class liim as a. prominent man) but let us hear why you would like to see "Becauee," was the answer, "I've hear father say that bin Imes has got tive hundred bud."