Zurich Herald, 1937-05-27, Page 6DAY SCHOOL
LESSON
LESSON IX May 30.
THE REMAKING O1' JACOB
(Genesis 28: 1-33: 20.)
Printed Text—Genesis 28: 16-22; 32:
24-30.
Golden Text—Be not fashioned ac-
cording to this world: but be ye
transformed by the renewing of
your mind. Romans 12: 2.
The Lesson In Its Setting.
Time.—God's appearance to Jacob
at Bethel occurred in B.C. 1784. Jacob
was married in B.C. 1777. Joseph
was born B.C. 1752. The reconcilia-
tion between Esau and Jacob took
place in B.C. 17'49.
Place—Bethel is located 12 miles
north of Jerusalem on the road to
Shechem. Haran is in Mesopotamia
on the great trade route from Nine-
veh to Carchemish. Penuel was near
the brook Jabbok which flowed into
the Jordan River about 25 miles north
of the Dead Sea.
"And Jacob was awaked out of his
sleep, and he said, Surely Jehovah is
in this place; and I knew it not. And
he was afraid, and said, How dreadful
is this place! this is none other than
the House of God, and this is the
gate of Heaven." (See Job 33: 15-
18.) -Bethel was beconie a place
where Jehovah is, where the House
of God is found, where the nature of
Heaven is discovered. It is most sig-
nificant, and may I not say interest-
ing, that when this great phrase, "the
House of God," first appears in the
Scriptures of truth, it has no refer-
ence to a temple, or synagogue, no
reference to a building. The House
of God. Where is it? Just where
you are.
"And Jacob rose up early in the
morning, and took the stone that he
had put under his head, and set it up
for a pillar, and poured oil upon the
top of it. "—Often in the night we
make great resolutions, we pray
earnestly and find our hearts moved
anew with the love of God. We are
stirred to new endeavors by the read-
ing of the Bible, and we promise God
and ourselves that the next day will
be a new beginning for us. But so
often when the morning light breaks
and a new day has begun, and all the
common, familiar things of the world
are seen again, there is a danger that
the hopes and vows of the night will
be put away, and the day after will
be no different from the day before.
"And he called the name of that
place Beth -el: but the name of the
city was Luz at the first."—The word
Bethel is formed of two Hebrew
words, Beth, which means house, and
El, which is the name for God found
thousands of times in the Bible in the
name Elohim. Therefore this name
means "the House of God," just as
the name Bethlehem means "the
House of Bread."
"And Jacob vowed a vow, saying,
If God will be with me, and will keep
me in this way that I go, and will
give me bread to eat, and raiment to
put on, so that I cone again to my
father's house in peace, and Jehovah
will be my God. Then this stone,
which I have set up for a pillar, shall
be God's house: and of all that thou
shalt give me I will surely give the
tenth unto thee."—Jacob's promise to
later erect an altar here for the wor-
ship of God was subsequently kept
(35: 1, 15). This is the only time in
the book of Genesis that we have any
reference to the giving of one-tenth
of one's possessions to the Lord, but,
as Dr. F. B. Meyer has said: "There
is no reason to doubt that this be-
came the principle of •Jacob's life, and
if so, he shames the majority of
Christian people, most of whom do
not give on principle, and give a very
uncertain and meagre percentage of
their income.
"And Jacob was left alone; and
there wrestled a man with him until
the breaking of the day. And when
he saw that he prevailed not against
hint, he touched the hollow of his
thigh; and the hollow of Jacob's thigh
was strained, as he wrestled with
him." -God saw that what Jacob
needed was first to discover his own
weakness, and that, in order that he
might discover as he never had done
before, the power of God in whom he
believed. On the threshold of posses-
sion of the land, he must be brought
to that attitude of soul in which he
would be willing to receive the pos-
session as the gift of God; rather than
imagine that he had gained it by his
own cleverness and his own wisdom.
It is not said that Jacob wrestled with
the man, but that the man wrestled
with Jacob; there is no question that
Jacob wrestled to, but the beginning
of the struggle was on the side of
God.
"And he said, Let me go, for the
day breaketh. And he said, 1 will not
let thee go, except thou bless me."—
Undoubtedly Jacob knew that he was
not only facing a great crisis of his
life, but that his own stubborn will
that night would be broken, and that
it was God himself with whom he was
dealing, and he knew that this was
the hour when he must either receive
a new blessing from God or live as
a failure the rest of his days. The
desire to retain God binds God to us.
All God's struggling with us has been
aimed at invoking'\ it, and all God's
fullness responds to it. Prayer is
power, It conquers God. We aver -
come God when we yield to God.
When we are vanquished, we are
victors, (See a rich comment on this
struggle in Hosea 12. 4).
"And he said unto him, What is
thy name? And he said, Jacob, And
he said, Thy name shall be called no
more Jacob, but Israel: for thou hast
striven with God and with men, and
hast prevailed."—The name "Jacob",
supplanter," while the name "Israel"
comes from a root meaning "to be
chief;" hence the name means
as we have seen before, means "a
"prince," and, with the termination
"el," the word means "prince of
God," It was a prophecy of the new
type of victory over men which he
would win because God had won a
victory over him. If a man will pre-
vail with God, he will do so in the
hour in which he is mastered by
God.
"And Jacob asked him, and said,
Tell me, I pray thee, thy name. And
he said, Wherefore is it that thou
dost ask after my name? And he
blessed him there. And Jacob called
the name of the place Peniel: for,
said he, I have seen God face to face,
and my life is preserved."— The
word Penuel (Peniel) means "the
face of God," and must have been
close to the Jabbok River, though
there is no place near there bearing
this name today. (See Ex. 33: 20,;
Deut. 4: 33; Judges, 6: 22, 23). Fel-
lowship with God changes Jacob to
Israels. Fellowship with God gives
insight and foresight, peace and
patience, calm and courage in every
emergency. Fellowship with God dis-
penses with subterfuges, natural
craft, and clever resourcefulness. Not
by unworthy expedients, not b,: moral
human acts, not by natural energy,
but in union and communion with
God, all grace and blessing becomes
ours. We must see the face of God.
Our solar system contains about
60,000 particles large enough to be
called planets.
Because it protects the stonework
from corrosion by acids in the air,
limewash is used extensively on Lon-
don buildings.
As Baldwin Opened It cried CP nference
This radiophoto, transmitted from London, shows Premier Stan-
ley Baldwin (centrey,.. as he opened. the British Imperial Conference
May 14th. "We deplore the necessity, but we „have no choice,"
Baldwin said, in commenting on the unprecedented armament build-
ing program being carried out by the Empire.
•
Bridget Wrote To Pat
An Irish soldier in -France during
the 1914-18 war received a letter
from his wife saying there wasn't an.,
able-bodied man left, and she Zvas
going to dig the garden herself.
Pat wrote at the beginning of his
next letter: "Bridget, please don't;,
dig the garden; that's where the guns
are."
The letter was duly censored, and
in a short .time a lorry -lead of men
in khaki arrived at Pat's house and
proceeded to dig the garden from
end to end.
Bridget wrote to. Pat in despera-
tion, saying that she didn't know
what to do as the soldiers had got -
the garden dug up, every bit of it.
Pat's reply was short and to the
point: "Put in the spuds."
ENERGY IN PLAYING PIANO
The amount of energy expended
by a person while playing the piano
varies greatly with different com-
positions. A study of the subject
shows that the per -minute energy
required to play "Tarantella" by
Liszt, is -1:50 per cent more than that
required*i to play "Songs Without
words,",'?by Mendelssohn.
Monsoons blow from land toward
th-sea,i' i winter and from the sea
toward:the a land in summer.
Service For Three
•
Sabu, Indian boy who appeared in a British film, acts as waiter for a chimpanzee luncheon party
at opening of Pet's Corner in the London Zoo. The service is a little awkward, but, after all, it is
the food that counts.
Reviews Students
President Roosevelt watches review of R. 0. T. C. unit at Texas Agricultural and Mechanical
allege, which he visited en way home from fishing trip, L -R: General Ii(. J. Drees, Governor James
, Allred, the President, Dr. Thomas Otto Walton, president of the college, and Dr. F. 112. Law.
Conducted by
PROFESSOR HENRY C. BELL
with the co-operation .of the various departments of
Ontario Agricultural .College
1, Question;—"I am preparing a
field for potatoes. It is pretty heavy
clay and I want to use SOM.: fertil-
izer. What would be the best way
of getting fertilizer on the potatoes,
and what kind of fertilizer do you
think would give the best crop? -M.
J. P., Wellington Co.
Answer:—If you are planting your
potatoes with a plow, strike out the
furrow, then draw in 17' " to 1" of
soil on top or mixing it with the
fertilizer, then drop the potatoes and
cover them with the plow or by hand.
If you are planting them with a
hoe, dig the potato holes, drop a little
fertilizer, pull in %" to 1" of soil,
drop the potato pieces and proceed
as usual.
We have obtained best results from
4-8-10 fertilizer applied at 750 lbs.
per acre. If this fertilizer is sown
broadcast on the soil and worked in,
you will not get as good results as it
applied the way we have described.
Broadcasting results in a large
amount of the fertilizer being fixed
in insoluble form so the immediate
crop does not get the full benefit of
it.
I note that your soil is a heavy
clay which is not well adapted for
potato growing. I would, therefore,
change •the fertilizer recommenda-
tions to 2-12-6 instead of 4-8-10. We
have found the latter fertilizer to do
best on clay soils.
2. Question:—"We would be glad
if you could send us results of your
experiments of commercial fertiliz-
ers with the ground limestone as a
filler. Any results of the limestone
and barnyard manure seems to be
better than with the commercial
fertilizers. Would be glad if you
could give us the right amount of
the different chemicals to use to, say
a ton, of the finely ground lime-
stone."—C. A. M,, Gray Co.
Answer:=Regarding lime as a
filler, quite a little bit has been said
about this with limited justification.
Of course, any free lime that there
'is in a fertilizer will function just as
any other lime applied to the soil,
but in the higher brands of fertilizer
there is room for so little filler that
the good it would do would be very,
very small. Understand, I am not
decrying the use of lime. You un-
derstand lime is a soil corrector, not
a fertilizer. Conversely, fertilizers
are carriers of plantfood and do not
function as soil correctors. Hence,
if your soil is acid and needs lime,
by all means apply lime. Fertilizer
will function best for most of our
valuable crops if the soil is about
neutral in reaction. Recent investi-
gations show that a very he►.vy ap-
plication of lime which will make
the soil distinctly alkaline, tends to
tie up in an insoluble form, any
phosphorus applied in fertilizer or
alone. Do not mix lime with fertil-
izers, but apply it at least one week
or ten days ahead of fertilizer, work-
ing it into the soil broadcast.
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The Book
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Shelf , v
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, BY MAIR M. MORGAN i+i
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BUCKSKIN BREECHES
By Phil Strong
(Farrar and Rinehart, Toronto)
This is Mr. Strong's first long
�novel and his first historical
'''f"iieme. It ranks with the great
b s or'ieal romances of America,
Oita tale of Jesse Ellison, his wife
Margaret, and thein four children.
Jesse Ellison had fought in the
murderous forest battles of 1812.
Lithe as a panther, his aim with
rifle or knife was deadly. When.
he married a belle of Cincinnati
he did.. not tame easily. He took
his gentle bride to the pioneer
country of Western Ohio. But in
1837, MerkumviIle was no longer
pioneer country. The Ellison tav-
ern prospered, but Jesse saw his
children degenerating and he fear-
edhe was losing the love of his
wife. He decides to go on and
escape the intrusion of civiliza-
tion — to give his family the
freshness and innocence of a new
land. They find it, and at the
same time, adventure, love, drama
of settlement and struggle for ex-
istence.
This novel is alive — you are
transported into the atmosphere
of growing, uncouth, honest
America.
"ABOUT THE MURDER OF A
MAN AFRAID OF WOMEN"
By Anthony Abbott
(Farrar and Rinehart, Toronto)
A Thatcher Colt detective -mys-
tery. Sauve and debonair as ever,
Thatcher Colt, Police Commission-
er of New York City, faces the
most subtle and intricate problem
of his career.
The body of Peter Slade, dead
from two bullets, is found hanging
out the front window of his
Greenwich Village apartment
Many women loved Peter, and his
acquaintances came from all walks
of life. His lovely secretary ,Carol
Burgess, his protegee, Eleanor
Foxhall, the Broadway star, Nor-
ma Sutton__,all had something to
conceal and all gave clues to the
strange happening on that cold
winter night when murder stalk-
ed.
The . style is breezy, racy and
humorous. One of the "must'.' de-
tective yarns.
"THE HEART HAS WINGS"
By Faith Baldwin
(Farrar and Rinehart, Toronto)
Because of her life-long devo-
tion to a father,anaviator, who
saw duty in France, Gail devel-
ops a neat father complex, with
the result that she falls in love
with Peter Harris, a married man,
the father of her school chum.
Bill Smith, a young inventor,
blithely ignores his rival, until
events assume a serious aspect —
then he disappears ,disappointed
and bitter.
This is a more profound study
of a girl's heart than Miss Bald -
win's previous novel.
How Gail tames her wayward
heart and eventually finds happi-
ness, makes engrossing reading,
and you will be curious until the
very end, how these people un-
tangle the web of emotions that
suddenly enmesh them all.
ov a -radio
-gossip
By DOROTHY„�
Marion Claire, who for the past
two years has been trouping around
the country with "The Great Waltz,"
has been signed to play Bobby
Breen's mother in "Make a Wish."
Schtilberg has signed Lenore Urlic,
who vas so good as the vicious graft-
ing friend of "Camille," to play in
"The Great Garebini." A girl in her
'teens named Wyn Cahoon who has
had considerable success on the New
York stage has been signed .by Col-
umbia, who have also nailed the vet-
eran Dick Arlen down to a contract
to 'keep him from gallivanting off to
England again.
For those audiences that like
chills and fever, horror and suspense,
blood' and thunder, there are two
new pictures just made to order,
"The Soldier and the Lady," and
RKO picture which is really that old
classic of spine chillers, "Michael
Strogoff," is the more spectacular
since it introduces army scenes made
in Europe. More intimate, but less
blood -curdling, is "Love From'' a
Stranger," which stars Ann Harding
and Basil Rathbone. It is a story of
a mild young woman who wins a
sweepstake prize and marries a
fiend who has dispatched several
wives via morbidly -contrived mur-
der.
Odds and Ends:—Bing Crosby has
been kidded so much about his tennis
in an effort reduce. Incidentally, did
you bear his old friend Harry Barris
on his program? And wouldn't you
love to see him in a picture with
Bing? ... Basil Rathbone, as 1 kept
reminding myself all throng) his
horrifying antics in 'Love From a
Stranger," keeps 86 kinds of tea on
hand at his house so as to have just
the flavor he wants of an afternoon
A11 1•Iollywood swooped down
on the Selzniek-International studios
to watch the Coronation scenes in
"The Prisoner of 7.enda," And then
Madeline Carroll broke up the scene
by whispering to Ronald Colman just
as the hundreds of extras in the pro-
cession got under way, "Don't look
now, but I think we are being fol.
lowed."