The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-05-08, Page 6tiLL,V,L 41'04 •,4.4•••4,,•,2,.4..."0,4.4.4.(44•171444t4.44•I',44 L..17
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• /
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-• ". a,- ., • ay 11. , Loesion VI—Jeras :Acclaimed
:! , 'all.;:••••,,,,, • ,;', As kingeaMatthew 21i 1-11. Golden
• ,Text—Hosanna to the son of .David:
Blessed ie he that cornett' in the
name of the. Lord; Hosanna in the
• • highest.-Matthetni 21.: 9. •
'''.0- `,... ,, . 4 " • . ' n . AN,AiikSIS , ..
• t. ‘MAKING PREPARkTION,.. VS. 1-5. •
, .
IL: riig ariltnuesaragarrnt, ys. 6-11, .
, , ; • • INTriOnueriort--lhe last tjone k .of
'II: : • , •., lesue.la net destribedin ay 'detail,
'butwe have enough to recognize the
...: •ti,
-• * i• places, through, which he pas'sed:' It
a. sv.the innEr strugglein his Mind:that
its of •chief interest to these writers of
. • •••: • ' • 0 qr vospels, and we are told of the
• aevere •strain and • ?Ark • forebodings
.•'' •:„..• ''. '• ' i, :'..' *hi* he: had to faCe. He :knew that
", •,” % . • ..11te wai, marchieg,towarde, 'death.- AU
•the ' more *ea terfull „therefore, is the
courage with Which'he thinks a.' others
•• ., , ,,
'... a.: • and cares for every little:detail in the
• ' • ' duty he has 'to, perform.1 . ' • •
1, MAKING. PREPARATION, vs. 14. '
•
lay• School
Lesson "
• ,;
••
•
V. •1.- Dttring the last week, when the
- •
city would be ! c ...wded with, such a
imultitnde ,,Pf. piigrinis, it was !feces-
•' -' . liary to arAinge for a ,plaei in Which
le stay, and Jesus clicse as his head-
. -. ,.istiarters, the home•Of Lazarui. It lay
over the •Monat of Olivee'tci the east,
•• ittuci each morning Jesus came unto the
• • -city-. While in that house be was
among friends in,
•he loyett. •
: ••V. 2. It *as a strange reqaest to
• . '
snake, and the diecinies muet have been.
• , greatly surprised. They cud*, not
-Imagine What it all mean. It•geve no
lint of the pomp and • cireumstance
with which, in their. minds :They had•
associated the arrival of their Lbrd, •
Perhaps the" dist.ipleS had hesitated
, In undertaking tLis strange enterPrise;.
.' itrid' may haire asked Jesus what they
• , Were to tell' the -owner •Of the 'ass. ' 'It
• did seem • rather -unusual to 1.t. held
•Of. . property no: belonging -to them.
east was a diseiPla et Jesus,
• Some ave suggested that the owner
of the
tend that there was an understanding
.'en the Matter. However, there' is an-
otherWay to regard ':t.- The kings of
• the eaSt never hesitated to take what-
ever they wished, and •ntany a Yalu-
- able pokseseion was seized fret& relue-
tant stiljects. Jesus is also a •king;
and his •royal eonsc otiSpess- shines
'through this incident. But'Jesus did
ma exercise his royal rights as others
-did. He demanded very few outward
swine; and 'here he asks for an ase, so
thingsOnce he destrlb . • yed • herd of
different from the callus claims of
thL,e lards of the world. Net Jesus was
LOrd °fall- , ' - • ' .,' •
V. 4. This was likel, • an- application
made !ply the lata church.' f After the
Resurrection tae disciples tried to find
L. the 1d1Teertment prediction -of. the
,. ' differejnt events in the' life of Jesus,
' arid it was natural that the passage.in
Zecha -Ith should be thus pointed out
as a refiguring of thiS incident Mat-
thevf is especially:lend of, calling at-
. • te•••. ion, to these proof. passages, or
• lei 'vas writing for Jewish ahristAarts,
Who were Often attacked by those:Yew-
: jab brethren for setting forth a new
•1 beresye and it Was, therefore, impott
ant to show that.dispiii was the fulfil,.,
ment of the Old Testament.
Nor is it of leisconsemience for us
•' to see how the religion 'of the New
Testament is the natural sequel of the
pronhecies - and revIla.ion of 'Israel
• In the Old Testament we find the pre -
•P: ration -far the manifestation sof the
truth of Christ. • •
•
II. THE TRIUMPHAL ENTRY, vs: 6-11.
Irt 444444
4 44,;1•:‘,
. L.
s
.",•.4k1 • ''..';•'4'^-,7.,.„,,,k;4•1,
• s_
in this incident. First, there 'is the
distinct cl•.im to Lordship oil the pad
of Jesus. He is conscious of being the
son of David, the 'fulfilMent of the pro-
phecies of Israel, • The.destinies of all
lives rest with him. He does not re-
fuse the triumph, Sec.ondly, this tri-
umph is quite inlike,that rf any earth-
ly riller• There le no gorgeous display,
no militnry parade. The triumph. of
Jest's Consists in peace, Immilitir and
holiness,`the tonquering power of love.
It is as. a peaceful ruler that Jestm
enters the •capital of his nation.
Work
•
• Montreal. Le Monde will be the ealva• ;
tion of the -people; the redistribution
er.tasite between a greatar number
hands Will Increase the markets: for
our -product :b,y3 increaSie; tne num -
ber,ot 'people who haae the means. to
afford ‘tlieni. • This is why, the; -work-
trien's unions are tieing al: they .canto •
lave the five-day week, and the eight-,
hour, day 'adopted, ''Will they: sac-
.Ceed?'„ It is our Convietjad..that vi
• erisplciyrnent :Wilt only be redueed" in'
direct . pronOrtiOn to their. •supcess.
GI Work to
• :
:
••••
• •
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4.4.ritr""udson .1145:13,•
Thelutas or old Fort Prince of Wales; 'OepOsite•Clittrehlit, tile end of the H of Prodection. They have not been
The Wheat Pool
Montreal Patrit 4Ind.): The initial •
edvattees. 94 their' crop to the fermers '
alone instifc the :existence of the ••• ,
Wheat..Poel, One can imagine what
Would have been the% critical
condl-
tion of the•Preirie farmers it the •ned
tion Of the Prairie farmers at the end.
of their had harvest year of, 1929 it
they had nit been able to rely on the
consolidated strength of their aisecia-
tion. Thanks to the Pool, they found
the necessary funds to .pass the, Win- •
ter ad to prepare for a eew season .,
. . • '
Lord Balfour
Baskedin ,
,
• Fine...Sunset
• t
•
Give • allthe•mem ers of e
d 'Age Seemed to -Develop
Rather Than Lessen His
• ChEirrn •
nicity For Office Puzzled.
workieg class and there will never be Te
•
made to stiffer because .their crop was
not sold, EVenle 'saitat of the reducl•
tie!' hi -Market prices of tommodities:.
^ • • .
• Through tltis- he•was marching, b E
..,imericari Imperialism since the fall,,,there can be no doubt • ,
Whose .,iptentions are ,exceitent. • - A
directly towards his third hase— Que ec venemen ( ons.
• ) • A• re. that the Poorbas.had a stabilizing in-
the- siineession;tP Lord Salisbury and cent address -by -1,,'resident, Hoover to "faience, On'the..market. It is. In fact
the .alliance with:Jeaeph'Chamberlain
daughters 0 9e RevoluticGl de. beyottd qUestiee that . the . price .,cti • ''.
grain would lave descended -to a Much'
clear the determination of the' Milted lower level if -the farmers,' left to their •
co"pritry. in the *Mid. •He. celebrated compelled to sell In an unfavorable,: -• . •
owu hativiauat re'spurees, •had .beenn,
"states to become the Mast powerful
he, inherited ,frem his uncle. , • ' •
:Two Wen 4hf .eierY' diierse minds
may work extreniely, well together—
so, long as they can keep stepo, The
diversity of ten-mere:neat lteigliterrs
the personal ...attraction. 'Thn wide
His Friends • ed multiphes the external effectiarte
• range of powers and interests cover-
_. .r- .
mess of the, combination.• •
•,.
So it was for a time with Lord
Balfout and joieph ChaMberlain.
And then they made ralitakee, or the
hick of the politica,: 'diee turned
any geetition of establishing unenv
pleyment assurance; with' no cone out •
of work; there will be no 'need for as- By A.N.OLD pRiEND
sistanee. •
•
Lord' Balfour alone,, et the. 'state's;
men of the nineteenth and 'twentieth
Centuries except Palmerston and against them., The .4thaki Election
, or sansboy—basked in: a splendid sun- of
What Ne 1r k
• set at the close of his life and career. 1')O4) was errpr, and Balfour sue-
• IS *Wearing Yet that career had seenied definite- ceeded to this -bad heritage as Preniler'
_
•*sad in defeat and even humile
By ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON'
,,---•••• • • :
Illustrated PreesynakiAY Lesson
• Furnisheci*ith -Every Patter'
•
V. 6. The ..disciples had long since
learned that there wer many things
stout their Master which they, could not
• understand? and they were coming to
• see that sample obedience was their
• chief duty. .
V. 7. They had some presentiment
that something important NOIVI about
' happen.: 'They put their clothes
uppn th mg and 'colt in order to deck
• them out in special festive attire, and
they place Jesus on the ass, see 2
• Kings 9: I.8. : •
8, There .114 a spontaneous rising
• of the crowd.• We would gather from
Luke that it was his disciples who
- were ,the chief actors in the scene;
ht t -we must also notice the part taken
by the multitudes who had come from
all parts of the world. They all feel
that sonde notable event is trinspiring.
• They cult do.wn branches of r-reeg to
• make his journey like that at an em -
Perot • It is to be a triuirviihal entry
• into the city.
V. 9. How easily the multitudes are
Stirred into enthusiasm! One moment
they cry, "Hosanna!" 'and efore long
. the same crowd will be crying out
"crucifYr We cannot trust the err-
. tional Actions of the fickle crowd, .nor
can we always rely 'upon our own
feelings? which are apt to carry us
away also. Feelings are meant to lead
tO action, and this, multitude failed in
• that they were c'oatcitt to enjoy the
• :excitement, and to assurne none of the
• ohligatiod.
• Two important facts are to be noted
•
ation 1911 when; chieffy through:
the persistent .worrying of Lord War-
grave and the 'tariff Reformerif, he was
driven to' resigtie the • 'COnsereatice
leadership.•
in 1902—a Premiership which left us
nothing except the excellent Balfour
Education Act of: 002, which to the
Feet benefit of ,the youth of the ha -
lion ,has for a, quarter of a century
survived every.- turn Of electoral ter-
• Then eame the war, and gave Lord - ' •
outi as the setting ray's of his life taken the first- two:reit:thy , , frir an
Mr- Chamberlain
Balfour from 1915 onwards an Indian' •
summer. of renewed bower. But, glori-. • Lord Balfour shoald, Of course, have
were, ' lit muet •be remembered that early dissolntion. Unfortunately he
they Were net those of his noontide: • decided to hold .on a;gainet. the flaw
Old age seeined to develop rather ing tide. Mr. Chamberlain ,determin-
than lessen his chatin. :And there pd to- turn that tide back by the Tariff
came with it a tenacity 'for office Reform appeal.. Hence followed woe.
which puzzled 'both hie critics anti Wel on woe to the :Tories—a fiscal quarrel
• friettds. '' ., . . - • I. ; • inside the party and a crushing de-.
• . •. •
His First Career
.
• For instance, hie adzelnisivation of
the Admiralty fn the first .Coalition
of 191.5 contributed to the diecoetene
' hich led •to Lord Oxford's fall in
1916. Yet he took the bait ,of the
Foreign Office offered him by• the a&
tuteness of Mr. Lloyd. George, and
joined the •latter's Administration at
an hour's notice. • :•
Lord Balfour's first career—not the
'afferglaw—ConsitteA of three phases,
•eaeh to some extent Overlapping the
other in-qui:ie. In the first he -is the
young man of birtli, wealth; ^and he
telleet rilaYing With life in mink
• forinspelities, music, metaphysics,
,society. ••
; As he Moves through a rarified- at-
mosphere suggestive • of the Dolly
Dialogues he- is admitted to be bril-
liantly clevEr but condemned as too
lazy to• turn )his brains to. account.
Elected for the closet borough of
Hertford, in 1874, be did nothing in
the House until, in 1881, he drifted"
into the orbit Of that fiery comet,
Lord, Randolph Churchill.:
Taking up the Fourth Party tactics
originally as a game, he was snared
into. ambition. His speeches began
ta take on a fire. beyond that of the
academician or dilettante. He piung-
ed with ardour into the political fray.
' The second phase had been reach-
ed of the great House of Commons
career. But it was some time before
the politicians would realize the trans;
formation of the academic into the
debater, or the changed "Pretty
Fanny" into "Bloody Balfour.'
• It was wrongly simpoied -that 'a
student of philosophy Must be incap-
able of argument, Whereas, the whole
It is. nipped in. at normal waistline;• process of logic or metaphysic.s' Is
by narrow belt. ' that of setting up a aeries of proposi-
Style No. 2846 comes in sizes. 14, 16, tions and then trying to 'demolish
18 and years. In the 16 -year size, them by dialectic.
2% yards of 39-irich material with a Lord Balfour's opponents were dis^
yard of 39-iffelt- contrasting is suffi- agreeably •surprised when the. meta -
dent physician started knocking their
HOW: TO ORDER PATTERNS' pasteboard castles of principle about
polished but very deStructive
Write -your name and address plain- in a
manner, They had not imagined it
ly, giving number and size of such
possible that a Liberal front-beneher
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
might meet an intellectual Superior.
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
The Irish Secretaryship was the
it carefully) for each number, and
strongest. episode 'fit his career. He
address your- order to 'Wilson Pattern exhibited a steely moral courage. He
Serrice, 73 West Adelaide St. Ter -ante.
• Smart young things are incinding
many silk crepe frocks in their firing
wardrobe to be worn with separat
coat to carry out ensemble theme. •
• The youthful animation of hem
makes this medal especially attractive,
for it is equally smart worn without
a coat: •
The cap sleeves of tile yoked bodice
are Outstandingly 'chic •in pointed
treatment.
the recent victories of his .eountry diarket. • - '
the international' sphere .• ,Fcir‘' ex- . •
ample;:in,stead •of talkingof' the naval Loyal 0 Teacher . .
parity ' of .the British- :and -Americatt • During the summer vacation a..
fleets, hedeclaredthat, for the first youug lady was appointed:as asubsti•
tithe in history;:the Republic of the tete teacher in the Industrial School.'
aited..States possessed a fleet at least She was quite 'young and itkexperi.'
the •equal of the strongest -in the Mice& .refertn work, but had na-
world: 'While putting his faith in the turally happy an dtrustful disposition,'
-Mend-Kellogg' Pact as a satisfactory When a class of, twenty Of the older • ,
method of preventing, armed Conflibt, boys was assigned •to her, She found.
he stated.with emphasis that there is that school lessons did mot appeal to
one ,kind of peace that no proed and i-thent; and'that,-"liewas difficult. te '6b- ;
free people could ,ever subscribe to: anythiug like order or attention. •
This Caesarian' has been enthusiiisti7. She ashed'perniisaiairto take thaboys'
Cally greeted in the Ainericankanital, on a ,Natura'Study atria through -the---
as ..not so long ago the, linperiallatie woods, 'and the Superintendent con." ",•
vows formulated MussOlipi,Were „seated, on the . promise given, by the • '
• Rome. • '• • lads that they Would not:attempt to.
' . • : • !.- •'' • • 'run away -or give 'any trouble. They ;
• Canada's' Waterpower started off iu the morning, takidg
Sherbrooke Tribune. (Lib.): Canada
lunch. basket with them, and returned
, .
has altogether twenty million horse- late in the afternoon, a: thoroughly
power at the lowest water (for the happy party. Not one of the lads nits- '
whole year roend),.. six behaved in sny way during the. outing
months' -in the year it has at least.
*II": for 1--- and they had utibotinded admiration •
thirty-three millions. Artificial reser- for the young -lady -who put her con
Hence in reser-
.t.... J. Kelso.. •
a^oirs regulating' the flow 'would raise , —. a...: •, .
this capacity to terty-three Millions, , .
Of' this tote', no, more than five and : z' iteligious Persecution in
feat at the polls in 1906. The major .
...
part of the .blanie for all ticis cannot one• -half tniilions, or 12'/a per cent., ,, : Russia • • . .
be laid on Lord Balfour's slioniciers. ' have been harnessed. To the extent .
,It is true that he had a kind of in; V , one,halfi the talk of harnessing Dr, John DeWey in Current Histery
.
curious disregard, part intellectual, this power has been undertaken in the (New Yorky: All the reports from
'Part -aristocratic, for the movements .last ten years: although :for 5. long Russia agree that Comntenist author-
point lie was right
of palmier apinien. On the, . ain Maritime
pOrno-. ities are unanimoue in the opinion
He Pr641v*--e'i time the
tQl"ftuelismeeilal:nwdattletre:c that he "religious' drive agaiost the. •
Soviets " is but another attempt ' of
the tiling which really matteredthe vinte_ .
a have ' furnished' the'motive capitalistic countries to ,Overthrow the
unity of the Conservative Party re 7 force for grain mills,. and textile
garded as a' -great national instru- plants, such as were indispensable to Communist regfine. .Anyone with a
.thent. 'But after the internal strug- the existence of the pioneers. In coin. knowledge of Russia could have pre-
dieted that such woula be the result. •
-gle Of '1906-1906 came defeat:, defeat, parison With other countries, Canada
and defeat at .the 'polls; until the in the number of its turbine., installa- Although many have protested on gen
Mils. It is also in the Second rank uinely religions grounds, nevertheless : •
thrice -vanquished leader vanished.
None- could excel Lord Balfour • In
is only surpassed by the:United States they have entered upon a campaign
charged with dynamite: So far as it
personal cliarni—even , when 'dealing
as regards the number of horse-poier-
With. cliance-met individuals. Natuta
generated per 1,000 inhabitants, Nor- has any religious:effect in the u.s,p.R.
it will intensifY opposition to religion,.
ally, he was surrounded' by an ador- .
way alone exceeding her figure. Per confirming the belief that the church
ing coterie of friends not
alw•aYs to capita Canada has nearly five times ,:'
nas,at bottom a political and economic
his practical profit But his politiCal
aim. it will also arouse the same
feelings that would be aroused among
' 'Nfitking the Best of it . . us by Any sign of foreign interference
,
Supperted his agents through. thick
• and thin. With an intelieet that could
TALENT penetrate the superficial at any vine
Talent alone can' tint make a- writer, he realized that the Irish prefer a
There wait be a:man behind the book. strong GOvertiment even when ite•re-
-Goethe. •
MUTT AND JEFF illy atm FISHER
•
440444.44,..
z'MThE UMCLe aP
cottCMANsa g Dobler :Howe At4t(
*COME LAC' .veAR. Bur
JUDGE. tuoimsreit JuGGED
Me Vett Na- PAYiNG• A.
'oN it: •
Sults are bad, to a weak Government
tic-erF.'"Te1411111S
*OAT Vogt .02E4,4Attli Amb OW—
t,•-4 AStiOt 1**BiAiiv
• ittiE 1,08.8ittBieS.EY2.
as many.turbines the•United'States.
friendships were colder. ' •
At the end his figure grew greate1.
if only as•the,:reilections of the past-
thrdw a longer shadow. had seen
the •House of Cecil's second predomin-
ance since the time of ,Elizabeth ale
pear and vanish... He had seen the
creation and fall of the•Germaa Em-
pire. He had been at •the Congress
of Berlin •and at the signing of the
Treetir of Veriailles.. He had known
in intimacy all the great .men. from
.Disraeli and Gladstone- onwards. He
had given. a Romanes Lecture and,
founded the Smits:. He had held his
.owu with, even -When he had not sur-
passed, politicians, metaphysicians,
and wits
41.nti in a 'time 'when' world opinion
was so important in the darkest,
days Of the war — hie dignity: and
faith did more for Britain's cause
than can ever he ''told. • The Eliza-
bethian Cecil lived again.'
' "She must be jealous of her lips -
hand.". • • . . -
"Why so?" . .
"She's just advertiaed for a plain
cook." •
"What the SocialistSI dreamed of
•
the new. capitalism had made a real-
ity."—Edward A. Fileriet
• . ,
• Doing con • in what we,regard as our own internal
The NewOntlook'
place things well may at tint eetn
a rather liurndrum business, while. we
areNagaged at them, but there is no-
thing in all the world that tells more
significantly whep.. the whole -recOrd •
•
of life's enterprises and achievements
is counted tip.. Arid ta fail .in the
every -day life is oneof the very
worst failures .we can make. The
Man who'finds fault with life because
it does not -.give him a place in the
front row has not yet come to -under-
Stand wherein life's finest opportun-
itles ile.' The man who is doing 'the ordinary things has .galteas many or . •
them as any one else, if he would see
•it. I
Prince Lucky in Aerial Trips:.
• Lendon.—Air crashes follow and
'precede the Prince of Wales, but he'
does not-•seeth to Wind. •' • •
A few hours ,before he landed at
'Windsor Casile from Marseilles on his
return from his African trip, Pilot,
Sergeant W. H. Fern, and Aircrafts:
man Leslie Charlton were killed in
the stint:ill-up of a Iwo -seater 'fighting
plane at the Royal Air Ferce.airdrome,
at Cranwell.
The plane in which the Prince fie.w,
from Khartount to Cairo Olt his return
fibre the African jungle crashed on.
the way back. to Ehartoum, Idiling
two men:
•
4ED me
i
•-• i IF z WAS: 1. PLEAtiatt,
..,,,:. it.it4v4, rckG t MOT GOT/
1 CUOUSiti MONIC.sf l
buy A 1U.01) mat
STAMP W4 '
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"Almost every problem becomes
less hard under the' softening influ-
ence of time."—Bruce 'Barton.
4.
"The girt•with -a yiddish boy friend
does all tlie. talking so his arms wilt
-stay pg." -
. SPRING
The green grass is bowing; '•
The morenig wind is in it;
"Tie a tune worth the knowing, •
Though it change every minute.
'Tis a tune of the spring;
Every year plays It over.1 • .
Ws do Ehterdon.!
Meet a $50,060 a Year. Man.
r Get A ,YEAR,114 JAIL
#0411) A ViJE tie FIFTY
GRAND. tutu., if Jeep
tAN RAtSE.- The Fier(
fl4ou5Ag3bX ceud
RAISE ThE, NiteAR. ,
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