Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 12 Jul 1928, p. 2

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a a td Zo hr EE Ea i pt SR ® but first of all Saul must go into the city. not as a persecutor, b lower of Christ. er eee-- V. 12. One Ananias. The character gz this man #s given in brief, but sug- ai and was | also held in high regard by all the roe iT saan om ote S00 Aoi 88 July J5--Lesvon ¥I1--The Conversion |iearn wi A of ion Acta 22: 6-16. Golden Text |In Ug I ae for, ¥ --This. is a falthful 'saying, and [pio vi 3 a preceded i .warthy of cil. acceptation, that, "14. God of our fathers The 3 Christ Jesus came into the world to | God ofethé Christians is the same God i save sinners--1 Tim. 1: 15. |vbo had guided and blessed Abraham, ! ? ANALYSIS | Isaac SP dot and God will 80 | = A} besto: race upon great 1. THE ARGEARARCE. OF CHRIS, Acts JCal will Follow: 1. Int Jesus, Paul |is to find out the will of God. 2. Jesus JL. THE SURRENDER OF SAUL, 10-16, is the righteous one, one who fulfills INTRODUCTION--The conversion of 31] the hopes of Israel and who will {Baul was one of the most tremendous meet all hes needs of mankind. 8. spiritual ~experlences ever known, Jesns will give him explicit directions swhile it was also ore of the most in- Fh a 4. The great world be- yond the Jews will also hear of the fluential events in the history of the Early Church. It 4s related thres wonderful salvation of God imes at Jength in Ads, and Shere wre, V. 16. Be baptized. This is the na- A] rect. references n ces of Saul's conver- he New Testament, This admission a he surwacd symbol of of Paul to the church brought into her entrance into the church. He is now Re pe eed hid . of the disciples, & sady to assigns ated a great impression throughout ia iin or ME the Jewish world. His great ability and gifts were now placed at the dis- | ve posal of the Christians, he did posed of tho Christians, snd be id Sagkatchewan Man 'pel into mew regions. More liberal Given High Award [teach on God, man and nature ap- ipear him, Bnd Christian theology | {By is 2 Sndiine new PrOpOTHetS, Hamilton, Ont--Awatds Zor 'bravery ta 8 26i{-dent¥ing abor, by his na-| ges announced by the Royal 'ing: and 'absolute # by hig en rly brain | Canadfin Humane Soclety bere Pat became greatest of the recently, after the board bad con: apostles. sidered a large number of cases of heroism throughout Canada in the past year. For the second time in 25 years, JL. THE APPEARANCE OF CHRIST, Acts f 22:6-9. . 6. Night untc Damascus. Sauls] ARR to stamp out this new the gold medal, highest award in the ect leads him to undertake a journey 'soclety's gift, was granted. It was to Damascus an important city outside 'voted to Albert J. Ewen, of Riverhurst, i Palestine, but near enough to learn Sask, Mr. Ewen was working as hired easily of the things that were happen- man on the farm of H. J. Skeoch, ing. We are not told how the Chris-| nen hearing screams, he rushed to tian church arose fn that northern ty, J house to find Mrs 'Skeoch's cloth- capital, but it is probable that pil-| "~ > Chin ing a mass of flames and the house on grims who had gone up to the Pente- | I Toston. He cost feast had come into touch with [fire from a gasoline explosion. 'the aposths and had carried home the | wrapped her in a blanket, suffering good news when they returned. These terrible burns himself, carried her to isciples did not separate themsalves'safety and then returned to rescue from their Jewish comrades, but kept | three children. up all their old customs, only adding to their religion the worship of Jesus Bs Messiah. They. had been left in ut as a fol ; peace till this visit which now threat- ens them with ruin. A great light. This light was super- natural, coming direct from God due to the immediate manifestation of Jesus who now came to call his new pervant. This was therefore, not merely a fiction of the imagination, a subjective vision; but a real appear- ance of the glorified Christ. Thera are four such appearances in the New Testament. The first was during the life of esus on earth on the Mount of Transfiguration. One came to Stephen, one to John at Patmos, and this is the fourth. In his subsequent life Paul often spoke of this manifes- tation made to him, and among the other claims made by him of his apos- Jolie standing is that he had seen the V. 7. .Heard a voice, There are slight differences in the three narra- tives as given in Acts 9:1-19; 22:6-16; 26:12-18, but these can be explained without much difficulty. Saul dis- tinctly hears his name called in the Hebrew tongue, and the question that follows is a direct and searching one: "Why persecutest thon mi?" His at- tack on these members of his church is an attack on Christ who is now clothed in heavenly glory. In the other parratives the words are added, "It is hard for thet Lo kick agains: the 28.1 aul's mind was not at eT he Conia net es Tedd Jop i INCOME inflicting such ruin, while the patient| The distinctive feature of these two endurance of the converts must have | frocks is the circular flare introduced 3ppeied to hini, He was going against at the hip-line, giving the required his better nature. The | fulness yet retaining a graceful flow- V. 8 Who art thou, Lord? ing li i : 4 (ing 'life. The popular two-piece effect question has often been asked whether |, lated in the frock worn in View d i , a bs on Jepus guring theia, although in this instance for praec- Cor, 5:16, it quoted, "Though I have | tical purposes, the blouse and skirt known Christ after the flesh"--but are joined beneath the narrow belt. even if this were the case, the present | The round collar fits becomingly to the vision was quite different, since Jesus neck, and the long sleeves are gather- d risen from the dead and ascended od 'into a narrow band. The collar nto heaven, so that this was the vid| ag omitted in View B and the short sion of tie glorified Christ. Jotia was | sleeves finished with a cuff. The dia- SMART FROCKS FOR THE GROW- _known among his enerlies as the Na-|8Tam pictures the simplicity of pat- zarene, and he thus uses this term to | tern No. 1175, which is in sizes 6, 8, make it clear to Saul that he is the 10 and 12 years. Size 8 years requires very Jesus whom formerly Saul had 2% yards of 32-inch, or 2% yards of regarded with such anger and con-!36.inch material. Price 20 cents, HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. V. 10. What shall T do? This ex- Write your name and address plain- presses both thé surprise of one over- whelmed with the great change that has come to kim, and also. the great energy of this 'man who henceforth will throw himself with whole-heart- edness into the new duties which he tempt, II. THE SURRENDER OF SAUL, 10-16, has to face. There is much to be = ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto, Patterns sent by return mail PUSSY They are Job very seriolisly. Police in London Halt Motors for Eleven Coaches Represent Remnant of National Pastime of Yore London.--Memories of a century ago were vividly brought to the atte tion of those Londoners who were for- tunate enough to visit Hyde Park on a recent sunshiny June morning to see the annual first meet of the Coaching Club. Eleven coaches, shining with brilliant varnish and bright color, and driven by men in gray top hats and frock coats, formed a picture which one observer accurately called "a prancing museum of Dickensian glory." : The entire atmosphere of the meet- ing was that of a quieter and more leisured age. The swift motorcars speeding through the park seemed modern anachronisms, a view appar- ently shared by London's traffic police who halted all motor traffic while the dignified and sedate coaches passed through the park and then to Rane- lagh. The only modern touch was the frocks of the women guests, the men and grooms being attired practic- ally as they would have been had the journey been made a century ago. This is the only surviving coaching club in London. Until last year there were two, England clings tightly to its traditions and its picturesque mem- ories and a more easy-going age, and there were many in Hyde Park as the coaches set off who sighed regretfully for the pre-motor days when sociabil- ity and good fellowship distinguished transportation and the roads as con- trasted with the incessant rush and turmoil of a petrol era. The club will have two other meet- ings before the summer ends. The drivers find that by traveling in groups they avoid much of the diffi- culty caused by the practical monopoly of the country roads by motor cars. fees Stuffed Peppers Green peppers, allowing two to each person, are to be prepared by remov- Iver fox pups belonging to a breeder near Toronto ~ Coaching Club| ACTS AB A FOND "MAMMA" CF i While he labors for 'an' earthly kingdom, Prime Minister Baldwin has not forgotten the Kingdom of God on earth, and his declaration of sublime faith in tfie Bible as a "high explosive" which bas helped and will help again to bring great revivals is a wotness that the Book is not with: out friends in high places. Mr. Bald- win was addressing the recent annual meeting of the British and Foreign Bible Soglety dn bondon Ww he gave voice" to the" faith that fs fn. him. Speaking of the "universal appeal to mankind of the personality of our Lord," 'which, he says, must come to |; every one who reads the Bible, he went on, as the London Times quotes him: Attended the Agricultural Research "It 18 that faith that animates a the Aim of Information Bureaus Explained to Americans by Sir Robert Greig Sir Robert Blythe Gréig, chairman of the Board of Agriculture for Scot- | 'erence in London, at which the "| pieturesque classics. "{lefs- therein contalne {use and ordering of "almost equally rare and a far more in- " {music with the words. Bible Sociéty; and it is Ip that faith that they send that Book out in all tongues to all peoples of the world, and so I come back to what I said at the beginning. It is a high explosive, but #t works in strange ways, and no i addition to their own work the infora- tion bureaus will co-operate with the living man can tell or know how that! plan for the bureaus was outlined, he Bded, and there will be more than this number of bureaus co-operating for the development of agriculture. In partments of Agriculture or similar 'ple, is touched beyond a ing the seeds and white veins, and by a few minutes of scalding. 'Fill, them with a mixture of chopped veal! or pork and rice, chopped onion and! parsley cooked together in butter only long enough to blend. When the pep- pers are filled, put one tablespoonful | of cream over each and bake gently for one hour, i Robbing the Mails Toronto Ma# and Empire (Cons): The successful hold-up in the Union Station has been a revelation to most people. There 'was an idea that a mall coach loaded with treasure would be guarded by men with loaded guns.| The public are amazed to learn that there was in that mail coach hundreds of thousands of dollars to be had just for the taking. The gunmen would not be so successful !f the Government were not so slack a trustee. | Book in its journeyings through the world bas started the individual soul in ten thousand different places into a new life, a new belief, a new con- ception, and a new faith.' are hidden until some- branches of government of all of the countries with such departments. "Through the work of the bureaus and with the co-operation of other na- ese thing? yong gf promised, farming , some Piha | Yithin the next 10 years will have ac- this by the ees th a fund of information on a me of Lar with other industries maintaining hich jvast research divisions," Sir Robert Divine fire, and the res those great revivals of repeatedly, through the have startled the world an little creatures we arc SW understanding. Until Well 'lelose of the Be masterpieces of "[--Aristotle," {studied as pract! '|the exquisite poe of the Elizabethan surely the love of through - thelr-pag deligst fn the my one of the most | the sun, 4 The rarest of the 0! books is Hyll's slend |"A profitable inst: " ordering of Bees," was first |p published in 1572 with\(his "Profitable | arte of gardening." It published separately in 15679, and 'in this form is a very rare book. Edmund Bouth- erne's "Treatise concerning the right teresting book, in that it is an original work, whereas Hyll's is mainly a com- pllation from the classical writers. «bs "| The most fascinating of the earlier bee books, however, is undoubtedly Charles Butler's "Feminine Mon- archle; or a Treatise concerning Bees and the due ordering of*them. Where- fn the truth found out by experience and" diligent observation discovereth the idle and fond concelpts which (1609). . . . ; An' Interesting feature of the book is the "beec-musi¢' associated with the after-swarms. -- TQ 2uthar gravely sets forth the notes, wiNgCR Strikes one as a typical seventeenth} century conceit, and in the 1623 editioMg thls "bees" ma- drigal" 1a expanded into\¢our pages of Binder naively avows he cannot vouch for Tg accur: acy "because in that confused Wg which the buzzing bees in the B time of their departing doe make dull hearing could not perfect ap- prehend it, so that I ¥ make |up that as I could, . my e perfite many have written anent this subject" 4 | The old bee masters "3d greatly on the merits of the picturesgyge cus- tom of "ringing" bees erne says: 'When the swargs not good to ring them nay it is a common thing 18 no e¥perience to ki lay on eigher with a pina 'Hoover and- the -Wgte Victoria Colonist (Cons.) : 31 ination of Mr. Hoover has interest for Canada. He is ed mankind and which, as sure as are meeting in this room, will again. "So much of our time in we seem to Je CarryNRTT, Of glo Intwilight or fn tog-trie men who ought to be 'friends blindly ni the melee men who are or ought brothers. Nothing which comes f lighten ~that a hi fog. The Kingdom of God may be: 3 very far off, but this society works | 10, Sanction Xhat wa ter Power Sere on through good times and through pt on Jr ant - evil times in faith, I wish this soc: |. s publisan yie- fety all that is good, and I would say | OTF in: November next will be warn for myself before Iiclose that 11 id ins (© Canada to bring publ pot feel that our work, and the work =, prevent any cession of all of ug wlio hold the same faith {United States of trights whieh and ideal, whether In politiés or | b y - 'bring, and which do. belong, to this civic work, whereyer it mayb Dominion. 2 is ; did not feel that that work was do in the faith and the hope that at som day, it may be 1,000,000 years henc, the Kingdom of! God 'would sp 'brought on the Government at Ottaw y I} The hardest thing In starting work. over the whole: world, 1 could Ve in the tinie we fiddle around before no hope. 1. could: do no or, #nd I 'getting under way we might have tho would. glve my, office over thls mom: most dificult job halt done. Things ing to any ona who would take it." iare rarely as hard to do as we. think wf & dh they are going to be, We suffer most : in anticipation. It's really fear that ition Keeps' us from starting. The water's| Torohto Telégram (Ind, Cons.) The (fine when' we gét in. The least pain immigration investigation at Ottawa comes when we plunge. 'The wind is reposted on most phases' of coloniza-' coldest 'when we dawdle along the tion, but failed to answer the! one burning ' question: How: are: we to bring in settlers, while we 'try to keep: them out? Until this problem has bank. --Capper"s Weekly. Bid ol pre me------ A It we wanted to. shirk we would organize a labor union of runners and been worked out the immigration will say that we would cut down the race be laboring under a handicap secon only to its present head. it to five miles and we would loaf.-- Clarence De Mar. * by to prevent, K wrang theirs should risé at the"j@me- time, But if they will not be ktayed, but hastening on still, go beyond your bounds, the ancient law €hristen, dome permitteth you to. pursue them withersoever, but our commén law is more uncivil, and yeelds no such privi- lege, for if your Bees bee out of your ground, your property ls. lost, if you bee not more courteous." But in the whole range of bee litera- ture surely the most fascinating book is that dainty little play, "The Parlia- ment of Bees, with their proper char- acters, .Or, a Bee-hive furnisht with Twelve Hony-combes, as Pleasant as Profitable . . . By John Daye" (1641). All the characters, with the exception of Oberon, are bees; the sweetness of fancy is exquisite, and seems' to har th light hat of iny wings. There is no record to show whether "The Parliament of Bees" has ever been performed, and it is so delicate that perhaps it is impossible.-- Eleanour Sinclair Rohde, in "Garden: Craft in the Bible and Other Essays. es pees Watch the garden far the land it saves the garden, too.. ON MY BED IN THE SAB HOTEL $0 XE BouGHT A NEUMATIC oNE. ANY Time T WANT T° BLow 1} THe GAs! = IT DIDN'T Like THe MATTRESS ft VP A BIT ALL T GOTTA DO THe 41S ATTACH A TUBE To THe. of a) i GAS JET AND TURN ON Mike; AGAIN Tr - For a | GU al visitors. A bug in time saves nine, Bes" (1694) 1s | OT ways been notorious as-a famine area, this year is the worst in the nation's history, the natural famine causes be- DE ¢ i al act that the ming Jande. have been turned into battlefields for the Nationalist and Northern forces. Lack of rain, ban- "With Shantung under Nationalist rule it i expected that the political abuses Which aggravated the stricken area are 1 d, For example, Ohiggchiry. ceploued collecting four years' Gov, Chang the province by yto" forsake their { ling g¥imly to hang on to re bits of holdings with no outlook than, a slow, painful for themselves and f js the word picture drawn by a jpondent of the Manchester after a motor trip of 350 miles kin the stricken area between Peking and Nanking: It is estimated that 2,000,000 starving people are flee- ing for their lives out of Shantifig into Manchuria, wheré they hope to find land to cultivabe--'"the greatest folk migration in the world today," the New York Times célls it, From that paper we get these further facts and. figures applying to the larger area. affected : > "Three years of bad crops, war con: ditions, merciless government, bandit-. ry, locusts and lack of rain have brought at least 4,000,000 people to a state of\dependence, and as many' more to destitution. The Times cor. respondent a month ago that 9,000,000 people in that oD. were suffering. Conditions grow worse, oe d or tha inhal to where food can be had." y | 'Another cahle dispatch, quoted by' the Atlanta Conctitution oor in bended with pity at ac Toda re en roni the farmers, com- as that crops" 'amilies"-- and must_continue to do so until am; outside hel) Etat migra , gives thess.

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