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Port Perry Star, 2 Mar 1922, p. 3

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7{ would make it possible to regulate the| = ~~ CN He Mak i Pig Amt umber - ; -- oe : 4 a ' ent this number is a varys| (The framework can be made of one-| Use for a marker a piece of four- -|ing one, there 'are worth-while ad inch, used or unused lumber; or if ainch board as long as the inside width vatitages ih a ventilation" systen: that! permanent hotbed frame is' wanted, | of the hotbed, Make one edge of the . | allows for regulation of the air cur-| Use concrete. Put the hotbed where board V-shaped. Press this Be ding door "tHe air] there is protection on' the north--a | the soil every four inches to make fur- t method, | building, tightboard fence or a grove. | rows for the seed. Drop the séed and v install. | Place it on sloping ground to permit | cover lightly with oil and sand mixed. Plants requiring different = ature should mot be in the same sec- tions, For instance, tomato plants nage. venient: to have 'the door controlled If the boards on the back of the from inside the building, as that en-| frame are twelve inches above the eral inches lower; thus giving a slant | plants. a After planting, sprinkle . warm water over the bed to moisten the soil. Replace the sashes and keep the tem- perature between 75 and 85 deg. F. When young plants appear, give: them fresh air every day if the wea- - C Tor ther permits, Avoid watering too Heathen 1 nah 3: 1- continuously tramping. Fill the pit| heavily; too much water causes poor T . Isa a 7 3: 1-10 Golden to within four or five inches of the root systems, as well as fungous dis- ® ada > top of the frame on the south 2 Use just enough watef that when attending the fowls. or r-- to the sashes, enabling watér to run Chee dn TE Loh _ | off quickly, This will allow, too, Sunday School [.esson Better atliization Bf. the war's: heat; SRA, {ai 3 | the slant should be toward the south. a : Throw the manure (use fresh horse manure) into the hotbed pit, which is two feet deep, in successive layers, ables the caretiker = to regulate it| round; those in front should be sev-| require more. heat than capbege prophet by this name in the reign of The manure will settle several inches Plants do not suffer for moisturé, On Jeroboam "(2 Kings 14:25), but as he before time for sowing the seed. Place | bright, growing days, uncover the lived long before the events described | Sash on the frame immediately. afber|beds and let the sun, shine directly on in this book, he could not hate been| filling, y the plants. This makes hardy plants. the hero of our story. The second! The heat' in a newly-made hotbed| Never transplant directly from a Sime, The first command to preach to! will rise rapidly until it reaches a|warm hotbed to exposed conditions. #| Tncheyed: ies: Sommant heceuse. pol Lar irne of at losst 120 deg. A Either got, the paste socustomed to feared the. effec : i > emperature may be obtai 'or | exposure le e hotbed, or trans- Ee RT. SE DERN FoDen| eck or move, bu ft wil nuk do tn ht. 4 <oM frame. Wich ja x i repent and the Lord would have _| sow seed over such hot material. Wait | thing more than a sash-covered fi A be his peculiar | passion on them, i: Pooks Hobdy jira until the temperature drops below 90 | placed on the gmound; just like a hot- on the other hand, the|ferred to see them destroyed. The deg., then place two or three inches |bed except there is no heat supplied till ruled the oarth, This praishment recorded in ch. 1, however, | of good soil over the manure if flats| except by the sun. ' oda stumbling block 0 Jewish | brought Hm Jo:his senses, and this | are to be used, or about four inches if | When ready to transplant, thor. spit. toward other 'nations, In| V. 2, Minoreh the capital of the the seed is to be sown directly in the | oughly ry the hed SASHA ha before us Jonah appears as great Assyrian Empire was, situated] r ...: plants moved, Dus of his narrow and exclusive on the eastern side of. the Tigris Letting the hotbed heat for several | go into another section of 'the hotbed, "a good Jew who refused at| northward of the Greater Zab, Under| d8¥s Will cause weed-seeds to sprout. into a cold frame, into flats, or to the repentance to Nineveh |Sennacherih the city was greatly en-| When the temperature gets down to|fleld. If they are moved directly to os LB ke pl heathery aged, = pthcned and beautified.| 85 deg. F., rake the soil with a garden | the field, run a shovel or trowel under nemies, but 3 2 . i : tha forced to do. so he saw that the gospel|on its dorment oo asioned ag iio fo oo bg ib The Blanes och to Se i " in Nineveh as well as in|pure drinking water. was introduc . (Israel. Thus the purpose of the book | into it in place of the rain water'on| = la. Dias to lift the Jewish nation to a|wikich the inhabitants had depended;| eral repentance, and were to be denied | dren of Abraham. Read the last * of | higher viewpoint where they could see! and stately palaces arose in the neigh-| their fodder and drink. Herodotus touching verse in the book, avitz| that the one God is the creator of the|borhood of the Tigris." "Its markets| alleges that the Persians made their| 2. The book of Jonah is thus an oats are|heathen as well as of Israel. were 'thronged with merchants and| animals share in the mourning cus-| anticipation of the wide sympathy of Pn ng. 1 | fraders, .and its library was stored! toms. The Ninevites were instructed] Jes. Luke has preserved for us the ;!With thousands of . clay = books" 'by the edict that they were first to| immortal JR=W vif,the Good Samar. [{Seyce). Nineveh fell in B.C. 607, pray that the calamity should not|itan. Whom did Jesus commend in this es com i | ADE ! : hook petore the Medes. upon them and then they were to| PaTable? ~ Certainly not the "price the book: There was alg V- 3 An exceeding great city, The amend their evil way--their general) oF the "Levite," but the outcast "Sa- : . Yas &|febvew means literally. "great for |sinfulhess--and the violence that is in| maritan." Thus the Master protested ES me-- 1 God" that is, great even, according to | their hands; the social oppression that against the narrowness, intolerance, 8 divine standard, The city occupied! was practiced among them, such as and blindness of his owi fellow- about. 1,800 acres and was surrounded | the maladministration of justice or| countrymen, nd endeavored to show with walls surmounted by towers and the pilfering of the poor by the rich. them that God cared for sincerity and pierced with gateways. These walls | V. 0. These people who stood out- human service wherever he found it. Tose to a great height and were in Side the covenant with Israel had a Jonah himself was pernlas, bitter, cir rence "about 7% miles. Of | conseience, and that conscience, once actually sorry that t e-foreigners-- three days' journey. The reference is | awakened, fold them that God was| the Ninevites-- were repenting under 0° the diameter Tather than to the | under no. obligation to spare them | his preaching. The Lord was compel: letence. . It required three days | from the deserts of their wrongdoing. led to reprove him for his frightful é 9 ite intolerance and pettiness, and to show through: the city from one end III. Forgiveness, 10. Bi hot tore won 1g widen It other." "One of the leading ideas of the book | God's mercy like the widcness of the y 3A ay 8 Journey, Jonah had {of Jonah is that God is full of com-| ges." Thus. the book of Jonah is a rate mosh the heart of the | passion not only for Israel, but also powerful missionary book, its aim and n he began 12 Preach. Yet | for the heathen. The faintest trace of | #*Sonse is to reveal God's love for all inevites were | repentance on the part even of the! nations ind-peoples. = a x this § heathen - softens dod's heart and es they: would feel! causes him to turn aside from the ively that the reason lay in| punishme t should hav » "gy 0 intulness. "For this teeming ie ea ou $: been G3 § 4 nanity he claims the universal pos-| - Jonah was indignant that his 77 ] ity of repentance, --that and no-| preaching had awakened the Nine- J.C:1h : G. A. Smith). vites, his nation's foes; to repentarice, + C.: 1 have a cow which has 3 hole JH, Repentance, 59. and 'that' as a' consequence' -God had | in the middle of her teat and it is very 5. The people of Nineveh believed | spared them, and in his anger fio | troublesome.' Can you, advise me [hoy believed that God would uit the city. God caused a gourd to whether there is any treatment that "out phe threat re- Brow and shelter him where he sat' will cure her? No but the gourd soon withered and'djed,} The fistula of 'the teat cam be done nd Jonah was thrown into grief at its) away with bygthe following method ; decay. His foolish grief provided an! of treatments Restms SOA pain | Gocasjon-by. which God c0uMT teach him sg. mor of Tesco Sl te to ) q 8 . t i § f of grace and yet had! thE real significance of his a ay, be bean od re "main point in. the people of Nineveh. If had is that the knowledge of Shown so muc for a short ons an instinctive res. lived and comparatively worthless "among: the heathen. - A gourd, would not 'God show' a far 7 These are the Ereater concern for a whole city of wound of the jof and self-abase- | living men and women, even though ite the East show they were heathen? oah his Marrow rejudiced, "Jewis it with: very hot water, tincture of jodine. C

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