Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 10 Apr 1930, p. 20

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MASS INSPIRATION IN PALISI‘INE VISIT EittSlltlllitCE .lur Writes luscriptive Let. ter to Former Parishoner in This City h; 'irmous Mt Baldy Troph, y won 6 y Dyndm/c New At Pomona.Calif" on Feb. 2,, an Erskine stark sedan, mt}; optional gear ratio, tertified by the Amman Automobile Association, It! a new record up Me. Baldy, making the winding 7.1 ml.» dumb in "sminutes,q4 seconds. It won the pror,resshlteti" trophy for the fastest time ever made by a "ricaly stock car. Feats such as the "rorrrbeeaking Mt. Baldy dumb as evidence of the Dynamic New Enkmc's power and Harmful. You can command this champion inform: INN)" NEDA N Sheahen Motor Company 125-127 North St. Johns Avenue Phones 388 and 1211 A IN requ‘ The 1mm nth " ale d that their names mneetiom The let- 1me I" tter m atsuvriiutgbloweost.AmtarrdtmrttrPet/' all that is needed. Your present at, traded in, may make any initial ash outlay mm. ebme--drivetheDyttamieNewErskineu'tr, the flashing response ofits gram angina, washed by a new full-power muffler, pioneer!!! by Sande baker. Enjoy the comfort of ample legroom, hend- room, in this BIG car of “4-inch whens“. THE STUDEBAKER CORP. Ott AMERICA At A. R. ErAine,Presidott T Erskine prices font 8895 to ttsts at the [an it ranzt 1 they tell me ' someone else , thrill. But I r I am strange Ue walked THE PRESS them old, and still In these F. 1930 s and really land. challenged nothing in ditions, ly f1elds the hills, now just beginning to be Bower. decked' with lillies of the field-the fiowers that Jesus loved. I walk and think and pray. Garden of G'ethsettttate "I love to go to Gethsemane, just east of the. city ‘on the slope of the Mount of Olives. They have built a church over a part of the garden; that spoils it. Part of it is in the open. It may be the exact spot; I do not know. It doesn't matter. Snmuwhore between" the Golden Gate up ymidcr and Bethany around the brow of the hill. He was here. I can visualizthhat and I came near to Him. It isrquiet here under these great old olive trees. I do not won- der m, came here to pray. "Again I. climb to the top of the Mount of Olives. Like a panorama, across the valley, the city is spread out before me. He loved the city and wept over it. It wasn't this city that He went over for that lies buried math the ruins of a half a dozen cit- ies. since built and destroyed. The city was here-that old Jerusalem. And the hills-the hil1walls round about Jerusalem-they are here to- day. They challenge my imagination; they call to my spirit. Jesus saw them, loved them and talked about city And about day. they them, them. "i went down to Jericho over the fine new automobile road. Some times we caught. glimpses of the old Roman road which was probably the one Jesus used when He travelled between .lprusnlom and Jericho. Always the hills. They shone on the hills and the hills on Jesus as He walked. I walked with Him that day as I went down from Jprusohuts to Jericho. I too love the hills. Maybe that is one tvasrurwhy they speak to me' of Him in this land where He lived and which hm- the hills. Maybe that is one tvasrurwhy they speak to me' of Him in this land where He lived and which He loved. “Out If) miles to the north of Jer- usulvm is a little village called Ra- mala. They say that this is the place whore Joseph and Mary,' returning from Jerusalem missed their 12-year: old buy. We Came to the village near the close of the day. Boys'were play- ine in an open field with all the vigor of young life; This too made me think of Him. How natural! He is no olnisterod monk. I find Him in no musty cave where candles must he lighted to reveal the tawdry trap- pings of superstition, but I find Him where life flows natural, free and strung. He was on the soccer field that evening with the boys of the village' where His parents brought Him as a boy of 12 so long ago. "Next week I am going up to His old hmne at Nazareth' and to thu lake that saw so much of His life and ministry. I think the lake will tell me much about Him and maybe I'll tell you about it when I come home. It makes me a better min to walk and talk with Him here,.and I hope it will make me a better pas- tor." Scarlet Ibis Specimen Exhibited in Museum _ The scarlet Jbis, in color one of the most brilliant and beautiful of birds, is represented by several specimens in a habitat group at Field Museum of Natural History. The group rep- resent's a scene on Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela. Shown also in the lame setting are specimens of the horned scroamer and the common acreamer of northern South America. Thursday, April 10, 1930

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