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Durham Review (1897), 8 Oct 1936, p. 3

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at 76, Retires me the to is n D that read Mar Exa whet 11. Now these were more noble than those in Thessalonica. The word here translated "noble" is used elsewhere by the apostle Paul in speaking of men who are noble born (1 Cor. 1:26) {t is the word from which derives uke 19:12). Why ‘hey were more noble Luke is about to tell us. In that they received the word with all readiness of mind. See Matt. 26: 41: 10. And the brethren immediately sert away Paul and Silas by night unto Beroea: who when they were come thither went into the synaâ€" gue of the Jews. Beroca was about f:rty miles from Thessalonica. "r:lble" is from a word meanin, "th marketplace," and hence, "loungers in the marketplace." And gathering & crowd, set the city on an uproar. The unfairness and deliberate baseâ€" ness of these Jews is revealed here. They went out and brought together a great mob, which, of course, could not be controlled by reason, but were driven on to do outrageous things under the power of mysterious mob psychology. And assaulting *the house of Jason, they sought to bring them forth to the people. Of this man Jason, we know nothing further from the New Vestament records; he may or may not be the on: by the same name referred to by the apostle Paul in Romans 16:21. 6. And when they found them out, they dragged Jason anc certain brethren before the rulers of the eity. _ The word here translated "rulers" is the Greek vrord politâ€" arches, a word that occurs in no other place in the New Testament and in no Greek classical writer. The remarkable accuracy of the author of Acts is again shown in his use of this very word, for in this very city of Thessalonica, an inâ€" scription on an arch spanning â€" a street of the city has been preserved an arch which is assigned to the time of Vespasian, on which this very word is to be found. The ingcorip tion itself was placed by tse uritish council in 1876 and is now in the British Museum in London. Crying, Thess that have turned the world upside down are come hither also. What a magnificent tribute to the power of the Christian faith within 0 generation of the ascension of our Lord! 5. But the Jews being moved with Jealousy. "When the Jews saw pros elytes and Gentiles, and many of the leading women of the city, convinced by St. Paul‘s teazching, they must have felt that his influence was silently undermining theirs. Took unâ€" to them certain‘ vile fellows of the rabble. _ The word here translated . ", SUauld, which extended for a distance of over five hundred miles, from the Hellespont to Dyrrachium. "It was really the continuation through Macedonia of the Via Ap pia (see Acts 28:16) and it might be truly said that when St. Paul was on the Roman road from Troas to Philippi he was on a road which led to the gates of Rome." They came to Thessalonica, where was a synaâ€" gogue of the Jews. Thessalonica was the largest and the most populous city in Macedonia. 1. Now when they through Amphipolis and Amphipolis was about miles from the city of P Apolionia was about t farther on. These tw well as the next one ment all on the famous» road Via Egnatia, which exte The Plan of the Subject: The Power of God When Preache Approach to Its Earne tion. The Lesson in its Setting Timeâ€"A.D. 51, Placeâ€"Thessalonica on the G Salonica in northern Greece Beroea, forty miles from T lonica somewhat inland. Golden Teit:‘h;; w living and active and any twoâ€"edged sword. I k 14:38; 2 Cor. 8:11, 19; 9:2) mining the scriptures . daily her these things were so. The Lt ss eveike â€" CC TEN WORDâ€"Acts 17:1415; salons 2.112, Printed Text, Acts X7:1, Thessa‘lonigns 2:7â€"12, THE SPOKEN AxrD SUNDA7 CHOO| : The Power of the Word When Preached, the Right n they had passed polis and Apolionia. is about thirtyâ€"three city of Philippi, and about thirty miles These two cities, as t one mentioned, were Earnest Cohsi_(i:;;: word of God is nd _ sharper than . Hebrews 4:12. ureeceo and from â€" Thessa Lesson THE WRIT the Gulf of Cal ( lled the 1 Thesâ€" &11; 1 LEsson 8. Even so, being affectionately desirous of you, we were well pleased to impart unto you, not the gospel of God only, but also our own souls because ye were become very dear to us. (Cf. Phil 2:17; 2 Cor. 12:15). Note carefully how words expressing love pile up in these verses. 9. For ye remember, brethren, our labor and travail: working night and day, that we might not burden any of you, we preached into you the gospel of God. _ Undoubtedly the members of the early Thessalonian church were poor, and Paul was de termined that he would not burden them by making it necessary, while he was in Thessalonica, for them to support him; consequently, he worked through the week at the bird setting over nest. With heavy losses reported to have been inflicted on both sides, more loyalist troops arrive at Porto Christo, Majorca, in Federal advance on Paima. * is usea elsewhere by St. Luke of a judicial inquiry _ or investigation (Luke 23:14; Acts 4:9; 12:79; 28:18). 7. But we were gentle in the midst of you, as when a nurse cherisheth her own children. (Cf.Matt. 23: 37). The word here translated "cherishâ€" eth" is used in Eph. 5:29 and in Deut. 22:6. It is used of the hen word here translated * After months spent in training wild animals to work in | and other animals are pictured grading land on Ma ynard This group of Russian women and their children, who petty officers of the Asiatic Fleet, smfle happily as they fore. Most of them were married in Shanghai. Russian Wives of American Sailors See America for First Time its young in the examinine" Loyalists Attack Rebel Stronghold 12. To the end that ye should walk worthily of God. Paul lived what he preached; he preached as he lived. Who calleth you into his own Kingâ€" dom and glory. "The meaning is that God is the inviter to whom they owe thâ€"ir admission into the kingdom, and that they must habitually live in a manner which befits uch a priviâ€" lege (see 2 Thess. %:14; 1 Cor. 1:9; Gal. 5:8; Col. 3:15; 1 n. 6:12)." 11. As ye know how we dealt with each cne of you, as a father with his own children, exhorting you, and enâ€" couraging you, and testifying. "Exâ€" horting" is the general term for aniâ€" mating address; "encour: ging is the calm and consoling side of exâ€" hortation as addressed to the afflic ted or the weak ‘Testifying‘ (used also in Gal. 5:3; Eph. 4:17) expressâ€" es its solemn warning element." One can only testify about those things concerning which one has a personal experience. 10. Â¥Ye are witnesses, and God also, how holily and righteously and unblamably we behaved ourselves toâ€" ward you that believe. _ The word "holily" has reference primarily to one‘s relationship to God, and the word "righteously" to one‘s honest relationship to men; while the word "unblamably," of course, means that the disciples were so undeniably living godly and upright lives tnat no one could honestly pace any just criticism against them. handicraft, which he had undoubtedly been trained in when a young man before his conversion, the making of haircloth tents, which are still in constant use in the Levant (see Acts 18:3; 20:34). Like Noah‘s Ranch? to work in harness. sacred cows, buffalo, elehpants, came‘!s on Maynard Ranch in Hollywood. who became American citizens when they married they arrive in Seattle. None had seen America beâ€" Princess Juliana and her fiance, Prince Bernard Zu Lippeâ€"Biestenfeld of Germany, shown as they were greeted by an enthusiastic crowd while on their way to a motion picture at the Hague. o nn e teuen c n L. % w{“ es ho coe 5\,‘?% o THURSDA Y, OCTOBER 8, 1936 ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Crowds Hail Princess Juliana And Her Fiance Ohio Experiment Station faced this situation forty years ago. After growing corn on the same ground for thirty years, the full amount of orâ€" ganic matter in the soil was ascer tained. _ It was found to be approxâ€" imately 1â€"3 of that which was in the original soil. On the other hand, where crops were grown in rotation, and manures and fertilizers used Judiciously, the organic matter was maintained and the soils were in creasingly productive. Two â€" out standing, and not fully explained inâ€" stances of the benefit of organic mat Tter, were found at the Rothamsted Station, England. The Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society, Engâ€" land in 19384 reported as follows: "One set of long continued experiâ€" ments brings out an important propâ€" erty of the organic matter. On the Rothamsted mangold plots part of the ground has had no farmyard manure or any other organic manure since 1843, while part receives farmâ€" yard manure every year. During the recent dry seasons the plants on this latter area started much earlier and grew much better in the early part of the season than those without organic matter, partly at any rate due to the better tilth and the larger amount of soil moisture retained where orgaric matter had bheen â€" griven. The classical instance of the unexplained effects of farmâ€" yard manure, however, is on Hoos field at Rothamsted where a plot that received farmyard manure from 1852 to 1871, but nothing since still gives nearly double the crop of barâ€" ‘cy obtained on the adjoining plot D*t has been similarly treated since ‘871,; but had reccived no farmvard or sugar beets on the same soil year after year without alternating with crops such as clover or alfalfa, the second growth of which can be plowed under as green manure. All too rarely are green manure crops grown to be turned under as soil improvers. _ The reason for this seeming forgetfulness is not care lessness, but is simply an expression of the ambition of Ontario farmers to make their soils return an inâ€" creasing interest on investment. Nevertheless, forgetfuiness to keep up the Organic matter in the soil has ruined many a good countryâ€" side and it is inevitable that farms where such neglect has been prac tised will face a deteriorating soil which very quickly will mean loss and less crops. _ ANSWER: The humus or organic matter supply in cultivated soils in Ontario bids fair to become a major problem. In some sections, farmers are burning straw piles. In many others they are keeping less and less livestock which means a diminâ€" ishing supply of manure. In still other sections, they are growing culâ€" tivated crops such as curn, potatoes the organic matter or ilâ€"l;!rn'l;l'â€"-]-);'ob' lem ? OTTAWA. â€"â€" The Dominion Burâ€" eau of Statistics has reported a conâ€" siderable decline in August automoâ€" bile production compared with that of a year before. Auto Production Lower In August 1. QUESTION : How important is with the coâ€"operation of the PROFESSOR HENRY G. arm Problems tion of the various departments of io Agricultural College. HENRY W. BELL, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Ontario Agricultural College. a idea of the fertilizer value of this material when it is left on the ground. ANSWER: Tomato fruit contains about 2 per cent. nitrogen, 7 per cent phosphoric acid and 35 per cent. potâ€" ash, while the leaves and stalks con tain about 35 per cent. nitrogen, 1 per cent phosphoric acid and 45 per cent. potash,. This will give you whore we grew tomatoes this year, quite a lot remained on the ground after picking. We live near enough to the canning factory so that we can get considerable waste pulp and skins of tomatoes. â€" Have these any value as fertilizer? ANSWER: If the soil is in good condition, about neutral in reaction, that is, neither sour nor sweet, there should be a considerable amount of phosphate and potash which was apr plied for the beets still available in the soils for crops of next year. In all probability, the rai. and snow will have removed much 0" the solâ€" uable nitrogen, but green crops or corn which are grown on this soil next year should find a comns:derable help from the phosphate and potash which was added for the sugar beets. 8. QUESTION: What {fertilizer value has the waste from tomatoes? Address all inquiries to Farm Problems Dept., Wilson Publish ing Co., Room 421, 73 AdelaOide ©t W.. Toronto, Ont. of agriculture, on"l(c the attenâ€" tion of Ontario farmers from day to day. Through this column _ farmers may secure the latest informa tion pertaining to their difficultâ€" been gathered _ regarding â€" liveâ€" stock and livestock management, crop production, soil manage ment, disease and insect control and business organization of the farming _ industry. Individual problems involving one or more of these ,and many other phases The business of farming yearly becoming more and n dependent upon facts that | 2. QUESTON: 1 fertilized for sugar beets and lost the crop. Will there be any plantfood left in the oil from the fertilizer that was ap plied ? Yhen Ontario farmers fully apâ€" preciate the great service» of organic matter, much more attention will be given to this important phase of soil handling. manure during the preceding 20 years. At the time of writing (midJuly, 1934) the barley on this old manured plot is strikingly better tha. that on the old unmanured land, suggesting some benefit from the farmyard manure given more than 60 years ago. We have noi yet sue ceeded in accounting satisfactorily for this result." During the month 448 cars and trucks were imported into the coun try and 8,449 were exported. A total of 4,660 units was proâ€" duced in August compared with 7,â€" 692 in August, 19385. Of these, 3,051 passenger vehicles compared with 5,524 and 1,609 commercial cars or trucks with 2,168. Stockings, belts and such small arâ€" ticles may be pushed into shoes, which travel best round the sides of the case. ie Pack your suitcase fairly tightly. The contents will then keep in postâ€" tion and stand less chance of becomâ€" ing crumpled. A piece of tissue paper where the fold comes will help to save frocks from creases. Pleats will arrive in good order it they are lightly tacked along the hem, Without going into the psychoiogâ€" ical reasons behind it, Marsh said driving seems to stimulate the "showâ€"off" and the "dareâ€"devil" more than other types. "It is quite true," Marsh explainâ€" ed, "that a man may be polite and quiet in his office and home, yet a little tilt with tough traffic will reâ€" veal that he‘s a bully at heart." A half mile through tooting horns, screeching brakes and traffic police men, he said, will bring out: A violent temper; merves; tendency to fatigue; timidity; â€" manners ang sportsmanship. "If a prospective bride," said Burâ€" ton Marsh, director of the safety and traffic engineering department, "really wants to know her future husband‘s mind, let her ride with him through a traffic jam; she‘ll learn things." WASHINGTON â€" The Americ: Automobile Association asser‘s t the best guidance to man‘s charact is the way he drives his car. \ She sailed for Englana on Aquitania, concluding a visit began in May. NEW YORK â€"~ The Dowager Marchioness of Reading ended a 10,000â€"mile incognito tour of the United States recently, impressed by |\ "a freedom of life and a delight to lwork" which she found among the Lady Reading said her tour prompted by the love of he: husband, the Marguess of Nea for the United Stutes. Driving Test As Character We Prospective Brides Advi Observe Groom‘s "Temperament. She also commenteo up ‘‘splendid way in which the have spent their money to their cities and States. "One of the things that nas ticularly struck me in every and small town 1 have visited, Marchioness said, "has been latent and supert wealth thai in the youth of the country ," The Marchioness attended t two major political conventions, w a guest at the White House and . other friends in the East and Sout Then set out by automobile to gr a firsthand glimpse of life in United States and what America; thought about it. She did not disciuse her idents at any time, she said, and talked â€" business men, workers farme: persons of all walks of life in : States. She appealed â€" the sentence, and charged lack of jurisdiction. The case passed through superior court, where the sentence was upheld. It never came up for a hearing in twe higher courts, although it remained "alive." Attorneys for the accused appear ed here with a showing that the ap pellate court ruled in a case against Francis Lederer, motion picture star, that there is no legal speed limit in California. They asked dismissa of the case, and the court concur red. Englishwoman Finds People of U.S. Have "Delight in Work an hour. She was tried before Jusâ€" tice of the Peace Kenneth Morrison here, and was sentenced to five days in jail, three of which she served before she was released under the habeas corpus. She appealed â€" the sentence, and Mrs. Fether was arrested after an officer pursued her at 58 mutes Not only that, but during the time the case was awaiting disposiâ€" tion the appeliete court has held that California‘s statutory speed limit is not binding. It required five years for Mrs. Fether to obtain legal vindicatton on a charge of drivin> an automobile more than 40 miles an hour, and while her case was pending the state legislature changec the speed limit to 45 miles an hour SANTA ANA, Calif.â€" Mrs, Edna Fether of Downey, Calif. has learnâ€" ed anew that the mills of jusitce grind slowly. k Woman Learns Of Mills of J us tice Took Her Five Years To Get Vindication On Speedâ€" ing Count Packing Hints pc 8, Wns ind of Soutn. 1 1 mch at 1} ate the the ns l 99 it

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