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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1929)
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1929. ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW fsaued Daily Except Sunday by The Newt-Review Co., (no. Slt-mWr of The Atxlfa Ird Irr. Th AnntntPd Prt-HH is exol uhI vt-ly entitled to the use for republl cation of all news dlhputt hi . .a n-Uitd to It or not othrwl credited io this paper and to an locm news nuoiiHiii-a iK-rtin. ah rigiiia 01 rvpuuuu- lion 01 aptscmi uiBiti'.iic iioi cm . c -.. . . . OUT OUR WAY ByWffliams HARRIS ELLSWORTH... ..Editor Entered aa second clam matter May 17, 1S20, at the post office at Roaeburg, Oregon, under Act of March 2, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ttallv. ner vnar. bv mail Dally alx molilbs. by mall.. Dally, three nuntha. by mall Uaily, lnKle month, by mall . Dally, by carrier, per month 4.00 2 00 1.00 .60 .60 ROSSBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY. APRIL 13. 1929. "I'M THE CONSTITUTION" THE senate of Louisiana hns impeached the governor of the state, Huey P. Long, on a long and rather stunning catalogue of charges. Those w ho initiated the movement for impeachment were not disinterested. They are representa tives of the oil industry, enraged because the governor had forced through an occupation tax on the refining of oil. But the governor had laid himself wide open. There was plenty of material to work on. A recent characteristic incident gives a fair view of Governor Long's outlook on his official position. A state senator at a committee meeting became enraged at the gov ernor's interference with legislation and threw a copy of the constitution at the executive's head. "Maybe you've heard of this book!" he yelled. The governor looked at the title and threw the book aside, saying: "I'm the constitution just now." Caesar could have said no more, nor Kaiser Wilhelm in the days of his glory nor Mussolini. But it seems to have been typical of Long. Nineteen charges have been brought against the gover nor as the basis for the impeachment. Among them are "crimes, misdemeanors, incompetency, corruption, favori tism, oppression in office and gross misconduct." Perhaps the most serious specification is one that the governor sought i to bribe a plugugly to murder a state representative who op posed his course, promising money and immunity from i punishment. Whatever may be the truth concerning the charges of criminality against the governor the records show that he has been carrying a political dictatorship with a high hand. In eight months of office he completely subjugated the Highway commission, the Board of Health, the Orleans Parish Levee board, the Board of Liquidation, the Board of Education and the administration of the two great charity hospitals of the state. From each and every one of these boards he has ruthlessly turned out all who opposed his will in anything. The record shows a long list of incidents il lustrative of his interference with independence of action by any of them. He seems to have a more completely puppet government that Italy has. ; One night last February Covernor Long in direct vio lation of constitutional inhibition, ordered out sta(,e militiamen- to raid restaurants where he thought there was gamb ling. No gambling was found but a large number of men and women who were dining and dancing wore arrested in the places. Then the governor ordered that all those ar rested bo stripped and searched. The order was carried out, in a few cases forcibly. When newspapers denounced him for his flagrant exhibition of autocracy the governor's an swer was "We'll do worse." .' "L' etat e'est moi," said Louis XIV. "I'm the con stitution," said the governor of Louisiana. Louis' assumption that he was the state, followed to its logical conclusion by those who came after him, carried Louis XVI to the guillo tine. Governor Long's .similar delusion of grandeur seems to be bringing retribution loss tardy and not so vicarious. ; , o .. TTllVP Vflll 0-rtt Vnlir l,Vp,ln Ta vnnv irn.it in frfi1.1 ch'ini? Have your boots been waterproofed? These are the really important questions of the day. The trout season opens Monday. , i -TUEM ,l-OP SWOVEFcS . M A l-AuGil-4. -THERE TwtE." ACE TRVlW 1 -f1 DOPE OUT HOV-J C MAKE A MACWIUE. OO "TNO DAWS VMORv-f IN ONE, AM' "THERE'S A CrOW aufef GOiM VW3T WHO, r-tw i- PA.T" T-WO WEEKS, HA BEEM OMU-t DCM' ONE OAVS VNOOK" INI TNO- s M66 .WOU'O -TUlMK" friEW'D Y xMOTis-te. hhi. mi r-ii-fn X- "VUoY WE. WAS, VvALK'tkl' IM A SHAOOvW "TiLL I -SEEkl -IrV SORE FlMCER.. TH' LiGwr Side -ft-V side. -THAT'S OM A VACAtiON. MOvN IF HE CM C.ET TH OTMEP FlkiOEf? BOM&EO UP FEP? "Tv-JO VmEW3- HE'LL HAsJE HAD A WHOLE MOmTH tift I r - " .'" -4. .. ' l; tfMp rx w m Ms. WAAL.P OFF." RtQ. U. S. PAT. OFT. ' 1MB. BV NCA StfWrCC, INC. him Notes! sprint The fertilization of soil for to matoes iu Oregon some times pre sents a problem to the gardener. While a good foliage growth fa necessary for a full crop of fruit, there is a possibility of the plants making too great - a growth of leaves and stems at the expense of the fruit. Fresh manure is not good, as any fertilizer for toma toes is heat well rotted, fine and thoroughly mixed with milk and used instead of fresh for apple Charlotte; or used making meat pies, balls, or kled over cauiiiiower. Wilted vegetables may be fresh ened by soaking ihem a short lime before U3ing in cold water, con taining a little salt. Candy pans are better greased with butler, because some of the grease from the pan will stick to i tie candy and wilt be tasted first when the candy Is eaten. Two or three ounces of balanced or complete commercial fertilizer !s often used in growing tomatoes, being applied at the time the plant is set in the garden, says the ex periment station. Unsweetened canned milk gives h -ii I better results than sweetened if A study of vegetable varieties used in Oregon indicates that the standard varieties are preferred, and with few exceptions, the num ber of varieties of each vegetable selected by the gardener is small, although there is a large variety offered by seed men. A copy of the suggested list can be ohtained by writing the experiment station. Office flr I CatWI Judge thinks thn difference in a hippo and a rhyno a that the rhyno has n radiator cap. And we're to mippone, probably, tliut a ctime) has a rumble seat. Thorn's nothing now. The mod ern sanitary package was invent ed years ao by the hen. If the nose bo thf index to char acter, how should one character- lzo Die man who has hud hl3 smashed? Harmonized With Chicago "You say she went, to a finishing Bchool In Chicago, What sort of u polirth did h gut?" "(lun-inctal polish." (UlreHKlng a scientific societies, "it will lake at least a billion yeurs tor tiie cluater to arrive." KANSAS CITY, April 12. Tony Boni'llo, on trial for the robbery of the Homo Trust company uu.l the murrlor of a policeman, Jamucs H. (Happy) Smith, yesterday pleaded guilty to both churges ami was sentenced to lite In the peni tentiary. , ' SPOKANE, April 12. Mrs. Frances l. Newenham, of the Unl vmtiity of Washington faculty,, waa chosen president of the northwest music supervisors, conference here yesterday by more than 300 teach ers of Washington, Idaho, Montana and Orog-on. Portland, Ore., will probably ho the Bfi'iio of the next biennial con forenoo, it waa indicated. EDITORIALS ON THE DA'S NEWS (Continued from page 1) The newspapers will cease to chronlclo the doings of Mrs. Mc pherson and her mother Just aa soon as the public quits reading what, is printed. The newspapers, perhaps unfortunately, have to print what the public likes to read. Now that airplanes are being sold on the Insi ailment basis,1 col lectors will have to luarn to Ely. Experience is something you get while looking for soinetlilti'; else. The fellow who Bpends his time knocking the town didn't put up uny of Its tall buildings. MANY VETERANS HAVE NOT APPLIED FOR COMPENSATION BOOZE SEIZED ON SHIP (AHRoctntH Pren8 l.poiwd W.rol NKW YOIUC, April . 13. Four hiiliclri'd liotilcB nf clmmpiiKne and brunily wt-rti ucl.ctl unlay by cus toms tMirm-conii'iit buroau aK'Ut3 lu Urn bilKcu of tlio Fabro llnor Pi'ovlilom-o at hor pier In Brook lyn. The Fabro lino is subject to a fine in' $5 tor each bottlo of liquor BOllIOll. Considerable Interest is mani fested In Oregon at this tlre in the growing of beets for r 'ning purposes. An important coir i lera tion is using the right number of pounds of seed per acre. 'This vary of course with the dls:-ace between the rows. As a general rule five to seven pounds are used per acre when th rows are 24 in ches apart. Thinning the plants is undesirable from the cost stand point, hence the importance of ob serving the thickness of seeding, says the experiment station. no fresh milk can be obtained. Wild Turkey Increasing In United States. Once Almost Extinct, Fowl Now Getting Plentiful; Can't -Be Stalked by Man. LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE OBJECTS TO NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING CIGARETTES HOME POINTERS (From School of Home Economics) Appropriate Bauces for various meat dishes are: Mint sauce with roast Iamb. Horseradish with roast beef. Caper sauce with mutton. Apple sauce with roast pork. Tomato sauce with roast veal. Cranberry sauce with turkey. Illack currant jelly with roast duck. When steaming a pudding, if th saucepan in which you are boiling potatoes is placed over the steam er, one gas or electric burner will cook botli pudding and potatoes. Two tablespoons of butter to one cup of top milk may be substituted for cream In a recipe. When bread Is stale, but not too hard, It may be cut in cubes and fried or baked brown in the oven, then stored in a tin container until ready to use in soups; or rolled to crumbs with a rolling pin for use in frying fish, steaks, veal chops, chicken, or croquettes. The bread crumbs may a'lso be soaked- In ROSEBURG, April 13. Editor . News-Keview. Aa a reader of the News-Review, I have enjoyed much that you have written in your daily column. In the issue of April l'jih, however, your comment upon ci garettes disgusts me. Is the merit of a newspaper to be Judged mere ly by the amount of advertising it promotes? And is business to be judged merely by the volume of sates or of piOfitB? ghall no re gard be given to the value of the community advertised ? A: e the baker and the cigarette manufac turer equals, viewed from the standpoint of public benefactors? Shalt we forget all that we learned in school about the evil effects of cigarettes? Should not a real newspaper be more ashamed of having advertised and promoted the sale of cigarettes to our hoys and girls than in boasting about how they have helped boost the cigarette industry? I believe in ad vertising and have used your puoa to advantage. I can easily under stand why the cigarette people use newspapers to promote their busi ness. I do not understand how a newspaper can use its pages to ad vertise something Injurious to the health of our youth and then de clare itself the champion of the people. You may use this in your columns If you like. Yours truly FOSTER BUTNER. (Los Angeles Herald) "From various parts of the coun try for the last few years there have come reports that the wi.d . turkey, almost extiuct except in thickly wooded mountainous and inaccessible regions, is becoming more numerous, and is even ven turing nearer the settlements than has been its habit. At one time U inhabited almost all parts of the United Stales and southern Canada, as well as the greater part of Mexico. ' In fact, in Jefferson s time, little more than a century ago, a wi.d turkey cou.d be bought on the streets of the na tional capital for five cents- To day a wild turkey for sale at any price in Washington would cause a stampede ol woulu-oe purcuas ers. The wild turkey is even larger than our domesticated variety, the latter being derived from tne Mexican variety. In habits -the wild birds are much the same as our barnyard fowls, however, ex cept that they are stronger of wing, being able to attain a speed in f.ight of more than a mile a min ute, according to close, observers. The sight and hearing of wild tur keys are so keen that they cannot be stalked by man successfully, but must be sought by the hunter while lying in wait for his quarry's appearance. The -apparent comeback of the wild turkey, after being almost ex tinct, is the cause of much inter est on the part of nature lovers. "Nor is the mere killing of him," says Archibald Rutledge. "the only sport that his return affords. His presence once more in our forests will invest them with the spirit of the primeval wildness that no man wis es this county ever wholly to lote." CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank the people for their kindness and their many floral offerings during the illness and death of our father. D. M. Smith and family, A. B. Smith and family. Noah Rose and family. Walter Kincaid and family. Wm. Goodman and family. Fred Hanna and family. Scott Smith and family. ' Z. B. Smith. C. T. Smith. RELEASED FROM JAIL Three of the prisoners in the county jail were released from custody today. Fred Day, accused of larceny of hides was released after serving a 30-day term, while Stanley Becktell and Harold Em ery, serving terms for vagrancy, were also released. There are now six occupants in the jail. DR. NERBAS DENTIST Painless Extraction Gas When Desired Pyorrhea Treated Phone 481 Masonic Bldg. . WEEKLY SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Nolhlnii nuikus daiit'lilcr more Indignant lliau father's not being! or nmtinu corps able. In make enough money inol her can dress us she docs. You don't iioed a press a?ent to attract attention. Have somebody tow you hi.- POEM FOR THE DAY By LOUIS ALBERT BANKS We've oflen wondered why wom en kiss each olher when they greet. Maybe U'b because some of them would never get uny kiss otherwise. We never have all weather in March. the March HEARING A SERMON TWELVE THOUSAND ! MILES AWAY The Associated Press of PiltsLmrrt, Pennsylvania, slates that an Eastern sermon was broadcast from the Shadysidc Pres byterian church by the- Rev. Hugh Thompson Kerr, and Easier music was broadcast by the choir; all of which was plainly heard in Antarctica by Commander Byrd and his party, and re sponded to by him. Twelve thousand miles in yonder jd"om And yet within the preaching room Of this tjoud Doctor Thompson Kerr! Ah, under what tremendous spur He must have sent his message rare Half round the woild through God's fice air To souls awaiting evciy woid. And (hanking Cod fur what ihey heard 1 Down in that land of ice and snow, With nothing else but radio To link them with the C'luistian woild By song and speech thuin;h ether hurled How they did haik with bated breath To Easter triumph over death I How sweet the message sounded there Which they with those at home could share! There were no careless listcnrrs in ; They sought his eveiv woid to wm; Imagination caught the hue Of him who spoke these wuuls of race. Gave vision ot that distant choir Whose sinking soothed their heart's desiie. And so that quirt Pittsburgh room Illumed that fat Antarctic i;loom. Yet each true sermon that we hear Comes from another hemisphere. Brings us a message from the skies Beyond the reach of- human ryes. God grant us quit k, awakened ear a For heaven's cure for all our fears, That over God's great radio We gel the help to make ua giuw. "We will now hold the Insula' lion of oft leers. "Installation, not insulation." "You may ho right, but thest are live-wire officers." Approximately SOO.000 veterans of the World war have not applied for the federal adjusted couiprn siUiim bonus acordlng to tnforina- , lion received by Umpqua 1'ost No. Hi, Amnrinu: Legion. Lous of near ly a billion dollars faces World war veternns who have failed to make' application. ' An honorably discharged vetor- J an who served in the army, navy for mure limn. so 1 sixty days belween April f, 11)17, and July 1, lllli), providing he be- gan his service before the Aniil-i slice, is enlith-d lo the benmits of! 1 he ad justed com prima lion law. To be valid, applications must be filed in Washington before Janu ary 2, 1931). Through the efforts of the American Legion, congress re cently extended the expiration date from January 1, lDliS. Relatives of deceased ex service men may make application for (he "bonus" and will ' In helped to complete the application binnks If they will call on either the iirvi officer or adjutant The Influence of a Good Ruler Do You Know Your Own State? t:pprptft from "OroRim (u-oRrnplilc Niiiiiph" Iij Mi Arthur, which ex plain the orlRln ot iiumr nt KiMiRi-aphlc liuiilmnrks through out the flute. ! post. No exprniio lor this boI'vum1. l.o.is ot ann.v-.discharin1 dors not coal a vrtonin his adjusted emu ptuistitlon. ort'lctM-8 ot Unipqua post, Amorlcan Li'Klon, will Kindly furnish blanks and assist uny vnt cran in making application. Do not delay. FIVE TEXAS CONVICTS FLEE TUBERCULAR WARD Toxt: II Chron. 30:1-9, 26-27. Ami Ilozekiah BVnl to all Israel and Jmluh, and wrote letters also to K aim and Manasseh. that they should come to the house of the Lord at Jerusalem, to keep the pussover unlo the Lord God of s'-iel. For tho kiiiK hail- taken counsel, and his princes, and all the con Kieaalloii in Jerusalem, to keep the passover in the second month. For thev could not keep it at that time, Localise the priests had not sanctified themselves sulriciently, -neither had the people gathelctl themselves toRether to Jerusalem. And the thlnir pleased the kins and all the congregation. , So Ihey established a decree to make proclamation throughout all -Israel Horn lleersheha even to Dan, that they should come to keep the pasiover unlo the Lord Clo.l of Israel at Jerusalem: for they had not done It ot a long time in such sort as it was written. ,,.,, So the posts went with the letters Horn the king and his princes throughout all Israel and Judah. and according to the commandment of the king, saving, Ye children of Israel, turn again unto the Lord t.od of Abraham. Isaac, and Israel, and he will return to the remnant of you that are escaped out of the hand of the kings of Assyria. And be not ye like your fathers and like your brethren, which tres passcd against the Lord liod of their fathers, who therefore gave them up to desolation, as ye see. Now be Ve not stiffuecked, as your fathers were, but yield your selves unto liie Lord, and enter Into his sanctuary, which he hath sanc- rnipnua ; tilled torevnv: nnd serve the Lord your uod, mat me nerceiiuio ui . TODAY: DYAR ROCK 11 YAH HOCK. Craler Lake National I'aik, Klamath couniy .This rock is on the south run Crater Lake, anil bus an ele vation of 7SSU feet. It was naineii in 1S72 by Captain i. O. C. Applegate for Leioy S. liyar. of Ontario. Cal.. then In dian agent on the Klamath In dian reservation, and later a member of the Modoc Tcaee commission. liyar was ibe only member of tho conimls sti.ll who escaped uninjured when attaeked by Captain Jack and his hand of Indians in the Lava Mills. April II. 1S7H. at which lime (leneral K II. S. Canliy and Mr. Iv Thomas were kllh'ii and Chairman A. II. Meiit'iiam w-, woundi-d and left I or dead. For if ye turn again unlo the Lord your brethren and your chil dren shall find compassion before them, that lead them captive, so that they ahull come again into this land: for the Lord your God is gra cious nnd merciful, and will not turn away his face from you, If ye re tuin unto '"tin congregation of Judah, with the priests and tho I evites and all the congregation that came out of Israel, and the strangers that came out, of the land of Israel, and that dwelt in Judah, " "so'there was great Jov 111 Jerusalem: for since the time of Solomon the sen or David king of Israel thero was not the like in Jerusalem. t,.. ti, ,,,-tests the l.evltes arose and blessed the people: and t v-H ii,,i pn-'w i 1 wir ) Itl rlr voice waa heard, and their prayer came up to his holy dwelling IIOI -!TO Tev Anril l'l Five ' plttce. even unto heaven, long ten,, 'convict', sawed' their! Th, International Uniform nation as was ftelglum during the way out of the tubercular ward at j Sundry School Lesson for Apnl recent Wor Id ar The g l tl, Win..,, ulinr. i.ils.iT, farm north I 14. in imiuenco 01 a uuuu i o ......... . Ruler. II Chron. du:i-, stale 1 of here slionly before midnkiit last til ht and escaped in a heavy ilow niiiuir of rain. All available gil-ir.ls and bloodhounds ' took up heir trail. Among the five was .!.,!. Silver, serving a life sentence for I he murder of a theatre cashier al Ft. Worth. Ionia on the east, and Assyria on thn north met here in contending conflict : and thou;:h the center of power shifted later to the west with the Use of the Grecian and Itoman empirei, Palestine contin ued lo be tl-o place of conflict ; --.iv r.ii ..i., , ,1,-.1 NEWS BRIEFS II NMH.L, Mo.. April YA. Nor val L. Urady, s!t, hist of the hn biHd phiyutais lu re of Mark i Tw aln. died today. I lliady as the '(".nil" 1'iady of Samuel t'lemeuit" writings. NEXT WEEK'S WEATHER (.-iitt'tt l'iv I iMM'tl Wir SAX KKANt'lSeo, April 13. , The weather outlook for the wvvk beginnim; April 11. as announc ed lit re u-.lvy by the Tniied S!at!.- I weather bureau as follows: "l-'ar weMei n si ates : Outlook Is tor .neutral rloadinesH with rain at i linos over the Fact fie north- 'western Mntes ami probably ovt r the plate:. n reuion and Nevada and rem rti I C'UU'tH nui. There w til be snow s in the hlh numnU.in i langt'.i, '"i'etnneratures w ill bo ahum 1 normal." tin nnil naril turn hinvi i;t lilv tn Jill restored and it is to- this rTnminH,inn of the moral fouiuU inai roiereiu-e is niuuu in r.y WM. K. flll.KOY. D. D. Kdltor of Thn Congi egationulh-t llvKeklah stands in lliblica splcuoua I'xar.tpie of the fact that y.-here the east and west met. where destroyed this kingdom and car- has been repeated again and again, a man may revover from his mis- furmrrly north and south had ried many of its people off into Nations, like Individuals, in suffer- f.w.o in) .i mi nf 1 he deeper truin r,tnnd in r va rv. ranliv IV. I ills Kllicaom was that a man's character is not hi- n . n, . tni sumuUm con- never ways to be judged by his errors of .:,,,, ttn almost eontlnuous men- event judgment. ae to the people of" Israel, but speaking of the Asjiiiminu Hut Isaiah's jndff- there was the further dancer. Israel. nunt was clear and sound, He see- somewhat lntensifle I, through the The poidlion of Hezekiah and i kiah bad been mistaken, lfalah tendency of a people thus harried the propheo.es relating to ins ; disapproved of Hexi kiah a fore tun between two foes, to seek allianoo kingdom must be understood iu policy, which bad hail the effect with the contending nation that relation to these events. Ho waa nf emhroillni; Israel in the quar- seemed most likely to triumph. It king of the. Southern Kingdom i''-ls of other nations, and be had was under those circumstances the Kingdom of Judah. And 1 pi-oiiouncrd judgnnn.a against that the prophets took an almost against the prophet's counsel he ! Htwkiah who. as we havn seen in consistent attitude in opposition had made alliance with Egypt "lost ten tribes of aim. The Assyria, result, of Two Kingdoms --o- ' n former lesion, while ho made to what would be called today tuning profession of the inteurity ntauKlli.g alliances." : of his purpose, bad "wept sore, and in recognition of his sincere repentt noe bud had firteen years One mm t rememher that at the added to his life. ' Ynv of tkose lessons tho former t Th Situation Kingdom of Israel was divided j It Is necessary tor an under into two kngdoms the Northern ruder the leadership t-fit-Hiii g of the polittoal and so- Kingdom, known as Tito Kingdom the nation turns to course, was to tons of their life. It may seem a somewhat coward ly process, and we may command rather the man or the nation who in the fulluers of prosperity and comfort searches the heart and ex amines the outward life and strives simply as a matter of righteous ness to make that life what it ought to be. Possibly this record, as similar records in history, partakes too much nf that nnrient Israeli' ish place the Kingdom of Judah and philosophy of moral cause and of IN GREAT DEMAND A movie director w;is d'i with a woman tho dluiculty part in a WILLIAMS HAY. Wis., April X j ing a pamcular -lo noi be alarmed, says lr. IC. S. : coming play. Krost. director of Yerkes observa ' "i want." he lory, over the fact thai a group of suns. Known as the cluster of ller j culos, is travelltm toward tho earth at tho rate of 2iP miles a tieiond. i of fill-forth- !cial backgrounds of th Old Testa- of Israel, or the Kingdom of the consecration. meat prophecies to picture vivid- Ton Tribes, nnd the Southern Tjie disaster ly in ones mind the situation oi Kingdom or Juon. consisting or Palestine and its peoples in the the two tribes. The story ot how its people in dan tier of much the Sit me calamity that nan over v helmed the Northern Kingdom. It is in these circumstances that of Hezkiah prayer aud said. "Lvou hi tuib lemlic bpveU, ' vounn man who looks Hi;o Lindheigh. tall, blue oyed and has sex iippe.il. a M'nse of humor and an ;;ir of distinction." "too do I' eke sUkeJ. Tit tiu. ancient world. If im looks at the map, ono s-es bow this little country, its in 1 vhitalde poriifu almot fifty jiilloH wide by ono hundred and un niiJc! Ionic. Mood in lh very center of contending empires a kuller state, iu much the tame bit- that has over whelmed Israel and that is impend ing for Judah is interpreted as a judgment upon the sins of the peo ple and of their fometf ulness of this division came to be Is prob ably well known to all Bible stu dents , but it w ill be found iu Ht. .KiiiEs, chapter 1-. At tne time or our , lesson tne nnrtea in turn rroni the way Northern Kingdom bad just fal- their fathers and to repent. ten under the assault of the Sargou Repeated in History. feet. As we continue the study of the prophecies we Khali see that later prophets ultimately face this question, and they come to rather a new viewpoint in which the suf ferings of a people are not all at tributable to moral laps or dis regard of Go.I, but In which th1 ver ysaliits themselves are called upon by Gml to fulfill their destiny and his purpose In suffering even Jesus fulfilled the purpose itod. The remnant that has escap- of God in Calvary. e.t tne devastation of Hargon is ex- This stage of tnonb, tie teaching f and this conception of nationni events ought to bo considered in tho light of the deeper and larger II, kins of A&bna, who iu 7J2 It is a chapter iu uittury that view of the later prophecies.