Cheraw chronicle. (Cheraw, S.C.) 1896-2005, November 03, 1921, Image 7
n i AT least not to tt
V^MpF/^ /-\ who uses OccoSelf-Rising
Floi
simply mixes it v
E??ry ia?k #f or water and sh
Fteur"e*rri?"i ?i*? pours the batter
iidian hmh tins and bakes it t
P 3 And what light
biscuits she sets b<
family.
She also make!
and hot cakes, the s
w I And they are woi
\ tender and good.
I AUSTI
I occoyon
thould ask for Perr- AVp// " J
loss when you want tho
Takes the Guess oul
*
mm
Hi
*
n
Prince Albert'*
note in the
*
Talking about rolling ,
your own cigarettes, we'll up
tell you right here that eas
Prince Albert tobacco has sta
'em all lashed to the mast! int
You've got a handful-ofhappiness
coming your di- ins
rection when you pal it with *? *
A. and the makin's 1
papi^Sppr.Prince Albert tha
, is not only delightful to sm
your taste and pleasing in one
its refreshing aroma,but our the
? exclusive patented process sm
frees it from bite and parch! wa
prince a
the national joy i
For Cleaning
Bathtubs, Kitch<
% 1j and Marl
Use SAPOLIO. Quick!
f >v the stains and makes eve
(-?f |?A like new. See that
- r. i i i.J w ?*? Urt-A r> a n/M i/^v
'fcHd " ' is on ever
3^ "^7 jk EN0CH ^0RGAN
IjSSlrSAPt
^??^??^?^?_^?^mmm??
(j^Foui
The next time ^ AUA 1
i you buy calomel
Aft "V* J"
oolr few columns of
3.SK. lOr Ifwhffjrou*
ADVE
,c*- w"
(J?J? s.m<
Youwi
? printing
The purified and refined i Hethi
calomel tablets that are Heads,!
nausealess, safe and sure. ding II
Medicinal virtues retain- public
ed and improved. Sold mem be
only in sealed packages. ou^ ^
Price 35c" lowest
with g<
/ hn' i
> no secret about I
>od biscuits! I
ie woman ing never disappoints be- "
nee-chee cause she uses flour, baking f
nr. She powder, soda and salt al- ^
nth milk ways in exactly the right I.
ortening, proportions. They come al- '
into the ready mixed in Occo-nee- :
o a turn, chee Flour and cost less than r
feathery when bought separately,
efore her ^ Both seasoned and unex- |perienced
cooks can get the rj
waffles same perfect results from [
ame way. Occo-nee-chee Flour. Order j;
iderfully it from your grocer. The I .
Her bak- Indian Head is on every bag. I
N-HEATON COMPANY I
Durham, N. C. ?
; I
NEE-CHEE I
Rising Flour I
t of Baking and Saves you Money *
^
> a new
! joys of rolling 'em!
A-J -T-_ _ -i.
tt.nu, iui a iaci, iuuiu&
Prince Albert is mighty:
iy! P. A. is crimp cut and
ys put and you whisk it Print* Albert i*
, . . told in toppy red
0 shape before you can bags, tidy red tint.
* * handsome pound
int three! And, the next
tant you're puffing away
>eat the band! ......
Prince Albert is so good
it it has led four men to
oke jimmy pipes where
1 was smoked before! It's Jj
j greatest old buddy- J
oke that ever found its g
y into a pipe or cigarette!
Tobacco Co:
> Winston-Salem,
imoke n.c.
. Mellon Furnishes Surprise.
Washington?Withheld since March
? Tilfh 3, last, when former Attorney General
> Palmer held the use of beer as a
QirilrC medicine to be legal under the prohibition
laws, the issuance of beer
1 regulations came as a complete surprise
to leaders of the dry forces, who
declared there had been an under
iy removes standing that the new rules should not
rything look he promulgated until the senate had
the name actetl upon the peD(Jing anti-heer bill.
, Issuance of the beer regulations
y package. wj 11 cause redoubled efforts to effect
'S SONS CO tlie passage of the anti"beer measure.
ictarera Much Cotton Already Ginned.
U.S. A. Washington. ? A larger percentage
of the country's cotton crop had been
? ginned to October 28 this year than
^ n m had been ginned in any previous
)LIOJ
j New York?Disclosure of the fact
that the loot in the mail truck hold~
" up in Broadway included nearly $500," ""
- 000 in bonds, coupled with Postmaster
1 ' General Hayes' offer of $5,000 reward
J- x!$ % for the robbers, set scores of detecuQuliOIlSw.
tives working on a theory that the
rich haul was an "inside job."
fortunes SP
^wasnington. ? normal restoration
of peace between the United States
, and Fermany awaits the exchange in
ire to the sdrerttrtnf Berlin of ratification papers and will
Mf*. occur some days from now.
RTISE IT. *
1 ?all it ! # Fob. Boston?Fred H. Moore, of counsel
for Niccola Sacco and Bartolomeo
Vanzettit convicted of murder, in a
^ statement deplored the sending of a
bomb to Ambassador Herrick in Paris
supposedly by sympathizers with the
condemned men.
? Tim A ?
/ JL aAK&'w Seven Years' Sentence.
disappeared following the failure of
[ be ill need of the Bank of Gray in April of this year,
t i i returned, pleaded guilty to a charge
^ OI SOme Kinu* of embezzlement and received a senSr
it be letter- tence of seven years.
statements wed- Washington.?Federal action affectivitations
or ing the railroad strike situation was
Sale bills TC- taken by two departments of the gov9
ernment when the International Comr
we can turn merce Commission ordered freight
a WOrk at the rate re(*uctions on grains. grain pro,
ducts and hay in the territory beCOSt
Consistent tween the Mississippi river and the
>od work. Pacific coast.
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SimdaySchool
' LessonT
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.,
Teacher of English Bible in the Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
Copyright, 1921. Western Newspaper Union.
LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 6
PAUL'S EXPERIENCES AT JERUSALEM.
LESSON TEXT-Acts 21:18-23:24.
GOLDEN TEXT?God is our refuge and
strength, a very present help In trouble.
Therefore will we not fear him.?Pa
46:1, 2 (a).
REFERENCE MATERIAL - II Tim.
2:16-18; 4:14, 15.
PRIMARY TOPIC?How Paul's Nephew
Saved His Life.
JUNIOR TOPIC?A Boy Tells of a Plot
[ Against Paul.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
?Paul and His Enemies.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
?Paul Attacked by a Jewish Mob.
I. Paul's Arrest (21:18-40).
The Immediate occasion of this was
his effort to remove the prejudice
which certain oues held against liiiu.
His reception by representatives of
the church was most cordial. In order
that all the brethren in Jerusalem
might graciously receive him, it was
.? i>im iho oliU>r>t flint
piujjuatru ii/ iiiiu uj v. ? . ??
he take a Jewish vow to prove
that he wns in no way opposed to the
law. They recognized that such an
act would in no way compromise or
Involve the Gentile brethren. As to
how far tills act conciliated the Jews
we are not told, but it only enraged
the unbelieving Jews, causing them to
resort to mob law. These maddened
Jews, on the basis ^ of a supposition,
seized him and dragged him from the
temple and beat him mercilessly, intending
to put him to death. Paul
was rescued from the mob by the
Roman guard, stationed nearby. Paul
kept himself under control and policy
asked permission of-the captain
to speak to the people. When he addressed
him In Greek and quoted his
Roman citizenship, the captain granted
his request
IK Paul's Defense (22:1-27).
1. His claim for a rightful hearing
(vv. 1-3). (1) His birth (v. 3).- He
was a Jew born in Tarsus, a city of
no mean reputation. (2) Hl$ education
(v. 3). He was educated in school
under the tutorship of Gamaliel, and
instructed "according to the perfect
manner of the fathers" (v. 3). His
zeal (v. 3). He was as zealous toward
God as those Jews who were
trying to destroy him. .
- 2. His attitude toward Jesus (w.
4, 5). "I persecuted this way unto
the death"?it was one of hatred, as
wns that of the Jews.
3. How his attitude was changed
(w. 6-16). His changed attitude was
brought about by the intervention of
God. While on his way to Damascus,
with authority to bind and bring the
Christians to Jerusnlem to be punished,
he was smitten to the ground
by a light from heaven, and the voice
of the Lord said, "Why persecutest
thou ine?" When Paul inquired as
to what the Lord would hnve him do.
he was told to go to Damascus, where
he would be told what to do. Ananias
was sent by the Lord to make
known Ills will to him.
4. The Lord commissioned him to go
to the Gentiles (vv. 17-21). It was
not of his own will that ife preached
to the Gentiles, .but by the Lord's direct
commission.
III. Paul Before the Sanhedrln (23:
1-10).
The Roman officer, in order to learn
why Paul was arrested, commanded
the chief council to assemble, aud
brought Paul before them.
1. Paul's earnest look at the council
(vv. 1, 2). This was a solicitation
of their honor to give him a fair
hearing, and also a look of conscious
integrity and unfaltering courage. lie
protests that his behavior as a persecutor
of the church and preacher of
the Gosj>el has been in keeping with
the highest principle of national in
tegrity. At mis me nign priest ordered
him to be smitten on the mouth.
2. Paul's stern rebuke of the head
of the council (v. 3). "God shall
smite thee, thou whlted sepuleher"?
fair without and foul within. This
was a just sentence, no doubt directed
by the Lord. Paul's words show
that he had the highest respect for
the office, but the man now occupying
it was not worthy of it.
3. Paul's appeal to the Pharisees
(vv. G-10). Seeing that he could not
get a fair hearing, and perceiving that
the body before him was made up of
Pharisees and Sadducees, he appealed
to the Pharisees, hoping to get their
attention, for his preaching hud something
in common with their beliefs.
This resulted in a squabble.
IV. The Lord Stood by Paul (v. 11).
Puul was in great need of grace to
sustain mm. tie may nuve Degun to
question the wisdom of his course in
going to Jerusalem, but tills assured
him that his course was right, uud
thus comfort was brought to him.
V. The Conspiracy to Kill Paul (vv.
12-22).
More than forty men banded together
for the purpose of getting Paul
out of the way. They placed themselves
under a curse to abstain from
euting and drinking until they hud
murdered him. God defeated their
plans without a miracle. This wus
done by Puul's nephew. Their futul
mlstuke was that they left God out
of the question.
The Wisdom cf God.
We speak the wisdom of God In a
mystery, even the hidden wisdom
which God ordained before the world
unto our glory, which none of the
princes of the world knew: for had
they known It, they would not have
erueilled the Lord of glory.?I Corinthians
2:7,8.
Fishers of Men.
And Jesus walking by the Sea of
Galilee saw two brethren, Simon
called Peter, and Andrew his brother,
casting a net Into the sea: for they
were fishers. And he said unto them,
Follow me, nnd I will make you fishers
oI men.?Matthew 4:19 and 19.
an a
Drawings by Ray Walters
"Port
? J_y "Yass
/ ^ Three
TFa^A/ Tighten up yer felloes and fergit $er fawfaraw,
-Or yer wheels will chunk with wedges fore ye hit the Arkam
Call yer wagons Concstogas, Pittsburghs, Dearborns, if ye
But they'll all be thunderin' nameless past the Independent
Cut new axle-trees a-plenty, stretch yer canvas tilts above,
Pick yer man ye want elected capitan at Council Orove;
Ev'ry coon's his wagon-master stretchin' out o' here today,
But the capitan is some from Council Grove to Santa Fe;
Fill up on Missouri ptinkins while there's punkins here to i
Fer yer teeth can fetch up salt-sore when yer out among the
And it's ten of coffee, fifty flour, that ev'ry nigger's takin',
And it's twenty pounds of sugar and it's fifty more of baco
And calico and lead and drillin' that he's carlin through,
With beaver peltries bringin' upward six dollars a plcw;
Catch up! All's set! Stretch out! An' hep the cavayard
Eight hundred miles is layin on the road to Santa Fe.
it a ?| "Xow I km>w.
PM ^ ^ I W I forgot all 1113
dd"i v m 1 Ju ?lc "Last io'
J'lrce
M'agh! Made the bank hot-collared, slick as shootin' on the
An' we're miles from Independence and another day is dom
So lay down lazy on yer old apishamore mat,
And smell the cherries boilin' in the yeiler buffler fat,
And cut yer fleece-flaps with the grain and drink yer hot he
Tonight we're munchin' boudins from the belly of a bull.
And there's hump-ribs past all shinin' and there's beaver tai
And the ruttin' herd is under and the madre's makin' meat
Ye/ say in' signs f 0 sages f" Kawsf PawneesV' Arapahoe1
M'agh! That's the old mulera * * * she's got cactus in he
But if yer sure they're comin' some and all half-froze fer h
Fer comfort get yer tacklin' with a scatter gun to spare,
And take an extry wipin' stick and flint * * * don't spill i
And lay along the stakin' ground and shoot a few, perhaps.
The rest of us ain't skinnin' eyes, we're ridin' tired a heap,
And if the devils drop around to rub us out asleep,
Just tug us up in huffier whang and cart us home and say
That we failed at quittin' arrows and fell short of Santa F
0f "This terrible desei
( Sgpl j| ^ Oh, I'm hot, dirty,
T' 1 f ? When he tries to ya
lC_\ "You've been drink
_ W- Unloading all those
' -* }?y If they'd let them i
- ,?i *~ie "Hogs! Look at rr
?I rj; "No; its screwed oi
Wagh! Fill yer wagon water kegs, five gallon to each one,
Fer here's a stretch of hell that God left blazin' in the sun.
From Arkansaw to Cimarron is upward fifty mile,
And if ye hit a water scrape ye'll lay wolf meat a while;
Two days if ye are pullin' good, forever if yer not,
And once too weak to gear a dog, yer better off gut-shot.
Half over's stinkin' Sand creek, but it's always flamin dry,
And yer tongue will get to swellin' on mirages in the sky;
There's hants o' men out there that died a-suckin prickly r
And lickin' huffier bladders dry and chewin' parflesh boots
And they say there's phantom oxen, with their yoke-irons ji
Appearin' white to pull yer through when all yer own are i
There's JJlackfeet and Gros Ventres and Comanches, and th
All campih' by the Cimarron to meet you when yer tlirougI
n*y, 7 lstitsih /it// tho etirb -flnsitQ filth PV 1Hfl.1l
C U /m yci /icy* urii* iuuyi v i v uuuv j Vr?.?v, ~ .
Catchup! All's set! Stretch oat! And licp! Hi-ya for i.
/
pll^w ^ . j
llep-a! Slick up ycr possibles, and trash and comb yer hait
And put a cracker on ycr lash and snap it through the air;
Yo' hear the stallions squcalin cause they know they're gctt\
And the oxen sniffin' water spoutin at the rendezvous.
Hep-a! Tie up yer trap-sack and sing out a good hurrah,
Fcr it's down the Alameda to the Plaza Publica!
There she is a-layin' yonder dreamin' lazy in the sun;
And we'll have a grand fandango when the custom house is
And the flirtin scnoritas will be welcomin the chance
Fcr a sly buss in the prairie and a partner in the dance,
And we'll count coups together and be telhn' them the way
llow we put a million under just to get tu Santa Fe.
?Text from New York Herald.
Buddhist Bible. IT^T^T,
?? printing of one set ret;
At LItnng, about a hundred miles of many men for m
to the east of Batang, In Tibet, where LItnng, until recently,
there Is a large lamasery, and In the copy of the Tanjur wh
lamasery of Derge, about 200 miles out by hand In gold a
above Batang, In the Yangtze valley, paper had first' been
the printing of religious books Is an Chinese Ink. The g<
Industry of Importance. The Kanjur, fluids In which the c
which Is the Buddhist bible, and the written were made t
Tanjur, Its commentary, each coinprls- precious metals on a r
Ing 108 volumes, are printed In the mixing the powder witt
two lamaseries from blocks on which was destroyed a few
SAFE AT LAST. | fira Rl,rnc
I II U UUI 11 <J I V
Uncle (telling tall yarn to young
nephew)?"We had more than a mile Near Fort Norman,
to go to get out of the forest, when of the Arctic Circle, 1
we heard the howls of a pack of burning continuously
wolves behind us. I strained every 130 years. Man did i
nerve, but all In vain. Now I could nor does man tend to
hear their panting breath, and at last They feed on Immense
I felt their muzzles touching me, nlte that, like 6ome co
vhen?1" Nephew?"You must have Ignited spontaneously
'elt glad, uncle.' Uncle (amazed)? Mackenzie, the explorei
Clad! Why?" Nephew?"WheD you them in 1789 and at
uind they hud their muzzles on." j he noticed that the
c> Sani'a R^ *
ws Hofnslnj Farril^^^
er! Some papers, please, and turn on that fan."
im."
me a paper, yes, and a timetable."
i'r, jus' a minute, suh."
Lord, I can't tell; let's see \0 ,
jm bottle, both palm beaches, Age of Innocence.'
decks, my little organdy, kodak.
your old back-spin mashie. j
tell what I've forgotten till we've started.
can * * * if they don't treat Bourbon right!
old pup 1 He knew we were going, didn't he ?"
* * * these awful staterooms 1"
1-1 'board!"
taw, f T\ -%
like, r \ Y
e pike;
rktoJyj)&n
5* .
- 1 *
? '
r adorable pink'silk ones, and my bead bag.
i glasses, I should have told Ingebord * * *"
dear; this isn't our honeymoon, j
?s out there? ,
* * * make cattle drunk.
ril, isn't it? There, how's that?"
dinnah in the dinin' cyah,
j'wa'd."
m! I hope ifs in those wet, cold slices,
Dss-cuts of tan and strawberry marble, nice **
\
' j '1 \ f
t! What makes the air wabble that way?
sticky ^groggy * * * I feel like Bourbon
wn and howl at the same time * * * no pep."
ing too much ice water * * * see 'em
! dead hogs back there ?
rest, then put wet dirt in the cars *
le! See if you can't turn that fan 1"
a."
r \
^ v
^ *
^ianta, Fe!
%
So this is Santa Fe!
.ook at this sfyirt, my dear; look at it! * * *
fonder what makes a train seem to slip backward
fhen it stops?"
That brushing did you a lot of good, I'll say.
ee all the flivvers!
u x 1 xi ?i ?
lie porier bavb burnt? ui me cuwuuja aic uu^iw
low that the movies are closing down."
. At Los Carros!
Los Americanos!
* La entrada de la caravana!
* Bravo!
.1 .
1. The blocks Chinese soldiers who understood noth-.
oonis and the ing of Its value.
[ulres the work
uny days. In Heated Winds.
, there was a An lr tensely dry, hot wind called the
Ich was written "zonda," which blows down from the
nd silver. The Andes upon the plains of Argentina,
lacquered with was formerly thought to owe Its heat
old and silver to volcanoes. It Is really a "foehn,"
haracters were such as occurs In Switzerland and
iy rubbing the many other mountainous countries,
ough stone and where winds, robbed of their moisture
i glue water. It In crossing the mountain, are heated
years ago by by compression during their descent.
in Vqopo subterranean fires had burned to a
lU I GdlSi brick-red the shales that outcrop along
the banks of the river that he named
not far south after himself. In fact, the shale beds
3res have been had been converted Into massive red
for more than bricks. It Is likely, then that the
lot light them, fires had been burning many years
their burning, before Mackenzie saw them. Virtually
! seums of Ug- all the explorers who lmve visited
al seams, have that part of the Mackenzie River
r. Alexander Basin have noticed the underground
r, first reported fires, which make themselves known
the same time by the huge periodic bursts of
beat from the smoke.