Sunday School Lesson LESSON IV Paul Win* Recognition For Gentile CHRISTIANS Acta 15:1-35; Qalatiane 2:1-10 P.iuud Text, Acts 15:235-29; Gal. 2:1, 2, 9, 10 Golaen Text â€" "A man la not Juat- ifjcd by the worka of the law, but through faith in Jctua Chrlat." Gal. 2:16. 'luc lA'ssoa lu Its Setting Tiue â€" The council In Jerusal- em was bold in A.D. 61; Paul wrote bit letter to the Ualatiana abtui A.U. IJ7. P.ice. â€" The council of Jerusal- em u»s bcl'J, of course. In tha sre-i center of Jowish life, the Holy City, Jerusalem, which twen- ty itars later was to be utterly dca .cj^d. The Antioth of this Ics- aofi >. as located on the Oronteg Kl.i/, in Syria. T :o church at Antloch determin- ed, with great wisdom, to send a group of tlieir members, together with Paul and Harnabas, up to the city of Jerusalem to discuss with the a;iosl!es and elders there this en. ;.e question. In Accord With One Another 23 I he apostles and the elders, bretlireu, unto the hrothren who are of the Gentiles In Antloch and Syria und Clllcia, greeting. 24. Forasmuch as we have heard that Certain who went out from us have* troubled you with words, sub- vertiiiK your souls; to whom we gave no commandment; 25. It seeiiied good unto us, having come to one accord, to choo.'je out men and send them unto you with our l>elovi'd Barnabas and Paul, 26. men tliat have iiazanied their lives for the name of our lx)rd Jesus Christ. At the beginning of the Je- rusalem conference Paul and Par- nubas were being severely criticiz- ed by some meaibers of the Jerus- alem C4iurch; now they are spoken Of as 'our belove(' Barnabas and Paul". The Intention of tho whole letter is to show the honor which the church In Jerusalem felt was duo to these missionary laborers. i7. We have sen', therefore Ju- das and Silas, who themselves also shall tell you the same 'hlngs by wc â- of raoul!- 28. For It teemed good 3 Holy bpirit, and to us, to lay upon you no grf^ater burden than these nee y things. TIujv boldly tr-it tho Holy Spirit aj one of their number, a fellow-couiiselor, who miitfs with them Ir t. annouute- munl of a joint conclusion. What a radical revol lion v 'â- ' c in all church assemblies the fien:io of tho S; resence were actually f',':, and It everything were said and done as In his pres- ence . . . Perhaps no one le- -a among all tlioso taught in this book U df'gned to leave a more deep lasting Impressir,: 29. That ye • bslain from tmngs saci.i.^ed to ' . Tliis qui^.slion of what to do In regard to meat offer- ed to Idols often troubled the early • church. .. thosr; Gontilo Christians standing in tlio liborly wherewith Christ ..ad m.ide them f. )uld be found eating meat offered to Idol.s. v.hicli was an abominal;,;n to tho Jews, they mir't iliereby keep other Jews from accepting Christ as llielr Savior; . while f y had a r.ghl so to eat meat, the church at Jeniaalem u g j them that Ih^y d' ml stand on their own rig:. I... oUt thl- ': first of t.ioir U' • saved breth- . A ' from "id, ard from things strangled. The heathen often di 'ood at their Idolatrous foasls, and freqiiently mixed b.oTl with I heir food. nd from '-rnicatio • from which .; ye keep yourselves. It shnl' bo well with you. Fare ye well. Don't Stand on Rights ). Then after the space of four- leer > ars I went up again to Je- rusalem with Ilarnabas, taking Tit- us also with me. 2. And I went up by revelation; and I laid before them he gospel which I preach all nmong th»* Gentiles but privately before them .vho wore of repute, lest by any means I should bo ruu- nlng, or had run, iu vuia. While there Is some disafbrponient among tcholars as to whethrr this plsode which Paul now describes is the aamo as that found In ih(» fiftcrnth ibapter of Arts, tbe opinion of the most to-day it that here wo have t'*o records of the same event. This prolilem of Titus is au im- portant one. and reveals Paul's real attitude toward the wht^e question of coaverslou. Paul vigor 0U6ly opposed ail tiu>>.« who taught tho necess'.'r of Jewish rites so far ns talvation is to.iCcTncd. ';ut. ou tho other hau' Si i'nul hart not Bervlng the law and subniiitlng to clrrumcUion. if they only realized that these taiuga were mere nat- ional custoui, and even aa rellg- toua rlte«, but not as necessary re- Jtgioua rites, lis rc'fit.-ed to circum- 'Jae Tl'.ue, for lustance, be e tb» Judaizing party at Jerusalem were Insisting upon tho ab^o'i^o iie<e»»lty of i ircumr-lslng the C 'llos If they wev • to be ived. Four Great Men 5. A!ul^wh>>n Wf'j jier.elved ;h» ifiace that- -wti given unto me, James »n'> Ophas and John, thny who were r*i»n'e(l te !)<• pillars. g.».'o to m? â- • Barnabas the rlgiit Would Improve Cheese Quality Premivr Hepbivn Sees Oppor* tunity To Offset Lou On Butter Output The government Is taking steps to safeguard tbe quality of Ontario cheese through improved super- vision of Its manufacture. Premier Hepburn said In his budget ad- dress before the Legislature. Canadian cheese is Belling at premium lu the Kritlsh market over New Zealaud cheese, from which it receives Its keenest com- petition. "At present wo cannot export butter and compete â€" therefore ev- ery effort should bo put forth to place our cheese Industry upon a basis whereby the demand may be filled with a product of a quality to equal that ot our past seasons and up to the expectation o( the importer," f': Hepburn said. Continued demand at good prices for Canadian cows and heifers In the United States an â- British mar- kets is a real compliment to On- tario farmers , b:':oders and feed- ers of purebred dairy cattle, he went on. High butter prices early in 1938 induced not only imi>ortatlons of butter but caused diver.slon of fluid milk from cheese factories to creameries. The percentage spread in 1938 butter prices was probably without precedent, the Toronto wholesale price ot creamery butter falling from 3C cents in March to 21 cents in December. National Policy For Agriculture Is Urged By Premier Bracken Of Manitoba â€" Thorough Or- ganization By Farmers Advo- cated â€" Means Of Handling Surpluses. The way out of the difficulties facing agriculture In Canada was declared by Premier John Bracken ot Manitoba, speaking at the lilast- ern Canada Conference on market- ing of farm products to be thorough hands ot fellowship that we should go unto tho G tile and they un- to the circumcision. James, Peter, John, and Paul â€" It was a memor- abU day whon thes four men met face to face. Amorist them they've virtually made f'e New Testament and t'-'^ Chr' "an cb ''.. James clings to the und embodies the transition from Mosalsm to Christianity. Peter is the nan of the prr ^nt, cjulck In thou:;ht and action, eager, b 'yaut, susceptible. Paul holds the future in his grasp, and schools the uubr-'-n 'lations. John I' ':er3 pre P-tl, and 'i- luro into one, lifting lis into the region of eternal life and love 10. Only they would that we our- selves should -embor lbs poor; which very ' ing T was r'-o zeal- ous to do. " 'The poor' to whom re- ference is hern made were un- doubtedly t'le n I 'Uians in Jersualem. Horseback Across Canada Pictured as she arrived in Mont- real is 25-year-old Mary FSosan- quet, of Devizes, Wiltshire, Eng. Miss Kosanquet will spend a vaca- tion in ('anada Ity making her way eastward from Vancouver astride a cow-pony, taking the best part of seven months for her trip. â€" C.P.R. Photo organUation within tbe Industry with such support by tiio Govern- ment of Canada as would give the industry an opportunity tu solve Its own problems. "I suggest that organisation meana the development of a nation- al policy tor agriculture," he said, a policy that when once it is form- ed win have the support ot those witbia the industry. That policy should provide a means of handling agricultural surpluses without Im- poverishing those who produced them and a means ot bringing a larger share of the national Income to that one-third of tho people of Canada engaged In agricultural in- dustry." Sees Danger to East Mr. Ilrackcn, after declaring that the 30 mlliioa acres ot wheat land in tbe West formed a potential danger to the 17 milllou acres ot farmland iu the East, if tho wheat growers were forced to turu to oth- er products, said that there was an Immediate threat to the econ- omic toundution ot Canutlian agri- culture that would strike Western Canada first, but it would strike the East second, and just as hard it It was not solved In the way It was meant to be solved when the national policy of Cauada was formed 60 years ago. Seaweed For Cattle Now comes the news that Cana- dian seaweed ha.s been proved to be remarkably good for cattle meal, and far away New Zealand has actually come into the market 03 a buyer. These farmers of New Zealand, some of them de- scendants of the men who long ago built a ship and sailed to that country from I\ova Scotia, know quite a lot about cattle and about dairying, and we know very well that when they ask for Canadian seaweed, made into meal, they are asking for something that will be a benefit to their already power- ful and efficiently conducted in- dustry of dairying. Four Copies Kept Of Magna Charta Document Was Drawn Up 724 Years Ago Establishing Legal RighU Of English People. There are four copies ot the Great Charter, the document which ostablisbed the legal rights ot tbe people of t-'ngiand 724 years ago. Upon this document was founded tlie Common* Law ot Eugland, the British L'lupire and of the United States. Tho people of Kaglaud were In revolt because there was no system of law and order and I hey suffered many hardships and injustices. The barons compelled King John to admit that the Crowu owed a duty to the people. The laws weie Inscribed in Latin on sheepskin, and at Uunnymede, near Windsor Castle, tho document was read to King John by the only man present who could read â€" Stephen I.,augton, Archbishop of Canterbury who had drawn it up. The King Iiimselt could not read or write. He could not sign his name to it, so he affixed his seal on wax. After that the Charter was taken away and monks and clerks made copies for every Important centre, i'ew were taken care of. The one preserved at Lincoln is believed to be the or- iginal. The King put his seal on each one of them. Ot the three oth- ers In existence, one Is illegible o\ying to fire, another in the Brit- ish Museum, lucks the seal, and I he other was partially destroyed by a tailor who was cutting up old vellum, Extra Milking Without any change in feeding or management, an extra milking per day will result in 20 i)er cent, more milk, according to the Iowa State college. Usually it docs not pay to milk cows three times per (lay, however, because milk is cheap and labor is high in price, relatively speaking. Tests have shown that the greatest amount of milk is secreted immediately af- RADIO NOTES AND NEWS MADGE ARCHER QUIZ PROGRAMMES Quiz programmes have become such an integral part of radio en- tertainment in the last year or so that their important place in the programme schedule i.s now freely acknowledged as permanent. Thcs' radio games began with the simple spelling bee. As they gained in popularity so they be- came more elaborate. Now ideas are being thought out so fast that competition is keen in the race to produce n mental test which will be as interesting and novel to the studio audience as to the listener and in which the listener can take as active a part as those in the studio. AROUND THE DIAL A rumor of unusual interest, which look.s liko becoming a uefi- iiite po-ssibility as the .summer schedules me mapped out, is that Hudy Vallec will substitute for Charlie McCarthy. The titory is that Vallee will join the Chase & Sanborn Hour on Sundays while Kdgar Bergen and Don Ameche take their vacations. Vallee will carry on his Thursday night pro- KTanune and stay in Hollywood for the summer. If true, the move will double his salary and keep him working twice as hard. Winners of the nation-wide drama contest inaugurated by the CBC last November 1, will be an- nounced during the first week in May. The four best plays will bo specialy produced over the Ca- nadian network. The authors will set handsome cash prizes, in ord- er of merit $2G0.00, $150.00, $100.00 and $50.00. Ambitious Canadian playwrights have sub- mitted more than 200 original scripts. Two new dramatic serials are being considered by NBC to re- place Bob Hope's show for thir- teen weeks during the summed. The more interesting one will star Burgess Meredith, unforgettable hero of "Winterset," and will be called "Prosecuting Attorney." The other will star Franchot Tone as a young doctcr face to face with the trials of his profession. June 20 is the tentative date. Moni;â€" TO BE HEAPd! . . , April 21, S.OO p.m. CBCâ€" Bowling Cham- pionships from Toronto . . . 8.30 p.m. CBCâ€" Miss Trent's Children ... 9 p.m. CBC & CBSâ€" Orson Welles' Playhouse . . . April 22, 4.00 p.m. NBC & CBCâ€" Club Ma- tinee . . . 5.30 p.m. CBC â€" Satur- day Matinee ... 9 p.m. CfiS â€" Phil Baker . . . 10.00 p.m. NBC-Redâ€" Arch Oboler's Plavs . . . 10.00 p.m. NBC-Blue &'CBC â€" NBC Symphony Orchestra and Menot- ti opera . . . .-Vpril 23, 12 Noon NIK; & CBCâ€" Tabloid version of Mozart's "Don Giovanni" ... 2 p.m. CBCâ€" "And It Came to Pass" ... 3 p.m. CBS & CBCâ€" New York Philharmonic Symphony . . . 8 p.m. NBC & CBCâ€" Charlie Mc Carthy and the Chase and San- born Hour . . . !> p.m. CBC â€" Hart House Strins; Quartette . . . 10.30 p.m. CBSâ€" H. V. Kaltenborn . . . April 24, 11.45 a.m. NBC & CBC â€" Dr. William 1;. Stidger's "Get- ting the Most Out of Life" . . . 12.15 p.m. CBCâ€" Ontario Regioa Farm Programme ... 9 p.m. CBS & CBCâ€" Cecil B. De Mille's Radio Theatre . . . 10.00 p.m. N]«Câ€" Marek Weber in "Bohetpia" . , . April 25, y p.m. CBS & tiFRBâ€" We, the People . . . Aorjl 26, 8 p.m. NBC & CBCâ€" Qihe Man's Family . . . 3.30 p.m. CBCâ€" Mu- sic by Faith . . . April 27, 4.30 p.m. Mutual â€" Runn/ng of the Blue Grass Stakes froiiji Lexington, Ky. ... 8 p.m. NB;Câ€" Rudy Vallee's Varieties. ter the udder is empty, and that a proportionately decreasing am- ount is secreted in the hours that follow before the next milking. Most of the high record producing cows are milked three times per day, and some of them four times. His grandfather, father, ancle, brother and twe couaiaa having been killed /ollowing riding acci- dents, Johannes J. Enaaua of Bloemfontein, South Africa, hai vowed never to ride a horse again. This Curious World VJZT \ HAVE "WHORJ_S"ON THEIR. ^A^^S. . . NOr ON THEIR. f=/NG-£:RS, AS DO HU.^AAN£•. ESTIMATES of the radius of the universe are changing con- stantly, and various authorities reckon it as being somewhere be- tween 2000 million and 20,000 million light-years. Today we have photographic evidence to a distance of 500 million light-years, and larger telescopes of the future will enable us to penetrate farther into space. , , NEXT: .To wliat Is the rainbow coloring in a peacock's feathers due? Father of His Country HORIZONTAL 1 First Presi- dent of the U. S. A.. George 10 Bottom. 14 Liauid part of fat. 1 5 Money, 17 Wrath. 1 8 Evergreen tree. 1 9 Makes true. 20 To observe. 21 Slum dwelling. 22 South America. 24 Upon. 25 Skillet. 26 Chest bone. 27 Tennis stroke 28 Measure of , area. 29 Prophet. 30 Action. 32 Inlet. 33 Snaky fish. 34 God of war. 35 Insane. 36 Half an Mm. 37 To .soak flax. 1? Answer to Previous Puxile IPE RO R U e: \1 I T COATOF 1 li "A AzgNJ LQiREJ ^S .CF p 1 NE pps ynss â- p E A â- HI E TlR w roiR S 1 N P ERIS OiN S i U L E I RIET 1 REIISP OD E e>iA!N s â- P A C E Dy5lT|A R lHd uol RIEISHPIOIAHAI 1 SBMIAIR THPA 1 I^AL CO p M nA lEIate: â- ai| â- r u â- m E u 5^ ! ENDr &E NI.AIVI 1 ^ E: NdeS^ 13 Electric unit. 16 Coffee pot 18 Moor. 20 He gained fame as a 39 Street. 40 Swimming organ of a fish. 41 Wedlock. 46 Divided. 48 Stir. 49 Blue grass. SOFurnished with rattan. 51 Trumpet sound. 53 He was a as a young man. 54 He became a IT man of VERTICAL 1 Grief. 2 Stranger. 3 Withered. 4 To hasten. 5 Within. 6 To smile broadly. 7 Gastropod. 8 Bone. 9 Short letter. 10 Crude. 11 War flyer. 12 Permanently attached. '21 Small flap. 23 He had great as a statesman. 25 Seed bag. 26 Long grass. 27 Meadow. 28 To help. 31 Sea eagle. 32 Rodent. 35 Threat. 37 To tear stitches. 38 Mother. 39 Nose noise. 40 Fright. 41 The hand. 42 To scatter. 43 Road. 44 Evils. 45 Land right. 46 French coin. 47 Beam. 49 Postscript. 51 To exist. 52 Exclamation. REG'LAR FELLERS-Up to Date ' V/HOS THIS LITTLE. FF.LLOW,PlNHEAD? HE LOOKS LIKf- A NEW PLAYMATE.' THIS IS A SiqHTSEElN'TOUR, MOM.'thi^ FELLER IS PAYiM' ME A PENNY JUS' TO LOOK AT OUR MY qOODNESS.' HAVEN'T V/E BETTER LOOKING ROOMS IN THE HOUSE TO SHOW HIM THAN THOSE? By GENE BYRNES YOU DONT KETCH ON, MOM .'this FELLER HAS NEVER SEEN A CELLAR OR AM ATTIC IN HIS LIFE ON ACCOONTA HE WAS srou<;ht TRAILERS