PAGE SIX — THE SOWER A Weekly Department of Religious and Secular Thought Contributed by REV. JAMES A. TURNER, Pastor, M. E. Church, Patton, Pa. A PRINCE AND A LEADER IN ISRAEL, Nearly sixty years ago a young man, regal in bearing, noble in counten- ance, and ardently idealistic in spirit, having sold his few worldly possess- ions, came up from the hilly farm- lands of Morgan county Ohio, and en- tered the portals of the Ohio Wesley- an University, driven thereto by the spirit of a holy idealism and a passion for learning which burned within his soul, hoping that he might acquire an education sufficient to enable him to know thoroughly and teach efficiently, to a hungry world that so sadly need- ed it, that great body of literature known as the Holy Writ, and thus to satisfy a deep and urgent longing that had cried insistently in his heart for realization since his early childhood. | Having, after years of hard work, | sacrifice, and devoted application to his studies, finished his education, and taken to himself from this same Coi- lege-town of Delaware, a bride to be his companion through the coming years, this young man, James Elmer Turner, by name, turned his face to the frontiers of the great uncivilized West and journeyed over its vast reaches until he arrived at the little town of Oxford in the southeastern section of one of the great territories of the United States, where he assum- ed charge of a Methodist Mission school which was being conducted in that Mormon - settled mountainous section of what in later years became a part of the State of Idaho. Here, in this raw frontier station of kuman civilization, the young mission- ary entered upon the initial stages of that unique and remarkable career which brought him in the course of time to a position of high eminence in the realm of those who have shaped human destiny. Always the idealist and the dreamer, | this young man had dreamed dreams and seen visions of a time when men and women should know their Bible as they knew their spelling book, and, looking toward the realization of that ideal he had originated a new system of consecutive and systematic Bible study, published a series of graded text-books for young and old, and ded- oa Speediest Toy Auto Not exactly a plaything for kiddies, this toy automobile is said to burn up the road at 80 miles per hour. Seven-year-old Dick Sinclair was 1 pose with the one-cylinder racing car at the spring hobby show of the Detroit Yacht club. It was one of the most popular exhibits at the show. ! a bit shy, but mighty proud to | ana teachers in | Biblical. His ! the Bible School Book, the ' one volume commentary on the Bi- , squalor, filth, poverty and destitution ' were rampant everywhere. icated his life to the high task of car- rying this Light of the Ages over land and sea and to the ends of the earth, Because of his love for the great Book of Books which he studied ana taught with a passionate devotion and a deep intellectual and spiritual pene- tration and grasp he became in the course of time one of the world’s greatest scholars, authors, lecturers, the realm of things new system of Bible- study, his graded text-books, were the first of their kind, and his corres- pondence courses and weekly publica- tions went to students all over the world. He edited and published the Bible School Teacher, the Bible School Booklet, the Bible School Primer, and latter a \ | ble, the only thing of its kind in print even today, and a book of great merit and practical usefulness. The Author's primary efforts in the field of Bible teaching were in the days when he was studying at the Un- iversity where he conducted classes in Lible composed of students whose in- terests inclined them in that direc- tion. Later, in his mission-school work at Oxford, Idaho, he developed his system of teaching, and took many classes of adults and young people through consecutive courses of study in the essentials of that great litera- ture. The early field of labor in Oxford was one of unusual color and interest, being in that part of what is now the southeastern section of Idaho, it was in the heart of Mormordom. Language utterly fails one in attempting to de- scribe the living conditions prevailing among this mountainous Mormon people. (One of the school’s nearest neighbors was a Mormon who had 16 wives and 64 children.) And polygamy was common. Ignorance, superstition Crime, brutality, murder, theft, falsehood, and vileness of all kinds reared their ugly heads on all hands. Human life was cheap, and conditions of domestic hor- ror were so common as to hardly ex- cite comment by a resident, though al- most beyond belief to the uninitiated. Reading of those rampant conditions of life in that country in those days freezes one’s blood and chills one’s soul. Much vicious opposition was constantly in evidence against any up- lifting Gentile or Christian influences. The Indians were pretty much in ev- idence to complicate the situation, and were a great deal of a nuisance most of the time. The reader can imagine the state of mind of the missionary’s Captivates Children THE UNION » young bride, who, when often alone in the humble little house which was the nianse, was besieged by bands of hun- gry Indians who pressed their ugiy their entrance and took what they wanted. accounts related by his mother of some most paralyzed with fright on many aceasions, in the house from intruding bands o: treacherous Indian savages. days in Idaho, over half a century ago. Many interesting and exciting as well as unpleasant and sometimes terrify- ing experiences were gone through by these missioners of the Gospel among these wild and wooly savages and near savage Mormons,— which would make interesting reading. In marked con- trast to the degenerate human phase was the striking beauty of the sur- rcunding country,—a veritable garden of Eden in beauty of majestic snow- covered mountain peaks, flowered val- leys, rich soil, luxuriant verdure and clear, dry climate. It was during the middle part of these interesting and eventful years at Gatord that the first two children of the manse were born,—the eldest son, Ariel Reuel, on January 3rd, 1888; ana the writer, James Aubrey, on April the ith, 1889,—fifty years ago, tomorrow. In the fall of the year of '89, when the writer was six months of age, the young missionary brought his family back East, and resided awhile in his erstwhile University town of Dela- ware ,Ohio, where he continued his unique and successful career as a lec- turer, Bible teacher and evengelist, which activities subsequently took him into various assemblies, conven- tions, conferences, camps, chautauqua circuits and churches of all denomin- ations over the eastern part of the country. Later he incorporated the American Bible University in the State of Ohio, where students were trained for special work, and from which headquarters went out a weekly Publication to a large body of corres- pondence students in every country in the world,—the first of its kind on earth. Ariel Reuel, the eldest son, and the writer ,with the help of Lillian, the oldest of the four sisters, spent their school years in the University where they received their various academic degrees, while at the same time doing the work in the large printing office necessary to the publication of the weekly paper, pamphlets, books and literature that went to the four corn- ers of the earth and, incidentally, farm- ing and cultivating the large acreage of land in connection with the Uni- versity estate. The supervisor of all these multitudinous activities, during the absence of the head of the institu- tion, was, of course, the same wife and assistant who had seen such strenuous days in the far West, and who was as- sistant editor of the weekly paper, and who wrote an entire page of ex- pository material each week for the ycung people, in addition to the other great variety of duties and activities incident to this large enterprise. With a school, students, a family of six chil- dren, a large printing plant, a large farm, editorial work, an immense other little things on her hands to keep her busy, she lived an active and effective life. house, and a thousand Many people have lived to over one hundred years of age and have not done even a fraction of what she. did in her forty-six years of life. NEW porate 11 P EW RITERS $21.76 Officiel Romington-Rand Portable Agency Account Backs, Ledger sheets, All-Facts Busi- ness Record Bks, Loose-Leaf Outfits, Dupli- cator Needs, Calendars, Advertising Novelties Stepling Machines & Staples for All machines Typewriter Ribbons 50c Salesbooks 6 for 256 Typewriter & Adding Machine Service Agency EAGLE PRINTING CO. Barneshoro MORE THAN THE LOWEST PRICED CARS Pontiac THE ENGINEERING STANDOUT OF THE GENERAL MOTORS TERMS TO SUIT YOUR PURSE CENERAL MOTORS*SECOND LOWEST-PRICED CAR WESTRICK MOTOR AND GET A YEAR! CO., Carroltlown, “GOOD HEAVENS!” I said, “You don’t mean that the call you just made to Sam at college only cost 35 cents! Why that’s a hundred miles from here!” She said, “Oh yes, I do! Long Distance rates are reduced quite a bit after seven at night and all day Sunday.” I said, “I know it, but I never imagined theywould be thatlow.” “ - “ Anytime on Sunday or any night after seven, you can make a three-minute station-to-station call as far as 444 air-line miles for only one dollar. Consult your telephone directory or ask the operator for rates to points you wish to call. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA faces against the window panes aud demanded food, or, if possible, torcea The writer well remembers of those terrifying and nerve-racking experiences, and of how she was al- when, alone with her in- fant sons, she had to barricade herself Indeed it was a colorful and exciting life; those RESS-COUKIER. Thursday, April 6th, 1939. Wide choice ers, Young Princess Types, sizes 11 to 20. Youthful, $695 TO $25.00 EASTER DRESSES Priced at $3.95 to $12.95 Jackets, Boleros, Plaits and Tailored; GIRLS’ AND BOYS’ COAT & HAT SETS Sizes from 2 to 6 years, and priced from $1.95 to $3.95 Fannie C. Wetzel, Carrolltown, Penna. i) o od CJ oR) BC Bp SCI) LS y CF ove * NEVER have we had such a complete stock of beautiful and dressy spring garments as now! Coats, Dresses, Millinery and all the accessories that match are here in profr-e assortment. But to) fully appreciate what we have to offer you must come and see. And you'll find the prices moderate, indeed, when you consider the quality of the goods. EASTER COATS of Fashions, Box Coats, Fitted Collarless, Smart Reef- Dressy slenderizing, specially designed for the woman of larger figures; sizes 38 to 44, and 46 to 50. YOU'LL FIND JUST THE VERY GARMENTS YOU WANT IN OUR STORE FOR THE SMARTLY STYLED EASTER MILLINERY Priced from $1.00 te $4.95 GIRLS’ Bonnets and Rolled Brims .... $1 and $1.95 Dionne Children’s Hats ...... Big brims, and little high crowns, sober sailors and bumpers; Little touches of flowers; rayon gros - grain ribbon and veiling; black, navy, spring colors, Head sizes 22 to 24. EASTER HATS ri $1.95 tury multitudes of people all over the world were introduced into a new life of Scriptural investigation under the leadership of this ploneer and cham- pion of systematic ana consecutive Bi- ble Study, whose heroic and original efforts initiated the modern movement toward consistent and popular Bible study which is spreading to the ends of the earth with such blessed and civ- ilizing consequences. Always dreaming of still greater achievements to come ,and while con- ducting a Bible institute in an eastern city of Pennsylvania ,during the month of May, 1913, the soul of this great niissionary, evangelist, scholar and champion of Holy Writ, winged its triumphant flight from the active fiela of service into the presence of the Great Head of the Church, where rec- ognition and reward were given to a life's work which, though covering 6n- ly the short period of fifty years in point of time, reached such monumen- tal proportions in faith and high ac- complishment and rendered so lofty and permanent a contribution to the spiritual culture of the civilized world that his name shall ever shine as a star of the first magnitude in the hea- venly constellations of the truly great. Should the reader care to read some interesting books on the Mormonism of that early day, we would cite De- puty U. S. Marshal Fred E. Bennett’s book, “A Detective’s Experience Am- ong The Mormons.” And James David Gillialan’s book, entitled, “Thomas Corwin Iliff.” Both these books make reference to the work of the wirter’s father in the far West. Dr. Iliff was the District Superintendent of the wri- ter’s father while out West, and bap- tized both the writer and his brother, Ariel, in Oxford, Idaho. Thus for over a quarter of a cen- [PATTON METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH James A. Turner, pastor. Church school at 10 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Epworth le- ague at 6:30 p. m. Mid-week Bible Class, Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. Have you gotten your copy of the UPPER ROOM? There are a few left. Have you ordered your copy of the Central Pennsylvania Conference Jour- nal? Better do it as soon as possible. Thirty cents per copy. Give the pastor the name of any person or persons who desire to come into the Church Fellowship on Easter Sunday. Also keep in mind the fact that Easter Sunday has been designa- ted as Cash Offering Day. Make it a thank-offering, in view of the signifi- cance of the day, and what it means to you. Don’t miss the coming mid-week Bi- ble studies. They are growing more and more interesting as they continue. “My boy, treat everybody with po- liteness, even those who are rude to you. For remember that you show courtesy to others not because they are gentlemen, but because you are one.” “Money talks — but generally it says goodbye.” Martin Vanbee J. EDW. STEVENS FUNERAL DIRECTOR KNOWN BY SERVICE PHONE SERVICE, Day 31-M., Night 31-J. REUEL SOMERVILLE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Good Blde., Patton a . OA A ibm a en, Ra dhs ay ih Fa Pot bie PA ro ed be I ma oO Ll aml ab a Ew" da hd foil nd wali eB eH BT Srey, io ha “e br of br ve