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THE

HONGKONG TELEGRAPH. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1985.

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST

SOUL AND BODY SUBJECT

FOR TO-MORROW

"Saul and Body" will be the subject

DUKE GOES FISHING IN

THE RED SEA

of the Lesson Sermon in all Churches MAY BRING YACHT TO HONGKONG

of Christ, Scientist, to-morrow.

The Golden Text will bo: The Lord is good unto them that walt for him, to the soul that seeketh him.

mentations 3:26).

(La-

Among others, the following cita-

tions from the Bible will be rond: "And there came a leper to him, be

seeching him, and, kneeling down to

him, and saying unto him, If thou

wilt, thou canst make me clean. And Jesus, moved with compassion, put forth his hand, touched him, I will: be thou clean. And as soon as he had spoken, Iminodlately the leprosy departed from him, and ho Was cleaned." (Mark 40-42).

in-

The Lesson Sermon will also elude the following passage from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key the Scripture" by Mary Baker Eddy:

Cairo, Nov. 1. The Duke of Westminster arrived at Cairo to-day on his way to Suez to rejoin his luxurious yacht, the Cutty Sark.

From Suez he will sail through the Canal to the Red Sen. There he intends to do some fishing from his yacht. Perhaps he will then visit the Far East.

“And,” he said, "I may visit Abyssinia, although I would not like to add to the crush of foreigners in Addis Ababa. I hear the crush is now acute.

"My movements are uncertain. I must be back in Cairo within a fortnight. That does not give me much time.”

Tho duke left London, a week ago. With him

valet. was his Their passports were viaaed for Abyas.nia, but both said they did not know whether they would go there.

Airmen Will Fly Into

The Unknown

Even now the duke repented that he was still uncertain about it.

He talked instead of his ex- he ploits during the war when fought Arab tribesmen in Western

New York, Nov. 15. Richard Archbold, ex.

Egypt. him better mentally, and so plorer, will lead an aerial

they even in

"Healing the sick and reforming the sinner are one and the same thing In Christian Science. Both cures re- quire the same method and are in- Reparable in Truth, Hatred, envy, dishonesty, fear, and so forth. make a man sick, and neither material medl- eine nor Mind can help him per

body,

unless it

delivers Im from his Become conscious for a single moment expedition into the Fly and March 1916 in command of a feet that life and intelligence are purely Palmer Rivers region of of armoured cars. Ife won the spiritual.-neither in nor of matter, New Guinea, for the Ameri- D.S.O. when he led his fleet in a Museum of Natural spectacular danh through 160 miles of desert to attack the Senuasi History, early in 1936.

Arabs.

destroyers.

and the body will then utter no complaints. If suffering from a belief can

sickness, you will find yourself suddenly well. Sorrow is turned into joy when the body is controlled by spiritual Eife, Truth, and Love." (Page 40t and 14).

To-morrow's Service

(A Branch of the Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Selentist, in Boston, Mass.)

Macdonnell Road, below Bowen Road Tram Station.

·

Sunday Service, 11.15 a.m. Subject: "Soul and Body." Sunday School, 10 a.m. Testimonial Meeting: Wednesdaye, Gp.n.

Reading Room is located at above address and is open:

F. Trubbe Davison, president- of the American Museum, said the two major objectives of the expedition will be:

The duke was sent to Egypt in

The Duke married for the third time in February 1930. The pre- sent Duchess was formerly Mis3 Loella Ponsonby, only daughter of

1. To penetrate into one of the Sir Frederick Ponsonby, G.C.B. Icast-known, regións on earth, the The Duke is aged fifty-six; his mountainous and inaccessible, inwife is aged thirty-two. terior of British New Guinea inime diately north of the intersection of the Fly and Palmer Rivers to

collect birds, mammals, and other Women's

natural history specimens.

2. To explore by air the vast Heroism

area of thinly wooded plains in the Fly River region, an area of some 6,000 square miles about which virtually, nothing is known.

G, HH, Tate, assistant curator

Monday and Thursday: 5.30 to 7ef Mammals, of the Museum, and

JF, 712.

Tuesday and Friday: 10 to 12 noon, All author.ned Christian Science

Literature is available at the Reading

Room.

At Quetta

GENERAL KARSLAKE'S

GLOWING TRIBUTE

Dr. Alvin L. Rand, ornithologist, will accompany Archbold. The party's Fairchild Amphibian special

"Thank God we had Karstake plane, equipped with a 750 horse The Publie is cordially invited to power Wright Cyclone Engine, will here!" That, said Field-Marshal attend the Service and visit the Rendbe piloted by Russell Rogers and Sir Claud Jacob, was the heart- ing Room.

by Archbold.

felt exclamation of one wno The plane has a cruising radius was in Quetta at the time of of 750 to 780 miles. Its speed is the earthquake. 135 miles per hour at an altitude of

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8,000 feet. Its.maximum altitude Sir Claud Jacob, who spent nearly Is 18,000 feet. Its licensed payload forty years in the Indian Army, is 1,000 pounds plus the additional was the Chairman at a lecture de- Hond of two pilots and the equivalivered recently at the Royal

lent of, eight, passengers.

United Service Institution in London by Major-General H. Fly From Australia

Karalake, on the work of the Army Archbold said that the four plan after the Quetta earthquake. to leave the United States about General Kurslake is the Com- January 1 by steamer for Sydney mander of the Baluchistan District or Brisbane to the laland of Daru, (Quetta), and in his audience were which is within a few miles of the officers who had done heroic relief |coastline of British New Guinen, work. They included Brigadier "We expect to be at Daru and C. N. F. Broad, whose Brigado ready for operations toward the end (4th Infantry Brigade, Quetta) of March or sometime in. April," was engaged in night operations anid Archbold. "Our first effort when the catastrophe occurred, will be to make a series of aerial General Karslake spoke highly of surveys of the plains and rivers the rescue work by British troops as well as the mountain regions quartered in Quetta and of Indian to determine the most accessible units, especially the Sikhs and way of approach. We hope to dla Hazara Pioneers (of which unit cover lakes or open stretches blg Sir Claud Jacob was Colonel for enough for our amphibian plane to many" years). The earthquake land upon and also sites that are took place about 3 a.m. and within easily identified on the ground

n few seconds thousands of men,. where we can dump supplies for the women and children had been kill- ground expedition which will worked or seriously injured. Ha way into the wilderness afont.

Officers' Wives

No Forchand Knowledge

All the women in the city did ex- "We have absolutely no forehand coptional work. Lord Kitchener knowledge to go by. So far once said that it was wrong for we have been able to determine officers to marry, The lecturer only two white men, members of thanked God that there were 'a British patrol, have ventured into married officers in Quetta, for he

the region. They reported the did not know what they would have IN *natives friendly. Very little 18 done without the help of the wives known of the natives of this par- of officers and other women who tículär section. Their cultural survived the disaster. About development has been so sluggish 7,000 troops were actively at work that they are still in the Stone Age Immediately the disaster happened, ,in that their implements are made and before long approximately ¡of stone and wood.”

12,000 were searching the, debris

The ground party, Archbold suid, for the injured and the bodies of will consist of Rand, Tate; and on the dead. He could not praise too Australian botanist whose name. Is highly, the efforts of both the Bri- Brass..

tish and Indian soldiers. "We can overcome even the most The disposal of the dend was adverse conditions," said the ex- a great problem. They could not plorer. "Our. plano is equipped dig a hole and bury the bodies with a special cargo chute from irrespective of whether they were

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tached to parachutes will be dropped religion of one caste called for by means of a releasing device to burial and the other for cremation. the ground expedition. The para- About 14 tons of wood were re- chutes Bro designed to carryquired to burn, 4,000 bodies. weights of about 100 pounds.

The refugees were placed in nj "According to our present plans camp on the racecourse, where the wo expect the initial penetration problem of sanitation was con- to cover the distance the ground aiderable: The Sappers and the party can travel in from six to Sanitary Sections, however, got eight days. We are limited in dis-over that difficulty so successfully tance by the amount of food our that the refugees, because of the puckers can carry because we are ordered cleanliness, "did not know not positive that the airplane can whether it was Sunday or Christ- find the ground party except at mus Day.

The work in the hospitals con- given points along the route.

"One of the special problems in tinued at high pressure day and connection with the expedition is night, with such good effect that that of maintaining communica-jal danger of an epidemic was tions between the ground organisa- avoided. tion and the base at Daru with the

"There is no Army In the world," " plane while it is in the nir. General Karstake concluded, "that

can touch the Army in India." United Press,

WARNER BROS. VATROPICAL MUSICALI

IN

WHEN AT HOME

aliente Thongkong Telegraph.

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