West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 1 May 1913, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

L * w y ly 1" 6 ‘‘Tolle‘by fast."‘ Then, her patience exhausted, the negress turned to the physician. To tell the truth, doctor, I was jest simply kick‘d in the face by a gen‘leman friend." ‘ ‘‘*Was it a large object or a small object!"‘ asked the physician. ‘‘Tolle‘by large.‘" ‘‘Was it a hard object or a soft object 1 ‘‘Toll‘by hard." ‘‘Was it coming rapidly or slowâ€" Ont day there came to the elinic a negress with a broken jaw. The examining physician, intent on disâ€" covering the exact nature and exâ€" tent of the injury, asked numerops questions. To all of them the negâ€" ress returned evasive answers. Finâ€" ally she admitted that she was "hit by an object." \ Dr. Osler tells the following to illustrate the elasticity of the Engâ€" lish language as used by the Southâ€" ern negro. ‘‘He who learns to do these things will be a happy man. We must consider every one an equal or superior till the contrary is clear. The world is so great and we men so small ; thus everything eannot be happening about us. When we suffer an injury or are harmed, who knows but that it is for the good of creation In ev. erything on earth, dead or alive, lives the great white will of the Creator, only we little beings don‘t realize it. Everything is for the best in the eyes of the Creator." l The words are those of the Emâ€" peror‘s favorite author, Ludwig’ Ganghofer, a Bavarian. _nbe strong in pain; don‘t long for what is unattainable or worthâ€" less; be satisfied with the day as it comes; look for good in all things ; be satisfied with one hour of happiness for a thousand bitter ones; always do your best even though you may not be thanked. ‘‘He who learns to do these Stuflcllc c omm s & In the shelter the down and out is not merely given a bed to sleep in. He is required to take a bath. He is also given breakfast the next morning. In placing the homeless men in the various shelters disâ€" tinction is made between the man who is a hopeless derelict and the man who is only temporarily down and out. In that way many a man who is beginning to drift downward is saved from the underworld and restored to society as a useful memâ€" ber. Through the efforts of John Burns the various charity shelters of the eity have been brought within reath of all needy. The policg have been called into coâ€"operation. The unâ€" fortunate men and women who seek the cold pavement of the embankâ€" ment for rest are directed by the policeman on the beat to a nearâ€" by office. In that office a man is in telephone communication with every shelter. The man or woman brought in is given a pass to one of these places. the benches and sidewalks of the embankment have served as sleepâ€" ing quarters for down and outs nightly. They served as the festerâ€" ing places of disease and crime. They <do so no longer. No man in London need now sleep out of doors. The Thames embankment is no longer the "show place‘‘ of Lonâ€" don‘s poverty. _ For generations The entente between Great Briâ€" tain and France seems unbreakable for the present, but what statesâ€" man can foresee the developments of the next fifty years in European coalitions 1 Many Britons will proâ€" bably refuse to forget that 100 years ago France was the enemy : they will oppose the tunnel as sturdily. as their fathers. And for this reaâ€" son it will not do to raise high hopes in travelers who remember vividly the horrors of a channel pasâ€" sage. But what a great thing for travel and commerce a channel tunnel would be ! When the proposal was last deâ€" finitely revived to dig a tunnel unâ€" der the channel to furnish railway communication between France and England, the voice of many Britâ€" ons was raised in a unanimous cry of horror. The Englishman‘s home would be imperiled, and sturdy country gentlemen were wont to waken in a cold sweat o‘ nights fancying they saw the French inâ€" fantrymen at their windows. But different times, different terrors ; and Germany is now the enemy. It is not surprising, therefore, to hear Hir Conan Doyle and Sir Regina‘d Talbot venturing to urge the conâ€" struction of such a tunnel for the express purpose of facilitating the arrival of food in England in case of war. _ With German commerce, destroyers at work on the sea, Engâ€" land would be left to starve; the tunne!l would mean salvation. THE KAISER‘S MA xIYU NOTES ANDCOMMENTsS world is so great and small ; thus everything happening about us. aiffer an injury or are anguage, a happy man. \\; nent of the embankâ€" are directed by the the beat to a nearâ€" that office a man is communication with The man who is buying his house on the instalment plan now wishes he could redecorate it in the same twentyâ€"four of hydroâ€"acroplanes. The remaining countries do not reach double figures. Italy has nine, Austria, three, Japan, Russia and Switzerland one each. |_ The nonâ€"stop record has been | beaten twentyâ€"three times, three ;times by foreign machines, twenty | times by French. The speed record | has been held twice by foreign maâ€" | chines _ and eighteen times by |French. The height record has been beaten twentyâ€"five times, four times by foreign machines, the rest by | French. _In the list drawn up America is credited with two makes of biplanes (Wright and Curtiss) and three of hydroâ€"aeroplanes (Burgersâ€"Wright, Wright and Benoist); Great Britain with nine makes of biplanes, eleven of monoplanes and one hydroâ€"aeroâ€" plane; Germany with six makes of biplanes, seventeen of monoplanes and two hydroâ€"aeroplanes ; France with twenty makes of biplanes, twentyâ€"four of monoplanes and Has 48 Different Makes to 47 of Other Nations Combined. An analysis of the existing makes of aeroplanes and hydroâ€"aeroplanes made by a French newspaper shows that France alone possesses fortyâ€" eight compared with fortyâ€"seven credited to all other nations comâ€" bined. Numbers alone, it is pointâ€" ed out, do not prove much, but the chief records give France also the first place. n | Crypt, and the Cathedral also conâ€" | tains memorials to soldiers of such | renown as General Gordon, Sir \Henry Lawrence and Sir John | Moore. The population of the principal parts of the British Empire overâ€" seas has increased in the 20 years from 18%1 to 1911 as follows :â€"Inâ€" dia, 257,270,000 in 1891 and 315,066,â€" 000 in 1911; Australia, 3,174,000 and 4,569,000 ; South Africa, 2,071,â€" 000 and 5,937,000; West Africa, 1,â€" 649,000 and 20,177,000; Canada, 5,â€" 035,000 and 7,447,000. | Prof. Jordan Lloyd, senior surâ€" FRANCE LEADS IN AIRSHIPS St. Paul‘s London, has been the burial place of many of the greatâ€" est soldiers, including the Duke of Wellington. Lord Napier of Magâ€" dala was buried in 1890 in the The Times announces the death of Admiral John Halliday Cave, C. B., at Kensington, aged 86. He was present at the siege of Sebastoâ€" pol as senior lieutenant of the Diaâ€" mond, and was honorably mentionâ€" ed as wounded at the storming of the Redan. ‘‘Bhakespeare,‘" said an cighâ€" teenth century writer, "was masâ€" ter of two books unknown to many of the profoundly read, which the last conflagration only could deâ€" stroy :â€"the book of nature and of man.‘‘ * ants of property of possible develâ€" opments; 4nd the police everywhere are taking unusual precautions. Bceotland Yard, London, aroused by the threats of women, has sent out warnings to owners ard tenâ€" 88, left no fewer than 66 descendâ€" antsâ€"three sons, three daughters, 40 grandchildren and 20 greatâ€" grandchildren. ® The Rev. J. E. Adderley, Birâ€" mingham, _ advocating _ religious films, says sermons are sometimes delivered to people who really don‘t know what the preacher is talking about. Mrs. Susan Alcock, who died at the Macheths of yest Anderton, Norwich, Cheshire, aged | Romeos of toâ€"morrow In the cotton mills manual labor has been reduced about 50 per cent. Now one weaver manages from two to ten looms, where one loom was formerly tended by one worker. in London this season than du;mvg the past few years. They are now seeking a suitable town residence. The Duke and Duchess of Montâ€" rose are to entertain more largely Fire occurred on the 2nd inst. at the shipyard of Doxford & Bons, Pallion, Sunderland. The joiners‘ shop was gutted, and the damage is estimated at £10,000. There are in London more Scotsâ€" men than in Aberdeen, more Irish than in Dublin, more Jews than in Palestine, and more Roman Cathoâ€" lics than in Rome. The Salvation Army raised £67,â€" 062 1s. 8d. by its recent Selfâ€"denial collections, which is £9,229 9s. 4d. in excess of the amount obtained last vear. Great Britain has no intention of following the lead of Washington in recognizing the Republic of China. A London firm of brokers sold 35,000 house cat skins last year for making "furs.‘"‘ Sixtyâ€"eight per cent. of all the newspapers published throughout the world are in the English lanâ€" guage. Occurrences in the Land That Reigns Supreme in the Comâ€" mercial World. The value of the fish drawn from the North Sea every year is £20,â€" FROM MERRY OLD ENGLAN) NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN BULL AND HIS PEOPLE. Accused (with offended dignity)â€" Never, your honor! Politics would have ruined my character. Judge (to notorious bank robber) â€"They say you were in politics on the other side. Referring to the happy combinaâ€" tion of the Hindu and the Moslem styles, Lord Sydenham said he earnestly hoped that this would be of good augury for the advance of the great Indian communities hand in hand towards nationhood under the guidance of British rule. _ _ The structure will be of shining white marble, and the style of architecture chosen is mixed Hindu and Moslem. The total cost of the building will be about $300,000, of which the Government of India is contributing two lakhs of rupees, the Bombay Government three lakhs, Sir Jacob Sassoon three lakhs, and the Bombay Corporation one lakh. F | Structure to Mark Spot of King George‘s Landing. Lord Sydenham, the Governor, recently laid the foundation stone of the building, the symbolical gateway of India, which is to mark the spot where King George landed on Indian soil on his way to the Delhi Durbar. The latter is important because poisoned meat is often offered to these dogs. The police dog soon learns to eat nothing but what his master serves him and is an examâ€" ple to many men in his resistance to temptation. His moral training forms as much of a police dog‘s education as his professional lessons. He is taught to be honest and faithful and not to accept a bride. How to defend his master is anâ€" other important lesson taught the police dog. Tho dog must snarl and bite as soon as an attempt to hold up his master is made. In this the police dog is developing marâ€" vellous qualities. INDIA*‘S MARBLE GATEWAY. Dogs are now used to escort priâ€" soners to and from jail in Paris. They will courageously attack their enemy, even when fired upon, as a notorious bandit found to his cost during a recent struggle to escape while being conveyed to trial. This is a result obtained by careful training. eecs ju, â€" ul ue es ce eC se s epigre Â¥ on d ent That o c s | Paris Police Dogs Are Trained to Refuse Bribes. After several attempts had been | made to damago the railways used |for the transportation of Greek troops into Turkish territory, dogs were employed to guard the lines, the Greek Government being unâ€" awble to spare soldiers for the purâ€" pose. The results were excellent. At Larissa in particular, the entire railload line was efficaciously pso-‘ tected by dogs. I For several years perfectly trainâ€" ed police dogs have been found inâ€" valuable in Paris, and they have been assigned to important duties. All along the banks of the Scine dogs watch for accidents. If a careâ€" less passenger or an unwary boatâ€" man falls off one of the many boats and barges plying constantly up and down the Seine, one of the big Newfoundland river guards bounds into the water to the rescue, barkâ€" ing to give the alarm, and often swimming with the limp body to the shore. IHomeos of toâ€"morrow all looked like Hamlets, so melancholy was their mein. Outside one of the biggest agent‘s seven of them stood togeâ€" ther, all in an "Alas, poor Yorick !" mood. In Bedford Street, and thereâ€" aboutsâ€"the actors‘ promenadeâ€" the Macheths of yesterday and the The head waitor at a worldâ€"famâ€" ous restaurant in the Strand tried to explain it all. ‘"It is an age of worry,‘"‘ he said. _ ‘"Look around this room. There are here thirty or forty persons, wellâ€"toâ€"do, and being served with some of the finest food in Europe, yet scarcely one of them looks happy." ’ Then an omnibus journeying from London Bridge Station past the Mansion House was mounted, and the persons inside were sorted out under the three heads. Of ten, five were looking tired, three seemed to be bearing upon their shoulders the burdens of the world, and the other two looked out upon the roadway as though it was not there. ! boGs aAs RAILWAY GUARDS. serious, and anxious. Across London Bridge. for examâ€" ple, when it was visited half an hour before noon, were tramping a long procession of dearyâ€"looking men ard tired, bored women. The first twenty who passed on the pavement on the western side were carefully sorted out into three classes â€" ‘"‘Happy," ‘"miserable‘"‘ and ‘"indifferent.‘"" The fact that seventeen had to be put into the ‘‘miserable‘‘ class, and that it was difficult to classify the other three, was proof that Mr. Bennett‘s stateâ€" ment was justified. _ _ The Daily Mirror says it tested the statement recently, when seveâ€" al hours were spent in counting faces in the streets and in typical places â€"where people meet. Everyâ€" thing was gloom; people looked glum and worried, strained, overâ€" serious, and anxious. fnaste and gloomy preoccupation‘‘ has led to an enquiry by The Daily Mirror, which finds that it is "all too true." Serenteen Out of: Twenty Betray ‘ Much Misery, Arnold Bennett‘s remark, after returning to England after a long. stay in Paris, that the expression on the faces of Londoners varies from the sad to the morose, and that their ‘"general mein is one of LONXDONERS‘ GLOOMY FACES. Denied. Buildings of Asbestos. Asbestos plaster, used in the same manner as concréetée at the preâ€" sent time, will, so a western conâ€" struction concern believes, solve several problems. It is claimed not ouly that buildings constructed of such material would be absoluteâ€" ly fireproof, no matter how hot a fire might be raging on cither side, but that the use of such plaster, which is a poor conductor of heat, would save fuel in winter and keep interiors cool in summer. Asbestos is also soundâ€"proof, which is an adâ€" ditional feature of importance, parâ€" ticularly in the construction of hoâ€" tels, factories and the like. _ The Government of the various states are making herculgan efforts to provide irrigation channels in cultivated areas distanced from naâ€" tural waterways, so that in a few years to come settlers may invest time and money in land and stock produce without fear of drought. is becoming minimized more and more. Irrigationâ€"the pumping of water from rivers and main irrigaâ€" tion channels along artificial waterâ€" ways cut through acres and acres of landâ€"has greatly helped to counâ€" teract any disastrous drought. If King Sol predominates too long, farmers just resort to irrigation to water the parched land. In accordance with® Australia‘s development, Sheep breeding in certain parts of Australia is precarious, inasâ€" much as its success depends entireâ€" ly on the amount of grass feed. The drought, which has almost ruined Australia over and over again, plays havoc with the sheep, owing to the grass being dried and burnt up. The animals die off in thouâ€" sands, and the young squatter is soon ruined. \ Bome idea of the amount of inâ€" spection work of a boundaryâ€"rider would have to do can be gained from the fact that on some of the larger sheep stations there are as many as 100,000 sheep. The animals wander for miles off the flat, in search of food, and it is necessary for a rider periodically to round them up and drive them back within certain boundaries. Likely Decides to "Squat."" After a year or two on a sheep station, the migrant may attain to the dignity of shearing. He will beâ€" gin to consider himself an expert in mutton matters, and his enthusiâ€" asm will probably tend toward the decision of being a squatter, or a sheep station owner himself. But although experience teaches, the new chum who commences life on a sheep station in Australia has many important conditions to conâ€" sider. Perhaps he will discover a numâ€" ber of sheep dead and others dying from some disease. These carcases must be gathered and burnt. He will probably be away in the bush for a month at a time, roundâ€" ing up, or ridingâ€"in sheep to within a certain bofmga.ry. He will find huts at certain junctions of his traâ€" vels, and it may be necessary to reâ€" main several days at one of them. _ _A jackeroo is paid about fifteen shillings a week, with board and lodging. After some months‘ exâ€" perience, during which he has learnt to ride a horseâ€"buckjumpers includedâ€"he will be tested as a bourdaryâ€"rider; and the most moâ€" notonous period of his sheepâ€"station career will perhaps come at this time. Australia is the shcopâ€"country of the world, and a large percentage of young Britishers who emigrate there land eventually on a sheep station. As new comers, they must commence life as a jackeroo, which is the native name for the freshâ€" man, and must for aâ€"while do anyâ€" thing. Ruin In Australia Resulting From Drought Now Prevented by Prrigation. INSPECTING SHEEP IS EXACTâ€" ING WORK. JACKEROD A HARD WORKER A new picture of Crown Prince Michi of Japan in a uniform of : abâ€" lieutenant of the Imperial navy. The Risk of Drought Some Tasks Arduous. TORONTO _ â€"Fatherâ€"‘"Why, when I was your age I didn‘t have as much money in a month as you spend in a day," Bonâ€"‘‘Well, pa, don‘t scold me about it. Why don‘t you go for grandiather 1" J untenanted. _ Fishing, however, continues to be the staple industry of the people. Twenty years ago 15,000,000 pounds of dried cod were exported from Iceland annually; now 50,000,000 pounds are shipped each year. Twentyâ€"one steam trawlers now sail with their hauls directly to Hull,: Engiand. The country still needs immjigrantc, much of it being _ During the last twenty years the trade and industry of Iceland has increased ~ enormously. Twenty years ago there was not a dairy in the country ; now thirty big dairies are sending thousands of casks of butter to Leith® and Edinburgh, Scotland. Sheep raising is also beâ€" coming an important business, ‘ __Under the antiâ€"spirit law permisâ€" sion was given to consume the preâ€" sent stock of liquors in Iceland, and figuring on the per capita conâ€" sumption it will all be gone by the end of the year. The government adopted _ the drastic prohibition laws because it was felt that the excessive drinking of the Icelanders was undermining the physical fitâ€" ness of the people. Present Stock of Liquors to Be Exhausted by 1914. At the end of the present year, according to news received from Copenhagen, it will be impossible for either natives or tourists to obâ€" tain alcoholic liquors in Iceland. The modelling of the memorial for Edinburgh to the late Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone by Dr. Pitâ€" tendrigh Macgillivray, R.S.A., has been completed and the statue will be ready for setting up in about six months. William Meikle, Chapel Farm, Strathhaven, was fined £2 at Hamâ€" ilton Sheriff Court_"tor allowing a dairymaid who had recently been in contact with persons suffering from scarlet fever to milk cows. Steps have been taken with the view of holding in Aberdeen next year a national exhibition, repreâ€" sentative particularly of the fishâ€" ing industry and the general trade of the North of Scotland. Several whales have been sightâ€" ed sporting themselves some miles north of the May Island, and it is believed that they have followed herring to the mouth of the Firth of Forth. Greenock Corporation have deâ€" cided to take tenders for the inâ€" stallation of an extension to the burgh gas works, to be constructâ€" ed on the vertical retort system. Operations have been begun for pumping the water out of the Glasâ€" gow harbor tunnel and putting the machinery and the elevators into working order. ICELAND WILL BE "DRY." Dunfermline Town Council has resolved to borrow £90,000 for the purpose of the construction of an outfall sewer to the Forth and subâ€" sidiary sewers. An offer has been made by Paisâ€" ley Art Institute to build and hand over to the Town Council, free of cost, an addition to the existing art gallery. Mr. Andrew Dickson, clerk of works, has just retired after 35 years‘ faithful service in the Hopeâ€" town estates, and was the recipiâ€" ent of many presents. _ At a meeting of the Edinburgh and Leith Corporation Gas Comâ€" mission it was stated that an offer had been received for the Corsâ€" torphine old gas works. Out of regard to the feelings of its poor, Falkirk® Parish® Councit has decided to eliminate the word ‘‘pauper‘‘ and substitute "recipiâ€" ent‘‘ in its books. 1 s es 0 00 m e oo C eR C yO oxt‘s The estate of Lochvale, belongâ€" ing to the trustees of the late Anâ€" drew Luck, has been purchased by James Clenaghan, cattle dealer. The gross earnings of 150 steamâ€" ers from Backie and district at the winter herring fishing has been calâ€" culated to amount to $487,500. The Clackmannan County Counâ€" cil have agreed to increase the wages of certain of their workmen from 22s. to 248. per week. A poacher has been shot dead down New Luce way. He was a fox which had put lamb and "goose too frequently on his menu. The Electricity Committee of Glasgow Corporation have acquirâ€" ed an electricallyâ€"propelled motor van for use in breakdowns. Dalbeattie Territorials have been reinforced by the addition of 38 reâ€" cruits, bringing the strength of the company to over 90. In order that Patrick may not lose its identity now that it is merged in Glasgow, an old Patrick Club has been formed. The death has occurred at Falâ€" kirk of Drummer Thomas Neill, who served for 21 years in the 42nd Highlanders. Kilmarnock Town Council‘s byâ€" laws for refreshment shops have been approved by Sheriff Lyon Mackenzie. Exâ€"Bailie Alex. Stewart, who is 92 years of age, is still an active member of the Callander Town Council. A start has been made in the construction of Portâ€"Glasgow pasâ€" senger station. What is Going on in the Highlands and Lowlands of Auld NOTES OF INTEREST FROM HER BANKS AND BRAES. The birds shall eat thy fleshâ€" The Egyptians believed that the preservation of the body as a mummy was essential to a person‘s immortality. The dire punishment predicted thus added indignity to punishment, and vet severer punâ€" ishment to indignity. Hang thee on a treeâ€"To expose the dead body of a malefactor was to increase the degree of punishâ€" ment. ihree momentous words are, how. ever, addedâ€"from off thee. These change the interpretation from one of promise to one of doom. _ _. . / ~ApPP0BODECES _ §so. common in dreams and is not able to frighten away the birds. 19. Pharach shall lift up thy headâ€"The interpretation â€" of the dream begins exactly like the inâ€" terpretation of the butler‘s dream. Three momentous words are, howâ€" T 4 on B in on oo \ 17. In the uppermost basket â€" The presence of all manner of baked food in this basket does not harâ€" monize with the statement that| there was white bread in all three‘ baskets. _ (Compare comment on preceding verse.) If we were to| substitute in verse 16 the translaâ€" tion ‘"three baskets _ of palm branches‘"‘ or "three wickerâ€" work baskets,‘"‘ then the two lower basâ€" kets might be thought of as being empty, so that when the birds had | devoured the contents of the upâ€"; permost basket there was nothingf left for the chief baker to serve to' the king. The baker experiences the helplessness so common in | dreams and is not able to frighten' away the birds. | 20. Pharaoi‘s ”l-.'.;"‘.l.da,y~ An oe¢ , Bring me out of this house â€" Bring about my release from imâ€" prisonment â€" and slavery and my restoration to deserved freedom. 15. Stolen awayâ€"And therefore not lawfully a prisoner or slave. 16. Three baskets of white bread â€"The meaning of the word transâ€" lai ‘"‘white bread" is unceruin.‘ Vl‘%x's earlier translations of the Heb contain different reuder-' ings, stih as ‘"baskets of palm branches,"" "wickerâ€"work baskets," and ‘"all manrer of baked food," that is, baker‘s goods, such as pastry, cakes, bread, etc. 14. But have me in remembrance â€"Do not forget a friend who is sufâ€" fering unjust /imprisonment when thou are agzin in a position to show kindness, 13. Lift up thy headâ€"Reinstate thee in office ; do thee honor. Comâ€" pare 2 Kings 25. 27 : "Evilâ€"merodâ€" ach, king of Babylon, in the year that he began to reign, did lift up the head of Jehoiachin, king of Juâ€" dah, out of prison." Verse 11. Pressed them into Pharaoh‘s cupâ€"The usual interpreâ€" tation given to this verse would lead us to think of unfermented grapeâ€"juice, refreshing _ and as highly prized in ancient Egypt as it is in America toâ€"day. But if we follow the suggestion given in the preceding paragraph in connection with verses 9 and 10, we can imâ€" agine the drama enacted in the visâ€" ion to include the transformation of the grapsâ€"juice into wine before the cup is given into Pharaoh's, hand. _ It is well known that ferâ€"| mented wine was a common beverâ€" age among many ancient peoples,’ including both Hebrews and the Egyptians. | the whole process of wineâ€"making transpire before his eyes in a few moments of time. It was as though the branches of the vine budded, and as though their blosâ€" soms shot forth, and these in turn grew and brought forth ripe grapes. verses 9, 10. Chief butler â€" Cupâ€" bearer to the king. A vine was before meâ€"In his dream the king‘s cupâ€"bearers sees Lesson _ V, â€" Joseph _ interprets dreams, Gen. chap. 40. Golden text, Job 32. 8. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY A scientist may insgist on inter preting a problem of this sort by It is indeed true that "a univerâ€" sal,"" as one has said, ‘"often maniâ€" fests itself in the opposition and the relation of individuals, but only through that opposition and relaâ€" tion the universal can realize itself as an individual whole." The process is a movement in which, though our conscious eleâ€" ments seemingly differentiate themâ€" selves, nevertheless a unity is still preserved in that differentiation and still holds its own even in the extreme opposition. Not only so, but even in the moments of antagâ€" onism that unity restores itself in a higher and a fuller form by means‘ of that antagonism. This is possible because religion is a growth, a development, and in the process of development, which is a transition, life fulfills its misâ€" sion, returning once more upon itself. This all pervading idea in the unity of our consciousness finds its deepest expression in religion beâ€" cause in the sphere of religious exâ€" perience our beliefs and doubt meet together and become coâ€"partners, finding their reconciliation in the unity of one life. _ All the problems of human life are centered in the idea of spirituâ€" al unity, which is neither a chaos nor an empty vessel, as some thinkâ€" ers imagine; and it is only in and through this spiritual unity that our life problems find their final solution. INTERPRETATION OF LIFE Our Analysis Will Show at Once the Complexity of This Problem INTERNATIONAL LESSON MAY 1. {â€" It would be a much more progresâ€" |sive world if we reduced the time we give to uther people‘s business. His consternation, when he disâ€" covered the princess identity, was only equaled by her tact in making him forget his discomfiture. The manager laid his hand upon her shoulder. ‘"My dear girl," he said, "I am sorry, but it‘s no use. You are not quite goodâ€"looking enough. Still, you have a pleasant face, and I‘ll tell you what I‘ll do. Come again next month, and then I‘ll see if I can use you as a junior saleswoman.‘‘ “"'I csme.".dibe said, ‘"because I your vertisement, and 1 M"_H How the Crown Princess of Gerâ€" many once met a rebuff is told in a Berlin despatch. The princess takes great interest in all measures that alleviate the lot of working girls. As the story goes, she once applied, incognito, on behalf of a protegee to a leading firm of dressâ€" makers for a position as model. eight years before his assassination _ besides the mural paintings, the excavations have revealed a numâ€" ber of historic names, scratched afâ€" ter the fashion of the tourist, on the Waills. Nearly 200 names have been already noted down, beginning with the year 1495. Most of them are Dutch; but of Britons there are Cameron, Buchan and John Par ker. One king has scrawled his name there â€"Gustavus AdoIphus III. of Sweden, with the date 1784, | _ The immense and richly decorated galleries were more than halffilled up with earth, and recent visitors had to grope through the 4.@% bent nearly double, to avsid~ touching tieseciling.. _ Of the mural paintings [the most interesting is that of a warrior with nodding helmet, a woâ€" man holding a child (clearly visible in the painting) and another woman in the background, where a gate :mi‘ battlements are also noticeâ€" e. on one of the rooms in that vast palace known as ‘‘Nero‘s Foll; and which covered an area about thrice that occupied by the presont Vatican with all its appurtenances I Erected after the burning of Rome in A.D. 64, â€" the "Golden House,‘"" which extended from the Palatine far up the Esqualine, and of which the artistic Emperor com placently remarked, "I am now lodged as a man should be," was converted by his successors into other edifices, according to tho timeâ€"hon«red fashion of Rome, and, while th> Colosseum arose on the site of the Neronian Lake, the baths of Titus and of Trajan respective! represent other portions of the Neronian palace. Interesting excavations are being made in Nero‘s ‘"Golden House"" }; the Italian Government, whose at tention was drawn to the subject by Dr. Fritz Weege, a young Germain archaeologist, author of a treatise Art Galleries of "Nero‘s Folly®" Were Filled With Earth, EXCAYATINXG NXERO‘®s HotlsE: 23. Yet did not the chief butler remember Josephâ€"The request of the fellow prisoner is entirely forâ€" gotten amid the old surroundings of prosperity and power. 22. As Joseph had interpreted +. themâ€"Both dreams had come true even as Joseph had foretold. casion for national rejoicing among the ancients was the birthday of their king. _ There are evidences that in Egypt it was customary to celebrate the birthday of the rcign ing Pharaoh with great formalities, including religious ceremonies and the granting of pardons to many prisonere Both the chief butler and the chief baker are summoned from prison, the one to be restored to his former office, the other to be executed. Thus for the basis of human }i‘e there is a unity of spiritual life, That unity manifests itself comâ€" pletely in religion. Religion is a «levelopment, a process, in which discrepancy increasingly springs up not by means of but with the sancâ€" tion of spiritual life that unity ma;y become deepened from more to more.â€"Rev. Yutaki Minakutchi, Japanese Evangelist. Therefore, however great the va riety of perceptions and of the pow ers of rational intelligence by which man may possess the most extenâ€" sive and manifold experience of the world, the unity of his consciousâ€" ness is able to reduce all this exâ€" ;)erience into the continuity of one ife. tion. And yet this is nothing but the way by which it returns to unity again. Every movement of the life of a selfâ€"conscious being proceeds out of unity into what seems an irreâ€" concillgle_diflorgqee_ and opposiâ€" â€" Thus even in selfâ€"«consciousness, in a sense the simplest of all ow conscious experiences, we | meet with subject and object as essentiâ€" ally diverse and yet they are funâ€" damentally identical. Patronizing a Princess. simpler and less complex category and to him our method may seem mysterious indeed ; but because of the nature of our problem we must appeal to a higher category than that of physical causation or the like. Our analysis will show at once the complexity of this problem and at the same time we will find the inadequacy of any scientific method . to ther." ed under the most eonditions of engine ufactured with a v quirements not on 1914 as well. The Russel] car 0 model on which ther portant change for met a second time, thei sent representatives of foremost â€" manufacturit the United States an« neers from Europe, fr operating under the Ki After the designs had stage, _ experimental built and submitted tests, upon the bench i and ulrm the road. F« a sirall numinoe» of d tp»s were nut thramant Then®&ame the tion of exact‘s= so that each pic act duplicate of a any other car. I one after the other ried through. To Company is delive: W1 "‘I‘m ten next birthda *‘Ten‘! Oh, what a little ‘our age. . Why, your rother‘s bigger.‘"‘ ) Well, yor see, I‘m only « mnary report, and tal of the unusual opp neering coâ€"operation econference of engine« the preliminary plar then worked out in In January, 1912, t met a second time, t] sent representatives WAs that stimulus to the b csompany found it . vide in a strong n dovelopments of t! velopments in min ther ldo;fli-'n of i in opposzon to 4 motor; the adopt fteering and centr trol ; the adoption ing and selfâ€"startir Early in 1911 a o« The Russell Motor Car has had long experience i1 ing and manufacture Btarting as agonts for oflJ Of cars, this company pro build up a plant in Canad facturing cars in this Bome of the parts were ; abroad ; others were dasi manufactured at home. Th of home manufacturing st« oreased. In 1910 the »«<l« the Knight Motor gavo a gergoing gre: tion of the tr sugar is asori & Venetian m rllll‘hwnd the ntroduced t} The refining « INTERESTING STORY « DIAX COMPAXYI‘s D oPMEXT. sUull a rarits gysicinn G: r certain : Experime: that sugar } hl‘ power w One of the e the Groat is sa gar to Grasoe . aws Sir Walto: thousand yours ©o from Virgin even so late as still a rarity in and it was than in Eur juicy reed 0 Its Origin is Lost in Aat fined in England in l. ll not knn\\'ll who in! «@isoovered, sugar. 8u seems, been known since Of history, but not in all The Chines# appoar to ha ed their palates with so sugar for more than 3.« Vl ‘What‘s your â€" age The Union Tru Company, Limi BUGAR USED s.000 Â¥1 Ciar. Idle Mon Mb N CAPITAL (paid up) â€" $1,000 RESERVE â€" â€" â€" $850 * _ hand for to-ronrp or Tor periods, or awaiting permar investment, can obtain POUR 1 CI'Z‘NT. Interest, compounded ‘qc terly, by opening an account in SA&NzU BEPXR1 MENT of CO"!:‘! These funds are w dra wa by cheque and bear in est from date received unill « withdrawn. We solicit out of t« m‘-.-u. which may be opene comdd, w tot PERSONI having idie fund hand for temporary or lo ty Tomple Buliding, Toronto Perk{ x ~~ Hp 11 d b t I1 lo 1k (A strength erl pportu on an< d a y toorou t " sn 1 We« rs pas s. Th t4 rt K dn In

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy