West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 26 Sep 1929, p. 3

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to Cotton iches (Us manic ' when " to.- t a u- name. d imeqrv. ml:- po. " to m ‘h Wu. my than M Our Mn. ad " - eueleu um children'- 'ttttdr-- Pulm m: tr. . We do nu always nee the lull "ttHkanee od events when they lup- rn. We may be overwhelmed by none mo: in the onetime» of the hour no that we fail to we a. forces which have occasioned it or the direction in which it in leading us. Not until some time In elapsed;. possibly years, are we table to Bee the deeper meaning of it all and discern the hand o Provi- dence in it. There can be no doubt that was the ease with the people of Judah and Jerusalem. When the blow lull and the nation was torn away from'ib loved centre in Jerusaltn. and carried to a far foreign land it looked like a day of unrelieved disaster. But. view- ed in the light of history and seen in Its perspective. it ir. more readily understood and its educative and re- demptive element' more easily recog- nized. Throughout the tteeoad Quar- ter's lessons this year we saw‘ some- thing of the forces which he! inevit- ably to the dissolrtion ttthe Jewish national life as it had been ronstituted. During this past ttwater we have seen these people in 2in ' at school, as it were, learning the deeper lessons of life from God through the prophets and teachers given to them. Then having learned-in some measure-- that lesson, we have seen them trans- planted once more to the old ground in Judah. just preceding the exile? Was their religion ever again exclusively a na- tional religion? Did not this "trip abroad” somewhat enlarge ti eir na- tional outlook and broaden in me measure the religious outlook as well? God was no longer cortflrted to Pale:- tine, but the God of the whole earth. What an the elfect of Eaekieh teach- ing on their conception of religion? Recall the emphasis Ezekiel placed on individual responsibility to God. The idea of getting rid of our personal ac eoutttahility in the corporate religious life was no longer possible to these re. turned Jews. Do we ever read again of the Jews taking " any form of idolatrv? Before the exile thN had been the muse of much difflettltr in What difterenees can you point out In the anish ife of Jerusalem in the re-established colony from the life of do old kingdom of Judah, " it was their religious life. but never again was this a tendency of the Jewish church. T What effects had the exile on the character of the people? Probably here thee developed those strong com- mercial tendencies which have marked them an A people since the restoration. In what war did this experience pre- pare the way for the vomit] of the Measimh and the Christian revelation of God? G!oryiroe in past ard present w we largely out off and hope pointed, With halving lurch and spurt of nam- mg smoke The last trail citrward deparu “lazing Its walling err to the echo- Quiet “ii! the on in each Lattrtmtlatt village mack span. the Ion-lg pine. against the roan-ed sky Like Mania: sparks the Malia: "att and vanish. The whip-main. send. torttt " plainiin err. The cow-beli- iinkle thp' the growing dullness And mountain mists make one ot hill and sky. In: hills . _ While down the winding road The honing "no ot auto. “an: The yellow moon climbs up _ All o'er the lake sun: In the mirror whlh the waters lake. . "temtrer 29. Lou.- JuU--tt.trietm.. fieimteure a an in". and on generation-Insii Jru.Gura Laurentian Night r did this experience pre- " for the vomit} of the ll the Christian revelation crying in pad and present r out " and hope pointed, w. Beii'les the broadened look, though but slowly de- pared the Wtthr for the con- t universal religion and a in otherhoo as seen in --A. Wiliama, Montreal, at. It. wt ,ara M.» «can! with m m a'ir'i'iu, m in tumult. can! bro-.1 :m' N- - c-md an In "I; man-io- - W at B maturity a til me m (i'itil,'.1,': of in. man hm When to“: were in“ uni-nu. distance ot 'rroe. one than Ind": GicTiii. waetrois.distrosetr of 10% tons in a a”. One man with two horses put out 12.43 tons. while two In with two horses loaded and spread on the Gold Isa, tom. With the manure "render one nun with two horses was able to hundle 18.23 tons. while when three norm were used on the spreader 21.03 tans were put out.. The” reruns are contained in Bulletin No. It,5 of the Department ot Agriculture gt Ottawa which covers studies extending over several yen. into the cost of producing farm crops in Eastern Canada. Eradication o! Couch Gran it has been (ound by an experiment conducted " the Field Husbandry Division of the Experimental Farms that much grass plants will be great- ly weakened if the plant is kept clip lpmi luck to the surface at the ground tor a period ot two months. This lulipplng back was mechanically done ”and would correspond with close gram ing. Clipping was continued up to tho tir" week in October. The tal. lowing spring the plants were so re. dured in Vitality us to produce only very weak shoots hearing no seeds by like month of Seplolnbcxx Another experiment with couch grass was carried out to ascertain the ettect of cultivation so carried out as to cut up the plants into small pieces. The root stalks were separated into pleas of inch and halt-inch lengths and each piece containing a node or joint was placed in the soil under con. dition. suitable tor growth. light:- eight per cent. ot the inch pieces and tlttr-two per cent. ot the hall-Inch pieces produced healthy shoots. Still another experiment by which the live couch grass root stalks were brought entirely to the surtaco was carried out. It was shown that under dry and hot weather condltlons ten days exposure was sutBciettt to dry out the root stalks to such an extent that they were incapable ot further growth. t Sex equality In still in " Infancy. we are told. Uncll It attain: mult- ity man can still be regarded " wo- men's equals. _ Nowhere is the advance in the (re- velopment of Canada's resources more vividly reflected than in the records of the Dominioau 'export trade. The sheer increase in the value of that trade is amazing enough in itself. but no tees astonishing is the manner in which Canada's exports have spread out into new channels. The United Kingdom and the Un- ited States have. long been Canada's two great customers, and until recent years other countries have taken only a minor share of the Dominion's er. ports. Within the past fifteen years a remarkable change has occurred. Dur.. ing that period the Dominion's sales to the United Kingdom have doubled in value, those to the United tSates have trebled, and at the some time exports to "Otter Countries" have risen more than seven-fold. These "Other Countries,' formerly I minor factor. now afford a huge market out- "Atttaeua" in the Spectator (Low don): (There is a widespread tend-) ency in England to compare and on- trast intellect and character. It In believed that these qualities are mutually exclusive. and that the pos- session ot the one implies the lack at the other. It in qulte commonly as- sumed that intelligence cannot. In practiée, be developed above a very humble level. Bare at the expense of character. If this confusion of thought has affected untavorably the education ot our youth-on whom our whole tu. ture welfare so directly depends-ati other counts which can be brought against it may be regarded as ot, minor importance. But it does work great mischief in many other ways. it tents to a widespread preference tor men ot ordinary or of inferior intelli- gence tor the conduct of putttie--and "rrivate--attairs. Large numbers of lauh men are to he found in Parlia. ment. on municipal .ind county coun- cils, on the governing bodies of vari- ous public institution and on nearly all public committees. And in,very many (nus they owe their appoint- ment to this popular trelief-that lack of intelligence implies possession of character. The loss to the nation unused by this state of attairs is, in the aggregate, enormous. its effects are felt everywhere. It impairs our national capacity to deal with current problems; and it detracts‘disastrousiy from our material and moral welfare. We cannot afford to persist in this error. . 1' The 9riihtrttrutt Canada’s Exports A young lady had an old admirer who, having found her gm, returned it with the following: If from your glove you cake the let- ter G, . Your glove is love, which I dovote _ to thee, A. F "Did she hue rooster feathers on her hat when you nw her?" "No: she had several cocktail' under her hat, I think.” I I914 l9” Character and Intellect "P0ms0rcatyryytmtoou:E, - l an I929" I -tttT6'- yd? um " fiscalm and!!! Ina/d; [wand/93 let for Canadian products. They bought from the Dominion last year a bill of goods greater in vnlue then the whole export trade of Canad- " teen years ago. To these widely scattered and lesser- known markets Canadn’s resources furnish In immense variety of pro- ducts in natural adn manufactured forms. Silver and artifieial silk to India, newsprint and sardines to Aus- tralia, potatoes to Cuba, lead and lumber to Japan, herring to China, foxes and lobsters to Sweden. oats and nickel to the Netherlands, salmon and furs to France, cheese and furniture to South Africa, rye to Norway, zine and asbestos to Germany, eodflsh and upper wire to Brazil, aluminum and wood pulp to Italy, and, of course, wheat and flour to all quarters of the giobe--these and a thousand and one other items help to extend the web of Canadian commerce across the seven seas. 501--Siip on dress with opening at left side, inverted tucks at shoulders and inset yoke forming irregular V- neck at front, finished with separate bow and streamers, three-piece eh. cular wrap-around skirt with two- piece rutile " top and joined to three- piece hip yoke that snug: the hips effecting slight blowing in waist, dart- fitted sleeves. For Ladies and Misses. Years 16, 18, 20. Bust M, M, 8830, 42 inches. " HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your nsme and address plain- ly, givingmhmber and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose Me in stamps or coin (coin preferred wrap it carefully) for esch number, sud address your order to Wilson Pattern Servieee78 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns settt by an early mail. "How thou: the jury, In that pro- hibition use?" “They've been out nix hours Ind they just sent word to the court to send in some more evidence." --hdge. ONTARIO ARCHIVE TORONTO it? J. In G. Def-ind. I a. tan-iq- Century (fauna): Mar In tho put the, more and tho to. dun-u PM have and. any continued co.- tnet. It but in In!!! when the for- or could no» to find n pom nods. tt is the mar on lu- " velopod people that In: dimm- to tho VIII. Whore be his not been attuned brtomotiorbrtto operato- of thou foul (In no! civill- ution. clothes. drink. ml disuse. primitive 'n-d, brown or block-- has nlmoat invarinbly succumbed to I kind ot vital languor. His lmnenof- ial customs suppressed or druticnlly modified, his habits ot thought dil- orientated, life has lost its savour tor him, And with all his profoundly in- teresting cultures he has faded silent- ly any. So, tor example, the red man failed in North America. the Aus- ‘tnlinn aboriginal followed the ex- ample of the red Man. and it is only in the very nick of time that the de. cline of the gifted and rhivnirous. Maori: of New Zealund has been Id rested. if arrested it proves to be., Alone the hardy and prolitte negro'; tribes of Africa have been able to per-l gist and multiply under the domina-l tion ot the whites. and this porsint-l ence has come to he dreaded by the. domiciled ruling community as likely in the course of time to overthrow their prr"scttt supremacy. political anal economic. That is the essence of the inative problem ot today. Sieley Huddleston in the New' Statesman (London): (At the time oti the sttowdetAJherott duel at the, Hague, French papers talked ot aub- etituting a PrantNAlertttatt entente tor the entente with Britain). In spite of mrperfteial appearances. France andl Germ-y can no more unite than can oil end water. Even it we assumel that France, anticipating further; struggles ot another character. has. need ot the benevolent ueutrelity ot Germany. it in inconceluhle that Ger-l runny will and .t in its interest to com- mit itself in this direction. Yet it ll strange that at a moment when wel, he" so much about permanent peace. l about. European unity, about the ttbtutodntnettt of the old diplomat-32' ‘there should be these more or less. (veiled threats ot secret diplomatici joumiingis. l Marlon Morning Post (Conant The presence ot British troops in Menn- dria 1nd in the vicinity ot Cairo, it it is resented " a few politicians, is popular with the mass ot the popula- tion, who know well, it they rettect at all on the sublet, that our troops are Iheir protection and security. In any event. the British soldier gets on well with the Egyptian people. and is be- sides a very present help in time of trouble to the foreign population. Iii: departure from those cities would leave the respectable citizen very much at the mercy of an occasionally fanatical and murderous mob, which the unided Egyptian police may be un- able to control. Chicago Tribune: The agitation for a Great Lakes seaway has tended to blind the public to the tact that today there are two water routes, both ot them in use. between the lakes sud the Atlantic Ocenn. There is no water. way from the lakes to the gulf, though the commercial possibilities ot the route are stupendous. There can be no such waterway unlea there in a substantial diversion a Chicago. l 'tryqk fyCErrirei- Saw: Do you know or I good dentin? Chisel-What do you fun: with u dentist! a“: I want to get my teeth straightened'. T British Troops in Egypt France and Germany Chicago and the Sea Br BUD FISHER Undergoing Reform Bombar-qhe union-MM!“ do- mrtments of the Nizaln's Government continue to do good work. according to the alhniuistratior, report ot Hyde- rabad State tor 1927, which has only recently smeared. A NEW HEAD T. Sense“. now head ot South Manchurian railway. mo of destiny In Jun-n“: 'cob mic salvation In! Asiatic prestige The record, of the experimental turns In the state, of which the" we all in line yum. diatrieta, In con- mended. Experiments are being con- ducted in the economical growth of crops suited to the soil by the use of ditrereat lenilizers and Improved types ot implements. India’s A notable feature ot the activities ot the department in the prouundn carried on in populnrking the nu ot modern implements nnd mchinery. and inducing the people to grow pu- ticular kinds ot fruit: for uhich par" ot the state were once humus. Three foreign scholarships are granted by the Government for uricuiiural edu- cation. The Department ot Industries and Commerce but been particularly ac- tire. New ronds comm-lug 230 mile: of territory were completed by the public works department and opened tor trattle. Addition has been made t. the railways and some new “not are also in course ot construction. Madra- Hindu Weekly: Io hr u the Nationalist Ministry in South Africa is concerned. it must be and that it in: so tar tried to stein the tide ot white opposition to the elemenury rights of lndians. But this negative attitude, useful as it has been. cannot be expected to redress the grievnnces. many and irritating. ot indiu- throughout the Unionw it will be necessary, therefore. for the Agent ot the Government of India in South Mri- Cu to press them upon the attention of the Government of South Africa with as much emphasis as he can put and put the issue boldly and squarely before them that there can be no inst- ing friendship between indium and Europeans unless and until the (crater are considered to he as much entitled to political and other rittttitt as the tat- ter. East Indians in South Africa pose'." Conductor: “Hardly! He looks as if he were kept on but tare at home, and needs I amuse!" The Mexican rebellion seems to be down to its last generi--Des Moines Tribune-Capital. The Mexican rebels, it develops, have been getting em: from Germany. At the moment, how- ever, they are depending more on their lat-NJ. Evening Post. British Hunter Old gent, mining to a lanky youth " his side in the tram car: "Row much for this boy-Ulf fare, I sup- In French Hands Nairobi. (b'.A.1--tRrme sensation has been caused here by the report~ ed 'trrest by French troops In the French Congo ot Mr. Mucus Duly. an old East African gamehunter. It ig stated that Mr. Dal! [as lost Ivory and stores worth $25,000 which have been cumscated by the French authorities. It ll believed possible that he may unwittingly hue infringed the French nine law. He ll well known in Kenya Colnny. Mr. Daly has appealed to the Brit. ish Foreign Oftiee for assistance. DreuFuhions . Favorite - Colon C Are New' And now. that In: Paris m to often-noon lid evening fads? The outlook in strange, dilemt, in Net ittoeUnbittlhetuttaieetift termed the “Nifty Ninth-’3 when ladies won many frills and loosen. or upon clout imports“ one ‘W a leaning toward: the Machine and Empire periods. The high waistline. capeleta. anal] boleru, more. lace or lingerie touches " tho neck all go to those early style periods, and ttet attractive they won.- in their day, which tnet designers of oak realize; and (hue they Lave turned bark the fashion pages. brittle and yellow with age. to find inspiration enough for this season and perhaps many more to It is more entertaining to glance at these oid-fnahiuned In“ of high. waisted Indies and upon opening the fashion books of this “tuna - one is fascinated with the modern de- signer's interpretation of old.“ frocks. alike and yet diiferettt, uniting the up of rash and rum even though they are hen-island with not things as frilled collars. panels. cape- leu, berthas Ind holeron. Ttter have raised the uuiriIine. lengthened the skirts, and fitted the tigure with via-er molding lines, graceful. yet :llowing for freedom of move-mam. MAY BE - Paris has provided stylist. with thrillers enough to In. than arming their pros and corn: ar late the neu- son. Some up the new fashions while extreme are wearable-that Purin- iennes are wearing them and that they nre lovely. Others my that they are fat too extreme u be like]: literally and that it will be I you, even " months. before they will be "opted. AU this naturally nah: for inter- est, Ind that there has been a drastic change in fashion there in no denying. It does let-m I bit disconcerting to consider corset.- in mneclion with thee widely heralded normal waist- lines, and to contemplate longukiru not only for evening but for all!!! wear. There is no denying that the ghost of the Gibson Girl atalks abroad and that her charm I." been the in- spiration for murh that haa been launched this season. Even her long black kid glows have been revived! The mode his suddenly Cone VIC~ torian or to nude remote periods and Chanel ins given pan-s by sounding the Empire note. The rotors who insist that women will never go back (a cot-lots and to long skirts, we about to say either "' told you BO, ' or admit their error. Thus. Paris " its track to the tict"e---with the molded prince“ lines. or the snug bodice above a belt at the natural waist. These two sili oueitos are the most important which the French designers have agreed upon. Add bath types concur in sponsoring the molded hipline. Ind fulness placed " in the skirt. Sports frock: ex- tend below the knee, afternoon mod- els are longer still, and skirts are lengthened to extrema in the evettine. Tho-ch the longer-in-bnck line is still important, Lanvin and Putin favor the full skirt with the even hemline reaching nearly to the ankles. lm. portant details include ogdeu, tiers, and rirculu skirts for afternooett sleeves that are long end trimmed be, tween the elbow and wrist, and e wealth of detail In the necklire. Deep berth. und cope coll-rs. Idiots. or lin- gerie touches elohomte every new (rock foe daytime occusionl. THE NEW COLORS. ' Tailored dresses show such details " 'ttthub-tto use of tailored shap- ing-Iectim. fur trimming. the a. gerie neckline. low-pineal ture, all the Wait and Mount! types. The. frock; are of either lightweight sheet can woollen. and “all, have“; patterned jersey. feather kneyl. can. animating. intend Ind necktie prints. Cohrrs are black. broom, [reel and Petou's dahlia -kados. One hears the new silhouette re- ferred to n The Lily Lustry or the Jersey Lily-wh" is “other step backward. Any way place the period where do will w. is nearer to the Vic- torian than to the "iation age which, of course. gives rise tn ell this specu- intion u to whether or not the con- tumes as launched at the openings of the haute couture are consist-m with the time. Fushionable colors for :hc formal evening frock include what is termed the ott white, green, Jahlil Pinks, red ard various shades .of purple. Black is a staple which alwny: sol-ms to stud tirm in fashionable circles. Fabrics for than occasions are velvet, both sheer and panic, metal lame, dull crepe satin, net, lice ehitfon and talteta. Colon to be worn during the afternoon. when one attends the for- Ml function. are black, prune dtdtlia, brown 3nd dad: green. while in tab. rics an lily choose either shot? all ”no: velvet. mun crepe, crepe MI and he the way late dam-o- "nies metal lame cloth. and can". mall m: or embroidered crepe: may be uni-u. ' Bogota was founded on a recrea- tion " of m the Em at the out“ [nib-I, who was! manor " w Quentin. . DECISION NEAR u,

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