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Durham Review (1897), 14 May 1931, p. 3

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tary Rules For Aviation io in France 12 of seyâ€" arly Oflâ€" zemmed mming y many e usual and «l m iygieéné a Set CAF MA tortant to remember that Jesus must ave been saying something which was intelligible to the disciples at the }ime. He is not reported as sayinz, "this is my flesh," and cfixite certainly when he gave them the bread, he was not giving them his flesh or physical body to eat, for .is physical body was till with them as he reclined at the able. We are ound, therefore, to ke the words mystically or parabo‘!â€" cally. We mus. not attempt to exâ€" lain them away, we must explain ?hem intelligibly. The Hebrew proâ€" phets had tnuiht their contemporaries, not only by their glowing words, but Iso by their symbolic actions. ‘ ius :or months Isaiah had gone about the At is easior to see how the service riginated, and how it developed, then know exactly what Jesus said at he Last Supper. We have accounts wof that Supper in the first three Gosâ€" ,els, and in 1 Jorinthians. In the s«#ourth Gospel we are given a disâ€" Course of Jesus on that last evening, ‘and the story of the foot-washinfz, but o account of the Supper, while the ramental teaching o?e Jesus is conâ€" ted with the Feeding of the Five housand. It is not possible qui&e‘ tisfactorily to harmonize all these ecounts. In particular it is probable but not certain‘ that we should exâ€" Rise from Luke‘s account from the ords "which is given for you" in v. 9 to the end of v. 20. There is imâ€" tortant manuscript authority for this, l@wnd it is likely that these words were ed, in very carly days, to bricg uke‘s account into better harmony Wwith the others. But we are still left with the quesâ€" tion as to what Jesus meant when he e said, "this is my body." It is imâ€" iity in the dress of a captive, and} stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap eremiah had carried a yoke on his| ;t carefully) for each number, and adâ€" thoulders as a symbol of the doom| jress your order to Wilson Pattern hat would overtake an unrepentable Service, 73 West A h ( eople. _ Similarly Jesus used the| ~°"Y°® 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto, ieted as well as the spoken parable. seâ€"â€"â€"â€"Â¥Gp m Iis seizinguglfhtheiTempluuna case CchaRity point. is is my y," must an, "this represents my body." As I‘:;” '::“' cover a multituda of sins esus was giving them the cup and With the whiteo robe of charity. t | 0. 90 oR . CUorQnL 22: 7â€"13, We are probably wrong to suppose that Jesus, on the occasion of his last evening with his disciples on earth, inâ€" stituted a new rite, or gave hisg Churchâ€"toâ€"be a new and hitgerto unâ€" heardâ€"of ceremony. It appears rather that Jesus, following a wellâ€"known Jewish custom which persists to this day, had been accustomed, at the evenâ€" img meal, when he gathered ais disâ€" ciples about him to offer a prayer of ‘ thanksgiving to God, to pass around the lovingâ€"cup from which each drank, and the round, flat loaf from wh;’rh' each broke himself a fragment. We seem to find references to this comâ€" mon Jewish rite, the Quiddush, in‘ other parts of the Gospels. The Last Supper was not an altogether new vn-l stitution, but one of , 2.,,.100° HNCW n« w0 P PXOe wCl and the round, flat loaf â€" each broke himself a fra; seem to find references t mon Jewish rite, the Q gther parts of the Gospels SHWRWAW weuw c2ok . It is 1 May 21 EeaNTT IRWNC Ed 123. _ Golden Textâ€"This do ; remembrance of me.â€"Luke 22: 19 ay 24â€"Lesson VIiiI: Jesus ing for the End, The Lesso: TRANSFPORMING TRANSFORMING a jEw 22: Tâ€"13, THE MEANING or tH® 14â€"23, ANALYSIS A JEwisx The Lesson: L:J(e Print: Luke 22: JEWISH CUsTOM SYMBOL, 22 CUSTONM Preparâ€" last _ Style No. 2948 may be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39â€"inch material with % yard of 35â€"inch contrasting. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and adâ€" dress your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. ‘ JEFFâ€" â€"By BUD FISHER. Black chiffon with black lace is exquisitely lovely for more formal ocâ€" casions. Printed crepe silk with plain blendâ€" ing crepe contrast is decidedly chic and wearable. The skirt hugs the figure through the higs with gracious flaring toward the hem. The cow! neckline softens the bodice and narrows its effect. White embroidered mousseline vest and deep cuffs provide smart newness and contrast to an allâ€"day model of navy blue flat crepe silk. in I!Uustrated Dressmaking Lessons Furâ€" nished With Every Pattern BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON |_ Vancouver, B.C. â€" According â€" to British Columbia lumbermen the recâ€" 'cotd for the largest tree ever cut down still rests with the Lynn Valley ’Douglas fir which was 417 feet high, being 300 feet to the first limb. It i was 25 feet in diameter and 77 feet in circumference, and was believed to be about 2,000 years old. "There is probâ€" ably no other tree that will ever surâ€" pass in size this giant fir," says the "Canada Lumberman," "except as botanical specimens. No lumber corâ€" poration could afford to let a tree grow to such an age." Wds e eniinins e meiuge "clvictg tur > eadttists" cdusss a feeding upon him by faith, a foreâ€" taste of the triumphal feast of reâ€" demption in the future kingdom. Many E‘storical details are uncertain, and we do wrong to think superstiâ€" tiously of the rite, but we can hardly put too much meaning into it, for we cannot exbaust the infinite love and infinite significance of Jesus. The Church has rightly seen in the Lord‘s Supper a bond of Christian !el}owship, a communion with Christ, C IVV. omee@tveiine. Wwsc Phevv 0 the bread, so was he giving his very life for them. What New York Is Wearing Still Largest Tree Faith is the key that unlocks the cabinet of _ God‘s treasures; . the king‘s messenger from the celestial world, to bring all the supplies we need out of the fullness that there is in Christ.â€"J. Stephens., ‘ The bee often works both day am _night, gathering the pollien and necâ€" tar «during the daytime and helping to fan the nectar with its wings during the night, to make the sweet fuid thicker by evaporation. One good authority says that it takes twenty thousand bees to make a single pourd of honey. _ It also takes five pounds of the sweet and preciâ€" ous nectar from the flowers to make one pound of honey. _ So, although the bee does not always work, in accordance with the latest scientific investigations, the phrase "busy as a bee" still retains its full significâ€" ance. k Still further study and observation revealed that the bee does not work all the time, as was previously beâ€" lieved, but takes time for rest and play. _ So the bee, although it does not realize that all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, instinctively carries out that idea. Nevertheless, when is works, it works with all its might, Only in war times do huâ€" mans come near approaching the strenuous activities of the bee. Shortly afterward, Dr. Frisch openâ€" ed the hive. The bee with the brilâ€" liant red ctoss on its back came out, followed by a host of other workers. The marked bee, continuing to lead the way, took the other bees to the clover patch without any difficulty. Aund from that time on all the bees could traverse the intricate maze without going ino a blind alley or: losing any ime. Through further observation, Dr. Frisch learned that bees have different movements and act in different ways,according to the story they wish to tell. Whenl angry, for instance, they move in a‘ peculiar zigzag fashion. | After it had gathered a load of necâ€" tar, it flew quickly back through the elaborate channels to the glass hive, where Dr. Frisch opened the little door and let the wanderer in. The sclentist kept his eye on the marked bee in the glass hive by means of a large magnifying glass. It was then that the entomologist reâ€" ceived the surprise of his life. The‘ bee with the red cross moved itsi feet and wings up and down in al peculiar rhythmic fashion, and no sooner had it made this movement than all the other bees around 1t' went through exactly the same antics. ‘ , This done, he lifted up a small door of one of the hives, letting one bee out. _ With some very bright red coloring material he painted a red eross upon the back of this bee, so that he would be able to distinguish it from the rest. _ He then released the marked bee to travel through the: network of passages in search ofI food. _ It went on its journey, bat-,' fled at times by enclosures and blind alleys, but it kept on and on, reâ€"‘ tracing its steps time after time, unâ€"| til it finally succeeded in reachingl the clover patch. The method used in his research is as interesting almost as the disâ€" covery itself. It appears that the doctor first built several hives enâ€" tirely of glass, so that he could see exactly what was going on in them. He made small doors to these hives in order to let the bees in and out as he wished. He placed the hives on one side of the garden, on the opâ€" posite side of which was a small patch of clover in bloom. . Then, beâ€" tween the hives and the clover patch he built a screen maze, or labyrinth, a place full of intricate passage ways which covered the entire garden. According to the latest scientific bee knowledge the feet of the bees are their organs of communication, believes Dr. Karl Von Frisch, a Gerâ€" man entomologist. In talking they do not touch one another, but deliver their message by what we would call a kind of dance. Latest Reports On Bee Science Sees Converse By Various Foot Movements THE KEY i Soil Erosion , Colombo Times of Ceylon: The problem of soil erosion is a worldâ€"wide one, but assumes most alarming proâ€" portions in countries where the rainâ€" fall is heavy, and the land steep. The rainfall in the Tropics, except in cerâ€" "tain dry belts, is notoriously heavy, | in its annual as well as seasonal inciâ€" dence; and where, as in the Central| !and Southâ€"West regions of this islan 1, ’the land is mountainous, the condiâ€" ; ’ tions for soil erosion may be described as ideal. This fact, and the loss reâ€" ; sulting from the removal of the finest (which are also the most valuable) / particles of the land, were scarceiy realized by the enterprising plonears who, in opening land for coffee and tea, blindly followed the system of cleanâ€"weeding in vogue in English agriculture, and largely dependsâ€"like all pioneersâ€"on the virginal fertility of the land for their crops. Subseâ€" quent experience in tropical pianting has made the planter wiser. Rigel is so far away that it takes its light more than 300 years to reach the earth, while the light of the sun makes the journey in about eight and a half minutes. And Canopus, famous star Egypt, is still brighter. For instance, in the cool of tre night one should look at Rigel, in tae constellation of Orion and contemplate how beautiful it seems. The sun goes into the shade in comâ€" parison with Rigel, for the brightest star in Orion is at least 10,000 times as bright as our sun. Fortunately for the people on earth, igel is not where the sun is, a more 93,000,000 miles from the earth, for there would be no living here then. | | Sun‘s Rays That‘s a lot of candlepower, and the brightest electric are looks like a black spot when seen against the sur‘s disk. But there are millions of stars much brighter, 000 candleâ€"power, Dr. Waliter S. Adams, director of the Carnegie Institution of Washâ€" ington Observatory here, will tell you it has been measured and found +o be _ 3,000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000â€" Things could be worseâ€"the isn‘t so bright after all. Mount Wilson, Cal.â€"If the glare of the springtime sun o1 the pavement irritates the eyes, don‘t be downâ€" hearted. Jack Charleson of Ottawa, who with Capt."F. N. WilHams, New York, will fiy as far north as magnetic _ pole _ to photograph aurora borealis in cclors. _ They plan to hop off July 19. Compared With Stars sun _ Travelers long have marveled at' PE â€" the beautiful azure color of the lakes Movie is Sent Th in the Tyrolean Alps, and chemical For Patrons compounds in the water wore generalâ€" On a miniature scree ly believed to cause the color. Recent‘of a Los Angeles the analysis, however, shows the lakes to‘ may view and hear the be free from coloring matter. Scienâ€"| ing picture being pre tists therefore have decided that the, main auditorium. This hue is due to reflection and refraction | who wish, to retire to of the azure sky in coloriess wate.,| room without missing a jarticularly since the azure color | tinuity of the film. The changes to gray as the sun declines,| flected from the film in Other localities do not have the deepâ€" } jection room by mezns blue water coloring because they are , and through a long tub not favored with clear blue skies.â€" screen, six feet wide, in Popular Mechanics Magazine. ilounge. ‘ _ New hope for the rescue of avalâ€" anche victims and for the early reâ€" covery of bodies of th> killed whiâ€"h l often are not found until the Winter‘s snows have melted has been found in , the divining rod. A mountaineer »f Traunstein, upper Austria, deeply moved by some recent avalanche traâ€" gedies, has been making a series of experiments. Objects likely to be carâ€" ried by every skier, such as a waten, ring, coins, ski knife and ski footâ€" plates, were buried very deep in the snow, and a "dowser‘ set out with the divining rod to search for them. in each case the rod revealed the location 1 of the metallic objects. It is believed that the new discovery will save scores of lives in the Austrian Alps every year. I Why Swiss a curious spiral geometry, showing the intricate effects of windowâ€"pan» frost projected into three dimensions. The ice is deposited like hoarfrost by the cooling of moist air as it passes outward through the caves.â€"Popular Mechanies Magazine. _ Giant ice erystals, up to eighbeon‘ | inches across, are found at only one place in the world, in the famous| Kungur ice caves of the Ural mounâ€" | taing. Russian scientists recently roâ€" turned from these caverns with strikâ€"} ing photographs of the fantastic structures taken by water in these‘ remote grottoes, Snowflakes are seen under the microscope as delicate sixâ€"! pointed crystals, and hailstones, on | rare occasions, have been found t‘ consist of crystals visible without magnification, but the huge cave crysâ€"| tals are more beautiful than either.| They are hollow and sixâ€"angled, with by such acute mental misery that it sometimes drives men to suicideâ€" these came into use before the end of the last war. But men recover from doses of these gases, just as they often do from mustard gas and phosgene, and we may apparently expect more effective substitutes in the next war. It seems, too, that there is a good prospect of developing other forms of poison. . . . Where is the glamor, the high call of adventure in war of this kind? . . , We have written in a‘ll sincerity on our war memorials up end down the country: "Dulce et de-l corum est pro patria mori." Perhaps | we shall do so again. But it we add ‘ "to kill for your country," which ls,{ aftes all, what a soldier is asked to do, will that, too, seem a sweet and hou-‘ orable thing in a war of the kind for ; which all nations even now are preâ€"‘ paring? | siant Ice Crystals Formed Only Once By Nature New Statesman and Nation (Lonâ€" don): Mr. Angus Roberts was perâ€" fectly right when he said in hbis presidential address to the National Union of Teachers that the danger of war stlll lies in its glamorâ€"in "the indefinite form of admiration" which still clings to it. . . . In the days when war meant handâ€"toâ€"hand fighting there was really something splendld‘ about it. Even in the last war there were opportunities for chivalry; there: was a genuine call for comradeship in arms. But we have heard complaints from regular soldiers that warfare nowadays is not war at allâ€""not war," they put it, "but bloody mur-‘ der." ... If war had become a scien-‘ tifle but indiscriminate slaughter inâ€" volving civilians as well as armed men‘ in 1918, what of the next war? .. . Lewisite, a poison gas which so burns its victims that they become scarcely recognizable, and another gas which first causes intense pain in the head and chest, a pain which is rollowed! War and the Next Generation Use for Dividing Rod ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Lakes Are Blue «% e Where the Fliying l On a miniature screen in the lounge of a Los Angeles theatre, patrons / may view and hear the identical talkâ€" | ing picture being presented in the main auditorium. This erlables thos> !who wish, to retire to the loungi.ag | room without missing any of the conâ€" | tinuity of the film. The picture is reâ€" | flected from the film in the main proâ€" 'jection room by means of a mirror |an(l thro_ugl} a loqg tube to the glass Movie is Sent Through Tube For Patrons in Lounge white Irish linen, wornh with white linen hat buttonholed at edges in red _ yarn. White kid _ opera pumps are trimmed with narrow band of white lizard. Nothing is so dear and precious as time.â€"Rabelais. s Sleep is fleeting death; each sunâ€" rise finds us all newâ€"bornâ€"From the Chines > "Alcohol should be in the engine, not in the engineer."â€"Henry Ford. Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.â€"Samuel Butler. "If a man drinks heavily in order to drown his troubles, he will soon find that they can swim."â€"A Soiâ€" icitor. Sad soul, take comfort, nor forget that sunrise never failed us yet. â€" Celia Thaxter. Certainly roching is unnatural at is not physica y impossible.â€"Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Hardly anything will bring a : n = mind into full activity if ambition Le wanting.â€"Sir Heny Taylor. That observations which is called knowledge of the world will be fou id much more frequently to make m n cunning than good.â€"Dr. Johnson. * Let not things, because they are common, enjoy for that the less sh re of our consideration.â€"Pliny the Elder. Summer Mode ~n.°s . ~‘ay, the basement ’ There is as much difference b> Eween the counsel that friend giveth and that a man giveth himself, as there is between the counse!l of a friend and of a filatterer; for there is ho such flatterer as a man‘s self, and there is no such remedy against flattery of a man‘s self as the liberty who best Bears His mind yoke they serve Him best; His state is kingly; thouâ€" sands at His bidding speed, Aud post o‘er land and ocean with» out rest: They also serve who only stand and wait.â€"Milton . God doth not need Either man‘s work l Auckland Weekly News: Some ‘the Dominions must necessarily look on Argentina as a competitor, Canada sees a rival in the growing of wheat for export. Australia and New Zeuâ€" land are obliged to think of the re public in terms of wool and frozon meat. In other products, perhaps in sugar, there may arise keen competiâ€" tion; already it exists to some extent in butter, alfalfa, tobacco and wiae, although these things are produced in Argentina chiefly for home consump tion. _ But consideration should be given to another aspectâ€"the opporâ€" tunity presented of finding there an increasng market for British goods, including some produced in the Do minionsâ€"and this aspect is definite‘y related to the fact that trade is inter change, The measure taken by the mu pality is said to have originated quarrel between the old woman sells the grain and a shopkeeper in square, who took revenge by comp] ing to the authorities of the dan caused y the birds. But the sentin of the pigeonâ€"loving population been aroused and the society for protection of animals has petitic the municipality in the interest of birds. The fate of the city pigeons in London, writes a correspondent of "The London Sunday Observer," has its parallel in Stambul, where also considerations of hygicne are to preâ€" vail over those â€"f sentiment. The old woman selling grain on the courtyard of the Bayazid Mosque has been forâ€" bidden to continue her trade. Ths pigeons will have to settle somewhere Birds of Bayazid Mosque Doomed to Seek New Home should be servants and not £o The sum of art, it is said, is ceal art. ‘There is need for c the sum of magic in words be conceal meantng. Two kinds of watchfuiness are needed in this connection at the promâ€" ent moment, One is that, while the standardization of the talkie is spreadâ€" Ing the words of its producers amid countless millions of Englishâ€"speaking and nearâ€"Englishâ€"speaking peoples, the greatest care should be taken to keep "the well of English undefiled." The other is that in an age of the growth of hard mechanism and misty fantasy there should be a jJealous exâ€" amination of the meaning of words. It should be remembered that words, with all their enchanting beauty, should be servants and not governors, Also, she says: "‘Love,‘ ‘valiant, ‘memory,‘ ‘solitude,‘ ‘silence‘ are other keys which unlock for me the gate of beautiful thoughts." She comes not when Noon is on the rosesâ€" Too bright is Day. She comes not to the Soul till it re poses From work and play. But when night is on the hills, and the great Voices Roll in from Sea, By starlight and by candledight and dreamilight She comes to me. I think the following verse by Herâ€" bert Trench contains more magic words, in this "pictureâ€"making" sense, than any other items I know : _ Murie! Audrey Rice of Chelsea, London, hits the mark when she say®, "For most of us the charm of certain words lies in the pictures and memâ€" ories they conjure up for us." She adds : _ "A delightfu! symposium on the aristocracy of words," writes The Christian Science Mo#itor, "has been conducted recently by the Morning Post, one of London‘s most brilliantly written dailies." In this symposium were the selections of various readers as to the words that appeal partiouâ€" larly to them. For instance, W. H. Twelvetrees of Nottingham selects "deive, ename!, foam, Darier, wanâ€" derer, buoyant, Hebrides, sovereign, Helen. Britain and Argentina of Certain Words CcoUuNSsEL SERVICE or his own gifts News: Some of necessarily look npetitor, Canada rowing of wheat i and New Zeuâ€" hink of the re vool and frozen ucts, perhaps in to com» ire lest used to I AF a#

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