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Durham Review (1897), 17 Sep 1931, p. 3

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I unu- work: an... In! rn ritain h. by no ed in. Ehoapor than the retail price of - ple. in Canada. At the same time, negotiation are in advanced. whereby a Canadian company will install 2.000 vending Ina-' chines along the boulevards. It is or: meted that each machine will sell 60, apples daily at one franc otrett, which: Paris.--' consignment ot more than a million Canadian apples soon will be on sale in automatic "rtdtttrtgtacttirtes on Paris boulevards. " the Brat step in a his campaign to make Frunce eat Canadian fruit. The tinal details of the campaign re. main to be settled, but French im- porters already have made a cash of. tar tor 7.500 boxes ot Canadian apples, realizing their superiority over the French variety. Paris Expected To, Eat More Than Million Canadian Apples Because of her size, many people leaped at once to the idea that ahe was intended for long ocean passages. It was. of course. a mistake. Increasing the size of the airplane does not in- crease its radius; like all other planes, the DO-X can get radius only by a drastic reduction in pay load, and the relative penalty which she has to pay for increasing " range aeems no less severe than that exacted of other types. Perhaps it is more so. as her extreme theoretical range, carrying merely crew and fuel, is only about 2,200 miles. But it is on the trans- oceamc routes only that long range in evenpiesirattle; existing air lines use short "hops" only. The airplane cannot negotiate the oceans on a com- In spite of the many misfortunes which have followed the DO-X in her long course from Europe, the achieve- ment which she represents is s very fine one. When in 1924 Dr. Dornier undertook his bold exploration in the new field of size it was eonfidenrly supposed that the airplane was reach. ine a structural limit. The larger the plane. it was assumed. the greater would be the proportion of dead weight which would have to go into the structure itself. The DO-X dis.. proved the thesis. and Dr. Dornier now sees no limits to the possible size which ttring vessels may reach. The DO-X can take " with a total weight. plane and load together. of more than fifty tons, but her designer thinks that within a decode we may see tir- ing boats of 100 tons displacement. New York Herald-rribune.-At last, afte. so many months of antici- pation and so many advance notices. New York has seen the impressive majesty of the famous "fUing ship." Riding easily " the tremendous thrust of her twelve motors, and with several ordinary planes buzzing line wasps beside her great hull and huge spread of wing, the DO-X passed up the North River looking. Indeed, like a liner of the air. She makes an in- stant appeal to the imagination. The faet that it is possible to lift a great structure of this sort into the ttir---.. true ship, with her large crew and six- tr passengers. with her fuel and stores. her three decks, her pilot house and engine and radio rooms and nil her elaborate living quarters-is still just a little difficult to credit. But we have now seen it done. "While the Bishop '.utrc'ilition was on one ot the Islands." Mr. Emory laid. "a party of 30 natives set " in I great canoe, which . d the name In malice as ths Maoris' craft, tor ttn. other laland " miles to the south. That is not a small accomplishment ---, or Jumoto. kind you» southeast of 'rtthiti. Thu covered by a group of mm bu neat out to study lsla groups by the Bishop M Honolulu. Mr. K. P. Emory logm. attached to the cum In visiting In New Zealand. Huge Flying Alcuand, Ni-Primitive "ruatiott, which enabled t to reach New Zealand on stretch of ocean, In preserve " among the native: ot the Natives Use Sun, Star, and Birds A: Guide Over Trackless Sea York Herald-Tribune-At _ so many months of nntici- d so nanny advance notices. 1: has seen the impressive d the “mom "ftrine ship." m 15th. This a; GT. a group ot natural scient- the Blah-0p waiil ot tr. K. P. Emory, an ethno- is Declared Marvel unland over a wide V ll Preserved tampon. "-Prirnitio, skill In enabled the Izod: "ttedition, now Inland culture leuotu, cut and 3 Previously, consignments on which ‘the customs duty had been paid, re. 'malned unsold at French ports, enun- ‘ing I heavy cash loan to Canadian ap- Iplo growers. i This enterprise is the result ot the initiative of tho Canadian Trade Com. 'missioner's ofttee, which also has just :induced the French Ministry ot Agri- jculture to grant a concession to Cana. {dim apple exporters, allowing them to store their apples at Havre without (erine the customs duty until the ap- [plea T'. sold. I "See that this is put' into execu- tione without loud or favour. else you mar expect to be dealt with as one not true to King nor Government, nor a Iman fit to carry commissions in the ‘King’s service. Expecting you will not 'tan m the tullf1itling hereof, as you Ilove your self I subscribe these with {my hand," etc. This concession on the part of the French authorities will permit the holding ot fortnightly sales ot Cana- dian apples at Le Havre. It to expect- ed that such sales will be started shortly. Kindly actions begun from a sense of duty blossom into infection and afford some of the sweetest pleasures earth can bestow. Active industry at first painful and arduous unfolds cur powers and comes to be the source of keenest satisaction. Purity of thought, word and deed, sought at first from a knowledge of its right.- eousness. comes at last to be the na- tural air which the spirit loves to breathe. Thus duty of every kind, containing within it the germs of de. light and beauty, will, if cherished, develop the sweetest flowers and .ieh, est fruits. and the good and beautiful thus clasp hands and claim kinship for ever. The estate Is 48,000 acres in extent, and Includes six miles ot the share at Loch haven. One ot the most (amour; ot Scottish beautrispots--mencoe - was put up tor sale recently. But " isn't its rug- ged and impressive scenery which has made Glencoe famous, but the fact ”that it was the ucene of one of the great tragedies (: Scottish history. This was the massacre ot Glencoe. in 1698. The order for the massacre. which was carried out by a party of soldiers, has been reprinted in the par- tlculars of Bale, and tells Captain Campbell of Glenlyon to "putt all to the sword under seventy." It goes on: u. Two Weeks ls Two Weeks On land Or Sea. [when one realizes that It is not not sible to see an island until within the mites ot It. and considerably 1295 than tthat it there are no coconut palms ris- l log above it. 5,000 miles at seventy-two knots. One renson can be seen in the relative .m- portance of the Power plant. The DO-X, with a maximum useful lift of about twenty-five tons, carries 7,500 horsepower; the Akron, with A useful lift three times as grest, has an in. stallation of only 4,480 horsepower mercinlly profitable basis, and pub- ably will not be able to do so until improvements in fuel and power Hunts radically alter the equation. The dirigible. on the other hand, has already achieved the necessary radius. The Akron has a calculated range of 10,580 miles at fifty knots and nearly on the Paumotu group, otherwise known as the Low Archipelago, dis- covered remarkable resemblances " tween the natives there and the Maor- is of New zeattutd.-The Christian Science Monitor. "The natives navigate by the stars. by the sun. by the set ot the waves. by the birds. In tact, it is an Instinct with them. An 80-m1‘n journey in those waters is no me n feat." I The tracing at Polynesian origins. movements, and atthtities, Mr. Emory said, is a task that only now Is be. ing properly taken in hand. The Bish. op expedition. which spent 2% years on the Paumotu group, otherwise "The Glen of Weeping" Duty And Its Fruits The secretions usually are obtained from animals, whose endocrine: cor- respond closely to those ot humans. The endocrine glands secrete sub- stances called hormones. which medl- cal men use not only in various types of illness, but in daring attempts to control obesity and the size to which a person mar grow. This step will be a joint study by physicians and chemists of the endoc- rine glands, the organs which regulate the body alt the war from its produts tion of energy to its rate ot aging. The study will be made in a symposium held jointly by the divisions ot me- dicinal chemistry and biological chem- istry. Buffalo, N.Y.--Atiother step toward.‘ The chemist's role-tho next step- tbe time when science hopes to repairii‘; to "wharf? hf,','r/,'ri'htoo, Take ' . emu ar ctallrittttt0lahoratory. man iT vital organs with sy-nthetlh sum} The sygthetlc Mutt has advantages in stltiites for damaged functions will beltreating human health. It is easier to taken at the meeting ot the American keep tree from impurities which often Chemical Society. lare found in the animal extracts. in: Science Plans to Repair Vital Organs by Synthetic Substitutes Therefore, instead of so much plac- ing of English books in our pupils' lands. we should make them more familiar with the sound of our lan- guage. As it is, rhetoric is a lost art in this eountrr--Mrs. A. M. Hender- son- Author and Lecturer, addressing the Summer School in Music Teaching at Oxford. It would be a great boon if it were recognized that alongside the teaching of English shou.d be the teaching of spoken English. Language, after all, is not for the eye but for the ear. That it is not is the fault of thnse in authority, not of the teachers. The art of speaking is badly neglected in this country, yet there are many pro- fesaions where good speech is so nee- essary. Our consideration of the art of speaking has become rather narrow. We do not consider it from quite the right angle. We think of it merely as a frill, whereas it should be a regu- lar part of our school work. Pigeon Sets Record in Harwich-Berlin Flight Berlin.-From Harwich to Berlin in eight hours is quite good time for an airplane, but for a carrier pigeon it is a record. This was accomplished recently, Trites a correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor, by one lot over 200 similar winged messen- lgers and it arrived at its home in lCharlottenburg without turning a feather. The Central flerman Travel Company organizes a pigeon competi- tion every year, this year's Right be- ing particularly successful. The birds --250 in number-were set loose in Harwich at six o'clock in the morning, and all of them, after a brief survey of the country, set " for home within l a few minutes. The first to arrived the Charlottenburg pigeon, did the. distance in eight and a quarter hours, equivalent to a flying time of more than 100 kilometers an hour. Within 30 minutes quite a number followed the champion, their arrival being an- nounced in their several homes by tho ringing of a bell attached to the door of the cot. Remarkable astuteness is manifested by these little featheredl flyers. Johnny Colao, fifteen years old, held midwest horseshoe champion tor two yea”. He has a record ot tossing " consecutive ringers and had scored " out ot , hundred in a title meet. A Lost Facility 15 Year Old Champion Horseshoe Pitcher I The principal ndocrines now recog- nized include the pituitary, a pea-sized :organ in the head, controlling the gi. gantism, dwarfing certain types of obesity and apparently master regu- ilator over some ot the sex glands. In .the neck is the thyroid gland, with (limited control over weight and over Home mental diseases. The pancreas. digestive aid, causes diabetes when its hormone Bow goes wrong. The adren- al glands, source of the explosive energy. that carries is man through A sudden’ crisis, and the vsripns sex glands are othc: endocrines. keep tree from impurities which often are found in the animal extracts. Its straength can iv controlled more ac- curately, which is important because of the exceeding potency ot hormones. At ordinary rates for electricity the lamp will burn for forty hours for 1 cent. A diamond with a tiny hole bored in it. serves as the die through which the wire is drawn. When coiled in a tilament 1,500 turns are required to it inch and no two turns may touch. The lamp has been designed espe- cially for sick room service, to illum- inate house numbers, electric clock dials. or inside refrigerators and cab- inets. Fine wire 410-1,000th of an mm m diameter-one-fifth the thickness of a human hair-provides the filament for a new type of electric lamp developed by engineers of the Westinghouse Lamp Company. Each life memorable tor goodness and nobility has tor ita motive power some noble thought. Here is that cathedral spirit. John Milton. In his loneliness and blindness his mind was his kingdom, He loved to think ot things true and pure and of good re port. Often at midnight upon Pt poet's ear there tell the sound ot celestial music, which he afterwards transposed into his "Paradise Re- gained." Dying, it was given him to say proudly: "i am not one ot those who have disgraced beauty ot senti- ment by deformity ot conduct, nor the maxim.» ot the freeman by the ac- tions ot the slave, but by the grace ot God I have kept mp soul unsullied."- N, D. Millie. World's Finest Wire Used In tiny Lamp Filaments ‘Inl‘l' ”I‘vl "1w “That's a great idea." agreed the farmer. "When you find it, what are you going to keep it in re' “We're ettdtmrorittg," replied one ot the students, "to discover or Invent I universal solvent." "What'a that?" asked the farmer. "A liquid that will dissolve any- thing.” "What are you trying to asked. Another Problem A farmer, visiting his son's college and wandering into a chemistry class, saw some students busy with retorts and teat tubes, TORONTO Noble Thought do?" he I In the second public session tho I, whats and their sympathize" probab- ly had a majority. After prolong“ ’debating. Peter made his speech, Ant.- 15: 7-11. He reminded them how he iii dined with Cornelius and had won Ihim for Christ. The debaters were :silenced. Barnabas and then Paul told their story. James, now the head of the church, and most orthodox Jew, showed from Scripture how God had long planned to save all. the Gentile; who should call upon him, Acts 15: in. 18, He then made the proposal which for the time, settled the question. m. A PROPOSAL ACCEPTED, Acts 15: 22-35. The proposal which gained the con- sent of the Counml was, at nocesaity. a compromise. It repudiated the mocha ing of those who had Cone to Antiteh l Nothing was to be said to Gentilesi about circumcision. They were to} guard against certain practices hum-I ciated with idolatry and immortoiity;| and, out of consideration for the scruples of Jewish brethren. observei two bod laws, VI. M, 29. Similarii'y' in diet would make oociol intercourael possible. A letter (vs. f't-29), tactful, and beautiful in its brotherly spirit, was dulled. and sent to Antioch by The church suggested an appeal to the Jerusalem leaders, v. 2. Paul. while recognizing their authority to be no greater than his own. was di. vinely encouraged to go, Gal. 2: 2. Be. sides Barnabas, he took with him Ti- tus, one of his m'ost faithful disciples, who was a Gentile. II. THE JERUSALEM CONFERENCE, Acts 15: 4-21; Gal. 2: 2-10. The welcome at Jerusalem left no- thing to he desired. At the first pub. lie meeting of the Conference, the apostles told how God had blessed their labors. He had accepted the Gen- tiles. The inference was plain-who, (then, dared refuse them? The lags!- iists, who had also arrived from Anti; och, rose up and maintained doggedly.‘ "They must keep the law of Moser" Their doctrine had blinded them to‘ the evident facts. "Our war, it not at all," was their attitude. .The clashl had come. The leaders required time; for consideration. The meeting was“ adjourned. I Paul saw the legalists. none too hon. orable in their methods (Gal. 2: 4).l might, by an appeal to popular pre", judice. discredit the apostles. He was‘ too sharp-witted to be caught in that: manner. He privately interviewed thel key-man, Gal. 2: 2. It was most in»: portant that James, and Peter, and John should know exactly what had' been taking place. Paul's brains were dedicated to God's service. Their announcement came like a bombshell into the church at Antioch. Most of the brethren were uncircum» cised, and Jew and Gentile were asso- ciating as equals. Paul and Barnabas refused to recognize the claims of the law upon Gentiles. Bitter contrwersy developed. The question once raked. must be settled. Gal. 2: l. T Visitors from Jerusalem who gave the impression, apparently, that they had been sent to deliver a message. said, "Except ye be circumcised nfter the manner of Moses. ye cannot be saved." IL THE JERUSALEM CONFERENCE, Acts l 15: 4-21; Gal. 2: 2-10. m. A PROPOSAL ACCEPTED, Acts Iii: ( 22-35. [ INmoDvcrroN-We come now to a great crisis in the history of the whole church. Paul 'ttd Barnabas, back from Asia Minor, were convinced that a great field was open in the Gentile world for the spread of the gospel. The new, of their work, however, was causing some unensiness in Jerusalem.; Ever since the death of Stephen andl the removal of most of the more broadminded Hellenistic Christiins, the attitude of the Jerusalem church had been growing more Jewish. It was granted that Gentiles could be saved. The question was, how? "By becoming Jews," said the Judaizers. "Br faith alone," said Paul. Was Christianity to be a mere sect of J uda- ism, or was it to become a gospel for all men? The question arose in Anti.. och, hortly after the apostles returncd‘ from their tour. I. THE QUESTION RAISED, Acts 15: 1-3;l II September " Lesson Ati-The Council in Jttroalesm-Aet. 15: 22. 29; Galatians 2: t, 2, 9, 10. Golden Text-For brethren, " have been called unto liberty; only use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by love eerve one another..-- Galatians 5: 13. THE QUESTION RAISED, Acts 15: 1-3 Gal. 2: l. ANALYSIS Br BUD FISHER ADVERSITV Advernlty in the only haul-co to weigh friends; pro-parity ia no just nteaie.--'dtr.so. The reputation for safety that the British system enjoys is laid to skilled engineering and the we of the latest mechnnical devices that an aid the hum-n element in railway opention. Figures just issued show how safe are British railways in these days of increasing travel. During thallium. Bank holiday main line rnilwnyl ctr- ried over ten million passengers with. out a single person being injured. British Railway Safety Is Proved by Report London.--0f 1,218,000,000 pnsen gem who traveled on British (airs during 1930, only one lost his life in an accident. Judas and Silas, prominent membem of the Jerusalem church. In Antioch the proposals were gladly accepted. and once more the church had peace. l Wool erepe/printed crepe silk Ind light weight tweed are suitable for this slim model that you'll find so en- tirely wearable. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and Iddreu plain- ly, giving number and size of Inch patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for est-h number. I'd address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.' The attached two-piece circular skirt is shaped through the hips with s widening toward hem that. shown graceful fUred fulness. Style No. 358 is designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and " inches bust. In the medium size, it takes " yards of 89-inch material with K yard of 35-inch contrasting for collar. A midnight Iii-.1- silk crepe is an excellent choice for all around day- time occasions. particularly with white silk crepe collar as model illustrated. This attractive scarf collar is passed through a strap of material at end of open Vionnet neckline. The wide loose ends that reach to the normal whist- line, tend to break the width through the bodice. The pointed treatrdent " the front and at the back of the bodice “in a clever idea to ndd length to the figure. It also emphasized the ttat hipline. Illa-tram! Drenmake’ng Luau Fur- nilMd with EW'WI Pun": BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON Whatgeonrk ism” Jen, Makes li Wearing I Nernst dischimed musical comm» lance. "Though I trained my ear h.-- Manila; to good music in Raireuth, Ind .eloewhere, uniike Einstein I um l mu.- tinlly unmusicul." he said. “I up I punched the problem ultngether from jtlte “Midpoint. of phrsies. " I have been musicnlly inftueneed the "tutus nut In" can». from my residenee in whit formerly wan the home of the great elmholtz. father of musical aeounties." ' Outwardly like a baby grand. the I new piano, the first fundamental , structural departure since the - I came into existence. lacks a sounding I board, ita place being taken by an _I electrical amplifying device. Ita lettings are set to vibrating " any 'lother plane’s, but its hammers. invent- 3 ed by Nernu, are much smaller. The / strings are gathered radially in set of (tive and pass under magnets, whence induced electric current runs through the nmpiifier of a loud-speaker. Eli-r- trical control allows tones to be held "ttdefinitely and makes them swell or idie away gradually. Pointing out the defect of the bass of the ordinary lpiano. that munch overtones almm't etre1usitrelr, Nermt calls attention to Ithe superiority of the new inntr uncut, which brim: out fundamental tones. liiiiF, in atill greater improvement in the upper neglntera. which for many (,i,ii,ii, butled ,tlte efforts of piano manufacture" to make them mellow. I Speaking of the upper regimen of the ordinary piano. Nernat said: "Mr friend Einstein, who, you know, in very musical, "" they sound like ' porcelain getting Imuhed." Mtttt he not always treasures, " wun can“, Tb. cool. great all? Time new ---to" at In“. All eatm thought. "can an In- The new piano also can be used u apinet. harmoniiua. phonograph and radio receiver. The last two feature- permit of annual combinations, aura a. switching in on an orcthral con. cert while playing the piano. Control mechanisms permit "just. in; the valuing of tone to any awe m- ud Acoustic: and "mu; the quality of tones according to on“ “in. The price at the new instru- mt is $650. Berlin. - A Nernst-Siemens-Berh- stein piano, a radical innovation but thoroughly tried instrument for uni- versal use. not an experimental con. osity. has been formally placed on the market. The inventor. Walter Nernst. a celebrated physicist, calls it both a musical instrument and a stuirttifie m- strument of precision. because its tore production is completely controlled. New Plane Lacks 1 bottle liquid pectin. stirring ml- stanlly, and bring again lu I lull roli. in; bait tor V. minute. Remove [ru- ttra. let Hand 1 minute. alum, pour quickly and cover hot jelly u once wlth hot punk Watt. - an" Jolly Partivulnrly good tor meat: in "rico' [rape jelly. made , following tho than recipe Ind ad " % cup vim; nr, t tenuounful ot clove» and , (at Imontula of cinnamon to the crun- ed fruit. Otherwise, follow and" the than recipe. And (In. In Mela. Dore Bttrq It. a: nu out, Grubs Mir or Jun in an old favorite with men folk. At hreuktut, they like " lumen. At dinner, they like the richneu it lddl when served with mat pork or in the pudding uucee. A time-honored Claudius dish will venison with grape jelly and the hon-e wife who couldn't serve jelly with rout. venison In: A poor cook indeed. She used to stand long hours over 0 hot Itove muting her jelly no the" we: " excuse it the did not III'I enough to Int through the you. not the madam housewife hu no such excune. She can make to lure ot do llclouu jelly In just on many minutes Here in the recipe: Grape Jelly Slam and crush thoroughly nhout t lbs. of rips grapel. Add one half cup of water, utir until boiling and Kim. mer 10 mlnutea in u closely covered uucepau. Place cooked fruit. in cloth or jelly has and squeeze out julve. " I sparkling jelly is desired, drip juice through cotton tuttnet bag. Manure ' level cum of sugar und 4 cups od cooked fruit juice into large naut‘epun, Mir and bring to a boil. At Ullt'P add " addition to ita delicious Muir, crepe Jelly In an exc’elleut tood for growing hon and girls: in Winter weether. Grape jun or jelly, with m high use: content. contains curbe- hydnteu. giving heat and energy necessary tor Winter den. Grapes, too, conuln tron, another substan- needed to build strong, active bodies. Abundant Crop tMem Variety of Nourulung' . ' Inexpen- sive Delicacies ,Beidom hare grapes been no Inact- mu ind large u thin yen. And it II many you: “Ice they have been no chap or In Inch abundnnco an (Ml season. The early hunkms appearing on the market mm mm that tho thrifty housewih- should Irwin think- itttt of her grape conserves Fine Winter Food TREACURE. Sounding Board 2W "a, [q, W0 M,

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