Mary had lost hope. How soon, when trouble came to herself, had she forgotten the teachings of the Master! Seeing her back among the profes- sional mourners, oppressed by the pa- thetic hopelessness of those who sor- row without Christ, his sensitive soul, hurt by the vulgarity of conventional mourning. Jesus moaned in his spirit and was troubled, v. 33. Asking where the grave was (the only occasion in this Gospel on which Jesus asked tor Accepting this new doctrine through her eonfUenee in him who gave it to her, Martha went for Mary (v. 28) "secretly"--in order not to attract the attention of Jesus' enemies to him--. and to give Mary the egortunity of a private talk with the aster. Jesus, also wishing to avoid the crowd, stay- ed outside tttvillage, v. 80, Arriving at Bethany. Jesus discov- ered that Lazarus had been dead four days, v. 17. The Hews apparently be. lieved that a soul hovered about the dead body for three days, but on the fourth, found it unrecognizable through decay, and departed. Lazarus was unquestionably dead. Friends are with tho sisters, trying to comfort then by saying the usual things. Martha’s greeting (vs. 21, 22) is n gentle reproach, and the expression of ( a boundless trust. Jesus' answer (v. 23) was disappointing. She has had enough of that from her Jewish com- forters during the last four days. Jesus made his great declaration. vs. 25, 26. The "resurrection" and the Nite" which he guarantees. are not future. but present. The resurrection has already taken place for those Who are Christians. Ther are living the resurrection life now. They are risen in Christ, Col. 2: 12; 3: 1. The ourpose of the intended miracle. he told the perplexed disriples, is Lhat they may believe. In the other Gos. pel miracle. are performed out of love and pitv for the tsufferer: here, they are performed to increase faith. Thom.. as. in no mood of expectant faith, but in lava] despair exclaims: "Let us also go, that we mar die with him," v. 16. The shadow of the cross is fall- ing upon the story. H. " "mum: John 11: 17-32 lug. and the bereaved tri are minions not lifted, Iii no‘. answered? John say driuys are the delays t loved Marthv--therirtor two days still, 'ts. rs. 6. His duty made plain b Thes rM-M' of affection would hurry him to his friends-he loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus, but he wouldmt be rushed aninst his better judgment. To go was almost sure death. He must wait for his Father's ttuidance. Jesus, like ourselves, was doze-idem upon a higher Wixdom. John t,4ls. the story of the raising of Lazarus in the lith of what he himselt knows of the 4eathreonquerine and ever- resent Christ, "John him- self had 'u',', a Lazarus. bound hand and foot in the grave clothes of the old life. He had in his own soul heard the mivhtv. awakening err of Jesus. ‘Como forth,' and in his hand he had passed from Math unto life." Christ, he says. can do that for any man. I. " mu. John 11. 1-16. Upon receiving the message that Lazarus is ill, Jesus said. "This “Imus will not end in death-there may be death-but dwath will not be the fFaal word. v. 4. Did he see his own death foreshadowed? “PM rmmvl of affection would hurry him to his friends-ho 1ovod Man-Mn 1tmtoovcmrts--The ten pricedin'; chapter of this Gospel tell how every an...» made by Jesus to win the Jews onlv turned them the more hit- terly agsinst him. finally he reveal. ed himself as the Resurrection and the Life. John makes this the turn- ing point which brings on the arrest and death. ANALYSIS. t. " nun. John It, 1-16 It. " anmuv, John 11: m. n m: Gnu, John 11 february a, Wh v John tit 32A4. Golden Text-t am the "mutation. and the Me: he that behave"! in me, though he were dead, yet man he "ve.-dohn 11: 25. did his F'athi/rkeeiGiirivats I the bereaved sisters? Why dons not lif.ted, 1ife'ssuestionk Lazarua From the Dead- Lesson 'x-oem" AND JEFF--- By BUD FISHER that Gar: love. m. Walk idanm 4t al Forgiveness Hath any wounded thee? Soft lattip uago dresses it, forgiveness cures It and oblivion takes away the Mar.-. Francls Quarles. A Foundation Commonsense In the foundation of man's happiness In his commerce with others. The high. artistic quality of archi- '. mute of Jerusalem's new houses, and the "extraordinary changes" since his la,t visit to Palestine less than two years ago, profoundly impressed Prof. Leslie Patrick Abercrombie, well. known architect and town planner, and professor of civic design at the University of Liverpool. Many of the buildings he found to be above the average of those going up in the big towns in England, and Mr. Abererom, bie found in Jerusalem structures a welcome departure from the common- place and stereotyped. What the city specially needs, he said, is more trees to make up for lack of green ttttd open spaces. If Jerusalem cannot have' grass, because of the shortage in the; water supply it nevertheless can ham) certain types of trees. l mum." "And what was your last post, tion?" "Oh, lt was very responsible mum. I Wu oitieial grass cute: for a polar expedition." a well-to-do son of Frankfurt put up the needed money. The work will take P. long time, and the modelers are pushing measurements of streets and structures to have data complete before more of the Altstadt is demos "My poor man. why don't you go forth and labor'." "I can’t and nothing in my line, Two artistt"the brothers Treuner, are at work on an exact model, on a scale of l to 200. In 1918 they pro- duced for the Historical Museum a miniature of one Old-Town street. which has since been eUnged beyond recognition. The project of having the whole district modeled was even then conceived by the late Director Mueller of the Frankfurt Historic-all Museum, but had to be deferred until Frankfurt Am Main-The "Alt, .Rtadt"-the Old-Town-ot Frankfurt, with its "Roemer" where emperors of the Holy, Roman Empire were chosen and its ancient dome where they were crowned, with Goethe'a birthplace and a picturesque maze of venerable buiiri- ins: and churches and hitrh-trabled, half-tiinbered dwellings, is yielding before the sweep of modern needs;) but if most of it is doomed.to disap- pear the whole of it is to be preserv- ed, at least in miniature, for future generations. I Coming to the cave, Jesus command- ied, "Take ye may the stone.†No I longer was he the weeping friend, he I was now the Lord of Life. But God does nothing for us that we can do 4 for ourselves. See also v. " So cer- tain was Jesus that his prayer would be answered that he first thanked God before all the people, and then cried with a loud voice (symbolic of the last trump) "Lazarus, come forth. . . . . I Loose him, and let him go." Here the artist leaves his majestic "sign." He has driven home his les- son. God's gift of eternal life is not a thing of tomorrow merely, it is a thing of today. Preserve "Old" by Reproduction in Miijia,e 4 C _ " a“ i alll F 7' “ Jill 1kiiti a i _Ji'e,,3, 'i 22Nea _ ttrest information) he burst into tears, v. M. It is a touching picture of the sorrow.. Ihming Christ. The Jews, whose re- gain“ vulgarity must needs follow my (v. 31), gazed with unsympa- thetic eye upon his tears. How like Some of our "large" public funerals.' m. AY THE GRAVE, John 11: 33-41. l Building in Jerusalem Dullneu - Dull is, after all I. relative term; It expresses only a. want of correspond- ence between the mind of the writer and that of the reader.--Prot. Seeley. Almt It was Julia Ward Howe who once said, when asked for a definition (f what the ideal aims ot life were: "To learn, to teach, to serve, to enjoy." A lite which misses any ot these in ity complete; but as any life can have them an. the incompleteness is a mat- ter of choice, not ot fate. made tre forges it itt again worse. The secret ot enjoying life is In being able to get happiness from the simplest resom'ces. Practically all of the Aleutian he lands bear marks of such evolution, and the birth of some of them actually has been observed. An example is the Bogoslof group. In Mar, 1796, there were signs of volcanic disturbances " the coast of Unimak Island( where the, recent eruption occurred) and a few: days later a new island had been cre- ated. It was christened Bogoslof. " most a century later, in 1883, another 1 island, which was called New Bogoslof, came into being Lnder similar circum- stances, and in 1906 a third appeared. That islands born of x-olranne: should thcnselvcs frequnntly be dis. turbed by vokanoes is to be expected. for they are oly Volcanic peaks pm- jecting rhove the watw. Estimates off the number of active volcanoes in the', Aleutians runs into score-S. and no one can say confidently of the others which are extinct and which are merely dur.. mant. Shishaldin is one of the best known of the active craters. Its most violent outburst occurred between 1825 and 1829, when. together with its twin peak, Pogromni, it erupted fierealy " intervals. Since then the clouds of smoke it blew from its mouth have warned of hidden strength. "Does Maud like dancing?" “She does." "Aud Skating'."' "Oh, yes! She likes anything that mar possibly lead to a. pro. posal." These ialands sometimes are made by foldings in the e,..rth’s crust as a result of the trernendrus pressure ex- erted by volcanic steam. They may also be accumulations of volcanic ash and lava which have eollected under, the water, until after repeated erup-l tions they make mountains thousands of feet high projecting above the oeean's surface. Such submarine volcanoes are be.. lieved to be at least as common as those on the exposed sutfaco of the earth. Occasional reports tell of the ocean's bubbling and steaming and throwing up fountains like 1 ly: coffee petvolntor. Volcanic cinder: and dead fish float above the spot, and sometimes those more permanent evi- dences of submarine eruptions-vol- canie islands-rise mysteriously out of the depths. Once more a volcano in the Aleu- tian chain of islands has been reported in violent eruption. This time it was Shishaldin on Unimak Island that re- cently belched forth clouds ot smoke and showers of ashes and lit up the sky "like a huge torch." Such news is to be expected from the Aleutian Islands, for the mujority of the Moo. mile-long chain stretching between Alaska and the Orient seems to be of volcanic origin, that is, they were formed by volcanic eruptions on the ocean bed. Volcanoes Active In Aleutian Chain will residing within us, and D to choose the better part, I iron chain: link by link and again choosing the ENJOYMENT " WILL "The organic matter or the solid portion of the sewage is destroyed, and the remainder of the solids rendered innocuous, by a digestion process. This process is greatly adeelerated by heat, "At the local joint sewnge-disposai plant the heating power of this gas, which is 50 per cent. greater than that of manufactured gas, has been but- nessed and put to useful purpose dur- ing the past five years by means of a safety collective device developed by the supervising engineer. John R. Downs. "Sewer gas, never very popular, gained for itself a particularly une- enviable notoriety early in October, when an explosion destroyed a part of the Woonsocket, Rhode Island, sew- er plant and caused the death of two men. Engineering publications throughout the country have carried columns of reports Ind discussions on this explosion. Some new feature, mark the suc- ter,rfrol mum†M rho city authorities ot Plainfield, New Jersey, to utilise Fetsct' 5115 It 1' me pruuucuon of trea. The plan is thus described and ex plained in the Plainfield Courier. News: and the development of power Heat and Power to be l, Generated From Sewer Gas Tsie,-' as“ WCf"i7i'7-" iii" “A"? m6 "i'"' Tet.t.YoU- WHAT A Tewbek gore-science He HAS- A - 7 .we-- _ vAany-ll’ auu Canada's greatest benefactor, once more draws attention to the tre- mendous scope of his benefactions to MeGill University with which the Macdonald College at St. Anne de Bellevue is tufiliited. These bene- hctions total more than twelve and one lull million dollars, $10,690,165 of which was given during life.) While the Faculty of Science and of‘ Seientifie Agricu ture we: possibly Founder's Pay which this year, marks the 101st Anniversary of the birth of the late Sir William C. Macdonald, founder of the Mar.. donah} Tobacco Company and r'..-... ..'.. -----F-_. . _ V "a, - u...- """"5"Pary UK I Macdonald College with par- ticular emphasis on Founder's Da.s . Februnry 10th, focuses attention on this institution' and its fopnder. the late Sir William C. Macdonald who built. gqulppqd and endowed the entire institution at an expense of mere thyt .trioUnillion, dollars. The Twenty Fifth Anniversary of Macdonald CONN": min. M. '7."7a'L C"h.'. 'dl/kt JK _ rr' 7 4-4 a (3ii"pgpitsggd 'li/du/Jie'? iii/k ' hi', (r, t)i(i?i(egft, GNTLQMAN: BY y t, Jig/,1 F, 9 w,†- ,, 'a, AY- /eh'Ur,"""' c'ctifi,t't,'iili'ii', J , V " Ld \///y,//,/// - . 4 u , . & . v l ' W. le 1l'tC11i, bl . 4:43 a! W 1()1 MY . iiit' IRR F" .'. sl, 1‘1 ( I "W _ F,, \r‘ I WIKI i?,'))! &\ Bil 4.1-3" .t ' "o, Jill-1 I x 1itil'ol All Ig%" Eit _) a ".s P " .. i F fl; Le, a??? , . N 'ialSilii, . .. E!,?)',-',-, t, z: . A' I . _ g Lg.» J :2 , " av r.‘ .s. ' if) g , / ttif , t 4.. , f. q '". 'iR'N" a ", I by , \\ f a. ' ~ $311 A, , ', - 'Aui?71 '"/1 &illSi,i' Cam. I... . b/l/tjjj" (llll-t ' '.' J» ' r ii .l/i _o|o If .1," ... g I I l; P'" In,“ ' c.' ' M11944,†" F vk " . '_' ‘-J- - " 4C" ..t _ " . i|..§co - ---.-------., t v" ' 't'"t â€V'shn H) Mn gluon-hug Menu] I'. fm M Help]: run: mrfuutr, ll fairer-“7. Mara-maid “all. rh. Hilario. Murder-III ' Macdonald College Celebrates "A very inieresting development}; that both the power and the heat can be recaptured from the mus gns. The \1 r ---r-" l-cs-rr'" l -LC2tt 'r-r---'" V it'riiMI IKalll It' - 4-†- "A w r ' l I 'a i. ‘ I ca , ., . a, ' p, H g _ _ 7 . 7 . I 4 I V ~ i Yr . I - " -. V . n,'ri'alllt , _ " 7 ih , .. , , 'T _ __,--------::------"------"" r C 2 "Power has also been developed from this gas. one horn-power being available continuously from each 1,000 persons connected to the sewer system, or fifty horse-power It the local plant. "Part of the excess gnu has now been piped into the office and ialro; atory building where it is burned in the steam-heating plan. A visit to this building will rouse the envy of any coal-shoveling householder. An absolutely uniform temperature of 70 degrees can be maintained night and day without shoveling coal or remov- ing ashes. for acceleration. The more heat that is supplied within certain limits the more gas is produced so that there is always an excess quantity of gas. "The Plainfield Joint Sewnge Plant was the first to apply this principle by using the gas given " during the process to supply the heat necessary Gus Geevem Seems to so that the time necessary to complete' the prom: is eat down from five or', six months to 3 period of from thirty to forty days. When we consider that about 2,000 cubic feet of these solids} reach the plant daily, the saving in thel capacity of structures to hold the iii.) ids, until the process is completed, be. comes obvious. l the dearest to Sir William'l heart,!today, as tie grew->1 Imam-3" 5v , to every faculty of the McGill Uni- his memory. versity benetited during his life and Macdomid C olieze was funded after. The Faculty of Law received by the la-e air Wiiiam in 1907, It $232,500. The C'onservatorium of was de~igned to inciude three Music. 8300,000. The Faculty of tschools-- one for agriculture, one for Medicine was bequeathed $500,000. household science. and one for The McCord Museum Building was normal teacher training. The gift purchased at a cost ot $142,000. included the grounds, nlmost 800 while the Macdonald Park site now acres in extent. the com iete equip- occupied by the Stadium, god the merit and endowment. ")l‘he cones Student's Park was purchased at itself was incorporated With t a cost of more than' one million University ot M cGillu the Faculty donors and presented .to. .theArni- of Agriculture. although thewgchen' i varsity. Student's activities came training feature is possibly his but under the benefieient scope of Sir known contribution to life in the Willinm_as the McGill Union testi- Province of Quebec. fies.. Sir William spent $219,000 Other sections of the country on its erection and equipment. In have benefited by the late Sir addition to the wonderful equip- Willinm's benefaeiions, the Mae. ment " M. Anne do Bellevue, those donald Institute nnd.the Mncdonnld buildings at McGill which bear the Hull ht the Oratorio Agriculturnl Mncdonnld name and those donated College, Guelph, being among the by the lute Tobnceo knight, stud most important. Have Matt’s Pedigree ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Other sections of the country have beaeiited by the late Sir William's berteiacGotu, the Mae. donald Institute and the Mucdonald Hill It the Ontario Agrieuhurat College, Guelph, being among the tttttet important. Wtte.-s now." Hubby.---' Your back best gaswnzines made an only 25 per cent. efficient, thermally speaking. the other " per cent. of the heat vnlue of the gns being given up to the cooling water in the engine jacket or lost in the exhaust. By wster-jncketing the exhaust and “Sing the cooling water to heat the sludge or buildings, " per cent. of this waste heat can be re- covered." tut heated ?" Tetmtst--"By tipping Pros ik -"You didn't In" . rag on when l 'rtarriod you." Anyway, I've plenty ot them ve Tenan the jnnitor. H 15 tisis PM u a symbol but in with: is unknown. the dlys when Cologne W; colony, exhibited in front , mf-Richartz Museum hon enriched by the addition objects. Among there are sarcophagi, one of which the fourth century. It is hr interest because itis p u penny-6m. or penal†eatled ,in.hcnldry, canal-t triangles to let together A tim-pointed star. It In I M u I limbo} the days v colony, exh mf-Richar enriched h objects. A urcophngi‘ the fourth ion Ind C powers fo taunt “1 conceded overshad Illy his ' Goverley, day and "He cannot lady Franzen ed this hum: "Re is not Sir James Fraser, who wrote that mummioce, "The Golden Bough." In said to have read more books tin. my living man. Whenever he truth the bulk of his baggage comprise. books. Mr. Rutter also tells my favorite Kipling story: A young editor of an undergraduate journtu had the superb emu-am to write to Kipling for I contribution, ex- pleining that to his regret the ï¬nal». of the jouml did not permit the. to my more than I (nine: (about i then) per wound We. Kipling sent this reply: "There was once an Author who wmte: Dear Sir-In reply to your not. - 0f Yesterduy' date I reluctantly Jute; Rudyard Kipling, who his sixty-sixth birthday r I reputation for punctun ernry men can rivui. In living It Rottingdean, he: he went to South Africa. 1 inc Rottinmdenn. relates F (in "Since I Was 25,") Ki ed I cum-inn to meet the in: at Brighton " r, pan. lowing 3rd of May-mo: Sup enough on May 3rd rived at the Brighton tern dot. "and," and Mr. Rutter m was ready foe him by reached home." it all," says Harry-now J 4trg--"wae strange; embu oh, so pleased, so truly de was a pretty seems." One that Charles Dickem much; his son Er.rry-ttow Sir Henry Fielding Dick- ens, an English Judee--to write short- Innd and for practice used to dietato stories to him. coming “How well I remember how he mad. me laugh!" rec-us JIM Dickens (in “Memories of My Father), “So much no. indeed, tint I was soon reduced to I state of helpless imbeeiiity with the natural consequence that when in tho end, I hid to transcribe my notes, I found myself confronted with an im. mature collection of tettdecipherabU hieroglyphics. I doubt whether any student of shorthand was ever I mom W For centuries men A." and tun- netted in the fields, until in I“! labor- em at work on their Hditutry agri- cultural asks unearthed ' luden od.. tin buried only three feet deep. it con- tained more than 7.000 silver coin. nearly all of the time of Alfred the Great, and I thousand ounces of silver omnmentn. tiny, mum. bangles pendants, and chums. most of which were of Saxon origin. Flu": example illustrates the Imam; pertinacity with which legends of buried trawl. survive, for obviously 'the lender: cof- ttn WI! buried, seven weigh! hundred yours before it ins fouild." "There, for centuries. j legend sur- vived that any one “find.“ on his hill and looked up thy-valley in tin direction of Ribchneer would face (in Meheat trauma in England.†he re- calls (in “Searching for Pirate Tren- Bute in Cocoa Island"t. 1 mm Can’t be quote.' Home, days , Captain Malcolm Campbell. holds of the world's speed record on land, who is going back to Cocoa Gland . lurch of buried (re-sun say: that the treasure story he likes best it that of Walhn k Dale, near the river Ribbk, in Latuaushire, England. Ackeus." "My father, “no hrd I the! oh. me, Germany I)" when Colo, ', exhibited in I :chutz Museuz Pithy Anecdotes 1.29? on Th change my dre he wouldn't not J' And Cowpel 'ound c awed his Sumophngi Unearthed m my isa. I doubt shorthand ms trying test as " er, in wh congenin "'ttt't his other! Letters of I his editi MIG (ttt said touch : dm hi be it is ppm-k â€union " ' cams-tine gather a to It wu used birthday “tenth; _ r punctuality few rival. In 1901, wl (dean. near Bright uAfricn. Before le ' relates Frank Rut ' M,") Kipling ord .meet the train I" It ti p.m. on the I 'tt and pr m ur masterpiece, in ther books. exped- rs of Sir Roger b editions of Addk which his morn-y Sour mas] The p.m. on the tot. -months All“ 3rd Kipling u- terminus on tb Mer, " suppâ€. I by the time I. the tubje theard and see- ow Judge Duck- IE s of parties yanked with an... it in ll " bfthe undeciph t whethe " ever ' I fifty timeta of ft t h no date: tttPty :' fu no Tanned. btsk lighted. " '" a. form . ta, ot Woks,“ he add. ' menu "eralir so. In. and 9 you Rutter order- Irri " “a. xp4 * girl- walk oun‘ n in!- nu. ' any posed n tho pm and setrd on