West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 6 Dec 1934, p. 3

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

Ity ard Dogs entiy, n hour as the their way in show organized of Commerce, more than 100 and 20 nurses for cted; ve at clde the winâ€" y get through led an incipâ€" nouncing that * judged next nownhnere _ in time to burn the greatest ke some moâ€" ve like fury assing everyâ€" e end of the hour of time a who has & mission . to i reasonable the journey; there safely. has become some people, 0 find fault creating fasâ€" to cater to and if those nce, stormâ€" ire, Eng., with 1,000 ut 890 of d King Edâ€" on will ever e of Caesar, who refused : room when nd everyone ires of King > Prince of d Alsatians, groups of oyal Family y â€" member er made _ by wa Journal In these )erson may d speak to ner utmost reeding. It love was a er life. colâ€" service , to many ed in the lowed â€" in )atronâ€" e gets mportâ€" nation â€" than <on leather rls‘"* accomâ€" n=, and the imended as hile still a a spaniel ie depredaâ€" ajesty was pay out of ecording presence Council hey did he same ere inâ€" mpanion. ay. Then ver tired is sport. e of the al times nant apâ€" ey never " referâ€" ‘«3 ever of Scots. t _ her eventyy 10u8 pet as )t under for exeâ€" nipped o blees and and the in the 1A r faithful red the all the Id h‘v. love of o!d, al T Masg. een COâ€" h “z’ patron. robably er re when Royal $0 T Wall Rack Use a thin board oneâ€"quarter inch thick and fifteen inches long by three and oneâ€"quarter inches wide. Shape the top â€" corners. Allow one inch on all four sides when cutting the oileloth for lapping. Paste the oileloth on the board. At the back paste a strip of heavy paper to cover the edges of the oileloth. The tabs are fastened with covered thumb tacks. | Wall Pocket One piece of plain oileloth ten Inches by six inches for the back, two shaped plain pieces measuring six inches wide and four inches at the highest point, two strips of gingâ€" ham pattern oilcloth measuring three inches by six inches with a rounded piece cut out of each at the top. The cover shown in black with the design done in gold with touches of red and green Chinese lacquer. The tassel and cord also carries out these colors. book measures from top to bottom and ten inches longer than the measâ€" urements of covers and thickness. Fold five inches on either end for pockets, bind with gold braid, ribbon or silk bias tape. _ Add a cord and *assel. If you have a card table with a worn top, undo the corner screws, stretch oileloth over the entire surâ€" face and replace the side boards. It also may be decorated. Telephone Book Cover Use pebble finish oileloth in black or colors. Measure each cover and the thickness of the book. Cut the oileloth one half inch bigger than the Card Table Cover Use dull or glossy art baize with an embossed finish in black or colors. Measure the card table, cut the material four inches longer and wider. Cut a rounded piece out of each corner Turn back a quarter inch fold all around and bind with bias tape adding elastic to each corner (o slip over the corners of the table and hold the cloth firm. Score pad covers made to match are unusual. ‘ To transfer designs to oilcloth lay the pattern on the right side of the material, trace with a blunt object no thicker than a pencil point (a crochet hook is excellent), press just hard enough to make a slight inâ€" dentation on the surface of the oilâ€" cloth without cracking or cutting the finish. Go over these indentations with a soft peneil again being careâ€" ful not to cut the painted surface. For sticking oileloth to wood _ or other surfaces, use either flour paste or liquid glue. Designs may be pai quer, enamels or arti They may also be appl with buttonhole stitch always) or done with machine. Christmas is ; corner and many ; problem of the se goodwill. Here ar ions. For instance take ornly a jiffy t most nothing and tical gifts, MUTT AND JEFFâ€" " _# are laced with the the season‘s offerings of Here are a few suggestâ€" instance oileloth novelties t jiffy to fashion, cost alâ€" many are f4 the season‘s PRESENTY ole stitch (big stitches done with the sewing * painted with lacâ€" artists‘ oil colors. appliqued by hand just around â€" the are smart prac faced with The one solid foundation for humâ€" an character has been abundantly proven to be the Lord Jesus Christ, "Everyone _ therefore." _ Therefore implies that the parable which folâ€" lows is an elucidation of what preâ€" cedes, the picture of that day when the Lord will pass judgement upon the lives of men, "That heareth these words of mine," It is an indication of Christ‘s diety that in his mouth they seem perfectly natural, and merely in accordance with his exalted charactâ€" ter, "And doeth them." Hearing is never enough. Unless obedience folâ€" lows the hearlng_ our listening has been in vain,. "Shall be likened unto a wise man." A man of prudence and sagacity, a man of practical knowâ€" ledge. There is much book learning that does not meet the test of actual expertence. "Who built his house upâ€" on the rock." Palestine is a stony country, A great rock ridge runs north and south through the | land, and on it the soil is very shallow, TIME AND PLACE â€" The passage }from Matthew is the conclusion of the Sermon on the Mount, spoken on Kurn Hattin, a hill west of the cenâ€" tral portion of the Sea of Galilee, at midsummer of A.D. 28, the second year of Christ‘s ministry. The pasâ€" sage from the Acts relates an event which took place at Ephesus in Asia Minor, A.D;, 53, when Paul was in the midst of his third missionary tour, and before the Apostle began his long work of three years in that city, SsUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON ... ... THE CHRISTIAN AS TEACHER GOLDEN TEXT â€" "Give diligence to present thyself approved unto God a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, handling aright the word of truth. a tale of men who lived dangerousâ€" ly, "Tents in Mongolia," by Henâ€" ning Haslund, will appeal to those who like first hand accounts of man‘s battle with the < elements. Warwick Deeping is always dependâ€" able and many are his followers. In "The Man on the White Horse," you have him at his best. i Of course, by now you have made your Christmas list and no doubt "A Book" is placed opposite at least three. Here are a few of the seaâ€" son‘s offerings. For those who love the sea, "Pitcairn‘s Island," by Charles Nordhoff and James Norâ€" man Hall, will meet every requireâ€" ment. E. Phillips Oppenheim‘s new novel, "The Strange Boarders of Palace Crescent," has every element of mystery and menace, and is the{ "thrill lovers" meat. For adventure, Tie backs for bathroom or kitchen curtains made of plain colored oilâ€" cloth are pretty. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Chair pads add a decorative note to the modern kitchen. Cut pieces of coarse felting the size of the chair and two pieces of oileloth measurâ€" ing oneâ€"half inch wider all around. Add tapes to tie the "pad" to the chair legs and bind all about with strips of plain oileloth or wide bias‘ tape. A cover for the high chair tray to match the bib is also worthwhile. An oilcloth apron is both practical and pretty. Use any pattern you deâ€" sire. Make it of any design or color you choose. Bind the edges and add tapes to tic straps instead of butâ€" toning them. A child‘s bib with a pocket will please the wee tot and help the busy mother. of the sixteen inch strip and â€"sew across the bottom to form a pocket. The ten inch strip forms the second pocket. Bind and add the tab for hanging. Slip a twelve inch rule inâ€" to the bottom pocket, a new ‘ tape measure and a pencil into the top pocket. YOUR LIST _ ‘"This maX had been instructed in the way of the Lord," The Greek verb suggests that this instruction may have been oral, and hence that _ no written Gospel had yet circulated in Alexandria. "And being fervent in spirit." A quality greatly honored by Paul, who possessed it in its perfecâ€" tion see Rom. 12 : 11, "He spake and taught accurately the things concernâ€" ing Jesus," Accurately tha't‘llf,-;s far "An eloquent man," A man of cul. ture, the word expressing _ both thought and its expression in words, "Came to Epheusu," He was a trayâ€" elling philosopher and lecturer, "And he was mighty in the scriptures." That is, of course in the Old Testaâ€" ment, for the New Testament had not yet been formed and for the most part had not been written, "Now a certain Jew named Apolios, His name was a shortened form â€" of Apollonius or Apo!lodorus, "An Alexâ€" andrian by race." He was born in Alâ€" exandria the great city of northern Egypt, "For he taught them as one having authority, and not as their scribes." While Jesus taught with authority, the scribes taught by authorities _ a very different thing. "And it came to pass, when Jesus had finished these words." The Serâ€" mon on the Mount occuping three chapters of Matthew. "The multit udes were astonished at his teaching, How strange and marvellous it must have seemed to the people to whom it came absolutely fresh and new : "And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and smote upon that house," The house on the rock could stand the gale; and the house on the sand went down agâ€" ainst it with on great crash. "And it fell; and great was the fall thereof," That there are houses of faith being built which grip the rock and which no storm can overthrow, we know of with a glad assurance, J ' "And everyone that heareth these words of mine, and doeth them not." How much of our hearing is describâ€" ed in these stern: words of the Great Teacher! "Shall be likened unto a foolish man,‘ When Christ says ‘Thou fool!" it behooves men to look well to their going, for they are facing the wrong way. "Who built his house upâ€" on the sand." He built it in some wady, or dry bed of a stream, No sign of water in the rainless season, but a rushing torrent as soon as the ralns‘ come. "And it fell not; for it was foundâ€" ed upon the rock," A man who takes Christ for his pattern, Christ‘s teaâ€" chings for his principles of life is a man whose life is safe and who shall endure. , "And the rain descended and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house," The prolongâ€" ed rainless weather is suddenly broâ€" ken up by the season of rain and of storm . his person, his word, his work, his grace, The staff of one of the leading Paris ateliers trousseau of Prince George‘s bride, Princess marin ¢ far inferior to dimself in natural ab. ility, He was full of energy and fiery zeal, He was bold and courageous, He combined logic with grace, He was profoundly helpful, he helped them much that had believ ed through grace." They helped him and he helped them! A noteworthy instance of Christian reciprocity. "For he powerfully confuted _ the Jews, and that publicly." The unbelâ€" ieving Jews of Corinth had tried to drive Paul out of the city and had indeed succeeded in driving him out of the synagogue, but only to set up his own church next to the synagogâ€" ue, Now in Apollos the Jews found an antagonist equally staunch, one weho did not mince matters. "Showing by the scriptures that Jesus was the Christ." All Bible teachers have much to learn from Apollos, He studied the Scriptures and made them the basis of all his work. He was ready _ to learn from others, even from those "They took him unto them,." Probâ€" ably they made him an fhmate of their home, where Paul had been, so that they could have a better chance at him, "And expounded to him the way of God more accurately." It would have been no easy task to take in hand a man of Apollo‘s intellectâ€" ual attainments and independence of character, and lead him on to â€" the views more generally held among the Christians, But Priscilla and Aquila undertook the difficult task and suc-l ceeded in it. "And when he was minded to pass over into Achaia," The southern part of Greece, containing Athens and Corinth, "The brethern encouraged him, and wrote to the disciples to receive him,." He could not have choâ€" sen a place more suitable for his work as Corinth was a centre of commerce it was a town also of great intellect. ual activity, "And when he has come, This fellow loves work, To you I‘il confide it. Me loves it so weil He can sicep right beside it. "And he began to speak boldly in the synagogue." In the synagogue of Epheusu, where Paul began his preaâ€" ching setting forth Jesus as the Mesâ€" siah, the Lamb of God who would take away the sin of the world, "But when Priscilla and Aquila heard him. He preached the gospel of repent. ance from sin with wonderful power and he could prove with unanswerâ€" able logic that Jesus was the Messiah But of the supreme glory of Christâ€" ian experience which comes in the witness of the Holy Spirit in one‘s own soul to the forgiveness of sins, he had never heard. 1 as he went, but not fully, "Knowing only the baptism of John," This difâ€" fered from that of the apostles mainâ€" ly in these respects; first that theirs recognized a Messiah who had come and, secondly, that it was attested by the extraordinary gifts of the Spi rit, Princess Marina‘s Trousseau TRUE LOVvE at work on two evening gowns, part of the ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO It was stated a policeman stopped the car and found the Road Fund license had expired a month preâ€" viously. When asked for an explanaâ€" tion, Miss Wilkinson said "I suppose it is the stupidity of us women." Gerald Denham, solicitor who apâ€" peared for Miss Wilkinson explained that Miss Wilkinson had been abroad and when she returned a great deal of important political work awaited her and she forgot about her license, The Chairman of the court mentioned that Miss Wilkinson was fined for a similar offence at Sleaford, Lincoinâ€" shire, in May last year, Miss Helen Wilkinson former M.P, was fined $10, in Police Court at Bain Tree Eng:, for driving an unlicensed motor car. Ellen Wilkinson All the same, the Friths say Baby gels in some private practise at home on the kiddie car, and will soon be graduating to a real road tricycle, Then it won‘t be long before the enâ€" tire family are awheel. Huddersfield, Eng. â€" Do not leave the children at home if you want to go cycling; take them with youâ€"is the advice given to parents by Mr, and Mrs. Frith of Huddersfiel4, whose two children aged 5 and 3 respective. ly, are also keen cyclists, Baby sits in a glorified armchair in between father and mother, on their specially constructed bicycle made for two and a half, But, to tell the truth Baby‘s inclined to be just a litle bit jealous of Junior who has a bicycle all to himself and who is very proud of having ridden from Bridlington to Huddersfield, some 60 miles in one day, The other set is of ivory with white jJonquils appearing like stars against its deep bands of springtime green, It strikes a very joyous note. Armchair for The grander of the Duchess of York teasets is tinted in palest peach, The cups have gold handles and round the rims a delicate scroll design in gold forms a deep band, The Duchess is modern in many thingsâ€"and especially in the arâ€" rangement of her home, She believes nohing is more charming than the deâ€" signs and especially the colorings of modern china so the *vo teasets that are used on thternate days in her drawing room at Picadilly are exactly the same type that you could buy for yourself in any up to date china shop. You are wrong if you imagine that guests who go to tea with the Duchess of York are asked to sip from heirâ€" loom china, writes a woman corresâ€" pondent in a London daily newspaper Duchess of York Uses Modern China for Tea Blames Her On Bi;:ycle Trips ‘Stupidity‘ London, Ont.â€"The question of sex equality is being carried a stage further by coâ€"eds at the University of Western Ontario. They are asking the board of governors to set aside a girls‘ smoking room so that they may enjoy the weed without "surreptitious methods". The men students have a room for smoking and the girls hnvcl decided that they are entitled to the same convenience. I Western Coâ€"eds Want Two old ladies of Lincolnshire have just had the surprise of their li\'cs.l Deciding that they would like to buy & motorâ€"car, they looked through their family treasures to see whni they could sell. They came across a piece of old Chelsea china which had| been in the family for years and | sent it to be sold by auction. Having! some idea that it might be rather | valuable, they placed a reserve price of £100 upon it. l To their amazement the ornament turned out to be the work of a famâ€"| ous French artist named Boubilliac,| part of a valuable group of three‘ pieces, one of which is in the Victoria and Albert Museum. The dealers bid! eagerly, and the old ladies received‘ £3,150 for it. | green leas, In liveliest pattern; barns and slates and tiles Are watersheds of silver; the road smiles From every whitened stone bared to the breeze, And the bright river Is sheeted into seas, Where ‘yacht sails lean to mirrored snowy piles Giddy with light and laughter, the land reels, In spangled orchards waggish robins twinkle And mimic the red apples the drops sprinkle, The sheltering yeoman shoulders his great scythe As though a fishing rod, and ambles blithe, And boys run forth with winglets at their heels. | The clouds are broken up in azure isles, And archipelagoes‘ of lights from trees Dance with their shadowâ€"islets on They are in both fur and fabric, One of the very newest styles is the muff of silver fox skins, Several verâ€" sions were seen in which two or more skins were used, Running vertically as though thrown over the arm, the skins form a big pliable, graceful muff that adds luxury, elegance and gives warmth. Then there is Schiaparelli‘s amus. ing long and narrow dachsmund muff. By BUD FISHER Chicago â€" That old saying that cold hands indicate a warm deart may need revising this winter, with muffs back in style, Muffs, whicrh have been edging in for the past few seaâ€" sons are booked for a big winter, So many different kinds of fur are being used that it is no trick to get a muff to match the fur coat. Some of the new winter fur coats are being shown with matching muffs, reproducing the sound Tolanoâ€"Cinema is a simple machâ€" ine which records sound on ordinary diske, from which it can almost be immediately repsoduced again. The speed of the turntable on which the disk is placed can be synchronized to tie speed of the amateur‘s movie ca. mera and may be varied between 20 and 120 turns a minute, The machine is equipped with an amplifier which can be used after a very small adâ€" justment either for recording or for Cold Hands Won‘t Paris â€" Amateur cinema operators will now be able to produce talkies, tranks to the machine recently perâ€" fected here by two brothers MM Hen. ri and Pierre Perreau, Chicago â€" Good Old Chelsea! thrown over the arm, the _ a big pliable, graceful adds luxury, elegance and Mean Warm Heart Perfected in Pari â€"Geoffrey Johnson William Morris and Dante Gabâ€" riel Rossetti loved pipes, Browning cigars; but Swinburne hated tobacâ€" co. "James I," he once said, "was a knave a tyrant, a fool, a liar, a coâ€" ward. But I love him, I worship him, because he slit the throat of that blackguard Raleigh, who inâ€" vernted this filthy smoking!" pipe," went behind a furzebush, and after feeling for some time, proâ€" duced a pipe. It turned out that ha had a cache of pipes in various parts of the parish for such exigencies. ! The schoolhouse was a big buildâ€" ing, and on the day that Dr. Barâ€" !wn took up his duties, one of the _ trustees addresing the pupils said. Charles Kingsley, as rector of Eversley was walking with the fuâ€" ture Archbishop Benson on a comâ€" mon in a lonely part of the parish when the author of "Westward Ho!" suddenly said: "I must smoke a on this floor, and tromp it when you go and come, and keep fresh pennyroyal on the floor, till these here fleas are druy out." Oh joy! "The hogs has been sleeping un der this building, and its _ full of fleas. I‘ve got ‘em on me now. Now all you boys and girls when you come back from reeâ€"cess, you bring big bundles of pennyroyal and put down on this floor, and tromp it when you go and come, and keep fresh ' In his inspiring autobiagraphy â€" published since his passing on â€" ’lho Rev. William E. Barton, noted preacher _ and _ Lincoln authority '(lnd father of Bruce Barton), reâ€" "I rather think," adds Dr. Barton with a chuckle, "I could have tr a ed Emmeline with her black eyes, but she never sparked no teacher while I was teaching there, nor did Sue Taulbee." "Teacher, if I was to spark the teacher, 1 wouldn‘t never tell noâ€" body "Emmeline took one step nearer, and said: aw broom in her hand on the right hip and said: "Teacher, you want to look out for Sue. She‘s trying to spark you, And Sue sparked the last teacher. and she told.‘ school ‘way back in the Tennessce mountains. "Well do I remember," he writes, "the day when Emmeline Berry, havâ€" ing swept the floor, stood before my desk with arms akimbo and the papâ€" aw broom in her hand on the right NETZC eVnHer Ir wrute Barlon}, re calls that as a young man he taught "Michael, I have now to discharge you. These 12 gentlemen on my leit say that you are not guilty. Take a good look at them, Mike, so that you may know them again, for if you treat any one of them the way you treated the prosecutor in this case, you will not get one hour‘s imprisonâ€" ment from me, even if you are conâ€" victed of it." 8."â€"King‘s Counsel). At the eng of a very bad stabbing case, the usâ€" ual. verdict having been returned, Justice Adams said to the accused:; "Michael, I have now to discharge oners tried by them, doclnresuS(:rge- ant A. M. Sullivan (in "Old Ireâ€" llnd:__l_‘wminiscvnm of an Irish K. Jurors in the county of Limeric! were dead against conviecting pris oners tried by them. declares Sorme The story goes that Queen Vicâ€" toria was once heard knocking â€" at Prince Albert‘s locked door. Hoe asked, "Who is there?" and she reâ€" plied "the Queen." Again and aâ€" gain â€" he asked the same question and she made the same reply. But finally she answered, "Your wife, Albert," and the door was opened. "Before I could demand my pacâ€" ket of candles," she says (in "Lon don At Home") "the harassed woâ€" man looked up at me and said: ‘Oh, do tell me what I can have for dinâ€" ner! I have had steak and haddock so often that my husband is getting unpleasant about it.‘" It is interesting to know that F. Marion Crawford was bitterly dis appointed when he found he could never be a great tonor like Jean de Reszke. He had a finc voiee, but not good enough for that. Which is just as it should beâ€"rememberâ€" ing "Mr. Isaacs" and other _ fine novels he subsequently wrote. Mrs, Elliott feels the same way mbout it. "Today,"she says "what remains of all the labor that adored tenor (de Reszke) lavished on his art? A tradition among musicians, perhaps (he lived before the day of the phonograph), while Crawford is reâ€" membered as he prophosied in that boyish boast to his sister: "The trace of my earthly footsteps shall not be effaced in eons." But is Crawford 25 years after his pas The friendly | spirit shown . by London shopkeepers â€" is proverbial. Not long ago Mrs. M. V. Hughes went into a little grocer‘s shop. "Before I could demand my pacâ€" Ni r ies t Piiua on SMOKING RECTOR PERILS OF A TEACHER ING ANECDOTE3 OF THE FAMOYS POsTERITY JUSTICK g to know that F, | was bitterly dis he found he could tonor like Jean de a fine voice, but for that. Which read todayâ€" ing on?

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy