West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Jun 1937, p. 6

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brews 11:1â€"12 ; 2 Peter 2:410. Printed Text â€" Hebrews 11:3â€"10, 17â€"22 Golden Text â€" "These all died in faith, not having received the proâ€" mises, but having seen them and greeted them from afar, and having confessed that they were strangers \ and pilgrims on the earth, â€" Heb \ rews 11:13. + THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING " Time â€" John wrote his Prologue fbout 90 A.D. The teaching of Jesus recorded in Luke 17 was given in the winter of A.D. 30. Paul wrote the Epâ€" istle to the Galatians about A. D. 57. The date of the Epistle to the Hebâ€" rews may be placed about A.D. 65â€"A.D LESSON XIHI Mesages from Genmesis â€" John 1 Luke 17:26â€"32; Galatians 3:6â€"8; In in and he simply folowed the leading of God until he came to that place that God then told him was to be a perpetâ€" wal possession for his descendants, "By faith he became a sojourner." The word sojourner means "one who lives in a place without the right of eitizenship," and, consequently, "one who lives on earth as a stranger." ‘The idea is perfectly expressed in 1 Peter 2:11, and also in Phil. 3:20 â€" #our eitizenship is in heaven." "In the gUNDAY it It CXa L brot 1d m 1d so many differ in various pas LESSON m it that nfu in 15; Heâ€" that Ni C his staif, it simp too feoble to ris and that he bow titude of prayer hands, probably while reclining . "By faith, Jos was nigh, mad« parture of the C wave commandn Fashions and manners may change but Niagara Falls still continues to draw the honeymooners and, accordâ€" ing to local hotelâ€"keepers and ofâ€" ficials, more have registered at local hotcls in the past two months than in six months last year. Immigration officials report large numbers of Amâ€" erican honeymooners crossing . to Canada every day. In any gathering, almost anywhere, it is possible to find a large number present who spent wedding trips here and look back kindly on their visits to the falls. All the world loves a lover and we have always had a kindly feeling for the honeymooners, so generation after generation of married lovers continue to come here. Long may they come. Welcome may they always be. â€"The Niagara Falls Review. SCHOOI_ You may be able to get Australia, China and Russia on your radio. But try and get ten dollars on it at the dealer‘s,. â€" Quebec Chronicleâ€"Teleâ€" graph. An obedient wife is one whose husâ€" band has told her to do what she pleases, and who does it.â€"Kitchener Record The Honeymooners n â€"God ind in nfiden oNnTARIO ARCHlVES TORONTO d by th A couple of years ago the legisâ€" lators of the province decided that the time had come to take some comâ€" pulsory action, and a soil drifting measure was passed which made it possible for neighbor to sue neighbor if land We have never heard of the act being invoked, but it might be a good thing if it were. It might focus pubâ€" lic attention on the problem and bring about more concerted action in this phase of farm rehabilitation work in the West. There is a strong tendency, we have noticed, for farmers to say that soil drifting control methods are fine "for the other fellow;" but they do not apply them at home.â€"Lethbridge Herald. Milk Protection For Tourists Ordinary raw milk heated to 142 deâ€" grees in a double boiler for thirty miâ€" nutes and then chilled is free from dangerous bacteria. This process is called pasteurization, and from pasâ€" teurized milk there is little or no likeâ€" lihood of contracting bovine tuberâ€" culosis, diptheria, typhoid fever, un:â€" dulant fever or septic sore throat, Toâ€" ronto and almost 5 other Canadian centres make pasteurization compulâ€" sory for the protection of their peoâ€" ple. But when their people go touring the country, this protection, and the protection afforded by a pure water supply, can no longer be exercised by the home municipality. It remains for the individual to demand pasteurized milk and government tested water at the resorts which he patronizes. The Health League of Canada is goâ€" ing to promote this form of tourist safety by listing the resorts in Ontâ€" ario which furnish guests with pasâ€" teurized milk only. _ United States tourists are beginning to ask for such information, and to some this will no doubt be a deciding factor. It will, at any rate, do much to promote public health. There have been in the past, reâ€" sorts which prided themselves upon giving their guests "milk fresh from the cow â€" not like the poor stuff you get in the city." Such milk, unfortunâ€" ately, may be full of harmful gorms. The cow may have tuberculosis, or it may have been wading in a typhoidâ€" contaminated pool. Pastevrization is a simple process which removes . the liklihood that any disease will be transmitted. "Any girl who is needed at home has a job just as surely as the girl who operates a machine in a factory." "The fruits of the free spirit of the men do not grow in the garden of tyâ€" ranny." â€" Stanley Baldwin, drifted soil caused damage to Law on Soil Drifting The great Paris international exhibition was opened recently by President Lebrun. Our picture shows, from right to left, in first row: Paul Bastid, Minister of Commerce; Edouard Herriot, President of th @ Chamber of Deputies; Albert Lebrun and M. Jeanâ€"neney, President of the Senate, ue eniigaen + Smppeco" oo sn ce Paris Exposition Formally Opened Muncie, Ind., recently stud‘ed as the typical Ameri Mr. and Nrs. Glen Craig and their children, Emma as the "Typical American Family." They are sho they arrived by plane. Nrs. Kathryn Coburn, Albany, N.Y., with model and finished rotary yarn winder she is exhibiting at Inventors Congress in New York. It is designed to relieve impatient youth, whose arms mothers use while winding yarn. _Typical City‘s Typical American Family Youth "Emancipator"‘ _ . Remmenss i «+ the typical American city, se‘legfll ane S Ety Eiennit oo Lo c c ¢ chifii‘xl'en, Emma Lou, 7, and Bill, " They are shown in Chicago as _ Executives at the Twentieth Conâ€" tury Fox studio are disappointed the public hasn‘t made more of a fuss over Simone Simon, so they are £0â€" ing to put her in a comedy and see If she goes over bettor. They are teaming her with Jack Haley, who made such a hit in "Wake Up and Live," in a ‘fastâ€"moving comedy calâ€" led "Love at Work." mssy fe l o. s Motion picture studio OMICHI® . ** ways change the subject when anyâ€" one asks if their stars really sing or if some singer substitutes for them, but radio listeners can recognize their favorite voices under any circumâ€" stances. They insist that Buddy Clark of the Hit Parade did Jack Haley‘s singing, that Virginia Verrill sang for both Jean Harlow and Virginia Bruce and that in "The Great Barnum" . it was Francia White who sang for Miss Bruce . Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.. has decidâ€" ed that he likes the United States better after all. Whilo ho was in Engâ€" land, he realized his ambition to beâ€" come a producer, and felt so grateâ€" ful to the countrymen who backed him that he thought he would live there always. Coming back to Ho‘llyâ€" wood to make just one picture, ‘The Prisoner of Zenda," he found when it was finished and he was free to go back to England that he just couldn‘t bear to leave all his childhood friends. ODDS AND ENDS â€" Joe Penmer doesn‘t mention ducks even once in "New Faces," which is being filmed by RKâ€"O, and furthermore he . apâ€" pears black face for the first time, â€"â€" Ken Murray always dresses most conâ€" servatively, when he shows up for a broadcast, but around home he goes in for the dizizest colored smoking jackets and lounging robes â€" Motion picture producers, are wildly enthusâ€" iastic over the intimate, caressing voice of Rosalind Greene who anâ€" nounces Mrs. Rooscvelt‘s radio proâ€" gram, and since they have heard that she is young and extraordinarily beautiful they are rushing to her with contracts for the pictures. movie-radio This formal eveninz gown of sheer dotted swiss, a new, modâ€" ern version of the oldâ€"time fayâ€" orite, is made of preâ€"shrunk maâ€" terial and will withstand a seaâ€" son of tubbings in soap and water without the loss of any of its fit Of style. Sensible Loveliness Er studio officials al d to Drugs That May Make You D=/ h ie Arousing Child‘ The names of common CV make â€" babitual | users . PO hard of hearing was the mo jately useful information |} at the convontion of the . Otological Society at Long 1 I., last week. Those drugs a ing to Dr. Her}wn Marshal of Jacksonville/‘ Ma., gquinin lates (aspirin, sodium, salicy bacco, alcohol, opium, arsonic san), lead mercury, phospho: chenopodium, aniline dyes, i Of all the nerves in the 1= auditory nerve is most sons drugs, said Dr. Taylor, and a of the 10,000,000 people in th States, who do not hoear Cl« well blame their medicine and selfindulsences, Some d fect the ear itsolf, said Dr. others the hearing contres brain. Most barmful is quinin« has been found in the brains babies of women who took [ to stimulate childbirth. Among other avoicable c deafness is high flying, acco Pr. Clarence H. Smith, of Ma In such cases dizziness and sounds may accompany the ( Such flyers may be "attacko arir by a paroxysm of disabli Bride Provides His Trovs: Among the chief items o ing of the bride are her The bigger and fuller thes Laimi explains, in her aut the more aristocratic the x wile of an important man will have as much as 30 y: terial in a single pair of p go. In Albania, the June | not the bride gots all the 1 when he marrios, his fianc him with a supply of clo will last him the rest of 1 cording to Nexhmie Zaim{, Albanian girl who is study! lestey and who has just pu autobjography, "Daughter « le." Alban‘an brides in tal, give their hus pairs of trousers, a shirts and, in addit them quantities of h« table linen for their terial in a singie pair of pant. Because it is just across th tic from Italy and can now }; ed in a short time, by airplan Zaimi believes Albania will ; visited by many Americans, * banians are very hospitable," clares. ‘In outlying districts t ceive all travellers as honored kill the bost lamb or turkey i banmians are vo! clares. ‘In out! ceive all travell kill the bost la and provide fr sider hospitalit virtues and Pa people of all th Civing Concrete The Water C Protection BDuricg the Hasl Period Water is both an enemy and a friend to concrete, Too much used during the mixture period kens it, and too little applied aft concrete is laid also weakens it safe rule to follow is to use the lest quantity of mixing wator will produce a sufficiently ; mixture for the work in hand then to give the surface of th« €crete as much curing wator a gible after the concrete is pla« The small amount of n used soon evaporates. Tl water content of froshly crete should be consorved it damp during its carl period and providing plen water to allow the concr en under favourable cond Protection during the period increasoes the resis concrete to wear; and th portant consideration in i ments and platforms. Freshly placed concrote « kept damp in several ways. Prc: the subâ€"base and forms with before concrete is placed will 1 absorption. Horizontal surfaces, as floors and pavements can h ered with damp sand the day they are laid when they have h ed sufliciently to to prevent pitti; surface, and kept damp by 1: sprinkling. Sometimes walls a» ered with canvas or burlap, wh drenched with water sevoral ti day. Keeping the concrote dan first ten days will give the ov least over 65 percent better va his money, _ ‘Three weeks‘ pro will give still groater increaso UC It is better to try to do some: and fail than to do nothing and eeed.â€"Sherbrooke Record. Those with nothing take too long to say Chronicleâ€"Telegraph, A girl can dress herse!f when a little tot, and when she grows up goes only halfâ€"dressed,. â€" Brandon Albania, She Gives Him J Enough Clothes For Lifctin= ind s rld of clothin; st of his 1 on n to say us 5t, â€"â€" Or eâ€"mn n Weird Collect Skipped to C N 8# Bay sTroo: Train TORG DBuVERi L PRICE Interest in Must L Willyu Used C b4 i. (Ontario nÂ¥ l

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