rioâ€"Que McArthur C“u Hairâ€"Raising Tales In A Rainy Night » Vegetable Drying Proce gests Curb â€" _ On Homework P Di Mi of dueling with pistt ure be allowed to .“ C ho Gorman Universities iz school homewerk whery ; with healtb, ang radig oduces sensationa} proâ€" ican _ MeArthur, Ontarig ister of nmllon, dig. orn education before the ecâ€"Maritime conventia. _. Health First _ education before ; ~Maritime eo-u.n.‘ national at ll“ said : » sure at times neasured up to th health and 1 tej : homework inte : health, through forget thee home r the age of 10 iitted to do such ntly also have in the matter of + lighting condi children‘s vision star appears: E. Nellic Morrison case her weepi# nust fade, ocm these longin@ that fret and jades d storm‘s passing her tears, ivens. s whisber » have t awase, they ing «l ild break, were *foi) { the promise® printed a list had gone out mes unsuard | counsel and vents eoly m® convicts freed rld marriage® t} me ughter phory. s wh violins, ; Pcts3 our ; which ‘ nery 1 lanke h "lgn 1| you ‘rierey laving illo-. ‘. Al radiog : have lack work, veary work, n our SOPâ€" nal and brother of six different me > ment who bear t Judas. The aw one chapter wa who wrote an quently, a brot! himself (Matt. To them that a those who have gosp» message Jesus Christ, a it. "Beloved i It is God‘s lov Jesus Christ t« sent that mess word and thre B thos> who are are the belove for Josus Chr trans‘ated "key this single cha 6, cnce in v. lated "reserve v. '_:_. The w eare and is sug session. _ It is times used by derful interces Jude is so con to keep us th ably with and "@ . part of our ¢ LESSON H. THE CHRISTIAN IN GOWS KEEPING (P=ailm 121; Book of Jude) PRISTED TEXTâ€"Jude 1â€"4, 17â€"25. GOLDEN TEXTâ€"Keep yourselves in th* love of God, looking for the itooy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.â€"Jude 21. the date 16 The Lesson In Its Setting Timeâ€"Inasmuch as the author of the 121st Psalm is not known, its date â€"cannot be determined. Jude wrote his epistle about 65 A.D. F.aceâ€"We have no way of determâ€" inin@ where the 121st Psalm was written. Strange to say. we have no information of any kind that would tell us where the epistle of Jude was written. It may have been Jeruâ€" salem; it may have been elsewhere. th t h th Own A Song in Praise of God‘s Preserâ€" ors," Psalim 121: This beautiful m is the trustful expression of a "Iude, a servant of Jesus Christ, ml brother of James."â€" There are ! : diferent men in the New Testa ont who bear the name of Jude or rnda The author of this epistle of me chapter was a brother of James ho wrote an (‘pisfl(‘. and, conseâ€" uently, a brother of the Lord Jesus imsolf (Matt. 13: 55; Mark 6: 3). ‘o thom that are called. That is, to pose who have heard the call of the ospw) message to accept the Lord esu: Christ, and have hearkened to t "Beloved in God the Father.â€â€" t is God‘s love which sent the Lord lesus Christ to die for us. and then ent that message to us through his vord and through his ministers:â€" hos> who are called of God truly we the beloved of God. "And kept for Josus Christ."â€" The word here vrans‘ated "kept" occurs five times in this single chapterâ€"here, twice in v. 6, cnce in v. 13, where it is transâ€" lated "resorved," and a final time in v. <{, The word expresses watchful care an| is suggestive of present posâ€" session. It is the same worl three times used by our Lord in his wonâ€" dorful intorcessory prayer in John 17. Jude is so confident of God‘s purpose to koop us that he links it inseparâ€" ably with and makes it to be a very part of our calling. and the fact of eur being loved by God. We are kept day by day from those things which would harm our souls. That which alone can come b¢ twcen us and God is sin. It is God alone who can deliver us from the power of cither of these, and from the Wakness and wicked inclinations of our own flesh. is "Mercy unto you and peace and love be multiplied."â€" This sentence is what might truly be called an inâ€" oicing in its own safety unâ€" ~atchful eye of Iim who is Maker of Heaven and earth : Keeper of Israel. The of the universe, the Keeper ation, is also the Keeper of iv‘dual. Undoubtedly _ the istics of Jehovah revealed in two verses of this psalm are o set Jehovah in contrast : dead gods of the heathen wound them, who. on the one 4 not make the heavens and h, and, on the other hand, on acknowledged (at times) worshippers to fall asleep to forget their subjects. A o has created the universe â€" enough to easily keep and individuals, no matter how ~=,. or how powerful adverse mweos or external antagonâ€" a@ Sunbuap Echool vh hysical dangers. the Psa‘mâ€" to moral dangers, assuring shom he wrote that Jehovah or, would actually keep his â€" all evil contamination of c ce c omm c es ome in sorrow. _ "Behold I thee and will keep thee »ver thou goest, and will + again into this land; for t leave thee, until I have : which I have spoken to . So, hundreds of years Lord said to Mosesâ€" "Beâ€" n| an angel before thee to |-)_v the ;fuy. and to bring the place which I have pret God‘s 1 omises iisite psalm is, as it were, lon and summary of simiâ€" «= of God in the ages that efore. as, e.g., the words Jacob the night he fell Bethcl, after leaving his o ~â€"mmweâ€"n in all of Paul‘s am ow «m â€"am o Lesson epistles. "Mercy" is the unmerited source. "Peace" and "love" are the blissful results, whether by love is meant the mutual love of the readers, or their love to God, or God‘s love to them, or all three. Trouble in the Shurch "Beloved, while I was giving all diligence to write unto you of our common salvation, I was constrained to write unto you exhorting you to contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered unto the saints. For there are certain men "~spt in privily, even they who were of old written of beforehand unto this â€" condemnation. vagodly men, turning the grace of our God into lasciviousness, and denying our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ." â€" A terrible situation had arisen in the Christian Church at the time Jude was writing, which was probably about 35 yea‘s after the ascent of our Lord to glory, possibly A.D. 65. or 66. Certain men had stealthily come into the church, who allowed themselves to become members of the church, but who concealed both their heret:cal beliefs and their impure life from other Christians, and were thus hyprocrites at the outset. They were false both in their beliefs and in their conduct. The two go together. These terrible conditions led Jude to urge his readers to earnestly contend for the very faith which these men were | denying. "But ye, beloved, remember ye the | words which have been spoken before â€" by the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ; That they said to you, In the last time there shall be mockers, walking after their own ungodly lusts."â€"St. Jude rem‘nds his readers that the apostles had often said that mockers would come and then proâ€" ceed to quote an apostolic document in which this saying was recorded in a particular shape. "These are they who mal.e scpara tions."â€" It was characteristic of the false teachers and mockers that they drew lines of demarcation which Christ had not drawn, between themâ€" selves and others, or between differâ€" | ent classes of believers. _ "Sensual, i having not the Spirit."â€"That is, they ‘wcre "men who lived only for the |natural self â€" men who make the sensuous nature with its appetites and passions the law of their life." Keep in God‘s Love "But ye, beloved, building up yourâ€" selves on your most holy faith." â€" Probably these phrases, of which this is the first, form as perfect an illusâ€" tration as can be found in all of the New Testament of the words of the apostle Paul â€""Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good." The way to build ourselves up on our faitl is by doing the things which Jude now admonishes. "Praying in the Holy Spirit." _ To pray in the Holy Spirit is to pray in accordance with the leading of the Holy Spirit who dwells in us. Consequently, all prayers will be characterized by holiâ€" mess and by spirituality. "Keep yourselves in the love of God."â€" It is not, "Keep God loving iyou.†But we need to keep in the conscious enjoyment of it. We keep eurselves in the love of God primarily by doing those things which please him. "Looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life." â€"We are to continually look for our Lord to come back, at which time we know that merey will prevail. At this time we shall come into the full apprchension of and the full realizaâ€" tion of the eternal life, which, as a gift, was bestowed upon us when we accepted our Lord Jesus Christ as our Saviour. "And on some have mercy, who are in doubt. And some save, snatchâ€" ing them out of the fire; and on some have merey with fear; hating even the garment spotted by the flesh."â€"As the Lord has been merciâ€" ful toward us, so should we be merciâ€" ful toward others, and especially must this be observed as we deal with those who have come into the darkâ€" ness of doubt, or have fallen into some great sin. "Now unto him that is able to guard you from stumbling."â€" The concluding sentence of Jude‘s epistle is one of the richest, if not the richest doxology to be found at the end of any of the New Testament writings. "And to set you before the presence of his glory without blemish."â€"The glory here referred to is, of course, the glory of God, the outshining of all ; Shadaimedir s Prvveceer®a DAPTT of~ his divine attributes. ing joy." This probably refers to the joy which is God‘s and the joy of the Lord Jesus Christ in bringing to comâ€" pletion their great task. ECmm comes «To the only God our Saviour, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and power, before all time, and now and for evermore. â€" Amen." Roosevelt Regins War on Paralysis Medicos Pleased â€" Will Organize Fovndation to Determine Cause Public health service officials this woek welcomed President Roosevelt‘s announcement of the impending orâ€" ganization of an infantile . paralysis foundation. From its research, they said, may come the allâ€"important explavation of what cavses the disease. "Many, many laboratories still are fumbling for the cause," commented Dr. Robert Olesen, an assistant surgâ€" eon general. "We have made headâ€" way in treatment, but as for cause and prevention, we still have to talk in glittering generalities." Mr. Roosevelt drew on his own °Xâ€" periences as a victim of the disease in describing the need for launching an adequatelyâ€"financed campaign through which one national body would "lead, direct and unify the fight on every phase of this sickness." 4 \l? * PM 5 0 #5 1 7 Q uen ,\‘| A . * A k \ ; C :\ ; | 4 P e > 1 * E6 @mlr ,' 5 ( (\1‘ 4 " | UAIA:â€"Ahas > > t -‘ *y‘ P BY HELEN W in Q We thank Thee, God, for sh No V For crusted loaves and fire A\ *X P Whose gypsy songs make | \ * On dark blue nights, again: \ f For wide, green winds, an« \\ f Seaâ€"light and dusk, and hi /J ~ To spring back straight, a A \\l And homing paths with lat Q\ . We thank Thee, God, for s p (@R \\\ h For violets asleep. in moss) which one national body would "lead, direct and unify the fight on every phase of this sickness." Dependent Human Beings «Those who today are fortunate in being in full possession of their musâ€" cular power," he said, "naturally do not understand what it means to a human being paralyzed by this disease to have that powerlessness lifted even to a small degree. "It means the difference between a human being dependent on others, and an individual who can be wholly independent." 1 cusl nsc oi o ces ce The disease, also called pOMHOMYC!T tis, wreaks its greatest ravages On children. The children‘s bureau reâ€" ported last year that three of every ten crippled children were the victims of infantile paralysis. The new foundation,as envisioned by the president, would carry on inâ€" vostigations into the cause, prevenâ€" tion, treatment and "every medical possibility of enabling those so afâ€" flicted to become economically indeâ€" pendent." Tea was first introduced in Europe on a commercial scale during the latâ€" ter part of the 17th century. It has been used as a beverage in China since about 500 A.D. Refore the deâ€" velopment of tea cultivation in India, Ceylon. Japan and the East Indies Netherlands, China enjoyed a world monopoly. _ Today China supplies a very small. percentage of Canada‘s tea requirements (0.6 in IM).mty on China tea im into is 8 cents per ,mm- Indian and Ceylon teas enter the Dominion under the Empire preference rate of 4 cents o also called poliomyeliâ€" Ve thank Thee, God, for shaded lamps at evening. For crusted loaves and firelight and the rain . Whose gypsy songs make music for our dreamings, On dark blue nights, against a shining pane. s For wide, green winds, and sunâ€"bright fields ot summer, Seaâ€"light and dusk, and high, brave trees that bend To spring back straight, and rainbows after showers, And homing paths with laughter at their end. § We thank Thee, God, for seedtime and for harvest, ; For violets asleep in mossy banks, ‘The hurt we masked with gaiety undoubted Oh, most of all for bravery we give thanks! is Some authors spend months _ or years writing a single novel, but Irna Phillips, author of The Guiding Light, Today‘s Children, and the news erâ€" ies The Road of Life, three N B C Seria‘s, turns out more than 30,000 words each week. Her job is no snap â€"spending nine hours a day at least five days a week in her Chicago ofâ€" fice dictating to her secretary. To get the natural touch, faithful charâ€" acterization, and so on, Miss Phillips invites such people as policemen, storekeepers, etc., in for a chat when she must write a part for such charâ€" acters. Joan Edwards, pretty 19â€"yearâ€"old thythm â€" singer, is determined to make good on her own. Although she is a niece of Gus Edwards, famous for discovering and developing stars, Joan wants none of his influence. And so she suffered many disâ€" appointments and heartbreaks. â€" Her father is a song publisher, her mothâ€" er a former vaudeville singer. Both encouraged Joan‘s ambition to beâ€" come a singing pianist. She made her professional debut in _ Miami, where she was presented by Rudy Vallee, and later by Fred Allen. She is now heard on the blue network on Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 10.15 Chose Hard Road to Script Writing No Cinch caus came come c en s m + se c t hank c;t@, Godâ€" J / ‘The News Is Out About 77 more days till Christmas _â€"but we know now that Arturo Tosâ€" canini will conduct the N B C Sym phony orchestra consisting of 100 hand picked musicians on December 25 from 9:00 to 10:30 p.m. and each Saturday thereafterâ€" The program will originate in N B C‘s large Raâ€" dio City studio and will be heard from coast to coast over the Red web. Toscanini, in returning to Am erica about December 15 to take over the baton of the NBC â€"Sym phony, comes back to the land where he has had many great triumphs. It was during his seven years of assoâ€" ciation with the orchestra at the Metropolitan Opera, from 1908 to 1915 that he rose from the rank of fine conductors to the pinnacle of inâ€" dividual supremacy among. themâ€" 1920 saw Toscanini returning to La Scala in Milan, where in his earlier years, his great genius had maturâ€" ed. Last year he left America, and was thought to be lost to music lovâ€" ers here until last Winter he conâ€" sented to return to the States to conduct ten radio concerts for N B C for which he will receive 40,000 iron men. Jellâ€"O Benny Rides Again October 3 saw Buck Benny back on his Jello spot with Mary Livingâ€" stone, Kenny Baker, Don Six Deliciâ€" RADIO HEADLINERS OF THE WEEK Around > The Dial G. C. MURRAY Vig» #ads ous Flavors Wilson, Phill Harris and his Jello guzzling orchestra, gravelâ€" voiced Andy Devine, and â€" Sam Schlepperman Hearn, who‘s "Hello Strangor" has been missed during the last part of Benny's sories. The dayâ€"Sunday. The t‘meâ€"7:30 pm.â€" The network, NBC Red. The Good Humor Amateur Hour enters the second â€" ycar of preseni: ing new voices and. acts over the ozone. Two now stations join the hookâ€"up, C F C F, Montreal and C F C O, Chatham. C H M L, Hamâ€" ilton, C F R B, and C K C L, Toâ€" ronto complete the chain. . . . C H M L, Hamilton to carry Rugby gamâ€" es of Toronto, Hamilton, and Guelph univers ties. Sport fans will have a full Saturday afternoon of rugby, for these games will be followed by the Big Four Games. . . â€" Wondering what happened to Pauline Drake, vwhose charming voice pleased manry rad‘o listeners while pinchâ€"hitting for another female commentator. . . â€" Lou Snider and Murray Ross have gained many, many friends across Canada on their present C B C netâ€" work programs. This two p‘ano team is one of the popular features on Canadian Radio. . . . Horace Lapp and his musicians move back into their Royal York Hotel spot, and will soon be heard dispensing smart dance tunes over the air. They have just returred from Banff, Alberta. Two young men named William Mahle and Harold Ohlgren, while enâ€" gaged on research work at Macales ter College, Eng., developed a secret process for manufacturng gasoline from ordinary field clover,. Their gasoline would be far cheaper than that marketed at present, for overâ€" head charges would be far less. Gasoline From Clover There is no doubt whatever that their product has a commercial value, for â€"alrcady representatives from various governments have approachâ€" ced them and offered to purchase the secret. Patriotic motives have comâ€" pelled them to decine, and an Amâ€" / ho Ssn s ty in * 0 m rorarinl "ipgp exp‘cit the new product. Canadizn (Radio) Capers Boverley Lane, 17â€"yearâ€"old Chicago high school gradvate, who has signâ€" ed q threeâ€"year contract with the Chicago Civic Opera Company. She will make her debut as a coloratura soprano in Rigoletto in December., n men B T man Hearn, who‘s "Hello ‘ has been missed during part of Bonny‘s scries. The dav. The t‘meâ€"7:30 pm.â€" Scales Opera Heights Hour ONTARIO ARCHIVES Normal Tissue Often Has Malignant Cells New Mcthod of Creating Canâ€" cer in Mice Demonstrated. ‘The creation of cancer in a new way was announced this week by Al bert Fischer, Danish scientist, whose skill in growing living tissues of flesh in test tubes led the Danish Governâ€" ment to equip and present him with a special laboratory. He transplanted a bit of healthy, normal, nonâ€"cancerous flesh of a mouse from one part of the animal‘s body to another. After two or more "moving days" of this sort, the norâ€" mal tissues turned into cancer in a number of cases, The new cancer was carcinoma, one of the two main divisions of these disoases. The experiments led Pr. Fischer to a new theory of «ancor, That all the normal tissues of the body ocntain fully developed maligâ€" nant cells at all times. Cancer appears when for some reaâ€" son these malignant cells get the upâ€" per hand. Dr. Fischer‘s experiments are announced in the American Jourâ€" nal of Cancer. Dr. Fischer starts by pointing out that the wild growth that makes canâ€" cer is not confined to this disease. Normal cells of the body show it whon repairing wounds. This is true even‘ in old age. The difference between the repairs the body makes on a wound and cancer, is that the rapid growth® of new flesh stops when the wound is boaled. In cancer it does not stop. Education Should Teach Usefulness Said President Christie, of O.A.C. Address at Ontario College Ropresenting more than 200 «citics, towns and willages in Ontario, stuâ€" dents from all parts of the province gathered in Toronto last week for ro opening of the 1937â€"38 sessions of the Ountario College of Pharmacy. Regisâ€" tration was the highest in the collego in 20 years and included 16 girls inâ€" tending to take up pharmacy As & life work. Opening ceremonies held in the Cof lege auditorium had unusual interest as the college was the first educaâ€" tional institution in the city to comâ€" mence activities this year. President Christie, of the Ontario Agricultural College, was guest speaker for the 0¢â€" casion. Students were welcomed by Dean R. O. Hurst, prizes were preâ€" sented by Prof. Paul L Scott, Greetâ€" ings from the college council were extended by President H. M. Corbett, I of Creemore. 1 F 4%.4 OF AZPRRmiE Opportunities for service to the community offered in the pharmacy business were stressed by President Christie in his address to the students. Education that failed to train a man to do things for the community was use less he declared, warning the students against simply acquiring information without developing ability to do some» thing. 5l y c c A gold medal was presented 10 !* L. Johnson, of St. Thomas, and a silâ€" ver medal to H. F. Mahaffey, of Port Colborne, as & recognition of the high standing they had made in the last year‘s academic work. T venrcc uris PFrev . ts cillicdtcintssetiatiratdiadit P CR 0 With vice president F. A. Lemon, of St. Thomas, other members of the college council present for the cere monies included Ebon R. Wigle, Godâ€" erich; R. M. Perking, St. Thomas; H. Â¥, Mercer, Lindsay; Frank J. Hoas, Kingston; W. J. Abell, Brampton; T. S. Brandy, Windsor; U. L. Campbell, Hamilton; H. 8. Tapscott, Brantford ; H. P. Broughton, Sault Ste. Marie; J W. Preston and A. E. Hanham, of To ronto. Britain‘s Income Up By £350,000,000 Britan‘s gross national income has gone up by £350,000,000 since 1935, according to A detailed estimate given in a work on National Income and Outlay by Mr. Colin G. Clark, University Lecturer on Statistics, Cambridge, published by Messrs. Macmillan & Co. The total is £5,176,000,000 in 1936 1935. A 0Cs Regarding distribution of wealth, Mr. Clark says that "oneâ€"tenth of the whole working population (those with incomes over £250) take nearâ€" ly half of the national income, and a small class comprising 1% per cent of the population (with incomes over £1000) take oneâ€"quarter." Farmer Joe Bryan‘s contentod cowsâ€"made that way, he reported recently from Portland, Indiana, to the department of agriculture, by musicâ€"don‘t care for soprano solos, "They get nervous," Bryan said, in telling how the right kind of music soothes his cows and makes them give more milk, "when they u‘;‘;e-stâ€â€";tâ€"&ï¬ and if he gets soft instrumental music, he «aid, the cows keep happy. His Cows Like Music Bryan has a radio in his big barn, | was presented to E. St. Thomas, and a silâ€" K Mahaffev, of Port WeR MapRntmpe nE T10 CCC £4,926,000,000 _ in 200 citios ++ ET 44 4 dy