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Durham Review (1897), 14 Oct 1937, p. 3

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y Greenwich Villeg~ ©* .. ads Tools In Car In New Sete ce That Launches an E.. lyer‘s Wife Legally Widow? y Blacksmith eping Beauty‘s CBrain is Studied End Epoch, Start Era ic‘s done it the taffyâ€"haired and her husband, George, closed the shop downstairs ded their tools into an ‘,‘ ey end an epoch and staft an he horses they visit daily to e the first in the world to re his special service. Mrs. Smith admits that a poem & Widow Martha Smith the “ h of _ Greenwich Village, made an announcement of is historical importance, mith, who weighs 183 and ps slightly smaller t a pole, declared lhh‘. portable blacksmith shop, ieved about it a little, not to realize she was making a she gave out the word at ie _ homeâ€"overaâ€"blacksmith. 16 Horatio Street. "Horses carce in New York nowa e said. wistfully, "that 1 Calls on Horses Redfern, whose hus red 10 years ago on wht to South America veek that she was pre that he be declared girl‘s family / isurably" to scic wing the autopsy where she Las s got to go to th@ ng MHer Love a gentle kindly woâ€" i3 A chubby face and « pants and one of irts almost all day ng is her life, her i small mule‘s shoe ing room wall just c of two coye ant she explained. istfully, "that q for the horses to ave â€" grown _ uP aviator simee he ing 150 miles off America on Aw ins d In Interests of 1 that he was of his airplal!- failed to bring of his fate. imits that a poerm where in a magâ€" Village Black. wff . a the brain and rination to find when it is found ns to att:v'g‘:: ‘s family = bly" to scient» D BY VIRUS #} ri€ one of them hsonian Insti verify recurâ€" had been cap rican savages; rod" in some _ gave their sy by which more of the : said, "my shop on a A Horse » her. to n a blackâ€" were mar blacksmith would be » hecical logally sod by a has been 1 depend of the the first th h ED om dis« irnt or reate of the nearly pC been A D n# of T€ M e tonguc®e Wha that, if a mar control, i.e., | _e*% fihereby keep the organs of 1 him into sin i A Tor 4. RBehold, â€" they are so ¢ : rough winds, : a very small 1 pulse of the So the tongue and boasteth horse uncont P3 ’fi:r as man i viren driven tain to found beae‘s and be "Spooch ca escape dang with storms, harbors, but shatter lives flDo_ul_ 7 "-'.'h! f itind®¥i by h the tongue is inflame anot ... anger, or t It is against this general desire to | ; be prominent as instructors that St. | James is here warning his readers. In teaching others, they were in danâ€" | . wer of forgetting to teach themâ€" selves; to possess faith and to do nothing but talk. } If any stambleth not in word, the ‘gpame is a perfect man, able to bridle ‘The whole body also. 3. Now if we put the horses‘ bridles into their | mouths, that they may obey us, we turn about their whole body also. James here begins the subject which oeccupies almost the entire chapter, namely, that of the control of the ® Gongue®e What James here means is that, if a man has his tongue under control, ic., his speech, he will be _ _thereby keeping under control all *a organs of his body which will lead him into sin if not mastered. A Tongue Controlled 1. Iehold, the ships also, though they are so great and are driven by rough winds, are yet turned about by a very small rudder, whither the imâ€" pulse of the steersman willeth. 5. So the tongue also is a little member, and boasteth great things. As a \ _ horse uncontrolled is worthless as eefor ss man is concerned, so a ship viron driven by rough winds is cerâ€" tain to founder on the rocks or the boeae‘ and be smashed to picces. "S; »~â€"h\ can guide into right ways, escape dangers, battle suceessfully with storms, and conduct into restful harbors, but it can also wreck and shatter lives and drown in bottomless flood Bchold, how much wood is tind®®i by how small a fire! 6. And the tongue is a fire. The tongue can inflame another with the passion of L_ anger, or the poison of suspicion. The world of iniquity among our members is the tongue, which defilâ€" eth the whole body. *"*You sully your lips and degrade your who‘e nature when you suffer yourself to speak the tainted and tainting word. Pasâ€" sions kindled by unscrupulous lanâ€" guage spread through various chanâ€" nels and courses until the whole cycle of human life is in flames. Al‘ld is set on fire by hell. "The fire of man‘s wrath is kindled trom beneath as the fire that cleanseth is kindled LESSON II1 CHRISTIAN SPEECH AND CONDUCTâ€"James, Chapter 3 Golden Text.â€"Let no corrupt speech proceed out of your mouth. Epheâ€" sians 4:29. Time.â€"The date of the epistle of James is greatly disputed. The auâ€" thor died in 63 A.D. Some place the epistle the year before this, while others date it as early as 50 A.D. The exact date cannot be determâ€" Place.â€"Probably James wrote the epistle in the city of Jerusalem. The author of this epistle was the ‘¥*ther of the Lord Jesus, and is reâ€" ferred to directly only twice in the Gospels (Matt. 12:46; 13:55; Mark G6:3. Cf. John 2:12; 1:3%,5). He was, of course, a Jew, brought up in the strict teachings of the Jewish synz’vu-, devoted to the law of Mosés, zealous in living a righeous and godly life. His was probably the first epistle written in the early church. The exact date c ined. Place.â€"Probably epistle in the city #e author of t ‘¥other of the Lor ferred to directly Gospels (Matt. 12 §:%,. Cf. John 1 was af comraum. w d THF LESSON IN ITS SETTING. T LE . s o6 L tubie s do th sor it It it can neali, WwH It is also God‘s for the pulling holds of sin, and kingdo@s. My brethren not so to be. ers C speak family lowâ€"m mon 1 from and I breth a man 3a3.30F by Who is â€" amone you? Father: and therewith curse we . who are made after the likeness od. 10. Out of the same mouth th forth blessing and cursing. low great are the possibilities of noue which is under divine conâ€" cleansed and anointed! What ows it can comfort, what wounds in heal, what strife it can still! ; also God‘s mightiest instrument the pulling down of the strongâ€" s of sin, and the upbuilding of his a@ Sunbap Etchool Two Kinds of Wisdom is wise and understanding vou" In a most natural way, , yield olives, or can salt water lar figures of ord. see Matt. â€"very kind of beasts and reeping things and things is tamed, and hath been _ mankind. 8. But the m no man tame; it is a il. it is full of deadly poiâ€" tine well remarks: "James ay that no one can tame :. but no one of men; so i it is tamed, we confess hrought about by the pity, ethren, these things ought be. It was abnormal that ould bless God in his prayâ€" ced and yet so despise or il of members of his own nasmuch as he and his felâ€" wore the offspring of a comâ€" h : now calls the rs to the great i with which 1 that with th the fountai me opening s tamed, we CC »ht about by the ce of God." w calls the atte o the great but ith which we a + with the t th evil ain send forth iz sweet water a fig tree, my or a vine figs? or yield sweet. f speech used t. T:16â€"18; 12: we the Lord both may attention but mysâ€" e are all ton#ue Lesson James proceeds from his specific disâ€" cussion of speech to the larger quesâ€" tion of wisdom. The understanding of things human and divine and their causes. It is the word used to deâ€" scribe the wisdom of Christ himself (Matt. 13:54). James refers to the need for wislom at the very beginâ€" ning of his epistle (1:5, 6), and now returns to the subject once again. Let him show by his good life his works in meekness of wisdom. Meekâ€" ness in the New Testament "included submissiveness to God as well as gentleness towards man. 14. But if ye have bitter jealousy and faction in your heart, glory not and lie not against the truth. The word here translated faction might be more accurately translated "rivâ€" alry," expressing the strife existing among different individuals or groups of individuals. There is nothing more tragic in the world than to see Chrisâ€" tion teachers, and officers in the Christian â€" church â€" striving . among themselves for superior places of honor, and angry if someone else gets more praise than they get. To glory with their tongues of superior : ‘sdom, while they chorished jealâ€" ousy and faction in their hearts, was a manifest lie. a contradiâ€"tion of what they must know to be the truth. James now turns from his disceusâ€" sion of wisdom in general to a charâ€" acterization and development of the two kinds of wisdom which men may have, one bearing evil fruit, and the other bearing fruits of rightcousness. 15. This wisdom. That is, any such wisdom that allows jealousy and facâ€" tion in one‘s heart. Is not a wisdom that cometh down from above, but is carthly. That is, it does not have a divine origin, but derives from the natural plane on which unregenerâ€" ated men live. "It belongs to the lower impulses, not the higher, in man‘s nature. â€" Devilish. The origâ€" inal word here really refers not so much to the devil himself, as to deâ€" mons, and as partaking of the nature of demons or unclean spirits who are represented as possessing the souls of men, and reducing them to the level of madness. 16. For where jealousy and faction are, there is confusion and every vile deed. In I Cor. 14:33, God is said to be the author, not of confusion, but of peace. The word here transâ€" lated vile means good for nothing. 17. But the wisdom that is from above is first pure. (See Prov. 2: 3â€"6). "The purity of the heavenly wisdom does not consist merely in victory over temptations of the flesh, but in freedom from world‘y and low motives. "I cannot win men from impurity to purity if I am not pure." Then peaceable, gentle. "It is beâ€" cause the man who is inspired with pure wisdom has no ulterior, selfish ‘ ends to serve that he is gentle, symâ€" pathetic, and considerate _ towards | those who oppose him. Easy to be Bocause his clothing and monts had been taken from him, C. B. Walden had to serve A ten day sontence in Atlanta, Ga., all wrapâ€" ped up in thought of his missing apparel, and a blanket provided by the police. Walden s_;'tid three men EObe EPRCCCCAERT held him up and fled. A Blanket Sentence entreated. The best interpretation of this phrase would be "winning its way by gentleness." Full of merey and good fruits _ Without variance, without hypocrisy. The first two words here probably mean "unwavâ€" ering," "steadfast," "singleâ€"minded," while, as we all know, hypocrisy means "insincerity," "pretending to be something which one is not." Duchsss Abandons VW allis Bluzs Color It Has Since Disappeared "Wallis blve" went by the board this week. New clothes chosen at Paris by the Duchess of Windsor were black, brown and i1ed. Only one costume struck the familiar blue note. It was a traveling ensomble in navy blue wool. Amnnneomame n ces eet There was a strong note of plaid in apparel the duchess selected for day wear at Mainbocher‘s, where a private room was set aside for her fittings. Her new dinner frocks for winter parties were of lace and georgette. The fabrics chosen for formal evenâ€" ing gowns included broadcloth, tutler, flashing metal fabrics and somber velvets. Pilot Johnny Martin, with his pet, a pesodi of rare value, The animal has vanished, and Martin would like to find it because there are only two of its kind known to exist in this country. Dr. Alexis Carrel, rescarch sCiCM" tist, disclosed this week that he and Col. Charles A. Lindbergh were conâ€" tinuing experimentation looking to ward perfection of the artificial heart‘" which they devised for study of human organs outside the body. Dr. Carrcl, returning to New York from abroad on the Normandie, rcâ€" fused to say that they were making progress, but indicated that they still were working along the same lines. He rejected as "nonsensical" reports that Lindbergh planned to become a British citizen. _ C Foremost among the coveted honours won by Bell Telephone first aiders was the Dominionâ€"wide Championships for women and menâ€"a goal which Bell first aid teams have been striving to attain for ten years. In the picture two Bell Telephone first aid graduates are giving an exhibition of how head, arm, and leg injuries should be cared for. In the background are the trophies won by the different Bell Telephone teams. Left to right: the Ontario Provincial Shield and the Montizambert Cup emplematic of the Canadian Championship won by Team No. 1, Toâ€" ronto. The Sir George Burn Trophy, All Canada Ladies‘ First Aid Championship, won by the Accounting Ladies‘ Team, Toronto. The Wallace Nesbitt General Trophy and the Quebec Provincial Shield won by Team No. 1, Montreal. - 4s t CÂ¥ MR i4 cclo aas ~matfe »nlfant AHOrkET been striving to attain for tEen yealo. In the picture two Bell Telephone first aid graduates are giving an exhibition of how head, arm, and leg injuries should be cared for. In the background are the trophies won by the different Bell Telephone teams. Left to right: the Ontario Provincial Shield and the Montizambert Cup emplematic of the Canadian Championship won by Team No. 1, Toâ€" ronto. The Sir George Burn Trophy, All Canada Ladies‘ First Aid Championship, won by the Accounting Ladies‘ Team, Toronto. The Wallace Nesbitt General Trophy and the Quebec Provincial Shield won by Team No. 1, Montreal. Approximately ninetyâ€"five out of every hundred Bell Telephone male plant workers are now qualified to render First Aid. PP : TLE LELICGchdret ies rcie esnt ic tetecie ontinues Work On Artificial Hzart Alexis Carrel, reso}u‘ch scien A Ten Yzcar Goal Reached Last Saturday, October 9, Jack Haley started the Log Cabin Syrup series over the NBC Red Network. Haley, if you remember, was the timid crooner in the 20thâ€"Centuryâ€"Fox pic« ture "Wake Un And Live." Supported by Ted Fio Rito‘s orchestra, Warren Hull, author, and Virginia _ Verrill, youthful blues singer, this series promâ€" ises to be on the favorites for this season. You listeners who NAVO NUSIM 1 much about Voodoo, here is your chance to listen to an avthentic desâ€" cription of a voodoo service with its nccompanying chants and drum calis on Wednesday, October 13, at 3.00 p.m., over the Blue web. The broadâ€" cast is designed to show the typical lifs of Haiti today, and will feature I+ma (Goebel Labastille whose husband was born in Haiti and Blair _ Niles, noted woman explorer. The program is titled © Women Expore the World." Log Ca‘bin S'_':'v:r Features Jack Charlie McCarthy, the only pine block in the world that can claim to have spoken over the radio, enterâ€" tained at night clubs, given command performances before _ royalty _ now has been signed by Samuel Goldwyn in Goldwyn Follies, after which Uniâ€" versal claims his services. What about Bergen, you ask? Well, it looks as though Edgar would get a job too. Charlie says he thinks he can fix it up with the moguls to "cive Bergon at least a small part". Another milestone in its JONSZ TCUD"" of service to the farmers and homeâ€" makers of the nation has been passed on Saturday, October 2, when the Naâ€" tional Farm and Home Hour began its 10th year over NBC. On that day, the popular noonâ€"hour program was aired over the network for the 2,771st time since the inavgural broadcast in 1928. During the course of this time, the net“';);ivhas been increased from 17 stations to a total of 70. At Least a Small Part ors who have heard so estone in its long record the farmers and homeâ€" nation has been passed October 2, when the Naâ€" and Home Hour began over NBC. On that day, § / 9, Jack And now for a wee bit of Canadian news. A couple of days ago, CFRB ran an audition over the air just beâ€" fore midnight. We think the program was probably the choicest bit of airing we have heard for a long time emanâ€" ating from a local station. The proâ€" RADIO HEADLINERS OF THE WEEK Around The Dia New Canadian Voices before seen in America [vwo members of the worldâ€"famec Mikhail Mordkin who are presen C. MURRAY At The Mord!: gram introduced a new voice to the air â€"that of Ran Dalyâ€"and girls, is he handsome! Vince "Flying Fingers" PBoyd played the organ, while Rai Purâ€" dy gave bits of philosophy and quoted poetry. The program was quite approâ€" priate to the hoursâ€"you know, the soft, lulling kind. Some smart sponâ€" sor should look into this, Stan Francis just dropped down on the desk. Stan is the m. c. on the Sunday Night Community Sing Jamâ€" boree broadcast over CKCL, at 900 p.m. We haven‘t seen Stan since someâ€" time in the summer when he shaved off his mustache. Imagirg our SUrâ€" prise when we noticed a brand new cookie duster under his nose. Thanks for the passes, Stan. We might drop in and see you conduct the mass tonâ€" sil exercises. Incidentally Stan preâ€" sents a smart review three nights weekly at the Lansdowne Theatre. "Barnacle Cill" If the kiddies of the house are inâ€" terested in listening to serials, tune them in to ‘ Barnacle Bill" over CFRB and a Canadian network at 5.30 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Ogilvie Flour sponsors the series. We have to hand it to Reg Dags of CKWX, Vancouver, who made Canadian radio history by broadcastâ€" ing interviews with Sino Japanese war refugees from Shanghai upon arâ€" rival here aboard the Canadian Paâ€" cific‘s Empress of Asia. Dage went over to Victoria the night previous, and boarding the liner on its arrival there in the early hours of the mornâ€" ing, he arranged the interviews on the five hour crossing to Vancouver, and when the first hawser came ashore the dock, Dagg heaved his mike lines ashore. The interviews were on the air before the gangâ€"plank was in place. American sponsors are getting inâ€" terested in Canadian radio stations in so far as to bring their American netâ€" work programs into Canada. This is indicative of the upswing in Canadian radio business. What we can‘t figure out is if these stations are valuable, why not run a Canadian series, emanâ€" ating from some point in â€" Canada. Then we may get some real prozgrams in Canada. The announcers out west are hayâ€" ing plenty of fun. With the sudden demand for football game broadcasts, a sponsor has undertaken to broadcast the Westorn Canada group. This conâ€" sists of teams in Calsgary, Winnipeg and Regina. The announcers travel from 350 to 780 miles to do a single broadcast. Nice work, if you get it. Irterested In Canadian Stations [ 0 UGLan enangnre are snttineg 14 M zin Balle: nc ballet troupe, directed by bailets this season never Dicing With Death On The Highways The diceâ€"cup is for daredevils who willingly bet their cash on the caprice of the ivory cubes, bug in that giddy game of life and death which is Onâ€" tario‘s trafiic lottery, everyone has a stake, willing or not. Doddering old men, tiny totsâ€"yes, even babes in arms. years of age met death in automobile accidonts almost as soon as they had learned to talk; 23 of these were wee pedestrians who porished even as they were learning to walk. Two out of every three persons ba years and over who departed from this life in traffic accidents last yoar were on foot when their fatal moment arrived. 4 Where is a severe â€" indictment of reckless driving to be found in these figuresâ€"a charge of apathy, if not of gross negligence. Little children canhot be held acâ€" countable for their actions; they canâ€" not be expected to take care of themâ€" selves in trafic. Drivers must think for them and protect them, Eidorly persons are at an equal disadvantage. The mind may be clear but the foot» steps falter and the necessary nimbleâ€" ness has left their limbs. Drivers must Jlook out for them, too, if needâ€" less highway fatalities are to be preâ€" vented. Albanian Town Majority in Gjinokaster Cling *to View of Turks, Rest Greek Gjinokaster, a town of approRntMA"" ly 11,000 inhabitants situated near the southern extremity of Albania, is preâ€" dominantly Mohammedan, . says | A bulletin from the National Geographiâ€" cal Society. The rest of the popaaâ€" tion is â€" Greekâ€"speaking Orthodox Christians. Only ten miles from the Greek frontior, Gjinokaster was elsimâ€" ed by Greece at the ond of the Balkan Wars in 1912413, but without success, Mohammedanism, . of â€" course, is a holdâ€"over from the long period, 1479 to 1912, when this rugged, mountainâ€" ous kingdom of the Balkan Poninsula was a part of Turkey. Mountain Kingdom Situated 1,060 feet above sea lovel among rugged mor ntaing, Gjinokasâ€" ter‘s whiteâ€"roofed houses are ranged along a hilltop and straggle like lines of snow down into the Vâ€"shaped valâ€" ley. Up and down winding mountain roads plod the donkeys . of sturdy Tosks plying to small, oponfaced shops solling cigareties, cheese, carâ€" pets, woolen materials and other proâ€" duce, The manufacture of cheose, one of Albania‘s main exports, is an imâ€" portant industry in Gjinokaster, Anâ€" other favored occupation there is car pet weaving, a reminder of the lons years Albania was under Turkish dom ination. tle Children and Old Peor An&hgmll()du'io Traffic Accident: Near the town are grealt BTOYVC® 7 olives and to the north, Ameorican corn, small grains, and other .crops are raised in the fertile fields that Ne like checkerboards along the talley of the Viosa River between bluish peaks, snowclad throughout much of the winter. Water is wealth in Albania. has but two navigable . rivers these are only partially and soa ably so. Wasted torrents from movntains in winter and . bone stream beds in summerâ€"these are extromes in the water problem of country where the creation of sto lakes could be an economic boon Zoo Alligator World‘s Longevity Record Claiâ€" ed for Four Captives in Four members of the Philade! Zoo family claim the world‘s I evity record for captive member their species. Over in the reptile house sw im ming pool, two gray alligator snapâ€" ping turtles, have snapped up their food for 47 years. "Bossie‘" the baldtheaded old Grifâ€" fon vulture, has picked the bones tossed into her enclosure for 36 years. Haunching in a corner o_( his cage, paying no malent disdaining the : were his delight young anthropoid peze, is "Bobby" honâ€" The turtles, champions of the zoo‘s old timers‘ club came from the Low» er Mississippi in 1890 and have hbeon on cxhibit five years longer than any other known _ individuals if their kind, Dr. Merbert L. Ratcliffc, as sistant pathologist at the #oo, said. e meiermy . SE med® 0 On the basis of years of residence in captivity "Bobby" beats the preâ€" vious record of gibbons by seven years and seven months, ‘and "Besâ€" sie" bests that of other vultures by two yearsâ€" , 26 toddlers up to four Water is Wealth every three persons 65 r who departed from no attention to wvisitors and ig the rope swings which g delight when he was the nthropoid on the f!ying traâ€" ©Bobby" a 31â€"yearâ€"old gibâ€" Philadelphia Zco town of approximate 47 Years Qld it ops ‘phia longâ€" rs of ind On the th th of 1y P Agy *43 C *ar pubg.o!

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