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Durham Review (1897), 28 Oct 1937, p. 3

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ind Afflictions, (range Plague Manking come in ally The becomes Blacp ases K‘own Eence Pick, cd t pouse c on c om ce an cam: anoemcee are can wan o en us . ce ns cae c amse en en cerre â€"<â€"( Sunbapr Scrhool \ \ Lesson AL 15SUE IN THE DRINK (International Temperâ€" :y). â€"â€" Romans 13:12â€"14; ingzs of the Lord h lusteth against irit against the mtrary the one ha nal Th pel puri li wl ;i Galatians § the ir Lord ness of ho t« temde Th n sn thri simp‘ y not « 10 til eC cert t Us th ne f1 7 union of the ust of m nc Orsas ol d darkâ€" s of the ial ‘rulâ€" mpt the C ions, 0cCu= N h and the 5). The sle s Pirst heathâ€" nd the y comâ€" the apâ€" written p ie the written crun (Pro these n h M r0De 13 but on the ity, [3 h city sus [d A Discussing the book in an editorial headed "Music of Sphereos?" the Lonâ€" don Newsâ€"Chronicle declares; "Sir James Jeans has explained why men sing in the bath. He ought to go on and tell us how to stop them." Science has explained away man‘s superiority over a woman as a bathâ€" room singer. Sir Janies Jeans goes into the subject in his new book of "Science and Music." A room of small dimensions like a tathroom, he says, will make any note below middle C ‘go on echoing round and a bass or tenor voice will resound in all its richness since its harmonies are only filtered out to a slight degree. But this is not true of a soprano. Hence the peculiarly male pleasure of singing in the bathroom." ing lrom the sense ol ms greatness and the mind‘s own readiness to sin. Henee then, we are to pass over the insults and wrongs inflicted by men as permitted by God, and a part of his discipline." That is, the holding in of the passions and appetites. Against such there is no law. You can never find any law on any of the statuteâ€"books of any Christian nation legislating against the virtues here enumerated. 24. And they that are of Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with the passions and the lusts thereof. By crucifying the flesh and its pasâ€" sions and lusts is meant taking a deâ€" liberate and positive stand against their domination snd their inciteâ€" ments, a reckon‘n~ of one‘s self to be dead indeed unto sin, but to be alive unto God. Bathtub Songs Of NMen "Best" liv holy parties, 21. iinvyings, drunkenness, revellings, and such like; of which I forewarn you, even as I did foreâ€" warn you, that they who practise such things shall not inhertt the kingâ€" dom of God. A fourfold classificaâ€" tion of the fifteen sins here mentionâ€" ed has been suggested: (1) sensual vices; (2) relizious vices connected with heathendom; (3) malevolent vices, enmities, strife, jealousies, etc. (4) vices of excess or intemperance. Wal‘ in the Holy Spirit What should be given the greater cnmipuasis in this leâ€"son is not the vices which we are to put away, and deony, and triumph over, though these certainly should be spoken of, but the meaning of and the daily experience of the glorious privilegs of walking in the power and under the guilance of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is a person, the Third Person of the Godhead. It is by the Holy Spirit that we are indwelt. As a person, he has a most intimate knowledge of ench one of us. As the Holy Spirit, his desires for us are always the most tion, uncleannes ldolatry, sorcery jealousies, wrath parties, 21. Em revellings, and s to the other; that ye may not things that ye would. 18. B: are led by the Spirit, ye are : der the law. Paul does not me we shall live a life in which t plays no part, but that we sh be slaves to fleshly desires, by live in our bodies as the Holy dictates, not as bodily desires ¢ TRIS CORINEE 1& WAE wonnzmcs we shall live a life in which the flesh plays no part, but that we shall not be slaves to fleshly desires, but shall live in our bodies as the Holy Spirit dictates, not as bodily desires dictate. This conflict is not present in the lives of unbelievers. 19. Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these: fornicaâ€" lasciviousness. 20. enmities, â€" strife, factions, divisions, & ye are not unâ€" here mentionâ€" : (1) sensual ces connected ) â€" malevolent ealousios, etc. intemperance. y Sypirit n the greater n is not the mean that ot do the But if ye ht cul wh the subâ€" arisâ€" men 1 no L re by Many people have the idca that when a smoker inhales, the smoke goes to his lungs and is then breathâ€" ed out again through the nostrils. It would be impossible for a person to stand so much smoke in his lungs without violent coughing. Even a small amount of smo‘e accidentally breathed into the lungs brings about instant coughing. Inhalel smoke merely goes to the back of the mouth where the nostrils connect with the throat, and then goes up and out through the nostrils. It may be pushed out of the noso or mouth by exhaled breath from the lungs, but none of the smokeo itsolf goos in‘o the lungs. Bread, beans, and cheese may be the road to longevity. Pavel Biskup, a young Czech doeâ€" tor who has passed two years. studyâ€" ing the reasons for the long lives of peasants and shepherds of a Balkan district, came to the preliminary conâ€" clusion it had to do with uniform diets that for generations seem to have been especially suited to the people. In most casos, bread and beans were the most important foo‘s. Litâ€" tle meat was eaten, and thon only in winter. Bread and Beans tat ed th t1 made wi hrousho 1N dit w? Cold Used in 171.8. Troatmont Irlectionsy Have cording to Sir William MeI‘:in. Y..C., leval adviser to the forergn effice. Speaking st Bary St. Edmunds School, he said: "A dictator must alâ€" ways be taken seriousty. If he‘s not taken seriously he eannot dictate. ‘"He cannot possibly afford to beâ€" come an object of humor but if a dictator ever succeeds in establishâ€" ing himse!f in EUngland, the English sense cf humor would have him out British Would Laugh Dictator to Defeat Curat Many Inaccsuracies Existed It was found that many inaccuracies existed on maps of the wostern coastâ€" line of Paffin Island and at least 2,000 square miles of territory wore added. Bafiin Island was found to be a huge deposit of limestone. deposit of limestone., Baird, a student of geology, doubts if mineral deposits will be found in commercial quantities on Bafin Isâ€" land. H Bray and Baird, who are cla bird and rock specimens at the ian archives, were mombers r ning expedition, from Cambrid versity. "down sible, it They came out 0", the mission ship, St. Teresa, in September after a year in the Arctic but intend returning In i Two thousand square miles have been added to the map of the Canadâ€" ian Arctic through explorations this year of two young Englishmen, R. J. O. Bray and P. D. Paird. 2,000 Square Miles Added as Reâ€" sult of Year‘s Exploration ¢1 Canadian Arctic Maps Improved How Swoke Is Inhaled 1 A dictator ofice in si> » chowed * mont, Di ‘ Americ ju with or f tubor Use Not to Ba Goneral oss stated "thore ds it noit d Ia Sorme Caze; ill not 1 Leads to Long Life »mnpleted lequate e physic ts of would he wonths in ly il practiti Iy in ro‘d were claimâ€" irs ago, but the _ was the first laboratory tests se of the gold actitioners but ite to use zold o certain limiâ€" with money as cent, in whom od. This group s with recent he discese is as ct.ve aro classifying s at the Canadâ€" mvers of Manâ€" in establishâ€" , the English have him out onths." h is a very s patients. 00 sns imâ€" i renorted Tubercul U returning n As posâ€" P hed out and. a~â€" NPOVe uffoct tiont Dat ining the only not Cre im Uni W Shipping handled at the Port of Glasgow, Scotiand, in the last fiscal year totalled over 15,000,000 tons, an allâ€"time rocord. Chinese cities, have been evrected in tI make the people there airâ€"raidâ€"minded times the height of a normal man. eovot un, rvasiddd CABIOL Luln Lii€Guibcitts tet Gi bullsg ull uy a DOmb in Chinz, so they play safe and skid for a dugâ€"out when the planes start drouing overhead. ‘The cameraman snapped Nelson T. Johnson, the United States Ambassador to China, on September 25. stepping out of his private dugâ€"out on the Embassy grounds in Nanking during mm es se Â¥ Aa wb PS *4 _ io 2 i?" ‘_',' v s Â¥ '|,u ' e 96 a x T8 34 §*c* % 4+ c y 2| h x in tA re ol ‘ P a ;'}::?;( :5‘"& 4 Rews. ‘.;»; > x + 3 ‘&\“wfl ®"_ As * > Grim Specstres of War to Educate China U. S. Amkasâ€"ador "In a Hols mbers on raiding expedition cted in the parks of Nankin The richest growth of bamboo is in tropical Asia, where the plants thrive as far north as Japan and to 10,000 feet or higher on the Himalayas. aiding expeditions over large parks of Nanking, China, to The giant symbols are four h at play, the old eight, had to bi yearâ€"old rompe{ older brother it cightâ€"yearâ€"old t dignity. He c fellow‘s frisking ly as the folly « cat M n« cOr ( t 11 Learn Chinese Etisvette From R:sk of Rules The whisker cuttin about the same hour and always with the s Sample whiskers were obtained by taking one stroke of a straight razor on the right cheek in front of the ear. An area of a square inch was thas harâ€" vested. The Eaton method was to measure whiskers three times a month,. This was done for three days early in the month, three in midâ€"month and four toward the end. It was two hundredths of an inch in September, when the average temporaâ€" ture was 79. A 12â€" month table shows the whiskers apparently making New Year‘s resolutions to grow bigger and botter. From January to Qctober the Florida whiskers grow progressively faster month by month. September The High September was their high. Then in October, November and December they declined. The sharp drop how» ever came in November when the heat was turned on. ny n average tomporature at which heat is turned on in homes and offices. That is the ‘"Critical" temperatore for whiskers, the dividing line between fast and slow growth, In January, with an average temperature of 58, the daiâ€" ly growth of whiskers was a bit over a hundredth of an inch on the face moaâ€" sured by the Eatons. In Jacksonville whore whiskers roe ords were kept for one entire year, it was not possible to discover the eCoct of zero weather, because the lowoest average temperature was 54. N Critical Temperature 65 But it appeared that samethiag ha» pens to whisker specd »t about 65 Faâ€" hrenheit. That, Eaton observes, is the In Florida, whiskers grow nearly twice as fast in summer as in winter, The Florida hair growing exporiâ€" ments, announced in Science by Paul Eaton and Mary Wright Eaton of Jackâ€" sonville, indicate whiskera probably do the same everywhere elso in the United States. ilt Tests Show That Whiskers Grow That Much Faster in Warm Months in Florida Summer Beard CGrow Twi Lrt Th t} t3 etiqu« n Whe ly th Mustn‘t Cow to Younser ul folly of x iped and frolicked r it was necessary Ar countenan« ng, but pog ith the sam * * x Lanuy to d As Quickly ith () n example . ir ced the litt carded it more Tell Hollyâ€" as only the sixâ€" _ As an for the ple in () C1 sacu d | comfort, No Longer Ashamed ‘More women are working their feet today than 20 or : ago, and continued stending o use of thom tends to mail: spread," Griftin emphaosized, howor the "most healthy sizs" is tha no lonzer are "ashomed" of and therofore want the siz "Today b: of shoog are fittings in 9 ustal. corns an quent." Griffin had sold ed to the shown by from 5 A now â€"â€" a ago. "The new demand fits the foot, instead fin ty W The off Mr. Croni make an ter?" the ble and â€" Calif., on a ho the home of I mond Coolidr the ministraiio of John Cronin How a burslar enought to masss to relieve pain, c fection was rcla by Police Sersear Waltham, Mass. neasants crow to turn in the for bonds. One set of t1 contri bonds Wedding Ring:s Made Who today . H wmorstans Ave st»~» He Gives Vist‘m ©&i‘{l Rubbing It cCO SV w f UywIiar mauss®s ts 5 D xt ronin any Surrender T Duyin?. Allow Normal Grow Into A wo i Reliev rt iY To Do Macsaco said that women‘s thir t} d t nol 1% h 41 avera d 10 t1 1j nowt 1d t] ww.-‘.;-v‘ M 26 40 00. 20 S usmcs W t} Jor A of the W h m« ) th many »Aed Whils Pain ty yu ArC n . that wom en ol ‘(tion 1] ind 14 18

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