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Durham Review (1897), 4 Nov 1937, p. 3

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Jon ecerve om Recr Because M‘ * Know How :.’ah eveals No Need om Reâ€"» B.....'.'..l“ Seat Drivers tensitw . ‘s Mood kened ist be led by These y two ightly hand. sweat ‘c ac. Â¥ more . tars were ren ‘ance ndreds of feet n taken from hynway autg. P3 Sflid M nal f Publit Reoa cat mflorig‘ dicine. . eove that .‘OW mple clearance ient nds ith Sm 99 ol not ¢ roms lohns tend to assigned autom.. 1@ othep the high. 3 are being ¢ is h re th“ Vere Ap« dllt‘m Cat thay the jit. 1‘€ Co .I"“ wifef -':i*/_m. Xcit« toth | to Th in« 18 your name For Your to A. R. be nea vJ~ FIND YOUR OWN BIRTH DATEâ€" ‘ Cucsday is your lucky day. Nine is your lucky number. "ze in your business affairs will have a big influence R ‘ his year, There will be new work and new interests. tay. ® ¢ dark red, it is your lucky color. You are facing ~or, one of your lucky years. Take advantage of all opâ€" c «â€" shead, put your shoulder to the helm. Uhc Topaz is your lucky stone. Love affairs are not nooth for you but there is f’t happiness through ~ a lighter and prepared to take risks. Nes vpio is dominant in you â€" take hold of your courâ€" To: the gilts that are yours through your fortunate birthdate. ts o ie land ability to fight will bring you success in properly used. ‘ov. 0 â€" CGuard against being too critical and outspoken, and make many friends who will help you. Use your attractive nality to win friends then let them help you. ‘There is real brogress and happiness in store. Nov. 10 â€" This will ha a hwilllant waar far encial ana tove matters <ov with own a fo il have live longs came sure, NOW FIN with tions neve long sams and t who wh THE 1 Ay N Che By A. R. WEJR Weat the STARS foretell for those born on November 5. 6, 7. 8, 9, 10 and 11 "WiI W vater 0 â€" This will be a brilliant year for social ana tove matters uch happiness is shown. There is a holiday for you by or ‘s This Your Birthday ? th >( @unbap ®chool Things That Are Above then ye were raised together hrist, That Christ was, in his »dy, raised from the dead, is imental truth in the Christian H : may ask, were we with him? Actually, we | tocether with him in the which we believed in him. » things that are above, where is, seated on the right hand . We are "to search them they are revealed to us in the ‘riptures and to be looking for epting them in our experiâ€" pd possession." "Seek, above ed communion with God, for God, frequent rest in y e of God, through and ‘, the final reward of (iod, but seek also that | t, purest, truest, nobâ€" 1 the sphere of nature. ir mind on the things e above, not on the things P the earth. "Jesus Christ ir nz up of ‘the things that ve‘; therefore if a man wants Jesus Christ, he must think m. Seeking the things that ve will come, and will only hen mind, and heart, and inâ€" are occupied with him. an‘s higher life begins in a Christ rose from the d.‘d. : members rise from the to a life on the highest in heavenly places." Beâ€" : hid, it is incapable t d or hurt by any evil LESSON VI. stian Character and Peaceâ€" Colossians 3:1â€"17 on Textâ€"And let the peace of is in your hearts, to the {«» ye were called in one body. > of your birth is listed above you were born under the vpic which is energy. You are strong willed, deterâ€" vo initiative and the will to do something with it. . You ce difficulties from time to time but you have the will to iem and to make them seem trivial. People like you vc is much happiness for you. ces . oon c aune aue cous: un mens oanp: or send 10c (coin preferred) Wel. 43 Adctaidy 96 We Toronto, Ont: â€" Please print , address and birth date plainly. Al â€" December will be a prosperous month for you. You i hbusy time as the result of some new enterprise you will dy of the human race t is that upward aspiraâ€" io definiteness and are «. _ Man continues to her things, and, at the conscious that the powâ€" w him down are greater ver of any longings to cher plane. What man e Lord Jesus Christ to make it definite, and in st, who is our Ife, sted, then shall ye manifested in glory. is not always to be _ come forth in full ifestation, h therefore your ire upon the earth; leanness, passion, covetousness, which ° which things‘ sake h of God upon the nce: 7. Wherein ye . when ye lived in he verb here transâ€" h" means, literally, itate of death," or tate helpless, inopâ€" ristian, in the powâ€" (c in Christ, is thus ins. ‘The believer, sources and of the , with full purpose, all his sing. IX ITS SETTING. A.D. 62. pistle was written the city of Colosse, d about one hundred hesus, in Asia Minor. 14. And above all these things, put on love, which is the bond of perfectâ€" 12. Put on therefore, as God‘s elect. The elect of God are those whom God has appointed to receive eternal life. Joseph Parker once said that a man could know if he were elected of God if he was certain he had elected,the Lord Jesus Christ as his Saviour. Holy and beloved, a heart of compassion. A compassionâ€" ate person is one who suffers with those who are in need. For two beauâ€" tiful pictures of true compassion, see Luke 10:33, and Luke 15:20. Kindness. "The character which ofâ€" fers sympathy and invites confidâ€" ence." Lowliness. The attitude of a soul which has lost its pride in the discovery of mercy of its salvation." Meekness. An attitude of submisâ€" siveness toward God. Longsuffering. 13, Forbearing one another, and forâ€" giving each other, if any man have a complaint against | any. â€" Forgiving and forebearing "explain the operaâ€" tion of meekness and longsuffering, forbearing to be impatient and to avenge one‘s self, and, on the conâ€" trary, to be forgiving." Even as the Lord forgave you, so also do ye. "A heart touched and softened by pardon will be a heart apt to pardon." A Life of Love 11, Where there cannot be Greek and Jew, cireumeision and uncireamâ€" cision, barbarian, Scythian, bondman, freeman; but Christ is all, and in all. There are no distinctions among Christians as far as their standing is concerned, or God‘s ultimate purpose for them, either national, ceremonial, intellectual, or social. & CC enc nan ECC Beeey on the new man. The old man is simply the state of an unregenerated man, a sinner guilty under the senâ€" tence of God‘s law. The new man is the same person with a new life in him which is contrary to the old life, e., the old man lives subject to the Somiauion of sin, but the new man lives under the sovereignty of God. Regeneration is an act of God through his Holy Spirit, and is something that no man can accomplish. That is beâ€" ing renewed. We are in the place where we can be renewed when we keep in communion wrh God. Unto knowledge. "A knowleage not alone of the intellect, but of the heart; a knowledge which includes faith and experience as well. Every item of true knowledge gained is growth and the conquest of evil." After the imâ€" age of him that created him. "As in the first creation man was made in the image of God, so in the new creâ€" ation. 8. Bntnowdonuhoputthoman away. How difficult it is to put off something which has become a habit! When we have learned a wrong way of doing a thing, it is a fearfully heavy business to unlearn it, Anger, wrath, malice, railing. "The first word refers to the outburst, or the vice of indignation bordering on reâ€" venge; the second word refers to the violent emotion that boils within. The third refers to calumnious deâ€" nunciation, to which anger so often prompts." â€" Shameful speaking out of your mouth. This phrase often deâ€" notes gencrally foul or abusive lanâ€" guage, and as it is so closely conâ€" nected with the passion of anger such may be its meaning here, The New Man 9. Lie not one to another; seeing that ye have put off the old man with his doings. 10. And have put o e s ie ale ienss L. PP Â¥X k Jack Barkin and Dorothy Price are gaining many friends with their work on the Grad Cigarette show Friday nights. Incidentally, listeners may atterd the broadcast of this perâ€" By the way, CFRB studios were dressed up in plenty of orange and black for Hallowe‘en, and plenty of pumpkins were aroundâ€"and we don‘t mean engineers. ; From Roy Locksley comes a bit of news that CFRB will carry the hockey games this year again. Canâ€" ada‘s national sport will be described by veteran Foster Hewitt. The first games will be played November 4th and 6th, and the broadcast will reach fans in every part of the country. Canadian Network News Joseph Laderoute, a lad we introâ€" duced to you a week or so ago, is coming along beautifully. He audiâ€" tioned for a commercial program the other day, and we hold high hopes for him. Sixteen World Title Fights Fight fans, take note! Sixteen world title fights to be exclusive on NBC. These broadcasts can be heard over the Blue Network. November 12th, middleweight Champ Freddy Steel, defends his title against Fred Apostoli; November 19th and 26th are also fight nights, but the cards have not yet been selected. All fights will take the air at approximately 10 if the broadcaster is an adopted brave of the Mohawks. The English translation of his Indian name is "Hot Coal." Maybe it‘s because his newscasts have always been hot stuff. Here is a littleâ€"known fact about NBC‘s Lowell Thomas: It seems as Well, well, here we are again, with more gossip about the people you hear on the radio. The informality of Bing Crosby‘s program on Thursâ€" day nights at 10 o‘clock is more than excellent _ showmanship. No _ atâ€" tempt is made to run through the show in its entirety before it goes on the air. Each spot is rehcarsed and timed separately. If any cutting is necessary to compress the program to fit the one hour limit, it is done just before the troupe goes on the air. Add to this Crosby‘s inimitable style of spontaneity, Bob Burns‘ Van Beuren drawl and the sparkling chain of guests, it‘s no wonder that the Kraft Music Hall ranks tops in proâ€" grams. 16. Let the word of Christ. The word of Christ is, that great mesâ€" sage which Christ himself made posâ€" sible by his life, death, and resurâ€" rection, i.e., the gospel, the good news, the message from God through his Son, who is the word of God. Dwell in you richly. The word of 15. And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to the which also ye were called in one body; and be ye thankf{ful. The peace which Christ makes for us with God. The peace, in other words, that fills us with seâ€" renity and tranquility in all our reâ€" lations with men. We are to let this peace rule in our hearts. ness. ‘The apostle says that, above everything else in importance and power, the new man must manifest a life of love. "Love is the product of the other graces, the fruit of their ripe development. Love itself is, at the same time, the highest element of this perfection and forms the nearest resemblance to him of whom it is said, ‘God is love,‘ No grace is comâ€" plete without love." Toen aop The Duke of Windsor, centre, converses with many of the employees of a German plant at Berlin, after having been noisiiy welcomed,. While the Duke made a tour of factories and houses, the Duchess reâ€" mained in her hotel, resting. Windsor Pays Visit To German Factories o RADIO HEADLINERS o o OF THE WEEK $ / A Program‘s Background In order to make our column a little out of the ordinary, we shall endeavor to give you a little insight of what happens in the background of a radio program. Each week we shall try to describe a different perâ€" son who is responsible for the radio entertainment you hear, and about whom you never hear. Today we shall give you a brief summary of the headaches of one of radio‘s superâ€" salesmen, Allan MacTaggart, of Grow _ and _ Pitcher Broadcasting Agencies, commonly called by all friends and enemies, Buster. _ Cute, don‘t you think? His history is one of daring. Bus. has been in and out of radio for some ten years, and is widely recognized as a merchandisâ€" ing brain and a creator of advertis Last Wednesday, Percy Pasternak played popular favorites from Tin Pan Alliey on his CBC program, Canadian Capers.... Horace Heidt and his famous Brigadiers will be heard on November 6th at 11 p.m., over CRCT and CBC net. Last Tuesday saw the beginning of a new program with everybody‘s favorite, Vincent Boyd. Coâ€"starring with him is Louise Robertson, the girl friend of the air. The program is heard from 7.45 to 8 over CFRB. If you like sparkling songs and some classy ivory massaging, tune in to these two. formance by writing to the studio for tickets. A round T he Dial 17. And whatsoever ye do, in word or in deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus. "The name of a man is that which distinguishes, identifies, sums him up, and the name of Christ is all that Christ is as man, as God, and as the Godâ€"man. Giving thanks to God the Father through him. All the blessings which we have come from God through the Lord Jesus Christ, and all of our thanks should be given through the Lord Jesus Christ. Christ is to inhabit us, finding in us its very home. In all wisiom teachâ€" ing and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearis unto Cod. ‘Psilms‘ seems to refor specifically to the sone#s of Daâ€" vid; ‘hymns‘ to songs of praise comâ€" posed by Christians; ‘odes‘ to forms of song with no limitation except that they shall be spiritual. It was to be a daily, lifeâ€"long service of song, but always as tcaching and adâ€" monishing. Ampire Airâ€"liners now in use weight nineteen tons and carry thirty passenâ€" gers. A couple more new programs have hit the air in the past week. Stan. Walker, furriers, present Musings and Melody, 5.15 every Sunday, over CKCL.... the Sterling Laundry preâ€" sents dramatizations, Mondays and Tuesdays, at 9.55 a.m., also over CKCL. And so you see, dear readers, that behind the radio program there is much more than music and entertainâ€" ment. Next week we‘ll try to give you the life of a radio production man, f tic Ocean." If anything goes wrong with the program, it‘s Buster who gets merry heck from the sponsor. If you do not buy the sponsor‘s goods, it‘s another kick in the ear for him. But Buster, being a happily married man, is not used to taking kicks, and makes sure that none come to him. You, as the Istener, demand enâ€" tertainment from your radio, but this entertainment must be paid for. and Buster is one of the guys who looks for the guys who are contemplating advertising, and tries to sell them the idea of supplying you with the entertainment you want. To use Buster‘s own words, "it‘s as casy to do this as walking across the Atlanâ€" ing campaigns. In a police lineâ€"up he would be quoted as being 5 feet, 10 inches tall, weight, 145, age 32, red hair, and a jovial personality. WJR, Detroit has carried a program series in which he was known as "Clip" of the twins, Clip and Save. He was advertising manager of Schulte‘s United Department Stores, the Ajax Tire Corporation, Wisconsin, for whom he conducted the first field campaign for tires, ScottMcHale Shoes and McCormick Biscuits. This material may be suppo: ted around the colony by a wooden winâ€" ter case, or by tar paper. Full inâ€" formation concerning the tar paper pack, as well as advice on winter cases, may be secured by writing to the Provincial Apiarist, O.A.C., Gueph Empire airâ€"liners now in use w 2. Q. "When and where is the Anâ€" nual Convention of the Ontario Beeâ€" An apiary should be located so that it will be sheltered from the preâ€" vailing winds. In addition to this, colonies should be insulated with shavings, dried leaves, cetc. Four inches (4") of insulation is provided on the sides, and from six‘ inches (6") to eight inches (8") on top. mmi +o e oi . Honey or sugar syrup may be used for winter feed. At the present time it is recommended that bees be winâ€" tered in a double brood chamber, with the combs in the top chamber full of honey. Singleâ€"storey colonies should have the combs from twoâ€" thirds to threeâ€"quarters ful} of honey. If it is necessary to feed sugar syrup, wix two parts of cane or beet sugar to one part of boiling water. D M ooo oeenn e Cmm e All weak and queenless colonies should be united with stronger colâ€" onies, 1. Q. "I have ten (10) colonies of bees and would appreciate informaâ€" tion as to how they may be successâ€" fully wintered."â€"K.G., Halton Co. A. â€"There are three important points to keep in mind: (a) A strong coiony of young bees (b) Abundance of food. (c) Protection from the prevailing winds, as well as :ncividual inâ€" sulation, Annual requeening is the best method to insure young bees for winter, _A young queen will lay later in the fall than an older one, which means that the bees will have more vitality, and be better able to withâ€" stand the winter and build up a strong colony the following spring. || @ _ with the coâ€"operation of the VM ;;nnh of 4 Ontario Agricultural College uk. Conducted _b : PROFESSOR HENRY C. BEL Farm Problems Kissing, and not by relatives â€" is the only medicine for a strange disâ€" ease in the Northern Shan States in Berma. Symptoms are fever, loss of appotite, lassitude, Beckeepers in Csnada number about 25,000. Canadian bees proâ€" duce more than 24,000,000 pounds of honey in a year and close to 300,000 pounds of beeswax, says a Canadian Resources bulletin. 25,000 Beckeeners in Canada The board believes the "strongest of the weaker sex," would be more useful than the weakest of the stronger sex"â€"and may fill vacancies with husky women. Women already are driving taxis operating gasoline stations, and actâ€" ing as conductors on buses. The Metropolitan Police Board, Toâ€" kyo, is considerin® recruiting women to replace policemen called for miliâ€" tary duly. CV "opt ue *** P 32 Dec!“‘b'f 'Iv'l‘ ‘)SO ‘c;fll 29 yro9¢ e Husky Jap Women May Police City A.â€"Regarding your mquiry as to potato fertilizer. it would appear to me that you overâ€"did tne application of Potash, especially since you report that where you used the 4â€"8â€"10 alone the potatoes were of good quality and size. You see the 10 per cent at the end of 4â€"8â€"10 is Potash. This is a fairly heavy application in itself, esâ€" pecially if you put it on at 500 to 750 lbs. per acre. By putting the fertilizer in the row there is a danâ€" ger that you get it too close to the seed potato piece. There is no evidâ€" ence to show that Sulphate of Potash is less chemically active than Muriate of Potash. As a matter of fact, 1 believe it is a little more chemically active so that the q1iterence in the types of Potash will not have been | responsible for your unsatisfactory results. ] 8. Q. "I think I made a mstake by putting Muriate of Potash on my potato ground. I mixed it with 4â€" 8â€"10 fertilizer and put it in the row with the seed. The potatoes were very small and most of them had a deep pink skin. Would it have been alright if I had put Sulphate of Potâ€" ash in with the 4â€"8â€"10% Four rows in which I did not put any extra Potâ€" ash the potatoes were good quality and size. A.M., Wentworth Co. Dr. E. J. Dyce, Provincial Apiarist, Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph. The chief subjects listed for disâ€" cussion are:â€"fall management and wintering, queen rearing and requeen~ ing, new ideas in management, home rendering of wax, labour saving deâ€" vices, proper straining and grading of honey. A.â€"The Annual Convention will be held at the King Edward Hotel, Toronto, from November 23rd to the 25th. fall, and what are the chief subjects for discussion?" W.F., Oxford Co. keepen'_ Association to be held this fot 45 u\n;\(\c ged v:m\)\wfl (not e wg»eo 999«\ of oxO C\JBI-‘:S qib \mN\ guP wl _ant pm\\pt\d. ofe! c\mel ©9.. 1927> Me\‘-.o! L\m\‘.ed’ * _ pnO L. toay «c.».'al‘ot\"‘“:“ int dcfi j % u\“; ONTARIO ARCHIVES "" Fa oo "I found out there that almost every business man knew the intimâ€" ate affairs of ailmost every other business man in the same trade, even so far as 100 miles away," he de clared. *"One had to be very d‘screct not to let some hint or remark escape from one‘s lips about onc‘s interviews with their business andfi interviews with other business men." Caradian business men were keen, he said, They expected salesmen from England to be equipped with technical knowledge of their wares, "an enormous" amount of typed litâ€" erature and good letters of introducâ€" tion. Mr. Lee also urged a general understanding of the physical as pects of Canada. He recently completed a tour of Canada and had been impressed by the intense leaning to Great Britain by Canadians who "are ready to do whatever they can to foster trads with the Mother Country." Predicting that Canada would be one of the most important places for future investment of British capital, Edgar Lee, general manager of a firm of chemical manufacturers, told a gathering of business men at Leeds, Yorkshire, how to drum up Canadian trade. Canada Excellent Investment Field Dr. Cutler said the institute‘s purpose was "to conduct research on the causes, diagnosis and treatment of cancer, and to instruct and assist physicians, surgeons, clinics and hosâ€" pitals in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer." Associated with Dr. Cutler in diâ€" rect‘ng the institute will be Dr. Ludâ€" vig Hektoen, direltor of the John Mcâ€" Cormick Institute for Infectious Discases, prasident; Dr. Arthur H. Compton, Nobel Prize winner of physics and University of Chicage physicist, viceâ€"president; Dr. Henri Coutard of the Curie Institute, Paris, and Sir George Lenthal Cheatle of London. Dr. Max Cutler, director of the Tumor Clinic of Michael Reese Hosâ€" pital, said the new organization, inâ€" corporated not for profit as the Chiâ€" cago Tumor Institute, would begin functioning about March 1. A new cancer institute bringing togother _ several _ internationally known scientists was announced on the eve of the 27th annual clinical congress of the American College of Surgeons. Drâ€" Schaffer offers some solace in the fact that as the earth grows older, although it seems to take cenâ€" turies for it to gather a little age, the moveable zones and the possibilâ€" ity of earthquakes gradua‘ly are disâ€" appearing,. Within these two remain‘ng orogâ€" enes, nearly all of the earthquake faults are located. Generally these faults are between the 40th paral!â€" lels, northern and southern latitude. Moveable Zones Disappearing The great catastrophic earthquake of historic times occurred for the most part where the moveable zones cut these parallels in California. Jaâ€" pan, Cook Straits, and New Zealand or where both moveable zones run more or less close to each other in Southern Europe and Southwestern Asia. For aeons of time these sedimentâ€" ary zones have become welded or folded into the continental masses, enlarging and reducing the zones until only two now remain. Moveable zones are located beâ€" tween the s‘al blocks or "pelagoâ€" genes" which form the deeper shell of the carth‘s crust, an?\ the sima blocks or "operiogenes", which have been given the name "orogenes" and are composed of sediments miles in thicknoss. In fact, gccord‘ng to Dr. Schaffor, there now remain only two great carthquake zones, of which Caliâ€" fornia has one, while Japan and nearby lands as far down as New Zealand have the other. That is why these two sections of the world have had the major earthquake shocks in recent years, Dr. Schaffer extisined that earthâ€" qva‘res are cue to "faul‘s" in the carth‘s structure and the ros of I‘s explanations would prove exceed ngâ€" ly interesting if it were not for the fact that the study of carthquake zones involves technical terms which are difficult for the layman to visual ize or comprehend. Faults Slowly Dsappear In any event, he explained that it is something like this The disapâ€" pearance of the earthquake zones and faults in the earth‘s surface is due to gradual geologic change that is going on at all times. The world‘s earthquake belt is beâ€" coming smaller, according to Dr. Franz X. Schaffer, famous European geologist, who is telling California universitics all about tremblors this year, Tremblor Zones Shrink As Earth Institute Mooted located beâ€" or "pelagoâ€" deeper shell n‘ the sima it 4 /

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