eries and W ‘astel Shades The Interior nd anges Palade M Elizabeth and Wall Co, Shades Brighteny ‘ a dium Povads en 16 or Cz disa D k €p Plush W bu wif and 13 t By wh h : hag AStle th &Â¥ & * fact [2a4 (t gome«» J VH N MINISTER 2 Timothy 2: 14 mothy 4: 6â€"16; »ct not the gift mothy 4; 14. Its Setting iatle of Paul to P‘aul to Timothy _ about A.D. §§, aul‘s second imâ€" + second epistle ten shortly beâ€" v was writâ€"« Paul was a and worthy is promised o godliness, train their ally as the ._ The seltâ€" ind concenâ€" 1 in athletic he way in it the task s profitable s profitable mise of the that which en in mind be a good The word means, litâ€" ho serves." ‘ the faith. + the Holy »d doctrine until now. ieve someâ€" instructed ith as God hey inevitâ€" false teachâ€" which can often lead wickedness,. | old wives‘ ken of are ible myths. w as itten â€"the imâ€" 1 he un ‘s of this that this given by a pris iul to AD. about to such public reading in the synaâ€" gogues and availed themselves of it in the work of propagating Christianâ€" ity. To exhortation, to teaching, The first word refers "to that form of pubâ€" lic address which is especially intendâ€" ed to excite the feclings and impel to action; the second to that public inâ€" struction, in which the purpose is to enlighten the understanding by reaâ€" soning, either in unfolding and e# tablishing truth, or in exposing and refuting error." 14. Neglect not the gift that is in thee, which was given thee by prophecy, with the laying on of the hands of the presbytery. "Three eleâ€" ments in Timothy‘s consecration to his present office were: (1) certain prophetic utterances similar to that by which. St. Pacl himself and St. Barnabas had been marked out for their apostolic ministry (Acts 13: 1, 2); (2) the actual ordination by St. Paul; (3) the recognition and testiâ€" mony of the Ephesian presbyters sigâ€" nified by their taking part in the layâ€" ing on of hands." % 4 12. Let no man despise thy youth. In the early church a bishop was not appointed until he was at least fifty years of age. But be thou an ensamâ€" ple. Here it means that Timothy was to be a model for other Christian beâ€" lievers. To them that believe, in word, in manner of life, in love, in faith, in purity. "The five words describe five stages from the most defined external to the most defined internal characâ€" teristiesâ€"speech, behavior, love, faith, purity; love, as it were, helonging equally to the inner and the outer self and combining all." Working Wholeâ€"heartedly 13. Till I come, give heed to readâ€" ing. This refers not to private readâ€" ing, but to the public reading of the Scriptures in church services . or wherever people are gathered together The early Christians were accustomed to such public reading in the synaâ€" gogues and availed themselves of it in the work of propagating Christianâ€" 10. For to this end we labor and strive. Because we have our hope set on the living God, who is the Saviour of <ll mon, especially of them that believe. 11. ‘These things command and teach. The great motive power in the life of the Christian minister, that which keeps him from fainting by the way, from giving up in despair, is that he is in fellowship with the livâ€" ing God, with whom some day he will be in glory, who has appointed him to the supreme work of bringing men to know and accept the Lord Jesus Christ as Saviour. God is the Saviour of all men in so far as he sent his only begotten Son into the world that whosoever should believe on him would be saved, and have everlasting life. 15. Be diligent in these UTMDU. 6""~ thyself wholly to them; that thy proâ€" gress may be manifest unto all. Let none of us who are preaching forget that our people will know whether we are really working or not. Our sermons will show it, Our conversaâ€" tion will reveal it. There is no man so speedily discovered as an idle minâ€" ister, and there is no man who is vis ited by swifter contempt. 16. Take heed to thyself, and to thy teaching. "Fig thy very best and we are really WODOI sermons will show it. tion will reveal it. T so speedily discovered ister, and there is no ited by swifter conten is life, ie., the very highest blessedâ€" ness both in this world and the next, St. Paul means exactly what our Lord means when he says, I am come that ye may have life and may have it more abundantly.‘ thy very closest attention on thyself. This is thy main duty as a pastor." Continue in these things; for in doâ€" ing this thou shalt save both thyself and them that hear thee. Salvation does not depend, of course, upon what one does, but what one does, and thinks, and plans will determine whether that person will waste his life or save it for great and glorious achievements. This likewise applies to the hearers of a gospel preacherâ€" it has been shown in more than one historic incident that a minister whose own life is strong, and holy, and Christlike has beev a tower of strength, encouragement, and help to his own people in hours when, otherâ€" wise, humanly speaking, they would have gone to pieces. Soldier of Christ 1. Thou therefore, my child. Timâ€" othy was Paui‘s child by faith, not according to the flesh, Be strengthâ€" ened in the grace that is in Christ Jesus. "Timothy was to retreat withâ€" in those concentric circlesâ€"grace and Christâ€"two circles which are, after all, but one, for grace is Christ in acâ€" tion and in presence. It is, after all, himself, as our secret, our refuge, our resource." 2. And the things which thou hast heard from me among many | witâ€" nessos the same commit thou to faithâ€" ful men, who shall be able to teach others also. There is hardly anything more important in all the Christian church than the responsibility and the opportunity of older â€" ministers and teachers depositing the riches of their learning, and faith, and experience in the hearts of their younger brethren, that the great treasures that are in the Scriptures and that are available in Christ may never be diminished beâ€" cause a generation arises ignorant of these holy and divine themes. 3. Suffer hardship with me, as a good soldier of Christ Jesus. "The Christian man, above all, the Chrisâ€" tian pastor, is to think of himself unâ€" 4. No soldier on service entangleth himsolf in the affairs of this life; that he may please him who enrolled him as a soldier. A soldier cannot be at the beck and call of noncombatants; he cannot be called on the telephone and asked to serve on this or that local committee for sponsoring every concoivable movement that has nothâ€" ing to do with the great war in which he is engaged, or into which he exâ€" pects soon to be called, So a minister of the gospel must not be so crowded der this similitude with secular ongagements, and civic movements, and certainly not with political causes, that his great task of witnessing for Jesus Christ and doing Christ‘s work is sadly neglected. In Texas (U.S.A.), lightning often strikes down into the sand ard the heat melts the sand into long strips of jagged glassâ€" The Princess Der Ling, former Lady in Waiting to the Empress Dow ager of China, and Chinese consul T. K. Chaing assist in the raisin: of funds and clothing in Los Angeles, Cal., for the purpose of render ing relief to the victims of the fighting in warâ€"torn China. Chinese Launch Drive to Assist Country Hello, folks, again we come to give you that little inside gossip about the pecple you hear through the loud speakers of your radios, Before we go much farther, here is a little note that might interest you. A couple of weeks ago we wrote about a young lady by the name of Pauline Drake, who did a couple of programs while pinchâ€"hitâ€" ting for another female commentator. Toâ€"day we are glad to report that Miss Drake may be heard daily at one p.m. over C K C L, under the sponâ€" sorship of the C. E. Fulford Compâ€" any, makers of Bile Beans. For your information, Miss Drake â€" measures about 5 foot six, very dark hair, and eyes, and not bad to look at. Her age â€" well, we have been trying to find that out ourselves for some time â€" but Miss Drake apparently doesn‘t want to commit herself, Her program is known as ‘What‘s New" and has everything to make the program apâ€" poaling to all types of listeners. The Pond‘s program "Ask Another" features a new novelty, At the back of the stage at C F R B a portrait of a famous person is covered. A memâ€" ber of the audience is asked to step forward, and a conversation takes place between Howard Lindsay, conâ€" ductor of the program and Mr. or Miss Public. Out of the conversation, the rest of the audience are to guess the identity of the hidden one â€" and the person who does, receives a box of Pond‘s products â€"â€" and so does the party who took part in the discussion. Wally Armour and his sorchestra are heard on the program together with Rhoda Howe and George, the "Ask Another" boy. Program is heard on Fridays 10 to 10.30 p.m. Write to the station C F R B for tickets. While rambling through C F R B‘s Studios, we caught Paul Berg rehearâ€" sing his 7.45 to 8.00 p.m. program heard every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. The program consists of the music played by Paul Berg on the Hammond Electric Organ â€" a bit of new equipment at the studios. The sound is quite a bit different from the regular pipe organ â€"â€" and the tone is quite pleasing. Peeking through the glass windows we saw Samuel Herâ€" senboran and his New World Chamâ€" ber Orchestra. Included in the many notables playing instruments on this program are Sidney Wells, John Dunâ€" can, Roland Todd, Mare Adeney and Harold Sumberg. 845 to 9.00 p.m. nightly over CKCL brings to the radio Fireside Pictures, a program featuring Ed Goodaire at the piano, Frank Gula and his violin and a variety of vocalists, Talking to Al Shea, the man behind the Sunday amateur shows, and he informs me that the firal program, the winner of which is due for a trip to Hollywood and an opportumity to appear in picâ€" tures, will come off about the end of December, This will certainly give at least one amateur a lot of "Good Huâ€" mor." There‘s still room for more â€" so if you think you have talent â€" write to Good Humor in care of the stations C F R B, C K C L, C H M L or C F C F. From "down below the border" the word comes that President Roosevelt will devote his tenth Fireside Chat over the C B S network to a discusâ€" The Audience Guess T4 esd st c c U :.â€"ule L sisie Bs sscceieite i ABi inss 4 o o * é OF THE WEEK By FRANK DENNIS $ / Surgery Makes New Scalps For Victims Marvels of Medical Science Perâ€" formed for Un‘orturate Accident k Sufferers The most recent operation for givâ€" ing a woman a new scalp was describâ€" ed by Dr. Cahill. The patient was a 25â€"yearâ€"old garment worker whose arâ€" cident came as she stopped to pick up something under her machine, A New Ear The machine did about twice as much scalping in area, as a savage‘s knife, and it took off the right ear too. Yet today, said Dr. Cahill, the youns woman has a new ear and a scalp. The Indians have stopped scalping, but machines have taken over where the Red Men loft off, the American College of Surgeons, at Chicago was informed. > . This fact was brought out by James A. Cahill, M.D., of Georgetown Univerâ€" sity School of Medicine, in telling how surgeons have devised operations to build new scalps, something which was not done much "in the good old days." The moderns who lose their scalps to machines are exclusively women and Chinese, acording to Dr. Cahill‘s records, which cover 96 cases, Long hair catching in wheels or belts is the cause, and since the Chinese cut their queres they have been exempt, But bobbed hair styles have not been a complete protection. sion of the government‘s â€" voluntary unemployment census, Sunday, Novâ€" ember 14th from 10.30 to 11.00 p.m. Family of Nations The Family of Nations, a transâ€"Atâ€" lantic program will feature famous statesmen and educators from three continents. The program is to be broadcast between 3 and 4 p.m. Novâ€" ember 11th, under the Carnegie Enâ€" dowment for International Peace. All stations of the Columbia network wiil carry this program,. MHeard on the program will be Nicholas Murray Butâ€" ler, president of Columbia University, V. K. Wellington Koo, Ambassador of China to France; for Britain, the Marâ€" quess of Lothian, secretary of the Rhodes Trust; For Hungary, Count Paul Teleki, for Italy, Signora Margâ€" herita Sarfatti, and William E. Rapâ€" pard for Switzorland. Major Bowes thought he had someâ€" thing pretty vnique when he had his car equipped with a score of convenâ€" ient gadgets including a writing desk, venetian blinds, dictating machine and a dashboard that looked like the She woears a transformation, said RADIO HEADLINERS A round The Dicl Printed in En;;::ld‘uln a new l;fl u::‘::lt\n Mn oo Pn rlear face type 8 y cut for this ition. .rl'nnm on og:: Blbl; paper. l;u ‘:r page Bold Type " x 44", t ess %". ver is oroccoâ€" ette, overlapping edges, round corners, it The bold, phck-fnced type edges. Remarkable Value. $1.24 makes this Bible a pleasure to ddd to Portass read. Although printed with A BIBLER FOR EVERY PERsON h i d fype, the volâ€" Offer is for a limited time at these Speciar $UCh easily read (ype, ,Pv:mu and every ’lu.u“:; c‘ou with the absoâ€" ume measures only 6% x u: ute guarantee of satisfaction or mosey *® x 1 inch, Packed in an attractâ€" ;:?:rtn.k::t':tt::o: must be at var &n Tor» ive brown gift box. 73 ADELAIDE ST., W. â€"â€" Suite 421 New Oxford Reference Bible Publishers Agency of Toronto Dr. Cahill and in good looks she "cor tainly has no reason for any embar rassment." Grafted Skin Most of her new sealp and this inâ€" cludes quite a bit of forchead skin, came from the region of hor shoulderâ€" blades. The skin there was first doâ€" toured to the back of hor hoad by a ‘pedicle flap" and then moved to coâ€" ver the areag whore scaip and other skin was missing. The tissues of her new ear wore supplied by the skin of her neck, beâ€" low the ear, The cartilege to stiffen the car and give it shapeliness was taken from her seventh rib. The world‘s oldest known tree is grow nz in Santa Maria del Tula, Mexico. It is a bald cypress, with an estimated age of 5,000 years. instrument panel of a transport aerâ€" oplane. Don Manuel Quezon, President of the Phillipine Republic inspected the car on a recent trip to New York. He was so impressed that he ordered the whole thing duplicated in his own automobile. Outstanding _ commentators under the guidance of Vernon Bartlett are again speaking from Europeâ€"an interâ€" viewer in Canada probing for answers to the questions of the ‘man in the street." The radio series "Canada 1937" which scored such success last seaâ€" son, started again this year, on Novâ€" ember 5th, and will be heard every Friday evening at 10.00 p.m., E.S.T. Lionel Shapiro, Canadian corresâ€" pondent in New York, will speak from N.B.C. Studios, relaying such latest happenings of the Gay White Way as are of interest to Canadian listeners. A new technique will be introduced in the talks on Canada to make the very pulse of the nation audible to lisâ€" teners throughcout the country. Mr. Walter Bowles wi‘l broadcast from a different locality each week, telling of viewing "nation builders" who make that progroas possible. Yet ancthor outstanding feature of the program will be the music â€"â€" evâ€" ery selection will be specially arrangâ€" ed for the large orchestra and choir that is now in rehearsal, ’rHAT is what everyone says when they see this new OXFORD BASKET WEAVE Has eight fullâ€"page beautifully colored pictures by the famous illustrator Arthur Twidle and the new Historical Presentation Page printed in two colors, Also contains six colored maps of Bible lands. BIBLE. No illustration could adequately picture the beauty of its warmâ€"toned _ DARK BROWN cover with the unusâ€" ually attractive â€" basketâ€"weave grain. You, too, will be surâ€" prised that so beautiful a Bible can be sold for such a lJow price. The cover is a triumph of the book binders‘ art. Unique in appearance, it offers a volume which it is a delight to own no matter how many RBibles you may have,. Not only is the binding beautiful, but it is durâ€" able as well. It s made of the finest quality DuPont Fabriâ€" koid. The cover is overlapping protecting the rounded brown edges. Contains interesting and invalâ€" vable "Aids to Bible Study." and 4000 questions and answâ€" ers relating to the entire Bible, Colored Pictures and Presentation Page The Basket Weave Cover Comments From Evrope coast to cors} Every Friday Night Interesting Helps Add 15¢ Postage 1.99" TORONTO, 2 only ONTARIO ARCHIVES Cold Water Bathers Kidding Themscelves Solfâ€"styled "polar bears" who broak the ice to swim in Docember are only kidding themgelves: in thinking they have adapted themselvos to unusual conditions, the National Acadomy of Sciences was told at its closing sosâ€" sion, at Rochester, N.Y. Two Cornell college scientists, Dr. James D. Mardy and Dr. Eugene F, Dubois, said heat production and the heat loss of the human body is quite constant at varions temperatures, And man cannot change those roactions and if he seems to, his ruggedness is only a qvirk of his mind, they said, The "Ideal" Range The Cornoll roscarc‘h\ men proved t"‘s was true by expedimenting with two male nudists in a spocial room where the temperature could ho closeâ€" ly controlled and the radiation and the water loss from the skin measured. They found that temperatures from 83 degrees to 91 degroes Fahronheit constituted the "ideal" range in which a person can live comfortably in the nude bocause the heat loss exactly balances heat production. This will be the noutral zone for future air conâ€" ditioning of homes and office buildâ€" ings. Above 91 degrees, Dr. Hardy added, sweating and evaporation of moistâ€" ure from the lungs increases to bring into balance the body‘s heat producâ€" tion since water evaporation from the body is the only way in which it can be cooled. Sciecticts Tell of Tests With P:i of Nudists This hard and fast rule of body heat regulation cannot be changed by the thinking differently. Dr. Hardy added, any more than the law of gravity could be repealed, No one actually likes any temperature above 91 or beâ€" low 83, the Cornell scientists said, beâ€" cause ‘then the brain comes into play and the person must make a conscious effort to keep cool or get warm," Why We Shiver If the temporature drops below 72 degrees for any length of time, they added, shivering â€"â€" which is the first muscular reaction of the body in orâ€" der to exercise and keep warm â€" beâ€" gins. Shortly thereafter the person must put on Clothing or move into a warmer room. India Has Largest Area Exceeds Total of Six Nations Next in Order, Including the United States t 70,000,000 Canadian Spoons on Order Tcbular Wells There have been irrigation works in India from time immemorial, but when British rule was established the area cnder ijrrigation did not exceed 2,000,000 acres. The area under woll irrigation is now more than six times as much. There is a large system of tubular wells in the United Provinces, They are driven by electric pumps with electrical energy gencrated by hydroâ€"clectric installations on canals in the same provinces, The extension <f the system is still progressing. EÂ¥â€" ery year adds to the area of desorts made fruitful, One of the problems of the transier of political power from the British to the Indian people themselves is to asâ€" sure that the administration of the irâ€" rigation system does not diminish in efficiency, for the successful manageâ€" ment of the vast undertakings it conâ€" tains is one requiring great care, J. Lyons & Co. Itd., tea merâ€" chants of London, England, have placed an order for 70,000,000 wosden ice cream spoons with the John Lewis Industrics of Ship Harbour, Nova Scotia. Damaged by a boiler explosion, the steamer Kingswood was towed 15,000 miles from Australia to England by one tug in 127 days, a now world Irrigation System returns issued at Simâ€" ernment, show India ated acreage excoedâ€" serves an cultivable udan. The