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Durham Review (1897), 31 Mar 1938, p. 6

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w# j *eady out of the girl, but that he had gone out before this, 30. And she went away unto her house, and found the child laid upon the bed, and the demon gone out, words hold out to her. 29. And he said unto her, For saying go thy way. The great of this woman‘s faith was in sub sively accepting and in rightly derstanding what Jesus said abou Messianic mission. Faith is grea the measure of the reliance it pI on the word of Christ. The de is gone out of thy daughter. perfect tense of the verb not implies that the demon is now ready out of the girl, but that he gone out before this, why God did as he d of the woman‘s reply keeps entirely to the guage of Jesus, W words she rerews her that he would not de words hold out to her €n U up wh e} th in Tell down at his feet. 26, Now the woman was a Greek, & Syrophocnician by _ race. The word here translated "a Greek" was "used by the Greeks to designate any Centile, owing to the wide difâ€" fusion of the Greek race and languâ€" aze." "Syrophoenician" is a more particular designation of the race to which she belonged. It denotes that part of Phoenicia which belonged to Syria. And she besought him that he would cast forth the demon out of her daughter. How long before this woman had heard about the Lord Jesis we do not know, but sie had beerd of him in such a way that she was led to believe that he had power to deliver her possessed _ daughter from the terrible mastery of the evil beine who indwelt her. The woman would never have come to Jesus had she believed that there vas any other hope at all for her daugchter‘s being restored to normal life again. The Lord came to do the â€" thines that no one else on earth has â€" ever been able to do. and tn AnKenus wheose little . spirit, having fell down at nave been, and probably was, the house of a friend. And would have no man know it; and he could not be hid. Of course, if Jesus wanted to, he could have actually removed himâ€" self suddenly out of the sight of all men, but this would not have been according to the selfâ€"imposed limitaâ€" tions of his humanity. The true disâ€" ciple cannot be hid any more than his Master could. In a truly Christâ€" lan life Christ cannot be hiaâ€"words and actions and abstinences alike tell of him. C. ihe tacle cat of Abe. _ The woman‘s derful in every 1 tedly she accepts _about the arrange ‘‘anic mission as co en nation. She unc ents. She dass n tered C LESSON 1. Jesus never uttered any word but SERVING OTHER RACES. with power. Jesus has never made Mark 7:24â€"37. any promise to any one but whenm Golden Text.â€"God is no respecter | that person has fulfilled the condiâ€" of mersons. Acts 10:34. tions involved in the promise, the 446 LESSON IX Ts SETTiNG promise has been kept, Time.â€"Summer, A.D. 29. Deaf and Dumb Man Place.â€"The miracle of healing the 31. And again he went out from daughter of the Syrophoenician woâ€" | the borders of Tyre, and came man occurred near the borders of | through Sidon unto the sea of Galiâ€" Tyre and Sidon, which could not lee, through the midst of the bordâ€" have been far from the Mediterranâ€" | ers of Decapolis. 82. And they bring ean coust in northern Palestine; the | unto him one that was deaf, and had healing of the deaf and dumb man | an impediment in his speech. Deafâ€" oceurred somewhere in Decapolis, a | ness and dumbness not only often ocâ€" lerritory south of the Sea of Galilee | cur together in the same person, but on both sides of the Jordan River. dumbness is often caused by deafâ€" 24. And from thence he arose, and | ness, especially if the deafness is conâ€" went away into the borders of Tyre | genital, because one who has never from n LCC COOCC TE rsetful, he would have dealt tenderly with her, so as not reak the bruised reed"; but, mualities being already well deâ€" d. he braced her character with d yet wholesome wind of seemâ€" ‘ouragenent, & bread of the childran" ts 11. m tnose powers which for men themselves to And Re ssid unkt: ks Of A Different Race But straightaway â€" a woman, little daughter had an unclean having heard of kim, came and 10en into "â€"¢ answered and saith Â¥ea, Lord: even the dogs able cat of the children‘s he woman‘s answer is in â€" every way. Wholeâ€" he accepts what Jesus the arrangement of his ission as confined to the n. She understands and She does not eÂ¥ven ack Y apernarm Jesus went to cian tborder. And he enâ€" a house. It might casily & and probably was, the and in rightl;-.l.x;; Jeausl said about his tilul Rep answered ocs not even l!k e did. The beauty eply is that she the figurative lan. With Jesus‘ own her appeal, certain : deny what these love which had opâ€" l ve d.vine, Doubt. 4 been less strong, deep, her love less would hav» dealt th her. so as not ruise1 reed"; but, selves to de!éét: unte her, Let the led; for it is not chiidren‘s bread #s. Jesus sought the woman that the condition of ender yet warmâ€" A ied to normal came to do the © on earth has and to deliver ce it places The demon ‘an‘ is a more of the race to It denotes that ch belonged to uzht him that Is great in ly » For this greatness n submisâ€" . The 1ot only now al. are too The Earl of Perth, British Ambasâ€" sador to Italy, returns to Rome to begin Angloâ€"Italian conferences, afâ€" ter having discussed the situation in Europe with Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, in London. 2.C@CIng opera singers of Russia are helping film Dzerzhinsky‘s opera "Quiet Don" in Leningrad and the composer is adapting the opera to the screen as well as writing new music for additional seenes. 37. And they were beyond measâ€" ure astonished, saying, He hath done all things well; he maketh even the deaf to hear, and the dumb to speak. Jesus‘ miracles of healing prophesy to us of a future world, in which there will be no deaf and blind, and, in fact, no more sickness and no more pain, not a world of disembodâ€" ied spirits who need no eyes and ears, but a world of men, who are redeemed both in body and soul. it was not his faith that enabled _Jesus to heal him. It was solely the power and will of Jesus. The Old Testament prophets announced that the Messiah, when he came, would be able to open the eyes of the blind and unstop the ears of the deaf (Isa. 385:5; 42:18). 36. And he charged them that they should tell no man: but the more he charged them, so much the more a great deal they published it. It is quite possible that they misunderâ€" stood his motives, and set it down to a modest shrinking from the place and popularity, which, in their eyes, was so well determined; and this conâ€" ception gave them an additional imâ€" pulse to do what their natural inâ€" clinations prompted. Faculties Restored 35. And his ears were opened, and the bond of his tongue was loosed, and he spake plain. There are only two miracles recorded by Mark alone, this and the recovering of sight to the blind man (8:22â€"26), and both are peculiar in that the cures were effected, not by a word, but by a process. The deafâ€"mute may well have received a spark of faith before the almighty word was spoken, but Leading opera singers 34. And looked up to heaven. He sighed. And saith unto him, Ephâ€" phatha, that is, Be opened. The word of command is directed to both the mouth and the ears of the man, for both need to be unbarred. Christ is the Great Opener. He makes our faculties function. He realizes our powers for use. cur together in the same person, but ’ dumbness is often caused by deafâ€" _ness, especially if the deafness is conâ€" genital, because one who has never heard words articulated would hardâ€" ly be expected to know how to articuâ€" late words himself. _ And they beâ€" seech ‘him to lay his hand upon him. 33. And he took him aside from the multitude privately. _ Christ‘s purâ€" pose was that the man apart from the tumult and interruptions of the crowd, in solitude and silence, might be more receptive of deep and lastâ€" ing impressions. And put his fingers into his ears. This was true sign language. And he spat, and touchâ€" ed his tongue, Thus, before the Lord actually healed him, the man‘s atâ€" tention was drawn to the two great physical handicaps under which he was suffering, Back At Post In Rome Jesus never uttered any word but with power. Jesus has never made any promise to any one but when that person has fulfilled the condiâ€" tions involved in the promise, the promise has been kept, Deaf and Dumb Man 31. And again he went out from the borders of Tyre, and came through Sidon unto the sea of Galiâ€" lee, through the midst of the bordâ€" ers of Decapolis. 32. And they bring unto him one that was deaf, and had an impediment in his speech. Deafâ€" ness and dumbness not only often ocâ€" les of healing prophesy future world, in which no deaf and blind, and, more sickness and no ot a world of disembodâ€" For : complete birthday horoscope for any birth date in the year, send 10¢ to A. R. Weir, 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto. Please print your name and address plainly. You would make a good auctioncer, designer, promoter or salesman. Your lucky birtbstones are the amethyst and the diamond. Socially the year is not of the brightest but from a busiâ€" ness standpoint is a successful and prosperous period. If you do not live up to your highest ideal, lift yourself above mundane things, you will be exâ€" acting and jealous. Restrictions and disputes with older people annoy you. You do not stop at anything, difficulâ€" ties do not deter you, you fight your way through. What the Stars Foretell for those born on April 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7. Zodiac Sign, Aries. When the time comes, as inevitably it will, that planes can be counted upon, as a matter of course, to stand the dayâ€"toâ€"day strain of longâ€"distance flying; and when a sufficient number of radioâ€"equipped meteorological staâ€" Most of the obstacles to successful flying across the Arctic are mechanâ€" ical, and apply to flying anywhere, Eventually these obstacles will be evercome; and then the Arctic will have the inestimable advantage of shorter distances. The airplane is about to change the shape of the world, And Canada is toward the hub! From _ Vancouver to Liverpool, across Canada north of Hudson Bay, and thence by way of Baftin Island, Greenland and Iceland, is about 4,300 miles; by rail and steamer, via Montâ€" real, it is 6,100 miles. From New York to Leningrad, across Labrador, Greenâ€" land and Iceland, is also about 4,300 miles, while the distance by â€" ship would be about 5,300 miles. From Livâ€" erpool to Yokohama, across the Arcâ€" tic, the dis‘ance is about 6,500 miles, while by steamer and rail, via Montâ€" real and Vancouver, the distance is 9,928 miles. ; not more than 1,200 miles from the tip the northernmost Russian island, or of Canada‘s northernmost island to about as far as from Toronto to Winâ€" nipeg. But this is not all, writes D. M. LeBourdais in the Canadian Magaâ€" zine: the shortest distances bet ween Canadaâ€"or the United States, for that matterâ€"and any part of Europe or Asia are northward. Nearer World Centre _ Think of what that means to us in Canada! It means that we are nearer to the coming world centre than the people of the United States. Looking at the globe, with the North Pole and Arctic Ocean in the centre, we see Canada on one side of this smallest of the oceans and Northern Europe and Northern Asia on the other, while the United States, Southern Europe and Southern Asia occupy a zone farther removed from the centre. Thus to fly from the United States to Eurâ€" ope or Asia by the shortest route, one must cross Canada and the Arctic or subâ€"Arctic regions. Canada and Russia are neighbors across the Arctic Ocean. It is less than 2,000 miles from the Canadian mainland to the Siberian coast: and Dominion Enjoys Unique Situaâ€" tion As Link Between North America and Asia By the Shortâ€" est Route Across the Pole. Canada‘s New Front Door Opens Across The Arctic Princess Elizabeth, left, and Princess Margaret Rose of England, leave Westminster Abbey, one of the stops on their recent educational tour of London. Queen Li;ry acted as guide. The King‘s Daughters Make A Tour Of London The â€" greatest improvement â€" was found in the cases that continued the treatment for the longest periods, the longest being about five months. The nature of the active material in the venom has not been determined. The extract used was made by Dr. August Wolif, of Bielefeld, Germany. The investigators report in _ "The Aungls of Internal Medicine" that seventyâ€"three of the patients showed improvement, thirtyâ€"five of _ them markedly improved and thirtyâ€"eight moderately improved. They reported a definite and lasting relief from pain and swelling. A diluted extract of the venom was injected into the skin weeklv. a number of associates in which an extract of bee venom was used in treating 100 cases of rheumatoid arthâ€" ritis. The belief has long been prevalent that the sting of a bee is helpful to suiferers from rheumatism and some experiments have been made to see if there is any basis for the belicf. Indications were found that it might be of some aid. An extended series of tests were made at the New York Hospital and Cornell University Mediâ€" cal College by Dr. Jacques Kroner and How Bee Stings Can Give Relief Although they often complain about money, the Windsors are quite well off. ‘They received a lump sum of about $4,500,000 in consideration of a transfer to King George of Sandringâ€" ham and Balmoral, which their father had left to the Duke of Windsor in his will. The duke receives an annuity of £125,000, so his total income is about $280,000 a year, For a time it was expected they would take the Chatcau de Grosbois, which was given by Napoleon to Marâ€" shal Bertier, but the duchess, having gone through the magnificent rooms and extensive grounds, declared the setting was "too regal" for "David and myself." PARIS. â€" Before the Duke and Duchess chose the Chateau de la Maye, a modern structure of indifferâ€" ent Louis XIII style, it had been exâ€" pected they would settle down in onc of the fine historical chateaux that abound in the vicinity of Paris. It Is Claimed He Draws $280,000 Duke of Windsor Has Big Income tions are established along the way, flying across the Arctic will become as commonplace an event as it now is to fly between Edmonton and Akâ€" lavik, or between London and Paris. ridironed With Air Routes Then will Canada‘s back door beâ€" come its front door. Then may Canaâ€" dians, who for so long have gazed enviously southward toward the supâ€" posedly green fields of the United States, turn their eyes northward and for the first‘time survey with satisfacâ€" tion the broad expanse of their own country, It does not require a prophet to predict that within the lifetime of most of you who read these lines the Canadian North will be gridironed with air routes connecting United States and Canadian points with imâ€" portant points in Asia and Europe. The shortest route will win in the end! Chatelu “T! Them. Weekly Skin Injections ONTARIO ARCHIVES For The weak link in this exercise is that, with the best will in the world, few of us are fundamentally able to see ourselves as others see usâ€"as we really are. We are so prone to deceive ourselves, often quite uninâ€" tentionally. Then set to persevere. It is now a simple matter to ascerâ€" tain which positive qualities need to be strengthened, and conversely, which negative traits you hope to elâ€" iminate. p Then dissect your negative points mercilessly, Are you slothf{ul, proâ€" crastinating, malicious, badâ€"temperâ€" ed, sarcastic, domineering (or the obverse trait, which is equally unâ€" pleasantâ€"sycophantic), brutal, selâ€" fish or boastful? Find out what positive qualities you possess, such as generosity, sinâ€" cerity, friendliness, honour, loyalty, thoughtfulness, leadership. The first step is to go on an exâ€" plorationâ€"discover yourself; "take yourself apart" and and find out what makes you go. Be honest about it. If you aren‘t, you are rather like the man who cheats when playing that solo card game, "Patience"â€"he merely cheats himself! Personality is a charmed possesâ€" sion that we all seek, but which few of us acquire. Yet most of us have it within our power to gain the cherâ€" ished circleâ€"if we go to a little trouble to attain it. Some time ago I had a letter from Wds i. Aobnihiats itc ds d i 4 They hope that ultimately treatâ€" ments as intensive as those given with radium will be possible, and are looking forward to the development of a 2,500,000 volt Xâ€"ray machine. The treatment would be quicker and cheaper, they said, and pointed out that there is not enough radium to meet requirements. Permanence Indefinite The doctors cited the results Some Forms Vanish Under the treatment, doctors at Huntington Memorial Hospital, Bosâ€" ton, reported in the New England Medical Journal last week, certain forms of cancer had been found to disappear completely. They emphaâ€" sized that their results could not be considered as a cure and stated only that on the basis of 100 cases treatâ€" ed, in certain types of cancer the symptoms had disappeared and the sufferers appeared well today, Physicians who have been treating cancer patients under a million volt Xâ€"ray machine, the only one of its type in the world, report "surprising results" during the first six months of experimentation. It Is Discovered By Boston Scienâ€" tists, But Results Cannot Be Considered As Cure. Million Volt Xâ€"ray Kills Cancer Forms Gooâ€"Goo Eyes Eddie Cantor‘s new series started last Monday for Camel Cigarettes. The picture heading this week‘s column is that of Jimmie Allen, hero of the new Kiddies serial heard from coast to coast. The serial is clean, exciting and thrillingâ€"yet without the sour taste of murders and copr killing bandits, The producers of the Jimmie Alien serial have been saluted by parentâ€"teacher organizaâ€" tions throughout Canada and child psychologists have added their supâ€" port to this program. Jimmie Allen is heard Monday through Friday over CBL, Toronto and CKLW, Windsor, at 5:45 p.m., and over CBO, Ottaâ€" wa at 6:00 p.m. \ HAVE YOU A PLEASING PERSONALITY? Your Handwriting Tells The Truth About Your Character! work on themâ€"and (Psychologist, Characterâ€"Analyst and Lecturer) By LAWRENCE HIBBERT ”; fZZ Would you like a personally preâ€" pared analysis of your character by this wellâ€"known writer? Perhaps, too, you have friends, a sweetheart or relative whose handwriting you‘d like analysed. Enclose 10¢ for EACH specimen (coin or postal note preâ€" ferred) to help defray handiing charges... Enclose with stamped adâ€" dressed envelope to: Lawrence Hib bert, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide A handwriting analysis can help YOU to develop a pleasant personâ€" ality by revealing the truth about your character, I heard later from the wife. She told me that my analysis was a terâ€" rific shock to her husband, and alâ€" though he was unable to transform himself completely, at least he modiâ€" fied his character ta a point where their domestic felicity was more or less restored. a man who sent me his wife‘s writing, with these remarks: "Frankly we ‘seem to have reached a point where our happiness and home are at stake. As a last chance I am hoping your analysis of my wife‘s character will open her eyes to what she is doing and encourage her to change for the better," When I examined the two writings I quickly saw that instead of the wife being to blame, the contrary was the case. The husband was a rather domincering person with an overâ€" powering sense of sel{â€"importance. He could see no point but his own. It was easy to see how friction was rife in that home. is England last year Ntotalled 757500:: 000,000. Russia has 104 children‘s theatres. Belgium now has 65,000 motorâ€" cycles. The figure for February was $60,â€" 155,402 compared to $74,791,596 a year before. The 11 months‘ export trade was worth $996,009,201 comâ€" pared with $972,855,377, OTTAWA.â€"The National Reveâ€" nue Department has issued figures showing Canada‘s export trade in February dropped more than $14,â€" 000,000 in the yearly comparison though the figure for the first 11 months of the fiscal year ending on March 31 showed a rise of more than $23,000,000 above that of the corâ€" responding previous period. February Trade Records Decline Whether the cure will be permanâ€" ent is a question the physicians do not expect they will be able to ansâ€" wer for years. achieved with their first case, a patiâ€" ent given "only a few weeks to live" when brought to the hospital. The patient showed improvement under the powerful machine, they said, and "today is clinically free from canâ€" cer." The picture of the boyâ€"accordionâ€" ist is that of Eddie Allen, who was .recently heard on the Dr. Jackson Airbreak Show. Eddie is one of the finalists that will compete for the trip to New York prize on April 1st broadcast. The judges will certainly have a tough time trying to select a winner because the calibre of the talâ€" ent presented on these programs is high, and one sounds as good as the other. However, listeners will have their say in the matterâ€"for they send in votes. If it is a tieâ€"the judges will step inâ€"otherwise, it‘s what the votes say. Airbreaks is heard every Friday over CFRB, To ronto, 8:30 to 9:00. Wages lost through sickness in Mangled Melodramas, Professor Boner‘s new show, is a new feature on the local airwaves. It‘s a pretty fair performance, and Joseph, the sound man, does make a lot of wrong noises. 15 prizes are offered listen: ers for writing in and giving a title to the play. Each prize consists of six pounds of biscuits . . . The staâ€" tionâ€"CBL, 7:45 to 8:00 Sundays. Tne new show, Cantor‘s Camel Caraâ€" van will feature the famous googoo eyed comedian, Deanna Durbin, Edâ€" gar Fairchild‘s orchestra with the faâ€" mous two piano team of Fairchild and Carrol, Benny Goodman‘s Quarâ€" tet, Bert Gordon, the Mad Russian and Walter King announcing. The time 7:30 to 8:00 p.m. T he Dial OF THE WEEK By FRANK DENNIS The charge, belloved to b« of its kind ever lodzod a arose from a crash in th tween two ‘planes,. A pas one of them was kiled. A young commercial pilot' charged â€" with "manslaug reroplane" at Bendix, Nev She finds her dwelling able and warm, Almost fiftyâ€"four feet in ference at its base, the tree ted awasy in its centre, | space big enough for the ol er to install bed, stove, ch: herâ€" various kitchen utensils The old woman of who lived in a tree h counterpart in the Fror Nigresserre, Her home comfortable as it soun ally she lives inside t The tests sho antitoxin in the creasedâ€"in one 1,000 times, TI to repeat the ex; er and weaker a All seeme repeated in five became and headack toms, whic} due to too b was declave Tests by volunteers : in "Lancet," the British 1 nal, Seven doctors stay minuges in a small seale« ed in a fine mist of t! keeping a careful watch er for danger symptoms. Discovery of a new n ministering diphtheria children by inhalation painful injections is a London, England. The inhaled as a fine mist a being absorbed from t face exposed in the lung Children Inhale Fumes, Avos -:#:‘: Painful Injections laure . There isn‘t land now, say cember, 193 been reduced than 10,000, cveased by 36 He announced tha be submitted to Par the existing pensions come applicable to t} age who have 10 yo: New Zealand. so will not hesitate to use pubâ€"ln eredit to boister prosperity if the neâ€" cessity arises. He has a plan of action all wah ed out. It is largely a problem of money, he says, and the (1overnment is determined to base New ZLealand‘s finances on production. 1( bad times eccur in other countries, New Leaâ€" land‘s standard of living will be proâ€" tected by maintaining wageâ€"rates of employment and protecting the in come of farmers, There will be no cutting of public works programs on the score of eco nomy and improved social service will be maintained. The Premier al Michae] J. sm-a.{.?fx". Labor Prime Minister, ; possible future depressio Labor Premier Is Ready For Then When They Come â€" Wage Rates to Be Maintained. New Zealand Plan For Future Slumm This ki“lnk of the germs c‘"‘ by touch is, for most of the infecti. ous diseases, more important thin sterilizing the air. The new lighh been in the Sufferin bank a month In that time, officials said no irtite. tion of eyes has been noticed, ew Antitoxin Treatment Used The rays also upper â€" surfaces money through t} even kill the gorn side of the money, House In In the bank w form a curtain of from a long, ho tube of mercury 1 lies between tell Breaths are insta light kills bacter second. The first installa« ler‘s window of th« and Trust Company It was described s of ten years‘ searc} ultraâ€"violet light to mall that man touche ing his eyes. A new lamp who a person against , fellow‘s cold was meeting in New Y, the American Insti: o"“t .cientifi(‘ 8001 Rays From l‘i ==______ Can Kill Gey, epmpgeemmemmmeses New Invention, Infectig By Operations !; Re"‘u‘“ To a Minimum ame ill, witl idache, In sp which the « emed we any s s Mr. fix pe on Skyway unemp 00( ew Lemlandy is ready for New Zeaâ€" since Deâ€" nent has 18 at the td. {ayette Wfi‘flin,;\'u‘t | "U].i“h ® m (q.' "ify air at ithout us all waa n'oblem#‘ overnment Lealand‘s bad times New Zea i11 be proâ€" eâ€"rates of g the inâ€" ‘ms carrig the infeeti. )rta_ntr thay | of adâ€" oxin to ad of ced in oxin is acts by tion wil wheneby will beâ€" © expos« ilng he ENt fillins e C cosonl lized, T, ath xin SUT* AP "Td on ed d han ; TY Deany Hanead Baret is l 1 4) o n yogian® No sed FANNING MHLJ. olsl.JNP pPon SEvEN YEaAns Wi 4 gINGER DRO Ines =â€" BR like new, $1 heads, $9. S extra. Suth« AGENTS, DiX our line. 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