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Durham Review (1897), 2 Jun 1938, p. 3

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orian Art ho atures Oddities v¢ Coifure ts Preference haperon one Lbair, aped Like | The Way portswomen tages p can show » high off ports IM. ie tortoise ns or perâ€" to take it ; waves Of worn oll nape of le on the b. Howâ€" nuch at« : Arrowâ€" i Bodâ€" y learn . _ And p their t plain a golf t o w re ck in 19183 heâ€"cup tea, ith walrug it centuries, Venus de haphragnm en Frank ie gallery + were no in turkey ser to s you to the not at laying rood with keup. lions noses ttes ry after h of art : woman ‘ond ex. sng art eP ‘, the new ipiter â€"clag» rreys ather asted skirt« ftenm ling it Goorâ€" are linâ€"« three ind with ases anys the ar® ne T3, or ilig= for hird car New ned ock and ugh he “th. aly Inâ€" st to 6. But Jesus said, Let her alone; why trouble ye her? she hath wrought a good work on me. It should be careâ€" fully observed that, as far as the reâ€" cord tells us, Mary sa‘1 nothing in deâ€" fense of her own act. UYer act was a good work, one which possessed true moral Lcauty. ‘The good~ess of the act lay in the grateful love which it displayed. 7. For ye havs the poor alwa; s with you, and whensocver ye will ye can do them good: but me ye have not alâ€" ways. P d shi 4. ut there were indignation am~ng th To what purpose hat the ointment been ma by John that the lea cism of Mary‘s beaut das. When we are m nc man n n But there wore some that had mation amâ€"ng themselves, saying, what purpose hath this waste of ointment been made? We are told John that the leader in this critiâ€" 1 of Mary‘s beautiful act was Juâ€" When we are thinking of huâ€" i love and the charm of human onality, it is icongruous, it is a ‘cration, to introduce the thought ilver and gold. These things canâ€" be woeighed. They are w‘ it we call the poet . of life. False Yardsticks For this ointment might have 1 sold for above three hur‘red ings, and &‘ to the poor. And mur.iured against her. The word â€" translated "shilling," as we have d in a previous lesson, is the word iarius," which is the equivalent bout seventeen cents, and was the e for a day‘s Iabor in the time of Lord. Our false measuring of «« by a materialis‘‘: yardstick will 1 when money is involved to the tâ€" degrading â€" and â€" dishonorable tations But Je LESSON X NC BY PERSONAL DEvOoTION TO CHRIST Mark 14:311, 27â€"31. An Act of non 8 =@ S&unbap Etchool ive their * and gratiâ€" m. This act was purely Mary‘s part, and certainâ€" from + de â€" love for the h s highly esteer perfume bottles iled alabastra. d, very costly. lan plant belon vrlana . clds ao t] it e e cruse and pourâ€" ‘ _ 1d. In the hot and U was grateful and reâ€" o anoint one‘s guests o ‘tesy. The sisters lercd ow they could t.ude for all he had hat he had dows> for h~a‘ed Simon, and had rs and their brother, ven, by winning their f, he ‘\a* shown how » Messiah, by bringing rom the grave. Mary th () this supper, and that 3 not to be identified me, but that she was or waiting upon the s house on that occaâ€" f coruse, must have is l~prosy. As he sat ‘ame a woman. John ae, Mary, not to be Mary the mother of ar. Magdalene. Hayâ€" n S he sione was quar shly esteemed for ime bottles or oint alabastra. ~v cost]lv. frag U L7 it ure Love : eruse al riptur ntal a A.D h ITS SETTI n ila T nWM Alabastron «on onging to i juice of re or Mixâ€" the chief was made k, April 4 ie. Havâ€" alabaster is generâ€" aster, to ound 1 n n n )mmoâ€" s who m id in idded urday NG mMinâ€" was what nt a n Francis Floud as High Commissioner in Canada for the ’Gnited Kingdom. 29. But Peter said unto him, Al though all shall be offended, yet will not I. ‘The words of Peter here are nothing less than sheer boastfuilness. 30. And Jesus saith unto him, Verily I say unto thee, that thou toâ€"day, even this night, before the cock crow twice, shalt deny me thrice. The crowing of the cock is not some casual crowâ€" ing of some individual cock. _ Two crowings were ditinguished as time marks, one near midnight, the other just before dawn. Peter denied the Lord within four hours after his emâ€" phatic assertion that nothing could ever persuade him to leave the Lord‘s side. 31. But he spake mently, If I must die not deny thee. And also said they all. T cere, but none of the weakness. All She Could 8. She hath done what she could. This is sometimes t "on to mean that, while it may not have been uch that Mary did, yet she did what she was able to do. She had done all that she could. She hath anointed my body beforehand for the burying. Mary anâ€" ointed the Lord, ith the presenti ment of, as woll as with the spirit of and divinely beautiful sympathy with, that death itself. Her action was enâ€" tirely a prophetic one. She was conâ€" scio~s of what she did. 9. And verily I say unto you, Whereâ€" soever the gospel shall be preached throughout the whole world, that also which this woman hath done shall be syoken of for a memorial of her. Mary‘s act to Jesus was the one memorial of the festive scene, the thing which did »ot pass away. It will thing which did not pass away. Mark 14: 10, 11. â€"10. And Judas Isâ€" cariot, he that was one of the twelve, went away unto ‘\c chief priests, that > might doliver him unto them. 11. And "oy, when they heard it, were sglad, and promised to g‘ve him ..oney. And he sought how he might conveâ€" riently deliver him unto them. Notice that Judas Iscariot is even here at this time, when his aw‘ul sin about to be introduced, still numbored among the twelve apost‘ss. Judas deliberateâ€" ly went to the ‘ief priests with the intenticn of betraying the Lord. The proposal came from him, not from the‘ priests. As Matthew tells us, they gave him thirty pieces of silver, which was the equivalent of about oneâ€"third of the cos. of the nard with which Mary anointcd the Lo: 1. Living For Seif 27. And Jesus saith unto thein. All ye shall be offended. The discipies will be trapped by what will happen to Jeâ€" sus: it will upset them completely. For it is written, I will smite the shepherd, ai 1 the sheep shall be scatâ€" tered abroad. This prophecy is found in Zech. 13:7. The shepherd here is, of course, the Lord Jesvs. The sheep Sir Gerald Campbell succeeds Sir Lesson New High Commissioner he spake exceeding veheâ€" I must die with thee, I will thee. And in like manner they all. They were all sinâ€" none of them knew his own Goering told his welcomers: "The Austrian fourâ€"year plan is not intended merely to check temâ€" porary unemployment but to lay permanent foundations for a better and happier life for coming generaâ€" tions. "Austrians must now prove to the world that their proverbial slovenliâ€" The plant is designed to have a yearly production untimately of 4,000,000 tons. Must Prove Their Diligence On his arrival the field marshal was handed bread, wine and ham by the enthusiastic population, these being the chief products of the disâ€" triet. Austria Is Told To Speed Ahead LINZ, Germany. â€"Field Marshal Hermann Wilhelm Goering, beginâ€" ning a week‘s tour of Austria to inâ€" augurate various industrial projects, speaking here told Austrians their proverbial easyâ€"going mode of life must end now during working hours. Goering, No. 2 Nazi and head of Germany‘s fourâ€"year economic selfâ€" sufficiency plan, turned the first spade of soil on a site near the Danube where greater Germany‘s most imâ€" portant steelworks, to be called the "Hermann Goering Works," will be erected. Mr. King made his brief statement in the House in answer to a question by W. R. MacDonald, Liberal, Brantâ€" ford City, who quoted Lieut.Col. A. J. Muirhead, underâ€"secretary of air in the British Government, as saying that negotiations concerning an air route between Canada and New Zealand are now under way between the dominion and the United States. The prime minâ€" ister said the negotiations were about the islands. The negotiations, the prime minister said, are being carried on between Great Britain, New Zealand and Ausâ€" tralia on the one hand and the United States on the other. The islands comâ€" pose a portion of the Phoenix group and other islands lying between Honoâ€" lulu and Australia. May Be Partâ€"Owner Though the prime minister gave no details, expectations are that this country will be part owner in the Paâ€" cific service, just as it is a shareholder Negotiations with respect to ownerâ€" ship of certain islands in the Pacific Ocean are now being carried on as one of the preliminary steps towards esâ€" tablishing an air service between Canâ€" ada and New Zealand, the House of Commons was informed last week by Prime Minister King. Transâ€"Canada Is Link Though Canada does not figure diâ€" rectly in the negotiations, the Dominâ€" ion is vitally interested since the Transâ€"Canada Air Lines will provide the connecting link between the Atlanâ€" tic and Pacific services and will evenâ€" tually be part of the Empire scheme for an aroundâ€"theâ€"world service. in the transâ€"Atlantic scheme. Flights of an experimental nature on the Atâ€" lantic route, which were started last summer, are to be resumed in the near future and it is believed that by fall the flying boats will be carrying mail and package freight. But it may b2 another year before passengers are carried. Mr, King Reveals Steps for Linking Canada, New Zealandâ€"Islands Requiredâ€"Britain, Australasia and U.S. Are Dickering Over Ownership. Transâ€"Pacific Air Service Interests Canada Vitally England. steps of the French Embassy in London as they arrived to weld a new and stronger military partnership with Premier Edouard Daladier (left), and the French Foreign Minister, Georges Bonnet, are shown on the They Helped Forge the New Angloâ€"French Alliance Formation is described as similar to Little Long Lac, including the banded iron formations so favorable to gold depositions in this territory. Having slept for 865 hours, the wife of a railway official of Saraâ€" jeyo, Yugoslavia, awoke as if nothâ€" ing had happened and asked for a drink. The territory was originally prosâ€" pected by "Hard Rock" Bill Smith, whose original discoveries in Little Long Lac area were the present Hard Rock and Macleodâ€"Cockshutt Mines. The syndicate has been reâ€"organizâ€" ed as a company, Gorham Gold Mines Limited, fully financed for drilling to a depth of 300 feet, toâ€" gether with shaft, lateral work and further exploration. Meanwhile the Lakehead Gold Mines Limited, adâ€" joining, has been financed for a simâ€" ilar program. The Universal Exploration Syndiâ€" cate is doing likewise, while other interested parties are buying up all the available farm lots in the vicinâ€" ity. The drilling was done by Gorham Gold Syndicate, headed by Dr. J. D. Wright, wellâ€"known geologist, and going to a depth of about 60 feet under a good surface showing gave an average of $38.20 uncut and $19,.40 cut across nearly four feet for a length of 300 feet. Sensational gold values found in diamond drilling to shallow depth have been followed by a rush of gold miners and prospect.rs into the Township of Gorham, nine miles north of Port Arthur. Some of the assays‘ bore cutting were given as high as eight ounces. Near Port Arthurâ€"Gold Rush Is Spurred by Sensational Finds One application of iron sulphate will not completely rid a lawn of dandelions unless they are very small. Two or three sprayings are required. The first just as the plants come into bloom in the spring. Subâ€" sequent applications should be at inâ€" tervals of about two weeks. Iron sulphate will kill white clover and may injure, permanently, bent grass. Mining Firms Buying Farms 1@ pounds to a gallon of water. The solution should then be strained through several layers of cheese cloth to remove grit. It is best apâ€" plied with a pressure sprayer. One gallon will cover 300 feet of turf if properly distributed. The chiecf objection to the use of strong chemicals on lawrs is that they also destroy the grass zss well is the weeds,. Iron sutphate hes been found efâ€" fective for dandelions. The chief drawback to its use has been the stain which it leaves upon clothing, walks and buildings or stonework. When it is used it should be diluted If a root is not pulled completely, place a little ammonium sulphate, common table salt, gasoline or coal oil in the hole. After weeds are desâ€" troyed by hand digging it is importâ€" ant to start immediately growing a strong turf where the weeds existed to prevent new ones gaining a footâ€" hold. Eringing Death To Dandelions Iron Sulphate May Be Helpful Eut Care Required which took £hce on April 27th, The bridegroom youngest son of the late Sir Ernest Shackleton, famous Arctic explorer, and the late Lady Shackleâ€" ton, recently completed a lecture tour in the United States and Canada, an". was the guest for a short time cf Their Excellencies the Governorâ€" General and the Lady Tweedsmuir, at Government House, Ottawa. Mr. Shackleton is a nephew of the well known artist, Miss Kathleen Shackleton, at present in Edmonton. E. Homan and Mrs. Homan, of Burley, New Forest, Hampshire, England, leaving St. Paul‘s Church, l(nightsbridge. London, following their wedding which took place on April 27th. The bridegroom youngest son of the late Mr. Edward A. A. Shackleton, of London, England, and his bride, formerly Miss Betty Marguerite Homan, daughter of the late Captain C. Later on I had the satisfaction of hearing that this little family had reâ€" moved to a town many miles away from their former home, and the husâ€" band was in a steady position and Her husband‘s writing showed that be was not as stable as he might be; he was too prone to take the line of least resistance. However he could overcome this. And he had certain tal ent potentialities. I made suggestions for making use of them. Here is a very poignant case that I deait with some time ago. I received a letter from a girl who was not quite 18 years old, but who bad been mar ried for 19 months and had a little baby girl. She said: "My husband is serving a term in jail for stealing. But he is not a bad man; he only stole to provide for me and the baby. 1 send you his writing. Can you give me any ray of hope for our future? I love my husband so much." In recent articles I have quoted acâ€" tual cases from my mailbag, in the hope that other readers, with perhaps similar problems of their own, might derive some help and guidance. Dr. Charles H. Best, associate of Sir Frederick Banting in the discovâ€" ery of Insulin, told the English speaking union in Toronto recently that more than a million diabeties throughout the world were receiving treatment with insulin now. Diabetes among younger people was being Insulin Hard to Get CHARACTER FROM HANDWRITIN CASES FROM MY NOTERCOK Explorer‘s Son Is Wed In England (Graphologist and Psychologist) By LA WRENCE HIBBERT Do you wich to know what your own handwriting reveals? Have you a dear sweetheart, friends or relatives you‘d like to know more about? Send speciâ€" mens of the handwriting you want anâ€" alysed, enclosing 10c for EACH speciâ€" men. Send with stamped addressed enâ€" velope to: L. Hibbert, Room 421, 73 West Adc!aide St., Toronto, Ontario. Ple pot Mr. G. writes: "If handwriting anâ€" alyzis is so helpful, could it not be utilâ€" ized by business?" You would to scrprised, Mr. G., if you knew how much handwriting anâ€" alysis IS used by business undertak ings. There are not a few large firms who use it a very good deal. Insurâ€" ance companies make use of it in the checking of applications at times, and other firms take advantage of it when filling important positions. It is noteworthy, say shipping men, that Europeans take an hour‘s delay as if it were merely a cloud passing across the sun. To the Canadian, it is an agory of susnense. accepting hi‘; responsibilities. â€" That wife‘s faith in her husband was jusâ€" tified, but it was a handwriting analyâ€" sis that@blazed the trail that he was able to follow successfully. Shipping Companies Say They‘re Always In A Scramble to Get Off When a Boat Docks In Agony of Suspense It is notable that when a ship docks, the experienced Britisher does not make a dash for the gangâ€"plank. He lets the Canadians put on their overâ€" coats, wraps and furs, grab all the loose parcels they want, and stand around to swelter for perhaps half an hour, _ Meanwhile the Englishman watches the scene, as if he wore not getting off at all. ‘Then, when the less experienced travellers, flushed and tired and hot, start to move off, he leisurely picks tp his things and goes. On the quay, the Canadian seems to think he can clear his baggage, shipâ€" ping men say, in about one minute. If he can‘t, thenâ€""there ought to be a law" doing something to somebody, beâ€" cause he can‘t. Inquiry leads to the sad conviction that Canadians are cither not very worldly, or hopelessly landâ€"lubbers. This is speaking generally, for seasonâ€" ed travellers are the same the world over. Of all people, Canadians are about the most impatient when it comes to gotting off ships. ‘This is the consenâ€" sus of poinion among steamship pooâ€" ple. The average Canadian forgets about immigration and customs, and thinks it‘s just like getting off a train. greatly reduced, though there had not been much change in the genâ€" eral death rate. Obtaining of suMâ€" cient supplies of insulin was becomâ€" ing a problem. Canadians Travel Most Impatiently ble ond as lengthy specimens as of suspens ONTARIO ARCHIVES *‘ Grafts Part Of I Poloâ€"enthusiast exâ€"King Alfonso‘s ( royal yacht, the "Romancia," is now i in commission as a trawler. She ‘ fishes for seal meat, And the meat she nets is later canned as dog Sood, ! _A new way for 'arithmetic. with ai | was reported in t * partment of India: ayette, Ind., last x l They talk into : Some days later she was found in the barn mothering five baby souirâ€" rels, as contentedly as though they were her precious kittens, Where she found them no one knew. The woods was a mile from the harn. It was supposed she carried them one by one all that distance. One Carried Foster Family Mile Through Woods A snow white cat on the furm of Rufus Labadie, near Wheatley, is the mother of two whitc kittens. One day recently some 06% the children found one gray and two black squirâ€" rels in the woods near by. There was no mother to be found so the children brought them home and gave them to the white cat. Tabby adopted them at once. She nurses them and cares for them as tenderly as she does her two kittens. On another farm a cat presen‘tcd her mistress with five kittens one day but the next day they had disâ€" appeared and Tabby was sorcly grieved, Cats Add Orphaned Squirrels to Brocd crror meth arith method of getting rid of errors developed the method. Teachers listening to the rero are able to find the reasons why cl dren habitually make mistakes a to point them out. "The teacher has a complete p ture of the child‘s mental process instead of isolated facts," Prof, F ton said. The new method finds that "he: ing is believing," even more th "secing is believing", and voices, When "six plu New Way for Children to Learn Arithmetic Seen by Psychologist A study of the recen tween United Kingdon whose benefits Eire exter ada has been made by t of the trade and comm ment who see possibilit ada‘s fish business with lrish Free State being i Before the treaty | smoked fish going into tariff of two pence a pc leted fish three pence,. treaty they enter fre« show none of this type shipped from Canada year,. Voice Records Correct Error To Ireland; Product Eaters | Free Under Its Agreement With Britain Otherwise the treaty is not expectâ€" ed to benefit Canadian trade to any marked demee. In 1937 Canada sold Eire goods valued at $4,425,293 and bought $46,575, The balance of trade accordingly is already heavily in favor of Canada. The bulk of Canadian exports to Eire was composed of wheat, $3,341,â€" 018; lumber, $180,794; newsprint, $400,894, and eloctric *stoves and parts, $130,921,. The treaty made no change in the tariff of these comâ€" modities, Raw wool was the largest single item imported from Eire. Canada Hopes To Sell Some Fish Preirie Woman Saves Life of Gird Attacked By A Coycte The Regina Leaderâ€"Post published this farm story from its correspondâ€" ent at Woodrow, southwest of the Easkatckeowan Capila!. O MLOd, had hel tion of Mrs, was ha sterilizing 1 Then anay, carved out t from the dead izing _ instrumen O‘H Hen On Turkey sul PA treaty â€" lapper ng into Eire nce a pound : pence. Und ter free. St his type of fi es like this: Mrs. ote attack one of Fhe drove the aniâ€" he bis bird «was W children to of voice re ificed a hen th: out a big slice « id bird and af.« nts and _ silk n of water and ed to do a f:gt y skin grafting. irkey is strutting er, not a bit conâ€" part hen. bilit vith nt m it to the nore: kippe Eire ided ly treaty and ng ‘e met A d and filâ€" nder the Statisties fish was Eire last of experts denargâ€" d raidor s por» learn ords, r deâ€" pi tC an 1 n

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