ised Leisure ents Problem il Beautyâ€"If Your Spi is a Straight Line Batâ€" for Good Carriage Is Almost Won ect Posture ecble Fow!l P ‘s of Labor, ailable for ed again _ pluwp, i( the N ulll‘ facil= ivail= ‘esive . ‘C% _ will o will the first No mat« r lovely the girt 8. chest the Asâ€" imp IMe= be nal ing me Who of 1t fullest tor ral he all ut 1¢ must to for. |l)lll up vin« NP M heads, and saying, Ha! thou that troyest the temple, and buildest t in three days, 30. save thyself, l come down from the cross." I implication here is that if Jeâ€" poke the truth in asserting his lity to build the temple again in lays, he certainly would be ble to pull his hands and feet free m the cross and to deliver himâ€" { from his impalement. In like manner also the chief 1 s mocking him among themâ€" s with the scribes said, He 1 others; himselft he cannot Membvers of the priestly arisâ€" y were scen in company with i and elders deriding the sufâ€" f 1t is not true that Jesus could t save himself â€" he could have so casily, instantly, with all I )mnipotence of God, but he could never have saved us had he 8 1 himself, for we are saved n‘vy by his death. Let the Christ, the King of Isâ€" racl, now come down from the cross, that we may see and believe. And they that were ervcified with him reproached him. The Fourth Cry "And when the sixth hour was come, there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour." This darkness is also mentioned by Matthew (27:45) and by Luke (23: 41), a darkness that began at high noon and ended three hours later, at three o‘clock in the afternoon. So compare another famous period of darkness at the time of the redempâ€" The Crucifixion "And they offered him wine that was mingled with myrrh, but he reâ€" ceived it not." This was a drink mercifully offered to those about to be crucified, to produce stupefacâ€" tion (le., as an opiate). Jesus inâ€" tended to go through the final orâ€" deal with a mind perfectly clear. "And they crucify him." It is proâ€" bable, though not certain, that our Lord was nailed to the cross while it lay upon the ground, and that it was then lifted into its position as is represented in the great picture of Rubens in Antwerp Cathedral. The cross of Jesus lifted his feet no more than a yard above the sround, for the short stalk of hysâ€" sop was able to reach Jesus‘ mouth. The agony of crucifixion needs no lescription. "And part his garments imong them, casting lots upon ‘em, what each should take." And it was the third hour, and 1 crucified him." Mark is the |y one who gives the hour of s erucifixion. The Jewish day name because it had a skullâ€"like contour, The site cannot be identifâ€" led with certainty. There are only two places that can be sericusly considered toâ€"day as the site of Calvary, one is the plot over which the church of the Holy Sepulchre now stands, and the other is the skillâ€"shaped knoll above Jeremiah‘s grotto, outside the present north wall of Jerusalem. LESSON x1 THE SUFFERING SERVANT Mark 15:22â€"39 CGolden Text â€" For the Son of Man also came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many." Mark 10:45. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time â€"â€" Friday, April 7, A.D. 30. Place Jerusalem. And they bring him unto the place, Golgotha, which is, being inâ€" terpreted, The place of a skull." Golgotha simply means "skull," as Mark himself explains for use. This place was probably given such a in, so as to be inte.ligible to all It was just this that the s refused to vecognize, namely, Jesus was their king. ind with him they crucify two )ers; one on his right hand, and on his left." These two men > not only robbers, but, as ‘".uke us, they ..ere malefactors, ie., whose business it is to work Thus was the prediction of h nearly seven hundred years vo this brought to pass. Though k does not recall it, all who do v the story of our Lord‘s cruciâ€" n as given in the other Gosâ€" will remember that, while at beginning of this day both of hieves railed upon the Lord Jeâ€" later on the same day one of i believed in him and thereby ved eternal life. Three Final Insults nd they that passed by railed im." These were either counâ€" 1k on their way to the city, or ns whose business called them the country. The word here lated "railed" means, ordinarâ€" o speak repr.richfully, to reâ€" to calumniate. "Wagging their . and saving. Ha‘ thou that P x o‘clock ut nin in the in the mornâ€" ie third hour o‘clock in the nd hal SsIR HUGH ROBERTSON ada, all of them animated with the me thought to do a beautiful thing beautifully. The children of today were the Canadians of toâ€"morrow and as they looked to the education and enlightenment of those children so they could look for an enlightenâ€" ed Canada in the future, and anyâ€" The eminent Glasgow musician said he had heard 40,000 children singing on his present trip to Canâ€" Sir Hugh Robertson, adjudicator of musical festivals throughout Canada, and director of the famous Orpheus Choir, told members of the Association of Canadian Clubs at Montreal last week that music was the best unifier that Canada could have, for all question of color, reâ€" ligion or nationality sank when peoâ€" ple joined together for music. Canadian People Could Be Drawn Together By Music Declares Eminent Glasgow Music Is Urged As Our Unifier "And when the centurion, who stood by over against him, saw that he so gave up the ghost, he said. Truly this man was the Son of God." This centurion felt himself to be in the presence of a great mysâ€" tery, and realized that Jesus was kin with divinity. to men as he never has been before. We now know God through the Lord Jesus Christ and especially the love of God in the fact that Christ died for us. tory, except the | entered through t before the holy of ing of this veili wa of Cod. The veil heavy, and said to forty feet in heigh we can only bow our heads, and ask the Holy Spirit to reveal in our hearts some of the terrible meaning of this cry. The nearest we can hope to come to penetrating this mystery is to think of Jesus as covâ€" ered with all the world‘s sin and curse; and when God saw Jesus thus, he turned away from him. And even though God turned from him and left him, he cries to him and holds fast to him as his God. Here the divine perfection of Jesus appears. "And at the ninth hour Jesus cried with a Toud voice, Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani? which is, being interpreted, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" _ This fourth cry from the cross, also reâ€" corded by Matt. 27:46, is the only one of the seven words from the cross recorded in Mark‘s CGospel. This in one of the deepest, most inâ€" scrutable mysteries of all the word of God, and, reading these words, tion of the Egypt. Musician children of Israel from p The great problem of race assiâ€" milation can be met by music more successfully than in any other way, for hostility could not enter where music was, and therefore its unifyâ€" ing value was inestimable. one who begrudged opportunities for the children was no citizen at all, but was a traitor in the camp. Music For Her Soul‘s Sake The propagation of culture was very difficult in new countries beâ€" cause the whole life in new counâ€" tries was one of striving, but new countries required a cultural backâ€" ground and that was a work that lay to the hand of the Canadian Clubs. Canada needed music for her soul‘s sake and also for her nationality‘s sake. Alice Brady has had years on the stage and yedrs in the movies, but when you hear her on the radio you Claudeete Colbert, who recently got home from that European vaâ€" cation, likes simple clothes â€" but listen to the description of the dress recently designed for her by Travis Bantom, one of moviedom‘s ace designers. It‘s frilly, it‘s frothy, it‘s of white organza, covered with a printed pattern of cherries in black. The skirt is shirred and full, the neckline is outlined by a large flounce, with wider flounces formâ€" ing the sieeves. Sounds anything but simple! himself a good actor? Well, it‘s to be made again, with Errol Flynn, Patric Knowles and Basil Rathbone in the leadin# roles. Remomber ©Dawn Patrol," in which Richard Barthe!mess starred, and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., after pleading and fighting for the role, played the ~~cond lead so ably that he stole the picture, and proved Carole desig..d the jacket, (she is Alice Marble‘s best friend) and Clark had his tailor make it. It‘s a knockout. And Alice, tall, blonde and pretty, will wear it. Carole Lombard and Clark Gable really ought to go into the dressâ€" making business. They coâ€"operated on a sports jacket which Alice Marble, the United States‘ Number One tennis player, will wear when she steps out on the courts of Wimbledon, England, to battle for a championship. Movie gy8 Racd W Nicknamed "Donald" by children and drivers, this ï¬et duck in Dulwich Park, London, England, collects toll from all motorists famng through the park. Donald waits until a car stops bfl.;k_{e the ake where he lives, waddles across and waits for tasty contribuâ€" tions. Photograph above shows Donald sreeting a motorirt and :yil‘lgd (m’guack quacks) "Please, pretty please, what will you give e today?" ERROL FLYNN By VIRGINIA DALE 4 DONALD‘S A TOLLâ€"COLLECTOR adio At the annual convention of the Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association in Toronto (Ontarioâ€" Quebec Division), Mr. A. E. Dobbie, managing editor of the Recordâ€"News, Smith‘s Falls, Ont., was elected president of the orâ€" ganization for the coming year. ... Frank Black saves the stamps from foreign letters, and gives them to his friends â€" which keeps his office filled with both friends and stamps ...... Around Hollywood they are calling "The Adventures of Marco Polo," "Mr. Deeds Goes to China" ...... Gale Page, known to radio but not to movie fans, has been made a star by Warner Broâ€" thers. ODDS AND ENDS â€" Paramount may follow Metro‘s example and launch an air show in the fall ... Stan Laurel and his Russian bride plan a fourth wedding ceremony it was so annoying to hear the laughter and not know what was so funny,. Heads Weekly Publishers of more than one instance in which a listener, at home, swore never to buy the sponsor‘s product because The first thing somcone is going Bob Ripley has discovered in his search for "Believe It Or Nots," that it is three and twoâ€"thirds times as easy for a man to become an amazing person as it is for a woâ€" man to do so. He finds that amazâ€" ing women are just as interesting as men, but rarer. The only reason he can give is that they don‘t have as much chance to distinguish themselves as men do. Eddie Cantor Encouraged by its success in the building up of Ginger Rogers as a dramatic star, RKO is going to try to do the same thing with Ruby Keeler, the dancer who is Mrs. Al Jolson in private life. You‘ll see the first results of the new campaign in "Mother Carey‘s Chickens." And with Fay Bainter and Ralph Morâ€" gan also in the cast, the girl will kave to act or be utterly swamped. may be sure that she is nervous. The microphone simply scares her into such a state of nerves that the pages of her script have to be pastâ€" ed on cardboard, to keep them from rattling. ; any of us know, to form an organiâ€" zation to protest against radio proâ€" grams which are awfully amusing to the audience in the broadcasting studio, but pretty dull to those who just tune in, and can‘t see what is going on. _ Eddie Cantor is one of the worst offendâ€" ers. After all, raâ€" dio is supposed to be heard, not just seen. And I know The exâ€"governor of the CBC and McGill extension head was much intrigued by the University of Kenâ€" tucky‘s mountain radio listening center system. The University of Kentucky has for years recognized the radio as an excellent medium for the stimulation of educational, cultural and recreational activities. During the past geason 15 or more This is the verdict of Col. Wilfrid Bovey of McGill University who reâ€" presented the Canadian Broadcastâ€" ing Corporation at the recent round table conference on radio held unâ€" der the auspices of the National University Extension Association at Hot Springs, Arkansas. There ain‘t no hillâ€"billy music! Kentucky and Arkansas mountainâ€" eers pref~ symphony orchestraâ€" tions and opera. They disclaim utâ€" terly the brand of savage discord which is described as "mountain music." Prefer It To Mountain Music, Declares Col. Bovey of Mcâ€" Gill, on Return from Visit to Say® Hillâ€"Billies Like Opera Best Upwards of 100 producing or soonâ€"toâ€"be producing gold mines have been given improved road asâ€" sistance essential to profitable opâ€" eration, and besides, active developâ€" ment has been encouraged in many promising mineral areas hitherto devoid of suitable transportation facilities. All projects carried out were reâ€" commended by the provinces and were subject to the final approval of the Dominion. All work underâ€" taken in Yukon and the Northwest Territories was don» by the federal government. The same arrange: ment will prevail this year, the statement said. 100 Producing Areas Aided In the assistance scheme work is being given mainly to persons takâ€" en from relief rolls, or classified as needy unemployed. â€" During the past two years the joint program has been of material aid in expandâ€" ing the tonnage treated daily in gold and other metallurgical plants throughout Canada. In that year agreements were made with the provinces concerned whereby the work was carried out under the direction of the provinâ€" cial governments with the underâ€" standing that twoâ€"thirds of the total expenditures in each case would be contribeted by the Dominion and oneâ€"third by the provinces. The proposed allotmoents follow: Nova Scotia, $25,000; Quebec, $250,â€" 000; Ontario $250,000; Manitoba, $225,000; Saskatchewan, $125,000; Alberta, $50,000; British Columbia, $240,000; Northwest Territories and the Yukon, $93,000. Agreement With Provinces Initiat‘d in the fiscal year 1936â€" 37, the assistance scheme was unâ€" dertaken to reduce transportation costs into mining properties w‘~:e the government thought such costs were likely to retard development a deparimental statement said. Resources Minister Crerar last week announced tentative allocaâ€" tion of the $1,300,000 vote included in the supplementary estimates to assist the provinces in improving transportation into mining areas. Dominion Minister of Resources A handwriting analysis is otten the first step towards a betior poâ€" sition and greater earning powers. Every reader will appreciate the Handwriting doesn‘t stop at reâ€" vealing the writer‘s character. It shows the hidden potentialities and talent that often lie dormant wit‘in a person. Many persons are workâ€" ing in "blind alleys," or are realâ€" ising but a tithe of their possibiliâ€" ties, merely because of a lack of knowledge of their own powers. Grants To Help Finance Roads Into Mine Areas What, theh, will handwriting reâ€" veal? It will show the character of a writer. There are, of course, many things we know about our friends, acquaintances and people with whom we come in contact. But there are other, deeper traits that don‘t come so readily to the surâ€" face, or are deliberately hidden. These are revealed unerringly in handwriting. Is it possible to foretell the fuâ€" ture from one‘s handwriting? This is a question that is frequertly askâ€" ed. Unfortunately, we cannot tell fortunes from handwriting. I wish we could, sometimes! A Handwriting Analysis Will Help You To A Better Life To Aid in Development of Mining Sections â€" Will Imâ€" prove Transportationâ€"Onâ€" tario to Get $250,000. Gives Details of Assistance the Provinces will be given (Psychologist and Handwriting Expert) hoist and again through the woodâ€" en flooring of the church, as inâ€" dicated by the broken line. > â€" porting the hoist, shifted, plungâ€" ing the men nearly 60 feet. The black line, ABOVE, shows where the elevator fell to the church‘s main floor. One of the victims plunged through the floor of the Four men plunged to their deaths as they rode an elevator down the 300â€"foot shaft of the dome that crowns Brother Andre‘s $1,000,000 shrine, St. Joseph‘s Oratory, Montreal. The men fell to their deaths when a beam, supâ€" He warned against col;sidering penny stocks as an investment and pointed out they were only a gamâ€" ble. "I have little sympathy with anyone who buys stock without inâ€" vestigating," he declared. "The majority of people will buy stock on a tip and very rarely will inâ€" vestigate.. If they did, it would greatly benefit the country." Methods of operation of the Toâ€" routo Stock Exchange, which, he s=id, is a "much misundersiood inâ€" stitution‘" were outlined by Norâ€" man C. Urguhart, exchange presiâ€" dent, to Kincardine business men at their spring banguet. It was found early in the experiâ€" mental broadcasting that large secâ€" tions of Kentucky lacked the faciliâ€" ties for receiving broadcasts, espeâ€" clally in the mountains. A system of radio listening centres was estabâ€" lished. The university provided raâ€" dio receiving sets, of adequate powâ€" er, and placed them under the comâ€" munity â€" centre â€" directors. This scheme has been a marked success. Do Investigate Bsofore Buying educational, agricultural and musiâ€" cal programs have been broadcast weekly from the university studies in Lexington. Have YOU discovered what your handwriting shows about your real self? Would you like to know the truth about your sweetheart, relaâ€" tives or friends? Or are you interâ€" ested in finding what talent you have? Send specimens of the writâ€" ing you want analysed, enclosing 10c for EACH specimen. Enclose with a stamped addressed envelope, to: L. Hibbert, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto, Ont. Your letter will be treated in confidence. Tragedy Strikes Church In the same way, graphology has passed the elementary stages and is now recognized as a scion®e. Can handwriting analysis be deâ€" pended upon? There WAS a time when many soâ€"called graphologists were nothing more than chariatans, preying on the gullible. There was also a time when many medical "experts" were quacks! But you do not put any less faith in your docâ€" tor today because many years ago there were medical quacks, do you? importance of this, especially in these days of fast competition and reduced earning outlets. g beoken Tne. â€"* :« |â€"Komiand to be:*waith sdogs". /; . K MAL;~!: .\ enenat hn t ns o dn ntiggihrtras on + + AMvwl1l VÂ¥ G&xP OQur natures aren‘t naturally genâ€" erous, or noble. We remember slights, little distastefu) actions, and some â€" peculiar. mannerisms about someone, . and: forget the many good qualities he may have. Mave you the habit of whispering to some one person inâ€" <a small group of people. Or of joking, laughing, or making fun of someâ€" one behind his back? .Or of drumâ€" ming with the fingers, tapping with the feet, clearing the throat, and otherâ€"forms of restlessness? Have you the habit of always frowning? Mave you the "I" habit; that is, are you one of those persons. who are always saying, "I believe goâ€"andâ€" so; 1 wouldn‘t do that;" etec? Have you the habit of slapping wther people on the back every time you feel so inclined? Or of teaging othâ€" er people? § Have you the habit of twiddling your fingers whenever you are beâ€" fore others, or of placing your hands on your face alk thetime, or of stretching and yawning no matâ€" ter where you are? Have you the habit of picking your teeth in pubâ€" licâ€"particularly along the streetâ€" or of manicuring your pails in pubâ€" lic? kiz Have you recently, or ever, takâ€" en an inventory of your poise or bearingâ€"your manner of standing, sitting, walking, and acting before others? Have you any undesirable mannerisms that you aren‘t aware of, such as standing with one hip "thrown out," or plagng both hands on the hips whenever you are standing still, or of standing with the feet wide apart and hands on the hips? We‘re All Subject to Odd Manâ€" nerisms Which Can Be Take Notice Of Y our Bad Habits New planetary nebulae are formâ€" ing, and old ones are fading away. Since about two hundred planetary nebulae are known, and their averâ€" age life is about 30,000 years, a new one should appear about every 250 years, Dr. Whipple said. which has a doughnutâ€"shaped ring. The gas, which is incandescent, came from an explosion of the cenâ€" tral star, which is still in a high state of incandescence,. The gases are moving outward | at > several miles a second. When they attain such speeds they are beyond the gravitational control of the central star, which is losing much of its substance into space. If the sun should explode and form a planeâ€" tary nebula, the surrounding gas cloud would reach many times the distance of the outermost planet. Moore, of Lick ctary nebulae the centre of : This cloud is but other shap« ed, â€" including which has a d When A Star Explodes It Shoots Out Gas that Surrour ds It As A Cloud When a star explodes, the blast may last for thirty thousand years, according to Dr. Fred L. Whipple, of Harvard Observatory, who bases his calculations on radial velocities observed in planetary nebulae by Dr. W. W. Campbell and Dr. J. H, Moore, of Lick Obscrvatory. Planâ€" Blast May Last "Despite their great sizeâ€"about seven feet in heightâ€"the Sasâ€" quatch were timid and harm‘ess," Burns said the Indians believe Perhaps Primitive Race "They were believed to be coverâ€" ed with a growth of hair and to live in caves and hollow trees. The legend probably care down fxom the actual existence of some primiâ€" tive race. 1 believe in it myself." Others, Indian Agent J. W. 3 explained, take a milder view Peek in Windows Many Indians take them straight. To hear tell, the Sasquatch wore great hriry degendary creatures that maintain their reputation with an eccasional presont«lay swoop from the mourtains to peek in winâ€" dows or emack down a lone trizes man. You either take the Sasquatch or leave them alone. There is no mid: dle course. An estimated 2,000 from tribes in the province and Washington State converged on a gaily decorated Inâ€" dian village here, bringing grotesâ€" que native masks and costumes. It was Sasquatch Indian Day, and no place for skeptics. HARRISOXN HOT sPRINGS, R.C. â€"â€"Indians of British Columbiaâ€"the home of the Ogopogo, legendary lake«dwelling water snake, and his terrifying saltâ€"water cousin, the sea serpentâ€"paid homage last week to Sasquatch, the hairy ones, B. C. 'l'l::.- In Annual Ritual H | 10 Thak Creatures of Great Size. For 30,009 Years ud of gas spherical en observ x Nebula IPRS i+