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Durham Review (1897), 20 Oct 1938, p. 6

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numbers. For plucking feathers from a live chicken, John Chibwe was sentenced to six months‘ hard laâ€" bor and ten strokes of the lash in N‘dola, South Africa. Philip Shafer, 21, who grew up in Virginia, is writing letters to departments of education in every state of the Union suggesting that teachers stop pulling children‘s ears. The practice, he says, not only develops an inferiority comâ€" plex but ruins one‘s looks. Shaâ€" fer, who blames his failure to land a salesman‘s job on his ears, has arranged to have them sewed "HMitler is obtaining a series of contacts in Canada and the United States," Mr. Ellis declared. "He is also attempting to locate descend. ants of Germans _ now _ living abroad." 7 "Hitler‘s Sucker List" Mr. Ellis warned Canadian radio listeners not to §end photographs or "chatty, newsy" letiers to Gerâ€" many, as requested ou the two shortâ€"wave brcadcasts. "There is no doubt that Adolf Hitler is operating a radio spy sysâ€" tem," Mr. Ellis said. "Anyone who falls for these thinly disguised proâ€" grams aro joining Hitler‘s sucker list." Warning that Hitler is building tremendous list of "contacts," Sam Ellis, chief radio inspector for Onâ€" tario, charges that Germany is conâ€" centrating a shortâ€"wave "radio spy system" on Canada and the United States. Under the guise of "greetings to our listeners," two powerful shortâ€" wave broadcasts emanate from Berâ€" lin daily, he said. On one, the anâ€" nouncer asks for "chatty, newsy" letters; on the other, for entries in a "photographic‘ contest. Chief Radio Inspector For Ontâ€" ario Warns ‘ihat Germany Is Concentrating A Shortâ€"Wave "Radio Spy System" On Us Nazi Spy System Seen In Canada His understanding was the negoâ€" tiations had not reached the stage of settlement. Under no cireumstances â€" would Ontario permit the International Kailway Company to construct a new honeymoon bridge. The comâ€" pany, which owned the Falls View bridge, has announced its intention ol replacing it. ‘It‘s pretty hard to beat a goyvâ€" ernment," Premier Hepburn comâ€" mented. He said the Government could expropriate the company‘s property on the Canadian side if it desired. Negotiations were proceeding beâ€" tween the New Yorkâ€"Ontario comâ€" mission and the International Railâ€" way Company "to make possible the construction of a new bridge by the commission," he added. Istanbul, Turkey, may ban mes for streets and substitute Prezier Hepburn Says the New Structure to be Built by Ontâ€" ar‘o and New York New Car Miarkers Are Easily Read Plan New Bridge Below The Falls Manufactured in the shops of Guelph Reformatory, where their predecessors have been turned out for several years, the new plates will carry the same heavy enamel and high gloss of past markers. Motorists will not likely find 1939 markers available until much later this year than last, he said, and it is intimated the new plates might not be distributed until after Jan. 1. The artistic has given way comâ€" pletely to the utilitarian in Ontarâ€" lo‘s selection of a color scheme for next year‘s markers, with white serial numbers on a jet black back. ground replacing the current pale blue and paler rose combination. And yet in many respects the new plates are more artistic than any combination of more delicate hues in the past. They are certainly more legible. Available Much Later TORONTO.â€"The question of liâ€" cense plate visibility, subject of so many grsty storms of controversy in 1938, appears to have been ush;, ered right out of the picture for next year at least. judging by a preview of the 1939 motor vehicle markers given by the Department of Highways here. Ortario 1939 License Plates Will Have White Numerak On Black Background Sensitive Ears w York State an f Ontario. ‘vr no cireumstal » permit the I y Company to meymoon bridge H 1 I in the shops of 1atory, â€"where their ive been turned out irs, the new plates same heavy enamel e, which ra River collapse replaced nmission the Proâ€" 17. And as he said these things, all his adversaries were put to shame: and all the multitude reâ€" joiced for all the glorious things that were done by him. P 15. But the Lord answered him, and said, Ye hypocrites, doth not each one of you on the sabbath loose his ox or his ass from the stall, and lead him away to waterâ€" ing? 16. And ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan had bound, lo, these eighteen years, to have been loosed from this bond on the day of the sabbath? Jesus asks two questions, the answers to which are beyond question. The argument i# cumuâ€" lative: the woman, a human being, over against the ox and the ass, mere beasts. was a stickler for the strict legalâ€" istic interpretation of the law acâ€" cording to the traditions of the faâ€" thers. , 13. And he laid his hands upon her: and immediately she was made straight. and glorified God. From him (through the laying on of hands) there streamed into her the currents of a new life, so that the bands, spiritual and bodily, by which sho was held, were loosened. 14. And the ruler of the synaâ€" zogue, being moved with indignaâ€" tion because Jesus had healed on the sabbath, answered and said to the multitude, There are six days in which men ought to work:; in them therefore come and be healed, and not on the day of the sabbath. He was one of those Pharisees who 11. And hebold, a woman that had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years; and she was bowed together, and could in no wise lift herself up. 12. And when Jesus saw her, he called her, and said to her, Woman, thow art loosed from thine infirmtiy. Luke 13:10â€"17. 10. And he was teaching in one of the synagogues on the sabbath day. No man is ever so good or so wise that he can afford to remain away from church. We here discover that the Lord was acknowledged to be one worthy of expounding the Scriptures in the synagogue. But, if we are agreed that the Sunday is to be a day of rest, it is still more essential for us to under. stand that it must be a holy not an ignoble rest. To work and to rest alternately, with a certain average proportion of time devoted to each, is prescribâ€" ed to man by the conditions of his physical wellâ€"being. To attain the ends of his existence upon earth and maintain his powers in healthâ€" ful exercise, a large amount of laâ€" bor, with cortain intervals for rest intercalated in the time devoted to labor, is universally indispensable. 10. But the seventh day is a sabâ€" bath unto Jehovah thy God; in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manâ€"servant, nor thy maidâ€"servant, nor thy cattie, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates. Rest and dedication to God are the properâ€" tieg here assigned to the Sabbath. 11. For in six days Jehovah made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the sevâ€" enth day: wherefore Jehovah blessâ€" ed the sabbath day, and hallowed it. The reference here is to Gen. 2:1â€"3. do wo 13 sist, and, ply mean work. wo 8. Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy. The Fourth Comâ€" mandment is distinct from others in a number of ways. In the preâ€" ceding three commandments, man, as it were, is spoken to individually as regards his relationships to God. In the last six comandments he is spoken to as a member of society, regarding his relationships to other people. In the Fourth Commandâ€" ment both of these ideas are found tozether. The word "Sabbath" is from a root meaning to break off, or to deâ€" sist, and, therefore, originally, simâ€" nly meant a time of cessation from OUR DAY OF REST Exodus 20:8â€"11; Isaiah 58:13,14; Luke 13:10â€"17; Galatians 4:8â€"11; Colossions 2:16; Revelations 1:10 Printed Text, Ex. 20:8â€"11; Luke 13:10â€"411. # THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.â€"The later prophecies of Isaiah were uttered somewhere near 698 B.C. The incident record. ed in Luke‘s Gospel occurred in Deâ€" cember, A.D. 29. The epistle to the Galatians was written A.D. 60; the epistle to the Colossians A.D. 64; and the bock of Revelation A.D. 90 or A.D. 95. Place.â€"The incident recorded in Luke‘s Gospel occurred in Peraea on the eastern side of the Jordan River. Galatia was a large pro vince in Asia Minor at the time Paul wrote. The city of Colossae was located in the southern part of Asia Minor; the island of Patmos is located in the Aegcan Sea opposite the southâ€"western coast of Asia Minor. 9. Six days shalt thou labor, and o all thy work. It is generally orgotten in reciting or . speaking bout the seventh day that there ; as distinct a command here to rork as there is to cease from Sunday School Lesson LESSON IV Contrary to the seasonal trend in 1936 and 1937, when opcrations for September showed a marked drop compared with August, total loans for September this year exâ€" ceeded August by $209,291, an inâ€" crease of 20 per cent. Loans up to September 30 totalled $23,426,259, providing housing accommodation for 5,911 families in 215 communiâ€" ties throughout the Dominion. None In Alberta Total loans by provinces up to September 30 and number of units in brackets follow: Prince Edward Island $59,634 (11); Nova Scotia $1,698,563 (395); New â€" Brunswick $465,627 (109); Quebec $5,993,281 (1,308); Ontario $11,073,676 (2,844); Manitoba $745,583 (173); Saskatchâ€" ewan $18,100 (5); Alberta, nil; British Columbia $3,371,795 (1,066). POPâ€"When Beast and Man Go Hungry The Department of Finance has announced loans under the Nationâ€" al Housing Act in September totalâ€" led $1,240,695, providing housing accommodation for 338 families, compared with $552,450 for 134 faâ€" milies in September last year. Housing Loans Show Increase Margaret Gillies shows the difâ€" ference between this year‘s "inâ€" visible" Ontario license plates and the new 1989 reflecting markers. The new plates are made with a white on black color scheme. Exâ€" perimentally, thousands of tiny glass crystals have been blown into the paint to reflect light and make them visible at a great disâ€" tance and at night. Doctors‘ cars only will use the exporimental plates till they have been proved efficacious. Then we may all have them on our cars. LIFE‘S LIKE THAT "Do you think you could do anything with Towser?" RACE HORSESs sELOOM ONTARIO ARCHIVES The center of the British indusâ€" try is now, as apparently it always has been, at Brandon in Suffolk, writes a correspondent of "The Christian Science Monitor." One wonders if it is a freak inâ€" dustry and kept going only for sentimental _ reasons. However, It may seem strange that there should still be carried on in the heart of rural England that prehisâ€" toric industry of flint knapping. The chipping and fashioning of flints into implements and weapons is an art which is said to date back to the Stone Age, to have had its orâ€" igin possibly 10,000 years ago. Prehistoric Industry of Chipping and Fashioning Pieces Conâ€" tinues in Britain after 10,000 Years. Flint Knapping Since Stone Age Rogers new 1989 "Superâ€"Value" Radios contribute many new feaâ€" tures for convenience, including easier, quicker and more accurâ€" ate tuningâ€"but most important is their _ exclusive _ six _ individual spreadâ€"band dials. Unly one dial is visible at a time on this new Canadian radio so that there can be no question as to what band is being tunde. This is an innovation in radio setsâ€"just as Rogers was the first successful batteryless radio in the world! "SILVER THEATRE" Margaret Sullavan, one of the leading emotional actresses of â€" _ CBS VARIETY PROGRAM â€" Jack Haley, jovial singing comedian inaugurated his own variety program over‘ the Columâ€" bia network on Friday, October 14; (WABCâ€"CBS, 7.30 to 8.00 p.m., EST). He was supported by Lucille Ball, young screen comâ€" medienne who starred opposite the Marx Brothers in their curâ€" rent film success; Virginia Verâ€" rill, bewitching blues singer, and Ted Fiorito‘s Orchestra. Jack Haley RADIO CONVENIENCES EAr gfi THE DAY BaFome 3 o A RACE . PoP./ 3 3c« > > Are You Listening ' By FREDDIE TEZ C * By Fred Neher Haley is a Bosâ€" tonian, born and bred. â€" Broadway success blazed a trail to Hollyâ€" wood for him, and his brilliant portrayal of the ambitious _ but mikeâ€"struck singâ€" er in the Winchâ€" ellâ€"Bernie vehicle "Wake Up and Live", led to raâ€" dio stardom. SASKATOON. â€"Herb Buckle, jeweler, doesn‘t know why, but he‘s observed that oneâ€"third of the watches brought in for repairs have stopped between 12 midnight and 3 o‘clock in the morning; also his business picks up immediately after a thunderstorm. Just when andirons were first made in the American colonies is hard to say, but those of wronght iron were probably produced for local needs almost as soon as the first blacksmiths set up their forâ€" ges. For two centuries American homes were dependent for both cooking and heating on woodâ€"burnâ€" ing fireplaces, writes Thomas Hamâ€" ilton Ormsbee in "American Colâ€" lector." Andirons were essential and must have been part of the necessary equipment brought over by the first settlers, although no specific mention is made of them. We do find in the inventory of Govâ€" ernor Winthrop‘s estate, dated Febâ€" ruary 17, 1649, "2 pairs andironsâ€" one pound, ten shillings." Four years later a list of the household furnishings of Captain Tyng, of Boston, includes "a great paire of Brass andirons." Andirons Once To Cooking On This Continent When Woodâ€"Burning Fireâ€" places Were In General There are many parts of the world where flints are still requirâ€" ed, and each year more than 100,â€" 000 specially worked gun flints are exported to the tropics. They go mostly to the traders at Lagos, on the west coast of Africa, or else to China or Malaya, and the tradâ€" ers in turn barter them to the naâ€" tives. The natives use these flints eiâ€" ther to cause the spark and ignite the nowder in an old flintlock gun or else to give the spark in an old UNUS: 404 used «of a.e digating. flint knapping is still a commercial undertaking and is a means of liveâ€" lihood. There is no competition and, indeed, the knappers lament that they cannot keep pace with the orders. ‘A miniature death mask of Naâ€" poleon, taken from an original which was made in 1834, is the latest addition to the unique colâ€" lection of miniatures which form part of the Major Bowes exhibit in the Chrysler Building in New York. Smallest items in the collecâ€" tion are four animals, a panda, a leopard, an elephant and a bear, each carved out of a peach pit. Musical instruments exhibited inâ€" clude a Dutch silver violin scarceâ€" ly three inches long and a wooden violin, with case, five inches in length. Margaret "Shopworn _ Anâ€" Sullavan gel", So Red the Rose", and "Little Man What Now." both stage and screen, brought her remarkable talentsâ€" to the radio when she took the starring rolé in the "Silver Theatre" proâ€" duction heard over the Columbia network, Sunday, October 9th. (WABCâ€"CBS, 6.00 to 6.30 p.m., EST.) Night Watch Were Essential BOWES TROPHY Use as the star of "Stage _ Door." Her best known movies have inâ€" cluded _ "Three Comrades," "Shopworn â€" Anâ€" gel", So Red the Miss Sullavan was supported by a large cast of well known Holâ€" lywood actors and _ actresses. Miss Sullavan‘s leading â€" success on the stage in recent years was Thule, Greenland, one of the world‘s northernmost | permanent settlements, about 350 miles north of the Arctic Circle, now is for the first time under the direct control of the Danish government, which holds sovercign rights over all of Greenland, and has actively govâ€" erned much of the coast. Thule Is 350 Miles North of the Arctic Circleâ€"Population 311, Ruled By Denmark mineral. 25 Soft food. 27 Before. 29 Every. 31 Blemish. 82 Social insect 34 Composition for nine instruments Arctic Outpost Of Greenland "For instance," he said, "the othâ€" er day near Hamilton a man was given quite a heavy sentence for ‘cutting in‘ on the road. Formerly he would have got off, Sentences also have been stiffened against vagrants and stiffer sentences also are being given for offences under the Highway Traffic Act and under the Criminal Code for drunken driâ€" vers." ornament. 20 Drunkards. 22 Measure 23 Pomace of grapes. 24 Velvetâ€"black Nixon said the increased prison population should occasion no al arm since it arose from imposition of more severe terms. twitchings. 18 Common liquid. 19 Dress Provincial Secretary Harry Nixon said last week the prison farm near the Northern Ontario mining cenâ€" tre of Sudbury gradually was beâ€" coming an "Alcatraz" because of the recent plan of sending the more serious "repeaters" there. The farm population now is at an allâ€"time high of 670. 13 To relieve. 14 Assembly. 16 Uncommon 17 Spasmodic TORONTO.â€"The new policy of seeking imposition of heavier senâ€" tences and prison terms for offenâ€" ces formerly not regarded so seriâ€" ously is converting the big provinâ€" cial industrial farm at Burwash inâ€" to the "Alcatraz" of Ontario. Prison Terms in Ontario _ Are Being Given More Often Now for Offences Formerly Not Thought So Serious Population With Stiffer Penalties National Insignia house. * 8 R’uâ€"t; 56 Wrath. 9 Alms box. 57 Its president. 10 Genus of lettuce. 49 Like an oaf. 52 Hat material 55 Minister‘s compress 44 Thought, 46 Proverb. 47 Kind of 88 Greater slope.58 Coffee is its 41 Pardises. chief â€"â€", 42 Derby > VERTICAL 43 To twist and 1 Wager. compress, 2 To lift up. AA MM.illlaca 1tm G |E/HIRU _ IN|G/E |R] feemess ago"> 95 |OIL!C NS |IMIE IL L. N 1 DE |A) |E Injp ClE S $ L| 1 S |TEN!S| E[!ll[ J[[gg gl]i[!g ENIN LCRA agba mgflfiv 0"‘ Bn E |E |H E D IIIBIQB RIE| S P|O|N e ks B /A] E] 1 |M, E /NEJR]c YJ Y THU 1TITIE iR 3 Kind of cravat 39 Pastry. 4 Relish. 40 Finish. 5 Legal rule. 45 Byâ€"product of 6 To love to a fire. excess, 48 Bones. 7 Goddess of 50 Eucharist Chile will permit the importaâ€" tion of wheat only under Governâ€" ment licence. While Thule‘s population growth has not been impressive, the vilâ€" lage has become important as a trading and missionary station for a vast region of northwestern Greenland and the headquarters and starting point for sevoral imâ€" portant Arctic expeditions. Discovered By Rasmussen Since its discovery by the Danâ€" ish explorer, Knud Rasmussen, on the first Thule expedition in 1912â€" ‘13, it has been uynder an autonoâ€" mous government by native huntâ€" ers. The explorer set up this local government, a system that until the recent action of the Danish govâ€" ernment was succossfully operated in the remote Arctic outpost. Thule is a village of about 311 inhabitants, nearly all Eskimos, sitâ€" uated on the southern shore of Wolâ€" stenholme Fjord off Bafiin Bay, says the National Geographic Society., Arthur W. Rocbuck, K.C., forâ€" mer member of the Hepburn Cabâ€" inet, who, it is rumored may reâ€" tire from provincial politics and seek a seat in the Federal House. By J. MILLAR WATT May Try For Ottawa 51 Distant 53 To sin 54 Lion. 38 Street. America. 31 Threatening 33 Appalling. 35 Queer, 36 Born. 37 Sound of surprise, 23 country in Ino 3 Tm y he declared "We have to provid mre safety of the pu tend these fairs," Chio! A. R. Routledge told tm Will have accideonts w protection is given. 1i been fencing at the tra: ‘h'. eontrolled the run: LONDONX, â€" aA that "all race io: least from the tw until the turn ; stand on both sid: K a Coromner‘s j e death of Bow ©5, prominent 114 business man, w the Thorndale Fa: & running horse « hm-'-y Into Death dale Fair Brines dation From Jods Would Fenc All Race erous lak landing 1 summer a Apart 1 moeans of supplies . the airpla in Canada work and in largo tered clial ; year freig) minin parts ecarric &nery morth and t! new ; ed up due t« trans; rich i mi f1 1 In In tu OQ sph Hemisph Biggest mi Wh whole some prime in Bs ties a ham, Por #ays the W Held 1 time due export n ples fro; fruit bel: Ei Southwestorn Export to ipp Wor O( As Markets of rld‘s

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