West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 Nov 1938, p. 3

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unq Single Jobless Plants breathe just as human beâ€" ings do. Under daylight conditions they consume carbon dioxide so help to nurify the air. The metaâ€" bolism of a plant, however, is deâ€" pendent upon the amount of light it receives, for it requires the energy of sunshine to convert the carbon dioxide from the air and the water which it takes up through its roots into starches. Stop Breathing Carbon Monoxide When dusk comes the plant stops "eating" and thus does not require any carbon dioxide. It continues to breathe, however, and in this breathing process it actually conâ€" sumes oxygen. During the night, then, it does nothing to purify the air of carbon dioxide, while at the same time it uses oxygen which is vital to human beings. "I am just a songâ€"andâ€"dance man who, though his chassis may be a little bent, can still shake a Teg." McGill Savants Confirm Belief Flowers Should Be Removed From Sickroom at Nightfall Science has justiied the old practice of removing plants from a sickâ€"room at night. The explana. tion comes from McGill University. Britain Is Seeking Trained Canâ€" adiars for Service In Air Reâ€" search hono phys Plants At Night f wBCnings JCCin Fop En~l» Of Hamilton, who is a likely canâ€" didate for the leadership of the Ontario Conservative Party. Hants MAYOR WILLIAM MORRISON Unemployed single men who have no homes and are unable to claim municipal relief will be absorbed on Ontario farms under provisions of the _ Dominionâ€"Provincial _ youth training scheme, Hon. Eric Cross, provincial welfare minister, said. Under Youth Training Scheme The project will be directed by A. Maclaren, who placed more than 4,000 younrg men on farms under similar circumstances from 1928 to 1935 while superintendent of the Norval hostel at Glenbrae Farm at Goorgetown. Only unemployed transients now in Toronto will benefit by the plan at present, Mr. Cross said, but if the measure is successful it likely will be applied in other sections of the province. Men wanting farm employment have been ordered to register at the Toronto office of the labor department and they will be placed in order of registration. The minister said the program would involve young men from 16 to 30 years of age and would be carried out entirely under direction of the labor department. Unemployed in Ontario Who Steal Our Oxygen T1 li al Provircial Welfare Minister Announces Have No Homes Will Be ind To Go On Farms May Enter the Race e British Air Ministry has adâ€" the National Defense Departâ€" of Ottawa that there is a wide open in Great Britain for Caâ€" n university graduates with _ degrees in engineering or ces or with research and pracâ€" engineering training. Candidates Physically Fit e air ministry said it would be isz to consider applications for ntment for Air Miristry reâ€" h at the Royal Aircraft Estabâ€" ient, _ Sou t h â€" Farnborough, P Aged 16 to unemployed . tr )nto will benefi sent, Mr. Cross idates should be physically flying and willing to fly as rs. I{f appointed from Canâ€" y are required to pay their ssage to the United Kingâ€" d also the return passage if e unsatisfactory. â€"Fred Stone 30 *A h REers Cheerful Service 41. And whosoever shall compel thee to go one mile, go with him two. Christ‘s counsel is: Do not submit to the inevitable in a slavâ€" ish, â€" sullen _ spirit, _ harboring thoughts of revolt. Do the service cheerfully and more than you are asked. The counsel is larâ€"reachâ€" ing, covering the case of the Jewâ€" ish people, subject to the Roman yoke, and of slaves serving hard masters. 42. Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would 40. And if any man would go to law with thee, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also. The idea here is that if a man, for security, or in payment of something due, should demand before the court one‘s inner coat, it being presumed that this was about all that the man had, inâ€" stead of being revengeful or furiâ€" ous or rebellious about it, the man should let him have his cloak also, which here, undoubtedly, denotes the outer garment, a large, loose robe. The teaching of the whole passâ€" age concerns the nature of our animosity toward other men. Murâ€" der is only the final fruit of a hateful, revengeful spirit. What our Lord is getting at is not the prevention of a murder but the utter cleansing of the heart of all those passions which so ecasily arise in the injustices and animosiâ€" ties of life, as we mingle among other people, that make our hearts to be aflame with revenge, with a desire to do evil to others. 23. If therefore thou art offerâ€" ing thy gift at the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee, 24. leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way, first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift. A man cannot have hatred toward a fellow man, live in sin with some other perâ€" son, and ever think that he can be right with God while these things continue. 25. Agree with thine adversary quickly, while thou art with him in the way; lest haply the adverâ€" sary deliver thee to the judge, and the judge deliver thee to the offiâ€" cer, and thou be cast into prison. 26. Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thor have paid the last farthing. Cf. Luke 12: 58. Acâ€" cording to the Roman law the plaintiff could carry the accused with him before the judge; the deâ€" fendant might settle the matter on any terms while they were on the way, but after the tribunal was reached the thing must go acâ€" cording to law. Matt. 5: 38â€"42. 38. Ye have heard that it was said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth. The Old Testament teaching to which our Lord here refers is found in Ex. 21: 24; Lev. 24: 20; Deut. 19: 21. 39. But I say unâ€" to you. Resist not him that is evil; but whosoever smiteth thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. This is not a fight, but simply the expression of one person‘s desire to shame, or inâ€" sult, or anger one against whom he has a grudge. The person so struck, according to our Lord‘s teaching, is not to strike back, for that would mean that he has beâ€" come angry, and in doing so sins. Our Lord is not condemning or forbidding the right of selfâ€"deâ€" fense, either personal or national. Matt. 5: 21â€"26. 21. We have heard that it was said to them of old time, Thou shall not kill; and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment: 22. but I say unto you, that every one who is angry with his brother shall be in danger of the judgment; and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council; and whosoever shall say, Thou {col!, shall be in danger of the hell of fire. "Raca" expresses contempt for a man‘s head, "You stupid"‘ "Fool" expresses conâ€" tempt for his heart and character, "You Scoundrel!" The regular use of such opprobrious epithets Jesus regards as the supreme ofâ€" fense against the law of humanity. Place. â€" The Ten Commandâ€" ments were given on Mount Sinâ€" THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING ai. We do not know the particular mountain _ from _ which Jesus preached this famous sermon. 13. Thou shalt not kill. The English Revised Version makes the verse to read more accurately, "Thou shalt do no murder." LESSON VII f THE SACREDNESS OF HUMAN LIFE Exodus 20: 13; Matthew 5: 21â€"26, $8â€"42 Golden Text Thou shalt not kill. Exodus 20: 13. Whosoever hateth his brothâ€" er is a murderer. I John 3: 15. Time. â€" The Ten Commandâ€" ments were given 1498 B.C.; the Sermon on the Mount was preachâ€" ed by our Lord in the early sumâ€" mer of A.D. 28. Sunday School * Lesson ~â€" "Suicide Car" Precedes Trains In Warring Palestine The livestock raising picture is changing materially, and the horse of the future will be bred for qualâ€" ities of stamina and endurance now common to the mule. Won‘t Need Grooming This prediction was made last week to a meeting of the Windsor Liong Club by Prof. J. C. Steckley, head of the Ridgetown experimental farm. Prof, Steckley pointed out that more and more livestock, especially in Canada, is being raisâ€" ed for purely commercial purposes. "The hysteria for swing music and the hopping, grimacing dances that go with it," he warned, "will pay its adherents with thick ankles, broken maladjusted feet, and an exhausted nervous system, unless they recognize its dangers. . . . And Sluggish Minds "The Big Apple uses many difâ€" ferent muscles, putting them to a stress and strain for which, in most cases, they are not prepared. These dances are violen. exercise, and reâ€" quire as much training and as good physical condition as tennis, basâ€" ketball, swimming and similar sports." If a person wished to dance the Big Apple, Mr. Ward advised, the heart should be tested, muscles should be gradually conditioned, and regular care given to the body. He said the dances are throwâ€" backs to the war and religious dances of primitive tribes. Head of Ridgetown Experimenâ€" tal Farm Predicts It Will Be More Selfâ€"Reliant, Looking After Itself "The horse of the future will be the horse that can take care of itâ€" selfâ€"the horse that can get along without the grooming and attention needed now," he expert said. Livestock, especially the horse, long has had an intimate connecâ€" tion with man in peace as well as war, he said. borrow of thee turn not thou away. But to give everything to everyone, the sword to the madman, the alms to the imâ€" poster, would be to act as the enâ€" emy of others and ourselves. Ours should be a higher and deeper charity, flowing from those inner springs of love. Dancing to swing music causes sluggish minds and thick ankles, warned E. A. Ward, immediate past president of the American Osteoâ€" pathic Association, in an interview. Horse Of Future More Like Mule Exhausted Nerves Are Also The Penalty of Dancing to Modâ€" ern Music, Osteopath Says Swing Brings Thick Ankles POPâ€"When Money Goes to a Woman‘s Head More important than the "cow catcher" as an obstacle remover for Palestine trains is this "suicide car". Manned by a picked band of dareâ€" devils it precedes trains looking for land mines, weakened bridges and barricaded tracks. The work is extremely dangerous as mining of railâ€" roads is a favorite trick of the Arab terrorists. Game Warden Harold Bailey of Gore Bay complained that even exâ€" plosives failed to daunt the beavers. Dynamite Doesn‘t Daunt Them "I‘ve been using dynamite to blow out the worst dams, but it‘s no vse. The beavers build them up again as soon as I‘m out of sight," he said. Game wardons in the Manitoulin Island district have been compellâ€" ed to resort to dynamite to destroy dams made by a colony of beavers in the west end of the island. In one case beavers flooded a road at Spring Bank to such a depth that children were obliged to use a rowâ€" boat to get to school. PLAYING SAFE Although Richard Crooks knows by heart most of the numbers he sings on NBC‘s Voice of Firestone concerts he invariably carries all his music to the NBC studios. He keeps such songs before him on a music rack, switching the piece just finished to the bottom of the pile. Game wardons in the Island district have be ed to resort to dynamite dams made by a colony "The more variety there is in your life, the more you have to draw vpon in presenting a wide range of types on the air."â€"Helene Dumas of NBC‘s Jane Arden proâ€" gram. Bob Hawk, left, and John B. Kennedy, widely known news commentator and writer, conduct the new "People‘s Rally," 3:30 to 4 p. m., EST, Sundays, over WLW and the Mutual Broadcast= ing System. Listeners are asked to express opinions on current problems as well as the studio audience. ** Beavers Flood Scholars Out Pupils in Manitoulin Island Disâ€" trict Had To Row To School Because of Beaver Dam Conduct Rally Are =&â€"_~â€"_~__.l THERE! L WAS AFRAD You Listening By FREDDIE TEE THiS THING CALLED "SPREADâ€"BAND"? The 1929 DeForest Crosley "Muâ€" sic Master" DelLuxe Radios have the new "Spreadâ€"Band" dials which simplify shortâ€"wave and particuâ€" larly foreignâ€"station tuning as the different "channels" have been spread out so that at least 10 times as much space on the dial, is deâ€" voted to each band (or channel), It makes foreign reception now a realityâ€"sure and certain. Radio listeners are indebted to Mr. H. G. Wells for the "thriller", as produced by Columbia Broadcastâ€" ing System on Sunday night, reâ€" cently. It‘s a good thing those comets and planets were falling on Princeton, New Jersey, instead of Callendar, Ontarioâ€"then we would really have had something to worâ€" ry about in Canada. Since Robert Ripley announced on his NBC program that he would leave soon on a tour of the world to continue his search for more ‘‘Believeâ€"Itâ€"Orâ€"Not" facts he has received nearly 5,000 letters from men in all walks of life asking to be taken along. Dentists, lawyers, physicians and men in other proâ€" fessions have offered to wash clothes, scrub decks or act as chef or secretary in return for the privâ€" ilege of accompanying Mr. Ripley on his forthcoming venture. Oddest request came from a Trenton, New Jersey, aan who asked to be taken along in order that he might win the hand of his girl friend. What Does Today‘s Young Man Want? Specifically, what are some of the qualities the upâ€"toâ€"twentyâ€"five young men are looking for in fuâ€" ture marriage partners? Here‘s the answer, in Mrs. Gertrvude Chambers‘ opinion: "They want her to be attractive looking. Smartness gets as much attention with today‘s young men as prettiness. "They want a wife who will share their enthusiasms. "They want a healthy wife. (They know continual doctor bills wreck any budge.. "They want a wife who has enough personality to impress friends. "They want a wife who can unâ€" derstand what they are talking about when they discuss business, (If her ideas are good, they‘ll even say ‘Thanks" when they borrow them.) how or is capable o stretch a dollar. "They want to ma who will make a go side of marriage. "Many of them f1 want a wife who can pay check, for a whil Mrs. Chambers | th should not resent st For meeting them girl on her toes. "In fact," she say attitude is a healthy way around. It is I man, better for the gi foundation for marria Mrs. should For n girl on In A Future Marriage Partner High hecls and pie mean shorter life, says Dr. Sara Janâ€" son, of Chicago. She believes it is possible to live 100 or 120 years, but "no one has a right to expect it if she will wear high heels, eat pie, stay up later than 10 p.m. and drink less than ten glasses of water each day. We have no right to ask for years if we are unwilling to take care of the body." High Heels Maan Sho "They WANT TO JOIN RIPLEY THANKS, MR. WELLS "Healthy Attitude â€" want. a wife wh toes. * she say: a healthy L: Jt 18 4 >CIis, FI1Ee, Shorter Life marry go of says hy one better girl, an of age who knows learning to and a the this brat e se o * ces as > «â€"WQoUuLo G0 TO HER all for woman _ social new the _ the good Scarlet fever had dropped from 700 to a mere 57 per 1,000,000 in the last 50 years, and in the same period typhoid had declined from 320 to four and infant mortality from 150 per 1,000 to 57 per 1,000. Shovld the present rate of deâ€" crease be maintained, Britain should be entirely rid of tubercuâ€" losis by 1960, Sir Edward Mellanby, secretary of the British Medical Reâ€" search Council, told the Canadian Club at Montreal last week. In the last 80 years, he said, the tuberculosis death rate in Britain had dropped from 3,500 per 1,000; 000 of population to 700, poem. 22 Half an em. 23 Colored gem. 25 Timber tree. 27 Negative. 28 Banal. 29 English titles 31 To hasten. 33 Barrier. 34 Imitated. 36 To bow 37 Genus of freshâ€"water ducks. 39 God of sky. 40 Within. 41 Exists. 42 You and 1. 44 South 41 Exists. name, courtesy 42 You and 1. 61 Wand. 9 Sun god. 44 South 62 He was a 10 Small are: Carolina. native â€"â€". _ 11 Side bone 46 Refuse matter 63 He was one of 12 Principal opening. 14 To help. 16 Opera melody 17 To atound. 18 Heron, 20 Narrative 1, 8 19th century musical composer, 13 Tiny skin LIFE‘S LIKE THAT HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 15 Degrades ‘"Henry‘s going to teach the birds to use that bath if it‘s the last thing he does!" â€" & Musical Genius place. 60 Assumed from pressed grapes, 48 Custom. 50 Feminine treble voice 52 To devour. 53 Merchants. 57 Neither. 58 Sheltered V /E )R WBR P@‘E G s T 1P 1OE n 1/ fie T N1 /S /H URTE the â€"â€" 33 A lure. composers of _ 35 Being. last century. _ 38 Exchanges. 43 To sin. VERTICAL 45 Rhythm, 2 To unclose. 46 Telegraphic 3 Garden too!. code. {Coat of mail. 47 Indian boat. 5 Compass point 49 Auction. 6 Bird of prey. 50 Gunlock catch, 7 Title of 51 Bows. courtesy 54 Hasterd, 9 Sun god. 55 Morindin dye. 10 Small area. 56 To excavate. 11 Side bone. 59 Type standard 12 Principal 61 Right EGASUS o By Fred Ncher ~~Mree Pirs oiaey T1 Armed with sixfoot bows and steelâ€"tipped twentyâ€"cightâ€" inch arrows, Arnold Wyttenâ€" bach, Jack Austin and Phil Sauve, of Toronto, accompanied Chuck Austin, prominent Onâ€" tario airman, on a mooseâ€"huntâ€" ing expedition into the woods west of Gogama this month. They used bows which were made of hickory, lemonâ€"wood and Texas osageo orangeâ€" wood. The twentyâ€"ecightâ€"inch arrows they used wore made from B.C. fir. By J. MILLAR WATT 1J E11 16. wufi TJC 17 He struggled to acquire fine â€"â€" on the piano. 18 To sup. 19 Hair ornament 21 He was well= liked as an orchestra â€"â€"â€"â€", 24 3.1416, 26 Railroad. 28 To scaiter. 30 Mineral spring 32 Electrified particle. 83 A lure. 35 Being. 38 Exchanges 43 To sin. 45 Rhythm,

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