West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 29 Feb 1940, p. 7

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EW NORGE CAL DEALER‘S NC â€"NERVE $ FEEINE â€" NCR uB *40, So prosperous is the business that the "Brown Windowâ€"Shutting Service" has taken on a publicity man, â€" Sophomore Bob Elliott, whose work is devising such quips as "When icy blasts how! through vyour room, eithor side of your bed is the wrong side to get out of;" or "You ean‘t help but start the day off? on the wrong foot if both For a dime a week he bustles into the rcoms of his clients shortâ€" ly after 5 a.m. daily and slams down the windows. Sophomore Dick Brown has takâ€" en over the work and worry for male students at Green Mountain State Teachers College, Poultney, Vt. W indowâ€"Shutting Service Prospers Be Good ... UDoctor Advises Women To Avoid Excessss and Seifâ€"Induigence M New Rule Helps Man On Mound y i6 Sasebail Reillef has been a long time comâ€" « for ine basoball pitcher, and he s taken some hard knocks in the ist 20 years, but the elders of the me at last aro in a mood to help m stand off the batters. Moeting in Bellcair, Fla., last eek the rules committee voted to ow pitchers to rear back and ke anothor complete step as they liver the ball. That is the first iliy important move toward help z the hurler that has been made sco the ruleâ€"makers began abotâ€" hing frea‘; deliveries back in M The complexion reflects the exâ€" es and indulgences and poor ience of living vyery quickly, and md the point which can be disâ€" od o~ corrected by cosmeties." ave frozer.‘ lthough only geventeen, lla Casse of Lake Louise, Alta., wizard on skiis, She beat skiâ€" mpicn â€" Gertie Wepsala, the ving Finn" in 1988, and now is racing down her native hilis he Canadian Rockies, preparâ€" for the Dominion Ski Champâ€" ip meet to be held at Mourt quay, Banff, February 28 to sMETICS CAN‘T CORRECT 1 ‘bail Pitcher May Now 1 Another Complete Step in Delivery Wizard On Skis, 17 (hool, women would obtain a iot ults in the care of their n," he said, "if more tiine t in organizing life on a isure adequate sleep, ade loor exercise, a well bal . proper fluid intake, and ionic considerations. n . It I% | o«metic 1th, Dr. | an addre Be Beautiful (% EG FREEDOM the rule was a vie _ Griffto, â€" veteran nators manager who irs has been carryâ€" us campaign for the hab urler previously vith both brogans now (in the case can stretch his chind him during ake a long, comâ€" : swings through is of iiving are foolish to supâ€" will maintain Perry C. Baird, oss at Harvard Photo Take lla iY March 1, 8 pm., CFRB, Kaio Smith Hour . . . 8:00 pm., CBY, Canada‘s Merchantmen . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Waitz Time . . . 10:45 p.m., CBL, CBY, Dominion Election Broadcast . . . March 2, 2:00 p.m,, CBL, CBY, Metropolitan Opera Co. . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Hockey Rioad . . There will be three famous crooners on the NBC network, in a row on Thursday nights, Dick Powâ€" ell on the Good News series at 9:00 o‘clock; Rudy Valloo in his new series beginning at 9:30; and Bing Crosby at 10. Only Bing Crosby will be heard on the Canadian netâ€" work . . . Sunday and Tuesday nights, according to the latest ofâ€" ficlal surveys, are currently radio‘s best listening nights, Thursdays and Friday‘s take third and fourth place. Brian Aherne will be the guest star on the Kate Smith Hour on March 1, over CFRB at 8 o'c!ock x + Much to everybody‘s regret Good News leaves the Canadian airwaves on February 29th. On Thursday, the Tth of March, the CBC will replace the 9 to 10 show with a Dominion Election broadcast from 9:00 to 9:30 and "Entertainment for the Troops" from 9:30 to 10:00. NOTES AND NEWS CBC‘s "Children‘s Scrapbook" de signed for young listeners and heard every Saturday from 12:30 to 1:00 p.m. is the latest Canadian program to be invited to become an international exchange feature on the Mutual Broadcasting Sysâ€" tem. Canadian boys and girls will now be joined by their Amorican cousins in opening the pages of the big book to which a new chapter is added every week by Authoress Mary Grannan. Then begins a half hour of adventure, music, nature study and onâ€"theâ€"spot broadcasts with commentator Austin Willis speaking direct from the point at which the actuality is to be preâ€" sented. GOLDEN TEXTâ€"This do in remembrance of me. 1 Cor. 11; 24. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Timeâ€"The plotting of the Jexâ€" ish authorities and the selling of the Master by Judas took place on Tuesday, April 4, A.D. 30. The passover and the Lord‘s Supper IN THE UPPER ROOM.â€"Mat thew 26; 1â€"30. 30 .1":\.% the t'ugn'n:al cortege of C;magla’s be}ovcd late Governorâ€"General, Lord Tweedsmuir, approached the llia;‘!l‘!:la‘xnent.bL‘uld'um.:". high dignitaries waited on Senate house steps, at Ottawa. In front are pictured, LiEL to ,J*“";”Sll Lyman Duff, administrator; Prime Minister King, Hon. Alastair Buchan, youngest son SnE stindiinns, P ons + eilite ty inie? Prvadmniar tciachs ds nds Wlb Asichin lrictaisti of Lord Tweedsmuir, and Sir Shuldham Redferl_'l, secretary to tie, Canadian minist« to Washington, stands behind Mr. King PRINTED TEXT, Matt. 26: 17â€" Sunday School Lesson RADIO NOTES FOR Th& CHILOREN TO BE HEARD LESSON 1X High State Dignitaries Await Lord Tweedsmuir’s Funeral Cortege By MmaAdGE ARCHER to Symphony Orch . . . March 6th, 4:15 p.m., CBL, CBY, Dominion El ection Broadcast . . . 9:00 p.m. and 10:45 p.m., CBL, CBY, Dominion Election Broadcast . . . March 7, 4:15 p.m., CBL, Leacock sketch . .. 8$:30 p.m., CBL, On Parade . .. 9:00 p.m., CBL, CBY, Dominion Election Broadcast . . . March 8th, All Amer ican networks, 10;00 to 10:30 p.m. President Roosevelt in a special address to farmers, gast . . . 10:00 pm.. CBL,. CEBY NBC Symphouy â€" conducted by Bruno Walter . . . March 3rd, £:39 p.m., CFRB, "And So You Think You Know Music" . . . 3:00 p.m. CFRB, N. Y. Philharmonie Orch . .. 8$:00 p.m.. CBL, Chase and Sanâ€" borr Hour . . . 8:00 p.m., CBS Ford Symphony Hour . . . 9:30 p.m., Apâ€" pointment With Agostini ... March 4th, 12:30 p.m., CBL, Ontario Farm Broadcast ... 4:15 p.m., CBL, CBY, Dominion Election broadcast . . . 8$:30 p.m., CBL, With the Troops in England . . . 10:45, CBL, CBY, Doâ€" minion Election Cast . . . March 5, 4:15 p.m., CBL, "War Fashions" talk by Dorveen Day, Stylist ... %:30 p.m., CBL, Information Please . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Top Flight Tunes (new) . . . 10;:00 p.m., CBL, Toronâ€" Place.â€"The anointing by Mary took place in Bethany, a village just over the ridge on the eastern side of the Mount of Olives; the scenes in the rest of the chapter occurred in Jerusalem. The Lord‘s Supper Matt. 26: 17. Now on the first day of unleavened bread the disâ€" ciples came to Jesus, saying, Where wilt thou that we make ready for thee to eat the passover? 18. And he said, Go into the city to such a man, and say unto him, The Teacher saith, My time is at hand; I keep the passover at thy house with my disciples. 19. And the disâ€" ciples did as Jesus appointed them; and they made ready the passover, It is possible that the room in an unspecified house in Jerusalem where the disciples mt after the resurrecion, and the upper chamber where they were abiding after the ascension, were the same as the upper room in which the Lord‘s Supper took occurred on Thursday night oi that week, April 6. Popâ€"Fireproof the late governorâ€"general. Hon. Loring Chri be, This broken bread represents my body, as it will be when it is broken by death; It is a parable in 26. And as they were eating, Jesus took bread, and blessed, and break it; and he gave to the disâ€" ciples, and said, Take, eat; this is my body. In Jesus‘ present act, there is a consecrating of the comâ€" mon meal according to Jewish passover custom; but more than that there is a sacramental syinâ€" bolism, the meaning of which may His Words at the Table 20, Now when even was come, he was sitting at meat with the twelve disciples; 21. and as they were eating, he said, Verily I say unto you, that one of you shall betray me. 22. And they were exâ€" ceeding sorrowful, and began to say unto him every one, Is it I, Lord? 23. And he answered and said, He that dipped his hand with me in the dish, the same shall beâ€" tray me. 24. The Son of Man goeth, even as it is written of him: but woe unto that man through whom the Son of Man is betrayed! good were it for that man if he had not been born. In the East, men eat by dipping their hands into the common dish. This does pot tell who is the traitor, for they all dip their hands in the common dish. It emphasizes rathâ€" er the heinousness of the treachâ€" ery. For to share a common meal in the East constituted the most sacred bond of friendship. 25. And Judas, who betrayed him, answorâ€" ed, and said, Is it I, Rabbi?t He saith unto him, Thou hast said. It is enough to tell Judas, who knows the fact, that Jesus knows it, but not enough to create in the minds of the others more than a susâ€" picion. The passover, of course, was that feast celebrated in commemâ€" oration of the night when the Isâ€" vraclites were redeemed from their Egyptian bondage by the passing over of the angel of death, who slew the firstâ€"born of every famâ€" ily, except those on whose doorâ€" posts was the mark of the blood. Our Lord is here about to acâ€" complish a greater exodus than the one commemorated by the feast, for his was for all men who would believe in him; his redempâ€" tion is deliverance from the bondâ€" age of sin and ultimately from death itself. place; and that that, again, was in the house of Mary, the mother of John Mark (Acis 12: 12). Others believe the room was within the precinets of the mosque of the Tomb of David (on the hill called Mount Zion). maiegamaiz ze e h e o n en se ns n ues \ e, ; d ’ “ + t $ f 7 4 ( _z ' ~â€"~â€" 4 ' . e‘ ‘ e omm “,..,‘"7 ']Ii § morrmmamemn mam G. Crowther, author of "The Sinews of War" (Oxford Pamphâ€" lets on World Affairs), became editor of "The Economist" in 1938. He held a Commonweaith Fund Fellowship in the United States from 1929 to 1981 and visited the U. 8. A. again in 1983 on behalf of "The Economist" to study the progress of the Recovâ€" ery Plan. It is advisable, where possible, and often more economical, to plough up and reâ€"seed thin weedy pastures with a desirable pasture mixture to increase the produciâ€" ivity of the scil. For further inâ€" formation on pasture managemer.t see Ontario Agricultural College Circular No. 28 on "Pastures and Theivr Improvement." _ Increasing soil fertility by topâ€"dvessing in the early autumn or spring with lime (where necded,) manures, and fertilizers, combined with good grazing managemeht and the use of the mower will encourage the development of desirable grasses and clovers to such an extent that all but the most hardy weeds will be completely smothered out. There are three things we need to remember concerning the Lord‘s Supper, It is a commemoration; it is a communion â€" spiritual comâ€" munion with Him; it is a covenant, a pledging of loyalty to Him. 80, And when they had sung a hymn, they went out into the mount of Olives, (Hymn means here, a song of praise). WEED CONTROL One of the chief causes of weedy pastures is the killing out of the desivrable species of pasture plants leaving bare ground in which weeds can easily take root and flourish without competition, writes N. J. Thomas, Pasture Re. which weeds can easily take root and flourish without competition, writes N. J. Thomas, Pasture Reâ€" search, 0. A. C., Guelph. This is brought _ about largely by poor pasture management such as overâ€" grazing in the early spring and late autumn, combined with low levels of soil fertility or poor surâ€" face drainage. Continued overâ€" grazing results in the depletion o‘ plant food from the roots of the pasture plants. This causes them to kill out very easily in pericas of extreme winter conditions o summer drought. He Took A Cup 27. And he took a cup, and gave thanks, and gave to them, saying, Drink ye all of it. This cup was the third cup in the pasâ€" chal mealâ€"four cups of wine were drunk by everyone. The Lord parâ€" took of the third cup or "cup of blessing" as the last part of the supper, and then proceeded to the institution of his supper by blessâ€" ing the bread and giving the sacâ€" ramentail cup. 28. wor this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many unto remisâ€" sion of sins. Remission of sins means blotting out, or forgiveneses of sins. 20. But I say unto you, I shall not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine, until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father‘s kingdom. In less than twentyâ€"four hours the Lord‘s body would be in the tomb; but the Lord knew that, though he would be put to death, heâ€" was victor over death. act, like the foetâ€"washing in John 13: 4â€"20. Wrote "Sinews of War" F A R M NOTES J. A. Carroll of Toronto, seeâ€" retaryâ€"manager of the Ontario Plowmen‘s Association, said in a report at the Assocation‘s annual meeting that progress in ploughâ€" ing interest and activity was notâ€" ed throughout the province last wheel 27 Grief. 29 To originate 33 Money. 35 A prank, 36 Indian 33 Money. pains. 35 A prank. 55 Boat deck 36 Indian 58 To dwell. mulberry. 59 She enticed 37 Rested on â€"â€"â€"â€" io their the knees. aestruction . 41 Parent. VERTICAL 42 Sooner than. 1 Pound. trick, 16 Passage. 17 Circular wall. 18 She haunted a rock on the â€"â€"â€" River. 19 Meadow. 20 Requirements, 22 Rubber tree, 23 To mention. 25 Eccentric HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Pozzle her rocks Sn w m Carmi R ‘Sme â€" (rogee Ek " Diocesan o | & es 7 She was GaA b"l:mns Oe 21 To maks famous for 2 Em ARCQ i QIE} ~_ slave of her beauly Slo/| L. [NEBER 26 Prepositic Snd â€".â€", UMSOLIEMM (EMRKE JOISNE] 28 sound oft 13 To smear. PAPJP [fl") GOHHN.S .:J' E/A) _ pleasure. 14 Grotesque | |V /A SERCO (CO)11 30 Adult ma ONTARIO ARCHIVES NEXT: What vision range is the new 200â€"inch telescope, under construction at Mt. Palomar, Calii., expeci¢d to have? ALL that is necessary to keep the carth rotating on its axis is that no force act to stop it. The only important force operating to form a brake on the motion is that caused by the tides, and this is minute nCt ONLY FEED UDC‘}' ‘wg : * 30L FABRIC OF OSA CLOTHES, ET USE FRAGMENTS OFr N MAKING THERZ PQUPAL CASES S x ts PLOWING AS USUAL COPR. 1937 BY NCA SERVICE, INC LEGENDARY SIREN 52 Minute object. 33 Spasmodi« 43 To abdicate 47 Greek lette, 49 Myself. 50 Wand. 51 Examination destruction By J. MILLAR WATT 11 Tiay. 12 Grain 15 Sesame. 20 Sailors boats were â€"â€"â€"â€" on hearing 6 To bury. 7 Tendons. 8 Frozen wuter 9 Gold paint. 10 Virginia * willow. 2 Jar. 3 Destruction 4 Formerly. 5 Organ of year, Several new branches were formed, including Chelmsford in Sudbury _ district, _ Collingwood township and Manitoulin, After considerable discussion by the executive, Mr. Carroll said, it was decided to hold the interâ€" national ‘plowing match in 1940 despite the war. America. 55 Plural. 56 Hawaiiar 57 Postscrip dogâ€"fashion . 38 Suffix forming nouns. 39 To discover, 40 Sloping foeds on wool, 46 Mental image. 48 Tree. 49 Heath, 51 Japanese fish, channels. 44 Ireland. 45 Insect which 52 Music 54 South Abus pi Li ant in omm bird.

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