inutes Checkered Careep fully Out will cut the passenâ€" etween Loendon and will not be daâ€" nts unless war ‘en, the Home every Briton iin eight hours. The Keot Pretty &“n inicipalities Y accepted in Continental F had a cheaner. D2.G§ jocting mt ) must be P L&2SieOr tinent and pa says the Fin il distribution &A "@ spreading like rishable and for mmercial hki.. its rival, Cana. ed real compet;. re Ing abr : boing ?,000 a _ distribution c 1884. On * in the but. for instance. cernment to other caco Anâ€" ccretary, wouldn‘t ause the handline uY that x ould : bag s en« ny _ Oorganized '!t(’d .nim narkable ex. iccessful in rket free of epuâ€" White Chunr'; been mâ€" t of ial fee for ifacturer‘s evies most r\[ day April fine ndGer ill fall A. D think foree + Jon. next date. en dairy although 20 cents as full sSar tion 99 ment ril 9 but ) get next CC _ in packet i; ority lans ‘ Particy, Financiap ¢" io i."l 6 CI’Q“ the on rto â€"drope An pricé dur. hog» & * 7. And there came a cloud overâ€" shadowing them: and there came a voice out of the cloud, This is my beâ€" loved Son: hear ye him. This Voice was heard in three critical hours in Jesus‘ history; at his baptism (1:11), here, and when he was tempted to ade the cross, to leave his nation, to go to the Gentiles (John 12: ). The full text of the Father‘s witâ€" s (combining the three Gospel acâ€" 416 C CCCCE AINC WAHOr SsUggestion is grotesque. For him, as for all men in like cireumstances, it were infinitely better to say nothing. He had lost the sense of the spiritual; and his mind, moving wholly within the realm of material things, imagined tha‘ the spirits of the just made perfect could find shelter in tabernacles constructed of boughs. The mistake is by no means an obsgolete one. Men are still trying to make tabernacles, one for Christ, one for Confucius, one for Budâ€" A Mistake 6. For he knew mot what to answer; fot they became sore afraid. Had he said, Let us stay here and make three tabernacies, one for thee and one for me, and one for James and John, it would have had more of reason in it. Think of Moses sojourning in a taberâ€" nacle, or Elijah settling down to rest in a booth!‘ The whole suggestion is grotesque. For him, as for all men in on ernacies. Peter so taken with th they saw that t erni litt] brai wer na M/ M T ~«â€"Probably on Mount Hermon. â€" transfiguration of Christ is reâ€" 1 also in Matt. 17: 1â€"13, and 4: 28â€"36, b <h of which accounts 1 be read with the one in Mark l as complete a conception as le of this remarkable event. has an additional account of this c in his Second Epistle (1: 16â€" 1 Peter answereth and saith _ Rabbi, it is good for us to and let us make three taberâ€" one for thee, and one for nd one for Elijah. ‘The tabâ€" of which Peter spoke were oths or huts made out of of trees or bushes, such as atructed for the feast of tabâ€" Peter and his fellows were with the sight of the felicity that they desired to abide mount with "esus and the The after six days. That is, six r the confession of Simon arding the Messiahship of sus taketh with him Peter, i, and John. These three, _and crown of the apostolic ‘r, who loves him so much, whom he loved so much, a, who should first attest could as little as life sepâ€" n his love. (Acts 1%. 2). e the three who, alone, were Lord at the raising of the f Jairus (Mark 5: 37), and the only ones allowed to go into the CGarden of Gethâ€" the nisht of his betray:s! mon »3. COte.}. And bringeth ) a hich mountain apart es. "The place of the m is not definitely locatâ€" ospels. Earlier tradition imously fixed on Mount rn opinion almost as unâ€" egxards as most likely lal way by the hand of 3 we know, did not sutâ€" t was translated in a + to heaven, Moses ot nted the law, while Eliâ€" entative of the prophetâ€" hus in Moses and Elijah Jesus meeting together, trinity of the law, the the gospel. that )th Transfiguration ti & @unbap @chool > â€" Lesson $ï¬ t 1 unto them _ they were t not be ‘hat sent because aculous exit as we know, the hand of did not sutâ€" islated in a ired before Mysterious visit to Paris by Winston Churchill (above), British statesman, aroused much speculation in England. He‘s seen on arrival in Paree. We are told from childhood that spinach is good for us, but few peoâ€" ple know why. At Carlsbad and other famous wateringâ€"pleces, spinâ€" ach occupies ar important place in the dietary because it reduces flatuâ€" lence and has a strong action on the bowels. It is rich also in materials for replenishing the blood stream, and during the 1914â€"18 war spinach juice was mixed with wine in the proâ€" portion of 1 to 50 and given to the French soldiers who had lost blood. It contains saponin, which proâ€" motes digestion, has more mineral matter than any other green vegeâ€" table, and b»cause of its high iron content is prescribed in cases of anâ€" aemia. Spinach has more vitamin A than any common vegetable, is as rich in vitamin B as butter, and conâ€" tains antiâ€"scorbutic vitamins, too. 9. And as they were coming down from the mountain, he charged them that they should tell no man what things they had seen, save when the Son of man should have risen again from the dead. 10. And they kept the s.ying, questioning among themselves what the rising again from the dead should mean. What the rising from the dead is refers, not to the resurreeâ€" tion in general, but to the rising Jesus predicated to himself. On the fact of the final resurrection of the dead the ‘ diâ€"eiples did not dispute, for they beâ€" lieved this. Jesus, however, had spokâ€" en of himself rising from the dead three days after his being killed. This was a different matter. If Josus wantâ€" ed to rise again, why should he permit himse!f to be killed? How could the Son of God be killed, and, if he could not be killed, how could he then rise from the dead? Meaning of the Transfiguration The life of Jesus was bound to reach this point of transfiguration. It could do no other In Jesus of Nazareth there was the perfect unfolding before heaven and before men, of the divine intention as to the process of human life. Beginning in weakness and limiâ€" tation, passing through difficulties and temptation, gaining perpetual victory | over temptation by abiding only, at all times, and under all cirezmstances, in the will of God, at last, all the testing being ended, the life passed into the | presence of God himself, and iito the â€" light of heaven, not through the gate j of death, but through the painless and | glorious process of transfiguration, ‘ and as he was transfigured, he was filled with the answer of God to the } perfection of his life. the same Jesus that they had known. But they never could think of him again as they had thought of him beâ€" fore. For once they had been permitâ€" ted to look at him changed, altered, transfigured. 8. And suddenly looking round about, they saw no one any more, save Jesus only with themselves. "Moses and Elijah had passed. The glory had vanished. The heavenly voice was silâ€" ent, and they saw J«:us only. He was counts) isâ€"This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye him. Hear Ye Him We are to hear Christ regarding our own sinfulness. We are to hear him as he unfolds the truth concerning God. We are to hear him as he speaks of life to come. We are to hear him as he speaks of himself, the only beâ€" gotten Son of God. We are to hear him as we hear no one else in the world, dead or living. Spurred By Spinach Churchill in Paris The enterprise was engineered, Mr. Wilbur said, by a Prime Minister who was named Wang Mang, who became Emporer in 9 A. D. Advanced Socialization "Wang Mang‘s social experiments," the scientist related, "included naâ€" tionalization and equal distribution of land, government monopolies and the manufacture of salt, wine and iron, control of mines and other natural reâ€" sources, aid to farmers by agriculturâ€" al price control through government buying of excess crops in good years and through storage in government granaries for sale in bad years, and government loans to business for proâ€" ductive enterprises at moderate rates of interest, China had a "new deal" 2,00 years ago, but the xperiment failed for lack of technical knowledge, C. Martin Wilâ€" bur, of the Field Museum of Natural History, told the Midâ€"West branch of the American Oriental Society, at Chiâ€" cago, last week. * Chicago Scientist Says Reform Came Before Its Time China‘s New Deal 2,000 Years A; Control of this waterway and o° the Balkans would make Germany virtualâ€" ly invulnerable in war, so far as capâ€" plies are concerned. to the Black Sea. Sixty navigable streams join it from the North and South. The mighty Danube will open up a lot of territory for Germany. It flows from Germany across Austria, along part of the Czechoslovak border, through Hungary, across a corner of Yugoslavia, along the Rumanianâ€"Buiâ€" garian border, and through Rumania Take one item alone â€" though a most important oneâ€"that of the wheat for lack of which Germany went hunâ€" gry during the Great War. The Danâ€" ubian states grow more of this grain thiun any of the soâ€"called big wheat ¢ intries, barring the United Stat‘s. It will give her the materials she needs to make her independent of other powers. It will be of invaluable assistance to her in extending her economic an | political dominance in the Balkans. Sti"!, there is vast importance in the announcement that work is to be rushed on the canal which will conâ€" nect the Rhine and Danube rivers, thus providing a passage for ships a distance of some 2,500 miles, from the Baltic to the Black Sea. Significant Project This will mark a seven league stride in der Fuchrer‘s program for the creaâ€" tion of a great Germanic confederaâ€" tion. The significance of the river proj.ct is this: It will enable her to undersell comâ€" peting covntries because of chcap transpo‘rtation and easy access to markets. Hitler‘s dictatorship has provided such a rapid succession of epochal events that it is hard for the outside world to recognize another milestone in anything so prosaic as a waterway. tion. The significance of the river proj.ct is this: It will open up an Arabian Nights treasure house of commerce for Gerâ€" many throughout the Balkans and Near East. When history finally appraises Adolf Hitler‘s regime it may easily record that he could have done few things contributing more to the might of Gerâ€" many than bring to fruition the 1,000â€" yearâ€"old German dream of a navigable waterway through the heart of Eurâ€" ope. 1,000â€"Â¥earâ€"Old Dresm Will Op en Up Treasure House For Germany Throughout Balkans And Near East; Work to Be Baltic â€" Black Sea Canal Will Fulfil Ancient Hope Hon. Cyril Asquith, son of the late Earl of Oxford and Asquith, warâ€"time British Premier, shown in ceremonial robes and wig, with his wife, and their daughter, Jane (background), as he left their Paddington home to be sworn in as a King‘s Bench Judge. 48 years old, Mr. Asquith is the second youngest of English judges. Rushed. â€"Premier‘s Son Becomes King‘s Bench Judge If this is applied to the Saturnian moons there is a place for one beâ€" tween lIapetus and Phoebe, which are respectively 3,094,700 and 7,918,700 miles from the planet. That it should exist is claimed by Dr. J. Miller, the English astronomer, who offers the geometrical law in supâ€" port. He shows in a communication in "Nature" that the distance between the moons, starting from the first moon, and not the planet, are in close approximation to the geometrical serâ€" ies, 3, 6, 12, 24, and so on. The existence of a geometrical law concerning the distances separating not only the ‘planets in the solar sysâ€" tem but also the moons of Saturn is offered in support of the discovery of the tenth moon of Saturn which was reported by the American astronâ€" omer, Dr. W. H. Pickering. This tenth moon, reported in 1905, has since been lost and astronomers have been unâ€" able to rediscover it. The highest average percentage inâ€" creases over the 1900 average were in flour, bread, cheese, sugar and marâ€" garine. Butter and meat prices showâ€" ed substantial increases. . Last December‘s census showed a reduction during the year of 3% per cent in the pig population of England and Wales. The council suggests it might have been wiser to leave curers in restricted competition with one anâ€" other rather than regulate their sales by quota. It urges supervision of the industry by an independent body such as the bacon development board. The council criticizes the governâ€" ment‘s bacon production policy and it says bacon output from homeâ€"producâ€" ed pigs declined by 16 1â€"3 per cent in 1937. A greater proportion of pigs was sold for pork apparently due to the breakdown in the contract system. LONDON, Eng. â€" Food prices in Great Britain in 1937 were the highest since 1930 and were 46 per cent above the index figure for July, 1914, accordâ€" ing to the annual report of the food council. . Eritain Sees Big Declice in Bacon Produced From Home Pigs Their Food Prices Highest In Years "I shall continue the ancient cusâ€" tom," said Sir Anthony at this year‘s ceremony. "If I fail, legend says all sorts of dreadful things will happen to the family." Sir Anthony Tichborne, 23â€"yearâ€" old holder of an ancient baronetcy, helped to distribute the historic Tichborne "dole" instituted in the 12th century. Each adult received a gallon of flour; every child half a gallon. In the 12th century the aged and ailing Lady _ Mabella _ Tichborne crawled around part of the estate while a torch burned. Her husband, Sir Roger de Tichborne, had offerâ€" ed to give to the poor a portion of the produce of the land enclosed by his wife‘s crawling journey. Lady Mabella vowed if the gift from the estate were discontinued the Tichâ€" borne family would lack male heirs. An 800â€"yearâ€"old curse lay behind a ceremony held at Tichborne, Engâ€" land, in which flour was distributed to 800 villagers of Tichborne, Cheriâ€" ton and Lane End, in Hampshire. British Baronet Perpetuates 800â€" Yearâ€"Old Ceremony of Disâ€" tributing Flour Plans Avoiding Ancient Curse Saturn‘s Lost Moon 4 t*4* Any thing that facilitates your judgâ€" ment of others must be a boon, for there is probably not one of us but has lost money, happiness, comfort or security through miscalculating the character of someone with whom we have been in some way concerned. And above all, characterâ€"analysis gives you a clearâ€"cut picture of your own character and potentialities, It reveals unerringly what you are and what you might become. There is no false modesty about a handwriting analysis. It shows with crystal clearâ€" And in love affairs it can be a guidâ€" ing star that leads you to happiness. In business and financial matters it can steer you past the traps set by the unscrupulous or overâ€"optimistic. In domestic circles it can promote mutual understanding, and will in many cases help to eliminate the disâ€" sension that shatters the peace of so many homes. Thereâ€"are so many ways in which a characterâ€"reading can be helpful. In the first place it is bensficial in your contacts with others. Every reader of these articles will, I suppose, at some time, say: "Can a characterâ€"analysis help me?" and "Exactly how can it help?" If you are one of those who would be on good terms with a bee, just be nonckalant. Light a cigarct, yawn lazâ€" ily or appear quite indifferent to their presence. If you must study them or invade their homes, be a bit desultory in your probings. There is no good reaâ€" son why you should ever give a bee the slightest excuse for stinging you, Dislike Quick Motion That‘s the advice given this week, to Windsor Kiwanians by one of the big beeâ€"andâ€"honey men of the province Dr. E. J. Dyce, professor of apiculture at the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph, reports the Windsor Daily Star. A bee, according to Dr. Byce, is disâ€" ‘ r»bed by quick motion on the part of Can A Handwriting Analysis Help You? By LAWRENCE HIBBERT E:pert‘s Advice Says Treat Them Helen Felton, one of the residents of an apartment built in New York under a FHA loan, is one of the tenants whose lease will not be renewed unless she gives up her pets. Be Indifferent, Handling Bees Will Have To Give Up Her Pets Or Her Home (We!llâ€"known Psychologist and Handwriting Analyst) "Yawningly" 421, 73 West Adelaide St, Toronto, Whatever your problem may be, this wellâ€"known psychologist and handwriting analyst can help you. You can write to him fully and frank!y, for all letters are confidential. Send speciâ€" mens of the writings you wish anâ€" alysed, and enclose 10c for each speciâ€" men (coin or postal note preferred). Enclose with stamped addressed enâ€" Now I have no intention of discussâ€" ing the ethical angle of this case. In any event, it is unnecessary, for this man‘s writing showed too clearly what an unsuitable friend he is for this girl. If she refuses to sever the acquaintance she will pile up a lot of unhappiness for herself. I mention this case to show that a handwriting analysis plays no favourâ€" ites. It only tells the truth, Can you doubt that it will help you, too? One of my recent correspondents, a girl of 20 years, tol® me that she is in love with a married man. In sending me some of her friend‘s handâ€" writing she was obviously hoping that I would confirm her friendship. ness exactly what you are like It is impertinent to disbeliove in the existence of angels and demons, declares the Bishop of Ely. ‘"Even in the centre the Italians are unable to ensure order. The main road from Asmara to Addis Ababa has been cut in several places. "In the southwest there have been serious revolts at Bako, Gimma, Kaffa and â€" Guara{arda. _ Italian â€" garrisons have had to be withdrawn from the three last named places, Only this and the hope of loans, he declared, can explain the reported italian willingness to promise to withâ€" draw all troops from Spain. They‘ve Been Gaining Ground ‘The Abyssinians have been gainâ€" ing ground, particularly in the west," Mr. Bartlett declared, *"The province of Gojjam is said to have freed itself almost entirely from Italian troops, and recent reports said an Italian ofâ€" fer of autonomy is dictated by stern necessity, Vernon Bartlett, diplomatic editor ol the London ?%â€"ws Chronicle, last woek wrote that stiff resistance from live Ethiopian armies as well as smaller bands is seriously hampering Italian efforts to dominate the colonâ€" iza the lands taken from Emperor laile Selassie. Seen As Cause of Duce‘s W‘i:ngâ€" ness to Make Tre=>> Conâ€" anyone or anything within ité%sight. Even the wink of an eyelash will atâ€" tract and arouse curiosity; hence the prevalence of bee stings on the eye or face. Whether the bee fancies those movements are coming from another bee or just an insect enemy probably never will be determined. The fact is, that beekeepers, although they may leave arms unprotected as far as the elbows or higher, usually cover their faces. Even an experienced handler doesn‘t relish being stung in the eye. Don‘t Pull "Stinger" If you disregard this advice and beâ€" come the victim of an angry or a curâ€" ious bee, don‘t pull at the "stinger" which is left in your flesh, but rather cut it off or slide it off with the use of a fingernail, The sooner this is done after the sting has occurred, the betâ€" ter, Dr. Dyce explains. Ethiopian Gains Embarrass Italy VY 1 PALMV â€" AMWMAIIYED® Edward witnessed the commotion at the time, but merely turned his head and glanced at the man, then controlling his startled horse, he conâ€" tinued on, McMahon was rushed through a hostile crowd to Bow St. police staâ€" tion. He was sent to trial at the Old Bailey and sentenced to 12 months‘ hard labor for "unlawfully producing near the king a pistol with intent to alarm His Majesty," Sympathy Aroused The duke‘s sympathy for McMahon was aroused by a touching letter which the latter sent him after he had been released from prison in August of last year. McMahon was arrested on July 16, 1936, for producing a pisâ€" tol and throwing it toward the then King Edward VIII while the Jatter was ~iding his charger down Constituâ€" tion Hill at the head of a state proâ€" cession. U & T05 CEETSCRCC 10 HCIP DHA AIOLE, The. Duike of Windsor also had exâ€" pressed the desire to meet him one day and the Duchess of Windsor has likewise expressed the desire to meet his wife. The Duke of Windsor has given a considerable sum of money. ~to the man who served 13 months in prison for attempting what was believed to have been an attack upon his life when he was king in July, 1936, 1t was learned. He has further helped to osâ€" tablish the man, George Andrew Mc« Mahon, in business, and constantly is using his influence to help him along. George MicMahon Wrote to Duke After Release From Prison and Is Now Established In Advertisâ€" ing Business, Windsor Helps Man Who Menaced Him So it was concluded that this type: of human heart trouble comes from too much nervous strain and that the mechanism may be due to the nerves releasing too much acetyl choline. t Dogs‘ nerves use acetyl choline the same as humans, and the excess of the chemical made them norvous. They apparently were under the same sort of strain as those executives, leaders and professional men who drive their noerves to the point of exhaustion. Discovery of the cause of coronary thrombosis, the heart trouble of high pressure workers, was reported to the American College of Physicians at New York, last week. Nerves Produce Chemical It comes from too much acetyl choline, a chemical which the nerves produce to make muscles move when the "motor centre" of the brain transmits an impulse for moverent. Dogs at the department of medical research, University of Toronto, werg given coronary thrombosis by the simple expedient of injecting into their blood daily small quantities o’ acetyl choline, _ These experiments were performed by George Edward Hall, M.D., and witnessed by the group of physicians who gave insulin to the world. Link Nerve Strain To Heart Disease Three factors contributed toward more favorable preâ€"seeding moisture conditions for the coming crop year. A heavier autumn presipitation, a snowfall 50 per cent, greater than the previous winter and spring rains and a blizzard of record proportions toward the end of March have comâ€" bined to create optimism in the three provinces, Because of the ear‘y thaw, wains and smows of ?March, iiself one of war~cst months on record, foun parilicularly retentive soil. Soil Also Retentive Proof of the heavier winter snow» fall is to be found in the burst spill» ways of dams recently erected in Southern Saskatchewan to conserve spring runâ€"off, and in the definite inâ€" crease in impounded waters over much of the former drought area, Considered the important factor, however, is the fall precipitation of the previous year following removal of the crop, most of the moisture occurring then, depleted neither by weed growth nor evaporation, has been held available for germination, West Has Larger Fund Of Moisture Reins In Fall and Heavy Snows Assuring Crops of Fine Improved outlook over the spring of 1937 prevails in agricultural arâ€" eas of Western Canada, according to reports received by wire at Winâ€" nipeg from agents of the C.N.R. in the three Prairie Provinces.