n Who Crusaded e Representation te Are Rememâ€" onze Plaque onors Feminists M i nats Te tes, eol« ()t« n THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING LESSON X1 Facing the Supreme Test of Serâ€" viceâ€"Mark 14: 32â€"46. Golden Textâ€"Not what 1 will, but what thou wilt. Mark 14: 36. Aj The Bitter Cup 36. And he said, Abba, Father. The word abba is the Aramaic word meaning "{father," and both words were often used freely in prayers to God. All things are possible unto thee; remove this eup from me. This petition of Christ was not a command. Jesus did not ask anything that would in the slightest way contradict the Father‘s will. He does ask that the cup be taken from him if posâ€" si\!~. On the other hand, he does not want the cup to be taken away if God wills it otherwise. What Jesus prayed to be delivered from in Gethsemane, was not death as a sacrihce voluntarily offered for the salvation of mankind: but this possible element in his death as a sacvifice, the hiding of the Fathâ€" er‘s face, and the withdrawing of his Father‘s hand from him. Howâ€" beit not what I will, but what thou wilt. It is the human will of Jesus that here speaks. The agony in CGethscmane will always bear an element of mystery for us, because of the mystery in the union of Christ‘s two natures. 37. And he cometh, and fimdeth them sleeping, and saith unto Petâ€" er, Simon, sleepest thou? couidest thou not watch one hour? ' the last night of his lifs on carth immediately preceding his rucifixion first departed from the noisyv, crowded city with his eleven lisciples to go out to a quiet garâ€" len spot on a lo\'oly hillside; now to be absolutely along with God, he separates himself from even this inner group of three. And fell to the ground. To fall on the wxround is an indication of utter prostration â€" before God. _ And prayed. While the Lord always was in communion with God and always one with him, yet there were definite times in his life, undoubtedly _ definite .times â€" in evere day of his life when he prayed to God, i.e., when he spoke to him definitely about specific needs, either of his own or of others. That, if it were possible, the hour might pass away from him. Of course the Lord Jesus means by "the hour" the entire period beginning now with his apony in Gethsemane and terminâ€" ating with his death on the cross, the entivre time of his suffering P AY nC day nig And anguis prc TY Ay ord now leaves eight of ples on the outer edge of len, while he takes what i as the innermost cirele ipostolic group with him nto the garden itself. Bearing !t Alone ‘all ;;% Sunbap E&chool Z2\ 3B » â€" Lesson â€"The Gard t the base o the Mount na they come undfo & he literal translation of c, as the margin tells us, ad "an enclosed picce of Which was named4 Gethâ€" The word "Gethsemane" press, which wou‘d imply garden was locatec in an ve in the midst of which ress for obtainingy oliveâ€" as on the eastern side of : Kidron, at the base of t of Olives. As John reâ€" â€" Evening A.D. 30. Oli had of Pa rt taketh AN en at t] of Thursday, dJ igured ea greatly e thoroushly be terrified. The verb inâ€" ch follows a cight of the boenge borne to them, My rowful even » here, and ; also found . The word lOn with hin: "n. These Lord took mountaim rzed i viee unto w V Week ovite And The atly Ol 38. Watch and pray, that ye enâ€" ter not into temptation; the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak. The spirit and the flesh denote the two extremes of huâ€" man nature, "spirit‘" being the highest word used to describe the spiritual part of man, our "flesh" being used to denote everytbing that belongs to the lower nature. Jesus is not pleading this as an exeuse for his disciples‘ sleepfulâ€" ness, but as a reason why they should watch and pray. The spirit is eager, ready to stand by me even to death, as you have just shown in your protestations; but the flesh is weak, the lower naâ€" ture fears death and danger, and exposes you to temptation. Prayer Without Ceasing 39. And again he went away, and prayed, saying the same words. 40. And again he came, and found them sleeping, for their eyes were very heavy; and they knew not what to answer him. Our Lord himself is the perfect example of persistent prayer, of praying without ceasing. o 41. And he cometh the third time, and saith unto them, Sleep on now, and take your rest. It is enough. We do not quite know whether this means that they had slept enough, or whether the Lord had prayed enough; probably the reference is to the latter. He prayed until he got his answer. The hour is come. The Betrayal Bchold the Son of man is beâ€" trayed into the hands of sinners. It is one thing for a criminal to be betrayed into the hands of those who keep the law and preâ€" tend to enforce righteousness; but it is the very opposite for the righteous One to be betrayed into the hands of lawless men. 42. Arise, let us be going; beâ€" hold, he that betrayeth me is at hand. Now behold the glorious conqueror! He emerges from the horrible conflict in Gethsemane as if steeled both in body: and soul. His whole bearing breathes selfâ€"possession, â€" manliness, â€" and sublime composure. 43. And straigchtway, while he yet spake, cometh Judas, one of the twelve, and with him a multiâ€" tude with swords and staves, from the chief priests and the scribes and the elders. The position of Judas in this verse would seem to indicate that he was the leader of this crowd. The Arrest 44. Now he that betrayed him had given them a token, saying, Whomsoever I shall kiss, that is he; take him, and lead him away safely. In the confusion there was the possibility of escape, and there was a desire to make everyâ€" thing sure. This sign was the orâ€" dinary form of salute. 45. And when he was come, straightway he came to him, and saith, Rabbi; and kissed him. 46. And they laid hands on him, and took him. Crowm Prince Michael is now heir to the throne of Roumania. The bemedalled youth will be 17 in October. Yocub measured 7 ft., 2 ins., from the tip of his nose to the end of his tail, weighing nearly 252 pounds, and stood 3 ft. 1 in. high at the shoulder. His head was 13% inches from ear to ear. Claimed to be the largest dog in the world, Yocub, a St. Bernard, has been killed by kindness. He was "loved to death" at a Dayton, Ohio, dog show, where he was petted so much that he died in his master‘s car on the way home afâ€" ter the show. World‘s Largest Canine Is Dead Was Once a King Andrea Leeds has been stepping right along since she did so well in a minor role in "Stage Door." She went on to do well in "Goldâ€" wyn Follies," is working now in the picture "Letter of Introduction," and will play opposite Joel McCrea in a picture called, so far, ‘"Youth Takes A Fling." Which all goes to show that she was right when she refused to go on as just one more contract playâ€" er. She felt that she wasn‘t getting anywhere, you‘ll remember, and got out of her contract, and all Hollyâ€" wood had said she was crazy, as she had just one performance to her credit at that time. Wt-\nrd then â€" "Stage Door" and all the opportunity in the world ! The "Lone Ranger" craze is now growing every day. The actor who plays the "Ranger" in the screen serial may go on a personal apâ€" pearance tour. National Broadcastâ€" ing company has arranged for the transcription rights of the radio program for the South, Canada and Australia â€" at present it‘s heard on a 42â€"station tieâ€"up three times a week. There‘s talk of a circus stunt and of a cartoon st®p for the newspapers. And the country will be flooded with books, cowboy suits and chewing gum, and sweaters, and all the other merchandise that can be used in profitable tieâ€"ups. Charlie Chaplain‘s latest discovâ€" ery, Dorothy Cummingore, has been given a contract by Warner Broâ€" thers, and you‘ll see her first in "Three Girls on Broadway." Bing Crosby can continue with his present radio sponsors for ten _\ years if he wants to. a It‘s said the adver P SA "dtising agency involâ€" 3 97â€0 ved would like him + :.}"i:;"{:;;:."’*t":‘;; M to sign an agreeâ€" liga ) ment for that length # * * P BM of time, with the usâ€" t Lz l ual year to year opâ€" : mt tions. His present $ ""â€â€œ" f. contract still has 8 a S _ cï¬ months to run. Of >A M all the Hollywood folks who have gone Bing CrosbYy jn the air, Bing has e seen the most sucâ€" cessful and shows no sign of diminâ€" ishing popularity. " aip tE #4 it .: 3 a v.... r | The Duchess of Gloucester opened a new garden estate at So Improvement Society to replace slum dwellings. The estate consists blessed the last two blocks of flats which completed the estate. Th forty children at the top of one of the new blocks, and the pictu member of the nursery. Movie * _ _aS O , GS 11 By VIRGINIA DALE 3 Andrea Leeds Radio Duchess‘ls Guest at a Nursery Tea The picture business being a bit gslow at the moment, picture stars are doing quite a bit of vacationing â€" Miriam Hopkins and her husâ€" band, Anatole Litvak, the director, are at her charming little house in New York. Fredric March expected to have to cut his New York vacaâ€" tion short, and then got word that he might stay on indefinitely. Maâ€" deleine Carroll and Wendy Barrie are among the toasts of New York. Benny Goodman recently gave his second concert in Boston, beâ€" fore a packed house; as in Carneâ€" gie Hall, in New York, the first things anybody knew the younger set in the crowd was ‘out in the aisles beginning to "shag." An ushâ€" er hurried forward to stop them, whereupon a conservative looking, middleâ€"aged gentleman stopped the usher. Seems he‘d decided to learn the "shag" and thought that was as good a place as any to begin. ODDS AND END» â€" Paul Muni seems to be all set to do "The Life of William Tell" ..... When Frank Lioyd directs "If I Were King," with Ronald Colman, Frank‘s own daughter, Alma, will play "Colette" ...... Joe Penner‘s new picture, "Go Chase Yourself," is his best one yot ...... Walt Disney divided $50,â€" 000 among the people who helped him make "Snow White" â€" Max Bacr is coaching Robert Taylor for "Knock Out" ...... The objection to Shirley Temple‘s making personal appearances has been that she was too young to appear behind the footlights ...... But Mary Pickford began when she was five, and it didn‘t seem to hurt her any ... In "Four Men and a Prayer" you‘ll see Richard Greene, recently arrivâ€" ed from England, who, it is said, will be groomed for stardom ... Now it‘s announced that Maude Adams‘ movie tests were so sucâ€" cessful that she will not appear in "The Young in Heart," but in a production giving more scope to her talents. Carefree Furnace Needs No Stoking For jaded _ furnace _ stokers, science offers today a permanent vacation. This vacation from â€" furnace tending was explained by E. T. Selig, Jr., industrial fellow at the institute, who aided in the develâ€" opment of the unit. Details of a coal burning heatâ€" ing plant that operates for a year without stoking, damper settings or ash removing were disclosed last week by the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research. "Carefree heating," he said, "is obtained by using Pennsylvania anthracite coal, usually of buckâ€" wheat or rice size, which is conâ€" veyed from coal bin to the fire through a small conveyor tube. Completely Automatic "After the anthracite is burned the ash falls by gravity over the edge of the burner into a dustâ€" tight storage pit beneath the floor, which is large enough to provide for several months‘ to a year‘s operation. The entire sysâ€" tem is controlled by room thermoâ€" stat and is completely automatic in operation." The size of the ash pit varies with the heating unit. However, Selig‘s charts show that a furnace burning seven tons of coal during a winter will need a pit approxiâ€" mately five feet deep and four feet wide. For those who don‘t want even the task of shoveling out the pit once a year, a specially designed can may be placed in the pit to receive the ashes. It is removed througch a tran daor. f a new garden estate at Somers Town built by the St. Pancras House llings. The estate consists of 230 flats and the Bishop of Oxford i completed the estate. The Duchess visited the nursery school for new blocks, and the picture shows her receiving tea from & tiny ns e m ngpeg h n ige h ud mm y â€" 1. , u5 * w Women Blamed For Depression Toronto Professor Urges Them To Wear More, Stop Take it from Prof, Norman W. DeWitt, of Victoria College, Toronâ€" to, one of the main reasons for the depression was because women wanted to weigh less and wear less. Prof. DeWitt told a service club in an address that every time a woman tried to reduce a pound, threw away a petticoat or cut anâ€" other inch from a skirt length she depressed the market in food and dress stuffs. ‘‘There are in America some 26, 000,000 women who have reducing in mind," he said. "If each of these women lessens her food consumpâ€" tion two pounds a week, there is a direct loss in food sale of 52,000,â€" 000 pounds. Along with this cause we must place the reduction in the amount of clothing worn by women with an amazing reduction in the total yardage in women‘s wear goods. No wonder we had a deâ€" pressio@." I am glad that you sent speciâ€" mens of all three handwritings. Beâ€" ware of your widower friend, You say you do not know much about him, and judging from his writing I am sure that you do not! Or you would not want to know him any longer! He is not to be trusted. Your husband‘s writing suggests that he is worrying about someâ€" thing; perhaps he is worrying about YOU? Certainly he seems a straightforward sort of man. Now YOUR writing shows that you have a liking for novéelty, gaiety and acâ€" tion. You are inclined to be flightâ€" ty and, do you mind if 1 add, flirâ€" Mrs. "Perplexed" writes. "I am in my eariy thirties and have been worried for some time because my husband is neglectful. He is cool towards me and I‘m sure no longer loves me. Recently 1 met a widowâ€" er who thinks a lot of me and I am afraid I have become very attached to him. 1 am wondering â€"â€"" Symbolizing th getting ready to to: of the army at Eger CHARACTER FROM HANDWRITING More Secrets From My Mailbag! Symbol of His Country‘s Spirit and Strength the spirit of his country, this Czech infantryman is toss a nineâ€"second hand grenade, during manoeuvres (Graphologist By LA WRENCE HIBBERT and Psychologist) Big Ben Revered By Whole Nation Old London‘s Famous Bell Is A Everybody who visits Old Lonâ€" don from distant places feels that he has missed something if he reâ€" turns home without hearing "Big Ben," the bell of the clock in the tower of the parliament buildings at Westminster, says the Toronto Star Wéekly, In British countries and in many other lands Big Ben is a household name. The special broadcasts by the King have been featured by the sound of the tollâ€" ing of Big Sen which has been carried by means of radio to the ends of the earth. Seven Feet High Big Ben tolls out the hours of the day and night. It weighs more than thirteen tons and stands more than seven feet high. It was made in Whitechapel and its reâ€" moval to Westminster was made a great occasion. Bixteen horses were used to draw it on a truck through the streets of the metroâ€" polis. Multitudes of people gathâ€" ered from near and far to see it go by surmounted by a Union Jack. Do YQU wigh to know what your handwriting reveals of your charâ€" acter and disposition? Have you a sweetheart or friends about whom you would like to learn more? Send specimens of the handwritings you want ‘analysed, enclosing 10c for EACH specimen. Send with stampâ€" ed addressed envelope to: L. Hibâ€" bert, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Et., Toronto, Ontario. All letters are confidential. I see nothing in either of your writings to make me discourage you. On the contrary I think you are well suited, The age dl!erenw is not an insuperable barrier. you are sure you love him, and finâ€" anges are satisfactory, go ahead, and good luck. tacious A girl of 19 writes: "I am in love with a man, aged 28, who wants us to get married. Am I too young?" Wound Twice a Week Four quarterâ€"hour bells are asâ€" sociated with Big Ben. Together they cost $30,000. The clock cost $20,000, and the clock chamber and clock faces $60,000. For many years the clock was wound by hand, a procedure requiring five hours Now two men climb into the tower twice a week and wind it by moto~ in half an hour, When the bell needed repairs shortly after it was installed a group of members of parliament objected to the noise of Big Ben as a serious inconvenience to which the House had been subâ€" jected for the benefit of people living in the county of Middleâ€" sex, They proposed that it should not be permitted to toll again, Such is the reverence with which Big Ben is regardec today, almost as a prized institution, that the people might sweep out of office a government that proposed to silence the great bell. Superstiâ€" tious persons might feel that such a development would be an omen of doom to the empire. There is only one scalyâ€"backed antâ€"eater in captivity, called the African Pangolin, and it is in the London Zoo. It is claimed that mankind and probably womankind will be enâ€" tirely bald by the year 2500, due to our custom of cuttin@ the hair, Thirteen Tons OoNTARIO ARCHIVES In many districts the value of silage is being questioned, esâ€" pecially where corn cannot be grown with any measure of suc» cess. The results of an exporiâ€" ment conducted at the Dominion Experimental Station at Kapusâ€" kasing, Ontario, threw considerâ€" able light on the subject. For five winters two groups of cows each ranging from five to nine animals, were fed rations which were balâ€" anced and which supplied as nearâ€" ly as possible the same nutrients to each group. One ration includ» ed silage while the other did not, this being the only difference in the feeds used. No roots were fed. The results when averaged for the five years show the proâ€" duction per cow per day to be: Cows fed silage, 23.3 pounds of milk and .92 pounds of butter fat; cows not fed silage, 23.2 pounds of milk and .93 pounds of butter fat. i( Oneâ€"Third As Expensive Differences such as these are too small to mean anything from a practical standpoint, especially as the cows not fed silage apâ€" peared to maintain their health, condition and weight, if anything a little better than those receiving it. This experiment shows that silage is not an essential in the milk cow‘s ration. When the rations wore apâ€" praised on a basis of cost, it was found that silage could not be valued at more than oneâ€"third the value of hay without raising the cost of the ration. In other words, if hay costs $12.00 a ton to proâ€" duce, silage to be fed without inâ€" creasing the cost of the ration, should not cost more than $14.00 a ton. There was no mention in the paper of the zinc sulphate treatâ€" ment given thousands of Ontarie children last summer, One high medical authority said informailly a large number of factors had to be taken into consideration in esâ€" timating whether the zinc sulâ€" phate had the same effect on them. Dr. Smith‘s experiments were confined to rats and have not been applied â€" specifically to humans pending completion of data for treatment of infantile paralysis being colected by the Ontario Deâ€" partment of Health, Blind Eat By Braille The zinc sulphate was introâ€" duced into nasal cavities of the rats and destroyed the sensory lining of these cavities. Used In Paralysis Treatment It was found the damaged linâ€" ing was eventually replaced by a layer from which the sensory cells are absent and a permanent loss of the olfactory nerve fibres and atrophy of the regions of the brain where the end was brought about, resulting in loss of smell. Raises Production Costs Data gathered over a period of twelve years at this station shows that when all items are included, hay has cost $10.65 a ton to proâ€" duce as against $6.87 for oats and peas silage and $4.96 a ton for sunflower silage. At these figures the use of silage will raise the cost of milk production in Kapusâ€" kasing district and other districts where conditions are somewhat similar. OTTAWA.â€"Rats given a few drops of zinc sulphate solutionâ€" similar to the means used in Onâ€" tario last summer to combat the infantile paralysis epidemicâ€"lost their sense of smell, the Royal Society of Canada was informed in a paper prepared by Dr. Carl G. Smith of the University of Toâ€" ronto anatomy department and tabled by Dr. E. Horne Craigie of the University of Toronto hbioâ€" logical department. Probably the only restaurant in the world that makes a specialty of providing meals for the blind is one in Budapest. The idea first ï¬tn‘ted when ‘:3 owner of a sÂ¥all restaurant h the bright idea of printing his menu in Braille. Great Britain has more horse races of importance than the rest of the world put together, and as many as possible of these are broadcast. Rather than have the whole bill of fare read to them, blind cusâ€" tomers prefer to read it for th -:;fv:es. ‘gi: rgtauunt befugm only place where they can do so, it enjoys a flourishing business, thanks to the proprietor‘s original idea. Make Rats Lose Sense of Smell By Use of Zinc Sulphateâ€" Compound Was Given to Costs Are Revealed In Tests Value Of Silage Canadian Children Last Year In War Upon Polio.