Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 18 Aug 1938, p. 3

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Sees for First Time houcht All Were Faces sirl‘s Joy First Sight en with dark red broidered on it With it ‘ad “HJFP’- A#1% 2 Mn Dy Al N O p- Thinking of buying a mink coat for the winter? If so, you‘ll find them expensiveâ€"more, even, than usual. The Canadian mink have had a bad year, due to lack of rabbitsâ€"their main foodâ€"and the shortage of mink has caused a rise in prices. The incursions of the Hurrianâ€" ons, who contributed greatly to the mixing of racial stocks in Jalestine, and whose blood is preâ€" dominant in the people now known as Jews, was also referred to by the lecturer. Prof. May, a wellâ€"known Bibliâ€" cal archaeologist, in the course of his series of tem lectures on Palâ€" estinian research in recent years, referred to the inroads of the Hyâ€" ksos and showed by lantern slides how the course of the progress of this semiâ€"Ayran people was markâ€" ed by the ruins of fortifications from the Caucasus to the borders of Egypt. Dealing chiefly with the period from 1800 to 1600 B.C., Prof. H. G. May, of Oberlin College, Ohio, reviewed the blending of various racial stocks in Palestine which produced the Jewish people, in a lecture at Macdonald Collegé, Montreal, last week. Bad Year For Mink Jews‘ History In Palestine Blending of Racial Stocks Proâ€" duced the Jewish People Italy, following the recent Angloâ€" Italian pact has taken much of the overflow of people who want to go abroad. Scandinavia remains as in previous years. "Safe countries" have benefitted in consequence. The royal visit to Paris, for instance, has stimulated interest in France, and Cook‘s reâ€" port a record year for that counâ€" try. The Polytechnic Touring assoâ€" clation have found the same thing true of the traditionally neutral and safe Switzerland. With Spain "off the map" for the last two years, as a result of the war, tourist traffic in Europe has been further diminished. One agency reports a decline of over 50 per cent. in travellers to Germany and Austria, and another declares bookings have dropped by 28 per cent. Hungary, too, has been slight‘y hit because, it is said, of a general dislike even to travel through Austria. "Safe" Countries Benefit At the time of the crisis with Germany one firm found a severe decrease in the tourists for Czechoâ€" slovakia, and this is only slowly righting itself. The war scares have caused a heavy slump in travel in Europe, particularty Spain, Germany and Austria, British travel agencies reâ€" port. Decline of 50 Percent. In Travyâ€" elNers to Germany and Ausâ€" tria Is Reported by COne Agercy gue ual ‘"When the dancing ends, the unfortunate is killed with specialâ€" ly selected poles, and divided. The guests then roast him to individâ€" "For instance," he continzed, "let‘s suppose that a tribesman steals from a fellowâ€"tribesman his wife or some other personal posâ€" session. The victim lodges a comâ€" plaint with the chief and the chief calls a council of assistant chiefs and priests. If they decide that the meat shortage is acute enâ€" ough to warrant drastic punishâ€" ment, the offender is invited to the blowâ€"out. Roasted to Individual Taste "He doesn‘t know he is about to be barbequed. He dances with the rost of them and the <~!1y inâ€" dication of the unusual honor to be bestowcd on him is a garland of flowers about his neck. It resulted in part from the Dutch Government‘s attitude toâ€" ward the consumption of white men and Chinese, he said. A white man‘s life among the Dutch New Guinea cannibais is quite monotonous because the eannibals prefer to eat their reâ€" latives, 8. Dillon Ripley, 24, of the Academy of Natural Science, said last week. Ripley, returned from a stay among the cannibals, said that nothing rates higher gastronomiâ€" cally than a relative who overâ€" steps the bounds of propriety. Minimum of Bores ‘"‘The system," he said, "results in a minimum of bores and loveâ€" thieves in the tribe." Cannibals Eat Their Relatives Â¥>ar Scares Lessen T ravel In Enrovne as popular I 12. and it came to pass, as she couninued praying before Jehovah, that Eli marked her mouth. 13. Now Hannah, she spake in her heart; only her lips moved, but her voice was not heard: therefore Eli had thought she had been drunken. 14. And Eli said unto her. How long wilt thou be drunken? put away _ thy wine from thee. 15. And Hanâ€" nah answered and said, No, my lord, 1 am a woman of a sorrowâ€" ed ful spirit; I have drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but I poured out my soul before Jehovah. 16. Count not thy handmaid for a wickâ€" ed woman; for out of the abundâ€" ance of my complaint and my proâ€" vocation have I spoken hitherto. Eli here supremely shows himself to be utterly unfit for the priest* hood. When a man who is supposed to be devoting his life to spiritual things, to the care of souls, to leadâ€" ing others in spiritual growth, is unable to tell the difference beâ€" tween a woman pleading with God in prayer and a woman drunk with wine, he should let some one else come in and do what he is thereby proving himself incapable of and unfit for doing. * A Most Earnest Worshipper 17. Then Eli answered and said, Go in peace; and the God of Israel â€" grant thy petition that thou hast asked of him. 18. And she said, Let thy handmaid find favour in thy sight. So the woman went her way, and did eat; and her countenance was no more sad. Yet wher El comes finally to recognize that the Pledged By A Vow 11. And she vowed a vow, and said, O Jehovah, if thou wilt indeed look on the affliction of thy handâ€" maid, and remember me, and not forget thy handmaid, but wilt give unto thy handmaid a manâ€"child, then I will give him unto Jehovah all the days of his life, and there shall no razor come upon his head. The prayer which Hannah offered was in the form of a vow in which she promised God that, should he grant unto her the privilege of beâ€" coming the mother of a son, she would dedicate that son to the life of a Nazirite as long as he lived. ‘"‘The Naziriteship included three things â€" the refraining from intoxâ€" icating drinks, the letting the hair grow, and the avoiding all ceremonâ€" ial defilement by corpses even of the nearest kin. These strange resâ€" trictions and customs had an inner signification. The untouched hair, which here is especially mentioned, was a public protest, that the conâ€" secrated one had determined to reâ€" frain from intercourse with the world, and to devote the whole of his strength and fu‘lness of life to the Lowd‘s waw! Place â€" Ramathaimâ€"zophiin was situated in Benjamin; see the lesâ€" son for further explanation. Shiloh was a city in Ephriam on the north side of Bethel. 1 Hannah: Godly Motherhood 1 Samuel 1:1 â€"2:10 Printed Text, 1 Samuel 1:9â€"18; 2:145 Golden Text â€"â€" "Her children rise up, and call her blessed." Proâ€" verbs 31:28. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time â€"â€" The events of this lesson cannot be definitely dated, but fell possibly between 1170 B.C. and 1140 B.C. LESSON VIHI Research at Penn State has shown an ordinary shirt can be washed and ironed 25 to 30 times before it shows pronounced signs of wear. Some have been washed and ironed 50 times, but they were not worn between washings. "Neck whiskers, if they are not shaved off every day, abrade the fabric of the shirt at the collar. Of course, this lessens the life of the collar and of the shirt as a whole," he said. Other things being equal, the man whose shirts last longest is the man who shaves most freâ€" quently, J. Fred Oesterling, reâ€" search assistant in textile chemisâ€" try at Pennsylvania State College, said last week. Shave Often and Save Your Shirts Hannah was a woman of faith, Le., faith in God, manifested by her constant prayer to Jehovah. She was a woman of infinite, patience and tenderness, for we do not read of a single bitter, hasty word that escaped her lips during the days of her great trial and insulting porseâ€" cution on the part of Peninnah. Hannah was a woman who considâ€" ered it the very greatest honor that a son should be given to the service of the Lord for a perpetual minisâ€" try in the tomple of Jehovakh. The song rises now from a conâ€" sideration of God‘s goodness to Hannah and her immediate family to a consideration of God‘s goodâ€" ness to all of Israel, and closes with a marvelous pacan of praise to God regarding "his King" and "his Anointed," which, we bleive, can refer to none other than the Lord Jesus Christ. ledge, And by him actions are weighed. Undoubtedly Hannah is here reâ€" ferring to the sneers cast at her by her husband‘s second wife durâ€" ing the barren years before Samuel was born, his birth bringing to an end cutting remarks about her own childlessness. God. ® God is frequently compared to a rock, which is, of course, a metaâ€" phorical way of ascribing to God strongth, faithfulness _ and _ unâ€" changeableness. 3. Talk no more so exceeding proudly ; Let not arrogance come out of your mouth; For Jehovah is a God of knowâ€" enemies; Because I rejoice in thy salvaâ€" tion. The word "horn" refers first, of course, to oxen, whose strength lies in their horns, The word was a fayâ€" orite Hebrew symbol, which had come to mean simply "strength" or "power." The phrase "to exalt the horn" means "to raise to a position of power or dignity." (Ps. 89:17; 148:14). 2. There is none holy as Jehovah; For there is noue besides thee, neither is there any rock like our Shortly after Samuel‘s birth his father went up to Shiloh to offer an early sacrifice and to perform a vow which he had made, which also shows that not only his wife but he also had made a vow concerning the birth of a son (cf. Deut. 12:11). Song of Thanksgiving For the mercy and lovingâ€"kindness which the Lord had showed unto her, Hannah utters her thanksgivâ€" ing in a song which reaches far beyond the occasion which gives it birth, and rises into the region of prophecy. 1. And Hannah prayed, and said: My heart exulteth in Jehovah; My horn is exalted in Jehovah; My mouth is enlarged over mine woman whom he had so falsely acâ€" cused of intemperance was probabâ€" ly the most earnest, devout worâ€" shipper who had come up to the house of the Lord for many a day, he had the grace to bestow a blesâ€" sing upon her, and to add his own hope to hers, that her petition soon would be granted. ‘â€"Evidently the Audience Knows Pop‘s DURING MY ADDRESS, COLONEL, IF 1 | Harry Owens who wrote "Sweet Leilani" (from Bing Crosby‘s picture "Waikiki Wedding") was the discoverer of the steel guitar. It seems that he was in Hawaii sitting on the beach playing a guitar when a native dropped a steel knife on the instrument. The result was a metallic ping â€" and "First Nighter" â€" a series of three act dramas presented in the mythical Little Theatre Off Times Square, starts as a Columbia feaâ€" ture on September 2 and will be heard every Friday from 8:00 to 8:30 p.m., E.D.S.T. GOSSIP OF THE AIRLANES Here is another advance notâ€" ice â€" Fred Waring and his Pennâ€" sylvanians, who have been off the air for nearly two years, will return on October 8th over NBC Red Network, with a brand new program for Groves Bromo Quinâ€" inc. The show will present a group of forty instrumentalists, vocalâ€" ists, comedians and other enterâ€" tainers. CONGRATULATIONS Don Ameche, popular young screen and radio star, is scheduled to return to the Chase and Sanâ€" born hour on September 4. The young singer and actor recently underwent an emergency appenâ€" dix operation in Holland while on a European vacation. He.is recovâ€" ering very well and will be back to please his thousands of radio fans on September 4th for cerâ€" tain. In regard to this program, we feel laurels are due to Edward Arnold for his splendid work in Don Ameche‘s place. Congratulaâ€" tions â€" Edward Arnold! TOSCANINLI RETURNS Arturo Toscanini, noted leader of the NBC Symphony Orchestra, will return to the air on October 15th with a new series of proâ€" grams. If you remember, it was Toscanini with his gifted baton who brought such favorable comâ€" ment to the NBC Symphony Orâ€" chestra in his first programs last year. The new series will consist of at least 12 programs conductâ€" ed by the famous maestro. In adâ€" dition the orchestra will make a tour of several American cities. For lovers of symphonic music we highly recommend Toscanini‘s new Fall series (commencing on October 15th). The woman who enters upon the enterprise of homemaking assumes definite economic obligations. The home is an investmentâ€"in part, a financial investment. If the home is maintained on a paying basis, then it is a sound financial invesmtâ€" ment; if on a losing basis, there is something which needs correcting. Should the question arise: "How does one know whken her home ceases to be on a paying basis?" The answer is: "When the current expenses are not compatible with income, and the balance sheet at end of month shows financial loss instead of gain." No business unâ€" dortaking could hope to succeed if those in authority did not underâ€" stand the technique and fundamenâ€" tals involved. The same laws which make a business organization successful are essential to the prosâ€" perity of a home. Find Where The Leak Comes In order to place a home on a Something Wrong Whken The Current Expenses Exceed Home Should Be Run Like Business Are You Listening RADO Too 100 oo 10to 19o 1100 1100 1w00 . isao By FREDDIE TE BE A SIGNAL Music by Rimskyâ€"Korsakoff, Sir Edward Elgar, Anton Dvorak and songs from several of the most successful United States and Briâ€" tish writers of popular melodies, will be presented Sunday, August 21, 9:00 to 9:30 p.m., E.D.S.T., over the CBC‘s national network, when "Music for You" is heard under the direction of Geoffrey Waddington, with Virginia Woods soprano; Dorothy Alt, rhythkm singer, and William Morion tenor, as the assisting artists. _ Albert Pratz, member of the violin seeâ€" tion of the orchestra, will provide the violin solo, a Russ Gerow arâ€" rangement of Hoagy Carmichâ€" ael‘s best known 1929 hit, "Starâ€" dust." By just the simple press of a button any 6 or 10 of your favorâ€" ite stations respond instantly, acâ€" curately and automatically. "STARDUST‘" ARRANGEMENT A marked advancement which gives a greater convenience to radio reception is the new Mazâ€" netic "Fingerâ€"Tip Tuning Conâ€" trol" being introduced by the Deâ€" Forest Crosley new 1989 Automaâ€" tic Radios this season. Larry Clinton, the swingâ€"heartâ€" ed NBC conductorâ€"composer now finds composing tunes easy but titles â€" oh!!! Many of Larry‘s compositions rank high in the "swing repertoire." Some of his wellâ€"known compositions are "The Dipscy Doodle"; "Satan Takes A Holiday"; "Study In Brown"; "Midnight in a Madhouse"; "The Shades of Hades" and "Abba Dabba." Tony Martin is returning to the orchestra business for at least ten weeks. At the close of the George Burns and Gracie Allen series, Tony will take out an orchestra on a series of oneâ€"night stands. Martha Raye, that swinzer of scintillating _ symphonies, and Dave Rose, her musical arranger, are scheduled to say "I Do" on September 12th. from that to the discovery of the steel guitar which is now one of the essential instruments in every band. Harry Owens and his orchâ€" estra are heard via NBC from the Royal Palm Roof of the Biltâ€" more Hotel, New York. Keep food in covered containâ€" ers. Remove paper bags or paper wrappings from food before storâ€" ing in refrigerator. Clean vegetâ€" ables and wrap in waxed paper or some of the new transparent bags; wash the inside of the refrigeraâ€" tor thoroughly with a mild washâ€" ing soda solution at least once a week; defrost automatic refrigerâ€" ators regularly, or when the unit is frosted no more than a quarter in. Do not overcrowd. Refrigeraâ€" tors give best service when there is a free circulation of air throughout. businesslike basis one must deterâ€" mine what portion of the assets shall be set aside for current houseâ€" hold expenses, such as: rent, food, clothing, fuel, gas, and electricity, If at the end of the month the reâ€" sources are in excess of the exâ€" penditures the home investment is sound. ‘This can only be consistâ€" ently and successfully accomplished throvgh a budget plan which enâ€" ables one to look at facts squarely, and helps to prevent the leakage that frequently occurs in household expenses. aA% LOG Refrigerator Tips *«( »*"x*® e as a tWe . MT ) _LYENTIVNE J SVURE TO BURST H. Byrne, senior nssisunt"er:gi;l; eer with the Department of Mines and Resources. He explained Lake POINT PELEE, Ont.â€"Canada gets longer and shorter every once in a while, according to J. pearl. 55 Above. 36 Rent asunder. 56 One of his 37 Discharges famous 25 To lease. 26 Wine vessel. 28 Laughter sound, 29 Vivid describer, 2 To dwell. . AN ACRE of ground contains 43.560 square feet, A 1â€"inch rain ®n the acre would amount to 3630 cubic feet of water and, since exch cubic foot of pure water weighs approximately 62.4 pounds, the weight of this amount of water would be about 113 tons. fixedly. 19 Eternity. 20 To catch in a snare. 22 Baking dish, 23 Projecting ancestors, 16 Supports. 17 Rodent. 18 To gaze 13 God of war, 14 Male Nobel prize winner for literature. 12 Threadlike 1 American : The islands which were ‘igcgyen‘ and forgotien three‘ American Novelist 521 uten 48 To = at sea. 43 Chum. 46 Cooking mucous. 39 To make suitable. 40 Circular wall 42 Call for help Irisa tribal society, Answer to Previous Puzzle i1 C characters. 57 He writes of the social â€"â€" problems of the day. 7 Polynesian 1 Razor stm 2 Pressos 3 Frost bite, 4 Box. 8 Actual being. 54 Northeast Erie is continually building up and tearing down Point Pelee, southernmost tip of Canada‘s mainland, forty miles southeast of Windsor. The change, Byrne said, would amount to only a few feet in a decade. OF WATER 1 By J. MILLAR WATT precip:iatica, 43 Taxi. 44 Eye 45 The tip. 47 Form of "a." 49 Money 50 Pulpy fruit. 51 Before. violent 27 Fitly 28 To annoy, 30 A discase. 31 War flyer. 33 Bugle plant, 34 Deponent. _ 38 Musical note, 41 Gaiter. 42 Wintor 24 Large wa ves, 25 Extremely 15 Experiencing | sensation. 21 Nigh. 12 This novelist 10 Wrathful. 11 Crystalline

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