rfx sunday school lesson august 21 lesson viii the tent of meeting exodus 33 716 golden tet the lord spake unto moses face to face as a man spaketji unto his friend exodus 33 11 analysis i the tent of meetinc vs 711 ii the prayer ok moses vs 12 10 15 1c iii the promise of cod v 14 i the tent ok meeting vs 711 it should be remembered that the israelites were leading a roving life in the desert if they were to have a sanctuary where they could worship god it must necessarily be a portabit one which could be easily transferred from one place to another they themselves were living in tents so they made a specially beautiful tent the tabernacle to be a place for wor shipping god it was called the tent of meeting it was a dace where hi israelites could meet not merely wit one another hut above all will here they would come with their lexities and refer them in prayer to god further he tent of meeting be gods personal presence with them on the way this woulj be a plain mark that israel wis distinguished from all other nations of the earth v 1c iii the promise ok cod v 14 the prayer of moses reads in part like a dialogue between god and moses so god interrupted moses prayer to assure him that he would go in person with the people of israel and that at the end of their desert wanderings he would give them rest in the assured possession the land of canaan berlin to new york in twelve hours by heinrich kluth in die woche berlin was set outside the cat up of israel this separation between the holy tent and the common camp israel that howevei to his people lie awful and holy their leader went out to the holv tent the roe of ism other occupa doors and n on irn lolv mi the grcal were taking pi d and moses in the tent pirit of i tncg if their 1 tracking criminals with plaster casts frequently found at the scene of a crime are- many bits ot evidence such as footprints tireprints toolmarks teethprints wheeltracks and numer ous other material clues ah ot these are perishable aud yet this very evidence will serve to identify tho criminal in court says mr j kaempfer in hygea chi cago we read the use of casts and molds has been ot value in various fields ot science to preserve in natural shape and size an object of importance this process which at tho present time is called moulage is extremely valuable in criminal investigation teethmarks in an apple can be just as identifying as fingerprints it a door has been jimmied in the course of breaking into a building there will remain along its edges markings produced by the tool em ployed casts ot these marks can bo made and compared with the suspect- i i tool to determine its identity heretofore it was necessary either to out the part o the door involved or to remove the entire door for court demonstration alphonso poller an austrian is the creator of this nieth- od his untimely death in 1930 con stituted loss to world o ltecoll gems from dickens control j jui il al- lb their mt peo- people four years ago one a the pio- neers of rocket research max valier predicted that before long tho enor mous distances between the contin ents would be covered iu a few hours with tho rocket the theoretic founda tions of which were already laid at that time while practical experi ments had just begun valier be lieved that the sixhour mail ser vice by rocket between europe and america would become the slogan of the future valier is dead martyr ot his idea the experience of a rocket flight was denied to him by fate but today thousands of research workers and practical engineers the world over study the problem of fly ing in tho stratosphere with the same tenacity that knows no obstacles tho same hope and unabated optim ism the rocket is more alive than ever aud is much nearer its realiza tion thau valier imagined just now however tho ambitions of the rocket adepts are surpassed by the stratosphere plane during the last few years much attention has heeu given to the stratosphere taking as a point of departure re liable meteorological calculations scientists have- reached the conclu sion that far greater speeds than those of ordinary flying could he ob tained in the stratosphere iu the experimental laboratories of univer sities and industrial plants the scien tific principles ot the stratosphere plane were worked out aud tested thousands of motor builders now work on models suitable for great altitudes trying to adapt the dimen sions to the new task and increased demands of the rarefied atmosphere a preliminary solutiou of the prob lem uppears to be contained in dr asmus hansens graduation thesis development possibilities of the stratosphere motor hansen com bines scientific knowledge with rich practical experience acquired as a squadron leader on the front during the world war his ideas have creat ed a sensation and have so strongly impre exl several of the leading german constructors that it was de cided to place with the junker works an order for an experimental plane bulk t cording to hansens princi- tumors that the instruction of i new el ne i i under way mi time al- jealously the plane not si 1 1 v iit roc- to use the p rp and it is til- first of tho strato- ible lo for ilie strato- i doubt grees or even lower the air la so rare that its density does not amount to oven onetenth of the nor mal these difficulties may be over come as was proved by piceard whose balloon equipped with air tight cabin ascended ten miles above the earth already before piccards experiment took place certain con- stuctors conceived the idea of equip ping the stratosphere plane with an airtight and pressureexisting alti tude chamber the difficulties to be overcome by the stratosphere plane are of course far greater than those encountered by piceard for whom one outward grip was sufficient to pull the valve cord and make the balloon descend in a plane the motor must be operated from inside the air tight cabin and at the same time all requirements set up by pic eard for heating airing visibility in strumentation etc must be com plied with the altitude chamber built into the experimental stratosphere plane is absolutely airtight aud gastight on all sides there is room for two men only it has double gastight walls with curved surfaces secured against pressure above atmospheric from inside the shape of the cabin is fitted to that of the human body in order to insure perfect visibility the window panes are double and protected against moisture from iu- side and ice from outside the space between the window panes which is isolated from the interven ing space between the cabin walls can be heated to reduce the heat requirements of the cabin the space between the walls is filled with a special gas which is a very poor con ductor ot heat aud is maintained under a constant medium pressure regulated by means of a special de vice the steering levers are more or less the same used in ordinary planes but the pilot is called upon to keep a watchful eye on a great num ber of scientific instruments which are mounted on a board of the width of the whole cabin it was important to invent a method whereby the pilot would be able to look down on the earth which is necessary for tho determin ation of the direction when flying at such altitudes after numerous ex periments it was decided to fix a special telescope between steering levers and pilot seat so that it rests between the legs of the pilot externally the stratosphere plane is not very much different from ether airplanes but it is of course much larger thau the ordinary single- motor machine the span across the wings is 92 feet and the length is rci feet the carriage is unus ually high because it must support 1 propeller of twenty feet in dia- met er for tii experimental flights the plane is equipped with an 850hp junker motor operating a multiple- tage compressor this compressor feeds to the motor a constant supply of air of a constant tension thus eliminating the inconveniences of the rarefied atmosphere tho compres- in the cylinders is just sufficient to insure a constant motor capacity in the stratosphere although this plane represents the tep on the way to- 1 ion of the strato- 1 smuch as it will out expei iments on a 11 from being the its importance lies in pi ibility of te-st- tite compres sor sinl the hi thin without 1 i stratosphere is what new york is wearing illustrated dressmaking lesson fur nished with every pattern sowing wheat and now the sun bore down on the prairie the whole livelong day bright titbits from berlin paddle your own canoe fritz and frieda may learn to re- and quivering in the forenoon he cite the house that jack built in swam through endless seas of blue the house that father built for la across the hazy afternoon he beamed the berlin suburbs a build-your- caressingly toward evening he open- j ownschoolhouse movement is pro- ed wide his countenance then the posed ft has grown out ot an un- flood ot light grew refulgent only usual couditoin that results from tha to die in splendour against a mys- j promotion of settlement ordinarily terious night which also hed life the most congested schools are found as the fine weather continued per i the centers of the citie3 but ao hansa became more restless but it many families have been moving to only seemed to fill him with greater utile plots ot ground in the suburbs joy suddenly he would be up by the that it is the outlying schools that field wasnt it dry enough yet are becoming overcrowded hither- he ought to have had the seeding all to the school authorities rekoued done by now it was high time to be gin breaking new ground on the 14th of april the sommer- maalsdag of his old iatherlaud per hansa began seeding the wheat three times that forenoo he had been out to test the ground the last time he made his great decision now we will start no sooner had he finished the noon with one school child to every throa families in the areas to which people are being moved as a part ot the plans for relieving unemploy ment the school population amounts to one child for every family the reichs 100000 marks does not begin to provide funds for tho re quisite buildings so tilt authori ties contemplate asking the fathers meal than he rushqd out grabbed the of the children to contribute their seed bag that he had made for this labor to help build the schools this occasion and carried two sacks of pi j similar to that under which seed up to that portion of the field the unemployed who are placed where the ground was driest he had upon the land aid iu building their paced off the whole field into one- own little homes acre lots and marked each plot learning to climb again per hansa thrust his hand 1 into the bag and his fingers closed on e0 lear to arive a tar ilild the grain he felt profoundly that the greatest moment of his life had come now he was about to sow wheat on his own ground his hand tightened in the hag he was on the f soutb f dr f play tennis they take swimming and 1 fencing lessons in saxon switzer- i land they can learn mountaincer- ing this interesting mountain a youthful model that is quite puff ed up about its sleeves uses plain crepe for conrast the original model was in a red and vhite crepe silk print with plain white another darling scheme is flag blue and white crepe silk print with the ekes of selffabric and tha sleeves of plain white crepe style no 2957 is designee for sizes 1 16 is 20 years 3g 38 and 40 i ches bust size 1g requires 2 yards of 39inch material with li yards of 35inch contrasting batiste print- voile prints sheer linen prints triple sheer and pastel tub silks also smart size 1g requires 2 yards 39inch with ivi yards 33inch contrasting how to order patterns write your name and address plain ly giving number tnd size of such patterns as you want enclose 20c in stamps or coii coin preferred wrap it carefully for each number and address your order to wilson pattern device 73 west adelaide st toronto point ot lifting it out when some- thing queer happened the kernels were running out between his fingers he gave another grab closing his hand still tighter again the yellow kernels slipped through his fingers like squirming eels then per hansa threw back his head and laugh- towering rock formations which servo as an ideal practicing ground for climbing special facilities for train ing are afforded the swiss moun tainsthat is the mountains in i switzerland are one of the most i popular goals for summer and win- i ter vacations of the german people they like them so much that thoy ed these fellows arent verv anxl- ous to go into the ground after riches v ca s0 tucir ow molm for me i fs and now the wheat rained down iu swtzeriand yellow semicircles from per hansas hand as the seed fell the warm rays of the sun struck full across it and seemed to wrap it in golden light o e rolvaag in giants in the earth twelve hours to new york if the claims of a german inventor can be substantiated it may be pos sible before long to fly from london to new york across 3000 miles of the atlantic in about twelve hours the new junkers plane upon which en gineers have been at work for more than two years is designed to have a speed of between 300 and 400 miles an hour when six miles above the surface of the earth one great problem facing aircraft designers is that the air grows rap idly rarer and thinner for every hun dred feet above the surface in a rare after them saxon one such examplo there is even a markische schwelz- near berlin it is just hilly country but the switzerland added to its name gives it a special glamour naturally it will not do to compare the height and greatness of the mountains but one may well speak of the fondness which is shown to ward them for that certanily is very great 110 matter whether they are high or low living with the stars boys build gliders the unemploy- ed erect cottages and now a work- man has built his own obserwtory wiht telescope and revolving cupola from early boyhood herr richard jakob had desired to see the stars more closely he studied and sav ed and accumulated a stock ot knowl- edge and a smaller stock of capital when he had acquired a tiny cottage in sehoenow a village settlement not far from berlin he realized that rid i pi a suit- ssenger prob- nt mail this irish expert on flax studies canadian markets ottawa continuing his survey of the flaxgrowing situation in canada lewis gray of the northern ireland delegation to the imperial conference is now visiting western ontario mr gray has already been in contact with that section of the dominion experi mental farms branch which deals with flax and he is accompanied on his trip by r j hutchinson director of the fibre plants department mr gray is observing canadian methods in the pullirg of flax and arrangements have been made for him to deliver an address at forest ont to the flaxgrowers of that district some time ago mr gray declared that practically all of the flax used by the linen manufacturers of north ern ireland was produced in russia 1 industrialists however were prepared to transfer this busi ness to canada provided that suffi cient volume and suitable quality of lax ed from this country sacrifice the time for the fulfillment ot his atmosphere it is difficult to obtain dream had come so he started out high speeds since the propeller has so i to little grip that is why in the schnei- build a telescope screw was ad- 1 ded t0 screw lever to lever lens to ler irophy races pilots always fly lens after four years of pains tab x r s work he had completed his task so confident are the germans that he then needed a revolving cupola they have solved this and other probl with the same untiring effort he set lems of great speed at high altitudes to work to build one that captain hamm has already gone to the berlin works to prepare for flight from berlin to newyor which he hopes to accomplish in a little more than twelve hours at heights such as six miles the air is too rare to support life and the pilot sits in a hermeticallysealed compartment supplied with oxygen so great toj is the cold that his clothes and even the knobs and levers of the machine are warmed by electricity old friends old friends are the greatest bless ing of ones later years half a word conveys ones meaning they have a memory of the same events and same mede of thinking i it look him a year now it crowns his littlo cottage and attracts visitors from all directions school children and pro fessors come to see one of the smal lest observatories of the world ills researches have furnished the larger observatories with many interesting data from mt wilson to tho cot tage observatory in sehoenow near berlin may he a long distance and a far cry but the ardor and en thusiasm of the workmanastronomer in front of his selfmade telescope certainly cannot bo surpassed jobless turn to reading in freiburg one hardly knows whether or not to regard the forest roads as continuation of the univer sity campus for erudite conver ging relations that may grow i sations are erd out tho upon me for my nature is affeotion- p reaction to the re- ate hut can they grow old friends walpolc bargain sulation that complete silence must be maintained in the stateowned uni versity library during the last year sc000 books were loaned to tho student body the public library on nimtsn u f munsterplatz with ils 30000 ilnng tuat tell on the contrary j volume newspanonir a ere to no occupation in which not s6000 uenl5 reurqi only fair but liberal dealing brings mlk ot m 8 the present time half od for both parlies he end of a beautiful friendship the readers consist of unemployed rails across the rhine one may float down the rhino to enjoy fhe scenery to contomplato the beauties ot ancient castles and to study bridge constructions for tho rhino presents almost a com plete museum of types of bridges ot the last 100 years there ara twentyfour bridges of the federal railways across tho famous west german river this means that every 155 miles in its 435mlio coursa through germany tho rhino ducka under a railroad bridge there ara combination rail and automobile bridges there are parallel glrdora and semiparallol girders thero ara arches and in some instances very bold bridge constructions there are also bridges which do not serve for railway purposes tho yopulatloa ot cologne for instance is enormous ly proud ot its now suspension bridge which resembles a miniature brook lyn bridge riches love is life ho who nas love is truly rich ha who hath none is poor indeed jma with lova s eternal krishna