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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-05-14, Page 7rte,+fw.� �„'•. M1 unday Sd to 1 , Lessor •v - amQmam ce: ..May 24 --Lesson VII: Jesus Preper- "inq for the.End. _The Lesio.Li_'. 'Luke • 21.; 1 'to 22i 23. Print: Luke 225.' ' 7-23: Golden Text --This do In remembrance of tne.--Luke 22:.19. ANALYSIS, 1. TRANSF•OR,MI TG' A JEW1Sii CuS,ro3Z, • • 22: 7-13, •II. T•HR MEANING'Or THE smf80L, 22; 14-23., . 711.iNSF.URi1fING A ,T4W1$11•''CU$TO•M}; 22: 7-13 • .-a We are probably wrong..to supspose that. Jesus,, on the occasion of; his; fast • evening with his dispiples dn•ear:tt,.iu' • .` etituted -.•a.. •.,ne'w. rite,O' .ve ii:T rga @ • i i s Chtl ch;to-be a new andte ito • heald of xenton� -If appears`rather T " '•that Jesus following a''wel'1=known Jewish-cus'tont'• which. persists to this .'day, had been:accus'tomed,.at the evdn reg' meal; .when he gathered :i.iso dis ciples about him to •offen,a. prayer' of • =y i haisgiving ,to Crod, to pans around the loving-.cul. e p,fiozu Vehicaeh•-dra•nk;- • . and the round, Slat. loaf • from which . each broke himselfa .fragment. We • seers to• find references' to,'this coin-, 'v •Melon Jewish • rite; the, Quiddush, in Other ,parts- of the. Gospels.. The Last' • Supper was not an •altogethe.r,new 'n stitution, but one, of 'a series, the last .of that'series' for. Jesus on earth,. and for the disciples: with his visible'p'res encs: It would, therefore, in any case, have been -ti particularly nteniorabie ._occasion, but it •Was iinade snore inem- • orable by the solem,n, prophetic • words , which -Jesus used. Henceforward •they, ,would,' when' thev gathered for their 'simple, - fanuly' . sacred 'mead,. • 'give thanks to God, -tot •on}y for his mer- • cies to Israel and to mankind at large - - but: tisi-pazticu9'az-forrt'he sending o his 'Son,and for Jesus' death and re- surrection • for thein. •. In future, the. bread and the wine-wcu1d be ;o ahem • the symbols of Jesus' gift of hires,,If unto death on their behalf..A sinrule.. Jewishe'rite. of fellowship and thanks= giving thus • because the Chiistia.n.. harrst,,-or -great Thanksgiving for. the• gift of Jesus. . The elements. of bread and ;wine •todk in a• new mys- - tcrious-sign ;fican.ce - The ser ecce 'came' e o a . ae •war. 'ook to the • Last....S_upp.er- iii-t}ie .:heir -ay -al night;- and • a forward look t_o_the- e: iritstaL ban -in the kingdom •of heaven when •the redeeming -.'work shall::be • completed. It Was natural that this service. should become ..•'1te _central act • `.f. Christian .worship. ;IT,. THE M EANI• • OFyl]i THE SY'oL, 2'2:' •1423' Itis oasis to see how the service• ;' originated.; .and ho'vvy�. itvdeveloped,,then tee know exactly ,what Jesus _said at the Last .Supper. 'We lave accounts. of that Supper in the first three: GeS- pels, anis in. 1 Jorinthians.. :In the fourth. Gospel we. • are given a dis- course o.4 Jesus on that last evening, and the story of the foot -washing,. but ito •accgmrt-.of the-Supper-,-while-the- sacramental he--S'appeY;-tvh-ii'e +he - sacramental teaching. of Jesus is con t-ected with'. the I+eedirg of the Five Thousand. -11•=4s--not•-possible-quit-e- ' satisfactorily , to harmonize, all' these accounts. I» particular it is probable (but not certain_that romLu we should.. Px- ciSe ers • account 'from the •••.• ivords "which is given fo.r you" in v. '19 to. the end of v..20. ' There is :m - the bC�readr ao w,ts he giving his very. life for 'the{nr • The Church has rightly' seen in the Lord's • Supper a bond of Christian fellowship, a communion with Christ, a feeding upon' him by faith,a fore- taste •of•'the ,.triumphal feasof re• demption . in, . , h•e , future .kingdom, Many l stoiical details are uncertain, and we do wrong to think supersti- tiously of the rite, but we can hardly put too much nieaning into It, for We cannot eihaust ache .infinite love and infinite significance ,f Jesus, " Stil'l •Largest. Tr e's Vancouver, B.C. - •According tA' British Columbia lumbermen the rec.- Icord for. the largest tree even ,cut down .8611 ,.rests. with the 'Lynn Valley Douglas fir, which. Was, 417 feet higl being. 300 feet to the ;first 'limb. It was 25 feet" in diameter .and 77 feet .in cireu!fife i•ence,,•alid was be1jtved to. be ,about';2,000 y"earrs old.. "There is probL, ably no°'other''t'i•ee that 'wil.1-ever sail:* ;pass in.: s.e this giant ,fit," .says h' .-Gan�td- •.-I..uut t ta• -eh e t t •t b� n, , , .,. c p . ..botanical ••speciiiten,. No tun}ber'cor-' pnration'-__o• ld aIroxd to let '• a' tree grow to such as age." ' `,What New York Is Wearing BY ANNABELLE WOR•THINGTO,N,, Illustrated Dreieniaki?tg Lessoaa Fztr- vishcd :YY'itht'Every Pattern' LatestReports- , On Wee *knee Byes Converse By Various a t Ii o!rre%lxents .According to, the ' latest scientific, • bee 'knowledge the feet of the bees • are .then 'o'rgans 'of','ceinn unication.; l" believes •Dr. Karl Von Frisch, a ger- man ento•utofogist. :in talking they', do net touch one another, but deliver ,their message by• what we''would a kind of''dance. r• The "method used in his. research 'is as interesting almost as, the ills wcovery itself. • Ii' appears tliat the' doctor -first built several • hives.. en -1 .. tire's, of .glass, so 'that he . c.oulil see ey actly what .w.as going on in diem. He made • s : all f d, ors' to. these ltives�• m 9, in •or -dei to let the, bees in' and.. out, as 'he, wished. : 13•e • placed. the b v.et3 .: •: oir 4,110 ide oY.thegarden.-on'the op-. u.: posited, side of which ''Kase a small... •'hatch `•of celo er inTh bloom' . en ,be- twee1i the hives and the clove•i patch. he l7uilt a screen maze,. or 'labyrinth; a • place; full of intricate passage ways whits-caverei3 ;-the-.entire-•garden.- This tions', -heed fte`diura`si a-11` lner-- of one of the hives,: letting 'oneliee. out.- ' With . some ` very bright red • coloriing material • he painted' ared.' cross upon the. back of this bee, so that he would .be able to ,distinguish it from • •the rest. '•,He• then released the marked ',bee to travel through the ' I network • of passages lin search of food:'' It -went -on its" -journey,: bat - fled 'at •. times by. ;enclosures :and blind alleys, but it 'kept on and •on, re• tracing its,steps 'time '.after, time, •ilii - til it finally ,succeeded in reaching the clover patch. • After it had gathered a.• load of •nec-, tar, it flew quickly back 'through :-rills=elaborateLehann.els-Lto ths-g-lass- 'hive, where Dr. Frisch -evened the' little door and' let the wanderer :in. The scientist kept his eye on the marked bee .iii the glass hive by. .means of a large magnifying. glass. It was _th.en that ,the entomologist' re- ceived' the surprise of his life,' The bee with the red cross .?a?oved • its fet-And wings • tap and down eirliar • rhythmic -.-fashion,- and -;iso sooner • sisal it made this. movement .'than a'11' the .other...:,. bees ',around it went through exactly the same antics. ,Shortly, ,afterward, Dr. Frisch open•' ed the hive. Tile bee with; the brit= -Hatt red ,cross on its back.came• out, followed by a host df other workers. The marked -bee, continuing to lead the way, 'took 'the ether bees'to the. clover patch:. jhout Any 'diftgI ity:- And from' that time on all the, beets • could traverse . the intricate maze With:Mit going Iito a ;bli,ud• • alley Or losing' auk tree Through further 2943 observation, : Dr. Frisch learned' that bees have .differetitt' movements and act in different •ways;according te ;the ••story ---they : ' -vish to -tell when • angry, for instance, th.ey'ntove in a peculiar zlgag fashion Stir)--fort•her-;st'udy--and--ol servation- • revealed that the hee does• not work Ian ;thee time,-as•o-was ,previously_ be- lieved, but talles time ' for rest. and • White enu,,uadered• ,► ..:. vest play. .. 'So the...bee', although 'it. does " ••x not • realize . that all work and no : play' portant manuscript authority for this, and deep;eirffs provide smart newness makes Jack a dull boy, i'nstinetively • -, and it is likely -that these words.were , and .contrast' to; an: all -.day model , of.,;carries out that idea. ' -Nevertheless. added,• in very early days; to brims ,navy blue flat; crepe silk. when is works'yit •works with .all'its • L'uke.'s account into better• harmony , . The cowl neckline soften ..the bodice - iiti.glrt. Only in 'war' times` do itu- with the others: ' and' narrows .its effect:. • { • grans conte near approaching • „the tenwe are'.sLill left:with:..tha.ques f- The skirt. hugs the figure through •'strenuous activities of tie' bee. tion as to what Jesus' meant. when he: the higs h gracious' flaring toward The bee often works •both day elle:, he said, "this is''my body." It is stn -._the hem,. '• night, ,gathering the pollenand nec- potta`nt to renicipbet•. that -„)'esus must •'�• have. been saying something :which' ' $lack •chiffon with 'black 1ace. -is: tar daring. tile` daytin>e and helping was•t .' ” i• l' . he • exquisitely lovely for more formal oc fan the nectar With :its. wings fo ie disc p es at the , . _., to h .-.. 8 time. Ile is net -reported as sayin'r,, easions. during the night, to make .the sweet this is:nty flesh," and quite certainly i Printed crepe silk. with plain: blend- ,fluid' thicker by evaporation. One when •h� gave them • the bread, he Was ' ing crepe .;contrast is decidedly • chic not giving them his flesh nr physical and wearable:. ' , •' body, to•.eat, for .is physical body Was Style.No. 2943 may be had in sizes still with them -as he reclined .at the 16, 18 ' years, '36, 38, 40,' 42 and 44 table.. We are ' ound, therefore, A 5• • • take' the words, mystically or p'arabo'.- •inches : ,bust: Size 3.6 requires V;i2 scally. `We hius"' not attempt';t ex. 'aids of - •3 -9 -inch --material- •-with -gK • hla•in" thein away, • we • must explain yard, bf' 35 -inch contrasting. --them • intelligibly- -The • i-lebrew- -pro- HOW 'TO ORDER PATTERNS:, .,phets had taught -their contemporaries, not only ' by their glowing words, but ,also ()ye their.symbolic• actions . -ips -'fat•--months Isaiali had gone' abeiet the city in the 'dress of a captive, and' . Jeremiah had carries? a yoke •on his shoulders as a 'symbol of the .doom that would overtake'an unrepeatable people.• Similarly Jesus used the aeted as well as• the spoken Parable His,seizing�of thb Temple whs• a Case • ---, i1 point: "This ---is iny-bodl,:ig--in'1i•a'- •• mean, "this represents my body.", s • Jesus. \vas giving them the cull and tI rite *our name and• address sat W P n - •good 'authority saysthat. it takes taventy thousand ' bees to make ,ate' single pound of honey. • It• also, takes ftve pounds of 'the sweet and preci-' ous. nectar from the flowers to make one " pound' of honey S0, a7ihough.'• the beee', does not always work,, in• accordance with the latest scielltiiic inyestigations, the .phrase "busy. as JA rr,t • • . • o Fly Nort] 9 Jac!:C;li:arleson of Ottawa, who ; with Capt—,..F, N. Wi iants; New • lor'k will .0 as far •:north •'as magnetic: pole . to •Pliotogralth ' aurora borealis iu c�:rirr P•lie'y. 1-•pia-u-•tci=-.Iko•p<-,aft.-J-it.i � 1:t1 ' . . • Sun's Rays:: Are !Cool 'Cornparfed With Stars Mount Wilson, 'Cal If' the glare of the spriiagtiitte sari--otz-t°he-•paveinent' irritates the eyes,: don't, be .`down= -hearted: .Things could be «oi sic -the.. who_ isnt ,-. o'b-rtght-sit • DrWalter S.- .Adams, ,director o.C_ tiie ==C-aiiiegie° Iiisti;ttztion .of Wah ington Observatory here, will tell' you it has • been measured • and found to be. 3;000,000, 0M00' 00, 600,000,000- 000 candle-power; That's a lot of can er, and the bri'ghtest.,electric rc looks • like a: black s otwhen se n.aga1nst.' thesu n s disk. But there• are rnillions of stars much brighter. - For instance, in the cool of •tae night one should look -at &igel, hi the constellation of Orion and contemplate' how beautiful it .seems. The sun goes into the shade, in com- parison with Rigel, orfthe brightest star-in--Orion-is at -le st -1:0;000 th les •as' bright as our sun. } ig rtunaoteely for -tether people on. earth, y P -surds- tr'nrere 93,000,000:miles from the earth; for there_av_ould-beno-li-viat:g••here•-then." Rigel is so far away that it takes its light more than 300'years•to reach the earth, while the light of the sun makes the journey in about eight ,and a -half minutes:--' And Canopus,; famous stat cf, Egypt, is still brighter. . Soil Erosion - Colombo Times of Ceylon: The problem Qfysoi•1 erosion is a world-wide one, hut .assumes.nrost -alar-ming---pr;-- portions iii countries where the rain- fall. is heavy, and'' the land steep. The rainfall in they Tropics, except in cer- tain- dry belts, is notoriously -heavy, inits annual as well as seasonal inci- dence; and where, as in •the 'Central and South-West regions of this islan"l, the' land. is -ii ountainous, 'the 'confi- tions fur ,soil ei'osiun may be described as ideal:. • This fact; and the logs r'e= sultiiig•froin the removal of the finest ,(which are also•• the most. valuable) particles of the land,' Were . scarceiy realized- by the enterprising pioneers ly. giving number and,_size: of,surh.-.a,bee" still retains its full si.gniliic- patterns' as you Want. Enclose 20c•in ince. • • stamps or,coiin (coin preferred; wrap it•earefully) for each,numberi:and ad- .dress your, order to -Wilson Pattern Service,, 13 West Adelaide St., Toronto. • 4``HAR1TY ' "We-niay cover i multitude of suis ,need out' of the fullness tliiat,there. IS _with:;the white• io f' 1 it i Cir i t J St 1 s ,THE KEY • Faith is' ttte key that unlocks the cabinet ..of God's • treasures;• the king's messenger • from the. celestial world, to, biting' all Ali Sappliies We • War,' and. the Next 'Generation' New, Statesman and. Nation (Lon den); .Mr. Angus Roberts was, per,•' lectly right when he said in presidential address .to ,the National )[Triols• of Teachers that the , danger et war still' lies tu its glamor+ -iii "the indefinite-fo'rm NqY adm ration ' which sill's clings to It. . la the days. when war meant head -to -hand fighting there vr!.as really something splendid about it. • F-bve'i in the 'last war there, were Opportunities for e.chivalry`, tlrere. .a was genupe call for eomiadeship im arms. , But we have heard. complaints from ',regular soldiers that warfare nowadays ,is not war' at- alI-="iigt was," .they put it, "but bloody inur- der.'"57: .. If war had become a sei.en- .tific but indiscriminate. slaughter , in: volviug:civilSans as well as armed men in 1918,' what. of the, next war? ,'.:' Lewisite, a .poison gas which ao burns its victims that.•they b'ecome,scarcely repognizable, and a.nothe'l gas whiolt.: first causes •itxtense pain lu tiie head. aud. clie•st,• a'1?aiu wi icit Is, followed' l1t1c.li a'cut'e rental misery that it; 'sometimes• drives Men to suicide these came into use before the end of the last. war. But men recover •from des ' of tlieke gases, just as they often rdo ft;dlii nusta �dgas aliil I fos ue, Quotations s That •observations, which is Calle.. knowledge of the world will be tone • • '• muel more frequently• to .make milt' • cuntring- thair-good;-Dr. Johnson l et-not-tlpngs; •because •they' ala - common, enjoy for' that the less sh<.. to • off c'out• consideration. -Pliny the Eider. . - .. _ ._.. _ _ • . • hardly anything,wil( bring a i'. :n s, mind izito•full ae1,ivity if ambition be • • wanting. -Sir Reny .Taylor.. m Certainly no.Ching is tinnatural..'ralr • is not physically impossible.' -Richard', Brineley,Sheridaii.' ' ' Sad soul; take eeniforf; nor forget`, that sunrise never failed, •its ryet Celia •Thaxter•: • ik la i• a v'.olin •soo in' -T3ife i,s 1 e 1 r..P 9 r�' 1 1 "f public and learning .the • instrument as .one goes .op,-Sain'uel„Butler.:' Tf,•a mane :drinks'-beavi•ly. in ,order, '• ' 'to d'r'own ;hl ,.troubles -'he•'*ill '.soon Y 4' ' i(Slt0.1, r { . yY ` fR f Should be ..i ire' i• • Alco o a •cul t engine, �•' 7n ki � g . r not in'the .engineer."-Henry'Ford. Sleep is ''fleeting• death;' each sung, • rise finds us all new• bili i . From the , and •we niay apl areutly espee.t More. j: Nothing• is so dear and precious `at • effective substitutes in •'the..next, war, It seeii}s, too, that there IS a good prospect of , developing , other •forms•, of poison. ; . Where is , the glamor, the high ',call of adventure in war of. this kind? • We have written. in •a,l,sincerity on 'our •war neinotials up and.down the country: "Dulce et de- i coram est pro`petiie nioki:'• ves'haps j ' we shall do•so• again. . But if Rhe add -r: "to •r11 for your countl•y," which 19, after all,. what a soldier is asked: to do, will, that,: too, 'seem` a sweet and hon. orable thing, in a war of the kind for 1 which all. nations even now •.are bine,-Rapelais" ` • . Si><rinier Mode sant Ice Crystals Formed • Only Once By• Nature :� Giant ice Crystals; 'up to eighteen inches across, • are found at only one place` in :" tile:' WOW: in •the' faMeai :1. Kungur, ice caves of the Ural- inoun tains Russian scientists recently nrd- -turnd freni-these e'avevns with s ik= ing photographs of • the fantastic struet-ur-es= takeriLby- .water =r -n hese• • remote, grottoes. Snowflakes are seen under the- Microscope'.: as delicate s'ix- pointed 'crystals, .and. hailstones,' on rare occasions; have been found to consist" 'of 'crystals . visible .without magnification, but the huge ea -%e• ciys tats are' more beautiful than either. They are' hollow :anti six-angred;:- ith a curious spiral geoinetry, showing the intricate _effects of wuidow-pan• frost projected into tI ree..:dimensions. The ice,is deposited like hoarfrost by. 1e ,the cooling..,of moist air ''as, it :passes, outward through the eaves. Popular Mechanics lyIagaz%ne • ' • • Use for Dividing- Rod • New' hope for-•-the-r-esese • of 'av'al- anche bictims and -fit -1U early t '- covery of bodies 'of the killed which often are not found until'•'the Winter's • snows have`melted[has been Zound ir•, the divining rod. A' Mountaineer...Of Traunstein; • upper . Austria, deeply moved by some regent avalanche tra gedies, has been making' a series ;of experiments.. Objects. likely to be car- ried by every skier, such -as 'a, watch ring; coins, ski 'knife and ski foot- plates, were buried nett' deep in the snow, and a "dowses.' set out with the divining rod to search for them. In each. case the rod revealed the location of _-the-nnetaliic , objects. It is-beli:evea that the new 'discovery will save scores of lives• lin the Austrian 'Alps every Year. • • • • r Why Swiss . Lakes ' Are Blue ' 'Travelers long have marveled at 'tlte'bei udfirl• i c for of the lakes in the Tyrol'ean•'�`, ilps', and chemical Compounds -in •the •water --'were -genera•)= ly believed to' cause; the color. Recent analysis; however., shows the lakes to be free,'from coloring„ :matter. Scien- tists therefore have decided that the who, in'opening land Tor coffee- anis hue is'due tea, • blindly followed the • system • of of the ,azu clean -weeding in Vogue in English • i,articularl" agriculture, aitd largely depends. -like• changes, to all pioneers -on :the virginal fertility Other local f th.e _1 tad .fos_•tl ii. _crc s Su, ?e eve ex ?went experience in tropical .plantir, ;• n f favors o p line• ...1 1,} dd , lar ;llechani. s Magazine. I lounge. " . • • • c..,.'.,..,: • .of red and. • white -Irish. linen, svo:rn • with -white " • linen hat buttonholed at edges in" :red ' yarn. ' White , kid opera , pumps are trimmed with,, -narrow .' ' band .of white lizard. •QY Movi'e;.is Sentt Through Tube • For Patrons in.' Lounge ' On a miniature screen in the lounge , of a •Los Angeles theatre; patrons may view and hear. the ide:>ttical talk-- -. ing picture being presented' in the main auditorium: ,.This enables thosa to reflection and refraction. 'who wish, to retire to the •loutlgi.ig re sky' iii colorless lysis,, room •without•missini any of the con- t•• since the azure color- tinuity Of 'the film. The,picture is re- gray as the sun declines. fleeted from the filni in the main pro: ities do not have the deep-.jection reoni by means of a mirror col Tian. because they are- and throw h a long tube to the las • d • with clear ue'�si des,•-- Yem'e'n; si ieei"Ccrcl�; •iii tile -Tia 1:1'11. lie o c tar y. it r. s .- . gels .ten . has .atia.de_the_ _planter w- ar Pow• rx MUTT AND JEFF— —By BUD FISHER. A BEAUTIFUL 'DAY' 11,1 MAY' -1 A NIFTY LAKE -1 At.)b AP4 OUT8OARb MoTOR • _K / NOTHING CouLD INE 1\ 604.6. SIXTY. MILE) AW HOUR:: O'BoY;' 1F SOMEBODY CRACKED 'A BorTI:E OF C:HAMPAGt iE , HEAD— I'14,, CHALLENGE ----s ThMnnY • LiIPTON': - — t HOPE. NsV PARACHUTE OPEN 5 WHAT's L MATTER MU,-.. 'Where the Flys'„, .77,,y: I. WAS GOING 60 MILES Ata HouR- AND t Fb(zso'V ii16 . LAKE,u►AS_ OIiLY 14.0 Mies W tD€ 1 • -- I. • • ter.d,WA•.".• 0. . 11