The Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-04-28, Page 3co. ...lc!.
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LESSON
TOO -OWING VISION WITH
- • :7
SERVICE -Mark. 9:14-29 '
Gok en Text., --All things are pea71
sibje to him that beileveth. Mark
23. I 6
THE LESSON.IN ITS: SETTING
: 29, ,
.the foot of the 71.noun-
"tain o:n which thetrariallgukation of
, .took r .and 'therefore:
- 'probably on: the plain at the ,f.trOt:of
• •%1Viennt I-lermen. • •••
14..And.when theycame' That• i
7:. it'd:ten the Lord Jesus, NN,;.ith bis titre
'disctriles,.P,eter, James, and. john
, „returningfrom their reptilrous ex
perience On the .negn.-bir monnthin
whore Jesus was tyansfigured; carne
to the -Pia.,i6.12ftoinZr11,01,-OgY r
had departed for 'the. 'mountain. To
•
the diseiplea. That ia, to • the nine .
•%disciples • wham' Jesus had left he-
• bind When .he 'ascended the meunt„,„r_
•'They .saw. "They,"' refers to Jesu• s.
the three disciples.- with. him. A
great multitude aboliit Ahena,andi
Ecribes questioning with them. I3oth
•!....cif-the-prenonna--,-,Nbern2L-refers--7tei,
' the nine disciples. As we anal soon
See; the 46i/ilea had failed ;intheir
•iittenipt to ' cast the demon out of a .
*poor bey who .haa been brought C. :•••
thern, and the s:•I'il•es vere
vantage ;of ter traiie failure to ae7,.
euse...theni of ithpostUre and an in".
te'aecomplish /the: things ,
'Which they boasted of.
,15,•And •straightway all the _multi',
'tilde, when .their. saw him, were ireat7:
lir amazed, and inimingto hint.saltit-
ed him. The multitmie were amazed
•e a y. no he,e c . esus
at -this tgd one person
•
that they wanted to.:see•,• especially
z' because of the 'heated :argument that
Id arisen. He crane' down on the
:lake : when his .',dAciplea,*.ere.;•enVe.p
e'
is unnatural ant iI1ogicit If earth-
ly fathers feel so, hew must our Va-
014 who IS in 111,..aVen yearn over his ,
.children, a prey le PRossession"t and
daily when under the control. or' sin
.;sent into, terribh.; dangers .and temp-
tations! • , •
,
Iland of Faith
• 23,, And Jesus said unto hi,M, If
thou eanst! . 'An thingsare possiblej,
to hi ml that :beileVeth, . The. father's' .
faith had -net been, . Very strong. `to
:begin, With, and the„,,failure of., the
disciples had made it weaker. !What
'-jesue, really -Man was •that
was'not a question of his (Jesus')
nbility .t4, cast c•ut this clemon;.: but
the real, iSsue was whether the matt
had faith enOugh to believe that
Jesus could do it: ••,
4, •
When. Jesus 'said .thet 'all
are possible, to: him that belleveth,"
he meant that everything „which we
have a :right. t6„.expect from God,
cording to the teachings; Of, the Neiv,
Testament,, We.shall receive 604! the
Lord, 1? we , have faith to believe in
hirn . who, has. made 'theee ,proniises,
-T2-4-.-Ftraightawarthe7fatberrOf the
childcried out, and said, I believe; -
.14p thou mine. unbelief. He wished
*;,*•tr,•( believe, 'butfelt unbelief Still' tee) '
' strimg Within hint. . He presenta.
him-
self to. the LOrd ,j..uSt' as he is
•*20.. 'Aila .whep..lesus saw that e
multitude cam.e'rUnning together, he
'rebukes]the unclean .Spirit, saying
•unto him, Thou 'clunib and deaf SPirit,
I ,command thee, •come out of 'hint,.
and enter no moi.e. into him.
20. And having' cried out,. and tern
becaine,,As one deed'; InsOmuch •that
tha'rnore 'pot 'said; He • is ,dad•t
''',What. is often feared ino.it in a thrtiOr.
: operation Is' what is ',called. "shock."
When a 'po'vve: that has ilothinated a.
:-•We is remove(1.'It Is rititnral" •that'
ped in j..h qto,nfji1'
-',Que's0oning 'MultItud,e
•16 And he asked .thein, What quee-
_, tion ye With their)? • The...qttestipn
• was iprobably put both to the scribes
and Ito the'multitucle• in general: ;Here
-Undoubtedly the ,',question,of .Jesus
was one asked sincerely, to eectire
• Inforniation,' totiod. h.ecattae. Jesus did
.:•;••• not' choose' to exetcise hisldfrmne ont-
•-•pfselcues.41in . this OccaSion,. '
• . .
• 17. Andone oftlie multitude
ans-
weiecj him, Teeeher;,:I brought -unto
Prom .iltia verse we gather that the' '
father of thla wretched boir.,•had heard •
, that Jesus,was:neae-hyl but the'Lord
•• had come up on, t� the mottnt4iti. With
• ,•his•three disciples to: he trails:figured,:
•
and-thoLfather-dtterntecIL-1-e-, Yd -e -the
' .• ''next.• best •thing, ' Le., to ask the' dis.
•• ..,MR.es_ of, Jesus to healhis. bey., Thia,
• Spirit Was: a 'power too great for the
to eSeape frain by his OWIT, deter.:
ininatien;..and.la.poWei which no
er••-•rtfan was able.,te.•drivo•
.' •
,yvheresneyet7 it taketh
it •dasheth him '•dowi0.'.tind*
-..foarneth, and gritideth his •teeth, and
.pineth: ray. -words here
• -.acribe the „condition .;of this ioyun-
•
Of. the deinen.' And 'I..
: spoke ..to • thy disciples that they
'Should:east, and they 'Were• riot
Tlue disciples had •;.lost . the
,'•••'•pOwer.Whieh theyonce had to. deliver
:inen:sfrOin the.boridage :fkbrn which
...the ..tord. Jesus 'Caree'tO set men free
' • ' • The Crowd Accused• !: ,
',,. 10. .And' heansWereth theni.. and
, • . tiaith) 0 ' faithless,, generation, how• "
long' shall 1 be with i,•ou.'„? how long
l'.'hear with r.(111 g•' himun-
to ;Me. These Worci,di..Were• addreSsed.
(1)•' 'to• -•-the 'father,. (2) tethedis-
•
7.
...(3)..I6 thecrowd,,• find , (4)
thretigh • Nein :to, thn Whole people....
, It as- faith that. the • .Lord 2.1,eanS'
Ought,fr314711iVit•-"011rien;'-iin
6!'ve'rthing .any one eeuid. db to '
•• secur6..shcb faith,; 'when faith; did 'het
• follow iiis..ntioolog • arid inatchless
teaching,: the; Lord was 'grieved...to
the depths Ofhis heart: • •
th0.-:hrottgl'it luim: unto:
hitn:',and:Wheri ho sa hirif,i-telliglita,
away the ,•sp,trit• tarevitirri..grieyougly;
and he fell. qv 1.1e .grOund„, and 'WA'-
. le'Wed foaming.: Ifer,elmfore the very
eyes Of jesui. the 'Whole
the hoy apiiertrel . ,•
21,' And: :110-•aSkeil his hither, How
, ,,•.lohg time IS 'It since this' hath cern°
Unto him?. •Artil ho. said, nrin •
• Child, , There' ave..," many „tat-lents',• "
• handicaps, 'aid ,'P,eCtiliar. twists that .
• Many men can say they littve,..,1iltd •
.dfrorn a 'child." • ,‘ If ".ft-onu a child"
• We know boi"is itna.g10.8.'tO bear -such
"..terkible afflictions and .Weaktiess.eS,
ItOW,,iMpOrtarit it IS, that.' t.lfrfun ..e.
•".Peonle • shOuld. . be '•
brought; t° know • the • Loyd jesUsi.
Alhel'poSsilillities'' for groat"
• •.'4.ocid 1rehildren are just' .aa eood as
the Possibilities .for gr6at eviL.
• 22, And oft -times it lhath efist,lihri
both into the lire fihd fhte
'11121rbile, .itFoir
•.eanst de anything,":'••iiiVe .coMpasalott-,
na,, 'And' help 70s, otico thq
bectitron.!e of .C14 prohouni"ns."
• The father infide .biniself one With;
7 the child, Th d Atifferiliks' of hia'•SOti
'4ere.hia Sufferings. Yet people SOY'
that ritOrientent through ',Substitution
ere s otild e a -convulsive expert:,
. ence iji the readjustment of that life.'
.to newconditions and to the loss' of '
that which previc;usly had been a Ver-
itable part:of that, life.; Here there
was pore, than a power,. an .actual:
Satanic , personal dominien Over this
•tat'Jeans took. him by -the hand'
and: raised hint .tip.; and he arose. •
Jestout net here, ,,aa_•it weie,pick
op -a linin body.- The -Cure: Wati Janne-
and';comPlete, and •so definite'
'that- .neorre7taii-14--cl-auht-thenl,ity
ofit. Jesus was•'not..only interested
in casting out this, dernOzi, balie.hed
'an.' infinite CoinnaiSion'. for tho boy
and' waited: 'until the boy
-.tiicsi e. n, r
estprod to nor-
g
'WhY". They Couldn't Act' '
,28 And Whenhe was come -Ante
'the, disciples ' asked him
• pri-vately,.hOyiS it that' Weeould not
'• cast it out?, • they •Wetile ashamed and -
perplexed and bewildered 'their
t41403-41111-10-t.gliQ3N-4P*-e-7'.1146.irkil
that . once they had; had *power- to
cast out dernotts,„.and th'eyknew also.
that they might to: liavci Ihad-power
t6'.de SO that dail. Stich fiumiliating
experiences are yholelOrne fok. every
, Christian Werker. Tittles of tripe
ten-
cy fiud failure are used- by God fora
great ,searching of our hearts and.
1.1„Vaa:' •• ' ;
29:2 And ho sald ;unto
kind 64n. come out by nothing; ,save.
- by '' prayer. These mightier spirits
require the :full measure of faith. to
dislodge. The diScipleS' dicl not think •
' of prayer.' They let their faith droOlV
hild %thus failed.; DepreSsiOn ,laid7hOttl
of, thorn, and in Cotiaeg.nenee..ihey neg.
lected, ivInti. they • thod..rieeoetitost,,:
•'.Praycr; and •so their faith fac1ca644..--
they were left without power. Pray-
•'•erlessness always results in loyrered, •
sPhitual vitality, and .ihaLt_in %turn:
; brings:, failure':- •
19'
• rl
• •
c
o A .c1f3c-P..F10.14... • at;i.utit,.:citt.,olitt;1•TI:40,0
... .... . .....
Vcr !!
f•MK1
'
• AY'
r-
. etc,' ,. •
the,•greater part: Of C41/14.) `and its 'de-
..thThoht theworld, *Ana to
•eActors wbich'..a•re pot, understood"
With the decline of plague is yan-
ishing 4 MYsteriOns licourge which
has .,fl°1"altlif3knnanWnthrQlau:nhe97:inathi:
North Africa. In the, sixth century;
perope :experienced its first visitation
The -Black Death •
,911e Of the n1914 fanta.144---'151'' nOtOr'
Deatkwh,jj the eattetnhethBle4etick
--
tury, swept...,Enrope and in England
alone wi.ned,' -mit more than •.three-
quarters of the, populationin all,
25 millioa P6006'4,10.'111 1.4q4-45 came,'
the .c_Ireat Plegite of London.
.popuititiOJI of rcondon•at that time as
• lese, than a half, a:,rei1lien;77a.ad'in. one
year. 08,000 Were stilts* down;
As.tinte pessed, the .plague .heeanie
leas endless .coMmon, in the West and
finally 'disappeared from lenrope, Inev-
/11.$ to.; 010'Eal,t An Oinbreali..itt.,10dia.
.-1)e.t..Ween*149.7:and;•1906 4.1.1.1ed oyer
.$4,.,060;00T People. ' • ; •
The plague is believed 'to be, caused'
'by. rAt fleas,. and conatant.vigilAace is.
—.44 •
11141.11kainqii in aii pprti, • lip ;;Toda of
•Settlement
' • ; • •ActOst.,IttitisILSOA'
MN Progress
.72,ritolaiia 'shod; Mediterrin-
e.onLies
:Hagan, ,When - Italy: Gave, Aid To .,.--;Fre.7,ch potato to theIdes-
Dynamic, men byHairy WhitneY; barely wins a race' from „Neephxte,;onail, driven.,by Billy yost, in a 'neck- .
and-neek, finish on the.Aiken Mile Track, .South - Carolina.
Survey By Canada's National Em-
ployment Conunission. Shows
Chronic' Disease Takes Second
'Place' In List of Unemploy-
ment Causes—Construction In-
dustry Hardest Hit.
While pmpl9yrneet Vere
inneh 'brighter for 01.9 years 1937'afid,,,,
a in -i2tore-r, 1-vro-.-yzar
the statistical reports c.ompied by the;
National Eintiloirnent' tominission,
publishedln l•-•?Itlet form, reveal that
the Majority of heads :of families:un-'
eMployed. in.;1937'"have,,net henn
tjnuorsly anitartIni.7 rOt
;months period .since19t3. •
qt 99,561 .heads Of..fahdlies
in Cnn-
ada unerePloyed in Septemb.er of
year more, than, .4,3,000 were 'not e1117
.ployed,...for.that.puTiOd shic4 1933; 16,-
600 ..sinee.19,3k2; 14400 ail:it-0;193i, And
1.7,411 since or earlier:, •.• And Or
•ithe,99,561. only, 1,734 were neVeri self-'
depe1ldent...1 The:Sante proPertiO,O'helds,
,good .for • •
•:. A. tableof.".tiret.Cansei
0! unernploy-
nhulity reveals- that age is the leading'.
cause for men and broken -hews .the
Te-edIngeatise.:.for. women. „For
„chronic; dipeaSe...taltea ; second'•pinee •
,anct,phyoioni..,(ioto4,.thii•d place
cause. of ,•upeinialo,y'ability.,' F6r.•Woineti '
age is Second cause, :Chronic ,d1SeaSe.•
. • , ••
third and physical defect fourth.; Ad -
tion to. drugs ,or ,alcohol is klninor
cause rorboth ineO nfid•Wernen, etil.k.
16 heads -•offornilies .1n the•Wliole
this .eanse.
ItTniplOirrible 'Pei•Scins„.• .howeVer„ i..en- •
:joirecl, ;sortie 'measure -Of .ertiployment.!
44,1946 and ..,apprOxiMately
_One-third of •tht:k 'last had workLIP.,
either,ot,these „
. ..•
,Tne, 'age .4roup, 0!. the largest cturs...,.
'bet 0! employable -•:persona • Is.,tinit
be-
lweeii 20 and 15 'years, While. the age '
group of the largeSt.:oirtnbeti:;of tinernW
Ployahle pe.r.sons ,froni••• 46:: ,to. -0
•. ,
'years: • "
eorriparative tahie of uneinpi.oyAd
in Ontario cities iii.1September, 1937,
revealas felleiVet ..,Stratferd,,,.781;,
Woodstock, '193; , St.' Thomas, 356;
Owen ', S'OUnd,, 'Sarnia; 154;
1,070"; Lon-
don,, 2,360! RiCeherier, 016.;• ' Guelph,•
1,151; dart,. ,3•25.; c?iiothon,.49';..13raA'.11-•
Ord, '2;9.07, : ; • •• ••••• ; • •
agricultural aid ilia:" total,.
riihe persons .keceixiiig.,relief. • in
..canada.,111 'Septerabeii 1931y
• •
.th:O,„Prolgnoo, or sas-
katchewatt...:: 0.0:minted 218,004;
vhil,-'il:it i1-o:Ia(l:only bout half that'
inuMber, 155,692.0.1t.
Tan.. total, there' ,iVere .260;001 .fai•rit.:
. • ' .
„ . • ersand their ilepetidents;reeiving aid ,
, , „ • .•
The feathers of . thetin aco are,..,while Ontario had billy 5,77' in tli,is
, , . . •
not waterproof, ;,the,,,cOlorat wash off: category.: . , ••• ,, , . .•': ',, .
4in. a rain. ' • Construction Hit Hard... •„
A table setting out , the. normai '
occupation •• of ;relief. recipients In the ,
lemitition•',reVeals tliat the . COostruc.-
. ,
Miss Erigland To Wed
fifi7101' Oxford,. "Miss Great Britain"
ni 1036, Will-Marry.Gilbert•.A.-Evat gf
it London ate& broker. 'Miss Oxford
figured' in the disappearance Of rianly
Voaper at sea; last, year, when he Van,:
ished from R parlY she gave,
•••
IS ,THIS YOUR
BIRTHDAY?\,,.
13rA. R. WEIR.
'What .the _Stars 'Foetell, fOr,
Born on APrii, go erre 30th and May 1,•
' ' • 41ar;d• 4 '
If you :Nvere born on .4 date listed
above 'your .7,0p etc sign is Taurus. This •
Sign is Of, the..Variby Triplicity .and it
„giVeS yettr...great•practiCality, a strong
will ; and fijced,:tfeterinination. you are
aelfpossereaeit; have, decided views :and
great•POWera .6f iPerserverairee.:', .!..
, Wlole "Au have.. influential frientla
u
14-.1**ANs' f f enf
who \vlul itteitipt to' eitiae tie:tibia' 'for
ebild,ren *ill be a sOtiree.of
rd'at ;happiness to you. Your 4itotty •
.1.fininber,is eixf••An luicxPeeted hnsfaeit, ,
•clifinge for the tette' Is Ind tca.ted,
- E'er c(linplete birtluday •hOrbSe6lje•for
any birth' date In. :the Year, semi 100 •
• to A. tt.,'Wetr', 73 .1t.d.glaide'St4W;;To-
ronto..PleaSeliript your, nAtite and it'd•'.
dreSS. tiTninly;. •- 1"
. • .
-Lion induStry lics been hardesthit.
Thei•e•-•were 18,84 fully employable
poisons i this category: Next. ya
minefactuying with 1522.f then goo-
eral iabor„11;880, and trade; ,10,323: •
For Ontario : the.; 'orderdiffered.,.'
slightly but construction was stiU in
the, lead with; 0,974, `lnanufacturing '
next., with 4;7,88; ginerallahor, 4,042;
trail ' . , .
aS legging,. faKining,',fishing andmin7'
ill( played only a nn 1 l' part An thesd,,!
table's, with 4: total?. of 8,073.,for the
whole DoMihion. This is exclusive Of
special' aid to resident farmers •snelt
• as -.those fflL the. ." • 7 -
Tombstone Laid
To -Appease Ghost.
'Victinri. of •Murder 200' Years Ago
• &ad to f Haunt Preznisei
•
: To 'appeaap, the ghost of. 'a • sailor
:who has. haunted the 'tine posta.init••
at Portsnieuth1 .Eng., • ever slnce. -
was murdered 200.'Leare. •ago, a:Itentb-
stone hasbeen erected ,oVer' his &aye'
In the:inn'a cOtirlyard: •
...According ie.-leg:end the sailor at'
rived .at 'the. inn One .night : early :in, ,
the 18th:century and Was . killed by a ,
stranger;'• Who robbed hire of a bag.of
jewels ; .0nd mone3 The . landlady and .
dier san, fearing that . the crime Would.
,damage-the.•nairie•-Of the Inn,' 'ar4&g.9d
the bony Into the. epurtyard and '. bur-
ied It ander:. a flagstone, ' • '
.Whitefaced Sailor
A ..traveller w' o slept' in 'the .-ksiont
•,;wher.e.L.-the....natiKlereeettrred7-.'7-a ;
1ew-7
. ,
.days later complained that .he. had
;seen ia..„'„„!:tyltitefac id sailor:: 'with ,bi6ed
on his .face''.
rior.'goi)oratioits the inn retained' its ,
,
of.being haunted and treh .
aftpr e. new binhling was erected' the
tailor Was Said to haunt the eorfidOr's
at night:.
The pi eSent landlady holes that .'
the nel •tornbstone will appease the •
ghot
Butterfly's Plight -
Well. Controlled
It Is' In Some Al*Ya.Superior To
ntterillil:aret9f.fragile
eteaturea ,that,, 'one. ;would .Suppo'pe-
thein to be largelY at, theniercy of
the :winds in. flying, "Their w4v.ok=',.
•"irig,,seemihgly erratic 'flight, 'even on
atilt' days; Suggests:this,. .But,wities •
W. Beaelt• Thernes-: in the -Atlantic; ,
'.lifohthly; for j'arttlery, "Their flight •
.is now known tO-be,---rnitch
control atop aeemedlikely.1.,arg-e
flocks -.Of "bniterflies have,. bean seen'
taking their *ay ' Strong;
Winds , over the: sea as beth inuni-
,grenta ,and erhigrants:" .Further, the
author tells.. ne,..the'•flig:lit of • butter-
flies is in some ' respects. Superior to
, that :Of birds., As an tinStanee • he
Cites the lingo' light hlne bittteriliga•
:of the 131;1124Jan. forests and the ptir••:,.
Ple .brimei•er butterflies of France aird
Great Britain which.-hae thc power'
' of rising into the'Air almostvertiefil-,,
an' ease and at a Snead that'
are, scarcely.' credible." These 'Cape*
aeronattie•Seern 10 bo the gykoplalies '
of the insect werld:" • •
Sideways paid .13ckwards
Insetts, have wevertil tricks of fhg t
of which other? flying .dreatntes And
heavier-than-air flying machines are'
, incapable. For &le, hinny
have tho
abiuiy to go into, rovets'o goar and
flY...di,reetly• haqkwitra. without Chan
ing 'their ,bodily position. In addi-
tion to thiat they can fly ,.sidewise,
either to the right 7tir ,left; at:tight
'angles to the aXli' of 'their --tiody;-
. Many of the Smaller '
ing bees and Mob ean hold ,their
own With the larXer dragon flie,a in
reverse:6i lateraYilyins.
cC,
econd Great War
,PrancT, FamOua Soldker's
• Once. regarcieci as A: penal settle-
. . Claim
• . . -*
second great War
of i,the 2'Oth century began in. July,
1936; according i6 'Capt. • Basil Lid-
dell Hart, historian and . expert -on•
-militaiy matters. •
Captain. Liddell Hart, who is Anilf,
tary .:Corresponclept of `the 1,4ndell•
Times,. told the ViiiversityCollege
nien Societk': in "thet the
s opera ,IQIIrs 9, ewer:came w en •
Italir.,.;witli• aircraft., gave' "direct as-'
aistaneefl, to The.. Spanish .thstirgents
, • . •
and GernattnY-N:Niith.Warships, gave
."in-
direct asaistarice,o' helping transport
trocips'.klrorri Africa- to -Spain. ' .
-.-:--Pretrediarthe way, he said,encour.
agement andexperience had. .been,
•gained by Japan in Manchuria and
'Italy, in Ethiopia. in defYing., ;the
League •of Nations and dvelopilig
.the':neW .:technique . of camouflaged
, . .
"'The situation "in this new 'great
War'''now wolo.Seeni to be that the
...enemy ,is• Within reach of gaining
the decieiVe, Points ',without a . battle,
ant:1,4n the Most vital direction we
havemade no 'serious attempt' to pre-
teritthim,'!. said. Captail Hart.'
.lagUe.::Decjines
'Throughout :China
'HrieDisappears Gradually. From
' Rest .4 the WO
'At a Loss--., For 'Explanation,
,
Pla,gue, is vanishing, front the world,.
and scientista are .fit a loss to under -
stet d , why. .,
calom%h
el • oe, report-
ing that for'seven, years.' no easesef
plague have.been found In Hongkong,
says:.'"Ithe disapPearan4 of plague.,
not ,Only from's. Ilongkeng,, but from
ient sts
ment, similar. to. Devil's '..Island; :the
•Ile of,Panteueria is no* being' re, •
,.P:arded',. by.' Italians as 'a potential .
;Mediterranean "Gibraltar' . Of their
gritish• atiases do .not eveip
It, but, lying aeroas thefBrittali
'and Freedh route to the Indies, • 11..
occ,uPies,a.Position of high. gtretogteei
,i.njiPelilltiet.E
P 11., 'LO
1 •
nL to a pea .emeatO qr.0•10e). c4:, Want •
"•2;506. feet,. lts areafs' ta-icoarelctio-
' metres, aiid it stands in thVniddle.of
the narrow ;,elannet between •Slcily
and the rrencli 'North Afilcan Colony,
Of ,titnis, 'frOm-Which-it
minutes'. journey. by : •
' Stationary Battleship
It ':,dotninafes:' &lash ;arid •
sliiPhing t� tbe Indies as effectively ,as
a mountain.duitiped n tlie...middle of:
the • Englieh• Channel would dominate
. all .pranecAritisiLoiRpii_js.,
,The PaintiiTtion of Pantplleria. Is
nearly .7,000; Mainly' ..7peasant
class Who have up •tornOWT,terideOlie
Vineyards and.' IsMen and orang&...
groves in peace: ' But now Italy
vis-
Iialiseii :the _island; as: magnificent.
Statitinary it IS trne.Aut
7Whieli; ne hopetotitik7'.
,Partlier. south, again in Mid:ehannel,.
islands •- Sinai'. but Of:-
','strategiCal importance, Within •a few
.minutea'' flying froin'any' point on the
Mediterranean between .Sicily and.',..43f-
.rfea-.4VPW-Csa;Thirii-a • and•'..LanM-,
- - •
The large boulders scattered
about Britain, and now known to
have been lett by ...glaciers, once
were thought tohave been wAShed'
,liT11ood•
• .
'
A. queen 'wasp prodirces: from
000 tct.:20,00.0 offspring In a' life-
Woman Cricketer "Whistles While She Works"
• • .
fornier.;eaptain of England's WOrriell'a•erfeket team;
is se'enhere ottelating in, a 'ecent field hockey
"„iate., bctween Stevenage
and 81ough ladW towns. She is on tour as newly appointed national or.
gmannejzitesarit0 t.110 Wornen'' Teeth' Games Board i .organizing sport timiughout
Planes• ' e Elevators
Are Visualized by Aeronautical
Institute — ProPened by
• '" Rockets
Aeroplanes that will he, Ole to rise
'.and descend like PreleVater'aild Apro- •
7Planes that, trayel at great speeds.,, Pro-
Pelled by rockets, are 'visualised by••
the American Institne of 'Aeronantlgal
Seience, whieh, 'is composed s'ef the leaf
:dere Of every branCh of ehefadustry. jfl
. .
the Vnited States.... • • . , •
,At the.annuatmeeling of .this group . •
In , NeW ork It Was stated thanan au
lOgiro:had been designed whieli was •
capable of juinPing," 200 feet ;into, the '
air on take off •.• ' "
•' fiockit Planes, Tao ,
• '.13H•Ocget ,planea, ,the: dreame .of air.'
Craft' 'Manufactarera,::•Ware ststed •tTbe o
almost • an acicoMplistr-...,ft fact. An .-
.abroplane e-per-t7d.eseribe,i, praettes)
,zoetheq or combiningaeroplane deal*
Nvlth the rocket priaeipie. By,•baating;
the air floin 3?4,et ;the, Metola o a.
-PlaneF.4capturing7itlirtniirtgrwir--7---'
letting It shoot.out in p.:.teiles 'ef ex,
'..plesiuns, :a ten:gin increase in .s.peett,'
would, be ,olitoiried..•
..Normal• speed of '600 ,nriles- 'an hour -
in the stratosphere's..fOr.ordinary'aero:
branea- was predcte hy experimentalWhe. are working:on methods' by
*hitch •tedis....r ',can, be elitnineted and:.
engine's. ocied; • .
Canada May Grow
Sugar Beet Seed
Cost of'WIcteirng, Over However
.
. Is AhlflOS,t ProhuntiVe Now
AbQut one million ponds of sugar
beet 'seed are 'reAtiired 'annually,. to'
supply the' requirementsnf '.the few
• ot•i
seed ,is • importeld ,almost, whoily 4rent
:•gpi.rOPe. hoeriMiite have shoWn• that
goed..,sugar beet aped' can,be grown hi
• Canada; -but the cost .ot groduction Is
I too high to e,nipprein psi:de with that
: Which ore ,he•-gr-tlw
••••••••
• III
II
ing of s two-year• propdsition---
the stecklings are grOWn.the first sea, .
sour-lifted;and,stOred during the Win-
. ter and then ploitectout the following
'season to: produce the seed erop The
'Cost of handling' the bpets, including:
sponsible for the hugh ost of seed
ityoidedChea r seed Would be the re.
• -•July Seedings•
-Under the .directiOn of the IX -Vision'. •
of-L'Ilorage. Plants, evperirnenti": have
th
been Started at e:DominibiCEsPefli
•
mental Station, :Saanichton,
COlumbia.,‘ to deferral:14i wIither di -not -•
attar ..beet ,iteckliags • Could , etic
.ceeaftilly Overwintered 111 the ,gronnd.:...
.,Seeding‘has.been done. In rows At in7
erya s rom ay • a to September 15,
without..thinhing. serVa tiens' the - •
lowing1„),reli:slicWed, that kin JunG
".1st, ,Itily'ist and duly, •. 14 'iseedinge,' •
• 2,900;.2,827 nand 2.682 pounds4..Df. seed
• per: acre' was, obtained ; respectively.
The ;Oilier anti tater .seeclinge did not• .
..: •
' These, result:Et. are ithiportan.t hi. that
AheY indicate that in the coMpara.tite.
winters: of Vancouver Island,
:;beei'S.may be.ancteaS oVenw er.
• ed in the groutid.• '
Crocodiles' Teeth
Puncture- Buoys
•
Air Firm Forced. tq U.se:Kina.Tliat
Air Firm Forted to Use'Kink thal
Liver "
Eng—Because croco-
diles• de not know the difference be.
,;t:Wp,ert (Fed rubber and raw liver, lrn
perial Airways" i-esearhp.41)*Ilyneht,
',his ;been obliged' to invent. a neW't,Yhe
aLfalak-a1, Kampala,-- K-isutnu; -Raj
..and rridia. •:
• The old mon'eing- deVice, was a huge:.
hall :of .red rtibber, anchored by
means of hooks the end .of."a steel
,
Chain.. Rubber V. -as used because it
was soft. and ditI net ,,darnage the
_ ,
of
'boats.- Trie t.,,
werci,painted „red F 0 they would be
visible et .tr; cl iit a it eq, , '..' . ..
., . S.tiddenly they started, 'disappear:. ,
ing.' tiivetilt•ations 1.:4,yealed the
bnokO,.. which ,we.re hollow, were' at
the bettorn'o.f tht lake. . 'Crocodiles,'
. jares,urnably, inistahhig theini for raw
.'liver, "had clietVed , .1to1es ' in ' them,.
causing thorn' to sink, „
The ,Proposdd new tyie! is a Steel ' •
cylinder Protected bY. a •seini-prieti- ".
•.,intitic fender,i.,l'ipervions:to thd
, teed; of crocodiles. --' , , • .•
. GO/d. Frpt,i2 Lead ..:
The drean'1Of alcheiniata of Oldd: •
, Seientista throughout the ages has !
' been realiZodaccerding to a young •
'workman At Lodz.:4 PlohLnii.L.It.e....c.laims-,
to lave .f.;tind it \,.Ity of making 'gold
trent lend, and has exhibited to fhe
Lods. Inveritolge A,sseciatiOn ,a siiret.,'
Ple eccss,lf the gold predueed byhrs peo.,
• The .,:. ......, 'ation has .app,Ointesd a • .".
for,'Postering inveritiehs, to ifivestio
Al.
eommitteer ••-t itsisting. 'of, twee' :tiii"diiiiz. '•- "'-
cal experts, • a Mechartichl engineer,
and a ,inember Of thi'''Polish.„Sotitttj, '
gate and watell Et derhons t ration 6f, '
the „pi000s., • •
' ?,"'