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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-01-23, Page 3Canada Must Fill Flower „Bulb Lack , It's A Challenge to Our Am•= attur Gardeners to'Develop. New Lines Now . That, Qur. Imported---8•up dice. -Are -Cut Off Tire vvay' Deinnr'ion Deparbment:- of Agric'hlture experts see it, the war. may be a blessing ill disguise to.Canada's amateur gardeners; plain • and fancy, .It'S `up te• theca to replace , s.upplies.., of flower btillis shut off by' the war.' When •Germany'•ce teueiied Mand, for. instance; Canada auto- matically lost the'.' :oiirFe of .98 e per cent of her:tulip bulbs. This: left.,.6nly slim supplies available. in British Colifmbia, England 'acid California.. ftUL'B INDUSTRY COULD ' EXPAND • One a.trthority ,A�ee,eette ecl;,,wtliat Within five years B?Ytish Colum- bia's expanding' industry might be sufficientto look after .the tulip, demand. In the 'meantime- "There's •nothing much you can 'do abput it," he said. , Right now we only have sufficient sapplies to meet '10 Per sent. of t de- . ma.nd., • , GO .Iir FOR PERENNIALS? But tulips or no. tulips, the • pro- blem .could be solved' if Canadians°. oad go more 'extensively eiotee the business' of raising perennials,, he said „ This.•-offar_ed-ail-oppor tunity both to amateur .gardeners.' _ e _and finicky faddists eosin) make a lifetime -study of the, job. One 'branch of the industry—' the florists—al of, have re- cognized the, ned .for ' action. • They''re using cyclarnen, snap-' • . • dragons and stock instead', of the traditional daffodils and tulips 14ext Likeliest Accident 'Victim. •Traffic Expert •- Says:: Male - :Pedestrian 'Over 50 Is Surest. To Meet His Deeth,':Accord- ing to Statistics.. The . person most liable to death' in. a 'miter . accident • is .a male pedestrian who has passed his 506 ' birthday. • He will be crossing the street in the riddle ' of the block, at ;night when he meets his death and in two e. cases rout of five 1vi11 have beendrinking. • . • This ;des•sription .was ,given, ad • vended trafficc.safety' ,students at Pennsylvania State .• College by. Burton W. Marsh director- of the' American ',Automobile Association Safety, and traffic engineeringde- partniOnt,, on the: basis. of a:-.nai� tie -wide three-year •survey. Marsh• said the steely revealed also 'that t13e. potential emotor -ae- cident' victim. probably is a non-. dsiver.. Commands U.S.... Fleets * Rear Admiral Husbend E. Kim- mel has been appointed ecenhilin- Pacific and Asiatic fleets under the reorgenization antiounced by Secretary . ef the Rank Chew Rhythin We'l..uvve ell read about drug. houses and ' opium• dees, but not Many have heard of the "chew- ing dens of Yeniere" Whose people liaye 'strongly declared ,their ,e,d7 herence to the &wee cif Britain. When tile . inhabitants of Yeinela have ;jaded' appetites, 'they don't. go along to .the doctor for a tonic. They' Merely go, down the 'street to a chewing den, on inabrize, In th9se dens, men, wornen and knoWei as "the flower of ing iS a tiringi. business; it is done • to the, thythre of deft „ Music hi • .tonic- e'ffect is rapid. 1. , Germans Who play lawn tennis are nOW, expected to Use Ciernian ▪ wolds irk the genie, istead of 'their- • -- Y HOOL R:IS7.ES•-.•CDN4E:FtN_'...FoR THE•„' • LOST:—Luke 15. PRINTED TEXT, Luke. 16' ; 1-1.0 __V_._111O.1.DEN TEX .*-T Son ,elf ' mar came—to. seekt and to; save that' which was lost. Luke 18, :. *9: , THTHE,LESS'ON IN ITS SETTING,- Tlme..—Ja'n.uary, A`rD. 30. , Plaps Same .place in . Peraea.: The grief people experience over -things they, have- lost depends up•- on. -the value of. these thin'gs.; How . , much mere . valuable than any property 'or even ,a, domesticated.•.' ,animal is the loss. of a soul—a. •man or, w.omane becoming 'an absolute Shipwreck., abandoned•', by 'Mee. and _ :without God or hope, The hearts et. all, studying' this teasel' lesseshould, be stirred up with a desire to go., ouout• and 'seek men who -know not,. Christ The.theme .who the parable an this lesson is the grace of God - the object of the., chapter is 'no'netso much' to' allow' how men, saved, brut why they are. sa*ed. 'Three. Parables; Le . •1.011ke .1.5 : r "Now. ail, .the pub-. • Roane and ,sinners were drawing iter.- unto him to .hear him " (•A` publican • in the. New Testeinegee was .a:: Jew in . the .employ, of, tire; Roman Governnnent collecting tax- --61e; 7' generrally `".from_•.•YeilOW Jews,=-- for the enrichment ofthe hated , =:cEficerse-who vereeen8oecing. the. laws of the, Gentile .'power upon .' ' these cdnquered children of Israel. They were utterly. Gigged- •6y • other. Isra•elites.-Sinners here were those not living le conformity with: • :the Levitical 'Lew), ' 2. ' "Arid : both the .Pharisees and the scribes' murinured, saying, This Ulan re= ceiveth, sinners,. and eateth •with .them." • . . • What our, Lord now is, 'abdut' to say, •.contai'ne first ae pr•'ecimie m:essee Age' overflowing: with hope,` and '. radiant with the love :of God for these 'poor publicans -and . sinners. • who • needed .God. so much in thee 11ves.• Up.' to now they' had':beau prevented.'from coming to Him' by all 'the 'legalistic paraphernalia, 'Which, the Pharisee insisted upon. .This- .tri e s s a: g e .was for the Pharisees and scribes, too, to . show 'teem how far 'from the will , of God ; they, were in condemning • the Lord Jesus • for mingling with. -such people es., they. despised'. •All three of these parables moveabout' one• .word as it were,_. namely, .they word •"loess"—a lost sheep,. a .lost' .: coin, end' a Jost man. The sheep wanders awa'x'.heedlessly, 'not ` of set ;purpose,, bat •drawn onward by one ..tuft • of sweet • her'bage 'after; _ anether,-.till it has got out of sight . of the,, flock and. hearing ,of 'the shepherd., Se many men 'stray away '• from God, and :Christ, not .delibere ately, but simply because they fol- low inclination and the ,d.esi%es of . :