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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-02-26, Page 7War Has Created '1 $• U N D A Y. Fish Hook Crisis S C H 0 0 1," . LESSON Manufacturers Rate Fish Hooks A4 Military Supply Who' would have thought, ask the Woodstock Sentinel °Review that the war, would have provoke e fish-hook crisis? It only prove what has been guessed all along that the Nazis and' . the daps are not good sports. But the fact, as' repoeted in the stern tones o business, in ".Business Week," is Chet four New York firms of fish- hook makers are. asking the gov- ernnrer,t: of the United 'States for a steel allocation, They want the steel to ,make hooks needed for 'the U.S. market. Before the war, most fish -boo es • weremade in. Norway, England and Germany. Japan e supplied the cheaper,•. 'imitative stuff. And •have the fish-hook manufacturers an • argument',, bated • on • the war?, _They'll' Say they have! ,They rate fish-hooks as a .military ' supply.' Two firms have hjgh',pri•orities on material for. making 60,000,000 Shooks , 'on government• 'orders; Some of these are for Iceland's fishermen for making "big catches to lease -lend to Britain." Further-! snmore,•all U.S..Planes :flying over Water and all life boats are being• equipped' with kits which include fishing .hoalis and preserved baits.' Consider .this: It is estimated that some 500 tens of steel and eight • tons of - plating metal are. .required to •meet U.S. dem'and's.. The manufacturers have a fund o.f ._-related-sta:tiaties;.___-_._ When Izaak Walton 16rote the "Compleat. Angler" in. '1653, he started something, the end of which he•could riot foresee. . Ana yet', it must ,:be remembered, that at•Lone time in -Iris-lir-a; 4zaak-Wal-'- ton •became an ` iron'moi<ger in 'Fleet street, near St. Dunstan's, in. London. ;As an ironmonger, he• would sympathize with •the pleas of -.the • fish-hook- maksere••-f-orel-iberal - tilowances .of steel. s• a a•. Assistant Nava! Ch i of n Orient • Seagoing assistant to the new., allied naval commander in the Far. East is tl, S Rear Admiral William A: Glassford, above. He will •probably command forces, at sea • while• Dutch Vice. Ad- miral C. E. •L: Helfrich handles naval strategy ashore, 'Catching Bobs' May Return With `Dobbin' m LESSON IX. THE PARABLES BY THE SEA. Matthew 13; Mark '4:1..34; Luke 8:1.18. PRINTED TE?OT. Mark 4:26.32; Matt. 13;44-5Q, GOLD) N TEXT. -Never than ao spake. John 7:46, • THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. -Autumn,. A.D. 28. Place. -At the Sea of Galilee. • Growth of Spirit ..26. "And 'he said, So is the kingdom of. God, as if a • man should cast seed upon th.e earth; 27. and should sleep and rise night •.amtl day 'and the seed, should •spring up and grow, he',knoweth not how. 28. The' earth beareth fruit of "herself; fit* the blade,. • then the ear, 'then thele full grain'. in the etir- .. 29. ..But .,when" tli0 fruit'is'•ripe, etraightway'he prtt teth forth the ,sickle, • because. the harvest is come." `°First the par- • able tells use that there is a •mys- tery. to the growing of that which • Ts sown.,• stew ,true thin is. ' With all of , our vast` .knowledge .'-of botany there is one thing that• mane does not know; and. that is how a plant really grows, Second •there 'is -.en e.mphaeis..__pia_Ce- o 'n the gradual growth of the seea and' this, 'also, • is, true in all' nor- mal, s.piiitual', life finally •there is a harvest. There is an end of gr•owingg; a rnat •rity ordained of ___;God :•" Life is -of ;God': r Growth is of God. The harvest is of God. We ean',co-operate With God, ana use all those atea.ns which He• has. • '.ordained'to bring about that nor- mal growth in our spiritual" lives, which Is .according':to Bis will. Grain of Mustard Seed 30. "And . he said, . How' shall We ' liken the -kingdom of God? or in what parable shall we set .Tt forth'? -;31: It is like a' grain of mustard seed, which, when .it is sown upon the earth,' though . it be less than all theseeds that are upon the, earth, 82. Yet when it, is sown, R-r•oweth'up, and becometh greater than all the herbs, and •putteth .outgreat branches; so that the .Birds of the'heavencan lodge' under the shadow thereof." Tho .parable, may be interpreted as Illustrating the phenomenal growth 'of the • Christian Church: 'the gro.i,`thallef -the .mustard„_seed.e the. smallest of• all sees, 1s an ab- riornial growth, shooting . out .great brances and •becoming, as Luke says, a great tree. It is true that Christianity. did so grow,, but it should be noticed that. our' Lard= speaks bf' fowls lodging in the breeches of this large tree. Fowls everywhere in Scripture have ari unclean significance. They pol- lute a tree. They do not belong to the tree itself. This it exactly' ". what ,happened" in the so-called "conquest" of the 'Roman Empire by Christianity, ' It •became so powerful that the nations, instead'. of opposing it, took shelter in it, nd, therefore,, brought pollution nto the Church, worldliness and he things that pertain to secular overn hien t. 13Y the 'ehations of he earth finding shelter in Chris. anity, and giving it their super- eia: approval and countenance,. they did not elevate themselves to e high level of, a separated 'an a i t • ti fi Into the limbo of fo1•,r*otttn 'joy has „one the sperd• of cetehin bobsleds, says The ll inrieapol,' Star -Journal: .No- longer tip tole i'oungstees retell the, •farnlel•. sleighs -to perch an the •ba, k run • sers or 'to hitch their own' sled Behind the flying bolt;; What do schoolboys' do now lin Saturdays and afternoon, wher '+!shoot is. out, to. ntak0 up for those shrills? Never was, ;. challenge more entriulcing •than when a spirited trent, with. hi!k bugling, dashed ,lowii the. i•narls as thgugh daring a led- to ,eat•eh a ride. A few fanners acre gruff. bat :u most- ly they, were in the main it hos- pitable lot, wrapped to thcir.ears in. buffalo coats, their• re, t.hiaden : cti.fied .people. but they brought • the Church down toward their s level of .carnality and secularity. , y Pearl of Great Price rh •4.1. • "The kingdom of heaven t' is like unto a treasure hidden in 'its' fit id: which a man found, and s 11.id: ..ed in. his joy he goetit and . ;elleth all that hr 11ath,+eand'buy- :eth that field.." One' who really understands the Gospel message' will be.rent • to make any possible cachifiee that .he hititself may be - some an heir of the Kingdom. He • find,; in the Gospel of Christ the thins; which satisfies his' soul. t3: "Again,the kingdom of hea- ven like ,ttnto a man that is aa. seeking goodly pearls 46. .end having fpund one' pearl of y:• -eat, price, he wt'lit and sole . in hay. When the snow lay Jeep .gal . winter's :day there toe. no trees-, tion what a hey would ,In' he'd he opt catching bobs. How Marvellous Is British •Soil llov1lit•vellou • the .! ctf Britain, mays Tht' 1 an,l,••r, ll.;tl>• E press. .Every Royal Coedeoe skin or other government tatters' in betwoen the two wars r.,^,a+rtt•d' that we could grote"t ti h c •,ta ltt welt , food tit home it' etc t' a I'hc -• pity is than. it was ;Teter .,tette. Yet' here today 1s , the 4.\h s:r> saying simply that the hate +hc . best farming emmttte n 1'1 s', wofhd. The story i. to!d , f .u• isp land faun in I'ast • 1 an; s ,1 t:e: e A ptrstu;i:e pinlaed ttmi s<'oo ces;.a1.1 . with grnss produced time a .'•te half t.tetv9 its fol trot :< <,,i •• '(;apse, upping the t li''d , • from 5.l to Sat! 1;,t Ir . i i t r • "C•amonflago' "camouflri•,.' n t -i, • uteatiing to"l'litid t, J all that he had, and bought it." We' truly i' Leve that the. pearl. of :;.tat prier is the Church of . t'c..its:. and that it is 'fotind in the :loos; of liuman wreck, c gath- ered is kath- ered out atf it,'t'galted, and allude the ,tedium through.which the, in- en,tct truth of (ion's grace and • , s learnt. siet,1 ba revealed, 4:,.• "_t,:•eine.. the . kingdom ..of. • !!.-:eel r, ns DLo elan' a net, that vas ,•itst Into the sett, and gathered of' eft' y k.n,i: 4s. which, -when it was ftee,:,.:hey ura• eup on the heath; ' 'and fi:ey sat dtiien. enol gathered ',the g,','tl 0l10 vessels, but the bad ' they east away. 41'. So shall it t', :p the end. 'of the world: The .trey sled! come forth. and sever the e:,:ked. (rent mono the right- ,:,. i tl. rend shill east them into ;he t e •t•nct` of fent: thet'e shall be the •e, el'::ta and the gnashing of'. ,re:h, • I l'Is , parable, addressed t •t•, deeaeles,, was mainly in: • < •:,:„i o ds h°•rt thein to 't he con- . •r. .:•red ofr those 'who would. ti e •o.','t.ers: rind impresses . •e <,::.it;r of moral purity as eelado', e elle ravteristicte •t , 't' 1•.•. ,•,;a:dren of the king - i • e, F KEEN BRITISH WAR WORKER r �IFF�I ?,' t •:+'i r.�t X <' Yt r� r. ve „��nt Mets :.;i,,: t, >.., �rj..,.:::•:.�: ♦ ..V G.., F' •.t.,Ft . �" . 111 - s•:e.:•r..f,:•r.':r<f•:�•.^t:/�.%5.:...., s .y:. �' 4/F'•.s �, iw,..3`...:c„d.. "`l'.,.,. Vis. ....., ..:_ .. .,._.... Farmers' Demands ands Edna Winstanley, volunteer worker factory, .examines a rifle barrel, • in a 'British small arms The 'Meanest Thief Domest(e tragedy' , that on]y a ' .'. War: could.' cause ,caught up, with • Har,ild C. Hanson, a wheat broker, at ' the Chicago Board of Trade Mast week, Shortly before the close of trad•:. ing he received a telephone call.. He left immediately. As he head- ed for the door a colleague called: "What's wrong?” a„..•.; "Wrong?" yelled . Hanson. "Plenty... My wife . said burglars ' ransacked the house and stole the rubber- tires' off the ,baby's go=- cart!" Looking back•, over this chapter we are struck with the amazing hopefulness and confidence of Jesus. H-e--fslot( rng .$o ,the rrlti= - mate ,suture, and trying to warn. men that what they do now will determine how they will be judged. when the day of judgment 'shall arrive. , Men of Prairies Say Ottawa Treated Them Very Kindly "How ya gonna keep,'em down ° on thea farm, now that they've ,seen Paree?" may well apply 'to the more than . 400 wheat .farmers , from ( the plains of Saskatchewan who left Ottawa after a three-day Bojo arp in the Capital. The business• of presenting a petition to the Government urg- ing increase kn the initial Wheat payment concluded, they left. Un- ion.. Station glowing with praise, for the way they had been treated and tally _convinced the .' delega- , tion had,estabflshed a spirit of fellowship ad better• understand- ing lietween the people ;"of..•the. eastand west and ,that the ties of 'federation whieh'sorne people be- lieved'..to be ire danger had been strengthened to a point that materially assist the furtheripg' of our"w'ar effort. To a considerable extent the government will meet the demands, of th.e "oe-to-Ottawa"' delegation of Westerners, in respect to wheat prices. The concessions made, however; will likely be linked up with ` a proviso that the; wheat , growers ,restrict • their ' acreage hi 1942 as they did' in 1941. " While dollar wheat may not :be granted, it is probable the goy - An Interpretation ernment Will agree' to. pay at least iption ''90 cents per bushed, an increase of O'f °Conscr 20 cents per bushel, as an initial ,payment on the 1942_ crop, lit, %Boldo ttis• be on an arrarigernenf --", that growers rei,crict their deli', eries of wheat to about 325,000,- 000 bushels. • • An alternative 'suggestion is if: dollar wheat is granted as an in ilial •payme'nt the 'deliveries to be kept down to 250,000,000 buses frofn„the 1942 crop. •No one can, tell in advance what the crop: will be; sq the plan. -worked _aut..a ilL-Ueaneaexeage _, basis which, under normal condi- tions would , 'return • 325,000,000 bushels for delivery under the one, ;proposal, or 250,000;000:under the. bther. It; is' to"b'e-'hoped •thaerthe fol-. - lowing• confuted ' bit. of conversae 'tion is not an.' example of ' the pinking being : done oh the "sub- ject of conscription 'in Canada at the present, time: This cenversa- tioir welled forth a fevr days ago from a lady who complained that her brother was, wounded- in the Iasi wax. "It was ,conscription that caused .brother was wounded' in November of ..191:7. • You Sep he went t'rp, into the woods. to avoid- conscription and. a hunter mistook hien for a deer." • • Something 'to Remember .. '•"7-7'11 every. drrver'cvo d r~e-,iuce lifs average• sped by 10 miles , per hour. he would .get about \ 6,300 extra 'miles out pf .his tires, ac: . cording to a .major rubber. com- pany. 1110 ,E •p Off• ?: E. R DIALING WITH DAVE: 1 MART'KENNEY This is,.Mart Kenney, Canada's outstanding modern maestro, who is really 'on the air' these days in no uncertain terms! Monday night at 10 o'clock, lie broadcasts' a half hour.show on the National . Network for the Victory Loan; on. Wednesday at 11.30, his regular weekly CBC Feature 'Sweet and Law,' and on Friday bnd Saturday ..nights at 11.15, broadcasts' Awl CKOC''s.facilities from .the Beant Inp at Burlington. CROC is also privileged to be with the National Network carrying the Monday and Wednesday night shows! • interesting, sidelight on radio and Hollywood! •Glamorous'Lana Turner is dated by Bob Stack, young” Bollywodd lunlinaty; they dance to, Tommy Dorsey's great music: they lunch at Dorsey's table, end. when the dance is over Dorsey takes Lana hone. Ace!ord- • • ing to Stack, it's a swell ;dea and, works Erie! Perhaps the pay-off is Tommy's wonderful music -.-at any rate, and as a; footnote, you , hear :the "Sentimenta, •Gentlemen of Swing" daily at 1215 from ' • CKOC, 1150, en your dial!. • Perhaps one of the most inter- esting things about a ' great star is her versatility!.' Take Ona Mun- son, for instance: in radio, she is one of' the to actresses, and when Hollywood wants a I3elle {,Watling for a 'Gone With , the Wind,'• or' some other outstanding charac- terization,; the call goes out. to Ona Munson - and - she always comes thrul As Lorelei in the •:'Big Towle' radio series, she has built ,up. a greatl.eharaeter, into a great following. And, • in ver-. satile • parts, ranking • from flip-., pant comedy; to tragic drama, Ona Munson demonstrates her versatility in the Sunday at 6.15 'Academy Award' plays broadcast from CKOC in Hamilton. To. a :great ,many, it is good ,news that the series will be continuing for another 39 weeks! a< * w 1150 Listening Tips; , • The "Good News" program, sainting the , weeklies of the • Provint.c; is now broadcast at 9,31) -`iVIonday nights from (!KOC: Thursdays at 8.30 p.m., listeners will continue to hear broadcasts originating from the.Army Trades. School• in' Hamilton; 'show picks up a part• of the •etitertainment • being provided• for the 'troops! • Two CKOC boys everyone gets a' kick out of -Joe Chrysdale and Len Smith, during their 8,15 to . 9.00 a.m. Toast 0'& Marmalade • program! Record of the tteek: from the • Swing World, 'That Did it Marie' by Benny.Goodman! Authorities here 'are concerned aboUi ketts'tie-as7- mach-gas-gossible of suitable western 'land diverted 'to uses other than wheat growing, so as. to •provide ample, ,coarse grains for feed, end . dairy 'prod-' • ucts. • • , Stand Up'Against° • -tn.,. And Beat 'E;► 1 "I believe that we will suffer '� reverses for, aother .year arid a• half before ' we'll • hale a' large enough ferce•to beat the Ger- mans iln the field," said John T. .Whitaker:, • ,Arneriea'n ' newspaper - Man. • "l've• seen. the Germans op-•... erate 'on • three,. fronts: They're good. But I'nr sure we'll beat • them like no anniy, has ever been beaten before. "After watching them bully and beat a, Jot of poorly equipped Europeans, I'd like to participate. with American trpops when they make them whitnper. " "It can lie 'done .because the mass of. .the German •army lacks' trained eominissioil d end 'non- - eorninissioned officers.. Until the Russian campaign' we only saw the elite panzer units in action. . "Nay the infantry i`s doing m6St" of the work and according to first-. hand reports it seeond' rate. Anybody who 'stands up against the , Gerwans can beat'• them." .. , The Book Shell DRAGON SEED By Pearl S. Buck The 'great masses of the Chin- ese. people are peasant faiers,. shying on the, lands that peasant, have been • passed on to them by countless ,generations of honored ancestors. They .are content to live and toil upon these, lands, to cherish them and to hold them in turn for their sons. Of,such was Ling Tan who lived ,wih his family ort a rice farm near Nanking when the' East 'Oreari soldiers invaded •his country. The bestial, unbelievable sae•ag• ety of the Japanese bro'aght tra- gedy and heartbreak to the peace-' ful home of Ling Tan. Although POP—So Close to Not' Living 4.t FAS'T'EN THEIR NE r TO HQt sE FeooFs werH WHEN `TME SLOPE Is TOO GREAT/ 'rHE G 1'INQUS.. S4LiVA lS MADE BY TME BIRDS 11-1,EAOSELVESe COree, t9at1 Bv.NEA SERVICi;, INC.' SQ E„ PLA.KrTS •14,4V4 'JUVEih1ILE L. VF's ' ' F ONE' SWAPE, AND, ADULT'. • LEAVES' OF' ANgr-tER,/ THE . NORTH ERN SRATtER C,OCJ{ if; AN EXAMPLE. ,. , "rt4E. WORD �1 K ,. AS B017!RO VVEECa BY °I"le _•'SPAN'iSH, ♦a .44kft ' • lase . THE storks of Baghdad bus g Id their nests 'stn •the domes and Minarets of mosques. Since the roofs are quite sloping, they hang . the nests'from the three balls on top, and here the glutinous ,Saliva is used to cause the nest' tostick teethe glazed 'tiles., e.. NEXT: Why t';' ",':..e -bats don't a-+ 1✓wzvres) his sones go away .to the' hills to, join in guerilla warfare against the, enefny, • Ling continues stub- bornly on the. land he loves. ' - Dragon-See°de s-a--tale-of-Ware-- cif four long years •of, War in China. - It. 'is a , story told with sympathy. and . authority of the.. Ling Tans :of a 'great peace -loving country, remaining ,on' the lands of their fathers, suffering,'•resist- ing and refusing' to be conquered.. , It is a story .,ofeo `sins' le 1 - P people clinging ' steadfastly to,• their.. way of life' and • holding; fast to •their ancien't, philosorhy-that"it-:seen3ed- the greatest thing a mar. could do , in these days'was to' live and keep• aliy;'his own." Dragon .Seed ; . by Peart' S. • Buck .•> ,The , Macii:illan Coen• pang of Canada . . ..Price $3.00: as 1 FOOD FISH i HORIZONTAL 1 Pink feed .fish 6 Its ;size, beau • and —'or endurance ree • characteristics; .`3.B-ee -14 feserrmbling a „digit- • 16 Opposed stoss • '17 Today a.' street: ' 19 Turning point, Turning 20 Back of neck. 21 To care for. 23 Emerald 24 Granted fact's. 25 Red snappers. 27 Sprite. • , ' genius. 29 Pertaining to 48 Ancient. seta. • 49"Storage place 30 You nd ,me .. for guns • Answes to • I LR+l'N� IB • E C: OiD,E , •- tt INN i ! •N) c G AFFR:` C'O,A TA:L.h AIT MED ON 0� L'�'': a ®u ©0 PLAT E AU 42 Tree, 43 Fuss, • 44 Ruby spinel. 47 Work of Previous Puzzle , 20 North America eee BIU!Ri OUtNkeA R L �EIAA+''1 ' TO E S iiE3®® Elea TAI: 1 S'1 T sup A t DELA OLIF L' T C AL I'R•R A RR R•.EP EFA ADI 5E E. K>w[ PAL K (abbr.). 22:Mu.ieeI rterns. • 25 Its fish • stay a yeas• or two •in fresh" water, 26 Wheel hub. . '281ts_' is tanned. 31. Pertaining to • -the leg. , 33 Not fresh. S 1 1 it_ 34 To sew loosely. 36 Offered. ,38 Farm tool. 40 Month 3 Makes' VERTIeAL 1 Tree timet 2 Winged. even. 4 Alleged force • 4 5 Frost bite , 4 • 6 Donates e1 7 Particle. 4 32 Wan ers. 51 Scarlet.- , 8 Door rug. 34 To exist 53 Roof edges,- 9 Ell. 4 35 Lump. 55 Adult insert. IO Snapping 4 37 Northeast • 57 It is a' soft _beetle. (abbr.). — fish; 11 Calyx 'leaf.. 5 38 Possesses. 58 It Or lays 12 To observe. 39 Rubbed in dirt eggs in fresh 15 Silly laugh. 5 41 Father. water 18 To come in. 5¢ l abbr: ):. 1 To promote. 4 Brought up. 5 Cuckoo. - 6 Softens • leather 8 Away. 9 Farewell! 0 To lick up. 2 Dower property. 4 Form of "a". African *tribe 52 53 By J. MI LAR WATT W LIVt i.N QUf P:Z 1i Mf 5 f Wl10 NAPPOW SCA1sr5 l d *4044'111;i " \Ail\ \� /j ft < s3xhfil,r• Thi t4 ] synrt,c sc,.."les c : id -"L (6t