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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-06-18, Page 3„4 'ri4,64"0(446.141 •• 11 • Great Britain Controls Co* al Government ekes' Over Mines and Rations Fuel The British government hae tak- en over complete control ef the eation.'s coal mines and has announced •a fuel rationing for homes,. busieesses and factories to be impesed _by , enlyea iodeas there. is a sharp Voluntary reeection in the use of fuel. Retain Ownership • Mine owners are to retain own. reship -ace to be paid $266,- 100,000 es compensation, • ' A rationing basis :pf 840 pollees of veal et Year pTr pepsore Was peoposee but 0 • was made clear that ,any rationing tor eoueehold- ere wowed °take into consideration the hioality of the home AO the number. Of rooms and Oicueants. A new eninistry of fuel, light and Power vias' treated toseens .trol the coal industry and 4dmin7 Mee the rationing, ' and Major Gwilym Lloyd George; son of •the Welsh prime minister of, the last war, was named head of the new ministry andagiven cabinet rank. Meese Lloyd George, who has:been. parliamentary secretary to the • minietry • of feed, will, not be a members, of the "wer eabinet." '• • Assumes. Functions• ' • announcement from the 'prime • minister's residence . last week .said that the new minietry would assume all the government's functions, in relation to the Pro- dectitin and 'consumption of fuel and pewee with the special task eor "madmieleteriegeseliationing Thejnew ministry also assumes charge of all 'petroleum control from the. board of trade. It 8:b- easts the old ministry of miees, and thereby there,. follows. the dropping of its head. , . 4 • 11/4. NOTED. BRITON SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON LESSON 25 THE TASK\ COMMITTED TO THE DISCIPLES , Matthew.28:16-26; Mark 16:14-20, Luke 24:49-53 GOLDEN TEXT. -Go ye into all the_world, and preach ehe gess pel to the whole creation. Mark 16:1. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. -The eetire period from our Lord's resurrection to His ascension covers forty days. The 'eFeearanee of Christ to the ten en Easter. night, took place ..Abrii 9, A.D. 30. The Recension took plasee „Thursday, May 18, A.p., 30. sPlace.--The appearance to the, ten occurred in the 'Upper Room in 4erusalem;-'another ,appearance recorded in our lesson topk place • on Oh, unnamed nieuntain in Gale lee; the • Ascension itself took place froni apeak on the Mount of ()lives. • Easter Night • 14a--"A.nd --afterward les was- ---ses - manifested -unto the eleven them- selves as they sat,at meat; and he upbraidedthem with their unbe- lief and hardness of heart, be- cause they believed not them that --,'had seen him after he was risen." This is 'Mark's brief account of. 'that Which Luke. (24:36-43) eend John, (20:i925) give with aeat detail, an 'episode of Easte She - day already dealt with in our last lesson. - - 16. "But the eleven disciplee went info' Galilee, unto the moun- tain where Jesus had appointee ' them. 17. And When they sale him; they worshipped hire; but some doubted." • Their worship was not merely homage to a King - but -probably involved -the- con- victioe that Chriat• was divine. Even the Saviour'sbodily appetie. ance seems, since the resurtection, to have been so 'altered and epiri. tualized that they felt more in.• flearia ftieneerliesto evorahise The subjeet of doubt must have been whether this was really their Lord come to • . ' Sir Nornian tirkett, brilliant ;orator, judge, writer and radio epeaker, and former member of Parliament for Nottingham, is now. in Canada where he is ad- dressing Canadian Clubs in a num. • ber of titles. Biology Wizard Awarded Medal Dr. Craigie. Honored For Rust Res arch Activities • At a meeting of the Royal Soc- iety' of Canada. they "Presented. a Med al' far 011tstanding eehieve- meets in, the field of biology. to •D. J. H. Craigie, says the Van- eouver Province. Dr. Craigie on • the Prairies is recognized as' the scientific wizard, who through' long' years of hard work and dis- appointment, . directed• the 'activ- idea of the Rust Researele Labor- atory at Winnipeg,. end who was largely responsible for the con- quering of the '• rust ;scourge, an active 'fifth-columniet of the days of peace. It is, estimated that in 1926 r " wheat rust reduced the ctop 'of Manitoba and • Saskatchewan by 111,000,000 bushels and .deused a toes'of. $136,000,900 to the fariners. of these two provinces. In 1127, the loss was $87,000,000, In ,1930 ,it was $27,000,000 on wheat and $6,000,600 on oats. Taking one - year - with • -anoth.eis.over.._a _long period, the Prairie loss due to rust averaged about $40,000,000. • Loss Now Negligible • Today the Joss from rustis negligible. New varieties of wheats, have been bred, resistant to every variety of rust. Several of these new •varieties have the good qiwals ittes of the aid' wheats, like Mare , quis, that .were• subject .to rust. They stand .up well in'the• they mainre 'early, „they yield. bouetifully, they are of gocidmill- ing quality, they make good .bread.. The new" euitaesietant **heath are replacing the old vale .1etieS on Prairie farms, and there are still, ether better ivheats OOM- Ing on ire the seed •plots at Win- nipeg and in experimental fields' elsewhere on the Prairies. For • this boon -this saving to the Prairie fernier of an average of $40,000,000 a year -Dr. Craigie and his assistants have' •been largely respoesible. A .British :failWay has leid ex- eerimentally 250 yards of mine line track with concrete' ties. Jt cheat's Authorise litk-ente them, and spajce unto them, saying, All aftee eelrad-speerre 18. "And Jesus came to them ' was received ue into heaven, and , authority hath . been • given unto satdown at the right hand of me in heaven and earth." Nab- 1.40e• seseesks s•et.s.,•..seetes.e...• A 0n • 00.4 i 4 LAMBS TAKE CALF'S PLACE AT FESTIVE BOARD Young, but zeaourceful, motherless twin lambs solve their food Problem satisfactorily with the • co-operation of an obliging Guernsey cow ori a Rushford, Minn., farrin. Whether the calf epproves of •the arrangem,ent is something else agai:n. believer,bet this miracle with God." The Sian • of IVIan at the one and that with anOthen righthand of GO is our Inter- ' 49, "And behold, I send forth cessor with. the Father. • . promise Of my Father upon you:• • 52. "And they woeshipPed . but tarry ye in the tity, .until ye end., returned to Jerusalem with _be clothed' with power from on great joy. 53. and were continu- , highe 69. And hp led them :,out, taireileaellessing GbV"- uritil they were oyer. against . Our chapter begins withs pie - Bethany: and he Jilted up his ture of ;two disciples ;in deep hands, -end blessed thence 5L despondency, knowing nothing but it cane: to; pass, while he blessed disappointment in the death of them, he parted from them and Christ.. The chapter concludes was carried up into heaven.", It with the •disciple's • convinced of . _has been StAggg§ted _toy many that Our Lord's resurrection and re - man's last view of the Lord, Jesus joicing, in the temple, bleseing, is of a Saviour e with uplifted • hands, in the attitude of bestows 20. "And they 'Went forth, and mg a. benediction, and that this preached everywhere; the Lord „is the true attitude of the. Lord • working 'with them, and confirm - toward Iniznamity.eeer since, the 'w.oacit .lythe" signs:. that has ascended .into heaven and is, followed. '•Ainen." In Matthew: at the', right hand of god'. only Jesus promised to be with them; that he might bless men. here Mark *says that he mane 19. "So then the lead • Jesus, tested his'. presence by 'Working with them' • and 'senfiannieg the- word'.prOyieg its truth and real- ity. ing Jess than the Divine govern- I Ment of the whole universe and the Kiegdorri of Heaven has been • given to the Risen Lord. The ,inafielle-Vstietteraese -Seel .4.171 4. power and °minim,- an every pee-1:16moussela-ree- in history Cif name' that is named, not only in this age, but also in that Which the stage. 12 Wall -eyed is to come. It is on the plenti- CREATOR OF STARS Outlook Is. Good For Manitoba Crop •The outlook for the Manitoba crop at the opeeing of the season ---ITTeriiAs:arceezeinegte---The- peg - peg Free Press; in Saskatchewan it is fair, but in Alberta not so • good, for lackeif rain in the cent- ral and northern, areas. •• •Vela he had to compete againet a There is a further reduction, in I German ace --and compete he. 1 RADIO REPORTER DIAL4NG WITH PAVE; • Fred Allen is the kind of a VI Polka juet naturally tell stories about - and they're either funny ". or ooniellesentary. In few 'other• businesses does one find more • happily •married buebanceandeelfe • collaborations than in radio. For one, we eaee Fred Allen anci Port- land Hoffa of the Sunday 9.00 p.m." radio show. Feed, whe es a very precise person, has been :celled •"the lean who married three. wo- men 'named- Portland* Hoffa"! It is Portland who- types Fred's scripts from their carefully band - lettered originals; it is Poetland who plays the ,scatter -brained stooge on the air, and it is Mrs. Fre s1 Allen who _rues • the houSe. hold around Feed's warkaalay.,ime. sttne! • TENOR TROUBADOURV^ Amongst the younger American • screen and radio tenore, ,Allan Jones Is high in popularity.' Local •etation_airiegs of the many record-. •legs,rtieuiai1y 1,fitS eVicter Herbert and Jerome Kern, have endearedhim to millions. As' reg. oeular tenor. &est of •Mutual's ' "Chicago Theatre of 'the Air" set - 'les, and other important 'Out of the West' shows, Allan, Jonee has built himself a great and° loyal following.' • ' . It's perhaps an old eters, 'by now -how a certain. World War num-. eebeiserte.eareeriease_&ela.tateadreihee._ early 20's, went down to South Amertha • te • sell Curtiss airplanea hew, on the day • of demenstrae 'wheat eereage in Manitoba' this: did. With two .broken •legs, put in (*sea just ;the day before; how year of sixteen pereent, but an • increase of nineteen percent in barley, eight percent in oats and thirty-one percent in flax. The increase in barley_ and flax was - what the government partictilarly seised for. • There ,will be an in- crease of seventeen percent in hogs, helping to meet the demand' from Britain and a Six percent increase of cattle. •Feer-the-whole-Cralrie countryee the. report is lees setisfactory. It is difficult to estimate accur- ately the redection in wheat acre- age, but it leeks like five percent. The increase in coarse grains and flax is much less than was wanted for war production. 31 tr'0W r Vit. pike. tude tude of this Divine authority that",• , 13 Furnished .Helays upon His Apostles and with a sole. Tics Church Ilisslast great charge, 14 To ac- arid leaveto them :His last great knowledge. • . 16 afted. promise. ,The Great Commission 17 Slatted box. 19. "GO ye therefore, and make 18 Century disciples of all the eations, bap- , plant fiber. tizing them into the name 19 Duct. the' ' Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." It ,is because the Messiah has all dominion both aboVe and below that He gives this coniprehensive charge •to the Apostles. He commits the whole human race to their care; and they are 'not to rest until all have been brought in as disciples with them •of the one Master. 'To makesclis- ciples' means to make' of men learners; or 'followers of' Christ. They were not to make men their disciples; they were to make men Christ's -disciples. We are not to be followers of Christian leaders, but of the Christ whom every true Christian leader serves. .., Creed and Conduct • ' ' • 20. "Teaching them to observe all •things whatsoever I command- ed you: arid lo, I am with you alwayg, even unto the end of the world." Jesus tells us here that we are to train ourselves ' and others in, not creed but cendect, not things • to be believed but things to be dope. • A creed that is not wreught out in actions is empty; ceriduct that is not in• , formed, regulated by creed, is un- worthy of a man, not to say of a Christian. . • -Hope For Everyone • 15. "And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to the whole creation. 16. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that diabelieveth shall be condemned." • It is interesting to .note that our Lord does not say • that he who is not baptized shall be condemned, but that he that disbelieveth shall be condemned, while he who believes and Is. bap- tized shall 'be saved. This ap- plies to 'every living person ,in the world. AccompatiYing Signe 17. "And these signs shall acs company thefn that believe: in my harne shall they 'east out dem- • obs:: they shall speak with ,new • tongues; 18. they shall take up tierents, and. if they &ink any' deadly thin, it shall to no Wise • beet them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall re- cover." These signs shall follow them that believe. Jesus dosesnot • Mean that each of these signs • shall manifest itself with every • • trappings. 21 Lion's home. 22 Viscous, 24 Woolly. s 27 Small island. 30 To think. 11 Trappings. • 32 Flower leaves. 34 To abhor. 35 And. 37 Dibbles. 41 Pennies. 45 Licks up. 48 Mountain pass' .weSeeeeseeSes....ar Wes 12 16, 19 24 32 37 25 38 26 39 P E T R I C 49 To walk. 2 Branches of 51 Songs for ng. 50 Beer. • single voices: 4 To get awe. 52 Empt. 53 Opposite of 5 Flat ear. cold. • 6 Blank metal 55 He was a a- die. • of .fine stage 7 Network. • plays. • 8 Poems. 56 He lived 9 Chart. 10 Greedy. 11 Short letter.' 12 He — or trained the almost years. VERTICAL 1 Lady. 15Rosees. 20 Large inn. 22 Genus of frogs 23 He had --- standards of • acting. ; 25 Monkey.,,: 261inseet egg; 28 Ocean. 29 'Upright shaft. 33 Kind of •Poisoning. 36 To make • terneplete. '38 Acidity. 39 Horseback 'game. ; • 40 Glided, s. 43 Feod container. 44 State of bliss. 45 Plot of grass. 46 Wings. - ' • 47 Saucy. 51 Spain (abbr) 54 Poem of "I" he got into a dog:fight _without gims, and finally forced the other plane to' the grnund, and sold the Ohilean Army .Staff on the sepee- i9rity of American planes and Am- erican pilots. Yes, it was Brigadier elen.eree Jimmy_ Doolittle, who per- sonally piloted ' the.' sensational , Tokyo bombing.. But' Doolittle's story has beeome radio's Story- • And from complimentary comedy quip -on evei y---ftth-'13)10W-011 tIie- alr, to down -right patriotic air - tributes, radio has enhanced the • ascendancy of the Doolittle Star. An since .the flight' to TOkyo is just the terst ehapter in the Vic- tory Novel, radio will keep you in touch with each succeeding chap. ter, as the beak is sex...Mesa There'll Li veskSh� As a result of every available emit of transportation being re- quired for urgent warneeds, the • International Livestock Exposi- tion and International Grain and •Hay Show at Chicago has been cancelled for 1942. For forty- two year, the Livestock Expo- , MUM' combined 'With the Grain and Hay Show for the past twenty-three : years, has been- the greatest agricultural expOsitioh on theNorth ,American coneinept. .Apart aitdgether from the resolve of the people to prosecute the • war to its utmost limit, the prob- lem of the transportation of the • huge number of exhibits; esthibi- tors and visitors in this .yeltr of war would have been impossible. Last year, in livestock alone, ap-• proximately .14,000 animals were 'moved 'from thirty-seven States and from some of the provincea of Canada to the Exposition and Show, which attracted a record attendance of '400,000 peesons. • ,The Lone Ranger, whose leg- endary heroics in the days when. •w • • the West wan yosmg, YOung and old iii their (lane • re-enect- ments on the air, is a consistent • ' popularity poll leader - has been . • for some' four years. Cle0C in • Hamilton ea -reties the adventures •• daily at 530 p.m. And all lbe fa.ine iliar paraders of the Lone Rang- er escapades a.re present - in- cluding Tonto, the Indian, and the Ranger's mat. while &nee, Silver. , Stirring stuff,with: right always triumphant over wrong, the. Loire Ranger's radio, 'adventureoffer healthy, clean-cut listening for everyone! Clara, Lu. and Eta are back •on ' • the air -eves thrice weekly • from CBS. Monday. nights • pese.aRadio Theatre, top ranking hourleng dramatie weekly show, is• chess- reheareed • Sunday afternoons', with a Studio audience of service -men, • Who are keen to •see and hear many of their radio and screen favorites in action. • "Cheers from the Camps", new' Vuesesaye ukist' 9.30_ CBC seltereate ee ae Network feature, originating With CBS, le proving a smash .hit, with • ; the new idea of the Boys in the '• • Service, providing the entertein- ment-for-theafelksi Re c o ed ,headIinere incluee: "Tame Little Sisters", and 'One Doiern Roses"; ,• a 1 "Johnny Doughboy Foune aa Rose le Ire- ' land": s• ••• Some •of, the Psalms are. sups . ' , .,.• tmen 6 4 4.7.5if9 M.: 4 COW recentle • as the •SecosideCenettry,.• haanbeesfreet to• the teach:- o • frees doni! • IEly William THIS cURIOUS-WORLD - Fergustin• • , ."',. 10 5 / 20 -POUND • 1F1 VVEIGH5 ONLY ABOUT CAVE 11\1 ALT ZI 28 WINWAR 40 45 46- ( . 0 0 BANANAS GROW PO I r‘el as) U.° (DR: DwOW'Aiel9 COPP. 193; BY NEA SERVICE: INC. POP—But He's Hiding! is HOW FAST IS YOLsr. • CAR, POO ? ABotiT SD( MON'64S 12-7, AH '41.0 USUALLY le ANSWER: Bunches pf bananas at maturay hste Lam the tres] With the individual."fingera" pointing, up, just the„ppposie of, thit way we .usually see them displayed in stores. NEXT: A decs that brought in his enemy's bead, • By 1 MILLAR WATT MY INCOME 70(8e1eas0d by The BO PynaieMo. ttc.