HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-04-06, Page 7saw -- .. - l wi►*.
Royal Canssiok
lltepor't In Offing
1I$as ;Probed 'Workings Of B N .
. Act---Cenferenee to Con-
sider lt Win Be Held Late. ".
'1* April.
Comp) ion of its. report by the
Royal C mmissioh on Dominic a
• Provin.cl�t1 Relatiens is now expect
ed around the end of April. Mem,
hers of the commission, who have '
been. in Ottawa• continuously for
Qome 'months pa• t, plan a • 10 -day
recessin • their work around: Ess -
ter, . after which •they will return
to Ottawa to complete their Work.'
*premier Mackenzie King. has in.
• heated• in the 'Meuse of C:oimmens
that thegoverh'ment will. ,hold . a
Dominion -Provincial` confe•rehe•e' to
consider' the • commiss,ion's report
,before any; legislation. looki'ne to
• arendinnen•t' cit. the.4.1,..,N,.4. I.A. Ace is.•.
. int'itodilced, .11r" ,I;ing hart 'not :•i,ti-
:dicated yet„ however, whether si ti
a; cortere.nee will be held before
a getiera•l election,
Mussolini Speaks To . World
• • Pveinier Benito Mussolini is shown
in this •'rafliophoto, de 'h:e.:address-
rd' a throng. 'of several ,hundred
thottsand'person's• massed in Rome
' to, celebrate the 20th• anniversary ,
..of the• establishment •of fascism:
Ii :Duca. -took advantage of the oc-
casion. to tell his .people, and the
. , world, • of a, possible .co"hflict if
lcaty's "Mediterranean pro•blems''
were hot solved.
Na Ontario.. Dog
Gets ., . Free Bite
ven If He Has Been The Vic-'•
tint Of Teasing He Must:
- i Spend 14 Days In Canine
Jetii.
The' old creed that every' dog is '
entitleii to one free .nip is considr
ered by • Qntario . authorities 'as
granting the mutts too much' free,
dom, officials of the humane ' so-
. ciete and
o-..ciety"`and the Toronto dog- license
department •announced last week;
They were commenting on the de-.
Peat' of a, bill lntrodticed by New
York State mail carriers: before
the state' senate to permit re.cov-
e enyeefeda-reages, lre aalegat watt e,
a a4.4014k8.izl htt lite`wm» *:4.00 ***4
each.,dog the p'riv'ilege o4 one
free. nip;, saes,,t.he Torenro Daily.
'Star,, •' • e'
"In Ontario," said J. M. Wilson,
managing, director of the Toronto...
}Inmaies Society, "any dog thea is •
reported to have bitten a person •3s,
de Subject to, 14 days' obset•vatiou for
rabies. If it Is found that • pe ,is
free, he goes. back' to tis owner.
"We, find that. the, •majorit;y . of ,
dogs have .beetr wrongfully arcus..
.3d:a he 'added, • • .
f•
•
I, •
\, 7
• LESSON 11 •
PAUL PREACHii.S THE RISEN
CHRIST '.(Easter Lesson) :
Acta 13; 1 Corinthias►s 15,
Printed..Text-Acts 13:16, 23.31,
-.• 38, 39, 1- Cor. 15,119-22.
. Golden TextBut now • hath.
Christ been rased fr .ob the dead,
the first -•fruits of';the:m that are.
asleep. I'Cdr:1520: •
'tHE•.LESSON IN ITS. SETTING'.
• Trine, -St Paul began his first
niissionavy journey duiin'g the
sunitmer of A.D., 47. , tie .wrote the `•
First Epigtle..to' ! the ' Corinthians..,
:from''Epheettes ab tat. A.D. 56
•Placa.-The 'apoet'les.• set forth• .
on• their •f rst' journey fz•o°t`n; eentie.. ;
och to ' Syria;• they Speat
able time on the island of Cyprus,
Paul's •first, recorded :sermon was
- delivered' in the synagogue of. An-
tioch, the: city of"Corinth', to which. •
the ,First Epistle ''to' the Corinthi-
• ans.Was. addressed, was located' itt
central • Greece. • • '
We come. in this chapter,to One
of the' •epochal• periods in • the his.
tory .of the Christian church, the.
beginning of Paul's. great mission-
ary journeys, by ,which ..the.. gospel •
was carrie'li. to the uttermost :parts
of the" Mediterranean world..
Not .long before this,: the Lord:
•told?''Ananias ..that • Paul would,'•
• stand bei. r .•kings.This .promise
is, now fulfilled; and the,fir'st-fruits •
begin to lee , hitrvested.. " Wherever
the 'gospel has gone, there •'has
been victory.ovee 'every evil 'nave
er,'and the ernancipation.•of �inen r
front• the •chains slid bondae•e• of
su.rc.rstition .and,Kri.
I'au1 .At Aretinzii •-•• • •:-
Acta. .1.3
-
Acis..13 14=43. ' From. Paphos,
•' Paul set sail..for the coast of Asia
Minor,.and; landing ,at Peega ,in •
Pa•niphy1ia;•1e .and •B.a'nabaa went'
• tee, province of •Pisi'd'ia,, where wel•e
• the provinc.e.of. PisidiaA wher were
1,ivinge :a considerable number. of
.Jews; sufficient:: to: .require . 'the
bu'iidirrg of. a• synagogue..., To:this
synagogue. on the ':. Sabbath, day'
:Paul and those 'who were.with'him•
repaired,; 'before the service .was.
over the city had heard • a' great
sermon from the greatest preach
er• of the first century concerning.
a s.ubjeet. About'which probably ••
none of',thm/tilel ever heard'. be- -
• :for•,e, the gospel of 3esue Christ.
16..And Paui,steed°iip;,and 'bec-
kon.ing with 'the hand said, Men of.
Israel; and ye• that fear ,God;'hear
"Perhaps a pun has been playltig
with ebildren," Mr'. Wilson` ei:lilain;;
epi: "The play develops into a teas;
ing session and the pep takes a.
nip with a 'now. I've•stpod-eneegh,
stop -it' attitude. • if the nip draws
blood, even from a scratch, a par. •
,-nt might become alarmed said ie'.
pert the dog. Thus. he finds' hint•
&Alt . in custody for "14 clays " '
' . WoolFrom Whales. . .
The ^problem of producilhg era -
ficial wool fiber appears to have
•twiny solutions. A'Japanese vier -
tilt has produced it frrrt whale
Meat.. Sr. Sasaki, of the College •
of. AgrieuIture' of 'the.,Kyusitn Int-
perial University, has,"according
to the Tokio corr'espo'ndetit'of the
American Cheniical Society, suc-
ceeded in fermenting the whale
izieatt ;in a chemical solution , se
that •ie w.as reduced to a viscid'-
tt►i".ass whteh could be' forced
.•tltt'ott li?sftall ox'ifieces•,and sprt,
atitar a tree
The Trans -Canada tiit•1iners to-
dity travel at ati,a'verage epeed•'pt
• • 140 //tiles an. bout' and' heave It top
s(reed of 260. milt's 'per. holt•, '
,. 1 '
23. Of this :man's seed .(Cod ac-
„coiding, to .premise brought. unto
Israel a .Saviour, Jesus. 'That God
would raise up .One from the line
of David to ben Savior, all'the', Old'
Testament testified: What Paul is
about to tell them; however, is not
only that their Scriptures promised.
• that such ,'a .person would come, •
but that he had conte; in the 'per-
son -of Jesus of ',Naza•reth,..,, born
.and cr'ucifi'ed in their, very genet•&-%
t•ion. +e. ,
•';.24.. When John had first preach- ,
ed 'before•his'cotning the baptism
of repentance to all the people• pf.
Israel.: X25.• Anda as John was'ful-
filling his course, '.he , said, What •
suppose• ye that 1, ant? , I am not
be: But behold, there comet4i one ,
-after nte; 'Owes of whose feet
..1 .em.•not ;worthy to: unloose, •26.
13rethren,•children of the stack ;of '
Abraham, and. those • •among you
that fear God, to ue is the word of
this salvation, sent fettle ••
27. For they 'that dwell in Jerd-
salem, .,and their, rulers, because •
bey knew him not, nor the •;voices
-•ero•,-the. ;.,..rh�ets:�w��i'noh.�t e•�•ead,ezv�,.,*
Tri .
`" ttest-g lith lett � til, ante) t�'te ' .1) at i u
dernnhig him. 28. And• thengh.they ,
found no: cause of death in him,•'; '.
• yet asked they of Pilate that he '
should be slain. 29. Ahd 'when •
they had fulfilled all things, that
,were written of him,' they • took.
him down from the tree, and laid.
him in a tomb. • .
30, But God )raised hint from,
the dead, •here eras the attest as-
tonishiti statement' that could
• have possibly'.felle.n • upon 'the eats
of these. people. • Paul says that' -
:' Cod, his God and their God,• had,
raised this man from /°the^dead,. a
double' tiliracle,, a miracle in na=
t.urc. and. a miracle in divine goy-
crument. He goes oil to'' present'
further evidence '• to • prove this
astonishing fact that he has just.
• announced. Fli'st„ he �p�lleclares that
this person 'raised. frbM •the, dead
was' actually 'seen, and that" some
Ito had seen,, the Lord, were still
living in, Pelestine and 'vitneeting •
'to this fact, 31. And he was, seen
f'ot many, days of them that c'anie
• up.with him •frame Galilee to Jean-.
gaiety, who are now his witnesses ,
• unto .tlie people.. , • .
88. ,Be it, known unto you there-
fo•re, brethren', that through this,
• man is proclaimed nate' yot, remis-
Sion of sins: 39. iota by hint every,
one that, believeth is justified from
ali things, from which ye could
,not lie justified.by the law ofo.
tses. Tlic . nhost iniportant pai'tof
°his first. recorded ser'nton Pinta
ss cessorr i '''iztctiWit •
of justification,the .declared tree
.•qutttal from the guilt• of , sin, a
•thing not obtaih; d -through the
1Vlosaie law, butt only through.- tile •
death And law,.
again •of ('hriet:,
�� -.� .ii. �•"� !r �e� W i..': ��':. ^M'�i4nH'r 4:`�.'4"i�l�t:Y,e
1,
LamsThe
Lamb's- Meat
At . Easter: Time :.
Has ` Long ' Been Associated!
With The. Festivities • Of The
Spring Season,
Iamb tai a meat that has . long
been associated with the .Easter
season. Early in the history of the -:
world, larnb was used in religious
ceremonies, 'the Israelites, during
their captivity' • in Egypt, keeping
•,tip their old practice as a pastoral
people of sacrificing the firstlings'
of their flocks in _the spring.
Among .the Anglo-Saxons, 'Norse-
men and. other:Teutoni'craces, the
•wand through'•it• sinners trust on' his
. saving work.. ' • . ore
Heart'Of Christian Message
• In this glorious chapter in First -
Corinthians '".we' find the ,central,
classic passage dealing , with the '
subject of resurrection in the,New
Testament..) .. ' '
After proving. the, lilstoric •'real=
''ity of Christ's. physical resurree- •m•
the ..Paul proceeds "to' emphasiz'e •'.
the tremendous _ importance" of
such` a feet. elf a' man does not
believe:, ins the •resurrection of
Christ,' 'he 'does riot have the
Christian n'i ssage; he 'does .•no.t
have anything to preach of any
value e a ` . ost certainly can-
not tack abotz salvation. in Jesus
.
Christ. Chtci t resurr ction
s e is,
anteing, other things, an indisput-
able testimony. to' Gdd's• full ac- ••
ceptance . e f •.Cl rist's• work for us '
on the cross. • , : ••
19. If we have only, honed in
' `Christ in this ...life, we are of all
eea eak ios*t spitiabiea:2r0,e.But 'i ow
41eallit` *rGhis.'tP'ilan Ct : nat1aeilerti*tiAlte • '
dead, 'the 'first fruits of them that, •
.are asleep. .21. Fox' since by • than •
,came death, by main c.amg also the'
• . resurrection of the dead: '22. For
ee in Adam all die; so' also in
Christ shall all be made alive.
Pani' proceeds front a' discussion '
of Christ's resurrection as a• h•is-
• torie'fact to an'application of'the
'fact to;aui: o'wn.lives.. On the rine
hand,. Christ's resurrection is a
guaranty of verse he is the' first-
-fruits; we shalt follow: •
• On the .other hand,- Paul .says
fitat this 'truth, instead .df' giving
us• ,an excuse. for careiessnss in•,
.oen. daily. life,eshould prose a, tree,
mendoua incentive to holy living
• here, now, daily. :
I'.
.
•
feasts of Eostre• of Ostara the An-
glo-Saxon goddess of spring, was '
celebrated' in :April, which, •, was
named Eosturmonath, or. Easter,
month; .when young` lain'bs' were,
principal *erns at all the feasts.
With the coming of Christianity',
and the celebration 'of the. Chris •
thea Baiter,' the traditional u'se of
•iamb.• still persisted,' and •se ou ,to
the;present,,day. • • '
Qana.diail Lamb At •Bes,t•
• Mere.'Canadian farmers are spa-
cializing .in the raising and• fatten-:,
ing of lambs 'for•,the.Easter mar•-
'ket. Many.;thousa.pds• of western -
range iambs were placed in feed-
lots both in Eastern and Western •
Canada 'last 'fall, 'After ,several.
months of `feed'ing on the -best of
alfalfa; silage,, eroota and ;home'
dgrown grains, th' selambs•are:now
ready for slaughter' and are .being
•'• marketedV from ,week to week: The
quality of. the ' product' IS at. its
hest. Lamb will therefore :be in . •
seaeon at. Easter time; in' • fact,
•,,Canadian• lamb of quality' is"avail-e
• able throughout 'rbe entire. year,
Pasture • Care. ..'
Not Expensive ..
-•
-
Pasture experiments during ,.the
last decade.. qr •so have demon-' '
,strated" very strikingly the Mee
proveiuents'that can 'be secured in
yield. and quality of pasture herb•
age and that these can be secured,
hi• yield and. quality ' , of pasture
herbage and that these .can be
secured very ecenodinically. Expel i -
merits conducted at the.Fredericton
Experimental Station, 'states T. (':
Chiasson; • agricultural assistant,
• 'have shown how pasture yields can ,
t •i,iereased-b-v etre'. arse -of' i uui 'mei :
.v ff*:1. e t'.ize:,..
i'c14x .,f It llt n . .,...,1.�.>.....;;,�
A pasture field t ecelving a eerie •
plete fertilizer since 1923; has, gill-
e'ii • an average 'yield; for the last e.
three years, of 7,277 jibunds 'dry
matter ,per acre; compared With a
yield .cif. 3,303 pounds , dry matter,
per acre for a• fi.eld.•that'had no fer-
tilizer since 19-23.. This was an .in-
crease 91 3,974 'Petards of dry inat•
ter costing• $3,61 or $1.8i, per. ton.
• Th•erefore there doe's not seem to :•
be any doubt that .fertilizing will
• : increase 'yields 'economically,
The ',herbage on the . fertilized
patture was also inucb More valu-
able as•'it vas made u.fi„la.rgel'y of,;
nutritious glasses , and clovers, •
white theherbage on•;the .unfertil-
ized pasture' was' -composed lai'gely •
of unpalatable grasses ant weeds,
Eggs ' or Easter
MM Tradition
The origin of the°Easter egg•tra• •
anion is lost in .antiquity but year
after wear the delightful practice':
of .adorning. th9' breakfast table
with.egge; on Easter Sunday mgrn-, ••
ing cntines. Zt;matters 'net that
the 'first f'res'h eggs no longer come
with Easter,. the . beginning of
Spring) Lhe •mosiern model of the, •
humble lien may, .and usually does, •
produce her excellent product 'Vie
year round. Easter is still assoclat-
ed'}vith eggs, with the hen scrp.tch-
ing, in' the warming" earth, newly ••.
, aware of her destiny.
Eggs, in.the 'Easter tradition, .are
•:a seat's' boiled in , the, shell. For
•
.ettileiretia of', course;, they meet be
colored, witrhr one ofaril infinite
.variety' of• home 0i commercial
preparations: N&- pt'aaeuts; „treasure
rng childhood memories"' of• 'bowls
Of •'mtiitt-co.lored eggs en.. Easter
..morni,ng eevo'uld. •deity`'a ''• •similar
pleasut•e to •their children. ' .
For children, pullet eggss if :they.
are. available, ;will_ prove' an.. added
attraction, their small size lending -
a youthful touch and laving. the
further practical advantage of en
abling Junior to' dispose•of- a great--
er number, :.These sma•11• eggs ere
sold under,tlie designation, of'Giade
A. Pullet..
'Look- For Beef
Prices To Rise :
•Puseibility of ati i.nereaase .in• the •
")trice• of, Beef. after April t is seen'
by 1' ..b: Smith; president "of the
Whyte: Peeking, Cornpany, Stsat-•
.fo.i d,. Ontario,' although .Mr,, Sittith' • 1.
stated that • he did. riot • `anticipafe til
a veal -v ••large. • increase.''sa•ys ;the
Stratford . BeaconeHerald.•'. •
Flamers are holding'' '.back their
• 'cattle ' until that date s,whtn the •
present 'tariff of three ceztts on'•
•cattle exported- tothe .United`, •
States is' reduced to two- ce'pt°s;'.Y
This *ill mean a considerable ad-
:ditional, return to farmers and as
feed' is cheap. and plentiful: :they',
are' holding • on to their stock.
' The."Canadian market does not
seem to be ,able to 'absorb heayy'',
, beef :cattle, 'Mr. Smith said: When
exports• are •'resumed under 'the ,.
•new. quota heavy'shipmen.ts"to the,.
• . United States are anticipated: The`
Toronto market at •present is• dull.
'Fhere,is no intimation' that hog
prices will :be any higher ire the , •
• near future,; Mr- '.Smith said.
ces. are remaining ficin, but the
wholesale 'price 'as below- value
•'right now, The ..,price's ire run -
nine' a little "below last • •years
.level:
$1 s 175,000 Daily
For Air lane
Great Britai'n•. is spending .$f;-
750,0'00 citaily on the production of
• -Military 'aircraft; . Sir . Kingsley:
• Weed, Secretary foe Air, 'announce .
• ed in the House. •cf• Common's last
By `the.`end of March Britain •
' will have 1,750 first-line !planes
and an und'isolose.d Number as re- •
sejge equipment.' • She also has at
present 5.0.0 first-line'machines ov- .
erseas. • Sir •Kingsley was coafid-
• •ent , first-line strength 'would be
2,370 'planes a year hence,•.
. The.
BOOK • SHELF'
By. ELIZABETH BEDY
-. 4esadtG s NADAA-Ne4stMO.SA1C
-;,- ." y -choir M''rray Giibbon " '
S' ,Royal• appreciation of the book. .
`ICathadiaia• Mosaic," ' a' recently;
• published study ofpCanadiaii racial
origins,.by John Murray Gibbon,•
has been expressed to the author.
through Alan Lascelles, assistant
private secretary to King George,
yr, who 'writes' from B'uekingham'-
Pal.ace by Royal: Cornrnahc ., The
followin:g. quotation front the let- •
ter •is euthorized',for publication:
• •"In view. of• His M'ajesty's'forth-
roniing visit tri Canada, 'he is
• greatly interested by this study
rif the. racial origins of the Cana- •
dian •people."•
• 'Canadian. . Mosaic" by John
Murray Gibbon .. , Toronto:
McClelland & Stewar't,
Pro duction of military 'planes,
in Canada will start next year, the,
Minister said adding: •
"Here we have the beginning ,of
a • great development and what
may prove:to be a valuable sup.-
l.ement to our ;production" •
Post Office 'detectives in I,oadon
are trying 'to trap a .ganyg stealing
• receivers from telephone booths,
and are puzzled'. because they say
the instruments are useles's fox
...any other purpose.
rrrR ' CURIOUS
as 1.1///i►i r.. By. William.
eq
e 'Atai L,I=AC:7%4 OF
I a, AN EVEi2-'c A`/'
c_ . U R:R.Efa mo~ (ea .`
r• '•OST IPLAlJ'i"S, BuT.
:o.• CHEMIST HAS
.MAKING ONE
/�/ ••
� COPS' 1937 'BY NEA' SER.VICE,INC.„
:MAN'S factories and •chemical laboratories are bttt playthings,
compared to -the marvelous Manufacturing. processes carried' on •
• • inside the cells of comteton, ordinary. .plants. From simple foods '
taken into• the .ple at, .hundreds of •amazing products are made
through •the ,magic of,•sunlight.
NEXT: . What stones did Jaime and the 1J. S. exchange as a ges
'tire •of good will?.. .•
•
i
Air:•• lane : Inventor
HORIZONTAL
1 Man ivlio was:
, the co-pilot of
the first 'air-
plane' flight..
12 Monkey.
13 Price" of
instruction,
14. Eye:
10 Money factory
• ' 18 Musical note.
19 Chaos.
20 Verbal. `
-' 21 Whole.
:23 Tiresome.
speech'.
•
•
25 Thing.
26 To tote!,
2'/Writing tool.
28 Meadow:
29 Exists.
30 Prices.
32 Railroad: • •
34 Bone. '
35 Aurora. •
37 Turkish •
' commander.
39 This flight.
the.
world.
421Vorthwest.
h,M
Answer to Pregioas Pluzzle
B E ,R .M DIER
A .` B R i T
:I 5 H
ER I..A ENSUE
GEE
El
SAI riDCJL:IN
APS
C EL LA[r
A S'
N AP ES COATOFARMS
T EW!m
t ••• D
U T
I -1n
A
.'T E R
ILK E
-UDA
N
DATER BERM
M A'GlLE
T
12I• T
BRUSH
P.Rio R A
IR H:E•ED5
L ORIF: ®RRO
E LaoL1VE R . Iii
Ru
S TE AME[ ,.ii'1U P
1' S T
43 To scatter;
44'To drink
slowly. .
45 Sturdy. tree.
46In,a sass
4'$ Peak. •
50Transposed.
51 Makes lace,
55 Part of eye.
57 Therefore. . '
58 Parrot fish.:
59 Reverse.
an inlay.
ful plane,
10 Hourly. '
11 Merchant.
12:His native- • • -
. 'laird:
15 Dimmed' as'
eyes.
17 Note ' in scale
20 Either.
22 Sun god.'
-24 To bury..
27 Beek.. •.
30 Rib. '
31 Drunkards..
Scene of the
Pioneer' ,light.
Kitty
To slash,
•To growl
T"o decorate:
Series of _ ,,
epochal events
Auditory,
Savage. ''
Small horse.'
Greek letter. -
33
36
6?4Filthy : 38
• VERTICAL ••41
ett
1 Deems.
2 Leases.
3 Neuter
pronoun.
4 Enticed,
5 Falsehood. e 52
6 And.. , •" 53
7 To be 'v'ie 54
torious., S6
45.
47
49
.51
Blackbird.
Sesame.
Sorrowful.
Capuchin
61 He is thew. 8 Long auto- monkey...
=» - of the . • mobile roads. 58 Pound.
first success- 9'Within: ' "" 60 Year.
t. ,'3 • ' 5 4' i. 6'• 9
13 '
ib
21
37
Nal
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50 `; t -'iil is
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61 111111111i 1111111111
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REG'LAR FELLERS-
•
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