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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-12-28, Page 7R et • Can Animals •• ltoad Futures Some Scientists .Belies a They • Are • Gifted With , Pglychic 'Powers' • So`e' lscie�ntis mts believe that ani- ' mals are gifted with,. psychic pow-' e r's aid are often able to •sense ,tne,,• coming• disasters. The night before •-the Tokyo earthquake of October,, 1923, the howling et dogs .in . the city,, was so • general that • peopip- 'were. appalled. Many, .held that 1�t was a portent of evil, and when dire -: aster overtook then 100,000 wove killed, - 1.5.0,00.0 1njt:red and 50,000 missing. Rats Wen leave a 'doomed ..tes- sol before there: is any sign of den ger ,• . •• • flats and Sinking' ,Ships • Soros ;time .ag& "iu.. Assam 'there • Was' an; invasion .of •high -land by ' thousands' of, animals and reptiles. Tigers-.: deer;; and' rabbits `[blipped, along with • each other; and when they etil reached: a safe level; a de- Inge broke, flooding tli`e.' lowlands toriles,. But the most remarkable -case of animals fleeing from •disea tar. occurred just before' the island of Krakatoa, was demolished by volcanic eruption. For days. before, • t1re water was Mack with swim- ming animals, all,recing out to.see, away from the doomed island.. KEEPING IN TRIM • A Ann. Rutherford takes advantage of the studio gymnasium for a. two - hourworkout before reporting • to `lose set. Skill efith.the• Indian clubs• are fun and, add to the grace of the body while proving exhilarating physically. , r .Adegiate. Wool •Supply Assured' • ;Situation Here •Expected . to Be Normal by Mid -Winter , No real shortage of wool will exist in Canada this winter, aecerd= ing to a Montreal atithority on' the Wool situation. He stated last ' • week that wool is •now arriving here from Australia more is en route and more is earmarked to came, so that •by mid -winter the 11upD1y will be back to normal. "Australia has 500,000,000 pounds , available •if we want it,". he added. ' Plenty From Australia Referring .to Wool ftr knitting, he said that undoubtedly there was a •shortage, particularly of khaki • wool et first, but that every Week the situation ''was returning. closer to normal,' "I repeat,' there Is 'lots of fine; . wool available for Canada," he. , said. "Australia has about 500,000,- 000' pounds available, and 'ft is coming on the nfarket right now. '. C.hange for Men's ' Suitings The spokesinan' said,. however, . } that a change worild occur in men's • suitings and other cloths such as • fine sergos. • .• • And, a mixture• of cotton, rayon , $table 'rtbre and oilier . mixtures will .be introduced into. the ' fine• • wools, he said, to bring the prices into line, s'o that suit and eto8h prices will not soar.. • - British Settler • Influx Forecast J. G. Turgeon, Liberal member of Parliament for Cariboo; B.C., said in a recent address that Can- ada must be prepared to receive large numbers of British settlers when the war is over. He told the Halifax Women's - Canadian Club Canada would bo " a 'creditor eati>l!n at the end of the mg., so far, as her relation- • With: Great . Britain is eon- , corned. Turgeon said that as sue'h, the Dominion would have to be prepared to accept pay'tiient of the debt in British exports; • , . • Increased imports would prove a; '" severe threat to Canada's second- ary industries and would create - added unetnploymenteu iless tib measures are taken, the 'speak - said. be -solved best by an adequately financed and effibiently arranged program of rolonisntiate• x�- ad- the -problem, +wan d- tz<- • Y e .Royal Nw&y Patrols the, Sea Along England's Coast In spite o the grimowaril ng gieen by tie battered wreckage of the British .destroyer ,Gipsy, another destroyer' of the Royal ?Wavy carries on its.` duty, of patrolling the sea' alonfi•' �l.s Englan:coast.•`T:he•Plane was broken -in two and sent to the bettori.when she struck a ,German mine after'' altering'her course to rescue two erp an 'airmen, whose. plane -crashed thio the' sea after 'being ;drit•en off Asha:1e attempt . ig. to attack London- "The ;Gipsy struck ;•the mine• after bringing the, two airmen to Shore .for medical• atten•tion: Sunday $.chool Lesson. LESSON XIV FRIENDS' AND FOES . SOF THE KINGDOM.—Matthew 13; 54- i6:12. • ' . PRINTED TEXT, Matt.. lit 54-- •' 14: • 4; 15:"29-31. •' GOLDEN TEXT •— Ye are lay ? xx'$1 tiff' cif ;rA sin *1,:. +hie I command . you. John „15: 14. Loris; the.; spiritually'• blind;., that ,they„tiiight behold the i.or,in.his • beauty, the paralyzed •ot'''speech to become witnesses of his grace; the hopeless to' . receive joy; the lost to, have their name`s written. in' the Lamb's book of life. ' pp Oosition To Christ We discover in, this lessor), the rising opposition to• the Lord Jes- us Christ, which .finally led, to the cross. We axe living in a day when • there . is a similar rising' • tide. of opposition to'the `Christ of the New Testament, and it is inter, esting to see here, the character- :• istics and •manifestations of "Knell"Knellopposition which,are .parallelled by :the antagonism against Christ which we : find today on •every which h riel ('hrisF a.n •vhcn he aii-one- earth; and Christ will win in:the conflict againt' 'h'im today. TIME--The .rejection at areth occurred in the winter of. A.D.'29; the earlier miracles of 'this story .through • the • end of: 'Chapter 14.. • ,took place .in • April latei rriwge es d he e. rebuke 'Of thPharisee and Sea-' ducees occurredin the summer of • the same 'year: `. PLACE—Nazareth was the city where Jesus lived most of his life, in northern,Galilee. Jahn the Bap- • tist was martyred at Machaeras, On the north-east • shore 'of the Dead Sea. The miracle Of healing the : daughter' of the, Syrophoen•.. icianwoman occurred , near the cities of': Tyre and Sidon •on the' -Mediterranean '.coast;. the walking on the, water occurred on the Sea.' of. Galilee, a (Rejected In. Own City, - 54. And canting into his •own .co.entry he taught them in ' their synagogue, • .insomuch that they we r e , astonished, and said, • "Whence )refit- this manthis • wis- dom, these mighty • words'? 55, Is not this the carpenter's son? Is not' his mother ' called .Mary? and • iris brethren, James, and Joseph, an.tl Simon, and 'Judas? •56. And his sisters, are they not all with as? Whence then .hath this man all. •these things? 57. And they . were offended in him. But Jesus said unto them, A. prophet is 'not without honor, save• in his own . country, and irk' his own. house. 58. And he did notany mighty;' `m worka there because of their un- : belief. ' ' .' Murder' of John ,Baptist'. Matt. 14. 1. At that season Her_. ed the tetrarch heard thereport aincerning Jesus; 2. and' said .un, PO his servants; This is John the Baptist; he is risen -from the dead; and'therefore do these pow- ers work in him- 3. For Herod had laid hold on John, and bound him; and --put ,hire in prison for the sake ; of iferodias, his • brother Philip's wife. 4. For John said •unto• him, 'It is not Iawful for. thee to have her. The death of Christ's herald was a certain "portent of the .re- jection and .crucifixion of the King. (The Herod .of Our lesson, called -Herod Antipas,• was the son • ' of Herod the Great who ordered. the slaughter.of the babes of Bethlehem). Herod, knowing that he • was wrong 'in this marriage with his brother's (still living) Wife, and too weak a man to, re- sist the will of Salome• and her scheming mother, Herod ' gave or- . ders ,for John the Baptist to be executed. Jesus.immediately with- dewinto a desert 'place on being informed of the martyrdotn of his forerunner by whom he had been baptized. - . Miracles fly the, Sea 29. And Jesus departedthence, and came nigh unto the' sea of Galilee; and he • sent up into' the. mountain, and sat there. 30. And 'there Paine unto him great Multi- tudes, having with thein the lame, blind, dumb, maimed, .and . many : others, and they east them down at. bis: feete and he hailed them, 31. Ixfsomuch that the nniltitude wondered, , when they saw the dumb speaking, the maimed whole, and the tante' gi --'-the .. blind , seeing: and ' they glorified, the God of Israeli Thousands of books have been' written about the person and work and life .and char -eater of the Son of God, of whose life the events 'of se 'few • daystare known; and yet we have, .not exhaiieted the infinite, nnfath omable wealth of those days when walked among us in the flesh. it -grid -1W ,,today: mated cripples 'that 'they Might walk in the way of the i-ea,mery -But •er -dnct.on Rue November creamerybutter pro- duction totalled ` 15.,362,056, 1.Iis., compared with 23,736;41 the"pre vious month, and 14,665,565 in November, 1938, the Dominion '. Bureau of Statistics reports.'. Production of factory cheese was '5,418,767 pound's, compared with .7,215;118. in. November last year, and: 12,816,531 the previous month,• -. Butterexports totalledtotalled.2 : 48,800 pounds, compared. with 259,500 pounds la's't month and 367,800 in November, 19.38, while cheese ex= ports were • 13,822,400' pounds, against18,'541,400 and 12,535,700, t N : E W By M,413BE iRCHER WELCOME TO 1940 • NBC broadcasts the ten bigge-t .news' stories of •the year at 2 ..pen. EST., on New •Year's Eve under the • heading ' of "Headlines of 1939."•'• The, -program• will be in di;amatic' form and' will 'last' for one hour.: Needless to say..there has been. more than...enough • ma-. -*fel •to make` tip 'the script;' It will not all be war -rnater;ial,•1loz,J- --e- er,,for there the Squalus, • . the Corrigan and Hughes, flights and the: new Lrrn 'landhurricane to draw. noon.: A minute ' befcre the New •Year, begins (1'1.59 pen. ESL, on Dec- ember eo-ember 31; 1939) Mutual micro-' P.hones,,: _.eii_rl ..be 9:pened 4p in Times Square,';Nety York City;•t.o 'catch Broadway's wel.coree•to 1940. All networks, will. parade •their dance• bands the same ":evening on • an overnight celebration, Tor five. hours, 'front—, 11 p.ni., EST;, the. boys will ke.epthe-.music going. NOTES AND NEWS .• New: shows for 1;940 include i'e= rivals of Cavalcade of. America ' and -Grand Hotel, and, for the..fi:rst time, a quiz program called "What •Would: ' You Have•,Done?", . The. Grand Hotel drams series .begins ' on January 7.• The ,new quiz hour opens on ,January 26:with 'E:d •H''r-• lihy,'"NBC• announcer, as M.C. Charles 'Boyer, ,released from. ser- vice 'in: the French •Army, 'takes back the star 'rel.e in the Holly-. • - Winter Ends Record Shipping Season On . Lakes • Great Lakes freighter unloading coal at Duluth • • • Automobiles• from IIntroit•being transported on,the Great bates A boom -tine • Great Lakes shipping" season 'which, at its height., put • into •commission every available steamer, has.just drawn to a close; The •1989'season •wipecl out unemployment among Great. Lakes marl- vers and,_ shippers believe, will have resulted in shipment cf 70,000;000 tons up and ,down the inland waterway's. The major cargoes are iron ore•aed grain downbound and coal unbound. L POP—And This Leaves Pop the Winner 5 • wood .Playhouse; beginning •Wefi- neSday,' January 3,"(8 .p.rri., EST.). • The case off'. -,the ,Chase .and San- born Hour and One .Man's Family has definitely been settled:.Begin- ' n•ing• January 7,' Bergen .and Mc- Carthy are to occupy. the, half hour .from 8.00 Ito. 8:80 p.m., :EST',, the • Barb er`serial following from 8.30 to 1).0e. : • O'i' H 1•; P CVE\'1'S:—:' BS's •Creat 'Play series gets under way again on J,an wary. 7 with She: i • den's "t'he Rivals". .President 'F:.oos ie t makes his Jackson .0::-07 spec -h .,' "one. ;-`---all i tcan . net- works, on. January 8. James 'Cage ney' wilrbe starred, on Arch :Obo- ler's• drama prog•ra.nr on Jan•uar�y .13t -h.) )-leads Swedish Defence A' recent' photo o.f• Lieut. -Gen. Olof Gerhard .Thoemell,' w,ho liaa been named. 'commander-in-chief • of Sweden's defence. Sweden is the strongest .of the Scandinavian nations in a miliary sense and has the•.finest guns'in the world..Her' total trained. • man power is esti- mated at, between 800,000 and 900,000 men, •This ' man mower i now being 'called up gradually as . Sweden prepares .to .fight invasion if she must. Save Space When Building A Home , Woman Architect Says Corrid- ors Are the Biggest Space- Eaters -- Advises Elimina tion of Halls • Declaring that hiane-. (cera pay ,too much attention to,:the style of houses and give too little ' thodght to the purposes they ,are supposed, to serve: Elizabeth ,Coit, • `noted ':yew Yoi'lt architect, advo-• sates an "objective viewpoint" in bttildittg .or buying a t place to live in; .. . - • Women, she says, should, thin': of prospective homes in terms of functional uses, such as eating. sleeping, entertaining, cooking, or yr ashing, and not merely as c•om- bintttiops of rooms. Plenty of Closets Extensive' research work in eco - n:otnical design and construction has convinced Miss colt that "'cor•-. ridor space is One' of the biggest space eaters in the average hou'se. Through, the elimination of halls the builder may either „re, duce the over-all dimensions'and•:• n , cubic: contents of •the house; or else lecrease the size of the rem*,. •islo woman will admit that apace. - can . be saved by providing fewex^•• •closets,, Miss Coit says, but • the fact remains that' closets can ''bo' located in otherwise useless spots s-.-s.ome shallow and .others deep, e • io !'y O/CLFe guiam san ! PREY ON 044C5 AND OW .S . PREY ON WZASELSY A HYBRID • TOMATO WEIGHS =7ROXIMA"> L.Y THE. t V.aLINT OBTAINED -"/ 'TAKING THE OF THE FIGURE. r',.r5'ULTINc WHEN .r-Hg.•WEIGHTS- OF • '11-4E TWO PARENTS AME, MULTIPLIF_.O Ef2...' CANVAS' -BACK. DUCKS , i 2W QN'7 .E" SLJr2FACE r; G� THE WA7°E BEFOT.E RIS.INC.ti•wiNTG 714E AIR. f0' BY 1,4ASER1CB rNCJ A .TOMATO rs composed of tells, and, by measurement and cal culation, it has been found that when a frint ;containing 200,000' cells.is crossed With one containing' 800,000 cells, the, offspring will . 'contain approximately 400;000 cells . the square :root ;of the protluct, of .ce,lls,&f the two•perents. DOMINION MAP HORIZONTAL 1 1 Pictured is the map of 6 Irnportanat river in this. land, St. 13 Stream. , 14 Comnianded. 16 Frxclamatiotf. 17• tibwwer'' property. 19'Sletted box: 20 Health sprang., ` 21 Examinatiohs: 23 Sour. 25 Devours.. 27 Public auto, ' 28'P1ura1 pronoun: • 30 Aperture. 31 Doctor of • medicine, 32 Measure. 33 Gypsy:' 35 Musical note, 36 Eternity 37 Perfect • • pattern. 39 Inclosed., 41 Artifice, 44 Part of a Answer to Previous Puzzle 46 Transposed, 48 Mole. 49,Electri lien. pnrticice 50 Senior; 51 To embroider: , 3.Haiai man'•: 53 To decline: to ' ltnot.. prosecute. ' ' 4 To suilice; 55 Beam. 5 Circle+ pat -t. 56 Drone' bee, ' 58 Paroxysm: ' -,— eadow:. -.. 59 Sack.. 7 Work of skill :60 Its largest city. 8 Tiny+ - 61 Jts governor 9 Road. general writes 10 Neck backs. under the ' 11 To scorch. name of.Jobn• 12B bylonian VEP TICAL 1 Credit. . '' Otiicer's . a;•sis int drama. deity. • 15 Doctor. 18 Meleeleer., 20 Froth; - '2'1 it has a large trade with 22 Male none. 23Stomachs. . 24.113 3000 -mile • ---- borders ' the U. S. A. 26 Mineral spring 29' Tpif, , • 32 Garden tool. 34 Intersected. 36 Female sheep, 38 Upper human 1'unli:' , 40 Being. 42 Near: 43 Brahman aeon 44. Courtesy titles 45 Peat dust. 47 To do again, 5,0 Scandinavian tale. 52 Was victorious 54. Chum. 55 Hurrah! 57 Right. y° 59 Before Christ'. an=4 ill 7 89 10 II 1 111120 ' Jr! 1►� ®11.11 HEE .111 a■ II■ Il 36 IIIIII 19 26 28' 29 30 ° 36 35 ; 12 43 •s 50 47 52 48 54 45 55 .o 56 57 5 59 61 By J. MILLAR WATT. S1Jt• WON'T &W CiN1 ST & t -_. ru✓ _ i AUSE ' ODY. WEARING ;IT! ""*" Bl_CAtJSE Vgt2YBQDY!4" WEARING IT! t' , *'