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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1940-03-07, Page 3More Birds
►anded°Ire
' During 1939
Total of 41,062 pati=ve Wild Birds
Were Marked .With Official
Bands by Canadian
.Government
Bird, banding in Canada sot a
new netted in. 1939, when a !.total'
of .41,0..62 native wild birds, r epres-
enting many 'species, were mar•.ked
with Weird bands.. This brings the
total number•ofbirds banded lai .Ca•
ees • nada since 1923, when the compila-
tion of, bird ,banding. records tie
acame a .government. activity; ,u.p to`.
,344,958.
• 'CAPTURED ELSEWHERE:.
ERE'''"
Th,usands of these birds . have
beett•t retaken .:at, :the; place:Where
where
they ,were first banded, or killed,
found'dead, ,tar captured•'elsewiiere. -
Ea,ch' i•e'port-•of tlie. reco:very.'of' a ,u
banded bird adds to the interrelation'
being compiled -relating to the mi-
gration, fly -ways, range, breeding,
and: wintering grounds, mortality:
rate,, ],ongevity, and cycles of aburi- •
dance of wild birds. These records'
'are 'invaluable in .assisting in the
conservation Of •wirFd• life, and the
important task of collecting' thea► is
'carried onby the National ;Parks
Bureau of the Department of Mines
and Resources, Ottawa, in . co=oper-
ation with the United States Bur-
. eau of Biological, 'Survey Sit Wesh-
ington, .D.C.
Most of the bird . banding in Can-
ada
. is • carried , 'on ; by about two.
hundred. voluntary workers, " ho
hold eticeban p
authority of the, Migratory Birds
Con.ven•tion 'Act. Official bands are o
de aluminum and are. inscribed with
a' serial nuea-ber . and with" as letter
designation.
Gets: Disstinguished
Flying Cross
. Flight Lieutenant L. W. Skey,
of Toronto, has been awarded the
Distinguished, Flying Croix it has
•been announced by the British air: '
ministry. Flight -Lieutenant Skey'
joined the R.A.F. in 1936.
• —Photo by Ashley and Crippen.
•
' Ontario' Gets
Biggest Share
Anson Twin-Engine4 Boibers •Being:
0001..
Canada
The first of a •shipment of, Avro Anson twineezegined bombers to be used":to.: train R. C. A.F.•,pilots have
'arrived at the DeHavilland Aircraft plant in Toronto.: A continuous stream of Amens will arrive in Can-
ada until there are more than 1,600 ,of these .,fast bomber for use in the 'commonwealth air.training scheme.
Nine flat cars were required to bring the crated planes41to •s'iding'.for unloading in Toronto, Where they will
be assembled.. • .
•
Cheese Premium; .$586,365 Paid By
Ottawa Since June 1
Premiums paid by the Dominion
•
Government on high grade cheese
under the Cheese and Cheese Fac-
tory Improvement Act totalled $586-
365 for cheese- made siuce June I,
*hen the premium went into effect,
• J. F. Singleton, associate director of
• marketing services for the Dentin -
fob. Agriculture' Departinent, report-
ed to the annual convention of the
Ontario Cheese Producers' AssC-
•
ciatiort. •
MM FOR IMPROVEMENT
Some premiums on 1939 cheese
have yet to be paid, so final figures
will . be • somewhat, higher, Mr.
Singleton said. .
Ontario cheese •producers roceiv-
"ed most of the premium money, the
total fol' that province being $499,-
• 196: Quebec 'was next with $79,564,
then Manitoba with $3,491, Prince
Edward island $1,607. British Col-
• umbia $1,483.' New Brunswick $560,
" • and' Saskatchewan $461. Nova. Sco-
tia has no cheese factories,
Huge -Rabbits
Caught Alive
. Jack .rabbits, some ty-eighitlg as
much es 22 pounds and able to
leap more' than 12 feet;" were
worth $1 a head alive ittMeaford
, district the middle of F'ebr'uary.
The animals, three ti'tiies the
size of cottcntail rabbits, have
done 'serious damage to idea -fried
district orchards and James C.
'1 iligretn, Meaford sportsman, of-
fered $1 a head for 100 of them
which were shipped to, the Hunts-
vine district and turned loose
there for the amusement of hunt-
ens.
'Trappers in the district used.
Wood traps to catch, their victims
p.l
Is• were: not..haring
°ww,ty °�. e.?.k"••#`,i•
-w.-`;K:a;;,,.awL,.:.>,s,.s:m...�.,W.c:`.,.u.
unday
esson'
•
das, went with the Lord as far as will; he• was 'asking that God's will
the outer part of'the garden.' Here he ,absolutely carried out,.'<anda if
Jesus requested eight of them to possible, in' this carrying out of
r
should
the.
tit. down and wait; but'•James, Pe-' God'sca
that
will .A
ter, ,and John, his three most in- ,pass from him.
timate disciples, the only ones who
were' with him .onthe mount! of
-=t•�n
' fi urs -tie -n , he with tr
him' s g ,
deep' into the garden, that these
three sympathetic souls might .be
with him during the time of ex-
treme sorrow and agony that he
knew. he. was at this Z'time ' enter-
•
ing upon. And began to be Sorrow-
ful 'and sore troubled. '. '
LESSON X
GE,THS•EMANE: . T.R.I,tl M.P H
THROUGH SURRENDER.—Mat-
tihew 26: 30-56.' •
, PRINTED,. TEXT, ' Matt.. 26:
GOLDEN TEXT.—Not as I
will but as thou wilt, Matt.26:. 39.',
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING:
Time.—Thursday, April 6, A.D.
Place.—:an the way ' to Get'h-
semane and in the garden of G,eth-
semane. , • , ,. • •
•
Matt. 26: :36. Then cometh Jes-
us with them • unto'..a place called
Gethsemane. (This garden. was 1d-
cated on the Mount of ©lives; be
gond: the river of the 'Kidron; the
name itself 'means "oil -press"•).:
And saith unto his diseiplesr Sit
ye here, while I go yor1}ier and
' pray. 37.,And he took with hiin
' Peter and the two sons of Zebe
e'aee. All the disciples,' except du-
aaraaaa
The ►,rtisii" - t':mprt ' siylil"
snore than 9,000,000 men' to the
firmed forces during the last Great
War..
• The Agony' ' •
38, .Then , settle he .unto: them,
My. soul is.. exceeding 'sorrowful,.
even unto death. •Christ here was.'
.expe►'iencing the limits of human
endurance. Abide ye, here, and
watch with inc. 39. And he went
forward a little,• and -fell' on his' .
face, and prayed, seying' My Fath:
er, if it be. possible; let this cup
pass away from me; riegertheless,,
not •as. I will, but as thou wilt. The '
, Lord. separated himself, from his
three' close companions who had
thus far accompanied him, .and he
goes deep into•the garden to pour:,
. out hissoul to the Father alone.
The "cup" is not.mrel.y the phys
ical suffering`•Jesus •has to. endure;
,but the whole, experience, the be-
trayal, the trial,• the mocking, the'
scourging, the, cross, the grave •. .
Jesus. was not asking that the •cup
should pass from him• regardless.
of consequences. or God's own
i
RADIO
A N D
N,E
•
NOTES.1,
W 5
..BY •MADGE ARCHER
politart Opera ... 9:00 a.m.. CBL,
•Toronto Maple • Leafs vs. Chicago
- Blackhawks . .. 10:00 p.m., CBY,
and 10:35 CBL, NBC Symphoauy
Orchestra • .. March 10th, 2:00
' p -m., CBL, Hart House String 'Quer-
„tet ....3:00 p.m., CFRB,. N. Y.
Foil. Orel. '. - 4:30 ' pm„ CFRB '
Pursuit of Happiness ' .. 5:00 p.m.,
CBL, The' World Today Reviewed
by Edgar McInnis e .. 8:00 pan., :
CBL, Chase and Sanborn Hour ..'.
9:30 p.m., CBL. Appointment With
Agostini : . March 11, 4:15 pee.,',
'Dominion. Electiort Cast .. 8:30
p.m., CBL, With the Troops in Eng-
land .... 10:45 p.m:, CBL, CBY,
Dominion Election Cast .. , March
12, 8:00 p.m.; COBB, Tig To.wn .. .
$x•30 p.m„ CBL, •luforntatiou Please
9:00 p.m., CBL, : Top Flight
Tunes'... 10:00 p.m„ •Les Concerts
,S fmphonigtres ....10:30 p.m., C11L.
DonL•Eloction Cast '1f•irch 13,
4:15 p -m„ CBL, Dominion Election
Cast .. , 8:30 pen, CBL, Serenade
for Strings . '9:00 .p.m., CBL,
Dom•. Election Cast 10:39 pan.,
.CBL, "France This Spring” discus-
sed liy'Professor Felix Walter... .
•10:45 p:m., CBL, Dominion Eloctiop
Broadcast ... March 14, 3:30 p.m..
CBL, Ou Parade ... 9:00'.p:m., CBL
"The Shadow .of the Swastika"
(new. aerie4) . •...-10:00 p.m:„.'C �....
$tug Ctrestiy and 13ob Burns.
KNOW CANADA. FIRST
The Canadian'•Broadcasting . Cor-
poration , during the past . few
months 'has, through the facilities
of its Features Department, Bevel• •
aped'.• a form of broadcast that. con-
cerns itself with the life of the in-
dividual'Caanadian and at the same
time emphasizes the importance of
the life 'of this individual in the
life of the ' whole Dominion. With
this in mina CBC has planned and
broadcast a number of series of:
programs' which brings listeners
from coast fa coast word pictures.
of national life in different parts of
the Dominion. "Carry On broad-
cast on -Sundays froth 9:00 to 9:20
p,m, is the latest of tho sanies • to
join such . programs as "This Can-
ada" a series of talks about the
custun►s and economic and social':
life of various parts of the country
and heard on Monday evenings .at
10:30 p.nn•, the Farm Broadcasts
heard in each individual Province
with news and. market trends per-
taining to each, every day at 12:30
p.m., the present Dominion Elec-
tion Broadcasts, "Canada's Merely
antmen";heard on Fridays at 8•:90'
p.an., and most interesting of them
all to those whose sons and fathers
and husbands have gone 'to Eng-
land with Canada's First Expedi-
tionary Force, a regular series of,
broadcasts "With the Troop's iii'
I.Ingiand" which often brings to
some lonely person the sound of
.the voice of'one of their loved ones.
NOTES AND NEWS
A message by President Roose-
velt to the faruters of the 1J. S.
will be heard over all, networks on
Friday, March 8th, from' 10:00. to
10:84 p.m, ... ihe'Kittg's Men
quartet will •be the 'featured vooal-
iets on the new Rudy Vallee pro-
gram which will be heard over the
NBC network beginning 1Vlarch 7th,
at 9:30 lam.. ; . 11.. V. Kaltenborn
Who brought such prestige to CBS
with his coverage of events abroad
during the crisis periods, is leaving
that chain to join NBC ... `
fO BE HEARD '
•IV r e la ll, 4 f eaa,
Watch and' Pray
40. And he cometh unto the dis-
ciples, and 'fme em s eeprnam
and saitli unto.Peter,' WTrat,;'could
,
Ye .not watch with me one. hour?
:There is a tone of sad, disappoint-
ment here. 41. Watch. and pray;
that ye enter. not into temptation:
the 'spirit indeed• is willing, ••but
the, flesh is weak. "'Watch" refers
primarily W. keeping awake, `but
also suggests mental alertness.
The flesh hereenieaus not;simply
the body as opposed to the mind,
sut the body as representing our
infulness, while: the- spirit repre-
sents ,what is better in us;
42. Again a. second time .he went
away, and prayed, 'sayiti'g; My
Father, if this cannot pass 'away,'
except I drink it, thy will 'be done.
43. And• he -carne again and found.
themsleeping, for their° oyes were
' heavy.:44. And he left them
: 'again, and went away,' and pray-
' ed a third' time, saying again, the
same .words. ,Perhaps nowhere .is
the true humility of our. Lord
more manifest• in the Gospel rec.
ords.,than in his, thrice-iettered pe-
ition made to his Father ' • this
night in the dark of Gethsemane.
- Betrayal and Arrest •
Service concert ... 10: 46 p.m., CBL
15ominion Election Broadcast .. -
Ma'rch 9th, 2:00 pane C1314•.11/4fetre-
I
anada's' Sugar
i Output t 1$eeed
More Than to,uble What It Was In
Early 1939;
Judgiriig from a report from the
Doininien Bureau . of °Statistics, Ca- '
nadia.n sugar refineries have been
pouting, out sugar this year at more
than double the pece.et early 1939.
Official report said Canada's ten s,u•
gar refineries manufactured 50,728,-
000 pounds of sugar th ing :the first
fear weeks of 1940. Of this, 47,790,- •
000 pounds were- granulated, and
6,9a8,000 pounds, were yellow and
brown,
Both grades have•been.produced..
at more, than double the early.1339•
pace. Graiuiated dinging the first
Mee 'weeks .of 1939 ; amounted to'
15,432,000; and yellow and, •brown
'aineuuted to 3,1'420000, or a 'fatal of
.18,575,900 'po'unds. '• ea,
four finite weeks 0.1940 turn -
•
f 19.40'turn-
• ed out more than for the first eight
"weeks of 1939e as the• second !Our -
week' period last year, produced 23,-•
00.4,0.00 pounds. ' • -
•
•FARM
NOT E S
BUY SEED' NOW
The' supply of registered 'seed in
Canada' is rapidly' growing less ,by
feeding and by' sale..through the
`grain' tr'ad'e. •This is particularly
true of the rust risistantvarieties
a wheat and oats, .says, the Agri-
cultural
g i -cultural Supplies Board. and lAges
that it is important that orders :be
Blared without'delay for any rogis-
• tered seed requ•i•ed 'for seeing
planting. ' '
45. Then ometh he •.to :the: dis
:c -
ciples and saith unto them, Sleep ,
' on 'now, and. take your rest; be-
hold, the hour is at hand, and -the
_ Son of, man is betrayed into the
hands- of sinners. 46. Arise, let
us be going.:. behold., be is at hand
that betrayed 'me. Jesus' mood 'of
pensive reflection gives' place, to
rapid decision. These last , words
c in Gethseniane throb • with the
willingness to yield himself up,
and to empty to its dregs the cup
which. the Father had given him:
In 'this, lesson we .,realize that .•
the, only absoluty holy person
that ever walked this earth, who
never did anything wrong, was
forsaken by friends, betrayed by
one whore he had continually he-
friended, all without the slightest
justification, and all of•• this was
allowed by God 'bp bap'pen., Just
why Gad allows sorrow; distress,
tragedy,, to come into our lives
'we , do' not1 •always know; but .if
Jesus endured.•such experiences as
these nnd never lost faith in God,
we, who are 'sinners, can surely
:endure any experience _he sends.
and still ''trust 'hint through them
M•
perilnente greatly develop the.
knowledge. of these processes:.
•" OSLER'S BOIL. 1MPQRTANT
Sir William Osier, the. "bad ixey."
of the school, who at\the age of 2i
carne to. McCain to study tnedictne,
wrote "The Practice of Medicine,"
- which became the bible'bf the Medi-
' Cal profession . throughout' the cn-
.CATTLE BREEDERS
The Ontario, Cattle Breeder;' As-
sociation 'have re-elected H. A, Dol-
-soil,' Brampton,, president; 13..B.
Wai•r•.ini.ce, Barrie, : vicepresident;
•
• and L. E: O'Ne'iil, Toronto, 'secre•
tars. . '
FIGHT HOG% PLAGUE
Experimental areas with a view
to obtaining a clearer conceptieu of
the livestock disease problem : in •
,this' province was suggested
report adopted by `the agricultural .
eornmittee of the Ontario. L.egisid'C=
ure. .. ;
The report, eame from a special'
committee vested with the respon-
eibility ofstudying. • recon*-nenda-
•tional brought to Toronto by Harry
veils n, Charing Cross 'farmer, • on.
-behalf of the Southwestern Ontario
.' Swine Breeders' Asso:eiatiofl. '
Serious' aspects .of spread of dis=
ease among livestock were cited i+y
the committee, particularly in view.
of the increased production of ba-
con necessary to meet' the weekly
supply exported from Canada to
Great Britain. .
'all. 1
Live Static
Screeches and .howls in Andt'eW
Ross' radio set at Rochester, N.Y.,
last week, sounded too realistic
for sound effects, too piercing for
static.
Rosa invettigated. •A• grey cat
was sitting on the tubes.. Ire tried
to move hero, but couldn't.' Police
were called and they put the eat
out.
•
the world, Canada could 'ale° tak*
setae -credit for the founding .cf the
Rockefeller Institute and the Locke- •
feller Foundation, be suggested, 'or .
it watt by the reading of Osle ft. -• :
, book and hie ,remarks bn the, geed
•for, greater .knowledge of . disease
that Rockefeller was inspired tai e
tablish Own,
is
This �1!I� ORLD Ferguson
SPERM: WfMALiE�a
HAVE A LEFT A/0577?IL.
ONLYf'
FC2R' SAME L3NACCoI)NTABLE
REASON, THE RIGHT
N051 JL AND. rrs
R,PSSAGE AVE'H
BECOME
St:IPP.RFSSED.
• 0/V.E-HA1...F .
= TH.E .BNTI Rt '
GHT OF A TERMITE.
1,E MADE-.CJP'OF
NY •PROTOZOA.
i; .�1LDE THE' ;BODY,
BENEFIT THE
ST TERM ITE B`>'
G' aESTING THE WOOD
IT EATS f
Canada's Fanned
Scientific Men
Dr. F. B. Gurd; of'McGill University
Reviews Work of Eminent Medi-
cos of Dominion -- Oster, Barit-
. ing• and Best., Collip, Etc.
• "Medicine hag been an intXrna-
tional subject, but the contribution
of Canada to it has been such. as
we need not be' ashamed of," Dr.
Fraser B. Gurd,. associate professor
of surgery at McGill University,
told a Montreal 'audience last week.
The. achievements of Osler, Bant-
i.ng.and Best, Collip, . Archioald,
Sheppard, Henri Lafleur and. others.
Were detailed 'as outstanding among
the contributions of Canada to the
science.
,OUTS'TANDIN.Cr C0�°r�Ii3t TIO
1)r. Janes. B. 'Collie,' Wino' came
to McGill. in 1928, had been. refer-
red to by an eminent American sur• .
,geon as the man •who had done
more for humanity than any other
• Man during the past 20 years.
his Collaboration .with D. , Teauting
and Dr. Best he, had purified the
pancreas extract so that it , might
be used with safety in the .t e:tt-
utent of diabetes.
a Dr. Gurd cited"the famous case.
of the French-Canadian, Alexis Si.
Martin, and Dr. William Beaumont.
the young American doctor, and
told how the gunshot wound its t1'e
stomach of St. Martin had etabled '
Beaumont to watch digestive pro•
cesses' and through a series of ex
POP—Adjustment Necessary
iii
,WG. CANT 61VG
YOU ANY
$4Oo. , •
CREDIT
lelLeS
MUCH BIGGER
NOW
THAN t l talK�l=tT
— e !'
i
THE
NEW
200 -INCH TELESCOPE.,,
NOW UNDER.
A
PALOMAR, CA1-1 , IS
EXPECTED TO. HAVE •
A.• VISION. FRANGiEr OF
i, 200, coop, oo0
G'/GHT, YEARS
COPR;1939 ay NEA SERVICE, INC.
h7 .
• THE new 200 -inch '.telescope will,. it .is "ho°ped, be able to• pene-
trate Space for a:distance of. 7,200,000,000,000,000,000,000 miles.' it
will have. a 'seeing range of ,nearly four times as `far as the •100 -
inch telescope of the Mt. Wilson Observatory: ' l
NFX.T:1{'1t it, color is the blood: of ine?cts"
PATRIOTIC SONG
BITER
HORIZONTAL
1 Author of
"The Star+
' Spangled
°. Banner.",
13 Dyeing
apparatus. •
14 Humor.
15 Chamber.
16 To slash.
17 Soft food,
18 Raven's cry.
19 Born.
20 Barking of
dog$.
21 Gypsy.
22' Eye.
24 Paid publihity
25 Sable
26 Pronoun!.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
RIDO VILP1®1111 amu®®n®r i
BLULi MINION 111114G
27 To tolerate.
28 Twenty-four •
hours.
29 Force. •
30 Type standard
31 Portrait '
statue.
33 Chinese sedge.
34 Uncle.. •
35 Edible fungus.
36 Musical note.
37 Nay, '
38 Cunning.
MUM 011IL II 'MO
IAI©®M INIFIN MIiOt1[14
O MU® ®TN RE
MlilligZIGUIEMIINI �
'mums
©IZIN 0©E7 RI ' E:L
© [0111 III N
[7©©0®. ®OBJ ©M
017. =.LIMP© 0
0©©0[311IN Eg01111111• iM
LORELEI.
'39 Upon.
40 Quiekly
41 Blue.
44. No good. .
•
2'
45 Dangles.
47 Wiser.
48 Twice.
49 Garden tool.
50 Grudge.
51 Drunkard:
52 He 'was an
patriot. '
53 He was a .-•.--
by, profession.
VERTICAL
2 -Competed in
a race.
3 Chill.
4 Fishing bag.
5 Credit.
6 To swing.
7 To drink'
• slowly.
8 Court.
9 Street car:
10 •To pull:
11. Chinese
measure.
12 Ta become
manifest.
17 Nominal
value.
18. Company.
19 His song is
the. U. S. A,
•--. anthem,
20 To purchase.
21 Elastic.
23 He wrote his
song during .
• the of
F rt IgcHenry
(1.).
25 Ventilating'
machine.
26 Minute object.
28, Monastic title.,
29 To diversify -
32 Dove's cry.•
3'3 To shed
feathers,
35 To' fail, to hit.
36 Blasting
substance.
38 Cavalry horse.
40 Floating ice
field.
41 Ache.
42 Roll of film..
43 Senior,
46 Electrical unit
47 Health spring.
48 Youth.
50 South •
Carolina.
51 Southwest.
7
19
16
19
24
20
25
. 42
99
50
51
5,5
By J. MILLAR WATT
.. rt1-147,
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