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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1940-06-20, Page 7
I. e. a • Y. • Bombers Fly cross Ocean , Purchases for B.rita•in Go. by Canadian Route fronru. S.= Canadian Border : • Bombing planes; it was disclosed, . last week, aro flying under their own power •from the biakya.rds of United States factories to the bat- , tlefiel+id of Europe. . • The 'flights cannot: be made 'dir- ectly from the United :Stater, he- . causeof the neutrality lois'. In . prac•tice,' the planes are flown ••to. . the Canadian ,border, hauled across the line, flown again td a base and paled for pie 2;000 miles pi At'lane • .tic ,Ocean between ,Newfoundland e'an4' Britain. 'Arthur le; :Pe r'yisi,.Telot7fre'al Indus• trla-Iist," who, heads the Angl•o- Freriph .,Purchaeliig• • Mission, told -. the' story' of .the- flights, . lip. gave nod'etalls, „e'iccept. that some Islan.es alre;ad'y; had negotiated ' tete hops and others would, as Boon as built., ONLY' HEAVY BOMBERS Flights' had. been.made so far, he said,, only by heavy boa:thers, Tht9.. indicated that the .planes .were tw'o- • • Motored Lockheed -Hudson and Mar- tin boinhers, of which the; Allies. have bought large quantities: Reports were doubtful that any pursuit.ships had flown the Atlan- tic, because these craft •are built for suth speed that they, leave" only . oranges of a few hundred miles. • The' new. bombers to .be flown, Purvis indicated; were hundred's of new type Leckheeds, Martino, Boe- Mao' and Consolidateds:. ; Addresses. Ph.arniacists Sir Gerald Campbell,' K.C.M,G.. •.' High Conunissioner for the Un- ited Kingdom, addresses the an- nual alumni,'lunc'heon of the On- tario College of Pharmacy at Ot- tawa on Monday; June 24th. The luncheon will be attended by . • pharmacists from .almost' every. city,.tvwn, and village in Ontario. 1 - Canada Buys 5,000 Plaines -U. S. Training Machines Will Facilitate Air Plan LESSON XII ' MALACHI DEMANDS. HONESTYTOWARD GOD — Malachi - Printed Text, val. 3.7.18 Golden Text — "Bring ye the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food. in - rriy house, and • • prove me now herewith, saith' Je- hovahof-.hosts, if 1' Will not' open you the ' w.indews of :heai1en, and pour you out a blessing, that there . shall .not be room .enough . to' re- -:cei.ve it"'—:Mai 3:10. THI,1.ESS.ON IN 17.S:,S•ETTING • Time — The'. ext date of .Mai-' • chf's ministi'Y _ls„not known, • but emost schoIars.place it between 430 and Plage '— Jerusalem. We•find.-in;this lesson•many •pas- sages: revealing the truth, which is so, often forgotten, that. the 'know- ledge which we .hold as Christians concerning God and, salvation has tremendous. practical implications, ,and that we cannot say. that' a 'part of our lite•,Is dominated 'by spirit • - 1 • ntal 'truths,' and then, shut the law ' of God out of. other parts •of• ,our , •lives; thus such matters 'as ,.hon-. esty, purity, the question of di vorce,' the question. of , separation,' ell must be determined by what God says. 'about these things; "hi thy' light shall we see fight,"'•If we' 'are .really sincere about following the Lord, we must'let his.law pone-. • trate every part of, our life. • THE, PROPHET MALACHI. The word, ,Malachi means 14teral- ly "my messenger." O'f, the prophet;. 'himself we 'know absolutely noth- itig. But we feel sure that in the time of • Nehemiah Malachi. was 'acting 'as the prophet of God, grating With the devil authority in ' bringing about the moral reforms- ' tion of the:people, By his writing, Malachi is 'known as' the •Fiehrew• •Socrates;. • The hlook of. Malachi begins with an exposure of the corrupt .practie- 'es of the, priesthood ,of. --the day; and then the prophet turns to 'the people of Israel as a whole,' point • ing out in striking language .one sin 'after another of which they were •guilty:. falachits primary • charge • 'against.Israel was in regard to mar= • riages marriages., with' heathen Wives,. . and frequent divorces.. The prophet again bases his.. reproof on .the relatien of Isl'ael 'to God. HIS ,ACCUSATIONS . 'Tragically, these terribly' 'guilty • .'Israelites, Were blind not only, to • their o'wn .sin, but to the judgment which was soon to fall upon them. Malachi . implies that' the nation was not prepared for the • reception of‘the;Lord., and therefore bad not •ground for murmuring at,the delay of the 'manifestation •of divine glory. 3:7: From the day's of • your fath- • ers ye.'hare turned aside from mine • ' ordinances, and • have not' kept them. Return unto me, and 1 will return unto. you, saitet. J'ehovah of hosts. •But ye say: Wherein shall we.return?.8.Will,a man rob God? hive. • thousand training planes front the United States are 'be-' ing contracted for to facilitate the Commonwealth air training' plat, accordittg• to reliable information: Hon. C: D. Howe, Minister of. Traneport,, has made not. infrequent visits across the 'line and the pur- chase is largely attributed to this mission, • WHEN . FIELDS A'RE BEADY The' difficulty has never _been one of -men for the forces but of machines With which to traits them — and fields: Recently, 5,000 addi- tional men were taketi•on the forge from. the waiting lists. Completion', Of the fields has been expedited the scheduled time cut in half in bun Instances. 13y the” time the fields are ready the training planes will bre .available. 'Priceless Letters More letters are written in time of war than in peace, and. some cf these efforts' will •uit- doubtedly rank. as historic docu- ;tents. in .the _future. Even coin- pai=atively , unimportant letters like a badly spelt one written by -Lady Hamilton to Nelsen, may tech a good price. This° fetched - $500 nra recent. auction. A couple of yeara ago some of Na- poleon's ,letters to his Chief of . Staff were sold for $32,500 and a. two-line note scribbled by Am- : 0Xi o Vespucci, after whom Am - 'S3 yet ye rob me: But ye say. Wherein have We robbed thee? Iii tithes and offerings. 9. Ye are'cutsed with the curse; for $e rob me; even this eq - tire nation.. ' THE TITHE• God'deniaitded the•tithe only.as a 111ini111um. and they had careless- ly given hint what he claimed — the minimum •— in tithes and offer- ings. They bad robbed God' 'in that they ehad not responded to the di- vine cleimin•the spirit in Which it was• made, but had' offered that which was•allowed'Iby measurement and rule rather than in the spirit -of -love. A tithe is all right if• it is something you •feel.. 11 it 18 some- thing . which puts yen 'in danger of being 'dishonest, , it is wrong; and if ie. is out of harmony with your own- succees• in life. itis ah• solutely wrong. ' 10. Bring ye the whole tithe into the store -house, that tiers mtty, be. food in my house. and prove me now, herewith. sa.ith Jehovah of hosts..if 1' will hot open you, the windows of, heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it. ' 11. And 1 will rebuke the devour- er for your sakes, and he shall list destroy ,the fruits eat your ground;. neither shall your vine . cast its fruit before the time in the. field, •sa.ith Jehovah of hosts, ' 12. And all nations shall call you happy; for ye shall. lie a .deligh some land, saith Jehosah of hosts, Do not imagine 'because we .are living in a spiritual .dispensation we ate no longer hound in the clat- ter of material giving, 13. Your words' have been stout against due, saith Jehovail, Yet ye ,say,, What have we spoken' against tiled? 14. Ye have said'. It is vain to Serve Gori; and what profit is- it that we have kept his charge. add • that we have• walked meurntully before Jehovah of hosts? 15. and now we'eall the proud happy; yea, they that woirk wickedness are all built up; yea,. they 'tetppt God, and escape. The people who returned' from Babylon seemed to have a knowledge of God, and, to observes . the law, end for undeirstand' their Britain's Oaken On The . Move Again ' During the long' period of inactivity on the western front, many of' the children who had •been evacuated from English •cities.returned •horne. Now they are being evacuated again. • These Lhildren were 'phot'0- graphed at Southend on their way to a, safer refuge. Some British. children may, come to Canada, all things; and',that they themselves were- in penury, _hunger, misery,' ,and were scandalized and said, 'what doles it 'benefit me that 1• worship the one true Cod. abomin- ate'Idols, and, prfeked with the con-, sciousness of sin, walk mournfully before Cod? SOME 'CONCLUDING -PROMISE'S 16. Then they that -feared Jeho• - vah•spake. one- With another;, awl Jehovah hearkened, and heard,'and a� bdok sof remembrance was writ- . ten before him, for them that fear- ed Jehovah,. and that thougli't upon hie name; 17.. And they shall be .sal mine, saith Jehovah of, hosts, .even Irniine own. pessession, in ,theday that' 'I make; and .I will, spare• them, as a man sparetb: his own son that seryeth him. not. ' The second .precious' promise at the .close of Malacli4's book.. for those that fear the Lord is•the as- sura,nce of victor over all evil, victory that.' will be co.isumntat'ed. in the day of. the Lord. a victory that ,in its perfect form is .still td ' take place in•the future, at theje�nd., of this age, when tbe •LordJelsus eCht•ist himself shall come back age ain 'to comrplete his redemptiv.e work' among, the nations of the earth. .The whole chapter is a fut- ure prophece. 'In the movie -houses of the U. S. 'A., the biggest audiences 'go to the .Sunday perfcrtnances.. • They. Must Work, Hard For G'lam'or Why Movie Stars and Photo- 'graphers' Models Always Do Look Their Best • No woman, needs to waste time and conversatioon envying, motion • picture• stars a•nd -glam:orous maga- zine. models fheir good figures, and smart clothes and nice complexions ',because any,giri w•ho is•determined • to improve her own appearance cane follow their exahple - that is,' if , she is determined 'enough.. Most of them get more exercise and More sleep than 'you and yeti. They.realize that sleep is the great, cure. all', for fine lines around the" eyes, downward s.loping linesn'from -nose to corners c.f the mouth. It ,lints .a sparkle in the eyes and ,it gives .tbe .complexion a youthful. gleam: • • They know, too, that no woman' • looks younger .than her walk, her .posture. Leek• of exercise •. causes 'the knee joints to 'stiffen, thigh muscles' to become tense and stiff. TQ keep from gaining too Muth weight, the average model er ;plc- " 'ture.stitr eats foods that- are low in ..caloric content. Vegetables, salads, and fruits rather than rich pastries, heavy gravies and such. , Farm Notes... EXPORT W HITE . CHEESE , The Dominion. Dairy." Products • Board announced,: following 'its first meeting held in Ottawa on May 27tth, that all' cheese, manu- •fattured in Canada after the 31st of May, 1940,, to •be acceptable for. • export to the i 'sited King- dom, must be. white and• unwax- .ed. Under a recent agreement the 'British Ministry of. Food willi•buy up to November 30, 1940,e a to- ' tai Of 78;400,0'00 .lb. of • Canad- . 'fan cheese at a price of 14 cents ,per lb. ",fox first grade • cheese f.o.b. steamship: at' •Montreal due- ing the season, of navigation •and 14 cents f e,h+: rail Montreal dur- ing ,the• , winter months. The ,ex- :.paxlt ,will he•.,'•arranged, by the Dairy Products • Board.., •H POI..N rS ON .IdOG,S Attention lust be paid • to at least .four important .points. be- fore. our- bacon 'will sell in the., top price brackets.. They are con-. tinned 'improvement in type and. breeding; 'marketing at proper weights; finishii'ng .to No. 1 selep- tioen rather than to No. 2 and , No. .13 standards; and ' production. of such hogs at not more than .,six .months 'of age. Each point is Very important, and together they con- stitute ai i'nteresting,challenge to all' Canadian hog . roducei ... ' School ,Bo - s' Tour To Pacific Coast An all-expense-ineluded tour across Canada for school boys,. under the Personal direction of Harold Bott'of the Montreal- High School; will be available.this' sum- mer to alt boys who desire to join the 'part'y, according to C. K. - Howard, managerof the Tourist - and Con}ve.ntion Bureau, . Canad ian National Railways. This tour, including 'the highlights of travel • •'over both railways And across the Great Lakes, : side • trips by bills, steamer trips between Vancouver, 'Victoria and Prince . Rupert, B.C.; a total' of 38 nights in hotels and outd'cor camps in the •west, are • part of the plan to make the jour- ney a most memorable outing. stated Mr. Howard. 1. Round Trip, 51 Days' The round-trip tour will take 51 days ' front' Montreal back to Montreal, and will commence with the departure, of The Continent- al Limited train of the Canad- ian National Railways from Bon- aventure station, Montreal', on Friday, ,,June 28 for Winnipeg, : *here a c�a>ange=over . will'e• ,made to a Canadian Pacific train. for the 'remainder of ' the trip westward to "Vancouver and by boat to Victoria, B: C. and return to . the coast.. This trip westward'. includes overnight stops at Cal- gary, Banff, Lake Louise, Alta., Vancuover and .13 nights at Glints.. Lake Camp on Vancouver Lland, most of which will 'he at the Y. M. C. A,'. ; Canadian Airmen Grimly Resolute On Arrival In London. There is detertitination stamped on the faces of these Canadian airmen who are •pictured as• they re- • cently arrived in.LondOn. Air Minister Power has announced,from Ottawa that Canada. is rushing '.ati available Mt -graft And 'pild,ts to.the annistanee of the, mother country.. ' t k•e,. � nr ...:i eee The return journey will com- mence from Vancouver on July 24 by a trip on the Canadian '.National' Steamships boat• up tq Prince Rupert, B.C. and thence eastward over Canadian National lines to Port;Arthur, Ont., includ- ing .14 nights at the Lake Edith Camp of the Y M. C,. A. near the town of Jasper in Jasper 'Na- tional .Park, Alberta, and hotel accommodation at Edmonton, snit Winnipeg. From Port Arthur tha. journey is resumed on tile S. Noronic to 'Sarnia, :Ont., a .thence to Hamilton;" Niagar Falls, by boat to Toronto. By Vilillir'Wn I -THIS CURIOUS WORLD Ferguson ill iN ONOSTRALitiebto ' ABOUT 4 B0O,00. 0 Pot/M05 ARE, SPENT ANteiLLALL., CONTRALLING THE 5m:temp OF RAB$/T,s,/ tOP11. 1937 NEA 5ERV10E. INC. ARE KNOWN. UNDER, • GENERJG NAME, ��TAMIAS;f MEANIG .57ZWAR-Cf BECAUSE OF THEIR HABIT OF STORING. • AWAY PROVISIONS' ti ;.V - !E SNAP- ' �„�`! '7© --_' :;`.. 1 EADE� HAS 'A -TAIL- ONE TAIL 1 ONEY.42A at ire LEA/GT/4e THE Australian government erected over 6000 'miles of wire fencing inits effbrts,.to control its rabbit population, blit with little success.' The millions of rabbits now• inhabiting •three-fourths. of the country are descendants of two. dozen wild rabbits brought in about one hundred years ago. . •NEXT: To whom 'de meteorites belong? • COMMON R0[)ENT. HORIZONTAL ',Pictured rodent.. ' 7 It is of . southern Europe. 12 Egg-shaped. 13•Pbsitive elec- tric terminal. 16 Poems. 17 To• delete. 18 Rhythm. 19 Dregs. ; 20 Plants: '22 Devoured, 23 A spreading outward. • 25 To commission. 28 Talisman. 32 North. Afr.ica. 33 Stormed. 34 Pig pen. 3a Rehtted through the mother. 37 Jumbled type. 38 Merely named 41 Soundof large Veil. • 44 Palm leaf. • Answer to Previous Puzzle; DENIM ©®o o111©®• USD • o ERN Gi10141111C421D ®Q:: TaIIGIO MINIM El' .1111CIN 1111 INGSMILMPT LIMB ©l1Tl D SCJ®': 'MOUND Kaffir ®M - a Q ©©M M0IlJ I: 1210INEW ©0I21;1 I N I fel WINO MNGIL NZ III I © JOHN BUNYAN 45 Spikes of corn , VERTICAL 49 To reduce. 50 Indistinct: 52 Shrewd, 54 Rubber pencil ends. • 56 Russian meas- ttre oft length. 58.Its used for`coats (pl.). • 59 Sesatte: ' • Olt, is Consid- ered a —, in Australia (pi.) • 1. Scepter.. • 2 Class of birds 3 Bundle. 4 To decay '5 Beret. 6 A ,variety of • this animal ••7 Born. .13 Tax. 9 Mental image 10 To shift. 11 Existence. 14 Lov: tide. 15 Sketched 21 Sowing, 23 Brittle. 24 It' belongs 't0 thg .family ' . of —. 26 Mountain: 27 Half an em. 29.Male. •30 Pulpy . fruit, 31 To rent. 36 Company (abbr ) 37 Papa. 30 Damp. .40 Native. ' 41 Challenge 42 Verbal. ' 43 Birds'' retreat. 45446097 6 Pain. 47 Feels regret. 48 Let it stand. 49 Er.,ergy. 50 Mister• .(ab Year.+cabbr.) 53 Being. • ° 55 Electric terra. 57 Spanish (3." ) POP—In Search of Recognition By. J.. MILLAR WATT WHAT CHEER GOING ` !FA.R• YES I I/M GOING ' TO l +GEP ON . WA LKiNC r F- AR sp oN - SAY; " WHO'S .THAT CHAP" ''i vas, . ouse to , atl?f`rix+is-ttd� br, —iii b sell for' high prices', but the de- bath. and the reit, •commanded in mend for recent letters is .trot so the law of God, and seeing ail the- Weise he- v e '!acid a long script° by Bine nations' around them aboendding in AF ff