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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-09-08, Page 6
ed to e' 'Been lm 8 talien„,41 - -- e r Living in. h'ngtaind—He ;Would. Make It Available to !di Manufacturers:. • Plana for a revolutionary auto mobile• without gears' or clutch were presented to the British As sociation,. or the ; Advancement eg f Scieace • .: • Prof Frederick C'wLea, former- ly of Sheffield, University,, who presented the ,paper,, said the new method '.of '• power transuiissio.n• also could be applied to airplanes, bhipsiandrailroad. trains . New Method of•,Transmis.ion " It was•. •understo•od an English company was being; formed`to pro= -• mote the •invention, creditedd by. f,, Lea to' C.ommendatoie Piero Sa erni n'Italian;.'en ineer living.', in: England. + �'.. Claims. for the gearless car:—in ,. which a ,centrifugal, primp: replaces. the gear box and clutch ...are .that t. .clutch—are ac.. ,increase wool usel,. ga.:,_..he.; _ 11• tire, 'mileage, and quieken,'accelera- ton; . 'Prof: ,Lea, said: he based.,his con - elusions on'. feats of more than' • {•65,000 'miles ,with such an 'a-uto- 'mobile ; •Substitution of the ,pump sya- tem fpr the orthodox clutch and gear •box,,')ie said, "results in "im-.'• proveinent,'of performance ..,. in getaway; general'. acceleration, hill climbing and 'drive on; the open roar}." ' `Sound' :Construction, "The driver,,over'long distances in traffic. ,;and . climbing hills, is not:Wea'ried by 'de -clutching and : gear -changing, he 'said. • • 7;Meeli fiical construction of the transmitter is in everyway simple and sound; as compared. with the ,orthodox clutch. , and , gear meek anitni, it is°simpler and less .cost- ; ly and its overall efficiency is ap parently greater. ; "Its scop -transcends" the. field d. of.•'the :'auto�obile arid shout'n-: in- clude iVehiclei of every kind driv- en by internal' combustion engines • ine, h both of t es asoline' nd..hea oil " • h g a "Y type• r ' �u Bard C t Scientists • Stud "low°Man Can • • Y Y. Be Induced to.Try Hatchinig a Golf: Balls' inn day Se o off• ,.esso.: LESSON Xl • • Failure , 1 $0 1,4e1 ;101' 17-25; 15; 10,23; • 2d 070.; 31; 1-10 Printed Text. 1'•,'Sainuel 10: 21-25; 15, :20-234 • 31 38 Goren • Text7-To obey i1 , butter• than sacrifice • 1 Samuel 15 22. THE 'LESSON' .IN ITS 'SBTT1NC, Time Variously from 110- 1R6 5 Place.—The• ocdt'ion, of Ramah 'has riot Yet , . been 1y `iP 'Mz ah was in B nj 3nin On the: road from"JeruSalein'to Shechen1 Ender • was four, miles south; : of Mount Tabor.,illount;' Gilboa, the, •trip of which is'seventeen hundred feet above sea level, was .onthe great 'plain of Jezreel in the;;cei1- •ire: of Palestine.- _ "Saul was •Israels first king. The: same t`Saul" is' usually: regarded as the 'passive participle of the ,verb. "to ' ask;'• and' • so means simply "asked", 'Saul •was theson of Kish, of .the tribe of B niamin; the ;fight- ing-tribe ght-ing-tribe ' of Israel. Saul's home' was, •at,Gibeah, usually:identified with Tell enrol', • a town about • midway between Ramah and •Jeru salem. • Excavations tarried on by the American, "School' of Oriental ,• Research ` ,in 1922•`; show• that the Site . was occupied in the °Canaan; ite period -and was trong1y -forti- fied at, the time of ,Saul' and David. Sometime after Samuel's, • vate anointing of Saul,,the.prophet called all "of Israel together ; at 1Vlizpah r ' Chosen rKicg-.. • 2t. And he brought ;the tribe 4of 'Benjamin near, by their': fain- ilies; and the family of. the Mat rites was taken:, and Saul the son,• of Kish was taken; but when they .: sought hien,' he''could.not be fo±and. Of the ;family •of the Matrites, .; we' know nothing, for" it is never..- -referred to in the Bible outside of thispassage. Therefore he' -'as ked of Jehovah' further: 'Is`. there yet 'a :.roan to :'come : hither?... And-' Jelin- vah• answered,• Behold, he hath hiid himselfamong' the baggage..:'' Saul shared the feeling. that :constrain-. ed .Moses to shrink `back when he was appointed,Kto deliver; Israel:' " from Egypt 23. And they ran and fetched. him ''thence;, and when he stood• among--the••-peole; he -was higher-- P A London ornithologist; F. ' B. Kirkman,' :toldthe: psychological, section of: the British, Association for the {Advaneementl of Science, last week; of a painstaking study of feather' • frustration. He 'spent weeks watching' birds. sit': en rubber balis, golf 'balls. camphor balls and cotton reels. ' A blackheaded gullsat for •22 days, trying'te hatch a rubber ball.' Other birds• sat op'. the. round ob- jects ter >periods„ranging :: from _4 . • I'22 days without:igetting anything: erose-bf frstration.. Sat:For 22 Days • But, with the true. British regret, Kirkman :reported: "One bird would. not accept. a cricket ball It tried : to. There >was.' no'lack of enthusiasm `and it Made, a ;most. heroic: effort•• but only sur • • seeded in rolling off on the other'. Side-,,: • J.,.+..-..�-,.�-....... Oared many 'years before, •God .? had, told Saul, through Samuel that he js to••destroy utterly all ., the possessions and ;property of; Amalek; afld every member, of ♦rhe tribe, 'every' than, every woman, every child. Saul carried out God's, ; str ietien-ft6estroy all the peo""" Pie,. but' Saul'. and • the people spared , Agag, and the best of the ''sheep, ,and of th9 oxen,.and of• `. the fatlinas and the 1amb and all that was good; -and would not uttelrly destroy them;, The sparing;. "of the: prey was 'a matter of pure Creed,.' The sing of Saul Sts, delib- erate. ate, It• ,was (the sin of putting his' will before. God's will, and this was the great moral tragedy Ya. Saul's .life., ' ' 20, ' And Saul said unto Sam- uel,_ Yea, • TT have obeyed the voice,;. of Jehovah;; .;and have gone, the way ;which'.Jehovah 'sent tire, and' have brought?' I$ag the king • of Amalek,, and` have utterly destroy- ed the Am'alekites.; '21: • But ,the'•' people took"'pf the ;Spoil, •sheep and`: 'oxen, pie: chief Of -.the �' devoted things; to 'sacrifice• 'nto, Jehovah 'thy God it: GilgaL 22, - And •Sam;. uel said, • Hath'' Jehovah as great delight in 'burnt -offerings. and sac es,asin obeying rifie be in the voice of y• Jehovah? " Behold; to obey, is hot- ter' than sacrifice,: and .to hearken •.' • than• the fat of canis,. 23. For re bellion is. as the sin` of witchcraft, and .;stubbornness is . as.' idolatry' •and.•terapliim. Because thou bast:• rejeeted the word of Jehovah, he•, hath also rejected thee• from .being:. king. Satil `stili continues, as guih , ty' people eften •will„ to 'justify his contract, though, down ' in his • heart, 'he must have known that: there was no• realjustification for • :he •had done; Witli' a burst, of prophetic inspiration:. •Samuel,. rends asunder •Saul's 'tissue of ex- Miand• lays bare: his sin.' ' Saur now confesses his 'sin, and • Said :uel had solemnly ..to tell .him that ...he..couldno-:,Iong ger:' h o_'wit the,.. , w king as he appeared before the' people.. ' Many' years,'have ' passed:. in Saul's life, andgwe find him now a man ;stripped • cf • power, :fearful; walking in the darkness of his own counsels, -rushing headlong to the doom'that is immediately before him. ' :Theepisode recorded in 28 is .one of. the. most fain • ous in all.;the :,;O1d.Testament: •.-• Defeated And Slain • And: ' t he ` battle went 'sore', .te , against •Saul, and the ' ,archers over oohim and he s. reatlY . • distressed by, 'reason- of the ar- dices. 4.: Then .said Sauh', to hit . armorbearer; Draw thy ' • sword, •:and thrust me througb, •therewith, • restthese,.uncireumcised come and'• thrust me through, and abuse` me. But :his armorbearer ••.would_ not;• • for he was' sore afraid, -Therefore '7 -than -any of .the people' -from his' should is and upward. !4 And Saul took his sworda and fell uP- g on ,it: ' 5. And when his armory 'Samuel' said to all the peepl•'e; See ; e him wham.. • hath rhos- '• bearer' saw that Saul was dead, he' y likewise fell; upon his 'sword, and • ; en,, that there is urine like 'him mon' al thew eo lei' And all. the• ,. died:, with him' : 6. So Saul'died, a g 1 ' P p " ' and: his three sons, .arid his armor bearer,' and all his men, . that same day` together. On. _r. to ><o Fruit e I d s� etter Than Ave rAe` . Cher ''Cro ' 128'000:. ttd'.Peachea� 2 Per Cent '.• - 'Abov'e:.Usual ,• Ontati r o• f uit `oar r gr • e s • probably ' wilt experience '.a' better than aver,,, age fruit crap this year;,the August report of the `Ontario , Fruit" arid.? • Vegetable: Statistics 'Committee iu-< dicates: ' T e h r ' c e r .ci•o this • h tis ea • Y P year' is, esti-. r fated at 128,370 bushels ust '' 26 - er' cent. a hi her` than last; ' P „higher st-., Year: larvestin ,of ` ea 'hes is • unu ua 1. g P c s ly early this year 'anal' the main cro now is being placed on the market,: Production es'tihated at •536,214 bushels Is 2 per 'Cent. .better.'ttha; last• year. ' • Apple. P'roductioH', Up-` ,Apple` production In. Eastern On- - Carlo is up an 'estimated, 3b per " .' cent at 317,720• bai,relsr 'bait !n',• 'Western' Ontario thls year livicely .• will .he :375,700:. barrels; down 2t.•. per cent. froni"fast year. ' • While scab 'and sidetvorin injui;y are severe in some apple Orchards; ' fungi • ad -Insect pests •generally' are under' fair.iionti ol` iii' well -eared-' i !or commercial' orchards. draperles':in Western Ontario:: , •'generally have a'tie'althy: condition, Tomato Wiring are • particularJy ,numerous this s'easan In Eastern ' Ontario, and in ion thwestern• coup• flea toniate• cracking is greater' than. usual • �.. �.. shouli.possess- al'1 • the''natural :at=` tractions". which 'lthe • Israelites' 'would desire• in a'king,. He.would reflect their religious -standpoint; at its best,'but-also- he -would rep :resent' their nat al the,`great defect of their 'iaonuds life, namely, a 'combining of . zeal: ;.for . the.. religion' of ;Jehovah • and utter want of -real `heart submis sion to, the. Lord. The •naople,ob- tamed`'. precisely what' ' y , want .'ed; and because•he, who Was 'their.. king so corresponded to their ideal and so reflectedle. 'Orc.ha.rds; '• • A direct air service has. bean inaugurated between .London and MOO* 17. people scouted,and said,Long:live the .king.1'• 25. 'Then Samuel:told• the peo ple :the manner of the :kingdom';- a d `wrote it in a book, and :laid' fit up I eforeJeh'ovah And.Samuel :''sent all: the people: away, 'every man to his house. 'This was,• :as it :wore, a charter• at':thp beginning.'. ofthe Hebrew monarchy;• probab-• • .ly ,defining :the' position ';of the king, both in :his relation •to:• God and"in his 'relation to the 'eople P P. Israel . demanded •that the .king' he ,failed. y Saul's'- Disobedience'.: o• Gonsideraule tinie' .elapses •be- tween' the r day • of Saul's 'public aiiiointing _before• •Israel• and the story which 'we" are no*, 'to con-• 'Saul 'had 'compl'ettlly :reor- ganize,'d,the army,' had. jnflicted a 'terrific; defeat upon the: Philistines'. 'at klichmash;: and then hadgone ., out against Israel's • old enemies; the Amalekites. , The tirne ' had - noiy come 'for ,the ,execution”. of ,God's sentence; of "destruction de ell i>n ' R gM'S :bird, Attie a'rm, Hands Get Strange • C .eat m.re After. It Had Caught Crow r WARDSVILLE Ont. W` t.h � theirattention attrabted' by ' .a wild:• ; commotion . of flapping .wings •rand thesringing. ound tot `:bells.. h' g • • above their heads, harvest ands working ;on. the fatin belonging' td. 3.:A. King, second concession Ald borough' Township, ;were. _'surprised • g'a -on lookino see' a 'large bird evi= dently;:of the raptorial order 'pu'rsu- ing a crow whichitfinally pounced on in mid-air and bore to the earth • , clutched' in ,its powerful 'cla•}vs a :short ;distance away.,.' Frightened by'. ;the approach :: of the men the. bird flew te a nearby ;'tree whey it sat perched, watcbing etey p_ ye eat .of the':Men. D. r em Lee;' one -of the .workers; ,borrowed a- neighbouring farmer}s gun and: later shot the winged killer.• While: its attention was •• centred on ..the men. .The bird. With a,,wing spread • ' me'"suitintwo'and one half feet,' a g . was ''bluish -gray, 'iii "color, and ' 'had ' a steal! • bell • securely strap ed , to P each; leg. Neither bell-' bore.•-a°ny identification marks, ° •, , , _1 Of Eyiton Got Ready :For His Swot! Roo Captain George E. T. ,Eyst'on dons. his gas• mask before taking ,,his huge 'car for; a speed run 'on' the Bonneville,• • Utah, salt flats. He aver-. aged the tremendous speed of :345' miles, an hour' in his "Thunderbolt": You Listenins �� By FREDDIE;,�TEE rry mural 7 HORIZONTAL , 1 Picture I fur -<,:,pv�rred --- "animal... ' 5, It is a S e hnimal. . T • E A in do •' 9K, g. m, 11 Form of "a",• 12 Cetacean I I ^13.14 ,the middle` 'a of,' 15�'o scatter..' T © T 15'.oblet. • 0 :::. POSED NI • ;19 To seat a cin. R:52. TOO L A h, •• _ j'I n.GE LL 21 s N e.s A na mCTPricep "'l2 i;3Fts is •• horns �Sovel,•eign. :valgable#or 3 h,.'I-,..5-: Pte ;coats "(pi i, " 'urora. -•45.A fih 25 Destiny' • 46 Sici,#.•,.•. • ' 28;Either: .:..84. 4 CoFr er . 9 Tal er 47 Pale. Melf:',. 2 9 e i - 491atite bird 6 Fece bar: •' 31 To hasten ; , •g0To revolve. TNoii . ,33 Laughter ` "52To count a ain'. ; Y fi Aer'ca. ' • sound,: `,54 Skin diseases. •' 'r:3.4obese;`.• 8Fished.'° ' 511 To argue, '35: Sorrowful, ] 0 Speed contest: $7itis.a 37 Meriibranous 13 Ten c e'sedge, bog. • animal. 14 Ten cents. ' • ,39 To leak,. :.'VERTICAIJ 17 Sunk, fence. 4/ pierced 1 Chair: 18 Currency. Answer to Previous Puzzle. ' -• CHA' EP A I• R OT ®p A •T OE T E A D r. H E• N S EVMOU EA T � C- H A A ND L S 11R— I: AS D 8 S CHARLES SEY,MOPR ES P. T C E M O R 0 V 0S "G L A • '20 Leather strip, •y ?21t lives .in -*- regions•• • 24 Expensive 25, Unable to. hear 26 Exclamation. 27 Itis one of•the, ti fevV, aqua 3Q Neuter Pronoun,. 32 Exists, i u hast 34I? g c .35 Sun. •' 36 I Ioisture 38 Sky , t 'phenomena; •'r ft finned • � s.es 01' a'nt:part• _ 41To, gather' after' a. reaper.,• 4,2 Challenger 44 Part in a drama. 46, assage ••487God of ' wisdonl 51 Data. 53' Greek letter.: 55 Note in scale,•. 56 To accomplish; HE .'SWEETENS •SWING' Mark' Warnow, dynainic young CBS 'conductor; who reverses the, - present ;day :order of 'things' by playing- swing musi^ '.in: the man- '. ner', of the `old: classics, is; Mir.: heard on the musicalva- riety program he ` originated,, "Blue, Velvet Music;" broad- cast each'': Wed- nesday ,over a- . nationwide•. Co lurnbi,a n e t work '(WAB.C- CBS, q 92;30. ; to 10 000 1JDST;) ' wings s. `aGnoxv _ tYes lits=, • rk W er rhymeset y ..to' music -and • "L'it'tle ' Sympaon ies,""'original +miniature sgmphon-... ies composed under 'Warnow's di rection, are among his innova :. tions in the musical: world., 'The famous stylistmadehis musical debut as• •a • concert . violinist at , Town Hall ,iii New York in .1924. • He' • was 'director • Of the M,assel ?' Opeia.CorRany';,and led many'hit' :musical comedy orchestras. ONAL FORUM In order to give full expression, on. the "'Canadian' air to the ' n:ani' conflicting points of:view on mat- ters 'of national and •world im- ortance the; :CBC' will continue eo sponsor a Sunday•;night .Na-, tional • Foru ;3n • on : current Cana - :dial :din 'affairs, in, addition to the 'weekly :presentation.•6f an'.inter- 'national roundtable discussion on. affairs of, the world today; The National Forum .will continue' the.: main features of the •"Whither Democra.Y ' 'Democracy" series broadcast,•last• ,s,as e on. ' 'AIRLANES GOSSIP'. »uiing' the past #ew•:weeks the CBC has introduced 'a number; •of popular; artists on its, 15 -minute features, frofn Toronto. Gordon.' Calder'; µ ell renown vocalist and .- master of ceremonies, has•been 'on• Mondays :at. 12.30' to - 12.45. p.m. EDST. - ' . The 'NBC' Vox Pop . program . will continue 'to be broadcast as :usual 'each Tue day •9 to 9.30 . p.m. EDST over F and the NBC Red;Network• ithout'Y any break. until `after the; how o f September : 13, when Parks Johnson and Wally' Butterworth will take a' two=weeks vacation before transferring their' sponsorship•"affiliation .on • ; Satur •,day, •October' 1, 'when they•wjli broadcast • the first program in -their new Saturday` night Series over •the NBCRed Network., This - will.•be the first vacation Vox Pop. has':had in •the nearly yeara. w -•the -show has -been-onthe•-'air' Frank •: Black is one of',radio's :greatest hahby-collectors. He col leets : anticjues, iare music menu- • scripts, marine paintings and let-. ters•,from • great - composers of long,;; ago.' d . "BIG TOWN',',, RETURNS` ',SOON' { Edward G. Robinson, Radio's'• No ' `1 :Racketbuster, returns to': • the: Columbia network • with his'. "Big Town":; series`; one Tuesday,. ember• 20.. WABC-CBS ,8 to.:. 8 30 p.in.' EDST..-rebroadcast.to.;, the West at 11.20 p.m.' EDST:) The • dramatic :sketches; starring, Robinson, supported, by lovely Claire 'Trevor,. will: continue to be heard each Tuesday'. at •the • same time. •, Whether portraying a gang 'ster as he;did in the. filin: "Little Ca 'sar," or a -reformer at he does '• in ," ''• ” i •.�:T wn. Robinson . adio ,. B o •i � s n g , carries, a-force---and---•conviction--' thatt has made him one; 'of the most admired actors•:in the enter-' world rode . o osi e 'tainrne.nt y pp t him in the broadcasts is' • Claire •Trevor, blonde charmer,: who' re- cently Married the • program's di- rector i- rector''—ChB k• Andrews: '-Robinsert-• is cast' as Steve Wilson, managing, • editor' of a newspaper ,-•The Heated News".' 4 8 2 5' • 19,, 20 22 28 29 39.40 50 51. 32 37 48 ' 38, 4' 5: The "far-seeing busineess lead-, er•'thinks more of initiative ;than of:tradition: Nat. "Yes, yon are .right;' men, but "Yes, 1'11 do .it,". • nen are the ,ones 'he looks out :for:o,. Dr. Bowie, Principal of;the ..Dun- '• dee (Scotland) School . of Econ-. omics, recently gave .a list of the points'that, make a good business manager; and :a further list: • of.' causes„of' waste. Briefly Summar ized'they:are: The ability • to dele. gate' authority,` to make.;' decisions, .to give. • clear. -cut,' instructions, •to .. understand his. staff, to accept suggestions, to -value initiatetie e, to depart from tradition where neces- sary, sal to have''a sense of .„humor. y, � lNIS.U 1O S �2 By William '` Ferguson ORIL>D�; • • • • rth ive Bi Cow To tee Calves es w 'EDMONTON, Alta. '-•' Giving, •Birth 'to 'friplets,•may be something. to be proud , of, but'.Daisy: Belle, y.. Adolp, • Holstein. coW rued' • by . Ph , Busse,, apparently 'doesn't think' so: • Daisy: •Belle,'ivho recently became the mother of two, bulls and' a heir ale POC'=Singink,on •the Run'' BEEN' SINGfl G N1Y ELECTION ;SONG ' FOR, TWENTY- FiVE` :`?'EARS 'fel hai refused 'to have anything ;Jo' elo with her sons,: ;showering' all her' affections • on • the daughter.`•;'. Since their birth,. Mrs, Busse, who named the , offspring Pete,• Re'- peat and• Re p eater has fed and ;car.- ed' for the bulls.. �` •b n tp.ie births amongngcow's s ,is • ' ' onusual,but. the factthat all three' are thriving despitethe unusually `- high mortality rate makes' thein a rarity. SPECS OF BIRDS • WHOSE SL1MN[ER' RANGES ARE 71-101.3SANDS, OF' MLLES' APART,: ARE. • TO ,13E FOLINC); IN THE. S4ME;TREE "1N' 71-IEJR rWIN`TFR_R.F.SO MORE: '71-i'A14 *$;000 ,006,, HAS' $EEN DISTRJBUT'ED IN /VQBEL ' 'PR/ZE A'tl/i� 4P'' COPtL i938 BY NEA.SERVICE.:INC.. 001v1D41\1, • 'NATION AL AMATEUR. GOLF• CHAMPION. PLAYED 'Hit FIiTT' SEVEi2AL.' YEARS. OF GOL• FLE.F7= HAA/DEC),. BECAL.1 E HE HAD': BEEN GIVEN SOME LEFT- 1d4/VVED CLaJB,S; • ,OUTH and Central America resents a'stran strange arrayof bird SOUTH .•.: a p.. .• g lifein the winter: Birds whose summer- habitats are entirely dif- ferent, 'hobnob together during their stay in "°the tropics. More. than 200 species of. North '4:inerican birds :are known as ,' •inter migrants in .Guatemala.• NEXT: Do snakes have; a voice? • YM ,contig . 1036, by 1116 1101 Syndicru• nen By J. ',MILLAR-WIP.TT .' 4. THAT'S THE SAFEST' WAY'. { TQ: • • :5 • 0