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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-02-27, Page 7>ls it. ManyIndians' ar�ers� Turn ��' rn .:. Formerly Engaged- In Hunt. -- .. torp. Only. Canada's :Redskins. - Are Being •.IQrliwn- Mere .and More Into AgrJgutture The extent tu ,which. Canada's • Indians are engaged' in agricul- ture, 1p -indicated • in a recent ; re), port oh' crep9 `'and hve''''attoclk? on_:• IAdi';an Reserves, in 1940 The areli►... unlet;-ehltibation. ` totalled: 216,495- .acr•es,• :and the. crops -•eownr-included:;-wheat;'--:oat's, - -bar ley, rye, peas, beans, buckwheat, mixed grains, • corn for„ hueking, • ,potatoes, turnips, hay. and - clove.; and alfalfa: The •. acreage -under pasture was- 36,I4.5,_ -and in_fa low, 36,049. Holdings of • arm live stock on the reserves were: horses 26,577, milk cows 6,874, •'P" Ib"'' other' cattle 35,5$8, •sheep 2,266; hogs 4,252, , hens: and 'chickens • 8.6,825, turkeys 5,929. geese • 2,- ' 9iib.: and ducks 3,579. • • GAME RESOURCES ' DEPLETED • - The transformation of ••the In- diens from hunters to farmers has i been • carried . out under the guidance of "the Indian Affairs • Branch • of the Department of • Mines and Resources. For years, the Indians subsisted in moder- 'ate comfort uponthe harvest that nature', provided, • mainly.. without iuman -aid, ,butwith -the' advance .of 'settleinenr and ' the. depletion of game resources that foi'.owed iri• its wake,-the-Indi'atte in: settled" areas were 'faced with, the neves-' sity of adopting white men's• pun - suits .in order tp support them selves. Their success in •the field of 'agriculture has been. due•. largely to education and the re-,' sponse of the Indians to the . ef- - forts put' forth to make them independent and : -self-supporting.• Taking The Day 'Off'.. LE88'gN IX . THE AUTHORITY OF CHRIST ' Luke, 19 ; 1 — 29 : 8. PRINTED TEXT, Luke ,19 . : 41.E GOLDEN TEXT Why••:call me, Lord, L.ord, and do. not tilethings which 1-aayZ...uke. 6,.: 46. ' THE LE$SON.; IN ITS., SETTING :,?.role -Th. ,;_cot v_.erslon. of ,_Zaeh-,u • aeue and the . telling of the parable of the ten ,po'unds occurred during the end of Marc' A•.D..2p. The til. ry •',:as On Surkday, .April' 2nd the .cleansing. 'of,;.the temple ' 'on Monday, the day .following, :and the ,argument concerning Christ's authority on'Tues'day,_='all in Pass- ion ass ion Week. • Place --The, conversion of 'Zech: aeus and the teaching immediately' following: took :place -In Jericho, a. - city: located en the Jordan ' just above:the northern end-of•the•Dead Sea; the remaining incidents of . our ' iesson occurred' in Jerusalem. .In, this lesson we obtain a' pro.' founder conception"oftthe absolute• pre-eminence of : the Lord Jesue. Christ amq, ng men-: in the conver- sion 'a. Zaceliaeus it „is :He who.. ' seeks and saves the lost; in the parable of the ten pounds, it is He. 'who is' represented by. the noble - u. -- • sse, •-man'- :'w:ho- dis�trib t .es Po .,ssionS__ and calls for,an accounting; in the • triumplia1 entry, into Jerusalem; it - is: Ile who •is :Ilius-r..it -ts. • Hn, who, cleanses the `.temple; in the argu= •inent: that subsequently arises, -it is - authority that • is questioned. His Sorrow For the., City Lu. ke 1W : 41. '{And • when , he • drew..nigh, .he saw the city and `wept over it. 42. Saying, If thou, hadst, known in this • day„ even, • thou, the, -things . which- belong unto. peace! 'but nowck , they are hid fro thine eyes.. '43{' For ,the days' shall • •come ,upon, thee, when thine en emies shall , cast, up a, bank, abopt thee, and compass thee round, and. keep• -.thee to • on every side, 44. and • • shall -dash the thy .children within thee; and •they shall not leave in thee one •stone upon: another; because' thou '.knew. est, not. the time.'of thy visitation:' This detailed prophecy of nor .Lord.. .wd.s .literally fulfilled 'forty years atferwards,.in 70 A.D.. at the, siege of Jerusalem under Titus. Why` did • •our. Lord weep? Perhaps because' he knew t at -of this giddy thought- less ••multitude,many' who, now cried,Hosann(r,,' would, ere • a little 'week was ended be joining in the cry Veracity' ?inn!". •He. knew,, and this. was a sadder,thought still, that, .there • waS no 'part of,'this.. dreadful doom but might have been averted, if Jerusalem had'" cliosen truly , to ' listen. to God's servants. Cleaning of the Temple ' 45 . "And the entered . into the 'sample,.. and began to east out them that ' sold, :46. saying unto them;, It is written,. And my house shall, be a. house of ..prayer: but -..xe:havel made it a den of robbers:" Pilgrims: came to Jerusalem "from all parts of the world to keep. the. Passover, . and at 'Passover times the city ,was crowded to 'excess; The . money spent in the city' dur- ing these feast occasions formed a great part of the livelihood of the native Jews. The mcib of citizens were persuaded•that Jesus meant to take' the bread out • of •their mouths; and their Hosannas' were' changed to cries 6f "Crucify Him!" (For the convenience of • •visitors, one • Of ' the courte of the Temple Was set'apart' •fora market, where they •cliuid, buy what animals they• • needed for, sacrifice.) • • ,Lee Bowman, one of fllmdem's'most rapidly rising young leading glen, ?takes advantage of a day-•ofr_from the studio 'of keep up.his tennis game. One ofHollywood'8 few re- • 'maining ellgible bachelors. the Young actor lives in an apartment In Beverly hills and spends his spares i at on thh .. beaches or playing he excels. Canada dui. ds Bacon Surplus, 3,000,000 Pounds Week Stored For `Lean' Days -'Overseas Shipments Steady • Against the lean summer days when .' supplies may be less plen tiful, Canadian' bacon '-= sgnie .of •it destined' eventuallyllus 11 y for over- seas. consumption• -- is piling up in storage houses across Canada. at the •rate rf a,Op0,000 pund4 a • week: An, 'official' of the Canadian Bacon Board said early • this month 'that this amount was .' in addition to ' the regular eitport flow , under . , the Canada -United Kingdom bacon agreement which calls for -delivery •to Britain of 425;600,000 pctinds this year — roughly 8,000,000 pounds a , week, 30,000';000 POUNDS IN HAND The 'spokesman estimated Can- •oda , now has some 30,000,000 pounds of bacon on hand. Ile ex- plained that some of this stir - plus woad be used 'up the'. sum- • the months, when production usually fall :cff to seine extent. "The outleok is most encourag- ing," he said. "At the present time we .hav'e ample sulplies to meet the demand . in fact we i e overshipping ourselves. Only a •drastic stepup in the Un- ited .i(ingilom demand 'could • 1present, w With any difficult pv6h1.e1n.{.. • • • $ Daily .'Teaching 41. 'And: be was teaching ,dally in the temple. But the chief priests and the scribes and •the principal men. of the people sought'to destroy him: 4S. And the, could not find ' what they might doi. for the people all hung upon him, listening." From Sunday; on. Jesus Christ was :teach -i • ing in the Temple, till • i:e . left a - for' good.-Tuesda:y toR{ard.eveniug he interns us that the Sanhedrin 'was seeking to destroy Him; but with all their, seeking' and schem- ing, they were 'not able to find • • what they might do. The difficulty lay in "the people," the love of the • pilgrims for Jesus. • His Authority Questioned Luke 20: 1. ""And it came to pass, on 'one of' the days, as he was' teaching the• people in 'the temple, and preaching the .gospel, there came upon him ,.the chief priests and the • scribes • with the elders. 2. And •they epake, saying unto him, Tell ttsr By what author. il ity oest thou these things. o 'who is he that gave thee this au-. thority .1 First View .of Modern I1.S, ; jnfantrymaim Kot Just what the U.S.,army infantryman will wear into battle is shown • •ifor the•first time by George, M. Welch,, 19 -year-old, Worcesster'student • ..who is now training at Camp. Edwards with the famous Emmett Guards,' • Co. B, t.01st Infantry. All, his equipment is new,"from trench hat to'•, shoes. • , • • : I • "or"ities'vi'ere`spe+akin;g AWL -Where did Hee get this" message? He had 'not been brought ,up.in,:the rab- -)iIt fear"'s'ehoaT .11ir had- not heard - it. delivered 'in Israel by any great teaching of His day.:The 'Pharisees And 'Sadducees would never have' asked this question if He was not • tetirring the : city to its depths. : ' . The Truth, Not In Them; 3, "And he 'answered and' said unto .them, I. also: ask you a :ques- • tion; and tell me.:, 4 The baptism Of ,John, ,.wast. i't from ',heaven; or from: men? 5 And they reasoned with. themselves,— saying, If we shall say, From' heaven; he will sayt. Why did. ye 'not believe . him? ..6. But if we. shall say, From men; all the peop e, wi one us: . or :they are .persuaded that john was a prophet. 7: And theyanswered, that they knew not 'whence it. was.. 8.And Jesus said• unto them, Neith- er tell 'I you bywhat authority 'I- da -these things." Jesus ,did not answer their question directly, for. one reason, because they were. ;not sincere in ' their quest for truth. Men who do riot 'want the truth W111 never find it.-:, • 4'A . test of democracy is . its ability to act. and. to •• ct success fully in meeting the nes ,upcn which the very life of a democ- racy depends." • • •• —Henry L. Stimson. s • • :Good Rad/ft:SW-tic -Scarce in Canada • T. J. McCabe of Toronto, presi- '° dent.. of the Canadian. Thoroiigh- bred horse . Society, 'said in his ' report at the annual Meeting of the society, that Canada is "un-• fortunately lacking in gcod brood mares." "Those - interested in racing and breeding know too well: how vi- tally racing ^is dependent upon good. ll'ood-stock•, We must con- sider every means ,possible to .en- courage. the blood'atock industry;". • He said British bloodstock • . breeders • had been asked in the• past . yearend their prim bloodstock, to Canada and United States' to prevent possible injury during wartime, and that small shipments had been. ,made to the ••United. States. He said ."shipping, facilities, climatic conditions :and various other 'reasons" were ;given by British' breeders in de- clining to send their stock . here; Fertilizer Booklet • C•cintains Pointers . a Recommendation of Adotiioty • a' Fertilizer Board of Ont. ger 1941 are. now ,available in pamphlet form. , " A forty page booklet, contain- ing .1941 -recommendations for -' soil' management and . use •ca fer..', tilizers; prepared by. the Advisory. • Fertilizer . Board for Ontario, 1 at` -Off the press: and may be` ,obtained ;;by .farmers front the '.Agricultural . Representatives in their county, or by writing direct • to the .Statistics; and Publications , Btanoh; Ont: Dept. of• Agricul- tune; Toronto: 'There is no ,,charge; With farmers everywhere aux-' p ions' to increase production this year in' v'rder that food.supplies May be kept' flowing in adequate volume to Great Britain, this fact - packed booklet takes on .special significance: ' The Fertilizer Board is com- posed of experts headed by G. N. Ruhnke, Professor . of Chem , • •istrg, O.A.C:, Guelph, and has examined .eicperiinental',data ._front all •reliable sources. The . book- let contains • recommendations.• justified. bysuch data ' and ap- proved farm practice. ,, : Fertilizer recommendations are o alined forcereal crops on heavy and '"light land; hoed:°crops; " pasture ..and hay, vegetables, canning, .muck soil crops:, . tree „fruits;, strawberries, raspberries, grapes •and tobacco. ' This , booklet undoubtedly 'has ". a placeon every farm book shelf and will - make profitable crop.- increasing rop=increasing reading ,, for every: farmer. Write for .it• now. Teacher ' Shortage Signs .Increasing Survey,Shows National. Crisis ' 1'n ,Canadian Education ;Likely. Next --Pear. • The shortage of .teachers.. signs •of which are'' evident to educa- ' Tonal .administrators will be on. a national basis, acc•ording.'to in-,' formation .obtained last • week •in • the department 'of • education.' at- ... McGill University. ' • • -• • • Department • . members . have been in ,.touch' • With educationists Who have conducted a ; survey: •This survey .indicates .'that the shortage, of instructors will 'make itself increasingly 'evident -:during•• •the ,present calendar , year• .and.: may become critical to the:. main- tenance :,cf educational standards • 'in the next .school session. Teachers stated 'last week that • they were leaving the profession • ...for two reasons.• One' is the da -1 to -national -ser -vise, vuiziolY- is -talc+ ing an increasing proportion of • • the male teachers, and the other main •reason is, low salaries. ., -•statistica-1•-•study-- -has .•been. - - made. by the Canadian Teachers'. Federation to show' that,,. teachers• ..,ate not.only the lowest paid pro- fessional group..but in • many cases -are 'receiving, a. great deal less • than other large •classificationa of • trained and =semi -skilled .workers. This ",condition must be remedied, teachers claim, •if education is. to maintain , itself proportionately to other community, and national' enterprises. , "You can't wake people - in •a democracy. up• unless there is something, ,to scare 'them." Joseph P. Kennedy. •Ne vv Year Day in Scotland in 1599 'and in ,'England 133 'years. later. New War. Clouds Darken The Far East A CHINA' • The real Jewish authorities' were 'the Pharisees and the Sadducees. primarilythe' Sanhedrin. They had not given Him ;any order to, clear se ' the Temple -74f nit they, then whO? Ftirtherniore, His teaching was , diametrically opposed to .the teaching of the Jewish authorities of Hie dry. They emphasized obed• 'fence to legalistic formulas: Jesuus, was cuntlnually pointing' to and insisting upon repentance, purity of heart,' honesty, believing in Hit°, praying . to ,the Fathers. in shtcerity, living a holy life bete) a Bien, none of which'things tate Jewish .untii- a,. • • INDIA �• (bi1RM*) ) ,0G • Siem SHANGNAF eiS FORMOSA •ty� HONG • a:1 v HAINn+fre'`Mew'Of 6 • • P A C IFI C. I. PHILIPPINE 0 MANILA®••y r pry SAIGON •.:N/' A Q ®���pjj � 15.110'40 • 5sen (U;5)' MALAY OUa.T Cil .NI)IA/V 0 c E A .' BRrIORTM 'a e04,0164 GUAM, (u.s.) 0 `E '4 N AUSTRALIA (6R.) 'A series of sudden troves by governments with interests, in the, Far East last week created ed an thea tense situation in the area es rhown in the • i government ABOVE Central. Press map. While` the' Dutch Ease Ind es gever (1), was ordering its merchant ships to' put;, into neutral harbors, the advisory , war council in Australia (3) • issued a warning that the war has entered a "new phase, one of the utmost gravity." Thereere reperts that a Japanese battle fleet has been coneentrated off Haiphi4ng, French Indo-China (2). .Japanese warships previously had arrived off Bangkok, Slant, 800 miles from the British Singapore apore base, and London said Japan might suddenly enter the war on• the side of her Axis .part- ner& in addition, ;the. U.S. consulategeneral in Shanghai issued an urgent warning to Americans in the Par East to return home. • ,brought it to Europe. 1 the bp- ginning of tee Christian k7ra it was' 'a well-known 'commodl`y in eastern Europe, and. a _big trade vias done, in it. . The early physicians- named the .herb''= •Rha. C.eopatra'a dbetc:2', Dioscorides, called it ithia. Mar- - ce'linus, . writing in the fowl's century, said it got this name bemuse it was found ;grening+'ai the banks of the River •Rlia.-no 007 Volga. ' • '• -: The R:oritans named the • .herb Rha-barbarum - - in -other word's,, the barbarian plant from the, Rha.' From Rha-barbarum„ it was , a short cut to.•the Rheubazbe of the early English .herbalists, .and,. eo to the modern Rhubarb, THIS CURIOUS WORLD. By William Fergmosan' 111111III1t1IIIIIIIIIIWIIutl1nism11 1I1Itu111,..‘,1111i1111„1 k n 111116. 9Q0 TRAINS QF FIF=TY, CARS E �aCFI wrrH SCI :"ta 'NS, WOLJ1_C>• ism R€4uttzzi j . CARRY 'THE DAILY LOAD ANC:. ,' .E/1...7 - F $E1 /71 -la ''I)d I s1PPI l i+ • R.(V EP... I NTO • T1-iGCJLF EACH , DAY. �O?R: l Dia 9Y• NEA SERYICE, INC,' e. A CLJBIG FOOT OF Q W : SANO . WEIGHS MORE THAN A CLJBIC fOCr ' OFLOAA440 SAN—‘,/ We, /7- QR W.Caci/vG r? n-zu C.ARt ori :S ARE NAMED FOR N CAR f,V,/e THe YB-;r Lc3v4• F IGMEAITTHAi-GIVE'S; . THEM TIIEII?, CALOR. ANSWER Right. . Dry sand is heavier, measure or measure, jf than.wet sand : . . up to a -certain percentage of mo sture.; Sand, on being dampened moderately, increases in volume all outof pro-.' portionto the amount of water added. p ,. .4 • NEXT:ilial-has-four-fingers'_'and-two numbs' Ancient Chines Raised •RIiubar As Long • Ago As 2.700 11.C. They Dried' the • Root and Used It .As Medicine—Greeks Brought It From Asia Has it ever struck , lyou that someone, •somewhere, .sometime, had. to risk bis life ,by sampling • the varices roots, pods, 'stalks slid leaves which we sail vege- tables? That •was• once the only, means • of determining whether -'the stuff f killed you or not., . • { Rhubarb • was. know; as .long, ago as 2,700'•B.C., when the Chin,=,, • ese dried the root and used .it ' as a medicine;and a medicine it re-,, ' attained, for 4,500 years. From Asia,. its ..use spread westwards to Arabia and rotary,. Whence the early Creeks and Romans • 'POP What..a. Tuning Up He Could Give a Square Meal i • GQD OPTH'E .SEA HORIZONTAL'. 1 Old. Roman' god of the. waters. 7 The most remote known is named' for, him (p1.). '12 Malt drink. 13.Extreme. 15 To be obligated. 16 Injustice Y"8 Cow"s':caTl- 19'Rorse. " ' 21,1•orward. • ° Answer to Previous :Puzzle ARMORliJQl©DEQ ®r I!L [BSI u SIAM 11121191M EAMON •JANIS 0® ®©o Cita©©amu D ` 0]1111©©• ©® 11 111111120112M 112M a C10 iE DUD P Dali11111211E1 I 1 uiRiul° R®Ia : 6®©t 39 Stocking. 23• Vehicle damages. carrying 40 Shin • of coffins: __ money. -•- 24Offsets in . 41 Withered. walls. 43 Fish: 27 Street. 29 Corrupt. 30 Comfort. 31 Plural; Pronoun. 32 Headgear. ' 49 Geniis of — 34 To, eradicate frogs: - hair. • 50 A11 •right, 3,6 Boggy, land. ' 51 Total. 37 Covered with 52 Puzzler. icing. • 55 He carries a •45 And. 46 Musical. entertain- ments. trident as his • 56 Fresh.., "VERTICAL - • 2 To merit, 3 Farming tools. 4 Card combination. • 5 Primeval fluid. 6 Tree, " 7 In ,behalf of. 8 Note in scale.. 9 Marked with.' spots. • ' 10 Water jugs. 11 Golf. devices. 14: Ponderous 16 He was once or''. 'revered in Rome. 17 Solemn. 19 Intelligence. 20 To guard. 22 Leaks - • 23' Warms. 25 Kind of hospital. 26 Poor; In; • quality'. 28 Silent. .l 31 Tumor: 33 Six plus, four.. .35:Drains.. __._ • 36 Prefecture in : China. j� 38 To abscond. , 42 To put. on. • 44 To •- question. . 47 Back of neck. 48 Ripped... 49 To .feel sorrow.- .51 orrow. •51 South • Carolina, 53 Either... • 4 Type measure.: 16 _ 17-- .18-. _.... ■19 .. 20 21 22 : .23 . 24' • • 25 26 27 28 .: 29. •,• ¢ 1130. 31 . 32 33• 34 55, 56 :• 37 38. 39, 40 41 42 tt 43 44 y)J 45 46 k 47 48. 49 5a ,Il 55 51 X tUPPOSS NDU t4Avgt4r tar AN ORGAN' IN, .THE. . D1NlN0 ROOM. I 'COULI TUNE' 1=o you.?' • i 1 I W Ll.. j 1-1OW ABOUT' A- N10E• NOT" RiNNfR , 52 ' 53 54 56'• By. J.. MILa AR,' W`A: {,I t: . /