The Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-09-25, Page 7• d
•
.
Invention Speeds.
Parachute 'Troops
A blind inventor, Harry P.
,•1!rusty Of Los Angeles' has' dem-
onstrated a deice for getting a
parachute. sqaud out of a trans
Port plane• in a hurry.
""It seenis to do the job," was
the terse comment of J. M. 'Eng-
lish, • .resident ,technical . • officer
observing the testaIee the British
Air Commission, ,
Sandbags with parachutes at-
tached were placed on the seats
• which moved on a• track leading
to a door of. the airplane ,and sent
them off into space. .
"We can d.o the same Ailing
• .r with fully armed troops," said
Trusty,. "and can send 24 of them
out ' of a transport 'plane, • in six
seconds.;'
•
:.DOn't Kill Tl'>teni
Just
.. . gent t Them
' Joe Bledsoe who lives 'in Texas
: isn'VVrorried ab'opi` inding a mar-
leerz, for h-ts-- -1.400•.' turkeys. , • He
.,,justs rents them to the neighbors.
Joe turned the .birds into his
'.t cotton field to •graze on the leaf '
worms.• In a few hours the insects'
-had disappeared. Now the neigh- •
bors, • who haven't been able to -
eradiicate the pests with. •poison,•
are •in line for the 'turkeys.: . •
:.I
Ti red Tire
Here's what happens ,when you
Array run, an Ary truck 2'0 miles•on
a fiat tire., Tire at left had same
wear except fol: that flat busi- ,
ness., •
-
o o -o-0•0,
Saving • Ontario's
Natural..
Resources.
»ctaa.a
0.• C. TONER
Ontario Federation of Anglers and
.Hunters
N o. 5;6
WATERFOWL SHOOTING
With the deck. season opening in
a few weeks niy readers might
like to kiiove something of the.
birds, that provide their sport 8o -
the ' next • 'columns. will deal with
this topic. Waterfowl shooting has,
a loris; history in 'Ontario. Much of
the fend of the palliative Indians
came from this source. and the
white mini h s• hunted both for
sport and for lood ever since he
has. •been here. Uiifort•una1ely he g
'hes not always used od judg-
ment. anti to,tlay the birds are
scarce compared •lo tl: i plentiful
supply • cif Smatter rer years,
Formany years most species of
.+� waterfowl have liven itt a precar•
ions situation. Drainage of tpillions
• of acres el' marshland, .both here
and 'in the States, has. deprivedthe waterfowl of large .portions
heirof
. tnatt.ral hahitat. while ten
proved roads --ansa het ter nit'ans of
transportation. have made it eas-
ier for' the gunner, to .reach the -
haunts of the birds. Each fall the
ducks and geese all have to run the
gauntlet of -a constantly. increas-
ing army of hunters equipped with
.modern weitpons• tied mere and
store powerful atituut.itinn. to ad-
dition, throughout •rhe year, the
birds arecalled upon; to Withstand'
r+k unpreventairle losses front diseas-
es, clitna'tie disturllitnc^es• rind pre-'
dii,tot's.
I am not going into the history
Of all the causes. of the decline in
° num bees of waterfowl nt .the .pre,'
sent time but 1 Might 'say that• drought on the. br•rrdiatit • g t iInds,
.'spread Of agave Ittiro tie t.os• the
prairies' and thegianth of indtf -
try in their sort [barnwinteringgrounds (rave ail•Irecn cont'31111t111
factors. • Meting, lot, ;11111: t:ikt'
part of the. hl8nte, 1\'urn. tete t cit
siders .that theta 'are tvr;• :awake)
e)
duck hutitele nu the, c0titin, nt, tt
is apparent 11)81 the•Y. neutt .61 kV a
tremetifions 1011.esrh ye:n' 1 heli
have morn In 5.1v :'Incl ea' , •' r•; \'
Ween. -
a
• LESSON XIII
THE •FULFILMENT" OF HIS-
TORY: THE• NEW JERUSALEM.
Rev.' 21, 22
PRINTED TEXT, Rev. 21 c 1-7,
" • , 10-12, 22-24r
GOLDEN TEXT. He that over -
cometh Shall Inherit these things;
and 'I will be hie God, and he shall
be • my son..Rev,, 21 : 7.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time. -About A.D. 95.:
Place. -The island. of Patmos in
the Aegean Sea.
- A . New Heaven, and Earth:
- The .Bible opens with. beauty, •
with' perfection, -with• man and In
, .man's communion with, God: Satan
•' soon enters, sin .ie. committed and
a -curse rests. wenn -gran and his
whole •environment. The Bible
--closes_in giorinus victory., the . O
fe.'at of, all evil, the ,establishment
of God's sovereign reign and 'the ' melt -moon, :far the eery - glory et
restoration' of perfect communion ' •God will illuminate the. city
RED NAVY JOINS
NINGRAD DEFENSE
•
Crew of a Russian Warship(),f the Soviet I3altic Fleet,•roarrs anti-airceaft guns to' beat' off Nazi', dive-:'
bombersnearhe'Russian naval; base, at Kionstadt, elope io'Leningrad; Russians. reported that the Ger-
nians 'recently stormed .kronatadt from' the sea and`'.were repulsed with heavy losses. :
•
f
between God - and that great cora- ''' The Book of Li
e •
pany of • Men and wonren whole' he • 24. -And the nations ehall walk
• has .redeemed. , amidst the light :thereof: and the.
1. "And I, sawa new heaven .and • • kings of the earth bring their glory
a new earth�9 for the first heaven • : into it." The light from, this city
and the fir* . eart)i ate passedwill stream down upon the 'earth,
away; and the sea is .no, more. .where the nations will walk in its
The fact that the heavens and the • glory,' while; in turn, the kings of
earth, here spoken of are "new," the earth will bring their glory
does ,not imply that they are' now into this ,Aely ,city. Into. the holy „
first brought into bein_g. Tbey m_ ay city; no'. evil one 'will ever. enter,
be: the. old heaven's'• and' the old'` -God-` hi7rnsl'1-throtighff-H`is -41°13 '1°
earth; but theyhave a 'ne'w' aspect, 'angels, will guard the gates of our
a new character, adapted to a new eternal abode that our eye? will
end. ' , never look upon evil,• norour ears
The New Jerusalem , 'ever hear a wicked word: All' will'
2: '"And 'i saw the holy city, new pot be in the . Holy ,City; but only
Jerusalem, coming .'downout of those. whose naives' are Written in
heavenfrom God; 'mane ready. as •• •the La :b'e'. book .of life,. :If we.
a .beide 'ad:orned for. heriushand." ` belong to.Him, our names are in
God prepares es for the city, as a 'His book of life. Is your • name
bride. adorns .herself for her bus-• written there? No question can
band, so will God adorn and beau- ' . ever compare with this in'.impor.t-
tify this . city for His , loved ones.
It will be a holy 'city, one in which
no lie will be uttered,' uo- evih' 'ora
spoken and, no • cor•.ru.ption ,of life '
-will ever be manifest. It will be
. Here is another hard stick .queue
'story, which happehed in Bootle,
England. ' A woman stood for
• half an hour in a queue to get a
little dripping. She put it in the
pram and then stood for half -an -
hour in anotherqueue to get some
Oranges'. -.Tired, but feeling that
.she had done het duty, .she came
back, onlyto find that the baby
tete-niEtrea eaata,,,e:. teeee eere.„,..ehad .e.atisa-the:_driplairig: .
ance. will I be with (rod , and
His'.redeemed throughout eternity?
holy because every one •r}i ThviI'C
be .holy.
3. "And I' heard a great voice, out
of the throne saying, Behold 'the
tabernacle of God is with mien,
and he shall dwell with them, and
they shall be his peoples, and God
himself shall be Witte them, and be
their God." What i an. amazing
truth •that God, the maker of Heav-
en and Earth, scall actually dwell
Lost Labo•
ur
•
p•t ea '-1R'fr 1Se a•
Queer Nature Facts
.A'bat can carry a heavier load,
in proportion to its size, than any
bird. It can fly. a brood of young
whose .;total weight exceeds its
own.
* * R
When acarnewl takes'a drink' of
water he . does a real job of it..
Fifteen .•gallons • is his average
"gulp." • He can 'then travel about
30 miles' a daze with a ioa of
,•800 pounds, for five days, without
taking another swig
Baby eels, .one or two.. inches.
long, have been caught in waters
around New ;Yoel;' City = a, thou. -
sand ' miles away from their birth-
place, the' Sargasso Sea. Tn their
babyhood, -they are quite trans-
parent, resembling tiny cellophane.
`cigar wrappers.
* , *
. The pocket .gopher, unlike .most
animals, .is- equipped.'with ;an; as-
tonishing "reverse gear:"
This .' little "sun dodger," who
sgends r nose of his, life in' under -
grimed tunnels which hehimselt
has excavated, can, rtirt backwards)
as fast as he can fo-i-ward..
In. areas where • flowers are
abundant, bees willaverage. about'
50,.000 miles' offlying to collect
one pound of honey. • In' regions.'
where, flowers are not plentiful,
they may fly as many as 3.00,000
Miles , for the same amount..,
'
More Fruit
'Need �'l�o a
In Jam Campaign
Everyone Asked to Donate
Fruit or Sugar For Jam For
Britain's .Bonibed'out. Chil-
dren'
Last year, me,mbei•s of the Ont. •
Women's institute wits, the sup-
port gf the Ont Dept of LAgricul-
m
tune, ade iiq,00b pn
ouds . of jam
which was shipped to , •Britain in
four poundcans for children bomb- :',
ed out of. their ,homes; and Cauad-
ian Soldiers in British Hospitals;
The }reed was so great aid the
lettersof,'recipients so grateful
that' the :. Women's In'sti'tutes ,of •i
Canada set an objective of 300,000.
pounds 'this year, with an Ontario .i
quota of 150,000. to 200,000: pounds
Of jam. '
The summer 'months were not„
kind td . this enterprise of the Oh_
tari•o Women's • Institute. Dry
weather brought, increased prices
for: fruit, and donations 'were' not
$o'pieliala"0i*Cteethe`"'W:`"T: ktrive er---
i•eports• for. July :show that some
24,000 pounds of jean ' were made
by rural -women' for shipment .to
Britain„ It was hoped that this fig- ,
ure would be doubled, leaving 100,-
000 pounts to .be made this ,fall
from. peaches, pears, plums, grapes
and apples: The Women's: Insti-
tute will meet this quota, if you •
will help. They won't, if.yeu don't:
-_These-wo-Yen--aza,agi:iaiiig, t°Q,;"
akerem ei ea ' afetfatittrainmlw
suea'.r-, to t4s-wertica eanse leu
orrti.
tear from their eyes;'arid 'd
shall be no more;neither. shall
eatTt`•
there 'be mourning; nor crying, nor •
pain, any more; the first things. are
,.
passed away, The Bible was writ-
ten for the comfort, the sustenance
and the enlightening of 'all people
• onarth. Tears, death, mourning,
crying, pain are not. ignored. The
cause -of these things will ultiriate-
ly be put away. Our faith tells us
of a time when they will be gone
. -forever... •
' 5. And .he that sitteth on the
throne said, Behold; •I Make all
things. new. And he- saitli, Write;
•for these words are faithful and
true. 6. And he said unto me, They
are_come to' pass; .I ani the Alpha
and the Omega, the beginning 'and
the end. I will give unto' him that
is athirst of the fountain of Um -
water of life freely. 7. He that
overcometh • shall inherit these
things; and 1will be his God. and
he shall be my son." • The 'folio,
tern of lift, those -desires for spir�
Dual' things which the world can
never statisfy, .i.s as- _erlltiustkess_ as
God ,himself.
Beauty. of Holy City •
,10,,."Anti• .he carried roe. away
In the Spirit. to a mountain great
and high,. and showed 'nie the holy.
city . of Jerusalem, costing down.. _
of t of Heaved from God. 11. hav-
.ing the glory of God: her light was
like 'unto a stone in&s't 'pi'eCious,.°
as it were a jasper, stone. clear
es crystal;, 12, having a wall great
and high; ,having twelve gates,
and at the gptes twelve ahgels;
and names, written- thereon. Which
are the names of the twelve tribes
•ef the tciifldren • of Israel." Twelve
is the number which expresses
government, and here we have the
perfect government revealed. This
wall with its twelve gates, £welve'
angels;, and twelve names of the
tribes of Israel and twelve foun-
dations with the names of the Ap-
ostles shows some kind of con-
nection between. the Holy City and,
.the earthly Jerusalem. '
The .Glory of Goo
2 . Antt l saw no • temple there-
in: for the Lord God,. the Al-
mighty, and the Lamb. are the
temple thereof. .23. And the city
hath• no need of the sun, neither
of. the mon 16 shine upon it: .for
thee gory of God did lighten it,
and the lamp thereof Is the Larnb,"
The fact Heart ..there will he no
tore tit' in tett eternal home is very
significant. :+e1 torte .as •inen 'dwell,
hrrt', Junky. the c'ond'itions of earth-
ij • 'Iter. thy cannot do Without
tiles.,. tt'n1lt'Iee Hut, there• is no
• 'temple "there" for the simple ,i•ea-
sen that Twee is needed. it is not
•
..tiff 'that there. -wilt not be any sun
or noon • In eternity, but that we
to e'1 rot betel lire tight of the sue
Cuftku1Vomo
-- Fergu"f'ii8nB1l .I
so
eI
Maj
• OF THE
IIT G
AMANITA GROUP
C.aUSE MORE
DEATI=LS THAN ALJ...,
OTHER POISONOUS
MUSHROOMS .
COMB I NEL}:
NO ANTI DOTE
IS KNOWN 'FOR'
THEIR POISON, THE
CHEMICAL, ACTION
OF' VV! IICH IS NOT
U NOERS1 OD.
S'R(M MILK
I5 USED IN 71-1E. MANUFACTURE,
OF ,81.177Z7/VS`: •
AVERAG i✓
AUTOMOBILE
DRIVERS
RAPIDLY , •
AFTER ABOUT
'Sal/AA/ f /R$
' c)F-
DF2IVIN
COPR. 1939 8Y/NEA SERV CE
CHEMISTS, astounded at the enormous waste of milk after the
'cream had been removed, expet'imented and found, it contained
a substance known as casein, which is made up of carbon, hydro-
gen, oxygen, nitrogen, and one or two other chemical ingredients.
When formaldchyd.,e is added to it, it produces 'a horn -like sub -
^Stance, '•
• e
NEXT: Did prehistoric man have tooth trouble?
'. -thy renlitetbe . ,
•
everything; That is , ivhy •everyone
-fruit grdwers,. mese women, and
children, and.especially housewives
• are, asked to contribute .fruit, sugar
of , cash to their' nearest • Women's
Institute Branch in Southern* On •
-
tario NOW. Maybe you don't know
• . theenam .of your nearestl,jam com•'
niittee convenor. Just phone or..
*ate leper .,county, agricultural re=
present'ative.'J-ie will tell you. The -
.'Convenor will tell you' when the ,
W. L jnembers. are meeting to make
jam •and where to send; the fruit
_ or sugar.
Ontario, as the largest fruit pro-
ducing province in' Canada, must
•pro•vide, .the greater part of 'the
300,000 .pound objective the women
-.have set. . •
Willy,. not buy.an extra .'basket
• •of peaches, peas, plums, grapes.
or apples when you are purchas•
ing, your oath?
The Women's Institute' 'will be
grateful;'so Will the Red Cross,'but
roost of 'al) the homeless •children
• n -f Great Britain' will . be grateful
to •the warm-h•eai'ted ,people of L -in- --
'tario.
a:
Ladies' Activities
• Ladies societies are, raising
money by selling Christmas cards.
spend spare time. An important
thing to remember is to begin
early before one's prospects •are
committed elsewhere. The British
Canadian Publishing Co„ Room 43,
24 King ,West, Toronto, has an
especially attractive line 0f'ClirY�t•-
mas Cards arranged in stunning
asso'tments, and selling for $1. A
letter to,the above firm will read
!ly obtain particulars. Up to 100
per cent .profit ,can be expected
u'nd'er their well -thought-out mer
chandising plan. ••
ADIO REPORTER
By DAVE ROBBINS
THE BANDWAGON:
Otte of the many weekly treats
afforded listeners over a wide area
of the province, 'is offered in the
Bandwagon shows, featuring a top-
flight concoction of the best in
modern music.
• C,FRB's version of this papular
show is carried Saturday night at
7.30 p.m. - CKLW in Windsor
takes its trip Friday's at 9.3.0, and
CKOC in Hamilton has the Friday,
might spot one hour earlier --at
8.30! Tune.in the Bandwagon in
your district and enjey s'brrlething
in 'radio shows. �.
* ••
,THE •SPO'RT,WORLD'
• If you're a' hohehody and like to
• relax between .6.30 and 2.00 -.o'clock
at night .and .you like ;your sport
'news authentic and up to the min=
ute, you'll.,find.a,CohpleOf' .welcom'.e
daily spots at 1150 on your • dial.
Joe"`Olirysda1e tees off at 6.30 -p:"m
,with a' complete, summary of base-
ball for the day, and .at 7.30 p'.m:, .
Perce LeSueur, , noted Eastern
:Sports • Commentator, does a' `fif-
teen minute 'chat covering the '
sprint • world in general: Also, 're-
meneher Monday, .Sept. 29th at.
10.00 p:in. - you'll hear the Joe
Louis = Lou Nova' world heavy-
weight,.
eavyweight:, e.hampiorish•ip '. bout, • with
the blow' by blow candled • by Don ' .
Dunphy, three the, Mutual system
and ;CM/6 in 'fLarnilton:
THIS 'N- THAT! o •
'`Till Reveilles' is one ofthe•sea-
son's •sweetest and most timely .bar,
lads •, ., . Orson' Welles, Mercury.
Theatre dynamo and the` screen's
•Citizen•' •Kate, care , •batik• to the •
, air last Monday. Colpmbia net •
-
' work, 10.00 p.m., E.D.S,T.Cutest
•record„ of ' the Week is 'Horace
Heidt's answer to Daddy ,-' Mam-
• ma!
* a *
•
THAT LITTLE WOODEN HEAD
_' His face is probably, as familiar'
was•-ytru-r^'--n•et:'--boor neigh;hor's-•
his .antics probably cause yo s
' ni t i iuu as anything in-711ie radl"-
world . can -'-and . to his.. othie ,..
-he's probably tile .proverbial.geld-
mine. Meet Charlie 1McCarthy,
Mi st e r Bergen's Ventriloquist
dummy, whose personality is. ;more
.reel than anyone else's on the '
Sunday night fiesta Of. comedy and
melody, originating .in Hollywood,•
and heard over the Combined net,
works- of the Natienaft Broadcast.
ing Company in the • United *latest
and: the . C.B.C. in Canada. Each
week, rose very effective boils, Mg. •
Caruhy has Ray' Nob1e, who in 1ie-ix
tween times conducts the musie
On theprogram (Ray is -a famous.
British orchestra leader.. composer
and-'-artanger), Abbott & Costello,
and the weekly guest. You'll enjoy.' • `
the program - hear- it Sunday
' nights at S pan. E:D.S;T'., tin nine,
after the . first of. October, if the.
American networks : go back on
Standard Time on CBL; CBO,
CKOC.
The Nazi have a• reasonable es.
planation for theslowing down of •
their .'drive into Russia. Their.
a iraies haeme • efisounhhved ba&eee ' ,
• rains, bad roads,.: and bad Reds. �.
•
1
MAP •P,UZZL•E
1
HORIZONTAL Answer to. Previous Puzzle 20 On its coast is
1 Map : of - T H O M AiS J UE D I 5011111 . a.— or
E productive
borstemak. - .
rr-
African colony
13 To listen '
14 Palm thatch.'
16 Audibly,
17 Roof finial.
18 Russian
emperor. ;
19 Faint color.
20 To cook in
fat o
21 Public walk.
R
A
ED
ERG)
GELIC
PA
AD o•
HE
• E
P
22 To repurchase
24 Decorative
mesh'
25 .Sesame.
26 Meal
29, To assign
'anew.'
31 Rubbish:
32 Mongrel.
33 Whirlwind.
34 1/12 foot.'
35'African.farmer
36 Measure of ,
area. . -
37 Promise.
38 Storehouses.,
1 2 3.
13
E
F
E
L
A
A
N
P
D1
C
T
A
N
0
M
M
u
A
AT
A
44
D'
S
P
A
E
N
S
EC
T
42 Giant -king of
Basilan:
43 Morindin dye.
44 Seaweed. ;• .
45 Melody:
46 Stringed
instruments.
47 To bang.
49 Canoe..
52 Its capital.
53 Its' natives
are =,
VERTICAL?
1 Sound of ' •
pleasure,
5
6
c
V
•
eakaiteeere
Inlef.
'is"Tit
u v 1 n as iron
O T and zinc.
24 Whip stroke.
E 25 Word of four:,
O letters.
N 2? Sea . eagle.- -
28 Moccasin..
1 AIN_ • .29 To regret.
TOMS
A. •.
'EDISON
"30 Gazelle.
2 To •ogle. •
3 Affected With.
gapes, '
4 Silkworm,_, •
5 Whole,
6 Theater •
pathway. ,
7 Blerrrish, '
8 Badgerlike
Smelli
anir mals. '
9 ng
badly
10 Pirie fruit. •
11 Shrewd.
12 Natural power
15 Chum.
7
32 To cat grass.
35 Genus of
cattle.
37 Rime.
39 Kite end. ...
40 Astiit
41 Sanskrit
dialect.
42 Lubricant,
43 Phrticle.
45 Onager.. '
46 Go on. •
48 Month (abbr.)
49 Plural (abbr.)
50 Musical note. '.
51 Like.
14
15
17
16
0
2
,n:
•
REG'LAR F.F1'_ILERS—Dogime Subtle
7WHEN 1 GROW UP 1'M taOtN'.tO
ADVERTISIN' SCHOOL AN' LEARN
140W TO BE A ADVERTtSIN`
EXPERT./ ,fi.
Bad
ettl
1ete
AN° I WANHA BE •EDITOR, •
SO I'M G,OIN' TO A, SCHOOL OF'
WRITIN' ANF JOURNALISM!
Os 1' 9'St' Ate., All tote,;, •..."Al
I BEEN THINKiN OF COIN' TO-
A SCHOOL OF . BANKIN' WHEN
I GROW VP - KNOW WHY 9
By GENE BYRNES
ON
,ACCOUNT THEY PROBERLY
LETCHA TAKE Tlv,O OR THREE
MILLYUN DOLLARS HOME EVER
NIGHT TO PwTICE
HOMEWOlK WITH '
t
Baa