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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-08-31, Page 7re• T11d The Honey. Bee' firiapeortant In The Poilirmtion •.• pf&mu its,and Clove The chief value of the honey bee Iles not in the amount of honey .VX ° r i1�a. dire galla a1'ly he community in .which the beekeeper operates often receives more benefit than the bee- keeper himself, The importance of the honey bee,. particularly in the early Spring when few other .pollination insects are prevalent, •cannot be estimated later • its importance 4e, the pollina tion of other crepe., as small••fruits •aid clovers, is generally r:ecognlz ed. a. -Can •HardiyeB.e Galled',: Domesticated The honey bees• are espQcilly� well adapted to`Carry. pollen: Their bodies. and •legs are. covered .with; hairs to which. the polled, ...grains adhere when .Y Working .the'. flower in sea•reli of pollen and nectar for their 'own requireinents. Many of :these grains' oi' pollen become lodg- ed' on the receptive stigmas and, fertilize. the flowers.. Although the honey• bee can scarcely be called doiriesticated, its numbers ,scan be controlled. Hundreds of hives.. are moved yearly 'from one section to • another either to be -placed in' Or - Chards for pollination purposes • or to gather a crop .of honey., She, Counated Shakespeare. re'.s First High Corrurniisiorger To;;'cargids, ay ooi iessOn ■ ISAIAH: A LIFE DEDICATED • ' TO GOD 4ainh 6: '1-1:3, Golden Text.—Here and 1; send Me: .TH`E LESSON •IN ITS SETTING. ' :Time.=Uzziale died in .755 B.C. Place, --The City of .Jerusalem,' -In•the year that. 40.t - 'died h saw .the', Lord.', sitting" upon'•a'throng, high'and difted up; • and' ' his train • filled the. temple. .Above hurt. stoodethei seraphim; • each one liad .w six •ings; with twain `rte covered his ' fade, and 'with twain he . covered .his feet, and • with •'twain he did fly: And.. • one cried unto -another, and said, holy,•holy, holy, is Jehovah of • . hosts: thewh• le earth „is full' of his .glory. , . i. •'In the •year • of ,King Uzziah's .death . the 'people .of Israel ,were • given up -to ..hardness • of heart • and •as. a kingd,on and .country to devastation and annihilation by the imperial. power of the- world, In the same year- Roinulus. was born' and shortly .after this, Rorie • itself. ' was founded ! - The national glory •of Israel died•out •with king Uzziah. and ''has .never .revived ,to ,this, day. Mid'• widespread corrup tion we find, the youthful :Isaiah. • was called :to.. the office of 'pro- phet: We' .remember Isaiah not on-. • ly. for .his: wonderful prophesies but , for his remarkable .gift • of greatest 'orator that ever opened a, mouth 'on the•,#ace .of the -earth. . These•' ,passages• show us that .Is-. aiah was endowed with' great vis . iqn and insight onto' the, .goodness ' of God.. • ' 4.. And. thefoundations, of the -thxes-h�lds''shooh-at` tire--voice--of-r� him' that. cried land • the house was filled with smoke. This • difficult expression. is figurative and means that j there • was a • tremor as • 'if from • awe: 'by. the sound attending •the •cry .of ,the seraphim. The 'smoke' is a reference to the• cloud that is so often- mentioned in, the Old Testament as the 'vas,ible symbol of - God. , It took comely Helen Brown, • 20;. of Toronto six 'weeks 40 pencils°1 •and miles of adding machine tape ' to count 945,8.43' words • •in 3.7 plays, 5 poems, and 154' sonnets while ' preparing • Shakespeare's • • complete ' works for use as copy in the Canadian National Exhibition's non-stop international Typewrit- •. ing Marathon at Toronto, August 25,• to September 9th.' ' New, York :Elms Are Hibernating . �lilliion • • .Dollar- Trees Are Leaf- . 'less • Fifth avenue's "million -dollar" elm trees are "hibernating" in mid - pummel.. . \ The. eight trees • inserted by the • Rockefellers last spring into the dencrete sidewalk fronting 'radio city = so New Yorkers could see what a tree looks like — are as bare as a roast turkey. • But they aren't ailing they are lust being, original, explained T. 1f. Van 'Den Hoek, Radio• City's' chief. horticulturist.. • •. ' • Putting Out EPctra Roots • "The elms ate.n't used' to getting- theira food from sdch cramped space, so, they are ,nutting out the extra roots, ' Meanwhile they are just suspending growt'• Above the ground, he said: "But the elms are healthy," 'Van Den Hoek added. "They '.ha.ve, grown six or eight inches since we put them in," the trees are about 85 feet high. , • ' • "They got their first meal the •other day,l he Said. "They, got it • • through a tube. Liquid •cow man- ure.' - e Never' mind what, has been. Re- inernber that every Morning begins a new day—a ' day for fresh 'en- deavor, a day that may and should • be filled with Trope a glardness., bdn't add to your blunders by condemning yourself too harshly for your'errors'and shortcoiningo. Better, flake •than ybiil have made • i1i s. Forgive your arid fieciyy as you woul another, hnd go „el eerily on, .leave itg the shadow's o regrat behind.. 5. Then: said,,..,• Woe is .me Ffor I am undone; because I am a man of unclean ,lips, and I dwell in the Midst Of a people of unclean lips; for mine eyes have seen the King, '. Jehovah of hosts. Isaiah is overwhelmed with the • e -sense fi-his--o••wn u;nworthiness.; 6-8.- Flew o.neof the seraphim unto me, having a live' coal ip liis hand., which he had taken. , the •tongs frons off the altar. And he touched my. mouth .with it, and said, ' Lo, this hath • touched thy lips; 'and thine iniquity is taken.' away, and .thy sin forgiven. And I '-heard'' the voice of the 'Lord, saying Whom shall I' send, and who will go for. us? • Then I said, Here am T; ,send me. ' - 9-10. And he.said, Go, and tell this people, Hear yeindeed,. but understand not; and see ye in- deed, but perceive not. Make theek heart of this people fat, and real their ears heavy, aid shut their ,eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ,ears, and.un- derstand with their' heart, and turn again, and be' healed. Thus Isaiah was •dire,cted to .he the pro- phet of his people,' the people of Israel with, unclean lips. low mournful does the commigsion, sound! It was the terrible' oppos- ite of that, seralihic mission which the prorliet had experienced him- self. • .11-12. Then said I, Lord, °how long? And he answered, Until cities be waste without inhabitant, and houses without man, and the land become utterly waste; and Jehovah have removed men far away, and .the forsaken place's be many in the midst of • the land. • Isaiah asks of the Lord how long will be before the children of Israel who will not receive his message will ,turn again to the Lord to, be 'healed: The ,Lord re- plied by giving• to. Isaiah insum- niary a history of the future of the Jewish people as a.whole. • 13. A•tid if •there be yet a tenth. in . it; it also shall in 'turn be eat= en , up : as a terebinth, end as an oak, whose stock . remaineth, 'b.() when they are felled; o the holy' seed is. the stock thereot..Thus Jehovali''says that Israel shall nev- et perish utterly, any more than the living seed perishes when bur- ied in the earth. To 'Judah and Jerusalem' a tenth part shall re- turn; not, of course, an exact lit- - eral tenth bit ,a tithe, expr'essiv'e of -.the claim that Jehovah. stlill. r_ makes on the nation and every sign of that return is prominent today. Israel, 'the holy seed still secures the 'perpetuity of a nation. lie t4 iiicapw , e,o 'a i y goo action who,finds hot 'a ,pleasure i#i contemplating the gaol action's of ' others,—I.avatei4: Cj The type of weaving. that we've in mind is more elementary and the equipment lised is home made. Nev- ertbeless, one Can turn out such lovely things as twotojle envelo.pe., hags, scarfs,, ho.diers, spider web' berets, lamp sbadee, .baby's afghans 'end so 'nia:ny useful and beauti- ful things -for personal wear and the home that it would be impos- 411 Best of all, these ,things. are all' woven: on "looms" made of a piece of cardboard, an' old hoop, a, paper plate, d simple frame, and other article.V" 'common to ` every •, house- hold. • . Asfor materials, your rag bog or .attic' will yield many old things that can . be used le weaving. The first High Cornmissioner appointed by '•Eire.. in 'Canada,' Mr:. 3-oiin Hearne, is pictured here with Mrs. Hearne. and their two: charming chil- dren, Maupice, • RIGHT, and Justin, aboard th'e . Duchess of Bedford as they arrived at Montreal en route to Ottawa where •Mr. Hearne has •taken- up ,hisnew duties. • Double Duty `I Art of Weaving Returns Teapot Eskimos os Tl iink White o• Peculiar Cannot Understand Air -Con. ditioning • of Viceregal Train ' Just • prior to 'the departure of the . viceregal train from Churchill, *Min., which carried Lord and Lacy Tweedsmuir' south after a• short visit.. to. this ,Outpost,•' he :train was given a close inspection by a, party of Eskimos: •,Of .particular interest, to them was the: work of the Can- adian National car • service . men filling the ice bunkers of the 'air- conditioni.ng equipment EskimosInspect Train • The party of Eskimos was ,taken. through the train and. ', they • emerged 'with' perspiration -pouring down their faces partly hidden, by' the ' heavy. parkas, they chattered to one another excitedly las' each piece• of ice :was safely stored away. •• • ' . • Curious. and Delighted y stood - arpund for ]lours, till the work wee completed and fin- ally went back to their 'boats. Dur- ing the long Tinter ,nights they'll ' tell their relatives and -friends of "'thee funny ways of • the white man' they saw with :the moving igloos. A 70=year old man, •Hodza f'a„ sho, has just celebrated .his ninth , . wedding at Sarajevo, Jago-Slavia. ' His bride is aged 25. •, Of Paslio's eight.lorm.er Wives, four died 4,14 .the remainder eloped with other ,Then. .1 Wrkir r�r Fergus nY a "Ye TL ANTIC CSW IIs, FLYING MACH I Irl E" ' .NEW .1/0.17 -KERS WERE THRILLED. BY 'i FI,IS' . :HEAGLLINE QL NIC>ST .,• CV, HG4NG7F2 E • .-EDr�Al2. ALU4N e:"•:�! Irl FFr> OF' FUNDS =� HELP HIS SiCK. WIFE, S'T'ORY OF "I'J• 1F ATLANTIC •CROSSJNG' C' MONCK•.'N1ASC'ON'S DIiZIGIBLE BALLON • A r. ce • SOLD 'iT T. INNOCENT •NEWSPAPERS AS AN ACTUAL•-- HAPPFLeeilNG;' •ecilrCG4 TRQPICS, • TRAVELERS ARE AB TO •FILL A COOL_ iN GLASS ' QUICKLY WITH COT_ ; ' • WATER, 'ay :CUTTING TH'E' STEN,‘_5' • F.THE nc>047fYTOC.2E.V.%, OT2. "VF'r;E` A ,LE • COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. At Last A New Device For the Tea Drinker There hasn't been a new develop- went in tea -making fo'i= several hun- dred years. Coffee 'rates a new,, de; vice at least once :a year.; bid the tea drinker. has been neglected' by the' gadget people. ,New some very bright soul has come along with a double-barreled teapot, and tea can • be poured :and diluted from the same container: • • it has two compartments, one for tea and one for water, with a spent for each. There is' an . 'identifying mark• on the :.handle for the side -which should contain tea, aii,d it is not . necessary• to turn the pot..”. around touse the other side. It can fust be swung back andfdrtb,until •the right • Spout is over the .cup; the lid won't come off, short of . a forty -five -degree ,angle.. „The pot would work equally well for coffee, -- ith-hot m-ilk—er-e-ven for, -coffee and . tea wheel both are bekng serv- ed. j r• Girl Sheep Shearer Goanpetes •London's' sheep go streamlined ' each 'year at the sheep 'shearing contest ,organized .by' the National Federation of Young Farmers' Clubs in Hyde Park. A girl • shearer was • among. the • 36 competitors this year' for the first timein the history of the contest., • She was Miss Evelyn Wood .of Kirbymoorside who; with her .brother foamed the team re- presenting the. North.• hiding of • Yorkshire:, Nearly .500 sheep, were shorn 'during the contes ,,18 ata time. .:Each competitor shears six sheep. Fine Air Force' Within Year • Canaria will have an air force second to none in' the world in efficiency' within th- year, says Air Marshal W. A. Bishop; V.C. ,"By next year we should ,have 23 squadrons equip' pad with the most modern• airplaness• obtain- able. • It will be equal of any in the world inefficiency and quality of personnel," It would be a "very fine nucleuse'for an adequate'defence force and "we will be in 'a' position to offer Great Britain ' substantial as- •sistance in case of war." ' • Weaving Lovely Things For Your Home Always searching • for new won= - ' en's` interests we discovered a' leis- - ' ure time 'activity that has been —,gaining-•popular-ity -weaving. Not,— to ' be :sure, Weaving such • as our great, great grandmothers used to do which required a large loom and muchtraining. at .the , ice and were completely puzzled. •The white man's., ways, 'were' beyond their understanding. To hea'ttlie, car .on the inside and pit ice into it in large quantities on .the outside was •just too )much,. The white .man sure, must be all mixed up.- --Wity••did he not -stop- heating the moving . igloos .or stop. putting 'ice' into them?.To do them. both did not make, sense in the Es- kimo's •way , •f reasoning. N D E W•�5• By. MADGE ARCHER CANADIAN SERIAL. IS TOPS. 'A story, .simply told, of the every- day problems faced by' hundreds of young •CaiiadiaYrs today, essential-. ly, .Canadian in locale and j charas, • ter, celebrated its 'first birthday . on the coast to coast network. of the' CBC last month.. 'Miss Trent's Chi1'dren" written by Joseph East- on •McDougall, a, young Canadian writer with a sympathetic 'under- • standing 'of the subject with with he is dealing, has now. entered • n its 'second year of broadcasting and is ,heard every` day Friday, ev- ening at eight o'clock over the .Ca- nadian network: •` "Miss Trent's Children"' is now recognizedas the -first and perhaps the only. Canadian- program to at- tain recognition oni$ioth the Dom- , inion and American network§ as , a dramatic serial as. 'typically 'Can-' , adlan as "One Man's Family" • ' is American. - .. • "Good -News of 1940" returns to the air on• September 7th, `and is to ,include a special' music series • by prominent song writers , ,.. Colum- bia's 'Star Theatre" returns to the network on September 13 at 9 p.m. The series is to include plays ,by such noted dramatists as Maxwell. Anderson, Elmer Rice, S. N. Behr- man, •Robert Sherwood -and Sidney •116ward . Edgar Bergen •anid' : Cliai•lie McCarthy will broadcast from Honolulu on 'Sunday, Septem- ber 3rd •.:. Mutual has booked this year's World Series. '- • TO BE.HEARD Farm Broadcasts; , CFRB 1:05. p.m.,'Monday'-to Fridays . CBL • • 1:30 :p.m., Monday to Saturdays. September ist 8:00 p.m. -=C13 . Miss Trent's Chit• dren. ' MONCK. MASON, one of , the pion, er balloonists, already had received considerable publicity with his balloons at . the time 'Poe. perpetrated 'Tris hoax, and, 'incredible/ as it seemed, every, body be- lieved the story. Poe had just arrived in New York, and was familiar with Masons experiments„i .England, and took this.means of meeting a desperate emergency.. • • NEW ENGLAND POET. HORIZONTAL „i. 1 Peet who ' G 1 ®C7' n®i�Cn7�7 y wrote 0® a®®ig[�®' NANCY 21 His popular: - "Evangeline.” ■ Indian poem.. 14'Arabian- m0k ®C6]im E .A TUR 22 Shaped lilte a military IN ®DHL R ND ' • keel. commander, U011111®®NG'1� 0©IAN . 23 One who digs • 15 Vegetable. NM.. WOW `LIN® O®Jch- 16Rental y GiitN®��®DI1 AL' '25 Hiditst' poemses. are contracts , 0'. MEI* .in ®MEIhil 'loved by . September 2nd, ' 17 Imperfect. 141g1140111o M : ®n ® 27 Reverend. ] 0:.30 p.m.—TBC CRY. Bright Idea 18 Short match�l�� ®© . �. ! amNFIC�MEZ 29 Blood money. .' Club. 20 Roof pbint. • �[�r� .:GiCIN® ., ®NA 8 3fl p m PBs—C> i�B Professor-- co -vexing UNILANKIEZEt�EIN MEMO Answer to Fr$vious Puzzle • 18 Promise. 19 orrrof "a." .. 31 House dog. • Quiz: • 21 Feminine i• • 33 -Liable. • • , • pronoun, September 3rd 22 Satisfaction. • 12;00'Noon NBC CBL Radfo .City 2q;. Muall, 26•IdaDryriti ' ' • 2:00 p.m.sic—CBHL Chamber Music. 27 Uncooked. 3:00 p.m.—CBS CFRB Columbia 28 Red Cross., ° Symphony. _ 30 Right hand. 4:00 p.m; CBS CFRB • So You 31 For each. ' Think You Know 'Music.32 Period. 6:00 p.m.—CBS CFRB Gay Nine -37. prickly 34 rieki'beetle. ties. per. 6:30 p.m.—CBL The' World To -„.„.143109 Workof , • day.,;•.genius.• 8:00 p.m.—NBC CBL Chase and, Negative. • Sanborn Hour. dTo scatter hay 10:30. p.m.=CBS Kalten.bprn Com- • I' IIS Transpose. - 43 To chatter ' i' 44 Laughter i . sound. 46Senior.. , 47. Cabins. '49 To: yield 51 Common; shad. '53' 3 Elying. t mammal • 55 Cleaved , . 57 To sup. 58 Wattle tree. 60 Ever. 61 He finished his education: In —.. 62 He was a .'professor of VERTICAL '35 To do Wrong. 1 Pronoun. 36 Tennis strokes 2 To set in Waic:38,Copper. 3 Parsimonious. 43 Relish. 4 Scarlet. 45 Goodby. 5 Year. 47 Grayish white • , 6 To unclose. close. ..48; Fertilizer. 7 Bed • for eggs.•50 Rubiaceous 8 Fence door.' • shrub.” • 9 Ell. . "• • .52 'Rumanian 10 Sheltered ' coin. place: 53 Exclamation. ' 1I Drinks • .. 54 Aromatic dog -fashion. ' • beverage, '12 Basketry twig. 56 Unit of energy 13 Plural ' 58 Common. verb, 'pronoun, 59 Haff a ments. ' • s. . nem:. • September 4th • • 8:30• p.m.—NBC CBL Voice of Firestone. • ' 9:00 p.m.—NBC CBL Magic Key • '9:30 p.m.—C•BS OFRB Guy Lom- bardo. . 10:e0 p.m.—CBS CFRR So. -This is • Radio.. • ' 10:30 p.m.—NBC CBL Pageant of Melody. . • 8:30 p11.2-•Nl3C• C1IL' Information Please. I 10:00 • p.m.—CBL; Geoffrey . Wad- • dington Conducts.. • • 'September 6th 9:30 p.in.—C•BL' ,Percy Faith's Music. 10(00 .p.in,—NBC Kay Kayser's College. •• • •September 7th 8:30 p.m;—CBL Serenade For . Strings. 9:00 p.m. -CBL Toronto Prom. 10:00 p.m.—NBC CBL Kraft Music • Hall. - • ,r 5' 7 17' 21 22 ' , 23 24 • ®25 26 32. 111133 UN! ���. it -III 11111 , , 1, ® : i P • :.: ‘i . 37 38 • al ill ill ' ill 46 47 .11 49 iiii�� ill 4' b5 : .• Illill. �IC'�1Ch POP—One Way to Keep Domestics Happy I DON'T • KNOW H0W YOU MANAGE TO KEEP THAT MAID so LONG: 4' • !. WE SHIFT THE .FURNIT&)RE. SO OFTEN SHE THINKS' S'I-1E°S IN A Nt W PLAC EVEFY WEEK!. ' By J. MILLAR WATT ry • i' •