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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1940-08-01, Page 3
nation 1t- •the trend continued. All 'other Canadian industries have a • 3root fin ;Wien/4W% he sad. . ° • "The prices the farmer pays tar hie neceseittee and tools have very steadily risen, whereas the priceff, • he gets for his products have alearII ; . . Canada's Bacon • Surplus Smaller, • b,600,000 Pounds' Are Being Shipped Weekly. to. United Kingdom ' Huge stock% of pork' in storage In Canada are novir'being 'marketed.. iso satisfaotprily that the ' Baoon- Boarrl -expects the abnormal •sur- plua to be cleared out before fall. 'This. means there Should pe no rlitfdcelty in maintaining the pies-. ent price of around 8% .cents to 'fanners. , The Bacon Board is shipping 5,- 600,000 ,600,00.0 pounds weekly to ri- tain, but .there is no 1 ihood f thio amount being i creased f r some :time. It cohstit ter . twq, oun - es per Capita, more, than iialf the $ritieh bacon ration. • TWICE •AS MUCH IN ST.ORAGE'. To . maintain •' quality in the Mace ttf irregular shipmen.tS,caused by: wartime stipping..troubles; ali,Can- adieu bacon is Crow being berm ed.., But the borax is. being 'dusted on careftfily; . and difficulties 6t the last .war are not being repeated. . Compared with last year, there its twice as much pork in'storage in, Canada, but since 22,567,000 pounds Of this are held by the'Bacon Board for British export surplus . stooks affecting the domestic market are only approximately 12,000,000 lbs.. The board does not regard this fig= . ure'as''excessive. About 60 per cent. of bacon .be- .. tug .pickled for export, is now being, drawn from. storage, and if this rate continues stocks will be cleared Jut • by the endo August. CLEAItEL) OiJT BY 'AUGUST? Remarketing. of •hog's continues' at the present low rate,' stocks may be cleared out earlier. . During July" and August more pork products are eaten in Canada than at any other:period, whileat the same time farmers have the smallest number 'of liogs. to market. • If' stocks are cleared oet in Aug- ust, •the •Bacon Board Will be in good shape to handle the rush' of marketing that starts in the fall. Aids Empire Air Plans • • J. I':, Bickel], Canadian mining executive, who once .flew to the far north in his private plane with P remier Ftepburn, is now. in Eng- land where he is associated with 'Lord Beaverbrook in the war - tine speedup of airplane produc- tion. Y -SC:, .LESSON This:.Wa'r News To Lost Colony LESSON V THE TWO WAYS — Psalm 1; Matthew 7:2427 • Golden Text: "For Jehovah: know- eft" noweth the way of the righteous; but. the way of the wicked shall. per- ish:' Ps. 1:6. ' THE LF]SSON IN ITS SETTING Time — While we do .not know when the 'First ?saint was, written, the words quoted from Matthew" wore spoken in'tbe earin;g •of• A.D. 27. . ' Place = No one is able to . igen' ', -tify the place in which the First Psalm- was written; neither are we quite sure' where .the mountain was located 'on which Christ delivered this great Sermon, though int. is gen- • erelly understood to `be. in. Judaea,,' iii this lesson we perceive:. life is never,a faiitire unless there is a cause for that failure, whether it he . in one's own conduct and character, Or in outside circumstances: God does not, want:men to fail in life, to came to disaster; and the verses which we study in this :lesson are divine instructions fromour heav- enly Father telling us how to live: so that life: maybe all that wewant, it, to be, and all that' God desires it ,to be • A GODLY MAN Ps. ' 1:1: Blessed is the man. 'Ry the term "blessedness" we tinder - stand :the.highest good for manse- garded , as a gift from God, .or as.' • enjoyed in some divine4relation- ship. Throughout the Bible this is . Centred in the idea of. life. From•the • great spiritual passages in the ,Old Testament we •conclude. that God's desire ie for every man to be truly. blessed, - to be satisfied with life;. • and that dad continually instructs man .how , this blessed life 'may be • '.obtained:In this' psalm the negative aspects of such a life of blessedness precede the positilve. That walketh not in the counsel of the wicked;, nor standeth in the way of"sinners, • nor Bitteth ing the seat••of ,scoffers. 2. Bat his delight 'is in the law of. Je• hovah; and on his law doth he med- itate day and night. The secret. of deliverance from a life of Ricked- ness is to be fully occupied with the things of righteousness.' How• Of the• ' can one knowhat'the way Lord is? By studying the word of • God; meditating .upon it, testing one's life by it: ` HE SHALL PROSPER • 3.. And he shall be like a tree'th'at is planted by the streams of water, that .bringeth forth its frust in its season, whose leaf also doth not • wither; •.and'whatsoever he doeth it shall prosper. The life of. the •godly man' is Maintained by the supplies of grace drawn'from constant cone.' • munion. with •God through his rev- elation. The law of the Lord is at once soil and ' stream. In the one aspect fastening a; life to it gives stahiiity; in the other; freshening and' means of growth. The psalm anticipates Christ's teaching of the good tree bringing ,forth good fruit, ,and also tells how his precept of, making the tree good is to be obey- , ed namely, by transplanting it from- the soil,of self.will to that of delight in the law., The last clatise of verse 3 must not be taken as a promise of .wealth: for every •one : who lives according. to the word of God, but a promise of success in • whatever such a man uhdertakes. The mark of God is a sane man, a . strong man, a,man whom men will . .honor and trust and reward in the things of this life. AN UNGODLY MAN 4. Thewicked are not so, but are like the chaff which the wind driv- eth away. Compare Ps. 35:5, Job. 21:18, isa., 17:13; Hos. 13:3), The scattering of` •chaff by the wind is a''common figure in the Old Testa- ment for the sudden destruction of the wicked: Here it 'describes their characteras well as their fate. 5, Therefore the wicked shall not 'stand in the judgment (the wicked r shall not be able to keep his feet in a time of judgement).' Nor sinners in the cdngregation of the right- eous. " • TWO ALTERNATIVES .6. For Jehovah knoweth the way of the righteous; But the way of the wicked shall 'perish.. Here is, as it were, a• summary of all that has gone before, emphasizing God's infinite • providence and omnipot ettee. Matthew. 7;24. Every one there- fore that heareth these words of mine, and doeth them, shall be lik- ened unto a wise man,• who built his house upon the rock. 25. And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat 'upon that house; • and it fell rate for it was founded upon the rock. - • 26. And. every one that heareth these words. of mine, and donth them 'not shall, be likened unto a foolish man, who• built his houses• upon the sand: 27. And the rain descended, and the fleeds carne, and. the winds blew, and smote upon that house; and it fell; and great was the fall thereof; ° Throughout the Scriptures there • are continuallyy recognized only two major classes of men, the righteous #•kms-� -._ ' ieTEf Jungle Settlement in • Peru Has Just Heard About End ✓, � of 1914-18 War A .white colony found after more thanquarter-century .in the -jungle -fastness of Peru wants to' stay there but would like' to keep in touccr with the rest riff the world now With that "new- fangled thing",called radio. • Two Peruvian army fliers, ac- , companying a Swedish -American expedition exploring to Colorado River, found the group. The fliers said the settlement, made up en- tirely of Peruvians, is at the mouth of the Pinquen River, a tributary of the Colorado. WANT A RADIO The inhabitants, offspring of : families of rubber collectors who remained on the Pin4uen after the crash of the rubber industry, welcomed the fliers. jubilantly. They plied the two pilots with an endless streame of questions con- cerning events during the last 25 years.. The First, Great War ,peace andthe new war were news to them. Despite theirprimitive life, members of the colony'.still have the habits of cigilized •peo- pies. Two Eastern .Emperors Exchange Handclasps 4,%i %/ ::'s"�/yy 4�y Emperor Hirohito, of Japan, LEFT, and Emperor Kangte of Man- choukuo exchange imperial handclasps as they'xneet at the Tokyo rail- road station on the. arrival of Emperor Kangte to celebrate the 2,600th anniversary of the founding of the Japanese empire: Kangte is. 'the puppet 'emperor set-up by the Japanese after the conquest of what once 1 was Manchuria: ' forth in a parable of the tree, our Lord here °sets forth, °even , more vividly, in a parable of building houses.' Every man builds. But not- ice the difference. It is not in the men who build:, or in the materials ; • with which they build; but in, .the foundation upon which they build. The foundation,.is everything. Hear .. then, the imperial• , claim of Christ. He says: Take these s•eyipgs •.of: mine, and build on them;; and no no storm can destroy your building. • (Tourist Mails Letter Firemen Get Alarm Through the courtesy of the Sault Ste. Marie ,(Mich.) Fire De- partment, friends back home .will know"' that one tourist: is "having a wonderful tihee." The tourists after funehling with the handles on' a funny, red mailbox, finally tor, ofthe fire alarm cox w'nen responded to a false :,alarm; at the beginning' of the Psalter sea Africa 'Yields Teeth Of. `Neanderthal Man Harvard scientists point. .to three cave man' teeth, rei;ently i discovered, as i the first tan gtble evidence of the existence •of. the Neanderthal man ' on, the North American continent. The teeth; believed. about 50.;000 years old, have been added to •the exhibits of Ilarvard's Peabody Museum after ' being dug up by Carleton Coon, anthropologist, on • • the Atlahtic coats of Tangier in Morocco. • 22$' Construction Contracts Awarded - By G. C. TONER, (NO. 1) ' Talk of the Conservation :or our natural resources has become lash-' ionable of late years. Few people,' however, seem to understand the true meaning of such conservation. Many think it means that we should keep -our wild life, our forests, our • . fishes, undisturbed and unutilized, ',with the ,natural 'increase locked away •from the people. Others be- ' lieve. that 'some 'portion of • these resources should' he .harvested• but fall to, take. account ,of the compn- • cations that arise when nature be- - comes unlia°lanced. A'feW: look for;,. ward,~believing our resources can . yield much if •harvestedproperly. under scientific management, Conservation of naturul resources'', •mean:s the, wise use •of everything that grows or lives upon''the land, It means the ni,aintenance of our soil and water. It means that our The • Department of'. Munitions and Supply and its predecessor. p.urefiasing bodies up to July 10, placed construction contracts• for 225 projetlts in the D.minion in- volving 'a ,total expenditure . of more than $26,00.0,000. Contracts include the construc- tion "ta tiom of naval, milt , ry, air force, , and 'air -training plan "t uil'dings, together with defense projects and the:' erection of;,plants' for the production of war materials. TiHR'ADiO R:.,RTER By DAVE ROBBINSEP0�. VIEWPOINTS Canada's director of public in- formation has launched a new ser- ies of interesting broadcasts which will be heard each Sunday evening at ten, Those who heard the first two speakers, Dorothy. Thompson. • top -.ranking ' woman columnist on this continent, and Fred Birchall; Member cif th'e Parliamentary press gallery for the New York Times at Ottawa, will appreciate what the Government is trying to being to the •Canadian public, in offering expert • . viewpoints 'on. the world straggle to . preserve freedom and justice 'for everyone• - This' series, entitled "Let's Face The Facts", is a radio feature that 1 every Canadian should make it a point to hear. You can .enjtS'y these talks by tuning . in .CBL, CKOP, CBC. CFRB, CKLW, CKSO or CJIC, for one of these stations reaches, every part of Ontario. ' NOTES AND NEWiS ' When anyone's program has been on the air three thousand ; s, it's a sure sign the people aY '.t like R., On August' 3rd, the R ° G. W. Tables, alias, Old Man Sunshine, will broadcast.his three thousandth program from CKOC, in Hamilton,. few' organists on the air :lanes have the personality reflected in their'offerings that is heard from the organ at Cli'RB when Ruby ltainsay Rouse .is at the console. Ruby lately has been featuring a swell tune, Lenore, which is .an= other hit from the prolific writings of T. Reginald Sloan, that Hamiltcin barrister, who, in his spare time, has given ,'the music world such hits as "411 Pais Together," `.Roll IJp Your Old Umbrella". and ,'.`God Bless the Shores of England,' Miss , Rouse's 'playing and Reg. Sloan's compositions make real listening. By the Way, things are happening to the Bum,stead family, the comic strip folks heard from the Columbia network every Monday evening at . 7:30,' It • seems• a -visiting celebrity comes• to town — and with the en- tire community .Tieing to entertain him, Dagwood :brings home a stran- ger —• with electric .results. This is, •one of the funniest serials on the ..air larges. If you like drama, there's a good play heard from the NBC -Red net- work,,Wednesday nights at 9:30 .. When "Mr. District ,Att,orney" is of- fered. Jay Jostyn, Vicki Viola and Len Doyle, play the,trincl'pal parts in this excellent bit of drama. natural products must be utilised in such a xray that an amplesur- plusis left for seed or breeding stock. It means that the b,arvesting must' not • spoil the environment. These would seem to be common-. sense rules, easily. applied. Actual- ' ly, they are .disregarded and the result •js depletion.' • THE NEW VIEWPOINT The changes that have taken place in the lumbering' industry il- lustrate the, new viewpoint: ..The old method was to go into the woods.and make a clear sweep, take ing ,everything merchantable and, leaving: the debris lying where it'. fell. Far too often this debris has caught fire and when, this happen- ed, it took several .years for even berry berry. bu`sh'es to cover the scar., In same cases it required generations' before desirable timber covered the co.untryside again. Often this tire destroyed the humus' of the soil and rains ;soon washed away the fertile upper layers, The bed rock is near the surface, over much • of Ontario, where fire, left a barren - deeert•without 'sell. . • • The:modern way of luniberingis: largely 'selective. Only the desirable mature' trees arecut, •the remainder • carefully protected so that 'another :crop'will Come on quickly. The dieb- ris is handled in such .a way that -there is 'no great fire menace of tinder -dry ,brush • in drought ,per- iods- The wild creatures are not un- duly disturbed and the' soil is left intact. Enough youngtrees are•left to hold the snow and the ;rain so that. the underground water table is net lowered. All the work is plan- ned to keep the forests on a Sus- tained yield, managed'as a crop ra- • t'her than like a mine. ' ° • PLANNING AHEAD • Conservation means planning ahead for ' sustained yields of,' all .natural resources.: This planning must include every> animal and .ev- • ery plant for they interact upon one another in many ways. An • import- ant part of any effort is sciej tific research because it is only through. the applications of biological prin- ciples that we will be able to con- serve 'some of our .resourcees now sadly depleted: Trees are turned into lumber with very little disturb- ance of the'ebvironm:ent by the mo- dern forester. Our fishes, fur -bear- ers and game must be 'managed in. •a similar way. WEEKLY SPOTLIGHT . Monday.— *Music You Want from ' CKOC at :3:30 .'; . Toronto Sym- phony. Band via CBL at 8:30 .- . 'Guy Loiubardo's orchestra from the Columbia,chain at ten ... Wednes- • day — Stranger. than Fiction on 'CKOC at• 6:30... Sheep anis Goats Club from Chicago via Mutual net- ' work. at 8:00. . They Shall Not Pass, on the CBC chain at ten .. Friday -- Happy Valley folks:at 12:45 p.m. from CKOC .. - Johnny 'presents. a drama, from the Colum- bia stations at nine ... Don.Ameche ' troupe at ten on the'NBC-Red net-. work ... Saturday Novelties in Music from OBL at 7:00 ... Hawaii Calls on the Mntnal chant at `i:15 . ., Grant P k concert from Chi- cago, on theBC`--blue network at 9:30. Farm Notes : . • ly fallen,'" 041d Dir. lfl, eiiw ingg the farmers Wguid have to or - Wive to protect they' inter seal just • as nzanufactu&'ere do, • Seventy delegates attended ter meeting and 36 county organ1*r - .tions were represented. Farmers Should 'Save, Themselves • •Onlythe farmers themselves can save Canadian agriculture as an in- dustry, speakers declared at a re- cent meeting of all York. County farm organizations in Newmarket as a•Yotk County branch of the Ca- nadian Federation of Agriculture was formed, "If We leave everything to gov- ernment boards we will be burden ,ed' with a bureaucreey we• don't want,", said H. H. Hannam,' secre- tary of the United' I;armers of Ont- ario: He said the''Federation now has ae).000 members across • the 'country. • • Mr. Hannam cited figures to•show that average: farm income had fal- len from J1,000 in 1926 to $400 in 1939 and predicted dij aster to the pOp—Cheered on the Way Out YOU'LL BE ALL RIGHT • IN Tel LONG •RUN, OLO • Ci -LAP 1 t �: r By "'Lam - . Vies CUR1OUS WORLD E,® Ferguson 1 ewe:,,/I AN CPU -- 7,,LEMQ S To Ti2AayF_L OVER -THE EARTH iN Ti -IE SASE /MANNER THAT A STONE,. 1:;42CDPPEO 1NTo CAUSES WAVES • `Ltd. TRAyEl.- OVER.. THE, SLJRJ= A BLACK.BEAR, AT •LAKE 1 DDGE, ROCKY MT' NATIONAL. PAR.K.e .M D m 1 IGS { • AS ANY AS •7fs'i2EE. OOZE ►- B J TLE OF PaSe INA SINGLE • DAY rumroeseej 'STARCH,. AND CREAM,, USED IIS MAKING iCE CREAM1- ARE :HEAT PRODUCING • 'FUEL: FOODS. I-1 ; COPR: 1930 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. EARTH -WAVES, set. up by. an earthquake, are of three types; two•of which travel through the.earth, while the third travels along the surface. Scientists know the speed with which these waves travel. and are able to determine the location of. the quake • . L. NEXT: Why,* birds ruffle their coats in Winter?. i SCHOLARLY ..JURIST HORIZONTAL 1,7 Judge -- of the U. S. A. Supreme • Court. 12 Dutch coin. 13 Constellation. 15 Remunerated. 16 Ever, •green tree. 17 Enemy of the • gods. 19 Snare. 21 Eggs of fishes. 22 -Radio wire. 43 South 24 Since. • America. Answer to Prepvious, Puzzle' ' 16. He -Was botk . §chool teachep and law 17 Some. . ' 18 Indefinite article. .20 He also • worked in. :got,ernrineflt- C'ROCOD I LE WATER OAS I ,S COLLEGE■U I�EA R R IST PER 15 SE V BARE■ A,NS BAL KEL PS MESS (MANY PAC R I' OTS MAKE KIP • ONLOOKER NEE T H HEWE E CROCODILL• ' .00 FUN RES 1 ME L ER L E S RI P'I R • • HATCHED A s ' 25 Mystic • • 45 Toe: ,rd. . syllabic. 26 Like ale..48 e. killed. •37 Contj�alty. 51 eueterotee 29 Electrical • ou.tcry. term.. • • 53 Honorable. . 55 Spinning toys. • 22 Divorcee's allowance. 23 Sour like vinegar. 26 Collection oe facts. Supreme , `28 Native metal. Court. 30 To simulate. 32 Being. ERTI'CAIi. 34 Negative 2 Cast of a word. language. 3'5 Primped. 3 Unfrequented.: 37 TO dine.' 4 Falsehood. 42 Rout+ing toot. 5 Neuter 44 Suitable. pronoun.. 46 Beast's home. 6 Spar. 47 Fabulous birdh 7 To mend: 48 Singer's voices' B Above. 4g To opine. 9 Gun. 50 Precept. 10 Italian 52 Indian. currencj unit. 54, Coal box. 1�1 Axiom. —d56 Butter lump_' 14 To suffer 58'Musicel note. 59 Tone B. 46's tm- �• : 30 Cuckoo. 31 Before. ' 5 7'Palm. Til 33 To form into a 68 Recount camp. ' 60 Egyptian •36'Dogrne. deity. 38 Drunkard. , ' 61 He ---.hie . • 39 Either.' • way through ' ' school. 62 Re was • • recently• to'the remorse. 40 Capuchin monkey. 41 Street. 42 Unit. AMINE al ■IM. 11111111111111i1 SIM AMM ©a11a0■®28 : ■® gm 26 Milli nom ill MIMI II 11©■��® WHO II HIM 4=:: 2111112111111E111Ulla 611111E 1111 " Mil ■ ©E killIII_..._.. A®®111.__.. ._1111111111N1 III 1111111111 X11®111® ®® II 59 64 all ° ■■�I®® ■_ 1111 11®111 62 11111111. 19 • WINN Jia 11 1111111111 9 9 IF You - DOM' r ou-DOMJ'r N'tRRY BACK By J. MILLAR WATT f 1J j