.- IOUS ADRIAN 5 «sy ro oa sia i dai i dil 3 i am gta bs TL dl data a BE A gv te 5 rg fF EAN pret TES bash i Shoal iniind hi re rt oa TT Ontario Facing Teacher Shortage Within "Next Few Years There Will Be A Big Drop In Number Teaching Publie * 8chool--Subjects Reduced as Attraction 4 With a definite prospect of a shortage of public school teaeh- ers in this Province during the next few years, a reduction in the number of subjects required for entrance into normal schools was announced early. in September by Hon. Dr. Duncan McArthur, Min- ister of Education. In order to attract.young men and women to the teaching pro- fession in sufficiently large num- bers to man the schools, it is pro- posed to consider for admission to the course leading to first. class certificates, candidates who have completed eight of the nine upper school papers hitherto re- quired. A survey by the Department of Education indicates that many of -those who in normal times would have entered the teaching profes- sion, are enlisting or securing positions in shops and offices in' connection with war work, This is most noticeable in the Ottawa area, according to the in- formation received by the Min- ister. "In this district," he said, "the rapidly increasing demand for 'young people to provide staffs for the various new hLu- reaux and services being created by the Federal Government is be- ing reflected in a substantial re- 'duction in the number of appl cations for admission to the Ot- tawa Normal School." A number of men "teachers have joined the colors, and, al- though they may have been given leave of absence for the duration of the war, their places must be filled in the meantime. i Elegant Simplicity i i Myrna Loy wears this distinguished evening gown desigyfed by Dolly Yree. This gown depends for {ts - style importance on' the beautiful draping of the material with its long folds of the white crepe fall. ing from the shoulders to the floor. Bolid gold bead embroidery forms the shoulders and tiny up-standing: collar of the gown. Find White Tribe In Peru's Jungle Colony Had 'Been There 25 - Years Without Knowledge of The Outside Worlg -- Don't Want to Leave There A white colony found after more' than a quarter-century in the jungle fastness of Peru wants to stay there bit woitld like to keep in touch with the rest of the world now' with 'that "héw-fangled thing" call- ed radio; h Two, Peruvian: army flyers, ac. companying a Swedish-American expedition exploring the Colorado River, found the group, The flyers' sald the settlement, made up entire- ly ot Peruvians, is at the mouth of the Pinquen River, a tributary - ot the Colorado. The {nhabitants, offspring of rabber collectors who remained on the Pinquen after the crash of the rubber industry, welcomed the fly. ers jubllantly. They plled the two pilots with an endless stream of questions concerning events during the last 25 years, The First Great War peace and the new war were ' nows ba Pham, SU SC LESSON LESSON XIIt THE USE 'AND ABUSE OF WEALTH.--Proverbs 11; Luke 16: 1-13, PRINTED TEXT, Prov. 11: 24-31} Luke 16: 11.13, GOLDEN TEXT--Lay up for your selves treasures In heaven, : Matt, 6: 20, THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.--Solomon flourished about 1000 B.C.; the message of our Lord taken from Luke was given in Jan.- uary, A.D. 30. Place.--There aro no geographic al localities mentioned in the chap- ter taken from the book of Prov- orbs; the parable spoken by Jesus was uttered in Peraea, There are many things that need not trouble us in life, many temp- tations that do not touch us, yet nO man Or woman can escape con- sidering the subject of how to make money honorably or what to _do with money when it is made, for money we must have, no mat. ter how economically we choose to live, Our lesson today has to do with what the Bible teaches con- cerning the use-of- thts fmportant medium of exchange and power for purchasing what we need, Effect Upon Character What we do with money has a tremendous influence upon our character aud also upon the char- actor of others. Money has in it the power either to sanctify or to pollute human life. Men are bur- dened by money, are separated from simplicity and polluted in the integrity of their moral judgments. We are here considering In our ex- position of the eleventh chapter of Proverbs only those passages which relate directly to the fundamental problem of our lesson. . Rewards of Liberality Proverbs 11: ' 24. There is that scatteroth, and Increaseth yet more; And there is that withholdoth more than is meet, but jt tendeth only to want. 25. The liberal "soul shall be -made fat; And he that watereth shall be watered also himself. He is the richest man jin the es- teem of the world who has acquir- ed most; he is richest in the es- teem of heavén who has glven most. Ho who gives his five barley loaves and two small fishes Into the hands of Jesus sees the people fed and gets twelve baskels over. Set no limit to your gifts of money, time, energy; in 'the act ot giving _ the whole that you have expended will return to you, and more also, 26. He that withholdeth grain, the people shall curse him; but bless- fng shall be upon the head of him that selleth it. In the early stages of commerce there seems no way of making money rapidly so suro as that of buying up corn in time of death, waiting until the dearth' presses heavily, and then selilng at famine prices. That sort of thing 1s: going on all over the world to- day. : Foolish Trust In Riches 27. He that diligently seoketh good seeketh favor; . But ho that gearcheth after evil, it shall como TZ CT o> unto him. 28. He that trusteih In ~ his-riches shall fall; But the right- eous shall flourish as the green leaf. 29. He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind; And the foollsh shall be servant to the wlse of heart. 30, The fruit of the righteous Is a tree of life; And he that Is wise winneth souls. 31. Be- hold, the righteous shall be recom- pensed In the earth; How much more tho wicked and the sinner! Compare Ps, 49: 6, 7 and Prov. 10: 22. The man who trusts In his riches Is a man who expects that his_ riches will give him all that ~ he needs, not only of the material things of life, but peace, and joy in his own heart, loved ones, friends, a great reputation. Such a man is bound to be disappointed, because wealth in itself will not at all bring these things; neither is it able to make these things permanently ablde in a man's life, Stewardship Luke 16: 11, It therefore ye have not been faithful in the unright- 'eous mammon, who will commit it to your trust the true riches?. 12. And if ye have not been faithful in that which 'Is another's, who will give you that which fs your dwn? "Mammon" {8 a Syrian word for money, The money which men have here fs another's, even God's, In comparfsott with the abiding treas- ures of eternal things, which are the trie riches, it 1s témporal and transient; and a_time is coming when" it shall fall: but 'if'the man 'who has been {ntrustéd with it has 'been uiifafthful,' and has approp- fated to himself what really be- longed to God, how can it be ex- ted that God will give 'him en. . uring spiritual wealth and hap: piness, which. shall be his very own, inalienable possessions? One Master To Serve 18. No servant can serve two masters: for either he will have - the 'one, and love the other; or else hd will hold td" one, and de- spiso the other, Ye cannot sorve (lod and Matifion, Manion here Is pereonified as a deity, devotion to whom {s shown In "covetousness" oy Jack Tar and Gob Fraternize 7 The spirit of friendship and good-will that has characterized the relations belween the British Empire and the United States here is dramatically typified by the American sallor, one of many who brought some over-age destroyers to Eastern Canadian ports, and the Royal Naval rating who has come from his own country to help man the ships during their voyage to the United Kingdom, They are shown above on the stern of a U.S. destroyer, which fs idolatry, This is an un- compromising statement. In actual lite we find that millions of so- called Christians are seeking to fol- low this out, but are holding on to the things of the world at the same time, belloving that they are serving God. When a Christian is serving God with the whole heart and mind, ho cannot love mammon; and when he is seeking the things oft the world, putting money first, he is not serving God at all. 'Miniature Pistol Fires Bullets Guelph, Ont., police had a dif- ficult job tossed at them when Edgar H. Croft, antique dealer, brought his revolver in to be reg- - istered. The nickel-plated weap- on measures about one inch and a half from end of butt to end of barrel, being approximately one-half inch in length. An odd thing about it is that it actually fires bullets--bullets less than one-eighth inch in length. According to Mr. Croft, the pellets will lodge in a thin board at six yards. Among the 6521 refugees in Hernsey, London, are represen- talives of Belgium, France, Czechoslovakia, Holland, Poland, Malta, Rumania, and Hungary. Late Apples Late apples on forgotten trees Are flavored with a strange de- light; Sweeter than grapes of Celebes Late apples on forgotten trees Bring visions of Hesperides-- Dreams half-remembered after night Late apples on forgotten trees Are flavored with a strange de- light. --Lucille Evans in Science Monitor. Christian Low Ceilings Are In Vogue Today The prospective home owner is advised to consider ceiling height of the rooms, especially as it af- fects general ¢anstruction costs. One of the chief features of homes erected in the late ninetigs and early 1900's was the hig! lofty ceiling, This was believed "an aid in keeping the room cool. Architects today lean toward lower ceilings, having established the fact that any space greater than 12 inches above a window head is of no cooling value unless ventilated. By DAVE ROBBINS | RADIO REPORTER I AROUND THE DIAL The biggest star of the radio world {8 due back again this Frl- day evening -- Kate Smith, and It will be a glad "hello everybody," for the listeners sure like the big girl with the personable voice. Then too, Willle Howard, ace com- odian will be In Kate's show this season -- so altogether it should be a surefire Friday night feature. Everybody's happy with the word that Mart Kenny and his Western gentlemen, those master music makers from Vancouver, will. be heard on a CBC network program in the East during the coming cold spell. Orson Welles, screwball genius of the entertainment world, held dozens of auditions for the role of the Shadow -- thinking to get a newer and still more fearsome voice. Then' the bearded badman suddenly threw them all out, and decided 'to retain Bill Johnstone again to scare the grown-ups and bring cheers from the kiddies. WMCA in New York has a great {dea. They are presenting a series of programs entitled "Trojan Hors- es" designed specifically to reveal tho activities of fifth columnists in the United States. The exposes are conducted by Albert Brandt, noted anti-Nazi writer and authority eon subersive infiltration, There will be no faffe whiskers In these pleces -- and real names, places and Incidents will be used For which hurray for the stout: hearted buckos, who believe In the things they had handed down to them. ' And a funny one from Fairbanks, - Alaska. KFAR in that far northerit town presented a new program of a transcribed night club show com- plete with band, entertainers and sound effects. So impressed wore several folks that they hailed a cab, and heeding the announcer's advice, asked to be driven td, the Arctic Supper Club. Now that }ab- ble "Is looking for+the KFAR} an. nouncer with a- nice slarp toma- hawk! TRIVIA: Contrary to other ru- mors, Toscaninl will be on NBC this fall , . . Don Willson of the Benny show will also announce "Good News" this season. ,, Mary 'Livingston (Mrs. Jack Benny) is expecting . , . Buddy Rogers sez he's all through as an orchy leader, and will work as motlon picture producer . .-. Songstress Ginny Simms of Kyser's crew -has been offered a motion picture contract . . » Fletcher Henderson has joined Count Basie's orchy as an-arranger. _ value. Dominion Gains In Intellectuals They're Moving Here From Abroad ~-- Distinguished Thinkers and Authors May Improve Quality of Canadlan Literature * ' Speaking before the Canadain Authors' Association at Saint Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, re- cently, Jean Charles Harvey, editor of Le Jour, of Montreal, pointed out that the Dominion stood to gain from a literary point of view by welcoming dis. tinguished thinkers and authors who are compelled to flee from Europe, "The geniuses of an old positor, "The geniuses of an old world," he declared, "by migrat- ing to our borders may become so fond of our country, our free- dom, that they may be the ex- pression of our national life. By giving those with eyes to sce and minds to understand the chance * to benefit by the glories of Can- adian nature, Canadian litera- ture, would be stimulated into growth and Canada would pro- duce great writers, painters and musicians." . There is much to be said for Mr. Harvey's point of view. The United States has gained tre- mendously by the number of dis- tinguished scientists, - philoso- phers, writers and university professors in . various depart- ments of knowledge who have found a domicile in that country. Canada can make no mistake in opening its doors to scholarly men who, because of their inde- pendence of thought, find ne place for their talents in Nazi- dominated countries. There will be a'"considerable exodus of this type of men from Austria, Cze- cho-Slovakia, Poland, France, and other occupied countries. Since the last war Canada has made very substantial progress in the development of its literature, and every addition should be welcomed. : Farm Notes . . . Fall Fertilization: Improves Pasture There is no more important crop in Canada than pasture, and in the light of the production of nutritious feed during the past summer months, now is the time to make plans to increase its If the pasture has not given the results expected, asks Paul Gervais, Dominion Experi- mental Station, - Lennoxville, P.Q., what is the reason? Is it a question of drainage, acidity, or fertility that is at fault? In the last case, commercial fertilizers if used with judgment, will help correct the situation. Tests have disclosed that it is better to spread fertilizer in carly September, rather than in the spring. There are, however, two exceptions to this rule: one when the ground is-too steep and second when the fertilizer con- tains nitregen. In the latter case, "the phosphorous and potash may be applied in the fall and the nit- rogen in the following spring. When a pasture is fertilized for the first time, it is well to use the highest amount mentioned. Tha applications of fertilizer should be repeated every three, four or five years, depending on the fertility of the soil and the needs of the plants. These re- commendations are general and may be modified according to the circumstances. Pastures deteri- orate not only by poor manage- ment but also fer lack of fer- tilizing clements. 'Eat Less Meat' Theory Is Wrong Experiments Reported To American Chemical Society Show Lean Meat at Meals in Hot Weather Doesn't Produce | Too Much Heat The old advice to eat less meat to keep cool In hot weather was shown to be exactly wrong in ex- periments reported to the Ameri can Chemical Soclety meeting re- cently in Detroit, The right way, sald Dr. BE. B. Forbes, director of the Institute of Animal Nutrition at Pennsylvania State College, ls to eat lean meat and other protein foods as usual, and be careful about consumption of starch, sugar and fat, LESS STARCH, SUGAR, FAT Tho old theory rested on experk monts in which each kind of food was fed by itself and meat, or pro- tein, caused the greatest amount of body heat, In Dr. Forbes' ex- periments ho fed proteins, fats an sugared all together and show that under those circumstances th meats don't cause eo muoh h production, { 30 Ear parts. 51 To do again. 32 Lode. 53 Foreigner 33 Indefinite 54 Pillar. article. 56 She is the 34 Skillets ---- of Win. 35 Point. J. Bryan. 36 Eye tumor. 57 Correlative 37 Therefore. of brother 39 Hawaiian food 40 Compass point VERTICAL 41 To skim. 2 Exorbitant 43 Instructor. rate of 8 English_ con. 10 To run away 12 Dilatory. 14 Sharp and 15 She was a ANIMALS | .» FROM TI INSECTS - 2 TO! A, ELEPHANTS. " | (EF THE MN | TARTHS FoLar ICE CAPS, { SHOULD MELT, THE GREATER. ; PART OF | FLORIDA , i wouLn BE | unDER! oh WATER { + SO er im + L} I) . " IN ONE YEAR, AS MANY AS 36 MILLION GALLONS, oF TURPENTINE - HAVE BEEN TAKEN/ FROM FORESTS fm 'OF THE Bad UNITED STATES. COPR. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. f~1] " ~~ at gs Sn ENOUGH water is locked up in the ice of the earth's polar rve- gions to raise the world's sea level about 150 feet. This would destroy much of Holland, flood the lower Mississippi valley and ruin every harbor in the world. Be : * NEXT: In walking one mile, to what total height docs the avere age person lift each foot? HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle the U S. A, 1,5,8, Former ' slateswoman, oa NS iA iY R 16 Hastened. --_ 0)® Fi El 17 Post. Rohde. 19 She was also 11 To pickle. to 13 Song. Denmark. 15 Cup used in 0] | ID] 22 3.1416. refining, 0 N | S| 23 Gaseous 16 Fabric. | clement, 18 Billiard shot. A 26 Sieved. 20 Gold quartz, 0 OP] 27 Kind of 21 Opal glass. & MOSES N| WK poisoning. 24 Roof point | R 1 S 29 Vigor. _. covering. vin = } 31 To remark, 25 New York YP CIEINTIE 36 To fly, . (abbr.) 43 Railroad interest. 38 Tubular 26 Cheats. (abbr.). 3 Shark. sheath, 28 Half an em. 46 Kind of boiler 4 Color 39 Hammer 29 Jumbled type. 50 Upon. 5 To exist. heads. 10 Intelligence. 42 Hindi dialect. 43 Definite article. "44 Owl's cry: 47 Upright shaft. 48 Beer 49 Courtesy title. 51 Road. 52 Giant king. 54 Postscript. 55 Transposed. | 6 To submit. 7 North Carolina. 9 Had on harsh. member of ES POP -- Clearing a 'Trap Ei WHATS BEND FOR A PLUMBER - THAT <7 4 FOR A SIMPLE UBB LIKE ar To RT Sat LYE PISA no 4 3 [i b> ¥{ tr a ed! a, i a