pacious Re. Ever Built! ELLARET* orcer. E *Miss West ORCE EALER ERVES the act‘s osâ€" or! .one, a sick ust wren ith salad ng best} Â¥1ice nierestâ€" »sed to topics at it a evea # "Pe' recipes icomes apple ) 11 J rreen Adiâ€" 0 low and brown. During the first four weeks of 1940, Canada‘s ten sugar refinâ€" eries manufactured 54,728,387 pounds of refined sugar, of which 47,.790,059 pounds were granuâ€" lated and 6,938,328 pounds, yelâ€" rely on the British Empire and Bolivia for supplies. ..â€"~ Ee Tin is the ‘dldest metal known to man â€" and it is still of the greatest importance in many in‘ dustries â€"notably canning ‘and armaments. Four thousand years ago the Phoenicians voyaged to Britain to buy tin from the Cornâ€" ish mines, and until late in the ninetcenth century Cornwall reâ€" mained the chief producer of the metal. Now, however, there are other sources of supply, such as Bolivia and the East Indies. The United States, who use more tin "Americans, and the Canadians 1 have instructed, made good stuâ€" dents, quicker than the average~ European. Their big fault is the | fact that they always want to proâ€". | gress too rapidly, and undertake fast sliding. In Europe, it is just the opposite, and we have to speed. theme up.". > * Pmd Three Important Steps a Schneider stipulates three highâ€" ly important steps â€"in the upward progress of a skier. First is to learn the basic fundamentals, in short, ski in control. The next step is to acquire style, for that will provide assurance of further control. The third"is sKiing fast, which raturally falls in line with the first and second principles. Hanens Schneider, an educaâ€" tionist whose doctrines have reâ€" ceived _ worldâ€"wide ... acknowledgâ€" ment, says a writer in the Monâ€" treal Star, last week declared: .. The man with the weatherâ€"beatâ€" en features, a heary crop of greyâ€" ing hair, and slightly â€" rounded shoulders on a powerful frame, prodded the weak point in North American skiing in that short summary of American and Canâ€" adian tendencies, the inclination of hundreds ‘of thousands to do things in reverse, literally the deâ€" sire to run before they can walk. "It‘s hard to slow them down here. In Europe it is just as hard to speed them ‘up." o ntationed at Jericho air station in Vancouver since last summer, Squadron Leader F. J. Mawdesley has been named to take command of the RC.A.F. school of adminâ€" istration to be opened at Trenton in the near future. ' With production of aircraft parts greatly increased, several Canadian foundri« have installed Xâ€"ray equipment. The Council has had faâ€" cilities for Xâ€"ray examination for several years and has provided an inspection service used by . the Transport and National Defense Deâ€" partments. To expedite the manufacture of aircraft and munitions, the Nationâ€" al Research Council is teaching the industrial use of Xâ€"ray inspection to employees of Canadian foundries procucing war supplies. . CaANX DETECT FLAaWs Use of Xâ€"ray methods for indusâ€" trial inspection .has increased â€" in recent years. Xâ€"rays can detect flaws and defects which cannot be found by other methods without deâ€" struction of the product. They aro of particular value in aircraft manâ€" ufacture. Using Xâ€"Rays . In Plane Plants Oldest Metal iâ€"ing Styles Hannes Schneider, Farâ€"Famed Instructor, Says Lack of the Fundamentai Training Keeps Competitors on this Continâ€" ent From World‘s Titles Appointed To Head Industriay Inspection in Canâ€" adian Aircraft and Munitions m .. > to and he «knows much about: the workings of the inside politics of that_ROubled..continent. ; ns * % Lovely Mary Martin, of "My heart belongs to daddy" fame, stepped into big time radio when she made her debut recently with Master: University, interprets hisâ€" tory. as it is happening. . Professor Salmonâ€" served with the British diplomatic serviceâ€"inâ€" Europe for a number. of years. â€"~ Well, at last, Canadian radio listeners can enjoy a competent commentator of their own, discusâ€" sing world affairs and the Euroâ€" pean situation from a Canadian viewpoint, and in our opinion this is something we have needed for a long time. From CKOC each Sunday afternoon at five â€" Pro fessor Edward T. Salmon, of Mcâ€" himself, the screen star puts on gripping incidents of life in 2 metropolis. 3 ts§ t iA Big Town, Edward G. Robinâ€" son‘s program from Columbia staâ€" tions each Tuesday night at Eight is always worth a listen. Supportâ€" ed .by, Ona Munson, an actress whose‘ ability matches Robinson Get to know radioland â€" then you begin to really enjoy the finâ€" er things in life. Out of this kilocycle tangle come dozens of shows that people listen to avidly, that radio editors write kind things about. No one need be told about NBC‘S Jack Benny, Columbia‘s Radio Theatre, CKOCS Cavalcade of Drama, The Happy Gang from CBC or Muâ€" tual‘s Colonel Stoopnagle â€" but sandwiched between these stellar attractions are plenty of programs that. maybe you have missed in your radio itineraries. So this Spring, on those evenings . spent at home with the family try a little dial exploring â€" and find‘ out the really fine things the raâ€" dio offers in entertainment, eduâ€" cation, art and many other phases â€"not the least of which is news coverage. â€" ' Do Some Exploring _ On every one of the year‘s 365 days, the average radio station presents some..45 programs, runâ€" ning the gamut of entertainment and education from morning to late evening. our lesson for today, is genér;llii; counted as the eighth of these ten appearances. Matt. 28: 16. But th’eigléven disciples went into Galilee, unto It is commonly recognized that there were ten different appearâ€" ances of our Lord after his resâ€" urrection from the first one early Easter morning to the women, and the last one, to the apostles just before the ascansion, forty days later. The appearance recorded in Time.â€"We are not sure exactly when this event occurred during the forty days of our Lord‘s freâ€" quent manifestations after his resurrection, before his ascenâ€" sion; it took place sometime in April or May of A.D. 30. Place.â€"A mountain in Galilee, exactly wheih one we do not krow. part of the earth. Acts 1: 8. THE L£§$ON IN ITS SETTING LESSON XIH THE CONTINUING TA SK.â€" Matthew 28: 16â€"20 GOLDEN TEXT.â€"Ye shall be my witnesses . . . unto the uttermost Tying knots is still an im ini 7 3 R L important part of every seaman‘s training and, ABOVE, a gro:w ;ï¬x na;e é::;ï¬l;g the fmedpomgs of tying the various knots used by failors' and seamen the uupsaw .. 0) C O1ans are undergoing a strenuous eightâ€"week‘s course aboard H.M.C.S. Ston war yc t ues eoaortetnnrene ue ecty 2o N PeC lg Memliantel which never moves) at Kingston, Ont. Canadian â€"Commentator Sunday School Lesson RADIO REPORTER unfattnanniintHi hN tngnacanm commmercons Tying Knots Is Part of Every Canadian Naval Officer‘s Training Commission By DAVE ROBBINS seems from WABCâ€"CBS at 8:30 I...... Raturday ...:. Under the big‘ Top from.CBE at one ... Metro,, pol%t,an jOpera from CBLâ€"CKOG at. 1.55," e . Â¥i+ High Seas from CKOC at 6.30 ... Wednesday ...... Canadian Snapâ€" shots from CBL at 8 ... Bob Crosâ€" by‘s orchestra from WOR at . 11.30 ... Thursdays ... NBC. Break, fast Club every morning at 9 o Farm . Broadcast °CBLâ€"CBC at 12.30 ‘ noon .._.} WOR at 6" ;.... Sundays ...... Philharmonic symâ€" phony from CBSCBLâ€"CKOC at 3 p.m. ... Silver theatre from CHML at 6 ...... Vancouver string ensemble via CBL at 7.30 ... Mondays ...... Stranger than Ficâ€" toin daily from CKOC at 8.55 a.m. ... with The. Troops via CBL at 8.30 p.m. ...... Radio Theatre from CBL at 9 ...... Tuesdays ...... Big Sister every weekday at 2, from CBS ...... Uncle ‘Don daily from It‘s the talk of the town â€" yes sir, every Thursday night at 6.45 The Town Crier is on at CKOCâ€"to tellâ€"you what goes.on in.this: or that Ontario town â€" and maybe your own. Dial in this programâ€" you will like its homespun toucH. Good News of 1940, starring with baby Snooks, Dick Powell . and Meredith Wilson. This Thursday night show, heard from the NBC,. red network at nine, is very ligâ€" tenable, and Mary‘s voice gives it another high spot. 17. And when they saw him, they worshipped him; but some doubted. There was evidently something about his appearance which commanded the attitude of worship. 18. And Jesus came to them and spake unto them. Our Lord, leaving the spot on which he had shown himself to the crowd, came to the celeven and spoke to them. We may suppose that those who were also standâ€" ing by could hear his words, and possibly were addressed indirectâ€" ly. Saying. All authority hath been given unto me in heaven and on cearth, As he gave authority to his disciples to act in his name, so he spoke of himself as one who had received authority from the Father. Authority "in heaven", in that unseen and eternal order which is altogether beyond human knowledge or cortrol, is claimed by the risen Christ: ty ... The Disciples‘ Task § 19» Go ye therefore. "Thereâ€" fore": refers back to the tremendâ€" ous claim Christ has just made for‘ himself. Andâ€" make disciples. To disciple a person to Christ. is to bring him into the relation of the mountain where Jesus had apâ€" pointed thern. On Thursday of Passion Week our Lord had said to his disciples, ‘After I am raisâ€" ed up, I will go before you into Galilee", and probably this apâ€" pearance is a fulfillment to that promise. (Jesus has promised also be in the midst of any group of his disciples, even in the midst of as small a one as two or three persons. Are we all keeping our appointments with Jesus?). POPâ€"Small Chenge Radio Highlights ‘~ sas mapost adt bhatrrucge +4 ~£* $G+ aisi>aRor Mutiny ‘on the Strange <as it used by sailors and seamen the world over. These course aboard H.M.C.S. Stone Frigate (a ship *T > BUILT PROPERLY In &â€"properly built stair the wall @,string (that perpendicular member ~~at the wall &gainst which the treads â€" _and risers.butt) is.cut so that the treads and risers slip in from the back. The grooves into which they ‘fit ate tapered so that wedges can . * be put in, driven up tight, and ‘glued‘" ‘to hold them securely in place. The «treads and risers are interlocked .. where they meet by micans of "a > ‘tongue and groove. . : .: ,. 0 Y‘ and, ABOVE, a group of future officâ€" The stairs in the house are so important from the sfandpoint of both use and â€"decoration that if an extravagance (if you can call ‘it that) is excusable anywhere in the house it is here. For the results of poor stair building are many, aggraâ€" vating and conspicuous. They canâ€" not be concealed from anyone passâ€" ing up or down. Squeaky or sagging treads; loose hand rails or newels, rattling ballusters, open joints, all are the result of improper construcâ€" tion. m ce To build a firstâ€"class stairway is expensive, but to. <â€"build anything but a good stairway is unwise and therefore poor economy, Cheap Stairs _ Poor Economy pupil to teacher â€" the Great Teacher has perfect wisdom and unlimited authority. Christ‘s authâ€" ority is not only the basis of our duty to disciple others, but the basis of all true discipleship. Of all the nations. This command is simply astonishing: here we have a Jewish peasant, surrounded by a small company of uneducated ’ followers, bidding them address _ themselves in his name to races anciont, powerful, refined; to win their intellectual and moral subâ€" mission to doctrines and precepts propounded by himself. It. was the purpose of our Lord that Greeks and Barbarians, Romans and Scyâ€" thians, bondmen and freemen, should have one religion. Baptism A Symbol Baptizing them. Baptism here can refer to nothing else than what is called water baptism; the exact mode .of baptizing, by sprinkling, by pouring, or by imâ€" mersion, is not here designated. We remove the stains of our everyday toil with water. So watâ€" er becomes a symbol of a proâ€" founder washing, the washing away of sins. Water can never in itself wash away sins, but it is used as a symbol of a cleansing from sin, which is truly accomâ€" plished only by the blood of Christ. Into the name of the Fathâ€" er and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. 20. (a) Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I commanded you. Teaching folâ€" lows baptizing. Little by little to the end of an individual‘s life, and to the end ofâ€"all_timeâ€"the words of Christ are apprehendéd in their fullness. The work of teaching beâ€" longs:to the home, to the church, to good book, good companions. ; Christ‘s,Promise . ._ 205. And lo, I am with you alâ€" ways, even unto the end of the world. The everâ€"living presence, of _ Christ "lies at the heart of the Christian Church, as well as in the heart of. the ‘individual Christian. Squeaky or Sagging © Treads Are Due to Bad Workmanship in. reach of all people in the old €ity and harbor of New York. Durâ€" ing its 130 years of existence, it has "distributed 24,096,295 Bibles,. Te'sga* ‘ments and Bible portions; the: anâ€" nual re56H says. _ The world‘s best seller, the Bible," says the Christian Science Monitor, ‘made a new record for itself ip 1939 according .to the New York Bible= Society, which reports that 998,652 copies of the Scriptures and Scripâ€" tural portions were distributed â€" this beifig the highest number for a like period in history. .The Socâ€" iety‘s, aim is to keep the Bible withâ€" Bible, World‘s "Best Seller" . The kitchen sink can be kept clean and healthy by rubbing with salt and a dam» cloth. and new. ~ A little salt added to dyed garâ€" ments will prevent the color runâ€" ning when washed. If carpets are sprinkled with salt and left for half an hour, then wiped over with a damp cloth, the colors will:be revived It cleans decénters, .tarllvrig‘i;s's' vases and a little added to the starch will prevent the iron stickâ€" ‘ing. To improve the flavor of cofâ€" fee, sprinkle with a few grains of salt before adding the water. * A little salt is most effective in removing ink stains from table linen. Damp salt will remove discolorâ€" ation from teacups and pieâ€"dishes. Scrubbing with salt and water rush â€"mats and wicker work beâ€" come bright and clear. The salt also stiffens the cane. _.‘=." If a little salt is sprinkled in the frying pan before frying is commenced it will prevent the grease splashing. If burnt saucepans are sprinkâ€" led with salt and left to stand until the next day, a little water added and brought to the boil, the burn will quickly disappear. Apart from the value of salt in seasoning almost everything we eat, it has many other domesâ€" tic uses. s Here are a few: Salt and water gargle is exce‘}â€" lent for the throat, and if the teeth are brushed with salt it helps to make them white, and it also keeps the gums healthy. Uses For Common Salt Are Manifeld we can change the feeding methâ€" ods in a season. The simplest and easiest method of increasing the profit from the milking herd is to provide the animals with ample feed which should be produced on the farm, where it can be proâ€" cured at the lowest possible cost. While contemplating the seeding program at this season, consider the bill of fare for the cow, as it affects her profitable returns. The cheapest and best source of roughage is found in silage, alfâ€" alfa and clover hay. DAIRY COW‘S FARE How feed affects profits from the cow becomes an acute quesâ€" tion with the dairyman. The greatâ€" est expense connected with dairy farmingâ€"is the cost of the ration. It requires a good many years to improve the breeding herds, but The desirability of lowering the cost of keeping livestock and of dairy production, by means of producing hay of higher feeding value was stressed by Dr. O. Mcâ€" Conkey of the Ontario® Agricul tural College, Guelph, in an adâ€" dress at the second Brant County seed fair held in Brantford. Dr. McConkey reviewed the soil capâ€" acity of Ontario farmlands for hay production and showed that hay was thus the cheapest feed Ontario could produce. (Conducted by Prof. Henry G. Bell, of the Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph, assisted by other members of the O.A.C. faculty) Broke All Records for Sates In 1939 : j the carpet will lookimgix; BETTER GRADE HAY Farm Forum "A s i s oo 4 4 ~~ P ‘ 1 . 4 e / 4‘ (Released by The Bell Syndicate. Inc.o J in old age. _‘ national â€"â€"â€"* 5 Noun 33 Domesticated. champion, termin:s 34 To undo a" _53 She is also / 6 Evincee ._. setting. U.â€"S: national 7Paid p 37 Kind of _â€"â€"â€". ~; 8 Instrun pottery. ‘ champion. 9 To boa:s 38 To disperse. 55 Small inlet.. 10 Smooth 40 To delegate. ~"56 Writing tablet 12 She â€"â€" 44 Pertaining to .57 Pert#ining to _ the Eng the teeth. _/ ____the sun. â€" tennis 48 Default:~~~*"* ~~ VERTICALâ€" _ tournan 49 Heavenly .+. .}>2 Diving bird. 13 She is : all diseases. ;"TH:? Tw 26 Pertaining to Méfl{@}é‘ziA genesis. â€" 30 Summoned body, Altar. forth, .: 51 Beast. 32 Pertaining to 52 Sbhe is U. S describer. _ 20 Musical note. 21 Remedy for HORIZONTAL Answer 1,6 Pictured champion. MIEIXNH _ IC tennis player, m 11 Smell. R) LNIFI 12 To worship. â€" |E/R) 1 WR 13 College girl. TPR@AIC| 14 Strong taste. . [UIPRU 16 To assault. . [GOJOIR] 18 Vivi® 5 manrce 2 e BIBLE IN ESKIMO Translation of the Bible into Es~ kimo is Canada‘s addition to nine new Bible transiations made in 1939. 3 Of the 730 Bible transiations cirâ€" culated throughout the world, Canâ€" ada requires 110 for the Dominion. This year‘s figures show an inâ€" crease of 121,713 over that for 1938. A GREAT deal of Hollard is below sea level, since it is land that has been reclaimed from the sea, and protected by dikes. The task of pumping out the sea water now is done by modern electric and steam engines. Work now going on at the Zuider Zee will reâ€" claim 900 square miles of land that has been under water for centuries. wl | THis Curious Worp POTATO DEVELOP iNSsiPE A BALLâ€"SHAPED Feury bilitenâ€"th ds 496 2 ts ct... A star FRLlm]‘ ALTHOUGH sELDOM SsEegny o im es Nok d, dï¬A J MddMlyy _ x cceveranp, omo. _ (FI#W N COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICZ. Inc. What is the origin of the word monkey* ONTARIO *_â€" _ By J. MILLAR WATT D Wriung tablet 12 She â€"â€" in ©"49 Snake. 7 Pert#ining‘ to the English _ 50 To total. .. the sun.. > tennis _ ~ / 52 South ; VEï¬T!CAL a tournaments..â€" _ Carolina, 2 Diving bird. â€" 15 She is a â€"â€"â€" _ 54 Senior, TENNIS EXPERT ANYTHING HE CÂ¥N _ GET OuT. or.mi‘ . to Previous Puzzle Roman month 39 Pictorial 4 Signal system. _ puzzle. 5 Noun 41 Turkish title termination. ; 42 Johnnytake, 68 Evinceed. 43, To . impel. 7 Paid publicity 45 God of 8 Instrument, ; <= pwisdom. ; ~= 9 To boast. fabpic :./ . ow 0 Smooth. 47 Region,. â€" _ 3 Part of stable. Next morning the cow had gone. Hours later French fisherâ€" men in Crow Sound found his cow. It was swimmingâ€"home to St. Mary‘s. A Tresco (Scilly Isles) farmer bought a cow on St. Mary‘s Isâ€" land, took it back to his farmâ€" 2 miles by boatâ€"and put it in a Cow Comes Home arerame®t t 4910 3C flower,\ _ 35 North Africa. 36 And. T Name â€".... .. 24 Hop ‘bush. © 25 Towelicit.= °. 27 Finish, _ 28 Cravat. "~ 29 Sick." 31 Starâ€"shaped 22 Kava, ; 17 Be silent. 19 Horse‘s neck m B § $# )4 13 Lt £8, ie 9 &