vlars m Torâ€" What Makes Up ~__ The Milky Way Wandering atoms and strange particles of cosmic dust form a vast, cloudâ€"like mass which, astronomers now beliove, fills much of the soâ€" called vacant space of the Milky Way. three per cent of the potential energy is lost, the remaining ninetyâ€"seven per cent being given out as light. Compare this to tlge twelve por cent given by electric sugar absorbed by the insect proâ€" duce the light from which it gets its name. In this process ouly EARTH ON FRINGE The earth is probably in the fringâ€" es of this cloud. But it is cortain that if you look at night in the dirâ€" ection of the Milky Way you are gazing through the cloud and the stars you see are slightly dimmed because of it. The most efficient source of light in the world is the glowâ€" worm. Chemical changes on the The Milky Way itself is watchâ€" shaped, a huge spiral of stars. The cloud is believed to be watchâ€"shapâ€" ed also, but smaller, like a watch lying within the Milky Way. The carth is known to lie about oneâ€" third of the distance out from cenâ€" tro toward the rim of the Milky Way "watch." That is why it lies also in or along the edge of the inâ€" terior "watch" that forms the eloud. These Frisians are a quaint, serâ€" ious, sober, pious folk who make their living largely from the sea and are notable for that love of freedom which only the sea or the mountain top engenders. Their motâ€" to, "Rather dead than a slave," is familiar enough to strike a responâ€" sive chord in ar Englishman‘s owu thoughts. The Frisians, unlike the Prussians, were early brought unâ€" der the influence of Christianity. Laws were early developed. LARGELY SAND DUNES The English world "silt" doubt loss has the same origin as "Sylt," as also as the Swedish "sylta," (to salt or pickle") and the English word "salt". Originally "silt" meant "saltness". Sylt, Gormany‘s largest island in the North Sea, is largely sand dumes. Its coast line has changed and channels have been blocked with the silt of the sands. Once upon a time although perhaps a million years ago, Sylt was part of the mainland. For military reasouns, practically all the five thousand people of Sylt have been evacuated by the Gerâ€" mané 6 TRILLION MILES THICK Dr. Roscoe Stanford, Mt. Wilson astronomer, has pieced together a picture of this cloud, using facts gaâ€" thered by many experts in thousâ€" ands of astronomical observations. It is more than likely that the British and Canadian fliers who struck at the island of Sylt were bombarding their ancestral homes. The language of its inhabitants, the Sildringer, is Frisian, which of all the Teutonic languages most reâ€" sombles English. He estimates the cloud to be 6,000 million million miles thick. _ Its lengta or diameter is unkrown but presumably is a large parr of the 609,000 million milifon milss distâ€" anco from onre edge of the Milky Way to the other. Sylt People Like The Angloâ€"Saxons Brigadierâ€"General ~Victor OGâ€" tum cf Vancouver, has been appointed officer commanding the Second Division, C.A.S.F. Commands Second Canadian Division Cheapest Light Scientists Believe That Vacâ€" ant Space In the "Way" is Filled by Wandering Atoms and Cosmic Dust Their Speech Resembles Engâ€" tish â€" Island, Once Part of Mainland, Now Consists of Fortified Sand Dunes sOBER AND PIOUS buresr foveccve sns MIG: #hit ;;;o'l-n: that is to be ruler in Is rael; whose goings forth are from of old, from everlasting. 3. Thereâ€" Every Man Under God 5. For all the peoples walk evâ€" ery one in the name of his god; and we will walk in the name of Jehovah our God for ever and ever. A man‘s god is what rules his practical life; it is that which shapes and orders our lives. Furâ€" thermore, the worshipper will reâ€" semble his god in character. Everywhere around us the people are walking every one in the name of his god. The beautiful picture Micah draws of the coming kingdom finds striking parallels in the proâ€" phecies of his great contemporary Isaiah (2: 1â€"5; 11: 1â€"12). Here we have almost every longing of the buman heart down through all the centuries satisfied â€" a uniâ€" versal worship of the Lord, abâ€" solute righteousness in judgment, abiding peace, perfect security of person and property. When will this kingdom be established? Two clauses of Micah‘s seem to indiâ€" cate clearly that the kingdom here spoken of wil not be established until at the end of the age, which has by no means yet arrived. «; 5: 2. But thou, Bethâ€"lchem Ephrathah, which art little to be among the thousands of Judah, out of thee shall one come forth LESSON III MICAH‘S VISION OF PEACE.â€" PRINTED TEXT, Mic. 4: 1â€"5; S: 2â€"52. GOLDEN TEXT.â€"And they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruningâ€" hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. Mic. fore will he give them Place.â€"Micah‘s ministry | was entirely within the territory of Judah, and for the most part in the city of Jerusalem. 4: 1. But in the latter days it shall come to pass, that the mounâ€" tain of Jehovah‘s house shall be established on the top of the mountains, and it shall be exalted above the hills; and peoples shall flow unto it. 2. And many nations shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of Jehovah, and to the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths. For out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of Jehovah from Jerusalem: 3. and he will judge between many peoples, and will decide concerrâ€" ing strong nations far off: and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruningâ€"hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neithâ€" er shall they learn war any more. 4. But they shall sit every man under his vine and under his figâ€" tree: and none shall make them afraid: for the mouth of Jehovah of hosts hath spoken it. The mountain of the house of Jehovah is the temple mountain, Moriah, here considered as part of Zion. Zion is the source of the law and word of the Lord, from which the nations draw instruction how to walk in the ways of God, to make it their own, take it to their homes, and walk according to it. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.â€"During the reign of Hezekiah, probably between 726 and T0Ol B.C. â€" This lesson is especially interâ€" esting because the people around whom this whole chapter gathers are the most talkedâ€"of, the most hated, people presenting the most difficult problems of all the races in the world today. No one has suffered in modern times as the Jews have suffered, at the hands of other nations; and here is not only a prophecy of such sufferâ€" ing, but a passage of wonderful hope, promising a time when these sufferings will be over, and a perâ€" iod when these people will come back to God and have a kingdom, in which joy and peace will abound. The name Micah was not an uncommon one among the Heâ€" brews; it means "Who is like Jeâ€" hovah?" Micah was a simple countryman, born of obscure parâ€" entage in an otherwise unkrown village. Micah, as his prophecy shows, was in closest touch and sympathy with the class of yeoâ€" men whose wrongs he so graphâ€" ically describes. Promise of the Kingdom In the first three chapters, Micah‘s chief moral denunciations are reserved for the wealthy nobâ€" les and worldly priests â€" the greedy aristocrats who coveted fie.ds and houses and took them by force, who oppressed widows and broke up happy homes. Comâ€" mercialism and materialism were supplanting almost the last vestige of the ethical and the spiritual in Jerusalem. At such a crisis Miâ€" cah appeared. and attempted to call the nation back to God and to duty. e Sunday School Lesson the time that she who travaileth hath brought forth: then the resiâ€" due of his brethren shall return unto the children of Israe!. 4. And he shall stand, and shall feed his flock in the strength of Jehovah, in the majesty of the name of Jeâ€" hovah his God: and they shali abide; for now shall he be great unto the ends of the earth. 5. And this man shall be our peace. INSTANT NEWS With the expected Spring offenâ€" sive both on land â€" sea and in the air â€" already launched, radio listâ€" eners these days keep their receivâ€" ersg dialed in for news â€" and few parts of the world have a variety of stations offering the authentic news coverage heard in this part of Canada daily. Today radio brings instant news of action on any front â€" the war of today is carried right to your doorstep. Tho best three tips for Canadian listeners are to tune in CKOC â€" CBL â€" or CFRB for your news, : You get the overnight news first from CKOC at 6:15 each morning and again at oight â€" then at 12:15 noon â€" 6:15 p.m. and late night news at 10:45. Transradio, one of the fastest news services today is the CKOC source. Canada‘s new Governorâ€"General, The Earl of Athlone, 66, youngest brother of Queen Mary, who has been appointed to fill the vacancy created by the death of Governorâ€"General Tweedsmuir, is seen ABOVE, with the Countess of Athlone. The Earl and Countess will be welcomed to Canada in June. From CBL you get news by Canâ€" adian Press cable at eight in the morning â€" 12:15 noon â€" 6:30 and 11:00 p.m. Ellery Queen‘s mystery serial, heard on the Columbia chain each Sunday night at ten, offers thrilling tales of detectives at work. Dial in to catch this one some Sunday evenâ€" Music by Faith â€" a standâ€"out program â€" is heard from the CBC chain every Wednesday night at 9:30. It‘s a treat! Every Monday and Friday afterâ€" noon at 3:30 CKOC offers radio lisâ€" teners a treat when the program â€" The CFRB news bureau presents news at eight each morning â€" at 12:30 noon â€" four in the afternoon â€" 6:30 and at 10:50. Earl And Countess of Athlone Coming In June RADILO REPORTER POPâ€"The Barter System yâ€" Mess !* /20 3 ccomws?uoN,s?c., C W vé%ï¬ï¬g vou _ owe 2/A ang a fate! T sn e 4sl 1â€" ’ " 5 tza Kih * CRA :)r > uk "U «/ |/ T ap. 6 By DAVE ROBEBINS ie Ned n hh stt Micah‘s prophecy regarding the birthplace cf our Lord Jesus was fulfilled seven hundred years latâ€" er. It is one of the most remarkâ€" able Messianic prophecies in all of the Old Testament. In chapter four we had a very beautiful pic ture of an age enjoying universal and genuine peace; here the Mesâ€" siazh himself is designated as the cause for such peace. Music You Want â€" takes the air. This threeâ€"quarter hour presentaâ€" tion of the classics is one of the finest programs of this type heard on the air today, so, if you appreâ€" ciate the better musi¢c, tune in on Music ‘You Want from 1120 on your dial. Pleasure Time â€" Fred Waring‘s show from the NBC â€" red network on Turesdays at seven â€" is the type of show that you will enjoy at dinâ€" ner time, Always a good showman, Fred has gathered a starry aggregaâ€" tion for this one. The week‘s Spotlight Dialing â€" Sunday ... Revuedeville via CKOC atâ€"2:30 ... Mark of the Duke on CBC chain at 10:00 p.m. ... Monâ€" day â€" Melodies from the Sky from CKOC at 7:15 . .. Culley and Clauâ€" detto from CBL at eight ... With the Troops on the CBC chain at $:30 ... Tuesday â€" Mutiny on the High Seas from CKOC at 6:30 ... ©g:ond Husband on the CBS netâ€" work at 7:30 ... Information Please from NBCâ€"Blue at $:30 . .. Thursâ€" day . .. Talk of the Town from CKOC at 6:45 . .. Waltz Serenade from CBL at seven . .. Kay Kyser‘s College of Musical Knowledge via WOR Mutual at Eight . .. Rudy Vallee from NBCâ€"Red at 9:830 .. .. Saturday â€" Good Deed Club from CKOC at 9:45 a.m. . .. Metropoliâ€" tan Opera ompany from CBC at 1:55 p.m. ... Wayne King, the Waltz King, from the Columbia Chain at $:30 ... NBC Symphony Orchestra from â€" CBL â€" CKOC â€" CBC at ten .. Jimmy Dorsey‘s Band from NBCâ€"Red network at midnight. . AROUND THE DIAL T HAvEeNT GOfT ANY ~~~~~ Souccrave | TO TAKE â€" » A GHIGCKEN _ _ (Copyright, 1928. by ‘The Bell Syndicate. Inc.) T win Cities At Head of Lakes Fort William; ~the "founding of which dates back to the time of the fur traders, etxends along the banks of the Kaministikwia River which has been dredged for several miles to give commodious berths to ships. Port Arthur dates from the early development of the silver mines and, with Fort William, shares.the expansive facilities of Thunder Bay and as the Twin ~ities are at the Canadian head of the Great Lakes, they play an important part in the commerce of the continent. The district is served by both of the transcontinental railways and by several highways and roads. PLENTY OF GAME The waters of the streams and lakes in the district abound in the speckled trout, red trout, lake trout, bass, pickerel, and pike. Deer and moose roam the forest areas and provide sport for the big game hunâ€" ter. Caribou are to be found in a few localities. Ruffed grouse, ducks, and the Canada goose give the sportsmen an opportunity in season to test their skill at flying targets. Fur bearers are plentiful, and trapâ€" pers catch a great variety of aniâ€" mals, including mink, marten, otter, beaver, and fox. Fur farming conâ€" sists chiefly in the raising of mink and fox. Crows are crafty creatures and by experience they associate a scarecrow with the presence of some tempting forbidden fruit. Crows are longâ€"lived and conâ€" sequently have long memories. Pests far worse than crows prey upon the farmer‘s crops, reâ€" marks B. Leslie Emslie, chemistâ€" agronomist. Crows may be seen and heard, shot at or shoo‘d away, though perhaps not to stay, while these other pests are invisible miâ€" croâ€"organisms w h o se ravages, however, can be plainly seen by harvest time. Farm Notes . .. Science has done much for agâ€" ricalture, and one of the latest and greatest achievements is the discovery that certain organic compcunds of mercury will conâ€" trol these seedâ€"borne diseases without injury to the seed itself when applied in the small doses prescribed. Indeed, by destroying the fungi the treatment improves the germinating vigour of the seed and consequently increases yields. Control Seedâ€"Borne Discases Years of most careful, painâ€" staking research and trial reveaiâ€" ed that there is a specific orgamc mercury compound for each of several classes of crops. Fortun: ately, a little goes a long way, so the cost of treatment is trifling, only a few cents an acre. The seeds of ceareals, for instance, are treated effectively with the ethyl mercury phosphate dust at the rate of only oneâ€"half cunce per bushel, and the seed grain may be treated from 24 hours to three months before planting, as may be convenient. Invisible Enemies Many of these micrescopic pests are fungi, some of which may inâ€" fest the soil, but most of them are carried on the seed itself â€" for instance, scab and rhizoctonia of potatoes, seed rot or corn, bunt or stinking smut of wheat, the smuts of oats, severed smut and stripe of barley, root and stemi rots of cereals, peas, beans and other crops. § For seed corn there is anothcer organic mercury dust ard a diiâ€" ferent one for veegtable seeds, while for potatces a wet dip treatâ€" ment is used. For the control of seeding "dampingâ€"off" a dilute solution of the organic mercury specific for vegetables may be prepared and applied to the soil with a watering can or in a finer spray. Dr. Frederic P. Woellner thinks American youth is like American Modern Youth Seen Improved ALL Riout! To Scare Pests From The Farm Fort William aad Port Arthur Play Important Part in Comâ€" merce of. Continent 2 ~ _T WwHaAT ArRE You GIvING ME Tw .. : CHICKEN automobilesâ€"each year‘s models are better than the last. © Dr. Woellner is professor of education at University of Caliâ€" fornia at Los Angeles. He said in mammal. 19 Pig sty. 20 Crowd. 21 South . Africa. 23 Toupee. 25 Relatives., 26 All right. 27 Night before. 29 A metallic â€"â€"â€" bears his name. 32 Definite article. 33 Retributive justice. 35 Born. 36 Ghastly. 37 To stitch "We are not facing a revolt of | THis Curious WorLo ONTARIO ARC ' TORONTO 1 Pictured ancient Latin god of commerce. 7 The â€"â€" HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle JAN BAPTISTA VAN HELMONT, after making the experiment regarding plant nourishment, settled on the erroneous conclusion that the tree had taken on its extra weight from the water that he had given it, and not until 200 years later was the discovery made that nourishment was taken in from the air, through the leaves. NEXT: How long does plant polien live? Tbo ANCIENT LATIN GOD material. 53 Visage. 57 Black. 58 Music drama. 59 Portrait statue 60 He had â€"â€" shoes. ethe~. about him. 41 Inaicn. VERTICAL 43 Musical note. 1 He was the 44 Numbers. â€"â€" of the 46 Sun god. gods. 47 Exactly alike. 2 Type meast 50 Fern spores. 3 Leaf vein. 52 Calking 4 Bird‘s temporarily. _ 61 Many â€"â€"â€" 39 Compound are told ethe. about him. 12â€"10 glle k\?}é?fllv//%_b&\iWE By J. MILLAR WATT hillobr brvibertaiiiatinet Sitcatetioes Pn s d | | PLANTED iTIN A POT CONTAINING 200 LBS. OF soI_/ FVE a| YEeARsSs LATZR, TAE puans WILLOW â€"AD GAINED IE4d POUNDS, r _ _ AND THE SOIL ME SOZ ALOoNEZ BUT HELMONT, A PHYSICIAN OF BRuUSSELS, DoUBTED .THE THEORYZ/ puR)NG THE 16TH CENâ€" TURY, HE WEGHED A WILLOW TREE AND 7)/ ANCIENT / PHILOSOPHERSE "TAUGHT THAT PLANTS WERE NOURJSHED FROM 1 He was the â€" 42 Chum. â€"â€"â€" of the 45 Hair fillet. gods. 46 Pertaining to 2 Type measure â€" a branch,. / 3 Leaf vein. 47 To press. 4 Bird‘s 48 Spigot. stomach. 49 Mongrel. 5 Railroad. 50 To embroider. 6 To bark. 51 Kimono sash: 7 Metal fastener 53 Desert fruit. * 8 Behold. 54 Tennis point. 9 Midday. 55 To read. 10 To recede. 56 To complete. youth. Their way is the way of the young, "Hellâ€"bent for Heavâ€" youth, directing its profitable channels." gods. 2 Type measure 3 Leaf vein. 4 Bird‘s stomach. 40 Fish eggs 15 Baseball nine. 18 Binds. i 20 Small weight. 22 Reluctant. â€" ~ 24 Voluble. 25 Leg joint. 26 Sound of 28 To eject. 30 Biblical 31 Grafted. 34 Rectifying. 38 Worker on By William 11 Liliaccous 12 Prize for a character [ 1 7e1q of 1P &#