epee 'Walking Well Social Asset Integral Part of Modern += "Smartness"; Which Can, Be Acquired © N No girl will ever ba {in the well, writes Donna Grace, beauty + editor, She must know how to car- ry herself so 'that she will be ad- mired for her grace and polse. * We once heard a lecturer tell a class that smartness was a gift, * "Something you either have or you haven't," she sald and added that those who didn't know what real smartness was would never acquire it. This, we can assure you, is a mistake, Any girl can be smart ft she will learn how. to make the most of the gifts she has, DAILY EXERCISES NEEDED ' + She can have a well-proportioned figure whether she is short or tall, She can be well-groomed even in fuexpensive clothes and she can walk like a' queen, Mature women who have never thought much about the import- ance of good carriage can take ' themselves in hand. They must have enough personal pride to make 'them "snap out of the old way." They will need daily exer- : clses. Most important they must | @ "smart! class who does not 'walk . LESSON XI JONAH: THE OUTREACH OF GOD'S LOVE ~-- Jonah 3, 4 Printed Text, Jonah 8:1-10; 4:10, 11 Golden Text -- "Salvation Is of Je- hovah." Jonah 2:9. . THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING reign of Jeroboam II, who reigned from 700 to 750 B.C, T Place -- The events of the last two chapters of this book occurred at and just outside of the city ot Ninevab, located on the east-bank of the upper Tigris River, In thls lesson we make a study of great revivals -- considering the character of the messenger, the fundamental elements of the mes. sage, the power with which the message is conveyed, the evidences that a people are under the convic- tion ot sin, a true turning to God, and the ultimate abiding conse- quences of a revival after the par- ticuldr period of preaching Is over. The question might well be asked whether the revival in Jonah's day had the same fundamental elemonts that revival must have In our day. 2 Kings 14:25 detinitoly identi. pay attention to thelr walking, fies the prophet Jonah as an HOLD YOURSELF -TALL definitely identifies Jonah as .an = : Sneaks Historia persUTE Tito iiTou Time -- Jonah lived during the - Ea a -------- TLL nized Units Entered P As Nazi Mecha The girl who will walk with real smartness and distinction will learn to stretch many times during the day and keep all muscles lithe und ! "active. She will hold herself tall and forget about ki ce joints, With { each step she will swing. the log Sl | SE from the hip, and take fairly long ; strides, : Stiff knees mean stiff jerky steps, { ~The foot on the floor supports the y F wolght. Practise the exercises that straighten' the back at the walst- line, There should be a straight line and no in-curve. Walk beauti- fully and you'll be smart. ~~ -| FOR SPORTS:AND.. + |, CASUAL WEAR |' i | | Diana Lewis truly has a feather in her cap when she wears this perky. off-the-face hat in white, Fashioned 'of ribbon, with grosgrain ribbon in navy as the trim, the hat achieves 'a jaunty air by-the blue feather thrust through the crown. 'The Oldest Trees > On Our Continent Are Believed to be Cedars in The Trans-Pecos, Section of Texas -- Ring Count is 10, 000: Years The oldest living trees on the American continent and perhaps in the world, are the cedars which are found in remote .parts of the Trans-Pecos region of Texas ac- it cording to H. L. George, civil en i 3 gineer and forester, These trees grow in semi-arid soil that is al- most pure gypsum and are sev- eral thousand years older than the giant redwoods in California, Mr. George said. . * "Some time ago I was retracing some of the surveying work done by Jacob Keuchler, an early sur- ' % veyor who located lands west of the Pecos River, about forty miles north of Kent Texas," he said. "This work was done in 1879, He marked trees with. a.cross. These cedars have not grown sufficient: ly in fifty-nine years to cover these marks, Several of the trees were on our survey line and. had.- to be cut, and at that time we . noticed that their rings were so close together "that they - could not be seen without the aid of a powerful magnifying glass. "By examining several of the y vy trees closely, we found there : » were approximately seventy rings: to the quarter inch. At this rate of growth, one inch would cover a span of 280 years, and since some of these trees ara thirty-six . inches in diameter, they would be approximately 10,000 years old." = shortly before the time of the pro- phet Amos. Jonah was a native of Gathepher in Galilee, situated just four miles north of Nazareth. And when Jonah was first called to go "to the great city of Nineveh and prophesy, the mission was so utter- ly distasteful to him that he fled from the presence of the Lord, took ship at Jeppa, Intending to sall to identified with Tartessus in south. eastern Spain, The rest of the story is familiar to everyone, . HIS SECOND COMMISSION Jonah 3:1. And the word of Je- hovah came unto Jonah the second time, saying. 2, Arise, go unto Nin. oveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee, Nineveh was the last eastern capital of the Assyrian empire. Jo- mah's mission to Nineveh took place after his wonderful deliver. ance. 3. So Jonah arose, and went unto Nineovah, according to the word of Jehovah, Now Nineveh was an ox- ceeding great city, of threo days' journey. 4. And Jonah be- gan to enter Into the city a day's _ Journey, and. he crled, and sai, Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown. Jonah's sermon was exceedingly brief, consisting of 'a clear, definite, easily understood announcement of the imminent do- struction of the city. The sentence -{--upon-Nineveh was conditional; If the people repented, their city then could be saved, -THE GREAT REVIVAL 5. And the people of Nineveh be lieved God; and they proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them, 6 And the tidings reached the king of NinBvah, and he arose the king of Nineveh, and ho arose from him, and covered him with sackcloth and sat In ashes. 7, And he made proclamation and publish. ed throughout Nineveh by the de- cree of the king and his nobles, saying, Let nelther man nor beast, herd or flock, taste anything; let .| them not feed, nor drink water; 8. but let them be covered with sack- cloth, both man and beast, and let them cry mightily unto God; yea, let them turn every one from his evil way, and from the violence. eth whether God will not turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we perish not? JONAH, THE "SIGN" The effect of the preaching of Jo- nah was "simply phenomenal. One prophet of the true God changed a city of probably 600,000 perople, for generations worshippers of the false gods, to one crying for mercy to Jehovah, Jonah was not only a prophet dellvering by word of mouth the message of destruction which God had given him, but he was a sign. unto the Ninevites ing story of Jonah's deliverance from death made the people of Nin. eveh aware of (od's wondrous way of showing his grace to the guilty who turn to him and frust him, 10, And saw their works, that thoy turned from their evil way; and God repented of 'the evil which he sald he would do unto them; and ha did it not. . SHOULD I NOT BITY? Jonah 4:10, And Jehovah sald, for which thou has not labofed, neither madest : it grow; fn a night: 11, and should not I have tegard for Nireveh, that great city, wherein are more than six. score thousand persons that can. not 'discern between thelr right hand and thelr left hand; and also should be read carefully). Here wo - 8eo a revelation of the divine atti. covenant of the law, A city sinning is &ver shining in oreatlon, The at: titude of God toward the cites of men {s never that of aloofness or of 123 bet i Tarshish, which is probably to be - that is fn his hands. 9, Who know- (Luke 11:20.32), Perhaps the amaz- . Thou has had regard for the gourd ; : which | camo up In a'night; and perished |. much cattle? (All of, Chapter 4 tude towards a oily outside the against the light which Paul shows from Trafalgar, A motorized unit of the N Egyptian Obelisk in the Place Do La Concorde in Paris, as t military formally took possession of the - __--_ a... ---------- yo azi army is shown Dimbling past the he German French capital.--(Radio-Photo) distance -- that was the sin of Ju. dah; that was the sin of Jonah, God cares for the suffering, the dy- ing, the dead world, Whatever the conditions of men may be, or what- . ever their sin, the voice of God Is heard saying, "Should not I have pity?" A wire fence extending from Calgary to Montreal. requires some effort to visualize: The pas- ture lands enclosed under the plans of the Prairie Farm Re- habilitation Act require . that length of fence for the 1,000,000 _ aces included, - ¥ [IEE 0 REPORTER By DAVE ROBBINS | EUROPEAN ROUND-UP Both NBC and CBS have thelr European correspondents on the alr regularly for two 15-minute per- ~lods dally, Recognized 'as the most Ingen- fous, best-organized radio news. gathering agency in Europe, the CBS bureau, supervised by Paul White in New York, for the past --month-or-so has been ergpldying eight full-time correspondents, and four stringmen, kept on tap for special assignments. From London, the bureau's European chief, Ed- ward Murrow, wlelds an efficient baton over~this 'war-casting sym.' phony. Columblia's Willlam I. Shir- er's talka from Berlin-have estab. lished him as the ablest newscas. ter of them all. , As opposite numbers for these CBS flashes, NBC has as its per- manent staff _a talented trlo: Max Jordan, Fred Bate, and Paul Arch- inard. MBS' w ~ news-casting from abroad 1s done by John Steele In London, Waverley Root in France, "THEY SHALL NOT PASS" British history is a. proud re- cord of victory won in the face of overwhelming odds, victory achlev- ed bythe stubborn slow strongth of a people mot easily or quickly roused. A > The past {3 rich in episodes that toll the same Inspiring story. And from the days when King Alfred earned his title "The Great" by turning long years of defeat into final victory, over" the invading Danes -- from the days whén the 'sea-dogs of Drake smashed the tow. ering threat of Spain's Armada -- where Nelson broke Napoledn's naval might in the face of great odds -- from ear- llest history to the present day, each challenge to British freedom has proved an {inspiration to Bo tish courage, : Such episodes as these form the theme of the new serfes of dram- atic features, "They Shall Not Pass""!. which will be presented over the CBC's National Network each Wednesday evening, 10:00 to © 10:30 p.m, EDST. They will remind | Most Imports Canadlans that they sharo in a tra. dition of unconquerablo courage, that has never counted odds or cost when the real test has come, NOTES AND NEWS For your Sunday afternoon list- ening you will find fow programs better than "Melody Time", a fea- ture from 1120 on tho dial at 5:15. Ricco Marcell, who formerly conducted the orchestra of an early Fibber McGee show known as "The " House by the Side of tho Road", has succeeded the late Joseph Pas- ternack as conductor of that excel. lent program -- "The Contented Hour" -- heard -from NBC-CBC-on Monday evenings at 10:00. About sixty years ago, concert- goers were all agog about the work of a young Russian composer Peter Techatkowsky. Conservatives were shocked by his original style, but the sincerity and beauty of his mu. sic compelled attention that grew to world-wide admiration. This year, 1940," is the centenary of Tschaikowsky's birth -- and in re- cognition, the composers' serles -- offered by the CBC network at 10:30 each Tuesday-evening -- will next week feature the works of this musical genius in recital. One of the best bands on the afr lanes for our money is Dick Gas- W, parre's Music Makers, They are . featured from WABC on Thursday nights at 11:00 -- and worth 15 minutes of anyone's timo, And here's somo news about the show that will tako the place ot Fibber McGee and Molly at 9;30 on Tuesday nights on the CBC chain for the Summer. Meredith Wilson's Musical Revue 13 the name of the presentation -- and Willson {s one of the foremost flautists in the dance world, Ho was the lad who directed the music of the "Good News" show all Winter, Meredith promises to have a top- notch: program to follow jntg the shoes of one of the best shows on the alr, 4 "| Tun ores; CONTONTIATeS, 1a3TaIues © single constituent of all living Are Licensed New British Order -- Canada Hears Live Animals Only Ex- ception Trada Minister MacKinnon an. 'nounced at Ottawa he had beea lu. formed by the chief Canadian trade commissioner in London that the British Board of Trade had Issued an order under which all goods jm- ported into the United Kingdom, except live quadruped animals, will be subject to Import licensing. Many classes of merchandise al ready were subject to Import Il- cense under previous orders and the new. order extends the control over imports, It does not affect tho goods which 'have been sent to the United Kingdom before June and imported before August 10th, For administration of the new order an open general license that permits importation from all the countries without the necessity of obtaining license tor individual shipments, has been established for certain commodities. OF INTEREST TO CANADA They include among others of Interest to Canada: cod liver oil; tish, fresh, other than frozen and wet salted; spirits, asbestos, raw and waste; drugs, natural, raw; fur skins, undressed; nickel ore, con- centrates, résidues and matter; ra- reat of the world starving to death," aald the college president. AGRICULTURE DISRUPTED ABROAD Pointing out that agriculture has been disrupted In Holland, Belgium, Denmark and other invaded count. rlas, he sald the problem ot food would confront every individual {a (Canada and the United States in the very near future dus to the the world {s in North America and parts of the South American com- food whether they come here for it or we send It to them. It has to be done and we shall have to share the responsibility," sald Dr, Christie In referring tor tncrensef sacriticas which must be made this country, By Wiliam Ferguson THUNDER, and compounds; tale; wood. tar; cadtum;- carbon black; cobalt; films; cinematograph (standard _Width), unexposed, and film base; films, cinematograph, exposed, and tool handles of wood. A further list of goods brought within the scope of open general Il cense as regards imports from Bri" lish Empire countries includes bls. cuits; buttons whether finished or not; dry earth colors; raw wool. Farm Notes Co PASTURINY TIPS According to J.C. Steckley, director of the Western Ontario Experimental Farm, Ridgetown, good grazing land is not the only essential in turning livestock out to pasture. Water, salt and shade are just as important, the director advises. } "Water is not only the largest matter, both plant and animal, but carries the nutrients from one part--of the living structure to - another by holding them in solu- tion," he explained. "Herbivorous animals (those that live chiefly on plants) need a ccnsiderably larger amount of "common salt than is supplied by their vsuul feeds," Mr. Steckley said. salt than other livestock," Mr, Steckley said, "but it is usually advantageous to supply them with some, Water, Shade and Salt _ Commenting on the third essen- tial, "Shade" Mr, Steckley said; "Shade should be provided for all classes of livestock and al- though on mest pasture farms there are sufficient trees avail- able to provide sufficient shade, pasture fields, where there are no shade trees, should be equip- ped with some cheap strugiure that would serve the purpose, "Particularly, this should be done for swine pasture," Mri Steckley caid, "as the direct rays "from the sun may injure young pigs permanently." . Sees America As Big F ood Source Canada and United States to 'Supply Europe -- President of O,A.C. Stresses Our Im- portant Food Role Tho Important role Canada must play in providing food for peoples of war-torn Europe was stressed dress at Guelph, to more than 140 delegates representing business and professional women's clubs all "throughout Ontario, "We cannot expect to go on amid a surplus of foodstuffs with everything at low - prices as-enjoyed In Canada and the United States and have the "Swine and poultry need legs... by Dr, G. I. Christie in a recent ad- |~ -- fact that the only food supply for tinent. "People are going to demand . GEORGE WASHINGTON NEVER. WROTE. HIS NAME --_ : A SUGAR. BEET 1S ABOUT 75 PER CENT WATER/ IN FULL. 12-127 SUGAR beets, botanically speaking, b long lo the same species as the garden beet. Although they confain less than 20 per cent sugar, they furnish nearly onc-half of the world's supply of that 51 Church bench. 3 Forearm 15 Point. 16 He has an commodity. NEXT: Do any Insects emerxe from the egg in a. winked some dition? 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