The Lucknow Sentinel, 1943-03-04, Page 7e;;
va
French .In Britain
Contact Homeland
"Fighting French"' 8 e n d
Messages To Relatives In
France
"Mademoiselle ,Annette" is a nom
Oar guerre, It screens the identity
et 'a • young 2arislan in England
wlio ants. es connecting 11nk in the
chain:: of :e'vents that stretch be-
: leteen the 'Fighting Fr•ench ..anti,
their families in: Prange. •
On -,four days a week fora ;few
brief minutes (longsi Would be
too .dangerous for •the listeners),
Mae sits before the microphol:e. in
a BBC studio .and broadcasts'. in-
timate messages . across the Chan-
nel.-- Each message carries • word
to some„ French ma. 'Jr woman •
that Michel 'or 'Jacques -or Andre •
Is safe ;and well. 'Often that is the
first wore they have heti, in months
of anxious :suspense, that a, hus-
band, a son;, or a brother is 'alive'.'
instead -of Just one Of the. •,miss-
ing." L Surnames,• of course, .c.4.11.-
net
:..n-not . be;mentioned, and Christian
names only, rarely,,fer the Germans
listen 'carefully.
Messages Received
But oven .the relentlessness of
Nazi. detection :is . no' match for
;either French .Wit or mother wit.
If Fighting French 'have a "sys.
•em". so worked .that the Germans .
ean, never telt who is sending the•
message,_:although ..it is easy -.for- :-
the relatives....to recognize from
Whom it comes._ . Age. is g vee,' and." -
th;e .neigihborhood +to wh' h ° the
Message -sender 'belongs, but it, is
little personal. • details • than bring
the thrill of •recognition to those.
who risk liberty, and' even life,,to
listen. "Henri, who always broke
hie .s'hoe'laces;, 'Jean; who still has
the sear where he cut his knee on
the bill -hook; Jules, who. hated
seep; Rene, whose favorite wine
was . ." are only pointers 1n, the
den ty chart. .
does' ".she know that th
e
. .
ed
ges are receiv. ' She...,does.
Messages come back in return.
There have even• been letters with.
retain ,:stamps on. them. One. Was
.
,addressed: "iVarcel, born. July. 14,
' .1915, c/o BBC London." Tho, Fight-•
big . French had to go .through all•
their res ids, but they found the
right Ma el in the end.
♦1
' NDA -Y
• C -'.00L
IIS N+
March 14
• IN THE UPPER. ROOM
John 13, 14
PRINTED' TEXT,
John • 13:12-20; 14.:1.6
GOLDEN TEXT. -Jesus: - snithh
unto him, I am the wey, and the
iruth,' and the life: noone eons -
*di unto the 'Father,but by me.
John 14:6.. `
MVlemor'.y-Verse I vi+ill.,.pray unto
Jehovah. ' Jeremiah' 42:4. •
THE LESSON IN . ITS' SETTING,
-Tine. Thursday. evening,
April .6, A.D. 30. • . '
`Place. In • the upper, room
where the,Last Supper was held.
Somewhere' in the city of ' Jeriisa-
lens. '
* Christ's Interpretation
" •" So:when he- had washed' their•
feet, and ta`'ken his garments, and
sat down again, he said unto
them,: Know ye what' 1 have done•
to you? Ye call me, Teacher, and
' Lord: and ye say„ well, for so 1
am. If T then, the Lord .and the
Teacher, :have waslied your feet,
ye also ought to wash onean-
other's feet. . For I have , given ,
you an : example, that 'ye . also:
should do as I have done to you. .
Verily, verily, I , soy.. unto you;_ _Af_
servant is . not 'gre'ater • than' his
lord; eneither one .o that -_is_•_ _sent
greateil:than he that sent. him. If
Ye' know these things, blessed, are '
ye iflye do them," What our
Lord was really laying upon the ".
disciples as a command was their
Willingness to serve others'•in the
}nimblest and most menial ways,'
an11, to be glad .to serve in. 'this
wary whenever they knew it was
the Lord's will: What our Lord ••
here,. desires is not so much some
physictil act- of foot washing as
tru _
e humilit of heart
Y..... _ when; vva
`. know .what 'is right; • w+hat the
Lord demands of us, we .will never
have true •joy until we are doing
those very. things.
Jesus„' Foretells 'His Betrayal
"I speak not of you all:. I know'
whom. I have chosen: •but that th
scripture may be fulfilled, He the
e.. eth, m . bread.lifte�
, .Y d up ,his heel
against me..From ]henceforth' I:
tett you. a ore it 'come to • puss,
A CAPTURED NAZI SUB:
Th
in
COMMANDER
'his, capture by American soldiers
in North Africa. The Commander
had to beach his.submarine after
it Wee. badly damaged by British
depth charges off • the -Algeria ,
Coast. His entire crew was also
Plane Windshield
Made Bird -Proof
hat, when, it is opine to pass, ye
ay believe that I ant he. Verily,
erily, I say unto yop, He that,
eiveth me; and he that receiVeth
e receiveth him that sent me."
e metaphor here is of one rais-
g his foot before ,kicking, but
e blow is pot given. This 'ivas-
e attitude of -Jesus at this
moment. •
Oar Lord ,ziow definitelY an,
• nounces that. sone of the • twelve
sitting in the upper rOom .would-.
-trat night betray their Master.
Our Lord will offer no resistance
' or defense. ' Men do unto
—*whatevm—tlre;rlmt,' as lie said
:leaves Hiniself in their, hullo
-They take :their responsibility in
what they do; He fulfills His.in
:whit He suffers.
Christ's Words of Comfort
"Let not yonr heart be
-troubled: believe in God, -belieVe
also in me." Thege are words not
Only of sympathetic kindness but
of a needful counsel. Note' par-
hoW Christ places Hiin-
self in immediate relationship with
. worthy of' being believed. .
many.mansions; if it were not so,
I would ,have told you; for I go,
,, to -prepare a place for you. And'
if I go and prepare a place fOr
you, I ,come again, and will' re-
ceive yeti unto myself; that where
I am, there ye may be,also." Here
is the cleerest possible announde-
fitent of what- is known in the
Church as the *end advent of
.our Lord. Chriat promised to
come back for us becanse He
.wants us te be. with Him., ,'Here
-Laminated Glas's Withstands again is the manifestation of in -
Shock of High Flying Birds finite love:,
Christ Is The Treth
The danger to airplane wind- "And whither I go, • ye know
Shiel.48 from collialma with Wel- the Way. Themes saitb unto hint,.
flying birds bps ,ziew been obvi- 'Lord,. we. know not whither thop
• ated, Civil Aeronailtics Authority gliest haw know we 'the way?
officiate claimed February 6 in dis- Jesus saith unto him,,1 sm the
closing the development of a la.m-, way, and the truth, and the life:
bated, "bird-nsoof" ene .cometh nnto the Father,
seven times as ,strong as ordinary bet by me." "
- Am months bf experiment by men may piltss from one to the
. .A. end glass and plastic cam- other. Hence, perhaps the 'Chris-
pany experts, can withsatnd , the tlan faith is spoken of as the Way.
impact of a '15 -pound bird at.speeds
Christ is the truth unehangeable
of 200 or more Miles an hour. The
and eternal concerning the funda-
• ,older type brae ander hoped at
mentals of aistence. Note care-,,
100 Mica an hour et less. °
'rests of the new glass Were fullY, He 'does not say He' 'brings
Made with a 20 -foot -long, double- the truth, or teaches. the truth,
Mose paneM. The gun was cme 'the truth 'Concerning love; in Him•
itru.cted,„ for. the testa by Westing- ' M the truth of holin.ess; in Him is
' house laboratory engineer's. the truth of scarifiee; in Him le
The nevi wndshield 0/mists of the truth a life; in Him is• the
a eingle layer of faiketnpared truth of creation; in Him is the
glass, on the outside, an air space, truth of „the thiniate sovereignty
.then in inside panel made of two Of trighteouinv.
*beets 'of 'glean separated by a
thick plastic filling. Air frpm the
plane's engine` eihauit tifeulatee
In the enelo.sed space to de-ice the
•
Celluloid, the first plestie used
In Ameries, was developed lit
1838 and trade -Marked h•si the
11 *Patent Office in 1973,
•
'ROUND .TIE WORLD PICK -A -BACK
Senegalese woman (left), seeing her husband eft AO -war -from I)al.ar,, totes her youngster in'the'
sarrie,Jmanner :as the 'Indian 'woman shipyard worker at •
Fictou, Nova Settle: •
•
• `
RADIO REP REX.
REPORTER By
"FRUST
broadcasts as singing star' of Roy
hocksl'ey's.• popular Musical Al.-
bum. As a curtain raiseFlo the
Saturday night, hockey 'broad
casts, the new 8:30 to 9 p.m. as-
signment ent to . Kathryn :Young will'
bee---mmuch enjoyed.: b '
* 5,, *
For • many years .CFRB listen-
' ere every • •nloi-ning, . Monday
--through , Friday, from ' 10.30 'to
10.45• have enjoyed the cheerful,
inspiring; voice of Mrs. H. M.• Ait- •.
'ken bringing the feminine inter-
_pretation:.-of-.eurr-ent-events world:
• wide •and invaluable • information.
an
that other.-inapertan:t `world'- -•.-
the home. Books music, theatre,.
movies,. personalities; war work, •
women's elub'work, care of. home, •
baby and husband (!) — these
and a score .of other interesting'
• topics have been included in these
daily ghats by Mrs.. Aitken.. • Am '
afraid jhere's a disappointment in .
store 'for you. • Commencing • fast
'Monday, Mrs. Aitken, took over a .
' very.. important government as,
signrnent--that o`f .erga[nizing and '.
qso-ord'inating• •worKien..s clubs_ arid.:'
"groups. right ,across the, length
,•and•breadth of Canada., •In con -
Junction -With the Hon. J. L.' I'ls-
„ley and his Department of..Na•
-
tiona•I • Revenue,' Mrs. Aitken will
undertake • the mission of 'further-
ing the • saleof war savings 'stamps
and certificates . . . ajd .for six
months.. we shal;1 • not ,have 'phis .'
pleasure of hearing that cheery o
Inews.. ..
We all enjoY -renewing old radio .
,aequaintances: Last Saturday.
many listeners welcomed the re-
turn to the airwaves of kathryn
Young, 'talented ly-i• ic soprano,
who commenced a. new, series Of :
Next Monday, Match. 1st, is St.
David's Day . an • occasion
which honours the patron saint.
of Wales :In recognition of the
occasion he CBC will p:sent''a
special half 'hour, programme of
traditional Welsh airs, .which will
be . heard over; the national net
-
Work at 4.30 p.m. Welsh stories.
will :be a , feature of the • pre-'
gramme." One of these stories will
exPlain p n the •origin ' of the Welsh
national
errrble
m, the "3e'ek. An-
other will delve into the histori- •
'"future; featuring .various phases
of country church work. • The •
broadcasts, while Maintaining •a':
religious atmosphere, will at the
same time incorporate illust}'a-
tions of the activities of Sunday
Sehoo1, ' groups, women's, church
auxiliaries, choirs, : anniversary
celebrations and other interesting
-interpretations of the part played
"by ,country 'churches -1P everyday
life of the rural conlmunitie8 of
• .Ontario. Local pastors will be
asked to take part in the pro-
gramme. Your "columnist; Rex
Frost, would;be glad to' hear from
rural, clergymen who would like
'to have their 'church activities in-
cluded in the .forthcoming series
of .broadca'sts.
Costly',Canaouf;age
Necessary � In War
cal associations Of the well knoWit
known Welsh musical: festivals.
CBC 'Magic Carpet programme
will also. go Welsh for the St.
David's Day occasion . . Mardi
Ist, 7.80 pan. and will stage a
very sPecial fairy .tale from the
heart of Wales, ,so that the young-
• In the, realization that particu-
larly in rural Ontario the loCal
,eharch;is the fecal point of Secial •
as well as religious .tlio6glit• and -
activity, CFIZB Toronte antici-
pating 'the ineuguratien of a .new
series of broadcasts in the near
I717.0,- cyfuppi,•.WORLD.:
Wil liana .1
7 'SUN AND
APPEAR TO BE
SAME SI.ZE;
THE MOON
COULD MAKE
ITS' MoNTHLY
TRIPS ARptiND
THE EARTH
A
GLOBE MUCH.
g#1092
BOLL. WEEVIL
ttAs NO GREAT LIKING'.
FOR COTTON! IT
em DRY
ifiNa*MOVI 6-9
-ITV IS KNOWN AS
ANSWER: 'Periser.ela, -Florida,- because 11 Mir traine ' so Many
Navy ilyeis,
POP—A Word From the Wise '
OUT FOR
•
.• between the ,cemoliflage experts:
• fiage and endeavor to plek it ,to.
bits, a study by the Aeronautical
The essential pbjeetiveof eamou-
• nage is, ot ceurse, to, puzzle the
bombardier, delaying his reCogni-•
tion Of his target ler the, sn14
--Wend thaf May deterMine the
stecess or failure of sh 4. 109i:felon.
Tricks, of .the 1Wd':e
. Measures, ..they will nevertheless
talk' about 'some Of the 'tricks of
' decoy installations, • false high-
ways, considerable sinoke Or fog-,
generating equipment; "disruPtive
painting," and struttures built of,
cheap textiles,. artificial tree• plent-
ing' and foliage hung froth nets or
• wire guys: Flood -lighting •Often
elimleate„ artificial. shadows
*Which do. not keep steP with • die
tt, dead give-away to the photo -in-
terpreter who znay be Studying an
toned down by darkenieg roofs,
runways and taxiivays with paint, •
' •cinders or. stone other medium
' which will make. thein pbotograph
the seine tone 'as the stirrounding
illarted
W. A. Walgreere of Flagstaff,'
Ariz., got more than a laugh out
of a storytold by Frank Bradley,
Navajo ,Indian, at an American
Legion pest meettng—he got. a
- Seine -thing to think' about,
says American Legion •Magazine.'
the rounds of the eld Indian ruins
near Kayenti,. in the Navajo
count**, and at one of the cliff,
dweller villages they had to leave
the ear' and walk soine distanee.
,Then someone remembered he bad
neglected to ,lock
began to. worrY.
"It is perfectly safe," assure&
6 qR
-
Cheap Rubber
From Guayule
To Be Produced Eventually
- aclatite •-4149re, e« ato- 4cl.
The guayule plant dines'
more rubber, in proportion: fd( .its
weight thancan be had from any
other source. And this is natural
rubber, too; chemically' the exact•
duplicate of the best rubber : tree..
Not only • that,' the sturdy, little
gray leafed guayule shrub is no,.
prima donna about &wing condi-
Mons and environment. It thrives
luxuriantly aid, stores rubber like
a cactus stores' water during the
long drysummers. of California,
Arizona, -:Texas and New 'Mexico.
• The , last tree rubber • w'hich
reached New York .sold for 221/2 c
a pound. For synthetic rubber the
price has been ranging from 65c
to $1 per pound' since 193'1 Some
day itis expected that synthetic
rubber can be made to sell for as
low as25c a pound.' However.,
rubber from the guayule plant
can 'eventually be produced in un-
limited quantities for ' l0c per
pound, even eventually' at Se per
pound, according to one 'eminent
authority.
825,000,000' Appropriation .
On the fifth 'of last March 'Con
gr'essappropriated .,$25,Q0:.o,00.0„to •
start guayule rubber into: preduc-.
_tion=50,004,` acres -.-of It inr Cal---
ifornia alone. Millions of acres in
the west are adapted' to the mea-
gre requirements of the knee-
high shrub.
The guayule plant • contains •'a 9
Mall amount of rubber both . in
its branches and roots when only
a year old. It doubles this amount
the second year, triples in the
. third, and continues toincrease,
its store of rubber for 10 years,
at which time the .peak' .is reached.
The rubber it contains is then.
equal to about 30 per cent of tah-,
oirtabeiwwithont deterioration
in quantity or 'quality for there-,
mainder of its • life. And •the,
guayuleplant reaches the ripe .
old age of two score years.
540;000 ' Tons in 1946
The United States tariff com-
mission estimates ave'.can ,;lroduca'
•5444000 tons of guayule ruubber
in 19.46::In 1948 they figure. that
2,000,o&o ~ tots can be . ,produced,'
This is more than -twice our:pres-
ent requirements for military and
outer essential needs.
Strangely enough, back in 1910
this country gonsumed more glum
yulerubber than any other kind.
We used. around 15 tens daily. It
was shipped in , from s Mexico.
Cheap tree' rubber frot the far
east gradually supplanted it. Now
history, reverses. itself. Guayule
tires will be cheap 'tires because •,
of low' production costs when •the
industry finally gets going on the
big- scale 'planned, And we will be
free from dependence ow Asiatic
rubber- .. o
•
Babes In. the Wood ;
Two little-rliildreari� '7mites afia_7—T
five and'seye ” ran away from
'homeaand:Iid in'oie of'
London s
parks: They were found a few
hours later after their distracted '
parents had notified the. police.
When 'they were asked: why they'd
run away, they said they wanted
to be like the 'babes in the wood,
and hide in the wood,
•until thewar
was over
OUR ,RADIO LOG
TORONTO -T
b 5TRT
InP75 '.
CFRB 8.601,• 'CBL• 740k
—excl. s80'k• C13 -Y' p10rc^
II.S. NETWORKS
WJZ, N.B.C. Blue 770k
CANADIAN STATIONS
CFOS Owen Sd. 1400k
CROC Hamilton 1.150k
CHML Hamilton 900k
OKTI3 St. Cath. 15513k
CFOP Montreal 660k
CFCH North Bay 1230k
JCS Stratford, 1240k
KWS
CKA
C dR � ,3 ,
ontreal r
fiIc
CICCR `''Wate'rloo"' 149d1
CKCO. Ottawa- .13101c
CKGfi3 Timmins 1470k
CKSO Sudbury 790k
'CK?C Brantford •1380ky
.CrccLW 'Windsor 8001
KNX Wingham 9201
CHER Peter.boro •.1430k
Il.S..SIATIOS ° '
WEBB k
WHAM Rochester 118falo 0k
WLW Cincinnati 7p.0k
WGY Schenectady,. 810k,
KORA Pittsburgh: 10201
.WB13;VI Chicago 79011
WBBN ..Buffalo 930k
Chatham 430k WKI3W Hilffalri. 1520k
FPL London 1570k WJR Detroit , 760k
SIIORT"'W.4.1181.
I3 Erngland- '
GSC ' England
GSD England 11.73'n
GSE,. England' •'11.86m
G Sd,!'England 17.79in
GSP • Bngland 15.31m
EAR' •Sbain' • 9.48m
RAN Russia . '9.6'0m
11NE Russia 12.00m
P.RF5 • 13.raz11 95.00m
WGEA Schenectady
15.33m •.:
WCEX N.• York 11.83in
•WRCL Poston 15.15m
HUGE FISH
HORIZONTAL AnsWer to Previous Puzzle
. oceanic fish.
9 It has a
swordlike
13 Musical,
14 imitation
15 Discolored .
by decay.
16 Circular wall.
• 78 Starting
SO Measpre Of !
11 Girdled
113Peasant, 44.
24T0 rent, te.
30 Formal
**Electrified .
s particle,
34 Golden orlote.'
,36 Humming bird
To scatter.
DON -UDE
iML30111 F410
011511 F)lltlA(
CI
AEU ZiME]
LIMON MONA
MOO @MINN- 111124
•
41 Masts,
43 Pronouri.
48 Auricula te.
48 OPppsed 'to.
49
fl It is .highlY
03 It is wit4o0t
. distinct
05 T6 put, in
*6 Yielded
2 Sheep's coat. -
Musical sound.
. 7 Small island;
10 Bugle plant.
Virginia, •
15 The adult
fish is
of teeth.
.26 To Jim
26 Weird:
29 Small hotel,
31,Pen 'point..
37 Possessed.
39 Risof 'edge.
40 Sixty *spina;
,42 Legume.
reed.
44 Stockings, ,
46 Biblical
4? Payment .
49 Child's --napkiii
50 Single thing.
52 Verbal ending:,
54 Italian river. •
14
ze
32
51
— LOOK OUT F0•0
J. MILLAR WATT