HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1943-04-01, Page 3L,
1."
When The Press -
Stopped Rolling
• Peopleof . Town' Without
• Newspaper Missed Local
News
•
•14,••• '4.'4' •
4••74D'rg.411,70,
-...aeSeaseastie4ea es- t.;".,;:*"... f,",..111;••;4",":"Hia v
• Editor. and Piiltlisher tells about
an Important city ,in Pennsylvania,
tithieh, 'due to a strike, was with-
out a daily, newspaper for 10
month, from, Decernber, 19.41, .to
• October, 1a42.The.city was Chest-. =
er; 86,000,population•gerviag a ter-
ritary • or 360.000 •peopte, now a
•f• • - goitre' of huge shipbuilding.atid
other war inclustriPS, A strike oc- .
•° tarred in •the plant and it Was shut
afalvaatust before enter'ed the'
• - war.. Pearl Harbor happerieclaitut
the hig pressgsawere
Business Fell Off
OIt wasn't the World news that
the •people missed 'so Much. They
could get that,: a little later May-,
. be, but eventually they Would learn .
what was happening. That it wes
y 'the ffeld ef locinews': that
POINTER ON TARGET --- PREDICTORS SET
WPMEk mrmim
•
•
, • • there ..was, a blackout. jean smith ••.iateas....in.-Englantlainanath-e'ispette7;11-elifit-firide-r, a-re:die-tor- anderadio location.-
•---t-inquiredu " the '0heilth of et-• • We aim the guns, and' the--rnen load -turd th•eia.."
_meighboe oily to learn that he had
been buried a week ago. Who mar-
ried who're blessed events in a
filentlai tenuity, the4 state otasthe
° caureh, the lodge the achoolifffiese
Were all; a blank. Merehahts tried
throwaway", •but that is just
what they were -they coiltatned no
local•news nor news of the district
no pews of friends and relatives,7._,. • . - th
----atarna,de- thon-worthatiering Orr
•the, front porch. Busineere fell -off
- • aamataavent. toslarger • cities nearby
despite the influx of ,tear Workers.
• °Some merchants were forced to'
•
close thjely stares. .' •
"I used to ma.ke ' fun or our,
"Eines'," said one wealthy citiz-en.
• "I,never will again.- 1 'Miss it toe'.
muCh.." • ' A
was a 'blackout for that ina.
• portant coMmunity,
•
'' 10 Months In bark,
• Politicians with. queer ideas oft-
en: try to make votes by •saying,
harsh: things about newspapers.
• But theyacotildn't do thattotlaya,47.•
WeePle know now •
' ,what they missed • when ;Jae big
Press &topped rolling. . They . spent
• • 10 monthsin the dealt. But now •
• the _Cheater Times lias resumed
•' publication. And, it has a circula-:
• tion, today 3,000 larger than When
•tt•• it suspended, Thepeopie of Chest-
er and coma un ity •know their
newspaper as an importalat cog Iii;
• " then- •Conitnii•nity enteaprise, •and • '
. everything that helps to 'make, a
community a going colacerm '•
• .
1-7)tan-For. Meeting
Farril Labor Need
Farmers Might Be EncOurag-
.
• ed To • Move From. 'Poor
Farms To. More Productive
- Areas
•
S UNDAY %
S CHPOL
L E-SSON
One or the proposals 'of the .gov-
eraimerit for meeting the great need
,• "ror itaan labor is to encourage me
to move from poor Tames' whete
•
they' are' meking 'a bare livang,
more productive. districts- wit
they en earn the beet wages ev
paid for farm 'labor, •saye.the'•W
nipegarPre,e. Presa. They are
perienced farriers, just 'the ki
of men who are *anted.
Fifty •thousaud United Stat
fartnerii ere being moved this y
under.suelt. a -plan; -the • govet
gent • Paying transpertatioa cos
negiying other assistance. M
re gping•tce;be moved from ba
ee .mountain farms in Kentuck,
okiatry .'district% in New:Engler!,
�tn poor •to gond. areas In Ml
ouri, and the same in 'Ohio, Il
• WiScorisiii arid. other ,state
. Canada's Pioneer• Farms
fn Canada,. the *sus. of 194
bowed tail,. of the. total 734
36 farms, 100,337 were classed a
pioneer farm's." There no pr
uct which they market -to :an
rge extent. They keep .'enoug
tock \to meet the fern* needs
nd the Men• wary out at time
get a. little ready money. Thei
ne poor -or only Partly .cleat
. In •Manitdba, there are farm
ke...thiS an. the .hush. land •sou•th
t •of Winnipeg -mid in the north
n part of the province, as kla(
the northern 'Mils Saskatch
an and Altherta.
By actively encouraging and as -
ting those farmers to ',neve, tfor
e ir own profW as well 'as for
e itbereas'ing of food production
w'so urgehtly •needeil, it should
possible to secare;manyathous.
de of men for the °More' prOduc:.
e, farms where their labors wIll
to
ere
er
du- •
ex-
nd
ee •
ear
•-n;
t s
en
y
1-
s.
,-
s.
0-
Y.
r
a
. '
a
r
t
7' d
la
.
sa
•• to
, ed
31
eas
er
In
ew
sis
tb
th
no
be
an
tiv
-Huns Ship French
In Freight Cars
German S. .a.nd regular troop's
were reported to be roundiag up
..• Vrenchrnep for forced labor by
beuseato-house raids in Lyon and
other districts, in some case i seiz-
• leg Frenchmen arid shipping -Ahem
kftstif*taya• tattlferghta cars: -
•'lead lots without alltarir)g them
•• t0 conntiunicate with the it Amite
' The Nazis led details Of -French
aiolice in In -rinse -to -house r•ftight
reids, andfearwas expressed that
Ven werhen 18 to -35 years old
might be. mobilized for Work in
• Germany, 'adviees reaching Berne
reported.
•
CHRIST'S. GLORY •
Mark 9:2-8; 2--Piter lager
GOLDEN' TEXT. --There• c
• voice out of the cloud, Th
• ,my beloved Song hear • ye
Mark 917. • • . a •
• Memory,Verse: God . . lo
• and sent his Son. 1 John 4
' THE LESSON IN. ITS SETTI
Time.---Autuani, A.D. 29.
.• Place,. --;Not specifically •de
• mated; but undoubtedly Mo
• Berman, far north in Palestine
• The 'Treasfiguration
, "And •after%ix days, Jesus
• eth with ' hint Peter, and Jam
Vrohm. • ,?ad:"btingeth, them
up into- a high anountain apart by •
•themselves. Arid he was trans=
• figured' before -thern:"." The wor• d,
here taansfigured is the Greek
, word inetarnerphoo, from' whic:h.
comes our word metainorphis. The ,
root :of this word inerphoo means
to Mold into. a fern), so ° that the
• compound woad), which -here ap-
• pears, •nieans • to •'.change the
• form 'of, to alter. t is foondare•
feiviag to our Own trensforneation,
which is apiritual, (and not phygi,
cal as the laird's) in -2 Corinthians
3:18, and Romans 12:2. The Word
• doescnot sirnilly mean an external
change,' but an aetual inner and
.eternal change.
"And his garments became glis-
teaing, exceeding white; 'so as no
•fuller on earth Can whiten them:"
When the disciples looked at the
countenance of Jesus they looked.
at -a -refulgence as brilrfint and
dazzling.' as the sun itself. And
this extended to His entire form,:
for___His-veratagannenta-hada-thar''
translucent whitenesS of pure
light.• • •••
Pete?' Proposal •.
"And there appeared unto them
Elijah' with *sees,: and they vvers
talking withaJesus. •And Peter
answereth •and saith to 'Jesus,'
Rabbi, it is geed' for ui to be
here: and let us make three taber--
nacles; one for:thee, and one tot.
Metes, and one for Elijah. • For
he knew not what te enswer,' for
they became sore- afraid." Peter
and • fellows were so taken'
With what they saw that they de-
ired to abide on the moant with
Jesus' and 'the saint. When the
pestle Peter .speaks Of tiber-
Ades, he means those little
ootlig or huti 'such as were con-
structed',for the Feast of Taber-,
aclea, made out "of' branches of
res or bushes. , • -
The Voice From Heaven
"And there came ,a cloud over -
Wowing them: and there came
Voice out of the cloud; This is
y. beloved Son: hr tre him."
e essential difference „between
is voice and that which was
eard • at the • baptiana 'la the•
'Ilear ye him.' The words
e -.from Deuteronomy 8:15, 19,
d seem- to be suggested by the •
pliearatice of Moses. The Prophet
e unto Moses is identified with'
e Christ, 'the beloved- or elect .
n; the allegiance due to Moses
now, with Move' concurrence,
anskerred to Jesus..
"F wet I un-
lrair CSn1diaidgait .thioei• oLewvil-ear --
nglY devised fablea." The ex.;
essionarageeesewithatittaang-fferr-
ratien of Si. Paul (2 Cor.
'7) that they, the apostles,
re not as •the marry .who
falsi-
d or 'misrepresented the Word
God. •
'When we made known unto
the power and coming of ons
d Jesus Christ." Many schol-
believe that the word `c•orea
' refers to ,the first advent of
Lord but prdtehbe.afi&aveseaa-
iteat'.°216.-TrEheria
in
ch•the Word °teem ,IS the Sec -
advent; hot the first. •
Holy Ground
For he 'rebeiVed .frOatia Gd the
er honor and glorY, When'
e was berhe Mich a voice to
•by the Majeatic Glory, Thia
y. beloved Stilt; in Whoa I am
pleemolt` and this Voice we
elves- heard „ borne eat .
•
•
IMO •
is IA
ved
:10.
NG
sig-
unt
takat-,
es.,
B.
a
a
a
nr
,Th
ar
an
•laik
• th
So
• LS
ni
tr
2:1
we
fie
of
you
Loa
ens
leg
our
hie
•
7::".rseg
*hi
ond
Path
ther
him
well
our
•
44
heaV• en, = when. "we were • with- him
• in the holy anohnt,".
'. We learn here why the. apostles •
.wete•taken with. Jesus to witness -
,His..transfiguratiote Just, before,
that event Wei find . (Matt.' 16:21 ;
• Mark 8 :31 ; Luke .9 :22 ). it.. reee"rd.
.., ed. that Jesus- had begun to,.sliow
•aulato•- -His- •disciplpi(UW must
suffer and die at Jerusalem. To
. Peter, who, 'as•at other times, was
. the mouthpiece 'of -thereat,. such
• a -declaration was 'unacceptable;
..but. at his .expreseiort of diapleaS".
ure. he met the'lebake, `Get •thea
behind me,. Satan.' 'He, and •the • '
,rest with. him, felt .no doubt that •
' attch a death as Jesus had spoken'.
. of would. be, :hulnanly speaking,.
the ruin .pf, their.. hopes. Now
• these three .represeatatives• of , the
• apostolic band • behead Moses and
Elias appearing in, •anda
....Christ glorified more'•then'tlidki-
and thesubjectp_twhich. they
:---rip-Ote was the very death of which
•'they hadsothanked, to heart the
• decease which.}ie 'was about
'aceemplielt Jerusalem (Luke 9:
•31): The verb which the. evangea
uses jells:4k the .fulfillment
of a prescribed coarse,' and thus
Peter was'taught, and the rest....
. with him, to speak of.that. death.
afterwards he do Ps' In his.,for-
Iner 'letter,. 'Christ was rerily.•
fo,reerdained' to*this redeeming •
•".•
, •
Sakti one "of' them:
.1;
• work 'before , the foundatibn of.
the world.' •They heard that He
who was to die wiA the, very Son
• Of God. God's voice had been
• heard there attesting the divinity
• of their . Lord and Master; •the
• place whereon they had; thus stood
eaerniere, holy -ground; • •
All The King's Men
And Horses TO Help
. All :the. -Kinei horses and all.
the King's men ard to be used 'in
bringing ta this year's harvest on
the Royal estate at Windsor,' 25.
miles west of' Londen.
Many, extra acres have. been
• 'put under cultivation at Windsor,
and there will be plenty ,of work
•- -for the • horse si including the fa
• Meng Windsor' - gratis -Which drew
-the goltlen coach in the Corona-
tion of .Geotge, VI in.1937.
There also will be work for,
••members of the Royal staff, erho '
at' -the Kipg's iexpress, with this
year will. "lend a hand" in •the
harvesting. . •
• Only twe horses aeinain iri the
• Royal stables at -Backingliam
'Palace, arid they are ite/aini to •
save &Celine ' by drawing the
brougham in which the Ring's
'messengers ride.
•
,. .
1 - . „HEAVENLY - BELT
a .
,. le
ROICIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle '10 Tissue.
- 1 Innaginary '
heavenly. M110,1g011119.11ME,3 MORN II Persia.
belt.•E01:11SIVIiiiigi C) 1111:11E1410 14 Huge wild
111MG1 RICJCI!JJ ° ZINN , beast.
, 6 It contains
or EgIg32.--0[1:1011iiil OINK/ ,
•1,, Its third sign,
' • sun's path X ' Ellglig 121 I§ ..1-9 -Its-second ---
• • ,Conimanded. nal:laariliieLEIN_ONI 511? . wil divisin.
/3 Radical. •DZIa.illIVIL3' Millig CIO 25 To reject.
• 15 Over (cotit.). ElaugaimiAD 61tIPAD
a_16..Raceende[Z] 1§0121 E.. Du 26 Acidity.
*OU111 PMFIZa MEC@ ....27G .0. -.6-f . y ..-.....----. •
,28 Street car. 1
wisdom. :
. 17 River.
18 Upright shaft. gEllglINIIP ig111112E4041111
CO
20 Sea eagle. 29 Fabulous birds'
irdll0COOMIA 4k1E3C2
,Collection df
" 21 Male offspring 30 Wise.
• 22MILYZININIIMEJ a ArMalp 31 Not edible:
rads.
33 Cessation of
3 HaIrt an. ern. 42 Plural ' paths of the use..
• 24 Stractural . - (ar ) " ._
bb •• ,principal 36 Uneli..eeled. ..1
n hitt „ 43 Ttadio bUlba. !"--s- 37 Part of foot.
30 Coartesy title. 45 Provided. • VERTICAL 38 Aneie t
32 More 47Herb. -2•Genus of- • - 3tlfera
fastidious. 50 Small iland. swans. .. 41 Observes.
• 33 To prsper. 51 About. 3 College. • 42 To gasp,
114 God of sky, 53 Knot. <Aida]. 44To tattle.
• 25 Den,oting 64 To vex. °- 4 'Unoccupid. 46 12 inches ' •
,
- equal ° - 65 Glade. . 5 Blasphemes. (pl).
•
ressure. 561t has -r. 6 Stiff collar. 48Poein.
• 37 Keystones. • Welts or I Credit (abbr.) 49 Snaky fisli,
40 Perfumes: divisions. • 8 Musical note. 51 Fruit. -
41 Trapped. '• 57 It shows the • 0 Italian river. 52 Male. ,
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-7-.
•
.1i
19 '
POP -A8 Always
•
' .1ra",w,•!1',.•
• ,,R "411,*.T.12,74r.
Roll Up Your
Sleeves And Dig
"IlettSr coma out in the sunshine
and ;hoe vegetables": say British
• gardeners "than' wait in a queue
foe. thew pd • then rind the Shop'
sold out." '
• This year Canadians are being
• asked by the Agricultural Supplies
Board of the Dciminiori D'apartnient
of .Agricniture to 'come- out 'in the
aunshitte and. hoe." Familal' and
Comiunnity vegetable ga,rdens are
going•a• be 'the falhionable: thing
this• season and. it'a, time to' start •
plans aow.. .; • •• .
The Government 'is .sponsoring'
this campaign for 4.. number of ,
'reasons. ,Taansportetion is beecina
ing more of a problem which•means,
, that there may be .diffictilty in
supplying' markets with 'fresh vege-
'tables, grown at a distance. Com-
aperataajaar_catters7 are:. -feced-, ,with•
• a labor shorta,ge that 'will in many
acasesapreveatatheir expanding _
• stahreve orlifereaked 'needs:Wore
vegetables are needed for ship-
ment overseisa by. way of the de• s
hydration plants. The vegetable
Seed supply is better this year and
the essential tools for home gard-
ening, rakes, ' hoes, digging -forks
and spades- are .alsp available, es.
are fertilizers. In community gar-
dens and among :neighbors larger
•tools ean be•
Communitypotato Ca.rnema
• AdVice as to crop,.• fertilizer and
care Of gardens will be available '
locally. Regarding erapsi-t h e
aGovernMent authorities adage that
• potatoes are best arowit com-
munity gardens where prober ate
tention can' be, given to spraying
Or dusting; but -ton:lathes, carrots,
onions, beans, peas, corn, cab-
.
bage, lettuce, spinach; and swiss
chard are all suitable fob either •
• home or ,comairunfty gardens.
Tl
ie more vegetables •that are
• grow•n im-abome-and eimmtiatatty--`,
..gardeas this year, the better Can-
ada will be able to feed. her arm-
ed ;forces and hat
Let's all get ready, roll up our
sleeves and .dig for Victory.
. '
•
• A unieue feature Of the re-
cently obaert-ed" Boy Scout Week
was theplan adppted by the Ot.
tiara Norteal School. Student •
teachers during that week were
instructed to give a history of
the birth and the growth of the
Scout Movement to their classes.
SCOUTING ...
•
Jahn H. Price of Qiiebec, a
member of the Canadian general
COuncil 6f the .Boy couts A.sso-
dation is a prisoner of war in
Hong Kong.
hearof-
Canada's • new Royal Canadian
Army Cadets was one of Canada's
.,--firat-13-oy-Scoutsongabefera-the-
Movement was officially inaugur-
ated in Canada, Col. Grier and a
group of his boyhood friends
formed themselves into a Scout' •
patrol and. carried: on. They cor
reap:hided direetly with the, Paun-
der, Lord Baden-Powell who cour-
teously apswered all their en-
qpiries. That was in • 1908a, th;
Year Se -outing -it,4-ted in
Great Britain.
* *
His Grace' the Arcbishop, of
Cauterhury. Primate ' of ' the
Church ofeEngiand has batorne a
member et the General Cuncil
of the 13037 8'coutsAsociatIon in.
. Greet Britain..
• * ' •
Two British Boy Scone have
been ' awarded the. Victoria Cross
In. the Present conflict, the ‘'An-
nual Report of., Imperial Head
quarters Of the Roy Scouts •Asso-
dation ,reveals.
* • •
Despite the fact that 15 Boy
Scout Troop headquarters Were
destroyed by ' enemy bombing,
130y Scouts of Norwich, England,
have just completed the shipment
of their 1,06(Ith ton of 'waste-
paper. •
*
. .
Front' a Fleet Air An n pilot:
"You would never believe the
number of Scouting activities
which come into our training.
Swimming., Morse and.. Semaphore
one expects, but the. Fleet Air
I& expects 1t pate io know
knots; whippings and splices. • The
instructor asked e if • d0„hoe,
sea an in the navy. I was glad
to.,be able to answer, 'No chief,
' but I was a Boy Scout.'"
. „
‘.1
..,. .
1 11411 11.10 REP 011111 REX FROST
-1°. On Sunday, March 21st, Prime It cuts ,, out the crackling, whist -
'Minister Winst5ia Churchill used' ling and other harsh noises which
the world wide facilities of radio have interrupted the enjoyment
'to give some indication of his of .radio reception' in the past •
Vision of a post wee future. In- when the weather has been in-
• cluded in:his coniment were sev- favourable or there has been in-
eral considerations particuiarla terference froinanearby electrical
• of interest to thoie' who- listened transfermers,' tapper lines and,
to hie apeech iti rural Canada and other•equipment Frequency ano-
the United States. Said the Brit- dulation : therefore, will be the •
ish Prime ,Minter . . . "During •thing of the future.
tbe -war ,., . •the pasition of the
farmer lias' been imProved . . : Television even before'the put- " •
' I hope lo see a vigorous revival of break of war was' an acconirdished • tx
heralthy,;village like on ,the bisis fact in Britain, United States •and
of higher wages apeef improved ' Germaritt. When year Radio Re- ,, •
honaing . . . And what with,med- porter was- in LondonoEngland, a '
..ern methods of locometion and few months prior to the outbreak'
the 'modern amusements . of the of world war Nct. ?, he saw. a
cinema,and wireleas to which will demonstration of television which'
soon be added television; life ,th . illustrated that it was quite �s-
thp.
e, country and on the land ought' sible to. transmit moving pictures,
totpoMpetein ittrattiveness with , outdoer sperts events. and studio -
life in the great cities. . .".' -ptogaartanei•
-which-zetild-bea-ree .. , ,
•
,* •* *
s •
Wireless, or as 'we °knew it
better iti,Canada, radio, undoubt-
edly has made a tremendous con,
tribution to the enjoyment' of liv-
ing in' the rural sections and small
towns of the •Derniaion,. Iirtprove-
mentS in the design and capacity
of radio receivers in recent years
have. made possible •the bringing
of news; education end' entettain-
Merit directly into' the most re-
• '-ceived with reasonable clearness'
at a distance of about 25 miles
from the huge B.B.C. television
transmitter at the Alexandra
Palace in London. Also in Ber-
lin he was given an Opportunity ,
• td the advance which had been
Germany in this new
branch of radio; In Great Britain
the B.B.C. was transmitting merna
,ing and evening programmes for'
the benefit of those whe_rhad-.
mote b.omes and_settlements Ara-- . :treated themselves to the luxury
the'backWoods orcivilization. And of a televisiOn receiver. A corn-
_ _
now Mr, Churchill promises that baled radio receiver, television
telvision will come into vogue • . screen and •phonograph player
shortly after the . war is over.' „could be purchased in the British. :
He Might' also have promised a •capital at a cost from 0200 up.
new type of radio receiver based As soon. as the war is•rever tele-
upoa research .in the field of vision is likely. to invade North
what is known as "frequency mo- America en a broad scale.
'clulation." . But for the feet that
war has diverted" the energies of . TEACHING' A HORSE ENGLISH
radio technicians and mannfeetur- A man we knowboualit a small :
ers into spheres which have a fent from a Japanese. He took• '
direct relation to the *, military ..jt overincic,...2stoak and-4arrela in- .•
strugglea--freqtrancy . modulation • ;eluding a horse. • • -
•
and television would likely . have Now the man is. in a dither.1
• been with us new. Frequency mo- 's The horse des not understand
dulation enipleyi .a new technique English and our friend, does not .
•In broadcasting and, receiving -4know whether it would be easier
-sushi& , virtually. eliminates all in a° far him to learn Japanese or teach .
• terference frorn static and other the horse English •
forins•of electrical distortion .. .••
•
' 0
• -7-Windsor Star
OUR RADIO LOG
MONT° STATIONS
cr$1t.131.1960k, CBL 140k
ulteL.s.NETWORKS
58C11(1k
ILL
WEAP. N.B.C. Red 60k
WJZ, %BC Blue 7-0k
•WABC (.BS .) , 880k
. 1/VOR (M.B.S) 710k
(.141VADIAN . savrtesivs
CFOS. Owen Sd. 1400k
CHOC licanilton •1150k
CRAM Hamilton. 900k
OKTB St. Cath. 15501
01PCS` Montreal 660k
V'
CH
London 1.5TOk
• CH North Bay 1230k
JCS strattord 1240k
• W -S Ktngston 960k
• CO Qhathans 400k
CICAC Montreal 730k
CHCR Waterloo '1990k
CKCO Ottawa 150k
CKGJ3 Timmins' 140k
CICSO Sudbury- 11'90k
CKPC •33earifford 1380k
01r:sat Windsor 8001c
CICNX • Wingham 920k
CHEX Peterboro • 1930k
. • IY,S., STATIONS •
WEBR Buffalo 1340k
WHAM Rocheter .1180k
WLW: Cncinnati. 700k
Wr Schenectady '810k•
KISKA Pittsburgh 120k
VWBBM• . Chicago • 780k
WBEN Buffalo 930k
WOR," Buffalo • 5501c
WIC.BW Buffalo 1520k
W.J11' • petrolt ' 760k
SHORT WAVE •
GSP Englaiid 9.514o
GgC Engand. 9.58m
GBD England 11.75m
GSE England 11.86in •
GSG England • 1.79m
OSP England 15.31m
.EAR • Spahr. 9.48m
PAN Rifsia 9.60m
RNE Russia 12.00m
PRP5 Brazil 95.1)0m
GEA Schenectady
15.23m
WCA13 15.27ra
WdBX N. York 11 3m
-WRILTL Boston 15 fam
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