HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-05-28, Page 3Nazis May. Launch.
Attack on England
The possibility that Germany
rosy launch an all-out aerialet-
leek 'against England on en even
,greater scale than the blitz in
thespring of last year and fight
'..ipnly a .deten:elve war in the East
in envisaged in well informed
British circles in „Washington.
It is known- that Germany has
been building up,` a large :air force
during the winter. months -Which,
it is • felt, may presage a new
aerial blitz sifcli as was unloosed
over England in the autumn of
1940 and the spring of 191.,
Where ' this • .air force is now ' .is •
Unknown.;but British ,quarters be-
lieve it may be directed against
Englait just as' well as'any other
theater''of, the war and that' there
is al reason Ito assume that it is.
-' . intended solely for a. renewal of
•'the attacks against Russia .whish •
-proved so sterile last year:
There is a disposition in these
mine quarters to believe that Hit-
ler may not follow the expected
pattern liy resuming an offensive
against the. Russiaus this :suui-
mer,` but that he may, , instead
spring a surprise• in another dir-
ection. This might mean an at-
tack against Iceland, Ireland or
England • herself,' the •strongest
lase of operations for the ' 'United
Nations in Europe.
Whatever .'Hitler expects to' do,
both Russia and, Britain are' pre-
pared .
re-pared._for . any eventualities. Am-
" rerican -aid- -to • the -Soviet-:elln-ion•
bas ' surpassed the billion • . dollar
mark in war supplies actually de-
livered and Russia is now spend
ing • a second billion dollars in
this counfry. England, on the
other .hand, has had ample time
to develoii her defences' since Ger-,•
Many Called off the aerial blitz
when ,the :Germans went towar
With the Russians last ' June.
Collo hands British coops
At Madagascar
S• `ZI N•D A Y
'SCHOOL
LES,.S0N
• LESSON 22
FRIDAY:
THE DAY OF SUFFERING ',(I)
(Gethsemane and Trials)
Mark '14:32-34, 44-46; ' 15:1-5
• GOLDEN TEXT. -Not my will,
but thine, be done. Luke 22942.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
• Time.—hate Thursday evening,
and Friday, April 5 and 6, A.D.
80.'
Place.—The Garden of Getlese-`•
mane, at the foot of the western
slope of the Mount of Olives, and' .
the palace, of . Pontius Pilate; in"
. Jerusalem: r
With His, Three Disciples.
32. "And they •cane unto •a
place.. wm
'which wee •naed Gethse-
mane;, and ,he saith • unto his alis-
'ciples, sit ye ,here while • I pray.
' 33(e). • And lie•-:.taketh with • him
Peter and James and John.'' :Our •
Nord 'took With •hi -m-• ori-
casion His three most intimate
disciples, Peter, James and Jahn,'
yearning for, as a true ••man, the
closest comeiunian of trusted fol'-
.lowers; and• the helpfulness that:,
comes from a consciousness of
loved ones being near. •
• 33(b). "And began to be
greatly amazed,,:and sorely troub-
led.".. • was now going •
through an experience unlike. that
'..of anything He had ever known
It' `was -the; -sorrow -of •-a, stranger .,_.
'in a strange land, and homesick
grief.
The Sorrow, •
-84. "And he saith unto' 'them, ,
My soul is exceedingly sorrowful
even• unto death: abide ye her,'e,
and watch." . The distress is' se
great that it breaks forth 'in words ,
from Jesus' lip's. • It, is. his aoul
grief, which • animates his body,
that i's, in .such deep distress, just ,
as.distrjess takes -hold also of our
soul.•• But they are• all • too shale
low .who.. think that the rapid ap-
proach -of physical suffering and
•death brought , On this .agony. in
Jesus' soul. Jesus now orders the -
three , ' ci-.les to stn ' where they.
are. Alas; even this little corn o
was denied him, for the three
slept. •The battle that Jesus fights
in this hour he must of necessity
fight _alone. He ,alone must now:
Will :la lay down his 'life.'
' 'The. Token
•44.. "Now he that 'betrayed .him
had. given. ,them a token, saying,
WHERE YOUR SALVAGE GOES•
Tires 'for 25 -pounder' guns are one of the, many war iiseg: into •
which' goes a proportion of:salvaged rubber.An aircraft tire requires' •
• hundreds of pounds of rubber. A Canadian, corvette •rises the rubber
.equivalent -of more than 150 •auto tires.
British King Views
Actual Land '' tittle' •
King George VI, who 'received •
his :baptism of fire asea 'naval
, 'sub -lieutenant in the.` Battle • •o3
• Jutland,, in •the First World ..Wer,
now knows. what it is' like to see
action on land.•
__ ..,Bullets• shat past him and gree
ades and 'land mines exp'loifereire'
• :most ., urrdesfo.ot as he 'watched
British soldiers 'undergo the dan-
gess of `actual war in "toughen- ,
ing up" manoeuvres which have
• taken a''total of forty-fo•ur .fatal
itiee in the last two months.' There
, were two casualties as he watched.
The King • crouched with his
• soldiers while machine-gun pellets
. tore up the • ground nearby , and
mortar 'shell`s were Jabbed over-
head
verhead and he scrambled, through'
`underbrush to: 'get' a, better view;
of -the •realistic 'mock war.
Officers say ethe live' ammu-
nition manoeuvres.. are ` the best
means of .training men to per;
form coo11 under netual-wax cone
.
ditione - I •
as a • morale weakling • when, he
ondemned the Lord without jus
tification. 'The only, one that day,
who showed himself to' • be a tram
Man, adhering every momentto
the principles of honor and jus-
re?tlty-=lie
C
• shalitrivizewa,rat4Asi
s
-.Major-General R. G. Sturges,
C.B. of the Royal Marines, com-
.mands the British troops, iticlud
. big the famous Commando units,,
that were landedon the Vichy -
controlled islandl'f Madagascar.
Some resistance was reported to
have been made, by French units
on the island.
Norse Kidnap Crew
Of Coastal Steamer
This is the story of a g'ioup of
Norwegian passengers who .kid-
napped the crew of a. coastal
'steamer and—forced•, the men, to
sail • to Britain through the mine-.
sown 'waters of the North Sea.
.The Norwegians made • .their
plans carefully, and at a given
time boarded' the steamer Galte=
Bund at various stops as it made
its regular run from Oslo to
Bergen, When all were aboard
they drew guns and cowed the
crew. Two days later the' 623 -
ton, steamer entered the British
North 'Seat •
Royal -'Air Force pilots .sighted
the little 'steamer and • British
trawlers were sent to escort it
through the mine fields to har-
bor.
• 1.
'Tokio Agrees To
Red. Cross .Visit
•
The Australian Red Cross an-
nounced recently that a delegate
of the InternationalRed Cross
will visit the British and Cana-:
_dianprisoner of war camps at
Hong. Kong about the middle of
this month.
ht. was stated that word to this
effect has come from Shanghai.
The International Red Cross,
•whose headquarters are in Gen-
eva, Switzerland, had been trying
for months to obtain this. con=
cession from the Japanese, it was
*aid, ,arid the • news that Tokio
diad at fast agreed was regarded
as encouraging.
At the same time,.Foreign Min-
ister Anthony Eden's' statement
in the House of- Commons in
London that prisoners of war at
Hang Eong now were receiving
better treatment gave teach sat.
isfactioni in Red Cross circles. It
was hoped that conditions would
'likewise improve in Singapore
where thousands of Australians
and Britibh prisoners are held
captive. ,
•safely." A sign was not neces- •
•sary bee .Jesus •was, a •well-known
▪ figure but in: the• darkness and',
'confusion there was a possibility
of escape and 'here was • a desire
to make ' everything. sure. The
sign given by Judas •had nothing
Unusual about at, but was the ,or-
dinary form of, salute, . Judas,
having once entered into this afe
fair, didn't Want a mistake made
Of it.
. The Kiss of Judas -
Many different reasons have
• be'en, offered why .Jades betrayed
our Lord. He must °have. betrayed
him, ' fundamentally, to obtain
money'for himself. 'What are ye
willing to give me, and'I will de-
liver
•him unto, you?' .(Matt. 26:
15) was his first question. One
need not stumble eat the fact that
the amount they gave him • was a
pitiful sutra•—ivhen a man•,.iiecomes
a miser, no sum istoo small to
covet.
45.• "And when he was come,
straightway he. came to him, and
saith, Rabbi; and kissed him."
Judas could have told -these men
where Jesus might be found, but
instead he stooped to use as an
instrument of betrayalthe most
affectionate ° token' of greeting
known among people, the kiss.
46. "And They 'laid hands'' on
him, •and took him." The soldiers
were able to take the Lord only
because 'He did not exercise His
own power ' in resisting: them.
The Circrostances •
1. "And straightway in the
morning the , chief priests , with
•
the elders and scribes, and the
whale council, held a consultation,
and bound Jesus,, and' carried him
away, and delivered him up• to
Pilate. 2. And Pilate` asked him,
.Art Thou the King ,of'the Jews?
And he answering smith unto frim,
Thou sayest." The phrase 'Thou
gayest' was a Jewish form of as-
cent. '"
Pilate's Question
3. "And the 'chief priests ac -
cased him of many things. And
Pilate again asked him, saying,
Answerest thou nothing? .behold
how many things they accuse thee
ef. 5. But Jesus no .mere •a
wered anything;, insomuch tat
Pilate liiartelled:" The,silgnce of
Jesus speaks eloquently._ against
Pilate. Why does Pilate width his
question and exclamation try to
Shift his , responsibility upon.
Jesus? • It is the duty of this
Roman judge either to silence all
these angry accusations or to ex.
amine them. It is because of his
cowardice that he does not en-
force hls verdict of inneeence.
Jiesus Is Silent '
Theailenee of Jesus is .dirertFid
aga1n t the Jews, expressing his
contempt for their accusations.
Pilate that day condemned himself ,
Hitler' Would ..Pay
Plenty In Britain
Hitler's• -priate income, derived',
from -the Nazi publishing coin-
` pany, which < publishes Mein.
Karrtpf -and- all the Party newspa-
pers; and from the Hitler levy.'
,on the wage bill. of 'German. in=
ala try,;�As . calculated, to, amount
s
to no less than £, 10 miltiort per'"
anntem, :' 'This : is', his persona: in-
come; sortie of it is spent in huge
presents •or bribes. 'Be is: certain-
ly 'the -greatest 'war profiteer in. -
history: If he, v ,ere in •England
he. would be subject to £9,745;000
income tax annually.
Young :Farther Sees
Action 'Round World ''
In 'the two short years since •he
left his father's farm at Sperling,
Man.,'•Sgt, Clinton • C. Young, 23-
year-old anegennere-•has-seepernoxe_
action and more of the world then
most men twice his age.
Veteran of 45 operational
flights, 12 of thein• froie England
and the others iia the,Middle East,
he has leen pounded by German.
bombs 'in' ,Malta, been. coned in
searchlights over Tripoli and Ber -
gms+ice ni a l el ifali ri e 'ir ogee in,:
J+rcl eo
the' Lord Jesus. Here as else-
where throughout his ' whole life,
He reveals •Himself without sin
and without,;tblemish:'
duels with ,axis night fighters'. He
sailed. around the Cape and cros-
sed the Equator twice and now is
back in England, ' .•
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
By William
Ferguson
SHED /•
T�HEiJR SKINS
BEFORE CH!NG
FULL. SILE.
SOME MOLT
�J -/r TIMES.
RAC.PH 44E1LMAN,
+IOPE, INDIAN/4,
RA 'Gly
900 BU
OF CORN
ON c
COPR. 1939 BY NEA SERVICE.ANC.
APOI L FODL'S DAY
CI?Jc INATFD Iref
, MERIJ 1 r. •
3=3o RIGHT'
• ..
ANSWER: t'•.ong. The diatom of•playing triiks on April first
h almost universal in, scope. but just, when it Originated' no • on* ;
seems "t0 know. •
N :i:T: How tett, do antlers grow?
1POP_Maybestupid
. GTUP1D
'i7NI 65
d Quebec Stove
n Coming Back
ew Models Will Be Cook -
Ig and Heating •Machines
• The of "Quebec heater"—much
'Maligned Bet very efficient . heat-
ing unit pe uliar to this section
of the coup y arottnd Montreal
for generation —is scheduled to
come back into is own within the
'very near future wing to a recent
rulingfrom Ottawa curtailing the
'iiiantacture 'of stov'es to' save
iron and steel.
Absolutely shorn of gadgets, it
performed its work; *ell and that
was to - slimily heat. In thousands
of .hones throughout . Montreal, it
was the only .means of suppling
warmth to a household. It was
econonticel in operation,' but "in'
aPpearanee• an eyesore, , for it was
just an• enlargediron' stovepipe,.
about three feet •high, "lined with
firebrick • and about two Peet., ire
diameter: It boasted of no 'grate,
had ,a small aperture at the bot-
tom ;for cleaning out 'ashes' and
was . fed-- fuel from the top. It
burned everytiiing`-and anything to
a • cinder and served its purpose
admirably while the wintry blasts
toppled the thermometer to 20 or
•
•
Some • years ago, manufacturers
bent 'on improving ,their wares
pueeout some new madels. They
dressed them up. to: look like. iic
trolls • and radios, .gave them
' 'bright colored ,casings, and' trim-.
med- -them with-..nickie eplated-3.it-„.
tin.gs installed - grates which re- •
duced effieiency. They even fitted
thein with ,'oildeurning equipment.
and .itrought ' thein thoroughly u,p -
to, date. The new stoves sold,
'they appealed to the.•eye of the
thrifty French • Canadian house-
holder.••
But 'tltltt's 'all over now, for the
Munitions and Supply Department
• on behalf of C. D. Howe, -Canada's
• American born 'minister, hlas de-
creed that on and after April 1.5.
•no new stovesother):than, ap.provr
ed ' mo,dels ,may be manufactured
and hi the words • of Alan H.
Wil-
lianison, •Supplies , Controller, he
says "The. bride of 1943 may get
some-tiring—at
sees the new, .stove. Built for lit,
'.ility rather than for appearance,
the• new , ijiodels . will be cooping
and heating machines and; nothing
30 degrees below zero.
No More • Decorations •
more:"
SCOUTING
•magaz
Boy Scouts and . Wolf Cubs of
Windsor and suburban communi-
ties in one April day's earepaigti,
for Ar:iry, Navy and Air Force
• libraries.
• .5 • • *
The Boy Scouts of th little
community of Lucky `Lake; in the
.rmer drought area of Saskute
. cliewan,• provide this example of
patriotic enterprise: A contri-
butio'n of • $28.75 to sthe 141111: -for
Britain Fund; $4 to the .Scouts
Chin ' itp Fund for Britain; a.
freight carload 'of salvage; the
--making and • installing • of linen
cups ards in the local. district
hospital; providi�p•g two Scout
firstsaiders with 1 kits, four rales-
sengers and •a bugler for the
Lucky Lake' Security Corps.
5 5•
*
A tribute 'to Scouting •by the.
Hon. and Rev. H. J. Cody. Presi-
dent of Toronto University i "1
have long believed, that the Boy
Scout movement is one of the
sanest and most influential of
modern educational efforts, and
• That, Lord Baden-Powell was not
only a fine general tilt an 'educa-
tional leader of the highest qual-
ity- He aimed, to reach, to train
and to, discipline boys at the most
' difficult and critical period of
their lives. He conserved human
energy not by repressing it,' but
by giving it a constructive e�t-
pression and a right direction."'
•
DAD111 REPORTED
DIALING WIni DAVE:
Radio's Faithful have once
again named their' favorites
through Moyie-Radio Guide's 1942
"Star of Stars” poll. Favorite
variety program of the masses
was "The lereakfast, Club," And
Don MacNeil it's M. C. was noted
1942's :star of stats. The two sing-
ing stars of the show, Jack Baker,
Tenor, and ' Nancy Martin, pop
vocalist, took top -honors also!
The , Breakfast Club is htnard in
• Canada- daily at nine .a.m., through
stations of the .CBC network, • in-
cluding OBY and , .CKOC. '
Other .favorites in this''popular
• annual poll, included ,Bob Hope
'as the nation's favorite . comedian
-Slug , . Crosby ',• as the leading
popular., singer (CDC—Thursdays"
'9.00 . p.m.), , Don Wilson' favorite:
announcer (jack- • Benny. • show'
OBG .Sunday 7.00 p.m.); and Low-
ell Thgmas as star . newscaster.'
•How .does this stack up with your
preferences, in •ease ' you weren't
one of the vpters in this year's
poll? '
• e 5 *
Jimmie Fidler, pioneer Movie
commentator heard Mondays over.
a network of Canadian stations
arranged by the CBC, is:•a man of
intense energy,- as you might sur-
mise from his rapid-fire, broad-
casts; and he is, consequently, an:
all-round' sportsman ' A four=handt-
cap•'.golfer, he also is -expert at
bowling, tennis, badminton -and •
ewimiming! And- he's a winner on -
Hollywood News too—listen Mon-
day ,at 7.00 .P.m.!
' •. s * 5
-Some 1150 listening tips:
Highlights •on any Sunday even
ing listening: Fred Allen's Show,.
9 o'clock, and: the guest spots• on
the program!
• Recently a daring Commmpdo
Raid by the R. A. 'F. in conjunc-
tion with, land and naval forces,
was dramatized,, on Wednesday, .r
nights, Flying foe' Freedom ' Situ v
e-CKOC, 8.00 o:cloek! It was tre=
mendousiy, exciting, and , was al- ,
most, an aetualtty broadcast of the
recent` Ste Nezaire raid even t.o. .
the fieding and, destroying of ;the-.,
Itit.dib Locator!
!News on the 'horn',• eeery••hour•
from eiveaue.. to p.m,- has been '
a daily Monday through Saturdar
•feature on CKOC for some time.. . •
eSvpplomenting as itl deme, the reg.._
ular • 8 a.m., 12.30 Moon, 6.15' p.m, '
9.00 p.m,., 10.00 p.m. •and midti,ite
nekvcasts, it gives listeners a truly' ,
complete and authoratative dailyT • .
.news service. CKOC, is served by •
British ell n 1 t e d • .Press—"The,
• World's best :coverage ot • the•
wprld's..b.iggest nes!"
• New •Hit Parade favorite,• get; •
ting a, big •recorded play these .
days' 18 "Full •Moon by .Frankie
Masters: ' ` • '
�Ss•O
, SHORT WAVE.
nSn . Englund-.9.Glm
GSC, England 0:6Stn'
GSD England 11,75m,
GSE England 1I S6tn
GSG England 17479m
GSI'' England '1.5.Zim
'EAR Spain -.: 9;4Sm •
RAN • Russiit ' • 9;i0n►
1(5i4 Russia 12:00M,
ItV96 Russia • 15.18m
WGEA' Scpeneetady
i.i.33m.-
WCAB' Phiia. • 15..27m
WRi.'L Boston 15.15ns
WC949i•N. Yerke1L83m
Tf}gg0*;n`O ' STA-' vt ,1e$ CKAC Montreal 730k'
CFRB 800k, CBL • 740k •
( KCL 553Ok, CBY • 1010k.
• • U.S. •N'r:TWORKS
N ic
.WEAN.B.C. ed tiOOk
WJY. N.B.C. Blase 770k
WABC IC.B.O.) , ,ssok.
WO• -B: (M.B.S.) • • , 71,Ok
CANADIAN • STATIONS
CF'OS Owen :±d. 1400k WEBK, Buffalo :: 1340k
`, CKOC HamBton 1150k WHAM Rochester' 1'I80k
GHML:. Hamilton 900k WLW Cincinnati, 700k
teem' St. •Catht 1550k •WG1' Schenectady' l310k
..CFCb• Montreal.. ti00k Ir;UKA Pittsburgh 1020k,
•.CF'CH North flay 12:5Ok WBBM Chicago :. 7SJk
'CFCO Chatham .. 620k. ii`BEN''Btiffaio •.: 930k
CF'i'L Londop —levee. ''week Betffaie . 5,.-.Ot:
CJCS Strut:lord ,..1%40k, WHIM Buffalo 1520k
CPRC Kingston 1490k WJR ,Detroit 760k
Waterloo 14900b1
CKCO Ottawa .. 1310k
-CKGB Timmins;:. 1470k
CRS() ,Sudbury ..1901‘
U PC Brantford 1380k
•CK'LW Windsor SOOk
CKNx Winghatn. 920k
L".S.
STATIONS '
• eral "incendiary: • fires" were
brought under control and "burst
waer m m • u'' 'were-taken-ea1 e -of-,
the Oakville Boy Scouts were cone-
•
plimented: by A. R:. P. officials.
•:on their effe.ct'ire maintenance of
the communication service '''dur-
ing the raid-"
SPECTACULAR AVIATRIX
Answer to. Previotas. Puzzle,
•f - i� : *
Kingston Boy • Scouts dis-
tributed "Volunteers for Victory"
pledge cards to' every .household
in that city. The card, used for
the Second' ear,' pledges- signers -
to salvage materials, of all kinds,
to save gasoline, and if feasible
to contribute blood in the blood.
• donors campaign. '
* * e• .
•
•
Following an A.. R. P. test at
Oakville, Ont., during which sev- '
ex' pictured
here."
9, Female
relative.
11 'Female sheep
12. Severe . critic.,
. 14 Modern.:
• -16 To ;liquefy..
17 To bake meat.
i9 Either.
20 Nuns' home.
22 Epical' events.
24 Officer.'s
assistant.
l8'Disabled.
30 Knave of
clubs.
32 -Sea skeleton.
34 Part of eye.
• 35 Engagements.
37' Size of type. "
38 Perched.
39 Discreet.
41 Measure.
42 Pomeranian.
43 Hurrah!
45 Kind •of harp.
48 Data:
50 �Prorndntories.
W Eraigr.,MAW E
tiS7ANE
Ca�1= G I C d
53 Resinoid ,
extract. • . , '4
55 Architectural. 5
rib.. 6
566 She atade a
solo flight - 7
to .—.. • 8
57 She made a . 10
trip A 13
, flight from 15
'London to . 16
'Tokio'.
VERTICAL
1 Form of "a." 18
2 Niggard. '.
3
To scream.
.doing '
21 Twitching.
22 TO eject.
23 Footlike part.
25 Diamond
cutter's clip.
26. Goddess of •
discord.,
27 Airplanes.
29 Heavenly..
body.
30 Constant' . •
companion.
31 Encountered,
33 Expert flyer.
Black mineral 35 Church title. -
Egret. 36 Courtesy title:,,
Compass point 39 Pertaining to
(abbr.). poles.
Intelligence. 40 Marsh
At this time. marigold.
Pussy. • , 42 Saucy.
Gbd of love., 44 Valiant man.
Heating ,-vessel 46 Small shield,
Her .former • • 47 Public auto.
husband was 43 To be sick.
flyer \James 49 Room recess.
51 -God of sky -
She was 52 Insight..
drowned • 54 Sun.god.
HENS,
i'OP
But Conslder'ate•!
DON'T
KNOW '—
--HEY NEVER. PORGET"
THE •SIZ1= OF OUR
60 CLIPS!
s
By J. MILLAR WATT
... ..-(R61660e1.bl.1e0 Bet synsicite, 1st.i
r,)
3'
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.
5
6,
7
8
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9
10
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12
13
•
14
15'
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ty,, c,
,
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IS'
•
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33
28
34
36
:37
e.
53
HENS,
i'OP
But Conslder'ate•!
DON'T
KNOW '—
--HEY NEVER. PORGET"
THE •SIZ1= OF OUR
60 CLIPS!
s
By J. MILLAR WATT
... ..-(R61660e1.bl.1e0 Bet synsicite, 1st.i
r,)