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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-06-04, Page 3What Air Raids. Mean To Britain Over 100,000 People Killed Says Stratford . B e a c o n - Herald . • • A tragic indication of what the air raids on the British Isles mean • is the statement of an of- -tidal of the MiniSIrY cif pensions • that the department has sapplied 10,000 artificial eyes since the war began. That he meant civilian casualties is evidenced by - his quasi -humorous .. 'observation thitt Women were much more particu- lar than men in getting artificial .eyes : that matched 'the color of • 'their real eyes..• • 'Well. over• ,100,000 people, have ben killed in the , United . 'king - dein -by air _ raids,the great ni;a ' jority'. , 'being civilians. • Bombs being no respecter of persons, many' of. them, .probablym .ore than. Balt,' have•been women'and, Oren. , Of the injured,.,at least 10,- • 000 have lost''an 'eye. Thousands have lost arms or legs.' As long as they live' the -y yvill 'be jiving_ testimonies to the brutalip of the Nazis. Harsh as it seems, there 4s no , other way of teaching the German: people. that 'this ,sort of warfare brings , its' own retribution except by paying them back in their own Coin, and: with •cuinulative inter- est. •Thera is no way - of Stopping the raids on Britain • except by • inflicting worse raids on Germany,',- Those who: lire by the sword, or fog i must perish by the ms' . a ,til.. b ,-.. ,_ ..� .. sword or the bomb_ Then , the ` ' suppose t th 11 y bullying peo- ple grace exceeds of will ceaseYDivine . ermanaof how s G' • e � her' peaceful, races and soldiers, who. •were the ' mere in -Cry ,From The Cross 1 000 from . Ole o. of l i „ L human expectationsO1 The thief "And ninth hour more .than • ,$ ,l• Rn TORONTO . sTAT1uN nts of rhe'executiorre.s, >a�ir 34. at the t that Del'Morl'ey 'found time to go c>H1�11 Moak, ct1Y. 740k :low them to live their Own limes.,' •strume that the Lord word& reI a Prayed with a Ioud 'voice ,. wa The for all His. enemies. d � �, t .k Y L„y. � T .St.N- AY SCHOOL LSS'N LESSON 23 FRIDAY; THE DAY OF SUFFERING (11) (Christ's' Words. on the Cross.) -Luke . $3..3.3-46y. Mark 15:33,34 (Compare. John 19:25-30-)• GOLDEN TEXT. -- He' was wounded•''for our transgressions,' he was bruised for our inia:uities;. the chastisement of our peace. ryas. upon him; and • with his stripes ire are' healed. Isaiah 53:5. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. --Friday, April .'7, A.D. ��•Place.'l11e, place called Call: ' "IThe' Crucifixion • 33(a.)• And, when' •they '.carne unto: the ;place which is . called .th. e' +,. - skull; there' they .crucified him. 33(b). And the malefactors, one on the, right hand and the other . on the' left." • Some have thought . --that- the--place-`was---se-•e-shed' •-he----, `cause•it was a•low, roilnde.d emin- ence in ,the shape • of a skull. Others have thought, that it was given this name because there dead bodies' were ' thrown. ', The,' two. men crucified' on each side • of our . Lord were robbers, per-' . sons of •very evil character. • .Prayer • Far. Forgiveness 34(a)'. "Arid Jesus said, Father rive them: for they know not • what they de." We must surely, ., : hat � e,. `.i,a er -w•�a,s tered, '.not only ..for the' 1 o-tha . • FUTURISTIC FIREMAN , • Lookinglike something out. of a • tortured dream, asbestos -clad • fireman. fights', blaze. somewhere' in Britain. Sui• ts- were gifts, td •English from Americana. • • disc':" In our L'ord's gracious e'. to.. the, thief's request s _ .t�esppn . ,. we have . a striking' illus iatrori Farm Experiment Achieves -Success Pool Labor -and Eguipmeitt To Save" Time and Money. Three farmers in . Biddulph Township have solved farm prob- lems so successfully they deserve more than passing mention, claims' the . London Free Press. They have put into practice the best. laid theories of the eco.tiomist and -. the "Co=Ops" p'fiblicists,. and made them work. By pooling their labor and{ equipment they have found sucdess in farming. • They have "iscovered a way to, save time, money and effort, ' They have produced new crops and new cash :revenues. • What. Vegan .,as• an experient-, born of continuous hard times .. and years' 'of lean. earnings .has developed into profits and `sati* faction. They are •,independent.: ' fa"riners, each on his own: • land, each growing: the crops he \wishes,: „ yet by teamwork they ° have proved how successfully, farm co- operation can . be practised. This is . the very, kernel of democracy,, the-se1ution.of problems' front the ground up. ' This trio of farmers near Gran- ton -Joe Kelly, Delbert Morley and Charlie. Jones --have :built a mutual trust association on the 'lines • of . the old-fashioned farm "•bee." -'If they had . a business title it might be `something like, "Neighbors Ltd." They -have made the good, solid word. neigh- bor• mean something in, terms of better • living. • ' , ' .. merit-'--= The story • of thy-a�chreve The darkness serge as a., m n for the -sufferer, . to cover. him fence,. #Y'om tri°e scoffi: g .and Otto • Trus e;enies. •!- shows that Charlie Jor-es cued 1 i RA RADIO HEPORTI- DIALING WITH DAVE. Wartije Prices and Trade Board: along. • The Bandwagon shows From this mightily important across Canada, are going. to stages department comes a • Monday the Optimist Club to- some pro - through Friday radio message- gram publicity. Cii.00 now •mitt plus mightily fine radio' .enter- it's Bandwagon show Wednesday tainment. At 10.30, a.m. E.D.S.T., nigh at 8.30,- as does FRB the ..program "Soldier's Wife" . Toronto! "Give an Optimistic conies on the air on the National ten .•- to some new Optimistic Network of the CBC. It reaches • ideas'•' into every War -time' Canadian .: ' '.home with a story- that is as up News notes -from here. and there to-theminute as today's head- Boris Karlof2 will again appear lines, and a rnessage that will • as guest on the • Sunday night WRITE TOMOR$tOW'$ ' headlines 8.30 Inner Sanctum Mystery Play of victory! The 'story is a ash* "-this Sunday, and -on June . 21 s , - ized -dramatization of a soldier.'s , also. Outa•taiading Mystery yarns. wife's , life .in-' Canada 1942 -her are selected for each Karloft ap- problems, her 'family, her in-laws. • pearailt;e on this top-ranking Blue It touches deeply on one's• enno- network feature, heard in Canada tional make-ip,. and provides, ac- over a network of stations ar tion,, .pathos,. comedy, dlnd, general • ranged by -. the • ,CBC, including interest oY_ a. high olden. It is•.'for CKOC.',1 Lanbilten: _ invitiiig °e women - dedicated' to the.woman ' Sunday on • CKOC in., the hornet and her eoii.tribution you to listen to the Songs of Joe . to. Victory? 'During it's'first. two Petersent at 12.45; "The••�World s weeks On ' the air, the' program Most Honored ,Music" at one 0 wad` broadcast at ...10:30, but . now clock; and the •Goideu Gate •Quay- - is.. being heard in the spot held tet at _5.15: They -ere just three by "or. Susan" - 1.1.30. a.m, of the great Sunday nn CKOC Thr. Optimist Ging programs, which , also include " . - Perhaps • there -ia oi�e. in /.your, Charlie NfcCartl y- at 8.00 p.m., In ' community or if not, there is net Sanctum' iysteries at 8.30, a ,repres'eptative,..who journeys. to and •the Fred. Alien. Shbw at a local • centre •for' regular- meet'- 9.00 p.m. ' • ' ' ings. There are some seventeen . • interesting side note on' one of . pptimist. Clubs in Ontario, and Radio's great: Kate ,Snutli ' will they have dedicated themselves soon :be. 'seen , on the . screen in a to providing the children of BM- series of short features, unkler ' tain, ' with as . large a supply 'as the ..title "America • Sings with w possible . of chocolate in the edible : -Kate Smith." Ali proceeds from bar form. Radio 'is going to play : the .Columbia 'Produced pictures -,its. part in helping the campaign. will; be turned over to the. YASOI • iclewalk SalIor S 34(b). "And • parting his gar- ments among .them, 'they: cast lots." Selfishness here seems concentrated out :of this ter- rible er rible. event, they' were .determined, to. personally profit, in the ac- quisition of , property, no matter how' insignificant. its Value'. • : 'The' Gazing People 35(a). "And the ,people. stood beholding.,," Jesus had' spoken of them' as ' being without a' shep- herd, and Many of them had come 4' to 'hope that perhaps -He -was their : Shepherd., ,Could they but see, He Was 'indeed the good shepherd and. in the mystery of the Cross, he was laying; down His life for ' tIem.' • The Scoffing Rulers 35 (b) "Arid the rulers . also s. . 4 'When the wind bows at 'Miami Beach, Fla., Leona Frederick's hopes to beat gasoline. restric- tions by zooming down the street on roller sksates propelled by this 8831. Many Nazi Troops Sent Into 'Norway Adolf Hitler has sent 50,000 eombat troops into Norway since March, despite the demands of the Russian front and has per- suaded Vichy to send, almost half a million tons of goods --largely war materials -as. well as troops to Dakar, French West Africa, 'according to Briti1h sources, They said signs that the Nazis feared ,an Allied invasion into Northern Nor -way were evident also from a German army order that traffic on all roads leading ,north from the Port of Narvik to Tromsoe , be limited to mili- tary transport, 'and from the des- patch of several Austrian moun- tain regiments to the area be- tween,Narvik and Kirkenes. . S. Plant Turns Out First 'Rubber The Firestone Tire and Rubber Company has anno'trnced maim - fracture of "the first synthetic rub- ber to be produced in any of .the new sylithetie rubber plants being erected for. the Government's De - [eine Plant Carps." A test run of several thousand pounds wee pronounced satisfac- tory, the ' company announced; adding "regular produCtion is ex- pected to ,get tinder way in a few days and will inerease to plant capdcity as raw materials become - available." • ' Firestone said the first batch of ..synthetic rubber from the new plant was• used in Making the' latest type' combat tire for mllj- t•; tart' vehicles," I and pointed out - 'fit was nine .years 'ago tine month that ,the first synthetic tires ever built for the United States armed , forces were manufactured by Firestone," which has beensoak. ing bona rubber in its Own plant for several years: ' • • this is the Christ o od lips chosen." • The 'very fact that these supposedly reli•ious men, the rulers of the Jews, members - of the Sanhedrin, could cast such words at one who. had never done anything but good, offers ade- quate evidence that these nien • `Were - not seeking- justice: Notice_ .- that they did not insult the wicked mals -factor's but . ' were, casting• these words at • One who never did• anything but'. that , which: pleased- the `Father. . The Mocking Soldiers 36. "And the Soldiers also mocked him,. coming to hien, o1 • feting him vinegar.. 37.- arid say- ing, If thou art the 'King of the Jews,. save thyself." It was the duty of these solders,. to watch him because sufferersometimes lingered alive on the . eross for days. All these insults took place 'during the earlier part .of the crueifiction1, and before the awful darkness carne on. the soldiers. would delight in these, taunts,. because like the ancients, general'.", they detested the Jevis. Tumults of the most Violent kind -often arose '.rem the brutal ; •50= fence f t,atr- d_whicl: limy shpt""cal to the conquered nation. • The• Superscription, 88. "And there was. also a sup-' eracri•ption over him, 'This is the King of the Jews'." We hear nothing about inscriptions for the malefactors. Not; however, tilt Jesus was crucified • did the in- . scriptions appear and were the Jews -aware of •it and of the writ- ing it bore. ' The Dyeing Thief . 39, "And one of the malefac- tors that weee hanged railed,, on him, saying, 'Art not thou the • Christ? . Save thyself and us.' 40. But the other answered, and rebuking hint said, 'Dost thou not even fear God, seeing thou art in the sante condemnation? .41. And we indeed justly; for we receive the due award of- our • deeds:' but this 'man hath done. nothing amiss. • 42'. And he said, . Jesus, remember me when thou contest in thy kingdom". Here is one of the most 'remarkable passages of all the', 'Scriptures. This one malefactor,• culled the 'repente:nt thief'. believed in God. Brost criminals cry' • out in the clay Of their condemnation ,that they are innocent, but this man said he was guilty. He believed 'Jesus to be innocent. This thief had real faith in Christ': did net plead. any . merit cot his•own. He• flung himself utterly on the Mer.. ey of Christ. • • . Promise of .Salv'ation 43.''"And., he said unto him,. 'Verily I -say unto. thee, today Shalt then -be with fele in Para. member It im.. in his 'coming 'k'ing Jesus cri, wl ' . into uk �eys , in abigLGL 5SOk, l:B\' 1U1Uk die lop lama •sabaghtharii �• a E: tv Orli:. m 'hut Christ assures Irani .that. Eloi, E , three have :been iteigh>3ors for- ,11 .d.� d0 b before that very day had passed.• he shoud be with the Saviour in' Paradise. Not] only does Christ's reply signify the survival of the, soul after death of the body,. but it tells us that the' believer , is. with him during the 'interval that divides -death from the. resurree- ton. • The Darkness. 44. "And it was now,, about the sixth hour, and a. darkness came over the whole laird -until the - ninth hour. ..And the veil bf the ,temple ' was -;rent in , the midst." `' Item '40ek Which ` is, being 'interpreted, 'Nfy God, My God, why hast thou for- saken me'?.. 46. • And Jesus, cry- ing• with a loud voic'e,••said, 'Fa- ther, into Thy hands • I commend my. spirit'',' and having said' •this he gave, up the ghost." The ,loud voice with which Christ spoke in- dicates that 'Christ did riot .: die of, exhauetien, but that he main tained . fullness of strength and power to 'tile very end: The word "Fatlhez _shoay-s:. Shat Jesus'' soul • has recovered and the. .darkness is go ,e. • WELL-KNOWN STAR clez:tr reviti uzzdie� :ta C alnlas 'a..gnait-er of a century but it was only a year ago ,•they de- cided to he partners as well. They seed,, cultivate and 'harvest as one. . They -till larger acreage and work it better. Out of mutual, confid- ence, and labor, by using One, an- other's horses, • tractors and equip- • menta they ' Have built fi .profit-' able farming business. What they,.have done thousands of other. Canadian farniere could do. . • J, ,".;t.l'. Blase 77Uk • • WABC (C.B.b.r SJ 0k MOH (5.n.S.)•...riot tiA!iA.Dt i STA'1•1O'r S 'CVOS Owen So, 1400h CKUC 1lan,Uton 1151111‘ t;HML liamYlten 90014 UKTn . St. Ca ih. 155Uk C11.s' 5loitreiu.. 6UUk l FCH" Borth Bay 1230a: (;OCU' l,hathana .. U:rOk • UF1'l. London CICS Strp'tford ..1240k: (Flt liingston ' 149011 • l:tt'_HlasA BOOK. SHELF BRIGHT TO THE WANDERER., By Bruce Lancaster Into the turbulent Canadian' Rebellion of 1837 young Gil • ��•rd�-pl�l�=avitii�.�e,- ^canes. radio star. - 8 He specializes 12 llowing1'tool. 13 Fold. 15 Native metal. 161Distinctive ' theory. 17•Threadlike.' 18 Dewy. 20 New England (abbr.): 21 Oriental coin: 22 Crystalline substance. 23 Melts. 24 Fell clumsily. 25 Entrances. 27 Vanished. 28•Jurnbled type. 29 Bottles. 3p Made fluid -by • heat: 31 Twice, 32 Writing fluids. 33 Carved gem.' 34 Grasslike • reed. . 35 Governor. of 1 C u Algiers. 36 Started suddenly.. 3 To obstruct.; 30 Festivals. • 3You and. me. 4 Either. 31 Common verb., 399 These that sue 40 Volume '5 Backbones. -,-':33 Food. (abbr.). '6 Jars. 36 Tree. 41 Sports. • 7. Close. 37 Edible , fungus., 42 Over (contr.). 8 Court (abbr.). 39 Ketch. • :„ 43 Parrot fish 9 Discussed. 40 Food list. Cpl')' 10 Made a 41 Antelope. 42 Simpleton. 45 Window part. mistake, 46 He starred in 11 School official. 44 Like. the first 14 Measure of 45 Postscript talkie•picture. area. • - • (abbr.). VERTICAL. 2 Not to. win. • singing songs. 17 Closed hands. 18 Feast. . . 1-9 One. skilled in law. • 21 Sword • combats. ' 22 He ,is heard frequently' on.�- the-- 23 Flakelike. 24 Inclosed. • 26 Baseball teams. 27 Reeks. . 28 Brooch. (known as the ompac ' '-t len representing- the •Crown must 'be crushed. With •a price on his head, 'Gil could only rely on' the girl he loved' and ' his Yankee cousin Josiah. • 13ut he played his part with full vigor --as 'soldier, spy, :prisoner of the Crown, and scout far William Lyen Igacken-zie.. But Gil was .only• part "of the grand 'and colorful Stensrood family. Grandfather Barnabas and. Gil's father •wei;e• United Em- pire Loyalists' from New • York State: They and Gil, . and all • Stensrood ' men, were big anal' gentle, and "tough 'when aroused. And as.. Bkrnabas "theysaid,. al- ways did, marry pretty women." heCanadian Rebellion we's cai.ed forward ,by the same driv- ing force which :had been behind the American ' Revcdlution , - the • same fundamental urge which - cements North America today. • And 'from • it,. sle'ky came Can- - 'a'la's . Dominion status. Alive • with romance, action, and- scenes shifting froth Toronto to Buffalo, Albany, and Quebec, this exciting novel expresses in concrete terns the jealousy.ivith'which free men eternally guard their. rights. .. . Bright to' the Wanderer .'. - bY, Bruce La*icastcr . . McClelland- .& Stewart, Ltd. . .•. Price 33.00. !O,'LOG s. CKAC• Montreal 73Ok CKCR Waterloo 14110k t-hCO Ottawa 1310k: t.:K tY Tina:bins 14rUk 11 50 .Sudbury 700k i i.Y t :nrnsriotS asok /.:IeLW Windsor 5001:1 ( 1[NX Wingbam 9.20k,, d:.s. sSATiUivs ' • WEBH Yfull;alo ..13401." W DAM •Rochester 113:►h \i'L\V l lneinnatti 7001' wU - Seheneetaoy tl1V:. i. i)KA r1ttsburgia 10201: 1111101%4 Chicago .. ;Sts: WREN' Buffalo .. 113uk W,lAti usfala 550k \i11 YidN' Ilattalo 15zUi: • WJR Detroit ... i60k SHORT =1h n GSB England 931,112 GSC England 958m .. GSB. k.nccland 1175m ((i.SEE .England 11 16ni .. GSG Englaint 17.79in GSI' England 15.31in EA1t ' Spain .. 9.48m RAN •Russia 960M • lttiE Russia 12.00m' il,V'96 Yci,s.,ia 15.1am \YUiI•:3 Schenectady' IS.L33n* WCAD, •Yhila. 15.27m WRCL Boston 15.15m WC11 i. "Pori: 11.83111 bears. Dead salmon were found littered along the bank , near. the spawning ground where th'e. bears liad been "fishing" • . ' "The bears •are a decided men- - ace . to spawning salmon," the de- partment .id. ' "They, prefer' the fresh -run fish ,and pay little •atten- - tioei, to spent salmon •which have' already spawned." .. • • • salmon fishiugi"•' the report said.. Dealing with. another ,enemy; • of `I -e fisTier•ruen,-tlre-department--sail • officials had .destroyed •183 'sea lions in 47 days , along the British Columbia coast after- severe dant- • , • :age • had been caused by these. marauders in ..the Nana.into harbor area: T)ie sea 'lions destroyed or fishermenz•s-meta. ares -eatainY,, '' h iuitlg was>.-cariied:' out ,, ,ti ne• possible to niaintain,.a check on all; of . the, animals• with . a taste for that : no t res o extei'lninaV1o11• of the species was•insoived. - 11 THIS. CURIOUS WORLD n - By William Fergusolt B.C. Fishing Bears . •. 'Scoop Up'Saflari®n Bears "fishing" on a British Columbia stream destroyed au •es- tiniatcd 10. per cent of sahnon'1U- ing to reach . their spawning ground, Fisheries Department of- -SC' a sxid--fokldavi•rrg Itepoits--on.-.a-_ stt:dy made in ..British Columbia. The study, was made in the .1.law- rou River area in the (luesuel dis trict, and officials checked on the losses caused through. salmon -be- ing scooped out of the, stream by COPR. 'W 9 BY AEA SERVICE. INC. CAN YOLJ [SEPI NE TH ESE' WORDS .� A..-rr I P TO -17-E E CON 'WOULD ENTAIL- SUCH NTAILSUCH •QIFFICULTiES AS LEAVING 'THE EARTH, H, WH tCH IS TRA.VE t NG =WOO /W/GK'S AIV HO✓2, AND . LANDING ON A -pad:/ WHICH IS MOVING Ai POUND LJ AT 1,A"TE .CW' , A/V A/0412. fh OF AN ELK.' /'AY crzvw ALn ^ 'l ONE -A .4L- %NGN • iN A S/V L -.E s... 6Y. , ANSWER: ../1 dory is a flat-bottomed. boat . . a Tory is a .typi of parrot .. . and a Tory is a menh`ber of certain political parties;i existing at various times down through history. • e NEXT: How the katydid sounds its frame. 101,34 POP --•A Right -Handed One r WHAT'S THE • MAT T GR win -4 11-1 E GU,P ?� By J. MILLAR WATT .. e 5,