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Zurich Herald, 1943-04-08, Page 2
SOVIET GUERILLAS MAKE IT HOT FOR COW NAZIS • p: a4 tee .-,Pili ere e %j Y .+ -.den front, the: Germans generell ' heicome warmth, but this fire set by Nazis many r to Pleture erere a I eutrel -ourea shows parka -clad Germans trying vara]; to ,:elle,;; 'tanks from granary fired by I:l1EEIRL.4. Tank .n forgeeound was only ,one saved. RADIO REPORTER EVER FROST New lamps fee one: Everyone,- recalls the story of Aladdin and his wonderful lamp which had the magic quality of being able to grant a wish. For milady* of to- day war time nece ;city has cre- ated a modern A:addin, whose ery is "New clothes for old." What lady has not at some time or other said "I wish I could have a new dress'? Nowadays it has become fashionable to make over old clothes . . , to take hubby's old suit and refashion it into a stylish spring outfit for madame ... to make a play suit for sonny out of dad's cast away overalls , . , to (Make a blouse from grown up brothers disused shirt .. , and so on. just as there are tricks in all trades, so in the remaking of old clothes into new there are ways and means of making the transformation so that the new article does not betray the feet that it is a "made -over." In demonstrations which are now taking place all over Canada as part of o:ir national war conserva- tion ;measures, amazing results are bei achiever& , previously nntheugreeef ideas are being in- troduced to convince the Canadian - hous.ewite of the praeticn Pty aY this type of war -time economy. Already several prorranllnes are being broadcast over the: radio einpha leing the nee essity for save ing materials, and et the same time suege.stiilg how the ladies can apply their ingenuity to turn out new clothes from old. 'On Wedne:-day, April 14th, and week- ly thereafter 9.15 to 9.45 every Wednesday morning, C IU3, To- ronto will inaugurate• a new series of discussions known as the "Sew- ing Club of the Air." These pro- grammes aim to provide valuable hints for the planning of the spring and summer "made -over" wardrobe. Should be of great in- - terest to economically minded, patriotic members of the fair sex. The name of Rex Battle long has been associated with two t'hiege: the leadership of a well known dance orchestra and the • brilliant execution of concert numbers on the grand piano. Quite a few fans will therefore welcome Rex Battle's visits to the UI1 B microphone Monday and Friday evenings from now on at 7.45 when the talented maestro will offer fifteen minute pro- grammes of light classical music at the keyboard of the concert grand. Rex Battle will add in- terest and interpretation to his programme choice by brief des- criptions and comments regarding the musical nulnhers, A true .stony of the war is being • told over the national network of the CBC in the new Collunando serial "C"rusaders in Brittany." The hero of the series is the gal- lant young Canadian Commando Pierre Cadorr;t, who steps upon the soil of his .inceetors for the first time on a misty August morning -in 1942 * the morning of Dieppe. Pierre is put ashore with instructions to get in touch -with a French patriot in Brittany who is active in the underground fight !for the freedom of France. This thrill packed drains which de- picts the co-operation between French patriots and a young Can- adian soldiier. who 'lees his life to work with them right under the hated eyes of the enemy is cur- eently bring presented every Pucsday and. I hersclay evenings et 7 o'clock, To thane who enjoy adventure with a bit of romance thrown. in, "Crusaders in Brit-- • f,a.ny" will lin of ec sidereblo are peal, grammes, featuring Wanda Lan- dowska, offers a delightful con- trast to swingjazz, and other types of popular music which so often dominate the ether wares. Wanda Landowska, as a matter of comparison, has made the in- teresting statement that "old music" is frequently more modern than modern music itself. She was born in Poland, and gradu- ated as a pianist from the War- eaw Conservatory at the age of 14, even then attracting the ne- tiee of several great European conductors. Tier villa at Saint- Leu-la-Foret, near Paris, France was one of the most famous musi- cal meccas during the years that preceded World War Number Two. In her present series of concerts heard over the Canadian network, originating from To- ronto Mme. Landowska is offering seven concerti for harpsiehord and string orchestra from the works of Phillip Emanuel Bach. It is a treat for those who enjoy good music. * * CFRD, Toronto announces. that It will offer a special series' of programmes in the Bastes spirit. War restrictions, it is explained, will not interfere with the presen- tation on Easter Sunday, of .the sunrise services which Lace been a feature of the station for a number of years. CeneB grill carry sunrise services from all over the North American .contin- ent on Easter morning, comnl.enc- ing at 6 a.m. Spans Ocean Twice In Single Day Capt. Joseph H. Fleet, of Pan- American Airways, set a record few weeks ago when he flew his Clipper aeross the South. Atlantic twice in 24 hours. Pan-American officials :said it was the first time a commercial plane had made the round Trip in a single day, Hart and his crew fiew the Boe- ing flying boat from Natal,.Brazil, to a West African port and return- ed to Natal in 23 hours. and 59 minutes. The mark was made possible by the ground crew at the African terminal, which refueled and ser- viced the plane in 50 minutes. Twice before Hart had estab- lisiied traus-Atlantic records. Early in January he lauded his Clipper at LaGuardia Field, New York, after paving flown the At- lantic 12 times in 1&-- ': , d ^? ac ers..es, In March, 1942, he set +e pre- vious record for commercial cross- ings when he made six South At- lantic eights in nine -days, 15 hours. * * * bon these who enjoy something particularly: This. ira1 in "classi- cal" mucin', the cm dent series or C.B.C. Sunday evening 10.15 pro - THS CURIOUS WORLD .By William !' IFerguson MENGVINS CANNOT FOLD ?HEIR WINGS AS .OTHER BiRDS DO, 'BUT MUST CARRY THEM EEXrc/YLaElo $ 4MiiIVRei ,GCS'q, 1942 BY NEA 9EIIVICE.INO. . "LAST •, AST WINTER, ON" Fi•1n ie4.1.5S0- GERMAN PRoNT, THERE W.E. Re° TANKS PAINT5D WHITE,'" LSNSN'LUEIN/W4O I 4 MOON REVOLVES AROUND THE EARTH ATA SPEED .OF :GUM/L•OS AER /1044,2. l`•`, erea Zro 'lily Env. 6-15 FOP—Right at Home • April 18 PETER AND JOHN 1N GETHSEMANE Matthew 26:36.461 John 1811.0.1.2 GOLDEN TEXT. -- Watch and Arae, that ye enter pot into temptation, Matthew •20 :41, Memory Verse; 1 will pray unto Jehovah. Jeremiah 42 :4. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. — Thursday evening, April 0, A.D. 30. garden Place,—Gethsemane, a g on the western slope of the Mount of Olives, opposite Jerusalem, Garden of Gethse,nane "Then cornett.. Jesus with them unto a place called Gethsemane, and saith unto his disciples, Sit ye here, while I go yonder end pray. And he took with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, and began to be sorrowful and sore troubled." Jesus knew that His agony must be endured alone, therefore He bade the disciples to wait there; but He desired to have them at hand, therefore He went but 'a little forward.' Not a word came from the disciples. They were no doubt awed into silence, as the truest sympathy is used to be, in the presence of a great grief. The Command to Watch, "Then saith he unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful., even unto death: abide ye here, and watch with me." Christ would have these men remain to give him such little comfort as was in the power of man to give under circumstances so tragic. Jesus Prays '•'And he went forward a little, and fell on his face, and prayed, saying, My Father, if it be pos- sible, let this cup pass away from me: nevertheless, not as 1 will, but as Thou wilt." In his fixed purpose to die for the world's sin Jesus never wavered. The shrinking does not reach the point of unconditionally asking that the cup might pass. Even in the act of uttering the wish, it is limited by that 'if it be pos- sible,' which can only mean pos- sible, in view of the great pur- pose for which He came. The prayer is the utter resignation to the Father's will, in which sub- mission He found peace, as we do. The three disciples were near the scene of His agony, but they were fast asleep, that the Scripture might be fulfilled, `I anee Aden „•the winepress alone d oo othe people tiie'iie esseete na-- with me.' Watch and Pray "Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation:' the spirit 'in- deed is willing, but the flesh is weak." If Christ needed to be strengthened by prayer, how much more His faulty disciples! He had entered into temptation and had felt the full strain; He desires therefore that they may be protected as He has been by prayer. Thy Will Be Done ("Again a second time he went away, and prayed, saying, 'My Father, if this cannot pass away, except I drink it, Thy will be done. And he came again and found them sleeping, for their eyes were heavy. And he left them again, and went away, and prayed a third time, saying the same words."- Certainly the dis- ciples could have kept `wake, if they had been determined to do so. Opporbunities to help others in times of great spiritual dis- tress are soon over; if we are not faithful in the hour when we are needed, the hour will soon come when nothing we can do will be of any help. The Final Words "Then cometh He to the dis- eiples, and saith unto them, sleep on now, and take your rest: be- hold, the hour is at hand, and the Son of man is betrayed into the • hands of sinners. Arise, let us be going: behold, he is at hand that betrayeth me." The calm and confidence of our Lord are in contrast to the confusion and weakness of the three apostles. The Cup of Bitterness "Simon Peter therefore having a sword drew it, and struck the high priest's servant, and cut off his right ear. Now 'the servant's name was Malthus. Jesus there- fore saith unta Peter, put Up the sword into the sheath: '1'he cul which the Father bath given me, shall I not` drink It?" The cup to which our Lord here refers is a symbolic expression, by whieh is meant 41 the silffering, the bitterness, the loneliness of the entire passion episode, eul- mieating in Christ's death upon the cross. Christ this night had discovered In the agony of Ws prayer, that this path of suffer- ing could never he avoided if He was to remain in the will of God, and remain He would, however terrible the cost. The Arrest of Jesus "So the band and 'the chief cap- tain, and the offieers of the Jews, seized Jesus and him." There are four souls partici- pating in the drama of this hour, our Lord, and three of His own disciples, we might say, the best three. Around these four souls crowd the temptations of the evil one. This is the beginning of that great day when once and for all the redemption of man will be wrought out by the sacrieice of Christ, (rod's Son. There have been great battles en earth be- tween the forces of righteousness and the armies of wicked nations, but there has never been a con- flict with such enormous conse- quenees for the welfare and the liberty, and the hope and the life of men as the conflict this night, which will end before another day is passed, in the defeat of prin- cipalities and powers; in the cast- ing down of Satan, in the offer- ing up of a sacrifice which is sufficient to save every man from kis sins forever. 1-115 LANGUAGE Ira' GO AWF1. Lr SUR THE BOOK SHELF Jf`R IENDSRI P By Berry Symons 4, house in the country Is the secret ambition of every city - dweller. Friendship tells how one such family made the dream a reality, By a process of trial and error, hoarding one summer, renting the next, they finally knew what they wanted, and set out te' find it, They found Friendship north- east of Toronto, The .stagy of its purchase from two maiden ladies is one of the best stories In a book full of good stones. The amusing and, at the. same time, tragic adventures of the Symons family discovering ' the joys and sorrows of eountry life, make delightful 'reading. PM.'ma- chinations of the rural telepliene, the difficulty of planieng jota- toes, raising chickens or tr'iiig to catch the old dog fox mane' you laugh because they axe so Iiutean and so important to those con- cerned. This light-hearted volume will drive readers out of doors for a fresh look at the sky, the 'trees and other wonders of the eoun- tryside. Friendship . . By Harry Sy- mons• . The MacMillan 'CoTn- pany of Canada . . Price 13.00, Liberia's .Rubber APProxiniately 77,000 acres of rubber are under cultivation, in Liberia. Liberia is the only Inde- pendent republic on the continent of Africa. OUR RADIO LOG q RD 86011, STATIONS CACL 55&k, CBY 1010k V,5. NETWORKS ��VV WJZ, 1•LNB. CC.Blue 770k •WACc.D.S.) 880k WOR (M E,6,) 710k CANADIAN STATIONS OS Owen Sd. 1400k OC Hamilton 1160k TB Hamilton Cath. 1550k CF Montreal 860k CH North Bay 1230k JCS Stratford 1240k S �Kiingston 9960k COWham 1570k PL P Lon .,. ►l • .• 11.1 • CKAC Montreal 730k CKCR Waterloo 1490k CICCO Ottawa 1310k CKGB Timmis C SO Sudbury 1790k CKPC Brantford 1380k CQKNX Wingham 920k G'HEX Peterboro 1430k U.S. STATIONS WEBB Buffalo 1340k. WHAM Rochester 1180k WLW Cincinnati 700-k WGY Schenectady 810k KDKA Pittsburgh 1020k WBBM Chicago 780k WBEN Buffalo 930k WGR Buffalo 550k WJRWJRW Detroit 7600k SHORT WAVE GSI3 England 9.51m GSC England 9.58m GSD England 11.75m GSE England 1±:86m GSG England 17.79ro GSP England 15.31m EAR Spain 9.48in RAN- Russia 9.60m RNE Russia 12,00m PRFs Brazil 955.00m WGEA Schenectady 15.33m . WCAB Phila. 15.27m WCBX N. York 11.83m WRUL Boston 15.15m a a STAR ON ICE HORIZONTAL 1,6 Pictured expert ice ska'ter: .. _. 11 Mountain nymphs. 13 Type of cap (pl.). 14 Small firearms. 16 Tasteless red crystalline substance. 17 Drunkards. 18 Pleasure boat. 19 Foot covering. 20 Compass point 23 Half an em. 24 To fail its drops. 27 Paving material. 29 She is an expert skater on 30 Erbium (symbol). 31 Not closed. 32 Thing (law), 24 Land measure. 35 Chinese measure. Answer to Previous Puzzle ZODI,I AC '0 O U R 5 L E CIfLL P TIRIA O pG-7fil© N ®0V®®: R ®D U CIIARIC PL NO TW 0 D TI R L T E D S I SLET UMBE TEASE VALE VE B P ANET 37 Biting to the taste. 39 Prattle. 43 Top of the head. 45 Produced. 47 Respire. 49 Monitor. 50 To wind again 51 Ether compound. 10 Domestic 52 Liquid mortar slave. VERTICAL . 12 Cunning. 1 Dips in a 13 Nocturnal liquid. flying 2 Constellation. mammal. 3 Put into a nest. 4 Members of an important Hindu caste. 5 Bustle. 6 Pronoun, 7 Cupid. 8 Lower, 9 Noun suffix. 15 Symbol for samarium. 16 Chinese (abbr. ). . 21 C155e -: , 22 Severe. 25 Tear. 26 Writing implement, 28 Exist. 31. Far East, 33 She is •one of the world's foremost .—s, 34160 square rods (pl.). 36 Not the swills, 37 Highest point 38 Desert fruit. .39 Through. .40 Road (abbr,). 41 Tuberculosis (abbr.). 42 Sin. 43 Kind of rubber. 44 Wriggling, 46 A jutting•roclt 48 Snaky fish. •1-4E ISNOT Fir TO C' AMONG DE , NT P1OILE ...., By J. MILLAR WATT SQ T E ROL.•}64-4T HIM I W HEP 11-pItnne 1, 1* 'rho Bell Nytidfrnto, Ynr