A . ' Sha AR ' i ie FL AEE SAS RS Ae dn Ee at di | a a EE ad a mr a Ff WwW. 22 30) BAL RY (SEPA TSE Nazis May Launch Attack on England - ---- The possibility that Germany may launch an allout aerial at- dack against Fmgland on an even greater scale than the blitz in the spring of last. year and fight only a defensive war in the East fa envisaged in well fnformed British circles in Washington, qt 1s known that Germany has been bullding up a large alr force during the winter months which, © #t Is felt, may presage a new aerial blitz such as was unloosed over England in the autumn of: 1940 and the spring of 1941. 'Where this air force is now is. unknown, but British quarters be- Heve it may be directed against England just as well as any other theater of the war and that there fs no reason to assume that it is intended solely for a renewal of the attacks against Russia which proved so sterile last year, There is a disposition in these - same quarters to believe that Hit- Jer may not follow the expected pattern by resuming an offensive against the Ryssians this sum- 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 base of operations for the United Nations in Burope, Whatever Hitler expects to do, both Russia and Britain are pre- pared for any eventualities, Am. erican ald to the Soviet Union ' has surpassed the billion dollar mark in war supplies actually de- Hvered and Russia is now spend- tng a second billion dollars in this country. England, on the other hand, has had ample time to develop her defencés since Ger- many called off the. aerial blitz . when the Germans went to war with the Russians last June, Commands British Troops At Madagas Major-General R. 'G. Sturges, . C.B., of the Royal Marines, com- mands the British troops, includ- _ ing the famous Commando units, that were landed on the Vichy- eontrolled island of Madagascar. me resistance was reported to ve been made by French unita .en the island. Norse Kidnap Crew | "Of Coastal Steamer - This is the story of a group 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- sund at various stops as it made fts regular run from Oslo to Bergen. When all were aboard they drew guns and cowed the erew, Two days later the 623. ton steamer entered the British ~ North Séa, Royal Air Force pilots sighted the little steamer and British trawlers were sent to escort ft through the mine fields to har- T, ; Tokio Agrees To Red Cross Visit "The Australian Red Cross an nounced recently that-a- delegate'. of the International Red Cross will visit the British and Cana- dian-sprisoner of war camps at Hong Rong about the middle of this month, It was stated that word to this effect has come from Shanghai. The International Red Cross, whose headquarters are in Gene eva, Switzerland, had been trying for 'months to .obtain this cone cession from the Japanése, it was eaid, and the news that Tokio had at last agreed was regarded as encouraging, At the same time Foreign Min- fster Anthony Eden's statement in the House of Commons in London: that prisoners of war at 'Hong Kong now were - receiving better treatment gave much sate jsfaction in Red Cross cireles. It was hoped, that conditions would likewise improve and Britfsh prisoners are held eaptive, . ! Ey 4 / sent, in . Singapore where thousands of Australians ~UL mOC wr DA O00 SO 2 LESSON 22 «FRIDAY: THE DAY' OF SUFFERING (I) (Gethsemane and Trials) Mark 14:32.34,/ 44-46; 15:1.8 , GOLDEN TEXT.--Not my will, but thine, be done. Luke 22:42; THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.--Late Thursday' evening, and Friday, April b and 6, A.D, 80, / ' Place.--The Garden of Gethse- - mane, at the foot 'of the western slope of the Mount of Olives, and the palace of Pontius Pilate, in Jerusalem, With His Three Disciples 82, "And they came unto a place which was named Gethse- mane: and he saith unto his dis- ciples, sit ye here while I pray. 83(a). And he taketh with him Peter and James and John," Our Lord took, with him on this oc. casion His three most intimate disciples, Peter, James and John, yearning for, as a true man, the closest communion of trusted fol- Jowers, and the helpfillness that comes from a consciousness of loved ones being near, 83(b). "And began to be greatly amazed, and sorely troub. led." Jesus 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 here, and watch." The distress is so great that it breaks forth in words from Jesus' lips. It is his soul grief, which animates his body, that is in such deep distress; just as distress takes hold also of our soul, But they are all too shal- low who think that the rapid ap- proach of physical suffering and death braught on this agony in Jesus'. soul. Jesus now orders the three disciples to stay where they are, Alas, even this little comfort 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 'to lay down his life. The Token 44. "Now he that betrayed him had given them a token, saying, Whomsover 1 shall kiss, that ia he: take him, and lead him away safely." A sign was not neces sary as Jesus was a well-known figure but in the darkness and confusion there was a possibility of escape and there was a desire to make everything sure. The sign given by Judas had nothing unusual about it, but was the or- dinary form of salute. Judas, having once entered into_this af- fair, didn't want a mistake made of it. The Kiss of Judas Many different 'reasons have been offered why Judas betrayed our Lord. He must have betrayed him, fundamentally, willing to give me, and 1 will de- liver him unto you? (Matt, 26: 15) was his first question. One néed not stumble at the fact that the amount they gave him was a pitiful sum--when a man becomes & miger, no sum is too small to covet, 46. "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 betrayal the 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 Circmstances 1, "And straightway . in the morning the chief priests with the elders and scribes, and the whole 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 saith-unto-him, Thou sayest."" The phrase "Thou sayest! was a Jewish form of as. Pilate's Question 8. "And the. ehief priests ac- cused him of many things, And Pilate again asked him, paying, Answerest thou nothing? behold how many things they accuse thee of. Bb. But Jesus no more ans. wered anything; insémuch that' Pilate marvelled." The silence of Jesus speaks eloquently against Pilate. Why does Pilate with his uestion and exclamation try #0 ift his responsibility. upon Jesus? It is the duty of this Roman judge either to silence all these angry accusations or to ex amine thé. It i4 because of his cowardice that he does not en- force his verdict of innocence. Jesus Is Silent The silence of Jesus is directed against the Jews, expressing his- eontempt for their accusations. Pilate that day condemned himself Tires for 25-pounder guns are one of the many war uses into which goes a proportion of salvaged rubber, An aircraft tire requires hundreds of ounds of rubber, A Canadian corvette uses the rubber equivalent of more than 150 auto tires, to obtain "money for himself, 'What are ye British King Views Actual Land 'Battle' "King George VI, who received bis baptism of fire as a- naval S50 Hpmsaogit in the Battle of utland in the First World War, now knows what it is like to see action on land. : Bullets shot past him and gren- ades and land mines exploded al- most underfoot as he watched British soldiers undergo the dan- gers of actual war in "toughgn- ing up" manoeuvres which have taken a total of forty-four fatal- ities in the last two months, Thore were two casualties as he watched, The King crouched with his . soldiers while machine-gun pellets tore up the ground nearby and mortar shells were lobbed. over- head 'and he scrambled through underbrush to get a better view of the realistic mock war. Officers say the live ammu- nition manoeuvres are the best means of training mento per- form coolly under actual war, con- ditlons a8 a moral weakling when he condemned the Lord without jus- tification. The only one that day who showed himself to be a true man, adhering, every moment to the' principles of honor and jus- tice, knowing fully the path He was taking led to the cross, was the Lord Jesus. Here as else- where throughout his whole life, He reveals Himself without sin and without blemish, Hitler Would Pay Hitler's private income, derived from the Nazi publishing com- pany, which. publishes - Mein Kampf and all the Party newspa- pers, and from the Hitler levy on the wage bill of German in- dustry, is calculated to amount to No less than £ 10 million per annum. This is his personal in- come; some of it is spent in huge presents or bribes." He is certain- ly the greatest war profiteer in history. If he were in England he would be subject to £9,715,000 income tax annually, Young Farmer Sees Action 'Round World In the two short years since he left his father's farm sat Sperling, Man,;Sgt. Clintan C. Young, 23- year-old air gunner, has seen more action and more of the world than most men {wice his age. Veteran of 45 operational flights, 12 of them from England and the others in the Middle East, he has been pounded by German bombs in Malta, been coned in searchlights over Tripoli and Ben- gasi, attacked Italian convoys in the Mediterranean and fought duels with axis night fighters. -He sailed around the Cape and cros- sed the Equator twice and now is back in England. THIS CURIGUS WORLD By William Ferguson 3 SHED THEIR. SKINS POUR TIMES BEFORE REACHING FULL SIZE. . SOME. MOLT E/SHT TIMES, COPR. 1939 BY NTA SERVICE, INC. APRIL FOOLS DAY ORIGINATED [N AMERICA, -. ANSWER: V/rong, The custom of playing tricks on Apri) first | "88 almost. universal in-scope, but just when it originated no one | seems to know. NEXT: How fast do: antlers grow? : Old Quebec Stove Soon Coming Back New Models Will Be Cook- Ing and Heating Machines The old "Quebec heater'---much maligned but very efficient heat- fog unit peculiar to this séction of the country around Montreal for generations -- 1s scheduled to come back Into its own within the very near future owing to a recent ruling from 'Ottdwa curtailing the manufacture of stoves to' save. Iron and steel. * . Absolutely shorn of gadgets, it performed its work 'well and that was to supply heat. In thousands of homes throughout Montreal, it was the only means of supplying warmth to a household. It was economical in operation, but in appearance an eyesore, for it was / Just an enlarged fron stovepipe' about three feet high, lined with firebrick and about two feet in ° 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 everything and anything to a cinder and served its purpose admirably while 'the wintry blasts toppled the thermometer to 20 or 30 degrees below zero. No More Decorations Some years ago, manufacturers bent on improving thelr wares put out some new models. They dressed them up to look like vle- trolas © and radios, gave them bright colored casings, and trim- med them with nickle plated fit. tings Installed grates which re- duced efficiency. They even fitted them with oil-burning equipment and brought them thoroughly up to date, The new stoves sold, they appealed to the eye of the thrifty French Canadian house- holder. But that's all over now, for the Munitions and Supply Department on behalf of C. D. Howe, Canada's American born minister, 'has de- creed that on and after April 16 no new stoves other than approv- ed models may be manufactured and in the words of Alan H. WIl- llamson, Supplics Controller, he says, "The bride of 1943 may get . something of a shock when" she sces thé now stove. Bullt for ut- flity rather than for appearance, the new models will be cooking and heating machines and nothing more." SCOUTING . . . Some 4,000 books and 25,000 magazines were collected by the Boy- Scouts and Wolf Cubs of Windsor and suburban communi- ties in one April day's campaign, for Army, Navy and Air Force libraries. * * * The Boy Scouts of the little community of Lucky Lake, in the 'vrmer drought areca of Saskat- chewan, provide this example of patriotic enterprise: A contri- bution of $28.75 to the Milk for Britain Fund; $4 to the Scouts "Chin Up Fund for Britain; a freight carload of . salvpge; the making and installing of linen cupboards in the local district hospital} 'providing two Scout first-aiders with" kits, four mes- sengers and & bugler for the Lucky Lake Security Corps. . . . A tribute to Scouting by the Hon. and Rev. H. J. Cody, Presi- dent of Toronto University: *"1 have long believed that the Boy Scout movement is one of the sanest and most influential or modern educational efforts, and that Lord Baden-Powell was not only a fine general but an educa- tional leader of the highest qual- ity. He aimed to reach, to train and to discipline boys at the most Nei i and eritical period of H eir lives, He conserved human ~gnergy not by repressing it, but by giving it a constructive ex- pression and a right direction." '. LJ * Kingston Boy Séouts . dis- tributed "Volunteers for Victory" pledge cards to every houschold in that city. The card, used for the sccond year, pledges signers to salvage materials of all kinds, to save gasoline; and- if -feasible to contribute blood in the blood donors campaign, * » * Following 'an A. R. P. test at Oakville, Ont., during which sev- RADIO REPORTER DIALING WITH DAVE: \ Radio's Falthful have once again named their favorites through Movie-Radlo Guide's 1942 "Star of Stars" poll, Favorite variety program of the masses was "The Breakfast Club," and Dx MacNeil it's M. U. was. noted Biss star of stars. The two sing- ing stare of the show, Jack Baker, Tenor, - and Nancy Martin, pop vocalist, took 'ftop-honors also!- The "Breakfast Club {s heard in Canada daily at nine am. through stations of the CBC network; -in- cluding CBY and CKOC. . * ee Other favorites in this popular annual poll, included Bob Hope as the nation's favorite comedian --Bing Crosby as the leading popular singer (CBC--Thuredays 9.00" p.m.), Don Wilson favorite announcer (Jack Benny show OBC Sunday 7.00 p.m.),.and Low- ell Thomas as star newscaster. How does this stack up with your preferences, in case you weren't one of the voters in this year's poll? - 3 . . . 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-handi- cap golfer, he also Is expert at bowling, tennis, badminton, and swimming! And he's a winner on Hollywood News too--listen Mon- "day at 7.00 p.m.! 'q LL 8ome 1150 listening tips: Highlights on any Sunday evens Ang listening: Fred Allen's Show, . 9 o'clock, and the guest spots on the program! : Recently a daring. Command Raid by tho R. A. Fin conjunc. tion with land" and" naval forces, was dramatized. on Wednesday nights - Flying for Freedom- Show: --CKOC, 8.00 o'clock! It was tre mendously exciting and was ale most an actuality broadcast of the recent St. Nazaire raid -- even to the finding and destroying of the Radio Locator! News on the hopr, every hour from &ix a.m. to sjk p.m, has been a daily Monday through Saturday feature on CKOC for some time, Supplumenting as it does, the reg- ular 8 a.m, 12.30 noon, 6.15 p.m, 9.00 pm, 10,00 pm, and midnite nowcasts, it gives listeners a truly complete and authoratative daily nows service, CKOC is served by British United Press---"The World's best coverage of the world's biggest news!" New Hit Parade favorite, get ting a big recorded play these days is "Full Moon" by Frankfo Masters, ) OUR RADIO LOG TORONTO STATIONS KAC Montreal 730k SHORT WAVE ¢ 3 : x CKCIL Waterloo 140k | GSB England 0.51m Greer: Poti his 1010% CHOCO Ottawa, 1310k Englund 0.58m AP CGI Timmins. 1170k 2 a 75 NETWORKS Ie sudbury .. 700k Englan 1L753m WEAF NLU. Red G0UK | Gini Brantford 1350k England 11.56m WALES NE JHue 170K | CLAW Windsor 500K England 17.70m WOR (ALIS 0 i7tok | CKNX Wingham 920k England (5.31m CANADIAN STATIONS U.S. STATIONS Spain... -0ASm CFOS Owen Sd. HOOK | WEBR Nuifalo -, .1310k | RAN Itussin .. 060m CKOOU Ilamliton - 1130K | WHAM Rochester 1180k INE Russin 12.00m CHML JKTIE St. Cath, 1550k ) Chatham ,. 630k CFI'l, London ... CJCS Stratford CFIC Kingston Hamilton 900k | WLW Cinelnnntl 700k - C WGY Schenectady Siok | RV00 Itussin CFCE Montrenl.. 600k | KDIKKA Ilittshurgh 1020k | WGA Schenectady C 11 North Bay 1230Kk | WHIM Chicago .. hig WHEN Buffalo .. 9l0k 8 » 1570k [ WGI Nuffalo WOAl Mila, «A240K | WIKBW Buffalo 140k | WIR Detrolt ,.. 760k 15.18m 13.453m bo 15.27m sa on | Witun nosten 151mm WCHN N, York 1LK3m eral "incendiary fires" were brought under control and "burst water mains' were taken care of, the Oakville Boy Scouts were com- plimented by A. R. P. officials on their effective maintenance of the communication service "dur- ing the raid." SPECTACULAR AVIATRIX HORIZONTAL Answer {o Previous Puzzle doing ---- . 1, 4 Skilled war work, flyer pictured 20 Fish. here. 21 Twitching. 22 To cject. Drums 1| 23 Footlike part, ' 1 25 Diamond 11 Female sheep. 12 Severe critic, 14 Modern. 168 To liquely. 17 To bake meat, 10 Either. 20 Nuns' home. A 22 Epical events. [AME] 24 Officer's assistant, 63 Resinoid 28 Disabled. extract, ~80Knave of ~~ 85 Architectural i clubs, rib. 56 She made a cutter's cup, 26 Goddess of discord. 27 Airplanes, 29 Heavenly "5 Egret. i body. HEEL 30 Constant JTHOR| companion. 31 Encountered. 3 To scream, 33 Expert flyer. 4 Black mineral 35 Church title, 36 Courtesy title, 6 Compass point 39 Pertaining to. "5 32 Sea skeleton. (abbr.). poles. 34 Part of eye. solo flight 7 Intelligence. 40 Marsh 35 Engagements: . to --. 8 At this time, marigold, 37 Size of type, 57 She made a 10 Pussy. 42 Saucy. 438 Perched. ---- trip, 13 God of love. 44 Valiant man. 30 Discreet, flight from 15 Heating vessel 46 Small shield, 41M e. London to 16 Her former 47 Public auto. po Pomeranian; "Tokio. "husband was 48 To be sick. urra . flyer James 49 Room recess. 45Kind of harp, VERTICAL = 77 51 God of sky. 48 Data. © 1Form of "a." {1g She was 52 Insight. 80 Promontories, 2 Niggard. drowned 54 Sun god. I Zz |3 4 ( 5 [6 [7 [2] [] 10 1] a [2 3 5 7 | ie / Q 20 Ki] 22 |23 24 [26 | 30 32 EQ 3B | 38 37 40 [7] 2 4 75 [46 [47 9 5% 5 152 | E 1 POP--Maybe Stupid, But Considerate! EN PO S, THRieS : Ld OH, I DONT KNOW -- » ~THEY NEVER. FORGET THE SIZE OF OUR + EGG CUPS! -- ---- £36000 ed va [S EW em sh en wiry Ee, i ARE