Can, ide Fredo, id pictured PETE r | [} ve :. \arrive at an équitable and reason. £7 saeh) £ #? 0 (1, Pessian 'of leased premises'it may api + ~¥ cr pod small" shopkeeper faved with Bal A 2 debtor = ac : = LI 4 { 114 { | . \ 14 Britain Adds 400 ||SUNDAY New Power to Move War Traffic Convoy System RADIO REPORTER i gee . : % Wars ps To Navy : SC HO OL Reduces , Lo 3 DIALING WITH DAVE: ) TUS LS) ol 7 fp In Ship Sinkings Along po tasenese pe 1 President Roosevelt. Under the indo Bunding ie lik L E S S 0 N Atlantic Seaboard Roem he the . crack. re. : LESSON 28 Ia porter has been given sweeping M than 400, warships have |/ : The U.S. Navy disclosed last' for. the disseyhination' of been added to the naval fleets of - fam snd Eve; Temptation "ud 'week that for pio a Tenth DS Tey ol Siena the Rritish Empire since war be > * gan, It Is disclosed in the new edition of "Jane's Fightlug Ships," the acknowledged authority on all the navies of the world, . Namgh are given of nine battle ,oldps, © six © afveraft 'carriers, ' 22 erulsers, four minelayere, 62 'de- slroyers, 22 submarines, 16 sloops, 119 corvettes and 178 other naval vessels which were not completed at the outbreak of war, In addi, tion to' these, 72 destroyers, seven submarines, '13° minesweepers, 61 sorvettes and 37 trawlers have had their names published in connec sion with warship weeks in Bri "fain's natlonal savings campaign, Enemy Losses ' "Jane's Fighting | Ships" ealls attention development of warship building fn the British Dominions, especl- ally © Canada; / where sloops, ~cor- vettes and 'minesweepers have been coming oft the stocks mn numbers undreamed-of before the war; Several destroyers, It 1s re- - sorded, are also In hand in Bm. pire shipyards, No less impressive are the col lated particulars of enemy ldsses, Binoce war began Germany has lost, We battleship "Blsmarck," the armored ship "Admiral Graft Bpee," the cruisers "Blncher," "Karlsruhe," "Koln," = "Konigs- berg," "Leipzig," 21 destroyers, --.-18 torpedo boats, nearly all the subs buil} beore the war and shout 80 other warships. \ Italy has lost the battleship "Conte df Cavour," 11 cruisers, 27 destroyers, 14 torpedo bo. ts, 12° submarines and 27 other vessels, while Japan's losses up to the end of April Included the battleship , "Haruna," 15 cruisers, 15 destroy- ere, 13 submarines, four seaplane carriers and 'seven other vessels, ARGENTINA LEARNS also. EL 'Argentinians. ave Yeaping | the 'harvest' of their leaders' namby- i by: dealings. with- the axis, Pent. Lujs Pydro Sealese, skip Pot the Argentine ship Rio ) { a New York telling of. the torpedoing 3 Sg 120 miles "off New York harbor, ' Little Merchant Small Shopkeeper 18 Unsung 'Hero of War Effort Oné_ of he unsung heroes of Great Britain's war effort is the little fellow with a shop who has ~4ried to keep his business going, aays 1s New York San. The 2 fighting men and war work- of drained one-half of the re-war - personnel of 1,300,000 An non-food retail trades; De- "mand" for 'raw materials has cat heavily into the volume of goods avhilablé fol' 8416, The Liabilities Act of 1041 has hélged antelior- até the Tot of thas caught in the Jam. A report in-Bulletins From Britain explains how it works, financial liabilities on account of "the préssures' of 'wat 'cdr apply | #0; the Liabilities Adjustnierit Of- \ ficer. in' his, district for "advice ~ "and assistaride in enabling hini to 'able scheme of arrangement with his creditors and; in particular, at such a scheme of artangement as will .enable him to . <i pres serve that business or to recover # when 'circumstahces permit." Courts. will enable ah post- the. payment of debts for i! periods (as they be tit Swill exempt from" Seizure ise8 and other property that 2 2) to remain'in-pos- uce hig rent to its "current -Jettable value." It can rede the £1 ¥dtd of ea on martitbe ans 4 ht Stporie' payment, | He mall .,.mhopkeeper, has long been.ad im- wJoriant cog in the. machinery of itish commerce, . to the surpriing,, moved, and the. greatest deter- - heard the voice of Jehovah God thé an, §ald, The' pr Io) 1'dia id od the Bérpént, she ldo showing Printed Text: Genesis 23, 24, } Golden Text: "The soul that' sinneth, it shall die Ezekiel 18.4, The Lesson in its: Setting Time--We 'do not know when the temptation of our first par- ents took place, except that it was near the very beginning of hu- _ man history, Man's First Temptation 1, (a) "Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field which Jehovah God had made. 1.-(b) And he said unto the woman, 'Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of any tree of the garden?" 'It is Satan's de- sire always to ruin what God, has done and now to keep God from redeeming man, It is his pur- pose, on this occasion, to make man as Satan is himself, that is, one who disobeys and = rebels against God, He cannot expect our first parents to rebel against ' God without a process of weak- ening, leading up to such diso- bedience. Satan attempts, and successfully, to insinuate doubt in the mind of the woman re. garding the word of God. This is the way Satan has always at- tacked the heart of man, to get him to doubt that God had spo- ken, + = Listening to the Serpent "2. "And the woman saith unto the serpent, Of the fruit of the trees of the garden we may eat: 8. But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the gar- den, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, lest ye die." What the woman should have done, was immediately to denounce Satan for his subtle insinuation, and tell him that her trust was in God. Instead of that she began to ar- gue with him, > Appealing to Pride 4; "And the serpent said Tinto the woman, 'Ye shall_not surely die'. When a person believes .8in will not be punished, then all dread of punishment is re- 3:11.13, rent from sin loses its restraining power. ' 6. "For God doth know that in the day you eaf thereof," then your cyes shall be opened, and ye shall bo as God, knowing good and evil" Satan appeals to the woman by telling her that if she eats of this fruit, the knowledge sho will thereby acquire will be of such greatness, and of such a nature, that she will become like God. This apeals to the woman's pride. This desire to be like God has always been a powerful factor in the history of fallen humanity. il : Choosing Satan 6. "And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to thé eyes, and that the treé was to be desired to make' one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat; and she gave also to her husband with her, and he did'eat." Was there anything in' the fruit itself which was harmful? Prob- . ably not. Thé harm did not comé from the fruit itself, but from disobeying God. Is such a simple thing as this to be called so great. a sin as to be worthy of death? Disobedience is disobedience whe- ther it pertains to' something small or great. Eve disobeyed God and obeyed Satan instead, She chose Satan in place of God and love for God was replaced by a love for evil, - Consequences of Sin 7. "And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves aprons, And they walking in the garden in the cool of the day; and the man and his 'wife hid themselves from the presence of Jehovah God amongst the trees of the garden." Why should man: now flee from God? Because he had disobeyed God and falt the shame of his own re- belliousress" and ingratitude, 'Blaming Oth, LL I 1 9. "And Jehovah 'God calied un- to the man, and said unto him, Where ait thou? 10, And he sald, I heard. thy voice .in the \ garden, And I was afrdid because: | I am 'naked; and!|I bid fhyee 11, And he said, Who told" thes" that thou wast naked? Hast thou eaten 'of the tree whereof I com: | manded thee thal thou sholijdest | not éat? 12, And the man said, The woman Whom tHdu gavést to be. WH i Ad Kava Ma of Poi al tree antl' I. did 18, And Jehovah God sid ints the Wohian, What id this thou hast done? And" ont bes. at," Adam not only blames the fransgression on his wifé, 'but really' puts, the blame on God; for he speaks of Eve pa the Womh whom God had given to him, The woman blam- Sona apne HIRTY-five fast and powerful locomotives of tho latest typo are rolling out of the shops to speed up war traffic over the Canadian National Railways. R. C. Vaughan (right), President of the National Sys- tem. accompanied by John Roberts, Chief of Motive Power and Car Equip- ment (left). and other officers, jin- epected the first of these engines, 'The president was keenly interested in tho cab interior which includes new features designed by Mr. Roberts and members of the Motive Power staff, no inclination to acknowledge the guilt or to ask forgiveness, 28, "Therefore Jehovah God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from whence he was taen. 24, So he drove out the man} and he placed at the east end of the garden of Eden the cherubin, and the flame of a sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the treo of life." His atcess to the source of per- petual life is barred by a guard consisting of the cherubim ~and the flame of a sword, The flam- ing sword is the visible form of the sword of justice and the cher- ubims are the ministers of the divine presence and judgment-- of his presence which was not entirely withdrawn from man; and of his judgment, by which be was excluded from the garden of delight, The Burma Road was tenta- tively - surveyed more than 100 years ago but was not opened une til 1939. : gid Mounties "Mutt" Is Well-Trained Dog "rhe telephone rang. Smug- gled goods? Yes, he would £0 right over and scarch, "Mutt," the dog of doubtful parentage, hooked out a flea from behind his ear and then literally slithered into the police car with his owner. Later the member in charge of the "C" Division detachment entered the suspect's house. Unknown to him, "Mutt" had ambled in, nipped another flea, sniffed for a cat, and then lain down under the kitchen stove. The peace officer did not say a word. The suspect piled smuggled goods in heaps be- fore him, An incredulous look spread over the policeman's face. "I give up, mister; 1 confess I smuggled all these, [ won't deny it, because I've read all about the Mounties' trairied police dogs." The officer turned his head, spotted the dog under the stove, and wondered how "Mutt" had got there! = LEADER OF GREECE [SS J HORIZONTAL Answer {o Previous Puzzle 14 Intended. 1 Late dictator (=) 16 Undraped of Greece. TEL 5 C or As 2 statues, 11 Squirrel skin. i : RE EL SQ 17 He was called 12 Heron. ? D) Til iT the "---- man. 13 Custom, of Greece." 14 Regions. MA ; 19 Small depres- 15 Kind. eM M ARTES sion.- 16 Fool. T| ME] 20 Rebellion. 18 Toward. LI B 21 Heaven sent 19 Highly fla- food. vored sauce, T 228ally, 20 Mountain- JOC +23 Mine shaft hut (abbr). OlUISIE] 24 Upon. "21 Fashions. 25 He died of a 22 Outer coat. ~-- infection, 26 Removed 37 Pretense. € Insect's egg. - recently, Whiskers. 38 To accomplish. 5 Mister (abbr.) 27 Fear. 28 Sugar-cane 39 Germ cell. 8 Coats with 28 Gondola race. stalk, 40 Banquet, tin alloy 30 Destines, 20 Sounds, 41 Advocate of * 31 To iron. 30 Catlike. bi © 7Deputy. 33 Laughable. 81 Pair (abbr.), realism. § Roentgen ray. 34 pjch, 32 Measure. 43 Money facto- 9 Bronze. 36 Kanarese sect. 33 Confining. ries, 10 Street (abbr.). 37 writes, 34 Opposed to 44 Amidic. 13 Under his 39 School. of com, . 45 Reluctant. leadership his whales. 85 Coin, VERTICAL country ---- 40 Pine f{rée. 36 Science of 2 Molding. . Italian inva- 42 Each (abbr). plants. 3 Skein of yarn, sion. 43 Myself, has been convoying merchant ves: sels along the. Atlantic seaboard: There has been an apreciable drop in ship sinkings in the area during recent weeks, a 'decrease believed due . largély- to escort vessels and the Navy's off-shore plane 'and blimp patrols, The Navy. Department had no comment beyond its brief an. nouncement that "the Navy haa been convoying merchant ships through the lanes of the eastern sea' frontier for approximately the past thirty days." "The frontier"/ covers: the en- tire coastline from = Florida to Maine. Of the 150 vessels sunk in these waters, at least 134 were sent to the bottom before the tonvoy system was instituted, 18 vessels went down during June, 18 fewer than the 31 sunk in May and 18 below April's bag of 39, In the first three months of the underseas warfare, another 62 ships went down, While the Atlantic sinkings are decreasing, there has been an ac- companying increase in submarine attacks in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean," ' It is understood the convoy system will be extended to those _areas soon. § SCOUTING . . . A total of 12 tons of salvage rubber has "been collected and shipped by the Boy Scouts of South Porcupine, * . . A permanent cmployee bas been vage depot, as a result of the continued success of the collee- tions mado by the Scouts, the of- ficial salvage organization "of the © community." Out of the financial returns to date the boys have made donations of $20 each to the Red Cross, Salvation Army Red Shield Fund and the Baden-Pow- ell Chins Up Fund for British Scout war sufferers. A $60 Vie- tory bond also was purchased. * * * Delinquency among juveniles hag shown a sharp increase, due to wartime conditions, according to Judge H. S. Mott of the To- ronto amily Court, but the Boy Scout movement is providing an effective means for combiitting this. 'Seouting," said Judge Mott, 'enables boys to plan and do things with other boys of their own age, and gives them a chance to share with others a training which tends to equip them for a happy aud normal life." LJ L » A 1200 acre wooded camp site located near the Canadian border has been presented the Boy Scouts of the Adirondack region of" New York.: The donor was Charles E. Bedford of New York City, : . LJ » A Camp Call To Scouts A call to Boy Scout leaders across the Dominion to overcome the wartime problems involved and secure a fortnight's camping for their Scouts this summer has been issued by. the Executive Board of the Boy Scouts Assocla- tion, The object is to ensure both the camp training that has proved 80 valuable, and the health bene- fit of changed surroundings and the full outdoor life, particularly for the Younger Scouts, Older Scouts not otherwise employed will be woking on farms, For these arg recommended camps in locations from which the boys can 80 to their farm work, thus com. bining farming and some Scout- ing, For the Young Scouts, where transportation js a difficulty, near-home camps are recommend- ed. It may be possible to locate such camps on-farma where the boys can help with berry picking and other light farm work, Chair- men of Scout Group committees are called upon to do everything possible to arrange camps and to More than: one-fifth. of the kuman race is Chinese, where at least 150 United Nations: 4 ships have: been blasted to the bottom by Axis underseas raiders, ° placed in charge of Aurora's sal ° BPRS MEET DICK LIEBERT Richard (Dick) Liebert, famed youthful organist at the giant Radio City Music Hall organ, is one of the nation's most able and versatile console stylists, You hear his artistry on the. air, in a_ wide variety of programs, rang-.: ing from the 'mood' music on many of your favorite daytime serials, to playing the mood 'nova- chord' accompaniment on mystery plays. Also, the weekly broad- casts from the Music Hall, to the nation, feature Dick's unusual console stylings, Some Interesting Sidenotes Dennis Day, more or less on holiday, while the Benny show takes its summer lay-off, is doing himself right proud, with guest appearances on many of the net- works summer shows, A recent appearance on the Sunday "Pause that Refreshes" program added new laurdls to the Day talents. Columbia's famed radio re. porter and news analyst, Elmer Davis, has become head of the newly created Office of War In- formation by appointment of L Recent Canadian highlight; was the Toronto origination: of the famous "Vox-Pop'* program, from CFRB to the Columbia network. Tommy Riggs with his yoice 'Betty Lou,'-is now in full charge of the Burns and Allen sommer show. "fehl . Kay Kyser, Joan (Valiant Lady) Blaine, Betty Winklé# and. Elizabeth" Reller arc some of the LBS stars who are collecting old /records, having them melted down, and then re-recording them and giving the special platters to the boys in the Armed Camps) . Nice gesture! i Ben Hernie,, the Old Maestro, is back on the air again, with"a big troupe and a daily quarter hour CBS show! . . ' * CKOC, Hamilton, had 'a very interesting evening Over 200 of the Presidents and Secretaries of leading Woinen's Clubs of Hamilton and district, gathered at the Studio for a social evening, and a bit of friendly promotion for "Soldier's Wife," the epic daily program of the war-time Canadian home, broad- cast throughout Canada: daily at 1130 aon E:DJUIY An episode of the play was rebroadcast, the sta- tion's Commercial Manager, Mr. Guild outlined the part radio was playing on behalf of the War- Time Prices and Trade Board, and studio interviews with the sta- tion's woman reporter Jen Gil- lard, were highlights of the 'éve- = ning. When all business had been attended to, a studio tour was arranged, and the women were given a first-hand picture of what takes place during:the. broadeast- ing from a top-flite radio station! All in all, a very pleasant and unusual evening! OUR RADIO LOG TORONTO STATLIONS | CKAO Montrea) 730k SHORT WAVE CERIN 860K, CBE, 740k | CII. Kirkand 1. stoi | gq 3 a wb CKCL, 550k, CIV 1010k | CKCIU Waterloo 1400k | S31) Josiau) yim US. NETWORKS HKCU Ottnwa 1310k | doy pint PEE WEAL C. Red 080k | « Timmlue 1470K > England 1156 WJZ N, Blue 770k | CK Sudbury 700k Paglund 15 04ne ti WABO (CLS) 850k | KPC Brantford 13850k England 17.50m WOR (MLS) 7 CKLW Windsor 500k | (i oland 15.81m + CANADIAN STATIONS | CKNX Winghnm 1230k | (uy toglond 17800. CEOS Owen Sd. 1400k 1.8, STATIONS IAN Span. D.dSe CKOO Hamilton 1150k | v Hattale 130k} 10g hain Soi CIML Mamilton 900k | V M Iochester 150K IAN Russia ~~ 960m GIL st. Cath. 1230k | WLW. Clacinnoa 700k | RAN Itussin 12.00m ger Montreal 600k [ WGY Schenectady S10 [ fie tussls 15.158 CECI North lay 1230L | KDIKA Plttaburgh 10201 | "YY " CFCO Chatham 630% [| WIM Chicago 750k | WGEA Scheueeta LARA) CFI, London Huffalo 030k 15.33m CICS Stratford VGIR Baftalo 830k UC 15.27m CERO. Kingston 1400k | WIKBW Nuffalo 1320k | WILUL lloxton 10.1508 CIE Sault Ste. M. 14008 | WILE Detrolt 700k | WCDX XN. York 11.830 a THIS CURIOUS WORLD By William Ferguson secure the needed camp leaders, SEVEN MEN, 1 THE U.S. BOARD OF | TEA EXPERTS, I BY TASTING HUNDREDS OF SAMPLES, DICTATE. {| THE QUALITY OF THE NTWENTY BILLION 1 | CURS OF 74 DRUNK, ANNUALLY INTHE U, S. @s 59.36 degrees, Fahrenheit HICH 1S COLDER, ON A YEARLY AVERAGE, THE NORTAMERN ORTH ANSWER: " The #outlicrn Is slightly cooler, show the annual mean temperature of the southern hemisphere to. be 55.94 degrees, Fahrenheit, and that of the SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE? IO Compiled figures northern hemisphere, -- ny. NEXT: A reptilian "quinfruped," By J. MILLAR WATT Rs A 3 oe - I WON'T GO IN YOUR CLUB BRELLA / AND LEFT THIS ONE IN / : YOUR BUT YOU MIGHT "THIS ONE eB is "TOOK | | RUN ACroSS IT MUCH MY UM "| | AGAIN IN THERE, 1S - Sern i wing FUSS a EAE recently, ,