Love rules .he court, the camp, the grove, for love is heaven, and heaven is love. â€"Sir Walter Scott., the Heart of Texas". Hit Parade Favorites, Sunday afternoon 1.30 on CKOC: "Miss You", ‘‘Tangerine", and "Deep in aweet sixteen, a charming girl! And for another kind of kick out of radio listening, lend an amused and thoughtful ear to ‘Penny‘s Wednesday evenings at cight o‘clock, if you want to get the inâ€" side thrills of being a member of the RC.A.F. Much of the life of the Airâ€"Force is dramatized in this fascinatiny program series, inclundâ€" ing such things as bombing flights over Germany, and other action sncenes of the boys on Active SBerâ€" vice. They‘re mighty real and lifeâ€" famous ‘Journal‘, has asked Uncle Sam for a full time navy job. At present he is a Lieut. Commander in the Naval Reserve! has made a couple of new versions of his great songs, ‘Good Night Bweetheart‘ and ‘The Very Thought of You‘ for Columbia records. Abâ€" 1150 Listening Tips: screwâ€"ball version of the old oper etta "Rioâ€"Rita"â€"a real riot! CKOC Sunday night 8.00 o‘clock), Hal Peary, ‘The Great Gilderâ€" sleve‘ ~(ex McGee and Moliy stooge), has been signed to make two pictures for RKO, the first Also, Hal will appear as McGee of the Tuesday night 9.30 Fibber McGee and Molly Show, recently presented the team with the comâ€" plete scripts of their seventh year on the air‘~ Show has been renewâ€" ed for another year, which means mmmmmm; all their friends of 79 Wistful Vista will fill out eight years of topâ€"flite Mystery‘ showsâ€"and the program is going on the scrern, with a serâ€" ies of Inner Sanctum stories soon to go before the camera. Present plans call for scripts and actors as used on the Sunday night radio play, and that includes Raymond, master of the Here are a couple of interesting sidenotes on & program a great many are listening to every Sunâ€" day nightâ€"in fact, in the halfâ€"hour period before Fred Allen, 8.30 to spectators at a recent Fred Alâ€" len Show (Sunday night, 9.00 a‘clock CKOC, CFRB), got an addâ€" ed treat. When they were about to leave after the program, they were told that if they cared to reâ€" main, they could watch a number of stars perform in a specially preâ€" pared show being transcribed for the soldiers abroad. Naturally, most everyone remsined, and they saw Madeleine Carroll, Giadys mmmumi Allen and other celebritics give their best for the entertainment of the service men! Would that we all could live next door to one of the big broadcasting studios â€" but then, we can hear the best that is produced in them, such as the Sunday night Fred Allen show! Walter Winchell, famous corresâ€" Ray Noble, maestro of the Charâ€" Don Quinn, one man script team VOL. LVIIâ€"No. 41 each for H‘W‘dï¬pendent [ T saw more than two hundred boys marching down the avenue to the dining hall ‘They looked as spick and span as guards on parade. Mr, Bell explained their neat appearâ€" ance; every boy was wearing a suit the Canadian Red Cross had supplied. A little later 1 saw them at their duties. The colony has its own school houses of three classes â€"infants, intermediate boys up to 14) and for older boys there is technical tuition in either carpentry, agriculture on the school farm iW by the Canadian Red Io'v-. Such a continuous stream 'due-u-mnpumm 'ur.nunomu-myumr to these boys. | _ There were 11 cottages at first. ‘Three times the homes have been bombed; once nine of the houses were in flames, and on another ocâ€" casion two were completely deâ€" troyed. When an incendiary bomb set fire to the linen store an SOS to the London headquarters of the Canadian Red Cross brought an emergency lorry dashing through the leafy lanes with fresh supplies of sheets and pillow cases. With the assistance from the Red Cross it is persible for Mr. Bell to give these victims of Nazi warfare not only comfortable homes, good food and .excellent clothes but also ordinary education and technical training,. Nor is reâ€" ligious development ignored. ‘The first building I saw as I motored up the drive was a church big enough to accommodate the entire population of that selfâ€"contained colony where every Sunday mornâ€" ing services are held. given Red Cross lorries roar up that treeâ€" lined avenue. There are more than two hundred boys in the homes and every boy wears a suit and wmtmm:m!z ’Muumrm' "â€"Mâ€". ;; ithhlnnluhlom Yoummlluchh‘q. have been prematurely saddened by the devastation of borhbs that destroyed their homes, buried their parents in an unknown grave, are facing life and finding their feet in surroundings which bring to young mmbya-u.mwn‘ of forgetfulness. John Arthur Te Boys at Farningham and Swanley in County Kent," this acâ€" tivity makes up to these war orâ€" phans much of what they‘ve lost through enemy action This is possible only beceuse to that clusâ€" ter of redâ€"bricked cottages come huge cases and bales of clothing and foodstuffs sent by the Canaâ€" d‘an Red Cross every week. We just couldn‘t carry on this work if the Red Cross supnlies home, school and training college for boys orphaned by war, many of whom lost sailor fathers in ships sunk at sea by Nazi bombs or Uâ€" other, nine cottages which line an l'.udoudn.ulhupa. London â€" Disasters at sea durâ€" hcfllwuunmmu m-mammm es Canada at one side and, on the ORPHANED BY THE sEA, Two HUNDRED SMALL BOYS CARED FOR BY CANADIAN RED CROSS Has Own Schoolhouses By GARRY AlLLIGHAN Canadian Supplies every Oor for Grimsby, Ontario Thursday, Aprii 23rd 1942 creases the population of the cot ing the boys learn shoemaking is forth-hhl&:o-.u.‘uh“ required by the colony so that deâ€" mands on the Canadian Red Cross may be reduced. Visited By His Majes‘y Rluom-.noh-m visitor to the homes, described the tive little Britons." merely part. As a result they put Mumï¬â€™Mun. chinery v understand so thoroughily they can take it to mm-nhulmnhg reâ€" pairs. Mr. Be!i‘s objective in havâ€" Every morming the school susâ€" pends its lessons for five minutes while the boys drink half a pint of mmmmm mmmmm In technical training the boys are taught the whole of a trade, not 100 acres. k: APBRIL ?‘P \“'\ & Te _ rOl t __â€" . tw Perhaps one of the most potent causes of the present discontent is the tendency to lay stress on rights rather than duties. Yet the real progress of humanity probably deâ€" pends far more on the conception of duty than on the conception of rights.â€"Lord Hewart. squarely on his own two feet. No llwohoy'honl-lm.rhlm. de will leave Farningham until he can earn his own living and we nnfoundlhflmhbforhln. and started him on his career. We regard Sunny Jim as any thoughtâ€" ful father would treat his son. We shall make a man of him." Send your contributions to your local Red Cross branch, Provincial Division, or to the headquarters of The Canadian Red Cross Society, 95 Wellesley St., Toronto, Ont. 3 houses, Completely unconscious of l.hedhutuwuchmbhdh!nol his father and caused such a shock to his mother‘s nervous system that she is now undergoing special treatment, he spends his days playing with toys provided by the Junior Red Cross and energetically sucking straws inserted into botâ€" tles of Canadian Red Cross milk. Cross, he will not be handicapped for life by the loss of his father. w.mnhqmmw babyhood and educate him so he and introduced me to Sunny Jim, twoâ€"yearâ€"old toddler whose fatha~ Pot*+â€"â€" â€"~««uy Jim is the sunbeam of the ~"*tcer Jame« "~ .. went Iâ€"sued under authority Department of the Secretary of State, Ottaws 2 V > UOTE the kindergarten they must crop every possibe acre to keep Canada and Britain proâ€" vided with wholesome war foods. During the next few weeks farmâ€" ers will be working long hours at high pressure to get seed into the ground. Harvesting this crop is a national problem which it is probâ€" able can be met only by adequate help from cities and towns. Mr. Dewan pointed out that a number of urban centres had alâ€" ready formed organizations to aid l’lmmwlthunlrcmp.. He reâ€" quests that Boards of Trade, Serâ€" vice Clubs, town and city councils eundhko!holendmmmu to form similar organizations in all rush of hay, grain and corn harâ€" Kingdom, states Hon. P. M. Dewan, Ontario Minister of Agriâ€" culture, in voicing a plea to all urâ€" hlmlwncmdum. here is every indication that Oltu\onmvlllmuyn- quire organized help from cities, towns and villages at harvest time if wartime foods are to be kept colistantly moving to the United As>. _ity Workers Aid Farm Harvest Hon, P. M. Dewan, County farm surveys, said the teer Man Power, Polls open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m y # a 4 % } d $2.00 Per Year, $2.50 In U.S.A / DAYLIOAT SAVING 1; And City t eeepatcy .. a..ct . Aiaatoe Arouna! i l sn ww ONM down flat But to lie thereâ€"that‘s disgrace. The harder you‘re thrown ‘The higher you bounce. &Mdmrwm; It isn‘t the fact that you‘re licked that counts, It‘s how you fought and why. h «t You are beaten to earth ? Well, what‘s that ?â€" Come up with a smiling face. It‘s nothing against vou to The best form of efficiency, said Mr. Dewan, is the spontancous coâ€" operation of a free people. Mornlulv-.or'oougu. carioads of four or five to nearby farms, Local organizations already fm“wmum Agencies, Mr. Dewan declared. No one could predict harvest weather, Heavy rains would add much difficulty. Properly harvestâ€" ed crops mean just as much to urâ€" ban dwellers as to farmers; for unâ€" harvested crops would mean a centres. Volurtsers can then regisâ€" ter with their local organization for Optometrist and Optician _ 270 Ottawa St. North, Mamilten JOHNSON vice Force, Agricultural tatives and Employment â€"Edward Vance Cook. "T.lo Attention Your Deserve at m_‘g_\'o! Can ADVERTISED «», 5¢ Per Copy pa T Afford."