Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 6 Mar 1940, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

• *1 Anton Twin*Enguied Bombers Being AnemMeJ In Canada The first of a shipment of Avro Anson twin-engined bombers to be used to train R.C.A.F. pilots have arrived at the DeHavilland Aircraft plant in Toronto. A continuous stream of Ansons will arrive in Can- ada until there are more than 1,600 of thexe fast bombers for use in the commonwealth air training scheme. Nin« flat cars were required to bring the crated planes to siding for unloading in Toronto, where they will be assembled. LESSON X CETHSEMANEi TRIUMPH THROUGH SURRENDER Mat- thew 26: 30-56. PRINTED TEXT, Matt. Ut 36-46. GOLDEN TEXT.â€" Not •• I will but at thoa wilt. Matt. 26: 39. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. Time.â€" Thursduy, April 6, A.D. 80. Place. â€" On the way to Geth- semanc and in the garden of Geth- sctnane. Matt. 26: 36. Then cometh Jes- us with them unto a place called Gethsemanc. (This garden was lo- cated on the Mount of Olives, be- yond the river of the Kidron; the name itself means "oil-preas"). And saith unto his disciples. Sit ye here, while I go yonder and pray. 37. And he took with him Peter and the two sons of Zeb> edee. All the disdples, except Ju- das, went with the Lord as far as the outer part of the garden. Here Jesus requested eight of them to sit down and wait, but James, Pe- ter, and John, his three most in- timate disciples, the only ones who were with him on the mount of transfiguration, he took with him deep into the garden, that these three sympathetic souls might be with him during the time of ex- treme sorrow and agony that he knew he was at this time enter- iii( upon. And began to be sorrow- ful and sore troubled. TIm Agoar 88'. Then saitb he unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death. Christ here was experiencing the limits of human endurance. Abide ye here, and watch with me. 39. And he went forward a little, and fell on his face, and prayed, saying. My Fath- er, if it be possible, let this cup pass away from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as thou wilt. The Lord separated himself from his three close companions who had thus far accompanied him, and he goes deep into the garden to pour put his soul to the Father alone. The "cup" is not merely the phys- ical suffering Jesus has to endure; but the whole experience, the be- trayal, the trial, the motlcing, the scourging, the cross, the grave . . Jesus was not asking that the cup should pass from him regardless of consequences or God's own RADIO AND N NOTES E W S By MADGE ARCHER KNOW CANADA FIRST The Canadian Broadcasting Cor- poration during the past few months baa, through the facilities of its Features Dopartmcnt, devel- oped a form of broadcast that con- cerns Itself with tho life of the In- dividual Canadian and at the same time emphasizes the importance ot the life ot this individual In the lite of the whole Oonilnton. With this i!; mind CbC has planned and broadcast a num)>or of series ol programs which lulugs listeners from coast to coast word pictures ot national life In different parts of th» IX>mlnion. "Carry On" broad- cast on Sundays from 9:00 to 9:30 p.m. i!i the latest of tho aeries to Join such programs as "This Can- ada" a series of talks about the cuetuiii!* and ocunomic and social life ot various parts ol the country and heard on Monday evenings at 10:30 p.m., the Pavm Ilroadcasts heard In each Individual Province with uows and market troods per- taining to each, every day at 11:30 p.m., the presBiil Dominion Elec- tion Broadcasts, 'Canada's Merch- antmen" heard on Fridays at 8:00 p.m., and mo.st Interesting of them all to those whose sons and fathers and husbands havo Kone to Kng- laad with Canada's First Expedi- tionary Forco, a r^Rular series of broadcasts "WitU the Troops in England" which often brings to some lonely person the sound ot the voice of one of their loved ones. NOTES AND NEWS A moesaKe by I'lcsldent llooso velt to tho faim»(r3 of the II. S. will b» heard over all networks ou J'riday, .March 8th, from 10:00 to 10:30 p.in . . . The King's Men quartet •will l»« th» featured vocal- ists on the new Rudy Valle* pro- gram which will Se heard over the NBC network beginning March 7th, at 9:30 p.m. . . . H. V. Kaltenbom who brought such preetlge to CBS with his coTW«g<> of events abroad during the crisis r-eilods. Is leaving that chain to loin NBC ... TO BE HEARD March S, 8 pni, CBV, CBC, House of Variety . . CBL, Cities 8«rvlce concert . . 1m: 46 p.m., CBI, Doaiaion Pll«ctio3 Broadcast . . . •14. I:M 9.m., CBU Metro- politan Opera . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Chicago Blackhawks . . . 10:00 p.m., CBY, and 10:36 CBL, NBC Symphony Orchestra . . . March 10th, 2:00 p.m., CBL, Hart House String Quar- tet ... 3:00 p.m., CFRB. N. Y. Phil. Orch. . . 4:30 pm„ CFRB Pursuit of Happiness . . 6:00 p.m., CBL, Tho World Today Reviewed hy lOdgar Mclnuifi . . . 8:00 p.m., CBL, Cliase and Sun horn Hour . . . 9:30 p.m., CBL. Appointment With Agostlnl . . . March 11, 4:1C p.r^., IXimlnlon Election Cost . . . 8:30 p.m., CBIi, With the Troops in Eng- land .... 10:45 p.m., CBL, CBY, Oomialon Klectlon Cast , . . March 12, 8:00 p.m., CFRB, Tig Town . . . 8:30 p.m., CBL, Information Pleast- . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Top Flight Tunes . . . 10:00 p.m., Lea Concerts Symphoulques . . . 10:30 p.m., CBL, I)oin. miection Cast . . . March 13, 4:15 p.m., CBL, Dominion Klection Cast ... 8:30 p.m., CBL, Serenade for Strings . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Dom. Election Cast . . . 10:30 p.m., C!BL, "France Thin Spring" discus- sed by Professor Follx Walter . . . 10:45 p.m., CBL, Dominion Election Broadcast . . . March 14. 8:30 p.m., CBI.r, On Parade . . . »:00 p.m., CBL â-  The Shadow of the Swastika" (new series) . . . 10:00 p.m., CBL. ntng Crosby and Bob Burns. will; he was asking that God's will be absolutely carried out, and, if possible, in this carrying out of God's will that the cup should pass from him. Watch and Pray 40. And he cometh unto the dis- ciples, and findeth them sleeping and saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch with me one hour? There is a tone of sad disappoint- ment here. 41. Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak. "Watc4i" refers primarily to keeping awake, but also suggests mental alertness. The flesh here means not simply the body as opposed to the mind, but the body as representing our sinfulness, while the spirit repre- sents what is better in us. 42. 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. 43. And he came again and found them sleeping, for their eyes were heavy. 44. And he left them again, and went away, and pray- ed a third time, saying again the same words. Perhaps nowhere is the true humility of our Lord more manifest in the Gospel rec- ords than in his thricc-uttcred pe- ition made to his Father this night in the dark of Gethsemane. Betrayal and Arrest 45. Then cometh he to the dis- ciples 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. 46. Arise, let us be going: behold, he is at hand that betrayed me. Jesus' mood of pensive reflection gives place to rapid decision. These last words in Gethsemane throb with the willingness to yield himself up, and to empty to its dregs the cup which the Father had given him. In this lesson we realize that the only absolutely holy person that ever walked this earth, who never did anything wrong, was forsaken by friends, betrayed by one whom he had continually be- friended, alt without the slightest justification, and all of this was allowed by God to happen. Jiut why God allows sorrow, distress, tragedy, to come into our lives we do not always know; but if Jesus endured such experieni«s as these and never lost faith in God, we, who are sinners, can surely endure any experience he sends, and still trust him through them all. Live Static Screeches and howls in Andrew Ross' radio set at Rochester, N.Y., last week, sounded too realistic for sound effects, too piercnng for static. Ross investigated. A g^rey cat was sitting on the tubes. He tried to move her, but couldn't. Police were called and they put the rat oat. Canada's Sugar Output Speeded More Than Double What It Was In Early 19S» Judging from a report from the Dominion Bureau of Statistlc-i, Ca- nadian sugar refineries have been pouring out sugar this year at more than double tbe pace ot early 1939. Official report said Canada's ten su- gar refineries manufactured 60.728,- 000 pounds of sugar during the first tour weeks of 1940. Ot this, 4 /,790,- 000 pounds were granulate<l and 6,938,000 pounds were ye>llow and bi-own. Both grados have been prt,d.:ced at more than double the early 1939 pace. GruuulHted during the first four wooks of 1939 amountcHl to 15,432,000, and yellow and brown amounted to 3,142,000, or a total of 18,575,000 pounds. The fl I four weeks of 1940 tdrn- ed out more than tor the first 'rlghi- weeks ot 1939, as the second four- week period last year produc»d 23,- 004,000 pounds. FARM NOTES POP â€" Adjuntment Necessary periments greatly develop Ibe knowledge of theee processes. OSLIilR'S BOOK IMPORTANT Sir William Osier, the "baj Uy" ot the school, who at the age ot 21 came to McOiU to study mediciue, wrote ' The Practice of Medicine," whl£h becaaoe tbe bible ot tb& medi- cal profession throughout th3 en- BUY SEED NOW Tbe supply of registered seed in Canada Is rapidly growing less by feeding and by sale through the grain trade. This is particularly true of the rust rislstant varieties of wheat and oats, says the Agri- cultural Supplies Board and urjies that it Is Important that orders be placed without delay tor any regis- tered seed required for spring planting. CATTLE BREEDERS Tbe Ontario Cattle Breeders' As- sociation have r»«lected H. A. Dol- son, Bra.mpton, president; U. B. Warrnica, Barrie, vice-president; and L. E. O'Neill, Toronto, secre tary. FIQHT HOG PLAGUE Experimental areas with a view to obtaining a clearer conceptidb of tbe livestock disease probjem la this province was suggested In a report adopted by tbe agricultural committee ot the Ontario Legislat- ure. The report came from a special committee veisted with the respon- sibility ot studying recommenda- tions brought to Toronto by Many Wilson, Charing Cross farmer, on behalf ot the Southwestern Ontario Swine Brooders' Association. Serious aspects of spread of dis- ease among livestock were cited ny tho committee, particularly In view of the increased production ot ba- con utcessary to mfet the weekly .supply exported from Canada to Great Britain. Canada's Famed Scientific Men Dr. F. B. Gurd, of McGIII University Reviews Work of Eminent Medi- cos of Dominion â€" Osier, Bant- ing and Best, Colllp, Etc. "Mediclae has been an interna- tional subject, but the contribution of Canada to it has been such as we need uot be ashamed of," Dr. Fraser B. Gurd, associate orofeiisor of surgery at McQIll University, told a Montreal audience last week. The achievements ot Osier. Bant- ing and Best, Colllp, Archioaid, Sheppard, Henri Latleur and ottiers were detailed as outstanding among the contributions of Canada to the science. OUTSTANDlNti CON'l :IBUTION Dr. James B. Colllp. who oamo to McCilU in 1928, had been infer- red to by an eminent American sur- geon as tho man who had done more for humanity than any other man during the past 20 years, 'i bis collaboration with Dr. Banting and Dr. Best he had purified the pancreas extract so that it might be used with safely iu the treat- ment of diabetes. Dr. Gurd cited the famous case of the French-Canadian, A,lexi8 St. Martin, and Dr. William Beaumont, the young American doctor, and told how the gunshot wound lu tie stomach of St. Martin had enabliMl Beaumont to watch digestive pro- cesses and through a series ot ex- tlre world. Canada could also lak* some credit tor tbe founding cf u* Rockefeller Institute and th» Hack*- feller Fouadatloo, he sucgesti>d, *3r It was by th* reading ot Osier's book and bis remarks on the aeed for greater knowledge «f dibeise that Rockefeller vu* iiiapired to ••â-  tabllsh them. This Curious World "C^ OP- THE ENT/RE WEkSHT OP A TERMOE M/^y BE MADE-UP OF TINV PROTOZOA INSIDE THE SODV, WHICH BEMEFTT 7WE. HOST TERMITE BV DIGESTVilG THE WOOD rT-EATS/ Bs£l THE NEW 200-WCH TfL€5C0P|, NCW UNDER. CONSTRUCTIOlsI AT MT FykLOMAR.,CAUR, IS ^ EXPECTED TO HAVE A VISION RANOe OP ttZOC>,000»000 LIGHT-VEAOS. Mnt 1»)T sv NE« SEDvice. IW. THE new 200-inch telescope will. It is hoped, be able to pwie*: trate space for a 'distance ot 7,200,000,000,000,000,000,000 niiles. if will have a seeing range of nearly four times as far as the 100- inch telescope of the Mt. Wilson (M)5ervatory. - NEXT: What color Ss (he btnod of insects? PATRIOTIC SONG WRITER warn isBiiiJSf^ iiHQ u^ mm fflHH [ffl HORIZONTAt Answer to FrcTloiis Fuzde 1 Author ot "The Star- Spangled Banner." 13 Dyeing apparattis. 14 Humor. 15 Chamber. 16 To slash. 17 Soft food. 18 Raven's cry. 19 Bom. 20 Barking of dogs. 21 Gypsy. 22 Eye. 24 Paid publicity 25 Sable. 26 Pronoun. 27 To tolerate. 28 Twenty-fota' hoiirs. 29 Force. 30 Type standard 31 Portrait statue. 33 Chinese sedge. 34 Uncle. 35 Edible fungus. 36 Musical note. 37 Nay. 38 Cunning. 39 Upon. 40 Quicldy. 41 Blue. 44 No good. 45 Dangles. 47 Wiser. 48 Twice. 49 Garden tool. 50 Grudge. 51 Drunkard. 52 He was an patriot, 53 He was a â€" by profession. VERTICAL 2 Competed in a race. 3 Chill. 4 Fishing bag. 5 Credit. 6 To swing. 7 To drink slowly. SCouiit 9 Street car. 10 To pull. 11 Chinese measure. 12 To become manifest 17 Nominal â-  value. 18 Company. 19 His song Cs the IT. S. A, anthem, 20 To purchase. 21 Elastic 23 He wrote his song during the ol Fort McHeniy (Pt). 25 Ventilating machine. 26 Minute object. 28 Monastic title. 29 To diversify. 32 Dove's cry. 33 To shed feathers. 35 To fail to hit, 36 Blasting substance. 38 Cavalry horse, 40 Floating ice field. 41 Ache. 42 Roll of film. 43 Senior.. 46 Electrical unit 47 Health spring. 48 Youth. 50 South Carolina. 51 Southwest )\ By J. MILLAR WATT

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy