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Flesherton Advance, 2 Jun 1943, p. 2

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SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON UNDAY SCHOOL LESSON June 13 GOO'S EXCEEDING GREAT PROMISES 2 Peter 1 : 1-11 GOLDEN TEXT. He hath granted unto ut hit precious id xceeding great promises; that through these ya may become par- takers of the divine nature 2 1'eter 1 : 4. Memory Verse: Kur lliini. Je- fcovah, hast made me (l;ul. IVilm 8 : 4. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. The A|'.> t . r.-. \\rote fcls Second K| isile In A I). Cfi. Place. We do not know from *rtmt placn tlii" t;ii:.:le was writ- ten, and we |,Mih.iM\ nevtr will fee able to di-ti imiji.. 11 The Salutation "Simon 1'tter. a uri.iiit and s^iisllB of Ji ill ''lirlst. To Diem Ifcst ha\e- olitalneil a like prec- ious faith with ':s In -be :i:''!t).niiH- B-8 of our Hoi nnd Hie Saviour Jc-FUii Christ." T!ie:e i ill' be. no spowth at all in the p!i>~:i-al fuse, for -\;:in|ili-. . ' . . la physical life, ;i ; ,.f it. And so It is In ttie spiritual H-H--P. Thtri, caji be no : . . nwih Without ipiriiu. ! ) fi pnceitinR It. And there ca:i l-e ni. s] i .Mai llf icept through Ih) new bli h. And Mia rew blrlb ci,nif a we obtain ttlB 'prwiollH fHlth' Faithful Service "Grace to yo-j ai,-l iK.ne be mul- ib>l>e<i in the kr.unledve ,f God and ft Jesup our Ix>rd " This is an s\IK>Mlic alii( jtion ami !s Uie way In which nearly all the (iiipt- ) of the New Tegument begins. tile true kno^li-d);i of Oixl can Bly mmp of faithful *. Christian faith "8eelDK that (is divine power fc&Ui Kranli <l jni<i .is all that per- ten unto life ,IM! ;i>d!iiies<-.'' Tlie faith 1s one of absolute INVASION PORT? Salonika, (l.ii-i, |<i>i ' uhi-n' al- ' eH invadwl Hulkiuis '.u World 1, ba< been shell, d )>y llri- 4lsi M. n- :. .1 i| ailio may ttni k here tn current runt. in fullness of bli i sin nnd no ordin- ay teacjilng can ul<! an> thing to i< . Itfe which w. have In fhriHt "Tliruugh the i.. 1,1 > ,< nj.',- ut him ttjbi called IK*. }ty hiH own |-Ir.v od virtue." The attribute h of God ntntfentrd by II Uu are the nuaiiH fcy which He calls man to the k-i' IMIJ-I of the truth. Charter of Promise "Whereby be hath granted unto * hlH preCiollH Mil) IMC. eilil.K gt)t promise: The whole ntble n. li> call) (I fiiMl'H chart ir of prouiUen -- hixinniiiK with tlm promise uMeiid ;i-ii j^/nilise wan liint and ehili-.^ M:I|T the un- ulflllMl vIMim "f piirail'.o i-paln- d. "'fl.At throiiKh these >f ui..;- be- SXine parlakerx of llu- <iitin> i ..- tine llavinjr escaped the runup- Mon that Is In lh- world l'\ l.isi." If i Hniilil be i'i Hi 11! from ilj powerlu.' evil forces that are o fcvuristilv at wink tliioiiL'iiout Mi world, wi- must continually lujiltif< the .linn, -II'H e M tl.e l>i).iniseii )if God's \\'ii-d A Christian's Duty "Vea, HIM! for this vi-iy <aus* SVddliiK on your |.,iit all illli>.'ei,' i " I>il ; >'eme In that f'll of ii.ili'.iMir winch Rprinyfi fvoin a sense of duly. "In your faith sujiply vir- tu ic " Viilui means the best de- velopment of Mich power v a man pOHfiesseF. "Ai.d In jour \liliie knowlnlge." Knowlwlce here prob- stlily mcai.o sf;iinial disrei ninent n to what IK riyht and what IB wronK in all ti. m "And In your tnowledKe. sellcontro!." Self con- trol In ..air temperance In all tfilngH. "And In jour celf eontrol pull) III " I'a'iehie grow* out of wit control. "And In your patience iix." Thin lant word Htrictly true nn. it-iii e for God. "Anil in j-oin ffoilliiiem hroilierly k Hii)l 111 jour hrol.heilv (mine** love." The lust named I. In lliHt Inchest love, ilie love of <iil to men. which IK net up the Ideal toward which His xer- ir,ls are lo constantly pievH for- wjuil. Our love for our fellow K In i" lie UK -.is luxe for UK, not dependent on Ihelr woriliinesc of It, and not i|eiei:-<l by their <lln- rKHP(l ni It. Knowledge From Growth "Km if IhefH tilings are \OUIB ai.il iV 01 nil. "n v iniij make vou In be not Idle nor unfruitful unto the know Ii dvc of our l/ord Jemm Cliil-t." Tills knowledfre. wlueJl Hi. iv ) wltii our growth, might b na.d lo be the issue o| nil our RADIO REPORTER ,<":x ,,, While ii. u MJ ID in r time radio casualty lUtfl of |i.|riiliir proKi-am- in r< ! not likely to be a heavy Hi'- year aa usual, June ami July will nevertli*lesR flntl many fav- ourite allows leaving the air. Jiu-k Benny wild "au revolr" to hist radio fn-in<!- for the glimmer last Sunday, ami from all rei>orts may be going ovcrspaB to enter- tain I'm troops. Kilpar Burden mi'l the Inlniiuililr Charlie Mc- Carthy will b* waving a HiniliiiK fair-well to the networks nrxt Sun- <1ay, June 6th. Fanny Hrlcn and Fr.nik Morgan pay th<Mr last re- sirts of the M.I'. on June 17tb. "Truth or Consri|ucn<-ei" will Ic.'ive the N. H. ('. network short of numerous quiz questions after June 2Gth. And as the closing ilayw of June fiml Old Man Sol pushing uji the thcrinoini u-r . . \VK m >!'W . . . It will push Huh llojiu and his josh and jorua'rily Into ui i at ion-time fierlusion on June 29th. On July Stli Mob Burns will leav friends with a friendly finile of recolli ci. i<n. A few (lays laii r "Information I'lcasc" will hiiim out a Momltiy pvcnlnx sliinxle "No in format inn. Iliank you." Oh yes, and lit-t we foij,-et, KJ-.I .iking of .lin.e (iisualtli-s, your nnl'o reporter am) rontpnipor.iry of the Ontario n : waves will Irave tin 1 OK'TIB mlrroi'hone behind on Juno 20th . . . and for two weeks will exchange lt;<- four-walled ex- cliiMVenega of the Hloor Street studios for thp broiul expands vi- ness of the wide siiat'o of ramp Pelawawa. For H days It will be his privilege to eM-hange city col- lar and tie for hatl.le drpss of khaki and the line of the 25 pouml- erp and howitzi-rs nf the 20Sth Hat- tery, Koyal ('Aiimliiin Artillery, of the Kp,serr Army. In his absence, Lloyd Moore will preside at the f'KHB noon hour farm hroad<ast in MI op hone. As for "foimtry News" 2 o'clock Sunday Hftf-r- noon, and Uio 10.30 Sunduy even- Ing "Armchair flub" we're telling no sn-reta. Heller t.ine In ami n > what happens! Kor many ye;i,s tho N'w York Philharmonic On lit slra lias pro- vidrd a musical radio liiglil:;-!' 1 on Sunday afternoor. X lo 4 ."". !(< Cenlly this fine t i,] miliia li-alii.c went rommereial over the Am. i ! can network ami (here was some question a* to whetiu-r llsleneis in 1 i Dominion v,. .,! be IT vilii..! to hear It Hi : '.ii,i' ii the facil tirs of a Canadian <milH. MHK. ,,i n. . .iM'.eiiipnts liavi. now bren inaile wlu-i-fby CKHK Toronto, will con- i n i>- to brliiR the New Yoi k I'hil- I. a 'inonic Society niMaUal .1:1,. rat inn to Ontario llstonern as a noncommercial broadcast. This is the first time In radio history that this well known oiKiuiUatltm has "<-<n engaged on n year round basis. Present arrangements pro- vide for a HC.rlcH of 52 progi aniiniH which will lie 1,1 ani t the usual tin.. Sunday afternoon. Never before In history has tJm demand for Canadian grown food- mi-it ings. "For hr Uiat lackelh TI . . thing! In Mind, seeing only \vl a' in near." Tint word blind la hpr aippllcd Menial ively to the mind. "Having forgotten the cleansing from his old ilns." The man who forgets thle clewiiMiiK of Ins soul and mi;. n If he were In his natural Mate with no power to resist temptation dnfH in fart H-niim what Cod has done for him and trnata the sins of long HRD HH though they wen. silil prf-i m. A True Christian "Wherefore, In el hi en. give tho mure diligence to make >oiir lull- ing an<l election mire: for If yo do tin-so thlngK, ye Khali never Btiimblp. For thus shall bp richly mipplied unto you thp. unlvaiirn Into I ho eternal kingdom of our Jjnnl and Saviou, .lesus Christ." As we close this IPHSOII, we ouxlit to remember one thing. Thin passage la revelation of the will of God for us. ThiH is not what tome philosopher has pU'tured, an Impossible Uleallmic life. This la a portrait of H due Christian, drawn b^y the Aposllp I'eter, under the inspiration i*J Hip Holy Bpiril. If Peter could live this kind of IHe. so can the rest of IIB; If thin Is the life (!od would have us live, He will enable UK lo live It, if we 10 ehooae. stuffs threatened to outstrip pro- duction. Manpower shortages, In- Creased domestic consumption of many fooxlv, net backs due to en- forced late ii i (Hi, k. and the needs of the export market . . . thpse are just M few of the factors caus- ing con. 1 Uleraihlp- concern through- out the agricultural Industry. In order that the Canadian public shall learn the facts of food pro- duetioi.. the CHO farm broadcast department haK just commenced a series of special programmes where!. y (.he difficult task faced by iigrir.ulture will be fully ex- plaiixd. The new aeries heard over CUC outlets every Monday evening at R 30 and titled "1943 Food Prospects" will Inform Can- adian fanners on agriculture's achievements to date and give them an Idea of what IH expected In the future. Tho series should prove equally of interest to the urban hoiiM wife. Eveiy radio announcer at some time or other gels Into trouble with his listeners over pronuncia- tion, lij \Vali s there Is a delight- ful little village bearing the name Ijla nfairphllgywnll '.oKertyllanilr- n-bwlliintisiliogogoch. Recently Da- vid Ci-enfi 11. the chairman of the Welsh Committee In the Hritisli HOUFI- <.f Cotiimons remarked that he didn't, like the way BRC an- noini'irv pronounced the name of this dalr.fy morsel of Welsh coun- tryside. Hi- wen: on to explain that while many annoiincei-H pronounc- ed fancy French. German, Spanish and liii^sian and other continental najnis reasonably wtll. few of them could pronounce Welsh woriN ).. vii.ning with "LI" with any dip of fidelity. Here's how you do tt according to Mr. Gren- fell. Just ^lick the tip of your tongue on the roof of tho mouth and blow out Wli cheeks like a goose. Us easier to do it light, he says. If you've got loose lower teeth! No Tourist Traffic On Alcan Highway Only Civilian Motorists Are Those On War Duty Tin- A'.i.ii; IliiMiwa.v across Can- ada to Alaska traverses some of the mn^t l.iauiiful country on this contiiHi'. >it It cannot be con- nidcru! nf this time as a vacation- Islss' paradise, observes The New- York Sun. Authorities -In hotb the United States and Canada have b n red '.viiig requests for per- mission to nioior over the Alcan, and II.T. i. of coni^e. refused nearly all of them. Tin jiM-af ttildtrm -!< highway Is an Briery of war. lull a sifnio route tu tl.e Yukon country. Its preset,! cotjisc is thiough cxtiiiiic- ly dangi DIUS teirain. Its route f- fords to travellers ueilher tourist cabin* nor summer -resort lodges and hotelF. The route Itsolf la ne>t yet completed, many of the bridg- a along the way are flimsy tem- porary Miuciuns which will KO out i" the MM i i ! of mountain rivers, nnd the inoir precipitous ectlotiK of the road are difficult of access even to the military ve- hicles that use thp Alcan. The only civilian motor traffic allowed over the highway, there- fore, Is that made up of persons who have specific war duties which take them to that part of Canada. The present public In- terest. ne erlhi lets, may he taken as Indii -iiilng thiit after th war the Alcan may go Into the auto- mobile g liili Kniins as one of the \i'ii<lir* i>t tin \Ves(crii ) -r. Peek At Radar liiiilar. <>!>' of the most heavily curtained *'f war secrets, was bared for a i|iiick peek by the winy Mini navy, reports Time MaKii/iiu . Tlie word stands for "radio (li'tcctinjr nnd rniiKiiiK." Itasis of operation, a hi^h-fre- quency radio ray, wanniiiK air or se, bounCM back from objects it strikes: e.g., ships or plane.". Radar measures the infinitesimal fraction of a second this takes (at IKti.OOO niilen an hour), thus valculateti dhstinncie an we.ll aa dii'ecl inn. Hot.li Hritfiin nnd Ger- many hate similar devices. Fly Pe*ts Menace Health Of Family Early Action Urged to Ensure Effective Control The season for flies the com- mon pertifcrou.fi, disea.He,'-carryinj< house fly is upon us. Now at the very beg-inning of summei is the bet time to destroy flies. Every fly killed now ie a good as a million or more killed later on in the season. Calculators figure that the progeny of one pair of flies might equal five and a half billion by September if not interfered with in any way, and if breeding- places were favorable. A Univeri*! Pet All over the world wherever man hat- gone the common house fly has pone, too. Musca domes- tica, which Ls the scientific name for this universal- pest, occurs arways in association with the human family. There are other flie*, notably the stable fly, and th bluebottle. 'hey are rela- tives, but not the close associates of mankind that the common house fly is. Fly Tracks Dirt and Disease If every housewife in the land could see a common house fly magnified to one hundred times its natural size, she would feel such horror and disgust she would never rest while there was one of them around the place. For the fine invisible hairs revealed by the microscope, hairs that clothe it* feet, legs and umler- purtit, are found to be alive with K*rms and contaminated with un- speakable impurities. Their feet are eejuipped with sticky pads to enable them to cling to such placeo as walls and ceilings. Imagine the trail of dirt and dis- ease a Hufficiently powerful microscope would show! Crave Danger to Babies "There is probably no greater source of danger to a baby than the disease germs collected by the wanderings of the house fly and transported to the foods andi persons of iU innocent victims," fcay* a well-known medical offi- cer of health. "Flies will carry on their feet, legs and body, and in the alimentary canal, the spe- crfic germs causing typhoie, fever, cholera, infantile diarrhoea, tuber- culo.iLs and other diseases. The houce fly ie also .sjspected of transmitting infantile paralysis (poliomyelitis). These org-arisms may be deposited in the food, because flies are fond of all hu- man fooiis, both liquid and solid, and because they arc active in- sects, travelling- extensively and flitting about from place to place with rapidity. They wipe their feet, perhaps bearing myriads of disease uerms, on everything- they touch. When we ponder over tho ource from which flie.s come and their filthy habits, we should not allow them to live in a kitchen or a dining room any longer than it is absolutely necessary to kill thejn." Methods of Fly Control Do not throw dkh water or MTub water near the hou.se, or In the bnck yard. Nothing; atuacta fliea more quickly. Sink n box with a hinged cover but no bot- tom in the ground, and pom waste wate-r into this box to soak away. Kc<-p the lid down nnd the flies out. Screen the doors and windows of your house with mosquito net- ting. In the army u-fuse is burned or burled, anil the >ami> practice should be followed in civilian life, except of course wlwre garbage i. collected b\ the municipality. Food, water and milk supplies dhould be cii-cfully protected from flies. Wilson's Fly I'iid.s properly distributed about the house in plates of water, will attract and kill any flies that manage to KC-t into the bouse despite the screens. Tables. sink-boards, pantry shelves or any place whore fooil is set - nnd v.-hcre flie.i have crawled-- should he cleaned with a scrubbing hiusli and .onp or disinfectant?-. Adherence to t hrs ( % simple rules of hygiene will more than repay the thought and effort by afepu:inling- the nation'.' most precious nssct, the health of our people. The latest development in ,it"-p "accessories" is uu :uit|.>hih ; Hn trailer designed to cany a i|uar- trr-ton load. By William Ferguson THIS CURIOUS WORLD K6JWAN, ALASKA, NOW MAS AN ASSESSED \/AJ_UE OP SEVEN MILLION DOLLARS.. THE AAAOUNT PXMD THE U. , AN >CXJ NAME THESE <o} LEAGUE OUTFIELDERS COfll. 1M1 BV HEX SE .(C! <HC. T. u uc. u. I. r. on. ANSWER: 1. Julius Sellers; 2, George Stainback; 3, George 4, Ival Goodman. NEXT: Do yon sleejp like a lot? 175 Tons Of Meat Saved Each Week A Price* Board spokesman aid that Canada's fit "meatless Tuesday" conserved sufficient meat to stock a large British battle&hip for fiv months at eea. He es-tu. *fi i. that regular diners in public eating placee ordinarily accounted for about tight pr cent, of the meat consume.l in Canada. The spokesman estimated iha* on one "meatless day" they con- tributed more than 30,000 po.:nd of meat to vital purpose*. ">laat- lee Tuesdays" throughout * year, he said, will tave approxU mutely 20,000,000 pound* of meat. EIGHTH U.S. PRESIDENT HORIZONTAL 1,6 Pictured eighth presi- dent of the U. S. A. Answer to Previous Puzzlr 15 Occurrence. 14 Male parent. 16 A tissue (anat). 16 Assayer. 18 It is (poet.). 19 Eject 20 Entomology (abbr.). 21 Feasts 24 Girl's name. 25 Regret. 26 A pile 27 Arabian gazelle. 39 Withered. 31 Halt an em. 32 Nova Scotia (abbr.) 34 Completes. 35 Possess. 3G Newt. 37 He was first president to be an (BX-MI& OF U1AXMY SIGNAL CORPS American citizen. S8 Chinese measure. 40 South latitude (abbr.). 41 Any. 46 Footstep. 49 Narrow inlet. 50 Resinlike, astringent substance. 52 Em met. 53 Meadow. 54 Posture. 56 Span. 57 One who puts animals in cages. 58 Formerly 69 Tears into long pieces. VERTICAL 1 Measure of length (pi.). 2 Thoi oughlare 3 Sleeper. 4 Powerful explosive (abbr). 5 Roman rpcd3 6 Necessary to life. 7 Risen. 8 Bird's home, 9 Indian. 10 Stay. 11 Omitted. 12 Native (pi.). 17 Feel pemtenc* 22 Metal faslenw 23 Samarium (abbr.). 28 Rots by exposure. 30 Age. 33 Biblical word (pi.). 39 Speaks. 40 Dry. 42 Fruit. 43 Hashed. 44 Diners. 45 Before Christ (abbr.). 47 Respond to a stimulus 46 Me was of descent. 51 \Vmgcd. 55 Swiss river. POP- With a Monocle By J. MILLAR WATT HE-S A DETECTIVE : LOOKING FOR A CHAP WITH A MONOCLE I

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