NERC 0%, iF ERE Fay Te IR Cfr.a Y ha ha of bd. . - A . y PL AR i 1s 4 £9 A ARETN IAI Rh Mos MSE VARY RLM Suatet Lw - SF gaan TRANS Res EN LI ET] he, MELA 8 ', sv SVs Fran OS £ a A) £2 acu RENE 4% a ' +' LE . w LISS aE UT $501 3 AE A fl : : rE \ * Le : / , / p= -- - They had to concoct a story to Labrador Seen As Great Air Outpost Important Complications Centre In Peace and War Canada's northern outposts, formerly comcigned to Eskimos and polar bears, are now bastions of 'planes and fighting men, writes B. J. McQuaid in Coronet, Chief among these is Labrador, soon to take.its place as one of the great air junctions of the world, : _ As a communications . centre, . both in peace and war, Labrador cannot be overestimated. A slight experiment with any globe atlas drives home the reason, Press one end of a piece of string against the spot on your globe marked "Chicago," Next extend the other toward. Paris, London, or Berlin (this is a great circle route between central Europe and the heart of America's agriculture and industry). You'll find that string passes directly through Labrador. Now try it between Washington and Moscow. Same is true. And for the final carto- graphic shock, measure a circle route between Galveston and Bombay--yes, it goes via Labra- | dor. System Closely Guarded Warmindedly Labrador is the intercontinental air invasion line, fs the shortest direct over-water route between North America and Hitlerized Europe, and possesses the inestimable advantage of the Faeroes-Iceland-Greenland ~~ step- ping stones. If round trip bomb- ing ever becomes feasible, Cor- onct believes that our Labrador- Newfoundland bases may ultim- ately decide the issue, - They are but 2,000 miles from Hitler- oe- cupied Norway ad France, but 500 * additional miles from the centre of industrial Germany. And this Is no two-way proposition, Hit- ler's nearest coastal bases are 1,600 to 1,800 miles farther from the roots of our war industries. Soldiers -who--man - these out- posts are among the unsung heroes of the war; for until re- cently the system has been one of our most zealously guarded se- crets. Among their ranks are men from the U.S. Army and Navy forces as well as the R.C.A.- F. Mostly they complain about the weather than the lack of streetlights and gals. In Labra- dor, however, the weather is much less trying for troops than in ~ Newfoundland; sections of it of- fer year-round flyability. So the boys can fish for enemy subs almost any moonlit night and ~ rumor is the catches have been good this year, 5 . : Pilots Must Be Tough But manning these sub-arctic outposts is no job for softies, Tremendous distances are covered daily over some of the world's most forbidding terrain. This flying is done without intermedi- ate fields, often without radio communications, and for: much of the area trustworthy flight maps do not exist. Often pilots have ex- perienced 5,000 foot peaks loom | ing suddenly out of cloudbanks where old maps marked nothing over 1,000 feet. But they are tough and along with the ferry pilots and groundsmen will keep the sky clear between the old and the new world, the past and. ~----the- future; ~~ Ganada-isprotected_ against the thfeat of air-invasion! Air Cadet Camps Are Great Success Boys Work and Study At R.C.A.F. _Alr Stations "More than 8,000 Air Cadets from 15 to 18 years of age now are returning home from one-week ---=--gummer camps at Royal Canadian- Air Force air stations, Group Capt. 0. C. M. Hume, national director ~ 7 of the Air Cadet League, sald re- cently; . ~The -boys-lived "at the very core of the joint air training plan and all of them are inspire. by their association with tho service for which they are forming a_support line," Group Capt. Hume said. "Air Cadets did not loaf at their summer camps," Group Capt. Hume reported. "It was not any holiday for them, They were up with the bugle at 6.30 and put.in Jong hours of real work and avl- atlon study before the 'light's out' hugls at 10.30 pm, "The boys helped to move alr- craft eocut tne airport, stood guard. duty and took part in parades, learned about control tower oper- 'ation, parachute packing, and made careful inspections of train- ing plane cockpits, At most camps they wero able to see the practical side of their basic train. ing course which includes such subjects as administration, afr. craft recognition, alrmanship, anti gas training, armament, drill, phy- sical "training, first ald, hyglene, knots and splices, mathematics, ,meteorolgy, alr navigation and signals, i ) "From both air cadet équadrons' and alr stations comes the opinion that these summer camps were. a tremendous success." they saw a band of Tshmaolites-- have a mascot of some kind. long been forgotten like the pooch above, kindhearted rough and tumble treatment from the crew, they very often will never leave the ship when in port. SHIP'S MASCOT Every fighting ship of Canada's ever-expanding Navy, seems to Many have dogs whose pedigree has Subjected to all sorts of ; account. for human lips, Joseph Sold Into Egypt him into Egypt unto Potiphar, of tle guard." Potiphar was that is, 'the chief officer of executioners." "The migration Israel necessary for three reasons: That they might not excite they were strong enough to sist it. (2) That they might riage with the Canaanites. an education in arts and a of their receiving In Canaan, The Lord With Joseph Joseph was the unconse ploncer of this great movem tion to the very utmost of powers and abilities and we not surprised to learn that _ Lord was with Joscph,-and he a prosperous man.' How coulc be prosperous as a slave? The planation is that prosperity is acter, and character in turn pends SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON LESSON 37 Joseph Sold Into Slavery Genesis 37, 39-41 Printed Text, Genesis 37: 23-36 GOLDEN TEXT.--Love envi eth not. 1 Corinthians 13:4. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.--According to the com-' "monly received chronology, Joseph became a slave in Potiphar's house in 1735 B.C, and suffered im- prisonment 1726 B.C. Place.--Joseph's home was: in Hebron, in southern Palestine. He was sold into slavery at Dothan, thirteen miles north of Shechem, which itself was sixty miles from Hebron. The capital of Egypt at this time, where most' of Jos- eph's years were spent, was Zoan, in the eastern part of the Nile delta. = Joseph Cast Into The Pit 23, "And it came to pass, when Joseph was come unto his breth- ren, that they stripped Joseph of his coat, the coat of many colors 'that was on him; 24. and they took him, and cast him into the pit: and the pit was empty, there was no water in it." The tank into which Joseph's brethren cast him was apparently one of those hpge reservoirs excavated by shepherds in the East, that they may have a supply of water for their flocks in the end of the dry season, when the running waters fail them. Being so narrow at the mouth that they can be cov- ered by a single stone, they gra- dually widen and form a large subterranean room; and the facil- ity they thus afford for the con- finement of prisoners was from the first too obvious net to be | _commanly_taken_ advantage of. In such a place was Josep dle. left to The Plot Against Joseph 26. "And they sat down to eat bread: and they lifted up their eyes and. looked, and, behold, a caravan of Ishmaelites was com- ing from .Gilead, with their camels bearing spicery and balm and __myrrh, going to carry it down-to Egypt. 26. And Judah said unto ~ his brethren, What profit is it if we slay our brother and conceal ~~his-blood 7-27. Conie, and let us sell him to the Ishmaclites, and let not our hand be upon him; for he is our brother, our flesh, And his brethren hearkened unto him." As these calloused, heart- less men were sitting not far away from the pit, devouring the food brought by the faithful hands of Joseph from the father's home, mourning, for him." . Before these brethren left for home, they dipped Joseph's coat, which they took from him, Into the blood of a newly slain kid, and in showing it to the father told him that this was what they had found, with the hope that the father would be persuaded, as he was, that Joseph had been slain 'by a wild 'beast, find unkindness we are almost certain to find untruth. 'Kindness and truth' are wedded in Genesis (24:49; 47:29); they naturally draw to each other everywhere; . there is a pre-established harmony between them. The same is true of their opposites, having sold their young brother, made it next to impossible for themselves to speak the truth. is without doubt torn in pieces. 84, And Jacob rent his garments, and put sackcloth upon his loins, and mourned for his son many days. 35. And all his sons and all his daughters rose up to comfort him; but he refused to be com- forted; and he said, For I will go down to Sheol to my son 1 And his father wept Wherever wo Jacob's sons, His for in thinking, are enabled to sec work and conduct. U. S. To Call Men the United--States army said cently that draft boards would before Christmas. be called. pled relatives, would first, he said. with wives and children. his disappearance, and it was as audacious and cruel a falsehood as was ever uttered by 86. "And the Midianites sold an officer of Pharaoh's, the captain lit- erally 'captain of the slaughterers' the of into Egypt had become (1) the hostility of the Canaanites before re- not' adulterate their race and lose their distinctiveness by intermar- (3) That they mitht by contact with a highly civilized people receive dis cipline by law and government such as there was little prospect ious ent. The young slave filled his posl. his are 'the was 1 he ex- not due to circumstances but to char- de- upon faithfulness to God. - life soon became evident, some way or other his mas- ter observed that Joseph's powers . must come from a Divine source. It is one of the finest results of true: piety when those around us who may not be of our way of the . reality of our life in our daily With Dependents "Brig.-Gen. Lewis B. Hershey of re- be- gin calling men with dependents The National Selective Service Director reiterated the order in which men with dependents would Single men with "secondary" dependents, such as aged or erip- be called © Next would come married men whose wives work, then men with dependent wives, and finally men "THIS CURIOUS WORLD By Wiiliam Ferguson ET 3 IE CUAL A 722. MALLARD 1S TH IMPORTANT OF All. DUCKS, sO FAR AS HUMAN BEINGS AS A WHOLE ARE CON ER] OST 58 CLAIRE WALLACE It you hear a radlo commentator telling all Canada why your next- door neighbor hasn't beén home on wash days recent, Jor equally iIntlmate and local news behind the news, you'll be listen- ing to "They Tell Me", with Can- ada's famous Claire Wallace. And it she does 'tell you about some- one in your town, (maybe your- self) you can be sure that it is because there 18 a twist to the story that will Interest every wo- man in Canada. Claire Wallace has risen to top rank In Canadian radio through more than seven years of continnous broadcasting. in Canada for. the first time, You ean hear her on the CBC (CBL CKOC-CBO) dally at 145 pm, Monday through Friday, right aft- er the Happy Gang. Assisting is her {indispensable announcer, tho Jovial Todd Russell, sometimes with news, sometimes with fun. . . . " Thoze within range of the voice of CKOC In Hamilton, have been hearing a great deal about Sep- tember on CKOC, and as the month progresses, the programs continue to appear. Already, the Happy Gang, Penny's Diary, Share the Wealth, Charlie. McCarthy, Claire Wallace, and many others have joined the parade, Fred Allen Is on his way, first Sunday in October Blended Rhythm Memoirs of Dr. Lambert are soon . to appear. CKOC is particularly proud of a couple of {t's daily broadcast periods -- the first one 13 from 11.39 am, to 12.00 noon: at 11.30, -the- Wartime Prices und Trade Board's "Soldier's | Wife" show Is broadcast, and is followed at 11.45 by "Teleguiz", the phen- omenal phone and letter locally produced quiz show that's the talk of tho town, From one to two, the station offers.a truly great hour, every Monday through Friday, featuring at one o'clock radio's _ greatest serial, NBC'S "Betty and Bob"; at 1.16 the "Happy Gang', and at 1.45 Claire Wallace in "They Tell Me!" * * * Prior to his flrst broadcast of the new season last Sunday night at 8.00 o'clock, Edgar Ber- gen with his diamond studded dummies Charlie and Mortimer, took a flying trip to Alaska and entertained the boys. of- Canada ---and--t:S---Originatly - scheduied- for OMe -- Now she broadcasts coast to coast IALING WITH DAVE: RADIO REPORTER Balwon, whose widely listened to analyses on the world at war have become almost a 7.15 pm. insti tution from CKOC, is now being heard at 7.00 p.m. a quarter hour earliér. The schedule la the same -- Monday through Friday. Ps . vo. The Lone Rangor, _ ploits of bravery -- whose action- "packed episodes have been 5.30 p.m, radio. fare from CKOC gothg' time, take the evening 7.30 timé, 'Monday through Friday., Hit. Parade favorites continue to parade over the airlanes Sunday at' 1.30 from. CKOC. New favor- {tes include two Irving Berlin hits ~--Left My Heart at the, Stage Door Canteen, and He Careful My Heart! . . . Flash Bulletin! Just got the news! Columbia's great West Coast network feature, "Calling all Cars" one of the most dynamic 'Crime does not pay' dramas to come to radio, comes to CKOC this Sunday at 6.15 pa. Make a point to be listening -- it's thirty minutes packed everything to keep you on edge of your seats! the More than 70,000 men are en- rolled in Searchlight Defence Un- its in Britain, whose ex- for . with Ramin . . . Riding A Bicycle . N Fifty Years Ago | A reader of this newspaper sug gests that instructions on How to Ride a Bleycle would be useful to many persons at this time. Well, here 18 a bit of advice unearthed from a wheelman's magazine of 1891: "ihe pedal should be pressed downward not with the heel or the instep, but with the toes and the ball of the foot, thus giving the ankle free play and producing thg, full development of the calf muscles of which the 'good rider fe justly proud. In mounting the bicycle the gentleman has the left pedal up and slightly in' advance of centre. Plaeing the left foot upon It, and clasping the handle bave; he throws his weight upon the left foot, swings tho right leg easily over the rear wheel and settles into the saddle, ' "In dismounting he checks the motion by letting the pedal on the upstroke lift his weight; at the same time his right leg describes a graceful are above the rear wheel and comes to rest on the ground at the left." "A lady must, of course, mount in different fashion, Stepping -- through the drop franie and mak- ing sure that her skirts are nicely draped about her ankles on either slde, she lifts herself Into the sade dle by pushing -down on the left pedal, in the samo effort starting the bicycle in motion." Says Mrs. William Brady, Pardee, Ontario: "We havé no more use for harsh cathartics! When we found out about ALL-BRAN we knew we'd never go back to pills or pow- ders any more. KELLOGG'S ALL- BRAN is certainly the 'Better Way'l"" 'Better Way" NO MORE PILLS AND POWDERS FOR US..WE'VE DISCOVERED ALL-BRAR! to correct the cause of constipation due to lack of the right kind of "bulk" in your dict. But remember, ALL-BRAN doesn't work like cathartics. It takes time. Get ALL-BRAN at your grocers, in two convenient size packages, or ask for the individual serving pack- Why don't you buy KELLOGG'S = age at restaurants. Made by» ALL-BRAN? Try ALL-BRAN'S Kellogg's in London, Canada.' HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle statesman of 1 Prime minis- =n ter of Canada. RIA I¥ 12 Every. : -13 Deporiments, 14 Long grass, .16 Genus of plants. 18 Right of precedence, 19 Vagrant. 20 Newspaper paragraphs. 21 Silly. 23 Finale." 25 Private. 27 Sun god. 28 Young ox. 29 To accomplish 46 Before, 48 Wealthy, 51 Evening wide 19 Badgerlike beast, . =] 22°Christimas carols. 24 Title. 25 He is highly by his countrymen, 31 To handle. 33 Female cattle, 36 Taxi. VERTICAL 1 Fifth month 38 Mire, 2 Sour, 40 Three 30 Little devil. 3 Forward girl. collectively, 32 To relate. un 4 Type measure, 42 Form of 33 To peruse. 52 Fro; tor, Forceps. "be 34 Wriggling varrozen Waler. g Genus of 43 Spore fish. 54 Driver. grasses. clusters. . 35 Being. 55100 square 7 Persevering. 44 Slave. 36 Young horse. meters. 8 Electric unit, , 45 Above. 37 And. 56 He is also 9 Pressing 47 Small _<hicld, __38S5temach.. president. of... machine, ------ 49 Nothing -- «xx caeceetimon coming down upon them, and im- mediately they agreed to profit by their treatment of Joseph, and sell him as a slave to these Egypt- bound men. Jacob Mourns For Joseph ~-+ 28, "And there passed by Midi- anites, merchantmen; and they drew and lifted up Joseph out of the pit, and sold Joseph: to the 'Ishmaelites for twenty pieces of silver, And they brought Joseph. into Egypt. 29. And Reuben re- turned unto the pit; and, behold, Joseph was not in the pit; and he rent his elothes, 30. And he re- turned unto his -brethren, and sald, The child is not; and I, whither shall T go? 81. And they took Joseph's coat, and killed a he-goat, and dipped the coat in the blood; 32, and they sent the coat of many colors, and they brought it to their father, and sald, This have we found: know now whether it is thy son's coat or not, 88, And he knew it, and sald, It is my son's coat; an evil ar YR © A Nd * beast hath devoured him; Joseph a \ a me a Pe L) i £, 5 -- i) ; ) 39 Court (abbr.). the Privy ----. 10 At no time. 50 Yes. just a nye of Shove the os 41 Fuel. 57 He is secretary 11 Driving 51 Silleworm, had to hold. over their dates for a 44 Substitute, of external command. 53 Half an em, much longer run, Beygen's ward- 45 Onward. . 12 He is a 55 Lava robo 'wasn't equal to the occasion, er especially on one particularly cold' z_|3 4 15 16 {7 |B 7 fo |i night. A friendly Eskimo gave Edgar a emart 'parka' and all the - |' Is 4 5 trimmings. Publicity reports state ; - "It saved Bergen's night!" 16 7 18 19 T LJ . EL] E-- 22 A few news notes of Interest £0 # to Peningnla listenera: Dr. EK. T. ----1 TTT WAGGING 7 : 79 Bonds " KITE rerio 33 IS WHICH OF To thé bond of liberty that THE FOLLOWING o __ unites them, the fighting forces 36 BIRO which attacked Dicppe have add-' : FLYING CONTRNANMEE ed the bond of danger shared, 38 7 ghia the bond of courage equally ex- INET OIA WHEEL. pressed, the bond_of helpfulness 44. FT: p-- PR EN " Af mutually displayed, the bond of . : } 'R: ¢ may be any of the first three definitions. partnership in an historic oc- 46 49 50 | Wosir MALLARDS fim Drehisiorie times, have furnished meat ""easion, the -bond of great service i be -man. In domeslication, Mallards are Important ir the food" to a great cause. It now remains 52 53 54 55 supply of China and other populous countries, for the home front to add to these NEXT: Valuable snakes Sa the : Yonge of war by buying more 56 57 St . ; POP---But Going in Reverse | & By J. MILLAR WATT YOURE LIKE YOU MEAN =I No! oe LJ [8] LOCOMOTIVE, A . TRACK S| | A deve Ine) } = . Jah 3 vig ACT NE