Flesherton Advance, 2 Aug 1939, p. 7

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1Q5 Couples Married In Impre*»ive Montreal Ceremony i: Novel Porch Garden Tv.o s;:r.^'s toHowin!? the mass maniage at Montreal Stadium show, LEFT, Henn Lepage, one of the gi-oonjs, saluting his bi-iue and UIGHT, leC happy couples grouped together following the ceremonies. The founder and charplain of the Jeunesse Ouvriere Catholique, sponsors of the rctsi marriage is Father Henri Roy, O.M.I. RADIO AND NOTES E W S By MADGE ARCHER NELSON EODV RETURNS TO THE AIR Thr.isands ot tlie admirers o£ Nel- gou E'..iy in Caaada and the United States will cancel all engagemeuta on Sv.uday night, August i;!, to wel- conae :ie return of tho popular bar- itone f.nd film star to the Chase and s.mbora Hour. Mr. Eddy re- sumes his place on the program af- ter r. prolonged absence on a con- cert :car. Donnld Dickson. Iiis sub- stitute, is returning to New York to rtjo'n the M&tropolitan Opera Comp :.ny. It :: diffictjlt to overrate Nelson Edti:"» popularity in the entertain- mea; ^roi-Id. This year he was ncm- inat€!! "star of stars" in more than one :idio poll. Be is equally suc- cessfj. in the concert hall and ou the Severn as he is on tne air. Ed;;;.- is a Rhode Islander and he was fcc'.-u at Providence, in 1901. It was «iile he was a newspaper re- porte.- in Philadelphia that he dis- cove/€iI that he had a baritone voice ct unusual beauty and mas- culine strength. He made his debut in Philadelphia with an amateur theatrical group and. later, in local pen'ormances of the Gilbert and Suliivan operas. From these he graduEted to the Philadelphia Grand Opera Company and sang roles in French, Italian and Ger- mar "REQUIEM" DIRECTED SY TOSCANINl Tiie aext important Toscauini date :s set for Wednesday, August IGtt, v>hen a performance of Ver- di's • Ke^iem'' directed by the grea: ?daeslro7wlll be broadcast from Lucerne, Switzerland. Three of tSe 'our soloists will be familiar to taosie who -ii«en to the Metro- l>oli;an Opera broadcasts during Ihe winter. They are Ziuka Milan- ov. soprano; Kerstin Thorborg. con- tralto; and Nicola Moscona. bass. The tenor has not yet been named. 4:00 1:05 Farm Mon- The broadcast will last from till 5:45 p.m. Other Lucerne events includ» a concert by the choir of Strasbourg Cathedral, on Sunday, August 13th, h-om 4:30 till 5 p.m. and one by the Sistine Chapel Choir under Dom Lorenza Perosi on Sunday, August 27th from 4:00 to 4:30 p.m. All are being broadcast over the NBC-Blue ua-twork. TO BE HEARD Farm Broadcasts. CFRB. p.ri. Monday to Fridays; Broadcasts. CBL 1:30 p.m. days to Saturdays. August 4 11:45 a.m. CBL Actuality broadcast Deep Sea Fishing in Nova Scotia ... 9 p.m. CBS CFRB Raymond Paige . . . . 9:30 p.m. MBS CBL Take A Note (new) . . . August 5, 10:30 a.m. NBC CBL Bright Idea Club . . . . 7 p.m. CBC CBL. The Little Re- view . . . 8:15 p.m. CBL Actuality broadcast from Green Island off Nova Scotia coast ... 10 p.m. CBS Benny Goodman . . . August 6th, . . . 2:30 p.m. CBL Devotional Ser- vices ... 3 p.m. CBS CFRB Colum- bia Sym. ... 6 p.m. CBS CFRB Gay Nineties ... 6 p.m. CBL Grenadier Guards Band . . . S p.m. CBL Chase and Sanborn Hour ... 9 p.m. CBL Appointment With Agostini . . . August 7, 8 p.m. CBS CFRB Accent on Music ... 8:30 p.m. NBC Magic Key ... 10:30 p.m. NBC CBL Chic- ago Symphony . . . .\ugust 8, 8 p.m. CBS CFRB Human .\dventure . . . 8:30 p.m. NBC CBL Information Please ... 9 p.m. CBS CFRB We, The People ... 10:30 p.m. CBL My Home Town . . . .August 9, 8 p.m. NBC CBL Ransom Sherman . . . 9:00 p.m. CBL Songs of the World ... 10 p.m. CBL Roy Shield's Orch- estra . . . August 10, 8:30 p.m. CBL CFRB Serenade for Strings .... 9 p.m. CBC CBL Toronto Prom. . . ... 10 p.m. CBS CFRB Columbia Workshop ... 10 p.m. NBC CBL Kraft Music Hall. Sunday School Lesson ELIJAH: A LIFE OF COURAGE. I Kings 18:1-46 Golden Text. â€" Jehovah is far from the wicked; but he heareth the pvayer of the righteous. Prov. 15:2'.». THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. â€" The e.xact year when these events took place we cannot determine; the late Dr. Willis J. Beecher suggests the year 90? or 908 B.C., and this is near enough. Place. â€" Mount Carmel is that grea: mountain range midway along the Mediterranean shores of Palestine and Syria, rising from the western side of the plain of Esdraelon. The river Kishon flows past the northern base of Mount Carmel, emptying into the Mediterranean near the city of Haifa. , 1-30: And Elijah said unto all the people. Come near unto me; and all the people came near un- to hin^.. And he repaired the altar of Jehovah that was thrown down. Without a word of previous in- formation regarding Elijah, we are simply told that "Elijah the Tishbite, who was of the sojourn- et? of tiilead, said unto .â- Vhab, As Jehovah, the God of Israel, livcth, before whom I stand, there shall not be dew nor rain these years, but according to my word." Ahab, King c.f Israel, was married to one f»f the most ficked women of his- tory. Jezebel; She had brought ev- ery abomination and idolatrous practice from her native home in Syria along with all the priests of Baal. These priests were bitter opponents of such a j>rophet of God as Elijah was known to be. .\nd so Elijah commanded the king to bring the prophets of Baal be- fore him at Mount Carmel where Elijah faced them. 31-37: And Elijah took twelve stones, according to the number of tribes of the sons of Jacob, un- to whom the word of Jehovah came, saying. Israel shall be thy name. .And with the stones he built an altar in the name of Jehovah; and he made a trench about the altar, as great as would contain two measures of seed. .\nd he put the wood in order, and cut the bullock in pieces, and laid it on the wood. And he said, Fill four jars with water, and pour it on the burnt-offering, and*on the wood. And he said, Do it the second time; and they did it the second time. And he said. Do it the third time; eand they did it the third time. .And the water ran round about the altar; and he filled the trench also with water. Elijah'* Prayer ,And it came to pass at the time of the offering of the evening ob- lation, that Elijah the prophet came near, and said, O Jehovah, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Israel, let it be known this day that thou art God in Israel, and that I am thy servant, and that I have done all these things at thy word. Hear me, O Jehovah, hear me, that this people may know that thou, Jehovah, art God and that thou hast turned their heart back again. In this solemn and earnest in- vocation of God â€" the name "Je- hovah" describing God as he is himself â€" the one eternal, self-ex- istent Bemg â€" is united with the name which shows his special cov- enant with Abraham and Isaac and Israel. In his own nature incom- prehensible to finite beings, he yet reveals himself in moral aand spir- itual relations with his people, through which they "know that which is past knowledge." The prominence of the name Jehovah, thrice repeated in this prayer of Elijah, is significant of the special mission, symbolized in this very name, so also of his immediate purpose. He desires to efface himself. The God of Israel is to show himself as the true worker, not only in the outer sphere by miracle, but in the inner sphere by the conversion of the hearts of the people. , The Sign 38: Then the fire of jehovah fell, and consumed the burnt-offer- ing, and the wood, and the stones, and the dust, and licked up the water that was in the trench. The doom of the false prophets, the life of Elijah, the future of Israel, and the honor of God are all involved in what should hap- pen following Elijah's prayer. This miraculous and supernatural- fire falling from the heaven con- vinced the people that Jehovah was the true God. 39. And when all the people saw it, they fell on their faces; and they said, Jehovah, he is God; Je- hovah, he is- God. Thus the great fire was the emb- lem of Jehovah, and the sign of his acceptance of his people's ser- vice. And so Elijah had the priests of Baal put to death, not so much from revenge as queen Jezebel had murdered the proph- ets of the true God, but to carry out the fundamental law of the Old Testament kingdom of God, v/hich prohibted idolatry on pain of death. 40-46: When the last priest of Baal had been put to death Elijah turned to the king and told him t» go up to his house and eat and drink for an abundance of rain would soon fall upon the fearfully parched land. But the prophet himself went up to Mount Carmel and cast himself down upon the earth and "put his face between his knees." Thus a solitary man brought back rain to Israel. His prayer was abundantly answered. There are certain characteristics in Elijah's prayer, which should form the part of all true prayer. It was based on the promise of God. It was definite. It was ear- nest, humble and full of expectant faith. .After using paint brushes, soak them in turpentine for an hour. Then wipe with a soft cloth and wash in warm water and soap- suds. Descendants of "Fathers of Confederation" This group pictured at Charlottctown, P.E.I., on the ooca.^lon of tho 75th anniversary of the first meeting on the island of the Fathers of Con- federation, is comprised of three direct descendants of that distinguiahed gT«up who conceived the idea of a united Canada. Rom LEFT to RIGHT they are: Mr. Justice L. P. D. Tilley, Saint John, N.B., son of Sir Leonard Tilley. who was the New Brunswick delegate at the Con- federation meeting; Hon. Wm. J. Tupper, lieutenant-governor of Mani- toba, son of Sir Charlos Tupper; Hon Geo. D. De Blois, lieutenant-gov- ernor of Prince Edward Island; and P. C. Johnson, of Moncton, son of Hon. J. M. Johnson. A pretty hanging garden for a porch can be made with an old sponge and some shoots of ivy. Tie a piece of string to the .-ponge so that is can be suspend- ed, and get five or six shoots of ivy a few inches long and push the cut ends of these into holes in the sponge. Trail the other paili of the shoots over the sp^Jn^e, keep- ing them in place with hairpins, for the closer the stems are to tha sponge the better. Keep tha sponge moist by soaking it ia • bowl of water now and again. The ivy shoots will send sot roots into the sponge, and toom after many new leaves will appear making the ball a mass of groea- ery. POP ^ Prepared to Break Duration Record This Curious World VJ^ ] HAVE ^^ TO â- *• BECOMEi excited' Itsi THE PRESEJSlCfi. OP- PEJ^SONS; â-  WEARING S/L^CZ< \\ <3IANT HAVE BEEN <NOV^N TO GROW & fi^£:£Y L.ors/o IN NEWV ZEAL>\NO. CATERPILLAR. OF THE. GUIANA FORESTS CUTS FUDWER. BUDS RROM PLANT^ STRINGS THEVV TOGETHER WITH -" SILK. /AND ATTACHES THEAA TO ITS ONA/ISI BODV SPINES. COfH- 193T BY 1CA SERVICC. «* INSECTS of the tropics have many curious ways of makmg .themselves inconspicuous. The caterpillar holds flower buds » its front legs while covering them with silk, then twists its heod aroimd and attaches them to its body. WORK OF ART UOEIZONTAI. 1,9 Famous painting pictured here. 5 The pictiured lady's makes it outsLinding. 12 Sailor. 14 YeUow- skinned fruit. 16 North Britain. 17 Digit of the foot. 18 To sink. 19 Above. 21 Over. 23 To scold. 25 Encountered. 26 Professional golfer. 27 Snare. 28 Native African village. 30 God of the sea. 32 Ozone. 33 Reddish- brown. 34 Grain. 36 Wore shoes. 38 Senior. 39 Rubta9Q|ree. AiKwer (• Previous Ptmle 40 To skip. 41 Powerful snake. 42 Go on (music) 43 Perennial plant. 45 To soak flax. 47 To emit vapor 48 To grasp. 51 Fish eggs. 53 Pretense. 55 Officer's assistant 56 Inn. 58 Market. 60 Artist who painted it VERTICAL 2 Umbrette (bird). 3 North Africa. 4 Work of genius. 5 Prying spy. 6 Myself. 7 Pound. 8 Artist's frame. 9 To loiter. 10 Within. 1 1 Long-beaked fish. 13 Electrified particle. 15 Wood demon. 16 Negative word 20 It was painted as a . 22 Sun god. 24 Furnace basket. 25 Morass. 26 To handle. 29 Sloth. 30 Youth. 31 This painting hangs in the 33 Child's game 35 Wings. 37 Throng. 38 Sun. 41 To make mean. 44 Ragout of game. 46 Stepped upoik' 47 Ovule. 48 Cravat 49 Stir. 50 Cognizance.' 52 Indian. 54 Part of a circle. 55 Morindin dye^ 56 Hour. 57 Musical note. 59 Liliaceous tree. By J. MILLAR WATT, WE'RE GOING OLTT TO BREAK THE DURATION ^^ R&CQ!7D' WMAT (r^\ ARE- YOU 4fcr9' TAKING - t HIM FOR r ^ TO CARRY OM N)/WGN I GE-T , -TOO OLD ' A C^ {^^^ ~~~~ ^J^V^cM. l»t». by T«.» BpII S>nili. *<â- â- , ,. . 3-io

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