. SUNDAY SCHOOL L ES^ON LESSON XIV CHRIST AND LIFE AFTER DEATH (EASTER) Mirk 12:24-27; I Corlnthans 18:50-68. GOLDEN TEXT Thinks be to God, who glveth ue the victory through our Lent Jtsue Christ I Corinthians 15:67. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Tlm The words here Quoted from Mark's Gospel were spoken y our I/ord on Tuesday of Pas- sion Week. April 4. A.O. SO. The rirat Epistle of Paul to the Cor- tntblani was written about A.I). M. f f Place- The words, flere quoted from one of our Lord's discourses were uttered In Jerusalem. The tret Bplitle to the Corinthians was written at Ephesua. God ef the Living M. "Jesus said unto them, Is It ol for thU cause that ye err, that y* know not the scriptures, nor the) power of God? 26. For when they shall rise from the dead, they either marry, iior are given in ste. 26. But as touching the that they are raised; have ye not read In the book of Moses, IB the place concerning the Busb, aw God spake unto him, saylug, 1 son the God of Abraham, and the Ood of Isaac, and the Ood of teoobT 27. He Is not the Ood of la* dead, but of the living: ye do greatly err." Jegus attributes these proud men with error, and he at- tribute* their error to their ignor- ance. Though these men were full ef intellectual pride, they were ' lacking In understanding of Ood's Word and faith In Qod's power. Jeems saya that God can and will rala* the dead, and that In the rteen life earthly relations will be tlaaolved. Our domestic relation- ships will no longer exist. Because there Is no more death, there Is no ore need of marriage, but the redeemed are, In this respect, as angels. Jeaus ends as He began, taring that they erred and erred greatly. It la God's Word which tell* of Hla power, and if we do ao't know the one we shall not bellTe ID the other. M. "Now Uil. I say, brethren, that fleib and blood cannot Inherit the Kingdom of Ood; neither doth the corruption Inherit Incorrup- Uou." Flesh and blood describes the human body as it exists in this life. In this state the body cannot enter heaven. Corruption to found in our flesh and blood be- eaua of tin. Only when sin to- gether with its effects Is complete- ly removed from our todies do ear bodies attain Incorruptldh and than inherit Ood's Kingdom. 11. "Behold, I tell you a mys- tery: We shall not sleep, but we shall all be changed, 52, In a mo- Bont, In tiie twlngling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised Incorruptible ~nd we shall ke changed.' Those living whn Christ comes will not fall aaleep, that Is die, before they are caught V to be with Him. We shall be changed In many ways. Our bodies will be ' tiai.i-i-1. Our minds will be enlarged. Our vi-iy characters shall be purified and we shall bs preeented spotless before the Throne of Urace. IS. "For this corruptible must pat on Incorruptlon, and this mortal must put on Immortality." The Bodies In which we now live are Mortal. The bodies In which we shall live will be Immortal, free from death, and the possibility of eeath forever. M. "But when this corruptible shall have put on Incorruptlon, and this mortal shall have put on Im- mortality, then shall come to pass tte aaylng that Is written, Death Is swallowed up In victory. 65. grave, where is thy victory? O tfeaUi, where is thy sting?" Death Is only an instrument In Qod's sands, and having done Its tern- lorary work is thrown aside, and resurrection steps In, and with Its supreme victory reverses all of that which aeemed a victory for eeath. M. "The KM UK of death Is sin; aad the power of sin Is the law." IB tn law im seen the expression ef the will of God. 67. "But thanks ke to God, who giveth us the vic- tory through our Lord Jesus Ohrlat." The victory here meant Is the> victory over death and the grave. Christ by his death hath eestroyed him that had tbe power ef death, that la, the devil, and de- Uvered thorn who through fear of seath were all their lifetime sub- Jeet to bondage. Christ deprives eeath of all power to Injure His teople. Christ not only given us this victory but He now creates the soul after the Image of Ood and repairs all the evils which death had Inflicted. He restores us to that male from which iln had east us down. He rescues our kodlee from tbe grave and fash- ions them like unto His body, even y that powc.r whereby he Is able to subdue all things unto Him- stlf (Phil. .1:21). Had It not been for riirlut, death would have rslgneil forever over our own fallen race; but Christ has given us the victory; HO that the bellpvnr may even now gay death, where is thy stlriK? grave, where Is thy victory? CANADIAN AIRMAN WINS GEORGE MEDAL Sergeant Thomas B. Miller jQwen Sound, Ont. and St. John, M.B., fint member of the Royal OanadUn Air Force to win the George Medal gained the award for "prompt and extremely brave action." This picture ii the first to reach Canada since his exploit. The 20-year-old observer entered the flaming wreck of his crashed bomber twice to rocue, first the pilot and then the wireless operator. The latter waa "sort of a human torch" according to Miller's own word*, but he managed to get him to the grass where he "rolled eat the flames. Miller spent three months in hospital. The crash followed a successful raid over Germany, when they were apparently trailed home by a Messerschmitt which did not open fire until they neared their home base. They auffered a burst "right on the nose," on* engine "conked" and a crah landing was Inevitable. New Sentry System Guards War Plants Silent sentries, many time* ore efficient than men in storm, fog and darkness, sre guarding miles of wire fence enclosing many of the nation's war-pro- duction plants, the du Pont Comp- any, fat Wilmington, Del., dis- closed. They're robots. 8U months of tests have' proved tte new sentry system the most efficient yet devised, the comp- any said, with the robots "hear- ing" a person's whisper or the snip of a wire-cutter, and passing these warning sounds instantly to a watchman at his post or to a central guard station inside the plant. "The acoustio fence" apparatus has the effect of multiplying by many times the number of guards on duty in aderee weather and at night when guards would have to be placed almost elbow to el bow tj provide protection, da Pont engineers said. The robot sentinels can keep WINTER SPORT HORIZONTAL , 1 Gtune played on ice. T Players move on , Answer to Previous Puzzle 13 Smell. M Organs of bees IT Minute object. H Flyer. ttjte players score on opponents' It To MIL 15 Coin. tt Butter lumps 14 To subsist. 16 Female sheep 17 Falsehood. M Delivery from injury. 12 To sting 13 Unit M Merriment U Sailors )8 You. tt Senior (abbr.) 40 Female deer 41 Sorrowful. 41 Fuel 45 Its players use curved or hooked . 47 Brother. SO Its players push a disc or (pi.). 52 Three. 53 Vulture. 15 To charge with gas. 67 Thwarts. 58 Weight allowance. 00 Id. 61 To allot. VERTICAL 1 Third-rate actor. 2 Pointed arches 3 Shrewd 4 Sharp. 5 To yelp. (Shoe bottom. 7 Roosted. 8 Seaweed. 9 To honk. 10 Ages. 11 Salt. 14 To vex 15 Pothole glacier in a 21 To rely. 23 Gazed. 24 Rays. 26 Plural pronoun. 28 Neuter pronoun. 30 Heart. 31 Blackbird. 32 Public auto. 34 Chafed. 86 One who argues. 87 Goddess of dawn. 38 Ox. 41 Descendant 43 Land measure. 44 Satirical sketch. 46 Irish (abbr.). 47 Point of starting. 48 Trick. 49 To instigate. 50 To Up. 51 South Africa (abbr.). 53 Above. 54 To hire. 56 Palm lily. 58 Point (abbr.), * * * * * * * SHOW MUSIC SONG DRAMA A CONTRIBUTION TO CANADA'S ALL-OUT WAR EFFORT * * * * * * * * OtCCfFE* BEVERAGES LIMITED an alert 24-hour watch over fences often fifteen or twenty miles in length, they explained, enabling the human guard to hear what is going on for several miles along the line and to tell instantly the location of any disturbance. Coal Is Becoming Big U.K. Problem Britain now is consuming far more coal than before the war and will have "a very difficult task to meet next year's demands" for the fuel, an official spokes- nan said. He foresaw no difficulty for the present winter, however, despite increased consumption and said there had been no stoppage of es- sential industries. The home market, he added, will absorb almcst four and a half tons a person next year, and "we must produce 4,000,000 tons for every week of the year." No Near Collapse Of German Morale Qermany Knows She le Beaten But le Afraid Te Quit Germany today knows she Is eaten but continues to fight with vndlmlniahed fury in an effort to postpone as long as possible the ttane of post-war reprisals, accord- tec to Alex Dreler, N.B.C. corres- pondent and last reporter to leave Berlin before war was declared. 1 saw the first erack In Ger- many's morale when the blitz vic- tory over Russia, which Hitler had promised, failed to materialize," Dreler writes in the current issue ef The American Magazine. "As relations between Washington and Berlin grew more tense, I saw the widespread uncertainty of victory tarn Into a conviction of defeat. "On the eve of Pearl Harbor, Qermany had been so undermined with hopelessness that even Nazi officials talked openly of their fears of ultimate disaster. 1 don't mean that the Nazi regime la about to crack up. Far from it. I've seen its fighting machine and It is still magnificent despite losses on the eastern front. In fact, recent setbacks have given Germany a will to fight with a new ferocity. Little Fellow Afraid "The little fellow under Hitler is afraid of what will happen to him after he stops lighting. I talk- ed with Germans who believe that a murderous horde of aveng- ers downtrodden Russians, Poles, Czechs, Serbs, Norwegians, Bel- gians, Danes, Dutch and French will swarm over Germany once military operations have ceased. A Nazi officer told me that if Ger- many Is defeated 30 million Ger- mans will die and not on the bat- tlefield." Mr. Dreie-r says that today the average German faces the war like this: "We've knocked ovor nine coun- tries in Europe and what has It got us? Our food Isn't bettor and our clothes are worse. Something has gone wrong in Russia and now we've got the United States against us, too. We'll bo licked In the end, but can't quit." Mr. Dreier reports that after two and a half years of war, Germany Is rife with uiiti-war and anti-Nazi sentiment, but he warns that "there is no immediate chim.'e of internal collapse in Germany." RADIO REPORTER DIALING WITH DAVE: EQPAR TfcERGEN and MORTIMER SNERD CLAYMATES: Mortimer Snerd, country cousin of Charlie Mc- Carthy, rites approval of the statuettes Edgar Bergen is exhibiting. 'Charlie appears fn the role of William Tell, and Mortimer is hft trusting son. Bergen !l backing the ceramics project that produced the miniatures of his famous dummies. There's been quite a few Mentions of said project on recent broadcasts of the Charlie Mc- Carthy program Sunday nights at 8.00 o'clock on CBL, CBO, CKOC and the entire CBC National Network! Yes, there's a 'Penny' in your home: a young teen-age girl, who keeps a diary who is subject to all the youthful trials and tribulations of one at that age in life. Opening Penny's Diary loading from the day's entries should be a human, fascinating experience! And that is just what all radio listeners can do now, each Thursday night at ten o'clock on the CBC network! Listen for Penny's Diary and as the an- nouncer starts- to read the en- tries fur. the day and the week paat, we revert to the actual scenes, effectively dramatized. Penny's Diary heard Thursdays at ten p.m. CBC! * * * A Carnation for you from Car- atiuu Bouquet! CKOC announces a sweet, enchanting new program series designed to appeal to the woman in the home, in the midst of the liorning's round-up of work in the home! Called "Carnation Bouquet," each pro- gram plucks | musical flower from a large Boufluet, and gives it to you in the 'musical voices of Bailey Axton, tenor, the Carna- tion Singers, isml the homely philosophy of Peter Donald! Lis- ten to 1150 on your dial each Tuesday and Thursday morning at 10.46 for a melodic bouquet! Among the popular singing personalities in Canadian radio today, is gorgeous Georgia Dey, heard in the Blended Rhythm show each Tuesday night at 8.80 on the CBC National network. Twas way back in Alberta that Georgia first got her start, with none other than Mart Kenney and his orchestra. Eric Wild directs the music on Blended Rhythm Herb May is the Mas- ter of Ceremonies, and among tho other stars on the show are Frankie Shuster and Johnny Wayne of the Varsity Follies, and Burt -Austin, popular vocalist of Luigi Romanelli's band! All in all, it's a topflite variety show Tuesday 8.30 p.m.! * A Few Newiy Notei Said Jack Benny, when pre- sented with a special 'Oscar' by Bob Hope at the Academy Award dinner "I'm caught with my gags down"! Bing Crosby is back at KMH each Thursday night at ten o'clock on the CBC. "Voices of Victory," b a mighty fascinating series ox shows, originating as they do each week in a different industrial plant, dedicated to fashioning Canada's weapons of War. Each Friday nijrht at ten o'clock on CKOC, * * Record of the Week Sammy Kaye's revival of "Let' Have Another Cup O' Coffee," featured on CROC's Sunday Ser- enade, 3.30 p.m.! THIS CURIOUS WORLD 3 ^;i G LESS THAN 4OO VEftRS AGO, WAS BELIEVED TO BE THE CEM71BR. OF THE GROWS RPLJAGE IN THE SPRING. ..THEN AND A MOrsTTH LATER., LONG BURST THROLKSH THE SOIL. AMD GROW TO A HEIGHT OP SEVERAL. FEET. IN 1543, Copernicus came forth with the startling new that th* sun was the center of our particular system, ana mat th* appar- ent motion of the stars was due to oui own rotation on our axis. Today we know this to be true, and day by day we come to realize more and more what a small object our tiny world is in th Universe POP-Cleaned Up By J. MILLAR WATT VEOW! WHAT IS THE MATTER, MOREEN T UPSET MY BA6 OF PEANUTS - AND THAT ELEPHANT CAME AND CLEANED THEM UP WITH HIS VACUUM CLEANER!