5 1 ¥ i 1: > xX c ll + v a ae c « of fot i i of * od | 4° Be ad JOSHUA: A CHOICE OF LOYAL. "Spirit, and, setting him ore - "Lum and Abner" is oc Bad LESSON L TIES -- Numbers 27: 15.23; Joshua 1: 1-9; 24: 1-31. Printed Text--Josh, 1: 2-6; 14.21 GOLDEN TEXT As for me and my house, we will serve Jehovah. Josh. 24: 15, THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time: --Joshua lived from 15637 B.C.--1427 B.C. Place:--The Jordan River is that twisting, rapid body of water dividing eastern and western Pal- estine, flowing from the Sea of Galilee to the Dead Sea in the south; Shechem was located in Ephraim between mounts Ebal and Gerizim on the highway between Judaea and Galilee; Timnath-ser- ah was five miles southwest of Shechem, and seven miles north of Shiloh. . Joshua appears in the Old Tes- tament narrative considerably be- fore the events recorded in the first passage assigned in our les- son, Thus in Exod. 17: 9-14, we find him assigned by Moses the task of choosing men to go out and fight with Amalek, a conflict .in which - Joshua was victorfous; in Exod. 24: 13, Joshua is called 'the "minister" "his helpei = At a) Moses tog -Eleazar, the priest, and before all the congregation he laid his hands upon him and gave him a charge, the words of which are recorded in Deut."31: 7,8. Immediately upon the death of Moses, God finally confirms previ- ous promises to Joshua, and leads him into the great task immed- iately before him with a gloriously encouraging and strengthening message. 2. Moses my servant ig dead; now therefore arise, go over. this Jordan. The major part of Pales- tine and the great proportion of events _in sacred history are lo- cated on the western side of the Jordan River; the territory on the eastern side is, for the most part, quite barren, and today very sparsely populated. Thou, an' all this people, unto the land which I do give to them, even to the children of Israel. Palestine 's re- ferred to as a gift of God nearly two hundred times in the Old Tes- tament, beginning as far back as the twelfth chapter of the book of Genesis. Five hundred years have Sunday School Lesson pm Hl now passed since that e iy proms= ise, and God is now aboif to bring to fulfillment the hopes/ of the children of Israel for a yermanent home, 8. Every place that tie sole of your foot shall tread upon, to you have I given it, as I spake unto Moses. Cf. Deut, 11/ 24; Josh. 14:9, : J. Land of Pranise 4. From the willerness. This wilderness is what:iyknown as the wilderness of Arabi or the desert of Arabia, located to the south. And this Lebanon/ This refers to the great mountdn range known as the Lebanon Mountains far north in Syriz/ Even unto the great river, tl river Euphrates... "The nearer offhe two great rivers of Mesopo ia, about 1,780 miles long, Mentioned as one of the rivers £ the Garden of Eden (Gen. 2:74). All the land of the Hittites. And unto the great sea toward tfe going down of the sun. This, ofourse, refers to the Med- iterraryan Sea. Shall be your bor- der, I'his huge territory was nev- er Ally occupied by the Israelit- ist people in all the hundreds of years that intervened between the conquest under Joshua LER ST a x Fan - Moses, will be wit will not fail thee," nor thee. . 6. Be strong and of good cour- age; for thou shalt cause this peo- ple to inherit the land which 1 sware unto their fathers to give them. One might say that Joshua was to be strong both negatively and positively -- he was to be strong in resisting temptation, and thee; forsake ke was to be strong in carrying' out the task which God gave him. Approximately twenty-five years have passed. since the death of Moses and the entrance of the children of Israel into Palestine. ~Joshua is now an old man (11¢ years of age). i 14. Now therefore fear Jeho- vah, and serve him in sincerity and 'in truth; and put away the gods which your fathers served beyond the River, and in Egypt; and serve ye Jehovah. Put away- all the images of the dead deities of the ancient world, who could never give to them one tiny par- ticle of all the grace and wealth that God had conferred upon them, Are You Listening ? By FREDDIE TEE Discovers Palio Cure? Dr, J. Eugene Salot Tooqied. of Montreal, who has attracted world- wide attention to himself because of his successful experimentations with intravenous injections of ani- mal charcoal since 1933, has given new hope to mankind, in declar- ing that he believed animal char- coal injected in the spine may prove a positive cure for infantile paralysis. | s00 600 700 800 Goo 1000 1100 1200 1300 WOO I580 In inaugurating this column of "Air Wave News" the editorial de- partment ask the co-operation of its readers to write and tell us what interests you the most in ra- dio comments and news, Just ad- . dress "Radio Column," Room 424, 73 Adelaide West, Toronto. Airlanes Gossip Tuffy Goff who plays Abner of going to spend his vacation in Canada fish- ing for trout and salmon. EE BE Most of the musical parts of, pro- grams from our Canadian stations are easy to take but the efforts and patter and comedy are "hard to swallow." * & % @ \ Club Matinee with chatter by Al- len Prescott from WJZ (760 kilo- cycles)--4 to 5, is one of the af- ternoon's. most entertaining airings. TE ® The oldest active actor on this continent, Lucius Henderson (90), appears every Thursday night on WOR (710 kilocyclés) in Federal Theatré"s "Great Stones." Do you know that many programs are broadcast twice in one evening? For instance Edward G. Robinson's "Big Town" {is first on the air at 8 p.m, E:D.S.T. Tuesdays and then again at 12.30 midnight, The same applies to Al Jolson's show, also "Gang Br ':rs", 10 p.m. Wednes- day and 1 a.m, This later broad- cast is for Pacific Coast listeners. The Canadian Radio Corporation, producers of DeForest Crosley, Ma- Jestic and Rogers, have just releas- ed a very complete radio log, list- ing all domestic, foreign/mand U.S.A. 71 long and short wav» stations, also a Weekly Menu of best weekly night chain programs, Copy will be mailed free to anyone writing to Canadian Radio Corporation, 622 Fleet Street West, Toronto. aDo You Know? HOW SOUNDS ARE MADE When you hear th» realistic thum- .der rumbling or crashing explosions on a radio program, you have, no doubt wondered how they were made. This phase of radio work is one of great interest. Here's the 1. w-down on the sound business. Thunder--By, beating a woolly urumstick on an electrically charg- ed screen contacting a pickup, a very realistic thunder crash - is made. Rain--Is imitited by birdseed thrown of* a revolving disc fed by | a hopper into a chute. Airplane--Easy! Just massage a tom-tom with an electric vibrator. Horses' Hoofs are cups slapped in gravel; waves are dried peas shak- en in a screen. It all goes to show you--you can't even believe' your yn ears. New Special Events Unit Latest engineering development of the Canadian Broadcasting Cor- poration is a new mobile broadcast- ing unit, an acquisition of the Cor- poration's Special Events Depart: ment under R. T. Bowman, director. The unit, Which was demonstrated last week to-eastern Ontario news. papermen and which is now enroute to Banff to do a series of National " Parks broadeasts, will be used for the presentation of a wide varlety of special programmes. It is be- lieved that it will assist materially in the development of important in. ternational exchanges and will be fnavluable as a means of advertls- ing Canada abroad. k u When you sce "Robin Hood" you're going to see some remark- able archery; it will look as if Errol Flynn is a wizard with the" bow and arrow. Bu the man be- hind the bow wag really Howard Hill, and you will be able to see him in a film of his own before long--one of those Pete Smith shorts. Hill will go William Tell one better by lining up fifteen Evéry Man's Choice 15. And if it seem evil unto you to serve Jehovah, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fath- ers served that were beyond the River, or the:gods of the Amor- ites, in whose land ye dwell. A choice not only must be made by men, but a choice is made by ev- ery man. All human life 'de- mands a God. The men most loud in their declaration today that there is no God and will not have God are worshipping a God all the time. Human life is so constructed that it cannot live without an object of devotion, something. that appeals to desire - and to which all life is responsive. But as for me and my house, we will serve Jehovah, A man of Joshua's achievements, a man of his unquestioned character, a man to whom millions of Israelites had looked for guidance and leader- ship, that man has an enormous influence over others, and now he is going to throw that influence, with all the power he possesses, into his pleading with the people of Israel to follow the only true and living God. 16. And the people answered and said, Far be it from us that we should forsake Jehovah, to serve other gods; 17. For Jeho- vah our God, he it is that brought us and our fathers up out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage, and that did those great signs in our sight, and preserved us in all the way wherein we went, and among all the peoples through the midst of whom we passed; 18. and Jehovah drove out from before us all the peo- ples, even the Amorites that dwelt in the land; therefore we also will serve Jehovah; for he is our God. 19. And Joshua said unto the people, Ye cannot serve Jehovah; for he is a holy God; he is a jeal- ous God; he will not forgive your transgression nor your sins. 20. If ye forsake Jehovah, and serve foreign gods, then he will turn and do you evil, and consume you, after that he hath done you good. Joshua, realizes that these peo- ple do not fully apprehend the profound significances and consequences of what they are saying. Joshua does not say that God will not forgive sin when sin is confessed and put away, but he does declare that he will not ae to bless his pco- ple and blot out their iniquitics, "or bear them away, if they con- tinue in their sin and forsake the Lord their God. 21. And the people said unto Joshua, Nay; but we will serve Jehovah. They repeated previous- ly expressed confidence in their own ability to serve the Lord and obey hig law, and by their public protestation bare witnéss against themselves. if they ever broke their engagement. Following this, Joshua set up a stone on this very spot, which for all the generations to follow would be a reminder to Israel of what had taken place that day. pretty girls with apples on their heads and shooting the apples off. Remember the days when no studio would ever admit that any Bj actor had a double, for any stunt? They used to make Douglas Fairbanks have one some- times, when the ff stunt was too dan- § gerous--and he'd manage to do it himself when the 4 cameras weren't =f grinding, just to /3 dshow that he D. Fairbanks wasn't afraid. Speaking of Flynn---recently he worried Warner Brothers no lit- tle. He bought a new yacht, and decided to go on a six months' trip in search of adventure, The executives objected. They finally gave him three weeks off. He had to go to Miami to get the yacht; he was to sail it through the canal, and fly to Hollywood to work in "Sister Act". Off he went, and off he stayed. He spent four weeks in Miami. A studio repre- sentative went after him, and went back without him. So Jef- frey Lynn, whose face isn't ex- actly familiar on the screen as yet, was given the lead in "Sister Act," with everybody cheering for him, and now the studio's de- lighted with his work. It may be another of those cases where a star walks out and a new star walks right i Not ing came of it so far as Met- ro was concerned, but Miss Davis saw the test and wanted Lynn for a role in "Jezebel." He didn't get it, but Warner Brothers liked the test and gave the young man a contract. They're admitting now that the clever Miss Davis was right when she refused. to play in "Comet Over Broadway," saying that the Sn L BETTE DAVIS story and dialogue weren't up to scratch. One newspaper man call- ed it "a very badly written story full of inane dialogue." Jimmy Cagney has bought three tractors for his farm at Martha's Vineyard, and would rather talk crops than movies any day. They're a smart family, those Cag- neys; his sister took honors at Hunter college the other day. Unlike some news broadcasters, Boake Carter writes his own stuff. his wife, who used to be society editor of a Philadelphia newspa- per. Is ODDS AND ENDS: -- Judging by recent demonstrations, it looks as if television would be in its in- fancy for a long time to come... Helen Hayes is willing to return to the movies if somebody can find her a story as good as "Farewell to Arms" . ... "Farewell," etc, has recently been re-edited, be- cause of the mix-up in interna- tional affairs, and will be re- issued . . . If "Women Against the World" comes your way you'll see Alice Moore, daughter of Alice Joyce, in a leading role . . . The novel, "Sixteen Hands," has bgen bought for the screen for Bob Burns; it's a story about a mule ... He'll do "Arkansas Traveler" too... And he went to court the other day to ask that the records he made in 1933 and 1934 be' kept out of circulation, on the ground that they injure his reputation as a creative artist . . . In 1934 he made $1500; in 1937, $400,000 . Nothing like getting a good break, and deserving it! Rode 578 Miles On Toy Tricycle A 44-year-old Melbourne ex- Serviceman, Alfred Wilkinson, has just ridden 578 miles from Mel- bourne to Sydney on a child's tri- cycle. Pointless sort of thing to do, you think? Not at all. He did it in 9 days, 23 hours, 25 minutes-- call it 10 days for the sake of working out the fact that he earn, ed $62.60 a day by his feat. The tricycle was an ordinary stock model, 2 ft. 6 ins. high, the only alteration being the fitling of a special saddle and a longer saddle pin. One of the conditions boop aLo3 z gadis coe Bod aR) Save Memento Of Rebe Movement Is On Foot to! serve Historic Blockhoutd Alberta--Figured in Rie} bellion, 1885, Crumbling in places, Fort _ier blockhouse stands today a Alberta's few mementos o | Rebellion of 1885. Efforts to preserved by and Monuments Board of Ca, have been made to Judge F Howay of New Westminster, board's western member, by of Edmonton Wetaskiwin, Alta. vice clubs Five miles win and about 35 miles sou Edmonton, the stands only a main highway Edmonton and less than 100} from the Calgary-Edmonton | E of the Canadian Pacific railw The fort's have the stru the Historic north of Wet old block few yards fron linking Calgary, = foundation is | ping now, with a possibility] whole structure may tumble running alongside Some of the hewn logs in its vw are rotting and the near-cyc! : which swept through Alberta = Ts) 12 ripped some planks off | a ravine roof. But most of the logs in it Especially well | still sound. serge iq the, floor hetween n Dancing S ancing Star [] un HORIZONTAL 9 Vocal I, 5 Dancer composition. pictured here. 12 He danced 10 Bugle plant. professionally 11 In. i v : : since 7 12 Hint to a 14 Sickles. mystery 13 Exclamafion. 15. To care for. 17 Flock." 18 Melodic passage. 20 Exists. 21 To love excessively 22 Beast of 44 Stalk. burden. 45 Deposits. 23 Fortified work 47 Neuter 26 Dress bottom. pronoun. 48 Magistrate. £9 Now partner. in motion --S. 16 He is famous for his --. 19 Usefulness. 23 Invasion by police. 2.4 To abdicate. 25 Mcasure of area. 27 Golf devices. 29 3.1416. he stars 32 Trecless plains. 33 Springing gait, 28 More costly 'JERTICAL 36 Low caste in 30 Dress arm. 50 Shed as blood. _ Y India. 31 Distinctive ~~ 52 Well-bred 2 Vexes. 38 Thing theory. woman. 3 Always. 40 Pussy. 32 Hog. 54 Notice of a ~~ 4Onc who 42 Helper. 34 Fish, future dallies (pl.) 44 Dispatched. 35 Queer. marriage. § Judgments. 46 Coin slit. 37 God of war. 56 Stir, 6 Musical note. 49 Acriform fuel. 39 To perform, 570s. 7 Funished with 51 Idant. 41 Monkey. 58 His --=-- (pl.) antlers. 53 God of sky 43 Sound of was formerly 8 Virginia 55 South east. surprise. his dancing willow, 57 Before. Christ. Rp | | a Ei Sor 0 | EL m 2 AG 54 | 4 | | [I i8 19 20 SN 1d] z 3 24 [25 26 27 128 29 30 31 2 "133 39 35 |36 x37 138 39 |4 42 45 44 45 6 47 18 19 50 _ ol 52 hb} 54 9 06 57 58 59 'Romantic THIS WILL MAKE YOUR MOUTH WATER jusclous, ripe, red strawberries and crisp, golden-brown Shredded Wheat topped off with a generous serving of milk or cream. Nature's perfect flavor: offerings, delicious, light, a complete meal for the hottest days, wholesome . . . THE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY, LTD, Niagara Falls - Canada ~ During Present Year lley to recuperate. ached 23,000-Foot Level - d the North col,, 'jumping-off" point for the limb to the peak, the dis- said. early southwest sible for y Previous attempts, ripped | the face of the mountain further climbing imposs- was not believed that an- 'attempt would be made this monsoon, _n Canadian ' | Art Exhibition ndon, England, This Fall ate Gallery to Exhibit Work of Century exhibition entitled "A Cen- of Canadian Art," represent. ing Canada's achievements in painting and sculpture during the past 100 years, will be held at the Tate Gallery in London, England, this fall, it was announced last week by Vincent Massey, Cane adian High Commissioner. The exhibits are to be selected in Canada and will be shown at the gallery for two months from Oct. 14, after which they will probably be taken to some of the larger provincial art galleries in Great Britain. Arrangements for the exhibiticn have been made in close co-opera- tion with the Nutional Gallery at Ottawa and the High Commission- er's office in London. The Duke of Kent has accepted an invitation to open the exhibition, An advisory committee com- posed of the presidents of the Canadian artists' societies has " been collaborating with the Na- tional Gallery in selecting the works to be shown. "The Committee of aptists in- cludes Sir Wyly Grier, president of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, A. Y. Jackson, president of the Canadian Group of Paint- ers, Elizabeth Wyn Wood, presi- dent of the Sculptors' Society, and Peter Haworth, president of the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colors. Also assisting the National Gallery are Clarence Gagnon, of Montreal, and Martin Baldwin, curator of the Toronto Art Gallery. Cattle I Ranching Goes Mechanical Age cf Genuine "Cowpunchers"_Is Past-- Cnly the Steer Hasn't Changed Spring roundup time in the south- west cattle domain of the United States this year finds a resurgent industry and a changed one. Where farmers mingle from Ar- kansas to the Big Bend country of Texas, there is less talk about run- ning combines and more about run- ning cattle, than there has been for the last tive years. Dut it is not only that farmers are turning back to livestock alter a swing to wheat; ranching ftself has changed. [t has become "big business" in organiza. tion. Although chuck wagons still roll from valley to valley as cowmen round up "the stuff," back of this is an organization that reflects an industrial age. Big ranches require business management, Many now have their auditors and equip their offices with modern business mach- ines, More automobiies will be on a ranch than ponies, kven the chuck wagon is a truck. The up-to- the-minute ranches in Texas which run upward of 300,000 acres use short-wave radio communication, or telephones, Cowhoys College Graduates In the Colorado cattle country the branding iron has been replaced by an apparatus that uses chemicals. Need for extensive fences has been reduced by © electrically charged wires, The cowboy too has undergone a change. On many ranches he'll turn out to be a college graduate, or at leagft a student at an agricul- tural college. About the only performer in this typically prairie scene that hasn't surrendered to this mechanical age is the steer. His manners haven't changed. He still loses his poise when thunder crashes through the arroyos, He still shows his mood when he dislikes the smell of a cow pony. found © Further Attempts Likely my = Kalimpong (Bengal) cor- ndent of the London Daily reported last week that the h 1988 expedition attempt- o scale Mount Everest had forced to retire to the Khar- = seven members are safe, it said, but the majority are rom the after-effects of in- 2 expedition, headed by W. Iman, did not penetrate far the 23,000- the failure of