PE Ya at BEAT 5 Put God First: Serve The Empire General Montgomery Abides / by Father's Early Advice El 4 ™ 3 The only thing 78-year-old Jady Montgomery will not do. for: her "son, Bérnard, is play bildge with- him. The 8th Army Commander js a first-class player, she says, "but put down the wrong card or give a stupid lead, and he explodes." The white-haivred mother of Bri- tain's best-known army command- er concedes that strangers "al- ways find Bernard difficult." "He goes around bossing every- one, and perhaps gives people -the wrong impression," she says. "His brusqueness is something 1 under- stand as hig mother." Lady Montgomery, to whom the army commander writes constant- ly from the battle front, tells that he lives by a creed given him by his father, the late Rt. Rev. H. H. Montgomery, former Anglican Bishop of Tasmania. Good Mathematician However, he was the family's best mathematiclan and whenever he was given any sum of money he quickly calculated what one- tenth of it was because of a fam- fly rule that one-tenth of all they .had went to charity. "Bernard and the others keep it up to this day." ~ Planned Soldier's Life One day Bernard, standing at a window - watching soldiers march- 5 e recalls that her husband 'summoned the five Montgomery song to his chapel in Hobart ono © evening years ago and told them: "Gentlemen, whatever profession you choose, always put God first in your lives and strive to serve the Empire. You come from a fam- ily of gentlemen. This does not signify mere outward refinement, It speaks of a refined and: noble mind to which anything dishonor- able or mean or impure is abhor- ent amd unworthy." Lady Montgomery says the bish- ops little speech made a profound impression on the hoys who have built their lives around it. As a youngster, the general was as "naughty and mischievous as most children and up to all kinds of practical jokes." His mother says he was fairly good at school but not brilliant, ing to the Boer War, announced hoe planned to be a soldier and from then on the army was his only objective. Everything he did was part of his preparations. Ten- mile hikes through the mountains when the family had moved to Ireland were nothing to the boy, according to his rhother. BIBLE TEACHINGS ON WINE'S DECEITFULNESS 4 re Proverbs 20:1; 23:29.35; © Matthew 24M5.51 GOLDEN TEXT---=At the last it biteth like a serpent, and sting- eth like an adder, -- Proverbs 23:32, » Memory Verse--Children, obey your parents.--Colossians 3:20, . The Letson In Its Setting Time--The book of Proverbs was written somewhere between 1000 B.C, and 1026 B.C. Onr Lord's words on the Mount of. Olives were uttered Tuesday, April 4, A.D, 30. i Place--The book of Proverbs may have been written in the City of Jerusalem; the parable taken from our Lord's discourse was uttered on the Mount of Olives opposite and east of Jerusalem, Sorrows of the Heart "Who hath woe? Who hath sorrow? # Who hath contentions? Who hath complaining? Who hath wounds without cause? Who hath redness.of eyes? They that tarry long at the wine; they that go to seck out mixed wine." The trouble here spoken of strictly anxious care, complaint; the _wounds are wounds received in causeless or wholly unprofitable © disputes such as come of the --brawls--of -drunken--men-- Mixed -- wine is that which is flavored with aromatic spices that increase its - stimulating properties. ws It Brings a Sting "Look thou not upon the wine when it is red, when it sparkleth in the cup,when it gocth down smoothly." The. whole sentence blends the attractiveness to "the senses of the wine in color, effer- vescence and taste. * ) "At the last it biteth lee a serpent, and stingeth like an ad- der. Thine eyes "shall behold strange things." Did wine bite first," who would touch it? Did Satan present the cup in his own naked form, who would dave to take it? If poison was seen in the cup, who would venture upon it? Yet is the poison less dan- gerous because it is unseen? The adder's sting is concealed, yet most fatal. The Senses Stupified "And thy heart shall utter per- verse things. Yea, thou shalt be as he that lieth down in the midst of the sea, or as he that lieth "upon the top of a mast." When a man is intoxicated his words HOW FOUR MEN OUTSMARTED THE JAPS Marooned for 10 months on Jap-held New Britain Island, three U. S. airmen and an Australian volunteer rifleman they met in the jungle have" been returned to an Allied base after an epic rescue, They built a camp at the edge of the jungle, top, and were making a boat for escape when a U. S, bomber flew over, discovered them and took this picture. A few nights later an Australian flying boat landed by flares and picked up the four men, | RADIO REPORTER «x rose Few of us in Canada appre- cinte the significant part that radio has played in Europe to- "wards moulding the fortunes (or should we more properly call them misfortunes?) -ofthat--un- happy continent in the years -- prior to the-outbreak--of--the war-- CFR pe Commencing in 1923 the Halian radio has been blasting out propa- ganda against the "democracies for home and foreign consump- tion. In 1933 Germany follow- ed suit, Immediately upon the coming to power of Hitler a most elaborate system. was set up for broadcasting the principles of the Nazi creed. Thousands - upon thousands of loudspeaker sys- tems had been erected in Ger- "man cities and towns whereby people would be regaled with Fuchrer worship as they passed along the streets, This radio and public address system sup- plemented the networks of Ger- man stations which hourly ham- mered the supposea glories of German National Socialism into the home. Regimentation by radio played a part no less im-. portant than that imposed upon the people of Germany by the Gestapo, the military and other implements of the Nazi machine. ge What of the post-war world? Can this vast enemy radio mech- anism be turned to good account in consolidating the peace? Po they are panning 0 use this elaborate system when, the war is over to sell back to the Gers man people their own souls and their own freedom, ) tay M. Aitken, the familiar sonality, who for so many years now has brought morning listeners new. items culled from the world of wom- en's activities, recently dropped back into Toronto. Her Wartime Conservation Program dealing with every branch o. household affairs, from wartime cooking cconomies te the revamping of the wardrobe, is taking her far and wide afross the Dominion. Mrs. Aitken says that one of the most inspiring angles of her spe- cial wartime assignment is the tremendous enthusiasm she meets everywhere. The women of Can. ada are anxious to do their part within the home os well as on the war production line. Mrs. Aitken told us that in Quebec Province so many women flocked to several of the halls eneaged "for her demonstrations of wars time food and clothing economy Mrs. H have police on hand {to marshal the crowds. In spite of her trav- els Mrs, Aitken still maintains her link with her many radio friends . . . you can hear her discuss the international work in that it was neccessary often to - motif broadcast every Saturday morning 12 noon until 12,45 from CFRB known as Red, White and Blue. Bringing sparkle and {--a humorous--and--human- angle to the varieus topics of discussion is' your old friend, Maurice Bod- ington. . Fach week "Bod" wel- comes a, guest to his Red, White __and Blue microphdne and in this way war workers in the home, in industry and agriculture are able, to gxchange and glean new ideas for the furthering of their wir services and There's music, too--"RBod" spe- cializes in the songs and melo- dies the boys in the armed forces say 'they Tike to hear. Audience surveys reveal that this is one of | CEFRB's most popular daytime Programs, I Summertime usually sces many popular radio favorites taking a vacation, Of programs which have left the air in recent weeks hardly any has found more ex- pressions of regret than Amos 'n' Andy. The latest news, how- ever, is that Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, offginators of the famed radio Dblack-faced team, will be back in the fall, Apparently they've signed up for a weekly half hour program in which they will also make lib- eral use of guest stars. Full particulars have! not yet been revealed but it looks as though the Columbia Broadeasting Sys- tem will carry the series. Mt goes without saying that they'll receive a warm welcome, Whale Meat Tastes Like Tender Beef Large Supply Available May - Solve Meat Shortages ~ Tukalook, the Eskimo, licking his eclieps over a while steak, is muttering something about he who laughs last langhs best. The palefaccdl Kabloona, whe has sneered at his northern cons: in's cating habits, appears on the point of becoming a convert to whale meat, It all started in Washington, where Te office of tite coordin. ator of fiche ins of the depiutment of the intevior revealed it lid 32 choice vecipes for transferring wintle to the family dinner table, The Canadian fisheries depari- ment recalled that Canadians ate whale meat in th First Groat War, Rich in Vitamins Tukalook wud his vace are a live ing advertisement of the virtues of whale, seal, walrus and Kindred = meat, They eat no - green food from one generation to another and ORIENTAL NATION I -- HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 22 Noise, 26 Lair, 28 That thing. 29 Half an ems 30 Aviator,. + 18 Becomes gul. charitiés."? 23 International 24 Cereal grain, 55 Active. 58 Three threes, line, the depicted 59 Selected _-- nation, (abbr). 5 Junior high 50 One, 60 ; js Pon -- (abbr.). 51 Well. ingdom, ui 53 Its chief 65 Let it stand. 0 Fruit, export. 66 Its capital 7 Barbed 56 Soak flax. Lis ---- weapon. 571s (Latin). 67 Minute 8 Girl's 60 Exclamation particle. nickname, of joy. 31 Distant, 32 Measure of area, 342000 pounds, 37 Reclining, 39 Raced. +42 Editor (abbr.)s 44 Receptacle, 46 Bone (comh form). 48 Camera's eye China's life- 49 Coins of Lady Montgomery says when the general comes home army dis- cipline prevails. "Bernard takes command of everything from the minute he steps ingic the door. Even the kitchen is inspected. Once he turn- ed the house upside down and insisted on the whole place being cleaned." : - ~ Lady Montgomery says the gen- eral may appear difficult to those who don't know "him, but to her, "he's just-amusing." British Church Bells Ring ( Cut Heard For First Time at Easter Since Fall of France No longer muted for fear of German invasion, the church bells of Dritain rang out! the Easter message through city streets and across the cool sun-gilded meadows 'on Easter Sunday. Not since the fall of France, ex: cept to celebrate the 8th Army's . desert victory last November and at last Christmas, had the bells of cathedrals, churches and chap- els in the thousands of parishes been authorized to perform their venerable function, In the peril ots days of 1940 and 1941 their - ringing had been reserved to warn of jnvaslon, In ta ringers' room of Saint Paul's Cathedral 13 ringers gath- ered early for the religious thrill they had not expected to experi ence again until the end of the war, At ihtervals they formed a + strenuous circle fii the huge bel © fry room, each standing upon a heavy wooden platform and thrust. ing his feet into stout leather loops so they would not be jerked into the air by the bell ropes. «The chief difficulty of many churches was to find good ring- ers, Almost every church of any size lost one or more ringers dur- ing the bombings of Britain. In rural areas many expert musiclans lent their ald, thus helping per- petuate the tradition that some of Britain's best bellringing is to _be found in the provinces. ~ A Cotton Wool "Sandwich" Meal A dressmaker who was found to have swallowed 23 pins, was given a series of cotton wool sand- wiches, which enveloped the pins. *8he recovered "without ahy pain or one drop of blood being shed," pays Dr. Richard Fawcitt, in de- soribing the case In the British Medical Journal. Ere often | boa ful; arroga 5 brutal and sometimes false. This verse stresses the drunken man's loss of fitness and complete in- capacity to take care of "himself, He cannot estimate dangers. The very instinct of self-preservation has forsaken him. The Tyranny of Desire "They-have stricken me, shalt 'thou say, and 1 was not hurt; they have beaten me, and I have felt it not: when shall T awake? I will seek it yet again." The tyranny of a desire which awakes into full capacity before the rest of the man does, and the inevit- able "will which in spite of all bruises and discomforts yields at _onge to the overmastering desire, make the tragedy of a drunk- ard's life. There comes a point in indulgence when the craving seems to escape from the control of the will altogether. Two. Kinds of Servants "Who then is the faithful and wise servant, whom his lord hath sect over his hougehold, to give them their food in duc season? Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he cometh shall find so doing. Verily I say unto you, that he will set him over all that he hath. But if that evil servant shall say in his heart, My lord tarrieth; and shall begin to beat his fellow-servants, and shall eat and drink with the drunken; the lord of that seivant shall como in a day -when he expecteth not, and in an hour when-he know- eth not, and shall cut him asun- der, and appoint his portion with the hypocrites: there shall be tho weeping and the gnashing of teeth." . it "The 'word household suggests the picture of a great house, and one Lord; and of all those in the house under His control, as' think- ing of His interests, while serv- irg under His command. He used the word that indicated the love principle - in service, the tender healing ministry that only grows out of love, Now, in the parable we see' two attitudes. First that of the faithful and wise servant, His attitude is simply that of bring- ing forth meats in due eecason, and feeding the rest; the attitude of caring for all the other mem- bers of the household during the lord's absencé, for the sake. of the absent lord. But there: is another. servant here, and Jesus 'speaks of him as "that evil serv- ant." He says, "My lord tar- reith," He is not returning yet; and with that sense of the Mas. ter's absence, he turns to evil courses within the houschold, beating his fellow eervants in- stead of feeding and caring for litical leaders of the United Nations believe it can, and so them; turning aside to the com- panionship of drunken men, in- stead of standing in the place of loyally to the absent lord, In the parable we "have two "results, When the lord returns, the serv- ant who has been loyal to the service of his fellow servants, for the sake of his absent lord, is promoted and put into the place of a new authority; while the evil servant is cut asunder and cast out. " NEW BISHOP ERE fi whe" 3 i: The Very Rev. John "Lion, M.A, D.D., who was conscerated | as Anglican Bishop of Montreal last week. which--shr--is Tow onrared by tuning in the program "Soldier's Wife." It's heard over the nation- al network of CBC and also CFRB, Toronto, Monday through Fridays 11.30 a mn. along the theme of interest and activity is program in patriotic spinach is as remote as Zanzin Bat they prosper with prosp at its zenith when a whale js tak © en or drifts ashore. Eskimo teeth, cuduvimee and good noture are something to marvel! at. The scirn- tists say the whales pack rich stores of vitmmin, As an hwdication of the ahnost Ymitless supply of whales meat I am afraid we'll have to let Boob Smith out of the loan. It looks. like it. At any rate that's tho way he looks at it himself, You know Boob, and you kuow he's all right; wouldn't hurt a fly; in fact-he never has, But, yon sce, this loan stuff is out of the. question for him becausn he's down already---he's explained jt to me himself--to rock hottom. Take the question of e¢igars, Boob smokes three cigars a day; always has; bit then those three cigars are "his ono luxury," that's the way he put it himgelf--his one luxury. He smokes good cigars because a poor cigar, says. Boob, is poor economy; weakens the system and weakens the taste for the next one. If a man smoked cheap cigars, he'd soon quit smok- _ ing. As a matter of fact you can't tell what you're getting till yon pay fifteen. cents for a_clgar, and it you want really to know, yon have to pay twenly cents, or for dead certainty, twenty-five. But anyway where it is a matter of a "working, there's no gense in cut- ting it out. ] ; Boob goes to_moving piclures three times a week. But that again is "his one diversion," He has no man's one luxury, that Keeps him. THE CASE OF BOOB SMITH (A Leaflet on The Loan, by Stephen Leacecl) other. He doesn't co fone {ines because $f he did he thinks -he'd get sick of them. But three times a week to a good movie and a fel ler needs no other diversion till the next time. So we can't touch that. It's like thet all the way round. Take the question of Booh's spring suit. He talked to me ahout that. Every year about this time Boch gets a spring suit a =ood one, something pretty elagsy. When he gets a suit he wants it to look prefty slick because that is he admits it--his one extravagance. Mo gets no other suit till the fall This year he may either get a light pepper amd salt tweed and wear it with a geraninm or a soft hlue serge to wear with a white daisy. He doesn't know; it keeps a feller thinking. And in any case his friends have grown {to expect it of him--so there you are. Mind you, as 1 say, Boob Smith has cat everything else to vock bottom, He's cut off his subserip- tion to. the Boy Scouts and the Children's Mospital, and the Deaf and Dumb, and he's not. sending his nicce to school any more. In fact he's madé "all the sacrifices he can. 2 _ We'll have you'll sce hin spring sult. 't_Booh out. But he parle in his VERTICAL - 9Oath. 61 Note of scale. et : 10 On the chore. 62 Near. ird's horvie. : 1a ON i 1B ve me 11 Genus of trees 63 Negative. 3 2 To. 12 For fear that. 64 Doctor of 3 Low, 14 Equipment. Medicine fll 54 Compass point 4 It threatens © 19 Force. (abbr). WL t § 3 5 7 |8 g Jo [2 Priz 14 15 16 «hb -. 4 18 19 ed ; 22 _ Za J SN 26 27 128 29 5 -. 3 33 34 35 $ 37 BESTE 39 \ a2 a3 a4 3 WL Wa vy L ; 57 }o- L2 63 [64 X [S18 I 16 wanted, otbclabs said (Ly 5 3 . ® o that 63 whales wore taken by tie A Howler wihitlers ast . el 5 Sais ae cldmed to be an aathen- In 1911, 328 were tiloon. tic "achueiboy howler" from Chie- van to de dens TL egeg sie Walter Raleigh, walk Lam] most of this we ht ing ene day. through tie streets . Vin yield of Coventry, wis surprised to geo £2 2h hu palluns of oil. 130 tous of anid PoLady viding ena horse. , i 5 of He tanto see both the horse and PR the ody, and <wddenly vecozniz- NZ = ed the dtter, HC owas none other k Ed partment official who repects tian CF than Queen Elizheth, © Quickly E neat Clastes move ble bef throwin hic richly embaoidered 23 3 altho shicitly celoak wound her, he id, oni x moe coarse imo texte. 1s very soit at mad oy pence', ow *h means, nT : You peed this Queenie, a lot more in Ed Satna tran § do Blew 0 mon droit, yi The name of Ale ha was decid mcg ed the eer Towan ¥ from an Aleut word moaning preat hee vay of coving "My Gad, you're R or ' right'!" 37 a ih - oRrQ TT Fn LIFE'S LIKE THAT f bi i . i Pel. O 4% A oy : $3 FED NeW 1-7 "His father's a movie ushef" , } A! > ra x WW! COOKS IN POP--That's All They Spoil FAR TOO MANY 0 By J. MILLAR WATT YES, GIR - BUT |T DOESNT MATTER = WE AREN'T HAVING ee, 7 BAS = : 3 SY ; pix