Zurich Herald, 1943-07-08, Page 7S UNDAY
S CHOOL
L ESSON
July 18
GO ENCOURAGES MOSES—,
i;xodue 3 13.4 t 3t
PRINTED TEXT, Exodus 3 : 13.16;
4 , 10.17.
GOLDEN TEXT.—Certainly I will
be With' thee, Exodus 3 12.
Memory Verse: The Lord is my
liel'per. Hebrews 13 : 6,
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Tlim--1446.1445 B,C.
Place—The call to Moses occur.
red ziear Mouzit Sinai (or Mount
Horeb).
Go'd Prepares Moses
"Anel Moses said unto God, Be-
, hold, when I come unto the ehil-
then of Israel, and shall say unto
there, The God of your fathers
hath Cent zee unto you; anti they
shall say to me. What is his name?
what shall I say unto them? 14.
"Aazcl• God said moreover unto
T1.1AT I AM: 1111,11 he said, Thus
shalt thou say mato the children
of Ione], I AM hath sent Me unto
you." When Moses asks God for a
speola1 • revelation of His' name,
that he might assure the Israel-
itee he had come to them under
a divine commission, God told bite
that His name was I AM THAT I
AM. He could now say, He In
whose name I come is about to
realize the promise of the lance of
` 'Catalan the seed of Abraham.
God's Name Forever
"And God said moreover unto
Moeefr, Thus shalt thou say unto
the. •ctziidren of Israel, Jehovah,
the 1 odi of your fathers, the God
of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and
the trod of Jacob, hath sent me
unto you: this is my came for
.ever, and this Is my memorial un-
to all generations." This state•
meet contains a very important
•truth—a truth which many profes-
sing Christians seem to 'forget,
namely, that God's relationship
with Israel is an eternal one. He
does not say,. 'This Is my name
for a time, so long as they con -
',throe what they ought to be.' No;
'this Is my name forever, and this
is my memorial unto all gener-
ations.'
"Go, and gather the elders of
Israel together, and say unto thein,
lelzowels, the God of your fathers,
the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and
of Jacob. hath appeared unto me,
sayln.g, I have surely visited you,
and seen that which is done to
you in Egypt." Here is a definite
promise on the part of God that
He will surely deliver His people
out of the affliction of Egypt, and
w131 bring them 'into a, land flow-
ing with milk • and honey.'
God's Answer
"And Moses said unto Jehovah,
012, Lord, I ant not eloquent, neith-
er heretofore, nor since thou bast
spoken unto thy servant; for I
ant view of speech, and of a slow
tongue. And Jehovah said unto
him, who hath made nnatt's mouth?
or who maketh a man dumb, or
deaf', or seeing, or blind? is it not
I, Jehovah? Now therefore go, and
I w11i be with thy mouth, and
teach thee what thou shalt speak,"
The work bad nothing whatever
to ric with the eloquence or in-
eloquence of Moses. It was not to
he measured or determined by his
eerecnal gifts. The moment, there.
fore, that he turned to his individ-
ual talents, he lost ,sight of the
great end which he was called in-
strumentally to accomplish.
"And he saki, Oh, Lord, send, I
pray' thee, by the hand of hint
•wltniors thou wilt send." This is a
curt impatient, and scarcely rever-
ent speech. Moses means that he
win undertake the task if God in-
sists; but that God would do far
better to send another.
Moses' Commission
"And the anger of Jehovah was
kindled against Moses, and be
said, Is there not Aaron thy broth-
er tbe Levite? I know that he can
speak well. And also, behold, he
camel]) forth to meet thee: and
when he seeth thee, he wiil be
.glart in his heart: And thou shalt
speak unto him, and put the words
in hien mouth; and 1 will be with
thy mouth, and with his month,
and will teach you what ye shall
do. And he shall be thy spokesman
• unto the people; and it shall conte
to pass, that he shall be lo thee
a n; oath, and thou shalt be to hint
us God, And thou shalt take thy
Wand this trod, wherewith thou sbaIt
do the signs." The word here trans -
level anger is the Scripture phrase
app"ol•'riate for description of
Geri`* feeling toward idolatry
(Ezod. 25). Perhaps Moses here
'betrays an inward fear of Egypt's
1tos,theni.sm, as well as lack of
:heels ardor of readiness for battle
w it.b it. Aaron is here mentioned
for the first time, Three years
olden than Moses (level, 7 :
Ize rcen;'s to have been all this
time in. good standing in Egypt.
In -taron we never see, real great -
nese; in Moses when once he is
under way, we :u(;ver see littio-
0085."
Welt indeed 11 it when the soul
cries with elle great apostle; 'We
are not, sufficient of ourselves to
think anything as of ourselves.'
But we most beware, for there is
a hidden line over wh.ieh stele -die,
tried' may not pass, lest It become
unbelief. Cherish the lowliest
thought you ;✓hoose et yourself,
but unite it with th'e loftiest con-
.ceptioti of God'. all -sufficiency.
SOUP HOUND
Assigned to the galley of a
U- S. minesweeper at San Diego,
nine -weeks -old' Scuttlebutt is both
mascot .and ship's cook 2nd class
for his shipmates.
Self -depreciation znay lead to the
marring of a useful life. We must
think soberly of ourselves, not too
lowly, 'as not too extravagantly.
The one talent must not be -buried
in the earth.
It would seen: as though in every
step of the way at this time in
Moses' Iife, he needed reassurance
from God that he cannot turn back
and fail to achieve the great task
which God now was ready to have
accomplished. So the Lord spoke
to him once again, telling him not
to hesitate to go back to Egypt,
for all tire men were dead who had
sought his life. Moses, when he
went down to Egypt, should do all
those things which the Lord had
told hint to do and not just simple
to arrive there as the place to
which God had sent him, but also
to do that for which he was sent.
Device Cuts Down
Static On Radio
The static which comes in •on
a radio set is picked up and set
t.. work eliminating its own noise
in a new control announced by
the Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company.
The static is reduced from
ttnonsands '6f volts to about one -
twenty thousandths of a volt,
and the result is like a muffler
on an auto, reducing static noise
tr a purr which docs not drown
out the radio.
Gilbert Andersen, the inventor,
said the crashing, static noise
made by nearby lightning is re-
duced to about the loudness of
the rustle of a sheet of paper.
The static eliminator will not
be made for the public until after
the war. It is a small device, of
electronic tubes, made to plug
into any radio set, Ortinary radio
signals, which carry broadcast
voices, conte in with an average
strength of about one -twenty -
thousandth of a volt. Occasionally
these radio signals are down to a
millionth of a volt.
The new tubes pick up moat,
but not all, of the static voltage.
That pick-up eliminates part of
the noise.
This Air Age
In describing what transport
airplanes were doing these days
the Office of War Information
mentioned the following facts:
Beetles from the Fiji Islands
were flown to Honduras to eat
weevils which were damaging
hemp root.
A complete hospital was flown
to Alaska in 36 hours after the
Japanese bombing of Dutch Har-'
bor.
Planes returning to the United
States from afar have not frown
empty, but have brought rubber
from Brazil, platinum from the
Persian Gulf, mica from India
and Diamonds from South Africa.
An army pilot complained that
he had left his laundry in India
and wouldn't be able to get it
fora week.
OTTAWA .: REPORTS
That the Farm Industry Is Af-
fected
ffected 'by .Price Contra, On
A Great Many 'tenni
The following is a suuunnary et
the general positron as of June 15.
Although price control . was oirlg-
Malty instituted with ceiling reps
Jetfoils not applied to sales of
farm products to dealers or pro-
cessing plants, certain exoeptiozs
were subsequently made in the
interests of all oonoerned; These
exceptions include wool, farm but
ter, milk, certain, grains and field •
crops, and maple products.
Ceiling price regulations, how-
ever, do apply in the ease of farm-
er's selling products direct to con-
sumers, through market stalls or
otherwise, when farmers become •
retailers to all iettenti and •, per
poses and may not sell direct
consumers at prices higher than:
the highest lawful retell prices tor
the particular products prevailing,
in their own communities or . die -
tris at the time.
Minimum or "•)icor" prices are
in effect in the case'of some pro-
ducts,
Grains
Prices of cereal. and food grains
and certain field crops are, fixed,
from time to time for both ceiling
aad floor purposes. For the . most
part these. are dealt with by the
Canadian Wheat Board.
Livestock
There are no ceiling prices on
the sales by farmers of live cattle,;
calves, hogs, sheep or lambs. Da-,
Mite ceiling prices have been es -r,
tablished on the 'sale of meats of
such animals at the wholesale and',•
retail level.
Floor Prices on Beef
An arrangement was announced',
for the establishment of Mott
prices on dressed beef whiche will,
have the effect of esta,blishfne
floors on beef cattle prices.
' Wool
When the Wool Board was_
formed in 1942 to take control of
all wool in Canada, the prices to
paid to growers were fixed by
an prefer of the Wartime Priem
and Tracie Board,
Eggs
There is no ceiling price on
sales of eggs froze producers to
dealers, but there are definite
ceiling },)rices on ;both wholesale
and retail sales.
Butter
Ceiling prices are established
on the sale of creamery butter by
creameries, and by wholesale and
retail dealers. Minimum prices are
'also established ort creamery but»
ter by the pairy Products Board
of the Department of Agriculture.
Farm Butter
A special schedule of. prices Is
set up tor the sale of farm butter,
and these prices are fixed for the
sale of this butter by farmers to
storekeepers, to wholesale deal-
ers, • and to consumers direct.
Milk
The sale of :fluid milk from both
the producer and the distributor
is governed in most eases by pro-
vincial milk boards, who set the
price at which producers sell to
dealers or to plants, anfl also the
prices at which the milk is to be
sold at retail to consumers. Such
prices must be confirmed by the
Wartime Prices and Trade Board
and then become the legal prices
for the area concerned. A general
order from the Wartime Prices
Board, :governs the general retail
price of milk throughout Canada,
according to • zones.
Fruits and Vegetables
There is no ceiling price on the
sales of fresh fruits and vege.
tables produced in Canada., except
potatoes and onions. Ceiling price
regulations are iu effect for the
sale of processed fruits and vege-
tables.
Maple Products and Honey
Definite ceiling prices were es-
tablished this spring for the sale
of maple products and honey by
the primary producer as well as
at wholesale and retail levels.
Feeds and Fertilizers
All sales of feeds by dealers to
farmers are controlled by definite
HAIM REPORTER REX FROST
Slime the commencemeut of the
present war we have read and
heard of many new inventions
calculated to help civilian popu-
lations in times of war stress, as
well as to -assist the various
branches of the active forces. I!
•duriug the summer months you'll
tune in CFB13 every Tuesday eve.
niug between 9 and 9.30, you'll
have the opportunity of meeting a
radio personality who• is fatno,,,:,
for his inventions . . perhaps•
they are not exactly the kind -of
inventions likely to help the . war
effort in a mechanical sense, bet ,
they wilt help in a morale build-
ing sense. The inventor • referred
to is none other than the famous
Colonel Lemuel K. Stoopnagle,
whose crazy iuve•utions and labour-
saving devices have always Prey-
ed
rowed real laugh raisers. Laughs are
what we need these days to chase
away wartime problems, and the
Colonel promises plenty of laughs;
sparkling music and scintillating
dialogue in his Tuesday evening
series of broadcasts. entitled stint).
ly, "Tine Colonel."
* * *
If you are searching the dial _at
7 o'clock on Sunday evening for .a
r e a 11 y, interesting programme,
make a point of tuning in CFO
anti picking • ep the new series. of
dramatic episodes entitled "Chips
Davis -- Commando". Here's`
thrilliug •series of adventures and
action in a truly modern setting.
* N' *
'And remain tuned to CFRB from
7.30 to 8 on Sunday evenings,
* 8 *
During July and August this half
hour period will renew the Church
of the Air broadcasts, which have
been closely followed in the past
by many Ontario listeners.
a * it
There's another interesting itenti
in C1;'RB's Sunday evening salted
ule, between 10 and 10.30, p.m., a
rebroadcast of the very popular
Columbia Broadcasting System
series of programmes entitled
"Traus-Atlantic Call." The settings -
of these broadcasts alternate be-
tween the British Isles and Am-
erica. One Sunday British people
will bring to the microphone de
scriptlons of well known cities
and 'towns, customs awl stories
of •the locality. The following Sun-
day the scene will switch to Am-
erica, and American people and
places of interest will take the
spotlight.
*
If when chores of the day are
done, you like to sit back and re-
lax and listen to a dramatic pro-
gramme, you'll be interested in
a new series of programmes which
will eduunence over CHUB on -Fri-
day, July 16th, 10 to 10.45 p.m.
entitled "The American Comedy
Theatre." Each week will bring
a new 45 minute radio play lea.
turing well Inown stars of radio
and stage.
a * w
A new series of broadcasts,
"Tlte Production Front" is getting
under way over the CB0 network
on Wednesday evenings at 8.30,
which will be of particular interest
to Canadians. A Roving Reporter
by the name of Allan May is going
to tour the country from coast
to coast in search of authentic
information regarding Canada's
war effort in all its various
branches. The viewpoints of em-
ployers and employees, their ideas,
problems a n d accomplishments
will all be discussed in unbiased
Manner with the idea of facilitat-
ing"
acilitating the 'war effort as a whole and
giving the public an insight into
the manner in which Canada is
meeting the challenge to her in-
dustrial output. Allan May has
spent many years in the role of
reporter, both here in Canada and
in China and Spain — his uew
Canadian series of commentaries
promises to be interesting and en-
lightening.
a * *
Lovers of good music will wel-
come the new summertime series
of broadcasts "Concert du Cha-
let" to bo hoard over tate CBC
network on Thursday evenings be-
tween 10.15 and 11 o'clock. The
two opening programmes, • July
8th and 15th, will be under the
!baton of Emile Cooper, Russian
opera conductor of international
repute who sinoo he left Moscow
several years ago, has been de-
lighting North American ands
fences with exceptionally tine
musical programmes.
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NEXT: Three ways to the far north,
ceiling price regulations and Lite
same applies to fertilizers.
Farm Machinery
All sales of farm machinery are
controlled by price ceiling regula.
tions. Rationing of . farm machin.
ery was introduced last year and
the provisions recently modified.
Fuetwood
There is no ceiling price on the
sale of fuelwood by farmers ex-
cept when sold direct to consumer
in which case definite ceiling pric-
es have been established 111 the
various fuelwood areas of Can,
ada.
Livestock Slaughtering
Fanners who are slaughtering
for the meat trade are required
to have a livestock slaughtering
permit from Wartime Prices and
Trade Board, Farmers slaughter-
Ing for their own use do not re-
quire permits,
Rental Regulations
Farm buildings or residences
rented entirely for farming aro
not subject to rental regulations,.
1
AB
HORIZONTAL
I Gone by.
4 Pictured bird.
10 Object.
13 Crushed rack,
15 Instruct.
16 These birds
lay Leg
w 17 L-�,
joints.
19 Avenue
(abbr.).
20 Small birds%
21 Devoured:
23 Joke.
-25 Level.
26 Sznell,
29 Three
(prefix).
31 Thug.
33 Before.
35 Aid.
37 South
America
(abbr.).
38 Source of llgkit
39 Egg=shaped:
40 Universal
language.
42 Belonging
to it,
43 Genus of
banana plants.
LARGEST BIRD
Answer to Previous Puzzle
RIA
SUMATMAP OF
RA
R
45 Citrus fruit,
46 Tantalum
(symbol).
48 Flaxen•cloth.
49 Chatter.
51 Proclaim
loudly.
54 Insects.
55 Lord's estate.
5? Indigo plant.
58 .Affirmative
reply.
59 Communica.
tion..
60 Beret
VERTICAL
14 Transaction,,
16 Therefore,
18 Remain,
20 Mass.
22 Annual.
23 Proceed.
24.Characteristt¢
spirit.
25 Fine thread8,
27 Offering
resistance.
28 Rigid.
30 Reverend
(abbr,).
32 Roam.
34 Furrow,
36 Its feathers
1 Request. are •----•.
of 41 Musical
2 Grou
p instruments,
laborers. 44 Male child.
3 Unit, 45 Row.
5 Strt (abbr.). :4:8 Melody.
6 Beverage. Put do
7 Ragineeg. Gasolinewn.
8 Frozen water. (abbr.),
9 China (abbr.), 50 Snake.
10. Era. 52 Music note.
11 Fire (comb. 53 Tree.
form). 55 Myself,
12 Manuscripts 56 Right guard
(abbr.). (abbr.).
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POP---Wornain's Prerogative
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By J. MILLAR WATT
(tirionecdfir the coli 9ynditnta, las.