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Zurich Herald, 1940-11-14, Page 6LESSON VII JESUS' CONCERN FOR LIFE AND HEALTH..—Luke 7. PRINTED TEXT, Luke 7: 2-15. GOLDEN TEXT,—I came that they may have life, and may have It abundantly. John 10: 10. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.—Summer of A,D, 28. Place.—The healing of the cen- turion's servant took place in Cap- ernaum; the widow's son was rais- ed at Nein; Jahn was in prison near the shores of the Dead Sea, though Christ's discourse about John the Baptist, and the events which immediatelyfollowed, ere to be located somewhere in Galilee. In this lesson we should discover one of the great fundamental char- acteristics of the entire ministry of the Lord Jesus on earth—living for others. Here we have the Lord bringing blessing to the home of a centurion, to a humble servant, to a widow who had lost her son, exercising tenderness toward the one who had baptized Christ and first proclaimed him the Savior, having infinite compassion on an unchaste woman who was despis- ed by all those of the community, and then showing infinite patience with his own slow -to -understand disciples. Two Revelations Luke 7: 2. And a certain centur• ion's servant, who was. dear unto him, was sick and at the point of death. 3. And when he heard concerning Jesus, he sent unto him elders of the Jaws, asking him that he would come and save his servant. 4. And they, when they came to Jesus, besought him earnestly, say- ing, He is worthy that thou should - est do this for him; 5. For he loveth our nation, and himself built us our synagogue, In Matthew's account we are told that the particular disease with which this servant was griev- ously suffering was palsy, which may be perhaps likened to what we call inflammatory rheumatism. The Worthy Centurion 6. And Jesus went with them. And when he was now not far from the house, the centurion sent friends to him, saying unto him, Lord, trouble not thyself; for I am not worthy that thou shouldest came under any roof: 7. Wherefore neither thought I myself worthy to came unto thee: but say the word, and my servant shall be healed. 3. For I also am a man set under authority, having under myself sol- diers: and I say to this one, Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and he cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he doeth it, "Just as I am," said the centur- ion, "under authority and in auth- ority, so art thou under authority and in authority. I am not suffic- ient," he said, "to entertain thee" and yet he knew that Jesus was a Galilean, a peasant. What a vision the centurion had of the glories of Christi He recognized that with the authority of God, Jesus was completely in authority over all the things of life. Such Great Faith 9. And when: Jesus heard these things, he marvelled at, him, and turned and said unto the multitude. that followed, him, I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel. 10. And they that were sent, re- turning to the house, found the servant whole. The faith of this man delighted the heart of the Son of man with a rare joye He pointed it out to the crowd. He dwelt upon it. He compared it ;with such faith as he had already met with, and he gave it the palm. Then without a ward more about the disease of the boy, without a; step nearer the house, the cure was done. Almost all who. came to Jesus for cures thought it into needful to bring the sufferer his presence, or to have Christ came and stand over the bed and touch and speak and heal. This man's., faith. rose at one bound • rectiicti ons. these a11 ',above Raised From the Dead 11. And it came to Dass soon afterwards, that he went to a city oalied Nein; and his disciples went With him, and a great inultitude. In this first year of his ministry, , before the „deadly opposition to him . had gathered heard, while at yet the Pharisees and leaders lia.d not . • opine to an open rupture with him, • and he had not sifted his follow- ers by 'hard 'sayings," • our Lord wa;S usually accompanied by ador- .iig crowds, 12, Now when he drew neer' to the gate of the city, be- hold, there was carried out one that was dead, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow: and kiuch people of the city was With her, 13. And when the Lord saw her, he bad coiripassion on ber,end said unto her, Weep not. Christ's Compassion. There are two features of the eampa.ssiorr of ()heist that stand out •very eleitrly in this story.. First it was in individual compass ori. It, singled out the, woman from the "throri'g; It • d a'it with her et '.an,.' individual liklisbnality. The other, '£eetu're tr. ohik`Lord'* c,o^rpascion is —_—� .,.-, - . •• ••.._ - -- ...,.._,._ ..W.-. Two of Them Survived 70 -Day Atlantic Ordeal I�? Emaciated and 20 pounds lighter, George Tapscott, British seaman from the freighter Anglo Saxon, is shown going ashore at Nassau after spending 70 days bobbing about the south Atlantic in an cpen boat with his companion, Wilbert Widdicombe. The Anglo Saxon .was sunk by a German raider off the Azores. Widdicombe and Tapscott endured the torment of heat and thirst for more than two months before they were rescued. They are now in a Nassau hospital. this: immediately it went forth in action, 14. And he name nigh and touched the bier: and the bearers stood still. And he said, Yung man, I say unto thee, Arise. Three times our Lord raised people from the dead, and every time he did it in exactly the same way, talking to the dead as if they could hear him. 15. And he that was dead sat up, and begun to speak. And he gave him to his mother. Whenever our Lord performed a miracle, or in any particular way manifested his compession for those in sorrow and need and his power over disease and death and demon, the common people at once glorified God for what they had. seen and heard. "Through playing parts in great plays, you get to know what life is," ----Maude Adams. "It is essential to preserve civil liberties as it is to track down those who engage in es- pionage and sabotage." —J. Edgar Hoover. 11 RADIO ORTER By DAVEREPBOBBINS III (All Canadian radio stations operate on daylight time) PATRIOTIC MUSIC Patriotic programs are the vogue these days, and one of the best on the air is .being presented from CKOC each Sunday evening at 6.15, when the British Band concert is presented. The massed bands of His Majesty's Guards are heard in stirring British army marches in this feature — while Peter Dawson, Australian baritone, is also heard in well-known march- • ing songs. Colonel Bogey, There'll Always Be Au England, The Bri- tish Grenadiers . andother tunes heard in the streets of the British Empire these days• are featured in this program by the best bands of the Empire played in, a way that will stir the hearts of. all British- ers.- Tune in on this unusual half-hour program next Sunday evening at' 6.15 from ' CI%OC — you will be proud of its • CANADIAN RADIO DRAMA The development of Canadian'• radio has been a boon to the lit erati of Canada. ' ' • This is particularly evident in the field of the drama,' both for play- wrights and actors. Tintil the last two or three years, there was little chance for the development. of this country's budding . dramas ists, . wltb were confined to two mediums — the professional theatre of Lon- don and New York, highly com petitive and hard to 'crash, • and the Little Theatre, more, of less limited in score. With radio in Canada on a; net Tonal basis,, howepe>.t, there are huge audiences for all types of drgana • : as well as a means of reaching them CBCs Diaqii;a.:debai•titeent has presentel , hundreds Of plays, the majority of which have been writ, ten and ;performed by Caua dians " for Canadian censum!ptron. Corm menting• on. the radio sketch .as a Canadian art form, Saturday Night, of Toronto, says of the plays al- ready produced: "A few of these have been brilliantly good; more will be brilliantly good in the fu- ture, as Canadian writers learn the trick of a new and very special trade; the majority have been sat- isfactory and workable entertain- ment, thanks in part to the skill 'of the CBC producers in impart Mg the required technical finish.” A nice pat'on the back for CBC's Canadian Theatre of the Air — heard over the Canadian chain on Friday nights at 10.30 (daylight' time.) AROUND THE DIAL • For restful . dance music . you can't , do better than dial iu Abe Lyman's waltz -time program, on 'the NBC -red nerork Friday.nights , at' nine (standard). Lyman's band has a distinctive • style — and on this show the or- chestra uses Frank Munn, the cap- able tenor as soloist - as well as .,a choral groilp. ° * The Cat's 'n' Jammers — a smart show on the Mutual chain can now be .heard on Tuesday nights at 9.15 (Daylight Time) from CILW. This is a sure fire program for the swing kids. *, s * . . "Scoops" Daly reports in the Radio Daily that there will be a big shakeup 'in the Mir:sic Tull chow„when Bing Crosby returns on • "ll ov'eiii.3ier 14. For one thing Connie 'Boswell has, been signed as co ., singing,star with Biug Hawhich. ' certainly giv8; this ,pregriiul • an e�ttra lift! , Alid it you've missed then late - you're :oVerlooking ate-you're:overlookip,g the best pair f comics, on the Sin; — Amos and Andy - who ,d9 thea nightly stint at eight (daylight ttnie) each even- ' .,ins frObe CFRB. . Fern Notes Store. Vegetables. On Floor Of Sand Heavy metal or atone containers help keep roots fresh, states George Rush, Ont. Vegetable Specialist Vegetables for winter use are best stored on a sand floor at a temperature above freezing', ad- vises George Rush, Vegetable specialist of the Ont. Dept, of Agriculture, Toronto. However, this is difficult where furnaces are used as the temper- ature is much higher and the air dry. If a portion of the basement could be shut off, roots could then be kept in good condition. Heavy metal or stone co'+t'i„- ers are excellent for keeping roots fresh, states Mr. Rush, and these containers have given ex- cellent results where used. Roots may be placed in a heap in the garden and covered with two inches of earth. They may be kept this way until the tempera- ture reaches 20 degrees of frost before being removed to the cel- lar for winter. Mr. Rush says the home garden should be cleaned up immediately and all rubbish and - diseased plants destroyed by burning, as only fire really destroys these diseases. Digging refuse in will bring trouble next season as disease will carry over in the soil, he warns. Example Still Best Teacher Wise Parent Acts as Model For Child's Good Manners Exampe is still the world's greatest teacher writes Alice Den- hoff, psychologist. That is a truism that the wise parent re- cognizes when it comes to child training. Every mother wants her child to be polite, but unfor- tunately not every mother prac- tises what she preaches to her child. The best way to inculate true politeness, the kind that comes from the heart, is to dis- play it on all occasions. Then it will become second nature to the observing child. LESe FREE EXPRESSION There seems to be a swing away from the idea of allowing a young child all the freedom in the world and permitting it to ex- press itself in all matters in its own way. After all, what's the use of allowing a child to do something that he or she won't be permitted to, once childhood days are over? It's a pretty sad awakening to find that one has to conform after all, and that be- cause one's parents permitted all the self-expression in the world, no one cares a hoot. The young- ster who learns by example, who is permitted self-expression only so far as it makes for .self-reli- ance, isn't going to have a rude awakening when he goes out into the world. CHILD AN EQUAL The wise mother treats her child as an equal. When it is fens-, ible to do so she consults • sister or junior and asks fpr and de- fers to 'their judgment should circumstances warrant it. A child likes to' know the why - fore and wherefore of things,., -and 'it's' a wise mother who re-' ' 'cognizes •'this. She knows that ' even • if 'explanations and tiiimes tedious or even 'difficult; - in the long run it will make things easier. Greece Tenth Land Invaded By Armies of Axis - Third Country into Which Italians • March Greece. • nation onto the tenth n xr uto lee"ce rs e tivliose 50&1 the axis armies have pushed mime ,the start ,of tire war, and the thLrd,'whose f outieee have be;eii 'crossed" by the. Fascist leg- ious 'from Rome, the Associated 1'r ess•;r'eiiorted last Week. Italy's first awned thrusts onto foreign soil were into France and the drive into Egypt from Libya in a campaign so far apPeeent1Y only begun. Germany started with the Blitz- krieg in Poland, Septenlbor 1, 1939, Next were Denmark, which sub- mitted, axles Norway, which resist- ed, April 9, 1940, ItT7i12tr?NIt1 NIN1'lit^ After that eanne the drive begun May .10 through Belgium, .The Netherlands and Luxembourg and the Conquest of Prance, in which Italy shared, The next w!aa Ruwiauia, a willing best, which .let in Nazi troops to guard hes oi;1 fields and officers to train her arney, 1 THIS CURIOUS WORLD �e u'so WHEN DROPPED UPSIDE.' (MOWN, A CAT CAN RIGHT ITSELF IN 1 FSC T1 -IAN A QCJARTE2 SECOND. IN FANO, AT THE BEGINNING OF THE. PRl1=NT CENTCIR Z, "-RAM- RODS” .RODS " WERE ERECTED TO DRAW OFF ELECTPJCITY FROM THE CLOUDS, AND PREVENT HA/4 FPOM pt 4q/NG. r .- rn. N �,� >� °° '� # ;s i•� L'`t.� 3x.5+ ya,.� ?s:£gat. �.. COPR.193e ItelgX BY NEA SERVICE, INC. fie VEDALIA LADY BEETLE 15 RESPONSIBLE FOR MUCH OF' THE SUCCP S OF CALIFORNIA'S C1TRL,15 INDUSTRY/ rr 1-t DS ON) ALL OF THE PFS7- //V -SEC... iS -HIGH speed motion picture cameras show that a cat can right itself in the air in less than'4wo feet of drop. First the front feet make the turn, and then the hind feet, with the tail acting as a balancing pole. NEXT: Has the south magnetic pole of the earth ever beast re - HORIZONTAL 1,7 Pictured actor. • 13 Network. 14 Conscious. 16 To drain. 17•Period. 18 Stop. watch. 19 Form of "be." 20 Measure. 21 To furnish anew with men. 22 Sofa. 24 Oleoresins obtained 45 from irises. 46 26 To originate. 49 SHADOW STAR Answer to Previous Puzzle Golf device. Toward sea. To seize. 28 Shoe string's 52 Optical glass 29 Edible 53 Hut, mollusk. 30 Ever. • 57 Female slave. 31 Frost 'bite, 58 He ' 33 Father. impersonates 35 To doze. a -- little 38 To subsist. tramp. 39 To obliterate. 59 Ile is 42 Supernatural considered a beings. piaster of 44 Wheel hubs. • VERTICAL 1 Credit. 2 Ivy. 3 Unaccented. 4 To soak flax, 5 Devoured. 6 Moves fish -fashion. 7 Notch. • 8 Pronoun. 9 Level land. . 10 Hobgoblins, 11'ro conceive. 12 Compass point. 15 Wine vessel, 20 He gained world-wide fame in — pictures. 21 Laughable. 22 Moistens. 23 Attack of nervousness. 25 Beasts' home. 27 Parent. 32 rootlike part. 34 Constellation, 36 Measure of area. 37 Powerful. 40 Reluctant. 41 •Southeast, 43 Dog chain. 46 High mountain, 47 The deep. 48 To perform, 49 Diamond. 50 Conjunction, 51 Turkish governor. 54 Sloth. 55 Before Christ. 56 North Carolina. (All Canadian radio stations operate on daylight time) PATRIOTIC MUSIC Patriotic programs are the vogue these days, and one of the best on the air is .being presented from CKOC each Sunday evening at 6.15, when the British Band concert is presented. The massed bands of His Majesty's Guards are heard in stirring British army marches in this feature — while Peter Dawson, Australian baritone, is also heard in well-known march- • ing songs. Colonel Bogey, There'll Always Be Au England, The Bri- tish Grenadiers . andother tunes heard in the streets of the British Empire these days• are featured in this program by the best bands of the Empire played in, a way that will stir the hearts of. all British- ers.- Tune in on this unusual half-hour program next Sunday evening at' 6.15 from ' CI%OC — you will be proud of its • CANADIAN RADIO DRAMA The development of Canadian'• radio has been a boon to the lit erati of Canada. ' ' • This is particularly evident in the field of the drama,' both for play- wrights and actors. Tintil the last two or three years, there was little chance for the development. of this country's budding . dramas ists, . wltb were confined to two mediums — the professional theatre of Lon- don and New York, highly com petitive and hard to 'crash, • and the Little Theatre, more, of less limited in score. With radio in Canada on a; net Tonal basis,, howepe>.t, there are huge audiences for all types of drgana • : as well as a means of reaching them CBCs Diaqii;a.:debai•titeent has presentel , hundreds Of plays, the majority of which have been writ, ten and ;performed by Caua dians " for Canadian censum!ptron. Corm menting• on. the radio sketch .as a Canadian art form, Saturday Night, of Toronto, says of the plays al- ready produced: "A few of these have been brilliantly good; more will be brilliantly good in the fu- ture, as Canadian writers learn the trick of a new and very special trade; the majority have been sat- isfactory and workable entertain- ment, thanks in part to the skill 'of the CBC producers in impart Mg the required technical finish.” A nice pat'on the back for CBC's Canadian Theatre of the Air — heard over the Canadian chain on Friday nights at 10.30 (daylight' time.) AROUND THE DIAL • For restful . dance music . you can't , do better than dial iu Abe Lyman's waltz -time program, on 'the NBC -red nerork Friday.nights , at' nine (standard). Lyman's band has a distinctive • style — and on this show the or- chestra uses Frank Munn, the cap- able tenor as soloist - as well as .,a choral groilp. ° * The Cat's 'n' Jammers — a smart show on the Mutual chain can now be .heard on Tuesday nights at 9.15 (Daylight Time) from CILW. This is a sure fire program for the swing kids. *, s * . . "Scoops" Daly reports in the Radio Daily that there will be a big shakeup 'in the Mir:sic Tull chow„when Bing Crosby returns on • "ll ov'eiii.3ier 14. For one thing Connie 'Boswell has, been signed as co ., singing,star with Biug Hawhich. ' certainly giv8; this ,pregriiul • an e�ttra lift! , Alid it you've missed then late - you're :oVerlooking ate-you're:overlookip,g the best pair f comics, on the Sin; — Amos and Andy - who ,d9 thea nightly stint at eight (daylight ttnie) each even- ' .,ins frObe CFRB. . Fern Notes Store. Vegetables. On Floor Of Sand Heavy metal or atone containers help keep roots fresh, states George Rush, Ont. Vegetable Specialist Vegetables for winter use are best stored on a sand floor at a temperature above freezing', ad- vises George Rush, Vegetable specialist of the Ont. Dept, of Agriculture, Toronto. However, this is difficult where furnaces are used as the temper- ature is much higher and the air dry. If a portion of the basement could be shut off, roots could then be kept in good condition. Heavy metal or stone co'+t'i„- ers are excellent for keeping roots fresh, states Mr. Rush, and these containers have given ex- cellent results where used. Roots may be placed in a heap in the garden and covered with two inches of earth. They may be kept this way until the tempera- ture reaches 20 degrees of frost before being removed to the cel- lar for winter. Mr. Rush says the home garden should be cleaned up immediately and all rubbish and - diseased plants destroyed by burning, as only fire really destroys these diseases. Digging refuse in will bring trouble next season as disease will carry over in the soil, he warns. Example Still Best Teacher Wise Parent Acts as Model For Child's Good Manners Exampe is still the world's greatest teacher writes Alice Den- hoff, psychologist. That is a truism that the wise parent re- cognizes when it comes to child training. Every mother wants her child to be polite, but unfor- tunately not every mother prac- tises what she preaches to her child. The best way to inculate true politeness, the kind that comes from the heart, is to dis- play it on all occasions. Then it will become second nature to the observing child. LESe FREE EXPRESSION There seems to be a swing away from the idea of allowing a young child all the freedom in the world and permitting it to ex- press itself in all matters in its own way. After all, what's the use of allowing a child to do something that he or she won't be permitted to, once childhood days are over? It's a pretty sad awakening to find that one has to conform after all, and that be- cause one's parents permitted all the self-expression in the world, no one cares a hoot. The young- ster who learns by example, who is permitted self-expression only so far as it makes for .self-reli- ance, isn't going to have a rude awakening when he goes out into the world. CHILD AN EQUAL The wise mother treats her child as an equal. When it is fens-, ible to do so she consults • sister or junior and asks fpr and de- fers to 'their judgment should circumstances warrant it. A child likes to' know the why - fore and wherefore of things,., -and 'it's' a wise mother who re-' ' 'cognizes •'this. She knows that ' even • if 'explanations and tiiimes tedious or even 'difficult; - in the long run it will make things easier. Greece Tenth Land Invaded By Armies of Axis - Third Country into Which Italians • March Greece. • nation onto the tenth n xr uto lee"ce rs e tivliose 50&1 the axis armies have pushed mime ,the start ,of tire war, and the thLrd,'whose f outieee have be;eii 'crossed" by the. Fascist leg- ious 'from Rome, the Associated 1'r ess•;r'eiiorted last Week. Italy's first awned thrusts onto foreign soil were into France and the drive into Egypt from Libya in a campaign so far apPeeent1Y only begun. Germany started with the Blitz- krieg in Poland, Septenlbor 1, 1939, Next were Denmark, which sub- mitted, axles Norway, which resist- ed, April 9, 1940, ItT7i12tr?NIt1 NIN1'lit^ After that eanne the drive begun May .10 through Belgium, .The Netherlands and Luxembourg and the Conquest of Prance, in which Italy shared, The next w!aa Ruwiauia, a willing best, which .let in Nazi troops to guard hes oi;1 fields and officers to train her arney, 1 THIS CURIOUS WORLD �e u'so WHEN DROPPED UPSIDE.' (MOWN, A CAT CAN RIGHT ITSELF IN 1 FSC T1 -IAN A QCJARTE2 SECOND. IN FANO, AT THE BEGINNING OF THE. PRl1=NT CENTCIR Z, "-RAM- RODS” .RODS " WERE ERECTED TO DRAW OFF ELECTPJCITY FROM THE CLOUDS, AND PREVENT HA/4 FPOM pt 4q/NG. r .- rn. N �,� >� °° '� # ;s i•� L'`t.� 3x.5+ ya,.� ?s:£gat. �.. COPR.193e ItelgX BY NEA SERVICE, INC. fie VEDALIA LADY BEETLE 15 RESPONSIBLE FOR MUCH OF' THE SUCCP S OF CALIFORNIA'S C1TRL,15 INDUSTRY/ rr 1-t DS ON) ALL OF THE PFS7- //V -SEC... iS -HIGH speed motion picture cameras show that a cat can right itself in the air in less than'4wo feet of drop. First the front feet make the turn, and then the hind feet, with the tail acting as a balancing pole. NEXT: Has the south magnetic pole of the earth ever beast re - HORIZONTAL 1,7 Pictured actor. • 13 Network. 14 Conscious. 16 To drain. 17•Period. 18 Stop. watch. 19 Form of "be." 20 Measure. 21 To furnish anew with men. 22 Sofa. 24 Oleoresins obtained 45 from irises. 46 26 To originate. 49 SHADOW STAR Answer to Previous Puzzle Golf device. Toward sea. To seize. 28 Shoe string's 52 Optical glass 29 Edible 53 Hut, mollusk. 30 Ever. • 57 Female slave. 31 Frost 'bite, 58 He ' 33 Father. impersonates 35 To doze. a -- little 38 To subsist. tramp. 39 To obliterate. 59 Ile is 42 Supernatural considered a beings. piaster of 44 Wheel hubs. • VERTICAL 1 Credit. 2 Ivy. 3 Unaccented. 4 To soak flax, 5 Devoured. 6 Moves fish -fashion. 7 Notch. • 8 Pronoun. 9 Level land. . 10 Hobgoblins, 11'ro conceive. 12 Compass point. 15 Wine vessel, 20 He gained world-wide fame in — pictures. 21 Laughable. 22 Moistens. 23 Attack of nervousness. 25 Beasts' home. 27 Parent. 32 rootlike part. 34 Constellation, 36 Measure of area. 37 Powerful. 40 Reluctant. 41 •Southeast, 43 Dog chain. 46 High mountain, 47 The deep. 48 To perform, 49 Diamond. 50 Conjunction, 51 Turkish governor. 54 Sloth. 55 Before Christ. 56 North Carolina. Light' As Well By J. MILLAR WA,ICT WWATS, UPWITH.YOU, COLQN L,~P MISSED 1141Ih TRAIN• 8Y -1AL) A t�1'1NU 'Es Is tiaierT Ato- ! 'TO !LOOK AT YOU ANYONE WOULD TNlN14 YOU'D MISSED IT aY I•-IALG AN HOUR I. (tier446il b' ".t'fi!a"7ir:1t sfStricat 7ttc, ) �e' 11 ®11 .1' #� t 19 �� Tic '111 28 y 29n F'k,, 711,4 30 35. , 36 ra `.31 37 32 et, iii • "' = 38 t' I• i. pp 4 p.r x4,11,. i• / 5 6 L ck5 r 59 j Light' As Well By J. MILLAR WA,ICT WWATS, UPWITH.YOU, COLQN L,~P MISSED 1141Ih TRAIN• 8Y -1AL) A t�1'1NU 'Es Is tiaierT Ato- ! 'TO !LOOK AT YOU ANYONE WOULD TNlN14 YOU'D MISSED IT aY I•-IALG AN HOUR I. (tier446il b' ".t'fi!a"7ir:1t sfStricat 7ttc, ) �e'