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Zurich Herald, 1941-08-28, Page 6SUNDAY S CHOOL L ESSON LESSON IX, John Urges Christian Love --The Epistle of John. PRINTED TEXT: I John 3:13.18; 4: 7-21. GOLDEN TEXT: Let us not love In word, neither with the tongue; but in deed and truth. John 3:18. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time—Not absolutely known with accuracy, but probably be- tween A.D. 90 and 95. Place—These Epistles were pro- bably written from the Clity of Ephesus. Love by Deeds 13. "Marvel not, brethren, it the world hateth you. 14, We know that we have passed out of death into life, because we love the brethren, He that loveth not abideth in death. 15. Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer; and ye know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him, 16. Hereby know we love, because He laid down His life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. 17. But whose hath the world's goods, and be- holdeth his brother in need, and shuttebh up his compassion from him, how doth the love of God abide in him? 18. My little chil- dren, let us not love in word, neither with the tongue; but in deed and truth." John stresses this point of love for one another, making it exceedingly practical, telling us that we are not to love in word nor in tongue alone, but in reality, by deeds. In seeing our brother in need and withhold- ing a compassionate interest in him and denying help to him, we offer indisputable proof that there is no love for our brother in our heart. By this test we can de- termine whether we are the chil- dren of God. or not. 7. "Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God; and every one that loveth is begotten of God, and knoweth God. 8. He that loveth not knoweth not God; For God is love. 9. Herein was the love of God manifested In us, that God hath sent His only be- gotten Son into the world that we might live through Him. 10. Here- in is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins." If God is love, every- thing He does must be in accord - with. His love, God's Iova to us 10 not proved simply by the advent of Christ, but by Christ's holy death for us, by the fact that He is a propitiation for our sins. We hear a great many loose and care- less statements today about the certainty of God's love, and that God because He loves us will never let anyone ultimately suffer or perish. But let us never forget that whenever the New Testament wishes to bring forth evidence to prove the love- o2 God, it takes pis at once to the cross. Men who refuse to believe in the holy aton- ing work of Christ, by death for us on Calvary, have no guarantee that really God does love them. To reject the dross is to repudiate the evidence for God's love. 11. "Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought to love one another. 12. No man hath beheld God at any time; if we love one another God abideth in us, and His love is perfected in us: 13. Hereby we know that we abide in Him and He In us, because He hath given us of His spirit. 14. And we have beheld and bear witness that the Father hath sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world. 15. Who- soever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God God abideth in him, and he in God. 16. And we know and have believed the love which God bath in us. God is love; and he that abideth in love abid- eth In God and G-od abideth in him. 17. Herein is love made perfect with us, that we may have boldness in the day of judgment; because as He is, even so are we in the world. 18. There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear, because fear hath pun- ishment; and he that feareth is not made perfect in love." Being the recipients of God's love, we, in return are to love others. Love is not something automatic. It has to do with character. A man may assert that God is love but if he does not imbibe this love, If he does not love God in turn, if his own life is not filled with Qod's love until he loves others, where is the reality of it all? Love is never -ceasing, encouraging, pur- ifying, sacrificing for others, It is Christian peopl6 on earth today 'who love their fellow -men, Those who know not God must live for self. 19, "We love because He Brat loved us." If you love God, you will love those whom God loves —those for whom Christ died— those who are just as you were when you learned that God loved you, 20. "If a man say I love God, and hateth hie brother, he is ft liar; for lie that loveth not hie brother whom, he hath seen, can- 'stot love God Whom he bath not 411.40P, 91, And Ws nozntnandm4M 1100 PANS = 1 PURSIL, T FLAME FRYING 1500 PANS sEPYING 500 • KErT gs 500TEfo rile FQANs 5 400 r" PANS 0 SAtia gb5 40 Doi l✓f 6 �" 500 901 01,015 // 13°0 E•!.CH SYMBOL 200 PANS The amount of aluminum used in a modem pursuit plane is indicated in this chart, which is based on dots prepared by technical experts. It is issued by the National Salvage Headquarters, Ottawa SALVAGE DRIVE FOR ALUMINUM Do you know the really big war job you are going to do when you get behind Canada's special coast- to-coast drive for aluminum? The cheat which you see elsewhere on this page should recruit you, right down to the last old pot and pan you can dig up around your kit- chen or find lying in disuse out in the back shed. Each one of the modern made - in -Canada fighting planes needs 4,009 pounds of aluminum. Each of the big bombers needs 28,000 pounds. Your latest war job will be to help supply some of that metal. In peace time Canada put mil- lions of pounds of aluminum into automobiles, electrical equipment, sports equipment, wire, railway ears, kitchen utensils, buildings, commercial aircraft, gadgets. In war time she is putting millions of pounds of the metal into ships, planes, army service equipment, and the like. These things are vitally necessary to victory. Give to Big Drive Therefore the vast program to turn out aluminum. Huge plants are working on tremendous ac- cumulations of stored South Am- erican bauxite. More plants are being built. But the demands for war aluminum is keeping ahead of the supply. "We must close this gap as much as we can," say officials of the Department of National War Services, which is sponsoring the drive. "And one way to do it is to rescue the secondary aluminum metal used in peace time manu- facture of household articles. That secondary metal lies all over Can- ada in small deposits in house- wives' kitchens, in basements, in back sheds. It takes the form of old, brdken, discarded aluminum articles of all kinds, which can be found in varying quantities in al- most every Canadian home. The country's war program needs that metal. Give It to the big drive." Give Only New Articles Such. metal, the officials point out, is still perfectly good, even if the article Is broken or out-moded. The metal can be re -smelted and save time and labor. The ohart says 7,700 aluminum pans are the euivalent of one pursuit plane. Big Canadian cities are expected to collect enough metal for perhaps ten such planes, smaller cities en- ough for two or three planes, and hamlets sizeable quantities for a wing or a fuselage. The money raised by the drive. when the donated aluminum is sold to industries filling war Don - have we from Him, that he who loveth God loveth his brother also." If we love a person, we will do what that person loves for us to do. We will be true to that person. It will be a joy to please that person. It Is sheer folly for us to live. in disobedience to God and at the same time to say we love Him. Let's ask ourselves, are we keeping God's command- ments as Christians? And if we d0 not lova God, then are we his children? If we are not his chil- dren, then we are not believers in the Lord Jesus Christ. tracts, is to be given to the Red Cross for its humanitarian war work. "One point to be made clear in this drive", stressed the National Salvage Campaign Supervisor," is that only scrap aluminum should be donated. Disused pots and pans, broken electrical equipment, parts of washers, sweepers, or auto- mobiles, discarded gadgets or sport equipment. All are welcome contributions. We are not asking for any aluminum articles now in use, the donation of which would mean replacement by something else. This would not be economy. Good -Will Pia l'ue Given At Niagara A plaque to mark the inter- national boundary, which will be placed in the centre of the new Rainbow Bridge, was presented to the Niagara Falls Bridge Commis- sion by the International Affilia- tion of Sales and Advertising Clubs on Aug. 16th. Hon. T. B. McQuesten, chairman of the Niagara Falls Bridge Com- mission, accepted the plaque from K. E. Kellenberger, president of the organization donating it. "I present this plaque to your Commission as a token of good- will between our two great na- tions," Mr. Kellenberger told Mr. McQuesten. It seemed significant that the plaque did not show the interna- tional boundary line so character- istic of such monuments, Hoon. T. B. McQuesten said. "In place of such an international division aro the flags of our two countries se crossed that each extends into its neighboring country. COMMON BENEFITS "Only a few months ago when the two sections of the great arch supporting this deck were still un - joined and reaching toward each other across the river, this spot at which we stand now, so called rho international line, was just thin air and any mark of division be- tween our countries, physical or psychological, was just as invis- ible here as it is on this plaque or at any other point except on maps, "Americans have found it just as simple to pass from one coun- try to another as to cross a State line. In the north, east, west and along the border thousands and thousands of United States care are rolling along. Canada's travel business, one of our . most import- ant sources of inoome, has return- ed to normal and gone beyond that point. The millions of dollars spent by American tourists in Canada are rapidly returned to the United States for the purchase of war ma- terials to help us win across the seas, and for many peacetime es- sentials that Canadians have al- ways bought from United States. Perhaps no where else in the world Is such fair international ex- change enjoyed, with so many common benefits to both countries! and their people. O R.A.F. Pilot Seizes F. Boat The Air Ministry News Service told recently how a Royal Air Force pilot captured an Italian E -boat alter he had pancaked on the sea. In the first attack on the E -boat which was approaching Malta har- bor the service said, the Hurri- cane was damaged but the pilot got in a machine-gun burst which killed or wounded the entire E - boat crew. Descending to the sea the pilot climbed out of his machine, swam to the E -boat and brought his capture into harbor. Don't forget to serve a thin slice of lemon with iced melon. Lemon accents the melon flavor. 1 RADI0 REPORTER By DAVE BOBBINS THE HAPPY GANG These faces identify two of radio's most popular voices and personalities — and they in turn identify the personnel of Canada's most popular program. The boys in question are Hugh Bartlett and Bob Farnon — dressed in — well, your guess is as good as mine. The program — of course, it's the Happy Gang — and the announce- ment of their return to the air waves is news to practically every owner of a radio in Canada — and return they do on Monday, Sep- tember first at their usual time, 1.00 o'clock EDST. CKOC is privi- leged to be among the stations that this year will bring you the daily fun and music of Palmolive's Happy Gang. Listeners to 1150 kcs, and to most of the stations of the CBC network will be making a radio date for Monday, September 1st, at one o'clock when the familiar "rap, rap, rap,—" and the question "Who's there?" says the Happy Gang will be on the air again. They're heard daily Monday through Friday at one o'clock! Other little wooden snen besides Pinnochio have come to life—and none more literally than the Ven- triloquists dummy known as Charlie McCarthy; in fact it's al- most sacrilege to refer to Charlie as anything less than human! But all lthat notwithstanding, it will be fun to have the Chase Si San- born hour back on the air again —and the date is Sunday, Sept. 7th — the time eight p.m. EDST. Carried by the full network, CKOC this year joins the others in bringing to the Ontario home the Sunday night adventures of Edgar Bergen and Charlie Mc - MAP PUZZLE HORIZONTAL 1 Map of African colony 7 It borders on —. 13 To listen. 14 Palm thatch. 16 Audibly. 17 Roof finial, 18 Russian emperor. `19 Faint color. 20 To cook in fat. 21 Public walk. 22 To repurchase 24 Decorative mesh. 25 Sesame, 26 Meal, 29 To assign anew. 31 Rubbish. Answer to Previous Puzzle Will • ©f:11 © ©SIO©C�]I�I REM'11111110103'..111E10 EMU 0110©DR 0000 R00©. ►M0©R©- -D©©° 41 ©DEC] I�I7 I1 ©©006'x© ©©00� 0© ©0©©`I DOM© I 1 i ORD DU 1E 0©00 © LE ©1 [1Fo• - J ©QOC�O©0000© i-10MAS A BISON 42 Giant king of Bashan. 43 Morindin dye. 44 Seaweed. 45 Melody. 46 Stringed instruments. 47 To bang. 32 Mongrel. 49 Canoe. 33 Whirlwind. 52 Its capital. 34 1/12 foot. 53 Its natives 35 African farmer are —. 36 Measure of area. 37 Promise. 38 Storehouses. VERTICAL 1 Sound of -pleasure. 2 To ogle. 3 Affected with gapes. 4 Silkworm. 5 Whole, 6 Theater pathway. 7 Blemish. 8 Badgerlike animals, 9 Smelling badly. 10 Pine fruit. 20 On its coast is a — or productive region. 21 To crush. 22 Inlet. 23 It is rich in —, as iron and zinc. 24 Whip stroke. 25 Word of four letters. 2? Sea eagle. 28 Moccasin, 29 To regret. 30 Gazelle. 32 To cut grass. 35 Genus of cattle. 37 Rime. 39 Kite end, 40 Astir. 41 Sanskrit dialect. 4 4 4 4 4 11 Shrewd. 4 12 Natural power 5 15 Chum. 5 2 Lubricant. 3 Particle. 5 Onager. 6 Go on. 8 Month (abbr.) 9 Plural (abbr.) 0 Musical note. 1 Like. Carthy. Tune in 1150 Sunday the 7th of Sept., and laugh a while and sing a while as the whole cast of the program presents another season of "Better than Ever" en- tertainment. Through the facilities of WBEN in Buffalo, listeners can hear Ace NBC commentator Kaltenborn Tues., Thurs. & Sat. at 7.15 pan. and on Sundays at 3.15 in the afternoons. Kaltenborn's com- mentaries are concise, clear-cut and carry an exceptionally broad understanding of the Interna- tional scene, * * * The Aldrich Family returned to NBC Red Monday the 21st Sammy Kay's DADDY is still one of the nation's best record sellers • - Band leader Tommy Dorsey is going to have a tonsilectomy ▪ . And yours truly is going to have an aspirin .. - until the next column, Adios! Wavell to Bar Gates too India New British Commander In India Broadcasts Need to Keep Enemy Away Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell, iu his first broadcast as commander- in-chief in India, said last week, "Our future efforts must continue to prevent the enemy, wherever possible, from getting within strik- ing distance of this country." (The broadcast did not speci- fically mention Iran, Afghanistan or Burma, generally considered the outer bastions to the defence of • India from the east or west.) Gen. Wavell paid tribute to the part played by Indian troops in the Middle Eastern campaigns, and said "nearly 750,000 of India's man- power are under arms and recruits are flowing into training depots as fast as we can provide for them." To "correct any wrong impres- sion," Gen. Wavell said the hig':i- est proportion of losses in the Middle East campaigns so tar have been British, both in total figures and in proportion to their strength, compared with Indian or Australian. Gasoline Shells Ignite Forests The newspaper Social Demo- kraten reported recently that the Russians on the Finnish front are using shells loaded with gasoline which burst 200 feet from the ground and ignite forests. A shower of these shells, it was stated, is usually followed by a 611111111 heavy artillery barrage -in order to prevent the Finns from extin- guishing the flames, POP—And Burn ' THE OLD TARTAR a OOG s Nir SAY GO TO BLA2ES " LIKE= WE DO, POP .,...gin.. ow..... HE SAYS r� MAY �t Y17L1 STAY IN THE- SAME HESAME PLAGE FOREVER ! " By J. MILLAR WATT '(noleAsed by rho —Dell .3ynil,leale,,Inc.i.. 4 5 6 7 !8 I1 12 '• Iq 15 16 S .Ig .Iq 3i 32 / -33 'y "• i -1 "- :35 36 '13 3tini92 2 1 47 48 50 .�• Carthy. Tune in 1150 Sunday the 7th of Sept., and laugh a while and sing a while as the whole cast of the program presents another season of "Better than Ever" en- tertainment. Through the facilities of WBEN in Buffalo, listeners can hear Ace NBC commentator Kaltenborn Tues., Thurs. & Sat. at 7.15 pan. and on Sundays at 3.15 in the afternoons. Kaltenborn's com- mentaries are concise, clear-cut and carry an exceptionally broad understanding of the Interna- tional scene, * * * The Aldrich Family returned to NBC Red Monday the 21st Sammy Kay's DADDY is still one of the nation's best record sellers • - Band leader Tommy Dorsey is going to have a tonsilectomy ▪ . And yours truly is going to have an aspirin .. - until the next column, Adios! Wavell to Bar Gates too India New British Commander In India Broadcasts Need to Keep Enemy Away Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell, iu his first broadcast as commander- in-chief in India, said last week, "Our future efforts must continue to prevent the enemy, wherever possible, from getting within strik- ing distance of this country." (The broadcast did not speci- fically mention Iran, Afghanistan or Burma, generally considered the outer bastions to the defence of • India from the east or west.) Gen. Wavell paid tribute to the part played by Indian troops in the Middle Eastern campaigns, and said "nearly 750,000 of India's man- power are under arms and recruits are flowing into training depots as fast as we can provide for them." To "correct any wrong impres- sion," Gen. Wavell said the hig':i- est proportion of losses in the Middle East campaigns so tar have been British, both in total figures and in proportion to their strength, compared with Indian or Australian. Gasoline Shells Ignite Forests The newspaper Social Demo- kraten reported recently that the Russians on the Finnish front are using shells loaded with gasoline which burst 200 feet from the ground and ignite forests. A shower of these shells, it was stated, is usually followed by a 611111111 heavy artillery barrage -in order to prevent the Finns from extin- guishing the flames, POP—And Burn ' THE OLD TARTAR a OOG s Nir SAY GO TO BLA2ES " LIKE= WE DO, POP .,...gin.. ow..... HE SAYS r� MAY �t Y17L1 STAY IN THE- SAME HESAME PLAGE FOREVER ! " By J. MILLAR WATT '(noleAsed by rho —Dell .3ynil,leale,,Inc.i..