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Zurich Herald, 1940-02-01, Page 6IStitiday School .Lesson LESSON V HOLDING LIFE SACRED. (A Prim clple of Temperate Living) Genesis•1:27.31; I Corinthians 6:19 20; 2 Corinthians 6:16-7:1. GOLDEN TEXT: "Ye were bought with a price: glorify God there- fore in your body." 1 Cor. 6:20. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time The First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians Inas writ- ten in .1.1). n7, and it is greerallt• believed that the Second Epistle was. written :lot many months lat- er. probably Lr the same year Place The Fist Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians was writ- ten from E;phettem, The Secvtid tree written in Macedonia, possibly from the city of `Thessalonica. 27. And God created man in his own image. in the image of God created he hint; male and female created he them. We gather from the present chapter that Cod is a spirit, that he thinks, speaks, wills, and acts. The great points of ooia- formity to God that man possesses are reason, speech, will and power. In the reason is evolved the distinc- tion of good and evil. In the will is unfolded that freedom of actlwt which chooses the good and refuses the evil. God formed the body el man in such a way u to make it a suitable habitation and, instrument tor its rational tenant, The mind and the body were compatible and complementary. It was specifically the mind of man that was created in the divine image; God le spirit- ual or physieal substance, and so is wen's mind or soul. Be Fruitful and Multiply 28 And god blessed them: and God said unto them, Be fruittai, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it; and haat, do- minion over the fish of the see, and over the birds of the heavens, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth. 29. And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb yielding seed which is, upon the face of all the earth, end every- tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for food: 30, and to ev- ery beast of the earth, and to every bird of the heavens, and to every- thing that oreepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life,.I have given aTanYeeereen ueeb for food; and it an.Vas so. The words spoken by God to our first parents are in the forint •r :t a command: man is to bear children; heis to subdue the earth, he is to have dominion over all Liv- ing creatures; he is to live phyaic- ally by the herbs and fruits and Cereals which God planted in the earth. Some day the whole. creation will be again in perfect subjection to man, as it was ordained to be Canadian Couple Have Military Wedding in England. Lieut. Fl. '..Palmer, of the Canadian Field Artillery, son of Mrs. A. Z. and the late Col. Palmer, of Ottawa, Canada, is pictured with•bis bride, the former Peggy Crerar, daugther of Brig. -Gen. H. D. G. Crerar,' chief ,of staff at the Canadian military headquarters in England, as .they left St. George's, Aldershot Garrison church, after they were married. Trumpeters of the Royal Military College of Music, Keller Hall, stand behind iflieni. at the time of his creation (see Ito - mans 8:18-23). Temple of the Holy Spirit 1 Cor. 6:19. Or know ye not that your body le a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God? and ye are not your own. pian has not only body and soul, but also spirit: Deeper down than where the soul with its consciousness can enter, there is a spirit -nature linking man with God. In some people it is nothing more than a dormant power, a pos- sibility waiting for the quickening of the Holy Spirit (We are famil- iar with the division of the temple into tbree parts: there was its ex- terior with tho outer toirrt, seen by all mena the holy place, into which alone the priest might enter; God dwelt in the. holiest of holies, where none might venture nigh.) 20. For ye were bought with a price; glorify God therefore in your body. The price or ransoiu which Christ, our purchaser, paid for our redemption from slavery, was his own soul. Let our bodies be God's so that through our eyes RADIO A N D Sy MADGE "MUSIQUIZ" CONTINUES In response to an overwhelminig popular demand, expressed in hun- dreds of Ietters, telephone Dads, etc., Ted Cott's unique Sunday af- ternoon musiauiz "So You ',Chink "You lfnovr Music" has been restor- ed to its forme? spot on the Colum- bia network, Sundays at 2:30 p.m, (Cl RB). Most amusing of the let- ters from younger listeners eras one from a Toronto girl, who wrote: "T have got the mumps. I am eight years old and I love your Urogram. I hope you will get enough letters so you can be on the air again as I am not :eking piano lessons or any- thing about music so you see I am learning a lot over the radio, so I hope you will be on the air, and so eines my mother and friends" MARCHING PAST The ltegitnental March -past of the old 05th - "Les Fusiliers de :bout -Royal" will be featured by ens Bland of the Cauadia•u (irena- alter Guards and the G'am'e Singing aluardsmen "On Parade" on Thurs- day night February 3t5a, tit 8:30 3,nt„ over Calle Follette(' wi the 18th of .aIle, :1860, to Montreal, Ir Is baa• of the; oldest lerencit•(.;aitad- :csn re :ituoatlrs ;t: F't' l't•ni?ttr•Eo of 411.1 f1 Pi', WILL SING AND ACT 11t1: knee:he former nee, and ettreine ease of be Chase. and San - bona flee_, bias 'twee signed 10 head ledaltour variety and (Iramate engram whieb will go on the air grit Or)11 as (MO of the uetwerks east lheeln;i r suitable spot. As on the ilase, and Sanborn 'Flour, Amec'a4 'uric, t r t't sin.: anti act on +ho pee - TO SE HEARD 1'+>1, ,, 1113Y, Aorento 3ft.nde.lee *nee f noir and Toronto Sympb» to Oreheetra , , . 10:30, ('131:., tlt4 ..Wer and the Canadian Farmer .. , • II:30 p.m., CBI., The Northieen r.is,.rlear , 13 b, 3, 2:64 I u.,' 1 NOTES NEWS ARCHER C81,, eietr•op,liton ()Pere Coinpany 10 p.m„ C'13? ; CRY, , Bernardino Molinari conducts NBC Symphony . Feb. 4, CPR13, 2:30 laser., '`So You Think fort T:liow Music"? 3 p.m., OF11.13, .N. V, Phil. Orchestra 6:30 p,nr„ C'I3L, C'base and Sanborn Hour . , 3:30 pan.. CBI,. One Man's Family ... 9 p.m., Ctn. Your Government and the \Vo , . . Feb. 5, 12:30 pan., Ontario :•ud Quebec region Farm Broadcast .. . 8:00 p.m„ CFR6, Tune UP Tirne 8:30 pal., C'13L. With the Treape in England , , , 10:00 p.m„ Nene bine to South t)nt•, Little Old (Toe 1 Wood , . , Feb. 0, 3:310, CBL. in- formation Please . . . 9:00 11.nt,. CBL, .Reginald Stewart, pianist , , . 1.0:002,m., CBL, Toronto Synepit- ony Oi b.... 9:30 p.m., CBL, l.les- ic ley Faith , , 10:00 p,m„ Musical Tribute to Edward MacI)owell , , , Feb: 8, 8:30, ('BE., On Parade . , 9:00 pan., ('BI" and S. Ona, Ease. man Scheel of Music . 10:30 0,m„ :Nett' - CBS - MBS, President Reese .% add aegis Roti Sd•nute of Amr•1'ir'a, shall flash the light of his. love. From this lesson we should realize anew the sanctity of the physical body in which we live, the high • purpose of physical life as such.. The Separated Life 2 Cor. 6:16. And what agreement hath a temple of God with idols'? for we are a temple of the living God; even as God said, 1 will dwell in them, and walls in them; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. The city of Corinth was full of temples which were an insult to God. Their idols spoke of and demanded uncleanuoss on the part of their worshippers God is infinitely holy, and demands: boliuess on the part of those. who approach him. 17. wherefore, conte ye out from among ,therm, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, ..etae touch no unclean thing; and 1 velli receive you, and Will be to you a Father, a.nd•ye shall be to zne sons and daughters, saith the Lord Al- mighty. 'This Separation from the world was not to be physical and local and social, but moral awl spiritual. Tbese Corinthians were not to migrate to miter cities, but to keep free from the iutitnneies and fellowships which might ally them with idolatry, and today the Christians are to live in ibe world, while they aro not of the world, 7: 1 Having therefore these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting boliness in the fear of God. As the source of ell defilement of the flesh is self -grat- ification, so self-seeking is at the root of all defilement of the spirit. Wise- Bird Lays A Breakfast Egg A hen which prefers a warm kitoben chair to a cold nest saves N. J. :Detweiler, of Middlefield, 0., a shivering trip to the hen- honse for his breakfast egg. "Every morning about dawn," - say Detweiler, who ineistS this. is n no yarn, "this hescratches on the kitchen door, When t let her in she clii'nbs on a cushioned chute and a few minutes later cackles to announce that she has laid her egg." Havana, the Cuban capital,. which recently celebrated its 425th anniversary, stood as a city 100 years before the first houses were built in what was to become New York. FARM NOTES USE BETTER SEED Opposition to ploughing poor marginal land to 'provide increas- ed crop production to meet' war - "thaw needs, was expressed by W. heck, deputy minister of agri- cultrtre, at a mooting of the Agri- culture cunnttItteo of the Ontario Legadature, "The only way em van tapitalizc on he and dairy pro- ducts is to prodece more barley, oate, and mined gra n,," said 31e, -Reek, "We know definitely that by ttre of butler seed, farmers in Ontario can step up their t't•op production appreciably," .said i1r, Reels, THREE -GRAIN DIET :1 E. Bergey, ascension sireciai- ist of the poultry department of the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph, suggests that a single grain diet is not satisfactory for laying liens. The u main grains are wheat, oats, barley, eorn and buck - Wheat, any three of which should be used, but oats is the best single ,grain and should be one of the tliree'used in a feed mixture. Milk is the most outstanding protein firod, be said. Others may be meat, fish or liver meal. Minerals, he outlined, may include oyster shell or bone meal and for vitamins, cod liver oil, greens or yellow ct11'n, Change Alphabet Into "Phonobet"? An American Has Now Invented A System He Hopes to Make A Comma Language, Symbols for Sounds The late Frank 11; Vizetelly, the famed lexicographer, once said the English-speaking people need a new alphabet, and John 10, Leavitt of Cincinnati believes he has it in his "phonobet." Leavitt, a retired carpenter, ma- chinist and shoe designer, defines the "pbonobet" as a "scientific ar- raugement of letters in a logical sequence according to their sound values and the vocal mechanics of their utterances." - 40 CITAR,ACT.1O LS ,ARULANG1+H LOGICALLY Believing that a common lang- uage -- preferably i3uglish—would be the greatest single factor in establishing and maintaining per- Iletual peace throughout the. world, Leavitt has offered his invention to y -w the League Of Nations. Leavitt prefers ' l.nglish because more. than one-quarter of the peo- ple of the world use it, Rut be says foreigners could not master the langaage until its vagaries of spel- ling attO pronunciation are stand- ardized, \Vil'I7 SPELLING At:'1'OMMA'ria The "phonobet" lueiude,s symbols adopted to represent the "orthau sounds" that itttve fret characters ire the present E•:linnet' language It has 40 chtr•acteee instead of the 25 nvw 111 use. The additictua; eharuc'te•rs. Lea- vitt says, permit eaeli letter to have • its own sound and each sound its own letter in the "phon- obet,' tuakieg all pronunciation and spelling 700 per rnt, autome- tic. Sees Improved Fruit Outlook Federal Farm Economist Encourag• es Growers of Niagara .All f'actor's eoue: ie'retl, Canadian growers of tender fruits can look forward to 104,0' with "a, reasonable degree of optimism," W. Cl. Hopper, Olaf agricultural economist tor the federal department of agricul- ture told the annus] convention of the Niagara Peninsula Fruit Grua - ors' Association. ".4. general rise in the level of Commodity prices would have a tendency to push up the prices of tender fruit," he said "1 f we have a long war and a large umber or nien are 'taken into service, the, e is likely to be a significant rise in the prices of all agricultural pro. ducts," '.i'UAINI." (l IN I+'Ii1J1'l IlA IZ VESTING ? Tho association adopted a reso• lutionl asking the department of la - Dor to organize a nativriai service program for enrolling and training Oitrilcl women to tee .::t In 11> . Liar. vesting. A Itethet reeol111101> ael-sed the governrnont to eetttlitah a re. search station 111 the Nntgeru die• triet to fitul ways and rneaus foe fullest utilization of fruit products. THIS CURIOUS WORLDarn ams n n lN HAS A SEPARA FOR. EACH INDIVIDUAL KERNEL. . D i 1(3+4 ' IS NOT i -.i M ITFT-1 ltD 11-1;= TWO POL.A A REAS IT CAN SE SEE.N SO.a7".H OF THE AR.Cr 1"1C CiP.Ct.-.5 AND iVIO./e711-1 OF '1"HE ANTARCTIC C:IIZC4 1149FR1 P"1i •1OS iS A FRESH WAT,HRa surANIMAL, BU1T WILL TRAVEL. THROUGH SALLA ScJJ' WATER PROM ONE RIVER MOUTH -T ANOTHER.. COPR. 19371Y NEA SERV/MOM. - 7.1 THEORETICALLV, the Midnight sun is visible only within the polar circles, but clue to the foot that the earth is slightly flattened at the poles, combined with the refraction of rays near the earth's surface a person considerably south of the Arctic Circle and north of the Antarctic Circle can see the sun at midnight, at certain sea= sons of the year NEXT: How can poison sumac be recognized? —,4444.,, MUSICAL INSTRUMENT ar HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 Pictured musical instrument, 7 It iS a -- instrument of the viol class, '111VIonkey. 12 Enemy of the gods. 15 Gazelle.. 16 Hops kilns. 17 Treacherous, 18.Measure, 20 To regret. 21 Small stones. 23,To lubricate. 24 To burn incense, 26 To observe. 27 11 has a rich ----- quality, 28 Blemish. 30 Southeast. 31 Surrounding conditions. 36 Earth. 37 Go on (music). 38 Pronoun. 39 Surgeon's instrument case. 41 Dye. 43 Silkworm. 45 To add to. 46I'n advance, 50 Mug. 52 Male duck. 56 Wild buffalo. 57 Roof point covering!, 58 Kind of plum. 59 It has four 60 A famous make of this instrument. VERTiCAL 2 To emanate, 3 Made of oatmeal; • 4 Circular wall. 5 Back of neck, 6 Ray of the sun. 7 Be silent, 8 Self. 9 Nonmetallic element. 10 Parrot fish, 13 Substitutes, 14 To vex, 16 1t has first place in an 19 Every 11 Fruit. 22 Let it stand. 25 Expression of amusement, 29 Pirate. 30 Sly person. 32 At this time, 33 To emulate, 34 North America. 35 Type standard 40 Type of auto. 42 Chair rail. ' 44 T! t oxen desserts, 45 Narrative poenm; 47 Derby. 48'To do wrong, 49 Bird. 51 Upward, 53 Male sheep, 54 Since. 55 Insight. POP - Boston Tea Party By J. MILLAR WATT $l;TJ AS TO -».,-�i _ _-_4444 _ -♦ ,._»..1 _' '"`R rn-^,^•--rvY +ta•�«.,'••-'+` r.:1..1..:.::i �iw. drl� FAQ ULO 1$ . LivS., IN Mll 4 ; I,...• --••.w.: - I`!' /ry.Fe. yy4, ,4 4, r..3N}�n2,i� F a+i1l,+' F ,t 1.f.t� ww4 BY - r ;'. BITAIN r.t� r.:7`"✓C,'•�—�`r.iY F cr +4i $''f' l :off%? 4i'Jf vl F ;eiit ,•,/•, Yrs . •; : r a 'le 'Y•"t ' pf i�.a./;v '"yFnirysC� :rJ4F;`•/f.::":y:!w`.M. }.vY.�•:•.vf,: 'J•v. 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