4 | t AMR A AAG A Es a Naaman, a highly respected general, suffers from leprosy. His wife's young Israelite maid believes the prophet Elisha can cure him with 5:1-7, God's help.--II Kings + Be ey. se See re ORS ae Oh © SC oh Rem aenae et ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Syrian Naaman visits Elisha who refuses to see him but sends word to him to wash seven times in the Jordan River, if he would be cured.--II Kings 5:8-12. Naaman's servants persuade him to submit to Elisha's will and a cure is effected. Grateful, Naaman urges rich gifts upon Elisha, who refuses them. --II Kings 5:13-19. When about later, Elisha emites him with Naa- man's leprosy.--IIKings 5: 20-27. GOLDEN TEXT: Hebrews 11:6. PE RS ate RE REPRO PE RL ne RO et TE A SE ee ee By Alfred Buescher Gehazi, begging gifts of Naaman BIBLE LESSON What Type Faith If No One God? By R. H. RAMSEY Fer a Christian to accept spir- ttual things beyond his under- standing is realatively easy, for we accept the miraculous pow- ers of our God without ques- tion. However, had we no one God, how many of us would fol- flow the example of Naaman and not only willingly accept, but act upon a child's blind faith in a God unknown to us? Such is the case in today's biographical study. Naaman, a heathen, was brought face to face With the monotheistic God of Israel. Acting on faith alone, as he did, he presents a sharply etched picture of a man re- warded by the faith he pos- sessed. Naaman, commander of the army of Ben-hadad, king of Da- mascus, is described as honor- able, valorous, a man of great ability and unusual military ge- nius much esteemed by his master. But . . . he was a leper. In five words we have, in our minds, changed Naaman from a great and mighty man to an ob- ject to be shunned as "'unclean." Now called Hansen's disease and known to be only mildly in- fectious, in ancient times it was a dreaded, loathsome disease, and those innocents who suf- fered from it were as already dead. They were torn from their families, cast out of the commu- nity, and condemned to survive as best they could, if at all--no matter how tender or advanced their years -- without care or even the most rudimentary eomforts of life. CURED DISEASE The Scriptures tell us that in ene of their raids the Syrians had captured a little Israelite girl. She was brought to Naa- man, who took her as a maid for his wife. Her faith must have radiated in her work, for Bible history has not forgotten how she used her trust in God for the glory of God and the eure of Naaman's leprosy. Her statement that if Naaman would but go to see the prophet Elisha, he would be cured, dem- onstrates her faith in the mi- racles of God performed by His servants. The maid's belief reached Naaman's ear and even the King of Syria showed concern for his commander's welfare, for he sent a letter to the king of Israel regarding Naaman's plight. The letter so much dis- turbed the king of Israel that he rent his clothes. News of the king's concern| teached the ear of Elisha, who is described as "the man of God." Speaking with the author- ity of a prophet, Elisha said, "Let him (Naaman) come now to me, and he shall know there is a prophet in Israel." So the royally - equipped, treasure - laden Naaman came to the bumble abode of Elisha. Naaman wished to be treated as a great man who happaned to be a leper; Elisha, to achieve the humility necessary for a cure and conversion, treated him a leper whe happened to be a@ great man, refusing to see him personally and sending a! message that -to be cured he should bathe seven times in the Jordan River. Aggravated that Elisha did UNITED SPIRITUALIST CHURCH OF ONTARIO Srange Temple Bruce St., Oshawe | (Upstairs) SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21st 2:30 P.M HEALING ond MESSAGES 7:00 P.M. Trans lecture by Pat Bartlett i Messages by Tom Bartlett and Mrs. Huggett. 723-6786 UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH 320 Ritson Road South (near Olive) | 723-6325 The Whole Gospel to the Whole World Sunday: 10 A.M.--Sunday School . iB A.M.--Morning Worship © 7:30 P.M.--Evangelistic Wed. 8:00 P.M.--Bible Study ond Prayer Set. 8:00 P.M.--Young People EVERYONE WELCOME not heal him with a demonstra- tion of divine power, and that the cure should be so simple, Naaman turned away in anger. To him, washing in the Jordan was repulsive and if he need wash to effect a cure, he would rather wash in the more beau- tiful rivers of Syria. Naaman's servants prevailed upon him to conquer his pride and submit to the will of Elisha. The miracle of the cure con- vin aaman that the Lord is the om" God. Filled with grati- tude, he urged rich gifts upon Elisha, but the prophet refused. Then Naaman asked that he be allowed to take some Israe- litish earth back to Syria and that, in the future, he be for- given for accompanying -- his master into his pagan temples and appearing to worship a deity he now knew to be false. Elisha granted both requests and bade him "go in peace." Because this a moral story. il- lustrating the powers of faith and the evil of greed, it ends with a typical folk element. One of Elisha's greedy servants fol- lower of Naaman begged a gift. When the prophet discovered this he rebuked the servant for his avarice and lies and, mak- ing the punishment suit the crime, smote him with the veny leprosy of which Naaman had been cured. "But without faith it is im- possible to please him; for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a re- warder of them that diligently seek him.""--Hebrews 11:6. Rhodesia Action Plus For Wilson LONDON (Reuters) --. The Hirst public opinion poll since' the Rhodesian crisis developed seriously credited the Labor government today with a huge leap forward in popularity. The National Opinion Poll, in copyright findings published in The Daily Mail, showed the government had a lead of 18.5 per cent over the opposition Conservatives, an increase of 8.5 per cent in three weeks. Conclusions based on the question "how would you vote if there were a general elec- tion tomorrow?" indicated La- bor would be returned to power with an "avalanche" majority, the newspaper commented. : HEAR The Back to the Bible Broadcast DAILY Mon. te Set. 9:30 - 10:00 a.m. | eliminate all those Color-Video For Mid-'66 OTTAWA (CP)--The way has been opened for speedy proces- sing of applications by televi- sion stations to start broadcast- ing in color by mid-1966. But the Board of Broadcast Governors, announcing the road-clearing Thursday, added a big proviso: Conversion to color shouldn't be done at the expense of ex- tending signals to wunserved areas or of providing second service to areas where only one channel is seen. The BBG announced it will waive the usual public hearing for color TV applications where neither of these conditions is in- volved. Such applications would simply be passed to the BBG from the transport department after a technical check be given a BBG recommendation without a public hearing and be sent back. This would avoid delaying all applications until the next pub- lic hearing of the board, set for Feb. 1. The formal start for color TV in Canada is Jan. 1, 1967. But the government has announced that a test period will start July 1, 1966 with stations allowed ex- perimental colorcasts overnight after regular _ broadcasting hours. A final polishing-up period be- gins Oct. 1 for-color transmis- sions during regular hours to iron out any remaining kinks. But the BBG said it would consider public hearings for ap- plications where there are con- siderations about second serv- ice or extension of service. Sleeping Disease Still Holds Youth OTTAWA (CP) -- There has been a "very slight improve- ment" in the condition of War- ren Weese, 18-year-old army private from Camp Petawawa, Ont., who has been unconscious with sleeping sickness since Oct. 19, the Tri-Service Medical Centre reported Friday. Doctors said Weese now opens his eyes when he is spo- ken to but still has been un- able to speak or make any other motions. It is believed Weese was bit- ten by an insect carrying the disease, about which little is known. years before: his death, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote to his only child, Frances Scott, complain- diver at camp." US. Has Six In At 'Scotti WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two ing, "what you have done to please me or make me proud is particularly negligible since the time you made yourself a good Frances had just been asked to leave a girls' school because she had broken bounds and Fitzgerald was worried that Vassar might not accept her that fall, 'In your career as a 'wild so- ciety girl' vintage 1925, I'm not interested,"' he said. Fitzgerald, who epitomized the jazz age generation he wrote about, feared his daugh- Fitz Would Smile e Now Hoffa Holds Off A Closing World By NEIL GILBRIDE WASHINGTON (AP) -- The hadow of prison walls edge closer to James Riddle Hoffa, but the tough little boss of the Teamsters stiJl is very much in the saddle. He shows no signs of intend- ing to quit the presidency of the|in world's biggest and richest la- bor union until the law actually lands him behind bars--if it does. He may not give up even then, A lawsuit filed by some broughthim an eight-year sen- tence and of defrauding the Teamsters' pension fund, which drew one to five years. Somie associates report Hoffa is pretty well resigned to the prospect of defeat in the court! battle. Hoffa himself is not talk- g. Both friends and foes inside the union generally agree on this picture of how Hoffa is bearing up as time runs out to- ward his final appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court: ge Se ¥ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, November 20, 1965 -- for him ba. me but e's pu on a '"* Sie, whe still claims the support of the vast majority of the Teamsters' 1,700,000 mem- bers, is going out of his way to avoid new internal strife. "He's trying not to rock any ment, agrees the guy has done an outstanding trade-union job, hath in contracts and organiz- ing,"' said one Teamster source, In addition to the basic truck- ers and warehousemen repre- boats, not to antagonize any- body, to avoid dissensions and fights,' ane source said Court. This could drag on for months and one Hoffa union opponent said "If he comes into the July, One high Teamster official said no move will be made to! unseat Hoffa until his appeals are exhausted in the Supreme Teamster locals prevents Hoffa from using funds in his own legal defence. But a dinner in Hoffa's honor Oct. 22 in New York about $100,000 for legal fees. A any more union raised series of similar affairs is Planned and Hoffa's fight to stay out of prison goes on. ALL ARE SURPRISED "Everybody is amazed that he is continuing to work as hard as he is doing. He's just going right ahead as if nothing had happened. "Psychologically, you can see the tensions. It is a little more 1966, convention a free man, he may try to change the union constitution to provide for a caretaker." What is the secret of Hoffa's hold on the rank-and-file? HAS HELPED WORKERS "Almost everyone in the un- jon, even the anti-Hoffa ele- sented by the union, Teamsters organizers have gone after membership among many other Workers, "We'll take anything that isn't taken," one Teamster official said. He didn't need to add that the Teamsters frequently to oust existing unions. In Hoffa's reign, membership has risen by some 200,000. Cross-country truck drivers, paid on a mileage basis, now make up to $15,000 a year. The lowliest Teamster warehouses man seldom makes less $2.50 an hour and Hoffa ma major breakthrough in abol- ishing lower wage differentials in southern states, where most other unions find it a tough job just to get a foothold. If the courts finally rule the muscular Detroiter must go to The writer would be Inter- ested in his daughter today. "Scottie" Fitzgerald Lanahan is a doer. The mother of four teen-aged children, Mrs. Lanahan, 42, has just accepted a job with the New York Times, covering Washington society. She previously had worked as a political reporter for the North Virginia Sun and had contributed to the 'Talk of the Town" column for the New Yorker magazine from 1944- 1948. She's written a couple of plays and dabbled in local poli- tics. PAST NOW HAZY Her part in the short, turbu- Rient life of F. Scott Fitzgerald ter might become a woman whose "only contribution to the} h uman family is to warm a} seat at the common table." | Bridge Playoff SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--The six players who will represent North America at the world championships next spring in Italy emerged Thursday night at the conclusion of the Amer- ican Contract Bridge League's international team trials. The three partnerships are Ira Rubin of Paramus, N.J.. and Philip Feldesman of New York, who finished first with 6154 victory points; Lew Mathe of Los Angeles and Robert Hamman of Van Nuys, Calif., second with 598, and Eric Mur- ray and Sammy Kehela of Tor- onto, third with 585. | Arthur Robinson and Robert Jordan of Philadelphia finished sixth with 558% points. Finishing fourth were B. J. Becker of New York and Mrs. Dorothy Hayden of Hastings-on- Hudson, N.Y., with 564 points, one-half point ahead of James) Jacoby and Dr. John Fishcer of Dallas. | The first six pairs qualified for the world pair champion- ships in Amsterdam right after now seems hazy. She finds it difficult to differ-| entiate between "what I have) read somewhere and what I re-| member." | "He gave me a golden child- hood," Mrs. Lanahan said, "un- til the world began to be too much for him, when I was about 11 years old." After that, she said, "I can remember almost nothing but money, and, hardest of-all, I) think his literary eclipse." | Fitzgerald died in 1940 while} the troubles which were re- 11:00 A.M. flected in our relations -- my "A Basic Question" mother's hopeless illness, his) own bad health and lack of} 7:00 P.M. prison, persistent rumors inside the union say Hoffa will try to install a caretaker president until he is free to resumed lead- ership. PLAYS CLOSE HAND The twice-convicted Hoffa is playing a quiet waiting game pending the outcome of his court appeals. He doesn't smile as much as he used to and he is somewhat gentler with his subordinates. Hoffa has been convicted of jury-tampering in a case that OSHAWA SPIRITUALIST CHURCH (Tennis Club Hall) Ritson Road N. & Hillcroft Branch of Toronto Spiritualist Temple Postor: Rev. Roy F. C. Stoddard 7:00 P.M.--DIVINE SERVICE REV, E. M. McGRATH BOTH SERVICES | | | Meeting Sunday: 2:30 P. M.--HEALING & SPIRIT GREETINGS | | Thursday 7:30 P.M.--MESSAGE SERVICE (Psychometry By Pastor) HARMONY ROAD -- BAPTIST CHURCH | 135 Harmony Rd. South Pastor Wm, J. D. Lewis 9:45 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M, "Ministering to the World" "Discover tne Difference" THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN CANADA KNOX SIMCOE ST. NORTH (Four blocks from King) Minister Rev, G W. C. Brett, B.A, Musical Director Mr. Matthew Gouldburn, A.L.C.M, ST. LUKE'S Rossland Rd. W. et Nipigon Minister REV. D. R. SINCLAIR, B.A, Pianist Miss Jane Welr ST. PAUL'S Wilson Rd. N. at King St. E. Rev. Walter Jackson Minister Mr. Frank Walter Musice! Director 1 9:45 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL "Delight Yourselves in God' Come end Wersnip With Us cottie was at Vassar; his wife! died eight years later. Mrs. Lanahan has written lit- tle about her father. "I've always left anything to do with daddy to the pros," she said. "Relatives. mess things up." CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH (Anglican) 9:30 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL 11:00 A.M. Good Out Of Nazareth All Cordiany invited UKRAINIAN Simcoe St. South Minister Rev. J. Jacenty 9:00 A.M.--Church School 1:00 A.M.---Morning Worship 9:30 AM. CHURCH SCHOOL 11:00 A.M, Commissioning Of Visitors 3:30 P.M.--Worship Service HUNGARIAN Minister Rev. E, Seress ot Knox Church Simcoe St. North 2nd and 4th SUNDAYS Mary end Hillcroft Streets SERVICES 8 AM. -11 AM, - 7PM, NURSERY CARE 11:00 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL--11 A.M WEDNESDAY -- 10:00 A.M, the world championships at Venice. HOLY COMMUNION BAHA'! WORLD FAITH Teaches: , "Men must prejudices which divide mankind" BAGOT AND The Reverend Canon F. ST. GEORGE'S ANGLICAN CHURCH The Reverend R. G, Brooks $.Th.--Assistant CENTRE STS. G. Ongley, M.A.--Rector SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21 11:00 A.M.--MORNING For Information re: weekly meetings or literature Write Box AS Tomorrow! ficonea behind world news! Monday - Saturday 9:05 - 9:35 P.M. (or immediately following Jr. A Hockey) | ond Sundey 10:30 - 11:00 P.M, 1350 RADIO Reveols the startling signi- | + with PROPHECIES next | 20 years! | | [4 GED | REORGANIZED CHURCH | OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS | | (World Headquarters, Independence, |) Missouri) ORANGE TEMPLE SIMCOE & BRUCE, OSHAWA 10:00 A.M. Chureh School For Children and Adulte 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship THEME: "ZION IS A RESPONSE OF GOD'S LOVE" SPEAKER: High Priest Elwood Smyth All Are Invited Phone 728-9604 THON CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH Temporary Place ot Worship: DR. S. J. (Corner Rossland and Simcoe Sts.) PASTOR: REV, D. N. HABERMEHL, B.A., M.Th, PHILLIPS SCHOOL 10:00 A. M. -- MORNING WORSHIP Nursery care provided during morning worship 7:00 P.M. -- EVENING SERVICE Tune in to CKLB et 11 A.M. on alternating Sundoys (Services of Chr, Ref. Churches in the Oshawa-areo) and at 9:15 P.M. (Back to God Hour, each Sunday) Nursery Facilities evailable THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25th--Holy Communion--10:00 e.m. Advent 9:00 A.M.--HOLY COMMUNION Sermon: "Marriage and Divorce' (2) 7:00 P.M.--EVENING PRAYER st -- Sunday next before PRAYER et the 11:60 @.m. Servies REV, REV. GORD Faculty member at Toronto Bible College 6:30 P.M.--Prayer Fellowship BOND ST. EAST 9:45 A.M.--Sunday School 11:00 A.M. and 7:00. P.M. ---- RICHARD J. BARKER, Minister ON DOREY a The Salvation Army Band will "A Welcome Awaits THE SALVATION ARMY Corps Officers Major & Mrs. Gordon Holmes To serve Gopi NOVEMBER 21st 11:00 AM.--'l SAW THE LORD" 2:00 P.M--SUNDAY SCHOOL 7:00 P.M.--"CHRIST AT THE DOOR" TUES. 2:30 P.M.--HOME LEAGUE WED. 8:00 P.M.--PRAYER AND BIBLE STUDY November 30th. 133 Simcoe South SUNDAY, be Christmas playing starting You at the Army" CLASSIFIED Telephone 723-3492 Dont Miss Out On The 'Ready - to - buy' Market Right this minute more and more modern businessmen are alm- Ing their sales message right to the BEST prospects, with fast- acting TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS, Every day, hundreds of the best prospects your business has, are turning to the TIMES. CLASSIFIED SECTION. These are people who have made the decision to buy, they already want a product or service and are voluntarily seeking out offers to help them decide where to buy. 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