Times & Guide (1909), 9 Jul 1919, p. 7

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I All those who become disciples ot) Jesus are to take the oath ot allegi- ance to the Kingdom of Heaven by the rite of Baptism. They are to be baptized into the name of the aIoly Ghost. The name represents the essential nature, the person, in which is summed up all his char- acteristics and attributes. When one (is baptized into the name of the _"1‘rinity, he professes to acknowledge and appropriate God in all that He is quid in all that He does for man. He recognizes and depends upon God the Father as his Creator and Preserver; receives Jesus Christ as his only Med-' iator and Redeemer, and his pattern of lite; and confesses the Holy Spirit as his Sanctifier and Comforter. The Example of Jesus About six months before Jesus be- gan His ministry there suddenly ap- "arespred in Judea a strange-looking man of 30 years. He made his home "in the wild, thinly inhabited regions of Judea along the Jordan, in the perfectly natural way in which a. poor man would live in the wilderness. , Here was God's messenger', the "voice of one crying in the Wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, of Jesus, who was soon to begin His Work of salvation, " I-II; Acts 8: 26-40. GOLQEN T1gXT---For as many of on as Cara baptized into Christ did ut on Cmrist.--Gal. 3:27, _ glue Teacher and His Class ,1 Th rite of Baptism is one of the [ est important in ~the Christian , urch. It has been from the first the Sign of allegiance to Christ; the symbol of the regeneration by the :1!on Spirit; the Badge of Christian Discipleship. Baptism symbolizes cleansing from (sin as the result of repentance and faith; consecration to God; citizenship in the Kingdom of Heaven. As it means cleansing, water, the ordinary cleansing agent, is used as the sym- The Baptism of Jesus by John, was at Bethabara, one of the Fords ot the Jordan, at the very beginning of Jes- us’ public life. . T The Commission to the Apostles Jesus had died on the cross; had been raised from the dead; and had during nearly 40 days appeared to His disciples on various occasions. ”Now the ,time is drawing near that He must depart and He calls His eleven closest disciples, the apos- tles, to a mountain in Galilee, tor some closing words of counsel and "cheer, He promises them that He will be always with them even unto - Baptism may be compared to the oath of allegiance required of all be- coming citizens of a, new country. V The Lesson in its Setting _ lThe Commission of Jesus to His disiciples was "on a mountain in Galilee” atter" His resurrection, and very probably just a little before His ascension. tiiu.,iiiaa otine world; and as their Lord and Master He gives to them their Great C6mmission. To John's baptism came, the multi- fudes. representatives from all parts kd the ca 3try, and ot all clasSes, rich and poo , .eamed‘and ignorant, Phar- isees and tax-gatherers. _ has WEEKS John preached the baptism of re- pentamee,--repentance that was ex- pressed, tested and confirmed by bap- tism. 'Six months after John had appeared in Judea Jesus, then about " years not age, left His Nazareth home, and went to the place where John was haptizintr, at Bethabara, near the Jor- dan. Here He presented Himself as a candidate for baptism. John, who, as a near relative, doubtless knew the character of this new candidate rem- onstrated with Him: "1 have need to tty baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me" But Jesus made answer, "But- fer it to be so now: for thus it be- ‘cometh us to fulfill all righteousness." LESSON IL-r-July 13. Baptism-Matthew 28 Jesus had no sins to be forgiven, but Xe could place Himself by His bap- tism as wholly opposed to all sins and wrongs as entirely consecrated to righteousness and the holiness of the kingdom of heaven. He did what all 'men ought to do, placed Himself pub- licly before the world as belonging to the kingdom of God, and everywhere and always opposed to the Kingdom of Satan. Five or six years after the begin- ning of the Christian Church (AD. 35 or M), there was so much work to be done that seven deacons were ap- pointed. One of these deacons was Philip, not the Apostle, and another was Stéphen, who, became the, first martyr of the Church. At the time of the persecution "which followed the death of Stephen, Philip went to‘Samaria, where he made many converts. After this he received a command to Arise, and go toward the south, unto the way that goeth down from Jerusalem unto Gaza, which is desert. An Ethiopian, the chief treasurer of Candace, queen of a kingdom east of the Red Sea, was probably a Jew- ish proselyte, since he had come to Jerusalem for to worship at one of the great feasts. He was now on his way home on the road running southwest from Jerusalem. He was riding in his chariot, and reading the 53rd chapter of Isaiah, concerning the Messiah. Deacon Phillip was directed to go to meet him. He was invited to ride in the chariot and to explain the bear- ing of the chapter upon the new red ligion of Jesus, the Messiah. 'EDNESDAYV JULY 9TH, The Ethiopian treasurer was con- vinced and as they came to some stream on their way he said, See, here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized k little later in the historv of the} “WW“ . "r"'"'", "'""--"', . _ F - been Winning some prizes lately at Church we see Peter 1n_the house of Newark and Philadelphia, entered for Cornelius commanding that those who ' V . T . . A . almost evely race available. to Itim 111 had listened to his preaching and be- th tt it “di in the road 'lieved should be ha, ti d _ I e a ern00n a er I'l “g ll I A p lze as the sea _ _ . , _ . . _ race in the morning. Doc Morton of their faith. after they had received thi "d _ th h If .1 while the gift of the Holy Ghost came ll IO 9 a -m1 e, ., y . . Gordon McMillan and "Baldy Wat- ' " . yrus.r.tPt1te.srPbo1 son, returned men, came first and Buried with Christf’ A symbol second respectively in the two-mile or type ot the change made In the handicap. A special event was an iny- life of a person who has repented of promptu race between two little boys wins SIDS and entered upon a new life. seven years old on small bicycles in Second Symbol which Herb. McDonald‘s son beat the "Putting on Christ." When you ac- little lad named Zimmerman of Lon, cepted Jesus Christ as your Saviour don. and King, and were baptized in His o name, then ye "put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after l OVERLAND OUTPUT To BE fhe image of Him that created Him." 1751300 CARS THIS YEAR V Third Symbol I "From Death to Life." It is the res- i . ',1itf"t'fitr,ifttfeJi'i,t,:. the pure spiritual John N. TriHys, President of the 11itt Whiéh t es us entrance into the Willys-Overland Company, announces Jrirutitiit'p. The death of Christ was a a new manufacturing plan which calls ggeoessgiry prelude to His resurrection; for a, production expansion in Toledo 'i'rttt'yJ1tityati,?,TiiCft-ttt tor our. sins there to 175,900 cars during 1919. This will finagffigvex J'r,1setrs' tJo' resurrection to mean an increase of 25 per cent., over "'tiii'uia'"trti'iiltr'ite'jytAit Spixit: ,VBut His death I the Company's best year. S. S. LESSON 18-2t); Mark 1919 alone, without His resurrection, would have left us in the darkness of death, not in the glorious light of the life eternal. RECORD PRICE FOR HOLSTEIN cow $40,000 Complete reports of the recent Pine Grove sale at Buffalo show that the highest priced cow, and also the high- est priced female of the breed ever sold, was Segis Hengerveld Fayne Johanna, This 47.34 lb. daughter of the 50.68 1b. cow, Segis Fayne Johan- na, went to Dold Bros., Alden, N. Y., at $40,000, and her yearling daughter brought $22,000 from the same buy- ers. / T $150 Investment Brings $58,600 Twelve years ago a New York tarm- er named Wilkinson bought for $150 a. Holstein cow, Elnora Paula. DeKol Oatka, 85125. Evidently he learned vaLna, uUJ-rav- --'s"e-"--t' -4- - - to love the cow and her descendants for he used good sires and practiced line-breeding and inbreeding methods and he must also have fed and cared for them well, for to-day Elnora Paw la DeKol Oatka possesses fat records varying from 16 3-4 pounds as a tive- year-old up to 24 1-2 pounds as a nine-eayr-old. She has six A. R. o. daughters whose fat records range from 17 pounds at the age of 24 mos. to 25.9 pounds at mature age. Also she has one A. R. o. son. With these evidences of productivity, excellence of _ individuality has been maintained. The reader can hardly guess the re- sult, but here it is: Elnora, Paula, De- Kol Oatka, came to the Pine Grove farm and brought her family with her. On the 26th day of May she with 33 of her own direct descendants entered the sale ring and sold tor $58,600, the old mother herself bringing $1,500 at the age of 14 years, still breeding and in calf to Bag Apple the Great. Elnor- adale Pietje Paula, one of her record daughters, sold for $7,700, and one of her three tested daughters in turn, Elnoradale Pietje Paula 2nd, brought $5,000. And this is the valuable gist of thes tory; in 12 years an investment of $150 in one good cow grew to $58,- 600, besides the cash and use received from milk, butterfat and bull calves during the time. Surely breding dairy cattle, like any other business offers opportunities to those who think and act. Congress Lake Farm bought the whole family of 34 head, one after tur.. other as the) came into the ring. MANY TORONTO CYCLIS'I‘S - AT LONDON MEET more than a race. It is an instltu- tion. Each year it attracts the pick of the riders and draws together many of the men who are interested in the sport ot cycling, either as riders, of- fici,als or spectators, during the quart- er of a century in which the race has been pulled off annually. This year, the 26th, a variation was made by transferring the race to Lon- don and running it in connection with the Dominion championship meet held there on Dominion Day. It is just 23 years since the Dunlop race was held in London before. ' The arrangements made by botWthe Dunlop Company and the London dealers were all that could be desir- ed. The g-rniliy course, out Dundas Street was good part of the way though badly cat up with ruts out- side of the city with a number of falls as the result. There was not so much trouble experienced with motorists along the way as has been the case in the vicinity of Toronto the last few years. While the time made was not remarkably fast it was very fair considering the road conditions. The first man in was Richard Har- bord, of the Broadway Club, Toronto, time 52.39. He was closely followed by a young London rider, E. Cousins, on a Perfect who rode under a. 9- minute handicap and put up a, re- markabty good race. The‘time prize was won by Roland Brady of the H. yr. A. C., 'Dpronto, with 5-minute handicap, time 49.05. Second and third were J. Lowry of the Classic, To- ronto, and F. Ruelins, Brodway, To- ronto, with only one second of differ- ence. The Dunlop Shield for the club with the biggest number ot win- ning entries was the H. M. A. C. of Toronto. After the race the officials were given a, luncheon by the London dear. ers. Amongst those present were: L. Rubenstein, President of the C. W. A., W. G. McClelland, the clerk of the course who has not missed a. single one of the 26 Dunlop races, Robert Falconer, G. L. MacKay, J. H. Smith, C. E. Patrick, B. F. Brown, ‘of Chat- ham, F. W. Staples, of Ingersoll, Frank Adams, of the London Adver- tiser, J. B. O’Higgingsof Toronto, A. A. Briggs, Sker'row, H. E. Richard. D. E. Rogerson, C. D. Falls and J. F. Duncan, of the Dunlap Company, J. E. Coltson, Geo. Braden and J. H. Morrow, of the C. C. M., also a full representation of the. London dealers, including G. A. Wenige, Walter Gum, A. T.. Tanner, W. A. Walker, E. M. Bissett and J. H. Barnard. A feature of the lunch was the running tire of Jew stories and Scotch stories from Louis Rubenstein and w. G. McClel- 42 riders covered the entire course Harold Bbunsail rode from scratch.' land In the afternoon about 500 specta-l tors gathered on the grand stand atl Queen's Park to see the big programl of bicycle races, including the Do- minion Championship events. In the" later Harold Bounsall and Herb Mc- Donald caried off the medals, the former coming first in the half-mile and mile and second in the two-mile; Herb. McDonald won first in the two- mile and second in the shorter dis- tanees. Harold, Bounsall, who has been winning some prizes lately at Newark and Philadelphia, entered for almost every race available to him in the afternoon after riding in the road race in the morning. Doc Morton came third in the halt-mile, while Gordon McMillan and "Baldy" Wat- son, returned men, came first and second respectively in the two-mile handicap. A special event was an iny- promptu race between two little boys seven years old on small bicycles in which Herb. McDonald‘s son beat the little lad named Zimmerman of Lon, don. The annual Dunlap road race a, new manufacturing plan which calls for a.» production expansion m Toledo to 175,t00 cars during 1919. This will mean an increase of 25 per cent. over the Company's best yeah V p road race is It is an institu- Never over season fruit salads, you destroy the fruit flavors. _ A hot water bottle can be patched with a piece ot adhesive tape. Whitewash the cellar as often as you can afford.the tim.e and money. - This is the time to haée the furnace put in order for the winter. An addition to iced tea or lemon- ade is fresh mint chopped. "gk" tireless cqoker makes it possible to use cheapef cuts of meat. -e CANNED CHERRIES - OPEN KE’I‘TLE METHOD Stone cherries (an excellent little instrument for stoning cherries may be procured for a, few cents). Make a syrup of consistency to suit the in- dividual taste, but remember that too much sugar will spoil the flavor of the fruit. Boil sugar and water to- gether for five minutes, then add as many cherries as will float in the kct- tle. Boil gently for ten minutes, then fill thoroughly sterilized jars to with- in 1-4 inch ot top. Seal quickly and invert to cool. A few of the cherry pies should be cracked and cooked with the fruit. Put pitted and sweetened cherries an inch deep in the bottom of a, pud- ding dish. Take one cup of sugar and beat to a, cream with two table- spoons shortening. add one well-beat- en egg, then three-quarters of a'cup ot milk alternately with two cups of flour which has first been sifted with three teaspoons baking powder. Mix Well, flavor with lemon or nutmeg, pour mer the cherries and bake. To serve, turn from the dish, having ihe fruit on top; use sweet, warm sauce. Cherries may be stirred into an or- dinary bread pudding and then baked. sugar, white ot one egg, cherries washed and stoned. Line "a pie plate with paste, and over the bottom spread slightly the beaten white ot egg. Fill with cherries and sprinkle with su- gar and flour. Bake with a top crust in a moderate, oven. Take the pits from two quarts of nice large cherries; put two cups of vinegar, two cups of sugar, one dozen Whole cloves and two or three sticks of cmnamon broken coarsely, in 1he preserving kettle, and boil the cher- ries ten mmutes. Set away 111 the kettle until next, day; boil again five minutes and bottle while boiling, in sealers. A few whole cloves under the cotks will prevent mould on the top of bottles. _ CHERRY SYRUP FOR BEVERAGES Bruise six pounds of cherries with the stones in (breaking them); add three cups hot water and boil one- quarter hour, strain through a jblly bag, add three pounds sugar and boil until it will sink to the bottom of a cup of water when dropped from a spoon; then turn into jelly glasses and cover with paper dipped in the white of an egg. To use tor a drink, put a spoonful in a. glass of water, let stand ten minutes, stir it and add chopp'ed ice, if you have it. MANY FATALITJES FROM INDUSTRIAL A( Industrial activity in the province has not fallen off very greatly, not- withstanding the stoppage of War- time activities. ' This is what the figures of the Workmen's Compensa- tion Board shows. The total number of accidents re- ported during the first half of 1919 was 19,811, as compared with 22,702 during the first half of 1918. The amount of compensation awarded was $1,676,049.88. as against $1,672,362.84, and the amount of medical and hospi- tal bills $170,459.23, as against $183,- 429.92 during the first half of 1918. The number of accidents reported each month were: January, 3471; February, 3164; March, 3343; April, 3112; May, 3201, and June, 3520. of the 't'otal, 19,811 accidents, 215 were fatal. Woodland, near Mt. Forest, held a garden party and presented 18 return- ed men with club bags. _ Three tablespoons flour, % cup SWEET PICKLED CHERRIES TIPS TO HOUSEWIVES FORD MOTORS FORD 'I-Ton Truck Chassis MotorsaiiesalMachiimsry To light your home and supply power CHERRY PUDDING Port Credit x m. , C q ' _ T - T _ _ gm" , ' T r ,. b, , 1 "c,'r' ' 3/4,;- 'Br ' 1 3,, _ ' A“ ,.a'.'_yu.r.‘_ cr-Cy, A,l .33". \ rii', H“- :1. 'y."-,'; s':r_'str._,, ' '.,. ,'. l N s,v‘:;x\‘-_:‘;,a Fe' 5N5: _/ri,, ")sr1'rj',)?ll:c)cs 'iukLshreL'ifir'i. 3 K,_ 1. ”It vs\rC" 1;" y .. 'c_c', '.,' /s,cisi'c?tr,c/,':.i,tiy/a" F'sj)>'jv7,rrr', sf 1jyr2'tlai1"ri, .,.\ I' r-s', _ 1.. s," . ‘W “41v¥".'»\,-.‘. T ","; Cs"e%irvfyi-: y.T,rlr.',Irlrr"f'r' .mng'ki' ",., i Cr,). , C “My r.ycu"f."y,'i'p,:'tc','v: rum.“ 23.”.H;.;‘..¢_ 3‘31””: 3.,“ " '//,, , r" x ' _ , T »/‘L¢Jis,q. , V; . "r',U' Tn' "r. ’. »\ 'e". _'"./r'r1';c,r,1r" ,r . . r'-' .as‘“ "I?“ 1,51" ”W's. fer, lj:?'. _. " 'th ' c, Kim: "it C I: _.,;.§eif-,‘ L, ' riiy'g' ,_ ','t', Cc/i', _, "dr.," 331.1; A ’, Trs' _ - a,' r?. "ic; 'Cb,e/,V,'i"er/,l, v c'C'l.lwr: "rr." TH EcyUiNc;l VEsRLS (AI L "ty,"8,72, V C" / ‘4 _',' var“: Cf7ic'eir:kireC,li, V, tt.r'r,', r' . . ,.' [ CHERRY PIE tyments made Agents for T DELCO ELECTRIC LIGHTING SYSTEM We give best price for your used Ford car. HEAVY DUTY TWO-TON TRUCKS 'AND TRAILERS Fordson Tractors TOURING, RUNABOUT, SEDAN AND COUPE CARS . on hand for immediate delivery ------also------ Agents for FAIRBANKS-MORSE LIMITED itted with any body to suit you de in cash or deferred payments to suit you on Cars, Trucks,' &c. l ACCIDENTS MACHINERY, ETC. Am PRESSURE SHOULD REMAIN THE SAME Tire air pressure should remain the same winter and summer, says the manager of a. large tire company. "Many car owners labor under a. false impression regarding the tire pressure," he adds. "Tires should not be pumped up harder in the winter months. Likewise pressure should not be reduced in summer, because de- creases cause the tire to bend more, create more friction and naturally to generate heat. Motorists are inclined to make a, complicated matter of in- flation. While too little pressure is undoubtedly the biggest abuse tires are put to, determining the air pres- sure of tires is really a. simple mat- ter. When the electric starting system refuses to start and the crank has been left home in the garage, the mo- torist still has methods of getting the car going. The best way, perhaps, is to jack up one of the rear wheels and turn it by hand, with the cluch en- gaged and high gear shifted in. The spark should be retarded and only a small throttle opening allowed. Before removing the jack, the gears shcqld be shifted to neutral again. MOTOR TRUCK HAULING _ sm-" CHEAPER THAN BY WAGON Statistics compiled by the U. S. Bureau of Agriculture show that the cost tor hauling in Wagons from farm to shipping point averaged in 1918 about 30 cents a ton tor wheat, 33 cents for corn and 48 cents for cot- ton, against motor truck averaging 15 cents tor wheat and corn and 18 cents for cotton. The distance cov- ered in these hauls averaged 11.3 miles for motors and f) miles for wagons, the motor making 3.4 round trips per day and the wagon on its shorter route only 1.2 round trip per day. The average load carried was wheat 56 bushels and corn 39 bushels by Wagon; by motor, wheat 84 bushels and corn 58 bushels. CITY PAVEMENTS GET The "hot pavement," which figures in the typical description of city wea- ther in the dog-days deserves its bad reputation, according to an article by Mr. G. S. Eaton, in the Engineering News-Record, reporting the results of thermometric readings made on Au-. gust 6th and 7th at Riverside, 20 miles from Chicago. Readings were taken every half hour from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. at the Jsuieace of three types of pavement; also one foot and four feet above the pavements, and over adja- cent lawns. Maximum temperatures of 124, 118 and 114 _degrees Fahr. were attained respectively by asphalt, brick and concrete surfaces. From 11 an}. to 6.30 p.m. the average tem- peratures of these three types of pave- ments were, respectively, 118, 113 and 108 degrees. The writer points out that the trouble caused to motorists by the expansion of air in rubber tires in hot weather must be greatly ag- gravated by these pavement tempera- tures, while the effects on horse's hoofs and one shoe leather are prob- lematical. During the middle ot the day the air one foot and four feet above the roadways was from 3% to 4% degrees higher than over a lawn in the sun. On the same days the Chicago station of the Weather Bur- eau recorded. the highest daily maxi- ma tor the summer: via., 102 ind 101 degrees A few miles from Wingham, a Pe- turned soldier is having considerable dlfficulty in teaching his war bride how to perform household duties, says the Ripley Express. She does not take kindly to washing dishes and keeping the home in order. After meals she insists on' sitting on the table smoking cigarettes and taking life easy. She says Canada is a. her- rid place, with no life or brass bands, and wishes she was back to old Lon- don. An X-ray was taken of the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Johnson of Big Island, without the safety-pin she was supposed to have swallowed being revealed, and later the safety-pin was found on the bed. EMERGENCY STARTING SHE DON’T LIKE WORK AUTO NUI‘ES for light machinery AS 128 DEGREES 7 Limited Ontario A HOUSE THAT YOU WILL BE PROUD TO OWN WE CAN SUPPLY ALL THE LUMBER LATH,SH1NGLES, DOORS, SASH, KITCHEN CABINET, BUFFET, DINING ROOM WOOD, MANTELS, &c., COMPLETE READY FOR PUTTING TOGETHER. THAT MEANS ALL THE MILL WORK DONE. 1iiiiiiuiiiiiiimii, m1, iiiiiii" C. DANKERT, Superintendent Become a regular subscriber to the Times and Guide. Tell us what you require for your office or store and we will give you a system that will give you no work. Programmes and Posters are supplied by us at all pricesa grades, and quantities. It adds (was and quality to your business to use good stationery. I . ti {6 Loose Leaf Binders & System (tyHlllliiytyllK BOOKS 'The Tunes a Guide Then get our prices on these books. for us. This is our specialty. You see our bills everywhere. GET THE HABIT OF DEALING WITH THE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Phone 175. Church Street, Weston " THAT REMINDS ME " 4iifi'cs' V See the compact layout. Every inch of space used. Large fireplace in the living room, large dining room, good, well.. lighted kitchen and bedrooms. V you money. You Will Need This plan and specifications go with every sale and save Look at This Plan They are made by the McCaskey Co. specially "iirSi'tTSi TTs 5 W. BARRATT,, Manager. PAGE l l l m. I if.

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