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Times & Guide (1909), 6 Oct 1920, p. 7

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@afi,; e To Win Worldâ€"Trade We Must Develop Aime! _ _ Overseas Trade Keeps Canada Prosperous R N nc ‘Puslinch, who removed. to Guelph, went out to look for her threeâ€"year ‘old boy, and on failing to find him, passed away of heart trouble aggraâ€" â€"â€"wvated by the excitement. â€"IMPURE BLOOD PIMPLES, BLACKHEADS, AND ALL IMPERFECTIONS OF THE SKIN AND BLOOD Vital tablets work wonders. Mrs. Boner of Calgary writes that she had been, troubled with impure blood for years. At times her face would break out in blotches. She was almost ashamed to meet her friends. After taking Vital tablets her complexion was as clear as could be, the color reâ€" turned to her face. She attributes all this to Vital Tablets. If your blood is impure or watery, if you are pale, weak, rundown, don‘t lose any time. Go to your druggist .and procure Vital tablets, the great French tonic for blood and nerves. ‘Vital tablets will not‘ only purify and make blood, but will build up a runâ€" down constitution. It is the elixir of youth. If you are unable to procure Vital tablets at your druggist, write to the Scobell Drug Co., Montreal. ‘Price 50c per box or six boxes for $2. Mrs. Evans, a former resident of HON AND DEARIE HE owNER OF ( 1 wow‘t CHARGE L TE ST2AY COW °/ yoU FoR. THE SHowS UP TO cow BuT youU‘VUE e ClaiMm ITâ€" ANP _ gar to PpaY FOR. ALso OTHER _ | tig miILK Y0U USED, THINGS. You‘vE HAD HER. . LA p (Q t )) The Navy League of Canada ‘% h 7\ Our Sea Heritage _ Our Ports Our Men _ _Our Ships Trade must flow East and West and Overseasâ€" Shut off this Dominion from the seas and in fifty years Canada will cease to be a nation. â€"Workers busy â€"Wages good Farmers affluent You‘vE HAD HER ANIMAL . SEE & 1 THREE PAYS. e e PROVOKE NOT YOUR CHILDREN We do not recall ever having heard this text expounded. We have heard the changes rung often enough upon. the duty of the children to obey their parents, and. we have heard parents exhorted to bring their children to Christ; but the fact that parents ofâ€" ten provoke their children to the point of discouragement seems to be overlooked by most of us. And, again, there is such an uneasy consceiousness in the hearts of most parents, in reâ€" gard to the training of their children, that they do not care to probe the matter very deeply. And yet we ought to face the truth, even if it is an unâ€" welcome one. ‘"Provoke" may mean simply to arouse to action, and it may have a good meaning; but, when Paul used it, and said "provoke not," bhe evidently meant it in a different sense. The idea of arousing to action is still thereâ€"but the end is evil, instead of good We provoke our children by our carelessness. We promise little Bill a sleigh or a ball, and we forget all about it. We promise May a dress or a box of candy, and we néever think of it again. "On," you say, "my memory is poor.‘" But we don‘t forget the things we want. We reâ€" member our own needs but weforget the children‘s. The children‘s eyes are sharp, and they notice this. ‘"Faâ€" ther gets whatever he wants; but he forgets what we want." This is a litâ€" Nit 1N i \4. we Dipw‘T GET )| mERE‘S No MILK . BUT NOTH!C You‘vEe aoT To WRONG PAy me Forg J & THAT aV BOARDING NEGVE: THE PESZLY T nntnaalcerr 7 . I:ig%&& TELL HIM I SEN wrond wTH ?zwng THAT auyS5 A gooP $ NERVE . CoW NEXT -? TIME ,-/ \\' A BOOK ON &9 How To MiLK i) â€"â€"7 wouLp BE ~â€"@ More He?. 14 Golden Textâ€"‘"This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.‘"‘ Mat. BAPTISM AND TEMPâ€" Expositionâ€"I. Jesus Baptised with Water and with the Holy Spirit, 3: 13â€"17. Lesson Textâ€"Mat.. 3: 1 â€"4: 11. (Read Mat. 3: 1â€"4: 11; Deut. 6: 4â€"16.) Timeâ€"A.D. 27. Placeâ€"Bethany, beyond Jordan and Wilderness. Jesus Himself, the Baptiser "who with the Holy Spirit and fire," comes to John to be baptised with water. Could anything make more plain the great importance of water baptism ? Jesus was baptised with water to "fulâ€" fil all righteousness." God commands water baptism as the form by which sinful man shall publicly confess his renunciation of sin.. Jesus »was not a sinner, but He took the sinner‘s place, was made to sin for us (Rom. g:mp 2 Cor" 5: 21) as Jordan ("‘the water") and Calvary (""the blood"). (Comp. 1 Jno. 5: 6, R. V.). The fwo occasions on which God bore testiâ€" mony to the Sonship of Jesus were here, when He humbled Himself to take the Sinner‘s place in baptism, |a,nd when on the Mount of Transfigâ€" uration He humbled Himself by turnâ€" ing His back on the glory that was becoming His, to come back and take the sinner‘s place on the cross (ef, Lu. 9: 31, 35; Phil. 2: 6â€"8, 9). That God thus spoke is settled by competent testimony and in conclusive proof of the divinity of Jesus. Jesus was bapâ€" tised not only with water but with the Holy Ghost (cf. Jno. 1: 38, 34). 1II. Jesus Tempted in All Points Like as We Are, Yet Without Sin, 1â€"11. The temptation of Jesus followed immediately upon His baptism with the Holy Spirit (comp. ch. 3: 16, TT Tm. 321 23;1: 1, 14, 18, Ac. TQ:38). It was the Holy Spirit who led Jesus _up to be tempted by the devil (cf. Mk. 1: 12). The temptation was a necesâ€" ‘sary preparation for Christ‘s â€" work, just as necessary as the baptism with the Holy Spirit (Heb 2: 17. 18; 4: 15, 16). The temptation came from without, not within. The personality cunning and malignity and "defeat of Satan all came out in this lesson. He met temptation in such a state of physical weakness as would make reâ€" sistance to temptation most difficult and failure "most excusable," but He did not fail, and so.no man can now plead adverse circumstances as a jusâ€" tification for wrongdoing. The tempâ€" tation was most real, because Jesus was most human and most hungry. The devil introduces his temptation as he did that of Eve in the garden, by suggesting a doubt of God‘s word (ef. ch. 3: 17). â€" Where would have been the harm in Jesus doing as Satan suggested? (1) It would have been to have doubted God‘s word and to have sought confirmation of it by a token (namely, His ability to perform this miracle. (2) It would have been to have taken HImself out from under those human cofhfditions under which He had voluntarily placed. Himself for our redemption (Phil. 2: 6â€"§; Heb. 2: 14). It would have involved the tle thing, but it means that our chilâ€" dren are losing faith in their own fathâ€" er which, in a very real sense, means, usually, losing faith in God and man. This is no little thing, but a grave crime against the @hild. We provoke our children when we fail to keep faith with them. The case is bad enough when we simply forget, but it is much worse when we deliberately lie to them. This is less common than the other, but it is common enough, There are some people who seem to think that it is not necessary to be honest with chilâ€" dren, and they do not sceruple to break faith even with their own boys and girls.. Such a man is not only a dishonored man, but «he is teaching his children to break faith. For such a crime there seems no adequate penâ€" alty. Perhaps we are wrong, yvet it does seem to us that the man who will deliberately lie to his child will also lie to his God. Such a man‘s children will find it hard to be good. And we provoke our children by our injustice. When disputes arise we settle them by the quickest methâ€" od and often we fail to be fair. There are a few parents who escape this indictment. Perhaps we do not mean to be unjust, perhaps we do not mean to be unfair; yet all too often we say things and do. things that leave in the minds of our chilâ€". dren a rankling sense of our injustice. | We blame them for what they did not do; we refuse to listen to their explanations, or to credit them if we do listen. We treat their petty faults as though they were unheardâ€" of crimes, and we talk to the chilâ€" dren as though there never had been such sinners in the world before. § This is not fair; this is not just, and \the children resent it, and they have a right to resent it. And if they ! look upon their parents as typical Christians, they will naturally conâ€" clude that Christianity and fair play are very far apart. The fact that we preach ~justice, ‘that we profess ‘to admire it, that we insist that it is The Sunday School Lesson a foundation of all virtue, only makes all the more inexplicable the injusâ€" tice which we practise towards our own children. Again, we provoke our children when we fail to recognize that they have reached the years of accountaâ€" bility. It is hard to realize that our boys and girls are growing up, and we are apt to forget that, with inâ€" w# TATION OF JESUS DON‘T GIVE UP THE w UNTiL _ HE IDENTIFIES HER . o HIM TELL THE ~ DATE. M\ t | KVow HE!" (RPSE _U" have ungol% ssters W 3 t CALAMITY giving up of the redemption of man by a divine Person who had really become man. Many commit essentialâ€" ly the same sin toâ€"day when they take themselves out from the sphere of sacâ€" rifice and suffering in which it is necâ€" essary that one live if he is to have saving power with his fellowâ€"men. (3) It would have been to have disâ€" trusted God. Jesus would rely upon God to supply His needs in lawful ways gcomp_ v. 4). Whenever we reâ€" sort to unworthy means for the supâ€" port either of self or of God‘s work, we are guilty of the same distrust. Jesus met every attack with "the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word" (Eph. 6: 17). All of Christ‘s citations of Scripture are from onge book, and that, too, & book that the higher critics have made the most strenuous efforts to discredit (comp. Deut. 8: 3; 6: 16, 18; 10; 20). Itis no wonder the devil hates that book, after the way in which he was pierced and defeated by it. If we would meet Saâ€" tan‘s temptations as successfully as Jesus did, we must meet him with the same, weapon. The devil can quote Scripture upon occasion. He is never more dangerous than when he quotes and misapplies Scripture. The devil omilted a very important clause in his quotations (see Ps. 91: 11;.12).. One, needs to watch the devil‘s quotations of Scripture very closely. He is likely to quote nearly as it reads, but not just as it reads. Where would have been the wrong in Jesus doing as Saâ€" tan suggested ? (1) It would have been to doubt God‘s word by making an experiment to see if it would come out as God said, It would have been tempting God (v. 7). This form of sin is very common. (2) It would have been an act of spiritual pride, a mere display of trust in God, when no end was to be accomplished by it. The sin into which Satan sought to lead Christ is committed by those who rush into unnecessary peril to show how strong they are spiritually. The devil appears at last in his true colors (v. 9). He would have the Son of God render to him that worship that beâ€" longs to God alone. Could the devil give what he promised ? â€" Jno. 14: 30). The antiâ€" Christ will derive his power from him. Satan offered Jesus the dominion by another road than the cross. The temptation was real, but it was utterly ineffective. We yield to this temptation when we seek that which God has for us by some other path than the one God appointsâ€"via Calvary. The three temptations corâ€" respond to the threeâ€"fold temptation in Eden, and appeal "to the lust of the flesh," "the vainglory of life," and * the lust of the eyes" (cf. Gen. 3: 6; 1 Jno. 2: 16) Then the angels came and ministered unto Him. That was much better than cating bread made ou‘t of stones. The facts connected with the Bapâ€". tism of Jesus emphasize His Deity and. His taking man‘s place: the facts conâ€" nected with His Temptation emphasize the reality and completeness of His humanity. The temptation as here reâ€" corded also emphasizes the certainty that there is a personal devil and the Divine organ, authority and inerrancy of the Old Testament Scriptures. creasing wisdom, there comes the; growing right to direct their own, lives. Johnny ceases to be a child. rather early in life, and he has an increasing right to say what shall be done with him. We do not mean, that a boy of thirteen should be alâ€" lowed to leave school and go to work, but we do think that he should. be made to feel that the directions of his life are resting very largely upon himself. There is an oldâ€"fashionâ€" tendency in some quarters to keep children in ignorance of the business ‘of the father, which seems singularâ€" ly foolish, the more so as it is often accompanied by the refusal to allow the children to have anything to do with financial affairs The children ‘are partners in the home, and they should be trained to recognize the fact, and they should early be asked to take a place at the family council table. J HE‘S TeyInG To HAND ( Po? THE ’Cows UNCLE .\ Many a father complains that his children are very unruly, that they "get mad" at him often, and usâ€" ually he interprets it as showing that there is a lot of the devil in the children. We wonder if the real seâ€" cret is not that the father himself is responsible for "provoking" the children. We are not arguing that children are always right and parâ€" ents always wrong, but we do hold that every Christian parent has a right to regulate his conduct and his speech so that he (or she) will not provoke the children. Pour the oil of encouragement on the wheels of progress and watch ‘em whirl; but don‘t pour coal oil on a fire to light or quicken it. It may cost you your life. â€" Keep inflammable material _ away from stoves, stove pipes and gas jets. Mimost Women‘s Institute met and sewed and finished complete in one afternoon, three substantial bedquilts for the Children‘s Shelter, Guelph. George Cutting recovered $50 from Eramosa Township Council for a horse that broke its leg in a defective bridge and had to be destroyed. Little Eugene Zetttler of Walkerton, four years old, had his left arm fracâ€" tured when a horse kicked him. \9![‘ S Tiose _ DIzZYPUME GOOPD ADVICE pip A cow) reauy JumP quEr ME iT MIGHT HAvE IF iT hAD Ssomne_ * ve Moon SHINE . moon SIS & Looks as if Canned Milk is Cheaper HAPPENED_TD BoTICE THAT HONP ADD THE COW \eesemsa,e °. EXH OTHER., wE {OST IF A CoW 1sS RAISED op aRass sSTUPE, WouLD you SAY ‘THEY EAT o ~ RAZOQ BLADE5. MyZ \7, / A â€" will Place this Beautiful Grafon ola~*10 Selections in Your Home at Once c lsh the nrivilece of paying us balance of Just $10 Toâ€"morrow 41 five recorus. This hansome instrument is made in both mahogany and fumed oak finish, and you can have your choice of either. It is over 40 inches high, 184 tuches wide, 20% inches deep (frent to back). All the mechanical details are of best construction. It has threeâ€"speed drive motor, plays four records with one winding, tone con_gol leaves, graduated dial speed regulator, new Dayonetâ€"joint tone arm, Coâ€" lumbia reproducer, pianoâ€"hinged lid, with selfâ€" adjusting support. All exposed parts heavily nickelâ€"plated. No other phonograph could give you more pleasure at any price All we ask is that you pay us $10 down toâ€"morrow and agree to pay us balance of purchase price in small sums weekly afterwards,. We send the comâ€" plote outfitâ€"Grafonola and recordsâ€"to your home at once.~ You pay for it while you are getting your enjoyment from it. 4 * COMEDIAN ~ ONEâ€"DAY OFFER ONLY ; ask is that you pay us $10 dovsm to-m?rro: WEST TORONTO MUSIC CO. GOIITRE Uâ€"SOLVO, the famous medicine for external and internal G Goitre, or Graves‘ Disease, NEEDS NO GUARANTEE, as the increase in sales monthly and the great volume of letters received continuously from satisfied users convince us that the results must be satisfactory in every case, but to relieve the minds of those who may have tried other treatments withâ€" out benefit, we wish it distinctly understood (as an incorporated company, both in Canada and the United States) we stand behind our medicine, and will gladly reimburse anyone who, after giving Guâ€"Solvo a fair trial, has not derived any benefit thereâ€" from. Guâ€"Solvo, which is taken inwardly, has two funcetions, to absorb the goitre into the cireculation and then to cast it out of the system through the natural organs of elimination. _ If the operation of the medicine were simply to dissolve the goitrous es mt asarescan o Gesie Y tissue into the blood, that would not mean that the goitre was wholly eliminated because it would still be in the system and very liable to show again. But the principle of Guâ€"Solvo is to clear the system of every trace of diseased tissue so that it will not return. You owe it to yourself to give Guâ€"Solvo a trial before giving up hope. It has done wonders for others and will do the same for you, Do not put off till toâ€"morrow what can be done toâ€"day. We also take this opportuniy to thank the vast number of satisfied patrons who upon being restored to health have assistâ€" ed us by passing the good wordâ€"GUâ€"SOLVOâ€"to others. now E‘LL | TqL. ONE. GUâ€"SOLYVO is sold by all leading druggists in Canada, or write direct to our mail order department, 43 SCOTT STREET TORONTO For sale also at MARTIN COLLETT‘S, MIMICO j To All Who Suffer From H. 0. COUSINS Main St., Weston JAMES MARTIN 2823 Dundas St. C Brampton iE PoP SsTaoLné 'ISYPAY ERAZ.Y Fog ANYTHING â€" j HAT cCoMES FIRST. Con'iTnE?T THE MONK CHEMICAL C0., Limited Ié'" it poP Livery ! DEPT. NOPRVINE HIGH: KICKING ConTESsT FoRr.. ; Home BrewEsrRrS . Summer Sessions in Shaw‘s Schools, Toronto, from June 28th to Sept. 1st, give contin« uous opportunity to qualify for a good business position., Start any time. Write W. H. Shaw, 395 Yonge St., Toronto. Operates twelve Business Schools, each a high grade Inâ€" stitution, giving excellent courâ€" yes CANADA BUSINESS COLLEGE ; TORONTO SUMMER SESSION Write ‘or Phone

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