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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1934-06-21, Page 6( n ' lag six Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Established 1840. Risks taken on all class of insur- rte at reasonable rates. Head Office, Guelph, Ont, BI ERR COSENS, Agent, Wingbare T E'' WINxCitAM ADVANCE -T ES J. W. BUSHFIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money to Loan; Office—Meyer Block, Wiagham Successor to Dudley Holmes R. S. HETHERINGTON. BARRISTER And SOLICITOR Office: Morton Block. Telephone No. 66. J. H. CRAWFORD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Successor to R. Vanstone Wingham Ontario DR. G. H. ROSS DENTIST Office Over Isard's Store. DR. A. W. IRWIN DENTIST — X-RAY Office, McDonald Block, Wingham. DR. G. W. HOWSON DENTIST Office over Bondi's Fruit Store. H. W. COLBORNE, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Medical Representative D. S. C. R. Phon 54 Wingham 1 bit. ROET. C. REDMOND 3d:R.C.S. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Land.) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON F. A. PARKER OSTEOPATH All Diseases Treated. Office adjoining residence next to Anglican Church on Centre Street Sunday by appointment. Osteopathy Electricity Phone 272. Hours, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. A. R. & F. E. DUVAL CHIROPRACTORS CHIROPRACTIC and ELECTRO THERAPY North Street -- Wingham , Telephone 300. J. ALVIN FOX Licensed Drugless Practitioner , CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS THERAPY - RADIONIC ; EQUIPMENT t Holies by Appointment. Phone 191. G-' Winghaen. a e THOMAS FELLS AUCTIONEER , REAL ESTATE SOLD A thorough knowledge of Farm Stock ! Phone 231, Wingham.. 1 It Will Pay You to Have An EXPERT AUCTIONEER to conduct your sale. See T. R. BENNETT e, At The Royal Service Station. Phone 174W. is tt THOMAS E. SMALL m : LICENSED AUCTIONEER Ula :f? Years' Experience in Farm Stock and Implements. Moderate Prices, Phone 331. it; A. J Walker FURNITURE and FUNERAL SERVICE Wingharo, Ont. ruXotnce Service Th ventriloquisti asked the rnartag- er fora raise, i`2ott can't have it,°' saki the man- ager, "you're getting a bigger salary man you'd get anywhere else.". 't be too jolly c ertain, aid v been offered �r a ' ,i tab ,in a r where they dell talking parrots,' "THE IF.: OF OUR LORD" b Charles Dickens CHAPTER THE the foot of the Cross, He said to his ELEVENTH mother that John wou]d be her son, to comfort her when He was dead PART ONE and from that hour John was as a son to her, and loved her. That you may know what the Peo ple meant when they said "Cruci him!" I must tell you that in tilos times, which were very cruel time u indeed (let us thank God and Jes Christ that they are past!) it was th custom to lull people who were sen tented to death, by nailing: then Mir- an lir an a great wooden cross, planted up right in the ground, and leaving theist there, exposed to the sun and wind and day and night, until they died a pain and thirst. It was the custom too to make them walk to the place of execution, carrying the cross piece of wood to which their hands were to be afterwards nailed; that their shame and suffering might be the greater. Bearing his cross upon his shoulder —like the commonest and most wick- ed criminal, our blessed Saviour, Jesus Christ, surrounded by the persecuting crowd, went out of Jerusalem to a place called in the Hebrew language Golgotha; that is, the place of a skull. And being come to a hill called Mount Calvary, they hammered cruel nails through his hands and feet and nailed him on the Cross, between two other crosses, an .each of which, a common thief was nailed in agony. Over His head, they fastened this writing "Jests of Nazareth, the King of the Jews"_: in three languages; in .J3ebrew, in Greek, and in Latin, Meantime, a guard of four soldiers, sitting on the ground, divided His clothes (which they had taken off)'in- to four parcels for themselves, and cast lots for His coat, and sat there, gambling and talking, while he suff- ered. They offered him vinegar to drink, mixed with gall; and wine, mix- ed, with myrrh; but He took none. And the wicked people who passed that way, mocked him, and said, "If Thou be the Son of God, come down from the Cross," The Chief Priests also mocked Him, and said "He came to save Sinners. Let him save him- self. One of the thieves, too, railed at him in his torture, and said, "If Thou At about the sixth hour, a deep and fy terrible darkness came over all the e land, and lasted until the ninth hour, s when Jesus cried out, with a loud s voice, "My` God, My God, why hast e Thou forsaken me!" The .soldiers, _ hearing him, dipped a sponge in some e. vinegar, that was standing there, and _ fastening it to a long reed, put it to . His Mouth, When he had received it, He said, "It is finished!" And cry- f ing, "Father! Into thy hands, I com- mend my Spirit!"—died. Then there was a dreadful earth- quake; and the great wail of the Tem- ple cracked; and the rocks were rent' asunder., The guard, terrified at these ights, said to each other, "Surely this was the San of God!"—And the Peo- ple who had been watching the cross from a distance (among whom were many women) smote upon their breasts, and went, fearfully and sadly, home. The next day, being- the Sabbath the Jews were anxious that the Bod ies should be taken down at once, and made that request to Pilate. There- fore some soldiers came, and broke the legs of the two criminals to kill them; but coming to Jesus, and find- ing Him already dead, they only pierced his side with a spear. From the wound, there came out, blood and water. There was a good man named Jo- seph of Arimathea, a Jewish city who believed in Christ, and going to Pilate privately (for fear of the Jews) begged that he night have the body. Pilate consenting, he and one NTico- demus, rolled it in linen and spices— it was the custom of the Jews to pre- pare bodies for burial in that way— and buried it in a new tomb or sep- ulchre, which had been cut out of a rock in a garden near to the place of Crucifixion ,and where no one had ever yet been buried. They then roll- ed a great stone to the mouth of the sepulchre, and left Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary, sitting there, watching it. ' The Chief Priests and Pharisees re- membering that Jesus Christ had said to His disciples that He would rise fro mthe grave on the third day after His death, went to Pilate and prayed that the Sepulchre might be well tak- en care of until that day, lest the dis- ciples should steal the Body, and af- terwards say to the people that Christ was risen from the dead. Pilate agree- ing to this, a guard of soldiers was set over it constantly, and the stone was sealed up besides. And so it re- mained, watched and sealed, until the third day, which was the first day of the week. (Continued Next Week) be Christ, save thyself and us." But the other Thief, who was penitent, said "Lord Remember me when Thou comest into Thy Kingdom!" And Jesus answered, "Today, thou shalt be with :me in Paradise." None were there, to take -pity on Elim, but one disciple and four wo- men. God blessed those women for :heir true and tender hearts! They vere, the mother of Jesus, his moth • - r's sister, Mary, the wife of Cleoph- s, and Mary Magdelene who had wice dried his feet upon her hair. The iisciple was he whom Jesus loved— ohn, who had leaned upon his breast nd asked him which was the Betray - r. When Jesus saw them standing at Copyright for North and South Am erica, 1934, by United Feature Syndi- cate. All rights reserved.) THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON REVIEW, Sunday, June 24th, Golden Text: Of His kingdom there shall be no td, (Luke 1:33.) "The Genesis of the New Testament the description that has been given , the Gospel of Matthew. Por six onths we have been studying the e and work of Christ in this Gospel now in one lesson we can 'take a' rge view, or review, of all that we ve had It is the Book of the Ring—King of srael, and Ring of the whole world. We can follow the King motif throughout the Gospel. Thus a Bible teacher notes that we have, in. chap- ter 1, the ancient pedigree of the Icing; 2, the royal retinue of the Ring, the wise nten; 8, baptismal investittire i -if the Xing; 4, the initial proving of the Xing or the temptations; 5, the inaugural message of the King—the rmon on the Mount. A review of the whole book can ,readilybe made on this basis. People sometimes say, ignorantly, that: the New Testament is the only. book we need in Christianity today; that the Old Testament is an obso- lete book, valuable only as a curio or antique, to be put away on library shelves, but not to be .+used. They do not realize that without the Old Tes- tament it would be itnpossible to un- derstand d t i the the New. Ithasbeen noted ed are more direct and indir- ect quotations from and references to the Old Testament in Matthew than in any other New Testament book, about • one hundred. The fulfillment of 'Old Testament prophecy is record- ed and described continually through- out Matthew. Any class can have a profitable time by taking paper and pencil and going through Matthew, noting every cita- tion of Old Testament prophecy, For example, when Joseph was told that Mary, his bride, was to become the mother of a child while still a virgin, "this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying, heold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a Son, and they shall call His. name Emmanuel, which being in- terpreted is, God with us," That is from Isaiah 7:14. Bethlehem was prophesied as the birthplace of the Messiah. The journey of the Holy Family {down into Egypt was prophesied, f Other prophesies were: Christ's ministry in Galilee; His healing of dis- � f eases; His public and triumphal entry into Jersualem as Xing; His death on the cross, and a score or more of the events of the twenty-four hours at the time of His crucifixion; His resurrec- tion from the dead. The deity of 505115 Christ shines throughout this book—that is,the re- velation that He is not only the San of God, but also God the Son-: a mem- ber of the Godhead as no created man ever has been or ever can be. His human or earthly name, jesns means Saviour, 'for He shall save His people from their sins," Bishop Mottle said, years ago: "A 5a lou r who is notoul God. would be a brid t; of �, e broken . t the farther end." Only God could give lost sinners eternal life, Matthew is filled with detailed re- cords of the miracles wrought by Christ. He healed all manner of sick- ness. He gave sight to the blind, hear- ing .to the deaf, speech to the dumb, cast out detnoits, raised the dead, The physical miracles were types or shad- ows of the greater, spiritual miracles of salvation and eternal life that He. alone can give. He chose and trained twelve men as His disciples, of whom eleven prov- ed faithful. Weak, vacillating, selfish, cowardly at first, they were changed into true heroes of the faith after His resurrection and probably all laid down their life as martyrs, in persecu- tion, rather than deny Him, Matthew gives in detail the story of the train- ing of the twelve. The Bing, laying dottnn. His life vol untarily, promised that He would come again to this earth and reign over the world that rightfully belongs to Him, This gospel, like the others, and the whole New Testament, has - repeated delarations of the Second Coming of Christ. The Lord Jesus Christ did not come and live here on earth merely in or- der to be an example to men. He carne here to die, knowing that only by His death could any human soul be saved, Either He must die, or the whole human race—for all are sinners —must die eternally. On the cross Christ voluntarily poured out His "blood of the new testament, which is shed for many for the remission of sins.,, But His death did not end all. He rose again front the dead, as He said He would. He had power over death and sin and Satan. His last words, in Matthew's Gospel of the King, are he Great Commission, beginning,"All ower is given unto Me in heaven and n earth." Then the Ping commands: 'Go ye, therefore, and teach all na- ions, baptizing them in the name of he Father, and of the Son, and of he Holy Ghost; teaching there to ob- erve all things whatsoever I have ommanded you; and lo, I am with on alway, even unto the end of the orld. Amen." how many tinges have you heard housewives lataten�t about cooking dur- ing the hot weather, With an: abund- ance of friuts and vegetables frons which to choose and with the many' ready -to -eat foods available, meal pre- paration should not be difficult, Even in the summer,, 'plan well-bal- anced heals, but avoid the use of too many concentrated and rich roods, Nature provides the ideal summer foods in fruits, vegetables,milk, eggs and whole -grain cereals, Do not go to the extremes of eat- ing all cold fools, just because it is a hot day, No matter how waren the weather, a meal with at least 'one hot dish is usually welcome. This is true even for breakfast. Fresh fruit served with ready -to -eat cereals and cold. rich milk and a hot beverage snake a refreshing and satisfying morning -,meal. t p t t s c y w Summer Satisfaction By Barbara B. Brooks It seems as though summer meals are the most palatable and attractive and can be planned and prepared more easily than at any other season. Yet, Find out all about Canadian National low summer fares before making your final holi- day arrangements. Travel bar- gains galore! Cent - a -mile fares to Western Canada and the Pacific Coast (June 10- 30); 16 -day and 45 -day fares to Jasper. Weekend round trips at fare and a quarter; Sunday round trips , for a single fare! Talk it over with the Canadian National. It pays your ttraz Luncheon or ,supper may be simplified by planning the meal' around one hot dish, such as creamed vegetables, fish, eggs or left -over cooked meats. Serve lon toast or toasted halves of whole- wheat biscuit. Vary by pouring the creamed mixture into a hot casserole, Top with battered corn flakes and serve at once. The corn flakes are toasted and crisp so that the mixture need not be browned in the oven. A green salad or fruit dessert, bran muf- fins or whole-wheat bread, and a bev- erage will complete this meal. Dinner 'specials which we all like have been chosen in making up the following menu: Frozen Tomato Juice Cocktail 'Broiled Spring Chicken New Potatoes and Peas Curly Endive French Dressing Strawberry Chiffon Pie Decaffeinated Coffee BRAN RAISIN BREAD 1 egg 1 oup sugar 1l4 cup molasses 1 cup sour milk 2 tablespoons melted 1 cup bran 2 cups flour teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon salt 3 teaspoons baking powder 3 cup raisins Beat egg slightly. Add sugar, mo- lasses, milk, melted shortening and bran. Sift flour, soda, salt and baking powder. Mix raisins with flour and add to first mixture, Beat well Bake in well greased loaf tin for 11/4 hours in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.). Yield: 1 large loaf. FROZEN TOMATO JUICE 1 large bottle tomato juice cocktail Seasonings to taste Season tomato juice cocktail mix- ture with lemon juice to taste and if desired add a small amount of pepper sauce. Pour into refrigerator tray or pack in ice to freeze. This mixture should be stirred every half hour, When ready to serve, beat with a fork and place in cocktail glasses, Garnish with a sprig of mint or parsley-. STRAWBERRY' CHIFFON PIE WITH CORN FLAKE PASTRY 1 tablespoon gelatin % cup water 3 eggs, separated • 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1%., cups sugar 1/s teaspoon salt 1 pint strawberries, crushed. Soak gelatin in half the water. Cook in a double boiler the egg yolks, lem- on juice, rest of water, halfthe sugar, and salt until custard consistency. Add soaked gelatin a minute before removing from fire. Cool. Beat. Add strawberries. Fold in egg whites bea- ten with rest of sugar. Spread into a flake crust. shortening TO I'A Thursday, J xr a 21st, 1934 D.L.E ACROSS THE ATLANTIC John Smith in the canoe which he hopes to paddle all the way' from Pet- erboro, Ontario, to Peterbdro, Eng. He will travel down the St. Lawrence foot canoe. River and Gulf of St, Lawrence to St. John's, Newfoundland, and thence at- tempt the dangerous trip across the ocean to Ireland, He will use a 16 - CORN FLAKE PASTRY 1/4 cup. butter 1 cup corn flake crumbs 174 cup sugar butter in a 9 -inch pie pan. Add the corn flake crumbs and sugar. Mix well and press the corn flake pastry firmly around the sides and in the bottom Roll or grind 4 cups corn flakes to of the pan. Chill for a few minutes. yield 1 cup fine crumbs. Melt the ;before pouring in the filling. THE STATES OF INDIA Most people, until the actual discus- sion of schemes of Indian self-gov- ernment brought the qustion of the Indian States to the fire, vaguely as- sumed that India was uniformly under British control. Actually the Indian peninsula is divided into British In- dia, directly administered by British government of India, and a number of states, some of which enjoy full' sov- ereign rights, others being subject to the "advisory jurisdiction of the gov- ernment. British India includes prac- tically all the coast territories as well as the valleys of the Ganges and: the Indus. The problem of devising a; constitution that meets the democrat- ic demands of the Indian Nationalist movement and the autocratic claims of the princes is obviously a compli- cated one.. In the above map all of British Indian is shown in black. Pub- lished by the courtesy of the Ryerson: Press and taken from the book, "An Atlas of Current Affairs,") GIANT PLANE INTRIGUES CHINESE The giant Condor bomber that Frank Hawks, American speed pilot, is demonstrating before the Chinese government, draws hundreds of eur- salts 'Ch]nese, w.lio have never seen a t this 'r Plane ofs sr ,e, The photograph was made at th Shanghai government airfield, Iihwl„ s is shown,. Teft, with- out hat; in foreground, W, tPAW-. 0 ley ` fNew 'York; and extreme right, M. 5, Harris, associated press Correa-' pondt:nt at, Shanghai.