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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1921-2-17, Page 4pArsz 4 , Howl Imo 11.11 MAGIC AKINGPOWDER A FIGHTER FROM THE WORD 'CO' STILL THEY CALL HIM ‘WINNIE' Right Hen, Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill is to take over the Colonial Office, succeeding Lord Milner, at the end of the month. In doing so he goes back to the office which saw birp start his official career as Under-Seere- ' tary in 1906. Twelve years ago it was predicted that beforehe was, fifty Mr, !Church - hill would run the whole gamut of human experience. He will be forty seven, his next blithcley— November 30. He therefore has a little time left to achieve the height of his ambition, viz., to be Prime Minister of Great Britain. But even without the Premiership he can boast—and some say he does— of a career few men can look back on. He was a soldier at nineteen and has been through five campaigns as a fight- er and writer. He saw the Spanish campaign in Cube, was with Britiek forces in India frontier warfare, saw fighting in the Soudan campaign of 1898, won distinction in the Boer war, making a dramatic escape from Pretoria after being captured, and then fought with the guards in the great war. When he went to the font it was said that be had seen more fighting than most of our generals and had written more vivid and better correspondence than anyone in Fleet Street He has written books Who's Who gives the titles of semen. Churchill himself modestly says: "1 have written the same number of books as Moses." He was the first Cabinet Minister of the., world to act as an air pilot. He did it in 1913. He has sailed in suemarines. lI Ilse "switched" Sona the eld. est son of Lord Reedolph Churchill, Ise entered Parliament as a Qonser- vetive but ,turned Liberai in 1904. Since then he has been Linder -Sec- retary for the Colonies, President of the Board of Trade, Home SeciteterY; First Lord of the Admiralty, Chan- cellor of ehe Duchy of Lancester, Minister of Munitions and Secretary for War, ole has been. more frequently car- tooned, and more bitterly cursed than Illy other inati in Britain. He has been called, "The unsinkable politi- cian." The Tinies, student of politics, says: Some men hang themselves on their politics others hang their politice cn thernselyes and these need to be stout pegs, as indeed Mr. Churchill is." He was prominent in the negotiathens last year for a new Central party. H% has not yet been Premier but as Pointed out before he has three years more to go before he's fifty. He will not waste time ,for as he has himself said: "The Cherchills peg out early, so I mean to make sure of my inning while I can." And in spite of all. they call him "Win nie," 01 • NOTHING TO EQUAL BAK'S OWN TABLETS Mrs. Georges, Lefebyre, St. Zenon, Que., writes: "1 do not thinkthere is any other medicine to equal Baby's Own Tablets for little ones. I have used them for my baby and would use :loth* else," What Mrs, Lefe- byre says thousands of other moth- ers 'say, They. have found by trial that the Tablets always do just 'What is claimed for then, The Tab.. lets are s mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweet- en the stomach and thus banish indi- gestion, - constipation, colds colic, etc. They are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at,25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine 'Company, Brockville, Ont, Cleveland Plain Dealer: Jou music saved an Indian theatre audience from panic during a fire the other day. Desperate diseases require desperate remedies. NERVOUSfIRRITABLE, ( AILING WOMEN Mrs. Men Tells Haw She Was Restored To Health Mei Suffering for More Than A Year. Another Triumph for Lydia E. Einklutnea Vegetable Compound 0 3? Dimond/de Mich. -14 hettpv' N.> 4^inflitillMatiOb anti a displace - 1".:,'D II ment and weakness, and itlf4 , had been neglected so long' that it caused great' pain and this affected my me inemit nerves so that I was yery irritable. I had severe pains every. month, so that rwas often cisliged to lie in bed for two days at a time. I suf- fered for.more than a year before my friends said, 'Why don't you try Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound?' So I purchased one bottle after another. until I had taken ten bottles, then Lydia Pinkharn's SinativeWash. I received so much benefit from this treatment that I am now able to do my own work."---Mrs.W. Baum; R. No. 2, bimondale, Mich. Author Illidtigaa Woman says: "I was bothered for along time with female troubles and was so nermesvous I felt nitwit ,03 .23) afraid at ti, I also had a pain, in my right side and 'mania certainly in a bad way. Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound has relieved me ofthese nervous feelings and Patna and I am ninth Imtter m every way. I don't know just how many bottles./ have taken, but I took itfor nearly a year and it has done me a world of good."—Mrs. JESSIEI naltarfona, R. No. 8,'Box 51, Italamazoo, Miehigam Good health is a woman's greatest aeset. With it she may be the inspira- tion of her husband, a happy mother, and the life of the home. Without it she stiffen agonies herself, household duties are a burden, and her family is xnade miserable by her condition. Is it any wonder that these women were nervous and irritable after. suffer - ling so long from ench deranged conditione? Such ailments act directly upon the nerves, and it hes boon said that a large percentage of nervous prostra- lion, normal deepondency, "the blues," end nervotatirritabilty of Women arise from some dorangpment of the female organiem. If wooden who are in this condition Would Only profit by the experience of others and take Lydia E. Pinkhata's Vegetables OorapoUnd at once, much suf- fering and unheppittesti would beavertail, as everyone knows a nervotte, irri. table ailing mother make* the home unhappy and her condition irritates iboth 'husband and children. Lydia Pinkbant's nitrate Text -13001r inion “Ailittents rotate liar to iVornort" will be sent to yon free Upon request. Write to The Lydia 11. Pinkliain Medicine Go., Lynn, nialOsebuoatto, OAS bolds contains valtrade infOrnatatkille FOR YOUNG FOLKS Sleepy Time Story About Some thing That orows In the Earth. EHE LITTLE OIRL'S OREAM, --- Strange Thing That Happened as She Gat Before the Fifa and Watched the Bright Flames Glow and quiver Soma! Pther Thing f Interect. Well, youngster% Paid Liecie Deo to little Ned and Poly Ane, 1 am Ping to tell You abdut THE QOM- FAIRY. I A little girl had been watebing the anal nye blazing In the grate and wont dering where the cent ealue from. When her' father (mule in she asked him. Be told ber It was, dug by men hi alines way down deep 'in llie earth and hoisted by machinery to. the our. taee, where it was leadedeon -freight ears that brought 0 to. the Coal yards in the city and from there .te our cel. 'ars by borne and wagon or uentor. Somehow the little girl seemed to get sleepy Its he told tier thee story. and. putting tier fend ou a cusbitere she watched the flumes 011 all 51 0000 she ettw a prethy tiatne colored fairyltep eta of the grate and heard her 007: 00..1 am a coal Calm I've nyed in that Meek 1 Imp of coal for eenturiee. At one time that pleee of eoal was part of a Iern—yes, a big fern. large as any eat. tree or tall syea•• more. There were lots and -lots of those ferns growing in the sandy soil when the earth we., swat:peter than It Is now, They would live and grow. but finally Ole and fall down where the shifting 5011(1 Mid aarth would slowly 1:over them, Thou they would petrify and grew hard like ri stona lu some pieces of coal you can ee the vow print of tl..1 fern leaves. "WO. my deer, thrive Ire Ilved stint up all these years 1111 lump pf was hurtled, when I eui.'lclescnpe In the shape or a Ilamo. Cpdhe chimney rshall look 111(e smoke and disappear in the air to fly to my fa try home." Just then the little girl heard'her fo. (her say, "Come, wake nor She had been sleeping, bra when she 001 Mw het story he told her it was true. • •11- , Nashville Tennesseean; Telling the average Mall to stop worrying— that it will ruin his health—doesn't do much good. It merely gives him something else to worry about. BIG DEVELOPMENT AHEAD OF ONTARIO SAYS HON. P. SMITH ABOUT TO ENTER UPON PERIOD OF PROSPERITY SAYS PROVINCIAL TREASURER ' (By 11011. Peter Smith, Treasurer of Ontario,) Many factors contribute to the fin- ancial strength of the Province of Ontarie. • Abundant resources of minerals, timber and natural products combined with the products of the farm and the manufactured products form immense collateral for whatever financing the Province requires. When one considers that $50;000,000 annual- ly represents the production from lumbering: $72,000,000 annually from diarying, a total of $373,000,000 from agriculture and' $1,5.33,000,000 an- nually from manufacturing it is easy to understand the stability behind a •'bonils issue of the Province of Ontario. -'fireearlier financing of Ontario was done ;in England; subsequently the home market ‘Iteae sufficient for needs. 41i»:r'tlnse restreetleois reaulted ill Ont- ario seeking a market elsewhere, and it .has led tOle way 01 pioneer Work in the United States, ' The bonds of Ont- nrioare known, bought and held from the Atlantic to the Pacific by United States eitize9s. At the gateway of Niagara, bonnie- ful nature has provided a wealth of energy very soon to be transformed into the. steady hum of industrial ac- tivity, Cheap power equal in volume to•the mighty cataract leself, will soon be flowing over the many lines of trans- mission, attracting industries by the cheap power of the greateSt hydro- electric' development in the world. For this purpose of Hydro capital ex- penditure recently the Ontario Gov- ernment offered a loan' of 36,000,000. In practically 48 hours it was over- subscribed by $10,000,000, showing the abundant faith of the citizens of the Province in their own eecurities. The slogan of "Buy a Bond of your own Province" 'ha: behind it a desire to interest citizens of the Province in a financial way in its wellbeing. ..11 makes for a 'wider interest In Provin- cial government and a keener insight into Its problems. In iny opinion Ontario is entering upon a period of unexampled develop - meet, The great pulp industry is re- eelving attention at the hands of the present •Government. The many qatesticins hive:lett:1( the " social better - Ment of itscitteefis are receiving its earliest co-operation, WW1 ,the ettractioil theongit cheap 11 '71"ho Clinton Neu, Era 71111rUd ay, PObfila fy 17th,192 1 lo &iris, Scalds, Cold -Sores and all skiti-diseese or Inharyyog out' dekeLnii upon Zotn-Bult. It's realty astonishing how swiftly and surely 0 banishes pain and soreness and grows new healthy skin. Agnixt..Blik is a pure antiseptic berbalbahriPolise5010g uverydefinite and important inealeinelinction on the skin. In Its char:WWI' and inItS results It IS altogether different to the usual ointments 1111d seinen. Zan.flnkIfelrOglifirlIS you ligIllatit blood.polson And sitin•tUsenee. All dialers 500, robes power of industriesto the Province, with the clevelopmont of its naturel resources,. with ,the intelligent desire to improve the welfare of its citizens fhe outlook for the future seems opti- mistic. A. Slow, Sluggish Torpid Liver RESPONSIBLE FOR MANY ILLS. Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills stimulate the sluggish liver so that it will regulate the flow of bile .to act properly on the bowels and thus clear away all the waste and poisonous matter that" is responsible for constipation, biliousness, eick headaches, heartburn, jaundice, eto, Mrs. Alice Mchill; ,Napanee, Ont.; writem—"I was very badly run down and had a torpid liver for over four months. I tried several remedies, but got no relief. One day my Husband brouglat me home o vial.of Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills add before I had used half the vial 1 wee much better. I only used two vials, and I am a different person to -day. I can safely recommend Laxa-Liver Pills to any one troubled with liver trouble." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25o. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direst on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. S 001 Lussoli (ny REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., Teacher of English Bible in the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (0, 1820, Western Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 20 THE WISE AND FOOLISH V1RBINS. LESSON TEXT—Matt 55:1-13. GOLDEN TEXT—Watch therefore; for 26i13. Wherein the Son of Man cometh.—Matt. ye know neither the day nor the hour REPDRENL:E MATERIAL — Matt. 7:24-21; 24:1-51; Bah. 6:10-20; / Tim. 6:17-19. PRIMARY' TOPIC—Being Ready. \ JUNIOR TOPIC—Being Ready. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIO --Prepared for Emergencies. vdtruo PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Christian Watchfulness. • --- • This lesson is a part of the well. known .011vet discourse, giving a pro- phetic view of the course of time front its utterance, just before the cruci- fixion to the second advent of Christ' The order of events en that time aee, roughly sneaking, as follows: 1, The moral eonditfon of the world during Christ's absence (24:1-14). This is the period covered by the parable of chapter 18. • 2, The appearance of the Antichrist (24 :15-26). , „ 3. The great advent (24:27-81), ha, whish there will be mighty convulsions of nature, the mourning of the earth's,, tribes, and the gathering tite the elet. 4. Warnings to God's petiole In View of the great advent (24:82-51), the time of 'advent unknown and unexe_ 1p.e3c6t)e.d. unexpectedness of His coming (26: 5. Instructions to saints 10 view of the . . • 6, Me judgment of the nations (25: 31-46): • • The present lessaTrI Is one of Ole two parables designed for the instrue- 'don of the saints In view of the com- ing of the Christ. It has a continu- ous application In the present time Thess; 4 :16-1.8;• Titus 2:11-13), I. The Foolish Virgins Took Lamps But No 011 With Them. (v. 8)• -1. Lamps signify Christine profes- sion (Matt. 5:16), and oil, the Holy (Zech, 4), Having the lamps and no oil shows that they were pro - feasters ne religion without possessing tee eeenty-. As 0000 ns 0 tent: is re- Oth,gro, Givick, Bilious Child lifOrnia Fig Syrup" "California Syrup of Pigs" is the best "laxative physie" to give to a sick, forefeet' ehild who ie billow; or ennetipated, Directions for babies anti children on hotele. The- love Ha fruity taste. 'Beware! Say :"Californie" or yolt may not get the genuine recom- mended ley physicians for over thirty years. Don't risk injuring yrror torithar etomaele livee and boivels by de - opting en incitation fig syrup, Ith3166 upon "Califoentat" .-•••` generated the Ittely SpIrit takes up We abode with Him, Theproof that one 'Is a child of God is that he bas the Hely Spirit dwelling within him„ "If any man leave not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of III,e," (Rom, 8:0). The foolish virgins may have been of good moral el:erecter, but they were on - regenerated. / 2. The wise virgins possessed both lamps and oil (v. 4), They made- a profession and backed It with 1% real life of rtghteousness. Time are the true bellevers. Both the :Hee and'the foolish virgins slumbered anti slept, Their eyes bad grown heavy and tligY foil under the Spell of &dell (v, 5) - This shows that as tile Clerieleen age lengthened the real and professing cellinienhz oetvould cease looking foe the o the Lord. II: Is unspeakably sad that so many even of God's salnte, wise virgins, should give up the ex- pectnney of the return of .me Ler& II. The Coming Bridegroom (vv. 13- 12). 1. The midnight cry (v. (I). In the midst of the night when all were asleep the cry was :nail% "Behold the bride- groom cometh, go ye out to meet him," How sad It Is that the church has' lost her hope, is not' waking and watching for the return of her Lord! 2. • Activity of the virgins (v. 7). They all arose and trimmed • their lamps. There will be great activity when the Lord comes, jan, the part of both the real Christians and those who only make %profession. The pro- fessing Christians will then realise. that they lack that which is essential to entrance to the marriage feast. ' 3 .The foolish request the wise to' share their 011 (vv.'8, 9). The revela- tion oreChrIst will make manifest the genuineness of our religion and ex-, pose the folly of mere profession.' When the Lord comes It will be too late to mend Doe's ways. . I 4. The wise enter to the marriage (v. 10), While the foolish were seek - Ing to nmend,their ways trying to buy oil, the bridegroom came and those who were ready were admitted to 'the marriage. 5. The pitiful position of the foolish' (v. 11), They begged the Lord to open the door that they :night enter to the marriage feast. No one can open that door but the Lord. 6. The awful judgment (v. 12). The Lord declares "I know you note'. Those, who put off the personal contact with Jesus until that day stud! be shut out from the presence of Christ, (If. The Solemn Obligation (v. 18). "Watch, for ye know not the day nor the hour wherein the Son of man come eth." No One Absolute. God loss made no one absolute. The rich depend on the poor, as well as the poor on the itch. The world is but a magulficent building, all the stones are gradually cemented to-, gether, No one subsists by himself alone.—Pelthane Must Deal With Sin. We may forget or ignore Him, or keep our minds from dwelling„4 the thought of Him; we cannot be entering into peace with Him while sin Is kept undealt with, cherished in our hearts. Children Cry for Fletcher's Fletcher's Castoria is strictly a remedy for Infants and Children. Foods are specially prepared for babies. A baby's medicine is even more essential for Baby. Reniedies primarily prepared for grownups are not interchangeable. It was the need of ' a remedy for the common, ailments of Infants and Children that,brought Castoria before the public after years of research, and no claim has been made for It that its Use for over 30 Years)aafi.. not proven. What is ®CASTORIA4 Castor 1 a is a harmless substitute IF Castor Oil, Paregoric, 1, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age Is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been. in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising • therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food ; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Comfort—The Mother's Friend, GENUINE ,CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Sigdrure Ino Use For Over 30, Years TRK CKNTAUR COMPANY, NOW YORK CITY Toronto Star: One of the young ladies under merest in Lndoe, Ontario, hes had, so it is said, seven husbands. She probably had ambitions to go on the stage so03e time, Ohio State Journal': Beauty, we suppose, if often also only skirt -high. Flint Journal: Witted are selling for $1.85 a piece in Turkey, You cant't Call it wife that "dear," Denver Tinies What's the use in reading a hook. The story will be eAitirely different when its filmed. Detroit Free Press: We wonder whether Mr. Leni.ne ever thinks about the ultimate fate of a ceoliin Robes- pierre. Sioux City Journal: The election Suspense is not over. Some of the servants of the White House may want another term, come goods pay trokre thanothers. Us ally, the the quality the gr at r the r « r fit. Th- grocer pays *refer fe se than for other teas—and h ells ft at less profit. When you buy Reti ose y buy the best. • I • • • •WW0". " Pictfife News From E ; gland • The Prince of Wales at the Ex -Service Men's Exhibition receiving his prize (a pair; of boots) at the Lucky Tub from a dwarf dressed as a Scotefilliall. 45°Y DX P dIalworagermilmwswelponmemfflame,1 highest reward a city can give. The Freedom of the City of London, lng., pre. members of Special Constabulary for services rendered during the wars 411