HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1919-5-8, Page 4RAGE 4;
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• Lsact Copy of Wrapper.
3
�T>�°s� ars
'or Infants and Children.
hikfotim MOW That
Genuine Casto '9a
Always
Bears the
Signature
of
Rs�
Use
glgite, are denounced or surrender
themselves to Justice," At different
times numerous persons were arrested
and sentenced to long terms Of Impris-
onment for supposed complicity In the
pubilIltlan cif the newspaper, and on
the same ground two Belgian Priests
were arrested as recently as April 1911,
and one of them wits condemned to
death. Once the convent of St, 'Michael
in Brussels wits suspected of harboring
the movable printing press, and the
Germans in their vain • search battered
is the walls and dug three feet down
under the floor of the cellars;
But all efforts at discovery were
fruitless, and La Libre, Belgique con -
Untied to appear, and Gen, von B1ss1ng
continued regularly to receive a com-
plimentary tupy every week; and on
the occasion of the ;anniversary of Bel-
gian independence the editor was even
able to issue a special number. Soine-
times the newspaper poked fun at the
authorities and pretended to give then]
clues and advice In their search: "La
Libre Belgique is written and printed in
a motor calk" it declared on one aeens-
len. When The Vlaamsehe Leeuw, an-
other secret newspaper, first appeared
to 7916, it contained the announcement
"On sale nowhere and everywhere.
liditorial Odice; IConnmand;tntur, Brus-
sels,_ Just above the printing office of
La Libre Belgique."
ior Over
Thirty
Years
,
Is
VHF CRN7P.U. COMPANY Ne A YOAM CITY.
PAPER WAS THORN IN
THE SIDE OF HUNS
.11el gian Paper Defies the Germans
All Through War. - A Four
Years' Secret.
The proprietors of La Libre Belgi-
pue announce that they are offering on
sale to the highest bidders four com-
plete files of La Libre Beligque, which
was secretly published in Belgium dur-
ing the German occupation.
To each of the files is added a
dedication and an autograph signature
of Cardinal Mercier, Primate of Bel-
gium, and a certificate from the heirs
of Victor Jourdain, founder and chief
editor of La Libre Belgique, testifying
that each file is complete and consists
exclusively of authentic copies, secret -
printed in Belgium during the German
occupation.
The entire proceeds of the sale will
be devoted to the reconstruction of the
University of Louvain. I
La Libre Belgique was the patriotic
Belgian newspaper which throughout
the German occupation of Belgium de-
fied all the efforts of the military auth-
orities' to suppress it. The identity of
its publisher and its editorial staff re-
mained unknown, despite the most
drastic measures that the Germans took
and the enwspapers never missed pub-
lication, but appeared regularly every
week, now in this part of the country
and now in that.
Printed in Motor Car.
It was a thorn in the side of the
German authorities, and Geo. von
Biasing in particular made the most
strenuous efforts, even employing ,an
army spies to discover the manner
and place, or rather places, of its
printing and publication. At one
time a reward of 75,000 marks (£3,-
750) was offered to anyone disclosing
the identity of publisher and editors
on another occasion,' •September 1916
seven principal printers of Ghent were
arrested at random "until the re-
sponsible persons," ran the order,
"who publish and print La Libre Bel -
ti
c * * as if - n if
k . Jr * 40 t0 if if a< .%
THE LATEST SPRING
IN FIFTEEN YEARS
The Ontario Department of
Agriculture ;announces, from
reports received, that this is
the most haakward spring in
fifteen years. The cold and
wet weather has held up seed-
ing In many sections of the
Province, Unless warns weather
follows shortly the seeding will
have to be clone 1n planting
period of root and other crops,
Early -planted grain and fall
wheat have suffered little and
fruit trees and bushes, from
their retarded condition, have
sustained no damage from the
cold spell.
iY
sr
:1 Tablets soon set her right and n'nv
it she is in perfect health." The Tab-
" lets are sold by medicine dealers or
a by nail :tt 25 cents a box from The
11 Dr. Williams' Medicine Co,, Brock-
', ville, Out
T1f IE CLIN7".GN NEW ERA„
'l'htjrsflay, May 8t1.1, 1919
What Will Von Do'
With the interest?
When you cash -in those
Victory Bond coupons' on
May 1st exchange them.
for their par value in War
Savings Stamps,
Your Country needs this
money in these days of
readjustment and recon-
struction.
The purchase of War Sav-
ings Stamps is an easy
way for you to save, as
well .as a patriotic duty.
War Savings Stamps
can be bought wher-
ever this sign is
displayed,
Mfg r S vings. Stain
sin
The lastest Method of Savia
it
IS THERE A BABY
IN YOUR HOME?
Is there a baby or young children
in your home? 1f there is you should
not be without a box of Baby's Own
Tablets. Childhood ailments come
quickly and means should always be
at hand to promptly fight them,
Baby's Own Tablets are the ideal
home remedy. They regulate the
bowels; sweeten the stomach; ban-
ish constipation and indigestion;
break up colds and simple fevers -in
fact they relieve all the minor ills of
little ones. Concerning then] Mrs.
Moise Cadotte, Makamik , Que.,
writes: "Baby's Own Tablets are the
best remedy in the world for little
ones. My baby suffered terribly from
indigestion and vomiting, but the
ii
Children's
Diseases
Are Not Necessary
They Add Nothing to the Wel!-being of the Child and Invariably
Leave the System in Worse Condition Than Before They Came
IN fact, they often sow the seed which,
in adult life, develops into disorders of
the heart and blood vessels and de-
generative diseases of the kidneys.
So if children escape any child's disease
they are the gainers in general health by
just that much. It may be that years are
added to their lives or chronic invalidism
avoided. Then there is the enormous risk
which every child runs who has measles,
whooping cough, scarlet fever, or other
diseases.
Perhaps this does not agree with your
azidea of letting your children have these
a>:l,y, I n.
menta when young, :with the belief that
ti1ey- must have them some time, This old
idea has cost many thousands of lives. It
f -Tin e.to forget it, and to put forth an
toy"`save the children from these
ailnlent�f~+�, '
children's diseases are known
germs are harmless
to fight til
rut
li
some, nourishing food, and by allowing
' them to exercise freely in the open air.
If they grow pale and weak and languid
-if they fail to derive proper nourishment
from the food they eat -if their nervous
systems get run down from the tax of
school work -use Dr. Chase's Nerve Food
as the best means which medical science
affords to enrich the blood and build up
the exhausted system.
Children whose blood becomes thin and
watery are helpless before an attack of
Measles, scarlet fever, whooping cough, or
other contagious disease, They seem to
"catch" everything that is going. They
are always "catching" cold. Their resist-
ing force is nil.
But their young bodies soon respond to
the nourishing, invigorating influence of
Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. As their blood
is enriched they becoi to healthy, robust I
and • rollicking -they enjoy their food-
their play -their work at school, and gra*
into strong, healthy mend and women:
1)t. Chant's 1!terve g'oadj 0 cents a bog,'g-t r yf,.
Sa,d6', all deaaets, or llldm arca', Hates & Co,
Ltd,; Toronto. On ever,,' i e
t#t
IMPROVED URIF9 14 INTERNATIONAL
irc
v _
Y
{,1441^'•t�
115, t1 Pelt
PRESS CENSORSHIP i Li ;.01
so
(B' BEV. '. B. I I'r!w'..'1 r.; 1, 0. D.,
CEASES IN CANADA Teacher a ]'nulls' Bible In the .foody
CANADA Bible ins). lute ,,r "'hb•sno.)
1Copyrlgh,, 1Ata, by NV, s,rrn a ,,e4ber
But Provisions of War Measures
Act Will Still Remain in Effect.
Ottawa April 3 0. -Press censorship
under the direction of the press censor
ceases to -day. The provisions of the
War Measures Act and orders- in -
council and regulations made there-
under will still re -main in effect, but
responsibility for seeing that they are
complied with will rest upon publish-
ers, importers, distributors and per -
Sons having objectionable platter in '
their possession. All publications which
have been placed under the censorship
bun will continue to be forbidden cir-
culation in Canada.
The order -in -council respecting un-
lawful associations was repealed srme
weeks ago. The order -in -council re-
specting objectionable literature was
amended at the sante time. Newspapers
printed in the enemy languages, name-
ly, German, Hungarian, Bulgarian and
Turkish, are however, still prohibited
from publication or circulation in Can..
ada.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
2n Use For Over 3 Years
Always bears
the Q,,,,����¢
Signature of -C:-CC>2,G
TRIBUTE TO FOCH
"Foch and Petain are the purest
glories of our military history, for
they are free from the stains which
have so often tarnished great leaders
in war, the lust of conquest and per-
sonal ambition. Their task was to
liberate France, which has been in-
vaded, and small nations, which had
been crushed. They have been the
soldiers of Justice, They have been
exemplars of the genius of France.
We see in then the logical reasoning
power in preparation, tate harmony
in effort, the adaptability 10 execu-
tion of the French mind, never con-
fused by surprises, always master of
the most serious situations. They
are born leaders. Because they are
men of faith and reason, they are op-
timists. They come from different
branches of the service; Foch is an
artilleryman, and Petain an infantry-
man. They possess, however, com-
mon characteristics and have been
able to work out a C0111111014 doctrine.
Superficial generalizers have tried to
differentiate between them in pre-
tending that l'och's ntetality is of-
fensive and Petain's defensive, What
an errorl Petain, at Carency, show-
ed more offensive spirit than any
other commander of an army corps,
and if he had been followed the
German lines' would have been,hirok
en tltrougii, Foch, the southerner,
more impetuous, more intuitive, has
flashes of genius, but he has especial-
ly, an 1nipertnrable faith which holds
sway over all those who surround
him. Petals, the ilortherner; is more
cold, more calm, perhaps more cal-
culating, But there is nothing of the
cynic it hint, His flriiineSs of sons
cannot be Better expressed than by
the splendid old Latin word forti
tude, Alt Lite world knows ills, mar-
velous aseelldaltcy over his soldiers;
.strikingly revealed to an anxious 211d
expectaint word In the dark critical day
of Verciu1ii"--llarpet•'n
LESSON FM MAY 13.
THE GRACE OF GOD.
LESSON TEXTS - I4pbos'.nns 22:4-10;
Titus 2:11-14.
(SOLI)ICN TEXT - We believe 11,at
through the grace nr tliv Lord Jesus
Christ we shall be raved, even as they'.
-Acts 15:11,
ADDI9'IONAr. 5f ' Ti:RIAT.-Oenrsis 6:
7; 2 Cor. 12:9; John 1:16. 17: 1 Car. I5;10:
James 4:6; 1 Pelcr 4,1u: 2 Peter 5:15.
Grace n,ennc unmerited favor, God's
grace menns his kindness toward ns
through Jesus C'brisf. (Eph. 2:7.)
God's mercy does not go out to min be-
cense they are good int brcuuse he
is good and desires to bestow that
goodness upon lost and ruined men fa
order to Inulce thein good.
I. The Grace of God in Salvation
(Eph, 2:4-10,)
Grace brings salvation; it cloes not
send it, Jesus Christ, who is the em•
hoiitnent of God's love and grace,
came bringing salvation with him. In
order to apprehend what the grace of
Goll has clone, observe:
1. Man's natural state (Eph. 2:1-3).
In the natural man Is :found 4111 that Is
opposed to the will and purpose of
God. (1) Dead in trespasses and
sins (v. 1). The supreme need of the
dead man Is life, therefore he must
have life from without himself. The
charncteriatic of one who Is dead is
that he is (a) without sensation -
"past feeling." (4:10.) The natural
man, therefore, can neither love God
nor hate slu until he Is made alive,
(b) Without motion. Activity. is the
demonstration of life. So far as God
and holiness nre concerned they are
motionless. They are as ]helpless as
Lazarus was in the grave. (2) Under
the outrun of fleshly and worldly lusts
(v. 2). The carnal nnture holds sway
over their.lives. (3) Under the domi-
nation of Satan (v, 2), All unregen-
erate Hien tend women are ruled by Sa-
tan. Since he Is the god of this age
(2 Cor, 4x1), the prince of this world
(John 12:31), n11 who have not been
freed by Christ are under the rule of
Satan, (4) Under the condemnation
and - wrath of God (v. 3). Over all
these -death,. Worldliness, disobedi-
ence, lest of the flesh -hangs the
wrath and condemnation of God.
2, Man's state by grace (2:4-10).
(1) He is alive in Christ (v. 5). The
Holy Spirit lays hold upon men dead
In sin anti quickens them Into life.
(2) Raised tip with Christ (v, 0).
God's grace not only makes lost men
alive hut raises them up with Christ.
(a) Association with Christ It glory
(v. 6). Christ's incarnation has so
Identified himself with the race that
those who are saved are raised up to
be with Christ and shall ultimately
share his glory. The actuating prin-
ciple of God which moved him to thins
lay hold upon lost men is his love
(v. 4). Man's salvation Is flue entirely
to God's grace. Not only the salvntiou
has been .provided In grace but the
faith which appropriates it is God's
gift (v. 8). Works as grounds of sal-
vation are absolutely excluded.
(4) The purpose .of God in the salva-
tion of men (55, 7, 10). (a) It Is to
display his grace in the coming ages.
The demonstration to the Inhabitants
of the spheres In which sin has not
entered, in the ages to crime, wilt be
the transformation of dead, and lost
men and their exaltation with Christ.
(b) To glorify God through their good
works (v. 10: et Matt. 5 tie). While
good works have absolutely no part in
the salvation of men God's purpose lei
saving teeth wary that .they Might de
good works.
11. The 4rIss, et Qv& In RIOAS UMly.
int (Titus 2:11=14)4
(race IA. not Duly elulestial 16 000'
tion bat esrtwits4 to tight Bring. It
ASS weed does (1,) to dent moth
(r, Rite. •nxVett 'tom hi.
opposed to 0011, e (5) Worldly lusts
(v. 32), The redeemed hon is stir -
minded with the things of the world
w'laicli have a downward pull upon
elm. The grnea of Clod tenches 111111
to renounce diem, (3) Sobel' living
(5, 1%). The grace nt' Clod tenches
the saved man self-control; to Have
the reins, of his nature well In com-
mand unci to rule mill, a strong hand.
(4) Righteous llving (v 12). The
grace of find tonelsos the saved 111aa1
to live uprightly with reference to
those about elm, (13) Godly living
(v, 32), It teaches 11101 to. so live In
this present world as to. enable hint
to need God and abide in h1s fellow -
sill 11, (0) 11 teaches the right mo-
tive in living (vv. 18, 14), The blessed
hope o1' the glorious return of the
Lord Jesus Christ Is the grand Incen-
tive to holy living In this present
world. Ife that: has it will keep him-
self pure. (I John 3:3)
Greatest of All Heroes.
The greatest o1' all heroes Is One-
wholn we do not 1101110 here I Let sa-
cred silence meditate that sacred mat-
ter; you will fled 1t the ultimate per-
fection of a fn't.nclple extant through-
out man's whole history on earth,-
Zam•nuk, because they have proved
that it doe+ what Is claimed for 1t,
42se tanurse,
of20Miehgagraduate
says: "I Have a patient who suis
ferecd terribly with piles, 2am03uk
is the only remedy that gave her
relief,
hI have used Zam-Buk myself
for the same ailment, also for sores
and burns, and have the greatest
confidence in it,"
Instruments installed by scientists
when a huge reservoir was built in
New South Wales have recorded
earthquake movements dislocations
Carlyle. and earth tides due to the weight of
30,0no.Ooo,ou0 cubic feet of 'nater,
Christian Life,
The problem of the Christian life
finally is simplified to this -man has O h11 ct r e n Ory
but to preserve the right attitude: ry
To abide in Christ, to be In positron, FOR FLET R'ca
that Is all. -henry Drummond. C A S'T 0
RIA
oe3 la -
r rqaep Need
ee a 'in Sck. ^
THE farmer with a Ford Truck
.A practically lives next door
to the market.
He has a choice of markets.
He becomes more indepen-
dent.
He can markethis-goodswhen
and where he pleases.
He sells his crop to the very
best advantage,
And hishauling'costs him less
-in labor and money.
It is not only cheaper to haul
with a Ford Truck than with a
team and wagon, it is quicker, it
is easier work.
Consider the time and labor
the farmer can save with a Ford
Truck. With a team the trip
to town takes the better part
of a day.
A Ford Truck makes the
same trip in two or three hours.
Price (Chassis oslo)
5750 f.o.b. Ford, Ont.
When labor is so scarce,
what farrner can afford to
waste day after day of his
valuable time?
Ford Trucks Complete
with Body and En-
closed Cab
Ford One -Ton Trucks are now
supplied, 0 desired, with standard
truck bodies in two types, tl:o
Stake Body and the Espies Body.
In both standard bodies the cabs
may be supplied with or without
doors as desired.
See these complete Ford Trucks.
Consider the matter from every
angle; the cost of feeding horses
against the cost of running a Ford
Trude, the time you lose on the
road; the money you lose by being
so far from the best markets.
There is only one conclusion you
can come to. You will have a
Ford Truck.
Standard Ford Bodies
extra. Get our prices
98
Clinton Motor Truck& Machine
Co. Dealers Clinton
LOOK for the
sealed package, but
have an ere out
also for the name
That name is your pro-
tection against inferior
imitations. just as the
sealed Package is pro-
tection against impurity.
The Greatest Name
in Goody -Land -