HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1919-6-26, Page 4•
?ACM 4
POULTRY FEED
We pve 70 bags of Lake of
t17,40. Woods Oatmeal Flour left
over from aur Poultry Feeditir
Season, This will make a ,wood
dry mash for laying Hens, or a
No, 1 feed for Hogs,
We are selling tlitS Feed at be-
low cost to clear: •
We are always In the vmarKet
for Live Poultry and ilew laid eggp
at top market prides,
GilEll-Lallaitis & Co„ Idea
The up-to-date Firm
Clinton Branch Phone lite
N. W. Tree-rtha, Manager
or Hohnesville 4 on 14.
OMMONATIMIMP
PIANOS
Before purchasing your
new piano or organ let us
show you the newest de-
signs in several well-
known and old establish-
ed makes.
INSTRUMENTS RENT-
ED AT MODERATE
PRICES
PHONOGRAPHS
See Our stylish cabinet
designs in the best makes.
C. Hoare
01100•1.01=11•MMOMM111.011.••••
111...MMECIMMIMINIs.
ienennerinnee.funiaenriA.Nnen.nue.W.e........a
NHEN YOU ARE IN
NEED OF ANY
PLUMBING
TINSMITHING
IROOFING
OR
ELECTRIC 'WOR K
CALL OR PHONE FOR PRICEd
losainseasemok
J. A. Sutter
A Plumber and Electrician,
Phone 7.
Better Pay
Pay
The Price
Don't be tempted to cheose cheap
jewelery. Far better to pay a -fair
price and know exactly what von
see getting,
Yon will never be sorry -for as a
matter of money, it is easily the
most economioni.
•
That hoe heen silk! 1.10 often that
everybody by this iime• should
now it --and vet there is no
&merely of eheep jewelry in the
land
Now to get per:meld - Ir3,1111 W11111r.l
like toni 4314 that sort altogether -
COM -HERE •
yon Wohlri like to }my whine.
mottling but high qualities are
'dealt - DOM E dIGEtE
And evert at that, no person ever
said our prices were unfair
W. R. eounter
Jeweler and Optician
1. 0.r e linfriage Licenses
Seed eorn
ON HAND -
Wisconsin No. 2; Bailey;
Improved Learning
and other varieties
sold Medal Binder Twine $26.50
per cwt.
BAY WA
1'011 I lifotkOD
,,„
* 49 * * * 59 59
* *
SHAMS *
* .,„.„...._ *,
r: BY LOUISE HOFFMAN ri
CLINTON NW ERA,
neeeSsary to come many times alld Very
Unexpectedly, too, And. then Anita
reafired the tar -reaching effeeis of neW
friends in her life.
Millicent19 to be my sister smile
.day, mother," she murineredshyly as
* • * * • * * * $he displayed a sparkling sonlilire•
"What- 14 the world do you w
with thoSe pillow shams?" latighed
ita,
"I thought is long as the house
undergoing such. A radical change
Millicent's coming, I'd, get these
for the spare rOoin," ,replied M
Brown, as her head emerged from
muffled depths of n huge cedar ekes
„,,, A year later, when happy Mrs. Bob
""' was looking through the pockets of
An- some of Bob's cast-off coats, she eame
across a little black leather dairy. She
was and Ilob bad often laughed over 'each
for others' dairies, and 9he.fel1 no com-
mit inaction in reading Oils,
, "Jan. 23, 19-
tha Met 11 brown -eyed beauty with real
t. curls, hair. • Dead tired."
• "Why, mother!" • exclaimed
daughter, in evident distress, "
don' t seriously think of • using tri
shams? They have gone out of st
ages ago,"
Mrs..Brown. thoughtfully broiled
stray lock of slightly gray hair fr
her forehead, 1.They are no more
of place than the rest of he shams y
are preparing for Millicent," she qui
ly returned.
Anita, wliiced, -Ugh! .Sham is su
an ugly word, mother, But," she
tended alter. a montent's
'these changes are really improvements
in our way of living." •
"We can't stick permanently to such
changes as Annie's uniform, cap •and
apron, dear. Annie is our maid of all
work and not a parlormaid. And, al-
though she will try hard, for your sake
to do her best, it is a difficult role for
her to play, and a little forgetfulness
on her part may cause you some em-
barrassment. - People like Millicent
readily see through these little pre-
tences, You forget Millicent is corn-
ing to visit you anct share the person-
ality of our home."
Anita frowned. 'Why, mother, 1
thought you said it was right and
Proper to always put your best foot
the "Why, that was the very day I3ob
you was stranded," site reflected,
ese "Jan. 24, 19-
yle "No 51011115 about her. Fine old home
No fuse and feathers, Sensible mother.
a Guess it's love at first sight."
orn Anita's mind flew to that ijtemorable
out visit. She refembered with a guilty
05 pang how she had resented her Mot-
et, lir"s advice. Her cheeks blanched.
, She might have lost good-natured, In-
dulgent Bob through a foolish display,
for he had been indirect)), influenced
de -
forward "
Mrs, Brown smiled "You are goi
to the extreme, dear. You are en
5591 hied in trying to make a since
impression. You are planning
change our home and standard of li
ing to such an extent that if Millice
should visit us unexpectedly she wou
not know us. And, you know,
never knotwhen to expect, friend
And wouldn't it be better to have the
find us as we are and save oursely
needless embarrassment? For, aft
all. it is not %'hal we have, but wh
we are, that counts. And we nes,
know what -far-reaching effects ne
friends will have in our lives."
"Perhaps you are right," unwilling
admitted Anita. "Anything else?
"The menu," promptly replied Mr
Brown. "We must keep lo our simpl
Inv their home life. Site drew her breath
sharply. It bad all turned out so won-
derful. She glanced around at her
inindsorne home with its luxurious fur-
nishings. It represented the' life she
had craved as a girl.
"Hello, wifey!"
Anita jumped. "Oh, Bob! I've just
been finding out what you thought of
us."
Bob laughed, then sobbed as he
glanced at the tell tale book "1 tell
-
you Kitten, it WAS no Joke. That day
was a turning point in my life, l had
about been disguisted with the shams
of life. And it was such a relief to
find gent.ine people in a genuine home
that I all but kidnapped you, and I've
been glad; glad ever since."
tig • FATEFUL YEARS
• FOR ALL WOMEN
to
nt
v- How Best to Overcome the Troubles
Id That Afflict Women Only.
ye
s.
m •
The most fateful years in a •,vo-
es man's lite are thnse between fort y-
er five and fifty Many women enter
at ,•
this term under debressing condi-
er (ions. through overwork, worr.‘. or a
w neglected condition of the blood, and
so they suffer heavily. Still . varia-
, tions of health at this time can be
relled bv home treatment.
1.1
S. ii, mon!, the commonest symptonic
are headaches and Mills in the back
e, SW! sides, feyer-flushes. palnitation.
wholesome dinners -meat, yegetabl
and dessert. The formal many-cours
dinners of soups. salad, entrees, etc
are correct in Millicent's home, wiles
f hey employ a staff of servants an
money is no t.bject. Simpler meals wi
give me more time to fret acquaints
with Millicent." she finished wistful's'
It was hard for Anita to relinquis
her cherished plans to create an a
mosphere of•style and easy Imsrdtalit
away beyond their means. But sit
finally triumphed over her love for dis
play. Anita and Millicent had met a
a girl's •finishing school and, althoug
Anita had confided that a wealthy aun
was paying her expense, she failed t
see how inconsistent her home lif
would appear•to Millicent until her mot
her showed her its absurdity.
A week later Millicent .arriyect. Sh
was• a sensitive. appreciative girl ii
spite of tile- fact that. she had kno.wi
nothing but wealth since her birth.
• "What a lovely borne!" 'she breathe
into' Anita's surprised and delighte
• ears. "It just invitek you" to feel a
1101110 and talk,- talk, talk, It's lovely,'
she added toward the close of •her stay
"to have your mother with us so much
Mother .is always so busy with• - social
engagements We scarcely ever have
time for little hearito1heart chats like
these. I've had a wonderful time."
The day before Millicent's departure,
she received a telegram from her
brother,
"Bob is on his Way home from. camp
dnd was to meet- me at the station here
to -morrow and take me home," explain-
ed Millicent, handing the telegram to
Mrs ,Brown. "But. he missed his con-
nectiong and is stranded. •
'There is an accommodation train at
5 30,'said Mrs, Brown. "Send him a
message to spend the night with us."
And so handsome six-foot Bob Caine
During the ensuing summer he found it
es di”iness and denression,
Women
stand in need (If rich. red blood all
their life, but never more so than .in
,0 middle are, when nerves are also
weak and nver-wroturhi, Now every
I; woman can prove the prompt help
d afforded to her health by renewing
, her blood supply . It is a test that
11 1.11V 1111111g woman can make by tak-
t- ing, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. for
Y these »ills make rich, red blood,
e which in turn helps the appetite,
strengthens the nerves a.nd re t
robust health, Thousands of ss,o(i)ifeei
11 have folind in Dr. Williams' Pink
"1 health and a brighter outlook of lifpink Pills the means by Which newe
were gained In proof of this is the
- Voluntary testimony of Mrs. H. S
e
Peterson, Milford, Ont., who says: -
q 'have suffered greatly from these
1. troubles that afflict my sex, and 1
1 have found' that. Dr. Williams' Pink
Nita in such •cases not only do all
d that is claimed for them, but more,
d Dr: Williams' Pink Pills have done so
t much for me that I urge every weak
' woman to try them, ands; they will
: fir the. .411'4 ngtarelciet.." e nce
If you suffer from any of the ills
that particularly afflict womanhood
00h Should avail yourself at once of
the •health help of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. You can get them from any
dealer in medicine or by mall post
paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 from the Dr Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
'rhe first cotton ginning plant in
1 Zululand recently began, operations.
1 An English inventor's cardboard
substitute made by insertinga lay-
) er of sawdust between two sheets of
paper and binding them with* an ad-
hesive material' and pressure.
1 •
In June
Cast $4.05
War S'avings geseepa
eon be ,iought when,
• over this sign is
displayed.
It is patriotic to buy War Saving!
Stamps because Canada must have
money for reconstruction.
But it is also profitable to buy War
Savings Stumps because you are in.
vesting in Governsnent Bonds yielding
over 41/se%.
You don't need to be a capitalist. You
can start with 25 cents,. Buy a Thrift
Stamp for a quarter. When you have
sixteen of them. , exchange them for a
War Savings Stamp, and you will have
laid the foundation of a solid invest.
intent with your odd savings. •
You can add to this investment as often
as you save $4.00, and in 1924 the
Government will pay $5.00 for every
War Stiff Stamp you buy now for
$4.00 odd.
This is the biggest opportunity ever af-
forded 10 wage earners to become in -
Make Your Savings Serve. You, auk
Serve YAM' COUlar7-44Veg Then hi'
War Savirigt 5,00.
ED UNU1OI11f itriErtaa'rio$41,
_,T‘ SON-
(i7Y !WV. P. 1> ,1•1%./.\VA rlq[i, 11. •11,,
'9'01101“1. Nnallsh into o. AltuelY
Jillde liadlime of cauu •
0111.4.1.1'1,, 1111e. by ivq411.1,1` 1 !NM I
LESSON P011 JUNE
FIEV1.11,9/: riEsPoN::..::: To
e LOVE,
Sis:1,14.‘TION P011 1 lh
7-19
(701.1)17N TroNT- 4will IsoaleY 1t"e. 0
Lere ius' with in. wool,. -
Is,
191 nY t.o'e
te Our llonYenly ,,l.lc 1419
TOPIC -Some Thiona•Wo 11,tve
LeOrned .9 110t1t. GOA. 01311 511,
1NT490tAl1A.11.1ATS 1,11111 '--'J'l:a Aini•he
or a ChrIslian.
SENIOR Aso A DP f,9"ro PlCir
Fundamentals or Faith and Prdetlee.
The method or review will hugely be
1.10.er11ined by the grade of the school.
The printery teacher ('9111 use. the ma-
terial which howe love to the Iteriv-
onl)' Father; the Junior teacher, that
which teaches Munn ,(lod ; the Inter-
mediate teacher, the marks of a Chrts-
•tian; the senior end adult teacher, the
fundamentals of faith and practice, As
Illustrative 'of the method for the
seulor and adelt; note the following;
Lesson I. God who was before all,
things Is the cause of all things. The
universecame into being by the will
and act of the divine personality. Man
himself Is a creation of God, not an
evolution. All things continue to be
by the preserving power of God. This
great being Is the Father of all who be-
lieve on :Jesus Christ. We should give
hint our undivided affection and trust
hint for food and raiment.
Lesson II. Jesus; the Son of God
and Israel's Messiah, Is the lamb who
bore our sins. Out of God's love he
was given, arid "whosoever believeth
op him shall not perish, but ha.ve ever -
tasting life."
Leon III. Jesus Christ rose from
the dead. Hie resurrection guarentees:
1. The integrity of the Scriptures
I Car. 15:20). •
2. The reality of the divine person
(Rom. 1:4),
B. The sufficiency of Christ's aton-
ing sacrifice (Rol/1.4;25).
4. Life and Immortality of the be-
liever (1 Cor. 15:20).
Lesson IV. On the day of Pentecost
the Holy Spirit was poured Out upon
the disciples, baptizing them into the
one holly of which Christ is the head.
The gift of the Spirit peculiarly qual-
ified the disciples to be his witnesses.
• Lesson V. God created man in his
likeness and image and placed him at
the head of erention.
Lesson VI. Through the full of
Aden' sin has passed upon all men,
bringing death, physical (1./1(1 spiritual,
lied sorrow in its train.
Leeson VII. Lost men are snved ab-
solutely by Clodgrace. Ms grace
means his kindness toward men
through JPAUS.C1/1`1tit.
Le6A011 VIII. At the preaching, of
Retell the people of Nibeveli repented.
Because of their repentance Clod'
wrath wits turned aside. Thee who
repent of their sins and go to clod
tny saprkat tbrausb :reins clirtst shot
he saved. .
. Leeson IX. it 18 only through faith
that man can pletse. God. Through
CMG) the mightlestvietories have been
• vyrou,thr. Vli. . argflil ,eetnplity uppn
whorit faith can rest Is .Tesna Christ,
Lesaen X. The grand Incentive to
obedience is 10*e-to God. Calling Christ
Lord -s1111 not answer for disobedience
to his will," Melting and doing his
teachings Is building upon thg 'solid
reek. Snell building ean never he de-
stroyed by 1100(1 or storm,
Lesson XI. The right Motive In pray-
ing Is not to attract man's attention,
but to have fellowship with God. Cod
le pleneed with persistency In prayer.
Lessen XII.. The 'grentest of the
Holy Spirit's gifts is love -the love
of God shed abroad in onr hearts,
Love is not a mere sentiment or emo-
tion, 11111 /I mighty rlyniunic which
transforms the life, expressing itself
in palette:1 1 service to men. It abides
forever.
Staying Away From Church,
The habit of absenting, one's self
from the Sunday services of the church
Is one that some seem to nequIre very
easily. It Is a lin bit to be shunne.11.
Sometimes It is occasioned by sick.
;less; often 501110 small eXCUSA, some
grudge against a membee, some re
sentment at a fellow member's faillt,
Is the occetelon, Jesus will be there,.
even if an unworthy member is eyes.
ent, ,Tesus may be -present especially
to meet •ansi forgive that Unworthy
member; and who are we Hutt we
should judge ft brother or 2 sister?
• Charity and Denial.
Brother men, one act of charity will
tench us more of the love or God than
a thmisrted sermons -one denial, then
whole volumes of the wisest writers
on theoldgy.-F. W. Robertson,
Grandest Thing on Earth.
There is not 0 nom or woman, how-
ever poor they may he, Ina 'have it,
In their power, by the grace of Ond,
to leave behind them the grandest
thing on eartlt, character; and their
children might rise up after thent and
thank Ood that thair wns a
pinus woman, or flak father n pIntis
man, -N, Maelecti.
Trent:nen& All Substance.
God's will lit the present moment is
the deny bread which transcends all
substnosee.--Medatme riwetchtne.
4 ' ation requited.
4111005,0 Oliftmosit wilosolioo son at Date
tied am certainty cure you, 45)e. a box; alld0I14t, elealeni, or Adzininson, Bates &110., Limited.
TOroate..;klanitilb hex &heal yen tioniforf 11415pipet aun enoless le. sta*p 10 pstostsee,
•
Do not auffm
• andthor day with
Bleed.
Init. 517 t'tlYttlIA.
1015 Yileis.
attanleril !Opp,.
THE DOUKHOROR
IL the published reports from
Western Canada concerning contest -A -
plated ehanges in the ownership of
Doukhobor lands in favor of Canad-
ian soldier settlers are true, one more
migration, total or partial, of hese
Russian peasant communities may
yol be witnessed. And so ths..clues-
don is Instinctively asked, Whither
would they go?
One has associated the Doukho-
bors so long and definitely whit
Western Canada that the part of
their career which MN been the most
formative in their history is apt to
be overlooked, The manner of life
in the sparsely populated prairie sec-
tions of Maultoba and Saskatchewan
-
or 111111(1 the partially cleared. but
potentially fertile valleys of British
1)ol1mblit, Is the direct ontcoine of
those peculiar conditions which they
were compelled to endure in their
native Russia. An Agricultural folk,
with the instinct for settlement high-
ly developed, their migratory move-
ments began with ' Tzar Alexander 1.
banished the Duukhobortsy, as the
community is more correctly termed,
to the hanks of the River Moloch-
naya, in the neighborhood of the
Crimea. Their original home wag'
Kharkov, a city several hundred
miles to the southweest of Moscow.
The movement spread so rapidly
from this common centre that gov-
ernmental hostility was aroused
against them, and their enforced set-
tlement on the Molochnaya • was the
result.
Just .100 years ago, the Russian
government resumed its hostile mea-
sures, which culminated in the final
deportation of the community to
Trinscaucasia; Pohiectonosev's pol-
icy of bringing all religious elements
of the empire into conformity with
Greek 9.1atholicisin being responsible
for the severities which attracted the
world's attention to the Doukhobors
in the nineties. Their refusal to
obey the law afforded a pretext for'
this persecution, In the inhospitable
and barren region 0) which they had
been banished, and which WAS to be
their final home In Europe, they
nevertheless, by dint of sober living
aud dogged perseverance in the face
49
Middle
Wo
Thursday, June
Keep your eye
on. this Brand
'91
0th, 1919,
The one Tea that never diSa,ppciint0 the
most critical tastes,'
4,0
on a Sealed Packet is Your Safeguard:67a
of hardship, managed to pros- what It Is, unprogressive if not
per. in 1 895 they were burning their stagnant, partly through its odd re.
weapons and refusing to submit to ligious convictions, partly through
the tyrannies of the Cossack soldiers, the stress of persecution which made
of Count Tolstoy and the Society of its early motherland impossible to st.
Eventually, through the good offices The
011 - " ambtions, or
sympathy with the average 1151112'S
Friends
are strangely out of
Friends in England, s 8( ( al were
despached as emigrants to Canada, wholly unconscious of
and there again they not only tolled 0,ttli.eyin.are The one tiling certain Is that
a511(1(rived, but succeeded, where `i"`
love work for work's sake, and not
others indubitably would have fall -
peasants, They evidently
for what it may bring to them in
ed, in converting to productive uses
this world's goods. They appar-
hundreds of acres and apparently
ently see very little horizon above
waste land. They, amassed compara-
the furrow whicii they are ever throw -
five wealth as a community, i
ity, and des- .ng up. They crave no fortune,
pised it as individuals. They paid pro- 1)0
i ultimate migration to the city, with Its
Vince after province, and now they f stimulating pleasures, is intellectual
ore almost in sight of the waters of 1 entertainment, the thousand and one
the Pacific,
lights that come in the course of a
The Doukhobors are a people ex- 1 life 590111 in the crowded highways of
iled from their original home but men,
one cannot live in their vicinity with- i Doukhoborland is truly a topsy-
f
out receiving the impression that turyey world, Sitting by the great
they have long lost the sense 01 stoves of the Doukhobors, one
country, as the average person un- strangely conscious that where the
clerstands it. One asks himself. "Are Doukhobor is, there is his home, Put
these Russians?" and finds oneself him elsewhere, and, like the spider
answering, "Scarcely." And if they which has found his web rudely dis-
turbed or rent, and mends the torn
meshes again and again, he will , out
of the compulsion of that simple,
primal instinct of his, toil and spin
as if nothing had happened, and,as if
toil were the one thing that counted -
In the sum total of his universe,
are not Russians in their allegiance
they seem to be hist as - improbable
Canadians Standing in their pres-
ence, talking with them, watching
the men and women at work front
morning till night In their fields or
barns, or partaking of the rude,
rough hospitality of their community
houses, this peculiar neutrality does
not strike 0110 as difficult to under-
stand The community is exactly
Mr. Alex, Mitchell, of Detroit, was a
visitor with his mother this week,
ged
Are Here Told the Best Remedy
• for Their Troubles.
Freemont, 0.-"X was passing through the critical
period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all
the symptom incident to that change -heat flashes,
nervouenese, and was in a, general run down condition,
so it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pink.
tiara's Vegetable Oonspound was reeessuriebried to391149
the best remedy for my tronbles,whieh it surely proved
to be. I Seel better and stronger in every way since
taking it, and this annoying symptoms have disap-
pear 14 GOMM , 925 Nineteen at., Fremont,
9214o.
North Haven, Cons.-"Lidta L Pinkham's Vegeta-
loreeftapousalcostored sty healta'after eFvelytlAng else
lizi4-failefl,wheavessetag Omagh cloantentilfe. There
likaotabsg, 41, sI fcS. 'overcome the EFyilig'sjimptieni."
--1144,7ioninten FsitiLA;14ex 191, North Herm,
has the "re 0 recent for the gmatest voila
PlancINE co. CANAAN&
.• ... • • .• . • rzto;
Rates fir
Telep ne
..111
91,
1911,
THE new rates for Long Distance pervice, effective .Way
25th and based upon air -line mileage, correct inequalities
in the old schedule and embody both increased and de-
creased charges. '
Following is a comparison of old and nel,v rates for a
3 -minute talk to points most frequently called by local sub-
scribers:
•
Old Rate New Rate
Clinton to Goderich $ .15 .15
Blyth .10 .15
Seaforth
London
Toronto
Wingln{m
10 .i5
.30 .35
.60 .75
.25 ,20
The hours during which reduced Long Distance rotes (night rate)
are in effect are now
From 8.30 p.m, to 11.30 p.m., 60 per cent of day rate
From 11.30 p.rn. to 6 a.ni,, 40 per cent of day rale
Night rates are based on Standard Time
LOCAL SERVICE
Rates for local service to present subscribers will be increased ten
per cent, effective from July 1st next.
Applicants for service will be charged at the increased rates, froto
May 25th,
Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station
Mel:fell Telephone Co. of Canad h