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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1919-10-23, Page 4Plain Languages You'll find that common 'MOS, dimple eleplanatione and quick action are the rule at the Willard Service Station. It is part of Willard policy to matte it easy for every user of a Willard Battery to get the most out of it. So our instructions ere plain: 1-444 Pure water. 2 -Take hydrometer teat every two weeks. 3 -If hydrometer teat is loss than 1.285 at any two successs come 'straight to theWillard Sear. Me Station. J. 11. MN, Garage is your Willard Service Station. Storage Battery recharged and ' Overhauled. Accessories for Automobiles and bicycles. Phone 80 t Residence 140 CLINTON, ONT. .LIVE POULTRY WANTED 4000 CHICKENS -0- 2000 HENS ° wr .1000 DUCKS -0- Each week from now until the end .of December, we pay for all. Poultry on a quality basis delivered with. empty ,crops. We pay special prices for properly milk -fed poultry, ane we would strong- ly advise all producers to finish their !poultry as it will pay you to do so. & a l,, Limitod The up-to-date Firm '4"tinton Brunch Phone ISO ktl- W. Tree--rtha, Manager or Holniesville 4 on 142. NS' 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. Hr.: are Better Pay The Price 0u i't be tempted to ebo,.an chen.n ejewelery. Per better to pey " rail :price end know exantly what v"u .tare ]getting;, -efen will never be sorry - fee as 11 ',mutter of tummy, 11. ie te:Hy the timet esonoutinel. Tb.1 hos hens sail so often Itoit everybody by Ellis ante shoo kt10w it-. and yet there le "n acareity of ttheee jewelry in 111e eland New to fret velem,-el if you wrmld like to, wk., hoot Pw L ,oltnge,hre- • BOME hi HE if von wnnlel like to Inv where nothing but high qu.tlities are dealt in -DOME HERE -And even at that, no nerso.n ever saaid our prices were nufltir We m s oto i ter Ae,vclair and 4)1stician it er 411 Lffarria>,gge Licens41 t►4: !' t 1riA' ��fi rn ON 1-IAND Wisconsin No. 2; Bailey; Improved Learning and other varieties Gold Melt Binder Twine $27.00 per cwt. HAY 'TBD J. A, FORD THE CLINTON'NEW ERA caught her eye. She bought two or three on the impulse of the moment, without nny definite purpose except to Molt thalla oyeW Nat tJB a'r8000 curb. ailty.. Witll thesis tae'itettd neafil9P Lae arm, ehe turned into the boarding, house gate, ran up the steps, and, upon opening the door, her care were giad- dened by the first friendly voice she had heard -it seemed to her -in ages, a voice withal that she had least ex- pected to hear. A short, plump woman rushed out of the parlor, and precipi- tated herself bodily upon, Hazel "Kitty Ryan! Where In the wide, wide world did you come from?" Hazel cried. "From tie. United States and every-, where," Mise Ryan replied, "Take me up to your room, dear, where we can talk our beads off. "And, furthermore, Reale, I'll be pleased to have you address me as Mrs. Brooks, my dear young woman." the plump lady laughed, as she settled herself in a chair in Hazel's room. "So you're married?" Hazel said. "I am that," Mrs. Kitty responded emphatically, "to the best boy that ever drew breath. And so should you be, dear girl. i don't see how you've escaped so long -a good-looking girl like you. The boys were always crazy after you. There's nothing like hav- ing a good man to take care of you, dear." "Heaven save me from them!" Ha- zel answered bitterly, "If you've got one you're lucky. I can't see them as anything but self-centered, arrogant, treacheroub brutes." "Lord bless us -it's worse than I thought!" Kitty jumped up and threw her arms around Hazel. "There, there -don't waste a tear on them. I know all about It. I came over to see you just as soon as seine of the girls - nasty little c•ds they are; a woman's always meaner than a men, dear -just es soon as they gave inc nn inkling of how things were going with you. Pshaw i The world's full of good, de- cent fellows -and you've got one com- ing "If you'd had my experience of the last two weeks you'd sing a different tune," Hazel vehemently declared. "I 17nte-I-" And then she gave way, and in- dulged in the luxury of turning herself loose on Kitty's shoulder. Presently she was able to wipe her eyes and re- late the whole story from the Sunday NIL.. Bush stopped and spoke to her in the park down to that evening. Kitty nodded understandingly. "But the girls have handed it to you worse than the men, Hazel," she observed sagely. "Jack Barrow was just plain crazy jealous, and a man like that can't help acting as he did. There reiily fortunate, I think, because you'd not be really happy with a man like that. But the girls that you and I grew up with -they should have stood by you, knowing you as they did; yet you see they were ready to think the i worst of you. e.bey rweely Hovey,' uo , when there's a mon In the ease. ;Chat e a wealcnees of nut sots, dear, Vol, you aren't working. Colne rind stay wftrt ms, kiubby's got a two-year con- tlflci VIM the Worid Advertising semi. ' pany. We'll be located here that long et least. Come and stay with us." - "Ob, no, I couldn't think of that, Kitty!" Hazel faltered, "You know Pd love to, and It's awfully good of you, hut I think I'm just about really to go away from Granville." - "Well, come and stop with its till you do go," Kitty Insisted. "We are going to take a furnished, cottage for a while. Though, between you and me, dear, knowing people as I do, I can't blame you for wanting to be where their nasty tongues can't wound you." But'Hnzel was obdurate. She world not Inflict herself on the one [fiend site had left. And Kitty, lifter p short talk, berated her affectinnatety for her independence and ruse 10 go. "Tor:" said she, "1 dieter ger hold re 1111m thtn.g till Adele Hemet veiled c elle hntcl ihia 1. tr'rnrlun. and 1 ;WV stop to thLta tildt it twits clear tea 1I, hilt Patna straight 17'"e. Pee, �,Intik I'sp +!.si0rl. t•' I.••to. I`I 'nt reniarrntr 'Ihe'tl two. 1 lev ental, write tteete et er i. i... . cods 111-1:N.' qpl. it, t. have a well deserved repu- taolx as a safe and effective remedy for stomach ail- ments. They are „iii c-,;,1 helpful in bilious attacrrs, sick • headache, dyspepsia, heartburn and constipation. They act gently and surely on the orga^.s of elimina- tion, purify the blood, tone the system and very quickly St pen6tia Largest Sul.^. of any Medicine in the World, Sold everywhere. in boles, 25c. 'rapwed to leisure its Perfect c,tildition in all eluates and seasons. Sealed tight- kw t right® The Perfect gum in the Perfect package. After every meal The flavour lases 55 nit leu 'I ar F re rte ),1)i icor Gr, OWES HER LIFE TO "FRUIT-A-TIVES" • After Veers of Suffering with iDys, pepaie,t43e Fruit Medicine Gave•.itelief MLLE ANTOINETTE BOUCHER 917 Dorion St., Montreal. "I am writing to tell you that l owe my life to 'Truit.a.tives' for this remedy relieved me when I had abandoned all liope of ever recovering my health. 7 suffered terribly with Dyspepsia. I had it for years and all the medicines I took did not do me any good. I read something about `Fruit-a- tives' being good for all Stomach Troubles and Disorders of Digestion so I tried them. After finishing a foto boxes, 7 was entirely relieved of the Dyspepsia and my general health was restored. I thank the great fruit, medicine, 'Fruit-a-tiven', for this wonderful relief." Mile ANTOINETTE BOUCHER. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25o. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit -a -tires Limited, Ottawa, Ont. teal quirk, the Coen or 114nv1ng Gran- ville and making her home elsewhere no longer struck her as ruining away tinder fire. She felt drat she could adventure forth among strangers in a strange country with 11 better heart, knowing thr-.t Kitty Brooks would puri a swift quietus cu tiny gossip that came her way. So that hazel went down to the die- ing room light-heartedly, and when the meal was finished came hack m18 fell to reading her papers. The first of the Western papers was a Vancouver World. In a real-estate man's half - page she found, a diminutive sketch plan of the city on the shores of Bur - rued Inlet, Canada's principal outpost on the far Pacific. "It's Suite a big place," she mur- mured absently. "One would be far enough away there. goodness knows." Then '.she turned to the "Help Wanted" advertisements. And down nee • the bottom of the column she Then She Turned to the "Help Want- ed" Advertisements. happened on an inquiry for a school- teacher, female preferred, 1n an out- of-the-way district In the interior of the province. "Now, that-" L1azel thought. She had a second-class certificate tucked away mwing her belongings. Originnllytt had been her intention to teach, and ehe land clone so one term In backwoods school when she was eighteen. With the ending of the term she had returned to Granville, studied that winter, and got her second cer- tificate; but at the same time she had taken a business -college course, end the following Jane found her clack - Ing a typewriter at nine dollars a week. And her teacher's diploma had remained in the bottom of her trunk ever since. Itnaceountably, since Kitty .Brooks' visit, she found herself itching to turn her back on Granville end its unpleas- ant nssoeiations. She did not attempt to analyze the feeling. Strange lands, and most of all, the West, held alluring promise. One thing was certain:* Granville, for all she had been born there, and grown to womanhood there, was now no place for her. The very people who knew her best would make her sulier most. She spent that evening going thor- oughly over. the papers and writing lettere to various school boards, taking n chance at one or two.She found in the Manitoba paper, but centering her hopes on the weary west of the I.tockies. Her savinge in the bank amounted to three hundred ocid dol- lars, and cash In hand brought the sum to a total of three hundred and sixty-five. At any rate, She had suffi- cient to insure her living for quite a long time. And • she Went to bed feeling • better thin she had felt for two weeks, Very shortly thereafter -almost, it seemed, by return mall -Hazel got re- plies to her letters of Inquiry. Tho fact that each and every one seemed bent on seeming her services eaten - hilted her. But the reply from Cariboo lifted - Owe, B. C., the first V140' 010' • had thought of, deckled her, The Member Continued next Week. 4. ulti moo» WttV9 tm 1fi91'6ttl1ATlolld " LEssoN tBY MeV, P. B: FITZWATER, D. D., Teacher or gnelleh Bible le the Moody fJlble: n3Khtllte of Chicago,) ICopyrlgyt, fi49, tttieptern Newspaper Velon) LESSON FOR OCTOBER 26 A LESSON IN TRUST. LJ1SSON 'MVP -Matt, 14:22-22. CIOLDEN Tl1YT-I believe; help thou' wale unebpef,-Mark 9:24, AY5r)ITtO21I AETi ZASs %Adnan 6111',' .4; MAI; Lotso 594X -2L PRIMARY TOPIC -Help to tris SearM, JUNIOR- TOPIC -Jeans domes to the 'lolp of his disciples - iNTERn4EDIATE TOPIC -Help when nasi needed, SENTOR AND ADULT TOFIC-An aver -present helper. The storm -tossed disciples on the in at night is an example or the struggling followers of the Lord In the darkness of the present age, as they are tossed by the tempests of the evil ,1714. 1. The Disciples on the Storm -tossed Sea (vv. 22-24). 1. They were sent across the sea by Christ (v. 22). Doubtless his reason for this was to keep them from en- tanglement In the movements of the people to make him king, for in John 6:14, 15 It Is *Shown that the people were so excited by the feeding of the five thousand that they were about to make him king by force. Though they weresomewhat unwilling to go, It was a mercy for him to constrain them. 2. Christ dismissed the multitude (v. 22). This may be taken as typical of his rejection of the nation whose rulers had already rejected him. 3. Christ praying alone In the moun- tain (v. 23). Temptation to earthly boner and power had come to him, therefore he went to the Father In prayer for relief and strength. The need of prayer Is greatest at such tunes. While his prayer was to pnrt for himself, yet it was for his disciples. According to Mark 6:4S, he saw from the mountain top the disciples tolling on the storm -tossed sea. We are nev- er nut of his sight as 'tve struggle against the storms of life, and he ever lives to make intercession for us. iI. Jesus Walking on the Sea (vv. 25-27). 1. It was in the fourth watch of the nighty(v. 25). Ile did not come to them immediately. hot wafted 1111 nl- t'Ebursday, pCtvber 23rd. 1919. SifeWet 711111110 .0111110$101.00001000000000111.1111.11.10.1101010100.10011011110010110100.0r Full weight of tea in every package TEAis goodiii Sold only )in sealed package& most dawn. it was, however, the darkest part of the eight, and physi- cal, danger was great, hut their per- plexity of mind was greater. They knew that the Lord had sent them, bet why should they be in such straits if he sent them? A stormy sea Is no evidence that we are not In the Lord's appointed way. The llsciples' concern should be to obey Cipf• commands of the Lord, being assumed that while do - Ing his will he will protect them. 2. The disciples alarmed at his com- Ing (v.26). It was the coming of their best friend to deliver them from danger. He Comes to us today in such ways that sometimes we are affrighted. 8. Jesus' words of comfort and good cheer (v, 27). In the midst of their distress they heard the Master's words, "Be of good cheer; It is I, be not afraid." This changed their fear Into joy. 1I1. Peter's Ventura and Failure (vv. 23.33). As soon as Peter recognized the voice of Jesus he cried, "Bid me come to thee on the water." Jesus said, "Come." Peter obeyed, and for a time he walked upon the waves without sinking. Itis simple fnith linked him with divine power and he was upheld; but as soon as he took his eyes oft his Lord and considered' the raging sen he began to sink. ;If we wilt but keep our eyes oo the Lord instead of the 1 waves we 01111 outride the storms of life. When Peter began to sink, he did the sensible thing; he cried to the Lord for help. beaus reached forth his hand and saved him. He has never lost one who honestly cried for help. When Jesus entered the ship the wind ceased. The people worshiped him as the Son of i God. No ship can go down with Jesus on rostra. • Hath Not Where to Lay 1-I'ls Head. I People are to be pitied who have ne home. John Howard Payne In Parts, homeless and miserable, uttered the universal longing of the human heart when in a cold and dreary garret'•hi wrote the words of "Home, Sweet Rome." There are many people In the world who are driven from pillar to post, and who can say of no spot on earth, "This is my home." Think par. Ocularly of him who bad come from his Father's House ,to this Inhospitable earth and who said, "The foxes have hetes, and the birds of the air have nests,•but the .Son of Man hath not where to lay hie head." Sublime Sentiment. "Beware," said Lavater, "of him who hares the laugh of a child:" "I love God and little children," was the simple yet sublhae sentiment of Rich- ter, -urs. Sigenruty. The Heart of the Believer. 1 The heart of the believer Is the home of God. Tl:e church of the Lord Jesus Is his hely temple.. He dwells Isere by his iloly. Spirit, and makes known through the chureb, to the prin- cipalities and the potters In the heave enly places, his manifold wisdom. This is 'a superlative honor. It brings with a supreme obllg,ltion. Oiauctren oz,y FOR FLETCHER'S CAaS a O R IA Support the Boys' Naval Biicades Because these are the only organizations training Can- adian boys for service in our merchant fleet now being built. - Canadians Must Sail the Seas Because we cannot leave our growing export trade at the mercy of foreign seamen. Canada Needs Trained Canadian Seamen The a va' Drigades Train Our Boys , rAisne of the AVY LL'ACll. OF CANADA ernpt,asixo Ccreerdn's txeities v,d r•arpos- tiee o" the .tea. raise feuds for ores relief of our Intrsl•rnt srn171o44, lwj:lred in the tour, and fur depra'.rvnts of those who were tailed. To maintain tailors' horses to 441parts. Te train boys tltld young mer for car turn -bent strips by the crga..iz,nite of Boys- Naval Brifados. Patron: H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES Doinl,lo,t President: eceeiseoneotk AEMLLIU.i JARVIS -Iiz�i1liM rI� { tt. ASO NILL tECO9C'CO is Ne CCea BhcrTLLse the work of the Bove' Naval Brigades and the other branches of the Navy League's activities are financed by public contributions. The Campaign Must Be a Success B.cauze Canada must be assured that her increasing surplus products will'reach overseas markets. The Race. for Export .,. rkets is on. One quartet' of the world's ship- ping was lost in 9;he war. Canada can- not buy or rent ships and so is building them, and must be in a position to man them with trained Canadian seamen. • BISON for '5 et 21-22-23 • "ea Elt dictrt.s MaasL a i l a",fae-•- Seas -4' Campaign Committee for the Province of Ontario :., Cheirn)ene, SIR* JOHN C r' t'.'r'i?5l Vice -Chairman: A. M. HOBBERLIN Elbn, Trees.: SIR EDMUND W.• . t''R Asaist, ?"remoter t N. L. MARTIN 34 ICin ..tract fest, Toronto 19