HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1919-11-27, Page 4THE CLINTON NEW ERA
• SINCE, ill 1870
SmLO
��TOg3J S$8✓lQIEJq
MAKES THE WHITES7 r,UGII S
• Under government encoeragement
"Corer's cotton' crop was ineresutsed to
,nearly 70,000,000 pounds this year and
an anneal prnclttetlon' of 250,000,000
pounds in a few years is expected.
An airplane :tmbulance his beep de-
signed with 'a fuselage that can be
Opened to admit alt insured person
throilgli the bottom; enabling a pilot to
Soad�a patient without assistance,
Better Pay
The Price
Don't be tempted 1,1eji om" altoan
j"web rr. 1P n Ire!a t o p v ". fair
prior' aryl know exactly what Vol]
• are getting,
Yon will never be sorry -for as a
tnlatter of money, it Is easily the
unmet economical,
That has been artid fin often that
everybody by this time should
'know it -and .vet there is no
scarcity of oheep jewelry in the
land
'Now tbget personr1-If v11)1 would
like to miss that sort altogelher-
'iIOME HERE
SP you would line to hay where
nothing huh high q,talities are
'dealt in-OO111 E t1 RI
And even at that, no person ever
acid our prices wet'e unfair
Jeweler and Optician
Yl ear 161 MSl,f riiiitt' licenses
VICTORY BONDS
E BRIDGE FROM WAR TO
PEACE
ie Donated to Victory Ldan 191.9 by
.A FORD
OR. F. R. AXON
MRMTIeT
re and rtrldge. W ork n speeta016y,
e of C.C.D.6.. Chicago, and 6,O,ll.k
Wm.
nit Mondays, /Nov let to h
W
Big.' IH, FiC►W I'.I,R .,
DENTIST.
ONoee over O'NEIL'S storm.
^epeeist core taken to make donee! Ira
'meat al potatoes se erleilble.
'PISAN TUtnug
Mr, ,lames Doherty wishes to in-
form the pub to that he is pre-
pared to do fine piano tuning,
tope regulating, and repairing
Orders left at W. Doherty's phone
61, will receive prompt attention
THOMAS GUNDRY
Wye stook and general Auction 'e"
GODERIOH ONT
tear, stoat soles a apeman/ Oteets .1 ,
New SRA odice, 011nton, prf.m + y abtenn
to, Terms reasonable. Partners .x11 not
•atienonoted
Medi,al.
DR. J. C. GANDIER
OFFICE HOURS
1.30 p. m. to 3.30 p. m.
7.30 p. m. to 9.00 p. m.
Sunday 12.30 to 1.30
Other hours by appointment only.
,Office at Residence, Victoria Street
W. BetYledief F;
A )(LATER SOLTOI'POR NOTAR
PUBLIC), FTO
tiemeTOtu
H. T. RANCE
Plotatry Public, Conveyancer,
Financial and Real Estate
800t1MANCE ACMST-Reproaeutinr 14 Fire
seranue Companies.
Division Court Ofline.
O. 0, McTaggart Ai. D. MaTagga
,MeTaa Bart Bras,
ALBERT ST, CLINT(
e.eneral Banking Buelnese
transacted
eIOTE8 DISOOON'UED
IDrafte issued. Interest allowed e
depoeite
The McKillop Mutual
Fire Insurance $o.
Ferns end isolated Town Pro0
arty Only in"eared.
-Iieatl OWee-Senior th, On t
t,
,•st
Officers
,17. Connolly, Goderlch, Protldeet•; lits.
ens, Beeehweod, Vice-eresldeatt,
E. HOS, Seder*, Secretary.
reatarer.
A(,cat. Le
Aosta
itoy}, No. 1, Citatoni Edilnir4
1Binekley, SIIIalbrt i Wm. Oleiaey; E`
aaton4 flie;.J...Vir. Yeo, Ooderlcbi 1. 0
liwanu li, SWIM.
( plastein
We. Mak Md. 2, SOID ;1:111Mp� I ! P.O.
itgfl� EseahWit.
oily, tiloderiehs 0, $. IQial(r�'te®Ot
, Alttortila .1, G. OM" Ka 4
MAW rtta*tl, liiirlotdt4 Flet
Agit
"n'net41" flatting 15111. tapped.
"Those aro pretty names, , Jost the
same, I admire your grit. Well, here
we got" r
He. took up the lead rope, and went
on ,without even loolting to see if she
followed. If he had node the slightest
attempt to force her to come, if lie had
betrayed the, least uneertnlnty as to
whether she would come, hazel would
have strung down from the saddle and
set her face stubbornly southward to
sheer defiance of ltlm, But Buell is Ole
peculiar complexity of a woman 'that
she toot, one longing glance backward,
and then fell tn.behind the pack. t3he
with (road bf the
•
was weighted dawn w
unknown, boiling over with rage at
the man who swungi',.,1lghtfooted in'the
1"ead; but 'nevertheless she followed
him. et 41 -
All the rest of the dny 'they bore
steadily northward. B zel had no Idea
of $1U Wagstaffe destination. She
was too bitter agaleat him to ask„after
admitting that she could not tace'the
Wilderness alone, She knew nothing
of the North, but she thought .there
must,be some mode,•of communication
or transportation. Iff-she mould mice
get in touch with other people -well,
she would show Roaring Bill., Of
course, getting back to Cariboo Mead-
ows meant a ,.new start' In the world,
for site had no hope, nor any desire,
to teach school there after .this epl•
soda. She found herself'Dicing that
prospect unmoved, however. The liar
portant thing was getting mat of her
present predicament.
Roaring 0111 made his camp that
night as If no change In their attitude
had taken plebe:- To till itis efforts at
conversation -she turned a deaf ear and
a stony ceuntenance. She proposed to
eat his food anclease his bedding, be-
cause that was unTeessory, But 'socially
she would have none of'him., e
Thereafter, clay by day, the tulles un-
rolled: behind them. Always Roaring
B111tfaced straight north. For a week
he kept on tirelessly, and a consuming
desire to know how ter he intended to
go'began to lake hold of her. At last
they dropped Into n valley where the
Woods thinned out, and down the cen-
ter of which tlowedrfa sizable river.
This they followed north a matter of
three days. On the west the valley
wall ran to a timbered ridge.
Then the stream they followed
merged itself le another, both wide and
deep, wltieleZflowed west through a
tri se -bottomed valley three miles or
mere'ln width. Roaring 13111 halted ()la-
the river hank and stripped his horses
clean, though ft wee but two in the
afternoon and their midday fire less
than an hour eetlegulsbed. She
watehed him 'ourlously. When ,file
packs.were off he beckoned 'to her.
"Hold them a minute:" lie said, and
put the lend ropes In her hand.
Then he went up the bank Into a
thicket of `saskntoons. Out of this he
presently emerged, bearing on his
shoulders a canoe, old end weather -
,beaten, but stanch, for it rode light
ass a feather en the stream. Bill
seated himself In the canoe. holding to
Silk's lead rope. The other two he
Left free.
"Now," he directed, "when I' start
across, yon drive Nigger and Satin to
if they show r!Lrns of hanging hack.
Bounce a rock or two off them if they
lag."
I3er task was ay) easy one, for Satin
and Nigger followed Silk unhesitat-
ingly. The river lapped along the
sleek sides of them for fifty yards.
Then they dropped suddenly Into
swimming water. and the current swept
them dnwnetreflin slantwise for the on -
south
and Ade
THERE is no time in wom-
• an's life that she cannot
benefit by the use of Dr.
Chasers Nerve Food iii, order
(to • keep 1 up the supply of pure,
rieh blood acid tot ensure a
;healthful cnndition '. of the
nervous system.
Headaehea," neuralgia, aieepleas..
nem,, nerroue• spells, imitatonitr.
tired, worn:414 feelfiele, soon
s4 whimtette .visor and 'ener y. of
'Lee are restored b3' the tete
of thea great foods (Mire. . '•yt
SI! emits a box. $ ter !)2.7n, an dea►ere, se
*dsruiaeaet,, Oaten & Co.,' L*4.0ti Selriala.
.,4. 'rp tk
p •ii�N '{t�i.m.... t
polite shore, only their bends.. showing
above the surface. Hazel wondered
what river It might be. It was a good
gtmrtei, of a mile wide, and swift.
Roaring 13111°dld not trouble to en.
lighten her as to the. tactility. Mtn
he got basic he stowed the saddle and
pack oqulflnent in the canoe.
"A"ll aboard for the north side," he
said boyishly. And Hazel climbed obe-
diently amidships.
On the farther side, Bill emptied the
canoe, and stowed it out of sight in a
convenient thicket, repacked his
horses and struck out agate. -Hazel
drew upon hoc knowledge of British
Coiumbia geography, and decided `that
the big river where Bill hld.hts canoe
must be the Fraser where it debouched
from the mountains. And In that-•caeu
she was far north, and In a wilderness
indeed.
Her muscles graduallyrhardened to
.the saddle and to walking. Her appe-
tite grew in peeportion.' The small sup-
ply of eatable dainties that Roaring
Bill had brought from the B4etilowe
dwindled arael disappeared, until they
were living on bannoeks baked a lea
frontier in his frying pan,: on beans
sic euffee, and vedisori killed by' the
wry. 'Yet,she relished the coarse fare
even while site rebelled against the cir-
cumstances of.its partaking.
"Do you realize," sheuJtirttke out one
evening over the fire, "dint this ls'stm-
ply abduetlon?"
"Not at all," Bill answered prompt-
ly. "Abduction means to take away
surreptitiously by force, to ^,arry away
' wrongfully and by violence any human
being, to kidnap. Now, you can't by
nay stretch -of the imagination aconite
moot force, violence or ktdeaptng-
not by a long shot. You merely wan -
searing on His Shoulders a Canes. '
dered tato ray camp, and it wasn't con-
venient for me to turn beck. ..There-
fore circumstances -not my net, re-
member -made it advisable for you to
accompany me. Of , course' I'll „admit
that, according to, custom and usage,
you would expect me to do 'the -polite
thing and restore you to your own
stamping ground, But there's no law
making it mandatory for a fellow to
pllot home a lady In distress. Isn't
that right?"
"Anyhow," he wens on, when slim re:
mained silent, "I didn't. And' you'll
have to lay the •blame on nature for •
making you a wonderfully attractive
woman. I did honestly try to find the
way to Cariboo Meadows that first
night. It was only when I found rny-
• self thinking how fine it would be to
pike through these old woods and
mountains with a partner• like you that
I decided-asI did. I'm human -the
1 woman, she tempted me. And aren't
you better off? Do you know that you
I look fifty per cent better for those few
days of living in the open -the way
every dormal being likes to live?
You're getting some color in your
cheeks, and you're losing that worried,
archangel look. Honest, if I were a
physician, I'd,have only one prescrip-
'h tion: Get out into tie Wild country,
end live off the' country as your primi-
tive forefathers did. 01 course, you
can't do that alone. I know because
I've tried it. We humans don't differ
se greatly from -the other unbinds.
We're made to hunt In couples or
packs. There's a purpose, a law you
might say, behind that, too; only 'it's
(terribly obscured by a lot of other non-
! essentials in this day and age."
But she would not take up the cud-
gels against •him, would not seem to
countenance or condone his offense by
discussing it from any angle. whatso-
ever, And she was more determined
to allow no degree of friendliness, even
In conversation, because she recog=
razed the masterful quality of the
man.
After a lapse of time they dropped
Intoianother valley, and faced west-
ward to a mountain range whicb'Bill
told het was the•Rockies. 7.'he next
,day a snowstorm struck thein. It was
not particuldrly cold. Bill wrapped
1)er In d heavy conva6 coat, and' plod-
r1edt on. Noon passdd, and he made
no stops• 'Ifrtinythtng,.he indeaaed his.,
pace, i ,
Suddenly, In the late afternedn, they
gtepped but of the timber into a little
clearing, In which the blurred outline
of a cabin showed under the wide arms
. of a leafless .tree.
The melting snow had soaked
through the coat; her feet verb wet
with the clinging flakes;'ind the chill
of a lowering temperature had segs,
'set shivering.
nearing, Bill halted at •the door tial
lifted liet'dowtl from Silk's back 1'ith
out the tbrmallty or aaktag her lessee
Gatlr►al it doze W. b _Au
. J _ �Np4Y'X?t',i4n1 �j W1II'i��°
- 1i �L� 1 � COM PY1� G
leINtitOHONTO, CAi'J. TREAt
Ya.r't' tri 1;!"svIr.
IMPROVED UNIFORM iNTERNATiONAL
el vA f�
�yglirpll��j
SON
(BY REV. P. a 1 1'L1t'A+lint, D..0„
Teacher of English Bible to the Moody
nlble'Institute of Chicago.)
(Sepyr u t, 1975, 'w'rstorn Newseaeer..Onto.)
LESSON"FOR NOVEMBER ,30
0'14
JESUS TEACHES PETER TRUE
GREATNESS.
LESSON TJ+JXT-John'•13.1-16.
0OLDENVTEliT-The Soit of Man came
not to be ministered unto, 19111 ,10 mints-
ber, and to give his life a ransom fpr
many. -Mat.` 20:21,
ADDITIONAL MATIfIAlf-dark 10:
36-45.: Rom. 1;:3.5: -Pull. 2:5-11: t Pater,
5:5-I1.
P3tl1(ARY TOPIC -Jesus Washing the
Disciples' Feet.
JUNIOR TOPIC -loans Tadc4ng the
Place of ,0 SueeNant.
INTERNED:UTE TOPIC -The Dignity
of Common' Tasks.
1. Christ's Amaring Love for Hie
Own (vv. 1-51.
Jesus was fully eons0i014s of what
WAS upon him. He knew that the cross
with alt its anguish wits ;hist before
him. He knew that his disciples would
silametully°or,9ake him in a few hours.
He knew that one of that number
wield be the inetru'lnent in the hands
of the devil In fits betrayal. He knew
that all things were In lits hands; was
tufty 'conscious of his deity. Notwlth-
standing. aU this, he displayed patient
and untiring love, He did not with-
draw his lave from them because of
their weakness and the shetraeftd fail-
ure which he knew would soon be
tirade naniifest.
II. Christ Washing His Oloolples,
Feet (yr. 4.11:).
This act is symbolic e,f his amazing
love forhisdisciples. Jesus did not
regard his hands as too holy. til do this
medial serylce. The true Olxistian
doe's not allow his reek in society to
keep like from acts of lowly seryice.
1. Steps In' this service: (1) He
rose from supper/ (2j laid aside his
garments. (3) took a towel and gird-
ed ,himself, •(4) poured water into a
basin, (5) was'tted his disciples' feet,
(6) wiped them swlth a towel where-
with he was.glyded. These steps span-
boitae Christ's entire work of redeiisp-
tion. His . rising from supper repre;
sents file rietag.from his .place of en-
joyment in the heavenly Story; his lay -
Ing aside his garments, his putttug
aside his•vesture of majesty (Phil. 2:7,
3) ; his girding himsetf, his taking the
form of n servant (Phil. 2.:7); the wa-
ter in the basin, his cleansing blood;
nis washing orb their feet, his actual
_leansing of men through ills Word
(John 1555;3; Eph. 5:20); his taking his
garments again, his return to iris place
and position of glory.
2. Peter's impetuous ignorance. Bre
goes from one extreme to another. It
.n his failure to understand the sig-
nificance of this service that caused
slut to behave so strangely.
3. The significance of this service
t0 those who participate in it. (1) It
is a spirituel cleansing (v. 3). Fellow-
ship with Jesus Is only possible as we
are continually e'ennsed from our sins.
"110 that Is washed needefh not save
to wash his feet. but is clean every
whit" (v. 10). The cleansing here Is
not the washing of regeneration, but
that of sanctification. Even regenerate
folks need the continual demising of
Christ's blond in order to hove fellow-
ship with him. He that to regenernt-
td-washed in the blond of Christ,
symbolized) by baptiell-does not need
a repetition of the net: he only needs
LIFT OFF CORNS!'
Apply few drops then lift sore,
touchy corns off with
fingers
Deese t hard a bitf Drop a • liktla
]a'resaong' on an oohia gobrnila,rteekiY
that corn Idol* hurting ihrn. you lift
li riOt o Tes, ms eel A
A y le at Freeaoie axle but a
few sesta at any drug store, bei is es.�ti/�-
eieal to semore every, bard maxi se
corn, of Sons; between tis tots. lied t)r
callus* without somense et Iirrttatiios.
Y 000000 iV inter seae.MaRaed disuevery
of a L'iieisetail palm, It is traataertue;
T1ttu'sday, November 27011 1919
Ile t'lenn•eing 1111 r .,,a,
zi tl 11Y thetvm'htl'11 1,f 'ho fret, As
we Ito through this' %voted .niter regeit-
,eatton•tre (1.14 eeatamlualed by its
,lies, lie is will'l't always to elennen
us of nal ahts Id WO aiflow hint. (2)
A. hnrlhr or h'enllh l It u,.„irllnu. 'huts
jet showed 1113 nhnnihwlivanl to 'the
cert-!ee of Ills men, '1'hls Is II 1v'+r:n11
111u1 IN 1111101 ueelh•ll ludo). ti's ueod
+nui'e and 1110Po Ilse I'ulneuN (it brnlh-
'1'ly leve. This luno needy: 111 he 1111111•
rested n !t''1 It Imiy'be POOH unit re-
liv,01. Ilne Into run volt be proved
Iy the smelly vhre It renders, (B) A tired
if hmntlity. This Is rt leee'u mneh
needed by ng' all. The disciples dui
Met 'leen (Reputing' ao 111 Who eiwntd
he the greatest 111 the l:ingilen: their
,elfish aulhltlon w'ns expressing Heelt'.
'Podgy, 00 every handl, tit see cXpreS
;tuns of pride, vanity, and even arae..
eenee on. 1110 pert of those who tore
114•01'1 '814011 followers of the lowly Jesus,
If the Son of Cod wile not ashamed to
stoop to lowly servlee Ills eteelpies
should not regnrcl it beneath t•h-l1 dig -
nets to follow In ids steps. (•1) Equal.
lzntion. As they would ilius stnnp to
eel•Ye cach'ether In 1II' 110me of Christ
there Auld he sui•de'r4lestructinn of
caste among them. 'rhe Sph'11 of
'rein ey-
•e•• is the t l
1 this service a 6
Christ h
eler of humanity. yyii
111. An Example for Ole (-}„'v. 12-10).
Tile diselples•of the Lol'dl eve tinder
obligation to do unto each other as
he,did•unto them; This obligation rests
upon' his Lordship (v. 14). All who
call hien Lord In sincerity will obey
h•lan, To'retuse to obey lrtin is to put
one's self above Ills Lod.
A •
Children Cry
FOR FLETC ER'S
CAST 0 RIA
O at 94 iF x *. it 4 if n
• SCIENCE NOTES ”
y.• • * ;, dt it * Y.• * it # * it
A sixteen -inch electric Alp handles
about -2300 cubic feet of tilr in a min -
ate
Europese Russia is believed to have
12,0100,000 horsepowers in undevelop-
ed water power.
?+uw alumni= boil for wrepping pur-
poses is only nue-sixth of one-httrndre-
dth of an loch thick.
A combined electric and sand bath
for treating certain 1115 is the idea of
a New York inventor.
"Rile first known use of asbestos was
in the manafactur0 of oermation robes
for the ancient Romans.
A tray which can he clamped to
the liottonl of a syrup jar to catch its
drippings is a household novelty.
For experiments with a model aero-
plane a Frenchman mounted the wings
and tail of a crow 011 a wire frame,
A Tennesseean is the inventor of a
ring-shaped vessel in which water cast
be boiled on conical camp stoves.
Spanish railroads are conduefing
campaigns of educators along their
lines to iarprove agricuiture eondi-
ti0ns.
A new typevetiter attachment auto-
matically feeds eruselopes or cards in-
to a nutehino to sere air Operator's
tilu,eAn.
Italian has been granted a British
patent for an egg bolder that can be
fastened to the edge of a breakfast
plate,
The Brazilian govertnlalt will man-
ufacture quinihe and distribute it
through malarial sections of the coun-
try.
Pockets for money and jeotelry are
woven into the tops of women's stock-
ings that a I'ennsylvenian has patent-
ed.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR IA
For electric cooking ranges an at-
tachment has been patented to store
the accumulated helot and deliver it
when wanted through metal members
or air tilled clttulnels.
Sericulture has been scientifically ad-
vtil ad-
vanced in Corea unthis year there
will be a harvest of 700,000 bushels of
silk cocoons, more than three times the
production live 'years ago.
126
,44111:ih.Y44. n,',
24 Years the same
6i good 97 tea
Sold only in sealed packages
a,
Huron. Country. .
The two fifty -acre farm at New-
bridge awned by Mrs, J. W. Spence
were purchased last week by Mr, Shel-
don Brisker of the second con of tiow-
14
Official announcement has bean made
fade orf the appointment of Mr. Wil-
liam Triebner of Stephen, to the
pok*fiten of &else Officer for the In-
layed Revenue Department Int. the Fro -
Once of Alberta.
Death ciailweci another former resid-
ent of these parts when James Girvin
of Parkin, Alan„ passed away In his
71st year. The deemed gef)lelpan
was born wear Dungannon, Ont.,riled6 ,
west to Winnipeg in 1889, three years
later he located on a homestead close
to the banks of the ekesbone in' Pere
kin district. A wife, four daughteas
and 0110 3011 surpvive, who will have the
spnlpathy of friends hero.
Me G,oaIest N
La
OUR
,nrl r as :F i'
T PERFECT G. ..a `�1 JABTs F%
1111111111""°"'t" "" Uc":�iilll1 it
MADE
IN
CANADA
SEALED TIGHT — KEPT RIGHT
�t. %/ a,%/ ;AA; The Refinement of
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` /'f e.
BIAREFUL cooks know the value
of purity. In the makings of
cakes or pastry they use those
-� ingredients which they believe to be
_ pure and wholesome.
_ Toa 1 this insistence on purity"
l to sugar, is no easy matter—for nearly
y
: ' all sugars look alike to those not ex -
p.,
' pert in detectingvariation. The safe
course is to use a sugar that comes
cfrom
boast.refint:ries in which purity is a
, J
� ' /0 In the Dominion Sugar refineries
the boast is backed by a standing
invitation to the public to visit and •
inspect the plants In which Dominion
1 Crystal Sugar ls'inede.
In Dominion Crystal Sugar the house-
(I; depended upon dor that Purify which is so
§ essential to successfey1 culinary effort.
ar q -�
. • . This is the'only, sugar that may be rightly
S
_
' '
y telexed "Cantatellan ahem the ground up."
/•
.
�u.
- We do import the'Crnest raw cane sugar and
.,
f, `
° `�%1'@�,
�
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fit;"
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tali
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reline it -bat our )Nile is in,tbe product we
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