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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1917-03-22, Page 7.,• Thursday, arc) 2nd, 1917 ' Marmalade T made 3t with :my same old recto hut A used On account of its Fine granulation it dissolves instantly uiai�ang a clear jelly. 108 2* 51b. cart011s,10, 20 & 100 lb, sociis frasrulafti - MIrftE.rlVLAfftri8.4di°M3'ftii4ilt SEAFORTH. by mail at 25 cents a box• from The Mr. 'Francis I-Iolmsted, K. C, of ur'. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, %this town, was quietly married to Mrs. Ontario. Kate McLean, of Golerich street The ceremony was performed by • Rev. T. H. Brown, rector of St. 'Thome Church. An interesting event took place at elite home . of Mr. and Mrs W. L Keys, Willi am street, when their daughter, ' Mayne Je was united in marriage. to Melvin C. Talbot, of William Town- ship. The nuptial knot was tied b Rev. J. Melvin Keys, B. A., of Brig rden, brother of the bride, in the presence of immediate friends and vela lives. The young couple left on the afternoon train for a short wedding trip to London and Detroit, and on etheir return will take up housekeeping on the groom's farm in Stanley Town - •ship. March Bad And Gang 'lhe March issue of Rod and Gun in Canada, that representative Canadian sportsman's publication, ist,now on sale on the news stands. A glimpse through this issue reveals the fact that the March issue contains much that is of interest to lovers of outdoor, life. The regular departments, which are a • feature of this magazine, and one that is of interest to its many readers, ale es usual web maintained and the devottee of gun, rifle, or rod will find much of interest and value in the persual . of its columns. In addition for the more general reader there are stories of out- door life to hold the attention and divert it for a time front the current news- paper and magazine recitals of things pertaining to the war. Such stories "Gentleman Jones' by Jean Stevie. son, "The Dwellers of Darkness," by Wm. McMullen, "The 'frearheroas Snow," "King of the Iiig Swamp", by F. V. \Villiams, " \ Brother Fisher- man" by IT. C. 1Iadtlou, etc., etc., are all redolent "f the out-nf-doors. \V. J. Ta)lr,r, Ltd, Weeoletock, Onto ado are the publishers. SICKIJ Sickiy babies—little ones who are 'troubled with their stomach and bowels ; whose teething is painful ; di• gestion bad and who cannot sleep web —eau be made healthy and happy with Baby's'Own Tablets. Concerning the Tablets Mrs. Wilfrid Demons Val dlrilliant Quebec., writes:—"Please; - send me a box of l,aby's (ban Tablets as • I would not care to he without them, I have used theme Inc censti- - ;pation and vomiting and am well pleased with the result*" The Tab. ,:els are sold by medicine dealers or Ajax nr.y have defied the llgh`ning, t'ui he ne'er bumped into a U-boat. A man never knows what lie can do • ttn,il he Iriee and then he's often sorry he fatted out, '!"here is more power in :<uthet than there is in dynain'te, but it takes lwtiior io dc' elolt 11, PING COUG The Infant's Wiest angeir ass Disease. Whooping Cough, although specially a disease of childhood, is by no means con- fined to that period' but may occur, et any time of life. It is ane of the most dangerous diseases of infancy, and yearly causes more deaths thanscarlet fever, typhoid or diphtheria, , and is more common in female than in male children. Whooping Cough starts with sneezing, watering of the eyes, irritation of the throat feverishness end cough. 'flte coughing attacks occur frequently but are generally more severe at night. On the first sign of a "whoop," Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup should be administered, and weeks of suffering prevented, as it helps to clear the bron- chial tubes of the collected mucous and phlegm. Mrs, Nellie Barley, Amherst,q N.S„ writes: "I have much pleasure in saying that there is no cough syrup like Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. My little girl took whooping cough from a little girl who has since died with it. I tried lots of things but found 'hr. Wood's' to give the greatest relief. It helped her to raise the phlegm, and she is now better, My young brother is also taking the cough, and I am getting 'Lr, Wood's' to work again." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is put up in a yellow wrapper: 3 pine trees the trade -mark; price 25c. and 50e. Refuse substitutes, Manufactured only by Tau, T. Mn.- BmtN Co., Lxntircn, Turouto, Ont. • • m9 n =mums • .....,.n.�,,.-.,�,�. 0.' -vi 1, C7 as 0 Our Sprin , Sty ., Preparations Are Thorough and Efficient EVERAL factors govern the pur- chase of clothes—some menplace value foremost, others believe style, fit, pattern or weave more important. acI Lt.MtV C.ldkltl'i`ED4 tar. The spring ' lines are oampletely ready --ready for men of every taste ready in all that is new and good. See them at your. first ,.t ' ._ � spare moment. They'll ll interest you. Kn Morrish . to hin _;. o. • Men's Outfitters elintOln Y THE CLINTON NEW ERA, SUNDAY SCNODI, Lesson Xll.--First Quarter, For March 25, 1917. ° THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson. John xiv, 1.14—A Quarterly Review.-Gclden-'text, John xiv, 6—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns, ' Lessoty L -.-Jesus the lite and Tight of men, John 1, 1-14, Golden Text, John 1,. d, "In Min was Life, and the life was the light of men;'. Tito open- ing words of the lesson are away be- yond us, high as heaven—what can we do? (Job ai, 8.) Ilut in verso 14 He comes pear to tis, becomes one of us and reveals unto ns the Father, aud, seeing and knowing trim, we see and know the Father tell tpter xiv, 0). Limos' II.—John the Baptist and Je- sup, John 1;19.34: holden Text, John 1, 20, "Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away, the sit of the world;'! John was to Jesus at Ells first coming what 'the real EIlJ,th Will be at His second' coming in glory, for the greet and'dreedful day of the cord is still 'future, and,ifiai. tv, 5, stands, according to Matt. xvii, 11. Lesson HT.—First disciples of the Lord Jesus, John I, 35-51. Golden Text, John 1, 93, "Jesus snith unto Him, Follow Ile." John's second tes- timony turned men away from htm to Jesus, and that u•us his alts, as it should be ours, .Andrew and the un- named other one, having spent the day with Jesus, quickly Itrought their brothers to the 1leselale whom they had found, tied Philip brought Na - dinned, who confessed Chrlst as Sou of God and King of Israel. Lassos IV,—Reverence or Jesus for IIis Father's house, Joint 11, 13-22, 'olden Text, Marl. nal. 13. "My house hall be called a house of prayer." 1.1y to means omit the marriage and the water changed ,to won" and the mar- riage or the Lauth oiieli nidi precede Ito kingdom Then shall follow is. eel's great ole' inviag, according' to :z. cxxvi, 25. Lesso:t V. --,Jesus the Fnvionr of tho 'arid, ,John ill, 1.12. Golden Text, oho 1)i, be "clod so loved the world hat Ile gave 111:+ only begotten tion." von the• most Mucins and moral uran enuoot stn or eider the Iciogdom niers he is bora again by receiving he Son of God, oho loved hint and aro Himself tor Wm. Blit there is fe for a look for n11 buten ones, and ley shall share the bridegroom's joy the morning ;verse:in)? ,aassot V1.—Jesus aud the woman of aaaaria, John iv, 1-20, Golden Text, Tint. i, 15, "Christ Jesus came into o world to save sinners." A religious oral man must be born again, aud a nor, immoral outcast may be born din, for He came to seek and to ve the lost. The letter became a be witness than the former and rougbt many souls to Ilius In such rvico Ho delighted and invites us Join flim, that we may rejoice to- etlser'.• Lassote V•IT. — Jesus heals a noble - m's son, John xiv, 43.54•. Golden xr, Matt. vial, 13, "As thou bast be- evetl so be it done unto thee," At arta Be bad shadowed forth the glory His owe marriage, aud now from na Fie sent life to a whole house- d. After the marriage what bless. there will be to multitudes! ktay childlike faith of the nobleman be rs, for be believed the word that us bad spoken and went his way. Eseore VI/I.—Jesus at the pool of tbesda, John 1', 1-15. Golden Text, u lx, 4, "It was Jesus who had de him whole." A truly helpless 1 for really helpless people, but re is a fountain which is better than pools, and i3'e gives life to all who hem Firs word and believe on Elm— t is, receive IIim. There is no book the Scriptures, and by Scripture learn of Him, but unless we come Rim of whom they tell we cannot a1n life (I John v. 121. Emote TX.— Jesus feeds the five usand, John vi, 1-21. Golden Text, L vi, 11, "Give us this day our y bread." Feasts of the Lord had ome mere feasts of the Jews, and multitudes were perishing. Today public worship of God is largely e formalities, stones for bread, and Lord is still saying, "Give ye them at." Ile is ready to take what we thatneeded, is real bread and increase ssog X. -$esus the bread of life, vi, 22-40. Golden Text, John vi, 'Jesus said unto them, I an the read of life." Living Bread from ea, and yet people despise it, even rael loathed the manna in the wil- es and In their hearts turned to the food of Egypt. See these disputing anti arguing instead OPg, And so it is still, Just as in invitation to the marriage feast all made light 'of It, each prefer - his owe way. One of the most feat delusions of the devil is the in ofwGodhich men despise the love and . son XI.—Jesus saves from sin, vial, 12, 2837, 5b-59, Golden John viii, 88, "I1 therefore the shall make you free, ye, shall be indeed." Be had. no stones for ant sinners, and no one else has ight to throw any, tor fde is the one without sin. BIO came not to mn, but to save. H0 is seeing thirsty ones, "Come unto Me and Be" says just as plainly thatalt die will net come Ninth in Sins and, preferring the devil to shall have to take the devil's a s 11 II u t I 1. 11 ti iu S th m P ag sa b b se to ge li C of Ca 1101 Ing the 0u Jes L Be Joh ma poo the all he tba like we to obt L tho Mat dal! bee the the mer our to e have it as LE John 35, ' b heat as Is dere back men eatin the they ring manl way grade Lacs John Text, Son free penit shy oily donde to all drink, their jod, portio Pointed Peragrephs. Gooti look is the most popular brand of nerve tonic. WS the fellow wito wades in shallow Water who stirs up the most mud. You never hear a Married man say he preface a Sterni to ;t 004 ';,duff, fedi ; A • MiSE uutL FROM liTROU[E STOhiC Felt Wretched NH He Started To Take °Fru it -a -lives", • 594 CafameMIN Sr., Moerneem 'Tor two years, 1 was a miserable Sufferer from Jl/ae(ailarrtrsui and. S1 mu'ar/a 7)'oub/e. 1 had freq ear t Dizzy S%iell c, anti when 1 took food, felt wretched and sleepy, 1 suffered front Ithea- niatisrn dreadfully, with pains in my bade and joluts, and my hands Swollen, A friend advised "Fruit -a -lives" and from the outset, they did me good, After the first box, Ifefd I =spoiling well and I can truthfully say that "Fruit -a -Lives" is the only nmeclloino that helped me", LOUIS I ABRI7r1. 50e, a box, G for $2.50, trial sten, 25o. At all dealers orseat postpaid bj%Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Acciuding to the clay child'; idea grass Is sninething:.y;ou have' to keel) off of. WOUNDED REFUSE WATER Each Takes No More Than a Sip— Chaplain's Pride An English chaplain writing to a London paper, says: There is a Beene before my mind's eye that will never be forgotten. A battalion attacking Just In front of us had suffered awful ' easualtle.9, end for hour, in a cote tinuoms wean' the wounded are brought in or crawl iu, all parched with thirst from the Dahl they are suffering. in rtynonso. t, a request to the S, r t t.r.'t mjor 1': water to ;rave these poor renews, the anpallin7 an- swer cones: "K"o he ve not a drop 01 loiter in the omit 1 tut e." Can you Imagine a t i y ,,.ars of ,t :ttles in the '1:11. "We W1'14• aft a it r end to dal With the i 1 . r;urt ; :;ti a .t ca tt Beer • breaking r r• .,1,•r in i i a<•t u on all sit 1 li wen 12: turn of the ifeeee ewers..,•ei with tau lut,ent 11,1 n, Then it otel,emly of , u t. d 11) 11,e th.tt inr 01111 w;..,r tr t 1.• tax1 it t„ u bud been ifjled the rttglit before olid not toaelied. f reshot! to 'Meng 10, and Proceeded to dole it out in a cup, As 1 handed the vup to each of the wounded mien, 1 said: ")soon hero, old fellow, there is only a very little water )iota, and you must only take euoneli to wet your lips and 111150 out your !Deuthl" Each man, without exception, put the cup to his tips, Loolt one small Mouthful, and then passed it on to the next, It is difficult for anyone wile hes not experienced 1t,• to realize the self-denial and self-control 'necessary to remove a cup of water from alto's lipswhen consumed •ly overwhelming LIMA,' One young follow eanio' crawl: ing 111, and his first toads were, „Olt, give mea drink:" 1 banded him the cup, telling ltinl the state of affairs, and immediately he said, "Oh, there aro plenty want it worse than me; give it to thew," and he refused to touch a drop. LAUDS SILENT FLEET Greatest Force of War, Says a Neut. ral Journal Consmentimmg on the landing Rus. man troops at Marseilles, tho wen. known Spanfeh uewsiiitper, 171 Liberal, said: "We see here the action of the greatest force of this ever—the British. fleet., Its silence and invisibility have: Induced many 'to believe it inactive. But it is the great oenogcting .nerve of_tlie_ allied geneses - ,',Chases to it MRS. KERNS ADVICE To Weak, Nervosa, Stan -Down Women ilo, Cumberland, Md,--"d.+'om' a IOW dime •I sufi'c red from a nervous brook - down. I ecub) not eat 01. aiettp and was eo weak 1' could hardly walk, My Mee- han(' hoard about Vieol and got mo to try it, Now 1 have a good appetite„ sleep soundly and am well and strong. Every nervous, weak, run-down woman'. armlet try Vrp01."---Mrs, D. W, 'femme. \'un $'lleralltee 'vinol to create a' healthy. appetite, aid digasticw and build up weak run-down women, deli- cate children anti feeble old people, J, L' Ilovoy, drugggist,Clloton, Also at the best druggisto in alit Outemio towns. flior'd are 77ngIlsh soldiers1111 France( French and English soldiers at Salome ilei, and Russians in France. By if the German fleet Is shut up and re, laced to impotence, The exploits o9 German submarines appear child's play when one thinks of their power lemmas to prevent these gigantle Movements of troops over the world's, seas." , Testimonial to Belgium A proposal has been made by • wealthy men of several 17uropean nal Grails to build in Belgium at the close of the war a garden city as a teetf.1 monial of time world to the valor ofl that ntttieu, and es some eoiit<rtbution toward replacing the places destroy. qfl durinre the conflict, i.„ f,1 i.-..,,:`J,Y�:Gi19-). a `<roN s J� )orov 1, 1 >f� Ms (1) A Water Carnival. (2) Dry Dock, Balifax, N,S, OUNT VON B17RNSTORFF and party stayed longer in Hal l - fax than they wolild have wished, and saw less of the town than any other tourists on record. For while the neutral' passengers on board the "Frederick VII I" were at lowed to promenade on deck, the Ger• man passengers, deprived of their hundreds of suits of pyjamas and their thousands of phonographic re- cords, were condemned to gaze at each other in wrath, or stare Halifax - ward at the dock wall through a mere porthole! Anti this despite the tact that some of the very best of the original set - tiers at Halifax were Germans --born to be sure before the Kalaeristic taint bad entered the good old Teutonic blood, I•ialifax from the harbor looks like It long grandstand rising tier on Ctreeted tier with the fort at the top taxing out over the immense circle sI grey^steel water where the whole British Navy could take shelter if it Wanted to. Who a. consignment of Canadian troops is due to start for Re sub -endangered trip across the titlaunttte, cruisers, destroyers and sub- asersibles hover like grey clouds over the state sea. and the visitor who Is7x't. ,thrilled with the sight of so touch potential belt must have bilge looter' in his veins in plans of blood. But there was no such commotion in the harbor or on the Iand when Colonel the Honorable Edward Corn. Wallis arrived with hie fluttered little fleet .chaperoned by the sloop of Won "Spin;' in the summer of 1749, No. thing was to be seen but "'a range of low Mlle with an unbroken forest that grew to the shore." Halifax is none of your war -baby elites,. born of chance and the spirit 51 adventure. Halifax came into the porld fathered by the Lords Commis- loners of Trade and Plantations be- cause the fair Boston to the south Wanted a sizable guardian to protect' her from) the French of Quebec, who were uncannily able to raise 0eetd, puntivei expeditions, Indian Maumee. Mons and Cala generally. The Eari of• Halifax, at the head of the Lords Commissioners, who o,k-'d the request tram Massachusetts, tm- bdlted from it some latent American spirit We must suppose, for to pro - Rape his city he immediately anttet- pa ed lis a hundred and fifty years Ltthv method of the bear that made tlwanioea' famous and the ear that saved lily. Ford front Oblivion—he ad- perldec'1. , iaasdom aew+spapora carded his dada soda°bat )►iter the fwd. - Jiltd fi +tdt haft a knead Oto, 7{at mai !!ib bawd ae eetllere, te must vs o arta d4. Veretore, o tune to Of intent disbanded Government promised free passage, free grant of laud of fifty acres, free- dom from taxes for ten years; free arms, agricultural, fishing and build- ing implements and free food ter twelve menthe. To any officer above the rank of captain the land grant swelled to six hundred acres, with additional grants for every member of his aristocratic family that he could Induce to follow him. In two months' time 2,878 adven- turers had signed on --seen, women, children and suffragettes—thirteen transportsful of heroism. It. took them a month to reach Nova Scotia, but the day•tlmey landed they got to work to turn the forest into log cabins and the situation into a oity. Timbers and boards for the most pre- tontions buildings were brought from Massachusetts, From Boston In the following year came the framework of St, Paul's Church, that staunch colonial meet- ing house which still gazes haughtily across the Parade al its upstart neighbors. George 11 contributed the edifice .to hie new, colony, to which shortly afterward he sent five hundred of his German cousins— Hesslans and )runswirkers-same• of whom built the town of Lunenburg, while others` settled In Rattfax leself, patting dp a (Meech of their own which still etealds, showing what careful carpenters those ex -soldiers could beceixte when their Lutheran hearts were In the work. The visitor who is interested in the Halifax Dockyard will pass the little "Dutch" church a couple of blocks to the west, with its graveyard beside it, Au awesome bit of history is the tact that three .successive pastors sent to the Halifax Lutherans from Hemmer were all wrecked and drowned dwi. lag the voyage) It surely speaks volumes Cor old-time German hero - left and davotednotrei--of the peoan . alta Bornetorff t`sri9---that it fourth minister was fou. ,) enough to volenteet+--aloft • •r,ough tq arrive. The Northwest Arm was a favorite resort of the early Bottlers, who were as fund of merrymaking as the pro. sent fialigoniante, despite the fact that in those grey -homespun ttmes they could put on no such colorful spectacles as are achieved by tho Waegwoltic Club of to -day on cared• val occasions, But the fishing was as good, we may be sure, then as now, and the bathing hes always rivalled that of the famous A,nnapotis Basin. In the old days the mouth of this pleasureful "A'rm" used to be closed by a huge chain cable, lest at hostile ship should slip in like K shark and disturb the merrymakers., It Bernetortf had been allowed ode his boat he wouldundoubtedly have, liked to drive out to the picturesque Quinpool Road to "Dutch village;" built by bis countrymen of the pre. decadent period. Here lived two naturalists who instituted the first Zoo 1n Am,erica-sixteen years ahead) Of Central Park. A short drive across country would hale brought the Am- bassador to Bedford Basin where, it there had been noTreitscltice and no war, he would doubtless have been; entertained by all the yachtsmen' at' the jolly sumtmer colony. Finally, if the cast-off Count hate been of the old -Lime German Wortbly be woad doubtless have taken'eel Dominion Atlantio Railroad Hate to the township of Clements, to flow beautiful apple -blossomed Annapolis Valley, between Old Port Royal mull D1gby, where, at the close of the Itevohttlonary War, Dutch -speaking Loyalists from New York and Neap Jersey were given shore lots, with) two parallel lines of German settlers behind them, still knowat reweectivo. 17 as the Waldeck Line and the Iles- elan Line. These old soldiers turne out to be excellent peacetime sole tiers. Although they mat at the tr*Illeh Chtttch lseior'e "heal** ttti Wu their" tgarsaa bpsare, they all ways stssyed to Molise rseeranIty to sermen In the t. . at lien• *4 tr 1I :_ 5