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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1916-05-18, Page 3THE CLINTON NEW ERA. Thursdaly, May 18th, 1916, ••••••••••••••••••••c••••• eesOseiSSessesQsrseCssse• Men and Events •' eeQOQeesesaissesesse@SSsse• Me e:hee t.. rho il! eulet ,d 6owiser' On chitins'' .IµLl5hudl':rl nOrDieitria. TGC. ';crtrtuerr forConelpf• h rlinrrhneu. F SLEEP. 0-17e of Te Yee it eek Fez Infants and, Children. Mothers: Kno That Ger u it Cartons , 1�Aiway u Signa,tare :Of. yea sent some more Zam•Bak to' your 'oldies friend. The nen at the front are asking for it. Tke[r say there is nothing to ental Zama - Bilk for the many little accidents' incidental to a soldier's life; noth- ing ends pain and draws out Innate- hiattoa so qufekly. • When as injury is sustained, if tke wound le neglected and left ex- posed to germs, festering is liable to follow, so that even a very minor injury, neglected, stay have serloue consequences; If, however, a eel- lter has a box of Zam-Buk la his pocket, to apply at the right mo- ment, much unnecessary suffering' can ba avoided. Seo to it, therefore, that your sol- dier friend is kept supplied with Zam-Buk. Remember, too, Zan - Bak is just aa useful in the hone! All druggists See., or Zam-Duk Co., Toronto, for price. In Use For Over Thiry Years 1 aNTA LI, COMP/4NY.ac„ . etereeeeeeareeNE r conducted .by any religious body or ' denomination,. any fair or exhibi- tion given by any society organiz- ed under the agricultural and arts act, or by any association men- tioned in. section 3 of the agricul- tural !associations act, the Can- adian National Exhibition Associ- ation, the Central Canadra Exhibit- ion Association, The Western Fair of Association. any exhibition of aro paintings, any entertainment the Ye entire proceeds of which are devot of ed to patriotic or charitable uses.. In addition to all other penalties the Provincial Treasurer may re- voke the license of any owner of apiece ,of lamuselnent ,willfully contravening any of the provisions of the ,aet or the regulations. in ut n, ud er a s. a he - he Viten Beeoene Szriously Iii :f Before -They Realize It. er -- ltSome people have a tendency to be e come thin blooded just as others have an inherited tendency to rheumatism or nervous disorders. The condition in which the blood becomes so thin that the whole buoy suffers comes on so gradually that anyone with a natur ecal dieposition in that direction should w.tch the symptons carefully. Blood e"e leesnese can he corrected more easily ee in the earlier stages than later. It begins with a tired feeling that rest does not overcome, the complexion becomes pale, slight exertion produces breathlessness and headaches and backaches frequently follow. In the treatment of troubles due to thin blood no other medince has had such a great success as Dr. Williams Pink Pills. eh They go right to the rime of the trou ble, tnake rich red blood thus rector on ing the weakened system to health alp and strength. Mr, R. F• Ashford, th Peterboro, Ont„ says; -"Four years Y ago my condition became so serious Y that it seemed to me I possessed every pain and ache and every morbid feel ing possible. 11or months I had been le overworked and bereavement added e the last straw neceeeary to break 00 down my constitution, I had a severe re ever present headache and pains in e- the beck of the eyes and at the same le time I was seldom free from severe neuralgic pains, I was rarely hungry and when 1 was it seemed to create a morbidness which made my other ills It harder to hear, Of course 1 consulted Ya doctor and he told me a rest and change of air, just the thing I was un able in the circumstances to take, I. I had a particularly bad spell on the day my daughter returned from College, and she insieted that 1 should take Dr, Williams Pink Pills. I was decidedly skeptical, but she got soma and to please her I took them• The result - After the first box I ungrudgingly admitted that they were doing me good, and after the sixth box Ifelt free fromevery ache and painand in grafi tulle I began to praise the pills to others. I am .feeling as fit as I did twenty year. ago and I owe it to Dr. Williams Pink Pills, Yov can g.'t Dr.Williams' Pink Pills flora any medicine dealer or by mail ' at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2 50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. THIN -BLOODED PEOPLE rte 1 'e Come to Clinton on the 24th. A big time islooked for. omeNeed n ,iona'lly,,to right a disordered stomach, of so much sick headache, nervous- ; nights. Quick relief from stomach 1 by promptly taking a dose or two of tam's lis he stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, assisting rgans, and keeping them in a healthy condition. egetable in composition -therefore, harmless, er-effects and are not habit-forming. is in the house is a protection against the 'used; by stomach ills, and lays the foundation e } r Ilealth hEir eeoham, 9t. Helens, Lanoantiire, England. d U. S. Amnion. In boxes. 25 oen COL THE OD ORE IR,OOSEVELT , formerly 'entered the race for the nomination as is candidate, for president by the Republican and Progressive conventions at Chicago, on June 7th 00009009.0%0196600609000000 Local News 116000001116000130001111111000111004 REV. JAS. SIEVEWRIG HT DEAD Rev. James Sievewright, a retired Presbyterian minister, died in Torten to on Saturday, Mtiy 6th, in his 83rd year. After graduating at Queens. he held nastorisles tit Melbourne, Quehe.e; Goderich and Prince Albert, Sask. His last pastorate was Huntsville, LIEUT, DUNSMORE WED. Word was received In St. Themes Mondsv by cablegram announcing the marriage in England of Miss Rorie Voaden of Peterboro, Ont., and Lieut, R.L. Dunmore, of the Mb Field Com. pany, t)aundians Eugiueers, C. 11. F• son of Mr, IL,J. Dunemore, postmaster St. Thomas and grandson of Mr, W.J. Paisley of town. CAS N o R IA For Infants and Children In Use For over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of aefdifIrliVe The Blind Man Eloquent e••e•ses4.sse,•Aersseatesw00... HIEN AND EVENTSp,'I •, e, essseeseeris(isssssss•Ww/ family was evolving into the clan and the tribe, finally into the people pr the nation, almost the Hest idea that came to be a fixed principle Was the right of the state to the service of all the males of certain prescribed ages, when the state Was threatened. The del,encs of the stale is not just certain men's duty. It is everyman's duty -the farmer's just as much as the artiz- an's, the ,storekeeper's quite an appropriately as the laborer's And in every land this is so, save in Anglo-Saxondom, where We have permittt• d voluntaryism to go to seed. It is hard of course for the 'women to have to say good-bye to their men ; to watch them go away to fight in a.war they had no hand in creating. I think the woman's is ever the breeder part. .But think of Serbia. Thera the women had to see their men go away from their country that their rifles might be saved to fight again for Serbia, while they wait- ed at home for way tor•ome to them, And sucha war. Think of those women left to wait for the coming ,of the half -civilized, whol- ly :brutalized .Bulger, who ' had learned .his lessons of fiendishness from the Truk. Waiting'whi1etheir enemies came to mutitate, to mur- der, to pillage, to destroy. And 0o ahundred thousand of them started over the mountains for the sea. As the poet has it - stands second. today What would it avail to be an educated • slave? Education must wait. The one su- preme business of the hour is the succ•eseful prosecution of the war. Everything -the farm, the store, the school, the profession -must be subservient to it. Canada must raise the army we have ;been asked for and which our national leaders have promised 'Huron's duty is the 161st Battalion. To see that it is complete to strength in the days are left is for Iiuron people paramount to all else,. My profession compels enc to he a student of military history, I have thought much on the reasons why nations, when at war, so often change eides_ History is full of such instances -not Jess frequently than any other, Engl.tnd herself, In the early clays of the war we rather depreciated German diplom- acy in that iFrance a.nd Britain both threw themselves into the conflict unreservedly on the side of Russia and Italy tivas alienated from the Triple Alliance. But German dip- lomacY •hate won impot tint ,victo.les since thein.. lFollowing the free in- clinations of their people, .Bulgaria Greece and Roumania should allby now be fighting on our side. And you see ;what has happened. - Bul- garia actually in all`sanee with her hereditary enemy the Turk, and against her age -;Fong protector, Russia :.Greece, unfriendly to Eng- land, the nation that made er in• dependence possible; and Rouman iah.angtng in the balance, swayed now with one, now with - another, breeze of self -Interest, Arid what of all this mystery of Italy's ,position? At war with Ani tria ; not at war with Germany 1 Was ever a g'•eat nation before in so anomalous a condition ? Can anyone go to bed tonight positive that we will not wake up to react that Italy has found it to, her ad- vantage to cease fighting? ft is not Italy that Germany hates; Gercnainy has no thought of being able to seriously cripple Russia.. She would make terms in a minute with 'France and evaeuate Belgium and give back Alsace-Lorraine in- stanter for a, separate ,peace with the republic. Germany recognizes than the country toe all others that ,lies 'biggest across her path to world dominion is, Britain. To be freed, to prosecute war against Britain alone, Germany would sac- tifiee much. She lull!. ;promise France, Ital} Russia, anything she fancies ,they .dasire. On the tater', hand she points them to the feet', that 65,000,000 white Anglo-Saxons control one-quarter of the globe; while Bustrlan and 1+9'ench blood pours 10 Streams, Vast portions of the British Empire ,are hanging back from war ,that they may make munitions and supplies to sell to their ;allies at great profits to themselves, 'but to the ultirnate bankrupting of the ,great powers save the two En hsh s eakin g p g o st ones.In myo »m.n thi, 'cotes 1 g i. danger. Lit' _<tr e h t.s to igusit d against is the possibility of the tiring of 000 00 more of hoe allies. Russia swarms with German sympathizers. Thera theyt ,carry on just such a propaganda as we see being pros- ecuted in the United States. Telma,- fore herefore kelt' us hu •ry, while our ;films are still whole-lhearted in this war, to raise ,and equip such an army tie will make its winning a certainty. "Defence is the first b'usiipess ,of the ,tate• defence is mere than one LORD DERBY, whom the. Nation- alists favor to replace P.aron Wimborne as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland "here is something that will hear- ten you: if I knew that the first shot in the first sl irinish out there would hill me, still I would have to go It is the call of duty" And voting men, that is exactly the situation that fades you Do not do yourselwe,s an' irreparable iuiury you will ever re- gret I could not live and have it burn in my conscience that I had turned down duty and was not the man I ought to 'be The part of noble womanhood has ever been the part of sacrifice, the pae't of manhood to follow the path of duty. My mother did not refuse to give me her bless- ing; her Irish blue eyes, the last time I ever saw them, filled with tears No: olid she, six months ago, though she is long past eighty refuse her approval to another and an older son, who dropped big business interests that he might enlist, and who is 'to-dey in the trenches, fortyethree years of age ante 'emend of being put in charge of the 'bombethrowers of his company Her reply to his re- quest eves, "I have known the crown of motherhood, I hope I am worthy to hear the cross" The meeting closed with the National Anthem "And over the mountains they went, ' Spotting the snows with ' their bleeding wounds." With their infants r0 their arms and with little children clinging to their skirts they started, only to die by tens of thousands, by wolves. by frost by hunger, Thirty thousand 'bright boys were col-, lected and sent our to try 'and reaeh the sea that they might be saved for the nation. And when what was considered safety was reached, only seven thousand were alive, and they were so worn and spent and diseased that they are dying at the rate of 200 per day. Oh, women of Huron! This is the war we would spare you from Recently I spoke from a plat- form with Surgean-General Ryer- son, head of the Canadian Red Cross work, and who bad recently come from Europe He told of a Belgian house in which he had been; .his informant was a servant who had concealed himself, but who was cognizant of !the facts When the Gentians came, there were in the family a father, mother son ,and daughter. 'Annoyed at the treatment of his daughter, the father protested, whereupon the soldier shot both him and the sou dead, they shot and wounded the mother, then finished her with bayonets fits she lay on the floor; they carried the ,girl away Gen- eral Ryerson himself saw the blood marks andc other evidences of the tragedy Three !hundred yards away .he was shown the graves of eleven girls between the ages of 12 and 1.0, done to death by the Ger man fiends That's along way off. you say? Perhaps But I want the women here to follow me in a little reasoning that a.ny ten -year- old boy should understand If no- body went to fight: for Belgium and against the Germans, if every Eng- lishmap, Irishman and Scotch man had pled that it was not 'his war thee. he had a farm to grow food on, a business to take care of, what would today have been the fate of the women of Britain? And if of the women of Britain what of the women of Canada? If the honour of the women of Britain anti Can- ada, is being Hared by the men who have heard the call and who are in khaki, I ask, in 'Heaven's name, women, why your son, your bus; - band, your brother, your sweet-, heart, should net he doiu g bis 'bit ? Shall the stay behind land leave you to be protected by others and retain your ;respect? Why should not your man take his share in the fight thatt vitally concerns you? Defence concerns every- body in the state I ,have no hesti- tation in saying to the women that it is their.duty to order their men to go Why has Great Britain three times ,as many men proportionally in the fighting line than we have? Simply because Britain's women have graeped the situation and sent ,to Coventry every man who persists in a refusal ,to do his part They ,deycline to; be seen on the streets ,with thoee who shirk In Britain public opinion condemns the slacker He cannot flaunt his selfishne=_s or indifference, as he is doing ,here, and retain anybody's esteem 1 I was just past twenty-;oneiwhelr the 'Boer war broke out I did not want ;to go "Had absolutely no idea of going But I bad been reading international politics and and I thought i could see a n g in European coalition against Great l g Britain if she did not win out Anrl I heard the colt "You ought to go'' "Bet I can't, I anti the principal of the village school, with a, college course ahead .of me" )3ut ;the call was insistent and I dared not trifle After I was signed up .T went home to tell any mother She wale getting along for 70 and I was her youngest boy She kept up marvellonrly well until fifteen minutes before train tune, when she (broke down and exclaimed ,,i ,,, ," sage Adam Smith. In the that she ltne!w else would never twilight of civilization, when the see me again "Mother,'' I paid Web of Circumstances Against Hotelkeeper Judge Riddle Refuses to Quash Search Warrant and Convict- ion of Bedford Toronto. May, S-Ao interesting Western Ontario case came up at Os geode hall before•.Tudge Riddell t oday when L. E. Denney of Goderich, on behalf of John Bedford, defendant, moved to quash a search -warrant and conviction for unlawfully keeping in toxicating liquor for sale contrary to the provisions of Part II. of the Can ads, temperance act. The judgment follows: "Here the reasons for suspicion are that the deponent know+ the intoxicat ing liquor is being brought to the hotel, and persons are reeovting there, as the deponent has good reasons to believe, for the purpose of drinking the same.' It is impossible I think, to say that the magistrate should not consider the above a reasonatle ground of auspicion. The eearch-war rano should not be quashed, "A taverniteeper who keeps his bar i•nnm bolted, to he opened to admit such persous as he chooses, who keeps whiskey -glasses, all smelling of whip key (most of thorn veru strongly) who rings up the price of two drinks iu his bolted barroom just before two nice come out of it and who can give no reason why he should -one of whose customers ie seen to take a drink from one of the whiskey.glasses, followed by a drink of water- cannot complain if the magistrate comes to the conclu sion that be wee selling whiskey or 'liquor,' Man have suffered long terms of imprisonment on lees evidence. The motion must be dismissed with costs," SUNDAY SCHOOL Lesson VIII. — Second Quarter, May 21, 1916. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, Acts xiv, S-211: Memory Verses, 8 -10 -Golden Text, isa. xl, 29 -Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. This chapter completes the story of Paul's first evangelistic missionary tour to Jews and gentiles, and is spoken of in verse 26 as "the work which they. fulfilled" Being driven from Antioch, they came to Iconium; persecuted there they fled to Lystra; their persecu- tors followed them, and at Lystra Paul was stoned to death, but the Lord re- vived him, and then they went on to Derbe, everywhere preaching the gos- pel, telling the glad tidings and suffer- ing for it, but winning souls and thus adding to the Lord the members of His body. From Derbe they returned through all the places where they had been, and from Attalla sailed to An- tioch, in Syria, from whence they bad set forth, and there rehearsed to the brethren all that God had done with them, opening the door of faith to the gentiles. .After preaching. the ¢capein ever.. WIIAT CATARRH IS thatevery It has been said third person has catarrh in some form. Science has shown that nasal catarrh often indicates a general weakness of the body; and local treatments in the form of snuffs and vapors do Tittle, if any good. To correct catarrh you should treat its. cause by enriching your blood with the ail -food, in Scott's Etnulsion which is a medicinal food and a building -tonic, free from any harmfetidrugs. '1'r • it. 'u,. ® Scott & Eowne, ,; os'alW1 - y'fealth for ick Wcmeiz For Forty Years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has Been Woman's Most Reliable Medicine --Here : is More Proof. To women who are suffering from some form of'' woman's special ills, and have a constant fear of breaking PI down, the three following fetters ought to bring hope :— North Crandon, Wis.— "When I was 16 years old T got married and at 18 years I gave birth to twins and it left me with very poor health. I could not walk across the floor without haying to sit down to rest and it was hard for me to keep about and do my work. I went to a doctor and he told me I had a displacement and ulcers, and would have to have an operation. This frightened me so much that I did not know what to do. Having heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I thought I would give it a trial and it made me as well as ever. I cannot say enough in favor of the Pmkham remedies."—Mrs. Marais ASBA0H, North Crandon, Wis. Testimony from Oklahoma. Lawton, Okla.—"When I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I seemed to be good for nothing. I tired easily and hacl headaches much of the time and was irregular. I took it again before my little child was born and it did me a wonderful amount of good at that time. I never fail to recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to ailing women because it has done so much for me."—Mrs. A. L. McCASLawn, 509 Have St., Lawton, Okla, From a Grateful Massachusetts Woman. Roxbury, Mass.—"I was suffering from inflam- mation and was examined by a physician who found that my trouble was caused by a displacement. My symptoms were bearing down pains, backache, and sluggish liver. I tried several kinds of medi- cine ; then I was asked to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It has cured me and I am pleased to be in my usual good health by using it and highly recommend it." — Mrs. B. M. Oseoon, 1 Haynes Park, Roxbury, Mass. If you want special advice write to Lydia 15. Pinkbam Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. place, when they returned they con- firmed the souls of the disciples, en- couraging them to continue in the faith, ordaining elders, praying with them and commending them to the Lord on whom they believed. One thing they insisted on was that the believers must not count suffering a strange thing, for only by the way of tribulation can we enter the kingdom (verses 21-23). When we receive the Lord Jesus we become children of Gal and heirs of the king- dom, but then the conflict with the world, the flesh, and the devil begins and will continue while we stay on earth. Even our Lord said, "In the world ye shall have tribulation." But He also said, "Let not your heart be troubled," "See that ye be not trou- bled" (John xvi, 33; xiv, 1, 27; Matt. +xiv, 6). Our Lord told Ananias that He would show Saul how great things ho must suffer for His name's sake (Acts ix, 16), and on this first tour Sanl certainly had quite a taste of the sufferings he enumerates more fully in II Cor. xi, 23-28. "All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution" (II Tim. ill, 12), and if we were more godly in our daily life we would have more fellowship with our Lord in this matter, according to Phil. 1, 29. At Iconium they spake so boldly in the Lord, and the Lord was so manifestly with them, working signs and wondere. by their hands, that a great multitude, both of Jews and Greeks, believed, and they abode long time there preaching the Lord Jesus (verses 1-6). Persecution sent them on to Lystra, and there they preached the gospel In Paul's estimation there was nothing else worth doing, for this he counted all else as dross and determined to know nothing but Jesus Christ cruci- fied, risen, ascended and returning. The healing of the lame man at Lys- tra, who had been born lame, reminds us of the heating through Peter in chapter iii of another man who had been born Lame. We also think of the man in John ix, who was born blind, and remember the Saviour's reason why. May we see in all difficulties an opportunity for God to work and be willing to be the material When the people saw the miracle wrought through Paul and Barnabas they were ready to worship them and could scarcely be restrained, even after Paul assured them that they were only men of like passions with themselves and that the' healing of this man was by the power of the living God, who was thus seeking to draw them to Himselt and away from all the lying vanities of their idolatry. Note how the Thes- salonians turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God and to wait Lor His Son from heaven (I Themi, 9, 10). 80 fickle are people that those who were ready to worship these two men of God, being persuaded by the perse- cutors from .Antioch and Iconium, are equally ready to kill them, and they actually stoned Paul and drew him out of the city, supposing him to be dead, but while the disciples stood runroc upand came round about him he e able to nest into the city and day was a to start for Derbe with Barnabas (verses 19, 20). It is possible that as Paul was being stoned he thought of the day wben he stood by and saw Stephen stoned, but 1f we are right in the supposition that II" Cor. xii, 1.1 de- scribes his experience while he seem ed to be dead, then he bad further fel- lowship with, Stephen and soon forgot the stones and .the persecutors in thei bliss of the paradise, the third heaven,! Li) wnrch ne was tasen anti savr +_ heard things he could not describe words. Itmust be a tine thing to be or to be out of the body in way when it transfers one to se blissful realities. Such, no doubt, the experience of all who die in Ch and precious in the sight of the is the death of His saints. In II Cos' ail, 7-10, there is a suggestioe Paul's thorn in the flesh was a res of his being stoned at Lystra, but though he was not delivered from he was able to rejoice in it and gi, God. May the grace of God enable to finish the work to which He Called ns, filling us with His Spirit, enabling us to speak boldly in the Lord and give testimony to the word of His grace and making it man:feed' that Christ is at home in 'le. }as All Choked Up Could Hardly Breathe. BRONCHITIS, Was The Cause; The Cure Was DR. WOOD'S Norway Pine Syrup. Mrs, Garnet Burns, North Augusta, Ont., writes: "I caught a dreadful cold, going to town, and about a week after I became all choked up, and could hardly breathe, and could scarcely sleep at night for coughing. I went ''to the doctor, and he told me that I was getting bronchitis. My husband went to the druggists, and asked them if they had a cough medicine of any kind that they could recommend. The druggist brought out a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. I started using it, and it com- pletely cured me of my cold. I cannot tell you how thankful I was to get rid of that awful nasty cold. I shall always keep a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup on hand, and I shall only be too glad to recommend it to all others."' Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is a remedy that bas been on the market for the past twenty-five years, and we cam recommend it, without a doubt, as being the best cure for coughs and colds that you can possibly procure. There are a lot of imitations on the market, so when you gb to your druggist or dealer see that you get "Dr. Wood's;" put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; the price, 25c and 300. I The genuine is manufactured by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Pruning Soon Now. In about ft month's time pruning may be commenced. Get the saws and coppers iu shape. AFTER TH'E GRIPPE Vinol Restored Her Strength Canton Miss. —"I am 75 years old and became weak and feeble from the very effects of La Grippe, but Vinol has done me a world of good. It has cured my cough, built up my strength so I feel active and well again." -Mrs. LizzIE BAL,DWIN, Canton, Miss. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil, aids digestion, en- riches the• blood and creates strength. Unequalled for chronic coughs, colds ' or bronchitis. Your money back if 1 it fails. J. E,Hovey, Druggist Clinton, Ont.