HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1915-07-15, Page 21
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M. D. McTAGGART
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THE
SUNDAY SCHOOL
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FIRST BRITISH
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PURE BL000 MAKES
HEALTHY PEOPLE
Y�
NOTES AND COMMENTS
E �
this
a earl' Complete StockOLD
W y a lila.'of1
We
IRME
Fes
}f
war tharifle is a toy.The
infantry soldier is used merely to ac-
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
JULY 18.
Lesson
Lesson `IIT.-SoI'omon Chooses Wis=
dont. 1 Kings 8. 4.15. Golden
Text; flroy. 9: 10.,
' ' '' r
T. Solomon's Dream Verses v-14,,)
( -
Verse 5. In Gibeon-A city of the
NAVY g, WAS ROMAN
-
ESTABLISIIEI) BY CAESAR AI TEli
HE HAD INVADI D ENGLAND.
t
=
Henry VIII,' Called Father •ot the
Navy of More Modern
Timrsa
The first
1 t
rofulas bwand rem crop-
scrofula sores, boils and other en�p-
tions, because it -drives out of .,lie
.blood •tlle ]rumors that cause them.
Eruptions cannot be successfully,
treated with external applications ns '
Uecauso these ca -nett purify the
blood.
hood's Sarsaparilla m - ureas rich';
rrd blood xerfeets !ho di<ention
P 1 ei ,
and builds upt
i " •" he 'whole 'system. Ili-
silt on having hood°s. Get it now,
Stone's Natural Fertilizer., No
cagy trenches that the artillery hes
}�
cT rt Bros.
Mls l �g�l h
.=BANKERS----.
'
8 GENERAL BANKING BUST-
NESS TRANSACTED. NOTES,
DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS ISSUED.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE-
POSITS. SALE NOTES FUR'
CHASED,CLINTON.`
befber on the. market.
Na
We pay at all se ssants,the highest
market rices for Hay for baling.
P y g'
•
Seeds
Amieriebn Feed Conn, Red Olo-
ven, Alsilce, Timothy and Alfalfa,
FORD & MCLEOD
CLI t
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Tone
piano.
rdnging
ant
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treble
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YE OLDS FIRM
(ZM II
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is the heartof any
• Its rich, round,
tone; iia brilli-
and rich,
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' 1
' won".said a Russian off}Ger u few
days ago. Now from kLolla nd comes
report that the Gexmins are re -
placing rifles by ;Machine guns whey=
ever possible, an that ,one hundred
thousnd •ae aI-oady in ,'itse. If
;those stories are :lrue the'soldier of.
to' -morrow willnot bear rifle ,and bay-.
onet but will carr und`ei' his arm
Y
a yard of iron pipe- 3
and several finds
of ,leather belting filled with ;moan;-
tion. He will squirt death at his enc-
my as if he were spraying flowers
with a hose.
The Germans .regard a machine
gun merely as an -improved automatic
rifle with a Water 9'`h, y
Hivites. The "'thbernacle' of the con-
gregation" and the "brazen altar of
burnt offerings":. made by Moses were
transferred to -Gibson from Nob (1
Sam. 2L 8; 1 Chron.'16 39, 40; 2
Chron. 1. 3•). It was "the great high
'e
place; therefore, and Solomon offered
thausand burntcityriir . upon-
an- alter." The be-
longed to the tribe of Benjamin. (Josh,
21-25 see also Josh. 9 :by
Ina dream=The offerininto
mon were leas}m bo odof Solo-
P g G as t e
dream shows, (Fora arale] account
of the dream, see 2 Clnmon. 1. q-13 )their
is frequently represented as.hav-
ing made known his will in a dream
(Gen, 15, i; 28. 12; 31 .11 34. G• 41.
25; 1 Sam, 28, 6, 15).
Great lovfu - that thou
hast given 'him a son to sit on his
throne -David regarded this as the
g mercy of Jehovah (see 1
Kings I. 48).
7. A little child -Not in years, but
in experience410
as a.ruler. Uriah was
killed about twentyfending
years before Da-
vid's death. This would make Solo-
mon at least eighteen years old at
the time of his coronation. Solomon
mi •h
b t well have felt as a little child
as he faced his duties. He was of aVienne,
peaceful disposition(1 Chron, 22. 9),
P
ordinary difficulties of his king-
ship were augmented by his warring
and env}oaf:°brothers and their fol-
lowers.
To go out or come in -That is, howtion
to live, what to do in the ordinaryputting
happenings
PP gs as well as the great
emergencies of 1}€e. This phrase was
Proverbial among the Israelites (see
Num. 27, 17; Deut: 28, 6; 31, 2; Josh.
14. 11,
8. That cannot be numbered nor
counted for multitude -A hyperboli-
cal expression common in all ran-
guages-"As the sands of the sea,"
or "the stars of heaven." Perhaps
Solomon was thinking of Jehovah's
Promise to Abram (Gen. 13. 16).
9. An understandingheart-That is
;wisdom and knowledge" (2 Chron. 1.
10), The Hebrew reads literally, "a
hearing heart"; patience "to hear" is
a prerequisite to air "understanding"
P q g
heart.
To judge -This was one of the
chief funct}ons of the Oriental rulers,
Herodotus (1. 98) tells us that Deio-
res was made king because of the
justice of his decisions, and Xenophon
shows that Cyrus was instructed by
tutors how to render judgments.
In some places in the Dominion to-
day the Mayor (or ruler of the town)
is also a magistrate who must preside
as judge over the court. In the Jew-
ish mind, the prince and uMr.
P' judge were
closely associated (bee Exod. 2. 14;
18. 16. 22; 1 Sam, 8, 20; 2 Sam. 15.
2-6, etc.).
Great-. people -In verse 8 the term
"great people" means "great" or large
in numbers; here, "great" means lit-
erally "heavy," upon the king. The
burden of ruling the people would be
great, or "heavy," upon the king.
10, The speech pleased the Lord-
Although a cream, it was the per-
sonal desire of Solomon.
11. Thine enemies - Iiadad tine
Edomite (1 Kings 11. 14-22) and,Re-
zon the son of Eliada (1 Kings 11. 23-
) . -These were adversaries of Solo-
ye „
:m 12."1ll his A wise days."
and an understanding
heart -A wisdom both moral and in-
tellectual (1 Kings 4. 29-34). It was
g
moral, wisdom alone 'for which he
asked. •
thee - Only one was to be
"greater than Solomon" (Matt. 12.
42).ly."
13. That which thou hest not asked
-God gave Solomon all he asked for,
and then, true to his nature, added
something besides- This is 'the law
of divine government (see Matt. 6.
33)•
14. If thou in
British navy was a Ro-
mini one, if the ilibernianism may be
permitted, and it was due to the hosts
whom great Cesar led to conquest:
For the protection of their colony
{Ernest Protheroe tells us, in a new„
book just published), the Romans es-
a fleet lntown as the Classic
manned by 'Roman sol='
diens, but with the oars of the galleys
worked Britons who were pressed
4
service. lin 288 A;D:, Carausius;,
with the aid of some p}rates, got pts-
8055100 of the fleet and defied the Ro-
Ern -
, man authority, calling himself Em-
Peron o£ Britain. He was succeeded
by Allectus, who was overthrown and
slain byEmperor
the L m anon Constantine.
The revolted soldiers, who had been
assisting Allectus,, fled to London,
where they were attacked and killed
in the streets b the Roman forces.
But after 'occupyingoutnumbered
Britain for
more than three centuries and a hall
the Romans evacuated the country in
AD-, in order to assist in de-
then heart of Rome, which
was being assailed by hordes of bar-
barians from Central Europe. During
the latter part o£ their occupation
they had practically abolished the
Britannica; and upon the de-
pasture of the legions Britain was
again without a fleet.
Alfred the Great was the creator
of the first really British navy. In
Alfred defeated seven Danish
ships orf Swanage, capturing one and
the others to flight; in 894 he
destroyed a Danish fleet off Appel -
clone and gained another great victory
near the Isle of Wight. three
later, $ years
The weakness of Ethelred II., who
gave bribes to the Danes instead of a'
fight, opened the way to disastrous
raids, and it was not until after the
death of Canute and the restoration
of the English line of Kings, that the
semUlance of a fleet was again estab-
l' had.
King Harold's Fleet.
To King Harold, succeeding Edward
in 1066, fell the task of averting, if
possible, the impending invasion of
Normans.
But Duke William delayed setting
out.
Meanwhile, their period of annual
service being at an end, food aboard
beingscarce, and the men being re_
g
quired ashore to work in the harvest,
the English ships returned to their
various ports. Three weeks later
Duke William crossed over with about
900 ships and 16,000 men, and effect-
ed an easy larding at, Pevensey, near
Hastings. . •history
HenryIienry II. had larger fighting ships
specially constructed for the service
of the Crown, in addition to the usual
forced levies. During this regin it
was enacted that po vessel should be
sold to leave Ehgland. Portsmouth
was rising into importance as a naval
port and London and Bristol were do-
ing an increasing trade with the Con-
tinent.
Richard I., "Coeur de Licn," sixth
of the Norman Icings, gave the navy
a great impetus, and in the third ern-
sada undertook a record trip to the
Meditterranean with troops for the
Holy Land.
It was in the time of John that the
naval rivalry between the English
and.the•F.vench first commenced.
In 1213 Philip Augustus of France,
attacked the Earl of Flanders who
was an old ally of John's.' An Eng-
lish fleet of 500 ships, under the Earl
of Salisbury, was despatched against
Philip, whose fleet was attacked in
the harbor of D 'retie As a great
portion. of the French clews was
ashore at the time, the English easily
captured 300 sail and destroyed 100
others. The remaining French yes -g
sols were then so closely blockaded
that their crews burnt them topre-made
it to be proclaimedthat all foreign
P fo c gn
vessels should lower their topsails ie
salutation 'of. the Eng1}sh flag in the
Channel,
English Seamanship, 0
A Buri ons battle royal •at sea
minced the reign of Edward h: r
There was a direct challenge and
g
acre tante to settle all differences
P by
a pitched battle in midchannel on
April 14, 1295. Their, was no limit
to the number of vessels on each side
ed consequently the .rivals enlisted
friends or those who merely de-
sired a fight of it. A num-
bar of Irsh andtDutchhe evesselsjoined
J
the hardy Cinque' Ports men, while
Genoese came to the aid of the
, ,
I xench.
Although the English ships were
by about two to one,
by their seamanship and desperate
fighting their crews nobly atoned for
their lack of sail. They captured no
leis than 240 -of the hostile ships and
sank a great number.
Meantime the French had been
building new warships armed with
cannon, and Edward III. had been
dead only a few days when De
a noted French admiral, ap-
geared off our southern coast to give
us a taste of the quality of the new
French fleet. De Vienna's drasticnew
o talions resulted in the sackingof
P
Rye and Folkestone, and the desttuc-
of Portsmouth, Plymouth, and
Dartmouth, and then he sailed back
to France with his ships filled with
booty.
Trench ships in 1380 even sailed up
the Thames and burnt Gravesend.
For not
only t eased to be he time being
the
of the
Seas," she was no longer mistress of
her own waters and the weakness and
unpreparedness/ of Richard II, to
withstand these foreign ravages led
to rebellion in some parts. of England.
It had required a Calamity to prove
the English that it was suicidal
policy to allow the navy to decline in
strength, or to fail to seize tit new
aids to warfare. Forthwith measures
were taken to bring the fleet up to
date.
Father of Navy.
Henry VIII. earned the title "Fa -
thea of the English Navy," for from
the commencement of his reign in
1509 he followed a definite naval
Policy, which consisted in steadily
building ships until he possessed the
largest navy in the world.
The most glorious period in the
of our wooden nvalls," writes
Protheroe "was that between
1702 and 1805, a stressful century
'of almost continual war with powerful
enemies, that put out ships and men
to most searching tests, from which
both emerged triumphantly."
And in those days -
Hearts of Oalc,' indeed, were our
wooden walls, for to build even a 74 -
gun ship, the third rate, of which
our navy contained so many, from
1,600 to 2,000 oak trees were needed.
"The French ships, as a rule, were
bigger and faster than our own; they
Possessed larger batteries, and their
lowest tier - of guns was higher, in
order to fight them in rough weather;
whereas in most English ships the
g P
lower deck ports could not be opened
in a rough sea without danger of
swampingthe Sh} y
P• Fortunate] for
us, the French did not pay equal at-
tendee to the effectiveness of their
guns, or many of our battles with
them would have ended far different-
In this brief review most attention
has been paid to the earlier and less
familiar history of Britain's navy. In
his book, Mr. Protheroe brings his
story down to the latest thing in sub -
marines.
II. T. RANCE
NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY-
ANGER; FINANOIAL, REAL
ESTATE AND 'FIRE INSUR-
"ANOE AGENT. REPRESENT-
IMG 14 FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANIES.
DIVISION COURT OFFICE,
, CLINTON.
ALL KINDS OF
p�
COAL 'WOOD
7 y
a
���E BRICK
TO ORDER.
1;
r
organ -like bass, have J
made the )cityoriginally,]3ritannica;
�Q•& Co.w�1 t
11�111��D1)Cl 4.18.
t
•
Piano,
the choice of the 1
world's great artists:
The Heintzman Piano
jacket. point
out .that the Guards at 4Vaboloo ^t1-"atalilished
reed a weapon heavier and more
clumsy than the latest machine gun,
and that in modern t1 -11;.u- warfare,)
with its. charges against barbed wire
entanglements, the soldier who can
fire a hundred shots to his opponent's
five has twenty' times the chance to
live through the fight. The rifle
g"God
seems doomed to follow, the long -bow
All 'kinds of Coal on };and:t
1
is bought b people
R y (
as the principal arm of infantry.
W. IIRIDONE
'6.
BARRISTER, SOLICTTOR,
NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC.
Office-- Sloan Brook-CLINTON
CHESTNUT SOFT COAL
STOVE ' CANNEL COAL
FURNACE. • COKE
BLACKSMITHS WOOD
/
1
who want the
World's Best Piano
BYEfp,�l iNUYeY00lY1S (
ci$ Oi7tQYl0 St. ,'crowning
In providing themselves with thou -some'
sands „f machine esuns,-she Germans:"blcindness;
•
have alitieipated the 'Allies, just as,
they did in the use of heavy field artil-
lery, torrents of high explosive
g1 •cS'TRATFORD
in. 3 in. and 4 ]n. Tile of the
Best Quality.
1
s'he'lls and gas. They have ben the
masters of making to -day the wea-
pons of to -morrow. In this war.
M. G. CAMERON A.C.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,
CONVEYANCER, >;TC•
Office on Alpert Street occuped by
Ilir. Hooper.
In Clinton on everyThursday,The
and onany clay for which tip-
pointments are made. Office
hours from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
A good- vault in connection with
the orrice. Oflieo open ovary
week -day. Mr. Hooper will
make any appointments for Mr.
Cameron.
` 'ca -
,�0-.. ��
without Precdent, imagination, not,
tradition, shows the way to victory:
ARTHUR
AR it 57URj FORBES
The German
Opposite the G. T. R. Station.
Pbooe 69.Griffis
Longevity is most frequent in court
tries of low: Berth.
Officially the Kiel Canal is called
physicians, chemists and
-inventors may yet save
their
their county from the destruction
y
prepared for her by her diplomats
�.�
the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal.- -
and rulers.
k
.
Dow is Your
Cutlery
-,'
� - .
de "gr,
'
TENDERS FOR PULPWOOD LIMIT.
I should say the French used be-
tween 3000875
, ,000 and 4,000,000 shells
in their 'offensive against my army
in about six weeks: Prince• Ru P
precht.
Supply ?
You'know that Jewelry Store
Cutlery is out of the coo-
mon class. At least, OURS
m'
It carries a, distinctiveness-
air of su eriorit that
superiority,
comes from being made with
thegreatest care and ut-
most skill from the highest-
priced materials.
If you can use same of this
Cutlery in your home,you
will be proud of it evry
time you see it on the table.
Carvers, cased, ,$300 up.
Knives, Forks and Spoons,
Tenders will be received by the under-
-signed un to and t September,
Wednesday, for
the fifteenth day of September, 1915, for
tilt right to cut n>ulpnvood on a ceratin
area
hsituated
il way, wensttof h of
Sethe ulrand scot] of
English River in ,the District of leaern•
Tenderers shall state the amount they
nro prepared to pay as ;bonus In addition
to tJ o Crown dues of ape: per cord for
woodG o t uch oiitercrntes as m r iroi;t
y
limo to time be fired 'by the Lieutenant-
Governor in Council, for the right
operate a nntp mitt and a paper milt on
or near the arse referred to.
. Such tenelcrers9shalt bo required to erect
a atilt or mills on or near the territory,
the to he lnae manufacture
,oimnperr ill
ithin such time and in
to be erected ce ns the
Gtotmetich nshall direct leu tenantGoventor In
Parties making 2endgr will bn required
to deposit earth their leader a marked
cheque payable to Oho Monourtrblo tho
ten per cent. of the amountf o i cir ten-
in the
Seven -eighths of were caused
Galician fighting were caused by
shells, half of which wex•e fired from
big -calibre guns. -Surgeon Major
Lasghintseff. '
--
The natural conclusion of many ob-
servers has been voiced by the sur-
peon major: "Bullets la no
j play part
to now, and the infantryman's rifle is a
toy. Infantry merely occupies theto
trenches the cannon have won."
But the rations will not disband
their riflemen• They will have a ua•-
P
pose, these myriads that a prophet
named "cannon fodder;" Obviously
there must be something in the
trenches for the shells to spend their
priceless energy upon.
CHARLES B. HAL7.,
Conveyancer, Notary Public,
- Commissioner, Etc.
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
Issuer of Marriage Licenses
gan
HURON STREET,- CLINTON
DRS. GUNN & GANDIER
Dr. W. Gunn, L.R.C.P., L.R.a
0,8., Edin.
Dr. J. C. Giandier, B.A., M.B.
Office -Ontario St., Clinton. Night
calls at residence, Rattenbury St.,
or at Hospital.
p'
$1.00 doz. np,
Knives and Forks, steel, white
handless, $3.00 doz. up.
het us show you our Cutlery
line. Let us tell you more
about why it is the most
desirable that you can put
your money into.
ser, to be forfeited in the, overt of their
notentering
he crindttio e,aentnagreement to carry,
Ttin 1 i,ltert or any tender not nccee-
sanity abeepfod•
riFor ,fcapitml do beas tinvested, ete•,nf ter
apply
to the nndereigned, -
N.E.-No unauthorized :publication of
this notice will be pard for.
G. 12, FERGUSON,
Minister 0f Lands, Forests and Mines.
Toronto, Juno 5th, 1915.
The game of ver can't be played
without the infantry. They are the
counters, the inert bloodycounters,his
-by which the victory is reconed. The
cannons bellow, the machine guns
stab the air, and when the .dead on
each •side have been counted and the
figures compared, then we know
which flag to look for in the front
trenches, Yes, men still have' a use
LII. J. W. SHAW
-OFFICE--
RATTENBURY ST. EAST,
-CLINTON
OR. 0. W. TIIO111PSON
PHSYICIAN, SURGEON, ETC.
Special attention given to dis
eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose
and Throat.
Eyes carefully examined and suit-
able glasses prescribed.
Office and residence: 2 doors west of
the Commercial Hotel, Huron St,
W. R. COUNTER
t
in war.
JEWELER and ISSUER of
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
NEWS -RECORD S NEW
CLUBBING RATES FOR 1914
1'
The Band -Smocked Middy Blouse Is
Here.
The middy blouse, in sailor style, is
fighting for for
TheMM(�1TTNNTT 1111�1111 77IIIYIY�1IrI };701•
The lifoKi110 Mutual
p (�i! yy''��••�� gg77��
Fire j'� p
Insurance
.SUt tUltCU V CttI CUlI�
•
Head ogee, .Sea forth, int.
DIRECTORY
- Offlerep
naB Mqo erichBai, cePrea deatntThoa E,
Mays. Seaforth, Sec.-Treas.
birectore: D. F. McGregor. 9eafo>,th; J.
Grieve,
torch :robe Ecnnowoie. Dublin; J. Evaae,
Bee hwood; A. McEwen, Brueellela; J. R.
McLean, Sottorth;, J. Connolly Goderich;
RobertFerris, Marloek.
Ed. Hinchley, Sealorth; W.
Chesney Egmonddille; J. W. Yeo, Molmee•
viae; Alex Leitch, Clinton; R. 8. war•
'south, Rrodhagen.
Any money to be paid in may be paid to
Morrish Clothing Co., Clinton, or at Cult's
Grocery, Goderah.
parties doeiroue to effect Insurance or
otho' business -will be nom tl
p p y
attended to oa application to any of the
above officers addressed to their respect•
Sve Tart -offices; Losses Inspected by the
aarector who lives nearest the scene.
WEEKLIES,
Neave nevoid and SGaU Empire ...ALM
Newe•Re•ord and Family Ierald and
N , Brea cord anct Neekiy sen ,:• ::: 1:N
Newa•Rceord end Farmers Advocate.. 2.33
Newe•Record and Farm & Dairy ,.., 1.58
Ne\vs•Record and Canadian Farm . .1.852G
Newe•Record' and Weekly Wlt°nee , :. 1.85
Newts -Record and Northern Messenger 1.60
Newe•Itecord and Free Prue ..........1.88
Naas Record and Advertiser .. ,s5
News-Record
ws-Recrrdand Saturday Night..3.51
News -Record and Youth's --Companion 3.23
News -Record and Fruit Grower and
Farmer -• :.....................•..... S.tl
MONTHLIES•
Newe.necord end canadtan sponte•Like
man ••• ••••••• -,...23,25
Ne `eieecord--and••LIDP......•6 Dtaga'-325
•• •••••••••••
DAILIES..
NensR ecord&a d Glob..........„...$3.58 .
News -Record and Mail &. Emplro..3,5n
NeweRecord ''rid Advertiser ,. ie: 2.83
Netve•Record and Tve ring Free Fre,, 3.33
News -Record and Evening Free Pres., 2.55
News•Reoord and Toronto Rtar 2.85
Newe•Record and "Toronto xewa ...., 2s3
If :what- you want fe not In tihe list let
os know about it. We can eppply yon ei
existence,
smocked middy blouse
3best to supercede it.
acknowlec}gecl that the
smocking in brilliant -colored
with front lacing to
very smart note, That
more than successfully
with the middyblouse is
one considers that not
prettier and dressier, but
° and easy to make. The
also cared out on the reverse
the blouse with strikingly
effect. Ladies' Home
terns for this blouse
c,( !
- b„"�' ,, i
V
is
It
touches
match•,
this
not
only
it
smockingis
Journal
are
-
.
�
the hand-
doing its
must be
of
threads,
add.'t
style: is
competing
odd when
is it far
is simile
side of
pleasing
Pat-Robnrt
cut for
OR. F. A. AXON
- DENTIST-
Specialist in Crownand Bride
P g
Work. Graduate of C.O.D.S.,
Chicago, • and R.O.D.S., Tu•
canto,
Bayfield on Mondays from MayW'
y J
December,
.
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron.:
Correspondence promptly answered.
Immediate
Immediate arrangements can be
for Sale3 Date . at The
News -Record, Clinton, or by
sailing Phone 13 on 157,'
Charges moderate and satisfaction
guaranteed.
wilt walk my3
ways,
to keep my statutes and my com-
mind ents--Allthat Solomon was to
receivewas .conditioned on an upright
life.
vent them from. being captured. .,
After this signal naval victory
King John took to himself the title
'Governor of the Seas,' and he caused
,Mary is the.commonest name foe
women in England, William the com-
monest name for men. .
T Q Q is
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Cold Day comm
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"'ordering your winter -simply'
less than it would cost you to send direct
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As thy' father did walk -In spite of
David's sinfulness his heart was
toward God incl his repentance
FIRST 'WISDOM, THEN COURAGE
C� TRQt
���,L�
r
STRATFORD. ONT.
Ontario's Best Practical
Training School, We have12.
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D. A. MCLAC)HLAN,
Principal.
D. Solomon Goes to Jerusalem
(Verse 15).
15.Behold, it was a dream -As in
r300fa • Men and Trus Are Fighting Shadows With
Broken Swords.
of Lehigh ValleyCual, None
better. in the world.
,
Rouse Phone
Office Phone 40.
t `,,
A. J. HOLLOWAY �'r AY
THE c!HILDREN
--
of T0 -DAY
Rif �� ..
,"dream
she case of Pharaoh (Gen. 41. 7).
The was one of the, recognized
modes whereby menexpected'to re-
cenve�knowledge of the divine will."
Came to Jerusalem, and stood.be-
o-
aft vah-Sohilomoo onreturnedirno Jact upon
the dream by showing gratitude to
God in ns sacrifices and bymaking
h
the reality of the dream known to
his servants at a'feast in their honor.pardoned
ti
"Prove all, things; hold fast that
which is good." -I. Thessalonians, v.,
21
To do that which we believe to
be right is one of the. first and surely
one of the most important precepts
-of morality. No man can be pardon-
ed for persistingin doingthat which
he knows to be wrong; nor again
for failing to do
can he ie e right. Sins
that which he knows to b
ceeded even if they could! Think of
the sufferings that have been bravely
endured on behalf of "fool" ideas and
unrighteous standards) Think of the
blood that has been gladly shed for
the sake of causes which were either
unsound or immoral! Of nil the
swarmingironies of history,none is
more bitter than that of the good man
dying for Satan in the guise of God!
The Scat of ;Revelation.,
N� s-
w, ReC0rd
CLINTON, - ONTARIO
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�• MITCHELL.
Editor and Proprietor,
just as They are -in their in.
door play, or at their outdoor
play -they are constantly of-
tering •temptations for the
! KODAK
' Lot it keep them for you as
they aro. now,Customs
Let it keep many other hap-
penins that ore a aou:rc of
g. a
pleasure •to you.'thorough
BROWNIES, $2,. TO $12;;
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No. 89b3-8923:
Ladies and •Msaes
inches bust measure
8953, as shown above.
also be had for little
ber 8970. In size
yards of 36 -inch material.
many that go
very nicely, but the
lar skirt ant U "
Pattern number Ladies'8923,
with or without suspenders
is particularly appropriate
It is cut iii sizes 22
surf, i1Ze 24 requirin
30 -}nth material.
Patteama.15 cents
chased at any Ladies'
Pattern Agency, or
Pattern Company, 183
Toronto,. Ontario,,
S,
on •sloes •.32
under"
They
girls under
36 ib requires
There
with this
four -piece
Home
to be
and
and
to 36, waist
3x1/2s
g y
each,canbe
I3oine'Jeurnal
from the
George
to,.42.
number
can
num-•
3s/g,
are
. blouse
circa-
r i'
Journal
made
belt,"And
smart.
mea-
alas Of
r-`
Home
Street; destroying
-
Brown had; just returned from aes,
short, but delightful, trip to the Con-
tinent. Barely had he sat foot again
on the shore of Britain when, as is
usual, he had to submit his baggage
Con.' the C officials for mspec-
latter-, although Brown
assured them that he had nothingto
deers -re,, seemed' bent _ on making n•
,Ins ection. But there s
P
nothing m that trunk except wearing
apparel," insisted' Brown. Unper-
tubed and' unconvinced the official ro-
P
ceeded with his task, pulling out, gar-
meet after garment, until finally he
disclosed a dozen bottles of wine. The
official looked at Brown, then at=rho
bottles, and then' again at Brown,
what kind of wearing apparel
on call thus?" he asked, "Night-
y ,; retorted g .
caps! retorted Brown, and even the
grim official had t0 smile.
3'
cof ulpable. Only he mission are alike
acerin like
Luther, "This one thing I do,
I cannot do other, God help me," is'
wholly virtuous.
If' this were all, our task of life
would be comparatively simple. But
it is not all. For behind the impera--of
•,
live command' to perform the right
there stapes the grave question,
What is Right?
And many there are who meet this
question onlyto evade it or to pass
, . •, ,.
it by uataecogmced. Nonce the tragic
spectacle of good men and true flaying
down their lives,their fortune and_,
i s
their sacred honor on the altars of
falsegods! Ca tuiec bysome 00-
P
rant prejudice, deluded by some
shameless superstition, caught up
and "carried about"' by some `vain
«wind of doctrine"- they strive and
strain for the realization of futile de-
devotion as blind it is
In addition to setting our wills to
the do'i'ng of right we must very par -
ticulaly set ,our minds to the deter-
mination of what is right. First, last
and all the time, of course, must we
consult the testimony of our own
souls, Here if anywhere is the seat
revelation. But by how many
things must this revelation be tested
before it is fully trusted? wi ?The experi-..
once of the past, the wisdom of seers
and sages the, opinion of contempor-
P
arias, the knowledge of the schools,
the ecstatic vision of the
, , , , prophets, the
•deep, utaxttenlate; • persistent• longings
of - the multitudes -to all of these
must appeal
mt s , ppe, l be made. Nothing that
time bas spawned must be neglected:
And onlywhen our idea of the right
g
hits stood tho test, silenced every
doubt, conquered every` denial : won
every sanction, can we eall it the right
and, with lull assurance; go ahead.
"Prove all things" --thio first we must
do if be
-
GRAND
fSFA),]
ylyl^�fl(
ill
di
RA}1 Wt11aY,
tl.111 s:YST'�;"
- T1111E TABLE -.
Trains: will arrive at and de arb
Ito Clinton
m nton' Station as follow:
BUFFALO AND GODERI'CH DIP:
Going Ess
of g t. 7.38 a, m,
es AI $
,.o_ I m;
Going 16
ng tVest, 107 A. qn
,i� o/o
A, so }}'.86 p. M.
$,4 p,. no.
" is 11.18 P. 1h.
LONDON, HURON d3BR DIV
QI' IV•
Doing Soiitb,, d,iP a: m,
0o ss
a►•
Going North, 11.00 a.
it of W.
Oc86Vp. p; ,
English submarines By from their •jealous,
g Y
periscopes a flag of which is a skull
and crossbones when they succeed' in
a vessel belonging to the
enemy
sires with a its we would wise. Then, with
and never 1or'soi instantim- our prgving•doe must we bo not
of
4,
agi:ne that they are fighting ,shadotvs, mately wise but brave }n holding fast,'
with „broken swords. Think of the even until death, that which we now'.
that has •been expended on ]:now to be good,,
energy i
campaigns that should not havesue-JOHN H YNES HOLMES.
1.