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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1914-01-22, Page 10G. PI! MaTAGdAliT, M. V.. lloTiGGAIIT McTaggart Bros. GENERAI. BANKING BUSI- NESS TRANSACTED. NOTES DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS ISSUED INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE- POSITS. SALE NOTES BUR- - CHASED. IL T. RANCE - -- NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY- ANCER, FINANCIAL, REAL ESTATE AND FIRE INSUR- ANCJE AGENT. REPRESENT- ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES. DIVISION COurrr OFFICE, -- CLINTON. ,, W. BRYDONE, BARRISTER,. SOLICITOR, , NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. . Office- Sloan Block -CLINTON cuAnr.,Es B. HALE. Conveyancer, Notary Public, ..„ Commissioner, Etc. • REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE, •- Issuer of Marriage Licensee F HURON STREET, - CLINTON DRS. GUNN & GANDIER Dr, W. Gunn, L.R.C.P., L.R. 0.5., Edin. Dr. J. C. Gandier, B.A., M.13. Office -Ontario St., Clinton. Night calls at reeidence, Rattenbury St., or at Hospital. DR. 7. W. SHAW - OFFICE - RATTENBURY ST. EAST, --CLINTON bit. C. W. THOMPSON PHSYICIAN, SURGEON, ETC. Special attention given to dis. eases of the Eye, Ear,' Nose and Throat. i ' --1- -"'"------- Eyes carefully examined and suit, able glasses prescribed Office and residence: 2 doors west of the Commercial Hotel, Huron St. •Ent. P. A. AXON r`---- - DENTIST - r8. Specialist in Crown and Bridge Work. Graduate of C.O.D.S., Chieago, and R.C.D.S., To. ronto. Hayfield on Mondays from May to December. - TIME TABLE -- Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV: Going East, 7.35 a. m. 3.07 p. m. 6.15 p. m. 11.07 a. m.1.25 p. m, 6.40 p. m, 11.28 p. m. LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV : • It I G4,?iing West, If 44 (I it 2. Going South, t4c,Ing North,44 7.50 a. m. 4.23 p. m. 11,00 a. in. 6.35 p. m. TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and isteidridoseription may tliTertiu.aVgggitonlgtel prtigpetggi, tizsatorentai.yfRineon PatentsAght igOatfraiti .tsetle.Vtive "Cad{ Oak,. WitilOnt• 084480,10 880 Utentific Jimeritat. A bandiorooly illustrated woold,Y. Largest cit, calve of BUY scientific Mural. Terms for PA4 804tage PisPeld, floId by MUNN Co.301Broadway, New York ••• Brant) Moe. Weableaton.D. C. , LIPPINCOTT'S • MONTHLY MAGAZINE, A FAMILY LIBRARY The Best In Current Literature. 12 ComPLETE NOVELS YEARLY MANY SHORT STORIES AND PAPERS ON TIMELY TOPICS $2.60 PER YEAR I 28 CTS. A COPY, NO CONTINUED STORIES " EVERY NUMGER COMPLETE IN ITBELP Maid -"H you please m'in, a man has. called with a bill,'' 0 - tress -"Tell him we have some al- ready ' Bran, orts' and Flour From the Best Mille at the lowest', possible price. WE. PAY THE HIGHEST. PRICE for OATS, PEAS and BAR- LEY, also HAY for Baling.' Ford & McLeod GE01if3E ELLIOTT Licensed Auctiniieer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. • Iminediate arrangements can he made for Sales Date at The News -Record. Clinton, or by calling Phone 13 on 157. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. ALL KINDS OF COAL, WOOD, TILE BRICK TO ORDER. All kinds of Coal on hand : CHESTNUT SOFT COAL STOVE CANNEL COAL FURNACE COKE - BLACKSMITHS WOOD VA in., 3 in. and 4 in. Tile of the Best Quality. ARTHUR FORBES Opposite the G. T. R. Station. Phone 52. The McKillop Tilutual Fire Insurance Company Farm and. Isolated Town Property only Insured • - OFFICERS - J. B. McLean, President, Seaforth P.O.; Jas. Connolly, Vice -Presi- dent, Goderich P.O. ; T. E. Hays, Secretary -Treasurer, Seaforth P.O. - Directors - D. F. McGregor. Seaforth John Grieve, Winthrop; William Rinn, Constance; John Watt, Harlock; John Benuewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEven, Clinton P.O. • - Agents - Robert Smith, Harlock; E. Hinch- ley, Seaforth; William Chesney, Egmondville; 1. W. Yeo, Holmes. vine. Any money to be paid in may be paid to Morrish Clothing Co., Clio ton, or at Cutt's Grocery. Goderich Parties desirous to effect insur- ance or transact other business will be promptly attended to on ap- plication to any of the above officers addressed to their respective post, offices. Losses inspected by the director who lives nearest the :mane Clinton News -Record CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms of subscription -61 per year, in advance; $1.50 may be charged if not so paid. No paper discon. tinned until all arrears are paid. unless at the option of the pub- lisher. The date to which every subscription is paid is denoted on the label. Advertising Rates - Transient ad- vertisements, 10 cents per non pareil line for first insertion and 4 cents per lino far each subse- quent insertion. Sinai' advertise - merits not to exceed •one inch, such as "Lost," "Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., inserted once for 35 cents, and each subsequent in. sertion 10 cents. Communications intended for pub. lication must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. W. J. MITCHELL, Editor and Proprietor. GRANO R N RAI LWAY SYSTEM 110MESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS • To Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta Each Tuesday until October 28, inclueiva WINNIPEO AND RETURN 436,00 EDMONTON. AND RETURN ....-843.00 Proportionate low rates to other points, • Return limit two months. Through Pullman Tourist Sleeping oars are operated to Winnipeg with. out change yla Chicago and at. Paul, leaving Toronto 11.00 p.m. on abase Tickets are also on sale via Sarnia and Northern Navigation Company. 03011 particulars and reservations from Nrand Trunk Agents, , or write C. D. Horning, D,R.A.. Union Station, To. ionto, Ont. Giving Ilex A way. - "1.Thale, we want you to give .the bride away'.'' "Very well. Pll announce to the gathered assembly that ehe's thirty - Ile Was Imelry. 'Did your husbandhave any licek on his hunting trip 11 "Splendid!, Didn't yon hear 1" "No, what. was ibl' "He got back. alive.", is certainly one of the most diseeree.". able alltnents which flesh is heu. to. Ceaefitorigne--^bilter,,taste in the mouth -nausea- dizeindsi- these combine to make life a burden. The cause is a disordered liver -the cure Dr. Monies Indian Root,Pille. They •.ere straight to the root'etth'etrouble, 'put the liver right, cleansthe stern- ach and bowels, clear the tongue and take away the bitter taste from the Mouth. At the first sign of bilious- ness take Dr. Morse' trl:din !toot Pills Forty years in use, 20 years the standard, prescribed and reeern. mended by physicians. For Woman's A ihnents, Dr. 818 rtel's Female Fills. at your druggist. "Rex-, Cold Tablets" WILL BREAK A COLD IN ONE NIGHT 25 CENTS Your money back if they don't, at THE REXALL STORE W. S. R. HOLMES, Phm.B. COAL ORDERS for Coal may be left at R. Rowland's Hardware Store, or at my office in II. Wiltse's ' Grocery Store. HOUSE PHONE 12 OFFICE PHONE 140 A. J. HOLLOWAY BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND HE SUNDAY1CHOOLLESSO:1 INTERNATIONAL LESSON, " FEBRUARY 1. ;Lesson V. The 1):.iijdrie'ndlee,Notglileor, " Luke 6oldelt"li ext, • Luke 11. 9. •Verse 1. .As he was praying -The 'Parilsage suggeeteeth4 the disciples were eo Much impressed with the prayer of Jesus that they asked to be taught how to pray. The name ;of their spokesman in this instance is not given. • - John also taught his disciple - Of the form taught by John the Baptist nothing is known.. 9 Father -Note the difference between the opening of this prayer, and that of Old Testament prayers. In the Old Testament God le se!. dom spoken of as a Father, and never except in reference to the nation (Deut., 32. 6; Jer. 3. 3, 4, 19; 31. 9), not to the individual. In this prayer no reference is made to the God of Israel and no special fav- • ors are asked for anyone. Jesus taught us the value of the individu- al man in the sight of God. He is the Father of all, and an earnest desire to commune with him is the only Condition of approach. • Hallowed -Recognized as holy; revered. Kingdone-The Greek' noun ie, ab- stract, not concrete. A better ren- dering is "dominion," The peti- tion asks that God's reign may be • extended from heaven over this , world and that his laws may pre- vail. ' 3. Give us -The tense of this verb indieate:seOntinued action. Mean- ing continually give us. Daily - The word translated "daily" appears here first in Greek literature and its origin and exact meaning are unknown. The best translation seems to be "for the coming day." Thus, repeated in the morning, it would refer to the present day, and in the evening to the next day. 4. Forgive us our sins; for we ourselves also forgive every one that is indebted to us -Luke avoids making our forgiving. and God's parallel. We forgive .debts; God forgives sins. In Matthew, how; ever, the word "debts" is used in both clauses. The word "tress - passes" dogs not occur in the pray- er as given by either Matthew or Luke, but Matthew uses it in the sentences immediately following the prayer : "For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if ye forgive not men their tres- passes, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses." And bring us not into tempta- tion -Matthew adds to this peti- tion, "but deliver us from the evil one," showing that the iemptations referred to are the enticements of Satan. When Saint James xhores us to "count it all' joy" when we fall into manifold temptations, he refers to such ,external trials as poverty, persecution. &c. This parable and that of the un- just judge (Luke 18. 1-8) teach the same lesson, that is, that man ought always to pray and not to grow impatient or discouraged ' when the answer is long delayed. They imply that the fulfillment of spiritual desires must he waited for, and that good will come to them that wait upon the Lord, 5. And he said unto them. Which of you shall have a friend -Note the directness of the teaching of je,Sus. At mielnight-In order to avoid the heat, it was customary for peo- ple in the East to travel at night. Lend -A different word from that of lending money on interest. It re- fers to a friendly act. 7. Trouble me not - The selfish neighbor does not object to lending the loaves, but does not wish to bo disturbed. 8. Because of his importunity - The man is selfish enough to object to being wakened at night by his neighbor who is in need, but re- sponds because of continued urg- ing. 9. Ask . . seek . . . knock -The verbs are present imperative and mean continue asking, seeking, knocking. Jesus taught that men should always make known their wishes to the heavenly Father and wait patiently for the answer to their prayers; yet he taught us by .his own life that far more import- ant than urging our requests should be the desire to bring our wills in- to accord with that of the Father.. Jesus never sought to bring pres- sure upon God. He never begged favors of God. There was no sel- fishness, no heathenish frenzy mani- Subjects taught by expert instructors at the Y. M. C. A. BLDG., LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Chartered Accountant 17 Vice -Principal CANADA'S BEST PRACTICAL TRAINING SCHOOL. CENTRA STRATFORD. ONT. THREE departments -Com- -1- mereial, Shorthand and Telegraphy. 'Courses are thorough and practical. In- dividual instruction ie given by a etrong, experienced staff. Our graduates succeed. Students may enter at any time. Get our free catalogue and see what we can do for you. D. A. McLACHLAN, Principal. It is better to be good for re- venue only than to be bad for fun. THIS 15 A STORE OF DEPENDABLE VALUES A store that keeps in touch with the constantly changing jewelry styles. A store that sells the same goods as those sold in the better stores' all over the country - And sells them, too, at as low prices as ANY STORE CAN. • Everything we show you can be depended upon to BE exactly what we tell you it is. This is so from Tie Holders at a quarter to Diamonds. And it matters not what you may require nor when, if it belongs to a Jewelry stock, it's here. Prove these things any time occasion arises. NV. R5 Counter .-• 'JEWELER and ISSUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES _meted in ,his prayers. The •nights Vent „alone in pra,yer were doubt,- ess largely given, to self -examinee tion and to meditation upon the luPPofes., of Gad, hut it WO WS ehief demee to pla,ee himself in line with these purposes: "If it be pos- sible let this cup pass from. me ; n'eVertlieleis not as I Will, but as thou '11,• 12e -Bread, dried, fisli4 and 'tard-boiled, eggs •are ,cOnnon food among the peapatits,of Palestine. . Give -Hand out to him. The word eised in the last clause of verse 13 a different word of ribber mean- ing. (ComPare James 1. 5.) qtone-May stones commonly seen would resemblelhe ordinary flat lool.• (Compare the temptation in the wilderness, Luke 4. 3.) Scorpion -The connection be- tween a loaf and a stone, a fish and a serpent, is suggested by a resem- blance; so also the scorpion when it is curled and its legs folded may resemble an egg. The thought is that ifa answer to prayer God gives nothing wi,elees or harmful, 13. Good gifts -- Matthew says "good things." Tho Hely Spirit -The snnreme ob. ject of desire for all disciples. DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUG3f1. Looked Upon by London's Poor as a Genuine Friend. • She has passed into the English language; .`as slender as the Duch- ess of Marlborough's neck" serves for a degree of comparison in one order of. creation no lees than "as bulky as `G.K.C.' " serves in an- other, so says a writer on the Lon- don Sketch. But it is not, with her, a case of neck or nothing; her Grace has a rare faculty for for- getting her own graces. For months her whole attention has been given to the figures, not of fashiein-books or Tango, but of sweated labor. She has come to grips with a sub- ject that is too Painful for most people to think about even at a safe distance. Her statement of the facts is eoncise, convincing, terri- ble. Her friends would far rather she thought and talked of the things of her own world. "Let them fight it out themselves; we can never understand them," is the sort of advice she is always getting. "But yo % don't let them fight it out themselvea," she answers; "every time you go shopping injudiciously, The Duchess Of Marliirough. your money 01 given to the bad cause of the employers. Every time you are careless and buy the' products of sweating, you subsidize the evil system." She rattdee out her statistics as ea.sily, and -charmingly, as another duchess rattles out, Epsom. prices. Though with less American accent than an average Englishwoman ac- quires in a fortnight in California, she has, nevertheless, an Ameri- can's sense of headlines. She puts her case with extraordinary brevity and effect. If you want to know the facto about the east end do not go to the east end, but go to Sunder- land House, Mayfair, when the duchess is telling, in her young, steadfast, and convincing voice, the things she has learned during years of constant study. "There are thou- sands of women and girls who are suffering actual hunger, want, and destitution though they are work- ing every available hour all the year.ronnd"-that is the gravamen of her charge against the existing 01(101. TIoe Duchess of Marlborough's philanthropy has not been spasmo- dic. During several years she has spent more time at East Ham than at Blenheim, though in no sense hoe she left the world in which she finds she and her campaign carry most weight. She does not relinquish her houses, nor her parties, nor her pearls. Her fascination does not wane nor her youth turn to grey- ness because she has things to do, and things to aay, and a set of ;very cruel and depressing obgervations always on her mind and in les' heart. By ‚station, by habit, by the very finish of her features and the elegance of her build, the belongs to a world of trivialities and lux- ury ; her manner, mines 18 certain ser that will not be wholly hidders even by the mask and domi- no of fasinve, is the manner • of -05101 -1VIaraborough, of Fifth -Avenue -cure -Blenheim, of a perfect worldliness of the Moat at- tractive sort. But it is made more charming- thau the most complete worldliness can ever be by the 'soft- ening influence of her large sympa- thIlese 'hduchess Domains, in, a, fuller sense than Curzon Street is apt to think, ae American. While she is absorbed by life in England, and is there Ter geode she holds to her faith in the States and hee natural' passion for her country, She be- lieves in the women, of America, in the college -bred girl. She is criti- '6/ Easiest Way 4.. to Clean • 3shusinteussperiankhiettdleoPnenas-1 , doaumr13 cloth,y be and ye' 1I1 1 '' • "..1..:;„ dirty, greasy, grimy as it may, Fanshinewill make it glist- '. llI ening, sweet and clean in a For an easy shine, use INE It's just as good for painted work and woodwork -for pots, pans, linoleums and bathroom fixtures. Panshine is a pure, white and clean powder withbut any ,disagreeable smell and does not harm the hands. Large Sifter At all Top Tin, 10c. Grocers Pi 1 1 1 1 1 .01 1 1 1 ' meri1111 ire 1. THE SECRET OF HIS POWER. Touching Incident Which Shows the Surpassing Wonder of the Prophet of Nazareth "And Jesus looking upon him lov- ed him." -Mark x., 21. This text is one of the most im- pressive in the literature of the New Testament, and one of themost striking illustrations also of the meaning of Jesus' message and the secret of His power, Here was the Nazarene talking to a member of that particular ;social class which opposedliiin most persistently and fought Him most bitterly -a young man who refused flatly to support the Master because he preferred the security of "great possessione" to the hazards of personal sacrifice, the very individual to whom Jesus', specifically pointed the attentiorrof His disciples as a. perfect example of "how hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God." And yet Jesus did uot hate this wealthy citizen, or despise him, or deride him, or condemn him. On the contrary, we are expressly told in the narrative He "loved him." Jesus Hated Evil 5035 passionately as any man who ever lived, He denounced hypo- crisy and indifference and selfish- ness with an overwhelming inten- sity of convictkn. He opened the most terrible vials of wrath which were ever emptied upon the sins of men. But for persons as persons He had nothing but sympathy, pity, forgiveness, love, Zaccheus, 'the chief publican ;" Nicodemus "a, man of the Pharisees;" the ionsan centurion, the rich veung ruler, the woman taken in adultery, the thief on the ernes, the priests and sol- diers who crucified Him -all were to Him as brothers and friends, No matter who they were nor what they had done, He loved them a,11, and by Rio love Ile conquered and transformed them 1 How different now is this from the ordinary practice of our lives! -How triumphantly do we eneceed in confusing the sin with the sinner and the evil with the evildoer! The patriot thinks he serves his country best who hates "the -foreign dev- ils" most. The political leader is sure that he is advancing his party's interests when he discredits his opopnent. The capitalist knows no better way of fighting labor than by despising the laborer, and the workingman in his turn thinks that the first step toward the attainment of his rights is Cordial Hatred of all Employers. We fight intemperance by calling. the drunkard "a beast," suppress crime by wreaking vengeance upon the criminal, and flatter ourselves that we are purging society of the social evil when we have banished the prcetibute from our company. Differences of opinion mean broken friendships, battles against evile become assaults upon men, crusades against unrighteousness involve the end of brotherhood. As one writer has expressed it in immortal phrase :-"We fight like devils for the kingdom of heaven and hate each other cordially for the love of C4od." We only have to think for a mo- ment to see that such practice as this is suicidal. Hatred one for an- other is the first condition of all evil; love one for another is the first condition of any good. Jesus was 'right; we must love -even our enemie,s1 - Rev. John Haynes Holmes. cal of the Englishman's rooted ob- jection to the higher female edu- cation. He must, she thinks, have a secret fear that the wife he finds so hard to understand even when she is unlearned, simple woman, will he absolutely incomprehensible when she is highly educated. All questions are to her the Women's Question, Her study has been the woman worker; the hostels she opened not long ago were hostels (the first of their kind) for the sex that Lord Rowton left out in the cold. But if her guest in Yorkshire not long ago was Mrs. Pankhurst, it does not follow that the duchess has given her support to' militancy. On many pointsthese two were in agreement; on many others they were in opposition. In America her Grace could, like ,her mother, be an out-and-out euffragette, because in America, out-and-out suffragism wins the vote without recourse to extreme measures. All the dacha, ess'e chief problems have been en- countered in reconciling of En- glish and American habits of mind, And East Hain believes she is solv- ing many of them with something very like genius. Use for Moving Pictures. One of the good uses for moving picture films is for recording historic events. Not long ago the King of Roumania organized the production of a fil01 of no less than 3,000 yards in length, this being a reproduction of the Roumanian -Russo-Turkish war which determined the Independence of that country. The film will be kept In the archives of the realm. In order to carry this out, the army lent 8,000 men in uniform, with arms and baggage, led by officers. Another case le that of the Italian Government, which is collecting all the films taken during the war in Tripoli. Til Eng- land the same thing is dello loo- the films of the king's coronation events. Study Economy.' The depletion of the family income Is due to many errors in food economy. Because of lack of judgment excessive quantities of food are often prepared, and then too much food is eaten or thrown away. More often too nmch food is eaten, and an extra amount of work is put upon the already over- burdened digestive n.pparatus, and a whole train of disease results. 1VInuy' kitchen . stoves are better fed than the family, because the .housewife does not understand the principles of coeking economically. A needless amount of fuel is used by not planning the meals so es to cook the greatest number of dishes during the time that much 051.1 particular work. Beneficial to Both "I had a long walk„yesterdaor," said Boreman, as he collapsed into a seat at Busyrnan's desk. "Take another, old man," sug- gested Busyman, "it'll do us both good." ' The Needle Scare. 'What's all this needle scare ,among girls'!' "I don't know. Can it be that some girl's mother has asked her to do a little sewing," . . . • • . I . • , , • Quit Dosing Your Children with strong Cathartics - Chamberlain's Tablets are most effective in regula- ting stomach troubles and con- stipation for the little folk -one tablet going to bed means a sunny face in the morning. Pleasant to take, they never fail. 25c. a bottle. Druggists and dealers or by mail. ChambedainMedicine Co. Toronto4