HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1914-02-26, Page 2G. D:MeTt1GGAJi�T Bran .' •hors's
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NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY-.,.
ANCER, FINAI�TQ+IAL, .,REAL'
ESTATE AND, 'DIRE INSUR-
ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT.
ING. 12 FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANIES.
;DIVISION COURT OFFICE,
CLINTON.
W. BRYDONE,
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, ,
NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. •
Office- Slonn Block CLINTON
CHARLES B. iiALE,
Conveyancer,• Notary Public,
Commissioner, Etc.
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
Issuer of Marriage Licenses'
HURON STREET, - CLINTON.
'7
DRS. GUNN & GANDIER
Dr, W, Gunn, L,It.C.P., L,R,
C.S., Edin,
Dr. J. C. Gandier, B,A., M.B.
Office -Ontario St.,'Clinton. Night
calls at residence, Rattenbury St.,
or at Hospital.
DR. J. W. SIIAW
-OFFICE-
RATTENBURY ST'. EAST;
CLINTON
DR. C. W. TiTOMPSON
PHSYICIAN, SURGEON, ETC.
Special attention given to dis-
eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose
and Throat. -
Eyes carefully examined and suit•
able glasses prescribed
OtIIce and residence: 2 doors west of
the Commercial Hotel, Huron St.
DR. F. A. AXON
- DENTIST,
Specialist in Crown and Bridge
Work. Graduate of C.C.D.S.,
Chicago, and R.C,D.S., To-
ionto.
Bayfield on Mondays from May to
December.
�R' n1,.Rtl.NIt`.RT
-- TIIIE TABLE -
Trains will arrive at and depart
from Clinton Station as follows :
BUFFALO' AND GODE1UCH DIV :
'Going East, 7.35 a. m.
5.07 p. m.
5.15 p. m,
11.07 a. m.
1..25 p. m.
0.40 p. m.
11.28 p. m.
LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV :
44' u
Going West,
u 44
t4 44,
Going South, 7.50 a.. m.
11 " 4.23 p., m.
Going Nortb, 11.00 a. in.
0.35 p. m.
14 f4
OVER BD YEARS' -
ExPEI#Imice
TRADE MAR1 a
Deawhtva
"'COPYRIte T s &e.
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Invent on 1 probably ppatentable. commin lab-
rton.etrian eonedentlnl, URN0000K on Patent1
t mance• Oldoft o enry.ror.oaurI,, .1Cute.
55 ten o taken baronegt Mum dteC 1. seoelytt
'lpeM IVOEi6e, rrltbopt nuance, In the
neriran
helnesomely Mediated weekly. Largest tau
•nkat ne -t any •ecleatltla 7osmaL Tonne for
Canada, $5.76 a sear. -po isse yrepola •eold by
au nezwissiera -
MON.N �p a 3eltdndaal,NeW York
Hrr aoL oiKes. eft«p qt: W4ubteetoo. A C..
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EV crY -tiU M UE!l DOM PLETC .1 N ITU.E LI•
and Flour
From the Best Mills at'thc lowest,
possi�bie price.
WE PAY THE,:HfIGHEST PRICE
for OATS, PEAS 'and BAR
'LEY, also HAY for Baling.
Ford , & McLeod
•GE'ORGE ELLIOTT
Licepseil •Auctioneer for-tho County
of Turon.'
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ALL KINDS OF
COAL, WOOD,
TILE .BRICK
TO ORDER.
All kinds of Coal o1 hand :
CHESTNUT' SOFT COAL,
STOVE CANNEL COAL
FURNACE'' COKE
BLACKSMITHS, -,WOOD
2% fn.,� 3 in, and 4 in- Nile of the
• Best Quality.
ARTHUR FORBES
Opposite the G. T. R. Station.
Phone 52.',
Tile 1Vi oKillop Illutual Fire
Insurance ComDauy
Farm and Isolated Town Property
only Insured. '
- OFFICERS -
3. B. McLean. President, Seaforth
P.O. ; Jas• Connolly, Vice -Presi-
dent, Goderieh P.O. ; T.• E. Hays;
Secretary -Treasurer, Seaforth P.O.
- Directors -
D. F. McGregor. Seaforth: ;ohn
Grieve, Winthrop; William Rinn,
Constance; John Watt. Harlock;
John Benuewies, Brodhagen ; James
Evans, Beechwood; M. Maven,
Clinton P.O.
- Agents -
•Robert Smith, Harinek ; E. Hineh-
ley, Seaforth ; William Chesney,
Enmondville; J. W. Yeo, Holmes -
vine,
Any money to he paid in may be
paid to Morrish Clothing Co., Clin-
ton. or at Cutt's Grocery. Goderich
Parties desirous to effect insur-
nnce or transact other business
will be promptly attended to en,ap-
'.j3lication to any of the above officers
addressed to their respective post-'
offices. Losses' inspected by the
director who lives nearest the scene
Mr, • Wa• la,yem .
y i (suggeas'tivc:];y) f
' "Can't you help a poer lonely man,
' who haan'i, got' anytliing in the'
world but a`']oaded revolver 1"
Clinton News -Record
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Kidneys Wrong?-
1f they are yon are in clanger. 'Whcq
through weakness or" disease _the
kidneys fail to filter <the impurities
front the blood; trouble comes at once...
Backache, 321ieumatism, • Sciatica,
Gravel, Diabetes Gall Stones'and, the
deadly Bright's'`Disease ate sone of
the results of neglected kidneys. Dr.'
Morse c Indian Root `Pills contain
•a. most effective diuretic ,which
strengthens and stimulates Mie
1 Jcidneys so that they do' their work
thoroughly and well. Try
Dr. Mellrse'sl fit
.1Indniln' Root Pll1•ls
Man'i`s the architect of dais own
misfortune.
Foist} years in use, 20 years 'the
SiAIAitiud, prescribed • and recom-
mencled by phys''icians. For
WVoman's Ailments, 11r 'Martel's
Female Pills, at your druggist.'
"Rex -all
od`.
C.
Tablets"
WILL BREAK A COLD
IN ONE. NICHT
n •25 P
CENTS
,
Your money baok if`'thay i
don't, at
THE'
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W. S. R. HOLMES, Phm.B.
,e
ORDERS for Coal Wray
he. left at R. Rowland's
hardware Store, or at
my office in h. \Viltse's'
Gi�oecry Store,
HOUSiu PHIONE 12
OFFICE PRONE 140
A. J H'O L L O W AY
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The under dog'gets a lot of sym
panty, but what he wants is help.
TI=T'S 15 A STORE. OF
V J C
L7A B AL, 15
A, store that keeps in touch
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.
a . be de ended•' .0 n
�verythitig• we show you c n; _ . P Do , t0
BE exactly what we tell you it is.
This is so from Tie Holders at a quarter to Diamonds.
And it 'natters not what you may require nor when,
if it belongs' to a Jewelry stoek, it's here.
Prove these thin gs an time occasion ars es.
8 Y: s
'with,.. t'he
constantly
e
EU S LLES:
.TN S QDAY CHDO _ S D
I11TLRNATION 1.P: LESSON,
MARCII,'1.
T -- l; rt
Leeson 1X. Trusting in R ches a d
Trusting in God.' Luko 12. 13-34.
Golden 1.'ext, Luke,,12.33.
Verso 13, The multitude The
chow- ivhi4h-had - collected while
Jesus' was denouncing the Phari-
sees (Luke 11. 53).,
Bid -The man doe's not aslc' Jeans
to arbitrate, but oto giv-c si decision
»i his own favor- and command the
brother to divide.
Di} ide the ,inheritances Accord-
ingl:to la.w one third of the pro-
peray should go to the younger and
two thirds to the older son (Dent..
"L1. 17).
14. Mian -A se'ere forth of ad-
dress It implies disapprobation.
Glom. 2. 1;. y. 2o.)
Who made ane a julge or: a:divi
cler olei• ;yoti4•=Ib was the ofice-of
the courts Co settle matters of dis-
pute, and judges were appointed
for -'this purpose, Jestvs abstains
from interfering with, their eluties,
(Compare John le: -3F, )
. 15. Covetousness -That is', `'the•
greedy elesire to have more." Jesus
knew wdhat,vas at tihe root of the
malt's request, and he takes coca-
cion, to warn the whole multitude
against this sin; so' common an<l se
subtle
A man's Life con'sisteth' not in.
the abundance of th'e things which
he possecseth-True, life is some-
thing apalt' from posse�ssione, and
it ins pot enriched by material gain
except as this gain 'roar be, an ec-
pression of an earnest life.-
-16. Brought forth. plentifully
There was no suggestion'' that the
man's wealth was unjustly acquir-
ed. He -is, indeed; to be eommend-
ed•fcr -having managed his farm so
n=ell. . , .
17-19. Note how .'the ma;n refers
to' fruits, my •barns, my grain, my
goods, .and uiv soul. He seems to
feel that he •has no obligation to
anyone but himself, There is no
recognition of the work of. the ser-
van'ts who prepared the ' ground,.
,nor of God, lvho gave• Lhe increase",
20. God said unto him -This is
but a story and not history. I -t is
unn'ecessal,•y, therefore, to inquire
how- God spoke- to the man.
Is thy 'soul required -Literally,'
"They a.re demanding thv soul of
thee," perhaps a vague reference
to the Heavenly powers: The Greek
word •Etanslated `.`soul" also means
"life."
T1te things which thou hast pre,
pared, whose shall they bel-Pos-
sessions cannot purchase life. Not
even this nman's soul was his own
to dispose of.' \What are his pos-
sessions woi°th to him 2 (Compare
Ecc1. 2'. 18-23. )
21. Jesus°closes the parable by
reminding hislistenels that- a like
experience:will come to any men
who ann'3sses wealth .for himself
without reference to God, who be-
stows Lt d.
]lith toward God-Rie'h in the
things which are pleasing to him.
3
KING A.LFONSO'S MOTJLI:R.
i
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,iE, SELL' and I5SUER'OF
11' AR &IAtTh LLCENSE5`:
Plte Q teen Regent Successfully
rought Up'Iler Son.
New that King Alfonso and his
charms g English Queen have such
a cons' erable family, and the
crown f Spain seems at last to
have a rived at;'a pitch of security
which i' has hot known for seventy
years, ittle is 'heard of the ahle
lady w* ho "gave Alfonso birth, and
who h rself reigned in Spain as
Queen- egent rgr sixteen years,
Yet hese asic Queen Christina's
i r st in
happie ' years;. roll of me e
her so• and his country, keenly de-,
voted' her , Royal daughter -fn -
law ani . her nurneroIts children,
Queen Christina ies "resting upon
her tat. •els,' and.well may she do
so, for in spite of considerable per-
sonal.0 popularity'in Spain -where
slue is ,lipliosed bo have the "evil-
eye"- he has scored a triumph as
a Quee which has no parallel in
the res of the world',
It is g wonderful story, how this
simple Austrian 'urch eteltess, wid-
owed a a melt trying and untimely
hour,' b rought her one son through
the gr 'est dynastie peril's, .and has
lived t see biro firmly established.
on the roost rickety throne in Eu
rope, my a woman of tremendous
person lity and foresight could
as "Nig Alfonso XII,," he -loyal
ly,, th ugh reluctantly, obeyed.
7.he S aniards' had not seen him
for ye rs, and when they diel see
him one more they were charmed.
They beheld a -smart and dapper
young King entirely ,after their
own h arts, and they accorded him
as mrs h :loyalty`as ,can ever be ex-
pected in the land of tlie'pi•ond
Hidai s,
Tha ew king, was' not allowed tat
remain e 'bachelor long. He bad
long c eriehed a keen affection for
his cot sin, the child Prtiancess, Mer-
eedes f Mo$pensaer. The• mar-:
rialto as not, a popular one, for
the. b e'a, faymily :were disliked' by
tlie,• S niards;. bat• it eaa,.au "love;
affa i ,' and the Spaniards are
:liatl q t£ xtat clliv lrcus
-Qn t •e^•wed!dang'�` day Il<htg'Alfons0.'.
gave h s pretty,yaung bride'a beta
ifii1 r by;;.ring,;.. and almost frons
thait% ent tthe new Queered
health began to fail. In spite ei''
every ttention the girl Queen of
Spain my lived two. days a#ter tier
eights nth birthddayy,
Sho eft:no children, and the
'lear•rtb oken young King removed
;the rig and gave it to his grand-
mothe , Queen Gha•istina, wh,o only:
surviv d' the gift fo-r a few+ weeks.
The King then• gave the Royal ring.
to his youngest, �sistel in-law, who
went 1 her'gravo three months la-
ter i •
An Unlucky Ling.'
T_t^ taint the ting •was
r
uo � iiu 1
ka, t L -e ;[sings :4nglisb
tra»Iing had made 'h:ni skeptical tr.
:ell snpers'titious beliefs, aricl •he
procced:d to wear it himself,
He was very soon a "'stricken-
nian !" tls Spain's' first ne.ce5sit}=
was an heir (all, itb�o bloodshed for
man} years h wing been oaueed b,e
the failure of direct .heirs to . ire
crown) King Alfonso ppomptly rnaa-
ried again. He this time chose for
liis blide'the Austr•.i-an archduchess,
whri was ai gl eat-greataliece of, the
ill-fated Marie Antoinette.
This young Princess had been
dogged by misfortune ,almost from
her birth, a'nd when. she had pre-
se•nted h'er King with two little
daughters, , death overtoolc hini.
very sticidenly.
The sorrowing- Royal widow re-
moved the 1I1-omened ring from her'
dead husband's lhand, and •deckled
that it should never, again be worn:
So •she caused it to be. suspended
round. the neck of the "Holly Virgin
of ,tllmadeno, Madrid's prbtro:n
saint, and tliero it, hangs to this
day •
But youth and: hope were with
Alfonso's second widow, and when,
s'i5c inohtlts..after lier -husband's.
death, she gave to Spain her only
son, the present Ring Alfonso, she
entered upon a new career. From
that interesting - moment Queen
Christina devoted herself heart' and
soul to;the upbringing of her son,
so thactlhe might be ablet'o hold his
own against a whole nation 'of'
machinators.
Hinny Narrow Escapes.
A.nd right, worthy has Alfonso.
XIII. justified Queen Christina's
careful mothering of him. Time and
-time again ]has he escaped death by
the "skin of his, teeth.".Many an-
othcr woman would have removed
her precious charge from; an atmos
phere so volcanic, but alone she
stood by .hini all through the elan
have alalli•eved sncb a triumph f;
Prior to -the accession of Queen
Christina's late husband to the
Iberian Drown the Spanish throne
was a dynastie volcano. Kings and
I
r
f
f
__ Stain's Dowager Qneeu. ,
1
queen's canhe and went in quick
succession, followed by a Republic
being proclaimed,
Tho then ruler of Spain, Queen
Isabella, had lied to Paris, and her
son, the Prince of the Asturias, had
gone to England and joined 'the.
army a.t Sandhurst. He never ex-
pected ever "to he King of Spain,
and in England he was at least free
from the fear of assassination.
Sick Of Republicanism. '
' a�s((d t.1 u �+ f mFt �•i ar f
epi
�:
1
Thi ��� .p.
It's so important? -yet easy and simple when you .use
Panshine. • Removes all grease and grime. Works lit e
magic -quickly, easily, thoroughly,
• Panshine is a pure, white, clean powder
without any disagreeable smell. Does
not.hure the hands.
kee s ots and ane sweet and a et "
P P P PP lz>nS•
Cleans woodwork and paintwork.
Large Sifter 1 O�r' At all
Top Tin • Grocers
21
WE MUST SERVE THE KING
Our Business Is 'To' Do It In Utter Consecration of
Hand •and Heart
But the Spania•ids soon grew sick
of. the Republican statesmen, just
as the Portuguese are doing to -day,
and when they asked the Prince of
the Asturias to return to Madrid
ger.ous sixteen years of 11is minor-.
ity.
During these years she had the
sorrow of seeing h:er son's country.
deprived in war of all its once -vast
colonial empire. During Llys six
months that elapeed between the.
death of King Alfonso Itil• and the
birth of King Alfonso XIII., Qheen.
Christina's eldest daughter' was
Queen of Spain'.
This Princess remaiined heiress to
the Spauirsh throne for the first
twenty-two years of 1her life, and
when she fell in love with one of
the hated Caserta pra,n�ces. and in-
sisted upon marrying him, the.
(:ihuroh was in a state of siege dur
ing the wedding cer'emo'ny.
She had one child, and then died
in giving birth to,another, and last
year King Alfen.so's only remaining
sister died under p•recd.sely the same
circumstances. 'T'here seems oto he.
a fatal destiny attached tq hheirship
tL the Spanish throne.
Naturally enough, the deaths of
both cher daughters' have been a
sore trial to, the Queen' -mother.
:Queen, Christina -was but' 25 when'
slim *yes widowed, sand thou h nodi
loved, she is higlhl:y respected by all
classes of the Spanish people.
xx `t9 Z' e.
,h.el" _ ..
,,nn_
lrae
gg�fr,1 hood,
tb;rongla
rglddte
ffe'and'tight along to :014 "age
Cliamberistnlr T.hletssrewosn5n'a+
bestr, frim --bed •the a nervesi ale'
digcstior,; estop headeaheae, keey,.tl o .
blood rich isiOt assure good health
Q nex'atiy. fry, tit .-, 'd5t'. a boetH
Diiignirts sad Aerial's ar by mall;, • e
111,-mbeitla 1145st Ca.. Totvat+ p�
v ,1e d. f..c s - �QiiMd
' "'These were the potters, and
those that dwelt among plants ,tnd
hedges; there they dwelt with t:he,
king for 'his work." -I. .Ohronicles
it ., 23. '
I't is an unusual picture which is
given us in this verse, which blos-
soms like aan oasis iii the desert of
the first nine chapters of C'hroni-
cles. Here is one of those infre-
quent passages in••the Old . Testa-
ment which permit us to turn for
a moment from the resounding
deeds of despo'tio Icings and cruel
soldiers, of selfislh priests and an-
gry prophets; to the quiet lives of
the common people who made up
tlhestrength of th'e nation. "These
'wets tlhe potters," says our text,
"•those that dwelt among the plant;
and ihedges''-the h.ulnble toilee s
whose homes were far removed
from the great.eity of the king and
who knew nothing of "wars, and
rumors of wars," of the clashing of
dynasties and 'the plo'ttings of
priesthoods, of the strugglings of
the great and proud for power and
wealth and fame; We are tempted
now ancl�-again to forget that there
were smc'h people as these in an-
eient Ise eel: Bot •such a text as
,thy :shows that .they- were, all of the
time livin •• obscurely a, rd d =in
unknown just as they have always
lived atnd died, and always will
Until the End of Tinte.
Now as I read this text I amt int-
pre.ssed by the significaant et•atement
of the chronicler that these humble
toilers, were doing the �cing'-s work.
They were working for tlhe king
just as truly as the greatest snan.in
all the realm of Israel. The ob-
scurest potter among them, dwell-
ing in the host wretched hovel
among the remotest- "plants -and
hedges," was just as much a. ser-
vant of the king as t'he mightiest
soldier in . the royal army or the
proudest statesman in the royal
palace, •
And eight here, I take it, is the
.essential thing in human life. Not
how much have sve gained, our how
p• re ard-
.high have we climbed. bt L g
,less of poverty or weakness or ob-
scurity, are we doing the work of
trite King, and doing it £a4dhful'iy 1
"That is the question l" Gad, our
spiritual, King, has placed us here
to do Ha•s work. Where we have
been placed is no't of the slightest.
consequence, but only how we are
working, at t'he task allolt,d to our
care, Some of us. are great, some
"small; some famous, some obseu're;
some Lave the live talents, some
but the one; some are courtiers in
the palace of the king, some mere-
ly "pouters" dwelling ''ammong
plants and hedges." But ail of tls
'are God's people; all have some
part. of Goal's work to do, and all,
therefore, if we be faithful. atm liv
ing unto Heim. Our business is not
to seek the ranks and titles, the
gilded mappings and ,ii'spinyie the
wealth and fatne and power of tlhe
works. Our busine s is not to beat
another in the race for gain or out-
do a rival in the quest for' glory.
Ot1r .Business is to do Dior Job,
he it big oT •little, "to the limit,"
to serve the Ring iu• our plana, be
it high or low, as well as we know
'h.ow. We must be like the stars of
which Matthew Arnold says, in his
ramous sonnet :-
"Bounded by t+hemselves, and un-
regs rdful
In what state God's other works
may be:
7'n their own tasks all their powers
pouring,
These attain the mighty uvea you
see•"
In itis biography of John Gilley,
a farrher and fisherman, Dr. C. W.
Eliot says, in the closing par.a-
graph -' `This is 'the Life oI one of
the forgotten millions, It contains
no material for dietdnetio-n, fame,
or long remembrenec, bait Lt clogs
contain the material fen a normal'
human development thro•rgh uaing-
led joy and sorrow, labor and rest•,.
adversity and success, and through
the tender loves of clhil•dhood, ma-
turity and gld -age. Wo cannot: bu't
believe that it is just -for countless
quiet lin'e's like �bhis that God made
-and unllolds this earth." -Rev.
John Haynes Holmes,
a.eveoa��,aa,'� oos�a�aa Could Not Be,
4 He : "I thought of giving• you a
She: "Not with diaaaionds',"
f
'.l'uc're Punctuation Marks.
"Oh dear I" sighed \Verret; as he
acme in from •school one day; "I
wish we didn't have to learn so
much ai,bont periods and eomma,
and semicolons and such things• I
hate them.r'.
i,tasrnma land down her sewing and
said: "Why do you hate them,
Warren 7"
"Why, it'•s so ,hair- bo remember'
whhen to use them, and, besidles, I
don't 1Link theY a +re of much use.
I don't see why we couldn't write,
sentences without putting in any
punctuation marls."
rl.?amma smiled, and thcis rising
from her chair, .she went over to L e
desk and got out a piece of paper
and: a pencil,; Tlren slhe wrote "The
little• bu•rkey strutted about, t:he
yard aisd ate corn half, aar hour'•af-
ter 'his head wa;a cut off., t
"3I'Say, snnmmie, how funny 1''
exclaimed. Warren •when ha had
read. it. 'How, could e, tut key 'w�a•lk
amaito•cl sating rwrn, without any
' Hs cmebdn'.t,'' r piiit_1 jni:lmma;;
'la'nfid yet .I.havc ,vee ten itis- wiwtt.;
I hritessd cl tq wriie T l• r1i;s e hp -w
eves;.• left oast aI't'J- puecbuatioii
',Lll en elle bent down and punotu-
eked; the senterioe. I,v '1Jhen read :
"The little turkey strutted about
the yard and atte corn; half au hour
after, this heaad'wahn Olt off..
41011, 1 ale,'' cried Wiarrert. And'
then and there. ;he reeolved ±0 'lavrD
all':t+hee he could nboirt punetuatien.'
meer,'kr�e;.--The Ev�angolist.
Lay Beeouie Tart.
Bear �thii,s in mied ti noun n ,_lards,
The girl v lu call
May "later prove l.05) 01 chop.
Precaution.
"Our new employee has a bullet
head."
"Then be "careful bow you fire
hini."
S
"The Brew
that Grew"
Laab++
c�tl.•r�9.
Lon.,da')
La.
Sallie
S /aat 1Yalcqueo'''
ma le:saet1ht
Taax'TRt)I AVOR-�'.�1t11:,
Puma. ,TItY 1T1
LABATTS
INDIA PAI: E ALL .
XXX STOUT
Made and mntured.te
the old way
THE *05AL,nsVOPA86B.'.
,IOtrri LABATT
LIhITSD
4051)011, ' CANADA
30