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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1914-05-07, Page 10F G. D; McT'AGGART M' D. McTAGGART" McTaggart 'Bros. ----BANKERS -- A GENERAL BA14KINGlR•13USI- NESS 'TRANSACTED. isTOTES! DISCO'UIsTED, -DRAFTS SUED. INTEREST ALLOWED CN DE- POSITS. SALE . NOTES PUR- CHASED. II..T. RANCE -- NOTARY NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY- ANCER, FINANOIAL, REAL ESTATE, AND FIRE INSUR- ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT- ING '14 FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES. DIVISION COURT OFFICE, CLINTON. W. BRYDONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, , NOTARY PUBLIC, ETO. Oliloe- Sloan Block-CLINTON CHARLES II. HALE,.. Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET, - CLINTON • i DRS. GLUNN & CANDIER Dr. W. Gunn, L.R.C.P., L.R. C.S., Edun, Dr. J. C. Gaudier, B.A., M.B. Ofilee--Ontario St., Clinton. Night calls at residence, Rattenbury St., or at Hospital. DR. J. W. SHAW -OFFICE-, RATTENBURY ST. EAST, -CLINTON DR. C. W. THOAIPSON PHSYIOIAN SURGEON, ETC. Special attention givento die. eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Eyes carefully examined and suit. able glasses prescribed. Office and residence: 2 doors west of the Comiliercial Hotel, Huron St, Det. F. A. AXON - DENTIST - Specialist in crown and Bridge Work. Graduate of C.O.D.S., Chicago, and 'R,O.D.S,, To. ronto. Bayfield on Mondays from May to December. eta. te.t� AI TE4v' TIME TABLE - Trains will arrive at. and depart from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV: Going .East, • ' rt Going West, 7.33 a. m. 3.03 p. m, 5.15 p. m. 1.1.07 a. in, L35 p, m. 8.40 p, m, 11.28'p. in. LONDON,.HURON & BRUCE DIV : Goring .S,outih, 8.10 a. m. 4.23 pt m. Going';Noi•tb, 11.00 a. m. 6,35 P. _m, 'OVER es YEARS' EXPERIENCE; TRADE;MARKa , pastime COPYRIGHTS 1�C. Anyone sending a nketch and description may '- 0uad7 ascertain our Opinion u fie whether anforgotten is probably nAte Itsb10. Oommuntcn- tionastrtateyconedentlal:. 88500008 on Patents rentfree, eldest a oncy foreemtrmgputeut,, ?'stouts ,taken tlh'oupp.9sunn 6c Ca socelvq ewe/notice, Without o6arge.1n ilio C�eisafi . Jitterican. A bgnesonely iltuntrated Weekly. Lamest e . coha,n or nnv eatebatfle'Journal. Terme for Canada, E�g�•75 a year, pastaso preraiA.: sold bg MUNNs5 nearoaha(isro rere. rK-co sola4wery ® nrAgCil QJdl0o. c2s�irat.. washp�rrY (/rt� LlPPINCOTT MONTHLY MAGAZINE A FAMILY LIBRARY The Best In Current Literature 12 COMPLETE NOVELS YEARLY I. , MANY SHORT STORIES AND PAPERS ON TIMELY TOPICS' $2.60 PER VICAR ; 25 CTS. A COPY). 'NO CONTINUED STORIES EVERY NUMBER COMPLETE IN ITSELF' An ordinary cold is one of the very few ailments the modern physi- cian has been wildii'tg to undertake die Gore withellt, a surgical....opel'a- eion, Brad, Shorts and, Flour from the Rest Mills at the lowest possible price. WE TAY THE HIGHEST PRICE for 'OATS, PEAS and BAR- LEY, also HAY for Baling. •• Ford & McLeod GEORGE, ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for. the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Data ant The News -Record, Clinton, or by calling Phone 33 on 157. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. ALL ?KINDS OP COAL, WOOD, TILE BRICK TO ORDER. All kinds of Coal on band: CHESTNUT SOFT COAL - STOVE CANNEL COAL FURNACE COKE BLACKSMITHS WOOD 2% in., •3 in. and 4 in. Tile of the Best Quality, ARTHUR FORHES Opposite the G. T. R. Station. Phone 52. The McKillop Mutual Fero Insurance Company. Farm and Isolated Town Property only Insured - OFFICERS -- J B. McLean, President, Seaforth P.O.; Jas. Connolly, Vice -Presi- dent, Goderieh P.O. ; T. E. Hays, Secretary -Treasurer, Seaforth P.O. - Directors D. T. McGregor, Seaforth ; John Grieve, Winthrop; William. Rina, Constance; John Watt, Harlock; John Benuewies, Brodhagen ; James Evans, Beechwood; M- Maven, Clinton P.O.. - Agents Robert Smith, Hariock; E. Hind. ley, Seaforth ; William Chesney, Egmondville; J. W. Teo, Holmes - villa. Any money to be paid in may be paid to Morrisll Clothing Co„ Olin. ton, or at Cutt's Grocery,.Godericb Parties desirous to effect insur ance or transact other business will be promptly attended to on ale plication to any of the above officers, addressed to their respective post - offices. Losses inspected by " the director who lives nearest the scene. Clinton dews -Record CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms of subscription -$1 per year, in advance; $1.50 may be charged' if not so' paid. No paper discon. tinued until all arrears are paid, unless at the option, of the pub. fisher, The date to which every subscription is paid is denoted on the label. Advettrsing Rates. - Transient ad. vertisements, 10 cents per non- pareil line for first insertion and 4 cents per line for'"each elGbse- quent insertion. Small advertise- ments not to exceed ono inch such as "Lost," "Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., inserted once for 85 cents, and each subsequent ° in. sertion I0 eenta, Communications intended for pub. lication must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. W, J. MITC:HEr. , Editor and Proprietor. d OMES.EEKERS'. .E X'C UR SI O.N,S' To MANITOBA ALBERTA SASKATCIH'EWAN Each Tuesday March 3 to October.27,iiiclusivc. Winnipeg alId Return '- $35 00, Edmonton and Return •- 43,00 Prom Toronto, and Stations West and Nor.th of Toronto.' Proportionate fares from Stations East of Toon to. Return Link two months. REDUCED SETTLERS' FARES NE -WAY SECOND EACH �UESDAY, MARCH ANDS41Pn1G effects shoultravelling kETTLERS' stock1'IAI TRAIN'wblch leaves west Toronto encu Tuesday during MARCH and APRILafter arrival regular 10.20,p.m.. trate' from Toronto Union Station, 'Settlers And families without, live stook should use REGULAR TRAINS, fcavine Toronto 10.25 p.m. DAILY.. Through Colonist and Tourist Sleepers.. Thr oCO COLONIST T€IMLS to WesalPeA and .: West. Charge for Berths. 8 ON ALL TRAINS, No ¢Largs far $silks. - Partieularefrotn Canadian Paelfic Agents or.. write M. G Murphy, G.P.A., Toronto. A. Fanatic.. 'They say ;Istat Briggs is a tom- penance crank' of the extremist kind." "I should say he is.- He wouldn't oven bt'ty sleeks because bItey fre- quently take a drop, Dr. Horse's Indian' insn• R.00t Piro are not a new and untried remedy-. our grandfathers used them. ,Half a century ago, before Confederation, they were on selcin nearly every drug or general store in the Canada of that day, and were the recognized cure in thousands of homes for Constipation, Indigestion, Diliousness,Rheumatisnt and Kidney and Liver Troubles, To- day they are just as effective, just as reliable as ever, and nothing 'better has yet been devised to 'a Cure Common Ills The Star Attraction. Hostess --I six end you children deckled to come for dinner•.• . Little Josie -We didn't ,turn for ;dinner ; we tum bo hear ?Willie's 'grandpa eat his soup. Many a good sailor has been wrecked on the sea of matrimony: ' Forty years In use, 20 roars the standard, preseribed and recon mended by physicians. For 'Woman's Aihnents, Dr. Martel's Female Pills, at your'draggiste, THE CHILDREN OF TD DAY jest as they are -in their in- door play, or at their outdoor play --they are oonstently of- fering temptations for the KODAK Let it keep them for you as They a1'e now. Let it keep many other hap- penings that are a source of Pleasure be you. BROWNIES, $2 TO $12; ROD.fKS, $; TO $25. Also full stook of Films and Supplies. Wo do Developing and "Printing. Remember the place: TH E FIEXALL STORE Lehi liValle C g y cal TILE OLD 11 LIA.BLI .; This season we have changed our Mine to the Lehigh Valley, which is too well and favorably known to need any introductions. Thi.a brand has been used for very mangy years, and has always given the best of satisfaction, - Orders left at R. Rowland's Hard- ware ;Store or H. Wiltse's Grocery Store. ;Louse Phone, 12; Oillce Phone, 1:40. A. J. HOLLOWAY HA1`V BUSINESS '�g p '}AND S1' Sl iS .g9 -.pL D Subjects taught by expert instructors at the Zeeekle Y.M.C.A.BLDG., .: LONDON. ONS'. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept.: 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. PrincipalCilarteredAccountant 17 [rice -Principal STRATFORD. ONT. B ECOME a specialist in Business, It offers more opportunities than any other calling. To reap the full meetllre of success you must have the best possible train- ing. This is. Ontario's Beat Business' School. We give in- clvidatal attention. You may enter our classes at any time. lllhreeDearta p ]eats - Com- mercial; ,Shorthand and Tele- graphy. Write at once for otix'freel cats. ogee. D. A. McLAOI:ILAN, Principal, GR: N;O s"? 3OMESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS. To Manitoba, Alberta, Ssakatehe- wan. Each Tuesday, March 3rd to October 27th, inclusive, via Chi- cago,' St, Paul or :Duluth. WINNIPEG AND RETURN $35.00 EDMONTON AND RETURN $43:00 From Toronto and stations North and ?Vest of Toronto. Proportion- ate low fares from stations East of Toronto. Return limit two months, • Pull particulars • at Grand Trunk Ticket Offices or write C. E. Horn- ing, .D.P.A,, Toronto. Ont. John. Raneford & Son, Uptown Agent. Phone 51. A. 0. Pattison, Station Agent, Phone THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MAY 17. Lesson VII. The Bich ,Alan and. La- zltrus. Luke 10. 14, 15, 19-31. Golden Text, Prose 21.13. Verse 19: A certain rich man- Ills name is nowhere given, the popular title "Dives" being mere- ly the Latin for "a rich man." -In purple and fine linen -The outer garment was rnacle of the 'purple" and the under of the "linen," Both materials were very, expensive. The name "pur- ple" was at first applied only to the liquid dye obtained from a' shellfish, and later came to be used metaphorically for' the fabric dyed with this liquid (compare Prov. 31. 22 ; ?Rey. 18. 12 and 16). To -day it refers primarily to the color: 20. A certain beggar named La- zarus -It is interesting to note that this is the only instance in which Christ.givesa name toany character in a parable. Was 'laid ab his gate -The verb probably means simply lay. The position of the beggar at the gate, • or probably portico, indicates the grandeur of the house. 21, We are :not told. that Lazarus was not'given-the crumbs that fell from the rich man's table. The fact that he lay thereday after day and the rieh man knew him would indicate that he shared favors and abuse alike with the dogs. His position does .not imply, however, that he was nob given enough to satisfy his hunger. As the dogs were regarded as unclean animals, the poor man's misery would be doubly exaggerated by •them. No- tice, however, that he does not murmur against God nor against the rich man, Later there is no exultation ever the reversal' of. their positions. 22. This is, of course, only a par- able, and we should not look for special meaning in each detail. The parable teaches that happiness and misery after death sore deter- mined by the conduct of persons in this life. 23. Hades In general the abode of all departed spirits, good and bad, until the time of final judg- ment. Here, however, clearly a place of torment for the wicked, Being in .torments -The rich man was in torment because of his in- difference to the poor and his lack of sympathy, .It could not have been because he was rich, since Abraham himself had been a rich man.. . 24. Father Abraham -he rich man was a Jew,• a descendant of Abraham, and he appeals to their relationship,.and to Abraham's fa- therly compassion. Send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of hlsiiinger ireewater, anti cool my tonghe-How chatlged the environment! On earth every- thing was made' to contribute to his selfish enjoyment, He had liv- ed a life of comfort, ease, and in- difference, Irebad not been ar- rogantand driven Lazarus from his gate, hat simply unconcerned about others. There is no one to help him and he must implore bhe small- est eei,•vice• 25. Thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good 'things -He received these good things as his own and used them for his selfish pleasure, but he made no investments for the future life. 26. Abraham tells the rich man that it is impossible to interfere with his lob or with that of Lazarus. 28, Testify -A strong word mean- ing to "testify earnestly and thor- oughly." 20, 30. Jesus doubtless liad in mind the craving of the Pharisees for a sign, and wishes to warn them, es well as all of his hearers, that if they made no attempt to use the opportunities which they had, new •signs' and wonders could not permanently aid them, '31. If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be permitted;' if one rise from the dead -Jesus knew the books of the law and the prophets to whdoh he referred. Asa child doubtless, with his mother and in the sync gogne school, he had Seamed the prophetic precepts and warnings against sin and •selfr'&hness, ;and he knew that those who had been thus taught God's will need not walk in darkness. He knew also that those not' interested in these sacred teachings would not repent .and change even if one rise front the dead. ARE P'LANE'T INHABITED. fit t !ieltt.tidSly l 5 Venus and Afars Are --Seasons' Like Ours. That Venue and Mars, in our own ,planetary system, are surely in- habited iiha!lited by human 'beings of some kind lis the rassertioni of T. T. J. See, who w.rites :on duvet subject in a re- cent insure of Leslie's Weekly. C'on- tinu'ing, he gays that observations show that .Mars has a rare wt,nes phcre a day thirty-seven minutes longer than ours, aeasona of the same type, but no longer dura•biern, and snow caps at the poles, and thus welter' vapor,. though the amount ie small. The probability of Venire 'being in- habited is much greater than that of Maas; for Venue rotates in twenty-one minutes, and m all re- spects so closely resembles the eanth as to he culled her twin eister. Ve- nus has an abudnrdarnce of air, elou'ds, water nand else mounlbains, and therefore seas, lakes and rivers. The rseasioat,s are duke out's except they em ehoaater-the year being 225 days in length. A man never looks better than when be is looking foe another man who owes him money. AN AMERICAN PEERESS. Rich Indian , teas blended with &ivory Ceyllas. Lady Newborough. She was lLiss Carr, of Kentucky, and mannied Lord Newborough thir- teens years ago. A smart dresser and a lavish entertainer. Comment on Events Getting at the. Heart. It is a great gift to be able to sift the wheat or mindsom withte Gold vin Smitlivnlways habit let the rnud settle, I3e. wanted to eee thea irrelovatt lest had blown oaway, and. his was an intellect which could pierce. through clouds of rhetoric and seize up on the one little central- bit or fact or theory over which rival writers or talk- er's were beating the air. Says Mr, _Ar- nold Ffaultalrl in hes book on Goldwtn Smith: Numberless instances spring to my fnind of this his faculty of seeing through layers upon Iayers of misty ar- solidfa ment trdbeneath. Sbhold usthwhenstthie. whole eccnomic world was looking on and wondering whether New Zealand had really solved the problem of strikes by the institution of arbitration courts which should ax the Tates or wages, he quietly asked: Can any Court force an employer to pay What hocan't afford to Pay, or 'force an employee to accept a wage lower than he can obtain else- where?" So with the whole question or paper money and the right and ability. of the state to manufacture dollar bills ad libitum which once so agitated the western continent of America. People do not see," he said, "that a dollar bill' is not money, It Is a mere promise to pay. When It changes bands credit Passes at the bank of issue from the gle- et' to the receiver," So with the whole question or Socialism, "Socialists," over and over again he has said to me,. sole owns thamanutueturer;sla landlord and and. what -not. OVhat Is 'the state'? Is 7t nut the people themselves? 'She state` Is not a person who can put his hand in his pocket and make everybeetY ricer." It is well perhaps now and again t0 mean .these 'small solid facts beneath" netfs1eatetblshioheme00wy,aing the- ories and mistaking tlront for practice. Wheat Harvests of the world. January -Oh II I, Australia; and New Zealand, and is the finishing UP of liar - vest In Argentine, Eels ruary and March -upper Egypt and Southern India, April -India,, Asla Minor, Lower Egypt, and Mexico. hhi ay -Northern Africa - (excepting Ealsoritushora tint tl oharvest l'a.for b he United States, in Texas, June -Southern - Russia, Austria- Hungary, Roumania, .Bulgaria, Ger- many, 1,1111100‘ Southern itngland, and ??astern Canada,- In the United States the harvest has worked northwat'd, and Is now general in the Central and New lingtand States, and in Nebraska and Iowa. The P'aciflc. States, Oregon and Washington, are harvesting, and even South Dakota is at work. July is the gr harvest tIolylAugust-Tlgu,, Holland, year, Denmark, and Great Britain. In the United States, the North-West,. 'West- er'n Canada, also is cutting. September and October -Northern Rusglit, Norway, Sweden, Scotland, Western Canada. November -Perm, South Africa, In fact, this month is the beginning of the wheat harvest in the southern hemi- sphere. Argentina does a little in thin month. December -Argentina. This country finishes In January, By the distribution of the seasons Na- ture preserves a balance and prevents the eater's harvest. from .coming on the market at one time, Something to Apprehend. The aged Emperor I! rands Josef of Austria-Hungary,eighty-tout' years old, may expire at any time, Flls race is nearly ruts. What will happen. to his conglomerate empire whet he passes away has long been an anxious query In the chancelleries of Dump°. Por the conviction has always been held that the unity of the Empire hung on the Emperor's life and that when he should die it would fly apart. German and. Magyar, 0Iungarian, Slav, Cosai,a..Pole, Italian and other races make up apop- ulatton more curiously ;nixed than any other in Europe, and no two that are not racially antagonistic. Emperor" Prances Josef has been reported 711, and the sable may at.any moment Mawr •the news of his death. When that event oc. curs Europe will have something to ap- prehend; 114uat Live lip To Standard. Raney hoidls foreign -born employees' are finding out that when the Detroit motorcar• iii n fact tt g r lea o'I 1 Y d bed their wages liY hes pr'olit-sharnig keen ho did net intend that all the extra money should gointothe saving banks. Many of these people in their native lands ex- lateri in squalid hovels, baro, dirty and unwholesome, Mr, Sord has served no. tile upon then that they must clean un their homes and levo cleanly., decently and 'comfortably. There must be no more crowding their abodes with board ors of their own nationalities; no more bathtubs used as duck ponds. American wages must mean American standards or living. • r 't uof 0 t IilibtC. Illustration. �_ I't D e you believe e og v in metem- psyohosis 1 Fogg --Come again, please( F•igg-let's like this. According to that doctrine, my soul, after . I gel; through with it, may inhabit bhe body of a jackass. Fogg -Well, I don't know any place where it, would feel more ab home. The Consolation. "There is one consolation in be- hig ho.inely," eke said. ".And what'stha,t?" "Nearly obi bele other women are willing to concede that I .ata sen- sible and will make a good wide for, seine maxi." The way' to success is not a chute, but a ladder, TIIE INDIGNATION OF ESUS His Words Elaine up With That Scathing' Power Which Profound Passion Alone Can Give How weak a thing good will may become if not coupled wibh right- eous indignation may be. Men to- day in India. The great Indian re- ligions preach love and good will. A ;typical Buddhist saint for years has been immured within the wall's of the sacred City of Beneres. ,He sits in seclusion; contemplating the Infinite and feeling benign good will toward. alI creation: No grudge is allowed to disturb 'his kindly equa- nimity. He loves all men, good and evil, learned and ignorant, and no: grit of :hatefulness impedes the smooth running of his meditation. Hut he never lifts a finger to help a person, nor feels a stir of indig- nation at the evils of his land. When a typical Ohristian comes, however, love and good will mean to him a different tiling. They in- volve positive abhorence. He hates the system that makes debauchery with nau'tcii:girls an act of religious worship ; he -resents the apathy that leaves millions without education; lie cannot endure the traditions which enslave child widows; he is turbulent with anger at the spec- tacle of faMine sufferers unaided by wealthy neighbors, A. Good Christian. is a man of wrath, whether in India or in America. He has heard the injunction -of. Paul, who writes the thirteenth chapter of I. Corinthians on love, and then says: "Ye that .lovo the Lord bate evil," This attitude of tate Ohristian is a direct inheritance from Jesus. His wrath is the negative electri- city at one end of his life, canned by the positive electricity of his love at 'the other end, and by a law o,f eternal necessity the two are equal. Because he pities the un- fortunate, his indignation is pro- found when he sees a Pharisee rob- bing,widows of their propeety and for a pretense making long prayer s. Because .fie cannot abide insincer- ity, he looks in speechless wrath on a group of men who, themselves guilty of immoral practices, ale, on the basis of the `double standard," one for women and another for men, condemning a pitiable victim of man's lust. Because lie loves all mankind, his anger is kindled at the sight of a selfish Dives who can enjoy his luxury at ease while La- zarus, in distress, lies at his very deet•. In the presence of the Scribes and Pharisees, who regard the smallest cere'monia1 demanded' by the law as God's requirement, alongside of "justice and mercy and faith," he is so roused in spirit that,.,as Dr. Seeley says:" "Of the teachers of the past whose sayings have been preserved Mohammed would be regarded by most as the type of unrelenting severity, and yet we may search the Koran from beginning 'to end without finding words expressive of more vehement eonclenanation than those attribute ed to Christ," The Love of Christ. Let it be said with distinctness that love like that of the Master is terrible. It looks on Lazarus- and then it looks on Dives! It looks on the little children in the faotory--and there on the men who profit by their labor and on society that allows the outrage. It leeks on the poor struggling for bread- and then on the men who keep food prices artificially high. Iib looks on the "abandoned girl" -and then on the man who betrayed her and on the men who seek pleasure at the cost of her shame, It looks on the unprivileged, coming to their graves, as Sydney Smith said, "With souls scarred like a sol- dier's body" -and then onthe privileged who have enjoyed their fat feasts of Opportunity within sight of the starving .and have "nr, helped. A feeble and negative he- nignity can observe these wrongs to men and be unstirred, but a po- sitive love, like the Master's, ie roused from its depths with indig- nation. -Rev. Harry Benson Fos- dick. - ' Rubbing 1t In. ' "My dear," remarked Jones, who had just finished reading a book on "The Wonders of Nature,,, `'this really is a 'remarkable work. Na- ture is marvellous! Stupendous! When I read a wore: like this it makes me think how puerile, how insignificant is man." "Huh!" sniffed his better half, "rA woman doesn't have to wade through four hundred pages to fined out the same thing." A year ago he sear*, 't eat Today he can eat three square meals and sometimes one "extra" because Chamberlain's Tablets cured Stomach Troubles and gave him a good digestion. You try them. 25c. a bottle. All Druggists and Dealers or by Mail.' 3 Chamberlain Madirine CO, Torasio B SST 'ie9 LABATT'S STOUT Has Special Qualities MILDLY STIMULATING, NOURISHING, SUSTAINING A Perfect Tonic THIS IS THE TIME OF THE YEAR IT IS NEEDED If not sold in your neighborhood, write JOHN LABATT, LIMITED LONDON �ili♦ CANADA THIS 15 A STORE OF DEPEN ABLE 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 ountry-And,se'lls them, too, at as low prices as ANY STORE CAN, ar Everything we show you can be u' depended on to p p 13E exactly what we tell you it is. This is so from Tie Holders at a quarter to Diamon And it matters not what you may require nor if it belongs to a Jewelry stock, it's here. Prove these things any time occasion Counter JEWF . I i