HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1914-07-23, Page 20
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ons. GUNN 14 OANDIER
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- 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 -
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Constance; John Watt, Harlock;
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Evans, Beechwood; M. MeEven,
Clinton PoO.
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Lelughlralley Coal
Coal that comes up to an almost
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Clinton News -Record
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Dr. Morse's
Indian Root Pills
owe their singular effectiveness in
curing Rheumatism, Lumbago and
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Cure Rheumatism
POINTED PARA GRAPIIS.
Necessity is often naietaken for
courage.
We refuse to judge a man's cher-
meter by his actions in public. .
Love may be blind but the girl's
small brother sees things,
.Many a harmless -looking bottle
contains a lot of fish stories,
And one good action is worth
more than a hundred good inten-
tions.
-It's a lonely day in a yellow dog's
life if nobody ha,nds bim a kick,
Gold may be the key to society,
but poverty is the etrongest bar.
Good judgment frequently ena-
bles a man to use the good judg-
ment of others.
Faith, hope, and charity belong
to the man who lends alio new um-
brella to s, friend.
A maid of twenty tries to mat like
a widow of forty; a, widow of forty
tries to act like a maid of twenty
-and there you age,
Two Objection.
Dad -What's your obleetioa to
that young fellow, Jaysportl
Daughter -His clothes are so ow -
fully pronounced and his English is,
pronounced so asvfully.
Patience may be the lazy ram's
only virtue.
THE CHILDREN
OF TO -DAY
just as they are -in their in-
door play, or at their outdoor
play -they are constantly of-
fering temptations for the
KODAK
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THESUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
JULY 26.
Lesson IV. The Pounds and the
Talents. Luke 19. 11-27. Golden
Text, Matt. 23. 21.
Verse 11. And as they heard these
things -The dialogue between
Jesus and Zaochaeus precedes this
parable. Jesus was on his way to
Jerusalem and the parable of the
pounds was spoken either on the
road between Jericho and Jerusa-
lem or more likely in the house of
Zacchaeus, and they who beard
were the disciples and others Who
were with Zacchaeas.
• He was nigh to Jerusale
About eighteen miles away, oe
hours' march. '
on -
six
om
ear
the
the
nd
ral
ied
etio
ng-
ar-
or-
a
elf
his
ial
nd
ly
d.
r -
in
ce
rn
st
ng
tit
on
al
er
r-
e -
Y.
s,
.10
ot
(1
1-
a
1
They supposed that the kingd
'of God was immediately app
-Jesus had been hailed as
Messiah. He had taught that
Kingdom was else at hand, ti,
the belief vsas probably gene
among those who • eecompan
him that Jesus would en -tee Je
salera in triumph, and' the Ki
dom be immediately , eet up.
121 He said .thesefore-This p
able is told for the purpose of c
reeting 'their expectation.
A certain nobleman went into
far country to receive for Wens
kingdom/ -The actin/as of t
nobleman would not seem unites
to Chriet's hearers, for Herod a
his son Arehelaus had actual
gone from Jericho on this erran
Arolielausa had met with the unfo
tunate experienFee cleseeibed
verse 14.
And to • return -The distan
would snake an immediate ran
impossible.
13. The nobleman -plans to te
the ability of his .servante duri
his absence in order to 'find a
who will be worthy of promoti
when he receives his kingdom.
Ten pounds -A. pound was equ
to about sixteen dollars.
Trade -That is, "do -bath/less,
as a banker or a 'trader.
14. His oitizens-The people ov
whom lie was to rule. In this pa
able the "citizens" no doubt r
•fenred to the Jews, While th
"servamts" were the disciples.
15. Having received the kingdo
-He now possessed fuR authorit
He commanded' these servant
unto whom he had given the moue
-This may imply that he owne
other slaves to whom he had n
intrusted anything.
Whattheyhtel gained by tradin
-Better, "what business they ha
done." It does not imply tam
each one had profited by 'his trac
ing.
16, 17. The manifest ability o
the first servant gains for hirn
high position in the kingdom tha
lie has just received. The kin
has achieved his purpose, wino
was to get loyal and capable gov
ernors. The kind of test mad
was not unsuitable, since the goy
ernors would have much to d
with provincial revenues.
18, /9. The smaller profit, indi
caking less energy and ability. I
rewarded with like additional re
sponsibility. • .
20, 21. The tined servant make
no excuse. He even thinks himsel
-virtuous that he has . kept hi
lord's money so safely. His shirk
ing responsibility, however, and hi
unwillingness to put fortiii anef
fort, show him to be unfit fo
greater responsibility.
AuStere-Timt is, "-harsh."
22. Out of thine own mouth wil
judge thee -The servant's owu
words have condemned him. No
other testimony is needed as to
his lack' of qualifioations for pro
motion. The eervant's opinion o
the master may have been wholly
wrong, but if he 'believed him to
be exading, he woultt also, know
that at, least intenst would be re-
quired on his loan. . So the actions
of the seevant were not consistent
with his .professed
24. Unused powers and faculties
are taken from us.
25. And they said unto hins-The
lieteners interrupt the parable by
saying, Lard, he hall ten pelmets.
The remainder of the verse gives
the reply of Jesus, after which he
concludes the parable in verse 27,
in which a more severe punishment
is meted out to- the rebellious sub-
jects than to ithe unprofitable ser -
vent.
She Had Tried Electricity.
• Mes. Carter had suffered from
rheumatism until she declared that
she had "no patience with it," but
she was always' eager to hear of
possibla remedies, and when her
sister wrote thal; she knew of a. cure
that had been tried with great sec -
cess, and would tell her all about
it on her next visit, Mrs. Carter
was all excitement.
"Now, Ellen," ehe exclaimed,
eagerly, a few minting atter her
sistai had reached the house, "do
tell me about that cure for rheu-
matism 1 I am 0,0 anxious bo hear
about it that I could hardly wait
for you to get here."
"Well, Cerolines" began her sis-
ter, "i s electricity-'
Before she could continte, Mrs.
carter interrupted her.
"Caroline Smith 1 The idea of
suggesting that to me 1 Don't yOU
remember that only last summer I
was struck by lightning rod it didn't
do me a mite .of good ?'
011Si dereil Gibers.
"How can you smoke those vile
cigarettes 1"
'Many geeaj, men .have done the
same thing. Robert Louis Steven-
son smoked cigarettes."
"I know that, but Stevenson had
the decency to go to the middle of
the Pacific Ocean to do
AGED U.S. SENATOR.
Senator Isaac Stephenson Is Cana-
dian Born.
"I have no specifie rules on long-
evity to offer," said United' States
Senator Isaac ,Stephemson on the
ISth of June when he was 85 years
old. "I believe my long life and
good health is dOe to the fact that
so much of my youth was spent in
the open. Many is the time I've
slopS on the snow in the woods,
Just think right and live right, and
spend RE mueh of your time in the
out-of-cloor world as you can and
you'll he as young as 1 am ab 85.
Why, I don't feel a day older than
did the day I was 20." -
By reason of strength this twll
'slender man has reached more than
four-ficore years, and his boast is
that he ha's worked hard ever since
he was a stnall boy in Fredericton,
New Brunswick.
According to ,Senator Stephen-
son it -is the idler who will be cut
off years before the anlotted span
of three -score years and ten, given
an even chance with the man who
works.
"Work is the greatest blessing
on earth," he repeated, "work,
and the open air !"
Also Richest Man.
The oldest man in Congress is
also the richest, and he carries the
responsibility of one distinction as
simply and naturally as the other.
It is a, far cry from the boy in
New Brunswick, who canoed up
the St. John's River on a logging
trip when he was 11 years old, to
the United States Senator from
Wisconsin, -who when he was 84,
fusn'bled check for $7,000,000 in
his fingers.
"I've just sold a little lumber,"
he said to the Senator aoross the
aisle. And that was only one of
many checks made payable to
Uncle Ike Stephenson in the seven -
years 'since he began work
in a lumber camp:
Senator Stephenson lives on a
farm at Marinette, Wis., where his
chief enjoyment is his horses and
cows, Pereherons and Holsteins.
Whereas he takes pride and delight
THE LIFE OF THE INDIVIDUAL
Religion Means Righteousnes in Every Iturnan
Relation- Of -In - None
"All in all." -I. Chronicles xii., 6.
That religion to -day is a differ-
ent thing from what is was a few
centuries ago is a fact which needs
no demonstration. The religion of
the modern man, as contrasted with
that of his forefathers, has under-
gone a hundred &lenges in inter-
pretation and application. And no
one of these changes has been more
remarkable than .the gradual ex-
tension of the practical influence
of religion to wider and ever wider
areas of experience. Once restrict-
ed to a very narrow field, religion
is to -day rapidly enclergoing -ehe
process Of universalization.
In early days religion was care-
fully delimited to 'particular times,
pieces and duties. There ,were
certain holy spots -mountain tops,
groves, lonely 'shores-- 'w'here God
could Ibe met; eertain holy hours
er seasons when he insist 'be wor-
shipped; certain rites and cere-
monies by the practice of which he
must be served. Religion was al-
most wholly a matter of approach-
ing certain eltass, offering certain
sacrifices saying eertain prayers.
These things done, 'a 2110,21"wasfree
to do
, Anything Else He Pleased.
We have a suevival in our time af
this primitive eonception in the no-
tion that religion is .a matter of
reading the Bible, attending public
se-rvices of worship or 'supporting
the Church, 'and that if these
things be properly done all relies
oue -obligations have been satisfac-
torily discharged.
To -day, fhowever, we have very
largely outgrown this idea. We are
living in a pe-riod which is charac-
terized by a practically undisputed
extension of religion into the field
of private life. It was less than a
century ego, to be sure that Lord
Melbourne could say in great wrath
on the occasion a hearing a ser-
mon svhich unexpectedly dealt with
the foibles and eine of individual
conduct, "Well, 'we -Il! Things have
certainly come to a pretty- -ass
when the Church interferes with -a;
man'private life 1" Rut to -day
such a remark only seems ridicu-
lous. We take it for granted that
religion primarily involves not the
artificialities af situal,s performed
and dogmas believed but certain
exalted standards of character, and
that the Church therefore has not
only the right but the duty of lay-
ing down principles of conduct to
which the religsous man must he
expected to conform. The moral
element, in other words, has en-
tered into religion for good and all
and made the clean hand and the
pure heart as vital a part of piety
as the bowed head and the bent
knee and the home as true a sanc-
tuary as the church.
The Life of Society.
Not yet, however, has the univer.
salization of religion been accom-
plished. For we are to -day only
just beginning -vaguely te realize
that beyond the life of the individ-
ual is the life of society, a,nd that
religion therefore must be made to
include not only private but -nib-
lic conduct. Long ago we passed
out of the stage of excusing a man
for lying, theft and adultery on
the ground that he is a church mem-
ber or a Sunday school superin-
tendent; but we are still in the
stage of apologising for a politi-
cian's oe a business man's offences
against the public weal because he
is a good husband and father or
never goes 'beak on his friends. Not
long, however, can this state of
things continue. We are beginning
to see that if religion has a place in
any part of a man's life is assured-
ly has a place in all parts of his
life, and if it has been pernaitted to
follow him to the factory, th, court
house, the exchange. Religion ap-
plies to everything or it appties to
nothing. Religion rightly observed
is life ,and life perfectly lived is
religion. This truth shall soon be
seen, and than will religion be "all
in all." -Rev. John Has -nes
Holmes.
Improving.
Husband -There you are my dear;
you see I'm improving. I've brought
the umbrella, back.
Wife -That is very extraordinary,
considering your umbrella, is still in
tie stand, and that you went out
with your walking atickl
Fond .Mother --"My dear, are you
better this morning 1" Dolly -"I -
don't know, mamma, Is the jelly
all gonel" Fond Mothere-"Yes,
dear." Dolly -"Well, I think I'm
well enongh to get up now."
Hibernian Wit.
'An Irish farMer was asked if he
used any oE the commercial fertiliz-
ers on hie land,
„"No, sorr," he replied. - "To my
notion there's nethi ag like the -old
barnyard kind."
Nonsense, mans' seal the other,
"the time is coming when a man can
carry the fertilizer for an acre of
land in one of his waistcoat pock-
ets."
"Maybe he will, sorr," returned
Pat. "An' he'll be able to carry
the crop in the other pocket, I'm
thinkin!."
.11[1110111,110:114WillOr
r Headaches
Here's the Reason and the Cure
senator Stephenson.
in bis hones and has for more than
fifty years, he confesses to an ever-
increasing fondness and admiration
for the gentle, placid cow.
He says that the cow is a philo-
sophical animal, practicing pa-
tience and calmness in a way that
is soothing to behold, and that
'should be a perpeteal lesson -to all
isiankind.
Perhaps it is because as he in-
sists, the cow has a, really beautiful
personality that he gives each one
of the kine he loves best'a, friendly,
familiar name, the most disting-
uished of which is Pauline. She
was presented to President Taft
and his family, and figured con-
spicuously in the domestic history
of the last administration.
His Whiskers Not White.
The oldest and richest man in
Congvess is also one of the nee men
in the United States Senate who
wear whiskers, aecl be it recorded
to his youth they are not white.
They are 310 grayer than Senator
Lodge's trim, proper, New Eng-
land cut of beard, although he is
twenty-one years younger; Senator
O'Gorman of New' York was not
born until Senetor Stephenson was
31 years old, and yet 'his beard is
as iron -gray as that of the man who
was 85 years old the 18th of June;
both Senator Lewis of Illinois, the
the yottrigest man in the Seriabe
wear a beard, and Senator Satiate -
land of Utah, only a few yean old-
er, age still unto -Oche -a with the
• streaks of White,
A smooth shaven, handsome chap
ann reached Seri ate r Stephenson
not long ago on the subject of
beards.
"Why do you wear whiskers,
anyway, Mr. Senator, in this hot
weather 1"
"Well, now, my boy." said Un-
• cle Ike, "when I was a lumber jack
up there in Wisconsinwere You
ever up there in that part °I the
000101 ±r7' in the winter'?"
The mouth shaven, handsoine
yoring man confessed bo knowing
nothing ohent northern Wisconsin
at any time of the year exceptae
he saw it on the map,
"Weil, it's cold," said the Sena-
tor with one cif his kindly, Whimsi-
cal sitiiles, ,quo to protect my
theoat, as well as. for many other
practical reasons,' I lei 71350 heard
grow. And heeitated,
now vio useq..to it, and
I've never found any sufficient rea-
son to take it Off. Solibere
Most men are industrial from ne-
man,"
bottle.
Most people at some time or another suffer from
headaches -disordered stomach, liver or bowels is
She cause -any one can be cured -one woman says:
Chamberlain's Tablets did more for me than I ever
dared hope for -cured headaches -biliousness -and
toned up my whole system -I feel like a new wo-
No case too hard for these little red health restorers. 25c. a
Druggists and Dealers, or by Mail.
Chamberlain Medicine Company, Toronto 5
Not a Useless Intoxicant, but a
WHOLESOME BEVERAGE
with dietetical and medicinal uses
- MADE AS GOOD AS WE CAN MAKE IT -
If not sold by nearest wine and spirit merchant, write
JOHN LABATT, LIMITED
LONDON - CANADA rio
THIS IS 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 eountry-
And sells them, too, at as low prices as ANY STORE
GAN.
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.
Cou ter
JEWELER and ISSUER OF
MARRIAGE LICENSES