HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1914-04-23, Page 5Ini-orsday April 2or1114,
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THE, CLINTON NEW ERA.
ti.°31s• , •
.e.
Otet. (Formerly IVIn ,) in a widow.
_
..
'the
-, .
. .
• ' , ' ' ' ' ' - a . ',:' - ,
r ,..0ANGER AFTER GRIP ' ' '
'
,
'
. . .
AMY ElfORALFZE11. '
"MY KIDNEYS HURT.' .
. •• ,
ee,ss ". dieutill
.,.,,,:„' ' ,!,.-g' •
a., ,' • -i.,', .9,,, :ii.
' .:.:-.. '. . ,:-. i...
en' : 'a' ., •,e,*,,'' ,:'
r n r-.1 I,'
: •': •s re ke.., .,,,.? i .1
e re.1,1•.' a
•powder
'
46 41t-----..
, ,• ,,. ,
..P' E RR
„. .,
Dairy Cream
re Of two kinds now
r lain '' and "regular"
YOU nre-sure to like
the, other because they
good as:you expect of
'
They dome in 5c,
'sealed packages that
their freshness.
_,
•clifs
very package
-
teed.
.,
'
i -
'. '. L , '.,
. 4".". et...Vr
pri, -'..
1,,, 1 6„,..,,., s
'
010)
,, ,
,
I. N. . ' S
.. . '
Sodas'
-the Po
`.‘- -119Y
soda biscuit.
either one or
are both as
Perrin'S.
•
lOc, and 25c
retain all
.
guare.n-
given „cotatnend, ,of right ,of. the.
line; end Will 'Preas' on rega.lidlasa 4
Mil,q0 . east. ,'Youunderstand, sir?"; e,
«Ooine.- ,, . . , , , -
hill! , Whitt ,abOut . the ,artillerY ?" .,. ' •
"Wta may net .be able: to, move the
uh.,.•he amstver d' "but you ' ' , to
keep, 'your. poWder as cirY' aSe messible,
' Clinton , ,' 'greatlY
and hod
'
will be 'sent' as , soon as. the
.
I could scarce se•e the fellow as his
• '
hOese whirled,': 'and , went. splashing
down the -Slope., Through the mist of
rain the men gathered about were',
. ' • ' •
• "All right, you water -rats come on!"
. 7', •
I gang, out chemfully. 11 0 11 give the
Red -coats the butts .of Our guns any-.
' . '
. ,
There wa,S a -faint cheer as the
, ' ,
drenched figures sprang forward rac-
ing alter me. Twice we r" 'up against
paities of horsemen eechanging
° . • - ' ,
shots, but these fell back, leaving the
road clear. BY dark we were at Eng:
•lishtown hungry and thoroughly Worn
e ' .
out, and there we halted, sleeping
-.Pon. our arms.' All I had in my hay-
ersack was a single . hard biscuit,
after munching which I lay down epon'
the ground and fell instantly asleep.
•..
,
,., ,
., .,.
' '''
,
.
:
,Terrors of Ritomant..Mititarisin' e • ' ' • • ' '1,
''ME. ALL THE '11114E
, ,
' : ' : The .00nditions eor service in , the
' '
%, ' , :: : : ir ' .,: :::: I .:',/ : : :, :: ' .' ' ,: H
Lies in" POOr BlOod• Cough.and
, . WO141-0,11t ,CotiditiOn. , ,•',
e '. , • ; ,, e e , , ' " , ' , , .
'. ,,, r.,
r
Lesson , .-,- .econ . uar er -of
,. . • ' ' :April 26,.1914. ' . : ' : : ,::,
-, ' . ' ! .''
, ' '. '
, .. 1,, :.
' '' ' : :
1. I
. ,. Illirell
'
' ' `
,
,
' Rhetunat
tha made
- -, ••
Zell.; 08
, ca. and
a cripple
clwanythine.
f . t
, et en
nie.
equally
several.
Some
Fru it-a-tives"
them faithfully
r l'isalvil:r1;ee
peinetvliatever,
the full
eure".
If you
iElJMAJI'
' , :,. : Y ' ,........: ' :
' .1 ' r r we , 'lit
Four Tears .U11111.118
Truk' "frruitl-tiveg"
, , . ,,,
. , .., May 201t.
r rut -a- iyes cured
sm. It Was•the only
an ' esSion on Inc
. .7 '17 -,. r
SP:frrer'r 'rem is-never:It
c., up or our winters V.--.-1
Musculer Rheumatism,
comp e c y, no being
Itl • tb'
I doctored with
; y •
paysicians, but they did
Other advertised 'remedies
unsatisfactoryi and 1 have
' '
neighbo'r of mine told
helped Min, and
every day ancl the
enema Foroyertwo ,ears
n free e3 -
a afdr go I ii 4 any,1,,,11 2
credit for making a remarkabld
.
W. T. RACHBR
are subject to Rhemnetic
. ' : , : :
1.11 it
, -
'
.1913.
, me. o
mediciae
Iwas
•'. e
1 I 'ale' ti'-
and was
•t
able o
four 111-
not he p
were
taken
•
me that
I took
remelt
now,
' ' '
a_ni: 'i 111,161 ts1,C,
At-
'
Russia a MY are tin e ea e, piece', -
ing to the correspondent o a Londbn
: ' PertWileal , that treats- exclUeively . of
. RUnpInll 'affairs.. This, correepondetnt
declaree that alb epy syetem „end ,ut-
ter laek of, consideration tor enlieted
Men, by the Officers, and theie brutal-
ity lie dealing with civilians have
crippled Pussies fighting force and
. .reduced to a low, ebb .the spirit of the
army. The article says:
"All military writers agree that at
least half the' strength of any army
depends upon the sPirit prevaili g in
. its -ranks: If they -are to eghtneseoll.
and successfully the men must be,
united by comradeship have faith in
. . '
their officers and teel that they ere
risking etileir live S for something,
worth fighting for. ' , '
"Looking at the Russian army
from this point of vie*, we cannot
but be startled by the facts of every
• da life amode the Cza ''s soldiera,
y ' I S 6.
pCloosinsirbaideebsyhipespcsiopnia•agcet.ically made lin-
"It mile not be itnagined that
spies confine their attention to pri-
vates. The officers are not immune
from the same treatment Until re-
G.:iii pins Cure Ti .' F
.. ' S,MPle Box Leads,t6. CiFe•
.,' Only those who have been tortefe
with kidney Trouble ean appreciate hoe
Mr, Trumpeiseeffered. Being a retiree,
man, he wee'Called upon to do all kind
of heavy work. The eerietant strain o
lifbthg, weakened the kidneys. • •
I received the sample box of Gin Pill
anclewas greatly benefitted by them. lel,
colda net Lift or stoop withent pain. Il
ficaiedtn,stLisw3\,vreareiniend thseuenheabrelyd Laclionticilletietian,;c
I have taken three boxee of Gin Bilis
.working all the tin t I •
, m a heavy work cn
the railroad and did not lose a day.
MANIC TRUMPER NT
i ' , e aPlume,Ont.
, Do sharp twinges catch you ns yet
stoop ? Are you subject to Rhemna
tism, Sciatica or Lumbago ? Does you:
Bladder give trouble' ? Take Gin Pill
on our positive guarantee that they wil
cure you or moiler tefunded, 500 a be,
(3 for 'n -( ' t• 1 1 I. •
caenot eb,stin trone dinggist. 'Sa.mpli
1.)01C free, if you niention tide paper.
-"1,0'.1,-.1,•'1' 'D' rn=g, a:csi sersh,e10::::c:oar.,Y:
Canada, Limited, Toronto. iee
, e , „. „ , e e .„,
re
, a' ' . ., ' ' ' '
,to be feared 'at. this •Seaeon,.
To prevent grippe from being. fol ..
, . ., e , , ' .
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIE$
' , , • "
, . . ' -
' owe y. either pleurisy or pneumo-Tsxt
ole, .. . . •
traces of it out of the, system.
, -
• Our 'advice 0 .to take Vinod,''eur
delicions cod. liver and hen Prepare,:
,
'tion without oil and get . your
strength and vitality back quickly.
- ' •
. W. W. Lake of Aberdeen, IVhss.,
says': Grippe let Me weak run-down
, .
and with a severe cough from. which _
,
I suffered for a, long time. I tried.
, different remedies, but nothing seem-
ed to do Inc'any geed until ele• took
' Vinci from evhich I received , great
•
benefit. My cough is almoSt entirely
gone and I am strong and well again,"
Try Vine with the certainty that
if it does not benefit you we Will give
back your money. .
• W. S. R. Holmes, Druggist .
Clinton, Ontario ,
, ,
�f the Lssson, k ..
Memory Versea .,8•10 -Golden Text,
. . . e, ,
Luk.e., xY, 1O -Commentary PrePared
by Rev. D. M. Stearns. ‘ ' ‘ : , f
There was ,sernething in Elis teaching
which reached the bearts•of these pun.
- .
licans and sinners who were so de-
. . 1 ,
spised by the se f righteous pleiriseee,
Ile was hill ot grave lind truth; they
!mew the truth that they were sinners
and they needed the grace that was In
Hem. He taught as one havlug atitlior.
,
ity rind not as the seribese never man
spake like this mai] (Matt. nil, 29;
Jaen vile 46, That which the Phial.
sees sneeringly said, of 13101, "This inan
receiveth sinners and eriteth with
them." was, and still is, gloriously
true' He is still sayiue "lf any WAD
say
. ''
hear my voles and open the door I will
come in to him and will sup with him
he
ta ' ' •a, '
Sciatic Lumbago or Neuralgia,
tak "Fruit -a -lives" right now and start
centl ' ' '
y political charges made by the
secret police against officers of the
BLOODROOT.
the permanent cure which "Print -a-
tives1 'edit complete if taken faithful-
ly, eoe a box, 6 for $2.5o, trial size, este
At dealers or sent on receipt of price by
Fruit-e.-tives l,imited, Ottawa.
' '
artily had to be inquired into and
verified by the Ministry of War. But
the gendarmerie naturally disliked
this procedure, as it .91100 exposed
the worthlessness of espionage. The
chief of the
.
• (By Bliss Carman.)
When April winds arrive .
• And the soft rains are here, •
Some morning by the roadside
These
• tene siVnining Wien.
.
One , does not took to one's .wallt-
ing stick to tell the dale, but earlier
sticks often combined the functions
of alraanacs and staffs, for our first
almanacs were simply "the coursee
of the mooiles of the whole year en-
• ' " •
graved -upon sticks, and those weo
went on distant pilgrimages soon
saw the advantage of turning the
heads of their staffs into almanacs.
rhea'. sticks were at once p a' '
guides to assist them in arriving neat
the recognized assembling places 1
pilgrims at the correct time -Lon-
don Globe. i
and with Me" (Rev. ill, 20).
The .word here tranelated "receiv•
,..
etb" Is generally translated "waiting
or looking for." Weymouth's render-
lee ie eel e• • ' %.,i,
e eites 11 V. 1.. come o) no e-
''''' -' t t
rious sinners." Not only does 13.e ree
ceive sinners when they come to Blue
(John vie 30. but He is on the lookout
f • them LI • k 1 t
el em. e came to see am o
save that which was lost iLince xix.
10). It' we are truly Ills disciples, at,
inthe last I will seek In
essmi" We' 000. " '
all the world tbe lost oues whom Ile
came to ,
save the 3whosoeiers" who
will make up Ms body, the church.
Their murmuring led Him to speak
the threefold the lost
Send 10c in coin or stamps
, a...ea and your grocer's name for
Look fo, tho the"PerrinSamplePackage"
aerie neeo of otherPerrin Biscuit Bain-
Marko° ovary ..,
packago. ties. .
.7
D. S. PERRIN & COMPANY
LIMITED
, LONDON - CANADA
.
CHAPTER XXV. •
. .-
• The Fight at Monmouth.
The next day -Sunday, the twenty-
;eighth of June, 1778 -dawned with
!cloudless sky, hot, sultry, the warmest
!day of the year. Not a breath of
•
air stirred the leaves, and in the tree
branches above us birds sang gleeful-
ly. Before daybreak we, who bad been
,permitted to sleep for a few hours,
,
.
l;loderieh
. , ,
Groderich, April 15. -Quick action
on. the part oE Joseph, Linch, a
farmer' near Caanienon Castle, pro-
bably saved, the pasestagers1 of the
Canadian Pacific train from loss of
life and serious injury Just before
'' '
the, train appelarielca atethis point,
where the track is around e quick
curve, Lindh noticed that (many
tons of blue clay, loos.enerdby the
thaw had .slipped down (mit° the
track. He flagged, thetrain just in
time.
secret police therefore
applied to Pen. Sukhomlinoff, the
Minister of War, asking that any in-
formation about any arnay officer
coming 'f h•should b
from is agents e ac -year
cepted by the military authorities
without uestion• M. Sukhomlinoff
q '
'fully agreed to this suggestion, gave
orders accordingly, and added. that
the olice reportsho Id b kept
P s u ese-
cret from the officers concerned. Thus
every officer is now at the mercy of
every turncoat and spy without being
given a chance to refute the allege-
tions against him.
"Duelling is encouraged and some-
gipsy folk appear.
.
We never see their coming,
However sharp our eyes;
Each if b
as y magic
They take us by surprise.
Along the ragged Woodside
And by the green spring run,
Their11 white beadsnodd
sma are ing
And twinkling in the sun.
,
They crowd across the meadow
In innocence and mirth,
As if there were no sorrow
In all the lovely earth.
,were aroused by the sentries, and, in
the gray dawn, partook of a meager
breakfast. A fresh
eieseees=e.e,„
t
supply of ammuni-
tion was, brought *up and distributed
•
My. Lady
6r Doubt
I
'
among the men, and, before sunrise,
we were in line, stripped for a. hot
day's work, eagerly awaiting orders.
. I can make no pretense at describ-
ing in any detail, or sequence, the
memorable action at Monmouth Court
House, but must content myself with
•
Th .
' " 10k,
If
color,
lacks
and
hair
If
if is
- 1
ruff
daly
the
dandauff
and
is
Parisian
Holmes
is
bdttle
makes
twice
disappointed
reff-Use
your
coming
that
beauty
is
it is
harsh
b .'
u lie.
it is
and
,scalp
,
itching
doubly
just
colts
tl
the
as
Soft,
hair
enviable
largely
too
and
at 't
e 1
becauee
flakes
with
. disappears
Joeautiful.
Sage,
and
what
' hair
abundant.
Fluffy,
out
do
thin
.
head
at
you
• 50
in
-
and no
Parisian Sage.
is losin As
and splitting,
eottndss,
not daepair-pretty
a matter of
make it grew
b •ttl s ft
Ifrl e havee' en"
you.
the scalp
off. Freshen
Parisian Sage,-oll
, jailing
cea.se, your
sold by W.
all drug counters,
M'eleica-a
, nts It
c'Eli • d
lus 'rous an
You cannot
Parisian Sage.
.
Dand-
natural
floss
care.
A
dad-
is too
hair
hair
' S,
large
sin Ye
seems
a
or
If
un
up
It
le-
u
be
,
parable of sheep,.
the lost coin and the lust son. in wialch•
we see the love or the Son as the
shepherd. the love of the Spirit and the
love of the .Father. The love of God is
the greatest topic in all the Bible aud
was specialize manifest In His giving
His only Son for us that we might
not perish, as it 0 written, ..iu this
was manifested the love of God toward
us. because that God sent 1315 only be-
gotten Son •inte the world that. we
might live through Him." "Hereby
nerceiVe we the love of God because
'
13e laid down His life for us" (I John
ill, 16; lv, 9a. The story of the shep-
11.1 dl h if di'
et an the lost s eep s bound a so
in Matt. xviii, 11-14. and the record of
the Good Shepherd is found most fully
i nJohn x, where He not only rives
for the sheep. ' but gives Ills life for
them. In our lesson Ele is seen seek-
tle
i e till IleI 1 1 ' Eli h 1
Inds; ay Lig 1 on s s ou -
ders, rejoicing, bringing It safely home
and callin othes to rejoice with Ellin
. g • .
In Hob. MIS 20, 21, He 0 the. Great
Shepherd 'ho, having found and say-
ec. n usw i e s we
1worksi that I I b 1 li
pleasing in His sight. In 1 Pete v, 1-4.
,
Centralia
'
After a angering illness, .-whieli
anifereed atetired life since his
removal from, London two years
ago, Rev. jarne,s H. Orme idtied here
Tuesday at the age of 16 years, For
20f tears Mr. Orme. was ,ea rese.dent
o , tendon, and for the gr a i par a
o f itl at time was .secreehry of the
Westee•n Ontario Bible Society,
which then had a distributing
center there. Previous to that time
hehad beim in active work in the
Methodist ministry, but illnesseforc
to go into more congeheial
times forced. An arrogant attitude
toward peaceful citizens, especially
e endent in their oli-
If they are ind p. . p
teal opinions, is interpreted as aexquisite
.1audab, le raanife station of "military
honor and loyalty, while heartless,
ic r ureel atreatmentrdodao. .
,00fodthedisrylittnaend file
8 "kg writer 'named Kulelliitsky. has
bl' h d 1entitled'
pu is e a vo ume Advice
to Young Officers.' In this book,
which deals, among other things,
with possible. quarrels between offi-
cers and civilians, the author says:
'Hill on the spot and with a single
.
blow A living man may harm you,
So frail, so unregarded;
And et about them clin s
y g
That perfection,
The soul of common thin st
g .
,
ThTinbirettyot;. the springing pastures
starry tvigil kept, ini ht
To hear g e In g
Some message while we slept?
• '
How else should spring requickes
Such glory in the sod?
I guess that trail of beauty
Is where the angel trod.
-.1
God, and we'll have a go at the Red
coats. Lafayette commands the ad.
vance, and Wayne will be up within
a few hours. We are to skirmish for-
ward toward Monmouth Court House;
Clinton has turned that way." •
"You learned that from a scout?"
"Yes; he just came through; one of
Charles Lee's men, I understood -a
blue-eyed, rosy-cheeked boy, who said
his name wals Mortimer. He had rid-
den from Cookstown, and was reeling
in the saddle, but would go on. Your
men are over there, major, beyond the
clump of timber. In my judgment
we'll accomplish little today, for
there' is a heavy storm in those clouds
yonder."
"How!dashed
many men will we hav,e when
Wayne comes up?"
"About four thousand, with the ml-
litia. We are .ordered to hang close
to Clinton's left, while Morgan circles
him to the right. 'Tis said the Brit -
ish have transports, at Sandy Hook,
and are trying to get there; that was
_
the word young 'Mortimer brought in."
The bath in the water seemed to
have helped niy horse, but I rode slow-
ly, 'up the valley toward the wood
_
which s,erved as MY guide. Refose
1 reached the skirmishers, great. drops
of ram fell and then a downpour, ut-
,
terly blotting out the landscape.
Lightning flashed, the thunder unre-
mitting, the rain a flood, water leaped
down the side of the hill cascades,
,
Etnti, blinded, I drew my horse back
Into the slight shelter of the wood,
end -waited, gripping him by the bit.
Men ran back down the hill, seeking
shelter from th•e fury of ft, and I bent
my head, soaked to the skin. For the
first time I realized how tired I was,
every muscle aching with the strain
ef the long nig
• ht's march, my head
throbbing from the awful beat of the
early morning. I sat down in the
mut; and water; my arm through the
bridle rein, my head against the
•
trunk of a tree which partially pro -
tected my face from the beating ram.
But there was no sleep possible.
My mind pictured the field of action
'
reviewed the events leading up to this
tiour, and, as surely; reverted to Claire
Mortimer. I had almost forgotten
die,eturdy downpour so intensely was
I thinking, when a courier came spur-
ring forward, blinded by the storm,
Vet riding recklessly. He must haveThe.
seen the.group of men huddled at the
3dge of the.grove, for he drew up hie
aorse, calling my name.
"Major Lawrence, I come from Gen-
eral. Maxwell," he shouted between
the Crashes rif thiinder. "You are
.
depicting what little I saw upon the
flring line of Maxwell's brigade We
., advanced slowly eastward .over a. gent-
ly rolling country, diversified by small
groves. In advance was a thin line
of skirmishers, and to left and right
were Dickinson's and Wa n '
Y e s men,
their muskets gleaming in the sun-
light.. Early the rumor crept. about
among us that Le hal. '
ecome up dur-
'edlliim
ing the night. with fresh troops. and
'assumed command. -
1 Wh led f
Whous was o but email conse-
,quence, however, as there was now no
doubt In any mind but what battle was
;inevitable. Alreadyt the h
o e aout
Isons
echoed a sound of firing where Mor-
1•
gan had uncovered a column of Dra-
1
goons. Then , a courier from Diakin-
along our rear seeking
ILee, scattering broadcatit the 'welcome
Inews that Knyphausen and his Iles-
sians, the van of the British move-
!merit, were approaching. With a cheer
lof anticipation, the solders flung aside
'every article possible to disc •d and
i ill ,
!pressed recklessly forward. Before
We moved a mile my horse became so
lam I ev bl' d t d• t d
e, a$ 0 ige o ismoun , an
' proceed on foot Never have I experie
;enced a hotter san, or .a more sultry
, R hi 1 dlel
a r. apid mare . ng was mposs ,e,
,
yet by nine o'clock we had paseec,
the Freehold meeting house, and were
halted in the protection. of a consider-
blthe d • ' to th,
a e wood, ie men lopping
:Max-''
ground in the grateful shadow. Mcould
' well came along. back of our line, lus
.
•horse walking 'slowly, as the general
. ' .
mopped his streaming red face. He
'Suppers
failesl to recognize me among the oth-
ers until I stepped out into the boiling
SIM, and spoke: . . . r
'What is that firing to the right,
general? Are the Jersey militia in ac-
'ten' '
He drew up his horse with a jerk.
"That you, Lawrence? Can't tell
anybody in this shirtsleeve brigade.
' What's become of your horse?"
: "Gave out yesterday, sir. Havecases
been on foot ever since. 0 it going
to be a fight.
' The grip of his hand tightened on
the saddle pommel, his eyes following
the irregular line of exhausted men
, - '
"Yes when Washington gets up;
' - '•
You need never doubt that: We'd be '
at it now, but for Charles Lee. I'd
' like well to know what has come over
that man ef late -the old spitit seems
to have lett him. Aye! it's•Dickinson ,
and Morgan out yonder, wasting geed
powder and, ball on a handful of Dra-
e , . .
'' ' I*
eee
rc- A.-
.91,.. '
.TO)r4)ri
w rl During his e iden in Lon
i r s ee
don c. ' '
n he resided on Richmond street
Two years ago became to theresi-
denee of his son, Dr. J. W. Ciernel
here, where he had lived
ever sineel, 'Heis survived by two
and two daughters, Dr. J. W.
D T D
Orme, of this place, r. T. . Ornae,
of Lucan; Miss Emma Orme, of Cre
cliton, and Mrs. Fullerton, of Sarnia
Mrs. Orme preldiefeeased her hue -
b d four years ago..
anvie funeral
was held on, Thursday morniliag
from the resid
!eence 011110 son here
re ,
m r
Interment .was madi,e at ount leas
ani Cemetevy, Londion.
•
.while a dead one Is harmless (i.e., as
a witness) in case of a trial.' This
book is recommended by commanders
to their young officers on leaving a
certain military school.
- This encou t f 1 1
ra.gemen o aw ess-
ness certainly does not strengthen
the necessary discipline in the ltus-
Si'Lli army. While exacting from the
`Using
privet? absolute obedience to a su-
perior s order, however idiotic or
lawless, and absolute conformity to
„
formal to
' rules which have nothingw
do with the military efficiency of the
soldier, the bullying officer no longer
,
The pantagraph principle has
been applied to the oxygen-acety-
lene Heine apparatus for cutting
metal to permit the worke to be
done accurately at a distance from
a desired pattern
- • '
delicate electrical .appara-
tus for his experiments,i' a Ger-
man scientist has (reached the 000 -
elusion that living fish are of the
same temperature AS the ater
in 'which they live.
'
Quick Switch.
Two men who went to a hunting
camp together soon found that nei-
ther possessed any skill in cooking.
After two da of continuou
lays s com-
0 about the food they made
-laining • •
the agreement that the first man who,
grumbled should pay $1 0 to his cora-
panion. At breakfast the following
morning one of the eampeas began
'llinna 50000 flapjacks made by the oth-
er member of the party. These are
about the toughest' imitations of the
real thing I ever ran agalnet," he ob-
served sourly, but as he saw his coin-
panion's face light up at the prospect
of obtaining the forfeit he quickly
added "Bet that's the eVa I Like
' Y
'era." .-
Lle is the chief shepherd rewarding
His own for faithful service. Thus
we have again the threefold aspect of
,
our ie a ion o 1 ns n----
1 t' t 'El'm i last lesson-
saved, serving, waiting for Elim. 1
. .
have ofteu been glad that schen He
11 cl• • h• II h •• i I • Li
11 S WS s eep - e !lugs t mine, e
does not drop it by the way. And
whin; a plate It is to be on Ells, shout-
ders its and our biirdeus, too i Dent.
xeNiii 12. Ise 0 e "i There must
•be-'nio*re slguitle.tinCet 'La' n we Lin ve 'ever
__ • • „a
seen in teem! words, 1110 Lord is my
shepherd," and it' we hilly believed we
not but 'rejoice (I Pet. 1, Si.
W On1.11.1 is 0 type of the church, both
,The
true and false, but here she represents
h r i
the true clime In the power o t le
Holy Sph•it
acknowledges any binding discipline
--
A Source of Glory.
so far as be himself is concerned."
„
. ..
•,?,FTER
All Scotsmen take' •
a pride in their
native land, but none rnore than the
old gardener of Duclilingston, of
whom the New York Tribune tells
the following story:
The gardener was showing to a
tourist the beauties of the loch and
of the little village. It was evening,
and as he expiated on the lovely
scene and on the glories of his coun-
try, the moon rose over a hill.. t
old man stopped short in he
middle of a speech and .gazed at the
• d i i
moon in a m rat on.
After a moment he turned to the
• ' oo
tourist and sail: "There s a m 0
fur ye: 3 tell ye, mon, we're a
grand nation!" .
HINTS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
Write on one side 01 paper only.
Mail to reach us Wednesday of
each week or sooner.
Avoid allatems respecting on per-
sonal character but send Alt the
News.
CI I f this' ' • •1
me i of Intl may assist
you to remember an • important
„ern.
l'e
Births. M rr• o• s D ths
, 1 a iaae. , ea .
Accidents, Church News
or Pregentations.
Removals Visitors,'
,
Lodge News, Fires,
Public Improve nt 5 '
VS e .
Law Cases, the iCrop.s.
.'
.
SICII4ESS
OP*
'
' Rio
to accept
holic
gal
r'-'"', '
e,
`ea'.
a
mixtures
,
O.P
TO
, ., • ,
' '1/4
.4-• -'\,..,..
-4e-ea `---
pathetic mistake
drugs or °deo.
when
.
'
se
e,
-
. .
•
-.
•
,-,
.
•
'1.
i'ii
nature
.
, _
e vere
Sett led On Her
Lungs'.
-.-
.
Mrs. Geo. Murphy, Spence, Ont.,
writes: -"I have had occasion to use
Dr: Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and
can Say it most certainly is a wonderful
•
medicine Last i te little girl,
w n e lnY
just a year old, took a severe cohl which
settled on her fun s Itried everything,us
g • ,
and was almost in despair, when by
chance I read Of Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup, and decided to try it. I
,
gottwo bottles, an as soon as I started
,
to use it I could see it was taking effect.
1 gave lier three bottles in all and they
,,
completely cured her. , • ,
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup i
-s a
universal remedy for sufferers from all
bronchial troubles. Coughs and Colds
of all kinds, Bronchitis, Sore Throat ,
Hoarsenes,s, . Croup, Asthma, Wheeping
Cough, and Throat and Lung Troubles,
disappear quickly after a few doses have
been taken.. . ' ' . . , ,
It will stop that distressing,tickling
in the throat whichcauses
coughing an e keeps you awake a mg , .
kt • ht
'
Price, 25c; large family size„ 50c.
Put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine
trees the trade rnarkaa manufactured
Th T M•lbu n mited
only by e , i r . Co.,a ,
,
Toronto, Ont. ,
- ' eee • , ,
,Refuse substitutes, , .
'----7.';e:1;
seeking diligently that
whicli is lost. Tbe sheep set before us
one phase of the condition of the lost,
9s When' we read. "I have gone astray
like a lost sheep," "All we like sheep
have gone astray" (Ps. exix, 17(3; Isa.
,
1111. ffi. The piece of silver may sue-
gest the indifference of the lost, as
when we read of beine. dead in ties-
passes aud sins (Eph. 11, l). In both
the Lord is the seeker, as Lie
,
has always, been over since He sought
Adam in the garden of Eden, after he
had sinned, saying, ."Where art thou?"
(Gen. III, 9.) He does not merely call'
us to come, but knowlug that we, are
as helpless as eleplalbosheth who was
' • d „I
'Mlle ill both feet. He sen s a
fetches 'us, into Ills, presence and by
greet love caliees us to fall on our
1118 - ' ' . '
faces in true penitence, then gives 115
ail (II Sam. 1; :3„5, 0, 7. 131. ,,
Like the good Samaritan, LIe. ands .
hel less and wounded and tenderly
P
cares for us and puts us in His place
ancl' brings us to a phice, 'of rest and
c
continues to clue for us (Lnae x, 33 1.
Like Paul in the ease Of Onesimns. He
, ., , . ,
s ays to His b tither concetnieg the sin-
. " c iv him as Myself; 1. f he Mali
ner, Re e e .
wronged thee or oeveth thee aught, put
mine account (Phi. evil, IS).
that on mi. ' "
"God tomtnendeth Hie love toward us
In that while we were yet sinners,
a -
Christ diel for us" (Rom: V, SI. ,
In the stery of both .the sheep and
tbe, piece of money., note the conclu-
Mon; "Joy in heaven. * * * joy in the
presence o e o o over onei.
f the angelsf G d •sanity,"
sinner that repenteth" (verses 7, 1(,)).
Does it not seem that if we really be-
lieved that, we Who are saved would
' have 11 greater, desire to have, others,
• .
know and share the great salvation:
How much of the spirit of Christ have
. ,
we if we hare not His heart ot eorn- .
passion for the lost? Hbecaink poor
for is and suffered in our stead few :houses
•
Sharks and Divers.
• The fully equipped modern diver
does net dread sharks i ,
n the depths
though there are cases on record
where these monsters have bitten sa-
, 1 t th ' I i
vage y a e air p pe, caus ng a ser-
bus leak and almost drovvning the
man before he could • be hauled up.
Sharks are, however, notoriously tim-
School Matter%
Correspondents will please zee
frain from sending motices of en -
tertainments where an adrnission
, . _ .
fee 0 charged, unlees 'they send
word who Is responsible for the
,
payment of euch advertisment. The
charre id fiVe cents a line -six
wcrcre make a line
craves nourishment to repair
theCOJ wasted bodyd
an restore
the vigor of health.
,
For forty years the best phy. ,
sicians have relied on thewhole-
some predigested nourishment
in Scott's Emulsionwhich is totally
id, and all the eecperienced diver has
to clo to frigten them away is to open
one of the air valves in his dress and
cause a stream ot bubbles to rise up
all around him, whereupon the "tig-
er of- the deep" will make off in ab-
ject terror.
•
To signal following 1a.utomobil-
ists that he is going to 'stop his
own car a Londerier (has invente d
a semaphore evhich swings into
position automatically as he ap-
plies the brakes.
For testing
free from alcohol or opiates.
Scott's Emulsion sharpens
,
the appetite ---renews blood- .
nourishes nerves -strengthens .
bones and restores the cotirage
of health to make life bright •
Some Sentence!
.
champion speller of congress
has On tap a great assortment of stor-
' . • „
is dealing with words and spelling.
the strength of pap-
Or a machine has been invendlecl'
in which a dial Tea•isilers the
, ' .- -
pounces eloressure to the square
inch needed to puncture a piece of
'with
Scott's Emulsion sets in action
i.
' tne very forces that promote health;
k is pure rich strength. ,
v
One of his linguistic feats is to
it aungei. I • •
p
0.1
reel off a sentence ,of twenty-six
words, each word beginning with the
. ,. „.•.
successive letters of the alphabet, like
this .
s• ,
"A boy cannot dig, easily for gold;
hence 'if just keeping lead melted
' . .
needs oxygen put quicksilver, rapid-
• , ....
ly saturated timidly under v„Liol, ,
•
' ' •
when xebecs yean zeolites."
,
, , ,.,....
f.
. . . ,
,
; .4
, , Everybody knows that
, i.
• I
.
-
. ,
CARTER -
I' '-
.1„, „,.
1TTLE s:%",.
,
r7"fi.....
......
'PI ..., "-ea,
ab ...
71,fq
F'-.• ,N, '
a„
•
,
Crazy.
, "We find the prisoner not guilty by
reason of ,insanity."
"But the plea was not that of in-
remarked the court. '
.
„A
. •
..
..,
e:
e
• '.'
4
• ' eS'is.. •
.. ... „
,
i' IVER _,:',,,,, ,
-'7,Sie ;iii:i....
PILLS. ,
•r
. 'reree,,i; ._ • "•
,:,4 ,•-•' ..-'74or-
.
i'l- ----
•
Bitilrtrloodache
dent tu
BissintOo,
eating,
Ilanorkitble
'
fleadeeles
eqoully,
..VOiltinglA)
, torrehtidltliSolcitist
eat
e•r
. .
eidnothey
.aniter
' 04,!,...`'
.' wiloOneetryaten
, able ie
ling to.do
,
,
4k107
a bilious
Pain
vitlirablblii.Conitipoiletit
-
frem'illiqlstroeing
:,,,,i,
so
Ivithont
e
.,.
.. ,
i'
and
Bousea,
in the
success
'•
yet Ciattne
aVilayinStphirlain
.
5
;
•'0
wouldbe
4 e•
many v
a
-
e
-
eeiel"
-relieve
state or
DrOweineaS,
Bide, .C•c.
bas been
• '
'10''
orthetiteeiath
a,
,,''' ''
ee.
tilmostprieobss
',-,e,'"se.'
elneetteeseleeepelevete..
ava Chat
them,
..b..
-eel
, ,.
"
A' .
all the troubles Incr.
the system', sea aS
Distress oiler
While their.rn est
el7own in curing
.
.o,
'' 1,o ,
Little LiVet. 50115 505
eating find Si's. '
L. kviiilo.l.h4 WO
stimulatethe ,
.., ewe. ,
drii,, ,,, , , '
efS
- . • ,
to tilosewh-
egm,,1 int; licrfertit
s'! • ."-- ''"' '
they will not be NY I.
retorter all akar beea '
"1: , V 'VA 0
v ,
,•• ) .... ......c. aa'ik•-- r-
,
'". ..l! .„.., ssensation
1 , o .ei . - `---- -,d
sae
. /
f L.•r/4:01
i • -.'
iti
,
., „._ . ' • , _ . ,• ,.
we Were but a manciful-a Single
' Thin Line •
'
gripns,, Wayrce has been ordered tor-
ward,' and then back, Mail he 0 too
but little bet-
ten By tile tternal! you should have
li 'el le '1 'b ' cl •
ear .aferottg, when le •egge_ Pei.- ,
, .
. . ,
Continued nest Week. , , .
•
"That's just the point we made,"
rejoined',,the foreman. We decided
that any , . whodidn't,,have sense
at a man w
enough to. know that an insanity plea
was the proper caper must be crazy." ,
• ' , ,.
t
, i
me. a,„ „ •
,,,eel .,,' ..
. :01'.i'. s'i.''': Sm. - Sellk:,,',e. '7
..,,, ';''SS s'1•, . ,•S'' ' r
.' .e .,r%
'e;le• , '.-,°.1, le ,. .
Their Hope - •
e ,e
c thinlc there
I shouldn w d b
oui ' e
any difficulty in renting, haunted
to actors."
. , "why. not?" , ,
"Because ,actors , like ,to ,see the,
walk." • • ' '
,
•
. "MORE
-•:, '
'''',.
•
.,
Makes . ,
,
I,
BREAD and BETTER BREAD" 4
e
,
. , .
OW, find out the ' reasons why it i
makes.. lightest, tastiest, ,.
.. • -
curbing oil Promoters. '
rs me n .,
F thefi t time i the history of
the west, the civic bodies of a city
have taken a stand to rearain the al.-'
vent of capital to the district. In
eve other case it has been a . ,ues-
tion of using every endeavor to at- '
t t ' ' estreent Calgary has taken
rae lnv .
111.0 step. The purpose of tale seem-
go move was to curtail the
ingly stran '
activities of a horde of trreeponsible,
our sins. How are we pro.ving that ,
we ere 'His Stisciples,? "He that win-
neth 'souls is wise" "They thnt fern 'ghost
many to rightemisnees shall shine, as.
the stars forever nnd ever." It was .
. penes ambition "by nII. means te sieve •A
. •• p '.' 1 • . • , lc .3. 1 c r ,
lc soli Wlint doeki• the Lord see in
' ' - ' ' . • ,
Our hearts Co_ this_todttes: . •'
----.., . - - . -,. .7 ---,- •.-
., •, '
' ' '
' • ', , ,
resident of Amsterdam basun-
ve.nted a chernical ,process for ex
traeting 'the unplela lamb ' ala,vor
• ' ' a • • ti ,
from cheap cigars h n ' giving . leen
a new 'flavor,' equal. to that of '
bigher price ,goo a. .
. ,
The expansion of steam ,geneea-
tel by. gas burners produces th e
ion n a new' !stationary vii-
eolith cleaner while the dust drawii
. . . , ,
Into a reservoir is ,stenhzed by
, _
else steam.
$e .• .
v? windows for !stores have
1,01- 111e. . .•
ere ed h ,, '80
been inv t with the glass '
. ,
'and
grocer
; ta
-or
money
every
,•,
•812
.
,
the and ..
most nutritious Buns,. R01.1S, ' Cakes k
•
Pies. Test it at. our risk. If your' ti
,
doesn't' handle PURITY it's easy t,
,
itu to get it. And -you get you'
,, , 1
, i t , .
back . 1 ' i is not satisfactory in
, ,
•
, . .
, . ,•, •. , .
. , .
ers who were prepa,r,
ta,ke advantage of the rich oil indica,-
co ' Root Compound.
Cook's ' tton
times and flood the country with ...... . ,.
. . ,
worthless stocks. A policy has been 4'' A Stile, reliabicreffulatin0
ad ted to develop the oll resources rgil - ^ ' - maim,. s old in throo de.
oP . . e . ,e--- e , ,,,,, grecs of strength -.-No. 1, 51;
OD. a sane and conservative bade and, . • . „ sees' • No. 2, 54 No. 3. It5, per box.
' . - ' ' '• Sold b all druggists or sera
,10.
prevent as far, as possible sense, , - , , .3' , ipb of ,,,i,,,
, . ,, , . , . ii pind on rece
tonal reports gaining circulation, ,, E''0%0 pamphlet. Address i
that are not warranted by' condi- . a-, slime:, ettswit risroseetesur, rat
Ie t he bane ?so
1.,, our great
WO Ina .,
.oth ers do et
• c, 'arter's Little
",7 cane7gitout11"`ve°englett:f
firl y
Virgo, but by
'.. aanr,
,ee
1
wiry Ives
. west
'Aver
' Pills
Y g
their goutle
mweitivits
.".......!`".'
N. , ,
1 .1 ii
aglea
'dirt here to where
omelet, °emit vale
.
are very smaneed
witnni..,,, ao,,,,
do opt gri e oe
I'
,action plersto al, who
A mite. vnivir '
"f 00..."" " " '''''-'
A•
,,
Debilnty,
.c55011011. ilylvv,
Ole'),
for AS
d *
__,,, ,,e,
, ''' Wooti-0,,gaoophodinn;
-The Great Engli.gh Boned*.
'
, '71 Telles and invigorates' 'Hie whOie
-rt- ' nor yOuS avatars • makes now Blood'
o, .^ ' • • - ' - ' ' '
• • . in old. Veins, Ouse° .11rervotto
Mutat (1.9e1 Bret , . r., a.
v War V Despo,
7 i. , te
awn of t7
Lep, et Lne 074 ra.-2,l- .
esnetene memory. Pre,o.si per boa, sor
rs One will planes, irix will curatz Sold by.oll
_ 11..0 in Orin Pk r on recr'pt of
.
. ,., , „ ,,
,
curven as to eliminate /election,
Which ,Ofben ,s,eriously interferes
1.17,f1, +hp. .s.lant .olf Um ri.1001olv .aul,-
.7 er ie., rs
4.... r . lk:111. r, e 't 1 re eft ..„1- ,
, , rt - to ri 1 rti 0 OH 11 tnn
ti.°31s• , •
.e.
Otet. (Formerly IVIn ,) in a widow.
_