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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1914-10-29, Page 4fi PAGE 'FOUR;. in CLINTON KIM IBM. Thursday, October 29th, 1914. Alarm -Ing , News, Not from the'"seat of war, bu' from our own'+C10Ck Depart- merit. epart` ment..The mornings are getting. darker which 'neoessitates your relying on an alarm Clock to reuse you in time for' you! work> or other duties, We are now prepared, and can furnish you with Alai'Mg:that we guarantee to give satisfaction, from 101 up We are selling agents for BIG BEN ALARMS Come in and let us show you our assortment. ;Perhaps you have an alarm which only needs a little' repairing -Largo so bring it, in, it le right in our line • cvr We IL II[EL G AR JEWELER and OPTICIAN EYES ;,TESTED FitEE •••••••00••••••••••••NN• Qutumns e • ssiun . • Is now open in Central Business• • • College, Timor to, ar.d in each of •. • its Six Branches. Free catalogue • explains courses. Write for a 2 copy. . W. H. Shaw, president. i dent _Head'ofhoe, 883 'Yonge Street, Toronto, wiesso •O•imeseeR•••••NN Childre-n:, `Cry 'FOR FLETCHER'S. C A S T`O"R .I A CENTRAL STRATFORD. ONT. Is school with a continental reputation for high' grade work and for the success of its gradu- ates, A school with superior courses and instructors, We give „individual attegtien, _ in Commercial, Shorthand and Telegraphy Departments Why attend., elsewhere when there is room here ? You may enter at any time. Write for our large tree catalogue. D. A. McLachlan, Principal 1tn9rl/FIIMIFtMIMIMIInntr There .is. a Cold day ;Coming Why not prepare for it by ordering, your winter supply of Lehigh Valley Coni, none better in the world • A. J. Holloway, Clinton NORTH END FEED STORE HELLO!'! IIafe you ordered your Kindling for the winter? Stave Edgings and Cedar BlOoks on hand Malted Grain and Other Stock, Foods for horses and cattle -kept in Stock Quaker Oats Corn Flakes Flour Oat Meal Corn Meal Etc., Etc GENERAL DELIVERY DONE Agent for Heintzman Pianos Old ones taken 'in exchange, and balance.ron 'easy terms. ' • FRANK W .LV TERMS CASH. PHONE 192 SUNDAY SCHOOL Lesson V. --Fourth, Quarter;', For, Nov. y, 1914. • THE: 'INTEIRNATIONAL.SERIES., Textlof the Lesson, Malt xxvi, 67-68. Meirricry Vel nae,' 6i3/64GOlden 'next, n„r io a lea. hut, 7Commaq{ry •Prepared by' Rev. D 11)11Stearna.. Not only was there power in His two words, 'I ani,'!:to''send«them•all” to the • 'ground, but more than twelve 'legions 01 angels were'. ready' to respond' to His call if''13e• had asked.', for" (verse 53;.. Jolie ah311; 15,c.(1)..' 'But He came to 'idlfillr"a11 Scripture, and the, time had come, for Him to let them' take'Hire.; It was their hour, and the power of • darkness. ''At least twelye times in Maithew's gospel it is written "that it might be fulfilled" or 'Rhen was fulfilled" (Matt, 1, 22; if; 15, 17, 28; vitt, 17; x11, 17; xi11, 85; xxl, 4; xsv1, 54, 58; Ssvlj, 9, 85). After His reeur- rection He said that all things must be fulfilled, which were written in the Law of Moses and in the prophets and in :the psalms concerning Him (Like roto, 44). He came to fulfill all Scrip- ture, 'and He will; all concerhing the future' 'as'.literally as He has fulfilled the past; So When we read any yet unfulfilled prophecy we should say this Blinn surely come. to pass in His •time. They laid hold on Teeus and led Hini away. They, took . Jesus and bound 'Him and led Him away to Annas first (verse 57; John xviii,,13).It•would he an inconceivable, unimaginable record,' were it not so 'awfully 'true;'that the' greater of 111' things;" who , giveth, to all life aiid'•lireath`and;all things; enf fered'Hid rebellious creatures to' take Him and •hell Him and lead Him; as . they -pleaaed. ,According' io? the 'golden text,, ledas a lamb •to the slaughter and as a sheep dumb before its shear - and submitting to all their ill treat- ment, that we who by His sufferings forus`are made children' of God when awe'reeefve the Lord Jesus, might learn how to submit to ill treatment for His sake'{) Pet. i1;19-25).' "' ' • f'3ier followed Him, afar oft (verse 58tribnt :his story will come is a later leatson. • In'verse 56 it is said: that all the'4 disciples forsook Him and fled. Th18' also. was a" fulfillment of the • Prophecy, "1 will smite the shepherd and the sheep shaiLbe scattered.",' There 1s an interesting statement•in this): connection• in' Mark xiv, 51, 52� concerning a young man :who followed .Him, ;when, He wasarrested, having "only; a. linen: cloth about his naked -Pods, and. as. some laid hold on him he left the linea cloth and fled from them naked. As Mark is the only one Who giyes,this record,;we shall have to ask him about it when we see Mm. i'v L E .POULTRY WA T:. I) ., N � 2500 Chickens 2000 Hens and 1000 Ducks each weer: during the poultry season Turkeys and Geese taken later Get our prices each week, delivered at the elevator. We are in the market for all kinds of grain at top prices A Full Line of Flour. and Feed Always on Hand Have you tried our Cured Bleats? All meat supplies Government inspected The Gun -I an11ois Co, Limited The up-to-date ,Firm, Clinton Phone 190. N. W. TREWARTHA. W. JENKINS Headquarters FOR Walking and Riding OJdvtrr. plows McHrmekMachnerEgPu1mps and Windmills. ALL LINDS rme• i E Ai88. •. AND 'EXPERTIl.VG. CALL ON • er �u � L �e Corner of Princes end , Albert street,. Is often an illumination' as big as the sun. There is no place in town where "money down" goes farther than it does right here.' A CHINA CLOSET or dresser bought for 'spot cash' from our present stock makes what you see elsewhere look like thirty cents. Its Bargains Galore we are offering just now in our entire Furnitt re Starck The Cheapest Spot in Huron�tto'Buy all kinds of sFurniture BA -1I1 W ,A. lICIIN 1 w7®Z97 Furniture Dealers and Funeral Directors -Phone 104 N. Ball 110 -RESIDENCE PHONES— J. D. Atkinson! 186 i 'Whsen a c tik!:, disliff,es studs' Whoahildenf 4155 With sp+d7 .nerve. .eat; ergs •lw mead;S oti.el", 4:4tactrarr. reoee Nke. 1r Aeffr Wraooeme^044 We carws•eaoarrd•1tarr 'ril:aq,di ai,c+er a'ttI • ri o ' Jeweler and Optician ' Ismer o1 Marriage Licenses an rue rema1inper oz' out'Stegall. We see Jesui-in'the 'presence of'the high' priest, the chief priests,'tke scribes add elders and all the council 'The$'soughti'. false ,.witnesses, against Him' to, put film to death, bit ,though ,many, bore witness, they did not agree. At tho, last:came two who testified :thet,Jesus said, "I are able to d'estrpy, the temple; of God and to build'It, in, three days,. brit neither did their witness agree to-' gether (Mark xiv, '65, 59). Thus., also wen Scripture fulfl;led 'which saftli,, Fake. witnesses' are rlieen' up', against me and such as breathe but cruelty." ,'";'hey, laid: to my charge things that I knew not" (Ps. xxvil,,12; xxsv, 11); the cruel: injustice 'of it all, the mild hatred of those who were fully ,determined to kili.Himl 'Could Turks treat Armenians worse? Jesus' held His peace. He answered nothing (verse '63; xxv8; 12). There ,,.was. nothing to answer, for no two wit messes agreed. How much, false ac- cusation'can you bear meekly for His sake? Have you learned to see God ant not people, and to'say, : "1, as a deaf man, heard not, and I was as a dumb man" that openeth not hie. motith?".- "1+ was dumb, I opened not my' mouth because thou didst It", (Ps. Alii, 13; xxxix, 9). It is' a wise say- ing: that "whose keepeth: his month and,'iil9 tongue keepeth his soil from troMiles" (Prov. Ind,` 28), but who can do'it,for the tongue can no man tame/ , The -people .in the time of'Hezekfah. did ,wjgely when they held their peace ' and answered pot a word to the blas- phemer. Hezekiah did wisely When; he spread the blasphemous, letter, before , the 'Lord (II Bangs xviif, 86;'xixr•.14). • When'. the. high priest said,.."I adjure Thee by the Living God that Thou tell us whether Thon be the Ohrist,othe Son' •,df God," then an' answer *as neves- sary, aad•' Jesus assented, saying. "Thou hast said." But how startling to the high' priest must have. been the added words, unless he was too dead: in gi"n to be startled by anything, "Neo- erttieless, I say, unto you, hereafter' shall- ye see the :Son of Man Sitting on't'he right' hand of power and corn- ing, in the clouds of heaven" (verses 83,114). That settled it in the minds of these holy (?) men. The prisoner was a blaapliemer and worthy of death; so they' mocked Him, and ,smote Him, and'spit in His face, and blindfolded flim, rind" asked Him to tell who'struck , Was ever a prisoner so 'i11 treated even if guilty? Not so with us. l But thik man was innocent, for even Judas Iscariot had so testified. Seine day all these men will be before .Him as their judge, and unless they repented before they died they will have to hear His "Depart ye cursed." Even at this day the scholarship• of this world may be heard declaring as blas= phemers those who truly believe that Jesus is God, but • the great truth stands, and . the time of Els coming again draweth nigh. EVERY WOMAN it interested and should know. about the wonderful MarYB� Whirling Spray Douche Alt roux druggist for it. If he cannot supplr the MARVEL, accept no other, but rend stamp for ;lbw trated book -sealed: It snieifull particulars and directions invaluable to ladies. WINDSOR SUPPLY CO.,Windsor,Ont. General Ascots for. Canada A IVON DER Ft1L DISCOVERY, An eminent scientist, the other day, gave his opinion that the most wonderful discovery` of ire, cent; years was ,the d'iscov'ery of'. Zam-Buk. Just think ! As.'soon ad- .+ single thin layer is 'applied;; to a wound or a sore, such injur$* ie` insured against blood poison 1 Not one species:of microbe has;';been' found that Zam Buk: does not kill Then again. .As soon as Zam4 •Buk` is applied toga' sore, ora cut. or to' skins 'disea'se, ' it stops sthe pmarting .'That is why . children are ich friends of'Z'am-Buk. They care nothing for the science of the thing. All they know is that Zam= Buk''stops their.pain.. Mothers should never foret this. Again. As soon as Zara-Buk is applied to a' wound or to a dis- eased part,' ;the cells beneath the skin's surface are , so stimulated that pew 'healthy tissue is quickly formed. This forming of ,fresh healthy tissue from below is Zam- Buk's secret of healing. The tis- sue thus 'formed is worked up, to the`surfa-le and literally casts off the diseased tissue above it. This is why Zam-Buk cures are per- manent. •" Only the other day Mr. Marsh, of 101 Delorimier Ave., Montreal, called upon the Zani-•Buk Co. and told thein that for over twenty five years he had been a martyr to eczema. His hands were at one time so covered with sores that he had; to sleep ,in gloves. Four years ago Zane.-Buk was introduc- ed to Nilo and in a few months it cured him, To-day=jar three years afterrhis°cure of a ' disease he had for, tWenty fiue> years -he is still. cured, and haa•had .no trace of an' eturn.-of, the, eceema; 'All •dtuggists''sell' Zam Buk .at 59e 'boss or we will send ,' free: trial be% if you send this adver` tise}nent and 'a' lc stafnp (16 'pay:' ;postage): ostage): Add}e`ss Zam Bji?p Toronto A Ate4404ii g With England, ' The Brantford Expositor The' Expositor. has been request, ed, to re -publish the following lines which appearedin print at time of the, South African war Ye who would, reckon with ,Eng- land. • Yewho would sweep the seas, Of the flag that Rodney nailed aloft, And' Nelson flung to the breeze Count well your ships and'. ,your men,- • Count well your; horses and your guns, For they who' reckon with i 'Eng - Must reekon with England's sons Ye who would' challenge England, Ye who would break the might. Of the little isle in the foggy pea, And; the lion heart in the fight; Count well your horse and your. swords. Weigh well your valorand guns, For they,who ride against England Mus t sabre her million aqua. Ye who would roll to warfare Your horses of peasants and s."- slaves, To crush thepride of an empire And sink her fame bathe waves, Test well your blood and -your metal Count well your troops and your guns, For they who . battle with England Must War with a mother's sons. Theo. Roberts in The Independent • For the first time, in the Boer war, the unity of the , Empire, in the case of attack upon any por-. tion of it, was made clear to the world. In the present war was this unity .is being displaced oma much larger scale, and gives notice t'o Germany, and allothei nations that the : preponderating infu- ence of the British Emipre in the affairs 'of the world ,is assured' for many long year s to come. TSF TITS •. i OF IfIIGLSTiON Disappear When the Blood Is Made; Rick. Red and Pure The mistaken idea that laixativea or'drastic purgatives provide a short' cut to,tne' cure of indiges- tion is largely responsible for the Prevalence of .dyspepsia and other stomach disorders, •. Indigestion calls for than re h o an a. makeshift, 'Yours stomach needs tone it can- not absorb 'nourishment' from . the food you eat, Mc, .give ,new strength to your stoach sothat tit •may perform the work of di- gestion without pain or distress you must enrich the blood, This. s the tonic method for strength:- ening trengthsening 'peak stomachs. I'n cases of this kind Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People are the best inedi•- cine known. Every dose makes new, rich blood, which not . only strengthens the stomach but builds up every part, of the body as well. Here is an illustration of what this 'medicine can do; Mrs. L N. Brown Downville, N. B. says; "For three years I was a sufferer from chronic indigestion. I was Hungry all the time, yet could 'take very little food, and what I did take was followed by great distress and nau sea. My sleep at night was brok- en,, and I often had profuse night sweats. The suffocating feeling which often followed eating w ould cause my heart to palpitate vio- lently. At times my, hands and face would become thel color of clay and I would be completely prostrated. I was under the care of a good doctor who finally, told me the trouble was incurable and that the most I' could hope for was temporary relief. I was in these straits when a friendadvised me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I did so, and .used the pills stead- ily for two months when I was again a weft woman, and have since had no return of the trou ble. You can Set these pills. through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2,50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine' Co., Brockville, • Ont. Traps have been •invented to catch flies at their breeding places before they come old enough to move away.; Operated by hand, speed being at tained by gear wheels atiny enery wheel has been invented' for grind ing off corns. The steriliation of water by ultra violet • rayysfrom mercury ivapor lamps ' has reached the industrial stage in France. Cook's GMM IZooCatollamll: k., reU1bler ulafiiip�' "R• med ae, Sold in tree.de. - gree e of strength -No I fr;- ..i Na 2. 53; No. a, is perbo:,.. Sold by all ,drusgiete or Seat- ppropaid on receipt of price. ` Prop pamphlet,_'. Address.:. THE. COOK MEDICINE'CO, 0050500, OHT. Mandy WWwr.) Cigarets manufactured in the United 'Stabs last year, if laid end to end, would almost girdle the world twenty-three times, American-made fountain pens command about eighty /, of :the market for conveniences of their k t el in Great Britain. The Raiser's Last �►11 1114 Testawent I herewith bequeath; 1. To France --The territories of Alsace and; Lorain` (because it is stolen property and I don't' de= serve any credit for it and I am . not likely . to get it, either.) 2. To Servia-I give Austria. 3. To Russia -I give Turkey for the Czar's Christmas dinner, 4, To Belgium -I should like to give all the thick ears, black eyes and broken noses that she presented to me when I politely trespassed opher territory. 5, To Admiral Jellicoe -I give all my Dreadnoughts, torpedo boats and destroyers and the fleet of ' flunkers generally -what's left of them.. He's bound to have thein in the end, so this is the only an- ticipating eventh. n-ticipating,:events. 6. To John Bull -I, give what's left of my army as his .General French seems so handy at turning my. 'men into sausage meat,, I suppose he means to finish the jobwith his Kitchener, the champion .Ger- man sausage cooker. 7. To the British Museum -i leave ' my famous moustaches; souvenir of thegreatest ewanker in this or any other age.• 8, To Mrs; Pankhurst and the wild ' Women --I: leave niy,mailed=fist They'll find it useful, no doubt when the resume ' i y. esu their r ttifltant. tactics. • 9., To Sir Ernest Sliackej on-Ileave the pole. I've been up for so long that I regard,- •it :as; my own property. (Signed)' ,THE KAISER Lord of Land, Sea and Air, not for getting the Sausages and Lager Beer. • Had Pain Aroud Her Heart' for Three Years Wis Not Safe to Leave ker Ahab Day after day one reads or hears of mad ' sudden deaths through heart failure, and many people are 'kept' in a state of morbid fear of death; become weak, worn and miserable, and are un- able to attend to either their social or business duties, through this unnatural" action of the heart. To all such sufferers Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will give prompt and permanent relief. Mrs. Norman H. Esau, Ship Harbor, N.S., writes: -"For three years, I have been troubled with a pain around my heart. I took medicine from my doctor untilI found it was of no use, as it only, seemed to help me while I was taking,it. I got so bad at last that it was not safe for me to be left alone, so having heard of Milburn's Heart add Nerve Pills, I took five boxes of them, and I eau. say they helped me so much that I feel like myself again." , Milburn's Heart and: Nerve Pills are 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25. Forsale at all druggist and general stores, or will be mailed direct on receipt dice by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, to, Oat.. Fall Poetry MELANCHOLY RHYME The . melancholy days are here. Distressing and despleasing When victims of hay fever go • Around snifing and sneezing. SOME JOB We wish we were a wise expert To write about the war, And tell the people all the things They read the day before•1 ENVIOUS I wish I was an officer - They are the ladies' pets. They're always either getting shot On smoking cigarets. WARTIME When the cook demands her ::pass- pportp, And declares that she Will go 'Tie a very solemn moment. ,As housewives , fully know: A WRECKER - "Wilhelm Rex," Yes, :by gure ! Wilhelm wrecks Belgium. ' A NEW SONG It's a short road of St. Helena :It's a'short road to go It's a short road to St. Helena," The loneliest spot We. know, Gpod-bye Kaiserina, farewell Ger- many. It's a short, abort, way to St; He lona. But your home lies there, HE FOUGHT TUE SEARS. Story of Odd Hotel anti' Its ,Soldier The destruction of an old building will often cause an old resident to turn back the pages cf memory and relate tales of 'the days of old. Thus it was that three or four gentlemen listened with a great teal of interest to a few lunch boor stories about the days when the 'old Bank of Upper Canada, IKing and Frederick streets,'. that'is no* cleniolisbod,' was a thrts- ing, institution in a good section' of the city, "I used to. "live right close to the bank," said the eldest of the group, a man of possibly si'L;-five years, ''and two or throe: rloor$ from the bap.k, at Red�eed Fr ee During then net two weeks we;place on sale about forty Beautiful 13.110S 1ns,Ta,pes'•try� �1 issels and' Velvets in sizes 24x31. 3xd,l3x3*, ah(l (oxo and'eoffer you your choice at wont ,llpf �du4elll prices ,ir1 -li i-- Owin to 1<• iv �� , Owing 1 rift sf • . ice :on a11,1' ' es' of im— ported Rus; w,'4h V4,i r,: , ' 'F, ,S' g ,:� • �., , �lh¢ts.�l� extra oy ers•;fox spring, in order to secure there .at .t ' "'' i .. , , , Me, lo3yct, ��ssrble price,but m�ust•now make a• 'clean Sr eepO,EPalp�Rh �s istock in order to have rootn'for: the :helm, ones when they arrive Mel? s alp ' t p hrn a. If you are interested in a ne* Suit, Overcoat or a pair of Odd Trdtisers, cnlne in'.;and see what we are showing. We can save; you money and guarantee to please you. r �f Bros. r TN �F New Idea Patterns ll)o r J l�Ia a to Measure Clothing WIIIIINWSIWIWIEIMMIMInwoonwp ' d r ••••• •E(ti'' You Cannot Ho iletter4fP nitm' 4ttend 'the '' . ,poi 4411, British Americaolcollcge t; ,,Iii,;• Yonge and McGill Ste. Toronto + for a Business or Shorthand + 4Course: Fall. Term is now open. +y , We ask you to write for particu + lass, T. W•. %Vauchope, principal O 114104114141641414110•••••••••••••• down the street, a man kept a hotel. In Toronto of those days the Sunday, liquor laws were not enforced as they should have been, and this tavern keeper, in order to induce custom to his place; on Sunday's without too much publicity, tried' a rather novel idea. From a circus which went defunct in Toronto he bought four bears, big black fellows, and chained them in his back yard, and ordered that any one ..coming to see the bears would have to pass through the bar -room. As a consequence, a large number • cline to see the bears on Sunday and • Many of them stayed for a consider- able length of time. "At length the news got to the sol- diers in the fort, and a few of them came down one Sunday morning to , see, what was in the air. One of theseh c spa was a big six-footer,and after he had visited the bar and ex- amined.the bears at some length he commenced to feel in a fighting mood. ,The hotel man didn't want a fight in his house on Sunday, so'he sent him outto fight the bears. The soldier went out and found the bears all asleep, so he swatted the largest of them three or four goods ones on the nose, and with this rude awaken- , ing Bruin got up to see what it was all about: The soldier struck out „q;nce or twice more, and the bear got him within his grip and hugged him so tight he broke his arm. It, took several men to get the soldier from the bear's grasp and take him to ,a,nearby surgeon." Another Canadian Woman Doctor.' Word bas been received of the sig- nal success of .one of Ontario's na- tive-born, Miss Agatha Doherty, M,D., of Eglinton. Miss Doherty, who ma- triculated from Loretto Abbey and graduated from the University of To- ronto, went to England a year and a 'half ago to spend six months in Great Orme Street Hospital as nurse - in -training. Being tiny and distinctly feminine, however, Miss Doherty changed her mind, or, rather, made it up differ- ently, and decided to go and study for some; medleal',examination. As a result, she has just emerged with ,the letters; MRCS.' Eng„ L.R.C.P.. I.onr'inn, altar her nxm ..- tha, this.+ d 461 -tan in Canada to achieve them, 'So charmed is Miss Doherty with England and its people that she will stays'on there for some time paying visits to old and new friends. i Miss Doherty comes of a family with healing as its hobby. Two brothers are doctors in British Co- lumbia, one of them,,. Dr. Charles Doherty, being superintendent of New. Westminster Hospital for the insane. . Searcn' r or 'Radium.: - there should' be a quantity of That 4 ty radium -bearing pitchblende on the Thunder Bay district is the opinion of P•of. Goodwin' of Queen's Univer- sity, Kingston, `A search la being made for the mineral in the hope of obtaining tho $25,000 reward,offered by the Ontario Government fear the dlseovery of radium in the province. An old waterway tunnel .in Iowa through a rock ridge ,has been .en- larged to straighten a'highwayand shorten it four miles. A drinking fountain from which the water, bubbles upward rwhich may the fastened to an ordinary faucet has ,bfenpatented. - Mabe tie Laver Do its' Duty Nine times in tea when the fans it Stlt & ,toaasclh andLo,vel. are right., • CARTER'S, LITTLE LIVER PILLS Ientlybut6rmlycon- yet a lezyuty. lieu to • do iu d Cures Con- stipation, Indigos - 810h, Sick Headache, and Blame after Eating. Small Pill, Small Doss, Small Price ienuine mutt beer Signature arompiomp000raimoriomos E�Yer 'man, woman and child should have `a pair Y '4'oi good' rubbers at this season of the year. Wet feet always travel the road, that at ends in the hospital -and it is Oanaafly a short:. trip We have the best rubbers made—we sell no other kind, for poor rubbers are 'worse than. no rubbers at all ''hese are Storm Itabpers Low Cat Kubbers, Toe Rnblbers, Etc. We have the Rubbers Modelled to tit all the New Styles'ol Fall Footwear. We Pit the Shoes with the sort of rubbers tbat are just right in -. tele, Quality and Price : aFM I.I .•' n., :M.u•14 i At <0 ,0 • Phone 70 Clinton nii.slFOOsruta eve'0,"d ommunocao