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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1913-11-20, Page 2l000moommorOomoomm0000 (I'. 11, McTAGGART C M, D. McT`AGGART' CTaggart Bros. A • GJ N'ERA B'ANI? ING DUSI' NESS. TRANSACTED:. - NOTES DIS.OUNTED DRAFTS ISSUED. • INTEREST ALLOWED ON . DE-, ,1'0;5TTS. SAh1 "NOTES PT7R-` CHASED, d II. T. RANCE - NOTARY ..PUBLIC, CONVEY- E L• R A l A;NCER, i'INANCZtj.L, ESTATE 'AND FIRE INS'UR- A;CE AGENT. REPRESENT - . 14 FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES. A IES. t D,IYISION 'COURT ' OFFICE, . CLINTON. W.` BRYDONE, BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, , NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. Office- Sloan Block -CLINTON ran, Shorts and , Flour From the deet Mills at the lowest ,possible price. CHARLES B. HALE. Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner,;,Etc.' REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET; - CLINTON !1, - DRS. GUNN & GANDIER t Dr. W. Gunn, L.R.C.P., L.R. C.S., Edin. Dr. J. C. Gandier, B.A., M.B. OfGie-Ontario St., Clinton. Night calls at residence, Rattenbury St., or at Hospital. WE PAY THE HIGHEST 'PRICE for OATS, PEAS and BAR- LEY, also HAY for Baling. DR. J. W. SHAW - OFFICE RATTENBURY ST. EAST,, -CLINTON DR. C. W. THOMPSON PHSYICIAN, SURGEON, ETC. Special attention given to dis- eases of the, Eye; . Ear, Nose and Throat. Eyes carefully examined and suit- able glasses prescribed. Office and,. residence: 2 doors west of the Commercial Hotel, Huron St., Fora-& McLeod GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for,,,the>Connty of Huron.' ' Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, or by .. calling Phone 13 on 157. Charges moderate and satisfaction, guaranteed... 'DR. F. A. AXON - DENTIST -- Specialist in Crown and Bridge Work. Graduate of C.C.D.S., Chicago, and R.C.D.S., To. ronto, Bayfield on 1Vlondays from May. to _. December. UTR:UN,: w - TIME TABLE -- Trains Trains will arrive at and depart ALL KINDS OF COAL, ' WOOD, TILE BRICK TO ORDER. from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV: Going East, 7.35 a. m. 8.07 p. en. 5.16 p. 11.07 a. m. 1.25 p. m. 6.40 p. m, 11.28 p. m. LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV: Going South, e 7.50 a. m. 4.23 p. m. , Going North, 11.00 a. m. I q 6.35 p. m. t 44 -„ Ir Going West, rt CC OVER 06 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS AG. Anyone eendinit a eketoh end deseription nin7 qulokir aecertaln our opinion free N ether as h.veution iekrobebly put5ptpb Q ommunlen. .,OonsnerseUyeonhIdentlal:.apa91100 onpotontp e e_nt free. Oideot aagRency for6eourAm potents. Patents S.kbh tieuneb Menu h Co. tecelve . etctdi .,ties, without char e, lathe A hendeomaly niustrated• weekly. Iargeet ale uulation of eel erientido journal. Terms for inn ;ppneSe nodMdeo$5.15 'a rear, Doane prepaid. told by .n. 1HUNN B�Co.Bsteraatear.NewYQrk Brendh o es.026 5' 8t.. Wa bioetm. A. �O1,u, MONTHLY' MAGAZINE:' A FAMILY LICAARY. All kinds of Coal on hand: CHESTNUT SOFT COAL STOVE CANNEL COAL FURNACE COKE BLACKSMITHS WOOD 21/, in., 3 in. and 4 in. Tile of the Best Quality. ARTHUR FOBS Opposite the G. T. It. Station. Phone 52. The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company Sick I'Iee►clsl lyes are not caused' by u gthing'v gong sn the head, but b constipation„bilious- ' r nese and indigestion. Headache, powders or tablets may deaden, but cannot cure them. Dr. Morse's Indian :Root Pills do cure sick head- ache in the sensible•way by removing: ' the constipation or sick stomach which caused then). Ar. Morse's Indian Root.F'ills are purely vege- table, ege table, free from any harmful drug, safe and sure. -When you feel the' headache coming take , , Pr. Morse's Indian ILgot' Pills Fo'r"ty years in use, 20 years the standard, prescribed and recom- mended by physicians:- For T'i'ontan's Ailments, Dr. hlartel's Female, rills, at your druggist. Farm and Isolated. Town Property only Insured OFFICERS - J. B. McLean, President, Seaforth P.0:; Jas. Connolly, Viec-Presi' dent, Goderich P.O. ; T. E. Hays, Secretary-Tt'easui:er„ Seafortb P.O. -Directors - D. F. McGregor. Seaforth; John Grieve, Winthrop; William Rinn: Constance; John Watt, Harlock ; John Benuewies, Brodhagen ; Jamas Evans, Beechwood ; M. McEven, Clinton P.O. - Agents - Robert Smith, Harlock; E. Hinck ley, Seaforth ; William Chesney. Eamondville; J. W. Yeo, Holmes• yflle. Any money to be paid in may be paid to Morrish Clothing Co.. Clin ton, or at Cutt's Grocery. Goderich Parties desirous to effect insur- ance or transact other business will be promptly attended to on ap plication to any of the above officers addressed to their respective post - offices. : Losses inspected by the director who lives nearest the scene The gest In 'Current: literature 12 COMPLETE ,NOVELS YEARLY MANY SHORT STORIES AND, PAPERS ON TIMELY --TOPICS $2.60 PER YEAR; 25 CTs. A COPY, NO CONTINUED STORIES ' EVERY NUMBER COMPLETE IN'ITSELF Clinton News -Record It's most Here TUE are now face to face VV with' the pa st;,trying season of the year. ; in feet vt is the time when: deli- cate, people are'Inost'stpseep- tible to disease. It is a duty you owe yourself and your family to fortify yourself against sickness.. Prepare now by taking- Rexall Wine of Cod Liver Extract It is a great nerve and tissue builder, and makes one feel Joe THE SUNDAY. SCHOOL STUDY INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOVEMBER 23. Lessson':•.VIII.-Joshua the 'New. Leader. Josh. 1. 1-9. Golden Text, Josh.;1.9. Versb'lr After'the ;death of •Mo- ses -The Israelites are still en- camped in the land of Moab, east prosperous . national period , was €rem about B. 0,'»160,0,700 after Which latter date they were "'ab; sorbed by the Assyrian empire 5. Ae I was with Moses -The nar- rative'iS' designed to impress upon the' reader 'the 'sense that the con-' tinuity of the nation and of its high Purpose way independent of, and -not'broken bye a change m 'the' person of the leader. I willnot. fail thee,;nor forsake thee -A promise gtioted_hy„the.^au then of the Epistle, to the Hebrews is love of free 'from the 1 o Be ye fr money ; content with such things as ye have: for himself bath said; of the lowest Jordan. In Dent. I will in no wise fail thee, neither 34, 8 we are told that "the children will I 'in any wisp 'forsake thee" of Israel wept' for Moses in the (Heb.' 13. '5). JConapare also 'Dept. plains of Moab thirty days," alter 31 0,'8; 1 Chien. 28. 20. which it appears that Joshua took 7. Observe to do according to all immediate command of all the ad - the -law-The law is to be strictly minietrtttivo affairs of the nation. and carefully observed" if the great Jehovah spake-It'is not neoes- 'work to which Joshua has been r i sazy to think of an audible, verbal called is to be successfully accom- communication from Jehovah to peeked, He is•to "read, mark, and. Joshua in this connection. Joshua inwardly digest" that',law, carry lied long been second in command ing out its provisions'to the letter. as the assistant of Moses, and Have good success - -Literally,- situation naturally demanded that "deal wiaaly." he 'take up immediately the reins ,of administration e? This book of the law -"This and Proceed. to ' - P obviously 'refers the ''law hi carryout the plaits of Moses, which scribed in Dent. 31, 9 as written by were very familiar to ''him. His Mosses and delivered to the Levites duty, "therefore, was most clear, I and elders. -That it embraces a and as ho contemplated the work considerable' nucleus of the Posta- before him, and the best means of teuchal legislation (including, of carrying it"out, he was conscious 1 course, the 'bulk of Exod, 2023) few critics would deny."-Dummelow, 9, Have not I commanded thee 7 - For similar emp'hhsis on the per- sonal leadership of Jehovah, . com- pare Deut. 31. 7, 8, 23. $1 a bottle at W. S. R. Holmes CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms of subscription -$1 per year, , in advance; $1.50 may be charged if not so paid. No paper discon tinued until all arrears are paid. unless at the option of the yub Holier. The date to which every subscription is paid is denoted on the label. Advertising Rates - Transient ad vertisements. 10 cents per non pareil line for first insertion and 4 cants per line for each setae. quent insertion, Small advertise. merits not to exceed one inch, such as "Lost," "Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., inserted once for 35 cents, and -each subsequent in sertion 10 cents, A man's best friend is a, -"woman who cats keen him from, malting a' u ei hi sell. Communications intended for pub lication must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer, W. J. MITCHELL. Editor and Proprietor; • GRAB i(,li di f LYNAY -1t., 57($TE M: ECOMESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS • To Manitoba, Saskatchewan, • Alberta Each Tuesday until October 28 incl mire WINNIPEG AND RETURN $3600 EDMONTON AND RETURN ...$43.00 Proportionate low rates to other points. Return limit two months. Through Pullman Teurlst stooping. oars are operated. to Winnipeg with. out change via Chicago and St. Paul, leaving Toronto 11.00 p.m... on above dates, Tickets are also on Sale -vile Seam la and "Northern Navigation Company, Lull particul'vrs' and reservations from Grand Thunk Agents, or wiulo C6 is. Horning, D.P.A„ Union-Sf1ition, "TO - Tonto,. Ont. THE REXALL STORE COAL ORDERS for Coal may be left at R. Rowland's Hardware Store, or at my office in H. Wiltse's Grocery Store. ROUSE PHONE 12 OFFICE PHONE 140 A. J. HOLLOWAY BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND Subjects taught by expert instructors at the Y, M.O. A. BLDG. LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions.. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt .1. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Chattered•Accountaat �• 17 •Vice-Prloc10a1 `•';. fid(27i/ACENTRAL / ir i 4r STRATFORD. ONT. STUDENTS may eater our ole sses at any time, Those who enter now will have an-advantss'e over thor-p who cannot enter till the New Year. Orr courses in Com,. mercia-I, Shorthand and Tele- graphy departments are thorough,and practical. We offer you edvaetta,res not offered elsewhere in the Pro- vince. Get our free: catalogue and see if it interests you, D. A. MoLACHLAN, Principal that the work intrusted to him was placed upon him by Jehovah, and there was borne in oh his, heart and mind by the' Divine Spirit a strong and overwhelming conviction that he should at once "arise" and "go over this Jordan,"" and lead the people of Israel unto the land which Jehovah had promised them. God speaks to men to -day as truly and as clearly as he did to Joshua; yet we do' not expect the audible, verbal communication, now -nor need we think of such a communi- cation here. That the language of the sacred historian is figurative and anthropomorphic does not de- tract from the value of his narra- tive. On the contrary, it adds much to its, forcefulness and beauty and gives to this ancient record a new and more enduring 'meaning and value. Moses' minister -For forty years, ever since the departure of the Is- raelites from Egypt, Joshua had been the principal assistant and adviser to Moses. 3, Every place , . . to you have I given it -A supreme challenge to 'conquest and faith. As I spake. unto Moses -The pro- mise referred to is found in Dent, 11. 24, which reads : "Every place whereon the sole of your foot shall tread shall be yours : from the wil- derness, and Lebanon, from the river, the river Euphrates, even unto the hinder (western) sea shall be your border:" 4. The boundaries of the land of promise, the new- home of the re- deemed nation, were to be the wil- derness on the south,the lofty mountain ranges of Lebanon on the north, the great river, the river Euphrates, on the east, and the great sea toward the going down of the sun, that is, the Mediten seaman, on the west, For other specific designations of these boundaries, compare also the fol- lowing references: Gen. 15. 18-21; Exod. 23. 31; Num. 34. 1-2, The land of the Hittites -North- ern Syria,, extending westward in- to Asia Minor. The Hittites were neither Semitee nor Aryans, but probably Mongolians, whom they resembled most nearly an physiog- nomy and' dress. Their facial type is said still to persist in the peas- antry of Cappadocia. 1 cis, Th sir most The "'Neighborly 'Spirit. The neighborly smirit is an • ex- cellent thin to cultivate, although ' not, perhaps, its it i$cultivatedin the following 'story : "How do 'ybu lilte your new home?" a friend asked a man who had recently moved into the vil- "Pretty well:" " "Have you called on your nefh1 bolls yet 7" „No, '' thenewcomer, admitted, "T h9,oii't, 'Buff Ts In s',in' to;'i:f any- ituda•e Ezf niy wood is missing, Unreal pleasures are the most expensive. No More Headaches For Me This can be your experience if you use Chamber- lain's Tablets -- they ablets-they. cure head- aches by remov- ing the cause not by smothering the symp- toms -woman's surest 'cure for woman's most common ailments. Try them. 25c. a bottle. Druggists and Dealers, or by mail. Chamberlain Medicine Co. Toronto 2 G AMB RLAIN'S; THIS IS <A STORE OF DEPENDABLE. VALUES A store that keeps in touch with the constantly changing jewelry styles. A store that sells the sail'te goods as these sold in he better stores all over the country And sells them, too, at as low prices as ANY STORE CAN: Everything 'we :show you can i2e, 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 requil'e nor when, if it belongs to a Jewelry Stock, it's here. Prove these things any trine occasion arises: `4y nt r. Mrs. Bessie Wakefield. Woman sentenced to -be hanged at Weathersfield, Conn,, with James Plew, for the murder of her husband. No woman has been hanged in that State since 1876. M MI • very°'Home-Has : Dozens o for Panshi - Des ne-'- Keeps r. woodwork and paintwork. spotlessly clean-' and white. Scours pots and pans. 'Clean's cutlery and glass- ware. Makes bathrooms spick and span, • Keeps :kitchens `immaculate and; sweet. is a clean, white, pure powder that has no disagreeable smell, won't scratch and will not injure the hands. Buy Panahine. You'll be glad you did. Large Sifter At all Top Tin �C. Grocers .P2 1 ".. ``liar` 7<_ �`:.',l,7 i...f>•;; ■t a1�,,.N., iMa: till'.!•''. ■ :,'.■ WISDOM_ OF THE• FATHERS The 'Moral Obligation of Deciding Things for Our- selves, Even the flost Ancient Things $10,000 atANK ROBBERY. The Union Bank at Hazelton, B.C.. Entered Isy Masked Men. A despatch from Hazelton, B.C.. says : Five masked men robbed '11w Union Bank at New Hazeitom, four miles oast of Hazelton, Tuesday night, shot the cashier and escaped with $10,000 after a rifle battle with citizens. A special train was sent west in hope of intercepting the bandits, as it was believed they es- caped down the Skeena Rivet. The. cashier, returning from dinner. surprised the robbers at work. One robber opened fire, the bullet strik- ing the cashier between the eyes The wound is not serious. Citizens. attracted by the shot, hurried tr the bank just as the robbers were leaving, The fleeing men engaged ina running battle wills their pur- suers until they found shelter in the timber on the edge of the town. Six men suspected of being impli• rated in the robbery were arrested between Hazelton end New Hazel- ton. 'I, CONDUCTOR DREANEY DEAD. !filed on the G.T.P. West. of Mc- Bride From Accident. A despatch from North Bay eays' Word was received here on Weds nesday of the deaths from accident of Alexander Dreaney, formerly a resident of North Bay, which oc- curred on the G.T.P. west of Mc- Bride. No particulars are avail- able, Deceased was formerly .a, C.P.R. conductor, and left here sense time ago to work ' on the G.T.P, He was married. Mr, Dreaney was interested in several mining properties, and a letter was on its way to him apprising him' that a mining property in which he was interested had just been sold,. his :here in the proceeds amount- ing to $20,000. , DROWNED IN DARKNESS. irful Casualty ,In the Lachine Canal'. despatch from Montreal says';. Seven, and perhaps nine, men boat their lives.in the Lechine Canal at Cote St. Paul early Wednesday evening when a flat -bottom boat capsized, throwing fifteen workmen into the water•. All' were employed in the con -street -ice eetice of the Meat/real Light, Hent and T'ower Company's new power plant at Cots Stu Paul, Itis believed that all are foreign', errs, The indirect cause of the asci dent was due to the passing' of .ti tug a'ud the injudicious ihuovement of •.the • men from one side of the heat to ].Ivor other rut the craft pass, ed through the tugs swells:.• a., The First. glia you ever really love any girl before you met one 7" asked 'the beautiful one, Nri " replied the latied''foreige- "Amen did that which was ,evil in the sight of, the Lord, as, his father Manasseh did, He walked in all the ways his fa= ther walked in anti served the idols that his father served." - II. Kings, xxi., 20. progress.- On the contrary, I well recognize the fact that our inherit mice from the past represents the matured experience of unnumbered ages, and that, in a thousand mat- ters, we must walk, in the paths trodden wide and hard by the feet of those who have preceded us, 11 Anion was condemned, I have no we would not become hopelessly lest doubt, because of the actual' evil in the wilderness of error. "The which he did, and I suppose that the wisdom of the lathers" is aro ape author, of "-Kings" did not intend phrase. What T am protesting to have us assume that the punish- against is the superstition that the went of the King was dependent fathers were not only wise but in - upon the chance fact that he "did fallible, and that it is therefore the as his father Manasseh did." part of duty to accept without ques- Whether this be the case or not, tion everything that they believed. however, this latter iilterpretatign r What I am concerned with is the may certninly be taken as eminent- t springs' -o£ action -tile simple fact If fair. The mere fact that Amon) that we must make our own paths "walked in all the ways that hal father walked in" wits enough to' stir the wrath of the historian, en- tirely apart from the actual nature of his deeds. Even though Manas- seh had been a noble man and a wise sovereign, and h_is son's imita- tion of him had resulted only in good and not in evil, still would Amon',s conduct have- been repre- hensible. For this one thing is sure -that no .belief is sound which is not the result of one's own person- al conviotion, and no conduct moral which is not determined 'by the dic- tates of one's own conscience. II We Walk in a Certain Way because 'our father walked in this way beforeuswe may be doing what is' good 'Irons the standpoint of the world, or we may be doing what is evil. But whether good or evil in a worldly-senee, we are cer- tainly not doing what is right in a spiritual sense. For the righteous life is not a matter of outward con- formity, but of inward realization. It is spontaneous in its origin, and not imitative. - Its seat of authority is the soul, and not the law. Ho only is living the moral lifo who is ri 1 his own life in sincerity and living y g truth, and thus serving God, not necessarily as the fathers served Him yesterday, but as his soul •teaches him'Ho should be *erred to clay l ' In saying -this Ido .not mean to imply that we should never do what the fathers did. I ani making no plea- for that superficial radicalism which believes that a complete wreak- with the' past is the key to LER ®j;, eS', "You're'tise.firs'gtrl,Cbfuve ever .BEy/l g left a11G1 I:3 !':o l .l lace v a.. hc. own rvIARKIAGE lalt;y E ;sl:, ..1ib." and find out our own gods; and than ellen though we finally walk in the ways the fathers walked in, We must do this for the reason that we have found out for ourselves that the ancient path is Indeed the Paths of Bight. As Coleridge puts it, in his transla- tion of Schiller's "Wallonstein".: "Self-contradiction is the only wrong; For, 'by the laws of , spirit, in the right Is every individual character That acts in strict consistence wills itself." Emerson called this the gospel of Self -Reliance, and it is a• gospel which needs as argent preaching in our day as it did in his. Too prone are we to take what is given us without questioning. Too ,easily do we accept the inheritances of theory and practice transmitted from the past. Too many of us are afraid of our own. souls. We dare not open our eyes to new revela- tions. We tremble before untrod- den horizons and undiscovered worlds- And when there cometh one who chide us break new path- ways unto God, we stone him and crucify him for very'fear. It is not surprising to find Professor Bury, of Cambridge University, saying on the last page -of his recent "History of Freedom of Thought" that "in this sense distrust thy father and mother is the first commandment of promise." - Rev. John Hayues tolrnes. She Enew. Teacher ---Have you looked up the meaning of : the word imbibes, Fanny'] Fanny -Yes, ma'am. Teacher -Well, what -sloes it mean? Fanny -To take in. Teacher -Yes. Now give gen-. tens using the 'word; Fanny -My aunt imbibes board- ers. Taking • thi Igs, pyla h,sophically. is easy if they dont concern you, - • Did it Taste Any Different? "'Waiter h+ "Yes, sir." "What, is this 7" "0, I'm sorry, sir. That's one of the nsaanagol's phonograph discs. Sorry_ it got mixed u.p with your plate of pancakes, sir.. It's a Otis- take, sir." -- Teacher---"If you had eight pen- nies anti Billy had foam+, and yen took his and put ahem to yours, what would that make?" ''Tiou- ble."..' . 27 ALE --- STOUT 'LAGER PURE •-• PALATABLE ---- NUTRITIOUS -- BEVERA9ES FOE SALE BY WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWHERE LOCAL OPTION --Residents in the local' option districts can legally order from this brewery 'whatever they require for personal or family Use, Write to JOHN: 1 iliBA7 , L71li1TED, '.,LONDON, CANADA /dl"n'G1 saYsil't/Ili'a t '• Alin. Mach s:4'OA • //alt, .:r it•'.:.W7^ rt • '"r�� 1..,s/IAA -V,1? r�•.,i"` 1� ,sr "'S* , � • ,