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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-03-20, Page 7WhettLydia E:Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound Did For Their 'Health—Their own Statements 'Folio W. s t Haliburton, :;P.E.I.:—"I had a doctor examine me and he said I had falling of the womb, so,I have been taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it has done me a lot of good. All the bearing -down pains have vanished. I have gained ten pounds in weight, the discharge is all gone, and I feel better than I have for a long time. I think any woman is foolish to suffer as I did for the sake of a few dollars. r� "You can use my' letter as a testimo- Bial. Itmay encourage other poor women who suffer as I did to use your Vegetable Compound." — Mrs. GEO. CoLLICUTT, Haliburton, Lot 7, P.E.I. Read What This Woman Says: New Moorefield, Ohio.—"I take great pleasure in thanking you for what your VegetableCompound has done for me. I had bearing down pains, was dizzy and weak, had pains in lowerback and could not be upon my feet long enough to get a meal. As long as I laid on my back I would feel better, but when I would getup those bearing down pains would come back, and .the doctor said I had female troubles Lydia O E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was the only medicine that helped me and I have been growing stronger ever since I commenced to take it. I hope it will help other suffering women as it has me. You can use this letter."—Mrs. CAssin LLOYD, New Moorefield, Clark Co.,Ohio. For Embryo Poultrymen. Build your houses so that plenty " of fresh air can enter them, but no draughts. A chicken's good must be compos- ed of vegetable and mineral mat- ter. .Always keep a clean supply of fresh water before the birds. Sprouted -oats form a great pro- ducer of eggs and should be fed regularly. Mangles also make an excel:ent green food. Remember a hen has no teeth and must be supplied all the time with good sharp grit. Pebbles are not grit, as they have lost their sharp edges. I'f the hens are laying soft shell eggs they need oyster shells, which must be broken up so that they can be eaten. Always buy pure bred stock and put as much as possible into your start. Buy from reliable persons only. Make your roosts all on the same level and so that they can be re- ' moved easily. CARTEaS I tLE IVER PILLS. Sick Yteadnche and relieve all the trouble: incl. dent to a biliousstate of the system, suet. aR Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress atter eating, Pain in the Side, &c, while their most remarkable success Las been shown to curing sb 13eadache, yet Car er's Little Liver rills arra *A.equally valuable 1 in Constipation, curie mal re• venting lhtbannoying complaint, while theyalso correct isordersoftheso.h,s imuo liver and regulate the bowelsZntn if they only Coed 7 ,x aw t r sx gat,. s tr I•A 'Achethey d almostpricelesstn tb e e whe cutter from thisdistressing irt ante1y theirgoodnessdosnotendhere'andthose who onco try ebcm willflndtheselittle pills valu- ablein so manyrahs that the will not bew'1- tinto do without ten. But after alt alck hoed Is the bane of so many lives that here 1s where we make onr great boast. Our pills cureit while others do net. Carter's Little Liver Pills 'are very small and i make a dose. Te easytottake. One dsm very,t e I , and do. t gripe or r are elect vegetable tea no p They but by their gentle action please all who nee them. Q Sane li8DICTSZ {Plow TORE. kaail 211��e11 X06@f :Mall �1l $y .Rupert Hughes Novelized from the Comedy of the Same Name ILLUSTRATED From Photographs of the.Play • as Produced By Henry W. Savage' Copyright, Test. by H. E. Fly Oo. sure sae was not creaming it. Then, omitting further parley with fate, she 6natched it away, put, it round his heck, and, since her arms were em- bracing him, kissed him twice before. she knotted the ribbon into a flaming bole She sat back and regarded the Mrs. Walter Temple. ;vision a moment, then flung her arms round him and hugged him till ho gasped: ' "Watch out—watch out. Don't crush any cigars." "Cigars! Cigars!" she echoed, in a daze. r And then the astounding husband produced them in proof. "Genuine Lillian Russells—five (cents straight." "But I never saw you smoke." "Haven't taken a puff since I was a young fellow," he grinned, wagging his head. "But now it's my vacation, and I'm going to smoke up." She squeezed his hand with a 'earlier ardor: "Now you're the of Walter Temple I used to know." "Sally," he said, "I've been traveling through life on a half -fare ticket, No 1I'm going to have my little fling. An ;you brace up, too, and be the old mi - ;chievous Sally I used to know. Area 'you glad to be away from those sew- ing circles and gossip -bees, and —" "Ugh! Don't ever mention them," "she shuddered. Then she, too, felt tinge of recurring springtide. "if you start to smoking, I think I'll take u ;flirting once more." He pinched her cheek and "As the saying is, go as far as you d - eire and I'll leave the coast clear." He kept his promise, too, for they were no sooner on the train and snu - 7y bestowed in section five, than Was up and off. "Where are you going?" she asked. "To the smoking -room," he swag- gered, brandishing a dangerous look - hagcigar. ,ng g "Oh, Walter," she snickered, "I feel 'kyoung runaway." St e a nt "You look like one. Be careful to let anybody know that you're a" he lowered' his voice -"an old" preae - er's wife." "I'm as ashamed of it as you arm" `she whispered. Then he threw her a ;kiss and a wink. She threw him a kiss along and winked too. And he went g W the aisle eyeing his cigar gloating As he entered the smoking -room, light- ed ig t ed' the weed and blew out a great puff with a sigh of rapture, who could ha e taken him, with his feet cocked up, and his red tie rakishly' askew, for a minister?. • n a Now And s Aren't w a u p laughed. e g he d g k e 0 h e, s II ly h u v And Sally herself was busy disguis- ing herself, loosening up her hair co- quettishly, smiling the primness out of the set corners of her month and even—let the truth be told at all costs —even passing a pink -powdered puff over her pale cheeks with guilty sur- reptition. Thus arrayed she was soon joining the conspirators bedecking the bower. for the expected bride and groom. She was the youngest and most mischiev- ous of the lot. She felt herself a bride again, and vowed to protect this timid little wife to come from too much hi- larity at the hands of the conspirators. CHAPTER VIII. A Mixed Pickle. Mrs. Whitcomb had almost blushed 'vrhen she had murmured to Lieuten- !ant Hudson: I should think the young couple Would'have preferred, a steteroom' DON'T NEGLECT YOUR WATCH AWATCH is a delicate piece , of machinery. It calls for Less attention than most machinery, but must be cleaned and oiled occasignally to keep perfect time, a With proper care a Waltharrm Watch will keep per fect for a lifetime. It will pay yen • well to let us clean your watch every x2 or x8 months. a ■!TKeCOUNTER ♦� ; V Jeweler and Optician. Issuer of Marriage Licenses. I IIo� PROMPTED THIS LET Prominent People Proud Testify For "Fruit -a -tins R. TIMOTHY MCGRATM x3o ATLANTIC AVB., MONeemee, Mutat t ISt. re12, 'For years, I suffered from Rheu matism, being unable to work for week; at a time and spent hundreds of dollars on doctor's medicines, besides receiving treatment at Notre Dame Hospital where I was informed that I was incur- able. I was discouraged when einem' advised me to try "Fruit-a-tives". After using three packages, I felt relieved and continued until I had used five packages when a complete cure was the result after years of doc- toring failed. I consider "Fruit-a- tives" a wonderful remedy. You are at liberty to use this testimonial to prove to others the good that "Fruit-a-tives" has done me' TIMOTHY McGRATH. soc. a box, 6 for $2,5o—trial size, 2gc. At dealers or front Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, And Mr. Hudson had flinched a lit- tle as he explained; ' "Yes, of course. Wo tried to get it, but it was gone." . It was during the excitement over the decoration of the bridal section, that the stateroom -tenants slipped in unobserved. First came a fluttering woman whose youthful beauty had a certain 'hue of experience, saddening and wisering. The porter brought her in from the station -platform, led her to the stateroom's concave door and passed in with her luggage. But she lingered without, a Peri at the gate `of Paradise. When the porter re- turned to bow her in, she shivered and !hesitated, and then demanded: "Oh, porter, are you sure there's no- Ibody else in there?" 1 The porter chuckled, but humored her panic. "I ain't seen nobody. Shall I look under the seat?" To his dismay, she nodded her head violently. he rolled his eyes in won- derment, but returned to the state- room, made a pretense of examination, and came back with a face full of re- assurance. "No'm, they's nobody there. Take a mighty small -size bur- 'glar to squeeze unda that bald—er— berth. No'm, nobody there." "Oh,„ The gasp was so equivocal that he made bold to ask: "Is you pleased or disappointed?" The mysterious young woman was too much agitated to rebuke the impu- dence. She merely sighed: "Oh, por- ter, I'm so anxious." "I'm not—now," he muttered, for she handed him a coin. "Porter, have you seen anybody on board that looks suspicious?" "Elvvabody looks suspicious to me, Missy. But what was you expecting i --especial?" Oh, porter, have you seen anybody that looks like a detective in dis- guise?" ,'Well, they's one man looks 's if he !was s la d ,gulled as a balloon, but I don't. 'believee' h s no slouch -hound:' "Well, if you see anybody that looks 'like a detective and he asks for Mrs. Posdick—" "Mrs. What -dick?" "Mrs. Fosdick! You tell him I'm not on board." And she gave him another coin. "Yassum," said the porter, linger - .Ing willingly on such fertile soil. "1'11 tell him Mrs. Fosdick done give me, her word she wasn't on bode." "Yes!—and if a woman should ask you." "What kind of a woman?" "The hideous kind that . men call handsome." "Oh, ain't they hideous, them hand- some women?" "Well, :if such a woman asks for Mrs. Fosdick—she's my husband's, 'first wife -but of course that doesn't! interest you.. "Nolo—yes'm." "If she comes—tell her—tell her— oh, what shall we tell her?" The porter rubbed his thick skull: "Lemme' see—we might say you -1 tell you what we'll tell her: we'll tell. her you took the train for New York; and if she runs mighty fast she can just about ketch it.' 'Fine, fine!'' And she rewarded his genius with another coin. "And, ,porter." Ile had not budged. "Por- ter,, if a very handsome man with CASTOR IA Tor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always' Bought Bears the" Signature of 1 U1uu o 'XII.—First Quarter Cress n, March 23, 1911 THE INTERNATIONAL, SERI luscious eyes and a soulful smile asks. ;for me-" "I'll th'ow him off the train!" "Oh, no—no!—that's my husband- any present husband. You may let !him in. Now is it all perfectly clear, ! porter?,, l "Oh, yassum, clear as clear." Thus !guaranteed she entered the stateroom, 'leaving the porter alone with his prob item. 'tie tried to work et out in a ;semi -audible mumble: "Lemme see! If your present husband's absent wife gits on bode disguised as a handsome hideous woman I'm 'to throw him—' 'her—off the train and let her—Mm— come in—oh, yassum, you may rely on me." He bowed and beld out his hand, But she was gone., He (rhuf - `il�r� :141lifli�t1?��;. I3ere are ten lies •Which are often' heard,' ,accol ding to •A.rthur 9.nll, For of Lamer, lito :— s• Yes, We're out, but!,, we've just Ordered .a lot of it. I didn't care ,eny'thing -for the money. It -was the principle of the ES. thing. I'd just like to have been ' in his place. I'd have showed them. Text of the'Lesson Gen. xxiv, 58.67. If I had that"woman for %' a little while I'd :teach her a few things. Memory Verses, 64, 65—Golden Text, If I'd catch a kid of mine' at any - prey, 111, 6=Commentary Prepared thing like that I'd 'blister him. by Rev. D. M. Stearns. If 1 had just a little money, 1 know where I could go out and We have our choice this week of a make a pile, resurrection lesson from .Mark s¢3 or I never would care to be rich, the regular lesson, but as we sate just comfortably fixed. . Isaac risen from the dead yin our last shMoey wife ed I have never `ea- acrandoss wor If you don't think. it's; la good lesson and this one shows us a bride g d. for Isaac and his marriage, suggesting thing for you I don't want you to the resurrection of the bride of Ohiist, do it.. the church, and the' marriage of the I've never seen such we'athar he - Lamb, we will take the regular lesson. fore- 1 After the figurative death and resnr- rection of Isaac (quite a reality to both Abraham and Isaac) Abraham return- ed to Beersheba and dwelt tbere. It is our privilege', to dwell always by the well of Him that liveth and seeth us and by the well of God's faithfulness and with joy draw water from the wells of salvation (Gee. xvi, 13, 14, margin; xxi, 31, margin; Iso, xii, 8). Gen. mail tells of the death and burial of Sarah at the age of 127 years aue of the purchase of the cave of Machpelah at Hebron as a burial place. Gen.•xxiv is the record of Abra- ham's servant obtaining a wife for Isaac and is wondrously suggestive of the present work of the Holy Spirit ob- taining a btaining'a bride for the crucified and risen Christ. 'We know from liiph. r, 31, 32, that 'Adam and Eve are typical of Christ and the church, and tbere is much to be learned from all the ,brides of Scripture, notably Rebekah, Rachel, Asenatb and others. The Bride, the Lamb's wife, is described in Rev, xxi. •and in Jer. iii, 14, Jehovah says that He is married to Israel. We have seen Abraham promised a seed. as the dust of the earth or the sand of the sea and again as the stars of heaven, and we have seen the two combined (Gen, xiii; 16; xv, 5; xxii, 37). Later we shell see the star promise given to Isaac and the dust promise tel Jacob (xxvi, 4; xxviii., 14), and some day when we see the elect church and the elect Israel completely gathered, the heavenly and the earthly seed of Abraham, the stars and the sand, we may wonder that we did not see it be- fore. In our lesson chapter we see a wealthy father and his only son, who had been given barer to him from the dead in a figure and to whom be bad given all that he bad (verses 35, 36). We see also a servant who bad control of all his master's goods going forth to obtain n wife for this sou and car- rying with him samples of his master's wealth (verses 10, 22, 53). The story of the servants prayer, his childlike trust in God, the direct answer to his prayer and his refusal to eat till he had told Itis errand are all most fusel - eating and instructive and a grand commentary on the Golden Text. As we read of the only son to whom the father gave all that he had we can- not but recall these words: "All things are delivered ante Me of My Father." "The Father loveth the Son and hath given all things into His hand" (Matt. xl. 27; John iii, 35). Then as to the Holy Spirit, whose special work In this age is to obtain a bride for Christ and who i5 suggested by Abraham's servant and his commission, we cannot but think of these words concerning Him: "Ile shall testify of me." "Ile sball receive of mine and shall shew it unto you" (John gv, 26; xvi, 14). The Holy Spirit fells in His word of the wealth and the love of the Son of God, and the only question for the sinner is, "1l-ilt thou go with this man?" (Verse 53.) When the reply is, as Rebekelt's was, "T will go," then the matter ofre- demption is settled, and we start on our way to meet our Isaac, having re- ceived from the Spirit evidences of His love and Elis riches of grace, such as are set forth in Eph. i, 3. 6, 7, 13, 14; Rom. iii, 24; v, 1; viii, 1; I John ill, 1, 2, etc, We mast start at once. hs the servant did with Rebekah, and net tar- ry in the old surroundings, for we are r and we now His purchased property, 'are to serve the living and true God and to wait for His Son from heaven, whom He raised from the dead, even Jesus, who delivered us from the wrath to come (1 Thess. i, 0, 10). There is no record of the journey be- yond the fact that Rebekah and her damsels g^ode upon the camels and fol- lowed thS man as be took them and went his way. y It must have been a long journey, rney • commonplace and weary, and they knew not' the way, but the man knew the way, and they had only to follow him. The only true life of the be- liever is to yield to the Holy Spirit's control and guidance and let Him have His own way with us In everything. We cannot but believe that the serv- ant' would have much to tell of Isaac and his wealth and that he,had little. if aught else to talk about, and we can scarcely think that she would grow weary, of hearing about bio to whom she had already given herself and with whom she expected to spend her life as his wife, the sharer of hie joys andsorrows. ibebekab's covering: herself as she met her beloved makes ns think of the seraphim of Lea. vi, who, in the pres- ence of the glory cover themselves with their wings, and of, Paul, some of whose favorite words were, "Not I, but Christ; "Not d, but the grace of God" (Gat. ii, 20; 1 Cor, xv, 10). In verse 67 we read that leans was comforted, and I Thess. Iv. 1e-18, tells us to comfort one another, with the thought of meet- ing our Beloved in the air when He shall welcome His bride. Continued next week. - jr„0 The family remedy for Coughs and Colds. Shiloh costs so little and does so much l"' Saxon—It's a fine morning. Sancly Sandy grunts. Saxon—I said it was a fine morni- ng, Sand dinnSnady-awant Terratae tvargueeel, !Versa tvel I ; den and the Conservative party, I' fought forthe election of air. Bor- That 'was a duty the Citizen i it thought it owed to the pa11y, which it has always supported to election iE F "'t 011 centuries ,t has been krahv i that Nature's most valuable health give lag agents for the erreof disease are found.in our American forests, '. 4 Over forty years ago Dr, R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to tae Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N.Y,, used the powdered extracts as well as ,the liquid extracts of native medicinal plants, such as Bloodroot and Queen's root, Golden Seal and Steele root, Cherry` bark and Mandrake, for thecure of blood diseases. This preaorlptiou tie put up in liquid form was called DR. PIERCE'S Golden Medical Discovery and has enjoyed a large sale for -'.all these, years in every drug' store in the land. You can now obtain the powdered extract in sugarcoated tablet form of your medicine dealer, or send 50e in one -cent postage stamps for trial box' to. Dr. Pierces Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y,, and tablets will be mailed, postage prepaid. The "Golden Medical Discovery" makes rich, red blood, invigorates the stomach, liver, and bowels and through them the whole system. Skin affeetions, blotches, boils, pimples and eruptions—result of bad blood —are eradicated by this alterative extract—as thousands have'teotified. -1 Seal 50 one -cent stature to pay cost of mailing only on a free copy of Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 pages, clothbound ADDRESS DR. R. V. PIIERcE, BUFFALO, N. Y. The Citizen announces that it of the'governnrent, with the added will oppose Whitney at the next virtue and advantage of. being rovineial election unless he courteous and progressive; will grants a measure of. tax reform. It make the Citizen's anticipated ac- says,in part: tion less difficult, "Sir. James Whitney:need take no ` consolation, however, from the fact that the Citizen, after differ- ing with the federal Conseryative 1 opposition lcluring the last session of the last parliament, sunk its con- Fictions on a tariff question and rott e Weak Heart. Was All Run 1I'own. Many people are unaware of having anything wrong with their heart till some excitement, overwork or worry causes them suddenly to feel faint or dizzy, and have an all -gone sinking sensation. On the first sign of any weakness of the heart or nerves, you should not wait until your case becomes so' desperate that it is going to take years to cure you, but avail yourself of a prompt and perfect cure by using Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pilin. Mr. Thomas A. Stevenson, Harris, Sask., writes:—"I was troubled with weak heart, and was all run down for a long while. 7 was almost in despair of ever getting well again, until a friend recommended me to try Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. After the first box, I was much better, and three boxes cured me, I am now, as well as ever, and will highly recommend them to any one else troubled with a weak heart." The price of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills is 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $125. For sale at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. T4'lHs Sir James Where it Stands Ottawa Citizen Iteplicsto Ontario Premier Ottawa, Feb. 26.—The Ottawa Citizen to -day devotes a column and a half editorial leader to Sir James Whitney's reeernt attack in the legislature on that Conser- vative paper's stand in opposition to the provincial government on tax reform, in -which he referred i., its advocacy ,of reciprocity prior to the last Dominion general elec- tion, and its subsequent support of the Conservatives in their fight against the reciprocity pact. '4g'oca's Eta:phedim), The Great .73nglisle itemedy71 ir Tones and invigorates the whols nervous system, makes now Blood in old Veins, Carrs Nero Pus Debility, Meatal, awl Bram Worr'ti, Acs pendency, Sexual 17calc,+.e•,s 'Docissions, Spee - 1 matnrnc�e , and 1 Bets of lilxcesaeu. Price: $1 per box six tot $5.. One will please, six vdIIoure Sold II all druggists or, mailed in platin pkg. on 1"everyp f price. New pamphlet nl,railed,irce. rho W(laci M.Ddicino. Ce, 'Coronet'. *PIO contests. This duty to the Conser- vative party in the federal arena, however, fin no way enlightens the Citizen to similar attitude to - W wards the Whitney government of the province on its next appeal to the electorate. -"While the Whitney government will doubtless he ab'e on its next appeal to the electorate to secure a new lease of life without the assis- tance of the .Citizen—such has been the excellence of their administra- tion on the whole—yet it will be impossible for the Citizen to sup port the government's appeal -if Sir James persists in opposing the province -wide demand for local option in municipal taxation, "Believing, therefore, as the Citi- zen does, that it is more important that local option -in local. taxation be extended to those self-reliant and self-respecting (municipalities that desires it, than that Sir James Whitney be retained as reinter of Ontario, it will be impossible for this paper, if Sir James continue to oppose this reform, to give him its support on his next appeal to the province. The reorganization of the !apposition in the legislature under aleadership just as capable, honorable, and aggressive as that every day. Post-mortem examinations often show that tuberculosis had been arrested by strengthening. the lungs before the germs gained mastery. You can strengthen your resistance -power by taking Scott's Emulsion. It con- tains available energy in con- centrated form, which quickly nourishes all the organs of the body. It repairs waste—makes rich, active blood and supplies energy to the starving cells. It's timely use enables the body to resist tuberculosis. For stubborn colds and bronchitis nothing compares with Scott's Emulsion. Refuse substitutes—insist on SCOTT'S. Scott Sr Boyne, Toronto, Ontario 12-67 CALDWELL'S MOLASSES MEAL is a decided Economy and an excellent Investment— Because it makes other feed more palatable and digestible. It also puts stock in first-class condition very quick. Caldwell's Molasses Meal is 84% Pure Cane Molasses with 16% a special variety of edible moss possessing unique digestive action. Thousands of stockmen and farmers are consistent users of Molasses Meal because they have proven it to be the best conditioner on the market. Your feed - man likely has it. If he hasn't, it would be well worth your while to write for prices. THE CALDWELL FEED CO., LIMITED, DUNDAS, ONTARIO. as. geo•as••••eoe•sescesseseoe1206oee0006iser®®m®•®asess••ss••sss•®•a••••s••••••••se•s otos orseesesess•s•®se•ae•snesesseeeorrseeeeeases••seseeeelm •ee•e•••••••oseir••• • i s• 0o •• � a .^ i® 00 40 s lI —T— .. ID 0 •.® t . Ctrl • dl 40 0 • T e . oh • ili »ra» • • • • • • •to :!I �, I �i�ii sasrsa ng4a lu• �7 ..��• • • • • i• , l r •• 1 tl • • • • 'i- I' •• r • ••: III;;. i �_ i � .��� i. � \f -^'�-- ®• • •• I � • •_ s •s • �, • •s ,I - s 1 l •• �` nRo es ; • r •• o ur▪ • s. • •▪ • • •. 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