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Clinton .Snec
Lesson .VIII'— Second Quarter, + -
For May 26, 1912
t
i
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of -the Lesson, Matte; v, 3347;
Jas. iii, 1.12; v, 12—Memory Verses,
34 -36 -Golden Text, Sph. iv,'25, R. V.
Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M.
°Stearns. • _
The topic of today's lesson is "Tuuth.
'fulness," but from the first and last
Scripture selections it would neem to
be a warning against swearing or, tak-
ing the three passages,a lesson on the
control of the tongue. The essential
thing ie a right relation to God, who is
the God of truth (lea. lxv, 16), whose
throne is heaven, His footstool the
earth and Jerusalem His special city,
the city of the great Bing. • That title
makes us think of Mal,'(, 12-14, where
He complaies of the deceit of His peo-
ple In bringing Hite offerings they
would not bring to an earthly ruler, and
he said, "I am a great Bing, a e e
and my name Is dreadful among the
nations." In Mal. fi, 1, 2, He said that
there would be a• curse if they did not
lay it to heart to give glory to His
name. Sometimes men are so honored'
by others thatsit is said or snob a one,
"That man's word is as good as his
bond." How much more should the
word of God suffice as the firmest pos-
sidbia foundation on which to rest,
"Forever, 0 Lord, thy word is settled
In heaven." "Hath Efe said and shall
He not do It? "The Lord of Hosts
bath sworn, saying. Surely as I have
thought so shall it come to pass, and
as 1 have ,purposed so shall it stand"
al
(Ps. calx, 89; Num. exili, 19; Ise.
xiv, 24). The more we meditato upon
Hen and upon such words concerning
Him the mope we shall become like
.Him In word and deed. Beholding as
to a glass the glory of the Lord, we
shall be changed into the same image
from glory to glory as by the Spirit of
the Lord (11 Cor. iii, 18) and thus be
more inanifestly.chlldren of our. Father
who is in heaven.
• This cannot be till we bave been born,
from above and have thus become chit.
•dren of Clod, standing before Him in
His righteousness, as we learned last
" week. James in his epistle is as clear
about the new birth and the manner of
dt eels Peter or Paul or our Lord Him.
self (Jas. 1, 18, 22; I Pet. 1, 23; John
iii), but tho,8pirlt tbrongb James lays
special emphasis on the need of a man-
ifestation of such words and works on
!the part of saved people that those who
•cannot read the heart, as God does,
may see in daily life the reality of the
'faith that saves. If a company of be-
lievers are asked to repeat the verse
.beginning, "This Is a faithful saying,"
It would o d be an almost unheard of oc-
currence for some one to ask, "Which,
•please'i" but with one consent all would
repeat I Tim, 1, 15, and not one in My
or a hundred would think of Tit. Ili, 8,
for it seems to he almost an unknown
saying, but it is so important. James'
great point in chapter II is that a mere
word of mouth, a mere "say so," does
not amount to anything in
necessarily; it
must be a heart t word which t will show
,itself in the 111e, for "with the heart
-man believeth unto righteousness, and
with the mouth confession is made
unto salvation" (Rom. x, 10). In our
lesson he speaks of the power of the
tongue for good or evil and uses as
illustrations a great creature like a
horse controlled and turned where the
driver pleases by the bit to his mouth
and also a great ship guided by a very
small helm. Even so the tongue,
though a
very small member of the
body, can accomplish a great deal of
good or evil; and, while many kindsof
creatures can be tamed, the tongue can
no man tame or woman either. But
there is one who can subdue and con-
trol it. It Is not right that from the
same mouth there, should flow sweet
water and bitter, and if the Lord Him-
self is the fountain in us it will not be:,
so, and He can stop the other fountain
from which the bitter comes. Salva-
tion -is whdlly of God, whether it be
the gift of eternal life or living out that
life day by day. We are as utterly
helpless -in the one as in the other. He
must do it all. it is ours to receive
Rim and be saved and then to let Him
rule in us. '
As we yield fully to Rim
we will find that He is able to subdue.
If :lob, who is mentioned in connec-
tion witib the last verse in our lesson,.
could under very great trial reject his
Wife's proposal that he curse God and
die (Job li, 9) there is equal grace for
every tried one, and. God is able to
make all grace abound toward us that
we may have all sufficiency in all
things (II Cor. ix, 8). Our tongues will
*he used by God or the devil as we yield
to one or the other, as in the case of
Simon Peter. (Matt. xvi, 18, 17, 22, 23).
"lie thatkeepethhis mouth keepeth
his life." And "Whose keepetb hid
mouth and his tongue keepeth his soul
from troubles" (Prov. ,silt, 8; xxi, 23).
11 is well to act often, according to Ps.
=vile 13, "I as a deaf man heard'h
and I was as+ a dumb.man that openeth
aot his mouth.!,' 1.113 well to pray iil-
waye p•'o.-xix, 14; eztf, 8). Self confi-
dence we must always avoid, bat when
weak and consciously so WO will find
His grace eufficleat. Ile win not Rail
tht�@e� �li�•,tleiy
ape, a nL,• 63-44, t4;
o1'1'� W �z
,44++.4++++++44444Pit++444t++++t4++i+++4+i+++t+44+4++++4+++++++: + +
..�vo44P44PO4PP+++P44'i4t4P44441ii4+4444tt4t4ttOP+444411444t4+44++t4444•It44.•(
RTAMBALL ' McCAU4CrHEY JOHNSON
fi4VITC';HEL1J DRAPER , ,•
A' feet: metfielder who, can also,akel �Thirdbaseman
'Whew is'ftini ed'n • 7hs• peer e' as,:.catce„ of the Clinton ; xh
e besshortstop in the.busiuess Seeond aaseman, who an playa lace as catcher. • 'revere' motemnkt
Clnb, . • any ball !tis 'easy fon' ;him, eee, Pirelli's ball any day. .:y
McEWEN
,Onefielder, who has •the Happy
faculty of (getting the
"high fliers"
CO
LiNT
ER
Ou(I;fi;elder, who looks as i$ he will
make good. .:
4114101.1011111101• .11••••181.111
Hearst : A Town in the Clay Belt
Toro!nito Globe.
What towns exist to -day in On-
tario!a gnea,t hinterland are the
resul'tl orf development's !that have
f
talzem place in the exploitation of
•ter" mine neon
,Pse t -wealth. .
G �
,The
.first tiling we ask .01 a. new town
in the north els,—What mimes are.
*here or what pulpwoodtreasu!'W2
But ,this popular ,conception of t'ha0.
largely unknown region is chang-
ing. Peoples are beginning to real-
ize that tihe north has a bigger
boas',; agrander heritage of which
to send deslpa!tches to the;, citylpa-
pees, and, after all, :a more alluding
life to, offer tLe!restless from omother'
lands W are be in i g' •o•hear
d .R' nn t
of t tun
o s being bualti u on a' faith
in, the one aumlaeee of the top six
inched oif,the Boal, which the new
,settlers' believe possesses more.
gold, than (the whole Interior of tl:fie
earth, .The latest otomy comes from
Hearst, an ambitious' eollection of
hwt;tt that es moving any (fast an a
da'i ilei pinned to the 1C1ay, Belt,
The prospector may do muc'hifort
Hearst, writes ayoung railwayiran,
played in 'the new burg,. 130 'miles
wee) of Cochrane, on the N. T. ,'Ry.,
who seems to have grasped fb:e
right view of things— there, ale
rumord of hidden treasuries. )3ut,
whatever the r•aflread,s or prost18e-
.tor,e may ,do, for her, .Heam(sis
real fuitmelies initl-!e miles ofagri-
cultural land 'stretching out on
every !side, even, tether Bay,` Pacts
already. .esta'bliat etd about the: soil
beyond Ontario?s present farmiin(g
dtetiaet should make the inhabi-
tanite of that embryo town truly
optimistic. .There 'are no hills or
rocks, within a reaching radius'' of
Hearst and muiskegs•are practical-
ly unknoiwn. The surface ,soil is
rich initis centuries of forest moiild
and below the humus is a valuables
subsoil of clay. •
Hearst was suirveyed last Sep-
tember, but lit Chas not long; bonne
the name. The Provincial Govern--
melee
oveirn-mend had d,ecid,ed on iQst.hblishing a
tow/Islets 'there and had named it
Tahtawishquia when the National
Transcontinental Commission chose
the spot for •a division; point, be-
ing loca'ted'some one hundred and
thirty miles west of Cochrane. The
Commission called it Grant, in hon' -
e' of (the railway ,s ,chief engineer,
but iitavas not to be known as that
long, or uanmediatel
the he post-.
offing+ Departmgat objedted, on the
groin/ that (there is falrelSd'y a
Grant in .Ontario. 'A third .ehristen-
ing was ordered, and .the name ,p1
the new Provincial Minister of
Lands, Foresee and MVlines was giv-
en) torthe infant ,town of (scarcely'
two menthe,
CVhile rites the 'National Trans-,
continental; Railway that is to make
Hearst known, and the agricultur-
al w
earth df!thefCla Bsllt 1s til r
Y , to c s
are confident, will aombj1thm make
h:er, gt'eat, (there ane. possibilities
hidden in!thleroelzs and. forestt'that
the little .town teannot afford to
overlook, 'Rinnorn have been .cur-
cur-
rent of the discoverty 01eilvier de-
po,silts, and the/ten/ay nray' be other val-
able mineralsawaitingbut capital
and enterprise Ito• draw them to the
world's( tnarkett.. Besides, the
choicel timber lands s'tre(tching' for
miles on all ,sides are a 'wealth in
themselves, and in them are pulp
areas( a'ncl u'ivers. elfo4ding oppor-
ten'itiee for power.
Hearst hopes to attract People by
her elun:ate; 'which, while itpeijmi'ts
of o0easiosra'1 deeps int the mercury
td 80 degrees' below zero In w.intter.
has .abeautiful Isuminer` of long
days and cool evenings, The Wise -
ter is also 'a pleas'a(at ;season, •for
although it gets very cold, there
and fewer !stormy 'ori gth)er',)wisief d'is-
agreoabld. days than petal o'f!ciji.
or Ontario experitelnce.. Those who
went ,to Iiearsit last autumn became
at once opti!mi§tic for the future -of
the 't own, and the ,ngwly-suirvelyed.•
Iota ,sold quickly at $100 ,apiece foe.
front locations and $40: ,each for.
those further in the priest In Jan-
uaey half a front lolt sold ,lor $900;
whiyeh the inhabitants (say, was the
beginning/ un�u
g ng, surd Many EtraWf�feriQ
have( ',since been inade at big mar-
gins'. There are few, front lots, now
that could:.bo bougjhit under $2,000,
y and' rear lois, .are biting heti d ak'as
high as$900,
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
is, above all other things, the,;
remedy' for sickly, wasted•ch 1.
dreis. it nourishes and bands
them up when ordinary food''
absolutely fails.*, Be: sure to'
get SCOTT'S., i►+t giau
acotl:$ emne,_ nay, rJ ' r,1Ms;,:
Not Puzzle -Witted.
Neapolitan, Ohio, May 20.—Presie
dent Taft addressed a large crowd,
consisting mostly of farmers, here on
Saturday, defending;, his reciprocity
platform pledges.
Rods. evelt says that I lack imag-
ination end sympathy and am puzzle -
witted," said the President. I am
not so puzzle -witted but that I can
conoefve the different between the
fi'fty million dollar treasury deficit at
the end of ',Theodore': Roosevelt'i two
terms and the $44,000;000 snnplue at
the end ofney fleet year as President;,,
Mr.
Taft 1•
dee ,iiia Ropswelt ;shouts
Solnomi'nabed• bise of the sham•
of hie 'Campaign ;and becaaee to
do so Would: mean a violation of the
thjid term tradition. He spoke against
With fair weather tot-znorreev
(May 24th) the most notable day in
the; History orf baseball in 'Clinton,
,lieu .cluih will oponi_ the etees(on ,and'
Will'endeavor to lhay 4,successtui
ball 'this iaammer.
The curtain goes- up at the R,ee
creation/ park with the, Lornees oR
London, and the (Clinton boys( fac-
ing each other in the initial dr(el oY
'the year.
The diamond has been improved
and, the grandstand (fixed anti
seats sitrengthenged sothat the fans
who attend the games will feel safe
in looking at,the American pas-
time, from thegnjandtstand.
Apart from the fact that Mary
24th, is opening day, ,the game Will
prove retest of slew blood which ::
had been injgeted in ,the Clinton ''•• -
iteami and from 5towt on (till Fall,
(they will ,show :that they aretablse
to hold their, posibiolt( or,ihave •-to
make way for batter ones.
1,3
0,
DYP TIC
Fowd Does You No Good
Hail the time, you're afraid to eatll
your tongue is coated, mouth tastes
bar; stomachis 'Mooted, If you want
to get wen, stop using dyspepsia tab- •
lets and go to the source of the trots
•'ble before it is too Late, Strengthen '
your stomaich, cast out the him, rem -
late the :bowels -db this, opd 'dys!yap..
ria wi11 be no more, " ..
• For your condition the best Pre'scri s.
tion is Dm. Iramiltonts fills 1 b am-'
:made specially for the stomach w 7
treys sand liver. No better h kis-
be devised, for Dtt"HamiltonFs"Fills are
;nea•teet. !
DR. HAMILTON'S PILLS'
A SURE CURE '
"No one could realize my sufferiaJse
from stomach trouble and indiig,estion•,.
For five years I have not been, well:
My food did me' no good, because I
couldn't digest or assimilate.. Mydoc-
tar said constipation was at the root Of
my trouble, so i got Dr, Btainilton's..
Pills My appetite improved, pain after
eating ceased, and my food digested
quickly, I ani delighted with the titer..
Pugh cure I derived from Dr. Hainitl•.
ton's Pius.
"(S'i5n rhe) MARTIN E. WALKER,
Bridgewater.!'"
"Onisee .results attend the use of Dir•..
Hamilton's fills; this medicine cures
ail: trouble in the stomach and dig -es -
dye organs by reoovi1.-._- the 'cause,.
dllbo
+tip
The photographs of the leading
la e
p y ra of the Clinton Club are r,e-
produced,'here to -day anal wretfeel
sure our readerb will easily recog-
nize their old friands.
Will. Johnson it le announced,
will clothe •catching for lhe team
this, year and he will be )sure ho
make good. He Ism tgood pe g,qr
td the b;xsea. Whein h!e 10 not on
the job, Ray. Rumball will be able; eo
do the receiving, ashe practically
caught the whole of last( season.
The infield
will nro
bib
IY
be(the
sand as last year and aharytld bee
strong one, Riley Johnlsofn, tut firsle
+Draper, soeond, 111nCaughey, !third
and' '.I`tviltcheli, (shortstop, have been
playing, 'these positions for 'the
peat two years' and 11 will be hard
for any team to got away With vee
many (squeeze plays and olthislr
tricks.
The outfield has znany.candidates
but
in allprobability.
M
c
Ewa
n
Rumball and Counter '
r n ei will ,beam the
outer' garden to -morrow, r%IcEwan
Lae his place sure and the othee
two boyis are wflling� workers and
'to bol,leftt off 'wilt melan that dome -
body! will have to produoct ;the
goods.
4,4
Clinton hats always had good pitch- HERE HE IS ?
era and it is haled to, pick Riley Johnson, the first, sacker;
the winner v for' sa oa
to -mor '
ow
r, who hits as well as he fields,
Local News E
F4WWWWWWr1TY�
Electric Restorer for Mne
phosphonol restores every nerve In the body
• to its proper tension; restores
vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual
weakness averted at once. Phosphonol will
make yon a =rung
Price 38 a box or hvo for
33. Mailed to any address. Tho>5colaell l)rnr,,
'1*.. Bt. Catharines. (nee. Ont.
DO NOT BLAME U.
Y The newspaper man is blamed for
a
whole lot of'things he can't help, such
as using partiality in mentioning
visitors, Oleg news about some s
and leaving othersout, etc. He simply
Prints all
the news he can find
,
Some
inform him
things s and others
do net. An editor should not be ex-
i peoted to names and resi.
do
entes of all you r uncles, aunts and
:cousins even if he should -see them get
off or on the train. Tell us about it.
Itis news that Makes the newspaper,
and every than, wonren and child can
be associate editor' if they only will.
Neyer, apologize when you give the
bit of information to the editor, for if
there lives one so dead that he has
lost his appreciation of such favors he
is dead, indeed, to every virtue that
imparts value to 0 paper. •
Foil? piteheijs—that's ,theue,se
then. 'Many promising 'juniors are
marking oult every night and sit
is hard to deckle, but the manag-
manit expectto,haveaistar for the
game, but will not Snake known till
ready to play.
HAVE YOU A SKIN HOW.
Tani -link 111'ii1 )End -ft.
Posy ,skin sashes, eruptions, ec-
zema, ,etc., elittter ill adults or t
children., there is nothing known to
science which equals Zany!-1Bukt 6n
the quickness and certainilty off
lite cuiratavelower. 'IVlr. Raymond
Web.bera of Allanburg, Ont„ Wrilte0:
"i have tried ZamwBuk far many
alimentts, ,and everyteime have
fennel ..leteuccessful, Some !tirne
ago i had a rash. g bail sash, all over jny
body. I tried home-made prepara-
tions, 'and ,these proved Ono as;e,
but when .I!triied Zam-But I was
cured in quarlter of the tienr;,th'ah
I had been 'experimenting tin Vain
whet oitthkr preparlation>;s.
"On anostheal occasion I had' one
o,f any finger4 ,eru5,hed, and en that
case( also ZamL(6uk wasrt1ne Only
rem,edy iI u/sejd. 71 :healed . the
wound` !splonididly.
"My boy had ;boils, 'and ,once+
agate. Gam,Buk brought *bout "a
complete cum (Walleye also Used
it area household( (balm; fox. the in-
juries( and' skin di§eases which ors
003000, ito every perison, and' 'can
Ieay that in oiur expemie eciet there
lenolthlingl to equal Zane -1312k."
ZameSta1si, owes its unique healing"
power, to certain! herbal 'extracts
it con;tahes. 'Unlike most ointments
it.conitathee no poa,s'on(ous coloring
maigteri srlo,anireal fat, but it purtely
herbal, Poe eczema, piles, ,blood
noi,sony ,abscesses, Weeps, cuts,'
burns, and. all 'elfin injuries( (anti
diseased: lit is Waive* equal ;and
ehoulot :be Innevery home. 506. box
all., eiritggilsite cersd' e!t.or(e+e. Viler
:SISO(,Za r tBL111, ,534apt •2,ket !t ebpgth„t
Children Ory
FOR FLETCNER'S
C A S o I e4
ARE YOU. INVITING T3TJSINESS ?
Two farmers were not tong since die•
cussing their localaper. Otte thought
it had too many advertisements in it.
The other replied; "In my opinion the
advertisements are far from being the
least valuable part of it. I look them
over carefully and save at least five
tines the cost of the paper each week
through the business advantages I get
from them. Said the other,"I believe
you are right. I know that they pay
me well and rather think it is not good
taste to find fault with 1110 advertise -
menta after all." Those men: have the
right idea of the matter. It pays any
mani b
w t a family to takeg000d
a g o
oa
local; paper for the sake of the ad-
vertisements-if nothing more. And
if business men fail to -give farmers s
chance to read advertisements in the
loca'l•prper, :they are blind to their
owniutereet, to say the leasI of 11.
•'You never trade with me," said a
business man to a prosperous farmer.
"You have newer invited me to your
place of business and I never go where
I am not invited; 1 might not be wet.
come," was his reply.
Another' E
, . h r legator
for Goderich od ch Likel;
Company Will buplioate Present
Structure, if Harbor Is; '
Improved,
•
'C'cnderieh', May. 10. -The fact' that
35,000,000 bushels of Canadian .'gx sin
A.W.0141 tranRsRgT;'tjr�t,1°R a't dills hetad,'`
of the great laked indicates that
Goderich, .as one of the lleading
•
pain o iusyvill season, Since n the
boat§ commenced to arrive a week
ago, there ha,s bele(n, an averpge o.f
one each day unloading, grain at
the elevator o:fthe 'Godericlt Ele-
vator and Transit Company.
Sof optimistic are The directors of
th'
ys company. as to the future of
Godericla as a grains!hipping port,
that the qu,estion of ,doubling the
present million -bushel plant ,cam,o
up far' discussion at Itiro annual
meeting_ of the directors, held here
a few days ;ago,
It the nece;ssery spatia and the
wonted bila can be dentneid from the
Government and the Gralnd Trunk
Railway, ,and: also If (the •n,eceisKtuy
'e
dr d 'ti is done r •t
1fo he accommo-
dation
ga commo-
dation of vessels, the Matter ea ext
U may
be 'seriously ,consrder(ejd riinthe ,rraar
future,
O
EXCURSION
GODS.T®
RICH .
DETROIT
Steamer
Greyhound
Y d
li•
Going to Detroit–June 14,
Return from Detroit–June17
234 Days in Detroit
Detroit Tigers and Ten-
nant Winners Play
Ball, June 15-16
Crescent Club of Stratford Special Train
to the
Goderich rich Band Moonlight
gt
Thursday, June 13, 8 p. m.
For particulars see small bills or write:
E. I3.:A.75tErt,
T. A. & 1E7. .A -g8, Detroit
DON'T NEGLECT
YOUR WATCH
A WATCH is a delicate piece
,(3 of machinery. It calls for
cess attention than most
machinery, but must be cleaned
and oiled occasignallw to keep
perfect time.
With proper care a Waltham
Watch will keep berfect time
for a lifetime. It will pay you
e well to let us clean your watch
eoery 12 or 18 months.
W. R. Counter
Jeweler and Optician.
Issuer of
Marriage Licenses.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA'
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Phinos
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See and here our finest 5
New Stylish designs of
Doherty Pianos and a-
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Organs, ..P
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;a
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Pianos and organs. rent 5
Ied, choice new Edison
ii phonographs, Music &it
• variety good : 8
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MOM
Emporium
Ill
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ot•
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C. Hoare ..E'
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VVYVVVVVVVTVVVVTVTTVVVVTTd?
T. WATTS
Boot Maker and Repairer
Opposite Postoffice
pp .
Repairing done promptly.
Suit cases and Trunks re-
paired.
A trial will convince you of
the neatness and pr omptness
with which I execute my work
Store' open every evening
WATTS