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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1912-08-29, Page 713.111; Oa-
tusdayi i1bt15t' d'' Ir 'Linn;:
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RliorlicqT111M,R
n
I .AdvLce to Est ectant Mothers
,. g
y p
prepared d
,woman
da how to properly case for her
-
1,
d' 1
11
', a The experience of Motherhood is a try-
in one to most women and marks dis-
,tinctl an epoch in their lives. Not one
woman in a hundred is re are or un -
e n
Self. Of course nearly everywoman
nowadays has' medical treatment
at
such times, but many' approach the
experience with an organism unfitted
for the trial of strength, and when it
lis over her system has received a shock
from which it is hard to recover. Fol-
lowing right upon this comes the ner
mous strain of caring for the child, and
ladistinct change in the mother results.
111There is nothing more charming than
a happy and healthy mother of children,
• andindeed child -birth under the right
conditions need be no hazard to health or
beauty. The unexplainable thing is that,
with all the evidence of shattered nerves
and broken health resulting from an un-
prepared condition, and with ample time
in which to prepare, women will persist
ingoing blindly to the trial.
Every woman at this time should rely
upon Lydia E.Pinkham'sVegetable Com-
pound, a most valuable tonic and invig-
orator of the female organism.
lit In many homes
(once childless there
are now children be-
cause of the fact
that Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable
! Compound makes
(Women normal,
' In0,s and strong. �� s s INK
If' If you ;want special advice write to`
t Lydia E. Finnan Medicine Co. (confi-
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
;be opened, read and answered by a
,'Roman and hold in strict confidence.
tan
1,11t ill.
i.� rMONTREAL;4'
e A
THE STANDARD is the Natl`onai
{Weekly Newspaper 'of the Dominion
of Canada. Itis'national in all its
aims.
a-•
It uses -the" most"expensive engrave
Ings, procuring the photographs from
fall over the world.
Its articles are carefully selected and
Its 'editorial policy is thoroughly
Independent..
lir A subscription td The Standard
casts $2.00 per year to any address in
gonads or Great Britain.
o TRY IT FOR 1912!
,,... jNantreal Standard Publishing Coy
Limited, Publishers.
r t i & ehatiffeui?
By 1..,Ouis Tracy
Copyright by McLeod & Allen, Tot cin!to
rorm,an •arch:
been : consulting a guidebook, leaned "You look rather like a baron," she
forward with a smile on her face, said gleefully., , "I wish I could her -
"What is a lamprey?" else asked: row some armor and take you in char-
"A special variety of eel which has
a habit of sticking to stones by its
mouth," said Medenham. Then he
added, -after a pause "Henry the
First was sixty-seven years of age.
when hedied, so the dish of lampreys
was perhaps blamed unjustly?'
"You have a good memory," She re-
torted. —
"Oh, is, that in your book, Miss. Van-
renen? Well, here is another fact
about Gloucester. Alfred the Great
held a Witenagemot there in ,896. Do
you know what a Witenagemot 15?"
"Yes," she said, "a smoking con-
cert."
Mrs. 'Devar invariably resented'
these bits of byplay, • since she could
no more extract their meaning than
if they were uttered in Choctaw.
"Some very good people live in Glou-
cestershire," she put in. "There are
the—" She began to give extracts;
from Burke's "Landed Gentry," where-:
acter as the gentleman who built this
castle. By the way, his name was,
Fits -something -or -other. Was he a rel-
?"'
'Fitz Osborne," said Medenham.
otters.
"Ah, yes. Fitzroy means King's.
son, dosen't it?"
"I—er--believe so." M•
"Well, I can imagine you scowling:
out`' of a vizor:. It. would suit you ad-
mirably."
dmirably "
"But I might not scowl."
"Oh, yes, you would. Remember
this morning. Just force yourself to.
think for a'moment that 1 am Mon-
sieur—"
She stopped abruptly. _.
"A little more to the left, please—
and turnS our face to the sun. There, HUGH MCKENNA, E.
that is capital."
.
"Why -should. Fitzroy scowl at thea
recollection of Count Edouard?" dea
mended Mrs. Devar, her eyes "devour-
ing the telltale blush that suffused the:
upon the speedometerindex sprang girl's face and neck.
to Yorty-iiye, and a noble fifteenth ren-tury towOr Soon lifted its stone lace- supplant him as our chauffeur, came,
the res. y• ntswer- ,'
'0 thought Monsieur Maeigny'a offer
a very courteous one."
"Undoubtedly. But as I had to de-
cide 'the
ecide'the matter I preferred, totravel'
in a car that was at my own disposal.".
Mrs. -Devar dared not go farther.
She relapsed into a sulky silence. She
SF,�gEu kiE'r9
�EdSUC��i9C
"Elfin-a-iivei" Gaud Ihill
-,"Only because the Count wished to
work above the trees and spires of the
ancient city.
Cynthia wished to obtain some pho-
tographs of old inns, so,- when they'
bad admired the cathedral, and shud-;
tiered at the memory of Richard the;
Third who wrote at Gloucester the
order to Brackenbury for the murder said not a word when. Cynthia oecu-
of the princes in the Tower of Lon, pied the front seat for the climb
don -and smiled at Cromwell's mor-. through. Chepstow's High Street, and
dant' wit in saying that the place had•
more churches than godliness; then
told of the Local proverb, "As sure' as
God's in Gloucester," Medenham
brought them. to Northgate Street,:
where the New Inn—which is nearly
(always the most antiquated hostelry`
In an English country-town—suppliedi
a fine example of massive timberwork,
with courtyard and external galleries,
The light was so perfect that he
Cynthia stand. in a d
nnr-
persuaded Cy a to
way and let him take a picture. Dur-
ing the focusing interval, he suggest-
ed that the day's route should be var-
ied by leaving the coast roar: at West-
bury and running through the Forest i.
of Dean, where a secluded hotel in
the midst of areal woodland would be
an ideal place for luncheon.
She agreed. Something in his tone
told her.. that Mrs. Devar's consent to
the arrangement had better be taken
for granted. So they sped through
the blossom -laden lanes of Gloucester-
shire to the leafy depths of the Forest,
and saw the High Beeches, and the Old
Beech, and the King's Walk, and
many• of the gorgeous vistas that
those twin artists, Spring and Sum-
mer etched on the wooden teide ations
of one . of Britain's most delightful
landscapes; as a fitting sequel to a'
run through fairyland they lunched at
the Speech House Hotel, where once
the skins
of daring trespassers on the•
I{ing's preserves were wont to be nail`
ed on 'the Court House door by the.
Verderers.
It was Cynthia who pointed the'
moral. '
salwaysogre's cave'
i
"There an
near the Enchanted Garden," she said,
"and those were surely ogerish days, drowsy."
when men were flayed alive for hunt-• He glanced quickly over his should
ing the King's deer." ' ' er, and instantly made up his mind to'
r ifthey towondered at e
It is not bey broach a project that he had thought
dawdled somewhat by the way; when out carefully since' his quarrel with
that way led past Off's Dyke, through • the Frenchman.
Chepstow, and Tintern, andI Mon- i "You mean to stay: in Hereford duri
mouth, and Symon's Yat Indeed, ---
Mathe whole of to -morrow, Miss Van?
Cynthia's moods alternated between renen7" he asked.
wide-eyed enjoyment and sheer re- I "Yes.Somehow, I don't. see ghat, for eachromanticruin and `self scampering across the map on they
my -
charming' country -side not only arous... British Sabbath. Besides, I am all be, a
ed her enthusiasm but evoked a long- Carter s
hag to`reinain. riveted to the spot. yet , bindhand 'with my letters, and my
she would not be a wotnan if there I father will be telegraphing something.
Were no exceptions rule, as rove'
I
Ithere. The Wye runs past the front Whist Sear Signature of
door, the boating: superb, and there
will be a brilliant moon, after dinner."
"And the' answer is?"
"That we' could run into Hereford'
before breakfast, leaving you plenty.
of time to attend the morning service
at the cathedral."
'Cynthia did not look at him or she'.
would have' seem that he was rather
baronical hi aspect just, then. ' Sad:
to relate, they were speeding- down
the Wyndcliff gorge without' giving it!
the undisturbed notice it merited. •
"I have' a kind of notion that Mrs.
Itheboat-1
Devar wouldn't catch on to
lag proposition," she said thought:
•
I. fully.
.DON'T NEGLECT
YOUR WATCH
,Ij� WATCH is a delicate piece
, of machinery. It calls for
less attention . than most
machinery, but must be cleaned
and oiled occasionally to keep
perfect time. `'
With proper care a Waltham
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for a lifetime. 'It will, pay you
R well to let us clean your watch
every 12 or 18 months.
W. R. Counter
Jeweler and Optician.
Issuer' of
Marriage Licenses.
Cynthia occupied the front seat for
the climb to Chepstow's High Street:
when the girl turned to call her at-
m the crest
i from tention to the view
of the famous Wyndoliff she was nod-
ding asleep! •
Cynthia told Medenham, and there
was a touch of regret in her voice.
"Poor dear," she said in an under,
much for
tone," the Castle was too -u
her, and the fresh air has made her
S. $WPi3EN, N.B. Jan: reth. Isis.
"I wish to tell you of the great good
"Fruit-a-tives" have done for me. For
years, I was a martyrto Chronic Consti-
pation • and Stomach Trouble. I was
greatly run down and my friends feared
1 had Consumption. I tried numerous
doctors and all kinds of medicines, but
received no relief until advised to try
"Bruit -a -Lives" by Mr. McCready of
St. Stephen, and am pleased to say that
I now enjoy excellent health. "Fruit
a-tives" are the best medicine made,
and I strongly advise my friends to
use them".
HUGH McKENNA.
"Fruit -a Lives" is the only medicine
that will positively and completely
cure Constipation. This wonderful
compound of fruit juices acts directly
on the liver, causing this organ to
extract more bile from the blood, and to
give up snore bile to move the bowels
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pc a box, 6 for peso, trial size, 2sc.
At all dealers or sent on receipt of price
by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.
7
SUNDAY O �� L
Lesson IX. Third Quarter, For
Sept. 1, 1912.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Mark vi, 14-29
Memory Verses, 27, 28—Golden Text
Rev. ii, 10 (R.'V.)—Commentary Pre.
pared by Rev. D. M. Stearns.
This lessen is . a look backward to
the murder: of John the Baptist and
the cause of it. Tidings of the mighty
works done by Jesus and His.follow.
of KingHer.
h curs
ars had reached the a
od, and he was perplexed and thought
that John must. Ile risen from the
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Mrs. Dever, perchance tempted by
the word "Castle,” quitted the car at
Chepstow, and climbed to the
Studded oak oak door of .one of the most
perfect examples of 'a Norman strong-
hold now 'extant. Once committed to
the role of sightseer, she was compell-,
ed to adhere to'it, and before the
fourth. court was reached, had she
known the story; see'wouldhave syn-;
pathized with the pilgrim who did not
boil the peas in his shoes of penance.
Chepstow Castle • is ' a spier did ruin,
,but its steep gradients and rough pave-
ments are not 'fitted for stout ladies
who wear tight boots. '
To make matters worse, the feel -
Inge of Cynthia's chaperon soon be-
came as sore as her toeb: The only
feature of Marten's'Tower that ap-
pealed, to Ler was its diabolical in-
genuity in providing opportunities for
that interfering chauffeur to assist, al-
most to lift, Cynthia from one •mass of
fallen masonry to another. Though
she knew nothing of Henry Marten
she reviled his memory. She heard
"Fitzroy" telling her wayward charge
that the reformer really hated Charles
I. because the King called hint ' an
ugly rascal" in' public, and directed
that he should be. turned out of Hyde
Park; the words supplied a cue.
"Pity kings are not as powerful
nowadays," she snapped. "The pres-
umption of the lower ' orders ' is be-
coming' intolerable."
"Unfortunately, Marten retaliated
by signing the King's death warrant,"
sail Medea a i pre to the break ., envied the dusty'
"Orcourae. What else could one, phauffeur- his pi`etty companion. An
expect from a person of his class?"' any rate,' they greeted the peening car
"But Sir Henry Marten was a celei with jeers and cat -calls, and awoke
brated judge h I7 ver I . ! •
emphatic if I don't bo beyond 'Much a
dead. `Others said, "It tt I Il�h;h,';ao,o
still others said, `It is one of the old
prcpliete risen again. Herod said,
'1Jobn have I beheaded, but who IS
Ws of whom I hear ' suel'y things?"
t
hat de•
I is _a1 be
he i
x 7 -fl. t d
Lu )
sired to see Him, and when just 'be•
fore His crucifixion Pilate sent IBM'
to Herod,• who was in Jerusalem,: at
that time, it is written that he 'was
exceedingly glad, for he was desirous
to see Him of` a long season, because
he' had heard many things of Him,
and he hoped` to have seen some mlra-
cle done by Him (Luke xxiii, 8). Her'
od's question,none
"Who is> this'?'.1s
of the greatest of all questions. We
find it In Jer. xxx, 21, in connection
With His becoming surety for His peo-
ple; :in iso. hili, 1, in connection with
His coming -in judgment; in Luke v,
21, in'connection with His forgiving,
sins, and )n' Luke vii, 49, also; in
Matt. xxi, 10,; as He entered Jerusalem
on -the ass' colt.'Blessed indeed are
all who know Rim, not only as Israel's
Messiah and the great head of the
church and the King of kings and
Lord of lords, but as their own per.
sonal Saviour,- who became surety for
them, bore their sins in His own body
and has assured them of the forgive-
ness of their sins. Apart Prom this
personal knowledge of Him as the one
who' loved me and gave Himself for
me (Gal. i1, 20), all else is es nothing.
The record goes on to tell us why
Herod had, killed John. He had! taken
Herodias, his brother Philip's wife, to
be his wife, and John bad: told him {.
that it was not lawful to do this, ,.
Therefore Herodias had an inward
grudge' against John and would have
killed him if she. could (verse 19,: mare
gin). But Herod, knowing John to be
a just and holy man, heard him glad-
ly and did many things and kept and
saved him (verse 20, margin). Thus
things went on, " Herod knowing and
admiring the right, yet doing the
wrong, and Herodias a sort of Jezebel
to help him in the wrong, and the
devil controlling all. Whht a picture
of real life it is, for the devil Is still
the god of this world, and the world
lieth in the wicked one!
Now we have an account of one of
the devil's supreme occasions—Her-
od's birthday and a supper for his
lords, high captains and chief estates
of Galilee. It must have been a great
gathering of the notable people of the
land, to which multitudes 'would con-
sider it an honor to be invited -a kind
of Belshazzar's feast on a smaller
scale, but with the same spirit of im-
piety and disregard of God. Oh, how
much there is of it today and even
among those who are called Chris
tiansl But the world is ever the same,
whether the ungodly or the religious
world, and "all that is in the world,
the lust of the flesh and the lust of
the eyes and the pride of<life, is not
of the Father, but is of the world."
"The friendship of the world is enmity
with God" (I John il, 15.17; Jas. iv, 4).
There would no doubt be royal wine
in abundance, according to the state
of the king, and the eating and drink-
ing would be according to every man's
pleasure (Est. i, 7, 8). There was
some special dancing also, and the
daughter of Herodias danced so well.
that the king said unto her with an
oath, "Whatsoever. thou shalt ask of
n the half of
me I will give it thee unto
my kingdom" (verses 22, 28). Being
instructed by her mother, she aske„d
for the head of John the 'Baptist ,iii
a charger. The king's order must be
obeyed, and immediately the execu'
tioner does his awful work, and the
grudge of the wicked Herodias is
gratified as she obtains possession of
the bead of him she so hated for dar-
ing to rebuke her sin. Naboth's
death at the hands of Jezebel or by
her command was somewhat on the
same line of things, as far as the
death of the Innocent and unoffending
to please the wicked was concerned.
But the great murderer has been at
work ever since he caused the death
of Abel, and he is not through yet
Those who are willing to do: his work
cannot complain if some time thea
spare his doom in the lake of fire pre
pared for the devil and his angels: It
was a wretched birthday for Herod,
and we saw at the beginning of our
lesson tiat he could not forget his
pert in the. murder of John. He has
not forgotten 1t, yet,' for we conclude
from Luke xvi, 25, that memory plays
a very important part In the torment.
of the lost Although It seemed hard
for John to be thus taken off the
earth, It was In reality a good' day for
him, for he had the gain, the very far
better of. Phil. 1, 21, 23, and he has
been well and happy ever since, and
love' on a picture poste Lille Liv;r Piils.�
"Symon's Yat is exceptionally beau v
ard."
tiful, and there is a capital little hotel'
"Perhaps not, but the river takes
,a wide bend there, and she could see;
as from the hotel veranda all the',
time."
"Guess it can't be 'fixedup, anyhow,"
she sighed.
Twice had she lapsed into the id-..
toms of her native land. " R"hat, then,
was the matter with Cynthia that she?
had , forgotten her self-imposed reso-i
lution to speak only in that purer:
English which • is quite as highly ap-,
preciated in New 'York tun in Lon-'
don?
It was Saturday afternoon, and theyl
pvertook and passed a break -load oft
bearifeasters going to Tintern. There
Is no mob so cruelly sarcastic as the!
British, and it may be that the revel-'
m .ri�' o — el n naso t uea ' the f apt
it not the prevalent democratic] that you have been asleep when you
vices," persisted Medenham. •.1 ere supposed to be awake, so she
"You must have sat up half thei leaned forward" now, ,and sewed non -
night reading the guidebook," she: phalantly:
pried in ' exation' at her blunder.
Cynthia laughed so cheerfully tlfat
Mrs, Devar thought she had scored.
Medenham left it at that, and/ Was con-
tent Both he and C9nthialenew that ed; as an afterthought.
lack of space forbade indulgence. in "Yes, dear. The air is positively
uch minor details of history of the •pverpowerfng.'
dart of the book's complier. ' more was another pause. ��
Another little incident heated Mrs. , "Ah, well, • sigfrpd • the girl, • "we
l,
to ,boiling'point. Cynthia more !slab have a nice long rest when we
�
i
hs��u once hinted thea, 1f tired,' she atop for tea an—at—what s the name
pni'ght wait for them In the lowermost of the place?"
rt, where a fine tree :inroad its : "Symon's Yat"
ahat1e over some benches', but the old- Medpnham's voice was husky. Truth\
er woman persisted in visiting every to tell, he was rather beside bimeelf.
dungeon and sorambling up every lie had played for a high stake and
broken stair. The girl took several pad nearly .won.-rs Even now the isspe
photog'rapba, andbad reached -t21e last ; hungon a word,: a mere whiff of _volt.
dim Ina roll, when the whim reined tion said if be knew erectly how
"Are we near Hereford?"
-"No," laid Cynthia. "We have a
tong way to go yet." She paused.
'Are you really very tired?" she add -
Continued next ,Week
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•
sue glory or rue, aingoom stall awaits
him. His disciples burled his body,
but John was not at the burial. It
has long been a comfort to me to.cone
come
alder that if the Lord does not
while I live and this mortal body shall
some day be hurled- I will not be at
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vain Attempt to Save Sister,
Port Colborne, Ont., Aug.i26,—Ghon
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