HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1912-09-19, Page 6Lesson Quarter; 'For
Sept. 22,'1912.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
.
Text of the Lesson, Mark vi, 30.44.
Memory Verses, 41, 42—Golden Text,
John vi, 35—Commentary Prepared
' by Rev, D, M. Stearns.
The words of verse 30 are -most Prac-
tical anal remind us of our great priv-
ilege of telling ,all that we do and
teach to Jesus, receiving our messages
from Hr]m and trusting Him to work
in us to will and to do of His good
pleasure. It is the old lesson of Prov.
iii, 6 "In all thy ways 'acknowledge
Him, and Ile shall direct thy paths,"
and the new one of Plell.iv, 6, 7. There
is nothing 1Ike talking it all over with
Bim both before and 'after. I am al-
ways reminded by this verse in our
Jolson of a little book entitled "Tell
Jesus, by Anna Shipton. • \
The words "No leisure so much ae
to eat" (verse 31) give us some idea
of His day by day busy, crowded full
life, for others, seven days a week,
even on the Sabbath day (Mark i,
21-31; Matt xii, 12; John ix, 4, 14),
for be taught that it is lawful to do
well ou that also. Our own works or
words are not lawful on that day (Isa.
lvfif, 13, 14), neither do they count at
any time. "Come apart and rest
awhile" does sound refreshing toa
weary one, but we shall set bow they
rested. When the people knew that
He had started across the sea they
ran afoot out of all cities and ontwent
them, and when Jesus came He saw
much people and was moved with
compasslon and received them and, as
was his custom, snake unto them of
the kingdom' 61 God and healed them
that had need of healing (verses 33,
34; Luke is; 11). May the mention of
the kingdom always lead us from the
heart to say "'I'by kingdom come, Thy
will be done in earth as it is in heav-
en" (Matt, vi, 10), for less than that
wi11 not be the kingdom of God. John
tells u8 that it was Passover time, and
that also suggests a phase of the king-
dom, for at the last Passover Jesus
Said, 'II will not any more eat thereof
until it be fulfilled in the 'kingdom of
God" (Luke xxii, 16). That will be the
time of Israel's restoration at the be-
ginning of the millennial kingdom.
As the day began tow ear away the
'disciples cause to Jesus, asking Him to
Send the multitudes away that they
might buy themselves
bread, and
to o
their asfonishment Ile said: "They
need not depart. Give ye them to
eat" To prove Philip He asked him,'
"Whence shall we buy bread that these
may earl" icor He Himself knew what
He would do, as He always does, for
-He is perfect in knowledge, and evot y
purpose of His shull he performed.
•(John vi, 5, 6; Job xxxvi, 4; Jer. 11, 29)
Philip might wisely have replied, Lord,
Thou knowest; Thou didst feed many
thousands in the wilderness for forty
years and there is nothing too hard
for Thee ger. xxxii, 17). But Philip
knew neither his Lord nor himself,
and on the night before the crucifixion
Jesus had occasion to say to hint,
"Have I been eo long, time with you
and yet hast thou' not known Me, Phil-
ip?" (John xiv, D.) Philip's reply in
our lesson story (John vi, 7) shows'
tient he was capable of and evidently
Bid some meutal figuring, but to hila,
the case was ,hopeless.
Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, some-
how fout)d ont that there was a lad In
the company who had five barley loaves
and two small fishes, andhe ventured
to mention it but with no hope that
they would be of any service. Ile
said, "What are they among so many?"
(John vi, 8, 9.) Jesus said, "Bring
them' hither to Me," just as He, said
concerning the lunatic boy at the foot
of the mount of transfiguration "Bring
him hither to Die!" (Matt. xiv, 18; xvli,
17). The unfailing remedy for every
trouble is Tell it to Jesus, Bring it to
Jesus, for. He said, "Come unto )Je,
all ye that labor end are heavy laden,
and I will give' you rest." Having
made the multitude sit down in com-
panies by hundreds tied fillies on the
green grass (verses 39, 40), He took
the loaves and the fishes and looked
up to,heaven and gave thanks, bless-
ing the food, and then gave it to the
disci'nles to pass on to the multitudes,
There would be at least-fifty'cotrpa-
nies of a hundred cacti or a hundi'eci-
companies of fifty each, so the disci-
ples had
iscipies-had enough to do to make them
forget themselves for awhile. We
might like •to know how He could di-
vide five loaves and two fishes among
twelve' disciples -and. how ranch each
had to start out with and just bow
the food multiplied as they gave it
out, but we are not told and so must
leave it We are told that they did
all eat and were filled,. 5,000 men be-
sides women and; children (Vett,, xiv,
21), and that twelve baskets full of
the fragments were gathered up when
all was over. .A. little later He fed
4,000 men with seven loaves end a
few little, fishes, and they were filled
and seven baskets of fragments gath-
ered up' (alatt. sv, 32-38; Maul; viii,
1-9). Yet soon after when crossing
the sea with H1s disciples they hnd
only one loaf with them, they thought
from soalething He said that EIe was
upbraiding them for forgetting to tette
bread, seemingly forgetting tete mirac-
ulous supply of the two greatl'ecent
events (Mark 'viii, 13-21),
Tbat whicha little' boy possessed
WAS used on;t:hie occasion to abundant-
ly .satiety more' then 0,000 poop)u. If
we are as unreservedly in, Ills heeds
ate Were the lad's loaves and fishes Tie
will use tis beyond our utmost thought,
moll: '$ Cottod Root compound.'
The great Uterine Tonic, and
only sate effectual 1Vionthly
dlwbeemedpen. Sodii three
of strengthNo. ; No
2,
10 degneee.sbronger, $3; No, 3,
for special eases il5 per box,
pSold
ha-bie all dsreueggttso,foprsiTeenNr„Ft
crow._
epamphlet. fldross:
MEN01NIC0„TvnoNTOONT. ,
tfornari•1/Windao't'
i ATS
EAPIN4 A HARVEST OF SORROW, '
ea
Iiowuloos+:;' manyback yo•ounng- t
� men
.
, �.a•-.- �` a heir;;
t,rJ / J- ',��.' .rorrr,r'r; .•,✓� // a%m:, ' .
tally life
a
wl regret their
see �y/'-*� gxcesses, violation Of us --
misdeeds,. Sowing their
w ld ats, va rotb ways.
`r
laws, ;wine, women''
and, song!'—all have their
victim .; Ylou have re
ferrried but what about the..
seed you; have sown—what
about the harvest? Don't
-de 'trust to .lack. If you are
at present within the
clutches of any secret habit'
which is sapping your life
by degrees; if you ate suf-
fering from the aesults Of,
past indiscretions; if your
blood has been tainted from.'
any private disease and you
dare not marry; if you are married and live fn dread of symptoms breaking
out and exposing your past; if you are suffering as the result of a misspent'
life—DRS. K. &. K. ARE YOUR REFUGE. ?gay your case before
them confidentially and they will tell you honestly if you are curable,
YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED
We Treat and Cure VARICOSE VEiNS, NERVOUS DEBILITY,
BLOOD and URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY and BLADDER Dis..
eases and,all.Diseases Peculiar to Men.
CONSULTATION FREE. Books Free on Diacanes of M.n. If unable to call, write
for a Question Blank for HOME TIUEAT1IXEN . .
DRs.KENNEDY&KENNEDY
Cor, Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.
pirNOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed to our
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Ont. If you desire to see, us personally call at our Medical Institute in
Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are
used for correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only.
Address all letters as follows:
DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont.,
Write for our private address.
animmemeenmannewineememergimenent
"Gyp” and `Lefty Louie"
Arrested in Brooklyn
Gunmen Submit Meekly
Gamblers Charged With the Murder of
Her•maa Rosenthal Have Been Liv -
Ing In a Flat Since Aug. 16—The
Police Shadowed Their Wives
to the Hiding -place — All
Seven Are Now In Jail.
New York, Sept. ]6.—"Gyo the
Blood- and "Lefty Louie," the miee-
tee gnntnen indicted as two .of the
e rs
actual 1 e
t i t• ,f Herrman h ret 't al
)t 1 ,
t.rg
th/ were found >} the police
e
Saturday night
living with their {rives
in h flat in the Brownsville :wetter: e'f
Brooklyn. They were arrested by De-
yule- Police Lunnnissinner Dougherty
and • a squad of detectives, who
brought them to police headquarters
and locked theta up. They will be ar-
ruipoed to -day.
The two gunmen bad been occupy-
ing the flat since August 15, alono un -
ti: last Tuesday, when they were join-
ed by their wives, through whom (lupe
t.i their whmeabteets were obtained by
the police.
The four were sitting at tea when
Deputy Commissioner Dougherty and
his men bunt nix n the door of their
apartment and with revolvers drawn
ordered them to Bald np their hands.
"Drop your guns. Touve got 1.1R,"
said Gy -p," talurly. "Give us a little
time to get dressed, will you cid
"Lefty' with equal composure. Scarec-
ly ancthee' relnarlt was {pude to the
police by either then until they were
e.:nin std at pollee 1)enelquatdere Inter
by A sietant District Attorney Mo;-,
actlnfd fir District iSttoreey Whitman,
who has gore to Iiot Sprint; to take
testimony of persons who talked to
Sato Schepps, a witness in the cane,
The women, however, made a scene,
throwing their arme around their bus.
bands necks and shedding copious
tears. They had to be torn away from
the men before the police could get
their prisoners out of the apartment
and were later brought it headmen':
tees. •
The arrest of "Gyp" and "Lefty,"
whose real mates are Harry Horowitz
and Lewis Rosensweig, means that
all of the seven mer'/ accused of the
murder of Rosenthal, of which Police
Lieut. Becker ie the alleged instigator,
are now in custody.
The capture of the two men was the
fruit of unbroken surveillance of the
wives -and relatives of the men since
their dfsepptel•anee on the flay of the
murder, .1 sly 16, This surveillance
was maintained. by sixty deleclavca
working in relays, who kept Deputy
Commissioner Dougherty constently in
touch with what they did and where
they went, The final'olne carne as the
result of piecing together a number
of conversations overlieare-1 by detec-
tives reported to the commissioner at
different times. The fii'at conversa-
tion was tinct. They ere not lonesome
beeau5e they can lee a Moving picture
'show from their back windows." An-
other conversation gave the informa-
tion that there was a laundry in the
house the missing men evere kving in,
Which was named. 'either the: New
Brighton, the Brighton or the Bright'.
Band Laundry. A third conversation
supplied the fact that the neighbor-
hood "was 'full of Swedes and. Ger-
manS,"
It then became. Commissioner
Dougberty's: teal,: to discover some-
where a hand laundry in proximity to
tL moving picture show in a t`ieinity
inhabited by `people of the nationali-
ties named. The possible name of the
laundry was obtained lees than two
days ago, and the cominiseioner dis-
covered that thine were half a dozen
laundries' of eimila:r names in New
York City and rnauy more in otter
cities, for the commissioner did not
assume that the gunmen were neces-
sarily located: in New' York. •
"When we found the laundry with
a moving picture show '61060 by, there
were no Swedes or .Germans in the '
neigaabcrhoodj" said 146. !Doi.igherty
last night, "or when we friend faun -
dry with. /the foreigners in the neigh-
boyhood, there was •no moving picture
show. One of our •laundry clues took
ne to New Haven, and we were just"..
about to investigate another in 'Bitten
bung."
Early yesterday Detecl]ves Meyer
and Cassasso discovered in Brooklyn
the "New Beightop Hand Laundry,'
which perfectly -fitted all requirernents.
They set themselves; •to watch the
n()a 1.1011)101 Sr vu. -.4m s atm ve. Vile
dry, and late yesterday afternoon were
'rewarded by seeing "Gyp the Bkiod's"
wif.r leave the building and do r
etrnncl at le store. Both wive; hail
been
nl ienai l' shim TUe day, when
the;; cleverly needed deteetivcs by
jumnin0 irtto 11 waiting enturturbi:e al-
ter leaving an "'L" train. •nn, which
they were riding in the direction of
I•Iarlem.• The detertivee iherelnre felt
certain that they were with their hue -
hands. The wr:rnen lead sev..;ri11 other
tans s eluded urveill {nee by the met.
1previouslyit d ,i -
1) I
n ,>ilc, but
of ani m
wan returuol t, thir beam e in New
York, Thu arrest tollnwe,l eden a-
the deteelrvls could codeet ti'iel, rein
merits.
Hayes Is Dismissed.
New York. • Sept.in.---Cornelius G,
H ty e=, the pn,fee inspector wIta was
r, scatty pl ecce nn trial for Pla kine;
tele:nent tllestet] to be fol e r'3,- nt-
h: '.11 1'Dlil'Y' Dnllirnieeitrn r W'i'ring
cut= taund eu111)'• 01 the chneeee tenter -
(dry and dieteiseed from the deeart-
mr•' 1, First Deputy ('omni)-siener
;helve r, who presided at tit. ;tint, an-
neln sed lli: Ending' 411(110,y alar Orion
Sate:eltr .
Tits' et•,tetnent by Haves wile) 1,+'1
to hie feint was to the t'fee•t that 11'at•
de had enjoined hili ftrui r tt lin die -
orderly 11,11 0,1:in01 eXptr - tu.
1rrltiene Nape; thus ,lrrlai"+I kern
1. Oft )rn-'alter tilt maids/ id Elr+r-
n i l;nsti,fhal,. tilt, gambler, at 11
t t s Mont
Um- when t,her w t li ,jt n t:
0 terra t 1 What th pe is were
1rl latlrr cenclt,nn.e :n the ten -
HAD DYSPEPSIA
FOR TEN YEARS
COULD NOT KEEP ANYTHING 'ON
HER STOMACH
Dyspepsia is cowed by poor digestion,
and to get rid of this terrible miction, it
is necessary to place the stomach in a
good condition. For this purpose Bur-
dock Blood Bitters has no equal.
Mrs, Norman A. MacLeod, Port Bevis,
N.S., writes:—"hor the last ten years 1
suffered dreadfully with dyspepsia, and I
could not keep anything on my stomach.
I tried several kinds of medicines, but
none of them seemed to do me any good.
At 1st a friend advised me to try Bur-
dock Blood Bitters, which 1 did, and after
using five bottles I was completely cured.
I would advise any one troubled with
stomach trouble to use 13,13.B. I can-
not recommend it too highly."
Burdock Blood Bitters is manufaee
tired only by The T; Milburn Co.,'
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
-Horse Liniment of Whiskey?
I(iugstou. Sept. 16.—(en Saturday
aftet:uoot Wm. elalroy el' recite Reek
was arraigned on e charge of having
liquor on the premises for, sale. Sus.
tiyes mi the 'Peace George Banter,
Kingston, •incl Edward Freeman, klart-
i.ngeori, reserw;,ed' judgement.
l.l'le accused, q•lira is in a'lecel option'
district, said the whiskey was for his
personal use and as a liniment tar
horses.
? ->zd /r:1.�rt�S
` a
cemtguai
ONE INee'Ati.RRINOSarcoes
rt'x. the CLeANrsr, SIMPL➢ST, and BEST How
DYE, one ono buy --why rod don't °yen have In.
know what KIND et Cloth your Goody are .nmdo
of So MIPs tea are-Imnoeetblo,
Send for Free Color Card, Story Booklet, and.
Booklet giving ratings of Dyeing oyer other colors,
)The .1OHNSONAUCIDAaDSON CO,i,inated,
.e,
ESPEeTS REDuor1ol4S'>
Pelletier Discusses Cable cued Roetal'
Rates at Banquet, •
guebac, Sell;•
16. -mil's banquet iv
en to Flout L, P, Pelletier Poatneaster,
General by the mayor, n.f• Levi$ and
the r Conseiwativee of the county,' on
Saturday night, was one of the roast
auceesstul ever given a public man
to this district,' 7'IFe banquet was at-
tended by tome X75 guests, Tyrie of the
Postmaster -General's fellow/ Cabinet.
members were:,preselnt, Bion, Mr. Reid
and Hoxf. J. D. Hazen. The banquet
owfas,L'' :eprevis, sided ; .over by'_Mayor Bernier.
' .
Mayor Bernier, in proposing the
health of the-guost'of the evening, paid
litho 'a high tribute. The banquet, he
said meant a desire to show their. con-
fidence in Mr., Pelletier, who had
rightly won his place in the : Borden
Cabinet, not alone by: his-talents,'but
by his past` arduous work for the:
party.
Mr. Pelletier' was in fine voice and
spoke with his old-time vigor. ''IIe re-
ferred to leis trip to Euro? with the
Premier, Ile had admired Mr, Borden
before he left .for Europe, but, -his ad-
miratien had grove throughout his
associajiidn with hila on the other
side:,
"Providence has given me a renewal
of my Health," said Me. Pelletier,
"and I will stay at my post and con.
thine my work."'
Mr. Pelletier went on to, describe the
work done in the interest of his de-
partment while abroad, including his
efforts to reduce the cable rates, which,
he said, was the beginning of more
extended suceess. He hoped to secure
a reduction in postage charges between
France and Canada.,
The defence of Canada and the Em-
pire was a duty for Canada, but a
plan to carry out that duty must be
formulated and this 'the Government
is endeavoring to do. '
"There are many interests who say
the Goverurnent is not proceeding last
enough with public writhe, in contem-
pletion for Quebec, but those who -say
so are realty the .people who have not
done or tried to dei anything for Que-
bec during the fifteen years they held
office, saidl It Pelletier,
"I have already said," continued Mr,
Pelletier, "to a delegation who met me
from the north shore, that I with in
favor of the drydock being located on
the north, side of. the SI. Charles Riv-
er, but added that if the engineers
refused to locate it ori, the site there,
it would be built at Levis, and if the
Cabinet decided that the dnek should
be built at Levee, 1 will not interfere.
I will ;abide by the decision in the ,
inters t'. of the rubor and the welfare"
flee ehil'l'1ltg. we the question is not
a 1,Ica1 {)tilt:,"
a a ta.
s ,:tea
s
rust .Ridden
•
_.
London, Sept 12—"While we do ganged, )?alfitieafly,» it concludes,
not aln+ticip rip ;41,3'y 50110105 setbadin "Canada isrfar ;bele-Sectits riaiilerital
id,tito near. futir,e+ +therB 1100 1s131 cicvetcpmot;'
Cars, .Inevgrthelese far j erre cliff
r i -'l lung
0 - Ilio a,. a ' iii -
ali n, _s � s e Uni:lyiNeivs° `nmurh 1111100
iuewtnng on the Cafnadran' 2'e`hna•,ns
1QUO
Published yesterday. "Speculiateotre
fiat land,' htus reached a 'elei r(gexlortus
pocoit, tend an the "Midst -of this rush
cif prospeurity•'it is well to rgm,elta-
ber'that iglltavd evils are; develop -
dreg wh)dh 1vjIi ifuarnish many deffi
mettles when the ,country "has been
further "explodt(ed. 'Pile ti•ust,sye.-
tetra has gripped the country to sin
alarming,extent whine the, mill flays
possess' ;power 'w hien d:oanilnlateia
tiro saute, ami lrabol• ie verity, 2ltitsoz -
Joint Committee Met 'and
Ad'citirned till Deem' r
The Jolliet' cotnanittee, of the ].'r '
res
byterfain 'Methodeat and Congrega-
tional Churches met infthe Mettle--'
odist' 'IVlission, Torinto, ioarld
roonrlaat Thuii{sdn:yr to consider
the '_possible .trnrengemeeitis 101
t moat, churches;alio ughqut1 the
eotintry, „,
:Llov Dr � Caxfuaaj war gpponntejd . `'
to the chytrl lend l'rav, I)re ItamnY',
ns eeek'etariy, �ftc• ecrintiN9t, d'z'sr
eussee,te aiod • cealisielorea(oSle O,f bid
mettle/' imvo)wac 'the 'cdnlmilih'ctel
in =circler: to see,u'e further lee-foe:le
%tion/ adjournei t o n'eet hu Ton'lon4
ttr on December 3.
6,000 masa (rate Measures
• Arcoriling tothe, quarterly return'
or the Public Control Committee, of.
the London County Council, no fewer
thea 623,055 weights and rneatiures
were stamped by the inspectors during
the past quarter, 56;600' being rejected
en the ground or4aaecur'acy-
Anthrax From Mohair
At an inquiry, held cot Keighley into
the death of a woolsorter named
Maude, it was stated thateee bad been:
sorting Turkey.:mohair, and Ilan ev1
deutly inhaled dust, as the post-mor-
tem revealed anthrax germs,
Wows nosphodino,
The. Great English, Peniedl.
a newel
-erveue ct rteinvigoratesce w
Mood old V eins. G ueee NSW
atla Debility, MentO, aael Brain. Worry, Dos,
gaidrnr i/ ,1exnnZ77 nk+ i' ndisnior'. Sire -
niertor>lea a,it,!'ttrli tit _lItuse or J''sreKr„
l'riee11 per box. six. for 23. Ono will if, ease, Gia:
will core. Fold to all druggists o: mailed in
plan plkg ou cree'p of price, .Me pa niulZel
mailed
111 610„ ,�. mean Rsed=Dora tcc,
a "44*0
Al, If ydu'are not already reading The Clinton
New Era, it will be to your advantage to do so.
Not only oh front page, but every page contains
newsy items each week. Regular subscription
price $1.00 a year, and 50c for six months. We
will send it from now to the end of 1912 to
any address in Canada, for 25c-4 months for
25 cents -45 cents will send the paper to the
United States.
The Clinlon Ne
"My GURNEY
OXFORD
jumped right in
and helped with
my housekeeping "
Dear Edith,
In, a general way I have wished you all the
good things I know of, so now I am going to descend
to the practical acid give you some sound advice
from the store I have accumulated since I started
housekeeping.
Housekeeping 'naturally suggests the kitchen
first—its equipment and management, or in other
words, THE RANGE:
My range, as you know, is a Gurney -Oxford. I
never enjoyed mulch of a reputation as a cook in my
da s, sowhenn I thought of beingresponsible
younger 3'yg
for - three meals a day my heart sank. I imagined
myself battling all day with a sulky range, trying
to coax it into a good humour, and covered with
mortification because of late or spoiled meals. But
my dear, my Gurney -Oxford seemed' to sympathize
with my inexperience. From the day it came it
seer t•e.rm.e,,.a
'h
tURNEYOXF0 D ,61
ill
t
tip
jumped right in and helped. It has become my
good right hand, and 1 go my way confident that
my Gurney -Oxford will not disappoint me.
It has the cleverest arrangement for regulating
the drafts, well named the Gurney Economizer. One
small lever put up or down does everything. The
fire will stay in all day, hardly burning any coal at
all—then, pburningbrightly,resto ! It is y ready 'to
bake or roast. An arrangement of flues keeps the
oven always properly heated, so that the 'biscuits
or bread come out light and crisp and brown. Yes,
Edith, as Bob says, I have developed into " some
stook," and I often -tell him he must give at least half
the credit to our Gurney -Oxford.
You will understand my enthusiasm better after
you have had your Gurney -Oxford a month or sob
Sincerely Yours, -
MARY HOUSEWIFE.
OWE.
eiinton
Nil
Ont
•1