The Clinton New Era, 1920-11-11, Page 4?AGE 4
Thy Ciinton Now 4rci
•
"44"uoluerisiiimerriteisicnorera
,
' • ILLETT COMPANY0E1
O LIMITED
ToRONTO,CASADA' 14O4.
• ESSON
(BY REV, P. a rerzwATlea, 1),
Teaohot of IDPg11811 131019 In the Moody
lathle Institute of Chicago.)
(0,1020;
LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 14
THE POWER AND AUTHORITY OF .
JEWS-
' LESSON TEXT -Matt, 8 and a
GOLDEN TENT -And Jeans went eland,
ail the cities and .vI1Iftg8S tegiahing
fl
their synagogues, and nreseiting the gos-
pel of theskingdom, and heaang every
siolthess, and every d4se080 anlong the
people -Matt; 9:94
ADDITIONAL MATERIALark 1:29;
242:0101.0fA
•
SINCE *IMO
3C)V48);ibrJUGIIS
• 1,.1'1110.11Y TOPIC Jeans Forgiving
Sine.
JUNIOR TOPIQ-a0BUI3 Mesta Centn-
rion's Servant;
INT1919,911.1DIAT0l 'AND SENIOR TOPIC
-The Response 00 176911F1 to Roman Need,
YOUNG P19OPI,1 AND AU130T TOPIC
-Christianity and Physloal Needs.
In chapters 8 end 0 are Mailed 41
number of miracles which eibibit
what the King ma; do over the chief
foes of inenkled-sleitness,
le PONVer. 111,11111 r •,11-1
)10N. 01.1,11,1
'WkiWOWWWWWWOW":- ,RiN*
,Personal Greeting Cards
YOUR FRIENDS will appreciate your personal greet-
ing and good wishes at THE CHRISTMAS SEASON
if expressed through one of our
FINE ART CHRISTMAS CARDS
Call at this office and make your selection early
An assortment of 15 different samples to choose from --
with your own name printed on thein and your own
personal greeting:
T he New Era Job Depart
CLINTON
mevemmag,:mmesmamm
One of F
here, following the lawS of the Wag.
dom, for they show the King'S Power
to administer tile affairs of the king -
dont,. and produce withinhis sublects
the graces a character set forth In
theee.laws, lesSon too
long to'attenipt' consider all these
miracles, It will also be nos:al:steel:off
tO confine 'ourselves to the particular.
section Selected by the :nom,
mitfge; so we Will select Several
most outstanding ones.. ;
I. Jesus Hale aLeper (8:1-4).
1, 'Ms dreadful. diaease was the
most loathsome and hopeless known.
In NIS ;Jewish Htlial It Wah regarded
as a Symbol of sin. It was incurable
by man. Oply the Divine
can cure sin.
2, The leper's faith, rlis • cry was
most pitiable, but hie faith Was strong.
Ile fully believed that Jesus was able,
but was uncertain as to his willing -
;less to tient! him,
8. • Jesus' power. tie put forth 11180
hand and touched the leper, bicaitag
the disease to depart, and Instantly
the man was dean, • •
11. JesusHeals the Centurion's
Servant (88-13).
. 3. The diseese.;--partilysis., In pa-
ryisis tens vietire is helpless and dis-
• qualified for service.
' 2. The centurion's faith, Ile be-
lieved that If Jesus' would but speak
the word his eeisvaut would be heeled.:
. 8. Tho wonderful power of 1110
Xing, ffe int teed to go- /to See
the eenturlon's sieve and touch 'him,
but onis needed to speak the.word and
It was done.
III. Jesus, Calms the Sea (8:23-27).
1. The Ring asleep' in the stoions
tossed boat. (v. 24). Since the, gins IA
ur Millions
(A Photograph Direet•from theWar-Stricken Area)
. • -
per Month Preserves.:thelLife,of
Millions of war orphans in Central. Europe' are growing
up undernourished and stunted.
Thousands of them are dying of typhus, tuberculosis
and small -pox,
•
There is almost a cornklete lack of the nourishing foods growing children need,
of clothing, of doctors,' nurses and medical supplies. The condition of the g.
children is pitiable in the.extreme. , , I
Upon this coming generation depends largely whether these nations will be
healthy and right-minded or a hot -bed of anarchy and degeneracy -a menace to
the world.
It has been found by experience that the coat of oaring for a waif child is
approximately three dollars per month; that of the supplies that are required
by imports about one dollar is needed; and therefore the dollar that we
• provide, together with the local support of local governments, local munici-
palities, local charities and local services practically preserves the life of
one
child.
• •
a , The British Empire War Relief Fund will be adminis-
tered in Europe by the British Red Cross in co-operation
with the League of Red Cross Societies. Send your con-
tribution care of:
Rheumatism
Neuritis, Sciatica, Neuralgia.
Templeton's
R4utv4ic
Capsules
Have brought good
health to half-a-raillion
sufferers,
A healthful, money -saving remedo,
well known for fifteen years, pre.
scribed by doctors, sold by drug-
gists, $1.00 a box. Ask our agents
or write for g free trialpackage.
Tetnpletons, 142 Xing W., Toronto
LOCAL AGENT - J. E. HOVEY
Child
The Canadian Red Cross
Enclosed and Ichequeanicicyceder for
..
es my contribution to the Canadian Red Crow Society for European Relief
Nuns
A
M
"" irai.,:eollsroden to the lera:1 ReA Cress Breach este This Catisair Red Cron, 4:10
..;
LETTER FROM
MRS. WAKELIN
Tells Remarkable Story. of.
Sickness and RecoVerY,
Toronto, Ont.- "I Suffered greatly
from weakness 'seemed to be Aired, all
the time, and had no
ambition to do any-
thing or go any place.
My nerves were in
bad Shape, I could
not sleep.mt 'night,
and then came a
breakdown. I read
of Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable
()propound in the,
newspapers and set,
oral of my friends
advised me to use it,
an. Bore y pap,upw,life into fle. Now.
1 arn quite able to do all my own Work
and I would strongly advise every suf-
fering woman to give Lydia E. Pink-
lism'e Vegetable Compound a trial." --
Mrs. CHARLES WAKELIN, 272 Christie
St, Termite, Ont. -
The makers of Lydia E. Binkham's
Vegetable Cornpound have thdusands of
such letters as that atioye-they tell the
truth, else they could not have been ob-
tained for,love or money. This medicine
is no stranger -it has steed the tet for
Ad% than forty years.
If there 'are any complications you do
not understand write to'Lydia E. Pink -
ham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn,
1413.08.
Ykursclay, Noy, 1 lth, 192(f, '"*6)
ontroie Orme, 'wawa is eighty ree4
high and 114Y -eight feet In diameter. :
Inlaid In the marble, the gem -stones
.employed in the Mariner described
furrdsh •the moat exquisitely heauth
f ul adornment known to areititecture,
The "Mama" .
flattens the most picturesque
• sight -ip fly Of tae huge Turkiffir
harbors is the "hornet," This man Is
the htunan pack horse of the ceeritrY
and le often seen oarrYing on his
leather back saddle Wade which re-
quire at Ioaet six men to place there.
• Ono frequently meets a, "hornet"
strolling along the street with a huge
office desk or Plano strapped on his
back.
• Soap Bubbles,
Soap bubbles ascend because they
are011ed with the warm- air from
,the lungs of the Dalton Who blows
them. • They .a.re, therefore,alight io
comparlion with the coldelwair that
Surrounds them.' . ,
the Altulglity Creator, he had no rea-
son to fear, and therefore, could well
be resting in sleep.
2. The terrified disciples (v. 25). If'
they bag but known him ns really the
Almighty Ring they would not have
been terrified, for they would have
known that no boat could go down
with the Christ on board.
8. The Ring's rebitke (vv. 20, 27).
(15iie disciples relyalted for their
lack of faith. Instead of looking at
the Lord, they were looking at the
circumstances. (2) The sett is made
calm. The elements of nature are sub-
ject unto him.
IV. Jesus Casts Out Demons (8:28-
84). After stilling the tempest Jesus
'crossed to the other side of the sea
into heathen territory.
1. Met by two men possessed by
demons (v. 28). By referring to I1ark
5:1-7 and Luke 8:27 we get a concep-
tion of the desperate'condition of these
men. So fierce were they that no one
could safely pass that way.
2. What they knew about Christ (v.
29). They knew that he was the Son
of God and that he had come to de-
stroy the Devil and lois works.
B. The limitation of the Devil's
power (v. 31). Although the Devil is
mighty, be cannot even enter a hog
wlt)iout God's permission..
4. Christ's power to .deliver from
the Devil (vv. 80-32). The demons
quailed before him not daring to dis-
pute his power, but begged permission
te enter the swine..
V. Jesus Healing a Woman With an
'Roue not Blood (9:20-22).
1. Her helpless condition (v. 20).
She had been a great sufferer for
twelve long years.
2. Her faith (v 21). Her faith was
• so strong that she believed contact
with the Master's garment would se-
cure this needed help.
3. Her confession (v. 21 ;-ef.- Luke
8;47). !Jesus had her make' a public
eonfes4on. It was for her good that
he hadilier ,make this confession, for
faith Ii Christ uncoufessed will net
urally !oaken. • •
4: Christ's Words of encouragement
(v. 22) He told her that It was her
faith, got her touch, that saved her.
• ;
' Proper Amusements '
'Thou ands of people demand emosio
ments. Thousands of dollars are
spent that behalf. But there is alo-i
genre S plan, concert, and ce-oPera-
thin. 'he Devil steps:Ja.and
the pr; fit. The people wantbut little
Aere b low nor wolf- that little. long,
Why .11 ny we not have tuore of. 0180
'amuse' ent which ,strengthens 580010181? One, rich .lean.by his 00188benefit:mice mightro
pvide
lighten
=Wet
health gl amusement for whoie city.
Why dace not benefaction 01)111 181 this
direct:IMO-Humphrey J. Desmond.
How a Python Kills.
' The 1.11Ython kills by contraction,
says Prof, John A. Jordan, in the
Wide World Magazine, and I have
heard 'many discussions -as ;to how!
this is ;done, scene istrithig 7emphatic-
ally that ther..must get their tail
round tsome solid (Meet to get a
leverage. I prefer to keep an open
mind On the subleet, and can only
relate what has come under my ,own
observation. 'Most agree, however,
that the giant python cat overpower
and kill alinost'ony animal, Some
declare that the width of their jaws
will only allow of the passage of an
animal about -the size of a goat, This
is not correct, Lir I have Killed py-
thons With the horns 00 11 Topi harte-
beest sticking out of the Jaw,. and
the Topi weighs well over two hun-
dred pounds.
usg 91AmoNp DYES"
Dye• rigbtl Don't risk
Zyour material,)0* l, apack.
, age of °Diamond 'Dyes'- eon -
til'‘) nits directions so Mamie
At° 1
,diamond•aye a new). rielt,
that any woman con
le oolor into old garments,
araperiee, coverings, every-
thing, whether fvool, silk,
linen, cotton or mixed goods.
Buy "Diamond Dyes" -no
other kind --then perfect re-
aults aro guaranteed even if
you have never dyed before,
Druggist has "Diamond Dyes
Color Cerd"-10 rich colors.
A. G. Mitchell of Owen Sound 81105 10
raspberry bush that is sow yielding its
third crop this year.
The allies have ordered Hungary to
l$0tfy the Treaty of Trilkno,
STUDENTS' RESIDENCES
• (BY Stop/len Leacech.)
Wken. I was a
student at the
University of To-
ronto thirty years
ago, I lived, :from
start to finieb,'--
111
seventtaga dif-
ferent " boarling
houses, Eisler as
I am aware these
houses have not,
or not yet, been
marked with tab-
lets.' But they are
all still to be found
in the- vicinity of
of McCaul and
Darcy, and St.
Patrick Streets.
A.n!yone, who
doubts the truth
of *hat I have to
say, may go and
leek at them,
I.was not alone
in the nomadic
life that I led,
There were hun-
dreds of us drift -
lag about In this
fashion from oue
melancholy habi-
tation to another.
We lived as a rule
two or throe in a
house, sometimes
STEPHEN LEACOCX, •
alone. We dined in
the basement. We Canada's Great Humorist, Professor of Politimil
Economy a xcein University.
always had beef,
on the table,• They used to have a brand of soda biscuits in those days
Toronto boarding houses that I have not seen since. They were bate
than dog biscuits but with not so much snap, . My contemporaries will al
remember them. A great many of the leading barristers and prof
men of Toronto were fed on them.
In the life we led we bad practically no opportunities for aseociation
on a large scale, no common rooms, no reading rooms, nothing. We neve.*
saw the magazines, --personally didn't even know the names of them
Tho only interchange of Id,eas we ever got -was by gains over to the
CasiO
Howell Hotel on University Avenue and interchanging them there.
I mention these melancholy details not for their own sake but merely!'
to emphasize the point that when I speak of students' dormitories, and Mel
; larger life which they offer, I speak of what X know.
• , If we bad had at Toronto, when I was 5 student, the kind of dornsi
toilets and dormitory life that they have at Harvard, I don't think I word
di
ever -have graduated. I'd have 1.5sen there still.
The trouble is that the "Universities on our Continent are only
jsos
waking up to the idea of what a University should mean. They were
very largely, instituted and organized with -the ideit'that Ctativersity was
place where young men were sent to abeorb the gesteatsof books and, to
Briton to lectures in the classrooms. The student was pictured as a
creature, burning what was called the "raidnight oil,' his wan face bet
over his dad/. If yet Wanted to do something for him you gave him
book: if you wanted to do something redly large en hie behalf you
him a whole badietful of than. Xf you Treated to go still further ana be ,
real benefactor to the Collegeot, large, you endowed a competitive acholar-t
ship and set two or. more pallid students working themselves to desa
That, as I see It, wail about. the idea and theory of the Canadian Ural,
to get it, •
versifies as Slay use to.;be.. In the course of time and through the plata
teadaiai 00 cironinilillaaellis; we hare .been getti.ug away, Meta that idea. Wel
are bogiateg tacosthakihri_tekt, book and the allowed:on are but 0.p
of the student's 111e., If.-theysarstaken,by thereselyes,_ in undiluted dos
018,
' they probably do Meese barov.tkaggood.; -They aot.anly .'Sn,inie the ;Annotate
keeltkbilt, they Unpile. his WOO. Tsme ethiestion.oannOthe aekkofed
tlabOa&genizbY Aura , Injubrnsation. meet that MU
ean .414
give•itt,ettutitte*, sad.- atry 1:41141r10$$$410,* and/r4ulale
TheA)picaltiredoet of it,te thr4eollege Pedant .poospitred- ef a atoremela-full
fack.aingwithat miled.the oire ;Of o'jpesoist nodstliermiglook of a child.
rfilipliert),1141`;4hiejal: bniziging4Ii'igbultelhiekof !th441i..„..setade°*thal*("
10,;lirSo-rathi-capatii4erry °th13at°isi the ininwol•,
•ithr4 Alisit„ game ,eatsf, hontetiaag;;OS this most- before. 001t there is pal
•
spasoes4.411:1**foreoasernigintlane7hol:rlikt'y,ce_ualariti;ryof graduate o pt speak„ ;herwevhod
riie uatlz eapettniverirsitreaMil
oeni
GOisinors 1110ill Uaiversity,1 hope, tolare another. Poteatter of a sally
• 00•4180i4K M.1a a noble profession, .asolis with th.e; coottnued aid of
- °Lit *argent before I WA up, mortar board and sink into the arms I
OM -trustees or tiws carnegiejisneteit,Pund, But as a college teecberjI
har4long stace realised that thri most that the teacher, as such, ean
tOr.the student is a Very.ihnitert matter. The real ,tbrIng for the stud
WOO life and. eh-fironreen, t thitsurronndi Ms.. hit that he, really 1
he ;eerie% in a seas.e, the 'Wive- operettas of his cinontenacr and n
as, the passive recipientof leettires.. And. for this active operation w
1411
hs.',needs Moet is, the continued:and.' intimate contact with big fellow. ,
Students .natet live together and. eat -together, talk and =make together...
•ard$C11$1.011 oboes -thatthat is how their miatds really grow. And they
ransotie together -in a rational and otunforte3e way. They must eat in'
big dining room or -ball, with oak beams across the ceiling, and the stain
gismo Milne widows and with a shield or tablet here and there upon the walls
10.- remind them between times of the men who went before them and left !al
, Mile worthy of the memory of the college. If a student is to get from his
College what it ought to give him, a college dormitory with the life In,
common that It brings, is his absolute right. A university that fails to
, give Otto blin is dilating him.
101'.8$80.e lailiVeraltYresand I say it with' all the seriousneas;
of which I am capable (jut think of that)', I would found first a amid*
reom; then when I had at little more money in hand .1 would found a• dopa
•mitory; then after that, or more properii.watt that, a decent reading roof
and a .1tbrary, After that, if I still hadmoney over ;that I couldn't use, .11
would hire a professor and g'et some text books.
We are conducting a campaign, -Just now to'raise, or lift five mulIlo
dollars for McGill Uniiversity, I have a notion that we, are going to get ,
And it is the duty of those of as who are in the University to show to our;
generous friends outside what it is that we mean to. do with it when
we have it
To my mind the greotest of all our needs Is the building of college
dormitories to supply to our students a wider college life than we oak
'give them now. go There Is no nobler object of benefaction than *hi,
There is no better way to perpetuate an honoured name or to oherleh,
tqlott.itn;eGnalue.ry, of one who Is lest than that the name and memory should;
be inscribed, mit deep in stone, over the' gate -way of a College Bormitoral.
Precious Stones In Marble.
1
The famous TO Mahal, at Agra, is
universally acknowledged to be the
loaost beautiful building in the 'World.
Ereeted by the Emperor Shah Johan
as a mausoleum for his favorite wife,
Mumtaz -I -Mahal, it was finiehed in
1682. Twenty thousand men, were
employed for twenty-two years in its
construction.
01101 of its most remarkable fea-
tures th the Jewel -work with which
the structure le adorned. In what IA
known, aa the 'style of the Mogule"
1 -though no other building ot theirs
ever approached the, Taj in this re.
Opeet-14tIs Inlaid with Semi prectouts
stones. All the angles and more lm-
�0'l&31t architectural details are thul
Ornamented with agates, bloodetones,
etc.,- ih Wreathe; impala and
ornaknontatton ot this kind to be.
stowedlwith special laviehneste, upon
ths touitilt'of the emperor and his
letter 000UPY1$$ 02 oeStrfa
:so.$itios beneath- the stoat trtitto
and the sealed stir -tight carton keeps it "Good".
Red Rose Tea cow/ to you with all its original
s'kii strength and rare flavor fully retained,
larsemmumnsmantiii