The Clinton News Record, 1914-07-02, Page 2G. D. MeTAGGART
M. D. MeTAGGART
ggart Bros
11411115
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ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT-
ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE
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•
DIVISION COURT OFFICE,.
CLINTON.
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Office- Sloan Block -.-CLINTON
•• CHARLES 11. HALE.
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REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
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Dr. W. Gunn, L.R.O.P., L.R.
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Office -Ontario St., Clinton. Night
cane at residence, Rattenleury St.,
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- DENTIST --
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Clinton News -Record
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The -Candid Friend• s
Mise Supheridge-I , should just
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dear. •.
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Backache, Rheumatism, Sciatica,
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kidneys so that they do their work
thoroughly and well. Try
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THE CHUREN
OF TO -DAY
just as they are -in their in-
door play, or at their outdoor
play -they axe constantly of-
fering temptations for the
KODAK
Let it keep them for you as
they are now,
Let it keep many other hap-
penings that are a, source of
pleasure to you.
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THESUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
• JULY 5.
Leseten L The Leborcre the:Vilies
yard, Matt. Ma 1-16. G.olden.
Text, Matt. 5.45.
Verse 1. A man that was a house-
holder-Themanager, or peehla.ps
the ()Avner, of an estate. One who
had authority to 'hire and dismiss
laborers. .
Who went out early in themoan-
ing-When the grapes were' ready
to be • gathered,. Many laborers
would be required in order that the
fruit might be cared for at once,
so that there would be no lose.
Into his vineyard -The care of
the vineyards was one of the chief
oceupations of Palestine,
2. A thilling-Literally, a dena-
rious. Under Tiberius two -thirds
of a denarius was the pay of a
Roman soldier. The amount paid
to these laborers was consid•eeed a
liberal daily wage at that time,
and was sufficient to supply tile
necessaries of life.
3. About the third hour-Tbat is,
at nine o'clock in the forenoon. A
day meant twelve hours, extending
from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. (John 11. 9.)
Standing in the marketplace idle
-Ae in our cities to -day, Vhe un-
employed were accustomed to con-
gregate in the public squares,
winch in the cities of Palestine
-were the marketplaces. The child-
ren also gathered there (Luke 7.
32). .
4. Whatsoever is right I will give
you -No definite agreement -is made
with these laborers as with the first.
There is simply a promise of fair
payment. These men are glad to
get employment, and at once begin
their work.
5. The sixth and 'the ninth hour -
Twelve o'clock and three o'clock
in the afternoon.
6. The eleventh hour - Five
o'clock, an hour before the day's
work closed.
Why stand ye here all the clay
idle ?-Their willingness to go. to
work as soon as employment was
offered to them shows that they
werenot idle men from choice.
Perhaps this is true of maffia
"idlers" of our own day, 'though
the chief difficulty, no doubt, lies
in the feet that men, and women
also, haye not been trained -for use-
ful employment in which there is
a demand for workers.
8. And when even was come -Ac-
cording to Dent. 24. 15, laborers
were to be paid every day' before
the sun seb. The prodigal son en-
vied "the hired servants" who re-
ceived their daily compensation.
The lord of the vineyard -That
is, the householder, men Honed 'in
verse 1.
His steward -An assistant in the
management of the estate who paid
the laborers for 'their work. (Com-
pare Luke 8. 3; Gal. 4. 2.)
Beginning from the last unto the
first -This order was unusual. Per-
haps, since this is only a story, it
was simply told so for the purpose
of bringing out the moral, or the
lesson which bhe whole story was
intended to teach..
10. The first . . . supposed that
they would 't"receive more - That
was only natural, because of the
much longer time they had labored,
and therefore the greater amount
of work they had accomplished,
12. The burden of the day -The
full day's work. -
The scorehing heat -This was
sometimes so severe se to drive la-
borers from the field (James 1. 11;
2 Kings 4. 19).
13, He answered and said to one
of them -Addressing, probably, the
epokesetan of the group of these
who, among thenelelvet, had been
murmuring against his ,seeming in-
instile. thee nowrong:'
.- -
Ididet not
thou agree with inc for a ,-ehilling7
-•--He was receivin-g the wagee for
which he had contracted, and in
one senstt it was no concernsof his
how meets the others eeceived. The
details of this parable eannot, how-
ever, be pteese.d.
15. Is thine eye evil because I am
goad 7 -"Art thou jealous beaus
I am generoes 7"
16. So the last shall be firet, and
the first last -See ‘intrOdimbory
paragraph. ,
No Rooms Left.
"My dear," said the young hits-
b,ancla "did you speak to the milk=
man about theee being no cream on
the milk'?"
"Yee; 1 told him about it this
morning and he explaieed it, satis-
factorily. 1 think it quite a credit
to him, too."
"What, did he ,sa,y 1"
"He said be always filled •the jag
so ,foal,Lhat, there were no room on
the top for cream I"
solnaned Ipbellespleeasiertiventh s°a
itis to see
through a glass eye.
---
ee a, wornau would cub out the
milliner's expensive "creations and
pin a 410 bill in her hair she would
attract more attention.
A CTJEV ER YO ()NG IVAN.
Hon. aVilfred Gariepy, Member 01
the Alberta Cabinet.
"Biography should treat of the
liVes of ,those whose worth, socially,
morally, and intellectually, com-
mands the unequivocal respect of
the public, which is 'a discriminat-
ing factor 1,tml invariably distin-
ffulehes the ring of the true from
'the ldis•sonarece of the brass. In the
peasession of admirable qualities of
mind and heart, in holding marked
preeedence as a dis•binguished mem-
ber of the legal prefeesion, and in
being a man of (high attainments
and distinguished executive ability,
Mr. G ariepy challenges a-Morita:in as
one distinctly eligible for represen-
tation in this compilation, -while-hie
earnest and upright career and his
position as a man of affairs but
served th render the more comma -
ant an epitome of his life history
in 'tails ,connection." •
So wrote Dr. A. 0. MacRae, of
the Honorable Wilfred' Gariepy, itt
his history ef Alberta-. Since the
above was written Mr. Gariepy has
more -than .ever won for himself a
place on the merit moll of distin-
guished men in the Province of Al-
berta,. In 1913 he was the suecess-
ful candidate for the Legislature as
repreeentatiy6 for Bever Rive;
one of the northern constitueneies
of 'the Provinee. In November of
last' year the subject of this brief
sketch was !sworn in a,s, Minister of
Municipal/Affairs* for Albe,rba, and
reeelected by acclamation as intem-
ben .thr Beaver River- in December
of the same year:
Dorn at Montreal on March 14,
1877; the son of Jos; H. Gariepy,
Hon. Wilfraa Gariepy.
the young man was educated at St.
Laurent College, Montreal Semi-
vneaz;'3);,m.-val Univereity, and finally
graduated in law feeln Uni-
Going th Alberta in 1892, young
Gariepy was associated with his
father itt business in Echnonton,
111 health prevented himafrorn tak-
ing up his chosen profession till
1903, when ha began the practioe
of law under the firm na-me of Tu-
ber, Boyle, and Gariepy, afterward
Gariepy and Landry, and finally as
at present, Gariepy, Giroux, and
Dunlep, of Edmonton.
Mr. Gariepy was.an alderman of
his city from 1907 th 1910, He is a
director of the Edmonton Chil-
dren's Aid Society, president of the
Alberta Union of Muniaipalities;
secretary of Edmonthn Canadian
Club, and president of- the French-
Canadian Congress Of Alberta, in
1901 he was a school trustee, and
has been elected every year sin-ce.
In 1907 he was president of St. Jean
Baptiste Society, and in 1911 a•
Grand Knight of the Knights of
Columbus. He is a member of th,ree
glebe, Edneeeton, Northern and
Ca•nadian, and a Roman Catholic
in religion.
The new Mister has a. 'leasing
manner, and on a }scent tom) of
the Province -with other Ministers
of the Legislethre he made many
friends. He is brimful of humor,
has a good tommand oi Englista;
and as a plabf•orm and eater -dinner
sneaker is very popular.
Mr. Gariepy is married and has
three sons and ono -rlaughter. Hie
home is at 837 Hardisty Avenue,
Edmonton .-Max. MeD. in Star
y.
WP;;SIONERS PLANT FORESTS.
,Ipstralian Convicts Reforest; Five
Hundred A.erefi.
According to a recent repor•t of•
the Forestry Departmentaof ' New
South 'Wales good condueb con-
victs at the ;tate prison. inetead ef
breaking ,ebone, are now engaged in
the More useful and healthful work
of replanting with trees the waste
lands of the state. At one -prison
alone 25,000 trees, mostly American
ash and pine were planted in 1913,
and so successful have these planta -
bions be -en that this work will be
considerably extended in the pre-
sent year.
A eimilar idea leas been worked
out successfully- by the Cety of ,Sen
Diego in California, which possess-
es 7,090 'acres of . bare rolling sand
land at a distance of ten miles from
the city. A trained forester was
enga-ged. make ;this land , profit -
yielding, and under his direction
the- cifY's unemployed have been
given Work planting this area with
trees suitable to the nature of the
country. Other cities in the United
States thee have found 1,1 mecessa,ry
to purchase andreforest large
areas en the watersheds governing
their water-sopply httee advan-
tageously used th•e sante kind. of
labor, The paimary petrpose of
euelt reforestation is not, how -ever, ,
to furnish woelato the unemployed,
but to develop a profitable sonrce
of revenue front land whieh would
otherwise remain unproductive.
City forests of this kind are net,
AS yet, ip vogue in this country.
Perhaps the orn,ly ,city forest in Can-
ada is that ab Gine/ph, Ont., where
frig
Vella r. I I rt rt Ai
POW .-,--
Keeps
*bite.
woodwork and paintwork spotlessly clean and
Scours pots and pans. Cleans cutlery and glass-
-
ware. Makes bathrooms spick and span,
Keeps kitchens immaculate and sweet.
ANS INE
a clean, white, pure powder that has
no disagreeable smell, won't scratch
and will not injure the hands. Buy
Panshine. You'll be glad you did.
- -
Or It - :1111'7111: 11‘,11111‘ ----
is
a smal1 area has been planted sur-
rounding the springs which furnish
the eity's water supply. In many
of the counties of eastern Canada
however,are large areas of waste
land, originally forested, and capa-
ble only of producing forests. On-
tario has a Counties Reforestation
Aot making possible the acquisition
of euch waste land for reforestation
purposes by municipal eouneils, but
up to the present time only one
county has availed itself of this op-,
portunity. Quebec and the Domin-
ion Governanent have also passed
legislation to encourage tree plant-
ing, and the Dominion Forestry
Branch in the last fiscal year dis-
tributed nearly 4,000,000 trees from
the nurseries at Indian Head for
woodlot planting in western Can-
ada.
The growing of forest trees on
waste land CM in most ca,see be
made a profitable untlentaking, be-
sides providing labor to a consider
able number of men, yet no exten-
sive reforestation has as yet been
done in eastern Canada.
AUTOS FATAL TO ROYALTIES.
Many Members of the Guelph Fam-
ily Have Suffered.
The accident to the Princess Fred-
erika, of Hanel/ex, the sister of the
Duke of Cumberland, near Bier-
ritz, the other day, is a reminder of
the fatal part that the automobile
has played in the Guelph family in
the couree of the lest few years.
Prince Willia•m of Cumbeadand,
the elder brother of the present
Duke of Brunswick, was killed in
an accident) to the auto which he
was driving near Berlin in May,
1912. The Kaiser sent an impres-
sive message of sympathy to the
Prime's father, and the latter was
so .affected by this and by other
courteme,s shown in connection with
the burial that he quite unexpected-
ly sent his younger son, Prime Er-
ma, August, to express his grati-
tude in person at the royal palace
at Potsdam.
This was the first meeting of a
Guelph with a Hohenzellern einee
Hanover, (the Guelph gate), • was
annexed to Prussia, in 1680. It was
also the occasion of 01, short meet-
ing. between the Prince and the
Kaaser's only daughter, Princess
Victoria Louise, which was the first
scene in their romantic match, and
the first step towards the. reconcilia-
tion of the two familities.
The betrothal was at, Karlsruhe
last wing, The festivities- were
the occasion of another auto •accii-
dent in which the •auto driven by
the Prinoe's future brother-in-law,
Prinae Adalbert of Prussia, ran
over a boy in the streets of Kaals,
ruhe. In the oourse of the week
of wedding festivities in Berlin on
the occasion of the wedding, there
were several other auto accidents
in which royalty was involved, chief
among them one in which the Duke
of Cumberland's auto was concern-
ed. This accident was the•cause of
the decision of the Duke of Bruns-
wick at the eleventh hour to change
one of the presents offered by King
George -an Englishemade touring
auto --in favor of Something less po-
tentially dangerous.
It has been said that never since
has either father or son been seen
in an automobile.
Rushed Up -stairs.
An Irishman discovered a part
of the woodwork of a chimney on
are. He rushed upstairs to his
master, and announced the alarm-
ing intelligence. A large kettle ,
water was on the fire. "Why did-
n't You put out the fire'?" he asked;
"I can't, •sorra" '`Why..eoit idiot,
pour the water upon it." • "Sure,
its hob water; sorr." *
His Reason.
"So," said the visitor, "you in-
tend to become a pbyea-aan when
you grow up."
"Yes, sit','' said Lie youth.
"And why have you decided up-
on the medical professiori7"
"Well, a doctor seems to be the
only man that keeps on getting
paid whether his work is satisfam
tory or not:"
Ilis Chance.
"I believe," •s•aid the bell:Lillie'
heirees, "that the happiest mar-
riages are made by opposites."
"Jost think how poor L am l" ar-
gued the young man,
itoHeadachesdre1
For Me
1
This can be yew, -
experience if you
use Chamber-
lain's Tablets --
they cure head-
aches by remov- 1
ing the collie-- I
not by smothering the symp-
toms -woman's surest cure for
woman's most common ailments.
Try them. 25c. -a bottle.
Druggists and Dealers, or by mail. .
Chamberlain Medieino Co.
Toronto •2
401.4)
BEST
- LABATT'S STOUT
The very best for use in. ill -health and convalescence
Awarded Medal and Highest Points in America
at World's Fair, 1893
PURE -SOUND -WHOLESOME
JOHN LABATT, LIMITEO, L,ONDOK CANADA
aeT,AINnemlnernme0,(!,
g
THIS IS A STORE OF
DEPENDABLE VALUES
A store that keeps in touch with the constantly
changing jewelry styles.
A store that Sells the same goods as those sold in
the better stores all over the country -
And sells them, too, at as low prices as ANY STORE
CAN.
Everything we show you can be depended upon to
BE exactly what we tell ydu it ie.
This is so from Tie Holders at a quarter to Diamonds.
And it matters not what you may require nor when, .
if it belongs to a Jewelry stock, it's here.
Prove these things any time occasion arige
W. R. Counter
JEWELER and ISSUER OF
MARRIAGE LICENSE.S