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The Clinton New Era, 1913-08-21, Page 34:+ ++ $ 4 ,4 0♦♦ 4+44. 44i,i 014441. +++++++++++++4+++++++4*$ ►+++{O+t$+4t00t'++4+1+i0+0$i++4++t+4+$F+i+++4x44$$+®00+040++$10+++4b++4 + tet.+ 1 404 0.. 00:. 6 + + f Int et I •1, a .v ♦ ,•. m 4444♦404,40♦♦♦OieA•++4444+4+4444++14++++e++4►O♦s444♦`m+weo♦0+44 0 +4++4++4+++++4++++++1 ++�+++4++4•p4i4+M++++O+t++++!®00000�00o®'@O+@0+00►00®0+•000+0®00+0004000♦®®o0s®®o®e®e+omo®♦m®vvrtr°+�m.ra•o+A+eO 00 O ® eee ee • PI N ^R,S 4.. 04•04 +,$+4+4444+4P+i4++++4+++¢+t Ai44 0 4ii®44•40+►0i 40 4. i i 4 Z THE COMING ' STRUGGLE' ,WHITE AND YELLOW RACES, TO FIGHT FOR SUPREMAC'F ,With the Difference That High' Po:vei• Weapons Have Made In Warfare, the Conflict Between the White and Yellow Races For a' Foothold on the Earth Will Dwarf All Other Battles in the World's History. 1 co There 0 of 1 to forgottenthrough 'ng isnot r o their corals o the centuries thaw have intervened. The feeling has grown up in the last century that the world will go through at least one more titanic struggle before the nations can afford to dis- arm. thewar Of- fices The graybeards 1n toward the east c� Europelook f1,i.s of when they are in their most pessimis- tic l' thevague tic moods. They due g formless mass of patient fighting men that are gradually being aroused from the age-old slumbers in the east. Something is happening there that is without precedent in the annals of an Empire. China -old China, with the musty smell - of 10,000 dead years hanging -over its temples and festering cities - is rubbing its cyte and beginning to look over its frontiers. Japan has passed through'this restless period. The white man had a taste of oriental courage along the Yalu; on the stupes of Three -Hundred -Meter Hill; on the Tiger's Trail and out on the Sea of Japan. "White teen who love life can- not fight against yellow men who are bent on selling their lives for the glory of their ancestors," said a beat- en Russian veteran after the Mulcden rout was over. Somewhere along the Urals, along the eastern edge of Europe, the orient and the occident will some day join in the last great struggle. It will be titanic,and on its issue will depend the course of civilization. Chalons will repeat itself ;'the white and the yellow will again tug at each other's throats; German, Englishman and Italian, Ca- nadian, American and Russian, will join forces, just as the white men did once before, when they took the road to. Pekin; but this time it will be no helpless foe that will front their bat- talions. All Asia, wild and barbaric in spite of the high-power rifle and the merciless rapid -firing gun, will sweep westward,' driven by the same spirit that led the hosts of Alaric and the horde of Attila over a thousand ,years ago. It has been pointed out that the ;wars of the past were relig- ious and political, the struggles of the present mere trade squabbles, and that those of the future,must be for a foothold on the earth. The "Yellow Peril" has been laugh- ed to scorn for the last 500 years, but the war lords of Europe are not so certain about this being a mere phan- tom dread, as they were before the days of the iron -clad and the machine gun in the hands of the Orientals. Asia for the Asiatics" is the watch- word in the far east since the guns of the Japanese squadrons ceased to bellow in the Tsushima straits. Asia first and then any or all territories that will take the surplus population of the festering cities is the European idea of the far-off policy of Japan and China. China's army is being re- organized. Skilled masters of the white man's battalions are drilling legions of slant; eyed troops all over the empire of the Mongols. New machinery is being installed and the patient Chinese are being taught to uses it. In that territory now beginning to. open is a population of at least 400,- 000,000 souls. The country is saturat- ed with population. The land will support no more. As soon as the popu- lation grows too.large, it will begin to sweep over the boundaries and spill into adjacent countries by'the thousand. With famine and plague out of the way, with the fields fruit- ful in every season and the country under adequate sanitary control, the population will increase with enor- mous rapidity. The west is their nat- ural gateway, but the islands of the Pacific and the nearer coasts of. Amer- ica are not beyond their reach. India is already restless: under the pressure of the hordes from the north. Tibet and the, Himalayas are yet in the way, however, and the movement may swing farther to the north and west. Backed by Japan, the policy of ex- pansion can go on, apace. The 50,000,- 000 of Japanese can find an outlet on 'some farther shore of the Pacific, and China's gigantic hordes can wan- der westward toward the Urals, stroll_ ing a few hundred miles in the 'course of a generation. Russia has long been the powerful bulwark, that interposed between the, Asiatic and the European. Her colo- nies in Siberia menaced the Chinese frontiers. The ,defeat of the Great Bear broke his influence. The Orien- tal no longer fears'the' Muscovite. There is nothing to check the deliber- ate Asiatic advance toward the Urals, the Caucasus and the Bleck Sea. The rich fields of Europe will be the lure. The wheat lands of the Volga are celebrated for their fertility, and the Chinese love to till the soil better even than they .love to work in .fac- tortes. The "Yellow Peril'" will again be at the eastern gates of the;white man's home. , Fourteen' centuries ago the white folk of Europe gathered along the River Marne and beat back the 'leg- �ions of the Hun in a desperate battle. TT Europefear that an- other of' he wiseacres other Chalons will yet have to be •fought between the moving masses of yellow immigrants and the present ' holders of Europe. Generations will glass, however, before the swarms of the Asiatic nations will be driven out. of the mother hive. to. seek homes in' the western part of Eurasia. How far away is the last great struggle, the war for which all the Ipowers aro unconsciously arming' Ithemselves2 is no doubt as to Itbe direction from which it will come. Distant es it undoubtedly is, Europe looks toward the east with a shud- 'der. The sound the hoof -beats of 'Attila's horsemen seem to linger. The bones of yr the o grassgrows green over O S 1 g eld and .the Buns on Cha n's battlefield, U aavF#jt$i�i�n 'Is the' 'test; remedy known for sunburn, ileac rashes, .eczema sore feet,, stings and ➢astern. A skin food ! v3 rill Druggists out. Stores. -son r.* '^i�k4at�?a 4 ll�FtSt�• ;1 A Disguised Toast. At one time the officers under Lord Howe refused to ch•iul: his health at their mess, for, though a splendid ad- miral, he was hot popular i11 the navy on account of a certain shyness and want of tact with tilose about him. The chaplain, who was a protege of his lordship, was mortified at this and t' sbould nthat the flicc s determined ae o o 'Ween called drink to Lord Howe. tv t upon for a toast one day he said,"Well, bet- ter I can f:hiuk of nothing bet- ter at this moment than to ask you to e Third of 1 words tl drink the first two n s Psalm, for a Scriptural toast for once • m of mycloth." may be taken f1one o y The tons was us drink. Not one of the word indicated by wo d or look that he was ignorant of the words alluded to. On referring to the Bible it was found that the Third Psalm begins, "Lord, how are they increased?" HER BLOOD TURNED TO AS !A 7g E R o She Doctored For Three Years But Was Finally Cured By Nlilburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. MRS. JOSEPH Saves, Box 25, Creel - man, Sask., writes:—"I write you these few lines hoping they will be a help to someone suffering from heart and nerve trouble. 1 doctored for three years but continued to get worse. I tried three different doctors, and got no relief, and tried all the drugs I could find but all failed. I became very weak, and my blood was turned to water. I tried M14oURN'S HEART' AND NERVB PILLS, and after taking five boxes, I got great relief. I was so thin, I only weighed 90 lbs., but after taking five boxes I was completely cured, and I am well and strong to -day, and weigh 150 lbs., and I can now work all day, and do not feel tired or fagged out -If anyone would like to hear more of my case, I would be pleased to answer any questions." Price, 50 cents per box or 3 boxes for $1.25 at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. One Exception. Nearsighted Old Man -I any,. did you break the .record ? Aeronaut -No, but thing else. -Judge. 1 broke every - Nice Selection. She -Now that yon have looked over my music. what would you like to have me play? Ile -Whist or auminos.-liOsteu Tran- script 'Woo* Phosphodino, The Great English'''Renmedy. Tones and invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins. CeresNerv- pus Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Des- pondency, Sexual Weakness, Emissions, Sper- matorrheea, mut BTects of.4bcse or Excesses. Price 51 per box, sixfor$5. One will please, ei-e will cure.•Sold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. ou receipt of price. New pamphlet saailedjrce. The wood Medicine Co. (formerly WinelsOrl Toronto, Ont. _- -WOMEN NEED' I O�Daeases0000messeseeeteee000ae1@®®Q®0/ u®Y®q®.0,••• eov9 se08008®e®®� ®® R6 e® HORRORS OF SIBERIA. e Sufferings of Exiled Women 'Revolu- tionlets Of ,Russia. One of the most picturesque figures among women revoltltlouists of Russia is Vera Flgner, whose father was one of the distinguished generals of the Napoleonic wars. Betrayed by a trai- tor, she was condemned to twenty years in the Schlilsselburg fortress for alleged participation in every one of the attempts on the life of the late czar.Those incarcerated in this for- tress are considered as buried alive, no intercourse or communication with. the outer world being allowed, not even with their own nearest relatives: But Vera Ffgner survived the horrtee of twenty years' solitary conflnsio and exile in Siberia andis still work, lug for the enlightenment of ignorant Russians. A. name revered by all Russian revo- lutionists is that of Mme. Slgida, who, aroused to a frenzy of indignation through seeing an n lavalid female P ris - ouer in the Siberian colony of Kara to which they had both been exiled, flogged by a warder, was herself flog- ged to death because she struck him. In the prison records it is written, committed suicide "Mme. Sib -tela c by poisoning herself," but truth, like willout, mur- der,o L and the crime of the warders of Kaa has been fully proved. Terrible indeed were the tortures and cruelty meted out to Marie Spirt donova, who three years ago shot Colonel Luzhanovsky, who flogged the peasants when they were unable to pay taxes or ordered the Cossacks to shoot down the strikers and to torture their wives and children. She was condemn- ed to death, but the inhuman treat- ment she had suffered before her trial induced the authorities to commute the death sentence, although it would have been more merciful to have car- ried out the extreme penalty of the law, for today she is working out a miserable existence in a Siberian mine and is said to be the only chained woman convict in Siberia. -London Tit -hits. A Word For the Mustache. Dr. Paul Kreger, a well known physician of Vienna, affirms that the mustache has a distinct value for the health. Ole believes that its utility lies iu protecting the nose against the in- vasion of dust and bacteria. Record - lee 600 eases of severe headache and thront and nose tronbte among his men patients, he found tint 420 of them had their upper lip clean shaven One has only to consider the fuurtian of the eyelashes in protecting the eye front dust and aneall particles to see that there is nothing nureesonable about the doctor's contenthet. �MILOH quickly stops coughs, cures colds, and heals the throat and lunge. .. :, 20 cents, Flight on the JOb. A pupil had been naughty all day, and the teacher sent him a note or- dering him to stay after school. The boy wrote an answer on bis slate say- ing: "Dere Teacher -Except the oner with pleasure. Always keep ml en- gagements with the ladies. Will he at the trlstfng place at 4 p. m." -Argo- naut It le of no use 10 watt for our ship to come, in unless we have sent one Ont:-Auuu. A SAES IONIC n %z 96/ic £ilei `there is Noi.11ing Reiter i w.� --- ' `'' Williams' Pink oeVieee®ee09eee10000e®®e®61049 10eeerie®6'3eCOmeeinataN itMa t®eGetatte teS9106680000a9' eti4oe4ee00 lI 1D,�Il �. ><. �� illllilllS PIN to ' 'flints up the It'. is said that woman's work is never doln.e,rand it is, al fact that whether in society or In the home her life is filled more cares tend more worries than falls to the lot Of mean. (nor this resole women, are tcompellecl 'regretfully to watehthe cheeks the gnowing pallor' of their ocming of wrinkles and the thinness every day. Every wloanan kIDO'VS that 11,1 health and worry is a, faat- alenemy to beauty and that good health gives the. plainest face an :en during 'attractiveness. lWhat'women fail to realize is the fact that lf thob100d supply 1slce t rich andpure"the day 'of the com- ing om 1n of wrinkles and dull eyese s and sharp headaches s is tanme a alT- ebb, Postponed. Dr: William•+ Pink Pills lareliterally worth their' weight- in gold to, growing girls. and women fomature years, They. redeine with the rich fill the v blood that b r1n s oiighbn ess to the eye the glowof health to sallow mocks and charms away the head aches and backache thatrender the livesof so many women constantly miserable. IMrs. William Jones, Crow Lake Ont., says; "I feel that Dr. Wil- liams' Pink P1111s saved my life I was go badly run down that' could hardly dr ag myself around. Iwas so. bloodless that I was as pale as a sheet and you could almost see through my hand. Ln fact the doc- tor told me my blood had all turn- ed to water, I was taking medicine constantly but without benefit My mother bad so much faith in Dr. Williams' Pink iPlls that she bought me two boxes and urged me to take them, Mots thankful I am that I followed her advice. Before these were gone 1 begatn to feel better and I continued using the Pills until I had taken five more boxes when I Was again enjoying the blessing of perfect health with a good col- our in my face, and a good appetite T beet sure anew lease pflife. I will always you may be; sure be a warm friend of Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills. If you aro weak or ailing begin to euro yourself to -day with the rich red blood Dr. ,Williams' Pink Pillss actually make. If you do not find the Pills st your dealers Bend 50cente for *box or $2.50 for 6 boxes to 'i'he Dr, Williams Med- icine Co. Brockville, Ont. and they will be sent to you by mail post peed. , t I 1 A Useful Remedy. Little four-year-old Billy was visiting his neighbor..7erry. Billy showed ev- ery evidence of a bad cold. Jerry's mother asked with grave solicitude, "Doesn't your mother give you any- thing for your cold, Billy?" whereupon Billy auswered. reeling in all his pock- ets at once, "Yes, ma'am; she gives me a clean handkerchief•"-Lippincott's. Quite Pretty. "I nm not ashamed 'of my latest book." solei the author, "Of course not." said the local critic. "1 noticed its gilt edges and the beau- tifully colored frontispiece." -Atlanta Con 111tutinn. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA (j, If you are not already reading The Clinton. New Era, it will be to your advantage to do so.. Not only on front page, but every page contains subscription items each week. Regularsubscrption price $1.00 a year,and 50c for six months. We will send it from now to the end of 1913 to any address in Canada, da, for 35c-5 months for 35 cents -55s cents will ti end the paper to the United States. The Linton New Era ...• n .,� ..,_.�,.3a,1—Lily 7 PR"si taut E1IIM KD,1V A1"f$ .1� SII ,, .,- �_.� •x1' :111 I j1 fI.4i1�1l5_-,jamII�ti If � > � 4.0"/?, . ,..,f ori : P i / / ....�•- MUF'ICH1 Warld'5 Greatest Scientists Alis 2EY STRAHAN 7".P. S. Dsn'croi 6OLOGICAL SUP.VJY GR .EAT BRITAIN, Some of the Foreign delegates to the great Geological Conference in Toronto A Useful Coffin. A writer in an English church maga- zine once found in a collier's cottage !n Staffordshire a coffin used as a bread and cheese cupboard. Notwith- standing his wife's remonstrance, he told the story of the cofu as follows: "Eighteen years ago I ordered that, coffin. The wife and me used to have a good many words. One day she said, 'I'll never be content till I see thee in thy coffin."'Well, lass,' I said, 'if that'll content thee it'll soon be done.' "Next day I gave directions to have the thing made. In a few days it came home, to the wife's horror. I got into it and said, 'Now, lass, are thee content?' She began to cry and want- ed the 'horrid thing' taken away. But that I wouldn't allow. In the end she got accustomed to seeing it, and as we wanted to turn it to some use we had some shelves put in and made it into a bread and cheese cupboard. We have never quarreled since it came." Circulating Libraries. Long before the Revolution a young printer in Philadelphia when he had taken off his working apron at night Used to sit poring over his dozen of old volumes by firelight He soon knew them by heart and hungered for more. But books were costly, and he bad but little money. He had eight or ten cronies, young men who, like himself, Were eager for knowledge. Ranging his books on a shelf, he invited his friends to do the same, that each of them might have the benefit of them all. Ben Franklin thus laid the foun- dation of the first circulating library in this country. On Pa. "My son," said Harker as he pointed to the ivy in front of the cottage, "al- ways be Like the vine --climb." The little boy was thoughtfuL "I don't think I'd want'to be like that vine," he responded seriously. "And why not, Tommy?" 'Cause If H was I'd be a porch climber." -Chicago' News. He Got the Raise. "You want more money? Why, my boy, I worked three years for $11 a month right in thislestabiisbment and now I'm owner of it Well, you see what happened .to your boss. No man whotreats his Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA The Business of Life. Life is a business we are all apt to mismanage, either living recklessly from day to day or suffering ourselves to be guiled out of our moments by the inanities of custom. We should de- spise a man who gave as little activity and forethought to the conduct of any other business. But in this, which is the one thing of all others, since it contains them all, we cannot see the forest for the trees. One brief im- pression obliterates another. There is something stupefying in the recurrence of unimportant things, and it is only on rare provocations that we can rise to take an outlook beyond daily con- cerns and comprehend the narrow lim- its and great possibilities of our exist- ence. -Robert Louis Stevenson. Those Newspaper Yarns. A worthy old dame of New England once invited her husband's attention to what Seemed to her a curious item fn the journal she was looking at. "Lis- ten to this," said she, reading. "The Mary H. Barker of Gloucester reports that she saw two whales, a cow, and a call, floating off Cape Cod the day before yesterday." "Well, what about it?" asked the husband. "Only this," replied his spouse. "I can understand about the two whales, but what beats me is how the cow and the calf got way out there."-Lip- nincott'e. Electric Restorer for Men Pf103Q1a01701'restores every nerve in the body to its proper toast n; restores vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual weakness averted at once.. Phosphene) will make yon a now min. Price 18 a box or two for 55. MAWto any address. 'Y'he Soobell Drog 41o..p000otthartnes. Ono t of Water. Many people think that fish when taken out of the water die because air, has a fatal effect on them. The real reason, however, is that their 'delteate grit filaments or membranes become dry and stick together, so that no air can pass between 'them. Thus they lose the power to imbibe necessary oxygen, and the circulation of their blood stops. , The painful gasping of a fish out of water is nature's effort to free the passage ' through the filar help that way can hang on his buss- meats. ness."-Chicog o, Record -Herald. CASTOR IA Tor Infants and' Children. The Kind You Have Aiwa s"Bou ght y g Bears the Signature of Hap Pillows For Insomnia. 'George III. derived great benefit from the hop pillow prescribed for him s and dative se i after other r. Willis byD drugs had failed and a similar remedy was eminently successful in 1871 with his late majesty King Edward, VII., then Prince of Wales, who was suffer ing from typhoid fever. -London Tele' graph. 1 • PPP?: A.LCC2O1X /NAII.Ct A DENTAL CURIOSITY. The Set of Artificial Teeth That Wash- ington Endured. It may not be generally known that the Father of His Country was one oil the first Americans to wear artificial teeth. By the time the war of the Revolution had ended he had parted company with most of the outfit which nature bad given him. An ingenious physician and dentist of New York city undertook the then unusual task of re - equipment and produced at length a full set of artificial teeth. These are now, of course, a dental curiosity and offer an additional proof of the heroisns of our first president, for it is a matter of fact that General Washington wore those teeth for many years and, so far as we know, never complained of them. The teeth were carved from ivory and riveted, wired and clamped to a somewhat ponderous gold plate. Three large clamps in particular figure con- spicuously in the roof of the mouth and must have caused difficulty, if not anguish. There were an upper and an under set, and the two were connected and held in position relatively by a long spiral spring on each side, says Rarper's Weekly. Nevertheless Washington wore them long and well, a fact sufficiently attest- ed by the worn and dinted condition of both teeth and plate. At the last account these teeth were the property of a dental institution ha Baltimore. LITTLE ` BOY WAS SO SICK Did Not. Think He Could Live. CHOLERA INFANTUiVI WAS THE CAUSE. This trouble is the most dangerous of all the summer complaints of children. It begins with a profuse diarrhoea, the stomach becomes irritated, and the child is soon reduced' to greatlanguorand prostration. Cholera Infantum can be speedily cured by the use of DR, FowLER's Ex TRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY. MRS. JOHN Foote, Hantsport, N.S., writes:: ' Icanrecommend Do.,Fow4ER's EXTRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY for Cholera Infantum: My little boy was so sick,''I did not think he could live, as he was out of his mind, and did not know any one. I gave him "DR. PoweeR's," and the first dose helped him, and one bottle cured him. I recommended it to a friend whose children were sick, and it cured them too." DR. FOWLER'S EXTRACT OF WILD ` STRAWBERRY is -a remedy that has been on the market for over sixty-five years and has been used in thousands of fam- ilies during these years, so you are not making any experimentwhen you buy `o LERs t it, but he sure and get "DR. w when you ask for it, as there are many imitations, of this famous remedy on the The price is 35c., and it is rnanufactured only by the T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.