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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1915-05-20, Page 2G. D. McTAGGART ; s M, D. MoTAGGARB• -• J McTaggart Bros. BANNERS 'A GENERAL' BANKING BUSI- NESS TRANSACTED.' NOTES DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS ISSUED. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE-. POSITS, BALE -NOTES. rim CHASED. IL T.RANCE - -- NOTARY NOTARY PUBLIO, CONVEY- ANCER, FINANCIAL, REAL ESTATE AND FIRE INSUR. ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE'" COMPANIES. DIVISION COURT' OFFICE, CLINTON. W. BRYDONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR; NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. Office- Sloan Block -CLINTON M. G. CAMERON K.C. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, CONVEYANCER, ETC. 0flico on Albert Street oeeuped by Mr. Hooper. In Clinton on every Thursday, and on • any day for '1v'hioh ap- pointments are made. Office hours f ronri• 9 ami., to 6 p.m. A good vault in connection with the office. Oface open every week -day. Mr. ,Hooper- will make any appointments foe Mr. Cameron. ('II,tRLES R. HALE. Conveyancer, Notary Public, __Conveyancer, Etc. REAL ESTATE,: and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STPEET, - CLINTON DRS. GUNN & GANDiER Dr. W. Gunn, L.R.C.P., L,R. C,S., Edin. Ur. J. C. Gaudier, B,A., M.B. Office -Ontario St., Clinton. Night calls at residence, Rattenbury St., or at Hcspital. (lit. .1. W. SHAW - OFFICE - RATTENBURY ST. EAST, -CLINTON OR. C. W. THOMPSON PBSYIOIAN, SURGEON, ETC. Special attention given to die. eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Eyes carefully examined and suit- able glasses prescribed. Office and residence: 2 doors west of the Commercial Hotel, Huron St. DR. F. A. AXON - DENTIST -. Specialist in Crown and Bridge Work. Graduate of C.C.D.S., Chicago, and R,C.D.S., To. font, hayfield an Mondays from May to December. GEORGE ELLIOTT Lamed Auctioneer for the County of limon.. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sale; Date at .The Kews-Record, Clinton, or by selling Phone 13 on 157, Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. , o i-- CENTRAL rr E'TRATFORD.• ON1', Ontario's Best Praoticaa Training School,' We have. thorough courses and experi, enced instructors in each of. our three departments: Commercial, Shorthand and • Telegraphy. Our graduates succeed, and you should get. our large, free catalogue, Write for it at once. I).. A. McLACIILAN, Principal, - TIME TABLE,- Trains AIILE - Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton Station, as, follows: BUFFALO AND dODERICH DIV Going East, 7.33 a, in, 8.03 p. m, 5.15 p. m 11.07 a. in. 1.35 p. m, 8.40 p. m. 11.18 p. en. t It i1 tr Going West, ' LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV.; Going South, 8.10 a, M. 41 I 4.Going North, 111.00• P. M. 6.35m. p. m. ,t u Pertilizer. ' We carry. a Complete Steels' of Stone's Natural Fertilizer„No bettor opl the market. Hay We pay at all seasons the highest market prices for Hay for bailing. Seeds American Feed Corn, Red 01e - vet, Alsike, Timothy and Alfalfa FORD •St Mc1.EOD CLINTON. ALL KINDS OF COAL, WOOD, TILE, BRICK TO ORDER. All kinds of Coal on hand: CHESTNUT SOFT COAL STOVE CANNEL COAL FURNACE COKE BLACKSMITHS WOOD 6 in., S in, and 4 in. Tile of the Best Quality. ARTHUR FORBES Opposite the G. T. R. Station. Phone 52. How is Your. Cutlery J Supply Su pP Y ? You know that Jewelry Store Cutlery 'is out of the com- mon class. At least, OURS is. It carries a distinctiveness - an air of superiority, that comes from being made with the greatest care and ut- most skill from the highest - priced materials. If you can use some of this Cutlery in your home, you will be proud of it every time you see it on the table. Carvers, cased, $3.00 up. Knives, Forks 'and Spoons, $1,00 doz. up, Knives and Forks, steel, white handles, $3.00 doz. up. Let us show you our Cutlery line. Let, us tell you more about why it is the most desirable that you can put your money into. W. R. COUNTER JEWELER and ISSUER of IIARIIIAG1I LICENSES. The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company Head office,. Seaforth, Ont. uiiuioTORY • Officers: 3. 11. McLean, Seaforth, Pres+dent; J. Con. nolly, Codertch, Vice -President; Thes E, ]lays, Seaforth Sec.-Treas, Directors. D P. McGregor, Seaforth; J. G Grieve, Winthrop; Wm. Rico, Sea - forth; John Beeneweis, Dublin; J Evans, Beechwood; A. McEwen, Brucefield J, 11.. McLean, Soiforth; J. Connolly, Goderichr- Robert Ferris, Garlock, Agents, Ed. ltinehley, Seaforth; W. Chesney, l:gmondville; 3. W. Yen, Itolmee• viile; - Men Leitch, Clinton; R. 5, Jar. muth,.Rredhagen. Any money to be mid In may be paid to Norrfeh Clothing Co., Clinton, or at Cdtts Grocery, Coder:ch. Parties desirous to effect insurance or Transact other: business will be promptly attended to on application to city of the above officers addressed to their respect - lye pest -offices. Losses Inspected by the director who dives nearest the scene, There; is Cold Day Coming Whe not prepare for it by ordering your winter supply of Lehigh Valley Coal, None better in the world, Rouse Phone 12. Office Phone 40. A. J. HOLLOWAY Clinton News - Record CLINTON, • ONTARIO Terms of subscription -1G ,per year,, in advance; $1.50 may be charged. if not so paid, No paper discon- tinued until all arrears are paid, unless at the option of the pub, Fisher. The date to which erery. subscription is P paid is denoted of; the label: Advertising Rates -- Transient ad. vertisements, 10 cents per non pared line for first -insertion and, 4 cents per Tine for each subse. quent insertion. Small advertise ments not toexceed one inch, such as "Lost," '`Strayed,'' or "Stolen," etc., inserted once for 35 cents, and each subsequent in. sertion I0 cents.:. Communications intended for pub. lication must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. W. J. MITCHELL, Editor and Proprietor, -s `FOR THE •�t^�v`avv�W„ookkl" will clear sap your urine -neutralize uric acid -dissolve stone in the lllad- der-or Kidneys -stop the pain- in the back -and cereal] kidney and Bladder Trouble. SOc. a box, 6 for $2.50. Trial treatment free if you write National Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto. 265 Some New Facts: Even when.- thawed and cooked frozen beets have been found to contain a poison deadly to live stock.. More than . 24,000,000,000 bons of coal remains to be taken from the fields in Wales, according to geo- logists, - A new knife invented for the use. of electricians. he equipped with a gauge indicator that measures the 'size of wire, e Twenty-five to thirty-five pounds. of soot for every inhabitant in Lon- don falls during ,the course of a year, according to careful esti- British Honduras is new in com- munication with the rest of the world. A wireless. station has been established at Belize. Want a safe candlestick'? Drive a small nail into the bottom of a candle to make it float upright, then place it, in, a tumbler of water. The highest tempera -thee ever known in a human being was re- corded in the case of an Italian recently, A victim of hang urease, his temperature' was 138. The copper mines of Cyprus, in ancient time among the richest in the world, may be reopened. • Buildings in Japan are very slight in structure because Japan is more subject to earthquakes than a57y other country, WHOOPING COUGH SPASMODIC CROUP ASTHMA COUGHS BRONCHITIS CATARRH . COLDS Est.1573 A simple, sate end effective treatment avoiding drugs. Vaporized Cresolene stops theparoxysms of. Whooping Coughand relieves Spasmodic Croup at once. It is n been to severs from Asthma. The elrosrryingtheentiseptievopor,in- holed with every breath, makes breathing. easy; def soothes the sore throat de f SeeP, end stops the cough, assuring restful nights. t 8 Itis ievelaabte to mothers ��'- with rages children. Send us costal for descriptive booklet Coto @v 00005,0t5 VAPO-CRESOLENE CO. Leeming Maes f ldc,.Mentr' 1 NEWS-RECOROfiS NEW CLUBBING RATES FOR 1914 WEEKLIES, News•ltecord nod Mall St Empire -.ALM News,Record and Globe,,, 1.60 News•Rceord and Family. Herald and Weekly Star .., 1.55 News•Record anti Weekly. Sun 18, News -Record and Farmer's Advocate235 News -Record and Farm a Dairy Lai Aeras -Record and Canadian Farm 1.23 News -Record sod Weekly Witness 1,85 News -Record end Northern Messenger 1.50 News -Record and .Pres Prete 1.85 News -Record and Advertiser 1.05 News -Record and Saturday Night3,50 News -Record and Youth's Companion 3;2, News -Record and Fruit Grower and Farmer ,,....:. ,,;,,,,,,,,,,,,, 175 MONTBLIES, Sews -Record and Canadian Sports. man ..,,,,,.:,. ,,,_,93.26 Nervi Record 'and Llyptneott'e Clogs• DAILIES. News-hecord and World ...............93.35 News -Record and Globe .:.:,3.85 News-Rocord and Moly & I•Imnlre 2.60 News -Record and Advertiser „ 2,85 News -Record and Morning Free limn). . 3.35 News -Record and Evening Free Press, 1.85 News•Record and Toronto Star,. „ 2 85 News -Record and Toronto None ,.,., 2,95 LI shat you went le not In thle list tel us know about it. We can supply yea as less than it, would coot You to amid dimes. 30 remitting please do so. by Post.emee Order Postal Note, Express -Order or lteg• feteledletter and address. W. J. MITCHELL, 41ELL i Publisher Nt: Wa+Ra'- ,.ard CLINTON, ONTARIO THE CHILDREN OF TCDAY just as they are -in their in door play, or at their outdoes play -they are' constantly- of. fr+ring temptations, for the Fly - 1.ct it, keep Ihem E,Fr• you as they are now Let it keep tiaany'ocher hap• penin;gs' that are a source of pleasure to you. IlR'OWNIES, $2 TO $12; (C O'DAB S, $7 TO$ '2$. Also full stock 'of 'Fi'lms .sod Supplies. We do Developing, and Printing. Remember the. place I, TI-I.E REX'ALL STORE • S an' eir. • Jeroboam, Joach' Jolenah',' and. Je- Yiel'-s. ho.t were elected by the cong're- They Are a Particularly Good . Buy Just Noyv=-Prices Are Cheap. There Sore Smarty gond 'reasons Why the • peesent is an especially oppeettlne;-*inmate buy • municipal bondus. In the first piaci, they are cilieep, • that • is, eheaptiol comparison With price w+harp have obtained dieing the past few years. It ie eat sci act"seep 'long ,since boorowing munreipa,lities were atble to;senure at four anti a half or five pm' oept. som5 of Money, doe which thiey now have to pay five and five aild; a half; and even six per cent. interest. This is to the advantage of the bond buyer, •wdatl can now get many low •yield bends est si<leriabily be,7ow' pas, or higd]-yield, gilt-edged sle curities at about the sasne price as he formerly paid foe low -yield tie - Shen -tures,. • Prices Steadily Advancing, Bat Conditions- governing the money market cannot be expected to keep so for very much longer. In fact, there has been quite a noticeable change in the pest few menthe. Bond prices, have stiffen- ed considerably since the first of the yeas', and municipalities are able to -'strike a little better bar- gain with the bond houses than was the case three or: four months ago-. Comparison of issues recently made will,, those made in January ,shows a firming -up in prices which the. bond buyer has to pay; and a still further comparison with November: and August prices_sh,ow.s a sub- stantial aclvasrce in prices, of Cana, - dean municipal bonds within these periods. There is no remise; to euppos- that this advancing trend w' change; rather the omens point a. smarter recovery in prices these securities. which have: be considerably dearer in the -pa 'This reason alone would induce pr' sent purchasing of municipal bonds, because the price is very reasonable just now, and the market is favor- ing higher prices with their conse- quent speculative profits without eora•'espondin;g speculative risks, tee these securities are practically at their low now and will not likely go any krwer. A Good' Selling Market. Apart from the fact that meni- cip,al bonds are cheap lend offer Food opptrtneaitdes to th,e' shrewd inv.e tor, they aisle also a good' hay 'art the present time because of the 'steady demand, Which always exists for this :chits of elecurity, Certain institsttioae, holders of trust funds and Other 001.p -oration -a' ,are 'bound by law ,to invest their funds in only certain absolutely safe .claise.s .o securities, Municipal' bonds, come ,within this category, and offr the 'ideal investment eor trust funds, -as well as coining within. the re.strie- tiens imposed by Cm -emblem lawn. • This constant demand for meniei- palls fes' investment of trust funds is greater -to-day than ever before, and is 'hound to increase as tim-s goes err. General financial condi- tions ' affect quickly all, other se- curity. amerkets, but inasmuola as municipals are necessities for the trusltie'o, there will always be a steady, ,stable market for ,the best grade bonds of thee class. Security Is 'Worth While. The sound seenrity of' the muni cipal bond. makes ea strong appeal to every careful investor. No mat- ter what conditions prevail, the buyer of a municipal bond- is rea- eonably certain that lie will: get back 'hie principal at the appointed time; and that his interest will be regular, too. This will, appeal to many people at the present time, wdun certain blanches of trade have not been quite so good :as usual, and the -seeuruties issued against ,such enterprises in seine cases nt least-a•ne not so well se- -tiled, due to depreciation of plant id property Rand other uniavmid- rle :causes: No Time Like the Pt'esent. Taken ail round, municipals ate l oiled -lent buy pleb .now. The icld i,s large, and the present prices cheap, though they are steadily going up. There is the beat of security behind ,`ouch bonds; and there is a good market, quite apart ,front the demands of the ordi- nary . investing peblac. In good times or had times the municipal is a 'safe investment, and at the pre- sent time a particularly attractive buy because• of its three -fold ad- vantages of price, market 'and ee- eurity of principal and interest ENEMY RETIRES OVER THE PRUTH Itusiaus put lusteat us to Flight on Front of Nearly, ]llP Rites, A de -spat -Oh ircm. London says: The Austrian forces in Bukowina have fallen back precipitately be- hind the River Prutth, on which line Cze'rnowdz, the capital of the pro- vince is situated. The retreat of the Austrians, according to the ofti- cial Russian commeni.cation, began on Wccine;s,d'ay, the enemy's forti- fied position north of the river hav- ing been 'shattered on, the previous, day by the Ressaanr attacks along a front of nearly a hundred miles. This front, extended to the Rouman- ian trot' -ler, end constitutes the ,ex- treme left of the 000 -mile Attstro- Germae battle line in the- eastern war theatre. The Russian report .states that the Aus'trian cavalry, which was nlerifice'il •i,n repeated eharges to screen the general retreat of the, enemy's fosees, was scattered by the fire of Vie pursuin Bu•ssiaais, wh•osr, horsemen broke through the Austrian lines •at a :number of points and threw into disorder the ho;iti1,y co,luntr. rmta'dhi'sg in res treat.. The Russians are continu- ing the pursuit end'ei conditions described tie -particularly favorable, Constantly adding to• the number of prisoners taken and it appears likely that fighting for the posses- sien of Czernowitz, which already has changed hands four times der- ing the war, will by in• proga"eec again within a. few days. ,Chalmers' Pitl.riotism. 1Yhen Napoleon was threatening Great Britain n T1 oias Gha me s (who was then parish, mrnisd;ei' of Kilsnany) joined ,a. corps formed to prevent •ths French from landing at St, Andrewe,. AndrewHe held two offices in tee corps, ihc+se of •Lieutenant and C•hap:ai i • And Prean his piflpit h,t delivered war ser'moes'mere iiirpee- sioned than many that are (heard to clay, May that day," 'he ca•i.ed; "when Bonaparte ascends the Throne of Britain be the last of my • existence; may 'she -the first to as oend the scaffold he erects to ex- tinguish the worth and spirit of the con.ntry•; may my blood mingle with the blood of pittriette. .anti may I die et the foot of that alto' on which British independence is to he the victim,'". - - A Firm Believer in Destiny, A sergeant of a Scottish regiment is a firm believer• in destiny. No amount of'argument with hiss more keptie.al ourn.rades can . shake his belief in the slightest, he invariably closing the controversies with the rather' illogical assertion that i;wthen a man's last day comes it curne,s." The eveningbefore the battle,,at Mons, when preparing to take ,a' stroll, he was noticed by a corporal, a ,persistent opponent of the destiny theory, to quietly ,slip a revolver into his pocket. ''Hel- lo,?" shouted the corporal, who saw a chance of ridiculing the sergeanie "what are you taking the revolver for'? It'l'l no'. save ye lit your ti -me has come." "I ken, that," replied the sergeant after a moment's hesi- tation, , "bar t, ye see I edciit fa' .in wi' , a German whose - last clay has come." Of the many kinds' of cater•rih, one is entirely cline to the pollen of daf- fodils, THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESS INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MAY 23. Lesson V]II.---S)avid• King Over Ju- dah and Israel. 2 Sam. 2. 1-7; 5. 1.-5. G. T. -Psi. 28. 7. I. David Goes Up to Hebron (Verses 1-4), Verse 1. After this --After the defeat 'of Saul and Jonathan the way wets clear for David's rise to the throne, Inquired of Jehovah -If lie was to be made king, -it would be the Lord's doing. He would not take matters into his own hands. His inquiry was made through the visual way of Urim and Thuminim (see 1 Sam. 10. 22; 23. 0). Hebron - A place particularly well adapted fora temporary caapi- tal. It was easy to defend because of the mo'unt'ains. David wits familiar with his surroundings, and lie had many friends there (see 1 Sam, 30, 31). In the north, the Philistine's and the adherents of Sall divided the supremacy be- tween them, The modern name of Hebron is El Khalil, which means "The Friend," referring to Abra- ham, `"The friend of God" (2 Chroii. 20, 7; Ira. 41. 8; James 2. 23). n 8. His two wives -See I Sam, 25. 12. 43, 3. The cities of Hebron -That is, the towns and villages near He- bron, 4. The men of Judah came -The members of his own tribe. See 1 Saar, 30. 20 for evidence that David had been in very close friendly i els r tons with ] the elders e of his tribe Anointed David -David had been privately anointed by Semite.] (1 Sam. 10. 13). A public eeremony, as in the case of Saul (1 Sam, 10, 1; 11. 14, 76), WAS necessary, II. 'l1is Pasting Bs'nIory of Jona- then (Verses 4-7). 4. They told David -This part of verse 4 is distinct from the other part. David evidently had been making inquiiie,s as to what had become of the bodies of Saul and Jonathan, The meal of Ja•besh-gil,.d-If the men of Gilead were favorable to David, he would have little diffi- culty in extending his kingdom aorthw•aisd, Th -ere was reason, therefore, for hit kindly attitude toward them. This fact, however, is not to be taken as lessening his real cones of: gratitude for their burial of Saul and „Joenth-en, 6, Loving ki ,lne,ie 'end truth, Or mercy and ;faithfulness,aye attri- butes of Gad which are Fremeently found together (Se ;ll.xod. ;Pea. 25, 20; 40. 11 •; 57, 3; 86. 151. 7. Be ye valiant -That is, to held Gilead against the ldlrilietinc,s until David could aid thenn, HI. r Anointed Icing Over Iisrael (Verses 1-5), 1, .'Then came -That is, after the death of IsFhboalmetls, the son of Saul (sec 2 Sam, 4). All the tribes of Israel -The war- riors, men over the age of .twenty, lice Nunn, 1. 3 ; Exod. 19, 3-0; 2d 3; Num. 27. 18-23S 2 San,.. 5. 1; A. Chem, 29. 22; 1 Kings 12. 20; 2 Icings 11. 19; 21, 24; 23. 30; Judg. ! 20. 1. These passages show,-, ;the rights and authority of the "con- gregation gregation of Israeli' Joshua, Da- vid, and Solomon weir presented) to this congregation for 'approval;', We are thy bone and 'thy flesh Having a common ancestry Ore Gem, 29 14; Jaidg, 9. 2). 2. Thou leddes't oast and brought est :im Israel -As a tear leader. Jeliovath said to thee -The divi call. "'Three reasons in the or. , cler ,o their importance are' given 'fa electing David king: the tie o relationship; hill proved cepalli as a miilitary. lea ,cies ; the diviti' choice': (see on the first' and' this'd reasons Dent. 17., 15, on the second 2 Sam, 3., 18). 3. Made a covenant i A mutual 'agreement,w th the rule he.to rule according to the laws and they to show allegiance. The king's right were .defined (I Stink, 10. 25) ; Bate these were limited (1 Kings 12. 3) "The Israelite monarchy was not an absolute and irresponsible des- potism," They anointed David Icing-. third time: see t ie ty 0 r t, petizer. It' revitalizes the blood, and is especially useful in building :. up the debilitated and run-down. A Hood's Sarsaparilla is helping thousands at than time of year. Let it help you. Get a`bottle today and begin taking it at once. Be sure' to get Hood's. WHEN RUN BWN Hood's Sarsaparilla, ,the Reliable Tonic Medicine Builds Up. .?'ss+rl The reasonwhy you feel so tired all the time at this season is that your blood is impure and impover- ished. It lacks vitality. It is not the rieb, red blood that gives life to the whole body, lisrfeej.s digestion and enables all the organs to per- form their functions aP, they should. From any druggist get Hood's "k Sarsaparilla. It will make a e you -feel better, look better, est and sleep better. It is the old reliable tried andtrue all -the -year-round blood purifier and enricher, tonic and a - p Germs Like Ging, "Fathers and mother's, Ricky enough to have both boys and 'girls, know show clean the girls keep themselves, end bow the boys dis- regard dirt. From ea•rlieet o'hi:ld- hood the little girl's hands and face are washed, and she evades dress stains, combs her hair, end tries to look nice. Beit every normal boy, up to the age i]•f fourteen ;rev- els in dirt, and looks, forward to the Saturday night bath with vir- tuous contempt or dread. Bait boys do not surfer infections diseases as much as girls. This was brought out in an inveetigation made of 8,900 children of alll Rages and sexes. We requested the motlhuerts, them- selves to report what diseases their children had had, Girls had had more infections than boys of the same age. Thie goes to support the modern view that dirt and di•eees,e have ria necessary relation, Dt is not the dirt boys a•evel in that does harm. Itis the germs in other peo- ple's bodies that should be dread - cd. The girls encounter infection more than the boys becausethey are more ,sociable, meet other chil- dren more, and associate with them more intimately than boys do . hies for the Baby. Keep ,the +baby's bib dry if you have to- make sixty changes an hour, Give him not a scrap of meat before his third .bi,rtthday. Save hint from the kisses of friends. Keep the sum otut of his face in his carriage, Keep his head above the clothes in the cradle, that he may not breathe his own breaths over again. Lay him clown to sleep on his side, and frequently change From one side to the other, Train him to keep his month closed by gently pushing it shut ,while he is sleeping. The air is filled with gz.rms, -lust and dirt -elements that are not good ;for hum -an lungs. Never bandage him • too tightly, especially in the morning niter his bath anti before his meal. Con- sider flow you would feel if, after being bandaged as tightly as you eoule well support i,t•, you were then to eat a hearty breakfast. The Simplon Railway Tunnel is about twelve miles long. TWENTY CANNON, 0,000 PRISONERS Preach OilieissI Report on the Booty Captured During the Past Week. •- A despatch from Parris cape: The offeimsdve of the- allies was contin- ued to the south-west of Angree, • whe'r'e -two lines of trem+crlies were captured and a -strongly fortified wood, in. which the •bodii,ec•of 400 Germans were found after the bat- tle. Fighting iii the village of Neu virile St. Vaast continues... More J -o•nFset. held by the enemy were captured,, and the losses inflicted by the artil- lery were extremely Heavy, accord- ing to captured soldiers, A German attack in the' Addy wood reisulted in the en•einy;tempor airily gaining a. footing, in the- first line of French-tr•encihes, but they • were repuleecl in a counter-aattack and 100 taken prisoner. • With a forced ,lull in -the fighting north of Arras on account -:f the condition of the groi nd' as a re- sult of .a 'heavy. rainfall tube French army had an opportunity of esti- mating the extent of the victories. of the past week. About 100 offi- cers ha -we been captured since Sun - clay, and the Freech have eke taken20 cannon.,including eight heavy guns, together with 100 an- trailleus s and bomb.throivere.,The- total, prisoners takers exceeded 0,000. A conservative estimate places 'the, tote! Germain lucre at be.- tw'e'en 50,000 and 60,000. A fleet of British- end French aeroplanes delivered another aerial attack: upon the German positions along the Belgian crest, destrny- bt-g a number of bridges. "One of my daughters has tonsi- litis," exclaimed Mr. Growler, "and the other has sprained wrist." "That's hard luck.'' "Yes; , nothing peens to hvork out in Oho way it ought to. The one who sprained her wrist sings, as -id the one with a sort -throat plays the A NAKED, UNASHAMED MONSTER Simulating Humanity, Germany is in Pact a Re- ' version to Pre -Historic Barbarism A despatch 'from London say's: The riots which occurred earlier in the week have given place to con- demnation by public men of the German Emperor and his advisers, who are charged with the responsi- bility for the. Factions which have as a -sod public anger. The demand is made that 'the British Gover:n- lirent public proclaim the personal eeepoauibility of me,rn,beee of the Geeman Government fon' "the out- rages pes'petrated by German offi- cers or their agents during the present war,:, A resolution in this sense was mov 1 ec tt, public r a tbro n8 ,unix P , i r Chcl-. s ace to -Mahe b ' Lord .a •13-eresierd ncl wC17arhe . as s'eooncled by Lord Robert Cecil, It was un -anis sciou; ly. pained. Load Beresford urged that al'l German property in the Briti,sda Empire be ,confiscated and that all rich Germans, whether nataralizecl or not, be interned until. Pri,tish prisoners in Germany are treated as ]tonorable prism -Ina of .war. Lord Cecil said he had been told that Emperor William did not ap- prove of what 'had lie,en done, bit the speaker• declared that if the (Lerman Emperor disapproved aril allowed these things to go on, ;he was t•en times more guilty rand must he punished; this must be one con- dition of ,any peace. Lewis Harcourt, British Secre- tary of State .for the • C'oloni'es, speaking g ata meeting on the .water er front to -night, aid -that utrinaay ` etocd .at the haw of the world a naked an -d, unashamed moirster, • simulating humanity, but in fact a revenaion to pr'e ]redmilc barbar- ism." GERMANS TERRIBLY EXHAUSTED Will Abandon Offensive Before Ypres and Begin Attack Against` Dixmude A (leapatch from London ,lays: Thee D,a,il,y. Mail's correspondent at J otterdam forwards is, report from. Bruges that ',the German offensive before 'Ypres is weakening, because of the vigorous c emteraattacks of the allies farther siMth of the city. "Hie 13ri+tnsh,°" ire says, "rein- forced and encouraged by the suc- cessful defence, have attacked vi,g- orous,iy and 'advanced against the . G•er rnaaus, east of the, city, 'line Germans lire terribly exheus,t,ed "by their ferocious efforts to. visa their way to Quidm'is,, I learn," ,he :eon- cludas, "that clic next ambitious attack of the : G'erm,aa+s • will be against Dixmude,'' Many women with disfigured complexions never seers to think that they need an occasional cleansing inside as well as o etside. Yet neglect of this internal bathing shows itself in spotty, and sallow complexions -as• well as in dreadful headachesand biliousness. It's because the liver becomes sluggish, and waste matter accumulates which Nature cannot remove without assistance. The best remedy is Chamberlain's Stomach and ;Liver Tablets, which stimulate the liver to healthy activity, remove fermentation, gently cleanse the stomach, and bowels and tone the whole digestive system. Sure, safe and reliable. Take one at night and you feel brightand sunny in the morning. Get Chamberlains today -druggists 25c•, or by mail from - Chamberlain. 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