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The Clinton News Record, 1915-06-10, Page 2ii �a incur ate, arc a; ART AND WAR iMn�•:ut�c+rY�c+�: f AOrg X.,a;4.-.0, Emu•, .;r1:d>A AVAN 0. D. McTAGGART 51. D. S1cTAGGART. McTaggart Bros BANEER S 'A GENERAL :BANKING BUST• NESS 'TRANSACTED. NOTES DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS ISSUED. INTEREST, ALLOWED ON .DR- POSITS., DEiPOSITS., SALE NOTES 171.11l - CHASED.* II. T. RANCE - - NOTARY PUBLIC,. CONVEY. ANCER, FINANCIAL, REAL ESTATE AND FIRE INSUR- ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT- ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES. DIVISION COURT OFFICE, CLINTON. W. IIRYDONIJ,. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. Office- SloanBlock CLINTON M. G: CAMERON K.C. BARRISTER; SOLICITOR, CONVEYANCER, ETC, • Office on Albert Street ocenjiel by Mr. Hooper. Iu 'Clinton on every Thursday, and on . any day for' which ap- pointments axe made. Office hours -from 9 a,m. to 0 p.in: A good vault in'connection with the office. Office open every week -day. Mr: Hooper will make any appointments for Mr. Cameron. t'11.1111,ES Il, DAI.R. Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET, CLINTON pll:S. GIINN A GANI)IER Dr. W. Guam, L.R.C.P., L.R. C.S., Edin, Dr.' J. C. Gandior, B.A., M.B. Office -Ontario St., Clinton. Night culls at residence, Rattenbury St., or at Hospital, DR- J. W. SHAW' -OFFICE-- RA: TENEURY ST. EAST, -CLINTON DR. C. W. TIIMM1'S0N PHSYICIAN, 'SURGEON, ETC. Special attention given to•dia. 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, DB. F. A. AXON - DENTIST - Specialist in Crown and. Bridge Work, Graduate of C.C.D,S., Chicago, and R.C.D,S., To. ro ntO llnyfield on Mondays from Slay to December. aro F, TLr,IOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the Count; of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sale; Date at The News -Record, Clinton, or by saltines Phone is on 157, I barges moderate and satisfaction' guaranteed Ontario's Best Practical 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 gest "stir large, free catalogue. Writs for it at once. 1).'A. aICL.ACIILAN, Principal. :al - TIME TABLE - Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICR DIV: Going East, • I Ir Going West, ,o it 41 7,33 a m, `S,ti3 ji. itt. 5.15 p. 04. 11.07 a. in, 1.35 p. m, 0.40 p. m. 11.18 p. nn. LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV Going South, I, 14 Going North, x e 8,10 a. m, 9,23 p• m. )1.00' a. m. 8,051?. Fertilizer Ws carry a Complete Stock o8 Stone's Natural Fertiliser, No better an the market. Hay We pay et all seasons the highest market prices for Hay for balling. Seeds American Feed Corn, Red Clo- ver, Alsike,' Timothy and Alfalfa. FORD & McLEOD CLINTON. ALL KINDS OF COAL, WOOD, TILE CRICK TO ORDER. All kinds of Coal on hand: CHESTNUT SOFT COAL STOVE CANNEL COAL FURNACE COKE BLACKSMITHS WOOD 55% in., 3 in, and 4 in. Tile of the Best Quality. ARTHUR FORRES Opposite the G. T. R. Station. Phone 52. ow is Your Cutlery y Supply You know that Jusielry 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, $8.00 doz. up. Let us show you our Cutlery line, Let us tell you more about why it is the most desirable that you can put your money into. W. R. COUNTER JEWELER and ISSUER of MIARRIAGE LICENSES. The • 1�c�11Q1 Mutual Fire 1 F11 e 11151 1c11C0 1 ii Company Head office, Sea:orth, Ont, f DIRECTORY Officers: 3, B. McLean. Sea.forth. President; J. Con- nolly, Godertoh, Yice•President; Thew 11. Hays. Seaforth, Sec.•Treas, Directors:: D. I'. McGregor. . Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, W.inthropt Wm. Elsa, Sea - forth; Sohn Bennowefs, Dublin; J. Evans, Beechwood; A. iliIEwen, Bruceneld; J. B. McLean, Sattorth.r J. Connolly, Goderioh; Robert Perris Ilailock, Agents: Ed. Iiinchley, Setaerth; Ohesner, l kmondville; 5, W. Yeo mimes - villa; Lien. Leith, Clinton: R. 8. Jar• math, Brodhagen. Any money to be paid In may be paid to Morrish Clothing Co., Clinton,ror at Cutt' Grocery, Goderieh. e Parties desirous to effect insurance or transact otho•, business will be promptly attended to on application to any of the aboveofficers addressed to their rcepect• lye post -offices. Lasses'- inspected by the director who lives nearest the scene. There is a Cold Day Coming Whe not prepare for it by ordering your winter supply -of Lehigh Valley Coal. None better in the world. noose Phone 12. Miter Phone 40. A. J. HOLLOWAY Clinton News -Record CLINTON, . - ONTARIO Terms of subscription -$a per year, in advance; $1.50 maybe charged if not so paid; No paper discos-, tinned until all arrears are paid, unless at the option of the pub. fisher. The date to which every subscription is paid is denoted on.; the label', Advertising Rates -- Transient ad. vertisements, 10 cents per non. pareiI line for first insertion and 4 cents per line for each subse- quent insertion. Small advertise• merits not to, exceed one inch, such as "Lost," "Strayed, "• or' "Stolen," etc,, inserted once for 35 cents, and each subsequent in. sertion 10 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, PERHAPS IT'S' THE KIDNEYS that are making you feel so badly. If so, you can easily tell. If your head feels dull and achy -if your Mach hurts nearly all the lime -if your appetite is poorly and your tongue is -coated-if- the urine burns, is highly colored and offer,. sive in odor -if you notice a brick dust deposit or mucus in the urine after standing over night -then. you certainly have something the. matter with your I{idneye. Get Gin �t .i FOF2; Th1E ro rrpNmvS St, Sattenr, Quebec City. "For a long lime,f had been suffering from the Kidneys s ai, l ,Pains ,n n y nactc-and Limbs,have tried several remedies ,without Mirrors. After using Gin Pills I was soon relieved of my: pans andw 1 opt p rfocaty ured, :Lod duo entirety to Gin Pills' iMIrs.Ye, J. GUY, Gin Pills are "Made in Canada" and sold by all dealers at 50e. a box, , 0 for $2,50. Sold in U.S. under the name "GING '-Pills. Write no..for '. free trial treatment; National Dru,1 and Chemical Co., of Canada, Limited.. Toronto, 263 Only Secured Eight Out Of a Total of 1,382 A despatch from London. says; The Admiralty has' issued a state - trent announcing that the antinhai' of British, -merchantmen , sunk Or captured by German su'bmaarines in the week ending'Wednesday was eight, with a tonnage of 23,303. No fishing boats were sunk in that period. Tho number cf arrivals and sailings from British pouts was 1,382. Res' ervoirs of Poison. In Latest Zeppelins A despatch from Copenhagen saps : A gigantic Zeppelin of en- tirely new type caused .general surprise alld along the Baltic when making It trial journey oven thein- ternatiena•1 route between Sweden and Denmark. It was visible from all the coast towns. The airship differs considerably in form and dimensions atom the eas'lier Zeppel- ins, is hearty armored and is sup- plied with three 'resers*oirs for poisonous gas. Until the wax Belgium, with a population of 7% millions, was one of the most densely populated countries in the world. NEWS -RECORD'S NEW CLUBBING RATES FOR 1914 WEEKLIES. I;ews•lteeord and Mall & Empire 55.60 Newe•lbecord and Globe...,..„.. 1,60 Newe-Reaord and Family erald end Weekly Star .. ., „ ... 1.06 News -Record and Weekly 'Sus1.85 News•Record and Farmer's Advoseie...2.35 Nuwe•Record and Farm. & Dairy ...1.86 News -Record and Canadian Perm ... 1,85. News•Rccord and Weekly Witness.. 1.85 Newe•Record and Northern Messenger 1.60 News.Record and Free Press .. 1.06 News -Record out Advertiser ... 1,85 News -Record. and Saturday Night. , &.60 News.Record and Youth's Companion 3;26 News -Record and .Pratt Grower and Farmer ................... 1.96 MONTHLIES. News•Record and Canadian Sports. mai, .........................:53;25 Newe•Reeerd ,and Lfppfncott'e •Dlaea• _ DAILIES. News.Reeord and World$3 35 News -Record and aloha '.. News -Record and Mall & Emnlre. 3,60 News•Record and Advertiser 2.55 News -Record and Morning Free Press. 3.33 News -Record and Evening Free Press, 2.85 News•Record and Toronto Star ...... 2.81 Newedtecord and Toronto News .... 2.85 If what you want Is not In this /1st let us know about It. We can supply you at less than it would .cost you tosend dlreott. In remitting please do so by..Post,u@ees Order Postal Note, Express Order or Reg• istered letter end address, W. J. MITCHELL, Publisher News -Record. CLINTON, ONTARIO THE CHILDREN N OF TO -DAY AY just as they are -in their in. door play, or at their outdoor play -they are 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. BROWNIES, $2 TO $12; KODAKS, $7 TO $25. Also full Stock of Films and Supplies: We do Developing and Printing.. Remember the place Ti I C LORD ItI'I'CHIENER'S VISIT TO GEN.. JOFFRE AT TilE FRONT. A photographer caught the two just es Lord Kitchener was say- ing good,byei That the terrible European con- flict now in progress will leave its mask upon both art end literature, no one can doubt. Men of all the arts are fighting ins the ranks; no one ewe guess just how their re- cord of what they sea end shame will take •form. Of one thing only can we be sure: whether the great word be spoken, the great canvas paint- ed, by one of the victors or of the vanquished, it will he no jubilant paean to glory, no splendid pa- geant of conquest. For the old- time, grandiose, hi -metric represen- tation of warfare shed`s is no longer room in ant. Since the outbreak of the war there have been many reproduc- tions in popular form of the admir- ably truthful wee pictuees of the two French artists, Detente end de Nouvul.le, both of whom had seen service in the Franco-Pru,ssulan War, and of M•eissonier, whose min- ute care and study for his Napo- leonic battle pictures were amaz- ing. In his x'1807" -the Battle of Friedland -Napoleon's cuipassiers are represented saluting the an - parer, who is posted upon a low mound, as they charge past him at. full speed through a field of ripened grain. Meissonuer', to 'obtain the right effect, purchased the standing crop of wheat in a large field, and induced a .friendly colonel of cav- alry to put his men through special nlaaitoeuvles in it. Fuss' his "1814," a winter seen, he painted out of doors, in the bitterest cold, in a field purposely trampled and bro- ken up by 'heavy carts, and then allowed to freeze, When it proved that his model for Napoleon could not wear true costtrsnm, carefully re- produced from the emperor's in measure and detail, he tried it om himself. It fitted pea'feetly ; so, mounting the chosen white charger, lie had a large mirror brought to the field, and set to work painting himrself .against the bleak and snowy background. It was so cold that his feet froze is the sitirrups, end he could only conttinue by true aid of foot warmers to thaw his toes, and a chafing dish held up at frequent intervals to warm ibis stif- fening fingers. Perhaps it was because he did spare himself that his models also were ready to endure nn.tt•eh in the cause of art; although even they occasionally complained, An old soldier, who had posed' with the assistance of straps and slings ens- pended from the ceiling of the studio, for a wounded cavalryaiwn falling iron} his saddle, once de - Clued with emphasis "Monsieur Meissonice, I have been six times wounded, and once nearly frozen on the field, and once they were going to bury me, but it was alt nothing to this -noth- ing I nothing I It is not:hard to fall out of the saddle, really. A bullet helps one so neatly one hardly knows 'when one touches the ground. But then, you see, one is allowed to fall all the way; one is not halted in mid-air, You are painting a great pleture, monsieur, and I am proud to be in it; but if you could have put me there with .a pistol instead of a paintbrush, I should have preferred it.': Five Allied Nations Will Act Together A despatch from Tokio says: Foreign Minister Kato interrpellat. ed in the House of Peers by the Budget Committee, made the 4e- clarration that Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy and Japan had agreed to take no independent action of any kind in connection with. the European war. Quite a lois of people work them - 'selves. to death trying to. find some way of nicking money without working.. James II. is the only English king who has ever 'abdicated since the Conquest, BELrGION A) D NAT ITII Shame Reddened the Cheeks of Converts - as the Gospel Sped on Its Way "What profit," ,,says St. Paul to 'Innis frieird in Rome, "had • ye in those things whereof ye are, now eslran tad7'' Now asihamedI These two words being us fade to face with a new moaahl power that had come into the world by Jane Christ. As the result of the prelsenee in the world of that shining personelsty and of the pressure of this judging andcin cenfoundftnrg mind, amen felt themselves ie sicken by a new ,and ndiwonted shame. We can see it et work in Christ's liwri lifetime. John the Baptist, the confident manipulator of other .men's sins, is smitten wads a sud- den shame when Rama comes to be baptized. Peter the tf-confident was ,unable to endure the . white heat of the Presence: "Dep ar t from me, feat I. am it sinful man, 0 Lord." Jiesus was feared as well as loved and Paul speaks of "the fear of •Christ" nus an inhibitive control in social life, It w,ac the same new shams that reddened the dheelcs of C'hristlas convents. es the gosgee1 ;sped an its Way and eased' them be emerge from the loud indecenciiee of pagan life into "a'lilfe of iholly modesty. It was the mine sh"atiuo that put an end to the gladiatorial" chows and a tliousand 'lh}sazee ,diewdneisses of Roman lifts. It was a -wave of the "new sheumie" thiat put an end to legalized slavery over iso. large an area cif Chs'usteralem . And to -day when a now a'aform the demanded, say in. our ii rison"'sy+sitem oqr ih the control of vice, or in the regulation STOREo4' abolition ci war, it is because a bi'uelh orf felt disgrace peseta ever the community of natiiouis, and we gay "it is a shame that semdh things should New the forces of evil hate this progiess''ive ,shame, because, work- ing from the centre al the hu -mann spirit outward, it works, toward the disrnbegrttion of evil's power. These forces accordingly have pro- tested against tdliis shaiho as weak- ne,ss, or prudery, as -the enemy of art and of human sed,f-fulfillment. In it place the power's s of evil have not ben slow to urge a life and habit of stramelesemese. Such naive sliamelessnes,s wits tried in Greece, and in the groves of Daphne; a ntitle naturalism, .protesti rig ag+a,inet restricting the area -of expasere. It was fried in Italy in the fifteenth century,.in England in the sev en- teen•th in France in bhe eighteenth ; 'and we know what in leach ease the issue was: A new pagan revival ins upo,r us now, Literature; jour'nn'li,san, the drama, the dance, evert education itself, Acre explorted in the interest of a. view of life, thoroughly im- moral in its 'source, which confuses exposure with cleanliness, sh.atm,e- hassnat,S with ootttag,e and nude in. decency- with sincerity and tr htdl, Meanwhile the real 'service to moral progriess,us being rendered, acs at has always 'been, by the souls who, seeing Christ, sea evil "through his eyes:" They speak but liittle. of what they ;see, ,and weilitl,ot 'little on its ,detaiil in their ought; but they labor and puny, for its destructible I wish we ,coIlllhl found a brotherhood, not of indif- ference ar laissez ;fair", but oof ear - vine and reform, built on the jl•rina Pile of nrodleaty regarding the shame` fel things oB li$ey and of an eaten-, eio,n of the 'al ea of seticeuee. I should calla it "The l retherihood of true New Shaiane.-Rey, G. A. John. s.bo•n Ross, I ie,w York. JOHN BULL SHOWN ON JOB A MEII.ICAN CORRESPONDENT'S • VIEW OF B.iII.'ISII SOLDIIR. Deadly Earnestness of Britishers Ia Great afar Shown In Its Brave Volunteer Armies. William G. Shepherd, American war correspondent, wrote the fol- lowing sketch for American read- ers, from the headquarters of the British army in Northern Fiance t Tins its not :pommy Atkins ; John Bull. mlaThe miinuite you begin. to rub .el- bows with the English Army you ke this tiitsoovesy, Tommy Atkins, the 'professional English soldaer, is here aplenty he dolts tire English Army. John Bull, us the everyday' English citi- zen, and he same to be around here in hundr'edas of thousands. Teinnty Atkine is the soldier that Kipling sings' about. John Bull has never been sung about. John Bull and His Castle. He's the John Bull who' believes his home is his castle; in fact, it is that belief tavat has brought him here. He's the Sohn Beall who pays. his taxes, who reads newspapers and talks -politics, who has .a 'gas, - den, a wife "and children, and who conhmmten daily, in peace timles, between his home and his office. Take any one of your yorungee neiglhbon+s-a lawyer, a street car conductor, a real estate man, a. clerk ; quiet fellows who ,stay home on slimmer evenings ,and squirt the lawn or weed the gardiem-and I'll go out on the streets of this helad- quarters town and find his minter - part for you within • five minutes. He's carrying a gun and wearing khaki. Or I'll find him for you ly- ing under a wooden crass in one of the field cemeter'ie's near by, his part of the job ,that 'he came out here to do, well and nobly finished, The Sacred Shelter. It was his duty to show that ,he believed not only that an English- man's home is his castle, but that a Belgian's home and a Frenchman's home and every home in all civiliza- tion is a sacred shelter bloat -must be untouched by enemies. There's a thrill about being with the English Army that mo American can miss. These hundreds upon hundreds of thousands of men are volunteers; every man jack of them spat down and thought it all out for himself before the went to the re- cruiting office and asked for a place in the army. To -day, in the E'nglis'h Army khaki, be's his own inane man. He's responsible to his su- perior, for he's a soldier; but, pri- marily he's responsible to himself and to that castle of his back 'home and to every jeopardized castle - home in every earner of the earth. He's worked out his duty for him- self as a mach works out his own religion or the other great problems of his life, and the answer to his problem is that here he .is in khaki, a full-fledged soldier. Don't believe these stories that he's always singing '`Tipperary" and that he's always ready for a fight or a frolic. There's no frolic about it, and very little musie. His frolic and his music are awaiting him at his castle somewhere in the Empire; if he ever sees it again. He came out here to fight, and lie's in dead and serious earnest. He wasn't always singing "Tip- perary'' while he was doing his day's duty in peace limes .or while lie was commuting to and from work; no snore does he do it now.. This is a'osmium job, just like his peace -time duty; the frolic and the music may come after the job is done, The thrill that an American gets, rubbing elbows with this volunteer British army, .tonnes with the know- ledge that there are only two great Pamela in the world that han•e the voluntary military system -Great 131rtein and the United States; Why They Caine. Through all ;the long winter, back in the British Isles, I .saw men in silk hats, in derbies, in long coats, in short counts, in hunting boots, in street shoes, chilling and march- ing and counber-marehing; their faces were always set determipeddy. Now I see these semis men here, in khaki and caps. They are here he - mime they are forged to he .hare; forced by something within them- selves. They ere here not only be- cause they wanted to be hher'e, but because they were determined to, be here. That's the English army of to- day, at the front. I saw pact of the army at church this morning The parson knew itis hearers. He talked to them just as the would have talked hack in any little old a orae church in any ar- tier of the British 'Isles on any Sunday morning. He didn't men- tion war, nor the nearness of eter- nity. Hie text was. about Thomas, the disciple who would not .believe Christ had risen until he ;had seem for himself the print of the nails. "To -day," he said, "when we doubt, there are no prints of the nails for us to see. e Christ appear- ed in person to that fortunate Tionras, and carried' him over the to'reat of doubt. But ase must bridge the Chasm between doubt OLD-TIME REMEDY MAKES PURE BLOOD Purify your blood liy taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. This media eine has been and still is the people'% medicine because of its reliable character and its wonderful success in the treatment of the common dis- eases and ailments -scrofula, ca- tarrh, rheumatism, dyspepsia, loss of appetite, that 'tired feeling, general debility. Rood's Sarsaparilla has been tested forty years. Get it today. and belief by faith, and we must square our lives to our beliefs." Pommy Atkins is Gone. Tommy Atkins, bless his heart, wasn't there. This was an audi- ence of English citizens, whom you might, have found in any dljuroh in England on this bright Sunday morning, come over here to Feence to do their duty, and the parson was talking to them as ,simply as ail parson can talk who is trying to help folks alomg-in the solution of then- problems of life and death. It was 'the same way at the foot- ball game this atheneum The -dis- tant cannon rumbled them, also. I tallied to two artists from the Chelsea Arts Club, who had been in the 'battle of Ypres, and who were as hardened veterans of war as Napoleon ever knew. I talked to e.a butcher from the West End oo London. I talked to a car'penhter. I sewsewsCarrnbridge main and a horse farrier' playing football, side by • sid This crowd wasn't made up of Tommy Atkins, the. proi'essional. soldier; it wail Seim Bull on the job. The world has never before seen another army like this English one; men who can he counted almost in millions; each man his etch sn:an's Man ; each man doing his du -try be- muse something within him had forced him to do it; each man playa Mg to the grandstand that lies within 'himself stud to the little gal- lery in his castle back home. H Losses of Prussians 1,388,000 to Date A despatch from Amsterdam emus: The Telegi'aad states that ate- cording to German casualty lists. Prussian losses alone have reach- ed a total of 1,388,000. Recent casualty lists contain the names of 58 airmen, of'wh•om eleven; were ite'.i'.ed and 30 wounded, the remaining ten being missing. Trying on Bridges. Does music weaken, metallic or other 'bridges? This question re- cently asked of a well-known bridge builder ,brought this reply: "Measured vibrations are more hying to any kind of bridges, and particularly to suspension bridges, than Irregular agitation, Music alone would not strain a "bridge enough to injure it materially, but a regiment of troops keeping step to music when erasing asuspen- sion bridge would subject it to a very severe strain. Consequently, it is customary to stop the fuusfo before troops reach the bridges, and let the men break step, and march more or less irregularly. "The reason for all this is Ob- vious. bvious. The structure naturally will stiffer least strain when at rest. When in uniform motion th • bridge acquires a momentum noun to its entire suspended weight multiplied by the velocity of the ;notion. It is manifest that, in the case of a. heavy structure, a uniform down- ward vibration, be it ever so small, wuitkl developa mnmentnm of many tons in the direction of a. breaicin s strain. The same disturb- ing forces acting irregularly, so as to counteract one another, would. be far leas trying to the structure. 5' OLDE A«i' M Sixty-five years of unceasing effort are represented in the Hemtzman & Co. Plano Sixty-five years ago the Heinlzman piano was a good piano. It has been improved year after year since then, till now it is acknowl- eged to be the World's Best Piano Branch Wareroors 38 Ontario St, STi4ATFORD -if you feel bilious, "headachy" and irritable- for that's a sign your liver is out of order. Your food is not digesting -it stays ip the stomach a sour,. fermented mass, poisoning the system. Just talcs a ole of Chaiphellain's Si omach and Liver Tablets - 'hey make the liver do its work -they cleanse and sweeten the stomach and tone.the whole digestive system. You'll feel fine in. the, morning. At all druggists, 25a, or by mail from Chamberlain Medicine Company, Toronto 14