HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1915-09-16, Page 2a. D. McTAGGAR!
M. D. McTAGGART
Fe�tif
so carry
Stone's Natural
better on the
Ha y
we pay, at
,
market glees
-.:
Sees
American Feed'
-STOMACH&tiIVER
Ahsike,
FORD
- CLINTON.
CLINION.
izer
a nal F 'Complete Steak of
Fertilizer. No
market.
i h
a+ll >xeu,son,s bhe h g es
, ...a
for. Hayfax baling.
Corn, Red Olo-
Timothy' and Alfalfa.
y
& MCLEOD
BRITAIN A1VAI�ENS
TO NEED OF THRIFT
.
GREAT MOVFM•ENT BEGUN ON
NATIO NAL LINES.
Finencial Stren "'t
^, Strength of the Nation Lies
i
In the Thrift '
of he
• Workers,
, .- ,
A revelation • in thought has taken
place in Great. Britain on the subject
of financial policy, and as London,, the
capital of Great Britam,'is the money
centre of the whole world, that neve-'
Innen must have a momentous effect
upon every nation,
✓
Before the war financial strength
Pu y RiGH B oo
PREVENTS DISEASE
Bad Blood,. -that is, blood that is
impuxa er impaveriehedt thio and
paTo,-is responsible Pox more aif
acrid thain anything else.
Y g and £unotlo
Inxsoffeoa ever or an ; n
m0 eases it causes Catarrh, in
others -dyspepsia; in others rheutna-
, _,
tis,. and in Still others weak' tired
languid feelings and worse troubles;'
•
It is responsible for run-down
conditions, and is the most common
cause of disease,
Hood's
Hoods Sarsaparilla is the greatest
: perieer and enricher of the blood the
world has ever known. It has been
Y
wonderfull succeeded in removing,
scrofula . and other hutngrs inereasing
the red -blood corpuscles, and building
up the whole system, net it today.
Are
!' �r a .
ALLIES NEED NOT BE ANXIOUS
OVER NEXT `MOVE OF GERMANS
•
IVIcT`�r] I] R��+�(�
,, ag",gart' Bros•
RA.NICElt9 —*
'A GIENERAL. BANKING BUSI
.
NESS,
TRANSACTED. ' NOTES
TTS ISSUED.
DRAFTS
INTEREST ALLOWED ON .i)E
INTEREST
n
POSITS. ' SALE NOTES UR•'y
CHASED.
,;
t
'
�8 . t eaw. _.
-t
`�
Don'tlet ttun rte,,^.
toolong,itvrill r �
lead to chronic ���f)
lead tQ eh Tn , _,a �� ` �?.
thegntearrwhde s+a•
sufPex; fie «a
..
..
----•••�
.5?tttatilOil.tS Iigpefui, Nct,Matter VVilat ii ltlj)digYl
,';'
Enetn s Staff Decides U on Sa 5 Tlmes EX eft. '"
.y {� p
+ •
1. • •.,. ....,.. :.
, oix
Y., ,. „. m f:.i irtta,.
.,mtsexable a ..s:!ir
, s tele' . r i."
••••••
heedac es, nee-Loi ,H.,.,,,,
7 ,
: , • •, . .. ,:- ,
-: A' de "'
spatcb Edon, London says. Col.
. _.
. ,,«' : ,, • , . ' ` •;
i ', , b
whit he Gexmgns will but
'.'.
!;,'
vou'snese.'"da ' °
: re res-„',,� ” +et. •sf f•
pp
Bion and,•s^alflow-•• v i
eomplexion.Justtr ',..• �ttJ
Y
CHAMBERLAIN'S s i
,
TABLETS. The re-„..
Neve fermentation, TH•ES•Epresent
; indigestion - gently
stan beb and hvcrinper£eotru non Border.
a
A, all druggists, 25c;, er by m,flfrom� 31
Chamberlr:m Medicine co Toronto
ea acv ,4 .,;
' ), .
;:
.:
._,,
•;
Repengton the Times' military expert,,,
discGssrng the question, ausuet•,will,
the Germans 'do next?" declares that
, the find,.themsel es nn thestate
Y k s a e ,of
perplexity as Napoleon did` after his'
success at. Vitopsk, the outcome of
'`!h3ch. was Moscow: The tenor' of. the
article is hopeful,. not 'Optimistic.
P PtimistlC,
The writer does not attempt to guess
,acerae,
s'
aye, .
✓+Tri situs i :i clear epoch, and
• e tapie l•, p E'' -,n
no matter what the German deciswn
•• ••
is, the -allies can regarda with. equa-
nimity,, We have not been -to foolishly
generous; as• our enemy has
been with initiative as a gift, and the
`question' is not only what .he proposes
"t0 d0 next but. what the allies , pro->
pose to do. Time will show.”
_
, , - -• 11. T. RANCE - ee
NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY-
'AINCER, FINANCIAL, REAL
1ryST.ATE •AND` FIRE INSUR•
S `OE AGENT'. REPRESENT-
II{ 19 FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANIES.
DIVISION .COURT OFFICE,
CLIN'PON.
ALL KINDS OF
��� �'�
' �' 9
TIL BRICK''ed.
TO ORDER.
, '
A Match for. Herr
•A certain suburban theatre was-
very £ill when the..young man enter-
Presently he stopped beside a
somewhat stout lady• who was trying
to occupy enough room for two
"Is this seat g engaged?" he asked
politely.
The stout woman looked up
angrily.
"Yes, it is!" she snapped. I'm,keep-
ing it for a gentleman," ,
"That's me right enough!" smiled
g g
the witty youth,' as he slid into theIn
seat, `But how did yeti know I was
coming?"
SAW- LIQUID
;,
AND INVENTIONS
AMERICAN ESCAPES
MANY WITH
:--e-
Charles Pray, Draughtsman
chaniq Worked
Munition
An amazing story
_
`FAZE
•"` •pwas
FROM GER-
WAR SECRETS.
and Me-
in German
Factories.
of the prepared-
,
self en.acute •to the Kruppfactory'at
`Essen; And; at the same time 1 did,
Fultretk that-NIr,, Fultz was' not Mr_
t z at all but Graf von Schnell
mann, off, the :,German Secret Service.
"At Krupps' I went on to a portable
grinding
an orate
the details of which were
shown "me byone of the Kruppde-'
signers.h At the first I had no idea
what this rmdin plant was intended
for. ,All T knewwasthat it was to
`'be shipped to Constantinople, for use
by the Turkish Government..
Little by little I learned that the
Kainair g.pla. was to reduce ea* cot-
ton to pulp. • This next job was to
was: estimated in the power of banks
and other financial corporations and
In bhe abilit of
Y great leaders on
change. But now it is seen and
known .that when a 'great crisis is to
be faced the financial surer gth of the
nation lies in the thrift of the great
mass of workers,
Great Britain has provided for the
expenses of the war for herself and
those of, her allies who depend upon
her for a year to come by borrowing
from her own people the utterly un-
thinkable sum of $3,000,000,000,
the old days of leisurely finance,
when comparatively small sums were
p Y
needed, bonds were rnegotiated
through the great banking houses.
But in this case a sum many times
for
beforeuwais requireen had d rand there been were
none to furnish it except the common
people of Great Britain,
as the leaders of'•the nation
have explained, in so many worths,
every man, woman and child in Great
Britain the praises of Thrift and to
ma]ee known everywhere how individ=
ual and national welfare alike depend
upon
ip n the small and too -often despised
economies of everyday life. Extraya-
Kane has not only gone out of rash.
Ion, it is regarded with dislike and
contempt. The man who to -day
should flaunt his wealth and tryto
bring in again the fashion of lavish
and ostentatious spending would be
looked upon as a fool or worse. Rt,
lion, Sir John Simon,Attorne Geier -
y"
al, has given this word to the British
people, and it is being repeated every -
where:
Extravagance, always a folly be -
comes in war time a crime; thrift, al-
ways a virtue, becomes in wartime n
great national duty."
Britain has spoken. by her decree
this world to -day is a world of Thrift..
.
At! kinds of Coal on band:
CHESTNUT SOFT COAL
STOVE CANNEL COAL
RNA CB -COKE
BLACKSMITHS WOOD
W. BIIYIDONE,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,_,
NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC.
Office- Sloan Brook-CLINTON
i
2% in., 8 in, and 4 in, Tile of the
Best ualit
Quality.
M. G. CAMERON K.C.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,
CONVEYANCER, ETC..
Office on Albert Street oeeuped by
Nr. Hooper.
In Clinton on every Thursday,
and on any day for which ap
pointments are made. Office
hours from 9 S.M. to 6 p.m.
A good vault in connection with
the office. Office open every®�
P
week -day. Mr. Hooper will
make any appointments for Mr.
Cameron.
Love Will Find a Way.
Master-Norah seems quite gone
on that. letter carrier.
Mistress -Gone! Why, she actually
mails a postcard to herself every
night, so he'll be sure to call at the
house next morning.
reds of Germany for war fs told .byt
Charles Bertwood Pray,an American
inventor and• expert echanic,, who'
designed fighting machines for the
Kaisers armies before the war and
who has just escaped to England fromFor,
an internment damp in Germany,
Pray was born June 11, 1874, in
instal an agitator or another motor
lorry, er om thgengi transmission
of t. power, from the. engine to operate
receive istheitcotton after it was to
P
sed through the grinding plant.' In
etd with Rsul huricr the tand ton nitric acids -s to be
and I remembered the old gunpowder
ARTHUR FORB
Opposite the G.- T. R. Station,
Phone 62.
other countries borrow from Britain
but Britain find's no outside market in
which she can borrow the immense
sums which she' needs in her world-
leadership. Nor can she call upon the
great banks and money houses, for
these the keepers
�y A
S RELATIONS
' °
GROG STRAINED
+
�� ����
Cutlery
Supply
You know that Jewelry Store
Cutlery is out of the coin-
mon lass. At least, OURSEnglish!
18.
It carries a distinctiveness-
an air of superiority; -ghat
comes from beingmade with
comes
greatest care and ut-
most :skill from the highest-.
priced materials.
If you can use some of this
Y
Cutler inyour home
Y ,you
Will beproud of it everysuch
time you deo it on the table.
Carvers, cased, $3.00 up.
Knives, Forks and Bpoons,
' $1.00 doz.. up,
Knives and Forks, steel, white
handles, $3.00 doz, up,s
Let us show you our Cutlery
line. Let us tell you more
about why it is the most
desirable that can
youput
your
your money into.
g� �y �AT�!®
W.
®C1 ifo COUNTER 19 1 6Il
■ !
Jh}V1;LE1t and ISSUER of
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
_
TENDERS FOR PULPWOOD LIMIT.
Menders will roe' received by trig under'
Ilio fifteenth th dto endefn9eptemb 'Wednesday,
the right to out pulpwood on a certain
area Railway situatednorthof
Souliand souithof
1;ngltsh River In ,the District of Renard,
Tenderers shalt state the amount they
aro prepared to pay as bonus to addition
fornake
spro ue and 20e. offor otheer r pulp-
woods, or such other rates lie may from
time to limo be filed by the Lieutenant.
Governor in Council, for the right t,,
operate a pulp mall and a paper mill on
or near the area referred to.
Such tenderers .shall 'tte'ronuirorlto erect
a atilt or a:tG Is on or near the territory,
and to manufacture the wood into raper
in the Province of Ontario -the papermtll
be acetas within such time and iny
such place as the Lieutenant -Governor in
Council shata direct.
Parties making tender will be required
to aepeett with their- tender a marked
cheque nayalto to the honourable the
Treasurer of the Province of Ontario, for
tett per cent. or the amount of their ten-
der, to be forfeited in the, event of their
Rollinsford, Strafford County, New
Hampshire. He became an automo-
bile engineer. In 1913, in response
to an advertisement for a high-class
draughtsman and mechanic, he was.
engaged, with others, by a German
named Fultz in Detroit, He says:
"As soon as I had signed the agree-
Ment he told me the next im portant
thing was for me to get for him a
copy of my birth certificate. So I
wrote home to my father in Rollins-
ford and he got the County Clerk to
sout the birth certificate. When
we reached New York I found six
other men, all Americans, waiting for
us. They, too, had all got their birth
certificates, ,1011 of us turned them
over to M r. Fultz.
"Those birth certificates never
came back to any of us. From what
1 have found out since each one ofwas
them was used -a year later -by aj
German spy, pretending to be an
American caught in Europe without
a passport. On the strength of thoseattache
birth certificates American consols
issued emergency passports right and
formula and 'tumbled.'
A Portable Factory.
„
I knew well enough I was helping
to create a portable powder factory-
the first one of its kind in the world."
After the fall of Liege, Pray in the
hearing of two of his superiors in the
model machine works expressed him-
self. The Germans might whipthe
g
Belgians, he opined, but "by heck" it
didn't lay in their power to whip the
"I also told 'em," added Pray with
reminiscent smile, "that when the
war was over there wouldn't be any
more Germans and little Willie would
have to hunt for another job,"
It did not surprise the Yankee over-_
much when, the following day, he was
arrested.
He was sent to prison and then to
but managed to
an internment camp,pp
escape to England, where he has been
engaged by the Government, and
where he has told the British Muni-
tions Board what he saw in Germany,
'f
are and guardians
of her Aladdin's -Lamp of finance, that
mysterious centre around which re -
volved the world's economy, the Gold
Reserve, One hope alone remains, but
one on which Great Britain has al-
ways relied in time of trouble -the
common People. And to the common
.people the great Ministers of State
appealed. A strong campaign of
publicity was carried on through the
' newspapers and bill -boards and by
means of public meetings and demon-
strations.
When the subscription lists were
closed and the tallies put together it
found that abundant streams of
wealth had been tapped to fill the
national treasury full to overflowing;
the most stupendous financial opera-
tion in the history of the world had
been carried to success.
Everybody sees now that there is
one class alone to whom the credit
for this success i due -those who
and practice thrift, The prodigal
and the squanderer have neither part
nor lot in this matter., Thrift,a
russett-clad virtue which has been
forgotten by many and scoffed at by
not a few, is now known to be the
strong guardian of the Empire s life.
The lesson does not end with the
raising of even so vast a sum as
$3,000,000,000. This is but the begin-
nag, and; should the war go on, the
people who have given so much must
give still more.
What then? Here is what the
Prime Minister, Rt. Hon. H. II. As-
guide said at the great history-mak-
ing meeting in London Guildhall at
which the loan campaign was opened:
"This meetingwas called not only
to advertise the merits and advant-
ages of this war loan but to initiate
a concerted national movement for
What may be called war economy."
And he pointed out that the great
increase in the • nnports of Britain, if
continued without beingbalanced by
Two More Austrian Officials Are
Likely to Be Sent Back to
Vienna.
A despatch from Washington says:
President Wilson's request for the
call of the Austrian Ambassador, Dr.
Constantin Theodor Dumbtt, has
broadened into a situation involving
Captain Franz von Papen, the mill-
tary attache of the German Embassy;
Alexander Nuber von Pereked, the
Austrian Consul -General in New
York, and possibly Count von Berns -
torff, the German Ambassador. The
official view is that the Ambassador
although technically involved, is not
so seriously concerned as the military
or the Consul -General. It Is
not unlikely that both of the latter
ma be recalled or dismissed from
Y
the country.
Coupled with Germany's disappoint -
"Elie sink ng and unsatisfactory
the�White ]Start lineon r
after Count von Berestorff
had given assurances that full satis-
wouldgbe given if it was es-
tablished that a German submarine
sank the slid g
p, official Washington
views the friendly relations with the
y
Germanic powers strained •more to -
ward the breaking point than ever be -
fore.
Hopes that the submarine crisis
had been safelyrodded and that a
break between German and the
y
United States had •been avoided were
displaced to -day by misgivings, Talk
of the possibility of breaking di lo-
-
moult relations was heard again; aI-
ale
though this time it involved both Hi
central ewers, on the theory that
P
Austria' after having her Ambassador
practicallydismissed from the eosin -
try might stand with her ally in rela-
tions with the United States.
M
CHARLES B. HALE,
Conveyancer, Notary Public,
Commissioner, Eto.
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
Issuer of Marriage Licenses
HURON STREET, - CLINTON
DRS. G UNN At GANDIER
Dr, W. Gunn, L.R.C.P., L.R.
C.6., Edin,
Dr. J. C. Gandier, B.A., M.B.
Office -Ontario' St„ Clinton.- Night
g
calls at residence, Rattenbury St.,
or at IIospitat.
DR. J. }V. SIIAIV
-OFFICE--
IIATTENBURY ST. EAST,
-CLINTON
not entering .into an agreement to carry
out tato conditions; etc.
The highest or any tender not necoe•
Barfly accepted.Love
,,I.FOP p lgpttal to.l o1urs eteaptfon of ter- etc., apply
to the undcrstgtod.
N.B.-No unauthorized publication of
this notice wiA I o pada for.
G, n, PERGusoN,isticall
Minister el Lands, Forests and MtnoB,
Toronto. June 5th, 1915.
left.
New War Cars.
w "When our wewe t to Wustexine menu
P
with armored cars motor lorries ofArabic,
1,000 kilos and upward. Some Ger-
man had worked, out a new theory
regarding Light armament practicable
„
THE "I{ISS AND -WASH BRIGADE
Is Not Very Popular With the Wound-
ed Soldiers.
Lady Warwick, in her character-
fearless and out -s oken man-
y Pfaction
ner, has draw attention to the scandal
O. W. TAO1lPS0If
PHSYICiAN, SURGEON, ETC.
Special attention given to ilia
eases of the Eye,'Ear, Nose
and Throat.
Eyes carefully examined and euiG
. able glasses prescribed. •
Office and residence: 2 doors west of
the Commercial Hotel, Huron. 9t,
1
NEWS -RECORD NEW
NEWS -RECORD S rr
CLUBBING RATES FOR 1915
R L> xLlt s.
Newe•Record and Mall a Emp:raSI 60
lewe•ltecord and adobe . „ t,5o
New•s•Rcaord and Family aeraid''arid
weekly Star............. ,•• i•S3
revue Recd d and F n ee a Adveodie:: 2.35
and Farm & Dairy ...: 0.ai
33errs•Reeord and Canadian Faun ,,., 1.85
•cews•Record and Weekly witneee ,,., 1.95
NewsRecora and Northern Messenger 1.50
Newe•Record and Free Prem .. .., 1.85
lewd Recrdi. and Advertiser.......... 1. 5
News News-Record
and Youth' Comp¢nto•¢ 33.23
News -Record and Frult Grower and
Farmer 1,73
MO?VTIILIEB.
,
I.ewe•Record. and Canadian Sports.
man . .,,.,, ••...... 53,23
Newt Record and Lippincotts MORA.
3:25
DAILIES.
News -Record d World
;3.35
Gleba sem
netve-13ecord and Mall & 1Smptrcs,sti
fiewe•Record and Advertiser •• 2;ai
News•Record and Morning Pree•Pre;e. 3,35South
Neve -Record and Evening Free Press. 2.60
Newe•ne Ord .and To ontn NDwn .. ., 2,55
3f what yon want le not In tate flet lei,
00 know about it. we can supply yon' at
tees than it would eget you to Bond direoL
In remitting please do eo by Post•omea
order Foetal Note, Essa order or Rea-
Wend eller end address,
/
for automobiles and were to test it.
The scheme was to use plates of
XIarveyized steel on the outside, thin
boiler iron on the inside -and in be-
tween the two pulverized glass. I
have found out since that the results
of our original tests have'been amply
proved in actual service. The Pulver
izet] glass stops any kind of steel
jacket projectile as effectively as
,nate times the thickness of any other
material. would:
"We were hard at work building
•equipment for Che German army and
being paid by the German War De-
partment-without having an idea of
it.
` After I completed a second arm-
ored lorry, equipped with several min-
or improvements over the first one,
P
they asked me if I would try my hand
at installing a dynamo in another
lorry -to operate a searchlight.
Subsequently y I lie Bund and out the
,SCheme whereb t
gand
searchlight could be operated simut
taneously 'tVith one lever, the' light
shaft and the bullet trajectory being
always identical,
"Wyman and I went next to Wit-
tenber late in May, 1914, where we
found another model machine works,
of which Fultz seemed to be owner:
Of course every one of these factories
was is Government-owned, but -I
that a number of the women veleta-
teers for nursing work at the front
only offer to help because the novelty
. appeals to them. They have no specs-'
1 al qualifications, and pester the
authorities for permits until the wear-
ieci officials sometimes give way.
Lady Warwick says that most of
the fashionable nurses who oto the
g
front are bent upon nothing. but hay-
ing a good time, and adding to their
collection of sensations. They drive
acoach-and-four through such things
as regulations and discipline, and are
a sore trial to the really -trained lions-
es. Such a statement byone who is in
a position to know what she is tall[-
ingabout has caused nota little ex-
asperation in certain high places, -
Soldiers at the base hospitals have
the name of the "Wash and Kiss
givenIdentifying
Brigade" to those ultra -fashionable
nurses. "What they seem to do most,"
e friend of mine from the front,
"is to wash the wounded man's •face
then kiss him for his mother."
Which reminds one of a storyof the
African War, A fussy nurse
went to one bed and asked the wound-
ed soldier what she could do for him.
Anything you like ma'am" bluntl re-
Plied Tommy, "but dont washy my
face 'a again. Them other ladies have
washed it six times alread Y'
%�
The lielllop�jUal
��jjjp Insurance
Q�(!! Company
1' 11 U 1dls�lt CUI1cU UoILL Lull
Head t) Ce, ,Seaf01°t%lr Ont.
DIRECTORY
' officers:
J, B. McLean, SeaforIb, President; J. Coll.
holly, Godench, Vice•Preeident; Thos E.
IIaye. Seafort 3 sec: Tress•
Direetore: D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; J,
G. Grieve, 'Winthrop; Wm. Rion, Sea.
forth; John Benneweie, Dublin; J. wane,
Beechwood; A. McEwen, Brueeaeld; J. R.
McLean, Setforth; s7. Connolly" Godemoh;
Robert Ferris, Garlock.
Agents: Dd. I{tnchley, Seatorths W.
Ohesney. Egmondville: J. W. Yeo, IIolmee•
vino; Ales. Leitch, olinton; R. S. Inc••said
much, mrodhagen. `paid In mayNewve
AnY y to i be paid to
Morrteh Olething Co., Clinton, or at Outt's
Grocery, Golerich-
Pardee desirous' to elle t insurance or
transact other: business will be promptly
Lee" ,t.pplictttioa to any of the.
above offtcere addreoaod to their reepeo¢
ive post -offices. Losses inspected by the
dienter who:1Ivee nearest the scene.
DR.
UR. F. A. AXOif
-DENTIST
Specialist in Crown and Bridge
p g
Work, Graduate of C.O.D.S.,
Chicago, and li.C.D.B„ T.
ionto,
Bayfield on Mondays from May to'
December,
exports, must mean a balance to be
paid out in gold; and that with the
lowering of its gold reserve Britain
must become a borrowing nation and
lose its position of pre-eminence There-
the world's financial centre.
fore: Economy, thrift. He said, fur-
thee: "There remains only one course
• • • to deminish our expenditure
and increase our savings."
Rt. Hon. A. Bonar Law, Secretary
for the Colenies in the present coals-
tion Government, formerly leader of
the Opposition, voiced the same belief
and ave hearty approval to the cam-
g•
of thrift.
A Parliamentary Committee has
been appointed to act in collaboration
with the treasury department. Offices
have been opened as headquarters,
and a great national organization has
been formed to sound in the ears of
Dead Soldiers.
Each of the armies in this great
war, says the Christian Herald, has a
system that enables it to identify the
dead. The Russian soldier wears a
numbered badge; the French soldier
has an identification card stitched
into his tunic; the German soldier has
a little metal disk that bears his
name; the British soldier has an alu-
milium aisle, with identification marks
and church affiliations; the Japanese
soldier has three disks, all alike, one
round his neck, another in his belt,
and another in his boon and the age,
trines soldier has a gun-metal badge,
with 110 name on a tinyy parchment
leaf within. The Turk is the only sole
dier so lightly valued that he carries
no badge. Identification is evidently
regarded as unnecessar in his case"
g Y
-.
GEORGh ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the Count
of Huron. Y
Correspondence promptly answered,
'Immediate arrangements can be
made for Sales' Date at The
News -Record, Clinton, Or by¢ttended
selling Phone 13 on 157,
Cbarges moderate and satisfaetioo
guaranteed.
■
There 8�
■
Co � ` �� Coming
t'Vhv not •prepare for it by
ordering your winter supply
of Lehigh Valley Coal. Noce.
better in the world.
Phone 12
Bowherewith
Olticc Phone. 40.
A. J. HOLLOWAY
����� /
�/ t'
/J �/�/�j� /
R'
STRATFORD. ONT.
Ontario's most successful bust-
reds training school. Teachers
are competent, coursess-aFe thor-
oughapplic succeed. We
g graduatesuse
had more applications this
month than we had students
graduate daring the
g past sixy
months. The three applications
received most recently were for
Lady Stenographer at $780,
Bookkeeper1int�➢11.
at $1000 and Com-
menial Teacher at $1'400 per
annum. Business men want our
graduates.; Get our free -[ata-
logue'at once.
D. A, McLACHLAN,
Principal.
P
w. J. �t�ti r
MITCHELL tail L�� iWORDSOF
PWialisher Iv1aws..11ierOrd
CLINTON, OI TARl:0
and
doubt if even the townspeople inpaign
these various places lila any idea of
the truth.
Saw Liquid Fire.
"it
--H'
THE WISE.
"Frugality may be termed the
Daughter of Prudence, the sister of
•m
was in Wittenberg that I got
Temperance, and the Patent of Lib-
gees seeee c .-.- - . -..
THE CHILDREN
OF Too
DAy
j',ust as then ire -in nc�ir io•
door or at their outdoor
17 o
p'' y -they are constnntl•y of-
> tering tempt:items For the
KODAKe.
:
1.50 1t1eei: them 1,,r Vete e,
they are now
I,et lit keep many, other hip.
,
peniags that are a s.,u rub oc
Pleasure to you.,
BIiO {]\ILS, $2' 7'O $l3:
KODA1IS, $7 TO $25.
Also full stock of Films and
first introduction to liquid fire,
Y q
"Fultz same along one day and
asked me if I knew anything about
thermite. I told him I [lid. process use
it in America in a'weldin,
where great heat 18 required. I:Ie
asked me if I could make thermite
and I told him I could -if I' -had some
willow ' charcoal, magnesium, and
iron fillings. After I had made a
quantity of thermite, my next job was,
to make' a carni ter to hold it. The
yarn Fultz told me to account for
this job wasea m the
j
light of what I know now.-
IIs took ms over to eine colorer of.':peare.
the works and showed mea cistern
out of which pipes ran to a boiler.
scheme was to dropcamas-tens of
thermite into this cistern and thus
heat the water 11 it' so lit would re-
, quire less coal to convert the water
into team when it •-re h.-
ao ed the Boil-
er. It was about' the fishiest yarn I'
ever listenegl, to, but he had done so'
weird thin s b this time I
,many g Y Was
less surprised than I should have been
otherwise.
All unconsciously I was making a
devilish contraption that a few months
later was to be used German air-
ert x." -Samuel Johnson.
Men live best on moderate means.
Nature has dispensed to all men
to be happy, if mankind
did not know how to use her ifts""-
g
Claudian.
,."A man that only translates shall
never be a poet; nor apainter one
that only copies. So people that bust
wholly to others'charity will always
•be poor," -Temple.
"I earn that I eat, get that Twear;
owe no man hate, envy no man's
happiness;
pp'ness; glad of other men's, good,
cement with my horns." -Shakes-
"Lose not thine own for want of
(askin • for it; 'twill earn thee no
g r
thanks."-Fuller.r'�
' No; when the fight begins within
Ihimself,
A -man's worth something."
r i
-Robert Broiling
"No chap e of circumstances can -
g ' , "
repair a .defect of., character. "--=
Emersonrf.,
- "Thereare but two wa s of paying'
r b Y P Y g
debts; increase of industry, in raising
income,' increase of thrift in laying
'out "-Carlyle.
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News-Record1
-play,
CLINTON,CLlNTOhTONTARIO
of subscription -$1
Terms per year,
in -advance; $1.611 may be charged
id pot st dill. Nn
p raper listen•
tiniterl until utl arrcara aro paid,His
unless at the option of tbo pub.
fisher, The'date to which every'
uubseription is paid is denoted oa-'
the• label.
-_
AdvertisingEt^rtes Transient ed.
vertisements, . 30 cents per ran.
line for first insertion
p t and
9 cents per lino for each subsea
ae in entice S
q nt s maIl adverts 3e.
merits not to exceed one inch,
u „
yea, or
s ete� rnserSted onem, Eon
,,..,...i„...„
' ,
cents, and each snbsequent, in.
sertion 10 cents.
Communications intended for pub• .'
ligation must; as a guarantee of
good faith, 'be accompanied by the
Dame of writer,
W. J. MITCHELL,
-
:Edi:tor and, •i?roprietor,
..,.
v; :.,',i F •'r' ;R4,:LW''
at$rt -... •
- LE.-
Trains willatMarriveB'ares!
and depart
from Clinton Station as follows:
BUFFALO
BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV.
mom East,,.
gdepart7.33 a:m,
,c „'„ 3.03 rn.
u :, 1 b.15 peri.
p
e36
:king West, ar. 11.00, dp,,11.07 a.m.
u ” depart �. 1.36 p.m.
« ar 6.32, dp. 0,45 p1m.
departs 11.18 pwas
LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV.
out South,al'. 7.38,d 8.05the
” g" departs p' 4.15 pen.
:ping North, ar. 10.30, dp. 11.00 a.m.
u " departs 6,40 p.m.
Supplies. }}o do Devoloprog
and Pr!nting. Remember the ,
lace:
thea
men in Zeppelins in their raids on the
English coast.'
”. Later I saw them firing a slightlya4-'
CUNARD STEAMER SUNK
NEAR COAST OF SPAIN
p'
THE
�vCt°
EA "'i� R,,, 0 Lula E"
...
different tee -inter that Was put m-
side a three-inch shell and shot out
of a gun. The havoc this liquid fire
caused on the testing grounds was
plenty to convince anyone of its hell-
And this, remember,
was maMny, three months' before war,
I wras. declared. • •
After a weeks .vacation which I
h -d, the end of June 1, I found my-
-
A despatch from Paris says: The
British steamer Alexandra, owned by
:'the Cunard Steamship Company,
'torpedoed 70 milds. from Cape Palos,,
real M urcia, Spain, accordiug to the
Madrid correspondent of the Havas
g Twenty-eight the crew
.Agency. Twent ei lit of
have been landed at M
Spain.:azarron,
COALS OF FIRE
--From '1'ltn New York, Evening Telemann