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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1914-07-16, Page 2The Standard of Cleanliness -All Real Soap. POSITIVELY the LARGEST SALE in CANADA STARTLING CHANGES COMING British Government to Accept Peen's' Amendments, Says a London Paper A despatch from Linden, Eng- land, says : The Dairy Telegraph's Parliamentary correspondent writes that a startling change may soon be expected in the polibioal situa- tion, "I have reason to believe that • the Government will, alter some de- mur, accept the two crucial amend- • ments proposed by the Hotese of Lords in the amending bill. The • disappearanee of the time limit h.a.s been recognized to be inevitable. This is the first point upon which the Government will, ultimately ac- cept the logic of the eituation. The • second point is the question of the exclusion of Ulster, praetioally as a whole, flora the seope of the bill. This is a much more contentious matter, and is indeed the crux• of the difficulty. It is, of course, im- possible fer Redmond and ale Na: tionalists to agree to this proposal, although prominent members of the par* now hold the view that, as exclueien is unavoidable, it may just as well be on a large as a small scale, but the Irish party will in- sist upon a plan of county plebis- cite as laid down in the amending The. Prime Minister has been in .personal communication with a prominent raetaber of the Opposie tion dining the la,st few days, otha am assured that the leader e of the Unionist party, in Order to save the Country from civil war, will recom- mend their followers to suppert the 'amending bill as passed the Lords, In that cas.,e, the Nation- alists will be out -voted, although they will probably be supported by a certain section of the radical par- ty. What will follow remains to be seen, but L. have good grounds Ler stating that, in spite a the line taken by the Lord Chancellor in the House of Lords to -clay, the Gov - element will .as a last tesort, con- cede the vexed question of area." ANNOYING KING AND QUEEN. Suffragettes Howl at Them, 'Who , Are Touring in Scotland. A deepatch from Dumbarton, Scotland, e,aars: Militant Siiffrag- ettes. made desperate efforts on Wednesday, 'to attract the atten- tion of Ring, George and Queen Mary; who are making a tour through Scotland. At Balloeh • the women .cut down all the decorae lions, and at Dalmuir, 10 miles from Glasgow, they managed to break out a huge banner bearing the words, "Your Majesty stop the forcible feeding and torturing of women," across the route as the procession arrived. At the same time one woman armed with a meg- aphone howled denunciations of fercible feeding. Neither the Ring nor the Queen paid the slightest attention,- but the crowd that had gathered to see their Majestieeedis- • played such a hostile attitude that the militant Stiffragettes • beat a hasty retreat. PREDICTS HIG CROPS. Peesident of Regina Board of Trade Is Sanguine. A despatch from Toronto says: Mr. C. S. Burton, President of the Regina Board of Trade, who is visit- ing Toronto, is most sanguine about this year's crops in Basket- chcwan. "All records be 'bee - ken," lie says. The crops will pro- bably be light in the ,southwest Part 'of Saskatchewan and in south- ern Alberta, he believes, due to drought, but in the Regina district grain is already heading elite ant' an early as wr-ilealtenr-reFora crop The hog industry, he continued, has received an ener- ', mous impetus during -the last six months. This has resulted from the , mixed farming pi:one:pada preached so widely in the west dur- ing the peat two me:three years. DIED IN THE 113511. ' Names of Provincial Police M- idrange Shote With Dim. A despatch from Quebec, says: Joseph Merand, the demented ban- dit, who since he ran amuck withee gun shot three men on Thuesdaye ' July 2, has terrorized the village arid district of Villeroy, in the Corint of Lotbiniere, was foend dead a, hut in the woods, accord- ing to information received here by Peovincial Police Chief Mc- Carthy. • TWO GIRLS DROWNED. Unable to Swim and Waded Be- yond Their Depth. A despatch Bann 'Sarnia, says -:Weed was received of the accidental drowning of two Sarnia, young wo- men Tashmeo Park, on Lake St. Clair, where the annual pienie Of the Sarnia. Baptist Churches was 14.45a--Pitteriris Ti.liee bathing and .61 beyond the channel bank at the Moment when a pa,ssing steamer caused ,surge of water. Both Were unable to swim, and when Miss Lawson lost her footing, she grasp- ed her chum about the waist, and both went down to death in the Swift current. The double tragedy cast a gloom ever the festivities of the afternoon. The bodies were recovered. • , GIRL MOVED BY CRA?;. Huge MeehanismeDeposits thild at Queen's Feet. DIE NEWS INA PARAGRAPH m A despatch froLondon, says: When th.e King and Queen were making a tour of the Beal:dames. weeks, at Parkhead, Glasgow, re- cently, a 120 -ton 'crane began to, Move from the opposite end of the workshop. Great Was the aston- ishment of their .Majesties to find that insibead of thelusual huge gun a pretty little girl carrying a bouquet was the burden of the crane. She stepped off the plate at the 'feet of the Queen, .and with a aniasey ask- ed her Mr* as,aecept the flowers from the workmen with love s,ntj their thanks. for cornine etg• Peen:- head. The qtaarel--n75",; delighted be- Yon;t1 PEACE IN MEXICO? UArra,NINGS ritok ALL ovEil rliu (mom: IN a suTSIIELL. Caneda, the Enilare and thi• aYorld, tu General Before Your Eyes. ,. Canada. Clatinges to Hamilton Hospital will c0st $250,000. Krafchenke, the Manitoba mar- derer, was hanged on Thursday. The Empress Of Ireland, relief fund, opened by Montreal Board of Trade, now totals $52,115. The .ca,nadian Medical Association meeting in St. John, selected 'Oliver for next year. A Chinese smuggling syndicate, with headquarters at Saginaw, Mich., is said to operate, with, To- ronto as a clearang-house, through Sarnia, Windsor and Niagara Lord Seymour, soli" of the Mar- quis of Hereford, is in Ottawa, with Lady Seyreour on his way to the Government ranch near Medicine Flat, where he will be in charge of the Militia Remount Department. The Dominion -Government will not defray the expense of deport- ing the Komagata Maru's shipload of Hindus, now outside Vancouver Harbor, but aeon to return to In- dia. Itis up to the vessel owners. Morbg.aging his farm in Reiman- ia and bidding good-bye to his wife and six dhilklren, Forstu Toder came to Called°, in April, landing a Thor- old. Since then he found just six days' work. He built primitive shack, but had no food for a week until friends gave him „mush and milk, and acute indegestion eased his death. • The Government made an offer to the British Admiralty to send the Rainbow up to Behring Sea. to 'carry • on the Biatish 'share of the inteina- tional patrol, fellowing the sealing convention, and this will be done. The two Admiralty ships whieh would otherwise have taken part in the giatrol, the Algeria° and the Shearwater, have been sent to, Mexico. Great Britain. A new arbitration treaty between great Britain and the United States A coroner's jliry inquiring into the dea•th of Sir Denys Anson, who plunged int the Thames while on e midnight pleasure launch trip, and a bandsman who tried to save him, found that the party had been "sober but full of fun." "Rome has the right name for Roosevelt," says A. Henry Savage- Laador'.the explorer. "The Ro- e mans call him 'Pollonara,' which means literally 'one who inflates toy balloons ivith gas." In reply, Roosevelt refers to his critic as "a Perfectly preposterous absurdity, the buffoon of exploratiori." Ruiz Beads Report of Meditation Conference to Deputies. A despatch from Mexico City, says: Esteva, Ruiz went before the Senate and the Ohamber cf Depu- ties en Wednesday afternoon and read the report of the Niagara Falls negotiations. The report was largely taken up with a rehearsal of the .events leading up to the con- flict with the United States. Re- ferring to the protocal adjusted at Niagara Falls, the repent, .states there isno need to express ratifi- cation by the. Senate. Ruiz mani- fests rthe -willingne's,s of the Mexican Government, to treat With the re- volutionists for the restoration of the first time in , Mexico expresses explicitly General Huerta's readi- ness to resign the Presidency if thereby the Republic's political pae- ifications can be attained. MISSING FRO THE KARLUK Eight Men PRICES OF FARM PRODUCTS United States. Fifteen persons were injured, several probably fatally, when a trolley passenger car. collided with a. freight train near Fairibault, Minn. Sixteen other passengers were badly shaken up. United States Judge Tuttle or- dered the receivers of the Pere Mar- quette Radian* 'to purchaaeaio Ted- rol license and to abolish immedi- ately the sale of liquor on all of the system. ea -a' T11 c Aneral General AP7 {real:revs has reversed the decision of the customs officials of the port of Ogdenbueg, N.Y., the effect be- ing to put all lumber :that ie plan- ed, tongued, grooved and beaded on the free list. The teaching of sex hygiene Will never be delegated to the American teacher if it ean be prevented by the National Education AeSociation. This was evidenced at St, Paul when speaker after 'speaker de- nounced snob a course amid ap- plause. , REPORTS mots THE Y.RADiNG TERADonetwetma oea Ardiatifebe. 'Breadstuff& Toronto, July 14.--Floar-Outtirlo wheat. flours, 90 per cent' . $3.70 to $3.75, sea- board, and at $3,00, Toronto. NOW flour for August, delivery, $3.40 to.$3,00. Mani. tobas, $5.:50;' do., seeonds, $5; deo 50c01108, $5;, strong bakers', In jute" bags, $4.80, Manitoba' Pelq6-.No. 1 Nor - thorn, 94 1.20, No. 2, 910, Ontario lybeat-No. 2 at 95'0 75, out. side, and new4.6t. 83 to 85s, outeide, Au- gust and September delivery. Oate-No, 2 Ontairio.onts at 40 to 41e, out- side, and at.42 43e, on track, Toronto. We,steru Canada eats, .42 3 -So for No, 2 and 42 1-4o for No. 3, Bay ports. Ilanley-Good malting barley, 56 to 08e, according to quality: Itio---No. 2 at 63 to 64o, outside. Ilitokyilicat-Purely nontin ' Corn -No. 2 American .at II 1-20 on traok. Toronto. Bran -Manitoba imam, 123, in bags, -To- ronto freight, -with good demand. Shorts, 525 to 526, • Country Produce. Butter -Choice dairy, 17 to 19.; inferior, 15 to 16e; farmers, Separator prints, 19 to 20e; *rear:levy prints, fresh, 281-2 to 25c; do., solid, 21 to 220. • Eggs -Case lots of striotlY new -Mid, 24 to 26 per dozen, ,and good stook ei to ffie per dozen. Honey-lhotraoteel, in tins. 10 1-2 to 110 per tin. Combs, 92.25 to 52.50 Per domo for No. 1, and $2 for No. z. cheese -New cheese, 14 1-4 to 14 1.2o for large, and 14 1.2 tO 14 3-4 for twins. Beems--He,ncl-pinked, $2,20 to $0.25 Per bushel; primes, $2.10 ,to $2,15. Poultry -Fowl, 15 to 16e per lb.; chick- ens, 20 to 22e; turkeys. 20 to 21o. Potatoes -Delawares, 91.75 to 52 Per hag, out of stove, and new P01a94.S at $5.26 per barrel. Provisions. Bacon -Long clear, 14. to 14 1,2o per lb. in case,,Llots. Hams-lviedium, 18 :to 18 1-20; do., heavy, 17 to 17 1-2e; rolls, 14 1.2 to 15e; breakfast bacon, 18 to 19e; backs, 22 to 23e. Lard -Tierce& 11 3-4 to 12e; tubs, 12 1-4o; pails, 12 1-20. Compound, ,10 to 10 1-40. Baled Hay and Straw. Baled hay -No. 1 at $14,75 to $15 a ten. on trackhere; No. 2 quoted at 513 to 914, and clover at 911. Baled straw --Oar lets, 85.25 to 98,60, on track, Toronto. Montreal Markets. Montreal, Julv 14. -Corn, American No. 2 yellow, 77 to Mc. Clete, Canadian West- ern, No. 2, 43 3-4 ttl. 44e; Canadian West- ern No, 3, 43 1-4 to 43 1-2c. Barley, Nan. feed, 55 to 56e. Flour, 'Mom Spring wheat pateuts, firsts, $5.60;neconde, $5.10; strong bakers'. $4.90; Winter patepts, choice, $5 to $5.25; straight rollers, $4.70 to $4.75; do., bags, $2.15 to $2.20. Rolled oats, bur. role. 54.55; do., bags, 90 :lbs., 92.15. Bran 523. Shores 525. Middlings, 528. Moulllie, $28 to $32. Ray, No. 2, per ton ear lots, 914.5000 516. Cheese, lineet 'westorne, 15 to 13 1-8c; finest easterns, 12 1.2 to 12 643e. Butter, choicest oreammy, 23 3.4 to 24e. Eggs. fresh, 22 to 23e; selected, 0600 Mei No. 1 stock. 2.30; No. 2 stock. 20 to 21c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, 51.30 to $1.45. Winnipeg Crain. Winnipeg, July 14.--Cash:-Whea0-N0. j Northern, 90c; N. 2. do.,•138 1.4o. Oats 2 ea, 871'2c; ex. tra No. 1 feed, 36 1-2. Barleyz-NO: 3, -5 No. 4, 51o; rejetted, 47 1-2e. Flax -No, 1 N,.W.O., 80.391-0; No. 2 0.W., $1.36 1-8; No. 3 do., 51.20 1-2. United States. Minneapolis, atoll, 14.-When1-Ju0y, 853-40; September, 80 1-40; No. 1 hard, 91 3-4,:s; No. 1 Northern, 88 3-4 to 90 3-40: No. 2, do., 86 3-4 to 88 3.4o. Corn -No. 3 yellow, 63 1-2 to 64e. Oats -No. 3 'White, 343-4 to 35 1-4c. I'lour and britn-Un- ch an ged. Duauth, July ie. -Wheat -No. 1 hard, 93e; No. 1 Northern, 920; No. 2 do., 90 to 90 1.2o: July, 911-20. tinseed-Oneh, 91.60 7-8; July, 51.60 1-4; September and Ootobev, $1.62 1-2; November, 91,62 5-8, Live Stook Markets. General. Geand opera in Paris is said to be .cloomed bythe competition of the movies. The French Senate passed a bill granting a Saturday half -holiday in the Government workshops. The Pa,ris police believe that two bombs found at Beaumont -Sur -Oise were intended for President Pohl. oaro• NEW' TWO DOLLAR NOTE. In Donor of the Stay of Duke and Duchess et Connaught. A despatch from Ottawa, says: A new Dominion two -dollar bill was issued Friday in commemoration of the stay of the Duke end Duchess Lef.t, the Ship im Three Companies and of Connaught in Canada. It will bear their portraits in -either corn - Only One Reported sr With' the figure 2;in the, 'centre . - and the word two on ,each side of it. he hill will be of a light olive 0 lgel Island ell of the Karink's com, 'green.. This is .0 fourth isSile of Toronto. July Ill. -Cattle -Choice but chore, $8•25 to $8.65; good medium, 98. to $8,15: common 00W9, $5 to 56.60; Winona and cutters, 52.50 to 54; choice fat cows, 56.60 to $7; choice bulls'57 to 5745. Calves -Good veal, $10 to $10,25; eonamon, 54,75 to $7. stockers aml feedere-Steeni, 700 to 900 Pounds, $7 to $7.25; light stoekere, 56 to 56,25. llogs-$8.40 fed and watered, 58.25 off cars, 'and 57.90 f.o.b. Sheep and lambs --Light ewes, 56 to $6,25; heavy, 93.50 to $4.50; bucks, $3.50 to $4.50; spring lambe, 59.25 to 69.50 bY the pound; yearling Jambs. 91.50 to, V. - mil& cows -Mallet- , a 5111 -to 980. Montreab a20y-14.--Prime beeves, 7 3-4 to 8 Viz, Medium, 6 1-2 to 7 1.2e; common, '4-1-2 'to 5 1-2.c. Mich cows, 530 to 580 eaoh; calves, 3 1-2 to 70; sheep, 5 to 60; Jambe, 95 to 57 each; hogs, 53.4 to 20. A despatch from Ottawa Says: That at lea,st eight officer's !and men ,of Stelansson's thin, the ICarluk, who were among the crew when they got safely on to the ice before, she went clown. on January 11 last, had net reached Wrangel. Island with the rest of the ship's...company is revealed in a further report to the Dqeseetanent of Naval, Service re- -Inervecl real (leapt Tlabept Ba,rtiet t8ge.,1, t ''nni d I • 0 men, divided into two parties, waS not known when Capt. .Bartlett left • Wrangel Island for the Siberian oast ia Search of 'help fne his ma- ,• rooned..crew, Init as they were well equipped, it Woo hoped they. had en Herald telenca. and weitld be,,Pick- ed ripe by- the .relief .eaperli tion. thie Summer. lie Ordered a •settech • party sent out for teem: This report thrn oCapt. l3artlett contains' the first intimation to the. • department ,that when he left Wran- diany had not been aceounted for. two-doller notes. The fi,ret bore After getting on tri the ice when the the piOture of Lord Dufferin, the ;ship went down 'they were divided eecond that of Lord Laasdowns and into three parties which left the the third oE King Edward VII. sbip..at different times in an effort when he was Prince of Wales. to reach land. Attempts to land on '•va Herald Island were, so far as knownM U ST NOT futile, owing to ice conditions, but 115 11. the main partr,' kl charge of part- f•-, e l'tlaYor of Ottawa Issues a Warning lett reeled. rang - To E eatety. Wen .15 left Wrangel-mployeas. land the Other two smaller 1:54.rtioS, A despatch trom 0-Ltawie, July 6. one of which, under First; Officer Andereon, left Shipwreck damp on • January 21, and the other, uncler the direction 'of Die -Mackay, left, February n, had not been heard • Prom.' There were four. men in FIVE, 1)4 13 oilman 14.5 BA IT. WE ARE ALL TUBERCULOUS Sir William Osier Startles a Big Audience at the Leeds Conference A Nebraska Fernier Will Give Them For Dam:esters. A ,clepatch from Lonilon, says: have obtained a certain immunity. Nearly all hutrfan beings harbor tu- bercular germs, Sir William. Osier,' formerly of johns Repl(ins Univer- . say, _now regius professor of medi- cine -at Oxford, told his audience at the conference of the A.ssoeiation for the Prevention of Consumption on Wednesday. Let me give you a shock," the 'speaker 'said, by way of &warning. "Tuberculosis may be put into three groups. All of us Wipe are here come in the first. If I had an instrument here with whieh I could look into the che,sts; or the abdomen of each of you, the pro- bability is that in ninety pet cent. of you would be found. somewhere a small area of tuberculosis. So wide- spread) is the bacillus that practi- cally all humans by the time they become adults harbor the germ ef the disease. . . 'Why don't yen die? Becarse we are not guinea pigs or rabbits, we Blvi, Ole genii is in us, though nega- tive, and with all of us there is the possibility of slipping into the two other groups. The second gronp comprises those in whom the disease is vo- tive enough to produce samntoina but in whom there is the pogibility of arrest or cure, with restoration te working health. Those in the third group are doomed, the disease pro- gresses week by, week, month by month, year by year, and from one year to five sees the, end. "When workers have living wa- ges, when the house becomes the home, when the nation spends on food what is spends on drink, then, instead of hundreds of thousands, there will be Millions in the first, group, with practically immunity. The enemy has been tra,ced to its very etrong-hold, which is defend- ed by :the three allies, poverty, bad housing and drink." Cetnment an Events . Town and Country. oodulinctut y etvheariyiboindy,iheiscilityeaultiti,,i0ortminuevtlitaye asserted us an absolute fact :that nobody vonturee to Question it Yet the very curious statiatics collected by Dr. Free - mantle, a county medical officer in. F,ng- land, :would seem to leave it a very open nueetton. It is curious to learn froth these statistics that the town obild has markedly better teeth titan the country 000, and is much lese'subjeet to adenoids and enlarged tonsils. Eyesight is worse in the country than in the town schools, but, in the latter, there isa larger pro. portion ' of stammerers among 010 V6.5' young, -whereas when the age of twelve Is reached snore country thlin town child- ren stammer or lisp. Deafness is much more common in town than in country children, but the percentage of tubercu- losis and riokete flore about the same /or both. Ono very strange feet ie .that mentai deficiency is found to be more common in the towns .than in the coun- try. while 4Ahe proportion of children suf- fering from insufficient nutrition is verY much larger. in the towns than in the villages. Altogeeher the report is most interesting, ' It seems to show t,liett the attention reeeived by the town child inore than makes up for the less healthy enr. poundings In whish it lives, and that the tax of town life Is rather upon the brain than upon the body. .".."'A World of Constant Change. Ono of the speakers at the commence - Mont of an Eastertl college told 1110 graduates that :they -were entering a .world unlike anything in past history. In foot no two ages or generations or, In fact, years are alike. 'Abe world is al- ways changing, and man changes too, eetidge,-,otengeg-qigo_niere radical in our age then in. any orededing o.,no beettnte knowledge 'is there diffueetl,"01511rkedo have arisen, the masees ere lees content and more ambitious, old institutions are now in their eeeadeace and better condi- tions are arising. Bat ours is a. world of constant change, kt ie the natural law of being. Onlyin this ago the changes are more amid and pronounced. It took about two hundred. years to -produce the French revolution and its changes. Ilhe world might aecomplish tie much now in ten years, A despatch from Oiltner, Neb., says : Ambrose Huntingdon, a fame er, residing west of this town, post- ed the following sign along a high- way in front of his home : "1 nee.d five haeveet hands ,for mare than a m.onth. Wages $3 a day; chicken ones a day; washing, mending and a bed in the hay mow. F,very worthy young man hired will have a thence to marry one ef easy pretty daughters. If re wins one of them, he gets MO acres ef land thrown in. Butle'e got to make good in more waye than one." Hunting- ton had more 'than fif* applicants. The five lucky ones are hard at work in the wheat fields. However, they are far from happy, for it has bec,ome known that the five daugh- ters, ranging from eighteen to tiventy-six years, are planning to depart for anlextended summer va- cation in New England'. GRAFTING JEDGES MAY Dn. • The missing inen Are: First Offi- cer Anderson, Second Officer Baker, Mackay, lVamaay and Benehot of ths scientifie staff and SailorfaReady Kid • said Morris Mayer MeVeity issued , order to the heads of the civic departments inst.:meting them th notify their vaximis staffs that drinking will not hereafter be countenaced 'among employees el the cotnoration. Hie Worship's mandate states that any employee or head or departnient who enters a public drinking place or bar -room will be penalized. The order is in .effeet whether the ein- pleyee is on or off dirty. ' Sig Ship Limit • Ateorcling to one of lihe greatest Ger- man anthoriMee on mercantile shit:lithe the limite of else have been reached for the time being, in the development of the giant. Eller, A halt was perbaps inevit. able. In bhe twenty-five Yeats :since 1899 the dimemtions of the ocean 'steamer have risen from the 10,000 tone of the City of Paris to the 58,000 of tam Vaterlaed and the unknown displacement of 1110 11511 Br iLan nic. 'This authority states that such progress could net be long maintained. The pace bee been too fast, while the Titanic Mee aster has conveyed a warning to the world that ,bhere are peeullar dengara Ito enormous size. Before the race recent- mences new deelte must bd b,,i1t• ttnd obnallele- deepened -in the chief Atlantic nOrie. Tine will be a xnattee of much time and money. do that the world riaY ilave to wait a decade or snore before the 1,000 foot long liner 'makes her appeal, 111100. Moreover, there is surely it limit to the earning orimicIty of these leviathans. Ilhey inevitably cost the same to min Whether that. holds are full or emnty of (surge er titeir ealoons of passengers. A period of dull trade, a new development in the worlds traffic, a new dettet tor linnutu activities mud the ievintfian or the (Amon seemingly numb slater. Chinese, Consorate Urges Extreme Penalty for Two Magistrates. A despetCh ,from Pekin, says: President Yuan Shi Kai issued a mandate recently fixing the death penalty for those officials who era- bezzle funds and take bribes. Now the censorate has impeached two Pekin magistrates for misappropri- ating funds and has recommended the death penalty." Wang Che lining, Prefect of Police in Pekin, is in prison charged with selling offices. It is evident that President Yuanintends th use the moat -String- ent methods in the suppression of 'gr. anti n g • A STIFF SENTENCE. Negro got Fifty Years For Stealing 50 Cents. A despatch from Mobile, Alaba- ma, says: Fifty years for stealing fifty mete. That was the sentence that a Hale county; Alabama:, jury imposed en Frank WiklicollS, a negro who in teat robbed anotliet negro of a half dollar. After earring more than twenty ye.ars of the fif- ty -years sentence, Williams has been paroled by Governor O'Neal, the, Governor extending clemency to, thos nearo last night. Machinery Great Economic Force. It does not require much imagrnation to realize that machinery building Is the 'basic industry, without which all other industries as we now know them would perish in a sheet time. Take any One of the 'common thin - of every -day and consider for a minute at how many points maohinerY eater: in its preparation. The loaf of bread on your table is made possible 011 ile attraetiveness, nutrbnent and at mall cost because of the mecninery used In ploughing the field where the wheat wee raised, in harvest.ing, transporting end handling it in 'the elevatons, ir: con- veying it to -toe flour mills, in grinding and preparing it for the market, an mak- trig tale 'wooden barrels or the Mtge in which the flour is shipped, in transport. Ing it to Yew theme, in supplying the utensils Of ula kinds with which it is mixed, in menufaaturing the range in 11,th100h it Is baked, in producing the gas or coal used for fuel, and in turning out the table and dishes and enverwp,re wthich accompany it as it is placed be- fore *you at dinner. In all the eteps in the preparation of that loaf from the un- ploughed field to your table machinery has entered. Or, if we turn to the pair of slmee oil your feet, we lind the touch of ma, chincry from the moment that the hide is stripped from tale steer, through the tanning, curryhtg, and finishing proces. sea which produce leather; its transport. Mien to the shoo factory; In the mann- faoeure of the marls, :thread, glue, ce- ment, canvas, hooks. eyelets and all either fiudines, and then in the multitude of machine operations that go to produce a pair of finished sheen. Imagine 400 00 moment whrut.would hap. Pen if machinery building should sud- denly colee! Dew long woul(1 our raii. rondo be able to handle trains? Bow long would our great cities have a sup. -nix foodP How long would you be able to link bread, butter, sugar, coffee, and all cif the other things which you consume daily? Row long would fao tortes be able to turn ou.t shoes or lutt makers make hats? Bow long *would .au. tomobiles be seen on oar :street's? Old and New China. - One of the aetereeeite thinge about the Panama-Paelfic Exposition is that tam largest display by any toreign country win be by the oldest in continuous We. Gory and youngest in civilization. Ohina will shame the trek, of the world with bar exhibit at San Francisoo, for which she has appropriated 51,500,000, and aek• ed for half as much floor sPace ttgain tie could be spared her. And the showing of old and 11.y? China, linking ancient art with modern progress, is likely' to be tile most picturesque and instructive of au et tale fair. Business and Advertising. Advertising has become a vital factor tn ae lines of t,rade and eommerce. 31, is itself a. groat, big Macanese. It Elle been referred to MEI the life -blood of cora. morale:I stifaire, and the term 50=6 vol'Y ant waen we consider how largely busi- ness :success to -day depends npon advee, tieing. No concern of any importance fails to include 010 appropriation for ad. vertleing In its annual budget. Mon aro trainedsome of them, 171 4110 vory (M- tn% of annroPriating and expending money for advertising'. The ReltS011. Farmer -See that there pig'? I cell him "Ink." Visitor -Why so? He isn't black. Farmer--Nobut he keeps running from the pen. DO YOU SUFFER FROM BACKACHE? When Your kidney's are weak and torpid they do notpronerly perform !thole functions; your back •ache . and You do riot feel like doing meale ea anything. Yott are likely to be despondait' and to borrow trouble, airet aS if you haden: • enough al- inaay. Don't be a victim any longer.. The old reliable medieine, Hood 'S Sarsaparilla; give m etrength and tone to the: kidneys end builds up , the whole eystenit Get ±1 today. ' NEILIS-RECORD'S NEW CLUB RING RATES FOR 1914 wpm -trans. News -Record and Nell & Empire -.51.60 News.ltecord and Globe 1,60 News-Rerord and Family Iterald and Weelcly Star .'' , , ........ 1.85 NewsR -ecord and WeeklY Sun 1.85 News -Record and Farmer's Advocate2.35 Newedtecord end Farm ck Dairy 1.85 News -Record and 'Canadian Farm ..• • UN News-Reeord and Weekly Witnees 1.95 Neweaecord and Northern Memenger 1.60 News -Record and .Free- Prose• • • • • • • 1..}25. News -Record and Advertiser . ....• 1•90 NewS-Record and Saturday .1,11ght3.50 News-Retsord and Youth's Companion 3,25 Neweltecord and Fruit Grower and FiLIMI31` . . 1,75 • MONTIILIES, News -Record and Canadian sports. mnn $3 25 , News -Record and LippincoWe Maga- zine . 3.25 DAILIES. NewaRecorel and World 93.35 News -Record and 0)10110. „SAO News-Its:wed and Mail 8.:RtntAre:. 3.60 News -Record and Advertiser ... 2,85 News -Record and Morning FreePress. 3.35 News-Reeord and Droning Free Press. 085 News -Record and Toronto Star 2 35 News -Record and Toronto News .....• • If what you want is not in this nit lot us know about It. We can 6UPP19 7011 et less than it would cost you to nand direct. In remitting please do no by Post -office Order Postal Note, Express Order or Iteg. istered letter and address, W. J. MITCHELL, Publisher hlews-Reeorci CL.INTON,ONTARIO ..c."."Ja72.•1611•01 IIOMESTEAn I) IUTIE SPeeial Treatment Asked For Some D istrictn. A deepetch from Ottawa, says: Representations have been made to the -Interior Departan.ent from homesteaders in Saskatchewan, asking for a relaxation of the home- stead laws in view of hard crops this year. The appeals received so far come from the Maple Creek district, which is asuallY dry land; and it is claimed. that as a result of lack of rain the crops there will be very light. The reel est is there- fore made that the holders of home- steads be' allowed to take two months off in the Fall to engage in outside threshing and other labor, and that these two months be ac- cepted as part of the homestead duties. Reports on the whole in- dicate, however, that the 'Western wheat crop will be a g.00d one. , TILE LOG OVERTURNED. Two Women and One of Their Es - torts Were Drowned. A despatch from New York, says: Two young women and one of their escorts, members of a party of four who went bathing et Long Beach this afternoon at a picnic of the Richmond Hall Sunday Scheel Un- ion, were drowned 'in the surf by the overturning of e heavy log on which th,e four were sitting. One of the young men, whose sister was drowned, managed to mita esbore after to cli_esPa_rate tittempt_t2110 her, but her body, and that of the other yoleng man were carried out to sea by the ebb tide, SWP means Sherwin-Williams Paint, Prepared. This is the best paint for you to use because it is made of pure materials -pure lead, pure zinc, pure Linseed Oil, and pure coloring pigments which are thorOughly mixed and ground in scientific proportions by powerful machinery. It is better '11 -18 better than the old fashioned hand -mixed paint because - the materials are put together according to correct chemical formulae which have been tested out in a practical way. Its fine grinding makes it cover nearly 50% more surface than hand -mixed paint. more economical SWP is an economical paint because it will • It is longest, and look best. --Ask us for color cards. coyer eatestamoimt of surface, wear HARLAND BROS. HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, ETC. 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