Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1914-10-08, Page 2Gl A. 1V2`cT;'aGGA1tT:,':: M.. D;'MeTAGGART ca A G1ENNIbA1, :PANKING •BUST- 1VESt' TRANSACTED. NOTES DISCOUNI,'Eb, 'DRAT'TS'ISSUED •INTEREST ALIOWED ON 'DE I',OSITS. SALE NOTES :?1-.1.4; CH4 SEA' 11. Tr RANGE: -- NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY- ANCER, FINANCIAL, REAL ESTATE AND FIRE INSUR- ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT- ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES: UIVI,SION COURT OFFICE, CLINIr'ON. W. BRUDONE BARRISTER, SQLTCITOlt,', NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC.' .. °Epee- Sloan Block-CLINTON CHARLES B. HALE, Conveyancer, Notary ?labile, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE rind INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET, — CLINTON DRS. GUNN & CANDIEIt Dr. W, Gunn, L.1t,C.P., L.R. C.S., Edin. Dr. J. 0, Gandier, B.A„ M.B. Office—Ontario St., 'Clinton. Night calls at residence, Eattenbury St., or at Hospital. DR J. W. SHAW --OFFICE-- RATTENBURY ST. EAST, —CLINTON DR. C. W. THOMPSON PHSYICIAN, SURGEON, ETO. Special attention given to dis- 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. r. A. AXON — DEN'TIST -- Specialist in Crown and Bridge Work. Graduate. of C.O.D.S., Chicago, and R.C.D;S., To. ronto.. - Bayfield on Mondays from May to December.: GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, or by calling Phone 13 on 157. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed, GRA RA LW, lIY '., S-X,S Tt TIME TABLE — Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton. Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV: Going gist, 7.33 3,03 p. m. 5.15 p. m. Going West, 11,07 a. m. 1.36 p. in. re " 6.40 p. m. 11.28 p. m. LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV : Going South, 8.10 a..m, 4.23 P• m. Goin North, 11;00 •a,° in: 6.35 p. nr. OVER 66 YEARS' 6MPER1E11166 TRADE MARES • DESIGNS GOPYRISHTS &e. Anyone sending a sketch end desertPtion kitty etael.Iy ascertain our bpInkin free 'Smother nn" Invention is probably patentable. Communion. .iousetrIcLl�yconfidental.. tuomeo0ll on Patents eent froo. Oldert -RRoney for soourmg patents. .Pntonbs talon tOrOu n. Munn is co..reoetve !acaiainotice, Without ci n;ge, inthe �ell 9it Villi@1 oCdns ., handsomely illustrated weekly. 'Largest sir, outdid T any scientific ;rosetal, 'Terme for• Coeds, $975_0, year, postage prepaid. Sold bit all note doaptu�ra�.9pp & Co 38l3roadway,��ew York irranon 4moo. tl''/b• 11' SL. Washinaton. D. e. MAGAZINE TPINCOTTST nV'1t78l1'7'lil�Y FAMUV .L13RA9Y Tho Gel ha. 'Gunk Literature 0OMPLZTE inoveLn YEARLY: i,. MAY Y SHORT STORIES AND:. PAPERS ON TIMELY TOPICS' 'i2.50 PER YEAR ; 25 CTs. A COPY). • i'10 CONTINUED STORIES' EVERY t•UM8ER COMPLETE IN ITSELP aenmoen ran,. Shorts a,d. From the hest '`illilis at the to vest` possible pricer W>, PAY THE HIGHEST PRICE for OATS, PEAS and" BAR-` LEY, also HAY for Baling. - Ford & McLeod ALL KINDS OF COAL, 000, TILE BRICK. TO ORDER. All kinds of Coal on hand: CHESTNUT` ,SOFT' COAL STOVE ' CANNEL COAL FURNACE -COKE BLACKSMITHS WOOD 2.14 in., 3 in: and 4 in. Tile o1 the Best Quality. ARTHUR FORBES Opposite the G. T. R. Station. • Phone 52. The DQoKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company Farm and Isolated Town Property only Insured — OFFICERS — J. B. McLean, President, :Seafortb P.O.; Jas, Connolly, Vice -Presi- dent, Goderieh P.O.. T. E. Hays, Secretary -Treasurer, Seafortb P.O. - Directors — D. F. McGregor, Seafortb ; 3chn° Grieve, Winthrop; William Rinn, Constance;; John Watt, Harlock; John Benuewies, Brodhagen ; James Evans, Beechwood M. Maven, Clinton P.O. - Agents — Robert Smith, Harlock; E Hineti• ley, Seaforth ; William Chesney, Egmondviile; J. W. Yeo, Holmes. vine. Any money to be paid in may be paid to Morrish Clothing Co., Olin. ton, or at Cott's Grocery; Goderich Parties desirous to effe'et insur• anee or transact other business will be promptly attended to on ap• plication to any of the above officers addressed to their respective post- offices, ostoffices, Losses, inspected by ..the director who lives nearest the scene. There is a Cole - O Coming o �y O fig Why not- prepare for it by ordering your winter supply of Lehigh Valley Coal. None better in the- world. House Phone 12. Office Phone 140. A. J. HOLLOWAY Clinton News -Record CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms of subscription -$1 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- lisher. The date to which every `subscription is paid is denoted on the label. Advertising Rates -- Transient' ad- vertisements, 10 cents" per non. pareil line for first insertion and 4 cents, per line for' each subse- quent insertion. Small advertise- ments not to exceed one inch,, such as "Lost,"' "Strayed," or "Stolen," ete., 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. BiliQuSneS5�- 1�*- is certainly one of the most disagree ' able ailments, which flesh is heir to. Coated tongue --bitter' taste in the month—nausea •— dizziness— ehee combine to make life a Burden.' 'The cause is a disordered liver' ''the cure Dr, Morse's Indian Root Pills. They • go straight to the root of tbe:trouble " put the liver right, cleanse the atom rich and bowels cleartbe tongue anti take away'th'ebrtter taste from Abe ruouth =+?it the first sign of, hai:die; nes9 take ^ , 1, Dr. Morse a " I asd>s a sy, limo o•t Pit a Bracelet Watches Aro in Vogue Some may not tare tor them, but just the same, snore and morn people .are weari•ng::: them. Assuredly, they are handy.- Unque;stiontebly they are in ornament. - In addatiom,'to". which,, as paid; they lase at present mudh in favor. e Would you care to look -at some : especially ateractive designs in mei ism Watches r .: A 'initis selection here, which wearea xiol• show yen. n tsto 3 The prices are from. 2.00 to 35.00. And we desire to add that these Watches are sharked at unusually low figures for their worth. You 'are 'asked to look them over. W. R. COUNTER JEWELER and ISSUER of MARRIAGE LICENSES. DELA Y AN COMET' A CTIVE. Will be Visible to Naked Fla Pllreugliout October. A despatch from Washington, says.: Astronomers ofUhe Natal Observe - tory are observing with keen inter- est the activities, of Delavan's Coen- et, which is now visible to the na ked eye, and which will remain vizi- ble throughout October, It may be seers about 10 •o'•oliock en clear nights at epoint,almost directly be- low the polestar At that time the coanet is low inthe. sky, As the night wanes ,the contest rises higher in the iheavens, ands in the early morning, between 2 and 4 o'doek, it - reaches the greats ,t altitude above the horizon. Then; it is said, is the best time to observe. the (Anlet. 27 Steamers Sunk in September. A despatch from • London says: Eighteen steamers, of .an aggregate tonnage of 29,581, have been sn ek' by German warships during Sep- tember, ,aceomding to a Board of Trade report, while nine';stea.mers were destroyed by mines in the Noi•,th Sea in the same period, '76 loves being ;lost,, No Friends Like The Old' Friends Prom girlhood through middle life and right along to old age Chamberlain's Tablets are woman's best friend—feed the nerves, aid digestion, stop headaches, keep the blood rich and assure good health' generally. Try them. 25c. a bottle Druggists and Dealers or by mall. e CLamlwtiniu Ddadtcias Co., Toronto. � 4-.- 494 O ES is a school with a continental reputation for: high grade work and fc r the success of its grad- , orates, ' -a school with superior Courses and mtstrectoiro. We - give individual attention in Cornniercial, Shorthand and Telegraphy Depart boents. Wily 1 ,attend> elsewhere when there .. I iIis room here? You may enter at any tione, Write ,for our large ,free catalogue. D. A. McLACIILAN, Principal, During Uhe courtship a ,girl to I often tillable to ealpilalfj ' her hon ht. 'but' she makes t s u for g o.01 in lost trine after' marriage, Wi„ THE CHILDREN OF TO -DAY just as they are—in their in door play,, 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 marry other hap- peningrs thet.aa'e a, source of pleasure.te. you; BROWNIES, $2, TO $12; KODA iS, $7 TO $25. Also full stock of Films and Supplies. We do Developing and Printing. Remember the place • , , Tl -1 LL TOR ENGLAND DID •-NOT ' SUSPECT KAISER'S L' l'Ejfll V'1SI'1'1.7U HER 6 u FAC'1'(Ri1'$. ITeird°ol Itilnpli I't•itw,,(Roilorte¢ .Itis i►uisoit: 'Before env aeensee ,are. nwnibeel by: the'. plash' aetd din of. itanrckillings;. on land and sea—before we lose the. faculty of renlember(ivg" the`p;ast in the staggering attempt to grasp the: prese'n't—I would like to take Eng: lishmen .bacik . to an event whicah' bcppened in their unsuspeetrn,g,' midst exactly two 'months ago, writes Frederic William .Wile in the Landon Daily Mail, A most 01ni5-. ter em ent, iu tile: light of lehirio has happened sine, and one . cle.signe'd as' hardly another could be to per- enade the Most sceptical osmolig •us. that the Warr, Kaiser's plans for the sacking of Europe.,were deep -Paid;. deliberate, ' and, stealthy. It: te- dnces 'to criminal ' absurdity the German contention that Armaged- don was kindled `at.Sarajevo. • Prefer to the'strange visit paid by 'Herr Krupp von Bohlten land Halbach, the dread of Krupp's, be; ,twee- June 14 and• 23, to Birken- head,, Barrow-in-Furness, Glasgow, Newcaetle-on Tyne,"'and Fdhefield,, His charmdeg wife, the : Cannon Queen ,and proprietress of Knipp's; accom 1lanied him That bolstered up the fietion that the visit was "private ate , and unofficial." But an order that the inspection of the Firth, Laird, Vickers, Brown, Arm- strong -Whitworth, Cammell, Laird and other establishments should not be strictly informal Herr Krupp von Bohlen brought .viii' bion hos chief technical expert, Dr. Ehrens- berger, of Essen. There was a fourth memb'er of this party—Herr nun Bulow, 6 kinsman of the form- er. Chancellor, who until recently- perhaps yet, fat' all. I know --repre- sented the Krnpps in London, Herr `Krupp von Bohlen's pre- IOUs Visits i•o England have been undoubtedly peiva.te in character. Both he ,and his wife were fond of London and liked to come to us in- formally, to live like well- born. well- born.people of vteans, at a fashion- able Piccadilly hotel. In recent filmes theycame primarily to sit for the late Sir }Tolbert Herkimer. Nevor.nntil the visit of June did they ever conic accompanied by their experts They came this time, in other words, Wieldy for busi- ness. And it is not a comforting' re- flection e -flection to think that they . aceom- pliehe<l their business thoroughly. Instigated Visit. Thera c:rn be no manner of doubt. that Herr Krupp Von Bohlen's last sojourn in these isles was at the tli rect instigation of somebody higher np. There is blit one person "in 'Germany who could send hint on such a mission. And that someone 1s i:he Kaiser. Herr Krupp von Bohlen is not in tine habit of '`traveling•'' on liehalf n1 .his gigantic firm. ,The lone of England, as.a matter of foot, Was the first of the kind he ever -made. He undertook it because the neces- sity of spying, out time armament se- crets o-crets of Great Britain had sudden- ly become k matter of vital signiSc- alive to Germany; incl he, ealnme ut the behest of the Krupp's great family friend, the Emperor, who, as we now know, preached peace while plotting tear. The genesis of the Krupp investi- gation of the ,state of preparedness of out faeilibies'for manufacturing land and 'sea..Linealnerate is ny less remarkable than the investigation itself. Early in May certain of the firms above mentioned received a delightfully cour'teinis letter from the Master of Essen announcing his inientien to visit England during the season. Frankness incarnate, the letter suggested that, an inspec- tion of establieh,nne.nts making ar- tieles of War similar to•those. mann- faotureci by Ki'upp's would natural- ly be of the greatest interest,. The recipients of Herr .Krupp' vo_n '13ohlefn's letters forthwith corn- Minn:ica•ted with our naval. and midi tary authorities, 1 was agreed that, subject to the elementary pre- cautions advisable in such ci cum- stances,. there eollld he tiro harm in extending to the Essen visdbore the hospitality for which, :1 Fear; We are eametines all the famous. They carne and they saw, Whether they conquered remains 'to be ` seen. Door's, at any tate, were flung wide open to, them. There was even some speechmaking., The fact that the ulumos1 possible care was eiereieed that the lyno-eyed Dr. ,Ehrens- benigea. and Here von Ballow did not see tot Much does not alter the en- derlying gravity of the visit' itself. Report to the Halsey. Herr Krupp von •Bohlen lost no time in reporting to the Kaiser the wonders be head been privileged to inspect in England and Scotland. By prearrangement tindoubtedly, he came directly from them to Kiel, where Wiilliatn Il, was standing a heirty, yeleo me •to Vice-Acbnlral Sii' George Weaaeendei s'bettleship and 'light• ca'uiscr sghadron', The Kaiser always deinands prompt re - obits from Special'emissaries. Grand Admiral von 'Tirpitz wens at Kiel, too, to' hear what the: Master, of Essen had gleaned in guileless Albion. And while r n the A b <rn1 issue of ntI -tr am wirLmx rd hong in y5a the ba !Tit'"oLa B r1i �Iei•r C • C t U n,. 'i'idl von Boblen hurried up from t"seen to fake part fn the momentous cottltcils of the Kaiser with his military and naval ohie.ftains.' Dan the doubt th-dd; what• he learned en th1e country in June was his prin- cipal contribution to the delibera- tions I Greili les:s•, too, 1 ren-tem,bel• ;. now that I sought an interview with Herr Krupp von Bohlen tut Kiel. It eeereitee Two Irish Sisters Recruiting for Lord Kitchener's New'•A.rniy: 'Iwo scoters, Miss Wisenifred tend Miss Ivy Mulroney, whoare working hard an' behalf of Lord rtchen-. •er s a,.pp:eal'feo' recruits; ride in Hyde Park, and personally request all young•men to join the Brutish army. Very few or the mer) can res'i;ttthem.: was the.day ' before Sarajevo. knew v a£ the tine British h'ospitalitt Which had been showered upon him I thought perhaps he might be i 'clined to indulge in some glitterin generalities for publication. Iknow now why' he despatched a polit young secretary to my 'hotel wit the message that the "nature 0 Herr Krupp von Bohlen's visit England made it quite inappro priate for him to discuss it ip pub die," , THE SWEAT-OFIEX'S BRO-WS , Their Work Has Made the World What to it Actually is at the Present Moment PARRCEL POST 1S GROWING. Shaws Greatest • Increase in the Urban Districts. A despatch from Ottawa says : Despite the unfavorable effect of the war upon business: generally, "the new parcel post •system) is finding wider use month by month, and the results to. date have been eminently satisfactory. Details of the :Moms - ed use of the system are not yet available in tabulated fotrn, but it is learned at the department that the revenues ere growing steadily, the patronage of .the sys+,tean 'show- ing the greatest increase in urban districbs, The post -orrice money order and portal robe business be- tween Canada and Great Britain is gradually coarsing beak to the nor - mat condition existing prier to the outbreak of war, the rates being governed by such changes as tale place in sterling exchange WINE ('ASK A DEADLY /ONE. 'Nino [tidbits 1•'ishei'ilten diet Tragic '.Evil iu (he Adriatic. A despatch froneRome sags; 1)e - tails of the destruction of a fishing boat off Bimini by a. floating mine show that the fishermen anlebook the inine• f'tii• a wine cask -which they sought to recover. Throwing otic a litre, they drew the •supposed emit, toward 'them and when -it touched their craft an explosion occurred; The boat was blown to pieces and all the nine men on board were kidded. Members of other dishing crews in the vicinity were wounded by flying splinters .from the unfortu- nate, boat. Naval experts express the opinion that hundreds of mines from tine Austrian cdaet are floating toward Italy, and as t consequence all steamship lines operating to Dalmatia, Montenegro, Albania and Greece Pi VW Italian 'mete have sns- pendecl sailings, iN1'ASION OF HUNGARY. The Jlua'ainn Approach Alarms the People. A despatch from, Venice, via Pa- ris, says : The news of .the begin- ning of the Resell:an invasion of Hungary 1i, exciting the greatest ap- prehension throughout the monar- chy despite, ',all: official assurance blurt 1)115 1101)1011 is without 'iropor- tance and ehnnlcl give no occasion for anxiety. The work on the Fore ti$ea.tione around VienLna is being hastened and am official warning !hes been issnecl do bhe public against entering certain areas on penalty of "arrest and dungen of being abot by the ntl'u s, Th:e •~hlco�a is_spt e,eeiding l apid'ly, eases\natio beic:nog re- ported daily in Vienna and in vari- ous distriotc of Hungary, 8001:01 pf cases anima ly have been found in Galicia, .whence the clisea ee 11110 spread to other• parts. French South Se. -t l'or t ;Domini rded. A despatch from l301 rie:lox a3 e: The German cruisers Scharnhoret and Gniesen to bombarded .and half destroyed 1?apestris principal town amd punt of the tench island of fiali itm, '5)100 'artist rmpnt bunt meanber or bits,. SorJieit,y gro 1p in (1110 Pacific, ,Su:oh its the •news received here by ,the'Minister of Colonies, Gaston Don ltlerylIe -The clr'uleers also sank' 'Oho dismantled French gunboat Ze- lee, a sister ship to the Sur•prise,,mn the harbor-ea/id ibhisn put out bo sero. Can you Beat It ? y.,., .rather ->n tvai---Lucie. here, young', man, don't you think it's about time yen were going to work, or cl'o you •expect-]TA1 to elipipoeb you the rest of your 'life 1 ISo11-in-law-41 would be no more than fair, just after what I have done for ;you. -- "I'd like to know; what you've ever done .for ane," `'Why, clidn t 11',ake your daugh- ter off your hands 11 For these workmen maintain the fabric of the world and in the handiwork of their 'craft is Their prayer.—Ecclesiasticus xxxviii, 34. Here` is a, very different idea of woa'k from that contained in the opening chapters of Genesis. Ac- cording to this ln•ophe't, labor is not a curse, laid upon man for his sin, but a service so holy that the very• doting of it constitutes a "prayer." Therefore does he sound the praises of the working- man as others have ,sounded the Praises of king .and soldier. The ploughman, the jewel, cutter, the blacksmith, the ,potter—all these, "although 'they are not sought for in the council of the people nor ex- alted in the assembly, though they sit not in the seat of the judges nor understand the covenant of judg- ment," are still to be numbered among the great and honorable of mankind I In order to understand •the jus- tice of this tribute we only have eo remind ourselves that it is work which has made the world what it actually is at the ,present Moment, All that we mean by civilization, in the material sense, is the result of toil in; the sweat of men's brows. Foe ages past the then who have labored with their hands—the farm- ers, the woodsmen, the blacksmiths, the spinners, the builders --have been contemptuously regarded as Ate Inferior• Gradeof itinustnity, as little better, indeed, than ani- mals 1 And yet while kings .have fought and noblemen hunted; while gilded courtiers have twirled their scented 'handkeech:e'Is and toyed with their jewelled swords, while so-called superior classes of all ages and countries have sported, gambled and debauched, these same inferior laborers Lave • made the world what we ,see it to -day! It is their toil which has cleared away forests, cultivated farm lands, opened urines, conetructed rail- roads,' laid out and builded cities. It is their work which has created wealth, .founded nations, redeemed the waste ,places of the earth, rear- ed the vast monuments of civiliza- tion. Not more .surely ar•e the pyramids of Egypt the memorial not of the Pharoahs out of their driven slaves than are the huge piles of stone and steeld• , in our nib ern cities the memorials of the un- named toilers of this later age, .And not only is it work which has trade the world what ft is to -clay, but it is work .also which keeps 'the world going from hour to hour. I have food upon my table, clothing upon my back, a roof over my head, beetles upon my ehelves only because a million hands u..r toiling in my service. tel this labor be snspend- ed fora little time, and Derail and D0;1Eutd(oit would stand towering at my' thresh- old. ``llrithont' these," says the author of Ecelesiasti.cus,,' 'shall not a city„ilie inhabited, ripe S zalla sojourn or walk up and down 'thert- iwuorld,; these" maintain the fabric of the It is these facts which are slowly teaching, time supreme dignity of la- bor. CratlyIe :had these” int, ',mind when he declared that work, and work al one,, is truly noble; Ruskin, when he revealed the beauty gain- ed through toil ; tlIorris, when he preached and practised -the gospel of skilled cr•aftmanship ; 14Lillot, tvheti he. painted the '''Sower," the "Reaper," the "Gleaners." Idle- Hess is doomed as a badge of. dis- tinction. Work trust henceforth be•the sole title to nobility, Whit- man is the 'trine, •prophe-t when in his "Song of Ont .ipations' he chants the Homeric catalogue, "househuilding, blacksmith g, glassblowing, shipjoining, piledriv- ing, fishcuring," and dedlares that there is nothing Yiellieh leads to greater 'than these lead to." --;Rev. John Haynes Holmes. SOJJif LONELY 'ISLANDS. May Nothear of ,Ante for ".1'ryo ,('ear's. Though scientific progress liar made ie possible. to do a double jcitr•ney between England and Anter'1ca nal al. ford:night, there re- main many islands with which ie. takes years bo ecumenical be. Off the Scottish coast ere the groups of iel11005 known as the Hebrides, Or'kneys and` Shetland's, Of these the -most Isolated ,'eland. is St. Kilda, some three miles long and two miles brood. The rinhabiban bs. lead lives of great loneliness, for it takes 1 month to get to the next island and the sea often makes any communication with St. Kilda im- possible for. months. ' .the group of eight Phoenit is - lands ie the Parciflc hale total pop- ulation of only. 158 while another little bit of the British empire is Fanning Island, This es a landing place toe the 7?aclfio .submarine oa- b:le, and usually there are about 100 eo• people in Ile place. The loneliest of gallp aunts Of IBei-. tish territory ie the Island 'of Tristr an. D'A•ounha, an the ' South Atlantic which 'is ailed, the smallest inhabited island in the enepi.re. It is 1,800.nt_le:s from ;land, him, a popu- lation of 74 Soo basil Anlericans,.and the inhabitants get news of the oiler world usually orrice every two • If you want work clone choose a bnsy.matt to do it --the other sorb have no time: ALE __^ STOUT __-,LAGER PURE -.PALATABLE ••- NUTRITIOUS — BEVERAGES FOR SALE BY WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWIHERE.. LOCAL OPTION --Residents in the local option districts can legally order from this brewery whatever they require for personal or family use. Write to JOHN LABA.TT, LIMITED, LONDON, CANADA fl s nn'�n�nn�.'.�cv,��rs..'� n: , nnn.'inrommnil 'nom ,1; Jo, en}hiNIA:i