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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1913-10-23, Page 2n G. D. MCTAGGAIT M. D. MCTAGGART McTaggart. Bros. BANTERS --- 'A GENERAL BANKING BUSI- NESS TRANSACTED. NOTES DISCOUNTED; DRAFTS ISSUED. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE- POSITS, SALE NOTES PUR- CHASED.- se- — Jr. 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.' BRYDONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, , NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. Office— Sloan Block CLINTON CHARLES B. HALE. Conveyancer; Notary *Public, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET, CLINTON DRS. GUNN & GANDIER Dr. W. Gunn, L.R.C.P., L.R. C.S-, Edina, Dr. I. C. Gandier, B.A., M.B. Office—Ontario St., Clinton. Night calls at residence, Rattenbury St., or at Hospital. DR. J. W. SHAW —OFFICE = -RATTENBURY 'ST. EAST, CLINTON DH C. W. THOMPSON PHSYICIAN, SURGEON, ETC. 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. F. A. AXON DENTIST — Specialist in Crown and Bridge Work. Graduate of C.O.D.S., Chicago, and; R.C.D.S., To-, ionto. Bayfield on Mondays from May to Docembor. GRA' u Tf1U1FRAsIvC 1�, — TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV: Going Eaet, rt „ ,1 Going/West, It It a 44 rr tr LONDON, HURON Going South, Going North, II 3, 7.35 a. m. 2,07' p. m. 5.15 p. m. 11.07 a. ort: 1.25 p. m. 6.40 p. m, 11.28 p. & BRUCE DIV 7.50 a. m. 4.23 p. m. 11.00 a. m. 6.35 p. m. OVER as YEARS' EXPERIENGC ?RAD( MARKS Outage Copreteltre ,4e. • Anyone sandlot* sketch and deeorlotlon may Btenrtntntforioronnae4pypopnb ebg oother a .s rt tuulnrnrern sent aaoneyrer seem pt' stense.Patenta aken tt b Munn Co. - Metre Wreldl ioEle, wIthonodara, toEe kknfiflc JimgiiC1f, A b nd,omety illustrated weekly,. Largest .ale, Iron o any selentide Journal. Terms f or Ma, tam a year. -postage preeeld. field by , .newsdealer* 111111111,'gCo.881&otAty,,New York bravomoe. usS pp. Wueington. D. C. j LIPPINCOTT° MONTHLY MAGAZINE. A FAMILY LIBRARY The Best In Ourront Ibrahim t2 COMPLETE NOVELS YEARLY MANY -SHORT STOI:I1gS AND', PAPERS ON Tt.INtEJ Y TOPICS. $2.60 PERNEAR i 25 c're. A COPY.' 'NO CONTINUED STOSIFS - ttireav outman COMPCcTIr IN rreol,F : Slow fbagrliness is Mere bene thee no 'for owe,.Ifees.: ran, Shorts and Flour From the Best Mills= at thelowest possible "price. WE PAY THE HIGHEST PRICE for OATS, PEAS and BAR- LEY, also HAY for Baling. Ford '& McLeod 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 1C7. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. ALL KINDS OP COAL, WOOD, TILE BRICK TO ORDER. All kinds of Coal on hand: CHESTNUT SOFT COAL STOVE CANNEL CO AL FURNACE COKE BLACKSMITHS • WOOD 2% in., 3 in. and 4 in, Tile of the Best Quality. ARTHUR FORTE Opposite the G. T. R. Station, • Phone 62. The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurauoe Company Farm and Isolated Town Property only Insured e OFFICERS. — J. B. McLean. President, Seaforth P.O. ; Jas. Connolly,- Vice-Presie dent, Goderich P.O. ;• T. E. Hays, Secretary -Treasurer, Seaforth P.O, — Directors D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; John Grieve, Winthrop; William Riun, Constance; John Watt, Harlock; John Benuewies, Brodhageno James Evans, Beechwood ; M. McEven, Clinton P.O. — Agents - Robert Smith, Harlock; E. Hinch. ley, Seaforth; William Chesney, vEine.amondville; 3. W. Yen, Holmes. Any money to be paid in may be paid to Mortish, Clothing Co., Clin- ton, or at Cutt's Grocery, Goderich Parties desirous to effect insur. ance or transact other business will be promptly attended to on ap plication to any of the above officers addressed to their respective post - offices. Losses inspected by the director who lives nearest the scene. 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 lino for each subse- quent insertion. Small advertise• meats not to exceed one inch, etch 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,'. GRAND TR ,RAILWAY SYSI E;111, ROMESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS To Manitoba, Saskatchewan, • Alberta Each Tuesday until October 22, iaalnsivo warenvyxe AND RETURN-835.nn EDMONTON AND RSa'U N Proportionate low rates tootkor points• Return limit two months. Through Pullman Tourist Steeping.' ears are operated to Winnipeg with. out change via- Chicago. .and at. Paul,' leaving Toronto 11.55 -'p;qt on alias, dates • Tiohnte ore oleo on pole via Sarnia . and Northern Nav5gatihn Coarpe,uy.. Pull, partioulare and reservations from Grand. Trunk Agents, or write O. E,., horning, n.P:A.;. limon Station, .. To- roots, Ont.:. Teacher—"Which is the more de- licate c1J the ?tensest" Pepi1---"The touch:-" Teacher --"Provo pile"'lien yam felt on a tack yen can't" l"ea"s it, you can't zee et, you menet smell hal i:G, hat nt*s; there." Acis., Strong='rpourt you think woman's hand. has played an /ea-, partabb part in the greet work of,; ctvali'zetaopee' . Philosopher—r•'TI1" itonbtedly; but I don't think lier hand has been quite ee effeetive'as he slipper l."r Kidneys Wrongt'?-- If they are you arC in danger. When through weaknees or disease the kidneys fail to filter the Impurities from the blood trouble comes at once. Backache, h xeumatient, . Sciatica, Gravel, Diabetes, Gall Stones and the deadly Bright's Dieeate ire some of the reeulte of neglected kidneys. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills contain a most effective diuretic which strengthens and 'stimulates the kidneys so that they do their work ,thoroughly and well. Try Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills Forty years, In use, 20 years the stentlard, prescribed and recom- mended by physicians, For Woman's Ailments, Dr. Martel's Female Pills, -.at your druggist. Don't Cough Your Bead Off and, don't allow a cold to run; it's dangerous. Get a bottle of Rexall Cherry Bari Cough Syrup Insist on haying this preparation; It is plea- sant ta the taste and the most effective pre. .paration for combating all' kinds of Kofs. PRICE, 25 AND 50 CENTS. Got ft at the G�f .EX A L STORE W. S. E. Il OLM E S, 1'lun.3, ORDERS for Coal may ho left at R. Rowland's Hardware Store, or at my office in II: Wiltse's Grocery Store. HOUSE PHONE 12 OFFICE PHONE 140 A. J. HOLLOWAY BUSINESS AND.' SHS RTI -IRNA Subjects taught by expert instructors at the C. A. BLDG,. LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Cita teredAccsustast or;., 17 Vlee-rriucipal CENTRAL STRATFORD. ONT. THE SUNDAY -SCHOOL STUDY INTERNATIONAL-LISSON, OCTOBER 26. Lesson' IV.—The Sin of Moses and Aaron, , Nnnr:%20. 1-3, ' Golden Text, Pee. 10,' 14. Almost forty years have' passed since the .vents of. our last lasso Discouraged by the unfavorable r port of a majority of 'the spies, the children of Israel did not attemp immediately to enter Canaan, ne the southern border of which the were encamped at Ieadeeh, The leek of courage and faith in 'jell vah and their murmuring "again Jehovah bring upon them a p longation of the desert hardship and privations until a whole gene ation falls by, the wayside and i buried. in the ' wilderness. 'No* however, the days and years of r tribution and ,.punishment as drawing; to a close and the time i at hand when Lintel shall agai move forward to the con quest •o the land of 'Promise. Verse I. The wilderness of Zin` In the immediate vicinity of • 'Na desh and - north of the wildernes of Parson. The first month -=The .month o Eisen or Abid,; corresponding t our April ' - - • . 2. Assembled. themselves togethe against Moses -+Started ' a mutin against their leaders. 3. Strove with Moses—A strife words and argument, abounding i complaint. When our brethren died—Undo the burden of Egyptian slavery e•r subsequently in the wilderness. 4, The assembly of Jehovah His chosen people and congrega tion. The isilplication..of the quer tion is that it is a disgrace fur th schoships,en people of Jehovah to le subjected to such wilderness hard G. This evil phase—The place o hardship and exeremo physical die comfort, No place of seed . vines . . pomegranates —'The promise `hem had been that they should b brought into' ,a land overflowin with milk and honey, symbols' o prodigal abundance. Neither is there any water—No only is there about them no sig of an abundance of seeds and fruit for food; there is not even the in dispensable element of sustenance, water to drink. 6, Fell on their faces -Utterly discouraged and helpless. The glory of Jehovah—The cloud, representing the presence of Jeho- vah. 8. Take the rod—The rod of Aaron which had budded (Num. 17) and which was later kept "be- fore Jehovah,'" that is, in the sanc- tuary, as a testimony or evidence of hie power. Our narrative at this point leaves the purpose of the rod unexplained, though its subsequent use is indicated inverse IL 10, Gathered the assembly to- gether—From this point on, the narrative as it stands is slightly confusing. According to a plau- sible rearrangement of the story suggested by several eminent com- mentatoes, Moses end Aaron were et first bidden by Jehovah to speak to the rock, which, being skeptical, they hesitated about doing, asking Jehovah, "Can we bring forth then rater out. of this rock?" To these ords Jehovah replies, addressing imself to Moses and Aaron with he words, Hoar now, ye' rebels, at he same time' bidding them strike the rock' and afterward proriounc- ng upon them the doom of emit - ion for their lack of confidence. 12. Because ye believed not in ne-Without some reconstruction the narrative as suggested above here is in the story no clear evi- ence either of unbelief or of die bedience •en the part of Moses and aron. The reconstruction sug- ested may not be the' best nor in armeny" :with the original word g. It does, however, point out a ossible , rearran'gement which elps materially in clearing up the ery evident ambiguity of the nar- ative as it stands. Ye shall not bring this assembly nto the land—A severe - penalty ✓ a wrong not fully explained in sir narrative (compare comments n verse 10 above).• 13. Waters of Meribah-Literal of strife or contention. That e place • was in the immediate iemety of, if not identical with, adesh is clear from the fact that e double name Meribah of Ka- e- ar y it o- st re- s r- e n f s 0 r. y of n • s e f to e f t a s w 11 t t of t d 0 A h in p h v r fo e 0 ly th K th dash i, frequently met with, as in Num, 27. 14; Dent. 32, 81; and elsewhere. Was sanctified in them—In the sense of revealing, himself as holy. CHIEF CANUCIC DAIRYMAN. John Archibald Ruddick ;Was Born -- in Oxford County. A despatch the other day an, nouneed that we were in danger of losing our, primacy in the British cheese market to the New Zealand - or. That primacy was probably due to a large extent to the .immense advertisement we gave ourselves by making the biggest cheese in the world, That cheese was manufac- tured in the fall of 1892 in the Cana- dian Pacific Railway station shed at Perth, Ontario, 'and -went sent to the World's Fair in Chicago the endyear. It weighed 22,000 lbs., d required for its making the equivalent of the September .milk- ing of 10,000 cows, After the fair webs over the cheese was shipped to England where it was widely exhi- bited and called attention in a startling . manner to 'the cheese- makers of Canada, Their cheese had already made a prominent place for itself in the English mar- ket; but that place was enormously enlarged as a result of the unique advertisement, which was fully sup- ported' by the quality of the Cana- dian article. The man who had charge of the making of that cheese was Mr. John Archibald Ruddick, then a member of the s'tafrof the Dairy Department for the Domin- ion, since 1905 the Dairy and Cold Storage Commissioner and official chief of the dairy interests for Can- ada. 'An Oxford County Mane At the time he superintended the' snaking of this giant cheese, Mr - Ruddick had for a decade been a figure in the cheese -making world of Canada. Ire was. at the tune just thirty years of age,'having been born of Sootoh-Irish and United Empire Loyalist stock in the rich county of Oxford. It was natural enough that be should turn his attention to dairying and make a success of it, for Oxford has long been one of the premier counties of the Dominion In ohcese and butter making. It was not Oxford, however, that gave him hie chane,^, though it did lay a broad and a .strong foundation of knowledge for him. It was under the "cheese king," Mr. D. M. Mac- pherson, of Lancaster, in the east- ern end of the province, that Mr. Ruddick got his most valuable ex- perience and made his name. When Illr. J. A. Ruddick. twenty years of age he entered the service of Mr. Macpherson as man- * t ager of one of his factories and for five years before 1888 he was super- intendent of •e, combination of sixty factories, which Mr. Macpherson then controlled in Glengarry and in Huntingdon, P.Q. Soon after this it was that Mr. Ruddick entered the .service of the Government as a member of the staff of the Dominion Dairy Com- missioner. For three years .he was -a travelling instructor of the East- ern Dairymen's Association, and at this time did much to spread im- proved methods of cheese and but- ter -making among the farmers of Eastern Ontario. When Queen's University established its dairy school in 1894, he was made super- intendent and remained in charge of the fortunes of this institution until four years later, the ,school in the meantime having been taken over by the Ontario Department of Agriculture. Went to New Zealand. It looks very: much as if he would haveto lay some . of the blame for the competition which our cheese is now meeting from New Zealand on the shoulders of Mr. Ruddick, When he severed his connection with the Kingston Dairy School in 1898, it oda for the purpose of en- tering the service of New Zealand, where he remained for three years and did much to lay the founda- tionsof the cheese industry in that colony, Mr, Ruddick, .by the way, is only one of a number of Cana- dian experts to build up the dairy- ing interests of other ceountries, New Zealand has £eilcen fat a time no less than three other Canadians for this purpose, while oven Great Britain and the United States have:. drawn ilpoe our -cheese anti butter- nialcers••;to assist them in improving their methods, Mr: Ruddick's life has tai, are: ,markable manner paralleled the. peeled of growth of dairying in Canada: This is particularly true of clieese-making;, with whiioh lie hail been most closely associated. When he was born, about fifty mil - elan l' - lion" pounds of butter was, being •ILv mil- er ""tilde in Cana<da, but the elieese q' produo amounted Lu, only about JEWELER'S and ISSUER OF fni, ll'01' p^hlac,.i, -.nk; .or cCuiSC., '303 chiefly fon home eon MARL jAG 'LICE NSES gumption, the export of dairy pro - pe; Our registration again exceeds that of any previous year, The boy or girl who has' not received our free catalogue does not know the great opportunities of. Com- mercial life, We have three de- pertsnents—Commercial, Short- hand, and Telegraphy—and we offer you advantages not offered elsewhere in Ontario. You may enter at any time. Write for our free catalogue at once. D. A. McLACHLAN, Principal. Hot water and lemon juice effec- tively cleanse cane seats, THIS IS -A STORE OF DEPENDABLE VALUES A store that keeps in touch with the constantly Changing jewelry styles. A store that sells the same goods as' those sold in the better stores. all over the countr'— And sells them, too, at as low prices as` ANY STORE CAN. Everything .we show you can be depended upon to BE exactly what we tell you it is. This is so from Tie Holders at a quarter to Diamond,. And it matters not what you may require nor: when,, if it belongs to a Jewelry stock, it's here, ' Prove these things any time occasion arisen 1 yl `"I HAVE NEVER- SEEN But Unnumbered Thousands of Brave Pur: Women Have Walked With "The fool bath said, in his heart, There is no God,"— Psalm xiv., 1. Just why the Psalmist concluded in his day that the man who denied categorically the existence of God was 'a "fool" we cannot say, but it is pretty evident in this much later day that there are very good reas- ons indeed -why this sweeping as- sertion is correct. We know some- thing to -day about the conditions of knowledge and the possibilities of ultimate experience, And when, therefore, we encounter a man who says in so many words that "there is no God;" we feel, with the Psalmist, that we can classify him with a good deal of accuracy, Some very pertinent questions must at least be put to this philosopher of atheism. When was this revelation of the non-existence of God given to you and by whom was it spoken? When did you mount to the sources of being and discover that the fountain was dry f When did you penetrate to the Holy of Holies and find, like another Pompey, that the shrine was empty'" When, in short, did you yourself discover as a fact of real experience that "there is no God" and thus gain reason for your proclamation of denial 7 No Adequate Ground. • For any positive assertion of this kind, after all, most have its basis in actual experience, else must it be accounted of no avail. Nay, in the ease of negative assertions, we can go farther thanthis and, say that theabsence of actual experi- ence cannot in itself be regarded as adequate ground for the denial of anything, It may be trim that this man can say "I have never seen God," but this may be, for the same reason that the blind man has never seen the sun. He may be able to declare with perfect truth that he has never hoard God's voice, but this may be for the same reason that the deaf man has never heard the skylark or the waters at Lo_ dere. He may be obliged to con- fess that he has riev souse of the Divine be for the same re Palestinian sheep b the Iily of the field; peasant gazes with ed upon the vale whi saw above Tintern A the failure of our ai God find cummune work with Him mu set'the living teethe bered thousands of 1 pure women who ha' God as with a frie from day to day as with His spirit. Wh of the failure of ar souls to see, and he when matched agai, which has succeeded we for the vote of t sembhy as compare of Socrates? And I to summon the i whole congress o. one life like that ""I do no After all, the ever say in the w nial about things ply this, "I do ni farthest limit of in this age is no to ism, but that of a thing may perhaps man who, snaking own experience of "I do not know." be said for the ma arrogant presumpti eel by any victim declares "there is the verdict long s by the ancient Ps that the problem open question, I s limit of denial th And when this is in the reality of t content. For the yesterday and to - in the face of thee question can rem only like many for the sake of John Haynes Holt duce on a considerable scale not arising till five or six years later. The total amount of butter made in Canada at the time of the last cen- sus has not been figured out; but ten years earlier it was one hun- dred and fifty million pounds. Tide is a three -fold increase, and prob- ably in 1010 it was nearly fourfold, The growth of the cheese produc- tion has been much greater, it be- ing over two hundred million pounds in 1907, an increase of fifty- fold.—Francis A. Carman in the Star Weekly. OLD LONDON HOTELS GOING. FissneuS Hostelries (Disappearing in Face of Progress. London, England, is being trans formed in no sphere of its busy life snore markedly than in its hotels. 'Within the last few months a num- ber of well known hostelries have disappeared, and several ambitious schemes have been proposed to re- place them, Among hotels that have recently closed their doors are the Gaiety Hotel and Restaurant, the Inns of Court Hotel, the Capitol, in Lower Regent Street (formerly called the Chatham, and further back still the Continental), while the Old Ship at Greenwich, the Star and Garter eit Richmond, the Tollard In Eagle Street, the Albion in Al- dersgate Street, and the Bedford Hotel, Covent Garden, have also been closed within the past year or two. The Salisbury Hotel, off Fleet Street, is to be changed into an International Roman Catholic Club, but it will still give hotel ac- commodation to its members, to- gether with an oratory as part of its equipment. But the closing of old hotels is interesting no less for the sequel— the opening of new. Ar-hitectural splendors and modern luxuries are nowadays aimed at everywhere, The development of the hotel has gone hand in hand with the devel- opment of travelling facilities. Dur- ing the past tenyears, it has been computed, a sum of no less than $50,000,000 has been expended on hotel building in London. The biggest hotel in the world will be erected at a cost of $8,000,- 000 on the site of St. George's Hos- pital, Hyde Park Corner, which has been purchased for the purpose by Mallaby Deeley, M.P. SPECIFIC FOR THE BLOOD. Formula May Prove Valuable in. Tnbereulosis Fight. A specific which may become a valuable ally to the medical profes- sion in the campaign against tuber - mitosis and other diseases has .been introduced by a London publishes'. David Doig, head of the firm of William Doig and Co., pisblishea s to the King, has interested himself' for several years in the potontiali ties of,`a formula which, he says, has remarkable effects in improv- ing this quality of the blood and the consequent resistance of the body to clisoaso, At his instance tests have been carried out in tee of the London hospitals which have demonstrate the value of the formula in a ver. . remti'kahle way, and Mr Doig, now anxious to secure further a more extended tests with the sistanae of solleol clinics and p lie health authorities, Seine thirty years ago the fc mule, m 1i opt by an c 9cienflh, am ' i_st s, possetissionccofemAir;istDcoig'se ,family was frequently r occasion arose wi ,sults, It is a oembi salts, certain of St centrated form, powerful stimuli white corpuscle so enable the of lurking disc stated -to be Is quite inexpens TESTS FOR Method of Av Proma A remarkabi ing• absolutely dead person i tints avoiding premature bus by Dr. Icard o has been reeei est by his colt Dr..teare's the question of still in circular slats of a sub- a email quasi which is quite the most viol known. If the tion of the bid around the Iso golden yellow, come adeep e the other hand more of the b matter is not duces no offer stated to be e test. The laity, w by this new m whether person undergo the d who later refs golden yellow eyes of which D are transforme aids, set like els." It may be a fleorescine is o sitory dyes kno Lite '‘Yesterday speakable insu "What was i "A deaf and on his fingers liar."