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The Clinton News-Record, 1908-04-30, Page 3April 3001 1904 ,ittsteettelettefeeetotfettreleferoteetfe 001-4,10191000~,00~010Wspoottstet ELECTROmctiE,NICAL .Rfti:tmaticf, Rings Are guaranteed to cure Rheumatism and Nepralgia, The Electro -Chemical Ringa le not an ignorant charm Or feith cure. hut nescientitle Pined:tom for the elle:due lion of uric acid from the blood. The tetra, the Power. the merit in this ring -lies in the ccmthination of the various tnetals of which the ring is made. No matter what the trouble is. If it Is caused by exceao of uric acid, The Electra-00**i Rlow will effect Ore. Looks ,fust Idce any ether ring. Oen he worn day and night. We guarantee these Ringo, to do all' we claim. Call and EX4fitline These Rings. W. R. Counter, Jeweler end Engraver. teener of Marriage 1410,11504 Via."0014~010~04101~40". 1041610106601~0601~64,0101 Theo Movement Towards Probi- bition. The most noteable movement in con- viction with public affairs in tne Unie jted States is found in the wholesale adoption of prohibitory laws by muni- cipalities and States. The movement began - in the South, and the greatest victories of the pro- hibition cause. have been won in that part of the Union. By the first of January next, when some of the State laws already adopted come into force, there will be between Mississippi and ,the Atlantic an area equal to one-half that of the whole Province of Ontario• from which the liquor traffic will be wholly excluded, and out of twenty million people in the Soutil 17,000,000 -will then be under prohibition. Latt- erly the movement has extended mirth large areas in Miehiga,n and •Illinois having voted in favor of local option a few weeks ago. All told, there are now forty milliten Americans in dry -territory, nearly twelve- times the ;number • So placed forty years since. A somewhat similar wave,swept oven the Northern States in the fifties, but in that case there was a quick subsie idence, the principal cause of the back- ward ebb being found in the great in- flux of immigeation from • European countries in •whieh alcoholic liquors form part of the daily drink, of the people. The excitement due to the Civil War also had its effect in turn- ing people's minds in other directions.• The present move is likely to prove more permanent than its predecessor. It had its origin in the South in whicdi; the whites are almost exclusively •of:I British origin, with an ancestry dat- ing back to the Revolution.. The in- fluence of immigration from Continen- t:el Europe will not be felt titre as -it was in •the Northern States in the 'fifties And 'sixties. Besides thereare special reasons for the movenient in the South. The old Confederacy ie no longer devoting its entire, energies • - *Iry • 13ailey yields more- e than twice as many• bushels tothe acre _es eaSier grown,—and the- dema.nd wilt be ' great • this. year.. •• That's plainly. -Why • I: I .11 it will pa. to sow the growing of cotton, tobacco . and sugar ; enoraious .tnanufacturing indus- tries have been developed, and , these depend ie the me:hr on negro labor. Negro laborers are as eeeily demoral- ized by liquor as ere native , Indians, and • one caute of the prohibition mOvement in the tertitery, in which they are so -numerous is founds in a 'desire to . keep trite:stealing • drink away from •men svh,�. are incepicitated for labor, melt whoese: evil paseions are :aroused by freeaccess to it. Besides this the trade in the Smithhad pass- ed into. very law hands and had • be- . come in a .spectal. sense •an agency of political and moral. degradation : 'For this reason Prohibition' seeine likely to. become the permanent policy of the Maeda -Dixon line. In the North ano- ther infitteiece wilt tend in the same direetion, All the great corporations and other large; employees of tabor leave joined the crusade in ftevor of total -abstinence; and the influeneeso created, added to the •meral influences already at *Irk,' are politerfui agen- ciesfor the Maintenance orthe ground . that has, been Won, • • . . • Ontailo aad our West large areas have also passed under local option, and in Quebec , 'a very i3on§iderable proportion of the rural seetiens he,vee gone dry, simply from refusal to issue • licenses. Similar movements have oc- curred in Ontario and ,the Wet :' bee! -fore, 'but this one shows greater eyis • detect of continued. :vitality, One ,of the forces tending M this elirection is , found in- an itriflow of inunigretion, in '. characternot unlike that which turn- edback the prohibitory • forces in the Northern States fifty years ago. Thcret hes- been, as a result of tide .incisieting tide, a rather startling Inereeteq ' .drunkennese during: the,:last few years - in Ontario,: particularly in the largo- • industrial eentees, These new comers are' riot sufficiently nutneroun' in our cage, to :turn the scale against -Prohi- bition, hut :they -re creating tondie. tines which have alarmed sorne of The Cameo News.Record 3 27,000 Troops Will Atten44be Celebration in Quebec.. from Julg 19t1to atst. 1 Twenty-seven thousand office= and men will be the representation of Can etda's adlitie at tile Quebee Temen- tentary, July 1,9th to 81st. This is e,000 more than the first estimate made by the militexy aettheritiee.,The orders governing the military at the celebration were received in Torolito last week end are of espeeial interest to the officers Anti men or the city auti eural corp. All qualified and warrant officers as well as the ,brigade and diviehmal staffs have emu; orde,red to take part. It is especially stated that no provisional officer c..an att,eed. Rural tattaiions will be permitted to WA), a bond of twenty end 00 per ceht, of their establisinneut of men wilt) have served their training of three years and more, . ,With the city corps it is larovided that they nuts% melee their choice of two alternatives which are given thent4 The first is that they May take their band, their officers and 50 per tent. of their establishmeet and receive .ae least eight days pay or perhaps more. and subsistence while away as well as their transport. `The eeenrid is that they may -take their full establish- ment and obtain transportation and subsistence for all, but they will only draw .pay for four days. Each intents et regiment will in addithen be aliewe ed to take live bugler*, who, it is stipulated, must be included is the 50 per cent. of their establishment. This • else applies to the te,Valry and artill- exy, Who will only be allowed not 4, more than three buglers. These arrangements have just. been made after •a, •number of conferences • hetwe,en the Department.and !, the representatives of the railways. The Celebration. Cominissimi, it is understood, had a conference with the • railway officials !est week in wile treat, and *the outcome is a well I thought. °et plan which Will' remove • any difficulties in the way of trans- porting tile troops, which at one time threatened to inteefere to sorne extent vvith the Meese a the celebration. The Arrr?y Sallee Corps will have . charge a the moving of the troops which will eonee from Port Arthur •and the east But a 'Small represent- ation of the militia. at points further west will attend, and the railways ex- • poet to meet the wishes of the militia authorities; though the tourist traffic • will be at its height. If a shortage of dolling stock presents itself te the Canadian railways it is understood I the railways of the United •States wilt came to the adsistanee of the • lines in Canada • and furnish. all the necessary cars and other equipment to meetThe needs • . • . . Choosing Partg Leaders. The Ametioan people are engaged at the present time in: what seems, to us: reared under the )3eitish system of cloverninenti reniarkahle task. They are selecting by soinething approaching popular vote the leaders of their res- pective parties for the next cam- paign: That We should- be within six months Of a general , election, and not korai/ -who. was to lead either of our parties in the. fight; would • scent to es amazing. Political elaitos could not gd. farther. Most of us would feel that we would have to pet off the:el- ections• until we. had time to And out where we "were at." . Yet this 'seam extraordinar3i, course • of events in the United Stetee, They choose their leaders about tho last. thing before the •outburst of ' stump °eatery begins... They may choose a man 'for either party who is hardly thought • of as •a • dational lead.er ••novs. Garfield WAS not seriously in the -run- ning: before. he Was nominated. Bryan himself was entirely unknown a day • oi so befote.his seleet.len to lead: one of the. two great parties. Even 'Roo- .sevelt arrived at the teadeiship• of his party by acCident-:the accident. that made .hini President when Mc:K*1ff was shot. It ' as. we were. to themi oiir partieseetto the melting Pet, this stem -nor with the elections -fixed for the autumn, and then piek out •Mr. Bennett to lead the Conservatives - and Hen. Sydney Fisher to•. leads. the Ijibetals, • 'Under. our sy0tern, leaders • grOW. They are not created at 'e• thee -days' • cenvention. • A,• Man •must wile his way to the leadership slowly' as a rule -; and by convincing, his aesetia,tes, in Parlienteet that he: is the best .pathbreaker the party. With fotir, American neighbors Congress', has precious little. to do • with . the selec- tion of leaderS. A Man may inalco' his mark in Congress, as McKinley - did ; but neither • Roosevelt, Cleve_. land, nee. Breae ewe anything . these not Mentided with this mese, •aild• he'll • indueed then to 'favor proe lubetory measures as a means 'of pre - vesting A return to the state, of thingst which prevailed in this Provinee forty Congress, the two former never having been . there, To -day the names most • to the fore are not Congresssma,de. , Taft was a judge, Itie'n a member of the Cabinet ; Hughes is a state goy. ether ; Knox and La li‘ollette are sen-. ators • while only cannon is a Cone • geessman. Johnson -Bryan's a State governor,. , Neither the ROO- bean nee the •DemocratM leeders . in the Rouse of Representatives are spo- ken of at all, s ln offeet, -tip party 'workers through- out the •coutrtryaitled mere or less by the people who •habittially vote with them -select •theix national .lead- ers' aecry four years. The first quali- fication they • seek is ability to 'Win votes. A lean who is not a wide - winner 'stands no chaege .whatever, no matter what' his servieee It) his iiarty or. his country may be Thus Thomas • R. Reed of Maine, •.thengh the ableei -Republican, ineeongreeee We% 430ted for 1VIcKinley becatiab Maine t A. critical etate. Under Alike System; no man can have a niertgage en • the leadership. If, when the: ele:tions draw near, the Man who is, expeeted to lead is thought by the reedi and file not to be a geed ioteegeiter he sacrificed without mercy, • •• ••' • • . Them is leech to...be said for •• *Mid against •such a system. It gets each party its surest vaeewinner • but it doe not necessarilv get the country the men hat qualided to goteen it, Olt system may not always give our narties. their biggest :chance al; • tbe polis but .We make fairly certain that no • ineXPerieneed Man Shall ever • be. piteleforked hito the position of • chief ruler the nation. . Premier Asquith -might bore not bop' the chalce er •Libeeal conventidal .but he, has sdeved a. long apPreetiteship Patliament and will .make a "safe" Prime 'Minis- -ter. Otte system bends. less to. the exigencies of practical politics; but 'pey pays, mere . reseect to, the high needs of the nation. • •• • : • • •• •• 411•11=1.01••111MISIIIIIM, •• • • • • •• • • • • • • , • • • ities. Size, aetivity, eapqpity for work, lasting quality and someinese, axe the tests of his merits, and there he is not found wanting. It he• is des - vended from the Shires, but is no less their successful rival. If he is dtecen- ded from 2,700 pound monstrosities, or eome other derivetion, he Is stilt no less an improvement over anything bigger, and lacking in other important cheracteristics, es well- as over many sr -04110e breeds in point of quality,, ae- • tivity, •and general handinesa. So long as he is the horse which meets everyday requirements as well as be does, his early, history end origle can well he relegated 10 the rornautie ineecuracies of obscure but embitious dreamers. So long as his breeding and improvement is dependent epee th.e shrewdest and most consist.nt breed- ers the world ever SaW; the hart-heade ed Scottishfarmer, and ihe upeto-datee well-informed, and intelligent breeders of Canada, the legendary side cau well he overlooked. In regard to the par- tieular statement regarding the size of old time Clydesdales, however, that there are more geldings' seating one ton at the :present time in all breeds of draft horses than ever le •the peat, and that is eiot very many. 441•641..40.444...44"...044',444 , WhittalSell'eb Mr. and 'Mrs. L Poxispent Easter tit Berlin. -• • Mr, W. IVIelVfichael Ishiredewithe Mirelionse for the summer, •s. . Mr. and Mrs, k; 'Patterson spent, (Easter Sunday at Winghatn. Misses Violet rand Blanehe • Holmes spent Easter with 'friends if Seafertie. Mr. and Mrs. T. Kew of Wingham spent Easter at the home of 'lidr; Cot- tle. • Miss Mabel Morrison spent •Easter at' Dungannon at the thorne of ber "ele•i •Mis. Smith of Wingham • was the guest of Mr, • and Mrs, .1, Morrison 1 alitegti7 etk .Melile;hael renewed Old- ac- quaintances around Whitechureh• ing Easter. Mrs, •Winfield attended the wedding df her son, hertram, to Mithrda Ellie ott, itt Wingliam on Thursday lake Thoe. Feed, 'jr., is hired with D. Clow for the summer ; George Clark with A'S Moore and J, Hutchison with J.. Craig, St. Augustine. . • Moving Pictures. •• • On Thursday night • of next 'week, a rare treat is in store, for all who Pay a visit to the Salvation Atmy in theid hall. Colonel Sharp, ' the Provincial Commander, is pittling on his: mut& famed illustrated lecture on "Mission- ary WotIts : in- Newfoundland," Thee Colonel was in charge of the Army'S oPesatione iv the 'Sea-girt Isle lot fie or six ,years; and. during that term saw some Wonderful adv.a,nces. • There :are over one hundred beautiful scenes •ilesetiptive of the country from St.". •John's to Port an Basalt: Ile - will deseribe the, places as they are threwn o1.1BetiCanvas, •slidesthis- . there are 1)eS. Canadian. Pictures, -embracing thee col, -lapse of The Crystal Hall in London ; the wreck of the A. -excursion train on the . Pere Marquette •• last. year ; soldiers, •• drilling at &Snot ; scenes .fratn • Prince Edward Island and Cape Bretee. There are 2000 feet of' moving pictures deseriptil'e of the, drunkard's home arid life; Other, scen- es .from the Southern end 'Ee.Stern shores of Newfoundland. The ' .wteck of the &cheerier "Salvationist" ; the Greenland .dieristee at Ice0elds • 'where dfty men lest their lives ; the wreck* of the "Queen of SWansea'! on Gull Island 'Where twelve . Newfoundland 'sailers died in sight of their 'homes., The Romance of the Clgdesdale Anothee Series of Illustrated Pieteres depih cts te visit Of Oineral Boeth 'to , . • • • . . the Hely Land. • Only 48 lbs. to the bushel,: -and bright barley brought Soc. last year. It will bring more this. No ' chance of a glutted market. Plenty of buyers. Sow baeleyb —it will pay you to. Clinton News.yecor4 CLINTON ONT • Taking the continent over, it 'Molts as if forces are at work whieh will •have the" efteet • of eteadily increasing the areae from which. the sale of li- • quor will be wholly prohibited, and of gradually making more stringent re- strietiens in those sections in which • legalized, sale may coetineet-Weeltiy • A Sudden Storm. • A few months ago •the attitude •of • the Liberal newspapers towards the Whitney, Governmentwas distinguish- ed for. amiable. if • somewhat ostente- tious .patronage. Much •of ite legisla- tion . was blessa altogether, 'Mere • was a snuggling up towards the Min- isters which Was both touching, and • beautiful. Mr: MacKay was set aside itt symPathetic •paragraphs. The Min- isters lux.tiriateti in columns of 'tem- pered eulogy.- If was a fat journey to Owen Sound, The Legislative buildings Were just ap the heed et University avenlie. So day after day *e had cheerful accounts of the. work of the Government and, Seldom even einnforting bulletin from the bedside of the Opposition. Rut suddenly tie! Go eminent has become depraved, Mr. MacKay is riding on to a glorioue vie'ory, and Mr. 'harlesr N. Smith has beeoint a. statesman. • The secret of it all is that we are on the eve of ait eleetion and that for a few Weeds the drums must hat and the eyerhals clash and the Liberal papers, blow on wind instruments. Then Mr, Maettay Will dietrount, stable his panting deed arid take the alto:noes.' train for Ckven Sound. Slitittltaneoesly them will dee- cod a great MOO upon the Liberal etwepapet offices, • and tip Minietere will regume active operations sin the Departreent >, and as the 'noise of the contest dies out no • &Uhl ratOtra some of the good will and confid nee of their trities.-eNews 04 Terms of suliseription-$1 per year in advance $1.50 may he charged if not so paid. No paper diecontinued until aritars are paid, tinlesa at the I e opinion of the publisher. The date to whieh every subscription is paid is denoted on the label. Advertising tates---Transient adver. tisennents, 10 cents per nonpariel fine for first Ittgatiott and 8 eents per line for eaeh SubSequent insert. ion. Small advertisement:3 not to exceed one inch, suell "test," "StraYed," or "Stolen," dee fie sated once for 85 Cents and 'each subsequent insertion 10 6 et 0. • Commuttleations intended ler litediett- tion timet, as a, guarantee of good faith, be aeeerripanied by the baste of the writer. Nivra PAM..., Ws a sure way to get blood poison- ing. rse Putnam's Corn Extra:tor. W. k t MITCHELL, It's •safe, pairdees and Sure to cr le Editor and Proprietor. e• day, - • • . . . , • „ . • , A writer in a• Western iournal ,Ittine• f r • • f 4 • ' 6 • ee and care f the worthlees LntsthO deteriotatjcn oi tTisserd't e slits te, and . t.qualty-trues-gener Clydssetale. They are no Mneer the pay. • • • jig, heavy horses of fifty 'years O, Through fully half the literature cur ileet, he Wanderson to state, a stele', rine itt our magazines at ebo vess(ei lion of 2,700 pounds was a • :common time, the pony' of ths West,• the mos ' A VE'GETARL'E•• • .• TON -CURE -s- • Because they contain mercury antl mineral silts, Many pills • are harsh. The easiest and safest , laxative is Dr: gI t ano g 0 Pour"eworthless horse alive,• has peeked his ale offered as Cletlee nowadays are / • wers'! 0010st equally,. common. Askillis hero with his guns and emendation. ) .ritere undersized, • insig,nificant rents, ' on his back his worthy eontemporarY, • e ,, bucking broncho, compared with ;the' wonderful horsee , theunwashed here, whose Harvard cd - ,of the. clays when be was young,. ucation has left hite ableto earn fore . It is customerY to tbroW the mantle tjt dollar, ' per month tram the• man around such penile-. habblings, . the same who robbed his father's bank and came mantle which • affords needful shelter , West before:hint.•' s • • Next i• n Order cbeees the Arab of the dreamed'. of sthe past,. . who nobly i • wrecked their imaginatiens, that the easteen desert, scintillating. -with' the stores of mythology might not be ours .hyperbolical romanees of Oriental ini- tailed.. Legendary • fabrication ig pe, .agitration. As we get feta a elass of horees of 'more known disefulness.• the telliar to no colititiry • or age, and • the character of• this "dppe" seems' to ohaitge. The really useful More in of 'Vermont, and the staunch little hottest of Lower Canada, the Peteherone, arid to the memories • of these heroic horn must beer its ehare of the al- iction. But it le interesting to note the graduations by which the diamet- rically opposite . proportions of the the Shires) shed some of the effulgence Icsthing foolish dreams adjuet themselves; and illestraies this feature better f of fairy Iore as their • usef tfinesse than does the horse, The more worth.; • less the object, the more Opecioos, Mystit, sentimental, and captivating .are.the lies which, are told about him. There are mere and bigger ones told .abotet bad haws' than good ones. This is true of particular cases, where the trader trio to touch the heart of the leen whoin lie • fathers with liability Spent Eighteen Dollars • 'Cleetlemen,-X have pletteure • etating that X have toted $18.00 worth of Prrychine, and as a result Wad "lured of very serious throat and tang trouble. creases. Last of: all comes the liohe Which has lent his services with more •PutPose than any of therri all, and here the iriagicn turns away with all the diSgust which any fabticator of the leapt professional pride feels for bare hard facts, • and • unvarnished With, The Clydesdale --oh, rate, he iS noth- ing, He. is descended from any oid thing. Effort beanie nugatory. Some eastoff Shires from England, •some wretehed skates whieh nobody knows or caret anything about, anything at all, will do for the ancestry of such matter -of -tact horses as the Clydese •Even the knoWe fads are loalle, the hat -racks upon which to hang and tesio and pile up a eomplete padding of My ease Wag le moot difficult one, and detraetive falsehoods. Every year the doctors' had practically Baia that 1 keg a heer cross of Shire blood on the coulduot get well, I tried Vsychhae, pedigree of the I)rinee of 441 The And it dM tros so emelt geed that con- tinued ite uite often X had taken $18.00 amount which hes already Leen Ned' worth, with the remit that iaat now ed into the leading stallions t f the a new mins physically, r Iteve gained Merrytort stud would heriortalize Dar thirty-five pounds. None. or Old Harold, "It itt with the greateat eindldaade 6+- that X recommend Podded to all who As a Mail er et fact, t matte% nodif- ference whether tire Clydesdale is des - are afflicted with throat or lung trouble. yours truly., 0. prtnemot ended from a Tommy hippot.ttrinS Or Seotatowtt, Que., Sept, '07. 2,700 pounds or from an extinct var- man speaks from experieneeiety of black etas. It is not what he This . V_se nitaies 6tireet all throat, cheeee st, lung , hut what he is to -day whie,h and etonmeli trouhies and gives renewed Practieal men want to know, atut it strength end vitnlitk to run-down poo. does not mattor much about the other to At all druggistfi, tiOe and $1,00, or 'k nit The Clydesdale stands ,e Aleut Dr, T. A. Bimini, Limited, 0,oronto. pioe as a lemeineelea uutui ut- • Hamilton's Pills of Alandralte and But- ternut, They clean, the stomach, e in- testines and bowels -drive out waste matter, tone the kidneys' and •forever Orre constipation.• As te general tonie •and eystem cleanser nothing is so miltl and efficient as Dr. Hansilton's Pills • of Mandrake and - Bettetnitt, • Sold everywhere, in 25e. boxes, I• ---- , QUE13EC E ElNrrgN 4 It ef gpm- ••• EBRATION. • A fine souveair.albtim is tot be issuea for the Quebtic 'ret -centenary celebra- tion. It, will be publiehed in both lan- guages, and will •contain n life of Ceamplein, some historical 'papers re- lating to • the • fouedation of the pioneer city of Canada, aft attieleon the. battle of the Plains, ete. It ;rill be• illustrated with rare portraits and priate and the • covet will be litho- graphed and prieted in several eolors, Should our readerwish lo ;seeure copy of this publication, we 'advise them to order it .rit dace, as the edi- tion will • be limited. Price, %eta, post paid, Copies can he had from the editor, Mr. Raoul Renault, Quebec, 'f'he Parkhill band will he re -organ, teed. • Mr. Thomas Hatrieon, an aged res- ident of lVforpeth, is dead. IT PREVENTS solo] THROAT. No simpler Way to kill a cold and stamp out sore throat than by apply- ing Nervilinee-ruh it in 'freelyi, trod then put on a NerVilitie Porous Plas- ter on tilt dna. These remedies hunt out pain, destroy every trace of cone gestion, cure the eold and teedeney, to bronchitis. Thousands find Nerviitpp inestinlably the hest renitdy for .pal s, aches, bruittes, neuralgia, sciatico4, colds and winter iiltt ot only is it penetrating and powerful, but it is safe ane mono/Meal. All dealers sell Poisons Nerviiine. Large bottlis for 2to„ the piasters same price. Beware et substitutes. rte 41ert Brings it ""m"" W_TI QULD-Y:U%-L.IKE-TO-.READ-THE-STQRY QP it FURNACE? "-justsbouh°1wa bec"rcrnstnoct PrincediPtie*"Y =moo= --ehot why no other plan of eon. Alit write groetion will do? on a poot- • -.hist wherein lies its ability to be esey caV� 00S velTheledon;Fomecwrfueli's 4'4w:sets: $in.31d7itntisa7n0;17;440/16 sosoot opor4uion? sibra:11.,41y :hot. themes. No furnace. 7 is • r.st indyoucanreaddlewhoreporyw 5 minutei, To the party contemplattes purclueins e formes it • co the • tend hig mass and pitfalls. and shOws exactlY Wha; to of erChi' 411=====. • IeeIt etataattor or dealer, in.fornace censioctinn and itimitation. • L7lfiYtarV.ANCOUVE.R • VRONreMOrMONTREAL, NANIITON W1/Pe CALGARY ng ld by Harland BrOsH ClintOn. • Seeding is general in Maniteba and the west; , A bageef registered mail was stolen „ at Edmonton station. It is said at Ottawa that the insur-: • atlec bill *ill bO left over to next sass on, ." North Huron Conservatiees nemineed erel Mr. 11. Musgrove for the Lege- laturc.. ,. •• ' Mo; Robert Shillington was nomina- ted for the Legislature thy the Conser- vatives of Temisitareing. ' The Cataract Power Company •has accented the oiler of the city of Ham- • ilton;modifying the terms of the, • street eallway franchise, ' 'Liberal nominations yesterday in - eluded Mr; John Auld for South Ee- sex, W. H. Wardrope .for West Heinilton, and Mr. William DfcClem- mit for East Hamilton. • • Detectives are ROW looking for Moir in the vicinity of Elmira. The Corm- erte jury. at London brought in a ver- eliet agalnet for the enurder of Sergeant Lloyd, • . • Two boys at Hawthorne, Pa„ were poisoned by eating wild parsnips. The anti -bucket shop bill has passed. both Houses of the Legislature at 'Albany. Sir' James :Willcocks Vial tato a punitive expedition against the,- Mahe Mottle On the Afghan frontier. Eighteen persons have been( shot at Guatemala, for conspiring ;to assassin-. ate the Prbsiden•t, and other exeeit- tions will follow. Mr, Walter Runciinan, President of . the Board of Education, the first of. Mr, Asquith's new Cabinet Ministers • to go to hie constituents, was rete lee • • , ted in "Reivebuty, by 1,148 Veto. •. 00400400404.40"34404"00.044.40"0"044 • The effect of Sceira Emulsion on thin, pale children is magical. • It makes them plump, rosy, active, happy. • it contains Cod liver 00, Hypophosphites and Glycerine, to make fat, blood and bone, and so put together that it is easily digested by little folk. • - ALL DRUGGISTS; SOo.iAND 81.00. 4•64000041,000040400004010000' • The 'entire 'Aline: of Tofield, Alta., . There Was - : a large. artteridened at is•being moved .to the G. T. P:' , Vicar -General Heenan's -funeral Sim- • . 'rho :Grand Trunk Pacific as prepare- . day .at Dundee, . „. ' - • • .. mg to open the line to Saskatoon-. • Mr. 'H . -H. Miller, M, P., and Mr, - Margaret Duncan, an aggd •resident Neil. McCannel, were yesterday • nom-. .ofelyateedowite,ea.e, foetid- deed in bed '. tO by the Liberals of Durham to '• • • .ellRPatrltaMetitistdensprotdi4ivel7al•Hous ..- licnry4arby, of Chatham,. _wile has Joe) Peters.,of.:Wiiidiar, waS fined $5:' been want0 lor a Year-lor stealing' s. liquoi .from the ' ?eve ' Marquette . waday g • end costs for selling cigars on Sun- . caught YeStertlay :al -id Sentenek t•ol. .r, . niCelilYarelateSinSeethiethC, ealftWraelli-Pkrniesrn ' fertile' 'Thieves damaged the organ* at .St. -() ;Gebriel s .Roinan Catholio:. ehlireh, er of Pullarton township, yesterday . Montreal reports thebeen deranged of late,l :• suielde of W. A. . eut as his :hie ., . • . , . cominitted suicide by hanging. He had . Yeunglittiband, aged: 70,, ..-of . March sanity *as of. •e. mild type no alarm - township, . . : .,, • • ' ' . . wasfelt regarding tam. ............ei,..ree.,..,....."--„;,...,„.ereeeee.s..........._ : 2 •• - . ' ' 'Plitstif e president of the C. P, R„ is seriously . Leap . • A. sure Winner. 'Bound to Oatchon. Your dealer will sup* ' •you. If not, write .• direct to 4 . D. 5. Perrin & Co, LONDON LtdCANADA. • egt,441:-Up._ g oney to Loan • •• on Mortgages' of Real Estate at Current Rates All Business :Strictly Confidential Liberal Terms of Repayment ' Loans Completed Quickly Expenses Moderate • Fuli inforsnation gladly given Loan and $avings Co., London, Ont, 444.• t