The Clinton News Record, 1918-2-21, Page 2enerf
9 I) EirTA001111'
!u D 6I0TA<7(1A11
•McTaggart. flrosi.
BA NEERN
a.:ri13'*ir+R.r1 144N1f1N(} IB11141.
WEBS • YR:ANRAc'rri) NOTES
f)IR(:OI1NTEI). ()RAFTS If11` TIVI)
INTI:ItEST ;ALLOW.IW ON . DE-
POSITS aA=L*' NOTES"VI it•
h: T, R $'reR
NOTARY PUBLIC CONY -KT
AN('8it, eir1NAN 11AL, UAL.
ESTATE exit) FIRE 114?+T111
t dNCIC AGENT T REPlitalti`ENT
LNG 14 FIRS INFIi31.ANCLI
COM PANiES,
4r1.i bate
BRYDO YE. •}'•'
tSAfiRIS''rTrR PMLITTTON.
!iOTt', RY PUBLIC', RTC
OM -•- Sloan Block —CLINTO
X. G. t A 111ttiON A.lBt
liA Elie Ele,„SOLICITOR. -:
CONVEYANCER ET(
U I et ufi :t)hi•rt. Street oceoped ,bl
9Ir. Beeper.
io (Jrnt.; rhurslay
end .on any day fur which ap.
L.,riutmruts are wade (Raet
hours from 9 °a m to 6 p'tn
d"gu<ul vault in c.tiuneetion with
tilt office . t)filce open . every
ret•k.dnr 'Mt Hooper will'
make any appoiotmeoti for. Air
t anlereo.:
DR. GUNN
Office cases at his residence, car.
High and Kirk streets.
Dr. J. C. Candler ,
Office Hours: -1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 7.30
to 9.00 p.m, Sundays 12.30 to 1.80
p.m.
Other hours by appointment only.
Office and Residence—Victoria St.
elFenny?. PLL/OTT
Ile/taped Auctioneer for the County,
et fiorni,.
t'nrrespondence I,rninptlr anewerrd
lmmcdrate arrangements can i;a
talkie for Sal, Date et The
Aewe Record Chattel 014 b,
eailingq Phone 18 ea I%7
Charges moderate and ,atiafactioa
euriveme cal
Sole Agent for
D, L. & W. Scranton Coal
and
D. _I. & Lackawanna
Both highest grade of Anthracite
The price will be at the rock bottom,
and all we ask in return is that all
aecounts be paid promptly.
A. .1. HOLLOWAY.
The IIlcKillop Mutual
Fire Iusurano
aonipa,ny
Lied office, Seaforth, Ont.
DIRECTORY :
President, James Connolly, • Goderich;
Vice., James Evans, Beechwood;
Sec. -Treasurer, Thos. E. Flays, Sea-
forth.
• Directors: George McCartney, Sea -
forth; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; J.'
G. Grieve, Walton; Wm. Rin•,, Sea -
forth; M. McEwen, Clinton;; Robert
Ferries, Harloek; John Benneweir,
Brodhagen; Jas. Connolly, Goderich. •
Agents: Alex Leitch,...Cllntoir; J. W.
Yeo, Goderich; ltd. Hinchley, Seaforth;
W. Chesney, Egmondville; R. G, Jar•
much, Brodhagen..
Any money to be paid Le may he
paid to Moorish Clothing Co., Clinton
er at Cutt's Grocery, Goderich. '
-Parties desiring to effect insurance
er transect other business will ,be
promptly attended..to on application to
any of the above officers addressed to
their respective post otfiee. Losses
!repeated by the director who lives
nearest .the scene
CarManitoba.
Oats
To- Mand
Brat and Shorts
.
e
Binder Twine
White Seal Flour
BUG I3I MSIJ
Ready to use dry on your niotatees,
Try it.
Grass and Clover seeds of ailekinds
always on hand,
FOith G1iutow
To Bare out, Shortening,
In substituting a �3135 vegetable
shortening n esip4, 1194711
Witt: xfrgre lents Clio l rmr, Wg kiA
remember that the Vcaetable
jug gee further thanbritter or ardh3-
ariy lard. When the recipe calls tor a
tablespoon of butter use a fount'
three-quarters of n tablespoon' of
�134034PttlA0 4j.oll4�1 ', Yb subatitul;-.
"` rite ori edit t rzi-h ! COP �i3it$el 1ra0 1i18.
fourth less . btoofnat300I' iO,
1
17 you biui obtain stable llia)li)re
fowl'" you0 garden plot 'to depth of .
w6 by .thyes ]aches wit it before
gang 014 9Iit11t
j Azad
1wa3M±d)d141l ti!pM,4t14M41iM4IM140111 17.0.4
y
la
a
(nplW
ko,ldNe k
a l ,4T, ' . .'
p $ ,ester 'value Bina rola tied X
4alI
wo' ie li a,th r$9io ,I. lip 53
1iii the minis 4 Blindr ict of A,nrcler 14
r.,tl o, Oat, Air, 140, OW tlern,u die- h:
co> ted 4a+larlhlnl;—the t tat hi;a 'X
Nmde 04 praisegivrnt to i in Pili, are • la
ht, utero is Int story, in part, ➢i
16
r1 Willman; of your "g
•G,.
• s.
ek.ti)p(if1Til5 Y
and dadd 1 to give them 0 trial.at E."
once, (te 5 bed be SI! fro rl4R fersmnr
time with uiy kidney, and igen,
X cent my chute out to fin Cheat
(about 60 tell• ,) a. d X 4111 p eaees1. 10 i
Worm you tont 41 lona Bland hours
* frit r,:l cf, Pn w, days the polo gw.
fed
had ISIS rue altugetr,rr, To -lin.
1 due ns u'en re ever X d'rl dud. n;y.
kidneys are nctlitt prof oe rc ltv' p1
(l+ull tesfii o*ri stat on reQACHt
togcfho- with Yang seeing et 1t
WW1 Ms,) '
,All tfenloes ,sell Gia Piila ' as 04
oar Moser Rack Gaeron--oo. 15
544'0 box, 6 bates /or ,1250. '
National i+rug $e Chemical Co.
of Canada Limited Toronto 1:
U.,S, Address: Ne•Dra.Co. Inc. M,
4002 Mara at., Buffgio, N.Y.
From -The Middle West
BETWEEN ONTARIO AND BRI•
TISH.COLUMBIA... �.
•/
Items -From Provinces Where Many
Ontario Boys1and Girls Are
Living.
The Winnipeg Council has appropri-
ated $03,600 for. hospitals;
Lieut. Harold Leach, ,of Winnipeg,
has Yvon the Military Cross.
Regina is strongly in favor of
Dominion -wide daylight saving.
H. L. Tweed was re-elected presi-
dent of the Medicine Hat Board of
Trade.
80,000 school children of Winnipeg
will be organized to raise garden
Produce this year.
Constable Gates, of Regina, has been
added to the Blairmore detachment of
R.N.W M.P. •`...
W. G. Baker has been elected. presi-
dent of the Moose Jaw branch of the
Saskatchewan Labor Representation
League.
David Wright, for 40 years a resi-
dent of Emerson, Man., died recently.
He had been mayor, custom collector
and registrar of titles'•
Seven hundred application's have
been received from returned soldiers
at the Winnipeg office of the Great
War Veterans' Association.
It is reported that the enforcing of
the Military Service Act has great-
ly increased the work of the Royal
North-west Mounted Police.
R. C. I•Ienders, M.P., has again
been elected president of the Mani-
toba Grain Growers. J. S. Wood re-
fused election` as lice -president..;
'Five hundred soldiers of the first
Saskatchewan depot battalion will be
quartered in the Moose Jaw armoury.
in the course of the next few weeks,
Liquor fines totalling $775 were
imposed in Brandon courts in .one
week, 'according to a report received
by Rev. J. N. 11fcLean, administrator
of the Temperance Act.
Forty school teachers are badly
needed in Manitoba, is the report of
Mr. A. W. Jones, head of the y-1beach-
ers' bureau,
The number of pupils enrolled i11.
the Edmonton Public Schools is 8;834.
6,200 children were tared for in the.
Mothers' Association day nursery -dur-
ing 1917.
An army medical board will be "es-
nb1ished 1neEdinon1on to relieve the
congestion in Calgary.
Government 'officials are buying
100,090 bushels of seed oats for- the
(vest' They will be placed in -the
Government elevators .at Calgary and
Moose Jaw. -
M,. S. L ougheed and E. N. Minden -
aid, two young graduates of the Mani-
toba Medical College, have r'eoeivecl
commissions as lieutenants in the Can-
adian Army Medical Corps.
At a meeting of the Regina local
of the Grain Growers' Association ;a
resolution was passed declaring in
favor of a survey of the boys of High
school age in ,the province -with a
view to arranging :for such boys to
help • seed and harvest this year's
prop.
Cream cheese ••mixed with chili ]n
sauce and served on lettuce leaves
refries a gad salad,
A4ADIA S RAID EN F Y TRENCHES
AND INFLICT CONSIDERABLE LOSSE$
Prisoners and M 'chine Guns Captured, Trench. Nottars PCS,'
troyed'and Ma11y,,(iieglmtna Filled,
A despatch from London says:• --
Canadian troo;is.have carried out two
successful raids in which they cap-
tured prisoners end inflicted looses
0parl the enemy, the official etate;nent
from British headquarters in France.
and Belgium says;
"In all atteele,Wedneszlay morning,
northwest of Passehendaele, in the
Ypres nectar, German troops temper -
,1 i1y. occupied two British posts. The
British later drove: the Germtins out
in e eoualtt;r-attack;”
The statenierit. reads:
"In a successful raid --south-east
of J•largicourt' reported .Wednesday
morning, eatrieci out by the Canad-
ians, in addition to 18 prisoner's, two
machine,.guns' were brought back to
our lines. Many Germans were killed
in fighting above ground and four
trench mortars were destroyed.
Seventeen dugouts in the enemy's
first line and others in his support
line whose occupants refused to come
when _summoned, were bombed. The
easulaties incurred by the 1'aiding.
Pal'ty were slight and all wero brought
in. Another successful `yaad was ear-
ried out Tuesday night by Canadians
in the neighborhood of Bill 70, north
of Leno, Considerable opposition
was encountered, iii • spite of which
six prrsoliers and a machine -jun were
•captured, Our casualties again were
smell.
A later despatch says!—The fol-
lowing official statement was issued
by the War Office Thursday evening:
" "Early Thurlld d ,1 morning the
enemy's trenches at Lens again ware
raided: successfully by the Canadian
troops. A number of Germans were
killed and a -few prisoner's and two
machine-guns Wore eaptured. The
raiding party ,returned to our lines
withod£ loss.
"Several 'other prisoners were
brought in during the' day' by our
patrols. On the southern portion of
our front there Was -some hostile ar-
tillery activity to -day in the neigh-
borhooe of• the Souchez River."
FARM LABOR
NOT CONSCRIPTED
But Inventory of Man -Power of
Dominion Will be Taken
At' Once.
A despatch from Ottawa says: Sub-
sequent to a sitting of the Cabinet
Council the Government gave out an
announcement as to its immediate
policy in regard to labor. The Gov-
ernment will not conscript men for
farm labor under the :Military Service
Act, but will take immediate steps to
secure, a registration and inventory of
the classification' of the industries of
man -power of the Dominion. There
will be no importation of coolie labor
at present, to which exception is tak-
en by the labor men, but. this matter
may be given further consideration at
a later date. No'decision has been
reached in regard to the conscription
of alienlebor.
MUCH WESTERN LAND
READY FOR SOWING.
A 'despatch from Regina, Sask.,
says: The area of land prepared in
the Fall of 1917, in Saskatchewan, ow-
ing to open weather experienced in
WORLD'S STRA C EST CITY.
Consists or Wooden Ilute on Wheels—
' - Is Moved to Huron's Ice. •
Tho most curious of cities consists
of wooden huts on wheels, to the num-
ber of about one hundred and thirty,
which, when the season arrives, are
rolled on to the ice on Saginaw Bay,
Lake -Huron. The population of this
city without a name is about five hun-
dred. Each but is fitted with cooking
utensils, hammocks, and a stove, and
is liccupied by three men, whose busi-
ness on the ice is to follow a; peculiar
method of fishing. • ""
In the 'centre -of each .hut a hole,
about a yard - squa ;e, is dug to the
water. ' One' of the fishermen . then
takes a live fish of the herring tribe,
and after fastening -it to a piece of --
pack -thread drops- it into the water.
The fish dashes away as swift as an
arrow until it is pulled up by the
,thread, when it returns towards the
]role followed by a host of pike and
other fish desirous of feasting on the
dainty morseL Beside the hole stand
the fishermen, harpoon in hand, wait-
ing the arrival of the pursuers, who
are received with thrusts of the four
or five -pronged instrument, which
rarely fails to bring � p some writhing
Victims,
Some huts can show two hundred or
more of fine fish at the end of the
November, was greatly 1 advance of •day's work. The most weird appear -
that prepared 'during the previous• ante of this city is at night, when the
Fall• A conservative estimate based fishermen prosecute the work by the
on reports from the staff of crop Or- light,of torches, which, as is well
respondents places the amount of Fall known, attract fish without the aid of
plowing, at fifty per cent. increase on the herring bait. The flaming torches
and the shadowstbe men leaning
the area. Fall plowed in 1916. The a of t 1 e a g
over the holes make astrange specta-
cle. If fish are not abundant in the
spot first ehosen the hut is wheeled to
another site.
ROYAL PALACES FOR
NATIONAL USE.
A despatch from London says: King
George, the Daily News says, has of-
fered three Royal palaces for national
user They are Balmoral Castle, Buck-
ingham Palace, and 3Censington Pal-
ace, for public offices. The Govern-
ment has net taken any action on the
offer.
Balmoral is near Perth, Scotland,
and is the Scottish Highland resi-
dence of the British Royal family,
Buckingham Palace and Kensington
area under Summer fallow prepared in
1917 for the 1918 crop, as shown by
the Dominion census return, also
shows a big increase above the area
estimated by the Provincial Depart-
ment of Agriculture. The total
amount of land prepared during 1917.
for the 1918 crop is estimated to be
6,184,619 acres.
CANADA'S ARMY STRONGER
IN MEN AND MATERIALS.
A despatch from Canadian Army
Headquarters says: After thuee and a
half years of war Canada in the field
is to march on to victory stronger than.
ever before,
The Dominion's fighting -strength,
both in meta and in guns, is constantly
increasing. Canada is entering upon Palace are in- London. Since 1837
the Spring campaign stronger in men, Buckilrigham Palace 11as been the Lon -
material and guns than at any time dole residence of the sovereign. It is
since the mobilization at •Valcartier at the western end of St. Janes' Park,
marked the creation of the historic Kensington Palace, on the west side
First Division, and is holding a of Kensington Gardens, was erected
larger front than ever before. in 1089-91.
The late Queen Victoria and Queen
NEARLY $300,000,000 Mary were both born in Kensington
FOR AEROPLANE BOMBS. Palace,
A despatch from Washington says: NORWAY HAS LOST
The principal items for the army in 714 SLIPS DURING' WAR.
the billion -dollar urgent deficiency ap-
propriation
bili favorably reported to
the House on Thursday include $277,-
782,000 for bombs for aeroplane, $100,-
000,000 for quat'termaster storage
plants on the sea coast and at interior
points, and $81,000,000 for mountain,
field, siege and]' other artillery, h3 addi-
tior�t to the billion dollars already spent
A. despatch from London says: The
Norwegian Legation in London an-
nounces that from the outbreak of the
war to the end of January, 1918, Nor-
way has lost 714 vessels of 1,050,583
gross tons. Seamen to the number of
883 lost their lives through the sink -
for' ordnance and. contract authorize- sink-
ing of thenhese vessels.
Nor -
Bons for $779,000;000 additional. wring the same period b3 Nor-
wegian vessels, With more than 700
crew, were posted ns missing. About
RETURNED SOLDIERS two-thirds of these are war losses.
FOR CANADIAN FARMS.
A despatch from Ottawa says: Re- GERMANS STILL DEPORT
turned soldiers who have had experi- - BELGIAN WORKERS.
once as farmers in Canada will eon- -
A`despatcl1 Prom Havre says: De-
poetatioe of Belgians by the Germaes
4011)nte their share to increased- pro-
duction during the'colning Summer, A lady --•No, 2, per ton, car lots, $1.1.60 to
transport whish arrived] at Canadian are oontmein despite the rotesta- 516,6e, I �ILH'4 -L 1+'inest westarlta, 2190;
1 g, pp do., linear aasterns, 3:LIc. Bolter--
., 'What the British Found on Way to Jerusalem.
As the British advanced in Palestine they found that the wells had
been destroyed. .Since such an outrage is forbidden by the religion of the
Orthodox Turks, the presumption is that the well"shown in the above photo-
graph was destroyed by the Germans who were with the Turkish army.
This well was at Bersheba and was blown up with a high explosive,
"t.
Markets Oats—No. 2 C.W., SS90; N'o, 3 C.W..
6590; extra No. 1 feed, Sse; No. 1 feed,
8194; No. 9 Peed, 759c, Darlay—No, 3
C,W„ $1.80; No. 4 C.W. $1.66• refected
$1,8,1;. Peed, SNI -o8,12
1.88. Flo-i—No.6 i N.W.C„
Breadstuffs noC ryuoted; ' No, 2 C,W., $8.281; No. 3
Toronto Feb. 10—\Ianitaba wheatr C•�Y., $3.088.
No. 1 Norihern, $2,333; No, 2, do„.$2.201;
No, 3, do., $2,1730 No. 4 wheat, $2.1031 United States Markets
in store Fort William, including 290 '`
taM.anitoba oats—No. 2 C.lv., 889o;,, No.
3 C,W„ 861c; extra No. 1 feed, 85c; 'No.'
1 POetl 8190, In store Fort
William.
American ''corn—No, 3 yellow, kiln
dried, $1.90; track Toronto.
Ontario oats—No, 2 white, 93 to 94o;
No. 3 white, 92 to 93o, according 00
freights Outside.
Ontario wheat No. 2 Winter, Per car
lot, $2.22; basis fu store Montreal. Toronto, Feb. 19—Lrxtra choice heavy
Peas No. 2, $3.70, to $8,80, according steers, $11.26 to $11.90; do„ good heavy,
to tu•lighls ltingde.
Tittrley—lt3ulting;'$1.69to $1.61, az. $10,60 00 $11; butchers' cattle, choice,
$10.76 to $Yi• do. nod 10. 0•
ding do., medium, $9,60 to $975• do coin.
Minneapolis, Feb. 19—Corn—No. 3
Yellow. 11.70 to 61,76. Oats—No. 3
white, 848 to 959c. Flour -Unchanged,
Bran—$32.60.
Duluth, Feb, 19-Linseed—$3.59 to
$3.71; to arrive, 33,60; May, 33.59
asked; July, $3.54 asked; October,
93.223, nominal.
Live Stock Markets
cording to freights outside, , good, $ 25 to $10.60,
Buckwheat—U.68 to 01.66, actor S t S 60•
to freights outside, mon, $ o $ butchers bulls,
Bye --No. 2, 31.93 to $2, according to ohoice, $9,60 to $10; do„ good balls,
freights outside: $8.76 to $9,i,,, do„ medium hulls, $7.00 to
. Manitoba flour. -••War Cluallty, 311.10, 8; da„' rough Uu71a, $6.36 to. $8.36;
now Bags, Toronto, butchers' cows, choice, $0.60 to $10;
Ontarlo flour—War quail Cy, $10.00, tlo., good 38.50 to 39; do,, mediuirb
new bags, Toronto and 'Montreal $7,16 to $8; stockers, 97.50 to 91.50;
freights, prompt shipment.
feeders, 39 to 310; canners and cutters,
Mlllreed—Car lots, delivered Montreal 05.70 to 36,26; milkers, good to choice,
freights, hags included—Bran, per ton, 190 to $140; do„ cam. and mad„ $d6 to
985; shorts, Per toil $90; middlings, 80; springers. $90 to 3140; light ewes,
white, Per ton, 140 to 346; good- 'geed 113.60 Lo 314,50; sheep. heavy, $0 to
Rout per bag $8.40.7.25: yearlings, $11,76 to $12,766;
Flay—No. '1, erton, $16 to 517; lambs, $18 to $18.76; calves, good to
mixed, $13 to $16, track Toronto.
Straw—Car lots, per ton, 58.50 to. 39,
track Toronto.
country Produce—Wholesale
Butter—Creamery, solids, per lb, 46
to 46c; prints, per ib, 46 to 403e; dairy,
130rlb,37toOle.
Eggs—Fresh gathered eggs, 60 to 520;
new laid, 65c.
Dressed pnultl•y--011icikens. 26 to 20c;'
fowl, 23 to 26a; ducks, 23 to 24c; geese,
1 to 20; turkey, 28 to 300,
Potatoes --Wholesalers are paying to /o dy,�t,,
glowers and country shippers, for first- @lSYa AlyA9ll9f1i12!
first -
Mass stock, f.o.b. outstdo points, 52.26
to 32,35 for Delawares, and $2 to 32,30
for Ontarios.
Whoeseler's arc selling to the retail
trade at the following prices:—
Cheese—New, large, 23 to 283e; twins,
283 00 229c; early cheese, 265 to 26e;
largo twin, 26 to Mc.
Butter --•Fresh dairy, choice, 38 to 090•
oamet•J prints, 90 to GUc; solids, 4't”
choico,'116 to $16.75; hogs, fed and
watered, $18.76; do., weighed off cars,
$19; do., f o.b., 917.75.
Montreal, Feb. 10—Choice steers,
310.60 to $11,26; 'good steers, .$8.60- to
$10; choice butchers' cows, 39 to 39.50•
good cows, 38 to 33.76; ntedlpm. 36.60
to 37.50; choice butchers' bulls, $0 to
10;- good bulls, 33.2510 $9,50; medium,
$8260 to $S; sheen, 410'to 912.50; lambs,
$14 to 310; canons .cattle, 6.60 to 6;
se act (togs, off cars, $19.70. $ $ '
cr
to 43e, Greater Than Production by
Margarine -20 t0.32e.
Eggs—New laid, in cartons, 00 to 050; Britain and United States.
No. 1 storage, 40 to 500; select storage,
52 to sat:. A despatch from Washington, D.C.,
Dressed pnullry—Spring chickens. 30
to 113c: milk -fed chickens, 32 to 360; Says: Ship tonnage' sunk by 'subma-
fowl 20 to 30e; turkeys•. 86 to 400; 1•ines in 1917 was nearly three times
•
000 TONNAGE
BANISH SCROFULA
Hood's .Seraaperllln elnermss the
2lood, akin Troubtso VArdah,
. Scrofuis, eruptions on the face
and body are both •annoying and
disfiguring. The eomplexion would
6e perfect if they were not present!
This disease shows itself in abler
ways, as bunches in the neck, in
-
timed eyelids, sore ears, wasting of
the /inmales, a form of dyspepsigfc'.
and general debility,
Asir your druggist for Hood's
Sarsaparilla, This great medicine
oomplotely eradicates scrofula. It
purifies and enriches the blood, re-
moves humors, and builds up .the
whole'system,
Scrofula is either inherited or ac-
quired, . Better. be stirs you are
quite free from it, Get Hood's Sar -
Sewall). and begin taking it 1 -,day.
last year generally are reckoned at
6,000,000 tons.
While complete figures on con•
stliuction in Japan Italy, France, and
other nations in 1917 are not yet
available, officials here do not believe
their aggregate equalled the tonal of
the United States. If that is the cas�$�
submarine sinkings more than doubled
all new tonnage produced,
Both American and British offi-
cials expect a very diefl'rent story in
1018, however. The United States ..
and Great Britain are speeding up
their building programmes, and naval
officials in both countries have cenfi.
dently predicted that the subrrlarine
will be curbed this Summer. Seere-
tary Daniels believes that effectual
results will -be obtained in the early
Summer.
U. S. LOANS' TO ITALY
ANOTHER $50,000,000.
A despatch from Washington, D.C.,
says; An additional $50,000,000
placed to the credit of Italy by`Secre-
tary McAdoo, brings the total of
American loans to that country to
$650,000,000, and the total of Ameri
can credits to the . allies to $4,734,400,-
000.
H t n
e ss a�Record
CLINTON, ONTARIO.
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faith, be accompanied by the name of
LOST IN 1917Thewi1ter.
Destruction Was Three Times
ducks, Opting, 27 la 300., geese, 27 to
280. as great as the total of production in
Live poultry--Tio•keys, 30e; spring the United States and Great Britain
eliceees, ib, 22 to 26c; hens, .3 to 2Sa;
duelist. Spring, 25c; goose 15 to 17c, daring the year.
Honey --Strained, tips, 23's and. 6•s, t
20 to 22e per lb; 10's, 22c; 60's, 20e. This tvae disclosed by the annowice-
13etvt5-Canatk!an, hand-plcited, bush, hent of Andrew Bonar Law, Chancel -
$3 to $S.2u: inluarted, hand -lacked, Bur- for of the Exchequer in the British
ma or Indian, $0,76 to $7; . apan, $S to
$3.26; Liman, rs3 to Inc..House of Confinons, that Great Britain
"Potataos--Delnwores, bag, $2.36 to produced only 1,163,474 tons of ship -
$.,3n: ontartus, bag, $3.10 to 22.25,„.ping last year, The output in the
Provisions—W1tolesale United States was 901,223 tons, Inak-
34,;trdo.,,tlhea'y 28 to 27c;�'cooi ed, X44 to O0 607owhiletal ns nkfli sob37 submarines
nnage of
lic; rolls, 20 to 300; breakfast bacon, '• ' g y
40 to 420; backs, nlain'48 to 440; bone-
less, 46 lo 400.
t'ured meitts--l.,ong clear bacon, 23 .to
30c; ''less bellies, 27 to 230.
Lard—luso lard, tier008, 280 to 293e;
tubs, 20 to 'ilio; trails, 293 to 2930;
compound, tier0ee, 253 to 25e; tubs, 269
t0 ,204c; palls; 80 to 2510,
seontireal Markets
91a101eal Feb, 39 Oats- Camtdial1,
Western, Nn 3, 91,08 extra No. 1 feed,
$'1 03;. No. ' local -white, 91,82; No. 8
local white, 31,01; No, 4 meal svelte,
91. !Nola—'N.W standard grade, 310.70
to 310,50. tolled oats --Bags, 00 lbs,
95.40. Brun, 936. Shorts, 340. Mid-
dlings. $48 to 360. Mouillie, $68, to $00...
port several days ago brought home a tion to the contrary by the Cerman C,hnleost creanrer•y,'•iO3,, to 6001 seconds,
9S3 in 490• 19gg1--.4111, n8 to OUo;
large Harty of soldiers alio are classf- authorities: Within the past few -Ocie, t<d r,2 tr 644; Na, 1 atoctc;.60 to
fied as "experienced farmers" The weeks the' Germans have carried off 52(No l stock. •16 to '170. I;olatoos--
ajority belong to Wester» Canada. 12,700 persons from the town of .Lo- Psi, ing, car lots, 32,16 to $2,25.
Otltei' large hatches of returned farm- lceren, in East Flanders and put them W0uaipeg Grain
ors 410 019004Cd t0 arrivelater alt, On military work 011 rite 1vea1:er11 front, ,a Winnipeg,, Pelt, 13—Cash ;noes:--
.
I
5 Y li rr_
A,, 0. •N1Y•Ii1py7STN15 6UhJK �CtRl'AINI.y
Y0U RE Ts' MNC7 To POT oVstz. 1 .-,,w--.--
Lvli'ADOU7 G4ING coy Yv 3UPPUR.
..
fil OLIV 011. AOCliegL0YYe
kOSE' .00`ica)~XPSCY ma
w« - "Tb PALL Fog.
G. E. HALL,- 191. R. CLARK,
• Editor,
Proprietor.
—TIME TAI4LI4.—
Tiains will arrive at and depart
from Clinton Station as follows:
BUFFALO AND GOD,t;RIC14 DIV.
Going East, depart 7.33 a.m.
" 41
" 2.68 p.m.
Going West,.ar. 11.10, dp. 11.17 a.m.
" ar. 6.58, dp. 6.45 p.m.
" depart 11.18 p.m.
LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DM:
Going South, ar. 7.83, dp. 7,60 p.m.
Going"North, depart .6.40 p.m,
There isn't a member of the family need suffer from indigestion, sick
headaches, -biliousness, fermented stomach, etc., of he or she will take
Chamberlain's Stomach and L' ive8 Tablets. They cleanse the stomach
and bowels and stimulate the liver to healthy activity and tone up the
whole system. :]take 0710 at night and you're RIGHT in the morning.
All drotSistt, 29e, or by mail from Cbantberlain Mo lain'
d o Company, Toronto. 16
tri 130C,11 CSA ' ibkli,te 1312.117,1es.
11
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