The Clinton News Record, 1915-11-04, Page 2.+rte
f . D. 11IeTAGGA,RY
M. D. MOTAGGART
lcTaart .Bros
- RAN IiEl1S---
A OENFAAL BANKING BUM.
NESS TRANSACTED, NOTES
SCOIJNTED, DRAFTS ISSUED
EST ALLOWE6) ON DE -
SALE NOTES
- 1I. 1'. RANCE
ARY P'UBLJO. CONVEY
Deft FINANCIAL, STATE-ANDREAL FIRE INSUR-
ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT-
ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANIES.
DIVISION COURT ,CFFICII,
CLINTON,
W. 11RYDONE, ,
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR.
NOTARY PUBLIC, ETO.
Office- Sloan Block-CLINTON
M. G. CAMERON K.C.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,
CONVEYANCER, ETC.
Office on Albert Street oecupcd by
Mr. Hooper..
In Clinton -;;:very Thursday,
-arid on any day for which ap-
pointments are made. Office
hours from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
A good vault in connection with
the office. Office open every
week -day. Mr. Hooper will
make any appointments for Mr.
Cameron. •
CHARLES B. DALE.
Conveyancer, Notary Public,
Commissioner, Etc.
AEA 1, ESTATE and INtSURANCE
Issuer of Marriage Licenses
fiURoN STREET, - CLINTON
inns. GUNN S GANDIEB
Dr, W. Gunn, L.R.O.P., L.R.
C.S., Edin.
Dr. J. 0, Gaudier, B.A., M.B.
Ofr'ice-Ontario St., Clinton. Night
calls at residence, Rattenbury St.,
or at Hospital
DR. J. W. SHAW
-OFFICE.
RATTENBURY ST. EAST,,
-CLINTON
LIR. C. W. TIIOMf SON
Pl3SYIOiAN, 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 -
in Grown and Bridge
dilate of C.O.D.S.,
ad 11.0.D, B., To.
ys from May to
er.
ELLIOTT
loneer for the County
of Huron.
co promptly answered.
arrangements can be
for Saler Data at The
News -Record, Clinton, or by
Balling Phone Mon 157. •
Charges moderate and satisfaction
guaranteed. ,.
The NTcKillop J utnal
`e Tnsuranee Company
Head office, Seafo7'th, Ont.
DIRECTORY
Officers:
J. B. McLean, Sea•forth, President; J. Con-
nolly, Goderioh Vice -President; Thos E.
Hays. Soatorth. Seo.-Treas.
Direotore, D. F. McGregor, Seaforth• J.
G. Grieve, Winthrop; Wm. Rina sea
�„ forth, JohnBennewole, Dublin; J. Evans,
Becehwood; A McEwen, Bruceaeld J. b.
McLean, Se,forth; J. Connolly, Godericba.
Robert Ferris, Harlook.
Agents: Ed. Hinchloy, Seaforth; W.
Oheeney, Egmondvllle: J. W. Yeo; Holmes.
vire; ales Leitch, Clinton; R. S. Jar.
math. Brodhagen.
Any money to bowed in may be paid to
Morrish Clothing Co„ Clinton, or:atCutt'e
Grocery, Goderich.
Parties desirous to effect insurance or
neaet'other business will be promptly
ended to on applioatton to any of tate
ore officers .addressed fo their reepeot•
e poetroficos. I:oeees inspected by the
trector who lives nearest the aeons,
ORA
-TIME TABLE.'
Trains will arrive at and depart
from Clinton Station as follows:,
rTy27.'1!,�"�O"t1ND GOD,ERICR DIV.
Going East, depart 7.33 a.m.
I 41 11 .1 It3. i8 pan.
3.15 pan.
Going West, ar. 11.00, dp. 11.07 a.m.'
a " depart 1.35 p.m.
" " ar 0,32, dp. 6.45 p.m.
r<. " departs _-11.18 p.m.
LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV,
{" 11 South, ar. 7.33, dp. 8.05 pan.
departs 4.15 p.m,
North, ar. 10.30, dp 11.00 am,
" departs..,
Fertilizer
We carry :a Complete Stock of
Stone's Natural Fertilizer. NO
better on the Market:
.lay
We pay at all seasons the highest
market prices for Hay for baling:
Seeds,
American Feed ( iiia, Red Clo-
ver, AIisilre, Timothy and Alfalfa„
FORD & McLEOD
CLIN;PON.
ALL 'KINDS OF
COAL, WOOED,
TILE BRICK
TO ORDER.
A11 kinds of Coal on hand:
CHESTNUT son COAL
STOVE FtTRNACF CANNEL COAL
BLACKSMITHS COKE WOOD
4% In,, 3 in and 4 in. Tile of the
Best Quality.
ARTHUR FORBES
Opposite the G. T. R. Station.
Phone 89.
How is Your
Cutlery
Supply ?
Yon know that Jewelry Store
Cutlery is out of the corn -
:non class. At least, OURS
is
It carries a distinctiveness-
' an air of superiority, that
Comes from being made with
the greatest care and ut-
most skill from the highest -
priced materials.
If you can use some of this
Cutlery in your home, you
will be proud of it every
time you see it on the table.
Carvers, eased, $3:00 up.
Knives, Forks and Spoons,
$I.00 doz. up.
Knives and Forks, steel, white
handles, $3.00 doz. up.
Let us show you our Cutlery
line, Let us tell you more
about why it is the most
desirable that you can put
your money into.
W. R. COUNTER
JEWELER and ISSUER of
MARIIIAGE LICENSES.
NEWS -RECORD'S NEW
CLUBBING RATES FOR 1915
143ERLIF.3.
Newe•Itecord and Man h Empire
News -Record and Globe: 1.68
Neweltoaord and'Family Iteratd• and
Weekly Star ......................... 1.55
News -Record and Canadian
Countryman 150
Newe•Record and Weekly dun ,t,d5
Newe-Record and Farmer's Advocate2,35
ewwe•Record and Farm hDairy 1.85.
Newe-Record and Canadian Farm 1.85
News -Record and Weekly- Witness .,., 1.05
Newe•Record and Northern Meaeenger 1.68
Newelteeord and Free Press.,4.st
bewa•Itecord and Advertiser ...."-,.1.81
News -Record and Saturday Night„ 3,30
News -Record and Youth's Companion 3.23
Newe•Record and Fruit Grower and
Farmer . ........ ......... .. . 1..75
MONTHLIES,
Neii-e-Record end Canadian Sparta,
Neavefecord"and Lippincotte Maga.
sine , .,_, 3.25
DAILIES,
News -Record and World ...............83.35
News -Record and Globe
News -Record and Mall & - Tmplre 3 60
Newadtecord'.and Advertiser , 2,85
News -Record and Morning Free Frees, 3.35
News -Record and -Evening Free Press. 2.8.1
News -Record. and Toronto .Star. , 2.85.
Newe•Record. and Toronto News ,. . 2,85
1f what you want fe dot in this Het lei
nr know. about {t. We can supply yen at
lees than it would cost you to goad direct
In remitting please do so by Post.enka
Order Postal Note, Exprese Order er Refk
iatered letter and nddrees,
W. J. MITCHELL,
Publisher News -Record
CLINTON, ONTARIO;,
Cling 'News -Record
CLINTON, -. ONTARIO
Terms of subscription -$I per year,
in advance; $1.50 may, be charged
if not so paid. No paper diseon
tinned until all arrears are paid,
unless at the option of the pub.
lisher. The date to which ever,
eubscriptioo is paid is denoted 00
the label,
Advertising Rates -- Transient ad.
vertisements,, 10 dente per non.
pareil lino for &rat insertion ,and
4 cents per lino for each cube .
quent insertion, Small advertise
ments not to exceed one inch,.
ouch as "Lost,': "Strayed,". or
"Stolen," etc., inserted once for
35 cents, and each subsequent in..
section 10 cents.
Communications intended_ for puh•
lioation must, as a guarantee of
good faith, be accompanied by the
mine of the writer,
W. 1. MITCHELL,,
Editor and Propr,,letor,,
ills
FORTIS KIDNEYS
What They' Cured
Here's the remarkable experience of
a Nova Seotian:-
"I was' once a terrible sufferer with
kidney and bladder troubles, and at
tithes I would. lose the use. of -my legs,
and could net go away from home with-
out some one with -tae. I was treated
by different doctors for 3 years, and only
got temporary relief. My son advised
me to take Gin Pills, and after taking the
first 2 or 3 doses I got relief. I continu-
ed to take them until I got completely
cured. I owe my life to Gin Pills.
Yours vetyttnly„
18 P. M. I{EM83ON
Port Medway, 18. S.
CIN PII,r,S are adc, a box or 6 .Coxes for
82,60 at allthvggists, Sample treatment free
if requested.
,National bona 3 Chemical Co. er Canada
➢,i,uitod,'Toronto ,
The Silver Lining.
War does not make all men blood-
thirsty. On the banks of the Yser in
Belgium where there has been such
fierce fighting, the •ambulance men one
day found a young German badly
wounded; and 'in the midst of the.
bursting 'shells they stopped to scrib-
ble a line describing what they had
seen and heard, and pinned it on the
blanket that enveloped him.
When he reached the improvised'
hospital, the nurses read the blood-
stained sheet of packing paper, and
one or two brushed away tears as
they did so. It bore these words: "He
saved the lives of seven' British sol-
diers." It is good to know that, ten-
derly cared for by an English doctor,
he eventually recovered.
PURE essence of fine
soap in flakes ---and
most economical of all
washing preparations ---
dissolves readily in hot
water, forming a smooth,
cream -like lather that can-
notinjur ethefi lmiest fabrics
or the daintiesthands, LUX
preserves the original soft-
ness and fleeciness of all
woollen garments. TryLUX,
At all grocers 10c.
15
Made in Canada by Lever
Brothers Limited, Toronto
Nearly everyon e' has.
ripping, tearing headaches
at times. Disordered stom-
ach-einggish liver dues it.
Cheer un I lore's the real
relief -Chamberlain's
Stomach and Liver Tablets,
They put the stomach and bowels right.
All druggists, 26c„ or by mail from 9
Chamberlain Medicine Co., Toronto
There is a
Cold Day Coming
Whv not prepare for it by
ordering your winter supply
of Lehigh Valley Coal. None
better in the world.
House Phone
plllee Phone 40.
A. Jr, HOLLOWAY
THE CH11.013EN
OF TO -DAY
just as they are -in their in
door play, or at their outdoor
play -they are constantly el
tering ternptati,.,os for tha.
KOii,-..:f7AK,
Let it ket•j.,them l.,r
they are new
Let it keep many othr hr.!,
penings that aro a/s.iii ri'e •
pleasure to you.
BROWNIES, 52 TO $11;
KODAKS, $7 TO $25,
Also full stock of Films end,
Supplies. We do Developing
and Printing. Remember ths
place:
RUM..
E
•406.191112111011.9.1.11,34 ..14001.P.11.1
Race .Hatred and Prejudicerbngnbe
Peace Will Come to the World
Creator'
When Men Will Walk in the
s Paths.
"And many people shall go and say,
Come ye and let us go ,up to the
mountain of the lord, to the house of
tie God of Jacob, and He will teach
us of His ways and we will walk in
His paths and they shaII beat
their swords into ploughshares and
their spears into pruning hooks. Na-
tion shall not lift up sword ;against
nation, neither shall they learn war
any more." -Isaiah ii., 3 and 4.
The world is still not conver't'ed to
the teaching's of the Lord. It has sot
yet learned to walk in His paths.
Therefore, nation is still lifting up
sword against nation and the art of
wart is still moot flourishing. • Men
are astonished, nay, amazed, that in
the year 1915 the peoples that are
standing on the height of so-called
civilization me decimating one an-
other. Some have, accordingly, ques-
tioned the value of religion and have
despaired of its influence, and have
pessimistically' given up hope that
peace would ever come to the world.
There 15 an intimate connection be-
tween true religion and world peace;
Religion seeks to convert the human
heart. It aspires to turn the natural
man into the spiritual man. The law
of nature is the law of strife. And
the law of the spirit, when it shall
triumph and be written in men's
hearts, will be the law of peace. The
process must -necessarily be slow. But
slow as it is
a
So-caIIecr civilization has, to a great 1
extent, to do with the mind and not w
the heart. The world grows in knowl- o
edge, in power over nature, in scien- p
tific use of nature's forces for man's e
purposes. But if the purposes be evil s
the knowledge only increases the c
power for evil.
Religion aims at teaching men that
God is their Creator and Father, and, p
therefore, that the unity of their Hu-
manity should overthadow their dif-
ferences of.raee and nationality. In
a perfect democracy,made up of all
sorts of races and based on the rights
of men, this .ideal will be realized;
, Religion is an eminently practical
thing. It plants the love of the alien
in the hearts of men instead of hate
and it makes justice superior to inter-
est, The natural man, driven by his
prejudice or his selfishness, fights.
Though it must be said, men also
fight for great moral ideas, and there
is even a worse thing than war, which
is humanity's sin writ large. When a
nation prefers the comfort of its skinand the integrity of its pocketbook to
any consideration of freedom and jus-
tice, and would rather do anything
than fight, it becomes cowardly and
degenerate.
Worse Things Than Death.
War, will, therefore, not be ended
because of the horrors of it and the
softening_ of men. It should not be
ended that way, because there are
worse things than death. War will
not be ended in the world merely by
the stronger crushing the weak. The
passion for justice will always revive
the weak for renewed effort until it
triumphs in human hearts,
Peace, will come to the world when
men will have learned of the ways of
the Eternal, and will walk in His
paths; when every bit of race hatred.
nd prejudice shall be destroyed, and
when men will have become so merel-
y cultured that it will be instinctive
ith them to prefer the right to their
wn profit. The world, with all its
resent brutalities, is better than it
ver was. The kingdom of God is
lowly, to be sure, but nevertheless
ertainly growing in the midst of
en. Religion is the root of the tree
that will eventually bear the fruit of
eace.-Rev, Samuel Schulman, D.A.
We Must Not Lose Hope.
THE ROMANCE OF
1001 HARD" WHEAT
HOW THE WAR IHAS BROUGHT
SUPREMACY TO CANADA.
The Dominion is Largest Wheat
Shipping Country in
the World.
No other single article of food has
so much importance for civilized
races as has wheat, and in war time
when a country's food is in clanger
the chief anxiety turns on the wheat
supply. •Bread is,.one of the main
items of food for the bulk of the peo-
ple and wheat. products of one kind
or another enter into the diet of prac-
tically every white person, says a
writer in the New York Sun, 1 t
The United Kingdom is the great- p
est buyer of wheat in the world and i
any serious rise in the prices of h
wheat, •flour and bread means great q
distress for the millions who hover
near the 'poverty line. It might be
said that practically every household
would feel the extra expenditure.
As a result of this the efforts of
of the mother country's needs. It
makes her the largest wheat shipping
country in the world and has brought the gun
to her activities that are unprece- what h'
dented.
os
The Romance of Canada t
then th
as a wheat country is one of fasc
tion. Aud fm•ther romance lies
the transportation problem of get
No, 1 hard from the Peace River,
over the 5,000 miles of blossom
Prairie and briny deep, to its lest
tion, which, like as not, is Liverpo
When Canada woke up and fo
she had the biggest falls in the w
at Niagara she had proved not
except her hack. But when to -
she can confidently assert that in F
William and Port Arthur she fro
the world's greatest grain port,
an elevator capacity of 43,250
bushels, she has proved her wo
For she made that port herself out
raw backwoods and concrete.
During the 1913 season of navi
ion 222,544,590 bushels of gr
issued
quality
T
to prot
the wh
and sol
And
is abou
of its ,
there w
big an
to load
hub nal
Lake 51
The 1
be slat
grain, ct
differen
or five
the stria
Norther
vator is
grade a
Iargest
bushel
orders ti
the Kee
or two,
shipper
money
time of
anythin
importa
traffic i -
by the
record
bushels
ed by 9
or an a
day.
Vesse
and ove
thousan
30 cent -
smaller
The av
in 1913
Here
in figure
on one c
ter a bi
getting
by sect
The -
wharf f
like a
terra c.
to play
ina- and the
in as per
ting and par
say, the ba•
ing into the
ina- into the
ol. And
untl 1or God
orad Port Co
ling' consign
day afterwa
ort will car
Ids oceang
Witlt the Ger
000 these,
rth, ads of
of done nit
And:
nlands
only tw
ur- farmer
for i the hold
f
hat Kitchenoreats
a Itcoalsodt
sidehrp
anns
she has
tion, sit:
more in
ga-
ain
eased through the twin ports. D
ng the sante period Duluth -Super
andled little more than half t
uantity and Chicago less than
quarter•
To the unitiated this carr
othing but a sense of national pr
n mere figures. There can be
onception of the handling and f
warding difficulties encountered
alsing grain from the Alberta farm
nd giving, it to the British bal
ithout raising howls from the p
neer, the shipper, the consignee,
ailroads and the general public. B
ust go to Fort William in the be
all season and see Inc yourse
uttonlole some man who itnows
ams, and if he's good natured enou
o give you half an hour of his ti
ou'll be just beginning to see.
The office of the Lake. Shippe
Association is as near
ub of the wheel as you can g
here are grain data of every descri
on; there are shippers in Winnip
n
0
the immense British navy in insuring'
regular food supplies is very largely t
focussed on guarding the conveyance a
of. the immense quantities of wheat w
which the British Isles require. cl
After the United Kingdom, her r
enemy, Germany, comes next as an j
important buyer of wheat. This is 1
in face of the fact that site stands b
high up in the list of countries which g
produce their own wheat. This fact t
emphasizes the profound change that y
has taken place in !