The Clinton News Record, 1914-08-13, Page 427"
hutott News -Record
s,
August I3th, 1914
. '
, aria. Mrs, 3, 14. Scott and tam.-
Toeoniel have been vieitieg fri-
in town •
. Zurich ,
•
eeere,' p, ,Lipiaoat, end- Hewitt.
C %tole Putetiased touring; eare.
re. W. Beneer left, as week, ,
-the eweat wiik a ,ou o horees....„
Eiss 'CroesWell, '
sh.,, is eisltMg he sistereAre, W.
ei..01aRers -,and••danghter, Miss'
ea,' et, Detreit are. gisiete at, the
FOS o elie. 1a1ya Peeente? elr, kind
s 11. Veil: ' •
lies 11.1„ • idemie of -Elmwood Was a
set or a few days at the home of
and 11,1.01, Miller, -'
-lee: Roy Geiger of Elmwood Mie-
n, has been visiting- hishome towe-
d pi:ear:lied in the Evangelical
iirch on Sunday lasts
Ir. Henry Repo, a pioneer
Bay toweiship, died at his
me in the village on Sunday morn-
; last. He Was - seventy-three
ars of age, He -had been engaged
catryfug treight from, Hensel' to
irieh and other points in this dis-
icb for many years. He`is Survive
by his wife and ten children, four
1,ughtiers',0m1 six sons. • The funeral
[It take place from his late residence
the Lutheran 'Cemetery on Tuesday
tornoon.
electoriaa storm. of short dera-
n 'nessed over the village on Sun -
y afternoon. Rain followed • and
Meucci the heart of the fanner.
et a feeent meeting of Hay town-
ip council a tax rate of two and
c -tenth milts o . the dollar was
ruck for the coming year. •
tiensall
oeoiuigrath, wilo seeenty-
nem yeate of age, and hertieughter,
Meelioughewhos-Imee been, lierel feoin
Vancotivex, 13,C, on a-viHit of several
weeks', with relatives and •friericIS, left
Met week to visit at Niagara Feats; •
Beffal° and °thee' points prior to re-
turning to 'illicit home in tile Coast
•IVIise Janet Sinith is spending some
time ine-Bayfield.
A BIG CONVENTION.
'wpm& interestee in Ontario ,nuni-
pal alleles would do well to write
F. S. Spence, City Hall, Toronto,
• a copy of the progreenme of the
xteenth Annual electing of the On -
10 Municipal Association, which
111)0 held in the City Hall, Toren -
on Sentemiber 2n0 and erci„ This
tuned, sets- out 'details. of the bus.
ss to be traueactedat this Con -
tion, which is likely to be of tutus -
a irupoi tauco. Thc- programme
ontains a list of subjects to bo (1is-
ussed, along With the names of the
;entlemen who are to present, them,
ind further sets . out details oi the
;onvention proceedings planned, part
-
)f which will ,he entertainment of yis-
ting'delegates and their ladies by
Is Toronto City Couucil. Delegates
haw .the advautage of the, spce-
al railwayi rates made in connection
-
with the Exhibition. They may
-1011tbiile, at thiS Convention, d hell -
lay trip wi.1)11 an 'opportuaity of letirti-.;
ing a great deal that will be of val-
.- to them in their local munMpal
erations. There ought ie be a'
y large attendance,
he meeting will he in, the first
ek of the Exhibition, and delegates
y _Secure Exhibition railway rates,
WHO, Alit 11APS?
. . -
Ferrero DelleVes ;They Are' -Fellow,
-.Rase of. South American
'.i:1111011E01.1040.1.011111.1111,....FOR WAR fUND
Ouglielmo Ferrero, the famoue Ro-
man historian, believes with, Many,
eminent ethnologiets, that the Saab ;
American Indiants and the Japanese
are kindred races,' and he looks for-
ward to their eventual alliance, if not
amalgamation. He tells how Porfirio
Diaz, when President. of Mexico, re-
ceived from the Mikado a dispatch,
In which the latter sainted the Presi-
dent as the ruler of a brother state
—a land populated by the same race,
He tells tte that he found la Chile,
Brazil and Mexico most of the popu-
lation belonging to the native races,
while the Europeans formed an arlsto,
°ratio minority. He flake:
' "To wbat race to these native popu-
lations actually belong, populationa
which' have resleted with such vigor
the influencee of European conquest
and immigration? Anyone, without
being a profeesional authropOlogist,
can dlecern in them a certain resene,
'blame 10 the Japanese. I shall te.ver
forget, for instance, an impreesion
produced on my mind at Ilspallata,
In the Andes, by the men who arrived
to carry the ,mall from Argentina to
Chile. At that time the trains did
not stop at Espellata in winter. 'But
aren't these men Japanese?' I in-
quired of my companion. They might
. well he Japanese,' was the reply.
'There are a number of Japaneme in
Chile. •But ,they might also be
Chileans.'" , _ •
•
;gord .kitchener-Aaka. fer-600,00Q Men'
'an. "Addrtion
to the...Army—
'Prenier's. Statement
The House of Commons unanienOue-
P Passed a ,war credit of $500,000,000
fOb' the increase of the British. tunny.
.Thits is the Second war credit .paesed
by the Howie; theslinn of 1.525,00Q,000
•Premier, Atmeith inforded: the '
'Members ,that .Field Mrsbaflpari
,
.Kitchener wanted power 10. increase
the, British army of 600,000' inen. On
'the new War Ministhrs' behalf the
Premier asked the House of Commons
to consent to this. The Premier de -
:tended England's course in joining in
the- war. In strong language he de -
'fended intervention, denouncing Ger-
zneny'a attempt to bargain with Eng-
land at the expense of France).
"It would have been infamoue for
England to violate her treaty obliga-
tions," he declared, amidst a storm of
cheers. "We had Pledged our honor,
and to heve refrain'ed from aotion
Would be to say we were no longer
capable of keeping our word."
The Premier told the House that
the weite paper issued by the Gov-
ernment showed how strenuous anti
unremitting had been the efforts of
Sir Edward Grey, the British Foreign
Secretary, to secure for Europe an
honorable and lasting peace.
Three Old Servants
' Reading Corporation has in its em-
ploy three brothers named Steven's,
whose combined ages' amount to 209
'Years, and whose total service for the
'Corporation araounes to 124 years.
Except tor illness, they have not loit
one emir between them the-whele of
the time. • „.
No Sudbury' In States
• There are ao producing nickel ni ne8
-in She 'United States, the damestie
production being by-products .of cop-
per .
An instrument has been lnyented to
inea' ere the glare of light reflected
from paper. '
Ready -
To -Wear
Garments
COUCH & CO.
rhy Goods •
and House
Furnishings
AGAINSTTlif WORLD
—
KaIer Seee Wili:-.Fight to Fines:her
Comrneecial Jealotioy.
. • . • , „
11
proclainatien',,by,Empror WO,.
uddreased to the German nation,
was made pub1i «Tn the Official Ga-
zette Orr,,Saturday. The. text WaSI ,ae
, • , .
• "Slice ,the' fonadatien "et- tee Gere
Mitre -Etainre• it .has.,'heezi ,-for. forte-'
three yeare, the object 'ef the efforts of
Myself and lily inceatere .Peeeee've
the peate.of'the 'world and:,to advent°,
Peacll."InPa;as. r. vikeebna' de7
Yeloplfient,
Our adversartee, however,- are
jealous of -the suceeees of our. work,'
and there has been latent haptility to
- the east and to the iyest and beYond
the sea. ,This 'has been borne by
ITS till new as wo were awni'e Of eth '
responsibility and our power.
• "'Now, however, 'these' adverear:es
wish to humiliateus, asking 'that we,
should look on 'and watch Our-enemiei
preparing theniseiveS Tor the comiue
attack. They will tiot suffer that. we.
Maintain our resolute fidelity to aux
ally, who is fighting for her position
as a great power and with Whoe6,
humiliation our power und honor
would equally be lost • • '
"So the sword must decide.
"In the midst of perfect peace. the
enemy surprises • us. Therefore to
"Any. dallying and temporizing
would be to betray the fatherland,
" To be or not tebe is the question
for the empire which our fathers
founded. To be or not to be is :the
question for German power and Ger-
man existence. . '
"We shall resist to tbe last breath
of raan and horse, and we shall fight
out the steuggle even against a world
of enemies.
"Never has Germany been subdued
when she Was united, '
"Forward with God, who will be
with us as He was with our ances-
tors."
".An Infamous Proposal:,
After reading Sir Edward Goschen's
despatch, saying that Germany had
made' "a strong bid for British x,eu-
trallty," the Premier remarked that
Germany's suggestion amounted to
"the infamous proposal that we
should give her a free hand to annex
the whole et the extra -European pos-
sessions of France. If Great Bri-
tain had accepted, what reply could
she have made to the Belgians' ap-
peal? Sho could only have replied
that we had bartered away to the
power threatening her our obligations
to keep our plighted word. What
would have been Great Britain's posi-
tion if she bad assented to -We in-
famous proposal, and what was she Lo
get in return? Nothing but a pro-
mise given by a power which at that
moment Was announcing its intention
of. violating its own treaty. "We
should have .covered ourselves with'
dishonor and betrayed tha interests.
of our coentry if we had accepted it,
We ere entitled to say for our come'.
try that we have made every effort
for peace, and that war has been fore -
'ed upon our country. The -Govern-
ment is confident that the nation. is
unsheathing the sword M a just cello.
We are fighting, fleetly, to fulfil inter-
national obligations which, it entered.
into by private individuals,' no self-
respecting man could,- have -repudIat.
ed: nd secondly, to vindicate the
Mine pie that small nationwere not
to be e5pelie4 in defiance of iinterne-
duty.
tional good faith
at the 'arbitrary will There will also be, 'available- suffie
of a° strong and overmastering power.
' 'A Clear Conscience.
1
CANADA'S PART 'IN
More Men Volunteering For
Than Are Required.
Reports,received by the Militia De-.
pertinent at Ottawa indicate that en-
listment all over Canada is now pro-
ceeding smoothly, and the numbers
who are applying bear out the forecazt
that , far More than the total number
actually required will volunteer; Al-
together there will be twenty-flve
thousand men" mobilized' at Quebec,
and of these twenty-one thousand will
be sent across the Atlantic as soo0.
as the word comes from the Imperial
Government. There will be ample
work,for the remaining fout theuaand
In Canada, for garrison and patrol
WAR
Duty
13RITISI-1 SOLDIERS
• NOW QIN ,CONTINENT
No Tinle Lost by; kitabener in Send.,
Ing AI Cf. 7tO raVe-
Array,-Speir itteCreie .Charitiel
.14';Oroieti;Waf-.'0.litoo,;.t.hat
troops
der: the direction' of ..Frezioh:011ieern,
: ,The Eribisk trpeps who landed
Saturday.
.expeditOnarY Sorce 05 20 000 mao
and inelndeiiiiottlie.
Inents of the, British arny. ' Th9Y,
were taken acrees he 'Channel bi-
g. fleet of transperte under the con.
y9Y of two battleships and three
armored cruipers, and landeige were
made at Ostead, Calais aird Dunkirk.
Ostend the.r,nearest Belgian port
from the tniiish coast,' eighty miles
From Dover; Dunkirk is ju-St acroso
the French border from Ostend and
le sixty miles from Dover, Ciliate le
• farther south and is 'only some twenty
miles. from Dever, '
The troops, it is well understood,
will be riiebed to Namur to sestet in
the defence of that town, where it is
expectee the chief stand against the
German invasion of Belgium 'will be
ae34284. ,
,
1
L t , . ii i
We put!on sale Saturday 2 dozen ladies' sump:ler
dresses made of percoles and chambreys, neatly trim-
med, all sizes, just • what you want for 2 49
these warm days, vary special Saturday •
Pailielte Sill( 25c
- We put on sale Saturday 200 yards 1 of striped
pailette silk, ;Jarrow width, colors nay.y 1.4nd white,
black and white, greenand '"'" • ' -
white„ reg. priceE503 _woe per yd
Te Last Callor Lathes'
Coats and Suits 37.49.
Only 7 coats and 7 suits to clear. These are all
new styles. 'We want to clear them out before new
goods, arrive. Some of these sold as high as
Your choice of any coat or suit in store
7 49
i "No natien ever entered into a
,great conteet with. a clearer =-
Science or a stronger convictien. It
Is 'striking for the defence of a prin-
iple, the maintenance of which is the
y.ltal civilization , of the world. As
we have entered the struggle let UB
now make sure that all our resources,
not only those of tbe United Knigdom,
but those of the vest Empire Of which
it is the contre,-are thrown into the
:scale." The Premier made a brief
reference to the appointment of Field
Idershal Kitchener as Secretary for
War. Re Said that Earl Kitchener's,
connection with tho Government did
not identify him with any political.,
party. In a great public emergency.
he had' reeponded to 0 great public.
:call, and he would have iso the
charge of his most arduous task the.
!comPlete confidence of all. In behalf
'of Lord Kitchener, the Premier asked
power to increase the army by not less
than half a million men. "I ain en-
couraged to ask this," lie said, 'Mot
only by reason ot-our own sense of
the gravity of•the ciretunstanees, but
by the knowledge that India Is pre-
pared to send us .two divisions, and
every one of the self-governing Dom-.
!Mons has spontaneously offered to
the utmost limits of its possibility,
both in steel' and money, all the help
it can afford the Fmpire. The mother
country must sel an example while at
the same time responding with grati-
tude and affection to the filial over-
tures of the -outlying 'members of the
family,"
•
RAIN COATS $2.99.
Just 5 oddEcoatsleft. TheseZare not new styles
but are s good coat for dust or rain, made of good qual-
ity cloth. Reg $7 and $8,for •tt $2 99
eient for a second array contingent
from 'the Dominion. According Lo the
opinion of military authorities at 01.
tawa, there is a strong probability that
a second army contingent.' will be re-
quired from here. Milithrer experts
believe that there will be a proloeged
European land campalge„ before the
issues of the war are finally decided.
At all regimental centrea in Canada
recruiting for enlistment 'in, the Can-
adian contingents is ot the most ac-
tive kind. Volunteers to do battle
tor Great: Britain are, coming- tor -
ward from every pert of the country.
From varioue parts of Gebel° 250 ex -
naval officers have already gone for -
weed. The 48th Highlanders ender
command of Cot j. A. Currie, M.P.,
will go to the,front as a.001t. The first
contingent of 20,000 men from Canada
will be all treinecl men. Several bat-
teries of heavy artillery are being
centred at Quebec, and Val Cartier In
the presence or the Duke of Con-
naught On Monday all the Canadian
ports were closed to shipping at the
same time as the British ports, which
means that during the time of pro-
hibition no trans-Atlantic steamer is
allowed to leave either port. This la
taken to 11.188.11 that German cruisers
are hovering in the neighborhood of
ehe British trade routes and until this
menace 18 removed there will be no
settings.
This force is only a pert of the
expeditionary force which England is
expected to send to the defence oR
,Belgium, the' British War Office ad-
mitted. it was said that the British
Government already had completed
.arrangenaeuts incliMing the comman-
deering of ; saflicient transports, to
send an army of 100,000 men 'into
Belgium.
CANADA SENDS FLOUR
One Million Bags to be Sent Over
• to Britain s
Genaee is giving a million bags of
flour to the Motherland. Action has
been taken. already, the offer made.
and accepted and the flour pprehased,
Withia the next few 'days the fleet
cargo ot this gift will leave the shores
of Canada for Liverpool, British
cruisers Iteeptug within etriking dis-
tance all the way to safeguard the
passage of the fiour ship. The price
paid was $2.80 per bag. As indicated
in the ' cable acceptance, and in other
messages received by the Govern-
ment, the girt is a most welcome one
to the Imperial government.
in addition to the free contribution
of flour the Government Is acting for
the home authorities in the purcheee
of other stores. Members., of the
Government are npw cbtaiaing from
repreeentative packers hi Canada an
estemate 62 the eveilable surplus ot
„meat, etc. ' •
,Feench Army Advancing -
• Unofficial depatches reached Paris
Sunday saying that the French army
which le invading Alsace, and evhich
btoke . through the German defences
01 'Altkirch occupie& the lusevily-
fortified town of Mnellutusen and..has
pushed on to Colmar, 22 miles beyond
! Muelhausen, •
• British, lererich and Belgium tro6P6
ars.said to have effected a junctioe"
across the line of the German ad.
-vance throe& 13eIgliim.
Coloring White Sheet
MUST STAY IN CANADA
GERMANS IN LIEGE
1..ABoR iri VAIN --7,, , , VW Tidr htislian , 0 1
1
be said to have a hasband, f*tid theta,
'rho Young Bee •allit the Thief ef'fier :Were 111e12411° °It(1 tiariii‘zi /44 .13.1),,tr
van always on the wing wite.fieesr
cald :ohe. off ;II One lfikl onoe nearly oaUght
- iglt,„Ifttal? thing tliflY let 'the
Eautt.ow,b4me. itaaWa te Settle.'
' ''ikd.'ii?E'tic;•,`'.iii :,i)a§aatig.,".,;.;'4'14.rfoli ."1A(''..,%ff'.11,...e,i'-: -'--' .''-, ''` , ...- '
esw,Ished lite,' eti..n.e.,',ag4tiiBt: '.-0..i0-;,i,,,,ii11.. F241,ent,Ilief-after.heing onoe
ilower wekb thongll'abe- were. ii,rneke'and th ' ea"' ' ,iln°9*r' ::-'-'46.4' °T1'9°. ' kttaelte.4- ,k
froni 11 4
' .4. . .. . . .e:t.,,-4.07i...:,..71:1'faa
She was a beefaet:verYbfr':elntoft:pTant,,„.4,,.tii,at,„0„
oniy.att.altati.alob.inigiih.., ,..
ft ie. .. . . i , . ofsonir liee'if nwn kind' riishing in and '
•
Kaiser's Forces Occupied Town But
Forts Still Unconquered
,lege,3/4,,and ',she fig out of holetseeeaele toeher own hole—. • ,
air wa,4,, Writh mal/i3,1
and the
0O"Aeli-ow that made hes look" larger'
than she was, Also her hum. mEase ddaaancolongthtallt°emyeardity.;:sut 8,dalZr')1111111/11311
her seem more dangeroue time Illa
. .
Our bee
keally wcie, for there is d 1;t •
• g ' 0 or
own burrow, only ' I to ,buirin
fi into ti.
' g,, °°u ...,..141'? Ili ' ' ' ' - .
piereed ahybody'14 skin'. • el 'that leom-
..,,es to whether her sting ' ld. ' lio was •coneing Mit T'hle '
bee was more
: , eW!)1I'D's'tfi, :aisli'' b9dc; :1- tia6:1ftgludalgt14'8.e'. by
ylpn,ga PlfPio9er4a,1.7t4yis1e- repg4dO:IPI°heirke' white
I II,. ''' ',4";1'' ;;..Pit;t5' andon1°17:6;r ' 15. *6' 6. edl Yr'''. ' .... bH il v.'n'cs 1 t; :' a Wah II itori It.
' killing -her, as she ought to have done, '
covered her like gold .dnst; and she
tushed 1n and placed her store ef ' •
. '
Tbe City of Liege is in the bands
of the Germans, but the forts are
Still holding out. The Belgiangarri-
son, realizing that the citadel in the
centre of the eity could not be held,
blew it up to prevent' the invaders
using it, It was an old disused for -
trees. , •
A •peaeriful occupation of Liege by
the Germane was carried out during
Friday and' Saturday , nights. The
entry tete the city was effected
through an interval between the forts
at Evignee, and Fieron,
Ten thousand German troops
marched into the. city. General von
Emmich immediately "gilled .0. pre-
clamatioli declaring that the civilians
had fired on the troop's, and warning
-the inhabitants that it this IS repeated
he will bombard 'the place with his
artilleey, which ia now stationed in
the citadel. There is little likelihood
Of anything so frightful, as the burgos
master has ordered the people of the
City no to 'carry arms.
During the first hours of the oc-
cupation the Germans remained hid-
den in the outskirts, but at night
they marched boldly into the city
and took np their quarters in the
university and public buildings. They:
retrained from Intruding into private
residences. They are conducting
themselves web, "paying for every-
thing they get in the few shops which
are still open. They are giving Ger.
man money.
German Reservists Will Not Be, Al.
„ lowed to Leave Country,
There 1s- trouble in store for Ger-
naan officers or reservises In Canada
who attempt, to leave for the father-
land to fight against qreat Britain. In
acearde:nee with instrectiona from the
Imperial authorities a'l such who are
Sound ,attempting to leave 'Canada for
the purpose will be summaiely arrest
ed and detained. Orden from Ottawa
have been given to the authorities at
all ocean ports and at all border towns
and cities to have this action takea,
and it is expected that numerous ar-
rests will follow the orders, •
Hundreds of reservists have been
collecting from ,outeide points in the
centree of railway transportation,
Whence they have taken passage to
the Atlantic seaports with the inten-
tion of shipping home. Theile men also
now avowed enemies of Great Britain,
and as such are not allowed to leave
for the scene of war. They are also
enemies of Canada, They will there -
tore either have to stay quietly and
peaceably' in Carieda or become pre-
emie -vs oS war,
• Germans' or Austrians wbo attend
strictly to their vOCaitione as Canadian
reSideate will not he molested.,
eee,,,1Whi1e koes can 1).e tlYed,els
4,Altope of saffron mlie
'three bdpopntuIs of olive oil
t)oate being applied with demi'
CoestIng Down ,Mbunteln
/ The eliweet Alpine sport le ceneeti
ihg doyen, motintain eailwayeoi
specially designed care, Which sonie
t112100 ,exceed 0, aj;)80d oe 80 mutes an
FRENCH ROUTED GERMANS
gemmed literally to ooze honey at every
Jaint-:.-whIch, utter all, is only another
way ,of Making beesWagi Then, all
of 4 sudden, and -without a fraction
02 a second's warning, a strange thing
happened, The bottom of the floor
she Was standing upon—that les the
leaf on to which she had backed—
fell out. Our bee fell, too, with this
part of the leaf for a Einem till the
'could, collect herself. Then an odd
•10.00, with huge eyes-, looked over
from the other side and said "Bezel"
very angrily, and she fled.' She had
been sitting on a Part of a leaf which
was being eut through from the other
side by a leaf.cutterbee—who lines
her nests with neat pieces cut' from
leaves—and—well, the piece had come
out Our bee went booming away
through the hot sunehtne, whirring
like an aeroplane, and in a direct line.
She was not alone. The air was full
Of insects, busy passing upon their
"lawful occasions."
But it seemed at first as if our bee
—who evidently knew where he was
going—was alone all the same. In a
moment, however, it was evident that
one flew with her, as if guarding bee
and guiding MT -through the danger-
ous aventit.111e aerial. ways. He
was lets st.e.11ele _height hrowee end
Awful :Slaughter at Smell Alsatian
Town—Bayonets Were Used
An official report of the capture by
the French of the village of Altkirch,
in Alsace, says that the French ad-
vance guard arrived before -the place
before nightfall Friday. The town
was, defended by strong earthworks
and oecupied by a German brigade,
The French, 111 about equal number,
carried the breastworks in a fierce
bayonet charge. The Geirnans broke,
abandoning the trenclies and the
town. A regiment of French dragoons
Mirsued the retreatiiig Germans In
tee direction of Waltheim and Togo.
schen, inflicting further great losses.
The Germans are said to have lost
-30,000 men and the French 15,000.
A Skirmish on the 'Sea ,
The Adrairalty announced on Stin-
dey that one ot the cruiser squadrons
Of the British fleet wee attacked by
qermaii sukwas.knes. The British:
Shrainfrifet, daniated, but the Ger.
man submarine IJ -1.5 was sunk. It is
hotstated where the engagemarent
io9f 2e.
mw.altitatt:
F' Imitation Tinfoil
In Germany tinfoil is cli9anlY,P941
tated by coating paper with tienetteprs
'of finely powdered .metal teen
and subJecting it to frietion.,
eeee.
Operatettlef n plunger, a new 4tito.
mobile WO*? blows a whietleAgOlt
time 04 g wheel oarrying 401404
.4101,
tire vs*
AWFUL GERMAN LOSSES
Requested a Day's Armistice to Bury
Dead at Liege.
News despatches frOin Brussels
state that the Gcrinalis on Friday even-
ing abandoned the attack on. Liege,
and requested an anulstir,e of 24
hours. It was stated officially that the.
Germans aclmittee their casualties
numbered 25,000. They had 80,000
men before Liege when the attack
commenced.
honeyand pollen besIde,the egg she
Mid already laid. ' • • ••• '
Then she cemented the walls ie,
and came away happy. But eho
might have saved herself the trouble,
for the other bee was S "ouckoo," who
had already laid an egg there herself
the grub .from which would eat up all
the honey and pollen Intended for our
bee's own grub.
if
Who Would be an Editor?
New regulations for the controleee
the Press have been issued by tika
Chinese Government. Editors
publishers are required to submete
record of their past to the police bi
fore they can obtain permission
publish. This rule, in effect, gtvAl
power to the police to refuse a liceallq
to itnyoue who has been connected
with political propaganda.
Publishers In Peking mut deposit
with the police $150 for a dairy news.
paper, $125 for a weekly, $75 for a
monthly, and 150 for an anneal, awe
the rates are doubled for "publicatioto
outside Peking. , No person undea
-thirty can be the editor, publishtri
or printer of a newspaper, and no pee
son having a nervoue disease, can
an editor. •
. .
•
NEWS-RECORD-NEUS-LEADER. NEWS-RECORp NEWS -LEADER.
The lirst .and second squadrons of
the Japanese' fleet pet to sea Sunday.
The destination ot the fleet is kept
secret, but there have been reports
that a German squadron is threaten,
ing British shipping 11, the Orient and
Ib le believed that the inorement of
the Japanese warships is connected
with this report. . .
.• Indian Troops' Offered 7
The Maharajah or Nepal has.offerci
the ...entiro. milltitrY• resources, at let
indenendent kingdom to, the British,
Clovernment, Other 'adieu iedepere
dent kingdonis are •makinksiniiter ot,
The Maharajah of Nepal is a Major.
General in the tiritislr army by virtue
of an honorary commission. His regu-
lar army numbers 30,000 men, with
an artillery force of 250 modern gur18.
The majority of his troops aro of the
Gurkha tribe, the most famous .sol.
Henry Geercke, a Geruaan living at
Scarboro, near Torouto, was arrested
90 Sunday, and a search of his house
. .
-revealed pc atioto draalliitcp. hicylea
in the calerk.....1474VIIIIIIRFge
Postman Walked 128,000' Wit
At Llangenny,,, Wales, Mr. John
rrowneend, Crickhowell, who for over'
eorty-one years carried the post frem
Crickhowell to Liangennr, Was pee -
1
limited by the parishioners with a gold
• watch on his retitement from the
ostaA service.- Towneend• travelled
over 126,000 melee' during- his Period
of office. •
Stock -Reducing Sale
Having' bOught -ont the Furniture and
n.clertaking business .of Mr. Wesley
Walker,and in older to reduce stock, for
the ne*tlfifty days, we put on one of the.
largest sales of Furniture that was ever
held in the county of Huron, , •
THIS STOCK riusT BE REDUCED:AND THE
PRICES ARE NOT TO BE CONSIDERED.
All,Goods Bought During Sale Will be Cash,
JAS. DuNfoltio 1
Night and:Sanday:calls!answered at residence
over thestore. Phone 28.
issomm.wwowswoowswows.......-
National Portland Gement!
, • .
We helve just received a carload of the same old brand
of Portion,' Cement which has always given you such cons-
plete sal 151, It always fille your requirements. You
----- •
cannot in. Ice a mistake:tieing the National. •
S. J. ANDREWS, - Clinton.
fife 411=1111111%
estet•n Fair
LONDON, CANADA
Ontario's Popular Exhibition
September llth to 19th, 1914
INCREASED -PRIZE LIST °
elsiONTIPI 0 ENT PROGRAM NIB OF ATTRACTIONS. TWO SPEED
EVENTS DAILY. NEW FIREWORKS EVERY NIGHT.
•
Come and' See
The Experimental Farm Exhibit and the Canadian 1-tOyaf Dragoons,
o The Con. '1, Kennedy Shows will fill the M w a y,
Music by the best available Bands.
Reduced, RailwayRates commencing Sept. Ilth
Special Excursion Days, Sept.15th, 161.1 and 1711),
411 tickets good till September 2Is1.
All information from the, *eoretery.
W. J, REID, President, EA.111. I-IUNT, Secretary
- • -
PACIFICe
ManyThousand Farm Laborers Wanted
FOR HARVESTING IN WESTERN CANADA
"GOING TRIP WEST." I "RETURN TRIP EAST."
$12,00 TO WINNIPEG I $18.00 ,FROM WINNIPEG
GOING DATES
Auyitst lOgrbnylra317,6fitnrihn,41,azaz,,......i, Soo to Arndt% anfl
sieliSte August 14th—traigllittalopis net et Kigenton, Sherbet Lake and Renfrew, in me reorinees ot
Abe bat Itith--Proin all eleVaNS.71nTriblirtglirjilrgare, lionfrow anti °wet to Asekla and
Sault EU. Marla, 001,50 812 polatO lu Manitoba and to certain points la Oaken-
ehewart 5101 Alberta.
Aso.t net—From an station° wet of Stineeton, 8harbot Ultra Renfrew, In tho Prosiness of
15 11 ablate In hianItObe, anti W certain polata Ellishen•
ii3nntrai? Inekituir
h
' 700112) Waters re ardln transportation weetof winni e eto see nearest C E. A eat, or
wrtte—
' - News-Vecord Walla Islows-Leador. News-ticeoid to, end '01 yea tor' 25e. -.......ww.ww,ww.wook
orento.