The Clinton News Record, 1914-10-22, Page 2(I, D. lleTAGGART
M.
0. McTAGGART
[ciaggart Eros.
-_-BANKERS ---
e1 GENERAL"BANK/NG BUST, -
NESS o TRANSACTED. • NOTES
DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS\ ISSUED,
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE-
POSITS. SALE NOTES PUR-
CHASED-
T: RANCE '-
NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY-
ANDER, FINANCIAL, REAL
ESTATE -AND FIRE "INSUR
ANCE AGENT. ' REPRESENT.
• ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANIES.
DIVISION COU.ti,T OFFICE,
CLINTON.
W. BRYDONE,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ,
NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC.
Office- Sloan Block --CLINTON
, CHARLES B: BALE,
Conveyancer, Notary Public,
Commissioner, Etc.
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
Issuer of Marriage Licenses
HURON STREET, - CLINTON
DRS, GUNN & GAN Din
Dr. W. Gunn, L.R.O.P., L.R.
C.S., Edin.
Dr. J. C. Gandier, B.A., M.B.
• Office -Ontario St., Clinton. Night
calls at residence, Rattenbury St.,
• or at Hospital.
DR. J. W. SHAW
•.
-OFFICE --
RATTENBURY ST. EAST;
-CLINTONI
-DR. C. W. TIIOMPSON
PHSYIOIAN, SURGEON, ETC.
Special attention given, to dia-
eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose
and Throat.
Eyes carefully examined and suit-
able glasses prescribed.
Office and residence: 2doors West of
the Commercial Hotel, Huron St.
OIL F. A. AXON
-. DENTIST
Specialist in Crown and ,Bridge
Work. Graduate of C.O.D.S.,
Ohicago, and R•C.D.S,, To.
ren
to,
Bayfield on, Mondays from May to
December.
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the, County
• of Huron,
Ciorrespondence promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be
made for Sales Date at The
4Vews-Record, Clinton, or by
calling Phone I3 on 157.
Charges moderate and satisfaction
guaranteed.
A'
Ifw
+4i
= RAND RUN R SY,STERNY
TIMFLE TABLE -
Trains will arrive at"and depart
from Clinton Station as follows:
B
Ul'F
A
L
ON , '
A D
GOD
L'
RIC
H
DI
4
Going East,
Goi
r.ng West,
rr "
7.33 a rn;
3.03 p. mel
8.15 p. m.,
11.07 a. m.
1.35 p,
X
,40 p.' m.
11.98 p, m:
LONDON, HURON Az BRUCE DIV
Going South, 8.10 a. m.
Glom Nor 4.23 p. w.
,c: g' crth' 11.00 a.;, m.
6.35
P. in.
'avER es YEARS'
EXPErliENCC,
Tnerin MaRlta
Gal
.1J orva,
J79 Y
t(
hJ
8 LuAn9otleg honeraoten
t
e.
yeeteti oortgi our opinion. !ee oh r.mthtoIt hrob nat@usmmuionuetpohildentlal. 'lnar houte,uneno.Oldest
Bugfor securing putoutp:Ploute tftktn t rouh Minn r(0.Lecelveweet4r,twtece. without o�nrto,la the
entssf -
rage
d
0srheomet'p
alaleratea weekly. Dirgost
a41bnits, je era. toroir•
.0004, 104t year, poetagbrognta..501d by
all
WiWfkIN&
981erosdlysy,
Newyork
York
N,ie
i,r n P iflrA et6
r'st.
Wne t
h Halon
.D. C.
I.:
T
.. TH., ..6. v.,
A F�tMirpl.Y7 LJORnta'
Tho dost In Current Literature,
$2.20 e.enveen; 25 c'rat,•A coati
, NO COI`tiTINUED 'STO131tm -
,61
aPh viun H(JM0 f cbnda4ETs:9i r
•
ran,
an
3 oris
Lour
From the]lest Mills at tiro lowest
possible Brice
WE PAY THE IIGHEST PRICE
for ` OATS, ' EAS ,and' "BAR-
LEY, also HAY for Baling,.
Ford " ' McLeod
ALL. KINDS "OP
COAL, ',n OoD,
TILE BRICK
TO ORDER.
ATI kinds of Coal on,band:
CHESTNUT SOFT COAL
STOVE CANNEL GOAL
FURNACE .00KE.
BLACKSMITHS WOOD
2% in., 3 in, and 4•in. Tile of the
Best Quality.
ARTHUR FORRES
Opposite the G. T. R. Station.
Phone 62.
The 11eKillop Idlutual Fire
Insurance Company
Farm and Isolated Town Property
only. Insured
- OFFICERS --
• 13, McLean, President, Seaforth
ly,
S' hoa,eat,GodericP.O.; T. E. Hysecretary-Treasurer, Seaforth
P.O.
Directors -
F. McGregor, Seaforth; John
lie
ve, Winthrop; William Rinn,
onstanee; John Watt, Harlock;
ohn Benuewies, Brodhagen; James
vans, Beechwood ; McEven,
linton P•O,
- ents -
Robert Smith, Harlock
E. $iacti.
ley, Seaforth; William Chesney,
Egmondville; J. W. Yeo, Holmes.
vilie.
Any money to he paid in may be
paid to Morrish Clothing Co., Olin.
ton, or at Cutts' Grocery, Gorierich
Parties desirous to effect insure
ones or transact other business
will he promptly attended to on ap.
plication to any of the above offigers
addressed to their respective post,
offices. Losses inspected by the
director who Lives nearest the scene:
There is a
Cold Day Corning
W'lry not prepare for it by
ordering your winter supply
of Lehigh Valley Coal. None
better in the world.
House Phone 12.
Office Phone 140.
A. J. HOLLOWAY
Clinton News -Record
CLINTON, ONTARIO
Terms of subscription -$1 per year,
in advance; $1.50 may be charged
it not so paid. No paper discon.
tinned until all arrears are paid,
unless at the option of the pub...
Hither. The date to which everysubscription is paid is denoted on label.
Advertising Rates -. Transient ad-
vert;. ,dents, 10 metes per nos-
pareil line for first insertion and
4 cants per line for each subse-
quent insertion. Small advertise:
ments not to" -exceed one. inchr
such 'aa "Lost," • "Strayed,"
"Stolen," etc., inserted once :for.
35 cents, and each subsequent M.
tertian 10 cents..
Communications intended for "
licatto puo
a must,: as a guarantee of
good fa,th, be accompanied by the
name of the writer.
W. J. MITCHELL,
, Editor. and Proprietor.
✓l1"rSIIHAL
STRATFO RD. ONT.
a school 1 with 'a continental
reputation for high grade work
andrind for the success of itsrad-
nates, a school with e
superior
courses' and instructors. CEO
rs
We
give '
individual
attention in
Commercial, Shorthand and
Telegraphy Department
S. Why -
attend nd elsewhere Mien there
a ie room''here 7 You may enter
at .any time, Write for our
large free catalogue.
D. A. McLACHLAN;
• Principal,
Once in a while a man , has so
much money that he feeds Ile can af-
ford to la honest,,
Sick Ii'IIeaadfacheo-,.
are not caused by anything wrong he
the head, but bycon'stipation bilious=" <'
nese and indigestion. Headache
powders or tablets may deaden, but
cannot cure thnni, Dr. Morse's
Indian Root PlllS do cure` sick head
ache in the sensible way by rentovit e
the omanh
lichocausedzon or 'tilem. sick Dr sMorses
Indian Root. Pills, are purely vege-
table, free from any harmful drug,
safe and sure, When you feel the.
header:he coming take '
Dr. Morse's se's w ,
Heidi -art` Root, Vii U $s
Does Aybody
Want an
Umbrella
Wo mean a GOOD Umbrellas,.`,
Most •people.' own ton Uul.-.
bre'lleeol somo sort.
•
But not ours in a hundred
owns one like we have to
show you or -geld you.
Ours .are die luxe goods.
Works a .art.
Present yrourself " with one,
have your monogram put on
it--
'Then
t-.Then take e,are to take Dane
of it.
Ar variety of handle designs.
Best of heel; :silks in the tops.
Cost $2.00 to $10,00.
You can't equal t'he'n :at the
prices hereabouts.
Prove it,
W. R. COUNTER
JEWELER and ISSUER of
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
BOiMBS DROPPED Al` DUNSURR
German Aeroplane ]Brought Down
-Occupants i1[adr, Prisoners.
A despatclh from London says:
The Daily'Chronicle's correspond-
ent in France contributes the fol-
lowing:
"Dunkirk, which expects to be
the next objective of •the Gentian
attack, was the target for an aero-
plane raid. One Taube machine was
brought down after dropping two
harmless 'bombs, and the two avia-
tors were made prisoners. One of
them had been mortally injured by
the sharp -shooters."
Took German Gunboat.
A despatch from London •sap's :
A despatch to the Central News
:from Melbourne says that advices
of the capture of a German gum
.boat have been received by the
Government from New Guinea.
Sentenced to Death.
A despatch from Chalons says
A'
Germ
an'
lar
mer
named Weber
l
Weber.
and his wife were tried here by
,count -martial on a change of har-
boring an enemy. They were found
guilty and condemned to death.
The man was executed, but a re-
spite was granted the ademan and it
is .possible that her sentence will be
commuted.
This can be
your
ex
erI
cote'
P rf o
u
use
Y
Chamber-
lain's gain's Tablets --
they cure head-
aches byremov-
Ing the cause....
not . by smothering the syn,
roma-woman's-surest. cure for
wo
mans moat co
-,� mmon oilmen
T'ry them 2$c. a bottle. = t}s
Druggists and healers, or,by, matt..
,: Chamberlain Medicine Co.
Toronto 2
CHANEBEk-LAINS
_ 'TABLETS, t.
a,
OF
HD
REN
DA:Y
•.
just as they are -in their in- '
door play, orat their, outdoor,
play -they ,are constantly of-
ferimg.temptatiens for the
,K �,. ,
AK
Leet it keepthem for you as
they are now.
Let `•t.
a keep
an other -:
P many I hap;
pening,s that are a Source of.
pleasure'•
-
toY 0
ll.
BIL01'VNIES $2 TO $12;
, I(OD UES; $7 pP0 $25.
Also full stock of Films and
Supplies. We do Developing
and Printing. Remember the
place;
SEXALL STORE
Rheims, French Oi;';y Destroyed by Gcrniiln• Boluhairdulei1t.
•
A view of l3iheim,s, the beautiful French ei :} which was i' '
during load in ruins by the siegeguns
na 'Rhe bombard/neat of the city. In the distance on ,an -eminence of the German's
Cathedral of Notre Dame, which was desbr" r el startle the a prominened_
Gernvan nus, oYed clueing the bom:baadmeurt. It was year-old
g and ,duelling it could ,easrily `Is:a me'.been avoided had the: prominent mark far
Gea•m�ana t"4vsdued. ;
FAIL TO TURN • GERMAN ORRER IRON CROSS
ALLIES' FLANK
German Attempt to Reach Trench
Coast Sorts Are
• Frustrated.
A despatch from Paris •says; The
attbmpts by the Germans to turn
the flank of the allies and obtain
possession of the ports of Ostend,
Dunkirk and Calais have :been un-
successful, for the Germans came
face to Lace with a strong opposing
allied army which compelled them
to fall ,back after severe fighting.
hat is known as "the marching
ing" of the allies is continually in
anted with the German troops and
onmletely covers • the approach to
e coast towns, When they fought
pitched battle west of Lille the
ermares eve•re ,forced to 'make a
asked retirement from Laventie in
e direction of Lille, their oeoulpa-
on of which 'by 2'0,000 men was of
ort duration, The line of the
battle of :the north" extends over
e most historic :ground in Man-
es, where on ,the "Fie'id of Cloth
Gold," Francis I, and Haney
II, had their celelbrated meeting
1520. Owing to the sin.nobs ether -
ter of the line of Ihattle, the -total
•gth of it frons the obast of Bel -
nn to the •Seise ,border now
ohes nearly 360 miles. Belief in
it final success appears to have
en a ]item hole: on :the allies, All
melt display confidence in their
menders, who are doing every-
lg possible to spare their troops,
allied soldiers are ii'giht'lngwith
or•. They often perform marches
r
'est
.sem 'beyond Duel
human an
1e n
power,
,
o thebattle attde ftelcl their ardor
nreatraivable, This is made evi-
1 often when avian detachments
apant from the main 'bodies,
no'h dragoons recently were en -
ted with the task of covering
•passage of, a river by artillery,
The
in
a'body of German Hussars
cles8i.' Both sides charged iii-
taneously, and'th.e melee lasted
inntes, during which the men
ed and pierced eaoh other„wilih
els and dances amid elle crack
fficers' revolvers. Finally the
ills broke ranks anti galloped
ea ''
tin
many n o•f.
g e',
.l their
mat.
field. T
r an
The :
t dragoons s al+
• sev
S so s,uf-
ere,
l
but t at. '
tame
d their
iha
t
of securing tri
r
t,
a sate g pass-
er P
or their comradu,s,
.p.
CAIN.
Vhat
qy
0
0
th
a
G
th
ti
sh
th
de
of
VI
in
ae
]en
git
tees
the
tak
the
coni
this
T.he
vig
w
Iht
wh'
t
is u
den
act
Fre
tens
the
nha
inul
ten m
slash
ewer
of o
bliss
off,
I
the
fer•ed
objet
age f
Ther' •
For
'Inhere
That ikee s
P hes. cell for hife•
But •there'rs none will stand
By the sawn who p'l'aned
With a Pie -perverted skill , ?•
To mint the world with a German
die--
At
ie--
Atthe price of a million -kill!
It isn't the Mien rattle thirst,
It isn't the Belgian rage, st,
It Isn't the English'' reed for Mad
and
h�,•
T a; mires the zeekng,stage,
But th0 monstrous plan
Of a Single Man
With a world -engulfing will]
Who calls to the vntbtu'res out o'
north the
To feast on a million -kill.
The Kaiser sits in au armoured
train, .
Far back front- the battle -grip.
ESTABLISHED IW FREDERICK
WILLIAM 111. jOfllY 73, Including But One Officer, Saved From
the North Sea
PLOT RN
ALD
LONDON RAID
Police Stine Pa -diary With a Roof,of Concrete Folli •
ree-t J'lkwk.
A d,cu nn Lc h Eich London says:
Phil Ii lice liu,ve..found at Willesden,
a s'tlburb to the'north-W,e;st ,of Lon. -
don',
a, buiJ,cHing oe hpie i' lby Ger-
Mans,-with,foun�dations and roof Of
heavy concrete. They arrested 22
-Germans on tlheiprernraes, The pre-
mises were ,bei»g used' by C
re-miseswere,beingused'byC G Roe-
hsg,' a German 'music puib!:rsher, ass
a factory; Ihe,,police laid their
plans and conducted a 'successful
lasts 1:n large force they surrounds-
eel th .;;,builthuq and then entered
and took into custody 22 German
subjects. The, factory is.of one
story. 11ricirt they found very
thick concrete founds,tions, ,and lir
was` discayered that the loo;£ also
Was of concrete-afd'between three
and four feet thick. The site of
'hiss factory at Willesden 'commands
several important railroad junc-
tions. The Paris premises of this
same firm were blown up recently
on orders issued by the French
Government,
More woinen than men are left-
ljantled,
CRUISER SUNK BY ENEMY
Similar 10 Effect to the Orders of
Britain, France and
Russia.
There has been considerable sa-
tiric eomiuent over the despatches
from Germany relating how the
Emperor :has been showering iron
-crosses upon his officers and the
soldiers in the ranks for conspicu-
ous deeds ofibravery. According
to one despatch whole .Wagon load's
of
these
decorations were abandon-
ed by the. Getman army when the
Ara retreat from Paris :began,
The Iron Oros's was established
by Frederick Willliaan 111,, King of
Prussia, in 1813, •as a reward for
bravery in the war with Napoleon.
1't consisted of an iron cross of the
form known ars "erose :pane," with
a border of silver suspended by a
black ribbon with :two white
stripes. In the centre af. •the cross
was a spray of three oast leaves and
above it was a crown with the in-
itials "F,W." and the date 1813.
1V111ianl 1. Revived.
When the Franco-Prussian war
'began, Emperor William I. revived
the order ,which had lan'guis'hed,
The only change in :the cross was
that the initial became a "W," and
the date was changed to 1870.
Since the Franco-Prussian war
no iron crosses have ,been awarded,
theor r
de beingstrictly
a military
ztar
Y
one
an the e awar
ds be'
to •'m
ade f •
deeds
g
or
of darling in battle. Gener-
ally the ,Empe:ror tosses the ribbon
about the neck of the happy reeip•
ient, but according to the des-
patches, he is tossing the crosses
about with such a .free hand these
days that he is awarding theta by
marl or at times by ,bearer.
There are many German orders,
dating Ecom the fecal clays, when
til• Teuton barons awarded to their
lieges various marks of favor.
These orders, however, are main-
ly' 'by the rulers of the
various kingdoms and principal-
ities s cons i t '
t t tttn
the
empire,
g
and
4
many of them are Inc terms f mili-
tary service Inc distinguished work
in devising military weapons.
British V. C.
The Victoria Cross of GreatBrit-
ain; widely known and probably the
e's many a man in flaringhell .roost -highly prized of all honors,
a sin an twist n t was established in 1856. It is
he knife; awarded."
e , only
for
e
on•
rd
uo
ns
m•�
many
a ibravery,":
Y tri
a r
a
.t
g son'
Pa
and
�to-gain
V'
toria Victoria
ra.
P
soto
I
Cross is indeed to '-aceomplis9t• ' a
deed of -honor Inc a Briton.
It is a
bronze cross surmounted by a
bronze lion, send bearing a scroll,
"For Valor,"
Frenc'hnsen, of duress, covet the
Legion of Honor, awarded' to' all
men France thinks 'have done some
great deed, no matter in what' walk
of 111e. 1t was. founded by Napole-
on in 1802, and was first known 00
the
Order of
Ord Eagle.
'
;h
e
The Rus-
sians, Inc military :bravery, decor-
ate with the Order 'of ,St, George,
which was established' •by Empress
Catharine II in. 1789, "
Servia has the order of 'I`ak_<rta,
and Austriatwo purely military
ordeal. Japaa:nhas the Order of the
Golden Kite, the newest of an of
the decorations Inc.valor. Tt was
established in 1891.
It's
the
I,i >
ci
ep boy sad
boy •
g Y the Paris
Who er6ue11 where the bullete nip,
It's -the Andwerp man P
Who is ending his spite
air.
With b1,eod-est, .
Uke
dprayer
wipl,, if. he
hellos h'
the Side t
•�' i.
3 -, of the Liver-
pool lad
In the Raiser's s lnill,o" - '
n kat. • �'
I�a
.,
The .
T,(a
leer'
s• m0 1 ,
-
tl ei
r
est
ones' !- .ileo
She ,hides hot fate in heaven,
She playa that she -we're the Yor -
e1iiae maid , .•
Or ,the .widowed .wife in Devon,
They mourn bh,edn• dead
With proud'1•ield heed,
Whose souls ,are in God's will,
Site mourns foe the thrice -eine leci
soul of him
Who plenned,'fhe attillion kirL1'
-Betty D, Thornley; in October
C0nadaa Monthly, ,
'Phe Ideal. -
"Would ,Yeti forgive sue i1 i kissed.
yott?"
":Flow eau 1 tell beforedand 1"
•
•1'rmy. Aatonfbbiles.
Motor've,hie.tee of ail kinds play
all ee
,dl r:
Sia as
n b �'
le
p art
in P the
Entree
peen eonfliot. Cannon, even o{
large calibre, lace mo -ti bed' :upon
heavily alanored motet• truffles,
moved from place and
lllar,e to place tvitll fair
greater speed: than could possibly
be ahea deme t teem h(i1S-es 'There aro
alsotracks
E.
of carrying a
l r,
n
U VL.''
S1 C
n
travelling-
g1 q�.
L
tit
z.
motor 1
aan
b-
lakuoe�s, water-lanit �trutelts tv'i,t1S: acp-
par•attls for . distilling' water that
carr ,
• b the water: to the. man on• the
firing lime motet, vehicles eiluipped.
with wtt.eless,telegraph and telpr`
phone stations • tractors with= a
winch and ol11Lin los tlr.aitlang ''heavy
guns iritic pee:t roil Upon the eat-
bre,alk.'of was, army .officers requi�si-
tioned tanieab.s and 10 stox oaeriagee
nl every targe city, with which to
hurry the ,tr1,ops to thei,r rendez-
tams, iaatd tenni. :there .'b0 their
places en the frontier, The gen
er els and staff officers 01 all the
leading atmi:es nee high-powered
awbotrsarbiles to (;ravel From place to
place. Many of those ,nachln0s.,an0
;ravelling war ofilees, .,
A desp.atcli from London says: ed shoulders with death. He' was
The British cruiser $awike, launch- I a boatswain of the Hogne's crew
ed in 1891, was •sunk by a torpedo I when that cruiser was torpedoed on
from a German submarine in the1 Sept 22. He jumped into the sea
northern waters of the North flea, that day ants, kept afloat anti!' his
good kick took him into a trawler.
Of her crew, which numbered as . His grim experience was repeated
many as 544, only 73 survivors have I as nearly as could be pose;ble. So
been reported, including a Reuben- I that
ant-comunander and three warrant
officers. The Theseus, a sister
cruiser of the Hawke, alo was at-
tacked by the submarine, tbut escap-
ed undamaged, the torpedo, in this
ease, •going wide of its mark. The
survivors reported by the Admiralty
are Lieut.,Com'mandez• Robert R.
Rothman, Boatswain Sydney Aus-
tin, Gunner James Dennis, Acting
Gunner Harry Evitt and 69 mem-
bers of the crew, Commander no -
email and twenty men were saved
by a raft, :the 'o'thers 'being picked
she by a tr•.arwlsr and' landed at
Aberdeen. Among the missing are
Captain M. P. Williams, Com-
mander B. A. Pratt Barlow and
eight naval cadets.
One o:f the rescued nen-commis-
sioned officers, Boatswain Sydney
Austin, of the Hawke, hears -a -
charmed life.. Twice he has touch.
within three weeks virtually
he has ,twice escaped .with remnants
of crews .destroyed by the German's.
Itis presumed that the German
submarine, with the boldness which
has characterized the operations of
the Unter See Bores, hook advant-
age of an early morning -fog and :eta
tacked the soont ships somewhere
off the coast of Scotland. The sue -
cess of the German ;su'bmarine, com-
ing so quickly after the achieve-
ment; of. the U9 in destroying the
Cressy, Hogue ;: id Aboukir on
'Sept, 22, is p,;rtie,ularl
y note-
worthy, because the blow appears
to have been •delivered ,far from the
German naval base, and in spite of
the increased vigilance of British
commanders. It is probable that
rthe German submarine ventured
fully 250 :miles fro the mouth of
the River Elbe and sank the Hawke
in the region of the Dogger Bank's.
PRAYERS FOR WORLD'S PEACE
That Swords nay Be Beaten into Ploughshares
and
Spears Into Pruning nooks
"On earth" peace; "-=Luke ii., 14.
Never before in the history of
man'kin'd have so many and such
fervent prayers for peace been lift-
ed unto Clod. Wars have despoiled
'the
ar
bef
o
r
e
n
o
w , C
e
zl
s. AttilIas and
s have again
and again achieved their
dreadful
handiwork, But never before has a
conflict been fought upon such `t
stupendous eca'10 been armed with
1
50 monstrously effective weapons
ane: threatened with ruin so high az.
ebage of civilized development :as
this
i
which t s now raging thrroug'h-
oat,Europe. And therefore never
before has the agony cif men's souls
been 00 intsend 11101' p,rayera
Inc deliverance so universal and
sincere, Not •ense,merely here, hitt
everywhere throughout the ear:
not merely bo -day; tbM on every
that witnesses the snpreune sloe
of nation 'Iditing up sword again
tion -not merely by us, who are far
removed -ficin tire and sword,,but
by sober men .etnel .stricken women
in all lands now ravaged 'by des-
truction--is G•ocl'besot ght, With one
voice and one heart, "to vouchsafe
EUS children .peace,"
Up Front a !L'honsaati Attars
:there goes ter God •the prayer to
hanash ,from 111e eat 1rh "the griev-
eusne1a et war," that men may nab
1)8 1leuglhtered like' herded beasts
Within the-s18anr'bles; that women.
may
not I stripped .Y be
stir ,
to
d of
p! loved came
Anel left alone and desolate; that,
homes may, not be'destroyed or tree
spoiled, and .the aged and the
young, tire -,sick and the enfeebled
scattered helpless •before :die winds
elf, v
rel
cute•
that
c,l'r .
t ;hated fields
m'l � a
a,y not be laid waste and inhabit-
ed places bloated like a deserts; . t •
Famine may not starlit that
pestilence 9111c nee eaath,
wa l
:Lit`
t darkness "
l.n
eSle
and
ove
p r
t beset. se
Y Lth• '
(, h
amp ' Mee, as
in for gotteredays ; that the machin-
ery
�, end:'inonume•nts, arts and
sciermai, comforts and
beauties of
'a thousand ,yoars gone' by may, not
be swept into oblivion ; that pro-
gr•ess toward efficiency, more
aibundant and more justly distri-
buted wealth, tuner political and
industrial democracy, wider anti
deeper knowledge
lefties. 15 er '
, ideals
1'11
„ 1
s of
re
liberty zt
.and.happiness, ,v
may
not be stayed for a thousand years
to come; that -lust and 'rate may
not ,possess the souls of men, force
usurp the place, of reason in the
governance of affairs, and the brute.
violence 01 might dictate isle terms'
of human destiny 7
Y
Up. from a million hearts ,'these
goes to God the .p�'ay er to grant one;
earth Inc blessedness of ,peace: that
people may dwell in sale dwellings
r• and
th-'
day
1n (Quiet Resting Places.
That deserts may bloom like: the
tor : rose and all waste places of the
ma- earth be glad; drat routes of trade
and nate of 'business may be
thronged, and prosperity dwell
within Inc hordes of every land;
that t s'c'
rents may be bngy in her la-
boratories, philosophy vocal in her
halls of learning, and redig+loll tri-
umphant, in the :teunpl'e.s of God's
praise ; that the hearts of men may
be possessed of hove, and in quiet-
ness and confideis:ce learn' the noble
;1a,vs-arrd,foilow in the gentile ways
of brothe"prood',, :;drat God's i.tn,g-
dem may come arses I3is avi11 isi dine
en earth has'
it is in 'Heaven.
seven.
Fondly do we hope t.h:at was', the
work of tiltl,aii'v anct the sura of
all ill, may speedily,lujss away.a ey-
venally do we pray :that peeoe, which
bormelt}l 110 marl' and
ringth stn-
to
e al,. .
5;11 . P •
Nbl .,
Dot'
g 1 to all, may ,.p•eed-
il,y appear, Efighly ,do wo yeses
to do all Which yc
t,1 itlab FtCll�t@\'t" that
Concord among men :oaks naeMert
witill r
v
tl;tvdzl
1
ct;l :rhea
:elan t,an Mt
neither
h•apeeinees not litre friendship, nor
any whole:see a fruit of toil or
tihonght,''_41,ev.' Joire 3iaynes
1io:1
ones.`
ABATT'S t'' TO
The very best for use in ill -health and convaieseence
Awarded Medal and f•Iighost Points in America
at World's Fair, 1893
PURE--SOUND-WHOLESOME
Jowl LABATT, 1L1:Mf1'TD, LONDON, CANADA