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The Clinton News Record, 1912-05-02, Page 2i.' 'News -Record OTT,NG MONEY THAT'S • EXACTLY 1 WHAT YOU Del WHEN'YOU TREAT YOUR SEED GRAIN WITII STAR BRAND Formaldehyde BECAUSE IT KILLS 113E 41IUT. CI11tilI' WHICH MEANS THAT YOU rwIL'Li}JANE .' A COMPLE IE CLRAIi U'RQI'•' - FIFTY 'CENTS X -- PINI AT TH .zl - T7rAtL-t STORM,'- W. Sr R. HOLMES I DR us�Q sT. SEED GR®, I i�' i\ WE HAVE A COMPLETE STOCK. i)F SEED GRAIN OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING: • TIMOTHY —CLOVER —A LSIKE --PP: AS —HANDSChilli1U BARLEY WE PAY THE HIGHEST PRICE FOR OATS, PEAS AND BARLEY, ALSO HAY FOR . BALING. FORD&McLEOD Z X X ,K x X X l: X x X x s CENTRAL $TRATFORD ®NT.v'' x CENTRAL BUSINESS COLL- x x EGE STRATFORD, ON'I'. se x Our eta -sees are new larger than x x ever before but we have cream x x ged our quarters and 110 have x x room fon a few more students, s se You may enter at any toe. x x \Ve have a Staff ot nine cxper- x x fenced instructors and our coni- x x see are the bast. Our grad- x x uates succeed. This week three x x recent grathtates informed us x x that they have positions pay- x a fog $05, -$75 and 5125 per x • rnoneh, We have three depart- x x ments,-Cit'nceereial, Shorthand x x and 'Telegraphy. Write for x ,e our free catalogue now. et x Se sc D. A. Mef;ACILI,AN, x x _ f tuncipal x $ :x Y. x x• X x .x r x x. XXX r: 'on County News Gathered for_News-Record Reader DETAILS AT LAST effort to sage Them ve an inter nave. perished. • • "The hours that elapsed before we •ware pirleed_up.by the Carpathin were the lm;s'st and most terrible that I Rescued Pastengers Tell of the - tl ever emmt. Practically without any Ehd of the Titahie•sensatir•i: of feeling because cf the - _ icy wilier; we were almost dropping from lntigue. We were afraid to tutu UST TOTALS' 1601 around to look to see whether we were seen by passing, craft and when some- one who was facing the stern passed It Be1 Coal 1WANT YOU ,0U COAL AND PROMPT DELI\' ERY SECURE 10'Ul2 SUP-, PLY FROM IIS ORDERS LEFT AT u,a VLS & ROWLAND'S HARDWARE 'STORE PROMPTLY AT- DEATU the word that somethingthat looked First Authentic Stories Increase the like a steamer wee corning up one of Horrors of the Disaster - sand the men became hysterical under the Down, strain. The rest of us, too, were 'treat- Played as the Vessel Went nirt001 Gracie point -even Passengers Cannot Say Col. Graoio denibd with emphases What Occurred- Long Hole that any di themen were,fired,upon. In the Big Steamef.'s Side, and declared that only once was a reXelver discharged. New Yolk,. Aprit,a10.-The` Cunard •`This Was for the purpose of intimi liner Caruatlria, a ship of gloom and dating some steerage passengers, he night said, who had tumbled irt o a boat sucor, came into Te+ 1rrk last . was prepared for launch- withi' the before itP ,Ptheit the first news direct from ing. This shot was .fired in air. great White Star liner Titanic, which and when the foreigners• were told sanl: riff' the Greed Banks of New that the next would bee,, directed at roundiaed early on Monday morntug• them they promptly retrned to the last deck. There was no confusion and The great liner went down with her no :panic.• band playing., taking -with her to Contrary to the general expectation,ectation death nil. but 745 of her human eargo .'there was no jotting impact when of 2,340 souls. the . vessel struck, according to the To this awful death list sir persons army officer. He was in his berth were added. One died, in the lifeboats when the vessel smashed into the which were put off from the liner's submerged portion of the berg and side ;send five 'subsequently succumbed was aroused by the jar. He looked on the rescue ship Carp ria. The at his watch, he said, and found it list of promiuent then mincing stands was just midnight. The ship sank as previously reported, and the total with him at 1.22 a.m., for los watch death list as brought to port last .nicht stopped at that hour. by the Carpathia is 1601. Survivors in the lifeboats huddled in. the darkuets at a safe distance from the stricken ship and saw her, go down. As to the scene on hoard when the litter struck; acconrits die. agree widely. Some maintain that a oonlpa.rative calm prevailed; others eay "that wild disorder broke out and that there was a maniacal struggle for the likeboate. That Ole liner 'truck an iceberg as reported by wire- less was confirmed by all. Sensational rumor+• told by hysteri- cal passengers who would not give their names said that Captain Stealth had killed himself on the bridge; that the chief engineer had taken his life, and that three Italians• were shot in the struggle for the boats. These ru- iners in the could not. be confirmed mvrs earlyion attendant upon the o s landing of the survivors. p Ripped from stein to engine -room by the greet mass of ice she struck amidships, the Titanfe s side was laid open as if by -a Gigantic -can-opener. Slie quickly listed to starboard and a shower of ice fell on to the forecastle deck. Shortly before she sank she broke in two abaft the engine -room, and as she disappeared beneath the water the expulsion of air caused. two expiosione, which were plainly Beard by the. survivors ndeift. A moment more and the Titanic bad gone to her doom, with the fated hundreds group. ed on the afterdeck. To the servitors they wore visible to the last, end their. cries and moans were pitiable. E. L. Taylor of Philadelphia, one of the survivors, jumped foto the sea just' three montes before the boat, sunk: He told a graphic story as he cause from the Carpathin, "I was eating when the boat greets the iceberg," he said. "There W55 an awful shock, that made the boat trem- bled from steer to stern. ' I did not realize fer some' time what had hap- pened. No one seemed to know the extent of the accident. We 10ore tole} that 'an iceberg had been struck by the ship. I felt the boat rise and it seemed to me that she was riding over the, ice. I ran out on deck, and tlet . t I could see ice. It was i verit- able set oe f ice and the boat was rocking over it. I should say that parts of the iceberg were 80 feet high, hut, it had been heoken into sections, ship. probably' byour , t t. 1 Y1 "I iurnped into the ocean and was picked up be. see of the boats. I Never .expecte,.o see land again. I 1 waited on boat t�l+ i to boat until the lights event out. 11 seemed to ole that the discipline on board was woe- derfe1." Cob 'Archibald Gracie, U.S A., alae last matt saved, -1 vent down with the vessel, but was picked up. Cal. Ora- cie told a reutarkable story of person- al hardship mad denied emphatically the reports that tb.er•e had 1.been any panic on board. ..Rc praised in the highest terms the behavior of both passengdi's and the crew, tand paid a High tribute t,o the heroism of the wo- men passengers "Mrs. Isador Straus," lie said, 'went to her death because,she would ' not desert her. husband. Although he pleaded with her to take her place in the boat, she steadfastly refused, and when the 'ship settled nt the head, the two were engulfed by the wave that swept 'her." . ,Q,,TENDED' TO, • Stevenson • W: Stevenson W.A.T.T,S. For Boot .and Shoe Repairing. . g STO13Fe OPPOSITle TITE POS'1'O'FF1Cl:, LOWE INAS HEROIC Young Officer's Story' Shows He ISM Played the Man. DiD MOUNT ' TEMPLE PASS? • Steamer at St. John Has Passengers• on Boated Who Saw Titanic Sink, But Captain Moore Indignantly Denies That His Vessel Ignored Distress Signals Msde For Titanic When Message Came. Washington, April 25, -Harold. G. Lowe, :fifth officer of the sunken Ti- tanic. yesterday told',the e&ate in- vestigating committee his part in the struggle df the survivoils: for life fel-, lowing the catastrophe. His testimony developed that with a volunteer crew, he rescued four men from the water, saved a sinking collapsible lifeb"bat by towing it astern of hie, and took -woman from twenty .men and one off t the bottom of au overturned boat. Every one of these under hie charge he landed safely on the Carpathin: From first to last Lowe's . story showed that he played the man.Or- dered away in charge of lifeboat No. 14, he packed it to its capacity on the top deck, and, fearing that some might attempt to jump into • it while it was descending, apt a fusilade Lawrence Beasley, an Englishman, from his revolver. nee afloat, he graphically describes the , sinking of i took charge of a flotilla of small craft, the Titaniic: • which eventually were picked up by "Anil then there fell on the ear the the rescue ship without the lose of a most appalling sound that human he- life. a . ing ever listened to -the cries of 1 Cornfmting in interest with the day's hundreds of our fellow -being strug- testimony was the interchange of tele- gling in the icy cold water, crying granas between Senator Wan. Alden for help with a cry that we knew Smith, chairman, and the acting Pre - could not be answered. We longed ' inter of Canada, George he, Foster. .to return and pick up some of those The hatter told of the docking of swimming, but this would have meant the steamer Mount Telnple at St. 001. Crrecie told of how he star drrvon t0 the topmost elect ) when. the ship settled• and was the 'sole survi- vor after the 105100 that swept het just • before her final plunge had swamping our boat, and further loss of tale lives of all of us, "We tried to sing to keep the -tee- med from hearing the cries, and row- ed bard to get away from the scene of the wreck; but I think the memory of those sounds will be one of the things the rescued will find it hard to efface from memory. We are all try- ing hard not to think of et." "What in your opinion 1056 1110 CAUSE! of the accidents asked a re- porter of Major Puechen of Toronto, as he stepped on to the Cunard pier ere who said they saw the Titanic f it C rlathia Iast evening I g John, N.B., with passengers aboard who claimed to have sent tate Titanic sink. It was thought possible the Mount Temple was the ship that was only five miles from the White Star liner when site took her final plunge. Senator Smith has requested that the depositions of the officers and crew of the Mount Temple be sent to hint. III addition, he accepted the offer of Dr. F, C. Quitman of To. ,onto to appear before the dommittee. Dr. Quitzntan was one of the passen rout 10 it I sink' say i was carelessness: gross tare- Acting Premier Foster's telegram, lessn0st," declared Major Peucllin dated yesterday, gave tate version of with we wens. "Why, the ceptalin. Captain Moore of the Mount Temple, knew we were going into an ice freta, end added: and why should he remain dining in "Under these circumstances it does the saloon when such danger was about?" not seem necessary to detain boat, Another story of British courage duo to sail Friday evening. If corn- " ooncerns Mi s. Richard Otter of Be- mission can be appointed to take' eap- tain's evidence, will no doubt be ex- husband as ger T .ROMPTLY ex - with 1 ave " said be, L noire wit U1 e w jumped d "lust as .1 often have jumped with the breakers at the seashore. By great good 1ortuuc T t»s,innged to grasp the' brass railing on the deck above and I hung on by might and main. • When the eine plunged 1)01511 1: was forced to let go and I "res swirled. amend end around 10 what s0omi i to be an interminable time, leventunity ,1 T▪ O r" 9, 'WATTS S came to the eau:face to find, the sea a rnass of tangled wre knee. I.urkfig i 1y ryas 'unhurt, and wise - Shoos. made t4 order. iiig about managed to seize a wooden grating.,floatulg nearby.When 1 had recoleted my breath I discovered a Winnipeg's Crusher Giant. 'Winnipeg owns the 1110 vet. muni- cipal cipal scone crushing pleat in the world, "Tee cutllnt ia. from 100 to 3,000 etthtc 'i• e rd ; +u r.'rl tu: '11 a 0105 e 1 2, i v IS 00cents n `tel. -f t ilio obta,inrd s n t i 'r and . Yard. ,,. .r ilei grade. r in live accrn* to �t n d i, 1 • q `a'of near - Where there ha been '•a aofU sa. e ef r� n ] 0 1 b Wh It' Could E S iatger canvas :and. cork 1, life raft whish haat floated tie. A nt an, whose mastic I slid rant learn, antis Strntggliog tewartl it from som0 wreckage to which, he had alu.iig. r rase off tine beeped hint to getr en to the raft And wo tl)541 fie- gel) the work re' ;tb ecuing 114100 wile Ecol lrru'1cd este toil Sea and were tee word ! ` in 3 fiuunlerill t 4 \When dew' broke there were thin ty of • es' cu the ,r lilt. 05,1117)115o knee o • Vater nliri. a11141il. taa <ieep'fn 'the. uy + move lest the ciente,• shift be over - tea, whose was a passenger. - British She rushed.amined later by Britisk commission." to the home of her broth- despatched er-in-Jaw, Wm. II. Otter, in Cleve- In reply Senator , c land, when she heard of the disaster, t" following: and canned the list of survivors, but, Telegram -received. l will greatly her husband's name was not there. appreciate .t if deposition of captain She was near collapse until she read of the vessel, Mount Temple, which is .men Earl sacrificed their Tires scheduled to sail from St. John, N.B., that n e Friday, could be taken by commis - that women and children might live. aioners, ns art geared by you, and "It is hard to lose him," said a 10 forwarded to tee art\'nstlington, rela- s. Utter yesterday, but f. ii Mite to tive to the movements of his ship on isria he went as shouldlie did. a think i. Sunday evening, April 14, statingre- s right the men stand brick. g, L • . It. will be a wonderful thing for our lative positions to 'Titanic and Car- son to remember that his father died pathic, together with a detailed re - a hero. My husband ens an Eng- port of all wireless, messages sent and lishman, and I should want him to received: ' meet his end bravely." The committee also received a 'tele. Didn't Slacken Speed. gram signed by John H. Moore, 1101S - New York, April 10, -The New York ter of Mount Temple; A. H. Sargent, World this morning published•the fol- chief officer; H: Heald, second officer; Durrant the Marconi operator, of the is sink- and J P exclusive account lowinge�clust N.13.,Tester- staff at West St. J ohn v dated • silos F. H urtl ing of the Titanic. by C ' staff eorresporulent of The World and day, practically repeating the. isifor- assistant telegraph editor of The St. mation contained in the 1?remier's Louis Post -Despatch, on board the message, and adding that the Mount C • Temple did not see the 'Titanic's Facts thfw t+�: hich I have established by light. enquiries 4104 the Carpatitia as posi- The navies of the passengers who tiyely as theycould be established, claimed- they saw the lights of the in view of the Silence of the few sur- Titanic, the message said, ,Were not viving officers, are: known,. That tire' Titanic's officers knew Captain Moore states that a mes- several hours before the crash of the sage asking aid was received from possible nearness of icebergs. the Titanic and that he responded, That the Titanic's Speed, 23 knots but owing to the obstruction of ice, an hour, was not slackened. his steamer did not, arrive until after That the number : of lifeboats on the Carpathie; did, and that the latter the Titanic was insufficient to' accon.- sent "a message, that aid wasn't requir modate much niore than one-third of ed, ther e5sineers, to Rey nettling of the Captain Moores Statement. erete iv[osi; ntentlrsra of the crew say St. John; N,$., April 25. -The there were were 18 lifeboats and two col- mor that the steamer Mount Temple lapaibles. None say there were more was within' five miles of the Titans than '20 boats in all. The 700 who when site sank and without heeding escaped filled most of the 16 lifeboats signals of `' dtatress, steamed away, and the one collapsible got away, to leaving 1,600 souls' to perish, is in- the -limit of their capacity. dignantly denied by Captain Moore, Two Lifeboats Sank. who was in command of the vessel, New York, April 19. -"'There were His statement is as follows: helee in the lifeboats and from what "'We received a wireless message I could learn nose of them were in after midnight Sunday ftoni the Ti- gime i-g od shape," said Henry Stengel of tanic, stating that she bad struck an Newark, N.T. "We suffered dread- iceberg and Ito come at once. We fully. There was no food, no water. turned about at 12.30 o'clock and no light aboard the 'boat which car- steamed back to position given us, tied us to the Carpathin. I sane with arriving there at 4.30 o'clock. We 01y own eyes two boats, loaded with encountered.. so' much . ice,. however, passengers, go dory:. I can only that we stayed- until daylight. We 1 not see any about but could Y ad condition. of cruised attribute thin to the b the bout§ sign of the ship. Aliotit 0 a.m. on wit "I levo clear recoilection that when irnmense field of ice studded thickly we were tutting. off the Titanic the with bergs, 150 Sane the Ceopathia. putting. iu aboard the big ship. We ,',iso saw the Californian. which m at%frac Inquest, band was It Y g • g tire verdict of the ,I 1 Hays Women .Lana. wails to the northward us, sten�t�}4rt,�� T York, April 10: -Mrs. Chas. el.:. west, then corning' down to the sotttle- -,which incriminated Cohen. Ree PLocks .at So Keys and her tw'o_daughtera, 'Miss wasfl, and. she met us. She did` 1101 --"' — o. Margaret Hays• end Mrs. .Chorntpn communicate anything. At 9.4ti - "Open Davidson, survivors of the Titanrc e'Gluck, ships , time, w'0 received a : Sault 'Ste. A ritSir ei ie wreck, were met at the pier by a large general message that the Carpathia steamer 1cawa,. re the Algoma party of friends. had picked up twenty boats. We ask- ship Cot,, left at daylight for Duluth. n:esidsnt of the 'Grand ed if they wended assistance, but got Locks on both sides of the river' are Mr.Hays, 1Shortie' after we received n err for the season, and night shifts Trunk Railway, went down with the no reply.sr�ralen P Titanfe another heneral.messiago statitzg, "No- :.went at last night. Boats: from Du - In taxicabs the party.. went at once th:dxg more can be done no need to lutlt are expected to clay, .and several tal to the Gland Central station, where stand by.' We,then teff tate scene and westbound vessels will be hp to -day, they boarded a train a t prose el ecce e REPLIED P Mount TeCnple Went at Once to Scene of Disaster. TELLS ,STORY OPERATOR Durrant, the , Wireless Mang. Says He Caught C.Q.D.'Message and Cap- tain Moore Lost Nq Time In Start- ing to the Rescue, But Durrant Believed .Frankfurt and Car - pathic Were Nearest•Titanic, St. John, N.13;, April •26,-'3. Dur - rent, Marconi wfrelees operator on the steamer Mount Temple, now ly- ing et Sand Point, tells a story of wireless calls Fre picked up from the sinking" Titanic: Mr. Durant said: "I v a, lying in z v s bed reading with the telephone over my ears at 10.25, ship's time, or 12.11, New York time, when I caught the. first' call. Immediately getting out of bed, I answered, asking the posi- tion of the ship; This was acne bacl: with the addition: 'Come at once. Have struck berg.' "As soon as I, got the message, I. notified the captain, who et once doubled the watch of firemen below, •'humanities," and teaching boys to called all hands on deck, and changed despise the honest toil of workshop ay 411 1912 0 0 Li m It is important that you should now rid your blood of those impure, poisonous, effete matters that have accumulated In it during the winter. The secret of the .unequaled and really wonderful success of Hood's ad's (Sarsaparilla as a remedy for Blood Humors is the fact that it combines, not simply sarsaparilla, but the utmost remedial values of more than twenty inges diente,-Rootts. Barks' and Herbs, -known to have extraordi1ary effie easy in purifying the blood and building' up the whole system. There is no real substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla, no "just as good''' medicine. Get Ilood's teday. Sold by all druggists everywhere. ion Educational 'Anomaly.. There is a ggorous movement in Regina at present for the establish- ment of a technical school. When the educational authorities met recently, a discussion took place as to the need of a more praottiealeducational system its the city. It was waged: against the present schools, that they succeeded' admirably in'fitting pupils for ppro- fessional'life, but'that they'contribut- ed practically nothing to giving them training in such local occupations as agriculture and its kindred industries, Ili other words the schools of Regina were not suited to the community. It seems just to criticise the'acheols of a 'western city of the size of Regina sit- uated in the midst of one of the great - t f diti t ' th ld ea arming s rse s m. c wor , when on the curriculum 0u1 mof those schools, practically nothing is taught, which is of the slightest assistance to boys and girls whose natural life out- look is the land. Let western cities beware of making the mistake of Eastern Canada, 'by giving tom predominant a place to the the ship's course towards the position of the Titanic. "At 12.21 I heard the Carpathia answer the 'C. D. Q.' calls of the Titanic and heard the operator .on that ship give his position, adding: 'Have struck iceberg; come to our assistance at once.' At 12.34 I heard the Frankfurt answer the appeals of the Titanic.. That ship asked: 'What is the matter with you?' The answer was: 'We have struck an ieeberg; please tell the captain to come.' To this the operator on the Freekfurt replied: "O.K., will tell the bridge right away,' The answer to this 100s: 'Yes, quick,' "All this time tate 'C. Q. D.' mes- sage was being sent out incessantly from the sinking liner, and at 1.06 I heard the Olympic answer the call. To this the Titanic said: 'Captain says get your boats ready. Going down h Fiveminutes later fast bythe head.' a t s the Fankfurt struck in with: 'Our opt, 11 t 'At 1.21 the Olympic sent another message which the Titanic answered,. saying: 'We are putting the women off in the boats.' Another five inim- utes of anxious waiting passed, when the agonized 'C. Q. D.' again cut the air, accompanied by the words: 'En- gine room. tlaodid.' Out of the dark nese the Olympic again asked: 'How is the sea round you?' to which the reply was: 'The sea fs calm,' Another four minutes passed when the oper- ator on the Frankfurt asked the a around Ti- tania: 'Are there any boats you already?' To this there was no reply, and two minutes afterwards the 01yni"pic sent a message to the Titanic which the latter barely acknowledged by the code letter R.D. That was the last message 1 beard and -I presume the floodingof the engine room had put the wireless ort of commission. "'Meantime everything thin was pos- sbile was done on the Mount Temple. Alt hands here on deck, the boats' were Henan clear of ihedavits and the gangways and ladders were got ready to lower at a moment's notice. It was not until 4.30 that we arrived at the position of the Titanic having been much delayed by the thick field ice. At the time we saw 00 sign of t any wreckage. -f ted ship, no the a 1, the Cali- fornian �' 1 1 had a call from At v.l and told that boat_ of the dis- aster' gave the position in which he Frank- furt wafter t it occurred. Shortly furt also called ole. "About forty minutes later, we ,saw the Carpathia and Californian, with the Russian steamer llirsna. There was also a tramp steamer cruising about, apparently :going in the same directiolr as oui'Selves, but as she had no wireless installation and never a.p proaolied very near, we could not find out what she was. As soon as I saw the Carpatlna,, I asked. for treses of' the Music, and if she had seen s1 'thing, batt• got no: reply. Other ships asked the same question, but she kept silent to ell. It was not until 8.30 that the Car- pathia gave out anything, and then" the only information wase that' she had picked up twenty bents. There was not a w00d as to the number of survivors. "At the time I' received the first message l would. judge. the Mount Temple to be fifty miles from the Titanic's position, and when the big ship event down, there w•ae still `30 or ,25 miles between us," Abe Cohen ,Remanded. Toronto, April 20. -Charged with the, minder'. of Rebeceia Cooper on Agnes street, a few weeks ago; Abe Cohen. appeared in the pollee coin t yester- dday: Magistrate trate Denison"remanded h • ted week. Collet 1 .waft ari C� him for a -ales a' ,W 5 `c ^r"'e .o f va la c but t ten a chau'�ed, tog one of murder following and farm. The cities of the west have their future -a great future; but the backbone of the cities must be the wheat -rustling prairie, Let the sons of pioneer prairie farmers be enoour.- gged tp„stityk to tlieeeerelig, Cour'iez, President Creelman. P . reiident Crcelnlan or: the Ontazle Agricultural. College, was speaking to Ole Literary Society at McMaster lea. versify recently,, 011(1 when ire :appear- ed on the platform he was greeted with a series of cock•a-doodle-deo e and other tarrnyatd noises. Mr. "Creel- man began his, speech briskly as te,- lows: and oils Ladies soil gentlemen roosters in the gallery: 1, find I am Net so tar' removed from the farmyards of Ontario as T had expected to be umee entering these halls." 'This made the president of the fam- ous college solid 11111 the McMaster boys at once. Boy Scouts In Canada. There aie',15,p00 Boy- Scouts in Ca!:- ada, according to the first report of the Demi-Mop Council Ontario bet's 6,987 Scouts, and of this number .To- ronto supplies 1,814, Ottawa'has %520',. London 203, Hamilton 250, and every city and town in the province is re- presented. 'Manitoba has 930 Scouts, Nev Brunswick 775,, Quebec 69.', Peirce Edward Island. 'over 100; I'1nrr Sc oiia 3,624 (ii1 whoin Yialifiete'eup- plies 1,100, being 51611 to Toronto 1.14, number), British Columbia 000, Al- berta 4510, and Saskatchewan over 560. IN ORDER TO FIND .OUT to what extent the different foodproducts are used by its mil- lions of readers, the ” Woman's World " (circulation over' 2,000,000 copies monthly) recently inaugurated a most inter- esting coupon canvas throughout North America. One'of the questions propounded was,'"" What tea do - you use ?" and the replies received demonstrate that Lipton"... - Tea is the most popular of all package teas, showing its sale to'be double that of its nearest competitor and over 100 per .brands taken to- gether. e than the next two mentioned silt, m , C getter. Surely Honest Tea is the Best Policy, Montreal. hone of them would When he filmed his ship and rush to discuss ill®, affair. eel 'back among fmtnense fields of ice o7 n recti, risir, for ' "Before said C Gracie, he was clotnr 50 tit g Befnro I bar a ton , that with Charles M. he had on board 1,461, passengers, "I. had t; president of the Gr Trunk b05id03 his creta. Nevertheless, he Hays, ifi > aOne ofe last promptly iauswer0d the call for helps Rxtlto p � Pacific dl 'The aid \via s. things Mr.Hca s s . InCell White Stilt the Canned and the Ilam- ganged Himself ol. Grand th Wtf bora- smerican lines. are devoting their ,Montreal, April 25-St.anielaue Rad- 141150tion and' Meennity itt hieing with .iebeefsk", a Bole,' serving a Sentence .. .era ou a sen. , one :mother to attain the supremacy of eight months'' for stealing money, Sim ,carit0i ace o se40101 y suits eJ: S'ev0ral. rtnot,•unatss. l7e- -f w r alter which he 6 tnru t in: ]psurtous chaps end lu m,a'tr.ng from a leUn++ Soar le. al lc vacu,i'at space on your walls. - 'nutnbed:.Red half deed, bemire"' its l •ds'� The time will come wee to have been deported, yesterday 'Where do you want the motto • '!'snits > to save, them• avd one of two made spent rhecu aon: when st 1 Cash" 'painted?, bee t this will ,be eheokod by marring conmitterl,suicide by,hang-• ` w a , e low a fele hours later he rues ea , tory o the ;je. ceiling, of br,nrse, .. . _..-. riot Y ns,1 pain er inn. e• o reach na, but we .t o disaster.' Poor rel- in lriuiself '''fth ,n strrrlt im; the lava- Barber Shop Proprietor -•On toe` y Had +ca made some. 01 Ili 6g i May Be a Strike. Nashville, Penn., Aprila}I 25. UfkiriaI s of the Chattanooga, and St. Louis -Railway, who have been in. COU h a committee of tele- graphers conference: Ce wit hers- over the question; of wages, at all negotia- tions 'h announced vest y v abandoned. trolls ltiY41 been Big: Revenues From Deaths. New York, -April 26.-A i,ondon ca } ()neatly cable says. "It is.iatly anriouncel that in the bast- three weeks the:lex- cheguer has received from deatk duties alone $10,825,000.). LIPTO GOES' FARTHEST FOR, T E THE MONEY EEAUTI F iYO UR. HO1VL Our store is ,!rowde,l with house furnishings which coin bine beauty, comfort"and utility : Wrienow Snentoi,-ln many colors and sizes, plain- lace ' end insertion 30e up. TAlasrny Cvnr,urs--Oriental patterns, heavy, fringe and tassels $3.00 to 80,00_ pr. t1ARP'G'r SQIARre—Made in England, all sixes, henamiful origin- al patterns. Goon Ltnneener-2 yds, 3 yds and 4 yds wide, 50 vele, ' Drier m+arts, timyrarags, stairr»tltet, couch oils. eying, table covers, floor uilclotla, etc. at right prices. J. H. CHELLEW, They Are Gnarantee4 A guarantee goes with every one of out' Watches so,' you take no risk. The price too, is right. If you need a watch let's show` you ours. W R. t Ni T Jeweler,,r Clinton.� ISSUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES. f1'=� Butter wrappers Fpr Good .But tertehere is always a hriek-demand at the top price the market pays. 01 Von (51)4113 Bat 10.4 les hest when dormileop, inaile t,wrap. 1 ''s ami 10e ,riffles 'tan name of deny. the Tnikei n f d a with 1 per y beings c .roses the maker ciao -.mare customers. 1'-alEoad e .Lt, Tele v ming theprinted s i 1 1 ' uov nfu wrappers, ertryoily h t. tfynu:arertt pp 11 yon start using them, 7ott, will continue es) well pleased will von be. There's a teem ih tt package •atd'the cost ia.. 1. attheOfficeof u eras Order The. News, Record.