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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1910-2-24, Page 2= THURaUAT 'FEBRUARY 91. 1010 .
OODFJUCH. ONT &RIO.
PUBLI8$$D EVERY THURSDAY
THE ST(fliA I. GODERiCLJ. ONTARIO
any mans. The New Zealand (anv-
ernment, whosernuduct hes been eo
extolled by Canadians eager W place
their own Government in a falseilgbt,
has driven a keen bargain. The
Dreadnought is not L ► take its place
iu the North Sea. hitt it is to be the
flagship of the Chitin unit. In re—tint)
for permitting the 1)readn ',igt 4.o be
stationed at a distants, the'r\tw, Zeal-.
Mut f:overnrtfent-rtemands that two
British cruisers, three destroyers and
two submarine•s shall iv kept in New
Zealand wafters in ting of'rare, and
that the flagship shirt visit New Zeal-
and at least, oni'e n year. :ken Zeal-
and pay,, only for the building of the
lfrt•adouught, nut rot its -annual main-
tenance, She demands alto that
se: en tither. rhiits •be stationed off her
coasts at the expels(' of the British
Government. and nfanneej as far, as
possible by New Zeeland [,frets and
crews. New Zealand will contribute
only $300.01II s'eerly toward the navy.
and this cunt is to 1e spent. not to re-
Iiiwe •the .British taxpayers, but to
raise the wears of the of herr. and
men shove the [bitten h'vel, avhieh is
considered too lose,
THK SI('4AI. PitINTINU CO. Limited
•Teleatione Call No. IS
;Tera,. et lslbeeraetlon :
S1.0) per atmum th aavwuou.
tz months, roe : three months, •Lkt
To l'nited States subsorlbun.. $I.3n a year
.lrldlyln aiivamet.
Buts.crtb•M who fail to receive Tuts a,us.tI.
'regularly by mail will confer • favor by ar
uatnl ma us of the tact at as tarry a date a.
Possible.
when a change of addrem I. . ind, both the
old and the new addrsar should be given.
Advsrtltng Rates :
-ta,tgaland other )similar advertrAtilent.•, Its
per lune for tins insertion and to per line frr
ea. h . 1 ❑end Insert . Measured by . a
- nonpareil .4ale. twelve lines to an inch.
Huoiue... earls of .4. linos and under. IPS per
year.. • .
t FH.
'ound ni ods
.ldvrrtl-.•rnenlrof Ina, M Y
cations Vacant, So tuitions Wanted, Houses for
Bale or to Hent, Yantis for !tale or to Rent
Anlnles for Sale, eta. not ascending eight
lines. We each insertion : 111 for nod month. .Atte
for tomb .ub.equeut month. harder advertlse-
Meta. itepr pertb.n,
Ann•,0i,.wtrn'-. in nrltnery reading type ten
sent. ler line X. entire 1e.. then :.4•.
' Ani sr.•cisf nor fee, t h+•ub,l..t of which 1. the
secuaiarrbetatt ofe.t
noy.audtti•tr�itar sttri.
vl n
atton, to e. coneidrtet tttl tort enownt Ld
' - tie cbargtst acerualinglyy.
Roar. ha dl.ptty rn,l eontrnet adeerU-e.
sleet. SUFI.• (Iv( ti ret a.pplirttion..
Adds.. -„Il rnn.onanteat/me, to
THIa111iNA4 I11INTINO CO:. Limits
-GHHiSi ic-11.-Tul:ltgU.tY.iKH. at.UI .
THE SITUATION IN BRITAIN.
A etiticel situ:tri so ham developed
vet y tepidly in the new Drill; ar
1isnlent. The It l'h Natti•snali. tt. w
_ ts &ren . f -the- Leber- eerie.- steel *Weil -
Male of the' Cits•ridl ufenabera Gunk
that 111., Asquith is nut SW111'ientl
aggressive in his atiark upon the veto
polars of the Isoase f iords, ami"
. tIsreatsof withdrawal of imprint are.
wade. :1s the lit s; al ane, e•ott.lerva-
-tive parties are al st evenly bat.
altered, numerically. in the 11"use. the
actisn of the Nationalists and • I,btr-
'tes is a supreme f.tt'tot• in thesitua-
tion. and it rest a.ins to be .een,Wheth-
ev Mr..\squith will Iw aisle to, proceed
with 11 i. .tigrittlt orslid.
It the twe•ent Government finds it
Impos.ible'tn !Mid office. it is not 'um -
likely that the te.ultwill be a bleed•
ier destrunn
eti• of aristocratic priv-
ilege than ire now hi' might. If 1-
erate I,iberalistri.'nnttntlrnle, the tight
will he bet neer] 1'r•ryisni and thot'-
ough-going ltedieali.uf, with possible
consequeneea of the titter overthrow
_Rim the Howse'ed. 1.ords and the estab•
shnient-ora tittealeumetalie_inixu-en..
went. \Vtfatever happen. the posi-
tion of th, hen.litary lords ie in im-
minent danger and government by
an,b.i'rary is neatly at an Grad in
Britain.
JANE f3ARLOW'S STORIES,
A new hook Ire .ammsmrpd from the
pen of Jane liprinw. the write, who
has dune for 1. i* h. rm•tple-what 11ae-
laren-.and (Berrie here t!cne foe the
Scot eth. at is a pity tiro. \Iis•.ilislow's
was ks Ore not betti•i' kite wn. .They
re .htu,ks_.uf .h"it .t,9t•iee sniffler to
• to 15,'131,1. Bits litislt, but ate• es
gent 'hely Irish welt. is i•nteh. 'The
�•
write ii, ufln nill
rrn('
re
f iri.r
r nr'actr , Pat and 'II ti it almond
mend in sin n titles as ',The - NVindfadll"
real Irish k till/tees ahi1, tt.t r td"neigh
burliness at touchingly depict Isl.
while other• slit • the quirk- tempered
Celt 'it resentment of slighteor injntit',,
his t-eediners to fakeoilene,• his meets
a1►qut. ars it. Wel e, w'illf IS chip on hie
shoulder +ted him gtrls er ipticknees
to feel 1 to an nude or an at-
tempt t.. make amends. So sine has
said the, .Miss Barbie min eaail]``:
have made her storiem mora set tial{
al, but she prefers lo depict then-
- eveotfnf-fifie-of'th7 .Aitaide count'
. folk in their tiny cabins, with their
continual struggle for existence, and
the interestof'her work depends solely
nn Its very hunnas; qualities. The
,people Ore teal, we ter thein :as they
live their tough .and poverty-stricken
lives with no greater excitement than
an'aecident to a pig..or the pn•sent of
a shillings to a lad from some spend=
thrift traveller, and we laugh at their
speech and their humor and• wink
away a tear over their, patient endur-
ance of troubles which would embitter
any other race. If the new book
"Irish Ways' is What other hooks
from her pen have taught um to ex-
pert. uteri. it; it treat in store for those
who read.it.
Canada doe,. diner than either of
the other daughter nations. In the
first place Canada iuuuediatel takes
P • awe dockyards—Hittites age
Ewtuimault -- and m*intaina thea[
permanentle aknetrulia Wetely un
e err -TS -MA TS A trlrnnttmn tn thy ofjn d A td
Sydney at • future ante--esent-
ually” ie tite terns used in ,the agree.
Orem.. Canada is to build and main -
have pry permanent n posers, ItAhas wANTs HER
been proved over and over again in
history that the interest that pursues
such tactics is but piling up judgment
*We against Ido.. o e when the insults
able fall does comp, its destruction is
the more complete and the ruin of the
patty that euppor s it 1e
irremediable.
EDITORIAL NOTES. PUBLISHED
__-
The Foste1-51acd•tuald Mauler suit
is on at Toronto. The evidenc. is vol-
tieninottA, but most people are 'skip-
ping" it and are wnittug for the end of
the story in the jury'sverdict.
Aix ut four hundred people attended
a meeting in Toronto the other even-
ing to boost the proposal of a contti-
bntitn of two Dreadnoughts to the
British navy by the Canadian Govern-
ment. When that is the best Toronto
ran do, the popularity of the new
Borden •'they, is not, much in evi-
dence.
The-automobileque+tion" hoe been
ttiiGer dii•rtts H
fun in ttrf tegislat--,
and the Premier promir.ea the taking
ot"drrstic..itepti' at some, time not fat
1 distant to stop the r.Lrele•t•s 'driving of
tytotnubih•a. ''These chauffeuva," says
lir 1'hitney:-"muirt. Ire -4*
t bey cannot. with impunity, drive wit h
utters-teZktesstte•s.;nverstTetts tthitlteigh-
.a .
ways in t ' , u Peoa'incr. The rights oTfbe
people 1 -tet and WWI be protected.
and tbi'' cklees conduct shell cease."
The'Pr.•••• dr isptroflg un Ianguigr, at
any rate.
T:he_Pruvincial Mitji, Cstiuuissiun
has tissued a'rrp in cuvrring•its foyer--
tigatiuns. It urges the ghat' import-
ance o1 Y. but ply Of pure Milk cud of the
eta tirceinent of cleanly Methods in
ii telling; omilk. ;ted res•' ends rut ict
I.I:ertimi and is ors sit ingent cello's -
1 tit'. it is suggested tlid uuruicitlydl-
111, be. give 51 linger 114tw'elss.fur lieelt;-
ing and .ula•rvising. The alarming
modality tlirsughaat the Prov-
tlributtd to impure. or pt or.
t
on this Remind alune-nn •fr-
cr.1 -is shade • fol irnpr.,vcd
a .%tr.t rn.eta►t (fisc.
Canada iv tic build rix dvty tit and
Au.trali/a_the ::aur nuruher. C nada
will build' no solemnities at lire ent,
Pe.
tl
though A.t't•atit Will hove th
lint Canada µi11 pay every sept of t
roestir tn:aint-ninitig•Iyer fleet. •idhil
Australia tt•l, take *i'2
,.' ltio ye'f1�
fiunl•tieveckt�'s uf, ht Ittitish tax. -
payers. Eventllinigh -Australia will
led Id a l)tr:nlniuisht,.e'.a Ida 1a
(ti -
inn
more 1.o.'n fuel defence.
The (tttiwa Opp,.11inn
ack?1
aifditis11, Air nta1liait ravhl e
('annda hand at 11111,111;111111.111
I.rwnf 11: itain to - tnrild two 1)re;
noughts which ire's• to join the British
fleet in the North Sea. The 'Ans-
tralian-Dreadnought will stay in,Aus-
Iratien waters• and hitt New Zeal. -ed
Du•eattnought in East erIt s-atere, where
it will Reeve the purpose of Ideal de-
fence:,•-
hat in
Tice
to
THE PEER -BEER ALLIANCE.
,tronghnlds of ('nn-ers'ati•nf in -the
Iteitish election contest just dosed.
The cities sld.by the Liberal pitrt•y
in a very satisfart .iy manner. but
giro after gain was scored for -the
('onse•r•vatives in the rural ennstifs-
eneieta. Some of the met beds by
which these resale were ' obtained
have Leen corning to light and ate
u
shnt tri»wl in on atairle in The *011.
'real 'Witness. 1fr. .1ohn
that v.herever he has gone atltin
'g the
Villager)/of the town ptnplb be WAS
1.1.1 5lint puldir hr•uses Hare been
pt•nrti(slly• flu tomiuittet' 5,4m)s of
_file 'Tories. and _ .th,ti the entq•uune.
forces -of the Jlink.traale.havt; Iwen
used • fri SecureTee y votes.,At the
same time. tu.liriatt•y .hop-keelwr.
have 1•e•to menaced ,with the lois t•f
tlrt•it•.tlade if they •hawed a Littered
hill o:' gave any sign of sympathy
with [Mortal • trtilit icor. - M:1rlaacr.+'of
public ;houses and hay en have in
some. •rasee been xuttren
ye-
dl-red Iter their •sweet,•, tele brewers, to
talk over "the men itt the other side
of the r ter into voting against the
biulge•t." and -arrangements were
made in i.iverinol for. at least 1,000bee then to canvass for thea earioua
Tory candidates. "Treating" has
f•
been on:course. in evidence. One
drinking titan tells of noticing un.
Metal activity in a public hoose in
Alherta, where a •neighbor explained
Why the significant carted, "Sup up
morel canvassers are stere." The op-
pttr.ition-'tit the candidature of the
temperance leader, Mr. Lair Jones,
wax notable fel' its bitterness. North
Westmoreland' is a stronghold of
squirearchy. to their ordinary inter-
course with - thete' ,tenants, the land-
lords have had a good reputation, but
during the 'campaign no means' has
been spared to lead or drive everyone
into the Tory fold. Lords And ladies
have canvassed every tenant' and em-
ployee, and if they were too •strung
Liberals tole persuaded to vote for a
Conservative they have been urged' totiq Sw
itay from the palls altogetbety,
Servants of great landowners were mending aoding at the doors of all Mr.os
Jones's meetings watehing the who
entered. Worse than this was the
statement circulated that anyone by
sending a shilling tai the Record office
in London could ascert.•►in how any-
one hits voted. This falsehood was
evidently intended to frighten the
poor farm laborers by the belief that
their lord and master eentid find out
whether they dared obey their con-
sciences instead of the commands of
their "bet term." iimiler efforts to de-
et my confidence in the secrecy of the
ballot were made in Wales. It is
little wonder, concludes The Witness,
that n
thraedetermied and unsrntpu-
lout methods have told heavily
againet the Liberal party. It is in-
conceivable, however, that they can
CANADA TAKES-?IfE LiMO; •
London Advertiser.
It is said that Canada is doing less
than Australia or New Zealand for
naval defence. This taunt is fre-
quently thrown at the Dominion
Government by those who have not
ascertained the facts. Let its see
what each country has undertaken.
• Australia will give a Dreadnaughts
but it ire to be the head of Australia's
fleet unit. The other ships of this
urftt will he three unarwored cy''iiears,
mix destroyers and three subma-
rines. But Australia will not pay for
the whole service, 'rt'he 'Britimh Gov-
ernment will ecntrihnte $l,'lr(Llttt
yearly towards the cost of mainten-
anee.
New Rt•alend will furnish a Dread.
nought, but not unconditionally by
into,'
inter is
milk. a
gent
ethuds.
ter as(•
Germ ny, the
Ottawa over
is to lie La' -11
more (aver.
goods in the
Hon Mr. Fie•1
hated mein
freer. and
TP1R•rwriys \
at the same tin,R the r
,gr.nind of hitt-CMationa
'There are go•els wIii.')Cana i
purchase nlo.t 'I)ttltably fr,
many, and tunny ('.mads.n 1
are wanted by Gertnan�ne
ar.d the-retunvil or the e'ilu.rruct
n years[ tar:ft war with
surtax imposed by the
[ ent on German goods
u! Irl c-tnsidet8tsn of
Ole rune fur • Canadian
eta of Germany.lin tt he c,rograttu-
this r, which means
therefore
re pruliiable,
r
For Benefit of Women who
Suffer from Female Ills,
Minneapolis, Minn.—" I was a great
Sufferer from female troubles which
caused a weakness
and broken down
condition of the
system. I read so
touch of tt hat Lydia
E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound
bud dune for other
suffering women I
felt stn's it would
help me, and I must
say it did help me
wonderfully. My
pains ell left rue, Y
grew st runger,and-withitttltreementhe
1 was a perfectly well ti omen.
'' 1 want this letter made public to
show the benefit women may derive
from Lydia E. 1'iukham's Vegetable
Compound."— Mrs. Juni (1. MoLUAN,
5115 Second St., North, Idinneapolis,
inti.
Thoand
ums of unsolicited and genu.
hie testimonials like the above --proves
-et :Lydia --k..- 1'inkhattes
Vegetable Contpouud, which is trade
exclusively from routs and herbs.
'Women who suffer from those dis-
tressing ilia peculiar to tlreir sex shellkl
not lose sight'of-these-fewte-or donne,
the ability of Lydia E. Vinkha'u's
Vegetable Compound to restore their
health.
I f you want epeeial advice write
to lies. Pinkbant, at Lynn. Mass.
Shewill treat your let teraastrlctly
iconfi lential. For L'(► years she
istth been helping Irick women in
this way. fret• of charge. Don't
hesitate _ "rite at once.
,un rtes an
e'en} (.5 it
,discord.
seas
w (art-
ah'la
IHV
ohm
of
which 'prevented the sa:isfyiug
these desitis on both sides is mere
an act of common sense—which, atter
all. is ni,t it., muni, n .is it might lee.
The G,,I. Who Smiles. •
The . wind -a a- ea -i .e,d the rhimncy .socked.
And 'the old brown house seemed dreary,
!; er tiobaly spilled. and nobody .foked.
The easing folk- greuihkd. and the ofd folks
croaked: '
fl y had come bolts chilled attfd wear). ,
Then ottt•nrd 1111• cheer. stet a girl came tit:
01,..i t tva. homely - very' i .
Her no-, wit. 11111:. IVA her cheek mats Ihln,
theft) w,•-101 a Amide from bow to cbi•,
lint her Smile war bright and cheery.
5Jh. -poke not a word of the cold and damp.
Nor yet of the g)o'.51. about her.
But she mended the fire and lighted the lamp.
And she put on the place a different stamp
From that it had without her.
They forgot tbnt the hoes. was a dull old
place,
And smoky from base to rafter:.
And gloom departed fano every Neer
tall t.ho charm other inirthf ut.grage._
And t he cheer of her happy laughter.
Oh. give Ore the girl who will smile diad sing?
And stake all glRA together!
To be plain or fair is a looser thing,
lint a kind ono/High heart earn bring
liood rhter lu the darkest Weather.
— Womant,.1.de.
FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES.
Mr. Proadfoot's Bill.
Jtamtltoe Timer._
Mr. Proudfoot, of Centre Huron, has
introduced in the Legislature a work-
man's compensation ' measure based
upon the Act now in force in Great
Britain. This is a very broad and far-
reaching law, and will hater important
effects on Canadian industry. It aims
to secure to a workrnab compensa-
tion for injury by any cause what-
ever.
Wry -the -Lents Should Go. -
London Advertiser.
ltcotlend has returned only eleven
Unionists to the House of Commons,
out of seventy-two members. When
the Scottish leers stet the other day
to etlect sixteen of their number to the
House of Lords. they otiose thirteen
Unionists and rejected the only peer
who supported the budgeL Could
there tfe a more glaring illustration of
the partisanship of the House of
Lord., and its ton.repieaentative
character T
Skeptical.
Woodstock tienttne:ttetlew.
The flet vessel of the conning Aus-
tralian navy was launched the other
day with becoming ceremonies and
the prayer "God bless you." One may
be inclined to eek himself if God really
tiles bless such enterprises. Wnuldn t
the Nestling of bat tle•mhipe of opposing
forces lead to innfneiun? \Ve know
that in swat time hot It parties usually
rleitn to have (sari on tltelr aide, hit it
is not always easy to decide from the
A Third of Your Time
is spent in bed. Don't sleep
on slate or a leaden mattress.
COME HERE AND BUY YOUR
BED -ROOM FURNITURE.
We have elegant brass
beds of most approved pat-
terns. • and dressing tanks
suitable to watch, at prices
you'll agree ate reasonable.
Examine and err.
GEO. JOHNSTON
Furniture and Undertaking.
meet slide Square.
•
11 Winter Term
OPENS
i JANUARY 3rd
restate whether is'ih are right in set.
ting m such a.ciaiui• or neither.
A Severe Dieting.
Oritlln I'.o•keL. ' ' •
.A eorret.poodeut. of The Toronto
Star mays the disease affecting do a at
pre•se•t.t is not rabies, but Israel es in
the intestines, and the cdre ie, oirt ti
nwyzlr the animal, hat 10 stir to its
diet. $isms 'thoughtful pe ems in
Orillia have beep doing tine f late by
feeding the dugs strychnine
THE .EVOLUTION OF THE BRITISH
PARLIAMEAI r.
TF
The British of the old Land, especi
ally the English. ate by nature con-
servative. hey cl ng t,t old,cuatours
because they have been ru long in
Use : the.c change them it hen forced
to by encuulstatteea.. 'they are by no
means blind. nor ore they so foolish as
to believe that they have in tpnfters
political. nr ntherwiee..reached tan (ee-
'on.' Hut they love the •s11 lotwa,and
se . t always to hope :hat they ran b)•.
adal'ed, to new ronditinur. When
they t Mize that the old and the new
cannot • not k. -t t.tgether they will
hang., . 1 in -['few r,{e'tietatiixas will
1 c„nfe its . .d of the new (Iweause old
to hese) as t t it f.itlite s .were of the
old ' feriae. •-
1'h 1m•e •sf fru nm and of the tight
of ea t turn to h 'e o voice it: the
wryest, tret.t stems Irave herrn iu-
isa n it• Heti letaglish t 'rtes. ' At 'least
the• • had .nide m„' of re eve • •
y tt ( government
IIIen1
tihen th 'rit'ns acre sti little mote
than reli.lg• , when they ,t enseives
were a 1-11.1” Id savage p •e,p' They
had then thei v lIitge. moot, ant their
representative dkrnont and Wita r-
mut.- The coni g of the Net•nts s
changed thin for ' ” •, but gradnatl
the English imbue( the:Norruan. wit
their love of' need( u, and little by
little they won heck rein Ohl methods
trf government. alter,to suit the new
conditioot+ of the cout v. Under the
Norman tole, the churl was, for a
long time. the only,p•,we that could
curb the afrolutistu of the king, end
we frequently fled bishops d arch-
bisbnps detcnnitig •the penpl against
their lenvwwign.-- Therein John feign -
the barons united, with the chu h to
force that shifty, cunning tnonar h to
sign the Great Charter. Not m
years later the herons took the le
themselves. and brought King Hen
the Third to terms. Then the cons-
mune were first called to Parliament,.
and had power only to grant supplies
to'lbr Crown. In the reign of Edward
the Second they were granted the
privilege of assisting to make the
laws. Up to the time of FAward the
Third, the Lords and the Commons
met in one chamber. In that reign
they began to tneet in separate rooms4
the bishops and herons in one, the
knights amid burgesses in another
chamber. Then the name Commons
was probably fleet given. It was not
until the reign of the fourth Henry,
who held his throne only by Parlia-
mentary title, that the. Commons ob-
tained the sole right to slake grantb of
money to the Crown, or in other
words got control of the public purse,
which right they have ever since
jealously and zealously guarded, and
which they are asserting in the pres-
ent crisis in the Old Lend.
it may take the British a ion, time
to diecover the best way out of a diffi-
culty, but when they once ,see the
right thing they do that thing and
then stick to it until it too bas long
outlived its usefulness. The Lords es
a body have bad their part in making
the British nation the greatest upon
earth. it is not at all certain that
they have not yet agreat hart to play.
but not .just in the present font), evi-
dently. But the very slowness of the
people in malting a change will help
to make that change when it does take
place a wise one. The eyes of all
nations are on Great Britain now, but
the leaders are making haste slowly
and it may ie same time before the
status oft he Lords and the part they
will have in conducting the affairs of
the notir'n are settled, and a new pre-
cedent formed for the guidance of fut-
ure generations.
y
Students may. enter
tiny day of the school
vest•.
•
'•Individual instruction.
(hay graduates get the
(lest potations.
Mail ('ourseti.
(rain inure outing pe•opl
than any other n1a[1age-
-'111ent in Canada'
Affiliated with ('nen-
mrrciel h:dueators' As-
soeiati.rn of ('arada.•
-
Write for particplars.
CLINTON
BUSINESS COLLEGE
OEO. SPOT TON, Prinupat, ' 1
i
meeIMIIIMtwe•II=1111111111MIWW
BUSINESS
EDUCATION
ouch as yogi may obtain under the
very best conddions at 1 he Cee
tea, [baseless College of Toronto.
is a sure passport to success.
Thousands have proved it. Why
not • invsti.gats for yourself?
Our fres catalogue explains.
Writsfor 41. W. M. SHAW.
Principal.
ealittilliallellWineneMW1111110
T
W. ACHESON d SON
EMBROIDERIES
COTTONS SNEETiNGS
We are showing hundreds of pieces of new and
htautiful Embroideries. Values are excep-
tionally gond and the range includes all qualities
and widths, at moderate priers.
Horrocks's famous English Sheetings and Pillow'
Cottons, in every width. Cambrics, Lonsdales,
Nainsooks, Cottons at prices no higher -
<, than ordinary -domestic-made goods.
FEBRUARY BARGAINS
Twenty-five doses e, to, l,enastitehe'd huekabau•k,
bleached Linen Ttijels, tegtilat•price 2tk; each: sale. 11 fur
TABLE LINEN
variety of pattern!,
75c
Fifty only 2x2t yards Linen (
lI"ths,
bleached satin damask and in a $1
Regular 1.''
R $ eu. for
Two thousand yards floe, Sb -inch Factory Cotton, worth
a;.•, for
FURS.-_.. Ladies' and Men's Fursall
clearing at a sacrifice
.25
This teeming-ovetstsset bele i, unreserved.
baht - s10 a _.seer--r—r - ,
$15
$25
935
\I en's $. ; to $ I ( Fur ('oats, Belling $ I i to .. - , ........
Latlieas lilt Melt'a.lt'i rdined_C; ate.-Regul+ir-.$54,--for .
6c
W. ACHESON d SON
CURE YOUR COLD
utland's Grip Cure - ti.11 cure a cold in two,t:ays. 1', 1, .
per Boole - 21c
druco Throat Gargle A giliek and speedy relief f.,t
wee throat. Per bottle.. 25c
- Zyrnole. Troches The famous remedy- for husky thee.,
eimapur•nmownwomommas1 e) ttlx ;' 25c
• Nadruco Cold Cream
The hest thing for ehtiliprd hand,
Anti reacted lips. Per br.11.•
• 250 add SOc
ure NI wegian Cod tier O'11 Anew Ointment ow in
25e and 50e'tioltle,
F. J. BUTLAND, Druggist, Goderich.
,THE STORE THAT P: -EASES
CEhTHAL
�
?I�iZ�d1
STRATFORO. ONT.
i
Write us at, since tor' our free
catalogue and (earn tiny nature
of our courses in Commercial,
Shorthand .or .Telegraphy depart -
ride. We have the leading
p client training +school in
W rn Ontario. (loonies are
thorn' ;h, instructors experi-
enced a , we anoint graduates to
posit : tudents ere entering
each weeks, You should enter
81(01
b. A. McLA • LAN,,
Principal.
Bigger and Brighter
THAN EVER
1111' `String \% ttoilen3 arc now in,
tultl c,inprise all • the newest
creation's in 'weaves and shades
MARTIN BROS.
Tailors and Furnishers.
ET A PRACTICAL EllUt
- - by attending the famous
ELLIOTT
BUSINESS COLLEGE
'PION
\
ORON7 O. ONT.
MA. PAH ern it will pay you. Write
to ps ter tai• andseme Canaan/tie.
The child who defined a mountain
range as •' a large-sized cook stove''
had imagination if not accurate in-
formation. On a test paper at the
Sheffield Scientific School, says a
writer in Everybody's Magazine, an
older student made a touch worse
blunder. The question read, "What
is the office of the gastric juice?" The
answer, no doubt struck off in the heat
and hurry of the examination, was
"The stomach."
ALLEN'S
LUNG
BALSAM
For deep-seated
COUGHS.
COLDS,
CROUP.
A rte. bel; ear their fold.
A Som. blur Ise 5... Cold.
A t1.011 Bottle lar • awe -veered c.o.
gold 1n• alt Itn.er,tts-
OAvts a t-AWRENCR CO., llenshiSiid
Cure Your Cold
White Pine with Wild Cherry and
Laxative $ron`de Quinine Tablets are
sure cures ; 25C a -package.
11. C. DUNLOP
I)RUUtile
Goo ERiC11.
Hair Brash Values !
We secured recently some unusually !fond lines of HAIR
BRUSHES at discounts. Anyone thinking of getting{ a
000D HAIR BRUSH should Ree them. We have them at all prices,
from :Mo up to S.(M1, and in handles of Ebony, Rosewood, Celluloid,
;OH.s,Wtlw, Enamelled Woods and Light Natural Woods.
r
COMBS all sizes and kinds, from 5c
and Inc up to $1.00. `„
-
S. E. HICK. Central Drug Store.
Goderich, Ontario.