HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1911-1-5, Page 2gl TRV DAY. JaPVAnt q 1141
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THE BGINAL : GODRRICH. ONT
The Iowa etwocU ut 1911 will have erwatry and eohsaoes the real pre sat
MIMS important Ioblsms os its Randa =wily* 'Mina of tie Berta Te
The ratepayers will look toe careful him.II seems,
baadlieg of these matters, and to re-
taro should give the aldermen the en-
oouraRemeat at their sympathy Mad
cooperation in the narrvinp w. of the
awe's argues
Mr *awe NMttoaatw movement
was given a embark last week b7 the
elector' et tit. Jobe it countywho in a
Provirieu l bye•electbo returned the
This ( litters/ 'eaodidate by ea hscresesd
beet as as sarb • as
wee/ ttee.Mww ekritY b riven
•werostrla tittle.
- L * seers etbr dg{adv imiaaveraaossara.
sash w rs bent lreertien t par
sdspardl seas. twelve floes to as Nab.
beim= seeds et aux ossa ems enderla rs
sear, ' Amos.
Advaressmets at
'Mises Vert, ataerienatd
s Wa�Ho
Verret, w ter
dale or to Rest, Farm ter des or t• Res
s
Articles toe Ma, eta, set eaosdlsglbws. No aside Issertloa elgYt
er se eebsosesat
swell Urgerr dna ad
ti rrre
Mailter
wrumaiteamiseda 1. ewa.rs re11al Iso• ton
,at, ser hon. No settee lea than
sessiel mum, gof whish r w
'tear bawds of aar I /'kisser sr sesest-
Mitt be seam a se edvatrtissgest ed
Rates tar moths ..e sables ..n . wows
• coals will M gives ea apsllsftan.
i•..
mildew W egsges eallew o
rHrCINtee i PRINTINU W.. Isi1se
- - - ttaisrinb. Out
0ODiftKni. THURBDAY..1All.6, wt.
I, . O- UR NEN' TEAR'S RESOLUTION.
We have ue•'er been iL the lamb of
staking New Year's resolution! pa-
'• Mthly because we find ourselves mak-
-.. .ng /and breaking:; resolutions all
through the year. and them are al-
ways emtough old ones lying ,.round
without making brand -crew set at
any particular season. Still• it may
be the proper thing to exhibit a fine
spirit of resolve at the beginning of a
fltbab, unspoiled year, and we don't
mind telling our subscribers at this
juncture that, if they pay up pretty
well In advance, we will try to make
The Signal better than ever io 1911.
it will keep us pretty busy to do it ; so
we du not make any promisee- we are
jolt going lei try.
to ELECTIONS AT WRONG TIME.
• .. Every year at this 6011800 there are
complaint& that the municipal eiec-
tions are held at the wrong time. The
latter part of December is one of the
busied seasons of the year—for town* -
,
people, at any tate---Mod the week btu-
tween Christmas and New Year's is
taken up to a great extent with home ,
gatherings and social feetiyities. The
result is that municipal affairs • receive
.oaat attention from all Imp', r,.- smell
proportion of the people.
Various suggestions ams *eerie : nue
,bat the elections should he moved
forward to a date in the latter part of
November or early in December : au-
. other that tbev be held oft until the
rod of January in the tette, case. it
[night be provided that the financial
statement should close with ',he end
at the calendar yea . and that the old
council should incur ac mzpendllt$es'
during the month of January esrept
such as might be absolutely neeemar;
i;o keep the: onici Del services r. ' -
ting.
The Leg:sat.,r, ahowr. cake the sur:_
Beet tate earnest eoosideration, with n
view tc providing better. oppor-'I
'4. realty than elide et pro•ent for the I
rueful :onsideration •:e. municipal
affairs Within the 'tat few week
the question hue beer, discussed by e
o umber of papers rn 'he Province, in-
cluding The Kingston Standard, The
Stratford Beacon, The (Atter'', .f►ree
Press, The rhatharr News, stet prop-
- ably men ether. wtt the opinion 1
appear nc. AA& ? C : t,
menet ehoua r,'. rade. -.
- IOITORIAt NOTES.
•
• . E,.* 'the new yes,/ p ^ob .ci; •
-
v.rvrng -. -id - c,an-e': ai,l >:n,rtir✓
`rela rc.
he taw•'Etr are !alk*uie • i
•, veer fleet Where is the ;nOrece—,
. -• ung gang 'r- :Md
';road1 NGr,bF:,, •' . is
16:.,o .ye able a give • goo° ;k; night
+
-.Is.
w ,oe nacrimttnet : . ,0.,,s,
los tresod Trunk Dont- ' 'red
er knight et Ob been ee , . .
we A and the P R
Woman . -. be •at l k ; c •t , ,
• Maas •. elm. "Jet cetR *Iboods
end stand ,Urfon s ebbe' , - -
nfilies or 'we instead
.xpar•reecc gouate - '-.1 •-Me.
aloe town oaten of Mt :omits tc be a
good dmfs Only not melte nee
• mote ben or the council h«*a
Cascada starts the sew ..q.
Wight pre.poet d growth and .tewlop
mascot old roadstead pr•(iwnR, Each
year the bust of ( a.diae tetk.. rig
• bsooung a premier rate
majority over his Natioaallet oppo-
nent Mr. Balinese is is Europe sod
hie followers did not have the benefit
et hie electric eloquence : oevertielem
the result is significant and pleasing In
the evi . it affords that the people
of
arc not all prepared te en-
dorse the narrow aims and views of
the Nationalist party The patriotic
campaign of the Liberal. of Quebec is
so doubt having its effect is clearing
away the base of the Urummond- Ar-
thabaske. epeeist.
Gol. lout Hughes bae bees, toning
the people out at Winaipsg that the
i
farmerwa
s' deputation to Ottawa s A
.frost,,.: the spokesmen, he says. used
the same old arguments that have
done service for years past The val-
iant coionel. with hie protectionist
notions of logic. evidently expected
the ?armits to attempt i,o demon-
strate that two, and two make five, or
perhaps six, and was acro dangly dis-
appointed when they clung to the old-
fashioned ideas that two sod two
make four. and that If you cut a piece
ntr the foot of your ,blanket and sew it
i 011 at the tup the blanket is ono longer
than before. The trouble with the
Colonel (and good :timely other
people} is that they have entertained
false ideas of political economy .o long
that they are shocked when they hear
its priociplee oorreeUy expounded.
.rbe New a ear's bootee ennouuced
from London include knighthoods for
a number of Oanadbus, including rbe
Hon. A B. Aylteworth, Minister of
Judice : Hon. Mr. Townaheod. Chief
Judice of Nova Melia : \ti'illiaru Mac-
kenzie. president of the Canadian
Northern Railway ; Donsld Mann,
vice-president of the same railway,
and George C. Gibbous, K. 0., of Lon-
don, Ont. Sir Alan Ayiesworth is
fittingly rewarded for his signal ser-
vices for Canada in the recent fisher-
ies
isheries arbitration before The Hague Tri-
bunal. Sir George Gibbons bas done
good work as a member of the Inter-
n a t i o n a l Waterways Commission.
Sir Charles Townshend ie a die-
Ungulthed member of the Nova
Scotia judiciary. Sir William Mac-
kenzie soot Sir Donald Maon are
s.,Goriots ne the biggest pair of rail-
way grafters in Canada. total.
amount of the subsidies have
received in various waye from the
Canadian people would .Hake n g,ery
liig figure. If they will accept'. a
koighrboom apiece in lieu of the next
in't.rleneot of railway bonuses they
were expecting it may be a gond fear
gain toe the country. Perht.pe it
might 'one welt Lo establish fur the
future .. rub thee the conferring of
knighthood debase the recipient ': f
the honor' frotn any fur tae-
epee the public tres.urv.
R�taie but be has alas the
that,. while he under peereet eye-
hole is the hairdos -beater of the whole
euuuiatmky and pays cases far 'beyond
his skarn, under that whish be
meads the heavier bunks would 1.1'
no the enormous 'Maeda*. d dip
and suburban popery and the
wealthy who poetess it. City dwell-
er, for their pest, weak' lad the pro-
hibitive rates (t suburban kite crum-
bllug down. Suburban flara would
fail foto the market ata rale which
would give to the city dueller a house
and lot at its real puce, as es
with the specut.tive pries at w eh it
is now going.
But probably the t wadi
really weighs most with the farmer
L the fact that the tax that be pro -
would
ppt*osresis go while into the publtc
ttwaeury, lees onlythe cost of collect -
Ing it, while for troom part the tax
on, ay, the threshing machine Roes
to the manufacturer, and only tbat leo
the odd imported machine goes into
the treasury; so that the farmer
spends nary tincts what the 'country.
gets. As the public service has to be
supported all the same. It is natural
that be should say be le willing to pay
bis share fur that. but not by a process
that multiplies that share essay these
for the purpose of maintaining Indus
tries which those who carry tbetu on
declare to be looting c oocerns hut for
this bootie—therefore losing convene
Go the country anyway. This clear
thinking on the part of the farmers ie
what was to be expected of them, as
they are probably the hest thinkers in
the community. having lees to disturb
their thoughts than cit • people.
Heretofore, however, It ha. been /mar
ticulate sod unorganised. Very dif-
ferent will be the effect now that our
chief industry and chief natio.al scon-
otnlc /.merest has fogad so united Mend
so ele.i•tent a voice
Fo RMERS AT SEAPORT H.
Meeung Addressed by Delegates to Ot-
tawa sad by M. Y. McLean, M. P.
Seatottto Jan. 2.—A meeting of the
farmers of •his vicinity was held in
the town hall on Saturday afternoon
last. There was a large attendance.
The object of the meeting tees to bear
Om report of • the representatives to
the farmers' delegation at Ottawa .apr
pointed ata previous meeting, and to
effect a local farmer/ organization.
The delegates. Meagre. McMillan and
ybillinglaw, delivered able addresses
detaili°tt the action taken by the
farmers delegation, trod dlerussing
the trade question. - Mr. M. Y. Mc-
Lean. M. P., wee present, and also
briefly addressed the meeting. He said
the tariff question was only one of the
many questions urged upon the Gov-,
enamor. by the delegation, but it was
the cne In which the farmers of On-
tario and the older Provinces were
mainly interested. On the tariff ques-
tinn the farmers of the East and „'est
were one, andtheir interests were
identical. The other questions, such
as Government operation of the Hud-
son Bey Railway. the purchasing and
operatiou of the terminal elevator',
and the establishment and operation
of abattoirs by the Government are
matters which will not benefit On -
Patio and the Reiter n ocie, cept in a general stay. illvis each and
ex-
alt will impose heavy dnancial reopen
lability upon the country, the brunt of
the burden failing upon the fernier, of °°
Uouirin. Hr 'there ore cautioned the
Sirtking Spells
Every Few Days
'At the time I began taldag
Dr. liner Reset Remedy I was
havitg sinking spells every kw
days. My hands and feet world
get cold; I could . scarcely
breathe. and could feel myself
gradually sinking away until I
wo•ld be eacosucious. These
about me could not tell there
was life in ale After these
spells I would be very weak and
servoos, sleepless and without
appetitf i had neuralgia in my
bead and heart. After taking
the remedy a short time all this
disappeared and in a few weeks
all the heart trouble was gone."
MRS. LIZZIE PAINTER
SO354 3d Ave. Evansville, Ind.
For twenty years we have
been constantly receiving just
such letters as these There is
scarcely a locality in the United
States where there is not some
one ,who can testify to the
menta of this remarkably suc-
cessful Heart Remedy.
Pyles 111.00 at your druggist He saws
artily you. If M dims net Mad grlse
le es, we forward '+reside
OR. email MaDIGAL CO.. Twesea
that has caused an infinite am0001, of
discuasioo. The third of
Fisher Chipanao'e articles on the(noires
ganizatloo of Western farmers ap-
pears in this number. end there is a
splendid article on Belfast, site mei
capita of irelatrd..,be Alf. S.
Moore. A hitherto unpublished
poem by Ooldwin Smith is a feature
of the issue. Other contributions oro ga.. orestw.t
"The Romwoliit of Tishman," by Wil •" Joohn.ta +ee•
Pr,".
Ilam Harrison : -An Ancient Indian
Fort,' by Edmund Morrie : en. Na- ��Mksr�
tfonalist Movement" by John Boyd.
aa ertkle tbat every Caoadien should
menial
CLINTON
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
N • link n ss anima
shalli of oollefloupdsd Pm ret
toreatyete yenta Tide than
Is - the teatimes of
pin Coda and
ti�galedd admitted that Its
=sates Ret the best pari.
There is a reason:
snits for it. ♦ diploma from
the G°mmsedal Midwinter's'
Aasosiatkto d °anode M a
passport to sueesee
You nasty study partly at
hoose Med Saheb at the .
Collegeotor soy def.'
Fall Term Opens' August
29th
CLINTON
IUSINESS COLLEOL
Ota UPOTTOH, Principal.
Thor too Holiday, C1esriiig Sale of
Mask Quay Boas and Seal., 14.11► and 116.00. for..
Kos's first quality black Ualloway (•orf Coats with
iamb collar, regular S 00 and SMOo0% for. 81
Men's Ahab Beaver Oasts, Il .IU tor.
floe Baty. turdised, with atiersonae. 500.00. for.
Iodise' Black Hoshoran Lamb Coats, handsomely
NMad and beautiful skins $Oft 09 tar ......
Oar TELEGRAPH and
I/
RAILWAY AGENT'S
Ower s • eafa gs.ara.Ma to .
is MI Tau sway pay as you go. On
The ovulation ant
.sad sar.n. 'w can nonan it
graduation w aid yew to meagre
.n.p..""T. O . nos aY•lotw
wrles for tt. W..t
r rya a Railroad Sc800*
reap and aarr.rd era Toronto
W H
read ; :The Cantwlian Speech." by
Miriam ��-illievas Brown : "L P.
Brodeur The Mao Behind the Navy."
by Fred. G. H. Williams : shot t.
stories by Christian Lys, G. H. Reade.
W Lacey Amy. and Agues Faulkner)
N�Sou, with poems by Hilda Ridley.
Theodore Roberto. Alan Sullivan.
Donald A. Fraser L J/ Montgomery
and ingIl. Mone
Alas, Poor Man ,
Sleeker—' I understand your wife
used to lecture. Has she given It up
slums you married her %" -
Mesher—••Well, she no longer lec-
tures
eo-
tures in public."---Lippincott's Maga-
zine.
An Easy Job. Anyhow.
Charles M. Biglow, the cnmedian, Is
almost as bold as be could be. One
day at the Labbe Club he said to the
barber. •`I aw in a great burry.
Can you out my Bair with my collar
?
"Sure I cane" said the howbeit "i
fa,iuer„ of on, alio not to allow their eau cut it with your hat on."—Bostou
mai for tariff refolln to lead then to Hecald.
aid t heir brethren of the West to force ,
the Government foto these other ez
pendituree of more doubtful utility. as
,y en dnirg they might foist on their
own Prnvinre a burden which would
outweigh the profits of tariff redac-
tion. ge es t as these may be. Before
the meeting closed a branch of the Na-
tional Council of Agriculture was
formed tinder the preskieney of
James rowan. and very etlk ent
staff t.f officers and director wee ap-
FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES pointed and a coostitution adopted,
• and oyer fifty members enrolled.
he, Farmers M•.
Mesmeai wlroaw
' - to ;enerally herr elle y I
three. whr, sen the equit_ of I acing
the burden of taxation c the "Mille {
conferred upon the lend b. the ;,ser 1
encs of thy cntumuoity the., -tie great
obstacle in the way of the ecceptauce
of that doetrin,_ would be the land-
owning fernier. To the fanne. his
farm ie en large ,, part of his life. and
be end his fe.11ow. oar, s' large a part
of the earth':- surface. that ore .vo ul i
expec, this, 6e would de anything
rather than tet the country'.• burdens
fall no the land To the • •rprise of
eyeryb ody the 'mporani, 'armee:
delegation that came East directly ap
proved oil this principle and cone -
needed it w the Government to place
if the present method of taxing their
ether nese .hies. Their political mon-
:Huy is right. hut It wet not .3xpected
:hat they would see it They are - b -
'Meting to the taxation. If theft ne.cs
titles land is their prime necessity-
--their raw material, as it were ; why'
then propose that the burden ,he
1 taken off their etho ne'-emeities end
' laid on that r One ca,.,l t. that. • 0
tax their other nee - realist.* makes those
necessities dare, while taxing the
' land mikes the land cheaper for them
The man whc hen threshing machines
for sale has '( ell them They will
not improve by ampule I f there is
f competition hetwe.0 makers he will
! have l• tell there at the smallest price
he at make .. living profit on it
competition „ abut out by .. duty he
cam charge ee nanny ,••r..+, .2 thn •tote
amount/ s.
Or the -the, :acrid. lana pg rows -n
'titin by Keeping in the Northwest
it grows rapidly The man who dose
nothing with his land rs keeping the
neighbdeho nd back. yet profiting
month by month bywhat other ppeeooppltee
Ate doing with tr
theme Hie hookling
his land out of the market to get the
benefit of what •other people are doing
for it .an be met by taxing him for
the benefit of the community at Mad
i ewer putt of the value that the melt
triunity It conferring 'troy 1t When
it conies to paying the t. thousands
4 unused acres bec(xne uw• costly for
their .ween t ' hold. So they sell
then, .it the price at which some nee
etre flan make thee, profitable. Thia
ncses quicklbrings farm land doveu
la pr(esnt farm value. and sings
all the land foto use. The oortesquent
fvr.wa `e p I.1,ian d&Telt , Ile.
AGAINST CANADIAN MARINERS.
•
Rule Being Enforced by United States
Officials.
teetta;:•. N 1 ,fan. I1.—The refusal
hi licenses to masters, abates. engin-
eers or pilots of 'team t. els .ailiog
the Great Lakes ntber than to citizens
and residents of the United States has
caused considerable commotion in
marine circler. The new rule is being
enforced by Government officials pur-
suant to a recent ruling by Attorney -
General Wickersham. The I o c a I
United States steamboat impactors.
Nolan and Pope, are lovestigaling the
places of abode of all applicants for
licenses Not only so, but there is a
determined move no foot to revoke
licenses already issued where evi-
dence can be obtained to show that
the licensee is non-resident of the
T)nIted States. .
United Stowe uutrket Attorney
John Lord O'Brien of this district,
who Instituted the first proceedings
for the enforcement of the sew law
about a year ego. announced tonight
that be had succeeded In revoking
naturalization papers taken out
mariners calling themselves
cans, but who live In Canada. "The
crusade against aliens was initiated
Ey the Bureau of Naturalisation,"
said he 'and. 1 bidieve, has the hearty
approval oe owners. maters and men
0o this side. Anyhow, it is Dow part
of the Government's well-defined pol-
icy to exclude all alleys from the nay+
gation of American water
"The fiat has gone forth test mas-
ters, mates rod pilots sailing tine
Greta lakes mud he not only eitlsens
but reeident.pI the United `tate. or
quit that p.rttcglar ealUog
Applicants for licenses who are
bona Ode Canadians will. of coarse, bet
barred without action of the Mertes ..
ultRENT LITIRATURE
•..AOI*: dtwowZLaa moa 1rZ14.,
Mat The Canadian Jflagadoe for
January Installs a number of artielee
that well repay rsedlnaRR "Ottawa,
the Unusual," lea new pout of view at
tits espital. It is written by Augus-
tus Heidi.. and the ilhtstratioas ate
from photographs reproduced 10
colors. eHnme Rule or Rome Rule,"
Py Patrick P. Croda,hs ntaredlog
sntamaiaa
IP ot a ►• Iva Imbed
Winter 5uitings
an(: OVERCOATS
A 0....serne of
Ir t-cIses grads at •
H,L1GH DUNLOP'S
WEST *TRZLT
"pp►date Toasting to
...all oar wetmsst.....
PREPARE for a provides at trust
and responsibility by attending
Elliott Business College
TORONTO, OMT.
This echoed enjoys a widespread pat
ronege. Enter now Catalogue free
Cats Tern inns Janes 3r4
CENTRAL
$TN */*FOND. ONT.
rbe greet p,.etinal traliing school of
Western • rmtarlo. our course- are meet kat
oar osmium are .xp.rta.eed Instructors.
The
term wear raven,demand upon lm,. the oupplj. Ourisi s
graduates are to domed e. Bodner.
kite teachers. Our graduate*, succeed.
TT.ros departments _. Cnumiereitil. Short-
hand and Telegraphy. (tet our free osta-
Ioges at ones.
1). S. Y-LACRLAN,
Principal.
. DNDON. ONTARIO
Business & Shorthand
SUBJECTS
Resident and Marl Courses
Owdeen-- Free
P.i.elt.... , V...P.e..iseL
INSPECTION INVITED
W. ACHESON lit S
WHEN YOU 'CHINS. OF tiOMETHING
. i'.it,RTit iR1.A RI 1: MOB INA . .
Suit or Overco
I'$EN ITS
MARTIN'S
!►F OOGRSfs
TAILORING EXOLUSIVEL
k.
You may have noticed tan• good l
mac men wbo atteod cbureb er. son '
ttotr with insomnia
o- ^+f
alf
qui
The phut
Reproducing Point
of the
Edl30A Phonograph
distinguishes the Edison from all other instruments
This point is net • "point," but • "batboa" that
travels without thetins, producing the psrflaet. life-
like tones for which the Edison is famous
There is no scrst(ming, ss harshness, no metallic
sqp d sod practically no war os either the repro -
dieing point or the Records. with this sapphire
batten Edison Reeatds ramie their sweet musket
tones fnr years.
Taos 0.
it=ifell and
e mi
tisw 0...s " aeeZerso * 1..ra
NATIONAL 1'1I0NOG*APW CO.
..bore r.. .,.J
v t t
wow ptaaslsaaaeles arts a•os•M mesa sa
JAI r. THOMSON. Oor.rith
e
Ito
ti
NA!)RtlCO REMEDIE
• \v.; vents 106 oeti3O spit .no Remedies
ad ears .-eoommeed .hem as 'losing t>t the
•rigbest daadard ►n regain ',e :io.Ilty doe
appearance We have -. somplete wenn.
tont and out be piee etel te. -New them
-.ir ,.rtt001e"•
t
F. J. Butland, Uruggis
...••r.i...i....•..
FUR COATS
Special Salle of F u r
and Fur -lined Coats
1 rya watil ., good 1 r-itnta9 �.uet .,t ,t
real bargain ' lr you do, now is yoyr
rpportunity. We have lust rwo of them l
muskrat lining, good rich ,:url, Persia?
iamb collar or an ester collas, good
Imported beaver she3I, e•c,:telat $65.c*o.
Special sale peer(
1162410
One only t oon l.(at, 1 egufg Vii). t •, for
Black Dog Coats, regular ffirz.,x,, for.
Klondike Beaver Coats, r•egul:- , X28.om,, for
1I you rFattl our i;• the .above C
Don't delay, as we have •sly a few
This is your opportunity. Don l let it
from you. -
1$42.00
18.00
.00
tat
WALTER C. PRID
et -
rtaw,a,„,, R„n,ys
The Holm d Real Values.
AM