Press Alt + R to read the document text or Alt + P to download or print.
This document contains no pages.
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1911-1-19, Page 2awns
swain
dee
_ 114 a.0♦a. and a,• 1411
stwatillision4
0001111011, ONlk1Iu•
Ntl81d>dR11) MIRY rRUHsI AY
rr
Il)-I..\Al. t•Klteri ,
iblgbsaeuW Ne. 2.
tons. et Swisorrttol•
p•e o atvasa
...a
u ..
t• t.t.aet
os sonnets wke tail a remelts Ilia yes-:..
-saulaety by snail will wader a beer by as
paleths sed flea tear et ti arty + ,fete .a
ie*..
wase • mesa• •+( vereis.. nwor g tfv,
owl •l.. 'ow, addms ',e riven.
a aw.rtra,ag rtes.,
\. rms. Woes drafter advert....eoun.,t.i.. las
on seekeaster
bba quant tasartion. 1tAna leasetion endb red pee Aye
,.*apalsll anal& twelve Maes to m look.
lrosliles•
...nor,' as •ti.ee an0 01401
.sae
warmest rd 1.•.,!..i.Vila ed, SW
lit
f�w>rYsr �,h.elda tr y�
iaee.fl• *resp- .tverWs-
t„eittss- ueielrtalis
....a1WW1Masea1 w urWrar) t) I,e ten
..wet Arlin* Ye notice less than IL.
Am* .pontis newsy• aha obese% a( elan L the
teseaniarg basset et •ai Iadletdtwal er aeeeld-
M.tlea, to tie eseedderedad.eetleeeteut cd
W,1. dam. tat Mem" ane uwluw. ulrertiSe.
'moo stn be sive. Or .pplte sere.
anri„we nit 0 tuu0talmetanar to
N 410\ 1. I'RIN! I NO CO., hutted
tit4.orinh. Out
DOR N
emir tug
Obit
i*
through
way,
withos*
off)
be rt,
"Obis .4
11liea' .
suind
juncture
well ie
TLB 8igniii
ft will keep
we do not
just going
ELEC
Every yeas;
Complaints '
tions Nrµ
hatter pan
busiest
people wt an
tween t
taken ap to a
gatherings a
result .s chat
inane art
iportiou o1.1
Various mfg
ch• elm
and !la
ember b
hat
0t .t run
t Ih saner
int
the cote
1112811
i
tet
.nW
tag rah.
a aught
keel, • ea
ng
The Leg,sa
rote ,so,o
1,_•
ity ;hare
fol
n Wii
queao • - n
bet
ng The
rstiolar
Trunk
at irk
the 1
t ft fir
to retle�
out ing•
K two sty
'1
OOORRiICS. TB 1JBODAY, JAN. 19. 1911.
SANK INSPECTION.
The Far•mer_s' Bank disaster has
been the occasion of a demand for
t+overnment inspection of hanks. It
may fairly be argued that the Gov-
ernment should takeme•sures toguar-
antee as far las is possible the sound -
atm of corporations which it brings
into being. On the other hand, there
is evident in these days too great a
disposition to rely on governments for
anything and everything. There
iuuet he a limit somewhere to govern-
mental Activity and interference
where is it to be drawn ? The quee-
titon is a difficult one, :and no doubt it
will a age the serious attention of
the Vttawa Government, especially as
the revision of the Bank Act is at
present under consideration.
The Toronto Star puts the argument.
.t Government inspection in brief
form thus:
'It will check the formation of
rxanks on an insecure halals. It will
check reckkst banking, and by tiro
warning tend to prevent eprt'ulat
or unwise investment from beingtar-
ried to a ruinous extent. It will/ not
guarnntee large dividends. but it/ttlay
.ave some body of shareholders //!from
losing their whole investment and in-
curring • heavy penalty. It is not
proposed that. the Government shall
g., into the banking Mildness It is
proposed that it shall retain some
,control and supervision over institu-
tions enjoying.•alueble franchisee and
Privileges isms, legislative and gov-
ernmental action. As to the iespoansi-
bility of tbe Dominion Government
and -of Parliament, It already exist'.
The Government, and Parliament,
which bring into existence institu-
sionsenjoying creat power .and priv-
ilege.. are , espousible to the people
to this extent. that they are bound
to leave undone nothing that will
prostrlwctand safeguard the people."
y
n
SHIPBUILDING ON THE CLYDE.
A friend in Glssgnw send,. The Sig-
nal :i copy of The Glasgow HenlId
•ontainiwig ;, "ehiptndiding, industrial
.tad commercial review" for 1910. A
parasol of the publication gives one
Soso. ideaof the immense industrial
interests of Glasgow, of which the
moat important, of course, is its ship-
building. The pre•emioence of the
Clyde in shipbuilding is well kuowu,
but it is perhaps riot generally real-
ized how great, that pre-eminence is.
'Not. only does the Clyde lead all other
seas -tem in the output of its shipbuild-
ing yards. but it torus out more shins,
,with greater t,oneage and greater
hareapowe,, than any country in the
,."old fermi,. Britain, of course, ex-
epted'. The Northeast G oast dis-
ict of rsogland (including tb' 1 yue,`
tic West and the Teas) routes next to
Oe Clyde. with a larger tonnage in
1110 rba,. the United States and , Ger-
.any .oeahined. . Altogether the
ides'
otalrte nage or 1 drams, or consii
ably mors. ha,' half of the entire
,aapat ' t i : world. The United
*Mee re lentOrld with 361,8 tons ed
(dee/nes a third with 917.746 toms.
-Isis figures indicate what a tessieo-
&0as lead British ihtubutldere hunt*
over art) nests.
• signal, t, . ernes t, is vote
••while *tot vhipbe$tdere h ve nest
&sown, inre-• ming ',het• memo'. of
new tonnag, the ma)orit} o• coon.
eountn.'s ,•. . hod to recognise the
fact;ba. .ti spite ot ell their efforts
there batt been ',twig -tuition in their
ahipbudding trade. In lellethere was an
jammer rel) ovet'(lgeat Anton and •
.rte hr ' - ..l tOelli&ger -rt the
'lannch,•n ,a•wheire rhe. .
011 minim As,
of�wgr. •. rt:a 'tar I'sit.d
stigos sella ar• ne, sew an-onntevl
Ifart0igr•ge eltnt tis lbw bulk -line
oftarge stainer, fee 'far ,i„gnt
Lake t,
This nntah.r of ills Oicoltrou afetaid
vwetafrss the advertisements.
• ,meat
r
of the. Ing •:lyde buiider•,
er•w advertlw"waren mail storm
vernal',"ere and cargo vernal'," as
dealer In groceries or drygoodt n.sg
est forth hie wages. leeriest t•, real-
ise tlia rnyaitmis af the trade at
Glasgow, the greatst taMtrercterins
e • ,rf Use world,
E utTOAIAL NOTES.
' t.,, .`j``) of abs batik: wrecker iS
uatd, tint. nor any hander than it
weft to be.
' Toronto Globe: A list of the un -
avenged murders in this Provinoe dur-
ing the past eve yeas would be a
startling ststetanal.
Someoue propose" that the ineinbera
of Parka:neat, all go to Britain for tbe
«lmnatiou ou hoard the Canadian
cruiser Nlobe. But frau Canada
afford to risk so many precious lives
12.600 a susion) in one cargo
The Globe reminds the protected iu-
terests that there is no vested right la
the tariff. "The members of the Ot-
tawa deputation," it says. "*nay rest
assured that the people of this
country do not regard a 27 per cent.
tariff as a pur runout one. As Cana-
dian industries become powerful they
must learn to stand alone."
What -is the English It lgurage coin-
ing to? Here is The Presbyterian in
a serious editorial article using the
expression "won out" when it tneans
simply "won." "In 1880 and 1883 the
Liberals won out both times with 170
of a majority." Would not '•won in"
he more accurate, under the circum-
stances, than'••won out"?
Mr. Buuraewat endorses the sugges-
tion that the Duke of Connaught. be
Canada's next Governor-General, and
The London Free Press considers this
an adequate ret -off to his attitude, in
t h e Drummond-Arthabaska cam-
paign. The .Free Prises' notion of a
"Inyelist" is evidently a crows between
a lickspittle and an anarchist.
It, is reported that, the Provincial
Government is taking up the question
of a uniform censorship of moving
films throughout the Prov-
inee.AnotherAnother• business that is to
conte ander Provincial regulation, ac-
cording to report„ is That of the bar-
bers, A inoveulent is said to be on
footfor the appointment of a isowrd of
examiner•• whose duties would be to
examine applicants for permission to
practise as barbers.
So far the power set vice furnished by
the Hydro -electric ComtulMinn to
places at s distance from Niagara. such
as London. Guelph and Berlin. has not
Men entirely satisfactory. The
trouble is the frequently of iuterriip-
tions in the service, causing great in-
eonvenience to Overs of power or light.
It in evident that their are difflcidties
in the transmission of power over con-
siderable distances, and though the
present defects in the Hydro -electric
Commission's- service may, be r•erue-
1 •
died there will always x a certain
risk of interruption in a long-distance
connection. Even if the price of
Niagara power in this district were
not prohibitive. it would probably be
a great deal mon- satisfactory to
secure power from a local point and
avoid the difficulties of Tong -distance
trans mission.
FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES.
Invading Ontario.
London Free I'ree-.
American real estate melt are Laic;
ing optitlus nn Western Ontario farms
and selling them to Ohio. Indiana and
Illinois farmers. The tieh farm. of
tbie Province will one day conte into
their own.
No Wonder They Revolted.
Stratford *Goo.
In 1'ottugsl men have been working
fotirteen hours a day for seven days
a week. They ink for a twelve•hnur
der anti roe day's rest io seven. No
wonder there Wag a revolution tinder
such industrial conditions.
A Ssggesbee far Toronto.
Ridgetews Ossifies.
An ettort ahmkt Ile made to r. und-
lip all the mining brokers, promoters
and iaan.ziet sharks at the revival
lilna goingg err in Tomato. Mas-
sey Held rnight not bold been. but the
oeerenw ;oukl he distributed .mono
the other -nesting placer.
s Seri te Canada
Marto. tern
1,,,• :, t *,tae biggest things whtcl, .any
Comedian Iovernmenr bas nnder-
i*ken in recast • wars is the ureeellrlt
attempt upon the part, ot the ftwutier
Government to Anew r•eciprrcit
treaty with .he United States. and if
the autmm• ,t th•-segootistions resew
In propene* neva. •• grea•
Oanadlai •ret'
sdttsild P1l,h;
A Time Is itasiway iJe es.r;; n,•
'we" ase*etaa,
lbs astltlon. 1..i eieetri,
charter, Weetsrr, ektarn ane.
shadows ,cave deveaopenent. Ths
neighboring States ale gridiro.al h•
radial. reitwaya hart the promising field
ISM, north tnsl west of iondos for
ower w hundred mile is almost l)nO('ca-
pistt it is time f,.. ..;hangs Artr1 ;be
thane. oming
1"t.. Young Pam, s Agee/wage
i cradles
1 he ret.) in the hash may Ina%
work hard, he reale mot bre ,
sial 1Av*ntwger „f the silty 'hap and
mai hent to wait Imes attractive
clothing --although it is en opinion
that any weltregultaltert farming .nm
nasitw .r rL.• ',..w
i v SIGNAL; t>;Obf RICH t►NTAKIO
dressed a lot of young peopie are to
be f in the either. nets( very
weep y uut of the rokmiss-iet he
ha.tt�s malefaction of wtways having
the fairca at hl, battle • mire provider
for vett age aid for the growing tato
Doss Veer Ieiglasr Nabs 'Yee Ilan& r
.7blyyr Quadra•
We read recently of a ntaa en. lu
asked whether his minister made him
thin*, and he aoswesdt' ' •No I don't
want him to make use think but bis
1 sermons are perfectly beautiful
Thinking is awl way worts possibly.
but it la nsoemrsry work, end mo et-. the
pewreet sermon should has a some-
thing that would grip the bearer's
attention. and ootipel Yis thought -
'
We do not believe in sermons that sec
unintelligible to the hearer ---a ser
mon in Mauskrit to an If lisb oongre-
i grown sou d fes au absurdity - hoe rh.-
.er•-h..ukt stake news think
Writing and Spelling
•.lt R.earra.
:N;hWl I u.pecWI tSpUttui !uta
bluntly declared that the writing and
sing of many Hamilton Collegiate
ik.ht.e pupil, is Jo had that they
should never have been pressed by the
examiners tut should have been kept
in the public schools, another year.
Our puhiic schools are Iteking in an
essential if they amwt at least teach
fairly legible writing and correct spell-
ing. And most hurne.s men are
painfully ems,- of the deficiencies in
the w• iting and spelling of our scowl
children. I nspectorSootiesn might liaise
well recommended .w general prin-
ciples that pithily. school children be
kept a year l,ngse before entering the
Collegiate lu•titutes. for many of
thein are too immature to stand the
strain of the higher education.
Camas's Prosperity.
Iia.Utoe These.
Westernmanufacturers roe coming
to Ottawa to see IA -trier mrd tell him
the • •tber side of the tariff su)ry.
Tweet years ago such a deputation
from he West would have Men an im-
pose, . city, because there were no
rnan4..seturers in the West at that
time.-Mpeetator.
There is something in that. Fifteen
years ago there was no usanufacturing
weer. it war, only after the Liberals
took office and revised the ,tariff to
"give the people a chance" that the
West began to thrive and prosper. In
Inez Si, Charles Tupper declared in the
House that the Fielding tariff had
killed the N. P., and he prophesied the
ruin of Canadian industries. He was
a false prophet. Never did a country
prosper as Canada has prospered since
the Liberal policy- was put in tori.
And we are just striking our gpit
--
getting over eighteen years otg-
ling land trade reotriction. 'Wait till
you see 118 ln'another fifteen years
THE LAKE HURON FISHERIES
Should Not Be Thrown Oyes to Reck-
less Michigan Fishermen.
torooto Globe.
The fisheries in Lake Huron are
probably snore valuable than those of
any other lake in the St. Lawrence
s) steer. The fishing industry btu
been for many years carried ou from
tunny centres on the l'aseadien shore :
Uoderich, Kincardine. Southampton,
Tobermuray, .everat pieces on the
Manitoulin island, Coeburn Island.
sum for uertein methods of operation
the Georgian Bay. Cauadian tlsher-
niee ply their vocation far out in the
wbere so -orated "shoals" are
feediug grounds for the fish. Thither
American fisbeimen also resort.
It bas been recently suggested by
Michigan polcticians, who are presum-
ably speaking for Michigan fishermen,
that t he tate ieUou. to ut 1.14)060d on
Honing in Lake Erie and Lake Ontario
sboulu be relaxed in Lake Huron.
There is not ou the face of the situa-
tion any good reesoo for regarding
this lake as peculiar. And probably tbe
sugge.ucn will never be acted oo.
but W thuwe wbo know the history of
the Lake Huron fisheries there is a
sati.f■story explanation of the cow-
parative atuodanee ot fish in its wat-
ers. Fur many years the eastern part
of the Geos gian Hay -test is the part
lying between toe M.oftouliii Island
on toe newt and the Parry Sound dis-
trict on the east -has been treated as
a great breeding ground for fish. 'Me
rod ansa line and the le.s harmful
sorts of nets may be used in catching
lab, bait no: the more effective sort,
by use of which the fisheries arc
ly depleted.
t would be a curious sort of irony -
ware fishing regulations to be lett lex
for Americans. who have never sup-
plied or reserved otter a breeding
ground as Canada has been magnani-
mously providing for a generation,
while the stricter regulations should
apply to Canadian fishermen : and if
they Are t., 1x• made lax for all, the
logical result would be an agitation
for throwing open to all sorts of law-
ful exploitation the Georgian Bey as
well ea the rest of bake Huron. in a
very abort time, with the influx of
eshennen t:o tbat lake to escape the
presence or the restrictions in force
eltowhee'. its fisberies would become
so depleted as to be no better than
those of Like Ontario or Lake Erie.
The only way to settle this matter is '
to treat both the lakes and the men •
who fish in than all alike.
extensions of Time.
Ottawa, Jaz 12. --Bills extending
the time in whish the Waiksrtoe k
Luekiow Railway may _ompiete con -
struggler. from Walkerton to Luck -
now. alai in which the Gudph it
Godelch Ralwav may be c°��►!�
hon, Woolwich. Peel or W7
township/ to St Marys and MOM,
,eta 1ttate:rd were,
adopted by the
-•a11wa)' JOm.Itl1lel ot the Rotor;
• ovocinna Hada.
co lute"' SMf-raisers.
li,.11et4n Nei + ,ntatiod `Bene itai=
mug •n Camila hes bean ironed be
1ir flock bean, R of the Thspart•nier
,• tgricnitnr. . fittaers. Trti
pre pars tfor hi, oulblti, er
effort has her, road. ro err. h•
roostsonnet. aid reliable - .
guarding the indttens Tb,, out 11,
not of tits intoormnatitn the
ion 1, the views of .'xperiencee feeder
and in many retries deseriptioo. DI the
methods which they hal, found ova,
attoosssful, should As •1f cogabesble
vale to all Inqteurested It Glia euaec%
A*ivy of the /utlletlt may he oh
tabled by anyone sob. mat ti!eelr* to
moire it by atieearung the five
Stuck Oosamistioesa T epe urm..,
e,.-0.nhseen Mtaw•,
!STILL AMOTHtR
CANAL S('Hi?i
1 faarhaaret WS as down t Saar
1111g Protan
e
�Osf�
Ottawa Jae. li. --Tbs.
tau.. Ana.
*ODOM.
.0 h�beelya tht most mad-
nousput forth sires
fat for tbe ottasiisrellou of -
anent, is that of the Great takes bad
£*baba Canal and Power Ormolu .
egoista. fur whish will tie toner
allair
too present session
company asks power to con -
stoma a ,,Anal frost sonar_ yyaaut en the
eastern •abort of Lake Herou io the
count) of Burrs. te, the northern
shore of Late Brie it, the county of
Bight, and ascribe canal from some
point oo the northeastern ,shore of
Lake Ent to the county of Heldi-
m•nd, to the wester, shore ot Lake
Ontario near the county of Linoolo ;
to improve and deepen, it necessary, a
channel ui Lake Ootsrio, and also in
the River felt Lawrie/we, to a point in
the county of Greville ; also to 000-
struot a canal from Grenville co the
cis. of Ottawa; to deepen a ship chan-
nel ie the'ac)tt*we River, from the
canal:to in runctiou with the River
des Prairie*: to deepeu the channel in
the said River des Prairies to join the
M. Lawrence ship channel below the
blood of Montreal. or by au alternate
repute from St. Ann's in the enunty of
Jacques Cartier through Lake St.
Louts to Montreal.
This would make and complete,
throughout the entire ditto ict forty
Lake Huron to the Si. Lawrence ship
channel of the port of Montreal. a
navfgahk, canal and ship channel of a
1 deptu of not 1e;µ :hen twenty-eight
1 test, and not over thirty-three feet,
land of such width ae itt.y be found
necessary u, •nable ocean-going ves-
sels W armee' and peas In safety et any
paint in the canal. lake or river chau-
neln .
Sarnia Wants Improved Harbor.
Sarnia, .tan. 12. -Engineers from the
Department tit Public Works have
been in Sarnia for the last two or
three days surveying the basin which
it is proposed by the Dominion (.ov-
ernwent to dredge in Sarnia Bay.
Tee scheme, as laid before the town
council, is to have a basin or harbor in
the woesland, about 1,500 in one
dimeo.ioo by 2,500 or more north and
south. Tee entraoee will be flow f he
SL Clair River up the wcetera side of
the bay, where at present there is
already deep wster,'just inside Point
Ed ward.
At present Mere is great pressure
upon the border facilities here. and
the boats now in port to sarojp are
more numerous titan ever betore. One
million btwbele of wbeat is in winter
storage in the bolds of vessel-, and
marry bout:; which would have win-
tered at Sarnia were unable to secure
accommodation. The Northern Navi-
gation Uompany is wintering its.btats
farther down the strew town' has
ever been attempted before. Slithers
to all the boats bare scintered up in
the bay, in order to avoid the ice, but
it has becotoe neoess.ary to run thi-
rick in order to find accommodation.
The Grand Trunk at present owns
the land where the basic is to be
dredged, and the sueoess of the
scheme is contingent upon the tail-
way company- allowing the land to he
deeded outright to the town of Sarnia.
The Government cannot employ
d es on private property.
F. 7t Pardee, 111. Y., and the Minister
of Railways, when herr recently, ex-
pressed a guarded approval of the
scheme.
Dr, Leacock, Humorist.
It is a far cry from lecturing on
economics a
ml redP•) a science in Mc-
Gill
1 sc� --
Gill University, Montreal, to writing
humorous sten hes for Teroato Satur-
day Night. However, this is the dual
occupation ot Stephen Leacock at the
moment.
Educated at Upper Canada College,
Dr. Leacock wee on the staff of th's
educational hied totion from 18N1 to 11199,
end is consequently well known in
Ontario. in the y-enrs 1807 and 19tsS
he toured the British Empire, lectur-
ing on Imperial prohleiva uuder the
auspices of the Rhodes T, ust. It wrs
after big ret•irn from Ibis wisaion that
Leacock began to he known as a
writer of humorous sketchy., some of
which appeared in Canadian journals.
including Tot onto Saturday \fight, as
far lack as 1809.
Toronto Saturday Night bas begun
a new series by Dr - Leacock.
"Novels in Nutshells," he ?*Its them.
They- are ten in number, and one is
bang puhlisbed each week. Every-
body loves good, clean humor.
Everybody is attracted by it. f sr the
reel humorist is a rare bird, and it is
rarer still that one is captured on the
nest right here in Canada.
Dr. Leacock -s series on Precucal
Political Economy- are also publieht'd
weekly- in Toronto Seturdss- Night.
Entinornier ore things that make tbe
civilised world move on. in the days
µ-ben the scieoce was not understood
and appreciated by at least a fair pro-
portion sof the world's inhabitantswe
woreskina, carried odtthg and traded
goat. Nnw we do hotter than that.
Every roam- and every woman for that
matter. should understand something
of the scieioe of practical wattles/
economy. arid this ke owledete can be
used ie no better Way than by me&
Mg Dm . Leaoock's series Maty west to
week. as a matter a fact. they ate
Dot hall as dry .,s they sound : and as
the Professor', style is always elms
and oneise, end as sprightly Che
ambjeet will permit tbey :tee well
worth •he perm:al elan if sou don't
A‘ PM • i.scomc 'seek president.
LANDS
FOR THE xTTLER
.a; t t -auwaa:
ailah,c iter sett er.'nt
Northern Or tat& Por full
ewe r ,1$(' • me A tteeet
1•r a,n xw m mrp apt*
11.
Drttai;Tpa APt-CW1.4 ,.
P*riiarooes •
eufferr'r1 1111 !man vesek,
horn what dome people call i
e(y L)r. Miles' estora-
trve cured me, and you 1
can im how thankful I am.''
M. I. COFFMAN,
Coldwater. Mich.
"My daughter was cU
with Dr. Miles' Restorativ
Nervine, after renting been
afflicted with fits for five years."
PETER McAULEY;
Springfield, Mass.
"For a year my little boy' had
spasms every time he got a little
cold. Since taking Dr- Miles'
Nervine he has never had one
of these spasms."
MRS. MYRTLE DAGUE,
Rochester, Itid.
"My daughter couldn't talk or
walk from St. Vitus' dance.
Seven bottles of Dr. Miles'
Nervine entirely cured her."
MRS. NANNIE LAND,
Ethel, Ind.
"Until my son was 3o years
old he had Pits right along. We
gave him seven bottles of Dr.
Miles' Restorative Nervine. He
has not had a fit since he began
on the fifth bottle."
MRS. R. DUNTLEY,
\'Vautoma, Wis.
Price *1.00 at your dniggtet. He ekwtd
su PPIy you. If he does net. sand Omer
to ua.'vw forward gall. MILS MEDICAL GO.. Ter+net.
Clara -"When I ivtuaed'tom three
weeks ago be de••lare.1 it would he the
death of him." Mande -"Well, it
wasn't. He proposed to me lust week
and I accepted biro." Clara -"Then'
he must have meant a living death."
W. ACHESON d SON
January Clearing prices
PVIIPB esti: Yoe•, klcaca to.
thio,
Mink, greatly redwood item, ,seas
which our stock is large, at half -pr .
1.odiee' Lamb Coats. *180.011.. ()tearing t,
Per ata ,
Iloes d
Lndies' WAS Coats of heavy wool heaver: esti , weeds
high as 11110.ti0 Sale urise, eece
ladies' Skirts
1.ltteaeu „lute ell-w.t.,i tet,
• rimmed, regular price: .
=• 1)gek.rr1Cidly ,Lindeand
v • 1'+.n hone tisoo
Prints for 1911
Two hundred •tui fifty pieces of cew, Mesafel ll-utcn English
Prints -the largest slowing we ever tee& OM the bandsnaeeot
efforts, onion warranted fast. our best_. _ s doth and ea•oag
them many lfir cloths. i'.. ,1 A VITAE'S' GNi O o., aM prior,
• per yard
11e
Cottons, Sheetings, Pilo+ Cloths
Ow springt'ottons are all now :o and forward. Bast. timet
Sbeetings and Pillow Cottons ret c o e nriCeo. and spe,iai War
for pieces and half pieces. '
Corsets
New A La t;r•ace Corset+, ten.: t. rhea tittiug awed :rawest.
Par)sian lines. Priced $1.00. 11.25, $1.00. 11111.00. 1111.00
•
W ACHESON a SON
LONDON. ONTARIO
PR
Business & Shorthand
SUBAcrs
Resident and Mail Courses
C.ri.e... Fres
1. W. Were.ebt 1_ w. Wiese lt.le., GA..
Pe.UpaL V-is.P sL
PREPARE for a position of trust
and responsibility by attending
Elliott Business College
TORONTO, ONT.
hie -chonl enjoys a widesuread pet-
onage. Enter now, Catalogue free.
'Our TELEGRAPH and
RAILWAY AGENT'S 1
Course is a safe guarantee to a
go..d salary. You can master it
in six months. The maximum cost
,s sap. You mar Par as you go. On
IYongraduation we aid you to secure
employment. Our new catalogue
explains. Write for it. Central
Telegraph & Railroad 'School
[e and Gerrard 8ta. Toronto
W. 11 Shaw Presment.
•
T J. Johnston, Principal
Le±
s
STRATFORD. ONT.
••-rite us rel enact for our free
and learn what in being done 1n abs
basins. opines in Winters 'Jataelo. tar
grid acs. oseure good podtion.. sad meet
with xuot-ese Bennie. amen 0y their ere
the bent We have three dep.rtppt.-
Commercial. Shontuind andnT laaranhY•
We give Individual ins* i uccion .u,d yy u
may enter at any time.,
O. A. MJLACB LAN,
\ P, incipal.
T^'446'.4-49woys
and
Girls
Should hart those subjects bare
which they oan earnea tying,
Sgetian's Bsetesn Collages are
the largest trainers In Qaeada,
and 011. sadoatet secure t he
britt positions. You can study
at home, or partly a, hornai and
finish at, t e o leo'i,
r
Style and Quality
7f style and Quality count, why
hesitate? We are confident we can
please you
JYfartrn Bros., Cas
NA=9RU=C0 REMEDIES
\'
�ea:ea t r i
agents these I red d Remedies
R .P
Ice
oda
and earl recommend them as being of the
highest standard in ret&rd- to quality sod
appearance. We 'have a complete assort
trent and will be piea;ed t, :how them to
our customers.
F. J. Butland, Druggist
"The store that piea,.a"
awareeseeew �Mw,eww
$3.75
FOR TME ASKING
OnI\ owners of horses,
pigs and cattle need apply.
X26.25
HERE TO GIVE AWAY
This Is a germane offer
INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION
ENTER ANY DAY
Inbestr9ab
It once
International
Stock Food
Three feeds for
osie cent
is shrewd devils'.
Howell Hardware Co.,
A/t/a/aA/V\
Limited