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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1911-3-23, Page 3'ems ITI N OMTHE COMING STRUGGLE AND ONLY IENOINE BEWARE OF IMITA• TIONS. BOLD ON Tibbs MII BITK 01 IINARD'S LINNET BOOK BINDING MAGAZINES, PERIODICALS and LIBRARIES . .rand or repaired. (GOLD LETTERING on LEATHER GOODS An order. prompt) attended to on leaving them at THE SIGNAL. Ooderioh. A. 13. TAYLOR. STRATFORD) CIVIL ENGINEERING %JAUUMAN M. RUBEKTS, CIVIL ' sad Hydraulic Engineer. Ontario Land ~ewer. Block, Goderich, corner iloptineal arse[. Teiephooe 137. MEDICAL DR. W. F. UALLOW. M. B. Ll Oahe sad residence. North street, Ooderieh. . eethat eea17 Bsgt.try Moe. Telephone 111 LEGAL DRiUD1'GuT. HAY• a XILLUK- 1 AN, barntaer.. idiotism, notaries public. yt�otot. 1n the MalRune Conn. etc. Private uT rads to"lead at lowest rate. of interest i1�ce, fad .ode .quare. Godench. W. I'KULYi•i'11OT h . t . R. C'. HAY&. J. L. KILWRAN. le O. CAMERON. RON. K. C.. HARRIS - 121. Tett adkater. notary public, LMloes- .AasUton thrust, e,odeneb, third door truest CHARLES (ARROW, L.LB., BAR- Kiel attorney.. sonatina, to... limier 1,rb. Mont to tend ■t lowe.t rates. 111 U. JOHNS'1UN, BARRIb'1'liR 111. .o/kttw. (Win U1 .M er, massy public ,mces busmen suaA, 4Wetee 11m.. INSURANCE. LOANS, ETC. IAcK1LU.'r MUTUAL FiRE IN Dl te e It ANL h. t.. u. -r arm and ,rotated lt,wa property iwured. (mese.-J. b. McLean, Me.., Se.krtb P.U; J... Connolly. Vole -Pre.. Uoderw:h Y. V : Mecum k hays, bac.-1 rem.. bealorth P. 0. Uueotul.-N o. l besot). realotth ; John U. urieva, W inthrop; tt filum Kinn: Sonstance; Jobs beubewel• Ifiodhr ern: J.mea Evan,. Beech. may John N all. barluck ; Malcolm itcbwen, bitn.Deld. Agent.: J. N. feu. Hol mese : It. Smith., B annock; Jas. t umtuing.. Ygiuuedvile: ti Hlnchlsy. teesfottl,. Ywcy-bowers con pa, a aeiasasais .r+i set their lata.Illelpttu .t Tater et Mown.. �Ilatob. or .t K. H. (-Mt it Roomy. kinesis Melee . Uoaerlob. SCO(C/t(1 PRIVATE FUNDS TO ,f+ V V V toes. API'', to M. 0. CAM - • A.. • AM- ..r....M. r..W6"A...u..C4 LiWata.l.. W r R: ROBERTSON. INSURANCE AGENT. Ina asB Lea RIM) . laitub, tausdlan ,Dd Asnerlo•a. CrabnrtT. alcatta it AFD k,IILOrint LIAa14 ITT : 1M Ocean Atldeut end Uaataotee ..operation. Limited. of London, Eng. IIDsLM AIDI•CA5ANTaa borne: the U.S. Fidelity and Guarantee L.omp•ay. Umor u reel_enw, uottbes.t corner of Vic aid ht. David's streets. 'Phone 171 1OHN W. C'RAIOIE, LIFE, FIRE U and accident insurance. Agent fur leading -IMAM and stock comminutes. Ln.ut nue Mad Met awatad on ber•. pians and al lowest num. .... il at emcorner N ;street reet and &lawn raM1M. W. .KAlula. Uuderwh. 111Vet. ms MARRIAGE LICENSES ati- s^ WAtilMlt a ll,hLLY, J. 1'.. t1UDliLItlCH, -- MUM OF MAR1ttAGk LICENsEs. .. LANK 14. ., U dwRcOh. � MARRL- SHAVING PARLOR BEDFORD BLOCK BARBER SHOP - well -known mod popular stand eases 1u patens• Use best ..rein. in .bavIng balr4MtAfag, eta, eta Ladies' .kampoolla a aMaras p.eeAyally. duty .killed hand. employed• BOl eelefetor prM be appreciated. H. B. ARCHITECTURE AR" UR J. BARCLAY, MEDAL 1..,...,b & 1patn ate brltis\ Architects r Saultttlk. ae. Oodetk h. Plana de- pebiM beleldfegaeins pe'ared ,ondeetor siden1e AUCTiONEERINO asnr--- rg' JWIIAIS OUNUIt . LI V K 8TUCK 1 ..a general sestiemer. oraaa os genu wiressweet ' Ithelli ar�r..nnablie and Usd M give yen esmow• phltse ■Oil � ODIIERICH OOlraKBVATORY OF MIMIC. Marra. A a1. Liak T. C)' M•a"dh.eh Mos. n.�jM• isLE eils eel Sas Per else.. seems at the W. J. MUIR & CO. ptlrra"wo 14A41 of Vivo see.ter.flse. WHITE AND YELLOW RACES TO FIGHT FOR SUPREMACY. With the Difference Tet High Power Weapons Have Made In Warfare, the Conflict Between the White and Yellow Races For a Foothold en the Earth Will Dwarf All Other Battles In the World's History. Row far away is the last great Struggle, the war for which all the powers are unconsciously arming themselves? There is no doubt as to the direction front which it will come. Distant as it undoubtedly is. Europe looks toward the east with • shud- der. The sound of the hoof -beats of Attila's horsemen seem to linger. The grass grows preen over the bones of the Huns on Chalon's batUeffeld, and their,00ming is not forgotten -through the centuries that have intervened. The feeling has grown up in the inlet century that the world will go through at least one more titanic struggle before the nations can afford to dis- arm. The gray beards in the war of- fices of Europe look toward the east when they are in their most pessimis- tic moods. They dread the vague formless masa of patient fighting wen that are gradually- being aroused Iron the age-old alumbere in the east. Something is happening there that is without precedent in the annals of an Empire. China -,old China, with the musty smell of 10,000 dead years hanging .,ver its temples and festering cities -- is rubhine u; ey, . and beginning to look over its frontiers. Japan has passed through nus restless period. The white roan had a taste of oriental ;ourag.• along the Yalu; on the slopes of Three-H•u,elr,d-Meter Hill; on the Tiger's Trail and out on the Sea of Japan. "White men who•love life e•an- not tight against yellow men who are bent on selling their lives for the glory of their ancestors," said• a 'beat- en Russian veteran after the Jlukden roat was over. Somewhere along the Urals. along the eastern edge of Europpee the orient and the occident will n•bme day join in the last great struggle. It will be titanic, and on its issue will depend she course of c•:vetaatidn. Chalons will repeat itself.; the white and the yellow will again tug at each other's throats; German. Englishman and Italian, Ca- nadian, American and Ruailan, will pin forces, just as the white men did once before. when they took the road b Pekin; ''ut this time it will be no helpless foe that will front their bat- talions,' All Asia, wild•.and barbaric in spite of the high-power rifle and the merciless rapid -firing gun. wjll sweep westward. driven by the same spirit that led the hosts .,l Alaric and the horde of Attila • over a thousand yeah ago. It has been pointed out that the wars of the past were relig- io:.., anti political, the•struuggggles of the present mere trade 'squabbles, . and that those of the future must be for a foothold on the earth. The "Yellow Peril" has been Iaugh- td to scorn for the last 500 years, but the war lords of Europe are not so certain about this being a mere phan- tom dread. aa they were before the Jays of the iron -clad and the machine gun in the hands of the Orientals Asia for the Asiatics" is the watch- word in the far east since the guns of the Japanese squadrons ceased t., bellow in the Tsushima straits. Aria Orsi and then any or all territories that will take the surplus population •,f the festering cities is the European idea of the fardel policy of Japan and China. China's army is being re- organised. Skilled masters of the white man's battalions are drilling legions of slant -eyed troops' all over the ' ei pine of the Mongols. New machinery is being installed and the patient Chinese are being taught to use It. In that territory now beginning to open is • population of at least 400.- 000,000 souls. The country is saturat- ed with population. The land wit; support no more. As soon as the popu- ation grows too large, it will begin to sweep over the boundaries and spill into adjacent countries by the thousand. With famine, and plague out of the way, with the fields fruit- ful in every season and the country under adequate sanitary control, the population will increase with enor- mous rapidity. The west is their nat- ural gateway, but the islands of the Pacific and the nearer coasts of Amer- ica are not beyond their reach. Ires is already restless under the pressare If the hordes from the ninth. Tibet and the Himalayas are yet in the way, however. and the movement may swing farther to the north and west. Backedby Japan, the policy of ex- pansion can go on apace. The 50.000.- 000 of Japanese can find an outlet on some farther shore of the Pacific. and China's gigantic hordes can wan- der westward toward the Urals. stroll_ fray- • few hundred miles in the course of a generation. Russia has long beteg the powerfu' bulwark, that inierpoeed between the Asiatic and the European Her cote. nie. in Siberia menaced the Chinese frontiers. The Moat of the Great Bear broke his mimeses. The Orien- tal no longer fears the Muscovite. There is nothing to cheek the deliber- ate Asiatic advance toward the Urals. the C'sucasue and the= Lack 8 e lure ea The rich fields of Europa The wheat ►and. of the Volga are relehreted tor their fertility. and the Chinese love to till the see better even than they cove to work ,n ase• tortes The "Te1lew Peed- will aisle be at them lees gates al the white San'• home Fourteen center ago me' whets b: k of Rirepi sered aloes the Kier' Warne and brat bark the hataleg- arnitleFlanisaeieprn I. Tbe .)seat+fes of lilw'ege tee that me cher Chalons will yet have to he 5grot betimes the mewls,; swam of w issiiaegemete •d tAo Pirie+ i/ femme themersamas will �a�, bra•. r........ 04 i itsiesina M biwoa net Neo so rah bet■1S Is Xis .iNglirgers, wl Mea)• __.. MUM ete THE SVONAL, UUJ)ERICH, MARK) FEEDING WORK HORSES IN WINTER. Tbe problem of feeding work bores, is doubtless of as wide interest as any problem In live stool management, writes L. G. Johnson In M'arw and Ranch. Practically all farmers. no matter what particular branch of farming they are engaged las, have oc- casion to feed %cork borses, and 1t mat tons not wbrtber feeds are high or low 1t always pays best to feed .ueb food as is best for tbe animal -the ones that are most efficient and economical. At the present high prices of all man A well bred Shire horse L from 1E2 to 17 [ands high• with • girth of 7 feet it tncbas to D feet its breed seems to De a cross between native u ncohabtre and Dutch stal- lions. ner of grata feeds it is e%Peclally im- portant tbat a Judicious selection of feeds be made. for much loss may re- sult from tbla phase of stable man- agement if you fall to give it proper attention. in the first place, It is necessary to provide good, comfortable. cleanly kept quarters for the horse during the cold weather, allowing him. of course. plenty of pure water and then feed him such foods as he will relish. For his grain ration for the most part I prefer oats in preference to corn. Of +ourse tbe horse wants a change oc- casionally, and for this change 1 some- time. etre a feed of chopped corn and wheat bran. but oats are the main grain ration. These. with pure. clean tim- othy bay. will keep the horse In a de- sirable. bealtby condition and at the same time keep his muscles hardened eo as to fit him for'the nett spring and summer's work. Care of Dairy Utensils. Any dirt that has accumulated on the milk can is good slyience that the milk Is fall of these 'titxfesira6le bac- teria. To guard against this trouble 1t 1s first necessary to look to the men - idle.' Only those tbat can be easily leaned. which have a hard. smooth surface without any unnecessary cor- ners. should be used. Wooden vessels contain thousands of small pores that make it almost Impossible to thorough. ly clean them. Glassware and earthen- ware have been used to some ez- teut with good results. but the fact that they are so expensive and easily broken make. It not practlenhle to use them. Galvanized zinc or iron re- ceptacles should never be used. Tin that Is perfectly free from rough sur- faces combines all the good qualities to be desired In milk utensils. Hone Out of Condition. For a rundown horse tbat is losing flesh and refuses his grain treat as follows; On empty stomach In the mornlnr'atve one and one-half quarto raw Hayed oil and two ounces turpen- tine well mined. In two or three days give following powder: Sulphate of iron. two ounce.; saltpeter, two ounces; nue vomica (powdered). one ounce. Mix well together and give In feed morning nod night a heaping teaspoon- ful. It Is possible that worms may be tbe cause of the trouble. If so, above treatment will eradicate them. • DAIRY POINTERS. With even only two cows it pays to own a cream separator. lenougb more cream 1s taken out to have two peaods of but- ter eacb ween. worth, say, 110 cents. Tbe gain In prlce 1s oleo' acid to be 6 cents • week and the wbole gain for the yes. 520.12 Th. Ideal color for butter is a golden yellow. and you can't tlx It rap any other wry. Steam is the best thing to clean milk bottles. Turn It on gently ate but more strong- ly as the g�bsats up well. It N net bard to arrange • steam emendate vess11 wttb a gait a bio pipe to 1L To ripen cream in winter. keep It 1n • warm room or in a Holler Many tarsiers' wives seep it to a stone jar back of the L Itchen reeve. Hilt or .-ream Mat has M- enem. warm •beeld sever be peered back info the beetle of Held silk Wiest Oath is dismayed In the metas will wrist• to mil it •fiA Wijnr► till Sauer •e1 wawastag nnsltttas If le I snpertha. to rale the prof 14 Italia. Hewn Aum Ole ..posh► able •Mimi% miner Feu Mot rnnr milk T1s. i•aatltT .4 wilt Is eat memegh, The bather fat meet he aMMt eeMI. gill •MiFSSMIMOMsNffM THE GROWING COLT. Tete Often the Youngster le Leh es Take Care of Hirneete The colt should have a little grata teed. such as bran and cats and a lit- tle cracked corn. about the middle oe each forenoon and afiera000 whUe Its mealier L at work. as wsU as at regu- lar fondles time Ina little trough aU Its own. It needs to be fed UtUe and often with digestible, nutritious food. writes a correspondent of Orange Judd Fernier. It wW be better o13 in the .table during tbe flay, provided the stable is kept clean and cool If al- lowed to get foul from accumulation og manure the little tender feet may be- come tbrushy and sore and the future strength and conformation of feet and ankles will be impaired. Many prom- ising colts are ruined for life for want of a little sensible care of the growing foot 1f the colt receives the proper care and food at this time he will be so .trong and healthy at weaning time that his mother's milk will scarcely be missed. The growing colt is too often allow- ed to shift for himself and gatber such food as he can find, generally of poor quality. The result is in the spring the owner will bave a poor. weak, broken hearted animal and very little growth for his winter's feed and care- lessness. It is said "raising colts is a lottery." Bo it should be with tbe odds against us 1f we are not willing to give rational care and food. A well raised, well bred colt should be a useful companion for twenty years or more. Is be not worth a little can to get him well started? CAPACITY OF A COW. Development of Milk Producing Quali- ties Begins With the Calf. To give milk a cow must eat and eat a great deal and havelthe internal machinery to take care of what she eats. writes E. L. Vincent In the Na- tional Stockman. You tale a cow al- ways as slim as a racer and ebe will not give much milk, do the best you can with ber. She 1s made. so .far as her work is concerned. and little can be done to increase ber powers in this direction. But how can we "make capacity" 1n our cows? 1s it safe to crowd a calf until 1t 1s ready to burst. its hide al- ways stretched like a balloon? Toads This Holstein brill calf 1s an ex- celient epeclmen of obs breed no represents. Th. Holsteins are sec- ond erand to none In milk producing quae- Itles. I reply that overcrowding will cage tainly not avail. But this is about the line we may work upon: • Begin early and begin carefully. For a number of weeks I would rather a calf should not have quite what it .watts to eat rather than to be stuffed beyond power to assimilate. Not that a calf should be starved. Give some milk, and as soon as it L old enough to chew and digest it begin feeding some nice hay. Add also a bit of buckwheat shorts or not too coarse wheat bran. Gradually add some to the milk ration night and morning. Watch the result. Don't get a calf off its feed. it must be watched all the away and not pushed too bard and yet must have enough. That Is the way to NAM* a cow. "1 Suffered Years With My Back." Backache resulting from weak kidneys, a bad cold or other cause, usually renders the sufferer unfit for work and often results in per- maAent disability. "1 suffered for years with my back, or kidney trouble, and have tried a number of remedies from different physicians. More than a year ago, one of our local druggists induced me to try Dr. Miles' Anti -Pain Pills and after using them some three months 1 found a decided improve- ment in my kidneys, and I arm glad to say that 1 hope soon to be fully restored to health." J. P. ALLEN, Ex -Judge City Court, Glasgow, Ky. As long as pain is present in any part of the body rest is impossible and the system becoming weakened is exposed to any forty of disease to which the sufferer may be inclined. Dr. Miles' Anti -Pain Pi:is by steadying the irritated nerve centers, make refreshing sleep pos- sible, thereby enabling the body tp recover lost strength. As aretnedy for pain of any description Dr. Miles' Anti -Pain Pills are unsur- passed. Sold by ■11 druggists under a guar- antee assuring the return of the price W the first box It ,,o benefit results. MILES MEDICAL CO., Toronto , t.an. HORSE LORE. To groom tbe horse well after bard work does not only clean the skin, but It prevents various parasitic diseases of the skin. In the purchase of a. new borne always purchase a mare. She will raise you some colts, which will increase the farm profits. There is no kind of animal breeding that will pay better then the breeding of borses, but bones that will sell. not dung- hills or misfits. Don't keep your horse to an overbeated stable and then stand him for hours in a freezing at- mo>.pbere and wonder bow be became pan lysed Most farm bones get too much bay. Cut down tbe amount and 4.4 it mostly at night Thor- ough dampening Meares the dan- ger from feeding dusty bay. I THERVDAT, Allssrss YM IYII a Tenet. MILLAR & SON'Pr ATTRACTIVE SHOWING OV NEW Spring Merchandise 11 'Phone 56 A ilEAU Every department of our store is replete with all the newest and most up-todate styles and ideas for the coming spring and summer season. We ere showing many new and attractive lines for ladies' and children's house and street wear. This season we have made many alteraty'ens in the interior of our adore andlverything is done to fecilitats shopping and make it a pleasure to shop here. Our New Housefurnishing Department We have greatly improved our Housefurnishing Department and have gone much more reten.- ively into the Curtain and Carpet business to meet the demands of our ever increasing trade. Nero Curtains special showing of new Curtains, Madrases, Muslim. Sash Nets and Door Panels. Carpets Carpet squares in every site, in Tapestry, Bill sele, Velvet and Wilton°. Cil Patterns 3121—Waist. No. 3923—Skirt TIFUL FROCK.MILLAR'S SCOTCH STORE 'I'b ae5J LI. He. Pr ce, 15 tests each McCall's Patterns Nairn's Linoleums The Children's Hair A Little Extra Care Now May Save 1 A:tar Years a Regret Children play so hard that toe hoed per'adtree and the hair nus a t.mdency to spat and get sticky on the scalp. Soap and water doesn't neem to re- endle Ir. but the hair must bte•ltne to be henitL). Jia:. try Nyars lilr.•..- tone. trot) it Into the roots of the hair with tt.e ba;ls of the fingers. Tar chtldren tike 11 and will ask you to use 1t_ iflrsutone loosens op the ae- eumttlated dust and perspiration and to hair sae scaly can theta be easily and thorough:y chan•d. After 1• .s dried give another application of n; : a/toae. >t .tete: you hale u.r•I 11 fur a wills you will se - i'.• h.•.• Toy have ever u-ee I Store will ehe.rrut', - - Um* to do all Said and gra .meed by : F. 3. BUTLAND S. E. HICK H. C. DUNLOP E. R. WIGLE GnDERICH One for each everyday ailment Nk Are you wise to the necessity of Spraying Have you a gold mine in your. orchard and do not know it ? Trim, spray, cultivate and fertilize your orchard and see what it will do for you. We handle the best makes of Spraying Machines The Goulds, of Seneca Falls, is said to be the best machine on the market. It has a wonderful power and is operated with little exertion. We can sell you all your requirements at the lowestepossible cost to you. VENN Howell Hardware Co., Limited THE HEST PLACE TO BUY HARDWARE When the Children Come Home From School give them Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes. "Kellogg's" is a wholesome cereal that satisfies a child's longing for sweetmeats. You can give them all they crave of it, too, for while strong in quality, it is light in digestibility. Be sure to get " Kellogg's." 22 TOASTED CORN, FLAKES 10C Per Pkg. 14AST E D CORN FLAKES PERHAPS NOT YET— BUT EVENTUALLY 'Zi:44, C I CK VII bees • parmea•ar stare as year dear mese Quality err was Sena as DwahUar wills Doled .1 bee Wil sad T—lemeh with gloss of mIN and ours -411i atm ev r Owes el Weed time tp5EY &AM .SODAS •