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The Signal, 1912-10-24, Page 2New Hemewiek, Cascada. — " I e a n highly isesmmard I�ppdIa t Plekbam's to �\tt•getebloC.w..ia�tp�nad wo- than. y I batt takes it ter swam. mob - as. oat palatal autstteatioe wad it eared me. " —blew Duffles= Baasowe. S Tay.anar, Oerearts s4. 1.i alePignat 9Oomell lfffreste, PUBLISHID EV'Mtlf THURSDAY .r THE SIONa.L PRINTING Ole., Limited, TaisMws Oall Ns, ��yy Tereus e. tir..srvt... ins nse..t .. k 'mthre ossatbe.160. Te U.nad elates sabsortbere, 91.60 a Isar tomato In &aystmM Subscribers who tai to receive Tau Snout resulatty by wail will oorrter a farm * so - unstinting as of the tact at .. early a date .s potlble Waal a seams et 'admire is desired, both old and the new add rise should be siren. Ad.ertbrng Rates : u and other similar advetti mamma. too pet 1 ter first insertion and in per line for each subsequent tasertion. Measured by s nonpareil scale. twelve tines to an inch. Business oards of six lioee and under. }.i per year. AdvertyemegU of Lost. Found, avant*. 814 nations ysoast, Sitantions Wasted, Rsasesbre dale or to Rent. Farms tor gals or to Rant, Artkt/s for gale, ate.. not exceeding ela3fsteL lines, :y: each insertion : i1 for Ina mouth, fur Oso►.abeequent month. Larger advertise 100.1. b proportion. Anoouaeameats la ordinary reading type leo cents per Una. No notice lets than 23c. Any spedat tattoo, the object of which is the twoleaierr bonegt of any individual or world' ' ly d an advertisement and oaccordingly. Rates for dboday and contract advertise meets wall be MIMI on application. Aldress W Osaaenicattows to THE SIGNAL PRINT !NU l'0.. Limited, A CANADIAN VIEW OF WOODROtW WI TH$ SIGNAL : GOLF ICH ONTARh, • ( and le invite \feast\.t to ksoera hate., LdOFaso my be N, orwhat mote her ow, ma w orpato t stated w to Bawd the reader to place • rae&e wreak coed gtfoo oa the facts. 1 will test+ a �eeagMae from lir. otiy. Dfagesaa'* letter sees a Mae ortticiaat • ng of ' M► I submit • few leets on the her d Lbs question? Under successive Liberal overnraeata in Ontario the bare de- cile- clined from MSS in 1874, to 2,618 ib Ur. J. A. Macdonald, of The T Globe, heard Woodrow Wilco two speeches et New York rete The first was $iveo at a nisei the Heights of (oluobua an second. the saw. eveniog. At a bemires of French-Canadian.:ivittlt In New York. The Democratic candidate got in touch quickly with both gather► lags, greetlytto the admiration ot Dr. Macdonald, who describes him a, a .,loiter. au orator and a statesman. A parepraph bow the addee.s to the Knights of ('olumbut is quoted : "The year 11112 is therefore not w remote from the year 1912, becau.e unless we can continue to consecrate thin greet continent to a higher level of spiritual lite we may some day re- gret that it was ever discovered. We may some day feel that itis a disgrace to bare bad a free field in which to do new thing., sod yet to have failed in dniag them in the very hour of trial and of crinis. . ... i have some- times thought that the true American vision i. fresher in the eyes of mane en immigrant than it is in the eyes of men born in America," "The coming President" spoke, writes lir. Macdonald, "without noise or straining after popular effect. His strong face WOO lit with 'the invisible Aatue within.' A note, not of perscpal conviction merely, but of serious pub- %loderich. Ont. 'lit urgency, sent bis epigrammatic sentences home. His lucid thinking, crammed into marvellously condensed and picturesque language, reminded we of Mr. Asu•tith s matchless style, hut \Voodtow NVilsou has the discip- lined emotional power the British Premier lacks. When be closed there was an outburst such as Cowes only when the deeper convictions of'atrong men are kindled into flame." To the French-Canadians Mr. it'll - There ate several objections to be sou spoke sympathetically of the laud wade to this proposal. of their birth, and showed that be had been a student of Canadian affairs. Ur. Macdonald concludes : r30UERLCB. THURSDAY. 1K1. 21. Ml MR. BORDEN'S PROPOSAL. It is under*tood.that on the open- ing of Parliament Mr. Borden will propose an "emergency" contribution of tbirtymillion dollars to the British Government. 1n the first place, there is no emer- gency, or surely Mr. Borden would not have dillydallied all summer and fall before tsking Parliament into his confidence. In the second plane, if there were an emergency, a vote of money would not help matters. t.rads would have to go to Great Btitrin to borrow the Iuoney,andall that Cantle's help would amount to would be the paying of the interest on the loan. if tbere is any one thing of which great Britain is not in need, it is money. The British Chancellor of the Exchequer is paying off the national debt at the average rate of about sixty million dollars u year and has plenty of funds for all the warships which can be manned. if there were really an emergency requiring the construction of more wet -ships, Great Bi Rein would not be waiting for Canada to take action. Sbe would be building the ship., not carit* much who was to pay for them. Any ships constructed on Canada's /teconnt would not he ready for two years. and surely we are not to suppose that the emergency will last that long. All this tank of an "emergency" con- tribution is just a scheme to postpone the adoption of a permanent naval polici. Mr. Borden does not like to adm't that the Laurier plan of a Can- adian navy is the tight policy, but be cannot find a better one :.o he delays. The Liberals in opposing a cash con- tribution will no doubt be accused of "disloyalty:" but they have heard that charge so often from their op- ponents that it troubles them very little. THE MANITOBA MACHINE. The Roblin machine has a way of its own of winning elections. During the Campaign in Macdonald Liberal workers were arrested and jailed, and when the election was over they were liberated, there being no evidence against them, On the other hand, "justice" wee dealt out leniently to Conservatives who wete actually guilty of cotrupt practices. Two men who were arrested at the instance of Liberal scrutineers and .barged with personation were given a trial in 'octet and geed $50 each, instead of being sent to jail as the law directs. When counsel for the prosecution arrived at the court room et the hour set for the trial of the personatoM, he was told that the magistrate had dealt with the cases In private an hour before. This naturally led to a remonstrance on the part of the pros. eeiuing counsel, whereat the wagi.- trate flew into a rage, insulted and threatened the lawyer and ordered his expulsion from the court room --an order whicb •he constable/ present refused to obey. in subsequent proceedings in o,nnection with the matter the same magistrate. nsmed McPirken, picked up a ehair and tbrestened to bit a Libeled lawyer on the bead with it, at the same time wing league,* which would dialyses a bar -room it io sot to he supposed that the people of Manitoba will aobenic in- detHMtaaly its thea kind of thing. Tb. preelNleMele el the tis tat• .ed . woOsatilog et the. reseed lin the eltsri s away let t• bye -Modest alt epee the methods by whit'! lad Ilt*llme bees for yaws attain la ieaelas a "Twice during one evening N uod- row Wiliam dispmyed the overwotked allegation that., because of hieaebolar- ship and the literary finish of his speeches, be could not be en effective campaigner. True. he slaps ni man on the hack. Be call* uo man 'Bill' or 'Tom'. He talks no vulgar slang. He violated no sound rules of rhetoric or kw* of logic. He speaks the' thoughts of a trained thinker in the cultivated language of a Rosebery or a Balfour or a Morley or a n Asquith, but with the directness ofSI/ American and with something of the inbred downrightness of an Ulster Scot. That, in very truth. he will be 'the next President' is the growing convic- tion one Ands almost everywhere. That he would not only add lustre to the line of George Washington's s.tcces- so, s. but would blaze a trail out of t economic and politica! woods in whic as many Americans think, the Amer can Republic ,s now all bat lost, is th warranted judgment of nit s fe readies of American thought, who, o November 5, will vote Democrat fo the first time in their lives." h, senrber 21st. Tbe St. Andrew's Society of Guelph ✓ has a president named Robert Roy. The Guelph Scots are in no fear of the Duke of Montrose. 1001—•a reduction Of AYTJ, or as aver ante of 73 per year for 31 years. Under 141r James P. Whitney's Uovernmen the decline continued on from 2.516 l 1904 to t,8'.il in 1910—* reduction 890, or an average of 147 per year fo six years, just twice the average re duction under preceding liberal Gov moments. Rad bar reductions been effected under Liberal Govurnmenta with the same speed as under Si James Whitney, only 286 would hay survived when Kir Jamas assumed o flee in January, 1906, instead of 2.510 Now 1 do not conteod upon these facts more than that they write down as dishonest the charges made at time, io Methodist quarters that Sir James Whitney is a friend or champion of the bar. This double -speed reduction, furthermore, has taken effect under the three-fifths clause, which, despite the apparent hardships it has worked in some places, on the whole has op- erated to prevent reaction and ensure permanency to local option." I think it cannot be fairly quer tioned when 1 state that neither Gov- ernment should receive credit for the licenses cut oft by the carrying of local option, or where municipalities have reduced thew by submission to a vote of the electors, e. g. Peterborough and Kingston. The cutting oft of the licensee by these two methods is die- tinetly outside of Governments, and due directly to local sections of the pr• rile. 11 i11 Mr. Dingman have the kind - n• _..4 to give us the reduction in 11 - cruses due directly to the action of the Liberal and Conservative Govern- ments? Will be kindly also give the number of bats tbat would be closed today through local option bad not the present Government made it more difficult to can y the bylaw ? He st ttes that the three-fifths.aause has, oo the whole, operated to pre- vent reaction and ensure permanency , to local coition. On what does he base this statement We have a number of pieces where local option is in force on the simple majority vote and can he repealed by such a vote. There are also a number of places where local option has been carried by the three• fifths majority and hes been in force three Tears or more. Will Mr. Dingman kindly show from these how the three- fifths ensures perrnanency? What, r other Than this, will show the per I manency value of the three-fltths? t There rue other things in his letter I to which 1 would like to refer, hut do not wish to make toy letter lengthy, apd will close with the hope that Mr. Dingman may favor a reply to my questions. A. T. F.etxaxy. h Godericb. Sept. 29th. by eine. Le the ea...o If his be remladattbis'sasdieme eff a Yt Watery whit\ is ahead t ddep t e to lbs mewed gemeatied2 neisilf, the Imiess W pretwomo which was ass - Assad Rk the lilwtase et the Peal Goy- eewaeot ltt 1818. •.1.1440 to 44 this time temeast.rated agaied lbs repeal of the prefetesos. Mu/eating that the loyalty and allegiance of the colony t might be affected by tbe action. Tb. n reply cave from Mr. Gladstone, thea of A meuther of the Conservative Goe- r eminent, who stated that be would be sorry to thunk the loyalty and attach- ment of tbe people of Canada de- pended upon the British Governalteet's r imposing A tax for their benefit oo tBritish wurko.o, but rather believed it depended upon coalition biewry common litetraturee, comuton institu- tions and '•those things which la emu- these we hold may do well to keep that itt mind even to! there dsyr," observed Mr. Rowell. FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES. 01 Course Net. Pule Star- Traaaettpt. Canadian cattle are now Leing rushed to the United States oa ac- count of the high prices there. The loyal ('uuservative fernier*. of course, will not be guilty of the treason in- volved in selling their cattle to be ex- ported to the United States. Eloquent Figures. Stratford Beaouo. The highest price for cattle in Tut onto last week was 811.20 per hundred weight, in Buffalo 89.60; for hogs .68.00 in Toronto. $9.30 in Buffalo : foi- l/11131m, 90,35 in Toronto, 97.10 in Buf- falo. There is an eloquence in these facts that outclasses all the oratory of the opponents of reciprocity. A Spider Wanted Toronto Star. it is with mingled envy and admira- tion that we hear Roblin declaring, or rather chanting, that the British Ern pure was saved in Macdonald, and that Chamberlain wee vindicated and that Macdonald will now remain a part of Manitoba, instead of beiug annexed to Jllnnesota or North Dakota, as Rich erasion wou'd have done if he bad been elected. That's the nay to talk, or rather the way to sing. What the Liberal pert y ought to do is to find a obust tenor, like Roblin, to celebrate ter victories and make the and -soca teak it has captured an capita when t wins an election. EDITORIAL NOTES. [The Dominion Parliament has been summoned to meet on Thursday. No - MR. MONK'S RESIGNATION. Hon. F. D. Monk. Minister of Pub- lic Works in the Ottawa Government, has resigned his portfolio. owing to his disagreement with the Govern- ment's program ,n the naval question. During the election campaign last year Mr. Monk stated that before ef- fect should be given to any policy in regard to naval defence it should be submitted to the people for an expres- sion of their views, As Mr. Borden does nut Intend to submit the "emer- gency" ewergency" contribution to popular vote, Mr. Mock feels in honor bound to withdraw from the Government. Messrs- Narttel and Pelletier, the two other members of the Nationalist wing of the Cabinet, hare not resigned, Mr. Pelletier is too busy beheading Grit pustwaaters to think about re- siguidg on any question of principle, and Mr. Nautel, it is said. is undecided as to what his course should be. Mr. Borden is reaping trouble where e sowed it by his alliance with the Quebec Natinoalista. While the Lib- erals of Quebec were campaigning In support of the late Government's navy program, Mr. Borden's allies in that Province were busily engaged in fomenting racial paseiou easiest any proposal to assist in the defence of the Empire. The unholy alliance, by which Mr. Borden gained power, is now breaking up, and eventually the Laurier policy will be vindicated. LICENSE REDUCTION. A discussion has been going on is the oolnmw of The Christian Guar- dian on the subject of temperance leg- islation, and especially with reference to the respective claim that may be made on behalf of the Liberal lied Comers -title. Governments of Ontario for !loaner reduction measure.. W. 8. Dingman. editor of The t'itr'atford Herald, put in a plea for Sir Jams Whitney, claiming that daring his re- gime there has hese a more rapid de. ereses is the *ember of Weasels than during the peried of Liberal peen - sent.. in last week's I. of The GuINIUM there is an effective reply to this claim by a Ged.rleh eNlaem wise writes as follows Dear fills,—Tea p: a bib[ _ lye hum week'* ha letter ft-IONMier. a. Mho - moo. Neer Om eke* •.t: W Weer k ie .lata that Ye DOOM its Is sot Aber party (to push Notiml p.raeo)istatoo a�b�wt tbtat these aro two shit to its e+ldeet Gliterfeet rtf toe abapt \oil Col. Hugh Clark is down in Er_st Middlesex telling the electors what a great temperance man Whitney is. Hugh always was a meat Wag. Rudyard Kipling has taken to tbe political platform. The cable des- patch says that his first speech was "able enough." Poor Rudyard ! Wilson is still the fay. rite in the betting across the line. The Rough Rider will have to he shot a few more times before he can beat the man from New Jersey. A coal famine is reported from Sea - forth. The dealers bave no coal end are unable to get any. We thought the Seaforth people were Loo Scotch and canny to be caught that way. it is just like Goderich's luck to get ► Minister of Public Works in line with the idea of continuing the devel- opment of the harbor here when be resigns. Tarte-Hyman-Pugsley-Monk : they were all the right sort. and we'll have to de our best with the next map. Prof. Todd, of the Provincial Oov• ernment'* agricultural staff, believes that he haa toued c method of killing wild mustard. A diluted solution of sulphate of copper Is used. Experi- ments will be mad. with the treat. meat in various section. of the Prov- ince rovince next year. The war between Italy and Turkey has bees brought to an end just ie WOO' to allow Turkey to give her at. Motion to the hostile Balkan States, By the terms of the treaty of peace Turkey agrees to withdraw from Tripoli. and Italy. oe the other hand, restores the bleeds she has occupied in the Aegean Sera. Goverment organs err cosmc•nc- fsg another attempt to popularize the Demistioe bigbways bilL which was Method out by the senate at the last sahebs of Parliament. The farmers ase asked to "harsh" for a proposal to speed oarstroa sprees of dollars oa troak roads which would he used chiefly for automobile teak in ea address before the [haler? ate il>eiwtta. Smdety of the vdvele tMbT ef'Reroute last wee& Nt. Rowell M'a am address a• "Cauedlea AMMO - mg and lasparIab Maly." ^hewing Mee Wm two lame haws _..dopy side THE,IMVNEER'S REPLY. The Pioneer, the organ, cf the pro- ihition movement, replies to the article in The Toronto News which was republished in The Signal last eel. The Pioneer says : In an editorial, The Toronto News, s trong supporter of the Ontario Gov rnment, opposes the banish the tar policy which is now being advocated by the Liberal party, and expresses a trong preference for the metbod tar- red by the present Government. bich it describes as "lucid option ith stringent enforcement of tbe cense law," The News does not la his article advocate the anti -treating stem. 1t sets out its own idea con- ening the situation in the following ran : If there is to he a radical reform in mperance legislation, private inter - t in the liquor trade should he alien tely terminated, and sale of liquor w s li ce to to es lu in shops under Government control and under severe restrictions surely would he the wiser policy." Our contemporary discusses the sit- uation and the different proposals made with some force but not entirely with fairness, it is hardly right to represent the propcsale to abolish the har-room, and to continue the lore! rep- os n law, as alternatives, or se being opposed to each other, The News edi- tor knows that the Liberals are as strong supporters 4.1 loc ai option as are the Conservatives, and that the adoption of the banish the bar policy does not mean the superseding of local option, wbidh will be continued to be used against any reineleing liquor traffic. Neither is it quite fair to set tis* Rowell policy algsiust the plan nd- vocated by The 'sews, inasmuch as The News idea is not iocompatible with the Liberal policy, and indeed oould be made a part of it if thought desirable. Tbe main argument advanced against the Liberal proposal, however, is that set out in the following para- grapb ' A thing that is now causing alarm it: Toronto is the amount of liquor purchased at the shop* for consump- tion in the home. This abuse is on the increase with the coming of a con- siderable population which has not been rested under Canadian condi- tions. Mr. Rowell promote to close the bar and to confirm the sale of liquor to shops in the hands of private own- ers with whom the desire to make money will be as active and acute as it Is amongst hotelkeep.es. How far, by the Rowell policy, will we increase drinking in the hone and amongst both men and women. and what will be the mamma of gala over, drinking at the open bar a. nime,peasitised r in reply to this let cm point out the fact that even if it is admitted that licensed shops would do a larger busi- ness if baa-rooas were closed. It would he practically impossible for them to do all the miscible( which the hers now do. No onethat shop homes, would be sutor bar. room tires..*. Thee mold not be, without the O.011801 et electors is the pellfaagg bdIvieloes be whiche the su atltntlowsstwas Korth *ad to a eat •1.w jority of etna.u- Zhieteeay test he�. 'Very few nor tlosbit h9 es ot way kind would be gtswtea today if the people ie the focality would cement to their issue. fa this Premium theaamttor of tor- ero genes* for this Baran* year ke lift\ l."111.'j . totalto g seher et al was !ht :.l tate. A It la mama. it will ba~e�s; OM of .sirthief dose bythis %am would t4 FAR as Waab Other Weems=jjo Know How She was Finally Restored to Hoak' ' Hammond. Ont. — " I am palming Wm Changs of Life wad for two Tett, bed bet &Moe vee bad. keed- aebae tsatnases 1'a the back ot head. was comaipatod. hail weak. aormus feel - iota _ °k attea4s4 ass hr but 1 b boas sear* of mos did brad 1 w. els* above 4t'Pt a bye E. p*khaet'a CrespipmNOW urn. Pith. mod Owl poo Me lekolos Barat'•ama. Sr., Hatnmaai.Oat,Caeoda. and to Brunswick. Llnlalb► — �• ••�•• Lydia E. )Pieiham', Vegot hie Oess- otie treanative mharba ote m narcotic aeh most to -day holds the mead Watseka trek s& limmela Ida we know 01 vslumbery Mermaids on file l• the Piskhage lob - oratory at Lynn, Mar„ masa to prove this fact Every suffering were. ewes itto Compound s LydiaE F1skha'e L [alta i ism yes weal al atria. well. b edid= Cie. OMR* NSW Lis. Thi laden w woman =SI held la Adel read sad lvddamted by . -- to compare done by the bar -rooms, wbhit% would be wiped out,. Then it must be remembered that local option power in relation to the shops will still remain with the elec- 001 e : and such conditions As The News fears, if they did occur, would prob- ably result in campaigns for the aboli- tionof the evil. Local option workers would have a comparatively easy task in the cleaning up of the Province whey, they had todeat web only 246 liquor -selling shops instead of more than 2.000 shops and bats together. Abolition of the bar -room is not s, progressive a policy as would be Pro- vincial prohibition. The Alhaooe pol- icy is far ahead of the Liberal pulley. it ham behind it an overwhelming en- aorsernent of the prop{* Tbe Liberal policy is far ahea od f the Conservative pnlicv of nrerelr prohibiting treating. The key's' method is certainly also far superint. to the plan at present advo- cated by the Provioeial t;overumeoL WOMEN'S HAIR MADE GLORIOUS Parisian Sage Stops Falling Hair and Dandruff. Nothing so detracts from the attrac- tiveness of woman as dull, fad.d, lustreless hair. There is no excuse for this cooditio. nowadays, because notice is hereby given to the readers of The Signal that Parisian Sage, the quick acting bair restorer, is sold with a money back guarantee at 50 cents a large bottle. Vince its introduction into Canada. Parisian liege has had an immense site. rand here are the mesons : it is safe and harmless. Contains lei dye or ,oisonous lead. it cures dandruff in two weeks by killing the dandruff germ. It stop+ falling hair- scaItp,promptly stops itchiog of the it,makes the hair soft and luxurianL It gives life and beauty to the bair. It is not sticky or greasy. It is the daintiest perfumed bait tonic. it is the heat, the most pleasant and invigorating hair dressing made. Fight shy of the druggist who offers you a substitute, he u y R unworthy of our confidence. Made only in Canada by the R. T. Booth Co., Ltd., Fort Erie, Oct- The irl with the stiburn hair is on every package. All reliable druggists, department tones and toilet goods counter, have ariaian Sage Hair Tonic. The girl nth the auburn Bair is on every pack ua . E. R. Wigle grantees it. P w age COAL Having purchased the bud- rme F. Barlow Holmes. conducted aby Pose deaMssg in Pur Cool, Wood Lima, Caseat Fire Brick. Ltt, We will hearth (Manton andifaw Lleigtwhilehb i'aYsy g trai t too tis. best We $w1* *0 's the pole e& 11s&.. rL wad *alb. amt shell he tovista* Woe Imo t r h Awe el /.evreausosa sad Noy �_ N am anything le war AI! asimer Mitt onto J • aYtaet Weft serest. er..tptn to. 11401114140111111 Yards at 0 YurO. T. AMes Atreet W. ACHESQl1. a SON NEW BLANKETS J ust opened a beautiful lot of P Blankets. Thoroughly shrunk ed N Ste` wool Noir all impurities or odor; Arid beitl�tl'fujirr�ItRt from singly for convenient .5 . se m Ped handling, at per p;i;r� New Comforters Amatfcan ellkol.tat to‘ reed or sateen. well quilted lead Ailed with pure batting. *iia 7Y x 80 inches, at �Q each $1.5U, SUN .ad + �J • White Quilts American 4 -ply crochet Cot- long, Sams[ dart ton Quilt,, largest doubt* bed every detail the best and in size and is a variety of beeuti- amend s�srltsi. that can 1ul pattern* These quilt. ate Matched skins .oR and tree from drewfoss,� 50 seat Bali with a only o1. sale, only for tietobcr'i guarantee 8 p e a i a 1 75 laac Week. each................. ., Regular X1.19 ' Si.50A 91.75, Meech �v aarove B, large lire, The showing of N *tree Tap- PK estry,Seandese and ddrowels Rugs Ladles' Cocas York aWleatellarwithr our itltost best edry.� $60 j ladies' lluskr'at Coat•, fin in. Floor Coverings _ $3.40 is very large. We offer special price inducements in every qual- ity for this October selling and Wilton and Velvet Hearth aim a invite your inspection. Ruse, u 27 x OH variety of pattens, floral eini Floor Cloths scroll.'al,oeniasal res lion. 1 �dlarg. cbboiocwide.of patterns inn ,, h°p as �aoss, rt per.quare d., �^ ! - y special Lslh 'I all at slot.. $2.50 Liooieums Furs Two, three or four yards, I The largest and riches•. Lee,wide, at per eyuare yard )ing we have ever mad45c, 50c and,.valueahessuperior,. inlaid Linoleums Muffs, Coats ma Sable Two yards wide. at �� M f Husicimumte iluianLai" per sgaere yard. 900, .[1V G10aYles Our own impaled Kid ilofitry Gloves, 2 -dome ?esteem *oft "t'etsangls^ Caahmer. H , and heautifully gaited kid oer perfect gitipw d of tteantitui and w.god,* to soft yarn iq *-ilwews•iebtt, wear. illBrutve goton•• 1-41111.white All sines, 25c, 36c and .... aucbb". greys and t.avy, 59 _ Rin all sizes, special ��( =wood Gloves Children's Woolen Gloves, Ladies' Beaver Gktk Coals ldome fancy, plain reds and Fur collar,quiltedlining. new 10 vy. Regular $e, at 18c �, t 2 (n in every point. • $0 per parr ally priced et..... TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS The Signal from now to Jan. zst, 1914, for only $z.00 THE PANijORA RANGE When you boy a range there ate reason why you Dealer It to soy outer make. e reason why so many people are buying the Pan- dora Range is because of exclusive features: The guriranteed semi steel fire -box. The steel -tined nickel - plated oven. The triple grates the. can be shaken separately. The burnished glass- like top. The highest quality , t material used to make is a Zoog-life range. Them features are some of the reasons why the largest sthaw. Manufacturing Co. in the British Empire are working overtime supply the demand for three ranges. They bake beautifully, they save fuel, there's no exlaens. • upkeep. Heaters It you are needing a Heater, a base- bereer, a tares or small Oak. or co.loi l heater our stock is vetty oompbtp giviog you a large assortment to choose from. We will be pleased to show them to you. Steel Range We are displaying We week a steel rang* of Ka/tlmd MOM the medi- um dm with tri elesM W evearvehe Aa alessethae &deal* rat sa' Prim epaipibM,.-.. $44) Glass W* have rvesivsd an import of glass whicb 1e very eves am' flawless. la all ghee. Magee jobs proaytly atteadai to