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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1913-1-23, Page 2t TlitvarDAY. JAEDART >Bc 1913 abralikibionzd 90D1SIUCH ONTARIO. PUBLISelED EV KY THURSDAY eT SUS SIGNAL PRINTING Lb.. Waged. Telephone Can Me. ea Terme of arYev+attew Lairs, Lanus to advance. p the ars ; tame mestee On menthe Natio wbscri tees, {La a year a advaacest Saba:slban was it'll te ve Tun emaat reeakrtI es wall w01 owtaw a duet by oro aaaladag an of tote tact as as early a date as possible. Wass a abartge et aYeme leantra. both old and the new address lima b. rhea Adseratebts Sebes . Legal and other stmrlar advseusosecta. Leo Pet line for Int issarttno and 40 Dar Una for teach c ll soak.:d..inaarUon. lines to anisiarad by e Mob. Rushers acrds of all lines wad wader. 113 per year. AAvarfiwmenta et Inst. Fennel. Strayed. Sit. Galan. Vacant, Situations Wanted, Hnoas.for Sala or to Rest, Panne for Bale or to Root, Ariadlr for Sal.. eta, not exosedtng Mg$tot Drew Tic each Mortice :tit for first month. tar snob subsequent month. hsps advert4w manta in proportion. Aasounoemeote In ordinary reading type tin Oeste per line. No notice lar than tic. Any special melee, the object of which t. Ube 'Gn4117 benefit of ass Individual or menet- atios, to be oaosidered nu advertisement and oharr d sooadtarty. Rat.e for display and contract advertise - mews will be given on application. Addr.r alt oom.dunicactons to THE 8IONAL PRINT INV CO.. Limited, ,irderich.Ont. 30DRRICH THURSDAY. JtN. U.I13 A SAD BLOW. The Government orgafle are very angry with Earl Grey. The Toronto News says : ••It the °Melee of which Earl Grey has-heeo guilty should I e repeated very often there would be an e agitation against British Governors for Canada that would shake the in- stitution to ita foundations." And the offence of which the fruitier Governor- General of Canada has been guilty is the refutation of the slander uttered against Stir Wilfrid Laurier and the Liberal party that in the reciprocity negotations they were sacrificing the integrity of Canada. Earl Grey, who was in • position to know something oft he inside history of the reciprocity pt •lx,wlee points out that an increase of the British preference was a probable complement of reciprocal trade in certain products with the Lnited States. In this connection it must be remembered that the agreement with the United States pertained almost entirely to natural products, which we do not import from Great Britain. and thus our trade with the Mctner Country, which is mainly in manufactured goods, was hardly at all affected. Earl Grey goes on to say : "As one of those whose desire is to secure the nearest possible approx- imation to interimperial free trade that the revenue requittement.a and the national necessit ies of each self-govnr•n. iog unit of the Empire will permit, 1 ant inclined to agree with those who believe that the adoption of the reciprocity proposals might have brought about a nearer approx- imation of that ideal, iuterimperial tree trsde." No wonder tbe organs are furious. THE SHIPBUILDING RECORD. The year 1911 made a record in Brit- ish sbipbuilding, but the year 1112 went slightly better. The figures are given in elaborate detail in Ttie Glas- gow Herald's t?hiphuilding, Indust- rial and Commercial Review, a copy of which has reached the editor's desk. Glasgow still keeps its place as the greatest sbipbuilding centre in the world, a greater tonnage being pro- duced each year on the Clyde than in any country in the world outside of (heat Britain, or than in ,any ether 'shipbuilding district in Great Britain, though the combined tonnage of all the different districts of England almost doubles that of the Clyde. "When it is remembered," says The Herald. "that all this work was done Within an estuary some twenty miles in length. much of it on a narrow river crowded with shipping, and all of it in an area that, in extent, would scarcely be noticed on the map of any oountry other than Great Britain, the full value of the (Jyde shipbuilding and engineering industries may be faintly realized." The great lead which the shipbuild- ing industry of the United Kingdom has over that of all other countries is shown by these figures of the output of 1912: Mieland . Soetiend Ireland 1.232.380 tors tea, lfiB " 164,748 " British Dominions. ... 35,678 •• Foreign countries 1.648.810 '• Total 8.770.214 Times are the figures of new sbip- pisg- The London Times in Its Ship- ping Supplement pointe out that the tical tonnage at British ebippiag y ewer arty per tont. greeter than that elf the next al: lesiistg m*ritiase nations oxwtbined. That is, if you add together the tonnage of norma it', Trams. Japes. Mammy. Italy and Holland. the total le hist two-thirds that el %itall.' sigma 'Raw ansae es be we doubt time ooNais le "siabss of the seas " THE SIGNAL GODERICH : ONTARII. LOOKING BACKWARD. Discussing the $opden naval expe- dient xpedient the editor of The Caaadien courier, Women a Conservative, says : "There is to be only one fleet for the Empire. Ceased* is to bay. no fleet of he own. Australia is to give up the Royal Australian Navy which it has crated. New Zealand is to surrender all its ambitions for a Royal New Zealand Fleet. The only Brit- annic Navy is to be in the North Sea. Mr. Borden and bis associates pee apparently to go further. No Do- minion overseas is to have a depart - meat of foreign attain or • tooaular service of its Own. These functions, like the naval tunctioo, are te be per- formed by Great Britain temporarily and by an Imperial Council or Parlia- ment ultimately. When these chaoges are made we shall probably be asked to give up to some Imperial body the right to make and unmake our tariffs. and also the right to make and unmake our trade trepties. In abort, the policy which has seemed good to the statesmen of Great Britain and the different dominions during the past hundred years is to be reversed, and once *pain we are to have centralization and a bureaucratic govern men L" THANK YOU FOR NOTHING It is announced that the Dominion Government proposes to set aside ten million dollars for the promotion of agricultural education and the "gen- eral stimulation of scientific (arming." and in consideration of this Kraut the farmer is asked to regard the Govern- ment as his peculiar friend, Let us see. How will this money be raised? By customs duties. Who pays the customs duties:• Mainly the farmers of the country. Manutactut- etre, storekeeper and others pay cus- toms duties, it is true, but they are able to shift the burden to the shoul- ders of the consuming classes. Wot k- ingmen ran organize to keep up the price of their labor, or they would suf- fer more than they do from customs taxation. The farmer has no "union," •be cannot go on strike. he cannot con- trol the price of his products—he takes what he wets for the goods he sells, andrays what he has t., for the goads he buys. He pays the price of customs taxation out of his own pocket ; he cannot "pass it on." The result is that the great bulk of cus- toms taxation comes out of the pock eta of the farmers ultimately. And in addition to the amounts that go into the public treasury through customs taxation, amounts several times as large go into the pockets of the pro- tected classes through enhanced prices poseible under tariff protection. So that when the Dominion Govern- ment votes ten millions for agricul- ture and raises the money by customs duties, it lays a burden of much more than ten millions upon agriculture. The Weekly Sun says : "There is just one service the Do- minion Government could do just now that would be of value, and that would be the acceptance of the Ameri- can offer of reciprocity that still stands. The opening of the American markets to our live stock and products of live stock woukl give a greater im- petus to Ontario agriculture in one year than the best devised scheme of agricultural instruction would give in ten years. To offer the farmer more instruction in production while deny- ing him freedom in the sale of that which is produced is just a little more ironical than a tender of stone for bread." A DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE, It is to be hoped the county council will reconsider its action of last ses- sion in the matter of the securing of a district agricultural representative. This is almost a necessary comple- ment of the county publicity scheme, and ,here is abundant evidence that these representatives are doing good worts in other counties. The following from The Brantford Expositor of recent date gives an indi- cation of what is being done in Brant county by the district representative : The abort courses in stock judging held this week at Burford, St. George's and Onondaga under tbe auspices of the district representative at. Paris, we are pleased to learn, were in each case very successful, both by the Targe attendance of farmers (an average of over sixty at each eight aeeteions) and the keen interest taken in all the classes, it is evident that the farmers of Brant count are anxious to produce better and hatter stock and we feel sure there could be no better way than by getting to- gether and studying Hamm of higb- class animals of the various breeds. in each ase a competent judge had charge of the classes and the Meal an- imal was set up in the minds of those present. These chorea are iarly valuable to the young men. for the discussion by the experiences) stockmen present Is one of the hest restores and must be very helpful. The meeting'. at 8L George and Onondaga were et I attended and the address by Mr. A. N. [,dd el the Fruit Branch, Toronto. a NwgislAed Orchards" was very emoo sod d- structive. Ool. Welwyn's address at Onondtalta on "Winter was full of baleful sins. , jk Nehuyier, our district sad his assistant F. C. 11e 111= a ddrese d the essetlegs eMrnf the work for the winter in Ilona y1A. spotsportienierey yler mt. 11.1., a nosy wiet is work bat mks' for the so.ogsragem sf the farmer, le mew Wet be nista to sighs Ma woo! eX We � EDITORIAL NOTES- Taxati°s retrain L wining to the hoot every day as the Beat issue in Ontario. Earl Grey is an imperialist of the Imperialists, and be could not be ex. pected to stand by in silence while aspersions were being mads upon tte e Ioyal$yvf "Canadian statesmen who are just as prepared as Mr. Chamber - bin himself to spend their last dollar and thei last drop of bloom in any struggl necessary to maintain the in ' y of the Empire." The British people are not sure that they want that "gift" of three Dread- noughts for the maintenanoe of which they will have to toot the bill ; and the Canadian people are not sure that they want to spend thirty-five mil- lion dollars on the ••gift." Mr. Bor- den would better put it to a vote of the electors and see if anybody but himself and his Nationalist allies is really in favor of his "emergency" expedient. The orange orchards of California have been devaatased by frost and it may take several years for the grow- er•s to recover tram the disaster and to re-establish their trade. It is an ill wind that blows nobody good, and while not withholding sympathy from the unfortunate orange -growers of Celifornia the owners of apple or- chards in Ontario may reflect upon the increased demand for their fruit which will naturally be the re- sult of the visit of the Frost King to the Runiey South. The apple -grower, too, Ditty have the further comforting reflection that, while there ere difRrui- tiea enough in the can ying on of their businesstheir orchards are not in danger of extinction from a few de- grees of front. After Autumn.' Like aend Hun who wend. her quiet way To Compile* at the pa -slog of the day. And leaves the world upon the wings of Prayer. So paseet1. Sommersopulent array, High noon hath wondrous beauty to enthrall The soul of man responsive to her call. Add yet when shadows lengthen on the grass, And night approecheth. sleep were best of a11. Aye. sleep were beet of all. though no birds sing. And summer leaves have ceased their mei murine. Man, like the .es.00s, halt. his tittle hour: And atter every Winter Dome. tbe Spring .Arthur tole. Armstrong to Pall Mall. FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES. The Golden Age for Editors. Ktnestoo Whig. After a while it will dawn upon the average reader of the average paper that the editor who doer his own thinking, and who honestly and fairly and conscientiously expresses it on any public question, is entitled to com- mendation in place of censure. Likes This Country. . fOuelpb Mercury. The daughter of a British Admiral is running a farm in Western Canada. She likes the country, the climate, the free and easy way. much better than the conventional society of the Old Land- Canada bas an open door for all such people—may their number in- crease ItivaWwf Sir James. Montreal Herald. Sir Rodmood Rollin has just called Rev. Dr. Gordan ("Ralph Connor") a "designing political parson," and R. L. Richardson an •'i sible poli- tical excrescence," Sir antes Whit- ney will have to look to his laurels. This is better than he has done in the lost two sessions. Putting the Screws ea. Berrie Examiner. Meeford is trying a new scheme to get in its arrears of taxes. A bylaw has been passed making it necessary for a man to have a clear receipt for the year'a taxes before be can vote. In close contests, where every vote is of importance, such a plan might be effective, but in most cases the slow payer would sooner lose his vote than Pay Hp. Hotel Competition. BtrattoMB..00a. 11 the bar was banished entirely from all places of public entertainment the business would be placed on an entirely new basis, and would open up an invic- ing field for investors. But in a city where licensee are granted, the tem- perance house cannot, it seems, snake ends meet. The protta of the bar give the licensed home' an advantage in competition for the travelling com- munity. Two Shots from The Advocate. The Farmer'. Advooata That farmers become the beet -read and most thoughtful citizens is in large measure due to the splendid op- portunities which the long winter evenings afford for solid reading leo not let It escape your notice that there are $ host of things in the woods and Reids about home just as Intensely Interesting ea any town moving pie - tore show. and far more wholesome in tbeir surroundings. A Gballeage to Mr. Borden. Brandin Newt Mr. Borden affects the belief that his naval policy is approved by a ma - parity of lbs (,anadlan psopls. If he le show* in the rontentios he nesd have an fear of the result of an else - Una. An el.etlos should therefore to him as ore opportunit b beyond doubt the strength of his psalm Is that matter. whi at the ore time dwarfing him from tan sue - Odom whish asset bodged his repute - des so Meg as be contleese to rsslntsYasa.the t the Wert to 't p- Unjsst Tamable. at. Aro. a K. irhogh Thorp is sethit mora tint a mea putt nog t0 bow iopt in the plans of bad t•ulidings or tssisp paint to improve tee valve of his property .ttould Rod kiutselt bMsfly tared. boob a none Is mat a oestrihutbs to the penned wee of the community and abased mot ppaeansrd. OHie raised eyy the greeter part of tri an ImersSsps.d bardeo upon the erne who make a contribution to the general wealth of the toononounity wbile the man who withholds land from general nee, to pro& byhigh prows later on. Paye only nominal w nal taxes. His Pride Was Stirred. To.onw Star. Hon. Mr. Hearst made a doe speech On the navy question at Orillie the other night, "i am proud, as a Canadian." be declared, "to he able to stand on the dock at Liverpool and witaees a Cana- diandp'ode fleet crossing the ocean—a fleet =cad by Oionacla, and manned by However, be was not talking about any Canadian fleet Mr. Borden is go- ing to produce. He -,vas talking about the fleet the C. P. R. bas already called into being. The C. P. R. can stir Mr. Heartier pride, but Mr. Bur- den thinks that Canada can't. The O. P. R. is a great company, bet the political party that made the C. P. R. has lost its nerve. Are Yea Superstitious? Stratford Beacon The superstitious fear that this Present may prove an unlucky year because of the numner 13. But if we go back a little in history, we Bud that the British Empire, at least, had nothing of which to complain in 1713 and 1813. The peace of Utrecht marked the collapse of Louµ XIV., and England gained poeascalon of Gibraltar, Minorca, Newfoundland, St. Kitts and Hudson Bay. The year 1812 witneavd the disaster of Napo- leon in Husain and in 1813 he was driven out of the Spam,) peninsula. Usually it to the people without re- ligion who most easily 1.11 a prey to superstition. The enlightened pay no attention to the accidental uumbering of years, and feel as secure in rhe hands of Providence at one time ..tis another. Keeps Clean Tongue. You(rrel Star. a are quite aware that men hurrying about their business and going into the ordinary ways and by- way. of life cannot be as precise and puritanical in their speech as an ingenue, but why they should have to rake the gutters of speech for words to express tbemselvea seems incom- prehensible. There is nothing which allows that it man is illthred more than the use of filthy language ; there is nothing which proves him more of a cad than his failure to control bin tongue in thepreeence of women, or even men, whose sensibility he Iae- erates. The worst of the business is that most of the language one hears ie not merely the product of a few un- controllable moments. but the mean - tired speech of an ordinary man on his crdinary rounds. Couldn't Do Without It. Enclosed find one dollar for The Signal. I could not do without the old friend in our home. Wishing you a happy and prosperous New Yost, i remain, Mrs. J. H. GAY, Lang. Sask. LOCAL OPTION VOTES. Returns of Recent Polling Throughout the Province. The Pioneer gives the following re- turns of the voting on local option by- laws at the recent municipal election. throughout Ontario: VOTES IN TWEI4TT-8Ix PLACES IN WHICH LOCAL OPTION BYLAWS WERE CARRIED. Aurora Tn. Clinton Forest Ingersoll Kincardine Dutton Vil. Hasbro Newboro Tiverton Victoria Harbor Wardsvilie Bedford Brock Tp. Delaware Tp. Drummond Tp. Dunwicb Tp. Elms Tp. King Tp. London Tp. Morris Tp. Nichol Tp. North Gower Tp. Thorold Tp. Whitby Bast Tp. Turnberry Tp. N. Monogban For 321 332 266 773 296 141 102 65 72 240 58 28 156 73 491 316 265 130 266 124 ...i0 175 555 275 796 403 858 567 368 174 219 127 207 191 288 180 408 252 171 60 Asst. Maj. Lic. 214 lin 3 214 118 6 167 90 2 455 218 7 196 101 6 89 52 2 55 47 2 :f5 30 •2 26 46 1 85 155 1 30 0 K9 1 175 3 135 1 141 2 984 2 280 3 392 5 ?B1 184 2 92 1 106 3 108 0 156 3 111 u VOTER IN THIRTY-IIOHT MUNICIPALI TIER IN WHICH TRE BYLAWS WERE DEFEATED BY THE THREE - MYTHS. For Peterboro' 2,096 Dresden 199 Gravenhurst Lindsay Meatord North Bay Oshawa Parkhill Petrol.* 18n 910 148 599 772 212 406 Sarnia 1,(174 EL Marys 540 WIngham 384 BBath villape 148 44 Bayfield 64 Exeter 211 Fenekm Falls 171 Remus 281 Olotenoe 181 Themsvllle 119 Westport 116 Amherst island 116 Arthur 287 Btlrlslrh k An - Amplest Tp,. Christie litsnwt Prost Requaing FinneIain tbyth Maes Marlboro M Merl 79 177 18 iso 40 299 » 1(D 37; 8S 4. 211 479 140 Age.. Maj. Lic. 1,620 476 16 184 15 2 143 46 3 757 163 9 227 146 3 562 38 9 1187 185 4 143 69 3 390 15 6 90 180 13 419 121 R 250 84 b 116 32 2 34 10 1 64 2 186 71 3 118 log 3 187 44 3 (19 44 8 96 dl 2 98 2s 2 78 14 1 284 3 1 61 18 2 119 48 2 1s 11 110 M i 814 149 3 111 78 rib 87 1 1112 37 2 ltbi 87 1 70 10 1 416 54 6 188 21 A 1117 119 t ? a !SIONTO WO WELL Freed Frees Bearing Dews Pala*, Backache and Pais is Side by Lydia B. Pink - Lanes Compound. Teseato_Oet — "Last October. I wrote to you far dvies as I was completely rue down. bed dome in the lower pert of bow- els. ' backa and also Mitred terribly from guts- 1 took Lydia Z. Fin sham's VwetableOempound and am aow settrely fres from pain i back sad bowels and am 'troops in every way. I recommend Lydia IL P%pkham's Compound highly W all expectant moth- ers."—Mrs. oth- ers"—Mrs. E. WANDER, 92 Logan Avo- ws, Toronto, Ontario. Ossdder Well This Adele& No woman suffering from any fors eft female troubles aboald less bops until she has given Lydia E. Flekken', Veg- etable Compound a fair trial This famous remedy, the maiden/ in- gredients of which are derived from es- tive roots and herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most vahiabls tonic and invigorator of the female oeganiim. Women residing in almost every Sty and town in the United Mates bear will i n g testimony to the weaderfal virtue �oofLydia E. Pfekham's Vegetable a that Lydia E. Plnikaaaes slightest - ble write to Lydia will wIf�edieise Co. for ad- vice. You)erwillbe opened. seats aad aaewa'ed by a woman, and Waft MAW eoni<denee. mitt' VOTES IN THIRTEEN MUNICIP.tLITIgs IN WHICH THERE WIRE MAJORI- TIES AGAINST THE LOCAL OPTION BYLAW"B. Carleton Place Mount Fute.t Pembroke Whitby Art but \-illege Bancroft Egan vale le Markdale Port SGtnley Bromley Tp. Himswortb N. Normanby Penelang For Agit. Krij. 380 391 11 216 210 I1 459 621 11x2 214 246 2 97 185 88 50 06 10 58 148 9t► 11:4 1S2 19 63 1311 57 157 180 ti 59 t12 ;i 234 522 288 Lic. 6 5 13 34 ti 3 :1 2 6 VOTES IN SIXTEEN MUNICIPALITIES IN WHICH REPEAL WAS DEFEATED BY MAJORITIES. Cbevley Renfrew Stiathroy Owen Sound Iroquois Village Wellington Adelaide Tp. Bent inck Downie East nor Lobo Tp. McLean & Ridout Mae kham Tuckeremi t h Caledon Orangeville Tn. For 207 364 437 1.4116 157 154 :318 4f)1 1110 123 63 745 312 494 366 Agar. 19) 343 1 286 70 91 170 2t15 224 140 150 57 297 187 376 274 Ms j, 17 110 94 120 147 (Ci 141 81 177 50 273 6 448 125 118 89 VOTES IN FIVE LOCAL OPTION MUNII'1- PAL,TIgS IN WHICH TURNS WERE MAJORITIES FOR REPEAL BUT IN WHICH REPEAL WA8 Pl.EVENT ED BY THE . THREE FIFTHS. For Agsr. Maj. Almoote 232 265 18 Galt 1,234 1,279 46 Dundalk Village 89 90 1 Finch 49 58 9 Col lingwood 91 Yore* WHICH REPEALED LOCAL OP- TION BYLAW 17: ONE MUNICIPALITY. For 137 WO 8B Acton LEARN THE AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS awing the viers mat& ed be ersp erd ler the epparb+m el the rob spa% TAKE A COURSE 04 1141 MG TOROMTO Y. W. C. A. AVT01[0s1[Li •CIBOOL Duca 30 VS BROADVEW AVF/9.11 Inds iv F. Mile beer CANADIAN IACif IC SPECIAL CRUISE AROUND THE WORLD ®iRI.SS II r IES5U" sal/ r t15U'. (Mew et P. R Pastae itteamedelpeo The 1•I11PRIM t or RUSSIA wIS is.,, ?lion A (, canter otea.lt a. an canterand Pert Said proe.sdr6 sus Best � low M s7� Tt>< Yissrl NVsa+ ,s, J ��pr(yw�_w_-���.eem.wat�eils� fl.J•re ILO. 3t /)asks cif trip train�� wit aof ver Mrs Grsies, Biles Ltid ` .msfvv C. P.R. a porthuhrotgwn les Mad. Or vers* lr.*. 11=, Ot R A.. C. P. ttr.. 3 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 .3 3 1 W. 1 CHE8ON 480N JANU 4RY SALE .)p Embroideries aidCottons 5000 Yards of F_lknbrnideries and Insertions Every width and quality tr ,..t dainty edges to the wide dress widths. During Jan. .•y .qtr . attire stoat os sale at 4 off' fhs price. The stock of ,n,'»ai•te :• - ls direct Importm frowaken and markedarkmarkedat our tag. lee !e' , •. 4gDr ttb this big discount atom" y yard means a bargain •....every slew of embroidery in our doe. Stock -taking Sale in Corsets Eighty pairs P. D.. a Laffrace, and a snttmber of best makes and all high-class styles and qualities. Rounder SLOB. 699 11.26, 81.50. (littering January 414 - . t7l. Dress Goods Bargain Twenty pieces of 38-ieches wide wool plaid Dews (,foods in best tartans and fancies. A splendid wearing goods and nothing olcwr for girl. dresses. Regular 36e and 40c qualities, 2C _ all on one table at per yard. clearing J(; Ladies' Fur• -lined Coats Siberian Marmot lined. collar and revers of Western `table, coat of fine English Ladies' cloth, or beaver cloth, a very heed - some garment, stylish and guaranteed in every respect, all sizes. Regular value 840.00, at each.. $32.00 Men's Fur Coats We carry prooabiy the 1aegeet or one of the Iarwat eelec. Clops (' ops in men'g s Fur oath in Western ontario—.vary Ooat war- ranted. Calf Coats, No. 1. with Lamb collar..... $17.00 China Dog Coat, No. 1. Lamb collar 9110.00 Coon Cleats, select dark skins, 845.00 sod 01112.0000 Wallohy Coate, No. 1. Natural skins 1140.00 • Wombat Coats, very warm and heavy.00 Robes ▪ Largest size Bear Robes, No. 1. best liniag, $12.00 3 $14100, for V�lll 3 White Cottons • Thirty -six-inch wide English nainsook, free frons dressing. Regular 124c. for.. 1 OC quality • Yrd-wide medapolaw and Ionsdales, 150 and lde 1210 j 3 Coat Values Winter ('nate, regular 616.1)0 valties, 87.96. About twelve • omit sfor women, last of our stock in Blanket Cloths, Beavers, et. Clearing at half-price. Men's and Women's Fur Caps Wedge shape in Persian Lomb, fine glossy ^_url, choly )nd,• and satin quilted -lined, a li B t, beautiful cap, all �ega j) 3 sizes. Regular 88.00, clearing Jlj 3 Rugs Every size in floor Huge. in velvet, tapestry, Axminster. 3 Wilton, 3x3, 3x34, 3x4.34x4.34x4i yards. Clearing at large dia- 1 count during our stock -taking. 3 W. ACHESON d SON 1010/ !fl!T!WWWPTWOMTTTT!1!!1! WWWPTR Insure Success b tale a practical worse in one of Shaw's Toronto, by attendance or by malt and by so dein Briskly create earn a good .ala'y. Han- drede of peppy do We year. Wh aolot Yoe 1 Free qua~ GAG explains Write tar It. Addcan lit'. il. Shaw. President_ lona St.. t or - onto. 1 COKE i have plenty of (:as Coke now. Can All all orders prompt- ly. 'Phone 127. D. F. HAMLINK 1 , Our Annual Sale OF T MEN'S CLOTHING aail FURNISNINOS is now on and will continue ,until . February 1st." It Is to Our interest to Sell our winter Overcoats and Suits at a verylow figure, as it is unwise as well as unprofitable to carry goods over. It Is to Your Interest to Buy now when you can save so much money. Last week's papers tell of the big reductions made; look them up again, then come and see the goods. We are clearing Men's Overcoats, Men's Suits, Boys' Overcoats, Boys' Suits, Men's Pants, Boys' Pants, Men's Shirts, odd lines of Under- wear, Socks, etc. Very Special --Boys' black worsted Stockings !Se TERMS CASH TERMS CASH Walter • Pridham Yl dew ho • .....tial! Coshy Brad at OBrls:.