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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1913-1-23, Page 8?Mot UD&T. JAlroant al, IIID OQTEAWA NOTES. MR. GUTHRIE'8 PROPOSED COM- PROMISE NOT AOOEPTED. IIIonise Gov ern ment Tied to the Na- tionalists and Cannot Get Away hoot Use AtHance-Some Light on the Progress Made in Naval Affairs under Laurier Government. mood - THE SIGNAL GODRRICH : ONTARiO a bye-eleotio• and the of whispered slanders of 1911. followed by Mr. Bor- den's imp to England to inform the British Government that the Empire was facing a previously uodiecovered mires and that he was acing to save it with a cheque for $36,000, -but that be would tot give any permanent pro''-. mise melees be were allowed to share in the Imperial control of the Empire. It was the voice of Jacob Bordeo, but the hand was the hand of Esu Bour- .aaa. Jan. Id. -With the resumption of Parliament and the naval debate on the 14th. • new he became appar- ent atter the of Mr. Hugh Guthrie, which was generally ad- mitted to be one of the ablest of the whole debate. Ever since he deter - misted to adopt We naval emergency and tbs salvation of Grant Britain by & .sash contribution borrowed from itself es the chief set in his part fur- niture. Premier Borden has loudly posi•imed that if the Opposition were Indy loyal k would take the whole atssttar out of party polities and join Ida in saving the Empire. It was goberaily suspected this talk was a mere part subterfuge and that asoth- Vwas f further from the Premier's d than changing his partisan .ecce• 11 is now perfectly plain that Wheat be demands that the Opposition iwld become real Borden patriots sad joie him in caving the Empire he meow that Liberals should adopt his ideas as dictated by the Nationalists, look, stock mad barrel; that they should stultify themselves, admit ao smsegsney which common sense and the Br=Wb Government tell them doss not exist. and then set about meeting that sham emergency with a policy which oommon sense tells them is not the best in any cireumetaooes. In other words, when Mr. Borden says drop party politics, he really means that Liberals should drop com- mon sense and deliberately place themselves in the position of thraldom which he himself occupies as a result of his &titmice, which seems to be almost allegiance to the Nationalist The Liberals being free froth any such such obligation are free to use their own judgment according„to the facts. Mr. Borden, however, was met oo hie own ground by Mr. Guthrie. After careful analysis of the whole situation In the light of We facts set forth in the Im<teeiai memorandum and t h e eries of various British Mintaters, nt brie suggested s compromise In order that Parliament might unite on a reallynational program. He to e expenditure of $36.000,- w a fair amount in view of the senditfoms of the Empire and the Do- minion. Hewreed that Dreadnoughts MOM be bunt. He, therefor[, sug- Witt as a compromise two is should be built in Eng- land while the balance of Um $85,(100,- 90U should be expended in the con- struction of two Beet units for Cana- dian waters -4s had been proposed by the last Imperial Conference -and that these fleet units should be built in Canada. be manned and maintained by Canada, and that when completed the Canadian Dreadnoughts should take their place with the Beet units. This, be contended, was a fair cow - =and It.. adoption would show Caned& was united in undertak- 1lInd its share of the Imperial burden. bow was this logical proposi- tion met? Although made enurel7 GS bis own initiative, Mr. iivarie s Mese were loudly cheered from the Liberal Maoism ; they were listened to Is tetany silence by the Govern- mssimgmbeew. It was plain that a wood !limy of them felt heir withers t and would gladly have taken tYe tiranoe of getting to cover if their Weiss would let theta. Bolt the leaden would not consent, Thresehout the debate Hon. Messrs. L P. Pelletier and Louis Ooderre sat grimly at their places as represents ase of the might of the Nationalists. and the opportunity was lost.. Im- mediately at the conclusion of Mr. Guthrie'•h the Government put up Mr. W. 8. Middlebro to reply, and be, instead of making any effort to direct a reply to Mr. Guthrie, re- hearsed a nicely typewritten partisan speech in wpm he emphasized every point of difference between the Bor- den expedient and the Laurier policy and never found time even to consider the possibility of a compromise,. What La+risr's Pobcy Did. Mr. Borden talks of -immediate effective add." Had be been less dila- tory or lees faithful to his Nationalist alliance there would be no need to talk of haste; Canada would todayhave docks and shipyards engaged o the building of vessels for the Canadian fleet which would prove much more effective aid th&o • $36,000,000 cheque. Mr. Bolden demanded -speedy." as- galenos in March, 1909, and then for- got orgot all about his baste until the sum- mer of 1912. Some good Conservative who is evidently not untinctured with parti- san spirit recently wroteTbe Canadian Courier &eking, "How many Canadian Ballon have been on those toys the Niobe and the Rainbow, and how many •re oo them now T' The editor of The Courier frankly admitted that he did not know. Prob- ably nine -teethe of the people who so frivolously called the Niobe and Raiu• bow toys also did not know what there vessels are, why they are here, what they have done or how many Cana- dians have been trained on them. A brief outline of the Canadian naval program bofore Mr. Borden in- troduced his "speedy" habits will answer these questions. In March, 1909, Laurier's naval resolution an- nouncing Canada's duties in Imperial defence was unanimously passed by Parliament. On May 4th. 1910, the Naval Service Act was passed after sharp opposition from the Conserva- tives. The Lturier Government or- ganized • Department of Naval Ser- vice which was divided into flve branches : Naval, Fishery' Protection, Tidal and Current Survey, Hydro- graphic Survey and Wireless Tele- graph. Rear Admiral Kingsmill was appointed director of the Naval Ser- vice and omcers of the lmpetial navy were borrowed to aid in the organisa- tion of the Naval Department. Then the two ships so playfully dubbed "toys" by the Conservatives were pur- chased from the .British Admiralty. The Imperial naval authorities, how- ever, did not call these vessels toys, but rated the Niabe as • first -clans crooner and the Rainbow as a recond- cleals cruiser. Both were manned by nucleus crews loaned from the various servicer of the Imperial navy. The Niobe reached Halifax October 21st, 1'910, and the Rainbow arrived at Es- quimalt November 7th in the same year after a voyage of 15,000 miles. Both were purchased, not as "tin pots," but as training vessels for the education of Canadian men and om- cers for the future Canadian navy. Recruiting at once started and arrangements were made by which postmasters in seventy-five cities and towns were appointed recruiting oma can, By Aprtl, 1912, the Naval De- partment reported that a total of 296 Canadian recruits had been secured for the Niobe and fifty-three for the Rainbow, a total of 349, while ill re- cruits had at sou -loos times deserted atter going through a certain amount of :raining Admiral Kingsmill reported that ex- cellent work had 'leen done by the Royal Naval College at Halifax, and that each year more cadets bad qualified to undertake the hard train- ing there, while the schooner Advo- cate had been purchased to give them practical training. But the report points out that owing to the continuous attacks upon the Naval Service Act the future of the Canadian naval service had be- come dubious, with the result that re- cruiting fell off and, as accommoda- tion was limited, no special efforts were made to obtain more recruits un- til it was certain there would be a navy to train them for. But the Niobe had had a full complement and Um Rainbow very nearly the same. This meant that the Laurier naval program, as far as it had gone, had provided practical sea -training along British lines, on British vowels, by British omcers, to several hundred young Canadians, while the Naval College at Halifax had provided train- ing for a number of omcers. In addi- tion a dozen or more Canadian mid- shipmen and other youngsters had been taken on board H. M. 8. "Dread- nought" and made excellent reputa- tions there. Theo the Borden alliance with the Nationalists oast the blight of p}artiser. politics over this national Imperial work. Recruiting ceased. The Naval Department was deliberately con- temned by the Tory 'seders. the vessels bought for training ships were contemptuously dubbed • "tinpot" navy ; the whole well -calculated scheme wits upset by the @booting Tory loyalista and their Nationalist allies. As • result, instead of at present having hundreds of trained Canadian naval officers and men. an increasing fleet built in Canada with shipyards and docks for their accom- mnodation, all that is left is the work done by Laurier and stopped by Borden and a proposition to borrow X06,000,0M in England and turn it over to the Admiralty. Barka Boerassm's Pupal. The genesis of Mr. Borden's inven- tion of the Imperial emergency is in- teresting in some of its vagaries. In the summer of 1912 the Canadian Prime Minister went to 1 nglend to confer with the British Ministers and In- formed them that Canada could not undertake any permanent policy or aid to Imperial defence until she were Riese a voles in directing the Imperial foreign policy -the determination of piece or war of the Empire. Was this Mr. Borden really speak- ing ? Not noticeably. It was the Canadian Tory Prime Minister acting as the mouthpiece of Henryourassa the Nationalist anti-imper ist, three of whose followers graced the Tory Coldest This is what Mr. Bourassa had pro - in a resolution adopted at a big N onalist demonstration at St. Bomtache os July 17th, 1910. "Sat eoaddeat in the greatness and eldeiesey of the principles of central- isation and of autonomy as solemnly proclaimed and recognised since more then halt a neetury by the authorities. of Great Britain end three of Canada we are apposed to any new policy which would entari fe us in distant wags. foreign to (amide, so long. especially, es the autonomous colonies of the Empire do not share with the Mother luntry upon a footing of equality the soverolgu authority in senates relating to the Imperial army and cavy, treaties of peace and d arManee. foreign nominee tae government of India and the pomm- ies* at the Crows." Atli $b . rpeoiulios was eulsulsl y atter Mr. Bosrsssa had m- ooed that Gest Britain saver great such a ooaditioa. it was evidently a political bombast by vsbieh IaNvassa humid to fool the an- sate his owa rare a$ ibm some Mese Meek any slyly mild le {.egaW deienee. Ado IMO Stemma was soodeetieg tile>rmeklmgia e eamo•laa. the No- yes matoiisg ter; Into the Dame - Tariff Revisies Experts. The work of revising the Canadian tariff. as necessitated by the trade treaty with the West Indies. is now going oo. The Government has se- cured the nerviest of R. W. Breadn('r, until recently tariff expert for the Canadian Manufacturers Association. to undertake this work. Aud Mr. Breadner's plan with the Manrifae-. tureen Ansociatioe has been taken by J. It K. Bristol. until recently cbief Dominion appraiser. Mince enure of the big industries are clamoring for more protections the statement of yon. Mr. tt'hite regarding tariff revision se reromesended by his expert will be of in tenet. "Ye.." declared a Mtaffragtte, -women bare been wronged for ages They have suffered in • thousand ways." "There Is one way in which they have never suffered." said a asset -looking num standing up is the rear of the hall. • • What way Is Meer deumeded the su toe. **They have sever suffered District News The tempel at Brucefield is cloyed at !lies L. Henderson, of Seafonh, fell while abating and fractured her leg. Two rinks of Seaforth curlers are tr km t part is boaepiels at 8t. Paul and Winnipeg. Mrs. Wm. Wolper, of Muter North, fell down the cellar steps and fractured • couple of ribs. The Wingham Citroens' Bend has secured Mr. Kearns, of Kueller Hall Music 'Training School, England, as leader. Forbes Bros., of Seaforth, have se- cured the contract for the construc- tion of a new rural telephone line in the county of Grey. The death of Mkt Edward Ryan oc- curred on Saturd, 11th inst., at Centralia. Deceasedaywas severity - eight years of age. Paul Powell has been appointed township clerk of Turnberry, suocesd- ing John Burgess, wbo retired after tweoty years' service. Mrs. John Patterson, who was seri- ously injured • short time ago in the power house of the electric light plant at Brussels, is mating rapid recovery. Miss Welsh, of Amuberley, is teach- ing this term in the Lakelet public school. She succeeds Miss Scott, who is teaching this year near Cbiselhuret. The death occurred at Stratford on Wednesday„of last week of Margaret McDonald, widow of the late Robert Elgie, of Tuckerwmithi 1'he remains were brought to the home of her son, Robert Slgie, of Tuckersmitb, for burial, William 8t•nbury, of the London road, near Clinton, died on Thursday of last week, after an illness of ten days of pneumonia. He was seventy- five years of age. One son, W. A. Stenbury, and one daughter, Mrs. Robert Hunter, survive. Robert George Kerr, son of J. J. Kerr, East WVawanosh, met with a bad accident a few days ago. He was hitching his team of hones to the sleigh when the horses Made a euddeo start and in some manner his leg was badly fractured below the knee. At the Lutheran patronage, Dash- wood, on Tuesday,41 th inst., John L Kraft, son of Mr. and Mrs, Peter Kraft, and Miss Tillle Willem, daughter of Mr. and Mn. John Willert, were united in marriage by Rev. G. Thun. Mr, and Mn. Kraft will reside at Dashwood, Jamas Laidlaw, son of tbe late Rob- ert Lidless', formerly of Brussels and Grey, died at Solomon City, Kansas, at tbe age of forty-three years. He went with his parents to Kanas about thirty years ago. His mother died only about two months ago; be is survived by his widow. Mrs. Ellen Mor -lock, widow of the Lite Julius Morlock, died at het home at Exeter on the 9th inst., in her seventieth year. The deceased, whose maiden name was Ellen Horne, was born in Prince Edward Island. After her marriage she lived at Crediton and Exeter. Mr. Morlock died in 1884. Four sons and three daughters survive. 1 he death occurred at Dashwood on Tuesday, 14th inst., of an old resident of that place, in the person of Elizabeth Moret, wife of Philip Beaver, at the age of seventy years. Deceased had been a resident of Hay township for &bout thirty years. She is survived by' her husband, live sons and one daughter. An accident happened to the type- setting machine in the once of The Seaforth Expositor last week. necessi- tating the composition by hand of most of the matter in the paper. However, the Messrs. McLean are not easily daunted. and the week's issue was got out in good shape and was almost, if not quite, as interesting as usual. Martin James Armstrong. owner of the Nanton Valley ranch in Alberta, against whom • verdict for $220,000 was liven in a suit for breach of promise of marriage, is said to be a former Kincardine boy. The plaintiff in the case was Mite Louise Collard, twenty-seven years old, a school teacher at Nanton. It is understood that Armstrong will appeal. Exeter Advocate: James Jeckell, London road, is confined to hie bed, Buttering from a severe attack of erysipelas in the face. A couple of weeks ago Mr. Jeckell was operated on in London at the hands of a specialist for the removal of some nasal trouble. from which he caught cold. followed by the attack of erysipelas. and he is now suffering much pain. A pretty home wedding took place on January Stb at the home of Mn. A. Lain!, 10th concession of Howick, her daughter, Miss Eva May Laird. be- coming the bride of ,lames A. Dane, of Tezorton. Sask. Rev. J. W. Andrews, of Fordwich. was 'the offi- ciating clergyman. After the wed- ding trip Mr. and Mrs. Dane will take up their residence on the groom'. farm in Saskatchewan. One afternoon last week A. W. Stobie, of Seafortb, met with an &cci- deot which might easily have been more serious than it was. He was standing in frontof the postoffb•e, when a man leading a hone passed up the street. Just as the animal was opposite Mr. Stobie it jerked itself away from the man leading it, end making a rush to the side knes•keo Mr. Stobie down, stunning bie. He was picked up and taken to his hone. and It is hoped no serious results will fol- low. The death occurred r 1 onto in, California, on January 7th. of John We ley 8herriU, ueenod son of Wm. 8beritt, of Stephen township, at the age of 'went y•nine years Deceased was bore is 8lanley tows- e•ip, and wheel a child his earente moved to Rt.Ne• Some yeah ago be west to bestiatcb.was, when W health fined hint, and oder mpesreg sums time at home he Vest about a to Tette Gen aellaseis td h•!• et tM restoration elms bml& boa ilt was lo oasis, Ram Hares Agr edtural Swingy. At the arms•& ase et in`` of the Kan Herm Airrieimal floriety Jobs Leckie was elliC =essr, Dawes eat dant& Maisie Mast =I. treasurer. Thursday and Friday, Oc- tober 1 and 3, were eboeeo as the dates of the fall fair for 1913. Flax Kill esrued The flax mill of Dwhwood, owned by a company computed of H. Willert, Geo. Kellerman, Geo. K h and Ohaa. BWtnbaggeo, was complet ly destroyed by fire Monday night lar week. The loss is about $o,1100 ; no insurance. The origin of the fire is a mystery. Cantle Sees. J. M. McEvoy, barrieter. of London, acting upon instructions from N. M. Cantin, of St. Joseph, has issued • writ agaiost Sam. R. Clark and John R. Carter, in which Mr. Canon claims $51.409.50 and interest, being the value of 514,119 shares of stock in a certain company. Mr. Cantin •Iso asks for an injunction restraining the defendants from selling the stock un- til judgment is given. Seaforth Board of Trade. The annual meeting of the Seaforth Board of Trade was held Inst week. when the following ofitcrrs were elected : President, 1l Brnderick : vice-president. John Finlayson ; secre- tary, F. G. Neelin ; treasurer, F. Sills ; council A. F. ('lull, C hewer., J. C. Greig, H. Bell, J. Hinchley, J. F. Daly, G. A. Sills, J. J. Clutf J. b. Reid, James Hays, Oscar Neil, 11. Stewart, Jas. Beate, W. C. T. Meteor) ; publi- city committee, F. Sills, Charles Stew- art, J. F. Daley. A. F. ('lull, A. D. Sutherland and the exe•:utive. The Board is offering a prize of $5 for the best written report of any town meet- ing prepared by • pupil of the Colleg- iate Institute. YOUNG AT SEVENTY-FIVE. Grand Old Man of the prairie Owes his Health to Dodd'a Kidney Pills. Swift Current, Sack., Jan. 20th-- (Speciall-1. P. Lackey of this place. seventy-five years of age, and known as one of the grand old wen of the prairies, has made a statement for publication that he owes his splendid bealth to D.xld'a Kidney Pills. "For twenty-fiveears," Mr. Lackey states. "I suffered from rheumatism, which I inherited. i was nervous; any limbs would swell. and I had severe pain. across the back. 1 aur a wt -1I man today, and I attribute it all to three boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills. My rheuma'ism and kidney disease have entirely disap .red," Dodd's Kidney Pills make healthy kidneys, and with healthy kidneys to strain tb3 nric acid out of the blood you can't have rheumatism. IN THE BULL PEN. east Inmate: De papers says dat your lawyer spoke wit' earnest convic- tion. Is dat right Second Inmate: )at was de result." DON'T BE BALD. • Nearly Anyone May Secure a Splendid Growth of Hair. We leave a remedy that has a record -of retarding baldness and promoting hair growth in ninety-three out of every hundred cases where used ac- cording to directions for a reasonable length of time. That may Rees like a strong statement= -it is, and we mean it to be, sod no one should doubt it until they have put our claims to an actual test. We are so certain Rexall "f0" Hair Tonic will eradicate dandruff, act to prevent baldness, stimulate the scalp end hair roots, arrest premature loss of hair and promote hail growth, that we personally giveaour positive guar- antee to refund every penny paid us for it in every instance where it dors dot give eqtire satisfaction too the user. Rexall 'Ur Hair Tonic is as pleas- ant to use as clear spring water. It is delightfully perfumed and doe. not, grease or gum the Bair. Two size., :itic and $1. With our guarantee back of it, you certainly take no risk. Sold only at our store -The llexall Store. H. C. Dunlop, Goderich. SLAVES SET FREE RETURN TO BONDS Still seater Freedom With King- ly Honors Thereby Secured. Pastor Russell's Discourse the Third and Last of a Series Upon the Texte Which Embellish the Fam- ous Unien station of Washington City. Washington, Jas. 13.-Pa.tor Bandl presided •t Washington Tem - t .der. his Sertnnn on eee Mirin neret lasts. Tod y Mot was "The Tooth shall make ase tame." (John SAL) Be sad Truth is the rreet Iheancipmtew A I I esolemen the Truth, oppose fog ifs power no the minds of their whims. The task- masters of bdaiy wady fain bide the truth boo wage..ler as, but sed it impabibbk-lete germs/ is the power 'f pram -and there ere peMisli.r. oho neve sell mid theta moral .mor low ettgdid pais when thanei slav- _the_ a test _t1 WM lto talbessI _aonoms their Inti wen way 'Mins lid • gammas pumas Wtool wd ajadts So ems Tr as mans =tae to wiedein memioaw• • oYhio pro ak wsseh sear him faros hos edvaat ge of and igeeraaioe bee been e chain which has bound the marina. The Bible has be•o tae great Mono- espatar of slaver --cental, moral and physical. Is is 0s Torch of Liberty, lighted by !!toter Pwrrldenoe. The Bible aloes tells ea that all humanity are of one blood, aeesttares of the .ame God, amenabb to Him. While Use Bible inmtrmse shot kings and all in authority should be recognised, it she tells that the is amen- able moreable to exactly the same laws els his roost menial slave, and that if he violates these laws he is as steno to he pnntahed. Moreover, the Bible points out that the present is Witted to the future Me too muss to Alai 16 oboes that every ask wool tied thoo=1tt bean. up- on -on charmen]-de..'opme.ut. and pre- pares us for h gtu•r tbihio, in the life to come or g.... reaching perindion and everlasting til.. . "H .Zit i` lion Looking into dgook se• Is- rael, aodden ofd bw their *YIP- tian ' taakma, Cela. me daring to take steps for libel*. BOL ewer the Exo- dus, atter God's msemepti with them at Sinai, they mer. •.emend people The hopes iareplosd LS the 8oriptitds: preserved them as a =Man when con- temporaneous civ! diens perished. The Jews gindooldadlT their own toaonaii p. Ths nom= merely performed the taneral rites ha destroying Jerusalem, A.D. T0. The .emperor evidently elnied that the Jewish religion meat neoesearily be at the 1oand•tian • d their ungovern- able character. Their liberty, used (' ontrary to Divine instruction, led to discontent a.nd saateby. Christ's Fellgws,' Set Fns. The Message of Jesus and the Apm- tles • attracted some "Isndites in- deed, a¢ztone to serve God. The early Christians courageously suffered persecution and carried the Gospel everywhere. The Roman emperors. Nero and Dioeiotiu, perceived that Christians had a courage which they feared would be infectious, and per- secuted them horribly. But the Mae-. ter had freed them from fear of death. Then cam. • long period of clerk - when the Scriptures were for- gotten, and only the words of bishops were heard --words misunderstood to be of Divine authority through Apos- tolic Succession. Next came dentar- ies under control of creeds and church councils. Darkness. ignorance and s'peretition prevailed. although God had His withemes throughout that long period. Finallythe Bible again emerged. when printing came into use. God's time had come for the Bible again to be the Torch of Liberty, and indepen- dence proportionately came forward. To -day Britain, Germany. Soandi- nevi• and America lead the world. because of the light from the Word of God. Danger Now, As To the Jews. The danger that the Jews encore Owed in the end of their Aga confronts us. Not all receive the Truth in the love of it. Not all, therefore, are saectified by it. Few have turned to the Lord. td become followers of Jesus. Hence we are on the thres- hold of a great disintegration. Lib- erty is about to turn to license -- anarchy; our civilisation is about to be ruined, as was the Jewish polity. by liberty unrestrained by the Spirit of the Lord. St. Pant declared that the Gospel hail set him free from all other bond - ages; but that he surrendered his lib - arty to Christ, to do, not his own will, but the will of his Redeemer. Force- fully he states that in so doing he became a bond -slave to Christ. HW thought in clear. Whoever ,gives hip will rt.o another gives his all. In be- coming a follower of (twist, we must turn all over to Him. Riessen is the condition •nf •theee. who gladly surrender all too.lecotne followers of the Lord! Bach can re- joice. because they know that al! thing. work together for their Food se New Creatures. to prepares thane for the Heavenly glories. Great Britain halm done more fur civ- ilization than any other nation in his- tory -i ea' "civilization" and not "culture." The Britons. an a nation, have never recognized art ea that power which it really is. -Mr. Michael Balling. THE SIGNAL'S CLUBBING LIST 1913 The Signal and Toronto Weekly Globe'. • • • $1.60 The Signal and Toronto Daily Globe j4.so The Signal and Montreal Family Herald and Weekly Star 1.85 The Signal and Weekly Sun (Toronto) 1.75 The Signal and Toronto Daily Star 2.25 The Signal and Toronto Daily World 3.25 The Signal and Toronto Daily e Ws 2.30 The Signal and Toronto Weekly Mail and Empire 1.6o The Signal and Farmer's Advocate 2.35 The Signal and Canadian Farm . , 1,85 The Signal and Farm and Dairy 1.85 The Signal and Winnipeg Weekly Free... Press f .6o The Signal and London Daily Advertiser The Signal and London Weekly Advertiser 1.60 The Signal and London Daily Free Press Morning'Edition 3.5o Evening Edition 2.90 The Signal ;and Montreal Daily Witness3.50 'Pie Signal and Montreal Weekly Witness1.85 The Signal and World Wide 2.25 The Signal and Presbyterian . 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For instance : The Signal and The Weekly Globe 11.d0 The Farmer's Advocate i $2.15 les $1.ao).... 1.35 2.90 Sats -making the price of the three papers $2.95. The Signal and The Weekly Sae 11,73 The Toronto Daily Star ($a a5lege Stool . I.ss The Weekly Globe ($t.eo to-- Rt.no . .... ba -the four papers for $ ; • ' If the publication you .., not in above list, let us know. We can supply almost any well-known Canadian publication. Send subscriptions through local agent or by postoffice or express order (not by bank cheque) to The Signal Printing Co. LIMITED Goderich Ontario RENEW Your subscription to THE SIGNAL for 1913. Fun-toWash.. Contest for January • •••••••••e:i•i• •i•• •••• •• i:t •••s !•tial• ••••;•11.47...•• iiiiiiii:ot •i• •j••`:•moi: il• •64 i •i • P••:L.: et. •••• •• ••••••• eee.0:.•....•.•.•.•.•....os e .. ie•e• ••••...,,,:: .. ::: : ••••;•• •3333 •.- r ae - • - e e• • • • • • •ee•me• e • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • sere• • • _ ..... • • • • • • • • A $100.00 ii Cash Prises. Count the Dots. First prize $10.00 Second prize 7.00 Third prize 4.00 Fourth prize 3.00 Ten Prizes $200 each Fifty six prises $1.00 each Stored. C.eh Prises. Ammer Tail.- i•ad vnZtre rye. Iib, tel A err..w' .w,.•1 roto.res e'dwb e. Mary ..t. At itwt Hose tate theme ..oleo •h•As11. Iib sew/, meadow .• Dylan • t . prism 4.M imsinset am s The Cab wilt= weea.w.agwbsw••sacalseiems wsams et1 . tom, es be eeCiee d iaa be sammeel e IoV.MeTm a Mee n• 11 !ht•