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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1913-2-20, Page 2! lbtratwaT. hi*v*ST $, MI THE SIGNAL GODERICH : ONTARI(, 1• I though it *bows souse } ` Biondi °eco '301JI TUCki ONTARIO. PUBL HED EV ::RY THURSDAY sr TH SIG fLL P .TING N CO, Tense of Wbeonstioa . ,1.e• per annum to edemas rite month.. Sec ; three moatbs, saw Tu United State..ubwcrtbsts, "Liu • leer' t.tdaily la adwan.oel TWA regularly by mail will center • receivebscribers who fail to SIGNAL favor by ac- quainting us of the tact at as early • data .a. l.oseibk;. change When the • address illiquid be begiven. tenth old and the sew Advertising Raters : 1 alistid other similar adverta.mnent' too pet line for first insertion and to per hoe for each subsequent insertion. Measured by e nonpareil scale. twelve lines to an inch. Business cards of of z line- and under, RS per year. Advertisements of Loot, Found, Strayed, Sit- uations ibuations Vacant, Sit nations Wanted, Houses for Sale or to Rent, Farms for &ale or to Rent, Artielea for Sale, etc-, not exceeding eight tpey, : each insertion : •1 for Arlt mouth. Mc for each subsequent month. Larger advertise- ment' in proportion. ordinaryAonouncementr in reading type Lee cents, per Use. o notice less than7t c. Any special notice. the ob)eot of which is the ,,eounfary benefit of any individual or sord- atlon. to be 000ddered an edvertieement and charged a000rdingl7• Rates for display and contract advertlse- urm.te will be given 00 application. Addrees an oom.annimineas to THE SIUNA.L PRINIINU CO.. Limited. ttodsricko Mt. goUEBJL'H THURSDAY. V. fat Irl THE VOTE AT OTTAWA. On Thursday last, after a long de- bate, the House of Commune tame to a vote on the navy •luestiun. The Na- tionalists joined wibh the Conserva- tives in voting down Sir Wilfrid Laurieee proposals for a Canadian Sleet in co --operation with the British navy, and also the amendment bf Mr. Verville, t1ie Labor representative from Montreal, calling for an appeal to the people before Canada should be committed to the Borden cootrihution policy. The vote was= to 75, • Gov- ernment majority of 47. A third vote was taken on the Borden resolution, resulting in a Government majority of :i'L Seven of the Nationalists voted against the Government on this division. The significant feature. of the vot- ing were the continued alliance of the Conservatives nod Nationalists in op- position to the Liberal party, and the repudiation by Premier Borden and his Nationalist allies of their pledges before the last general election that their policy on the navy w old be sub - ted to the people before itsadop- tion by Parliament. The Liberals will continue the fight against the Borden makeshift, 'tt rich is expensive to. Canada and at the sante time is of no real assistance to Great Britain. SIR JAMES ASTRAY. In the Legislature last week an Op- position amendment ceiling for tax reform was voted down on it straight party vote. Premier Whitney distin- guished himself by his contribution to the debate, in which he associate, tax reform with the single tax propoeale of Henry l;eorge, which he declared would lead to "abolition of the home, ..f marriage and of religion." No wonder there are rumblings of disap- proval in the party ranks. In his cheap denunciation of the teachings of Henry l;ecrge, Sir James \Vbitney talks like any other ignorunns who never read Henry George, and does not understand the questions with which he detlt. There are hundreds, probably tbbusande, of Comet vatives in this Province who have a much clearer insight in these matters than Sir James. and they cannot but bi dis- gusted with the exhibition of crass ignorance which he gives every time he discusses the tax question. The flttaw'a Citizen J('onaervative) comes out straight with the declaration that Sir James is incapable of leading the party. It says "If anything further hail been -e- .tuired to show the utter folie of the attitude of Sir .lames Whitney on the question of tax reform. it way •applied by his speech in the Onterio legisla- ture in his reply to Mr. Rowell There needs t.. he no greater proof of the neeessiry of a change in Provincial leadership than the words .1 the lead- er hiw.elf. "They reveal either en ignorance ..f plain fa, to or at. indifference to real issue*. If the 'tingeing statement of sit' Jame, represents the sum total of his knowledge on these great ques- tions, be is clearly incapable of lead- ing a great party. 1f. on the other band. his use of such etatemente is a blind to cover loyalty to other Doter• rets then those of the rax reform ask- ing public. the deduction is even . tearer. In eith-r case, it is such in- stances ..s this that are snaking the name of Sir .lames • byword and jest., aynonytn for that antiyu ited kind o11'sunset vatrani that sought to do no harm Ly doing nothing at all The A^tial leash, as anyone an a.r- ie to torn the cit rent of puhlir opinion in the direction of the Ontario Lihpr.I party ()rte thing is pure. the people of Ontario are sufficiently in earnest Derr meal option in tax reform to secure it. even 1 tliry bave to snake • political nvertu.n. the a. -lion of Sir lames Whitney in stiabh ornly pervert - ins in his reeistaoor, end uttering ouch nightmarish deductinna, is the stemma* lever at work Soday.- tLO1tIM1AL NOTE i he Hosea s.Pelletier poet stilt !.olds• dgw of weak -1 that. makes • benisons of the debutante and tar t By the way, why should Canada maintain customs taxes on importa- tion. from tbe Mother Country Let us .suit imposing a fine upon the man who improver his property and thereto, adds to the common weal. The t.erwan newspapers ate poking !unit the war -scaremonger* of Great Ili nein. They haves broad target for their ridicule. Thr Liberals at Ottawa propose to help Mr. Borden carry out his pre-elec- tion pledge to submit his navy policy to the people. In there months the Borden Admini- stration dismissed over five hundred persons from public positions. The Windsor Record JJ5 it the rapid -"tir- ing" Government. The Quebec Nationalists voted solidly against Sir Wilfrid Laurier's amendment on the navy question. The Liberal party will still have to fight the anti-British faction in Quebec. FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES. Mr. Musgrove Is Right. Toronto Globe. A strong protest against specializing in the public echoole was made by Mr. Musgrove of North Huron in the debate on the address. He held that the public school should lay a founds Gan for any kind of later specialized development. Getting into Debt. Farmer* Sun. Not many years ago a huge map. hanging in the corridors of the Pro- vineial Parliament buildings, bore the ioscript ion, "Ontario has no Debt." In the floral year ending with Oc- tober 3Ist" 1911. there was paid out of the Provincial treasury over one mil- lion dollars in interest and sinking Lund on the debt of the Province. Whitney's a Great Spender. Brantford Expositor. It has to be conceded, of course, that some increase, year-by.year, is inevit- able in the expenditures of a growing Province, but what ie noticeable with regard to the present Government is that its increases are out of all pro- portion to the increases made by the preceding Government, and also out of all proportion to the growth of the Province during the term of office as compared with the growth during the Liberal regime. Scott's Last Words. ;Brooklyn Stataiard. Seldom has anything. so atfectint been written as that last message of Scott's. A commander's anxiety for is favorable judgment on his precautions the nobility of a strong man strug- gling against Fete and resigning him- self to the will of God. and a pathetic appeal for it nation's cafe tor the ten= der sex and the helpless age, shine through the simple words preserved with the br•diri of the heroic dead through eight months of the Antarctic climates fury. This is what is meant by the great spirit that ennobles any sarrific,. and takes away the sting .,f failure from death. Unity and Division. I'm -onto Star. Four years ago the House of Com- mons voted unaminiously for the or- eanixation of a Canadian navy. to work it co-operation with the naval forces of the Empire. Soon afterwards, under pressure from the Nationalists , and other fac- tions of his petty. Mr. Borden eel nut to destroy thiq unanimity. He has succeeded. His own resolution is now Adopted by the House on a question on which it was unanimous in 19119, but he has divided his own part y. The policy now goes upon record as that of only half the people of Canada. This is the natural and expected re- sult of the work of friction which de- stroyed tbe nati•+nal unity shown in the resolution of lett8, A Growls; Failing. St. John, N. B., Telegrapb. Perhaps the one item in which our xchoole fail today more cnmpl,•trly i• in teaching their pupils to speak enol write their thoughts well and clearly. As a people we are growioit wonder- fully tarekes in this swatter, so that the social conversation of a great many men and women is little more than rendes. chatter; this, because we have failed to rettlixe that speech is living and vital and is always to large extent an indicator of the life. We think that bombast and linidnee• are forted, while they are is confession of weakness. Now, to -peak well can- not be learned from a achooltnsster or acquired from a hook. S.mplicity or speech depends nn simplicity of life. and'tbe only W&% to avoid vulgarity in speech is by being honest in think• ing and living. The top on the Farm. Rochester Herald. Giving the hny on the farm an inter- est in the product of his work is the sorest method of imprewing span him tbe fact of its profitableness. There comes to him a *PLOY of personal re- q..msihility, and be realizes that upon his exertions depend the elements of profit and loss. Left to his own de - vire., he scxsns learn. toettrieste him- self from difficulties, each of which he hegina to Zook upon s. • part of his education. Seldom does is man who has had this. kind of handling in his y,wth voluntarily leave the business of hus- bandry. 1/ he doe•, it is more than likely ne e.eitated by the fact of physical ineapatity to maintain the nigh speed of his early years. Ma&y men do not piny enough and when they- o• *ht. to he in their pose* ■re heoken down with boo m.ueb work. The faith is their own, and not [bat of the calling. Vet it makes an nee. war able ion w'essi on apron !beim to whom Use farm might otherwise hold out some a .lsre.i men Advaetagss of Inst Pbtime.ts as Lose* 11 Lent is not otwe ve•d from aey on••t.eve .staph,*) M reettriae, et wry rat. f he pbyairal and D s-v,we roman tow sr.••us t,. require Ib. osasttNoa ef the h, '3t programa of arusasme t T alike for inured de- votes of fashion. Items 1 if Sunday were not a lust day of ti.: turwl sad ecclesiastical appointese• , still th* respite of one day in seven would be ouosider•ed salutary for the body as well as for the soul. The French peopleat the time of the revolution were uusuece.sful in their edoru to dispense with it. Just so. the Lenten %waaaoo meow vitally and not rely spirit Ily indispensable. Fro the very eaniog of the word, the n- iog is 'ven to "go slow" --the term if is a reminder of the ezhaurtiug effects of the swift and dizzying Merry--t.- round of folly, whose rate of motion seems %ear by year to be accelerated instead of retarded. It is well tor all oI us to he reminded that the soul and the intellect have higher claims than that of selfish and corporeal indul- gence. Hon. Alex. Mackenzie Favored Reci- procity. Toronto Star. The Hon. James Young wrote a book with the purpose of informing the people, and they will be informed if they read the book, but misinformed if they read some of the newspaper reriews of it. For instance, several newspapers are saying that the book ,bows that Alexander Mackenzie was opposed to reciprocity, whereas Alex- ander Mackenzie wars a strong advo- cate of reciprocity. In his life of George Brown be says : "When the country returns to an enlightened commercial policy, the efforts of Mr. Brown and the late (Mackenzie) Adminixtration to promote inter- national intercourse between the great nation on our eoutberu border will be better understood and appreciated." Mr. Brown negotiated a reciprocity treaty which went farther in some re- spects than the Fielding agreement, and it was supported by the Mackenzie Government, by whom Mr. Brown was appointed to conduct the nego- tiations. A Lesson Learned. Montreal Herald. The loyalists of Toronto object to the idea of erecting a monument to George Washington in 'Westminster Abbey on the gtouud that be was a rebel, and fought against his King. in view of this attitude of the Tor- onto people it is interesting to note that the idea of a statue to Washing- ton ire the Abbey is received with almost unit ersel favor in England its self. One English paper gore so far as to say that a statue to Washington should be erected beside that of Crom- well; that the nest President of the United States and the Great. Protector were the two men who, more than all others, did most to combat tyranny and ignorance in tbe Government art Englaud. No public journal of im- portance in Great Britain bas objected to the memorial on. the grounds taken by the loyalist.. of Toronto. • The habit of Empire government give, wide views. England's rulers have the trick of true perspective. They real.ze that Washington raised tha standard art revolt against 'injust- ice, and they are big enough men to hold his memory in reverence for tha ,act. Only men of vision san see in the- triuwpb of • principle some- thing that outweigbs material loss. Smaller men wrangle over the loss and forget the lesson learned. KINCARL)!NE HARBOR. A REPLY TO MR. KERNWHAN, Mb. following !utter wan received WOMAN'S MOST too Iles* for publicattoo Mat week.) Te the Edits* ef The eigeal. Dun Sis,— 1 Lead with ouch in- terest Mr. Y.rnighan's letter in rout Out issue, regardiug thein- veMtigatioo into the affairs of a O. W. ti. R. The first thc.urbt that came to me wan—wby ehuuld • resident of Colborne be the one to write such a letter, when that township 1s Dot concerned in the affairs of the rail- way'r The township of Colborne is not one 41 :he township. which guaran- teed the bonds of the railway, .aa they very sagely took advantage of the fact that the railway had to run through the township between Gude- rich and Ashfield and they did not feel inclined to brlp the people of their slater municipalities, who had vated on and parsed their bylaws at an earlier date. Tbeir uueeltl.h conduct on that occasion commend* their advice to the people of Godertcb and other municipalities at this time. Mr. Kernighan even boasts of the action of the Colborne people in hampering the railway In every way nod„ increasing the cert of construc- Lion. and even going to the extent of taking the law into their own hands and tearing up part of the road at the dead of night. As I have already said, the Colborne people did not put I henrsrlvra andgr any liability (bring gifted with a tavf0- dom and toreeight that is denied to ordinary people lite those of Goderich and the other municipeitties), but strangely enough the C,•Iborne poop e all aloog have had more to say about the conduct of affairs in connection with the railway than those of Ash- field and all the other guaranteeing municipalities put together. For 1..- statice, the Ashfield people she ate paying heavy taxes on account of the railway are doing it like men; all tbe whining comes from Colborne. fhe proposed investigation will not cost the people of Colborne amuse and if the ratepayers of the'utuuicipaliurs actually concerned want an invest - gation to determine wh. to • be r money went it is hard to see whi Ih y should 1301 be allowed t.. have it, ev, n if they do spend their own nun y over it. 4s to the caipability of the OnLerio Railway and Municipal Board to am - duct an investigation properly, Mr. Kernigban may be better informed than some other" ; at any rate-, I understand he has pat tinnier . mason for wart holdiog a very high opinion of that body. So tar as I can judge the people of Goderich are deter,.anrd on one thing. and that is to have a thorough investi- gation into the whole matter. Thanking you for the space you have given sue in your valuable paper •' Yourw truly, ONE OF rite -'Scti gats " Goderich. Feb. 1.hb, 1913. Hopeful. "Bobby." *aid Mr. Hadley to' his young son, angrily. "mv father always whipped toe when 1 behave -I as badly 1 a!1 you Ale .doing." •Well," answered [lathy, thought- fully, '•I hope 1'11 never have to tell Illy little boy that." Deputation to Ottawa Receives Some Encouragement. .Kincardine. Feb. 17 --The deputa- tion sent to Ottawa last week arrived home on Saturday night. They were received by the present member, Col. Clark, and the subjects 'nought before the several officiate were listened to with much attention. There is a strong probability of barbor improve- ment . The present harbor costs *5.055) a year, which would pay interest on the tutu asked for to make • new har- bor north of the pier. which would not nerd dredging after t.riug finished. This will be inqui. ed into. and if suffi- cient reason tor a new htrhor is brought forward the work w141 be proceeded with. The application for a subsidy for a regular steamboat service throughout the summer months tnav Ise got on condition of the trade showing after a year's service to warrant such an expenditure. The commi..i.ln met the official at Montreal who has to do with railway extension, who gaveencoutnarrow lit, to hope of a probability of the C. 1'. R. purchasing or ]tasi.g the West Shore Ittil way. if the icipalilies get the line in their own hands. HURON & LAKESHORE RAILWAY BILL. Ontario Government Claims Invasion of Provincial Rights. trot ass a, Fel.. 1S—Provincial rights caste to the front in the railway com- mittee today. when the hill •o incnr- nitrate the Huron and Lake Shote Railway Company wen discussed. The line proposed is trom Satnie north ea/aptly through i.amhtnn, Huron, Bruce and ':rev counties, to Meaford, on the Crror•gian Bay. R. H. Code ohjertel to the company getting a Federal charter. appearing, he said, on behalf of the Ontario Croy- ernment and bolding that se the line proposed wen entirely within the Province of Ontario it should be stile j-ct to Provincisl juridietion. Mr. Nesbitt (Oxford) held that the line between Sarnia and Meaford was never intended to remain a separate road. became there wruld not ' be enough horsiness between these two points. It was praioly intended to connect with one of the ioig railways and ,.n the rates should he under Fed- eral roe David H.ndersc n t Halton) pointed out that such a view would remove all railways from Provincial r'ant,ol. A vote take on the preamble of the hill defeated It by 19 tot* Both Quick and Permanent Strength If yai are run down rte tired out, if you take ortld easily. have no appetite. are losing flesh or have other evidence of lowered visality, try ser MacLsod's System R,ssnestrw weldor ren. tee to refund the prise pmldW the remedy Id). to give entire satlsfssMen. It aide digestkas, hawse no the nesveus 'manses and gives boli q.eiek •rd pas - snasts.nt rv*e$t•. One A• •liar a termer. Manof•etnred by Macleod Me•iiclne Os., Getderieh. Ont. Ric sale he R. Wigle. its the interior of a man's head that epuuts. SVCCESSFOL MEDICINE Known All Over The World —Known Only For The Good It Has Done. We know of no other medicine which has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women, or received so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. In nearly every community you will find women who have been restored to health by this famoua medicine. Almost every woman you meet knows of the great good it has been doing among suf- fering women for the past 30 years. Fox Creek, N. B.— " 1 haus always had pains in the abdomen and a weak- ' wens there and often after meals a sore- neas in my stomach. Lydia E Pinkham's VegetableCompound has done me much good. I am stronger, digestion is better and I can work with ambition. I h.. encouraged man y mothers of families to take it as it is the beat remedy in the world. You can pub- lish this in the papers. "—Yrs. Wlitlani S. Botaonsk Fax Creek, N. B. In the Pinkham Laboratory'at Lynn, Masa., are files containing hundreds of • thousands of letters from women seek- ing health, in which many openly stab over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. many of whom state that it has saved than from surgical operations. A CORRECTION. To tbe Editor of The Signal SIR.—At the Net township council meeting at Carlow, when the telephone question was hying diseueeed, W. F. 'Vatting made the amazing assertion that the plaintiffs in the recent law- suit with the township of Colborne roup each been billed for =118.151. Mr. Yo.•ng may have had hi* tensions for *. siting such a talar stat•-tnent. but to those who know the f.ets of the case 1 appeer. a. if he were merely trying to live up to his reputation. The p rs••ns in gales1 i• n wish to state. tor the it,form.tion of any who care to kn•,w, that they have never r•ereived a hill of costs for one single dollar in connection with the case fioni any per -on whatever. C. A.' ROBERTSON. fur Plaintiffs. Few of us are perfectly happy, and few of us deserve to be. MY FREE TRIAL TREATMENT MAY CURE YOU • Kingston, Ont.. June 6th, 1909.0 Dear Mrs. h.—i feel SO very 'much better after urting the 10 days' treat- m.i.t of ORANGE LILT you a -ere kind emo.geu to send. that 1 will not require any mor.•. In fact, I feel entirely well, and It is now a month since I stopped using the treatment . - . Muni F. W. T. _ Similar lettere to the above are not infrequent, though. of course. such cams are not et .un¢ sttnding. Most wo- men who have suffered for any length of time will require to use ORANGE LILT tenger than the Trial Treatment in order to effect a romp:etc cure. but In every case they will he perceptibly benefited. Further, the benefit w111 be perman- ent whether they continue to use ORANGE LiLT or not. It Is not taken tntersatly. and does not con- tain any alcohol or other stimulant Tt is an applied treatment. and acts directly- on the suffering or- gan.. in all resew of women's die - orders. these organs are congest- ed to a. greater or less extent. and ORANGE LILT will relieve and remove the congestion just as positively and cer- tainly as the a•tion of ammonia or soap on soiled linen. it is a simple chemical problem, and the result is always the same, a step towards better health and complete cure In order that evert suffering women may prove its good qualities. t win seal enough of ORANGE LILT for 10 day's treatment abstflutely free, to each lady obs will send me her address. MRS. FRANCLe. a. COPRAis._WINOSOR, ONT. 1S The Al fells ales sever Iotoasomr-tom always Lave easapatay whoa thero's an Edison Phonograph os the table. For them and the young folks, the scope of the new Blue Amberol Records includes everything, from old time favorites to present day tunes—popular and classical The real fun and enjoyment afforded by an Edison Phonograph is unequalled by any other instnunent made. A call on your Edison deakr will convince you. Thur, A. gra fuse. }SS -'- s A.. (fust.. ft L. 11. S. A A ret p1 lee alias Rew•gt aplu veld Is. wiin he Amid ss JAMES F. THO1tSSON �1ii11tMt11rllf 1ltlii11f11i1rlltt�Itlf W li►lirllrlif t+Mllr Willi 1111 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Ladies Furs, Muffs. etc. Our purchases for this winter were 3 larger than ever before. Now with such price reductions we will clear all this month Many at Half Regular Value. 3 Men's Fur ("Jets and Fur -lined Costa, all et unreserce.l 3 sale prices. 3 Men's and women's Fur Caps at one-third off regular prices, W. ACHESON 1 SON "EW Dress Goods L t e e e it Now on view, a selection of the new season's ehnies Dress Fab* ice inelu1iug Suiting,, Worsteds. Bedford Cords. Whig cords, Tweed*. its gre-ys, blues, browns, black and white, etc. New Dress and Waist Silke, in •Jtuliug F. ularde l'ailettre, Mescalines, Satins, etc. Wass Materials Are now .howiug—all the new Prints and Gingham* are fen ward end %alum good. Crumbs English Prints in 190 patterns. all styles, per yard 1 sc Linea Sale Greatest layout of handsome Linen Domestic Table Cloths in every size and great quality range slightly imperfect'. selling at one-third and more below regular. Wass Dresses Ladies' Wash Dresses of good Scotch t;ioabam, neat stripes. perfect -fitting. neatly made and trimmed. -Regular each *2.151, for t s1.so Ladies' Coats Big Clearance Value* in Bokaran Lamh. Fur -lined and Cloth or Tweed Coats tor women, all this Season's. Very Great Reduc tions. 3 White Cottons, Cambries, Nainsooks 3 Nearly one hundred pieces, new for spring sewing, beautiful - 3 ly soft Cambric., free from dressing ( English maker, exceptional values et l0c, 121c, 13c, 1$c. 3 Six hundred yam's :et -inch extra beery Factory Cotton' 3 Round, even thread. Regular value 14c.. Special. per yard, 10o 3 .. f 3 W. ACHESON cf SON F 3 e 9MMTTTT TTTTT.M!1!TTTT!1!0 TTR Insure Success he taking a practical course in ore et Shaw'w schools, Tanto. by ettendanos or by mail and by ie doing quickly prepare to ears, a gond notary. Hoa dn.ds ,.f young peoMe do this every Year. Why not out Free r*talogue explains Write for it. .Address, tt-. H. Shaw, President. Tome St.. 1or- onta LYRiC THEATRE The management of the Lyric Theatre wishe* to announce that commencing Saturday. Febru- ary SLS. and continuing until further notice they will run a big double program consisting of FIVE THOUSAND FEET OF PICTURES EACH NIGHT. Entire change three times weekly—Tnesdayt, Thursday and Saturday. Each progniw will comprise, every variety of subjects. all of the highest cissa obtainable and guaranteed to please et cry taste. Thursday and Friday each week will iie shown a TWO OR THREE - REEL SPECIAL FEATURE.. specialsinging three times weekly. First-class music at all per - forma noe*. General admission, Inc; chil- dren, :.c. (Inc hour of the best enter- tainment possible. Geo. Huggins 1'. opt ietot Brophey Bros. .'UDEKICH The Leading Funeral Directors and Embalmers Orders carefully attended to at all hours. night i•r da,. ROBERT WILSON The Massey -Harris Agent has 5 Cutters ti. a war nut at cost price. 1 f you need a cutter come and see what we have. We Kaes. the kLEt'RY PLOWS JOHN DEERE PLOWS VERITY PLOWS MASMEY-HARRIS and Mmukr J E CREAK SEP- ARATORS BAIN WAGONS sad SLEIGHS GRAY'S, CANADA CAR- RIAGE and MOCNT FtIR- EST BUGGIES OLD HOMESTEAD FERTILIZER. Try a few hundred—it will pity you. 1 have just received a carload of the famous Frost Fence an l;ates and Steel Fence Poets. • When you are in town come in and see what we have. The MasseylarrisSnop Hamilton Street, Goderich,Oot• awastawedweassersoseaaerara A GOOD RESOLUTION FOR THE NEW YEAR TO BUY VASSAR SHOES FOR WOMEN HARTT SHOES FOR MEN These are goods that will give the wearer satisfaction every time. They .are sold in Goderich by J. H. McClinton East Side Square. 'P hose 622.