HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1914-9-10, Page 22 TurutlRDaT, 81110T1111111111111 10. 114
THE SIGNAL : G3ODERICH : ONTARIO
►r
IRWIN ABOUT THE RANKS AND
THE STRINGENCY
A. !L ISADWIN
Eames As. !bourns,
Tia Etafat seri orory Taar.da
tr�eeet. to oriteoe. �(r M
nra--oe• Denar rutMr
Qs a jer Moir paid oto au to ad.oaea flee
he aeso•r•d : to suiataitoet. la thy
Orr starch the mss 1. ass DOW sad Fifty
to advisor. ftaborbses wise
Mg to r•eslve Tons Nla/0A'. regularly b1 mall
will rotor a favor ams•l•tiaa dee � N�
ra.
arofth.hetatua .datewpossftt•
a chasma.(p weber 1. damned. both old sad
Ow new aflame■tesla M Elvis. aeotttaoess
ay be radii by
mmtt.. exwow
ardor, or letter.
N4. &orivte rid
may oomaaoee at any t mo.
ApvmrrtatM0 T .w. -Ratty tordloplay sod
°de• l.s.ogolaad.
lotar slmlferaadvwill bo errtlsweon wot..
tom .sots per limo tar int Iser.Usu fusel four
orb. per lime for rob .s sserat insertion.
lt.s.rrnd by • meats of .maim rampant' --twelve
Ito to as (rot $s.lossm mark .f .ix fleas
and under, Flee Dollar. pan year. Adv.rU.e-
went& et t.r1.@wired. eitalo
w•seot, Situations arid.
ned. Hous for Oar or
u Rent, Marr for Nle or to Root. Artier.
for oats. .le.. mot .serMfog eight Ilm•, Twenty
Ale coot, .mot t inion : One Dolior for lint
moat\• fifty ('..t star each •ub.e.iuent n.oritb.
nes.dvortirmuerts 'in proportion. e.n
no.memu in ordinary reeding tips. an
Vat• pee lima No nouns k -s. rhos Tweet"
-
ayCera..- Any "p04a1 Dodos, the object of
widgets res mean "r�b.meat of any nits
d
sudsynm.otfen, to c.m■ldoesd an *dyer
U.seot sad carred •oordingb. {ori of
To tomasaro.tgxr.t-The iso
oar mbanriber. and seeder. 1. cordially la, 11
. d toward. ..king Toa el. N A 1. • .Intl, ',+.00114i
o f all lend, county and district doings. No earn
umtratbn will be smoothed a soder it cora
tars taw mime and address of tM writer, ..ot
seeourruyy for publication. but •n .vb■ucs
of rood tains. New. Roar named reach Tag
41410.,. alae act later than W.dnneda) noon
of taro snot.
Vsml 1M Toronto World.
There is no sign yet that the g
oral managers of our banks have d
clded w follow the advice of their
keit managers to the cleering house
to accept bank notes--uow made
legal tender by ',sentiment in daily
settlements, instead of "hank legate,"
which las been the regular practice.
"Bank legal." are practically gold oer-
tiflcatee against gold deposited with
the IWluiuiuh government Some of
the general managers are in favor of
the substitutiou of bank notes, and
Noma are against it. The general
managers against the nub.titution of
bank notes have sold in print that It Is
e nutter of concern to the banks only,
that the public have nothing to do
with it. Estates it .now organising twelve such
• • • "national reserve iwnks" with an un -
The World takes lonar with them uu limited national currency behind them
this point, and we wt11 give an ail- for the purpose of fedincount against
sufficient teasou for these grounds, approved s•curitics and presumably as
viz , that, inasmuch as the emcee- the agents of the government in put-
ting out a (teethe! issue of Gull million■
of national notes for moving and
carrying over the crops! The Bank of
England is today the national bank of
the state. And in all other countries
they have thew national banks and
they have found that they vaunt have
them "to conserve the financial and
commercial interests of the rcuntry,'
to u.e the ;Arline of the ('anedian
parliament.
The real fact is that our took,' are
not anxious to step in between the
legislative aid of parliament and those
who would harrow the national notes
provided hy parliament on the credit
of the nation! If that is so, then we
moot hoar a national bank t e do it.
therefore. that it is the duty of the
minister of finance and of the gov
nawot to see that the banks mob -
se as they herein Englatel, and that
ey take advautage of the proposition
rich made hank note. legal and al-
lowed an .Zrese Jeanie of their own
totes, and accept hank notes in their
daily balance. between the member
books.
THLRSOAY.MEPTF.MSKR 10rn 191i
• • •
Onr thing more: if our banks do
not mobilize a they Lave in Ragland
they are hastening the day when a
national bank will he established herr
to do the work that parliament has
legalised "to conserve the itnaneial
and commercial interest. of rte costa -
try." .Hues bank cannot come too
soon, not only for than• atrenuouu
Liana, bat fur all tinge.. The United
[trent and parliament have tnade bank
notes, legal tender throughout the
country in every transaction, what is
good for the country ought. to be good
for the bank*, and that if the hanks
sok the public to take their notes as
legal tender they ought also to take
them as between thetnnelt-es. Hut
this in only a secondary reason com-
pared to another one, viz.. that parlia-
ment in its wiedom has seen Ht to
WRITES NOTABLE LETTER authorize an vireo"eireuletion of hank
--- notes to the extent of 15 per rent on
A resident of than United States, the paid-up capital and reserves of the
torn in Germany, has written to the hanks: this is practically equal to all
Washington Times making the 4tata per cent on the paid-up capital of one
bundled and odd millions. This ex-
cess nestle would amount to $ ),lI011,dr1
But the banks cannot avail them-
selves of this issue and let toe money
out to rust uuierr, at It -amt probably the
majority of them would not ton dis-
posed to do ate tinier the notes thus
pul out were available in the clearing
house where they would land the next
day after isnite : in other words, if a
hank wishes to avail itself of the ex-
cess issue it tnn•d have gold to redeem
them the moment they come into the
clearing house. or "bank legs's" of the
1komin' of Canada, which me the
same thing. And the very banks who
have been liberal in their treatment of
customers and who have already in
oars approached within reasonable
distance of the limit of safety, hesi-
tate at the additional dcty imposed
upon them of finding further gold or
DAominion notes for the redemption of
this exrres issue. Ir other words, its
needed nL chess times of 'tsetse the issue of hank
"Again, be says : 'It is a shame notes bided', falling in amount, where -
that with :13 per cent of the Coifed r it should be, if the hanks were
States people of German stock and
only 19 per cent English the United
States people should today be so anti -
German.' I have no idea where he gets
his figures for the above statement. Our contention, therefore, is that
and without the census statist ire before Wont sln,(Msl would he immediately
inc I would not say what percentage Invgllahle for the necessities of trade,
are of English or (termite de•wcent, Ind for Ilan rryuin aunts of muni^ip•litie.
1 do know hi+statemMl l•• fide.. Why and .0 1,4 i1 th•• 11110(4 road.• ►he
is it, let mr ask hoick., that ti• Parked ell 'nee in 111•e cleat ins-hou4.• rule
States people shol►W Ir .o anti tier- which we have advocated and which
Peen?' Turn on the light. I•n111e of the hanks are anxious to do.
"In she Owner of his reply 1'11 give ( _ , s
a ',salsa for ouch a rondltion. 111 The
Dulled States people believe in Right And it in becalm there are some of
the hank* Moho refuse to take Ibis
meet that "England for a century and
a bait has been our deadly enemy,
while Germany has always tried to be
our friend." Fortunately, loin state-
ment does not go down with the aver-
age United States citizen and one who
read the letter written by the German-
born resident makes what, in our be-
lief. is • notable reply. 1t is as fol-
low.:
"Let us oak hint was Oertn•ny our
friend when for hire she, furnished
England soldiers to come over here to
tight the colonies in the revolutionary
war ; when's. France sent an army
and • Hest. which enabled lis to win
our lodepeudence ? Was Germany our
friend, or 'tried to be.' at Manila bay,
when Admiral Dewey told the Ger-
man admiral, who was making some
hostile demonstration, 'not to get toe_
tween bis guns and the fort?' The
Eoglieh admiral, with his ships, was
there ready W aid us should we have
availing themselves of the privileges
given to them by parliament, increas-
ing in issue.
and Juane',. They know militarism
reigns s•tpieme in Germany -that
1. niperor William, or more appropri
Moly the 'War Lard,'int" an Ilei he
i• a military genius --that ile h.►s an
invincible army and has an am-
bition to become chaster of Berms.
1V by do i say en? What le tlertmany
-sad for forty years -but- a Wiltat y
damp? Why such an Immense stand
ing army. every adult a soldiers Why
such a formidable nary ? Wbst na-
tion or nations wanted to fight hist
Ragland, France and the United
States were willing to limit the Nulld-
ing of their navies. bat not so with
Germany. fabe refused to eater int.,
such agreement. And what was the
ronseynrmee? Heeattse of Oertnany's
refugia!, all the matlaas of Europe, or
well an the 'United States, and even
dtil aw. ROA UWIedtilip taste 'envie. 111
order to keep parse wit` Crermatiy. for
they wall knew that Germany on the
slightest pretense, or without any
pretense at all. would one day involve
all Ruzops in a aaaguinary war.
-The people of Europe and of this
eountry have tit been deceived, nor
surprised M conflagration now
sweeping Ayer , and every un
biased person. not a German or t/•r-
W eympathiter, are heart and sol in
sympathy with Prance asd her allies.
Thousand' of United States cilia
sews. the paper, toil It., are offering
their services to France sad England
to cwt hack the hretal Invaders of
Belgium. whn di.regard the rules of
war and drop explrmivw upon a city,
killing women and children. It is
also alleged that German soldiers
sheen the wounded on the 'settle/field
mod rob the deed! R.M., do rots Slip-
pees
q>pees seh brotal tad barbarous roe -
dart enrld he approved hy any ht.
sees people t
"'Phe mills of the finds grind slowly,
bat .seesdhmgly Awe, we ere told, mid
worm pews downte what the end
wA k•a"
....Von Mem" •s £IoR.re..ew holds
'00 *WON lud Mettles
',tend that we are compelled ,to say
that there is a lack of tinily 1n the
hank.. that they hare not got to-
g ether as they should have under the
present circumstances; and that it
would well hecnme Wer to follow the
example of the banks In the United
'States *Ito are united in action and
who are standing together, and .til
more if they would follow the action
of the banks and the government in
Great Ileitain. One Ananciel paper
In England speaks of "the mohilixetion
of the hanks" in England into • solid
otg tnitation for taking care of the
country ander the mote.s of war ; and
we r ,nt,nend thin line phren. to the
honk. of 1'an wit Mobilise Into one
organization! They had letter mob-
ilo, • their forcel and do everything
they can, 1•(r the Lank■ of Engl.nd
i.s.ea:.1;.-sugolw request of gime British
government. and afters pie gr+'wvrt
merit itself bad practically .aid. we
will see you through Our govern-
ment has said the same thing to our
bank., but they have never smobilis.d
nor as yet extended the aid that
parliament placed la their hands for
the relief of the Anaacial w iog.nce.
•••
MUST PRODUCE MORE
The Fannet•'s Adviwetr in comment-
ing on the present European war mays
"Through it all the farmer occupies
the hest position. He can at Mart pro-
dtter hie own food in plenty. hat even
he should he careful ac this time. If
he never war of a raving disposition
before he should try it now. It •
good time to be cautiou., to cowserve
feeding stuffs for the live -stock rather
than sell them o ffon a rising market.
l'nuecesaary expense should he
avoided. In short do as the business
WW1 dory, "play safe." This can be
accomplished without furote or ex-
citement. Simply resolve to cut out
unnecessary- luxury, anti ton.erve the
products and profits of the land to be
used to the Joest advantage. Look
ahead and ',Ian to meet all possible
complications squarely. Cut out the
waste, and shove all put firth every
ounce of energy to make the old
farm produce es It hay never pro-
duced before. You are not likely to
bear much about over -production for
a year or twc. First of a11, conserve
this year's resotlrres of the land, and
lay the plans well for a bumper crop in
1915. The l'snadien farmer has an
itnport.ant duly to perform, broth as
regards him own welfare and that of
Iii. a try:. Ile has always done
what was expected of hint seed will do
so again. Conservation i• the watch-
wonl."
As a matter of fart. the recent
legislation of parliament ha. pal all
o ur banks in the one p,1, and They aro
all in t oget her, and they mutat stand
or fall toast her ; .net if 11, ita,n were
to lore In this war, Canada war1.1 haw
end nen hank. would !nue, and that
being the rase, they should t *old
th.mseltw a. absolutely one intorno.
Nn hank ler the clrcunotenres can
hope M keep itself aloof (non the res',
no matter how %Lrnng it may think
itself In he , nor eon It corm. otic "f Ih..
prevent wit unarm --if Britain gnee.�
dawn- -keeping itself in an undarnagm 1
coalition. It eea only coma nut as
the e•tnmtry generally cronies out : aid
thinking otherwise aroma in he the
mistake that two or Ibe.e of t h. hanks
M.• assete that hy v Individual
pelky they eau tt iaietaln their In
airlift's! atrsmgtb sad poali howl ' W.
still stand by our former dw here.
�••.. �• ..•.iuZ�.sit.it•-- -�Sr:
Make Sure of a
Steady Income
Put your savings and surplus
profits into the belt dividend
paying security. The
per Cent.
Debentures
of t be St ,n ctar d Reliance Mortgage
Corpor.tion are wr•.red by • Paid.
uptaaut.Iof 12-0.10.91A.00•nsl A..
sets of SS 00(.011) fl0 These d- - :
bonnier. assure you r dependaklr
inceen. n( S •. per ••morn, pond
ball ys.vly. punu.:ali. onth, elate
t'!. 1.•.- sa • .r•..• I,' -.t k',. roar•
ereT ... •.,,. +. s•
•N. rr, .o w• s.•ely
2:16 7‘
..e.•.■
Standard Mance
etrPolatke
. • w ane s t tool .-oaesrro.
W. L 1 HORTON, Godsric)i
Res:dset Q.eeslw
tit.runorms-r�Ti-iz"'SaA" A
PERRIN'S
GONDOLA
—a biscuit of ' most
detestable flavor, short,
and light r a leather.
At tea -dant or say
other tine, it L sure
to be a success.
THE
PERRIN "SAMPLER"
PACKAGE
will delight yew
A hex of de ieieee limey
biseeit. .end lee. (hie
or •temps) ed your power's
mems for it.
t. L hniit+s-, mum
•
e.
•p
e.
••e
s•
a
.•
•
•
•
•
e•
••
•.
••
Ra
Re
as
•r
1
t.1
WAR SCENES IN GER-
MANY AND FRANCE
lights revealed an amateur barricade
carts across the highroad.
First there was • palaver at the
gates with a cutuwiltee of national de
fence, which gravely examined my
passport and approved It, thougk they
understood it tout.
It looked imposing with the 1lnitrd
States eagle in gold ',tamp and W. J.
Bryan's name epee/lei in thick, black
letters over the toottaan of it. Also '
the number of our motor car was not ;
1:i2 B. for a warm reception awaits
that motor and et platy of Germain.
As we sweep down the road our
fights pick out the white blouse* of a
knot of the older reservists waving
their rifles. We slow down. After a
-autlose •pproaeh our papers are ex-
amined. We escbrnge news.
Then they tell us more about a my.-
terioua Gerona!' automobile -"•l5'1
A.B.," which is said to be dashing
through Franc* at night, loaded with
some dreadful new explode°, a charge
of which would destroy Paris. 1
At Moot releil the mayor and the
village schoolmaster, advancing brave-
ly to our terrifying car suddenly pre-
eeot revglvers. "Rotate up 3" is the
shout. Up go our hands, while be-
yond the chain drawn acrues the street
the few remainingInhabitants watch
the proceedings wth interest. Again
the United States passport -the
Wrs.rd talisman carries no past.
Thr nay or unbends, the !evolver
disappears, and we hear more of the
fearsome 1:52 H.H., more and more as
they .top us at each village.
The mysterious auto is laden with
melitute for the destruction of the
railway bridges : it is burdened with
spies who have killed children ; it is
anythingou lite. and the authorities
want it. The villagers wait for no In-
structions.
it occur. to one village time they
have a railway. It may only go from
tn. brk•kworks to a side line, but :far
Oerioans are apable of anything ; so
that railway must he guarded. It Ir
thin spirit of initiative which bag
made France what .be is; et is the
spirit of national service; which even
defeat cannot crush.
Were liawhietta alive today he
would have seen the realization of his
ideal of s nation in army, anti-mili-
tariate and royalists are Hocking to
the standard of France.
The miner, the phxtgbboy, the
deputy. the minister -they are all in
arms. The women. tiro. are helping
in the preparation of hospitals, in the
tending of the children left behind.
They are taking the place of the men
on the railways in the goternment of-
fice..
They are doing it gaily for France.
but in all their activity their minds
are waiting- waiting for news from
where death and hell reign -the firing
line.
They crowd round the Matin offices
on the boulevard. they rush for the
newspapers, but they learn little.
They must wait.
France has trade up her mind to
welt. She is prepared for reverses in
Belgium. for apparent triumps of the
eneiny in Russia. Sae sees victory at
the end and is prepared to wait
SCENES IN G- ERMANY.
(.need,( eorr•.pOod.noe wriUaa ny W. H.
Nevl.00 and .amt via $w.',rrrnd to 1 &median
newapaper'4l.
(Ip and down the pavements' and
the central garden avenue the Berlin
people now pace all lay and some of
the night They do not shout or
clamor and no one makes a speech.
Every now anti then r Land of
young students and girls go singing
down the street, waving Hags and
pushing through the crowd.
They sing Germany's great national
songs, "1„e Wo•ht am Rhein” and
"Deutschland. Deutechbend uber
Alla- are far the favorites, but some-
times one bears the Bluchet Hong of
"The Old Field Marshall" and other
echoes of the "Wax of Liberation.'
just • centuryago.
For whie the crowd runs after
them cheering. Hut another excite-
ment carries them assay. A taxi or
van drives rapidly through, and men
stand in it Hioging out single sheets,
pi -listed in large type. with the latest
rumor or fact. These are the "Extra-
Blatter" of the various newspapers.
They are thrown out gratis.
And then • squadron of Ublane
comes, their white pennons wrapped
close) round the top of their lenges,
not sowing the black skull that
stands for "Death or Glory."
Like all the army, they wear the
new uniforms of dull grey. said to be
invisible at a short distance, though I
doubt if it i4 co good as greenish
khaki. They nave grey covers care-
fully drawn over their helmets to pre
vent them shining.
The infantry wear them, too, and on
their packs both horse and lot wear
the brown overcoat tied in s circle
round the kuapsnck of brown hide.
Behind each infantry regiment on
the march follow the machine glin.,
and then the -train" pontoons, Held
kitchens, baggage wagons, ammuni-
tion wagon., an,Massacre and storey.
------ —
Yoe may judge how they are cheered i Students (het a Second Chance
mg they start for the front. finely
built and well -t rained fellows they are. , The minister of edncation announced
1-m1 folks in America talk atout to all teachers and candidate% con-
n lffering-euffering from high pares. corned that the new high school re-
in Berlin they suffer more. It is not
merely that in nearly every family
some man has gone out to serve, and
when the full levy of all between 30
and 111 ir complete they pod Presto about
nine million wrl have gore. the normal school., and upper school
i ern ear ro1,4 (ip flat. The examination for entrance into the
government has tried to lir the price
(staltic. of ',duration, any candidate
may carry over a rnhj.rt from one of
the above examinations, or part.
Thr families of the re..rvists have thereof to another .lamination of the
1., live aotot.how. The government same or higher grade provided that
ba. i..ued farm• under which a pov- irk He has made .00 that *object not
.i toy -.0 icken wife can apply Inc an al- low than sir perrent of the market es.
s
lowanre, with "smoothingrt
extra forlaignedthrro,iaadIhile.elandingon
Ps child under fifteen. But it is a
hard pinch.
Before mob. losalion began • n
h ugh Reiser ealfffi1M•� wMr:.ro
inl standard. An up-
Ittoretirtt vert
was away un holidays, and came Pow ' s:• 3L Z:�Jrmo etf
hurrying hack. All registered beg- ase f.rllowise wshjects 1111. reeept.d
PR• was lost_ At .very utattnn Instead of se elamisatisn In the roe -
trunks and sachets stand paled up is r.powding "his" sublet over frog
enormwn heaps The main Friedrich- (he aslddle ee►onl ettamslaatkwt Knit'
strum, station is Mill so crammed that li.b Ht.ssturr• Aagibub erwuFeate tn,
the baggage bait overflowed into the litetrwtwe., geolls.try, nbyaie. or chem -
puma and liras exposed to man and lets',. All tasdldales at lbws "x -
rein. aminatiom0 In June 1•.t who are en.
Germany(twli.yre.he is fighting Inc titled to Ise standing indicated will
existence, and probably oh. is right. hay. .cas of marks sent to
A. 1 travel through the roorti y and them,e' showwinging the .larding awarded
son the wrll•hnilt lumen, 1h. well• loader thin regulation According) .
ruhirowel 11.1)1., the ehurrhwe and the an appelrrruon on the part of a ra -
woods, I cannot bit remember ars chore n nnn.ce.sary.
that Germany had done for the world
-her orderly life, her Ihnnghtfnl
literature. her patient scholarship soil
adventinni..clene.. I are the chil-
dren of en many g hunk• on neat-
ly droned, so elan, so well behaved,
so carefully trained in mind and hotly.
EVERY TOWN AND
VILLAUE IN CANADA
Has Someone Cowed by Dod4's Kelsey
Pins
Vanbrugh, Ont.. -- Sept. ith.-
t.pecisl.l-One more man has proved
to his entire satisfaction that the one
sore cure for sore back is Dodd'. Kid-
ney Pills. That tnao is Mr. S. Handke,
a well-known rtoident of this place.
He says.
"1 was laid up with sore back," Mr.
Handke says. "At limen 1 was not
able to get up it. the morning,. But
by the time 1 had taken one box of
Dodd's Kidney Pills 1 pound that the
pain was getting lea, and by the time
1 had taken six boxes 1 was all right
and able to go to work again. I want
to say to any titan who suffers from
sore bark that Ikldd's Kidney Pills are
the only remedy 1 world re^ mend.
They saved tole n large (helot's bill and
much lost time."
iodations, which will 1e tented in the
course of a few days, make the pro-
vision that in lower school examina-
tion for entrance to the normal 'schools
and faculties of education• middle
school examination for entrance Into
of tye and wheat Hour, of raise and
salt, hut 'still the root of living is
dnot.letl.
the flrrt examination. •ornilting that
suhjeret ami the bona' subject, and his
etaodimg on tae amend exaeinatiue,
lnelndboa a former s abject, are reels
R('RNi R IN PRA NCR.
.•rpep lel err..pr:two wr111ee ay ti.1.
F Mille■ ar•.i ■set ala I.g.Aee 1. . awadlu
..••••••••/..
Niece the depart two to the frontlet,
I ha.. ainenr,d far Into the country ia
several dieseling,. from Pari•.
Yesterday I traveled well ny..• tun
miles neer the Ane rand., per riwg
through villain. after frillier in the
...nine 1 became aware of souse us -
' seal ox.dteesent.
At every village, at every level
armlet rer every railway bridge mewed 9M sere, of the Reps teed lit
1w��„,„,,fes %b.
to til defame. shoe. tehoe.e tneresbi Be r sor.lved ke
om s l bareof puns, or es: baso- -s s.s .&
il..,ir i',p,le .•.' ^•. aet.....rd'T: 444441
-Th. palace of the Al.bop of Vend-
a! on the ontnklrta of Cardiff, Wats.,
was burned. s�C - •- a._. -,
. xt.at h her removed fin ag .I resident
of U.lenrne township in the person of
Me glees/or Will tame, who pawed
away on Thursday. August 19th H.
sue in hi. Mitch year. TM .fere.«d
etwm. of I'n1tnd Empire 4..; *1 ist sleek,' are wrtm rein
hi. grandfather having m.e.w1 wvledlewase•sow
le he ri
s•,1>bprerm.�r�-maasrmmw
Penne Ivanat tps. of the wast = hure.•s�. ��shyiL�are
of the Atomic -an revolution. Wain the
.rpine;• •W mi/ aswsswm to /ora ssbmaka•
�
d.ew1 was a lad of twelve
he father woe (011.1 hy a fall hoes ej ��
horse and t the
into lust
ado ettedtle a• �� wwmtii. h b•ee
go out hon tb. worts and deo nettle for f+� ammo one
hisaself. How well Ire suceseded
l brewrgh indite rJ' perseverance and
thrift ray be judged frog. the stoat
t hat as the those of hie death he pre
W. ACHESON 8 SON
Ladies' Knitted Coats
AWAY BELOW (HALF PRICE
Thirty new pure wool and wool and silk Golf
Coats in all colors and styles. New sample
garments. They are plain and fancy stripe styles.
Regular 83.00, $4.00 and $4.56 at each.... $2.50
Silk Buying
Silks have advanced in prices—many lines
from 20 to 30;,, already. Several of our best
lines of which our purchases were very large, we
clear at same price as last season.
36 -inch wide heavy black silk Pailette for
dresses at- waists, worth regular 81.25, at ,per
yard .{ $1.00
Black Satin Duchess dress silks, 38 to 4o
inches wide, quality warranted. Special at per
yard... r $11.23
New Model Corsets
A La :,race Corsets, every pair of latest
model and made from excellent materials and
best rust proof boning. All sizes in all styles,
at per pair Tae, $1.00 31.23
Hosiery Special
Boys' and girls' Rib Wool Hose, full
weight, elastic and soft yarn, double heels and
toes. All size 6 to to. Regular value 35c, at
per pair 2c
Ladies' Underwear
Fleece Lined Underwear, Vests and Draw-
ers, 20 dozen special. Regular 5oc a garment
at each - 40c
1 W. Acheson 0 Son
Relieve Your Mind
of tie wor-
ries inci-
dental to appointing an individual as trustee of your estate, each
a3 -
Will he' live to fulfil the trust? Will he fall Al or be away
when most wanted? Will he neglect lois trust for his own affairs?
Wi11 he prove unfaithful?
These are all possibilities. But you may leave than out of
consideration in entrusting the adminietration of your estate to
this strong, conservative Company.
Call or write for all information desired.
THE LONDON & WESTERN TRUSTS CO. LIMITED
382 RICHMOND STREET. LONDON, ONT.
SIR GbO. Oa0ORS, [.C., President
ions B. 11100131. Meal r
1
GAIL
TABLE
SAuI' •,■
FRS iturisw°
Isn't this the Salt you have always wanted
- -a Sah that stays dry and tree running,
alt the year round -and especially in
damp. rainy weather ?
"Regal" Salt Is the (toast grain ol
Windsor Salt prepared by a won proms
under perfectly hygienic methods mekkbig a pule
and paefs tee, pogo ..e... ti .•'
mememamilEMIRM
rt,
W i I
of nerves'
e1=
Drs
M
25 Cents "1" pay for THE SIGNAL Will,
sed of
thiterewitt veto.