HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1914-9-17, Page 2o; 14, we; •..e .. .._..
It Tuoau,AT, tumult$*& 17, BHA
THE SIGNAL ; OOD$RJON t ONTARIO
A. 1. wDWill
Al WS Aldi ell111111111110
Tint ss i. S...rtea t nf►M7Mga�kiTMA
btu ta.e�surrwe il'•aaa --Oe. Dealer and IRy
pati a.! ?N= Yt.d .tnetly la advent* (M.
Dollar wW los a...�: to tubae ib.n In the
tatted fusee0 dee rate le One Dollar and Fata
Cea+t..trietly la .elven.. Subscriber. who
tall to tonsils Tim sur*i. rematerly by moil
will center . tartar by aoeeeluilos the putts.•
err *Rho he t.ct.t as early agate a. pow,lbe. Wheel
• chaose of anther la derived, both old and
the new adder.. should be divan. ltemIttanose
may be mode by h.uk draft, expel.. mousy
Order. vont -dice order. or registered letter.
flabectipliow away 0011OOMNIOD at arty time.
A uvea t tat so Tait rata -Kale. for display and
OJntraet advertherninote will be given os appli-
cation. Legal end other .im9lar ad.certfstw.ut.•,
tea put* per line for ae.t (oration and four
cont. per line for coat .ub.wqueut ineerUou.
p ienwared by a .cele Of voila noap.trfl-tw.Ive
Ilan• to au Inch. Hu.tur.. card, of .iz 44..0
, .ad under, Five taunter. per year. A.Iverti e-
meeats at I.o.t. Found, tltr.ynd. !Situation.
Vacant. Mit nation. Wanted. Heo.e. tar Sale or
to Rent. Form. tar Rale or to Kent. Artlgee
tar .1.le. ale.- tot• exceeding eight Ilne-, TV. oat y -
eve ewer. ASCII f.. motion ; One Duller fur Set
copoo the 11hy lent. for cacti auto. scent mouth.
Larger adverts -eluent. In pre ion. An-
n ouoe ruert. to otdlsary r Int try., ler.
Contriver line. No notice lir thus Twenty
ft.. cont.. Any .penial notloe. the object n''
whluhi. the p.e*st.ry benefit of any Jodi. id -
wit or a.•ocl .!foe, t . br con.•aered an &dt•er-
ll.eaienl and ct.ars.d arroordiogly.
7'u CuaurarunuKN1.-1 h -.[le npor.lim of
our .1,bre.itw,. and reader. 1. cordially b-
e fit .ward• making Tim eii'Ai. a+,eekly record
of all Wool. county and di.grtotdol►.aw Nu cool
muale.tton will be a•tended to unlene it con-
tain. the o+mc and •1 hire.. of the wt ter. n:,l
a.ee•aaril) tor y Ibh , i• /II. tot a, sn erldeo.e
of Rood Oulh. New. nen.. .hould tech THE
SIfiNAL. oche cot later than t1-edneeday eeee
admen week.
TH 1 itSI1A l-. s1•:1'TEM HER 171.1 1911
THE TRUTH ABORT GcRMTNY
From lee New York Thee..
-Some of the chief men of the eau -
pit ea have put froth a book that it pro-
fessedly written as the appeal of Ger-
mauy for the sympathy? 1.0.1 moppet.t
of the 'recede of the United State.'
Among the anthers of the volume are
a former chancellor. a Held marshal!.
a'ptesident of the reichstag, several
university professor-, prominent men
of business and flamer, and some are
of princely title. A care -that (enlist.
pleaders. of this high dualnclion moat
11 truth need buttres ing: and it Ls an
occasion fur reg•et (11 .t they hare not
teen able to wake a better defence.
The blame doe. not rest with throe
No voice or pen, however el apnent ur
gifted, 1.40 curf)•inee uu imp titled
world of the jusece of Germanys
cause or change- the rooted belief ut
le right-thinking men that she ire lea thug
for end, that, .dewed, would
t
the advance of civilization and make
the pears, the pruspeeity. and the
kapp,uees of the nations Item •.•cure.
that refuse to bow to hie will. The
German ambition becomes a matter of
eatie.W meows to me it is alarming.
fur It is certain we (ate that with
Ruses• beaten hack, Mislead sod
France orusbed, and Belgtuw and
Natured seised, Use canning of some
cause of coullict with oureelve* would
not be long delayed. We cannot be
expected to welcome the compulsion
to spend our sebstaoce in • ram with
Germany for military supremacy.
We ere not agreeably impressed by
bl asphruious tempered ir.rocstiunr of
divine favor upon bloody enterprises.
'These gentlemen of Germany plead
in vaiu. We can give thew no help.
To quote Ih•ir own words in a truer
ernes than their own, ober cuuutry of
George Washington and Abraham
Lincoln places lentil upon the ride of
just caul. and one worthy of human•
Ity's blearing.'" —
BENEFIT CANADIAN TRADE
View of British Financiers is That the
War will be a Short one
There is no rennin tor any Canadian
Hnawclel panic and that there ►u •o
mum' why U. neda should not. benefit
greatly from the European war, was
the opinion exprrsrrd by 1)r. Adam
Mbortt, Cereedlan civil bet -vire cow-
wi.sirner, on his return Thursday
Irene a top to England. Dr. Shorn
seed that he had interviewed many
pt-ou.iurut fivaucial men in London
with regard to monetary conditions,
etu.l tier the e-onL-11 prevailed gen.,
elan), that C'at eei or. rel,l buffer the
testi. have the rot eters. recovery frog*
the effects -of the u,... and ul:i,ustrly
wake none Irons it titan any other
country in the world. -
-According to the Luntion flnauci-
ere, the war will nut be of !wig dura-
tion,- he declared. "Many ret theta
expect that the struggle will be prac-
tically decided by C'hlistmss, and, iu
any event by next *piing. ter prob-
lem of financial and fermi supplies tar
Germany and Austria being the de -
lei mining factor.
**With the British wavy in control
of the seas, aid food . tiro! ies for the
allies from abroad tieing thereby
guaranteed; with the Huaucial te-
anin ces of Russia. France 51111 G r ea t
B. rain considerably grater t hat.
those of the enemy, weld with the pros-
pect of both G. etre• y and Austria
being unable to menitain the portent
pacts or to till their fields near yrat,
Dr. Shorn 'aid the pitmans ftulu
inanci•d stt'agernty end from shortage
of fool sunsets.* in Awtria end Ger-
many should compel them In coarse to
terms with the allies within a very
few menthe...
ArJo Canadi*n conditions affected
by the war, Dr. Sboetl p•)fnred out
that le Caine of the limitations 'et
European supplies of food, lumber
and the other necessities of life whish
Canada ptiolucee there Mutat lir ren in-
creased demand from Europe for the
things which are produced by the
Dolnlnion from its natural tesourcee.
This increased demand meanie higher
prices and a btiululus to the bass in-
dnstrir, of Canals twinkle in turn,
moat menu incre*tled national pros-
perity in practically• every hien of
economical production in Canada.
Before the war broke out, *aid Dr.
Shot to there was in grocer* a neces-
sary and salutary- readjustment of
financial rand industrial conditions.
1-tl.an development had far outdis-
t awed a¢I icultural . development. The
floating of eecurilies of a'1 kinds for
iafluserial enterprises, the wurhrtow
growth i+1 cities enormous expendi-
tures and borrowing .fee municipal.
p,oviucial and national pu•posei•, real
relate *peculation and all the other
concomitants of hemp tunes bad de-
veloped a condition where European
financiers were already calling • belt
and flnauciet stringency head already
made itself severely felt. On the
other hand, agricultural production
bad not by any means kept pace with
urban and industrial expansicn.
I"These wen of Germany ask tis to
gree no bred to the lied of their ene-
Iosier. In this hand of enlightenment
public opinion dies not take int 1) on
anybody'. lies. Wtl keep no mind of
Ppee version& sent out front Lnrdoa or
ali.. We have sought truth in its
undefiled coiner, in the Bean!. white
pipet and in the n.ernoraud of the
L;erm•n foreign ether, in the ob..e1 re d
Iand acknowledged policies of the
coenhatant nations, and in the ut-
terances uf thee wen ot authority.
The princes and erofet•rols who pay
us the cum aent of this appeal to
cur cat.did judgmentnwill not impeach
the teetiwoey of theta foreign Ake.
we supposes, yrt if there mons steepen -
sl o of judgment ,n the firnd weeks of
-the war. doubt vanished and full cun-
eiction came when the Times publuh-
ed the official documents sod record,.
The people of Anemic* there read of
the untiring efforts of Sir Edward
e Grey to reach a peaceful adjustment
e through a conference of the powere,
e of his appeals to which France, Rus-
sia and Daly Rare immediate assent-
. ing response, which Germany alone
met with evasion, excuse, disfavor
and refusal. From Germany's mem-
- they learn that the Kaiser's
✓ government had front the fleet sus-
tained and encouraged Aureola in *
r policy of war and had denied the
,i• rights of any other power to stand
(pt between her and the Sereien objects
* of her wrath. It is wholly Rutile, it is
t an affront eo our„intelligence, for
✓ these German suppliants tor our favor
4, to tell us now that ltuslia and Eng-
er-im• land brought on the war, Ibat Ger-
i many
any did not cho.s*e theme, h of blood,
that the groped was forced into the
reds of the Gelman emperor.
' 'Nor can our favor or sympathy be
won by misreper.entiog the motives
of England. Fiance and Russia. to
the face of Sir Edward Grey's labors
for peace wby tell us that England
'encouraged this wee' because ebe was
dotes ruined to check the cotmtneeciat
growth of Germany P Why tell us
t sit the war was 'provoked by Russia
becau.s of an outrageous desire for re -
wimps 1'' We have knowledge of the
feet, the proofs are before us. yet
(bone Gelman advocate.. talk to u. a•
though we had not art !veil from the
moon. W. ear u..lnnr-d by their
picture of the Inas peril. n by is it
that Germany fears the Slav ? Eng-
land is sen .id, France baa no fear.
Italy. Belgium. Hollered are s11 uodis-
twbed. Wi should bk• to see • amis.
.' when -M `o% F - �4 sal.
wb•a .0 t rest % i. c•Im.
Berman, steeds In terror of the Slay.
Tim anthem of this buok make •
we etebed d.fem e of Germany's crime
• agebeet inbw,oienal morality and
her In 'MAPS d soutrsl Belgium- 'in
our puce the goroeemest of the
United States wnold not have acted
differently.' Speak fee yuutselvse,
"w1
�t41m•n. Oar Melt repeal of a
e edswte that was• great peat of
lent Tram* to be in conflict
•wit one of are le• speaks for un.
:lint ft Is Not upon three prevent
things that ear winds chiefly dwell.
r are taking ,bought of the future.
We are a great oration We do not
become Ism great through overel.ngh
terfeg or diminishment ai the bands
of a European military potter that for
yeses hes menaced the peace of the
1, rfatihn, by her schemes of ygr•ndises-
e,�ldndt. We beta pre•eosione in mase
G ytttrten of the stole* and commercial
'>[I M
Tlet4fts In ale. This appeal for our
sympathy end moral w t empire ill -grace from too sir Oct• of as
err W $ *Mei ruler whom am Goa It le to
lift der j♦e peskiest of world
cannot look wkb
.wlt r•1 epee the effort
nigh en. p•Mmt1 heel ib° yg to
niMM
Eminent Coiffure Bpscialist is Coming
Prof. Dorenweud of the Dorenwend
('ompiny,Toronto, will le at the hotel
Bedford. duderich, oo Tuesday, Sep-
tember '. nd, when he will toe in con-
sulation with their many patron in
this vicinity. The Dorenwend Com-
pany is well known theuugbnut the
Dominion and their vents. here are
always signalized by activity in their
lire. During the visit there will be.
shown a sarnple eto:k of the most
fashionable hair -goodie and the latest
modes in everything pertaining to the
hair. A specialty will be the Doren-
weod monitory patent toupee, an in-
vention which should be examined by
every roan who is bald. A cordial in-
vitation is extended to the people to
call and inspect these goods.
GERMAN VilrEL$ TIED LIP
Commerce of the C.. ase y =sigmas far
Leon of Carrying Power
The following review. •pp.npi4alq
to the time.. end meaty 10 tie (a-
etruotlon met 'sitorinsteps' it ooave s,
appeared • few days ago in • Pbil-
pbta paps, : -
The German vessels tied up in our
Atlantic coast port., uuwrrous and
important as wtoe of the .hips are by
rea►oo of their size .tad value, repre-
sent but • tithe of what the Eustirh
"embargo'. on Gee nlsn .:owmens
meatier, for the tunnege ..f the tauter
nation constitutes more Oran t.ne-
teuth of that of the world and at tise
close of the putt year ire dreg -mat -r
.Iraeuabipr nituitered mote than lou
thousand. maklog it the .ec•ond carrier
of the woe Id'. commerce. To shut off
the trade of enormous entry ports,
6W:1111111 lfatuu.irg and Brennen, is ug
little vletory to a oat►un wbieb fere-
'sestet a London, • live. pool mei •
Glasgow. Thus. con.idetAbly more
their one hundred .teamshei Imes have
been operating regularly out of Haar
Iwlg, tro•tbirtaa 01 toe Lumbar heists
Gern/•o lines. lir oar you tee neer
sea trade of thin our Gertuanpert has
sent forth, loth in its regular and
tramp 'orrice. a total of nearly leev-
enteen thousand shits cal vying crews
whose aggregate iumb•t• amount to
thirty-three thousand. Froin Brews
other great Heels of merchant 'shit s
11,5. be't.d annually read In Ibe c NOVO.
01 $ year more titan tot o bushed
Ih nie.rid shit. bare, here, enterer( and
clr.,.d f•orti the p i ., .1 Illatutooir.
Bremen. Steed", teeming. Kiel, 1..
eek tend Eunigebrrv, fr. to whe••Icr
they !ray,. colied Gel man? s tease.-
factur.d greeds in particularly la•ge
quanlitier lir Lutplend eat 'be n.uu-
Iti..r l•ordetice on the Baltic. 1'he
1 •egret portion of tlernmay's exports
to the I'ni'.d eater b yr ,ono
through Hamburg and Btewen, lei.
et en Sou.h America's lers p.pulou.
nations have reritered more flout Ger- '
runny than the United States.
•••
The set vice of lbe Berman ships bas
been world -wale, linking not cele
Getman tarts with the harbors of
other lietinn•, but binding together
aunty repo-termsu trade rrntwt s. At
the. outbreak of the war one of the
German lives hal sixty-eight sere:ere
in operetiop no, minty ocean and tuucb-
ing every port i•1 impar tenet. Today
this service la editing in harbors le
Mexico. Central Atomics. the West
Indies. un the coasts of *mob Armes
ice, ■l mg the 'may harbor* of the'i
tarot y - thousand - Odle - °oast -lies of
K hope, oo the were( sow of Abiola.
in the pate cif. Amble. the Persian
gulf, Ceylon, Calcutta. the Straits Set-
tlement, China, Korea. Stie.is and
Japer. Even our own Pa:ific .deet
haw felt, the war..fTec1 iu its interfer-,Ii
ince with the wailing. of a Getman
line that ran 'hip. from the United I
States to Japan. While Hamburg bad
five lines linking it with North Amer -I
Ica it h.d fourteen liner reaching out
to Asia and Australia, twelve to .Sloth
America and thety-there to England.
From the portsun the North Sea ship.
railed on an Overage of one a (ley to
New Yon k, every other day to Hcsz 1
and the Argentine, twice t. week to I
Africa, eve,y fourth day to Alu:rali.. I
and once re week to !mil e. Today not •
only the line etrau.ets and the drift- ,
ing (German tramps of the or•..an hare
been stopped. but a host •d Bdtush. '
Russian. French and Japsn.le ►easess
as well that weer wort to di.ebarn*
and take on csrg •e. at the Berm in
ports. I
In Germane, eleven mila latlf per I
cent of the papulation have tweet en-
gaged in Com0131ea and the greater
group of its neople engaged in menu-
factuting hate teen able to convert,
their products iota cash through the ;
efficiency of the Gerw.w drips and the
Getman pert*. A ce.nmerc.• amount-
ing to nearly four billion dollars a year
has never leen 1locka1 d before and
one cannot easily speculate on what
the natural result will be iu lands
which now must tely largely oar Rot
terdam and Amsterdam to supply lbs
needs of both Germany and Austria. a
population nearly notal 10 Ibat of nor
forty-eigbt states. For the \:crit Sew
ports have served Austria far mote
than the easily blockaded pp els oo the
Adriatic, more of Auste la's experts
having left Hamburg in a year than
have been .hipped from Telmer.
Wars bare wade and nomads .hip-
ping centers A hundred yeah age
wben Europe wad tons by the Na-
poleonic wan the youthful l nited
States rose to the Ant rank as • carry-
ing country. in describing this epoch,
John Bach McMaster said : "In two
years almost the whole carrying trade
of Europe was in tbeir hoods- The
merchant flag of every belligerent,
save England, disappeared from the
sea." In 1W)9 our tonnage was 367,71,
and In 1810 it had leaped to 98t.o111,
the highest Stark attained ualil with-
in recent yearn. But we were early-
ing then from e11 the poets and as
McMaster has .aid : "Fo'm Veva Cruz,
from C.arthagena, from Ls Plata, from
the French colonise. in the Antilles,
from llayewne, front Dutch (Guises.
from the Isles of France and Reunion.
from Batavia and Menlla. great fleets
of Amer Tran'Ibeeebaa:asa.-.riled. (ret
Um United Suttee, there to neutralise
Um voyage and theses go on to
Europe.” But the ,•tbetpicture of the
war came speedily In the embargoes
nod the etfeet of the war of 1811 whys
our carrying trade was paralysed sed
the exports of New 1 ork tell from
$19,9110,000 to 41351,010)• while the
wharves of many an Aneeri•aen diae-
boe were empty and deserted. Wan
have Inevitably benefited the com-
merce of neutral nations. During and
immediately after our Civil war the
fimrmaa 11ee11 paid d(eideege four and
flee times the 'Lamont they havede-
chimedIn recast years • in why SfIgniah-
American and RuesoJapalsa.e wan
the English and German (triers pro-
fited and when the Bore war occupied
the attention of tis. British it was •
MS messy -making period for Hennas
shipping. Today, with the rinsing off
of the normal and ordinary derriere M
many hundreds of ships these should
be rnIisooppeessed to the American reach•
• sew 1.14 of opportunity in meeting`
the rpsh.meste of ib. mobil ode of
porta smattered es the ..vee sot..
-Dr. Lindsay Webb, of Brighten•
died Ibere as the result of mistaking
toadstools for mushrooms.
—Major W. G. (,ores• of London, bas
been put in command of the Army
Service corp. at Velma! lier.
0)
INE BL000 IS TilE
$TREAM Of LIII
Pure Mood Is Absolutely
"FRUIT -A -TIMES f1 PURIFIES
These Wonderful Tablets,
blade of Fendt Juices, Are The
Best Of All Tonka To
Purify And Enrich
The Blood.
Trete, rich blood can flow only is a
class body. Now. a clean body is one
in which the waste matter is regularly
mad naturally eliminated from the
system. The blood cannot be pure
wiles the skin action is weak, when
the stomach does nut digest the foal
**roped y , when the bowels do not move
regularly, when the kidneys are
strained or overworked.
Pure blood is the result of perfect
health and harmony of stomach, laver,
bowels, kidneys sad skin.
"Fruit-a-tives", by their wonderful
action on all these organs, keeps the
whole system as clean as Nature in-
tended our bodies to be clean.
" Fruit-s-tives " tones up, invigo-
rates, strengthens, purities, clans and
gives pure, rich, clean blood that is, in
truth, the stream of life.
"Fruit -a -tires" is sold by all dealers
at soc. a box, 6 for $2 5o trial size 25c.
or sent postpaid on receipt of price by
Fruit -a -lives Limited, Ottawa -
1 SItEP EOR BREEDING
1
BUSY TIME FOR FLOUR MILLS
Canadian Flour Mills will )(un at Full
Capacity to Meet Demand
• Orders front the D 'minion and On-
tario government& fee en aggregetr , f
LIMON l ar.-rle uf flow are only the
beginning uf the Ince.-,.ed demand on
the Brew mills of Oan*1a as • result of
the war.
The mobilization of the arin:es of
Europe will result in t. large t eduction
in the sewage .uwu to wheat in that
continent. That reduction in acre:.go
and enneg•lent reduction in yield will
gi re ly hoer ea -e the denetnd for wheat
and flour from (ober producing coun-
tries. t'nnada will Had a txady mar-
ket tor all the wheat and flout vile can
export during ton war. The Hour
wills of Canada will be kept busy
grinning Canadian wheat into Cana-
dian Hour for export to the euolher
coo rite at lhir time of trial- '
In the home market there aice will
be au i,rreasd demand for A ,ur. The
tendency or many will be to nae more
Neal and other ►tapir art tele. of food
Inateid 44'80me of the luxuries of Goo
table. This will mean an incl eased
eonrum9 ion of 11 rue.
Thus it would uppeer that the 70110
Inru who are working In the flour
trills of Canada- are asenred of con-
tinued employment throughout. the
war. 1t is possible the number of
employee+ Ir. Alar miles will have to
be ire -leased, but even if an increase
should Is. uoneeeseary the continued
opr►';ion of thee industry will wean
the cit cola' of epproxlroalely futtr
million dollars a year in wages to
Canadian workmen_
Real Cause *ef the War •
—Near) .8 the an .f the Gana-
ellen
.•a
ellen tloe(lagsstam equipped with 0 1 -
Ata sad sole WS W needy te more.
Mars TAN* W Observe In FeessNsg
• tM raven Plock
ter
la starting a farm Sock of
It is Important that the harmer
have an Ideal before hlm as
kind of sheep be wants. W• cannot
say that there Is any best breed, for
each breed has Its own merits and
deflclrucln. The mutton -producing
sheep are divided into two classes—
the long-..tacia and the Downs. 01
the former we have the Leicester,.
Cotswolds, sod Lincolns; of the lat-
ter
aster the Shropshire*, Oxford Downs.
tlouthdowds, and Hampshire Downs.
Roth thew classes of 'hoop have
their merles The long -wools are lar-
ger, yield a larger clip of wool, and
are possibly slightly more prolific than
the Downs. On tbe other hand. how-
ever, neither their mutton nor their
wool is quite Ito good quality, and they
are not so hardy. This latter fact la
due to the nature of their fleece,
writes Donald Ewlug In Farmer's
Magazine. ileing long and open. tt
-Parts" dowu the centre of their backs
when wet. This allows the rain to
penetrate to the akin of the sheep,
w tbat the, are wet through after
every rain. and cold and Catarrh are
:nore or less prevalent among them
during the fall and spring. Against
tots the wool of the Down breeds 1s
c:.me and tight, and even a very heavy
lain does not penetrate it. After a
drenching fall rain they will get up
from under the tense or tree where
they halls found shelter, shake them-
selves, and be as dry and comf_rtable
as before the rain. Added to this
1s the fact that the Downs yield a
fine y. alley of mutton and wool slight-
ly more valuable than the long -wools.
Still, as we said t -•lore, we cannot
claim that :':ere is any "best" breed.
Every prospective sheep -raiser must
choose or himself. following his own
preferences.
Selecting Sheep
Having ch. -.en the breed, it L tm-
partant that certain well-defined prin.
ciples be followed to selecting the In-
dividuals. -taro are not dealing hero
Ith the raising of breeding stack, but
shemerai ing in a comnLerctal way.
At the same time, then selecting the
foundation fu,- the flock, it 11 better
to get pure -.reds or good grade.. con-
firming very well to breed type", rather
than cross-breds or mongrels- It
lends character and value to our lambs
if they conform fairly well to some
recognized breed tyre. Aside from
',reed type, ':rare are certain charas -
ten we must have.
First. we want constitution. Title
is Indicated by a good heart -girth.
bright eye. wide muzzle. and pink
akin. This :net 1 regard as ratter Im-
portant. if we will part the wool so
that we can see the akin, ewe will
notics a de.;lded •difference is differ.
ent sheep. Some will les decl.ed?y
bluish in tinge, while others syn
grate pink. ',Ve should avend :,Rehab
o pa. skies, and choose a geed, plat
it skin as indi.-ating a good coast:tutlos
and good c:rculatlon.
Then we must look for lte;h-grodec-
! ing qualities. As the beat meat le
found along the back acd loin. and
steep.
should
to the
Tieunderstand lhid war you may
(osget all ahem H.rbeosollern and
Hapsburg. Slav and Trutor, Serena,
and the Archduke Francis Ferdinand,
says the 8•turdey Evening Teat. A
monarch applied the match, but the
institution of monarchy had littler to
do with it. Republican France con-
tributed A. much to the conA titration
es w.usarcbidal Austria, and demo-
cratic Essg1p1•od almost.. much w Au-
tocratic Ro•ela-
Ther. was • situation in Europe
which could issue only In war or dis-
armament,
iearmament, and artiste in tbe latter
direction were unavailing. Military
competition among the greetwe
bad been steadily ioereasing forPn
ten
years until the teoaioo had become al-
umna unbearable. Then cams a su-
preme effort. Germany raised ber ex-
traordinary war contribution of •
quarter of • billion dollars by dra.tie
epeeist taxes on top of the heavy or-
dinary taxation. Frame lengthened
the tarns ot active 04Iltary service
from two years to three Russia
adopted a vcMM of basely augment-
ed military expenditure. England
lifted bey naval appe..p(falloos or an
unprectdeated figure. -
A rah..an't stand oe tiptoe Iod.So-
ltely. Military corn uoo could
7Eaeb.q► r r. Ton.
mast be a s •• bt.
The pewkfmM. maser- Duerr's ir-
ritation aa•Met Sweets—w•. tri v W
Trot
real mese was eta -
carefully
evepIdue and boteed-•-
served and exploited every
where by the military state and the
noisy leer who end • prodt is war.
TM grand meek is tire& of them fee
nesters of war is that barbarous pat -
Amass wbiek is merely a modern es-
trssion of the tribal sentinteet trot
mode the iodise whir Hewed on the
sowsib ride of the creek eesaldee h •
pumas duty to hill owe living on the
n orth aide whenever he got a Asset..
Whatever the earl ei this war there
will to another some day if il}rsvneh-
men are still ta.gbt t• bat. the Ger
mane. Germane to hate 12-mistss, *ad
SO On.
In the hindquarters, we must look tot
• strong, broad back and loin, and
ter deep hindquarters, carrying tie
.tesh well down toward tee beet. in
fact, the same general form which In
dictates meat form in the steer also
i tndlcates It In the sheep. The geasrl
Dorm should be blocky and square.
1 with good top and underlines. not too
long legs, and that general roundness
and amoothenesa, as indicated by feel-
ing the animal over, which show.
quality io the sheep aa well as In the
steer-
The wool, though of minor import -
alma is still important, and we must
see to It so far as we can that the
sboep we are selecting to form our
breeding flock have remonabiy good
wool -producing characteristics.
KIDNEY HEADACHE
is e.ra••d from the bleed hslog Hidebou-
nd witb ark .cid poisons ehwelat. 4.
the heed. Anti -Vole P111. ewe all
fermi of kidney tremble. They aro WV
gond and en sere Y. J. Bwtland grams -
toe, them. Be eery yeti get AMI-IIrIe
PRS R. V. Marler no every beg.
Mohd only at P. J. 8.11•nd's ease swim
4044•Vh•oi1`
Pearls of Groot Price
There was exhibited at a Court
jeweller's in Bond Street a striking
eoMsotloa cd pearls. One magnificent
rags 1s wailed at •o less than =300,000:
rw►lf•sibl�it aatdbe rerneitOnes; Jia•
part• perfectly symmetrical. 176.11.)
was asked- beet probably the most
wegetette areleiw In ter entlwrtkrn was
• *taste accuse of gens of extra
ordinary bee. the matnhir.g and grade
alta. Miss superb The cost of this
article wag 110.06•
iC Sae of the *loses were lost 1t
wenld be Impowdbes le remises it with
eta exact dwpllc•te Reek and pink
part* also friend • plane to the .z-
4lMttou; whilst • rooming reference
meat be sada to • pale of button
sleaped ear rings valved at 446.006.
Men Otp1MHng In the Hl,hland•
gmwggtiag appears et111 to reetlnue
m the Rig4laaide. not theta* officers
tesestly dfeostered In the district of
Inman a sew smeastiag •stn sad
feed Maim M • mire fist we.es tkle
fishing vtlLw .1 Breadalleeb sad
W. ACHESON 8 SON
Ladies' Suits
AND
Separate Skirts
WE are showing a very select lot of
Ladies' Suits, new and stylish tail-
or made, in navys, blacks and tweed ef-
fects. Coats are silk lined and splendidly
made. Sizes 32 -0 38. Special at $10.00,
$12.00 and $10.00.
SKIRTS
Serge* and Tweeds, all sines. New, at each $2.60,
........................ .... .*3.00,is.10and 64.00
RUGS and CARPETS
New English Rugs, Brussels, Tapestry, Velvet and Wal-
ton. Newt patterns and hest standard quality. All sizes,
203, 3*3, :(vi, 3ii4, 414 yards, at prices under regular
value.
WOOL BATTING
Pun Wool Batts, clean and scoured. light and fluffy.
Direct from the mill. Done up In 1 Ib rolls.
FLOOR OIL -CLOTHS and LINOLEUMS
New pattern', in all widths made. Oil both at per
*queer yard --. 25o and BOo
Linoleum' at per ►quare yard BSc, 40e, 60a and 60e
BLINDS
Standard Window Blinder in shades of greets. Heavy
roller and fully equipped. Regular 3Sc at.acb.............25o
NEW COATINGS
Plaids. Checks and Scold) Tweed styles. Pure Wool,
heavy and stylish. 64 inch goods, at per yard 111.00, 51.25
and .. . 51.50
Butterick Patterns for October all In stock.
W. Acheson 8 Son
"Regal" Salt is the
finest grain of the
famous Windsor
Salt — especially
prepared for table
use by the most
modern Salt Plant
on the Continent.
"Regal" Salt never
"cakes" —never
clogs up the shaker
—never gets damp
and sticky.
Ask your
Grocer. In
•
Buy Goods
Made in Canada
Buying foreign -made goods wont keep
Canadian factories open.
KELLOGG'S
TJIASTEIJCORN...ELAKES
is THE ONLY food product bearing
the Kellogg name that is made right
here in Canada. All others are import-
ed and do not help our own people.
,
YOUR MONEY spent on
CANADIAN -MADE GOODS
helps CANADIAN WORKERS
BATTLE CREEK TOASTED COIN FLAKE CO.
LIMIT1D.
LONDON, ONTARIO, CANADA
Cutswill pay for THE SIGNAL to the
tad of the present year.