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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1915-4-22, Page 3THE SIGNAL : GODERTCA : (ONTARIO THVYDAT, APtIL IVIS $ If you suffer from this painlul malady, pply Zam-Buk.t it is purely herbal, quickly eases the dull, gnawing pain,stopsbleeti- ing, ends the irritation, and In • short time com- pletely and per man- e n t l y cures. Zam•Buk should oe In every boos. Mrs. C Hanson , Poplar, R l' sari. • l .uttered foe years with bleeding piles The pun was often so bad I c,. .Ll hardly walk. fined remedy after reined v. and finally • n.lerwent as oyer. anon, but only got imp wary relief. At lea I tried -lam-Buk. Piremerance with this roinpktely cued me and there ha. been no return of the trouble." 'Peeler Fee the Canadians la s long despatch dealing with re- =Vents at the front. Sir John �h referred to the -Canadians aa SeSows: "During the battle of Nouve Chapelle they held gsrt of the line allotted to the first army, and aL heue % they were not actually en- gaged In the train attack they ren- dered valuable help by keeping the enemy actively employed in front of their trenches. All the- soldiers of ('aneda serving in the army under my comntan•i have so far splendidly upheld the traditions of the empire, and w111, I feel sure. prove to be a great sour 'e of additional strength to the fcrcts in this country .'• Railwaymen May Strike TI. Canad.an is othtrho d of Rail- road Emp'oyes. of ehi. h :.Ir. A. B. Mosher of IliSfax is C:a d President. has lanced an uitirts:um to the mau- agement of the C9nadlan .:overnment Railways to the effect drat they w1:1 case work Inn •wdy by Friday , nl.-ss the GeaareI ST•Sag, r, Mr Is. F. Gute- Ls. meats arses -r tat:yes o' th brotherbced and sett t:a to tht!r satis- faction their n11-ged grteranccs. The new uteadhia loin of twenty- dve. m'1'ic : de:lar• ksa user-,14rg 1 . events! srribc d. Responsibility for the War. "War might have been avoided by a European cooferenos when and where Germany desired." the British Foreign Secretary, Mir Edward Grey, told an audleo:e in Loodoo on Match 22nd. He was acting as chairman of a gathering which was listening to a lecture on the strategy of the war. l)ootlnuiog, the Foreign Secretary said :—"tierutauy, from her experience in the Balkan conference, knew *he avid count on our goodwill, and that we were ready to do teat July what we did before. But Germany refused every butt ration, and on her tests fos- sil or►11 owe the appalling responsibility fur the war. We now know that Ger- many had prepared for war, and only Chow who have planned for wer eats prepare for at." Amid loud cheers Mir Kdward added :—"This is the fourth owe within living memory that Prus- sia bra made was upon Europe, and we are determined it shall be the lest. The ezpeniiture of hunched. of mil- Itone of wuI.ey and the lows of mil- lions of lives might have been avuided by a conference of the European powers held in London or at The Hague, or wherever and in whatever form Germany would have consented to bold it. 1t would have been far easier to settle the dispute le Lateen Atutria-Hungary red Servia, a bleb Germany made the occasion for the war, than it was to get successfully through the Behan ci ion of two years sato. In teerut years," the Foreign Seeretery want on to pay, "we have given Germany every assurance that any aggressive movement upon ber would receive no support from us. We withheld from her only one thing —the unconditional promise to stand aside however aggressive Germany herself might be to her neighbor. Last July, before the outbreak of war, France, Italy and Hussies were ready to accept a conference. Germany refused eves v suggestion ands for settling the dispute in this way, and on her must rest now and fur all time the appalling responsibility of having plunged Europe into thin tear." SICKLY CIILDREN PROMPTLY CURED. Baby's Own Tablets are an ideal medicine fur little ones. They regulate the bowels and stomach and promptly cure constipation, indigentiuo, ()old and simple (ever,, expel worms, cure colic and give baby health and bsppi- ness. Uuucerning them Mrs. Fred Vanelorder, Dunnville, Ont.. writes: "I have used Baby's Own Tablets for my four children and find they always give perfect satisfaction." 'the 'fair leu are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at '2.: cents a box froth The Dr. \Villiarn.. Medicine Co , Brockville, Ont. Taking Precautions. Jennie we.+ a gem of a servant girl, and ber mirtress was quite fond of her. She was taken aback when Jen- nie announced her approacbing.mar- riage. '•I hope, Jennie," she sail. "that you have given the matter serious consit:er odor. "Ob I have, ma'am," Wail the ~fleet. reply. "I've been to two fortune-tellers 1 a clairvoyant. meat and looked in a sign book. and dreamed on a lock of his hair, and been to one of these !asterologers. aria to a mee- jum. and they all say go ahead, ma'am. i ain't one to marry recklesalike, uta am.' A peck of trouble ie one thing that is mighty seldom -bort weight. Next in Importance is maitin, to Making a W ill provision, to ensure its being properly carried out. The interest of this Company in any estate which it is em- powered to administer is strictly impersonal. A!' things are done with the sole aim of fulfilling its trust with the highest degree of efficiency and faithfulness—in closest conformity with the expressed desires of the testator. Consult with us regarding the administration of your estate. AH information cheerfully furnished free. THE LONDON 86 WESTERN TRUSTS CO. LIMITED 382 RiCHMOND STREET, LONDON, ONT. .:R GLS. GIBBORS, C.G., President. JOHN R. MOORE, Mange, The Master Tire, 1 u io7 ' Trac..,. T1Gtrtic mere when you most need it -- and in the only tire not covered with chains on real elinpery days. DVNLOP TiRE dQ RUBBER GOODS C)MPANY. LTD. Head (RR -. TORONTO Rranehe. la Lading rm.. Mat.,. of Time for Aetomobika. Motor Truck., Moterrrrle., Hbtyeiee s -d Car age,. Rubber Belting. Parking. How, Heel. Met.. Tiling. end General Robber apae1.11 leu - - You'll do a ort of •unnin betlbne 7°tt strilleonythingas go,od as PERRIN BritishNavy WOMEN WHO ARE ALWAYS TIRED May Field Help its This Loner. Owen Creek, Mien. —" I cannot speak !s0 highly of your laodkfas- When through neglect or overwork I get run down and my Appe- tite lis poor and I have that week, but - •)ways tired I get a bot- tle of E. Pink - ham's •getable Compound, and it builds me up, gives me strength, and re- stores me to perfect health again. It V truly a great bless- ing to women, and I eaanot speak too highly of it. I take pleasure In recorn- mending it to others."—Mrs. ANNIE CAMEe0N, R.F.D., No. 1, Swan Creek, Michigan. Another Sufferer Relieved. Hebron, Me.— "Before taking your remedies I was all run down, discour- aged and bad female weakness. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound and used the Sanative Wash, and find today that I am an entirely new woman, ready and willing to do my housework now, when before taking your medicine it was a dread. I try to Impress upon the minds of all ailing women I meet the benefits they can derive from your medicines.' — Mrs. CHARLas Rows, R. F. D., No. 1, Hebron, Maine. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pink ham Med- icine Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter wil be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. RUQ SUCCEED IN SPRING CAMPAIGN esitAccomplished all They s.t Out de and Are Moving to Take Enemy In the R %r In spite of the mud -filled mountain pans re roads and thea len stresses a•tie wh1 ch the arrival of the spring thaws has bro:ght. the Russian cel,.:en: :hat have fought their w: y t`'rou=h the Lupkcw Pass o,' th Carpathians art laboriously moving en'tward to at.ac: from the rear :he AustroG..rman form 'hit have b.en ho!d,ing hast so for g the Russian at erepts to char the 1 %sok P.as trot : rho lir.rthera entrance. • "In this rav'a.e.:t to rr:p oe:- oa the principal fosses cf •bo!r er-elay In e rlant titre. the Ru a a s have now eels:d he lf!.ts between the village; of Te:efotch and Zuclia, •couthea+t o: Lentos Pars: The Rrs:Ian poa't'ou on these he g!-ts has teen co so d=ied. and Pc.rsar.:d re,'crta that tic Austrians. In futile coua'eratt:cks, bare lost heavily, 1.140 prisoner; . tatting into the hands of the R_satan troops. icnna. on the other hand; assert] that the Rt:ss:an ,, onslau ,h's 1n the . vicinity of Telerotch have been "viciously repulsed." and c aims over _,?e.0 prisoners in the last two days. • A lengthy official rs iew of the Cas paellas operations issued bi the Rus- sian War Office Intimates that Lie military task, undertaken by the Grand Dube Nicholas as essential be tore the beenning of the spring thaw has been accompll+hed with complete success, the Russians having estab Robed themselves In ail the prasiticnt they set out to conquer during that period. The report stabs that 70,000 prisoners. Including 900 officers. hays been taken In the fighting since about the time of the fall of Peremysl • month ago. NEW ADVANCE BEGUN Meet Important Oain Made by Allies eines Last Autumn The allies now are taking the In• IWUve. Whether in the Vosges, In the Wcevre. on the western front, at Notre Dame de Lor,•tte, or in lie:• earn, along the Brit eh lines the Ger- mans are now daily cn the defensive. The first report detailing the most important British eperatto,s since the Neuve Chapelle biter, almost six weeks ago. was issued Monday night by the War Office. It tells of the cap- ture and retention, after many furious counter-attacks, of HUUI No. 6(1, near the village of Zonneheke on the Ypr s front. An advance of th-ee tulles was made. The official report says that hundreds of German dead are lying in front of the position Unofficial re ports say that 100 Germans have been taken prise ere and that the fighting was as fle a as at Neuve Cbapelle and the Ge an losses heavier. Hill No. n.0 is some two miles southeast of Lll1eteke and about five miles from Tpres. it 1s the most easterly spur of a range which swings around on the aorta of ' the valley of the Lys from Ypres to Cassel. There are n eminenees of any account farther ens' along the line of the RriUah advance toward Reuling and Thiel. orta.is Nt,raa bear Word. bas been received of the death at the front from over -fatigue tit Mi•a )tit+ Richardson. a was with the mint Oanodtas eoatingent Mise Ricb- nnesea who ens a danobter re the Mils Mr Artie* Richardson et Ragtag, sat_ a sister of Mn. (Asap) Ili. slate et K TUMMY Inde War kens O11sw with a beelberisaaw, •s Ssalf Abloom was a maw with Me Ama_Ism burgs - FUTILE ARt RAIDS 1 SIND English Shore Vlstted by Oseinesi Flynn Rut Little Damage Done Three hostile air raids were made against England within silty hours last week but in each case there was no loss of life and comparatively little damsre to property. The first, attack was made by a Zeppelin which reached Blyth from across the North Sea, paasis; over Blyth •nd Cram•I lingtoa and proceeding to the neigh. boyhood of Sealoaburo. Bombs vers dropped on several of the villages passed by the airship—five at Chop- pington, three at Wallsend, two at Seatooburn and one at B,dlington. The airship passed near North Shields and Newcastle. tVhile neither city was visited. both took precautions against attack by extinguishing the electric light. At Lowestoft, on the North Sea, In Suffolk county, three bombs were dropped by the same or another Zep. pelln, considerable damage to house property in the centre of the town) resulting. On Friday an aviator indulged In a daylight raid. The German aero- plane crossed the North Sea, flew over the County of Kent dropping bombs. In all, four nrissites were dropped— In the vicinity of the towns of Fever sham and Sittingtourne, the latter just across the Bugle from the Isle of Sheppey, which 1s the birthplace of the British toyal nasal flying corps. All the bombs fell In fields. From Sittingbourne the aeroplane es flew over the Isle of Sheppey, and It is thought probable the raider mit took the -towns attacked for Sheer- ness. heerness. the Brush naval base, which U on the other side of the Island. On his way the airman pa sed over Can. terbury and other towns in Kent, but did not drop any explcsive projectile upon or near them. During the raids at hast fifty bombs were sent down but either by error or purposely the airmen seem to have kept Away !rim ths larger towns. There is an inclin: tion to consider the raid oniy in the nature cf recon• uatsaances. for, except in case of aeroplanes' b lees tont of military importance were avoided. 1 "Willie," Paid the teacher, "give nae three proof* that the u•' rld is actually round." "Yes'm," ,a'd Willie cheer- fully : "the Book says so, you say so, and wm says no." THIS WOMAN WAS VERY UNHAPPY Physically and Mentally Worn Out—Tells How Nervous and Crying Spells Were Ended by Vinol. Monmouth, PL:—•'I was weak, worn- oct and nervous. I had no appetite and was getting so thin and discouraged, one day I Just broke down and cried when a friend came in and asked me what was the matter. 1 told of my condition and bow nothing I took seemed to do me any good Vinol was suggested. I got a bottle and before it was half gone I could eat and sleep well. I continued its use and now my friends say I look ten years younger, and I am well, healthy and strong. I wish I could induce every tired -out, worn-out, nervous woman to take Vinol."—Mrs. HARRIET GALE, Monmouth, Ill. There are many over-worked, tired - out careworn, nervoul women In this vicinity who need the strengthening, tissueilding and vitalizing effects of Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic, and so sure are we that it will build them up and make them strong that we offer to return their money if it fails to benefit Vino) is a delicious preparation of the extract of cod liver oil and peptonate of iron and contains no oil. H. 1.'. 1)o?ll .p, drugg +t, ire lfnrd Block, (iod. tleh, (int, i 1 1 L_ 11E111 SIND GEM 111111111111•111.111 DeMILLAREYSON Special Values —IN— Lace Curtains A beautiful showing of all that is new in Lace Curtains for the coming season suitable for every room in thekhouse Windsor Curtains for the parlor and diningroom. These rich Curtains are made of best quality scrim with fillet net and yoke lace insertion in ivory and ecru, at $3.50, $4.75, $5.00, $7.50 and Upwards Swiss Curtains are always in good style. We are showing a large range in white, ecru and the new two-tone effects, from $3.50 per pair Nottingham Curtains in almost endless variety. All new patterns, exceptional values. 50c to $3.95 per pair Curtain Materials By the Yard Curtain Materials by the yard are very popular. Our stock is most complete and by far the lar•gent in town and the valuer •re unequalled. 10 de- signs in white, cream and ecru nets, some with scalloped edge", others straight edges, 45 to 50 inches wide. Special. per yard ipso Other prices ranging from per yd. 15o to 21.25 Beautiful Silk Madras for overdrapes. Linoleums Nairn's Scotch Linoleum' are the hest and will give entire satisfaction. We have a large stock of block and floral patterns in 3 and 4 yards wide at per.quare yard IiOo See these before buying elsewhere. All Lino- leum• laid tree of charge. Oilcloths Canadian and Scotch Oilcloth,, new designs, .11 widths. I h n Mock, floral and matting depi era at B per equate yard . 30o Nairn's Inlaid Linoleums Nairn's Inlaid Linoleums in tile and block de- signs, suitable for e11 places that art' subject to extra hard usage. Per square yard $1.00 Carpet Squares Carpet .lfuarea to all the wanted sizes in Tapes- tr1' Brussels. Wilton and Axminster in design' suitable for all rooms. Every Hug is persooally selected and bought in the best mat kets for cash and therefore our customers can depend on get- ting the utmost value. Aprons Special value in Coverall Aprons, made of good quality Percale, extra large sizes, orly 50c each House Dresses Women's House Dresses in light and dark colon in all sizes 31 to 44. From $1.00 each rIcCail's Patterns sad Publications "THE STORE THAT IS ALL A STORE SHOULD BE" AhiIlars' - Scotch - Store 1 1 i TELEPHONE NO. 56 GM MIND IMOD 111111111111111111,111111111111111116 "%%' hat . do you think of married err %" asked the henpecked niers ad- 1 • • JOB AND COMMERCIAL "Blisi.n1 the name bridaid the iti� "Hilo+ i+ n t name for ii," Paid the young husband enthnshent ek "You •M tbe %ionat are light," weld the henpxrkeaf line gloomily. —Mies iv no name for it." e . _ .: � �^��:,,"~�;�;����i ��l�gi'C;'�, ��.,�OIIH�`p1tIIpII1111NIiI�iIIIIIUpIwlUlllllll1111111{Ullll,ialIIIIIIIIL'llllilllllllmlllul�iil[h�m�IVII�Wum�u�imll�uQlluiuDu1111111111�IlilillllUl��lml�lhura e t�6 1913 Get '' Sugar packages— than you ars sure of the genuine UGAR! The inherited preference for fr'-4 2,4 e' . Sugar that exists in so many thousan : s of Canadian homes to -day, is based on genuine satisfaction for three generations. Satisfaction first with "Ye Olde Sugar Loafe", made in Canada by John Redpath 60 years ago—then with Canada's first Granulated Sugar, made by the Redpath Refinery in 1880—now with the modern 2 lb. and 5 lb. Sealed Cartons of Aggilt Extra Granulated— "Canada's favorite sugar, at its best" ,,, CANADA SUGAR REFINING CO. UMiTF.D, - MONTREAL IiIflrRl�Wlll�lilYl�