HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1915-6-3, Page 8• EenseoiT, Join a lits
tincts •lvuaapaat Nem In •b elerms
MR SIGNAL GOD&RIOH : ONTAR)O
Witt p=mon= I
/r the week
etr. • intaiisrldAVIly
F. m r)dIITH
`• Tars ea awaag.Ust. has i
Mild bum retain. work to Mama.
✓ -_-.5• e`sm at as seheetos
memehagerlem a•mpmmy in Nem
Met Mr. Iib ddnd ns igy
simmmilty W the Oidesi
▪ e ta the Meseest a the mai
and' sWgl & ibmined mteemeat mid
the L .CA. Madmen Mat • W-
Mat the ellem __I, $
tlidisubrellgteneemenlindllitmleimMens
rig eaten be patmisial Yd 7th
►'mss the tbeta_m,
Many Colleges dem for Vacation a1
Midsummer. Our College doss not
_�.hOTT
batitsaW lee t Meted.
aaJsstwiRD aYIA est • peruse Is the eartypvt
�•Mf
THE SIGNAL'S
CLUBBING
LIST
1915
The Signal and Toronto Daily Globe $3.75
The Signal and Daily Mail and Empire3.75
The Signal and Montreal Family Herald
and Weekly Star M,S
The Signal and Saturday Illustrated Globez.S8
The Signal and Weekly Sun (Toronto)1.85
The Signal and Toronto Daily Stir
The Signal and Toronto Daily World ......
The Signal and Toronto Daily News
The Signal and Toronto Weekly Mail and
Empire
The Signal and Farmer's Advocate
The Signal and Canadian Farm
The. Signal and Farm and Dairy
New
2.80
3.25
2.8o
1.60
2.35
1.85
'.6o
Renewal 1.85
The Signal and The Country Gentleman 3.25
The Signal and Canadian Poultry News1.35
The Signal and Winnipeg Weekly Free •
The Signal and London Daily Advertiser2,90
The Signal and London Weekly Advertiser I.6o
The Signal and London Daily Free Press
Morning Edition 3.50
Evening Edition 2.90
The Cignal and Montreal Weekly Witness1.85
.ns- *rt 1I tnd World Wide 2.25
'l'I, : J I. .unci Pread.1te: ian 2.25
Th.: Sig , „ .,nd-Arestminater 2.25
The Signal, Presbyterian and Westminster „3.25
The Signal and Catholic Register
New 1.7o
Renewal 1.85
The Signal and Saturday Night (Toronto)3.4o
The Signal and McLean's Magazine 2.75
The Signal and Home Journal (Toronto)1.75
The Signal :Ind Canada Monthly (Winnipeg) i.50
'these priors are for addle .a,.. cat Canada or (creat Britain
The Signal and Woman's Home Companion
(New York)
The Signal and The Saturday Evening Post 2.75
The Signal and The Ladies' Home Journal. 3,00
The Signal and The Youth's Companion
(Boston).. 3, to
The Signal and The Scottish American
(New York). 3. �5
Including postage to Canadian subscribers.
Thu above publications may be obtained by Sig-
nal subscribers in any combination, the price for any
publication being the figure given above less $l.00
representing t e price of The Signfil. For instance :
Tit SI sad Tie Family Herald da14 Weekly
Star ..11.115
The Parmer's fllescaie/=a351i•m;t•eo) t.3a
BY REV. B i rEON H. STAUFFER
I'aawr Lund street ;;oasressuioaai d uur,y.
THE GRACE OF PUNCTUA
UTY t
say, "1 will not eat until I have dose
mine errand." Louis the Fourteenth
said Punt -twilit.) Is the politeness
of kings. the duty of geatlemeo, the
nece.alty of business men." 1t is said
that the only rebuke the late King
tdward ever gave his favorite sister
was when she was late tor br••k-
faat. And. by the way, how pumassat
to have every member of the house-
hold together at the breakfast table.
The morning meal Is often the Daly
OMR at which all can be protest •
BUM chat over bacon and eggs is a
great social stimulus for the day and
gives loved ones something cheering
to think about while they are ee'arsted
during the hours Of toll.
Text: "A time to keep."--ccct.s.as.
tea 3:0.
dome Canadlau it.strher*, on
day at Washington, U.C., missed
Ins Prsident Wilson because
were not a: the White Hu
time! "Thr d,,,r was shut "
coolish virgins erre told that
would not 1;. dr the br.degr
volee. The sir. at nuisance u
business, the pr..(esstoeal, the
and the relfgt.,.., m „old is the La
who will not keep Ili. ragag.•
I know a deutlst who *111
make an engagement with
tomorrow at nine. He would
It even earlier were he perm
WUI be be there oil time' N
.At nine -fifteen he comes rushlu
violently denouncing the att..-
oompan). In every committee
lag. however important, there m
the late -comer who delays the
of six others by his tardiness
emus people are late at ehur,
the theatre, at dinner.
As wltb other bad habits, tard
Is usually • species of selfish
Unconsciously laggards say
others wait for me• I do not
disatrbtng them." !even at rec
where artists are peculiarly di.tu
b7 late -comers, these ■Inners sig
the public weal are not thong
Mosgh to break their miserable
At &early every wedding, some gu
Ir In while the ceremony is
osdiag. 1 have even beard of pe
telephoning the bride to reques
Meorter-hoar's delay for their
Oakes. Did you ever see a Sun
•mis,b1 excunloo get away ,cu 11
Toa may delay the embarking
to ax mesa minutes, but Just a,4 s
as yam get ten yards away front
idler, you will see three or tour
men, haft a dozen children. and a
brits mhooUng down the platy..
kite! And they will be late nest y
also. Indeed the habit grows like
Cathie of drugs. litany a pr. -ac
who berates other bid'hibits la gu
this heinous of.noe. He enter.
'aloft • few minutes late, or del
the opening of the concert until Y
k keeping the faithful wait
the unfaithful. (Niue. the punet
for the lard). John %Veal
prince of preachers and organize
as one of the most punctual of m
• expected his carriage at the d.
the minute. "When I must p
pare for a journey, I dress earl
maid be; "then i have the remalnt
time tor work without being hurried
P ctuallty, somebody said. enab
asley to do a great amount of w
th perfect composure.
Punctuality Is such a prudent th1
young man who asked counsel
Walter Scott was given t
unique advice: "When a regiment
der march, the rear is often thro
to great confusion because the fr
ova not move on time." Punctualt
se work easy; tardiness ensiav
late train is laid out at every jun
point. A train on time Is anti
ted by every despatcher and eve
Itchman Did you ever take a rt
the Empire State express? The
somethIng In the .ery jerk of C
ductor's Land as he pulls out 1,
telt and yells, "All aboard!" th
s •You against expecting •
icy for late• -comers. On time
seconds the wheels turn and t
t locomotive bounds &pea
rough the suburbs and out Into th
ntry, past hamlets and throng
rly pretenttou. cities; mltgbtin
ntry towns galore, and not eve
bating at time-honored junct
We; on, on we fly, for the gree
trggttlIs must be reached o
e�ule time, and there 1s not
use's margin anywhere. The roe
a holl-
meet.
they
Ulla on
The
they
0003 $
I the
social
ggard
meats
'unity
u tor
wake
tit.4
N.el'
g lu.
car
meet -
f l l be
w ork
The
IA, at
lees.
eesn
mind
ital.
rbrd
alum
httul
rule.
ester
pro
opte
t■
deter
day
me'
five,
ore
the
wa
tr
rn.
ear
the
h.,
a> s
I.1
car:
rt-,
et..
NIT
r,'
1,..
La
oak
cf
Y.j
!t
W:
oat
ty
es.
c-
cl-
ry
de
r•
•
ny
to
he
d;
e
h
1
n
ion
n
a
e
d
o'clock
pier
trete+
w
H
to
A.
1 111 DYSPEPTIC
CAN GET WELL
4 Takkg «Fn's"
Slis Copt SIN
Weis very
sederirk mwit
be them
hour StolcbIiB >1Qiesiesees
m
letter froCaptain Swan toot of the
best wo skippers on the Gr
Lakes) tells how to get
front S notable. quick rel
ie
lk¢•t
rawt., 0�., May Ash, 191
A man hes a poor chance of livim when mad enjoying lite ea be cannot est.
was r what was wising with matt.
Lou of appetite sad indigestion was
tlp
brought on by Coasstion. 1 have
had trouble with diem diseases for
years- I lost a mast deal of flesh
and suffered oomstanUy. Pot the last
couple of years, I bare taken "Fruit-
s -tires" and have beset mo pleased wltb
the results that I have recommended
them oa many occasions to (noseband
a0yuaietsncea. I am sure that "Prah-
a -lives" have helped me greatly. By
following the diet rales mad taking
"Pros t-a-tires"aawerd
any poses withDyspepsia
p� will get
benefit".
H. SWAN
"Arun+Uu
rea"esaid by aUdealers
at sac. a bo: 6 for $z.so, or trial sirs
ase. or seat postpaid mm receipt of plies
tbsw
by Fruit -a -tires Limited, Oe.
wet a labia: timid ;a- iehdhtti Eli
IL* innertere. As sadlea a was with -
tad a btcturer last algal beoaw ies
was bmhlaw Line ler ins the Vaasa
btatbra. A grocer 1s 1 the Merle%
li
bet Is berease e customers were ism
I itJ hand ha pay las their bilis. Pree ma
eraatlaatloa is rt only the tiller d
Cies bet the assass:n of careen.
sc
1 ae punctual an feels 1n tuam with
the .shoe*. Hs la tell or serenity;
be !a In !.matte with Ood. Nature le
alwa;-r on time. Oar old earth le
sloe sever Into: she travels over ball a
tllllnn miles 4 year aad arrives. ea
is 1 me to the t.t:etete. Were the planets
lumen lair, .. a a!teold have celestial
Gres
Turoato
Suppose > uu try 1t to -night. I say
to -night because there 1s no use
introducing the Innovation by sudden-
ly arousing habitually -late sleepers to-
morrow morning without a wall -plan -
lied and concerted resolution before -
band to break the chains of bad baDti
statist all hands to rise early, and Pro-
ws for breakfast long enough be
tore the earliest workers alae for
leaving the house to allow for a ban-
quet of forty-five minutes
Lord Nelson said that he owed Ida
sitcoms to being always a quarter 0t
an hour ahead of time. P»atdeat
Waabingtoa's secretary was habitually
late, and Invariably blamed his watt*.
One day, when patience had ceased
to be a vtrule, the President quietly
r•msarhsd: "Sir, either you will have
to get a new watch or I a new sacro
tary." Benjamin Franklin, one sr the
most prodigious workers of the eigh-
teenth century -whose career, by the
way, bears a marvelous reaemblsaca
to that of John Wesley, said: "He
wte loses an *our In the morning may
keep on a dog -trot all day, but ma
mot overtake It b. erecting."
The Berlin Congress of 1315 brought
together Europe's greatest statesman
to settle the boundaries of Turkey in
Europe. Bismarck. Beaeonafleld, Dort.
ehaboR and Oambetta were the lead-
ers. Each had often been called a
crank on the matter Of punctuality,
but their work to the negotiation*
vindicated their hobby. Each megaton
began to the minute. Every man need
the time as if each moment were a
of gold. The result was that
longest treaty ever written was
arranged cad signed within thirty
thin reputation tor keeping engage-
/ ante L worth while. ♦ rural layman
jafd to me proudly: "Too may set
watch by the Doming of our
r at the Bandar morntag Ger'
He Insists oa our little choir
In ahead of hint about two
to eleven. Promptly at the
he enters the pulpit Nobod7
ever caught hlht *ming late.
Dve'rybody in the village expects him
to keep his appointments and nobody
1s disappointed." Now I suppose that.
the whole community regards that vil-
lage parson as Quite • preacher. At any
rate his preaching reputation L at a
premium on ccount of this virtue of
promptness.
So whatever your talents may be.
young man. win a reputation for being
on rote. To be known as an employe
whose hat is on the nail at a certain
minute every morning will be an as-
set Let your habit be so well cul-
tiva•ed that it some fine morning you
should be unavoidably detained, the
manager tall) say at one minute atter
alae: "Call up his house; see what's
wrong; be most be sick!" The habit
ha. a rMecttve effect on yourself too.
To be able to say. "1 am on time; new
the town -bell can regulate itself by 1111
ate.- w1U give you a pride which will
got as • tonic to all of your activities. pan
The daily ne. spaper preached a w
"Mehl(' sermon ou promptness To loubin a new-.nsoer ofllce at the iiia -
en
in
d
mak
Lion
Pa
•w
Oe
L
(ret
Iera
RAM
me
:the
elan
th
coo
tat
cosi
hes
pot
m0
' sch
I min
h clear. and there la not a minute's
margin anywhere. The rood is elver,
switches are turned for us; accom-
modation trains are vide -tracked' re-
lay engines are waiting for us; every-
body along the road seems bent on
giving us ti.e right-utway.
As with tragi,. so with men. He
who la on time always gets the right
of -1157 tw,',h••s are turned for pun,
teal people. Luc .entaphorcs are raised
against tarn: folk.,
• Punctuadr, makes work easy. It Is
the prompt man who can stop for
recreati n here and there. Those who
are punctual! get through their work.
do something. reach a d"cisloa. Their
recreation is sweet bemuse us$nish
ed tasks do not haunt their leisure
hoar Only he ran rest whose work
1. dose. Fleawort' taken before oar
tasks are finished is like • ntghtssare.
the *skeet engagement always stares
es to tb. fare The mtedmat knows ft;
tbe travelling miesmaa knows it; all
who have great responsittittles have
esperienred the dtftereace between
rest takes atter conscientious MD -
meat of duty, and • pastime indulged
la white work Is uncompleted.
Tardiness is either • moral limita-
tion or a menta oma 1n either case,
one must mak. a prodigious effort in
order to get the victory over it. With
some glrople the trouble Iles la staking
a great ordeal oat W the grysrtatio,t
for keeping an appotataneat. They
deeply pet of getting eddy beams.
Or dlmiselim••toa. These mast bring
tbsmsslvee to ewbost the epleiaaat
fast bravely Often are amt ma ems
became, they de net moieties
They do tat lay out their theeseethed- '
! kat/lr--.o ranch la w11br b «vas, so
touch . sad a r1 oar -
giro
Punctaality is coo grant re-
.
. oilttes of seeress lies tab, wailer t
tbsir esapaninas i� iodkd
is lie eight" diol ds� idles
maAs I. tithe there,
flys Ve .brat Mra s Midis, *ben Invited te ��L
tabIt
bib's parent*, Mead
•
-making the p ice of the three papers $3.2o.
Tle Memel se al TM Wieldy Hee S1115
The Tamale) Atily Star (ELAM hue Steal LIM
If the publicatio n you want is not* in above list, let
us know. We can supply almost any well-known
Canadian publication.
...4end subscriptions through local agent or by
postorace or expres s order (not by bank cheque) to
TIE SIGNAL PRINTINCi CO., LIMITED
Galeria Ontario
collision. Leu the et nista that pay
lel us a visit but on.v. In a choosey
years arrive oa the scene the momeet
3. they are due. let es resolve with
g l the Paa:mlr.t "I myself will awake
early." And all nature will cheer ea
at that delic.ous time et day while
everythlrg seems 10 say, "Be on tinsel
Be on lime!"
t Note -The preacher is fade hied for
several illustrations t0 Semay Smiles'
tamoua work on "Belt -Hely."),
go. to .art st ,'t,,npress
of his llaziness. cureought to the
the
most t::: ' :g procrastinator of his de -
1 I.ac;uencies. i t iything must be don.
to ter r'l note. Reporters click off
their last words on their typewriting
macbints without wetting to leisurely
u:ecu ayuunyms. Copy -reader* are
hu rrylnr through maauscrtpts. ('Mees
late eut.iag down stortes. Telephones
)hne1e like aielgbbells; telegraph in•
'stet L.retn•.:!ck off tate new. of Europe;
printer's devils are rushing about,
nimble -tooted but without cineuhoofs.
Mat before the time for lucking up the
last final the telephone rings! -Take
this down!" yells the Inas at the
'Phone. "Murder 04 York Street!" In
three minutes more the story of the
muter is written; a scare -bead I
lashed' off; the pneumatic tabe 'beats
• NJ the composing room: halt a
.low printers ruu their Angers over
the ki aboard of tie typewriter -like
muting machines. Alter ninety sec-
onds of clashing ar.J tot:a:Ins and sloe
big and rapping, the' '•takes" are aa-
Iembl d, the murder story Is placed
carefully but swiftly into the last
form. which drops through the door
to the stereotyping room beneath
where half -naked men. dripping is
perspiration. secure the matrix boom
which the semi -circular Loam Is emit
On time to the second the pessimism
receive that form and plane It with id
companions on the great prialtag press.
The wheels revolve, the great manilla.
rumble's, it thunders, it clashes. Ton
see the paper from the roll glide tab
monster clutches, and at the author sad
Ion see papers emerge, printed, pasted.
Folded, counted-tblrty thoemind an
hour, fourteen every secoodl Ilmrla
The newsboys, all on tl�r oely
Jutside of the office but througnost
:he whole city --ere crying: "fining
Paper, all almost lbs Tech Street
murder!" Then see those handles.
Vrapped and labeled in a trice, thrown
tato automobOea, whirled to the branch
pmos.. where carriers &watt them so
(hat they may leave, at year doorstep,
city on thine. the story of the bond -
When you {tare sinned watch-
l1gIie series of 1lgtkt Jig larks which
Barry that story from the reporters
room at police headquarter* to a hun-
dred thousand homes, you will resolve
to get up earlier tomorrow morning
and do your work In such cannonball
express time that folks will say: "Has
& hustler," and you will add that yes
er knew before that there are siky
nutes In ■n hour.
♦ widow with four children 1s to
ury to -day because haw hsebaad
as behind Ume paying kis lame la -
ranee premium A ooegmgalloa y
t hoyt ' _ meet l ng -bops. *maw. Ibex
CURRENT LITERATURE.
THE CANADIAN MAI,AZINI -A nisei -
bee of .troaa features are found in
The Canadian Magazin. few J.sie.
To. Pear d Howls,- by Protestor
A. W. Cenwfonl, .bows that after tie
wee we have more to bops for from
Resets than we amid have tram tier -
many. Professor R. A. 1[denauabtoa
Rives an interesting mimosa! remin-
iscence of Admits! Jellicoe, and Pro-
fessor
Ii. eraser Harris outlines the
influence that Italy has had on Beityb
and tbcusrbt John Lewy reviews
tee famous trial of the Hon. Oeorlts
Hrown for contempt of court. Mr.
Newton McTavish contributes a char-
acter sketch of George, Ham, tie
"moat popular man in the Dominion."
There are siz excellent short stories.
Sweet ''rung Thing : They must
have beautiful made in Kentucky.
Mere Man : Ob, really ? Sweet
Young Thing : Yes : they do so match
night riding, you know. -Buffalo Ex-
press.
WE'LL $&R1• T MIRos
few de d Gia P4 es yes
or I; ladder yes
have say Ebtotry
Trouble. After yes
es
see bow fwd they
tis flflte deist yam jae{e
F eimmmat5, «.
Cies Hlackmtime's delicious los cream
of superior
Phase quality for all otraaslooe.
HY.
• Get Your Counter Check Books
Out of Town
WE CAN FURNISH THEM
FOR YUtl AS CHEAPLY 1
AND AS GOOD AS AN OUT-
OF-TOWN PRINTER CAN
Iteloyour trade
at me.
LET US CALL AND
QUOTE YOU P'RICES
The 3IGNAL PRINTING COMPANY. Ltd
FARE $322
LY BETWEEN
BUFFALO 5.
The Great SM. "3112ANDINCV
noir
I me vet ina new ewer ire. ii• is./ mew ewer st as Audi. ISAlirgarsomma.
BUFFALO -Daily, Mailst to Doe. lot ---CLEVELAND
ca