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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1915-7-22, Page 4TsetseDAY, J CLT U. Me $btahri$ipaal •Tilt SIGNAL PRINTING CU., LTD. Pvausagae Pea SN1r&L hireable' eevvwery T order faseeth.e•Irelano IngaalDultdtne. North Wreak Oeeteriei °stake* Telephone Na Li Jofeciurrtu. Taiu .--Oso Dollar and Fifty test. est ; If paid wlicmy 1• advance One Me//�1,,,�lyy�� acoepl.d ; e wheeetbsn In the d State. Use rate le One Ilett., and Fifty ('ante strictly la adeesea eab.orlbsrs who fall to reows• Tas tlwru regularly by roll wW ...ohm • favor by angaalet .a the pub11.D nr of the fact Ma.e.rl edit. pnn.ib:e. When Outage of a.r dre1. r d-dr.d. bah Md end tet new add.....houW be River.. Itemit••nce. spay be wade by honk draft. ,speer. money order. wet Dees order. or reet.otted letter. Pio howl ptt..ro nsinsenle at any tne. A tits arum suit u t new-Itaa.+ fro d. -pial ted 1 ,atr.rt Meer hfoent. he alien on nppll 1a1la0, Legal and , her -,milt advert Lenient.. ten rent, per lire for era in-erina ,nd f wr teat. per line for mob autta,,i tient iv.ertl•o. Mea.ured to a .cal. of Milli n-mp.r•i1--twelve Pow. to au In -;b. Hudt.e.• n,nl. el els linti and under. sir. Iloilo. per pro Adeetti..- w.out. of Lo -t. e,,oud. r+•rn)•.d, 441100'twr. V. rant. 4414 nation. %Vanier'. H.t -es f.,r Kale or to Rent. Yon:,a for fees or to Real. Article. for 44.1..-tr. . nor exceeding d.iahe 1,u11ar fu ent ere teen,- m.•L du a.r'1 lou month. Fifty trot. for earl. .ub- •nuent moth. Larger advertl.seoenta ua propestine. An- n.nneemeiat• In ordinary reading tryy. Ten 4 ,nt.p•r line. No notice I .. than Twenty. flee Cent-. Any ..I melee. the object of with -hi. the peruo srr benefit of any t,d,vW. unl or ava.clatlun, to be eon -wised .0 adver- ti,ewDenr and rh.rerd aeace dlagly. To l't,anestnetua,te.-The cooperation of nor atata.•, iier wen reader. b. cnrdl.tr•.Invit- ed tnwnrd-m:.ko.a 1 oti$lo+at..eel - .ecoid of ell Inca. crow y and did net dohag.. Ni .own munication wml l.e vtw.ded In nein-a it con- tain. the name and '.ddre.. of the writer. n, neoewril)• for [[nrubl,-eHo, tic a. .. e, ides,•. of Road Moth. \ens- lunar .mold reteb THE trio,,,Ohre not tater Oa .n Wtdneat'y noon of earn week. THC RSDAY..Il'1.1' _', 1''13 EDITORIAL NOTES. The Monetary Times estimates that the rttnl amount of war orders pieced in C.toada is ■pproxlncrlrly 111100,11110, - tion. _ Winston Churchill hu a.pict ireeque style. He likens Germany to R wild (east in a cage, with the Owes get- ting nearer and nearer. The greates:.optimists et present in si ghtare the Manitoba Conservatives who fancy they 'an win an election atter the recent disclosure.. Sir J. A. M. Aikin., who i. lending the Conservative forlorn hope in Mani- toha, will hr jest plain jam when 1'. C. Novi is gets through with• hive. ,lodging from the i yah f.,fos the high sellout entrance exrhoivation results, the boys and girls are an keenly inter.. casted in education as anyone could ex- pect them to he. Orillii bas lost its town hell by fire. ('nnten,plating our own nolle stole - lure on East street, we can imagine what a terrible misfortune O4'illia his suffered. - The ',lobe is worrying over the ".bort knife' ttiat le to be tried by Ilse French t.,o pl'to kill their ene- mies. The old women in the Globe office would like to tae the armies furnished with notlkmurder- out) than bruomstitl testier - dusters. Rev. Dr. Chown, °enenl- Fetperin- teudeot of the Melhudi,t church,. makes thi. appeal: "At this time of supreme nisi, every Canadian of mili- tary age and in sound physical and mental health must give au account let himself, to society, and. to God; as to why he wears civilian clothing and not • military uniform." An unofficial report states that Kitcberers army of two milli in men ia now being poured into Prance Whether the report be correct or not, Shies is the uews for which we have been waiting for many weeks. Kitch- ener would n4,{ move his men unites they were ready and well equipped for lbs fight, and the wutld will wait *db. or i� momentous eagerness1 tl au I moos drvrlop- Illrta[r that may 60013 fulbw. Thew. the mmiterer of •Stanford White, has been .rt free after seven yeas*' detent.n in an inure sa?rlum. A judge and rosy hare deleted hint now to be .nue, Respect fur b'nit'1 'rtetee law has not been Increased by 1111 uses to which it has been put in this case. The wealth of the Thaw futlily was employed lavishly and per si.trnlly to enable the tuurdet-er to es•vpe the r0Diespience, of his '•tiro., while a man without wealth would have bard to take the chances of e.ld justice. Lilerela do not want to indulge in p&uty recriminati. ns at tin. time. but velem Con tire journal. keep on repeating the old slander that the Laurier Government denied naval aid to the Empire patience *tweet testes to 1,. • virtue. Tb. I,sitrier Government is the only Canadian Uoveroment that ever proposed to sive any rffe•-lice tort of naval aid. Its policy was to eabtblish fleet units of Canadian war remelts manned with Canadians trained and ready to fight wb the call should come. The carrying out of this polies- was inter- rupted by the defeat of the Laurier Uovernmeot in 11111 and the coming to power of the Borden Government. which owing to its alliance with the Nationalteta of Qoehr•c hal to with- draw any proposals of real Canadian participation In naval defence in or- der to twee their face with their Im- psrlali.t supporters in Ontario, the Oouwvattive leaders monocled the ridiculous scheme of borrowing THE SIGNAL GODB.RICB 0 TARIO OUR OWN COUNTY As a■ Outsider Sees k—Mefwler .f Glebe Staff Forecasts Great F.t.re for Horse Now that the &Ass t. tits West Has Ceased. Mr. J. E Munro. a memher of the staff of The Toronto Globe, lm touring Ontario sod wriuog up the agricul- tut.; prospect• in the various •ec- 1400w His letter from Huron was published in Monday'. Globe, as fol- lowr : G,aderich, July- M. -There hut been one erup lettere in Huron tais year at which 1be count. re]j)i_ces. The crop of yuuug faeiner@ f..r LVe tern Caned is poor. I brie was no exodus this year to the prairies. The bad times haul sowe- lbing to do web it, and matey who would have gone enlisted. but were is mote than that behind it all. Huron senility hu done 441 uch for the building up of the Cao.dieu West. Being our of the newer counties, it. people re - tamed the upon of lbs pioneer, the taste foe the uew,iand tbuineands sat- i•Srd the appetite by going West. Eves y Western district baa its Huron people, and the nest -door ret iabbor4 p. oh ably comet from Bruer. Huron i, 1 pious' of them and' their ywurl, but troy lett • big hole back 11 the bane eoaoty. Many a farm house ou Hu oat owner in l,u... w.•0le( enup y; wetly nu aged couple rlruggleal w car. y on the wort of the old hone - stead while their sone '•got Gaels quick" on lite %Veatern pr aiu ie : many alarm once Fultivated became but a pasture for the cattle of big drovers ; many ■ "fettle led school" caw its pupil.' dwindle to eight or nine inhere there had been forty. It was tarried to by agricultural" experts and newspapers ae 'lured depopulation " There were as irony remedies suggested as there are. for cold. in the head, but the change is just coming now. The Raceway Coming Back. ':Dec are seeing thing. differ- ently en Hut on. The generation. which fulloWeil thot, who bowed their tomtit ed acres out of the Qiireti r Blob, who built goat buildings and built up fine herds. had it in their blood to do pioneer duty, too. They cuuhlte't see Huron aright The hills wee e greener for away. l'hey overlooked the Karon held at boast. Hut the •t,unt Ills changed. Huron 4* cowing hark. Si is the runaway. It is predic.ed in Hui on county that those seepty farenhou.re will he tilled ■p The little schools will he crowded again with happy country children. Tile Kra.* fano. will be submitted to the pi .w and Heron *intake ib right- ful elec.- or our ut the flew districts under the sun. It must not be thought that the Htnon of today is any drro- latewilderuees. It eta lender among the ovine ire of Out at 40, but It has felt the eVestern exodus More than any except Bruce. It 14 weelt.hy and pi0- gtr..i•e j4,tt une.. hilt there is a he ter time costing than even the good faro times of today 111 Heron. Ontario's Turn Coming. The.counties that have sacrificed themselves to build up %Vestrrn Cau- ida will now build tbemselves up. They realise that they have the coun- try and the tight kind of people. Tbey went • few store, that is all. The "slay-iu-Ontario" movement will spread. The ruesl pupulallob will come hark. The new rural life will not b, u lbe old'. It will thiel the urban life in the matter of convenience. with its telephones, !shot -saving machinery. god road., suite sod the hundred tether added C.enforts. IC will mean, to,. a revival of towns. It will be * d.lfeieut Urns than related trr(ore "they went West ' Huron terms have lost none .•1 their richness through people going %Vest. Ezcellent Crops in Huron. The c -op this year to bittern cannot he beaten In the Province. With otber dialect., in peseta the hay i* light, but au other places it is very goo i. Wheat is ezcellei.t. Spring grain ie line. Corn is backward, lett looks erioog The Huron amity apple is famous. It has pet haps the beet flavor of any Cana- dian apple. The crop, however. is I gat. 1'be frost affected the fruit crop, end, in fact,dll the crops except wheat, roots and spring grain*. Huron to a coxed terming district. There are a large mutter of cattle which are tooling well and will bring a high price Dairying is 0I.0 carried on In some .action.. Hogs ted sheep •ro also kept in (sillily large numbers. The county 1. adapts for almost any base of farming. Along the lake there has been much pogroms in apple grow- ing. , The Huron Orchards, Limit at, liar • 1L' acre apple orchard. Very little of it i. b tag i Ig yet, but it is kept well cultivated and promises to be a splendid 4uveatment schen It starts to hear fruit properly. Thee a has been considerable farm budding in Huron this yea,. House, are being constructed wish all the mob -roe rveniencea. Many barns and await -r buildings have also being built. About the only work the contractors have had this you i. among the farmers. There has been no heavy purchase of "war horses'. in liuroo, which divi.ire hunt,, s with Yoe k a, the hest horse county in Ontario. Good sires have built up the horse industry ,in Huron There at:. splendid Clyde, in the county. It to felt that there might he were Ironies bought from Ontario farmers tlt.an tbere are. Ferment here are patting in power -planta and waiting fur a chance to get .trached to the Hydro. At present they use gasoline engines. Huron county ferule that are not given over rn gra,. err improving year by year, The farmer, who remained have made good. With the present prospect. of a good crop. taking •eve'y-thing into c ,totderat ion, and the excellent price,. which prevail, the Huron farmer will be pro.perous this year, and it will be another genal arguulsut to keep the hays in Huron. To -re are good thing, in more for Hurd suunty and her people we it. the money froin Britain t o bola three dreadnoughts and then teeming or giving them `n Brirnin as (Jauads'. ccntributlon. , Sir Bober& B,nden bad so little (*Eh in his owg scheme that when the Senate de- manded a vote of the people on his dreadnought proposals he dr.pped the measure. When the war broke out Australia, which bad martini out a policy along the some lines as the Limier ti verrmeet had planned for Canada, was able to give splendid as- sistance to the British navy,. while Canada wan to a position of helplep- ores so far as aid by sea was con - Fame and Death. 1 t*eight ury tan) arr.j:i.t a ray of lith%, A .nnbeanr where I trod, careless Imp. *g,l. it/ .to re'('t', I111. feet with rapture rood ; Ustll he wen' for county) and for r.gl.t And tough: his way to ti xl. is 'a igla werels were lea, ".N court, i') litre to fesuld no! .al hinray : A heart •• Behr n. hi. coull never know The nigui-D of that de) i ll. mowed to run to meet .he cruel foe. 'net a. he ran to play. )IeIR'nk, I L+tth ptac:ed him a. .d chief) rioter!. Fit for Li. I-L:e.o f.+.r ; Arid .eekrneFamawit Ain her .ac-edb ,mer, reined. He twined It inhet hair. .1nd w return Fame fate to death e- dower The Mortis Government of Manitoba called to office when sir Redmond Rob!o threw up the sponge on ac- count of the scandal revelation.. has not a majority of the Legiaatute at its back, and in order to confot nl with constitutior el practice it i, neces- sary to hold I general election. 1'he polling will take plaeee,n August (kb. The Conservative party has held a convention, chosen Sir .1. A. M. Aikins, a member of the Dominion House of (:ommons, a. the Pi (mini ill !eider, and adopted a platform which it is hoped will stave off the utter de- feat which was in stoic for the party which stood for m many Testes behind the late Robf n (iuvrrnmetit,- The Conservative policies include Provin- cial prohibition, woman eaffratte. ed- ucational reform, abolition of the pat- ronage .ystew, and other proposals of a more or less radical nature. This all rounds very much like • deathbed re- pentance, end, unless we are very much mist liken. will be so regarded by the 40*) pity of voters in Manitoba. Premier Norris in hi* add resin to the elec- tor. p ints nut that the chief business to he attended M at present is the thorough probing of the 'wended. which baits been en tar only partly investigated, *to puni.hnlent of this guilty persons, Rad ao far a, passible the forcing of . restitution to the Province of moneys wrongfulls token from the Provincial treasury. Mi Norrie record to the pre..nt time i. that of an honest man with rnusm(nserae views of public effigies and he seems to be the man needed to establish decent Govern- ment in Manitoht. Some yeses ago a bridge wait twilit In Japan which was so slight that • entire was pet 4p • "No animal. al lowed to eros.." But rats were seen (tossing on it, and as they retold not he stopped. the eige was changed to read No large animals allowed to ernes ' The acid test of cbeafulness is dia- appointm.et. .tulle .o ue`,on .ir. And so i Care not Gradate Ile alit re give, Who eitrued sari, joy<aa 4 ( i• When rot row hrsakei h o'er me like a Ovate. Ibis he the mot bei'. Lits., , That when they Ind Alai In .oldler - ac.lee ram, t..ive to Iknth • -.1. Stodart %'Llker.' Lie lits Out. li"My dear, you l.wk sweet enough to "That'« tb. way 1 intended to look, Jack."+Prineet..n Tiger. Needles. "How 44.,!... girl. are today. i don't believe you know what .needles are ttr." 'How absurd you are, grandma." protarated the girl. '-Ot c ,une i know what needles are tor. They're to make tbrgrapbophone play.' A Narrow Escape, Mrs. Farmer inset back from the County fair): Well, Abner, we've all had a Darter escape from being eer.n afire ! They had • wild cannibal Igorotle at the fair. and if it wasn't the same feller that helped us bay lest July ! The Difficulty Solved. eel's," 'aid the old shoemaker, sternly. "I will not de it Never have 1 sold anything by false r•preeenta- tion.. and 1 will not begin now For a moment be was silent, and the shop - man who stood before hien could see that the better nature of his employer was fighting strongly for the right. ••No,".aid the old men again, "1 will not do it. it is an infeiinr grade of shoe and 1 will never pass it off as any- thing better, so just mark It 'A oboe fit for a queen,' mei put It in the vete- dew A queen, vote know, does not have to do notch walking.-' KIDNEY HEADACHE 1s rnn..d from the hlond beteg tbiek- .eed with eerie arid twnlsone circulating in the hurl. Anil -frim Pills cure all fortes of kidney t mishit. They are so mend and goalie* C. L Oouliia gusrau tow them. Re anre you get Anti Uric PI11s. H. V. Marion on every bee. Sold Duly at C. 1.. CosIt a drug stns'.. THE WAR. A HEAVY BWw TO UKIULAN MOPltlt Today's rase.. of the surrender of all the tlousalaing Geruaan forcer In South Africa is not of high military import- anse, but has great dramatic signifi- cance and a wide suagestl venom. Poe one thing, it 'marks the extinction, temporise ly at least, of the German Colonial Empire. Kiso-cbau, the Pae- ific istaods and now the vast stretch et territory in South Africa -Nast Africa is as good as gone -have been lost to Germany. This was oars of the great. 'take* which the Kaiser put at bastard when be decided upon wits au- to whh.hGreat Britain was cert els to be drawn. The result was inevitable. Sea -power would attend to that. After all the Kaiser's exhortations to Ger- many to look to her future on and across the ocean, the while colonial edifice, built up with such pains and • t'auch mutt, has now crumbled t o the ground. The fated cud in South Attica may not cause so much of a e ensalinn iu Berlin, or provoke w many cries of vengeance, a. did the esspulaion of Gerwauy from China by the Japanese, but it cannot fail to give to serious Getman,, food for melan- choly thought. It mail, for them the feint ration of many hopes. Be.idrs the actual loss of the cu!uny upon whi •h lierwany had expended eo much treasure, with not a little blood in the war wit the Her- rero', there i* the further bitter re- flections that the blow was dealt by the Burr., now loyal British .objects. What a change froSm the day- when the Kaiser root to Kruger his fatuous- ly imprudent telegraul ! And to the German way of tbiukiog, it would have reeved absolutely impossible, after the Boer war, that the Dutch burg he re could have been found so eon, and in a wnrtd-conviels;,n imperilling the very life of the British Empire, lighting under the Union Jack. Ger- many was confident of a Boer revolt, the u,oweut the present war broke out and England's hinds were tied. There was, indeed, a weak and speedily quelled revolution, which t be Germans were suspected of fomenting-ju*t as they wet. going to have India aflune and Egypt in insurrection -.but the wise and tested colonial policy- of Greet Britain, giving self -goverment to the Boers, had its wonderful vindication in the rallying to the Empire of the {trent badly of tee Dutch 'in South Africa. It i. a B ser, General Bathe, who received the surrender ,,f the Germans. In that fact alone there is le whole history, as well a* au entire body of noliti .al morals. Tgat Germany entered the war (n' bungling fsrbion is a. fact which few Germans dispute. They must be made the more keenly aware of it today by the wiping from the map of the last .rt the Get 111 colonies, Nothing but complete triumph on the continent could make up for that, and no such triumph it now in right. The Russians are vidhly- stiffening oti their own soil. If the French .n.1 English s re making tenetl programs, they are at least show- ing Chet they can *tend otf the eno.t furious Ornstein drives. Even the mit newaged Danlenellee campaign prom- ises testier. Aud the German tattooer. in. warfare is not atarsing England or appreciably crippler g English (torn. 'Herne. ti•ermany is putting forth teleoy tiro' 14, rind i. doubtiess able to do ,t, for • long time to come: but the liras of a Bernhardt seb.:ut inupns. ing her will on Bulope and becoming the great %V.Itmacht ere not in pro - green of realiyttion. Far from adding to her dominiona beyond the aea. Get - wany he. Peso stripped of all she bad. -The New York Post. • LLOYD GEORGE •ON G ER MI AN TRICKERY. The perorations of Mr. Lloyd George's great. speeches always make e%c.ptionelly good reading. The fol- lowing is the concluding part of his speech in the lieu,. of Commons on June 'ltcd last when introducing his hill "to make provision for furthering the efficient supply of munitions for the nr•esent war : %Vhat was the condition we were contronted with at the beginning of the war r Germany had been pre- paring for years. She had leen p•. - paring In • dl,ICti.yl we hnrdly ex- pected. %Ve naturally were envious lest elle was making great preparations to strengtben her navy and deliver • surprise attack. 1 believe, on the wh,,l., tiers was notbiug lo connec- tion wish the German navy which had not been erticipeted by us, or that we were unprepared against. There has 1 ern no surprise In the turning out of any expedient of war which bad not is -en t ir..een a. rewards her navy. The strong development of her sub- marines has been s surprise, but the fact that rhe poes•ased thew wan known. That is not tbecase with her army. 1 ventured to call attention in 1919 to the fact that Germany was concen- trating and developing her strength on her army and not on her navy, and fair that i had rather • Md time. What has happened ' Gemstone had undoubtedly been preparing. She had been piling up materiel until she was ready. She was on the beet of terms with everybody. We all recall the great Balkan cried.. Nothing could have been friendlier 'ban her attitude : nothing could have been more retiring, more modest, nine. unpretentious. It was always "after yon " She did not want to push het,elf to the front. She had a benevolent smile for Prange. She treated Rupia as a fteend and a broth. .r. She smoothed down all the sus- ceptibilities of Austria. Abe walked arm-in-ar•tn with Onset Britain through the rh•neellerl.• of the world, and wes really thought the era of peace and goodwill had dawned. But at that moment she was forging end hiding her Isrnenee arcumltlaGoes of war .toes to tale her neighbors unawares and murder them 1n their Ifathis Iliad elf trlekwry amort na- tions eueceeda, all the basis of Int.r- aatloaal goodwill tumbles Into tib dose. It to essential Ire the pesos of the world that It should fail. it b for os to gee that 1t dose fail. 1t depesde more on Gnat Britain than on anyone that it should fall. One of the pillars of good RRoverameot is the security that evil doing shall be puobhsd. That is equally true la the sphere of inter- natloaal gnvarswrnt. Valor aloes will not achieve that end. Otherwise our "treat army would beim achieved it. It is not enough that tare* tuil- lioes of young men devote their lives to their country. It depends on ua at home to support them with all skill, strecant b, every resource of machinery and orgapisatloa at our dlep.i .l, .0 es to drive the conviction into the hearts of Oita and nations for all time to come that those Goveromeots that de- ceive their neighbors to tbeir ruin do so at their peril. • • • THE DAY OF RECKONING. A prominent article in the Keee z Zeitung, the IeadingConservetive jour nal of Germany, is not cheerful read- ing for tbe tboughtless showery of the street.. The article pasts out that, even should the war end as patriotic Hermans hope It will end, it will hr iwposeible to think of any wonderful improvement of the econou,ic situa- tiun, Dtfliculty and distress wili prs- v`il on all sides, and in addition to this, and more important Than even -- thing else. Gerwauy will he confronted with a woald which will hate bar In- tensely. The Kreuz Zeitung point. out that iu view of thus it will h, (iermany'r duty after the conclusion tit lbe war to su order her system of military err •ice that it will embrace every young man w,tbout exception. There Must be no tepetit on of the situst which allows turn of forty to proceed C, the front while young wvl at house are exempt. Universal steel es must be lbs national ideal, and the training must begin in the schools and be cou- tluued all through adolescence. This will all coat money. Naval and military munitions wast be completed on r gigantic reale, and must lir re- newed on the lines which the expel - enter of the war hare laid down. The new positions whicb the Empire will have acquired east and west wast Ie. Made bulwarks of Security. All this will also cost ennrwour tows of money. The Kevin Zeitung .. is not very sanguine abml the capacity of the expected wet indemnities for meeting the colossal poet -war expenditure. It was different in til. Thu• war a short catnplign, mud France ,bowed no ex- haintion. This war may drag on for year., and ie certain to result ite the complete prostration of all the nations ecgaged ,n it. Germany, therefore, must pot think of war iudewoities w cover her needs. Thee. heed* meat Ise covered in lalrge meuure from Ger- Mit y r own resourc-s. Economy on a scale never More at- tempted wuat be exert bed by the Da - tion. and the , Id Puurei,n virtue of stein orubending leve t:nn to [be cotln- try'e need* and of absolute self-s.acri- Ilce must he the rule But all the ecuocmy in the world, ad.t* 11.e Cun- ertretive j wroal, will nor exempt Germany fruw t.eltion, direct and indirect. on a scale which will -snake the country stand agbaat. Tile de- mands on German citizens will h. en- ormous. imperial monopolies will be a ueceesity, also custortl, duties for the r.iaiug of revenues other then (how devoted to the at any sud navy. Tete ICrrna Ze,tieng sees no wry out of the COIL ng tlollble, sive a cessation of ale social and ameliorative work in which million, *nee ally are now being .do-ut by the temp re Ni II the eever.l Statue, -Thr Daly Chronicle i L'uJou). 'The People Are to Biarne. Monaca; MaUL The 'secret of the various political scandals which engage the attention of the Canadian people from time to Uwe, lied of which the Manitoba case II 'tie most •pectecul sr et the moment, is campaign funds, says The Winnipeg Teiegram. This is air true that it is singe. inog w lints attention is paid to the fact. Everybody seems to be willing to coudewn graft and corruption, once the graft and corruption are discov- ered. Soinehody rings the Bre alarm, and the people rush to eland around and deplore tl.e holocaust of repute - tions and ideals. But nobody teems to take any preventive action before the fire starts Can it be that the public enjoys the "fun". 'It mete a great deal of money to run a political campaign. This 'money may amount t o a large suwand yet he spent in legitimate campaign expenses, moth as advertising, the. renting of halls, transportation expenses, lbs payment of speakers 'and canvassers, etc. This money has to he pro.ured, and to procure it is one of the duties of political leaden. The people elm are ready at the slightest chance to talk 'corruption" don't give a cent The members of the party give &certain amount, That makes up only. • small part of what. Is required, and to furnish the Fattener* business men whn demand value for money expended are usually reedy. The system I. ridieulon., and yet it is in vogue all over the country. With publicityof campaign contrib- utions demandefrom each and every political party. ninety per cent. of the scandals which have shocked the pub- lic of this country during the peat tea Teen would never haves developed. Scores of tee public men whose reputa- tions are gone would be livin today 'Athena• stain, and this would mean much for them sod for their families u well as for the country. Secret campaign funds are unfair to the men In ;minis office and unfair to the people themselves. The public which rests complat.ntle under a sys- tem like trip has eo right to raise its hands in holy horror when the truth sometimes comes out, throngh moms particularly clumsy tennsactioe on the part of sow particular political lead- en. Th. horrors of Germany's method of waging war ars not en dieguating as the horror. of Germany's deliberate and sneaking preparation for war. Aod the horrors of what he revealed whose political curtain. In Canada are drawn acide aro not so dlas the crsmplecenry of the public w lab cannot help knowing what is "Whig en bsbiod those mit tains all the thew and welts patiently to ssjuy the "shook." W. ACHESON A SON Special Values in Linens for July Table Linens ti0-inch Unbleached Table Linens, heavy, fine, and in neat patterns. On sale at per yard 39C Bleached Table Cloths, all linen, dainty patterns, 2x2 and 2x2,4 yards. Special at , $1 ••50 To wellings, Crashes and Towels All old stock clearing at old prices and a very' large choice. • French Flannels and Viyella Flanneis Twenty-five pieces new of all wool French Flannels in neat new patterns suitable for waists. dresses, coats, etc. Special price per yard 5OC VIVFLLA FLANNFIS—Dozens of new patterns, neat, and in all leading shades, also plain cream, navy and black, at per yard 6Uc Dress Muslins, Voiles and Crepes Twenty pieces new in seed voila: effects, dots, stripes and dainty buds and sprig patterns. Special values at per yard 12k, 15c and 20c W . AC H ESON & SON ,The New Transcontinental NEW SHORT ROUTE tb WESTERN CANADA Can. t.ovt. Rya. T. a N. O- Ry., Greed Trust Hy. 5ystes. TORONTO—WINNIPEG Pip North H.•. Cob.lt and Caches. network the Swain rii,Siaod. of Onyrie. Amar 44 . "Oat.n.,. Route of ianrwerailr Marvels tweet Lanope.aa- :.aheeL'a Roadbed. camc,.etiag T rwd.y. July 13. Lir. Toronto 10.15 pm. Tr. 71s .Lt. Lv. ltriani,. b 00 r ens. daily itagfula •. Cochrane 4.15 p.113 m. R Ar. et Fria S•Sa.ka*.% 9 18 •.m. A1. Wim.dpre 3.5O p.r. Thu. Set. Mea " Emmet,. Ie.00 sun. Tiered► deW Dia deo "C•nad:en.rn..nl amear Mow beet" to Prince Rupert Vel n V.oe.w. Victor... Sohl. I kceei, hakud mocks. iia... touri.t & .uni.rd.lw,ing care. Tier table..Icep:rq ear ticket* mad *tear Us - formula. from any Crawl Trunk. c.a F. & N. 0. Its. Agar. ou .pdsatioa. Co operative Store a Failure. Rraceln:dg• Gazette : The failure of the Muskoka l'., operative .1)resh mid teed 10 Nett!. the' queelion whether atorekeepe.s charge extensive priers for their ware.. The ('o -operative store wad' the tenet of a etre/owns canvass by a man who firmly believed en -operation t., be the panacea of all i11. that b tyenpuffer. and eta closing by aasognYuert is. natural. The only reason for a co-operative store is a re- duction. of prices or • .hare in profits. 1'b,. state mil not attempt to under- sell. but wee rn divide the profits among shtreholders. Any merchant could ba,• t„Id them that with the small arnnunt of capital, the necessar- ily small Outlines. and the heavy ex- pense. account (here eouIi never I.e profit. to divide. 1f storekeepers thought they were paying too mach for butter and eggs and lamb ,,iii era: and hay and oats, and were Iu atm t e little mined farm to grow ilteir own, the result would be as diasud.us. HE MEANT EVERY WORD HE SPOKE. Just Why J A. Hill Recomtneeds Dodd a Kidney Pills. Sixty Nine corners, Ont-tri{rcisl). -"i ate recommending Dodd's Kidney Pills as the hest of medicines.' The speaker was Mr. J. A. Hill, a well. known resident of this place, and he left no doubt in the minds of his hear- ers that be meant every ward he said. "dome rim. ago," M.. Hill continued. "I had a very sore b,ck. 1t started front a cold and 1 suffered for six months with it. 1 also had stiffness in my joints and creates in rr y .uu.rles and 1 felt heavy and sleepy after .seals. My appetite was fitful and my limits were, heavy. Then i decided to try Iiodd's Kidney Pills. 1 took four bowies sod received great benefit from them. That's why 1 recommend 1)odd's Kiduey Pi1M.” It's ,anally the man with the teat meiney wbo wants to mak& tbe largest conversation beta. FIVE SAILINIIS WEEKLY. Pert McNicnll to Sault St.. Marie and Fort William. Canadian Panne Palatal (treat Lake. Steamships leave Port McNicoll Mondays, Tuesday., %%'edn.edaye, Thursdays and Saturdays for Rash Ate Marie Port Arthur and Port William St.am.hip Eem-eesese reak)ng direct moor 'coon kayos Toronto 1356 p. m . Partk,ilare from Caaadien PariR& tlek.t &guts, re write M. (4. Murphy. Notelet Parsng.r Agent. ToroH nueararveeoararaeoiwawasefewob FALL TERM OI'eNS SEPT, 1st _t ..1.;o 1 f 7, // /1 ie4,// r'/ Ter.,, •n. ilia, not rt.k for a letter reputallu• t ban it 'dread) poa,r+,rn we get l*r4itiouv foe many student. each Fret. t atahrgue free. %-. J.Iet.L10'rr. I'rinelp.! .N longe it., n Y,gr and 4'h.rler ft.. letetIoesieseeetainieseseenteeseseeseareseteasieseele ~' 2s Canadian National XHIBITION TORONTO S i.' ) tJOQ ' Ile; iasis 5150,000 Sept. 13 1 "PATRIOTIC YEAR" '1 /dt1 Military ('amp Dentructton of Battleships Betties of the Air %IANIIOTH Military Display N tRCH OF THE ALLIES Firm under ('ullisetlon !billions In Livestock C:, v.rnment i zblblte THRILLING Naval Spectacle REVIEW OF THE FLEET Belgian Art Treasures (restore's Famous Rand Bleeest Cit and Doe Sinew WAR' TROPHIES Field Groin Competition Greater Poultry Slow Acres of 114aaufaetures One Th.saad sod Owe New Mots to See ItEDU(71) RAILWAY RATPS mom ALL POINTS