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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1915-9-16, Page 2I► l • • II • Tlsasasa* i..ltt.o- le. MU >CHii SIGNAL PIUNIING 00., Uro. Pneues ae amems • adv sin • Zai assist •Leer b was r legis Mae ens tar surer aheeld as wrvew SwaNs�sssassr ... be made be �rM' saMw awls nes tnlll.al tier aadv.deasaM elt eand leer =emu p.. bee lar awl isle. ver sae ter mob selseemeat -twelve Mimeses/ b a_ -N of mala els Mase Mss leinkfinlisre say .s.agestan A vertise- leave need; •• rw q �ss for eel* owsacattlIng� rll:i Ws r -r les ▪ Oaae- sale Om M sift ,a�w r1�r Mmear imbeeasamrtsel wig taw ail ---.- M whose, rsmerea tYvs, frm acum. pnosle Ne mows ler Tussle saes Tutr - �sd�a� a.4ss. t*ns of F ie pm.eelarr amamat mf M� �t «_ y.mMt wadMarred' 7b Oa••arr• awns* -1 t seeL feria of ooa�rr eebervtaor• said eeaissw V cordially (silt. ori satinw T.0 Mew *Ls weekly mooed of sU trail, *anti and Meseta &one o corn ritatiow win be attendee to wale. it see- WM Wt1e am= beta. of tie writer, sot et Itamd sash Newlsreylma. ►.met evidence Tits S law ease not latee than Wednesday noon or ices week. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER Is, 1916 TO THE YOUNG MEN. elm would /*sisal to a *Wool Chleese stagnetlon. Free traders d„ not say that provi. iota shout/ ooh lee toads, industrially, for possible war ; but this sae be dao* without putties the brsrdes ot protec- tion upon the whole ttsdustrlal fabric of the eouotry. The establishing of rids and ammunitioe futons*, navy piths, osdoanoe factories, and other works required for the carryloa on of war should be uadertakea by the Oov- sr.meat as • part of the uataoaal ser- vioe. ProtectloaiMs should lake note of the fart that of all lbp 0arioes at war free bade Great Reliant M the suoo.- et financially. and 1t has been said that the present war will be woo by the side that can produce the last roand of silver bullets. The recr uit:ug nosy going on for the T lst Battalion ofit'r+ the count glen of Gtxlcrich anti Huron' coon-' tv a maguiticent opportunity of serving their country and the cause of humanity. British law allows every man to decide for himself whether he shall enlist or not. Each man's. conscience should settle the tnatter for trim. The armies of Britain and her allies are fighting for the liberties of each oto of us. They are fighting for freedom from a military -oppression which would give no man a chance to decide for himself but would take away his iuditidual liberties to make him a vassal of the state. And a vassal of a state which rec- ognizes no law, human or divine, but that of its own security ; which practises any brutality that seems to serve its ends ; that murders• in- nocent women and children, tramples upon weaker states, wrecks homes and churches, wed wreaks brutal vengeance upon alt who stand in its way. God and the Right are on the side of the Allies ; but God- works His will through hnnMli �iliiswests, Each young man should search his heart and take the stead that his inmost conscience dictates. TOO MUCH EXTRAVAGANCE The Government financial state- ment f ,r the last flail year shows • deficit of over $&O,IJU11,000, •pact from the war expenditure. The national debt i. being rapidly increased : but so ter •s this increase rehreeents war expenditure tbe Government is tber- o•'ghly justified in adding two the na- tioaal obligations. On the other band, the otdonary expenses of adtuiaistra- tion dor iog this time of stress 'should be kept down as ter a+ pcetible : bat we End that these expenses are •ct'aal- ly increasing, the lacerates over the preceding year being nearly six mil- lion.. and no less than $01,000,O0t over the ordinary cost of administration in the hat year of the Lustier Govern- ment. This is a record for which the pres- ent Government has no reason.ble 'Reuse. For one thing, millions of Jollars are being thrown away each year in paying the salaries of civil servants who are not required for the proper warming of the Government offices Those wee In tb• civil service wbo are phj4si•'ally fit and who ian be spared from the 'service .tuonld be`in vited to shoulder arms and fl,tht for their country. When people are straiuitg their pusses topf.y increased tomes and Meet all. he other rper 'al calls that arm being made upon thew. it is intole,at'le that they should be sad - died with the brrden of paying sal- aries to a lot of •uperounreaaries in the Government offices. WAR AND PROTECTION. industrial Canada tries to mate a pot for the prolectiooist policy by stsiTing that if free trade had prevailed in Cuadra there would be no factories in this country which could turn cut munitionrtof war. This has about as much weight as the usual protectioobt "argument." Great Britain. a hese trade .counts y, is not only wansfac- Wriog war wunitious for her own armies but is furnishing large supplies for her allies, who, though under the blessing of protection, have not as extensive a manufacturing equipsaeut as Great Britain. Another weakness in the poeitioa taken by I ndusti i J Canada is that it assumes war conditions to tw paresaei est. In time of war free trade with your runny is of course imposed/Iv. In peace times prolectiom-from an economic standpoint, at any rate --is ss great an absurdity as the keeping of half the population under aro. or the maint'flanee of a wall of bayonets along the borders. in some of tbe European countries peotectiom may be • necessary evil, like some other con- ditions that would be intolerable on this side of the Atlantic but which are the customary things in countries sur- rounded by hostile neighbors. But, rays industrial Canada, if free trade were the policy of Canada. we should be industrially dependent upon the Unitt'd States. In time of war as well as in time of peace. Will lodes trial Canada tell ns how many Cana- dian factosies would be running to- morrow if the United States were to cwt off the aspplke of seal aged raw pastille Das Mewing into tbis t'oun- My (sem •cres.tbe border f Without ____g a detailed examiaatlen of the deme Murne, we venture the state - MOs that by far the lar. gent elaes of Aeaia wa get from the t'nised State, M made up of coal, cotton and other raw =aleviate imported by our nrano- facturere to keep their factories nun - sing. Until the war tar was Imposed & hos .oats* ago, the nein part of these raw material, wee imported free Of ditty. Fres trade Y good enough floe the meaufeetnrere whom they ate Imp.JN.g. 1f Oaaada were to try to Ilnakehuwslf Indeserislly Iodepeodent WHAT OTHIRN SAY. TSI SIGNAL .......40111011111111 GODRAIOH t ONTARIO 1. the Way a It? Tics Merest Little gtrle easy be as even* to school as are little boga but they have the diplomacy of Hoarsest and so they sae oval their feelieels. A Mean Thrust. at.r.. aetse.er. The Toruuso their Weekly be*.See e.erybody should e0000.iae. It hes set .wide . page to which it proposes each week to slag the praises of thrift 1s might est • eoacrete oaample by cutting out Its "colored supplement. Right. WYAs. tabs. If there is a youag man to this dis- trict of military age, able to pass the medical ezessiaatiee, sad hie doss not have the desire W enlist. he should lie awake at nights and wonder If he le worth a pinch of salt to his country. It he is unable to go that is another matter. The Old Chid Is Plecky. Bawutee Thaw. Last week SiryVilfrid Laurier and Sir George Foster were blHed to address a recruiting meeting at Napans'. sir George tinted to odonect, •tad altboii 1 Bir Wilfrid was suffering from no ul- cerated tooth and the sun was bruiliug bot, be manfully faced and addressed the audience. lie is uow in the hos- pital undergoing an operation. All we heroes are not in the trencher. The Mery British Toeing. Loodo. hewn aid Leader. Our good allies, the French, have been astounded by the fight -hearted• new of the British Tummy. However heavy the casualties, however weari• eine the dirty, however imminent the danger, our' soldiers have never lost their power to sing and chaff and laugh. Asa matter of fact, this power is the quality of the people. The typ- ical workiug-claes Britan meets advers- ity with • studs, and bad luck with an unconquerable determination to make the hereto( things. Dickens disooverrd tbe humor of England. linR land ah in greatest was "Morrie „Ragland." The England tried and proved by the war must be a "Merrie England" once more EDITORIAL NOTES. Carnot Huron county do at least as well as Bruce for the national patriotic fund? There'fe et ill tact of a Dominion general election. Why not defer it until the soldiery ballon can be pulled in the K•isees palace at Berlin ? Bir William Van Horne, who `*ed on Saturday Motet, Montreal, was the Dian trhese orgaaiziug genius made the Canadian Pacific Railway the powerful and successful organization that it has become. He was born at Joliet, 114, in 1843, started to work as a telegraph operetor on tits Illinois (entre' at ata early age, and worked bis way up steadily in the railway world. In lliEff began his association with the Candia* Pacitir, of which, he was is succession general manager, president, and chairman of the board of directors. The desert Safety Committee of the thread Trunk Railway issues s letter ie whisk ft is stated that during We .x months ended June 39th last thirty-eight sewn' were killed and thirty-four were injured while tres- passing on to T. R. property. These were preventable accident., due simply to tie too common practice of tralking ie railway yards and along railway trues- The Railway Act makes insinuates on railway property ss offesree pu.i.bable by fine or im- pri.o•meat, but the trouble is that no one pays ape attention to the law because It i. so seldom enforced. The question is, woul t the public rather take chemise of losing life or limb than have the law enforced? Playing with the Suttee. Toronto ,-(tr What etre the American people to think of these Huns.' 1}'bat kind o1 game is the Berlin Govrr:latent play -- tug hub the 'Nit,aehiugton Govern- ment :' Thr thought oust legin to perinea in the Mm/ ut many an Aweri- can that, whether by.tudied design or by extremely eutu,ur ac•ident, Ger many is, by • aeries of actions, makiog h as country look foolish in the right or the world. Are ships torpedoed by mistake, and are sincere explanations and apulogiee made ? Or are ships sunk deliberately and sham apologiee ',tiered in tie expectation that, uo matter bow manifestly sham thee may be, they will be ac'•rptrd eagerly by • nation that Ir determined tt leiMuin n eutral undler any con=eav+tble provo- cation, affront, or iojury that -pray be pin upon it? If Nobody Shirked. 1 know rel wh•a.e I ,we... l know sot slabber 1 es; Bat IM feet Asada Yaw that 1 am here. in thl. world M treswn and wee. Aad int of the .ad sad wort AM•Mr troth Alyea lotto plain It le .•y power with day and hoer Tie ale tens )oyer It* pals. 1 k.sw that i b• earth arid*. it Y..a of .p bargains Irby : 1 *serif and oat what It '• .11 .beet. 1 seem but wool • time to I ry. MI 1515.5 0.4.1. 5u501 l5I,. 1 am keno lar a little •ear.. •wd.00111 stay 1 should Into. It 1 may, Te betr1M sad Maim tae plsea The tremble.* Malt. with 1.10. leek se able► teareit: If sari lore isefabs be w.a e.at t• ibis met. Ts maks Its Mt ware await, How Dace we reale ~on the world. New reify staid all wreaa. If nobody ablrbad..wn DoH nae worked rs MRs hli renews aYas'. ewer wonder*** • h1 y^o ^awe pt se Makes, fee f.aie sad a.w• RW op today M rear told* mail we - "r. pet M tie net Neva* ('o.. Neemer fill the waste. 1 .70... towel" ar as •aewar tsar 11 W seed dew w 1 wised Mt be -- 1 ..0.e M suvesebm the pm.- -11, Insets! Mises. • • A ►IOHT TO ♦ WIN1SH, Whlis Lent tft•h..e•. a year MIS ptsblielp'I.etsasd that the war would robot* lest this* yawn as E•gllelo write' who !mew him wA teak she B ret oppirtu.lty he Dodd of asking h im if he really msesat li-If be thougbt the war would WI ae tong aa that or was be merely beteg politic 1. seytrrs so. The fopty d Kite/better Wad that it wee absolutely •eear'ary THE PATRIOTIC FUND. We bare no.e entered npio the sec- ond year of the war. and the end seems as far off as ever. No one ima- gined, • year ago. that by September of 1916 j;aneds would have seat across the Atlantic nearly one hundred thousand men, with as many more to follow if necessary This magnificent ertietmeot, while primarily due ti the loyalty of our people, hae been, in a large measure, malt+ possible by the Canadian patriotic fund. This greatest of Eli the national benefactions is now assisting twenty thousand families of men wbo have enlisted for overseas servicr. These mem have gone forward with the full assurance that the people of • Caned* will see to it that during their absence their wives, widowed mothers and little children shall be tnaintained in comfort. 1Ve hear that the drain upon We fund is •ieuwing large pro- portions, tyat to meat the nerds of July and August $700,000 wase ex- pended,- that the reserves are being materially- decreased and that the national executive committee now finds it necessary to take a further appeal to the Canadian public. to defeat Oetmaey or she would dom- 1•atr the world: the doing of this would be • loft sad difficult task ; Oermwr was amazlagly prepared fur was, and the Alb= wets sot. I am laying all my plans, Kit&eoes is quoted ea saying. "un the basis of • three years' war." Whoa Kitchener *as asked this spring when be thought the war would sad he was reported to have said that he did not know when it would sod but be expected it to begin in May. %Whsle it would not do to hold him responsible for all the sayings that rumor attributes to 61m, Jm it is pretty safe to assume that Kitchener entered this war rzpee it to he a Doe. long De. lie could estimate. perbape better than any other loan, the tre- mendous forces that life war would bring into conflict. At first, a year ago, nearly every b xdy in Canada supposed that the talk of a three years' war was used for effect. People said to each other that the strife could not last so long -that the great miaow could not stand She cost of It, that the warring powers would be bankrupt, that the lo.. of life and destruction of property were so appalling that all nations would draw back. There is a different view now. it is semi that the war must go oo. for two years, for three or even more. Throughout the British Empire, in Canada and Australia as well as in the United Kingdom, men have been forced to reach the conclusion (.bat the war must be nought to • succesdul fin- ish without thought as to what it rimy cost in mooey,or men, or lab,r,or time. Nations may lee bankrupted and pop- ulations decimated in the process, but that would be hotter than that the wotld should he cured under the wie- ners of Pruseia° military conquest. Men everywhere now see what that would mean. No man could hive believed Hee or even two ye ter ago that there existed in the modern world any race cf people capable of the monstrous deeds Germany has committetj skies August of last year. A great Dation practises scientific bsrharirn : wicks the whole thing out in detail, and stripe at noth- ing. They fight. not against armies, but people*; they go 014 t.0 kill not only the enemy, but his wife and chil- dren: they Beek to destroy net may his f,rrtres+. bat his borne, Ilia rhuteh. his father'. tomb, his ,rt, all 'bet linlwihim wa'h the put or that • could make his iutnre respectable. Toe Prussia idea is that the soldier must rale the world again, after bow- ing lost control of it lot centuries. They mean to dominate the world es the 'Romans did. They aim td do it ,by combioing tele ratadessem f t the barbarian witnthe.ctwtific efficiency of the twentieth century. They be- lieve what a sycophantic Pole told thew. that Corsica has conquered Galilee They believb that other na- tions have leen weakened beyond power of self-defence by the humane teachings of Christiana". With them the =ate is an Imo machine, too vast and great to concern itself with relig- ion, conscience, or morals. The deliberate apd useless murder of inoffensive people on land and sea. the wantondeatruction of irreplaceable relict aod treasures m Belgium, eraeoe and Poland. have aroused lbs world two a full knowledge of the truth that men everywhere must risk their lives and all they possess in fighting, slay- ing and burying the scientific barbar- ism that has set out to subdue, loot and pagmern, the world.-Toron to St tr. There are many funde, moot of Uuem worthy, but of t all We patriotic fund s the oma we cannot allow to foil. It is the duty of tbe Govern- ment to arm, equip and maintain the troops- Not • dollar do We Federal authorities give to the patriotic food. Thla work depends solely un tbe patri- otism and generosity of our own people Thousand,' tit brave men are fighting our battles, believing that we meant what we Bald whoa we told them M =bey went forward and we will care for the wife and kiddies." It would he to our everlast- ing diagrece if oar pledge were broken. The national organ$aatine, with hen u•rteat Ottawa and branches or affiliated associations in every part o[ tax. Dominion, is worthy of our moat steeeroas support in the tremend- ous nod ever growing task that it bee undertaken. Ottawa, Sept. 1.t, 1716, Mash sea IMISigliefdy Ws, shrepsel shell I. dem- would mom metals death with- out edea Ism - pored and lapsed steel Meant and darnel platy assuaged slid sup' ported ta mesh the some worm as int sswspiee'e pad, only they atop ride Jadk laetasd of a 4 .1 Shit, Is CM WAR of Um swim mod - sew and furious war ewer know•. we hale the swot and** mod antiquated form el 110sing *ad defence -hand bombe end body armor CANADIANS 111 PRANCE. Sneed Caatlwgsat Nes Crewed the Chem* After Tuareg le Saglaad. Folkestone, Esglaed, Sept. IS -The second Oansidiao saistleigesst has crossed toe sndtleh Chemist and di* embarked on Pr.scb soil. The pee- p• oUooa for the e.co.d exodus were begun immediately following Rha royal review ten days ego, sod traepoet• have beets departing for se tet l days. and all have now safely rea.bed their destination. Mea who are is the reserve mining depot, many of whom have been here looger than those who form part of the second division, were quite envies* ot their comrades who have wase to the front. In the first reserve btlitade d field artillery there are several well- kuowo O•tano men wbo far name reason linger on, though they have seen companions go to the frost week after week. It is now on the Staple that a howitzer brigade will be teemed. composed of men drawn from this unit, and there is • keen desire shown to be drafted into the hew brigade. • • • ANOMALiHB OF THE WAR. At the outbreak of the present war, many people of experience were con- vinced that lighting wculd be con- ducted at exceptionally long range, lbs armies being ties •part and hardly visible to each other, even in large bodies, by the naked eye alone. High-power Zoog range Infantry rifles "My Country Needs Me." The following letter appealed la some of the Toronto papers oo Moo- d. While In the eity oa Wednesday last 1 happened to am a bowels of raw neraiim oo la •venue, neat • new t for me. 1 .topO.d, •sir rear was wear the sit. wast i sale Mese. "Bib, Jerk, bm less haw* yen bees la the carols* r He mad d : +Ob, jest yeesseday. i Nva Is Herm mmumf wad wort for a former. He may takes owe paper • week, and (t 1e swirly all desteerd be- fore 1 get a shames to reed it, sad twbw i waw the alga on the city hall and the r..re § u My bees mid .etc. ' 1 wti.4le ftp. at see fee a s to the fir, but he acs Sty hseg.*r7 weeds o..• - Tf..fN.er s taw them es ardor W mews, sled dna **abed m• shame ale�R..men. hitt rifts wIth the that yeast bwaAewds Hb. I yM•rys. Sept. H. Turkey s■ Its last Legs. Athena, Sept. 13. -Isis learned from • quite reliable Turkish source that the Gasman eta1T in Co•'etantinople ba'• informed the imperial military authorities in Berlin that it is Itupos- *ibis for the [Turkish army, unless it receives effective help to bold out longer than September 25th. ROUMANIA PREPARING. Austria Ce•cestratiog Troops and Hoatditiee May Erie*. Athens, Sept. 13. -It is reported•i■ diplomatic circlea here that there has been a heavy mobilization of Rouman- ian troops, including several regi- ments of cavalry. to face an unex- pected coccentration of Au.triaoa, which is directed presumably against Roumania. Railway traffie in northwestern Rou- mania. is declared to hare been sus- pended in favor of the troop move- ments. All horses have been requis- itioned. The ascend series of reserves are now with the colon. it is asserted that the Aus'ro-Germs• •Ilegition is that the concoctrdtims i, directed toward the .*lppression of espionage in Transylvtsnia, bat this statement is mot taken seriously, and ordnance of from five to fifteen mites' range made it seem almost cer- tain that one army could not advance openly toward the other to any point within the range of fire. The great development of the a.r•opla.e and of her air-eraf t made surprise eft socks, in force, next to impos.ible. So •Ito- gether it seemed oertaln tbat this war would be fought oat at long range. But one very impertset element baa entered into this war ea it entered into no other war, and completely reversed We situation. Instead of being fought at fax greater range than any previous wars, it le to a very greet tritest being fotttbt out at a Is. shorter ramie than any previous warmonger those of de- cidedly ancient hawse}. Before the war had been mar weeks rid the asps peva developed tine seises* to a point where it brought Sty. e0.ts.ding armies literally fees fes thaw et di. tastes measured by 'aids or e'en feet lust**/ of miles. TheOhses d tremolo dioxin' has been devallPid b s.& .n extent that each army worms its way through the ground tamed the other, Invisibly, until its tae.M*L taenshes wants tae enemy ei.nly a few . 1.0 When wash points OM lv.�.d the men in the firing teen& et• seek side resort to the naly practicable Ilei of warfare -lbw snidest sod antiquated warfare of throw*" b.nhs K one °snot her by band or by esepale. M ein eumstances require. A mer. d.saly genre. though of tan aims.* idea. as starry wheel semellaor $nothK toes , , Unita. /NW be mono stigneed thee other trench nags. bassos, they mast see where so threw ami ts>sit Not sodlei- etatly aheve .rse8gs to tbtow the bombs. 1ti ,.*SO4 0lam is ..& .:- plead pelais•s, easiest methods.are eosin remerted OW. Whey weer roueded and tapered steel belmete w•11W111111 Few or tyle Original Patricias Left. An Ottawa despatch says : Accord. ing to Lieut. V. S. deBay, ape of the original weathers of the Princess Pa- tricia Light Infantry, who is home on fmhwugh with a wound in the arm, there are now may twelve men apd one t.icer of the battalion wbieb marched away from Ottawa • year ago who have so far escaped unscathed. The sole remaining officer is Lieut. Pwinene. who, although bead of the bomb -throwing contingent. w -,danger, nus position, and in all the important fights, is stilt In the ring: Tne itrattal- ton is again up to full strength, with companies relied by the Canad ao universities. WILL RELIEVE OLD TROUBLE. Sir Wilfrid Lacier Undergoes Surgical Oper•tioa. Ottawa. Sept. 10. -Although still suffering somewhat from the effects of yesterday's surgical opetation, and from ►he feverish conditions following a fortnight or so of slow poiso@iog from • suppurating infecfioa of an old tooth mot embedded in the bone of his Power jaw, Sir Wilfrid Laurier was reported by bis physician. f)r. R. Cheerier, to be resole easily tonight Jo his room et the Water street hoe- pileal. If bis temperature M back to normial again by tomorrow morning any anxiety •e to his speedy and zom- plete recovery to the beat of health will be removed. The operating memo= yesterday found that the was • little more **rime andshale the X-ray disrloe.f. A tIl11b t 01 an aW tooth had b.taems 8111111880011I• the bone of the jy.p, which bed grows over it. A boo* had resulted, dewy of the to e.oes- sional infiain *suet illi a. with eu nidi ii aequiss kritru ios of a digestiVS des The trouble is an old tars Ma ProbehlY soeono" for several AIM 111sessee which Sir Wilfrid beta bed, sed whish have sometimes fuse *_..heat Se neural - gm Trying Saperiwc* at Napalm .a.tsdy hem the renewed 8 8181810111111 tservons sell yetn1... Wil- frid kept W t Let week to speak at the Napdses ttererwitlsg meet - lag. The wirier eehiktows .f that weeeldne. wish tbe o.t ami Imeold at - nosepiece, sail tie melee Meg d•. at least, part et the dM* Melds& to On sew, whit through • We- te k. 1 Ir, his oral• enesspewde tided of to aap•sr. compelled "" R'wand e, is middle ea▪ ten" : Spartan part sem finis .eme thsergtareses a"PC to the t as Mtge to of die :116 th.��elremeti. UDesY ph Issas-"-.7-41_Iseas-"-.7-41_poli be dile shortly to nosones ftidiomesemy and blie du with • MAW dad swat• t vigor Jaak-"RshoM the fair damsel me- lee demo the street. She is • mime silo •.eel...- Toa.-• Whet le hews W oke r J•ek-"11seh1u a ems with • mamba: Kra. 11'ews-"wyee bets at war stems menthe .1..~y, w1' . .: 1s y) 00. =roc N leM 0Yt yase ileitis fifese bane W. ACHESON & SON AN EXCEPTIONAL LIST OF Special Values Hosiery 50 dozen "Penman's" black Cashmere Hose, good weight *tail fine quality, full fashioned. Ladies' sloes !it to 10, reg- ular price 35c, at per pssr 25c. Children's 1 and 1 rib Cashmere Hose, double knees,agels and toes, sizes 6 to 10, special per pair 25c. Ladies' stainless black Cotton Hoee, full fasbioued and medium weight, sizes Si to 10, clearing at 2 pains 2•"ic. Floor Covering Extra quality` and recommended tor wear. Csaadian floor Oil Cloth.. New patterns and colorings. is widths 1, l f ,. 1 �, 2, 2i yards, a large choice, at per square yard 36e. linoleum 4 yards wide, in a number of new pattewrs, at per square yard 55c, 60c and 65c. Silks Black 3G -inch Pailette Dress Silks, specially priced at per yard 75c, 111.00 and $1.25. 36 -inch Chantnng Silks and Silk Poplins, special sale price per yard 75c. 36 -inch Silk Fonlards and Duchess Silks, fancy effects, reg- ular price 81.00, for Cotton Crepes Fancy Wash Dreams Crepes in 20 'patterns, regular 15c, clear- ing at per yard 10c. Sheetings r 66 and 72 -inch bleached Sheeting, fine, even thread,and firm. special at 22c. ant -inch factory or unbleached Cotton, special 7c. 36 -inch English Cambric, soft and Bee from all dressing, at per yard c. 3Grinch extra 12heavy plain unbleached Sheeting, at per vagic4 10c. w. ACHESON & SON FARE $3(22 --mor The Green Nilo'SSZA Thr Y.'srs me ... e a.er rsremr ea my her i maw el .e wwta arwOe s••••=mi- era Out • pummem• 'rY 0► d>>A` - S M.a»ai.et sass...+ - 'CRT Or MNWA" BUFFALO--Datly'rHHMay . 1 d to Dee. 1st -CLEVELAND yp hi .17.7.1=d -till �t{- - - taY-tL'a" - . - .gyp- ter itr.w m� eel laas��tlr.r er Cradle brew.~ Br�Y �.e... d iw11."" s,.wsaahit ....e Mr.N� raw trot wwet fee 04.01, Hct' Las. I ....iporde+ ...sty ar, warierstsdisrbrmankowl d Ta. i..t 1 . r* "ate(iw.: wee ors dis are..* M TNg CL2 ND • Ii TALO TRANSIT CO.. Cle..Gad. saketweeeneweemameknemeesesimesemenwiresimosesesesesineweeieweeseseweesieefte Hardware Specials - - Extra quality "azure" blue and white - Three Coat Enamelled Ware New assortment just in, will be on sale at excep- tional values. for one week only, commencing September 2oth. See our window. New and second -haul Stoves, Ranges and Heaters Special sale prices. One only No. 3 Daisy Oak Bar- rel Churn Hoop handle, also foot tread; steel frame. Regular $8.25, special 118.89. One only "Summit" Range New 4 -piece sectional grates, elm wood grates, reservoir and oven thermometer. Reg- ular $40.00, special 1132.25. 30 only Imperial Gray Enamel Tea Pots Regular 45c, special 25c. One only "Ideeal" Range Pottra•inch lids, l��v'odir,high shelf and oven therhtometer, burns coal or wood. Regular *82.00, special 827.75. If you intend painting this fall this is your chalice. 50 gals. high-grade Ready Mixed Paint Regular 82.60 gal., special 82.0000. W. carry a cootpiolo Imo of liaf+lwaro. Our prim on risk Howell Hardware Co. Ire r tr • .• . • 1