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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1915-10-14, Page 2TlttraesAY Orematee 14. tele ibralisionat HE SIGNAL PRINTING C0., Uro. Post.u$aas .as e0NaL Y • Tb --r -ems the imam is ivosetu-rt0N Tutu. -Ors sod lilts .sew per you: It paid .triode u no dies will be woopted : a wb..ertbere Is the Mal Moore do r.w t. dos Deltas aid lefty caste already is adulates wbeer(ben wino an u to nests* Tina sOLL lee nearly by man will water . favor by rpuaa.tlaa tae Peg= Ii es oftine of tact at ...sa ds r vo• ibi•• W sec t csa. d,..$.otrl.Arad. beth old sed tas sew wieram .s..W be awes. R.mlttaesss may be made po.t ebeak .A.r. ler Ser to ed noseytor. flolocriessoesrardesamossees at say teras Aov=KTulad Ttitana-tiler ter d1epW sed esete.at advertisement.' will be rive. oe &Pen- tmnsa. Les•l sod ether dinner advert Woods. uo mow per nee tot Gert Weenies and tour maw per line for web wbmes.at l..ertion. Me.sured s Goals of WM ss.psr'e4I-tmelee and underto so. Ties tw.11sr per yearr. of svertise masa .4 Last. Toed. Str.ysd. Situation. v.esot.l oration. Wanted. Homer for Solo tr t. Mot, taro. tor Sale or to Rent. Artlol e far Mete. etc.. notuoeeding eight Ila... Twenty! live tear- gaol... (.loon t rue Dancer tor Brit smooth. rine t'emwtor each•ub.eauent u.00tb. Lerma advrti.Gmefw to 'proportion. Aa sosneemente is oedlmary roadie' type. Teo Cowper Ito•. No stone• I. w than Twenty - Ave lints Arty ■pwW sake, tb. object of which la tae peons(W7 benefit of say lsdivW. e. w ateraoelation, W oon.dered no .dyer Wmen%and charred avaordlagls. ,em of To ('ooasarotivaasw.-The cooperation Olen • subeertber• and reader. 1. cordal record o X11 Vii.coounttyy Tintd(Mr4ctdon weekly..o cow o,,.le.lton edit be attended to utile-- U con- tain. the name and adder. of rhe writer. Sol nee.++rlly for poblicauoe. but e., an es L1en.'e d rood faith. New. item. .hould reach THE MrorAL oboe not later thou Wedne.da7 100a of sora week. THURSDAY, OCTOBER it, 1915 EDITCAIAL NOTES. Poor little Serbia! 1s she to have an ordeal like that of Belgium Lsmbton county is to have a Can- ada Tempel ante Act campaign. Be- fore long the only "wet" territory ad- joining Hugon county will be Lake Huron. THE SIGNAL : 13ODERICR ONTARIO all. perhaps, is the object which the Allies have Io flew In the landing at 19alooica. Germany invaded Belgium in order to strike at France. The Allies are eroding troops through Greek territory to go to the defies, of • little nation threatened with In- vasion by a powerful soemy 1 here will be oo outrages by the Allied troops on the Greet psop!e; oo ()fere vlllegrs will be buries 1 and pillaged; no Greek bourse w111 b violated. There hu bent 'another Cabinet shuffle at Ottawa. Hon. Louis Cod - erre, Secretary of titate door 1912. steps out to become a justice of the Superior Court of Quebec, and is suc- ceeded by lion. P. E. Blondin, Minis- ter of Inland Revenue, who in tura is succeeded in the Inland Rev- enue Department by Mr. B. L. Pat- •awde M. P. 1'. for L Prairie. The new Secretary of State is a Nationalist and distinguished himself a few years ago by an insulting reference to the British flag. At that time Boureesa and Nationalism were strong in Que- bec, and Mr. Blondin took advantage of the Nationalist opposition to tae Laurier navel policy to float into of- fice. Now (bat the Nationalist tide has receded, and the loyal princip!. s .d Sir \Viiftid Laurier have beep vin. dicated•in the Province of Quebec, Mt' Blondin i• no doubt as loyal es any- body. "Don't tbink becauge you Rare a little girl' 25 cents for a rose yuu have saved the British Ewpiie," said Hon. T. W. Mtt.airy in an address at.Tor- onto the other night. The Cleveland Plain Dealer is of the opinion that no woman is entitled to tbe ballot who at this season of the year cannot supply her husband with nice, deep, rich pumpkin pie. . Premier Borden hes not yet taken the country into hos cmtittenc� by a declaration that there will he 00 gen- eral election while the war is in prog- ress. Perhaps "Bolt' Rogers won't let him speak. One thing for which every Canadiso could give thanks this week was that Canada has awn who are ready and willing to risk their litre, in the name of patriotism and duty, to defend the right against the murderous and treacherous assaults of the 'Kaiser and his hordes. Since the day sefrietr11esobsersance of Thanksgiving Dagberell changed fro u Thurselay to Monday, the day has lost almost altogether its special significance and has become merely another holiday land "holiday"' now- adays does not stein ''holy day"). There ate still some who would like to have the mid -week day and to observe it in the old•fashioned way. Altera peru.tl of The Signal's edi- tot sal c.dunrn last week, as reader re. [narked that the paragraph recalling tbe tradition that a Constantine would once mote tide the city of Constant nople must have been written before the Hing of Ureter dismissed his ly •n- reurier. And so it was. AIli s t P If King Constantine doesn't know enpegh to live up to ttedit ion, that's bio misfortune, not our fault. Ths Montreal Star, unlike soros of the Conservative newspapers in this Province, speaks kindly and proudly of S,r Wilfrid Laurier. Commenting on 'his recovery trills his recent ill- ness it *eye: Sir Wilfrid's attitude during the war hes been a subject of especial pride t r his friends and of c•itntot t and satisfaction to the. whole country. Whatever, fewer men have said tat done, Sir Wilfrid has laid aside all party feeling or manoeuvring during this messcjog crisis in our history. He hes stood &queerly end publicly behind tete Government in its prepay Micros to pat Canada with the fightiog tortes t.1 1 he $m pi rr •.and he bas raise,) b13 eloquent and persuasive voice, agsio and again, to menet recruiting evert at times of keen physical suffer- ing on his own part lie way he .said to have gone straight from the firing lice of the recruiting platform to bis hospital bed The whole Canadian people will be glad that so valiant a soldier for coneitutional liberty is uuce more_able to bear arms. The roronto World has some vet y sensible remarks on the iubj •ct of the Iiiitish. military eimeorehip. "We have no doubt at ail," it .my., •"tbat the military censorship has been te- apon.ible for as much evil as would more than compensiate any good it has done. The palpable absurdity of some of the decisions, lu Inc.smany of thaw, has tended to bring the whole business of supervision into contempt among those who are aware of the to Is, while the tendelry hes been to .trate a great apathy among the public gen- erally who have hien prevented know- ing the facts and understanding the vital features of the .ituation. There is not the slightest doubt that recruit- ing has been seriously retarded by the stupid me -thuds of the censor. An instant reponse has been observed when the facts of any battle have been published : bit all the Interest is usually nullified by deadening delays." No reasonable person objects to a proper censorship. But what chject can be attained by refusing to my Hutt General Hamilton is in"charge of the troops at'ialouiki for a week or more after German and Italian rapers have publirhel the at L i W het Amt. was served by censoring the name of the aviator who brought down a Zeppelin Y The British people are wise enough and strong enough to know what is going on, whether for good or evil, without injury to them- aeltre,.�.V__estion is the better of being treated lilts infante. But the censor brie oonsistenlly behaved from the begiealsg, not as though his busi- ness was tc keep intellig.'uce hum Iraking throne' to the ere.ny, but t s if it were to keep the news flow bit own public In file report of the Commission of Conservation 'for 1915 we notice for statement- Pty ffr:t " 'J'R6i#r, o,1 -111e Department of Agriculture, that in Oatario "there are only three counties left unprovided with district repte- tentative, of the Provir cal Depart - meet (of Agriculture)." Aron county le ase of tier three, shrtme) the back - wardni s of the eounty council in taking bold of the matter. The rep- rewutativee are doing su.h good wilt k in other r lies that in several in- stances an a..i.lant is required to cope with the demands that are made upon tbem for advice, instruction and beep for the farmers. Is Huron county in s., fattunate a position that similar .'twice. are not require) here( \1 hat is the diff`rnce between the German invasion] et Belgium and the action of the Allies in fending troops on the neutral soil of Gree -e % There are several very im- portant differences : Jiffs renew so ital. portant, indeed, that the comparison Irises practically all its effect In the f1 't place, Britain and trance are not yr laliog the integrity of a rnuntry w sae neutrality they bad solemnly bound thetnselvee to sesp.ct, as Ger- many had pledged herself to respect the neutrality of Belgium. Britain and France hal• not broken faith and treated a anleren prosier. es "• errap of paper." Anether important differ- esre is that the Greeks do not retest the landing of Allied troops at Milne - lea : In feet, there it reason to believe that the mains -ley of the Greek people orient -,n the pt'esen.e of this British sad Preneh troops and wish thorn site. cess in their enterpri.• in behalf of the Serbian patine. Most importaet of DEFENDS PRESS BUREAU. News 1s Osesssed at tis !hoed W Fr'enda's Mem, gays Shoos. LONDON, Get. 12.—SIr Jolla A. Stmem the Hoa Secretary, last algbt laetsid a statement In which he dereads the Ometal Press Bureau against the recent better attacks on Its methods ot censoring the sews. and places a large measure of the re- spoaatblllty for the trouble on tb. special censors at the Croat, who were spectated by Field Marshal Sir John French. It was they, he sari, who excised from one of the de- spatches to the London Times a re - SIR JOHN SIMON. ference to the bravery shown by the German troops, which has occasioned such an outburst of indignation. Sir John Semon declares it Is a mis- take to suppose that the Press Bu- reau exercises Its own judgment con- cerning the class of news which rbould be withheld from publication. It cxam:nes the ropy submitted to it, h•' says, "with r view to seeing whether what It i. proposed to pub- i:sh ("Rends agains' any of the series of prohibitions which the War Office 'or Admiralty or other Government • departments concerned think it is im- portant to enforce." Patience. Hit by bit the battle'- nen. Piece by piece our ...irk 1. dome. Neter 110 51 in a Stant leen, cblldh.od .row to m,uboat'. might. loch by suis we p. -►our way. Task to task "lido .easy. Never to a .Ingle 1.• .p i). we .ues .• Attain aril (sop Mtep by •tip and thought by t hoseht Hour by Nur are fortune. "outright. Neer 410.141 w• mulles grew steward though .ore may yet be ■tow. -H. W. IS, WHATOTHERS SAY. ATTACKS HAVE CEASED. German Activit) Has Come to a Standstill in the East. LONDON, Oct. 12.—The most sig- nificant point In the official reports of the ficbting along the Russian front yesterday was contained In the statement from Berlin that Field Marshal son Hindenburg on the Dvinsk front had repulsed Russian attacks, which seemingly would indi- cate that for the first time since the 'German drive through Poland began the Austro -Germans are making no big offensive at any point along the whole eastern front. A Bucharest despatch says that a force of about 150,000 Germans and Austrians is concentrated at Czerno- wits, on the frontier of Bessarabia. The first lite troops number about 60,000 and are supported by some 75,000 or 50,000 reserves. The military critics here are in- clined to regard the -concentration of troops at Czernowits as a anent but forceful hint to Roumania of what will happen If she draws her sword on the side of the Entente powers. Now that the Russians are 'tn a more stable position they are per- fecting their equipment, and the re- ceipt of an abundant supply of pro- jectiles bas enabled them to gradu- ally assert their superiority over the exhausted Germans. It is now not uncommon for the Russian artillery fire to predominate in both volume and effect. Prisoners captured on the Vilna front admit the German troops are worn out by the unflagging obstinacy of the Russian resistance. • BRITAIEsB GRIM DBTSAMINA- TION. 'ellen was Dever a time In the past thirteen months when the people of Great Btltala perceived so clearly as they do today bow right wee the de- cision taken last summer, bow jot was the cause they then made tbeir own, how terrible was the danger by wbtoh their own ealstenoe as a nation was threatened more than that of any others. It it were possible for the country to be more resolute to go on to victory today than it was at any earl- ier time, it would be more resolute. That determination has passed Into the very blood and tissue of our people, It le a part of the life of every man and woman. As the Prime Min- ister has said on behalf of us all : "We will continue to stake upon this issue everything we have -our wealth, our industry, our intelligence, the lives of our children, and the existence of our Empire. --The Daily Telegraph, Ler. UNDER-SECRETARY BLAMED Grey's Assistant Is Half German and Wedded to German, Says Paper. lnvlar)' ,, Ott. J.2. — Describing_ Great Britain's "diplomatic failure" In the Balkans as "ghastly," the Globe declares the foreign relations of the country tanot safely be left In tbe hands of the Foreign Office as it is at present constituted. Its record, says the Globe, "bas been one of dismal, tragic weaknem. Iit is a misfortune that Sir Edward Grey speaks no language but his own. it Is a greater misfortune that be has been incapacitated through Irl -health. It 1s the greatest of all that his Per- manent Under-Secretary. upon whom he must chiefly depend, is sprung from a German mother and married to • German woman. "If the failure 1s not to culminate In disaster, the 111-omened partner- ship must be ended." The Under-Secretary referred to apparently Is Sir Eyre Crowe, K.C.Y. G., whose mother was Aste, daughter of Baron G. von Barby, while his wife is Clema, widow of Eberhardt von Bonin, and daughter of the late Pro- fssor Gerhardt, of Berlin. Sir Lyre Crowe was appointed an Assistant Under-Secretary at the Foreign Omoe la 1912. Jost SO. T.r-nto Telegram. Favorite song of the allied arm? oe landing et fe siloniki woe the famil- iar "Wire Here Bet muse We're Here." Prennnciabea M "Salonika' sad "Segs," Tweet., Sea, Nalomki 1s pronounced so if spelled Rah -Io -nee -kis torrent on third syl- lable). It 1s also written Saloniea, prnnorineed $ ab-Ism-ww-keh laeeent on third syllable). It was formerly. as in days of St. Paul, Called Thesaslnn• lea, pr»nottnrsd The.ulnn-i kah Ise - rent nn the "1." not on "Ion." as one often. Mere 111. Sofia is prwnottneed So -f. -yah (seeent nai firer •1. 114140 by the Bilgarians, and that lahe pronunciation given in N.Ison'a Riser elopsdia, Mit the RtsnrInrd I)ietionary givn it same M the English Nopbla. don. • s e• THE VAR AND THE AUTOMO- BILE. In dwelling the other day upon the difference between campaign condi- tions in Russia iti Napoleon's time and today, Gen. Von Bulow, one of the German commanders, pointed out par- ticularly the changer' In means of tem- munication. Whereas Napoleon had 1s live on the country, or bre supplied by convoyed wagon -trains over incred- ibly bad roads, today there are not only railway,,, but thousands of motor trucks for whose Itis asphalt roads can be made to gr.)w as it were out of the earth. Beyond doubt, no recent in- vention, not even the aeroplane, has so rti•cted the development of war as has the •utotiro'.ile. The first rush of the Germans into Belgium was facili- tated by eudiess Ines of motors, and the wort striking achievement of the war bitbeito, the • winning of the battle of the 31arne, was made pos- sible by the bringing up from Pari'. overnight in texica)r and oninib nee of a fresh army of chose presence Von Khiek waw not aware until it com- pelled his hash- retirt'tueut. Every sort of euWmohile has heen requisitioned or cons.duct-d, Tbere President and F leasrea. W ASH I NGTON, Oct. 12.—Pred- Went Wilson, accompanied by his flan- eM, Mn. Norman Galt, and members of his family. left for New York Fri- day, where the party was entertained bg Oelosel K. M. House. the Presf- deet's clays friead. Friday night at a theatre party. in honor of the as- aeoseemeot of the Preaddeat's ss- g agement. An unusually large crowd awaited the Pre'sident's arrival at the Delon Matron. where the party hoarded the Freetdestis' ear Many woman were la the throe,. eater to catch • elopes of the eagared pair. 311443 The Peps way rely treatise rods. colds. bromeliads sad brag sad direst treaties.. Mow i Well. up to sew proves with these chest fond threat tronbiee kava swal- lowed watlowed coos! rioter.$, sickly gasps sed the like, into their efesass4e, fors ha .gs and throat get so geed by dosing the stoat - mei. Peps work differeatly. Peps are tablets made up of Piss extracts and medicinal essences. which when put Into the mouth torn Into healing "spore. These are breathed down direct to the lungs, throat and bronchial tubes -not swallowed down to the stomach, which is not ailing. Try a Pec. boa of Peps for your cold, your cough, bronchitis or asthma. All druggists and stores or Pepe Co., Toronto, will supply 4/3 Q h to stuffy stahks and artificial feeding. have actually to learn bow to crop grass. M d ther ambulances have otor an o been among the most valuable con- tributions of the R. S. P. l'. A., as they enable wounded, sick and tired bones to he transported with a mini- mum ot distress. At one of tbe poste where large numbers of tonne, are landed, the steep bill which they needed to climb from the wharf to the veterinary station was found to he a real death-trap to horses that had con- tracted chills or pneumonia during the vuyege. Theetyrichiewood Home of Rest for H•,r-es, a daughter society of the R. S. P. C. A., provided a double motor on. tailrace for the cooifort of these feeble horses, and the coat of this (100tt) was saved in its flret week's work. The Society is able, in many other ways, to relieve the sufferings of the hiatses, largely tbrt•ugh its abil- ity to provide additional comforts and alleviation+ not prescribed on the. mil- itary establishments. its representa- tives teport that the general treat- ment of the horses used by the arwy iv as humane as the circumstances per- mit. and teat carer ot mishandling are very severely dealt with, The Socias ty's educational work includes the giving of special lectures on the care of horses to N. l'. O.'. and other sol- diers. Altogether it may he truth - are ambulance., of course, galore ; fully paid that the claims of the hgrwe there are also bathhouses for the men, to kind and considerate treatment 011 four wheels, laundries, field and have been recognized and provided for soup -kitchen.. aterilizingroouls, X-ray and baoteriological laboratories built on the ordinary chassis tinde or of pleasure -ye■, the French have even little "operating theatres" that move to the, wounded sten instead of their being brought to the burgeon. The h (slily armored carp of which we heard so uiuchn the early days of the war haveehoeb that they are of great value, but, so A British writer pointe out. are none tete burr dangerous be- cause of their inability to turn quick- ly, particularly in narrow roads. (It. is suggested that military motors hereafter be "double enders," so that they may go in either direction with- out stopping tteturn) There are even ladder -cars i•t the reach army for ptirpnses of observation: the instant they atop, a bidder is run up for the nhservet to climb. For despatch-cer- riers and scouting the automobile bas proved its u-efulnw, we is shown by the multitudes of wrecked vehicles that litter the fighting -ground. -The Nation (New York). • • • THE HORSE AT THE FRONT. in the July issue of Our Dumb Ani- mal., (Boston) I read these words : "Regard for all laws, human and divine, ham ceased on the part of both hostile armies ' Eich is ready to stoop to any barbarities tbe other may put in practice." This rather hasty and unguarded statement is open tc ob j. ctiona on many different lines; but one of the most obvious and utter refutations of it is the noble woo k now being done by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals err costmertrm with etre Veterinary Corps of the British army. '!'hough this Leto largely • war of mechanical haulage. it is estimated that there are at leave one million horses employed at Ibis moment in the armlet of the various belligerents. The experiences of the Boer war showed the very un- satisfactory state of the organization for the care of borers in settee service, ar.d the Army Veterinary Corps was established in IOW. During tbe pres- ent war this c arcs, consisting r.f about 7011officers and 8,000 men, has received meet valuable assistance from the R. N. P. C. A., and the chief secretary of this Society has been made an offi- cer of the Army Veterinary Corps. There are now, in all, fifteen veterin- ary hospitals on the tines of communi- cstioo or at the bases of the Biitlsh army. At the time cf the latest re- turns x1,131 horses had been treated in these bowpitals, with the reenit that 47,192 bad returned to duty, 9,119 had died or been killed, and V.,9P1 re- mained under treatment. The staffing and equipment of these hospitals are as complete In their way as those of the hospitals for men, down even to bey -stuffed operating beds, no whirb chloroformed patients subside gently Into a comfortable unconselou.ness Each patient is .ut•jected to the Mal - lien teat for glanders, and 1s then went to the sureiral, the medical or the in- fectious ward as thecae. may demand. Pneumonia patient, are Isolated in longe-hoteo, and a whim tape round their necke indteates that they aro not to be disturbed or taken cwt to water. The Idinwynrrasy of marling 1. recast nirud hl the provision of sand baths for their use. Local anaesthetics pre employed for palslul drwadngs. Just as many of the mete at the Caret are (*11., fed and eared for than they have ever teem in their lives, en many of the ennvaleseent homers, turned loner In • lash French pW'tre. are en jnyi•R hitherto rink sown delights. It .men asserted that mine of the real - mine horses, aeouatoeed all their fiver in this war, in • whollyunpre•.alentsd manner. The economic results have 'Leen as satisfactory es the butaane. The figures already given show a tuar- vellous improvement on the 06 per cent. of foss in the Boer war ; and it hoe been estimated that the German cavalry use up at leapt three horses to our one. from want of care in unsad- dling, removing harness, and feedbag. -London correspondent of New York Post. • . • DAG PIPES AT THE FRONT. it is bardly neceeaary to say. says The Glasgow New", that the Scottish bagpipe has,in the past twelve wontlte, atuintd a vastly wider fame han ever it had before. It is practically the oaiv musical instrument in the British lines un the hattlefielda, and yet there are still left in Scotland vastly mote pipers in active commis- sion than any century as a who!. in Scotland'► past could mortar. Fife bands and brass hands have almost wholly beery dismissed, or et least put into lavender till more psciflc times; pipe, alone go to the fighting ground.. They are even to be found officially oa the Fleet. end are the strength of regi- ments quite un -Scottish -for instance, the Liverpool Irish. How many bag- pipes are at thio moment rousing the morn, or lightening the packs of marching infantrymen. it is impos- sible to estimate; at all events the hum of drones is now as familiar W the peasantry of Northern France as the chirp of crickets. In those districts, hitherto occupied by French troops to which the British line was extended lately, the natives followed the pipes for miles. W. ACHESON dei SON RUGS Seamless, Wilton and Velvet Greatly Reduced in Price These are fine heavy wool -backed Rugs, good quality andcolorings, greens, fawns, browns, greys, reds. St7e 6x9 ft., tegular$1600, for $12.00. Size 9x9 ft., regular $18.00, for $14.00. Size 9x1Of ft., regular $20.00, for 115.011. Size 16x 16 ft., regular $34 00, for 130.00. Tapestry Carpets Reduced to 50c, 60c Originally many of these were nearly twice as much. Mostly ends now of it to20 yards at these prices. Navy Dress and Suiting Serges Probably the best choice in Dress Serges we have ever shown is now in. Nothing else so fashionable and nothing ever more serviceable than a good British Serge. : ' Blac5c, kfan navys, pure wool goods, at pet yard 50c, .00, $1.:35 and 12.00. The choiceie large and styles are very pleasing, materials of good Scotch and English Tweeds, Kerseys, Beavers, Velvets and Plushes, marry . with large belts, convertible GQl- lars, fancy patch poc: kets, flare skirts, and beautifully lined. Prices range $8.00=to =$22.00 Csrn,iorrei "Why, west in the world has he - come of your watch ? The one you used to have had a handsome gold case." "1 know it did, but circum- stances alter cases." Suspicious tailor -"There, stand in that position, please, and look straight at that notice while 1 take the mea- sure." Customer reads the notice - "Terms Garb." "Do you think L should give up ameking. doct tr'r" " Well, 1 think you should; at least until you are able to paymy account. which has been standng for tbreeyeare now." By reason o f the changing shape when in iuotion this bre demos itself o f all mud and slime FARE $3°2 The Great Map'SEEANDBEE" r. preen rid est wetly rts11•1a. to air lalad luta. d tb. weld. Stews•*. seesamspart..r few tee treeraewe. -tin Oft ENV— 3 M...Meent sr.m.r+ — "CITY or BUFFALO' airnin:ut BUFFALO—Dolly, Ma 1 at to Dec, 1st—CLEVELAND e.,r.:e-• • e:m P. Ler. Lterd.ad - • 1P+0r. st. ar,.. • Cawwt.: iaad - • - %AA. Arr.v Pedal. • • • • 713e A. n. (t.t.rs m e.e AT $.ar) reaewtir at C ress eMe Cads, rb.t. Ps-e-a.r Toledo. [.trait rd all'MuaauirwpWaftwtriwd tosue.at_ r.adag..on Buffalo iod C4rdaed au reed ca. Masoo, Ask yew ticket aL-eat fur tK':eu sae. a A. Lon, a.a.,.fuitf ee4r.•1 seams i'a•I. Hart. .hour awls •eta..e .ad Manx of Ito areal 1 Pau "aiEwtn at•:r.' .an qa ~Wyk .1 Iiww mots sone per• end.Mll.s. Alae Ps. nor 2..'y•�' ~Ws.. twskier free. M THL CLE LAND & fU FALO TRANSIT CO, Cl.vd.sd. Ohio SPECIAL BARGAIN'S - - Extra quality "azure" blue and white - - Three Coat Enamelled Ware New assortment just in, will be on sale at excep- tional values. See our window. New and second-hand 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 $(1.39. One only "Summit" Range New 4 -piece sectional grates, also wood grates, reservoir and oven thermometer. Reg- ular $40.00, special $:32.25. :) only Imperial Gray Enamel Tea Pots Regular 4.5c, special 26c. One only "Ideal" Range Four9-inch lids,resenoir,high shelf and oven thermometer, burns coal or wood. Regular $32.00, special $27.75. If you intend painting this fall this is your chance. hn gals. high-grade Ready Mixed Paint Regular $2.60 gal., special 1'1.00. Ne carry a eenepletf lie of Barium*. oar prices are risk. Howell Hardware Co. Ire