HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1916-2-17, Page 2id-
ltitraesae Psaswaair 17, 1914
THE SIGNAL : GOD RRICH ONTARIO
ibrailksignig
TOO CLONAL PRINTING Ou., Urn.
1Peilansmethe
Tem .re
beledied Hes AtA�ierrY Alis la
Mame. YatT^ygy.i
leeeenernee Didier aidlige
sirpnaa oldealy be ud.ees use e
Ahs
eassesse : is canneries i. Use
tee rev is O.. Ower sad puv
ie whams. MkssAMn who
Tim swig' b Soma
pW
.w
acakes tb p-kltr.
m� adds am s essoli le. ilei
Agar, e�so~m Tits=egisi_ves►msmlltss.ss
Mbnrttme Aleeseesinne�y osmm�rnelm��
saet vsead !w wA 1. dv.. ea sqr-
seeles. honied ether NdlsraN.etisers's.
tis eines per th. ter Ilan lemenase ane leer
^ems per nee tau area wew-aeqt larglea
NeeMar weed • et mild sertsstall—twahe
&.d s.4Ire . itcsflu t. Fear.ad* sr .Is Waw
•.e ..ear. mss. • l« r..r. a/vnw
e1.. et Last Ind. Strayed. Mter
stle
Vra.t,niteatiee. Winded, Rase. fee Sante
te g.•u, Perm ler 8.1. sr to beak Addis.
ter 11a1e. eta. eat exeweler ode new. Tw'eety-
e ve Ceara ma& Worries : One D.O.. ler bat
-s.ab. fine Cede Mwos\ess.eases mend"
se m ts 1.=Mr, ill:
Largerertieseareas
Caay per use. No ..ties be t\sa Twenty -
e ve Ovate. Amy •sidseine.' .e. tr.. 4.m of
.1
wadable ted ewesi.rs1ib. el any W/rtd-
.alsr,esed.tim, w eea.Ywsd as oaser-
ty�u a.d abused non eiteo y.
To Iaasero iosm—Tbir es werstl.s of
ev..brvlbee- sad reaem le eindially lath.
d lewure.-akteg Ter, etsu.t. a week) meant
rent Meal, anew, and distrleedateea weekly ewe
aseeientlee will be ut.sded tie sal.e tt roe -
tales tee .e -i sad ddra.ci et the writer. ed
s.sa�r4Ip far
Ir.e. arts N1rsios. ►-ebesid t i Ale.sa.d ens of s.ae fail► s.
•LIMOD aet law DIMS w.ds.day sono
et ssee week.
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 17. 1111d
EDITORIAL NOTES..
The struggle with liertnay is giving
us all new ideas of the atleaning and
value of freedom.
Ilse constitution of the Board, whisk
ale. for ILusthly meetlage of the
council rad quarterly aseeriage of the
whole Board. The getters' m*M 0(.
would germ as opportunity for those
who are not on the ear callvm to being
forward any business in which they
may be interested, and would help to
twtntaln • more grovel and tntlm•t•
'uteri -et in the affairs of tie Hoard.
OriUia Packet : 1( Mr. Fallis of
Peel had made bis resignation lined
and withdrawn from public life, he
would have shown more horse sense.
A contemporary suggests a new
test of • man's sobriety—hisabaity to
tell au ordinary owe -rent stamp from
the special three -cent rump now in
use.
Bluevale young people hare been
debating which is more destructive.
fire or water. The orthodox belief is
that firewater is a greater destroyer
than either.
Whiskey distilleries ie Britain ate
being req usitiuned by the Govern -
meat and oonserted into inanition
factories. Even the old topers must
realize t bat this war is getting to be a
serious business.
Hass Schmidt, of Toledo, Obio,
turned up at Windatr. Oat.. in a
tetrarch for the German recruiting of-
fice Ile wantee: to fight for the
Kaiser. Ile was taken in hand by the
Canadian authorities and is now •
sadder and a wiser man.
Portident Wilson hese snensced his
willingness to accept a seeped term.
This probably means his Domination
as the Democratic candidate. There
is more uncertainly with regard to
the Republican nomination. It Theo
dore Roosevelt should be the man.
there will be one grand snap. with not
much "neutrality" about it.
Both houses of Parlimatsest •t Ot-
tawa bare atquiet c. d rnanimoe:sly In
•resolution &skins Ib. Imperial Parlia-
ment to extend the life of the Cana-
dian Parliament for our year. In nrd'r
to avoid • w•rt.we rl actinic, Bxb Bir
Robert Bol deo and 'lir Wilfrid Laurier
Made notable spectres on the oeca-I
•i .n. The (, beral leader ungrudgingly
approved of the r....lutioc, quoting
the sentence of the Liverpool laborer :
"If Germany wins. nothing else in
God's world mat tars.
The Orillla Packet atoM.at the "the-
ory," which it atL. ihutes to The Tc-
ronto Star, that "Bouraeas deserted
Laurier and attached himself to Bor-
den because he moult not 'stomach'
Laurier'. superloyal ', to British con-
n ection." 1f this, along with • sense
of per.onal i. -jar c Leanne he did out
get some appoint meta tbat hewaeted,
was not the cause of Bourarsa'a Meek
with Laurier, pr, baps The Packet will
1-11 us what the ie�sson was. Bour-
a s s opposition to Canadian partici.
potion in the Boer war war, if we t e-
memher rightly, the first open eidn of
his disagreement with the Liberal
leader, sod since that time bis most
strenuous fight was in opposition to
the Laurier naval policy. But poo.
• lily The Packet bas • line on sotne
entirely differect ressoo for Bourassa s
conduct
The death of John TL.Imle. of Kin
eardioe, removes a tan who was
widely known as a salt manufacturer
and • politicieo. He was a member of
the House of Commons for several
;arms, supporting the Liberal piety.
His death, which was the result of a
f.11 in the cellar of his house, is • dis-
tinct Ions to public life it Bruce
county.
Our good friend The Orillia Packet
has a notion that it is a military
theory that "alt army marches oo its
stomach We bare beard that an
arm l•.•figbts on its stomach." 1t
marrbee, we believe, on is feet and
legs—end the esamining physicians of
the army are vett. easeful that the
feet mod legs of recruits are in rood
condition.
Mr. Jodie* Riddell urges Canadians
to search for and pre.etve family
vs.ords. lettere- and documents rolect-
ing to the early settlement of Canada.
In this way much valuable ma-
terial concerning pioneer life In Can-
ada may he preserved for historical
purposes. The Ontario Historical So-
ciety is doing good work •losg this
liar. and Huron -.suety should have a
breach society
The Hensel' Observer grows sarcas-
tic over the refund of Use Comity
cousell to ask for the appointment of
• district representative for Homos. 1t
says : 'The rural members of that
homer able body are ss • rete witty in -
*Rarest farmers and leer the Ma-
nion of an expert. What nee good
enough for their great -great -greed -
leans is good 'sough for thews." A
M more -digs" like this and the
•ossilloes will hasten to amend their
way`. -- --
A mssseb•at o n the Square 1 ho other
day vetoed • complaint again* the
beard of Trade. or. rather. pisiost the
wap Is which the Board le ewdorted.
M.ueb.ata are asked to bemuse mem-
here aid them throogbout the year are
pssetleally ignored, the .,moil d the
Bend tra...et iso .'1 the beeinem.
The e,mtiWst hes some fenedaltes.
_wenn has repeatedly awed that
IneldbleP neon be bald Ale arthro to
WHAT OTHERS SAY.
TIIE way.
hadwtea ard side. Their tow wee
.ilii
T.i M essnM They worm shoe try to stone ns omit. Oa the ssaws.d sidle • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• ••• • • • • • • •
1l.._M_i.uu.pdlr.sa1o..t Ihe bsyer isadw with
b � •
woes fully occupied I �. � � � W A CtiESON & SON
THE DEFENCE OF MOUSA DAGO.
From the day that Turkey entered
the war there had bees smooch aex`ety
among the people of Zeitoun as l0
',bother the Tusks would treat the
Armenians of theca mountain Angina
with some new loom of crmalty and
opprraslor. Zeituun is—we must now
ray was - • city s.1 7 t11M1 Inbabitaats,
entirely Arani.n, .rut surrounded
l.y many villages, •1.,. Cbriatien, in
the Mart of the Taurus Mountains. 1
The Ortbedox Hope.
0,4111s Peewit
An editor in this life. The Goderirb
Signal. hopes. that the late M. Y. Mc -
for Dearly fifty yes.s the direct- 1
ing mind of The Seafortb Expositor, in t
the Valhalla of the mystetious future
"may 'till find comfort and joy in
the vocation to which he devote his
life bere." The thought woul.l at
least suggest no irreverence to the
mind of • Swedenhnrgisa ; but most
newspaper editors doubtless indulge
the more ortbcnloz hope that in the
hereafter "the wicked cease from
troubling and the weary are at rest.'-
Germanys Eserseeae Bleeder.
Hamilton Ppett•ter. -
Before the war Germanys overseer
COED 'perm was valued approximately
at the enormous tum of $.i,lk10,Op1,Ot11.
Hamburg'. its chief port—second only
to London—bandied half of this
amount. No business is tieing trans-
acted in it today, Germany's Nieman -
tile mar i ne lying rusting at its wharves.
Add to this the loss of compainti.nly
all of its c,lonies and tremendous
wastage in men and munitions tweed
by the war, and some idea will be had
of the tremendous coat of its lessee
and futile attempt to dominate the
not Id,
Many • man wbo seeks facie finds
nothipg hut infamy.
Then i wase catarrh in tea. vection of ted
con.trr ilia all ober diew.- put t.erta/r.
sad for year. 1t weal wppo ed to be laeur.b e
Ilortor. etre.lb.1'sett rewdlet, sad by e n•
Aanny (antro' le cur. with Meal trestwret,
-earer.o.n-a 1 1 L.4.sssed b mens tatioonal
eonditio.• and tlssrelbe. requires cleat1 u
donor treatment. malt. C.twrh Cee.. e. -n =
lectured by I. J. L'bertey ages. T.4.da 08.o.
is • eoa.tlt.tloaal e. es�ladse.. re lakes arto rove y
and eels t\aeagS the ea tbti.eoe our
ties. of the .pie. Os. Madrid dollar• rr-
w ard i. Glared eR say tame that B.1.. Catarrh
Care tale te em- Send mor circular. sad
testl-.nlat..
P. J. cHL'IY a CO. Toledo, Ohm.
add by druggist.. Tse
Hall, rawly P 18. for ••••mti pat io..
bad been serving for one year u. the
pa.tor of the Armenian Protestant
church in Z-itouu, and the narrative
which follows 1s one of persoual ex-
perience.
Barly in the epilog of the year the
Government began to assume• threat-
ening attitude towards Zeit un, enm-
owntn8 the eider• and notables of ted
city and commeoclog an inquisition
with the punirbment of the latrtinade.
Meanwhile some t1,io0.1 regular troops
ware .1uuto•.td in the barracks above
the city. An attempt t o tate the Ar-
menian monastery by storm co,t the
Tori* some casualties and failed of its
object. The young men who were
wi.huu *tinily defended them -elves,
arid tot unt•I attacked by field arta--
brit was the ono:.&slery taken.
Fifty of the leading teen in 7e loun
wet. summoned to the •.arracks •'for •
ronteience with the cumu,snder.-
They were at once imprisoned and
their (.wilier carte ►cot for. Erery-
one waited anxiously for these people
to return, but after a while it war
Yarned that they bad been seat away
to an us known destinatioo. A pew
day. later asotber and larger group of
families were ordered to the barracks
and were forthwith driven off salt
threats .gid curses to adistant banish-
ment. I.. this way three Of four Lan -
dyed famtli-s were seat uff on loot,
by devious routes through the mcun-
tssos.
Day by day we saw the various
quarters of the city dripped of inbab-
'tants, until at last but a single neigh-
bor boot: retrained. The commanding
officer sent for me one morning and
told mete make ready at own fur de-
parture. We made our preparations
arrieedly, for we were allowed to take
but little with us. As we were leaving
I looked bark with an aching bears
and saw our beloved church empty
. and lonely. The last company of our
7.000 people was streaming down the
valley into banishment. We bad seen
massscrer, but we hart never seen this
before. A massacre at least ends
quickly.
The first day's march exhausted all
of tar. In the dark, as we Il down
upoo the open ground, Turkish mule-
teers came end robbed as of the few
donkeys aod mules that we had. Next
day. in forlorn condition, Inc children
with swollen •nd blistered feet, we
reached Ilatasb.
[Here the pastor was parted from his
company and sent to bis boom town
nest the sea, twelve miles west of An-
tioch. This was through the inter-
post Goo of the Americas mineionariea,
I but. as it turn.i oat, be was by no
means yet out of danger).
Twelve days after I had reached
bonne an official order from the Turk-
ish Government at Antioch was served
upon the six village^ of Moose Dassh
to. prepare for banishment within eilttbt
days You can scarcely imagine the
co r.aternatioo and the indignation
which Ibis order caused. V, • eat up
•11 night derating what to do. To re-
sit the forces of the Turkish Govern-
ment seer, ed almost hopeless, and et
the nattering of families into • dis-
tant wilderness raidrd by fanatical
and Mateo Arab tribes seemed such
an appalling prnpect that the inclina-
tion of bo h men and wooaett was to
refuse the pummons and withstand the
anger of the Goreromeot.
S sty feeril:es from cone village
which were not of th•a mind, and •
considerable number from the next
village separated themselves from us
fare commenced through one ravine.
All the other adreams bad been feiota
and were not followed up. By the
time our men discovered the situation
and rallied from distant points, the
runts bad shot down Our scouts end
had poured through an important parr.
To our dismay we saw them •!read
in full occupation of high
g
threatening our camp. Reinforcements
kept pushing up the mountain, and as
the afternoon drew on wafter that we
were complete) ,yet bend We
--- —
•
inn N
s.a4 west dAaliuck
ispiratee. We Isa.e loot all track d
them and may lever bear of thorn
apis-
that It would W lapoe-
elide to i our villages ism the foot -
Me etssdved to wi'►Jraw to the
heights of Memos Deg h, takiag wlsk
us at Wile • sandy of loud and irn-
pisataste aa it was passible to carry. All
the Hocks of sheep •ed goats were also
driven up the monoliths -dale •ud every
•visitable weapoo of defence was
brought oat and fuel i.br d up. Ws
found that we had IR) modern rifles
•ed *bastions. with perhaps three
times that number 0f old flintlocks
and bora,-pistols. Teat still lett more
than half our men without weapons.
By nightfall the ern day we had
reached the upper crags of the moun-
tain. As we were preparing to camp
Algid to cook the 'vertigo weal, a por-
ion rain set Is and coounued alloight.
For this we were 111 prep•. rel Ther -
bad nct been tine to make huts of
brancb:'e, nor had w• any toots or
waterproof clothing. Men, w apes
•nd cblldreo, somewhat over ;x,1100 in
all. were soaked to the dire. aid much
of the bread we had brought with Di
was turned into • pulpy mos. We
were especially solicitous to keep our
powder and rifles dry. This the men
managed to do very well.
At dawn ..it morning all hands
went to work desalts( trenches •t the
most et retegic prints in the a.eenl of
the mountam i. Where there was no
earth for trench digging, rocks were
rolled together, making .troug barri-
cades behind which group, of our
.batpabootera were stationed. The
sun carie out gloriously, and we were
hard at it •11 day, strengthening our
portion against tint art* k whi-b we
.new w••eeertaio W come. Towanda
evening we held • ma.. m.•ning fur
ibe eIec'ion of a committee t -t defence,
and plans were 'made for desend.ng
each paw in the mouutaio sod e'en
approach to the damp. `i:out., mes-
sengers and a central reserve group of
sharpshooters were chosen and aa -
signed their duties.
The sight day: grace had now al-
most elapsed, and we were aware that
the Turks must have di.covered our
movements,. The whole Antioch plain
is peopled with Tooke and Atab., and
there u always a strong military gar-
tieon to the Antioch ',wracks. Oo
July 21 the attack begin. The ad-
vance guard was 3lu regulars, and
their captain insolently boasted that
�e would clear the mountain in one
day. But the Turks suffered several
casualties and were driven beck to the
base. When they advanced to a more
Ugeneral attack, they draaged up a
de-run, which, on securing the
range, wrought havoc in our camp
One of our .harpsbooters crept down
through the beusbwood aod among
the rock. until be was in very close
range of the field -gun, which war
mounted on a fiat root 'tiring made
himself an ambush of branch'', he
waited for • opportunity. He
was so near that be . ould bear the wise shipping to a misimum. Mean-
loadedat suggestion, women
the gun. Then, u gine gunner . had been making two immense flags,
.lbttpr>d 001 into view, the young ratan on one of which 1 printed 10 large,
packed him • R with the drat .bot. clear English : '•Christians in distress
With five bullets . killed four gun- —mus " This wadi a white deg with
ners. The capt thereupon threw black lettering. The other was also
up his hands in dinner, and, not being white with • large red cross in the
able to discern our sharpshooter, or- centre. We fastened these flags to
dared the gun to be dragged to • place eel "Piing* and ret • w•trb at the
of shelter. Thus were we saved from foot to scan tore horizon from dawn to
• disastrous got: -fin oo that day and dark: The Turks again attacked us
several dare to come 1 eras hes and we had
But the Turks were gathering forces
for • massed attack. They had sect
word through many Moslem villages
calling the people to arms, until the
mob of 4,(100 Moslems tbireting for re-
venge bad become • formidable foe.
But the ebief strength of the Turks
was in the 3,000 regular troops acede-
toured to discipline and loured to
hardship.
Soddenly one morning air scouts
brought word to headquarters that
the energy wail appearing at every
pee in the mounteh. Here sad there
the Turks had alt eady gaised the el:ffs
st.d'bouldee. of the crest. Our re -
ares body of defenders waAl--very un-
wisely as we afterward' realied—sent
in wall groups to these various points.
No sooner had our forms been tbus
dli•ided than • maned stunk in gnat
by several
there wee se b.rbor ar aeeommws-
1 a ale tan din.etl Into the sea. We
ewe weenie amid the reparation one
damage dein to die vamp. Spatial
...moatge were held to *Mak God Ise
deli.mws . tbus tar, and to (Nweelle
with Him for our families rad ltd.
now.
Whoa we di.cover.d ,hit 0411 soma -
tale was in • .tato of stag-, we Mpa
Lo setlmate our feed re+wrwe. tic
the first week me the we
had ezbausled the bets tree did
chime Ord we bed bret.Y $ Oen
tomo • w for a roust* pot tee w
been living on our floe♦•, adapt the
goats' milk for the little cblldree ask
the sick, amid slaughtering a number
of sheep and goats every day. Thio
smarted wear diet was not good for
us. but, os the other hand, we were We have still a very large choice of linens im
profoundly thankful that we were • ry '-'g`
flocks • will continue these on oak at original prices , prices at
and •
found that even with �reduoed •
no more en longer.
Under the perdue, of this aeen•ddppyns • facturer•
by se.. It occurred to us that posslW; •
• battleship of the Allies might w in •
to the north. S . one of our mem: who • a
•
wan • strong swimmer, volunteered to
creep through the Turkish lines, and
take • message in English, strapped
inside his pelt. He succeeded in reecb-
ing the hilts overlooking the harbor.
but saw that there was no battleship
and returned. His plan bad been to
swim cut t ' we, circling around to I
reach the battlesbip, thus avoidin, the
Turkish sentries on the roads leading
into Alezaudretta.
We then prepared triplicate copies
of the following appeal. andappoiuted
three swiu,me.s to be constantly on
the wet -h for soy paving ship to
strike through the .t.rt aud swum out
at such •0 angle as to meet Ibe vessel :
To any English, Amoneao, Frencb.
Italian or Hussies admiral, captain or
authority, whom this petition may
Plod, an appeal in the name of God
and human btotberhood:
We, the people of ail Armenian vil-
lages. about .,,tri, souls in all, have
withdrawn to that pan of Mous* D.gb
Balled D.,m l.jik. We have taken
refuge here from Turkish b•rbariam
and torture. !Them. after reciting at
length what exowiences they hid
passed through the appeal concluded:)
Bir, we appeal to you in the slam.
of Christ ! Transport us, we pray you.
to Cypress or any other free land Oar
people w not indolent. We will ears
our own bread if we are employed. U
itis is too .much to grant, tran.p..rt at
least our women, old people and chil-
dren, equip w with sufficient arms,
ammunition and food, and we will
work with you with all our might
against the Turkish forces. Please, sir,
do not wait until it is too lab
But days psdeed sad sot a mil wad
seen. The war bad reduced the co•st-
• •
-
C
•
Exceptional Values.
•
• in Linens •• •
a
•
. e
• TABLE CLOTHS. TOWELS. •
1
TOWELLING, NAPKINS
•
snared the suff-rioo 01 .tarvtios- ported by us before war time and at prices We •
W. made • careful count of the
ration of meat our supply Id la" which they cannot be duplicated today from the manu- •
th two weeks ton r
we begin to think of platy for •
Alezandretta harbor, thirty-five miler
Shantung Silks Sale •
The Moa- ant .sae s "Mew dare you set that tenet •h. r
The Panties t '1 des't see Clot We year business.'"
The taws-le-ewelshe : **Ten ttisn't, r r t ygeeemst 110.0110 Comedies
werbm'a who sera their Minn hem toren n prwd.Mto. You people who bull
down w timber ere wane aa'rtttise M tasssdiao latter t han all the alien dysa-
nian+ put tegetber
7
num
saw also that the range of the Turks'
rifles was tar superior to that of our
old-fashioned firearms. By sundown
the enemy bad advanced three oom-
paaies through the dew underbrush
and forret to within four hundred
yards of our buts. A deep damp ra-
vine lay between aid the Turks de-
cided to bivouac rather thea to push
on In the du knees.
Our leaden hurriedly took rousse'
together. Finally • veninreeome plan
was adopted : to creep around the
Turkish positions In the dead of sigbt
and Grob carry owl an euvebpisg
movement. closing la very saddesly
with a 1usilade end aiding with a
head -to -band encosster. If this piste
should tail, we knew that everything
was bat. Through the dark, wet
woods our men crept with 'straordis-
ary skill. It was here that our fam-
iliarity with thew nags aad thickets
made it passible to do what header.
(meld sot attempt. The elven wee
practically onemptstdd, whew with s
Barth and a cash w .B aides our mee
delivered their sunk, rosbhg forward
with desperate nonage. 1m a v'ry
few momwts It wee evident that be- -
wiid•emen t and ahem bad throws the 1
T1sstlub camp hes ted stmmet MO -
Nies. Bvideaty Ihe impression tells
attacof a very esibetaatial Annan*
k Weans is Mm alma ball ss
lour the Tartish eglesM gime the or-
der to retreat. and Mbar doss Use
wooed were dear d the
mope. More tbllta Teat. lad
been killed and gene beet' token
ssvm Master unser 1. tlelwd..1
smmwaklon sod w e asrl.. let we ,
Imre, that oar faep ewe set deemed
t were tidy athero eft
the mite M days they
messed 1 whole M.iammrdmm Arps.
Wien for mashy messaseme"—a Mir
d pssbaps Ib,t10s. W1tb this brow
somilles they wen able to neerwend
sadly liege to Men Dish ee the
.ppproac
some severe getting, but sever at
such •bee quarters as during the first
engagement. From one point of vant-
.gs we wen •hle.to r.,ll boulders down
the precipitous mountain -site with
disastrous effects to tbd enemy. Our
powder and cartridges were running
tow, and the To ks evidently birdmen)*
idea of the .traits we were in, for they
began shouting inaoient summons to
surrender. Those were anxious days
and lone nighty.
One Sunday mernine. the fifty-third
day of our defence, while 1 was occu-
pied in preparing • brief sermoo to en-
courage and strengthen our people, 1
was startled by hearing • man shout-
ing at the top of his vole*. He came
racing through our encampment
streigbt for my but. "Paster! Pas-
tor ! ' he exclaimed. "a battleship is
touting and has answered oar waving.
Praise God! Thank God! Our prayers
aro heard ! When we ware the .Red
Cr on Bag, the halt Ieship ao.wers b
waving signal -flags. They aus and
ss
are corning in nearer 'bore.- •
This proved to he the French cruiser
tiuiebeo. a four -funnel ship. tVhile
one of its boats was holeg lowered,
some of our young men razed down to
the shore and were soon swimming
out to the stately vessel, which seemed
to have been sent t•, u. from God.
Witb heating hearts we hurried down
to the beach, and soon an invitation
• •
• 34 -inch wide Natural Shantung Silks, good weight •
• and beautiful. puiest quality Silki4 will wash per- •
• fectly and will wear well. regular 10c and 39e •
•
• 60c a yard, at per yard 0
• •
• Furs and Fur Coats •
• •
• Men's and Women's Coats and Furs. Our entire clear- •
• ing sacrifice prices are now inaugurated. We •
•
• invite inspection early for bargains.
••
•Hosiery .Specials•
•
• "Penman's" famous Cashmere Hose for men and
• women, all sizes. Exceptional 35c and 50c
•
• values at i1�•
•
— —
•
• W. A ChESON & SON ;
•••••.•••••.•.•••••.••••••
1
ease from tbecaptain for • delegation I
to Dome cm board and narrate the situ -
anion He edit a wireless to the Ad-
miral and before a gnat while the
Heirship Ste. Jean d'Arc appeared nn ,
the horiz w followed by other French
battleship'. The Admiral spoke words
of comfort and cbser to ns and gave !
an order that every sod of our nom-
msnity should be taken on board tint
chips. In two days we arrived at Port I
Said. and are now settled in a perms- I
Dent camp which has been provided
for us by the British autism hies.
Au accurate census has been taken;
which shows that the survivors num-
ber
B.bien and child raw under four 413
Girls from four to fourteen 501i
Boys from four to fourteen MC
Women above fouwteen 1149
Mao shove fourteen lari4
Total number rescued 441414
After the Tut ks first challenge July
13, we had eight days' parley and ptep-
&ration. For fifty-three days we de-
fended ourselves on Mosso Dagb : and
a two day. voyage brought us to Port
Said on September 14.
Ws do not forget that our Saviour
was brought in his isfanc to Egypt
for warty and shelter. WItb sid-
ings to American, British,Fren.b ani
Araoien friends, in the name of
Christ. usd, r the shadow of whose
Med Cetus we ere indeed one people. -
The Outlook New York I.
GOT TO THE ROOT OF HER
TROUBLE
Aad Dodd's Kidney ille Cared Yrs.
B.•acbgrd's Backache cad Rkwlsdiem.
Pagoetville, Oloseeas r Co . N. P..
Feh. 7,—tSpecial t—'•Tse, Dnda'd K d-
ory Ps11s cured me." Ties e are the
words of Mrs. Niche) Blancbsrde of
this place. Mrs. Blanchard continuer:
' I suffer •d for two years mid may
truthfully say that my trouble had
reached nearly artery part of my body.
1 hid stiffness of the joists and realer,
of the muscles, and rhesonsetlem soon
developed. 1 nattered from headache
and backsebe. 1 bad beast fluttering•
and my .leap was so brokro and unre-
freshing that it wee with dimcnity I
could get arty rest. Two boars of
Dodd'. Kidney Pills cured a com-
pletely.-
Melted
om-pletely.-Clogged kidneys mean clogged eir-
culatioo. Clogged circulation means
heart trouble. Dodd'• Kidney PJM
make good cisculaUoo and cure heart
trouble.
MacEwan Estate
Exclusive agents for
SCRANTON
COAL
for Goderich
and District.
Best Coal Mined.
Any quantity beet all Maple
Slabs, Mixed Wood, Hemlock
rad Kindling (Cedar or Rae.)
TELBPtHONE3. ease p
reridma 'seer ES
Our Special Offerings fhis Week
are Extra Values for You. - - -
Three 1 -bus. Chaff Baskets.... 15c
Two 1 -bus. Willow Baskets... 3.5c
One 2 -man Posthole Auger..$ 3.00
Four D -handle, round point,
best grade, regular $1.00
Shovels 50c
One base -burner Heater, new
fire pot, in good shape, good
value at SIR.00, will clear . .$12.00
One Art Garland base -burner
Heater, used only three
winters, practically as good
as new. When new would
sell for $45.00. For a quick
sale $19.75
will buy it.
One 3 -burner I) troit Coal Oil
wickles'. Cook Stove, reg.
$ i s. ot•, for $11.75
Two Ovens for same, reg. $3.00$2.00
One hundred Grindstones at25c
One $3.00 Hammock $ 2.00
Two pairs Snowshoes, reg
$4. oo. for $ 3.00
Skates at half-price.
We have several excellent values
in new ani second-hand Ramer.
THE HOWELL HARDWARE CO., LTD.
PHONE .57.