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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1917-3-8, Page 2'!lltntaoAT, Olathe 8 , 1917 t • 1111s B1UNAL PRINTING W., Uro, Pssuassus Yam &seat tet31/sbed every Tban rt .s w °SBA in TLe Signal Building. North eltrestpe. Ood.rloh U a Telephone No. to snrurn0N'reeer.—Oce Dollar and Fifty t •tit+ per yea, ; If paid otrlcUy In advents Otte will be accepted . to subscribers In the tilted Stere the rate 1r One Dollar and Fifty te strictly to adv.00e. Subscribers who hill to revolve Tits dans m. regularly by mall will confer a favor by acquainting the publish- er to Net at a" earl a date sr psible. When change of moire.. desired, os desired, both old wad tae sew address should be given. KemtUaseee may be wade by bank draft. empress money order, post -deer order, or reglsterrd MUM. Subscriptions .nay commence at any time A oviurnereu Taaua— ttata for display and deotraet adventrmeot.. will be given on aeon- csuou. Legal and other .imnar advert Women M. Ms Dents per Rim for first Insertion and four "ems per line for Babb subsequent insertion. Measured bya scale of solid nonpareil—t 'Pelee ad hoesunder, au nch. 134,41004,4 cards of de USW sFive Dollars per year, Ad•srUa► mem. of lama. Fouad, Strayed, 811mattoor Vacant, Situation W au Led. Reuses for Sale tr to fent, Earn$'• for Sale or to hent, Articles for R. le. etc.. not exceeding etcht line., Twenty- five('rnt- each insertion; 1300 0011.r for 0 - month. Fifty Cent. for es. kw,s quent month. Larger advertisements to proportioo. An- neeneementr to ordinary reading type, fen Cane per line.' No natl., km thenTwenty- Ave Cent'. Any spnoial no, toe, the object of which td the perunirrl benefit of Any ludivld wl or •...elation, to be considered an adver- tisement and charged ao..ordingly. To ('oltitr$,oND.Nty.—The co operation of our .nbs'•rtber- and readers Is oordlally Invit- ed reoord olall local, county aand dtet riot donors. No00nt mdntoaUon will be anendod to uolae. It con- tains the name and addrw of the wrltey, net ogee-serily for pnblirai ion, but as .n evidence of gnat faith. New- items should reach Tits 81watt office not later Mini Wednesday awe of ewe week. THURSDAY. EDITORIAL NOTES. The Hun is hacking up. The United States appears to have a serious caw of ruaewt•. China may beat the United Slates In getting into Lb. war. China bas mote starch, of course, than the s. Now is the time to get that each lot gardening scheme on its feet. A great deal can be done by united ef- fort. "Nut that 1'w violently opposed to it," begs the Saltford Sage, talking of womso suffrage '•bm with the wo- men runnitw things iu pernea, as they do everywhere else. it'. going to be a poor sort of world for u. men," "Ontario should not, have to'dlmond upon a foreign country foe Its 'coal supply," declares The HathiltonTimes• Come to think about i , it was rather careless of P. ovidrnce not to leave a handy coal deposit in this P.nviuce. "13Ily" Sunday gets atter the Olen and women "who won't take time to fight for bind.' But these ..we men and women might da a lot of lighting if they were offered what •'B Ily" Sundry gets—shout shoo, • tbiow. Now China is talking of declaring war against Germany and Austria It i. • pretty safe thing for China, and she will get )tit of paying the share of the Boxer indemnity payable to the Central powers. The Chinese bead isn't all ivory, by any means. The project ftA' the tion by Canada of the British West fedi.• does not appal to us. The Wert Indies are too far away to to governed wisely (row Ottawa, and any advantages to be gained from the union would be outweighed 1.•v the opportonitiee that would be given for the operations 1f the grafter and the patronage-wonp- er. grated by the Cotlleecvative Govern- went. The members of the Govern- weot are evidently uneasy over Mr. i .wart's pe s,stut campaign on the nickel question. 1t may he that the advice to put every back yard and vacant lot into cultivation is better advice than most people at present realize. With the prolonged scarcity of labor, the great demand for foodstuffs from the war- ring countries, and the sinking of ford cargoes by submarine, there may be something more closely approaching w tandne than the present generation has ever seen. A Difference In Social Values. Much of the opposition to the taxa- tion of land vetoes. grows out of the inability ot people t, diatingu‘sh the difference Nativism) social values u tbe.e apply to 1.ud, and the values that are rup/o,srd t' attach to other articles that ale commonly taxed. People recognize t hat as population increases lend velure adeemed even more rapidly. Most people real Z3 also that thew increased values are not due to the tt•.rls ul the indisidud, but to the p,roeece of the couituuutty at large, aud that were the people to move away the land values would (tirapperr with them. When it is suggested, however, (bat thew values should be razed for the benefit of the community which creates them iu- stead of tbeir being allowed to pass into the hands of land specialistuts.wbo anticipate increaser in population, by buying land and boldi',g it for the expected advance in values, objection sometimes is .aired to ►uch La loll no the ground 11341. siwlI&. values attach to other lines of Industry. It is claimed, for instance, that when a moiufate u. et• ,.it. up • building, end dowel. p. a huge trade becou-e of in increase iu topul4t Km. his enterprise should he taxi,. just as such as land velums, and for toe Mule' reason, aa the value of bid business would disap- pear with it. A great uriefake underlies this ergo - went.. God created the land. He in- tended it for the use of humanity. Without land no person could live. Out of the land, and to some extent the se', everything we need for the sustenance of life i. produced. When • land speculator gr.bs and mono - Pollees land he takes what be did not ct...to, and motto. by withholding it front the use of those who would use it and benefit the community by iso doing. He doe. not produce anything of value biwself and makes bis gain by taking from otbeu something which their efforts did produce. When a manufacturer puts up • building and sells loots, clothing or any other useful article. be himself creates aoaeething in We goods he manufactures which is of value, and thereby he benefits the community. Hb makes bis gain by ae.l.Ung the public to supply their needs. While it is true the presence of a large popu- lation is likely to help hie business, he iu turn helps that lgpsl+aiun gat tering together real arMrfisrs manufacturing them into useful at - tick., tberelyy furnishing the commun- ity with needed goods. incidentally he furnishes labor for others. The Land specillatrir dials none of theme things. Vu h. -in a poor immigesn: conies to this country the lend speculator makes it moled.fficult fur him l.1 obtain a fern or home by withholding from bid tae the land which he would he glad to use if be cytoid obtain it at • price within his reach. Thor, the land spec- ula'or hinder-: the development of the country and imposes a burden on peo- ple who would he glad to work if they could have an ripper uni'y of doing so. The manufacturer benefits by the coming of the immigrant to the coun- try, hut in turn he helper, that iwrui- grant by increasing the supply ret' the things which Una, immigrat t nerd.. It is •heolutrly unfair and unjust. therefore. class the manufacturer with the land .peculator, and to inti - tulle that the cohditioos are parallel. The lend specubstnr is a drone that lives on others ; the inanufacturer is a working be that helps to .nmtain others by hid writ and enterptise.— Plum and D•tiry. The Toronto World adviees Pre- mier Hearst to "look into the Depart- ment of Education and encourage any sparks of intelligence or embers of progress that are to be discovered there. if he does not wish to provide a 'new subject of attack for the Opposi- tion." Tbs Opposition, however, does not seem to be in any burry to take &dvaut•ge of the opportunities for criticism offered by the vagaries of the D. p clement of Education. The winter temperature of Toronto Island is warmer than that of the city, as shown by official records. This ir due, no doubt, to the modifying influ- ence of the water. The acme cause operates in the moderation of the tem- peratures in the Huron ieke holt, It 1s fiequently noticed that ti derirh' does not have the extreme frost$ that visit iondon. or places even farther south. Which is not to may that it down t gat a rmewbat chilly in Oode- rich sometimes. Mr. Hartley Dowell keeps rep his atlark on the °static. Government on the nickel quest. ion. In the i-egisla- ture last week he aha,gad that Peverel percale of land in the nickel belt were granted in 1918 to three dollars ass acre to reepinyees of the Canada Cop- per topper (o., in spits of the dsearatinn of Hoe. 111. 11. Ferguson that not nee sere of nickel -bearing land had been THE WAR. THE TALE 1)F A TANK. (Boyd ('able.) His \Isjasty's lend ship '•Hotatuff" IMP busy rebunkering and refilling ammunition in a nicely Secluded spot under the lee of a cluster of jagged stumps that had once been tree, while her skipper walked round her and made a careful examination of her skin. She bore, on her blunt bows e•- pecially, the marks of many bullet splashes and stare and .rata, and on You may seas s day by aa iritsltio‘of LA ran SIGNAL GODERICH ONTARIO It 8114 and possibly you will not detect this imitation until the tea-pot reveals it. Demand always the genuine "Salada" in the sealed aluminum packet, and see that you get it, if you want that unique flavour of fresh. clean leaves properly prepared and packed. eke Mak Signal.," said ' he rpoke.tuat. "The I locker 1.11 away *bee she upended armor p1 .t nog d,wsu't etnp thew, )0,1 •,.d tuwbl. d down t 0 • he other 0,)J. see. •1'ney go through, and t h• o. l.v Spilt eve. y blessed grain we hod. 1 an ing•oions arrangement of •brut -d don't hold wi' (bet .'r"ight-up-.tatd- steel venetian shutters jure inside the down ,ua err my alt." skin, the bullets are turned. riche. "(1h, well," said the Asst men," 1 up'tId on to ono' her Pet o' shutter dou'tkuuw a• it w.e wotae than when deflects again out'drd" and awry. No we .10,333' toweda.•taeatbeChannel. evei y bullet i has h't• out retui no to .he `J6r WOwakes a rotten Lad sea-bui►t, 1 shout.,, with .lightly deuroa.eJ veloc- wu.t aloft" i y nes Telly. hot. mortice nt p'-netratin' . "t•'w*it act tee r. ..*.d •h.. stet tied Poseur to k111 et et/1114 Doable 14(1310." Sig nailer. '•You loo's wean to Nay Signale soared at bio/ stoptci•.u0ly, I she duets but be weave utte• ly 4.•1' wn.ud there 1 "Why, ot course," said the HotaUitf wee such as' anti'e alirertae of atwink_ simply. '•Cm nub, wind y..u, we'll" Iraq syr ur geoidy resile atuungs'. lbs 001 "Wilted fur• i.u'g vuy•.gre under biscuit-wuuchers that he was puzzled. our owe power. The whole bull is a •'An' 1 hear -they can go over atwost watrt-Igbt •tank -w i lu..giitodih•I anvthin'—trenrb+s an' bit had wire, an' tranavvire, buikbe.dr, wu' we've n an'shel,-boles an' such-likr ?" be raid -adju.wbleactew pt.•i4her. 1 duunoa as 1 ought to be Savant' about tet, interrogatively. "ALtIONT anything." repeated the dough.' and 10, .auk hie voice and spokes.wan with just it shade of indig gu per fuRlrucolu ceutiouody r and At this Skiff n aliuo in his Gine. "She's built t(oldie'sup b'.. wap "LAI) t aob.ve,rut aintythiNg byw, itihboi.ut maonrynina'lu,w10,t nurrgrltbeKert Iwllotrdtro.•uf t iI1r.l.1 0I�sou•, loittr le1 turned to the ciew. "what was the sus prise." be conclude.) hurriedly,asbe o lain•• that place wi' the twelve -foot saw the Skipper rise, "list we'... sev- in' up lar use Hun whish we gra to solid stone wall round it? You know. Stout eleven wiles behiud- the German the Rhine. He seokou. ibis Rhine is lines." goiu' ,u hold us up, d•.ti t be? Wait ''Eleven miler ?" said the Bighaller tel be seer the 't'auk..wuu it an' walk io accents struggling hetween doubt up this chffr on the o ber side," and incredulity. The Skipper owe a few quiet orders "About that, accordin' to:the map," and the clew vanished. crawling, and said the other. '•shat'+ about our oral" by one, into w bole man -hole. The ge cruise." ••Hjt—but," objected the Signaller, "how wasn't. you cut off—surroucded- er—" "Cut off." said the Hotstul cheer- fully, "why, of course we was, sur- rounded, AND cut off, Hut what good was' that to'ern ? You've seen some of tut welkin' up and over their first lines, and them shoot$)' shells an' Mika aa' maxims at tet Hut they Signaller's Tufo. in int tound 111110 for • last word to him in prseing. "1 'slime. we't a trkiu' a tura down across the river an' reseal," tie said. "1t you fol- low us you'll most likely war us do a practice swim or two." "Well, I've met (some dandy lien in no tune," the Sigorller murmured to hilurelf, "but that ch ti's about 11'." Hut he • •yeti to watch the tank get uruer way, and after watching her time* tis, did tit�>1 Yainw d'you perfw wCnC. and COU, sm .or a few nun - p hie motet- rnppnw they cumin' back? diad reds he telu.nwi to But about t ha1.1w711,!!1 " e went on, hay bike Willi struggling d. nota in his ing reduced the Signaller to pondering own mind as W bow and iu which di - 1 W Hied t o boa 1.. ought it afool—in belie•o ororection be was likely to to the bigger l. encs r i n0, an' coetdn'r, so we opled on the 4tCO1t'_.i 9_re[wioS.tobe-. grapplin'•book bands, anwwlked r straight up one side au' down the The Hotstui3 snorted orae or twtiei other." shook belself, rod rumbled internally ; Yes," put in cne of the other Hot- her whe -1-bonds made a alum re•olo- . tuff,, "an' doin' it the terxful o' tea tion or two, churning out ei herons. au' sugar that was up fo the front lo+d or so of tuft mud rod bitthr ugh lit• ber starboard gun turret a couple of hleckened patches of blistered paint where a persistent Hun had tried his ineffectual Not to bomb the good ship at close quarter without any further result than the blunt paint. And a series of bullet holes in the bomb •t. Aa the Skipper floished his ex&min- ation, finding neither crack, dent Dor damage to wnything deeper than the paint work, "a11 c uuplrte" www re- pa,ted to hint, end he a•'d hie crew proceeded le dine off bully beef, bide cults and uncooked prune.. The )teal waw int.rriped by a mutt -cyclist, who had to leave his cycle on the roadside and plough on foot Oltnugh the sticky mud to the Hute ,iff'a anchorage, with a written message. The Skipper read the trowag'•, Initialled the envelops as a receipt, end, meditatively chewing OD a dry prune, carefully consulted • sgnar'ed wap cells - ,r meed and wriggled nver'by • wee, of heavy black lines that marked the Oeratan trenches, and pricked off a (4.nu,se to where a closer -peeled wane of lines w•• newed as a redoubt. The Signal' dispwtch-rider had ap- proached the Brew with an earn Mete curiosity and • deep desire to Improve his mini and hle knowledge on the auhjeet of '•tank■." But although the espy hook maxima have alwa • •n- conraged Lire improvement proveent ofd one's mind, the crew of the Hotstuff pre- ferred to remember srrothsr eopy hook Mecum, "Milenee Is golden," and with the warning's ret many Months snaked Into their very mal -roam, anti with • pantlous secrecy that by now had be- come v►eond, 11 not $L ots, sat on. to them, ret netted answers more befMling In their fulness than the deepest slimes wmiN have been. '•ie It true that them things will turn a point -hank troll.. ?" asked the dl•poteh rider •'tura them is just the right ward. 1 "ty ..• .-lbs -ages. . '1' THE SPEED MANIAC. —Chicago Tribune. The 'Jolted !hates Congree li is re• tainlr not country into war, but even the blow proerras that appears to alar.) p.ct13 t. like W. J. Bryan. "rushing" the is being made the lonw,ttpper sail. lista the tlt'ger , ground; she jerlejeikrd.eoovulsiveiy two or three Ower, crawled out of the deep wheel ruta she had dug, turned, hosing • cautiuue way between the bigger shell cr•tsrs, and then ploughed uff on • straight course towards the road across the sticky mutt—mud which the dispetcb-rider had tltterly failed to urguttate, and which, bring iwpaspble to bltu, be bad, out of the knowledge born of long exleneuce,con- .cfuded impassable to suythiug, light or heavy, that ran on wheel... A wide ditch rau between the Held and We rani, but the Hotstuff steeled firelight for it and Drawled tteoquilly w:russ. 'rhe dispatch -rider watched the prog- ress across the mud with great wter- e.i, whistled softly as Ileum the tank reach the ditch and reach out for the far back. with her tore -end aoderearly belt her length hanging clear out over the water, gawped as the bows dipped and fell downward, her fore -feet clutching at and resting on the other tot..k, her bows and undei-body (the deecripI.ive terms are rather mixed, but then su le the name and make-up of • laud-abip)hitting the water with • mighty splash. And then, in spite of wwself, be broke from wide grind into open laughter us the Hotstulf gut • grip of the far bank, pushed with her bind aid pulled with bee fore -legs and dragged herself across. If ever you have sero a fat caterpillar perched Oil a cahhage leaf'. edge, straining and reaching out with its (runt feet to reach anutber leaf, lou-hing it, catch- ing hold, ami-letiug go asttrn, to pull over the gap, you have a very (stride* of what the Hotstutf tu.,ked like cross - tug that ditch. She wheeled on to the road, and as the dispatch -rider, with singled awe, aso■armeht and admiration, watched ber lumbering tiff down it, he saw an oil -blackened baud poked out through a guu-port and waggled triumphantly back at hi "Hang it," he grid. "I believe sh can swim ur stand on her head or ea peas off a knife. She looks human—intelligent enough for tiny - ' But the Hotstuf on that trip was to display little enough iutelligente, bit instead an alwwt humus] perversity, adding nothing to her battle botore, but very much to her Snippet's and crew's *heady overcrowded vocabu- lary of had language. The engineer showed sinus of unea.ioew as Ob. tnindl.d down the road, cocking his bead W one side and lie ening with r look of strained attention, stooping his vier to various parte of the engine., squinting along rods, touching bis finger-tips to v rims twar.ngs. "What's wrong?" asked the Skipper. "Isn't she behaving herself ?" The engineer .hook his head, "There's some hing not exactly ngbt with her," he said slowly, "1 doubt she's goiu' to give $rouble.; He was right. Sbe gave trouble for slow mile. sura trouble fur sooth.r ball -mile, and then most trouble of all et a 'pet where the road bad degrnereted into • sea of thin, poi ridgy loud. We will say nothing 'ot the technical trouble, tut it to. k four .olid hours to g' t the Henault u nder wa again. The road where she belt swat a main th' r 'ugbfare to the firing line, and the locality of her hreak-down, foreuwatrly for the waffle, was where a borer -watering - trough stood a hundred yards tack from the r '•A, and there was &mole room to d• fleet Pan t other vehicles pathe Hutatuff t hstaclr, which ley rtght in the fairway. Alt the four hours a pro-x*140n of tuutotc.rs and lorries, A. S. wagons, and t' uopr of horse 1 streamed by tor•gbt and left of the helpless Hotrtulf. The caro squirted jets of liquid orad on ber as they spiralled past, the lorries flung it in great gouts at her, the wagons Wel— tered ber lower body liberally, and the bor.ts going to and (tom water raised ,objections to her appearance and .puttered a q..ite astonishing amount of mud otos r her all high es ber roof. . When finally .he got ber engines running and pulled out of the quag- mire. it war two late to attempt to get her up into the action she had been called to. so ber bows were turned back to ber anchorage and she plodded off home. And by the lack of war, and his volunteer ing tint of his turn tor the trip, the same diep+web-rider brought auuther message to her early h eat morning in her berth hahind the line. The crew'" night had been spent in internal affair+, and since there had been no time to at enipt to remove any of the Accumulations of mud that cover. d eve' y visible inch of her, she looked like a 'anisette wet clay ant heap. The dispatch riller stared at her. "Looks as if she wanted her ('tom washed," he remarked. "What hs• she been up to ? Thought you veld she was goiog Swimming? She doesn't TO INVESTORS THOSE WHO, FROM TIME TO TIME, HAVE ;FUNDS REQUIRING INVESTMENT MAY PURCHASE AT PAR DOMINION OF CANADA DEBENTURE STOCK IN SUMS OF $500, OR ANY MULTIPLE THEREOF Principal repayable 1st October, 1919. Interest payable half -yearly, 1st April and 1st Oetnher by cheque (free of examine. at any chartered Beek i• Canada) at the rat* of five per meet per annum from the date wf pmrliase. Holders of this stork will have the privilege of tnrrae4rieg at per and aerrued interest, es the equirslent et mak, in pay- ment of any allotment made under any future war lean issue la Canada other than an issue ef Treasury BOIL em ether tike abort dee security. Proceeds el this stank are for year purposes only. A twamrnissioe d one-quarter of not per rent will be allowed to recovered bead and Burk brokers on allotmrsets made is respect el nppliestiar for this meek whirl bear their stamp. Yew appli.aUon faros apply to the Deputy Minister .1 uresis •w, Ottawa. O V*OTWW$T f # r1NANCI. OTTAWA OCTOnt[w rah. lets. t. tie • ‘10M11010111"60001.111111111111.111.1111011111111111111111101.4 1%11' look much as if she'd had a hath la't- ly," His former g ttelefor•tneet slowly straightened • weary hack, checked • tart repay, and 'visited most. wish an excellent dimulat ion of cheeriness.. •'Dadn't you 00111.' an' Watch nes yee-' terdav, then r h. raid. "Well, von n,iaspd w treat —bread new dodge our Old Man has invrnt..1 bieseig, When we got 'Pr in the carol. we cloped all pores, elevated uu, peri -ape, u.' new Often the Cheapest— Always the Best W. WALKER Furniture Dealer and Undertaker [louse Furnishings The Store of Quality PHONLS STORL 89 RES. 197 telescopic air•tooh, submerged au' B ank to the bottom. An' who walked four tneasu,ed miles under water along the bottom o the canal. That' —and be waved hi. hand towards the mud•hidden Hot.ttff—"that is where . bt got all the mud from." Aud to thie dry that dispatch -rider do•e-n't knnw whether he told a g, r- g e.•u. teeth or • still more gorgeous lie.—The Times ( London r. The Saults Coal Co. Sueees.or to Mrllonal, tt Gledhill EXCL('SIVE AGENTS FOR LE111011 VALLEY THE. COAL THAT SATISFIES • We deal in Hard and Soft Coal, Lime, Cement, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, also Hard and Soft Wood, Maple `end Hemlock Slabs. Fresh cars of Lime and Cement just received. OFFICE PHONE - - - - B. j. Saults' Residence 27:r W. W Saults' Residence Nr_' - _t School of Commerce CLINTON. ONTARIO Winter Term Begins January 3rd, 1917 YOU have always intended to take a Commercial and Stenographic Course some time. Do it now. A course here puts you in a position to command a good income whenever and as long as yon want it Can yott invest your money and time in any stock, war loan or anything else that will promise you so great a return ? WE GUARANTEE POSITIONS TO GRADUATES. Write for hull information. DO iT NOW. B. F. WARD, B. A., M. Accts. PHONE lob PRINCIPAL 1 ...ed:ar • . to I W. ACHESON & SON WINTER BARGAINS Ladies' Coats t Cloth Coats, stylish and w'eu made, $ C • 00 values up to $1'_' each .J Fur Trimmed Coats A Quilted -lined, values $25.00. Each... $ 12.00 Musk/lit/1 Coats Select ski ', matched, and lined with $40.00 best sati , values 850 to $60, each Men's Black Dog Coats Bocharan Lamb collar, well made, cuffs in sleeves, quilted -lined, value 135.01, 4`25.00 each ..... ....' W Small Furs . Boas, Scarfs and liftoffs, of Sable, Persian, Rat, clearing less than ha regular. Grey Flannel \ • Old values, at per lard .. 3� Extra quality mid -grey wool Flannel, 21) pieces, old contract, worth today 50c, at per yard Military Flannel \_ In the standard grey and black !Aix., for Shirts, dresses, skirts, and general Red Cross sup -w 00, plies. Special at Per yard �! Dress Goods and Suitings New 52 -inch all -wool Gaberdeens, Serges, Tweeds and Poplins, in shades of blues, -gees, taupe and greens. Values are exceptiotiall>l got 41 per:yard $2.25. $1.—r and $oo W. ACHESON & ••ONo , An TO INVESTORS THOSE WHO, FROM TIME TO TIME, HAVE ;FUNDS REQUIRING INVESTMENT MAY PURCHASE AT PAR DOMINION OF CANADA DEBENTURE STOCK IN SUMS OF $500, OR ANY MULTIPLE THEREOF Principal repayable 1st October, 1919. Interest payable half -yearly, 1st April and 1st Oetnher by cheque (free of examine. at any chartered Beek i• Canada) at the rat* of five per meet per annum from the date wf pmrliase. Holders of this stork will have the privilege of tnrrae4rieg at per and aerrued interest, es the equirslent et mak, in pay- ment of any allotment made under any future war lean issue la Canada other than an issue ef Treasury BOIL em ether tike abort dee security. Proceeds el this stank are for year purposes only. A twamrnissioe d one-quarter of not per rent will be allowed to recovered bead and Burk brokers on allotmrsets made is respect el nppliestiar for this meek whirl bear their stamp. Yew appli.aUon faros apply to the Deputy Minister .1 uresis •w, Ottawa. O V*OTWW$T f # r1NANCI. OTTAWA OCTOnt[w rah. lets. t. tie • ‘10M11010111"60001.111111111111.111.1111011111111111111111101.4 1%11' look much as if she'd had a hath la't- ly," His former g ttelefor•tneet slowly straightened • weary hack, checked • tart repay, and 'visited most. wish an excellent dimulat ion of cheeriness.. •'Dadn't you 00111.' an' Watch nes yee-' terdav, then r h. raid. "Well, von n,iaspd w treat —bread new dodge our Old Man has invrnt..1 bieseig, When we got 'Pr in the carol. we cloped all pores, elevated uu, peri -ape, u.' new Often the Cheapest— Always the Best W. WALKER Furniture Dealer and Undertaker [louse Furnishings The Store of Quality PHONLS STORL 89 RES. 197 telescopic air•tooh, submerged au' B ank to the bottom. An' who walked four tneasu,ed miles under water along the bottom o the canal. That' —and be waved hi. hand towards the mud•hidden Hot.ttff—"that is where . bt got all the mud from." Aud to thie dry that dispatch -rider do•e-n't knnw whether he told a g, r- g e.•u. teeth or • still more gorgeous lie.—The Times ( London r. The Saults Coal Co. Sueees.or to Mrllonal, tt Gledhill EXCL('SIVE AGENTS FOR LE111011 VALLEY THE. COAL THAT SATISFIES • We deal in Hard and Soft Coal, Lime, Cement, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, also Hard and Soft Wood, Maple `end Hemlock Slabs. Fresh cars of Lime and Cement just received. OFFICE PHONE - - - - B. j. Saults' Residence 27:r W. W Saults' Residence Nr_' - _t School of Commerce CLINTON. ONTARIO Winter Term Begins January 3rd, 1917 YOU have always intended to take a Commercial and Stenographic Course some time. Do it now. A course here puts you in a position to command a good income whenever and as long as yon want it Can yott invest your money and time in any stock, war loan or anything else that will promise you so great a return ? WE GUARANTEE POSITIONS TO GRADUATES. Write for hull information. DO iT NOW. B. F. WARD, B. A., M. Accts. PHONE lob PRINCIPAL 1 ...ed:ar •