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The Signal, 1917-3-8, Page 3MEDICAL TtiE OIIDINIL IND ONLY RENOIR BEWARE OF IMITA- TIONS SOLD ON THE MERITS OE IIN&RD'S LINIIENT 1 \lt ORO. H1S1LEMANN, O$TKO al PATS, veerWist In women's and obit area. drawee, acute, ;bran c and nervoaidie seders. eye. ear. more sod limpet, partial deaf we, lumbago and rheumatic condltloos. Ade - meida remove, without the knife. (Sloe et eeddeea, oorner N�yeer and SL Andrew's ftsst� At home seas Mosday., Tburdays sad /sWroays: any evaNaR- by/appotottneut. DENTISTRY IRR. 11. 0. MAci)ONELL-HONOR 11 Graduate 'tomato Unit welly. Oredaat• ons College of Dental Sureet.n+. Booms.+ r to the late Major S.M. Oabes rear Spasn asst W e.t street, OMNI k h. £UCTIOma GUNDRY AUCTIONEER 6131 tl,ttctn.t. Ah .r,ut.t"t. 11 . .0 1.1 1.3`10 tate wdl to tompl > e waded to. R••ldeooe telephone IW. LEGAL l'. MAIei BARRISTER, SoLICITt,K, N(YTA1tY PU'btd&. Eft. JM. -sterling Back Block, Hamilton 8.reet. easttck. 1 eiet.booe !r!. Meal Rotate Loans and lnearaoce. PROUDFU(Yl',1[1LLOBAN t COOMB ■AllKIN) LIW. 901iCITu1th. NOrAS1ICI PUBWC, ETC. Oglice on the eguarstMsoond door from Henr- Utru Asset, ti rrtvete tuW. W at west rates. W. J. L Krt.ware H.J.D. ' , G. LAMhHUN, M. 0.. HARh1b Annum winnow, notary public. Otiose slan. Street. Ooderlch. third door fn. %oar.. At th •l burde7 of each week In alias on Ailett btreet eocuplsd by Mx. Hooptr. i. alts hour, a e.m. to p.m. 1fA1tLJsb (iAltktuW, LL.ri., 1t*n I lt1b a th .twrsq. senator, an., Done- is... cdeis v w .&La at rgwtat nut.. �1' 111146$11, BAIiRIBhR.71iUL- 'alo.-l.ourt Horns. I�hmdenoh. Lam( 0.b1rr. INSURANCE, LOANS. ETC. tYILIl.Y JIL'lUAL 1011th IN - 111 8 U R A N C E U O. -Yarm and Isolated Lawn teoitrtr neared. Oerer..- J . t ounull7, Pres., Goderich P.O.; Jas. Evans, Vtoe-Pres, Beechwood P. O.; Dunne. h. Hay.des-Trea.., Seetonb P. V. Directors -D.. 7. McGregor. $.atorth : Jobo� 31. Grieve, N Intbrop ; William/Wm, Coe.taood^ Joao Renwen. Brodbanen; Geo. u. McCartney; Sada th ; Robert Ferris. Harlock ; Malcolm Yotwen. uruosadd. Agent.• . J. NYeo. Rolmesville ; Alex. Leitch, Clinton .•iA'Sllam Chesney, seaman ; L. btuubkt.80.JOrtb Polic7-boldere oao pay a,.er..mer,.b a",. Stet their cards reoefpted et 11 J. alt•'rob'. Clothing Store, Clinton, R. rt. (seat'. G,, • r 7, M.notuo street. Godertoe. J. B. Reid'- GeueralStore, Ba7Mld. PRIVATE FUNDS TO Apply to M. 0. CAM- smilton street. Question. t� 8 r si•,---a ••w.. -r • 1 HE SIGNAL GoDER1CH ONTARIO ounorrnwnLErretifElT LIKE A NEW 401H141.440410••• H. P. GAtemalsaelopperee Ottawa, March 5. --So many of our brave wither., hove died hemmer of de- fects in the Ruse rifle that it was Migh- ty appropriate that the dying houry rf the recout seeeton of Fluliaweut should be taken up with a detritus on this Importrst subject. The facts about the hose rifle are in n eed of careful restatement, so that the public mind will harbor no confus- too to regard to such • vital matter. The fundamental fast to bear in mind i. that Ilse Koski -Me Mark Three, w.tb wraith our soldier. were provided in ibis war. 1. the Bergen Government's own child. It is of their authorize tion and is built according to plans submitted by their experts since tory COUSIN into office in 1911. The Rose rifle of the Liberal regime was known we Marie Two, and is sail to have been • touch sturdier Mud More serviceable weapon than its successor, which was /given a lunger b.rrel and finer sights in order to swell Sir Sam'a pride as • Bisley prize snatcher. it was • very fine Whitt, rifle -none better -but roc delicate for active eervlce where the shooting is necessarily tough and ready add lack`, so to speak, the Sis- ley elaboration. With this tact in view the attempt of the Borden Government to shift re- sponsibility for the Ross rifle Mark Three to the Laurier Oovernwent would be laughable it it were not das- tardly. It IS almt.et $$ pitiful as the Hon. Mr. Melgben's at'enipt to pass the buck to Sir Charles Roes. Mr. Meigben's theory is that the Borden Uoveroment was bound "in per•,etu- ity" by a contract rude by the Laur- ier G.veruwent in 1902. The words "in perpetuity" aro of course fallacious.. No contract can b3 "in perpetuity." But outside of that this "perpetuity" in regard to Rose rifles was shat ply defined. It could be terminated by giving a ye•r'r notice. That IS to say, it could have been terminated in 1914 or In 1913 --one year, two years before the war sleeted -cc again in 1914 or tiny time within the last two years and a half, As a matter of fact, there hasn't been • minute since the war began that the Borden Government, acting strictly wi•bin the terms of the contract, couldn't have stopped the manutacture of Rune rifle Mat k Three and had a better one made More- over, the contract on which Mr. Mlfigben rests his honor and that of the Borden Government's so strongly was a contract drawn up in times of peace. and liable to be swept aside in war emergencies. In war every gov- ernment grows s,hitrary. Wath the consent of the People it takes extra- ordinary powers to itself. as the Bil- den Government did under the Vsr Measures Act- Under that Act the Borden Uovernmeat was Iireuerd to deal sharply and directly with every- thing that needed such dealing. Nice custom., says Shakespeare, bow to great king.. And 'similarly neat little peace contracts for Rose rifles must bow to the. Borden Government armed with the War Measures Act, provided of enures" that the Borden Government wanted them so to bow. Which it didn't. So far this article has proceeded en the amutnptbin that Sir Merles Ross tuiaht have been unwilling tosurrend- er his contrect and that the Gov- ernment might hate to handle him drastically. But when Sir Chat les Russ comes forward. as he has done several tines in the pontic prees, and tells us that there hasn't been a day since August, 1914., when he hasn't been willing to turn his factory over. as rapidly as possible. to the manufac- ture of Lee-Euflelds or any other equally serviceable rifle -when Sir Charles hoes Domes forward and tell. us that we begin to see how .illy Mr. Meighen's talk is about being "hound." l'he Bordet! Uovernment was "bound" only re far es it wanted to be bound. It could slip its fronds any day with the consent of all parties coucerned. "All the parties" -•there's the rub. The party of the first part. Sir Char le. Ross, was no Shylock, standing on hie pound of flesh. He was will.,. enough. but the party of the second part. the Borden liovernmect, wasn't. 1t preferted to remain n "bound." \Vhyi' Well. presumably because Sir Sam Hughes war Minister of Militia, au - he stood or fell by the Russ rifle. Jt here it is worth remarking that he stand and fall by it -he left the ernment just about the ne th rifle Mai k Three was ale ni carded as the weapon (it th soldiers in the Hrl•t. It h chat Sir Sam'* vice la/frieodettip- whet her for turn or ri es -he in icks- y else has de - o good. Allison ark Three are two Sir Sam is, so to fi}tticttlarly when be n*bre wiring he fens he beccntes. This of facie, such as BE t3ON. • INSURANCE AGENT. FORA AND LI1HTNINQ : Brltlsb, Canadian and American. •001DRNT niCAee *ND tyPLOYRas' LIAaIr. rev : 7'aa he ocean Aootdent and Guarantee L'orp,raUon Limited, of London. Eng. FIDSLITT ANI [io•nee rsec BOND. The U.S. Fidelity and Gus eateeComttany. Omoe at re„ideuce, Oktbeaet corner of Vlo- Soria and 1,1. favid'. street..'Phone 178. MARRIAGN LICENSES Ai ALTKR R. KELLY, J.P.. OOI/DI:RICU. ONT. mama Or MAItAUA011 G1C144111111. Patents, Trane jut Designs Secured in All Countries. Write for free book "PATENTS PROYTiIC- TI0 ''X�``((I, all about end how to net pat tints. AI1+4(.CK R BONS, t.tabltebtd 1977 formerly Patent ClMe Examiner, Mute of Patent Lowe,. ReaPtered Patent At{orneya eta, 98 St. Street. Montreal. Bdanohes- tlttaw• and W naton. Representeuve. Is all foreign Broph GOD 1 Ile Lard Fe en d 'Did They Do It 7 i°e r.. 1. Cooper gang the solo, "'Thatet Story of Old," during the ning service. At night Miss Hazel ehard and Miss Pauline Tripple- horn sang the solo part* in the an- them, "There Is a Holy City," and Mia* Helene Landon took the solo part in the anthem, 'The Night 1a Par Spent." Miss Trippleborn sang the solo, "140 Flury Thyself." -Chat - hem Dolly News. id ov- Wes ly di.- anedisn been said PERSQN After Taking Only One Box Of "Fruit -a -!hes by them after every c,ded that they are and the Ross rifts exan'plee in polo apeak,pighesd is wrong. T the more pi e Pxpleins w , ali fa the gun- . rofit111Lg 4t St. Julien and Fest uhe and, otic boys throwing it ,Away and to ,ng Lee-Knhelds ether er they cu Id find them, Sir St contin be dote on the Roes ri : e. Ott. Uletencu.ea put forward as loaf ditInb-not Canadian ammunition dr •tiii.h ammunition, but multili the United States. When tbA s rifle did the same thing whehyy g ods /oral awsnunition made in Rliglsnd, It was said then . that the efianrber was a shade too email add some 99ft tae title.% were re- bored .! 9ubsrgpynlly file bolts were "tempered," Withllhe ,.4tIt that they were made as hrlttle a♦ glass, and other tinkering wail none. Anything rather than do what common sense dictated-eliemlonihe rifle and start making one that stood the active set - vice test. 11 Ewa Sate HAaeoua, N. S. "It is with great pleasure that I write to tell you of the wonderful bnarfts 1 have received from taking "Fruit-a- tives". For years, I was a dreadful sufferer from Constipation and Head- aches, and 1 was miserable is every way Nothing in the way of medicines seemed to help me. Then I finally tried "Fruit-a-tives" and the effect was splendid. After taking one box, I feel like a new person, to have relief from those sickening Headaches". Mss. MARTHA DEWOLFE. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa. and was in grave danger of losing his j h in the Militia Dep..' intent. How- ever, milder counsels and powerful friends prevailed and General (iwatkin was retained in • post in which he had proved himself w public benefactor. Thur did General (iwatkin take the first fall out of the Ross ritie nod its great protagonist Lieutenant -General Sir Saul Hu -bee. it was as ra.' back as the spring Of 1915 that the C+nadian soldiers I. gan to throw away their Ross rifles. Lb spites of this summary proceeding, which mint have reached the ears of the 11 `den Government. the Second, 'third and Fourth divisions were srwed with the Rose rifle, which they carried with them to France. 11 was not until after Sir Douglas !DOW.: re- port in June• 1916, that the trite of the Ross rifle was disecntinued at the front. All of which goes to show how much the Borden Government con- sidered the lives of our soldiers when they kept loading them up with the Ross rifle a full year aftet it had been proved deteetive. But this is not the limit. The Rues rifle Mark Three is no longer in use a.. au active service weapon. Sir Charles Rues dis. Iainis any wish to hold the Borden Government to any contract to manufacture Ross rifles, when he can manufacture Lee-Itnfleids just as well. And yet the Government pro- fessss to consider itself "boatepd" until February, 1918. Consequedtly, How rifles are still heing turned out at the rat thousand is site �..1Lr. SiAltsllz 1. THUBSDAT, MARVA S. 017 A ►••i••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••e• MARKET QUOTATIONS• ��„• • �1I it MiiiAL)sr�'�1N• FERR('ART gth • • - w may• _• Temente Cattle Market 1 • • Choice weighty steers $10.7Sto$11 .6e lo. medium 10.26 10.00 Benchers•, choles handy 10.6u 10.90 4o. good 9.40 10.40 da. medium 8.60 9.30 , de_ common . 7.40 $.00 Butchers choice cows8.60 9.26 do. good 8.00 8.30 da medium 6.50 7 00 Batdhere' bulls. choice8.00 9.60 do. good .... 6.76 7.50 du. medium 6.76 6 60 • do. bologna 6.00 5.50' • Feeders, 900 to 1.000 lbs. 8.25 9 36 do. med., 700 to 800 7.25 8.00 • *lookers. 700 to 900 lbs. 6.76 7.26 • Cotte» 6.26 6.76 Cannon 5.00 6.26 ' • Milkers, good to chotce86.00 106.00 Sprto. com. and mat50.00 70.00 ngers ... _... ; 66.00 115.00 • Qtlr'es, veal, chotcs12.50 13.60 • do.\ medium 9.00 11.00 do. common 6.00 • 7.60 • da • ass 6.00 7.00 • do. h vy fat 7.60 9.00 Spring la bechoice13.60 15.00 • do, cu 9.00 11.60 • Sheep, ewe light 10.25 10.76 do. heavy nd bucks8.60 9.60 • do. cull/ 4.00 7.00 • Hogs. weighed off cars 15.25 15.40 do. fed and s:.3red.15.10 15.26 • do. f o.b. cou ry 14.85 00.00 • • • • Nein Silks and Suitings The New Spring Silks SILKS will be much in demand this spring and summer for dresses. waists and suits -including Duchess, Taffeta, Habutai, Poplins, • Tussores and natural Shantung Silks. Toronto Gr n Markets Manitoba wheat- rack, bay ports. No. 1 northern, $2.07 ; No. 3 north- ern. 12.04%; No. 3 no barn. $1.98;k No. 4 wheat, $1.87; all- - 11 wheat de- »vered Montreal freights, No. 1 north - $3.06. Itoba oats All rail, delivered, ea route, C.P.K. points only, 5.o. 2 C.W., 74c to 75c; No. 3 C.W., 73',40 to 7$44c; No. 1, 73t,ic to 73Nte; No. 1 feed, 71',4c to 72'4c. American corn -No. 3 yellow, 31.21. abject to embargo. Ontario wheat -No. 2 winter. 31.63 to $1.85, according to freight °Melds; No. 3 winter. 31.81 to 11.83. Ontario oats --According to freights outside; No. 3 white, 66c to 67e; o. 3 white, 640 to 66c. \\ Peas -No. 2, $2.50. Barley -Malting. $1.22 to $1.24. Buckwheat -$1.18. . ---_ Rye -No. 3. new, 11.41- to 11.43. Manitoba flour -First patcats to jute bags. $9.70; serrnds, In jute bags, 39.20; strong bakers', In jute, $8.80. Toronto. Ontario flour --Winter, new, track, Toronto, pr,.mpt shipment, according to sample, 37.65, in jute bags; $7.26 export grade. bulk, seaboard. Mlllfeed-Car lots• delivsred...M4on- treal freights: Shorts, $41T -bran, 538; good feed flour, per bag, $2.70 to 32.89. Ripened a Week Earlier. George W. Neely, Dorchester Sta., Ontario, says : "I fart tl zed with Homestead Bine Black Fertilizer purchased hour Mr. Fred Howe, I.)o cheater Sta., Ont., .even acres o s this spring. At in- tervals in 1 he fl»Id I omitted the fer- tilizer a drill -width. The nate where the fertilizer was sowrt, after the Hist few day`' growth, allowed in a marked degree • wore vigorous growth and maintained this advantage over the unfertilized pertione th ghout the season, ripening It Werk sootier and with fuller heads of grain." Stung ! "There must be some mistake in m examination marking. 1 don't think 1 deserve an absolute zero," com- plained the student. "Neither do 1," agreed the instruct- or, "but it's the lowest mark I's.' al- lowed to give." The manner in which Sir John French's Adverse report on the Roes rifle, dating Jnne, 1911, was pigeon holed. also General Alderson's letter on the same subject, is an old sinry now but a had one. The Borden Gov- ernment seems to have treated these reports as if they didn't exist. They ware like the fa' mer who saw •gir.fle for the fleet time. "There ahi't no aoch darned thine," he mattered un- der his breath. 14otnehow or other the oommtnts of the British authors- ties on the Roos rifle found tbs. light in The Gnawe Citizen, where,rpoo there was a great clatter among the Cabinet MinisGetters' and .tters' (wat- kin, an officer who had the good of the ('anedian aoldi.re at heart, wail much blamed for being over -zealous BAB TONACH -TROUBLE to Delicious Vinol Shreveport, La. -"I had a bad stom- ach troubre for years and became so weak I could hardly walk or do any work. My appetite was poor, my food would not digest, 1 bloated and was very weak and nervous. i tried many reme- dies without kelp. I saw 'knot adver- tised and tried it, and now my stomach trouble is completely cued and 1 am well" -E. L. MAasnALL. Vinol 11 guaranteed to tone up the tired, over -taxed and weakened nerves of the stomach and create strength. H. C. Dunlop, druggist. Goderich. Ont. Also at the best druggists in all Ontario towns. 'er il- Winter Troubles If you have trouble with your water pipes or your plumbing, don't worry - Call us up and we will put our skill and expert knowledge to the task of getting •things in good running order again in d short time. FRED. HUNT THL PLUMBER" Hamilton Street Mens *SS Hay -Track, Toronto, extra. No. 2, $12 to 112.50; mixed, $9 to $11. Straw -Carlota, $8.50 t,, $9. Cereals -Rolled oats, carlots, per bag of 90 lbs.. $3.25; sma l lots, $3.40. Windsor to Montreal. Oteal, $3.90 in carlots, $4.16 in small lits. Predates Tdtont�le prices to the trade: Eggs - New -laid, cartons $ .43 to $ .46 do. ex -cartons .41 .42 Butter- ('reamery prints, fresh .43 .46 Creamery prints, storage .43 .44 Creamery solids .43 .43 Choice dairy prints .38 .39 Ordinary dairy prints.34 .34 Bakers' _ .31 .31 33 cheese -N *. Urge, 26%e; twins, 27c; June, large, 27%c to 27%c; twins, 27%c 10 27%c. Poultry- Dressed Spring chickens, ib. .... 23c to 26c Old fowl, lb. Geese, Ib. Ducks, Ib. Live Poultry - Chickens, 1f fat 24c 25c Fowl, 1t fat. 24c 226c Chickens, o.'dlnary 22c 23c Fowl, ordinary 22c 23c Beans -Japanese, hand picked, $6.25; prime, 35.75; Canadian, band picked. bushel, 17.26; prime. $1.76. Potatoes -Ontario small lots, $3.60 per 90 -lb. bag. 20c 21c 19c 21c 210 23c East Buffalo Cattle Cattle -Receipts, 200; active and higher; shipping steers, $8.60 to 811.50; butchers, $7.25 - to $10.50; hetter•a, $6 to $9.75; cows, $4.60 to 38.75; bulls, $8 to $9.25; stockers and feeders, $8.50 -to--381-fresh cows -and springers, active and steady, $60 to 1110. Veale-RAeeipts, 600; active; 15 to $14.60; few at $14.75. • • •• •• • • • •• • •• • Rich quality Duchess Silk, all colors, $1.35 and $1.50 per yard. Rich quality Taffeta Silks, wear guaranteed, $1.50 and $I.75 per yard. Popular Habutai Silk, all colors, splendid washing, 75c and $1.25 per yard. Silk Poplinsjor suits and dresses, all colors, $1.35 per yard. Fancy spot Tussores Silk, natural ground, for waists and dresses, also fancy stripe design, 75c and $1.00 per yard. Natural Shantung Silk, 50c and 75c per yard. All the above Silks come in 36 -inch width We would draw special attention to our splendid showing of Suit Serges, which are exceptional values. In navys, black, green, nigger brown, etc. Price $1.00 to $3.00 per yard. Black and White Checks Ar e Popular Black and White Checks for ladies' dresses, skirts and children's wear are greatly in demand. We are showing a very large range in small, medium and large checks and many plaids from 35c to $1.00 per yard. For children's wear and house diaesses Anderson's Kindergarten Cloths are unsurpassed for hard wear and wash- ing. Will not fade. In plain colors and stripes. No more to be had after present stock is sold. 28 inches wide, 25c per yard. • New Spring Corsets Our new now in. Corsets Kgtlres. styles in spring Corsets are We feature the famous P. C. and have a style suited to all • Two Qualities Niagara Batting •• Special values in Niagara Batting, the best that money can buy at 1 5c and 20c per • batt. • • • McCall's- Patterns and• in stock - • • PHONE 56 • i ll a r s Scotch Store • • ••••••••••••••••••••••!•!•••••••••••` PHONE 56 • • • • • • •• • • • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• • • • • •• • •• •• • 402 LANTERN SLIDES. Charge Apnli • • I.•11 414'1141 bet-mw.te AslinglIWInnweekossmossestow--- ws I0 ter \1tlrai v Ho.p, *1. Commission, An instructive Set -of Views May Be _3 Vitto,ia •••' 111. awe. Borrowed from Remittals Commission. - An Ontario minister the o, her day borrowed from the Military Ht'npital■ Commis.ion a set of Iante.n slides. Theta slides show what goes on tit the hospitals and aat.atoi la. That i.., they show somethins of how our injured' soldier'. are being 'ertored to health and to power for self-support. how- ever set ious their initiates may be. The mini.'er exhibited the slides at three country chwehrs under his chs,g.. 1n returning the set he wt ices : "My reeording steward, who'1..1.n the pnetnia.ter and chairman Lf the local rem tilting le..gur, says they should be shnwn in every community. They meet the unrest in many fami- ne- who hive feared that the maimed who return will be forced to .sell lead pencils or such like. "What i shout° have don. woe to ask fin- them for a longer period, and put th• rel on in ever♦ sveilalde search in (hie niatriet.. A man with is well- prepared Ir"ture and slew lecal''slides iendue a vain ible service to the c.,t).try, both in stleying the unrest tamer referred to ,trtrt-in removing the pr. judice to a"n,r fa",th. - from which termite might be eerie'." Th..lide', with esplauatory notes, mbe h.ni•owed by ministers and• nibays re.pon.'b1l' perionr, frew of Hogs - Receipts, 6,600; active; heavy, $141!0 to $14.75; one load. $14.b5; milted. $14.65 to 314.76; york• res. 114.70 to 314. 6; light, $13.60 to $14; pigs. $13 o $13.60; roughs,) $13.25 to $13.5 stags, 111 to $11. Sheep and ambs-Recelpte, 8.000; active; lam , 312 to $14.75; yearlings, 111 to $1 • wethers, 112 to 312.60; ewes, $ $11.76; mixed sheep, $11.76 to $11. Meats -Wholesale Toronto wholesale houses are quot. lug to the trade as folows: Beef, forequarters ...$13.00 to 116.00 do. hindquarters .. 16.00 18.00 Carcases, choice 16.50 17.00 do. common 11.50 13.60 Veale, common 9.50 11.60 do. medium 12.50 14.60 do. primo 17.50 18.60 Heavy hogi 12.60 14.60 Shop hogs 18.60 19.60 Abattoir hogs 19.60 20.00 Mutton. heavy 10.00 12.00 do. light 14.00 18.00 Iambs, yearling 21.00 23.00 Spring lambs, each 11.00 14.00 Chicago Livestock Cattle - Receipts, 14,000; market strong; beeves. 18.16 to 312.10; stock. .n and feeders, 38.45 to 39.36; cows) and heifers, $6.40 to $10.35; calves, $8to$41. Hoge -Receipts, 42.000; marks} firm; 40c to 600 higher; light, 311.46 to $14.11; mined, $111.86 to $14130 heavy. 313.80 to 314.36; rough,313 81 to 313.96; pigs. 310.60 to 113.76; bulk of sales, 314 to 314.98. Sheep Rerelpta, ./4,000; market strong; BMnbs,.eative. 011 10 31&70- CURRENT LITERATURE. THE CartaTHAW MAO:SIMS. -Several articles .1 p. 1 '.1' is t`e`st to OHIO, diem app. 1, %t;.r eh Canadian Magazine , \fb - -h w+ that by a snrpllte oU_lirt_ "t'• • impurl s Can• ads has .'h.,, c t n, a d tune na44..11. into a er......, •. lis,• , and !het the year 1916 tote a-,• ,..'I tied. in the Count' v s 1. . -. . r. U. 1.,1 •gan r N t iews l'a .•., •• 1 y • i In. 13, est 1Var, sho , '..,1 1!.n •a baa r been bebn, 1. 1111 1, ir. n Ihi. r... specs. M. . J -h'. ,•n emu tee the gaiety M 1. ie du.9rg w r - time with *hi • n of 1".,'.. 'ta.,k; Yeigh run rib.- a an Ail.•tta tit•g descriptio 1• • I.. I Quebec, with. x (lent 111.. first, ' al%t nig the Rh ive" Is a sat. t. -kr•• h by A. B. Rr9wn. • 1' ' 14(.1. 111 eviewthe B,iti.h or + ;ntv. Larry Amy describer • 1. . 1 flys ,.on" -nil. .1' 50,54* 11 it . u.l 1 McKelvey Bell cnnti n •••, a • .111041 tele, "l'h 1' n t nnn in Pratte . Fr.utci. t1 I ,Jun„a'ntrioutrr an. it't1. I.• r.1 work Ib chelutia '- • ,' •1 n .l v.. rare 111an+1- farturjp. '.. N op on Jt •c'I'aviah gives s eke o$' of S, ew;v t Lyon, the Uanadien •v r +poadent. Little job or Big - From the repairing of a faucet t0 the lnstailar tion of a complete ptlumbi n g system, we a r e equip- ped to do the job. •R.PINDER 0165 H flit' law pen ,l.. more way• n aa - caping p'oui.h, rat th.n of i'ttl mg it. 1 CIGARETTES