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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1919-10-16, Page 7e THE .BIONAI. OODEBIOM. oN't. e 1'hutsduy, tkiotier IU, Iain. -7 xx°xx xxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xx Goderich Board of Trade At the regular meeting of the Executive_ Council held on M,onda evening last, a special committee,,consisting of Mr. T. G. Connon, J. P. Hume B. A., and Rev. Canon Hill was appointed to undertake to organize a Debating Club. This committee will likely report to the next meeting of the Board, which will be held on Monday - evening, October 20th, and all who are interested in this should confer with Mr. Connon, or other members of the Committee. G. L. PARSONS, - T. G. CONNON, President. Chairman of Special Com. October 9, 1919. xxcxxxxopexxxxxxxsxoccecsx • 1a1-1i•anasomm•••amaaaana M Mea THE PRINCE OF WALES • A large photo of the popular heir to the throne ' III for all Signal readers a ■ The Family herald and Weekly Star of Montreal lutve se- 1 ■ eared the exclusive rights for all Canada for r real goeid 1 • photo, 16 z 22 inches, of the Prince of Wales. It' is by '$ X Vanl)yke, the celebrated London. England, photo- a • graplier, taken on the eve of the Prince's departure a 1for Canada. - _ $ 'I'Iie Signal has made aerraugements with The Family herald• . and Weekly Star %%hereby we are permitted to inelllde ■ 1 the Prince's photo in a elnbbiag offer. 1 ■ We now make the following offer, gotal only until 1)eeemher Mat. 1919: The Family herald and Weekly Star ODP sl ■ ' year, cost $1.25. The Signal one year, $1.50.MI • Wt. offer troth papers for one year ear+, and a copy of the a • Prince of Wales' portrait. s17.e 16x29 ittehes, all for $2.15. a • All order►, to he sent ,to this otfiee. - lIN • TIIE SIGNAL: flODFJU(i1. isi 1 \VARNINti--This offer is gond onl. until December :tbt, Illi • 1919, K'heu it is auuolttlee•l the !rive of The Family al M Herald will be $1.50n year. . . 11 1 ••Al<1•a*a$$I *U11$E11%*slI1M*1 icicxxxxxicxmaiionocxxxxxxxxze 'ANNOUNCEMENT We are pleased to be able to inform the public that we are now in a position to supply any quantity of hard coal in all sires.- Also any guaQtlty of soft coal for domestic use. We wish to e. teed thanks to our glstgtners, who 11tttve been very patient during the stress of the coal shortage, and now that it has been relieved we will give our ,old-time service and prompt delivery, The. Saults Coal Co Phone No. 75 B. j. Molts' residence _W-,---Vh-Sattlis4resittente No. 275 No. 202 - COUNTY AND DISTRICT II lI it ' lieu can depose of your plums and pears, also poultry. at W.' T. Riddell's at(re, Auburn. MISS LAURA JACKSON, pupil of Mr. F. I'. Egeuer, Mus. Bar., is pre - parol to twelve pupils on the piano. Pupils prepared fur 7oorouto CoA- sert'atory esuminatlowi up to apd In- r•Iud1nK Intermediate. For terms apply 1n M1$$ LAURA JACKSON. Auburn. The Zurich Herald announces the decision of a firm of silk glove manufac- turers to open a branch factory in that village which will give employment to any number of women and girls. H. A. McEwen, who has been mana ger of the ltensall branch of the Sterling Bank since 1t was established, has re- signed and is engaging in another line of business. He is succeeded by S. M. Wickens, who has been roan ter of the Sebxingville branch. Miss Josie Medd. of Exeter, who re cently wrote in Godench on two Univer- sity examinations. philosophy and senior Englsth, has been notified by Queen's University that she has been successful in loth subjects. • The marriage took place at Main street parsonage. Ex -ter, on Werines tay, October ath, of Miss Mary Elaine, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Stewart, and N iHiam H. Stone, all of Dacron. an which townsup the young couple will reside', ' Mr. and Mrs. W. 11. Fertuson. well• known resident- of Belgrave locality, left last week for Toronto. where they will reside. Their daughter is teaching there and two suns are pursuing their studies in the city. On Wednesday, October 8th. at St. Peter's church, Lucsnow, tie wedding was celebrated act Ruby Elizabeth, younger daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Nixon, to Sidney (hear Plowright, of Lucknow. Rev. Mr. Eccleston offi- ciated, On their return from the honey- moon trip the happy couple will settle down in Lucknow. A pretty wedding was solemnized at the borne of Mrs. Elliott, Nest 'lot -unto, when her sister, lona- May. youngest daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Paterson of Lucknow, was married to Peter L.Bouck, of Schohane. N. 5'. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Dr. McKerrotl, for- merly of Lucknow. Wesley church in et at the home of Mrs. H. 13. Chant Monday evening of last week to say farewell to one of the mem- bers. Mrs. J. W. Moore, prior to her departure for (;oderich. During the evening an address was read to Mrs. Mourn and she was presented with a handw rnely bound copy of the new Methodist hymnbook. Mrs. Moore is leaving to join her husband in the county town, where they have purchased a residence on Victoria street. The de- parture of Mr. and Mrs. Moore from Clinton is much regretted by a large circle of friends. MOTHaat AND SON RINE BOTH GRATEFUL For the Good Dodd's Kidney Pills Did Them. t Bergland, Ont., Oct. 13 (Special). 1 am glad to have an opportunity to give fair cretin to Dodd's Kidney Pills, for the good they did me and also my • family," says Mrs. John •S. lartwn, a well-known and highly respected resident of this place. "At the time 1 ordered Dodd's Kidney Pills l did it more fur a fancy than from any belief in their curing value. But l was all in from an aching back. 1 caught a bad colt and that settled on my kidneys so bad that i could nut sleep. e:d I could not work. When I stooped forward my back at so rune that i had to brace up my bore, by 1 utting my elbows on my knees and 1 cold Hardly raise up again. Atter takuig two poxes 01 Dodd's Kidney Pills the pain decreased some and my back is fairly good unless 1 overwork. Also one of niy young oris had diseased kidneys, so that he had to get up every hall hour during the night.Dodd's Kid. ney Pills cured him and now he can sleep all night." At the home of James Reid, township of Stanley, on Wednesday. (kfober 1st, his daughter. Margaret Ruth. was united in marriage to Harold Stanley Graham. son of Mn and Mrs. James Graham of Goderich township, Rev. Mr. Wilson of •Varna officiating. Tie young couple will reside on the 11th concession of Goderich; township. Capt. Wm. Fingland, woo since return- ing from overseas was visiting his parents, Mr- and Mrs. -ohn Finglar-d. Lundes Gro', has gone ter New 'i ork, where he intends spending the winter in the Theological Seminary. Mrs. R. Patterwm, act Heneall, was called to Toronto last week on account of a senor s accident that had befallen her son. James Patterson. While working in a planing mull in the city his right hand was caught in the machinery and so badly cru hed and mai,gled that it had to be amputated. l'l.l \To 1N. T. T. Murphy has sold his residence on William street to Fred Rogerson of Ifullett, who gets possession in March. Thanksgiving services in St. Paul's churctrwere conducted by Rev. Canon Hill of Goderich. whose eloquence and power as a preacher have been greatly appreciated by the people of St. Paul's. The church was beautifully decorated for the rrccasion. The members of the Ladies' Aid of 1)ain the Wee i SUN" MON. TUE. • WED. THU. FRI. SAT. 2 3 • .i 1.3 1 T V%010 WINNIPEG TORONTO Toronfo5htncoerh Com,,isnotng SUNDAY, OOTO•ER 5th, leaving TORONTO NNrO`1 5TATioNi e 9.15 P.M. DAILY MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT Standard Sleeping, Dining, Tourist and Colonist Cars. First-class Dai Coaches. Parlor Car through the Rockies. Sandal, Monday, Wedneaday, Prids, Canadian Settees! all the way. Tuesday. Thursday, Saturday Via •.Ton., north Say, Coehran• and Oenadlan NatIonal. epae ear Idarmall•w Own Comedies' aatloul TiehN •• .IRtUAIL PASSEo•[R •LPARTMEUT, TORONTO Aet Toronto - Winnipeg Ceiewirtasst Otoerratren Leber, Cars Canadian NiianaI Railways SF:AF1)It'1'11. The marriage • of Miss Barbara A. Sproat, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.',oho Sproat of Seaforth. to Reginald Sykes. of Shelton, Wash., took place September 22nd at Tacoma, Wash. The bride served as a nurse under the American Red Cruse the last two years of the war, bring stationed at Camp MacArthur, Waco, Texas, where the groom was on the hospital staff. Miss Bessie Grieve, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gneve, has accepted a position on the Collegiate stall at. St. Marys. A Woman's Auxiliary has been formed here to work with the Great War Veterans' Association for the furtherance of their common aims. At the home of the bride's parents, Gravenhurst, on October 1st, Robert J. Sleeth, of Seaforth, who recently returned Irom overseas, was united „in marriage to. Miss Lillian B. Scott. The young couple sill reside at Toronto. Well Satisfied With Baby's Own Tablets. Mrs. A. Bernard. la Presentation, Quebec, writes: "1 have used Baby's Own Tablets for my baby, and am well satisfied with them. 1 have recommended them to several of my friends who have also used them with beneficial results." The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the stomach and bowels and thus prove of benefit in cases of indigestion, constipation, colic, colds, etc. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mad at 25 cents a box from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co.. Brockville, Ont. ONI.% ONE DEER THIS WAR. Season ('hanged to Open November ,nth —No Partridge Shooting This %ear. Despite the fact that Mr. H. C. O'Livind is still with us, the Ontario Government has decided that this year the deer hunters will have to go back to the old rule of one hunter, one deer. Last year. as a "war measure" and to ensure the public a little meat in Ontario. the law was changed to allow two deer per hunter. There have been reports that there was a Targe slaughter of deer last year, hut many an old hunter will tell you that last year was the hrst of many that he didn't get his count and many didn't even get 'T one deer. `h1,1 was accounted for be- cause the wolves were bad in the northern hunting grounds of Ontario, arid the deer were chased down to southern portions of the hunters' paradise. 1 hose who hun ted there got their count as a rule. Date Is ('hanged Another change that has been made this year is that deer hunting does not start until November 5th, instead of November 1st. Many hunters are rather opposed to this, but the majority are satisfied. They can have their fifteen days' shooting just the same, as the season does not close till November 20th. The season for moose, reindeer and caribou, south of the C. P. R . is set for the same dates—November 5th to '2Uth— but north of the C. P. R. line shouting has already begun, for the first day was October 1st and the last is November 30th. Again only one of these can be t: ken, but no cow moose, young moose, reindeer or caribou under one year n1 age may he shot. No Partridge This Year. Partridge hunters must wait another year before they can shoot this game. as there is no open season this year, but clucks, squirrels, rabbits and hares are ready for the hunter's cru tv shotgun. %lied tonsils nix, is shot: tt,at say, if any can be bond in Ontario. it is said that a real wild turkey is almost as scarce in Ontario now as hem' teeth. 1t may be well to state that the Govern- ment has fixed the hours for shooting game, and hunters are forbidden to use their rifles between sunset and sunrise. Every hunter, whether a resident in Ontario or not. must take out a license before he can go alter deer. Non -rest Ident licenses for deer and moose are 1125, while resident licenses are $3 (or deer and f<5 for moose. ikrn't Waste Meat. There was a time when dealers c3t1ld sell wild duck and wild fowl, but now regulations have been made during the past two years which forbad this sale rhe hag allowed for a duck hunter is 200 ducks a season, but hunters most remember before they take this amount that there is a game law which says' "No person who has taken or killed any bard or animal suitable for food shall allow the flesh thereof to be destroyed rx spoiled„ Intolerance or Compromise? A Challenge to Common Sense! ON'T let anyone tell you that the issue on October 20th is "The Beer or the Boy"—"Is Alcohol a Poison or not"—" Economy or Extravagance"— any such an abstraction. The plain situation is—three- sections of thepeopleof this Province are, absolutely dissatisfied with the Ontario Temperance Act and want new legislation that will permit the sale of light beer and wine generally, and the sale of pure, spirit- uous liquors only through Government agencies. These three sections of the population are—ninety per cent. of organized la- bor1 j.xactual vote; a large number of returned sol- dier. organizations, by c.ctual vote; thousands of the rank and file of the electorate who have joined the Citizen's Lib- erty League. The plain issue then is— Are you going to vote for the safe, sane, .fair com- promise that these men and women want; or, are VOU going to insist on the retention of the unsatis- factory Ontario Temper- ance Act—insist on the retention of legislation that is breeding and will continue to breed dissatis- faction and discontUnt among our workers, re- turned men and a large section of tklis citizens generally? \ Which are YOU for—COMPROMISE and HARMONY, or INTOLERANCE and Widespread Resentment? Study the Ballot and analyze the situation conscien- tiously. This is one of the most vital concerns you have just now—a settlement of Ontario's vexed temperance problem that will be in the best interests of all the people. 1 Vote "Yes" to all Four Questions Mark your ballot with an X. Any other marking will spoil it. Remember also—Every voter must vote on every questioa or his ballet will be spoiled. CITIZENS' LIBERTY LEAGUE MEM 1ERSHIP FEE, ONE DOLLAR Please taroll me as • member of the Leafs*, for wht.Y 1 I Nene lactose my subacr'plias O-r.Jeriew - - To east'', the League to carry oglts good wort and achieve lie present purpose', active se l.ershlp sod laud, are re.psltd Show your true spiritfill la the eoupo• sod Neese • seas bet d the Cities a. Liberty League N ••e. T. L. CARRUTHIRS, S•eretery 22 College St., Ter••to CITIZENS' LIBERTY LEAGUE PROVINCIAL HRADQUARTIM• 22 College St., Terost• T. L. CA'RRUTHBRI, Seeretary Hoa. President- SIR EDMUND II. OSLSR Pre•id•at: LT.•COL. 11 A. C. MACHIN, Viee•Pr•eidest: I. F. HRLLMt1TH, I.C. Hoa. T : P. GORDON O$LRR CIaiyPan4 ra rr HE Boiler doesn't crowd the dinner off the 1. Pandora on wash -days. You can set the boiler either way, across or lengthwise of the top. 11There is no guess -work baking either. Theoven NI) has a glass door which keeps the baking in full view. The thermometer tells whether the own is het enough or not. The oven, as you must raw heard, is very evenly heated. This dependable range has easy -working grates ; peroeWe enameled reservoir, which may be removed for rimming The Pandora is the sort of range you have always wlwted. Omit. Sold by FRED HUNT • le 1•.•