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The Signal, 1919-11-6, Page 2Thursday, Siogreloher 9, 1919. • TIM SIGNAL OODERIOH, ONT. • 4114 CHB 81tiNAL PRINTING Cu., lbs. Pessaasstrke Th reed• •, November li, 11119. THE G. T. R. BILL, T14. hill for the purchaw• ky,the. (:ov 1'nulx•ut of 1'1.11:r,1/1 of 111e Grand l'runk Hallway Ila* I"'''.1 the Mouse of 1' neon*- and is now in 1114. 1131141,4 of the Borate. The,:. t)lg4.M.lt hell hl 1 hr Com mous prol*leelll a number of amend tumid*. bot all'were 104(•11 11i1WII. Th, • .limo -.iglu las served tie purpose, 110w a •ver, of .howhlg up the Wra$ure mem 111,11.14.1ke1 proposition, the Ministers 1etng nimble to state Just what they are ms•ilyr. and taw eienu et•a af. taw tial•iliti,' whirls they are taking over rumgiug all the war from ore huuflrel n4111i,o111 fir aes& eMNs1.ie- that figure An effort has lawn made to plum the (Imposition in tie position of opposing the oldie ownership petneipae. 111411 1411 cholla •there are at number of member. '9s taw Ilpurr bud mut all 'vu the 1 rp• • • pesitiou sits --who are opposed, t11e- �'iis fk sty al •tea+It. tee, the Iatlolwsllxa- tfua_af_ ralastaelu : tom. Sys•Aroiew is not open the principle of pablk• ownership It is 11}4.111 the wisdom or u1k'rwlee of takiii over the Graph •Trunk. Rail- way ma the terms proplwN'hy tlw t.nk'• rnnnt•ut, t•stweially at this time "viten tie credit of O. 1.onitry is already overstrained. Mr, Fielding las taken a rrry *helm. part 111 the diw•nssien and haw dome et valuable w•rvi-e to revealing the faults of the measure. nue' of his achieve- me'nt, was the showing up of the. bugaboo of C..1'. H. acquisition of the. 4:. T. ht. If th►-.I:evvnuueut flailed t.. purl -haw. It. Mr. Rowell was fond t1 admit that tlw 1'. P. li. W011111 have tea comm to I'arilami nit for legislation per- mittlatg.K 1 fake!,wdd'rr the 1:. T. It. rind that Ales Q,%4)• ltdll hfmwlf, would not pp -iv* ,',,f .114414 legislation. Mr. V Rowell ale.. tad expressed) fear that if 'Mr iueasurr were um put through now• f� -' !n)lnel41r 914ou111 lM' eew'1 to defeat it. Mr. Fk•hling, tetnn...I that Mr. Howell appesne1 toi he; afraid of the integrity of the akknhrrs 4141 hWM II9911 MIM! 1!f tlI.P- House, faiwYatt'monition 11)11144.114.4. to41r. have to 114' WW1". 1111 141 a. • effective- wos that quarter. s HILIBIOtl If -THE SCHOOLS. 711rn• {M x good deal ot411i��l4,ms{drasd tell/arbourtie {eueht,g of—n the w•hoois-. A letter on the.iuhjret pnbll.hld hi a 1;i9rM tomer of Thr'tikliic prime out Mame very Imperil/Id aspects of the matter and doubtless r.prt'selits the viewpoint 11f naau;: who tiers e.*e' 411d,'n.1 ' taw gltestion w•rlously. W4 �^ r. plrMtxh'ttii• hiret in *1111 • 'To the Edit. -1 of Tlw•t:Ao1M• : Hsay Temple who have given the MubJe't but -- illight 1911Mi111'H,t' may hillllk it would t,.te a g1MM1 thing to hove r4Igluu tonight in the slluNl1s, 1.114 u* n teacher of many ;eon.' rx(M'rirner I wish to p..hd oat a few of the diffienitie• flat must he - faced. 11a The teachers of. the 1't-ovlmr hold eertlfleat1�.ls.1nlvl by the *tate. Had ti no rrllglun..1111111Ii11•M(Ion is required.'x- erpt that they lou' tat towel moral char- aeter. Sillily teeeill •iw, Ixdd very ;M'•nllar religions vlrww,puewl while they are estimable• young people and gnat t1'aehe'rs, p•rlaps, yet thea nest ardent advocates of religion. instruction sefIllet would hesitate 11 1111111 placing this grave natter in thl•Ir rare. Them thele are those who are uoulluaal ad EDITORIAL NOTE& Have you bought all the Victory ponds you can handle It would be interesting to know\lust what connection Sir Clifford Sittew, has with the G. T. R. purchasedeal. The Toronto Board of Trade braes tim !Lw: bill. ''Ttir'Tat+sr pspl are altior it. Why disco!. it further.? And after nothing the Prince of Wales all over Canada they are al;.pnring His Royal Highness' to go home without see- ing tit prettiest town in the whole -sjty. \--- , some newspapers suggest that the Ottawa Governmeng should appeal to the country on the G T R. purchase measure. Imagine that Government risking an election on any que,t ion before its time is ape The people are entitled to more light on the G. T. R. purchase questi .n before being saddled with ad.:houna .lobi itn s of seven lir right hundred million d . 13rs. Has the,Crovernnent made the be -t bis gain that is ponabie It is announced that Mr. Drury is to take ()flice with he, new Cabinet `o'I No- well:! rr I�th: Sp.cu!ation isrifeas to 2Y,g lierarnnel hf th3 Cabinet. but the Premser•to-be and his adviser, are wisely keeping their own counsel A Kincardine justice of the peace, be' fort whom two boys were, convicted of theft, ordered that they should go to public ichook sgviatly. attend Sunday every -Sundial and a chfr)ch service mice a Sunday fora year- . Toe boy will not be caught stealing again for a while. The 1). F. A. (United Farmers of Al- berta) have won a bye -election contest a Provincial seat in Alberta, defeating Liberal candidate who supported the Stewart Government. Perhaps we shall yet eee our former townsman Fred. Davis at the head of a Farmers' Government in the far Ilestern Province. The girl bank clerks in England, threat- ened with the loss of thee- positrons now that the war Is over and men are avail- able, are asserting themselves In an effort ht•rrnts of Iaratt`'-uttmdel ,•Inlr'h.:a, - \ hilt who have manleep ,.mivictlous end <<n�o personal,'Spriette' 111 religious titers. To fort* the gid lug of re - lots• IllMtnle•tlol on these 1,.1414..1•* --wc8dd be a very serious mistak,'. Now. —1 un in IMS way reflecting on rile teach- -1ng profe•Msi(u. 1'p to the present th,•It IfellgInul view's tare 1,49.11 e•utlrely their •; 1,• own affair, and let us hope that. along ' with other Canadian citizens, they may be allowed tel retain that fnrdlom. • 121 The gI'tug or religion. beanie. Don is • duty Rlaoel by Milne 191111 - Ilia 111 111x111 ;MIAO1(44 141141 1114.111 e1ft• shunil. They c'111tlw)t el-ari' their re- m potiMirf1fiy lor. r. e4ttilg to tots( It 111x!14 others. Parents have leen awglet'tlug Al140, ILuts.tor yea'ro: ant' the .h-iireli 1s elofng very little. I have lurt'n a teacher in a town where there 'were fire e•hir,he•M soil only one seltoolsand yet many of the children had ter berm sought by the Munelay w Merle. the clergy. Sunday school workers ''+feel tltttrnts would beetle the•meelree am) lin their part the religious treleilug of the. •'hlldren would 1e 111 right. 1 fear that "Feed my laude." is forgotten by nMtff Rear• lea, or replaced by tire new cry, •.tart into polities." tai At'•tlw preernt time there Is ,.nl- t•f11M'aSlt'tttNrlxlon NM 114. for tellgt.ln,e teat'Isigeg- All public and high so loads ovas ataafred to le catered with Scrip twre44s d1 ilei prayer. 11111,' *tori* are ;r to Ir taught 111 the lower *nub -AM labile se honi, and thew Mrs irleollbilt set forth in the revile - Ilona. Atm IM ()vision mad,' for the visits of c g 'u note a week. 1 Never knew k reynrn who availed emit of s lvth'gt'. in .tnsing 1 rrbnId may th I phtple: Think this tter'bvcr eittrfnil and ren1enilwr- , oat . noted t hjs•ebt he toe. = 0 thou the troth Mmshhlt teach : iml thine own ).'icttan.1t.overfuw t bon a te.tbertaiy bear(' would,( reach." ;SS .• J .M •••M• tehy in Gray Matter. jtarojele Ada erti.emvnt "1'onlig remelt eapttal and brains, missisba J. Vo, A. " I Nitonder Would -it ' Help Me?" THIS question has bele NE answered by many thous- ands of woolen who have found health and happiness in the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. Sl•epl•ssness, irritability, nervous- ness, gloomy forebodings of th• future, depeasaloaand discourage- meet—these are some of the Syms. touts which tell of exhausted nerves 'In order to avoid nervous pros:rt. tiow or som• form of paralysis 1t 11 well to get the bwllding up process established at once by use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. r cats • be:. s for t2.76, ail d.abr., fare adivaeoa, Rater a co., lAe.. Teasel. m 'ass to retain their places. The b nk man- agers should take- into consideration the added pleasure to their customers of having their money handled by a charm ing young lady. The people of old Lunnon gaped at a shop window full of Canadian eggs and displaying the announcement that "Canada will ship six million dozen eggs toi•Great Britain this year." That looks like a big lot of eggs, but a bit of figuring shows that it means less than two eggs apiece for the Old Country folks this year. Huron county poultrymen have a long way to to yet before they exhaust the possibilities of the egg market. HE WHAT OTHERS SAL- - - - Our Case Diagnosed. Clinton Ness -Record. The Goderich Signal is a trifle more cheerful since the election. The Liberals didn't gain anything, but they feel hap- pier braining ing that Hearst is out. Gee *any Comds Coining Ba. scot' nh l'aprr. A senior member of a London firm has ju at returned from a commercial visit to Switzerland. and tie is confident that Germany is out again to beat the world. He their met the chairman of an impor- tant firni of machine manufacturers. He was obviously a . ermaa. The englishman, in conversaatioa_wlth a Dairy Expiess representative. re- marked: , I pretended to be pro -1.; rinan and spoke with hum in his own tan uoge. He let the cat out of the bag. A'; the litho' in the Schwarzwald and in South Germany where the Allies have no repre- sentatives. ne told me. has refused to recognize the e.ght•hour day. The men are working fur'ously, without pressu e of any sort, ap to fourteen hours a day, In order to be ready to ent r '(tie world's markets again at the first opportunity. "This German chalrn.an of a Swiss concern simply chuckled with glee when he said: 'Our good German. workmen ~know whence riches come -the work of their hands. Tney du not want this easy q- day of eight tours: th y want wealth, and they will have it.' "Germany is re viper ting after the war faster than any oth r nation, simply because, instead of giving way to the - reaction of peace, or demanding the impossible by means of strikes, she is working as hard as human stren_th and twain allow to re apture her old commer- cial pinnacle and be again the pre-war Germany. -In France and among the Allies gen- eral,. there are traders who have already ftten the• war. and care only to buy m ie cheapest market. errnany is out. I repeat. to provide that market, and our Plight- hour indus- trIal ,la} will ,>rfl dtsast.r fee Ili if we do not wake up.' - 'WHEAT ANi) TOE LOAN. Everyone with anything at stake in Canada annualty letches the prospect- ol the wheat crop. and the prices i likely to yield. He knows that on tftC return of th.s commodity alone depends a great deal of the country's prosperity. 1f Lanada's surplus wheat is sold at gold prices the returns'flow into every channel of enterprise and industry. A fortnight or so ago the eminent financier. Sir 1 hos. White, threw an important light on what the Victory loans of the past two years had accomplished in connection with this single item of national prosperity. Great Br gain was and is Canada's greatest market forwheat; but by reason of the pressure exerted on her finances during the weer the motherland had been unable to find the read* money to purc!-ase our surplus. The altestbative was that Canada should lend her the cash, which returned to the pockets of the Canadian producer by tit taate-vf the wheat surplus at h' prices. The enormous importance of this s item was shown by Sir Thomas when he slid that in addition to other (credits 8170,000,000 had been loaned to Great Britain in connection with the Bingle commodity of wheat, last year. Of course this would have been impossible if the Victory loan of 1918 had not been a great success. The circulation of this great sum meant prosperity to vast numbers of Cnaadians'and ifthe same system is to be continued Canadians must lend of their nrn'its and savings with equal enthusiasms this year. What to 1b. •__ Mother ttyl* .Cry kg 4n nn eoeffet d,•tu,rtin'hit. 111111 11ec4r Inst a chalk. ol inwtllllrug 1t lobe %label. "There.. one important thing. my' i q,'s r." she saki. !4111 const never paint at anything." "stmt. nmalnma," nbJ4'etwl the girl. "snppow' 1 am sheipplttg, and don't . k14.111• till' 0111111• of s thing°" "Theo Int the asslstant show Ti))) everything In stick mall he a es to the Mrtklr you desire," - Mrs. 1'hll1ip. to Tom-. who hes Jmst /one hone. after lid* nrst day at a ktlldergarti'nt write) : •'1v,'Il, 111.9 f, 111111 lots• do peal like gnitlg to school? 1 111111110111. yon are the youngest of all the little boys, aren't you ?" Tony (ladimiently b : "I'm not, mother! Two of dbr fellows come In perambulators l" "THE PEOPLE'S rARTV." U. F. O. May Broaden Out and Assume Another Name. ('ower is usually cprlceded to be brord- j ening. and. from latest accounts, it is having that effect upon the United Farm- ers o( Ontario. fentatave plans have been talked over for a revolution in the Farmers' party by which it would broaden its scope of activity, and also aspire to get away from any fear of having the movement considered as s ctionah or de- voted to one -class interest. Even the name may be altered, and one new cognomen suggested is the Peoples Party. This would be as broad as the Atlantic, it u thought. Rej••rring to this, Mr. J. J. Morrison, secretary of the 11. F. O.. ren asked: "We cannot be considered as a purely sectional party. The f .rmers moray gave the lead to the people of the Province in looking for better government." He intimated that there was every pos-ibiiity that the movement would broaden out. and de-' chsred that the party was permanency. He even thought that a short space of t,ilpe would see the party, possibly under Wither name t • get away from the sec- tional idea, installing organizations in the city. and prepared to tieht for the support of the city voters --Toronto Globe. Glycerine Mixture Prevents Appendicitis. Simple glycerine. buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adler i-ka, removes all foul, accumulated pois.nous matter from BOTH upper and lower bowel and prevents ap- pendicitis. Relieves ANY CASE gas on stomach or constipation. The INSTANT pleasant action of Adler-i-ka surprises both doctors and patients. A business man reports great benefit in a long stand- ing case of indigestion and sou stomach. Campbell's Drug Store. Comparatively Speaking. Neglected lnher--Harr you leen in the errantry. walt•r? Tinel Walter -Mk. sirs No, sir. Why. dr? f Ing Nrglw•tw) minwu�, k- en thrilling yon' -efton a truer and w'ateh the snef) ' ij a by. - - ever Marlatts Specific R em oN-e,i a11 •Mone* Il 24 Hour - TME Never -Failing Remedy for Apve• • • indigestion, Stomach Disorders, Appendicitla • • itlney Stones on of Gael Stones, and mislead peeple until those bad attacks of Gall Stone Colic appear. Not one in ten Gall Stone. Suffcsers knows what is the trouble. llarlatt's Specific kwithout hout Dela or oper- For sale exclusively in Gode- rkb he —JAMES A. CAMPBELL... alp m*m.�ST. TORONTOOat 11 laccoodocaxiocimpocx..xxxx.xcic.xxx.mcx.■ Wo Acheson Son woomaax■ n"nxaxcnn Women's Tailored Dresses ----Extra- • ord Dresses----Extra- ordinary Values Dresses of Taffeta, Duchess Silks, Poplins, and finest of all Wool Serges. that shew the touch of the artist in Neir perfection of line and attention to detail, are her for your choosing 'at special introductory prices, prices much below city quotations-. /One gown of a style and color. Many are lavia r or neatly em- broidered witK"silk. Sizes range 16 yews to 44 bust. Prigs mos $17, 519, 522, 525, 530, $ 5 and 540. 4. Coats Coats of Velour and all -wool Crystal Cloths and Plush. Many are lined throughout with heavy fancy silk. Coats have shawl collars or convertible. Some belted all round or can be worn flare or semi -back effect. Hundreds to choose from. Ranging in price 515, 520, 525, 535, $45, 550 and 560. Hosiery Penman's Wool Seamless Cashmere Bose, 9,9) ,1 Penman's Rib Cashmere Hose, $ 1.25, for 75q --- Men's Underwear/ . , Stanfield's Underwear for men, all sizes, 34 to 42. .Tutor violins*, garment 52.75 and 53.25. .50, for $ 1 .00. Red Flannel' per ...The Doctor" Brand in red and in white. Purest all -wool, scarcest goods, atper yard 51.00 and 51.35. --1 Gossard Corsets LWe are pleased to state our stock is moat complete in this world-famous Cor- set. Every pair guaranteed to give satisfaction. The .:orset that is perfect comfor and that never loses its shape. Prices 52.50, 52.75, 53.00, 53.50, $4.0O, 55.00, 56.00'and up. s W. ACHESON & SON Tough on `ifs. Mrs. /laggard . • I'o you know, my daughter and 1 are often pikltaken far Misters.' Mrs. Gay : -- ATi for isms girl mast he 1st lodging- ldrisord. don't7wfrf r, • "She mays she prefers to tl, her 'shop- ping by telephone." ,.Why so?" "Msye slot can't hear to sen how little 11hp Is getting for the money." ' Bright Suggeotsaw Hunt --I've herrn klltg t len- bat' ererywlere. J wonder w he bat' Hall -•'Hare (joo looked 41s4e ' baa w•Ur'a thaiiibr A V T V M N 44r..HERE is a nip in the air these mornings • that must be rather sharp to the man who scrapes his chin when shaving ,;himself. • Iii us a -Mote ht Razor, ate well positively enjoy shaving every morning, tareotslll" look his best at all times, and there would 1* no cutting or chafing of the skin! • Furthermore, in the time he now takes to get his old razor edge as near right as he cant he could • finish shaving with the Gillette. Stropping and Honing would be a thing of the past for him. That alone is -worth $51—the price of a Gillette Safety Razor Any dealer who is anxious to supply men's needs will gladly show you a variety- of Gillette sets. See him today, if possible. *Aoc.1N CANADA . • Columbia ;Records and, the. Columbia Grafo.>iiia Will Save Your Time Columbia Regards -div i1 save' your time by entertaining all the -children for hours and - hours at a time, The mechanism of the Columbia(:rafonola is so simple that they can put on the ,.records themselves. And they'll put them- on—the songs-ani—folk dances, the popular hits and the animal stories, \ the children's games and fairy tales, the Christmas carols and children s tunes. Stop in at our store today and hear the Columbia Graf onola and Records For Children KNOWN tem WORLD OVER, WILLIAM SPROLJL, Furniture Dealer and Undertaker Dungannon, Ont. �-a 1.44111'