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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1928-7-12, Page 2nd1 2--Thurs,lty. July i2. 1926. -- -'Very good so fir. The designee 119 uu. however, to declare: eb� C Stout..in the non -collegian sults, ttestwo. 1� r utton garment with a length of 29 ESTABUSH KL) 1848 i Ili:11141. shapely in outline with a high GOUERIl''ll : : CANADA waistline, will predominate. The skirts Realtor her of Canadian Weekly News- to be clinging :tilil ri'tilnied nailer than paper Association flat. The shoulders to be moderately Published every Thursday morning. bread and s.pmre. The gorge pse•kets and buttons to be rather high. and the Subscription price $2.00 per year front below the lower button while strictly in advance. gut :mix to follow' a straight line end - THE SIGNAL PRINTING ('O.. LTD. ins; will; a sr iiw•wat rounded Iottow. Telephone 35 : : Goderich, Ont. l.apwl to be either alma. uotchdrl or W. 11. Robertson. Editor and Manager eeal,e'd, leaning to the narrow stile, about Sty inches in width. The vent to have a moderate opening of about 14 indite:. with a full-length of 2I in''hes, • emiiug in moderate length i points. The front to Boat• with live ' buttons. The trolt ers are straight hot one-Jd,., l:es. hinging. with a :'itis-intav knee Hutt • • • Ia-inc h bottom." For the heated tertu the I.rea''hers' Ii w many of you men will remember might adopt an, ohl busInese motto: all that? You'll just go to your tailor. .might sermons and Iola friends. ' pick out a piece of sloth. and tell him • • • to !mike a suit the same t the Inst. a,' The pre-ettt populu11o11 Of the earth you linve leen doing for them' many is estitemea et 1...ist.onn,tmt0, and ,,,,,..len_ years. , We should like to wager that tlste c:u, ilate that it van support eight not three men in a hundred -unless lilliet,l. lace haven't notit•ed anybody they are tailors or dealers in clothing- - i kitow' how many buttons Thera' are on el.- around here. anyway. i ••-y the taut and vest they are wearing. Thar- 1 ty..lniy 1'l. 1ti-` EDITORIAL NOTES meat° A tenon went over Nlagetra Fa1L, in,Where e Britain Is Supreme a big router bail last week, and stall Farrt;tini,li.tu e►bNercers ,i1 lire*. De gel on the front lice of thea ---Forty-six me- a-'itt. of the exports of 'Aih newspapers -rs fur a day. but we TutibK irrihe t nitett- Stotts kr+•-sirriel lu'11rI- Vidte his exploit will entitle ham to be hurled Safi stripes. a greater pe.rteutage thon that tarried icy the marine o: any is Westminster Abbey. . other nation e'om ertte'i. lotluding the • • • United states itself. Thi. 1. despite 'The Smith family is 17.miug right a determined effort made since the war out this year. (if the four wotuen by the rutted Stales to extend her candidates to the British Columbia ehipptog business at the t%1n'use of � the.Itritisi. 'file fart rivet British Provincial election. two bear the natal ships earn more of the 1nitr'1 State* ambit . Dame as the Ik'm'm•rstit aspirant for export goals than that notion herself the White offs. at 1't H t n'u«hiugton }-auggeets that the struggle for lIeenn • • • , business' has not yet st'rtonsly affected Miss Ferhart, the Roston girl who cite standing of the British as the first mercantile shipping nation of the made herself famous by flying across world. the Atlantic. is reported t'1- he engaged but will not talk to the reporters about Ontario Makes Rapid Strides as Popu- lar Summer Playground It. Seems to be a rather ienslhie sort' CeIIdy answer to the question M girl. "Wierei shall we go for our holkju s • • • Is found today among the many'sat- We would suggest us a good motto tractive and pleasurable resorts that for our town: May Mount Forest Flour- have made Ontario's bighlnnds and Ish. The double aillteratibn tripe lake districts the mecca of vacation - easily on the tongue and is pleasing to ist4 from till stress the continent. the ear. while the sentiment fine the . 'From the blue water* of Huron to requirements of 1's -al patriotism.- the rock -sputtered streams of the Mount Forest Confederate. Ottawa Valley, picturesque lakes and sparkling rivers vee with each other as popular resorts. For the ardent fisherman the Ke- wartha Lakes, the Thirty Thonsand Islands of Georgian Bay. the Magane- taw•ati. Pickerel and 'French River districts and inland lakes of Algon- quin Perk coffer the test of bass, Inas- kittonge and trout fishing. For some a holiday is not complete without a canoe trip. For these. Ti- magami. the Rideau Lakes and the upper 'treame and lakes of Algonquin Park offer a thousand delightful canoe trips with open-air camping and cook- ing thrown in for extra measure. Forneral Hd a/.• f5a awartha Lakes, and Lakes (buchlching and Simcoe are recom- mended. Any Canadian National Railways agent will gladly give you literature and full information on all of On- tario's summer resorts and assist you ning you holiday. Very good; but why not "Make Mount Forest Flourish"? • • • The achie+remeut of Joe Wright, of Toronto, in capturing the blg rowing event at Henley le one In which Can- adians, and particularly T'•rontonians. may well take pride. Canada rather "rubbed it in" by having another man 00 hand -Jack (luett, also of Toronto -who competed with Wright in the semi-finals anti who might have taken the big event it Wright had not been there to 40 it. Toronto Las prod a **eee'le gi 9t riming ••a -•wwwineww pa1r who promlie to uphold the fame of tie city for years to come. • • • A unique experience was that of Marshal Foch tn. baring a statue of I is o wn to commemorate his triumph in the Great. War. The statue -an eques- trian figure in bronse-in placed at the spot where Foch commanded the last great effort of the Allied forces in driving the German armies from French soil. The gallant Marshal was ^� Y _eA THE SIGNAL, A47 • GODERICH, ONT. • WINS DIAMOND SCL i.t' 14)R ('.tN.t1).t Joe Wright. jr.. brllliaut 1'auadktn «culler, achieved 11,. nit icon of his career when he won the Diamond Sculls. unofficial 'amateur sculling championtehip of the world. from .1. T. Lee. of oxford. More than 1151.1551 pestle alttte,ae'1 the great race. which was completed in the fast time of eight minutes and twenty-four seconds This is only the seesud time in the sixty-four year- iti`tt"ty of the coveted Diamonds that a Can- adian has leen successful. Lou Scholes being the other t'suadian w uccempli-h this feat. Above 1s an aerial photograph of the picturesque cour«e at Henley-on-Thames. It is one wile and :.tits yards long and is es straight as an urrow•. Inset is a clone -up of young Joe 1Vri:ht. the winner. and the tun in whom Canada has staked her trust to carry tiff more boilers et tie Olytutee games. Fashion Fancies MACK SATIN IS ALWAYS t1t 9( TSE RHYMING OPTIMIST B7 Alms Vie SMART (•ay SUMMER W111PLAR4 KILL LITTLE 11th ONESQ t' At the first sign of illness %tiring the hot weather give the little one Baby's Own Tablets or in a few hours he may be beyond aid. These Tablets will prevent Hummer complaint if given occasionally to the well Child, and will promptly relieve these troubles It they come on suddenly. '7tltby's Own Tab- lets should always be kept in every home where there ate young children. There la no other medicine as good and the mother has the guarantee that they are absolutely mfr. lbey are sold by all druggists or will be mailed on receipt of price. atnts,'per box. ley The 'Dr._WMiami' ' -, k - Mats* in Ren a d Siekness, win he request: free to any mother SCHOOL REPORT I'. P. P. NO. 1 COLBORNE School report of C.S.S. No. 1, Col- borne: • tent.. pope 0 ler cent.) -Kathleen 1VIlllame 70 ler cent. i'romoted to Jr. iV. (honors 75 per fent.. pass 00 per cent.) -Wilmer Rut- ledge .sal per rent.. Carmen Brindley 4" Keith Feng:ut 77, Ellen Feagan Promoted to Sr. 11 (honors 74 per tent.. pas." 00 per cent.)-' na,m ,5t per rent. (Te.d tinendM 1. Tinily marks for .Tune: Jr. iV.- Kithlr•n Williams 711., Sr. i1i. t ttntien Brindley 829, Keith Fengnn 71:.i. Wilmer Rutledge 017. Eileen Feagnn 413. gen t1D. ifen= -petit Williams 1'97. iI.--iteosou Kerr 423. Jr. 11.-iItounld Williams Z1R. Win- nifred Watson 4::11. Gordon William* 411. Kenneth Kerr :168. T. -.►ether Jones 1145. 1*lyills Kerr 430. Pr.- elork Wilitnms. David Hardy. Elwin •Ryan. Glen Witileme, Arnold Young (absent). Number on roll. ^-Il. MARFA. WOODS. Teacher. Many women relieve in Including ,at leatit one frock of black satin in their wardrobe. no matter the minion year Thin ir *wise pian, for black satin to serviesable. flattering material, whicch can he worn at almost anj informal aeasion. The owner of such a frock will never find tierself at a loss for "what to wear." The dull and shiny sides of the me - tergal form tarns frock. Two half the material. -on• - the dull. the other the shiny silk, are used. tying in a knot on one hip. The akirt features the uneven hem- line, being cut lunger on the lett side, The end of one of the halt -squares Calla below the hem on the right, thus achieving a nice balance. avert* to being lionized in this way, Whi•-Can DemyT bort his admiring fellow-eountrymen in- Who can look back on life and see sited. and so, as the gable despatches Its intricate design, say, he hall an exps•rience which net.Its strange and lovely tapestry Cher (*err nor Napoleon knew. Of changeful line end line, • •• I And. looking thus. can tall to find, uhilems msm tutee men the femora polka hendyuorters of -Lon- don. England. Is calked Sentient' Yard. The Manchester Guardian gives the Who can look hack and fall to see. explanation. The present building. When paths had grown moat dark, called at first New Seotland Tard to Mont veiled In sombre mystery. �ris�wvY That still there shone a spark, distinguish it from Its predecessor. ._y ""`takes ire name from the old building in A Anek that led him ta?d o0. 44 Ohreti more into the light?d Whitehall from wbl'h the police "gen-Who can deny God makes the dawn eral stag" wee transferred in 1R90. More fair because of night? This Whitehall building was the oriel - nal home of the Metropolitan Police. YOURS FOR T In scenes of dull despair, stat, some thread* of brightens -l- ere •wind Among the shadows there? z:J Weanseettortro • HIT ANKIN(i and it was called Scotland Yard from What do you like to do test on your a palace which once stood on the samesimmer vacation? What k your fax, site and wan oreaelonelIy (erupted by nrit' outdoor geort? if it he fishing, cnncIng. swimming. sailing. hiking. or Mutterer it Is. if you gni to the land o the Kings of Maitland and their *mhAs- (*der•e. • • • favorite recreation awaits you. it to ' The Fergus News-nw•ori pow** the tall of Nature's playground that along a euggestinn tint duplhetP urge« yon 0n (0 the life carefree In iia driven' licenses might le-issned nt n , highest degree. Perhaps you ere keen small extra charge s' flint driversen golfing• motoring nr driving. On- could keep one in each Boit and nveld torso can offer you all this. And more. the unpleaeentneee of being caught if you seek the very wIldereess ttsele without their card. The difficulty Is. or the hnnter•s shack. It Is in that land however. that In Anne mimes the dnpil- of enticing waterway' that Aati.sfae- cate license would he lent to lin- tion is yours. There are countless re- Ilcen*ed drlvert end these meld then I sorts one eon set out on new ath•en- operate with little fear of dlecovery.- 1 teres, obtain new thrill in life. and TvMnto Star. cone AwAy with the greatest stgttifi- There (Mould be no great difficulty caner of what life renlly is. Genrelan iTh file rnnttee of mein* lfiwrttt•A If that itaty.. French River, Pointe nu iteril. traffic ofirere are rPAAonable. ■s dmtht•', Timngami. Vnsltoko. Kan (tribe. Tent F.cho-nil nwnit to give the vttitor a leas most of them are. A man°ahmild' vncntlnn worth while. For full resort information •consult any ticket agent of the ('nnedien Net- tie Railway or Mr. N. R. Fnutty, town ngcnt. tnderi.h. Ont. Theyll Know! It your memory's had rind you went to know What you did n week or It month 51e Don't wreck your head with mental labors-- Ilmtbere, jest Ask your watchful) neighhnrl. MOST POWERFUL LAMP. Paris Boasts Moat Powerful Flash - Light Lamp In the Workl. Paris, Voltaire's l'Ity of Light. boasts 'to -day the most powerful fiaah-light'lamp lu the world. Its light, generated by electric current. is equal to 1;400 tni{liou candies. When we consider that 1,400 tulliion ordluary candles, put end to end. wpuld extend eight to ten tines round the earth, and almost far enough to reach the moon, we realize how Par man has travelled as light -maker since the days of the first tallow candle. Even It mediaeval man had bees able to manufacture 1.400 million candles and put them to 1,400 million candlesticks, the whole population of the world could out have set them alight; to -day a single mac moves a switch, there is a maelstrom in the ether, and the light of 1,400 million candles bursts Into flam•t. So powerful is the lamp in Paris that from the top of Eiffel Tower It would be visible for hundreds of miles; and if the Eiffel Tower were twice as high a man with field - glassed at Vienna would be able to ser 1t quite clearly. The heat in the centre of the electric flame which ra- diates the light reaches 6.500 degrees Centigrade. That is to say, it equals the beat at the surface of the sun! TOY PISTOL. UANGER3.. . Dangerous Toy Pistols ire Beimg Sold In OW Country. Scotland Yard Is concerned about the increasing number of dangerous toy pistols being sold in England. That these can be converted into leth- al weapons has been proved by a me- chanic who has bored a barrel and two chambers in a "toy." and tired bullets that penetrated a .plank % inch thick at /0 feet range. Summonses against tradesmen for selling these firearms contrary to law have been dismissed by magistrates. aad the Yard have stated that they will not prosecute where toy plvtois are sold without a permit. The only time the police can protect the pub- lic, apparently, Is when the Highways Act. which prohibits the use of any kind of firearm. whether with live or blank cartridges, within SO feet of a highway, is contravened. Flowers for Every Occasion While we have strewaet Funeral and Wedding Floral iMerew for some lime, this Is by no swans the limit of our entering eapaeity. We can and do supply Bower fur arilatk. tasty ornamentation for any other function at which they ern be appropriately rrsed. We are pleased to advise. when re- quested. en the use of flowers. Pueibl)• we ran make some prob- lem easier for you. "When hi doubt. send flowers... No expres- sion of sentiment more beautiful" GEO• STEWART Florist Telephone 105 - Goderich "ALICE IW WO!IDFIIL.VIID. An ometal points out that the law - - leaves a considerable loophole, and a atsibor Was lusplred .liter i•wenl,:A recent murder was committed with a to Boy's ltrcumstantlul .it. rye ' pistol little larger than those which The original manuscript it Die• ne are sold as toys. B7 cutting the the best-known and best -loved b:. k i barrel or drilling a bon," be says. "it ' * the world is to be sold at SOth.- is possible to convert a toy into a by's. It is entitled -Ali. Ado' u- formidable •r " op the uoehect- tures Under Ground," but itis known In as attemptweapto .d .op every nursery as "Alice .n -w n- ed sale of ao-gelled "toy' pistols. a derland." bill has been introduced in the Brit- The manuscript Is being sold by House of Commons. i Mn. Alice P. Hargreaves, the original , Alice ut the book. One July afternoon site and two small friends were take a on the river • by Mr. Charles Dodgu..n. an Oxford I don, f..:ous as a mathematical es- ; pert When h• was Bret of rowing he took them ashore, and there. un- der a hayrta':, he told them a story. Most people. in 'Similar circum- much ircum- on ewe bet the mat 1 �aSs••i'sm a cesae M mn h so that he gars It mo per► manent form in the manuscript now being sold, and published It as a book. But if Mr. Dodgsoa—or Lewis Carroll, for It is by his pen -name that he is remembered—was a good story -teller, he was also a good lis- tener. According to legend, he got the germ. ot_the 'Alice in Wonder- land" Idea by acting as audence to a small boy. This youngster had to explain as absence of some hours' duration. He did so by telling a circumstantial story of how he :net a white rabbit and was taken down its hole. Lewis Carroll was apparently keenly inter- ested In his tale. To -d -ay Carro_TT has • suer—seism In -A. A. Milne As is well known, his children's books were inspired by his son. 1'hratopher Robin, and were orig- inally written for him. That other modern favorite, "Dv. Dolittle," was also originally intend- ed slim 1 for the amusement of the author's children. Win Tt was a o tunate day for countless nurseries when the manuscripts which had de- lighted one family so much came in- to the hands of a publisher. More than eighty sites having been identified as the probable earllest home of man. we conclude that the caril'et men lived In (late and mused on the firer of every month. just like the latest. r rhes• of brides' shown by the prefer !Marlow trs - 111srlow eome gale great -broking. 11ut she who shines in weIIIIIIle ,lress SO good cooking. -tan fhmiletr t likes-4lntari0-,your Moly not to not he in peril of R fine If he happens to i•hange hie coat and forget Alm 11- PPMAP. 11 there Is any reseon to use reset that a drker le not iieenee1, 1t can easily 1* ateertsined If Mk IA the ease or not. Ito give nnneretAAre trate hie to A driver who le cnndnMing him- /lett properly, simply heranse he has forgotten a hit of pestehoarvi. would 1* an outtsge which surely the law Asea not contemplate. • • • The high and mighty pertfnset* who *Wee the fashions In men's clothing- ," who think they do -have hewn meet - /Il` IS solemn cnnlWsnee. and we are Sold INK i(or the coming aeafa►S fife aRyM Y M be "nitratonatMrath'e." P The honeymoon is that pirt of life which comen between the Iipvtir'k awl the hrneoatick.-RrAndnn Son. Amelia Earhart epoaks Ave differ- ent languages, het she cease to hold her tong,* In all of them.--'Kitehener Record. Skirts for tutuare will to 1* the newest in men'* .ales, het the Picot will say there is nothing new what- ever ahont them -St. Catharines Standard. MASTFR Iteetlly) : "1 don't mind your playing .*Ms downstairs.. Jenkins. but f do think yon might take the Rens not of your sleeve he► fore you serve the snap!"-d'atsing Show, London. LAST OF THEIR Animals That Are Fast Beco.ukg Extinct. The last passenger pigeon in the world died not long ago of old age In the New York Zoological Gardena. It was the sole survivor of • race which, only fifty years ago, was so numerous that their flights darkened %the sky and broke down the beaches of forest trees by their weight. Ti:e American buffalo — or, rather, bison—nearly shared the same tate. That it has survived to dee to Canadian Oovernm Int, which pre- served a few In Wainwright Park Reservation. where they have multi- plied so wonderfully that now there are eight thousand of them. An even finer beast, the European buffalo, lived in South Russian for- ests up to the war, but now not one la lett In that eountry. Happily a few live in captivity in the Duke of Bed- ford's park at Woburn, and else- where, so the stock may be pre- served. The elephant seal of Guadeloupe Is found on that island and nowhere else. There are very fee left, and If steps are not taken to preserve them the species will be post to the world. The lovely sea otter of Alaska hu been so hunted for Its fur that It le almost extinct. It is the only salt- water otter, and • beautiful playful creature whose fur in the moat won- derful in the world. But there Is very little hope of Its being saved. In the Galapagos 'elude, off the northwest coast of South America, are found the giant tortoises, the longest lived of all known animals. These strange, singglah reptiles are survivors from a pone -put age, but owing to the tact that dogs have run wild on the Islanda, and now devour the eggs and the young of (nese sen- ators, they are tut disappearing. The curious Ravines gull of the Pulite Coast la belat exterminated by egg robbers, and the great walrus of the North Psctae le belag destroyed by bunion. Two lilniss Milers of Jangle. The Imams boats to South Aim,- Ica, marIca, which cover more than two mil- lion blion square miles. has a population st teas than ow person per square inns. The reason M too ouch t•rt>alb• 1'1• sountry 1s covered with as almost im- passable )angle opt natural vegetating. 1 ltv► is 1IseMI,. a of . ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE W. C. SNAZEL Haberdasher and Dry Cleaner Steam laundry in Connection West Street Telephone lib Vacation Footwear for Golf, Tennis, Bowling, Soft -Ball, etc. Vacating Trava6.g Goads Hat Boxes, Club Bags, Suit -Cases, Boston Bags, Auto bik Cases, Trunks, etc. IOU ARE INVITED TO SHOP AT W. Here's Shoe Store Goderich ..AO' :•-. IT'S A BORN HILL CLIMBER Justtry it (NOME drive this new Oldsmobile j yourself. Try it out on the 1onast. steepest hill you know. You'll be thrilled , at the way its smooth. even flow of power carries you on,and over — without the slightest effort. For its amazing ability to take any hill, or any number of hills, with true, fine -car ease is one of the principal reasons for its tremendous, country -wide success. And this Oldsmobile will pass every perfor- mance test you make with the same bril- liant record. Its great new SS-h,p. engine provides speed, pick-up, power and stamina to fulfill every motoring desire. And a new cylinder bead of General Motors Research design adds all the advantages of high -compression per- formance, yet does not require -the use of special fuels. Thousands of buyers are choosing the Ffne Car of Low Pries for its beauty. luxury and style—fen its comfort, de- pendability and handling ease._for its excellence in every performance—and. espeei.Uy, because it is a barn hill- elimber o•s..NOse 2 -Door Sedan •1; 35 AT /ACTOR'''. C. eWA, OSITA$110 Gewr•smsr Tea ad Spiro Taw Str�a Oman Neve .a• Inbar sower ass yyrpt flank eau C OOloof +soot ot wewreeneeel wee N saw OLDsM0BILE TIM MS CAR 05 LOW PRIM MacEwan & Tebbutt Goderich, Ontario PROOl1CTOP Ol1UAL MOTORS OP CANADA, LDET1D •