HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1929-12-26, Page 7IJtter
Faflgue
When the Nerves
play tout
It la common to be tired after
the day's work but you rpt and
sleep and are ready with new energy
aed 's effort.
But when the nir for gghtr 'saleep fails to
and t . worn toou and t au nd fart e feeling
w th drrad
the new day, it is time to take stock
of your health.
Either as the result of the Mame
siva eapeediture of nervous energy
or because et worry or wasting
Meese" yotu nervous astern is te-
eming bankrupt. It is high time
to the building uy
established by the tree of Dr. Nall
'Nerve Fes!,
Dr. Chases .,
Nerve Food
The greatest of reaturaeves for
the blood and nerves. -_
Brophey Bros.
FUNERAL DIkIIiCTORB
AND EMBALMERS
Amheta•ce service a1 all
k.rn, day or sight.
PHONES: Store 120 Ras. tI
AODERiCH
J. R. Wheeler
Funeral Director and
Embalme
Ati calla promptly attended to
day or night
PHONSS
Store 336 Residence 355w
1lamtltoo street. Gedericb
•
S HINGLES
A ear of Rooting and Rock
Face Shingles just arrived
S: and 3x B. C. Shingles
(let our prince te•fere you buy
Robt. Standish
Emit St. Phone:Me Goderuh
Coal and Wood
Genuine Hard Stove Coal
Chestnut Coal -
Pea Coal et d
Coke
Pocohontas (2 by 4 egg)
I tan supply your wants in
any of the above fuel. Prompt
service and reasonable prices.
L. FLICK
Telephone 1 ; Sj (ioderieh
t
THE SIGNAL'S
Clubbing List
Th. Signal sad no Toronto446.50
Globe .-•-.•
The Signal and The Taranto 6.50Daily Star
The Signal sed The La.don d
Advertiser .
The Signal and The Laden 8.50
Free Press
The Signal and The Toronto a 50
Mail and Empire
The Signal sad The Fanners'
sen ...... 3.25
The Signal .d Th. Family
Herald and Weekly Star _. 3.00
The Signet and Saturday 5.50
Nigh
The Signal and The New
Outlook ..... 3.90
The Sigaal and Comedian 4 66
Homes and Gardeea.. _
The Signal and The Catholic
Record . 3.76
Th. Signal and *Lama's
Magazine
Tb.,Signel and Montreal WR-
woes ......... .
renewal.. 3.55
new 3.50
The Signal a • d World
Wide _ names! 4.26
sew 3 66
Toa Signal and Youth's
Companion 3.60
n. Signal and The Toronto
Star Weekly 6.71
TIne Signal srd Rod .n4 3.56
Goa
The Si/aai bed The Canadian
Coastryaas* 261
Clwbbtag Rates With °tier Pert-
.dk.H May Se Had cm
mer•wax;vr^sv sr.t.r*re j
,k
THE SIGNAL
County and District
At the Ileal meeting of the Brus-
wee village council for 11xee, a motion
we Sussed to Ibr effect teat the ;mem-
ber, et next year's (*until should be
I1;ihI for atten.J., .r at mined wc'tc-
logs,
)lrs. W Stackhome', 'of Brucedeld,
while milting wit.; knocked muter the
feet of eine of the cattle and was so
bailie
he wa0e 10 the ba'k of stitches
tik and
heed.
The death ,ex•urnrl Atli December
i(kh, at err hues' In llow•l'k towuedup,
Of Elizabeth Ann ltulertseru, widow of
Itiatert Meek. at *the age of snits -one
years. ikeeasirt was for many years
' a resident of Bluevale, le'fure moving
4t Huwh'k tau yours age. One son
laid two daughters 'survive,
Willlau„Jnhn Mcltrlen, a Hheitne
reek)eent of Hullett tows slip. tiled
lkvewber lade, in' hj, $runty -third
Iyear, after a brief filmes of pneumonia.
fie is aurt•ked by four suis and three
deuxbters; Vrs. T. E. Ma.un. Summer-
hill,; /l. K. ane E. M. Stcltrleo. Detroit;
W..1. Meltrien. Saskatoon; E. N. Me-
,
I Brien. Bullet: Mrs. Fletcher Giblr
ina . Kindersley, Sask., and Mies Mary
r McBrlrn, Essex. Ont.
New Llrain Store System
Kincardine Review -Reporter: it is
i annneyue.d that a new chain dote
system known an- tbt' Farley 'Hardware
( Stores, Ltd.. for the pup,.e of oper-
Ming r chain of hardware. stores, has
originated at Kincardine, wbere the
odlte 1s located temporarily. Later
Ithe gruel one and w•arrhuunt' will be
heeled at Listowel, and we understand
that a number of stores will he oper-
ated throughout Brute eouuty.
One Hundred Years Oki
•Mrs. John Gibson, of Wroxeter. on
Saturday last reached the age of one
i hundred years. Though feeble In
Indy, du. retains a mind whk'h not
only needle events of her youth but
takt% more than a passing interest In
affairs of the day. Born 1n .wvetland,
where vie was married in the year
Isee. she and her husband and one
child litter cheesed the octet' 60d In
I('.7 came to Wroxeter, whrre„she had
•into• resided. Mr. Grbeein dial .slxty-
"ne year, ago. and Mrs. Gibson brought
tip their large family. all of whom,
exe.le. the elders. have prrdeertttted
her. There are pony grandchildren
living.
WLNG1L M
Yne Bennett. wife of Iter. M. M.
'Bennett. a former pastor e; SVingham
i 1'nittrl churclt, died on Saturday et
dawlon.
John L. Campbell, a rrsldont of
Wingtutm for ter last six years, died
oa J)r cniher Itkth In bis seteuty-eighth
year. He was born near exalt, and the
greater part of his life was repent at
('nerve'', Seek. He is survive, by his
wife.
on Thursday evening last, at the
Wellington street United church par-
es'nage. London. the marriage was sol-
emnized of IPora darling Beattie,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Itobert
Beattie of Winghni. and ()neer Brown
Moffatt, eon of Mr and Mrs. t'. Mof-
fatt of Turnberry township. Rev. .1.
W. Hibbert performed the ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs. Moffatt will reside in
Winghane,
EXETER
At the James street United church
larsonage on Wednesday, December
Pole Mies Mar Sanders, eldest daugh-
ter of W. D, Modem of Exeter, was
united in marriage to Jae. W. Pomeroy
of London, Rev. D. McTavlab otlt,elat-
ing. Mr. and Mre. 4'omeroy will re-
side In London.
The fortieth anntvereary of the
coneerratton of Trlvltt Memorial
chnr•h w111 be observed hy "medal
servbe. on Sunday, December 29th.
,Intik Hidden had his arm fractural
by the backfiring of the engine while
he wn, cranking a ear a few days ago.
At the annual meeting of the South
Huron l'l,ewmen'e A,ts,rneatlon. officers
were elected es follows for the coming
year.: President, A. W. Morgan; Let
rice-pre'SWent. P. fa,emore; 2n0 vice-
president. Gurdon MoI)onale ; secre-
tary, E. Pym; treasurer, W. Welsh.
SEAFORT/I
rt. t1•. Nutt, of the liluroh highway
we<I of Seaford'. one day last week
.hot the lurgeet owl that has been *ern
IIAcre for some se. It had a wing
�Huse.
of See feet, five !richer.
Nrw- of the deitlh of Robert Nelson
1tase which occurred In New Turk
1
4Nly on Daeember 1Stb, was received
With much regret by relatives and
(Meld r 40 8eatorth. Mr. Hays was
a ani of the laje Thumae E. Hays of
tide place, and wur born In McKillop
luwnslitp fifty -ulna years ago. After
teaching school fur a few years he
went 'o Chicago, where he was
rugugesl with it book publishing
Mashies... Later he went to New York,
where he Wald couueetesl with a large
Iatbllshing home.. He was ill fnr ''V-
era) weeks with sleeping sickness, and
wa. *unlaced to be rot'overlug when
he suffered u brain hemorrhage. which
proved fatal. Ile is surtived by his
wife, formerly Miss Elizabeth Camp-
bell of Seaforth, awl by two et/eters
end one brother: Mrs. J. St. (Jiweu-
')fk•k, of l(eafurih ; Mrs. Agnes Munro,
of Regina, and William T. Itays, of
Edgerton, Alberta. The body was
brought to e$ealurth for interment.
On Tuesday. December 17th, Mae
Iludscn, Odeon daughter of Mrs.
George Hudson, was united in mar-
riage to ,Scutt Habkirk, Adieu .tun of
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Habkirk, the cere-
mony
ereloony being performed 11 Rev. Charles'
Malcolm. Mr. and lire. liatokirk wltl
reside 1u rk'afurtlt.
BLY TH
A wigwag signal has leen iu-Inllyd
at the C. I'. It. oozing on queen
street, where set prat 'evident, Lace
taken plae•e•.
•Mrs. & ltt•v. 1 A. Shore has g..ue to Lou-
den, where she will reside for • time
at !test.
Mea. Sarah Richmond, wife of Wit -
Baru Richmond, formerly of Morrie
towusblp. died December 9th at Tor-
onto. where the family had lived 'for
some years. Deceased wee a daugh-
ter of the late Mr. and Mrs. George
McGowan of Kart Wawaneeb. After
lenviug Blyth Noose thief. years ago,
Mr. aril Mr... Richwine, had lived at
tendon and Winnipeg. Beelike the
husband. one son survive*.
Mr.. henry Jackson hue gene to
spend the r.maln,lrr of the winter will'
her daughters at ltrigdeet.
This community has been r4 -n utt
by 4110 andira and uuexpe'eted ele'nt41
of 'Vt111am It. Erskine, which octetrrwl
on Sunday afternoon, Ileeewher here,
after a few hours' Hines*. I).sntstel
was sixty•threw year.. of age and was
for many years In busiuess at Atwood.
leiter he engaged in business. s1.Ayl-
mer and three yeaas ago he came to
Blyth with his son. A. H. Er.klne.
Ile was prominently identified with
8t. An.lrew's United church end was
superintendent of tee Sunday 'whited.l
fie 1s survived by his ereond wife end
by a family of three wets and three
daughters: 'Mrs. (1. Y: 'Pathan. Mid
land; Mee. ('Geo. Renton and Rudolph 1
Erskine, Detroit; James M. Eneklue.
Atwood; A. 11. and Jeanette, Blyth.
LUCKNOVP
It. M. lohnetolle. who was amerce -
aced with hes brother. St, Johnstone,
In the furniture and undertaking I,9sl-
tlr.w here, has gone to Toronto, where
he has taken a posltlon as funeral
drreceor with I) M. Johnston d ('o. of
(het city. Mr. Johnstone had leen
reeve of Lucknow rhe last three years.
and l*sides being prominent iu the
:cosiness life of the village he t,s,k an
active interest in baseball and hockey
and was a member of the I'reenyterian'
church choir. Before his departure'
for the city he was made the re'•ipient'
of several presentations.
The Iucknow hoc fes club be. bete ,
reorganized for the ..awes and a j
team will be entered in the senior)
Northern Hockey League. A team may ,
*le, be entered in the Bru,e ieague,
and it is proposed to form a bowel
league for young players. Officers of
the club are: President, Geo. H, 4mLh ;
vee-preeldent, R. H. Thompeou ; Tee-
retary. C. Thompson; treasurer, C.
Mnrdte; manager, W. Mct'oy; coach.
R. Johnstone.
Alexander Hamilton, who spent
some time here last fill tislting his
brother -In-law, Walter Sturdy. 1s mew -
log from his home at leentlee. Mich.,
and wuepkiouv of foul play are enter-
tatoed. Shortly after returning i,onre•
atter his visit to imeknow Mr. liamil-
ton went to a farm which he e,wne
about eighty miles from d'ontlar, and
sine then he has not been seen. The
tenant of the fart' has been arrested
on suspicion, but there appears to be
no evidence direet1y eennerttng hon
whit the myeterlona dlsnpeel' ante.
Mr. Sturdy was over 1n MMhigne for
N wiile giving his Residence in the,
efforts to mantel the mystery.
Hotel Longfellow Built
This hotel, the New Pines at
Digby, N.A., was built by Long-
fellow. Not, however, that he saw
it, thought about it or even
dreamed or imagined it. What ha
did do towards it wu render im-
mortal the Land of Evangeline, the
beautiful Annapolis Valley of which
Dishy 1. the gateway. sad Do
create a tourist lure.
Tisa New Pines le being built by
tis. Dominion Atlantic Railway to
further aid in the development of
tourist trams u the Maritimes
and, with the exception of the out-
door swimming pool. the lines for
which were borrowed from those at
Bane and Lake Louise, it is a
handsome building of early English
type of architecture. The opening
of the Pines will shortly precede
a three day festival at Annapolis
Royal in commemoration of the
three -hundredth anniversary of the
arrival there of Sir William
Alexander's Scottish colonist -gender
the charter of New Scotland
granted by Hing James I.
GODERICH, ONT.
THE STORY OF COFFER
Grown hunt Meed, Transplantd,
Yield Begins In Pour to llaht
Years -•-industry In Brea/L
Gently rolling hills of dark gran
crossed with dusty roads In red, MU*
clearings with straight Hoes of white
houses and an occasional pretentious
atablishbmeat of a proprietor Is to-
day's winter picture of the Brazilian
coffee country. The Uulted Stater
drinks halt the coffee iu the world'a
coffee puts.
Two-thirds of the world supply of
Coffee grows in Brasil, two-thirds of
whatr
Brest' grows goer to the gaffe
Stater and two-thirds of Brsal's cof-
fee grows In Sao Paulo state, tor
which the port of Sento' le the fun-
nel. Brazil's coffee valorization plan
has kept up prices, but the propor-
tions have changed, Brazil selling less
and other couotrles more, hence Bra-
sil's alarm.
This L the ceotre of the coffee
area, the dark green trees cover the
MHz like the fruit land in California
as far as the eye cau see. Here are
the Larger (agendas, one with 4,600,-
000 trees, and here is the crux of
Brasile :uffee problem, for the planet
attons of the old aristocracy etch
political power are growing old.
Younger and newer fazendas la Bra-
zil and other countrle. can produee'
coffee cheaper than the price which
the Government uses to protect the
old
The coffee harvest in Brasil aad
the winter of South America both
start in June Thousands of coffee
pickers, entire families, are hidden la
the closely -planted trees, their pres-
ence disclosed by • pile of sacks or a
Jalan.•se• hahy tended by a larger tet
along the roadside The trill of cof-
fee across the seas to cups in meat'
hands starts with the harvest, but the
. tory goes back even farther
Oreaslunally trees are grafted, !roar
the seed. From nurseries, they are
tran.pionted Into the grove.. They
must be cared for until they start to
bear. at least four years in virgin soil
and seven to eight years In the ua-
replenlahed soli of Sao Paulo Some
trees there have been bearing for 100
years. but they are rarely profitable
after 40 years and .tart to decline at
I weir...
Brazil produces six species of cof-
fee, according to the Coffee Institute.
the Government organization control-
ling the crop. Java is classed as a
species, but many consider It only a
degeneration of Bourbon, the most
prollfic and least hardy species Moka
le not classed for every tree In Brazil
produces Moka. Those who Imagine
that names of coffee hare geographi-
cal slgntdcance and picture Mote
coming from mutiny Arahta and Java
from the island in the eastern tro-
pics. will be surprised to know that
their favorite mixture '.f lava and
Moka is probably merely a reunion
far from home of little brothers who
VOW on the same tree In Brasil Most
coffee berries contain Iwo beans, the
Mit eider together On the end,' of
each hranrh are smaller berries which
have not fully developed. Thee con-
tain a round bean. It 1a Moka.
Troy August to Orlober, the emer-
ald sea of trees is covered with a foam
of *bite blossoms. Three times a year
the workers clean the grove. and. In
most countries. the tree blossoms
three ttm.s to a single season. No
Burbank has developed a ooffee tree
which *1)1 spread all its blossoms at
one time
The berries turn from green to yel-
low, to dark red and anally to dry
Purple at three different intervals tea
the same tree. in Colombia, for In-
stance. three pickings are made. es-
penalve but producing a uniform and
h igh-priced harvest. in Brazil, (b.
tree. are .tripped, not pteted, the
"plek.r" enrtrelfng a branch with h1s
hand and stripping off leaves and
belles. ripe and green alike. Later
sorting tamely made it uniform In
gni..
The world's thirst for coffee, .spe-
cially that et the United State., le la-
gattable, but the world need not buy
low grade eoffee.wb.n it can get bet-
ter grades at the same price. That is
why the billions of trees in Brazil,
their care and their barv.sat, are so
tamely related to more billion. of
cups of coffee l- the United States.
Bras1I's whole economy 1a based on
coffee, 71 per cent. of ib exports, and
though the little rad berries run into
astronomical figure., the, anal 6nan-
etal outcome for the nation, now not
at all sure, depends on the headline
of each one. This L a problem en-
tirely separate from overprnduction-
stock* of low grade roffres which can-
n ot be sold at any prier.
For the last two years the coffee
growing countries have produced
More toffee than the world ran ran-
sume. Brazil, the gr.•atcst prodecer,
ham kept the price up through Its
valorisation organization, tits Coffee
Institute, which controls the amount
which can be shipped from the reen-
try. With high prireo, the ntrmber of
sew trees planted each year In Brasil
runs into the hundreds of m1111tyas.
Other countrles are doing the same -
"getting under our umbrella," as the
Brazilians say. Normal Inertias. 1e
consumption le far behind the Omer -
mai Moreau In •produetba.
A story of cotes h.a many phases
--irons the humble picker who has
dotae as a colonist to a now land, to
the hoette for whom a rep of the
beverage le a part of their daily Ille
and anally to the world centres - of
finance which t'ontrol the gold which
is the pulse of nations.
Daylight Having Time.
Summer time. says a cnrre.pondent
In the Edinburgh IHspateh, is not an
Institution of yesterday nor of man.
For verification et this refer to the
411ble--Isaiah, chapter it, verse I.
the verse in as follows "Behold, I
Will bring again the shadow of the
degrees, whlnh 1s gine ties in tote
sun dial of Ahas, ten degrees baek-
ward. Ho the sun returned tea de
pees. hy which degree* It was gone
dean"
linked Mates' leer ease.
The populaUon of the halted hetes
literature at the rate of about 1,505,-
000 porsoi s 1 pets.
'Bette will Caere be ensuing to
114soo wise have Itemise enough to en-
joy It." -Bence &Barton.
'' "t•y wftfiolY. enthuatesm----and
701 Yate a rlfla without a hnllrt."
--4414 Dewar.
. m.t..
Ylxty-Itteh Coupe for '/'Wo Duca 1146
',tllee, oto (.allnn of liar,
A diminutive automobile Dalt wit.
sell tar nut more thau 1200. sod
which can be 'marketed Ihruugn wall
order .hop, ham just I'll a sueeca*-
c0l d.w,uatr ti /u New fuck. It
the inventlun of Jautea V. Hared of
Ute Mania airplane factory in Garde*
City, 1.1., who hold* that ft W that
see*llest motor -car fur practical pur-
poses ever made.
Mr. Mania has pertectt,'d three
models wheal are unique In many
ways. MAW' of theta fres a e'basel•
frame or axle. Mottled, each wbeei 4
Independently attached to a refnfuro-
ed Gude, and the door of the body la
the bottom of the car.
There are nu springs, but to pre-
vent shock or discomfort of any kind
W the driver or Samoomer, the wheels
are set In what la called av tutor cord
-made of rubber under high tendon
-elmolar to the way alrplaue wheels
aro suspended. This makes for raw
wheel being able to absorb the 'boa
of rough spots In the road indepen-
dently 0t the others. Universal Jolnte
la the wheel hubs suable the drivsg
to keep the car under perfect control
through the application of motif
power and steering mechanism. •
Mailmen who witnesed the 411.
aaoaatratlon said that, deepito lei .1ttfb
Mr. Martin ham made an automobile
that LI a real, practical motor -car. 16
h*• • body, a 4-oyltader, air-cooled
Meter, tour wheels and, during the
demonstration, proved it la capable
of travelling et the late of 60 railed
efts hour or more over roads that apo
not ant Masa, and with 'tartest eons -
fort to the persona ridtag la it. It le
ttalit for two persons.
Mr. MarUn observed ole nutmeg
eeenuary of apses and parte 1a build -
tag It, 1t was sate. The coupe has a
{e -faith wheel base, es compared with
the 1011 ea-tneh wheel bars of the
Word Mudet A, the smallest Am.ric•se
„made automobtle, and the 71-1a011
wbeel base of the AusUa Seven, tae
small Brltlsh car that la soon to be'
lalreduoed Into Use United State"
through an American meautastuetmmel
'Oapmy, sow betas termed.
Mr. Martin's automobile welch'
400 pounds and pommies what the
automobile seletemaa valla the "usual
rvdnemeata." It. has an 'IectrN
starter, ge.dometer, ammeter, .Ms„
and will b• shipped In a *wittier*
proof crate designed so that the pure
chaser of illit car eau set the crate up
in his yard and use It for a garage.
Among the advantages which MR.
Martin holds his care possesses, one
that w111 appeal strongly 40 the pup.
chaser la that it needs no "servieing.•
The few parte that require lubricate
otos may. be declared, be lubricated
for tis. life of the car before It le
Shipped from the factory to the user.
The aviator curd by whl:h e**41
Wheel u suspended is "gond" for 21,-
.60 mites, h. declared, and Its engt**
will reviles no more attention thea
tray experienced motorist is capable
et glvlae It. When the aviator cord
1111 worn out, anyone can replace it at
a cost of about 50 teats, he added.
♦pother of the advantages which
Mr. Marco a.e.rta els car has 1a that
it will "do" 10 mike on • gallon of
paellne.
Legend os ain41absr.
1 watched ■ kingfisher waiting fee
tY pap, sear Wtedsor, writes Look -
'.r -Oe in the Landon Daily Chronicle.
Tor tern mlaute. It stood perfectly
motionless by the water's edge, Ila
beautiful plumage presenting a won-
derful debt evilest the drab sky.
Suddenly, without any Indication.
It plugged almost perpendicularly In-
to the water, and emerged a few
yards away with a small fish iu 4111
bill. Then, with a quick glance
around, It Saw to a bush a yard or so
from are and began devouring Ib
tasty morsel, I recalled, as I watch-
ed, the story of the origin of the
Yingdsb.r's delightful rotors. It 1a
told that a ktagesher was at first a
dull greyish bird until one was re-
leased from Noah's Ark It then flew
so near to the sun that It was scorch-
ed to IU present color, also assuming
the rotor of the blue sky.
Forret of 1Daem,..L,haten-
That comparatively little k2o_�
area, the Royal Toreat of De'Sn, la
Ginure.tershlre, England, an expanse
of 26 900 erre' of almost prlmrAval
w;•odi,.nds, hill and dale tying rough-
ly speaking, between lite Severn and
the Wye, was recently the seeno of
an ancient custom. This was tier altar-
h,--onte
ut at the 8ph House --the
tinseing - place In the Tenet of the
i Verd,r.rs, and Where the ancient
1 Mine Law Coutts' are held -of coal
1 royalties due to the Free Miners of
this royal forest, a privileged body
entlUed Jointly with the crown to the
I mineral., Thowho sink .hafts for
coal to tis. Tus oreest of Dean (by per-
mission, of course, of the crown)
have to pay a trifling. royalty on all
the coal raised, a halfpenny a ton,
and In Rome cases a penny.
"F'avears annoy owe, etivaut„g.•• d1..
euneert one, prlvlletegee humiliate nn-.•
Andre Gide. '
Theiliday, December 25, 11120-4,
ZURICH
Mr. and Mn. Wm. C. Califs* and
daughter Clda lett last week for Kit-
cheuer, where they alit reside.
Oswald richer, who botaget the
emelt farm at the suction rale two
week.' ago,' hue sinew soil it to Law.
Truce De'nummr, of near Drysdale, for
teetele. Mr. lkvwuuhwe w111 move to
the term next April.
Jacob and John Lh'Ichert were at
New !litres, Mich.. attending the fun-
eral of their brother, Henry 1►el,•hert,
who teemed away alter a abort illness
in Ids sixty-fourth year. Deetetueet was
well known iu Zurich, havlug Ureal
her' during his chlklhu,sl. Mrs. ll.
4 uugbiut, of Zurich, is a sister and
there are two brothe'rtt at l41trult be-
ehive the two residing in this village.
ammo's
The death •occurred ori Di.•ember
10th of Mrs, Stephenson, widow of
John rltephen.on of Stanley township,
at the age of teeny -revel' years. De-
ee•sed was born In England, came to
('toads when a child, and .lived In
Stanley town.hly for thn'equartera of
a t'dhtury. Her husband died eighteen
years ago and about four years ago
Mr... Steplbenson casae to live with het
daughter In Clinton. SM. leaves two
daughter* and three runs: Ralph and
iDavid John, of Stanley: W. M. of
Marlette; Mich.; Mew. R. Armkteeug,
of Clinton. and Mrs, le Armetrong, of
Pilot Mound, Man, • • •
The Ytasrtc. iIrow•n, of 1L,ronto, 1
who recently deev,rateel lit. I:wrge'. l
chure'h, Goderieh, hare been engaged
in the decorating of St. retire AngII-
can rhun•b, Clinton.
David Canteen' left last Werk moi
emcee' Christmas with his sister, Mrs.
Kyle, at Winnipeg.
Hun R. B. 'Bennett, leader of 141.1
Federal t'nnser,-ative polity. 1. booked!
to visit Clinton on January Mb, when
a banquet will ire bell 1n the town hall
under Iotrol OunservatJve ausplcee. i
At rel. James' ebure'h, !Stratford, on
December 11th, Rev. ('anon (Muff per-
formed the Marriage ceremony unit-
ing Laura Marion, daughter of ,Ire.
Henry aid the late John G. Henry al
1tratfonf, to Lynn Malr, eon of Mr.'
amt Iles. Walter Milr of Clinton
An Alkeeta•ia Street ear.
PIttsb•rgk has the seat aluminua
serest oar to the world The car is
built for vlalon for the • passages
It has windows without the usual
panelled obstructions, and thus. same
windows dna be raised or lowered at
leisure with the same ease and the
same Dort of gadget as an automo-
bile's The 'Athlete was built with spe-
ctra attention to speed, comfort and
safety. The seats are form -acting and
mu ma recline In ease In them The
floor la a non-skid compositlou. The
lights are subdued, arranged eo u to
eye their rays almost indirectly.
Humpy Village Street..
The typical (lemma highway M
tortuous sad full of twists and turas.
It proceeds from one country village
to the neat, going through the main
Streets of every tuwn and hamlet
where tragic Is frequently blocked by
all sorts of bindrences. A• villages
are usually only a short datanse
apart, the time for getting tbrough
them often nearly equals the time
spent to travelllug at high speed be-
tween them. Outside the village pro- -
per, however, the road may be an es-
eellent one kept up by the Provincial
Governunenl. inside the village ,
boundary the road becomes the mala
street, paved with the rougheee kind
of cobbles but quite satisfactory to
the inhabitants who possess ao auto -
Mobiles o4 their owu. The village,.
wish to keep their streets rough sad
crooked In order to slow down- fad
automobiles and so prevent injuries
to geese. pigs and chickens, and poll•
ably to Induce urotorhtts to stop u
the village.
S•Int on Postcard.
"Good King Wencealaa" baa Join-
ed the very select band of stamp
Wats. which ranges alt the way fruit
the archangel Gabriel to St. Vitus.
1t le the little country of Czech..••
Slovakia which has paid him the
honor. for he 1a their pattoa salat,
and it la Just • thousand years slit*•
his death This event I. shown en- the
two high valuer, the three and ave
korony. In so lively r manner that the
design V ualque In philatelic &anaks.
"PINKHAM'S
COMPOUND
IS WONDERFUL"
Read This Letter from a
Grateful Woman
Vanessa. Cent. -"T Milk Lydia E.
Pinkham'. Ve.etahl n Coagpord is
woedsrful. I bays
had ix children al
Mah four are bv-
ma ap ywug-
>�Is a
naw
mouths
boaaold
• weigh. 23
ads. I have
hoar medl-
bdoee e.ch 01
was born and
certainly t� t
from it. I urge ma tribade to take it as
I am sure they will rode* the same
help I did." -Mas. Mason MO-
Mtniaat, Veaama, Ontario
Season's Greetings
•May the New Year bring to you noel yours untthad-
owed gladness and joy, heti may it open for you fresh oppor-
tunities for usefulness and aehiev,•nunt
At this, the clime of another year, we wish 4, thank our many
reutnmete for their leanings/. during 441. year and we elicit a con-
tinuance of the dame during the coming year, and may it prove of
mutual benefit
W. HERN'S SHOE STORE
Thune 43* The `yarn• r:,,lrrwi,
1
GODERICH INN GARAGE
,F'F'1('L1L SERVICE STATION FOR -
Darant, Hudson sad Essex, Caporal Motors Aoheso6ilee and Troths
Expert on Electric Trouble W. Specialise en Brake Service
1',a, can ,nr,0' Polus• L,'pe'ctinn when they are repaired by us
Automobile Supply Electrical Parts 4or AI) Makes of Antos L Steck
t' I" .n your who can l.ring a car we can't repair --$2F
HARRY BRADLEY
HAMILTON ST PHONE 247
Tr
BROPHEY BROS.
rem.. 'enestranemerenameMessimiessee
Leading house for high-class
Beds, Mattresses and
Springs z'`�t
-INSPECTION INVITED ,J," .. "
Store Phone 120 Residence 217
Thr *ignal
��a•.�'li .t,P'kt�Frmil
Calendars for 1930
are here and they are "dandies"
for every paid -in -advance subscriber
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The Signal from now to January lst, 1931, for