The Signal, 1916-6-29, Page 2TiBMIIDAT Janis sr, INA
TiHR SIGNAL PRINTING ON., tiro.
Ptratrlessas
Tai aw0AL Tk•
I. p re6/
Ales t A. nA j� �ttl�ty.
hers
%eras, uoa.rick, • T.Msks•e Na s►
JL aw. tomos Tear.. --un. Debar w /'Iflr
este ere year : upaid Mrietay V advance fl..
Poli.r will b. • to •ok.xibere 1a tM
Vatted Maar the rat* 1. (roe Palter and rift.
Cents artsay la a/tame. eabrcriben who
I oll to rouges Ms ewLIL menisci, by slaw
ees e. a tbvx by aq.atsrrag tb. publish.
•r •f tt>t tact al r eery .date u scribe. When
t •Oases •t •n're•- is desired, bot► old sod
tM sew
cid. .r....0 be elven. Ksmlti.asse
M by Mab draft. [tend x•.e I.rsree lt/tbMMw wrier.wrier.x registered late•..
emaiummee .t any theft
A.,Yr.
yese T.tttsa —Hales for Unpin, sod
010U .s_seetberisets will be elves ea spoil
saYsa Legal sag Ober Maids dverrismossits.
tea mesas ger lis. tor Ar.t Inrrtio..nd fear
tis per 0.. fee each subsequent treirtgeo.
wale a .le of.obd .ouD•rett-twelve
Moss 4 u inch. Beelae.e e.rd. of .la Uses
awil ander. Niue tailor, per year. Advertho-
aoste .1 lel, rowed. *rayed. enmities.
.01st, ditssuiou. wanted, Hour.. for Bale cr
to Rant. glum. for tl.le er to tte,.t. Articles
tee Bae. etc.. not .toeedsae slag[ Ilne-, T wsnty-
Av Cel, - nazis 111•11111108 : One Dollar fur erg.
swab. sin► Cent. tuella., hes arousal =oath.
Career .dvertl-.meet. in proportion. *a-
. e•nc-tris,t. in ordinary reading type. Teo
Oust. per hoe. No notice I. tee Tweedy.
Ave Cont.. Aor •pcalal so. toe, the object of
which 1. the pecuniary beneal of any lodlvtd-
eater u.orlatlw. to be 000.tdersd au ad eve -
thereon t and charged au. or+l trigs!•
To ('oaarawi,ruc%y..—Tbe on..eio
r.tO of
our sube•-t'ben and reader. 1e toediatlr invit-
ed toward. waking 1 n. tl W,i A I. • weekly record
of .II I.J.woeunly and dirt net doing,. No coat
euntoattoa will be attended to union It caw
fair. the .ase and .d/re.e of the writer, sot
.,
s.0.ar41 ' fee audi ...too. but M an .vfdewoe
of wood faith. New. It.... .bn•N reach Tug
BIGIOL doe sot Ida taco Wednesday moon
Wawa west.
THURSDAY. JUNE 2. 1918
EDITORIAL NOTES.
Rpeod Dominion Day in Goderich.
The Kaiser is sending out 8. U. S.
calla to the neutral nations.
The hills dont soy whether that
mule race on Dominion Day is for
four -legged ones or the two -legged kind.
The "greasers" and the "gringos" • y
are getting into grips on the Mexican I
border. Some people tbiok the Ger- c
mans are at the bottom of the trouble. , t
As the Russian Grand Duke Wight I
truly have said to bio soldiers a year Ub
*goes they began their great retreat
"He who fights and runs away
May live tut flght soother day." m
w
TILE tall:PIAL : 3ODERICR ONTARlt►
Minister of the Utowa. Iia UM btbiegl
examined with reread le the attic .f
condemned awtuunities hp *bleb bb
hired Allison bad • h.la4. Hs told
the ezamindug counsel theta bs wall
accept Col. Allison's wend before be
would accept his ,tbe eott.ser.l oath ;
be didn't care what the AAmlt.ky paid
for the amwuni,inn; he hadn't read t1.
evidence takrn Leto.e theOemmiseie.t
be didn't "carr a bona about what tbel
public thinks" ; Alii.. n bed hese
proved to bean honest man—and so or.
Premier Borden has received emphatic i
warnings f Journal. ut his own
party ma to what will happen if the
Minister of Militia is allowed to ramp-
age In this way.
The Provincial coat for North Perth
has been vacated by the assignation
of Mr. James Torrance, who. It is
understood, i, to become collector of
customs at Stratford. The election
has been set for July 10th, the Gov-
ernment evi•lrntly trusting to the
Liberals.' beifigulsoprepared to put •
candidate in the field on so short
notice and so securing an election by
acclam.lion. The Liberals'. however,
lave quickly rallied, and have placed
\Vrllingron Hay of Listowel in
nomination. Mr. Il..y is the well.
known grain dealer and has business
eonnec:ione throughout this part of
the Province. He should be a strong
candidate. Thr Conservatives have
nominated Mr J. A. Makin', a farmer'
and Reeve of North Eastbope, and are
attempting to make an Issue of the
bilingual question.
The Provincial general elections in
Nov Scotia last wee► were an nver-
erbelmin,t tr iunpb for the Liberal Gov-
ernmentheaded by Hon. G. H. Murray,
which receives another [sumo( power,
with an increased majority. The
Liberal' have been in power continu-
ously in. Nova Scotia for thirty-four
ears. In Uonservetive quarters it
wig; hoped that the electors woo Id
onsider it "time for • change," but.
be Government bad • good record,
nd the course of events politically in
&nada during the last Pear or two
as not tended to strengthen tbe Con-
secrative party. Nova Scotia i. Pre-
is! iirlen'. Province, and if lest
eek'* el-ction■ have any significance.
in relation to F'ederai Origins the result,
must to anything but comfortiug to
the Government at Ottawa.
London, Out. is rather peeved be-
cause the soldiers are being removed
to Camp Borden, atter the city had
spent • lot of mom), to provide ac-
commodatioa for theta. (ioderich
could eyuspetbve with London, if it
didn't remember that London worked
the gauze to keep the soldiers from
coming to (lodetich.
L'Itrrp artven l'onserratire jieirnals
are trying to snake for Liberal Op-
po.ition responsible for the ahaence of
Canadian .hips from Biitain's naval
line. It won't do. Canted* would
have hien right there with the ships—
and the men, too --if the Laurier navy
policy had not been turned down by
the Borden Government wbeel it male
into umce in 1011.
In Rusin, the people are demanding
the ezreutienl df the former War tr
Minister and his wife, who have Leen) re
found guilty of grafting in connection cel
with army contracts. herein (anodal U'
grafting appears to be an honorable tin
bu.inrss, and those who reek to expose ha
the grafters ars openly insulted. ling
Tt.err is mine cleaning out to he done, lin
in high pl..eo in (•'nada before we: ah
reach the Ru. -i in .tand,uJ.
the
are
The Financial Po.t says if the. (Joy - do
ernrurnt wants to reach Owlet titer it wi
most use the new.l.apers- Pamphlets, I p• -or
blue -hooky and public meetings do not ' the
get them. All the farmers can be l no
rfrothed by the methods pursued by
ntodetnowt chants and manufacturers.
They talk to the people they want to
reach in the papets closely read by
What looks very much like an or-
ganized effort ia bring made to druni
up an Imperial Federation movement.
It requires drumming up, as there is
really no popular demand or desire for
any such movement. One can talk
with public-spitited Canadians for
twelve month. ata time without bear-
ing the subject mentioned. We are
told, though, that the overseas do-
minions cannot long cot.ti011e to ac-
cept a position in which they have no
direct voice in the large! affairs of the
Empire. This is an ingenious argu-
ment, but On examination it (ails to
carry weight. Supposing an lupe' ial
Parliament in which Canada, Aur
Alia and the other dominions were
presented, as ptopcn.ed by the Em -
re teorgan urs. With rrpresecta-
.n by population the members bi-
g for the United Kingdom would
ve absolute control. and the outly-
domir.wns would have W fall in
e, even if the policy decided upon
cull be extremely distasteful to
m. As it is now, the dominions
free to adopt their own line of ac -
n. 1f they wish M join voluntarily
tb the Home Goveson,ent in ho-
od enterprises, they can do so : if
7 adopt some other line of policy,
strain is placed upon the Imperial
lotion. The net result of lbs adop,
n of the plans cf the Empire reor-
iaers would be, so far as Canada is
corned, that the people of this Do-
nlon would be throwing away their
dem and independence of action
bout securing any compensating
ree of influence in the Imperial
n cils. We do not know of any
r way to wreck the Empire than
plan which the Iroperial Federa-
n faddists propose.
re
tin
gen
con
then.. There are no worth -while farm- mi
era anywbere in Canada wbo are not free
readers of their local newspaper, wit
Theodore Roosevelt has announced encu
hi. support of Hughes, the Republican
candidate for the President sues
Presidency. T }t.• the
who is strongly pro -Ally, is evidently tin
not disturbed 1i
y the fact that
the German element in the United
is:ates i, behind Hughes. He is bent
on defeating Wilson, who be thinks
hes not displayed sufficient backbone
in dealing with Germany. if Hughes
gets both the pro -Ally and lbe pro-
(ierman vote, Mr. Wilson will have to
do the best he can with the "neutrals."
A good many things may happen,
however, before the election day in
November.
A number of Con•etvstive M. i'.'s
from. Ontario went to Nova Scotia to
help turn out the Murray Government
in the Provincial general elections
last week. The brigade included
W. H. Bennett, measlier for East
Simco. ; H. B. Murphy, member for
North Perth ; 1.4 -('ol. It oath Clark,
rwmber for North Bruce : Oliver
James Wilov,r, member for North
Reset, and some ethers. No doubt
they afforded a great deal of manse -
meat lin the Nov• Scotian', but they
evidently made very little impresa(on
otherwise, a. the Murray Goverment%
wee sastalsed by • larger majority
Shea 1t bad In the last House.
Majoe-General Sir Ram Hughes be-
fore the Davidson Ontionia.inn last
week gave umber 01 the exhibitions
Whit* are snaking him Impossible es a
WHAT OTHERS SAY.
Major Sam's Little Game.
Meats..) Malt
1t is evidently in the mind of Sir
Sam Hughes that by assuming an atti-
tude of lofty contempt for charges
affecting the administration of his de-
partment he can disarm his accusers
and allay public distrust.
Tb. Irishman's Blanket.
Retail Orderlies me a pleasant. safe
and sure !steady,. Sold and puerto-
teed b ell Resell drug stores, 15e and
tt ie. H . C. Dunlop, Goderieh.
tears OtiVER
• soma Nock of Trsseary Stock in •
gelid mise now beiag worked in Po,.
cups. Unmet which we Consider •o
oaeel1ta ape. ulatwn at
dI GENTS Pen •►.ARE
If you are i.tere.ted and wiab further
particulars, write
Pi-UMMEK d CO..
sea a.v ov vo Neve
ist
SUMMER SHOES
SPORTING
If you would be we11 and
comfortable you heist have cool
stlnliner footwear. We have
the latest in Oxfords and Pumps,
dud oar prices are most reason-
able.
T. anis and Bowling Shoes
are now in stock. The tidiest,
nattiest, most wearable line of the
Lifebuoy Brand in stock at the loetst
possible pricey.
Geo. Mac Vicar
North Side Square GODKRI('H
THE man who does the
most talking doesn't
necessarily have the most
enthusiastic listeners. The
business men who make
the strongest claims are not
necessarily the leaders in
their lines. We make
strong claims, but we back
them up with the right
kind of workmanship.
May we have an opportus-
City to prove this to you.
Fred Hunt
HAMILTON STtRF:t•:T � PHONE 135
statewnan In blue Kitchener was
TEIE W out ovw•Uted them war
was uwdsrestltrIw ated, Its proportions/ beyood anybody'so.ybody's ineajioat/
• A sem that of the "uwlmagsaretive'
Kitchener, wbo t1..... t i
RUWSIA RRItL'MKS.
At the (does of the great Garman
campaign in Rus-$• lane year 11 seemed
10 nsany people a gratuitous thing to
soy that I. the crucial aeras It bad
faded. Kumla indeed had suffered •
tremendous defeat, one which perhaps
no other belligerent could hays sue-
vivid.
ur-
viv.d. gibe bad keit Polamd and Cuur-
Iard, at least 2,1R10,W0 men, great
quantities of poses, and almost leer
.whole Urn. and s(cond lines of forti-
fied defence, how 15. Gulf of Riga to
the itunteaben tro0u.r ; out she was
yet uurruebed. The Germans bad
tailed to put her out of the war, that
is, W win • decisive result. Tbey had
won territory which would be hard to
bold, aid bad taken priwuers enough
to populate a small empire, without
wrtouel7 end$rgering the man power
of this great sad terrible adversary.
Proof that the dramatic German
eempaims in Russia was in the basic
moss • failure is that Knees& has den-
gseoud1 r'eemned the offensive
the Austrians. Algal* disputes Galicia with
tt(ans ere otrsewheliagain
ei. uThey have
never boon able W bold their own
against the saa.ians. Twice already
they have bad to call upon the Ger-
mans to save them. la the reports
n ow doming from Austrian headquar-
ters • UN of panicky emphasis is put
upoo the thickness of the gnosias
COW..., aha @beer weight of terrific
'alhe Russian. still cline to
th▪ e tray N lisp attack log columns.-
writes
olumns,"writ s S8. err Tegeblat is cos res-
pondent. ria w after tow deka down
and nate sure are always there.
Again ha yanks of tbeut as meaty
woven jag close upon another.
So It has bee. always in this war.
The R.seiaa army is unlimited.
There is eotbiog like It in the whole
world. It is too big to be either cap-
tured or deetrored. It can only be
.den ell, and hardly enough damaged
to be t.
Besides its unimaginable strength
in numerical teems. the Russian army
by qualities. It is romantic, courage-
ous, naive, mad optimistic in defeat.
It bee both reeeivsd and inflicted more
punl.bmeot than any other army in
this war—shoos, as mush as all the
others hostel her. Russia's role has
been more that of (Renee than of de-
fence frosu this beginning. She is the
only belligerent on either side that ba
maintains' two offcneive operations at
the same iia. She began with two,
invading Kest Pt uwia and Galicia sim-
ultaneously. And she now is main-
taining two—oue again,( Turkey in
Asia Minor and the one just launched
&ghost the Austrian, in Galicia. And
that i• to say nothing of the men she
is contributing tc the defence of
France on the we'atet n front.
According t, the Rueian tempera-
ment it is better t, attack and fail
than to turn warfare into an excavat-
ing contest undergrwnd. And bis at-
tacks, even when they bare tailed to
aetieve a perm.uent testllt, have
never failed to a.uaxe and disconcert
the enemy. The first Russian offen-
sive probably saved Piaci*. because
Fart of the Berman force striking into
France had to he turned quickly
against tbe invaders of East Prussia.
The second Ruwian offensive inflicted
on the Germane the only ignominious
defeat they have suffered. Having
cote within *bell range or Warsaw
bey were swept back out of Poland,
ur'ued veru into Posen. When they
ere trcuverel from that disgrace
hey reappraised the jos and went and
vo Potaod in an efficient manner ;
bat was souther episode. This will
the third inv•sioo of Galicia, timed
cry shrewdly to embarrass the (ter-
tanne, for they have their bands full at
erdun and rleewhere on the western
oat, mud may Rod it very awkward
have to go again to for assistance
the Austrians. Beating the Ros-
ana memo such a costly and futile
einem, and then it doesn't but. —
he New York Time'.
tutions to provide the capital and the t
energy. Even the most ard.ot pa/tiara
p
could never point to Ottawa when t
speaking of the measure of success t
that has attended the recruiting In
Canada. hs
A Strong Church.
Toronto Blas. n
If the union of Piesbyteriane, Metbo-
dietsand Congregationalists is carried fr
nut, it will be very strong. According to
to the Census of 1911 these three de- of
nominations contained together 2,•120,- si
Zip people. United, they wilt lie byy bu
far the strongest of Protestants, •rHJ T
will be only ball a million less than
the Raman Catholics of Canada.
Caatada's Business Fiirst.
Toronto Telegram.
Tari? problem and other .o.eailed 10
Imperial problems can hest he settled d
tor the whole British Empire when r
each Htitiab nation settles these prob-
lems
rob leets in the strength of its own inde-
pendent sovereignty and individual hi
common sen,.. Canada's immediate id)
local problems can provide full em- f
ployment for all the obeli*,' Canada is ss*
able to develop. Canada Ina no sur- Ito+
plus ability for export to Westminst.r. oat
K I'1'CHEN KR.
The dramatic loss of Earl Kitchener
ucbes the British people very
reply. He was • product of their
aeial genius, • projection and symbol
themselves. io his defects 0. in
squalities he was monumentally Brit-
. 1'be war might have gone much
aster in other hands : bust a. nobody
Id be pure that it would prosper by
ng fatter, a great majority went
belieying in Kitebener, In his pus
ti.nee, his passion for certitudes, his
thoroughness' of preparation. and his
postponemenu, because in do:ng .o
they believed in themselves.
In the beginning his appointment
a War hr:retsry, to have supreme
direction of miliary affair*, was
hailed with unanimous approval.
it was logical He was the greatest
living English soldier, with • dash of
Neatly Termed.
V tetoris CoWtet.
Mr. John U. Smith bas es'abli.bed
a claim to fame by suggesting that all
hebiee shall be tattooed with name
and date and place of birth. Hs does
not say where the mark ought to be
placed. . You remember the story of
the young lady wbo told her partner
at • dance that she had just been vac-
cinated. H. looked at bee sponeys
arms and aid : "Where were you vac-
cinated 1" to wbfeb she replied : "in
Boston."
t•anoee•er Province.
Speaking of the daylight-saving
ptop'.sal an Irishman mays it re-
minds him of Raferty's blanket. "it
was trio short to cover bis feet, so be
cut a tut e? the top and sewed it ria
the bottom, amid be the powers, the
blanket wan not a bit longer than it
was before."
Cpa Aeries Behave It
Tersste(itebe.
1s there an • in this country
foolish enough to hal ve that tbe rake -
or amounting to • Ilion dollars, di.
vided between (tidwdl, Allison,
Yoakum and Bs.siek, after they
leaded Use foes .oetraca, did not add
just a .(Ilion dollars to the price that
amid ham been obtained by a clomp
buyer?
Las a/ Simi. at Ottawa.
egg* Memory
Ther hoe beer eviueklarabie ...egg
put tato r.evvlt►.g, but at be.e the
efforts Mw been hapb anal. The
whole taatMlt has hem Left t• heal iw-
itiative, aid hugely to ib. Seed lwetl-
Thinking of His First-born
T . young man mat at the luech-
enunter dawdling over hie trod He
took out bis watch and looked admir-
ingly at a photograph pasted in the
ease. It was the picture of a haby
at [me Nat h.gia.log-to-talk age.Hs
pot the watch ewer and at looks
lar Into space unseeingly. The wait-
ress's l.goiry. "Can I t you any.
tithes eta?' rr.obed him hat didn't jet
him out M his dream.
"Dimwit. a jieky water. Weems." be
prattled.
Pier digs.
What did you may our age war'
be remarked between dances.
f Mein t a smartly re-
turned the P(rl, "but I've jtfist reached
tweatyq..
'is that en r lee returned ned eonsoll.g-
ly, "what d.taii ted you r
A Little Job
ora Big One
From the repairing
of a faucet to the
installation of 9r
complete plumbing
system, we are
nipped to do the
• jA saran pro-
fit with a customer's
favor is mote to us
than a large one
without it.
NW
W. R. BINDER
Phone Ida Hamilton Street
areteemoteeseoigamatwowitobowea
ould teas
at haat three years and f for'
is Ileh
The teak of oegealsltrst Out of now
material an army of 5,000009 ,vies*
was a heroic undertaking for one man.
Kitchener was expected,ueuidee, to
proctors the raw materia, which was
• political problem, ani then to equip
his arm and provide it with aan nuoi-
tion, which are lndentrtal problems,
vat and .xmpfex. He was expected
to be all things 1.'nU.Jted measure,
and when be wee mos his enemies at-
tacked him bitterly. lice bad undw-
estimated CM quantity of menItJ,oss
that fould be required, they saM,
and had supplied the way.g kited
first; but seen the Germans order -
estimated the @mutat of .hells
modern warfare would 000enrw,
though they had ooaased mon upon
them than anybody .lea.
Karl Kitcbener's teak required too be
divided up, as et lea It was, Lord
Derby undertaking to And the raw
materialf the army and Loyd
(Irorgs to'produne *be equipment avid
ammunition. At no time was the
supreme command of military affairs
in any danger of passing out of Bari
Kitebenet'. hod.. Lately his es -
mobs had lost their volubility.
And yet the lose L by no means ir-
reparable, in the pcact ical toner. Katt
Kitcberer's work was brgely
achieved—the work of organiaeaettlluusvi
The army of 5,000,00n now exists. It
is the largest volunteer army ever
formed In the world, and the rapidity
with which it was integrated will
rest for a long time as the high mark
of miliary achievement. It will he
known historically, perttaps, •s "Klt-
cheo.r's Army."
Personality is a my'arious thing.
Last weak the British and German
fleets net in the North Sea and thous-
ands of lives were lost In the pe.atwt
naval battle of 'modulo times; bast
the shock of te.1 was moeh Iso than
time shock of baring that "K of C'
was dead. 1t was partly owing, of
°ours. to the citrumaam0e of his
being Minister of War, but much more
to the fast of his tieing Kitchener.
—Ta. New York Times.
BRTIAiN'tl SL'FRR-DRRAD-
N000 HTa.
The 'Queen Elisabeth." mentioned
in the descriptions of the Skagerrak
battle are flee euperdreadnoughte of
the same recent type, of 27,500 tons
displacement, heavily armored and
carrying fifteen -inch guru. Only four
of them neem to have hien engaged in
the battle, the Queen Klizahetb, War -
spit P. Barham, and Malaya. The
other is the Valiant. These .hips
were 'enriched last year. Newer
superdreadnougbta, w Imam if not
larger, ace the memo R's, 0Arnely : the
Koyal Sovereign , Hotel Oak, Re-
venge. Hesotutietn, Ramillies, Renown
and Rsputre. They were listed a•
19.5 111 boats. and it is not cer•.ain that
all lone been put in commiwion, but
probably they are ready for fighting,
as it is known that Great Britain has
more sprrd,-eedoougbta on the ways.
The urinals Navy is .till in control of
the seas.
A Woman's Health Needs
Coastant Care.
When the Blood Becomes
Poor Disease Speedily
Follows.
Every woman's health is pecoliai ly
dependent upon the cooditfotr of bee
81,rud. How many women surer with
beedacbe, pain in the back, poor ap-
petite, weak digestion, a constant feel-
ing of weariness, palpitation of the
heart, ahortne.e of breath, pallor and
net vouwees. Of course all these symp-
toms may not be resent—the some
they are the worse the condition of the
Mood, and the more necessary that
you should begin to enrich it without
delay. 1)r. V. illiams' Pink Pills are
beyond doubt the greatest blood -build-
ing tonic offered to the public today.
terry dose helps to make new, rich,
red blood which goes to every pert of
Use body and brings new health sod
strength to week, despondent people.
Dr. Williams' Pink P1111 are valuable
to all women, hut the are particular-
ly useful to gills of school age wbo be-
come pale. languid and nervous. Thin
blood during the growing years of •
girl's life usually means a fiat-cb.eted,
Follow-rherked womanhood. There
can be neither beaith or beauty with-
out red blood which gives brightness
to the eye* and color to the -beets and
bps, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills do all
this, as is proved in thousands of cases,
Mrs. %Vm. Rowe, U•rlaw avenue, Tor-
onto, says: "1 have received so much
benefit fiom [h. Williams' Pink Pills
that 1 fell it my duty to reoommeod
them hi others. i wan about com-
pletely prostrated with anaemia. 1
bad no appetite, was terribly weak
and 'object to fainting spells. I suf-
fered greatly from Waxiness and the
various nibsr symptoms that accom-
pany a Noodles@ condition. Remedy
after remedy was tried but to no avail
until a friend •deiced ewe to try Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills. Before coin.
plating the second box I eyes again en-
joying ,plendld health and have have
remained in that happycondition,"
You can get Dr. Wiliams' Pink Polk
through any .medicine dealer or try
mail at 50 riots • box or six Nixes foe
t'Lfl0 front the Dr. Williams' Medicine
( o. Brockville, Ont.
A Bit of Everything.
Lady Pope, In bee "Reeolleclmoo,"
tells this deligbtfal story of .n Anzac
in Gallipoli :
Oa one occasion au Aeatraliao, end-
ing himself detailed for sentry- go, pre-
med.. to make bis`` task a may as g it e'b1. rifle °. ani met jacent
his heand
taw. A peseta./ slicer asked, not ma-
aattstslly : "And what may vas hely'
"tint. I'm a bit of • pietist," drawled
the sentrt, mmahaebed : "and soba/
Rues* yew use 1"
, I'm • hit of • ttaajor," was the
•.aver'.
Well,., evj.its•et the wiry, ga.
"11 you'll wait • jiff TTI got my Hite
sal gave Two • Nt d a ssi.te."
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•W. ACNESON $ SON :•
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: si&s
Rugs Reduced for Clearing i
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A NUDGER OF WILTON, TAPESTRY AND WOOL RUGS
AT CLEARING PRICES REDUCED.
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Wilton Rug, sea,nlea., x 4 yards. Two-tone gh
green neat pattern. Regular $37.00, for., ,..$25.00 •
Size 3 x 34 yards in Oriental pattern, bine and crim-
son, deep effects, regular $25.00, for 11 i .01► •
Tapestry Rugs, 3 x 34 yards, 114.00, for $10.00 t,
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34 x 4 yards, $1R.00,for 114.00 •
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Dress Waists a`
Handsome new Blouses, dainty and serviceable, in
white voiles, organdies, marquisettes and wash silks. I.
Exquisitely made. Sizes 32 to 44. Price each •
11.50, $2.00, 12.50, $3.00 and $3.75 •
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• CREPE POPLINS,- SILK POPLINS and DI'CH- •
• ES$E SILKS, in blues, browns, rove, wild rose, •
copen, alive and black, 36 to 40 inches, at per yard... •
...... 11.00, 11.25, 11.35
GEORGETTE CREPES, TUB SILKS and FOUL- 3
ARD SILKS, new styles, beautiful and at moderate
prices.
31sreds..s every Wednesday au! o'dock digriag July
and August.
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W. A CheESO1v & SON
.S. ..
t1 _
Av
fl,
a\"
fat
74 �a,
'WADE IN CANADA!
ry
ed Ai*
Free gasoline for thirty-three h.alred
theFordFord owner's saving in ole year.
Th .:light. economical Ford with its seeeih-running
engine averages about twenty-five miles on a gallon of
ga.o:ire,
Compare (Ins • ith the gaa,:ine consumption of the
Sixteen-51iles to -the -Gallon car.
Then figure the difference, having an eye on the
present price of gasoline.
• RN thousand miler i. a fair season's travel. The
Sieteen.7t(,I r-to-tbe•Ga:ion e ,r. going silt thousand
miles, tonne up one bun.ired and thirty-five more gallons
of gasoline than does the Fond going the same distance.
This means that the Fiwd owner saves enough dur-
ing a single season to pay fot hi. gasoline for an addi-
tional thirty-three hundred and seventy five miles.
W. E. KELLY
DEALER - - - GOtDER.CH
NI
sin inviable
Mpu,atkic
WEST
STREET
HEN you need an electrician
the chances are you need him
pretty badly. And why not
get a good one—it doesn't
cost any more. We make a
specialty of first-class work
and enjoy a reputation for
skill and reliability second to
none in the business.
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fJlabt. 'fait
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