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The Signal, 1916-9-28, Page 6• INlVMDAT, hit's. '.!I IAiti THE SIGNAL GODERICH :ONTARIO. e FRUIT BULLETIN The EIberta Peaches are perfect now. A pod crop and extra fine fruit for home canning. Smock peaches and l,nnghursts will he along 1R a week. NiagaraGrown grapes are now ready. Look for this map quality. NIPG PENINSUU • i•yr1 tr` GR pUW►CKAGEE WERS NO. 2 4 it is your guarantee of good GODERICH DISTRICT MEETING. ieth,dtit Clergytses and Layman Css- vess at'Seaforth. 411• Norma vial district meeting of t►- 1M sllo•di.t church for tire tinder ch digs riot cunveI ed In the Meth. d st clinch, Sas( *rib. on Tuesday. t'ep 1--nrbei loth, at 9 log en. Torte w.r s I.i•R• attetid,i•ice.,af tuini.fiere sal L. y sawn fn tai the various circuit,. missy J. F:. 'Foid, of 1.- alerieb, chair- se.n of Nee di.tric•, pr sides. with itev. G. McKinley. tit S.afurth, as &satirial secretary. Rev. J. B. Jones, of Hayfield. was appointed district statistical secretary. The regular routine business of She district took up the first part of the day. after which Rev. Lloyd Smith, 11. A., of Victoria College. assistant secretary nt education, presented the claims of the College. He wade a ve y elcayurut appeal on behalf of the t oll.ge, the funds of which are fall - Mit behind for various reasons He ptouted out that last year a vrYy sub- stantial increase 'bad brru given by ithe Uoderiett dist t Ict over u» pe ideals yeas, rad urged up.ns the dlsttict the great nec .-Ily of te.i.g Inyal to the educational woe1 of th.• cbur.•li It Iwas decided that Mss elk 4'11, Iasi. be ,set apart as educational suutvet•rary for the Jist. ict. At the hegtnumg df the afternoon monition. Rev. .1 W. 11.itl.ei t , of l'Wingbam, prevented *tie ...home of the (toi.f...ence finance c Iter, which aims at the increase to the mum salary, halo, to the minis- ters who du lilt now receive it. He pointed out that there war now a de- ficit in ministerial report throughtatit the lkinl..rence of over $111»1 Living had iucteased forty pec cent , hilt s minister* salaries had not conts- pottdlogly inereaae.I. 'Mr. Hihlwrt stated that. according tat the scheme, a special effort he made to incresar the sust.entatiu)t :fund and this fund aid in helping the weaker oirctiits. The remainder of the afternoon was spent in discussing missionary prob- lems, the speaker.. tieing Inas. Jrase Arnup, of Tmm�to, Hrv, 14. N. II.zen. of tiarttia, and Rev. Mr. KI'on, smog. lottery front China. I ev. Mr. Arnup introduced Ibe general' missitu.ary riluatioc of the church Thr church st : angst of the tytp• of tu,•U Hod wants, /f -t -he futon of tins wot k Is to he succesutul. He •te.ke opt u..tieal- ly shout the sumai0uary went In spite of the wet, last y...s we. the hest financial year ui ntiteiorary work in all the history of the cbuteb. The beings to nris►ioos last year enuxinted In $IA,AW shove those M the previous year. Neatly all eh. volunteers for the stiesitan field who were in preparation for fnrrtgn work have noes rUliatr.t for a. ivr service. Ileo the miwi Board of )hitaut had 1 NOM.r• • �.11>�•.1�• Prohibition 11 is not in force for the finest beverage of all T it For flavour, quality and richness there is nothing to equal a cup of "SALADA". lnvigorating, rgreshing, and so pure and clean. 6226 SOLD AT ALL GROCERY STORES 40c., 50c., 60c. and 70c. a pound MOM ft/ft .1111/011111111110011111 sedans 4.1 India. The Government of Britain had advised it, believing this will tend to consolidate the Ewpiie. Rev. Mr. Elson, of ('hire, war the next speaker, and gave a very rlo- yu• nt, tnstfilet ivt. and impressive AC - COMA. of c•eoutof his wt.'k there doting for past few years. He stated that the onare is enjoying the tavor and teepect .1 the hest c.t zeus of China. Rev. Mr. Hazen reported that in begun r mins.' among for Mobam- Rendon (..oaf y rrrnce Ibis ear there is ' a decrease in the miasiuuary fdvtogs of $2,1nn1. The diset s+ton brought out the fact that the decrease was due in most cases to the depleted populations on the various circuits. A motion was carried that an increase of 17 SonleChild, en fear the Balk as minis ped cent• lie the objective in the mite as route turn fear the Tight. 1 ',binary givinge of the lioderich di. - Sinners would have a lot sort fun tt let this year. At the evening sec- 'f,lfutai people w,nJd leave thew alone. cion, inspirational missionary ad. 1 dresses were given by Rev. Messrs. tether, prop'e'r self-admitatiou 1 Arnup, Elson and Hs*en. prover that th..r.• t. no a' counting for tastes. MUNICIPAL COUNCIL. FAST 1VAWANotiH. Minutes of council meeting held on Srptreuher Iy:h. Mrnitsers all p t. Mioulre of last meat mit read ard top - proved. Tbue. M. Wal.b and others prevented a petition fur the mentor. 154111 of a muoiclpel drain st list 42. concession A. 1115 petition wag granted and a copy ordered to be for- warded to the engineer. Regarding clam. of H. J. Millets for tberp dm - t oyed by dogs, lett over from former meeting. it wvi moved by Mr. *'urn., .econtled by Mr. Irwin. that on se punt of being usable toMoonier the .wners of 4h. dogs inyaestlon WI be antrd Mt. Mcklee for compruaatlos. :he following accounts wars oidered to be pod : J. rutbreland, drawing tial and repairing culvert, eoneessiou 12. 55; I. Heown, cement tile, 540 All: W. Kib•w, 4, wn.utetsoo ctatulr litho( , tax, $lt_S. Fur grarrl—J. Noble 51.10. t' Morton et,, S. F,•i.5. Peek T. Bradnoek 55. J. Pfeffer $,. IU, J Nicholson 53, /i. Hensley it.". el, Mrs A. Patterson MA.t5I,1, McBur r.ry R. Tbouopr.•n $1.40, W. Fothergill Stet J. J. Kerr 55.10, D. t'.r.•k 5k no. H. •tleott 15.110, W. Saltar $4.50• Johnston 711,1, XV. tialtst, shovelling gravel, 53; W. Blau, do., $2; ti I Deer, do., 53,1) ; J. Somers, do., k.. The council will meet .grin no Mon- i day, October ltilh. A. P"irrgor tl.le Cler k. MOTHERS WHO KNOW say there Is nothing Olin *Mud Zam- auk for their children's skin ail - intents and Injuries. Nothing Is so soothing or so quickly ends pain. Reing entirely free from poisonous drugs and animal fats, Zam-Bok Is suitable for the most sensitive skin —ecru CIO skin of a baby. Mrs. J. Knox. of Pine Creek. Man., wrltrs: "1 aht.uld like to reeommeod Zam-Cuk to all muthers- I consider tt an Invaluable house - hetet remedy --particularly where there are children. May little daughter had a rash break out ors her wrists and bands during teeth- ing, but frequent applications of ?ant-Buk kept the skin soft, ended the Irritation, ant' very soon the ra-,h Mas completely' tared" Zant-Buk Is **pully good for eczema. ringworm. old sores, ulcers, abscesses. ,Leo t!•y.:,ct:lag. oslcs. cuts, burns, and all skin itl;urles. ark. box, 3 for $l.. all druggists. or Zatu-Iluk Co., Toronto. Send le. stamp for postage on tree tri:.: to x. ff �N EPAR ADVEIUNINO PAYS - -�iee111Mr G ODERICH'S GREAT OPPORTUNITY TO SEE MOST WONDERFUL WAR PICTURES Britain Transformed BRITISH MOTOR CYCLE MACHINE GVNS The gasoline motor is a factor to this war, ams sods the bicycle. new factor is the machine gun. The aw)ttircycle 411.chinegun:corr.. all these modern ine u:tons into one•. pertaining. - They .realized after seeing these —pictures being conducted.. Another l'centrism. the Sanctioned By Royalty I 1IE moving pictures "Britain Prepared." are shown i.v Royat,sanetion arc! per - tai .k.ii, under the patronage of 'their - Majesties King George and Queen Mary and their. Royal Highnesses -the Duke and Duchess of Connaught: - . They are vouched for by Right Honorable Arthur Balfour. First .1.,ord of the Admiralty, who matte a notable speech at their first'present atiou in London at the Empire Theatre. • "I ani convinced," Said Mr. Balfour on that occasion, "that such. representations as you are' about to see, and which I have done my in- dividull best -to further, will do much in this and in other -countries to put the great operations of war that are 'now going on in their tree perspective." - , "Britain Prepared; as a film production, made a profound imptiression in England and the British Isles. For the first time the British people were able to grasp the magnitude of the operations of Which only local details had been apparent: owing to the policy of strict censorship unprecedented, scale upon which this war ,is tit I I E film "Britain Prepared" comprise the officially authorized pictures of the British Imperial Government taken to shay t;^r trt .....1,?..;;- lir: 1;t:lain ing in t`.11- They :u They were taken l.y; the -iurt,,:apst piloting picture producers of t .neat Britain. acting, under the directions of the Cinema Comn'Ittec notgitl- ated by the British' Go; ernaieat • They are moving pictures taken by the most modern camera., and they are beautifully clear, ,harp anti distinct. Tl*y show tl:.. transfornta- tiitn that tilt war has wrought in the British Isle.—�runteu work tug in the places of met, : the men training a. •.,Iuit;, in Kitchener's army of volunteers. They show the enthusiasm and the earnest. ADJUSTING BARBED WIRE ENTANGLEMENTS news of -the recruiting. -the thoroughness of the totraining of the new armies, the life of the mien When trench warfare became the settle,' thing there soli• a- t,rt ten ..:1 for in the training ..gimps. barbel wire. Wire mitts in America. received huge orders. "Britain 1'r. pare.*'' They show how' industrial Brit, in is concett- shows how barbed wire i. used in modern war. Anted on the war, bow the factories are organ- ized to supply the equipment and the munitions for the Briti-h•armies and those of her allies. They show the very life and spirit of England—"Mother t : Freedom"—in the strain and stress of the present struggle. They show what war means,to the heart of the Empire, and that the people of ..the Motherland are closer to the battlefront than we.have perhaps imagined. British Navy on Guard 4 4RITAIN Prepared" means the British navy on guard fit .t of alt. The power of Britain, sea-girt and sea -bred, lies - primarily its her navy. 11 ever thete was any failure to realize that primary. fact, it is made plain, by the moving picture can era and the wonderful filth "Britain Prepared." It showy those modern floating castles of nickel steel, with their turret forts and their con- ning towers and their broad, clean decks, as plainly as though the beholders were on board. ' 'ft shown these terrible, aheeat unbelievable guns, such as the Queen Elizabeth used to stud one -ton projectiles *cross the isthmus ttf (;a1 lipoli. It show's the "men who have made old Eng- land's name" on duty, aboard the itattleships, the cruisers, the torpedo boats, the submarines. and the airships The spectator is taken down tinder the sea in a sub arise and up abdve the clouds aboard an ae *tie I Life on hoard a Is.attle•htp oro active service i• not all plan, although Ile goes aboard a mine -sweeper. He paces there i, allowance mute for sttme. Apprtnticta are herr shown learning a few things about knots and apparently cujoctng the lesson. the slippery decks in a storm, will. the �iortb Sea rollers smashing over the bows antl',dashing spray high in the air. Wiliiters like Kipling and Ralph Connor have written of their visits to the grand fleet. These pictures take vor there. Von see for yourself, and the experience: are your own. Nothing like it was ever possible to the public be- fore, for this is the first great British war since imoving pictures were invented, SAILOR LADS ON H. M. S. ELIZABETH Super=Dreadnought in Action DIFFICI•LT indeed to realize is the effect of modern ships of war in action. The huge weight and power of the modern super -Dreadnought is a development of. very recent years. Her huge guns are themselves a new development. Few people in this country ever saw a modern battleship. Tlie film "Britain Prepared" shows the greatest of all the new battleships actually in action. It shows the Queen Elizabeth—"Big Lizzie" of the Dardan- elles -firing her great broadsides. It shows the "reeking tubes,'' the clouds of smoke, which half envelop the ship, the spurts of flame it puts the spectator as near to the heat of a naval engagement as it is possible to get without risk- ing his life. When it is realized that these are the guns which threw projectiles weighing 1,50) pounds across Gallipoli Peninsula to crush the forts on the Dardanelles, the effect is awe-inspir- ing. Their long, tapering barrels are pig enough in the bore to permit a man to crawl through them. They anti the machinery by operated are the last word to date as to man's power of scientific destruction—unless rumors lie has produced a gun still bigger. But that remains to be seen. GREAT GVNS OF OLD ENGLAND Fore turret of Soler-i)rea.lnnught Queen i':val,rth, the pr*le of the grams fleet, and the great guns whic h threw .hells weighing over 5,415) pounds acrt..• Gallitr.lr Penin+ala into T,:rkish fnrtrrraea on the Dardanelles. y' which theme s t smoothly true that Germany 4, MODEL THEATRE Uoderich FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13. 1916