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The Signal, 1917-4-26, Page 3T i SIGNAL. - GODERIdJ, ON141g0 ,_ TIiE' Ops1NII IND ONLY GENUINE BEWARE OF IMITA- TIONS SOLD ON THD MERITS Or IINIRD'S LINIIENT 1rEDICAL 11K. (3E0. HEILRMANN, OSTEO AP PATH. epseWlst 4 wens ol. sad Mal drea . dimmer*, acute, Sumaac saa aatnd�.artr oardle =lumbago eye, ear, :nd rhNma(kr Mad7llMa Adhil �e- aMlde nano%el willset ISO Y die. O. at sasideaee, corner Nokias sad Bt. Andrew's beets. At boom Miss Mooches, Thursdays sad Saturday.: any evsalag by gppetatmsoL DENTISTRY 1) MACD()NELL-HONOR Orsduale Toronto Uolvenlly. Graduate o/ a ICoiege of Dental 8urm oo.. S.00sre,r to the late Midas trete. Ogees roar tloaan sad Wort street. Oodwkh. AUCTIONEER __ THOMAS GUNDRY j AUCTIONEER. Stat e7. Oodertob. Ai laetrsctloas by' mall er tat at Signal sites will be prompUy at meted 1•. Mmide ,, Isieplrone 119 LEGAL ou�o�rAwac�rr�x� R (l. HAYS �I•B&.IUU8Tstt NtIL1ctTOR, h(YreRY P it LW. ITC. *d a eUag HTApbaat ie.Block, Heroines 8ss.t, /fail ie $ lovw sod lu•ureaes. PROUDFO(l'T,l[1LLOKAN ACOONE BAERIMTICESt. BOUC1TUEi. NOlA�tES PUBL(C, ETC. (lice on the Square..eco.d door Prem Ham - Mrs .beet, ra :erich. ✓treats hu.ds to loos at lowest rates W. PaovniNdir. K.C. J. L 1tlu.osae H. J. D. Coons K@. OAMERON. H. C. BARRIO . TER, sotl°It°r. eotery testae. . Oates mlL.. Unreel. Oudertcb, tLlyd door fr• ��are At ('hnton Thursday of each week to =Too ° a lbw t Street occupied by Mr. Hoops. ulta hour. A a.m. top p.m. 111144.0•04P1 11. F. OADS8Y►t.NMN Ottawa, April 24.-Tba Hindenburg line has Ita analogy in the order-in- oouoal granting a free exchange of wheat with the United Staters. This Is a ttrategio retree% on the part of the Burden Government from au inde- fensible position and foreshadows the defeat wbieh they gill surely Incur when they make their feet stand In • general election. All the good guessers believe that the free wheat ruse indicates a general election not Tater then September. The Honorable Bob is • brisk poker player and this is the way be opens the tot. The story runs that the Honorable Bob bas been pressing for free wheat fuS.ttep yerua back, and that lately his voice bad been joined by that of ♦ithur llelgben, who looked things over and reported that the West was irretrievably lost W the Conservative party unless the Government gave its faithful servitors a good point to talk about. Free wheat it the result. It Is the last card. Even at that the Borden Govern- ment hesitates to play it boldly. 1t would like to stand in with the farmer, but it doesn't like to fall out with its old fr ends, the millers. The upshot M that tree wheat is announced as • "war measure." 1t is not ac- cepted as • permanent policy -at least, not yet -and the Northwest farmer is war ranted in keeping his eye on it till ke sees it implemented by a special clause in the Tariff Act. The Northwe.t farmer does not for- get that In 1915 he was beguiled into raising tbe biggest wheat crop on re- cord sad was then denied • market. Never °gain for the Northwest. farmer. T'be Borden Government will have to show him lint. The best guarantee of good faith will be an amendment to the tariff. Without this the farmer is justified in supporting that the Borden Government is trying to put another one over. Hoodwinked once, be will be twice as suspicious. The order -in -council is dressed out with is good deal of buncombe to ex- plitin why a Government en adverse to truck or trade with the Yankees in 1911 should grab at It so eagerly now. The reason put forward is that the United States is now an ally, and therefore a atter country to trade with than when it was a mere neigh - bet five yeas ago, This has the same old slithering sound that we bead in the reciprocity campaign. when the present supporters of the Borden Gov - eminent wrapped their humbug in the old flag and jollied the electors into swallowing it.. As a matter of fact. they didn't have a leg to stand on. All the °rgumeota were on the Liberal side, but the Borden crowd of profiteers waked the flag and beat the drum and spent an enormous slosh fund and ill managed to preserve Canada for tbe interests. In sackcloth and ashes the people of Canada have realised what it mean* to put • Government in power whose LAKLE8 °ARROW, LL.B., BAR - WW1 bit. .ltorner. solicitor. sae, Soda riskY. rsy 1,, 1044 16.1 lowed rate. 6 tt&.1GYR, BARRISTER. 801. V. Idt4t. Notary Public and Cosyyaaoer. asest -Coen Ho..s theierich. Mr U INSURANCE. WANG, RTC. AGALLI el' MIJTUA.L MIN 1N in BUB INCE CO.-7arm sa4lslaad L.rrre Property tainted. Coen -J.. t morally, Prea, 0oderiob P -a: las. Evan., VtcrPrea. Beechwood P. 0.; s, Ray., w Bee-Treas.. Ntortb P. O. W c_Lk r. Jsoureger. BeafW ; Job. Ji. Orissa Wtathrop; w'nlram x Rion ('oostaoos; 'Oka bsuoewele• Bradha. es ; Geo. McCartney, Searmtb . Robert Feats. Bartock ; Malcolm N.Lweo. Iy uoeae d. to : J. W. Yea (code rice ; Alae. A ('llobn ; wl11Lm Cbeeasy, Be•(o,th ; g. bU. Ul.y. Be.(arstaa. Polies -beldam era pay aromemeete aim at Morrb.h a Clothing Bio CLLoton..tm. 14 ('at* . Or,. mei y, It Ermine street. Usdetiob, or J. 14. Reid'. General Store. Bayfield. TE vi-t/Ortr1) loam Appy toM. FUNDS. CAJI- d. Barrtetm Hamilton street. Oodidib. WR. ROBERTSON, . INSURANCE AGENT. has AND LreeTarso 1 WWII. C.nedlan and American. £OQaar4T, BICalraw 5150 Lor1.OTaaa' LIABIL m : The (loran Accident and Guarantee Corporation Limited. of London, Eng. Ifursgid�ollt7 ..led arm Gua ens teet:mam ray. U.B. Mos at resldeoos, asthma comer orf W10- Sail lr*sale sed BL David's aroma. :Phase 176. Palmas, Trane larks, Designs Secured in A11 Countries. Write for free book "PATENTS PROTEC- TION. Trlb all about and bow to aehpst Gala BAJI(.00E t 9UN8, established 1617 areeerb Patent (Aloe Examiner. Mesta of Parent Laws. Regl.terod Patent Attor°eys Mo., to M. James Street. Montreal. Branches - ultimo and Washington. Representatives In all foreign countries. rophe3 Bros. GUD1tR1CH lite Leading Funeral Directors and Embalmers Orders carefully attended to 1st all hones, night or day HEUMATISM WAS MOST SEVERE Omaha, Pains All The Time Until He Teck 'FRUIT-A-TIVES'. Mn. LAMPOON Verona, Out., Nov. ilth., 1915. "1 suffered for a number of y. -an with Rheumatism and severe Pirias ie Side and Basi, from strains and heavy lifting. When I had given up hope of ever being well *gala, a friend recommended "Fruit -a -Lives " to mo and a/ler using the first box 1 Jell so feud: better that I continued to take them, and now I am enjoying the best of heath, thanks to your remedy ". W. M. LAiIPSON. If you -who are reading this- have any Kidney or Bladder Trouble, or suffer with Rheumatism or Pun In The Back or Stomach Trouble -give "Fnt.it- a-tines" a fair trial. This wonderful fruit medicine will do you a world of good, as it cures when everything else fails. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. At dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit -a -tinea Limited, Ottawa. the Borden Government goes out, as it will in the near future. it Iraves Caneda looking like a sucked orange. That these fruits of repentance oq the Borden Government's pact are only shadow picture. is shown by the tact that the tariff is still maintained at its present height. This ring fence is high enough to enable the middle- man to shear both producer and con- sumer and at the sane time prevent cheap food from climbing over. The Borden Government may sacrifice the millers temporarily, but it won't go back on the food forestallers who put it in office and who keep it there. As for the Western farmer. shrewd student of public questions, be will laugh at Chia eleventh -hour et iff. 1f MARIE QUdTAT10t6 APRiL 23rd Toronto Cattle Market Choice hoary steers $11.26tn$11.76 du. medium 10.60 11 00 Butcher: chola. handy10:75 11 60 do, good 15.215 10.60 do. medium 0.76 10.25 do. 'common 1.50 0.26 Butchers' choice cows9.25 10.00 do. good 1 00 8.60 do medium 6.60 7 00 Butcher's' bulls, choice9.266 10 25 do. good 8 25 9.00 do. medlars 7.26 8.00 Feeders. 900 to 1.000 ibs. 9.25 10.25 do. med.. 700 to 800. 8.25 9.00 Stockers. 700 to 900 lbs. 7.26 8.60 do. medium 6.50 7.00 Grass cows. 910 to 1.000 lbs. . 6.76 7.60 Cutters 6.25 Canners 5.00 Milkers, good to choice .80.00 do. com: and med60.00 Springers 66.00 Calves, veal. choice12 00 do. medium 5.60 do. common .... 6.00 do. grass 6.00 do. heavy fat 7.60 Lambs. yearlings. cholce14.50 do. medium 12.60 do. cans 9.50 do. spring lambs. each 6.00 Sheep, ewes, light 10.56 do. heavy and bucks8.50 do. culls 4.00 Hogs, fed' and watered, choice .. 16.50 do. good 16.40 do. common 16.36 do. off cars .... 18.75 do. f.o.b. country pts.15.50 backers •re the monopolist and the the Borden Government r. ally be - food forestaller. The friend. of the lieved in freer trade it would have re - Borden Government began to dish in mowed that handicap on wheat six right from the 'tart. The coot of lav- ye.rsago. Ten cents a hushrl on the le iuow•sed rapidly. In August, exportahie surplus of Western wheat 1911, when the war broke ont, it had reached a mark that looked like the limit. As it turned out, is was only the beginning of higher and higher prices. The war was just the thing the doctor ordered for the Burden Government's friends. It wee scold day when they didn't give the unfor- tunate consumer another squeeze. They knew they would get away with it, because the Borden Government was their friend. At the very outset the Government assumed power by means of the War Measures Act to regulate prices or anything else that needed regulating, hut they bad no intention of hurting their friend.. The War Meaaures Act was • rod in pickle and that was where they kept it -in pickle. They had no idea of chastising with it. They simply took Ibe rod and put it away safely where no- body else could get it. The theory was that the people would look at the rod and say, "What • stern divciplin- ■rian this Borden Government is 1" However. you can't fool the people all the time. In the course of a year or two the people got wise to the fact that the last thing the Borden Govern- ment wanted to do Was to use the War Measurer' Act against their friends who were treating Canada as their oyster. Naturally enough the people noticed that the half-dozen or so high -cost -of -living commissions re- ported aa tardily as possible and that, when _they did report, nothing was ever done. Nor did they fail to ob- serve that in • strategic position was posted one of the biggest food profit- eer. In Canada, whore cue was, of course, to are thinge coming and then bead them colt. Thr final evidence of bad faith on the part of the Borden Government, which handed Canada over to the lootets and said, "Get rich whileou can." 'rout when the Minister of Labor. Mr. Crothers, broaehed • plan W investigate the high coat of living in such a way that there were four chances to one against the results ever reaching Ottawa. Free wheat w • "war meaure," as a favor extended to "our ally,' bot its an election trick of Bob Rogers and Arthur Meighen, has et queer smell to it. You may take it for granted that the good of the people is of less concern than the relief it Is expected to afford the Barden Government. This high tariff (iovernp,ent, which had cheerfully lumped the tariff misty per cent. In two raises. has not been soddenly conve rted to freer trade. it simply wants an election cry that will alienate the .mallear group of rich friends. Thin grour, no doubt, happens to be the miller.. The Borden Gov- ernment hopes to lore them only for • short time. Remember that free wheat is • "war asestire." Of course thba move of the Borden Government admits the whole case for nt}reolprocity,the fatuity of the seen - `rota about '`Reset and West haul,'• "oeir wheat losing Iia identity," and en on, but what dose the Borden (igviern- mant oat* about, oon.istencv when it is In the lest ditah 1 Unfo,tunately for the Barden Government, this country has a good mommy. it is a sadder and wiser Canada than it was six years ago when the Borden Gov. ernmeet turned the peolltwieti loose. k was bad enough, heaven karma, in the piping times of passe, Mit war was Lbs pg+oatem e. ".argselm000.. When The Best Newspaper Value • 6 Western Ontario Whe x,onbon Ravertfeet All Mall Editions GP Per Yea' foots up many millions of dollars in six years. The stat isuri ins can Kgure it out for themselves. \Vhatev r It amounts to 11 is that much the West- ern farmer her to forgive. it's a safe bet that be won't do it.. He will reckon that a Guvernw4 t. aa foully spotted with war ocanderhi and chronic mis- deeds as the Borden Government has too many tots to change in a hurry. H. P. °AOSSY. .'1FAK, NERVOUS MOO WOMAN Made Well By Delicious Vinol Rell.•fontsines Ohio.-" My blood was very pair -I was in a weak, nervous, run-down condition. 1 tried different r. medics without benefit and one day my druggist told me about Vinod: tried it and it built me up in every way -blond, strength and nerves, and I tell my friends it is the best medicine on earth." -Mrs. &Aat Muslim( Vinol sharpens the appetite, aids digestion, enriches the blood and in *his natural manner creates strength. Complete formula on every labeL H. C. Dunlop, druggiet,Coderich, Ont.. Alsoat the best dreggiate in all. Ontario towns, - Toronto Gm', Markets Manitoba Wheat -Nominal. bay ports. No. 1 northern, $2.60; No. 2 northern, 52.56; No. 3 northern. $2.61; No. 4 wheat, 52.40. Manitoba Oats- All -nil. delivered, No. 2 ('.W., 9114c; No. 8 ('.W.. 79c; ex- tra No. 1 teed, 79c; No. 1 teed, 77%c. American Corn -No. 3 yellow, 51.62, nominal, subject to embargo. Ontario Wheat -No. 2 winter, $2.49 to $2.42, according to freights outside; I • No. 3 winter, 12.38 to 52.40. • Ontario Cats (according to freight* ontslde)-No. 2 white, 73c to 7,c, nom- inal; No. 3 white, 72c to 74c, nominal. Peas -Nominal. -Barley-- $1.35 to 51.37. Rye --No. 2 new, $1.37 to $1.89. Manitoba Flour -Fort patents, In jute bags. $12.60; seconds. 10 jute, 512.10; strong bakers'. in jute, 511.70, Toron- to. Ontario Flour -Winter, new, track. Toronto. prompt shipment. according to sample, $10.46 to $10.60, in Jute bags. M111feed-CarIots, delivered, Mon• treat freights; Shorts, $43 to 544; bran. $41; middlings, 846 to 548; good feed Sour, per bas. 52.80 to 12.10. Hay ---Track, Toronto. extra No. 2. 811.50 to 512.60; mixed, $8.60 to $11. Straw, car lots. 17 to 58. ('.reals ---Rolled oats, carlots, per bag of 90 ihs.,,�.154 small lots, 54.30. Oatmeal. earlobe per bag of 98 lbs., $4.60; small lots, 54.76. Gold dust cornmeal, 90-1b. bags, $4.10 to carlots, $4.25 In small lots; fancy yellow corn- meal. $3.65 in carlots, $3.80 In small lots. White corn flour, 95 -Ib. bags, $4.46 In carlots to 54.66 In small Tots. Hominy grits. 84.45 to $4.60; pearl hominy, 54.25 to $4.40. Yellow hom- tqy. $3.85 to 53.40. THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 161$ 3 ii- •r•••••••i• •••••••••••••••••••-•••••• •" • • !j j' D.MILLARuSON i1j (4 • • • w 7;,, •v • • • • • • • Let Us HeIpYou with the Spring Cleaning• • We are at your service with the best stocks of Curtains, Carpets, Lin • - oleums. Congoleums, Oilcloths, Mattings. •• • • • • • Most popular among the new Curtains are the Windsor Marquisette Curtains. They • • come in ivory and ecru, with handsome lace insertion and edging, large variety of • styles to select from, at $2.60, $3.00, $3.50, $3.75, $3.95, $4.50, $5.00 to $7.50 pair, • •• • i d-uiade French C 626 p to Arab Curtains, do(p Marie Antoinette hal urtatns, 6.T6 iu -atom air • Special value in cin f5 00 shade, heavy border, for din g ecru shade, handsome designs, 2� yards • parlor. Per pair $3.50. long. Per pair $4.25 and $4.95. • I�pt • gham Curtains, from 60c to $3.95 per pair. • Handsome Material for Overdrapes 70.00 96.00 14.60 11.00 8.00 7.06 10.00 16.00 14.00 • Beautiful Madras Muslins in rich colorings, for overdrapes, which are so 11.00 13.06 , • in demand, and 12.00 • Silk Madras, 10.00 7.00 • The new.7.ira 60.001 • Rich Velours for 00 60 • inches wide, $1.95 per yar 00.00 - 00.00 • d greatly to the appearance of the room. colors of green, rose and tan, at 81.0)) and 51.25 yard. arquisette for overdrapes, 36 inches wide, 50c per yard. verdrapes and hangings, very handsome, in green, rose and tan, 50 much track, Carpet Squ es ., Carpet uares ' Carpet Squares, in Tapestry Brussels, russels, I• W are showing an excep ovally large range ofpe q • most present wholesale Flees, her, In : bought many months ago. e you buy. goleums e • Wilton and Axminster. Although •rices have advanced enormously we are able to sell at al - track, have all sizes in stock and • would advise seeing what we have bef • Linoleums 4",.. Nairn's and Canadian Linoleums, in lock and floral pattern., to suit all rooms, 4 yards • wide, 85c and 51.00 per square yard. CONGOLEUMS CONGO UMS CONGOLEUMS We carry the largest stock of Congolenms i . town. They come in beautiful art designs, •are proving a great success by all who have tried the ; they are waterproof and lie perfectly • flat without fastening. Sites 2x3 yards 66.00, 3x3 yard$9 00, 3x3,1 yards $10.50, 3x4 yards $12. 0 . r DOMINION OILCL'THS • O Dominion Oilcloths iu block and floral patterns, also • 60c per square yard. n • • • NEW COATS NEW COATINGS NEW SKIRTS • • 0 PHONE s6 IVIillars Scotch Sto • f•••• -••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••r• Oilcloths Walkerton Telescope : If there isle'. gamer family anywhere than Reeve Robert Russell's we would line to hear about it. The last of the five Russell boys left on Monday for Toronto t sign up for si-rvice at the front. This left the Reeve in a light corner end be wee forced to advertise his huai- nese for sale owing to lack of help. Fortunately hie daughter, Mrs. Jean Vogan, showed that she poe°eeees some of the pluck that her breathers have been exhibiting in France, by volunteering to "do her hit" on the milk wagon. She marled driving a rig Monday morning and ie getting along famously. A few wotnen doing mens work, and plenty of our best women are plucky enough to do it if necessary, should prove a good daily relllnder to some men folks that there is k war on -r- - - - - The lifework of a wise man may be destroyed by a fon! in a day. if you steal another man's good story and tell it yourself better than he did you establish • valid title to the ysrn. 11 you spoil it in telling 15 you double the original offence. Chicago Live Stock Cattle -Receipts, 500. Market slow. Beeves. 59 to $13.25; stockers and feeders. 87.10 to 59.90; cows and heif- ers, $5.60 to $11; calves. 38.50 to 312.75. ]fogs -Receipts. 8,000. Market strong - Light. $14.65 to 16.75; mixed. $15.80 to 815.95; heavy. 515.20 to 516.95; rough, 515.20 to 815.40; pigs, 510 to 813.85; bulk of sales, 515.45 to 815.85. Sheep - Receipts, 1,000. Market teady. Lamhs-Native, 812 to 516. East Buffalo Cattle r tie, I5 care, stow. Hogs. 20 rare. Blow; heavy, $16.25 to 516.40; yorke $16 to $16.15; pigs, 513.60 to $14. Sh ep-Thirty cars, dull and lower. I lambs. $16 to 316.26; clipped, $1 to 513.25; yearling's, $11 to $12.26; w hen, $11.76 to 312; ewes, 311 to 1.60; calves. 313. low- er. Top, $13; air to good, 512 to $12.50; fed cal 35 to $7,, reduce 'ices rices to the Wholesale Toronto wholesale trade' Egg. - New -laid, cartons do. ex -cartons Butter - creamery prints, fresh .. .44 Creamery prints. storage_ .42 Creamery solids ....... .41 Choke dairy prints.... .38 Ordinary dairy prints.. .34 Bakers' .30 Cheese -New, large, 27%c to twins, 28c to 281/sc; June, large. twins, 201,4c. Live Poultry -Buying price dellvere4 Toronto. Whole.ale price to the trade le two cents higher. Chickens, fat .20 .22 -Fowl fat .21 23 Chickens. ordinary .22 .00 Fowl, ordinary .20 .22 Beano -Japanese, hand picked, $6.36; prime. $6.76; Canadian. hand picked, b•shel, 47.36; -Yams. 10.11 Honey -Tine, 21,4-1b. tins. 16c a Ib.; 6 -Ib. tins, 14140 a Ib.; 10 -Ib. tins, 14c a lb.; 90 -Ib. tins clover 12c to 1314c a lb. Comb bones -Sobers, 11140 to 52.75; No. 2, 32 to 52.16. Buckwheat honey, 60 -ib. tins, 10%c to 110 a ib. Maple Syrup -Pure, 51.06 to $1.76 per Imperial gallon. to$ .19 .00 .49 .43 '.42 .39 .36 .81 28c; 29c; k Plank for surrounds, all widths, • • • • - •• ••• • •• •• •• •• •• •• • •• •• • . • • • PHONE S6 • • PROF. R THEi DORF ENLISTS. Well-known Lecturer Has Joined Army Medical Corps. Woodstock. April 19. -It was learned here yesterday that F. V. Reithdotf, former protessor of modern languages s at Woodstock College. who gaveP his position early in the war to Lake the public platform iu denunciation of ids. that appeal, stilt there are Ino Prussisnism and German militarism, many that simply buy a bit of space in Human nature is what a man thinks has enlisted as a private in the ODDS- the local papers and let it go to weeds he shows when be makes a donkey of like a neglected garden. The town himself. dian Army Medical Corp. at Toronto. Reithdorf is a native of Germany and put in his time in the German army. He devoted a great deal of 1s time early in the war speaking throughout Western Ontario and other parts of the Province in support of the Allied cause. He was successful to a marked degree in ctyrtalhzing sentiment among Canadians of Ger- man lineage against. German milita Put "Pep" into Advertisements merchant wbo can aft Cavertpmootcount storesmore+ areand making their mail-order competition .Jleril since ;the Oran who is adopting m the rural ail routes opened the wuy' nese ideas aha maokingrtthe local advertising ppuunitl is a big field for men of that e to laugh at °wedgy§ is oderu busi- t of his There p. to the back concessions. Town mer- chant° could get just as good results in proportion through their local news- papers it they would wake up and put some "pep" into their ado. A few ood .dvertisels in every town write A politician never forgets his if b• is appointed to a good one. It 1s surprising - how little pec know when on the witness stand. 8019 Dressed Msat.-Wholeeals Toronto wholesale houses ars quot- ing to the trade as foluws: Beef, forequarters 516 Olto$17 00 da hindquarters 18 00 20 MI Carcasses, choice 18.00 19.14 do. common 12 60 14.50 Veale, common 9. 60 11 50 do. medium 12.60 14.60 do. prime .. 17 60 - 18.60 Heavy ego 14.00' 18'.00 Shoe hogs 2004 21.00 Abattoir hogs 41.00 111:1141 do. light . , ICOR 18:00 Lambs. yttiarttsos 111.09 $5.05 t-. ism and in revealing the motives of official Germany in precipitating the war. in the coureqeL of bis campaign he received a It6tuber of threats against his life fr m bitter pro -Ger- mans and was treated with b.r.tility in some quarter.. After a time be le ft for the United States. As a member Of the Canadian Army Mediral Corps be may possibly be used as an interpreter or translator in the bo•ritale or inteininet camps in Great Britain. where there air thous- ands of German prisoners. Prof. Reithdorf lectured in this county and gave a vivid description of the German military system. As the result, it is understood, of persecution from some small-bore Canadian pol- iticians. he atterwards left Canada and was for some time in the United States, whence be has since returned to this country. Some mei' like to talk of their busi- ness successes, and the rest would if tbehad ever had any. W hat. We Plumbing, 1 Heating, Eavestroughiug, Electric Win'l� Metal Work, I Prompt attention to all jobs, Targe or small, and general repair work. 011111MINVONw W. R. PINDER Phone 166 Hamilton Street ART CLOT-MIES IC1247K •wow. ALLAN LIMIT%O THESE 'SPITING CLOTHES 'V DESIGNED TO PLEASE GOOD DRESSERS Gentility is the outstanding feat- ure of the style of our clothes -a quiet refinement that is essential to good dressers. That is the first characteristic that strikes you -- and the quality is almost equally apparent. oRT-C40T • are tailoredin of our many new Sp g models. We.have hundreds of exceptionally fine fabrics to choose from. The prices are moderate. WALTER C. PRIDHAM Goderich - - Ontario 9.p \ • ..,.u, t'e.4c• e .. n ' 1 v 1:r