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The Signal, 1919-10-23, Page 3• .TRZ . iIIIONAL - OODUIOX.ONT. a 'Thur.d.1, 4It totter 23. 19.113 :1 THE 1- R LIITLE ORPHAN ORIGINAL ,ANOTHER AND ONLY GENUINE BEHARIC OF IMITATIONS SOLD ON THE MERITS OF MINARD'S LINIMENT MEDICAL. 1'R. GEO. HEILEMANN. OSTEO- PATH. specialist in women's and clltldreo' dreams. acute. chronic and net sous thwarts, eye ▪ nose and throat, partial deafness. lumbago and rhrumauc condition. Adenoids removed ',about the trate (Mae at residence. corner Nebo. and St Andrew's street. At boas "fhce Mondays, Thwdays and Satudays, any evening by sppantment. DENTISTRY. r►R. H. G. MACDONELL--HOi'uOR' J' Graduate Toronto Un,ventty. Graduate a1 College ul Dental Surgeons. &memos to the late Nam Salt. Offices await $aware and Nest street, l.sdermh. AUCTIONEER. THOMAS GUN DRY. AUCTIONEER. Bea 17, Godench. All instruction by smog er eh at S,gnat office •all be promptly *Headed to residence telephone 1;a. .. UG. CAMERON. K. CER .. BARRIS- • T. .otK,tor, notarx pubic Otte .•ripen SUKt, t,OdeftCh, toad door from starred. True/ funds to Men St lowest rat 1. R C. HAYS, • .. BARRISTER, SOLICiTOR. NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. 0•se- Stelawg.hank• Block. Ham,ltcs Street Geasraci. Teleplwne in. Beal Estate. Lose and Insurance. VROUDFUOT, KILLORAN & COOKE D ARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. NOTARIES PUBLIC. ETC. (Jame on the Square. •etond ,dooe Iron, Hamill .s Street. Godes), ' Pv. a4 lunch to lona at lowest ratar-1 «. Pomeroy!. K C.. J L.,Ktu.ats. . H. J. D. Coves. IIHARLES GARROW, LL. B. BAR - ILK. attorney, imitator, etc.. (,oderrek. Mewed at Merest rate. , S6:Al;k:R• BAKRIS1ER. SOL- ICITOk, note. y. public and conveyancer. Qien-Court Hoose. Caddo -h. a -1 1n, l*rUl1AI1C►. WAN& 1lTc. ucKILLQP MUTUAL FIRE INSUR- ANCE C;O.- Farm sod isolated town prop era) issued. *kers-Jas. Connolly. Pres, Goderich P. 0 ; Jas. Evans. Yoe-Pree.. Beech,sood P.O.; Thomas E- Hark Sec. -1 seas.. Sestath P.U. P. McGr. or. R. R. No. I. Sea- ls. bas- Urt Sco- wls. John G. Grieve. No. 4.aRRt. e Walton; Witham 11nsedasA,, k. R. No. 2,sestotforthJohn Bennewt, BtedAsaes; Geo. McCartney.. R. No. 1. Ma- sten. ytobert Ferris, Bedeck. Malcolm Mc- Ewen• Clinton; James Evans, Beechwood; James y. Godench. Avesta J W. YewGoderab; Ales. Leitch. R R. No. 1. Chalon. William Chimney. Sealorth' H.ochley• bealort h. Policy -holden can pry all ',Vibrato and get then cards receopted at R. 4. wrnh's Clothing Store. Clinton; R. H. Cunt s =General Kingston street. Godera4 or .1. H. Rsi/'s General Store. Bayfield. -1 -- r ISUSIc. FREDERIC T. EGENER, Mus. Bac. SINGING PIANOFORTE PIPE ORGAN Studio next to P. J. MacEwan's Garage Brophe3 Bros. 1 ne Leading Funeral Directors and Embalmers Orders earefolly attended to at all tonna, night or day. UODERI :H END STOMACH TROUBLE. • • GASES OR DYSPEPSIA crap✓s DIapepsIn" makes sick, pour, gamy stomachs surlily feel Ane in five minutes. if what you just ate is aonrlag ow your stomach or lies Tike a lump of lead, or you belch is and 'rnetMe soar, undtgested food, sr have • feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and seomaeh head- ache, yon can get relief in five minutes l,y nentnlizing acidity. Pot an end to sneh stomaeh distress Mew by getting a large fifty -cent ease of P&p.'. Diapepsta fermis say deng slots. • You reallee 1a dee minutes how a.edleas 1t is to sugar frneo indigestion. dyspepsia nr any slew set allea,eder ceased by food fermentation dee to excessive acid la MAMA. • By H. F..Gadsby. Ottawa, Oct. 20.-01 course Parlia- ment could say nothing about gratuities or the hone -dry bills until Premier Hearst's little trouble was over. so the Grand Trunk bargain came as a good subject to chew on. The members can go home now at the end of the trfnnth with a clear conscience and say they have earned their money. That does not lessen the blame. how- ever, which must attach to the Govern- meht for bringing in a tran•act;on of this size an the dying days of the session to ue frisked through with a lick and a promise instead of getting a clean wash which would expose some of its sinister leaturt s. 'that it has sinister features we cannot doubt. because Sir Thomas White. who now acts as candid friend to the Govern- ment, a sort 01 unofficial Cassandra who shows us the worst we can expect of we don't get back to work and save money -it has sinister features, I repeat, because Sir Thomas White, handing out his little blue pills if reasonable pessimism. says that this country is m a serious condition hnanci dly and that its back may be broken if it takes on a heavier load. In the same breath S;r Thomas prophesies that there will be another loan besides the one already afoot, which means that inside twelve months we shall be borrow- ing live hundred million dollars to pay for a peace demobilization which should cost not mere than hall of cur war effort. Following out Sir Thomas' frank logic -which by the way has.already thrown a ch•Ii into the curpertt Victory loan- it is allowable to surmise that If this ccuntry cannot afford to pay from four hundred million to a billion dollars to the soldiers in gratuities neither can it afford to take over a railway which will cost us in in- terest and principal about two hundred and forty-five million dollars, not count- ing settlements which will Cost perhaps two hundred million dollars more. One way and another the Grand Trunk deal promises to set us back five hundred million dollar-. and where we are to get the money heaven only knows. It's a cinch that Union Government has to idea how it's going to raise the wind. Loans present and to come will soon make our war debt two million dollars. which means in interest alone -not to mention the sinking fund to retrieve these bonds within twenty years -an addition to our current expenditure of ten hun- dred million dollars a year, We are told uta high aullasrlty flat 1t will cost four 1 Inst million dollars to put the C.N.H. iia ..lata• and It Is not Uurws,mable to suppose that the ether rililways, -•[latah have Iteccome a public charge. will.take another two hundred milHuns to brlug them up to the mark as modern carriers_ In afx years. if puddle ownership Iw•haVert .v 11 fa doing right naw, the railways will tat`. nisi !whited three hundred million dollars In ae-nwuhate,l deficits. This brings our pr.n+p'ctIvo railway burden tip to about a billion and a half dollars. What then'! DMo we refund mu dom- path• 1laatn. Way at three. or two. or 1.4.411 11tw per dent., or do We n•pndiate•? One 1 reseuue, •.111AM• 11f tile rail- w•ars, 1. at present two Atuslret and righty million dollars. Our annual .obligations. for some years to come, threaten to Iw seven hundred million dollars. How are we going to crit our cloth to make the omit tit? 4'an It lie done at all? All of which-ttrto sty- that just now is a time to briliJlr down another -baked public owner. ay tlle'al-to take another little hcggafr Into tlw poor Mouse who will tam like Oliver Twilit and keep crying for "more" These orphan railways cast us a lot of money nnsl 1111 they sem a -111111g to du after they drop tato our arm. IN to he fed. The Transcrotlnent- 4nd al and the C.N. k. and the :re Trunk l'aclt4• were our misfurtnoet. They were left OD our doorstep; so to speak -- take your brats -hut the G. T. it. Is our own fault. We recusal for it. .1s sou as we get It We can depend un its falling asleep. The Canadian Snorethoru has done it. already. Like- wise Ile Traulecoutlnehtal and the Grand Trnnk Soporific. The railways aim the only ones that can afford to sleep --the lax payers 11114e (11 keep awake to find flue money. And speak - Ing of sleep. why d,wsn't the enter- prising retuella ut Northern manage- ment of the Canadian National Belt- way. give us blankets that will cover unr .houldcr. and our feet at the same time? However, pct that pass -there are graver thing?, to be discussed. 1 own to ■ leaning toward public owterehlp of railways if Duly politics can he kept out of them. but Chairman Frank l'arvell of the Railway Commis- sion 1, authority for the statement that taw Almighty himself could not keep politics out of n Government railway. 1 am also convinced that put.1le owner- ship of railways 1e a gaol thing Inc the public If the Government owns all the raildays and len run them for ser- vice rather than fur profit. That would mean that the Government would have to own the C.P.H. to)-lnsteed of the owning the Ilovernment, as has lawn the crow In the gist--uud 1 am afraid there is not x111101 estopr of that. As mntti•rt stand at present, the C.P.B. booing a far more eotveut in- .Ntntlnn then the Government in Canada. there is a better prosp,t4 of the 1'.I'.11. buying mit the Government t-aile,vs than of the Government buy- ing out the 1'.1'.it. Not to pot to) nice a print on it. when' would the (Me- rriment find another billion to hay the 4'.r.lt. ? The a'utrtne.t admirer, of pubilc ownership -of whom 1 am um --+cannot lout admit flat ,dm -c (he Government took over eertuin railway-. the operat- ing espenscs and the freight rates have gone ftp and the ,tprvice hug gone down. The freight rates went ftp iwosome the Government rails -nye need- ed the money. The ('.1'.11. didn't need the money. but it reap,' the hcneflt. The 1'.('.13. Is rich, and, as the Rlble says, to him that hath shall he given. The only way the Government .crotid think of to get aroma' the difficulty of making the I'.1'.12. Helier at the prepense of the otljcr railway, was to ,.k 1130. 1 '.('.H. tpi9tand oyer flirt /extra lifters per emit. of found motley. 1'p to date 1 have not heard of the I'.P.R. doing any su1•h thing. tone can Molly Mame 1t fon Lulkind at much an unfair talc on goo.' management. It miss he that the executive of the Canadian National hallways seeks to demonstrate that publk oweershlp 1s a THINK TANLAC THE FINEST ON t'ARTM. Husband and Wife Are Both Praising It foe Good It Has Done Them. "I am still praising Tanlac,•' writes Daniel J. Hickey, ul 217 Euclid avenue. •1 oronto, Ontario, in a recent communi- cation teceived from him at the Tarlac office. Mr Hickey has lived in Toronto all his life, being employed at the Dominion Steel Warks, and his statement in which he tells how Tanlac .eheved him- of a lung -standing caa of stomach trouble and rheumatism attracted widespread atten- tion when it was first published. In cor- roboration of her husband's statement Mrs. Hickey also relates her own won- derful experience with th;s medicine as follows: "I had nesvons trouble 'for sax years, said Mrs. Hickey, "and was in such a terrible condition that I had to stay in i bed for four or tive months every year. I My energy was completely gone and! when 1 was up I was too weak to eve.I sweep the boor. I had no appetite and what little 1 forced down did me no good. My skin was pale and ,alloa and 1 could ! hardly sleep at night. ,! "My husband was taking Tanlac and he improved so fast that 1 decided to try I ;t too. and since tahing a hew bottles I am! now in better condition than 1 have been in several years:. My nervousness is all' gone, my appetite is hne and I stet p tike;' a child at night. From the way Tanlac has! fixed me up. both my husband and I j think it is about the tinest medicine there is." Tenho. le le s'I(1 111 t:ab•rieb by E- R While. In Scuforth by l'. Aber -hart, in Wingham by J. %Venom McKlltt.ou, in Ilermall by A. M. E. Hemphill. In Blyth by White laity DEng Store, In Wroxeter by J.• N. Alien, fn I..oridewborn by John O. Louudslw•rry, in Exeter by W. 8. Howey, in Brumfield by l'eter Mowry, ID IMahwold by Verner' & Edighoffer, in Creditor) by J. W. ciente, In Clin- ton toy W. N. It. Holmes, In Sheppard- ton by J.H. Simplon, fu Gorrie by H. V. Armstroug, mud in Furdwicb .by H. 811nsrm. • • ADVT. leucon. 1 notice that Sir William Mackeuxl.• ,uud Mr. %. A. 1.115(1 are frequently in 4Ittawn to set. haw Mr. Hausa Is get flog tiloug. ern the other, hand, they may -tor d g the past they 1'an. itut past or worst the result thrensells to le• the vitae. After. may. three hundred million dollars of mum ululate -ft deficits the {erode may tire sit their e.stly'pluything and say "sell nut." Ir' that 111./• 111t' 1o,%crl'11u.•ult w'h11'11 'has lawn wt "busy getting- to- gether this .nest of Lad eggs may either hold a public anctiou and sell to the highest bidder nr ask a regenerated 4':u114di111 Northern .,; -fit 141 take tlw lard bargain off its halals for the amount of tlw 't•tMit+hod say two hun- drsl million dollars to hoot. 'rhe t'.1'.It. might Kiwi le willing to buy ou 11,.1-.- 0•.111+, Wit I ,Doubt if the Government would sell. Its object' lac- ing. where pallid oww'rsblp had tailed, to give the 4'.1'.It. a little healthy com- petition. At all events, it would ap- pear from this :u.gte that Gov.. •ot ownership Is ...wing for souwp,Mly else to reap. mod p•rhapa 4'anitda, teener - hie uttd.•r her loud of debt, will bud that the iw'.t way Ont of it. 1t is ttue that the Grand Trunk bargain pNt$tlaalee ultimate payment for 1hi1•ty years, meanwhile guarantee- ing dividend. w111-11 MN the shaimholders twser enjoyed before, but this la a sort WllkinN ylk'awller !Butner which con - eiders. the debt paid when the tante is signet. Any Goyernbeot that expects to retrieve two billion dollars' worth of war bonds In twenty years and then after • tett year+' hreuthing spell pay for another railway shows a greet deal more hope than tr.mmun sense. Mean- while we shut our eyes to the fact that 1' were able o y for if xnarla mer ail t pal• t r the Grand Trunk at the end of thirty years the ('midi Staten I:overnment might say No. How is it p seible for the I:oy.•rnwettt of Canada to own ■ railway in the Poiret States, where the most profitable part of the Grand Trunk lie.? $n1 h a plu sitz a, one Government permitting unntht•r fur- eleu Government to own a railway within its te'ritnry 1. against all tuitional law and precedent. 1 do not believe that we mold even ntaks a 'corridor" arrangement with Uncle Sam. Mr. \leigheu does nut mention this matter at all. Given a l'hanee. "i am in need of a boy about your size i would pay you 10 shillings a week." "Will 1 have a chance to rise'" ' Oh. yes; I want you to be here at 4 every morning." - Ottawa Evening Citizen. Hard Wood r AXI) - Light Wood From $2.0o to $6.00 per cord Delivered to ane part 01 the town. Also a quantity of KINDLING WOOD Phone les") Robert Wilson Hamilton St. Goderich aggregation They ail! 1.e compelled , to find u way of co -opera -Goo with kir. After -Election Comments. It'wart, or .'olttrMM u ia,ttIca I iut'apa- chy which wjI$,iwttlly disliaiify theta for (Millie t•uuHdtoav lu the furter, 1imihu•ly. Mr. 1k•wart 4•:uu:tot hoop.. ,• t Mt'ST BB GIVE ANI) 1'.1hF:. 111.1.i'ts1 on the old-fashiutntil liner: of The 1.. Ishii' Advertiser 1a•.peks vu- operati•nI I,t Farmers, liberals turd Labor wen Al lite new 1.egisl:tture. it Mays : 'lite final election r.•turuM make 1t deer that l)utario's new Legislature will present a {without sittietiou that fo atartlugly novel to this Province, arid full of vital possibilities. With 411 United Farmers, 2S 4'ouwrvattvvs, 210 Liberal. and 11 1ul.urites in the Home, the old -Mlle parties disappear as dow- htatiug tactors Uu wlaate%er hgAlatiou' sha11 kw taken Up. Ser divider is the etuudittg that wen, sort of i•ualitiou ministry will le rwtulrwl 1.. ,cotslurt the lh•ovirwe's affairs if these are to he administers! 'w'ithunt hampering hus- 111111e. 11041 fvie,iflu. No nue party will Is• ,ijle to act selh-ttly without incur- ring rte risk of lacing a t-omhluutiun of the others. 'This situation. while it Is bra sal-ta•w n, 1►utitrio polt5''. and at first I llIwura awkwardly :complex and etJnstog. eh,alld Iw of .server to the people.' ,to It will mean daft all faet1011* to file 11.41%lalmw must adopt at policy of give and take. Liberals, Fernier,. and laborites cannot be ex- petttl to throw lu their hot_ wMolly alai heartily with what is left of tlw df5- 0rdlterl t'owtervatiie party, pmt shade rvspe•ti.•• platforms are essentially the same, and It should lad Iw ditik•ult for them t., got together 1111 t-ommein ground, if they art• siuetiwly mttsk,us to do the Lest 1!y all ,.hisses I11 the 1'ravlue•. 'rhe hhiehound partisan way glow over time puiIth•al revolution that' has disrupted the •.1.1 -11'»• -ups the I'rovitet', but the new Iw•i1Mlutar' {of flinty. calors and .11,41•1111f10.10.. It Will IWa dittinetly papular one by m] large uajorlry. That should forward lues" .rriefy of lutme., 411 uu.re sir d a.uu*WWIeel*WWI and talo- ri.tl It-giatu- ut•st niguitl.uut. 'I'It.•rl• air tlw 41141- tion for the people. rnrdi'or urban, at Haw parties, lath looking ww•htlw the same time curbing privilege whirls w -urs' for w,h,r. 'rl,rn tier,' are ttw bas too long .filet nit 4ta.tt•tis Park. +1'MosI Fernier-. fresh, cigorouie, w1•h• • barrelful of tt.' ill's,. a►M,rt 4:oyer1t- • 1'\R TF1"L VOTING. •, • 'own' alai t lisr.s hr general. The lata t' party tilt strung its IWlltbers, • emailarut' v,-ly, also with snore t..crliiw The !s1ai1 and Emp re, the senior Con- to hay, •.n the table, The Ilidepwn,e•ut servative organ of Toronto, attributes and alt•• $uhhtv'. nisi s ori•• situ.•, -s ti• the old-farhiuls,l party leader. h, The toerwlieltiiiug No tor. etlf..T1e eulirrty new (ler', regardless of the , ideuh,l line -tip of tuendwrs u'f the 11 - stubbly. There is au iron•raUve id, aalwily hl the 1'rorinl•' .for the Hytin• though 111e Imus whose genius WW1 rnergy (las (made 11 is 111111111e .uewt1, 111 p111.1fe uwilerohip IoM Inst his Neut. and may himself la• lost to public Mt•rvk'. The l'l•orince st rttd lie elitism.' to Maffer-Lena u' lulndou te'wpararily•lost its Mud, Nearly a million 1ww• pits tors have assure.' the liu;a triumph of prohibi- tion.. No w0011111 will Mit is :lie Leah.- latur•: but the %%111w11 of uutario have aeldev•cl a pdili.1•1 result of the first waguitu4.'. alai their weir:: Is hound 0, I perkuett' every please of our •owiuyt political progress. The termer., stud la- p 1-.rltee, who have lawn loudest lea tla•ir ,-oulkwuallou ou• f discredited par rcognize that the feminine vote anti illtlla'Is•t• w111 be Meet 1,1 tlw suer dines-IGuu, The 1ww 11es1, there tore, lewd carry all pr.preemivc els tut•urs luta u working alliaiwe. 11 t. hup"oiide to rule 1111. Liberals tilt uC it, iutel a. c,wlitiuu is i1s•vitab:e, if True 1 answer is to he tipple to the asplrutlone ,,viae,' the people of tomato bit vv 1141 V1.111•1111 1111) ...pr.•.W.I. .A PATCHWORK 411.11.T. • The 1.,udun Free I'n•.s 111.1 the folluwiug 1c,tnyl••ut : trill trio Inas petty 1.11,1 herself with a ta•w Is-gelature that hestrw tate Is re. s•u11,Lu1tr it, tin' iatcllwurk quilt of the good olid days. It I+ u Ls'giela:nr' their any hl n. wc•I1. Altcye'tht•r 1 n the result to prevatlirg unrest among the tali., .stews nr Ib.e -.•t .rut to pr," people. it says: - vide ilio; mordditlk•tllt tlme.ih•• I None of the political prognosticators, tk".1.-' f•.r liars•• who woa1,1 mtvr m nine of the kern men who wager money nutter in the. i. ,'..anuli tit hie. No 0s events came ,within gun -hot of occur.' owe 'Kitty has a els,r majority. No l ately gauging the chances of the genera , Many, i,dct,I, puts anyti.iltg ni.pn.aleh- election that took place yesterday. There' ft11 at Majority. (bre might eontwit* Of was no sign in any quarter that the exult ,,,i While. 11{..11 se.er.at s• ones. I:sit of the voting would be as it turned out to Pot oto' .1 such ,.mise 1.. .ae+-••.. 111*. bee In no previous general election in promise of ',lability. The'r'nited Yarm- thts country was the issue so startangly , • is w ill he+tt:ue to endanger the int OM different from the general expectations, !wu.rc's- of their us.vemeed. My liuk- In' forming expectations as to the outcome; lug rp Is'rtmiltwntly with either of of the voting t0 such a contest people the aid -lice p11(,',. she It totittei would take account of the record of the Govern- le• u I+•nasal of many fertnerit who went and of the criticism to which It is' •'t1,I for 1'. F. t3, ,•.uwli•I:itrs. 'ihe jsubjected and of the policies submitted 1'. F. 41, .,41.111 to,twl - .. 01:I6.s+l by its opponents. An analysis of these snpi.lirt to a I.IIe•ral t:rtv,-t.weut., conditions in the present campaign would toueat,I by a Hubs• wluttu-sty.. rnr fo r lead any reasonable tmind to the rnnclu- d'uhs•rt'utive 4.ovenuueut,. Lu •s.•d also Son that the Government was pretty sure t a Minority. labor, with lis halt - of being returned by at least as iarge a so fire or s, sit i'ulev, lacks the uuwtmr majority in the Assembly as it had at the' re uielte to plum the furw,•r+ ill con- tinte of dissolution. By the Opposition' for A Farvwri.' Gni-ennat•ut, ,oup- it was generally conceded that the Gov- I port tol by Lihertils. 4'•rns rra:fr: s viol ernment wouid have a substantial margin la4IM.1, is wN impossible: Futr,.,1h, it over the combined strength of the other is a pontos u,lsnp two has r"stdAd groups an the House. Hut so far from from the .'iltrt to drowse a 1.•...•ruweut. that being the case, the Government s 1 A not \imprdable onrconn• w ill he ently not more than 26 sea t e another a'h,•tiun in a twt•I',t•mnutic t .•fee • rata*. ci I of the A w to h1 ti is sit t numbering1 pear . candidates�R1 all F. O eM . than 42. the Liberals 28. the Labor `Go •mime t. h.• who 111111. way reed. lrnsfidates-l2.-the independent a2. -. r 'to oil' • w inter In :ale 401(1:117 to astonishing turnover and break-up of the, a 1. ex tei than antlelpaf.vl.divideo House into fractional groups produces a Its vo a who it canoe :or elnw,sint situation that leaves everything problem- I candid tots. a anti-prohibitinniet., atical. Hoa• or by whom government is on ill other naiad, snood ti.g b1wr. to be carried on in the premises it is: Tlwy voted sdlc y ter Ute- reti-titpurr i ole at this moment to say. candidate. Nom • who reaur,•sly twr4r m The election. with all its singularities, the ileum iwtprcttd,reeirel th.•ir sup. is the consequence of unrest. The policy {sort. Sir ..tilt uu -Meek, in landon, I. ' .A11.1111•lid noda r v ! sit insthur a t this. 'Sir o[ the Government that received i rd most , attention in the contest was approved at have the p'rs•nal npbdtsitI-.0 of i-lJh•'r the polls. but did not win the support of j terulrrusr• or Bence. .Wore. Ile was the people for the Gover'nment's candl net p.r.uonnetslly with nate aide sir the dates. A great part of those who voted other.. Ile• is 11 ,leatelivl,ut.•tpen, who've: to continue the Government's wartime int -its speak 'for th••r.i'�i�'Ise+. Rut legislation in restraint of the liquor traffic thoile!, he had ale lar•,1 ;stat'. 1 an (0- voted against the candidates of the -- Government. Conservative legislators 1 are used to that ked of treatment at the i hands of the temperance voters. Then ' the women. who owe the frarshise they exercised in this election to the Hearst Government, in many cases voted only for the temperance legislation and omitted to vote for candidates, or preferred those. who were opposed to the Government. In the popular brain -storm five Minister were defeated. Sir Adam Beck went down to defeat. It remains to be seen whether or not the voters have brought legislation and government to a state of deadlock. HYDRO GAVE 180,000 PEOPLE CHEAPER ELECTRICITY • HYDRO electricity saves the people of Ontario millions of dollars year!y. One hundred and sixty-six municipalities, pro- vided with Hydro currert, pay less for electricity than they did bcfore Hy&o Power supplied them - And Hydro current cost them leas now than it did during the first year that they used k. TheHydro Electric Commissi of Onto rio is coo stantly extending this service for the bent ht of the people. The Commission is interested in doing whatever it can to make the current"used c f great- est value. As a result of rigid tests in its otvn laboratories the Commission rseo nmenc's the use of HYDRO Quality Lamps for home lighting. f n Us Iddatamries she Commission tress II''DRO Qu4li ty Lamps for ion fl i anc u, current consuthpf l on and length of usefulness. H YORO Quality Lamps carry flit Commis- sion' assurance of absolute safsasartfon in nae. HYDRO -ELECTRIC POWER COMMISSION OF ONTARIO FOR 'ALS BT Waterworks and Electric Light Comm HYDRO SHOP ASK THE HYDRO MAN s0too POWER lesion dependent. Ite telt t h.• Herr' of the_ he Memoir anti -prohibitionist vote. To - ionto is further .•t ilei,.-,'. I1e•r.' wart candidates were eie•tel, despite 1� thre• s. utmost wilted npga'sifIOU of 1111'1 p• u 1rt+.FnrnfTary t/+111� historic practice of ':Tory T01.01110. - The g•uera1 unreel in the ,country also ' had it. ••ffe•t. II is possible that the He:u•st eaudi,htt.•s felt the ha,`kaash of the aotl-coloveriptiun stun intent. The fort that Sir William Hearst hoed: th,1 been .•le,•t.rt at it C' nit ral,t,00ven- tlol, of 111.• piety wii. not wit114111 s,mt. eft .int m 1. ttic.'o t + reit that he � ant the aura for the plate, and -TIM Free fetese a y.mr ago sng- g.•sttetl tb11K narne of Sir Adana Heck for limier, All these things are now mf ito''u Wotien'e. The. Prowfue• fa.rs i .t WORKING ALLIANCE. "The •Spectator," a writer in the Toronto world. evidently reflect. the editorial lieu'. of that lniier, with h game JIr. Dewnrt an independent sup- port 4hrtimgbotit the campaign, in pert. The Sp,•tator', after-t•Ie'tion article is on follow's : There never wee Nnch a wee-knge of political orthodoxy A Govertnnent hits !Well ignomlulou.ly beaten I.y al three- party -'1gosltion will. has all the etc- tuents. int .o fur few or the methodic 1 of cohesion. .1/ this writing, the Farmers are hellotrouge.t party numer- ically. The Literals are a. globi tweets!. !,also. is an extremely lwrtenNnd third. Nothing In Canadian 0r British history offers a precedent for the /'roan to fol. low. Mettles. the.trinttgcst pinup in th1• 1•rgftlatnre hes not n .single man nt i'arllamentary exptrtenre^to w•butn th. Crown can apgwtl to form a Go•eru anent, 11 is unprecedented that the lender of a minority party should be nsked to aasnme the -rt'tp'r of rimer Mr. 7k -wart Is ungltestlouably the hest equipped mina for the pretutlt'rslllp: lint Ile cannot 110p• lo ,.mated 111111111111 1M' ertot>r•rl,tinn of tib other groups: and they have all along repudiated as -nata- tion with eltht ' of the old parties. The Literals, Farmer,' meal Iattor men are equally up against 11 condition which is vastly more Important than it ny t Inry-. The people ha re de- manded a new deal : and if they don't get It there will he a ghastly failure on snmetwwly's sort. It is unthinkable that Slr Wilthtm iloaret one come hoick. A remnant of bit Cabinet iie like the boy that stood on the burning deck. Neither the farmer. nor the lahnrltc e can make terms with to helple'.sly dls.•redited an «M y Back Is So Bad" P AINS in the small of the back, lumbago, rheuma- tism, pains in the limbs all tell of defective kidneys. Poisons are Vining left 1. the blood which cause pins sad whoa. The kldnevw, liver and bowels must be lfbuaed to artJon by each treatment as Dr Chase's Kidney - Liver Pula. There is no time for delay wham the kidneys go wrong, for sacb de- vslopmenta an hardening of the ar- teries and Rrigbt's dla.aas ars the natural result. Ons pill • does, 25 creta a bea, all dealers, or Edda dem, Rates a ('e., i4.4 . Toronto. Dr. Chase's Kidnet -1 leer (%itl u' i.•w s.•t of is wnt. t■ rows. The ret sps'uslL!Ilties of the hof are tremen- dous. t dulls. 4111Iy foods will trine with the .1tuatiou, Tise times 1.111 for tlw sink-/ lug of petty differences: even sit dif- ft•r.'w•i'r that ,rem for the moment im- po.rtallt. 4'it multi Is i tilTrantert situation from which .Ie will ewt'rgu happily 111111 w'Itt1 Nur••r.s oa(y if there Is mntty and gist -will -the will to sacrlfie•: the spirit that held through the war, that Auu Its way to tielory. Ont trio 1,4 the foremost of the 1'rov- 111e•es. 1'p,n her roust devolve the Kreuter share ofthe taskcarrylog T. this ei)d she mu. aye a merfnl and resourceful Government. i mumstanees have u.ert hrowu a good havertome•nt. Let us hole that -eft •ulustatw.a will shortly ratite up an - 01 her +114'h. Itl 111 1 1T . .y4 r, I. ` Victor Victrolas � • �.4, and Brunswick Phonographs at Thomson's Music Store In addition to the Victor line which we have sold for the past 25 years, we were offered and accepted the agency for the Brunswick Phonographs, 12 styles, from I $77.00 to 8550.00. : -� The Brunswick Tone Amplifier is built entirely of wood, giving the sound waves a beautiful mellow quality. The Double Ultona, or Reproducer, on the Bruns- wick will play any make of Record at its best. We always carry several thousand Records in stock of the latest selections and standard "World's Best" music. Call and hear our Musical Instruments and be con- vinced of their superiority. Thomson's Music Store North Side Square Goderich •