The Signal, 1919-10-30, Page 3•
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A.
2- Thura.lay, 'October 311, 1919.
THZ SIGNAL
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41)411111,-S. i omit
ctfa, SIGNAL PRINTING Cu , Lre.
Ps: rl.lsunas
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Thursday. 1 k-tula r 311. 1'1111.
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lint THE UNITED FARMERS A
CHANCE.
At this time of writing no announce-
ment has yet been made as to the new
Provincial Government. It seems to be
generally recognize 1, however. that the
United Farmers, who have the largest
group of members in the Legislature, Will
be the dominating element in the Govern-
ment, and that the Labor party will be
mote or less clos.ly allied with the. torted
Farmers.
Between them the U. F. O. and Labor
will have a bare majority in the House -
too small a majority fo any Government ,
to rely on under ordinary circumstances.
But the other parties -Liberal and Con- i
a rvative-must act in recognition of the
extraordinary conditions that exist and
refrain from any course that would em-
barrass the new Government without
advantage to the Province. Indeed. we
see no good reason why Mr. I)ewat and
his following of Liberals should not
cordially co-operate with the new Govern-
ment and assist in bringing about reforms
that are outlined in the Liberal as well as
in the L. F. O. platform. In this way the
L itera's in the Legislature may do a
much-needed service for• their Province
by ensuring the stability of the Gov-rn-
tnent while exerting a :,enehc.al influence
upon legislation. The United Farmers
have won a surprising vict ry at the polls
and they should have a lair chance of
s owing what they can do es a governing
body. They will have their troubles, as
all Governments have, but the leaders of
the new movement are n 1 men to be
easily dauoted. and difficulties wall be
dealt with as they come along. At the
di tinct'
very beginning there are the s y
conflicting claims M urban labor and el
the farmers to be met. The farmers have
been ccmplaimng that wages an the towns
and cities have cone to such a height as to
rob the coup ry of help; and on the other •
hand the wage-earners in the tokns and '
Mies complain that their wages do not
allow them to pay the high prices de-
manded for farm products. 1f the new ,
Farmer -Labor combination at Toronto
can reconcile such differences as these. at
was well worth while to have the situation
brought about which c. mpeis an align-
ment that a few weeks ago se med im•
pose hie.
The farmers and the Liberals. whcse
election platforms were very simile. could
'together make an easy ma)ority an the
Legislature. and probably a good many
j.iberala throughout the Proven, a do not
see why such a cumbination cannot be
effected. The United Farmers party has
been recruited from both Literals and
Conservatives. who have not entirely for-
gotten their former affiliations. and If the
U. F. O. leaders should combine with the
Liberal party in.the Legulatcre many
former Cons• rvatives would break away,
and if they should become too friendly
with the Conservative members the
former Liberals would be estranged. So
• the U. F. O. leaders are bound to keep to
the middle of the road between the two
old parties or risk the dissolu'ion of their
own forces. So long as the 11ew Govern-
ment takes a broad vier of the needs of
the Province. refrains from class leg.s-
Iation, and governs wisely. party names
may well be forgotten and the sympathy
of good citizens of all parties extended to
those upon whom responsibility rests.
Its ASSAM ,quality gives it
that rich flavor
fiEDROSE
TEA's good ted'
Sold only in sealed packages
A man may find, at necessaryto buy a
horse, but that does not mean that he
is obliged to pay any price asked ham for
a spavined old nag with the heaves and d
blind eye. The issue before the House of
Commons at Ottawa is not public owner-
ship, but the purchase of the Grand Trunk
Railway on the terms proposed by the I
Government. The people have had no'
decent opat.rtunity ofascertainIn whether
the proposed deal is a good one or not.
but the puerile excuses for argument put
up by The Globe, and Mr. Rowell's In-
decent demand for haste lest public
opinion should turn against the proposal,
are sufficient to cause suspicion.
The nearest we have seen to anything
lake a reasonable summing-up cf the
question is the statement of The Toronto
World's Ottawa correspondent. who is
favorabk to the measure. He writes as
follows.
'The habihties appear to be about
:SIXI,(X)O,(XXI. For this sum. plus what-
ever the arbitrators may give as the value
of the preferred and common stock. the
Government gets the Grand Trunk. the
Grand Trunk f'acihc and the American
lines of the Grand Trunk, constituting a
system with an aggregate length of 44.000
nares. Tris brings the cost per mit ,or a
fairly reasonable figure taut the Ootiosi-
ton. busy adding up liabilities, I',es sight
altogether of the Oct that •-.e are acq.i•-
Ing a vast railway system. •••th .+eat
earning powers and tremencous posse
butt les "
Passing -•ver the '"tremendous 'Stlasi-
�bilitees." the first question the ordinary
man scold ask rs • hether Ire "great
e: rrirg poor-. : ' of the railway are suf-
ficient o ray the expenses. and .n being
i told that they w1'•. a not he would probably
want to knew ah':, in that case, the
country was 'n be saddled with liabilities
of five hundred million dol ars.
Mr D D. McKersie proposed that the
road, if unable to pay its tsp. should be
allowed to go into liquidation. and that,
will strike many people as an eminently
!'enable suggestion, Then of the Canadian
Government wishes to take over the road
it can get it -at its naked value, without
!help from the high financiers a •ho in this
case figure as the "nigger in, the wood-
pile."
In any case The Globe ought to quit
i its parrot cry of "public ownership•' and
talk sense.
PIBLI(' OWNERSHIP NOT THE i
Liberals who wish to see the Senate
reject the G. T. R. purchase bill, are
,ayytlg democratic government no cem-
1 finenEo-Toronto Globe.
„s.Why can't The Globe co : e down off its
( lofty pools and talk common sense'
!Deoistietarie governmerft is not repre-
Seared b •the present House of Commons
at Ottawa. The Nouse was elected on a
!cooked -vote's, UR in an election that was
a travelle) Ar►jibbelar government. More-
1,ovet, The 'Globe Meows, and the Govern-
.>nen cklla'b that sa election at this time
1 would scatter tbltf•psesent members of the
'House lit lehi'es lirfore a wipd. What
eesee_ra-lige.-aw -mss Globe's implying
Ottawa or the
Hou o o tawa represents
the r 1.4 ' • ' 1 Canada on the
G. Ot. ►t • est ion'
. R. purchase
gh quickly or
led against
• ,� .ink of that
•'• w Globe ill
it
o a
f oa Globe
� s
n4.. n0
p elect
it tis
w B T.�Qa Iptjle
he Gig
EDITORL� NOTES.
At latest rep 'rt prohibition seemg to
haverarned with a malonty of three or
four- hundred thousand.
Judging from the outcry of some of the
newspapers. this Province is bound to go
to the demnition bowwoos ut,iess some
elixir as found to entice -:r Adam Beck
perpetual life.
The Globe gives the United Farmer
a ivntie hint that if they do nut behave
he number of urban representatives wi}i
be ant reased to correspond more nearly
with the urian popuia:lo;t. At present
the rural member of 1'arl ament repre-
sents a much smaller popu.atron than the
average city mcmtxr.
The Farmers hasre followed up their
succ ss in the Provincial field with three
smashing victories in the Federal bye -
elections. Four of the live seats cent• sted
1
ion Monday were formerly FS5eld by sup -
1 porters of the Unionist C; vernment.
Now only one- Victoria. B. C. -is in the
'Government column. Borden is slated to
follow Hearst.
The spectacle of the Union Govern-
ment going all the way to Victoria, 11 C.,
to get a Minister of Agriculture is not
without its humor. These pesky farmers
are keeping such a sharp eye on the Gov-
ernment that it was afraid to open a
rural tiding. and had to go right to the
edg of the co tinent to find a workable
combination of man 'and constituency.
Three polls in Ashfield [ Nos. 5, (1 and 7)
which usually vo e Liberal by large
majorities gave Mr. Proctor. the U. F. O.
candidate in North Huron, a combined
vote of 34S. If thea- votes had gone to
Mr. Fraser they would have elected him;
it was. they elected Mr. Joynt. So
t instead of a man who -is as good a
IF. O. man as Mr. Proctor, and who
have given the Farmers' Govern -
useful support. the -riding sends a
'importer of the discredi• 4 Hearst party.
in N. b. A and 7. Ashfield,
ty good fellows, but they have
to Wilk over in the conse-
thleir voting as they did last
the G. T. R:'pnrcha.e bill. week.
LEADING LIGHTS IN
THE U. r 0. PARTY.
GODZI.IOH, ONT.
lliaut I. is a U. E. i.., which proves tlutt 1
taw F.F.(). 14 not frets frilw arlwee'ratic
tarsal. 1 lett. W. H. Fant -m, 11,1'., of I
DoUluatos 1 North Bruer 1. is au AurJl-
t•au Tors. and A. T. Walker of tiaaeonH-
tirld (Mouth 1►zfurd), n member of the
}'rbewla.
Ipf
In the entire IIA[ the I'nwbyteriaus
wrwewhat outuuwla•r the Mrthodiats. '
these two slewwtwtionie coutrilaitritlg
the hulk of the hew weathers of time
I'nit'hgw. Thr I.IIwrails and I'owu'rya-
thvw are also pretty evenly divided, the
I.Ilwnls harlug s narrow uwlorlty.
Thr 1'.1•'.14. Ivltouur d.wa nor anticipate
that the we11ge either of religion or i
politica w111 rind 1t vulnerable at any
palm ; it utas at rt'oh•ilig 11 " parrplr's
party" without, tetastiig tul•nw•r or
allcw'Iug Intolerance to assert itself. j
While all are farmers, as has been
said, the learn's1'trofessions tire to have
same regrew ntiati.m- in the U.F.O. Iu
the brat pialr an altorney-getwral moat
he { •{11+11, and he must he a lawyer,
Ieruuw• 0111• 11111114 'of r'alwnstlde• Rov•
rruw.nt 1•111111d allow a lay attorney-
ge•urral to retain legal advisers. There
1s 1141 -tawy.•r allallliL,the 1'.F.1►. tures-
Iwrs-elect, mud s w•af will necessarily
have to lw-found for 11 Iarrlster. This
taunt has not. 11.1K will uuikrstooti.
lawn diw'uawd iu'th.•'•autua w1 far and
will not be broached until after the "e-
lection of t)Ie pn•mter-lle"iguate tion-
don 'Waldron has 'well I14r Intal ad• '
vlser of the parry, holds the confiders
of all 1ta mei-ahem awl en)oys a repu-
tation at the lar that measures' up to
every requirement of the ottkr of alt
The 1-.1.1.-.f 11111a rio (e•1 keenly tonal -general. 1f hr should Imo -collet
Interested in the 1' F I1, group of men to the 4'althtct the general public' would
win will weer in T,rnito nn \\'0dli0s 1111 re reason. to be well satisfies!.
.1140 .f the present week to "select a Thr welh'a1 pnlfer.1, 11 ulow• t'werg.w
bowler, win. lis 111.• regular Ivlurw• of from the revolution against party Roy-
.•cr11t s, nun' 144,1111e 1 gelid of the 1.nlwe•11t with Ihe• tlisUla tion of hayltnt
Province a. soon as he a✓•'a'pts the task naw of its meutle'r' in the nuke of tllr
„( f.rwlllg n I:oaenuuvut. Phis is 14'. 4.ts i'g. M..1wwwitl
\['14141 urge 11..• Id.•,11. trwla•r awl 'sad- „f 1'arney 1 south Croy 1, whose high
f i.0 of 1M'..' farmers. win. wit hiu the achievement la the defeat of 1)r. Jamie-
son, the Speaker. a gentleman ileal in
(rule) the tay.1 entrenched twilit kat
'virile , aid. by holding them divided.
IMO* 11is..'•i a long- w'shel�fnr .p{wr•
l tinily 10 err n'.•t, or attempt to e,rrect.
..nue hoary alma, of goyerumrnl
nudge the party. system'?
.\ week alto I1, 111y of the socia and
political leaders of the country Wert
wagging their heads In assuwelamuse-
went over the a isionary expectations -of
the rural rrvolutlotutrios. Tlalnv
srralige to sal c. the college professor..
1-a1IINtl1st' Httd .-apttlits of Industry are
off'rf::� c,o,gr,lr,datl.lus a11d sincere co-
o1a•raltio11, '1'•• •itlgte factor of suers
uaklug a11, the difference to the lentil's.
Th.• Wrwls•rse•Iet to the 1luta rio
1 , gislatur• 't ho have won on the 1'.F.I I.
platform are without a single exception
native-born sons of the soil and tanw-
t1dc farriers. Coming f1' every part
..f the I'ro''hs.•, they have bot little
know lege of eDeh other: ait1 11 Is all
the more curious, for this reawo, what
a nem 11.1,1 their ',annum pups w• has
token instil therm. They represent al-
most all the r.'llglons de (nations,
and their rtel:al ,•haract.•r is equiaNy
r•pr,- 'lttat ave of the ofd stack of
urea n. settlers. The ps.M heal 'di--
server
ar
serer of The World. who followed the
118\•1,1 1-a1111a:Igll ,Ir closely as allV.liw
,nte•re,del hl 11, 1111111e* the folluwhag
j1tat111a II ig figurer, along illy farmer
tprew'ututike% :
1.14te•r Suttth of thelwfagt-IIie 1 Sou11,
forth 1. f..rtn.'yly a ..'intra tt•st•her, who
is el. rk .f III. t.lwt.hip, .trpr.m.hing
five "lid forty- Ili y..lrs. a lig tau,. of
;post appeal -ape,. ..f Irt'I,.l'r.•shyt.•rhu,
extr:,,ti.n. 1.16'•ral in his laditi'ul lean-
ing.. 11101 a (.11' susakrr.
Fh1ullslro 1Nortlh
h',utwnrt0 . who farms four hundred
ages'.. :u01 lead 1ulo,r endurw•tuent to
his i•liti..11 claim•. is warden of his
.nilly : l,.' Inns land considerable mltol-
,i1pa1 experience. and won hal. ele•tiou
by a nn,llorily ..t :'•gals
•►u.li.'s" {licks of Centralia. In Month
Ilnr.n. „
Liberal .f lill'wndeut re.rr.t.
a fluent ,u01 rather witty speak.•r.
\leth.sli.1 in religion.
{fent -1',1. In. ('arn.hqutel 11'entm
; re.5 i of
Coiling -wood. wbn earri.w the
1 -1'1u ti..1. ' t ,,,er1,"itlg Hen. I. 1t.
[mew,. fru week. atter returning
frau, the, Iml'!,•(I.;.is fu Enema's wh.9t
he row t1', ,n tie. ranks and '1,, liner[
t he \I. 1' ;11i 1 11. S. It 1'.1. 1'In'uti'h:n•l
i...1 4,,n-3 h if.••., n1', -unmarried. and is
the ...n of .1 wi,1uw. Th.. .duality of
his t. o:cli I.l,s„I 111.1.5 14' .spleno llldg,•d
f:',•ut. 111, w.lin11a' +senna ,,u.l, the 1.ct
that four .i.iy' atter being tk'wnhitlz.'d
h' was b.•t...•'•,t th.• 11,11.114.. 314 the plow
on his mother's farm. with his eye Upon
11on. I. It's supposedly tnprt'itltablt
suit.
It. It 4;r:uit. alp. 11.11' Iwe•Ire mites,
Int .f lltta.'a, in I'arb•hnt tnuoty, a
ttrn.ln:ire .f 11 .\. 1., with no toddle
+....333.1. 31 \I'-t1n..li»t :u01 ('nnw•ryatiy..
A. II.•11y.-t• .f I"•uilw,nll1 1 East \\'.l
liugton�, ni nuns -+smog loan of ster-
ling purls. held in 11u11-k,I 'rth"•ni by -
the couu11maity tt, which 1,11 has lived
for more thi11, a it,•I,,•ratinn.:old arise+'
he t:mcht oe'hoot before taking up term-
ing. tie is t.wnshid. clerk, a Baptist
in rt'Ii¢io11 anal a Liberal fu politica.
Ther. 'honl.l Io• WOOD' of the Cabinet
material hi this .here list of rant+s of
1..1' 11. lea.lers. {tut Iadnr,• pr.a','.vlittg
it t. ,Is well to admit at huge that the
1. 1'1. realizes it f.nud mord of its
hnatuW and energy In .1. .1. Morrison.
s,1' -rotary• t reit surer of the organization.
who worked night Hud day spreading
the ('.F(I gospel and carrying every-
wh.•re as ill, 11.;11 the tenurions porno..
.f the reformer with the real *COM' of
politic:d duty ...milled with intelligence
of D high order and (dell : of practical
.nnnun souse.
Mr. \Inrriaou wax lawn
in the township ,,f {'eel. the son of 11
north .f Ireland I'rr'b"t'rtan immi
grant, eln'atel in the public epflool,
and Imun•r"'.I Ishii in 'oolitic,' and
fnrmiur fr,.m 111. Hsu of fonrte'Ii. .1..
.1. \lorrisou Is one of the best tuttormis1
Men In the Province, rine•+., likeable
end 'Huditl. and an aggressive and
effective pn1.11c ,paker.
Hornbill !bowman. -the man from
Manitoulin." was the first 1".}'.11. In the
Legislature 111111 nal 1unge'r suds an In-
tr.ahnl•tlon to ne'w'spaper Mall.rs. A..1.
I T1wlelle 1 North Essex 1, of Tilbury. is
Daae of the neem torn of mark. Ilia nam.
1. Irish: tint he y,pvks french He
fluently as if It were his mother's
tongue. w 11tah it probably le. 11e la s
Catholic to rr1►glou. He 114 oto of the
Iola fanners of the "horn belt," and Is
shot forty-five rears of age. John
Party (Smith Itenfrew, oA Itrud.nt'lI,
is another ('atholic, Irish. Tory, young
and lflpnlar. i1e beat !Ina. Thomas
\I.'/iarry ono easily that Mr. McGarry
would hare been umnwd at It himw•If
If the ('otn.Pgnet.rs wvre not I11 Ionone.
11. C. Mimi of St. George (North
the rate'w of his prty and Lover,+
wrist, to w•h.tut 1•alhs•r rank was appar- 1
rutty astyr1ttrt'd, and who attended the
fngn.ntlr referred -tis Eugenia pkute i
pave 1u the character of our who em-
-400-) valla rather finial aspire+. (►n Nutt
fair suwnwr day it 11.a.•r oreurrel dl
Dr. Jamte•squ that 111111'1. was ■ retin'.I
turwh'r of his own pru(essiou, who bad
taken to the pion'. but who already
had Mr. Speaker's number.
Tlw I'.F.11. party in the Legislature
will eutbraer farmers, young and elder-'
Iy. all the way' from 0. 15 or over
7'11e young torn are S. S. Shipley, Id Ida
1 East i►nrham 1, n'b. L somewhat fa- ;
mouses a asoma breeder: John Party of
Itrndeowll ; 1.1ent.-Col. 17armichael, E.
N. Mci)onald of Warsaw 1 East 1'et.•r-
tloru), who looks about :Ill, anal R. M.
41Varreu of Eganyille North Renfrew 1,
who Is perhaps; 37. '1:1a' elderly gronp
ha•ludrs H. t' lieenyoes of Emit Hast-
ings. who may be M. alai J111111(1. l.rth-
I.rtdg.' of Glenne 1 Wt'*? Middlesex 1.
o1.4'.of the old "masters of the 11 rn,JI t•.''
a �,lla•ntl 1'rt•stoytertait, well -to -olio
fanner and a,.Rlssl sp•.;ker, who may
tae I.d years or age or w/. -
The great•ma)e city of Mir farmer re-
prementatives are. however, men be-
tween thirty -eve and fifty.
THE PLATFORM OF THE I'N-
ITEU'.1S,1(F,'RK OF
(e lo. .
a i 1 'foo cot nut all exp•rdlturts
that are not ahr.tntety e"w•ntial
SI To alo,I -h the- system of
party patronage.
131 T. limit Governmental
activity respecting t'altweresatl 'o-
cownttfou Io l•gi'lur1tu fnc11S 14.
Ire -opera the rtrnrt:" to the ke•phng
of accurate re,rord,, and to general
etn'atlon along co-operative line..
14i To, provid.• e'.ttw1 educa-
tional opportunities for all the
children of all the people by arcade
1.xiriuitnk 11101 Imprnring 4a7�1,llusa-
timed facilities In the rot rj4l 411s-
trlcts. fff
I.i1 TO atthat1tut. for 'he policy
of exla'tosIrl' I'nnyluti„1 hilghways
a trolley of organtzld cnuttnuons
rosid n,a111tW1a1aY, MINI of wakltng
grad) read, for all rather Clan
high -grains roads fora 1,•w, the /•rat
of road moist met fon and mainten-
ance teeing efnitritly distributed
between tit,' sod country.
(n 1 TO promote a ayst1.m of
forestry whl.'fi will maintain till
Increase the public revenues fnoin
this sorer, prrateet and perpetuate
our bon•st r•wores, reforest the
waste places of 411e1 Ontario. and
en11nurngt municipalities to engage.
lit fllresti(1,111 ent•rlrriw•a.
171 To ern -outrage and cheapen
1lydro-ole frit' dreelegriri+ut seal
maintain efe•t!oe nubile control
over it.
14 1 To enact 111111 mfrs+ a Much
prohibitory t.gi4Iatfon against the
Ilqutir traffic as the people may
ea1.41I,ol in the apprsehlig refer -
prelim) nil as airs within the power
of the Province. Prohibition Is an
integre! pant of t].e Farmers' plat-
form. end the United Farmers of
(marl. will use ate influence In
that dins -flop.
194 Too extend the policy and
prattler of direct 1'gtstatiwu
pnetle• of 1 dl next legislation
ref ormolu tn.
11111 To apply the principle of
prntsortionel representation to our
ele'toral ns•thala.
Not�iing to Equal
Baby's Own Tablets.
Mrs. Alfred Naud. Natagan River,
Quebec, writes: "1 do not think there Is
any other medicine to equal Baby's Own
Tablets for littleones. 1 have nod them
for my baby and would Pse nothin else."
What Mrs. Saud says tboulsnds of other
mothers say. They have !mind by trial
that the Tablets alwatl do just what is
claimed 'ter them. The Tablets are a mild
but a thorough laxative which regulate
the bowels and sweeten the atonfach and
thus banish indigestion, constipation,
colic. colds, etc- They are sold by medicine
dealers ne by mail at 25 cents ■ box
from the Dr. Williams Mealicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
The success of the Victory loan fe
necessary to combine prosperity s ith
peace.
Fraternal societies protect their
mem-
bers by putting their surplus funds into
K IOi ■ INsf1�i tffofbtsflt)��
iii,DCOCWo A cher �•�' Sn
*XXX* rxk°icacx11 NOC a a 1000C121 -012c aXXX
•
Beautiful Dress Silk_
Oil
3E>, -inch Satin Duchess Silks, heavy weight and purest
quality, in all colors and black. Very special, per yard $2.25.
Black_... Taffeta, yard wide, our guaranteed quality.
Beautiful finish and lustre. Regular value $3.35, at per. yard
$2.50.
Dress Suitings
Genuine all -pure -wool French Gabardeens and Serges, 52 to 56 inches ,wide
quality back to the old-time standard. Browns, navys, black, greens. burgundy- and
purple, at per yard $2.50, $3.30. $3.00 and $6.00.
Floor Coverings
Balmoral Brussels Rugs. English make and seamless, extra heavy pile, and ex-
quisite colorings. Best quality throughout
2q x 3 yards $24.00 3 x 3 yards $28.00
3 x 3 1 a yards 32.00 3 x 4 yards 35.00
8,
earreaars
Ladies' Coats, and Wool
and SilkDresses
A rlagnelent and large choice from half -a -dozen
leading makers. and come direct to us from New York
city. Prices range $13.00 to $50.00.
Curtains
Eighty pairs of Scotch Madras Curtains. in a range.
of patterns. Ivory shade. Regular $4.50. at per pair
$3.00.
Gossard Corsets '
We carry all styles for all figures, Wear a Gossa
once, you will never buy another make. They lace in
front
•
Scotch F ngering
Knitting yarn 4 -ply, grey or black, 4 skeins for 89c.
e
ACHESON & SON
MO DE.L
BOOT and SHOE
REPAIR DEPOT
Orders solicited for all kinds of
Footwear Repairs
Good work and reasonable peaces
Sam'. Ward & Soo
Hamilton street (stand formerly
occupied by the late rhos. Hall
aasaapasamaaana
The Singer Store
L�.dies' and Child-
ren's Underwear a
K The New Collars
with pleated effects
just in' 1/
ji Stamped Goods R
R of all kinds for ladies' 11'
1 fancywdtk 1
1 1
• if
it A call solicited. •
II II
a MISS S. NOBLE r
■ Fant side Square ' A
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Victory bonds. 11111111131111111111
WHEN YOUR HEALTH FAILS
ALL IS LOST!
Oben your gno'1 health haves you theft you haw usargy.
ambition and the desire to slaeessd ht life.
Mega theta,:. *esti while do not batmen you and you peat
drag on frogs day to day.
Don't give up; Don't Weaken, do sot he hs.
eause other medicine. have failed to bene�fit�paaa.� ons
that will Mild Up and Strengthen the so that you will
again be Strong sod Vfgorous-
Hacking's Heart and Nave Remedy
It takes sway "that tired feeling" and brings book its ray
eheeka of your younger days.
Health. Strength aid ♦itaub' ate yours if you dein Ihesa,
get a few bozos of Backings Heart and Nerve Awd frog+
your dealer today, and gin the. a fair trial. Itis the
Tonle and Builder that will idonied when eaten have fa0ad,
arr. H. Rhisbolife of glh'tngham wenn ss feibus-
Haeklag'a Heart' and era Rowdy hes detss woman
for nse.I was on th.potato1 a Complete Meow /spa
ooeld not sleep .or pias �y household dabs.; fat id f
suffered with asy aa_dV Mines end thedoasoda
do little for �k nae['a Haar[ and Men
on the rscogs a of one of q ideals. .+ taking
the lira hoz I imPreved so mush la M.IIa Oa } I Mak dm
full treatment of pia hen.. and .ostwwball g halm
that! am able be nears bap week O eeaesfd am. 1 an
RIM that I have at last beag a mals as that has dens as
much good." •
Hashing's Hears sad Ilene away alb tee Na a boa. g kat
14110. If your Druggist dose me hamIt he all ha gle/ M la
k for you or we will he glad he stat R se yea 4 {air
paid. Iaslat on- Heade •s.
HACKING'S LIMITED.,Lalsii ivi. GIL
f •
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