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The Goderich Star, 1926-08-19, Page 2• • IBI 1 oM11M.+.. 1.1•••A-•11.0 1111 11 11 11 VIM 01. mum a •IIbI I 0.11111.1 l •Irrw•• I. ,qu ••,•„II .I, VIII. L,, MM OW .OM III.61.MI It 1. 1 11.II1 III1 .i••••1lw4w1m.u. A mr.4 i+rwii 1 m nrr11R4111e NO 1 I1- NNW ma • AN a E EW -•.- - y ' BU (Bloc s* 93avies in.i� 4. Setacation' In i'ancoun er T'riners w:to, he said, were not living ,connection with the British coal The campaign of Non. H. 0. St"' r at the address given, and of whom he strike. Following the rejection of tile crs in North tiancotver has provided swore he had personal knowledge. ,Bishops' plan by the mimes, an ap- ire most sensational development so Evidence of several of the peaple"on peal was made by A. J. Cook, the far in the election campaign. In ad• the list he submitted resulted in his miners' leader, to the government, tc clition to the accusation levelled detention. It is admitted that Dug -,(101 another meeting. It is said both angafnst him, that his evidence in the old Donaghy, Mr. Stevens' opponent government and mine owners are de. Customs campaign was secured by is giving the Minister of Customs a termined not to treat with Cook, , underhand means, which was denied close fight in his constituency .ind whose utterances have put him be. ley R. 1'. Sparks of the Commercial that, had the names been removeei 'wend the pale, so far as they axe eon- Protettive Association, there were there would be no doubt of Mr. Sten-` eer red over the week -end the arae {•f ned. This conviction of the irre- ere' election. cernsfbiiitY of took is ead[ng Amos C. 'Fe:aquson, accused of per -1 A,l;hrn.;h many estimates have among his fellow labor leaders, and• jury as a consequence of his cffo: t tc bees, tirade a the probable result* of Cook, quick to catch the tenor of pas. have removed from the cote.^s' list: tee election next month, the situation ° sing •events, made a whirlwind speak. four thousand names of Conner etive + is od;,r;ttedly a puzzling one, end ing tour over the week -end and plead. %there ere many who fear that in spite' ed with the strikers not to repudiate of the public "s fervent desire for a de-, him, "Discredit me and you discre• BOILS PAINFUL , , cisiv. • settlement, the result of the,die your cause," he told them. Al a :.:- .'er. my not lis much more eat - ready the men in one of the South OEM tetra CAWS. EVir:.: tu: ; than the last one. ( Wales fields have made their own I During his British Columbia visit settlement on the 8 -hour -day' basis. Mose pimple" sad bails appear On Mr. Ifing has denounced his oppon• Men in other trades who joined the She free tad body it seams as is the ents'attitude towari?e the united general'strike are handling and using s>Ria were the seat of the trouble, but States. He draws attention to the imported coal without a protest. Un- tiae real cans Of these diseases lies tourist trade by which Canada is now fortenately the coal imp;.rtations are Iia tate limparite, of tke blood, fliers- profiting and declared that Conrerva- threatening to affect sterling ex - tom you mast get tinder the skin; rt tive references to the Republic to the change. In spite of this, observers as the bleed aid it. South "do not foster good will." He -.profess to see in Britain signs of deprecates the hostility it will pro- coming industrial expansion that duce, and says: "If this campaign is promises prosperity for that greatly kept Waking these lines, I intend to harrassed kingdom. British industry have much to say about ft during the, is all set for a great forward stride next fewegeeks." Both, party leaders the minute the, coal strike ends. are now in the mountain province end Garnet Peoves Its Worth will work their way back aeross the The prairie provinces to the east. Hon. early qualities claimed for the Charles Dunning is carrying on a vie- nee/ Garnet wheat is being proved in orous campaign in Ontario, carrying practical grain growing this year. the •war into the Conservative camp. It vele ready to tut ten days earlier He is said to be one of the best Drat» than Marquis and Marquis in turn is gas to ,p root of the ills- ors in the campaign and is making a ten- days earlier than Red Fife. ease and restores healthy, normalvery good impression upon. eastern These two grains have moved ahead maim to the different organs, and ai:aiirnees whose acquaintance he is the harvest time for the benefit of cleanses the blood of all its impar- making for �tho first time. northern farmers the wbole of twen- ty days. . trine (tae Limited, Toronto, Ont. ,World's Greatest Mr Pioneer • PIMPLES UNSIGHTLY IAD BLOOD Eitanufaetured only by The T. Mil- ' Cook to be Repudiated • Events show a little more action in Alan Cobham has earned for him - SHETLAND PONY FREE Votes will be given out up to Saturday Night -AUGUST 28th and ,ballot box : will be open at Model Theatre up to MONDAY NIGHT; AUG. 3Oth, fo r deposit of ballots. Rememberthere is a Second Prize of, EIGHTEEN -DOLLARS and a 'Third. Prize of TWELVE .DOLLARS,' Cash 'Just a week and two days lett but .)ou can get a lot of votes in that time. .. The following stores will give you votes on cash purchases and cash paid on accounts of twenty-five pcents. and up. Ask for them. THE S. A. GRAY CO., ' ea Drygoods and LadiesWear. E. G. SMITH, Bakery CRAIGIE BROS., Tobaccos and Billiard Room FRED HUNT, 4Hardware . W. REG. SHARMAN, Boots and Shoes STURDY'S 'CASH GROCERY, Groceries and Fruit GEO. W. SCHAEFER, Groceries. HURON MOTOR. SALE1 ........._.. Garage, Gasoline and Oils 'THE GODERICH STAR, Newspaper Subscriptions. self the reputation of beingthe chief of this world's airmen in consistent service to -the cause of aviation end in the continuous performance of pract- ical feats of aviation. His • magnifi- cent flights from Engin/el to various parts of the Empire have beeri in the natero, eof. __pioneering .royages to prove the practical value of'Imperial air routes. He has arrived: in Aus- tralia, having completed one half 'of a voyage to prove that aerial com- munication withthe far distant dom- inion is within the realm of practical business. He' was greeted by' 75,000 people. His plane was in as good condition as when ` it took off from England. Two other notable Imper- ial flights were his round trip' from Epgland to India and the round trip' from England to South Africa. ; Debt Cancellation. Rumors afloat in France are to the effect that a general cancellation of debts is not far distant, but that at a, preliminary .France must .accept the British and United States settle- ments now before the Deputies. Whether this is a hope with which the French encourage themselves to - face the practical financing of the settlements er whether it is hased upon sound information, has not yet appeared. It is said that the plan is to wipe out all debts and reparations except four billion dollars of German railway and industrial:bonds. Com- plete cancellation of debts and repar- ations would leave Germany debt free, while the allies struggled with domestic war debts, In this event Britain would be by far the greatest sufferer, but that country has a stand- - ing offer, to meet just such a proposal _ as soon as the United States steps in. to lint Several billion dollars world be sacrificed by Brittain to .achieve this settlement and start Europe out on a firm financial basis once more. Trees Transform Manitoba The conquest of, Man over Nature has never been more forcibly demon- strated than in Manitoba, where the nature of the country is being demo. ed" by tree planting. The immensity of the . campaign can be imagined when it is raid that, five and a half million seedlingsand cuttings were set out this past spring alone. Twen- ty..five Aare has passed sine, the first distribution of about 60,000 seedling!. began, in 1901, The distribution in. creased to nearly, half a million in 1916 and during the past ten, years the distribution has ;varied between four and a half and live and a half millions anniaallye All told, 80,300 farms have received 87,205,000 tree&, The value of trees to the farmer can- not be estimated. They help to pre- serve moisture in the soil, provide shelter belts and add in no small mea- sure to the beauty and comfort of farm homes. .thea Welland Canal in 19311 The Welland Canal will be in use in. the season of 1930, it is hoped and believed. Thla immense engineering e project, costing Canada 015,000,000, t 1111111 MM.....,r mi m•••Y A1osimonammomM11111ai1N neag 1 Wiwi tY+111111 IIS r Win sat dews the tier between Lake Erse and Labe Oaalario front fifteen or tartness hears to eight /hours. The ship tra/e between these likes is increasing rapidly evil year and there is urgent reed for the new wst- eniesy. 11e Was a $easter Boosting for his home town war the reason given by Martin Nyhaus, of Cold Lake, AWetits, who is alleged to have tonfessed to padding the vot- ers' lists in the last elsctkrn. He said that the district needed railways and higba ays, and would not get them unless the population seemed bigger than it really was. Seeing Tltrongh the Air It is four years since radio broad, casting first passed out of the exper- intentsl stage into practical use. The strides made since then should pre- pare the mind for almost any other seemingly ntrrtculdne discovery, and so there is little excitement over the. announcement that the first license has been issued for wireless television. J. L. Baird ir,.tlie inventor of this re- markable instrument by which pic- tures are projected through space. He has established communication between his city home in ,London and his country home in Harrow, nine miles away. The transmitter h a complicated' -collection of tubes and, lenses, light cells and revolving shut, tern, but the transmission is by ordin- ary radio aerial. Canadian Enterprise The Canadian genius for engineer. ing has been forcibly demonstrated with the completion of a great .pipe line for the conveyance of oil' from the wells of the International Petrol. eum Co. in !Columbia, to the seaboard The arrival of, the first shipload of this oil at Montreal, representin about four days' supply from the wells was the. signal for congratula- tions. Canadian .-capital and Cana- dian enterprise has provided a great supply of crude oil for Canadian re- quirements. WON THE KIMG'S PI21Zl Sergt. Fulton, winner of the ,King's Prize at"Bisley, "chaired" .after his victory. . GAINED 10 POUNDS IN -22 DAYS That's , going some -but skinny men, women and children just can't help putting on good healthy flesh when they take McCoy's °Cod Liver Extract Tablets. Chock full ofvitamins--•the kind that are extracted grow the livers of the cod -the kind that are a real help to frail, rundown anaemic, •akitny men and women. Try these sugar coated tasteless tablets for 30 days -if they don't help greatly get your money back. One woman gained ten pounds in twenty-two days. Sixty tablets, six- ty cents. Ark any druggist for Me- Coy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets. Directions and formula on each box. "Get McCoy's, the original and genuine:' Our Weekiv Lessons inEnglish By W'' L. Goteion Words Often Minna Don't say "it had happened before I had seen her." gay "before l taw her.' Don't say""there was a deadly pal- lor on hie face." Say "deathly pal- lor." Don't say "let you and Iplay." Say ,"you and me." Don't say "It 10 very unique;' or "most unique." "Unique" means the only one of its kind and should not be qualified. Don't say "it was most excellent"h or "very exeellent.' "Excellent" is mooth SO lesease 44V�� r a te:s:41 nu les u IAs y111iY� to poen et bow we.Awl we It elfored brrarimm.62•9 eirtseDia *dm t umnenau lualp *title an at ma eesase eget ae m a sa •• • elera isaat to rinti suer*� male* heeler, ra1a11em Lewwt 1'yMe /er uwesuer* we iw 411, ...i1.4„lest m e1t� ititatt �ite/11t a1N+11 AN Mao ee ?aeewr Glaaro rs:ixe:a " s for icetww bowl Tvle*a to tion Huron Motor Sales 1" fi= &ira,i�r.wis ,siuwwat 01141141 a superlad and shook not be a valii lied. Don't say "the balance of the day i was devoted to athletiesa." Say "rest of the day." Weeds Oftenigispasamateed Forum. Pronouns the o as in "four," not as in "or." Hum+tae. Soasnd the b, pronounce the u as in "unit," a as in "name," accent last syllable. Heretic. Pronounce first e as in "bet," second s unstressed, i is in "it" accent the r. Regular. Pronounce reg -u -lar, not reg -lar. Iowa. Pronounce the i as in "tie," o as in "no," a as in "ask," accent on the i. Salmon. Pronounce sae -un, the a as in "am." Words Often Miaaltelled Possessor; four a's. Achieve. Re- servoir. Repartee. Requiem. Obli, que. Synonyms 1 Account„ story, narrative, report, tale, recital, relation, description. Scare, terrify, frighten, alarm, in- timidate. dismay. Rebellious, disobedient, insubordin- ate, intractable, refractory, ungov- ernable, Hesitate, vacillate, fluctuate, oscil- late, swerve, vary, waver. Enemy, foe, antagonist, opponent, rival, adversary, Criterion, ' rule, test, standard, proof, measure. Word Study . "Use a} word three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabu- lary by mastering one word each day. Words for this lesson: MORALE; state of mind with re- ference to confidence, 'courage, etc. "We must maintain the morale of the army." INTERVENE; . to come between; interfere;' interpose.. '4Several years intervened before my hopes were ful. filled." . EXEMPLIFY; to illustrate by ex- ample. "It was an act which exem- plified his characteristic habit," .ADHERE; to sick fast. "I intend to adhere to, my purpose, regardless of difficulties. • • DESTINY; inevitable necessity; fate;, decree, "These conditions seem to foretell my destiny." PROCLAIM; to announce aloud or in a public manner,• "His many good deeds are proclaimed by his follow- ers." . CANADIAN NATIONAL RY: TRAIN SERVICE to TORONTO Danny Except. Sunday. Lye. Godericb 6.00 a.m. 2.20 p.m. Clinton 6 25 a4m. 2.52 p.rp. " Seaforth 6.41 a.m. 3.12• p.m, . Mitchell 7.04 a.m. 3.42 p.m. Arr, Stratford 7.30 a.m, 4.10 p.m. Kitchener 8:20 a.m. • 5.20 p.rn: " Guelph 8.45 a m. 5.5C1p.m. Toronto. 10.10 a,m. 7.30 Pan. Retaining- Leave Toronto 6.45 a.m., 12.55 p.m, and 605 p.m. Parlor Cate car, Gocerich to Tor. onto, on morning train; and . Toronto to Goderich 6.05 p. m. train. Through coach Goderieh to Toronto F. F. LAWRENCE & SONS Town Passenger and Tickets Agent,. 'Phone 8, +ar • .i.,I l.1 _ _ 1XLlIffinah t, AVGU$? 1904 1946 Early .housing of FALL GOODS FALL HATS FALL CAPS FALL SHIRTS SLICKERS GOLF HOSE GOLF KNICKERS • VJNDB'1E S FALL SUITINGS ARE IN! Come and See Them CHAS. BLACK. The Leading Tailoring and Men's Smart Wear Store Phone 219 FALL FAIR DATES. Toronto -Aug. 28 --wept. 11 Goderich--Sept. 8.1Q London -Sept. 11-18 Stratford -Sept. 20-22 Exeter --Sept, 2i -2,p Listowel -Sept. 21-22 Seaforth-Sept. 23-24 Lucknow Sept. 23-24 Blyth -Sept, 22-23 Kincardine -Sept. 23-24 North Side Square 1. I Bayfield -Sept. 28-29 I Mitebell-Sept. 28-29- !Brussels-Sept. 8-21aBrussels-Sept. 30 -Oct. 1 Zurich ---Sept. 30 -Oct. 1 Dungannon --(let. 7-8 IV/Ingham-Oct. '7-8 Children Cry • ' FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA• Protect Your Sdmmer Cottage From Fire! Underwriter* give lower insurance rates on summer cottages roofed with Brantford "-'Aipt *It Sl*tesbecause t11eyerefire-resistant, and cannot be ignited - • by burning shingles or seee' 'A- -flying embers. 19 1 4 t. uG ro®ri irsilwsaara Mar AMR l�#I4 i Am.. .rectos*Mie11111 �. q .aeasaly�roma, maw ask I P. �11.: tl.l ■■■ , I.. .a I L i�r,l i ,Y ,,. OnlivItcoraMolli4Cahaiteal Brantford, Ontario 'Smock. Carried, Information Furnished and Service ANA efnBrsntford Roofing rendered .by W. M. McLean - - - Goderich• i gniguirmaggenactemmezzontsEnnioncimumnrimmtlemo kJ 1 4. 4. 4. 1 4. 4. 4, •4• 4. 4. •4. 4. 4, 9' 4. .4. 3. i 1911-1926 • BINS 15th Anniversary ALE--- 1911-1926 CONTINUES UNTIL AOGUST28th Here are a few more Specials for This Week 0111111111111011111 e 10 Dozen Boys' Jerseys Brown and Navy, Nary and Bed, and Navy and Green, all siren, 15th An. Z1riw niversary Speei*l i� 10 Dozen Men's Black ick and Blue Overalls Made of Henry Denim. 15th ..slime Anniversary Special slime e3Dozen Men's Khaki Pants and Smocks • Made of heavy Deck, Peach Pockets and doable knees. Beg. $3.00. ties. lath Asaniversery Special Men's Cotton Bathing Suits One piece, with shirt, in contrasting colors, all sizes. 15th Anniversary ....i $ ite • 60 Pairs Men's Heavy Work Shoes In Brown or Black. 16th Anni-OA•41�t versary Special.... e4l Men's Merino Underwear Shirts and Drawers, sista 36 to 44 Anniversary Special, per garment M. ROBINS • i