Seasonable Bargains Latest Wool Boys' Men's ee Laides' Style Play and New Girls' All Wool Wind- Suits Girls ' style oun Rib Top breakers | Reg. $2.50 Hose Wind- He ty Hose Suedine ¢ 1 1 breakers say $3.95 | $1.95 C | $2.95 | _2ec (Se ate Set. Woollo . ------ Yarn : papers EAs 'Reg. 10 en's All Wool 'Style Men's To Clear White All sizes Send Wind. Odd - Broadcloth $1 00 Silk and breakers Pants 5 C Shirts = Wool Suedine . Choice Reg. $1.25 ae Hose ee | ge" | oem $3.95 $1 95 Bibi. C Kitchen 5Sc GIRLS' Reg. 65e¢ a reed Big fee ee Se, Samples ests "9 oR a oat 29C_ | sno ana | $1.00 An Wool Leggings Gloves Kiddies' long sleeves Fleeced | silk and wool Reg. $1.00 : Bacon sisi 25c rai a Vests and 50c itts fe and Reg. $1.00 oy ates Size 2 only 5Sc 25c 35c (9¢ PRICE THE WOOLLEN MILLS STORE 22 WELLINGTON STREET PHONE 2291-F I'm looking better Every day And feeling better Every way. ME FOR Cereal Blend Breakfast Food YOUR GROCER SELLS IT Cereal Blend Products Co. ST. MARYS, ONT. -_ ~Some traffic officers always lick their pencil when writing down an of- fenders name and address, and other particulars. | i ! | | Evidently to make the} ease look. blacker. i oe Easy on the eyes and easy to clean \ 25 - 40 and 60 watt ss SERRE REISE ERE gte = cappee 25c Carton of 6......... $1.40 HYore Shop Tel. 460 ervice is supreme A Stratford woman awoke her oe band the other night and told him to stop snoring. "Why, I wasn't snoring!" he said, LIEUT.-COLONEL SIMS Salvation Army Social indignantly. "I was dreaming about Commissioned officer 41 years ago. a dog and you probably heard him! (Previously attended Quakers). Serv- growling." The World Moves... So Do We Stratford Cartage We Move Pianos, Safes and Furniture By courteous and reliable men. PHONES: P, J. Sinclair : 2264 Ereicht Sheds 2.20... ST Office 837 26 ALBERT ST. GASOLINE AND OILS |}ed in England, U.S.A. and Canada. | Visited every penitentiary and large 'prison in Canada from Halifax to | Vancouver. Was delegate to Czecho- Slovakia in 1931 to the World's Prison Congress. Saturday night at 8 p.m. _will speak on "Early Day Doings of : the Salvation Army." On Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m. he | will give a lecture entitled "Looking Through Windows, or Prison and So- cial Service," in the S. A. Citadel. { | READ THE MIRROR "ADS." ! Secretary. No longer young lovers You will find For beauty must The joys that life COURAGE Now Courage was sung by the poets of old, When heroes were sturdy and valiant and bold And held it high honor to die on the field, To fight single-handed and never to yield; But round us and round us, wherever -- We go, Shines courage as brave as the ane- ients could know, Yet nobody sings it or decks it with praise, It passes unnoticed as part of our days. Yl tell you.a story: A maid that I know, Who danced and was glad in the lost long ago, The pride of the village, had lovers a score, For she was a girl that the could adore; She was gentle and true and was lovely to see And. her voice just as sweet ag the birds in the tree, And her eyes just as. clear skies when they're blue But the dream of her young life has never come true. world as the Now she lived with her mother--her father was dead-- And her mother, an her bed, And Love came beseeching her heart and her hand With all that Love offers for her to command, The home she had dreamed of, the carriage to ride, The children she hungered to have at invalid, kept to her side, , But steadfast she answered him, year after year: 2 "T never will marry while mother is here."' them together -- the mother still here, The daughter still standing to com- fort and cheer; are found at her gate, vanish and youth cannot wait. is promised -- she turned from them all To be near her whenever her mother should eall; Year after year at that bedside she's sat, And, poets, I say it takes courage for that. --Edgar A. Guest. Few Delegates Here. « With side roads throughout the district practically blocked to motor traffic many delegates to the annual Cheese Makers' Association convention in the city hall here were unable to get to the city to attend the sessions today and as 4 result the morning session was cancelled, The president, W. Krotz, said that unless more delegates arrive later in the day the after- noon and evening proceedings will be greatly curtailed. There were about twenty delegates present out of a possible seventy-five or eighty. The morning session was to have started at 10.15 o'clock and elect- ion of officers was to take place. When business starts this after- noon the exceptionally small dele- gation for an annual meeting will have to rush through the various items in order that delegates who have to leave on evening trains _ may be able to set away in time after the banguet which is to be served in the Y.M.C.A. auditorium scheduled for 6.15 o clock. THE STRATFORD MIRROR Route 1-- Huron Rd. Bus Marked-- Huron Road Leaves waiting room on hour and half-hour, 6.00 a.m. until 11.30 p.m., inc. Operate on fol- lowing streets: Waiting Room to Ontario Huron to Mornington Mornington to Britannia Britannia to Huron Huron to Huntingdon RETURNING Leaves Huron and Huntingdon 8 and 38 minutes after each hour on following streets: Huron to Avondale Avondale to Douglas Douglas to Huron Huron to Ontario and Waiting Room, arriving at Waiting Room yuarter to and quarter after each hour, and leave for Route No. 2, East End and C.N.R., with out transfer. Transfer necessary to Hospital, also Dufferin and South end. Route No. 2 -- East End and C. N. R. Bus Marked -- East End and C, N. R. Leaves Waiting Room quarter to and quarter after each hour, 6.15 a.m. until 11.15 p.m., inc., on following streets: Downie to Shakespeare (C. N. R. Depot) Shakespeare to Front Front to Douro Douro to King King to Brunswick Brunswick to Romeo Romeo to Ontario RETURNING, leaves Romeo and Ontario 22 and 52 minutes after each hour on fol- lowing streets: Ontario to Downie Downie to Waiting Room, ar- rivine on hour and half hour, and proceeds to Route No, 1, Huron Road, without transfer. Transfer necessary to Hospital route, also Dufferin and South end route, Route 3 -- Dufferin and South End Bus Marked-- Dufferin St. Leaves Waiting Room on hour and half hour, 6.00 a.m. until 11.30 p-m., ine. Operates on fol- lowing streets: Waiting Room to Erie via George St. Erie to Chestnut Chestnut to Walnut Walnut to Dufferin RETURNING leaves Dufferin and Walnut 5 and 35 minutes after hour, via following streets: Dufferin to West Gore W. Gore to Home Home to Brydges.~ Brydges to Norfolk Norfolk to Front Front to E. Gore E. Gore to Nile Nile to Shakespeare (C.N.R. Depot.) Shakespeare to Downie, arriv- ing at waiting room at quarter to and quarter after each hour and proceeds to Route No. 4 Hospital, without transfer. Transfer necessary to Huron Road Route and East End and Cities Bus ServiceCo.,Limited WAITING ROOM AND OFFICE--100 DOWNIE ST. Phone 319 The Following is the Schedule of Times and Routes of all Buses Daily Except Sunday--Service from 6 o'clock a.m, until 11.30 p.m. inclusive Route No. 4 -- Hospital Route Bus Marked -- Hospital Leaves waiting room quarter to and quarter after each hour 6.15 a.m. until 11.15 p.m. inclu- sive, on following routes: Waiting Room to St. Patrick via George Street St. Patrick to Church. Church to Cambria Cambria to Hospital Returning leaves Hospital 22 and 52 minutes after each hour, via: Cambria to Birmingham Birmingham to W. Gore W. Gore to Church Church to St. Patrick St. Patrick to George (Waiting room). Arriving at waiting room on hour and half hour, proceeding to Route No. 3 Dufferin St. and South End without transfer. Transfer necessary to Huron Road Route, also East End and C. N. R. Route, C. N. R. Route, FARES: TRANSFERS FREE 10 Cents Cash Fare . aay oe er ae eS 3 16 tickets for $1.00-- 8 tickets for 50c-- 20 School tickets for $1.00 -- Children 5 to 12 yrs. age, 5c. Buy Tickets -- Save Money. 4 tickets for 25c¢ EFFICIENT AND DEPENDABLE SERVICE ALWAYS It's Cheaper To Ride Than Drive! Makes Sensational Disclosures One could not help be struck by the frequency with which sentiments re- flecting a new outlook on war were | expressed in services throughout many of the nations which took part in the last war ,as they honored their war dead on November 11. It is a sentiment born of the realization that the last war was not a war to end | war, and that it is not always ideals which are at stake, 'but rather, big profits for international rings of manufacturers of armaments and other implements of destruction. | scripted, the same as man power, the \likelihood of future wars would be "very slim indeed, | Who can wonder at the growing feeling that the last war was largely a commercial war, in the fact of start- in practically every European country since? | Some of the most sensational dis- |closures have come from France, from the pen of Monsieur Paul Allard, pro- ;minent French publicist, who was chief censor during the war. Monsieur | Allard has stated publicly that French Allied soldiérs. Germany was so short | of these materials, he claims, that she | would have had to sue for peace. | Frech firms very obligingly came t 'the rescue, with the full knowledge of ,the Secod uBreau, a branch of the} | | | ' ling disclosures which have been made |returned in the Frech military intelligence service. The excuse given for allowing the sale of these materials, which were form of explosives which killed hundreds of thousands lof French soldiers was that the agents for the company, while negotiating in Germany, might pick up valuable in- formation. The real reason, though, was for the gold, for which France gave the flower of her manhood. Monsieur Allard also states that the One local minister was quoted as | firms supplied-the grease and oils with |only victor in the war was the Comite having said that if wealth were con-| which munitions were made to kill | des Forges, the international steel |huge profits which trust, which had both French and German capitalists on its board of dir- o ,ectors. His statements haven't been denied, and there hasn't been a protest raised against them. The reason is, appar- ently, that he "knows whereof he speaks, and has documentary evi- dence to back up his statements. The Comite des Forges still exists. It is still international--more interna- tional than ever. Is it reasonable to believe that this gang of ruthless money barons is .satisfied with the were __--i realized when the world was drencheqd in blood two decades ago? eS at