The Seaforth News, 1917-08-23, Page 1.>< H-)X&eG.
fit td W 'Dealers
Phone 50
j New Series Vol. Ig, No, 34
SEPIFO TH, oNTPIRIIe, THURSDAY, AUCOST 23 117
SECTION WORK
Nice easy work A child could almost do
the work. come and take one Section as
follows
5 girls to put in hip pockets.
5 girls to put in side,; pockets.
5 girls to make garters.
5 girls to loin garments together.
3 girls to sew on bands •
and one or two girls to inspect work.
We also want 25 or 3o girls for pants
making. All nice clean work and easy and
steady ail year round. 5o horS per week
We have girls making over ten dollars a
week. Why can't
Apply or Write to
W. E. SANDFORD MFG. CO.
Fred Robinson, Manager
Seaforth Ontario
of
j Plit'T'�I 39
RESTAURANT AND CONFECTIONER.'
An up-to-date Restaurant in town for
good meals, lunches and homemade'eandy
Special Regular Dinner every Saturday
Fresh Fruits of all kinds always on hand.
Our home made Dandies always the best,
Chocalates, Carmels. Bon -Bons & Taffies a
specialty.
Having installed an up date plant foe making
ICE CREAM
TRV IT
OLYMPIA RESTUARANT
next door to tvardnos : ros
estern F tint
London Canada
Se__Pt7th to 15th 1917
18o7—'A half Century of success" -1917
The Great Agricultural Exhibition
of Western Ontario
$32,000,000 in Prizes and Attractions
A very interesting programmo, inluding Military and tho other
feathers—TWICE DAIIY
FIREWORKS EACH NIGHT
TWO SPEED EVENTS DAILY
REDUCED RAILWAY RATES
?race Lists, Entry Forma and all information from the Secretary.
Lieut.- Col. W. M, Gartshoro, A, M, Bunt
President Secretary
Y
Poultry;Creeders, Attention
Experimental Farms Notes
At the present time when growing
chicks are attaining all age from one
ten weeks, a dinettes (known as Coo.
oidiosia) affecting the liver and bowels.
is causing considerable losses. This
disorder according so Dr,' Wickware
of the Experimental Far '1 is quite
prevalent throughout Canada and is
probably responsible for many deaths
at present attributed to White diarr-
hoea,. The disease is caused by a small
egg-shaped germ which inhabits the
first portion and blind pouches of the
bowels,,, Itproduoee inflammation of
the bowels and liver, the blind pouches
showing the most marked alteration.
The changes in the latter may vary
franc a filling up with a reddish gran-
ular looking m:ss of soft consistency
to hard cords composed of lining cella,
blood etc. The liver may show changes
varyingfrom a fairly normal appearance
to large areas of yellow ooh, which
when cut into a cheese like centre.
SYMPTOMS; The chicks appear dull
and isolate themselves from the remain.
der usually remainiug in the hover or
under the hen. The feathers become were won on the fields of battle where
raffled; wings droop; appetite islost and l sleep the vanguard of Canada's army of
occasionally the chi ks will give utter- national defence—the noble youths who
she is ] the Vesssnvius of Nations,very
American ought to road the narrative
of Canadian sacrifice and Canadian
heroism, It is an epic Odell Homer
might have been proud to tell, We
confese that, when we compare this
splendid entlmsinsm, this 'pager de
votion, this nnqueetioned and reaguifi-
oent courage and unselfishness with
eer'tain manifestations of American fn.
difference, half heartedness, acid oaten.
sating prudence, we feel a sense of
humiliating moral inferiority.
Some fool Americans before the war
used to talk about annexing Canada
and extending to it the blessings of
Republican government. Unlese we
raise ourselves to the the spiritual
level of these groat-souled people, the
best thing that could happen us would
be to get Canada to annex ns, But we
hope these letters will thrill our hearts
with admiration, and will stir us to a
generous emulation, To be a Can-
adian must bo, for the next generation
of least, equivalent to being one of the
elect of the earth."
Clanadiana at home must live up to
thie record, It is a record which has not
been made by the Government or by
Parliament, or by the millions of Can-
adians who live iu comparative ease
and security within their borders re-
mote from the thnnderingreveberations
of the guns, This record and this fame
Isereseessreessersetesents
36,000
IAR VESTGRS WANTED
$12.00 TO Plus Half a Cent per Mile beyond to any
WINNIPEG
Station East of Calgary, Edmonton or Bur-
bank, Alta,
Return Fare Half a Cent per Mile to Winnipeg till November 30th, 1917,
plus $ 18,00 10 Original Starting Point,
SPECIAL THROUGH TRAINS WILL LEAVE
TORONTO UNION STATION
1.0,00 P, M, AUGUST 23rd and 80th,
The Beat Equipment and Lunch Counter Care
Electric Lighted Colonist Oars -
Special Aoeoommodation' for Women •
Per Tickets and Leaflets showing number of laborerslog111red nt each point apply
CHAS, A, ABERHART, Town Agent;
or write General Paeeenger Dept, tI,'N, 12, , Toronto, Ont.
0000 to a shrill cry, particularly when
trying -to pass material from the bowels
A white discharge is usually present al.
though it may bei rather reddish in
celour and the vent may become past-
ed with the material discharged
These are the prommeut symptoms 10
typical oases but chicks may also be
badly affected and exhibit uo outward
appearenoe of disease until death sud-
denly takes place,
for a perilled heritage
"In some divine awakenining caught,
Set it against all dream and joy,
And died in rapture at the thought''
Toronto Globe, July 26
TREATMENT— Treatment consists
in dissolving fifteen grains of powdered
Gatecbu in a gallon of drinking water
This should he kept constantly in front
of the chicks and should be changed
every two days.
PREVENTION—Prevention consists
in the isolation of all ailing chicks
from the remainder of the dock and the
thorough disinfection of all the quar-
ters and runs, which may be accomp-
lished by the application of a lineewash
solution made by adding two and one-
half pounds of stone limo to a pail of
water, to which is also added one-half
a teacupful of a good commercial disin-
fectant. This 'should be applied full
strength with a spray pump, brush or
old broom, to all parts of the quarter0,
brooder housee, oto. The feeding
troughs sdould be cleansed daily by
scalding with boiling wataf and epeoitil
e.ire taken to prevent the chioke from
getting their feet Dither in the feeding
utensils or drinking fountains as the
disease is transmitted irorn bird to bird
in this way. The floor of the brooder
houses should be covered with a coat-
ing composed of nine parte of sand and
one part of air•alaked lime, and if the
dropping are not removed daily, they
should at least be mixed with a fair
amount of air.slaked lime to insure
proper disinfection,. If the runs aro
not too large, it is also advisable to
cover them with a thin coating of the
above mentioned lime and either spade
or plough therm up, The chicks should
be kept away from all adult fowls and
onrcasses of dead birds immediately
burned as burying only serves to keep
the infection going from year to year,
The Influence of Canada
Lieut. Arthur S. McLean
Shot/. He suffered no pain. He was loifonofvrttiefor you to lfnow Ghat he was not
buried by the C1laplain of our liatta• tosufferase0rnauyunerlion,owounds,Althoughdoad h.e lives in the memory
of his officers, N, 0. Os and comrades 1 God bless you!
of his company as one of the truest Yours faithfully
soldiers of our pause,
Charles W. Hadley
Once again I retell to atsure you of Chaplain.
my sympatay in your bereavement. 1
I remain, - BIRTHS,
Yours sincerely, UNDERWOOD—On Aug. 501,1017, in
Major G. M, Orr McKillop, to Mr, ane( Mrs, George
Underwood, a eon,
Dear Mre, Nealy.—
You will no doubt have beard odic
folly long before this reaches you of
the death of your son .Pte. A, 0. Neely
of the 58th Battalion No 654417 who
killed by Serapnel in our advance on
June 24th and buried next day in our
little Cemetery at Chaudiere near Vimy
He played his part well in a splendid
advance by our brigade iu an important
area and gave hie life for the cause,
It is the inevitable Dost of victory—
she cost of the redemption of this land
and our whole world, from the horrors
of war, the saorifioo and service he
made is an offering wo are sure accept-
able to Our Lord, the Prince of Peace.
He has passed into a wider, happier
sphere of service in God's infinite unl•
verse to a reward beyond anything this
earth could give.
It ie terribly sad, the loss of such
men, but I feel that the loss is ours, not
theirs, For you who have lost such a
eon our sympathy goes cot and we pray
that God iu His Infinite love will grant
you every Comfort and Consolation in
your bereave•neut It will be some nom -
Word was received on Saturday by
Mrs, Sarabel McLean that bar son,
Lieut, Arthur Smith McLean., had died
of wounds on August ]5th, When war
broke out he was living Western Can-
ada, but returned looms• and enlisted'
with the 33rd Battalion and for a time
trained in London before going over-
seas, which he did in 1915, After go-
ing to the front, he was wounded in the
fall of 1916 and spent four months in
the hospitals of England. He recover-
ed and went again to the front and
took part in several engagements.
Lieut. McLean was born here and was
a son of the late M. Y, McLean,
The influence of Canadian patroitism
has been far•reaohing. The Batimore
Sun has this to say of Canada—that "it
is an honour to live next door to her;
Blood le thicker than water. Our
American cousins were quick to grasp
the significance of Canada's response
to the challenge of Germany. Our
victories were their victories, When
Canada won fame they cheered with
the best of tis, and felt it an honor to.
live next door to us, The Baltimore- F, J. Simmons.
Sun reflects the close and friendly re-
lations that now subsist between the,
Republic and the Dominion; f Dear Madam—
It is with very sleep regret I write to
yen to inform you of the death of -your
the Snow,' but the story which our eta most gallant eon Pte. A. C. Neely,
correspondent is tolling of her war re•who'died on tho field of battle during
oord shows that when her pride, her an attack by our Battalion, He was
yalty, and bet nffeotiotte aro enlisted natantly killed by a High hfl*ploeivol,
CONDOLENCE
Mrs. Neely has received the follow-
ing letters from friends of her sou who
was killed at the front,
No, 654884
"C" Coy.
58 Batt,
13, E. F, France.,
Dear Mrs, Neely; -
Long before you get tide you will
have heard the sad news that your eon
was killed in notion about Julie 27111.
(I am not pertain of of the exact date.)
Although I know that by writing this
note I am going: to bring back sad
memories to you, I feel it is my duty to
do so.
"Coon" wee killed by shrapnel but
died instantly, suffering no pain, We
parried his body back behind the lines
and and buried him in a small
cemetery, I am enclosing two cards
that were taken off his body.
As a bomber he was liked by eAery
ono for he was always 00 bright and
cheery and willing to do his share of
the work, and all hie old chums join in
sending you their deepest sympathy.
Rest assured, dear Mrs, Neely, that
your son died doing his duty and for
the most just Dense that this world has
ever known,
Out here we are anxiously looking for
the end of this terrible business but un-
til that
n•til-that time comes we are quite de-
termined to carry on and make the
Hun pay dearly for the misery that he
has caused. It gives lite great pain to
write:this note, Mrs. Neely, but I
feel that it is my duty to do so seeing
that I was always your late son's 010-
oore friend,
DONNELLY—On August 7th, in Taok-
ersmith, to Mr and Mrs Jae Dannelly,
a daughter.
SHERWOOD-0n August 11th, in
Tnckoremith, to Mr and Mrs M
Sherwoo 1, a son,
McGILL—On Aug. 12th, in McKillop
to Mr. and Mrs, Byron McGill, a son
BURNS—On August 19th, in Hibbert
to Mr, and Mr's. John Burne, a son
FRENTIN—Iu Clinton, on Angnst 15
to Mr. and Mrs. B. Frentiu, a son
DEATHS.
HILL—In Clinton on Auguet 13111,
Bayard Hill aged 73.
McLEAN—In Goderich, August 6th
Donald McLean. aged 60,
GIBSON—In McKillop, Aug. 19th,
rgr7, Mrs. Matilda Gibson, aged 92
years,
GEMMEL—AtEgmondville, on Aug.
2lst, Mrs, Thomas Gemmell, aged 78
years.
t" u •, if .,o', . .
--W, TO BOX St tea
EMRALMLRO Arta
arUNltftdf, 11fAXOTORti
H. 1L', BDX
50110rs o1 flea, rngrn4,hll* an And
Meana -00 vote' I:•40rrlma'ra
Phones 1't',ro Q ��M list
------- 71••?-w-.,sta:o..
$1.00 pe
ye*1t
3
Gradi,al'io n
Gifts
Sow that (Initiation Wits arc
0 order and something really
useful, durable, and beautitu:
is being sought for to mark the
p1-'asaut occasion we would ung•
ge,t that most desirable el all
gilts tora a lady "A Wrist
Watch" to the 7,iuntr mar a
Wrist or Pocket 11'atelt, Tike
price for _ither is
17 Ue and ,,nerd -
Make that Graduation Gift ai watoh
the memories of the occasion wilt
live with thewateh—far alive time
Jr>�b . Oamat t 1
Oacrra0a0 un
Oatt8UtW cot 'tl]lirrlt1
zar4;,crmricro unit 090101ans
dllarriage License Issuers
PHONE 194
Evening r0
The store you :will alwa s
i like
'rg1M..j_TEIMMwe
samffmsar'sa am cc 3a f g, .
MACTAV ISH'S
Better in quality, lower in price
ARE ON DISPLAY AT OUR STORE
Every woman who likes to see the newest
FALL creations of fashion will enjoy
looking at these two garments.
Superb in style
Unexceilad in Quality
And Unusually
Reasonable in Prices
In New Models will be Found in Our Early
SHOWING OF AUTUMN STYLES
(tome in Tit day
and Se " T` ,ern
TRV ON SOME
You'll Surelp Find Just
What You Like
Wanted litij
Butter
Seaforth
Eggs
Wanted