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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1918-05-16, Page 44 PROPESStONAL ettRDS _ MEDICAL DB, n, I V(Ul 1tQd8, P4Ybt918nand aurgaea .Bps esti attentio94to (Pleases or Nye, 't n Nogg andeebreet, QMSe and residence behI4d DominionWally. Oflle 1 hone No. •r Bes dears Phone No, ieh pi; k, J, el'ltitovfb eoafortit odiee and r tdensee Goderleli !street, east et tho Meth odid Church, eorriner for County of Buren Telephone > to, refire b+ 1' s elanKAV, Pllyatclaaa and R.FSurgeona. ‘3uderielt Street, opposite Mettto• Cher !t ',perm, Secee gen.:esteVietorie and Alto Artier, end MemberrfU"ORIo PAWS() el Plirsielens And Surgeons, Coroner .0 County at Huron. surges honor gradnat°Trinity University, gold miielht iluneleaLurllege. elember nbg„ t nlln {re. nHiala d hildrenett11di.,eniQeaand Bheumalr troub;ee. Aeuto aad chitin& disord Adenoid re- • N 1I11Throat era, Ear, her, move i t{hh>nr the Iuh r'on duuiall Erne. !loyal note) 're Way,-: 1-111, t1o en.eFridev $ e.niu; agar Marriage Licenses ahinpitby JOBS lldiwea Marriage u earth Insurance ]liyou argait ree,lalpoaltem d will get IneuraticLIN or cddeotr our mut.. J. D. HINeI4I,RY, Gen oral Aeene for Landon Life Insurance Co,, I and Witmer.] Guariatee and Accident li e:ranee Co, Seeforth, Ont. fames Watson General Fire, Lire cud Acetdent Insurance Agent, and dealer in Hewing efachlnea. Main Street. Rearm] h, THE iMcKILLOP MAW Fara insurance Co Farre and isolated Town Property Only insured. OFFICERS Jas. t'nuotly, i;nderit h, President, James Evaue. nerchw000, Vlce•President, Taomas Hags, Neaforth, sec. -Treat'. Directors D. F. McGregor, Seoforth• John G. Grieve, Wlntrop W. Rion, Constance; yobs BenneweLi. Srodehagen; Robert Ferris, 'Harlock; Malcom Me exon, Clinton; O McCartney Seetorth; Aimee Connolly. Goderlch: Jae. Evans, Beechwood. Agents. Alex. Leitch, Radecki E. Hinckley. Seaforth• William Chesney Egmondvllle; J. W. Yee Hlelmesvalel R. d. Jarmouth, Brodhagen; Jame Kar and John Govenlock. Seeforth. andiron'. Parties desirous to effect Insurance cc Crane -e: other buolnees will be p omptty attended to b. application to any of the above officers. address N their reopectlee poata$ieea. E f.Jilt* 41664.5 117®.25 Cts f ierh4 &IIdITBf •—f ' 'sSOtleyo o,CitICIIARe5dt4 �. ,The Original and Only Genuine eware of Imitations Sold on the Merits of Minard's Liniment for Sale SCRANTON COAL W. E. !TY, ScaPo'tti. Phone 180 A Business Without a proper systm of adver- tisin is like a motor without the power 4.4. Se $forth News ADVERTISI.r1ENTS will supply the required energy pllAtte - 34 evenings127 it eww.lra"rr.r,• laVol AGAR DM j suascUUPTIQN IS ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY Froth the Office MAIN ST. - SEAFORTH, ONT.. Phone 84 Itreniag 117 One dollar ngr year, stricter he ad v a nee It not peed in edvante, one dollar and a boll will be chervil. Milted Rhues papers, fifty rents extra, scrlekty In ee veneer, When sabacribers chaange their address natke should be sot 1u immediately, giving both the old and the new addree,. Sub- reribere win confer a favor by notifying fie of any irregularity of delivery, Reading. Notieee--No reading notice, matter k by r r leen an entertainment4 dve t a g d b as each any o b made Y Da which moat Ist o Y y1 inserted in Tia Haws vica all b rt lthoulechnrgo. be price for the laser. tion of business aonouncemente Is TEN cents per count line each Insertion qttyyo edvertieina,tand FIVE nteennts per lineereach (000(3len to those having display contracts, and for ehurele, society end entertainment hoering notices' Card of Thanks 5 to 9 Judicial, Legal, Official end Govern- ment Notices• -.Ten cents per line for OCR insertion and Eve cents per tine for each rubsteuet (neertlon. Yearly cards—Processional Cards, not exceeding One Inch, will be Inserted for 55.00 per Sear, naeable strictly In advance Display edvertleing—Rater furnished un appitcatiOti. "Advertisements ordered for Insertion, wUn ll forbid;" add those sent without written Instructions will appear until ritten orders are received (or their dir- continuance. Letters to the Editor meet be acom- not ornbtctsartgpulaion, but writer's own off faith. The publisher accepts no reepon• olbilley whatever for the statements made in such communications. Letters on reli- gious topics will not be published at all eseept as paid advertising, plainly marked WS such. The rete for such matter it ten cents per (Inc J. F. SNOWDON EDITOR AND PUBLISHER I1 4' M General Observations Clinton Council is determined that uo more ^ horns'' be hidden around there and appointed Chief Wheatley and Sergeant Welsh to enforce the Provincisl'I'emperance Act, w*a . A few years ago it would not cause any sensation if a doaeri " 110r119 " Wore found in a " bank " near Clinton. Now, apparently it is very rare aed is pub- lished everywhere. We hope this is not a subtle way of getting a free ad- vertisement for that town, sv'e. No "horns" have beet' tinooyered near Seaforth. This is no reflection on the officer, here, who has charge of en. forcing the Canada Temperance Act. We believe he tries to do his duty. The importance of Early Hatching THATCH EARLY, Blake every effort to gat your chicks out this spring be- fore the 24th of May, The lighter breeds may be hatched up to the first of .lune, but as a rule, the heavier breeds hatched later than the 24th of May are not satisfaotory, A.t least 90 par cent of the pallets in Canada were not laying during November and December the past winter, because they were hatched too late, If you are depending upon your own flock for breeding eggs mate ten to fif- teen day's before setting. Test the eggs for fertility so that you will be sure you are not setting many without good fertility If you are using incu- bators set early, but do not count on more than three batotLes. If you can get all the chicks out in one hatch, So much the better, 1f Irene are used, use some system, ;See Ehhibition Oironlar No, I, Experimental Farm, Ottawa,) If the hens are too alow in becoming broody gee if you can get some custom hatching done or purch- ase day-old chicks. Get in touch with good breeders in your vicinity, or write your neareet Experimental Farm. There is more money wasted each year because of late hatnhed pullets than is often tnade from the reef of the flook. NO LATE HATCHES. Do not be mitt informed. Late hatched ohiokens as a rule do not pay, "0ne more hatch ' will not help the Empire. Bet- ter to Sell the eggs and save the feeds, Better to sell the eggs and nave the feeds. It is in Demand,—So great is the demand for Dr. Thomas' Eoloctrio Of that a large factory is kept continually busy making Ethel bottling it. To be in demand shows popular appreciation of this preparation, whioh etands at the head of proprietary Oompounde as the loading Oil .n the market, and it is and it 1s generally admitted that it is deserving of the lead. Ti-iE SEAFORTH NEWS WOULO YOU is I've eaten my stew with my iingere, And drunk the $nine from My plate; I've United mud, with the htimbio-Spud I'm given to masticate, I've altered a bowl with a straugor Whose Noe 0or0 Ii two days' coat, I've quel3od my tea in which 1 could See, 0Er n L cries tob roundind float t I've slept in a whitewashed barraoke, With friends of Unfrsgent kind, In n snmptnouS rug the sporting bug Wes not a strange thing to find. i've Sat in a growing puddle, luul e 07 r and 1 s d oneyp air, airliner sable, tolography, bueeer, wire. Cas. whistle,, lainp and heliograph, Map reading issleo mastered Through this 80rpe `twiroleoe for women mut ilt' tre(lu0ed and one of its members holds en important post se teacher of wire. lege in a wireless telegraph oollege, The W0menta Legion was another antecedent of the Wanes, Its mem bere voluntarily organized to furnish c Ica w e 0o and site eses for camps and seelire(1 1,200 i0 one year, They Alga took 1 ove'the cooking and a 1' • e lg in 11 the fret cOthvalos0eut (tamp that em- ployed 1n those oapseities. The Wore- en's Volunteer Reserve and the I'1'om- ali s Auxiliary are tura other fors -run- ners of the " Small wonder I a lel 't is t that within + l I1 1 lees than a year after ,1 { While night I've slept in n 10aky tont, y a t I the foundation of this braeolh of the army service there Where twelve 1111(1 the goer to share! are Ironton signallers le 1i'ralw0 doing I've tried my hand at scilla laundry, e(l oh geed work that elle Officer 00m - When my shine I've managed to maudili31 Siguals is asking tor thousands rivac. more. That the " \Paine" gra an of- i'1'hey were hong up re dry, but the I lielally recognized aria of the Army wind was high, Serviee fills every woman's heart with Aud I've 13ever seen them since. joy and pride, Itis inspiring to von - But, bless you, I'91 not grumbling, What Briton would ever dare? 11'heu over the way, in a ghastly fray, There's shrapnel awl blood for fare,. So come, you chaps, from your downy bed, It isn't all nice, 110 doubt, But you'd hatter die eating English flirt, Than live to eat sauerkraut ! Huge Horns Were Dug Up at Clinton Clinton, Nlay 8,—The action of the Rood and ice this spring scooped out several feet of the fiver batik on the north side of the first reilway bridge, east of Clinton, opposite the residence of John Raneford. On Monday Thos. Judd observed soinething stinking up which looked to hits like a deer's horn, He dug out an elk horn, 51 inches in length, 13 inches in circumference at the base, with four times, the largest two inches in length and six in cir- cumference It was found some hun- dred and fifty yards possibly from what was once the river bed. Joseph Whitehead diverted the river from its original course when building the Grand Trunk Railroad in the early aftiea. He believes the horn may have been in 'the ground severalhun- dred years. 19 Women's Auxiliary Army Corps Popularly Known As "The Wages" Whenever a great organization springs into existence there is created, of neoessity, a wide -spread intermit in that event; But the real intermit cen- tres in the antecedents of that organ- ization. What phases of public opinion and endeavour, whet principles govern- ing the interoourse of human beings have crystallized themselves, finally in to this tangible form? These questions naturally arose when the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps (familiarly oalled the "Waaos'') came into being. It was January, 1917, when Lord Derby at the Woolen's Service Demon atration inAlbett Hall asked for wo- men to do clerical work in the army. In February the otfoiat appeal was issued and volunteers answered on every hand, Within lees than a year, these recruits are Ooming in at the rate of 10,000 a mouth. This immense body has been made "part and parcel" of the British Army working under udder its rules and regulations and serving wherever duty calla with- out regard to danger, Nothing so efficient could have sprung into existence suddenly. The service asked be the Government wee that of support and substitution—re- placing man power. All this required strenuous training which was required in numberless voluntary organizations formed by women at the very beginn- ing of tete war. Most of these, either in whole or in part, have been merged into the "Waace", Among them is the Women's Reserve Ambulance, the oh was 40 highly trained that, at the time of the first zeppelin raid, these women were the first to reach the injured and give aid. Indeed, there was no work left for the regulars when they arrived There was also the Women Signaller Territorial Carps whose Commander - in -Chief was Mrs le, J. Parker, slater of Lord Kitchener, These women vol. untarily trained thernselvea in every kind of signalling, semaphore -Raga gleollaaioal arose, Morse, with flags, template the broad vision which leaped ahead far enough to the the need of service years before the Government could use that training: Patriots and heroines they are indeed, these work - era, iVherever the British Army is needed there the " Waaos" are found. Etfoi- enoy follows wherever they lead,wheth- er it be in England or just back of the tiring line in France, 'Their work die' - ides itself into five great classes. A lenge number serve as cooks and wait- resses and when one realizes that as litany as sixty Cooks are necessary in some camps one also realizes the service performed in releasing When to say noth ing of the greater economy in the nee of food stuffs. Clerical work ie another branoh of service but, in a way, the moat intel'9et- ing is the Signallers' work They alone of all tbe''Waaes" wear Army badges. The "Hush Waaoe" number about a doz en and are connected with the Censor's office. They are fine liugnist8 and can decode ony messages whether signalled or written Anotherietereeting work is that done by the drivers of motor and transports, The work known as "Salvage" ern. ploys hundreds of workers who redeem every kind of battle -field debris con- verting it into something usable. Army boots, for example; are repaired to the number of 30,000 a week, One kind goes to the men in the trenohea, an. other to men on lines communication and n third to prisoners and coloured Thursday M M MMMMMMIIMIi$MM101111 IIMMi1M IIM MIIMM MMMMMM Y 61IIII1M MM WM M*I 11 1 THE DOMINION BANK Established 167I M W W ✓ M at Have you money in the Bank? Are you savht$'? By putting away a few dollars atm time you will soon possess a fund for emergencies. holes. Deposits of One Dollar and upwards received. Interest paid or added to accounts twice a year. n4 CAPITAL AND RESERVE $13,000,000 n n n q n 30 Savings Department n w sl el n m et q n fie X Im W WRltgylWplingWW - nYgq 8 W n q lIM A Wlgagrlln qhl W n p >LrMa 1lapwlCpwl(s,.rtVl9 SEAFORTH BRANCH: R. M. JONES, Manasse lahourert, When npeer5 are of uo fur' Cher nee they aro out up into laces, hal. 111ottt leather and 0 1nt11 equipments, rifles, horse -shoes, spurs—everything is is need by these Capable 001091 who were( just back of the firing line, 'l'ho postal service also employs large nuns' bars to look atter letter's and parcels. One kind of work handed over to the wool 511 will be appreciated wherever the call to the colours has been hoard and that is the care of the graves of those who have fallen' Many of these aro in lonely spots by the roadside of in fields—All are to be plainly marked and planted with Rowers. No work is more faithfully performed than this, The bodily comfort of the "Wastes" is well looked after and they • find in the Y. W. C. A the sante friend that the men have found h1 the Y. BI. C. A. The pay of She "Wane" is that of the ordinary soldier (about twenty live cents a (lay) and if she renews her cote - tract at the end of the year elle received a bonus of 45. She is allowed a fort- night's leave each year, All the oitioers aro women but although their appoint- ments are gazetted in the usual way, none of them holds a commission nor carries a Military title. Warts will render the prettiest hands unsightly. Clear the excresoenoee away by using Holloway's Corn Cure, which ante thoroughly and painlessly, It is usually safe to say that when a child is pale, sickly, peevish and rest- less, the came is worms. These para- sites range the stomach and intestines, causing serious disorders of the digest- ion and preventing the infant from de- riving euetenanee from food, Miller's Worm Powders, by destroying the worms, cor'reet these faults of the di- gestion and serves to restore the organs to healthy action. CHURCH NEWS I Items a ever this He ad are bl1 shed !too of charge, ex- p) tense regarding meetings whore au Mi101a8ion lee is 1/barged. Tho rete for snail being nvo neat par count line SliPiFeRTt't e:tuReHrds St. James' St, ,lames' Church, Rev. Father 33, F, Goetz P,1P, Early Mass 0,,13, High Mass 111,30, Sunday School p. m. Vespers and Benediction of the Bless• ed S8o1•sme1t,7 p, 1» St. Thomas' Rev, '1'. H, Brown, Rector, Sunday eer0oes 1I a.m and 7 p.m. Sunday eohoo 12.30 p. m. Women's Aoglioau Misaionary Association, Tuesday 2.311 p.m. Chlldren'ebrannh Saturday 2 p.m. ntoreession services every Thursday, .0p.m. RirstPresbyterian Rev, 11', H, Larkin„Pastor. Sunday services 11 a,m, and 7 p m, Sunday eohoo) 2,30 pen. Prayer meeting, Thursday, 7.45 p.m. Women's Miss- ionary Society the First Tuesday in each month at 7,40, Barbara Kirkman Mie Bion Band 3rd Tuesday; in the month at 7.30 p.m, Sunshine Mission Band every 2nd Monday at 4.111 p.m, Methodist Rev, G. McKinley, 3, D., pastor —SUNDAY—Claes at 10;00 a.m, Public servioe 11 a,m. and 7 p.m. Sun- day school sud Bible study plass 2.30 Epworth League Tuesday 8 p.m. Prayer Meeting Thnrsda y 8. p.m, Winth-ap Presbyterian Sunday setvice 2,30 pm, Sunday School I 15p m Prayer meeting Tuesday 8 p, m. L 0 . beat Wed. Nilly Ifs * Different Portraits The Difference between he t ordinary d cry P /fo%graph and the kind we make is due to bur skill and /ligll grade equipment, Every sitter is given Individual attention and treatment and the results we Aro da ce are photographtic portraits - not merely photographs, Lel fa slake you the best portraits you ever had. Picture Framing Now that the house clean ing has s taJtPl lookup u Mose e pictures you want framed and bring then? to us. We carry a large and well assorted stock o/ moulding and our prices are not high. A/nateurs We sell Amateur supplies develop films & finish prints for amateurs. Bring your work to people who make a i business o/ doing id, 1 D F DLIC PHOTOGRAPHER L SEAFORTH Salvation army Lie.ht, Shiva and Envoy Wood Holiness meeting 11 a.m. Praise. service 3 p.m. Gospel service 7 p.m. Childrens Servi10—Direotory class 1D a,m. Bible classes 4 p.m. Week night Meetings—Wednesday Praer meeting 8 p,m Egmondvdlle, Presbyteria.q Rev. J Argo, pastor, Sunday ser• vicar 11 a.m, and 7 p m. Bible class 3 p.m Prayer meeting Wednesday Bp. tel. Y.P M,S U1ion 3rd Friday in the month 8 p tn. Women's 3115030,,- ary Society 31,0 Wednesday in the month at 2.30 p.m Lltdios' Aid Inde s im- mediately after. McKillop Presbyterian Rev. D Carswell pastor Sunday serviced Duffs' church 11 a m Sunday school 1U a m Prayer m0etiug 4Ved- needay 8 p.m. women's Miesiouary Society last Friday in each month at 2 o'clock. Gonstaude Methodist Rev, W. Keine, pastor. Sunday service 2 30 p.m. Young People's Lea- gne2 30 p mSeethe v om0u'e A"xit erg first Tuesday of every month a 30 p.m, Lul1ee' Aid 1651 Thars,'ay of each month 2.30 p, m Are you giving aid and comfort to the ene y? Any householder in your neighborhood who has a garden plot, or who owns a piece of suitable vacant land that is not being put under cultivation in order to increase food production, is (though he or she may not believe it) giving aid and comfort to the eneimy in restraining food production, as really as,is the Submarine Commander. who sinks an Allied ship laden with food. The difference is only one of degree, not of kind. around yo ¢_ ! Look ar d you If you have not yet decided to plant a vegetable garden make up your mind to do so now. You will not regret it. There is still lots of time. Potatoes and beans may be planted up to June 1st and these are the best substitutes for wheat and meat. For good, practical advice upon how to lay out and cultivate a Vegetable Garden, write for a free copy of the booklet entiti_ed: "A Vegetable Garden for Every Home.” This has been prepared by the Ontario Department of Agriculture for the guidance of citizens who will respond to this call for increased production. Mail This Coupon NOW Organization of Resources Committee, Parliament Buildings, Toronto Dear Sirs: Please send ins a eopy of your booklet "A Vegetable Garden for I Every Home." 7 i. eeeee Adftress...,.—..-....-.:,....._.......:...-_........_,.,..r....._.,.,... � ORGANIZATION OP RESOURCES COMMITTEE In Co -Operation with Canada Food Board rn 4i;