HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1918-11-21, Page 4T a a �!,
ThMrsda'ytselovflmbrr
rt -L owl*
nO9�q},,1rF18tclauaiid Burgeels
imnsli n %YttiVl tendon, Mussed,
al attention to 1Bseit of Ere, Ear, Nose
emit pesideuee behind Aondaiou Rank,
, hila n0e tie a, Resideo phone -NR, 149
Dr, F, 3. $USIt0111S Seelo0iti Office an4 r:9
I,deneee-Oodetioh Street, east et the Moth:
wtiat gburob, coroner for County of Huron
Ts gelatine Not 40.
ft RS, SCOTT & MAOICA2, Physicians and.
JVSurgeens, eoderlch Street, opposite hteth0-
Chureh.Seaforth,
Steri, graduateViotertaand AultAtbor, and
Member Di Ontario College 41 ]•'hyslolans end
Ella g0011L Coroner Ior Oounty of Huron,
2f,olla0 honor graduate Trinity Uul ersitr,
geld lldli01 Py4ICiani0and Sical urgeons, 0180110,
oY'College
•ythl�B, (GEO. HEILEMAN, OSteopthio Specialist
no in Women's and Children's diseases and
Rheumatic
Eaar,oEye,Noso and Throatt OAdenoidsor .
Moved without theknife. Consultation tree.
Reyal Hotel
`Suasiay, R a -m. to 8 p.m,;Frldity 80,m, to 0 pm
Marriage Licensesissued by
F Q pq fan foe
12111
I surance
llllyon 0re,talpostcard will get our taws.Life or ccidentt
J. D. i izatei1LRY.
eenerol Agent for London Life Insurance Co..
ad Imperial Guarnotee end Accident Insurance Co,
Seaforth, Ont.
fames Watson
Samuel
l nea Accident Insurance
080,d dealer in Sewing Machines.
Maio
Street, Seatorth,
THE McKILLOP
Mutual Fire Insurance Co.
Perm end isoieted Town
Property Only Insured.
OFFICERS
J al. Couuolly, Goderich, President, James
Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President, Thomas
Hari, Seatorth, Soc.-Treas.
Directors
D. F. McGregor, Seaforihi John G. Grieve,
•Wlatltop W.. Rina, Constance; John BenaevmJa,
lhadahagen- Robert Ferris, Harloct' Malcom
Merton, Clinton; C, McCartney Seaforthi
flee Connolly, Goderich; Ju. Evans. 5eechwcod.
Agents
Alex- Leitch, Hariock; E. Illncadey. Sealottb •
AiWam Chesney EsmudrUUicc• J. W. Yeo.
jgpaarlifr It. G. JarFmouth, B' haginr Jane.
Darr and John Gevenlock, Seaforth, auditors.
Pasties desirous to effect iasursancr or transact
Weer Muskets will be psalmody attended to bo
aitaatstbn to nay of the above *Memo, address --
as their respective posh:Dcee.
00..'LAA
)301
MAK
&B
rice 25 ets,per6ti,,.,
ahl ,1'S T gq,lli4iE11TCQ
,1 -....LIMITED—r 4,.
I .te0R07o C.CRICRAR05Et4
"]0 k 5.
ti
I The
Original
and
Only
Genuine
Beware
of
Imilatione
Sold
on the
Merits
of
Minard's
Liniment
For Sale
SCRANTON COAL
W. L. ii[Y, Seaforth.
Phone 130
A Business
Without a proper
s spill of adver-
tisin is like a
motor without the
+ peeves. .
4'S
Seaforth News
1liinVEuriSl: 1tNTS
Will supply the
'required energy
pll nz - 54
etenktgsd21
t1t , 0E 1 kT(}t1 ntr 1
15 issuer; EVERY THUIOSDAY
Fran the OWisa
MAIN $T. . seAroirni, ONT.
Phone 34 Evening 127,
$UBSCRIPTLON
000 dollnt'er year, *Wetly in ad v a nee
It not paid in a vance, one dollar an4
a hall will be charged, United States
papers, tIlty mints extra, strickty in
When ■ubseribers cbasage their pddreae
notice should belent eaImmediately, giving
loth the old and the new address. Sub-
scribers was tooter a favor by notifying us
of any Irregularity of delivery.
Reading Notices—No .reading notice,
advertising any entertainment or matter by
which money is to be made by any person
or cause will be Inserted In Tug News
without charge. The price for the inser-
tion of business a0aoaucementr is TEN
centspercount line each Insertion to
parties haying no conessi for display
advertising, and FIVE cents per line each
ineertlon to those having display contracts,
and for church, society and entertainment
reading notices, Card of Thanks 3 to 9
Ilnes, 50 cents,
Judicial, Legal, Official and Govern-
ment Notie.s—Ten cents per line for scat
Insertion and ave cents per line for each
subsequet insertion.
Yearly .card.—Professional Cards,: not
exceeding one Inch, will be Inserted for
83.00 per year, no:able strictly la advance
Display advertising—Rater furnished
on application,
Advertisements ordered for ineettion,
wUntil forbid," and those sent without
written Instructions will appear until
rlttea orders are received for their dis-
continuance,
Letters to the Editor must be accom-
panied by the writer's own signature, not
or publication, but ae a guarantee of good
faith. The publfsber accepts no respon-
sibility whatever for the statements made
In such communications. Letters on reli-
gious topics will not be published at ail
except as paid advertising, plainly marked
an such. The rate for such matter Is ten
cents per tine.
J. F'. SNOWDON
EOITOR AND PUBLISHER
General Observations
I I
The Kaiser is now in the Sun.
!.`hors is no place on earth for him,
***
More than one week has passed since
the Kaiser left and the old world, still
is here.
***
The task of feeding the Central
Powers will be heavy but will be pleas
ant compared to fighting them.
***
The closing down of muntlon factor-
ies will mean the speedinglup of domes
tic manufactures. The sword will
again be beaten into a plow share.
***
People would like to know why soft
coal is plentiful while hard is scarce if
translortation is at fault. Hard coal
is easier to carry than soft,
+:•**
People would also like to know why
the soft coal is dearer than hard oval
1f it is more plentiful, 1t looks as if
there were a coal colored gentle.
man somewhere in the pile.
Peace But Not Plenty
'THOUSANDS. ON FARMS
Over 7,500 Persons Were Placed
on Farms This Year,
Experience Shows Cold Nights Lett -
ere Milk plow Whorl Cows Are
Lett In plaids.
(ContributedAgculturre, Toronto )treat of
INCE Oet. 31st, 1917, the On-
tario Government Public Em-
ployment
m-
seen ed
1 • r
to meltuceau have B
P
y
employment for 19,000 per-
sons, of which 7,016 wore men and
11,984 women, This work has been
accomplished for the most part
through the efforts of the offices at
Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton and
London. Since April, however, new
bureaus have been opened at King.
Ston, Port Arthur and Fort William,
In order that the best results might
be gained through the campaigns 'for
farm. laborers the efforts of the
Trades and Labor Branch, the Organ-
ization of Resources Committee and To get the best results the pullets
the Agricultural Representatives were should be placed in winter quarters
co-ordinated. The province was di- by November 1st, Sometime in Aug-
vided into six districts, each center- ust or September the henhouse'
ing around one of the bureaus, The
organization is now such that each -
county, through the Agricultural Re-
presentative, is kept in touch with
one of the Employment Bureatta.
Thus the surplus labor in one part of
the province may be shifted to a
Part where a scarcity is felt, Any sand at least four inches of it should
farmer in Ontario, by communicating be renewed.
with the Agricultural Representative If at all possible, separate the pul-
tor his county, may learn how farm lets from the old hens and cockerels.
help can be obtained. In order to lay well, they should be
To date 7,800 persons have been fed all they will eat, particularly of
placed on Ontario farms. Of these ground grains and green foods, and
some 3,300 were men, 2,140 boys should not be overcrowded. About
and 1,260 women. Several campaigns twenty-five to thirty-five pullets is
have been launched including, "Sol- plenty for a pen twelve feet square;
diers of the Soil" (boys between 14 is fact, in many cases twenty-five
and 19 years), "Haying and Har- pullets in the pen will lay almost as
vest," "Sugar Beet Hoeing," "Thresh- many eggs as the thirty-five. Should
ing and Fall Ploughing," and "Flax you be fortunate in having too many
Pulling." Over 250 boys were sent pullets, or where .you `can make a
to the sugar beet fields of the Chat- selection, get, the earliest and best
ham district, and 126 are now pull- matured ones into "the pen first. If
ing flax: you have tso
o crowd or sell me get
Of the 1,260 women sent the ma- 'rid of the Small, weak ones and those
jority are on fruit farms. An effort that are slow to develop.
was made at the Toronto office 'to' • The penrshould be' light and well
send women to assist in the farm ventilated. Have all the ventilators
kitchens with the result that 70 w0- or openings on one side of the house
men have gone to this work. During and close together. Do not have an
the winter a class was organized for opening in one end of the house and
the purpose of giving girls a train- another in the other end. These cause
ing in chore work on the farm. In drafts, which are very apt to produce
April a course was opened, at the On- colds and sickness. It usually takes
tario Agricultural College, wherea pullet at leapt three weeks to get
about 160 women and girls have gone over a cold, and she seldom lays
out to assist on mixed farms throtsgh- while she has a Cold. Keep the house
out the province. The results achiev-, dry, and use plenty of dry straw la
ed bythese women have been satis- whieh the birds tan scratch for the
factory from the standpoint of the feed.
farmer. $remember a; laying hen needs
It is the desire of the Department plenty of, food grit, and shell ma
that every farmer in need of help is tenial. Also there sboulcLbe,a variety
supplied with suitable and satisfae- to the food; that is gra food such'
tory assistance, and it is toward this as clover reaves',.; cabbage, or sprout --
end that our offices are organized and ed. oats, or if none of these can be
into the fulfilling of which practically had, sons e roots. She also needs
all the energy of our staff is put. some form of meat food—sour milk
Oa account of the supreme import- is the befit, but beef scrap, or other
once of 1oodaproduction the greatest meat offal, if untainted, will answer.
amount of effort, in all offices, has Usually about one-third of the grain
been put forth toward recruiting and should be ground or evenup to one -
placing men on farms, yet a large half. The whole grain makes exer-
number of people have secured posi- else in hunting for it in the straw.
tions in other lines of work. Fight Always remember the pen should be
hundred and seventy-one men have clean, dry, and. sweet,—Prof. R. W.
been placed at factory and munition Graham, 0. A. College, Guelph.
work, 3,200 general laborers, 3,000
builders and 1,624 at miscellaneous
occupations. Women have been plac-
ed as follows: 1,690 domestics; 1,273
munition and factory workers, and
1,700 at clerical and miscellaneous dition for growing plants as in well-
occupations,—Dr. W. A. Riddell, rotted manure. In the storing of
Superintendent, Ontario Trades and
Labor Branch. manure, however, to get it well rot-
ted considerable (oases of plant food
Keep Cows Inside- During Coll I occur unless the manure pile is pro -
Nights. perly packed.
The season for cold nights will be If the • quickest returns are not
here all too soon, in this northern cli- wanted following the application of
mate. While it Is true that keeping' the manure to the soil, then the
the cows inside means mere labor In manure may be added in the fresh
cleaning the stable and more dthu ,
culty in keeping the cows clean, the 1 condition. If this is done in warm
extra fertilizing material collected in I weather the manure should be
this way will probably pay tor the ploughed in as soon as possible after
extra labor. If this does not, the I application. The total plant food ma -
extra supply of milk received by
keeping the cows in a comfortableterials present in the manure will
stable at times when the temperature , thus be added to the soil, where they
drops below freezing:point, will do will be prepared by the soil bacteria
so, Experience shows that' cold has for use by the growing crops.
a very marked effect in lessening the The main objections to putting
milk flow, particularly for cows that ,fresh manure on the land are—first,
have been milking for some time, , it is not always convenient to do so;
when the natural tendency is for the second, weed seeds may be numerous
cow to dry up and during which -time , 132 the fresh manure, consequently a
every means should be adopted to ( heavy weed crop may be expected,
MAKE POULTRY
I'
Laying lien Needs Plenty of Food,
Grit and Shell Material,
i'rotent Ifteaeh-
lin Preserving Manure
ing IFil'rt ind Thor Keep Pile
Moist wnd Weil Packed.
(Contributed by Ontario Department of
Ar'rieultore, Toronto.)
ANY times the laUure of
securing a satisfactory wins
ter egg yield is doe to neg-
ledt of the pullets early ill
the fall, The ordinary pullets begin
laying at from six to seven months
of age, and many farmers get a few
pullet eggs is October and November,
followed by little or no production
in December or early January. This
frequently is due to a (Mange in
roosting quarters or being avec-
crowded and underfed in the peed -try
house.
should be thoroughly cleaned, the
walls, ceiling, etc., brushed down,
and all old cobwebs, etc., removed,
then give the house a good white-
washing, and if the floor le earth or
To Preserve the Fertility of Manure.
In fresh manure the plant food
materials are not in as available con -
The end of the war has tomo, butkeep the cow milking, Cows should third, its action is not so rapid es
milk at least ten months of the year. in the case of well -rotted manure,
Canada meet not relax her efforts to heaving cows Out of doors on cold but it is active over a longer period.
increase the production of food. In nights, after they have been milking
addition so the Allies whose productive
for six or eight months, snakes a
powers have beau hampered by the war greater tendency for these cows to go
and who need irnporte from this eon-
tinont to build up is reserve, the people
of the neutral nations must also be
Considered, Canada Food Board calla
atteutinn to the f
nut, also, that the
countries of the defeated 011010y nations
must also be considered as in som'1 the cows clean.
cases millions of helpless people are Another advantage of stabling oro
frosty nights,. le that it prevents the,
facing starvation, Counting Russia, cows eating frozen feed, which is gen•
tustria-Flungayr, Tnrkey, Bulgaria, evilly considered to be injurious to
the neutral countries, France, Belguim ws. Troy may be kept ine the
Italyand (Great Britain a rend total ,1,11,1111:1:°wor yard this wayr pasture
, g thaws, and in this way the animals
05 250,000,000 people aro short of aro protected agafnet digestive iron -
Canada will have a hungry market 1T H Dean, 0.A. College, Guolpll.
for her agricultural produce and our
greatest possible effort to maintain and Prevent Great Farm Loss,
inCreaee produotior; will be none too 1'f. through better tare and man -
greet. tegument, the aves'ago life of farm
machines could be tnbreased by a sin-
gle year whitt a tremendous saving
'would 'be effected. The amount a
farmer loses each year through nog -
Soft corns are difilo nit to eta tltoe le left tlf lxi;s ntachlnery would pay for
tile ereefiott 01 a plain weather-proof'.
but H011oway's.Odrn Ours will draw shed that' would keep thein in good
tkem oat painlessly, condition, --Prof, John Evans, (3, A,
College, Guelph.
Where manure Is to be stored in
piles or pits until it is ripened, or un-
til it is convenient, to user then the
dry, greatest care is necessary to prevent
Where cows aro kept inside., the losses of plant food materials from it.
stuble should be cleaned .regularly in the first place the bottom of the
and some absorbent muterial like pile or pit should be impervious to
sawdust, shavings, chaff, nr cult- water so that leachings from the pile
s
tra•w should be scatteredLalong-thewill not occur,' ' Second
r
it la
well to
old well -rotted n the have a layer' of 1
platform, and f
passages, on the piay
ma -
gutter, This helps Very much In nure at the bottom. Third, the ma -
cleaning the stable and in keeping. nure as it is piled up should be wall
compacted do to
drwn
re
acted or trampedpre-
treat
treat excess nI aft from getting into
It. Fourth, 1t should be kept moist
but not wet. These precautions apply
more particularly to horse -manure,.
which is loose ttnd comparatively dry.
Unless this is kept well packed and
moist, loss by fire'ranging 18 certain.
This is an oxidation pro0es0, or ter-
bles, and conditions are more favor-' mentation, set going by certain see-
able for tnaintaining the health and cies of bacteria in the manure. If
milk -flow of the animals. -- Prof. Cow or pig manure is available it
should be mixed with the !!orae ma-
nure in the pile, as these are Very
wet and compact and -mill give a good
consistency to the whole 811a58, 'Ma-
nure 90 kept Will have the minimum
of loss and the plant rood will be
ripened by the Various species or bac-
teria in It and thus shade ready for
immediate use by the growing crops
When 10 ist.added to the soil,
The main things to be romefneered
is storing manure are, drat,. 00 Pre-
vent leaching; second, to keep 1t well
peeked down and moist.—Prof.
I ' nes, 0 A.8'Ooilege, ateleh..
c e ribg AUctiOn Szle
Farm Steak end Implement1, Lot 10
Gen, S, Tuakeraotith, eoatit of Egmbnd,
Ville, Monday, Nov, ebth, 1019, Sale
091nnteno69 at one o'eloek sharp,
2 Agriculture geldings, 3 yrs 1 do 1
yr, 2 do 2 yr, I Reg draft mare in foal
to Glenree, Bono and male, gen. pur-
pone, 9 yr, 1 horse do to yr, ,Black
pacing mare (Ada Galea) 1 grey carr-
iage gelding, 3 yr, Black Shetland pony
end outfit, 4 Grade oowe supposed in
pelf, Reg. Holstein heifer to calve in
Jan, Pttre bred Jersey heifer supposed
in calf, , Steers & 5 heifers 1 yr, 3
Steers & 2 heifers-2yr, Pnre Yorkshire
BOW, litter Deo, 15th, do Berkshire dot
Deo, 1st, do Tamworth boar 1 yr, 10
Store hogs, 8 Pure Shropshire Ewes,
5 Pure do Lambs, x do Shropshire Ram
Lamb, Massey Harris binder, 7 ft used
I yr, do 6 it good as new, 1 mower, 1
steel hay rake, 1 side delivery rake, 1
flay loader, 1 Massey setd drill, I disc
t cultivator, 1 scnffler, 3 walking plows,
3iroln harrows,. 2 lumber wagons, a
wagon boxes, 1 hay rack, 1 hay and
stook rack combined 1 fanning mill,
1 Lubber tire buggy nearly new, 1 steel_
tire buggy, 3 single harness, Bob sleigh'
2'Rutted family cutter nearly new, cut-
ter, s seta double working harness
double set carriage harness, rubber,
Cream separator De Laval nearly new,
i5 H• P. gasoline engine, Internation-
al; 4:11. P, gasoline engine, Interuation
al; 1i, H, P, gasoline engine with q.
Jack These engines are in good
shape.
A large corrugated tank, 2 large wood-
en tanks, 3 1290 pig troughs, extension
ladder, 4 4o gal. gasoline steel barrels,
power grind stone, ropes, neck yokes,
hovels, etc,
TAKES OF DAN I It
' HAT sI -40 I*1-1P0
Nave row HAiri .Oi t a mall bt�ttle
of Danttlrina, nlfht un -Also
Mope itching scalp, a
'thin, brittle, oolorleeo and scraggy
hair 4e mute evidence of a neglected
Boalp; of dandrug—that awful scurf,
Sphere is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff, It robe the !fair
of ite luettro, its strength and ita very
life; eventually producing a feverish -
nese and itching of the eoalp, which if
not ^remedied esuse8 the hair roots to
ebrink, loosen and die --Bien the hair
falls out fast. A llttle Danderine to-
night--now—any time—will surely love
your hair,
Get a small bottle of Knowiton's
Danderjpe from any drug store, You
surely elan have beautiful liafr and lots
of it if you will
Serine. ave your hair! Tlittle
ryitl n
Pi
• TERMS --All sumo of Teti Dollars
and' under cash. Over that amount 9
mouths credit on furnishing approved
notes. 6 per cent off for cash on med.
11 BUM.
There will be no reserve as the pro-
prietor has sold his .farm.
J.
J. MERNER M. P. T, BROWN
Proprietor Auctioneer
Auction Sale
Of Farm Stook acid lm implements,—
' p
Jas. Jones, auctioneer has been in-
structed by Mr' John Jefferson to sel
by public auction on Lot 10, Con 31
Hibbert, on Thursday, November 28th
the followiog Span of good- working,
one drives}; one horse. Cattle -2 Dur-
ham cows due to calve in March; Dur-
ham cow, due to calve in'Deoembor;
fresh Durham cow, 2 Durham heifers
supposed to he in calf, rising 2 years
Durham heifer 2 years old; 3 steers ris-
ing three years; Sheep -20 well bred
elves and 20 well bred lambs. Bega—
t sow with litter at foot; I sow due to
litter about the time., of the save, .g
store hogs. Hens—About loo hens,
Implements—Deering binder, 6 ft, cut;
Deering mower, 6 foot. out; Maxwell
hay loader; Maxwell hay tedilt r, Mass-
ey Harris rake, Noxon'oultivator, Nox-
ou seed drill; land roller, root pulper,
Kent manure spreader, 0:100011 fann-
ing. bagger, set iron harrows, 2
furrow, plow, walking plow, snifterwagon, hay rack, set of bob sleighs'
pig rack; buggy, cutter, National'
Dream separator, churn, sap pan and
buokete, iron and pulleys, set slings,
grindstone, crow bar, ladders, logging
chain, set double harness, set single
harness, grain geoid, scoop shovel and
other'artioles usually found on a farm.
No reserve as the owner has sold his
farm; Sale at one o'clock sharp.._
retina—All sums of $ 10 and under cash
over that amount 12 mouths' credit
will he given on furnishing approved
joint notes. Live per cent ori fur cash
on credit amounts
JOHN .JEFFLRSON, JA0, .TONES
Proprietor, Auctioneer,
Notice Please
Having Just recently been appoint.
ed in charge of the .Local Corps
1.5081 that it is my duty to say as
the Alpha and Omega of it 0alvation
Army Officer life is to serve mankind
so my stay in Seatorth shall be,
Heartily thanking you in anticip-
ation for your esteemed support,
I remain yours in Christ,
F. `%r Leight,
Lieilt•
Millet's Worm Powders will eradi-
oate the worm evil that bears 80 heav-
ily onehildren and is believed to cause
many fatalities, They are an accept-
able medicine to chlldten and can be
fully relied upon to ohannelethorough-
ly of those parasites and restore thein-
ti'amod and painful aurfaoos to health-
fulness• They are an excellent retnttdy
for thee° Mile,
Notice
Residents of bile Township of Moitil•
lop who require coal aro required to
forward a written request to J. M Gov-
enlock who has been appointed Fuel
Controller for the Municipality of Mc-
Killop. Only those who have no wood
or rail fences need apply, ea the quan-
tity of coal promised MoKillop is limit,
`ed
By Order of the Council.
M. 1'Ittrdi°, Clerk
•
For Freedom and the Right
"THE ALLIES"
The above ie tho title of a most
interesting War Album fasted by The
Family Herald and Weekly Star, of
Montreal.
It le brimful of useful information
from cover to cover . T 1e front cover
page is a most beautiful design em-
bracing the Rags of flags • of, ,all the
Allies, It is a clever artistic effort
The Album contains the flags in colors
of all the A11iee. 'It tells in full the
story of the "Union Jack" and "Dill
Glory". 1t gives the date and reason
for entry of each of the allies into the
War. It gives the system of Govern-
ment of each, alio population, area, etc
etc. It contains the )!cations Songs of
Greet Britain, France and the United
State*, a swell as a great many of the
popular ongs ouch as "Tipperary,"
'Long Long Prail," "Good Bye Broad-
way," "Over There," etc. , etc, It eon
tains a diary of the war since its com-
mencement up to to time of going to
going to press, with bleak amine on
which the recipient map fill in future
dates and have the complete history,
The Album is one you Would buy m'
sight at any reasonable price, but is
not for Bale. It is absolutely free to
all who subscribe to The Family Herald
and Weakly Star for t919 The year-
ly subscription price is $1.25, Wa
have made a clubbing combination
with the Family Herald and can offer
that great Weekly with the Album anti
News for $2,50, The offer of the Album
is for a limited time only. Order now
and be sure of a copy, The Family
Herald does not continue such an offer
ndofinitely, A sample of the Album
may be seen at this office.
QHURCHNfWS
e'1t1111 80111115 004 are
a0 402 0' 00 of ebarte, 01c-
eptbose reger4htgma0tlfage
Whore all admission tee le
4bt0ged. Tho rate ter suer,
being a re Beat per 000181 l l ae
SRAFORTH eHUReita S
St, James'
St. Jamas' Chnroh, Rev, Father Lr,
F, (toed P. P. Marty Nlass 8,091 high
Mass 10,30, Stitgla'yl School3 p. in,
Vespers and Benediction ul the Bless.
ed'Sacrement,7, P. m,
St. Thomas'
Rev, '1', H. Brown, Reuter. Suutlay
eer0oos 11 trill end 7 11 ;n, Sunday
8018001 2,30 p in. 1)Olifell's allglioan
Missionary Aosuoiatioti, 'J'1lcsday 2 30
p,m. Ohildreu'ebrencll Saturday 2p.m.
nte000selou services every Thursday,
.0p.m. -
THIS CHRISTMAS
must count as no Christmas of recent;'
years have counted, The spirit of
Christmas must be kept up, Only
sensible, wisely selected things can be
given, and ono gift should provide for
manly. Here it is—all ideal gift, for
one and the who a family are sure to
be delighted with it, The Youth's
Oompauiou fills the bill completely
ooming all new 52 times a year, Stories
Articles. Receipts, Special Pager, and
more in quantity for all ages that any
monthly magazine gives in it }•ear. A
distinct benefit to all hands, You give
ahem., nplift, inspiration and outeetain-
ment—nu actual timid in these times.
Tho Companion is still only $2,25 to
year
Don't mise Grace + t' 1. tuhmand ag spat
serial, Anne Exeter, 10 chapters, begin
wing Deoembor 12,
The following special oiler is made
to new subscribers,
1. The Youth's Companion --02 fames
oP 101q.
2 All the remaining weekly issues of
191%•
3, 'Phe Companion Home Calendar
for 19re
Ali the shove for on'y 32.25 or
you may include.
4 McCiall's Mognzine--13, fashion
1111131118108 All fat rely 3121.
The two magnziuee luny bo sunt to
separate a,idresaue if desired.
T1911 YOUTH'S; UOdIPAIvION '
Commonweaith 81, foul Sf,
l8OB0Ou, Mess,
Nes Snlssoriptions R0obived \at 0.1018
Olfiee.
Methodist
•
Rev. 11. D, Moyer, pastor
—SUNDAY °creel at 10:00 a.m.
Public service 11 a m. and 7 p,m.
Poayer Meeting, 'lehursrr.uy 8, p,m
Salvation Army
Lieut., F. W. Leight
Sunday sorvioes—Bolinesa 11 e, m
Praise 3 p,m,—Salvation 7 p.m.—Sun'
day School 4' p. m.—Wednesday—
Public meeting All are welcome.
Egmondville, Presbyterian
Rev. S McLean pastor. Sunday ser•
vices 11 a.nr. and 7 p m. Bible class
3 p.m Prayer meeting Wednesday
8p. m. Y,P 9a.S Union 3rd "Friday
in the month 8 p in, Women'sMission-
arySociety 3rd Wednesday in the month
at 2,30 p.m Ladies' Aid rnee a im-
mediately after.
First Presbyterian
:Rev, V. H, Larkin,. Pastor, Sunday
services 1f a.m. and 7 p m. Sunday
school 2.30 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Thursday, 7.45 p.m. Women's Minn-
ionary Sooie'y•the first Tuesdal in each
month at 3 p m. Barbara Kirkman Mis-
sion Band 3rd 'ruesday: inthe month at
7.30 p.m. Sunshine Mission Band
every '2nd Monday at 4.15 p re.
PleiCi ll opPresbyterian
Rev. D Otrdwell pastor Sunday
services Duffs' church 11 a Ili Sunday
school 10 a m Prayer meeting Wed-
nesday 8 p.m. women's Missionary
Society last Friday in each month at
o'clock.
Winth-op Presbyterian
Sunday setviee 2 30 pm. Sunday
School I lop In Prayer meeting
Tuesday 8 p 1' . I, 0 I..st Wed.,
tSohsta'Ice Mechndrst-
Rev, 'I` E Saw) t -t, pie r. Sunday
service 2 3lepee, Ynnng 11e-; la's Lea-
gae2.30 pm t 11 1 tv w ,:n'i•t's Anxil
ary Shot 'L'n-s l ty of nv 'ry month a
30 p.m, l,t1 111 ,a•. 1'hnr0dny
cf 0ae11 111911th :i-, p ,n
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e31MI 19
HIV Oeh MIA
e,'ell7 off; sr pore ally
House i.o lent
I A seven nem e11 hone , o r. tit with
cellar, soft water.
Apply to
Coli rad Eel( rt,
Phone 238 r 14,