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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-11-14, Page 4Pa; Four te `ttingbam Abbanrt 301IN JO' T, Proprietor A, (1, SM Tit, Mit1l4 or 1918 .VOV,EM23ER 1918 - Sum. Mos. TVs' WED 'tri BAT 1 ! 2 3 4 5 6 i 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 ; 14 i 15 16 17 18 19 20 : 21 ' 22 23 24 25 26 27 , 28 29 30 THURSDAY, NOV. 14th, 1918. The Kaiser has lost his job. * * * Adieu, Kaiser William. Tile "con- temptible little army" put the halter around the neck of your dynasty. * * * in the old dine another hot ill •e'e There'll be et town "When Johnny Conies Marching Home." * M d Now altogether for a clean-up on the Victory Loan. It is an excellent invest- ment, * * * The allied battle -cry "fltmward Christian Soldiers." * * * Germany appears to have made up her mind to have no more of that breed on the throne. * Now that the war is over Victory Bonds are surely a safer investment than before -- if such was possible. p * r. Say Mister Tight -wad, how many dollars have you given to help the brave boys accomplish the great deeds they have won? Won't the thirty-five cents you gave to the Red Cross look small to the soldier lads who have risked' their lives. Can you look a soldier Straight in the face when they come home? Buy Victory Bonds now. * * * The Crown Prince His nose is red, His eyes are blue; His chin recedes, His armies, too. -Life. TURNBERRV GOUNGRL Minutes of Council meeting held in Blue - vale, Friday, Oct, 25th, 1918. Minutes of last regular and also of special meeting, held on October 7th, were read and approved. At the special meeting. Mr. Gavin Wil- son was appointed Fuel Controller for the township of Turnberry. Mr. Thos. Mc- Lean got the contract for digging the McCreight drain, work to be completed by Dec. 15th, 1918 The following accounts were • paid: D. Jewett, $5.00, gravel; J. W. King, $12.80, gravel; W. Armstrong, $6.00, culvert; Fred Hogg, $14.00, gravelling; J. Hall, $4.00, drain; John Yeo, $8.00, drain; H. Bolt, $9.65, drain and tile; W. S. King, $3.00, jurors; T. K. Powell, $3.00, jurors; P. Powell, $7.00, jurors. Moved by Wheeler and Adair that the next meeting of the council be held in Bluevale, Mon- day, Nov. 18th, 1918, at 1 p. m. P. PowELL, Clerk. Morris Miss Mary Stewart and Miss Agnes Aitchison of Biuevale, visited at Will Abraham's last week. Mr Victor Haines is able to be out again after his recent illness. Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Robertson of Bel - grave visited at Mr. Thos. Abraham's last Sunday, Mr. James Thyme threshed fifteen hundred bushels of wheat for Amos Tip - ling on the first line Who can beat that? Mr. Maxwell Abraham of Grey sold his farm on the lst line to Mr. and Mrs. Mc- Donald of Wingham. Miss Eliza Messer who has been visit- ing here all summer left for London last Saturday. Mr, B. Miller is visiting in Hamilton. Mr, James Golley has purchased a tractor engine. Mr. Golley believes in being up-to-date. PATRIOTIC NOTES The Society acknowledges with thanks a donation of $5.00 from Miss Rutledge for the Prisoners of War Fund. The de- mand for socks, shirts and hospital sup- plies is just as urgent now as it ever was. As long as the troops are overseas these things are required, let us not slacken but rather double our efforts. Cut out articles and yarn may be bad at the rooms every Saturday. THEN GRUDGE VE NOT r E WIN iAM Ai Alga ow Man Your ioiior • Of course every city, town an t. s riot will earn its Honor Flag But how about the crowns? For every twenty-five per cent. in excess. of its quota, each city, town and district -will be entitled to add a crown to its flag, Can y'ou do fifty per cent. better than your quota -that means two crowns for your Honor Flag. But double your quota and it means four crowns. Hang. a Flag in your hall, that for years to come. will show that your city, town or district did better than well - That it was a real factor in the huge success of CANADA'S VICTORY LOAN 1918. Issued by Canada's Victory Loan Committee in co-operation with the Minister of Finance of the Dominion of Canada • THE ADVANCE till Boo ► 31st, 1919, tor 1$1.50• AMSTERDAM, Nov. 11. Prof. Ilammasch, the Austrian Premier, has received official notification, says a despatch from Vienna, that Poland has assumed sovereignty over Galicia. A message from Cracow an- nounces the formation of a Polish republic under the Presidency of Deputy Dasyzynska. I Galicia is a crown land of Austria- Hungary, north of the Carpathians. It has an area of 30,307 square miles and in normal times had a popula- tion. of some 7,000,000. German General Staff Pled. LONDON, Nov. 12. -The former German Emperor's party which is' be- lieved to include Field Marshal von Hindenburg, arrived Itt Eysden, on i the Dutch frontier, at 7.30 o'clock - Sunday morning, according to Daily ; Mail advices. -Practically the whole German General Staff accompanied the former Emperor, and ten auto- mobiles carried the party. The auto- ; mobiles were bristling with rifles, and all the fugitives were armed. 160 Poland Rules Galicia. (Awarded First Prize in Victory Loan Poem Contest, written by Geo. H. Mait- land, formerly managing editor or The Stratford herald.) Since neither words of ours can raise, Nor prayer of ours restore, The dear lost lads of other days, That legion "gone before" How shalt we grudge the yellow gold To beat their foemen clown, Where the Red Prussians pitiless hold Sacked city, pillaged town? But if some faith of ours could know, Some prayer of ours awake, The dear lost lads of long ago, That perished for our sake. And at the dusk their spirits dim, Came whispering sweet and far From that fair land beyond the rim, Of things that' mortal ate.- If te.-If such could be would these' not ask (Vague voices down the wind) That we should help -ah, humble task -- Their comrades left behind? 'then grudge we not the yellow gold 'ro beat their foemen down, Where the Red Prussians pitiless hold Sacked city, pillaged town, 1 "Give it to me, Please, Grand- daddy." "Why Bobby, if YOU wait a bit for it you'll have it to er- ioY lodger!" `+Poo•pool 'That's no with i th WRIGLEY'S 'cause the flavour lasts, annul" Helps teeth, breath, appetite, , digestion. Sealed tight -(sept right -After every meat This is Betted Then Laxatives -•^- ^W*-.. - ?Mir.. 442: "rgf :r, - bt'•( NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK important Events Which Have Occurred Outing the Week. The Busy World's Happenings Care- fully Compiled and i'ut Into Handy and Attractive Shape for the headers of (Yur Paper --•,S Solid Hour's blnjoyenent. WEDNESDAY. Thomas Whitesides, who placed bets for Louis S. Maynard, the Dom- inion Bank manager, who stole be- tween 850,000 and 8100,000, was seat to the jail farm for six months. Premier 0lentenceau declared in the Chamber of Deputies that peaoe night not be so near as some might think, but he could assure the House that "that fate of the peoples was henceforth fixed." Severe rioting has occured at Kiel after a meeting of sailors, which was addressed by an independent Social- ist speaker. Military guards fired upon the mutineers, killing 29. The military commander was shot dead. The Government of Chile took possession of 84 German ships in- terned in Chilean ports. This action was taken to prevent the Brews from sinking the vessels after having de- stroyed vital parts of the machinery. The London papers reproduce a map of the British Irish waters show- ing hundreds upon hundreds of ships tate enemy alleges to have sunk by submarines. The map was issued as pro -submarine propaganda in Ger- many. Emperor Charles found the con- ditions of the armistice offered by the Allies so harsh, and considered them so dishonorable, that he would Ono NR Tablet Each .faight Por A Weak Will Correct'Youe Constipation and Make Constant Dosing Unttvices- Bary. Try It, Poor digestion and assimilation mean a poorly nourished body u.:.d low vitality. Poor elimination n.:' ,t5 clogged bowels, fermentation, i,e;tr,- factiuit and the formation of potso=,•.0 gases which are absorbed by the b:ood and carried through the busy. The result is weakness, heatdache:4, dizziness, coated tongue, inactive liver, l,tho :s attael.a, loss of energy, v nerv- ousne,:,q, poor appetite,. roil . vr i iah.e•i di iaue,luiid coftena times ia.tio us''ill iters, ortlinery p i ;.atives, purge 5 owl c+:r•- tll^rti,s•--stlti, oils, calomel soft tliu like•--,r,:^,v relieve for 0 few hours, bat real, 1.tuti:,;; benefit coo only canto throu.,it use of medicine that tones tip ar.J. strengthc:tt, the t1l , ;ti%u as Well ea the ell.nim:tive of c;ai.w. cot n, Ko box of Nature a Remedy (Mt T.'',le t) at:d tate ono toast sash night for 't week. . I`e1lef ;win follow the very first dose, abut a 1Y .rt t va `i ill elel', a before you fee 1 ue. 1 r e .e.izc the fullest hon.iit When Von t;et. straightened out and feel ju.;t t l„t t gain you lecoa hot tape sne.lit su+s evrty day -an oc a lienal will then loci:, your syt,te o ill iotud condition ood y. a will tawny.; f;:(.1 Your best it. r, I,:cep u w..11 is easiersup u•tl,., t1,to t c1 ll. ,Ntrturo'a nooec'y (+vlt d +1.1 1 1' ule Sold, (tuar:anttutl nod r•c:eono,u,.ai,J by your druggist. J. Walton McKibben, Winght>;,ttt ttemia„ . Site may enter •Bohemia as t, private individual. It was (QM' 1l: anonnl'ed that Ron, T. W. (` .:ah rt;, Minister .of Labor, who is nee ' t route for Cali- fornia, has ]sant; t t.:s resignation to slit Robert Borden and that It has wee a•e eptee. Ile',:. Gideon Robert- -tat, who ha:) eemesented labor in rho c'ubintt for route time pagt, in t lit len to atilt t.; an ehairauLn of the 1'•.fn.ttlis'+1 Ri'ai-tration Bop,rd, has ;,.'c•n at,,•oirtted Minister in suceee- eon 1o, air. ('ethers, and has been ',ern in, tia`?'t; ItDAY, tt;tratitt's eeetialties number 68,- r:,,t set e: eel 158,199 wounded, l'•, irnai, which has been oceupied t :he Ilrititsia, is on the railway line het -tele to Brussels. • f f a. (iotira ud holds the west bank ,.i il" mem, river from Sedan to ;it o.?aul:irts of Mezieres, his troops tiering one day having made an ad- fi•',isi live to eight miles. leeltlt Couunlasioner Copeland fee is Beed. the( there are about 21,e to rt children In New York who have l,r'e•r tattle foil or half orphans by s• ,lt irtiussz'1. :I.• 1l1 ctraI Munitions Board is ;t,lvl ing all 10; employes who have •isat ces tow to drop back into per- ,..sprat posit io!,t, to take advantage of thi-in without delay. 1 I)it ortc s v ith the Bolsheviks int Russia 1 , , r ,viug, especially among he pc.::,,nts.- Tee Iiolsheviki papers ;announce that the anti -Bolsheviks !Reiman revolts are also growing, Prince Henry of Prussia, brother of Emperor William, left Kiel on \,ednesday in an automobile flying ;t red flag. He was pursued by ma- rines, who fired a dozen shots at him, the newspapers Say. The British took 200,000 prison - ere Oa the western front from Jan. 1 not sign them, says a Vienna de- to Nov. 5, inclusive, -In the same speech. to the Berlin Tageblatt. The period the French captured 140,000 condition were finally signed by Field prisoners, the Americans 50,000, and Marshal Ary von Strauss' nburg, the the Belgians 15,000. chief of staff, During the absence of Sir Robert Tho Army and Navy Veterans are Iterden at the peace conference Hon. protesting against the punishment N. W. Rowell will be Secretary r,f imposed at Toronto on Pte, John State, Hon, A. K. MacLean acting Pope, of the 80th Battalion, who was Minister of Trade and Commerce and given two years less one day in Bur- Ilon. J, D. held will be acting Min - wash prison farm because he refus- inter of Customs, ed to take electrical treatment for A republic was proclaimed in Ba - shell shock. The veterans regard yaria at the conclusion of a great such' punishment as altogether too popular meeting. The Wlttelsbaeh harsh. dynasty has been deposed. Ludwig Mrs. Lillian H. Rain, widow of the III., King of Bavaria; is head of the late Capt. (Rev.) Roy Rain, told 1n House of Wittelsbach. He became the witness box; a terrible story of regent in succession to his father, how her husband was neglected in 2, 191 in , the Base Hospital, Toronto, at the Prince Lttipotdd, in 191 time of his death. Dr. H. C. Wales, An effort to ,ive the vote to the medical officer in charge, was rebuk- ed by Crown Attorney Greer for at- women of the State of Louisiana was tacking the dead chaplain by in- nuendo. THURSDAY. Ohio entered the column of states where intoxicating liquors cannot be sold or purchased. American prisoners in Germany are being badly mistreated in spite of the protests of the American Red Cross. Negotiations are pending for the withdrawal' of Field Marshal Mac - mania. kense's German armies from Rou- n Preparations are being made for the transfer of British and French troops to occupy the Dardanelles and Bosphorus. Orin G. Provencher, of Smith's Falls, a lad of 18 years, was sentenc- ed to five years in the Shawbridge Boys' Home, He had set fire to some pulpwood. Mutinous German sailors at Kiel have seized the battleships Kaiser and Schleswig-Holstein, and refused to return to their duties until a treaty of peaee with the Allies, is signed. The United. States naval authori- ties failed in their search for a mili- tary dirigible balloon contain six military aviation students, reported as having drifted beyond control over Lake Erie. A young son of Mr. James Doug- las, of Fort Stewart, in the northern part of Hastings County, got posses- sion of a dynamite cap which he ex- ploded. The result was his left hand was terribly lacerated, the thumb be- ing blown off. An official report from Berlin says: "The Russian diplomatic representa- tive will leave Berlin early to -day by special train, for Russia." It is said Germany has demanded the with- drawal of all Russian representatives in Germany. Edw. J. Fay, a world notorious ,crook and bank robber, known as "Eddie Fay," was found shot to death in an alley in Chicago. There was a bullet wound in his head just below the right ear. A gas explosion at the Sarnia Steam Laundry smashed every win- dow in the place and severely burned one of the proprietors, Mr. McMii- lon. Gas is used under the steam boilers, and while lighting this the explosion occurred. FRIDAY. Earl Curzon, member of the Brit- ish War Council, it is announced, has gone to the continent on official busi- ness. Lt. -Col. Harrison, controller. of the entire Department of Chemical Warfare, died in London following an attack of pneumonia, An order -in -council has been pass- ed putting dried, desiccated or other- wise prepared potatoes an the cus- toms free list in Canada. Mackensen may take his Germany army through Hungary from the 13a1kans providing that the troops lay down their arms on Hungarian soil. Col. Bruce, who went to London frotn France to operate on Lord Beaverbrook, has returned to hitt Military duties. Lord Beaverbrook is now out of danger. Complete and final liberation of the peoples of the Eastern Mediter- ranean countries from the oppres- sion of the Turks are i'he aims of Great. Britain and France. A fatal accident befell Mr. W. Brawn, who lives at Manilla, while out shooting robbits. He was walk- ing along carrying his gun under his arni when lie slipped and fell, Ma - charging the gun. Empress Zita of Austria has asked permission of the Prague Governt- ment to go with her children to Brandeis Castle on the Elbe, in Be - Bellmore 'Thee l,e[n,or,• VCfumen's instiutc have re- vOitl1y"sent a barrel c•outaining cit jars of fruit, al,ct to the boy's overseas 21 poxes eontai•,lul; o;trl, a shirt, hair of suck' and other ueeessary c'anttorts. Mrs .Arnold Stew.0 t at 'Toronto, is visit- ing at the horst,, of hair parents Mr. and Mrs, 'fine; Inglis. The Victory Knitting Club are prepar- ine bo're's to ;end overseas to the boys. Mr. Carter Melee has returned to his schoolat Galt after spending s. week with his ;talents Mr. and Mv.. l 'im Mists, defeat ed. L'ilhjulrual Stefansson, the .Arctic explorer, paid a visit to Toronto, where he was accorded a civic re- ception. It is estitm t, d that over 80,000 people attended the great service of thanksgiving in Queen's Park, To- ronto, on Sur:t'.ay afternoon. • The Great La.b' S Band, a U. S. marine band, under the leadership of John Philip Sousa, visits Canada to take part in the Victory Loan eampaign. 11. 8, Food Administrator Hoover will go to Europe to look after the work of feeding the people in the redeemed portions of France and tlelgitun. Joseph R. Bruce, superintendent of the Royal Bank of Canada, has been appointed to represent Canada before the Sug:u• Program Commit- tee of the International Sugar Com- mission. `.['he Swiss t'c:deral Council has de- ' i..led to break off relations'wttll the Russian Soviet Mission. The mem- ber:; of the Russian delegation were ,'irculating Bolsheviki propaganda in iv itzer1;u:cl. The last note to be sent to the old German Government before it Mats overthrown was a vigorous pro- test made by the United States against the cruel treatment of pris- olters of war. Rev. Dr. Chown, in a message to Methodism in Canada, said that the pities in the hour of victory must re, .ember that they- are the trustees of God to see that justice is done ir' the world. lie uttered a warning against the jingo spirit. The Great War Veterans of To- ronto held ai meeting, in which they warned the Government that the veterans had to be considered in the days to come. They said that the Government had been elected for the Sake of r•.otiscription.and must now expect some. plain speaking. '17 (' HSDAY. The lalling s. ack ' Renfrew of Victoria has fou tiered off the west coast of Vancouver Island. All of the crew of 13 t': ere lost. Oswald Clark, 14 years old, son of .T. J. Clerk, Leamington, was run over by a heavy iron roller, which, was bein;; drarr n in the parade here Monday night, and fnstantly killed. Anxiety is felt in London lest I3ritish prisoner s in Germany aro left to die of starvation. A despatch front The Hague sounds a grave warning in the need of prompt action. France decorated public buildings and celebrated last night. The mili- tary authorities tire salvos to lnfornn the populace that the armistice had been signed, and caused all belle to be rung: London was better lighted last eight than at any time since the first air raid by the Germans. Coast towns', at the request of the Admir- alty, will remain in darkness for a short time. Magistrate Kingsford in the To- ronto Police Court allowed all drunks, rlisordel•lies and minor of- fenders to go free yesterday. "This day is not appointed for punishment, but for amnesty and pardon,' he said. „ - Street fighting is taking place int Warsaw, the en.pital of Poland. The railway station there has been cap- tured by Polish forces, whish hav0 refused the 'GI ratan troops in the city permission to pass through Polish territory. Field Marshal von Hindenburg halt asked the Cologne Soviet, in order to "avoid chaos," to send delegates to the Main Ilea 'Ott rtefs itltmediately, aeeordtng to aiViceS reeelved hero The delegates started for Headeuar tees Monday 1 , 1r. ing, It Is said. '1. hursday Nov. 14th, 1918 The Canadian Angie N amusing skit on the effect of the new C. P. R. president's hat appears in the Chatham "News" -this effect being produced, doubtless, by the law of suggestion. The eat of Mr. Beatty is said to be tilted at a rakish angle; and the mo- ment that this was found to be the case, the mimicry of that hat became a sacred duty on the part of the em- ployees, according to the story. Inthe good old days of Baron Shaughnessy, says the writer, the brisk and businesslike boy who de- livers our 0. P. despatches used to march into the face with lits natty Mut) cap set square across his noble brow. That cap was a fixture there. We got used, to it. It seemed part of the • established order of things, One could as easily imagine the boy push. Ing it to one side or tbs other, as ,rine tonl& imagine a breeze on the !34ile upsetting the great Pyramid, One day la$t week we got a shock. Into our office tripped the young- ster with his cap tilted rakishly over one ear. "What'!% the matter, kid?" we en- quired. "Getting the flu?" "Nope," and he bricked out again without troubling to explain. But we have just discovered the truth. Baron Shaughnessy used to wear his hat square -set across his fore- head. Rut the new i resident of the C. P. R. --its first Canadian -born president --Mr. E. W. Beatty, invari- ably carries his chapeau tilted at a rakish angle. There are whispers going down the line that sedate firemen and brake- men and conductors all over the 1$,600 miles and. more of the C. P. R, are giving their headgear a shove to the east. A commerclat traveller through the West, who has escaped the flue, his system being too crowded with nico- tine to give the germs even the tini- est foothold, mentioned to us Just this morning that he had seen bell- boys in the 0. P. R. hotels out there with their caps entirely off their heads and banging from their ears, like pagan ornaments. He saw that more than one sq the C. 1'. R. hotels; andwhat the effect may be if the new practice is prevalent throughout the eighteen C. P. R. caravansaries, It fe Impossible to range. Telegraph operators in the 15,000 offices of the C. P. R. Telegraphs have been widely affected ey the new mdvereent in hats. The workmen in the great Angns car sharps at Mont- real, and in the C. P. R. shops at Winnipeg' and Calgary, • show, It Is Said, scarcely one piece of headgear *Mt retains the old _Shaughnessy Eminent Colffnre Specialist Coming Dorenwends of 'Toronto, the eminent hair -Specialists will be at the Brunswick Hotel bra Thursday, November 14th, with a grand display of the latest creations,in hair -goods including ladies'transforina- tions, switches, pompadours, waves, Old. and toupees and wigs for men who are bald. Alt those afflicted with loss of hair are invited to this display when a free demonstration will be given. THE Amvaliacms from naw until pet - 21st, 1010, for $1 I;0. E. W. BEATTY tl New Cl. P. R. President, level. The Beatty angle is the thing now. Even the chaps associated with the Canadian Pacific Ocean Serviees (re- presenting one of the largest passen- ger fleets in the world), with the C. P. R. western lands, with their' great ;17,000,000 irrigation scheme and ready-made farms, and with the mining and smelting interests of the C. 1'. R. on the Pacific Coast -even the men linked up with these 0. P. R.. subsidiaries have yielded, it is said, to the lure of the 'clted cap. It is even whispered that a few of the older locomotives with the wide - brimmed Stetson smokestacks of the vintage of 1889 have taken to wear- ing their battered crowns a bit to one side. We asked the kid about it this moi.'nsng, when he came in wearing, his cap at an even Beattyier angle than yesterday. "Do you really ex- pect xpect to be president of the C. P, R, some day?" "Every fellow's got a chance," .he rejoined. "But," we ex. plained, "Mr, Beatty went to Toronto University and studied law, and-" ,"That's just it," he said, "He was only a lawyer to start with and look what he done -just through wearing his cap like this. Don't try to tell me 1 ain't gat a chance -and here I'm starting at the bottom rung and working up." "But," we urged, pa. tiently, "it's better to be right -than to be president." "Yep," said the kid, "and its a beaverdamsite better to be both," He gave the corner of bis cap a yank, and went out whistling, "Central" Training Means Succes insurance The one who holds our diploma knows that he is qualified to fill the very hest 3 office positions, and, what is more, the bus•iness men of Ontario know it too. 0/7 THIS EXPLAINS WHY WE CAN SO READILY PLACE OUR GRADU- ATES IN DESIRABLE POSITIONS. Day and Evening Classes. Telephone 160. ID. A. McLachlan, Pres. A. Haviland, Prin ONTARIO ELECTION ACT, 1918 Notice of Sittings of Revsing OfficeraY ELECTORAL DISTRICT OF NORTH HURON TO WIT : TAKE NOTICE that the lists of voters for Polling Subdivisions numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, in the Municipality of the Township of Howick; numbered 1, in the Municipality of the Village of Wroxeter; 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, in the Municipality of the Town of Wingham; 1, 2, 3 and 4, in the Municipality of the Township of Turnberry; 1 and 2, in the Municipality of the Village of Blyth; 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 in the Munici- pality of the Township of Morris; 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, in the Municipality of the Township of Ashfield; 1, 2 3, 4 and 5, in the Municipality of the Township of East ' Wawanosh, and 1, 2 3, 4 and 5 in the Municipality of the Township of West Wawa - nosh; have been prepared by the Enumerators and have been delivered to the Clerk of this Board by the Returning Officer. AND THAT His Honor Judge E. N. Lewis has been appointed Revising Officer for the purpose of hearing complaints and appeals as to the said Lists for the Town- ship of Howick and the Village of Wroxeter; His Honor Judge Lewis H. Dickson has been appointed Revising Officer for the purpose of hearing complaints and appeals as to the said lists for the Town of Wingham and the Township of Turnberry; D. Mc- Donald, Esquire, has been appointed Revising Officer for the purpose of hearing com- plaints and appeals as to the said lists for the Village of Blyth and the Township of Morris. R. G. Reynolds, Esquire, has been appointed Revising Officer for the pur- pose of hearing complaints and appeals as to the said lists of the Township of Ash- field. C. Seager, Esquire, has been appointed Revising Officer for the purpose of hearing complaints and appeals as to the said lists for the Townships of East Wawa - nosh and West Wawanosh. AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that the sittings of ,the said Revising Officers will be held as follows: In the Town Hall, Wroketer, on Friday, the 15th day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said lists of voters for the Polling Subdivions in the Village of Wroxeter. In the Town Hall, Gorrie, on Saturday, the 16th day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said lists of voters for the Polling Subdivisions in the Township of Howicic, In the Town Hall. Wingham, on Wednesday, the 13th day of November, 1918, to, hear complaints as to the said lists of voters for the Polling Subdivisions in Town of Wingham. In the Township Hall, Bluevale, on Thursday, the 141,11 day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said lists of voters for the Polling Subdivions in the Township of Turnberry. In the Industrial Hall, Blyth, on Wednesday, the 13th day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said voters' lists for the Polling Subdivisions in the Vil- lage of Blyth. Ih the Township Hall, Morris, on Thursday, the 14th day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said voters' lists for the Polling Subdivisions in the Town - InMorris. In the Township Hall, Ashfield, on Wednesday, the 13th day of November, 1918 to hear complaints as to the said voters' lists for the Polling Subdivisions numbered 1, 2 and 3, in the Township of Ashfield, and in the Township Hall, Ashfield, oil Thursday, the 14th day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said voters' lists for Polling Subdivisions numbered 4, 5, 6 and 7, in the Township of Ashfield . In the Foresters' Hall, Belgrave, on Wednesday, the 13th day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said voters' lists for the Polling Subdivisions, in the Township of East Wawanosli, and in the Township Hall, West Wawanosh, on Thurs- day, the 14th day of November, 1918, to hear complaints as to the said voters' lists for the Polling Subdivisions in the said Township of West Wawanosh. Each sitting commencing at 10:30 o'clock in the forenoon. AND PURTI ER TAKE NOTICE that any voter who desires to complain that the names of any persons entitled to be entered on the said lists have been omitted from the same, or that the names of persons who are not entitled to be voters have been entered on the lists, may, not less than 5 clear days before the dates fixed for the sittings of Revising Officers, apply, complain or appeal to have his own name or the names or of any otherperson corrected in, entered on or removed from the lists, prepared under the Ontario Election Act, 1918. AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that such appeals must be by notice in writ- ing in the prescribed form, signed by the complainant, and given or left for hint at hi:, Oresidence or place of business, on or before the said date, to the Clerks of the Revising fficers as follows: Mrs. L. Walker, Gorrie as to ala peals Inc the Township of ahlowlett; D. M. Me- Tavish, Wroxeter. for the Village of \Vro' Wroxeter; ;i. F. Groves, Winf,harn, for the 'I'orvn of Win hath; Paul Powell, Wingliani, for the Township of Turnberry; A. Lldel', Blyth, for the Village of Blyth; Joseph Stothers, Blyth, for the Township Mordel Mo ; T. G. Allen'Township of Ashfield; A. Porterfield, xielgrave, for the Township of East Wawanosh; W. Wilson, Lucknow P. O., for the I'owlisliip of West Wawanosh. LEWIS H. DICKSON, ehairmain Voters' Itegistlatiun Boaid, County of Il<urun,