The Huron Expositor, 1917-10-05, Page 66
HIT LIKE
Tilt HURON EX PO
fter Taking Only Ono Box Of
"Fruitalvesn
Fast Sine Heasoue„ N. S.
"It is with great pleasune that I write
to tell you of the teoadetfue benefits .1
have received from titang ."Fruitest-
lives". or years, I waa a &mad
suffeeer fevin Coasiefealiort and /lead=
adiesoinai was nitieraMe in evet7 way.
Nothingin thetwaypfinedicine,s seemed
to help me. Then 1 fealty tried
"Fruitaa-tives" and the effect was
aalendid. After taking one box, I feel
like* new person, to have relief from
those sickening Headaches".
• Mus. MARTHA DEWOLFE.
50c. t box, 6 for p.m, tea size, 25e,
Lt alt dealers or sent postpaldby Frtdte
ietivea Limited, Ottawa.
The licKitop Mutual
Fire Insurance Go.
Ileadortice:,Seaforth, Ont.
DIRECTORY
OFFICERS.
X. Connolly, GodeXich, President,
jag, Evans, Beachwood, Vice -President
T. E. Hays, Seafortie, Secy.-Treas.
AGE:141'S
4.1e/r- Leitch, R. R. No 1, Clinton; Ed.
ginchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Egettonctteille; J. W. Yco, Goderich;
G. Jarmutle, Brodhagere
DIRECrORS
Willison Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; Sohn
Binnewies, Brodhagen; James Evans,
-
Beechwood: M MeEwen, Clinton; Jas..
Commlly, Goderich; D. F. MeGregor;
• No. 3„ SestfortIn I„ G. Grieve,
No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Oarlock;
George aldeartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS
WILL MAKE YOU EAT.
The sufferer from dyspepsia and ia-
digestion who- bee to pick and choose his
food, is the most ndserable of 4.1 man-
kind.
Even the little he does eat causes such
torture, and is digested so imperfectly
that it deo biro little good.
Vrnat dyspeptics need is not artificial
digestion but something that win put
their stomach right so it will manufacture
its cent digestine fertaents.
Burdock Blood Bitters restores the
etomach to a normal, healthy condition
so that food no longer distresses, but is
thoroughly digested and assmulated.
Misa. Ella McDonald, Charlottetown,
P.E.I.„ writes: "1 ,bave used Burdock
Blood BitterstintrfindThat feitineedielees
can give such relief in dyspepsiaand
etomach trouble. it was troubled fore
theme years with despepsie and could not
get anything to dO me may good untie I
took 13.31.B. I toe* fear bottles and
can honestly say I AM now cured, and
=neat anything without it hurting Inc"
al.B.B. is manufactured ottlyiby The
T. Milburn Co.. Limited. Toronto. Ont.
HOUSE FOR SALE.
For side, the two storey, seven -
roomed brick residence, on Jaraea st,
Seaforth, owned by Mrs. Ethel Mc-
Lean. Apply at The Expositor Office.
A Scimoimaster Recommends
MILBURN'S LAXA-UVER PILLS.
an....0111•11.4marear
•
men and ernraert alf walks of life who
oocupy sedentary positione are more
liable to liver troubles 'than those wbo
are active from morning till bight.
When yoti don't get the proPer exer-
aloe the Wires .do not ritove regfilarly;
youx liver becomes sluggish, the breath
be�nies foul. speeks Boat before the eyes.
everything turns black,constipation sets
In and brings in its train numerous
troubles that could be prevented if the
bowels were only looked after properly.
Milburn', 1,axa-Liter Pills will and do
regulate the bowels, and keep you in a
state of exoeflent health.
Mr. J. G. Hamilton, Schoolmaster,
Cornwall, Ont, writes: I have great
pleasure in recommending. Milburn's
Lara-eiver Pills. I am a teacher, and
all the time I do not get the requisiteamount of e.xercise I need, so I was
troubled with sour stonteeh, yellow eyes,
and specks floating before my eyes. 1
pwthased 5 vials of your pills, and have
ust finished them.
Now I am feeling all right."
Milburn's I,axa-Liver Pills are 25 cents
a vial at ali dealers, or mailed direct on
receipt of peke by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto. Ont.
ARMY IN WEST
ea um, can hard-
:
o any great -extent the
oe , s in the weste" says
- Northcliffe ia the • Septembert
orld'a Work. "Practically the
Iwhole German army was there 'al-:
ready, yet Sir Douglas Haig has
rendered it powerless. During the
last eighteen months he offsee captur-
ed the bulk of our 180,000" German
prisoners, who are a good set,off a-
gainst the 30,000 Bratish prisoners in
German hands Our captures include
large numbers ,. of officers, the only
kind of prisoner that countsin the
'Prussian mind. -
• "Haig and the French have had
opposed to them for many months
past the bulk of the German forces.
Even in the summer of 1916, after
Hindenburg had draevn off from the
Russian front a number of divisions
te be passed through the daughter -
house of Verdun, the northern sectors
of that front were very lightly held
on both sides, Along the whole of
it, Germans, Austrians, and the Turks
together did not number a million.
The Austrians, were a mixture of rac-
es and nationalities, with nothing but
discipline and fear to hold them to-
gether. They surrendered in droves
. whenever opportunity presented it-
self. There werenprobably fie di-
visions of.Gerreans, not a hundred
thousand men in the entire Russian
front-. Therefore, it is nothing new
for the French and British armies in.
France and Flanders to know that al-
most the whole of Germany4s availabIe strength. is pitted against them.
There is certainly nothing terrifying
in the knowledge. They are as num-
emus as the enemy. Man for man
they are 'better, troops. Theye have
an armanent which now exceeds- in
quantity and is more -modern because
newer than that of the Germans.
True, 'the Germans- being in the de-
fensive have a great advantage. De-
fending underground positions such
as the Germans, with the aid of en-
slaved Belgians and French, dig • and
build' to -day is a far easier business
than attacking them. A small num-
ger can keep off a large number. That
is 'why- the assistance of the United
States armies ie necessary. With that
assistance thelask can and will be ac-
complished."
. .4. - i
SOME WAYS TO DO IJP GRAPES.
Grape Jelly: Pick oyer -grapes, re-
move from stems and wash. • Put the
grapes in a white enamel kettle and
let simmer ovei. a slow fire until they
are thoroughly softened. • Strain
through a jelly bag. Weight juice and
allow one cup of sugar to each cup
of juiee. Put sugar in flat pans and
heat in oven. Bring juice to the
boiling point. Boil five minutes,
skimming as needed. Add the heated
sugar to the juice and, boil three min-
utes or until a little Will -jelly on a
cold saucer when tested. • Turn into
hot glasses, and when cold cover with
paraffin or paper. Wild grapesmake
the best jelly.
• Green grapes also make le delight-
ful jelly. For this the greens should
be picked when they are just. begin-
ning to turn -and the jelly made the
same as with the ripe grapes.
• Grope Conserve: . Wash six pounds
ofegrapes and press the pulp from the
skins. Cuteone and cme-half . oranges
in thin slices, but do .not remove
skin. Cook the grape pulp in a doobe
boiler until softened and remove
seeds by pressing through a sieve..
Add the sliced oranges and grape
skins to the, seedless pulp and cook
until the skins are tender. Add one
pound of seeded raisins and three
pounds of sugar, and let cool until
as thick as marmalade. Turn into
small glasses or jars and. seal.
Raisine — Take an equal quantity
of "grapes and pears, wash and
stem the grebes, add just sufficient
water to keep from ,burning and let
them sinuner untd soft. Then put
them through a sieve. Pare and core.
the pears and cut in than. slices. Add
the sliced pears to the grape juice
and let cool slowly until the peare
are tender. Stir frequently to keep
from beaming. Weigh, and to each
cup of the pear and grape. raixture,
&Hoer three-quarters of a eup of
sugar. Cook until the consistency of
marmalade. Turn into glasses and
seal. e
GIRLS WHO SLACK
"Oh, but 1 gave up van -driving ever
so long ago!" exclaimed a woman war
worker the other day when someone
expressed. surprise at finding her off
duty at an >unusual hour. ."I'm a
post -woman now—though I shan't be
much longer, Pm going to learn milk-
ing!"
"Sounds as if she were collecting
experiences of different sorts of war
work!" a man remarked in an aside;
and, as a matter of fact, that does
more or less represent the attitude of
a very large number of women at the
present time. There are slots of wo-
men—especially women who are not
wholly dependent on their own earn-
ings—who seem to be imbued with a
restless desire to sample just as many
varieties of war work as possible in
amilagemilimmor
AININNINIMMINNOW
S
that spoonful
Four and often five spoonfuls of ordinary tea do
not go any further than three of Red Rose Tea.
Less Red Rose is required because it consists
chiefly of rich, strong, full -flavored Assam teas.
Use Red Rose Tea
and save that
extra spoonful.
Kept Good by
the Sealed
Package
nEE•
Ibds Veen web
se ball
Sao la bode kig or
oataitaol smelts*
4tlantioSagre
itiforeriestintball
' iftweeeldiairig
MONTREAL,
10
the shortest time. The results are t Yankee. "I thought perhaps you
bad both for the work and the work- would rather have the motley than the
erscolt; but I tell you what, 1 habit got
It is not only necessary for Women money enough to put into that bird
to volunteer for the `•great masses ofand don't you talc selling to any one
special work which want labor; it is
also necessary for women to stick to
the particular work -which they take
up, unless there are serious reasone of
health or such personal causes for
making a change. Such reasons,
however. do not exist with 90 per cent.
ITolt
OCTOBER 1917
hour, after the day's work was done
far into the night, till at length he
mareged to draw from him the seere
of his misery, /
"I will never be a man again." he
said, bittterly, to Yankee. "And
there is, the farm all to pay for. I
have put it off too long and now it if;
too iate, and it is all because of that
—that—brute beast of a Frenc.hmand
"Mean. cuss!" ejaculated Yankee.
"And I am saying," continued Mao -
f
donald Dubh, opening his heart still
fight, wtill
furthers"I am saying, it was nhatever. I could whip him
with one hand. It was when I was
pulling out Big 'Mack, poor fellow
from under the heap that he teak me
unawares."
"That's so," assented Yankee. "Blam-
ed low-down trick."
"And, oh, I will be praying God to
. give me strength just to meet him! 1
will ask no more But," he added, in
bitter despair, "there is no use for me
to pray. Strength will ceme to me
to m.ore."
"Well", said Yankee'brightly
"needa't Worry about that varmint.
Ile ain't worth it, anyhow."
"Aye, he is not worth. it, indeed, and
tell we see her gait 'hatched up. But that is the man who brought .me to
this that Was the bitter part to Mea -
1 guess a little of the plow won't hurt donald Dubh, a man who he despised
for a few weeks or so:" had beaten hire. "Now look here."
Next day Lisette left .behind her said Yankee, I ain't much good at
forever the free, happy days .of colt -
this, but if you will just quit worryin',
hood. At first Beheld was unwilling
to trust her to any other hands than crokul nutndivier wire ts
,o Leelethatxttware,, little ac -
of the women who hop about from I' his own, but when. he saw how skill-
"Andha
one sort of Work to another, who are fully and gently Yankee handled her, meeteawideat goodacdwouldonald
Dubthh, "tbe is
anxious to de something different di- soothing her while he harnessed and
redwasly they have learned how eto do hitched her up, he recognized that she mynot so much the destruction of
self that wants to meet him." It
another thing well. It is a fatal rest -1 was safer with Yankee than with bita- LeNoir that he desired as • that he
essness which must be checked. Woe self, and allowed hitn to have the
n
s
t
ien war workers must learn that they reins. . should' have the destroying a him.
While he cherished this feeling in his
ctuanot do their bit in patch , work They spent. the Morning dtiving up heart, it was not strange that the
pieces; the latter can never be. made and down the lane ev\ith Lisette and minister in his visits found Black
to fit into a perfect whole. . Fox hitched to the stone-bont, The Hugh mnapproachable, and concluded
An employer of much labor who ha;
e cold had been kindly treated from her that he was in a gate of settled
aken on many women in place of men earliest days, and consequently knew
"harness of heart." His wife knew
ince the war, shook bis .head when nothing of feet, She stepped daintlY better, but even she dared not ap-
asked, if many women broke down un- beside old Fox, fretting and chafing in proach MacdonaldemDubh on. that sub -
der the strain of accuetomed Work.
, , the -harness, but without thought of ject,which had not been mentioned be -
"We've had very few Physical any violent °Mention. In the after-
tween them since the morning he bad
tneakdovvns up to the present, but noon . the ' colt was put through her here have been a lot of moral ones!" meaning experience, with the varia-
he Said, dryly. "Women have shaped tion that the etone-boat Was piled
-finely for our particular work. The up with a fairly heavy load of earth
t
t
t
oroable is that somany of them, af-
er they have bcorn--
een trained, into and stone. And about noon the day
following,Lisette was turning her fur-
petent' workers, ge_off to learn some
resh sort oi work. Then we have
o set to work to train others—who
proba.bly end by nerving us the same
rick .I.1
The case -is by no means an isolated
ne; it is the sort•of thing which has
een, and is, happening in all sorts
f we r work for women in all. parts
f the country: In many cases such
onduct is doubtless the outcome of
heer thoughtlessness and lack of eon-
ideratioa—because the women con-
erned do not. give sufficient thought
A
1
to the ethics of results of their ac-
tions. One woman whm had been
• trained almost entirely free, for no
lese than five different sorts of work,
js quite unable to, realize that her con-
duct. has not been quite fair, or that
it could in any way help to delay the)
progress of important work. Such de-
lays, however, are born through the
mania of women war workers to ,be
everlastingly doing something new,
and to stiek-forlong at.mo pne thing.
A private employer engaged on gov-
ernment work. had five women clerks
for a special branch of work in less s
than a year. . He says that all five
womenwerequite efficient workers,
but directly they got the run of the
job they went off to new work event-
ually the work turned into one for
which only "duration a war" applica-
tions were entertained. Quite a lot of
private _employers are following the
example of certain state departments
in that respectthese days—calling for
women workers "for the duration of
the war" and refusing to consider ap-
plications from. women who are al-
ready engaged upon war work.
It is not without reason that such
steps are taken. That is proved by
the statement of a woman workerat
a labor exchange, who goys that when-
ever any new war work for women
is announced there is an immediate
rush ,of women to take it up—and a
large proportion invariably. prove to
be competent weakers from other use-
ful emploimeat, who are bitten with
the craze for constant change, and
went to have a go at each fresh sort
of work that comes along. Such
restlessness- intist be killed. Women
war wozacers who would be really Use-
ful must cultivate the power of stick-
ing at it --for their own personal good
as much as for that of the nation at
large.
-
opened his heart to her. The dark,
haggard,gloorny face ha -Canted her. She
longed to help him to peace. • It was
this that sent her to his brother, Mae-
donald Rhein, to whom she told as
much of the story as she thought wise..
row with all the steadiness of a horse "I am afraid he will never come to
twice her age. peace .with God until he comes to
Before two weeks were over, Yan- peace with this man," she said, sadly,
kee, with the horses, and. Ranald, with i"and it is a bitter load that he is car -
the oxen, had fmished the plowing and • rying with him."
in another ten days, the fields lay "I will talk with him," answered
smooth and black, with the seed bar- Macdonald Bhain and at the end of
rowed safely in, waiting for the rainthe week he took his way across to
Yankee's visit had been a godsend, his brother's home.
not only to }Wield with Ids work, but He found him down in the brule,
also to Macdonald Dubh. He would where he spent most of his days toil -
talk to the grim, silent man% by the ing hard with his' ax, in spite of the
1 The Man From
Glengarry
By WO Connor
,41114111111•111011.11010401
I
(Continued from page seven.)
selling sewingernachines and new pat-
ent churns.
"There's plenty of pasture," said
Ranald, "and "Fox will soon make ;
friends with Lisette. She is very I
kind, whatever."
!Ain't ever hitched her, have you?"
said Yankee.
two IT
"Well, might hitch her up some
day. -Guess you wudn't hurt the buck-
board."
• "Not likely," said Ranald, looking
at the old ramshaekled affair.
"Used to drive some myself," said
Yankee. But to this idea Ranald did
not take kindly.
Yankee stood for a few moments
looking down the lane and over the
fields and then, turning to Ranald
said, "Guess it's about ready to begin
plowing. Got quite a lot of it to cite
too, ain't you?"
"Yes, said Ranald, "I was thialdng
I would be beginning to-rnorroW."
"Purty slow business with the oxen.
How would it do to. bitch up Lisette
and -oh Fox yander?"
Then *Ranald understood the purpose
of Yankee's visit.
"I would be very glad," kiaid Ran-
ald, a great load lifting from his
heart. "I was afraid of the work
with only the oxen." And then, after
a pause he added, 'What did you mean
about buying Lisette?" He was an-
xious to have that point settled.
"I said what I meant," answered
1
•
To the Zam-Bnk 'CoR.OYAL NAVAL CLUB,
Portsmouth, England.
Dear Sirst—I have found Zam-Buk most reliable for healing
t and abrasions, while for the relief of akin irritation it is invaluable.
(Sigoed) RODItE.Y. Kt, ietd)Arndzaire,
ENURE CREW PRAISES ZAM-BUIC
From Admiral to stoker, all grades of service praise Zam-Buk. Stoker fangs -
north, of H.M.S. " Cochrane, says I slipped, and ien on an exhaust .teaso
pipe, which fairly frizzled the skin. on nay arm. At once the ship's singatdreszed
the burn, hut the injury would not heal owing to a lot of dirt from the, pipe
causing blood -poison £ was in fearful pam and didn't Irectw how to ease.
" For weeks 1 remained under treatment, but the ordinary °in 4 • ed
good. Indeed, I got worse. I therefore obtained a supply o
iallineatiosntgacos smoonanenascett awnaasaafpepwried I. got ease. From the very finn ..orky
itd(;)::;:f102:111,;3:eof !1211:111-1!4o711!1:131:47"411
tlisementand lc. twin, Poshm.
earnest entreaties of Ranald. He was
butting a big tree that the fire had
• lain preme, but the ax fell away with
the stroke of a weak roan.
As he finished his cut, his brother
called to him, "That is no work for
you, Hugh; that is no work for a man
who has been for six weeks in his
I bed."
"It is work that must be done,
Ihowever," Black Hugh answerede bit-
terly.
• "Give me the ax," said Macdonald
• Bhain. He mounted the tree as his
brother stepped down and swung bis
ax deep into the -wood with a mighty
blow. Then he remembered and
stopped. Ile would not add to his
brother's bitternese by an exhibition
of his mighty, unshaken strength.. He
stuck the ax into the log, and standing
un, looked over the brule, "It is a
fine bit of ground, Hugh, and will
raise a good crop of potatoes."
"Aye," said Macdonald Dubh, sad-
ly. "it has lain like this for tbree
years and ought to have been cleared
long ago, if I had been doing inn
duty. -
"Indeed, it vein' burn the better for
tha.t" said his brother clieerfullye
"And as for the potatoes, there is a
bit of nee' clearing that Ranald might
as well use."
But Black Heigh shook his head-
"Ranald. will use no 'ran'g clearing but
his own," he &aid. "I am afraid he
has got too ;much of his father in hint
forlis own good."
(Continued Next Week.)
,ewzwaas.e4a...mnxfwgpsnrg0rAr/Zfaail%W/ViM/INS
CASTOR IA
ihr buts,
lb fill Ye Ike Always Ioti
Beers the
Sivetese of
Military' Service Act,1917
Explanatory „Announcement by the
Minister of Justice
MILITARY SERVICE ACT has received e assent or the
THEth
Governor-Genexal and is now part of the law of the land. It will be
enforced accordingly, and the patriotism and good sense of the
people can be relied upon to support it. Resistance to its enforcement;
however, by word or act must and wiU be repressed, as resistance to any
other law in force must be.
Reinforcements under the Military Service Act
immediately required
It is the intention of the Government Immediately to exercise the
power which the Act confers and to call out men for military service in
order to provide reinforcements for the Canadian forces. This is neces-
sar3r since the military authorities report that the reserves available or
in sight for reinforcement wilkshortly be exhausted unless this step be
taken.
First call limited to men between 20 and 34 who were
unmarried or widowers without children on
July 6, 1917
The present call will be limited to men not In the schedule of (=cep-
tions'who were unmarried or widowers without children on 6th July,I 917;
are at least twenty years of age, and were born on or since janeety ese;
1,8133. Of this Class all those will be entitled to conditional exemption
whose services in their present occupations; agricultural, industrial or
other, are essential in the national interest, and whose business or domes-
tic reponsibilities are such that serious hardship would ensue if their
services be required.Conscientious scruples hrs-sed upon a prohibition
of combatant service by the articles of faith of thereligious denomination
to which men belong will also be respected. The men first required to
serve will consequently be those who can be called upon with the least
disturbance of the economic and shcial life of the country.
Civil Tribunals to deal with exemptions
Questions of exemption will be determined; not by the military
authorities or by the Government, but by civil tribunals composed of
representative men who are familiar with local conditions in the com-
munities in which they serve, who will generally have personal knowledge
of the economic and family reasons which those whose cases come before
them have had for not volunteering their services and who will {be able
sympathetically to estimate the weight and importance of such reasons.
Provincial Appellate Tribunals constituted from the existing judiciary of
the respective provinces will be provided to correct mistakes made by
Local Tribunals, and a Central Appeal Tribunal for the whole of Canada;
selected from among the present Judges of the Supreme Court of Canada;
will be constituted in order that identical principles may be applied
throughout the country. In this way every man may rest assured of the
fair and full consideration of his &climate:tea and the national require!
tnents both civil and military.
Proclamation will announce the day
A proclamation will issue calling out the bachelors and widowers
referred to and fixing a day on or before which every man must report for
service to the military authorities unless he has before that day made an
application for exemption.
How to apply for exemption
Applicatiens for exemptien,may be made by vnitten notice on forms
• , which will be available at every postoffice'and will be transmitted free
of postage. They will not, however, be required to be made in this way;
but may be presented by the applicants in person to the exemption tri-
bunals The cases of those who have given writien notice in advance
will take precedence, and appearance in person wilt therefore be likely to
involve considerably more inconvenience and delay to the men con-
cerned, so that it is recommended that advantage be generally token of
the facilities for written application.
Ottawa, September 11 1917.
Exemption Tribunals hi all parts of Canada
The local exemption tribimalsevill be constituted with the least delay
possible, consistent with the selection of representative individuals to
compose them, and the instruction of the members in their duties. There
win be more than one thousand of such tribe -weds thrmighoutConada, each
consisting of two members, one of whom will be nominated by *ckit
Committee of Parliament, and the other by one of the ju
existing Courts. Every effort will be made by the wide of
tribunals, and by provision where necessary for their sitting* tooreth.ari
one place, to minimise the inconvenience to winch. niell will be put in
obtaining the dispoaition of their cestn. •
-
A Registrar will be appointed in each Province, who will be named
in the proclamation and to whoxn enquiries my be addressed, Beth
Provincial Registrar will transmit to the appropriate tribunal the aped+
cations for exemption which have been submitted in advance a the sit-
tings. and Men who have sent these in will not be required to attend the
tribunals until notified to do so. Other applicants shoull attend per-
0flli3r15 the tribunal without notice.
Now o report for service
Men who do not desire to claim exonption will report to the military
authorities for service either by mail or in person at any time after the
issue of the proclamation. Forms of report by mail will be found in all
poet offices, and, like applications for exemption, will be lesestnitted free
of postage.
Early report advantageous
No man who reports for service will, although he may be medically
examined and passed as fit, be required to go into camp or join a battalion
until after a day fixed by the proclamation sufficiently late to pertrdt of
the disposition by the local tribunals of most; if not all, af the applica-
tions for exemption which may come before them. Thus no advantage
will be gained by delaying or disadvantage incurred by prompteeport for
service on the part of those who do not intend to apply fee exemption.
Facilities' for immediate medical examination
Immediately upon the issue of the proclamation; medical bow & will
sit at every mobilization centre for the examination of men who report
for service or who, subject to their right within the time limited to apply
fax exemption, desire to have their physical fitness determined in order to
allay any doubt as to their physical condition, or to know definitely and
there in advance whether ere is a po sibility of their services being required.
Certificates of physical unfitnessssued by these Medical Boards will be
accepted without any further investigation by exemption tribunals when
they sit. Men found phyaically fit who have not reported for service
may nevertheless apply for exemption on any of the prescribed grounds;
including even their physical conditioa if dissatisfied with the Medieel
Board's conclusion.
Notice to join the colors
As reinforcements are required; notret173-report tothe—iegulgt— mobil-
ization centre vvill be given from time to time to the men found * and
passed as fit for service: Disobedience of SUCh notice wilt the
offender liable to punisluneet, but punishment for failure to report for
military service, or to report subsequently for duty when called upon;
will be imposed ordinarily by the civil magistrates; offenders, however;
will remain'liable for the performance of their military duties notwith-
standing any civil•punisfunent which may be imposed and will be liable
to military punishment in cam in which civil proceedings are not taken
Watch for the Proclamation
Notice of the day amointed'for the making of a claim for ezeraption
or for report for military service will be published as widely as possible;
but, as no personal notice can be given until the individual* called' ant
have so reported themselves or claimed exemption. men possibly cen-
cemed are warned to inform theenselvea with regard to the day fixed;
since neglect may involve the loss by them of important privileges and
rights,
CHAS. 3. DOHERTY;
Minister' of justice.
tee
,CTOBE:
R BUT
4T* be healthy at se
is sound advice
of middle life •
at the careless tre
aims undermines
Keep your blood pu
"lee with the strengi
-nourishing prope
asion whici is a fo
medicine to sustain
'ate rheumatism. a
No harmful tine
Scott 8 Bowne, Tom
LEGAL.
R. S. HAYS.
r Solicitor,Cte
Solicit")
k. Office izt
Seaforth
J. X BEST
Barrister, Solicitor,
Nothxy Public.
Over Walkers Furnitur
Street, Seaforth.
IMFOOT, Trinets)
COOKE.
Solicitors,
oney to lend.
of each w
W. Proudf
H. J. 1)..
do
4A.Ammirme...0,..••••••••
tiate of
ege, and honoree
Association o
„ege. Tr
Os by
p es. Dendsdy
. Offiee op
t, Sudo
hotel
`on. Night
Alt
oInc
-der graduate o
ege. All disea
ted. Calls
and charges
Arznary Dentistry a
•sad residence on Gode
Aoor east of Dr,. Scott'
ME AL.
W.J.GLANFIET 0.
Thysician.Hone
ef niversity of Toronto
taperience. Bracefield, 0
DR. GEORGE HEIL
Osteopathic Physician
ipecialist in women's a
Ataeoros, rheuraatiSin,
and nervous disorders; e
laid -throat. Consultation
the Royal note], S
and Fridays, 8 a.
. . W. IIARN, M
425 Richmond Street,
Seazialist, Surgery and
*Fry liseases of men. and
Dr. ALEXANDP
Physician and Surg
Office and Residence, Ji
Phone 70
DR. J. W. PE
Graduate of Faculty
*Gill University, Mon
llege of Phyeicians
tario;Licentiate of
o_ Canada; Post -Grad
Regident Medical S
ait4 Montreal, 1914-
t a Post Qffice
ntario.
DR. F. J. BURRO
Office and reeidence, G
Ieast of the Methodist thu
Phone 46. Coroner for tI
Zinn.
GitsSco.tSt,CgrOTadTua8ste31A
91
College of Physicians
AIM Arbor, and memb
aPhyskians and Su
Lflo.
Mackay, honor grad
niversity, and gala
Medicn1 oliege;
ege of Physicians
0.
uata Univerat
icine, me
y Lana and
• pass graduate
0 Clinicaj School
Ophthalmic Hose);
d, University Hosp.
d. Office --Back .of
Seaforth; Phone
answered front r
eet, Seaforth.
..AUCTIONE
THOMAS BE
auctioneer f
Pert.k
for sale
up Phou
r Wee.
g
E. T. LUXE