NEWS A r i- PftiM I HZ Mm This- Dangerous Condition Br East Tbomto For two years a of Indigestion and fitomnch It attached i that could Around 1 tried all of but did mo any good At last I decided to try I bought the first box- lost Juno and cow I am well after using only three Soxes I- recommend FruUntiTcs to anyone suffering from Indigestion J a box for trial At alt dealers or sent postpaid by Ottawa QUICK SALE Owner leaving town Frame Collage good -well- small greenhouse stable acre of laud crook at bottom of lot All kinds of fruit Adjoining College Farm Apply to Ho Newmarket 37U i I I I I I I I FOR BALE House on Huron at a bar- for quick Bale Also one on Queen St Apply to CM Mr has sold hie property on Sharon Road to Mr Fry of Toronto who intends moving to thp Landing next Spring has sold his property on Yongo St to MrH A of Toronto who intends to use it as a understand that Mr is about to remodel the house purchased by Mr Other properties wo undcri stand are likely loohahgoptands Surely the Landing is booming I i KINO CITY I HOUSE TO RENT corner of Prospect and Sis All modern conveniences Good and Garage For apply to Newmarket J- Horses and Harness one Shetland Pony Apply K ROBERTSON Newmarket FARM FOR SALE i Lot Con of Kink All under cultivation Brick House and Hank Barn fine young Orchard Good well and small pond on the premises Three miles the Towns of and Au rora mills Mclropoli- tan- stop also rural mail and tel ephone service further par- enquire Mrs Spruce St Aurora The annual Plowing Match the direction Klpg and Vaughan Plowmans is to be held at Sir farm near Friday Nov The dinner and supper will provided by Womens will he in Lake Mario Farm The proceeds are for Cross to buy more wool to knit more socks The Branch at Mrs Ouo Lawsons Wed nesday afternoons The folloVing was the program Simple enter tainments in the Country by Mrs Winter The Art of Liv ing Together by Mrs Sinter The Call was responded to by Bright Ideas Aurora Proctor is now a notary public for the town ships of King and and the own of Aurora says tilt Ontario There is a very grave suspi cion in my mind but I am not absolutely convinced of guilt so must give you the of the doubt said Magistrate Brunlon in the County Police Court here last Friday as he dis missed the charge of obtaining money by false pretense which had been laid against Alfred But cher a local coal dealer It was alleged that the accused had de livered a load of coal purporting to contain a ton and when coal was weighed it was found to be lbs Butcher claimed that he had an account of Hi for against and he gave for Si on this account after tell ing his driver take a small load lie was ordered to refund the SLOT I J 1 lwrne of Chan Tim incident and has been made nndeT rod which waging with Denmark and in yearii Allow ho one to which tholattor country was pen- la thin l jucteoodflrebutexTimentn right to yield tomight and is a harmless Denmark had to accept what for Castor Oil Paregoric Drops she could obtain from her Soothing It Pleasant It victorious foes neither Opium troops- were marching with the nor other rotobuu celerity o which IJiey iTiA bed us in the Great la its guarantee It than thirty years It hasten la constant lor the of Con stipation Troubles and Diarrhoea It regulates he Stomach assimilates the Food giving healthy and- natural The Children Friend of in For lit t i I PERRIN8 GREENHOUSES ST I GOOD THE IIIEAT winELEsa Catharines Oct Dr Bell addressing the CaiVadian Club last night on Ap parent said the telephone has reached its ex treme limits what next I can not say what next hut can tell you of something that happened in Washington about three weeks ago The telephone has been applied to wireless and a man in Arlington just across the river from Washington talked with a man on the Tower in Paris by telephone without wires But that is not all A man In Hono lulu heard the conversation From Honolulu to the Eiffel Tow er is miles onethird of the circumference of the globe Docs it not mean that we can talk from any part of the world lo any oth er and wire In All Dr Bell referred to the groat advance jn aviation in recent years though the airplane idea was years old and predicted machines flying miles an hour as high as2p000 feet in air The they are rarer the air and the greater the The lime will come v IN ANY QUANTITY PHONE 135 OXIDIZED On Short I Machinery for Sale DAVIS East of Bank of Toronto Newmarket Furnace Work Plumbing j Our Specialties See the Bathroom at Shop THE LEADING TINSMITHS It TO lililTU8 imiy can remedy most ills and help you to escape many if you give me timely NaturallyNature prefers him imi Good as the wheal is an old about as much the last word in meaning as Safe as the Bank of England A bag of No Northern clean as a whistle of rookie and foxtail was a symbol of sure value long before gold was known in the world Wheat lias been found in too Pyramids The Egyptians just about wor shipped wheat The Bible calls it corn so do the English But when we say good as the wheat we refer to the bushel of brown hard kernels worth by Govern ment fixture this year In the memory of living man when did good as the wheat mean more than it does now i Never A bag of wheat weighing two bushels and a peck totsup in to just about the value of a five- dollar gold piece But of course no man wants gold for his wheat All he gets is a check made out in his favor on some bank and sign ed by the manager of some ele vator company or milling corn The check is converted in to bills or goes on deposit wheat good paper nobody asks any questions Because the company is K and the hank is sound If any wheatseller had any doubt of either ho would at once demand something else I sojd good wheat he woulo say I want something as good in exchange What made the wheat good The good farmer behind it A can make good seed wheal What makes the paper The good security of the corporation whoso it bears Tho sounder the corporation the nearer the paper comes to being as good as the wheal But oven a big company may go broke Back of the corporation is a con cern whoso guarantee on a piece of paper is belter than either The pledge of the Dominion Canada to pay any man money for value is as good as the wheat and as safe as the Bank of England The best pledge of the Domin ion of Canada lo pay is a Canadian Bond belter than checks or GOOD AS WHEAT I Suppose you change that twenty bags of wheal on your wagon not into a check or notes or even gold but into Canadian Victory Bonds of each bearing interest at lye and percent per an num and as negotiable on the market- as the best check or the best load of wheat you ever saw Its worth considering speed when you will lake your break fast in Newfoundland and your supper on the west coast of Ire land he said The inventor of the telephone positively prophesied lob that the day would come when light vibration would be transmitted electrically and persons would be able to see by wire I hough he does not himself to aid in realizing this In this connec tion he recalled that In he filed a patent at Washington and it became rumored thai was lo afford sight over lelegraoli wires and once a group of claimed to have made prior dis coveries and denounced Bell as a thief Transcontinental Whisper lie detailed the origin and de velopment his telephone thai a few days ago he had whispered a message from New and received a whispered renly Or Bell In concluding said that just as the world war had broke been deemed an why should not an international league of peace be possible War raging at when ah a British TractSocioty fell in with an Aus trian He ventured to ask the colonel if it would ho pos sible for distribute some books among his soldiers The colonel Austrian Catholic as he was replied most courteously thai he regretted ho could not grant the request the day was closing- ana there was scarcely daylight left to reach his destination Unwilling how ever- to refuse his kindness alto gether he told the agent that he was to order a halt for lis- min utes and the suf ficient for him if he cared to give the tracts lo the officers who be promised should dis tribute them to the men on IJich arrival in the evening The officers politely received tracts the live minutes ex pired and the regimentwent its way tin way of suffering and death to many a brave fellow in the lull flush of hope strength Oil the following day the regi ment went into action and a bloody fought On the third day along with some comrades the agent who had giv en the booklets to officers visited the scene wnore con flict Had raged On every side were visible the trophies of death fearful grim Many a soldier lay dead upon the bloodstained ground Whiu with moist eyes upon these prostrate forms it seem ed as though one made a move ment Drawing near they caught the low moans of one in great pain and hurrying forward dis covered a man still living but so from thirst and loss blood that he was unable to speak Having received some water he revived sufficiently lo tell them how he had been left as dead on the field when the the wounded were removed He had been there alone for lVo long days and nights without food oi water his wounds undressed ex posed to the sun by day and the cold by night his life ebbing slowly away hut he added These have been happy days the very ever spent I never knew happiness before I He pointed his pocket and made signs for them to lake something from it They did so and found a tract It was one I hose given three days before to Hie Austrian It was wellknown tract Come to Jesus in Kalian Again taking a drink and with much effort but eyes beaming with peace and joy the dying man exclaimed Yes in that little book learn to know Him T never knew Him before Walt Provide It will bo advantage of Canada If the entire quota men to be raited Mattery Service Act can bo secured from the fintclctsj Is from men between and who were unmarried or widowers without children on July This Is almost for following reasons I Authorities oil proper exemptions been allowed Canada should be able from first class men fit for service so drain upon the man power of country vill be severe of Class One will be well advised to present for examination immediately ihe Medical Board in their district Upon examination as to their physical fitness they will be placed in oca of the following Category A if fit for service In overseas fighting units Category if fit for service overseas in Army Medical Corps Forestry Battalion etc Colagory C if fit In Canada only Category If unfit for military service of any nature If not placed in Category A the applicant will know that he Is liable for Immediate service but will CO to Post Office and tend in claim for exemption with his Certificate attached when he- will re ceive In due course a of Ihose in his medical category are summoned for service Vhere a man who Is placed In category A feels that exemption should be allowed an application form can be secured from postmaster This form when filled bo forwarded by to Iho registrar of the district and applicant vill be informed by mail as to the lime and place far ft on Military Scrtkc consideration of his application by the Exemption a u profoundly pulling the trunk ai- at right angles with the legs so that the nod or slight inclina tion of the body which Oc cidental makes seems to them in adequate salutation but lliey condone this Occidental ity or perhaps accept the will for Ihe deed In entertaining or Americans Japanese hosts and hostesses think oo lite lo dress in European style and serve Kuriipeon topri and drink but they exhibit in their houses the traditional Jap anese style of dressing tables and using flowers and plants for interior decoration The Chris tian Register o twain he covered his feet What a lesson in modesty What a lesson for Sunday What a rebuke to of color which distracts the eye and mind during worship in many a socalled up- todate church Farmer A boasted that he was the earliest riser in the neighbor hood Farmer thought he was lying and set out to prove it rise at oclock the ncit mora and went and rapped Farmer door in knock answered by the housewife Wheres your husband asked expecting to find boaster abed Si was around here early morning answered the but I dont know where now IU mio Salvo tore Jesus OF Protection of Child Life Must When the rear tire of their motor out Pic and two companions crashed into a Metropolitan trol ley car at Richmond Hill on Sat urday flarvey was thrown over the windshield and sustained severe injuries lo the head while his two companions escaped with minor and bruise was taken lo the General Hospital in a passing motor car The oilier two sol diers were taken to the Convales cent Hospital All three soldiers are returned men Secret Service Agents have already seized in New York and in large stores of cooper oil and nickel valued at 000 owned by and are engaged in Identifying other stores said to amount to many millions more in value When these will be solved is a flatter that Washington is now said to be considering Under the Trading with the Enemy Act the Government through its alien has full power to seize all the property and make an accounting for the seized stuff after the war Greater Attention The importance of infant wel fare work at this stage in tho nations crisis is daily becoming more generally recognized by all glasses of the community For many years our public health have been sowing oh what seemed very barren ground but the outpouring of the nations blood the willing sacrifice thousands of the best and most virile of the race has caused the apparently lost seed to germin ate and here are now of an abundant harvest Had wo looked after our infant life dur Ihe last forty years there ought to have been today Iwden the ages of and Arm LABOR Defenders of the liquor indus try have always professed anxie ty concerning the great army of workmen that would be thrown out of employment upon the adoption of National Prohibition Much is said about the enor- amount of capital that is invested in Ihe liquor industry and yet for every y in vested in the average industry practically six as many workers are employed as in liquor business Take a few leading Canadian industries and compare them with the liquor business For every invested in each of the industries the following number of wageearners are employed Liquors Agricultural Imple ments anil Butter and Cheese Bread House Building Clothing Furniture These figures show that the number of wage- earners in the liquor business is comparatively small compared other industries The changed conditions fol lowing the adoption of National Prohibition do not mean that they will go adrift cause a panic Some adjustment will- be necessary The constantly changing situation in Ihe indus trial world often compels men lo change their occupations and many have to learn new trades It is an acknowledged fact that lose their jobs because WsU TRY- THEM TODAY Lave td letter Hits Year ICingston Potatoes ore veiling on the market at per and stores at per fetish el and it is the prediction of i heaters that before they will be selling at per and One 1 great drawback la the fact that than per the tamers or County have feithftfoiHu crop to tue labor Chatham- Oct The On tario Sunday School Association closed its annual gathering here tonight The threeda convention has been one of most successful ever held by association and the plan of di viding the work of the Into two conventions has proven highly satisfactory- The at tendance was fully up to expecta tions- and practically large when delegates attended from all parts of the Province OiT fiQU A ftpd fLde J o i Dull and difficult v I the fighting forces In other words have allowed through our blindness thousands of men to die in their infancy male babes born often healthy and in all re spects capable in duo time if proper attention hod been given them or if their home conditions had been belter of growing up and doing their full duly to the nation as our splendid sons of today are doing in the battle fields of the world Because of improper conditions around them which are removable thousands of these fellow citizens of ours whom wo shall too late wish we had saved now die within twelve months of their arrival In the world Edmunds in Jour nal of the Royal Sanitary Insti tute X JAPANESE P3 There is one point of good manners in which the Japanese especially Japanese ladle excel they arc admirable listeners visibly giving perfect attention with and ear and or attitude the person who is speaking to them They differ from English en gaged In social in one not unimportant respect they smile less easily when talkii and laugh but little They some- IIIC lllUMl the case if Ihe trade he destroyed Someone has said When liquor nuts a man out of a job il him for another Job is bet ter thai Ihe bartender should lose his job and get a better one than that dozens of patrons should lose their jobs and be unfitted for any job We find humility In Gods very presence i The seraphim in ad dition to hiding their faces also covered their feet With twain he covered bis feet this to keep himself screened Those feet shone with ineffable splen dor But shapely feet and shin ing faces in Gods presence must never be obtruded is true their pinions could not hide any thing from Gods alleeelrfe eye But the creatures hu mility guides him to avoid all display in Gods temple No dis tracting display of dress wealth or human culture should take place in worship When a wor shipper once faces God he never obtrudes even his feet There fore how unbecoming and even shameful is much of Ihe dress display in many a modern church I Feel that draw in work study or play J is a welcome help times therefore seem grave and on by their Wicked- to an unnecessary degree tt6BB twenty shoes at when good cheer or that draw attention merriment would be appro- tbejv immodest They bow to each other in Teeth breath tite digestion and spirits are the bet ter for it makes the next pipe or cigar taste better It pleasantly sweetens and mouth and throat mm J rvis i LI s r M frwd feW i I j HI TORONTO Trl mm v Sr5