H^ > > .1 September 27 1917 THE FLESHERrON ADVANCE â- e* ^notice"^ We h»ve now a fuM line of farm iinplcri.ent* includii)^' ihe oa'piit cif llenfiew M<ichim>ry (>., Oiick- fhutt Plow Co , S iiLjur St'wiiiL' Machine Co., & clc. IntenUnl ]>urch»8ei'K of Cream Separators do not fornet »»' are siill Ntl mg the Standard Cream St-ptra'or. Have already this season in idi>. over oiib half a hundred hoiius liii|ipy with i.ne. Can Ktipply yuu wr.h rtiiy »ize re<juiied on shott notice. We are also Kivinj; a cash piiKu of $12 1< r beat live pound lull <if luittcr made from creaui of ,1 Stiindiiid Cream ScpsiMtor iit Kevor.sliani Kail f-»ii', divided in three prizes, $<.,f 4 and if-'. l'air"n iite scdicifpd. Ft I further pan iciiUis ipply to FRANK G. DUNNING WALTER KERTON, Fever.ham . Phone R. 2 short 2 long. . Strayed Krom the premise* nf i!i» umlervigned some weeliK ayi, ."• eaiKiunl 6 Ijeicester UiiiUn, und'>cl(ed. Iifoiiiiatniii w»iild { lie thankfully received. I \V. S. INKSTKK, U..ii.han.. 'â- Farm For Sale I I Being lots Ii6 and ti!t :;m1 Iuu' norlli i.f I tbt Durnaiu foad, conlainin:^ liHt ncrcs. t)n the pienuTs i.re a friine h.iin i.nd straw shed and a lai'«{e l«u >.t.'rey Ktoiiu ' bou'te, altu e"od walei 'IVtoii (•u.'-y Apply lo-Mii.S. .)KKIC\ THii.Ml'.-<rN Sept 15 I'. ,x .".>'i. (•.,lliiii;'..i».(l. ' BUSINESSCARDS 80CIETIE.S piilNCE AKTHUR LODOK, .So m t , .^ K * ' A U, tij«eta in tb( MftHuuic-UaU. Arui troKK'B hlock KliMhartoD. *tverv Kndav oij b«for« t)i« full moou. T. ll.mi . W. M. H. W. HIckliuR. bw.ru-.Kry. CHOSKN KKIK.NDS KrMl...rl<.ii ( oiiiui C.licnni Kri«u<l» :;U iim-l« m t'ia«t>iii HhI tnt and tbiiil \Vriin»i.d>\ „• ...i, ii.oi.ih « »> |i.ni. Pay natttiuetiti. to l;.<itii,i < r. l<*fcrt iLe firkt (lav c.f ifiih intiili. » hi.' i^iuccillor, W. II.HiiDt; Ktcn i.i 1 . .M i, I. .\ Jr.eher. Dentistry tW E C MURRAY I.. D. K , dental enrBem, j *' ij< iiOJ Kra.luate of Toroaio fuivurBity aud I htya. <.«ll««e of IJental hurgeonii ot OiiUriu ' (•M •daiuiniit«rwl for tMth eXtractiou Vm* at realdeDce, Torouto Blreei. l'Ii^::ttrioii. | Medical I fP OTTEWKLL Veteriuarjf RurceOD jra<Ji.»t« 'if Ootaric Veterinari ir,n»et raradcue* â€" isuoiid door «outh i\«>in od ^*"!.-. '.*'••>, '^^^* '"••» '"«•• ut'tli PrM>bjt«rlan Cbnreb. I CMas. E McLean. M D. C M, ^•peclally â€" Surgery, .Midwif.ry A ULmeHM DiseiineN Okm< »:hâ€" Klesherl in. h «â- ll..ii.... I'riceville-Cimnn-ri ial Hi tri. '.i.:ti) t<> 1 |..rri l>rt\g Ktore in innn<'i:lioii »it)i oHii'r, Ofht* ll'ium ill KIcKhertim WVrlni'Mhiy mil Kfid^y afti'rnniiii 2 t<» '> |i. 111. l'b<iii>- meKKiijrci' rccriv iirmniit atimtiiMi iii lyth i.rtiw" IHM n Is Legal i LUfAH. KANKV A tiKMtV-llarrlflei.. ! nollcitori.eir.- I. H. l,uca«, K. C: W..K. ( R*a*]r, K. r'. : W. l>. Hmir), II. A. (iilu't'n. | /oroDto. WO'J Tiadi-ra Hank lllilu.. |ili>iii<. IcalD ]41'2; Mtrkilale I.iicaa Illiak, I'liu' « 'J \. Hrancli oUic« at Uuudalk opaii «v»rv hatiir<ia\. WKIOHT. TKliKOIlIJ 4 MiDONAI.li l*«rrl«t.r. Kolicitorn, Ac. t)t>li.-« (in • llr'icc lllovk, llwcil Houiiil. KtaililHKl Hunk Work. Klethi-rl'iii. (SatiirrtBvn W.ll. Wimi.i, Vi. V. I'elford Jr. J. C. M<[)oi.»l-l. I,. 1.. |i. Rr.siNK,s.s C'akdh *• CVlAMVdH A VOLJ.S'd liankem Maik'talu (iniieral liaiikiiiii buaiueaa. iloiii-y luauivi •t reaaooal^ld latii* Call uii uh n McPII.ML, I.lr.riistd Aiictloiiea toi 11 r < a'' County of (irny. 'ririiia rno.luraii: m .1 j (kim acticn KUaiautcu'l. 'Ilie arraiiKniii' :iii> and itati.li of kalcecan la inixtrat rliK Aiivai..i , tilfice. I(i:iii(leii(iki.il P.ii .. < 1 )|iiii. Til 1 jiliii . . ci/uuectiun. lin-. 1). > 7 i U'M. KAITTINH, lounai-d Aiictionui'r i.n '' tlm counliftfl ot (iroy ami hlniiM' ••arui Bill Stuck Balon a HpBcialty. Term- jjuiliiHlo patiefac'lipll KuarautiHil. Arriiiii'. uiUiiii. lor dalna may b« iiiaituat llin AdvHuii jILlp, i.r (autral telerliriiionfllcK Hiivtiri-liHiK Ot hy addraMlUK uic at Fev«rihaui, Out. Fall Fair Dates KI.KSHKUTnN. M.rkdalj <'al«d<iii CvalHworlli Chealey Ciarksburg Culliii){«rood . . . . Dundillt Durham. . , Kevcishani Hanover Ho'Htein London (Weateru Men ford. .,,,,,, Moutit F(irf-iit.,,, <)r«ni<evillo Owen Sound. . . . rrioeville R'lcklyn Shplhiirne. .,.,,,, 'I'.r,. , Toronto (C.N.K ) Walkerton Watler'n Kail-,... Wiarton (let. li X .•â- ' Oct. !t .V- hi Del. :•. A I .. . Sel.t. i:i .V 11 Sept. if & I'll .Sept.. IH* 1!) j Sept. Ill 21 j Oct. 11 A 1-' j Sipf. 1*11 A 'Jl I Oct. 2.V :i I Hepl. 20 A 21 j Sept. 2(i 1 Fiili) Hept. Tl.'i I Sept. 27 A 2H Sp[il. l!t.ik:2fi Sept. 18 A 111 i Sept. l|-i:i I . .. . ..Oct. 4S. 6 I . . ••«!«â- â- . , .' >al. 4 i( 5 .....â- ^..Si'pl. '-V. *2<l Ooi. 2<f ;i .\iiK' •'•' Sf|it. Ill , . . .Nil Kail lliii4 y(.,ii , iSoDi. S3 A 2(1 Sept. 2.T .V 2* THE SPRIG of MAGIC HEATHER Among tlie Selkirk Mountains â€" Mt. MacDonald on left and Sir Donald on right. JM jii."! an orilitiary. evcrvday work- ing Human. That 1 earn my liv- iiiK »ith a fountain pen and a t |i«-wriier. rather than with a tine i.'fUle and HfwIiiK machine, or a "ool!y I loth and a- |mil of suds, is< an at < itliiit of leni|>erameut. I get jii.vt •..â- ^ tired .xonietliiics scrapinR up tiioiiKlits and iiiinliig iliini into sen- t(ii(e<! a.i the oilier woman does who f iie-i oinb.s VoRue or the Ph tnrlal for ^ new »ay to make her < iistonierf cieulug loal. Hui this siimiiur 1 had a holiday. â- Jvp had them li^fore. hut they've t;.ken me to towns iha! vere bisfter iiiut dlriler and more iH'dlsinedly bo- )ihi-li(aied tlian my own. I'w lome I ai k so many dollars poorer, not a jiound heavier, and. If 1 Inought me- ir«ntos hoiiii' Willi ine. iliey were liodywearahles not .soul dellghlabl<-8. Hut this >ear I had a holiday that was so different that 1 il rather tpell It the old way and lall it a Holy l>ay. 1 spent a whole month In the Cana- clan Faiin. l<orkle.<i. Do you know wliSt I'm louklnv at row? I Is a spriK i)f red heather and I \^o^lldn'I (tiie It up for a wardrobe- trinkfiil of diitlablea. I hold it in my Itand. the IciurIi little brown stalk of it. and khv Kieen leaveH. Ihe purply pink llaiiio that It flowers Into. And the walls of niv den Ko liac k. melt out The sun !•< lUKh In ilie iloudlegg heavens the blue lieayens that aeem io hariK MkH a soft r iirlain dropped to regi on the pnij« 'ops of the great , n'ounialiiH. All mnrnlnK I'vo IoIIoa. I i; the trail t'lriiKKti tlii'^r>-al t reeK of the Asiilkaii Valley by Ihe side of the leei old rnarinK elai iai river, ni.tll the paUi led ^ne hack to ihe fcoiirees of ever> ihiiifr. The mountain slopes lay before me III a vast fan. (Ireat giillieH Into mhlih voii lOiild drop a eiiv bloek Deutchiuan's ':abin at Nakinui Qjive. Glacier, h.3. looked like v rlnkles In tlie brown velvet flanks. The river had Its four f( Id henlnnins on these slope.s. To fc'llov, anyone of the s'leanilew up ti) lis parent glailer-tonKiie would have been a day's Joy. hut the trail had elei led to keel) to the left aeiord UiM to the tralflr laws of British Co li.nihia. At l.oir.e I'ra reckoned a fairly Kood â- .* alUs ;•. 1 ran do a eoiiple of mllns without lieliig tlri-d. Hut in itie sharp I leaf air of these lutoxfeatlng uays I iiiMld go ten miles and get Lome Willi Ihe lilt of pure Joy In my very lasi step. And to pit myself aKainst the sudden steepnesses of a tiall full of surprises made me laugh r.i:t loud. At the edge of a .snowbank, where Il < lept to the border of the trail I" pefp ovi'r at the Jirooklet far below ny little hit of heather grew The vast slleiii e of the heights was Mill il that 1 wouldn t have- been sur I'ised if tile brave pink liells had t>iin>-d toward me and tinkled' 1 put my ^land mil slowly. And drew it bark ugaln. I'm half Seotili ai'i'Ordlug to the family tree that grows so grei n In .IV grandmothers memory. Hut I'd IK ver seen heather before. exe«>pt on.- wee pressed bit of It that eompasslon- ate friends had sent out to u.-t And here II wa.' brave, wonderful, iindaiintahle! [ didn't need to wait to asU anybii.ly. It was heather, heatlii r to the staiiiiih soul of il. and It was iirowliig right there it had always grown tight there for me. 1 pliked It and tarried it. like a piirpl« tonh. right up '" where the h;st green gnisa lifted Itself o::t of Ihe stifeted whiteness that ran s'raighr up. Kteep as the pitch of a .athedral roof, to meet the far blue haze of Ihe sky. .\nd when J lenl< :.t it now. the wee llame on its crest lights up the way ba.k to all the sth-nt wonder of that day. I have a yellow- lily too thrt* lan work magic. It grew right up thioiigh the snow in an Alpine nie.i.- dow where 1 talked to a great grey n.armot who sat on a rock listening. 1 have a white "here's a nil" - silky Utile hall that swung in the wind that blew down from tli,j Vic- toria Clatler at Lake I.nulse. I have a li.inch of dried s vHit grass that . anie from Banff on a day w" dro\e to Moraine Lake under it« Solemn T«'n Peaks. 1 have a little triloblte fossil that has never seen a glass ease, though its worthy of one. ft means a morn- iiig of eni haiitment on the prehis- toric upland beds of Ml .'^lephen at l-'|eld. . Hest of all perhaps I have, some- tiling that nolmdy inn name. 'You look dlBereiit. " said my ne-.-f door neighbor. "I don't kno»v Just . V. ha: It l.s. Ynu weren't sii k when .Mil; went away. Hut now- .\ oil look like a house plant that's been i:. ih< gatden all auiuiner." * LV M J »7, mum a Salmon F?iver onthe Map ^'^'^ "'â- ^' '"^ "'"•*' "^^ ''"'"• i:i-MMN-u K.ioM 1,1,:, n 10 M.,i-r; .Mvxmiimvn- (ItiAVTt A.M) Rub-. .Maxmiii.hn Kosi n ham kis ii TlIK map r.fc-nu h, is n map of , ••Kxamlne,." .|„ck l.iilt. of the riii, .tg , Mime niiportame. ,n s.:,liuon Is "lleiald." (liaii-lh.Dd Ulcu and W. (;. tie his ganip of the fisherman. | M'Geehan, of the Ne v York "Trt- Bnd hrniis In search of It Kporliun.i, hune," and I.. O. Armstrong of tlu- â- •0,11 all rivn- ,l,e uorld with hm t wo- ; I,,,,-.,,,, „f r,,tu:n,Mv in.l Kcoiu.iiii'h, in ill, '; t- " 1 '"'*•". "?"T â- •'•<â- â- '«, ^\'>-''l"«l"". IM-. .." old caniiiaitimr and (what ( anada much desires) a who has hunted and H..lii-d in ih- deepiHirse for .amps. Khldes and out- raiiadian woo<l.s for over llftv vearM fit. Harry Allen, I'resldmt of the ! and A. 0. Pevmour Geieral Tourw' New llninsvvlrk (luldos Apsorintlon, Agini of the' Canadian Pacific Ua'h Vns kno-n the Caln.s River as one nfKvay, an ardent fisherman Alhee II' .^e.^ nriiuswlck, and s.ilmen j all the local llsl er,i,e:i vveiu tie-id Avere fivnuenlly caiietht twenty miles ' miPlir-. "If lhcr.> urc salmon in t' e l'!!/'''"'\V,"'- J"":!'"? '''*'l' ""^ betten Cains." they «:,id. ".von 'have come at Known Miiu.iiehl. but he In lleved | (he w nmc time. Thev wont out wih that if the right kind of llsr.ermon the ico and nro no.v at set Hetter Foi there, they would find F^lmon all go homo and come back In a month" the IrriKth of at least eighty milrs. In was cold and raining the wor«! The InveijtiKation was made n short [kind of weather for (Ivilshlng hu' time ago by a rarly of si.ortlng j ojiihing daiiiili-d. thev set out' vrltir.iand editors from the I'liitr-d With eli'lit H.^^hprmen, olfe (ifiovle Btnles. Ma-vinillian Foster, a salmon I picture oiienitor rium Ihe F^anmv fl.Hhermiin of twenty yrnra Ptandin.^ |Cnmp»ny of ChlcoKO and nine gihi..^ ' Avho knnvv.s .\'ew l-lrunswt'k and Veiv 'the l^ret Ktartrd out near the brad if fdundland like r hook, and writes fur I the Cnlns Ulver, fl.shlns the pools a- I the "Sflturdny Kvpnins Post", Ithoy went ilo.v,!. The first day thrv Hughlo FtiUertoTt, of tho Chkago|sUuck only inn;t, but from tho SiC I'osiKli, V,'. O. M'(;i'.ii\N, Jack I.Air, VNUS I'tM I. iiiirt diy niuvards the iiiovie man wai-' busy. Twlie he had to choose be- t.vcen two flsh.ermen who had hooked their .-.alimm at the same time. Ma.v- milllan Fnsirr had a basket of ililr- tMu. raii'ing from Heven to eighteen Iiuuni!.^. 'I'he largest mi'a!-,iircil tor^v- iwo-and-ii-hall-lmhea, which means that If It had been taken In the fall It would h;ivft weighed fort v two-inul- a h,ilf pnunJs. l-:\i.,-y 'iieiuiicr of ll.,' party had what ho ranrj for, fhnnk.-< to Silver Honor and Parmcichcue. P-iMo, the two ni'.s tlrt the Cains River galinon frrni to ,lko. in o'lo nool M'ven licatitJps, wc;.!;hlns between them 8i\ty eI^hl poand.s, 'were taken out in two hnurs, and It was only dark and Imk of time that eIo-..-l the sport Revuli, (.m;t tiappy ll^siier. meii, ore huppy nio\-ifl man. and ci" .Miprcii'ily pioiid Ila'-ry Allan, v 1 saw tliiU hia ilalms were JiMri't 1 and Ihat Cnln^ Hhyp eoiilrt t-|'rA i place Tor salmon bisldtM tie Ip.' .- • 'iiine famous ivaters of tt.ft .'.ijri,, hi 'ir.! th,' l(>:::i:;.,, n-h,,. How Eaglish "Slackers" Have Managed to Avoid Doing Their Bit in War THE British authoritie.s poss- ess to-day an amazing re- cord of conspiracy to avoid military service. Part of the story las been told from time to time In the courts. More will be told a.s the net Is drawn tighter. Much that has been discovered may never be revealed, for others might there- by be encouraged into the temporar- ily profitable paths of crime. II be- «an at the beginning of compulsion. While there was a great rush to an- swer the call, there was a small but determined move ' toward evasion. Young men walking the streets in civilian attire, letters from mothers wanting to know "Why my boy is taken and so-and-so is left." open boasts that men bad "done the au- thorities," soon told the tale. Re- cruiting raid.s â€" denounced in some quarters as "interference with the liberty of the subject" and the rest â€" conliriued suspicions, and the author- ities were soon at work fighting the criminals. Personation was the first discov- ery. Two hefty men arrested as suspected persons produced army i-e- jectioii certificates. Inquiry showed that in each case a man suffering from locomotor ataxia had twice gone before Ihe medical boards, af- terward banding the men the rejec- tion certificates thus obtained. That form of personation was resorted to in othei- ca.ses. It is no longer pos- .'^ible, for reasons which need ijot be discussed here, although there is rea- son to believe in som*" cases medical specialists have been imposed upon by some similar trick by men anxious to secure certificates for presentation to tribunals. Foiled in the personation game, the master minds in a criminal con- spiracy resorted to forgery. Rejec- tion certificates were obtained from men justly entitled to them -obtain- ed by criminal methods. Occasion- ally they were purchased Irom uu- Ecrupulous holders for a few .shil- lings; often they were stolen from men under tho inHuence of drink or drugs. Then, with ready acid and pen, the forgei-. having found a pur- chaser, changed the name and ad- dress on the certificate, and parted with it for a good round sum. A man, or men. in the .\orlh of Eng- land "collected" several of the earlier certificates in this way, and came to London. The first forged "rejec- tion" form was sold for £15. Later, forms were parted with for iiuuis ran.;ing from £5 to 5s. That process has been stopiK-d. Again, numbers of blank certifi- cates were stolen from a recruiting office. .Months later they wre found on men who liad evaded military ser vice by their use. properly filled in, stamped, and sigied. and so com- pleted as to d-ceive any but those with the most detailed knowledge of the recruiting service. A later form of fraud involved the use of a merchant s.>ainan's papers, .stolen or purcha.sed from some in- ebriated sailor in the purlieu.s of the docks. Auierican seamen trequent- ly parted with their papers. Th->->e papers were sold to some man anx- ious to avoid army service, and until the fraud was discovered, quite in- chance, served as a sufficient answer to police or reiruiting olfice inquiries as to the position of the holder, for merchant seamen are exempt from service. Stimulated, or even artificially in- duced, symptoms of t iberculosis, .'sy- novitis, and debility are still met with. ("he Introduction of the tu- bercle bacilli into sput'im submitted tor analysis ha.s been heard of; the allegation of synovitis induced by an injection has been puhlidy reported. .Vl-'U, It Is Iw'lieved, on the advice of the doctors, have starved themselves and Kone without .«;lcep for days be- fore );(iiiig before the doctor.s. Tbetv are records of one young man who starved himself for five days, who bad practically uo sle.-p for the same i>eiiiul. and then, iho night lieforc tho medical cxamiiialion, rubbed sham- poo powder into his eyes -md drank himself into intoxication. He would have been rejected as ' unfit ' but for a discovery that naed not \n related, and ho is now in the army, a cutv- Kory "A" man. Drugs are constantly employed â€" BO constantly and so cleverly that tlure must tie expert advice in the background. At one London recruit- ing station a youni;/*inan arrived in an.-;wer to a call-up notice in a state of collapse. Hi.=; face was a greenish- gray and he was apparently in pain. An expei ieiieed ollicer iiad ''im plac- ed 111 a private rooiu and kept under observation. Five times during the morning the man vomited. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon he was well, and hy li o'clock, after an exception- ally thorough exaiuination by all the mciubers of tho .Medical Hoard, he was passed Class ' A. ' Uopiug tak'S many forms. In one place ilu-re .vus uiiparently an epidemic of "disease of the middle-ear," marked t)y dis- charges of apparently purulent mat- ter. The analyst was called in, and the matter turned on' to he tobacco juice or conden.sed milk, or a mixture of both. Malingeiing, (00, has been proved. The "deaf" man who withslood every test, and even received a rejection card, only to succumb when an astute clerk whispered. You have forgot- ten your two-and-nine-pcnce"; the man with the "palsied" arm, who owned up when the doctors .ipoke about an .â- loctrie battery; the man who stayed in bed "puraiyzed," while his tearful wife went to the â- .ecruit- ing offl-e to explain that he could aot answer the call-up, but fotgoi him- self the next day, and was seen valk- Ine in the street â€" these are minor. cn.'<es (if irtteinpt'Ml fraud easily dii-;-, covered. Much more serious uro strange stories ot drungint' and in- oculation, which are ilitfleuJt to arove. â€" London Timet*. Deering Impleiiients AND iGasoline K\\ kinds of Deering IinpIeinentH. Part* always on ha))d. .Ayent for Barrie tyutters. Barber Buggits, Loudett Litter Cfcrricis, Hay Tracks, Pedlar shiiiglus and siding. Ttiese liiiplenieiita icjuire no recommendation as they ate standard goods and rec latiized rts the liesl on the market. FUriT TKEES â€" I represent iheStoii it Wellin}(tin iiur.sery.anil will lie plci'ed 1(5 c:i'l if you senii me a card. ED. RUTHEHFOftD Proton Station > FOR SALE No. 3 Buckeye Traction tile ditcliin^j outfit ; nil machine 19 an 18 h.p. ga.suline or kerosene engine, all in first class repair Will be Sold on leasonable terms. For full tiaitieu'urs apply where luacliin© is working, about two miles west ft" Saugeen junction, cr -A. N. PRATT, Lturel P O , Oat. Farm For Sale One hundred acr.s, L n X... !i, cou. 4 N.D.R.. .\rfeiiiesia, HO acres under cultivation, -10 rods fruiii ^ood fchool, two miies froi'i C F R Station, 4 from Flcsherton ; fair buildings, food water â- ind wii-dniill, sniall orcliaio. -Apply on th^ premises to â€" H. .STONK. Ceylon R K 1 , . 2aAui;tf Farm For Sale or Rent Lot 141-142, :Jrd range X.E.T.S.R,, Arteiiietiia 7'1 acrea under culuvation, i/ood liai 11 and brick Inuise. an ncre of oicliard ; well watered, -^pply to- - I. SINCLAIR, l-i'^ctlT . Fle^herten. FARMS FOR SALE For .sale or rent for grazini;. lot 30, con. 1;!. and part of lots , '14 and :!.'>, con. 14, .Aiteiiiesia, 181 acres inoro nr less known s the Cc.jHjr farm. \\ ill lerit for pasture alhis season, or take slock iu by the mon Ih. This isa splendid grain and lltraziiig farm, well watered and fenced, a lot of valuable timber and cedar and abouc !Kt acres tit fur cultivation. It is well worth thj Btlenliiiii of stock men . Will sell for rea«oi-.-»ble cash payment, lialance e.isy terms. Apply to R. J. Spioule, â- '"'y*''f Fletheiton, l^i.t. j Three Heifirs Strayed \ S'ljiyed from Lot 1, Cell. !•, t)sprey, I three ye.ir-old heifers- two red ones wuh. ; seme white spnis on iheai. and the other j a roan c lor. La.st seen about the middle 1 .if .Line. Any person huaring or teeing I aii)thiiig ot them, ph. ne er wiite ""•â- ^ OAKNKT MAC.KE Kii^enia, U R. I. Voluntary enlistment has taken thousands of men fnui otbce Work. Conscription will take luoie. titlice help is scvrce w ill be .scucer leiysocn. ^'miii.' women ai.d bojs under niilit.iy age must till the vacant plicfs, and they need training. is tho very leM p'aioto get a training and prepare to he p meet the demand for traiuiid ilfice help. .'Students -nay enter a'ly any time. N*.. incieaie in fees Ciecul-ifs frte 011 app ieation. C. A FLEMING, F.C, A., Principal, Dept. A., Gwea Sound, Ontario. For Service I'm .service on 1 .t IL', cm. !), Ospipy, â- 'lie pvirel.r.d !>h..rtli..rn Bull. Tering l.oU. Al.so .lie pure hrid Yorkshire RoAr, Terms *lt». AH accounts tiast lit) pai.l to KUi:!) TVLKR, Ua.'rti>er. • 1 Sep A i 1- i •^ * Representative ^ X WANTED f at once for ^ FLE5HERTON I aud Dustriet fur \, I Canada's Greatest Nurseries f j Spring PUT p'anting iist now leiidy I Splendid list el hardy l\riadian grown \ fruit mid oriiHUiental stwk, including, I Mcintosh Red Apple, St. Regis Ever- ] besriiig U.;splHTiy and many other i onders. • / . . ' i New iltustri'ed e.Atalouge sent on ) apulicatioii. ' J Start now at best so'.ling time. I.ilior- / â- \\ pr.ipo.siti'in. Stono & Wellington The Ponthill Nurserlea. (Established \K^~ .) TORONTO . ONTARIO U t mm â- .mamtM