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Phone 140 When you get your luumlry niooly packed phono the. above number nnd wo will call and get it. Wo guuranteo satisfaction. Try us. Price reasonable We wa?h everything but the baby. Ritter's Laundry THE ROAD TO DETROIT FAST and FREQUENT ' SERVICE PORT HURON TO DETROIT . BY THE Rapid Railway Limited cars leave Port Huron, Eastern Standard Time, 7:30 a. m. and every two hours to 7:30 p. m., also 5:10 a. m. Mondays and 10 p. m. Sunday. Limited cars leave Detroit, 8:15 a, m. and every two hours to ' 3:15 p. ra. Sundays only 11 p. m. Furniture of Quality Perhaps there U something in the Furniture Line you need. Something to fill in a vacant spot It will pay you to look over our line before you buy. We can fit you out in anything Parlor, Sitting Room, Bed Room, Dining Room or Kitchen Furniture at prices which will surprise 9m and please -our purse. We can meet any catalogue house price n d save you the freight .George Gough. Licensed embalmer and funeral director. Phone 132 Yale ...BERT BEAL... TAXIDERMIST BIRDS ANIMALS REPTILES of all kinds mounted true to life. Satis faction guar anteed. PRICES PHONE 162 YALE eamng.. I have taken over the Dry Cleaning outfit recently opera ted by Charles Cavanagh and am prepared to do work in this line in a satisfactory manner. If you have clothes or garments needing to be cleaned or press ed bring them to me. Prices reasonable. At residence on North street, Yale. ROY PHILLIPS J. B. WEYMOUTH General Law Business Solicited REAL ESTATE & LOANS RAPLEY BLOCK YALE. -:- -:- MICH. JOHN M. GLEASON LAWYER Whit Bleok. Pert Huron, Mleh. Real Estat Leans Dr. J. . STEVENS VETERINARY BUROEON, ORADUATK of the Ontario Veterinary College, also the. University of Toronto. All calls nlpht or day promptly attended, rhone 89. OfTlce at residence on Kenninck street. YALE, -I- MICH. ..Drv CI .1 Is tail. ft',"" THE EMINENT EYESKJJ1T SPEC IALIST PARSONS The Eye Man of Pontiac Will arrive at the PAISLEY HOTEL and remain one day only, ' Tuesday, Sept. 18th This being his regular monthly trip, ne will 8iui give consultation, exam ination by the EUetrio Retinascop. adyice and a thorough eye tept Fit EE. He will spend one day each month here. It you have headache, nervousness, dizziness, stomach trouble, poor mem ory, near sighted, far sighted, astigma tism, or are suffering from AN i kind of Eye Strain don't fail to call on this expert as a visit will cost you nothing and may save your Eye sight. Don't fail to have your children's eyes examined before school opens. If necessary to wear glasses he will merely charge you the cost of the glasses, which in no case will be more than the uniform price and are guar anteed. Don't forget the date. Yale, Tuesday, Sept. 18th J Our Telephone Number Is 93 If you want a new tire, tools, extra parts, spark plugs or a can of Gargoyle Mobiloil, call us up. Our telephone bust' ness is growing. This is because telephone, requests receive our prompt Attention. SERVICE GARAGE Mobiloils Don't Forget This Man You are money out of pocket if you miss getting that fall or winter order in before Oct. 15. Prices going higher can't be helped. 1 will be at my of fice, 307 Huron ave.,' (over Corset Shop) all day Saturday, Sept. 15, to show you samples of these great "Ilichman" Suits and Overcoats. Leave measure now and have clothes come when want ed. Get in before the big rise. Strong line Overcoatings and "Pinch Hacks" for young men and boys. Come and order direct from factory at wholesale. E. C. Uoice, Agt., Port Huron. We Buy Old Junk 1 will pay the highest market price for old iron, braes, copper, rags, old paper, hides and fur. If you have any thing In these lines see me beiore you sell. Abe Kline, Yale. 16 52 ANNOUNCEMENT. Owing to the confusion in the names of two Doctor Frazers on Military St. Dr. It. C Frazer, specialist on Eye Far, Nose and Throat diseases wishes to announce his ofllce on the ground Moor of the Yokom Uldg., opposite the Harrington Hotel, 1U11 Military street Port Huron, Mich. FOIt SALE Eight pigs, 4 wks. old, O. I. C. and Chester White. Inquire of Kobt. Rix, phone C3 J, 1L Is. 23-2 All-Rodded State Mutual Fire Insurance Company L't'd of Michigan. I have the agency for the above com pany and am prepared to write fnsur ance for any and all who want It. Only rodded risks taken. Ho old, run down buildings. All roddlng must consist of good material and good workmanship. A satisfactory insur ance. See me before you have your buildings insured. 21-4 James II. Brown, Yale. DAIRY and CREAMERY AGE TO BREED HEIFERS. When Bred Too Young They Fall to Develop Into Profitable Cowa. The present high price and the scar city of good dairy cows are a great temptutlon for the cattleman who has a largo herd of yielding heifers of a milking breed to breed them at the earliest possible period and get Into milk In order to get high prices for them for dairy purposes, writes a cor respondent of the Farm and Fire side. This, however, Is a great mistake, as many a young cow has been weeded out of the herd as a cull and found her way to the butcher's block, when If she had been kept a few months longer beforo breeding sho would have made a profitable milker for the dairy herd. I have seen year old calves bred when A good cow born Is usually proof that the owner Is doing his share to make his cows profitable. An expensive stable la not necessary, bat the better the accommodation provided for the animals the more profit they return. The picture chows interior of an up to date cow stable. they were no more fit to become moth ers than a six months old calf. This forced them to become mothers before they were two years old, placing them In a weak and nervous condition with not enough vitality to purport the calf. They were expected to give as much milk and the milk as .rich In butter fat and milk solids as the heifer that brought her first calf when a three year-old. A year old calf Is growing bo fast that It takes about all the feed she can consume to supply her with the proper elements of bouo and muscle making. If she Is bred et this stage her work of bone, muscle and hair making is doubly Increased, which Is too much for her constitution. And as nature forces her to divide a certain portion of the food consumed by her with her calf (or rather the substance of the food) her own body does not receive sufficient nourishment to keep it in a growing and healthy condition; hence some part of her body must cease to grow, and after her calf has come she is much smaller than she would have been had she not been bred. The calves of such heifers ore not generally of much account they are small, weakly, peevish things which aro often not worth the trouble of rais ing. I always try to breed my heifers at tho ago of two years, never before that age, and after I have bred them I am particular about their welfare. While pregnant a little dry feed mix ed along with what they get on the pasture during the summer season, with plenty of pure fresh water, goes a long way toward bringing the cow out in good shape after her calf has como and insures 'a profitable dairy cow and a robust, healthy and valuable calf. BARLEY AS A COW FEED. Experiments Indicate That It Is Not 8c Good as Mixed Grain Ration, In order to determine whether barley has a tendency to dry up milk cows, as is sometimes claimed, five cows in the university farm dairy herd have been fed rolled barley as exclusive grain feed for varying periods during the past two years. Well reports that the production of ono cow during tho rast two lactation periods on barley was considerably in creased over that during tho first lac tation period when ralxed grain was fed, while the other cows produced somewhat less milk or butter fat on barley than during the corresponding periods wtnen fed mixed grain. The results do not indicate that the feeding of barley tends to dry up milk cows, but they suggest that most cows do not do as well on barley alone as on mixed grain rations. Tbrco of tho cows had heavier averago body weights when on barley than when fed mixed grain, while the opposlto was truo in tho caso of ono cow. Annual Report of Director of California Experiment Sta tion. When Cow Holds Up Milk. TChen a cow holds up her milk mas sage the udder gently for a few mln rjtes before starting to milk, and let the cow have some relished feed to cat at milking times. Tosslbly she may let down her milk if a calf is placed near her. O j I til P . v - 1 Roscburg School Notes School started again on Monday. " Our motto: "Success is won by trying." Julia llwtor and Verna Smith are the editors. ,Wo have 14 new Vlclrola record?. There are 64 on the roll this year, eight in the eighth crade. v Everybody is good natured this year. Walter Stewart was absent Monday. We have a banner for the side that keeps the tloor cleanest. The south side got it first. Myrtle Hunt, Maynard Sischo, Wil liam and Marjorie Mclntyre are new pupils. John Webb and Viola Herbert, class of '16, are attending High School at Vale. Helen Thoad, of Tort Huron, visited us part of this week. We are well supplied with fuel, thanks to the school board. The Expositor will be a welcome visitor during the coming year. EAST KENOCKEE The harvest home picnic at the Allen church grove was a success. Fully $33 was raised for the minister's salary, liev. Lomas leaves this week for con ference. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. l'errin, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Morgan, spent Monday and Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. JJertrand at Lake Huron Park, Sarnla. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Munro have re turned to Port Huron after a visit with local relatives. Emma Wahl, who has spent the past two months with her parents here, has returned to take up her work In Sag inaw. Her trother John accompanied her and will attend school in that city. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Perrin were visitors of Mrs. E. Ilubbel, Zion, re cently. William Grant and Bide Dempster are two of the boys from this place to be called in the last draft. A. 13. Munroe and son liye are draw ing flax from the farm here to Fargo for Henry Zuelch. John Cflyshaw and crew of men loaded seven carloads of stone on the D , 1$. C, & W. railroad. HARDEST WORKED NEED HELP FIRST Through all the years the kidneys are at work filtering out impurities that poison the blood if permitted to remain. Is it any wonder that they are over worked and iu need of help? Foley Kidney Pills are tonie and strengthen ing in action. Get rid of backache, rheumatic pains, stiff joints, sore mus cles. Herb. T. lienuessy. adv. BROCKWAY The farmers have Btar,ted fall plow ing. They report that the ground does not work up very good on account of being hard and dry. t. Snyder and family have moved from Avoca and are occupying the Johu J. Jackson house. John L. Patterson motored to Fort Huron Monday. Wm Jacobs and wife, and the for mer's mother . were receut visitors in Owosso. Ella McKinney has been engaged as principal of the Marysville school. Kemember the Gleaner dance to morrow (Friday) evening. All will be welcome. $1CO Reward, $100. The readers of 1 his paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least ono dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in its stages, and that is catarrh. H all's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constltutlonal.disease, requires a con stitutional treatment. Hal I'd Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct ly upon the blood and mucous surface of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, ana giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith tn its curative powers that they otter One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. .?. Cheney h Co , Toledo Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, "Sc. Take Hail's Family Pilli for consti pation. FARGO. George Lossing, of Port Huron, is spending a few days among friends here. Mrs. J. Gardner, of Atkins, was a guest of friends here recently. Mrs. Hlsey and sister, Emma Holden of Vale, visited Geo, Hull and wife this week. Alyln Heinmiller, of Monroe, visited his parents in this place this week. Florence Heinmiller has returned from a visit to Detroit friends and relatives. SAFE REMEDY FOR CHILDREN Chas. Baker, Brownvllle, Tex., writes "For years I nave usea ioiey s noney and Tar and found it especially eOiclent for bad coughs of my children. I rec ommend it to my friends as a safe rem edy for children as it contains no opi nion. It it rertaiu to brlnff Quick and lasting relief." Stops cough. Herb T. lienneesy. auv. o to We have found it necessary, owing to the constantly in creasing cost of everything used in the make-up. of a newspaper, to raise our subscription price to L50 p After Oct 1st, 1917 Up to that date subscribers have the privilege of paying up arrearages and as many years in advance as they wish at the $1.00 rate, but after October 1st, the price will be $1.50 to all our subscribers in the United States and $2.00 from Canadian subscribers. Other papers are raising their rates, and in order to make a living and just a little more, we must do the same thing. But in establishing this new rate, we believe that we know the minds of our subscribers well enough to feel that they would rather have us give them the same qual ity of a newspaper, with a chance to better it as years go by, than to lower our standard of excellence in the slight est degree. We are forced also to raise our advertising rates. No one knows better than the merchant how prices have gone up on all commodities and we know they will be with us in the matter. As soon as possible we will print a rate card and the price printed thereon will be strictly adhered to. VISIT WINDSOR & JARDINE FOH A First-Class Shave, Hair Cut, Shampoo or Sea Foam Everything neat, clean and up-to-date. Hatha. Charges moderate Yale, Michigan .WELL DRILLING. Atn prepared to drill wells from 2 inch to 8 inch holes. Have had 22 years experience and guarantee all my work. ..Pump Repairing a Specialty.. If you need my services and want a first-class Job done call on or address GUS COLBERG, MELVIN, MICHIGAN ml For Sate by And All Cood Dealers. J. W. TOMLINSON, M. D Physician and Surgeon Office Over Mathews & Wight's Drug Store. YALE, - MICHIGAN Dear reader, did yon ever think that you might be carrying a dol lar around In your pock fr that liplonrfsi in the Expositor man? Hefore you lay this paper away take a look at the label and if you ilndou are in ar rears visit the Expositor ofllce. Now is a good time to pay your subscription to the Expositor. You aeed the paper and we seed the money. .' SAY 3SX23S3SXEr?2S!! e Expositoi Subscribers . eryear The Yale MORTGAGE SALE Notice ts hereby given that on the icth day of January, l'.to", (ieorKO li. Alooro and i llz.ibelti M. Moore, his wife, executed a mortgawe to the Commercial Hank of 1'ort iiurou, Michigan, a MIcnlKRn corporation, uch mortgage hi-liu re coiUed lu the otlice of tho Kelster of Deed tor the Couuty of .sr. Clair, on tho wth J iy of .Jan uary, 1W5, hi Liber 96 of Moi tcanes, on pane 414; that thereafter, and on the trd day of January, 1 'j.'. laid mortgage was duly assigned by said I he ( ommerclal bank of i'ort Huron, to Kni ly E. O'Neill, ot Port Huron, such assignment bo Ing recorded lu the ofllce ot the KegWter ot Deed! tor t. ( lair county, on the iskh day of July, 1917, lu LibiT 2t of Aslgumeui of .Mort gages, at puna KM. That default lias b en mado in the payment of said mortgage, and that there Is now claimed to be due t Hereon the sum of eight thousaud sixty-three i$-i,oi oo dollars, and that no suit or proce -uln flititr ut law or lu equity has ber-n lustltuteJ to eutorco or col lect kaltl mortgage: Thereiore, to satisfy the aniouut due thereon, touether with an attorney fee provided lu said mortgage, and In accordance v ith the power of sule contained therein, notice is hereby kiven that said morcgave will be foreft -fed by miI of trie premlties tnereln and iierelnaf.er cescribed. at public auction, to tne highest biudnr, on tho JTtli day of October, A. I). 1917. at ten o'clock in the forenoon, ut tlie front door ot the v ourt House In the city of I'ort Huron. Michigan, that being tho place wherein is holden tho Citcuit Court for said County ot t"t. Clair. The premises so mortgaged and to be sold are described as follows: ,l.ot No. . hi Mock 9 1, Re cording to W hlte's I'lat, of a part of tlie City, of I'ort Huron, Ut. Clair County, Michigan. Hated July . 1917. liMll.Y i:. O'NKII.L. P. II. FH1LLI I'M, Assignee of Mortgagee Attorney for Assignee. isl.t I KOHATK OKDKH 1 Ktate of Michigan, The Probate Court for the County of St. Clair At a session of said court, held at the Probate Ollice In the City of Port Huron, In said County, on the th day of September, A. 1 1917. Present : Hon. Hugh H. Hart, Judge of Probate In the Matter of the Estate of Jacob Vauclief, Deceased. Edward F. Fead having filed with this Court his final administration account as administra tor of said estate, together with a petition pray ing that the said account he allowed, tlie admin istrator discharged, the estate closed, the heirs determined, and the residue of the said estate assigned to the persons entitled thereto. It Is ordered that Monday, the 1st day of October next, at 9:ixi o'clock In the forenoon, at said rrobate ORlce, be appointed for hearing threof ; And It Is Further Ordered, that a copy of this order be published three successive weeks prev ious to said day of hearing In the Yale Expositor a newspaper printed .and circulating in said County of ,st. t. lair. lAlrueCopy.l HUC.II IC.HAKT. GEO. L. HKOWtt. Judge of Probate Keglsterof Probate 'JM CTATK OK MICHIOAN O The Circuit Court for the County of Mt. Clair In Chancery. Mary Oarrett. PlalntllT vs. Robert C.arrtt, Defendant At a session of said court held at the Court House lu the City of Port Huron on the th day of September. A. D. 19 7. Present, the Honorable Eugene 1 . Law, Cir cuit Judge. In this cause If appearlnu from aflldavlt on file that the said defendant, liolwrt Oarrett, Is not a resident of the 8tato of Michigan, and that his whereabouts are unknown, therefore on motion of John M. Oleason, attorney tor plalntlll, it U ordered that the defendant, enter his appear ance in said cause on or brfore thiee months from the date of Ibis order, and that within twenty days plaintiff cause a eopy of ttil order to be published lu the Yale Expositor, said pub lication to be continued once in each week for ix weeks In succession. KCOKNK F. LAW. Circuit .ludtre JOHN M. (iCICAHON, Attorney for Plaintiff. 3 White lllock. Port Huron, Mlcb. 7 For Sale or Rent. Eighty acre farm, 2 miles north and east of Yale, known as the Moses Hallead farm, (lood outbuildings, land In good condition. Enquire at Yale State Hank, or address Mrs. J. l Hallead, 120 South Campbell Ave., Chicago, 111. 22 4 Try an Expositor Mner. 6 Expositoi JL 9 0 A Time For Everything If its an advertisement in Th'.i Expositor you are thinking about, t!i? prop er lime is all the time. Others have obtained good results from tho use of our columns. Why not" give it n trial. Everything ...On Time... Id our Job ' Department we never tail to have work fmisbed when premised. Our priees are as low a consistent with line work, (live us your next order and let us ahon- you that we understand the print ing business. E x pos ito r Print -Shop -the s::op that knows how O R AT THELABKLon this webk's Kxpof.itor and tee if you aie in srrpnra A nnmlipr nf if II II our subscribers vifo noticed our requests to equare up, have either called or E Mit the money in by mail. There are mnnv others who are vet in arrears. We will feel very grateful to those who answer this call for cash -at earliest conven ience, rieaso remember that ca-.li is required to operate a newspaper aa well as any other ligitimate business.