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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1928-07-26, Page 6) THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE 0 WELCOME > It is a real satisfaction for of us who have remained at to have our guests tell that is no community that offers we assure our guests, that hear stirring and helpful from the earnest and cap- who are supplying the lo- « « * • for a girl to decide popular or to act THURSDAY, JULY 2<Jth, W --wmni a lot Chambers Bros., Exeter 1 33 . ... *** *** Often the wall flower at the dance only girl who knows how to DUNLOP low-cost It takes a good tire to render efficient service. It requires a fair price to make a good tire pcxwtble* When you get a good tire at a fair, “low-cost” price, as you can with Dunlop, you will get the satisfaction you expect from it. “DUNLOP" been a household word the world over ever since Dunlop produced the world’s first pneumatic tire. There is a wide range of Dunlop Tires to suit all needs and all conditions at right prices. We recommend that you consider equipping a set of Dunlop Double-Strength Tires made of high-tension, resilient, rubber-encased cords. We’ll fit them at no extra cost, using Dunlop Pressute-Cured-Joint^ Long* Life Tubes. Support the Highway Safety Movement Wear this sticker on your windshield Ask. for one at your Silling station Highway Safety Committee Tfe HON. GEO. S. HENRY, Chairman. MMMI Our Corner o A hustler has no tins© for bad luck.♦ ♦ ♦ * * ♦ # * The best nation in the world is explanation. When the mercury soars of us get sore. Even the weather reports at times are nothing but hot air, * * * It isn’t hard whether to be like a lady. is the cook. * * * * * « * * the cheerful loser and you rob the other fellow of the pleasure he gets in licking you. Exeter and vicinity most cordially wecomes the vacationists who are seeking rest and new strength by visiting this community. Welcome is cordially offered the men and wo­ men and kiddies who have -left our neighborhood for a little, but who lose the weight and weariness of the years by returning to their native heath. May they find their stay with us a time of uninterrupted ad­ vantage to themselves and to their hosts, those home there better advantages, in scores of ways, than Exeter and its environs. Per­ haps their good words will prove de­ cisive when our youth are making life decisions, The wander lust and the thirst for other scenes does not always lead to fortune- We wel­ come, too, the stx’angers who are casting in their lot with us for a few days. In behalf of the commit­ tee of welcome we hand them the keys of our municipality! We hope they they will visit our stores and splendlid farms and churches and schools. We’ll be glad to show them about, exchange ideas and otherwise make time pass pleasantly for them. We regret that so many of our clergymen are away on their holi­ days, but they will messages able men cal pulpits for a few weeks. We remind them of the proximity of Grand Bend * with all its facilities for holidaying, not forgetting our own scores of shady nooks and rest­ ing places. Our roads are the very best for motoring and the country just now is looking its very best. So here’s to our visitors, each and all, hoping that they may have the joll- iest of vacations and that they will so like our surroundings that they will return next year, bringing their friends with them. May time write no wrii^kles on their brow! HOW TO MEET TROUBLE Here and There Lindsay Gordon, poets, too, im- more by four all else he plac- (98) Wito concrete now up as far as the flrat bedroom, windows and •Coal up to the fourth, the Royal Yarik 0. I*. R. monster hotel in Toronto is well up to schedule and is expected to be completed in time tor the opening next May, notwith­ standing the short strike of the ■<eel and building trades. Fac- fearing what there’s noth-, there be, not you may get W. M. Van VaLkenburg, president <rt the. Regina. Board q£ Trude, pays that bis city and province are out to capture industries. That la one reason for his visit to Montreal and the Eastern States. Ha figures that the mineral resources of the province should provide the, basis of a number of industries, as 42 per cent of the provincial area lies within the pre-Canxbrian shield. Established 1873 and 1887 ' Published every Thursday morning at Exeter, Ontario t SUBSCRIPTION—$2,00 per year inb advance. United States sub­ scription $2.50, RATES—Farm or Real Estate fox}- eale 5»c. each insertion fpr fir»< four insertions, 25c, each sub»«H qqent insertion. Miscellaneous uut^ tides, To Rent, Wanted, Dost, or(- Found 10c, per line of six wprdf*,. Reading notices 10c. per lin®*' Card of Thanks 50c. Legal ad* vertising 12 and 8c. per line. Inf. Mtemoriam, with one verse 50a, extra verses 25c. each. Member of The Canadian Weekly} Newspaper Association, I Soma people go out to meet trouble; some run away to hvoid it; some have trouble thrust upon them. The problem of how to meet, trouble Is on» that all of us Should know how to solve. It is really no pro­ blem at all. Nothing is a problem once it is faced. Always somebody else has had to face the same pro­ blem and where one could solve it others may. An unfortunate Aus­ tralian poet, Adam first of Australian mortalized himself lines he wrote than ed on paper when he sang:— "Courage is the essential quality required in meeting trouble, ing it like a man, nor may happen; knowing ing to fear but, should caring a hoot; feeling licked by it yet being willing to take the licking rather than run away— that is what courage means in the face of trouble. Trouble cannot daunt anybody who looks at it that way. In fact, it will itself turn' tail and run when resolutely faced. That is why, as somebody said, "The greatest trouble I ever had never happened?’ Trouble does not hap­ pen, except when you cringe before it and. invite it to kick you on the nether side. But "Kindness in another trouble’’ gives us courage in our own, on the principle that with such measure as we meet out it is measured out to us again. By showing the other fellow in trouble the brotherly spirit and helping him face his enemy we come to realize there’s nothing to it, nothing to be afraid of, and so we help him send it back it its native nothingness. Hence, when our own turn comes and trouble faces us, we have learnt by helping the other fel­ low that there’s nothing to worry about. Let’s try poor Gordon’s re­ cipe. By helping lame dogs over stiles we shall find all stiles easier to climb ourselves. No man is ever conquered by trouble or anything else until he himself says he is con­ quered. ■yyith courage no man will admit defeat, which is why trouble cannot conquer him. Try it. “Stands Scotland Where It Did?” Aye, Laddie! fi (O 'Pt r2E o PT THE BUSY MAN .£ •? Modern business has engendered several axioms which rival the rar­ est bits of wisdom of the ancients. Among the most frequently quoted is, "If you want something done take it to the busy man. panion workman never wants for a job. Axioms and epigrams that endure don’t just happen. To go down through the generations they must express in? a concise and vivid man­ ner an obvious truth. The axioms of the busy man' and the good work­ man fill this requirement. There is a reason why one should patronize the busy man and work­ man who has a job. The busy man is busy because he has earned a re­ putation of giving service expedi­ tiously and satisfactorily. The best recommendation a workman can de­ sire is work, forced accept from another job, but when allowed to choose between t'he employed and the unemployed they always pick the former. The axiom of the busy man ap­ plies to the professional man, store, hotel, factory, office and every other branch and phase of business. The axiom of the good workman is ap­ plicable to all classes of labor, world wants more busy men good workmen. ” A com- epigram reads, "A good the fact that he is not out of Very often employers are through a labor shortage to workers who do not come The and INDISPENSABLE TO BUSINESS :C\ \3Mnqb. IX ■■■ .MWDlfUl ••Stands Scotland whore it aid?" yJSTOs. except rdurife|ig’the period from- td September 3, when, if }M1J seeni td have, beeri>' transplanted jovernight to d Highland baiint bln the Canadian, Rookies. The oc- JlcAaiOn is the Highland ^fathering and jBcottish Music Festival. Ap' take gtee a second time at Banff. Alberta, th headquarters at the Banff rings Hotel, Songs that the Scot s sung tot seyta centuries, and martial bagpipes he has played even longer, will again resound in the Canadian Rockies, making Banff re­ semble its namesake in Auld Scotia. Initiated last year under the pat­ ronage of the Prince of Wales, this festival has quickly established itself as a Canadian institution, with regi­ mental piping contests,, athletic games, folksongs and Highland dandies —all as old as Scotland herself. Nota­ ble among the musical features ar­ ranged by Harold Eustace Key, mus­ ical director of the Canadian Pacific Railway, 13 the special performance’of “The Jolly Beggars," a cantata with text by Burns and music by Sir Henry Bishop. At the daily concerts in the hotel ballroom notable Canadian art­ ists wili sing the folksongs of Scot­ land, and Scottish Canadian lassies will join their liddies in the High­ land fling, the sword dance, the sail­ or’s hornpipe, the Scotch reel and the graceful seann triubhas. The programs of Scottish music are drawn .Up ta historical sequence, be­ ginning with the bld ballads -of the 13th. 14th add -15th centuries, follow­ ed by groups from the period of Mary Queen, of Scots, (the Stunrt-s and the 'Jacobites, .selections froth the fonge of Btiirnft- Sir waiter Sdot^Vtady Niarne and Christopher North, as Well as tlid Hebridean music rectatiy made popular ity Margaret K«nx>4dy Fraoer, .. t HR- ‘.. This At the same time the Alberta. Ama­ teur Champfqnship meet will crown the ’ victors in the flit and hurdle races, weight-throwlhgT"- tugs- hf-War. blgh ahd. brbad 'jufnping. tossing the •caber, shot putting and discus and javelin throwing. The regimental pipers from all over the Dominion will compete for the prizes offered by l«. W. Beatty. ...................................> "Advertising pays.’’’ That epigrammatic declaration questioned by no one informed the history of business and commer­ cial development. It is a statement of fact, obvious and indisputable. Quality and service have built vast commercial and industrial institu­ tions, but with their handmaid, ad­ vertising, greater institutions have been built in far less time and at far less cost. Advertising brings buyers and quality; service and ad­ vantageous price keep them. One can point to several automo­ bile manufacturers who owe their exceptional success not to building a better car, but to using more and better advertising than their com­ petitors, And several manufactur­ ers have learned too late that suc­ cess in this huge industry depends upon more than making a good Car. It is significant that the makers of those products whose copyrighted names are synonymous With the pro­ duct itself have all, been large-scale advertisers. ■» Making a "better mousetrap" wasn’t enough. What these famous national ad­ vertisers have accomplished for the trade names of their products has been done by merchants for their business names. Advertising has made one store synonymbus With clothing, another with furniture, an­ other with meats and groceries; ahd another with music. In every business and comm-m Ry there1 is some far-seeing and ejto/- prising manufacturer or merchm.t Who raises his product and busmans name above the common level by making advertising work for him, is in Inauguration of toe new New York-Yarmouth, Npva Scotia, pas- •enger Ship service recently repre* •ented toe first entrance of a ves­ sel from New York into ^Wtnouth harbor for the past 20 years. This was the S.S. Evangeline, of toe Eastern Steaftoship lane, carrying 150 passengers. She is of 5,000 tons and her sailing connects with the Dominion Atlantic Railway and do enables tourists to reach Nova Scotia sea and holiday resorts, This summer will witness a greiat deal of activity on the part of the grata companies as well as the Wheat Pool in the construction of •levators at country points in Al­ berta to take care of the larger harvests which a re < expected. An­ other company which has just an­ nounced its intention to enter on a tonstruction program is toe GID ienpie Grain Company. According to John Gillespie, president, toe firm plans to erect six new eleva­ tors each with a capacity of 40,000 biMhels. Musicians under the leadership of Flight Lieutenant John A Ainers, forming the band of the Royal Air Force, Britain's young­ oat ‘military band, landed recently M Quebec from Canadian Pacific liner Montnairn, for a tour of Can­ ada from coast to coast, as did the hand of the Coldstream Guards last year. This aggregation was formed in June, 1920, and since then has fulfilled engagements all over the British Isles. The band will play in all the principal cen­ tres, military centres and garrison towns of Canada during their tour here. “First call for dinner!" “Last call for dinner!" The old mono­ tonous warning to toe hungry tra­ veller is a thing of the past on toe Trans-Canada Limited, C. P. R. trans-continental crack train from ^Montreal to. Vancouver. To-day a nattily , attired waiter in white coat and apron with a smart black bow tie walks through the cars ringing “chimes" on a dulcimer, an appeal at once more pleasant to the ear and more likely to attract attention than the former method. In time, there, is no doubt, the idea will be adopted on all dining car trains of the railway. Advertised to make the trip from Montreal to London in nine days, the Canadian Pacific freight ship Beaverbrae actually completed the fun in eight days and twenty hours, making record time for a freight vessel between the two ports. This BShirp is one of tli'e five “Beaver” ships making up toe new fast freight steamship service of toe Canadian Pacific. They have re­ frigerated cargo space and are of 10,000 tons dead weight. The sen* vice is between Montreal and Lon­ don, and there is a sailing from the Canadian port every Friday, the vessels as a rule making better time than most passenger vessels on the London route. Heart Troubled Her Was Afraid to Walk „ Around the House 6 Mrs, Henry J. Davis, 31 Princess St., Stratford, Ont., writes:1—ft A few years ago I was troubled very much with my heart and nerves; was all run down and bofamo very thin inded, tf £ was afraid to walk around the house the why my heart would jump anfi beat. ‘"I went to the doctor to get relief, but he did me no good. I then went to another and then to two more and still my heart and nerves were as bad as ever. “I was completely discouraged when a frimd told me to try “I started fight away and the first six months I had gained ten pounds, *hd now, to-day, I have no sign of any heart trouble. > * j <{I always advise any of my friends co use your Pills ever since Io Was relieved of my trouble.” Milburn’s Heart and Nerve Fills are 50c. a box at all druggists or dealers, Or mailed direct On receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co*, Limited, Toronto, Get. <»Ont 0 1874 1»H The London Life POLICIES AS GOOD AS GOLD W. C. PEARCE 3 Exeter. Phone 130W. Residence, Ann St., two blocks of Ford Garage GLADMAN & STANBURY | BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ' Money to Loan, Investments Insurance Safe-deposit Vault for use of oaft Clients without charge ( EXETER LONDON HENSAMI . CARLING & MORLEY > BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, LOANS, INVESTMENTS. IN- SURANCE Office: Carling Block, Main StrM|| EXETER, ONT. DR. M. C. G FLETCHER | PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Graduate of Faculty,of Mediclaty University of Western Ontario, Mow ber of the College of Physicians aa< Surgeons of Ontario; Member of British Medical Council. Phone 6—(The office of the laf*> Dr. H. K. Hyndman) Dr. G. S. Atkinson, L.D.S.JXDJL DENTAL SURGEON Late District Dental Officer of MilltarB District Number One, London, Ont, Telephoned Office 34W Residence 841 Office open every Wednesday u>» til April 25th, 1928. MAIN ST./EXETER, ONT. '» Dr. G. F. RouUtom, L.D.S.7D.D.Sfl DENTIST J Office over Carling & Morley X Law Office Extractions Under Oxygen Ga< fl EXETER, ONT. ' JOHN WARD DRUGLESS PRACTITIONER OPTOMETRIST Physiotherapy Treatment PHONE NO. 70 MAIN ST. EXETER ANI? i A DR. E. S.. STEINER ,, VETERINARY SURGEON Graduate • of the Ontario VeterSnaaj^ College DAY AND NIGHT CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED T®' Office in old Ford Garage Building Corner of Main and Ann Street# . EXETER, ONT. - ' ARTHUR WEBER LICENSED AUCTIONEER For Huron and Middlosox FARM SALES A SPECIALTY PRICES REASONABLE SATISFACTION GUARANTEES Phone 57-13 Dashwood R. R. 1. DASHWOOD, ONT. 1 FRANK TAYLOR j LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Huron and Middlesex FARM SALES A SPECIALTY Prices Reasonable and Satisfacttog Guaranteed EXETER P. O. or RING 138 OSCAR KLOPP LICENSED AUCTIONEER Honor Graduate Carey Jones’ Auah tion School, Special course token Iff . Registered Live Stock (all Breed#,)} Merchandise, Real Estate, Far» Sales, etc. Rates in keeping with .. prevailing prices. Satisfaction sured, Write Oscar Klopp, Zurich, or phone 18-93, Zurich, Ont J USBORNE & HIBBERT MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Hoad Office, Farquhar, Ont. President, Vice-President SIMON DOW, DIRECTORS frank McConnell, j. allison ROBT. NORRIS, WM> BROCK , AGENTS JOHN ESSERY, Centralia, Agent ton nr „.„Usb°rne and Bi<toulph HARRIS, Munro, Agent for” Hibbert, Fullarfon and Logan W* A. TURNBULL Secretary-Treasurer Box 99, Eketer, Ontario. GLADMAN & StANBtftRX Solicitors, Exetejf JAS. McKENZIE- .JU J Q