HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1913-11-13, Page 4xeter boon : ;E NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK
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,. TJIUl1 SD. Y', NOV,
• SEAFORTH POST MASTE,RSNIP
The Seaforth ',Expositor' lest • 'Week
• .cttr:mpeed to create a lot of fuss over
zhe appointment of John A. �lrilliams
of Zurich to the• postmestership of
Seaforth succeeding Samuel Dick
son, who has been the postmaster for
forty-nine years. The Expositorcalls
,.be proceedings hard navies incl • lt,
•.'faints that Mr. Dickson has been a
aithful end obliging official and a
• .Conservative. Mr. Nickson may be
ell that the •Expositor claims for
but we are given to under,t;tnd sbat
although nominally postmaster he has
taken no active part in the % ork -for
• years, and that his son-in-law has
been in charge, and that he is a very
partizan Liberal, who takes an -active
part in election campaigns. The Eke
posnor
c--
positor also claims that the' appoint-
snent of Mr. Williams of Zurich is a
• direct insult to the Conservatives of
• Seaforth, But let us retiiild, the Ex-
. • positor that it is only, a few, yearaegee
since Mx- Macdonald of Wingham was
appointed to the postmastersbipn•,•o
London by a Liberal Government,
That was going out of •the riding too
which is ,not the case in regard to
the Seaforth position. Yet we heard•
no kick from the Expositor • when•
Macdonald went to London, The
.Conservative party throughout the
:Tiding should be well satisfied with
tithe appointment of Mr, Williains. No
:man in the riding is more deserving.
Dashwood
Mr A. H. Weltin who `.fits;been in
Montreal Canadian Bank of •C"ammerce
:has been transferred to Winnipeg.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry WilFerrt,' who
were visiting at Mr. T. Isaacs on
Sunday got storm -stayed and •'ouid
not return home until Monday "after -
110011.
We are sorry to hear of the illness
of Mr. Clarence .Itellermann and hope
soon to hear of his recovery -
Mrs. Daniel Shaefer is at present
in the hospital at Lo.ndon,aundergoing.
.an operation for the removal of a
• •rowth.
Mr. Oliver Graybi:el of the Mol:ons
Bank staff. Toronto, is holidaying at
his home in this place,
eit lecture on the habits' and doings
of the Turkish people was • sit eat in
the Evangelical church on Tuesday
night,
Five of the crew of the boat wreck-
ed on Lake Huron on Sunday were
;,cashed ashore ;north of Pont Blake
on Tuesday.
The mail carriers could.. .not make
their trips on Monday, the roads be -
in; blocked with snow.
The smoke -stack on the planing
mill was blown over in Sunday's storm
Mr. Edmund Walper has got set-.
tied in his new home in the village.
Mr Henry Smith, south of here, met
with a painful accident on Wednesday
-of last week. He was working around
the horses when one of them ki_ciced
him. breaking three ribs. . A doctor
was called and he is now recovering
.
Mrs Claude L. Schneider . and her
daughter of 280 West Grand' 13ouie-
vard, Detroit, and Mrs. J. Sneid.:r ul
Jackson, Mich., arrived here 1z, i i.iy
and will spend a few weeks 'With the
former's parents, Mr. and• Mrs. C. L
.114alper at Cedar Grove Farm.
Miss Minnie Ehlers who his been in
Memphis, 'Tenn., for sometime, :e •
::turned home last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Restemerer te
'turned last week from their honey-
moon trip.
The death took place on •rhur:;:izy
-morning atter a lingering illness of
Catharine Birk, relict of the lata'.
Andrew Birk, at her home here, at
the age of 63 years. The funeral look
place on Saturday afternoon to Gosh-
, en
osh..en Line cemetery.
Daniel Schaffer went to London last
• 'week to have a cancer treated.
The Misses Eidt have rnoved their
frousehold effects to Strafford where
'they will reside. `:
Louis ,Adams has moved the house
he recently purchased froth Mr. Ed,
Nadiger to his lot south of the will -
age, r
Crediton
Winter appeared on Sunday efter-
raoou The gale was terrific. In a
short time the roads became impas-
eihle and some of our people, who
evert out of town were obliged to
„stay there until the foliowing day be-
fore they could return home. rhe
change in the weather carie quite un-
expected to many of our farmers who
had their stock out. Fortunately
there was ,no serious damage done in
thi: neighborhood.
Our flax men took advantageof the
few fine days last ,week and got .in
most oi their flax.
Our mail men got their, first taste
" of winter on Monday, when they
made their trips, In some ,places
c'ere obliged to take to the ditches
xo get through the drifts.
Henry Ste' hac er retur ed home
on. Saturday the West,where
Y
be has been visiting his sons the past
twc. months, He reports crops to be
good and a bountiful harvest,
Michael Hirtzel returned home ef-
,ler a short visit with .'his children in
-Detroit acid Capac, Mich.
Hugo
gSlie,nk left for Ailsa Crag On
Monday to take charge of Alf. CJark's
. harness business, Mr, Clark is at ijres
nt ill and unable to attend to his
tv:trk.
Thos. Edwards has moved into his
house which he bought from Mrs, ,G•
hfoltzmrann, and which was formerly
•• eci;ip,ed by Mr: John Mast,
mportant Events Which l- vl'
Occurred During the Week
The Busy World's Happenings Care.
fully Compiled and Put Ilet n.
Handy and Attractive Shape to/
the Readers ot Our Paper -A Salle
Hour's, Enjoyment.
WEDNESDAY.
Vire originating in the top room it
the Oakville town hall, resulted in
the destruction of the building.
The election ot. R. E. 'Truax to
South Eruee will not -c proteste''.
This was decided at a neeetieg ot
onservetive workers yesterday,
The general order to inoet late
every -ember of tbe Colo, ado Na-
tional Guard to render them immune
to typhoid fever was put ato etfeei
y:stcrday.
John Renshaw, G.T.R. st,tic
agent at Blair, near Galt, £Lr the as
twenty years, committed suicide
terday by drinking earboli acid. N.
reason for the a t is known.
Rt, Hon. Jamas Bryce presided yes
terday In London at lunehecn give
in honor of Joh'i. it. Mott, chairuz"a
of the Continuation Committee of tbt
World's Missionary Conference.
Charles Sheraton of. Portage to
Prairie, Mau., aged 41i, lost is lite
endeavoring to rescue two or Por,
tagge's well-known citizens, who, when
out duck shooting. capsized they
canoe
Wallace M. Norrie, C.1 -.R. enginee.
took a hemorrhage while taking tai
train from Godericb, bu ga nHl;
stuck to the throttle until he arrive
at Guelph, where b- was relieved.
will ren -ver.
A wealthy philosopher of Cleve-
land, 0., William Verno,. Backus, ba--
formed
a.formed the App eciatton League of
the 13 Cited States, and aims to p' o -
mote taiosaphy, the art of making
.'anpiness epid' w'c.
Martin Moran, a sur''Ivor ot ti:e
Titanic ti aster, was kilter yester "af
by a ru• h of coal at Natalie Collie.
Shamokin, Pa. He ha„ been employ-
ed as a sailor ei the big liner ano
swam to a rescuing boat..
Supt. Sullivan of the Welland Can -
41 has been chosen as assistant t.
thief Engineer Weiler of the ship
.-anal.
Word has been received at Ottawa
from Vilhjalmar Stefansson annour.e-
^ng that the three boats compristn,,
,he expedition have reacbet their
winter quarters.
Col: Roosevelt arrived In Bueno
Ayres yesterday morning on board
the Argentinian gunboat Uruguay
From Montevideo, and was given a
splendid reception.
Sixteen bodies wet. taken during
the night from the: burned and splin-
tered passenger coacher of the Mer -
seines Paris e- press train, wrecked
fuesday near Melun, France.
Collingwood Schreiber, •Deputy
Minister of Railways, says he antic -
pates that the golden spike, marking
the c'mpletion of tbe G.T.P.. will
be driven early next summer.
Ralph Desane, of Belleville, was
committed for trial yesterday on a
charge of inciting two small boys o
enter the hallway of a city residence
and steal a purse from a hall rack.
.The famous English artist, Frank
Brangwyn, has Jeen commissioned to
execute mural decorations for sever-
e., courts in the fine arts section at
the Panama Exposition in San Fran-
cisco.
Wreckers yester .y abandoned the
Montreal Transportation Co. barge
Cornwall, which sank with its cargo
of 40,000 busl.sl. of wheat in the
St. Lawrence Canal -w bile an route to
Montreal.
FRIDAY.
Advices from Chihuahua say. 6,000
rebels began an attack on Chihuahua
city at ten o'clock Wednesday night.
George and Clement Young, and
Vivian Marple,were drowned in a
small slough by falling through the
ice at Inv zrmere, B. 0.
Maurice Chevalliard, French avia-
tor, yesterday imitat ;d Pegoud, and
flew over the aerodrome at Versailles
in his biplane head downwards.
Lieutenant -Governor Brown -open-
ed the Saskatchewan Legislature
yesterday, forecasting a measure to
provide for agricultural credits.
Sidney Smith, a toy of eleven, lost
his life in Edward's,Lake, near South
Porcupine, but rescued Mina Hogg,
aged 12, who bad broken through
the ice.
No decisir n has been reacher by
the Dominion Government and no de-
finite steps taken in regard to -secur-
ing a site for the ;anadian building
In London.
The next development in aviation
will be the "flying motorcycle" ac-
cording to Glenn H. Curtiss, aviator,
and builder of the Curtiss aeroplane
and flying boat.
Dr. L. C. Prevost of Ottawa, one of
Canada's leading autboritfes on gy-
naecology; died yesterday :.t Saranac
Lake, N.Y. He had been i11 for about
a year with tuberculosis.
C, H. Minchin, .former assistant
City treasurer of Calgary and alder -
Man, was found guilty of the theft of
e5,000 from the city and was sen-
tenced to five years in the peniten-
tiary.
eniten-tiar .
Mrs, Anna Tasnes, 30 years old,
strangled herself to death in the Beth
Israel Hospital at Newark, N.J., with-
oat disturbing eleven other patients
or a nurse who sat within a few feet
of ger:
CATI)RDAY
Four persons were killed and seven
injured yesterday in Los Angeles
when two automobiles collided,
Michigan Masons will buy six hurt-
dred acres on the Canadian shore of.
Lake Erie to make a modern Venice
for Masons only,
An Order -in -council has pass-
ed,
been
ed, fixing the date of the election sni-
der the Scott' Act in Peel, Welland
and Huron counties for Nov. 24..
Genz' :1'elix. Dials was arrested " lit.'
.
Havana yesterd- and: accused of
shooting Pedro Guerrero, the young'
etexiean Wounded in Thursday night's.
freers,
While the neWV Underwood tariff
law doer not mention Canadian :reci_
proetty by eamet, the effect of the bill
is to entirely abrogate the 'aft reci--
procity act,
Dr, Charles afel3orney, a well-
tcnawp New York surgeon, died sud-
denly at his home Cherry Hill, N.Y.
He attended, President McKinley after
the Czolgosy outrage.
Roland B. ,Molyneaux, twice tried
twelve years ago for the murder of
Mrs, Katherine ,T. Adams and acquit-
ted, was married to : Mies Margaret
Connell of New. York.,
Six Chinamen appeared in the Hali-
fax pollee court yesterday morning,
charged with enticing young girls to
visit their laundries far immoral pur-
poses. They were remanded.
The presence or bubonic plague and
yellow fever on the great trade routes
from the south convz'rging upon the
Panama Canal, is giving grave con-
cern to American health officials,
Latest return:, give the Newfound-
dandy Government 3" seats in the
1• -louse. The Opposition, under the
leadership of the former Premier, Sir
Robert Bond, has captured 14 seats.
A. S. L. Turner, who was arrested
to Montreal and taken to. Ottawa on
a charge of bigamy, pleaded guilty
yesterday, and was sent to the Cen-
tral Felson for one year. Both the
wives were in court.
., a Y
Ludwig III., the new King of Ba-
varia, who replaces the mad King
Otto, took the oath yesterday in the
throne room of the palace at Nlunich.
About $5,000 damage was done to
the contents of the,ha:bor board's
freight : hed, Toronto, by fire which
broke out at 10 o'clock Sunday morn-
'nee
orning
W. A. Borah, a wealthy merchant,
was found guilty of murdering his.
wife and their daughter, and sentenc-
ed to life imprisonment at Atoka,
Okla. .
Wm. Ayres, motorman. was in-
stantly killed and twenty persons in-
jured Saturday morning. when a trol-
ley car crashed into a grocery store
at Laketon, Pa.
Winnipeg, on Waal- of the sister
provinces, yesterday turned out en
masse to a meeting to :welcome Gen.
Bramwell Booth,- commander-in-chief
of the Uvation. Army.
The last rail on the extension of
the Niagara, St. Catha.ines & Toronto
Railway, was laid Saturday, and a
temporary passenger service will be
commenced within two weeks.
A strong earthquake shock occur-
red at Messina, Sicily, last night. It
was followed by two shocks of less
severity. No damage was done, but
the people are greatl alarmed.
A four-year-old girl, knocked down
by an automobile in which Prince
Friedrich Leopold of Prussia was
driving at Potsdam, Germany, died
after the prince had •onveyed her to
a hospital.
Suffragists made another demon-
stration at the service of St. Paul's,
London, y terday. At intervals they
kept singing "God Save Annie, Kenney
and Sylvia Pankhurst who are being
persecuted for conscience sake."
I Uta JAY.
The Chino -French bank at •Pekin.
yesterday signed a contract for a loan
to the Chinese Government of t 30,-
000,000.
Sir Richard Solomon, High Com-
missioner in London for the Union of
South Africa, died yesterday, at the
age of 63.
Frank Davison, lumber king, died
at Bridgewater, N. S., after an
illness of four days. He suffered a
stroke of paralysis last week.
James G. Kerr, aged 40, despatcher
on the G.T.R. at London, Ont., was
instantly killed yesterday at was
Park through being struck by express
Nom. 3.
Horace Whitten and his wife had a
thrilling escape f.om their blazing
home at Beamsville when fire broke
out from an overheated furnace yes-
terday morning.
Four hundred young men and wo-
men endeavoring to secure positions
in the civil service are undergoing ex-
amination this week in the House of
Commons at rttawa.
Snow piled up in drifts from two to
ave feet deep in the outlying dis-
tricts of Buffalo, completely tying up
suburban street car lines as a result
of the heavy storm there.
The first C.P.R. train from Eastern
Canada to arrive since Saturday
reached Winnipc.; yesterday. Eight
other passenger trains arrived dur-
ing the course of the evening.
Between three and four thousand
surgeons from all over the world reg-
istered yesterday at the openin,, of
thl fourth annual Clinical Congress.
of Surgeons of North America in Chi-
cago.
All wheat bas bee* removed from
the C.P.R. elevator. at Transcona,
which on Oct. 18 sank twenty feet
into the ground and tipped at an an-
gle of 45 degrees. Not a bushel has
been lost or spoiled.
INCREASE GRANTED'..
Trainmen of Eastern States Get Seven
Per Cent. Raise.
NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—The long-
iivert controversy between railroads of
tile east and their conductors and
trainmen over the latter's demands
tor more pay, ended last night. The
employes are granted an increase in
wages averaging seven per cent. and
otalling $6,000,000 annually—about
gall Co? what they wanted — from:
Oct. '1 last; effective for one year.
One hundred thousand men will
share in the increase. The award of
the arbitration commission tiled late
yesterday afternoon . in the Federal
Court is binding and final.
Since _1909, when last an increase
was granted, tbe arbitrators found
that the cost of living had increased
sevenper cent.
CLANPEBOYE
Mrs, WM. Paten win) bas been
t he past week with pneumonia died at
1 11 o'clock Tuesday. Mrs. prttrtonlivetl;
n this part o1 the country all herchild•
food, days and was widely known.
few years ago she moved to Lieur).
',here she lived up to the time of het
tenth. She leaves to mourn her loss
ger husband and five small children -
Roves ThisP
WeofferOne flundrtvl Po1larsReward for aoycas
f catarrh that cannot by mued by.11all'a Oatarrl
lure,
F. J. CHHENEY & 00.,'Tolede, 0.
We the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for
he last 15years, and believe him perfectly bo rorabt
n all business transaotions and financially able tr
arry out any obligations Walde by his oral
W.sr.niso, li.LNNt,N k AMASVnr.
Wbotaiule Pruggiste, Toledo, C+
BIall's Oatarrh Oure is taken internally, tutting di
ectly on the blood and anuoous surfaces of btu.
ystem. Testimonials sent free. Price (it5c. per bot
le, old by all Druggists
TakeEfall'e Family Pills for constipation,
LICENSE AND REGULATION OF
THE LIQUOR BUSINESS
BETTER THAN THE
SCOTT ACT,
The Members of the Huron County
3usiness Men's Association before or•
,,anizing to oppose the Scott Act, in
:his County,- considered the situation
is it is at the present time, and as it
,s likely to be under the operation 'o'
:he proposed law, if itshould carry,
Under the license system,hotels and
hops are licensed to sell ,, liquors
These licenses are issued by, the Gov-
ernment: Inspectors and Commission-.
ars are appointed by the Government
vhose duty is to see ,that only fit
and proper men get licenses, and than
:hey live up to the law after they
;et them. These inspectors and com-
nissianers are swell -known and re
ppt'nsible men in'the counties in whicl
:hey live and represent the Govern-
nent, and are men of high character
Are frankly admit that mistakes ma}
)e and are occasionally made by these
nspectors and Commissioners, and
:hat undesirable men are sometime]
xranted licenses and possibly are per -
flitted to continue in the business
'at- too long. Many of the men, how -
:ver . who are given licenses by these
officials are good men and live up tc
the law; and we contend that it is
lot necessary to vote good men out
)f business to get rid of a ;ew bad
.nen Who are ,in the business. That
method would not be applied '0 any
other line of business, and: it is enjust
and unfair to apply it only to the li-
quor business: No thinking per -,o.'
would advocate doing away v th .Il:
banking business because non awl
then a banker commits robbery, No
sensible man would suggest getting
rid of all physicians because some
doctors are convicted of malpractice.
No reasonable man or woman would
jour in a movement to prohibit al]
preachers from preaching because now
and then ,some stray from the straight
and narrow path of rectitude. '1'o do
:these things would be' unreasonable
and vArong, but is not equally so the
proposition to vote all the good men
who are in the liquor business out
of it, in order to get rid of the had
men who are in the, business? The -In-
spectors and Commissioners are con-
stantly dropping the undesirable lic-
enseholders out at a rate that is
rapidly reducing their number.
Let us enumerate some of the things
a law -observing hotel -keeper ,,and
shop -keeper does,
Niagara Level Is High;
NIAGARA• FALLS N.Y.,,-Nov, 11.
in the Niagara, -=The water g a r rier is v
:birty feet higher than 'the normal,:•
level, The base of the elevator in'
hn State Park is flooded. .The se,ae
`indpit e' Theee Sister. Islands is1
aost'utdet' -Water, and the 'park (Alia'
;gals are fearful^ far the donnectfng
erid ..a, Down in the lower gorge,
leaf the whirll ool, the waters are
•aving' the bank of wliegorge rail-
road..r..
eeee-e-e-aeoewerwwwww:' ism
He does not open irn the morn-
ing until the law says he may,
eight o'clock.
He closes in the evening when
the law says he must -in villages.
and townships at ten o'clock, and
in towns and cities at eleven o'-
clock.
He closes in the evening at sev-
en o'clock on Saturdays and he
keeps closed until eight o'clock
•itionday. morning.
He does not sell to a boy un-
der twenty-one years of age.
1 -Ie does not sell to a known
drtbnkard.
He does not sell to an intoxic-
ated persgn,
These are not all the things the
uv -observing liquor dealer scrupul.
ias`ly does, but enough has been mete
:need to indicate to any thinking
dead the kind of orderly drinkins
,lace it ,is possible to have, and the
ind the law says we, must have. Le;.,
at law,we say, be rigidly : enforced
it in our operator! it could not be en-
)reed
n )reed too "rigidly. It might not be
iadvisable to bring pressure to bear
poen these commissioners to exercise
very precaution" in their power tc
void granting licenses to any bre
lose' who will keep strictly to the
ivy; and if a holder of a license
reales the law his' tenure of his lic-
nse-ought to be seriously imperilled
not forfeited.
It is unnecessary to indulge . it
eeculation as to what prohibition
?es for.. a community. Many place,
we fairly tried it and ,turned fron
, Other places are still giving it ;
tir trial, The people of this Count;
to knowabout '
-rat the truth u h rt. ;A•
1 earnest of our good faith, we sug-
nt that the advocates' of the Scot•
.ct name a gentleman and this Ase
iciation .name one, and that the w
lit certain places agreed upon an<.
take a quiet investigation o
ie conditions, •,the results of
`itch will be ,published over them
,natures.in the press, for the. ben •,
'it of the voters in this County, stn'
ins in some degree at least neeis
tem in making up their minds ' a'
i how they should cast their vote's
This Association offerspay
n
lio a1 the.expenses. incurred by th
: tlenten.in making._this jnvestigatio-
via°ing ;Above- all to''•eiscei'taut t1ie',ie
cal. truth i.n.,regard to l tins' dtYM6stton
.a:si5e'i."i£Ctlty ee,
ii HUkO l" COIJw ii BUSiwNts
'1,1 -EX'S ASSOCIATION,
tel! Ransford, W. Jackson,
President, Secretary:
E CANADIAN BANK'
OF COMMERCE
SIR EDMUND ,WALKER, CNA). LL.D., D.C.L., President
ALEXANDER` LAIRD JOHN I IRD
General Manager' Assistant General Manager
REST, $12,500,409
CAPITAL, $15,000,000
SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS
Interest at the current rate is allowed on all deposits of $1 and
upwards. Careful attention is given to every account' Small accounts
are welcomed. Accounts niay be opened and operated by mail..
Accounts may be opened in the names 'of two or more person,
withdrawals to be made by any one of them or by the survivor.
set
Sxl7TER BR_ANCII-G. i:,. WAUGU, M.anag er, Branch also at Oredltoo '
The Molsons Bank
Incorporated 1855
Capital & Reserve $8,700,000
85 BRANCHES IN CANADA :
A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED,
CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT.. „..,:
TRAVELLERS' CHEQUES, 'Issued
'BANK MONEY ORDERS' • ....
SAViNCS BANK DEPARTMENT
at al Branches. Interest allowed at highest current rate.
EXETER BRANCH
. Agents at Exeter for the. Dominion. Government.
DICKSON & CARLING. SoliCitilrs. , N. D. HURDON Manager,
UNION
Auction Sale
The undersigned will hold a union
ale at the Metropolitan, Hotel, ,Ex-
:ter .pn Saturday, Nov. 15,- at 1 p.
n Parties having anything to dispose
)f will kindly leave orders at office
en or before Nov. llth. B. S. Phil-
ips Auctioneer.
Auction Sale
OF FARM STOCK & IMPLEMENTS
Bta. • - -
There will be sold by public s Auc-
tion
on Lot 9, Con. 4, Stephen on
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1913
At 1 pe 'm:, sharp the following prop
erty, viz, -3 cows supposed to be in
calf 1 new mach cow, 1 two-year-old
heifer supposed to be in calf, 2 year-
ilng heifers, 2 yearling steers, 5 caly-
es, 7 pigs 2 months old.
Wagon, seed drill, pair bobsleighs,.
nearly new hay rack, gravel box, Mas
sey-Harris binder, Massey -Harris
mower sulky. rake, 3 -horse cultivator,
set diamond harrows, walking plow,
2 -furrow plow, nearly new; root lif-
ter, root pulper, a number of hens,
heating stove, draw rope, two bicy-
cles, turkeys, stack of straw to be
fed on the place; also many
other articles. Positively no deserve,
Terms, -Sums of $10 and under,
over that amount 6 months' credit on
approved joint note. 5 per cent, per
annum off for cash in lieu of note.
Straw cash. •
Jas• Stanley Jas. Patching,
Auctio,neer. Proprietor.
Auction Sale
JF 50 HEAD OF CHOICE COWS
AND HEIFERS.
There will be sold by public auc-
tion at lite lefetropolitan Hotel, Ex-
eter, on THURSDAY, NOV. 20th
tt one o'clock sharp, the following,
15 cotes due in. Nov, and Dec,
10 cows due in Jan., and Feb.
10 cows. due 'in March and April
The balance two-year-old heifers,
some of which are with calf.
The above mentioned stock has been
:areftilly selected in the best dairy
.ne', districts of Ontario and consist
�f the milking strain of Durham with
ome Holstein and Jerseys. This sale
hould all the attention of anyone
wishingto, secure a good: class of
ovgs„,, yea credit will be
Terms, -6 months cre i
;iveil• on furniuhitig,.approved 'pint
notes. A discount of b per cent, per
Anwnr off for cash 'in lieu of notes,
as Ferguson, Thos. Cameron,
Ingersoll, Prop. Auctioneer
LUOAN-Mrs. Roberts of Lucan had
ter head badly cut while attend-
og a dance Wednesday evening in.
he town Hall. The power in Luca°
s off at midnight and a banging lamp
aad been• lighted for the occasion.
4rs. Roberts' was under the lamp
vhen the glass broke and a heavy
tiece struck her and inflicted a deep
rash.
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Notice to Creditors
TN THE MATTER ,OF THE ES-
TATE OF THOMAS WILLIS, late
of the Village of Exeter, in the
County of Huron, Gentleman, de-
ceased.'
• Notice is hereby given pursuant to
Sectiort 55, Chapter 26, I George V.,
Statutes of Ontario, 1911, that .ell per-
sons having any claim or claims •.g-.
ainst the Estate of the above named
deceased, who died on or about the
7th day of September, A.D. 1913, are
required to deliver or send by post to
the undersigned, a statement and full
particulars of their names; addresses,
claims, and security, if any, onno; :be-
for the 25th day of November 313
And take notice that after tfeliaid
last mentioned date, the executrices
of the said estate will proceed to 'a •.
distribute the assets of the deceased
among the parties entitled thereto,
having regard only to the claims of
which they then have notice. And
the said Executrices will not be Bal.''"
ble for the Estate or any part there-
of to any person or persons of whose
claim or claims they shall not have
had notice at the time of such dis-
tribution.
Dated at Exeter this 5th day of
November 1913.
DICKSON &• CARLING,
Solicitors for Executrices
Mail Contract
SEALED TENDERS ADDRESSED
to the. Postmaster General will be re-
ceived at Ottawa until Noon, on Fri-
day, the 19th day- of. December, 1913,
for the conveyance of His Majesty's
Mails on a proposed Contract for four
years Six times per week, over Grand
Bend (Brewster) Rural Route from the
Postmaster General's pleasure, next.
Printed notices containing further in
formation as to conditions of propos-
ed Contract may be seen and blank
forms o1 Tender may be obtained at
the Post Office of Grand Bend and
Brewster and at the Office of the r
Post Office Inspector at London.
Post Office Department, Mail Ser -
vire Branch, Ottawa, 7th Novr., 1913
G C. ANDERSON, Superintendent,
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