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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1919-6-19, Page 5126 24 Years the same " good " tea fiEDfiosE TEAIS good ta Sold only in sealed packages "SMOOTHER THAN VELVET" THE ever -recurring problem, what to serve, is so easily solved with Ice Cream--Silverwood's.. Frozen cream --a delicately flavored dainty —velvety smooth and rich,. Silverwood's is always thoroughly enjoyed. Sold in all flavors in Bricks or Bulk. FLAVORS $ILVERWOOD'S LIMITED, LONDON, ONT. � E„��`� { X11 For Sale by Wilson & Simms Look for the Silverwood', Sign What About That Wasted Five per cent ? in June W -ss. Cost $4,05 Warr Savings Stamps can be bought wher- ever this sign is displayed. Most of us fritter away at least five per cent. of our weekly wages in trifles. If we stopped to reckon it up, we would find it hard to remember where the money went. If we could make that money earn more money without troubling to think out a plan or attend to details, we would consider that we had done a good stroke of business. The Government has made it possible for us to do that Here is the plan: You say to your employer; "Every week I want you to hold back five per cent. of my wages and invest them in War Savings Stamps. When you have bought a War Savings Stamp with my money, put it in my pay envelope. Go on doing that for a year." You will never miss that five per cenf, which you had previously frittered away. But at the end of a year you will have a little pack- age of Stamps which, in 1924, will be worth $5.00 for every $4.00 odd you pay for them now. The guarantee of safety behind the War Savings Stamps is the whole Dominion of Canada. Make Your Savings Serve You and Serve Your Country --Invest Them in War Savings Stamps. THE SALVAGE 63992 Is a Pure Bred Standard Bred Stal- lion, He has been eniiol)ted and . enr. spected Form Al Hits enrolment number is 5348. His sire is Exponent 47150 and his dam Maybar, record' 2.25. He has an excellent pedigree, tracing back to Idarebletionnaej 10, Red Wilkes, -Mambrino Chief Geiorge Wilkes -and Blue Bull. He swill stand for mares Buri June only at it_ T. Lukier's stable', Exle,ter, Terns; $25 to insure, JAMES ESSERY, Owner. rie R1✓il3 HEIR 1NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week. The Busy World's Happenings Care. fully Compiled and Put into Handy and Attractive Shape for the Headers of Our Paper — A Solid Hour's Enjoyment. TUESDAY. 13reekville has adopted a higher standard for milk. The Adriatic and the Lapland ar- rived at Halifax with troops. There was again a tendency to lower prices in the live stock znar'ket.. Toronto unions. pledged $6,000 weekly to the metal workers' strike fund, Stratford Collegiate Institute Board has granted the teachers a 10 per cent, increase.. The Tunisian, bringing troops to. Quebec and Montreal, was delayed by fogs in the Gulf, Three steamers grounded in. Lake Superior owing to fog. the Wilkinson, Hatrionic and Trevor Dawspn, Joseph Connolly. of Welland, fore- man lineman of the Welland Elec- tric Co,, was electrocuted at work. A gas well in Dover field, No. 13, is t24urning out a better producer than was expected, yielding 7,500,000 feet in hours. The Minister of Justice has retused to interfere in the carrying out of the death sentence on Frank McCul- lough on Friday next. it has been practically dee/sled. that H. A. L. Fisher, president of the .Board of Education, will be appoint - cd British Ambassador at Washing- ton. The Vickers-Vimy bomber made a test trial at St. John's yesterday, whichproved so satisfactory that the hop -off for the transatlantic Aght will be made with the Drat favorable weather, J. R. Haffner, of Philmont, Phila- delphia, led the field of 132 com- petitors in the first day's play of the United States national open golf Championship yesterday, The Olympic, with 5,440 troops, is expected on the 1 ith; the Royal George, with 1,446, on the 15th, at Halifax, and the Monteagle, with 705 Canadian soldiers, on the 20th, at Vancouver. Seven hundred. British, Canadian and Australian troops left Leith yes- terday for Murnaan, North Russia. The passengers included a Russian general and his staff, and French and Italian officers. WEDNESDAY. German submarine U-79 arrived in Toronto harbor, Lt. -Col. R. 0. Windeyer, formerly of the 74th Battalion, died suddenly in his .51st year. The Detroit Street Railway strike still continues. Auto owners are eiv- ing free rides to citizens. Si, Canadian war bond issues. made ,new high quotations on the Toronto Stock Exchange Grain Growers' conventions are called by the Saskatchewan Associa- tion for all the Federal ridings. Lt. -Col. Barker, Y,C„ the noted Canadian airman, at a civic luncheon in his honor, gave an interesting ac- count of "spy -dropping." Sinn Fein hopes have been re- stimulated, the London Daily Mail says, by President Wilson's intention to receive the Irish -American dele- ga,tes. Premier Lloyd George has receiv- ed the South African Nationalist delegates and informed them that Britain can take no action upon their demands. President W. J. Stamen, of the Canadian Manufaet.irers' Associa- tion, in his annual address, declared no quarter would be given to the One Big Union. A strike of railway shopmen that would tie up every railway in Canada is threatened if the demands of No. 4 Division are not granted by 10 o'clock next Tuesday. George Douglas, of Cavan Woollen Mill, drowned. himself Monday in the millpond at Cavan, after first tying forty pounds in weight around his neck. He was nearly sixty, unmar- ried, and had suffered recently from melancholia. Serious clashes occurred in Win • nipeg between strike sympathizers and the special soldier constables, numbers on both sides being beaten, •one mounted policeman, a Victoria Cross winner, being, so severely in- jured his recovery is doubtful. THIIRSDAY. Minnie E. Dinwoodie, of Stratford, was drowned while bathing if a pond. T. F. Morrison, a special constable, was shot through the leg during'a small riot in Winnipeg. Women were admitted to the lay- men's meeting of the Toronto Metho- dist Conference for the first time. Kingston is to be made a national harbor andfoot of the lakes term- inal for the grain transhipping trade. Mr. Lloyd Harris told the Canadian Manufacturers' Association of vast opportunities in Europe to sell Can- ada's goods. Galt Board of Trade has appoint- ed a committee to investigate local conditions contributing to the high Cost of living. Methodist laymen were rebuked by Rev. Dr. Ernest Thomas for not hav- ing read the industrial report to the last General Conference, The mortgagees of the London & Lake Traction Co. have accepted an offer from St. Thomas of $25,000 for all their prgperty in that city. Raymond Shaw, of Chatham town- ship, aged 19i -died as a result of bee ing thrown from a loaded manure spreader and run over by its rear a tomb 50201 l: :;The-Maisagement Committee of the Toronto,; Board of Education 'decided in favor of coatless boys in the dis- pute arising at,Harbord Collegiate The famous Wiii:kes .Stantdard Trotting S.aillion ''v ill be at his own stable, e carda season at 1919.S;ee ea@tdsrr-fear"'ped- T agree and terms—Vni;'t Mitchell, Enrolled and Imisip�ecctte(d in accord.•. anoe.;with Gh�apit;ear ;67 of the StatutesStatutesof Ontario, 2 Geo. V. Enrolment Na. 2593, ,Form 1, 1919. Statement of Enrolment was Inad- vertently Omitted fro+m lar dsl .Institute;, , President " Wiii§on undertakes at the request of;uIrish-Americans to bring 'Irish quelltions unofficially tod the attention of the other Peace' Commissioners. Tile Admiralty announces that a British submarine operating in the g Baltie Sea has' tn'en missing since June 4 and is presumed to have been lost with all hands, The Winnipeg Police Commission removed Chief MacPherson and .made Deputy Chief Newton acting chief in consequence of the former's declin- ing to relinguisleeontrol of the force. FRIDAY. A number of loaded shells were stolen from a hangar at the Dom- inion, arsenal. at Quebec, Alex. Stewart, a prominent farm- er near Harriston, dropped dead while working in alleld. Maple Leat Mining Co. had profits of $929,105, compared with 31,022,- 266 the previous year. Advices from China. indicate that the Japanese boycott may develop in to an anti -foreign movement. A. W. Wright, Vice -Chairman of the Workmen's Compensation Com- mission, died at his home in Park- dale, Two newspapers have resumed, publication in Buenos Aires. This is their first appearance for thirteen. days. The building trades strike at Hali- fax is ended, the six unions accept- ing the employers' offer or arbitra tion. The Canadian ;kianufacturers' As- socigi•atn. ation at their closing session drew up an extensive legislative pro - Final efforts were made In court to save Frank McCullough frons: hanging this morning, but were un- successful. Rev. Dr. Chown,, speaking before the Toronto Methodist Conference, denounced Sympathetic strikes and Bolshevisla, The British War ()Mee has is,aued e denial of the report from Stock- holm that British troops are advanc- ing on Stockholm. At the Central W.M.C.A. meet, an 1. Toronto last evening, Freeman bet - red George Goulding's mark for the 3,500 -metre walk. Some of the Parisian society peo- ple are acting as strike-breakers in Paris. Baron Henry Rothschild has been acting as chauffeur on an auto bus. The body of Edward Watson, a returned soldier, was found in a building at Brockville used as a con- valescent home for soldiers, the place being filled with gas front a gas stove, The bodies of F. L. Sharp and Joe liigalaeh, prospectors, have been found, with several bullet holes in them, in the Rocky 'Mountains, 179 mat.; wit of Hudson's Hope; foul play is suspected. SATURDAY. Three died of injuries sustained in the Newmarket explosion. Over (47,000 was contributed for nee bus at a meeting in Massey Hall, Toronto, The royal eonantission on Indus- trial Unrest held is final sitting in Ottawa. A fine geld watch, suitably engrav- • Miss alarie Haan', of New York, •Av'on' the Metropolitan Women's golf ehampionship. Countess Mark.•vicz, the Sinn Fein leader, has been arrested at Dublin and taken to Cork. The allied answer to the German counter -proposals will be presented on :Monday morning, ed, was presented to each of eighty returned soldiers of Lancaster, Bates- ville and vicinity, A British squadron, according to a Swedish report, is bombarding the Bolshevik bane at Kronstadt. Prepared t•ts are again under way at Versaill;.,; tor the formal ceremony in connection. with sighing the Treaty of Peace. C':`ief "i"orges Regis, of the Mon- ta^'nais Indians, ns di h a . a e ds a delegation going to Ottawa to obtain help for needy families of trappers. John Bolton, a fisher of Niagara - on -the Lake, ran out of gasoline, and, h_vitig no oars in his boat, the laun.'.h wt.s adrift two days and a night. The annual picnic of the London Collegiate l;'stitute and Public Schools was attended by more than ten thousand pupils, their parents and friends. Mrs. Alan Nicol, wife of the cap- tain of the Ontario No. 2, died very sur;, -• :!r t.;, • g Thurs.ay airht; she ha.l her trunk partly packed for a visit to her old home in Scotland.. P,•';ieasional lacrosse will be play- ed ag in in this section of Canada, the Ua.liadian Lacrosse Association, comprising one team in Toronto and one in St. Catharines, having been organized last night. MONDAY. Knox Church, Galt, celebrated its fiftieth anniversary, Wm. Nelson, of Lindsay, died in his garden from the heat on Satur- day. A general strike of the members of the Miners' Federation is to take place. Seven trainloads of troops from the Olympic reached Exhibition Camp, Toronto. The Society of Friends in Ontario is celebrating this week its hun- dredth anniversary. Ralph De Palma, driving a Pack- ard car, broke the fifty -mile record at Sheepshead Bay on Saturday. No drastic action will be taken by Cobalt miners pending negotiations with the Department of Labor. An instructor at the Victoria In- dustrial School, Mimico, was shot by an inmate in resisting recapture after escape. Robbers stole an auto in Toronto, and, going to a gasoline service sta- tion, carried off the office safe con- taining $400. Earl Roberts, aged 17, was drowned while swimming at a picnic at Dundurn Park, Hamilton, on Sat- urday evening. A non -striking workman 'at the Billancourt aviation works in France, was seized on Friday by strikers and thrown into the. Seine river. 1t. W. Harnett, an old man, was killed- on the railway track near Hali- fax while walking the track on :the way, :to, iaao• his wife's .grave in the; cg!netery ngarby irs ' ligrbert,• Ll 'd • daughter and granddaughter, were all killed, as also their team of horses, when struck by a fast train while driving into Napanee Saturday.. { IxI'.'i" rs t ittr There thterridnetiSaaRat-nP` neither 04. Sat ,AhelgUIRe? adY.fae CoflstipionansleDlAfl ' 30 turd FeveriS1U% oatd I,s>,ss°FS foY' ieantti�t4-.-- '..=- �at>a1 Coif . as Nosi .S„.NEWXQt 11 J .0 .1l U to,es 0 too 35 D"sz' 3 �= Moat Cspy > f Wrapper. For infants and t Mothers Know That Genuine Cast rIa A1.*ays Bears the Signature of me For Fhrtv Y$41111 «a.TAuK sl4PA,1'r, W.w VO wK awry. Zurich Dr. 13. Campbell and family attend- ed the funeral of an uncle of the Doctor's at St, Thomas,—Mr. A', H, Schnell, who visited relatives here for some weeks, has :returned to Calgary,. Alta„ to iresurne his position.—Mr, Jacob Haberer left on Tuesday for Park Rapids, state of Minnesota, where he will visit his brother, Mr, John Haberer. for a few weeks,—Mr. and Mrs. E. Appel left on Thursday for an extended visit with relatives in ettroit.—Mr. R. E. Appel, who has conducted a jeweller shop here for some anonths, has ,discontinued busi- ' tress and has gone to Hamilton 'to as- sume a position.—Mr. Geo, CamnbeIl of Stanley township has sold his 60 - acre farm in the L. R. E. Cont of Stanley 4ossnship ho Henry Steckle, —Rev. Roy M. Geiger has been sta- tioned at Woodstock as pastor of the \fethodist church in that city, the ceuncsl 'me: and the rol- lowing business was tray. a:ted.—The rental for the Town Hall was fixed as follows, --To people outside the Township S10 per night,. to those in- , side the Township e5; the :aretaker to ;receive 20 per cent of the pro- ceeds. It Q. Hess was appointed tat- ephonc toll collector for Zurich cen- tral and P. McIsaae for Dashwood central,. all ,;ollectios s to be made the first day of the month, :tad returned to the township treasurzr by the 5th. with tull report. The clerk was appoei• 1 ,o -attend the Telephone Conven: al in ten- don o•a the 20th. A number of accous i -a 'ta;•- sed and aajrt:.v ournment wz male • June 21st at 8 p.m. Hensall Miss Bessie Urquhart of Georgia, is here visiting her parents, M-. and airs Donald Urquhart.—Tho Jaakson, factory will commence operations" soon.—The explosion of a coal ail stove at the home of D, M'.'2lartin nearlycaused d the destructionn ot t he home Mr. McMartin rttn was painfully burned in putting out the fire.—I'll oiling of the ,centre of Main street is not satisfactory. The sides :must be oiled a� ret' before we will l se rid at the duce—Mrs. G. G Petty arrived home i, om the \Vest is , week, whith- er she Itad gone .owing to the Illness of her daughter, airs. Donaldson Corp G. Harburn, Cora. Edgar Munn Sap, er Earl McEwen and Pte. Wm, Stene have returned front overseas.— John Thompson suffered a fall onthe cement walk recently and cut his head badly.—John Dick of Oakville and sister Mrs. Cawthorpe are here Vis- iting relatives.—Mr. and Mrs. J: T. Bcnthran are here from the West.- 1lrs.. Abraham of Portland, Maine, 's visiting Mrs. Thomas McKay. -John Stewart of the London Road, a lirle north !of the village, a son of the late air, John Stewart of Tucke,rsmith died at his home on Saturday in his 54th year. The deceased had been in declining health for the past year. He leaves to mourn his death his brother Alexander, and sister, Miss Mary, both Living, tvith him.—Mrs. Christie of Ex- eter is visiting at the home( of Mr. John E. McEwen, her nephew.—A quiet wedding was solemnizes at the church of St. John the' Evaaglist, London, on Tuesday, when Maria, daughter of,Mr, and Mrs• James Lotman became the wife of Mr. Israel Lindenfieid, son of Mr. and Mrs. LirtdenfPield of Hensali. The bride was attended by her suster, Miss Margaret Littman, and the; groom by Mr. Milton Jiohnson. Rev. Cants Craig performed the ceremony. Hay Council Court of Revision and the regular Council meeting was held ani the 7th; At the Count odf Revietioiil a few min or ;changes were made in the assts.s- menrt of lands, and several appeals against dog tax- wen graanted. At the close of the Court of Re- HEARIBILARN or heaviness after meals are most annoying manifestations of acid -dyspepsia.. iliol pleasant to take, neutr ia.cid'it and:': hel )rest rr At ar .I?. Qe. norma c�tgCSt10 MADE BY SCOTT & AO{YNE ' . MAKERS OF SCO1Ts EMb .SI0id KIPPEN.—Mr. John. Workman. 1: ho recently underwent a serous ape•a- tiott at a London hospital. has :ear a - ed home fully reeovere i from his ness Large quantities ,'t hay are r e - being baled and shipped daily by W. T), Harvey from Kippen tart:• : t` a 4, Heasals and Exeter- Hii pre • ea handle three carloads a lay, hu: r" s iat less than the demani for hay ala far. H:.., pang 'the tar. . " ? $2e p e ton and has a :•ea i ;n: .at in Tc renta and -the Un.ted State.•: --- CLINTON.—The death oecurre -1 at Clinton on June 9th of C. H. B a• 1. who after supper sud.?en s ceaar'el and area almost immediately. He `ame front England and live 1 in Ciintac 13 years, previously having lived in 3rus seas and Seafarth. His widow, n.:ie on and three daughters surv:ve.—K'm :cant aged 33, also passel away :he oat day He was born in Ireland and carne to Canada as a child. He mar- ried Sat -ah Foster of Varna in 1877,and since that time resided in Clinton. Has trite survives. STARTLING EVIDENCE IN THE TEMPLETON CASE PROD SUEMIYTED BY 8E9 a ]t3 D 801 DRIERS DISPELS PUBLIC tilRSEPTICsSi Z Public interest in the Templeton cane has been accentuated by a volume cf further evidence which has been sub- mitted to prove thatTempleton's Rheu- matic Capsules da remedy Rheuma• em, Sciatica, Gout, Lumbago and many of their kindred diseases. Canadian soldiers from the front claim that these capsules were of the utmost benefit in relieving them of sciatic pains and pre:•enting the development of rheu- matic troubles. One well known Can- adian Ge.neral was a. constant user of and his persistent demand for them is proof that they gave him the relief he sought. Men such as our Canadian soli' urs are not prepared to make false state- ments. T.R,C'S fixed them up and they are glad to Say so in order that others may benefit by their experience. There is no denying the fact that T.R;C'S do all we claim they will. Convince your- self. Try them, THE DOUBLE TRACK ROUTh Between MONTREAL TORONTO DETROIT and CHICAGO t+ ...iUIthexrteleed •,dining car '`', .w.,,. '',ears:;:' ' .� s>ervl;ce,�; ltS14'0 So ;bars ''ea .night traiata .'t,1+iri Parlor• c , a+rs' '',daft,, Cra1M:5;w: Fuji information from any Cinod Trunk Ticket Agent, or C, E. Flem- ing District Pase'. er Agent T" -'giro N. J. DORB Phone 46w Agent; 1•,x+:it.ie 1 1 1 '1 4 4 1 1 4 y 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1