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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1919-6-26, Page 5Full weight of tea in every package TEA'* and teS SO1d only to sealed packages Sfleiwxxxfs lee rote= "SMOOTHER THAN VELVET" 'THINK the cone connoisseurs don't know 1 Silverwood's? Ask them. That rich, smooth, creamy taste is something they go an extra block to get. And that's just why Silverwood's is good for them. It is wholesome, pure -a real food. Always to be had from LL FLAVORS SILV<;RWOOD'S LIMITED, LONDON, ONT. Look for Me - ,- ' �:esti p Sil o �gods 8 /// SMOOT�Cp ka ti. � 13 For Sale by Wilson & Simms Patriotism and Profit ' in June Cost $4.d5 It is patriotic to buy War Savings Stamps because Canada must have money for reconstruction. But it is . also profitable to buy War Savings Stamps . because you are in- vesting in Government Bonds yielding over 41/2%. You don't need to be a capitalist. You can start with 25 cents. Buy a Thrift Stamp for a quarter. When you have sixteen of them, exchange them for a War Savings Stamp, and you will have laid the foundation of a solid invest- ment with your odd savings. You can add to this investment as often as you save $4.00, and in 1924 the Government will pay $5.00 for every War Savings Stamp you buy now for $4.00 odd. This is the biggest opportunity ever af- forded to wageearners to become in- vestors. War Savings Stamps Make Your Savings Serve You and can be bought whsr• Serve Your Country—Invest Thein in ever this sign is displayed. War Savings Stamps. THE SALVAGE 63992 Is a. Pure Bred Standard Bred Stal- lion. He has been enrolled Lind in- spected Form Al. His enrolment ntimb.er its 534$, His sire ns Exponent 47150 and his daip Maybar, record 2.25. He 'has an excellent pedigree, tracing back to Harnbletonia,n 10, Red Wilkes; Mambnino Chief ` George Wilkes and Blue Bull. He will stand tor mares during June only at R. T. Luleer's stable, Exieteie ' Terms, $25 to .insure. JAMES ESSERY, Owner,. t;. RE1 HEIR 50201 The famous Wilkes Standard bred Trotting' Steelton. wall be at 'leis awn stable, Metropolitan, Hotel, Exeter', for season of 1919. See carets for ped- igree and terms. -"Wm. Mitchell. Enrolled and Inisp,ocfetd in acro te- gree` with Ghaplt,er 67 of the Statutes of Ontario, 2 Geo. V. Enrolment No. 2593, Form '1., 1919. State,titent of Enrolment was inad- vertently omitted from large cards, NEWS TOPICS OF NEL Important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week. 'The Busy World'sHappening's care- fully Compiled. and Put Into Bundy and• Attractive Shape for the Readers of Our Pieper Solid Hour's Enjoyment. '1'1JESDAY. The dispute between the packers and butchers ox Toronto was finally adjusted. Walter Rawcliffe, young son of John Rawcliffe, of Paris, was drown- ed in the Nith river. The strike called by the French Federation of Miners went into ef- fect yesterday morning. Walter Hagen, golf chee pion, will go to England next season to com- pete for the British open title. The fall of Kronstadt, the naval base of Petrograd, is im'mi7 tt, ac- cording to reports by naval "elides at Hilsingtors, The Australian tennis team thick won the inter -allied toubnnament in Paris will conte to America for the American championships. Provincial police oflcers say they have seized documents proving that the 1. W. W. and the One Big Union are the one and same organizption, Maj. -Gen. Mewburn, Minittter of Militia, introduced a bill to provide for a permanent tore() not exceeding 10;000, instead of 5,000, as at pres- ent. Miss May Barnhart, of Cornwall, a school teacher, and Gus Bradley are believed to have been drowned in the St. Lawrence four miles below Pres- cott, E. N. Macdonald, of South Drum- mer, president of the U. F. 0. ter Peterborough county, was nominated as farmers' candidate for that riding in the Legislature. Sir Lonier Gouin';s Government was returned by acclamation in the nu.ainations in Quebec, obtaining more than forty seats unopposed out of the eighty-one in the Legislature. A strike order to 40,000 railway shopmen throughout Canada was is- sued by the executive of Division No. 4 at Montreal, to take effect to -day unless concessions are made by the Canadian Railway War Board. WEDNESDAY. The tussock moth has made its an- pearanco in London. Labor men are incensed over the wholesale arrest of strike leaders in Winnipeg. Four-year-old Roily Patterson was struck by an auto in Toronto, and may die. Thirteen persons were injured, three or four seriously, in a railway wreck on the G.T.R. near Lindsay. Mrs. Fares, wife of Dr. 0. W. Fares, of Port Colborne, was struck by a street ear and died of her in- juries. W. A. Deery, of Montreal, 21 years of age, was drowned with the Ungava expedition, its second tragedy in a fortnight. Col. W. N. Poston, of Belleville, wee elected Grand 2 at the annual convocation of Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Masons. The Misses Durack and Wilie, Aus- tralia's champion women swimmers, are en route to America for a series of exhibitions. The League of Red Cross Societies has opened its headquarters at Ge- neva, in one of the oldest and most historic buildings of the city. Among the concessions contem- plated for Germany in case she signs the treaty is the use of 30 per cent. of her merchant shipe for two years. William Ramsay, a former whole- sale ''mereeent and Linannier, who made a half -million -dollar gift to To- ronto charities a year ago, died in Scotland, aged 84. An oil painting of Sir Oliver Mowat was unveiled at Woodstock by his grandson, Lt. -Col. Mowat Big- gar, an address being given by Hon. N. W. Rowell. The rush of strawberries on to the market drove the price down from 35 cent to 20 cent a box at London, to 18 cents at Brantford, and to 18 cents at Tillsonburg. Czech forces, under Gen. Hennogue of the French army, have begun a• counter-offensiveagainst the Hun- garian Soviet troops, and have cap- tured several villages after ten hours' fighting. THURSDAY. The mining market was quiet but firm. West Elgin Liberals want farmers and Laborites to join them. There were 53 acclamations in 81. constituencies in Quebec nominations Tuesday. There was a sharp division in the methodist Conference over Sabbath observance. The Senate killed the measure p - viding for prohibition for a yetr after peace is signed. Haverford College cricketers were defeated by Toronto yesterday by one innings and 69 runs. H. I. Wells, aged 65, of Toronto, wasstruck by a street car and' died In the Western Hospital. The German peace delegation has advised the Weimar Government to refuse to sign the treaty. Peterson Lake Silver Cobalt Min- ing Co. was again victor in litigation with the Dominion Reduction Co. The Congress of the U. S: has vot- ed to terminate the operation of "tiie daylight-saving law on October 26. Hamilton Street Railway em- ployes have obtained recognition of their union and an increase in wages. The nitrogen plant at Trenton, formerly operated by the Imperial Munitions Board, was destroyed by are. Premier Clemeneeau has written a letter of apology to Brockdorff-Ront- zou for the stoning of the German delegates in Paris. Duncan Munro, the local athlete, who saved two from drowning last Saturday, received an honorarium from the Toronto :City Council. ?R.IDAY. 1, The I.O.O.F: celebrated their cen- tennial in Massey Hall, Toronto. i Protracted drought has ruined the strawberry crop around St. Thomas.. Colli Wata`lt's w re ,ieaented` to seventyrettt:.ueti oldies of B uoe township. A reduction isannounced in rates on Pacific cables from San Francisco to transpacific ports. Winslow yesterday won the Hud- son Cup et the Upper Canada Col- lege . ollege.. a5vil>llning meet, ItOward Sutton, of Gait, died of in- jur;es receiv,eil when a taxi -cab in whie:t lee was riding was upset in a cauls' •RI. The reported loss of the Donets Coal Basin by the Bolsheviki is re Govdeer gardnmenas a t. heavy blow to the Soviet The German nation assembly will make its final decision on the Peace Treaty on Saturday, according to ad- vices from Weimar. The Haverford University cricket team was defeated in Toronto Yes- terday by Upper Canada College, the score being 81 to 56. Several million of francs are being expended by the French Government in developing the fishing industry on the Island of St, Pierre. Riot insurance to the aggregate value of between fifty and sixty Mil- lion dollars has been -taken out by Winnipeg firms and individuals. The Trades and. Labor Council asked Premier Borden to amend the immigration law, which permits, the deportation of Winnipeg strikers now under arrest. John Ferguson and P. J. Cody were killed, and Thomas Gibson and Alex. Watts, all of Kingston, were badly injured when scalding steam enveloped theca ou board the Atiko- kan, a " mudiiole" blowing out.. Rev, D. L. Ritchie, D.D., principal of the Congregational College, Not- tingham, England, is to be appointed principal of the Congregational Col= lege of the United Theological Col- leges, Montreal, and professor of theology in the United Colleges. SATURDAY The Aquitania docked at Halifax with 5,744 Canadian troops. The Ontario Government has in- creased the pay of civil servants. Results are announced of medical examinations, University of Toronto. President Wilson has decided to appoint a commission to investigate reported pogroms in Poland, Shares in the Imperial Oil Com- pany will be reduced from $100 to $25, if shareholders approve. The Monteagle docked at Vancou- ver with 747 soldiers of the Cana- dian Siberian Expeditionary Force. Nick Aiello, employed at the Beachville liege kiln, was struck by a train un his way from work and killed. Martial law has been proclaimed in the entire zone of Hamburg harbor as a consequence of raids on food. depets. A British submarine sank the Rus- sian cruiser Olig on Wednesday, ac- cording to a Russian wireless receiv- ed in London. A large wholesale produce firm in Queb«:c, tine of the t.luest in Eastern Canada, that of J B. ltenaud, is charged with conspirrey to restrain trade,. Lieut. J. P. Crystall, the missing conducting officer of the Western On- tario Regiment, has been located in New York and brought back to Lon- don for treatment. King George has conferred the order of Knights of the British.Em- pire on both Capt. Alcock and Lieut. Brown, who made the transatlantic flight in the Vickers -'Piety plane. Capt. Asa R. Minard, former chief inspector of Dominion Police for Military District :. ., 1, and organizer of the "American Legion" (97th Bat- talion) in Toronto early in the war, pleaded guilty to three charges of forging c..,,or:eeeents on pay cheques for members of his staff, and will be sentenced at Lo.tdon next Wednes- day. MONDAY. The Lana bion Golf Club beat Lon- don on Saturday ey 19 to 4. A motor ;.'Lk ;vith thirteen per - on the Hamilton rL vil way'. Toronto RalIway employes went on strike, leaving the city without a car service. The German National Assembly, by a vote of 237 to 338, has decided to sign the Peace Treaty. A .-tablet in memory of Rev. Dr. Robert Law was unveiled at St. An- drew's Ceur'h, Toronto. Fire h t; ::bee caused half a mil- lion do11.:... loss in the wholesale and loft building se..tion of Lower Town. Edward Heany, a young returned soldier, invalided home, was drown- ed at Burlington, sinking within two feet of his objective. The British War ()Mee announces that between the date of the armis- tice and June 16, 108,641 officers and 2,779,707 glen were demobilized. A young man named Williams, who worked on the farm of Joseph Madden, near Vernon, was killed on Friday while working a land roller. A mutinous movement at Sutton Camp, in England, against being or- dered to France has been overcome by the .dispersal of the troops to var- ious points. RaiAvay firemen on the Canadian National Railways lines at Humbolt have been on strike for three days in sympathy with the Winnipeg metal workers. A young man named Williams was fatally crushed when a land roller, from which he was thrown, passed over him, on a farm near Vernon, Ont., Friday. King Victor Emmanuel has re- quested Francesco Nitti, former Min- ister of the Treasury, to form a Cabi- net. Former Premier Tittoni will be Foreign Minister. Cecil Eplett and the Misses Louise and Alma Wyatt were drowned when the Inotor car in. which they were riding went off the dock at Hailey - bury into 25 feet of water. A Great Northern' train was blown from the tracks 21 miles west of Fergus Falls, only the engine and one car remaining ou the tracks. Re- ports said three persons were killed. While walking along the C. N. R. track to a neighbor's Saturday morn- ing, tvIsss Cunningham of Welling- ton, who was hard of hearing, was struck and killed by the southbound train from Trenton to Picton. Children Cry for Fleteherrs The Bind You Have Always Bought,, and which bas been " in use for over thirty years, has borne the .signatt`) of and has been made under his Ser. sonal supervision since its infancy. • Allow no one to deceive you in his. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just -as -good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Ex erience a ainst Experims ' °:.. What ' AS TORI Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare ;uric, Drops and. Soothing Sprrups, It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. Eor more than thirty years it bas been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and nattuai. sleep, The Children's Panacea --The Mother's Friend, GENUINE CASTOR IA AmOZ `S' Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always fought T CCNTA.IR COM NMW YORK C17Y. Zurich Reeve Laporte was a member of the delegation that waited on. Sir Adam 'Beak re hydro radials for the County of Hteron.-Pte. Carl Schnell son 'ef David Schnell. of Alyefdeen, Sask., visited relattives here. -Mr. D. Gottschalk and daughter Miss Vera of .Bad Axe, Mich„ visited relatives here for a few days, -No services were (held in the Lutheran church Sun day a' the .pastor, Rev. H. Rembe at- tended the annual cdn.ference,-These. who (returned from overseas recently are, Lieut. H. 3. Simon, Ptes. D. F. Zirke. Carl Schnell, John Dabus and Elmore Eaters.- Lieut. Siereon had been overseas since the springof 1916 and rose from the ranks to the position of Lieutenant. -John J.Smith attended the funeral of hist father, Ftlr Joseph Smith at Crosswvell, Mich. The late Mr. Smith was a former resid- ent of this section and well kno,vn. Mr. Oscar bucharme has purchased from Mrs. A. Johnston, and Mr. Wm. S. Johnston. the farm on the bauble. Line South, getting immediate posses- sion except this year's cro, .-A quiet weddin took place at the Lutheran church at high noon on June &title 'vhen Rev H. Rembe performed the ceremony which united in marriage Miss Violet, daughter' of Mrs. C. Fuss and fir. Henry Aitkens of Hay Tp. -:hiss Dorothy Truemner left Iasi week cto assume her duties as nurse at Toronto. -Mr. Alfred Bender ic'ft last week for Winnipeg where he has taken a position in. a shoe store. Hensall Mr. and Mrs. Millay of San Frani cisco ,Cal., are viis itling with Mrs, Millay's sister, Mrs. John Flasheri. - Rev. D Buchanan of Rollo, Saeke visited for a few. days wjth his bro- thers, Messrs. Alex. and Andrew Bu- chanan. -Mr. Alpine McEwen r"e- turned from Overseas last week. - Mr. Thos. Hudson of Marlette; Mich.. is visiting- at Mrs. Jos. Hud(sfon's,. - Nirs W. A. MacLaren and Miss Flc.ssic Foss Fgent to Toilonto aai delegates from the local Rebekhh lodge to Grand Lodge. -The Ladies' Aid of the 1Aettirodiist Church held a garden party on the lawn of Mr. and dies. J. D. Wilson on Tuesday even- ing, the 24th. -14111. J. D. Wilson met with a rather serious accident while unhitching his horse. The animal trusted out of the shafts when only partly ,unhitched, and became fright- ened, and rearing up struck Mr. Wil- son with its feet, k;nlocloiagt him' down and rendering him unconscious. -The rink .skipned by A, Hemphill won the first of the local bowling tournaments with A. WhItieislides' `second. -A rink of bowlers went to Clinton; Wednes- day but failed to get' in the money. GODERICH TP. -The home of Mr and Mrs. James Johnston, Huron Rel., eras tthe scene of a happy event Wed- nesday when their ,daughter, Muriel Klattherine wlas united lin marriage to >Ir..Frederick Middleton., soar• of Mr. John Middleton. The bridesmaid was Miss Kathleen McNaughton ,a£ Varna KEEP • IT Keep your stomach sweet today and ward off the indi- gestion of tomorrow- try ta!- the new aid to digestion. As pleasant and. as safe to take as candy. MADE EY SCOTT et SIOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMUL:S;^?V. .our : oz the bride, and tlt ° uo>r s- tlan Mr. Wil'! Mi- J eten, the groom HEALTHFUL ADVICE During the aftermath of in- ept= or any other prostrating illness, the logxtal tonic is SCOTT'S EMULSION which enriches the blood and strengthens the whole body, via nourishment. ' Jf would re, new your strengt�try Scott's. Scott rcOomeayeronto, Ont. 19-1 When You Motor to London AT, THIS store motor parties will find every accommodation and convenience for their comfort while in the city. A free Checkroom in the Reseal -int, where you may have you: wraps and luggage •.-. off Ladies' Rest Lavatories on the second 2 .c; Restaurant on the fourdh floor; where you will find continuous service throughout the day. Breakfast --8,30 to 10.30 Course 1'iianer--11.30 to 2.30 Short Lunches at the Soda Fountain on the Main Floor. Make this store your head- quarter ;; its many conveni- ences a -e for the free aceom- mode tion of the travelling public. WPAKRITI LIMITCO LONDON, ONT. TIME TABLE CHANGES A change' of ;time will be made om - JUNE 29th 1919 Information ,now in agent's hands, Phone 46w,. N. J. DORE Agent, Exeter 4 Ar 4 4 A 4 4 i A A 4 I 4 1 4 11 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A