HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1920-4-15, Page 5In the Rush of Harvest
• THERE'S NOTHING
1
which makes a man
so downright mad as to
have twine run uneven.
Stopping a binder once on
this account is simply a nui-
sance, but such twine means
constant interruptions—a seri-
ous matter. Use only
PLYMOUTH
and be rid of st ,:,h trouble
forever. Plymouth.
MADE IN CANADA
is more even in size and
stronger than other brands.
It runs full length, ties more
bundles and does not fall down.
Bu>' the twins that's '"ahaays
good and order earlu,
e same good quality is found in
ti
GOLD MEDAL i
u+ I
Pure Manilla
Hay Fox Rope
v
V ill`�1t %,1S4'l
HOBBS GOLD MEDAL
So1d`by W. J. Heaman, Exeter
Mail Contract
SEALED TENDERS aciciressed to
the Postmaster General, will be re
oeived at Cgttawa until noon, on
Friday the 14th day of May, 1920,
for the. conveyance of His Majesty's
.reps, on a proposed Contract for
four years, six times per week, over
t),ashwtsod No. 1 Rural Route, from
the 1st day of October, next.
Printed notices containing further
information as to conditions of pro-
posed Contract may be seen and blank
forms of Tender may be obtained at
the, Post Office of Dashwood, Exeter
and Zurich, and at ,the Office .of the
Post Office Inspector, London.
CHAS. E. M. FISHER,
liioitlt Office Inapecoor,
Post Office dlnspector'a Office,
London, 2nd April, 1920.
Notice to Creditors
OF WILLIAM PARSONS, LATE OF
the Village of Exeiter, i.cx the County
of Huron, Laborrer, deceased.
Pursuant to Sec. 56 ,of Chapter 121
of the Revised Statutes of Ontario,
19:1, +notice is hereby given that all
creditors and others having claims
ag ,snst the estate of William
Pu.-oas, late of the Village of Exeter,
in the County of Huron, laborer, de-
ceased, who died on or about the 22nd
day of lurch, A. p. 1920, are on
or before the Seventeenth day of
April, A. D. 1920, to 'send by post,
prepaid. to Isaac R. Calling of the
said Village of Exeter, solicitor for
Nelson Stanlake of the Township of
Hay tin the said County 'of Huron,
locoman, sole executor of the last
will land testtament of the said de-
ceased. their christian names and sur-
names, addresses and descriptions, the
full particulars of their claims, a
statement of their accounts and the
nature of the secunitties Of any) held
by them, and that after the day last
aforesaid the! said Executor will
proceed to distribute the assets of the
said deceased amlorsg the parties en-
titled thereto, hawing regard only to
such claims sof which notice shall Have
been given as above required, and the
said Executor wilt not beliable
for the said assets or any part there-
of, ,a any person or person of whose
claim or claims notice shall not have
been received by him at the time of
such distribution.
Dated at Exeter this twentyyaltinth
dray of hfarch A. D. 1920
Nelson Stanlake Isarac R. Carling
Executor Sol'r for Executor
S. 5. NO. 2, USBORNE
The following is the report for
S. S. No. 2, Usborne for the month
of March.
Sr. 4th.—L. Fulton 85; A. Hun-
kin 79; WI. Cottle 75; C. Doupe 74.
Jr. 4th. ---W. Allison 75; : G. Mc-
Donald 56; *S. Pollen.
Sr. 3rd.14. Pollen 81; C. Camp-
bell 78; W. Allen 7 3; G. Fulton 68;
*B. Campbell 59; E, Stewart'53; *C.
Hodgert 42.
Jr. 3rd—H. Fulton 78; *E, Allen
62; A. Campbell 61; R. Cottle 47;
C. Stewart 41; R. Turnbull 3 8; A.
Rhode 35.
Jr. 2nd—S. Campbell, A. Cottle,
R. Cottle.
Sr. Pr.—M. Rhode, T. Allen,.
These are best spellers.
Sr. 4th.—L. Fulton.
Jr. 4t1.—W. Allison.
i Sr. 3rd.—W. Allen.
Jr. 3rd.—H. Fulton.
` Jx.
2nd.—S. Campbell,
Those, marked with an asterisk
inissed one or more exams.
'No. on roll 26; aerage attendance
22. M. 1VIcNain.
AUCTION SALE
1
HOUS}3 SIX LOTS & HOUSEHOLD
EFFECTS, ETC.
There will be sold by public ane-
tecta, we Huron, Street, cn
SATURDAY, APRIL, 24, 1920
At 1 e.eo k sharp the following:-.-
Ptrlor suite, bedroom suite, dresser
and stand,. 2 l ocki'n+g chars, 2 side-
boards, cupboard, extension table t.oak)
u clin'ng-roam chairs, 6 kitchen chairs,
2 k tt herr tables, Pandora range and
penes !teeter and p pes, base burner
line eum, carpets, curtains, blinds, tnats
te:ezt r,; i, al'slles, pictures, :eskers,
bu:e.tu. stands, carpet sweeper, elec-
tri•.r 'a•on, c'.a: k, step ladder, lantern,
Gem t'h:Ip:>er, cooking utensils, quare
tity woo°i, sle gh longue, and many
other articles.
There will also be sold at the same
tinre and 151ace the ,Proprf e(tor's Frame
House and Six Lots of Land. There
is a good frame barn, hard and soft
water and ,other conveniences on The
premises. ani the 1lpuse is wired for
Hydro
Terms—Real estate made known on
'. tv of ,sale; Chattels Cash.
c:.4 W. ROBINSON, ELI SN ELL,
Proprietor Auctioneer.
Notice to Creditors
OF MARGARET ANN PARSONS,
late o r the Village of Exeter, in the
County of Huron, married woman,
deceased.
Pursuant to Sec. 56 of Chapter 121
of the Revlsed Statutes of Ontario,
1914, notice is hereby given that all
creditors and others having claims
against the estate of Elizabeth Ann
Parsons. late of the Village of Exeter',
in the County of Huron, married
woman, deceased, who died on
or about the twenty-eighth day
of t)ctober, A. D. 1918, are on
or before the Seventeenth day of
April, A. D. 1920, ,to 'send by post,
prepaid, to Isaac R. Carling of the
said Village Of Exeter, solicitor ,for
Nelson Stanlake of the Township of
Hay in the said County of Huron,
Yeoman, theadministrator of the
whole estate of the said de-
ceased, their christian names and sur-
names, addresses and descriptions, the
full particulars of their claims, a
statement of their accounts and the
nature of the securities (if any) -held
by them and that after the day last
aforesaid the said Administrator will
proceed toy distribute the assets of the
said deceased among the parties en-
titled thereto, having regard only to
such claims of svhich notice shall have
been given as above required, and the
sail Administrator was nett be liable
for the said asacits or any part there-
of; to any person or person of whose
claim or claims notice shall not have
been received by him .at the time of
such distribution..
Dated at Exe=ter this twenty-ninth
Jay of March, A. D. 1920
Walston Stankake Isaac R. Carling
Administrator Solicitor for
Atd,mianilstrator
NEWS TOPICS OF F}EE
Important `vents .Which Nave
Occurred Dutinl the Week.
Auout' a nunarea ani rorty rural
school principals in Manitoba have
organized to better their working
conditions.
Nathan 1: Green, of Winnipeg, who
was run over by a train at Guelph,
losing both legs, died from shock and
loss' bft;blood:
The Italian Government" has de-
creed that front April 6 until further
notice newspapers shall be restricted
to two pages. • •
Further sensational, `developments
come yesterday in tie inquiry at St.
Catharines into the finances of the
19th Regiment,
Angus Campbell, superintendent of .
the Canada. Furniture Co.'s factory
at Woodstock, dropped dead shortly
after arriving at work.
The Toronto Board of Control ex-
pressed itself as favorable to the
"Building Guild". soheme of the
Trades and Labor Connell,
President Wilson has appointed
Mrs. Joseph Daniels to represent
American women at the eighth con-
gress of the International Women
Suffrage Alliance.
FRIDAY.
John Marshall, of London, died as
the result of a fall downstairs in his
home.
Robt. Whitelaw, Woodstock, pio-
neer manufacturer, died at the age
of 93 years,
The Indians of Canada, claiming to
bo Allies of the British, will ask for
an Ambassador in the Dominion
House of Commons.
The commissions of the three
Scandinavian countries for the recov-
ery of debts owed by Russia are
meeting in Copenhagen,
The Duke of•Devonshire announces
his intention of settling clown in
Chatsworth after his term as Goy-
e'rnor-General of Canada.
Ex -Councillor Hugh McDonald, a
well-known miner of Glace Bay,
bled to death from a splinter of stone
pentrating the artery of a leg,
St. Catharines firemen walked out
=•eeording to their threat, when. the
Oouneil accepted their resignations
rather than grant their demands.
Eugene Brosseu, Canadian welter-
,veight boxing champion, was knock,
y}.i out in the sixth round by McTigue
of New York at Halifax last night.
Ontario teachers completed the or
gttnization of a Provincial Federation
for the advancement of their claims
to greater consideration than they at
lI (sent receive.
Erner,t Bergeron, manager for a
.Windsor hardware firm, was shot in
the head and dangerously wounded
by police officers, who mistook him
for a whiskey runner. °
With the arrival of the German
battleships Nassau and Ostfriesland
tt the Firth of Forth on Wednesday
the complete surrender of the Ger-
man warships has been made.
The Private Bills Committee pass-
el Toronto's bill authorizing the city
.0 operate its street railway system
ender a commission of three tnem-
bars, with or without salary.
SATURDAY.
Nearly 1,300 Toronto Boy Scouts
nook part in an Baster rally at the
Armories.
The Bolsheviki have captured the
Black Sea port town of Tuapsle, In
Cireassia.
A bill to invalidate municipal early
closing by-laws aroused much opposi-
tion in the Legislature,
The first license for a commercial
air harbor in Canada was taken out
tor the Ottawa Airdrome.
An American landing at Cherbourg
Met $175 in gold was compelled to
exchange it for paper money.
An effort is on foot at Queen's
Park to increase the revenue derived
from Ontario's game and fur re-
soures.
Angus McDonald's plurality in the
Timisicaming Federal by-election,
with eight polls yet to hear from, is
2,077.
One hundred farms in Northum-
eerland county have changed hands
;ince the'crops were taken off them
last year.
The Brantford Board of Education,
at the instigation of the women's or-
ganizations and women trustees, re-
itored .voluntary drill.
Joe Steeper, world's champion
heavyweight wrestler, successfully
defended his title against Pllakoff of
Russia in New York last night.
The Belgian Government has de-
e.,Ite1 to place the Belgian roads and
railw.,ya at the disposal of France for
the deepateh or 'troops to Germany.
The Prince Edward Island Govern-
etent proposes to impose additional
axation to raise teachers' salaries
end to take advantage of the Federal
ant for highways.
Thomas Hillis, of Egmondville,
Ont., died at the age of 87. He and ,
his brother, George, of Delaware,
Ont., were said to be the oldest twin
brothers in the British Empire.
MONDAY.
Elias Rogers, Toronto coal mer-
chant, died in his 70th year.
A Federated Labor Union has been
formed at Belleville.
Sterling exchange in New York
was heavy at $3.97% for demand
bills.
John H. Boyle, one of the oldest
surviving residents of Toronto, pass-
ed away.
The Japanese have captured the
entire Ussuri Railroad between Vladi-
vostok and Khaboroosk.
Dr. Michael Clark, M.P., addressed
the Independent Labor Party in To-
ronto on the tariff question.
St. Thomas has formed a Public
Playgrounds Association, to establish
four supervised playgrounds.
George Walters, aged 80, who had
been a -member of the guard of honor
of Napoleon III., died at Brantford.
Toronto job printers threaten to
abandon their present work if a wage
increase is not granted by April 24.
Hon. Peter Smith, Provincial
Treasurer, is expected to make his
budget speech tri the Legislature this
week. .
Six hundred million dollars will be
needed this year by the U. S. railways
to finance the purchase of new equip-
ment.
Work was begun on two blast fur-
naces at Ojibway for the Canadian
Steel Corporation, to cost $5,000,000
each.
Mac • Kirkwood Bryden, aged 14,
was accidentally and fatally shot by
his younger brother on their father's
farm,. in Erin Township.
The Saskatchewan Co-operative
Elevator Co: will erect a million -dol-
lar elevator and flour mill just out-
side Portage la Prairie, Man. -
Calgary G.W.V.A. proposes to
-picket the Soldiers' Settlement offices
to prevent returned soldiers from
purchasing Hudson Bay lands,
Under the auspices of the Scottish
Home Rule Association a meeting was
held at Glasgow on Saturday, at
which•a resolution was adopted ask-
ing the Governtnent:' to `pass "a bill
giving Scotland control of purely
Scottish 'affairs.
CLINTON—Henry Carrick, a resi-
dent of Clinton. for about thirty years
passel away fat his ,home on Monday
evening, He was .ham in England 80
years ago and came to this couxttiry
when a lad of sixteen. --Mrs. Edward
Turner,_, an old resident of Clinton, pas-
sed Away at her home on Monday ev-
ening, having reached the great age
of eighty-eight fears And eleven mos.
She lived An Tuckerslnath until 1893.
—The marriage was solemnized on,
April 7th In St. Paul's church of Fan-
nie Edith, y`ouagest daughter of Mr.
and Mrs Chas. Lovett, to Mr. Frank
G. %+obis, ,son of ,fir: and Mrs:, W, H.
Lobb of Goderich T.ownslrp.
Plain Facts about Milk Routes
A team of horses costs about $400, double harness
$100, a wagon $75, making a total of $575.. A Ford
Truck costs $750 at Ford, Out.
Government experiments have proved that the cost
of feeding a horse is 8.7 cents per working hour,or
17.4 cents per team per hour. QMtem, ff collecfiog
milk, could not cover more than 30 miles a day.
The cost for twelve hours would be $2.00, or about
seven cents a mile. The cost for gas and oil for a
Ford Truck is only 4,r' cents, a mile. The Ford Truck
soon pays for itself m the reduced cost of operation,
A Ford Truck will cover at least 60 miles a day col-
lecting milk or 250 miles on long hauls. It enables you
to operate ata lower cost per anile and to cover twice
as much territory as with horses.
Ford One -Ton Truck (Chassis only) $750 f.. o. b. Ford, Ont.
Use only Genuine Fardi'arts
685 Canadian Dealers and over
2,600 Service Garages supply
Genuine Ford .Parte and
prompt repair service..
— x —
Milo Snell, Dealer, Exete
Do not forget
to file your
Income Tax Return
on or before the 30th of April, 1920
Dominion of Canada
Department of Finance
ALL persons residing in Canada, em-
ployed in Canada, or carrying on
business in Canada, are liable to a tax
on income, as follows: -
1. Every unmarried person, or widow, or
widower, without dependants as defined by the
Act, who during the calendar year 1919 received or
earned $1,000 or more.
2. All other individuals who during the
calendar year 1919 received or earned $2,000 or
more.
3. Every corporation and joint stock company
whose profits exceeded $2,000 during the fiscal
year ended in 1919.
Forms be filing
returnsteo os orin beforne
the 30th of April, 1920.
ALL INDIVIDUALS other than
farmers and ranchers must use
Form T 1.
FARMERS AND RANCHERS
must .use Form T 1A.
CORPORATIONS and joint
stock companies' must use Form
T2.
Penalty
Ev x:Y person required to make a return, who
falls to do so within the time limit, shalt be
,ubfect to a penalty of T,Venty-fife per centum
• of the amount of the tax -payable.
Any person; whether taxable, or otherwise,
who fails to make a return or provide informa-
tion duly required according to the provision of
the Act, shall be liable on summary conviction
to a penalty of $100 for each day during
which, ,,the default continues. Also any person
making a false statement In any return or In
any information required by the Minister, Atilt
be liable, on summary conviction, to a penalty
not *ceding $10,000, or tb, sit[ months' lmpetl en
mentor to both fine and imprisonment.
General Instructions.
Obtain Forms from the Inspectors or
Assistant Inspectors of Taxation or from
Postmasters..
Read carefully all instructions on
Form before filling it in.
Prepay +postage on letters and docu-
ments forwarded by mail to Inspectors of
Taxation.
Make your returns promptly and avoid
penalties.
Address INSPECTOR OF TAXATION,
LONDON; ONT.
BREAbNNER,
Commissioner ” of Taxation: