HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1920-7-22, Page 4the Western.
TI1E GR
1..ON noN
Sept. 11 th .to 18th
a
1
_ T AGRICULTURAL Ai ,D LIVR STOCK EXHIBITION
OF WESTERti' 9. TA1 UO.
$35.000.00 in Prizes and Attractions
JOHNNY J. JONES EXPOSITION ON THE 4IDWAY
FULL PROGRAMME TWICE DAILY
At` I't:a POLO. MUSIC, FIREWORKS. TWO SPECIAL EWLNTS DAILY
EXHIBITS O1+ :ALL KINDS.
'OMETHING DOING EVERY MUNUTh.
a' .:IAL ADMISSION 50c. CHILDREN 15c.; AUTO AND DRIVER SI.
. ,X1 information from th;; Secretary,
\\". illi f, ar'tslaa re, I' A. 'ik. Hunt. tick:rotary.
The Exeter Advocate Fia„-a ' went in, England had to go
:ti; esnd so had Canada. Of military
Sanders Sr. Creech, Proprietors aro polo:sal conditions :n Russia, we
Subscription, Price—In advattce $1.50 kn ry nothing, Sir Edward Grey a.
Baer year ixn Canada; $ .a►O its the :hits he did .not know of the agree
td,. tel State's. All subs, notion.: not meat between Fr;uz. e anti Ru'sia
oaai3 in advance 5Oa:, extra charged. but tan!} what passed between Front .•
ADVERTISING RATES awl Great Brit t;.n. Car.,'ada d`ci not
ewer. know that, but Fnutee and Rus-
in:ay Advertising—Made known sit knew both ends. The ttt'on ,•:
O41 P, iie-atiOrt. the Russian War Office in disobey
S Fv Dual is—One insertion >Qi., •t: t w' s ;tr''• or ler to stela to 1)'r'
aha nsertians $1.00an ;)re p:tatetl the German d t ,ora
POT n o Real Estate for sale 50c gnat or war. The mora res;wens;l.'1-
1 'a aRn�r-a.On tor one nooth or fool art ,is not hers.. tIt4 quer `s*1, 11,
%gat is that or year; ' a lay in the
r.ions
;.i:'eilan�atrS articles Of not moreonwer a::an :anyone who etkuld gain. eon
th.a five iL'n:s, For Sale. To Renrt esr o: the Russian auto;rat io !'lip
each inserto seer Lost and a Cana'lz's ;future and the a�.s of
aril :;i loeac ins alt i.^.soriion thousands of wt'r tit+ .e:ts.
r ,fa?an Jlat clttza'!d, as Cais „.c.''"
1 o a, reading notices, t:., Ute . per trig, wvn desired to t a
lino par insertion. No notice less inada :iw,.na larn tvt a linin ri':t. It wvas
til c :5 . Card of Ttnu1.s 50e. "trot , mere matey as to rimes. lac'
\rz Cont Sa:es $3 ,or o^,e insertiono esaww stain} asks :dila would have
x.i ! $$l„54.1it for each subsequent in- 'n :.I; roosis:aa :.gs.,z ,lit :aim. As a
tttn`. er five arches in length "• songoor es:m de would haw ranked
I els" „lavers nits; 1t?.. and St.. a line with of?tw:r Kinn toms. It would
,;ac. • anolueted its own ;ors' = n .=1K:: s
'�..esbrects would not have been Can-
a Fon. :Z t:arstda anti British subjects
to ; le but Collodion n s.11F;e. is wi h-
st ►r w: shout. Last, bu: not least,
..1 one se. -yang her eaul.1 have been in
0•r'"; t zt alis sole• au.) was to her.
ws .l a a not hav-. been possible. as it
t. ^?.s o: a t able and ctmselent ous
u') is scrrtnt to feel tha it is his
lute to ,lace the Empir: c!rsi and
*._asecond.
i :it`iZS`D.A .
JULY 23. I I I
<'O:wi\!L'NICA I'ION
e'a•mte:rod from 'Ng. rill«
tbs.' U' o n central t'e 4
lal 'E ,t S14, ':• Alabama
a lea 1 . words are strong. enough to inn-
, No
�
Sl7 .;time Can: is was Feeleran.e1 rby.s': upon). the voter the imrnr.anee'
wit w; 's te>; at':ntliS"C.'fke iter i1w1'th deiene .. °3' ni l•tyny uta his rain:I as to our status
'l a:te'ra try ` ging was 13ati,.1 on as a notion and being represented by
Gselett"s humanity an 1 tem so neone who thinks as he does. 'Tli
nv a t s.^,se i' nvo veli throwing ,ittret..+on created by the Peae. Treaty
caw. Iowan.; the andireet chinas and :s all artificial one, girOng weight to
awl item' a tin ,c mei only The ♦:late oolors. ignoring others. France
t tlttl.:i `, s weave ruled out
tea l est a.`, on herposition ;n Europe
sitA
Geneva. arbitration by th a di(nish..d population and rely -
the oinsit and friendly anion oc the fall tartly on negro troops may not
mini+wriean representative, Canada re.•eive the syintlathy she did as thee.
re OCa.r:t.' an a state sof suss en+de l an wi:'t ru 4. 1.$70. The sew"enty-five
tai a,; s.' ?o'_itic•aPly until her Oa:ore ..0a; 0: German-speaking people, even
vw i2 .tied as :t then. was by the " `.p'it up over several states are 3e„11
11 -rte „so'as tion wvls .:'a i'resi 1..rt h' m aio, important commercial. group
too o ,.,) .. l to the representative tw , h lily continent. The eentur zs they
''th. Cnw ted States on the Arh'ration Oesi bask the Slav from Europe. New',
a o.nttiasitan at Geneva n 1872. targe Slav states have been created in
Is`at contemplatingany fore ;n Centro! Europe, whose racial affilia-
caws and reessordoster doth the power tions ere with Russia. The heading off
amid the god waft caf the irrigated o German enter;lrise from the wast
St .? es, Sir Jahn M.xdon t!d dot not at and :ram over sea must result in a
+.std time spend upon troops or .trnla 'Range of the role hitherto played b�
Rn.'.aa' more than a nominal. :hum. Its the German's, and they may eulty,
cm?t:?itstic refusal of men or nhd?ney to these new Slay. States and Russia as
the S wax n pan Campaign and Cart- well.
w .o':.t's s.ay.- "Canada nal a owves noth - ° \We can on!y see dimly what is
los to Great Br.taia exeezt a good emergono from the Peace Treaty and
.3::. of christ_aa forgiveness," can o'n"y t.no awigh spots through the fu'
:vas tIa understood in the light of but enough to see a very unstable
who loot happen. 1 t ;t :alas :xist- • tool dsrubt:ur future.
eau, and her being the battl Held int We have in the Cairo to Calabar
-a quarrel coat of her making both 'Railway project the spm, allitera ;ve
hug in the balance ani were decided jingle. .and the same possibilities .for
Isy the action of others She had no :rouble as went with the Cape to Cairo
derisive word as to h destisati . i try. Here are independent states on
The, Boo_ 'War arose ..it of a pri- 1 the route just as were the Boar Re-
vel: any money making ambition. publics The aonly difference this
n• cat .north trab:n ane Town along tiara is that it is a andrib: gold alines
~
the ': h lands which stretch to the Tho Pores ere making the first use
Ston ::aria were Cape Colony, the Boar of their liberty in conquering coun-
1t.e ublics and Rhodesia, th e latter tries two hundred miles beyond the
being a private speculation with a limits of Polish sneaking Sends. 'As
charter, stock and bonds and the their country was a battle ground
temptations and dif€ic tlities incident twice overrun, they must get the sla-
te. that kind of an enterprise. The ews of war trona one or the other of
Boer Republics were the seat of great tete great powers who so recently
• alit:a.ng eomnar es that wished for .'e=?geci us to peace.
.l o, ced native labor in the mines . rhe French show their 'disregard for
Tize Rhodesian Company would be the League by enforcing their own
'benefitted or at an events better r e.ws '1 the treaty with their osvn
advertised by being on a trunk line troops, and of public opinion by using
railway. Hence the Cape to Caro negro troops. They show us what fu-
ry a r? the Jamieson Raid.The .true they loot: for by introducing 'con-
xaee r=ag interests and the Rhodesian scrirtion lin their negro colonises.
f mparo, fellout just as the raid . A turn of the wheel and we may be
started because the former wished off agahi to prop up the watered stock
''lo- preserve and dominate the Boer of Lid or Ori Companies in Persia to
Republics and thus make their own save the: Poles From their own folly, or
labour conditions a thing they were to put down French \Tlitar!_m in
not likely to be ,able to. dew :f the, Re- Central' Africa. A little social .recoe-
publics became Golan es: nits n• ;anza-ag groin cent and ` pliable
These intrigues and the .int rests ;,eople a little suppression, of truth
-
bhin s them were wholly , , remote and expansion, of falsehood in
. aro m Canada, and we were ignorant the news. the bait of jarge palms
of them except through highly sprea.d before profiteers and a slight
.. coloured abuse of the Boers and their ,noserial stir bias at Ottawa would be
Governments furnished gratuitously .e " enough. • A timid outbtarst in a
to our press by the propag'ztda of subsidized press appealing to our cum-
their adversaries. The raid, how- passion showing us moral obliquity in
. e v'er Ind to the South African War _ the intended enemy and lauding the
,which mattered enormously to us. righting capacity- of our young men
That war did what Jamieson failed woos' Sire the mine.
to do and what the mining :nierests 1\%E should shever forget that the a p -
were averse to doing. It wiped out total pretended' to have been arcade
-.theBoer Republics. It did not pro- :sons Johannesburg to save thewomen
dare a Casae to Cairo Raiiwvay, nor and children there, - an appeal ;with
forced ktbour for the mimes. As in which ,:lug' -tress wrung the country's
0.ftert.- thea.ase, the. -conquerors Melo- , soul' with Eo'-r_b:e memories of the In-
ned into the troubles of the-onqu.r- -iron Mutiny my was signed in Cape Town
ed and could, not .find any new scall a month be.orehand the date being left
Lion. hru er beaten and dead badhts'blank so that Dr. Jamieson could lard
judgment- vindicated by events. inc it ;‘rt too correspond with the -starting
Dutch majority= had to be recognised of thesoil.
..ns predominant. No forced labour was , oil .fields or gold mines in ar_yr
avaizable for the mines, The 'railwayw country have ever produced two bil-
aft.r twenty years is yei to cone- Sons of dollars hn, fire' years or sup--
} ronh oetonsss.lso to etxl ,of: this war .,-,ortel half a .million, of troops. If the
C orad 's- part pas to ,furnish troops, people can do these things` are too;
u,ot to c. resider -tile rhe." cy` dint led to ,i'' It . silspect .false news, too inert
xt nor the s,andu� -'Zw,f t'' Or tial far'l tomwish to u' lerstavtdtfoaeg,n evens
siti cation - and at -the panne torr.., susceptible ,o
Tate ww*o 1d, wt.� .so recent;; ...It tl e . flattery and social•.haliueisces, they
dos or racy 'Shot led up to ;it , .< anada m, ,y vtie 1' to be e plviteei, Mesa
• afl.no raaart,: Wa'tht$ut' foil details it Canadians say "never again," but to
..;an known that the situ 'ti(rL was bn safe. w-e,.need abrriad something
bro.-an-ht. about to. which a. Russia ii:feren`.from a desk ,in the otfic- ^.f
Q. ent-ton wan Fraaitie' ilad to go>in:. l •:BTat 3; t robassatior,'we, need .toric:
our in:'ormatithn aa,t the source and to
weigh it xmrsel nes, knoavittq how it was
t••oane by.
Any psolitval party can afford to
make "entire and direct control of
our Foreign Affairs" :t plank in its
oletfrrm. All candidates should be
:trade to pledge themselves to it.
C. S. CAMPBELL,
Beaferd, P. Q., May 30th, 1920.
Stephen
neatl` of Mrs. Robert Sweet. — An-
other of our best brown and most es-
t eemed citizens has been, called to
answer the Great Roll Call, in the per-
son of Mrs. Robert Sweet of Crediton
who passed away at the home of her
daughter Mrs, Richard Hill, 4th con-
cession of Stephen, on July 13th, at
the •agesof. 76 years, 2 months. The
funeral took .)lace on Thursday to
the Exeter cemetery anti was very
largely. attended. • Deceased was born
in Lower Caned's, April 30, 1844, and
came with her parents to London Tp.
when Baur years old, and later gnawed
to OlieGiltivray. In. 1863 site married
the now bereft husband, lir. Robert
Sweet of Crediton. Mrs. Sweet was
possessed of a kind hart, broad M her
sym.lathy and was constantly de'med
o her "a
t It bonne and family, and was.al-
ways a s;weeial favorite and lover Of
t hiltlren. Slue was n religion a Meth-
odist and trek a deep interest in its
ivel,are. She is sure ivt_ 1 b' ,her hus
load Our daughters and two SOILS:
).flit V. Meade of Bindlors, Alta., Mrs.
I. Towers of Calvin, N. Dakota, Mrs.
F Sande Crystal, City, Mara;, Olrs. R.
Hi'l Stephen; William of Olds, Alta.,
til Eli o' Isla, Alta., also three sis-
ter;, an three brothers. .,
Amore: those from a distance who
t'.•s 1 hed the funeral twf e'+.e .late Mrs.
Rooert Sweet, were, Mr- and :\Irs.
.George Neil, West Lorne; :.Ir.
arn.l Mrs. Will Neil, Winnipeg.; Jlr.: nd
lr George Kennedy, dr Hudson, tt-
wa Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ke ahaedv
a n'I sort Richard, ;Et:. ,41;.
Kirkton
'twenty one fields tai fall wheat
were entere•i i'n the Standing 17.e".1
Croz4 w•O:upetition, arid were ;&h.u1
last week lnw Wm. Hietsau of Bhw ev
goon. The o'.Iowinr err the names -f
the prize ww.n-.ars and the variety a-
grain and scores
--
1st, James More, Dawson's G.C.()Pi.
Ind, David Roger, "' es
;rd, Walter Gowans " Ql4i
4th, Wm. Ratcliffe '` Ql
5th, Jas, Robinson " ems
eth Albert Bickel', G. 40
itch \\'zn Harding `:a SOS;
Mr and Niro Samuel J. Doupe and
daughter Audrey of New York are
spending a few weeks with Mr. Amos
Dowse and other relatives here. —The
haying ;s now about completed and
,a: sr ant is being cut.
Stephen Council
The'Counc,1 of the Township aF
Stephen convened in the, Town Hall
Crediton July 5th. Previous minutes
approved. -
The elerk ren,orted the Grand"Bends
hydro vote resulted --Stephen„ for 23,
against 0, Bosunrtuet, for 15, :aga'net 1.
Total for 38, agai t
The irk was instructed to ,notify
Contractor for Haycock Creek Drain
to complete ,sante by °August.lst to
conform with last report of Township
; ngineer.
The petltistatt of the Trustees of S.
,S No. 5, asking ,the .coupoil to pass a
by-law' for the purpose of borrowing
ing 52550 to instal e heating system
was complied with; and by -hall 267 to
to issue debentures for same, was
real three times. Signed and sealed.
Following orders were passed—A, A..
Langford Co',, balder for Reg. B.M,
,C D. $3.31; Inspector of Theatres for
hall taw: 3,00; C. Beaver, frame for lic-
ense 50c.; S. Br okei 1iire and other,,
grading. 3 S,R., 14.00; 0. Kienzle,
grading 6.30; Harold Ryan, grading;
30.00;Express Cot, 45c.; R. G. Seldon
eemeant, 20.50; Alvin Baker contracts
and grading 73.50; Henry Clark, cont.
rave 18.75; 7J. Tiernan, cement 73.86
J Jestle: and others filling in E.S.R.oad.
268t0 • Linkisardne
, culvert,
00 .65 ; M. O'Brien, eoni'r, 7.50; John
I`allwtags. abeeu kilted by dogs 90.00;
Joe Guinan, sheep inspeett r. 2.00; B.
Mw`Keever. Contracts it1.50; P Mc-
Keever, gravel 11.25 and 15,00; Wm.
White roots, 121.30; R. Davey, tom,
1715.
Adjournment to August Znd.
H, Either, Clerk
Greenway
Messrs. \\''m. and David Eagleson are
soli l:ng new kitchens and Mr, Dean
Brown n has improved his lhouse by
;wtint ng it.—Sone of our citiscns at,
tended the Chautauqua in Parkhill and
•-.e vert good programs Miss Zillah
English was its London last week for
a few days.—Mr, and Mrs. Armstrong
t• Parkhill tsited. her mother, Mrs, C,
Rie kborn last week.
Zurich
Mrs. riy Demuth, her son Albertan].
daughter. Mrs. Young, and her little
sod co Port Arthur are visiting here,—
The
ere,Th teat i-rs of our school have Leen
re-engaged., Principal' Daluus, sal $1300
Mi.sea F. Kalbfleisch, M. A. Lamont
and U. O'Bgien, assistants, salary $1000
Mr. Lambert Kopp, who has been at
tending Rono UtrIversity at Sena, Virg.,
is v stir at -the 1-jome of his parents,
Mr and Mrs. Wm. Klopp. Mr. K1opn
was successful ,in his. recent exams,
having received the B. A. degree.—Mrs
J. Ort, who spent the past winter at
Detr.?it, is spending a few months at
.he home of her daughter, Mrs. A.
''e n.:k,Ir, and Mrs. Geo. Farwell of
D etroit are moving to Zurich andare
o: cupying J. Geiger's house at the..
north encs of the village.—Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Smith of Detroit visited rela-
tives
ela tives and friends here.—Mr. Alvin Sur-
e:rus of QakvilI, is spending his vacao
ion at his home,—Jar. Isaac Moritz left
for his borne in Buffalo Lake, Mitut—
The Misses Zeo,a and Marguerite
Prang are spendir their holidays at
Detroit.—Mr. Lb dsa.y \S'urnh of De-
troit is visiting -r-ea:ives here.—Mr.
John Zeller of Grand Forks, Mich., 's
vis:ting relatives in Zurich.—Mrs. Bos=`
senberry who had been, in St. St. Jos-
e:41's Hospital, of that city, and re-
cently underwent a serious operation,
returned home with. him, and u e are
P leased to state is improving nicely.
Ask to hear
NEW EDISON
"Ti,, Pbanrtrifk iviri a Sari' -
wiiich backs this challenge—(rsprieted
from an'advertisement by the
. Edison. Laberatoriss). .
"\Vtare informed that the represents.
tivei of tailing -machine manufacturer*
have stated, .that they are able to dis.
unguis' 'between a singers voice, or }ri•
stru.mentalist's performance, and the New
Edison's RE-CREATION of such voice of
performance. ,
"We hereby invite responsible zepresenta.
fives, of any reputable talking -machine
manufacturer, to listen to such a compari-
son, in the presence of judges of their own
chobaing, Indicata it to the judges w.heaa
they think they are listening to the artist
and when to the New Edison.
"The test' will be made with an Official
Laborstocy Modelt taken frons' st°ck, auc!a
as can -be' ought in any Edison dealer -
slora7-4.94er7T : FOMAS A. EDISO i.
j J aitl`s•llowvei!1, Dealer
• Exeter, 'Ont
SEAFORTH—Mr. William Are hi-
,la:d, a highly respected resident of
Egmaandva_e, died at his home July 14
in his Sled year, diabetes being the
w•ause aa;' death. He was born near
Glasgow Scotland, and came to Can-
ada at the age of 16, settling in Tuck-
ersrnith. Hss willow and six of a fam-
ily survive.
OVER -EATING
la the root of nearly all digestive
evils. If your digestion is weak or
out of kilter, butter eat leas and use
paqui
the new aid to better digestion.
Pleasant to take --effective. Let
Ki -molds help straighten out your
digestive troubles.
MADE sy SCOTT lit BOWNE
MAKERS OP SCOTT'S EMULSION
•
Incorporated in 1$55
(.A PITAL RESERVE $9,000.000
Over 120 Branches
I THE MOLSONS BANK
THE MOLSONS BANK is prepared to render every assist-
ance possible to responsible business men or fartwers in financ-
ing their business.
The Manager will be ;;lad to go into your affairs with you
and give you any information needed about banking.
Safety
EXETER BRANCH
T. S. WOODS Manager,
Centralia Branch open for business daily.
Deposit Boxes to Rent at the Exeter Brush.
Western University
London, Ontario
its and Sciences
3Vledicine
Fall Term Opens October 4th
FOR INFORMATION .AND CALENDAR WRITE
K. P. R. NEVILLE, Regristrar
Cornfort WITH Xconomy
The New Canadian Car
THIS Overland is built from
the ground up to secure rid-
ing comfort, light weight and
economy.
Triplex Springs combine, in a
remarkable way, the economies
of light weight with the luxury
of riding, formerly possible only
in a heavy car of long wheelbase.
In every detail of its equip-
ment from Electric Srtarting and
Lighting to Speedometer, Over-
land is high-grade and complete.
The large Canadian factory
old service , organization behind
the Overland are big factors in
the success of this new car for a
new Canada.
R. H. t1worth D r
y, . tale ,.Exeter Ont.
Head Oce and Factories., .Wiilys-OverIatzd Limited, Toronto,, Canada '
Branches: Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg and Regina,
•
s
THE BAN 'S
POSITION
- a As at 30tH;, November, 1919,
Vasil allid. Bpk Balances $ 90,757,510
Other Quick Assets - .~ 129,154,213
Loans - - - - - 283,870,274
Deposits 0 s 393,665456
Total Assets.479,644,205
w.,
THE CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
PAID-UP CAPITAL - - 15,000,000
RESERVE FUND - $i5,000,000.
EXETER BRANCH, F. A. Chapman, Manager.
Incorporated in 1$55
(.A PITAL RESERVE $9,000.000
Over 120 Branches
I THE MOLSONS BANK
THE MOLSONS BANK is prepared to render every assist-
ance possible to responsible business men or fartwers in financ-
ing their business.
The Manager will be ;;lad to go into your affairs with you
and give you any information needed about banking.
Safety
EXETER BRANCH
T. S. WOODS Manager,
Centralia Branch open for business daily.
Deposit Boxes to Rent at the Exeter Brush.
Western University
London, Ontario
its and Sciences
3Vledicine
Fall Term Opens October 4th
FOR INFORMATION .AND CALENDAR WRITE
K. P. R. NEVILLE, Regristrar
Cornfort WITH Xconomy
The New Canadian Car
THIS Overland is built from
the ground up to secure rid-
ing comfort, light weight and
economy.
Triplex Springs combine, in a
remarkable way, the economies
of light weight with the luxury
of riding, formerly possible only
in a heavy car of long wheelbase.
In every detail of its equip-
ment from Electric Srtarting and
Lighting to Speedometer, Over-
land is high-grade and complete.
The large Canadian factory
old service , organization behind
the Overland are big factors in
the success of this new car for a
new Canada.
R. H. t1worth D r
y, . tale ,.Exeter Ont.
Head Oce and Factories., .Wiilys-OverIatzd Limited, Toronto,, Canada '
Branches: Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg and Regina,
•
s