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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-3-30, Page 4MOW MRS BEAN METTHECRISISI Carried Safely Through Change of Life by Lydia E. Pinkhanes Vet Compound. Vegetable Nashviller;Tenn.—"Whets 7 was going ',trough the Change of Life Iliad a tu- mor as large as a child's head. The doctor said it was three years coming and gave me medi- cine for it until I was called away from the city for some time, Of , course I could not e,�� go to him then, so e my sister•in-law told me that she thought Lyda Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound would cure it. It helped both the Change of Life and the tumor and when I got home I dud not need the doctor. 1C took the Pinkham remedies until the tumor was gone, the doctor said, and I have not felt it since. I tell every one (how I was cured. If this letter will freer, others yon are welcome to use it." .-Mrs. E. H. BEAN, 525 Joseph Avenue, Nashville, Tenn. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Corn - pound, a pure remedy containing the extractive properties of good old .fash- ioned roots and herbs, meets the needs ivf woman's system at this critical period of her life. Try it. If there is any symptom in your use which puzzles you, write to Lydia E. Pink-listen1kledieine ,Dy Lynn, Mass. �V not give yore' lad the same 'training ? °>V -nen 1 was a growing lad. and came upon many words ht my reading that I did not understand, Esy mother, in- stead of giviag me the definition when I applied to her, uniformly sent me to the dictionary to learn it, and in this Nay y gradually Ietnnal naoy things besides the meaning of the individual Nord is question -among other things. how to use a dictionary. and the great pleasure and advantage there might be in the use of the dictionary. Afterwards. when 1 went to the village school. my et„Pf diversion. after les. sons were learned and before They were recited, was in turning over the pages of the "Unabridged' of those days;,. Itiosr the most modern Una- Iaridged-theNEW INTERNATIONAL - gives azo .a please -re of the same sort. So far as my knowledge extends, it is at present the best of the one.volnme distio „>.;P , and quite sufficient for all eratary uses. Even those who possess the splendid dictionaries in several v ,Iuraes will yet find it a great sonrenienrn to have this, which is so compact, so full, and so trustworthy as to lease. in most cases. little to be desirati"-Albert 5. Cook.Pit.D..LI,.D.. Prafessarof the English Langaage and .Literature, 'Yale Univ. APn7. 25.1911. WEI= far3pedmea Pages, Illuz one, Etc. ,-.CIPEELMIUCS NEW 1HTE ULATLOS6L DICTIORdZr G. & C. 3.13ZREIAM COMPANY, Tor Over 0 3 Yearn P ibUshere nz The Genuine Webster's Dictionaries, SPAINGFrt.,r.n, MASS.,'U.S. A. The Reason. wt try lb -Ey are called bach- elor szr;e." "Pole "AS ?le; :t ?" "May ortr:i t some ba, belors to in- veatige.e the ntetuting of ttze title." 1 The C.:iat Kind. "I hal za joy ride tochty." q ' I• ricin take you ent't" a "Ne. It was on n street car. The 1 eend'tctor forget to g -t my fare." 1Johnny Knew. 'You can't get sjnietlileg for nosh• i:ig, Johnny."' "Oh, yes, roil vete" "What it l ti you think so?" "'Cause 1 dal n•h->n ma just thought I had been in the j;atn." Must Be a Promoter. "Isis prrsperts are bri;liant." "Indeed: .are his ptist .achievements :lfltftlJlN. .•l shone) Srtr .!>. .Tlu,.• t .are If you really believe in Safety First get a box of Takake pi1Is for your, rheumatism, neuralgia. or sleep:tes,- ness, for they etre abeelutely ,harm - lees. Fifty cents a box at your drug- gists or by mill from the Georgian Mfg. rCo., 'Collingwood, Oat, SOUR, ACID STOMACHS, • GASES OR INDIGESTION tach "Pape's Diapepain" digests 3000 grains food, ending all stomach misery in five minutes. FOES HANGARS RAIDED Seaplanes and Ships Descend' on Schleswig-Holstein. Planes Convoyed by Cruisers and Destroyers Strike an Effective . Blow at (Ierrnaxe Sheds Near Sylt, and Brisk Battle Occurs—British. Lose Destroyer and Germaus Lose TWO Armed Trawlers in Fight. LONDON, March 27. --Great Brit- ain gave her drat effective answer Saturday morning to German air raids. A squadron of five seaplanes, convoyed by light cruisers and de- stroyers, crossed the North Sea and went straight to the home of the Berman nettles waxen have frequent- ly visited the English coast of late. They attacked the German airship sheds in Schleswig, east of the Is- land of Sylt. They were met, how- ever, by an effective anti-aircraft defence, while their convoys were engaged by German patrol boats. A battle royal, both iu the air and at sea, outside the harbor of Sylt, en- sued. Oniy two ,of the British planes returned, the three others, including a battleplane, were brought down, according to the offieial statements. Stormy weather prevailed, and in the course of an exciting naval engage- ment, the British destroyer Medusa collided with the destroyer Laverock. The Medusa is believed to have been lost, but her crew, are safe. The Germans, on their part, lost two arm- ed trawlers, the Braunar: hweig and the Otto Rudolph. During the engagement four Ger- man torpedo boats were cut off by a number of British destroyers, but eventually succeeded in making their escape. says a despatch to the Cen- tral News from Copenhagen. The Copenhagen correspondent of The Daily Mail said in a later tele- gram last night: Several miles off the Island of Fence there was fighting Saturday between a squadron of twenty ships and a German squadron five cruisers and twenty destroyers and two Zep- pelins. A number of German aero- planes also took part in the engage- ment. Two German vessels were disabled, the remainder retired behind the Is- land of Roem, on the west coast of Schleswig. During the fighting sev- eral British seaplanes suddenly rose from the warships and raided Toen- dern, where they dropped bombs on the Zeppelin sheds, which found their mark. Two aeroplanes, however, were shot down. The Anhaus Tidente states that 25 miles from Esbjorg fishermen sighted the opposing squadrons. The thick, snowy weather prevented the view, but firing was heard for twenty minutes. The paper's correspondent at Esb- jorg says that the German squadron was more than forty vessels strong, including several disguised merch- antmen. Preliminary to the main action twelve British destroyers last Friday got beyond four German de- stroyers and Heligoland. The Germans were compelled to steam northwards, and were joined later by some twelve armed trawlers and other vessels carrying four sea- planes and two Zeppelins. It is reported that part of this flotilla has been destroyed, but there is no confirmation of this report yet. Fishermen who arrived at Esbjorg report that the German trawlers Otto Rudolf and Braunschweig were sunk. Three British cruisers on Sunday inspected Blaavand, north-west of Esbjorg, but immediately afterwards steamed in a south-westerly direc- tion, The Daily News' Copenhagen car - _„e -e-. Fishing cut- ters report bandit/ evening that they saw about 50 German and 80 English warships at sea. Severe cannonad- ing was again heard Sunday night from Fence and Esbjorg. AUSTRIA APOLOGETIC. Has Aroused "ors ;tfa e of ` Newest Levy Soldiers Widespread Dissatisfaction. VIENNA, March 27.—The follow- ing seeming apology was issued by the War Ministry in publishing the mandate extending the military age to fifty-five years: "The new measure has been adopt- ed dopted owing to the necessity of calling up the newly -formed Landstrum unit into active service. The measure could under no circumstances have been avoided if the war is to be car- ried on successfully, and this urgent necessity justifies the new sacrifices demanded of the public. The new extension order is being carried out under most precise rules in order to consider the personal interest of those concerned, and to insure the sacrifices being borne in the same de- gree by all.” The last sentence is of interest under the circumstances, for origin- ally the extension was designed to af- fect only the peasantry and the work- ing classes, and not the middle c'ass or merchant popniat:on. The dissat- isfaction was thr' pr, atrst ' n a'!e " t of this a:!deinoe -'o,. ^ • •'t of . e ime it! In five minutes all stom- ach distress will go. No Indigestion, ttesrtbtzrn, sourness or belching of gas, acid, or eructations of undigested 1 food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape's Diapopsin Is noted for its Speed in regulating upset stomachs. It is the surest, quickest stomach'rem- ,edy it ti e whole world and besides it is ha mless, Put an end to stomach 'trouble forever by getting a large I fifty -cent case of Pape's Dlapepsin t Irene any drug store. You realize in 1 Ave minutes how needless it Is to suf. ler from indigestion, dyspepsla or any i. :etornach disorder, It's tho quickest, sourest and moat harmless stomach. t ltictor the world. c, Lc>0I A t 3ICI'i 1 --•(il flys I'atic. t °I. trey, tgtantly of I!: atT at Iry to t. `. '?king ' Ir veal a°; P➢iCa <. THE, EXETER TLMES l'$U`RSXAY, MARCH( 30111, i..Otti; NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK Important Events Which Have Occurred During -the Week. The Busy World's Happenings Care- fully Compiled and Put Into Bandy and Attractive Shape for the headers of Our falser — A Solid Hour's Enjoyment. WEDNESDAY. 1)NESD)AY. Ploughing has commenced in Al- berta. .A famine In sailors owing to en- listment faces Canadian marine men, Ispahau, Persia, is reported in a Reuter desiiatcll to have been taken by the Russians, Ring CtlrNtailtide of Greece greet- ed the new Japanese Charge d'Af- faires to Athens. The German. War Ministry has de- clared war itgainst the waste of cloth in. women's garments. A German who bad blue prints of the G. T. R. bridge at Niagara Falls was interned yesterday. Western University is offering the Government a complete field hospital staff for overseas service. Latest recruiting figures show about 280,000 men enlisted in Can- ada, of whom nearly 113,000 are from Ontario. Colonel L. R. Carleton, former Commandant of the Royal Military College, Kingston, has been made a Brigadier -General. A Berlin expert proposes the build- ing of 100 freight -carrying subma- rines at a cost of $250,000,000, to carry exports to America to support German credit and to bring back food supplies, Rev. Brother Marcelius, of the teaching staff of Mount St. Louis College, Montreal, was killed yester- day afternoon by an icicle falling from the College building and hit- ting him 011 the head. The London Sketch announces that Sir Charles Wyndham, the veteran actor -manager, and Miss Mary Moore, who was his leading lady throughout a long stage association, have been married. Sir Charles is 79 years old. THURSDAY. A tornado wrought terrible havoc in the State of Indiana. Two thousand people in Nashville, Tenn., were made homeless by a fire. General Cadorna, Commander of the Italian armies, visited Lord Kitchener in London. Four men were killed in a freight collision at Val Brillant, Que., due to a frozen and open switch. Mr. Robert Davies, of Toronto, brick manufacturer and owner of Thorncliffe Farm, died suddenly. Four Maritime Provinces sailors were lost when the Canadian steamer Port Dalhousie was sunk in the Eng- lisle Channel. Hon. W. J. Hanna yesterday in troduced the prohibition bill in the Ontario Legislature, to become effec- tive in the late summer. The Nova Scotia House of Assem- bly yesterday passed an amendment to the Prohibition Bill, bringing the measure into force on the 30th of June next. Mr. Justice Lafontaine annulled the marriage of Frank Paulin and Lucean Leduc of Montreal, on the ground that the woman already had a legal husband living. One hundred and twenty-seven submarines have been captured by the British navy since the outbreak of the war, according to information from the British Admiralty. A committee of six members of Parliament, three appointed by each leader, will, on Hon. Robert Rogers' request, co-operate with him in. the reconstruction of the burned Parlia- ment buildings. Analysis showed the presence of strychnine in quantity more than suf- ficient to be fatal in the stomach of J. F. Lindsey of Swift Current, Sask., who died suddenly on March 5, while under arrest in connection with roadwork contracts. FRIDAY. There are now 41,500 British soldiers. Mrs. Legget of Montreal was run over and killed by a street car in front of her own door. Another of the German seaplanes which raided Fn lar� lastt Sunday vas rebartec& aired, Ontario hotellrleti Iii'Opose that the people be allowed to vote upon the question of compensation. Wm. Chisholm, Superintendent of the W., E. & L. S. Interurban Line, was electrocuted at Windsor. It was announced that the Galloper lightship, off the mouth of the Thames, was withdrawn, not de- stroyed. Mr. Robert Proudfoot, father of Wm. Proudfoot, K.C., M.P.P., died at his home in Goderich, at the age of 91 years. The Orange Grand Lodge of New Brunswick adopted resolutions ap- proving of prohibition and of con- scription. It is announced that Baron Hard- inge will be appointed a Knight of the Garter on his retirement as Vice- roy of India. The Dominion Government is starting an extensive advertising campaign to promote thrift and pro- duction in Canada. Two hundred and twenty-five Can- adian officers and men returned by the Sicilian and the Corinthian,. reaching St. Sohn, N.B. An effort to avert a vote on direct irohibition is saird to be a possibility '1 connection with the Stevens -Mar - ;1 ,resolution in the Commons. Barotr Scarsdale (Rev. Alfred Cur- t ("ether of EarI Curzon of Kedle- es- teed yesterday after an illness rel month's. He was 84 years 'ling to information from Sa- bq Bulgarian Commander -in- .' arrived at the Macedonian paratory to a general offen- 'IIx has been ordered bythe tI,ntd rtrarters Staff. SATURDAY. ea, exelefet tela get. $600,000. widows of from the amusement ti , It wait Stat- ed in the Legislature yesterday, Welborne Atkin, Public School in- spector for East Elgip since 1884, e died at St. Thomas, aged 77 years, The International Agricultural Bu- reau at Rome stated that there would be good crops in the Central Empires thisa ye r. It is.reported that a device to pro- tect the' earsduring heavy bombard- ments has been distributed to the British o ' 's. t h s Diez Dr. Frani J. Lutz, a widely known surgeon, died of heart disease at his bon in St. Lore�, Mo., yesterday. He was 60 years oiL Exports frcin Kingston district to the United States during the least sic months more than quadrupled those Of the sante pe'loti a year ago, A meeting of optic improvement workets iu Toronto yesterday llttuli&'d a resolution asking the Ontario LelJ islature to enact a town planning (tet. E, H. Devline, M,P,I", for Kinis- tinot Sask., was derested at Sea,-l:pe on charge of lieviug arsisted in otu- beeeloflent of Highways i)oliartzuent funds. Owing to the steamer Atirora breaking from her moorings, Sir H. Ernest Shackleton, the British ex- plorer, will have to remain in the Antarctic another winter. An order -in -Council has been pass- ed at Ottawa under the provisions of the adulteration act reducing the legal percentage of moisture in evap- orated apples to 25 per cent. Daniel O'Connor, a veteran of In- dian campaigns, and his wife, were sentenced to the penitentiary for two and a half years each for brutally whipping their ten -year-old daughter at Windsor. MONDAY. Commencement exercises were held at the new Cobourg Hospital on Saturday. Commissioner Richards, head of the Salvation Army in Canada, visit- ed the two Soos. Joseph Rattenbury, a hotelkeeper well known throughout Western On- tario, died at Clinton. L. A. Wedge of- Blenheim was burned to death in a fire that de- stroyed a garage there. John Wickett, a prominent merch- ant in Port Hope, died suddenly in his store Saturday night. A mountain in the Cascade Range has been named "Sir Robert" and a glacier at its foot "Bordeu." Owing to the perils to navigation in the North Sea a big Dutch liner has been withdrawn from the service. John Flook of Chatham, a well- known marine contractor in Western Ontario, died suddenly at the dinner table. Canadians have contributed $2,- 233,256 2;238,256 in money and kind to re- lieve sufferers from the war in Bel- gium. Rev. Dr. T. Stannage Boyle, of To- ronto, is leaving Trinity College to become head of King's College, Windsor, N. S. The icebreakers are making good headway, and it is expected they will cut a channel to the open water of Lake Supilriai- within a week. George Finn, fifteen years of age, living near Oriole, York County, was accidentally shot by his elder bro- ther, and the result is in doubt. Norway has made a demand on Germany for an investigation of the sinking of the Norwegian ships Lind - field and Kannike, according to Christiania despatches. Albert West, a Hamilton Swede, was terribly gashed in an altercation over to war, and Gus Carleton, an- other Swede, is under arrest, charged with attempted murder. TUESDAY. There was a $50,000 fire loss at 77 Bay street, Toronto, last night. Steps will be taken immediately in Britain to organize a Shackleton re- lief expedition. Lieut. -Col. N. S. Edgar, 0. C. 68th Battalion, is appointed to command Military District No. 12. Eleven persons were killed when the British steamer Minneapolis was sunk in the Mediterranean. A workman named Humphries was killed in an explosion at Nobel in the works of Canadian Explosives. The military Governors of six Chinese rebel provinces have de- manded the exile of Yuan Shi Kai. Robert Hanna, residing near Mil- verton, has secured two retired farm- ers to work his farm while he goes to war with the 110th (Perth) Bat- talion. The tre tored strike of the Liver- ' • a ' pcol carters has been averted. The men have accepted the terms recom- mended by a Government Concilia- tion Board. The entire nineteen indictments against C. P. R. conductors and others, alleging ticket frauds, have been disposed of, the accused all be- ing acquitted. Floods in the Don Valley caused the suspension of traffic on the C. N. R. for several.hours, and also threat- ened the safety of the Bloor street bridge over the Humber. Mr. Mark Irish's resolution favor- ing compensation for license holders under prohibition was withdrawn in the Ontario Legislature yesterday after Premier Hearst had opposed it. According to the Danish news- paper Politiken, the latest type of German submarines are so large that they can take aboard the crews of ordinary merchant ships which they sink. Three Men Acquitted. OTTAWA, March 28.—Conductors Charles A. Merriam and Francis Nel- son and News Agent Bortz were all found not guilty in the High Court Assizes Saturday of charges of de- frauding the Canadian Pacific Rail- way by the re -sale of tickets collect - e'1 by the officials. Conductor Harry Dunham was acquitted on Friday, and the charges against several others are still to be heard. Gen. Alderson Knighted. LONDON, March 28: '--- King George received General Alderson, commanding the Canadian corps, at Buckingham Palace Saturday, and conferred upon flim the Knighthood, recently announced, and invested him With the insignia. FOE'S HANGARS RAIDED. Seaplanes itiRi Ships Descend 00 Scbleswig-llf olstcin. LONDON,March 28.—Great Brit- ain Ata 11 28. re it - r ain gave her first effective answer Saturday morning to German air raids. A squadron of five seaplanes, convoyed by light cruisers and de- stroyers, crossed the North Sea and went straight to the home of the Germanla v p nes which have frequent- ly visited the English coast of late. They attacked the German airship sheds an Schleswig, east of the Is- fanct or gyft. Thet were. rag, ever, by au edgrag, E1t►eve anti-aircraft defenee, while their convoys were engaged by German patrol boats. A battle royal, both in the air and at 330a, outside the harbor of Sylt, en- sued, Only two of the British planes tetitriled, the three others, including li battleplane, were brought down, according' to the official statements. yt.9rlifsf CJ'bather prevailed, d in the Course of an. excitir,.g naval a;ftal engeee- ment, the British destroyer Medusa collided with the destroyer Laverock. The Medusa is believed to have been lost, but her crew are safe. The Germans, on their part, lost two arm- ed trawlers, the Braunschweig and the Otto Rudolpb. • During the engagement four Ger- man torpedo boats were cut off by a number of British destroyers, but eventually succeeded in making their escape, says a despatch to the Cen- tral News from Copenhagen. The Copenhagen correspondent of The Daily Mail said in a later tele- gram last night: Several miles off the Island of Fence there was fighting Saturday between 'a squadron of twenty ships and a German squadron five cruisers and twenty destroyers and two Zep- pelins. A number of German aero- planes also took part in the engage- ment. Two German vessels were disabled, the remainder retired behind the Is- land of Roam, on the west coast of Schleswig. During the fighting sev- eral British seaplanes suddenly rose from the warships and raided Toen- dern, where they dropped bombs on the Zeppelin sheds, which found their mark. Two aeroplanes, however, were shot down. U. -S. PERTURBED. Sinking of Sussex Has Aroused Di- plomats at Washington. WASHINGTON, March 28.—White everything indicates that the Chan- nel steamer Sussex was torpedoed deliberately from bloodlust or an at- tempt to force the United States into the war, official information upon which President Wilson will decide whether the sinking of the steamship Englishman and the damaging by an explosion of the Cbanuel steamer Sussex were the results of acts in violation of international law is be-• ing gathered from every available source by Consular representatives of the United States in England and France. Despatches already received indi- cate that several Americans were in- jured or killed in the Sussex disaster. Four American citizens who were aboard the Englishman, and who were said in despatches Saturday not to be among the rescued, still are un- accounted for. Only one despatch of importance concerning the explosion which dam- aged the Sussex was received by the State Department during the day. This contained an affidavit made in London at the American Embassy by two American survivors, Edward S. Huxley and Francis E. Drake, of New York. Both swore that the explosion occurred "without the slightest warn- ing," and they credited the comman- der of the Sussex as saying that he saw the wake of a torpedo before it struck his verse'I. The position of tfie United States will be decided upon official reports from its own officers. Should either the Sussex or the Englishman have been torpedoed the United States would consider the act to be a most flagrant violation of the rights of hu- manity, the principles of internation- al law, and the broad assurances re- garding the conduct of submarine warfare which have been given by the German Government. There is no evidence, or even a suggestion, that either of the ships weer armed, so no defence could be offered on that score. CONFERENCE OF ALLIES. Seven Entente Powers Represented at Conclave in Paris. PARIS, March 28.—The most im- portant conferente of the Allies since the outbreak of the war began at Paris yesterday under the Presidency of Premier Briand. The Premiers of Great Britain, Italy, Belgium, and Serbia will participate. The British Foreign Secretary, Sir Edward Grey; the Secretary for War, Field Marshal Earl Kitchener, and .Commander of the Continental Forces General Sir Douglas Haig; the French Commander -in -Chief, General Joffre, and the Italian General Ca- dorna also have seats at the council table. Russia is repre- sented by the Foreign Minister, M. Iswolsky, and General Gilinisky, aide-de-camp to the Emperor; Japan by the Japanese Ambassador at Paris, and Serbia by Prince Alexander. Probably nothingwill be disclosed concerning the questions under con- sideration or the decisions reached, but it is expected that the allied pow- ers will come to an agreement re- specting common military and politi- ca) actions. Soldier Imprisoned in Well. LONDON, March 28.—A mystery has been disclosed by a little girl, who on peering down into an old, dry thirty -five-foot well on the East- bourne golf links, saw a soldier im- prisoned there. The soldier, on be- ing rescued, Could walk, but could give no account of himself, not even his name. He had about a week's growth of beard end was covered with mud. Ile must have Bled many drzye on the water trickling down the: aide of 1YIs Cell - INCORPORATED 1855 rti E. MOLSONS BANK CAPITAL' AND RBsBR B $8,800,00Q 960Branches in Canada A General Banking Business Transacted CIRCUI,AR;,LETTERS OF CREDIT NICl,MONEV ORDERS: SAVINGS BANK( -DEPARTMENT lntereEt atowed at highest curt ent rater W. D. CLARK1 , Manager, Exeter Branch. I" tI THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.Y.O., LL.D. D.C.L., President JOHN AIRD, General Manager. 11. V. F. JONES. Asa'tGeaeral Mnnagseir CAPITAL, $15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, S1,50U41.0 { BANKING BY MAIL Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian:: of Commerce to be operated by mail, and will receive the sal l careful attention as is given to all other departments of the Bank'. business. Money may be deposited or withdrawn in this way +. satisfactorily as by a personal visit to the Bank. esat Exeter Branch-- A. E. Kuhn, Manager. OREDITON BRANCH - A. E. KUIHN, Manager, EXTENSIVE „ Auction Sale OF CHOICE YOUNG HORSES Thos. Camerons has received in- structions to sell by public auction on Lot 7, Con. 12, Hibbert, on PRI - DAY. MARCH 31st, at one o'clock sharp the following 1 brood marc, 4 Sears old, with foal, agric.; 1 brood mare 8 years old with/ foal, agric.; 1 mare 6 years old, draught; 2 geldings 6 years old, draught; 2 mares 5 Sears, agric.; 2 geldings 5 years agric; 2 geldings 4 years, draught; 2 •marcts 4 years agric.; 3 fillies 3 years, agric.; 4 geldings 3 years„ agric.; 1 pr. match- ed general purpose mare and gelding; 2 good farmers drivers, 5 years and 7 gears old; 1 pr, drivers, mare and gelding 3 years old. The above mentioned horses are _a fine selection of clean boned, well fitted horses. Farmers waning hor- ses will do well to attend this sale as the proprietors last sale and pr t- vious record of !:.ales is a guarantee that stock will be up to the mark and sold without reserve. Terms -8 months' credit will be given on furnishing approved joint notes at 5 per cent per annum. DAVID C. GA'RDINER & JOHN G. SCOTT., Proprietors. THOS. CAMERON, Auctioneer, Auction Sale OF ;CHOICE COWS The well known Jas. Ferguson has instructed Thos. Cameron to sell by public auction at the METROPOLI- TAN HOTEL, EXETER, on T.liU13S- DAY.. MARCH 30th, at one o'clock sharp the following: 6 high grade cows of milking strain with calves at their sides; 6 high grade cows of milking !strain due in March, April and May; 6 choice Holstein cows with calves at their sides; 6 choice Holstein cows due in March, April and May; a number of young calves; a few two-year-old heifers, Some of the above cows have a very high record and all cows will be sold under a guarantee. TERMS -6 months' credit on fur- nishing approved joint notes. ,A dis- count of 6 per cent per annum off fon cash. JAMES FERGUSON, Prop. THOS. CAMERON, Auctioneer. Auction Sale OF HOUSE & LOT AND IIOUSE,f HOLD EFFECTS On North Street, Exeter, on Sat'y April 22nd, at one p.m, Frame House containing parlor, dining -room, kltch;- en., three bedrooree, wash room and pantry; hard and soft water, cellar, all in good repair; eatable on lot. Household effects consist of parlor room and kitchen utensils, stoves. crockery, glassware, china, carpenter toobsi. shoemakers tools and dozens of other articles. See bills. Terms -Cash. For particulars ap- ply on premises or B. S. Phillips. Thos, Cann.. Prop.,, B. S. Phillips,, Auct. ^' T Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S 1CA.S"T'O R 1 A JAS. BEVERLEY FURNITURE DEALER Embalmer and Funeral Directclga' Phone 74a. Night Call 44h• EXETER, -:- ONTARB CJ.W. KACN,M.E.C.M. 925 RICHMOND ST., LOnlingle, ONTARIO. SPECIALIST 111 SLIPPERY AND ItN1T0-Lb'FtIIi1IS DISEASES 01' AND "10 2lENN DB, G. F. ROULSTON, L.D.t9„ MR! DENTIST , el Honor Graduate of site. Office over ling's Law office. clay afternoons. ,Residence 5b. .x Toronto lSTaivept. Dieksoaa ifs tom. Closed Wetbaeria, Phone Offiae Sag Lh. A. R. KINSMAN LI.D.B, D.D,Ib Honor Graduate of Turnouts 33aidge ersity l DENTIST .ifft 9th extracted without pain. any bad effects. Offioe cat axe �I* roan & 8tanibury's Office main L Exeter, 1 Wt. BROWNING M. D., X. leu � s P, 6, Graduate Victoria Usalgg ,s city Offioe and reaidenoe Dtm,isni** Labratory., Exeter, -lei Asaooiate Coroner of Huron 1 • D ICKSON & CARDING41, .t Barristers, Solicitors Notaries veyanoers Commilssionera-, t8oli;lz >! for the Molsona Bank ere i .lel Money to Loan at lowest rates $tkiiP terest, '41 OFFICE -MAIN STREET, H1['S'it"lilnt 4 I, R,• Carling B. A; t Sb l elmoal MONEY, TO LOAlli, We have a large amount o3 paint ate funds to loan on farm ash amt► lage properties at lowest rate 0 hip ter6at, GLADMAN & STANBUB9 I Barristers, Solieitors, Malt 'Exeter,, . 6 The Usborne and fiibbert Farmer's Mutual Fire luS ansa Company Head Office, Fatquflar, OEp President ROBT. foe !_.aBII�l1 Vice-Presideut THOS. RYAS(' A}Illx' IlIRCCTORi51 I1.11 WM. BROOK , , WM, BOW' J L. RUSSELL ,T'. T. ALL1SO)Y!l' AGENTS 14! JOHN ESSERY Exeter, agent Ugi borne and Biddulph. 41 OLIVER HARRIS Munro agent gals Hibbert Pullbrton and Logan. - , W. A, TURNMIJfLII- ' 1 Secy.Treas. Farquhaltr GLADMAN & ST4Jt 3UBX „mit Solicitors. Exeter. agrneor Mart It.girtdrew GEORGIAN MFG. Ca„ Tl a'ffirmiess-birtEffi-- oentremedy for Hsadach+a Neuf aiglat,Anaet'nia,SiieP.- fbssness, Nsruous j>»xr haustknotled,%. elr i 4WD AT ALL DiwitailSTS, brby+na1$•'Irewm' COLLINGWOCJCb?ON1 • .. __. . t