HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-5-11, Page 4i7::N7•7' • 7 •
0
NI%
I DON'T SUFFER
ANY MORE'
'Wee' Like a New Person
says Mrs. Hamilton.
New castle, lad. -"Frons the time
was eleven years old until / was seven -
ter I suffered each
l'.,9,1„,111111. month so I had to he
'in hed. I had head -
.e aehe„ backache and
such pains I would
cramp double every
month. I did not
M9" lila • oes,....4 a zele..ae.
My health was all
run down and the
• " doctors did not do
me any good_ A
neighbor told my atether about Lydia
E. I'initharees Vegetable Compound and
I took it, and now 1 fee/ like a new
ipersore 1 don't suffer any reeze and
.ara regular every month. "-- Mrs.H 4 7F,I
lieetteeoN, 822 South liith St:
When a remedy has lived for forty
years, steadily grew -leg in popularity
lend •iniluence„ and thousands upon
thousand s of worrree.1iYeelaee they owe
their health to it., is. it not reasona-
ble to leelieve that L is an article of
great melite
If you want special advice write
to Lydia E Pinkhana Meefieine
Co.. (confidential), Ly111-4, Mass.
"Your letter will be: apened, read
rend ecusevered by a evoroan and
laid in strict coulattenCe.
1,70
tear -4_
EASTER EXCURSICP,IS
SIMCLE FARE
od goierg April 21:t and returning
same day.
Far and ne- Third
Some p;eing. April ee, 21, 22,' 23, _Return
Limit April 2e.th.
laetern eitkets will be issued be
1ween all etaticns in Canada east of
Port Artr end to Detriot and Port
?-1uron Mieb , Befeelo, Black Rock,
Niagara Fella read Stale-eve:ion Bridge,
New Yorke
efickets and further pertrcnlars att
greed 'erenk ticket office:F.
N. J. Dere, Agent.
You can secure a
4
44
4
4
4
4?,
4
•
Position
If you takes eaurs?witk, as. The e
demand uvon tes Lou trained kelp
is Emmy tiniest the number grad.
eating. Students are entering
each week, Yu may enter at Inv
time. 'Write et one far our free •
catalogue of Commercial, Elaart•
-
4
D. A4, Illtletchlan, Prin p
eeeo 44444 seseseesecestee 04,4404saas ?so
rffiers!
Made in Canada
Fertilizer $18 and
$22 per ton
Now is the time to
buy wire fence be=
fore it advances in
price.
Let me quote you on
your needs in the
fniiowing
• Al kinds of Lumber
il)ur died OE rongb.
`411ingles, Lath, Cedar
Few- Posts, 8 ft 9
ft long triel 10 ft long.
41,• mint, Wall Board
and itParly Roofing
AJ
CI, VFW° THY
rffi ANToo;
Lord Ceciee answer.
e eINDONT, Mev 9.—Lord Robert
Cet eliniecer o: War Trade, and
Pareamentary Under-Secretary for
Foreign Affairs, in a statement given
to the Associated Preset, deals with
the charges againet Great Britain
and Germany's avowed desire for
,peace as contained in the German re-
ply to the nate of the Belted States
on submarine warfare.
Atter recalling alleged inhumane
praetices by Germany, through em-
ployment of submarines, Zeppelins,
poisoned gas, and high -explosive
elicits. Lord Robert, on the esue of
peace says:
"Of the German peace overtures, if
such they are to be called, I will say
little. It was only in last December
that their Chancellor declared that
we believed it to be in our interests
to attribute falsely to them peace
proposals. Yet the Cerman Govern-
ment now- says that twiee within the,
iew mete-. a _Inany has an-
nounced before the world her readi-
ness to make peace. Which is the
truth?
"It may be that the Germans want
peace. If so, it is because they fear
defeat. It may be only that they want
to appear peaceful.
h''For us it matters not. Our atti-
'Cede, at any rate, is unchanged. We
drew the sword unwillingly. We shall
sheathe it gladly, hut we should be
untrue to our trust, we should be be-
traying civilization, if we abandoned
our task until we have re-established
in Europe the supeemaey of Taw, the
sanctity of treaties, and the right of
all nations, great and small, to live
their lives, to fulfil their destinies,
free from the intolerable menace of
Pruss;e13 Militarism."
The statement is a defence of the,
British blockade- an the sea, le re -
fee .ce to the German claim of the
le "et intention to starve •millions ot
women and children, "who by their
sufferings will force the victorious
armies of the central powers inta
ignominious capitulation," Lord Rob-
ert quotes remarks of the German
Chancellor laet month in the Reich-
stag, in which the declaration was
made that Germany had sufficient
food for alt with a surplus, and which
concluded: "We have not run short
of anything in the past, nor shall we
ren short of anything in the future."
Statements by Prince Bismarck
and Count Caprivi, dealing with the
rights of belligerents to cut off the
food supplies of any enemy, are also
contained in the communication as a
defence of the British stand.
Jealousy Causes Three Deaths.
• PONZANO, Italy, May 9.—Captain
Bettolo, a member of a leading Rome
• family, in a fit of jealousy Sunday
slew his wife and committed suicide.
Captain Bettelo returned from the
front and soaeht the Abbe Giacomo
rra, of wlom he was jealous. Ar-
riving- at the parish house of tbe
Men!, Captain Lettelo fired through
the windows, one sef his bullets kill-
er th Abbe Nieco Richetta. Abbe
was rtes. hit. Afterward the cap -
'nee returnee. to his home and killed
les wife and tilen• committed suicide.
He was a raehew of the late Admiral
Bettoto, once elinizter of Marine.
No Werning Given by C -Boats.
LONDON, May 9.—The erew of
the British cteamer City of Luak-
new, wticb was sunk in the Mediter-
ranean on Tuesday last, were landed
on the island. cf Malta on Thursday,
aceort.'.ing to a Lloyd's despatcb from
Mitita under Thursday's date. The
steamer was torpedoed without
weraing, the despatch asserts_
The small Norwegian steamer
Speed has bean sunk_ Eight of her
crew were landed. Five other are
still missing.
HONOR ROLL FOR 161st Battalion
Maj. W. J. Beaman,
Lieut. Edgar Torrance
Sidney Smith, lia.y P.O.
Fred Tucker, Exeter
nish, Elimville.
Hector Heywood, Exeter.
Fred Hopkins, Whalen
Sylvanus Cann, Exeter
Wilbur Pfaff, I
Milton Pfaff
'Harold Bissett
Fred Wells •. •
Lloyd. Rivers
Austin A. Rice .1 ;el J;
Ernest Collingwood.
Albert S. Bolton
Wilfrid G. Stewart
E. M. Williams, Farquhar
Grant eloaper
Thos. Harold Wilkinson, Lumley
Cyril Tuckey
Ralph W. Batter!, Winchelsea '
Geo. Edward Kellett, Elinaville
David G. Appleton
Garnet 'Rau, Crediton
James It. Marshall
Bruce II. Matthews, Thames Rd.
John D. Lang, London Rd. I
Ma W. Matson, Exeter
Lloyd England, Crediton
Gordon C Culbert, Centralia
Earl Henry Iledden, Creditee
Williarn Teyeld
Bert &levees r
Sidney West
Ernest Harvey
Ira Taylor
John Willis
Elmore Willis )
John 'W. Mallett
'Welter Harness '
Alfred Gambriel '
'William Nunn
Lorne Cudmore ;
Rat. Hy. Passmore •
et, Earle So tbcott
'Charles Cameron.'
Garnet Ford "1
Williams Sirns
Arva E. Brokensbire
William Jeffrey
Nelson Stacey
Norman Johns
Wiesoe Culbert
James G. Walker
Louis Day. Jr'.
Thomas ippleton
Eris Hurdon ;1
W. A. Sad .h. 'Centralia
Jackson teemds, Elinevind 1
Edmond Oke "
..Ertie... • eel
.7)ehhe
'te IT Peeled).
Vert Piper
; 1'1... • 1. t •
)
• ' I
THE EXETERTIMES
NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK
Important Events Which 'Have
Occurred Dtxrin3 the We?A,
The Busy World's Happenings Care-
fully Compiled end Put Into
llandy and Attractive Sbape for
the Readers of .0er Paper — A
Solid Hour's Enjoyment,
WEDNESDAY.
Another Belgian relief ship was re-
ported destroyed.
De. Herbert Theme was elected
President of the Academy' of Medi-
cine, Toronto,
A Turkish transport loaded with
troops was reported sone' by a Brit-
ish submarine.
A Berlin report says that northern
Epirus has been placed under Greek
adnain tetra ann.
The biggest moving picture theatre
in Canada is to be erected in Toronto
at a cost of $2Fictse0we.
Canadian aviators, A. .7. Emday,
Toronto, and T. R. Liddle, Grimsby,
were killed in England.
Six hundred. Canadian moterenat
men are wanted by the Royal navy
for the auxiliary patrol service.
Britain and Germany have eon -
eluded an arrangement for striding
wounded prisoners to Switzer/vied.
The Postmasters'. Assoeaitfon of
Canada gave $6,000 to the Canadian
Patriotic, $1,600 more than /net year.
St. Catharines Connell passed a
by-law to issue debentures for $3 le -
000 for extensions to the Ils-dro-elec-
trie system.
David Metier of Effingham, ex -
Reeve of Pelham Township, 80 years
old, was accidentally drowned in a
creek on his place.
Charles Christopher, a Torouto
Italian, tried to choke bimself at
King and Yonge street, and in falling
fractured bis skull.
The price of bread has been raised
to seven cents for .one and one-half
pound loaf by tbe bakers of Berlin,
Waterloo, Etraira, Hespeler, and St.
Jacob's.
Dr. Edwin Seaborn has been ap-
pointed by the Board of Governors
of Western University to command
the new hospital unit authorizes] by
the Government.
Supplementary estimates were
tabled in the Commons totaling $22.,-
282,081, of which $15,000,000 is for
a loan to the C. N. R. and $.8,000,000
for one to the G. T. P.
George Glover, a returned mem-
ber of the first contingent, was sen -
termed to three months in jail in de-
fault of paying e300 fine for selling
liquor without a license, having, as
be said, purchased a bottle for a sol-
dier.
THURSDAY.
Over 24,000 surgeons. are attend-
ing the German troops_
Four new batteries are authorized
to be raised in Kingston.
• A German aeroplane raided Deal,
England, but caused no casualties.
The Allies denied yesterday that
they bad established a blockade of
Greece,.
Principal Gordon of Queen's Uni-
versity has tendered his resignation
owing to continued lit -health.
Parliament decided to' ga on with
the Hudson Bay Railway, putting
through estimates for that purpose.
Conductor John Neil, one ef the
oldest trainmen on the Michigan Cen-
tral, was killed in the yards at Mont-
rose.
Dr. Liebknecbt, the noted German.
Socialist, was arrested in connection
with the May Day disturbances in
Berlin.
Representations will be made to
tbe Government with a view to stop-
ping unauthorized collections for pa-
triotic purposes.
Separated from her husband, Mrs.
11. J. Crozier, 5 Pembroke street, To-
ronto, committed suicide by inhaling
illuminating gas.
The strike of Italian workmen on
Welland Canal construction has
spread, till 260 men are now out; no
trouble bas occurred.
The New South Wales Ministry
has resigned owing to the unwilling-
ness of its members to put into effect
the abolition of the upper House, as
demanded by the Labor party.
The Anti -German League of To-
ronto made allegations to tbe effect
that German -made goods are on sale
in Canada, and passed resolutions
urging Government action to prohibit
importation of German and Austrian
goods during war time.
In his statement to the Cabinet,
following Premier Hearst's presenta-
tion of argutnes against Federal
disallowance of Ontario's bilingual
"Regulation 17," Hon. Mr. Doherty,
Minister of Justice, as'he reported to
the Commons yesterday, beld that
the Provincial legislation being de-
clared ultra vires, disallowance
might increase the trouble.
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FRIDAY.
The Turks are concentrating their
orces near Smyrna, on the Asiatic
oast.
A German steamer that broke
oose in a storm trom the Canary Is -
ands was captured by a cruiser.
The United States protested
gainst Ontario's proposal to divert
bippawa Creek for power purposes.
A French csbing vessel was sunk
n the Atlantic by an enemy sub-
arine, whet/ 15,0 miles from the
ea reel. land.
A memorial was unveiled at St.
ndrew's church, Fort William, in
onor of 253 men and five nursing
iters from that congregation.
The University of Toronto will ac-
nowledge the services of Colonel G.
. Nesmith to the oats° of the Allies
y conferring the honorary degree of
L.D.
Informatiot wbicb is regarded as
rustworthy bas been received in
Msterdam to the effect that Metz is
etiinogn. evacuated by the civil pope -
The C. P. R. staff in the general
ffices at Montreaf has begun to
save deyiight" by starting work an
our earlier eut without altering the
Mate than IlirA` Miff tad- men are
out now because of the strike of rte
tau laborers on Welland Canal, sec
tion 3, and the work on the whole
section is stepeed.
Roland Martin, a farmer near
epencerville, aged forty -eve threw a
fork from a MOW, and, jumping
dowu, was impaled on the splintered
handle, being fatally injured.
Indicating a strong belief that the
war is beginning to draw to a close,
Lloyds yesterday posted new insur-
ance rates, wagering only one to
three that the war will not end be-
fore December 31, 1916.
The arrest of a man and two wo-
men at Sudbury and another man
at Kingston is believed to have ef-
fected the rounding up of a gang of
cheque swindlers who have been
working the Province of Ontario.
SATURDAY.
Wm. K. Pullis, a Toronto prospec-
tor, was drowned in New Ontario.
The Russians are making steady
progress in their Caucasus campaign.
Four more Irish rebel leaders were
sentenced to death and shot yester-
day.
The Bishop of Michigan announced
himself strongly in favor of prohibi-
tion.
W. H. Perrin, a, resident of Clinton
for more than half a century, died at
the age of eighty-ftve.„..-
The French submarine Bernouille
sank an enemy torpedo boat in the
Lower Adriatic Sea Thursday.
A group of sixty-five strong, well -
drilled Walpole Island Indians join-
ed` Lambtott county's 149th Battal-
ion.
Great Britain granted the immed-
iite release of Germans and Aus-
trians taken from the U. S. steamer
China.
The Hydro -electric Power COMMIS-
sion of Ontario is given control of
tbe Trent Valley and Central Ontario
system.
James Oliver, of Paris, who on tbe
12tb of July last attended his sev-
enty-seventh Orange parade, is dead,
at the age of ninety-seven.
The body of Pte. Frederick John
Irvine, 111th Battalion, missing
from the barracks at Galt since April
18, was found floating in the Grand
River by two comrades.
The financial statements of the C.
N. R. and G. T. P. were submitted
to Parliament yesterday in printed
form as the Government brief for
making the $23,000,000 loans.
The Cunard Line and the Canadian
Northern Railway completed an ar-
rangement whereby they will co-
operate on passenger and freight
business between Europe and Can-
ada.
Lon Sanderson, an unmarried
farm laborer, aged forty-four, who
had just enlisted in the Dufferin-
Halton Battalion, died at a hotel in
Orangeville of an overdose of laud-
anum, which he had taken for In-
somnia.
MONDAY.
Lieut. E. G. Ryckman, a Toronto
aviator, was killed in action.
The $250,000,000 war aid bill was
passed by the Commons on Satur-
day. •
Rev. James Sieveright, a pioneer
Presbyterian minister, is dead in To -
'theta: ' •
General food cards will be intro-.
duced de Berlin to supplement the
bread 'cards.
"Field punishment No. 1" has been
abolished in the Canadian militia, as
it has been already in the Britsh
army.
C. N. R. employes of several class-
es, east ,of Port Arthur, have`been
granted.an increase in wages of about
22 per cent -
Dr_ Angus McKay, member of the
Legislature sixteen years for South
Oxford, died at his home in Inger-
soll, aged 62.
Sir George Foster announced ar-
rangements for expansion of trade,
and forecasted efforts to co-ordinate
trade research.
The .Govern.ment has decided to
organize immediately an expedition
for the relief of Lieut. Sir Ernest H.
Shackleton, who, with a number of
raen, is marooned in the Antarctic.
Field Marshal Liman von Sanders,
with the German fifth army has ar-
rived in Smyrna, bringing with him
a large number of Austrian heavy
guns and other artillery, says The
London Daily Mail's Athens' corre-
spondent.
Striking St. Catharines carpenters
donated their labor and erected the
frame for the women's rest cottage at
Niagara Camp, citizens of St. Cath-
arines giving the material in response
to an appeal by the Women's Petrie -
tile League,
TuESDAY.
General Townshend and his staff
have reached Bagdad.
Great Britain is now building air-
ships of the Zeppelin type.
London is likely to have the big
simmer camp for Military District
No. 1.
The bill providing for . a United
States army of 250,000 was rejected
by the House.
Mr. and Mrs: A. B. Sinks, Demme
estville, celebrated their diamond
wedding anniversary.
Halifax longshoremen protested to
the Board of Control • against the
"daylight saving" plan.
The Ottawa -to -Toronto C. P. R.
night oxpreas was wrecked and pas-
sengers had remarkable escapes.
Austrian and New Zealand troops
have arrived in France and have
taken over a portion of the front.
It was, officially denied that the
Pope made any appeal to avoid a
break between Germany and the
United Slates.
Some docuetents required by the
Meredith -Hal Coin/ .1.8sion investi-
gating the Kyte char,, ,s have still not
been produced.
It is now stated that owing to ill -
health the nt. Hon. Lewis Harcourt
cannot accept the position Of Chief
Secretary- for Ireland.
Oscar 5'itzalwyn Wilkifls, cuetome
officer al Bridgeleurg, and the oldest
/loyal Black Ktegh' of Ireland lit the
district, is dead at dee ago of eighte.
Sir Thomas' • White.„ 'Minister of
Finances Ulla! ..do. .;d the Govern-
ment's pronost • r loans as a, tom-
Portary... eing, av, 11 ho probleas of
the, O. aza eitn.Q".•11'.
1'
KING NEW SAttigT
^,7•77.7.7.777
Germans Hope to Make Bulge
in Verdun Line,,
Crown Prince's Offensive Shifts Sud-
denly to the North-West of Hill
304, With a View to Making
Dead Man Bill Untenable—
French Withstand Assault Ac-
companied by Gas Bombs.
PARIS, May 9.—The Gerrnaa
Crown Prince, after sending forth
during the last two days a fresh army
of piced infantrymen against ,the
formidable Hill 304, the chief bul-
wark of Verdun to the north -West, on
the west bank of the Meuse, Monday
afternooe suddenly shifted his offen-
sive slightly to the north-west of Hill
304, launching a new drive against
Hill 287, the south-western slope of
which, the Termites Hill (ants hill),
is held by the Teutons.
Thus the Germans, who, according
to the Berlin War Office Monday af-
ternoon, took during the last 48
hours "an entire system ote trenches
on the northern slope of Hill 304,"
added to the onslaughts from the
north-east an operation aimed at
placing- themselves in a position to
attack the high hill from the north-
west as well. The ultimate purpose
of all these operations against Hill
304 is to create a new salient with
Le Mort Homme, dominated by Hill
304 at a range of more than 2,500
yards, as the head. The taking of
Hill 304, military critics here agree,
would make Dead Man Hill unten-
able and force a retreat of the French
to the Charny ridge line, a little
more than five miles to the south.
The German attack on Hill 304
was continued Saturday and Sunday,
the attacking forces making another
gain Sunday to the east of the hill.
The assault which gained this lat-
est success foe Crown Prince's troopa
on this side of the Meuse was made
after an extremely heavy bombard-
ment which had continued unceasing-
ly for two days. The front attacked
extended from Hill 304 to Le Mort
Homme, with the Valley of the, Beth-
incourt Brook in the middle of the
At first all the- German attacki
were repulsed, but after these had
been repeated time after time the at-
tacking forces won a foothold in the
French positions on the eastern
slopes of the hill as they slope
down toward the Bethincourt Brook.
It already has been remarked by
military observers that this brook is
obviously one of the weak points,
tactically, of tbe French defensive
line. This obvious weakness to the
topographical situation, it is presum-
ed, has been balanced in the defence
plans by the use of the batteries on
Le Mort Homme and Hill 304, and.
by whatever mobile • force was re-
garded as necessary for the holding
of the 'valley itself.
BIG CAMP ABANDONED.
Turks Are Fleeing Before Russian
Advance in Asia Minor,
• LONDON, May 9.—The Russians;
continue to advance in the direction
of Bagdad. After dislodging the
Turks from their positions in the
neighborhood of the village of Serie-
alkerind, the Russians bayoneted the
defenders and occupied the posi-
tions. Sunday's Petrograd official
says: "In '-he direction of Bagdad
since our occupation of the organized
points of the Serinalkerind position
the Turks, having sustained heavy
tosses, retired hastily, abandoning a
great camp of tents and other ma-
terial. It has now been established
that by the occupation of Trebizond
we captured eight mounted coast
guns, fourteen six-inch guns, one
field gun, a thousand rifles, fifty-
three caissons, and other important
booty.
"In the direction of Erzingan we
repulsed a Turkish offensive sup-
ported by artillery."
RUSSIAN TRANSPORT SUNK?
Berlin Claims to Have Destroyed
One in Mediterranean.
BERLIN, May 9.—The sinking of
an allied transport in the Mediter-
ranean late in April, With the loss of
nearly all the 600 Russian troops
who were on board, is reported in ad-
vices from Corfu, says the Overseas
News Agency Sunday. The trans-
port was sunk by striking a mine
about the same time the. British bat-
tleship Russell met a similar fate,
the advices state.
The news agency statement re-
garding the reported sinking is as
follow -s:
"According to reliable reports
from Corfu, in addition to the bat-
tleship Russell, a transport steamer
'with 600 Russians on board struck a
mine and sank. Only a few were
rescued. The bodies recovered were
buried by the British at Malta."
This story needs confirmation. -from
other sources before it can be given
credence.
Brazilian Steamer' etd.
RIO JAItatIlle), Br, y 9.—
Tbe Minister o.. Fore. • eirs• has
received a tiegram
lan Mini,. • 11. Los, • .rte
that the v. • •• 1 ti r . •••
ship 1111,
vresumat
confirm •
set was •v
marl
et -
May 4 e
received I
'io Bra' t
tom by a j.
Kaiser to Pr.t
ROME..., la 9. --it is
the tZaiser as Wanted
of Pope Dm ,alit. for th,
French prieee wbo bav
prisoner whileeiglating as
France.
11t14,1910..
INCORPORATED'1855t OOOOOOO
•
MOLSONS 13
•
CAPI-tAt..,' ANL) RESERVE $8,800,00(1
96 Branches in Canada
I -General Banking Bus iness Transacted
etrdIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT
,!
BANK MONEv ORDERS'
IT/ISAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT
essater....a-oretee.
Interest alowedtat highest curee( rate'
W. D. CLARKE, Manager, Exeter Brettsch
mair.„
.1111elease
THE CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL.D. D.C.L., President
JOHN AIRD, General Manager. 11. V. F. JONES. Ass't General it,Liturgeoi,
•CANAL, $15;000,09(1: RES.ERVE FUR.
• .13ANI.,,ING B1 MAIL
Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian Banitl.
of Commerce to be operated by mail, and will receive the same:
careful attention as is given to all other departments of the Bank's.
business. Money may be deposited or withdrawn in this way ar-
satisfactorily as by a personal visit to the Bank. sua
Exeter Branch— A. E. Kuhn,...Manager.
VREDITON BRANCH — A. E. KUHN, Manager.
Auction Sale
OP HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS
• Mr. C. W. Robinson, Auct., has re-
ceived instructions from the undere
signed to sell by public, auction on
Andrew Street, Exeter, on Saturday,
May 20th at one o'clock sharp the
following valuable property.:
1 tennis outfit, -complete; 3 veran-
dah shades; 1 verandah seat and
clairs; dining table; 6 chairs., side-
board. eurtains, 1 coal beater, week-
ing chairs, linoleum, ,.pictures; new
washing machine and 'wringer; 6 kit-
chen chairs, sofa, music cabinet, car-
pet, large wardrobe, watnot, small
tables; drop lever weigh scales, 2000
-lbs.; buggy, light wagon, 1 cart, fan-
ning mill; 'straw cUtter, set harrows,"
pulper, gasoline engine, circular saw
cement lawn roller, horse' rake, 'rube
ber belting; boat with oars, shovels
and garden tools,.500 •cedar posts and
fence ;stakes; 'a quantity' of ,:lumber, •
and other articles too numerous to
mention. •,1 • ,
TERMS,,,CASH '
3. /sL.IICYWA'RD, Proprietor.
U. W. ROBINSON. .Auctioneer.
Satisfied the Claim.
"Put any money in airships?"
"Yes, a few hundred."
"What results?" •
mit flew."
For Others.
From him on everything In sight
Advice was always brewing.
He could do things better than any
one else
Except the things he was doing.
Just Like a Woman.
"Oh, come, now; forgive and forget."
"I am perfectly willing to forgive,
but 1 just won't forget, so there!"
Good Reason.
She was stuck up: she sailed on by,
Cool as a marble rock,
For, why, she had an uglier hat
Than any in the btock.
WHY the same training?
not give your lad
• "When I wage growing lad, and came
• upon many words in my reading thut
1 did not understand, my mother, in.
stead of giving me the definition when
I Mantled to her, uniformly sent me to'
the dictionary to learn it, and in this
Way I gradually, learned tapir things
besides the meaning of the individual
word in atiestioa-antonx*Iter
how to nee a dictionari, and thc; great
pleasure and advantage there might
be in the use of the,dictionary.
Afterwards, wheal went to the village
school. ntr chief diversion, after les-
sons were learned and before the,/
were recited, was in timing over tho
pages of the 'Unabridged' of those ....,,
days. Now the most modern 'Una.. ,
brifted-theNE,w give. ate a pleasure of the same sort.
So far as my knowledge extends, it is
at present the best of the one -volume
dictionaries, and quite aufilcient for .
all .1;rdinaity uses. Even those who 7
possess the splendid dictionaries in • several volumes will yet find it a great
convenience to have this. which .is so
compact, so full, and so trustworthy
as to leave. in most cases, little to be
Professor of the English Language and •
Literature, Yale Univ._ April 28,1911. ,
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