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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-5-25, Page 4THE.. E ETER„ :TAMES THURSDAY, MAY, 25tie', I ll"c,. x• YOUNC V 0 AY AVOUI PAIN Need Only Trust to Lydia Pinkham's. 'Vegetable Coln' j( Sound, ysMrs.Ku tzweg's Buf£f►io, N.Y.-"My daughter, whose picture is herewith, was much troubled with pains in her back and sides every month and they would sometimes ba so bad that it would seem Like acute in- fitunmation ufc some organ, 'She read your advertisement in the newspapers and tried Lydia E. Pinkham's V e g e- ey 5 ' table Compound. E'i2 grasses it highly 3s she has been relieved of all tht:se pains by its use. Allmothers should snow of this remedy, and 111 young ,grits who suffer should try it. " - Mrs. 111A rir,IaA KUR'rzwEG, 529 High St., Pufrato, N. Y. Young women who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging -down sensations, 'tainting epetls er indigestion, should take. Lydia g. Pinkham's Vegetable 'Compound. Thousands have been re- ;stort'd to health by this root and herb /remedy. If you know of any young wo- =an who is si<;k eyed needs help- nst1 advice, ask her to write to the Lydia :it .Piukhana Iitedieine Co., lie amu, Mass. On/1r women will ateeeive her letter mad it willbe taeltl iu strieteat conii'1 ncea 3x.111 0.3 rlig8: Arita i' Vit T el ftp L1 ilAial good going and r.- :. -tri lI2 2-1th. —. I IA:'. ONE. Tiilitl) - Good r;oinu ,:',ird and lith, retur. . limit It :y 25th. iR tssu tickets will be issued bat - x ;t nal ststions in Cana4•1 east of 3-k Arrhur and to Dar:. and I't. Mt *au Jiieh Buffalo, Buick Rock ,,"n Niagara Falls, N.Z. is keY and • fail particulars oa ::_asiarti to t.hta ricket agents. N. .1, 3SL11Rh, Ig. nt. • tic `rq, $ i . {w :You can sacLa-e. a 4, • • • C'S"r.trtl 4,1, 04 .i} 'W . an •'. :. a r .._... ' ...tL %S. T2,:. 4 demand upon us 1 rrtrai ted help 2 9 is many 'times the number grad, e 4. hating. Students are entering 4 4eaei> week. You may enter at sn9 p, there,,:. Write sat once for aur ''re• *catalogue of Commercial, t•:.tort- e 4 !nand ox Telegraphy depart toer t • 4, •9 K r • D. 4,, McLachlan, Prix, ' -r a 41 4, e Ifir*004004"0''!***0 »$'d,*s **,,,•,+"W+SN .. 9 4 et 1 Made in Canada Fertilizer VS S and $22 per ton Nov,/ is Uke tirire t buy wire fel fe b.::: lore it adv ;ices til ➢rice. Let me qn it.e)O)otga.' your rnee .' following Ali knit she' dlisai f1' Shing;P' •ttl 1, C ::1rk.'1` Fence P 'il; r, .r:. ft long teal r ' 4t- r '1 i,.ili 7'I , and lit,/ y •• , A 1lIJ•. it r. rl `1 w I 31 ' 1 d I For Lifts. " 3" .e Kind Yan r4I! tt,BIuiI l 14041,r,1 tale /p; , J,l.:s.:.,r. -rte of attti:e oa''sl ' NO . ROLL is'OR x6\st 13 ttpliarq fila i. W, J. Hinman. Lieut. L dsa r ierr a na e Sidney Smith, Bay P.O, Fend Tucker. Exeter John Iced.!! Dornish, Elim.vlllo, Ileetor Heywood, .Exeter. s Erred Ilopkins, Whalen • Sylvanus Caren, Exeter Wilbur ,prat?, , ; Milton Pfaff Darold Bissett 'i Fred Wells Lloyd 'River, Austin A. Rioe i Erne.t ;Coilingwood: e t i Albert S. Bolton • + r , Wilfrid .G. Stewart , E. /if. Willa:tins, Farquhar Grant Hooper' r. ,n Thos. Harold ' i old llhinson, Lumley Cyril Tuekey Ralph \V, 13ntten, Winchelsea ti Geo, Edward Kellett, Elimville David G.Appleton 'Garnet ,Rau, Crediton Jatues R. Marshall ' ' ' Bruce .1I, Matthews, Thames Rd. John D. Lang,London ondon R+3. W. V. Miliso, Exeter Lloyd England, /Creditors Gordon C. Culbert, Centralia Earl Henry Heddeu, iCrediten William lipid • Bert .!River;: 1 i r , ,r- Sidney West I r , . ti i Ernest IIarrey Ira Taylor , John 'Willis Elmore 'Willis John W. Mallett 'Walter }Harness Alfred Gambriel 'William Nunn Lorne Cudmore l t t r t • 'Roht, Hy. Passmore r B. Earle Southcott Charles 'Cameron Garnet Ford Williams Sims Arva E. Brokenshire William Jeffrey Nelson Stacey Norman Johns 'Wilson Culbert James G. *Walker Louis Day, Jr. Thomas A,ppieton Erie Harden 'W. A. Smith, Centralia Jackson Woods, Elimville Earl Johns, Elimville Edmond Oke r ' V. Ernest Neil Chas. Dobbs t • {.'i R. H. Cornish ' • William G. Birney. L. V. Hogarth Wm. Ja Veal Walter C. Cutbush • Elmer Meats, John C. Strang. tsborne Jahn 0, Ilunter, tsborne Rufus W. Ke.tae, L;sborne Geo. Bailey, Elimville i t i r . I r k YOUNG .MEN OF HURON. C nada and Austra,ia with a )pop- ula:ion of twelve millions, occupies one-eighth et the globe, and there= munin- se ,.•en -eighths is nolo occu- pia.i by sixteen hundred millions of reop.e. Over -crowded central Euro - p= with its decreasing little farms of from five to ten .acres, has ler years cas envious eyes upon the ever ex- panding farms ot Canada; larger than all i_ en tral Europe and with only eight nriliron; of people. If Germany wins these e Ear acres of ours become the oro. .y ef the Htut, the Austrian, the Bulgar and the'Turk by right of conquest Is this valuable inheritance, carved out of the forest 'by your forefath- ers worth defending? Who is on the firing line fighting f or your property? Are you so unmindful of your her- itage and so crassly selfish that you permit ether boys to spill their blood un d.;fence of you and yours? Will von stay at home and make money ? If so there is a taint upon every dolar bill you make, and, in the seats to come. you will hang your head in shame and be despised by oar fellow citizens and be bated by yourself ".vat r ';1° - a:-.3 your relatives Lies' you •should go; married risen, leaving large families of little ones to the mercy of the state, -are corn- ing forward and snore freely than single young men who have no ties. In all ages, and in all lands, single young men from eighteen to .thirty, then up *o forty-five, are first drafted. Are you 'willing to be drafted? After the %car is ever your own conscience will be your accuser every day and ev- ery aright. How will you conitpatre •vith the returned heroes? The • ex - :use that "mother would not let me 4.o or that you "had to produce", az any of the stock excuses will sound cheap and foolish. Only fifteen more men out ofeach `o.vn and township will complete our I3a.tta ion and s:..ve our County the -.iis"-race which will follow if our nine .hundred brave boys suffer the gno:niny at being broken up and :ar-ce?led out to other battalions. Will his matter interfere with the busi- ness of production? Tbis is a time of sacrifice, what .re yeti sacrificing? In later years w,tLI you go about mutt ring, -- `O: all sad words of tongue or pen' The saddest_ are these, "Mat might have been'.' Sounded Good. 'Tor' a:'e all run dawn," it, ,t v . al do. "Tr, rat it,.e's remedies." 5V alt: •i•;iI n to the bail II ,mr 7' .d0 g6 Dal What Flo Could. "rex,: he )o ; iniwli at poker?" "Nei e greet dent You know, he 1 'n has n srrl:,ll,.ineorre." Cj ti*:ssified, N r r, ..t; nee,es in the air h xy t. ,r h: archReetttrai No 11,1177 tat, 001' would you swears 'J'..at it w s inteileetua.l. Just a Guess. "Httr, nee 15 h rfortune," e 'Whet let her I,ueireeee -rat exterts9i- >nator?" __."? !Pit. NEWS ,t t OF IMportant Events Which HaW. Occww1-red During the We?'c, The Innsy World's Happenings Crre- fully Compiled end Put Into Reedy 'and Attractive Shape for the (leaders ot Our Paper --- A Solid Hour's E 1joytnent. WEDNESDAY. Miss Leyd Hall, a well-known evangelist, is dead at Guelph, at the age of fifty-two. Another . madden dead occurred reed at the General Methodist Conference at Saratoga, N. Y. A Swiss engineer denied the story of coercion to get "torpedo witness- es" in the Sussex case.. Major Ewan A. McDougall, com- mauder of the 9th (Toronto) Bat- tery,is reported orted is Inm at the front. Major George \ransittart of the 13th Battery is reported killed at the front. He came originally ?torn Barrie. The Chateau Frontenac at Quebec was damaged to the extent of $25,- 000 by fire in the kitchen section, in the servants' quarters. General Alderson, in a letter to the Militia Department, criticizes the Rose rifle as inferior to the Loe- Enffeld for active service: Legal action against the proposal to take a vote ,in Berlin on Friday au the quehtion• of ,•hanging the city's name has been withdrawn. Many imports have been prohibit- ed by France and Italy, especially bulky ones which requirr'e too great a ship tonnage for transport. Daniel Bissett, formerly of Strat- ford, has been decorated in France with the Croix de Guerre for heroic action on the field of battle., Lieut. Milner Mathieson of St. Mary's, with the Canadian Engineers in France, has been awarded the Military Cross for conspicuous brav- ery. The 86th '(Machine Gun) Battal- ion, Hamilton, was presented with colors by the Marchioness of Aber deep, on behalf of the donor, Mrs. W. E. Sanford. The Exchange Telegraph Com- pany's Paris correspondent, who yes- terday reported that Brigadier -Gen- eral Marchand of Fashoda fame, had been killed in action, reports that his information was incorrect. THURSDAY. Eight opponents of conscription were fined in e . London court. The Dutch steamer Batavier V. was sunk and ,an American was d rowned. Motor car license reciprocity with three more States is being arranged by Ontario. A new pensions scheme for British soldiers was announced in the House c t Commons. Fire caused $50,000 damage to the factory of Wm: Croft ,&,_.-Sons, Wellington street, Toronto. • A "preparedness ce.mpaign to keep Ontario "dry" will shortly ' he Launched by the Ontario Alliance. Charles Mabee, - ex -Mayor of Till- sonbnrg, died! as the result of in- juries sustained in an accident on the race e trac b. The bye -election at Tewkesbury (Eng.) was carried by the coalition Government candidate, who had an enormous majority. Mr. M. C. Reynolds of Goderich, totally blind and in her eightieth year, has knitted more than 125 pairs of socks for soldiers at the front, Geo. C. Holland, for forty-two years official shorthand reporter of the Canadian Senate, who took his "take" as usual this session, has re- signed. Sir Douglas Haig, Commander-in- chief of the British forces at the front, has been asked by Sir Robert Borden to thoroughly test the Ross and Lee -Enfield rifles. Hon. 'Martin Burrell, Minister of Agriculture, who was severely burn- ed i h Parliament m e a lament building fireof February 3rd, and who has since been convalescent, returned to his Parliamentary duties yesterday. The funeral of Capt. E. J. Kylie, Adjutant of the 147th Battalion, held at Lindsay, was most impres- sive, being attended by a large num- ber of university men and represen- tatives of other interests with which he was associated. E. W. Nesbitt's motion in the Commons to strike out the vote of x4,004,006 for the Quebec & Sague- nay Railway was defeated by a vote of 29 to 12, and Senator Bostock's motion in the Senate for the six - months' hoist was defeated by 22 to 8. FRIDAY. Lloyds announces that the French steamer Mira has been sunk. The announcement gives no details as to her "sinking. Nicholas Romancuck, a Bulgarian grocer of Port Weller, was convict- ed yesterday of keeping a blind pig, and fined $300. Early yesterday morning fire did damage in the greenhouse of Miss K. L. Wilks at Cruickston Park to the eytent of $1,500, Hugh Proctor, aged forty, was drowned while driving from The Bluff," an island on which he lived, to the; mails land, near Brighton. Lieutenants Selwyn and Bateman, military aviators, were killed instant- ly yesterday at Gosport, in Hamp- .hire near Portsmouth. Their aero- planeplane dived and fell. Dr. W. J. Teasdall, a leading Lon- don physician and for the last twenty-one years a member of the London Board of Education, died last night after two weeks' illness. Mrs. Annie Jane Cheesman died suddenly in Chatham yesterday morning of heart failure. She told friends Wednesday night and again yesterday morning that she would dye yesterday. Tbe members of Parliament were "relieved of their arduous labors," "thanked' for their care and devo- tion," anal sent home, by Sir Charles 1 lt'itzpatrick, the ' Deputy Governor Gener • .rlyesterday. Percyr r Herr, elerical engineer and son of a leading merchant at Mer rickville, was killed at the local 3 power house yesterday by betna caught in the belting while inspect- ing the 'machinery. The Cologne Gazette states that negotiations for an alliance between Germany. and Turkey, on a basis of equal rights and mutual assistance ill peaceful work of development are practically concluded. SA'I.'URDAW'. Berlin electors carried the by-law tochange the name of their city by a vote of 1,569 to 1,488. A. B. Mccallum, Ph.D., of Toronto, has been elected President of the Royal Society of Canada. British aeroplnes and seaplanes made a successful attack on an im- portant Turk port east of Suez. Premier Asquith returned from Ireland yesterday after Sve clays of conference on the political situation there. Mr. George Anderson, of Toronto, prominent in business and formerly Trade Commissioner to Japan, died at the age of 71, Premier Borden leaves to -day for a week's holiday in the Gatineau Hills, accompanied by E. N. Rhodes, Deputy Speaker of the Commons. Alex. Farrell was fined $196 at Brantford for cashing a- cheque after having given another man power of attorney over all cheques received. Lake steamships. transporting troops to Niagara camp were convoy- ed by unarmed vessels, the crews of which•}vere on the lookout for Ger- man -American mines. David Lloyd. George, Minister of Munitions, last night announced that 131 munitions factories have been added to the establishments under Government control. The total is now 3;577. T. A. Hutcbeson, K.C., of Brock- eille, has been appointed by the Gov- ernment as counsel to assist Sir Charles Davidson, Commissioner on War Purchases, in succession to Cap- tain John Thompson, resigned. The Military Cross has been granted to Lieut, W. B. McArthur of the Royal Scots, and an official of the Canadian Pacific, who enlisted .as a ranker with the London Scottish, gaining a commission at the front. MONDAY. Dr. Helfferich was appointed new Vice -Chancellor of Germany, to suc- ceed Dr.',Delbrueck. Sohn Boland, 55 years old, was found dead in bed at 324 Richmond street west, Toronto. Lieut. -Colonel W. R. Marshall of the 15th Battalion, formerly of Hamilton, was killed in action. War. Office' advices indicate that a large number of horses will be re- quired from Canada this summer for military• purposes. An inquiry is to be held at Mont- real into. allegations regarding build- ing materials, some officials and one alderman being implicated. A new` `repord was made for the King's Plate' 'when Mr. J. E. Sea - grain's .tiMiandarin, Gala Water, and Gala Day took the first three places. Albert;J::Batt of Buffalo, his wife and her nlother, Mrs. Sarah Lieber, were drowned in the Niagara River at Bridgeburg when their automobile backed off a ferry. Medal been Medals „have y a e ee awarded two Boy Scouts of Verona (Italy) by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission for acts of heroism during an Austrian air raid on that city in November. Miss Annie Forgie has accepted the position of Lady Superintendent of Guelph • General Hospital, Miss Reekie, the retiring Superintendent, going to it similar position at Re- gina. Information has been received from the prisoners' camp at Aachen in Germany that 3. J. Smith (423,- 329) and George Walker (76,041), 29th Battelle., recently reported missing, are prisoners there. TUESDAY. A new postomce was opened at Burford. The total British casualties last week were 9,097. Three German aeroplanes were winged by French aviators. A cargo of French war trophies reached New York for the Entente Bazaar. One member of the Crocker Land expedition has reached Copenhagen from Greenland. The Metagama brought a large sanm.ber of inyalided soldiers and ,others to Quebec. • City Engineer MacuIlum of Ham- ilton has resigned, to accept the post of Commissioner of Works at Ottawa. London's tax rate is fixed at 32.65 mills., exclusive of local improvement lases—the highest in the city's his- tory. Clarence :Bedford, 1 Boothroyd avenue, Toronto, fell from the sixth storey of a.ahoe factory and was not killed. - The War Drfice has cabled to the Minister of 14I'tlitia asking for fifty mining engineers Trona Canada to en- list for special services. ' Thomas Duckworth of Grand Val- ley, who was recently sentenced to death, was yesterdaygiven another respite, when' a. new' trial -.was or- dered. A company of bank clerks has been authorized '- i eci to be raised by,Lieut. Col. Scobell in the 3rd Military District for the 235th - (Northumberland) 'Battalion. ' Jonathan Sissons, prominent in public life in Simcoe County for than . Y years, , and widely known as a lecturer on agricultural subjects, died at Barrie. Orillia ratepayers overwhelmingly defeated by-laws for the handing over of the town's electric power franchise and equity lie: a dam on the Severn to the Provincial Hydro Com- miSsion., i Fourteen hut—Weed parcels of rub- ber which were taken from the first - clots snails on the Dutch steamer G&,ria while she was on her way from South America to Holland were condemned in the British Prize court yesterday. POOGRWSS CONTINUES us.s:en Arrnieat Keeping Lrp Their March on Diosui. LONDON, May23,—The Russians are continuing their march toward Mosul (ancient Nine'veb), according to Sunday night's, Petrograd official report. A Constantinople correspondent says that Field Marshal Lillian von Sanders is assembling a strong force. Of Turkish troops at Sivas, in Asia- tic Turkoy, to oppose the advance 01 the Russians, The Turks are equip- ped abundantly with artillery. The correspondent ,also says that Turkey has called out recruits of the ages of 17 and 18. Tbe Russian occupation of Sakiz and their advance upon the village of Ban is of extreme importance, andd establishes a direct line of communi- cation between the two Russian. groups which are operating against the Turkish Mesopotamian army. "Four thousand German troops are expected at Bagdad in June," says The Times' Bucharest correspon- dent. "Twelve thousand Austrians already are there. The Turks are weakening the defence of Constantin- ople, sending all possible reinforce- ments to Asia Minor and concentrat- ing a large force at Marash, three days' march north-east of Alexan- dretta (on the Mediterranean in Northern Syria), where they fear an attempted landing by Entente allies." Although little has been known re- garding the military operations in this immediate district, which lies between Lake (Irumiah and Khani- kan, on the Persian border north-east of Bagdad, Kurdish bands, supported by Turkish regulars, have been for a long time attempting to make in- roads into Persia, and, by cutting off from each other the Russian armies advancing ,toward the Mesopotamian border, make their progress impos- sible. It is apparent that in these efforts they had been so successful as to capture the Persian towns of Sakiz and Ban, but, as officially an- nounced, the Russians recently oust-. ed them from the positions, and the danger created by this wedge into the Russian line has been removed. Ban is near the Turkish border, and along a 200 -mile front the Rus- sian armies are now drawn up close to the Mesopotamian frontier. Milit- ary experts believe that further pro- gress for the Russians should be con- siderably facilitated by this straight- ening out of the Russian line and the establishment of direct communica- tion, which not only makes further Kurdish inroads impossible, but lightens the difficult task of provis- ioning, which delayed the Russian progress in Asia Minor. • COSSACKS JOIN BRITISH. Body of Russian Cavalry Reinforce Lake in Mesopotamia. LONDON, . May 23. --The first news of'the operations on the Tigris since the fall of Kut -el -Amara, sent Sunday by Lieut. -General Sir Percy Lake, commasider of the British forces in Mesopotamia, although it shows that the Turks are still hold- ing the Sannayyat position on the left bank of the Tigris, where the British check made it impossible to carry out the relief of General Townshend, brings the welcome but astonishing intelligence tel rgence that a body of Russian cavalry, after an adventurous ride, has succeeded in joining General Gorringe's forces on the south bank of the Tigris. - How this important junction was effected is still unknown, and the story will be awaited with intense in- terest. The supposition is that this detachment came from the Russian army which is threatening Khanikan, but it still remains a puzzle where and how the Russians succeeded in crossing the river. Their sudden appearance with General Gorringe has also raised the question whether the Russians have already cut the Bagdad railway at Mosul. In any case the unexpect- ed appearance of this body of cavalry is as great a surprise'as was the first landings of Russian the Ru s'an troops at Marseilles, and is another instance of the swift and stealthy movement of the Russian forces in Asia Minor. An official communication issued Sunday night concerning the situa- tion along the Tigris follows: "General Lake reports that on the 19th the enemy vacated the Bethaies sa advanced position on the right bank of the ''Tigris. General Gorringe, following up the enemy, attacked and carried the Dujailam redoubt. The enemy is still holding the Sannayyat position on the left bank of the river. "A force of Russian cavalry has joined General Gorringe after a bold' and adventurous ride." PEACE IS IMPOSSIBLE. President Wilson is Told of Deter- ' ` urination of Allies. WASHINGTON, May 23.—"The die is cast. Germany must fight on to the bitter etd and cannot' escape retribution by useless appeals to neu- trals for peace." This is the answer of the Entente Allies to the steadily increasing peace talk which has reached official circles here from Berlin. The Allies' ° posi- tion, it is explained, bas been made. perfectly clear.to President Wilson. Both the President and Secretary of State Lansing have been inform- ed confidentially from sources close' to the Entente capitals that peace now proposals n w wee e outY o theu q es - tion. The 'time is not ripe, it is ex - Waffled, and the time will not be ripe until Germany's military dominance bas been completely broken," The Entente Allies have trans- lated Germany's peace pleas into the meaning that the imperial Govern- ment now sees the handwriting on the wall, and is taking measures far. in advahce i an effort to end the war. This Government also has re- ceived official reports from its own agents tending to show that Germany is beginning to feel the effects of the "drag" much more deeply than ti generally knujvn.. y.e---.ao..'.s' INCORPORATEIY 1855 rr fll[ ., o .l 1 _ IMOLSONS, SE $8,800,000 CAPICAPITAL'AND. RESERVE 96 Branches in Canada A General 8ankinr Business Transacted JIRCULAR,L,ETTERS OF CRBDI1 , BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT interest aulwediat highest cur/ enl rate' W. Q. CLARKS, Manager. Exeter Drench I o i 'i o.eeoe....aao.S.... aso......sa..••.I.rate....s............,,.......,.l.iy.. . THE CAl\iAT1IAN BANK OF COMMERCE SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O„ LL.D. D.C.L., President JOHN AIRD, General Manager. H. V. F. JONES, Ass't General Mamma/ CAPITAL, $15,000,000. IlESEOVE FUND, $13 540 00g SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS Interest at the current rate is allowed on all deposits of $1 andlt upwards. Careful attention is given to every account. Small accousst•s are welcomed. Accounts may be opened and operated by mail. Accounts may be opened in the names of two or more persons, with- drawals to be made`'by, any one of them or by the survivor. Exeter Branch— A. E. Kuhn, Manager. DREDITON BRANCH - A, E. KUHN, Manager. ITr.ee Mark H.ii.t.r.J) _ 1 GEORGIAN MFG. CO„ The Harmless but - cant remedy for Headsdfsr:' Neta raigi a,Anaemia,$ lessrws. Nervous Epee-- haustion, &c, • see AT ALL onuocoSre. or at a lr a- COLLINGWOOD, ONL -_ 1 APPRECIATED. 'The extra session • Makes a bit . , That sounds suspiciously Like "Nit." In trying to Adjust the tax They make a lot Of easy tracks 1, That lead away, If sin n` signs trail', „ To •where the trusts Have made a trail. i., The conscience of The congressmen 1; Works overtime. But, now and then They slip a cog And by and by Slip through a measure On the sly, And e'er the task ,l -w In hand they quit : Some friend don't get -44: The worst of it. Addresses meaning Votes to, catch With actions do not Always match, Constituents .Are far away And interest May not display, Or if they should Attempt to scoff AO explanation p anatiom Calls them oft. They know, indeed, They cannot catch Applause from all 'J'he shooting match, ` I And so they try Themselves to please ?', And hope to capture Bread and cheese And saw a cord Or two of wood Against the day They'll quit for good.' rl 11 r.; kFt Could Wait. s "1 think John was just going to pro- pose to me last night when he lost his voice." "Why didn't you turn up the light to look for it?" , "We didn't want to find it -as bad as all that." Light For There. - "Uncle Bill, what did you live on h r wile in the arctic?" r "Mostly canned goods, bear meat and the like." "But what did you do for a change?" "We had light refreshments." "And what were yourlight refresh idents?" "Candles." 4§4,04 Slow and Pleasant, ff "allow does his wife treat hini since he catne home?" "She is killing biro with kindness." "allow does he stand the treatment?. "Growing fat on it." JAS. BEVERLEY FURNITURE DEALER Embalmer and Funeral Director Phone f4a. Night Call 74b EXETER, ONTAR1 DBI G. F. BOULSTON, L.Da9., 'be' DENTIST ,tr Honor Graduate of Toronto Unevesee_ si 13. Office over Dickson & floe ling's Law office:; Closed Wednece• day afternoons. 'Phone OM ae s Residence 5b. DR. A. B. KINSMAN L.17.8e D.D,i, honor Graduate of Toronto iia tjp eratt y I wEEl:i DENTIST t • ate extracted without psis. pa any bad effeote. Office over Blas} than ds Stanlbury's Office Maks $k 1 rl Exeter, 1 W, BROWNING M. D., •?d„ Vii, e P. 13, Graduate Viotoria DAMP eity Office and residence Dors►iniil♦ Labratory., Exeter, •uiY Assooiate Coroner of Burma D ICEBOX & DARLING Barristers, Solicitors Notaries ®it> veyanoens Oommileaionera,II?a. for the Molsone Bank etas ti 141' Money to Loan at lowest rates ar^,aw tenet, 11 1 l OFFICE -MAIN STREET Exalts I. R. Carling B. Ae 4 Ei Disknsll! MONEY TO LOA& i .1 1 I, We have a large amount of wills ate funds to loan on farm and Dien lags ,properties et lowest rats tc4 tap West, at• GLAD>lff4N & STANBUii c -q Barristers, Solicitors, Main ISA- Exetoci Ido Uaborne and MUM Farmer's Mutual Fill Inv! aim Guinan Head Office, Fal gunar,"a " President -• r BOI3T, NORBRs• Vice -.President •DIR c WM. BRO.CE J. L. RUSSELL AGEN l,H0o,9. ETAIS C'L'OY ') teff WAR'; RP72, 1 iir, T. ALLISON& E TB',. . :',4,1 JOHN ESSER Y Exeter. agent IIx' borne end $iddulph. ; .ii OLIVER BARRIS 1lfttsrro agent !SW Hibbert Fullerton and 1.2pgan. t t..,,t, ,..I. s W, A. TUENBI'llLlti 'r Secy.Treas. Farquhar' GLADMAN &, 8T4N13 R U X a;,id SolitsitorS. Exeter. ,041 -.ems CA A STO Rr soft Infants and Children 1 Os* For Over 30 Years Always bassi' Aigni tu d tat