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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-6-8, Page 4RELP FOR WORK1N WOMEN Some Have to Keep on: Until; They Almost Drop. How Mrs. Conley Got. Help,. here is a fetter from > wornexa who had to work, but was too weak and suf- fered ton numb to co atinue. How she regained Irealtn:-- Fra•nkfort, Ky.-'X suffered somuch• With female weakness that r could not do. my own work,. had to hire it done. 1 heard so much, about Lydia E..Pink- ham' e V e Beta b 1 e• Compound that 1 erten c. 1 ' ten ei ee bottles and 1 found' it to be all you, ciaizn. Nowl feel as well as. ever I did and: ant able to do all my own work again. I ireeturenend it to any woman suffering from female weeakness. You may pub - Holt my letter if you a isl`i-r*-MrenameS: CONt,Ev,516 St. Clair St.,Frankfort,Ky.. No woman suffering from any form of Iernule troubles, should lbse hope until she bas givers Lydia E. Pinkhaiao'a Veg- etable Compound a fair trial.. Thies famous remedy,. the medicinal; iingreclients. of 'whine are derived front !native foots and begs, has for forty- , orty• yea proved to lee a most valuable tonic and invigorator the female organism, Allwoolen are invited to write Ito the Lydia :In..Ptakhaen. Medi - nine Co., L�ni n, for special; vice,, --it will be canizetentiale V TRA DAY z'AY 24th eats LE F'Ana.— Good going and ;re- warning re- turnirg May 24th. jA''kl: a ONE THIItD - Good going May :.'°3rd and. 24th. return limit Me y .-5th., `L;etern. ticks wilt to issued be- tween all station- in Canada east of w'r« Astbur and to Detroit and Pt. "Huron, Mich., 13ufta`lo, :Week Rook load Niagara Falls, N,. '.i tckets and full particulars on episiicaiion to the ticket agents, N. On, DORE, Agee , )+ENTR. • 9 '4 Yon can secure a • Position a • 4 1a you take a coarse wine us. The a t demand ui-rom ms leer trained kap ass many times the number grad:,* S uateng. Students are entering a 4each week. You May enter at sna w •4 time. Write at once for oar Fre • :q catalogue of Commercial, Short- e 44handaz Telegraphy depart mer t, i O 4 q n't At McLachlan, Prin - e , t 01144,..4404,10.4444"......<14., 1-4artnersi 1 Made in Canada Fertilizer $18 and $22 per ton Now is the time to buy wire fence be= fore it advances in pII icLe Let me quote you on your needs in the $rousting lines,— Al) kinds of Lumber iber d i c: seen of rough. hingles, Lath, Cedar Fence Posts, S fit long, 9 ft long and 10 ft long. Ccment•, Wall Board and ROA i v Roofing. A.J. CLATWORTHY iR nNTON CASTOR IA 'or infants Ott Children, , ,nd Yn Il elf ISI a Ilan Always Bou Bears tirF.. gfOliC% xttQL1 FOB 161st Battalion Maj. W. J, 1Ieasnaa.. ..1„1 Lieut. ut. E d ar Torrent*rra ae I Sidney Smith, Buy Pane Fred nukes', Exeter John Kendall ICorealien, 7ur>lirnvi11e, Hector Heywood, Exeter, file � w ter c Fred llepkins, Whalen Syllvanus rtsx, 'Exeter 'Wilbur 1?faffwa, l l Milton. Waft • , 1 t- l l Inarold Bissett f, ! Fred ,Welds i net: , : I 1 Lloyd Rivers l r Austin A. Ries; Ernest ;Collingwoe+'l., , re t 1 F, Albert S. Bolton. . , : a ' I Wilfrid G., SteWeett I E. AL Williams, Tenn Etas' Grant Beeper Thos. Harold, Wilkinson, Plumley ?Cnril Tuokey (Ralph W. Batten, W invrhelsea f Geo. Edwaslyd Kellett, TL•liaaville David G. Apra^ton ti rnet • ieau, Credited James R., Marshall ' ' Bruce H. Matthews, Tares an. John D. Lang, London W. W. Matson: Exeter • Lloyd England, itwredaton Gordon C. Culbert, Centralia Earl '!berry lledden, Vet:di:ten ' ?tN ilrars2 XY1143 (.` tffi `I.1�tl�tllill Bert Rivers r t• Sidney West t ' ' .' i Ernest 'Harvey; ' • : ' 4 1' Ira. Taylor .11,\.t.,Le! John Willis n Kr c i -,a '. Elmore. Walks r.' 1 (•(?, John V. 'Dra'91'et it w :. 'Walter Harness 1 '1, : Alfred Garnbriei 1 • : 1 Lae .•x '?tairilliana. Netrn • '9' `� . 1 1,t1 a , 1'' Lorne Cudmore • , 1 a lei' 1Robt,. Hy. Passmore f ; Li,: 1 , IR. Earle Southcott i ; ' Charles Cameron • , (f :e; ' Garnet Ford J. _' ''i ( Williams Sims ; r-,) 1 Area E. Brokenahirs ik ' William Jeffrey. en :? .' Nelson Stacey ' ' ! szf 1 Norman Johns U 'n Wilson Culbert James G. 'Walker, 1 u3; s ' • Louis Day, Jr. • ; 1 e : I f • Thomas Appleton' I ? I n? f Eric Burdon • • ' !C'''; I ,W,, A. Smith, Centralia , i 1 Jackson Woods, Elimville ; • Earl Johns, Elimville Edmond Oke • - l; t_ W. Ernest Nett Fi Chas, Dobbs • ` tn.i( IR, B. iCarnisb ' 1 t William G. Birne;y. L. V. Hogarth • t I 1 t; Wm. Ja VeaI , ' 1 ! r r i - Walter :C. Cutbusla Elmer McFalis, Jobe C. Strang, Usboriae John G, Hunter, Usborne !Rufus W.'Kee. tle, Usborne Geo. Bailey, Elimville Hilliard Horton. Knew His i'face. The busy agent knocked briskly on the door. iF " Wlro do you want?" asked the man who opened .t. "l am looking :for the head of the house." "Very sorry, sir, but yon will have' to call again. The baby is asleep." Too Late For Him. "We have tine most beautiful sun- rises in the world." `' "So I have beard." "Never seen one?' "No; I often thongbt I would sit up long enough to witness one of these grand sights, but I always get sleepy and go to bed before the time." 4. Unclassified. "He is claire a model man." "Well, he has none of the smaller tires."' "Wiaat would you call the smaller vices?" "Oh, I hardly know." "Stealing elephants -wouldn't be one, would it?'" Various Resorts. 'I•• I suppose he will spend (tie sate:seers in Canada and his winters in Florida." "Quite nicely. unless" - '.Unless what?" "Ile spends his winters in the repair shop and his summers in a hospital," Worked Wonders. "Jones is on thea water wagon again." "Reformed once more T' • "Well. he saw his wife's new bat, and nothing would convince him but what he bad 'ern again." An Insinuation. "Hili Wife is : ,sarfrraagette:" ," Wlia i restauraut aloes he eat at?' PERT PARAGRAPHS. The rec50n n, sarcastic saran ft Tiiike a doctor is bermes' he doesn't tike to take his own lm'di' ine. We can't see neves s as others do, for which we are :nee :tr less thatinkful. We ren ifz*' at .. ^r a century that we are i.•"YL - •_ *)tilts .and unable to realize 4:. • . :nation. It nig pale `rf fication- • 4rnw l allfd and •r all tie rami - 'y lie: a am excellent • differently. tee by the re. the Woirk ate. .aF'l THE EXETER • TIMES Thursday, June 8th, 19.It NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week. The Busy World's Happenings Care - Cully Compiled and l'ut into Handy and Attractive Shape for the Borders of Our Paper — A Solid Iiorir's Enjoyment. WEDNESDAY. Tice Synod of Niagara opened Its annual meeting at Hamilton. The 163rd Battalion, from Mont- real, has safely arrived in Bermuda. The London Ad. Club was formed, with More than fifty cbarter mem- bers. Hamilton' City Council has decided to advance the clock one hour on ,lune 4. The British victory over Ali Dinar in the Sudan was greater than at first reported. Colonel Mosby, the most famous guerrilla leader in • the American Civil War, is dead. First drafts of stations in London and Bay of Quinte Methodist Confer- ences are announced. Herbert 'Holmes, a farmer of God- erich township, thirty-five years of age, was killed by a colt's kick. The three and a hai€nontreold;son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Seibert, Water- loo, was drowned in a creek yester- day. t Pte '(F1sv. aJ 1t•i'PalrrtiIlj '1:1 vtat" Battalion, as chosen Moderator of tbe Walkerton Baptist Association at Clinton. Berlin citizens are much dissatis- fied over the selection of six names to vote on for the city, made by the committee of ninety-nine. The Serbian army has been trans- ported from Corfu to Salonica by tbe French navy, it was announced yes- terday by Admiral Lacaze. An open jack-knife was thrown at Colonel Roosevelt yesterday in Kan- sas City while driving through the streets in a Memorial Day parade. Joseph • G. Clifton, liveryman, of Woodstock, was drowned when an automobile he was driving plunged over a parapet ..into Mud Branch Creek. Major-General`Sir Sam Hughes, Minister of Militia, and Honorary Colonel J. Wesley Allison were on the stand at the Meredith -Duff Com- mission inquiry. Prof. John MacNeill, President of the Sinn Fein Volunteers, who last week was found guilty of complicity in the Irish revolt, has been sen- tenced to life imprisonment, and the sentence•has been confirmed. THURSDAY. Lord Robert Cecil arrived in Paris to confer on the blockade of Ger- many_ Hotels near Camp:Borden will re- main n is w1l1 open, but he but of bounds p , to soldiers. 'Johnnie 'McAfee, of 85 Markham 'street, Toronto•, was found dead in bed, as a result of escaping gas. • The Whitmonday Bank Holiday in Britain has been postponed in order not to interrupt the munitions out- put. Wna..Leek of Toronto, aged 65, was trampled to death, probably mobile in a fit, by a .horse in a stable at Virgil. ' Kingston City Council, owing to citizens' protests, rescinded its deci- sion 'to adopt the daylight-saving scheme to -day. ' The convention of the ' Ontario Medical Associatbn opened in Toron- to yesterday with the Iargest attend- ance on record. ' Harold Cruxton, of 94 Logan avenue, Toronto, was drowned at the foot of Booth avenue, while playing with some .other children. Niagara Synod, meeting at Hamil- ton, adopted the report of the Moral and Social Reform Committee en- dorsing Provincial prohibition. A hundred and fifty Austrians re- Ieased from the Fort William intern- ment camp were taken to work in Creighton Mine, near Sudbury. J. Oliver, 114th Battalion, was sentenced at Dunnville to two, four, and seven years for desertion, carry- ing a weapon and shooting with in- tent to ki11, The business profits war tax is to be administered under the supervi- sion of R. W. Breadner, Commission- er of Taxation, and James A. Russell, bis assistant. The Government has appointed the firms of. Warwick, Mitchell, Peat & Co. and Price, Waterhouse & Co., Toronto, as auditors of the C.. N. R. and G. T. P. rystems, respectively. FRIDAY. A big strike of longshoremen has begun on the Pacific coast. Shortage of rennet in Canada may cause cheese factories to close. The first Lutheran Seminary in Ca- nada was .dedicated at Waterloo. It was rumored that the Prince of Wales is to wed an Italian Princess. The annual meeting of the Cana- dian Press Assad. ',nen commenced in Toronto yesterday. The court-martial of the man who ordered Editor Sheehey Skeinngton`s execution began in Dublin. • Capt. the Hon. Rupert Guinness, and other ofncers have arrived to obtain recruits for the British navy. ' Six persons have been killed by automobiles in Toronto during the past month, another fatal accident having occurred yesterday. No captains have been appointed for the 235th Battalion as Lieut. -Cot. Scobell wishes to giro lieutenants a chance to qualify for 'captaincies. Lieut. -Col. .7. J. Craig has been re- lieved of the command of the 153rd (Wellington) Battalion, and Major A. Kelly Evans put in his place, at least temporarily: More than 33,00'0' teen have en- fant:I•is the .3rd Military District, and some•iiix' or seven thousand more are needed to nenipolete its quota of Canada's half million. • Tire Government •isnsiderin' c'a g titea.sents to" tadilitate: theeeninittneant m the allied•armtes qT foreigners now •,n Britain. It is estimated about 800,000 friendly, aliens desire to en - Premier Bowser of British ColuW- oia is made defendant in an action by Fl. C. Brewster, Ieader of the Liberal Opposition, demanding the restitu- tion of $18,000,000 of Pacific Great Eastern money. SATURDAY. • Frank Lamontagne, watchman at the Quebec Bridge Works, is dead as result of a: heavy piece of steel fall- ing on his bead. Phenomenal cold for this time of cite year prevails throughout Russia. The street cars at Kazun have been stopped by snow. The home of Frank Rivers, at Milliken's :Corners, was struck by lightning last night, and one end of the house was torn out. Two murderers, Roy Champlin and John Supe, were put to death yester- day morning in the electric chair at the State prison at Sing Sing, N.Y- Two women, Mrs. H. Larose, aged 45, and her, daughter-in-law, aged 21, died in Lorette, near Quebec,, hor- ribly burned by the explosion of a small petrol ironing stove. Charles Sooysmith, widely known as a civil engineer, died in New York yesterday at the age: of 60 years. He introduced the so-called freezing process for excavation. A sudden flash of lightning ,during one of the big electrical storms which swept Ontario yesterday killed Pri- vate William Creser of the,169th Bat- talion, 439 .Clinton street, Toronto, at Niagara Falls. The following Canadian birthday honors were announced yesterday: Privy CounciIlor•s Sir Max Aitken and Sir Gilbert Parker; K.C.M.G.'s, Lt.- Gov. t:Gov. P,'E. LeBlanc of Quebec, Sen. J. A. Lougheed; Knights Bachelor, Wallace Graham (Chief Justice of Nova Scotia), P. A. Landry (Chief Justice New Brunswick), and R. T. Stupart (Director of Meteorological -Bureau, Toronto). MONDAY. Flight Sub: Lieut..J. Russel Cham- berlin, of Toronto, was killed in Eng- land. John Nelson McLean, an infant, was smothered in Toronto by his mo_ ther rolling ove: on him. Andrew McDonald, a pioneer ,blacksmith of Petrolea, Ont., died yesterday in his eightieth year. Andrew McKee, a farmer of North Oxford,,, 77, years old, died of heart failure while at work in the field. The heaviest traffic for one month yet reported. passed through the' canals at •Sault Ste. Marie during May. A lad, Percy Wilson, son ,of Alonzo Wilson, near Brighton, while driving cows to pasture, was killed by a troop train. The 'daylight-saving scheme event into effect at Hamilton last night, the clock being moved forward an hour' at 9 o'dxook. • Captalii' John Sim pson, a vete ran Canadaaxnavi atr and .snip,buildeie died at his home' in Owen Sound lis his 91st year'. Color's were presented to the 160th ' Battalion at Chesley, ,and its funds' were aunmented -by $1,500 gate re- ceipts at the park. James ,Cohere of Chatham, believ- ed to be a_discharged soldier of the 70th Battalion, was drowned, it is thought through suicide at Windsor. Princess Patricia Chapter, I. 0. D. E., London, Ont., raised $1,265 by a tag darfor a fund to provide educa- tional facilities for blind soldiers re- turning. James Codere of Chatham, believ- ed from papers found in his clothing to be a discharged soldiers from the 70th Battalion, is thought to have committed suicide by jumping from the Canadian 'Pacific dock : into the Detroit 'River at Winwsor yesterday. • TUESDAY. George Rumpel, a prominent man- ufacturer of Berlin, died suddenly at his home. - Chief Detective Peter K. McCas- kill of the Quebec Provincial .force, died at Montreal. The Germans yesterday admitted the suppression of news regarding the North Sea battle. A Hungarian organization has adopted , a platform of complete in- dependence for Poland. The members of• the Landsturm class of 1917, . who. are Out of Ger- many, are ordered home. • Lieut. Beadle was taken into cus- tody charged with assaulting Captain Bell• -Smith, Chaplain, and also' with drawing his revolver on the military police. Every minister and probationer in the Bay of Quinte Methodist Confer- ence received the minimum salary for the past year for the first time in the history of the conference. Sir Cecil Spring -Rice, the 'British' Ambassador to the, United States, has been notified to the bestowal upon him of the Order of the •Grand Cross of St. Michael and St. George. . President A. J. Johnston. of the Council of the Ontario . College of Pharmacy in his annual address said that the Ontario temperance act was satisfactory to the druggists of the. Province. Ottawa 'City "Council last night de-• 'sided to' 'put, the dayligiitssaving plan into effect in the capital ,by advanc- ing the 'clocks of the .city one hour from Tithe 15th to October lot next. Pte. Jos.' Meinzinger of the 118th Battalion was sentenced : to eighteen months at the Prison Farm for an aggravated assault on . P. C. BIevIns when the latter was serving him' with a sulntons. Seyd:fltz. Didn't Get Away. COPENHAGEN, June 6, via Lon- don. --The Stifts=Tideue of Aalborg, which yesterday published a report that, the 251,0:00 -ton German battle cruiser Seydiite was sighted on Thursday off Fano Island; pursued by British warships' and badly;dtunaged, says it now: believed tnerlSeydlitz was sunk. ,A despatch to this hews- paper from Ribe,, nutlet:d •. reports. that persons; Iiyfirg.fn• Sehleawig have recefvedl.word that, telatives on heard the. Seyd1it2t were Itilledn- • Auction Sale of Houselwld Meets ' t Mr. 13, S. Philips has been instruct-• ed from the undersigned to sell by public auction on Dain Street (be-; hind Martin's store) r s s o e) Lseter, on Sat- urday June 24th at one o'clock sharp the following valuable property, all In excellent condition, being the nn - tire belongings this will be the gale or thea season,. • 1 piano, if not ,previously sold, 2 settees, 2Ismail chairs belonging to settees, 1 arm :their,. 1 walnut chair small tables, 1 umbrella stand, si carpet sweeper, 1 parlor rug, 1 !din- ing room extension table, 1 china ceberrctt, 5 dining room ,chains, 1 arm )chair, 1 largo , bureau, 1 base burner, 3 bedsteads, 3 spring mat- tresses, 1 bed mattress, 1 stretcher, 1 bureau, 2 wash stands, 1 toilet set, 1 sideboard, 2 commodes, 4 car- pets,) 1 linoleum, 1 oiloloth, a num- ber of, mats, a numper of pictures, 1 eloek, 1 screen. door, 1 washing mach- ine. 1 tub, 2 kitchen )tables, 4 kit., oxen chairs, 2 'rocking chairs, 1 cook stove coal and wood, basket and camp case. lamps, crockery, garden raker shovels, step .ladder„ basket grip, stair •carpet, sealers and a lot of other useful articles, 1 stair carpet, Terms oB sale, 'cash. 1 Mr. 'R. Phillips, B. S. Phillips, Prop. , .Auctioneer, Exeter. Auction Sale OF HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS There will be sold by public auc- tion • an Main Street, Exeter, opposite Commercial House Stables, on SATURDAY, JUNE 17th, 1916, The- 1oilow:ilug household effects :- Piano New Williams,quarter-cut oak sideboard, .bevel glass ; chitfoneer, cabinet. cupboard, Reymond sewing machine. 3 bcdseads, 3 set springs, 3 mattresses, quantity • linoleum, bed- room carpet, Devoutport bed, 2 couch- es book case, bookstand, 2 dressers 3 washstands, chest drawers, 3 bed- room sets, extension table, Z kitchen tables, 10 small tables, 3 rocking chairs, office chair, 4 dining room t;ha.irs 6' kitchen chairs, Radient Home beater cok stove, Good Cheer, coal; or wood; 3 feather pillows, number sealers. lawn mower, refrigerator, washing machine and tub ; charcoal iron, number pictures, rifle, breach - loader gun, •,2 muzzle loader guns sword, bag -a -tell board, stair carpet, pair Porter curtains, 6 pair lace cur- tains, 6 window : blinds, paper rack pair snow shoes, pair skees, 2 hall racks, Jblass jamdineler, easel, dumb Waiter, step •ladder, number. hooks, stove furniture,'garden tools and a lot of other useful articles. Terms Cush. 'N..1). • Hurd an, B. S. Phillip's, Proprietor Auctioneer •Mr. C F :Sma e of the Smalley Il Y. Manufacturing. .Co •Manatowac Wis. .was an , Exeter this week with a view of ies'iablishi,ng•'-a branch factory in connection with Connor Machine Co. ;Owing to 'thee scarcity of men at present the company will partly man- ufactiire' the goods end have -them finsihed here. Tli'e Smalley. Co. man- ufacture ensilage cutters and now the granid ;prize on their line at the Pan- anania ,Expositi:on (last year. i3usiness For Him. "We were traveling all day in the teeth of the gale." "And you bad no dentist along." "What for?" "TO pull the teeth?" . 11 ° Good Reason. "So you are goitag to marry her?" "Yes." "Why are you going to do that?" "She said I might." MINSTRELS OF• TRIPOLI. Mysterious Musicians Who Flit From Place to Piaci at An Hours. The strange music and mysterious musicians beard and seen in Tripoli are described by 'Mrs. Mabel L: Todd in her book, "Tripoli the 'Mysterious" "The children are possessed of won- derful mental quickness. Tbey ac- quire •languages without effort, and the street urchins use easily French, Ital- ian and all the languages that are cur- rent in their narrow streets. The strange music of the city, too -the weird chants, the cymbals, flageolets and queer stringed instruments-edeep- ly impresses the American visitor. "Sometimes at dawn, when roofs and minarets were dazzlingly white against the sapphire sky, while yet the laby- rinthine streets at the bottoms of stuc- co canyons lay in twilight gray, strange men from the desert would stalk by, making uncanny music. "One of them, very tall and blacker than most, was dressed in a low neck- ed, short sleeved garment, greatly abbreviated as to skirts, playing melo- dies hi a minor mode unknown to the west, and his stride was full of a dig-, nity well nigh appalling, ' "The instrument slightly resembled ii Scetch bagpipe' decorated with bar- baric strings of shells and, beads, an Inflated skin with a primitive mouth- piece ani at the opposite end two pointed projections like horns. . His• companion beat upon a curious • little tomtom and now and then sang ,a bloodessrding chant 'FMtlack bot-s•followed, jumped,'shont- ed, danced like wild ei'eatui'es, excited, beyond' all bounds by this oddly corn - pelting musienis the rhythm( penetrated and seized their imagination. Although these men of mystery generally passed about sunrise, they sometimes went by in the night. Once or twice the 'weird perfornipnce took place about 2 o'clock In the Meaning, The ininstitelo' always .walked With, pecutiat swift= iaeas, intenr MnstitilfitsatiOint ibiteineeit fax lien&"¢;" 4'. . 1 INCORPORATED. 18551 ,901• •..:'ae r f+o.„• e BANK SONS CAPITAL' AND RES.ERVE � , 800>OQ 0 E+77-7:. . 96 Branches in Canada a General Bankinr Business Transacted u� OIRGULAR,LETTERS OF CREDIT ,r,- BANK MONEv ORDERS i i § I 'GS BANK DEPARTMENT "♦- interest aiowedlat highest current rate' 1 W. 0. CLARKE, Manager, Exeter Branch THE CAliTADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE • SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL.D.. D.C.L., President a JOHN AIRD, General Manager, H. V. F. JONES, Ass't GeneratMsma 'CAPITAL, '$15,000,000 =RESERVE -FUNO, $13,500,800, 1 ARMV'IERS' 'BUSINESS The Canadian Bank of Commerce extends to Farmer.,,,, facility for the transaction of their banking business, incu" eats, the discount and collection of sales notes. Blank sales votes,' are supplied free of charge on application. sse. Exeter Branch— A. E. Kuhn, Manager. ( 1 I ' • VREDITON BRANCH -S. M. JOHNSTON, Manager The. Harmless bvtEa$g- cent remedy for Hesdacharz Neuralgia,Aneetnie,fieep',i- lsssness,' Nervous Exar• hausttan, �sC. • ¢Tiede Mark Regieter,.i) 1 nes AT ALL DRICIGOIST1116 ev kr mala bow» GEORGIAN MFG. CO„ - COLLINGWOOD, ONT. Notice to Creditors NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN 'TRH MATTER OF the estate of 1l•'ealey Parkinson, .late of the Township of (Thorne in the Coun- ty of Huron, ,Farmer, deceased. NOTICE iS hereby given pursuant td :"Revised • Statutes of Ontario" 1914, •chapter 121, that all creditors and others having claims against the estate o,. the said Wesley 1 p arkinton, who died on or about. e flay 'of April, 1916, to send- by• post prepaid or deliver :to A; E. Parkin- son. or me Town off St. Marys, Solici- tor for John T. Parh'nson, the Admin- istrator of the property of the. said seceased, their names and addre»s.•, and full particulars of their claims the statement of their .accounts and the nature of the securities, if any held by them. AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that after such last mentioned date the said Administrator will proceed to distribute the assets of the de- ceased among the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which he shall then have had notice; and that the said Admin- istrator will not be 'liable tor the said assets or any part thereof to any person or persons of whose claims Notice shall not have 'been reaeive;d toy him at the time of such' distrib- ution. • Dated at St. Marys the 27th day of May, 1916. A. E., PARKINSON, 'St. Marys, Ont. Solicitor for, the•said Administrator R.T.T. St >a S Only Solution. • • "Wbat are yon doing for a liv- ing?" "Nothing." "Pshaw!Ididn't know you were married!" Two Zeppelins Destroyed. - ESB'JERG, Denmark, June 6.— Two Zeppelin dirigible balloons • are reported .by, fishermen returning to port' to have been destroyed. The •Avis Lamvig states that fish- ermen saw a Zeppelin in fames as the result of gunfire and that the air vesselwas destroyed at a point 40 smiles;off the'Thyboroln Canal. The entire crew perished. The Ekntra- bladt says that fishermen arriving at Ringkjobing say they saw another Zeppelin destroyed Friday some mileeerom .these waters. Mayor:Charges Assanft. INGERSOLL, ; Ont., June 6. -- Charged with assaulting Mayor W. J.. Elliott, occasioning actual bodily harm, a. warrant has been issued for the arrest of.. ex -Chief of Police A. W. Gutnmerson. The alleged assault took place on Monday, May 22nd, and on the' 27th of May an in;forma- tlon was laid and a summons issued.' The efforts to serve cite summons having•' been•.unsueeesSIuly a Warrant. )y ai.'been issnt6d and naslsl`de..' ywlice departmenfa->libtified.... . JAS. BEVERLEY FURNITURE DEALER Embalmer and Funeral Dire 4, "ir' Phone 74a. Nigra)] 74b EXETER, -:- Oir1TAR DR G. F. ROIJLSTON, L.JD ne a DENTIST EN,T lei! Honor Graduate of sit3. Office over ling's Law offioe. day afternoons. Residence '5b. Toronto IJnivatp Dickson ' iia.le}t+ Closed Wef4aes•= Phone Ofii.e Elisa i LR. A. R. KINSMAN LLD,$, D.D,/,t Honor Graduate of Toronto 1 4 eraity t , , DENTIST i 4 9th extracted without gain. ON any bad effects. Office over: Glare' roan ,e Stanibury's Office Xt'uaian 410 Exeter, c , ,t al 1 W, BROWNING M. D.-, At. 111 s P. S, Graduate Victoria U;aij1111 sity Office and residence Dom n: Labratory., Exeter - 1•-J4 Associate Coroner of Heron 11I a D ICK'SON & CARLING '.ii • Barristers, Solicitors Netaa'iess Osler veyanoerss Commissaioners, t�aliaill for the Molaone Bank etot t nisi Money to Loan at loweat rates of tereat, .4311 OFFICE -MAIN STREET E2LIWiLZ4 I. R,, Carling B. A: ( $. Wised a /+•. MONEY, TO LOAM , We have a large amount el awl ate funds to loan on farm and lags properties at lowest rats el Asp tercet. GLADMAN & STANDUTA fa. Barristers, Solicitors, Nana IN Exeter , A ?ne Usborne and Mut Farmer's Mutual Firr. u ' ante Compal) Head Office, Farcoolh aa, Oil President ROBT. NOBS" Vice -President r THOS, RYA* • .DIRECTORS WM. BRO,CK , WM, 11O' ' 3 L, RUSSELL 4. T. 9tf.LVft)lN AGENTS JOHN ESSERY Exeter, agent 'Una borne rand Biddulpl►. aj 'OLIVER ..HARRIS Munro creep 1 Hibbert Fullerton and Logan. as W. A. TU1pMC1St Secy,TreatetN. Farcllli uhatP. GLADMAN & STAN33UBIC Susi Solicitor¢. Exeter. • •Ai R 1 Par Wants, and Children 30711,0:...r Year*