Exeter Times, 1916-6-29, Page 477.m, a'^�fnv
WO VVffiN AVOIDS
OPERATION
Medicine W
in+ hk..h Made Sur-
gem's
uz
g . 'sWork Unnecessary.
Astoria, N. . -"For two yea ,I
igas feeling ill and took all kinds of
tonics I was get -
in g
et-ing worse everyday.
I had chills,my Tread
would ache I was
always tired. I could
not walk straight
because of the pain
in myback and 1 had
pains an my stom-
ach. I went to a
doctor and he said I
must go under an
operation, but I did.
N .E net go. I read in
"the paper about
:Lydia, E. Pinkhani.Ts Vegetable Come
pound and tend my husband about it. /
' aid' I know nothing will help hie but I
,Will try this.' k found znyselit improv-
fng from the very first bottle, and in two
weeks time I was able to it down and
haat a hearty breakfast with racy bus-
atead,which I had not done for two years.
am now in the best of !health and
id net have the operation." — Mrs.
Gritz A. lolaivre,, 502 Flushing Avenue,
t;a"sstoria,, N. Y.
Every one dreecle the surgeon's knife
end the operating table. Sornetimes
vothing else will do; but many timea
:doctors say they are necessary when
they are net. Letter after letter comes
to the Pinkha n• Laboratory, telling how
operations were advised bind were not
erformed; or,if perfarmed,.did DO good,
ut Lydia E.Pinkbain"s Vegetable Com-
pound was wed ami geed healihfoIlowed.
i If you want advice write to
'Lydia E. Pinkbana Iedicine C90
o afigeu ial) L;;b.mo. VSs.
ID AY
Single Fare
Good going July 1st. Valid to retaarn
same
Fare and One -Third
:f#ood going June P{;3tb. Julvllst. Valid
to return July Srd.
Between all stations in Canada east of
Port Arthur, also to Detroit and Port
:inion, Mich., Buffalo, Bleak _Rock,
Niagara Falls and Suspension Bridge,
'ie:,kets now on sale at Grand. Trunk
ticket og.ee9.
e e
X31 r 1 .'"3"- .1 5 £ i ;x
fi+
VITRATPAR Sia .
:You can secure re . 4
o
• Position
o
toIf yea take a came -re -matte en The
4 demand upon tis Petr tratzed rep
et is matey tine the number grade
eating. Sttedents are entering s
t each week. ;You may enter et '
time. Write at orate for our fire-;
q
catalogue a£ Commere ai, :-!bort-
lura or Telegraphy t ersrt reer t.
•s D. Aa Mea aahlan, 3.'run est
•8
w,0414•+100****0. ►a4#•40ir.9.0 1.*e
Farmers!
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
following lines,--
All .E�.I kinds of
Lumber
iher
drt?w..CG
ef101
1'OlUgll,
Slung
les.
Latl3
Cedar
Fence C Posts, .
$ fL long,
ft long and 10 ft long.
Cement, Wall Board
and Dearly Roofing.
THE EXETER TIMES
unaIu Great Lakes
(T) Port Arthur, Ont. (2) Huge Gra
Ln Etevator at Head• of Great Lakes.
(3) The Soo Locks. (4) "S.S. Ke
awatin. (5) Entrance to Harbor,. Fort
kith! !arab.
wifs HE late afternoon sunshine teems
with memories as you slip out of
Port McNicoll.'What would Mar-
quette say to this so -wonderful Kee-
watin with her broad decks, her com-
fortable berths, her unexcelled cuis-
ine that tempts the guils to dip mile
alter anile fn her wake?
Sit en deck in the long throbbing
twilight. You are in the north here
and you ran read at nine o'clock at
night, You can watch the past stip
by in its canoe, dodging behind the
dark islands of Cieorgian Bay. You
can smell miles of water in the breeze
and miles of northern land beyond
again. You can listen to the strange
cries of the wheeling birds, the linger-
ing liquid Iap of the ,raves against the
boat side, the sub audible converse of
Canadian past. which is great with
Canadian iiitiire, which is nnbellev-
able.
When you go on deck in the morn-
ing the sun is there before you and
the rollicking wind, tamed to a breeze
by the stili -green banks of the St,
Mary's River, gay with cottages. Soon
you'll reach the Soo and the far-famed
canal that Canada and the States
have made.
What's that against the skyline,
like black barred seeIeton hands play-
ing "Simon says Thumbs Up"? That's
the Canadian Pacific Italiway's Bas-
cule Bridge, which splits accommo-
dating in the middle, using its won-
derful
ondertul thousand -tan side -weights, and
opens itself Iike scissor blades, a hun-
dred and sixty-eight feet in the airt
Truly a strange town, this Soo, where
tse `wk rtpsiranal-locks an
bridges go jack-kntas itin mgcagainst the
zorizoni
See thatorweird boat yonder, like a
whalboawith its i}eat` and tail out oxd
the water? It's an Alice in Wonder-
land boat so don't laugh at its puli-
ed-out proportions. It carries a lit-
tle machinery in one end and a little
crew in the other. In between—
welch is anything from four to sir
hundred feet—it's just a series of
grain bins, tied together with steel.
It can stow away from seven to nine
trainloads of wheat. But now we're
through the locks and by afternoon
we might be in the middle of the At-
lantic for all the land we see,
At four o'clock we find ourselves
under the awnings where the little
blue teapots circulate cheerily and
the talk turns on how cool it is.
Dinner to-night—strange how mun-
dane and appetlteiul we become in
t11e .air: -dinner is a joy ul procession
"tea t`ii
New Field Husbandry Baulding
ONTARIO AusasinguRAL Cori,zes.
Outwit.
These Buildings
are Painted
With
MARTIN SENOUR
PAINT
straight through the menu, even with
the sneaking remembrance that some-
body said there'd be more bovril at
ten.
Looking through the porthole as
we rise next morning, we see Thunder
Cape and in an hour or so call at
Port Arthur, next door neighbor to
our terminal at Fort William—eleva-
tor towns, .both of them. •
Between Fort William ana Port
Arthur there•are twetty-five of these
huge wheat -banks, each looking like
a collection of spent shells from some
giant mortar, triumphantly up -ended
in the service of mankind and grain
trade. Their combined capacity runs
to forty-three and a quarter million
bushels, this making the twin towns
the world's greatest grain port.
%%i.; -max �c.-
.1 I•
I 1IPI
Barns at the
ONTAaio AORrevLrvRAL CoLLEGe,
iivci,.Pra,
r r..
FARMERS
Consider Purity in Paint
in Preference to Price:
You wouldn't pay the regular price for Sugar that
analyzed 10% of sand. You wouldn't pay "all wool"
prices for cotton -and -wool clothing. hy should you
pay your good money for impure . Paint, when you
can get
t4ARTIN «SENOUR
"1007 PURE" PAINT
We guarantee Martin-Senour "100% Pure" Paint (except
a few dark she
desa
th k cannot be prepared from m
pure Lead and
Zinc alone) be
1�D%
pure White
Lead
pure Oxide of
Lin
pure Linseed Oil, pure Colors and Turpentine Dryer ;
and to be entirely free from adulteration or substitution ; and
sold subject to chemical analysis.
Every experienced Painter knows that the above formula
is right. It is the standard of the paint world.
You get absolute purity
extreme fineness =- uniform
quality --when you insist on "100% Pure" Paint.
S OURsF o
n ty>RA
P INT RED SCHOOL HOUSE e)uE
PAINT
The old reliable.
for the barn
and sheds.
MARTIN-SENOU
ft WAGON and T
FQ PAINT
for wagons, fools, etc,
Write direct ea
e to the Martin-Sen
our r Co., Limited,
Montreal
, ,
for their 1916 Booklet, "Town and Country Homes", showing many 75R
new Dolor schemes and giving valuable paint information,
��\N Sf�o ��\N•SFyo
� T.AVVII�S & SON,EXETER Ont. �.
.k. ,,..4;
umor
1! PAINT mo... `.
�' / // "),/,,,,,,,;., ��p SPi
Indications Are That Allies Have
Already Begun Drive.
Attacks Are Going Ahead in Three
Theatres of War—Russians, Brit-
ish, and Italian Armies Pass
From the Defensive to the Offen-
sive -,-British Artillery Now En-
gaged in Blasting the 'Way.
LONDON, June 27,—At last the
long-beraiided and much -delayed
grand offensive of the Allies seeins to
be at band. Indeed, if events rather
than official announcements mark its
opening, it is already well under
way.
Parts and London have said no-
thing with regard to the important
operations now developing, with the
exception of the chronicling of at-
tacks on German lilies at different
points along the British front. These
may have been for the purpose of
feeling out the weak spots prelimin-
ary to an attempt to break through,
but it has been left to admissions
from the central powers to establish
their existence. Thus as against the
silence of the 'Peltier War Office,
Berlin Monday chronicled the open-
ing of "important battles" on the sec-
tor held by Sir Douglas Haig.
Vienna supplemented this Monday
night with the admission of a twenty -
mile retirement in the Trentino. "To
retain our freedom of action," is the'
tribute the Austrian War Office pays
to General Cadorna's offensive, which
observers 'expect to spread rapidly to
the Isonzo front.
In the east the Russians, while
still held up in their advance on
Kovel by the Germans, are continu-
ing their advance against the Aus-
trians in the south. Their flank now
protected by the Carpathians, they
have turned northward in their
sweep through Bukowina and are
now approaching I%oloniea. They
are already within ten miles of the
town.
French Retake Ground.
LONDON, June 27.—Some of the
ground lost to the Germans in the big
assault on Friday was retaken by the
French, who have pushed their lines
up to the Thiaumont work, west of
the Meuse and in the region of Ver-
dun. The Germans penetrated into
some houses in the outskirts of
Fleury, but the French made some
progress against the enemy in the
outskirts of this village. Tho French
also repulsed an attack of the enemy
in the region 0f Le Mort Hommc.
The Germans intensely bombarded
the French lines in the sector of Hill
321, north-east of Froi de Terre and
in the Chapitre and Chenois woods.
Throughout the day no infantry
action was fought in the Verdun re-
gion.
The British fir" continued uninter-
ruptedly all Saturday night;--accord-
in- to a bulletin issued Sunday by the
War Office.
The report reads: "In the region
from south of La Bassee canal to be-
yond the Somme the enemy develop-
ed and continued day and night un-
broken, lively activity. He also bom-
barded Lens and its neighborhood
with heavy fire and discharged gas
without success over our lines in the
region of Beaumont Hamel, north of
Albert."
Sunday night's despatch from Sir
Douglas Haig does not indicate that
the bombardment referred to in the
German official report has any espe-
cial significance. It merely reports
that the artillery has continued to be
very active along the whole front and
that mutual artillery actions have
taken place at many points.
More Men than Women
have Appendicitis
Surgeons state men ._are elightly
more 'subject to • appendicitis than
twomen. Exeter People 'should know
that a few doses of [simple buckthorn
bark glycelrine, etc., as mixed in
Adler-L'.l.a often relieve or prevent
appendicitis. Thus mixture removes
such tsurprtaing afoul tmattee that
ONE 81?OONFUL relieves almost ANY
CASE constilpation, sour atomach or
gas. The INSTANT, easy action of
Adler-1-ka is surprising
W. S, Cole, Exeter.
Executors' Sale
OF 100 ACRE FARM IN USBORNE
AND HOUSEHOLD EFFECT'S, etc,
TIe Executors of the estate of the
late John Duncan will offer for sale
oa the premises on Tuelsday July 4th,
1916, at 2 o'clock p. m, the following
veil able property;—
(teal Estate.
Lot No, 18 in the 12th Concession
of the Township of LTsborne in the
County of Huron, containing 100 acres
ix.orc iro less• On thus property are
a good 1 1-2 storey brick house and
two bank barns. There he e ar
e ab-ut1
f0
acres es scaled down. 2
0cr
a cs will be
c,
left ploughed this coming y
fall and 6
acres
in fall wheat,
and throch r
s
u r
p
will have the privilege of ploughing
after harvest. Full poocession will b
given oa the 1st day of ilia.rah, •1917
leis lx ' a firs -
t class farm and is only
about half a mile from a school-hoire
00. •
,
C-
lattc s
1
Organ,
bed
mo
m Is.tit.s, table=;
chairscon
c
h
, c1 ar 1eL
,
s bedsteads,
1
coal stove v
o e a
net La
vood
stoves, dishes
kitchen ir
utensils,
alio
a
sant t
q of
Y
firewood, 1 top buggy and 1 outter,
,
.r1+aR;yls OF SALE
Real Estate;
sL1
< te
110 ,pct Bent on the day oa, (sale in
cash or
other asaLusfaciozy security
and the balance on the ist day of.
March 1917 without interest,
Chattels; (Cash,
Further terms and pd.rtleulirs will,
be remade known on the' dcy of 8112 or
can ba land on application to
e. S Phillips, Auctioneer, ' xeter
John al. Duncan, Wco(lh,m, Ont.
George Mantle, Exeter, Ont. Exreut-
ors, or Gladman $c Stanbury,
,Solicitors for .Erecutbrs.
"I`huraday, Juno 29t1i, 19X(
: NIOLSONS BA
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,800,000
96 Branches in Canada
A General Bankinr Business Transacted
JIRCULAR:LETTERS OF CREDIT
BANK MONEv ORDERS
SAVINGS DANK DEPARTMENT
Interest a,owedlat highest current rate
W. D. CLARKE, Manager, Exeter funnel
THE CANADIAN BAN1
OF C -MMERCE
SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL.D., D.C.L., President r,
TORN;AIRD, General Manager. H. V. F. JONES, Ass't General Mai .
$15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, $13,500,0011,
FARMERS' BUSINESS '
The Canadian Bank of Commerce extends to Farmers ever5r.
facility for the transaction of their banking business, including
the discount and collection of sales notes. Blank sales not•
ire supplied free of charge on application.
Exeter Branch— A.:E. Kuhn, Manager.
' 0P,EDITON BRANCH—S. M. JOHNSTON, Manager " ; ;If
(Trade Mark Reester.J)
GEORGIAN MFG. CO„
The Harmless flirt lEi--
cent remedy for Head>"
Neuraigia,Anacmie,$1 .-
Iessn ss, Nervous Eag-
haustton, &o- et
1 •Os AT ALL DRUGGISTS, or $r9 mat weep.
COLLINGWOOD, ONT.
Notice to Creditors JAS. BEVERLEY
IN 'Tula 11IATT:LR OF the estate of
'ar eeley :Parkinson, late of tie
Township of Uborne in the Coun-
ty of Huron, „Farmer, deceased.
NOTICE is hereby given pursuant
to :"'Revised Statutes of Ontario"
1914, cliepter 121, that all creditors
and other.* having claims against the
estate of the said Wesley Parkinson,
who died on or about ,the Seventh
day of April, 1916, are required on
or before the thirtieth day
of June, 1916, to send by post
prepaid or deliver tp A. E. Parkin=
son. or ane Town or. St. Mary's, eolici-
tor for John T. Park. nson, the Admin-
istrator of the property of the ,said
seceased, their names and addre-se.
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 NOT;C u
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 for the
said assets or any part thereof to
any person or persons of whose claims
notice shall not have been received
;ay him at the time of such distrib-
ution.
;Dated at St. 5Iarys the 27th
day of Ida.y, 1916.
A. E., PARKINSON, St. Marys, Ont.
Solicitor for, the said Administrator
Notice to Creditors
fn the matter of the estate of
John Duncan of the Township o1
Usborne, County of Huron, farmer,
deceased,
Notice is hereby given pursuant to
Statutes in that be,bnlf that all ,cred-
itors and others having claims a-
gainst the estate of the said John
Duncan who died on and about the
19th day of May, 1916, are required
on or before the 10th of July 1916.
to send by post prepaid or de-
liver to Messrs. Gladman & Stanbury,
elf Lae Village of Exeter, Solicitors
for the Executors of the said deceas-
ed. their christain and surnames ad-
dresses and descriptions the full par.
ticulars of their claims the stater
meet of their accounts and the nat.
ture of the securities if any. held
by them, And further take notice
that after such last mentioned date
the said
t executors will proceed to
distribute the assets of the deceased
among the parties
entitled t
hereto
having regard rd on1
5 to t
hk claims
of
which' t
heS akin then have notice
and that the Executors will eot be
liable for said assets or any part
thereof to any person or persons of
whose Claims notice shall not have
been received )ved by them at the time of
each distribution.
h astributn,
GLADMAN & STANBURY
Solicitors i .ors for Executors.
Dated at Exeter this 19th day of
June16 9 '
1
I.
To
Prohibit
MeatConsumption.
LONDON, June 27.—According to
a despatch etch
p from Berne, e
,given on
t b
y
the wireless .press Sunday, Adolph
von Betook', president ei
p s dent of
, the e
Geran
Food Regulation Board, threatens to
make Germany a vegetarian nation
until September. He announced on
Friday, the despatch says, that he
was seriously considering a prohibi-
tion upon the consumption of meat
for two or three months, and he pro-
bably will adopt that course,
German neWspapers, it is added,
were allowed to report Herr von Da.,,
tocki'a1 statement, bat were fobidden
to ebiYYflient tipolt' it.
FURNITURE DEALER
Embalmer and Funeral DirVL°n
Phone 7.4a. Night Call '7.4h
EXETER, oi`iTAR
DF), G. F. ROULSTON, L1�•4„ SOL
DENTI:tST
Honor Graduate of
site. Office over
ling's Law office.
day afternoons.
Residence 5b.
rel
Toronto Uniateve-
Dickson a Sago, "
Closed Wedneop
Phone Oftioe Sop
DR. A, B. KINSMAN L.,Daaa'DI3i jL
Honor Graduate of Toronto Ihorant
eraity f -�
.DENT'IS'T IIt+
sth extracted without path.
any bad effects. Office over
'Man do 8tant,ury'a OfficeMark)' -
Exeter, • i
1 • W,, BROWNING 14L D.,
r P. 6i Graduate Victoria U!1&1
pity Office and reaidene>9 Donainj .-
Labretory., Exeter, 1_Lsi
Associate Coroner of Buzau -J
D JCEBON & CAIWING f'
Barristers, Solicitors Notaries IOW,
veyanoere Commiissioners, I>'
for the Molsons Bank eta, l Kl,el
Money to Loan at lowest retie) of kV
tereat.
OFFICE -MAIN STREET EXTEESIIIV4I
I. R. Carling B. A. L. al MAI**
MONEY, TO LOAN t i 1. i I:: I .1
We have a large ambnat are B4122 -
ate funds to loan On farm almfd Y,I17r-
lege properties at .lowest ratq SO harp'
terest, z al4y
GLADMAN & 6TANBUI= !=-1i
Barristers, Solicitors' ¥etiaa
Exeterr t,;a
Tile Osborne and f111MM
Farmer's Mutual Fire is$rt,R.
ansa Gompanp.
Head Office. FarquinarND.ts,
i,dent
P es'
r BO )�
BT N(yR
Vice -President d
eut
THOS.
I
IR C
.n ' l; togs l,f,
W 1Yz, BRO,CE , W1MT, Pear
r
L. RUSSELL J. T. ALLISON
AGENTS 0
JOHN Es8>;RY Exeter, B6e,ct`t ITV
borne
end73c d 1 h. ,
'd u
I
P
OLIVER BARRIS Monro egest PGM1
Hilbert Fullerton and Logan,
,.I W.
li '
Secy Treas, Farquhalr
GLADMAN & ST&N93UR'.Y .a&1G1
8olioitora, Exeter.
,
se er, u
CAS'i0 R 1AQ
Pot Infants and Children.
In Use For Over 30 Year.
Altior hulatlis
til riattari r.>t