HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-8-17, Page 4ee-
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ELDERLY
SAFECUARBEB
' 1' U Others How They Were
Carried Safely Through
Change of Life,
Durartd, Win --4'1 am the mother of
lourteeu children and I owe my life to,
Lydian). Piukham's
Vegetable Corn-
^; pound When l was
45 and had the
Change of Life,
a friend recom-
mended it and it
gave rue such relief
from my bad feel-
ings that I took
several bottles. I
am now well and
x healthy and recom-
mend your Compound to other ladies."
--Mrs. MARY RIDGWAY, Durand, Wis.
A 11lassacisusetts Woman Writes:
Blackstone, Mass. — "My troubles
were from my age, and I felt awfully
sick for three years. I bad hot flashes
.often and frequently suffered front
pains. 1 took Lydia E. Pinkhant'e
Vegetable Compound and now am well."
—Mrs. PIERRE CoURNoYER, Box 239,
Blackstone, Mass.
Such ,warning symptoms as sense of
suf€ocation,bot fiashes,headaehes,baek••
taches,dread of impending evil, timidity,
wounds in the ears, palpitation of the
heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu-
lfarities, constipation, variable appetite,
weales ess and dizziness, shmai dbeheeded
by middIe-aged women. Lydia E. Pink -
flumes Vegetable Compound has carried
sorely women safely through this crisis.
TlICTIVE TRIPS
.tee
."1'Ie! ok.a .Lakes Lake ox Bays
4seurlian Bay Algonquin Park
;hooch River Kawartha Lakes
Maganetaware River
Temagami, etc.
lfottud trip tourist tickets now on sale
from certain stations in Outaric at
very low rates, with liberal
Atop -overs.
SOA EXPRESS.
✓ ave J£'oronto 12.01 p,me daily exeept
lursday, and 2.05 a.m. daily for
Muskoka Wharf. Connections are
!made at Muskoka Lakes. Laave
Toronto at 1015 a.mt, daily except
Sanday, and 2.05 a.m, daily for Hunts-
ville; for points on Lake of Bays,
EEluipmeaat t!oe finest.
Full /particulars on applic• .;on to
agants.
TQ
71 14:1
'u i-`0'-csivrFAR% files
You can secure a
Position
9
•
▪ you take a course wit/. us, The
▪ demand upon us far trained ISeIp
is ;many times the number grad. 4,
eating. Students are entering a
eack week. ;You may eater at Inv
4 tbn • Write at once feer• our Free
,o ▪ catalogue ei Commercial, :'{port -
ii 1.1'na "s" !€ leer" -;by deper'^er F• p'
19'. A., McLachlan, Frio • ptl•
F
e+0004500$f40EA413,000.40••0.*04$4'>s
rn s !
'Made in Catad
Fertilizer $18
arad
$22 per ton
Now is the time
buy wire fence r e-
wore it advances in
Let me quote you on
\your needs in t 1e
following lineE, --
All kinds of Lumb ,r
Ater dr sled Of rcuhb,
Shingles, Lath, edpr
Fence Posts, 8 f:. lot;,
ft long and 10 ft inial,.
Cement, Wail dap cd
Indi Ready Roof'' g.
A. Je
CLATWORTNY
GR ANTO,"
t!'
1
OF WEEK.
important EYents Which Have
Occurred During' the Week.
Tile Busy World's Happenings Carta
fully Complied asd Put Into
Handy and Attractive Shape for
the Readers of Om Paper --A
Solid dears' Enjoyment.
TVl:SDr1.Y.
VSF l)N 1;.aDAY.
The Bulgarians were driven back.
by Fleneb'and kt:rbiau troops.
Heevy rain izthe OtIilia district
effectively checked the bush firer.
Four canoeists were drowned at
St. Germain de Granthatn, Quebec.
British and FI•eucb airmen suc-
cessfully raided the German town of
Muelheitn.
Serious accidents unci mueb incon-
venience resulted from power ditti-
eulties at Ingersoll.
The Canadian troops were review-
ed at Bramshatt by Mr. Lloyd George
and Genera/ Hughes.
It was announeed in London that
nearly 4,000 rifles have been taken
from the Sinn Feiners,
Laura Dingman, of the Muncie Re-
servation, was drowned Monday in
the Thames River at Moraviautowa.
Carpenters in the employ of the
Government o , the old and new Wel-
land Canals are on strike 'for higher
wages.
EIton Hubbs, infant son of. Wm.
Hubbs, Ameliasburg township, fell
into a pall of scalding water, with
fatal res"itiJ.
An ig:,.ment has been reached
between the United States and
Mexico, the terms of which will be
announced to -day,
Thomas Gienny of Orillia, fireman
sz the tee Dudley, was seized with
cramps and drowned while swim-
ming at Port Maitland.
C. Rennie of Windsor, a G.T.R.
-• sman, was killed by bis engine
moving for some unexplained reason
while he was under it.
No further trace has been report-
ed of two vessels, believed by the
coastguard lookout who sighted
thein to to suL.narines which ap-
Peared off the Maine coast near Ma-
chias Monday.
The German ItoyaI Material Test-
; ing Office announces the discovery
that paper . can be manufactured
from cotton stalks. A shipment of
stalks. whic't had arrived from Egypt
iiafore the opening of hostilities, was
used for the caperintent.
THURSDAY.
French aviators boinbed a German
factory at Rottwe1l.
The Philadelphia papers have de-
, ,ed to make a reduction in size.
J. J. Coughlin of Stratford has
been apputnted County Judge of
Kent.
Dr. John R. Mott says there are
5,000,000 prisoners in the camps of
Europe.
LordDerby in aa interview said
the Allies were now bound to retain
the Initiative.
Twelve men are neissing, all be-
lieved killed, in a terrific explosion
at the now No. 3 mine at Michel,
B.C.
Official statements by the arehi-
teets in charge of the construction of
the Parliament buildings at Ottawa
were issued.
Mrs. L. J. Tripp of London was
fatally injured when run ever by an
automobile, before er hich she jumped
back when apparently confused.
An important Hydro -electric con-
ference was held in Toronto yester-
day, and it is proposed to hold a
mass meeting at Exbibilion time.
Lloyd's Shipping Register shows
that there were 440 merchant vessels
of a tonnage of 1,500,000 gross
under construction in the United
Kingdom at the end of June.
Employees of the Guelph Sewers
and Public Works Department, who
by a strike in 'May obtained an in-
ereaee /run see. to 25c an hour,
have again struck, demanding 30
cents.
A private of the 156th Battalion,
who had deserted five months ago,
going to Calgary, came back to King-
ston at his own expense to give him-
self up; he was given a suspended
sentence.
An organization was formed in To-
ronto yesterday to receive and ad-
minister relief for the sufferers by
the northern Ontario Bre, $250,000
of the $400,000 aimed at having al-
ready been subscribed.
FRIDAY.
The employees of the British raiI-
roads considered a demand for more
wages.
Fifty-seven supernumerary offieers
are to be sent overseas from Camp
Bo: i'n.
Seventeen Frenclz Brigadier Gen-
erals have been placed on the reserve
section of the army.
Belgian troops completed the oc-
eupation of the north-west part of
'Term an Fast Africa,
Brantford Council decided to re-
vert to standard time on August 13,
instead of August 31.
Oil was discovered in a gas well
from which Oil City had obtained
partly its suppiy of gas.
Matheson sent an urgent appeal
to the Fire Inlet Committee for
funds, whieli were sent.
There are t;c, cases of anthrax in
tbe Pro -Ince o: Ontario, it was offi-
cially announced yesterday.
'The new Panne C. P. R. station at.
Quebec was form Illy opened by
Mayor Lavig i :or yesterday.
Cleat L3ritsl!n ha„ requested the 1).
S. envoy at Berlin to protest to Ger-
many' against the execution of Cart.
Fryatt.
Rolland 'Verret and Cecile Lome -
lin, aged four end six yours respec-,
tieeely, per4aibcd in a lire in a tem-
ment house in Quebec,
Mr, Hartley Ixewart, IC.C., the To-
ronto counsel, was nominated
by
South-West Toronto Liberals as can-
didate. in the corning bye -election..
The British War Office bas asked
tlhe Militia Department to supply this
pw�,`- {,ARFRapr
THE EXETER MMES.
Royal Army Mediae/ Corps with oily
hundred men from the Dominion.
The Canadian Government will
contribute towards the memorial to
be erected by the Empire- In honor
of Lord Kitchener. Canada's share
In the tribute toward the man whose
army is BOW forcing the Germans
back will $25,000.
SitTUle DAY.
Eight steamers, one of them Brit-
ish, were reported. destroyed.
A umber of invalided soldiers
reached Quebec from Halifax yester-
day.
A new continental "shelf" was re-
ported discovered in the Arctic
Ocean.
Many big guns, in good condition,
were captured by the Italians on
Podgora Heights.
Sweeping proposals will be sub-
mitted to the Britts/a Trades Union
Congress which will meet in Sep-
tember.
Alex. Pelkey and Ray Knight,
both farmers of Kent county, com-
mitted suicide, one by a shotgun, the
other by hanging.
Charles A. E. Bianeet of Ottawa
has been .,appointed a commissioner
to inquire into the unrest at Thet-
ford asbestos mines.
The wife of ex -Mayor H. L. Janzeu
of Berlin dropped dead in her home
after returning from accompanying
the children of the Orpbauage to
their summer home.
The death took place in Essex yes-
terday of John Waltet's,•aged eighty--
three, former Town Clerk. He was
born in Halton county, and began
life as a land surveyor.
The Central News says that it
learns on "undeniable authority"
that British prisoners from Kut -el -
Amara have been subjected to con-
siderable hardships by the Turks.
The Provincial Resources Commit-
tee has made public a letter from
Mr. J. W. Lavelle to the effect that
Ontario munitions manufacturers are
falling behind seriously in their de-
liveries.
Ald. Duncan M. Ferguson, chair-
man of the Finance Committee of
Stratford Council, was elected by a
majority of one to fill out the unex-
pired term of the late Mayor E. K.
Barnsdale.
MONDAY.
Miss Maude Whittle ,aged 25, of
99 Dixon avenue, Toronto, was fatal-
ly burned yesterday.
A new hospital for mentally dis-
abled soldiers has been opened,. by
the Dominion Hospitals Commission.
An icehouse on Tic Island, Rice
Lake, was burned by an explosion of
the sawdust through spontaneous
combustion.
C. P. R. machinists and other em-
ployes on the system east of Fort
William have received a substautial
increase in. wages.
Canada's trade for the year ending
with May totalled $1,563,230,51.3, an
increase of about half a million over
the aggregate in 1913.
Labor men, replying to Mr. J. W.
Flavelle's letter, blame the Govern-
ment and the manufacturers for the
shortage of munitions in Ontario.
A large majority of the miners in
district 18 at Feriae, B. C., have
voted approval of the settlement with
the operators and the strike has been
declared off.
Angelo Fantino, an Italian em-
ployed at the limestone quarries near
Beachville, fell from a trolley car
late Saturday knight and died of a
fractured skull.
The new steamer Gaute, the third
of a big fleet being built for a Nor-
wegian company, left Detroit for the
coast, where she will take on a num-
ber of Belgian refugees.
• John W. Eve of Bermuda, a final
year student in medicine at Queen's
University, was drowned when upset
from a canoe, a companion who could
not swim being rescued.
Nelson Chambers and Miss Jean
Secord were killed, and Sergt. Thos.
Thompson, 205th Battalion, badly in-
jured, in a collision at Hamilton be-
tween a taxicab and a motorcycle
with side -ear.
If a proposition made to the Min-
isters of War and Marine by Deputy
Colajanni is adopted all officers with
Austro -German wives will be depriv-
ed of responsible commands.
TUESDAY.
Robert P. Lceder, a pioneer settler
and railway employe, a„ sd 80, died
quite suddenly at. Palmerston.
Marquis de Segur; the historian,
and member of the French Academy,
died yesterday, He was elected to
the Academy m 1907. •
Mrs. Isabella Jones, wife of John
R. Janes, of Toronto, was in-
stantly killed by a London and Lake
Erie car etear London yesterday.
Hon. Valentina Winkler, Minister
of Agriculture in Manitoba, says that
Manitoba's wheat crop will be small-
er than tbe lowest estimates made
early in tbe season.
Tho Treasury has given notice that
the capital and interest of any treas-
ury bilis and war expenditure certi-
ftcates issued henceforth will be free
drone the British income tax.
A report is current in Athens that
a Turkish personage sojourning at
Geneva is authorized to negotiate a
separate peace provided tbat Turkey
is to retain possession of Constan-
tinople and the Dardanelles.
The Daily Telegraph to -day says
tbat the opinion is freely expressed
in the London wheat market that the
rise in wheat prices was the result
of a conspiracy on the part of Ger-
man -Americans in Chicago.
After a four -days' search for Chas.
T. Wright, a raftsmau, wbo was sup,
posed to have wandered off the tug
Ruth while in a drunken stupor, his
body was discovered in about nfhe
feet of water at Silver Islet, near
Port Arthur,
Barbers May Strike.
NEW YORK, Ang. 15. --NOW
Yorker's, will have to shave the n«
aeives next week, fur tete barbers,
not to be outdona by the street car
nen, the railroad mei, and tete form-
as, are going au sense, /robin t es-
te r
kenbtlsfne;.3 : ti,,,lo ^f the l;arbela
Milieu, said Monday that :;0,300 of
them reprezaulin;, he. c.nnroyes of
10,00'x) shops in t.‘shops ci.y, will walk
Oat at. 10 oratoe a next £uts:lae
ddILSON TO PREY NT
Railroads Will Probably Have to
Mahe Concessions.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.—Presi-
dent Wilson conferred Yesterday with
both parties to the threatened men -
try -wide railway strike,
end
last
night it appeared that sufficient
foundation had been laid to furnish
a working basis for a settiement of
the differences of the employes and
employers. The president will meet
both. sides again to -day.
At the conclusion of yesterday's
conferences, the President issued
this statement: `
"I have met both sides and. have
gone over the ease with the utmost
frankness. I shall not be able to
judge until fio m w whether t we
have found a feasible basis for settle-
ment,"
The foremost questions are what
shall be arbitrated, if arbitration is
to be resorted to, and what form of
arbitration shall be adopted. Repre-
sentatives of the employes maintain
that their demands for an eight-hour
day and time and a half for overtime
is the only concrete proposition
under discussion. They insisted to
the president in their conference to-
day that the railroads,make some de
finite counter proposal. If the rail-
roads submitted some proposed forte
of settlement, they said, they would
be ready to discuss negotiations fur-
ther.
The employes are understood to be
ready to consent to the principle of
arbitration if the contingent pro-
posals of the managers, which the
men claim involve rights they have
won in thirty years' efforts, are elim-
inated from consideration and if ar-
bitration is conducted by a board on
which all four brotherhoods are re-
presented.
Immediately after learning the
employes' position., the President
summoned the committee of man-
agers and held a long conference
with them. They left the White
House to confer among themselves
throughout the night, if necessary,
and the general understanding was
that they. discussed the advisability
of withdrawing their "contingency"
proposals and submitting a proposi-
tion "without strings," as demanded
by the men.
While representatives of the em-
ployes insisted that they had -not yet
agreed to arbitrate any feature of
their .differences, there was a grow-
ing impression that arbitration or
some form of compromise would be
agreed upon.
ITALIANS TAKE MORE TRENCHES
Heavy Bombardment of New Aus-
trian Positions Continues.
LONDON, Aug, 15. ---Another
strong line of Austrian trenches, this
time east of the Nadlogem height,
south of Gorizia, has been captured
by the Italian army. The enemy cis
being steadily pressed back on the
Carso plateau by the continuous
pressure of the Italians. In this
sector elaborate entrenchments were
carried east of Hill 212. About 800
Austrians were made prisoner by the
Italians.
East of Gorizia the Austrians have
brought up heavy reinforcements and
the Italian advance has slowed up.
Heavy artillery duels are being
fought in this area with the italians
fiercely bombarding the positions of
the enemy. The Austrians are retali-
ating by shelling Gorizia and the
bridges thrown over the Isonzo.
Small and sbarp local attacks are
reported from the remainder of the
Italian front, with the invariable re-
pulse of the Austrians. Among the
places where these encounter; are
reported are the slopes of Fortune,
the head of the Costeana valley, the
Boite, the slopes ot Monte Civarone,
and the Sugana valley. Fifty prim
overs were taken by the Italians in
these fights.
Bombs were dropped on Montel-
eone and other places on the lower
Isonzo by Austrian aeroplanes ;iun-
day night, but no damage or casuaI-
ties were reported as having been
done.
Ontario Fall Wheat Held Tightly.
TORONTO, Aug, 15.—According
to local grain buyers, there is practi-
cally no Ontario fall wheat coming
on the local market. The feet that
most of the farmers are busy with
their oats has something to do with
this scarcity of supply, but the high
prices in the west are the big re-
straining factor.
One dealer stated yesterday that
unless a break came in prices he did
not expert to see much of the crop
moved before the first of September.
The more or less nominal price for
new crop given out by the Board of
Trade yesterday was $1.18 to $1.20,
which is two cents lower than, the
prices issued on Saturday.
Dealers are bidding $1.10 for
broken lots and $1.15 for carlots.
but are not getting very much at
these prices,
Destroyer Sunk Off Dutch Coast.
LONDON, Aug. 15.—The British
torpedo boat destroyer Lassoo sank
on Sunday off the Dutch coast, hav-
ing struck a mine or been torpedoed,
according to an official statement is-
sued Monday night, Six of the crew
of the destroyer are missing. Two,
men on board were injured.
Typos in Convention.
BALTIMORE, Aug. 1,5.. -•— The
sixty-second annual convention of
the International. Typographical
Union opened here Monday. After a
brief business session for organiza-
tion and appointment of committees
adjournment was taken until Wed-
nesday.
Danish Steamer is'Victim on a Sub.
LONDON, Aug. 15. --The Danish:
steamer Ivar was stank by a subma-
rine off Genoa, Italy, Sunday,. accord-
ing to a despateb: to. Iteuter's Trete-
grata Co., from Copenhagen. The,
crew of. the steamer was. salved..
Auction Sale
.TIIU,ftSDAY. A+UGU. iT, 17th, 10f
4i
„. IC'IIA�1'I,s.',i, I'XO.I'EETY
ia,.T EXETER
1AczEw' al be f
ea edfor
Sale by
lxublio Auotion ,zit tbe 'Commercial
Hotel on Saturday, August the 26th,
19113, the following valuable property,
One eozrnel (stallion, 1 brown mare.
3 (buggies in goad, ',repair; 1 light wag.
on; 1 cart; 1 set of isingie 'harness ;
2 new straw outtens; 1 hay :rake; 3
exeunt aepa.ratona; 3., new force pumps
1 ,new pump jack; I litter Harrier
bucket; 1. brass oyliudea°; 1 new
pump; 1 stove (Steater) 1 writing
;desk; 2. 'chairs; 3 lengths of 1 1,rd
in. gal.
piper 8lengths tEs of 1 -
0. 1nch
gal. pipe and other articles too num•
erous to mention.
'C`I+:1t11IS OI+' SAL' I!; ;
Cash wider x:15 over that amount
Pour ruontlea 'credit on furnishing up•,
proved joint notes. a)iecount 11 per
cent on a edit amounts for oas'h.
For ;Mather particulars apply to
Alvin Eacsery, .Arssignee for William
Schroeder, Insolvent.
'Oledmess a, Stanbury, Solicitors
Dar Assignee
1 . 0. S. Phillips, Auctioneer
SENSE and nonsense,
That's the stuff
Life is made of,
Sure enough.
Sense? Yes, maybe,
And a lot
Of the baldest
Baldy rot.
y °.r
How they mingle u? _
And intwine,
Forward, backward,
Down the line.
Sometimes hardly ,
We can know
Which is t'other
In the show.
In the schoolroom,
In the mart,.
Them you cannot
Tell apart.
Often Sense on
Closer view.
Is but nonsense
Through and through.
in the busy
-Daily race • "
Each is useful '
In its place, . w
And between them,
Could you choose,
Which would you
Prefer to lose?
•
An Exception.
"It is awful the way .everything is
going up," said the saki faced family
man to the hilarious young person at
his side as they entered a tall office
building,
"Find the grocer is sticking you?"
asked the younger man.
"Not only the grocer, but the butch-
er, the baker, the milkman, the coal
man and everybody. I never saw any-
thing like it. You can't mention a
thing that isn't going up."
"Oh. yes I can."
"I defy you to."
"This elevator, fer one tking," he re-
plied, pointing to the wearisome sign,
"Elevator out of ceder."
Humane.
"Bill ins." '
"Well?"
"You ought to be ashamed not to
pay your board bill."
"There is `just one reason why I
don't."
"Well, what is it?"
"My landlady has a weak heart."
Resigned to His Fate.
"Yes, be courted her for eight years
before they were married."
"Did it take him that long to make
up his mind?"
"No, but it took that length of time
for him to discover that he couldn't
make bis escape." .
Not at All,
"Why such a grouch?"
"Grouch!" - ;,'
"Yes."
"I've got no grouch. Wbat in time's
the matter with everybody anyway?"
Hard Place to Fill.
"I wish I had a private secretary."
"Why don't you hire one?"
"To be any good he would have to
know more than I do, and I wouldn't
have that kind of a man around."
In These Days.
"He has retired from business for a
time."
"Indeed! How long will it take him
to serve his time, including reduction
for good behavior?"
The Belt.
You think that your long winded friend
Has staying power and strength.
The comet can a tail unfold
Some million miles in length.
Had to Be.
"Fon say you. are fond of your
mother-in-law?"
"Yes."
"There fanny."
"Se it?"'
"Yea !tow does tt happen?"
"How does It happen? Sur, you
don't know my wife:
4
BANK
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,80O,0OO
96 Branches in Canada
A General Uankinr' Business Transacted
,;IRCULAR LETTERS OP CREDIT`
BANK MOW/ ORDERS
SAVINGS:BANK DEPARTMENT
interest
a,owed1at hi feat
current rata
nen
eannA[2KE, 1Vierseger, Exeter Drench
1
E CANADIAN 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 Generat 1 s
I_ POI, $15,0OO9OOO RESERVE FUND, $13,500,001
Opeasaammemimomonamm
SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS
Interest at the current rate is allowed an all deposits of $1
upwards. Careful attention is given to every account. Small acct/
are welcomed. Accounts may be opened and operated by mail.
Accounts may be opened in the names of two or more persons, sill.•
dtrewals to be made by any one of them or by the survivor. -.
Exeter:Branch-- A. E. Kuhn, Manager.
CREDITON BRANCH —S, M. JOHNSTON, alanaga 7 -ark
rads Mark Ro*astoro.,i
GEORGIAN MFG. CO„
The Harmless min-
csnt remedy for Headache -kw
Neuralgia,Anee tia,S;Isap.-
haleness, Nentous Esc -
benefice, &G, 4,
zoo AT ALL DRVOOI*TS, or by tirood/
COLLLNGWOOD, ONT.
Notice to Creditors
In the Matter of
William Schroeder
insolvent
Notice is h'ere'by given that William
Schroeder of the village of Exeter,
in the County of Huron, lmpleenent
agent hag made an assignment of his
estate to me 'for the general benefit
of ,his ereditore under the Assignment
and Preferences Act.
A. meeting of hie creditor; will be
:held at the offices of Gladman and
Stanbury, Exeter, i3arristern on Tue-
sday the Fifteenth day oeAugust 1911
at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, to re-
ceive a statement of the affairs, to
appoint inspectors and •fix their re-
muneration and to order' the affairs
of the estate general'ly.
Oreditors are requelsteai to file
their claims with Gladman and Stan -
bury the Assignee's Solicitors, with
the proofs and partieulars required
'by tho said Act., on or before the, day
of such meeting.
'And notice es further given that
after the First day of September 1910
the assigned will proceed to,dietribut:e
the assets of the debtor 'amongst the
parties entitled thereto, having re-
gard only` to the -claims of which not -
lee shall then have been givetn 'and
will not be liable for the nese,te or
an& part thereof so distributed to
any person or persons whose claims
Le shall not then have bad notice.
Dated at Exeter, this 3lyd day
of
August A. D. 1910, •
O: Aivin Es_ery,
Assignee.
Gladman and Stanbury, Solicitors for
assignee. r
ASSIGNEE'S SALE
OF VALUABLE 'ILEAL ESTATE.
STANDARD BRED, REGISTERED
AND • GRADE HORSES, 'FARM
STOCK, IMPLEMENTS AND
CIATTELS
Tte undersigned Aesignte of
the Estate of Napoleon A. Cantu, In-
solvent, will offer for sae by Public
Auction at St. Joseph Stock Farm,
61, Joseph, Ont., on Wednesday the
23rd day of tAu,gust, 1016, at 2 p, 'm.
HO R S E b;-• Seven. standard bred
and ,re;gi;:,tered mares and entire hor-
ses, including "Emperor ISloIeenney"
said to be one of tte most promising,
stallion,' in Canada; 2 light roadhor-
ses; 1 chestnut colt; 2 young draft
mares; 1 grade Perchcron colt, one
year old; and 7 good, useful farm
horses and mares.
C 11 A. T T Ia LS;— One binder; one
mower; 1 cultivator; wagons, harn-
ess, sleighs, 1 White Steamer Auto -
(mobile, and various other ohatto1,-,
for particetars *ea posters
REAL F,STATIi;— Parts of Lots
9, 10, and 11 L, It. F. and parts of tote
9, 10. ,11 and 12 L. R. W., Township.
of Hay, t;ottnty of tlluron,
TERMS O.1'' SALE
REAL ]STATE;— 10 per cent on d'iy
bf sale, balance in 29 days without
interest,
IHORSES;— Standard bred horses and
!colts cash. On the reme,itt,ler oC thi
tehattcl Cone tnonths' credit os furn-
isliing 'approved joint note=, A dis-
count for cash will be allowed on
credit .tmount:s,
Dated at GoElerlch Ibis 1.1,
!day of August, 1916,
Proudfoot, Kiilor:atti 8. Cooke,
Alssi,gnee'!s So!irltors
Thomas Gundry,
JAS. BEVERLEY
FURNITURE DEALER
Embalmer and Funeral Director,-
Phone
irectorPhone 74a. Night Call '14b
EXETER, ONTA
r 4
DR G. F. BOULST'ON, L»S., 31/1
DENTIST n
'Honor Graduate ot Toronte- linty'
5113. OLfiee over Dickson ,Et Vow
ling's Law office. :Closed Weems'
day afternoons. Phone OUise Say
Residence 5b.
DR. A, R. KINSMAN L les9,. D,D,L
Honor Graduate of Toronto Um*
armitY
DENTIST i i•
silt extracted without pane.. aal
any bad effects. Office oven Glans
bean & Stanbury;o Office -catMid
Exeter„ I , ▪ , .
1 WA BROWNING M, D., ,a,
* P. 5i. Graduate Victoria M;z iim's!
city Office and residence, Domti
Labratory., Exeter, r1
elesooiate Coroner of Hama ' el
1. 11, 0..4.RLIN•G, a A, •414.
. ati',rilster, Solicitor, Notary -Publiese.
Ptzbiio, Pommissioner, Solicitor ;Eat'
the Molsons Rank,, tete. ,
Money, to Loan at 'lowest gags tai`
Intertest. . . :.tsyr
OF1rLC,E,—MAIN STREET, 'EXE.TE't',
MONEY, TO LOAD ,
We have a large ambient of gal*
ate funds to loan on farm eek' lam
lage properties at lowest tate gt
tenets • ....fiA
GIiADMAN & STANHU.BI $ W
Barristers, Solicitors. grain ah
Exeter,
t e , ;setae
.Tile Usborne and tllbbertl
Farmer's Mutual Fire lamb'
nun Gompadp
Mead Office, Fargt,,har, CEP
President ROB T. 1101tIfige
Vice-,l'resideut c I'FlO$, RYAS '
• ,Dr'R EO'1'ORS 1111
WM, BRO,CK , , WM, PaGIV
J L. RUSSELL , J. T. ALL1e548S3
AGENTS t"
JOHN MISERY Exeter. a,3e»1 Vi
borne and ,Hiddulph.
OLIVER HARRIS Masao agent Oa
Ribbert Fullerton and Logan. .o
W. A. TiiENHCiUI
Secy.Treas. Farquhssrx'
GLADMAN & •eTANBEIRX nes
Solicitors. Exeter.. ,•461
C A STCi R
PO Infanta and Mid=
hi Us* For Over 3O1F€nrs,
Always Imam
Aiiitnaturc of