HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1918-7-18, Page 7mat. Oh, it has hap -
Of 0atiada l kOs pened a thousand times Aust as it dad
inthe case of my ,poor father. Where S y.
Steady Progress is he to -day? I do not know. 1'rol -
NE +TS BY MAIL l RO i9 IRE-
LAND'S SHORES.,
UaPpenings in ikte Emerald Isle of
Interest to Irish-
r�'da,.�ltt:, r'
n n1�14, nren
at. tool. J'. P. C. Parley, son of
I11r. and Mrs. Taney, Violet 6211, Bray,
ouiiiy is rcklov,-, has been killed in,
coon.
The Dublin in'veettalents iA 'NV-al'.r
ulat?. r tlae War Savings
C. .
1 s t
e�,y en' rr
S 1 bill
lt,
.i
1 crit. Geo e
Relines It NJL, son
ot; Mrs, llolr es, Sandynawmt .Yemen,
Dublin, bus been awarded the IDs- ;
tieguislzed Service Cross.
'The ltigl.a lion, James O'Connot'
was -sworn is by tl�e Lord Chancellor [
has a judge of the Chance*" Division
of 6
the 1-ligb Court, of Justice,
y. tros.smore, of ltossnore, Co. ;,
terse -ititi s as nr_ed 410 for send -1
ing atefegrarxi wwhicia stated that the i
Cler°nmans 'nt°c.r . i.irzrehing 'en Calais,
Capt 'i. Ii (tortorx, M,C., Connaught
Rangers, sod or Si Mal`uy and Lady
Crofton, ouse, Dallisodare, t
has ben l:apled ir action,
"R e Gosei t rent have
7
lz
t
decides'i to"
eo [ueetltng
the 111.
11
The lie'rd Chace 1 r has all
eirisin l3a. Mnrtira esep il Flatu
Netto;-aaZni'gerskky.' et
€, dist ict li
t=i'bkwd after
atter pa'
years of
C0ro1;a�
.
The 11
granaed i
.t
0a'
ne
h. Oa E13' f ouneil. h
rate etillc'ors an Incrca
s of Cao Per annual.
F
Steady progress andexpansion fe
re-iorted by the glome Bank of Cana-
da, in Its statement for the fiscal.
year, ending ;tray 31st,
Under canserYative and energetic
direction the Horne J3aeilt has been
forging ahead and improving its
anunelal position.
Right along the lilanagement has
carried out a number of thrift cam-
paigns and these have resulted 1n a
very considerable. increase in the}
amber of savings accounts at ,hart.
various branches. g=
With its larger resources the si
Tank, in turn, has been able to.
liandie a larger amount of general,.
nosiness throughout the country.
One of the outstanding featureg0
Oi i
therepoi t is the gain of �i niosli
,$3,000,00.0 in total deposits i2„~z ng
the Viet Ory IaO'an C.am,iaign the.
t ane lent every assistance to iti 1;
customers and dee ositors. :with, tine
a suit that there were withdrawals
a>y depositors for investment in Vic-
tory Bonds of elose to $2.0O0,000.
If this , ampaign had not developed
the inez ease in deposits for the
twelve aoonths:',lrioti would have
been elose to 5. 0119.0.09.
The marked .a ores made by the
Borne hank cillrag the past few
Years most he regarded. as tee best
ii eti ,tdr a of the ftt7ther stritieg it
is h ely ira m l e
with Its arganiza-
tt, n strengthened thened, in, differentparts
il.
Tag total assets gave increased
it(ii #'r,.$3.000.000 and now stand at
compared with • 45,-
,4 Q t1agtaaarsaunt
.,nioinit, t '
8 .Oa73,1a2.
tOgni ion Notddr,a of nt
$3 t' 0 Canadian nay tetpal
and Prtt foreign an cnlonaai
ati its seern'1t;ee amount. to t2,721,
332 as eoanp reel with 41 .214.450 last.
Shs sttei sCS' om tE.v tl,r,tt cam-
paigns carried,of t by t1Me ifanis has
steadily resuilited in aize aR a #>a s
deo "s t¢0.$0 0 w el Rndi. } *U�y�^
53 l i' 11P froAta $10. 2 aa$0. h . _ RhhRa
de estroot hearing irateres
stand $4.0 -43 -lei. no ,froca
101.
F]
The staff ofthe Lopdotr. L ivespool
. Weller latcirfinse Company Qatar., TNN 0
taineII 'iu' 'le`„` t Sir taredai"le"6k
Dun's Iiorpltal,
The total flag; atop In lrelaild in
17 tvaas 11.9 34 tons, altd was worth Sold
e} ?,7717,1181.
aappeal has been1Tr>ade
sebecil children of Trete.id tc
tufts of s'COI f.aza the hedges tied
ecanz vans ba ore alteariaa
Arther Dra* e . ty'31
soreei tri�Go-;iI, i21 11�1iI tai4,
�yt(�rr, poll :9FY '""'w5aae.L'
§3n RFswmi
lee
SCORE
CHRISTIAN STLJ
.l(A11, \ iJL
Into Slavery, Deport
•a1 a
ldassner?d by
e
*Forty
rk
I
from
Ying
Red C
1 1`•T.
Vag
Plea
1"!' ttltl .l itw aril RSta1mous voaoert
piartyP.
:After 1,7', ray -)110 years' t13T'w'ive as
a1aaater tit ,laermuy Workhouse, F', „l.
Utu'tniey has 1(5igal011, owing to ill -
health.
The, polled have takoa pua..,'tu itan of
alt tho ammunition In the stock et the
Youglial hardware uiuritbtttits.
The Lord Chancellor or Ireland dis-
tributed tho junior prizes at the Royal
Irish Academy of Mlusie.
In his last annual report the melt
cal health officer of Tuatil:,stated that
he Was laleitsed to report that the old
single room cabin WAS giving, way to
a more sanitary class of handing.
i'lte Galway Urban Council is con-
sidering proposals for the tatting over
of the Galway and Scaltlzills Train
ways Co.
P110 Food Controller has refused
permission to the Master of the Ath-
lone Workhouse to kill pigs for usa
In that. institution,
UKRAINIAN GRAIN IS COSTLY.
Cannan Press Indignant Because Na-
tive Farmers Receive: Liss
From Government.
German newspapers received here
are filled with ,violent protests against
the Government food director, who is
paying higher prices for Ukrainian
grain than Germanfarmers are per-
mitted to charge, says .a despatch
from Amsterdam. The matter has
been taken up by the German Farmers
Union. The rieh land owners, who
wield great influence within Govern-
ment circles, are up in arms and pre-
dict thee '; things unless this "shameful
discrimination" is stopped immediate
ly.
While consauniugand starving Ger-
many was hailing the 'arrival of Uk-
rainian grain with shouts of joy and
asongS of praise, the , Junkers who are
in the agrioultural ,'business not only
for their heath and for glory, but also
for profit, made the surprising dis-
covery' that the German food dlctatoe
is paying for rye imported from the
Ukraine 140 marks per tori more than
German farmers are allowed to
charge. And 'for , Ukrainian wheat
Germany pays even 200 marks per ton
more than is the maximum' price fixed
for German producers.
Meat lases one-fi th and upwards of
ft �S weight in cooking.
tI "Tridles make perfection, and per-
-friction is no trifle."—Michael Ar'aelo.
A Rare -bred sire is as necessary to
the 5ucces of the man who disposes of
his stock'to the butcher as to the man
%viio ttypecializes in breeding animals.
vel is Its e
{.72 ities
the 0rless A
i#a
ably dead -at least, I hope. so, rather
than enduring savage cruelties, or dy-
ing front thirst and hunger, while
being lashed for inability toperfornt'.
hard manual labor,
"You know what the Turks do with
our middle-aged and older men. Chain
them together in squads of fifteen,
twenty or thirty. March them fox -
,
out into the open country. Stop
al014 some desolate roadway. 'Tern
their guns upon them and shoot them
tiowwn like so nlapy defenceless sheep.
.1sive
h seen the roads. la Asea Mincer
ailed with the dead bodies of At•ree-
ras ,so that it was impossible to pass
>iatal the barricade of flash had been
,,emow'etl, I have en s'.holt:. families,
seen wae'
massacred in this way—the bodies of
mother, father and innocent children" p.t
stretched out upon the highway„
'u rig
`The "Forty Martyr '4
"My mother was torn away from Us .t
an just h'. ' el i was.terrible
'
._ .._. teras :za,�saittr..:Ic ,w,�.,,
to go and to tlai:tlt of .what
probaejwould hantpen to him. It w;ras
see father
terrable to' thin tit In + r -
Cod try heaven,liub �u ed ewe^l
ui d„ N ,"end
dt�l la +3 en Armenia e he a
re Iz:arrors of her deselal�n e.
er rr;.acifixion. Silrg
is. to be :nada ;s4
Will poor, rr
c�ttliir terra r!r, C.
brae peo
Alaityrslt It "tr,1s
a:i yOriii rrmera,.
r;e myself, self, college stti='
elevate henaseh'es
clonal t:acilitles pz'ei
tld"esi us by C.iarictian America and
Christian, Europe. A leader of the
gendarmes carne to our school and
made it Brown that we, too, inust
lour in the footsteps of the cavalcade
anor�ing, eastwerd to the, deserts. It r.
°zas either a eza�e t,f suicide or go
BENTS
+ kites 1V'Ilnt WOS dta. 6:
' `#,ll Qt' bas agreed
suffer au;thiq, rathe.
?aloin ammeCiandaAaa A
the nretttill4''' '
It has dactyl ixt b1AS .
torr;, es,caapC
ttk it 15'4 wvoynld
r than }bow to €
lutither of them,
late harems,
cue of the
r foil ing her
;vied
11 tS v' icor.,:.
r
pio#d
gxW11, bot ' rl ;y - iemaa t
am( zwome, ;a ep xfal, Tufa
:
$ rn n irYPil t, I 1? t' r 2t',
fiend urs yqy .. � ,,. .3".,;.. ., r� eatitrese.
We, iv#1,1 rep d>��� 1c2',1t;b1E; sng-
y tions and: rice,; bat Rr is made
I'
hie ad)re: otg f 4 ;.'t SeFt instruct
14-4,40 thak o k o '• ;tit er coat.
Ii9Prziet nr sek a i ?rrxu es our low
rimApeeV'ou ret ?Cew Fall
le Effectg," irliliaal Attention arid
AI'npt berwtre at a big se.virg. $5.00
„ 41 remodel a coat that $25,90 will not
raig 1 this Fall. We do this'work for
gkz4.4'or Private Heroes.
AFeipe no., 74 Pay tie., Ter=t4,
into Canada especially in Nova Scotia,
wwhe e it is crossed With crrmmercial
success ot; Lineoiz^s, Cotswolds, and
Zeteesters, 'line skirt,% se produced
€axe worth from .$5 to $,7. The wool
of +he k arakn.le and its crosses varies
12'a: color front light gray to black. So
far the Ka.rnkule industry 3n Canada
is only in the experimental stage, hut
there seems to lto-!rte good reason why
Persian lamb, Astrakhan and other
?bona e e,'ses 'fur cannot. be pro.-
di' el in this country.
LEMON JUICE IS
FRECKLE RE 9OV
Gla.ar b
1140 Y
r
ng has
ory
out,
The dame in the l
dulled.
But I am thinking.
Whose faces are n
Springwi , r
wr:hert
lnembers
Iit sunbursts a
And the leaf lie fret anti to
the bough
she myriad shining blossom be
tlmnter and I,
ea.
f
e
isobered'
e'1
ee
in
ata;1) ttr
AP at
But
ern:
shall be thi
eS WIlI IlOt
„a of the young
e ail 1xs
Western Crop Conditions,
x'r. need ref rain over eonsidei :�Ie
sections of :lis grain- growing areas In
_a'a..rtoba> Ssska*ebeww'an and Alberta
is Indicated ip tineweekly crop r€ por, t
et" Canadian No -there Agents to tri ,
ei.r: all tei ieee of the cosnpartY is
bQwcy era a,arge er
who amort ;t' ars ,. e
'a ffe4=t`t
d e�z
Somethi
looked rp fro h' -
no
if they
1. anti h
cIcles and
�, dolt en rl white the
oinee. '1'05? It is kta
Ha
.,few itCnnithe ago JaVall
wIth
coal. Duriag
yea 10
of
010 70
le
The o
MONEY QRD
e .sen
:NTED
log 4
anti II
ou tphled to
krI 5.:gtS
°la'ayrty' iz,lrt� r 4' wet.'
s 4 re talented yerurag lznaeni gra girt;
w.hsa cif the be; i:uairi oa tine world
wwaar ww°ere: stutlelzts rlt aitaatnla Col-.
Ief;o in elle Armenian city of :Mnrso-
mtna1 who vowed among aseivos
c'
secret' p;at't, i€ivpial to with n1I the
1, t:°sionate ardor t�f ,,weir race=, than
tlbi:y wwoulcl tarth and every ono sunmit
,elk", n2t7;,t. harrowing tortures or die
ttawtir Cawu hand rather than em -
ace Mohammedanism.
So far us knaoww•n, this young girl,
Armenuhe Demerjian, is the only one
of the "FF arty Martyrs" who has
escaped to, America, although every
once in a While the Armenian colonials
in the various largeAmerican metro-
politan centres welcome to thew midst
With tears of joy some < emaciated to.
tared exile from the harems or prisons
of the Moslem.
Father and Mother Taken.
She took up the story of the "Forty
Martyrs" as though an :ordeal that
she dreaded.
"My father was an Armenian min-
ister," she began. "'Wien the war
began many* of our young men were
commandeered and forced into the
Turkish army. Think what that means
---brother fighting against brother!
My father, with many other men, was
deported. Can you imagine what that
means? A gendarme at the front door
during the night; a peremptory de-
mand to be at the mobilization point
When Yon Eat
Gr4pc Ntits
you get the solid nour-
ishment of whole wheat,
malted barley and other
grains in more pleasing,
easily digestible form
than in any other way.
This great, ready-eooked
cereal is -very economical
—requires no sugar, less
milk, yet is probably the
richest of all prepared
cereals.
A Fitting
War -time Foo
girls 'Fere l'?r
while others wire <let
101715rd the east,
Beat!; bF Tart,
"It a eitfa�
take yot2.` oat
alo
of
OPP WITHOUT- PAIN
cInnati aria tell* how to dry
op A corn or callus so ta
00
Yet many, many Armenia girIa cast , lt mato i
themaelves into rivers or over cliff's eause few droas el
to a death preferable to rtures or slirk.,..at ou a. tender,
"In the town of Harpout the Turks
did as they pleased with them, then
killed every single one and finally
burned the cbarch to cover the awful
In one fireplace were found the
skulls of forty children.
"Many, a•ery malty, including some
of the Forty Martyra, were scorched,
and aoMe of them thrown into vats
of boiling oil. Many of the prieata
and preachers were cruoilied.
"I could go on and on. But it is all
the same horrible story. I got backl
to Constantinople from Beirut and
thence into Switzerland, through the
kind offices of oar good imissionary
teachers, all of whom were driven out
when the United States and Germany
went to wet.: And now have ar-
rived in free America. And here la
shall remain, hoping and longing and
praying' for the day when the oppres-
ed of my poor Armenia will be op-
pressed no more."
ANOTHER CANADLAN V. C.
Charged the Enemy Single -Handed
and Captured Prisoners.
The Victoria Cross was to -night
gazetted to Lieut. George Burden Mc-
ean, ana Ian infan y, aged 30,
says a London despateh of June 30.
He enlisted at Edmonton as a private
in January, 1915. Ile won the Mili-
tare,c Medal and was wounded in 1916
and received a commission in May,
1917. He is still in France. 1-Ils mo-
ther lives in Calgary. McKettn's
party was held up in a communication
trench by a most intense fire from
grenades and machine guns. Realiz-
ing this block unless destroyed might
mar the success of the whole opera-
tion, McKean ran into the open, leap-
ed over the blockhead on top of the
enemy. When a man rushed at him
with a bayonet McKean shot him
through the body, then shot the man
underneath him who was struggling
violently. This gallant action en-
abled the capture of the position,
McKean's supply of bombs ran out
and whilst waiting a further supply
he engaged the enemy single-handed.
On bombs arriving he fearlessly rush-
ed a second block. killing two and
capturing four and driving the re-
mainder, with a machine gun, into a
dugeut which was destroyed. This
ofRcer's splendid dash ancl bravery,
Lei undoubtedly saved many lives.
WOMOR
ditto origin. to be
thie new business,
pi
what the datetor called ' ; bad drain
days I was out to work again.
it the beat Liniment made.
and aoon
tae corn or hardened cat looseas so
It yea be lifted off, root and all, 'with-
out pain,
A small bottle of freezene eosts very
little at any drug store, bat will posi-
tively take oft every hard or soft corn
or cantle. should be tried, as it
theapeasivo and Is said not to Irri- Cusrat's Stanas Abuse.
tale the surroundiag sain. Cosmos appeared in my garden a
year from self -sown seed. This y
the garden was covered with
lings that were mistaken for coreop-
time, sis. Having plenty of coreopsis, the
seedlings were turned under in sped -
•1, ing, Now the plants preCe to be cos-
mos. They are coming up, though
some of them are covei-ed entirely.
except the tips, plants fully a loot
long. On digging these up I and the
plants have rooted along the stem. 1
have traniplanted them and they are
doing well. 1 never knew before how
muck abuse cosmos would stand.—
If your druggist Inaan't any ,freezotio
hlia to get a small bottle for Yon
from his who/el:rale drug house. It Is
flue stuff and nets 11110 chnrra every
How Persian Lamb, Broadtail and As-
trakhan Furs are Obtained.
Persian lamb fur, states a pamphlet
issue by the Live Stock Branch, Ot-
taava, that can. be bad free from the
Pablieationt Branch, Department of
Agriculture, is the primary market-
able product from Karakule sheep.
Both in Canada end the United States
there is a keen demand for this fur,
which is being. tilled mostly from
Asiatic countries, through the pro -
sheep. This Persian lamb is obtain-
ed from killing the young Karakule
lamb when only a few days oIci;
this age the skin is very black and ,
tightly curled, while as the lamb be-
comes older the curl rapidly loosens.
The qualities determining the value
of a skin are lightness and size of
curl, the lustre and size of the skin.
Another grade of fur. the product of
the Karakule, is Broadtail or Baby
Iamb, the skin of prematurely born
Iambs, when these skins are strong
and of good size they usually possess
more lustre arid a longer, closer curl
than do the other grades. Astrakhan
fur is the dressed and dyed. skins of
young Karakule lambs which do not
possess the regular tight curl, but
rather loose ar.d open. Astrakhan is
also frequently the result of late
killing. These three classes of fur,
Persian lamb, Broadtail, and Astra-
khan are invariably black when taken
from the young ICaralcule, there ' ,
however, a fourth grade which is us-
ually included with the above by the,'
fur trade, namely, Krimmer Cur. This'
class is very similar to the AstraknaM,
except that it is grey and is dresaked,,
in its natural state. It is said to be
the product of the Karakule produced
mainly in the Crimean Peninsula. Th;
Kerala -le 1)0W been introduced
ISSUE Nci- 28-15 '
"11.tinard,u Liniment Cares Colds. Mto.
The Prince of Wales is, alluded to
often and, affectionately as "the boy
who wouldn't grow up," and sister
retains that air of a schoolgirl that
most of her contemporaries have put
so completely behind thorn, not for the
better. The stranger seeing Princess
Mary in sach a position as not to
know who she was would set her down
as the daughter of a very nice country
parsonage.
Minard,14 Liniment Cures Garret In Cows
A mixture of lime and sulphur, two
parts lime and one part sulphur,
maltes an excellent fungicide for dust-
ing the mildewed foliage of roses,
Along the 1st, of July mulch 1110
rhubarb plants with the fresh 'supply
of manure, first, turning under the old
mulch. 1 stbsorblac and Absorbine. 'ace Dada 10 Cana
email orchard and wi
excellent lot of fall feed f,o
try,
lituk
'S Fan
e
Cur
e fro organic. tri
vousnees an
aches Lnd every.
month would ha ve te
Ley lobed most of
the time. Treat.
meats would relieve
le for a time but
my doctor was al-
ways urging me to
have an operation.
My sister asked rile
ha nes Vegetable
operation. too
five bottles of it an
A it has completely
eared nae and 'my
work is a pleasure. I tell all my friends
who have any trouble a this kind what
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coma
pound has done for 1110.'1—NELLIE B.
BniTTINTaLi.m, 609 Calverton Balt!.
rnoIlt.eisModn.ly natural for any woman to
dread the thought of an operation. So
many women have been restored to
health by -this famous remedy, Lydia E.
Pinkhanas Vegetable Compound, after
an operation has been advised that it
will pay any woman who suffers from
such ailments to consider trying it be.
fore submitting to such a trying ordee I
Will teduee- inflamed!, Strained,
Swollen Tendons Ligaments
or Muscles. Stops the I ameness and
pain flora a Splint, Side Bone oi
Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair
gone and horse can be used. $2.50 a
bottle at druggists or delivered. Do -
scribe your case for special instruc..
tions and interesting- horse Book 2 R. Free.
ABSORBINE,111., the antiseptic liniment for
mankind, reduces Strained, Torn Liga-
pleats. Swollen Glands. Veins or Muscles;
Ireals Guts. Sores, Meets. Allaxp pain. Price
51.25 a bottle at dealers or ered. Snot. Evidence' f ree,
W. F. YOUliG, P. D. F., 516 tartans Bldg., Maritsa!, Can.
yak CUE