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The Exeter Times, 1918-11-28, Page 4t FF DANDRUFF, R $TOPS FALL,I 1 erl on a small Nott i)e rTceht no'ur Mse. stcilin9 scalp. v taar ,lp. of scat dim freeze hing he hair a3 ci�ndrtxif, $1 s lststr4, ata stem,. e *entutally product and itching of the enalp, Temer,T.Ied muses the hair oats loo.s rs and die —then • this huer t .teen A little Daaade arae to- y time --.w1/1 surely save bottle o Know/tenni,- 1 env thug Owe., 'Vona beautiful. hair and letan just inn d lido Dom' hitetir t Try 361 0 The Kai By. or moi': A t, `AY. sYST E Th tl 4er art the great late a ^=t tht, tilt! -er had + tiara s ::s long ieeteti:, tlse .leer sionv he waist have Year 11 S see quart ae at Pleas, two e Genii}ane Tasked tbe eft bo put- start ut start. "She f`e3 s eu sXermane a n. Armies and abed over eln-a ee arang erose scent 0Tet fe ati the fl gyp Aare Ia aha . irsnatioxrr liow Fer,, wee had onlyy 30.- '090 seaeas,, in ii'ran,ce at` that time and he was of the opinion that ul - never have more, `ektnerlee $. a fine Ora* tea r�i : lrlestliy.:,.I he other de c1 tea 14I`ila, t:�SI RT. Iti Gael renes 4axedish >wlo� o register a#*3t't We *re ;eta $ excellent ixaformation about al caizaTititans in Axiterieea. " ortlybefore this bed one the reg* slsetlens from 'Washington of the 11.. trigone oi` COent Ton',mbar.; the Ger hose minister to Argentina, and 1 ]tnetw where the Lehrer was getting thea ine. formation he referred, to. In- :ne ed,' every nese, It appeared, the kaiaen'e le- foment* were snleleading him. Bath before and after we entered ae vier the kaiser wane tli,Q,nadgbly eon- ineed asst we couiaT yet nein- it umit site fair ainpower cern Siad leis an a q? fit unktgglete CRISIS ing Revetafions by For - Colonial Secretary, Booth Att**icn' 4Gs 1914 4ffak Relaels eel by rg[n ot" : ]flip LONDON, Noy. 2 ; ==- bi=ght So on. a,uxes Lowther L restded Saturday at oaf 'the `Empire Parliauseo- ASsoeiatien at the douses of Uament, at which maw peeve d commoners were pr A; The nae '"Minister wrote pig a Ari bate to the work of tie �e whish had e.abled tis1 .. Overseas Par iamentartani ; x eRt parts of the .En etre. He einged the eontinuaiiee et sinaiiair 'a,' »»ices w'hieb would be even more Invaluable in the future than in the Mt, The ebairmae,,,4ep'torheoss of three South ? fa�ican anedemtliersabf <rliameat, who had been torpedoed gad drowned 011 their way to attend to nieedng. Fie comaaended the parr aa/ that an overseas delegation of taz-iaaza be in ited to visit TiF .lB11 ATI0N sued Freud* Marchang Gemmel. - PARIS emmny',P RIS, Nov. 25.—The 'War Omce eatimanneent on the opexa#fons of oceupa *ion p np'Iete Gaeta' eerritorica q e is in prof ur lathe/ he ztd: achieve - ' i he vett i[4 and ribl*VW in the ably in Diltiugen,, Barr e�il c * t ' tri eiouis, where the gene cozitrnding the First Army', entered at :'the bead of his troop*: 441n Armee l« Tench v - gisabrds reached the former frehtter too$ possession oaf Woes th, cschwiller. Reisehotlen, as wall :ts x and Dlsehwiller. Everywhere wench troops were enthusiasti- el1y' welcomed by the delivered popnlation.s;"' Field Marshal Haig's report on the movement of the British army of oe- cupation, says: " toward Gn, frontierThe is maproceerchding sathetzsfaetsatil7, Advanced troops of the Fourth Airy bave erosaedethe Our°the river, south. of Bomala and are rushing forward to the east. "The number of guns left behind by the retreating enemy now in our" hands, exceeds 600. A number of air- planes and quantities of railing stock are also passed into our peseta» Marehal y0ia4Iidenbarrg,: ea* tea the et eatbcial Wolff has tele;phed the Berllzi eat asserting' categorically rise~ German army, beeaneo at lard terms of the armistice and of the internal situation, is In no position to renew ftghtiog, Tae Ger-` mala i`fiil$taary leader eelde4 that even operations against the F4'etien array alai . Weeld be alapere ible, nneriue *lilted i ill *,-Do yoit if ipping it to w" he *s To na to th e r a>rn l would require Eng in addition si for regular froa«a, with au allied veaa- ever be .reg- dolsag Avon: repared to rTsi;eri Laced? y tl.be is $r rfel work- and w art sae care of ail tkit two ay try tc lUsand itt i lion; ow feoh fsar tae to the war.' he went Long moved ery niessage. nell *1entbera�, all` •.,. b ow of iaaiit triumph of goQ'taa'ni e tit, s� hieh _! hat fi bosh byFl the self.'51 glt of th l rigish aid led sides auc, navies seting un- rer flys pytli&til, to lhee welcoreae re neai=r 71:114:74'7avii,e2:::QUI1Vdt) t Zalaud �"aet4, 3otha diheliv-r#Icoxiae irt'iais ctatai ; iea t,loniai dk g rise resolution, an .1, course of solus ialte revelatjons that iwmnetliatoly be BritiS aaltzuiaNuctn had eta- 1 d at n ith let oa ttgiasl 4, 1914, i. ad, eahlc4, e to iie wle , "ire and�� hti.etoretae. trauutlig wlha€i 1 ttae spa aril t fry 5f lie boot triod t thnt " tiara wart ei It ' soar ; 1�4eti 1.:;ra aO1Q tion b al T kt" tt rc °r O p C tt o* flit#' r., anal€ atznaNratft�,n1rt rite elii$1 1r is Itag+ i31 ia$41iioat scaltae;;tly, he: : 4 oioa y- Cyan rkl e telt I`«tlitk nd toz e,�a6ed .hay thti t I.I.1G 5S"I 'a - , t TxLIZzl Phone, pric Fence Ia1� bm6.0 'h c t't st cfta to ; ossa and brec fi taw lot prices, ohox, poets. Let n ail kinds PIa€"`v aux CLATWORTHY GR AN TON A not give your boy and girl an =_ opportunity no make the iIwrne study easy and ee effective? : G i v e en- thena the same chances to w-inpro motion and emcees,::. as theiad having the :n, advantage of J1[Uw flia, nW21 '%n u^�lt• W EBS la 9S E INTERNATIONAL`= n • Dictionary in his home. Tills new n, - creation answers with final author- • ity'all kinds of puazling questions in history, geography, biography, spelling, praniwciation, sports, arts, of and sciences. 400,000vocabnlaa0ti`ermsenatillages - over eeem ilustr tee'l(laisi�ked fates a§„ ae tvpe matte% er,tha't of a as velumee , eyelapedia olasf �l�dcnra#e Convey terse, tfie fitly' t +ail any other Lege . ee;" he if `on 1llnden sella] , Re hat znis ne�C P{arrs:atgia"cal �-gExaoraai for ilio tttl,� lea cte rnarsettV. in iYenet,.time 'itberz by u 'brilliant trabi cs e stri tegy ho lind succeeded: in. :arts . ser"s lcrxces, including rise, kaiser and his 'allele staff./ T ariz~e referred in aprevious ebapter fo `tl e kslser's unbounded confidence stkfer rile Italian collapse in 1017. "Now, wee got the allies!" he ." - elcirtse3, with an air of conclusiveness ;wishes emphasized the optimism be cleplayed. After the capture of Roumania he ex`siibited a similar degree of exults- tion. Ilebelieved that ha that achieve - went lie had snecessfnily solved the food problem—the one ' cloud °which constantly darkened the kaiser's hori- zon. "Nov: the allies will never succeed in starving us," he said to me In my of- fice shortly after the Roumanian drive. "With Roumania in our pockets and Servia already ours, their wonderful agricultural possibilities will supply our food needs and foil our enernies' efforts to starve un.: Indeed, they had better look out for themselves. Don't forget we have a Monopoly on the potash mines of the world. Without proper fertilization, American crops will go on decreasing and decreasing and they won't get any potash until we. get ready to let them have it!" . - The failure of the Zeppelins from a military standpoint was undoubtedly a great disappointment to the German people at large, who had counted so much upon :them to bring disaster to England, but it cannot be said that the kaiser, shared their chagrin. On the contrary, 1 have reason to believe that he never expected very mneh.from that arm of his military force except as it might be 'useful to terrorize the civil population. A day or two after Zeppelin's death» In 1917, a patient of mine, a lady, hap- pened to remark that it was too had that the count had not lived to see the triumph of his invention,, and when 1 saw the kaiser shortly afterwards I repeated her remark to see what he would say, "I am convinced that this count lived Ion :Omagh to see all that the Zep- eitaP rere capable of accomplishing," as s sa e {,comment It recalled the as r1 d agfven MO?'"[¢ e y aLB ,s llOW failure .clirxzerac ui1y ale sl ep tshorta it ie m pec c ,the ateo 1. tercept ap ships rntist loos Iaaixi+ cart to him. ;and America rwhelrningly ,overcome the alalpping, I don't kutiw, but re than probablo that for some o tome tho teat aituaation will, at pato, be successfully concealed' t theGermanpeople. 1 know that failure of the, V -boat campaign watt unknown` to tho Germans up to the tinge I left Berlin -in January, 1918. 'While the kaiser and the Germans generally felt confident that we would never be able to send mane men a atcrosla, they professed to feel little concert even 11 we did. .According to some of the German of- ficers fficers with whorl 1 spoke, even if "two landed 2,000,000 men in France It would not be enough to break this: deadlock, as the Germans were taking a similar number of trained' troops from .the Russian .front. The only menace of American participation In the war lay in the possibility that we might add considerably to the allied air strength. Man power alone, they, contended, would never be sufficient to help the allies much, but overwhelming superiority in the air might occasion the Germans some annoyance. The kaiser himself had but a poop' Opinion of the fighting qualities of the American' soldier so far as modern war requirements are concerned. "The American soldier would pool =ably give a good account ,of himself in; open fighting," he declared, "but he 'la not built for the kind of warfare he 'will encounter in France. He lacks. the stolidity to, endure life, ;in the'. trenches. He is, too high-strung and ecoulda't stand the inactive lifewhich Issuch an important `part of modern' 'carfare. Besides, he lacks discipline and trained officers." ` CHAPTER 'IX. Titie`Kaiser's Plan for World Dominlorf, The history of modern Germany is, perhaps, in itself sufficient indication of the underlying plan of the Teuton war barons to control the whole of Europe end, eventually; the world. The program has been slowly unfolding'it- eeif since the time of Frederick the Great and the present generation Is now witnessing what was intended to be the climax. There can be non doubt that,,11 Many Ila#t eel C Q e et,1 h the c able way Sub- ' ..ub'r lora llioug€i iY nR argin of 2-1 E:#erred xo tae danger whkik, teaaate?ned South Atrlea 1:o an. ex1,e*nt that; ev,°ex. the# Sout.ii i'i.£riea n rebels haat tailesi `to realize wallet they captured rises eJriioze'srxenxtsGetaauil ttaitlnunition In 19:14. 4i71zsi, Botha cabled for their rel lacer eut without delay, he naturally, but without luuch hopes, appealed to Loral. Kitchener. The latter replied: 'N'o, xny' friend, not ono - rifle nor one cartridge shall be diverted front 'the European. front," Lord Harcourt ' searched. the world ;for nearly a week and ° ulti- mately found the weapons required in a friendly country. An empty ship was despatched and was loaded with arms and ammunition in 30 Hours. They =reached Cape Town in 16 days. That was the ;most critical period the TYnion of 4outh Africa had ever ex- perienced. The resolution, was adopted, and Mr. Lowther stated that he accepted the Invitation to preside on the exe- cutive committee and entertain Gen. Botha on his arrival. Vicar Defied Police. PORT ARTHUR, Nov. 25.—Defy- ing the order on the Medical ;Officer of Health,` prohibiting public gatherings on account of influenza, „Peet B. F. Palmer,' vicar of the Anglican Mis- sions, • advertised on- Saturday that services" would be held ' on Sunday. The M.O,T1. caused two policemen' to be stationed at the doors of the church .to take the naives of those who entered. Only four persons, in addition to the vicar, would give their names. The others were not allowed to enter, butregular service was held for these four. The M.O.H. had threatened prosecution in police court df services was held, but it is not likely that steps will now :be tak- en, on aken,on :account of the four' not con- stituting an unlawfulassembly under the Medical Health Officer's `'proelam .tion. Grand Duke Renounces Throne. BASEL, Nov. 25.—A proclamation issued Friday` in Karlruhe, by,, the Grand ;:Duke of Freidrich of 'Baden,. says that he relieves soldiers; and of- ficials from their oath of fidelity,and renounces the throne for'°himself: and hie descendants, in accord with„. his cousin and heir, Prince :Maximii en, the former German, Chancellor. The provisional people's - govern- ment -of Baden_s in' announcing the abdication to;e'teke1people, declares. that the Grand Dtii e and his family,. and theirhone '+sae ander the pro- tection of thee'll' ,en Reputlic. The. announcement renders homage to the patriotistp. of the Gra'nt , Duke and, the seeviCes of Prince Maximilian to? Germany. , u a Jov 25 =Thele eluding sentem`d, a etee§nt Stittreleest o, eke P yv< Mending Hot Water 6ottlee. To .Mead a hot water bottle nee e Patch such. as used for auto,tires. They earl ha bad at auy garage. dant cleat arourtii the puuetw'e with gasoline then apply patch, ata3o aatbleo on. Tra[ableS. blame your is erect be middleman. Dii.D3as--; T blatrrae all our troubles Lite peraeant he said Emu` post prepaid or do- iliege of Exeter, Solicitors dresses and descriptiona, the !Wiper tit:tilers or their claims, the state- ment. or their accounts and the na- ture of the securities it any, held by them, And aerteher take notice that after such haat mentianed date. tire said _executors will proeeed eto distribute the asseta or the doeetistal among the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims or whieh they shall then bave. -notice and that the Executors will mit be latble _tor said assets or any next thereof to tiny person or persons ef whose ,claims notice shall not bave been received by them, at the time such distribution. Solicitors for Rxecutors Dated at lexeter this 22nd day Octobee., ann. Dated at Exeter this alth lday :November, 1918. Notice to Creditors rilinawtetelf, 0[1131 thilhee4-VEdia41:::' 00i Exeter, 'County of alarm, widow Notice is hereby given pursuant to Statutes in that behalf that all ered- itors and others having elaims a- gainst the -estate oftetihe said Ana Samentil, who clied on or about Octo- ber n.7, 1918, one wequired on or before. December and, 191e, to send by peet nrepaide or deliver to Aleesra Glad - man & Stanbury, of the „village of Exeter, solicitons for the Executor nail and surnames, ,addresses and des- criatiouse the full particulars of their claims, `the statement of their ace courite and the nature of tbe aectua niece, if any, held by them. And further take notice tbat eiter said last mentioned- date the Executor will proceed to distribute the then have notice and that the said said assets or any part thereof, to any • person or persons of whose claime eotice shall 110t bave been received by- him at the time of clixcl, neetrieet eniaci tent .for Executor. Dated 'at- EXeter tiles alth day November "Arsi8. adONNIY Children Cry for Flatcher's tt TO The Kind You Rave AlwaYs Bought, and which' has been_ ; in use for over thirty years has borne the signature ter and has been made under his per , Aik countodeit5, Imitations and ” Just -as -good" are but Enteeelmegg., In that trifle with and endanger the health of„, ' , and Children -7E erieuce against Ex ear_ tilk, , hat is_ . „ STC) A Drops and Soothing Syrups. it is pleasant. It contains ueither Opium, Neepleine nor other narcotic substance. Its Mge la its guarantee. For more than thirty years it hae. been in constant use for the relief of CenstipaVon, Flatulency$:, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; allaying Feverishness arising: therefrom and by regulating the Stomach mid Bowels, aids. the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural aleelit.4 The Children's Panacea—The Dlother's Friend. ENUINE ,- CASTOR IA ALWAYS Use For Over 30 Ye The Kind You Have Always Bou .0G PRODUCTION It ,;s a matter of the greatest importance that Canada should increase her pr4tilt6 -ion of4,13ACON HOGS and other liiTe Stock. as there is at present a world-wide 'short -- age of meat. Good markets for scime time: to come are asSured. THE CANADIAN BANK OF cOMMERCE, will gladly -mace loans to assist farmers in, good standing to acquire live stock. 3" Drediton Braneh—J. Me Donald Manager. -it, in St LW, ROUINSON LICENSED ATY,OTIONEER AND, VALICT.A.TOR Iter Counties of Huron Perth and allidalepes,, Farm „Steele Sales a Specialty. Office at Cockshutt Warerooms, next' door to the tOentral Head, 'Main fat. Exeter, Chafgea mod- erate end satisfaction guarantee& Iiiro EiROVVNI101, 31. M, at, ea S. Graduate aciatoria University„ Office, and Residenee, Dorainion E,7orone.r of Huron Soli -alter, Notary E'ablies Me Loan ein- lowest zatea of °POOR IN_ BT. EXETE1,4,0 FARMER'S MUTUAL FIRE INSeraie jaead Offioe, Farquhar, Gate. President, ee ROW. NORRW RYANe DIRECTORS JOHN: FfiSERY. 'Exeter,. Agent Upee, bornenand OLIVErRaHARIIIS, alanro, Agent far Beaty-Treas. Farquhene Saha-torn Exeter,•' 0. to. 110:cf4F9N. nor inglaalasaye fereerke Lae Se 0. teofi pia f1 pis .Ji