HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-7-3, Page 4919
TUE EXETER TIMEie
R NkR 51fSW
TEM
Time Table Changes
;o. -change of time will be made on
JUNE 29th, 1919
Ittfortuaatioit
ILOW tae agents' bands.
k'u.11 information from any Grand
Trunk Ticket Agent or C. 1L Horning
District Passenger Agent, lotrouto.
N. J. l)ORE,
Agent, Exeter.
Phone 46w.
Get m•4•+lhta 4,44,tP .braW+M*1+i4040®4.4 pap' '..,
•
We have TELEGRAPHY,
COMlt,1,ltC]IAL and SHORT-
-Kt 4.ND
HORT-14.ND Departments. We
give individual instruction.
Students are ent zing each
week. Our graduates se-
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
cure positions of trust. •
•
•
Get our tree catalogue g •
now it may interest you. ,r
19.. A. McLACm+Ala, •
Principal •
Nb •
i9 teet3.4?•b0•0•44• 411#4!!Heento••
rrri era
Atterrtiorl
Now is your time to put in your
supply o: both BIRD AND SOFT
CAM,. I am selling Large Lump,
Bright, Matt Threshing Coal at $7
per ton, Very low prices on the
/Best Farm Fence (Frost .Pence. j
AU kinds of Lumber in stock, also
Shingles and Cedar Posts, Set., 9ft.,
and .10ft.long. Cement sold in
large lots at a very close price.
ell fera+des of Paroid Roofing.
Phone 12,
A. J.
CLAT ORT Y
GRAN TON
19R, A.. B, KINSMAN, L.L.D., D.D.S.
Honor Graduate of Toronto Univer-
Say.
DENTIST
Teeth .extracted without pain or any
bad effects. Office over Madman
& Stanbury's Office. Main St.
Exeter.
THE USIBORNE AND .JiIEBERT
k+'d1P'tMJiE'as MUTUAL FIRE INSUR-
ANCE COMPANY.
Head Office, Farquhar, Ont,
President, THOS. RYAN
;Rice -President, WM, ROY
DIRECTORS
Arm. BROCK„ J. T. ALLISON
e..ii. i,UsSI.LX4 FSO BT. MORRIS
rbce li l;I3Ii+,
`fJFIN tggertY, Centralia, .Agent for
trsborne and Hibbert.
flLWER HARRIS, Munro, Agent for
I, thbert, Fullarton and Logan.
,Z"t', a,.,, W. A. TURNBULL,
t „r,,•n.c.-,. Secy.-Treas., Farpuhar
GLADMAN STANBURY
Solicitors, Exeter, etet-
•.Y
I3Ity. Qa, F, FOUL TON, L.D.S., D.D.S.
DENTIST
Office over I. R. Carling's Law
office.
Closed every Wednesday afternoon,
WHO IS BLIND?
Will every person who reads this
iotiee, and knows a blind man in
ielanada, kindly send the name and
address of that blind one to the Can-
adian National Institute for the
plind 36 King St. East, Toronto.
The Institute is conducting work
for the blind along the most modern
scientific, lines and desires that each
bland resident of Canada should have
the opportunity of availing himself
or herself of the benefits represent-
ed by this work.
The immense task of registering
'every case of blindness can only be
accomplished successfully by the
earnest co-operation Of the public
r,enerally, This is why we ask you to
send names and addresses of blind
people you may know.
The following departments of
work are being actively prosecuted
by the Institute:
Industrial Department for Men.
Industrial Department for women,
Department of Field Work,
Department of Home Teaching.
Department of Prevention of
7E'3linciness.
Library Department.
Department cif After Caire,
leeeidettc:e and Vocal Training
Centre for Blinded Soldiers.
To send information or to obtain
information address
The General Secretary,
Canadian 'National Institute for
the Blind,
G .. 30 Kirlg St. East, Toronto
,Pec elve`4111'n al 1�1"ilzxlYl'1'y~ tr�l'e �rRtTl I"tr:
� TOPICS ,~ ]"llz}ah Xyt�nford crf e.lurtecy in the
C. G. It. officers' mese at Carling
Heights.
Important Events Which Have
Occurred Dine frog the Week.
The Busy World's Happe nitngs Care-
fully Compiled and Put. Into
Randy and Attractive Shape for
the Reader. of Our taper -- A
emen lHoyyur'�sy Enjjoyy'ment.
W £WNE&.OA.Y.
A Hamilton foreigner bad his
'pocket picked of $504 while watch-
ing a fire.
Harry Matthews, a returned sol-
dier of Hamilton, reported his wile
mt sing Since Saturday.
Numerous food shops in the north-
ern quarter of Berlin were stormed
and pillaged yesterday.
Predictions are made in Detroit
that coal will soar at e20 per ton
during the coming winter.
Farmers in Niagara peninsula are
crying for help and cannot obtain it,
though offering high wages.
Col. H. J. Lambe, D.S.O., 'was eta
pointed Dominion Government engi-
neer for the Province of Ontario.
Brig. -Gen. C. H. Mitchell address-
ed the Canadian Clue, telling of the
work of the Intelligence Department.
Ontario Liberals meet in Toronto
to -day and to -morrow to formulate
policies and choose a permanent
leader,
Dr. Epitacio Pessoa, President-
elect of Brazil, has intimated t ctrl that
he will visit Canada before returning
home,
The Ontario Railway Board made
an order directing the Toronto Rail-
way Co. to operate a service, com-
mencing to -day.
John White's seat on the Have-
lock Council has been declared va-
cant owing to his non-attendance for
the past four months.
Jack Dempsey knocked out "Big
Bill" Tate at Toledo yesterday. The
arena there will be"increased in size
to seat 75.000 spectators.
Three United States tennis players
beat three Britishers in the opening
games of the world's championship
grass court tournament in England
yesterday.
The Budget Committee of the
French Chamber of Deputies has de-
cided to ask Premier Clemenceau for
an explanation of the sinking of the
German ships.
Rev. Canon O'Meara, parish priest
of St. Gabriel's Church, Montreal,
was found dead in bed from heart
failure, said to be caused by shock
over his brother's drowning the day
before.
WEDNESDAY.
James Orser, Toronto, died from
injuries received when he was run
'over by an employes' truck.
British Columbia farmers are tak-
ing steps to organize a Council of
Agriculture for the province.
Sixty-three Villa rebels were kill-
ed and many more wounded in a fight
With Federal troops on Saturday.
Henry Seidan, a Montreal commer-
cial traveller, was arrested at Que-
bec on a charge of seditious plotting.
Mrs. E. G. Sutherland, of Welland,
dropped dead at the tea table while
visiting her nephew in St. Catharines.
A basis of settlement in the To-
ronto street car strike was reached
late yesterday, following private con-
ferences,
The Medical Council -will deal to-
day with charges arising out of the
administration of the Ontario Tem-
perance Act.
Joseph Zimounstos, seven years
old, was instantly killed by a train
at Montreal, his head being severed
from his body.
It was announced at the annual
meeting of the Home Bank that the
dividend would be raised front five
to six per cent.
Herscovitz of the C.E.F. was beat-
en by Norton of the A.E.F. in the
heavyweight boxing bout at Perste--.
ing Stadium in Paris yesterday.
King Victor Emmanuel has re-
quested Francesco Nitti, former Min-
tst,pr of the Fieniaeury, to form a Cabi-
net,e`.
Former Prem.r 'ittoni will be
Foreign Minister,
teams piµ;`e_ WM again
badly beaten by the United States
representatives at Wimbledon, Eng.,
yesterday, Andre G-obert, of France,
beat Lovibond, of New York, in the
featert patch.
Ian Macpbeeson is hard at work
on a scheme for the solution of the
Irish question, which he will have
ready to submit to the Cabinet when
the question of the future govern-
ment of Ireland arises.
THURSDAY.
The Board of Governors has given
new names to the hospitals in
Hamilton.
Liberal women of Ontario de-
nounced the action of the Senate on
prohibition.
Italy resents the inclusion of Jugo-
Slav athletes in the Inter -allied
games in France.
Ten doctors were found not guilty
by the Ontario Medical Council of
violating the Ontario Temperance
Act,
The colors of the 98th Toronto
Buffs have been re -deposited, with
full military honors, in Canterbury
Cathedral.
In the Inter -allied games at Paris
Howard, the Winnipeg negro sprint-
er, was second in his semi-final heat
of tite 100 -yard dash.
Miss Ruby Cavell of Owen Sound,
a cousin of the martyred Nurse Edith
Cavell, was one of the nurses grad-
uated Tuesday night from the Royal
Victoria Hospital, Barrie.
Despatches state that former King
Constantine, who is living in Swit-
zerland, is in financial difficulties,
and is seeking a reconciliation with
the. Greek Government,
Although the late Amelia Barr
was the author of more than 75
novels, she left an estate valued at
only $550, Her will was filed for
probate at Jamaica, N.Y., yesterday.
A national Council of Labor, with
Mandatory power to take concerted
action, is advocated by the Guelph
'l'redes and. Labor Council in a sug-
gestion to the Dominion Trades Con-
gress.
Pte. Arthur Lockhart,
of York,
.U'aiditnand county, Is likely to die
as a result of injuries accidentally C
li'ilrr'tl[r�lY,.
.Manic salaries were raised bar the
York County Clo'unc».
Two old men were ]tilled in To-
ronto in. the strike day traffic.
The giant British dirigible, R-34,
Is • not quite reacy for her trans-
atlantic negate
The Undine eight -oared crew of
Philadelphia will ccmpet.e at tire
Canadian Henley.
Cecil M. Day, of East Nissouri,
aged g 19, died as the result of a
horse's tick a week ago.
Niagara Fells Council took the first
steps toward borrowing $100,000 un-
der the Ontario Housing Act.
The Seveda'str Government is insist-
ing that the future of the Aland Is-
lauds shall be settled by a plebiscite.
Mrs. W. Loveless, ofAmelias-
burgh dropped dead while visiting
at the home of her sister, Mrs. Cal-
nan, in Belleville.
Seven doctors, two for three
months, were suspended by the On-
tario Medical Council for breach of
the Ontario ,Temperance Act.
The new Finnish constitution
adopted by the Diet provides that the
first President ehall be elected by the
Diet and slaail
have a six ye'drS' term.
The House of Commons, by a vote
of 1105 to 34, again. expressed itself
Sn favor of national prohibition for
a year after the proclamation of
peace.
Walter Magee, employed at Talbot-
vile, was fatally trampled by a horse'
lee as riding,when w t it was fright
cued by a passing motor car, an
threw him oft'.
The Danish Government has pro-
tested to the Peace Conference
against acts of the Germans in
Schleswig. The Hans are selling pro-
perty belonging to the state.
The Argonauts will send an eight -
oared crew to the People's Victory
Regatta to be held at Philadelphia
on July 4. "Bob" Dibble, the Cana
dian and American champion, ha
applied to the C.A.A.O. for permis
sion to row at the same regatta.
d
s
SATURDAY.
Mrs. John H. Clarke, mother of
Lady Borden, died at Canning, N.S.
Forest fires in Alberta are report-
ed to be the worst for years.
W. D. Black, M.P.P. elereAddington,,
was renominated as Conservative
candidate.
Metal trades strikers and mounted
police clashed at the Willys-Overland
plant in Toronto.
Canada's soccer team was beaten
by Belgium by 5 to 1 at the Inter -
allied games at Paris.
A portrait of Principal Scott was
unveiled at the closing exercises of
the Norman School, Toronto,
According to reports from Berlin
the Ukrainian forces have again oc-
cupied Odessa and Rherson.
The weather changed front 90 de-
grees in the shade Thursday to snow
flurries yesterday morning in North-
ern Ontario.
Former Emperor Charles of Aus-
tria is reported to be so ill that his
friends ,are fearful as to the result
of his malady.
The appointment of 011ie Pecord
of Toledo as referee of the Willard -
Dempsey bout' meets with the ap-
proval of both camps.
Marshal Foch will not sign the
Peace Treaty, but he will attend the
ceremony connected with the attach-
ing of the signatures. -
Charges for smelting imposed by
the Consolidated Mining & Smelting
Co. were found justified by a com-
mittee of investigation.
War service gratuities have been
extended to all who served overseas
and to all who served in Canada}, for
ono year or more before Nov. 11
last.
The U. S. Senate and House con-
ferees on the Army Appropriation
Bill have agreed to fix the average
size of the 1920 army at 325,000 offi-
cers and men.
E. H. Johnson, a one-armed man,
while paddlingain a canoe on Mud
Lake, near Cobalt, with another one-
armed man, a returned soldier, was
drowned when it upset. :t - "
MONDAY. _
Bran..titeeee general gtsilie has been
calker} off,
Galloper Light won the Grank Prix
de Paris at Longchamps on Sunday.
Sinn Feiners burned a number of
i; ritieh flags in Dublin on Saturday
night,
London Street Railway Co.'s em-
ployes voted 189 to 5 to strike on
Wednesday.
Loss in wages by the strike in Aus-
tralia is estimated at; a million
pounds sterling.
Safeblowers operated with success
at the,Avenue road plant of the Can-
ada Bread Company, Toronto.
Thanksgiving sermons were
preached in Toronto churches to
mark the signing of the peace treaty.
Harold Bounsall, Toronto cyclist,
was beaten in the United States na-
tional amateur championship at New:
ark, N.J.
Win. Kendall, jr., of Ayr, received
fatal injuries by a fall into a culvert
while walking home along the rail-
way track.
Vancouver Street Railway em-
ployes want to return to work, but
the Metal Trades Council decided to
remain on strike.
One woman and the driver of a
motor truck were injured in a col-
lision with a radial car on the King-
ston road, Toronto.
Serious disorders marked anti -
Government demonstrations in Rome
on Saturday. The rioters were driven
back from the Premier's residence by
troops.
Street fighting between Canadian
and. British soldiers has taken, place
in Woking, towns where previous
disturbances occurred having been
declared out of bounds.
Fred Oliver, employed at the Mat-
thews-BIackwell plant in Brantford,
was fatally injured by being struck
on the head by an zron bar falling
upon him while going up in an
elevator.
Gold, signet rings, with the bat-
talion crest of each man, and the
name of an engagement he fought in
engraved on each, was presented to
seventeen returned soldiers from
hisholnr: township.
MANY SEDITION CHARGES.
Winnipeg ver* Threaten to blo
on. Hunger Strike.
WINNIPEG,, June 30. --- The 'five
prisoners held In Stony Mountain
Penitentiary on sedition charges
have threatened. a "hunger strike."
The reason {liven is the alleged °Cave
elitism shown. the six others, held
on the sante charge, who were admit-
ted to bail,
Mr, M. Hyman, counsel for the
prisoners, tried to dissuade them
from starting a hunger strike. It new
have been due to his efforts that the
threat was not put into effect.
S. S. Woodsworth, of Vancouver,
acting editor of the Labor News, who
was arrested when that paper was
suppressed, and charged with sedi-
tion. -has been released on $3,000
bail. Mr. Woodsworth will appear
for trial this week.
F. J. Dixon, M.P.P., for Centre
Winnipeg, was taken into custody at
the Central Police Station Friday
night, on a charge of sedition. Mr.
Dixon called at the building and
stated that he had been informed
that a warrant had been issued for
his arrest, and that lie was prepared
tel answer any charge that might be
preferred against him. Re was told
that his information was correct, and
was thereupon taken into custody
and removed to the provincial jail.
After a night spent in jail he was
arraigned in the city police court
before Magistrate Sir Hugh John
Macdonald, charged with seditious
libel. He was remanded until July
4, on. the request of his legal coun-
sel, T. J. Murray, Bail was fixed at
$6,000, and he was released. The
charges against Mr. Dixon are based
on written matter seized by the police
in the raid made recently on the of-
fices of the Western Labor News, the
police assert.
MUST RATIFY TREATY.
Blockade Against Germany Will
Then- Be Lifted.
PARIS. June 30.—The official
notification to Germany that the
blockade will not be raised until the
treaty is ratified by Germany was
in the form of a resolution adopted
by the Council of Four and presented
to the German delegation before its
departure for Berlin.
The resolution is as follows: "The
auperior'blockade council is instruct-
ed to base its arrangements for
rescinding restriction upon trade
with Germany on the assumption that
the allied and associated powers will
not wait to raise the blockade until
the completion of ratification, as pro-
'vided for at the end of the treaty
with Germany, but that it .is to be
raised immediately upon receipt of
information that the treaty of peace
has been ratified by Germany."
Conditioning the raising of the
blockade upon Germany until ratifi-
cation of the treaty is regarded in.
confidential circles as a sure plan for
securing a speedy ratification, be-
cause of Germany's food and raw ma-
terial needs. As Russia was practi-
cally blockaded as a result of the
blockade against the Central Powers, '
the opinion is held that when the
blockade against them ceases there
will lie no blockade against' Russia.
However, Soviet Russia's lack of cre-
dit and inability to make financial
arrangements is looked upon by fin-
ancial advisers connected with the
conference as a bar to Russia's re-
sumption of trade on a large scale.
MAY SOLVE PROBLEM.
Sir Horace Plunkett's I'riish League
Well Receis ed.
LONDON, June 3Q,_—The peace
exigencies have claimed so much at-
tention that the newspapers here
have had less to say about the Dom-
inion system proposal for Ireland
than they otherwise would, but the
Blanchester Guardian has blessed Sir
lioraei Plunkett; scheme, saying
thea the new league may have a long
and hard battle nefore it, but has n
goo saw. end wine experienced
leaders. It holds out better hope for
Ireland than has existed for many
a day. Interviewed by the Sunday
Observer, Sir Horace Plunkett said
that it was certain that the present.
regime, syith its army. of occupation,
tanks and machine guns, cannot go
on. The question is what can be put
in its place, and the supporters Of the
Irish Dominion League believe their
plan, with necessary adjustments de-
manded by geographical and other
considerations, is the solution of the
Irish question. The Times, announc-
ing a series of articles on Ireland by
various writers, says the Irish settle-
ment must be based on the determin-
ation that under the aegis of the Brit-
ish Crown, and within the framework
of the British Commonwealth, Ire-
land shall be her own mistress. The"
Star greets the manifesto with en-
thusiasm and describes, it as a politi-
cal event of capital moment.
139 Ships Built on Clyde.
LONDON, June 30. There was a
great fillip to shipbuilding on the
Clyde during the month of June.
Thirty-six vessels, with an aggre-
gate tonnage of 84,746, were built,
making the output for the half year
130, and tonnage 263,451. There is
a scarcity of new work owing to
unsettled conditions, the only con-
tracts in sight being the cargo boats
of 42,000 tonnage.
•
Advised to Go Home.
PARIS, June 30.—A note will be
sent the Turkish delegation by the
Council of Four, advising the mem-
bers to return to Constantinople.
The message will say that there is no
reason to believe any agreement can
be reached in the near future be-
cause of the difference in 'demand
of the Turks and the concessions the
Allies are willing to grant,
Former South African Premier Dfe+aa.
LONDON, June 30. 'William P.
Schreiner, Premier of Cape Colony
from 1898 to 1900 and former High
Commissioner for South Africa in
England, died in London on Sundry:.
PEACE SIGNED AT LAST
Great War Officially Ended en
June 28th.
Sullen Attitude of Germans, the
Attitude of the Chinese Delega-
tion and the Protest of Gen.
Struts of South Milts Were the
Only Disetersktat . Notes In Mo-
mentous Ceremony at Versaille ,
VERSAILLES, June 30. --- World
peace was signed and -sealed in the
historic Hall of Mirrors at Versailles
Saturday afternoon, but under cir-
eutustances which dimmed the ex-
pectations
xpectations of those who had worked
and fought during long years of wa
and months of negotiations for it
acceptance. The absence of the Chi
nese delegates who, at the last mo-
ment, were unable to reconcile them
selves to the Shantung settlement an
left the Eastern Empire outside th
formal purviews of peace, struck th
first discordant note in the assembly
A written protest, which Gen. Ja
'Christian Smuts lodged with his sig
nature, was another disappointmen
to the makers of the treaty.
But, bulking the larger, was the
attitude of Germany and the German
plenipotentiaries, which left them, as
evident from the official program o
the day, and front the expression of
M. Clemenceau, still outside any for
mal reconciliation
and made actual
restoration to regular relations and
intercourwse with the allied nations
dependent, not upon the signing of
the preliminaries of peace on Satur-
day,but upon
ratification by the
assembly. To M. Clemenceau's stern
warning in his opening remarks, that
they would- be expected, and held, to
observe the treaty provisions loyally.
and completely, the German dele-
gates, through Dr. HanieI von Haim
hausen, replied, after returning to
the hotel, that had they known they
would be treated on a different status
after signing, than the allied repre-
sentatives, as shown by their separate
exit before the general body of the
conference, they never would have
signed. Under the cirenmstaances the
general tone of sentiment in the his=
toric sitting was one rather of relief
at the uncontrovertible end of hos-
tilities than of complete and un-
alloyed satisfaction.
The ceremony came to a dramatic
close, in fact reached its' highest
dramatic pitch, with the wild recep-
tion to Clemenceau, Lloyd George
and President Wilson by the crowds
outside' the palace, who Ignored or
disregarded the minor discords of the
day. The ceremony of signing the
peace terns was brief. M. Clemen-
ceau called the session to order in
the Hall of Mirrors, of the Chateau
of Versailles, at 3.10 p.m. The sign-
ing began when Dr. Hermann Muel-
ler and Johannes Bell, the German
signatories, affixed their names. All
the diplomats and members of their
party wore conventional civilian
clothes. There was a marked lack
of gold lace and pageantry. There
were few of the fanciful uniforms of
the middle ages, whose traditions
and practices are so sternly condemn-
ed in the great seal -covered docu-
ments signed Saturday. A spot of
oolor was made against this sombre
background by the figured Guards.
The Germans, who were the first
to sign, did so at 3.13 o'clock. The
American delegates next, led by'
President Wilson, signed in this
order, Secretary Lansing, Henry
White, Col. House, and Gen. Bliss.
rhe British followed the Americans.
Representativesof the dominions
signed after the British delegates in
the following order: For Canada --
Hon. Charles J. Doherty, Sir George
Foster and Hon. Arthur L. Sifton,
Minister of Customs. Australia—PE�rgg-
mier William M. Hughes and Sir Gil-
bert Cook, Minister for the, Navy.
New Zealand—Hon. -W. F. Massey,
Prime Minister, and Minister of
Labor, South Africa -Premier Louis
Botha and Janchors Smuts, Minister
of Defence. India—Edwin Montague,
ecretary fne India, and the Ma-
;arajah of Bikanir,
Gen. Smuts, ono of the delegates
epresenting the Union of South
frica, signed the treaty under pro -
est. He objected to certain terri-
oriel settlements, making a Iengthy
tai eutent.'
Gen. Smuts Said that the Indemni-
les stipulated could not be accepted
ithout grave injuries to the indus-
rial revival of Europe. He declared
t would be to the interests of the
Med powers to render the stipu-
ates more tolerable and moder-
te. In his protest, Gen. Smuts de -
tared that there were territorial
ettlements which he believed would
red revision rind that there were
uarantees which he hoped would he
ound out of harmony with the new
eaceful temper and unarmed state
f the Central Powers. Punishments
were also foreshadowed, he said,
ver which a calmer mood might yet
prefer to pass the sponge of oblivion.
The arrangement was. signed by
the German, American,Belgian,
British and French plenipotentiaries.
At 3.44 o'clock cannon began to boom
announcing the completion of the
ceremony of signing. The signatures
had not, as a matter of fact, been
completed, for at that time the small-
er nations were still signing ha
alphabetical order. The •proceedings
were formally closed at 3.49 a'clock.
The close of the ceremony came so
quickly and quietly that it was
scarcely noticeduntil it was all over.
M. Clemenceau; arose and, in a voice
almost lost amid the confusion and
hum of conversation, which had
sprung up while the minor delegates
were signing, declared the conference
closed, and asked the Allied and as-
sociated delegates to remain in their
places for a few einutes-=-this to per-
mit the Germans to: leave the hall
and the building before the general
exodus. None of these_arose as they
filed out. This was regarded as an
answer to the action of Count von
Br'ockdorff=Rantzau, in reading his
speech seated at the first meeting,
but even more as art expression
of
sentiment at the German attitude
toward the acceptance of peace.
S
r
A
t
t
S
t
w
t
IA
1
a
c
s
n
g
f
p
0
0
IIIINWIlDI Ml Illi Ull 11mai ppp„�IIommi IUflnmmmwiumumn o
xto42
The ProprietaryorPatc •nt MeticineA t
AV'egclable Preparation forAs
s imtlatt ngthe Food and Regain
-
ng the Stomachs ander
Promotes Digestion,Cheeri'ut'1
nes s and RestCont ins or Minerer
al.
Opium,Morphine n
,NOT 4ARCOTIC_
,(¢y�ofOdDrSMlUbLA'1Y1lfR ::
�},o,pFui J•w•rL '
IkvielkSat
�rlb linat.•S'r0
id
Cga'
lifokrws Ekon
Aperfect Remedy forCenstipu
hon. Solar Stomach,Diarrhoel
Worms, Feverlshnessand I4r
LoSsoFSfn
Facsimile signature0f j;:
THE CENTAUR
C�
oldNY
.
MAONTREAL&thEe ,
35 DosDS —3
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
r
tienut n
eC
astori
a
Always
Bears the
Signature
of
',0441
kr
use
dor Over
Thirty Year
CASTO'RI
INC CCNTAUR COMPANY. NUM YORK CITY:
_. _ INCORPORATED I855`
lid, ,MOLSONS BAN
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,SOC,000
Over 100 Branches scattered throughout Canada.
The Molsons Bank is an important factor in
Canada's business prosperity. It is supplying
many industries and many farmers with ade-
quate banking facilities, thus enabling the de-
velopement Of their business.
Savings accounts as well as commercial business invited.
T. S. WOODS. Ma,nager, Exeter Branch.
A SAFE -PLACE FOR
SAVINGS
IT is as necessary to select a ,safe
place for your savings as it is
to save, yet few give this matter
much thought, and many lose their
savings because of ignorancie or
carelessness in this respect.
N
For over fifty years The Canadian
Bank of Commerce has been sere•
hag the people of Canada in in.
creasingly large measure, until at
the present time it has over 470
branches providing complete bank-
ing facilities in all parts of the
country.
THE CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
CAPITAL PAID UP . $15,000,000
RESERVE FUND . . $15,000,000
alA
r,
EXETER BRANCH
CREDITON BRANCH -
DASHWOOD BRANCH . -
A. E. KUHN, Manager 1
J. A. McDONALD, Manager ,
F. S. KENT, Manager
I. R. CABLING. M. A.
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Public,
Commissioner, Solicitor for the
Molsons Bank, etc.
Money to loan at lowest rates of
Interest.
OFFICE—MAIN ST. EXETER, ONT.
PERRY F. DOUPE, Licensed Aue-
tioneer. Sales conducted in any loc-
ality. Term moderate, Orders left
at Times Office will be promptly at-
tended to. Phone 116, Kirkteii,
Address Kirkto* P. 0.
C. W. ROBINSON
LICENSED AUCTIONEER AND?'
VALUATOR for Counties of Huron,
Perth and Middlesex. Farm Stock:
sales a Specialty. Office at Cock--
shutt Warerooms, next door to the -
Central Hotel, Main St. Exeter,.
Charges moderate and satisfaction,
guaranteed.
.3. W. DRO'WN°, M. D., M. S.
S. Graduate Victoria University
Office and Residence, Dominion
Labratory, Exeter,
Associate Coroner of Huron.