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Exeter Advocate, 1915-4-8, Page 5PENTAIa Dr: Gi. 1'. RQULtSTON, L.D.S., D.D.S. DENTIST Member of the R.C.D.S, of Ontario and Honor Graduate of Toronto University. arose -Over Dickson & Cariing's law office. Closed Wednesday afternoons. OR. A R. KINSMAN, L.D.S., D.D.S., Honor .Graduate of Toronto. University DENTIST Teeth extracted without pain, or any bad effects. Office over Madman & Stanbury's Office, Main Street, Exeter. LEGAL DICKSON & CARLING, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notaries, Conveyancers, Com- missioners. Solicitors for the Moleons Bank etc. ttioney to Loan at lowest rates of interest Offices -Marin -St., Exeter L R, Carting, H.A. L. H. Dickson MONEY TO LOAN We have a large amount or private funds to loan on farm and village prop- erties at low rates of interest. GLADMAN & STANBURY 1:3arr:etere, Solicitors. Exeter, SYNOPSIS. GF 'CANADIAN • NORTH WEST I.,AND REGtILATIQNS THE sole head of a family, or any malnover-18 years old, may homestead a quarter-sectiop of available Domin- ion land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta The applicant must appear it} perso . at the Dominion 'Lands Ag- ency ot Sub -Agency . fear • •the : Dis- trict. Entry may be made at any Dominion Lands Agency, (but not Serb -Agency) on certain conditions. Duties -Six months' residence upon and cultivation of the land in each of three years. A homesteader may live di.tilin, nine miles of -his'homeetead cn a fken of at least 80 acres, an certain cage tions A habitable house is re- setea in every case, except when le - ace is performed in the vicinity. In certain districts a homesteader in go�od standing may pre-empt a quarter 9E'ctlen alongside has homestead. Price $3 per acre. Duties -Six months resi- dence in each of three pears after freilltr homestead patent; also 50 atefes extra cultivation. Pre-emption *tent may be obtained as soon as homestead patent, on certain condi- tidies. A settler who has exhausted his homestead eight may take a purchas- ed Ste nestead in certain districts. P "ce $3 per acre. Duties -Must re- site 6 months in each of 3 years, cu- ltto 50.aores, and erect a house. w th $300, e area oi' cultivation is subject to reduction in case of rough, scrub- be or stony land. Live stock may be substituted for cultivation under cer- tain conditions. W. W. CORY, C.M.G. Deputy ot the Minister of the Interior N.B.!-Unauthorized publication of this advertisement will not be pad for. DR. DeVAN'SFRENCH PILLSretia ble Re- aulating Fill for Women. $5 a box or threefor $10. Sold, at all Drug Stores. or mailed to any address on receipt di price.. Tx s SconEnl, DRUG CO., St. Catharines, Ontario. PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN. Restores nd ;itality;for Nerve and Slain; increases "grey matter"; a Tonie-will build you up. $3 a box, or two for $5, at drug stores, or by mail on receipt of price. THE SCOBELL DRUG Co., St. Catharines. Ontario 4) CENTRAL • STRATFORD. ONT.1�/ Ontario's Best Practical Training School. We have tharaugh courses a [d experienced instructors in each oT ow three departments -Commerc- ial Shorthand and Telegraphy. Our graduates succeed and you should read our large, free .catalogue. Write for ir at once. D. A. McLachlan, P•ri,ncipal MANY COLLEGES CLOSE' • • `POR'. VACATION at midsumener :Our.,cple lege does not. Yonge and Charles Sts., 'Toronto is staictiy first-class. NONE BETTER. IN CANADA. Enter now so as to gena position in the e rrly fall. Catalogue: free. FARM FOR SALE Lot 7, Con. 1, Stephen, the ,uop- erty of the late Thomas Essery 'Brick House, bank barn and frame barn. '3 good wells, windmill, good orchard about 8 acres of good hard- wood- bush containing about 500 su- gar maple trees. Soil clay loam, well drained and fenced. Farm in good state .of cultivation, one-half •mile from Centralia station. , • ' Posses'ion can be given " to : uit purchaser • For terms and particulars apply to GEO. G. ESSERY, Centralia.; Or GLADMAN & STANBURY Barristers, Exeter RAND TRUNK SYs EM DOUPLE TRACK ALL THE WAY TORONTO --CHICAGO TORONTO --MONTREAL --o_- FOR CHICAGO Leave Toronto 8.00e. 1n, • 4.40 p, m. and 1100 p t0 . daily FORAVIONTREAL Lea Toronto 9.00'a, m, 8.30 ;p.`in,'. and 11,00 p.ln; danl3f Smooth Roadbed Highest Class of Equipment. For particulars and 'berth ` `reserva- tions at Grand Trunk ticket offices. N. J. DORE, Exeter Prof. Frankland demon- strates that COD LIVER OIL generates more body -heat than anything else. In SCOTT'S EMULSION the pure oil is so prepared that the blood profits from every drop, while it fortifies throat and lungs. If you are subject to cold hands or feet; if you shiver and catch cold easily: take SCOTT'S EMULSION for one month and watch ib good effects. 14-40 REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. morgramm HENSALL HORSE SHOW The horse show last week was the usual successful event, the entry being unusually large. The •ollow„ing is the prize list, - HORSES, Clyde or Shire Stallion foalded in 1912 or ,before -Wm, Berry., ''Lord Armstrong;" T. McMitchael and Son Clyde or Shire Stallion foal ed in 1913 or later -Wm. Drover, Robert* Belt Jr HARNESS HORSES Heavy Draught Team-AIex,Sinclair John McGregor, Heavy Draught brood mare in foal - Wm .Drover, Alex Buchanan, Wm. McAiJlister, Heavy Draught or Agricultural Yeld Mare or Gelding -Wm, Brown, R. Bell Jr. Three-year-old Draught Filly or Geldine.foal ed in 1912 -Wm 'Moodie, Two -yr -old Filly or Gelding, foal- ed in 1913-R. Northcott, Agricultural Team -D. Fathering - ham M. Clark. Agricultural Mare .in Foal -T, H, Soldan Frank Beau, John Rawcliffe.. Three-year-old Agricultural Geld- ing ing or Filly, foaled in 1913 -John Rott cliffe Wurlr's Special for best Heavy Har- •nesaed team -Alex, Sinclair. He.mphill's Special for Beat Im- provec( Brood Mare -Wm. Drover, Palmer's Special for Best Agricult- ural Brood Mare -T. H. Soldan, Ortwein's Special for Best Heavy Draught Team -Alex, Sinclair. Judge -George Charlton, Denfield. LIGHT HORSES Standard Bred Carriage Stallion 15.3 and over-' N. Contine, T. "rlurdock. Standard Bred Roadster Stallion 15.2 and under 15.3 -Wes. Harvey, T. Mur- dock, R Cameron. Carriage Team -W. Weido, A Rei - chart. Single. Carriage -Ed. Wurm, C. Silber. Roadster Team -John Decker. Single Roadster -M. Elliot G. Koeh- ler. Hudson's Special for Farmer's Sing- le Drivin Outfit -A. Reichart. Wiggin's Special for Single Driving Outfit -Robert Munn. Broclk's Special for Best Groomed Horse Any Class -Wm. Brown. . Judges -E. Christie and R. Welsh. CATTLE Shorthorns Bull Calved After September 1st; 1913 -Oscar Klapp, R. D. Hunter.; Cow or Heifer Over Two Years - R. D. Hunter, Wm. Pepper. Sweepstakes -Best Bull, Oscar Klapp: Best Female, Aged Cow -R. D. Hunter. Scrwtotes Special for Best Bull Under one year, Any Breed -R. D. Hunter Aberdeen Angus Aged Bull -T. H. Soldan. Bull Calved After September 1st 1913 -T. H. Soldan. Cow or Heifer over Two Years -T.. H. Soldan; Best Female, T,) H. Sol- da. Butcher Steer or Heifer -Wm. Pep- per,• Wm Denali. judge -James Cowan Seaforth. " ST. MARYS-Samuel Treacy, aged ,70 who had been il1L for some weeks vies found`dgad in bed; Merch 30. SEAFORTH-William McDougall, died in London, on Monday. The Seaforth Fire bre gide; of which the deceased was a member, attended the funeral in a body. Mr McDougall took a keen interest in', sports • and a valued member of t'he curling and bowline clubs. He wars' also a mem- ber of the Beaver leecroseej Club for Years and was on the team' That won t)h c senior championship o'f. the• C. L A in 1895. The news of his death came as shock to his many friends and acquaintances in Seaforth and vicinity. TUCKERSMITH —Mr. William Kyle ane of the pioneers of the, town - shill') of Tuckersmith, died at the home of hi; non -in-law, Mr" George M. Strong. ' Mr. Kyle was 73 years of age and is survived by his widow and a grown-up .faamily.,„. • If you are having trouble with your Bladder.,-witle:.inconti'n- . , ence or s tp session,: of urine -buruangpaiu-wea'l,:ness or pane in the back -or Stone iii the L'ladder- take Gil. Pills: They cure -50c.-6 for $2.50 At dealers everywhere, 'A 269 NE VS TOPICS OF WEEK caught r .•land she was soseriously burned that alis" diet. from the effects I Friday at her home in Montreal. A conference of international lab- or Ieaders will be held in New York on April 15, to choose delegates to an international congress of labor to devise ways and means of bringing the EuroPean wa. to an. end. In his monthly letter to the diocese the Bishop of Birmingham pleads for restraint in, treatment of German prisoners takep from submarines, Saying: "We shall continue to fight assinsgentlemen, even though our op- Ponents use the methods of asses - TUESDAY. A. neivate cable from Warsaw an- nounces the death there of Isaac Ge- retz, greatest Jewish poet of modern times, aged 63 yearn, Gen. A. G. L. 15'Amade, comman- der of the French expeditionary forces at the Dardanelles, has lost his youngest son, aged 18, who was a se- cond lieutenant of infantry. Otto Zinn, a New York restaurant keeper, and two of his employes, a porter and a coo'c, were killed early yesterday in the cellar of Zinn's res- taurant, supposedly by burglars, An Anglo -Belgian force -attached German troops eight miles north of Abercorn, Rhodesia, on March 17, driving the enemy aeross the border Into German East Africa after a sharp fight. Five more Prussian casualty lists containing the names of 31,715 pri- vates and officers were issued in Ber- lin yesterday, This bring the total Prussian casualties to date up to 1,133,081. Worst way received by Cornwall friends yesterday of the death yes- terday morning at St. Petersburg, Florida, of W. J. McDonald, aged 55, a prominent railway contractor, whose home was for many years in Moulmette, Ont. The 13 -year-old son of Mr. D, A. Wheeler, a farmer of Glen Ross, Sid- ney Township, near Bellevile, died yesterday as the result of injuries by a horse. The boy was in its stall when it viciously knocked him down and tramped upon him until life was nearly extinct. important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week. The Busy Worlds Happenings Care- fully espied and Put Into Handy and Attractive Shape for abs headers of Our Paper—A Solid Hour's Enjoyment. WEDNESDAY. Retiring toward the interior, the German troops are reported to have destroyed the main railway line in German Southwest Africa. The Australia warship Sydney, which destroyed the German raider Emden, left Montevideo yesterday for an unknown destination. She arrived Sunday. Gen. Felipe Angeles has been de- cided upon for Provisional President of Mexico by the Villa and Zapata factions, says a despatch received from Mexico. According to e press despatch two civilians were killed by the German aerial attack against Rheims which was referred to in yesterday's offi- cial communique. Returns furnished l' British trade unions show thatout of a member- ship of 1,250,000 the unemployed in February were 80,00xor 6•.5 per cent., as compared will? 4.7 per cent. a year ago. After tieing bis wife to the bed in apartments in the tenement at 172 East Fourth street, New York, Vara- gi shot and killed her yesterday, and then cotnmitted suicide by firing a bullet into his head. Former Premier Venizelos of Greece issued a statement yesterday denying that he had offered to sur- render Havana to Bulgaria during his term of office in order to avert any Bulgarian attack upon Greece. THURSDAY. U. S. Secretary of the Navy Dan - fele yesterday authorized Admiral Moore at Inaeolulu to expend $20.- 000 to raise ti,e hilly of the submarine. F-4. The funeral service oc the late Mrs, Eunice Borden, mother of Sir Robert Borden Premier of Canada, was held at her home in Grand Fre, N. S., yes- terday afternoon. Three Queensborough, Ont., bro- thers, aged 19, 21 and 23 years, re- spectively, have enlisted with the 49th Regiment. They are Matthew, Fred, and N. Lepalque. The payment of 160,000 pesos, or $.20,000 in gold, to Mrs. Ruth Mc- Manus, widow of John B. McManus, the American killed by Zapata troops occurred yesterday in Mexico City. Dr. Clifford K. Robinson, the for- mer Tamworth doctor, has volunteer- ed his service tt, the Royal Army Medical Corps as a result of the ap- peal sent out by the British War Office. Twelve Germans of the crew of one of the Zeppelins participating in the recent raid on Paris were killed when the airship fell near Liege, according to a despatch printed by the Amster- dam newspaper Tyd. The police are searching for two unidentified men, who with a revol- ver held up William Hodgkinson, a storekeeper, at Port Weller, Tuesday night, bound and gagged him and robbed him of $65 in cash. The British steamship South Paci- fic, bound from Glasgow for New 'fork was sunk Tuesday night in col- lision' with an unknown vessel off Arran, an island on the west coast of Scotland. The crew was saved. SAT U itDAY. Wm. Stitt, general passenger agent of eastern lines of the Canadian Paci- fic Railway, died suddenly in Mont- real on Thursday. The Daily Mail's Copenhagen cor- respondent telegraphs that the Ger- man Crown Prince has left Berlin to .take up his duty with the fifth army corps in the vicinity of Verdun. Telegrams received from Las Pal- mas, Canary Islands, say that the Hamburg -American steamer Macedo- nia has succeeded in making her es- cape and has evaded Britsih cruisers. An Austrian steamer loaded with arms and ammunition on its way from Berlin to Panceova, both ports on. the Danube, struck a mine in the river Thursday night, says a Havas de- spatreh from Nish. War Secretary Kitchener is among the first of the prominent men in England to respond to the suggestion of abstinence from the use of alcohol contained in the letter sent by King George to Lloyd George. Premier Asquith temporarily has taken charge of the British Foreign Office, Sir Edward Grey having been compelled to take a short holiday. Sir Edward will be away from the Ministry about three weeks. Lt. -Col. W. G. Hurdman, inspector of technical equipment for the Cana- dian Militia Department, has beep. susaeended by Gen. Hughes, Minister'` of Willie, and the Militia Council, Pending further enquiry into the pus= chase of binoculars. Fifty-nine Bulgarians from Mont- real arrived in St. Catharines on Thursday in search of -a foreman who ,engaged them for work at the Wel- land Ship Canal, but no contractor could be found who was expecting men. The men are penniless: MONDAY. A ten-day province -wide campaign has been started to have the Provin- cial Government close the liquor sa- loons during the war. A despatch last night from Cape Henry, Va., said that a Luckenbach tug was wrecked three miles north of False Cape. Six men perished. Claude Casimir-Perier, son of the former President of France, was kill7. ed in battle and blereed near Rheims, according to information that has'. Beached his family. • Eire broke out during Friday'night ii the Thornton Tannery, Brantford, and,";considerable damage was done to. the buildingand to' wool stored' there- in, but the hides escaped. All- motor ;manufaeturing plants in, nootland have been placed under Government"control, in. pursuance of the' Government's mans to accelerate~ the supplying- of war material. While trying.to light her stove with tar paper, Mrs. • A. Lauzon's dress MUST FORGET COl4QUEST. Germans Fighting Now For Homes, Says Berliner Tageblatt. LONDON, April 6. -- The Daily News has the following from Rotter- dam: - Paul Michaels in the weekly re- view o1 the war in The Berliner Tageblatt is evidently in an exceed- ingly gloomy mood regarding the present position of the German ar- mies, and speaks of the spirit of mod- esty that now reigns in Germany. To -day he says: "We only see how tremendously difficult it is made for us to preserve our national unity and freedom. Many dreamed too easily of our victory over our enemies. The people thought to gather in the har- vest when really the first prepara- tions for the final result still had to be created. In the meantime we have become more modest, and it be- comes clear to us that even with the greatest self-sacrifice it will only be with difficulty that we shall be able to conquer the opposition of a world of enemies. Everybody already has long abandoned expectation that be- tween to -day and to -morrow the world could be healed by the Ger- man spirit. We have had to be con- vinced unwillingly and by hard facts that in this war it is not a question of putting through a fantastic world - policy, but a question of protecting our house and home. "The war was not begun to lay a new yoke upon the world. It cer- tainly will have to be carried on for the self-preservation of the German empire. It would bo idle to try and fix the details of what the final peace will be, but in any case our object must be the making certain of our national existence for the longest time possible." After referring to the course of the submarine war, the writer con- tinues: "We are confident that this winter of our discontent .will be fol- lowed by a glorious summer." EXECUTION WAS TERRIBLE. Bavarian Troops Were Decimated by French Artillery at Eparges. PARIS, April 6. -Combats at the Eparges, in the Department of Meuse, on March 18,•19 and 20 were no less brilliant and successful than the pre- ceding engagements, according to the French official' Eye -witness, in a re- port giving further details of the bat- tles on this part of the front. "The most reeen: success," says the report, "was due to'the `•intense ar- tillery preparation, • the • very :prompt assault and violent hand-to-hand fighting. In the trenches captured from the enemy, in which our heavy artillery fire caused great excava- tions, we found bodies cut up and half -buried in earth. "Survivors who were captured de- clare that the French artillery fire was- horrible. Others say that the Eighth Bavarian Regiment was deci- mated, having lost two thousand men and sixteen officers duringv February. One battalion was reduced to 87 men. Effect of Shells Trebled. PARIS, April 6. -The army' -bulle- tin yesterday made the first 'official reference tothe new powder, which has been talked about mysteriously for months. The bulletin says that, without entering into details which cannot be divulged, it may be stated that the new explosive 'recently put into use doubles the explosive effects of the shells '`of•t'he'three-inch guns.•. Michigan. Cutts O1F' 265 Bars. D,ET1i;OIT, Aprliy;4.--Returns re- egireele up to; midnight, .last night :in-: tticated a •sweeping victoryefor: the `drys" in" the .local option contests" which • featured, 'the Michigan state election yesterday. ; Incomplete re- turns also showed` large majorities for the Republican state ticket. The liquor result will mean the closing of 265 saloons. COMING TO EXETER THE DORENWEND CO. OF TO- RONTO LIMITED, Canada's tore most hair -goods establishment will displa3 and demonstrate a sample stock of the latest hair -goods +:as11,- ions for ladies, and toupees and wigs for bald men, at The Central Hotel, on Friday April 16 FOR LADIES,-Dorenwend''s Transformation by overcoming every defect of your own hair will assist you to appear at your best always. Switches Braids, Pompadours, Wavelets etc. of the finest quality hair and unsurpassed workmanship. You are invited to inspect these goods GENTLEMEN, ARE YOU BALD? A. Dorenwend Art Hair - toupee will make you appear years younger and ivila prove a benefit to your health and comfort, Indetectable, Featherweight, flygenic HAVE A DEMONSTRATION OF WHAT IT WILL DO FOR YOU Remember the Date: -Friday, April 16 ZURICH Ontario and will lnale their nome in 1 Dashwood. --Peter Bender has opened Alonzo Foster has sold his. 100 up a shoe repair shop in the old eov- acre farm being lot 4 concession 9 Babylon Line, Hay, to hig son, Mlt%lip Faster,—William S. Johnston was,pur- chased the fifty acre s, known as the east hall. of lot 10 Con. &Babylon Line Flay from Mr, Henry Volland, Jr. far $1300.—Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Meidutger and daughter are visiting .irierldsl sad relatives in . lichigan,-Chria ` Kiill:r of Cavalier N.D. and Arthur Kibler of Stoughton, S' ask. were visiting relatives and friends here for a fes' days last week, --Samuel Dietz has moven into the dwelling he exacted last week on his lot in the north part of town. -Douglas Sparks has ecturn- from a business trip to the( Canidlea west: Samuel Reichert has tnared to the fare of Mr, John Cochr't'te east of Hillsgreen, and will run !ha farm for Mr. Cochrane this somata Mr Jacob England and wife of near Swift Current,' Sask., have moved back to eriga Bank premises. --Miss Alveda Weseloh of London spent a short vis- it wits' her.parents Mr. and dirs. liy. F Weseloh Iast week. -Peter Lam- ont wa; called to Cairo, Mich.. last week owing to the death of t.s sis- ter Mrs Patterson,. BETTER THAN SPANKING. Spanking does not cure children of bedwetting, There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mr.;. M,Stun- tmers Box W., 840, Windsor, will send free to. any mother her suc- cessful home treatment with full in- structions. Send no money but write her to -day if your children erouole you ir. this way. Don't blame the child the chances are it can't aelp it. This treatment also curea adults • nd aged people troubled with urine dif- ficulties by day or night. Relieve Your Mind of 'See .- -_ ries . t1 dental to appointing an individual as trustee of your estate, e as - Will he live to fulfil the trust? Will he fall ill or be e.eve when anost wanted? Will he neglect his trust for his own affair. Will he prove unfaithful? These are all possibilities. But you may leave them out a. consideration in entrusting the administration of your estate to this strong, conservative Company. Call or write for all information desired. THE LONDON & WESTERN TRUSTS CO. LIFT='D 382 RICHMOND STREET, LONDON, ONT. SIR GEO. GIBBONS, S,C., President JOHN S. MOORE. 1!(I:: er 1 tik '1 ll. -if you fe I bilious, "headachy" and irritable-- for that's a sign -•our liver is out of order. Your food is not digesting -it stays in the stomach a sour, ,/ fermented mass, poisoning t ,; te- ;. .: •1st take a dose of Chamberlin's Stomach and Liver T '-lets - 1 ) , they make the liver do its work -they clea..ee A.. 1 ll sweeten the stomach and tone the whole directive system. You':15, feel fine in the morning. At all druggists, 25c., or by mail frog II Chatnberlain Medicine Company, Toronto 14 "•MADE.IIN CANADA" Ford Touring Car Price $590 PRICES QF,'OTHER FORD CARS ARE—TWO-i?ASSENGER RUNA- BOUT $540; TWO -PASSENGER COUPELET; $850; FIVE -PASSENG- ER SEDAN $1150. ALL ARE FUL LY EQUIPPED, 'INCLUDING ELEC- TRIC HEADLIGHTS, PRICES F. 0: B., FORD,:ONT. BUYERS OF ALL FORD '€ARS WILL SHARE. IN OUR PROFITS IF WE SELL 30,000 CARS 'BETWEEN' AUGUST 1, 1914 AND AUGITST 1, 1915, ALL FORD CARS:A ARE; ON EXHIBI- iT 1O1 Al EXETER. 1VlILO SNELL DEALER , THF. UNIVERSAL C4R