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The Exeter Advocate, 1916-1-27, Page 4(Sayre �lbun'Catr, Sander.. Sr Creech, Proprietors In'advance. 41.00 per year in. Canada r f ad° a Un}teStates. If not pale SOe. extra per year may tae charged. Ta tmiirsDAY, JAN. 21,191, G Dasbwo'd to• reed 'lee/aril igat Tar he,, wea- schca' or. Tuesday evening, tree the asters Wok the',- parts wells—A, ;rent many are suffering; from le grippe :yet. Herb Male of Zurich spent :at'trnday in town, elm D. Pfafe, who underwent sin toperttic>n for aapendieitis at 'tinctoria Hospital London, returned seaturdey venznf very much improved. dist A Fine:heeler and Pearl 1 ie- ttar. visited in Zurich Sunday. Mrs Norman Kellerman and dhug t- `tex„ Kathleen., returned home after •n .extended visit . with relatives it Bei - Mise Lydia. Brown returned to l.an- elort agair Monday. Melt :4:t Oestrei'cher, who spent serest months in Naperville, returned home last week, - week this a C- - hz s P Glu, Rev u, tending, Conference at Elmira. ;Mien V. 'Brokenshire is visiting ;n Loaeon, Centralia Gl sISELHTJRST • C,`1 Were Beinenell, son 0Q t l Brintnell ?oixn:e+d~ the calors on :Yiem day...- eer . and Mrs, Bubo, Col elette ed „eelatives near B•rucei' eld en" S to dej. a Red !Grass aocise.ter bias: iar•- gaaizecl here es :week.—Messrs, E. Mettle and .relortort were 1'n this loca?it . on 'v s tda:y getting tubscrib- ere . ' fol the' Coneneete= of :tate -Iutdr'ed o -- Mr and .firs. Warren Meche:l tnd ;taloa), left an Tuesday for .hes- new home at Pheonex, B.C. Di McCue of Gull Lake, Sask., ; e- xteet a few clays with friends in the village lits Wade was ealle�sl to ..ilencee tc tie bedside of her mother, ,vno was, seriously ill The organized bible class of :lie Whaler. Church were guests of pec, atzd Mrs Finlay on Tuesday evening, A vert pleasant evening was spent in, various amusements. Lunch was sere vee ane all spent a very enjoyable time Quite a large number are still' ort' the sick. list with heavy colds tad la grippe. tine under the doctor's . are. Mr, W R. Elliott spent a -,duple day with relatives in. London. The weather for the past week %e- xuind, us that the weather man •gust be aookizie at the calendar for he month of Apra, LIGAN. Ma. Jobe Windsor of Braeet taitY, gieb.. is visiting en town.—:1frs. Wen. 1I. Dinar and Miss Edna Dickins, whc, have been, on the sick list, are able oto be sewed again,—Mr. C, seur- brigg, who was married at Hamilton ori Wednesday, Jan. 19, returned the letter start of 'the week withCraig- has e s bride"—M=s. S�?r'otgtht of Ailsa : rain has enowee into the residence purchas- ed frcni Mr. Joseph Hodgins, --Lorna the six months aid daughter r of the eelito•• ane Mrs. W. Sovereign, had her feet anal one hand badly scalded one si ah- last week by the upsetting of i c tri ; of tea.—Mr, Wellington !3od- n, heel the misfortune to fall .'ne -, - "e last week and break his left en near the ankle. QRAND BEN eir, Jams :Mallard, sr, met with an a,ceiderlt Which will, keep hint zndoors o: sometimes. He went to feed his hens or. Wednesday afternoon and ;.epee or to ice, beaking his leg ahou° four inches below the hip,—Mr, Sands • frier the west visited :'.Baker for a feraldays -last week.—Wm,Green why ha, been v isi iug Cyrus Green, has returttei to his, home near Hen- sail. Wm Zapfe of Saskatchewan ar- rived here•' o visit his parents, g': and :Mrs C. Zapfe.—Mr. Jahn South- cott held a wood -bee Saturday.—Air, James Stubbs from .near 'Medford visited his sister Mrs. Jahn I3aird, -- Robert Tetr eau has enlisted with the 14et1 Death. of Robert Mitchell,—After an 311ne.se of sirs. or seven years the death 'took place on. January 19th of Rebut etlitchee of the second concession of Stephen at the are of 70 years,, 11 days For the past two years dr. titchee had beea incapacitated from work otw'ng to ulcers, and, since the de:tti of his wife three weeks tgo he had worries, greatly, bringing on a shah, stroke on. Sunday last, and his death- resulted as abode stated, De- c,e:tsecr was born in Darlington Town - she) and came to Centralia when but fou: year: of age, Shortly after- wards they moved to the second .on - her e- cestior, of Stephen and there sided until death" Mr. Mitchell was a man of sterl;ar worth, upright in all hit dealings and respected end es- teeinec, by all. He was a staunch Conservative and a member of the Methodist church. Four sons >ur- erive C M., Melville, Bruce+, and War- rent alt of the neighborhood; :iso two brothers, Thomas of Centralia and James of ',het 3rd con, of Step- hen., and two sisters, etre, H. O'Neil of Ildertot. and Mrs. Geo, Foster of .Byron, The funeral took place to Fairfield cemetery on Friday efter- noon and was largely attended. Crediton ST_JOSEPH RUSSIANS AtOVINO W ST. y of Caucasus is Driving Turks Along Before It. DIFFICULTIES OF MADIED. Clow Crippled Soldiers Overcome Their New Handicaps. Apart from the personnel of besot. LONDON, ,tam, 25, -The opera- tats, there are often little incidents thole in Armenia, where the Ruse which occur during convalescence Or their funny e. r,atrtita were driving the ,Turks west- � side (writes a convalescent British Wards betore them, promise mere officer). The other day I took two and more to influence the situation•friends of mine to dine at a hotel.: in Persia, The Ruselens, who origin- Theyhad both of them been wound - ally fought the Turks on a limited sans;,".union elle last week h ee afterward which have aimportant wins, and at last dc; ed. One had, lost au arm, and the area in the Caucasus, have inflicted several crushing defeats upon the other had 'tad his right hand shat- Ottomans hatOttomans since the Grand Duke Niche tered, and it was our first reunion olas took the command. They have since the war broke out. We ordered. transferred the momentum of their oysters and partridge for the ocea offensive over the Caucasian border sion. The oysters went down easily, intoArntenia,. where they are now at- but when it came to the bird they tacking Erzerum, an important city sent their portions away, with an in the interior, aside to the waiter, and I was left This the Russian offensive in that with mine. part of the Near Eastern theatre. if. I began on it, then looked up. pushed with the same success that "That's what yousaid you'd like, has marked it since the beginning of wasn't it?" I asked, They said par- the year, presents a growing menace tridge was just what they liked, to Asiatic Turkey, 'South-east of the "Well, why don't you eat itee 1 Erzerum front, around Lake Van, the asked. Muscovites have been proportionate- "Well, you see," said one, "I bave IY successful of late, though the a bad hand and and a knite and fork the whole Turkish lines appear. on h rather difitcult,A, to have held their own, i "And I have lost an arm," said the There is no doubt, however,. that ; other.. the Turks are compelled, both by the ; .'So we have sent the bird allay to situ -tion in Armenia, in: the Cau- casus, and in Persia --where the ItuB- scans are menacing Tspaban---to send very strong reinforcements of troops to the' Asiatic theatre, The Sunday Petrograd official re - Oki Wednesday morning a happy e- vent was celebrated in the R. C. church Drysdale, when Rev. A. e.on- dot perforated the ceremony which united Walter Jeffrey in marriage to Jane oldest daughter of dr. and firs. John Charette,—Mrs, Jeffrey passed away ptt'Susrday morning of last week at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Lora, Jeffrey, aged e4 years. De- ceased was taken down with a ,tara- lytic stroke two years ago from which she never fully recovered. Her ttus- bead died 14 years age, Three sons survive Frank, Rennie and Clifford, all of the Sauble Line, and five da'a- ghters efts, Louis Jeffrey, of St. Joseph. Mrs. Jos. Ravelle •tad Mrs. Andrew Desjardine, Grand Bend, Mrs Leon Jeffrey, Babylon line, and Mr.: R Ayotte, Pigeon, Mich. be cut UP for us," concluded the drat, I am not myself sensitive about my injuries. The bullet that gat me has left me with a limp --a very pro- aouneed limp, I might say, in fact, that a more lame duck could seldom Pert ste tris that the precipitate re -1 be seen hobbling down the street.. treat of the Turks in the region ofI However, I can toddle slowly round erzeruna continues. In many places a golf course and enjoy a,stroll down thFl Czar'e troops are still capturing 1 Piccadilly as touch as ever. In fact, artillery, ammunition, provisions, sometimes I quite forget that I am endlee telephone la tenial. The pursue lame. But alae other day a friend of ie : troops are advancing along roads mine came up to me in the club. strewn with frozen bodies of Askaria., 'Getting on all right?" be asked Largo numbers of prisoners have . cheerily. bean teem at each inhabited place. • "One of our detachments," con-' `Yes,. thanks, I answered, Unites the report, ""which has ar "Still very lame, thari6la, he said. rived at the Caucasian front from Well, I am a bit, but ft might Manchuria, eharged half a squadron have been worse," I replied, "You know, I believe of cavalry and three . companiesbelieve you'd be bet, ter oft if you'd let them Askaris, who were defending the vile take your leg lage, sabring some of the force and ot1 and wear a wooden one," be :said, capturing others. , The suggestion was made in all sin - "South of the River'Chariansoa sin- cerity, but was haxdir what you we completely annihilated a strong would call tactful. Kurd detachment. The Coward Who Was Cured. "Have I ever had a cake of coward- ice? Yes, once, and I cured it," re- lated an oilicer. "We were in a period of very heavy fighting, and one day one man came to me crying. 'Colonel,' he said, 'let me go back. I have done my best; I cannot stand it any xnore; I am all broken up. It isn't my fault. I have done all I could. Let me go, colonel; let me. go,' "I looked at him, He was a strap- ping giant and had been so far a good soldier. I felt sorry for the man, for I knew that he had done his best. But to yield an inch to him would have been ruinous to the spirit of the regiment. 'Brown,' I said to him (his name was not Brown),'you have got to go through with it. Take this letter to the officer commanding the front line.' "I was called to -another section of the line, and when I came back I found that Brown had returned. He had delivered the message and brought back the receipt. I sent for him to congratulate him. I friend him still in the same broken mood. 'Let me go, colonel; let me go,' he pleaded. 'I sent for you to con- gratulate you,' I said. 'I withdraw my congratulations. You will take 'another message to the front. If you are not cured then you will take an- other and another and another until you get your nerve back again.' It was hard, but there was nothing else for it. That man is to -day fighting in the ranks of our regiment and do- ing his work as well as any man there:" TRECANADIAN BANK _ OF CONMERCE E WAUCR, G.v.s ., LLD. D 0,L,.1"resident SIR M1J P al .. g, V. V, JON1 S, Asst General Manager . JOHN t1II2U. General Manager. SERVE BUND, Si 3,500,000 CAPITAL, $15,000,000 BANKING BY FLAIL - Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian Bank of Commerce to be operated by mail, and will receive the same to all other departments of the Bank's careful attention as is given this wayas business. Money may be deposited or withdrawn in ha ct as bya personal visit to the Batik. satisfactorily EXETER BRANC,Ile-H. ,j, WHITE Man, CREDITON—A. E. KUHN, Mat, CLUBBING—Now is the time to select and place your order forread- in":: matter for the coming year. We club with all the leading daily end weekly newspapers and all foreign ptriodicale and magazines at close !)rices Call at the Advocate Office end leave your oeder, Dz McCue of Gull Lake, Sask., was at the village on Tue sday shak- ing hands with his old friest'ls. the doctor ;.s looking fine and is :sways sure of n warm welcome wben'vzr he visits us - Arrangements are being made for a Layman's Missionary Banquet +o 'ee given in ...he basement of the Metho- dist Church on Tuesday Feb. 8th. One hundred tickets will be sold. Two spealeers, one from Toronto and •Ibe other from London, will address the gathering in the interest of mis- sions. The local branch of the Red Cross Society intend giving a concert in the Town- Hall t.n the near future. Miss May Armstrong of Exeter els- eted Mrs Herb. Eilber for a few days last week. The petitions to the Ontario Jor- ernnien, h• the interesit of nrohibit ion are being circulated this week. - Mr Joir. Fai_st and . Christian :drawn of Sebewing, Mich., spent a few lays here visiting relatives this week. Garnet Rau has eneeted with ':he 161s- ;Hurons, Who is next? Dean of Mathew Fj:nkbeinei•.—Maili- ewt Fiekbeiner, who, was stricken ,with paralysis last Saturday, passed away on Monday afternoon, at the age of 69 years :The. deceased .was well and favorably known throughout the .neighborhood, His sudden ` ,death' came as a great shock to all, as he wa •sr: the best oaf health utp to the time he wras stricken down. His re- amine will be, interred in the Crediton at afternoon 2' cemetery on Friday f •o'clock.ge.mm. He'leaves to 'nournians: µ t 1. sons' Fred' ,Charles loss lawidow,, , and Samuel�'and daughters, Mrs. Dear- ing of Stephen, .\trs.' Heywood and Mrs John Mallett of Exeter, 'Its. Nickie:. of Adelaide ; Township, efts., Humble of Sarna and MTS. Fahner of P- ar e aumL of es %des a 1 e b Stephen g 'other relatives, to whom area extended the sympathy of the community. KITCHE' ECO` O SICS. How to Make Palatable and ,Nourish- ing Soni». From Leftove:- AIR RAID ON KENT. One Man Was Killed and Six Persons Were Slightly Injured. LONDON, Jan. 25.—The British War Office announced Sunday two visits by hostile aircraft to the east ceeet of Kent, Taking advantage of the bright moonlight a hostile aero- plane swept over the coast ht one o'clock yesterday morning. After dropping nine incendiary bombs in rapid succession the aeroplane disap- peared over the North Sea. Neither naval or military damage was done, but private property suffered, the in- cendiary bombs causing several fires, all of which were extinguished within an hour. One man wets killed, and two men, a woman, and three chil- dren. were Injured. An official account of the first raid, given out here yesterday, says: "The War Office announces that, taking advantage of the bright moon- light, a hostile aeroplane visited the east coast of Kent at one o'clock this morning. After dropping nine bornbs in rapid succession it made on to sea- ward. ea- wa rd. "No naval or military damage was done but there was some damage to pr'vate property. Incendiary bombs caused fires, which weer extinguish- ed te two o'clock. "The following casualties occur- red: One man killed, two men, one woman, and three children slightly inured." The War Office announcement con- cerning the second attack says: "Following on the aerial attack on the east coast of Kent early this morning two hostile seaplanes made a second attack upon the same William Waldorf Astor, who has lo- cality shortly after noon. been raised to the peerage by King "After coming under a heavy fire George, will take the title of Baron the raiders disappeared, pursued by Astor of Hever castle. our naval and military machines. Admiral Lord Charles Beresford "The enemy effected no damage, probably will be Baron Beresford of and no casualties have been re- Metemmeh and Curraghmore. ported." - Hever castle isan ancient mansion in Kent, rebuilt by the great-grandfa- ATTACK IS HELD UP. ther of Anne Boleyn, where • Anne 'Boleyn was visited by Henry VIII. Teutons • Near Salonica Cannot Pro- vision •heir Arfnies. The question of economy in the kitchen is easiest Solved by the good cook. The woman who knows tittle or nothing about cooking finds it very difficult to make ends meet at times, while the woman who is either a nat- ural born cook or has been trained to cook beautifully can always serve a dinner, even if there is nothing but scraps; in the house. To the. housewife whose only knowledge of cooking is how to broil and roast...Meat and boil and bake po- tatoes and a few other vegetables— to this woman scraps seem at for nothing but the rubbish heap. The idea that these scraps may be used would ` probably never occur to her, while the suggestion that not only might they, be used, but . that they might be oeade quite delicious, would seem preposterous. One way to save the leftovers is to make them into a good soup. When there is a good butcher's bone for a solid foundation a great. many of the scraps can be put into the soup' pot for flavoring. The bones left over from roasts of lambs, veal qr chicken can be made . into fine soups with, the ' aid of the celery leaves and any .odds and ends of vegetables which happen to be on hand: A`'`earrot, a turnip, a few on- ions, peas, all may be thrown into the soup pot They all add strength and flavor. LUMLEY • Re vs IA Euler ngton was in Goderielieehis week attending County ,,Councel:Mr. John Cann,c.v+as, n-anvas- airee iter thr locality for the Committee oiSY7400 0t and ,irnet with good ,re p once Maggie Hobkirk has retie ot• o Ecetert <,earrth dxessmakir. ._ -M.. +ry .�,t3hur ton. Keys'. lads been 1aLd up. -a attack ,:of la,, goripp e. -Mrs Geo. a.hlcl,. e- Saskr.' and "1lrs. o �e, - of Gii11, Zak , , M osr y ,_ of D 1 fan a few ,.e. It's Baron Astor of Hever. a THE MOLSONS BANK t Capital & Reserve $8,800,000 e8 Branches in Canada ry A Sinai Inking Business Tweeted • Letters of Credit Circular Bank Money Orders -41 41ANINOS BANK DEPARTMENT Interest allowed at kigkest cunerrt rata EXIT" 1REI. involcH— W D, CLARKE, Manager, : »' made #�1ar1c tiaelataraa1 GEORGIAN MFG. CQ"„ ' The Harmless.. but Elio cant remedy tor'#i adaa vs Nsuralgis,Ansensis,3 lsssnsss. NinVou* • haustion, tks. 1 ace AT AU. onuani*T*, or by mall tract COLLINGWOOD, ONT. Patriotism In Hayti. now again in one Hayti, wh'Ich is w g of- its perennial revolueions, breeds a spirit of . 'sensitive patriotism •un-• known in other countries. Some years ago a general • in. •the Haytian army ordered an artificial eye in Paris. The maker;, executed. the, order.to the best'of •his-ability;:.but the eye 'was "returned from Port au Prince, ,with a letter complaining. that "the eye }yon forwarded r» is . of ,a . tint, that resembles the Spanish flag. lam.:far too;'. patriotic to wear any colors, but those of my"ow.• country. After as- certaining from the Minister of..Ma- tand- ��heH a fan ;rine, the .colors Or -the yt e) , ,, .• • • ord, 'a scar -let anis pgreen eye was ;de- epatched; and •thissmet with approval. Chronicle. o =-�-Lonshodr:'Dail '•4� ' y • d he A � .lie rheas ex 5 h .I _ �, , 0. p f. t ut s call' attention oaf conctab ,, ,. rhe rxrts otnde,, is, and d' eth ers Yfo1'sendugin-such s 0 Matter e r . may have' forpublication as lige .week"as s posible `.:2e- y �e. 'oto:' ss ,gare' dV.d-.. memlier ,w g ze P 5 nesday' afternoon', Gordon Mooney a oratne,; x were visitors =a:t W. Glenn's w"°da s.The drari , ``'1:he S'rod- SALONICA, Jan. 25.—A German submarine 'has sunk a British cargo boat. The crew:was saved. The :=Bulgars.-, are transporting heavy guns from. Varna to the Mace- donian front. ' The belief is growing in Entente circles that the Austro-Germen at- tack ttack on Salonica is likely to be de- layed some time. The Germans are finding that it will require consider- able time to surmount all the ob- stacles facing them in this campaign. Chief among these is the transport.. of troops, heavy artillery, and sup- plies along the bad roads and the railway line, .rhich is stillconsider- ably damaged in several parts. It is, said that the 'railway will ' not be completely established for two -inontits yet. . .How serious the matter of rovis- ioning the troops is may be gauged front the. "fact,. that all the Austro German troops at - Monastir, `which originally numbered 16,000, have. been 'removed to a more 'northerly point, where they: can more easily be kept supplied - • Greek Statement Delayed. ..2S =A p `"des' etch . to PARIS; Jan..,, the' Havas: Agency from Athens, one' der date,' of Friday, states that • the'.. u : Greelf cliautber of dep t>es cone will l inenee its. work without .the :usual lipeech from the Throne„ the "Govern nu nt'reserving its declaration oil the 1 sit nationfUntil ' o itica .. u • . ., .� ... Y 1. d:- res ac • o. %iPa1t t lr ri • ns de u h .. ,1 t=.� , e d r�o e`t over ly. n D r er. fa g „t of� ; • he e� t •'red a:elected . s i n }u be ,.p iv �i� A post card addressed to us as below, with your name andaddressoNnYontheother side, will cost but one cent. Drop it in thenearestmail box,anditwillbring prompt- ly a copy of our illustrated 80 -page catalogue for 1916. walso—free it will come al o— free —a 15c. packet of Byron Pink Tomato A perfectly formed tomato, the Byron Pink is uniform, large, and attractive. The flesh is firm, and the flavor delicious and full-bodied. It is a robust grower and a heavy cropper. It is an ideal tomato for forcing. You are going to buy seeds anyway; then you might just as well send for our catalogue and get this free premium for yourself. The Catalogue tells about the other valuable premiums tvhich we give with evert, order. DARCH & HUNTER SEED CO., LIMITED, LONDON, ONTARIO, CANADA 17 McGILLIVRAY COUNCIL "Ar the (statutory meeting of the council on Jan. 10th the members as follows took the oath of office—J.J. Poore, reeve; J A. McKenzie, Deputy reeve; Wm: Dixon, Jos. Glavin; and C. Mason. Councillors. The following officers were appointed, J, D. Drum- mond, clerk; A. F. Smith', treasures W. T _Moos, assessor; Geo. Hind - mars. h and W. E. Corbett, auditors;. Geo Sanders, janitor Fire ilall; R. J. Hamilton, M,' O. •H.; and Jas. Neil, member of Board of Health A motion was passed that the, Hy - before their marriage. It is said to 'dro Electric: Commission. be required be one of the finest examples of to enquire into examine, investigate, Tudor arehiteeture;inEngland. Bar - and report upon the cost of construct on Astor spent some $10,000,000 on ing and, operating an electric railway the estate, including the expenditure from Lucan to Grand Bend through for the diversion ofthe river' which, the township, who wound be served by according to tradition, made the such railway, the population 'off the castle so damp that Henry VIII. con- municipalities served, an estimate of tracted rheumatism there. the probable revenue, the practicabsl- Metemmeh is the scene of one of Lord Beresford's early ex- os the undertaking` and the econ- Admiralorisc value to the municipalities, ploits in Egypt; while Curraghmore A :similar report was asked `_'os by is the family home of the Marquis motion on a proposed road. from Gran- ton to 'Arkoma. • A number of accounts were passed and. council adjourned to :Feb. 6. J. D. Drummond, Clerk, „ Hon Directors,—Dr. Steele, John, Benneweis, J. J. Merner and H. Eilber, members of parliament for South Perth and South Huron, and William Hazelwood land- Samuel Doupe; aud- itors A .M. Driver and, Win. Ratcliffe The president and secretary were ap- pointed delegates to attend the Con- vention of Fairs and Exhibitions at Teronee on Feb. 1st and Znd, of Waterford, the head of the Beres- -ford family, Study Enemy's Tongue. The war is turning out niore lin- -guists than the universitiesdid be- fore the conflict began. A Petrograd despatch states that,tnany of the Ger- man prisoners are devoting them selves seriously to _learning Russian,and the . same is the, .in Fr , h ..ose ance where there is a great; demand for French ' grammar -1i:: among German prisoners. German has been male. the -court . made The ;of Bulgaria:` • The French; are applying themselves assiduously. s '`,Ali Atietl's, de.p.atch y ernment,' an-' (}reek Gov .according to re .sees no objection. nouncem.ent he.,. .,, r ea < blishrnen't.. 'of• • to".the gem ora y, to 1.l* . Serbian Government at -Corfu. • to the :;study of English to increase the f eeiin g offsternitY am ong the ',allies in France, and the English are;; recTiprhgoeating•byacklwearning students are:. the British prisoners in Germany, `the .Gereiian. tori=: who..r'Qf?rse to�ioaEi�p ,,, f re" are exec' •tions ' gL{e, a though the , F 11 t, .tri• tests Oniversities. il'GF aitatltori. R epre-. s e n ta ti ves of. the ,< f ou r eus..n t i ern.Univetgit"esand-Brandon Col- ,lege.e; iri'.COnfereneehere rcently, _'` artimousiy decided ''to tiifer to the :Departure nt, a' 'battalion to; be Militia . raised' from those institutidns •A was a of ted to draft sub-•romulttee . ,appointed iP the farmal offer .and=complete' the de=. ails for organization., ATOOcd. Fbr Infants and Children .:Z ZO..ears r F .l�5@ •fin _ IA Always bears the iignatur,c of KIRKTON the. Kirkton A riculiturelr•,Seele!tee. `1d theii-anneal:.meeting oil- Wednes-f iiQ .. dna ,of last week Beth the'°. president •' . here ,i s . the chai�r4.'' e rhe. A nr,' AtkLns > . �liie•' ociet wet; ` rep or ilr,,axiees f S. y • ,.. p 4 Crit-:...fr; . fauiid. CLERK ALL RUN DOWN Restored To Health By Vinol Shelbyville, Ind—"I am a clerk in a hotel and was all run down, no energy, my blood was poor and my face covered with pimples. I got so weak I had to put up an awful fight to keep at work. After taking many other remedies with- out benefit Vinol has retored my health and strength."—Roy F. BIRD. For all run-down, weak, nervous - conditions of men and women, nothing equals Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil. Try it on aur guarantee. W S Cole, Druggist, Exeter, Ont. in! excelleut,i d ,after piEl: E`i xri o . 'en a' ba1dt e, off - Z5 on`. hand: :was decoded;'t oM aeeeee again:.,tier' th' :crop c•osn etiitien -Th�eh " electio..n.... p: :. ollows ° ': �ted'as.f ,.rs. resin }. , affcers i Ke`tlan,d A- B;rethour .est Utcel, '•l,, , o, ; Sec:= Treas. 'A, Intl. Vice.:-' 'oho C le , , ,.., n ,J _. Doupe.,• Dsreete s, Wim.'Atk,nson,, R, o. ; ,.en " " R:d. Paynter, Berry, Wm , R b.fis , y , More . S Rouitly Wm. -'Brock, Jas, . o, , as' Crier A. 3erryliill; Frmrtcis, J y,. kL, Australia anay be 'doiing, this and that :excellently well, but it is re be noted that 'ie. the recent :special cam- paign to raise n oney for the -`Brit- ish Red Gross little old Ontario :aised nicre .money than all other British oversee -Provinces :put together, , —occurred- CLIl�`I°ON The death".o at the home of Mr. 1=11.1 E. Rorke on Sat- urday 'evening, atuiday''evetiing, of one ofHuron Coun- ty's: early „Settlers, in the. person of Frances Louise Reed, widow of the late"Thomas Robertson, Judge of the Supreme Court of Ontario. MOTHERS Df 0 .Wo oR� It is a grave mistake for mothers to neg lett,their aches and pains and suffer in to h nic'o;sick- sTence—this only leadsc ro f e s rtens•life: es.•adotu ho n s n Te; . esa is 1 erY your ore t ria f ur u Ifwi , Yo g :or' 1"• ':if" you' feel l'an id w eat ._•tab e3C, e fi4r, pF-ssSedr Yo should know that`S co t t's inuIssou overcorueslust such conditions. . It oeeeeses ion concentrated form the, very elements to invigorate the bloc d , strengthen the tissues, nourish the nerves : and build strength. f. Scott's is tren , coin .thousands o mothers -and Will help yeti. Y ou. Tr7, it.' "` scot,towne Toronto, Ont. • •