Exeter Advocate, 1908-04-16, Page 54'
Ozeter Rewe tete
t.\l:Tf. it
,1 00 .t pail in advance,
,1 60 a 'var if not so paid.
'y To United States Subscribers,' 50
i• a Wear Stri .II) in Ad• anLc
SANDERS k CREECII, Publi.hen.
ONTAI:ty
PUY OUR ONE
O
Baby Carriages
or Go -Carts
and let the Baby grow.
Large and Beautiful.
The price is not large and
the terms are easy.
- 1..10..
2 6 octave Organs cheap.
2 Pianos, slightly used, at a
Great Reduction.
Sewing Machines, Bicycles
Children's Wagons, at prices
that will make you smile.
Fine Stationery.
8. MARTIN &SON
Cook's Cotton Root Compound.
The great Uterine Tonle. and
only sato effectual Monthly
ttegulatoron whlch women can
depend. Sold In throo degreea
of strength—No. 1, $1 ; No. 2.
10 degrees stronger $3: No.3.
for special cases, per box.
'told by all dru ts, or sent
repaid on rete pt of prion
Free p. inphlet. A dressTMS
COINI11E91011dCO..TosOMTo,Orit. (former1yWiaaaeer
pnP Ilirwir isriwitrirriiiri
Easter Terms
w
r`
1
OPEN v.
APRIL 21ST
•1•1••
Canada's Greatest Chain of III gh•
Grade Besineas Colleges. located at
P►.rrasozoroa
Gtisros
ORANGEVILLE
WINouAE
WALKERTON
OW/ERICIH
foltntcs the customs of business concerns
and takes no vacation.
Stenographers. (took • keepers a n d
Telegraphers are In great demand in
July, Auust, September and October.
We train more young people than
any other management in Ontario.
There 'be a reason; write for it.
MAIL COURSES
Clinton Business College
George Spotton Principal.
ho Daniel E. Eby, Vice -Principal.
LA. ikJfi&>d 16.retaek ks6ark ak Ala
NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
f Dell
Ooaflij
Of �
CaQaDa
is abont to publish a new issue
of the Official Telephone Di.
rectory for the District of Wes-
tern Ontario. including the
Town of Exeter. Changes of
fires names, changes of street
addresses. or orders for dupli-
cate entries should he handed
in at once to
A. MARCHAND,
Loc.11. 11.1N.16l:lt
and Weekly
Mail and Empire
or
Weekly Globe
for One Yr... $1.35
and all other papers
at lowest rates.
way
Mrs. Rohl. McLinehy spent Thurs'
ls
day Inst with Mrs. Visa Young.—Mrs.
Broomfield. of l'.lrhett, visited Mrs.
W. J. Wilson one day last week.—Mrs.
FAl. Mason and Misses ilerena and
(;lady+ visited friends at the Bang,—
Miss Alma Po1'nck, Of Corbett, is cis•
iting Miss 7.11.' English. --Mr. W. J.
Wilson has leen sufTering from an at-
tack of grip for the past week. Miss
Lizzie Foster and lit Ile neire. of Petro -
lea. are visiting at Mr. Jos. roster'.,—
Miss Milly Foster spent a few days
with her sister. Mrs. J. (fill. of (,rand
Bend.- Miss Edna Belt presented r ur
Post•Mieter with a boggiest of Octets
the first of the season.
I'roof is inexhaustible that
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound cures female ills and
Barrie. women safely through the
Change of Life.
Mrs. Letitia Blair C'annifton,Ont.,kh
writes to Mrs. I'inam :
1 was sick for five years. One doc-
tor toll the it was ulceration, and an-
other told me it was a fibroid tumor,
and advised an operation. No one
knows what I suffered, and the bear-
ing clown pains were terrible.
" I wrote W my sister about it and she
advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
It has cured me of all my troubles,
and I did not have to have the opera-
tion after all. The Compound also
helped me to pass safely through
Change of Life."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from toots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills
and has positively cured thousands olf
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tulnors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
ing -down feejinO7 flatulency, iadiges-
! iotl,dizzinessor nervous prostration.
Why don't you try it ?
Mrs. I'inkllam invites all sick
.hoiden to write her for advice.
She bus guided thousands to
hest Ills. .►ddress, Lynn, Mass.
McGillivray
DEATH—There passed away on April
Oth, Margaret, the beloved wife of
Artemus Bice of the 2nd con. of Mc-
Gillivray, in her 75th year. The de-
ceased's maiden name was Miss Mar-
garet Carter, daughter of the late
William Carter. of McGillivray. With
her parents she moved from the town-
ship of Huntly in the County of Carle-
ton, in 1837, when she was four years
of age. The township of McGillivray
and the adjoining township were then
a vast wilderness her parents being
among the first settlers. The deceas-
ed is survived by an aged husband,
who is in very feeble health, two sons
and two daughters, Ira of McGillivray,
Eli of the homestead, Mrs. Melinda
Cayo, of the Centre Road. Nest Wil-
liams and Mrs. Patterson. She is also
survived by five sisters—Mrs. Jas. B.
Hodgins of McGillivrav, Mrs. Isaac
Adanson of Nissouri, Mrs. Wm. Ryan
of London, and Mrs. Robert Hodgson
of Clandeboye and one brother, James
Carter of Michigan. George Simpson,
of Parkhill, is a cousin of deceased and
for years an old neighbor. Interment
took place on Wednesday, Stb, in St,
James' cemetery, Clandeboye, in the
presence of a large number of relativ-
es and friends.
Ziolt
DE.vTIi.—The death took place in
London at Victoria Hospital on Mon-
day, April 13tb, of Jennie R., wife of
Jaynes Ogilvie, :35u Pall Mall Street,
and daughter of Alr. and Mrs. Albert
Bert'yhill, of this place. The remains
were taken from the residence of her
sister, Mrs. John Govier, 510 Hill St.,
London, oti Tuesday afternoon to the
G.T.B. station, and conveyed by train
and carriage to Zion, where the funer-
al took place from her father's resi-
dence on Wednesday afternoon to
Zion Cemetery. Sincerest sympathy
is expressed for the bereaved. De-
ceased had been ill for only a short
time. She is survived by her husband
four small children, her parents, five
sisters and one brother.
iVinchelseit
Miss Lille Heywood is at present
the guest of her aunt, Mrs. W. Fran-
cis. of Plugtown.—A number from
Anderson spent a very pleasant even-
ing at Mr. Thomas Coward's on Thurs-
day evening last.—Mr. John Delhr•idge
met with a very painful accident on
Saturday. \Vhile chopping wood, a
chip flew from the axe, cutting his eye
badly.-- ( )n Hatutday.eyening the boys
organized a baseball club, and the fol-
lowing officers were elected: Manager,
W. W. Kerr: Captain, Thomas Bell;
Sees- and Treas.. 1.. H. Robinson;
Field Committee., Geo. Godbolt, Geo.
Banthrope and Newton Clark. Pract-
ice next Saturday evening. —Mrs. Joh
Hers presented her husband with a
baby girl on the 5th inst.
•EFORI ANO AFTER TREATMENT.
Canadian 'retterino
is an absolute certain cure for Hcrema. Acne
Basra. Tetter. Pimples, nlackhe ids, Ringworm,
Barbers' itch Scald head, itching files. Ulcers,
sa,
dorand all cutaneous sent facial blemishes.
Has been thoroughly and successfully tested
In bendiest. of so called incurable cases.
It is entirely unlike any other preparation.
mixture or ointment that has been sold or pte-
scribed.
A few applications will convince that is ha.
wonderful medical vir'.,e and intrinsic merit
it is made in Canaria. A goof honest Cana-
dian preparation.
Price one box Fifty Cents, or five bones -two
Dollars.
Mailed to any address nn receipt of price.
Sold and rec..mncenued by all !riding Drug•
gi-t. in Canada.
Pamphlet free to any address.
Manufactured and solei by the sole proprie-
tors.
The Tetterine Chemical Co.
Windsor, Ontario.
Sold in Exeter lie .1. W. Rr.Iwning,
Mosey and W. S. ('ole. I)rntr•
gusts.
Mitchell: Agnes Little, relict of the
late Alexander Mulberon, aged 75
years, died on April 13. Deceased had
been ailing for some time, and he r
death was not unexpected. She leav-
es a grown-up family. The funeral
took place \Vednesday.
saws -
BACHELOR'S REFL ECTIONS.
No man loves his baby at first; he
Ras to get used to it like a baseball
Unger.
It always makes a girl mad to bo
scared by a mouse when there areu't
auy teen around.
Any man can get any woman to
marry hies if he only proposes to her
in enough different ways.
It is generally easiest to kiss a wo-
man right after you have begged her
to forgive you for something.
After a man has argued a certala
time with a woman he is either con-
vinced or else he Is willing to admit
be la.
A man judges a woman's heart by
her face; a woman judger. a man's
face by his heart.
A woman who loves too much some-
times loses, but a woman who loves
too little never gains anything worth
losing.
The women have got up a new story
now about a girl that was so sensi-
tive that It made her seriously 111 to
be kissed.
Every girl has an Idea that when
she is telling a man she loves him he
will see her whole soul looking at him
to her eyes.
Whenever a woman sees a picture
In a book of a woman kneeling at a
man's feet she feels that she ought
to read it herself before she lets her
daughter.
As soon as a woman falls In love het
complexion gets better.
If modesty was the fool -killer most
women would dle of old age.
There are probably a lot of womea
that will and heaven awfully old-
fashioned.
♦ minister doesn't have to know
the marriage ceremony by heart, for
If he forgets a word the woman can
always prompt him.
The only thing which would punish
a woman worse than having to say
what she believed would be having to
4elieve what she said.
The main difference between a cat
and a woman is that the cat has
whiskers.
Any man can go into a room ful of
woman and pick out the one that
thinks she is "advanced."
As the women run things nowadays,
r.•Thody but an Emperor can gu in
good society without having to be a
hypocrite.
A woman's club is a place where a
woman can go and learn all about
baby food, garbage and Rubinstein ai
%. a same time.
At a meeting held in a town in ire -
1 -1.1 two speakers who had come from
•• United States contributed the fol-
Ic.,:utg sentences in the course of their
speeches p ethos
One of them, in giving some details
of personal history, informed his hear-
ers that "he had left Ireland fifty-three
y, ars before, a naked little boy without
a penny in his pocket."
Said the other :
"Until last week I never set foot in
the 13nd of my birth."—Chums.
The following story of the Pope is
told in the Italian papers. A depu-
tation of the monks of some order had
obtained an interview with him. Ac-
cording to the etiquette of the Vatic;'1,
only Cardinals are allowed to sit in the
Pope's presence, and an invitation from
him to do so is deemed equivalent to
the promise of a Cardinalate. Pope
1'ius X. is a plaint mats, utterly indiffer-
ent to the etiquette of the Papal Court,
IIe, therefore, begged the monks to
take seats. They hardly knew whether
they could venture to do so, and while
they stood hesitating he said to them,
"You do not, 1 suppose, expect me to
draw your chairs forward for you ?"
—a—.
As one of the very few occasions
when the wit of Rufus Choate aas
foiled, an incident is recalled when that
brilliant lawyer was examining one
Dick Barton, chief mate of the ship
Challenge. Choate had cross-ex-
amined him for over an hour, huriing
questions with the speed of a rapid -
tire gun.
"Was there a moon that night?"
"Yes, sir."
"Did 3 11 see it?"
"No, sir."
"Then how did you know there was
a moon?"
The 'Nautical Almanac' said so, and
i'll believe that sooner than any law-
yer in the world."
"Be -ton •'r. And now tell me in
.....gitude you
crossed the equa.nr?"
"Ah, you are joking."
"No, sir, I'm in earnest and I desire
an answer."
"That's more than 1 can give."
"indeed. You a chief mate and un-
able to answer a sirflple question!"
"Yes, the simplest question i ever
was asked. 1 thought even a fool of
a lawyer knew there's no latitude at
the equator."—Success.
SOME IFS
If papa didn't have to go to work:
If mamma always could sit down and
play;
It :escalates were used Instead of
bread;
If combs and sponges could be thrown
away;
ff toy stores 'Ildn't have a single
clerk;
An 1 any child could go In there and
stay;
it we had Saturdays Ave times a
week;
!f ('hrlstmas came on every othst
day;
If grown folks loved to hear a lot et
noise,
TbtJ world would be suit* she for
u.ttie
Stephen Council
The Council of the Township o
Stephen conversed in the Town Hall
Crediton, Monday, April (ith at 1 p.m.
All members were present. Mr.
Wuerth, the newly elected Council-
man having pievioubly subscribed to
the necessary declarations of office
and property qualification. The min-
utes of previous meeting were read
and adopted. Sanders—Wuerth—
the Treasurer's Bond be accepted and
filed with the Clerk.—Carried. Keller-
mann—Yearley—that By -Law No. 0 of
1908 to authorize the Iteeve and Treas-
urer to borrow funds to meet current
expenditures of the Towuship for the
present year, having been read the
third time, be passed and signed by
the Reeve and Cletk and the seal of
the Corporation attached t hereto.—
Carried. Wuerth—Yearly—that the
By-laws appointing J. Lewis Thomas
as Township Engineer and Drainage
inspector be repealed and that Fred
W. Farncomb of the City of London
be appointed in his stead at $6.00 per
day and expenses.—Carried. Beller-
mann—Yearley—that the By-laws
Nos. 7 and 8 of 1908, being by-laws re-
pealing By-laws Nos. 16 and 20 of 1907
and appointing Fted W. Farncomb to
be the Township Engineer and Drain-
age Inspector, each having been read
the third time, be passed and signed
by the Reeve and (clerk and the seal
of the Corporation attached thereto.
—Carried Sanders— Wuerth — that
the Township purchase four concrete
moulds of the following sizes: 14, 18,
24 and 30 for the manufacture of con-
crete tile.—Carried. The following
were appointed pathmasters, pound -
keepers and fence-viewers:—Pathmas-
ters: D Smith. Tboa Oliver. Lunt Alex-
ander, A Rollins, Geo Hill, Jas Mit-
chell, Jas Neil, Jonah Sims, Sam Jory,
Wm Penbale, Wm Sandet-e. John Hep-
burn, 3 R Essery. 0 Hoffman, Ohas
Kerr.Ed Sweitzer. R Hill, Albert Ford,
Sam Essery, B Brown, Jno Falmer, M
Finkbeiner, J G Wein, M England, J
Lawson, G Finkbeiner, Jacob Schwarz,
W Kestle, J Kestle. R Davy, J Keys.
W H Martyn. L Kraft. D Weber, P
Reardon, T Dieterich, 0 Dietericb, A
Neel). F Wild, F McKeever, N Clark,
W Smith. F Preeter, W Lafond, Ed
Ryan. F Geiser, J Dietrich, W Brok-
ensbire, H Rhode. J Hodgins, N Pol-
lard, W H Nichols, T Webb, P Baker,
G Hartle. R Stone, T Follis, A Mollard,
W Disjardine. F Mason. D Wilson, E
Gill, Jr., J Oliver, J Eagleson, H Isaac.
H Battram, J Brenner, Ed. Gill, W G
Reilly, J McKeever, P Glavin, T Row-
land, J Hays, W Sbaddock, T White-
side, A Hotson, F Green, $ Stanlake
Jr., W E Sanders, L Rader, Hy Kraft,.
Hy Schroeder, P Schroeder, J Rhode,
Sr., C T Walper. Poundkeepers: Wm
Moffatt, H Shapton, W B Geiser, B
Cunningham, ,f Hickey, G Webb, Jos
Edwards, T J Army, U Finkbeiner, 1'
Baker, W Fritz, F Preeter, 5 Stan lake,
Jr., W Zimmer. A Mouser, C II Wil-
son. Fence -viewers: S Davis, I Hill,
E liaise, P McKenzie, G Mawhinney.
1•: King, J Love, (; Down, A Hayter.
The following orders were paid: Mun-
icipal Wm Id, subscription and supplies
$7.15; it. Hill, shovelling snow. $2; D.
'Wilson, drawing the and filling in
wash-out, 81-1; Alonzo Hodvens, ac-
count for repairs, $8.23. Council ad-
journed to meet in the Town Hall, on
Monday, May I, at 1 p.m.
f. Eilber, Clerk.
--
$100 Reward 8100.
The reader., of this paper.n11 be plead to learn
that there is et least one dreaded disease that science
has been able to cure in all its stages, and that Is
Catarrh. Ball's Catarrh Cure is the onlypositive
cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease requires a constitu-
tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in.
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the constitution and assist•
ing nature in doing its work. The proprietors hate
so touch faith in iia curative powers that they offer
One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. ('HENEY k CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Druggists, 75 cents,
Take Hall's Family fills for constipation.
-sae-
Zurich
Misses Allis Schnell and Lucy
Schachter of Pigeon, Mich., are visit-
ing in town.—Holly Little has return-
ed from the lumber camp near Powas-
son.—The first ball and supper of the
season will be held in the Commercial
Hall, on April :.'0th.—William ,Miller
of the 15th con., met with an accident
in the woods on Friday last, receiving
a fractured ankle, by a log rolling on
his leg.—One of our old residents, Mrs.
Bossenberry is laid up at present by
illness.—A pleasant surprise party was
held at the borne of H. \Veber's on
Monday evening, for Miss Laura Boss-
enberry, previous to her departure for
Berlin. --The Rev. A. D. (iischler left
on Monday to attend the Conference
et St. Jacoby.—Nicholas Foster has
leased the John Koch SO acre farm at
the Babylon line, for a terns of two
years, and will take possession at once.
—11. Mages and F Bossenhery and
their families left last week for their
new homes, the former to Detroit and
the latter to Berlin. --The first fanners
in the section to be connected by tele-
phone will be Jacob Harberer, John
Pfaff and Peter Schwalm of the Blind
Lone.
The following is not original, but
has been going round among our ex•
changes for some time: "In the las-
ginning Ood created the heavens and
the earth; then the editor and the lib
eral advertiser, and prompt paying
subscriber, which was all very good.
Next day it. snowed and He created
the man who does not ''elieve in the
advertising: another who does n, t
take the home paper ---then He rested.
Then the devil got into the moulding
room and created the man who tak, e
the paper for years and fails to pay
for it. After he had completed thar
sorry job. and having a few lumps of
mud left, he created the excuse for a
man who settles his subscription by
instructing the postmaster to mark
bis paper refused.
ririiirwirispirliOr RI WWII. IV,
AROUND ABOUT US
!stud ALARA. Ai 41. ain'dh
Rrinaec: 1/n April tat at the ruin•
envy of Mr. and Mrs. Thomism Morgan.
their elder• daughter, ilannah was
married to Chester Lee, son of (;eorge
Lee. They were nnettende3.
Not a Miracle
But Medical Science
Dr. T. .'t. Slocum, Limited,
Toronto, Out.
Gentlemen:—
"Some time ego I began to lose flesh
and failed every day until I had to
quit work. My physicians and all my
friends said i had contracted c•un.uwp
tion. I failed from 165 pounds down
to 119. I was advised to go to the
Rockies or to the coast. I went to both
places under heavy expense. I con-
tinued to fail, and was advised by the
doctors to come houto as nothing more
could be done for me. Hope seemed
to have left rue.
"I tried Psychlue and since starting
its use I have gained from 119 to 141
pounds. I have used 810.00 worth of
the medicine. I am a well man and I
cannot say too much in praise of Psy-
chine. The strongest recommendation
would be weak in view of the fact that
1 believe it has saved my life. It is
without doubt the best remedy for
run-down conditions and weak lungs.
"I sincerely hope and trust that you
will continue your good work of saving
run down people and consumptive from
the grave. Wishing you and Psychine
eontiaued success, I remain, one of
Psychine's best friends."
ALEX. McItAE,
vault Ste. Marie, Ont.
Almost every snail brings us letters
like the above. Psychine will repeat
this record in every case. It is the
greatest medicine known. At all drug•
gists, 50c and 81.00, or Dr. T. A. Slo•
cum, Limited, Toronto.
Seaforth: The death took place in
McKillop on Friday of George Lock-
hart at the age of 76 years and 10
months. His death removes one of
the earliest settlers in the township,
and one of its most respected citizens.
Bayfield: John A. Thompson and
Mise Grace E. MacDougall were quiet-
ly married at the manse in Bayfield on
April 7 by Rev. John McNeil, and yes-
terday they left far the Lloydminster
district, Sask., where Mr. Thompson
homesteaded a year ago.
Mitebelt: The death occurred on
April Otb at bis residence, of August
Herbert, who retired from farming
some few years ago and moved to Mit-
chell. He was in his 69th year and
leaves a wife, three sons and one
daughter. Deceased was one of the
early settlers of this neighborhood.
Clinton: Miss Lily Miller, eldest
daughter of Mr. Jacob Miller, left here
last week for Seattle. Washington.
She goes on a very pleasant errand,
for on her arrival she goes to the home
of her uncle, Mr. Gilmour, where she
will be married to Mr. James \Vattern,
of Seattle, formerly of Clinton.
St. Marys: There were two bylaws
voted on here on April 10, one to em-
power the council to hand over $40,000
debentures to the St. Mary's and West-
ern Ontario Railway, and the other
granting a loan of $20,0011 to the Small
Nares'
Lu. The former bylaw was
carried by a majority of 311, and the
latter was defeated by 51.
Fullerton:t
A quiet wedding was
HORSEMEN,
ATTENTION
Yo.. Cannot Afford
to get your Cards
and Bills printed
at any other place but
THE --
ADVOCATE
OFFICE —
Because
We have the Best Cuts
in the Business.
The Best Cardboard.
and the
Lowest Possible Prices
We Give a FREE Notice
for two weeks, describing
the Horse and Route.
THAT NOTICE
reaches more people
in this district, through
THE ADVOCATE
than any other medimu.
Is not that just
what YOU
need ?
Send us your Copy
or Call Early.
The : Advocate
EXETER. ONTARIO
Clinton: Mrs. C. G. Middleton,
wife of a prominent Goderich Tp.
mer. was so badly Burt in a i nnaw ey
accident here April 8th, that slight
hopes are held out for her recovery.
celebrated at the home of Mr. and !The horse dashed down the street at a
Mrs, John McIntyre, of Fullerton, on terrific pace and came in contact. with
Tuesday of last week, when her eldesta tree. The buggy was turned up side
daughter, Miss May Ella, was united I down and demolished and Mrs. ,Mit'dt.•.
in marriage to John A. Hanson, of :ton w,es thrown over 30 feet to tLe ce-
the firm of Ilanson Bros.. St. Marys. ! tnent sidewalk and render ed einem'.
Bev. I3. Stewart, Motherwell, j scions, sustaining injuries her face
formed the !and head.
Jr.,
f.t r -
of
ceremony.
per -
to
A sure winner.
Bound to catch on.
64 to the pcund.
Your dealer will supply
you. If not, write
direct to
D. S. Perrin is Co.,
LONDON. Ltd. CANADA,
Your savings are the safeguard
of your future. You want to
place them where there is no
chance whatever of losing them.
You can do that by depositing
them with this Company, or by
taking out a Debenture for $100
or more, for one or more years.
By law no depositor or debenture
holder can lose one dollar of
principal or interest while any
assets remain to cover his
investment. The aa;rts of this
Company exceed S11,000,000, so
that there is no chance of loss.
In fact there is no financial in-
stitution in Canada which can
offer you more absolute certainty
of safety.
Correspondence will be gladly
entered into with those interested
in banking by mail.
0
Loan & Savings Co., London, Ont.