Exeter Times, 1916-8-31, Page 4THE; EXE.T R TIMES.
T'IlUt.em),Avr,.UGU$T Shins, i9rfy4.
OU
NOT L `FIK
How She Was Relieved from
Pains by Lydia E. Pinl£harn's
Vegetable Compound.
Taunton, Mass.--" 1 had pairs in both
Bides and when my periods came I had
to stay at home
from work and suf-
fer a long time.
One day a woman
name to our house
and asked my
mother why I was
suffering. Mother
told her that T suf-
fered every month
and she said, 'Why
don't you buy a
bottle of Lydia E.
Prnkham's Vegetable Compound?' My
mother bought it and the next month I
was so well that I worked all the month
without staying at home a day. I am
in good health now and have told lots of
girls about it. "—Miss CLAxucE MORIN,
22 Russell Street, Taunton, Mass.
Thousands of girls suffer in silence
every month rather than consult a phy-
rioian. If girls who are troubled with
painful or irregular periods, backache,
headache, dragging -down sensations,
fainting spells or indigestion would take
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, a safe and pure remedy made
:from roots and herbs. much suffering
might be avoided.
Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co.,Lynn, Mass. (confidential) for free
advice which will prove helpful.
LABOR DAY
' SINGLE . FARE
a a-'oaA goina and Tettunan,_ . Septeln-
.alar ith, 1'tlii,
FARE AND ONE-THIRD►
Good going Sept. 2nd, 3rd, 4th. Good
to return Sept. 5th 1010
altetrrrrr. tickets will 'oe 'reseed from
alt atatiorus in Canada east of Port
Arthur and to Detroit and Port Hur-
on, lIlicb...•; !Buffalo, Black Rock, Niag-
are Falls and. Suspension iridgc. N. Y.
;.pickets and fall particulars: on appli-
eation to agents .
In'ANABiAN NATIONAL, EXHIBITION
'Return tickets at reduced fares to
Toronto from all. stations in Canada.
Platelet particu.tars of special train
aeirtrtee ani low rate excarsione. from
Grand. Trunk Agents
Fall Term from
'AaagUSi 29 i
*r�ar,
� v
��tY��eeee
Fr
GO1VMMERCiAL
S} ORTHAND:AND
4 TELEGR AP}IY DEPTS
• Students riay enter at any
a temre. We place graduates in
p sitiona During July and
Aogsst 've recsi>ved appli-
cations for Over 200 office
4 assiist2erlts we could not sup -
4 ply Wri;te for our free catal-
4 'ague at an;.a.
fir tlA
As.. l.eLashla:m, Priv pit
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
0
a
e
•
•
4
•
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e
4,
4,
•
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1
ers!
Made in Canada
Fertilizer $18 and
$22 per ton
NOW is the time to
buy wire fence bE i
fore Pi advances in
price.
Let me quote you on
your needs in the
following Iiia es,—
Ali Mach of Lumber
iter dressed oz rough.
S'bthg ks, Lath, Cedar
g
Fencer Posts, 8 ft long, 9
ft, long and AO ft long.
Cement, Wali Board
and Ready Roofing.
A. J.
C AT O TU'
T'3 p
4�,
6RANTON
tnereetsesewaseenteetilkelterseetneeseraresiteen
WHERE SUGAR CoMES FROM
Some Interesting Facts About a Big
Canadian industry.
We will have to revise our school
books to let the next . generatio4
know the real facts about sugar.-
So
ugar:So fast moves the world that each,.
fresh. edition of an encyclopaedia has
to take back much that was publish-
ed in the former edition. Small won-
der, then, that most of us are hope-
lessly behind the times in our know-
ledge of even the most commonly -
used commodities.
Sugar is a good instance of this.
About all we know of sugar is
what we learned in school. Even
the housewife who buys it and uses
it still thinks it comes from sugar
cane, cane that grows in the tropics.
Now that is still as true as it eves'
was. But it is not the 'whole truth—
not by millions of pounds.
A large percentage of the world's
supply of sugar does not came from
the tropics at all. England, Ger-
many, France, the United States, all
grow sugar beets, and these beets
snake tbe very fittest of sugar.
In resent years Canada has en-
tered the field as a grower of beets—
and with splendid success. Indeed, it
has been found that certain parts of
Canada are quite ideal for .the grow-
ing of this remarkable plant, and
with modern manufacturing methods
our Canadian -grown beets are pro-
ducing a sugar that is the t equal • of
any.
"Can it be as good as the sugar re-
fined from ..caue ? es the• natural
question of the housewife. The best'
answer to give her is that she is
probably serving this very Canadian
sugar—sugar refined from Canadian
beet roots—on her own table every
day in the year. A goodly percentage
of the sugar sold in Canada to -day is
this very sugar that comes from the
beet.
In this urs of beet root for sugar.
refining Canada is but following
Europe's lead. There an even larger
percentage of the sugar used is re-
fined from beet root. In England
this sugar is used almost exclusively,
both for table use and for preserving.
england's jam manufacturers, fa-
uous the world aver for the excel-
lence of Their products, use beet
ugar in the making of those deli-
cious preserves. England's house-
wives, in a land celebrated for its dis-
crimination in culinary matters, use
this type of sugar almost exclusively
for everything they cook or serve.
Now, let us see what all this
means to Canada.
It. means, for one thing, an indus-
try already very important from a
labor -employing standpoint; an in-
dustry that keeps two huge Canadian
plants busy, with another still finer
fae cry now being built. It means,
furthermore, an industry that sup-
ports, on an exceedingly profitable
basis, hundreds of farms in Western
Ontario.
In the counties of Essex, Kent,
Lambton, Waterloo, Wellington, and
Huron thousands of acres are devot-
ed to the growing of the sugar beet;
and every day 1,800 tons of these
beets are made into sugar. The new
plant, soon to be completed, will add
to this a further capacity of 1,500
tons per day, bringing Canada's capa-
city for sugar refining from beets up
to a point where It can take the pro-
duct of 28,000 acres of our land.
That would mean $2,000,000 paid
out yearly for beets alone.
The Agricultural War Book, pub-
lished by the Canadian Department
of Agriculture, pays special tribute
to this comparatively new industry,
pointing out that it is only a matter
of time until Canada can produce at
home an even larger proportion of
the -sugar consumed. All theleading
economists and agriculturists ap-
prove of the growing of beets for the
making of sugar, so that this im-
portant staple may be, from the
ground up, a Canadian product.
Crops Are Behind.
i.- r---:-,4-- -{ *,►letin issued the
anther day 'by the census and statistics
office at Ottawa, gives the usual pre-
Iiminary estimate of the areas sown
to grain crops in Canada and the
condition of these crops as reported
by correspondents on May 31. The
reports show that the spring this
year is late, and that heavy rains
throughout the Dominion have in
!many places made it difficult to .work
the land. In eastern Canada seeding
I at the end of May was considerably
behind hand, especially as compared
with last year, and in parts of the
west the sowing of oats and barley
had not been completed.
According to the preliminary esti-
mates of correspondents, made in
many instances before the completion
of seeding, wheat in Canada this year
will occupy a total area of 11,4,91,-
600 acres. This Is 3,149,800 or 11.5
per cent. below the high record of
iast year, when 12,986,400 acres
were Harvested, but 1,197,700 acres
or 11.6 per ceut_ above the harvest-
ed area of 1914, which was 10,293,-
900 acres,
The area to be harvested of fall
wheat for 1916 is 1,,:42,200 acres,
leaving the area estimated to be
sown to spring wheal: as 10,449,400
acres. In the three northwest prov-
inces the area sewn to wheat is esti-
mated at 10,471 2'r0 acres, as earn -
pared with 11, 1 .10;) 0J acres, the
area of 1915, an( with 9,335,409
acres, the harves`e., wheat area in
the north-west; pee, tr.r a for 1914.
In Manitoba the a• a . awn to wheat
for 1916 is pia ,/ .i et 2,904,400
acres, as compares" wait 3,342,900
acres last year; sit re eratchewan it
is 5,889,100 acre:; , , :et ainst 6,838,-
100 acres, and lar • .l'.' :La 1,677,700
acres, as aga'.r.rt 1 C ',MO acres,
.Metres ee . le,
According to
OF • despatches,
es
r
Alberta has r. .o d 1 e men more
than her pre. tier! the 500,000.
Eritisb Colur e a 4 %, 2,100 short,
and Manitoba irl 'a s.t,'rehewarl. are
short only 7. e 'Carlo liaa yet
to rase 41 5<.: +1' sec 105 00tl: stud
� r r w
tbe, Maritime e v..,>crl 36,000
NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK
frrlportant Events Which Have
Occurred °wins the Week.
The Busy World's Happenings Care-
fully Compiled and Put Into
Handy andAttractive Shape for
n• '—A�
the Readers of Our Pollens
Solid Hours' /enjoyment.
WEDNESDAY.
The Northern Ontario fre relief
fund now totals $252,789.
Colors were presented at Camp
Borden to the 147th (Grey) Battal-
ion.
The Russian. Grand Duke's troops
scored a triumph in the• Lake Van
region.
Dunean Leslie McBain, nine years
old, died of infantile paralysis at St,
Thomas.
The first $100,000 for loans to
New Ontario settlers bas been ap-
propriated.
Brigadier -General C. J. Macdou-
gall, commanding the forces at
Shorneliffe, has been mode a Major-
General.
Sherbrooke police, being refused
an increase of pay by the City Coun-
cil, decided to strike on the occasion
of the opening of the Fair.
Tbe fifteen -months -old child of
Mr, and Mrs. George Brooks of Ade-
jaide village, ``fell from a. high -chair
yesterday, breaking its neck: •
Wallace Dixon, aged nineteen, was
instantly killed by lightning at Hes-
peter while • standing le the doorway'
of a log cabin clubhouse, where he
and his companions bad taken shel-
ter.
The joint committee of Parliament
for reconstruction of the buildings
held sessions Monday and Tuesdity,
and meets again to -day; responsibil-
ity for demolition of the standing
walls has not yet been placed,
Carson Hubbert of Denfield, a su-
burb of London, was struck by a
Normal street car last night at Dun-
das and Richmond streets, incurring
injuries from which be died a few
hours later at Victoria Hospital.
"The British submarine E-23,
Lieut. -Commander Robert R. Turner,
reports that on the morning of Sat-
urday last she made a successful
torpedo attack upon a Germain: bat-
tleship of the Nassau class. The
commanding officer believes the
enemy ship was sunk.
THURSDAY.
The German Government has is-
sued a decree providing for the in-
troduction of meat cards for the
whole empire on October 2.
Leaders of the Liberal or Veni-
zelos party at SaIonica are organiz-
ing volunteers to aid the Greek com-
mander at Seres in resisting the Bui•
geerians.
Tbe Chinese Parliament has Aman
imousiy approved the appointment
by President Li Yuan Hung of Tuan
Chi-Jui as permanent premier of the
Chinese republic.
The Britisb steamer Quebra, 2,801
tons, bound from New York to Liver-
pool, bas foundered after striking
rocks west of the Big Blanket Island
off the coast of Kerry.
E. G. Carson, 55 years old, a well:
known farmer and cattle buyer, liv-
ing near Glenmeyer, Ont., died yes-
terday at his home, an hour after his
collapse from sunstroke.
The capture of the German steam-
er Desterro, of 2,543 tons gross, with
a cargo of iron ore, off Hernosand,
Sweden, has been officially announc-
ed. She was taken into Raumo, Fin-
land.
The long -expected order -in -council
changing the name of Berlin, Ont.,
to Kitchener was passed yesterday.
A proclamation is being issued mak-
ing the change effective from Sep-
tember 1.
Of the .ix liquor stores in King-
ston, at Ieast two will continue to 'lo
business after prohibition comes.
into effect next month, dispensing
soft drings and "local option" beer
and porter.
Seven deaths have resulted from
the more recent fires in northern On-
tario, according to the information
of the T. & N. O. Commission yes-
terday. Mrs. A. Mackenzie and her
six children are reported to have
been lost near New Liskeard.
FRIDAY.
The Admiralty announces that the
British armed ;-acbt Zama has been
sunk in the Gulf of Alexaneretta,
Requests made from different
quarters that the Canadian war loan
be made payable in New York ns
welt as Canada are not to be acceded
to.
A Iarge grist mill at Pbillipsville
owned by Reuben Haskins, caught
Etre and was totally destroyed. The
loss is heavy as no insurance was
carried,
George Hill and Company, London
merchants, sire fined £25 and 10
guineas costs for trading with a
Dutch firm which is on the blacklist
of the British Government.
Sir Richard Bi-lulph Martin, chair-
inai of Marti'n's Bank, Limited, and
welt known as a British financier,
died Wednesday at his home, Over-
bury Court, Tewkeshury. He was 7e
:-ears old.
Four were drowned at Metighan
River, forty miles west of Digby, N
S., Wednesday night, when au auto-
mobile ran amuck on the bridge and
plunged with its occupants into the
water.
Tire body al George Lees,'. a mid-
dle-aged resident of Lucknew, Ont.,
was found to -day in a ei:imp of
hushes en the property owned by
Richard Webster with his throat cut
'roar ear to lar.
A court-martial sitting at Klagen-
Ort has sentenced General Riedel,
who was in command at Gorizia
when the city was captured by the
Italians, to dismissal from the army
ind Joss, of his rank and pension.
The Department , f Labor bas
named the following commissioners
`o investigate the dispute between
the Cobalt miners and i I r tn,, e-
vriP, s of r y
Judge Coatsworth, Toronto; A. F.
;orkill, Copper 011.Y, and Joslpb
.Xlbbon,,, Toronto,
um
Mr. John M, W' e !
l.11.Ji'3, one of Ste to a_ .
ord's hest known citieett,, pats :t•
away at the General' hospital +ester-
dal.
Germany's agar production this
year will exceed that of 1915, • ac-
cording to statistics now available,
by about 30.0,000 tons. •
The' seven anon who escaped from
the Ontario Reformatory a few days
ago were sentenced to two years in
Riugston Penitentiary.
The German submarine me}'chant
Man Deutschland arrived at Bremen,
her home port at noon yesterday: 6
wild demonstration. by the residents
greeted the vessel and her crew. ' •
Sir Sane Hughes was the guest of
honor at a dinner given last night ey
Lloyd George, Several Cabinet Min -
inters and in.embeib of tbe Army
Couuoii were ,,among those present.
Witit a view of enabling war-
mutilated soldier's to become teach-
ers in the elementary schools, the
Froneh'•Govrnmeut has opened spe-
cial colleges for their rapid training.
Sir George Foster returned to Ot-
tawa yesterday from Inch Arran,
where he has been spending a week
since his arrival in Canada after -at-
tending the h'lconomie Conference of
the Allies.
The story that the German subma-
rine Bremen has been captured by
the British, reported by passengers
arriving yesterday in New York on.
the Baltic an -1 a week ago on the
Mania, is generally accepted as true
in German official circles there.
MONDAY.
A British armed auxiliary was tor-
pedoed and sunk in the North Sea.
L3'o'bert Gow of Paris died as the
result of an automobile accident.
Allied aviators made a successful
• eld ovet the Ghent and Brussels .re-
gions.
Doris Eleanor Adamson and James
Allen Fraser were drowned at Paris
Saturday afternoon.
The Britis.. Military Gazette an-
nounces that Captain H. R. Gunning
of the Princess Patricias is dismissed
from service.
A new Canadian Red Cross Hospi-
tal, called after the Princess Patricia,
is to be established at Ramsgate,
England; at a cost of $100,000.
Ida Fern, thirteen -months -old
child of Willis Hodges, Holland
Landing, crept through a fence on to
the G. T. R. track and was killed by
a train.
Frank Cisco, an Austrian laborer
at the London Rolling Mills, was
struck in the head by fragments of 3
bursting emery wheel, and dived
shortly after.
Fourteen battalions from remote
parts of thc'Province are to get four
days' leave from Camp Borden once
a month, the whole battalion being
off at once.
Though seventeen Guelph women
have within a month registered as
willing to do any work in order to
release men who desire to enlist,lno
employer has yet availed himself of
the list.
Demietro Sucreon, an Austrian,
was seriously injured when he was
struck by a telephone pole felled by
an automobile ani, Toronto yesterday.
The driver was arrested, charged
with criminal negligence.
TUESDAY.,
One thousand Chinese arrived in
France to work in munition fac-
tories. -
Opening day at th Exhibition broke
the attendance record for that day
with 32,500 present.
Mrs. Joseph Snively of Simcoe was
fatally hurt when struck by a Lake
Erie & Northern car at Boston.
The Ontario Government plans to
care for cattle which have been de-
prived of feed by New Ontario fires.
William Edward Terrion was
drowned when upset frqm his canoe
while returning from fishing near
Marmora.
Samuel McKenzie of Port Stanley,
a fisherman, fell asleep on the rail
of a tug, tumbled into the lake, and
was drowned.
The youngest child of Mr. W. J.
Hodges of Holland Landing, wander-
ed on to the G. T. R. ;track and was
killed by a train.
The Greek steamship Leondros has
been sunk, according to a despatch
from Valencia, Spain, to Lloyds Ship-
'ping Agency. The crew were saved.
Seven Toronto persons, including
two children, were injured at noon
yesterday at Newmarket, when their
auto was struck by a Metropolitan
car.
Berlin City Council decided not to
hold a celebration of the change of
name to "Kitchener," considering a
silent passing more fitting, in ciew of
the great hero's tragic death in the
Orkneys.
Captain Peregrine- Acland, son of
F. A. Acland, Deputy Minister of
Labor, who received the Military
Cross recently for gallant conduct at
the front, has just been gazetted a
Major.
The Berlin newspapers, the des-
patch adds, express themselves bit-
terly against. Gotlieb von Jagow, the
German Foreign Minister, and Dr.
Alfred Zimmermann, the Under-
Secretary for Foreign Affairs, for
their failure to keep Roumania out
of the war.
Saskatchewan's Crop Fair 3n Spots.
REGINA, Aug. 29.—Additional
telegraphic crop reports, received by
the Saskatchewan Department of
Agriculture at the 'week -end, give
further details regarding crop condi-
tions. Apparently in certain locali-
ties a fair crop will be harvested. It
is generally understood that a large
acreage was summer-fallowed this
year; and some districts have a fair
acreage of new • breaking to their
credit. The harvest should be eo.m-
pleted in time to allow a good deal
of fallow plowing to be clone, which
will ensure a normal crop area for
1917.
Deserters Sentenced.
NIAGARA VALLS, Ont:, Aug. 29.
—Harry Bannister, who until about
three weeks ago . was a sergeant
with the Welland canal force, 'and
Fred. Willinghara, formerly a
nen-
ber of the Armory guard here, were
each sentenced to 'serve six months
in the Ontario Reformatory for being
absent Without Ieave, by Magistrate
Fraser. Bannisters homeis in St,
Catharines. Willingham was arrest-
ed in Toronto, where he formerly re-
sided.
INCORPORATO U 55
British Are Cutting Off Import-
ant German Positions.
Iieipsic Redoubt and Village of
Thiepral, Which Are the Strong-
est :Pints' in the German Line,
Are Being Worn; Donor.-
-Prus-sian Guard Has Been Sent to
Hold': the Positions but Without
Success.
LONDON, Aug. 29.---Tlie two most
powerfully fortified German positions
north of the SommeThiepval and the
Leipsic redoubt ---are slowly being
won by the British. Despite the ut-
most'efforts of the Teutons to win
back their lost ground in -these two
vital sectors, General Haig's terri-
torial troops not only are repulsing
all German attacks, but '.re steadily
increasing their gains. 'They have
won a further 600 yards of breaches
along the Thiepval-Coui,celotte road
and, despite the great concentration
of German troops in the neighbor-
hood have further pressed in both
east and south-west of • Mouquet
farm.
The Prussian. Guard, proudest
corps of the Fatherland, has been
sent to the threatened fi,ent, but de-
spite their most desperate efforts
have been unable to :vin back any of
the important terrain which has been
taken in the British advance, accord-
ing toa report from. General itaig.
Attacks were delivered not •only in
the Thiepval region, but againsi"the
British lines west of Guilleniont and
the French front south of Maurepas.
All these attacks were repulsed.
Hand-to-hand fighting of the
greatest violence continued through-
out Saturday around the ruins of the
Mouquet Perm, General Haig reports.
On this sector, as well as in the new
trenches south of Thiepval, Worces-
tershire and Wiltshire men hold the
British lines. It was these "troops
who repulsed the Prussian guard.
Following 'heavy figh 4eig daring
the greater part of Saturday night,
there was little but artillery activity
on the Somme front Sunday, bad
weather, hindering operatioiis.. 'Me.
British in a strong •attac3k •Saturday
evening gained a further .290 yards
of trench north of'Bazentiu-e-:Petit,
capturing a machine guar. For the
greater part, however, aft mltecks ou
both sides resulted in no change of
front.
German surprise attac4ee ea the
Arracourt sector, in Lornaitte "aid in
the Apremont forest were .reerulsell,
Parris announces, while at' Verdun
there was only artillery fighting. In
several sectors, especially on tee
Thiaumont-Fleury line, .th,i big gun
duels reached a higk pitch of intens-
ity.
Repulse of a German attereett to
penetrate the Belgian lines is'i•ecord-
ed in an official statement from Bel-
gian headquarters at Havre. It says:
"After violent preparation by their
bomb throwers the Germans last
evening attempted to cross the canal
near Het Sas and penetrate our
lines. Our barrier and machine
gun fire repulsed them with heavy
losses."
Nine German aeroplanes have been
shot down by ,the French• and British
at various points on the western
front in the last two days, according
to official reports. German attempts
at an offensive north-east of Verdun
came to nothing, says tbe War Office
at Paris. -
A semi-official announcement is-
sued in Berlin Sunday says . that be-
tween February +21 and July 30
there were 'engaged in the Verdun
sector 66 divisions (nearly 800,000
men) of French troops. In the bat -
tie of the Somme, the announcement
says, the French thus far have en-
gaged 23 divisions nerd tbe British
37.
POUNDING AT RIGA.
Russian Amies Begin a New Offen-
sive in the East.
LONDON, Aug. 29.—The Rus-
sians, who for some time had re-
mained quiescent in the Riga region,
have again started ' an offensive
against the Germans. Efforts ivere
made by them to cross the Dvina
River south-east of Riga, and near
Friedrichstadt, but both attempts
failed, according to. Berlin. OR the
remainder of the Russian front no
fighting of importance has been re-
ported. '
While the Russian drive for Kovel
and Lemberg has not been resumed
—for what reason Petrograd' gives
no-hint—the Czar's troops continue
to push steadily forward in the foot-
hills of the Carpathians.
Striking west of the Jablonitza
Pass, which they now control, the
Russians seized the village of Guta
and reached the sources of the two
Bystritza Rivers. These gains were
made in the sector bordering, on the
Pantyr Pass. Continuation of the ad-
vance here will give the Czar's troops
another road into Hungary.
Petrograd also chronicles a fresh
advance for the Russians at Koverla
mountain, near the Hungarian bor-
der.
One Dead, Two injured.:
PORT ARTHUR, Ont., Aug. 29. --
One is
9,--One'is dea :, two are slightly injured
and one is under arrest following a
collision between an auto and a truck
on Algoma street late Saturday after-
noon, The dead lean is. Oscar Og-
bergh, 37, insurance agent, who
died in a few minutes after the
crash, John Palo, a barber, is
slightly injured; and Peter Milton,
proprietor of the Canadian Northern
Hotel, is slightly injured and under
arrest. -
Canadian Troops Arrive in England,
OTTAWA, Aug, 29.—It is official-
ly announced through the chief cen-
ao office that tat th o
e following '
Win
g troops
have arrived safely In England:
The 117th Battaliort, Valcartier
Camp; the 120th Battalion, WJndsor,
N.S.; the 12lst Battalion, Vernon,
B.C.; the 126th Battalion, Camp tor -
den ;
or -den; the 128th Battalion, Winnipeg,
Drafts and details,
I
f
)'
f
i
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,8OO,OO
96 Branches in Canada
A 04meral $ankinr Business Transacted
ZIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT'".
SANK MONEv ORDERS
SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT
interett asowetl at highest current rate*
W. D. OLARIcE,, Mat,ager, Exeter Branch
THE CANA]DIA1\T BANK
OF COMMERCE
SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL.D.. D.C.L., President
JOHN AIRD, General Manager. H. V. F. JONES, Ass't Genera: Maraaegaih'r+a„
000 RESERVE FUND $13,500,D00
CAPITAL, $15,000, 1
FARMERS BUSINESS
The Canadian Bank of Commerce extends to Farmers ever
facility for the transaction of their banking business, including
the discount and collection of sales notes. Blank sales "Notes,
are supplied free of charge on application.,
Exeter Branch—:A.iE. ! Kubn,F Manager,
CREDITON BRANCH —S. M. JOHNSTON, Manager
Oracle Mark R.v.tsr, it
GEORGIAN MFG. CO„
The Harmless but>-
csntretnedy for 1#a'adae
NsuraIgia,Anaernra.Sisya.-
isssnesa, Nervous Mow-
haustlon, &c. !
1 foe AT ALL. DR1.10,01f'•T1, or torr ,wail Ikor-
COLLINGWOOD, ONT.
They Make a Try.
Here's Dr.`Wiley, food expert,
Who says it is no fable
The t women where we thought they shone
Are neither strong nor able.
Be says they do not understand
The mystic art of cooking,
But we forgive them much in that
Since they are so good looking.
The French, he says, can beat them out
In juggling with the skillet
And fooling round the frying pan
When they have things to fill it.
0h, dear, but ignorance was bliss!
It gave us satisfaction,
Before we heard how much they lacked,
To see them get in action.
Wei:,, doctor, maybe that was so
Where you last week were calling.
There are somoNplaces where the food
They serve is quite appalling,
But there are other places where—
Ye gods and little fishes!—
It makes your stomach doubly glad
To see them spread the dishes.
It makes a difference where you go.
Stop in some rural places
Where canned goods are not on the bili
And watch them feed their faces..
Your flat raised lady may be shy
On baking, broiling, stewing,
But in the wayside places yet
You'll find great homemade dhewing.
Second Hand.
"Did you ever!"
"What?"
"Ethel said her new coat was made
to order."
'Men, what of it?" • n
ee ere
"Nothing, only"— ,'r•
;
"Only what?"
"I couldn't help wondering made to
whose order."
• k:.0
Contrary Minded.
"Do you believe in a hereafter?"
"Hereafter?" •
"Yes." .14.110! : } d...
"Sure." h`; i ' l fl ! tb%? -+ ry.
"Because I don't see much reason to
believe in the heretofore."
Slam. • ,-••-•+-,, •
"My memory is so poor."
"Too bad; must be sort of hard on
you."
"Why on me specially?'
"Your sort are supposed to have
good memories."
"Why?"
In the installment Age.
"When are you and Charley going
to get married?"
"Not right away. He doesn't think
we ought to begin buying the furni-
ture until he gets the ring paid for."
Out of Commission. v
"1 see you have a cold?" 3
"Do you?" e ,
"It Is very evident"
"Wonderful! My eyes being swelled
shut', you see 1 can't see it myself."
Keeping • Up the Average.
"He's too lazy for anything."
"Oh, no!"
"What's he good for?"
"To counterbalance Some of you hue-
tiers."
With the Proper ,Cause.
"1 see Mrs. Gadder has a new hat."
• "Yes. Isn't it a dream?"
"Depends onwhat you had for sup-
per the night before."
r.
.7 e
Same Effect. f;a.a1'�i'.
He wanted an auto, but couldn't get credit
From those who had antes to sell.
One morning he carelessly fell down: the
stairway
Alld found that dict him aa wen.
JAS. BEVERLEY
FURNITURE DEALER - '"
Embalmer and Funeral DirecttsF r
Phone 74a. Night Call 741► ••
EXETER, OI' TAR
DR G. F. 'ROULSTON, LJD.S,, 1411111.
DENTIST e si
Honor Graduate of Toronto, Entealte,
site. Office over Dickson ch Hasp
ling's Law office. Closed W Lineae•
day afternoons. Phone Offtoe. rkkg
Residence 5b.
DH, A. R. KINSMAN L.,D,0r D.D,L
Honor Graduate of Torus SIF
eraity
l
•
DENT'I6'7l � ,a.i13
stir extracted without 'palm ide
any bad effeota. Office over- l•
,, GIa *
roan SD Stanibury's Office •,ekk
Exeter, i ! G ; 1 .1.0101
1 - W, BROWNING M. D., M,
sl P. SK Graduate Victoria Using"
eity Office and residence Dwaili>}i.
Labratory., Exeter; I..la�
kAasoeiate Coroner of Huron tee
I. IR, ;CARLIIIG, I{_3. A, . , 1o01152
Barrister,' Solicitor, Notary Pwblkee.
Public, iOommissioner, j9olicitor, %oa '-
the Molsona tank,, etc. , , i .l_ril
Money, to Loan at `Lowest rattler ter
Intertest. • - : s f *WO
OFFICE, --MAIN STREET, EXETER&.
MONEY TO LOAN 1 ; ! ! 1 1
We have a large ambaanat cit pals
ate funds to loan on farm ani
lege properties at lowest sets gill i'ina
serest„ _ie,l
GLADMAN & STANDUligi ! ±�
Barristers, Solicitor'''. sin 4 i
Exeter," , , , , hent
Tne Usborne and iiIbeert rt4
Farmer's Mutual *fire lose
ansa Gompanll '
Head Office, Fareid nor, Cllr
President ROBT. NOI&A,•.r4.,
Vice -President r THOS. RUA&
DIE ROTORS 1_fri{I
WM. BROCK , WM, I V
.T„ L RUSSELL. J, T. ALLIES
AGENTS l.�.
,TORN ESSERY Exeter. agent VOW
borne and Uiddulph.
OLIVEB )1ARRIS Munro agenit hi '
Oibbert Fullerton and Logan. Li...
W. A. TURNIRCL i
Secy.Treas.Fergie hiitl)'
GLADMAN & BTA.NBt!R•3r
Solicitors. Exeter, e+ "i
A
°,h
To A�
Per Infant, and Chiida�err" •
in Use For Over 3Qr' earir
the
11.11311
r i'Jfats�t i1L