The Exeter Times, 1919-6-5, Page 4FRS 'AV MAII(`N Sth.,
SOUR AM' STOMACHS,
GASES OR MIMES"! CON
"ape's Diapepsin" neutralizes exces-
sive acid in stomach, relieving
dyspepsia, heartburn and
1 distress at once.
Time In five minutes sill stone -
gels .distress, due to acidity, will go.
No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or
e tiatp; of gas or eructations of undi-
d food, no dizziness, bloating, foul
t or headache.
ape's Diapepsin le noted for its
ttpsed in regulating upset stornache.
It le the surest, quicRest tomach sweet-
ener in the whole world, and besides it
is harmless, Put an end to stomach
distress at onee by getting a large fifty-
eent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any
drug store. You realize in five minutes
Trow needless it is to suffer from indi-
gestion, dyspepsia or any stomach dis-
order caused by iermentatioax due to
excessive acids, in stomach-
FannersAttention
Malta money he your spars thine
Suring the Lail and winter eiont'h
by welling
HARDY CANADIAN NURSERY
ttfDOCrit
xritiat and European markets will
be open main for 1am dian
'
Fruit end
awe ie tihet t
me
to order for spt'uig
P1areticrg
Laxlgeat test of Fruit and Ornamental
Stock, Seed Potatoes, etc., grown
in Canada
Writ: far Particulars
STONE ft WELLINGTON .
Zile Old Reliable Foothill .Nurseries
Eistabliseed 1837
TORONTO, ONT.
NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK
trripartarit Events Which Have
ve
Occurred Dut irtg the Week,
The Busy World's Happenings Oare.
fully Compiled nod Put Into
Handy and Attractive alaape for
Ow Readers of Ow Paper -- A
Solid flour's Enjoyment.
',I" U'GSDAY.
Hyman Shotkin, Toronto, aged 6'S
Team was fatally injured by an auto.
Col W. A. Bishop. F.C.. has been
ordered by his doctor to take a com-
plete rest.
Judge Charles Chantilly de Lori -
ruler of the Quebec Superior Court,
died at Montreal, aged 76,
The allies will recognize the Gov-
ernment of Admiral Kolchak and
Gen. Demkim conditionally.
Pr•eutier Borden and Maj. -Gen.
Morrison were tendered an enthus-
iastic reception at Ottawa.
Llewelyn Roberts, formerly of St.
Catharines, was found on the Is
shore, Toronto. with his throat cut. Commander 3. K. L. Ross will re -
The body of Captain Fryatt will be tire the famous stake horse, Sir Bar -
brought home to England and given ton, at the end of the present
burial similar to that of Miss Edith season.
Cavell. The members of the Canadian
The commission inquiring into in- Corps CavaIary Brigade have been
',istria). conditions heard testimony invited to volunteer for strike duty
of
from Toronto representatives var-
land
y eee Pier frra ring's Parte at frisky
tits: year. Canada's team is con-
sidered to have an unusually good
Cha ace.
The threatened strike of Hydro
employes has been averted, the men
getting an eight-hour day, double
time for Sundays and holidays, and
time and a half for all other over-
time.
!FRIDAY.
The Regina and the Carrreania,
with Canadian troops aboard, docked
at Halifax.
The Toronto job printers accepted
the offer of the employers of $2 for
a 4S -'hour week.
Mr. Bonar Law states in the House
of Commons that Anglo-American re-
lations are most cordial.
According to data just published,
the Germans Iost 198 submarines
during the course of the war.
The Balkan States have asked the
allied powers tor further time to con-
sider the peace terms offered.
The fruit crop prospects in Nia-
gara peninsula are somewhat dimin-
ished by the leaf curland brown rot.
As an outcome of the war grenade
throwing has replaced the Marathon
on the program of the next. Olympiad.
ious activities.
Col. H. A. C. Machin and others
hotly criticized prohibition legisla-
tion at a meeting of the Citizens'
Liberty League, Toronto.
A joint congress of the Canadian
Public Health Association and the
Ontario Health Officers' Association
is in session at Toronto.
The French Government has secur-
ed from the German peace delegation
an assurance that it will ask for no
further extension of time.
The India Office announces that
the request of the commander-in-
chief of the Afghan forces for an
armistice is merely a device to gain
time.
Nathaniel Brown, a returned sol-
dier. lately married, who had started
ere ranging a week before, was
v drowned Friday evening in Kapuska-
sing river.
The bakers at St. John and Mil-
ford, N.B., and Halifax, have been
notified by the Cost of Living Com-
missioner to reduce their prices,
made on
which are found too high.h.
w,ne„,,..;.,.Josaph -,Manion and his wife of
Huntley, and Mrs. Ryan of Ramsay,
were instantly killed, and Mr. Ryan
seriously injured, when a motor car
was struck by a C.P.R. train at Carle-
ton Place.
WEDNESDAY.
The Austrian peace terms will be
submitted by the allies on Friday.
St. Thomas citizens carried two
money by-laws by large majorities.
Two thousand soldiers arrived in
Ontario from the Aquitania and
Bohemian.
Time Table Changes
.9,. change
of time
will be
May4th, 1919
Infortttatiou now in Agent's hands.
Full information from any Grand
Trunk Ticket Agent or O. E. Horning
District Passenger Agent, Torronto.
N. J. DORF,
Agent, Exeter.
Prone 46w.,
944,040.4444.#4.i..<14.0 $.'9,
CENTRAL
9c if &tee/
vet"'
Sir Robert Baden-Powell inspected
Boy Scouts at the University Sta-
dium, Tomato.
The Ontario Medical Association
opened iES annual session by a round-
table dinner.
Hydro charges in Guelph have
leeteeert .eta. XPi ., y been reduced for power to $19 per
horsepower.
a We have •TELEGRAPHY, ® E. R. Vincent, of Guelph, was fat-
ally crushed when a packing case
t 01L'►LERCIA3, and SHORT -
q fell on top of him.
A further increase in savings de-
posits of $35,000,000 is shown by the
April bank statement.
Admiral Kolchak is again advanc-
ing against the Bolsheviki, who are
falling back on the Volga.
Wnr. J. Quinn, of Odessa, was
drowned at Kingston, while working
outside a boat on a scaffold, which
0 sway.
Sir Thomas White announced in
the Commons last night that the bud-
get would be brought down on
Thursday of next week.
John D. Hahn, of Kitchener, drop-
ped dead while talking with a friend
on the street, waiting for his doctor
to perform a minor operation on him.
Lieut. W. H. Fenton, Dt.C., was
chosen U. F. 0. candidate for North
Bruce at the next provincial election,
and John F. Ford, of Trafalgar, was
nominated as le F. 0. candidate for
Hal Lon.
The bill for the incorporation of
the Canadian National Railways Co.
was read the third time in the .Sen-
ate yesterday, after two amendments
from the Opposition side bad been
defeated.
The Italian troops who occupied
Sokia, fifty miles southeast of
Smyrna, Asia Minor, have re -embark-
ed on the'r transports. They turned
over the control to Turkish military
authorities.
HAND Departments. We
•
give individual instruction. •
Students are entering each 41
week. Our graduates se- 4,
' cure positions of trust. A
• Get our free catalogue
now it may interest you.
i D. A. McLACHLA N,
•
Principal
•
Far i lets
Atteritioii
New le your time to put in your
pupply of both MARD AND SOFT
!MAOI.. I am selling Large Lump,
]$rialto, Clean Threshing Coal at S7
Per ton, 'Very low prices on the
Best Passu Fence (Frost .Fence.)
;All kinds of Lumber in stock, also
iiShing1es and Cedar Posts, Sft., Oft.,
and 10ft. long. Cement sold in
Large lots at a very close price.
AR tirades of I'aroid Roofing.
Phone 12,
A.J.
CLATWORTRY
GRANTON
xavz "$YRUP OF FIGS"
,TO CONSTIPATED CHILD
DetIcious "Fruit Laxative" can't harm
tender little Stomach, l..ivee,
a . and Bowels.
ab
tTook Et the tongue, iot1i r l Tf
tboated, your little one's stomach, liver
{and ,rowels need cleansing at once.
!When peevish, cross, listless, doesn't
bleep, eat or act naturally, or is fever-
�'astr, stomach sour, breath bads has sore
!Throat, tliarnccea, full of cold, give a
teaspoonful of "California ,Syrup of
igs," and in a few hours all the foul,
teonstiparted waste, undigested food and
Mur bile gently moves out of its little
Asoweis without griping, and you have a
Well, - playful Schild at ain. Ask your
ruggisb yfor .9, bottle of "California
Syrup of Figs,"which contains full
Pireetioris for babies, children o aU ages
p ati ,for grown-ups„
THURSDAY.
Isaac Johnston died at Halifax at
the age of a hundred years,
The joint Congress on Public
Health has concluded its sessions.
Graduates in the department of
social service, University of Toronto,
received their diplomas.
The Province of Ontario is borrow-
ing four million dollars in the United
States at 4.9e per cent.
A conference to consider means of
combating venereal disease in Can-
ada is called at Ottawa.
Returned soldiers and trade union-
ists of Cape Breton are, it is said,
about to form an alliance.
Greek troops are reported to be
advancing from Smyrna toward Mag-
nesia, the Turks retiring before
them.
The Michigan Stale Legislature
legalized ten -round boxing bouts in
which referees will be permitted to
give decisions.
Frank Bull of Toronto beat Jake
Schiffer of Buffalo in their return
bout. Schiffer recently got a deci-
sion over Bull.
Hydro municipalities' representa-
tives empowered Sir Adam Beck to
negotiate with employes on the Chip-
pewa canal work.
I•Iawker and Grieve were received
by Icing George at Buckingham
Palace and subsequently saw Queen
Mary and the Prince of Wales.
A Radial Railway ear was hacked
to pieces et the rear of the Ontario
;Agricultural College. It is alleged
in case the need arises.
Vera de Lavelle, the girl who was
mixed up .in Frank McCullough's es-
cape from the Toronto Jail, has also
escaped from the same jail.
The Sault Ste. Marie branch of the
G.W.Y.A. unanimously voted to op-
pose the Calgary resolution asking
for a gratuity from $2,000 down.
Lincoln County Council, after
meeting for two hours, adjourned till
June 15, deeming farm work more
important than county business juSt
now.
The Toronto physicians in conven-
tion at the Physics Building scored
the action of the Strike Committee
in assuming to exempt them from a
strike call.
SATURDAY.
Dr. E. T. Edie of Galt, for many
years a well-known physician in Grey
county, is dead.
Between seven and eight thou-
sand Toronto workmen went out on
a general strike.
A decrease is reported in the num-
ber of communicable diseases in the
province for the month of May.
Hundred of Brockville citizens in-
spected the interior of the German
submarine U0-97, which is proceed-
ing up the lakes.
Premier Lloyd George says the
Germans will have to sign the treaty
either at Versailles or in Berlin. The
allies will not give way.
The Russian. Soviet Government
has decided to recruit Russian pris-
oners from Germany for the "Red"
army wherever possible.
Owing to the strike situation, the
annual convention of the G.W.V.A..
scheduled for June 9-14 at Van-
couver, is postponed until further
notice.
Hope Township Council will raise
each year a memorial fund, at the
rate of one mill on the dollar, to
assist disabled soldiers and their
dependents.
Lieut. -Col. C. A. Denison is retir-
ing from the position of chief ac-
countant of the Standard Bank, after
forty-one years' continuous service in
that' post.
Wm. Douglas, a returned soldier,
was buried in Owen Sound with mili-
tary honors; his son, Corpl. George
Douglas, arrived home the night be-
fore he died.
Two new notes were delivered by
the Germans to the Peace Confer-
ence. The first concerns German
property in allied countries and the
second has to do with the Turkish
public debt,
A large force of Bolsheviki is re-
ported to be mobilizing at Jazanka,
in the Suchen mining district, ac-
cording to a despatch from Vladi-
vostok. They meditate an attack on
the allied mine guards.
Eugene N. be Schelting a Russian
diplomat, speaking at Montreal un-
der the auspices of the Alliance
Francaise, averred that there are 62
secret Bolshevist societies in Canada,
and that those in Montreal have
15,000 members.
MONDAY.
The Royal Canadian Dragoons
were accorded a fine reception in
Toronto.
Rev. John Somerville, D.D., treas-
urer of the Presbyterian Church:; is
dead.
Jess Willard has arrived at Toledo
and will go into training for the bout
on July 4.
Hawker's airplane, which was sal-
vaged, is to be placed on exhibition
in London.
William Wedd, the last survivor of
the old Upper Canada College, died
in his 95th year.
The U. S. naval plane, NC -4 has
completed its flight by reaching Ply-
mouth on Saturday.
The Quebec Board of Trade op-
poses further nationalization of rail-
ways for the present.
Harley Shepard, reputed one of the
best swimmers in Brantford, was
drowned in the Grand river.
Norma Yvette Richard, two years
old, died at Montreal from swallow-
ing a ring in a package of candy.
John Fitzgerald, a C. P. R. line-
man, of Indian river, near Havelock,
was drowned at Thamesford while
bathing.
The troopships Megantic, Meta-
gama and Corsican are making slow
passage up the Gulf and river owing
to fog.
Pasquale Catalano, of Thorold,
was shot and probably mortally
wounded at St. Catharines, the as-
sailant escaping.
Two drivers and a mechanician
were killed and two others injured in
the 500 -mile automobile race run at
Indianapolis an Saturday.
Probably the largest family in On-
tario is that of Mr, and Mrs. Albert
Sehingh, of Ottawa, whose twenty-
first baby was born on Thursday.
East Middlesex Liberals in conven-
tion at London Saturday were told
the vandalism was by students of plans to organize associations in
fele EJ ETeee TIME
WANT TERMS MODIFIED
•
German Diplomats Await Deci-
sion of Big Four.
Allied Statessmesl Desire to keep
Sebeidemann and Ebert in Power
Because '.Itieir ]Fall Would Mean
Triumph of l3olsbevissn In Ger-
MEN FAIL TO RESPOND
1110.6011.111111.40
Toronto U,rions ignore General
Strike Order.,
teleu vage Between Moderates and •
Extremists Becomes More Marked
•
I
many Internatioaral Situation as
Seen in Paris. •
PARIS, June 2. ---"Tell Berlin
there is only one hone of drawing
concessions out of the allies—their
desire to keep the present Govern-
ment in power. The Council of Four
is disposed to support the present
Cabinet, not because it approves of
the men forming that Cabinet, but
simply because if Ebert and Schiede-
mann go there will be none left to
sign a real peace. Their successors
would lead Germany straight toward
Bolshevism. And even the Entente
press recognizes how irnpossillle it is
for our present Government to accept
the terms offered to us."
The above message was confided to
a Geranan official living here by one
of the most intimate advisers of
Count von Brockdorff-Rantzau, head
of the German peace delegation. It
clearly summarizes the German dele-
gation's. view of the situation as it
stands to -day, with the fate of the
:Fatherland facially eommitted to the
four statesmen gathered in Paris.
Brockdorff's fight /-is ended.
Whether the treaty of Versailles is
destined to bear his signature now
depends wholly on the omnipotent
Four. The German Foreign Minis-
ter's mind is•definitely axed. He will
sign no treaty which separates the
Saar valley and Upper Silesia from
Germany and deprives German indus-
try of the means which lie considers
indispensable for its future function-
ing, or stamps his country as alone
being responsible for the havoc of
war_
Two incidents connected with the
visit of the Germans to Versailles:
A chimney fire wa' caused by an
over large bonfire of diplomatic docu-
ments ignited by Baron von Loraner.
It did little damage.
An intoxicated Frenchman was
run down by a military automobile
containing four German secretaries
but piloted by a French chauffeur.
The }'icon's injuries are serious.
The long-awaited presentation to
g P
the Austrians of the. terms under
which they may have peace with the
Entente and associated powers will
take place this month at St. Ger-
xnain-en-Laye, a short . distance out-
side Paris. The Austrians will learn,
however, only, what they will have
to do from the military and political
standpoints and how their future
boundaries are to run. The cost to
then financially, indemnities and re-
parations, will be withheld to be pre-
sented at a later date.
Meanwhile commissions of the
allies are going through. the German
counter -proposals to the;; German
treaty, and it is expected that the
reply of the allies and associated
powers to them will be delivered dur-
ing the present • week. 'Sunday saw
the Council of Four inactive await-
ing the report of the commissions.
Count von Brockdorff-Rantzau,
head of the German delegation,
continues to assert that the allies'
terms cannot be accepted as original-
ly framed, declaring them to be
"snore than the German people can
hear."
Whether the allies are to make
any concessions remains to be seen.
Womn n Will bo permitted to Com- 31 federal constituencies in 0141:itr,
Over Week -end, and Several of
the Lees Resign Mena DistrictLabor Council — Committee of
Fifteen Is Working Hard.
Montreal Police Scatter Radicals.
MONTREAL, June 2.—Squads of
police officers charging through the
park, with mounted officers aiding
their efforts by dashing into groups
of people who were slow in moving
around united to form a spirited
scene on the slopes of Mount Royal
Sunday afternoon. It was an after-
noon of wild excitement, with the
determining hand of the police well
shown up.
The persistence of a Socialist
group in Montreal to endeavor to
hold a meeting against the orders
of the civic authorities was respons-
ible for the clash.
Mrs. Ray Press Mendelsohn, one of
the active workers of the Socialist
group, was arrested and taken to
headquarters. She had attempted to
speak, when ordered not to do so,
and several policemen took her into
Sergt. Detter's house on the field and
held her there until the patrol wagon
came. She was then driven to head-
quarters with several mounted men
as an escort and two motorcycle
side cars. No attempt at rescue was
made.
The Socialist meeting • had been
advertised by means of a circular
signed "Social Democratic Party of
Canada, propaganda committee."
The pamphlet denounced the police
among other institutions.
Justice for
LONDON, June
about of Enver Pasha
Pasha, the leaders
Government during
known, but the British Government
is taking steps to bring them to ac-
count, Cecil Harmsworth, Under-
Secretary of State for Foreign Af-
fairs, announced in the House Satur-
day. Mr. Harmsworth said he un-
derstood a provision requiring the
surrender of Enver and Talaat
would be included in the peace
treaty with Turkey.
Turks.
2.—The
and
TORONTO, June 2. — Despite the
most strenuous efforts of the extrem-
ist section of the labor movement in
Toronto, assisted by the revolution-
ary element of the Socialist party,
the call for a general sympathetic
strike of all trades, has proven a
complete fiaseo. Not a single addi-
tion has been made to the ranks of
the strikers since Friday, while there
has been a number of defections, not-
ably of the plumbers, who decided
at a meeting yesterday, to take no
part in the strike, and ordered those
'who did cease work on Friday to re-
turn to their jobs.
The crisis came ie the early hours
of Sunday morning, when the Street
Railwaymen, at a mass meeting in
the Star Theatre, decided by an over-
whelming majority not to take any
part in the present strike. Several
other important µmons took sin}ilar•
action,`ithe Ortk e7te0p''1on, being 'that.
of the carpenters ".who held a Mass
Meeting et ifeaLabor l emple, and re-
affirmed their intention of standing
by the Metal Trades'in theirlight for
the eight-hour day, and the'eight of
collective bargalnieg... Even this,
however, wastosonieeatent qualified,
as it is only to be effective until Wed-
nesday of this week, the reason be-
ing, the carpenters have grievanees
of their own, which they want reme-
died. For some two months the car-
penters have been endeavoring to ar-
range with their employers for an
increase of wages to 75 cents ,per
hour, and they had served notice on
the employers, that the new rates of
wages would become effective on
June 2. As the employers has'e ig-
nored the notice, the carpenters, or
at least those of them belonging to
the unions, would have been out on
strike in any event to -dei.
With alt these factors against them
the Committee of Fifteen, fought
stubbornly to extend the strike move-
ment, and they put up a strong case
before the delegates at the joint
labor eonvention, at the Labor Tem-
ple on Saturday night. The regular
trade unionists and moderates re-
fused to be stampeded, and most of
them left the meeting without record-
ing their votes against continuing
the strike. But even that did not end
the troubles as President A. O'Leary,
Secretary W. J. Hevey, and John
Doggett, of the District Labor Coun-
cil, who were chairman, secretary and
treasurer, respectively of the conven-
tion, resigned their positions and
withdrew. T. A. Black and E. R.
Bales, both members of the Commit-
tee of Fifteen, were elected to take
their places.
The meeting was far from har-
monious. The first trouble • arose
when Financial Secretary James
Ralph, of the District Labor Council,
repudiated all responsibility for the
publication of the votes cast by the
delegates at the meeting, when the
general strike was ordered. Mr.
Ralph, said the figures were not
given out by him, or with his con-
sent. This precipitated a merry row,
which lasted for about two hours.
Neat came a motion to reduce the
Committee of Fifteen, to one of five,
which was rejected. An amendment
that a committee of five, with two
representatives from each union tak-
ing part in the strike in addition be
named, met a similar fate. It was
long after one o'clock, when this mat-
ter was decided, by which time all
the moderates had withdrawn from
the gathering leaving the extremists
in absolute control. These continued
in session until after three o'clock,
when it was decided the strike must
continue, and that another meeting
of the delegates should be held on
Tuesday night.
where-
Talaat
of the Turkish
the war, is not
Nova Seotians Quarantined.
HALIFAX, June 2.—The secretary
of the Nova Scotia Returned Sol-
diers' Cominission has been notified
by the corresponding commission in.
British Columbia, that the Nova Sco-
tiens who arrived at Vancouver re-'
Gently on the Empress of Russia, are
in strict quarantine for fourteen
days.
•
Bavarian Ministry Resigns.
COPENHAGEN, June 2.— The
Hoffman Ministry has resigned, ac-
cording to a message from Bamberg,
Bavaria. It is expected that a Min-
istry en a broader basis will be
tanned,. t:......
Proclaim Republic In Rhine Cities.
MAYENCE, June 2. — The Rhine
Republic was proclaimed Sunday in
various Rhine cities. The population
welcomed the event with satisfaction
and expressed the hope that it would
put an end to the painful uncertainty
prevailing in the Rhine provinces re-
garding the allied nations and Ger-
many.
The new Government is headed by
Dr. Dorden. It has been installed
provisionally at Wiesbaden. Dr. Dor-
den addressed a message to the dif-
ferent Governments and to the Peace
Conference.
British Mission for Baltic States.
LONDON, June 2.—It is officially
announced that owing to the develop-
ment of the situation in the Baltic
States, it has been decided to de-
spatch a mission to Estonia, Latvea,
and Lithuania, with branches at
Revel, Libau and Ko-vno. Colonel
Talleats, who has been appointed
British commissioner, left London
for Libau, on May 25.
Riot Damage In India.
LONDON, June 2.—in the House
of Commons at question time, Sir
Edward Montague, Secretary of
State for India, stated that he
understood the totals of deaths and
injured, in the riots in India were
about four hundred each, including
eight or nine Europeans. Damage
was nearly a million. pounds sterling.
Two Aviators Killed.
NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 2. ---
Lieut. Melvin B. Keleher, 23, and
Corpl Jos. Katzman, 21, army avia-
tors from Mineola, Long Island, were
killed yesterday afternoon when
their airplane collided with another
machine while flying at a height of
1,000 feet near the Yale Bowi.
Safeguards against religious dis-
criminations in new states created as
the result of the great war have been Teeth extracted without pain or any
decided, upon by tlx Paris Peace bad eftects. Oiilco over Gmn
Conference,. �,. ,a..) l.::1 & Stanbury's O cce. Main
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MonerA n& NEW YORK•
�It NTRE
At:6.tetont-itt '
CASTORIA.
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castort
Always
Bears the
Signature
of
i
use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
- Exact Copy of Wrapper. • TNi CUNTAUR COMPANY. NUM YORK •ITV.
.. j
11111111111.11101111)
INCORPORATED 1855
UL MQLSDNS BANK
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,SOC,000
Over 100 Branches .scattered throughout Canada.
A Genetal Banking Business Transacted
OLIWULAB LETTE138 OF CREDIT
• BANE MONEY ORDERS
SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT
Intoreat allowed at Wiest ourrent rate,
T. S. WOODS, Manager, Exeter Branch.
••••••••••••.,
PROGRESS AND
GROWTH
For over fifty years The Canadian
Bank of Commerce has been serving
the people of Canada in increasing-
ly large measure, until at the pre-
sent time we have over 470 branches
catering to the needs of the Country.
THE CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
•
EXETER BRANCH • •
GRED1TON BRANCH •
DASHWOOD BRANCH •
a • A. E. KUHN,Manager
. , J. A. McDONALDa Manager
F.S. KENT, Manager
0. W. ROBINSON
LICENSED AUCTIONEER AND
VALUATOR for Counties of Huron,
Perth and Middlesex. Farm Stock
sales a Specialty. Office at Cock-
shutt Warerooms, next door to the
Central Hotel, Main St. Exeter.
Charges moderate and satisfaction
guaranteed.
.3. W. BROWING, M. D., M. S. P..
S. Graduate Victoria University
Office and Residence, Dominion
Labratory, Exeter.
Associate Coroner of Huron.
I. R. CARLING, M. A. eeteleemell
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public,
Commissioner, Solicitor for the
Molsons Bank, etc.
Money to loan at lowest rates of
Interest.
OFFICE—MAIN ST. EXETER, ONT,
PERRY F. DOUPE, Licensed Auc-
tioneer. Sales conducted in any loc-
ality. Terms moderate, Orders left
at Times Office will be promptly at-
tended to. Phone 116, Kirkton.
Address Kirkton P. 0.
DE. A. R. KINSMAN, L.L.D., D.D.S.
Honor Graduate of Toronto Univer-
Sity.
DENTIST
THE USBORNE AND HIBBERT 1
rARM]16R'S MUTUAL FIRE INSUi 'r-
ANCE COMPANY.
Head Office,
President,
Vice -President,
Farquhar, Ont..
THOS. RYAN
WM. ROS:
DIRECTORS
WM. BROCK, J. T. ALLISON
J. L. RUSSELL, ROBT. NORRIS;
AGENTS
JOHN ESSERY, Centralia, Agent for
Usborne and Hibbert.
OLIVER HARRIS, Munro, Agent for
Hibbert, Fullerton and Logan.
W. A. TURNBULL,
Seey: Treas., Farpuhar
GLADMAN & STANBURY
Solicitors, Exeter.
DR. G. F. ROULSTON, L.D.S.,
DENTIST
Office over I. R. Carling's Law
office.
Closed every Wednesday afternoon..
CASTOR IA
For Infante and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
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