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The Exeter Times, 1920-3-11, Page 4is :1. ]i. NG records, dance records, filled with the ..fire any and frenzy that mark the music of Sunny gr!•.ieri \'l/'' elsease...—see'rel • ie. e"el, lin ell o then., and hear the very newest 'note � in popular music reflected in Columbia Records. V on.o a and R,ec' ] All the newest music while it's new --that's what Columbia stands for—songs of our home -coming toys, the very latest in jazz- dances, the newest, brightest operatic stars. And to hear any record at its very best, you need to hear it played on the Grafonola. VS'Y'ST .. , Sas a ,,g000eseee OMR, ONTARIO. ALhky r BEAUTIFY THE HOME Flow to Grow Hants f:;r Winter From Cutti11g'S. August Ploughing Destroys a Cony sideraable Proportion of \e bite Grubs and Wire Miens Infesting Old Sod Fielais—'l ata Is a Splen- did Crop for a First Crcp on such Fields. (Contributed by Ontario Department. of Agriculture, Toronto.) TOWARD the end of the sum- mer, the amateur flower grower often wonders how the stock of geraniums in the flower border can be increased and preserved by some other means than by taking up the old plants in the autumn; the last named method mot having, perhaps, proved success- ful in past seasons, By starting fair- ly early, toward the end of August, before cold chilly nights appear, a nice supply of young plants, more especially of all kinds of geraniums of the flowering, kind, or those hav- ing fragrant leaves, or even the bronze or silver leaved kinds, can be :had by starting cuttings or slips of these plants. First of all obtain a shallow box about three inches deep, ;ten or twelve inches wide, and from twelve to twenty-four inches in length, an empty haddie (fish) box ''• will do eery well. It should have some small holes bored through the bottom for drainage. Pack this box Zanily with moist, clean, gritty sand; sand that will make good stone mor- tar will do, Then take the terminal for top part of the young growth of plants about four or five inches in length, each shoot or cutting having from four to six joints where leaves are produced. Make the base of the ' cutting just below one of these nodes or leaf joints, making a clean cut 'with a sharp knife Sat across. Cut 'off some of the lower leaves, leaving' two or three 'eaves at the top. Cut off all bloom buds and blossoms :where possible. Make a hole or drill 'in the wet sand deep enough to set t. fully half the length of stems of cut- tings in the sand. Water them well once and keep the sand moist until cuttings are rooted, which should be in five or six weeks' time. The box ,can be set out . of doors in partial ri`sihade until the first week in Septem- ;ber, when they can be taken into !the window. When cuttings have soots about an inch in length dig thein carefully from the sand without injuring the roots and pot them singly' into small 234 inch pots or set theixi about two inches apart in le well -drained shallew boxes in a soil ade up of one part sand, one part ',leaf tnould, and about six parts of dight loamy • soil enriched with; one ;art of ulverizea. P. dry cow w man r ua 'from the pasture field. This last ea li one of the best possible fertilizers dor.soll for pot plants. Set the young tplants in the window in a tempera- iture of 60 to 70 deg. Ir'ahr., an ordis ary house temperature. i4--- William unt, O. A. College, Guelph. thoG MILK lean ES enCats in Cooling Eix p:afned. :':also; That Sprig on Your Farm a i's•oiit Question — It Should Be En/erg:ea Clzxned Ont Well ande Cribbed In an Efficient Way. thoe tab ,utee by Ontario Department of Agriculture. Toronto.) ' WEE nal 'annum TO Important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week. The Busy World's Happenings Carer fully Compiled and Put Into Handy and Attractive Shape tor the Readers of Our Paper— A Solid. Hour's Enjoyment.. TUESDAY. diaries Oarvice, novelist, dramat- ist and journalist, died in London on Monday. Brandon United Farmers decided to enter provincial politics. and to have a candidate: Thomas C. Stewart, a prominent Woodstock business man, passed away at the age of 73: Thomas Doherty, a\C,P,R, employe, was instantly killed by a freight traiu shunting in the yards at Trenton. Charles Holland was instantly kill- ed in an elevator at the plant of the Canadian Woollens at Peterboro, The Japanese Imperial Prince is to take a two-year course of study at the French Military School at St. Cyr, France. Hon. M. P, Goudge, ,president of the Legislative Council of Nova Sco- tia, died at his home in Windsor, N.S., on Monday. A country -wide canxpaign is in pro- gress against the enottnous increase in gambling houses in every large city in Spain. Imperial reservists' widows and or- phans are to be granted, under cer- tain conditions, ?zee passage to the United Kingdom. A degree of Bachelor of Cgmmerce will be instituted at the 1Jniveraity of Toronto, according to an announce- ment made yesterday. Crown Prince Charles of Roumania intends'to dissolve the morganatic marriage he contracted in 1915 with Mlle.' Ziggis Lambrino. Capt. Long of the U. S. Navy has been made a Commander of the Or- der of the British Empire by. King George in recognition of his war ser- vices. Attorney -General W. E. Raney and Provincial Secretary H. C. Nixon are considering what steps will be taken next in connection with prohibition in Ontario. Addressing a convention of County Road Superintendents and Engineers, Hon. F. C. Biggs, Minister of High- ways, announced that no levy would be rsade upon villages through which provincial highways are constructed, WEDNESDAY. Sterling opened:. in New York at $3.451/2; but receded to $3.4''3x, : A movement has been started to establish a Fire College for the Do- minion at Ottawa. The salary of Admiral Horthy as Regent of Hungary has been fixed at 3,000,000 kronen per year. The Toronto Presbytery nominated Rev. Dr. James Ballantyne for the h air of the General Assembly. Toronto City Council turned downAld. Stinger's motion for an inquiry into the Toronto Police Court. The cost of all principal articles of 4CTERIA ie larger or smaller numbers are always present in freshly drawn milk. lir temperate;res between 60 deg. F. and 98 deg. F. (blood heat) they grew easel multiply rapidly, causing the milk to become quickly spoiled. As the temperature falls below 60 deg. 9., the bacteria become less active, the changes caused by them are less marked, so the milk keeps sweet and in good condition for a longer time. Growth of bacteria in milk in 24 hours (136,000 per c.c. when freshly drawn) : Bacteria Per C.C. ee (20 drops) Temp. held. after 24 hours. 40 deg. F. 280,000 50 deg. F. 1,170.000 60 deg. F. 24,600,000 The above table shows how low temperatures check bacterial multi- plication lieation in milk. This is the en - .x tific fect upon which thepractice of milk cooling is founded. In practice a dairyman should bear In mind three things in connection with the cooling of milk. First— 'oo1 mill~ with as little delay as pos- sible after it comer- from the cow. Second—cool milk to as low a tem- perature as possible, say somewhere between 40 deg. F. and 50' deg. F. Third—cool milk with as little con- tamination as possible from outside sources, such as dust, dirty 'utensils, water splasbings, etc. If these three points were regularly attended to by all dairies a marked improvement in the general quality of our milk sup- plies would be noticeable right away. The quickest way to cool milk is to run it over some form of tubular or surface cooler, pail by pail, im- mediately it is drawn from the cow. In this way milk may be rapidly cooled to within two or three degrees of the temperature of the water used. The objections to this method are the extra work involved in washing the cooler twice a day, the difficulty of keeping it properly clean, and the danger of contaminating the milk with dust, barn odours, etc.; unless the cooler is used in a clean and separate milk room. The other alternative is to place the cans of miik in a tank of running cold water at the earliest opportunity, or in an insulated tank of water sate. which some chopped -up ice is thrown. If the milk is stirred once every ten minutes during the first hour, codl- ing will take place more rapidly than wh'are milk is left unstirred. If cold running Water is not available all summer, enough ice should be pat up during the winter to ensure the mint being brought to a sum ielztly low temperature during the erarirter portions of the year. The importance •of prompt- and thorough cooling of milk is still in snffic eptly appreciated by matey •Min producers. There is no cheaper -and simpler method by which milk qua1- ty may be improved:—T: II. Lund, B.S.A.Co 0. A. _ College, Guelph. ph, --"The police, ray thztt you i d f °iY~ad husband 1'ed sorxe words." —"night Tod` e, ho had nalso lira get a chance to Ilse 'ens." u' food in England rose in January to 136 per cent. over the pre-war level. Mr. and Mrs. Arch. Smith of Lind- say, and their 14 -year-old daughter Navoni, the whole family, have all died of the "flu." Damage estimated at over five mil- lion dollars was done to fruit and vegetables in South Florida by frost on Monday night. ` An ice jam isforming between .Lake Ontario and the Niagara bridge at Lewiston, which may rival the 50 - foot high jam of eleven years ago. Mrs. Robt, J. Stewart of Paris went to bed in apparently her usual health, but was shortly seized with a violent fit of coughing and died of heart failure. Hon. G. Howard Ferguson states that the choice of a site for the set- tlement at Kapuskaming was made with an eye to soil, climate and scenery_ A despatch from. Flensburg, Sles- vig-Holstein, states that the Germans living in that ,territory attempted yesterday to make the district an independent state. Chas. Everett, his wife and 12 year-old son, at Braeebridge, ail i11e in bed with the "flu," were obliged to crawl but into the snow when their home ca tght are. THURSDAY. bo added to the provincial high syatexn. Little Margaret Pauline Kite •daughter of Mrs. Dalplda Slxeri Brantford, ixas fatten heiress to. e 000 wax' insurance, payable by U, S. Cover ►ent,::her father h died while in •tlxe A.E.F. FRIDAY, The Turkish Cabinet has swig owing to the gravity of the situs at Constantinople. Sixtg•-sixfarmers with their fa lies carne from, Btpomington, I11. Manitoba on, one train of 46 cars The Galt Industrial. Housing Ltd., is ' being organized, and scriptions are called for $15, stock. Fred Howlett, jr., of Petr while at work on an oil derrick ton ed a .Hydro ware -and was Inst killed. Major Pullen of Kelso was n nated by the Teiniskaming Conser for the coming k'ederal, election. • McGill University governors h decided to appoint a Canadian hist of an Old Country professor principal. Bela Kun, former Communist lead- er in Hungary, will be set at liberty in Vienna. Re will be sent to a sani- tarium. -•-- v. Maxim Gorky, the Russian novel-. ist and Radical, expresses bitter dis- appointment with Bolshevism in an article recently published. The men in power now, he says, are as brutal as those under the czar. At a convention, of the Dominion Mortgage & Investments Association, Francis H. Sisson, vice-president of the Guaranty Trust Co. of New York, characterized work as the basic fee - tor in post-war reconstruction. Addressing the Ontario Ear As elation, Hon..Justice Olson of Municipal Court of Chicago ur that effective measures be taken prevent mental defectives from leav- ing Europe for immigration to Canada. A delegation from the G.W.V.A. waited upon the Board of Education, Toronto, to protest the appointment of D. R. Franklin as chief draughts- man for the board on the ground that he was neither a returned soldier nor of Canadian birth... SATURDAY flM ways OfelilARIXO , hen can, ,octioo Sale the FARM STOCE, IMPLIiII NTS, ha AND. HOUSEHOLD I+IPFECTS. 4 .The undersigned has received in - nod struotions to sell by Public Auction tion on LOT 7, CONCESSION 2, HAY` - mi- -•_on_. to WEDNESDAY, . MARCH 17,• 1920 Co,, cowiinencing at one o'clock sharp the sub- `following;' 000 HORSES ---1 brood ware, rising 6 years old; 1 brood mare, rising 7 olea . years old; 1 aged horse; 1 filly ch rising two years old. aatly CATTLE -3 Durham grade heif- ers with calves at foot; one cow due no at time of sale; 2 cows due, one in rva- May one in Jung; , 2 marrow cows; 2 bye- steers, rising two years old; two heifers, rising two years oldr; •tour as ave heifers and steers, rising one year old; 4youngc� calves. S. @ad` PIGS -1 brood sow, 9 store hogs, POULTRY -3 ducks and 80 liens. IMPLEMENTS -1 Massey -Harris binder, 6 -foot out; 1 Ild.-H. mower; 1 Cockshutt dise drily;. 1 sulky rake; s 1 M. -H. cultivator; 1 M. -H. disc harrow; 1 No. 21 Cockshutt walking plow; 1 Frost & Wood trouble plow; 1 root pul,per; 1 land rollers 1 hay rack; 1 8 -inch plate grinder; 1 cutting box; 1 Kemp inanure spreader; 1 Melotte cream separator; 1 set iron harrows; one hay rack; 1 fanning mill, Clinton make; 1 waggon, 1 light democrat, el buggy, 1 set sleighs, 1 Frost gate, 2 dozen sap .pails and spiles, 1 sap kettle also .a full range of house- so- hold effects. the TERMS—$10 and under, cash; 9 ged months credit on ' furnishing ap- proved joint notes. 5 peracent per annum off for cash. JOHN NORTHCOTT, Proprietor C. W. 11073INSO. , Auctioneer FRANK COATES, Clerk Sterling made a further advance New York Friday to $3.66. Robert H. Bowes, K.C.; registr for West Toronto, dropped dead his home. A new species of animal, the c talo, has been obtained by crossi buffalo and COMM WI cattle. The Indians at White River, On are dying of influenza, with no o to care tor the sick or..hury the dea Michael Cassiday; • a member Cayuga Town 'Council, died of stroke 1ollgwing abotit two week illness of: pneumonia. About, twelve million dollar worth of securities were stolen la .year from 60Q brokerage houses New York and other cities. Farmer and Labor rpenibers of th Provincial Government saet in a c .sus to discuss the legislation whr is to be introduced at thttapproachi session. April 3 has been tentatively fixe s the date of the departure of S uckland Geddes, the new Britis teethe United States, f ew York. Representatives of Toronto an eighboring . municipalities uttered rgorous protest. before the Dominio oard of Railway Conimissione gainst the increase in commutatio les. The appointment of R. D. Waugh anaging commissioner of the Win peg Water District, as member o e Sarrd. District Board by the' C01111 1 of the League of Nations is an unced. E. Doyle of North Bay was kiIle a train on a crossing while dri g in a covered. buggy with a yours dy, who was rendered unconscious t in whose case internal injurie e feared. J. Austen Chamberlain, British ancetior of the Exchequer, has an unced that Britain and France have a reed not to renew the Anglo-French an issued in the United States in 15, and are taking 'steps for its payment. Action n Sale.. 013 DWELLING HOUSE, LT'S, HOUSEHOLD ?FURNITURE, Etc. in . IN EXETER ar There will. be offered.for sale by at Public Auction on the premises on SAWITRDAY, MARCH 20, 1920 at -at one o'clock in the afternoon, the ng fotrowing: t:, REAL ESTATE ne 1. Lot numbers 16 on the east side of Main street and 33 34 and d 35 bn the west side of Andrew St. On this property is a good six -room - a ed frame cottage and woodshed; a s° first-class stable, and hard and soft water. This is a comfortable home. s' Immediate possession will be given. st 2. Lots 26, 27, 51 and 52 on the in west side of Main street containing one-fifth of an acre each, more or e less. This is a good building site au- and is good land suitable for -gardeu cls' :.or pasture, ng CHATTELS Two ranges, 1 heating stove, one d extension table, 1 bed -room sett, it 1 glass cupboard, parlor and dining- sh room chairs, two lounges, carpets, or linoleum, wringer, clothes rack, pic- tures, dishes, flour bin, two good d wagon boxes, water -trough, _ horse blankets, wheelbarrow, tools, lad- eders, wood -rack, forks, shovels, and rs other articles too numerous to men n tion' and about 20 hens.. TERMS Real Estate, 10 per cent on day of sale and the balance in- 30. days. Chattels, Cash. THOMAS CAMERON, Auctioneer. CICERO ALDWORTS, Proprietor GLADMAN & STANBURY, Solicitors• d v- e. S a A ,'A n v' a ra m ni th cx' no by in la bu ar Ch n0 ag lo 19 re Canadian runners will compete in a 26 -mile Marathon at Detroit. Admiral Horthy, elected R.egent of Hungary, is king sin all but name. Grand Mere, Que., voted to restore beer and wine licenses by a majority of about 500 to 10. David Spencer, sr., owner of large businesses in Vancouver, Victoria and Nanaimo, is dead. Jimmy Wilde easily defeated Patsy Wallace in six rounds at Philadelphia Wednesday night. There are thirty street car lines in.New York still out of business as a result of the heavy storm four weeks ago. Mrs. Wm. Reid, wife of a farmer near Cottam, 24 miles south of Wind- sor, has been missing since Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. James Biviere, aged 70, died at Cornwall as a result of burns re- ceived when she stumbled while car- rying a lamp. The Dominion Customs Associa- tion, in annual meeting at Ottawa, changed its name to the Dominion Customs Officers' Association. An appeal for uniform divorce laws' throughout the Dominion was made" by N. B. Gash, Ii:C., in his presidential address to the Ontario Bar As sociation. Hon. W. E. Raney stated that a, new Mechanics' Lien Act would be drafted and placed upon the statute books during the conning session of the.Legislature. A Moscow wireless despatch re= ceived in London says that Russian Soviet leaders regard Poland's pease. conditions as absurd. Lenin threat- ens to give blow to Poles. Addressing the Ontario Good Roads Associations ons iia convention in Toronto, ion. F. O. ;Biggs announced the fall list of roads which. are 20 MONDAY. W. J. Jones, for xnany:years a bank. manager at Bowmanville, died of heart trouble. Sir Arthur Currie says that it was possible that the 11;',th, Regiment,:. may oe continued. University of Toronto won the Intercollegiate seniorand . junior`. Championships on Saturday. • r Dr. Henry De ' Man, eminent Bel- gian Labor leader, predicted the ear- ly death of Bolsheism. Morris Rappaport, a Windsor but- cher and grocer, was shot dead by an unknown man Saturday night. Ex -President W. H. Taft chuckled when asked if he entertained any ambition to return to they' White. House. Louis Private of Wjiliamsford, near Owen Sound, died after being ill from sleeping sickness for a month. Ottawa won thechampionship of the National Hockey League by beat- ing Canadiens in. overtime .an Satter- day by 4 to 3,. Bela Kun 15 still in custody in Aus- tria. A short time agoan attempt to secure his release by Hungarian officers was foiled. Bishop Michael F. Power, of St. George's,. Nfld.; died at Sydney, N.S., of pneumonia, following' asthma and bronchitis, at the age of 43, The city of Kiel, no longer a naval base is 1 li a nxn r p c0 nstr g atetzon of a free port on the Wiker Bay, north of the : main' town, taking, the town of Hamburg as a pattern. The Paris -Bucharest 'train over the Simplon route has not put in an appearance at. Szegdin for five days. The de1aY is attributed to Croatian- Serb disorders at Agram,w Five children of Wm. Watts of Hampshire, near Charlottetown;" P,E.I., died between -Tuesday and Saturday • of pneurionia .following "flu," be himself is critically Ill, and kb seven other childien are also down, with disease, END STOMACH TROUBLE, GASES OR DYSPEPSIA "Pape's Diapepsin" makes sick, sour, gassy stomachs surely feel fine in five' minutes. If what you just ate is souring on your stomach or lies like a lump of lead, or yew belch gas- and eructate sour, undigested food, or haee a feeling" of dizziness, heartburn, fulness, nauseh; bad taste in mouth and stomach -Bead= ache, you can get relief in five minutes by neutralizing acidity. Put an end to such stomach distress now by getting a large "fifty -cent case of Pape's Diapepsin fromtany drug store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any stom- ach disorder caused by food fermentation due to excessive acid in stomach. • THE TJSBORNE ANI) IIr13RERT F'ARIER'S MUTUAL FIRE 1NSTIR- . AlSICE COMPANY. Head Olilce, Farquhar, Ont. President. Tf-IOS. RYAN Vice -President, JOHN ALLISON DIRECTORS WM. BROCK J. L. MIAMI. ROBT. I' ORRIS, JAMES McKENZIE AGENTS JOHN ESSERY, Centralia, Agent for Osborne and Hibbert. g ()LIVER HARRIS, Munro, Agent for Aribbert, Fullerton and Logan. W. A. `'URNBULL, ecretary-Treasurer R. R..No, 1, Woodham. GLADMAN:: & STANBURY . Solicitors, Exeter. T)R. A. R. KINSMAN, • Hofoi;.Grfiduate of Toronto Vniver- Sity. DENTIST Teeth extracted without pain or any bad effects. Mate' o v er ; Ga l manStanbur e Office. main St. Chjkiren Cry for fletcher's Fletcher's Castoria is Strictly a remedy for Infants and Children. Foods are specially prepared for babies. A baby's medicine is even more ossential'for Ba,by. Remedies primarily prepared for grown-ups are not int'erhangeabie. It was the need of' a remedy for the common ailments of Infants and Children that brought Castoria before the •public after years of researcll,. and no claim has been made for it that its use for over Afp. i years has not proven. - hat is■ -L Castoria isa harmless substitute for Castor 011, Paregoric,. Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither -Opium, Illorphine nor other -narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use -for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, • Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; allaying Feverishness arising - therefrom, and by regulating the Stall:asli and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural ?leen. The Children's Comfort—The I!fo °'ter's Friend. GENU , w S70 F EA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of In Use dor Oyer 30 Tears THE CENTAUR COMPANY NEW YORK CITY. 7577:71771, •7P4774747,747417.. lisranterenteaeie A Good` Investment THE money you save earns interest g when deposited in our Savings Department, and both principal and interest are safe and can be obtain- ed whenever required. Open an account to -day. 68A THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE PAID-UP CAPITAL - ' $15,000;000 RESERVE FUND - $15,000,000 EXETER BRANCH, A. E. 1Cuhn, Manager. c, INCORPORATED IN -1855 OVER 120 BRANCHES THE MOLSONS BANK CAPITAL AND RESERVE $9,000,000 Documents' of importance are absolutely safeguarded if placed in one of our SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES T. S. WOODS, Manager EXETER BRANCH Centralia Branch open for business daily. Farmers . . Alt entinxi FERTILI7ERS 16 per cent Acid Phosphate $34.00 0-10-2 General crop $3,,50 1— 8-1 General crop $39.00 2— 8-2 General crop $48.00 2-10-0 Ontario Special 44.00 4— ,9-4 Potato special $68.00 Put up in 125 pound bags., Place your order to -day. WIRE FENCE 6—Wire fence Is --Wire fence 8—Wire fence 9 :Wire fence 50c. 550 606 r 70c. Barb "Wire, Brace Wire and Steel Gates. Low prices on Dry ;hemlock and, Pine Barn I#oards. Large stock of Cedar ,Posta'• XXXXX B. . C. Shingles Neponset'Asphalt Shingles . Paroid Roofing e . Phone 13, A. J... , r, CLAT .wRO T Ill GRANTON MONEY TO LOAN We have 'alarge ,amount of private- funds to loan on farm and village_ properties, at lowest rates of in- terest. GLADMAN & STANBURY Barristers, Solicitors, ' Main St. Exeter, Ontario J. W. BROWING, M. D., M. S. P.y S.' Graduate Victoria University Office and Residence, Dominion, , Labratory, Exeter. • Associate Coroner n r of Huron. I. IL CARLING, B. A. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary • Publita COMMisaioner,, 'Solicitor " for this l(2oleons Baiik, etc. Money to loan at lowest rate's of -Interest. OFFICE—MAIN ST. EXETER, ONT. PF. D PE , a ERRY OU - Licensed 'An- tionear.: Sales conducted in any loc- ality., Terms moderate, Orders left, , at Times Office will be promptly at- tended to. Phone 116, Eirkton. Address E irkton Is, 0. . PR. G. IP. RALSTON. L.'D.S., D.D.S. DENTIST biilee over: 1. R. Carling's Law - Cloned ((very Wednesday afternooes • Tri;• �,