HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-7-15, Page 4•
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TJ•I Jitsaeo ', JULY' unix, 19i$
Children Cry for Fletcher's
',the find You Rave Always Bought„ and which has been
in %ase Icor over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and has been made Lander his per-.
Ronal supervision since its infancy.y. Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-aas-good" are but
Expel talents that trifle with and endanger the health off
I1nfa15 and Children -Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castorla is o harmless snbstitnte for Castor Oil, Pare.»
Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It
contains neither Opiaun, Morphine ]nor other Nareotie
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. Per more than thirty years it
has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation,
Flatulency, Wind Colic, of Teel hing Troubles and
Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural eepa
The Children's Panacea --The Mother's Friend,
1
GENUINE CASTOR IA ALWAYS
In Use dor Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
1 TN E cm ,VTAui, CARTWITANY. N d6W V®Ax
SummerServicetolligidands
of Ontario from Toronto
1• 2.05 a,m. daily for Muskoka Lakes,
R• daily except Sunday for Lake of Bays,
Algonquin ParT, Maganetaw•s n Riuer
• and Timagami Lake points.
�}
vats a.m. daily exclpt: Sunday for
(xeorgion Bay, Lake of Bays and Ma-
- ganetawan River points.
• r2•oa p.m. dailv except aurelap for
Muskoka Lakes. lake of Bays and Al_
t eXonquisn Park.
•
•
l STEAMSHIP EXPRESS
"-
Leaves Toronto - i t -es sum,
,-• Arrives Sarnia Wharf, 4.30 pan.
I
Each Monday., Wednesday and Satur
day, connecting with N.N. Cons :gala.
Cal steamships for Sault St. Itilarie-
#'ort Arthur, Fort William and Du-
luth, and at Fort William witaa G.T.P.
Railway for Winnipeg and paints in
Western Canada. Coaches, Parlor -
Library -Cafe and Parlor-Library-Buf-
'fet care between Toronto and Sarnia
Wharf.
Furebee particulars on application
to Grand Trunk Ticket Agents.
N, J. DORE, AGENT, EXETER,
Farmers!i
Woven Wire Fence
below Manufactur-
ers' Prices,, either.
Peerless or Mon-
arch makes,
buy at onkel
as these prices will not last
very long,.
6 Wire Fence 2.3c per Rod
'7 25c .,
8 " „ 28, //
Cedar and Anchor posts
10,000 Cedar Posts on hand
-also Anchor Posts.
Lumber and Cement
Let me quote you my low
prices on your Lumber require-
ments, whether large or small
orders. Also Cement.
A. J.
CLATWORTIY
GRANTON
OVER 6S YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
•
•
QUITE AN ADVANTAGE.
•TTES, congress has an easy soak,
- lI ever there was one.
To carry on its pleasant work
is nothing short or fun.
It only has to pay the bilis.
It doesn't have to sweat
Or wonder where to make ends meet
The money it will get.
A thousand or a minion cold
To 1t Is all the same.
It knows its folly Uncle Sant
Bas money to Its name.
And so It passes right and left
Bills wholesale. by the score.
It pauses Just to get its breath.
And tben it passes more.
How very pleasant It would be
11 you could only pay.
Could settle as they came to hacs5,
Your family bills that way—
No matter how immense they were,
1f you could sit at ease
And calmly say, "I'll let that pass,'
Offhanded as you please:
But, no; you have to rustle out
And get the wberewithal.
You're not a congress. so you must
Look after matters small.
You may sit down and vote, but such
A simple minded plan
Won't make the butcher give you peace •
Or pay the grocer man.
Her Vocation.
"Wby is Miss ,Elderly Prim so alb-
.,-stracted?"
"Miss Prim?"
"Yes."
"I presume she is going over the
main points of ber lecture to herself."
"What lecture?"
";The one she is going to deliver be-
fore the Congress of Mothers."
Doubly Sure.
•"Nou guarantee this to cure bald-
r8ess"
"ertelnly. Besides, we give cou-
pous "
-What are they good for?"
"When Fou get twenty you can trade
theca tar :a,avig"
Slow.
**What is trepartee2"
"Repexteee"
"Yes."
"It is the ,brriUiant answer that you
might have made, but didn't think of
until the day after the occasion to use
t 1
•
!Sole.
"What are you so mad abont?"
"I never am parcnitted to have my
own way."
"Is that so?" : Ii
"Yes."
"Then you are in great luck."
ie.
She Knew.
A'XtUSEME l�4.4y!
N'#y DON'T You
AIA''Ry fPPOSA9
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Amaze eenaleg a ettetch and description n mar
rynlc-k11 ascertain our opinion free whether an
;Invention Is Iirobabiy pat entfIlle. onirnunten.
tl,Ynil,uictliconadentlal. SIANISOO!oa Patents
*Craft** Walt figwort, r aoc inning yatent2.
Pa taken through Ailing A Co. reedy,
;pates notice,
gwithout charge, In tee ��aa
.A'lttisedlely mnatratedweekly- Li gest clr'
smarties of ani' Selentl'lc iourntlt_ 700 11111,01
.E(onsay, V.75 *yea, pones° ltrepald. timid PP'
llrl nelYBticiaterj.
�iNN & Co3OS1"ndway,,New York
oxfoxicrolocp,." IF lit. wilco• oti. p, i
"Why don't you marry a rich girl?"
"Ask ber."
,,,1 I ,
Undoubtedly. ,,life to
9 am solving my wild oats."
"So I have beard." I
"What do you think about it?"
"That you will be calling loudly for
befp "then harvest tittle cornea;"
....owl.
NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK ?dCSJ„,td tl a pcil,'EIc ref areiint?; the
NEWS SeiencEl,
Circu.1:::
ars lixvc: peen alistributec
amongst Canadian:: critihing the Rost
rale.
The German brewery assocltiont
have ordered all breweries to reduce
their output of beer to forty pt's
ecu', of the normal, on account o
the shortage of barley.
The Stratford Police Commissioi:
yesterday, at the request of factors'
owners. ie whoae planta war muni•
•
tions aro bolus manufactured, decid-
ed to place extra pollee on guard.
Samuel Meakin, a native of Hing
land, at,d an electrical engineer
rode a bicycle all the way from NCS
York' to Montreal in order to ones
Cor war service, He arrived in A'tont
real yesterday.
General Vrctariano Huerta waive(
preliminary bearing at lel Paso yes
terclay and was removed to For
Bliss, where be will be field. Ilei
bond is fixed at 515,000, wntcb 11
has not been able to turnlsa,
The Russian steamer Anna, Mu
Archangel, for Hull e. as she led by
a German submarine tic the Norte
Sea, Her crew abandoned the ship
anal landed at Peterhead, Scotland
The Anna is reported to be still
ail oat.
The Atlantic Transport liner Mtn
nebaba, before reported as having
hau an exp'os in one of her for
were bolds on Wednesday last, ar
rived at Halifax yesterday to dis
ch'Trge part ot Luer cargo and to in
vesligate the cause or tee explosion
Important Events Which Have
Occurred During the Week,
The Busy World's happenings care-
fully Compiled and Put Into
Handy and Attractive Shape tor
the Readers of Our Paper --A
Solid Hour's Enjoyment.
WEDNESDAY..
The Duke of Teck, brother or
Queen Mary, has been appointed
temporary assistant military secre-
tary at the War Office, •
Gen. Liman Von Sanders, German
commander at the Dardanelles, has
been wounded for the second time,
according to despatches received in
Athens yesterday.
The attitude of the German So-
cialist party in its relation to the
German Government is viewed with
the greatest suspicion, and the lat-
ter is believed to have connived at
the appeals for peace.
Germany plans to carry her sub-
marine warfare into American wa-
ter', according to a reserve cfficer
of the German navy, who is under-
stood to be cognizant of tae inten-
tions or Great Admiral Von Tirpitz.
The British Government yester-
day, by an order -in -council, decided
to take over the control or the
sale and supply of intoxicating It-
quors in many„ districts, where ewar
material -is be'ng made and loaded,
unloaded or otherwise dealt wltb.
The trial before a military tribun-
al of Capt. Llebsicher and three
members of the crew of the German
warship Lemnos, under detention at
Ancona since •the beginning of the
European war, was opened in Paris
yesterday. The charge is espionage.
In only 7`32 cases has it been
necessary to amputate one or more
limbs of British soldiers admitted to
hospitals die England and France
since the 'commencement of the war
to tbe .present time, according to a
statement in the British House yes-
terday
'THURSDAY.
foseph H. Walton, a veteran resi-
dent ,or Teterboro county, died yes-
terday at .his residence at the age
of eighty-four years.
Pte. Arthur Crucby, of the 28th
Battalion .of Manitoba, was drowned
while bathing at the Shornclifre
beach, England, yesterday.
An order has been issued by Gen.
Von Bissing, German Governor or
Eelgium, providing a year's impris-
onment :for school teachers giving
anti -.German instruction.
After ten unsuccessful attempts
to enlist for overseas service,
Charles H. Fletcher, a young Eng-
lishman ,from Stratford, has been
finally accepted at London, Ont.
1:1. tC. -Shock, Wilmington, Del,,
victim 'of the cordite explosion and
dee at the plant of the Canadian
Explosives Company at Beloeil Ines -
.day, died in Montreal yesterday.
Dr. .Pyne, acting Premier of On-
tario, .reached London, Eng., Tues -
;day .night to confer with the Army
'Council on .the provision of a hos-
,peel by the .Ontario Government.
Five ,British army officers nave
been ,indicted in San Francisco on
:charges of .violating American neu-
•txaJlity ,by trecruiting in the United
.States for the .British army, the Jus-
ttioe -Department was advised yes -
'Twelve apersous are known to be
(lead, eight buildings are known to
:tame .been destroyed, and at least a
dozen persons are missing in tee
debris as the result of a fierce tor-
nado whicb swept over Cincinnati
last :night.
The advance guards of more than
2,1000 Baptists from all parts of the
United States and :Canada were in
Oakland, :California., to attend the
opening yesterday of the interna-
tional convention of the Baptist'(
Young ;People's Unio!i.
'FRiDA:Z.
.ff,oha D. Rockefeller celebrated
yesterday •the seventy-sixth anni-
versary elf ,his birth on his estate at
' 'arrytowtn, N Y,
The Gnimsb,,y trawler tvheshire was
h own up ,her a mine in the North
Sea Wednesday. All the crew, with
the exception of the chief engineer,
were killed.
Squadron{tepmmander Arthur R.
L. Soames of -the Royal Flying Corps
was killed yesterday by tee explo-
aloft ,of a bomb with which die was
experimenting,
The French Senate yesterday
unanimously appropriated ttleatialleU
to be used by the Minister of Marine
in payment for raargoes of netattrai
vessels that have ;been seized.
The Italian armored cruiser Ara-
alfi was torpedoed and sunk at
dawn yesterday morning by stn Alice-,
trian sulemarine evage taking hart
in a reeon.aoitance en the upper`
Adriatic.
Thirteen persons dear¢•, and ninety-
two injured is the competed count
of the accident to a trolley car
crowded with Sunday ;5e.hool pic-
nickers which. was derated near
Queenston on Wednesday.
After long negotiations, France
and Germany have agreed to ex-
change the doctors, .chaplains, epotn-
ecaries, nurses, stretcher nea.rers
and administrative officers of the
sanitary service now held prisoners.
The British Admiralty stated last
night that It was officially a.onuunc-
ed at Petrograd yesterday that the
submarine whichmade a euceessfltl
attack on a German warship on
July 2 in the Baltic was a 'Brittsb
boat.
An order -in -Council was gazetted
yesterday prohibiting the exporta-
tion from Great Britain or jute
yarns, jute piece goods and bags and
sacks made of jute, to any destina-
tion. Heretofore the prohibition
only applied to Certain European
points.
SATURDAY.
One thousand sten enlisted .in Toe
ronto during the past week,
The .'Dominion Chiropractors' As-
sociation was formed in Toronto
yesterday to defend chiropractors and
a.r ct 4 111OND _9Y.
Icing George has returned from a
visit to the fleet,' under Admiral Jelli-
coe, and is now staying in Bucking-
ham Palace,
Major-General Sam Hughes, the
Canadian Minii_stc o_ Militia, arrived
in London front Liverpool last night
after an uneventful voyage.
Fire thought to have been of in-
cendiary origin. late Saturday night
destroyed the ;'ai • buildings of the
Al:lborough Agricultural Society at
Rodney. The loss is ;5,0041.
The strike of 1-5,000 union carpen-
ters, which for tw.• months practical-
ly has paralyzed building industry in
Chicago, is eyries- Settlement on all
points at issue has been reached.
As a result of the worst; storm that
has swept the Bay of Fundy coast in
the last forty years, three fishermen
on Friday last their lives, and others
were saved •oily ;after great hard-
ships.
Joseph Matthias, caretaker of the
Union Buntline; Montreal, Saturday
night shot anti killed bis wife and
then blew off one side of his head
with a revolver. The pair had been
drinking.
Despondent through ill -health, W.
Centres, :aged 27, of 757 Walker
street, Landon, Ont., committed sue
ci•de on'the banks of the Thames near
Vauxhall Bridge, East London, Satur-
day -night.
While playing about a wagon load
of bricks on Qneenston Road Satur-
day evening Edward Cole, five-year-
old son of WIZ/fain Cole, engineer on
the Welland Shie Canal, was run
over and instantly killed.
TUESDAY.
tConccnding sessions of the fifth
World's Convention cif the Christian
Endeavor Sotfietzes, were held in
Chicago yesterday..
Lient f;o1. W. W. Burland of
the Royal Montreal Regiment is
gazetted commander of the 14th
Battalion 3n place of Lieut. -Col.
lleig ieun.
Flight Lieutenant Riley was kill-
ed last 'evening while flying from
Brighton to the Shoreham aero-
drome.. A passenger who accom-
panied liim was injured.
R. 'L. Blake, accountant, and R.
D. Simpson, Iedger :keeper, in the
Union Bank at Moose Jaw, Sask.,
were drowned when their two
canoes .collided on the ;river.
The ,corespondent :at Amsterdam
of the :Central News transmits a
Berlin :despatch announcing the
birth sf a son to the wife of Prince
Oscar, fifth !son of Kaiser William.
Emperor Nidbolas of Russia has
conferred the Cross of .St. George
upon all the officers and crew of the
British submattine whiic'h recently
sunk a °Gerniait battleship .in the
Baltic.
R. A. Bones, 'KZ-, :and E. W.
Craig have been appointed by the
Attorney -General's :Department of
Manitoba to prepare :fqr and take
charge of any criminal prosecutions
arising out of the Parliament Build-
ings affair.
Sir Edward Grey, the fSecrptary
of State for Foreign Affairs, ,who re-
linquisbed his duties on -May 21 last
to rest bis eyes, which had been
strained by excessive use, u:eturned
to the Foreign Office yesterday, ;still
wearing glasses. -
HUNS HAVE MISGIVINGS,
Submarine War Does Not Justify It-
self Say Some Writers.
LONDON July 13.—The Daily
Telegraph publishes the following
under a Berlin date line;
"There is a growing difference of
opinion in Germany regarding the
utility and possibilities of subma-
rine war, Count Iteventlow, chief
henchman of the Von Tirpitz party,
always demands its continuance on
the most ruthless lines. The other
party, whose views are believed to
be those of Von Betbmann-Hollweg,
consider that the moral loss out-
weighs the gain.
"Lately there ].las been much dis-
cussion in the newspapers from both
points of view. In the Berliner
Tagehlatt Captain Periue writes an
important, reasoned article While
taking the middle course, he' goes
out of his way to warn those who
expect great things from this form
of warfare,
, ,
A Submarine Duel.
TURIN, J'u1y 1g,—Divers operat-
ing for recovery of the Italian sub-
marine Medusa in the Adriatic have
discovered another submarine, evi-
dently Austrian, nearby on the bot-
tom. It is evident that both 'were
sunk in a Submarine, duel,,
WOMAN SUFFERED
TEN YEARS
From Female Ills -- Restored
to Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
Belleville, N. S. , Canada, - "I doctored
for ten years for female troubles and
did not get well. I read in the paper
about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and decided to try it. I write
now to tell you that I am cured. You
can publish my letter as a testimonial.','
- Mrs. SvvRINE BABINE, Belleville,
Nova Scotia, Canada.
Another Woman Recovers.
Auburn, N. Y.-” I suffered from
nervousness for ten years, and had such
organic pains that sometimes I would lie
in bed four days at a time, could not eat
or sleep and did not want anyone to talk
to me or bother me at all. Sometimes
I would suffer for seven hours at a time.
Different doctors did the best they could
for me until four months ago I began
giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound a trial and now I am in good
health." -Mrs. WILLIAM H. GILL,No.1.5
Pleasant Street, Auburn, New York.
The above are only two of the thou-
sands of grateful letters which are con-
stantly being received by the Pinkham
Medicine Company of Lynn, Mass.,
which show clearly what great things
Lydia E. t,:Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound does fpr those who suffer from
woman's ills.
If you want spe-
cial advice writs to
Lydia E. Pinkham
Medicine Co. (confi-
dential)Lynn,Mass.
Your letter will be
opened, read and
answered by a wo-
man and held in
strict confidence.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CAS TORiA
PRESENCE OF MIND.
t Saved General de Segur From the
Fury of the Kalmucka,
In Napoleon's eainpnign in Russia
One of bis generals, Philippe de Segur,
bad a peculiar edrenture with a band
of Kalmnctts. The Kalnn efts are wan-
dering tribes of southeastern Russia-
Tbey are fierce warriors, and tbeir
light cavalry forms an important part
of Russian armies. De Segur's pres-
ence of mind saved him from being
killed by tbem when the most desper-
ate fighting could not have done so.
The French bad attacked a body of
Russians and pat them to flight, when
Segur soddenly discovered that be and
a few French dragoons bad become
separated from the French army and
were being carried away with the re-
treating party.
He and his men were surrounded by
a band of Kalmucks. The situation
seemed so hopeless that the men gave
themselves up and, disregarding his
orders, passively allowed themselves
to be struck down. De Segur deter-
mined to sell his lite dearly and contin-
ued to fight. A Kalmuck lance struck
him from his horse. He jumped to his
feet and, getting behind his horse, con -
tinned the struggle. It was a bopeless
contest, bowever, and in a few mo-
ments be would have been killed had
not a happy thought occurred to him.
The Kalmuck leader, a tine looking
Cossack, remained calm while his men
were carried away with the fury ot
battle. The expression on his haughty
countenance indicated tha t be_s orned
to murder a vanquished foe, and from
time to time he caned, "Nike le, nikalel"
De Segni guessed that this was an
order to cease fighting. 13e shouted iir.
perlotisly to the Kalmucks that sur-
rounded him, "Nikale!"
Immediately the fury died out of
their faces, and they paused, motion-
less with astonishment. Their fury
once checked, Segeir's life was saved
by their chief.
Be learned afterward that the word
meant "Do not strike" and tbat while
the impetuous Kalmncks had not heed-
ed the command of their chief they
were puzzled and disturbed at hearing
Ms word of their native dialect from
the mouth of one whom they supposed
to be an enemy.
De Segur was kept a prisoner until a
peace between France and Russia wan,
arranged some months later. -Ex-
change.
German Helmets.
German military helmets, though
made of steel, are as light almost aa -
a cloth cap or a straw bat, and more
comfortable than a bowler. Round the
Inside, where the helmet toadies, Is a
ring of metal "leaf springs" bound
with leather, which lightly clips the
bead to keep the helmet on without
heavy pressure. The brass spike or
knob that crowned the helmet Is made
useful as well as ornamental. There
are large holes In it, which give very
good ventilation to the inside of the
helmet --much better than the pin -
boles that are supposed to ventilate a
bowler. In fact, the Germane seem to
have succeeded In making a really
comfortable bowler out of paper thin
steel. -Manchester Guardian.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S . tk
CAS►_TOR1A
.Illi
a
1,1 1, 11 111 111 i.,
iN' I P HI ill UI Ilu
,.. , 111 111 .1 III 1 .
� tit' Ill..,
I ell"'lir" 1 I I I 1 i 1 'u
111,
.f.
y
Incnrpersted TitMO
NS BAN
r
ISM
A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
TRANSACTED
camITA(,
AND
= INCLUDING
_ CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT
DANK MONEY ORDERS
RESERVE
_
—
4 I
$8,800,000.
- Swings Bank Departs
_
At all Branches
Interest allowed at highest current nista'
92 Branches
__
o
In Canada
PExETER BRANCH ..
"'W. 1D. CLARKE, Manager
7iti.,;Ili,„11111,,u,1.11i,,,io.,.Ifn111..1111111iu1.,111,1.(m
-iiiinalium ldu,,,, au. I11.1a..,in;;iir
1
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j
THE CAIVADIAIIT BANK
OF COMMERCE
SIR EDNIVND WALKER, C.V.O.,LL.D., D.C.L., President
ALEXANDER LAIRD. General Manager JOHN AIRD, Ass't General Masi -
CAPITAL, $15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, $13,5003000
!
SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS 1
Interest at the current rate is allowed on all deposits of $1 atm
upwards. Careful attention is given to every account. Small accounts'
are welcomed. Accounts may be opened and operated by mail.
Accounts may be opened in the names of two or more persons, with—
drawals to be made by any one of them or by the survivor. :.1
Exeter Branch-- H. J.LWBITE, Manager
�'+_`;•! VREDITDN BRANCH - A. E. KUHN, ,Manager, a,L„•i agFeirfir
SMALL FARMER'S TRADING.
He Is Under Serious Handicap Com-
pared With His Bigger Competitor.
[Prepared by the United States depart-
ment of agriculture.]
A matter which threntens the pros-
perity and even the existence of the
small farmer is the handicap under
which he finds• himself in buying and
selling. The big farmer who can buy
and sell in large quantities and also
employ expert talent in buying and
selling and in securing credit has an
advantage over tbe small farmer who
must buy and sell in small qunntities
and give bis time and attention mainly
to the growing of crops rather than to
selling them.
Much or the supposed economy of
large scale production, even in mer-
chandising and manufacturing, is
found upon examination to consist
wholly in an advantage in bargaining -
that is, buying and selling. When it
comes to the work of growing farm
crops, as distinct from selling them and
buying raw materials, -the one family
farm is the most efficient unit that has
yet been found.
But the big farmer can best the indi-
vidual small farmer in buying and sell-
ing. It would seem desirable, from the
standpoint of national efficiency, to pre-
serve the small farm as the productive
unit, but to organize a number of small
farms into larger -units for buying and
telling. Thus we should have the most
efficient units both in producing and in
buying and selling.
If this is not done the only farmers
who can enter successfully into the
production of agricultural specialties,
where the problem of marketing is
greater than the problem of producing,
will be the big, capitalistic farmers.
The small farmer may bold his own in
the growing of staple crops, in which
Send the problem of ehcieut production
is perhaps greater than that of success-
ful marketing.
The reasou for this is that there is a
well organized market for staple crops
and the problem of marketing is there-
fore somewhat less difficult than in the
case of agricultural specialties. Ilut
even in the growing of staple crops the
small farmer will have a hard time of
it ia he is forced to compete with the
big farm when it is cultivated by gangs
of cheap laborers.
Tic two worst enemies of the small
farmer are the opponents of co-opera-
tive buying and selling on the one band
and the advocates of enlarged immigra-
tion to the rural districts on the other.
The latter would help the big farmer
in the buying of labor for .his farm
and reduce the price of the small farm-
er's own labor when be undertook to
sell it in the form of produce.
Chain Propelled Grindstone. ''
I took two sprocket wheels, one smal-
ler than the other, off an old binder. I
put tbe smaller wheel on the shaft of
the grindstone where I took the crank
off, says a writer in Farm and Fireside.
Then I put the larger wheel at one end
of the frame. To mance boxes for the
shaft of the larger wheel I took two
pieces or sheet iron and bent them (A)
and drilled holes in each side (i3). I
then took the crank and placed it on
the end of thishaft of the large wheel.
A' chalk from the binder was placed
over both wheels, This device is very
handy for grinding mowing machine
knives, as tine ,person turning f>l but of
J. A. MASON
ARCHITECT
425 Dundee Street, London,' Guar, flus'
teed cost of buildings; no extras; it •
years New York experience, rhe nt
2725.
Anyone intending to build will dc -
ell o write me. No charge for co&.
sulat on
C J. W. KARN, M. D.C. lid„,
425 RICHMOND ST., LONDON,.,
ONTARIO.
SPECIALIST III
SURGERY AND HN1TO- JE]t ABI r
DISEASES OF AND WOMEN,
DR G. F. RO ULST,ON, L.19.tt3 ID. R EP
DENTTIFST ; 1,kt
Honor Graduate of Toronto Uni1v4-
allt3. Office over Dickson 'die Qeltar-
liug's Law office. Closed Wedneieo-
day afternoons. Phone Office Saw
:Residence 5b, -
A. R. KINSMAN 4,I048; D.D,,ti,
Honor Graduate of Tor., tO Oslo .
ereity f . , l- i_5auol�ai,a
1 D E N T `I $ Tl t i t l .r i•
Teeth extracted without p*iale
any bad effects. Officio over Molar-
'man
old -roan & Stanibury'a Office h$ain 6k,
Exeter. I t t , 4-.6J
I - W, BROWNING Ii& D., Ag,
e P. 8, Graduate Victoria U;aiiee
sity Office and residence Deinia40ga
Labratory., Exeter • .._W
Associate Coroner of Hamm =lstil
D ICKSON & MARLING I' "'em
Barristers, Solicitors Netaxi+i:ts 0I.111
veyanoera Comtniesioners, Selititik, '
for the Molsona Bank eto;
.Money to Loan at lowest etas a►14ige
terest. , 1 1 '.y$_,,
OFFICE -MAIN STREET, E11116ros.,4i
I. R. Carling B. A U. Be BRA
MONEY, TO LOAll .i I
We have a large ami ci eft ARM
ate funds to loan. on farm. an* grit
-
liege properties at lowest sDket t?f
terent.;
GL'AD,MAN & STANB.U8,7 let'
Barristers, 5olicitoiei Xiaaa �t
Exeter,' . , 1 ,•
J�ial�
Tae Ugborne and H.ibbe�l;
Farmer's Mutual Fire iovummx
auce Gompano
Head Office, Farquhar, O10
1
President , :.4 I ar„I�ROBT. NOBBagaa-
Vioe,ePresident I 1 THOS. RYlata-
DIREC'1OYRN: - !_Alli(
WM, BRO,CK , 1 , , ,, • i WM, ;,'
;1,, L. RussimL' ' I 1 J, T. ALLIS0
AGENTS t 'tat
JOHN ESSERY Exeter. ayedt •--
borne and Biddalph.
OLIVER HARRIS Munro agent
13ibbert Fullerton and Logan. 1 _eel
Iml i , W. A. TU143117131
Secy.Treas. Farquhaalf"
GLADMAN & ST.ANBURYt ,i>SINiI
Solicitors. Exeter. A'
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Nave Always Bought
_ J
Bears the
Signature of
1444,