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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-7-29, Page 4Children Cry or Fletch is ,: cin t ti, . t!,: .. K< • The ]Edged You axe Always BoU! ghts, and which 'ons been •, aan use fele over 30 permse has bcaa•n a the el3 erlatnnre of lee and Lute, been made unatier his per., spinet supervision. since its infancy. C- Alla sn' gnu one to deceive pita in this. AU Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just -as -gigues" are but L pc? einetets thet trifle with and endanger the health of iiefan; 5 and ati1dxene-Exlxerienaee against Experiment. ..ghat. is CASTOR1A� Oa t3$e1"Atti is a, bierac e'.:ros eTzbetltate for CaSs'r',O " 'oily Pare. • e tieele'y 'Props and St,othii:; els seeps. it is pleasant. It contains nmeitlr.er ctpiineen, Morphine 'nor other 3 areotie substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms Med allays Feverishness. For auoire than thirty years it Rias been in .constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatuienc3te Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and. 10iarrhecta. It regulates tbe Sto!nach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, r,iving healthy and raatura1 Sleep. Thea Children's Panacea—The Blether's Friend. ti w I ALWAYS By ax. a.. ' e:.. ignatI re o . a'• t 4i,„„„te In Lse For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought r Y Y7 4: -.1V C.Q lr'.4N P4 L2. pc•K CITY. �" ,} rM lr• `� a... -r 'ager�Pt'.`+-n'rrs�wrs�x•�9t !,. rr UlnkherServketaliighlands of Ontario from Toronto teoe ct.tn, daily for Muskoka Lakes, -laity except Sunciav for Le e Beye, Algonquin i'arT, Maganetawan Rimer and Timagami Lake points. •O.as a.m. daily except Sunday for 'Deorgion Bay. Lake of Bays and Ma- ganetawan River points. ae,ol pall. daily en cept sandap- for ,'aiuskoka Lakes, lake of Bays and Al- m. Park.. a .a TEANLSI I l P EXPRESS Leaves Toronto - n.55 a.m. 'Arrives Sarnia Wharf, 4.3o p.m. 'Each Monday, Wednesday and Satur- day, connecting with N.I. Co. s palls tial steamships for Sault 'St. Marie - :Port Arthur, Fors William and Du- luth, and at Fort William with G.T.P. Railway for Winnipeg and points in 'Western Canada. Coaches, Parlor - Library -Cafe and Parlor-Library-Buf- aet ears between Toronto and Sarnia 'MTh art. Furthea particulars on application to Grand Trunk Ticket Agents. N. J. DORE, AGENT, EXETER, Dissatis eeel. • "The cost of living is very high.' — "Yes, and that isn't the worst of it" 'No?" "No. The worst Is that the living It - :t•1:; is ere -thing but high." Just So. "Why can't a woman under- stand baseball?" "Why can't a man trine a hat?" 1/4 et Use For It at Last. "I suppose the aviators .will work up new set of signals." "That will be easy enough." hd e ie "How will they work it?" , gull}; "Just give the higb sign." ii.feeeif Disputed. "Lots of men are afraid of women." "Are they?" .Byes'„ "But not unless they are married to them." Forecasting the Future. twat "'n met my fate today." "What is her name?" "I don't know what it is now, only know what it will be." mens! coven Wire Fence below Manufactir= ers' Prices; either Peerless or Mon= arch makes. buy at or ce is these prices will not last very lenge d Wire Fence 23e .per 'Rod' " 25e, . ... 8 " " 23e. . Cedar and Anchor posts 10,000 Cedar Posts on hand —t.lso Anchor Poste. Lumber and Cement Let me quote you my 1.3w prices on your Lumber regaiae• meats, whether large or small orders. Also Cement, A.J J. CLATWDRTHY GIRANTON o,�rcatA. .avra.s>»ts •ys�tyCO:RI Flag yC 1.4i; D strINV « ettOltnit3HTs'ko. • ti ron0 s91dime aY sketch end descripnc n Char q. irkly'ascer lain ear opinion tfree whether au 11.0rar tion is e`ssns Ito, 'r7°.,,n a thdty AM c ce. ( , .. ,r s., ire i ,, t. 3 lot"ttnaL t'il•,11111.1 .u•.t. Jr t,. uL. t• ^srt, 4 41,tic4,v iteou! in is 3,allr, 11; - o'f ent 6C.tlS 1'nuT' C.:i rtta' ri:,.;s't .151 t to sGwslbra,• !ICUi $v !tr.3i11 :iiz Walz oleo, G2(x l£ $t,, 'Wee.kion,1'. C. Geed. "What are the best pair of mascot yon know?" "Common sense and ability to use t." Her Reason. 'Why did yon marry him?" "1 smutted to see if he were really as amiable as he appears." Too Modern. "Oh. fly with me.•" the lover said, '"I'n some far distant spot!" }1c -r cruel dad unscrewed one Wing, And thus he forted the plot. The Reaeori. '"why Is be henpeched:?" "Because be is ix) cbieken hearted." And Still Haa Them, "Is he financially sound?" "I should say so." "Got the money, eb?" "You bet. Be bas served a term in teat; penitentiary fur misappropriation of funds." • t,. Fetal Mistake. • "Why is he tr. jail?" "For trying to be one of the criminal rich." "Al:, i" 13;e: Dtt .. l keel enough." Query. "What's a kiss or two worth?" "Expert or amateur?" '1 e Would Spoil Their Trade. 1f all the: people that you tsnow Were berme, land and true And always did tt,tngs up' just so, What would the gossips do? Don't fear their lives would be so Oat if perfect were each brother, For it it ever came to that They'd tate about each other. PERT PARAGRAPHS., There lies it imet anti (inlet plane be- :"avwae tele cotetlitioal of being always might end beieg never wru;ig, 1T.e c'{l't G s;i.,'410 i i;t' iitut fij'j <Mt list siF ftiee!tio the.xtt'llots' :;ts' w 41lweS's s'leort when we are lure.?+ NEWS TOPE OF WEEK. important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week..,; The Busy World's Happenings Care* fully Compiled and Put Into Handy and Attractive Shape for the headers of Our Paper --A Solid Hour's Enjoyment. ' t1 EDNESDAY. Austrian troops have invaded Mon tenegro on the west, it is officially an- nounced. The Toronto Ministerial Assoeiae tion will give a machine gun to Can, ada's fighters. The Union of Canadian Municipali- ties began its convention at Niagara Falls yesterday. The Ontario License Board will make a tour of Western Ontario and abolish places that are solely for drinking. Andrew Hastings, a fifteen months' child, at Wiarton yesterday accident- ally fell into a tub of water and was drowned. The Province of Ontario will give $500,000 for 500 machine guns for Canad.:ns at the front and $25,000 to aid recruiting. Another. German aeroplane has ar- rived at CenstantiPeUte,..aftdr flying over Bulgarian territory. This is the sista machine to violate Bulgarian neutrality. .•# The strike at 4tbe Algoma Steel Company's plant at Sault Ste. Marie, where 300 men walked out four days ago, has been settled and the men have returned to work. Mrs. Hedley, vife of Rev. Canon - Hedley of Port Arthur, was fatally injured yesterday by a train on a bridge, when she was trying to rescue her eleven -year-old daughter. The night patrolmen of the Sarnia police force declared emphatically yesterday that for some two minutes around 4 o'clock yesterday morning a fair-sized snowstorm raged in the city. Frank Bellfan and Joe Prischi were sentenced Yesterday at Belleville to three years in the penitentiary, and Autonaceio Carmine to one year in the Ontario Reformatory for bur- glary. THURSDAY. The Masonic Grand Lodge opened its golden jubilee session at Hamil- ton yesterday. The Unemployment Board issued a report yesterday urging labor bur- eaus for Ontario. F. B. Scofield, a former Mayor of Woodstock, and resident there for sixty years, died there yesterday in his ninety-second year. It is announced that the King and all the Leaders of the nation• will at- tend St. Paul's Cathedral on August 4, the anniversary of tbe declaration of war. To Commander Max Horton falls the credit of having sunk the Ger- man battleship which was torpedoed in the Baltic on July 2 by a British submarine. Alberta has followed Saskatche- wan, and yesterday declared for the enforcement of the proposed liquor act prohibiting the sale • of;,•]iquor throughout the Province. After an illness of long standing Hon. Jean Prevost, ex -Minister of Colonization, Mines, and Fisheries in Sir Lomer Gouin's Quebec Cabinet, and M.P.P. for Terrebonne, died yes- terday in Montreal. The village of Warren, near North Bay, was practically wiped out of existence to -day by fire. Ten dwel- lings, the post -office, a hotel, a black- smith shop, and a hardware store had been burned to the ground. A Russian commission appointed to investigate charges of inhumane methods on the part of the Germans, made a report yesterday that they had employed shells with cast iron tips, which were filled with prussic acid.'" FtI1DAY. Colonel W. W. Burland was receiv- ed yesterday by the. King at Windsor Palace. The Allies have ordered 20,000 portable hou.see for Belgium and northern France - Renewed activity of British sub- marines has paralyzed for the time being all traffic in the Turkish inner seas. Signor Marconi,, now Lieutenant of Engineers in the„Italian army, is in Loudon buying general war material for the army. Damage approximating .$150,000 was done by a hailstorm to the crops north of Belle Plains, about•30 miles west of Regina last evening. The first Hydro -radial railway in Ontario was formally opened at Lon- don yesterday in the newly electrified London & Pert Stanley Railway. Sir Sandford Fleming, Chancellor of Queen's University, and ono of Canada's pioneer engineers, died at Halifax yesterday at the age of 88. It is stated that all leave of ab- sence in the German army has been stopped. The order is believed to foreshadow important developments in the west. The India Office announced, through the Government Press Bur- eau yesterday, that hostile tribesmen ambushed a patrol near Bushire, Per- sia, on July 12, killing two officers and ono Sepoy. Premier Botha arrived in Cape 'Town yesterday frorri the campaign which ended on July 9 with the sur- render of German Southwest Africa. The :Premier received an ovation wherever he appeared. SATURDAY. Harold Sheehan, a Toronto boy, Was drowned of Fisherman's Island Yesterday. Time. I3. Roberts, for some years mechanical superintendent of the Grand Trisnk Railway, died at Walk- etvil le, ri ieelsti E. O • iSViiileer,• head .of the Hiram: 1X ells :see Fa, SOPS..; 'Cf l: ]t;jlet'#tt • lker� ill >'t ,left - < n eSdtt: Of over t e.,i'em:Joei. • liedit.ile testimony has been re- THE EXETER TIM eeived lel lVfontreal of the visit otr an aiectitanif ;hurl Stintlay Slight to., the vicliUty.; of t.l fgaud,. Miss 0 'BlanelitYt, of 5t. Jacques de. Parisvints, Que., was killed, and three otherpersons injured, when a motor car jun'iped a bridge. "Miss Myrtle. Peach, bookkeeper, perished in a fire following en ex- plosion in Walker Bros,' garage at ('rillla, being caught under furniture. No British ships were suuk during the week ending July 23, according to a statement issued by the Official Press Bureau of the Admiralty. Twenty-four Austrians were trans- ferred frons Fort henry this morning to Petawawa, under a military escort under command of Lieut. D. H. Wig- gin. , Despatches received from British Consul Greig at Monastir, Macedonia, indicate that the situation of the re- fugee population in that district is very. serious. The Austro-Hungarian Govern- ment has issued a decree prohibiting the use of the Italian language throughout the epire, including the Italian-speaking promvinces. The New York Surrogate yesterday admitted to probate the 'will pf aline. Lillian Nordica Young, tbe singer, who died in May, 1914, ,in the Far East. The fortune is estimated, at $1,000,000. Despatches from Switzerland state that the German Sodialiete, have initiated a propaganda in fever ot. peace. The propaganda is being mer- cilessly repressed by the police. ac- cording to the despatches, and the So- cialists are being closely watched. • t ..e MONDAY. German military authorities have announced that a census will be taken, beginning at midnight, August 2, of all stocks of cotton in Germany. Helen Hedley, eleven -year-old •daughter of Re -r. Canon Hedley, of Port Arthur, died yesterday of injur- ies received by being struck by a train last Tuesday. An explosion of unknown origin oc- curred in the forward bold of the British freight steamer Cragside at her dock at New York Saturday. The loss was $152,000. It is officially announced that Se- cond Lieutenant Hilgrove McCor- mick of the Prince of Wales Leinces- ter Regiment (Royal Canadians) has been awarded the Military Cross. W. J. Code, a prominent Ottawa 'barrister, died yesterday, aged fifty- four. He was born at Innisville, Ont., and after graduating at Osgoode Hall was called to the Bar in 1884. William Ball, aged 45, an employe of the Light and Heat Commission at Guelph, 'was struck Saturday by a horse said to be driven by George Strome, and almost instantly killed. A Reuter despatch from Zurich says that under a decree issued by the Austrian Minister of the Interior, 40,- 000 Galician, who have taken refuge in Vienna, -will be sent back to their homes within three weeks. The embargo placed by the Cana- dian Government upon the importa- tion of live animals and their pro- ducts, hay, straw, etc., coming from the United States, will expire on August 2• in the case of :several States. • • TUESDAY. • . • - Sit• Robert Borden returned ; to London yesterday from Paris. Sir Janes Murray, editor .of the . Oxford English Dictionary, is dead. Four Turkish vessels were sunk in the Sea of _Marmoa•a by a British sub- marine. The employes of the Standard Oil Company at Bayonne, N.J., refused to accept the company's terms of settle- ment. The City of Antwerp was fined 250,000 francs ($50,000) for popular demonstrations held there on the Bel- gian fete day. Port Severn locks, at the Georgian Bay end of the Trent Canal, were formally opened yesterday for the passage of boats. Edward Tait, b:ickmaker, of Port Hope, Ont., killed his twelve -year-old daughter yestc•rc.ay. He is thought to have ruddenly gone insane. The Royal Canadian Regiment has been ordered to the' front immediate- ly.,'and will be relieved in Bermuda garrison by the 38th Battalion, Ot- tawa, under Lieut. -Colonel Edwards. The IIamilton Machine Gun Assoc- iation has been formed. Money has already been subscribed for 86 guns, and 200 are aloe? at, also the forma- tion of a machine gun battalion with 24 guns to each company of 144 men. The new reerich'destroyer Le Bis- sorehas dem dished the Austrian eel?- marine and aer•orlane depot. on; La- gosta Island (the southernmost ' of the, Dalmatian group in the Adriatic Sett), with the loss to the French of only one roan killed. .The crew af•t e Norwegian sailing ship Brighton, which arrived in New York yesterday from Jamaica, feasted on fried bananas after their ship was struck by lightning. The lightning bolt shattered the foretopmast and roasted the bananas near the base of the mast. PIIO ;aonoNs IN PROSPECT. Steele Currie and Wilkinson Men- tioned for Recognition.. TORONTO, July 2.7. — The Mail and Empire publisbes the following from its London (Eng.) correspon- dent: • "A rumor which reaches ane from a well informed source is that Gen.. Sam Steele will shortly be promoted from the command of the second Ca- nadian division to the command of the south-eastern district of England. This means the command of a large number of British troops, as well as of all the Canadians in that district. Gen. Wilkinson, an Imperial officer, is at present the commandant of the south-eastern district. YOur corre- spondent also hears that the two Ca- nadian divisions will be commanded by Gen. Turner and Gen. Currie, at present first and second brigade com- manders. If these roomers be true, this recognition of Canadian officers bye the Inverted •authorities wilt give general eiitisiaetion.. Gen. Steele's Hotted orgitnlsing abilities ate evident to all visitor to Shorncliffe, TWO WOMEN SAVED FROM OPERATIONS By Lydia E.Pinkham's Vege- table Compound —Their Own Stories HereTold. Edmonton, Alberta, Can. — ” I think it is no more than right for me to thank you for what your kind advice and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have done for me. "When I wrote to you some time ago I was a very sick woman suffering from female troubles. I had organic inflam- mation and could not stand or walk any distance. At last I was confined to my bed, and the doctor said I would have to go through an operation, but this I refused to do. Afriend advised Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable 'Compound, and now, after using three bottles of it, I 'feel' like anew woman. I most heartily recommend your medicine to all women • who suffer with female troubles. I have also taken Lydia E, Pinkham's Liver Pills, and think they are fine. I will never be without the medicine in the house. "—Mrs. FRANK EMSLEY, 903 Col- umbia Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta. The Other Case. - Bestride, Neb.—"Just after mymar- riage' my lent side began to pain me and the pain got so severe at times that I suffered terribly with it. I visited three doctors and each one wanted to operate on me but I would not consent to an op- eration. I heard of the good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was doing for others and I used several bot- tles of it with the result that I haven't been bothered with my side since then. I am in good health and I have two little girls. "—Mrs. R. B. CHILD, Beatrice,Neb. PERT PARAGRAPHS. MOST everybody likes help, but after- ward bow a man does hate the individual who helped him make a fool of himself. Being dead certain - that you can suc- ceed if anybody can is a thing that goes a long way in the boosting line. Yon never yet made a reputation for yourself out of that which you took from another man. Tbere is nothing like low salaries to encourage graft unless we except the man with the jack pot. Good luck is catching, but it isn't catching the fellow who is sitting around waiting to be caugbt. A personally cond- ucted business is the kind that gets at the station mark- ed "Attainment." Success often alig- hts in unexpected places, so cheer up and ping away. Some men :spend so much time talk- ing tbat tbey bave very little oppor- tunity to acquire any information. What's In a Name? Listen, children! That grand quiet So much like ' A young riot, That even tenored calm That you hear, Is the oft year Getting ready With such studied unconcern To do its turn. Yes. Every second year or so We go into a state of coma And rest from the insane Presidential campaign. 1 . But this one Promises to resemble more 1! A. score 0f exclamation pnints! Yes, judging from the hum, 11 It is:getting on some For one that is on the program Listed plain and clear As an off year. Issues to burnt Turn ; 1 Where you wilt, And the bill Would knock a circuit program silly. There is some hilly Going ahead For some on the track That they hope will Lead back To Washington and pie .And plunder, But the thunder Is ominous, And some who never fell before .W111 score A tumble And find their way unaided to the humble Pie Can lie the signs unblushingly, 1j • Sure Way.1+:; • "j'". "Nobody seems to care foci me." "Would yon like to receive lots aji at- tention?" eyos.,i "Get off the train in Kansas and an- nounce that you are a harvest hand." Up to Date. "What is that ,you are carving out?" "A Greek god." "You ought to give It Local color." "And how, pray?" "By placing a bunch 0 bananas in his hand," Ch.1. i1‘C FOR FLETCHER'S CA5TORIA TrIVESDAY, JtILZ 20041of raewae...aeeeo .u• _ INCORPORATED 1855 al T!i reararrre.erarrera.r« MOLSO.NS BANKG. CAiPITAL AND RESERVE $8,800,000 " `'96LBranches in Canada EA General Banking Business Transacted to. tie n m CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDiT ,., BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGS:DANK DEPARTMENT "yn Interest alowed at highest current rate ?9R .44460 W. D. CLARKE, Mesteager, Exeter lereltec'9,t THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL. D., D.C.L., President ALEXANDER.LAIRD, General Manager JOHN AIRD, Ass't General Manama CAPITAL, $15,000,000 RESERVE FM, S13$500,000 FARMERS' BUSINESS SINESS 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 note are supplied free of charge on application. 1* Exeter Branch— H. J.WIHITE, Manager VREDIT;ON BRANCH — A. E. KUHN, Manager. FOR BETTER LIVE STOCK. Neighborhood Organization Needed if' Quality Is to Be Improved. [Prepared by the United States depart- ment of agriculture.] One reason for Americans' indiffer- ent success in animal breeding has been the lack of neighborhood organi- zation. Where a whole community is interested in the same breed of live stock, where practically every farm is a breeding station,' there is first a wider basis of selection than where telly one .farm is given over to that breed. A wider basis of selection makes possible more scientifle mating than is possible where there are only a few breeding animals from which to •select. In the second place, a neigh- borhood enterprise of this kind gives greater permanency and continuity than are'possible where only a few in. dividual farmers are interested. Ithas happened so often in this coni try that it may almost be said to be the rule that by the time. a successful breeder has built up a superior herd stud or flock his life is drawing to a close, his sons have moved to town and his animals are scattered. These animals may after they are scattered do something toward improv- ing the general average of the animals of the community, but this is by no means certain. There are many chances that they will be crossed with other breeds, and the general tendency of haphazard crossbreeding is to produce mongrels. lf, on the other hand, the whole com- munity in which such a breeder lived were engaged in developing the same breed instead of a large number of dif- ferent breeds, his animals would prob- ably remain in the same neighborhood and be crossed with others of the same breed. When this happens the wort: of the individual breeder is not lost, but is enabled to couut in the improvement of the stock of the country. Under our present highly individual- istic methods the farmer who enters upon a breeding enterprise frequently, if not generally, makes the initial mis- take of selecting. some breed which is new to his community in order flint he may have something different from anything possessed by his neighbors. 11 is safe to say that a neighborhood whose farmers behave in this absurd manner will never become distingt:ish- ed for the excellence of itt live stock or of its field crops. A third reason for our lack of suc- cess in animal breeding has already been suggested—namely, the lack of stability of the average Atnericanfarm family. Where the same farm stays in the same family for several geliera- tions, if it happens to be a breeding farm, there is time to build up a fupe- rior herd, stud or flock. In the United States this does not often happen. The sons of a successful breeder have in the past frequently gone to a city to enter upon urbari business or profes- sion. But even this instability of the farm family, which prevents the con- tinuation of breeding enterprises over long periods of time, is in large meas- ure due to a lack of rural organizafinn. So Sudden, "tfo`iv is your health?" "Much better." "Digestion good2" "Is that on invitation to dinner?". The Grumbler. - "I have a lot relati " vee. "All mine are dofistant.distant when I want I. iubli Work.. ,:, P. �7te ease Wey bail, Ellin' irUei � e ver r: , Requiring all the doctor's skill, el:ewe At :first to pull the patient through , .An,.de��l�ater to collect the bill. „te J. A. MASON ARCHITECT; 425 Dundas Street, London,' Guars tee teed cost of buildings; no extras; L years New York experience. Phnir. 2725. Anyone intending to build will di ell o write cue, No charge for cue sulat C J. W. KARN, M. D. C. fid.:. 425 RICHMOND ST., LONDON,. ONTARIO. SPECIALIST IN SURGERY AND IiNITO-U>;tiNaRY DISEASES OF AND WOMEN, D)3, G. F. ROULSTON, L.D,t9., �Jtt DENTIST !$, Honor Graduate of Toronto Uailvert• site. Office over Dickson '& Dare ling's Law office. Closed Wedneee day afternoons. ?'hone Office w^le Residence 5b. 4.r LE. A, R. KINSMAN 12.,I7„+AtD.1),,L Bonor Graduate of Toronto Uaelp ersity l •�, _ oaarls�i t DENTIST I l leliti l Teeth extracted without pain. as any bad effects. Office over Glada. inan & 8tanbury'a Office *aim Exeter, it , „ , -, . /OS - W; BROWNING M. P. Si Graduate Victoria Unlviil3s sity Office and residence Doatinioall Labratory., Exeter; iAssooiate Coroner of Huron .I D ICK•SON & CARLING Barristers, Solicitors Notaries ett9&s veyanoers Comralssionera, $oliaii$ is? for the Mo]sona Bank eto,; t .I,J Money to Loan at lowest rates of levo terest. OFFICE—MAIN STREET ExKTIttia I. R, Carling B. A,' TS. Hla Dle3tas�m MONEY, TO LOQ l i I,f We have a large acniaa.nt of sulfa ate funds to loan on farm and, vile lags properties at lowest sate of 4i tercet„ GLADMAN 8c BTANB,UB3 Barristers, Solicitors, MSs,inEli Exeter, , , , • 1 . ,. � tl Tile Osborne and tlibilert Farmer's Mutual Fire Mo. anoe Gompan Head Office, Farquhar, OIC President 1 1 LI , ROBT. NORMA, Vice -[',resident 1 i THOS. RSATv UIRECTORS, 1el1:i WM. BRO,C1'i , , ; WM, Reng J, L. RUSSELL I - 3, T. ALLIS.0S ; AGENTS m;fd JOHN USSERY Exeter. agent Co borne and Biddulph'-. OLIVER HARRIS Munro agent feel Hibbert Fullarton and Logan. 1 .W 1-.11 Gti 1 ' W. A. TURNH(ULT1 • Secy.Treas. Farquhar' GLADMAN & STANBUR'Y Solicitors. Exeter. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children, Tho Kind, You Om Always Bought' Bears the Signature o