HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-9-9, Page 4se,
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•
Children Cry for Fletcher'S
The Mind Vett RaVe`AlwayS-Bdtiglatrartel. 411.4beeitt
lin use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and. has been Ittilikt:144,3e, hise1"-"'
4,ieRal Atilt,trqs1912,. s Vat 44 'Ulla:40r i•
deceive you in this.
II Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just -as -good" are but
Expettments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Antall
' aud Okildren-Experience against Experiment,
What is CASTOR!
Castoria is a, harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare.
tgorict Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor ether Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it
}has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation,
Elatuleuey, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and
Diar1:6614'006 736."'41,ire,--euleaa.-,:e 'fiat Stom,Art and Bowels,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep,
The Cbildreies Panacea -The Mother's Friend,
1
‘sENUINE CASTORI. ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
,n+
1.4
In Use For Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
IHE cNr.uR CONTRA NY, NW YO RK
T
"WESTERN FAIR "
LONDON
11.ETURN TLGKETS
at reduced fares to London from sta-
tions in Ontario, Belleville. Scotia
Ousaction and South or West thereof.
Special train service and low rat e ex-
curelons from principal points on cer-
tain dates,
Ask Agents for full particulars
Special Train for London will leave
METER 8.02 A. M. on SEPT. 14.TH,
1.5'and, 16ra
TiNiE, TABLE CHANGES
Effecttve September 12th
Information now in Agent's hands
Panama Pacific Expo=
sition
Reduced fares to San Francisco, Los
Angeles and San Diego
/nformation and tickets on applica-
tion to Agents
N. 3. DORE, AGENT, EXETER,
Farmers!
Woven Wire Fence
below Manufactur=
ers' Prices, either
Peerless or Mon=
arch makes
buy at once'
as these prices will iaOrisastar
very long.
6 Wire Fence 28c per Rod
725c
8
„ 6 6 28c 44
Cedar and Anchor posts
10,000 Cedar Posts on hand
-also Anchor Post.
Lumber and Cement
Let me quote you my low
prices on your Lurnber require-
ments, whether large or Boast'
orders, Also Cemea,
• A. J.
CLATWORTHY
uRAN-rom
4,,,,,,wee,,,,,,inaaeaseneeesessoe#### Manager -I say, can we get anything
like a real doctor in this jay town to
attend a sick actor? Village Inhabit-
ant -Sure. Just go to that corner gro-
cery. You'll find a man there who's
t all right at curiae, hams. -Baltimore
# American.
P
A FRIEND IN NEED.
The Pleasure That Came With a Little
Act of Kindness.
"I am one of your new neighbors,
Mrs. Estabrooks," said a cheerful voice
at our door in the very middle of our
first attempt at moving. "Nor I can't
come in. I just brought you a bit of
lunch, knowing you would be too busy
to fix any. Please call on me -just
next door -if I can be of any help.
Goodbyt"
My _husband and I glanced at that
tray with its two bowls of hot soup
and steaming little pot of coffee and
then at each other in dumb surprise.
I
We had just reached that dreadful
1 state in moving when nothing is in
1 place and the things wanted first are
underneath the things wanted last -
that awful moment when a sense of
helplessness, weakuess and homesick-
ness combined smuts clown upou you.
We had not realized that we were
hungry and physically exhausted, but
after sitting down at an improvised
table and sampling that delicious soup
and drinking the stimulating coffee we
suddenly knew what had been the mat-
ter with us. Courage returned.
"Blessings on our neigliborr cried
Ben.
"Yes," I, answered. "She's the jol-
liest caller I ever received. She bas
taught me how to introduce yourself to
new neighbors and win their everlast-
ing gratitude. Whatever happens in
this neighborhood I'll stand by Mrs.
Estabrooks-see if I dontl"-Woman's
Home Companion.
Public Penance.
A quaint old law for the punishment
of petty offenders exists to this day in
Middleburg, the Netherlands, and any-
thing resembling it is not known to ex-
ist elsewhere. Owing to dampness
weeds quickly spring up in the streets
between the paving stones, and here,
under the eye of a none too severe
guard, the offenders are put to work
with a large trowel shaped knife clear-
ing away the upspringing blades of
green. Each is provided with a wood.:
en stool; hence it may -be imagined
that they are not hard driven. Here
men and women alike who have been
convicted work in this manner.
Joy of Anticipation.
The youngest girl of a Baltimore
family was recently much distressed
at dessert to discover that there was
tce cream for dinner.
"Oh, papa," exclaimed the youngster
reproachfully, "why didn't they tell me
this morning that we were gOthg to
have ice cream?"
"What difference would that have
made?"
"Lots," sighed the child. "I could
have expected it all day." -Exchange.
A Roland For an Oliver.
OVER #36 YEARS/
t3S PE Ri ENGE
• •••-e•-a.tarei-eleec
TFIADS, MaatiS
Desidel
Convrtioters &C.
deneene tending a sketch and deeeriatiori WA?
Jittlickliasdertain oar atetatee. tree -whether en
involtoon it probably patent/I5. COnim'artSco,
sialti steteteeileentte HANDBOOK en pesente
isebtfree. sot aacriny"fer sorurinte tattebts.
l'atriatel tiirovali Otitis &.CO. Vi.M1e,tittf
'eartexinottee, elerse. -Ise°
•Sl/11117 1.1r51"4"1
#4.asteetersessla 4 e Olt
titpi "•A fo
4.1lauk $3.4 a.ite". •
testraietaire.
Far Apart.
Mothr-I hear that Harry Smith Is
the Want bey in school, and I want
you to keep as far from bill) as pessible.
• Tonntny-1 do,
ma. He Is always at the
head of our class. -Boston Transcript.
SpRefial.
Petienee-This paper says It Is esti-
mated that the annual catch of )0b-
sters in the and is 125,000,000.
Patrice-Yeu haVealt catight One yet,
have arOu, dear 2 -Yonkers Statesman.
NEhS TRIgS OF WEEK
important Events Which Have
Occurred Duringthe Week.
The Busy World's Happenings Care-
fully Compiled and Put Into
Randy rood Attractive Shape for
the Readers Of Our Paper --- A
solid ileuv's ElOgYite14* • vir ""'
•
ignati,us,Mtsegru, Pttalf-opia,
German spy, was airgigne`in
Thook-
1y±t
Sixty-eight British steamers were
sunk by the Germans during the
three months ending August 12. '
George T. Holioway, Chairman of
the Ontario Nickel Coramission, ar-
rived in Toronto yesterday from Eng -
/and.
Austrian residents have helped
generously in the patriotic campaign
in Halton county, pledging 5 each to
the fund.
Soldiers digging trenches at the
Toronto Exhibition yesterday found
nu Indian skinning knife in perfect
c,ondition.
Two hundred and fifty men from
Elgin County are to form a company
be the 70th Battalion, to be a unit
throughout the war.
The Canadian Press Association
will discuss the question of adding
"journalism" to the curriculum of the
Canadian universitiee.
Sir George Foster stated yesterday
that no orders were given in the
Malted States for portable or collaps-
ible houses for the troops of Great
Britain or the allies.
The Manitoba Government has
changed the Provincial accounting
system, appointing a Comptroller -
General, removable only on two-
thirds vote of the Legislature.
The announcement Was made at
Lambeth Palace yesterday that the
Archbishop of Canterbury last week
had a serious return of the illness
from which he suffered two years
ago.
Madame Rosare Thibaudeau of
Montreal, President of the Notre
Dame Hospital and of the Patriotic
Fund, "Aid to France," has been
awarded the decoration of "Lady of
Grace," by the Order of St. John of
Jerusalem.
THURSDAY.
Paris is planning to celebrate the
battle qf the Marne.
A great guerilla warfare is being
waged against the Germans by the
Russian peasants.
Ten Turks with knives assaulted
two Italians in a, fight in Toronto yes-
terday, wounding them seriously.
Regina ratepayers are to vote on
abolition of Sunday street cars as a
means to reduce the annual deficit.
Native troops desertod the Ger-
mans in the Kameruns and helped to
defeat them, according to advices re-
mixed yesterday.
A rich gold discovery is reported
at Kowkash, on the National
Transcontinental Railway, 300 miles
west of Cochrane.
Stratford and. Perth county branch
af the Speakers' Patriotic League has
vigorously condemned the criticism
of Professor Riethdorf and warmly
commended his work.
The names of sixty-nine officers
killed or wounded at the Dardanelles
were made public in London yester-
day. The name of Brigadier -General
F. C. Lloyd was among those
wounded.
The Island of Ruad (Syria), lying
between Latakyeh and Tarabindus,
has been occupied by a detachment
from the French squadron, which
holds the blockhouse and the Syrian
shore. The French flag was hoisted.
Sir Rodmond Roblin, ex -Premier
of Manitoba, and his.three former col -
Leagues, arrested with him, Dr. Mon-
tague, J. II. Howden, and G. R. Cold -
well, appeared in the Police Court
before Magistrate Sir Hugh John
Macdonald and were remanded till
Friday on a charge of conspiring to
defraud the Province in connection
with the construction of the new Par-
liam.ent buildings.
loitre n theOtte.e11,stot trolley disaste
SA.TURDAY.
A Hungarian etatiatieian give:3 the
Austro-Hung,arian losses to August 1
ais2;050`000000 anti the Italian losses as
04
Pilot Lachance" was blamed by
Wreck Commissioner Demers for the
week of the Rornera„. and fined al 00
for his error of judgreent.
Gen. VQI Kluk has recovered f row
his wound and is Visiting the Kaiser
,Gen. von Is.luk will be
ei en command ot the Silesian Wandd
WO 12 r.
Sir Charles Davidson, Royal Com-
EaUeletner inq,uiring into war per --
chases., bas.concluded his imvestige-
Hon of remount buying in Novo,
Scotia,
Emperor William has conferred
upoe. Field Marshal von Mackeusen
the Order of, the Black Eagle, the
highest decoration within the
Eni-
peror's gift.
Fred Serschagrin, at Cooksbire,
shot his employer, Robert Westgate,
a sawmill owner, and when surreund-
ed by a posse attempted to hill him
self. He will probably die.
Duncan MacLean and W. F. Clan -
an, privates in the Canadian_ Mounted
Rides, were knocked down by a lorry
at Folkestone, . Eng. MacLean was
killed and Cloneis recovering.
It is annouaced that Serbia has ac-
cepted in principle the Entente .pro-
posals for territorial concessions to
Bulgaria, with the reservation that
the new Serbian frontier remain in
contact with Greece in some part.
AIONDAY.
Lieut. Baron von Forstner, who
gained notoriety es a result of the
Zabern incident, bas been killed in
action.
Maaor-General Sir Sam Hughes left
Ottawa for Lindsay Saturday night
to see his daughter, who is ill there
with. typhoid fever.
The Hon. Charles Lister, well
known in London society and a So-
cialist; is dead from wounds received
while fighting at the Dardanelles.
Lloyds announce that the Danish
steamer Frode has been sunk. Cap-
tain Clertimeson and eighteen mem-
bers of the crew of the vessel wero
saved.
Fire which started from some un-
known cause evidently in the skating
rink at Kenora yesterday morning,
resulted in damage amounting to
$75,000.
J. D. McArthur, President of the
Dunvegan & Waterways Railways,
states that steel laying will begin on
the Waterways Railway by the end of
September. •
The Chesapeake & Ohio Grain Ele-
vator "A," one of the largest in the
United States, was destroyed by fire
at Newport News, Va., last night,
with a loss estimated at $2,000,000.
Genial Pasha, the Turkish general
who had fallen. into disgrace owing
to the failure of the invasion of
Egypt, and had been transferred to
Bagdad, has mysterionsly disappear-
FRIDAY.
Gen. Alexiev has been appointed
Chief of the Russian army staff.
Sir Wilfrid Laurier made a notable
speech at a big patriotic meeting at
Napanee.
Enrollment has begun for the Can-
adian reserve militia, of men of 35
and over.
An officer on the White Star liner
Adriatic says Britain has captured 50
German submarines.
Sir Robert Borden, just back from
Britain and France, says his mission
has been accomplished.
Five Turkish transports were sunk
by allied submarines, according to a
statement iss led yesterday.
The Pope, through Cardinal Gib-
bons, has sent a message urging Pre-
sident Wilson to strive for peace.
Mrs. Thomas Walker was burned
to death yesterday while lighting a
fire in her daughter's house at Sarnia.
Passengers on the Holland -Ameri-
can liner Rotterdam, which was on
lire, were landed safely at Amster-
dam yesterday,
The new shelter at Port Hope of
the Children's Aid Society of the
United Counties of Durham and
Northumberland was formally Open-
ed yesterday.
Engineer FileS was killed yester-
day when a Grand Trunk Pacific
freight train plunged through a
eyclone-wrecked bridge into the Min-
dewaski River, Manitoba.
Germany, according to Count von
Bernstorff's instructions, Offers to
Submit the claims for compensation
arising out of the Lusitania and Ar-
abic cases to The Hague for adjudica-
tion.,
An Amsterdam despatch says it is
reported that Admiral yen Tirpita,
the German Minister of Marine, will
resign, and will be succeeded by Ade
miral Von Pohl, now Chief of the Ad-
miralty Staff,
The Magistrato declined yestrarday
to commit • Vice-ProaidenteGetieral
Manager Dickson of the International
Itailevay Company for trial mi a
charge of net catising loss Of
TUESDAY. •
Bessie McKittrick of Toronto, aged
six, was killed yesterday by an auto-
mobile at Willowdale.
N. L. Alderson of Toronto was
found dead of heart disease in a hotel
in Hamilton yesterday.
The Turkish torpedo-boat destroy-
er Yar Hisser has been sunk in the
Sea of Marmora by an allied sub-
marine.
The grain crop in the West is esti-
mated at 600,000,000 bushels by Sir
Glenholme Falcon.bridge on his re-
turn from Vancouver.
The official casualty list published
in London yesterday contains the
names of 194 officers and 4,000 men
of the army and navy.
A private cable from London an-
nounced the arrival at Plymouth yes-
terday of the steamer Caledonia with
the Royal Canadian Regiment aboard.
The British steamer Cymbeline has
been sunk. Six members of the crew
were killed and six were injured.
Thirty-one other were landed safely.
A weight of the clock in the town
of Hamilton Collegiate Institute,
weighing about 800 pounds, broke
loose yesterday and fell through the
floors to the basement.
Sir Sam Hughes announced yester-
day that should a new Canadian divi-
sion of overseas forces be organized
Brigadier -General Mercer of Toronto
will be offered the command.
An Austrian military court has
sentenced to 15 years' hard labor a
shoe dealer, Adolf Neuron, who de-
livered to one regiment shoes which
had already been rejected elsewhere
as unfit for military requirements,
U. S. HOPES DESTROYED.
Situation at Washington is Now as
Bad as After Arabic War.; Sunk.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 7.—That the
torpedoing* of the Allan liner Ilesper-
Ian by a German submarine has de-
stroyed at one blow the beautiful
structure of peace and amity built up
in Washington during the last two
weeks through the efforts of the Ger-
man Ambassador is the belief in
Washington.
Officials were dismayed at the first
reports of the torpedoing of the Hes-
perian, and permitted themselves the
hope that these were not true .until
an official report was received from
Consul Frost at Queenstown this
evening.
It is aow regarded that matters
stand exactly where they did after the
Arabic was sunk by a German subma-
rine. This Government will look to
Berlin to explain how it was that,
'while the German Ambassador here
has represented that German subma-
rines were not to attack liners with -
mit warning and without regard to
those en boardetwice within less than
three weeks liners have been so at-
tacked,
' FloUr Down 50 Cents.
WINNI11$11G, Sept. 7.—A reduction
of 50 cents per barrel on the price of
flour went into effect yesterday. This
followS a reduction of 70 cents per
barrel that Went into effect on Mon-
• day last, and brings the price of flour
down to what it wag at the outbreak
Of the vial., •
MR MEN GET SCARED.
rhey Never Know When a Pardo of
Fear May Grip Them.
Professional aeroplane pilots have
long since ceased. to be ashamed to yen -
fess that they get scared and that a
panic of fear while in the air may seize
them at any time. Why this is so is
the subject •of an article in the London
Aeroplane.
It appears that n filer with an imagi-
nation is neverquite happy, especially
on a long flight in calm weather when
he has nothing to occupy his attention,
One pilot, who is one of the finest titers
in England, has a habit which is Most
disconcerting to his passengers, hew
-
ever consoling it may be to idin persen-
ally:* Ile will fly without a waver for
Perhaps half an hour, then s.ucldefilY
• the passenger will imagine that a storm
has struck them for the machine ''Bl
stand tint on, one•wing tip and then (in
the other, then it will dive terrifically,
and then it will almost loop the loop.
After that it will calm down and fly
for another half hour, when the per-
formance will be repeated. After they
have landed and the passenger has re-
marked on the extraordinary squalls
which struck them when over certain
places, the pilot will casually explain'
that he was merely looking round at
those intervals to see whether his tail
was still there and was testing the
controls to see whether anything was
trying to jam.
"'Cold feet' may lead merely to prop-
er caution, or it may lead to complete
loss of nerve. A pilot mai have cold
feet of a certain machine and so Ily it
with due respect for its peculiarities,
or he may have cold feet of flying al-
together, in which case he had. better
give it up, for if he does not he must
take to 'doping,' which is fatal.
".A. 'particularly malignant disease is
'constructor's cold feet,' in which the
victim, always on the ground himself,
watches every machine in the nir in a
constant state of terror, expecting it to
fall in pieces whenever it is moved by
a gust, and when a machine of his own
or any other make is on the ground, be
is always pawiug round it, finding some
spot at which it may break."
WALL STREET WISE ONES.
You Can't Fool Them by Losing Things
on That Thoroughfare.
While carrying a bar of gold weigh-
ing about two pounds from the United
States assay office in Wall street re-
cently a messenger dropped the little
package from among other bundles he
had in his care. Upon discovering his
loss he retracot1 his steps quickly, but
no sign of the gold Could be found. He
was notified he would have to make
good. The policeman on duty near
the assay office had this to say:
"It will he some half baked idiot
who will pick that bar up. The wise
ones of this street will never do it. If
they saw it on the street they Would
think it a hoax of some kind and leave
it severely alone. 'These very shrewd
Wall streeters can't see their -way a
quarter of a block without matches in
broad dayligbt
"Two years ago a bank messenger
dropped a leather bag with no more
or less than $73,245 in it right in front
of J. P. Morgan's office. corner of Wall
and Broad. Was it picked up right
away? Not for two houes. And who
picked it up? Why a bunch of im-
migrants with packs on their backs
came up Broad street, saw the bag,
kicked it and then one of them, after
a furtive look around, dared to pick
it up.
"He laid down his pack, and so did
his companions, while they examined
it. 1 happened to be watching, and 1
saw the bilis. They apologized ab-
jectly in their jargon when I took it
from them and saw by the. lettering
on the bag where it belonged.
"I didn't let on how cheap I felt
myself. I had seen the bag au hour
before, but refused to -believe it worth
while picking up. Some swift for a
cop, eh"
But he was no exception in Wall
street -New York Sun.
Remarkable Memories.
Thomas Fuller could write verbatim
another man's sermon after bearing it
only once, says the London Chronicle,
and could do the same with as many
as 500 words in an unknown tongue
after hearing them twice, which re-
minds one also of "Memory" Thomp-
son, who, among other remarkable
feats, could repeat from memory the
name of every shop in the Strand in
proper order.
The Mystery.
How cool she looks! The day may be
A scorcher, up to ninety-three,
But in her dress, so prim and nice,
She seems to be a cake of ice.
Though men may rage and tear their hair
.And at the weather almost swear
And go around in garments limp,
She doesn't lose a single crimp.
If Inwardly she feels the day,
• Her outward form a weid don't say,
And nothing seems to muss or stick.
I wonder how she turns the trick.
But if you could her secret guess
You might not envy her her dreSS.
The outside garb is fair to see,
But things internal-hully fie&
A WOMAN'S MEtssAot TO WOMEN.
It you are troubled with weak, tired
teenngii, headache, backache, bearing
Shawn sensations, bladder weakness, cons-
tipation, catarrhal conditions, pain in the
Mei regularly or irregularly, bloating
or unnatural . enlargements, sense of
falling ot misplacement of internal organs,
nervousness, desire to cry, palpitation,
' hot flashes dark ring, undet the eyes,
or a los. of'interest in life, I invite you
to write and ash for my simple method of
hems treatment, with ten days' trial
NI
tgt
ely free end pOitpaid, also refereil
enc
to . nadian ladies who gladly tellhOW
*IT Ave regained health, strength, and
ha net* by thio method. Write to-da7.
feast Mrp. M. Suintnitri, Box, .811
Wier. Oat. 0 0
HURSDAT, SEPTEMBER' Oth's 10_
.INCORPORATED I8%.
69900 MOO OOOOO 461111460
NS 13
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,800,000
96,Pranches in Canada
A General Banking Business Transacted
CMCILiI.AR LETTERS OF CREDIT
BANK IVIONEV ORDERS
•gSAVIN6S' BANK DEPARTMENT
i-filtS Interest sltwenlat littut (iv/ ct nt,te
W. D. C1LARKE. Messinger, Exeter, Etrestsch
tR.
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 Mana
CAPITAL, $15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, $13,500,000
FARMERS' BUSINESS
The Canadian Bank of Commerce extends to Farmers ever*
facility for the transaction of their banking business, including
the discount and collection of sales notes. Blank sales notes.
are supplied free of charge on application. S2
000
ASTA9721a3.
Exeter Branch— H. J. WHITE, Manager:' . a
! MEDIUM' BRANCH - A. E. KUIIN, Manager. ,
PERT .PARKGRAORS.i,.4;t1
'Any one who tries to cut 'some neW,
capers with common sense is certain
to lose out, for style in the article
never changes.
The people are most wearisome who
get busy just for the sake of creating
bustle around them.
The tnau who drinks just because
he thinks it is smart is due to smart
for it sooner or later.
Nothing is more perky and assuming
than a num who has happened to
make a good guess.
If you knew of any get -rich -quick
schemes pay yourself a gratuity for
keeping 'elear of them.
Sometimes a man swears because
he Is mod and sometimes because you •
ate.
There are a bunch of old saws that
don't cut much ice nowadays.
Humor and
Philosophy
Ey DV.NCAJV M. SMITH
PERT PARAGRAPHS.
great things that you do in your
mind only are often the corner-
stone upou which the superstructure
of your failure is reared.
A beauty doctor is as sure of her
lady Victim as the purveyor of a hair
restorer is of a baldheaded man.
Don't be irritable. It simply calls
the attention of the community to
your shortcomings.
Being a good fellow is a great stum-
bling block to any ambition you may
have of making good.
The high cost of living makes plain
living come on the same plane with
high thinking.
But, after all, what is the good of a
blessing if it never takes off its dis-
guise? '
There may be
some difference
between being a
sport and playing
the fool, but it is
not always ap-
parent.
. -
Nothing looks
AN 04 more innocent
HIS J and offenseless
go sif than milk, yet if
not properly
cared for even
milk will Wm.
Some men are so busy climbing that
they never see whose neck they have
their feet upon.'
No matter houfugly a thing, if it puts
on a mysterious air it is sure to be.
come attractive.
To be honest and at the same time
truly sympathetic often calls for more
abilitythan we can muster.
Sewing machines are all out of date
as a piece of' household furniture. A
lady. Was Nondering the other day
;What 'those queer looking things were.
If ther0.10 any-fonling 0 a WOrnan
20 be done She Muth prefero bo the
auerittor herself. ' 41.011.,..;1Jok-
J. A. MASON
ARCHITECTS
425 Dundas Street, London, Guars IV -
teed cost of buildings; no extras; lit
years New York experience, Phe truss;
2725,
Anyone intending to build will do
ell o write rue. No charge for cote
sulat
C J. W. KAP N, NI, D. C. NI,
425 RICHMOND ST., LONIDON,
ONTARIO.
SPEOIALIST IN
SURGERY AND EN1TO-IINFICAtitY
DISEASES AND WOMEN;
DR G. F. ROULST,ON, RR&
DENTIST lea
Honor Graduate of Toronto lhaZvpn*
Sit] . Office. over Dickson '85- Slaw-
ling's Law office. Closed Wednalless
day afternoons., Phone Office hag
Residence 5b.
DR, A, R. KINSMAN TAXA', D.P.1.
Honor 'Graduate of Toronto
ersity I
DENS (
11411.411}
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any bad effects, Office over Gloats
Man & Stanbury's Office Main ah
Exete.r. L L1 1_,
WA BROWNING NE D.., M,
Os P. S., Graduate Victoria Ungs
city Office and residence Doneispingl
Labratory., Exeter _Wad
iA.asociate Coroner of HUI=
D ICKSON & CARDING i '; 1'41
Barristers, Solicitors Notaries OW
veyanoers Commlissioners, tasolititHNO
for the Molsona Bank ON ( IaJ
Money to Loan. at loiv@et rat!! at 110
terest,
OFFICE -MAIN STREET EiSTIMIN 4
I, R. 'Carling B. IQ U f3h, Disinang
MONEY, TO LOAX t 1.1 f 1, I 1
We have a large amount of leis
ate funds to loan on farm and ie
lage properties at lowest at a fay}
forest
SLAT/MAN & STANSURsill 14.!
Barristers, Solieitora, Sim
Exeten, . • • ,
Tna Morn and filbert
farmers Mutual FIN Insio
an Compaq!
Head Offlco, Farquhar. Ow
President, ! (LI , ROBT. NORRIAk
Vicee.P,resident 1 , THOS, RTOA
„I)IRECTORA
BRO,OZ „ i WM., RP,X,
L, RUSSELL 1 J, T. AvLitspla
AGENTS 1
JOHN ESSER Y Exeter:01MA Vas
borne and iiiddulple.
OLIVER HARRIS Munro se rrl IO2
Hibbert Pullarton and Logan.
I ' W. A. TURNIStAli
• SOCY.TrOtio.Farollhili,
GLADMAN & STANBURM
'ZIY1:4.1 1 Solicitors. Ruttier. :MP
CASTOR IA •
For infants and Children.
Tho Kind You Rave Always Booed
Rears the
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