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Exeter Times, 1915-9-16, Page 4o atilt 1 IV 1 ST ......,,.tor..,z,,, a i.....tali le et 'I6ei!ialnelweave 'igl•ed'f$tn's. r"c et'a6fePi'r aiut ostit°oFii4 ainitatuuellteRice r , eingibestemacesaedBow sof Pr(16idtl,1G'S'Dite5ti01i,'ekeett 4, nessaallestesntdasiteltterf OVRatt.tdargitine IaorNineral. l No''i' NARCOTIC. Mothers Know That Getutitit Galatia Bei the Signatur of ..Reer,ite attlihallEZEZ Jnivra 494,41cuallt sdklSrei'ttri"*` gorei, Arm, Rrevren?n rte: it ErfecGRemedy Csitlipe lion, Seer Stemadt,niatrkaeal Worms,Convulstonefevensle ness.aryl LOSS OF -SLEW ttatSitnd@ Signatura=or, TeigeNtrisUlagerm n'. 21tONTREAb&NLV4YSIIN th Use dor Over Thirty Years ;. ;f 1 "WESTERN FMR" .LONDON .ET J1rea TI11i elS E reeireced fares to j eodtai from sta- tions in tuntario, Belleville. Seotia Junction and South or West thereof. ,t p cial train cervica and lava at ex- >itcraions from principal points on cer- tain dates. A,ek Agents for Stall; partiieelars dp"e.ial Txza:in for London will leave 3a'.GTF.;Re .US A. M. on SEPT. M4naa, TI.Pt(LE4 TABLE CHANGES Effecttive September 12th Ira erinatien now in Agent's bands Panama Pacific Exna= sition .if'.e used fares to Sen Frenciero, Los Singeles and San Diego Information and tickets on applica- tion to Agents N. J. DOsRE, AGENT. EXETER, Farmers! Waver Wire Fence below Manufactur= ers' Prices, either Peerless or Iia:�} = arch rnakesc, buy at ®rape as these prices will not las very long. & Wire Tenser ".3@c per Bosh .f 7 "' 6. 2 c n C4 2ec 46 Seder and inciter posts O,p0>3Cedar Posts on hand --also Ancleos Poste. Luce and Cement Let me ceue a you may law prices on your Ltetsrber require - t ent% whether bare ea areal! orders, Also Cerue;ite _ A. J CLATWORTHY GRANTOt* OVER £* YEAR: ( £7S PERI£aVCE GUNPOWDER. Sam, to Which the Perforated Grains Are Three inches Long. The bigger the gun the bigger the grain of powder. For the rifles the men cagy the grains are half as big as a pinhead. For the largest guns they are three inches long and three-quarters of an inch thick. Every grain is per- forated lengthwise. Small grains have a single bole, while the largest sizes have seven. These !totes regrflate In a wonderful way the rapidity with which the pow- der will burn. L yon light, a scrap of paper all round the edge it Will burn toward the center and the burning sur- face will steadily decrease. If, how- ever, you made a hole' in the center of the paper and start the conflagration there the flame will steadily grow, and the most rapid burning will take place just before the fire has reaebed the out- er euge. reels is the erect principle which governs the arrangement of the perforations in big gunpowder. The burning starts along the surface ex- posed by the perforations and spreads always faster as the hole is enlarged, burning fastest at the instant it is con- sumed. It is not intended that the charge in big gars shall exhaust its force in- stantly, says William Atherton Dupuy, writing on "Powder For the World's Guns." The beginning of the explosion starts the projectile on its way. The explosion continues, and as the projec- tile gains speed the force behind it con- tinues to push. The powder is burning fastest and mashing hardest at the in- stant the projectile reaches the mouth Of the gun. At that instant also it burns out and exhausts itself. Its work is done.-Pearson's Weekly. Slight Mistake. For file minutes they bad not spoken. "Mary," be said at last, "I can bear the beating of your heart." "Pshaw! That is a man on the floor above beating a rug.'° Shut Out From the Sources. "No wonder Jones is such an igno- campta." "When/54Aresson;"' "He sbaves•beetself, bas his wife cat his hair and doesn't read the sporting Paget" Keeping Employed. "He seems to he very busy.'" 'He always 'What does be do?" "Tries to make peopte believe that be is of sone importaace." ` ,odern. ' °FIs this house for stile?'" "*Yes," "Pltznlbing ,irt' geed order?" "I should' cap so. Plumber looks aft- er it every weep!" Fine String. Simple Sinfaii went .a -fishing In his mother's water Pali And. as you have doubtless heard it, .Didn't catch a single whale,. But the sequel. wasn't printed In the little story book, For he gnita string of microbes Past as he could bait his hook TRADt. MARMS DESIGNS Coi°vntairrs ac. szarceeacesalt O V (tet, mad reisert1ttsn mar retro itf /Mee/Nein am osenion are elr teteesr an 31nrot firm btg oyntent mot._ Cara1tice. ,'rntuetwi dontderet(ai. i Pailia2 OreP c1'..Yli oDe'M rte.- Oifloet steed iersacwini eHtn. ifeluats takdrt -through Mull* Arc Seceivt naIL;a, WIt3wutchars�e,,iiuiho ' e i i Rm a o. At iaiud'1,ratetl weekly. Largest .era• m a 7e K rot ;detama, rr aI any ie;_ +se. R. r m lift a a ;veleta, eft cad . .� v=t �Yt"r (�a� tozepati.d.y.New yy�k V !IL.,VieolAngtin.I. LS Taking NoChances. "I forgot to 'ask you one thing," said the prospec- tlre city bourder. ''What is that?" asked the farmer. your ileus lay strictly 'fresh eg»s T, THE EXETER TIM 5 THURSDAY, SEF TE.M13.17.316tbi, IIMP" NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK Important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week, The Busy World's Happenings Care -- ?Fully Compile! :and Put Into Handy and 'At tractive Shape for the Readers of Our Paper --- A Solid flour's Enjoyment. WEDNESDAY. Three lives were lost in a collision in Halifax harbor between a tug .and a warship' s' boat R1 -Chard 'Iiow"a4b; ` ±'6 years; 45 Galt avenue, Toronto, was drowned in Coatsworth's Cut yesterday. The provincial police are watching pro -Germans who are using moving picture shows in Canada to stimulate sympathy for the Huns. Wm. McAllister, a young employee of the Soo Dredging & Construction Co., fell from a dredge near the locks and was drowned. A strong earthquake has occurred in San Salvador and Guatemala, Ju- tiapa, capital of the department of the same name in Guatemala, has been ruined. Sir George E. Foster, Mr. N. W. Rowell, K.C., M.P.F., Col. T. D. R. Hemming, and Prof. L. W. R. Mulloy addressed a monster recruiting meet- ing in Renfrew. The Township Council of Wallace, in response to a large and representa- tive petition, decided to contribute $5,000 to the Patriotic Fund, adding two mills to the taxation. An Athens despatch says that a British submarine operating in the Sea of Marmora has sunk a Turkish transport which was carrying 28 -cen- timetre guns from Constantinople to Gallipoli. The French steamship Bordeaux has been torpedoed and sunk twelve miles outside the mouth of the Gi- ronde, off the western coast of France. Her crew was taken aboard a pilot boat. In the Exchequer Court Mr. Justice Audette handed down a decision awarding the owners of the Carslake Hotel property in Montreal, bought by the Government for a postal sta- tion, $288,750, saving nearly $37,- 000 37;000 of the price the Government had appropriated for it. THURSDAY. Ten persons were killed in Tuesday night's German air raid on Britain. The entire 2nd Canadian Division is being supplied with the Ross rifle. The war has compelled King Al- fonso of Spain to abandon his plan to visit America. British workmen in congress at Bristol pawed a resolution justifying the allies' part in the war. Thirty-five thousand Hebrews took part in Jewish New Year festival in Toronto at sundown yesterday. Erglish-speaking parents are evi- dently boycotting Ottawa University, ae .,shown in first form registrations. Four children, from four to ten years of ace, were roasted to death yesterday in their home near Lorette, Man. The Duke of •Connaught, as Com- mander -in -Chief of the forces, bas left for the west to visit mobilization camps. Mrs. R. C. Drew of Smith's Fairs was drowned yesterday while fishing near her summer home on Star Is- land, Rideau Lake. Sir Wilfrid Laurier bas gone into Water Street Hospital, Ottawa, where he will undergo a slight operation to cure an old standing tooth trouble. Col. J. J. Carrick, M.P., Canadian representative on Sir John French's staff, stated yesterday that the second Canadian contingent will probably be in the trenches next month. Sir Redmond Roblin and bis three former colleagues, accused of con- spiring to defraud the Province, were remanded again yesterday until -Mon- day. Dr. Mcntague was too ill to appear. As a result of the Sultan's expos- tulations to Prince Ernst Hohenlohe- Langemburg, acting German .Ambas- sador to Turkey, four hundred men from the Krupp works arrived at Constantinople. FRIDAY. R, Howting, a Brantford contrac- tor, while going home last night dropped dead when about a block away from his home. The British steamer Mora was sunk Wednesday afternoon by a Ger- man' submarine off Penmarch, De- partment of Finistere. The local Munitions Court fined 245 workmen at the Cammell Laird Company's works 20 shillings each for refusing to work overtime. Hon. W. J. Bowser, Attorney -Gen- eral of British Columbia, was oper- ated on yesterday in Vancouver Gen- eral Hospital for nasal trouble. Light frost was reported from sev- eral points in the West Wednesday night. The weather is clear again, and harvesting is in full swing. General Friedrich A. J. von Bern- hardi has been assigned to a field command at his own request, by Em- peror William. He has already left for the front. • More than 2,000 Jewish soldiers are in London on leave •from the front to; celebrate the Jewish New Year's Day in London, among them, being several Canadians. Sir Arthur Evans, archaelogist, has been ebosen _resident of the British Association for the Advancement of Seiezace. The association will •-meet next year in Newcastle. Five years in Kingston Peniten- tiary'was the sentence meted out by Judge MtWatt yesterday to Jacob Stamm, convicted of abducting Alice - Weston, a 15 -year-old Sarnia girl. SATURDAY. A German spy was executed yes- terday in tbe Tower of London. Sir William Van I'vrne's condition took a -turn for the worse about Mid- night. An order -in -Council has been -pass• ed bringing the Canada 'Comer 'c p ah, e Act into effect in Perth County. Provisions for restocking many of the Ontario lake waters with fish are w,: s boing considered by the I rovinel. authorities. W, 3. Beatty, a f:tt•nser near Thomas, was instantly killed yesterSt day by a kick from :a frightened hors; n thateity A German aerial squadron, con sistiug of six Zeppelins and severs aeroplanes, attacked l.it;a on Wed nesday night, Ignatius Lincoln, the self -confess ed Germau spy, has been ordered ex' tradited froth the United States t• Great Britain. Captain P. M. Campbell, of Coiling wood,a pioneer Great Lakes marine: 'andshipbuilder, died yesterday at tie age of sixty-nine. r`'I5..,.Cbai,Ies 61. Boucher De l3oucb• t.ylie, p.14i.G., Canada's oldest Sena• ot, died yesterday at Montreal, 'aged nicety four years. Otto Heinonen, a Finnish farmer, near Whitefrsb, after twice attempt- ing to shoot his wife, took strychnine and died in an hour. A few days ago a Zeppelin, whiisl manoeuvring in the vicinity of Br'us•• sels, was suddenly attacked by British aeroplane and totally de - strayed. Hon. G, Howard Ferguson, Min- ister of Mines in Ontario, in a state- ment yesterday declared that all nickel mined in Ontario should ,11e re- lined here. An explosion of gasoline on the Newfoundland steamer Hiawatha at Halifax yesterday caused the death of James Saunders and William Hooper, seamen, and Capt. Hubert Clarke, master, all from Burin, Nfid. MONDAY. The attendance at the Canadian National • Exhibition at Toronto totalled 864,000. Harvey Warner, one of the most prominent citizens of Napanee, is dead at. the age of eighty-two. Several Russian seaplanes attacked a small German cruiser off Winlau yesterday. They dropped eight bombs, all of which missed." - Lieut. Morrow Alexander of the British aerial service, son of Prof. Wm. J. Alexander of the University of Toronto, was killed in England.. Sir Wilfrid Laurier was reported last night much improved in condi- tion, the pain of the wound having abated, and the swelling subsided greatly. Mrs. William McKay, wile of a farmer near Sarnia, was instantly killed by taking hold of a power wire that bad fallen across the back of her horse. The death occurred suddenly at Vaucouver• Saturday night of Mrs. Priscilla Grace Farling Teetzel, wife of Hon. Mr. Justice Teetzel, formerly of Hamilton. Col. Henry Watterson, famous edi- tor of The Louisville Courier -Journal, says President Wilson of the United States may get an -ry if Germany fools too much. Wm. H. Ingram, Postmaster in St. Thomas for more than 20 years, died. at his home, Elizabeth street, last night. He had been in -poor health for several years. The British steamer Orania yester-• day returned to Corunna, Spain, after • having received notification by wire- less shortly after sailing that a Ger- man submarine was off Cape Finis- terre. The London Morning Post an=' nounces the death of Sir Claude Mac- Donald, who was British Minister in Pekin during. t`he Boxer trouble. in 1900 and was later Ambassador to Japan. TUESDAY. The Toronto Flying School will shortly move to Bermuda for the winter. The International Joint Commis- sion met at Kenora to consider the ef- fect of water levels in the Lake of the Woods. This year's grain crop is estimated as the highest on record in total yield, in average per acre and in acreage. Rev. Gregory Kernahan, former Chancellor of the Archdiocese of To- ronto, died at Collingwood, at the age of 35. The British Press Bureau an- nounces that it has been decided to - send eight parties of munition work- men on a four days' visit to the trenches. An important conference took place at Ottawa between the Militia Council and representatives of indus- tries and finance respecting Canada's furnishing of munitions. The steamer Pomona 'reports that at 10 o'clock Sunday morning it wit- nessed the sinking of a British steam- er flying signals of the Belgian Relief Committee. Ten of the crew .were res- cued by steam trawlers. In reprisal for the recent bombard- ments of Luneville and Compeigne by German aviators, a squadron of nineteen French aeroplanes flew oyer the town of Treves yesterday morn- ing and dropped a hundred bombs on it. The Britsih Press Bureau an- nounces that an aeroplane• dropped bombs on the Kentish coast yester- day afternoon. Four persons were injured. The hostile machine was driven off by British naval aero- planes. Reservists on Burning Ship. NEW YORK, Sept. 14.—Between 1,600 and 1,700 Italian reservists are passengers on hoard the Fabre Line steamer Sant' Anna, bound from New York for Mediterranean ports and reported afire at sea, according to the local agents of the line, James W. Ellwell &''Co., here to -night. The ship also carries a large cargo Of mer- chandise. The Sant' Anna registers 5,814 tons, and is owned by ther I+abre Line. Capt. Pavy is In command, Greeks and Bulgnrs Clash. KAVALA, Greece, Sept. 14.—Re- ports of a frontier skirmish between Greek and Bulgarian patrols near Fa- tarns have been officially confirmed,. and an investigation ordered. German aeroplanes, itis said here, are co v in nstan'1 II t Sorbian flying over and Bulgarian territory from Orsova; Hungary, to Adrianople. Each of them is loaded to its full capacity, ac- cording to the reports, with supplies for the Turks, tMY1OU1S RAILWAY Battering Drive Compels Rus- sian Forces to Retire. Successes of Russia Against Aus- trians in Galicia Make Xt : Likely That the Germans Will Rave to Send Reinforcements There — Southern Teuton Armies Striving. to Reach Kovno, LONDON, Sept. 14.—By one of those battering offensives which, al- though costly in men and munitions,.. have invariably been successful, Field Marshal von Hindenburg's army has at last set foot on the Rovno-Petrograd railway between Vilna and Dvinsk. The whole Aus- tro -German forces have been striving to gain this railway since the fall of the Polish fortresses. The offensive, which began toward the end of last week, was carried on from three directions upon Dvinsk and the railway on either side of the town, while farther south the invad- ers advanced towards Vilna. The Russians, before superior forces, sup- plied with the usual mass of artil- lery, were on Sunday forced back to the lake district, which the railway penetrates, and are now making a stand there. Simultaneously, the Germans pusb- ed their way eastward. toward •Slonim and Pinsk, both of which are on roads which join the main railway line, while the Austrians, with whom there are many German units, are fighting hard to reach Rovno, the southern terminus of the line. With this railway partly in the hands of the Germans, it is probable that the Russians will be compelled to make a farther retirement, al- though their offensive in Galicia, , which continues, might save them by compelling the Germans to send re- inforcements to this region. There is now no doubt of Russian successes in this district, following the Austrian admissions of retire- ments, which bear out the Russian claims. The Russian positions here are well prepared. The eastern bank of the Sereth, from which the Rus- sians are delivering their counter-at- tacks, is a veritable fortress, from which the Russians emerge every time their opponents approach, tak- ing heavy toll of them: in killed, wounded, and prisoners. According to, the Russian accounts, nearly 30,- 000 prisoners have been taken in the fighting along this river. As for the rest of the entire front, however, Petrograd, in summing up the situation, asserts the Austrians and Germans have been "dashing from one part of the line to the other in an effort to strike a decisive blow." This latter assertion is significant. in that it recalls the consensus of allied military critics after the fall of Novo Georgievsk, the last stronghold of the Russian main line of defence, following' the ,caelture of 1$ other' fortresses since Warsaw. "What'will the Germans do next?" was the ques- tion predominant in everyone's mind. And the reply of leading military ob- servers, including even some in the Fatherland, who were at a loss to guess at any tangible possibility, was: "They do not knew..!<llemseAves; they will have to feel their way." But even if the Teutonic allies had their minds upon certain principal objects, such as .Riga, Petrograd, Moscow, Odessa, Vilna—the sudden turn of the Russians, reinforced and supported by apparently adequate communications, is bound to result in sweeping changes in the central powers' plans, and optimistic critics here predict the complete frustration of the main program, provided that the Russians will be able to make good their gains of the last few days. That strip of Galicia which still is in Russian hands, continues to be the scene of most furious fighting, with the Slays evidently retaining the upper hand as attackers. The Rus- sian victory at Tarnopol several days ago, although contradicted by Berlin, can be no longer doubted, since the official Austrian War Office statement admitted it on Saturday. TWO FORTS DESTROYED. French Mortars Rave Shown Effic- iency at the Dardanelles. LONDON, Sept. 14.—An optimistic rumor is again afloat, probably due to the statement recently made by Lord Robert Cecil, Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs, that the allies are not far from a -great success in the Dardazielles..According to the French official report the last five days have been very calm. "In the north zone the Turks on different occasions have opened a violent infantry and artil- lery fire, but without leaving their trenches. In the south one there is nothing particular to report outside 'the efficiency of our trench mortars, which have destroyed two small forts and caused sensible losses to the enemy.,, The alleged repulse by the•Turkish coast batteries of tayq hostile,destgooy- ers wbich bombardedthe def(enders'• left wing frgm: the Narrows is cheone •icled in the statement issued yester- day by the Turkish War Office. • Armenian Children .Sold. ROME, Sept 14.—The Agenzia Na- zionale bas received a telegram from its Bucharest correspondent stating that 800,000 Armenians from Asit Minor are, now interned in Turkey The women, the despatch says, have been placed in 'Turkish harems act the children sold at ateition in Oon eta'tinople. Accidentally Electrocuted. ST. CATHARI1 ES, Sept. 14.—AL' Italian laborer named Antonio Mon tenureo, employed on section 3 of the Welland Ship Cantil near •Merritton, was electrocuted Saturday' afternoon, when he grasped a live wife. Coroner Vanderburgh opened an. influest, which was adjourned until next week. e,„eeeeeseeeneewooteeicallelll INCORPORATED 1855 LE M'OLSONS BANK CAPITAL AND RESERVE X8,800,004 96 Branches in, Canada A .General Banking Business Transacted CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT BAN`" k 14't'SiE IDOnEAs; TAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Ictethhf (lite W. ID. C,L,ARKE, Manager, Exeter Braricih THE CANADIAl\T BANK. OF COMMERCE SIR EDMUND WALKER.C.V.O..LL.D., D.C.L., President - ALEXANDER LAIRD, General Manager JOHN AIRD. Asst General Masagode CAPITAL, $15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, $13,500,00541 SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS Interest , at the current rate is allowed on all deposits of $1 an& upwards. Careful attention' is given to every account. Small acctszntai, are welcomed. Accounts may be opened and operated by mail. . Accounts may be opened in the names of two or more persons, witb. - drawals to be made by any one of them or by the survivor. S2/X Exeter Branch— H. J. WHITE, Manager'f '`` 144,1 DREDITON BRANCH - A. E. KUHN, .Manager, t•. Notice to Creditors in the .matter of the estate of Stephen J. Etherington, of the township of Usborne, county of fHu- ron, Yeoman, deceased, Notice is nereby given pursuant to Statutes in that behalf that all cred- itors and others having claims ag- ainst the. estate of Stephen J. Eth- erington.. who tied rbn or about Sept. (it,h, 1915 are required on or before October 2nd, 1915, to send by post prem pard or deliver to Messrs. Gladman & Stanbury, of the Village of Exe- ter, Solicitors for the Executor of the said deceased, 'their christian and• turnames, addresses and descrip- tions,,,tbe full particulars of their claims, the statement of their ac- counts and the nature of the secur. teties, if .any, held by them. And further take notice • that after said Last mentioned date the said Exe- cutor will proceed to distribute the assets of the deceased among the par- ties entitled thereto, having regard Duly to the claims of which he shall then have notice and that the said Executor sball not be liable for said assets or any part thereof, to any `poison or persons of whose claims notice shall not bave been received by him at the time of such distribu- tion. GLAI)MAN & STANBURY ' Solicitors for Executor. Dated at Exeter this 14th (ley of Sep- tember, 1915. . . HIS WiFE'S TRIUMPH. A Record That Used to Inspire Green, the Famous Historian. It has been the fate of many men of letters to have i11 health bearing them down as they struggle on toward lit• erary achievements.- Thus beset in re• cent times were Stevenson, Richard Jeffries and J. R. Green. Each of these, it happened, had a high hearted wife to keep him up, even to help him with the actual labor of writing. "The Life and Letters of J, R. Green" show forth a great and sweet man. They show, too, a wife whose sympathy and forti• tude helped to' Make bis' accomplish meat possible. In copying the vast amount of nian• uscript •of her busband's books Mrs Green contracted writer's cramp and was forced to stop using her right band Tbis looked like a final obstacle in the way of the inbaiicl, who did :such of his thinking in bed and could not write himself. But Mrs. Green set to worl; at once learning to write with tar -left hand. One of, her first practice pages, which ehe was abbut to destroy with 1110 rest her husband took quietly and put in bis pocket, Yeans afterward ashen ill health seemed ,unee:a•ta le and in dis- c'oorngemeut be felt that he could not wotik lee used to takeout that piece of paper, as living accord of bis wife's tri umph over difficulty. When 110 saw the painful, patient stroke's by which Airs. Green bed learned to write ,with her left hand be could work on with' intnething near to inspiration. PILES CURED at HOME • by New Absoriitio I1ethod. If ,,you 'suffer, from bleeding, itching; . blitz . or protruding ilea, send me your address,. and { I ,W ll tell you bow to cure your, self at Hoare by the absorption tnr;attnent ; ala 1 vr�i11 also send sone of "this home treatment; free for €ria!',• ' itli referenced front your own locality if re, guested: Immediate relief and permanent ' tc p urs a sure' • SI. Send o xnoney; but "tell others of his offer.: Write to -day to Mrs t}�, *Sttinluetts, Box p 84I Windsor, #Z.Ntt • . ,w J. A. MASON ARCHITECT! 425 Dundee Street, London, Gnaw's>1tc. teed cost of buildings; no extras; 11 years New York experience. Phez4.uv 2725. Anyone intending to build will in ell o write me. No charge for eorg+i sulat C J. W. KAP N, M. D. C. M.D.C.M. 425 RICHMOND ST., LONDON, ONTARIO. SPECIALIST IN SURGERY AND I:NIT0-17311NART ; . DISEASES OF AND 'iWOi1EN; DR G. P. ROTJLSTON, L.D.S„ DENTIST ,at Eoneir Graduate of Toronto Uab= Sity. Office .over Dickson '& Dare- ling's Law office. Closed Weenees- day afternoons. Phone O1fie 563 Residence 5b. • LR. A, R. KINSMAN ILEA, 1IID„1, Honor Graduate of Torrents 'm'- ► ersity•1 i-e_t_aI:.,H,i1.,,d DENTIST i 1'ol_,1<l Teeth extracted withouf epistle. Q any bad effeota. Office over GIM roan & Stanibury's Office kflain *& Exeter, 1 , 401 1 - W: BROWNING e P. 64 Graduate Victoria Using! city Office and residence Dpmtioj 4 Lahratory., Exeter, lassooiate Coroner of Huran (41 O ICKSON & CARIJING ; ' ' l''11N Barristers, Solioitore Nato/ice �i' veyanoers Commiissionere, +iiol for the Molsona Bank eto4 l .lsl Money to Loan at lowest rate* mat LW' tereat4 , . c 1 ) OFFICE -MAIN STREET Emma I, R. Carling B. A� 4. Bi, Dit�ienl 3 MONEY TO 'LOAN i 1141 F- 1 We' have a large amoiaat o8 Stir ate funds to loan on farm anis !ill" lage properties at lowest rata!',( �m tereatn GL'AD,MAN & STANIB,U 0.411. Barristers, Solicitors, ',]1 igje •• Q Exe tars , Tde Usborne and Mart Farmer's Mutual Fire lam ante Gompaud Head Office, Farqulrgi', Otiln President t i H., R . 1^10BR, Vice -President 1' ;, THOS. •R'EAO J3IRECTORA - Mei WM. BROI0f ,c;I; ' i WBS, liP J L,• RUSSELL 1 l IT T. ALLI AGENTS - ic,la JOHN ESSERX Exeter, vend' US" bornen a dt 'd u P �1 d 1 ird OLIVER SARR 1 Bn aR a cad: fit Hibbert Fullerton and `Logan,. i.it:ty 1 Secy. ,Tr IIa F uhaatt GLADMAN & STANSURai, ,* Solicitors. Exeiter. • ret CASTOR IA For Infants chum: The. 1Kind You, Have Always *qv inforrsvalwarom