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Exeter Times, 1915-11-11, Page 4THE CHARM OF MOTHERHOOD Enhanced By Perfect Physi. cal Health. The eXperien ce of Motherhood is ate. ing one to most women and marks dis- tinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one woman in a hundred is prepared or un- alereteada now to' properly care for her - Of 'coterie nearly evairiVotian " nowadays has medical treatment at such thms,11:gtonany approach the experi- ence with an 'brinnism unfitted for the trial of strength, and when it is over ler system has received a shock from awhich it is bard to recover. Following !right upon this comes the nervous strain! caring for the child, and a distinct lehe.nge in the mother results. There is nothing more diem:ling than happy and healthy mother of children, red indeed cbild-birth under the right rd need be no hazard to health or auty. The =explainable thing is at, with all the evidence of sbattered eases auta le knee Leann r eeui Ling from ism unprepared condition, and 'with. am- - 'Vs tun e in which to prepare, women *11.1 persist in going blindly to the trial. • Lavery woman at this time should rely eapon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable !Compound, a most valuable tonic and anvig' orator of the female organism. In many homes ranee childless there are now cluldren be- utafase of the fact that Lydia E. Pink- Measn's V eg et abl e leompeund ra e.k e Women normal, bealtbv and strong. nen. If you want special *deice write to ge'dia F. l'inkh am Medicine Co. (condo &Intel) Lynn, Mass,. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a airman and held in strict confidences r•VICAM•••••••••=11•M•••••••.. Toronto = Chicago g Toronto = Montreal FOR CITIO4.G0 t • Lee Totoato -taatlaan. &DO pm, and /1.911 pan; Vat aeave- Torpedo 9:00• am, faaa p m., and 11.0G p.m. daily e lalcaripmene the finest on all trains. 'PANA.2611-pActric ten-PoSITI,ONS = Realized fares to San Francisco, :Los 'Angeles, and San Diego anamoavalammasmainnalinclarrab Farmers! tf!•1111MINNIMINIMEMMEIMINR.,...,/, Woven Ie Fence below ib3mJactur= ers' Prces either Peerie: fir Mtni= arch n es - buy as thes Wire 7 Cedar E. 10,000 -also Art Lunt. Let a prices ca ments, orders, CLk , aer B 3har pc nen", e THE 'EXETER l'imEs THURSDAY, NOVEL UEt BY MMES. Tiny Tillage Sway Calamity or•Success In Human Affairs. Everybody allows what a little thing an inch le, but few realize wbat a big thing it is. Few step to Vostemplate what the difference iutie inch felly metals. A tailor Itnow s wbee an Web .as -eta. el WU Al A 110 has cost bili anywhere from $18 to $80. A dress- maker knows when tux inch too little of the goons. ou hand may cause lier, after an ardugus day of planning, to abandon a anseu patterneforeanethera- An engiueer knows when his train, with its carload of human fretelet,elaas gent one inch off the track ever' h precipice. Some men have minds one" inch off the judgment track, and that causes all their schemes, gigantic and brilliant as they may beto ruu amuck. Beery calamity and every success in life is controlled by inches. Meta rarely go to their doom in an hour. It is inch by inch. a All successes are won incb * inch. As inch by iach the waters of life creep in to engulf us, so inch by Mai the obstacles that impede otir maga ress move aside. The man who attempts to leap over the lisehes to reacb his goal gets there with a broken leg. The word inch has a forbidding sound_ It is because it holds us in its clutches. We cannot ignore an inch or it immediately thwarts our inten- tions. Every simple thing is perform- ed by man, an the saying goes, "with. in an inch ef his life." All diseases move lune by inch. Be- fore the scarlet fever break., out in a child it has been developing inch by inch for nine days. The overstepping of an inch in the proprieties of /ire brands us: If a gal In a theater laugns an Ina too loud the audience looks around and puts upon her the stamp of "not a lady." Deportment is measiered by inches; and woe unto ahe man who fails to observe its dictates. Even in the deela est grief it one goes toe far in bis wallings tbe grief is (pest -loped, if not ridiculed, and sympathy turned aside. An inch too far in the poet's flight to imagination's realms and the world laughs at bis best efforts. A stage Lech in any direction may throw away a man's chances for the world's approval, and yet some men do not even consider the yards. It is the map who considers life within an inch of every detail present- ed who suceeeds.-New Yarn Ameri- can. Record Gales. • There have been terrifingaies dons places all over the worla: In many instances it is, of course, impos- sible to obtain any exact record of the velocity of- the -wind, but the highest ever recorded was repartee. a from Pape Mendocino, Cal., -in Jaiiiiary, 1886, when the anemometer registered 144 miles 'au hour. At Cape Lookout, on the Atlantic coast, there is no telling what the ree, Dal force of the wind migbt have been had not the anemometer blown away after registering 138 miles an heur. This fearful hurricane hit the middle Atlantic coa.st on Aug. 17, 1879. In June, 1.831, a wind of 112 miles was recorded on top of Pike's Peak, Colorado. --Chicago Herald. MagazThes on Warships. If there is one danger that sailors dread more than any other it is an ex - 'in En thepewder magazine. To prevent mach an occurrence a device for flooding that compartment in the least possible time is fitted.to inost big battleships. A pipe below the surface zonnects the maalaine with the sea.' This pipe is closed by .two tapa, which are connected with the deeka In case of danger it is only the work of a min- ute to open the taps, let the sea rash in throngb the pipes and aead the mag- • azine. The water is aftezarar&drained • off by means of a gatter.-London, elan. • No So Often - With hmigry people the table snet of so much eonsequence as the spread. A 'eery fat "man who -had just retire canstimverocera business Wal on day atbteva thisaWvottely greeted 4:044 &iend: "'I °any; oara TAW; SaiticlOielaill. Fng $ineerviSeht-Vecif5ilii • o thin 1 saareely knew year. !Ter; • baps so," replied the grocea cert. lady don't 1Veigir so mach itS. la did nen I was in the grocery taadern-St • Paul Pioneer Press. .. 1: 1! :CIF/ • SiaS. e.J 10 Success. I 13 and xi nb batenn pesiaeirew thei rfEr and hinder and spoil Jour ,Nrtitici, Is going to nrester finale she ecome its shire. surrendeel n ?tee -vrhole being to the paincipledi erel Me ideals of intraie If a boy la lo Master /••:*e'• or et pretession he reeeee ;give to it If e mon: 'in g ,,f tbe peepler tbe we) at ernhE j ;es rot px tirrntr • ,,,ittr.rel 'L:a :tale rin ere ;vbol!e, NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK IMOOME141•11110.0.1.4 Important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week, The Busy World's Happenings Care- fully Compilee and Put .nto Handy and Attractive Shape for the Headers of Our Paper — A Solid Hour's Enjoyment. W HONES DAY. Thomas Duckworth shot it killed his brother-in-law, Harry Strata in a fere/house near Grana,Yellen..Ont. Sir Frederick Smith was appointed yesterday Attorney -General of Great Britain to succeed Sir Edward Cara son. James E, Merriman, a leading St. Catharines citizen, and eery promin- ent in aleeonic eirelee, is dead, at the age ef forty -eve. - Brand Whitlock, IL 9, Minister in 13russe1s, declares that the Germans made no promises to him regarding the sentence of Miss Cevell. An ample supply of..7inter clothing for Canadian troops in England and training,- in Canada is assured by the Militia Department officials. The Travelers' Club, the largest and most influential of its kind in London, Ont., has decided to close its bar at 8 p.m, till the end of the war. Sarnia license -holders have offered $1,500. to the Red Cross Society and the local Patriotic- Fund if the local option -fight is dropped till after the war. Among the nursing staff who had the leonor of attending the King on. the journey home from France last - week was the Canadian nurse, Miss Vivienne Tremaine, attached to tbe Canadian Clearing Hospital. Details are beginning to come in of German atrocities after the taking of Belgrade. Tbe children, women, and old men were shot down, stabbed by bayonet or sword. A certain num- net of soldiers were sent out in par- ties to exterminate the remaining Serbs. John House, aged eighty, an old British soldier, walked the twelve miles from Niagara Camp to St. Cath- arines, followine the 81st Regiment, while his grandson, a Lieutenant, rode on horseback, the latter's offer of a conveyance being disdaitted by the veteran. THURSDAY. • Niagara Falls carried the Hydro- electric by-law yesterday by,a small majority. . • The cities of alechlen and Liege. were bombarded by a French. aviator yesterday_ ' • . • The brst shipment of inolylinenite was made from- Orillia to the' British War Office yesterday. eOrtaria collecticnis for, the British Red Cross now exceed $80.0,000, and are,expected to pass ...the million' merk. The body of • Richard Andrews, xaining prospector, sixty years of aae, wes.feniad yesterday in a boozn of lonstettestanntater near Dryden. lord Derby"' in -a speeeh In New- castleeesterday declared that- Lard Kitchener had by, mistake been serv- ed With a copy of an appealto enlist. Premier Sir Robert Borden held a conference yesterday with -Sill Wilfrid Laurier looking to proposals on. ex- tension of the life of the present Parliament..• - . D. A. Thomas, representative .pf Lloyd George, Minister. of Munitions, -underwent ansoperatioh in. New York 'yesterday and will rest during his trip to Liven:1091- Lieut.-Co/. Armand Lavergne, 'M.P.. P., has declined Major-General' Sit Sam Hughes' offer of- a commissiently raise and command a battalion,- but says he will obey orders as a soldiere Hole. W. T. Wbite, Finanee•Minis- ter, announced that the new .aomes- tic war loan would be issued at the end of this month, and. estfmated, Canada's war expenditure _for the next fiscal year at az5moojkoo. George Cave, Unionist member of Parliament, has been apnointed' SII- citor-General in succession to iSha :Frederick Edward Smith, who las taken the portfolio ef Attorney -Gen- eral, made vacant by the recentresig- nation of Sir Edward Carson. FRIDAY. British teems have taken the/town. Of Bamenda from the enerciy in German East Africa. W. Doman, 14 Alma avenue, To- ronto, a- deekhand, was drowned in Toronto Bey yesterday. Newfoinialaad yesterday VOted on' .the question of . arehibition. • Final results ere not expected ,fora week. Arthur -Forbes at Cliefonewais run' 4EgAtir hAilkiwoont orrth §,ftaI1145P- .'0.40/47fr fe 04 et SWAPO itdishdlosintrrialanAncgrerlaara3e Government will' sari coiefeee neate congress either it the Ila.gue or at Malmoe. • More drastic action is recontbaend- ,ed1V the Executive•Committee of the Canadian Patriotic Fund in regard to deserters and those •dismissed • for ..aange. . Capt. James Thorntovin, believed •bave been fotenerly a Wealthy neneber in Mexico, committed suicide • in a .bumble rooming house in Dach- ess etreete Toronto. .... Mrs. MfAN.gy ,Treble, the 'widely knewei Toretit,,pailagthropist . and founder , qf the Winiam Massey Sebool of Doniestie Science, died in Santa. Baabaaa; tale yesterday. . • aleinit Chevalier Was iiistentlr„alec- trocuthd at a breteefe in • COrnerall, and later in the evening, while Otter Letour was eiplarningehaanit happen- ed,he, too, :wee ,instantey Maurice Kelly, son of Caneractor Thomas Kelly, told . ,Chiensatnitice- Mathere in the Manitoba Law Comte itigniry' hole lie burned a nutaber oe papers beliteging to tbe Brea se the Attorney -General's Department coin& not get them. Geeral Grigorief, who wee in e;narnruand- of Kovno fortreds, bast tbeen sentericed to 15 yeers' imprisoh- nieht for atirrendering the fortress ti Ithe Germans, although he bad sup- plifee of muttitiona and provisions euf•- !Want(' last for considerable time. SATURDAY. land, indicate Minnie movement Mr Carried, Tb e reports that Italy wUl taae r hand lu tb.e corallat in the Bantaus landing an eapedition in Albania re ceive no confirmation in Macial guar ters at, Rome. . The London Tiraea to -day declar€! that a rumor that Field Marshal Kat Kitchener migbt take command ii Frame may bo dismissed as °llaml,. without foundation. • Fire, thought to have beau catisee by a tramp sleeping in the building early this morning destroyed the hie barn on tho farm of laminae Patter* sc. o . south. of St, Mays, ' Fire caused damage estimated al between $50,000 and $7Q,000 to the etorage and manufacturing premises of the United 'Pbotographic Stores, Limited, yesterday in Montreal, The skeleton of a full grown man was found by workmen digging a sated pit OD farm in. Louth Town- ship, on the Queenston and Grimsby road, yesterday. A tragedy is sus- pected, ' The RilSsian Minister to Rouraania returned yesterday to Petrograd from Bucharest arid imeaedietely went into •conference with Foreign Minister Sazanoff, presumably concerning the prospects of. ,Roamanian aid for the Allies. s The Swedish Government has de- cided to distribute the Nobel prizes text week as follows: Masks, Thos. A. Edison and Nikolai Tesla; litera- ture, Remain Rolland; French, Hen- drik Pontophiclan and Troels Lund, Danes, and Verner von Heldenstam, Swede; chemistry, Prof. Theodore Svedberg. • afONDAY. Mr. T. R. 'Whiteside, former M. P. P. for East Toronto. Is dead. The Anglicaai Chureb and one of the public schools at Port Colborne were burned to the, ground'. Windsor ratepayers carried by 20 a proposal to raise $60,000 by deben- tures for patriotic purposes. Mrs. Jennie Lewis was burned to death when the home of Milton Lewis, Chatham, was destroyed. Nine hundred Irishmen were at- tacked on the docks in Liverpool on Saturday whea they' attempted to take passage to New York. The Greek police authorities have discovered a German officer installed at Piraeus with a secret wireless ap- pagatus by which he was in direct censmunication with Berlin and Con- stantinople. •• . •Sergius Sazanoff .retain his posttas Foreign ealinistereof Russia. The flume committee was authdri- tatively. informed of that decision :yesterday. It comes after a week of ,the wildest rumors. • Two moreeHonorary Colonels in the Canadian militia are gazetted. They are Hon. G. ;Howard Ferguson, Minister of Lamas, Foreats, and Mines in Ontario, and Major J. H. Rankin, M.P., of the 28tb' Perth Re- giment. s The list of distinctions conferred in connection with • the Dardanelles operations includes: Major, terripor- ary Brigadier -General 'William Break Lesslie, of Kingston, Ont., created a Companion of the Order of St Mich- ael and. St- Geoege.. • .• TUESDAY. ENEMY IN KRUSEVATi Austro -German Forces HaVe Occupied Large Town. Enemy R&M Also alanaged to Crosa•:. the Morava River—Serbian Main Army is Still Intact and Allied Army in tbe South is Assuming Large Proportions—Serbs flold Babpne. LONDON, Nov. 9.—The Austro - Germans have succeeded in crossing the Morava River, in Serbia, and Gee. von Gallwitz has oceupied Krusevatz, one of Serbia's largest towns, about 30 nsiles due north-west of- Nisb. The fall of Krusevatz . means that the branch railway line to Ushitze, near the Bosnian frontier, ban been broken by the invaders close to ehe • point where it leaves the ;main' Belgrade- Nish-Saloniki line. A,large number of prisoners, ten guns, and :a, lot of war material fell into German hands. The Bulgarians also are advancing frorn the east; but in the west the Montenegrins claim to have inflicted another defeat on the Austrians. The Austrians are said to be concentrat- ing a force of 120,000 men in Herze- govina for an invasion of Montene- gro. The Serbian main army is in - text, ready at the erst opportunity to resume the offensive; and there is now a real allied army in the south. The Bulgarians are attempting to envelop the French force in the Vlan- dovi region, according to information froin Bulgarian soldiers obtained by a Greek outpost in the Belasica mountains, at the junction of the Greek, Serbian, and Bulgarian front- iers, says a Reuter's deepatch from Saloniki. Heavy artillery and rifle fire has been heard at the outpost station. A Serbian official is quoted as de- claring the Serbs are holding firm at Babuna Pass, where all Bulgarian on- slaughts have been repulsed. The pass is said to be piled deep with Bulgarian dead. At one point more than 1,000 'Bulgarians were caught between a crossfire and annihilated. An important British contingent was landed Saturday at Saloniki, where additional landing facilities have been granted the Allies after ne- gotiations with the Greek authori- ties. The belief is still held here that it is not too late to turn the tables on the invaders. The departure for the East of Lord Kitchener, after con- ference in Paris with Premier Briand, Gen. Gallieni, the War Minister, and Gen. Joffre, the Commander -in -Chief of the field forces, bas given confi- dence that the campaign is to be car- ried on energetically by the man who knows the East better than almost anyone else. Advices from Saloniki and other points yesterday show that much larger forces than were thought to be near the 'se* are being landed ataSoloniki And • are*"pioceeding to WM'S Where. ie i -))e,lieved they , can do elle niost, goon- in‘ronp trains are eonthaually Saloniki, but so mecle seerecy is • being mainteieed that it is impossible to comp -lite the nuinber of men: • . • Ofiereport sins that an Apgig-Italn Jan arneyahas landed at Valona •;.(Aas-e • lona), on the Adriatic, with the pur- pose of crossing Albania. The Rus- sians are still concentratiagan Bessa- rabia. to be prepared to make a de- scent on Bulgaria from the east. ; :Meantime, in Northern and East- ern Serbia and on the Montenegrin frontier big battles are in progress. The Austro -Germans claim to be ad- vancing all along the line, and to, hove reached the Morava River,. which has been crossed at some points. In their ,advance they are .picking up prisoners, gluts, and war •meterial. •• „• The .Montenegrins, like their Ser- bian allies, are bghting stubbornly in defence of their country, and report that they have repnlsed an attempt by the Austrians to cross their 'bor- der from Herzegovina, and captured 'fOur guns, a quantity of supplies, and ale* men. They also claim success over' the Austrians in the Sanjak (Novi -bazar), where 'they captured four more geld guns and several hun- dred inen. , In the south the French are report- ed to be over the Bulgarian frontier, 'where they have taken several vil- lages. An Athens' despatch to The Daily Mail says: . A large nun:tile-it' Of Wounded sol- diers are returning to Canada. •• • .Snow fell in Win/eines yesterday to the depth ofnerteiaches.• - Hamilton pence ntetesthat arrests for datinkennesa laye,adecreased by on-thied same etirlY7caoing went into effece.there.' • Enoch Bennie and Geotecre McCabe were drowned ,citt a hunting trip in. a small lake in Shawa.naga Townsaip, ,back of PaereaSound... ,•The ten Frank C. Barnes of • the °Canada, Sa.m.eaie Lines aseleeneved to* haft' tamale/ad in Lake Ontario with her areie of, Seven Mea: Theifrnondon Eietirig'aareVie nub-, lisheios, despatch' frim "Thea'Higue, saying that The Berlin Vorwaeata hap.; Ibeennsuppressed• temporaritlyea Morris on Paris,:offithee84th enantalioa, just. emegetl•in. Brantford' for Winterieg,.w, es, arownea in the Y.- at.C:A. swimming' emol yesterday. ' The London Globe will not be per- mitted to epaeaa for tevoaWeena; for' havbag published an-article'asserting that Lord Kitchener had resigned.' The British .steamers- :leuresie of 2,278 tons, and Glenmore of : 1,656 tons, and Wopawiels of 293 tons, have been sunk. „ The erewsewere landed. Thos. Lynch, a pilot on the Wel- land Canal, fell from a rope , while climbinginto a boat and was fatally crusbed between ' the vessel, and"the " • Official notiee has been posted in. aliscoel-naietes in England stating that ;eucli a :lame, aitenbereoft miiueifs have eineeader jeinedetnnia,•reety %-ratbat Oitne _ taakilInnaXinaab! fin4Aala IS ciafevjt a4 tolimmItftyegtm.IP i0PukY,.34-1P-00, .; U. S. Message, Protesting Against Blockade Published in London, . , . 'WASHINGTON, Nov 9.—The long- awaited note to ,Great Britain on -al- leged ,•British practices interfering with American trade has been Made public. In it the United States says: I. That It does not recognize as legal and effeetive the British block- ade of Germa,ny and Austria-Hun- gary 2. That it "cannot submit" to the curtailment of its neutral rights by measures which am "admittedly re- taliatory, and, therefore, illegal." 3. That it "must insist" that the relations between it and the British Government be governed, not by a policy of expedieney, but by estab- liebed rules of international law. 4. That it unhesitatingly assumes the task of championing the integrity of neutral rights, and will denote its energies to thetnna. • •"• Three Beinians Shot. AMSTER,DA1Va, London), Nov. ilespatah from Beessele, com- ing by way of Berliresayse "A field court-martial nee Sentene- ed ter death three neigia,t)Aapd con- demned another to 12 yearetaieptise .otiment. Since IrebruarY, ',the coodeinned had: "Mae& all „Military transports proceeaiag toeartanetprat • ed ftem the frdat'ataingetWO Mies, 'whieb infoinfation they cornea The returns, att far in Theniday s noptcated to•ttle Anieg. The stens . AP ewhesSerbitins eiciffered. ;a magisifi-- • ceatidefenceiat •Nishe fighting .succep- siveractions': of ithei enemy edam:teed.' Tbelidastestand.:'waseon the-tortified rhillieeneoandethe :town itself. • 'Thee. succeeded an retiring in good order before . greatly,superier forces. • "The sitiation at Uskup is Un- changed. The Bulgarians, after their severe experience in Babuna Pass, ap- pear to be reinforcing the IstiP sec- tion with the object , of continuing their Attaekth on the Frenah, which have for their object the stoppage aia French help for the 'Serbians matheir left. "The allied troops axe now arriving In much mote'esatitifWtory numbers!, ,avineditt,h. e generale, situation promises • Denmark May self Islande to States. enene • :Ft•it• • PYrENIIAGEN via Landon _Kea diseussing the Dani - 1s ils:apsaeatiay,: Councillor neStaXe • , ,a,abaltfasAin PPACti e.,fteseeageeteen . of sellinF the DeneeafeXpac,:rataies, shoela., striae .kaailefe, kens entre,that the ,;nroposial **quid Meetve ,fanera.ble consitleraa gee, as, it is 'useless , to contlette speeaing large seams frail which no improvement results!". instanced Porto Itico -as an ex- ample of .tbe • beneacient . effects of American rule. 4.61 ' Jemeician War Contingent •nINGSTON, Jamaica, Nov. p.— The newlyeelected members of tbe Legialatfire:.enecided yetterday to xir pe eat ft send a big - war co.ntinge, help England, the eolone beatixig Speelal tat tor the . _ peababition election itt Negfotind- ten.cea were ettnarined and etecnted, purpose. Ink OW INCORPORATED 1855 1 MOLSONS BANK CAPITAL' AND RESERVEL$8,800,000 • 96 Eiranches in Cdnada. A,Caneral Banking Business Transacted ClineULAR, LETTERS OP CREDIT BANK aVitNEY ORDERS SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Interest alowed at highest current rate „ W. 0. CLARKE, Niatteerger, Exeter Brearecat 0.0.•••••••••••••.00.0 •0••0•11• • • 11 THE CANADIAN BANK: OF COMMERCE SIR EDMUND WALKER, c.V.o., LL.D., D.C.L., President l JOHN AIRS). General Manager. H. V. F. TONES. Ass't General Manager CAPITAL $15 000I 000 RESERVE FUND, $13,500,008 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. S54. Exeter Branch— 11. J. WHITE, Manager D1ED1T.ON BRANCH - A. E. KUH-.N, Manager. , ar'n'ira.17"Q Clearing Sale OF FARM STOCK. IMPLEMENTS, 111Y, GRAIN .AND. ROOTS On Lot 21, lCon.r12, nlibbart, on Fri- day. November 12th, at 1230 o'clock sharp, '3 choice grass, mares ouppoped to be with 'foal; agricaltural.matched team, some colts and driver; A fine Lover cows land .choice \cattle; 1.9. full line of implements; 17 tons of hay; 1200 bus. of oats and. some mangolds. No. reserve as the proprietor has rent- ed/his farm.. Terms -10 months, credit; 4 per cent off SAorLucaxchs. TE Wee'ltla Proprietor. THOS. ICAMERON., Auctioneer. Auction Sale. OF n'Aaaal 'STOCK, AND qtra.k.E. (BUNTS . Thee. Cameron nee eepeived histrue cloneneom .the andersig.o,ed to ;sell by public. nucleon on •Lot. 3 vencession e, Teckeesmita, on Tee,eclea, alov1e23re at tufaaecipen pares the •follOwinga ifOR§EaasaleaiY!.diare,'"mare rising 6 years old; heavy draft marc Inrrs, old; heavy draft mare rising 5 yeare old eupposed to be in foal' to Chloro dyne; heavy draft colt' easing 2 care old sired by Chloroderne; driving horse 7 yeas old; driving' colt risine 2 years aired by Mac 'Wilkes. a;ATTLIil .AND P4G8-2 grade cows supposed to the in calf; ;Jersey cow supposed tobein calf; farrow cow; 3 steers easing .2: yeaxs;. aeheiiers ris. tug 2 years, 4 spring- calves; also a brood sow, 6 pigs 3 months and* 75. swung bens. • , laiennalaINTS-•Massey-harris bin- der, 7 -foot cut; Masseyetlarris mower toot cut; :Frost et ;Wood/ disc; Frost & Wood seed drill; nroet & Wood Cul tivator; Dein hay loader., Deering hay redder; McCormick hay rake, 2 walk mg plows, lCockshutt gang pion.; set narrows, land, prober, root pulpee, !muffler, lumber evagon, gravel box. uay rack, ibobsleighs, alensocrat, pole and ahafts, , top buggy, open buggy, road tart, hay fonk, 160 ft., nope, car Oinks and slinns,',2 eete lieavy. Agee . ness. !set double light Jenne* aaapi seed sower, a eete whiffletrees, .g neckyokes, sap pan, 100 ameaets awl spileS, step ladder, forks,, hops, sbPvels op tons ef, hay,. mengolds, Cream f3eparat?ata:,;21 Iteating 49.Ye.a. 3bangg.ll?''ARA•aer, 'aca:.oaFac prieter i giving paeretatne. eve TERMae-All sums ne $10' aha unaer, cash; over that amount 12 months' credit on approved joint inotes. A discount ;of 5 per cent off for 'cash., Hay and, roots eanat THOS. CAMERO-N, Auctipneer, ALEX. BUCHANAN, 8r., PXop Red Cross Auction Sale • THE ;BLIMVILLE PATRIOTIC SOCIETY has instructed IR. S. Brown to sell by pubis° auction at WINCHRLSEA on TUESDAY. NOV. 10th. at two. teclocn the follawing donations: one . New Idea ateriure spreadea, -new; two • News 'single walking 'flew; one buggee Se- cond leafed; fis fair ahape; quantity„of turnips by the bag for 'cooking, This riale May be used by peivate partiesio sell stock araarticles 0! any .kind ainpayieg the auctioneer'i fees for Selling.. :Cross donations will be 'sold Witheut `reserve, ' TERM8f-satuns of a1000 and under cash; over Malt /lemma 12 merithe" credit on furnishing 'approve met. .eetes ,cr 7per cent oft for eash fien ef notes. Mess E. I eyweo ,1'resident. alias Ids Ahdrew, Secy, vatriotic So- ciety. • It S. Brown, Atie oneer, ,,,„ J. A. MASON ARCHITECT 425 Dundee Street, Londop, Guars ra-e teed cost of buildings; no extras; n years New York experiebee. rho man 2725. Anyone intending to letiild „will cia ell o write me. No chaiae for cola sulat • C J. W. r. c. 425 RICHMOND ST.-, LONDOnie ' • , ONTARIO. , SPECIALIST SURGERY AND xasetareetsrears DISEASES OF AND WOMEN:, DE, G. F. BOULSTON, MRS DENTIST , lel Honor Graduate .of 06ronto Unravel* tate. , Office. o;nr,•Dickson Dann Ing's Law office. Closed Wedneas- day afternoons. Phone Wise Man ;Residence 5b. es, DR, A, K. KINSMAN 1/21, DMA, Honor Graduate of Toronto 3311101! amity .1 DENTISI r 1141 1114 Teeth extracted without pais., mg any bad effect. Office over GAWP 'roan & Btaniburra IA Esetfirii L I - WA BROWNING M. 11., A 11 el I P. as Graduate Victoria Manage sity Office and residence Domisi,a:11Ai Labratory., Exete:r„, A.seociate Cormier of Huron . 4 D IOKSON & CARLING '1' LVA Barrister's, Belleitore Notaries IOW vey amens COM whesioners, for the Monona •Bank eta, Money to Loan at loweet rate* ofhp tenet. OFFICE -MAIN STREET BXI 1. II, 'Carnets B. A; L. H. pi:boa MONEY, f 1, We "Saila si" •ale tende to loan on farts 4&84 Lageproperklea I•owest. te47ast,:• (11.4..H4bi&N • Barristere, t'Solicitora, xethrd De Worn° and flibiler11.' Farmer% Mutual :fire 1115'ILP UGC Gompann . Head Office, Farqukip117, President ItOBT. NORA,* Viee.-,Preeicient , 1i1Ios.'11.1frAlk , ,D1REOTOHiS'; ' afel. BRIaCK „ WM. Raaan J, L. RUSSELL !J. T. AL1.46#111 AGENT'S JOHN ESSER! Exeter. t.1,4*1104 'borne and Iiiddulph. OLIVnat Ineitetis meranlaseitene'ana .Elibbert Fullerton and negate• s . ••••• • .1 1•4••,• f W. A. TUENH111.11 A • 8,00y.Trests.farciuhatte GLAMMAle & STANSUII1C Bolicitota. Exeter. al..7a44 ... Scientists have pleedged taelr sidnot, the 'King by idevoting all thole dnere 4ieseto the task of bringing the vettir to a victoeious tonclusion, In ' the meantime, the health and nerVen "or eur brave aolaiers And their frieeds, at home s suffering, and PAHAran is the ,one perfect xeniedy ter tiervesi, Pifte cents at your druggists; or Isn Imell from the Georgian, Man Ogre pollingwood ()kat'