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Exeter Times, 1916-8-2, Page 4
WHY WOEN JITE LETTES To Lydda E. Pinklaam Medi. vine Co. Wormer who are well often ask "Are the letters which the Lydia E. Pinkhaii M®dieine Co. are continually publishing, genuine?" "Are they truthful?" ' ¢ Why do women write such letters ? " In answer we say that never have we Ngblished a fictitious letter or name. ever, knowingly, have we published :ern untruthful letter, or one without the full and written consent of the woman Who wrote it. The reason that thousands of women from all parts of the country write such grateful, letters to the Lydia E. Pink - team Medicine Co. is that Lydia E. Pink• framesVegetable Compound has brought lheatth and happiness into their lives, once burdened with pain and suffering. It has relieved women from some of the worst forms of female ills, from dis- tlacementa, inflammation, ulceration, iarreguh*nes, nervousness, weakness, stomach troubles and from the blues. It in k apossible for any 'woman who is well and who Inas never suffered to realize hew these noon suffering wo- men feel when re- riatored to h e a l th; .their keen desire to help other women tram are suffering as they di l.. ISE. MIPS aausho Lekre Lake o^- Bays 1 eor ;fan Bay Algonquin Park .Ra reruzh River liawartha Lakes Maeanetawan .River Tetreagami, etc. „,netted trip tourist tickets now on sale mart certain stations in Outarie at very low rates, with liberal atee-overs> 6 illIFICith EXPRESS Leave Toronto 12,01 pan. daily execpt Sunday, and 2 0-5 a.m. daily for Muskoka Wharf. Connections are Tilade at hiuskoke Lakes. Leave Toreato at X0.15 a.ae daily except atanday,. and 2.05 a.nr, daily for Hunts - trate, for points on Lake of Bays. Equipment the finest, Full p rtirulaas on application to agente, 9OH can secure a• POSition : 4 49 If you tale a course mita us, The •A demand upon cis fear trained help • in many times the number grad • eating. Students are entering • each week. :You may enter at any time. Write at once fur our free • • eatalogue of Commercial, i'hort- to!asrnth er Ieleb,..the alepas.:ser''.. a At McLaehian, Prim ep a1 • e 4 •4 w 4 s FRES TAKE 200 LIVES Oritat'io Northland Swept by Big Forest Conflagrations. Dozen. Towns and Villages have Been Practically Wiped Out by Holocaust 'Which Ras ;;Wept Over the District Between iliathe- son and Cochrane—rresent Fire is Worst in History of North. COCHI:ANE, July 31.—Northern Ontario is being swept by th.e big- gest bush fire in its history. South from Cochrane, and as far west as Hearst, on the Transcontinental, the ilames have engulfed millions of dol- lars' worth of timber land, and wiped out at least a dozen towns and vil. lages. According to reliable infor- mation 200 settlers have perished. TLiee separate fires are sweeping the country. Tho largest, and the only one concerning which any de- tais are available, commenced at Porquis Junction, ou Thursday last. A stiff south-east wind hurtled the flames down the line of the T. and N. 0., wiping out everything as far south as Matheson. Another has been raging east of Cochrane for several days, but the estimated death list of 147 does not include any casualties in that zone. There is no means of communication. The 'third is supposed to have started near Hearst and is sweeping the Transcontinental Railway on .both '2 Sides, ' but wafting mainly south-easterly with the wind. Near Hearst there is a big interment camp and hundreds of soldiers. ' All tele- graph lines are down east of Grant on the Transcontinental, and there is no way of ascertaining if any lives have been lost at this point. An army of between five and six thousand men are fighting the fires. But the best they can hope to do is hold it in check until a heavy rain storm comes. The meterological of- fice said Sunday night that it had rained a little in Northern Ontario on that day. There is no prospect of heavy rain for some time. A North Bete despatch says: "Coch- rane and Matheson, two small towns in Northern Ontario, are reported to have been wiped out by fire to -day with a loss of at Ieast 100 lives. Many persons were injured." Sporfai trains with doctors have left North Bay for the north. At least eighty are known to be dead, and it is feared the casualty list may be much larger. A Cobalt report says: ,Terrific forest fires are raging all through the north i ountry and the town of Timmins is in serious danger. The telephone operator at Matheson had to leave the office as the fire had worked right up to the building, and it 'was at the risk of life to re- main. A large number of farm buildings around Pearson's Landing were destroyed. Telephone com- munication north of Swastika, is com- pletely eut off. The last word re- ceived was from the Matheson oper- ator just as she left the building at which time there was no communica- tion possible with the Porcupine dis- trict. Three of the largest pulp and paper mills in Ontario may have been destroyed ire the fire which is sweeping its way through the north country. These include the Abitibi Pulp and Paper Company's plant at Iroquois Falls, the Metagami Pulp and Pap Company at Flat Rock Falls and the big plant at Jackson- boro. The Abitibi is one of the Iargest plants in the world. Its capacity is 400 tons a day. It is located on the T. and N. 0. lines north of Matheson and east of Timmins. The Jackson- boro mills are controlled by a Buffalo firm and are located 35 miles west of Cochrane on the Grand Trunk Paci- fic. This is three miles west of Flat Rock Falls, —here fire Is also re- ported. pie e ete., ead assumed serioue proportions Sunday night was re- ported to be raging north of the Ca- nadian Pacific lines at Cartier. No details could be secured up to a late hour, but it is understood the flames cover a territory 10 miles wide and are working north in the direction of the Canadian Northern lines. These, however, are about 100 miles distant, so that no fear was express- ed in C. N. R. circles, as it was thought there would be slight possi- bility of their spreading so far. Throughout the regions surround- ing that of the central fire, other fires of lesser ,degree were reported Sunday. The Canadian Northern sta- tion at Foleyet, which is a divisional point, was seriously threatened for a time. A hailstorm which came along at a critical moment extinguished the fire completely. Foleyet is about 150 miles west of Sudbury. Mining men who came down yes- terday from Cobalt and further north say fires have been raging through- out the north country for some time past, but had not assumed threaten- ing proportions until a couple of days ago when they menaced a large sec- tion of the country along the line of the T. and N. O. The Intense heat had dried out the brush and timber to a dangerous ex= tent and made it splendid fuel, while the "slash" everywhere through the bush accentuated the danger.. Settlers ail along the line were expecting the fire to go almost ite any direction and were taking what precautions they could. Sunday at Porquois Junction, the point where the trains switch into the Porcupine division, the T. and N. 0. had an en- gine standing ready to take out re- fugees as soon as the fire reached there, while at Matheson the same precautions had been observed by the Government railway officials, Farers! i Made in Canada Fertilizer $18 and $22 per ton Now is the time to buy wire fence be= fore It advances in price. Let me quote you on your needs in the following lines,— All kinds of Lumber ihear dressed ox roughr Shingles Lath Cedar Fancy: 'Posts, 8 ft long, 9 ft long and 110 ft long. Cement, Wall Board and Ready Roofing, A- J. IIY R RAN TO THE EXETER TIMES '111G1i51a tI', AUG,UST 4th, 19L6,. 17 EXPLOSION KILLS MANX. Millions o'f Dollars Lost When Muni- tions Blew Up. NEW YORK, Aug. 1.—An un- known number of dead and injured, thirty-five to seventy million dollars in property less, tine states shaken,. and millions of persons within a radius of a hundred tulles frightened todistraction is the partial total Of the damage wrought by the explosion of war materials ii Jersey .City early Sunday morning, While only one body bas been re- covered, the toll is believed to have been considerable. In the excite- ment following the explosion little or no effort was made by anyone to take a census of those known to have been in the vicinity. The disaster was by far the worst of its kind that has ever taken place in the country. Black Toni Island, an area of re- claimed land, which projects into New York Bay from the Jersey shore, imihediately behind the Statue of Liberty, was the scene of the explosion. Six Lehigh Valley piers and the. National Storage Warehousing Com- pany, comprising twenty-four 24 - storey brick buildings, about a hun- dred. feet deep, were the principal sufferers. Between twenty-five million and thirty million dollars' worth of pro- perte belongingto these two comp panics were hurled into the air by the series of explosions. Thirteen storage warehouses and their entire contents were blown up, 85 loaded freight cars were burned, a dozen barges and their contents burned or blown up, and probably three tug- boats sunk. The New Jersey Central Railroad pier, half a mile from the source of the explosion, also was damaged con- siderably. Three tugboats, with an aggregate crew of about 24 men are listed as missing.. These boats are the Geneva, a Lehigh Valley boat, and the Bridgeton and Ithaca, Jersey Central boats. When last seen, the little vessels weeg bravely forcing their way into the lazing barges, in an effort to re- move them. Then occurred the big explosion. It is feared they were torn to pieces and lost with their val- iant crews. The cause of the earth -shaking catastrophe was the explosion of hun- dreds of tons of high explosives on the "explosive pier" of the Lehigh Valley Railroad. This fire, as nearly as can be es- tablished. from eye -witnesses, began either in a freight car on the "ex- plosive pier," or on a merge moored to the pier, about ten minutes after midnight. The Lehigh Valley Railroad, in an ofrrcial statement, lays the blame on a barge owned by an independent towing company, which, against or- ders, had moored to the pier. The railroad charges the fire began on this barge. Baby -Killers Out Again. P ):IAGIy J rl 31. i', h r Ct ]a y s o men froze the Island of Gotland, reg• port having sighted tee zeppelins over tbe Battle, 'steering in a north- erly direotiati. NEW ADVANCE MADE. _: Clearing Ocean _ ;= Our Farming I Problems 110100000.10, 3; ofMines -and ss the. secret e T press, firstAMEN UCLNTL Y theAItLI r sion of the Chamber of De- other organs of influence puties was held. Tlie maintain an enthusiastic in- French constitution proved- terest in bettering the agri- ed for such a gathering, but cultural condition of the oddly enough insisted that however country. All feel that the aim is of secret the debates might be there .the best; whether the many schemes should be no private votes. The aloe- Proposed will prove beneficial or de - tors of Frame must know bow every cidedly injurious is Still a matter of controverwsy, says country cleigy- deputy votes on every motion. tors ao man riting in 'l'ha e 'Poronto Globe. the deputies met and debated in se- Living, as I do, among a community stet for a week, and then finally the of farmers, I am in a position to in curtain was : raised and they voted form many of those zealous advisors that a large majority of practical, upon a carefully prepared motion. It intelligent, and ' successful farmers might be thought that the bill or re- have very slight confidence in their solution that they finally and public- suggestions. There is a feeling ly disposed of would frustrate their among the rural population that secrecy; that they were permitted to most of those who make speeches at come in silence to the very deuoue- conventions and propound theories meat of their deliberations and then on paper, have seen very little, if to blurt forth to the world their se- any, of real life on the farm; that cret. This supposition does little jus- most of the reforms which they ad- tice to the French. The meeting of vocate are very specious and alto- the deputies in secret was an event gether impracticable when submitted of the first magnitude; yet the mo- to the test of working them out. tion put to_a ballot would seem to "What constitutes a State? Men, be of no more importance than a last high-minded men, etc," Whatever year's weather forecast. experimental farms, agricultural col - It' is to be remembered always leges, and annual conventions may that France is a ' Republic, that accomplish, all must recognize that France dreads the possibility of any the real hope of prosperity in this all - "man on horseback" and dictator, important industry depends mainly— who aright arise in times of national we might almost say entirely—on the distress and then forge chains that character of men and women engag- would have to be worn forever. ed in it. If the developinent of the There were in France many who educational system of the province, feared that Joffre might become an -or of the country, is ever to have any other Napoleon; a Napoleon in peace influence for good in preserving or who had earned his title in war. elevating the standard of agrwill 0l - Therefore there has been consider- tural industry, that influence will b - able criticism of Joffre for many tain just in so far as the educational months past, not so much for what institutions of the country contrive he has done or bas failed to do as to keep the best blood of the nation for what he might be able to do. And tilling the soil. Up to the present France loves liberty, and fears a schools and legislative bodies have not accomplished, nor even attempt - French autocrat only less than a Ger- ed, anything worthy of notice in this man autocrat. There have been many respect. criticisms of Joffre prompted by this Allow me to draw attention to one secret fear that the generalissimo important resource, for whose per - was getting to be too big a man; and manent usefulness to the cause of other criticisms prompted by the sus- agriculture no assistance has ever picion that he was not a big enough been given, nor so far as I ant aware, man, that he was not a great gen- has ever been proposed. I mean that eral. Obviously, it would be a great indispensable and mast worthy ele- mistake that these sentiments of die- ment of country life—the hired man. trust should be given voice publicly; There are growing ug in the rural obviously the French Chamber could districts a number of boys or young not deny itself the right and perhaps men, sons of poor parents, sons of the duty of making these expressions widowed mothers. They conanience privately. So the secret session was to work very young, and until the arranged. age of twenty-one or twenty-two, or The idea was a Socialist one. even later, ail their earnings have While the French Socialists appear gone to the support a the home. to have been as loyal and enthusias- They have worked bard and steadily tic as any other body of Frenchmen all those years; . .they understand since the beginning of the'war, they every .kind of farm work; they re- vere especially reluctant to relic- ceived the training that makes a sue- quish any of their rights of free cessful farmer. In point of experi- speech, and when they felt that ence, intelligence, iuclastcy, general things were noel, going well they behavior, ambition, there is no rea- burned to ones°. Some of them son why they could not conduct a thought that Joffre had blundered, successful farming business. But They were not permitted to express these poor fellows, at the age when themselves in the Chamber; they other young men are being settled urged a secret session. The notion for life, have noticing, and have no was laughed at, but finally it was encouraging prospects. Has anyone agreed to, ,and there was what is ever thought of ptwlrosing that the called a "heart-to-heart talk" held Provincial Treasury might furnish these young men with funds suffi- reParis recently. To merely read the cient to give them a start on a farm? resolution which was passed as a re- perhaps a thou and dollars would sult of the conference would convey be near the amouit. I cannot say a slight impression to the reader of exactly how much our provincial the proceedings. It is more lilumin- Terasury spends on each young man sting to read the interpretation put who takes a degree from the Provin- upon that resolution by the Paris cial University, but it is probably' correspondent of The Brooklyn considerably more than this amount. Eagle. In other words, the legislation of the He says, reading between the country announces its readiness to lines: spend large sums, unlimited sums if First—The Chamber of Deputies, necessary, upon theenpung man who elected by the French people, is the will leave the faille to embrace supreme authority in France.Infer- some other calling, but nothing at all entially, the Higher Military Com- upon him who is willing to continue mond, I. e., General Joffre and his the occupation of farming, and has staff, are its servants. given years of hard labor to prepare Second—The Chamber of Deputies for it. will take a greater initiative in push- Remark also that the Provincial ing the war. It will not interfere in Treasury expends all these large the technical business ,of the Higher sums on college students and asters Command, but it will see to it that ants to the learned professions with - there is no laxity in getting things out asking for any recommendation ready. In other words, it will see to of character, without any guarantee it that the soldiers have plenty to of industry on the part of the recip- eat; that they get all the ammunition lent, without any assurance of his they need, reinforcements at critical future success. Whether or not be points, and plenty of barbed wire has done anything to entitle him to and trenches to help them fight the this special consideration, whether or Germans on equal terms. not he is likely to abuse the advan- Third—There will be more secret tages placed at his command, whe- sessicns, or in other .words, the ther he may be no better citizen in Chamber will continue to keep an return for all this is really never eye on what the chief generals do, questioned. Moreover, through col - Furthermore, it will send a delega- leges and educational institutions, tion to the front and to the ammuni- our Government is spending those tion factories to see to it with their immense sums on the sons of the own eyes, that tfenches are dug, guns rich as well as of the poor. It is an absolute waste of energy put up, and shells made. • to attempt to induoe city -bred boys Fourth—While giving the presenb to live on the farm. If we are really Cabinet a renewed lease of life, it in earnest in our advocacy of "back. does so on the strict understanding to the land" our efforts should be de - that the Government takes notice of voted tp encouraging country boys the lessons of the past and goes re- and girls to stay there. When a solua;tt, to work pushing the 'war and young man has been trained to farm - "hinting up"'the Higher Command. ing until his twenty-first, or perhaps In other words, the war will be his twenty-fifth year, when his tastes prosecuted by France more vigorous- lie entirely in that direction, should ly than ever—and nobody ever ac- we not be doing a real service to the cused France ee being slack in this country in enabling him to continue respect. The deputies forced the that occupation? Government to etake them into its Having suggested this matter in confidence, and explain things that private on one occasion, I was met looked dubious, especially some of tette tbe answer that mauy of the the matters concerning Verdun. The beat' citizens the country produced Government was able to satisfy the were men who began with nothing deputies; Joffre was able to satisfy and through energy and perseverance the Government. More than ever possessedthemselves of a farm. Very France is "one harmonious whole." true; and the same can be said of From the beginning of the war there many of the most successful men in has been a hope in Germany that in- every other profession. In that case ternal differences might lead to . why not say that any person who France quitting the fight, that a wishes to become a physician, or a quarrel among factions might hasten lawyer, or to obtain a university de= what German military successes bad gree should reach that point, thanks begun. The secret session of the to his own unassisted effort? Why Chamber has shattered this hope. should the public funds be expended Prance is one—she is France. Events for his advancement when the most ,that have happened since this secret distinguished professional mea have made themselves what thoy are with- conference have tended to approve out such assistance'? the wisdom of the decision then pre, vately arrived at. France will be et Ontario's Autos. the mercy of no dictator, domestic or Tiurty-eight tiioutandd automobiles foreign, Conirdenee in Joffre has never been highetrY . _ ]British and French Have Gained on Sozuine Front. LONDON, Aug. 1.—After an ar- tillery bombardment so terrific that the advanced sections of the Ger- mans' third line were swept away, the British and French Sunday morning smashed forward in a tre- mendous assault on a front of eight miles. From east of Delwood to the Somme the blow was struck, and whole systems of trenches, the work of months, were carried. Greatlosses were inflicted on the Germans. ;lore than 500 prisoners were found in the shattered ditches and dugouts. The most pronounced gains were made by the British. These troops smashed forward beyond the Water- iot farm, Troves wood, and the Maltzorn farm, formerly mere out- posts of the British front, breaking well beyond the frontiers of the Ger- man third 'line and establishing themselves in strong positions. On the British right, the French, attacking simultaneously on a front from a height nortb-east of Harde- court to the river, carried a German trench system on a front for a dis- tance at one point of half a mile, seized a foothold in Maurepas, and conquered a wood and powerfully - fortified quarry north of Hem. Street fighting is now going on o. Maurepas, a village stfongbold, which has withstood until the pre- sent, all assaults. Sunday's victory puts the Franco - British allies in a position to strike a powerful blow at Comities, the strong German point of support between Bapaume and Peronne. It also marks a furtber advance of tho wedge which is being driven into the Kaiser's front between these two key positions of the 100 -mile Noyon salient. The British are continuing their "nibbling" tactics on other sections of the front stretching down to the sea, Canadian infantry took a "bite" out of the German trenebes south of Ypres during Saturday night, while Irish troops carried out a successful raid in the Loos salient. Another' Bomb Outrage. SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Aug. 1.•—. Three bombs exploded beneath the floor of the Menace Publishing plant at Aurora, Mo., at 4.15 o'clock Sat- urday morning, slightly damaging the publishing company's plant, and set fire to a mass of copies of The Menace, an anti-Catholic publication, lust oft the preen.. The tla:ales were soon extinguished. Chirtarntan Jellied, Another injured. TORONTO, Aug. 1.—Chi' Lapp, 1079 College Street, is dead, and !lop •hang, 2104 College street, now lies n the Western Hospital in a serious aonclitiorz, as a result of jumping oft Carit^n war No. 1088 at Shaw street, abort midnight Saturday. The body .tf Chin Loop was taken to the rorgae., Where :'an inquest will he hila, rric RPoRPTm i85S MOL °NS BANK CAPITAL AND RESERVE 58,800,000 96 Branches in Canada da g A gieneral 8ankinr Business Transacted 1 .;IRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT' BANK MONEY ORDERS - GS BANK DEPARTMENT •SAVIN Interest a►owedlat highest curient rate' W. 0. CLARKE, Mariag©r, Exeter Emrich THE CANADIAN BANS OF COMMERCE SIlt EDMUND WALKEtt, C.V.O., LL.D. A.C.L., President ,,��� JOHN Ain't). General Manager. H. V. F. JONES. Ass't General llYant7te . CAPITAL, $15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, $13,50001 BANKING BY MAIL Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian 1: a# - of Commerce to be operated by mail, and will receive the same, careful attention as is given to all other departments of the Bank's, - business. Money may be deposited or withdrawn in this way, - satisfactorily as by a persona visit to "the Bank. ll Exeter Branch—EA.:F. iICuhn,t Manager- ial amr1 1 ; ' •ip,REDITON BRANCH—S. M. JOHNSTON, Manager- aa -ehe3 1 rado Marl Ra:eternU GEORGIAN MFG. C)„ The Harmless but cent remedy for Heacins a Nsuralgi a,A n ae m is„Slasqp.- Isssnssa, Nervous ExAo- haustion, &c. s1 1 60a AT ALL DRUGGISTS,' or by r"eSM tbot>.a COLLINGWOOD, ONT. - Notice to Creditors JAS. BEVERLEY FURNITURE DEALER Embalmer and Funeral Direeta Phone 74a. Night Call 7.4b EXETER, O1'i'TAC 'In the matter of the estate or liar- gareti ,Smillie Sturgeon, of the Vile, loge of itensali, County of Huron, dressmaker, a spinster, deceased. Notice is hereby given pursuant to Statutes in that hebalf that all cred- itors and others baying claims a- gainst the estate of the :said Margaret Smillie Sturgeon who died on or about Juno 2nd, 1916, are enquired on or be- fore the 7th day of August, 1916, to send by post prepaid or de- liver to Messrs. Gladman & Stanbury, of the Village of Exeter, Soi:citors for the Executors of the said deceas- ed. their christain and surnames ad- dresses and descriptions the full par- ticulars of their Maims the state, ment of their accounts and the na- ture of the securities if any. held by them, And further take notice that after such last mentioned date the said executors will proceed to distribute the assets of the deceased among the parties entitled thereto. having regard only to the claims of which' thea _ball then have notice and that the Executors will Lot be liable for said assets or any part thereof to any person or persons of whose claims notice shall not have been received by them at the time of euoh distribution. GLADMAN & STANBURY Solicitors for Executors. July. 1916. Dated at Exeter this 19th day of l 44 { The Small Boy's View. "You know you can't get something for nothing.” "Can't?" ..No." "1 bet yer." " I)ld you ever?" "S ui•e." "What?" • 3N " Lickire." The Procession. "Do you keep a maid?" "Most of the time."+tee -I tiud it difficult," "Yes, It is." "What nationality do you most af- fect?" "My maid looks like a slow parade of all the nations of the earth.' r. eas Classified. "Honesty Is the old fashioned poll- cy "It is?'' e „Truly." ; ale e "1 prefer the new." 't`? "And what is that?" "Fire, marine, accident and lite." Query. "She is posted on husbands." .1 "Is she?" • "Indeed she is!" el wonder"— •i "Well, what?" •L 11',• "1 wonder whose husbands?" -r Danger Zone. "We are to run right through the tail of the comet." "It is taking an awful chance." "Our trust magnates will be out sprinkling salt on its tail," "Pa?" "What's a ,A What ant v rilo uist 1 n "A fellow who talks back at hare. been licentied ill Ontario, self" .....___.. Explained. JW 4' DR G. F. ROULSTON, mat DENTIST tat Honor Graduate of site. Office over ling's La* office. day afternoons. , Residence 5b. Toronto Uniliveitie Dickson `ds Siam Closed Wedepeon Phone O•fiiee tial' 4 DR. A. R. KINSMAN L,D,e, DJ3IL Honor Graduate of Toronto igallip errity i I DENT'I8T, • 401.E ' sth extracted without pais, > any bad effeota. Office over 6'lila pian .do Stanbury'e Offiee ela fik Exeter, 1 ' • =141 i - Wi BROWNING M. D., g, •1 • P. E. Graduate Victoria Ualstira city Office and residence Dominant Labratory., Exeter, I—egg iAasooiate Coroner of Buzau T.• R. OARLING,.I�3• A. ,ariei Eiarrister, Solicitor, Notary Pu;`b1ita. Parblio, !Commissioner, ,%Solicitor, 'Poll the Molsons' Rank,. eta.. 1t;al Moneee to !Joan at 'lowest rat gisr I,nterest.• API OFFIC MAIN STREET, EXETEXC. MONEY. TO L041 . We have a large amount of Pram ate funds to loan on farm a>11 lage properties at lowest rata Is p tereat. GLADMAN & sTANBUliii# l 2 Barristers, Solicitors, MAL/ 11. Exeter,' , , , . ,...,10.1 Ttie Udldorns and tiil,1er1 Farmers Mutual Fire law arse Gompanp Head Office, Farquhar, Om President Vice -President ROBT. NOBIEriGto THOS, BTA DIRECTORS (ti; WM. BROCK , , WM, BOW RUSSBLL . J, T. ALLISCUIP AGENTS a J011N ESSERY Exeter. egen'3 Up borne and Bidduiph•. 4) OLIVER HARRIS Munro aseut Oft Bibbert Fullerton and Logan. I .r) , I ,. W. A. TUENW 11JI Seay.Treas, FargUher GLADMAN & BTANi3UBYi ,.gtAi $olioitors. Exeter. 47404 CA...._ IA' For Willits and Children r In Us* For Over 30 Yearli • bm Alwriti o6wirr Blipuiture ed