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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-8-24, Page 4I • How to Feel Well liring Middle Life Told by Three We en Who. Learned from Experience , The Change of Life is a most critical period of a woman's existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will .so successfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from illative roots and herbs. Read these letters:-- Philadelphia Pa. 64I started the Change of life five years ago. 3 always had a headache and back- ache with bearing down pains and I would have heat iIashes very bad at times with dizzy spells and nervous feelings. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I feel like a new' person and am in better health and no more troubled with aches and pains I had before I took your won- derful remedy. I recommend it to my frieugls for I cannot praise it enough."—Mrs. MARGARE RASS- MAN, 759 N. Ringgold St., Philadelphia, Pa. Beverly, Mass.—"I took Lydia E. Pinkham's getable t.:ompotuxd, for nervousness and dyspepsia, when I was going througn the Change of Life. I found it very helpful and I ;have always spoken of it to other women z'ci^n suffer as I did and rave had t1- 'u it try it and they also have received I►Il(((�� good results from "—Mr. GEORGE A. Du1CBAit, 17 Roundy St, Beverly, Mass. Erie, Pa. —"I was in poor health when the Vhange of Life started with. sac.: and I took Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegei,able i onipound, or I think I should not have got over it as easy as I ciid. Even, ' .o if I do not feel good. I take the Compound and it restores Inc in a short time. I will praise your remedies to every woman for it may help v .. them as it has me—Mrs. E. KIssLmG, 931 East .24th St., 'Erie, Pa. No other medicine has been so successful in relieving woman's suffering as has Lydia E. Pinkhamn's Vegetable Compound. Wortrennmae• receive free and helpful advice by writing the Lydia . P°inarham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are received std answered by women only and held in strict confidence. • The 'Globe on Saturday last con-; '.aired the announcement of the ene argemrnt or Mies Margaret M. i ;t •- ger. dangLter of 'Mrs. Margaret Yee - ker. of •town, to Mr. Edward Joseah M:elosee, Tilsonburg, Ont. Fail Term from August 29th ,• lm 1 COMMERCIAL 5 SHORTHAND` AN D 2 TELEGRAPHY DEPTS Our graduates are placed 14 in position;. In 3 months `; we received 219 applications for trai„ed help. IN rite us at o33cc for our free cata- etcz a. 4 a e 4 4 4 3• 4 4 iCL, McLae}'slaar, Pratt pa 444-040044444.40 04+064 der •. Made L Canada Fertilizer $18 and $22 Per ton low the damse►o buy wire fence b fore it advances in price. Let me c;°ote you on your nc.,:.di in the fo11r ,.,, i li nes,__ .All, "ai-i(k of Loeber Icer Clore. ".i t;d Ol 1 '1 L1gb. S in �,i yl'L'"'i , Lath, Oigdc:r Fence Pon':.: 8 ft l ,cg, 9 ft 011 : S.3fJ .0 ft 1o'.1g, C'cm nt, W-.11 Board and ' sally i�'oC'# g. A. J. CLATOllrr� HY RATON CANADIAN NJ T L EXHIBITION RETURN TICKETS at reduced fares to Toronto from ail station; in Canada. Speeial train service and low rate excursions from, all principal points on certain dam:. Full particulars and ..pecial train ser- vice from (xrand Trunk Agents. HA i VEST HELP EXCURSIONS 12 TO WINNIPEG Take the New Transcontinental short route to ;Western Canada, The Grand Trunk Pacific :Railway is the 'Shortest and quickest route between Winni- peg. Saskatoon and Edmonton. Full particulars and excursion dates from Agents . . . --� �t '. RW. Ot Met Some Hard Words. "13 Ow did he come out in the civil service ex- nininntion?" "Ile bad a bad spelt. Daybreak. The ,t c';ery gleam fix the rtpp'tng streat T r list Fess eye care -sees. And the golden ray OS the Watatag day The joy or }Ire coniesac . But the morning bright }:nags 00 delight, Though the toys of m ern aro thronging, k'or they tied me ear Her Political Views. "Jane, I have discovered that one I new cook has decided views about the 1 policy In the east." "John, what da you mean?" "She firmly rm y believes in the gradual 1 1isruption of china." , True to Life. "First really realistic novel 1 met read." "What's so realistic about it?" "Didn't you notice? '1' he heroine does about six times as much talking w the hero." -Exchange, NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK important Events Which Have Occurred During. the Week, Ville Busy World's penings Care- ful/7 Compiled and Put Into Pandy and Attractive Shape for the Readers of Our Paper—IA Solid flours” Enjoyment. WEDNESDAY. Bread has gone up in Brantford to seven cents a loaf retail. The total cost of the war to France up to August 1 was ,,39.900,000,000 francs. James Aleroft, aged 6, of 36 Pou- eher street, Toronto, was fatally in- jured by a train yesterday. The Italian Dreadnought Leonardo da Vinci was blown up, following a fire, and 300 were drowned. The name of "Kaiser" in Saskat- chewan has been changed by the Post -Office Department to "Peebles.' The Topeka, a small coal boat, was rammed and sunk in the Detroit River, off Sandwich, by the Christo- Ner. Her crew ware saved. Hon. Edward S. Montagu said yes- terday that Great Britain would soon be independent of the United States in the matter of all munitions. Persons sending parcels to prison- ers of war in Germany are notified not to wrap them in linen, calico, canvas, or other textile materials. Mrs. Daisy'Bastable, 135 Highfield road, Toronto, was fatally injured by an automobile in High Park and two children who were with her were in- jured. Increased taxes on the nickel in- dustry to be retroactive were fore- shadowed by Hon, 0. Howard Fergu- son, Minister of Mines, at a South- West Toronto election meeting. The fall of the Persian Ministry was announced yesterday. Former Foreign Minister Wossough-El-Dau- Leh has been ordered to organize a new Ministry. Titeophile Dor'ion, a former em- ployee of the Department of External Affairs, was committed for trial at Montreal .on a charge of offering se- cret information to an Austrian firm in that city. THURSDAY; The mother of Hussein Kemal, Sultan of Egypt, died at Alexandria Tuesday. Two thousand five hundred tons Of Canadian Club whiskey from Walk- erville, Ont., is being shipped to England. Count de Sails has been appointed to suceeed Sir Henry Howard as British Minister on special mission to the Pope. The barn on Ezra 'Weber's farm, near Conestoga, about nine miles north of Berlin, was totally destroy- ed by fire with contents. Eleven surgeons and eleven nurses, comprising another detach- ment of the Harvard surgical unit, Ieft yesterday for England. One man'is known to have been drowned and four others os. a party who left Gimli, on Lake Winnfj eg, last Thursday, are believed to Dave met a like fate. An encounter between English and German warships off the Belgian port of .Zeebrugge, where the Ger- mans have established a naval bare, is reported by The Daily Telegrapb. Persons other than British sub- jects and who desire to go to India to undertake missionary or educa- tional work must in the future ob- tain permission from the Indian au- thorities. An agreement has been reacbed between Great Britain and Australia, under which Great Britain contracts to purchase 100,000 tons of zinc ;on- centrates and 45,000 tons of spelter annually from • Australia during the period of the war, and for ten year's afterward. FRIDAY. Retail prices of gasoline in Pitts- burg have been cut two cents per gallon within the last four days. Algernon Bertram Freeman -Mit - ford, first Baron Redesdale of Bodes. dale, died in London Wednesday. The French wine output of 1916 is estimated by the Moniteur Veticole as 900,000,000 gallons, or double that of 1915. Premier Asquith announced yes- terday that Parliament would ad- journ on Tuesday or Wednesday next until October 10. I1. Letendre, of Rimouski, a jun- ior clerk at the Montreal Bank in Quebec, was drowned Wednesd.y evening while bathing in the ;=t. Lawrence at Lapzon. The Roumanian state railroads have contracted with the German steel works union for from 25,000 to 30,000 tons of rails. Dr. Steinbal, rabbi'o1 Charlotten- burg, Germany, has been awaaled the Iron Cross. He is the first we- lsh priest to be decorated during tee war. Another Austrian air raid 7tre Venice is reported in the ofileiaJ statement issued by the War Ofriee last night. Only slight damage vas done, and there were no casualties. '•The British steamer Whitgift, previously reported missing, is now understood to have been torpedoed and sunk April 20," says Lloyd's. "The sole survivor was a Japanese." SATURDAY. Germany has withdrawn the threat to hold up shipments of coal and iron to Switzerland. SIr Wilfrid Laurier is unable to make definite engagements for sev- eral weeks, being in the care of his dentist. In recognition of his sinking one hundred vessels of the Entente allies, Walter Forstmann, commander of a German submarine, has been given the order of Pour le Merite. I3. F. Hodgans, a guard at the On- ario Reformatory, is lying at Me. Guelph General Hospital in a gener- ally battered condition as the result of being Mt by an auto. Donatrl McDonald, d'sttrict paseen- ger agent of the Canadian Govern- ment railways, died af: Montreal last evening after en sluices of tiueo months,. from, heart trouble. 1.t. is. expected. that bat- :en Sept. THE EXETER TIMES 1+# gnu Jit full great eenere Simi or the Quebec bridge will be floated into position. This will pave the wily for the opening of the structure early next year. The eighteen -months -old daughter of Mrand Mrs. John Reinhardt. of the fourth concession of Howard, near Ridgetown, was kicked in .he head and killed yesterday morning by a horse. Germany and Austria have metal- ed an agreement providing for the reeognitiou of autonomy of Poland. The despatches add that an An- nouncement to this effect has been made in Warsaw. According to the elaborate ealcula- tions of Colonei Gablonsky, the Rus- sian military critics, tbe Austrian losses in June and July reaebed the enormous total of 830,000 men. Of this number he figures 400,000 were casualties. MONDAY. About two hundred farm laborers went west to -day from Owen Sound and viciuity. A large area of new land will be cleared on the Provincial Govern- ment farm at Monteith this summer. Premier Hearst of Ontario and Hon. Dr. Fyne, Minister of Educa- tion, arrived at Falmouth, Eng., on the Noordam Saturday, Professor Thos. Gregor Brodie, of r pronto University, died in London, Eng., suddenly Saturday night. Mr. Brodie was professor of physiology. Conclusion of the evidence in :he trial of the ex -Ministers win prob- ably be reached this week, depend - lug, however, upon the number the defence will offer. Word was received in Cobalt yes- terday afternoon of a drowning acci- dent at Iroquois Fails in which a young French-Canadian of Montreal, named Henri Fallee was the victim; Recent subscriptions to the North- ern Ontario Fire Relief Committee's funds, bring the total received to date, up to $248,261. Of this, $236,- 188 was previously acknowledged. The barns of Richard Findlay, farmer of Southwold Township, two miles west of St. Thomas, were struck by lightning Satua'day and tot- ally destroyed by are with contents. The loss is about $6,000, covered by insurance. TUESDAY. General Smuts reported further British progress in German East Africa. General Cadorna's troops continue to consolidate the gains they made in the Isonzo campaign. Stewart Parsons, twenty-one years old, was 'drowned while swimming at tb.e Coves, on the.Thames, west of London. Manitoba public schools opened with bilingual teaching in French, German and Ruthenian eliminated from the curricula. A steadier, presumably bound from Montreal across the Atlantic, is re ported in distress on White Horse Reef, Magdalen Islands. James Doherty was overcome by the heat while at work with a bridge gang on the Grand Trunk at London, and, it is stated, cannot recover. The b , dy of Benjamin Kauffman, 17 Murray street, Toronto, was re- covered from Lake Ontario where he was drowned while bathing on Sun- day. The Royalist party in Grece is tak- ing extraordinary precautions pre- paratory to the coming elections. King Constantine is constantly guarded. It is stated that five hundred wo- men of Grey county are doing the farm work because their husbands and sons have enlisted in the 147th Battalion. The two Eskimos who in Novem- ber, 1913, murdered Fathers ,La Rouge and Rouviers are reported captured by the Mounted Police pa- trol sent after them. • The 123rd (Toronto, Royal Gren- adiers), 124th (Toronto, "Pals"), 134th (Toronto, 48th Highlanders), 119th (Sault Ste. Marie), and 125th (Brantford) Battalions, also No. 4 Tunneling Company, signaling draft, Ottawa, drafts and details, have e - rived safely in England. Visitor From Brazil. OTTAWA; Aug. 22.—Senor Lauro Muller, Provisional Minister of For- eign Affairs and representative.of the Brazilian Government at Washing- ton, is visiting in Ottawa. He will pay a visit to members of the Cana- dian Government, and a programme or entertainment has been mapped out for him which includes a lunch by H.R.H.• the Duke of Connaught and a dinner at which the Govern- ment will play host. While Senor Muller's visit is said to be social in character it is not un- likely that matters affecting trade between Canada and Brazil will be disco ssed. Chinaman Drowned. TORONTO, Aug. 22.—The waters of Lake Ontario claimed another vic- tim Sunday evening, when Tong Duck Lem, a young Chinese laundry- man, was drowned while bathing off the Island, opposite the filtration plant. Althouih the body was recov- ered within eignt minutes by a canoe- ist, who leaped from his craft into the water to rescue the man, it was impossible to revive him, and after working over the body for more than an hour the remains were removed to the City Morgue, where an inquest will be held. Woodstock Ice Famine. WOODSTOCK, Aug 22. -This city faces an ice famine. There is only another montb's supply in the local ice houses. The ice crop last winter was as large as usual, but there was a large wastage through the building caving In wben struck by lightning a short while ago. Mr. McIntosh, the proprietor of the ice business here, says there is very poor prospects ,f securing ice from outside points as the extremely hot spell has caused such a heavy demand on all the deal- ers. Kingston Guard Dead. KINGSTON, Ont., Aug. 22.—Fran- efs Patrick Mellrtain, a resident 55 years and a guard at the "pen" thirty years, is dead, tSC/A % AUGUST 21(1.,10f t Up►1MremooIq OP 0, N. rt. roAK s EPOCH IN CANADA'S .niswo1WY Three -thousand -mile Strip of Terri- , tory Opened by Giant Undertak- ing is an. Empire in Itself and Needs Only the Settler to Make It Produce Wealth --Twenty Xears of Work Have Gone Into the Road. WHEN the present chapter of Canadian history comes to be written, not the least important item. in it will mention that in the darkest days of the Great Warr toward the close of the year 1915, the Dominion opened a now trans- continental railway, thereby making available to man's uses a further strip of this continent, from one hun- dred to five hundred smiles wide, ex- tending from coast to coast. It was a demonstration of Canada's ' faith in her future and that of the empire of which she is a part. In this 3,000 -mile -long strip, in itself an empire, there are snow- capped mountains whose peaks are as yet untrodden by the foot of ,man. There are broad rovers whose fur- thest reaches are still unexplored, huge forests untraveled save by a few trappers and Indians, lakes un- named and all but unknown, game beyond counting—that "big game," all but extinct in the better-known southern half of the continent—min- eral wealth the extent of which can merely be guessed at, natural re- sources of every kind, lieea'ally be- yond computation, all .awaiting set- tlers who will darn to face the trials of pioneering in a new.{1end for the value of the rewards wfiitch courage and :resource bring to the adventur- ous. The new coast-to-coast line is the Canadian No.rthern's, Oounting in the partly Government awned and constructed Grand Trunk, it is the Dominion's third trans -continental system. It is the outgrowth of twenty years' railroad building which has expanded from a tiny enter- prise of 125 miles olf lisle iatsthe heart of Manitoba to a great,sggtem of 10,- 000 0;000 miles of tracks gridrroning the richest sections of the wheat -grow - jug provinces and neinistering to tbe continual cry of Canadian 'farmers for more transportation, more facili- ties to carry in machinery and work- ers, and send fortis. •tiie constantly growing stream of Oesmedian pro- ducts. Two men dt•eaarsod it and planned it, others to have faith in their dream oval help in its fulfillment. Their individual re- sources at first were a ntece nothing. Now the pioneer di:eat eea William Mackenzie, is Sir WL t(m, and Don- ald Mann, the builder, la Sir Donald; the railway system tare r created is valued at $400,000,000, and they be- lieve that its real ecgaaas4on has only just begun. Already it enters one Pacific port, Vancouver, and a second outlet to the north as fsroiected. It will feed the Government line now building to Port Nelsen on Hudson Bay. It touches the Greet Lakes, en- ters Quebec and Montceal, has feed- ers in the maritime provinces, and runs south across the border into the United States. And the country it has opened up in the West has possi- bilities unbounded. The system forrnatly opened busi- ness last October by sending a re- cord-breaking passenger train bear- ing some eighty members of the Can- adian Parliament from Quebec to Vancouver and back 'again. The train itself was a full quarter of a mile long. It was carried over the Rocky Mountains, the bane of trans- continental railroad builders, by a single locomotive, one not even of the 'greatest capacity in the system's equipment. From the terminal in Quebec, close by the old palace of the French In- tendents of the colony, crossing the river where Cartier wintered his ships in days now a sacred memory in the province, the line runs through the familiar scenery of old Canada, through well-established and pros- perous farming communities into Montreal. There a mountain has been tunneled and a block of build- ings is being displaced to give the new railway a palatial station in the heart of the city. Thence through • sleepy French towns, past the stone beauties of the Parliament buildings at Ottawa, along the river and on be- side the clear streams and blue lakes of the land of the voyageurs the steel road comes at last to Capreol, there meeting the other eastern branch of the line coming north from Toronto. Thence begins the country that is to be the new Canada of the next few years. It is known in the Dominion as the "great clay belt," from the character of the upper strata composing it. Su- perficially, it is a richly wooded coun- try, thick with spruce and jack pine, extending for 600 miles along the northern shore of Lake Superior. Abounding in minerals, with *black loam left by succeeding ages of for- est above the underlying clay, it is one of the richest stretches of the north country, but it has been called the "bridge of Canada," because it has always been an untouched waste separating the fertile rapidly devel- oping West from the well-settled East. To be farmed the land must first be cleared, and there has been neither transportation to remove its lumber nor settlers to do the work of clearing. Incoming homesteaders passed south to take up the easier task of farming the prairie, where land was ready for the plow. Non,' all that can be changed, There are 10,000,000 acres of this rich land ready for occupants. The rnm bn o Ci•• ve 8 t plans to release it for some $3 an acre, and the settler will have the spruce trees for his first year's crop, They 'will bring .him about. 12 an. acre Clear. t1E MOLSJJNS BANK • • 0 r - • • - r • • • 0 •. i i ••• • CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,8OO,OO( g6 Branches in Canada A General lankier Business Transacted ZIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGSr.BANK DEPARTMENT niterett aiowedlat highest current rates' W. D. C:LAR1KE, Meiriager, Exeter Bratic h i :• 'w 110.l•••.•11' •. AOA HE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE. SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL.D. D.C.L., President JOHN AIRD, General Manager. • H. V. F. JONES, Ass't General Cafaeogetrt, CAPITAL $15;000,OOO RESERVE FUND, $13,500,01111. BANKING BY MAIL Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian Banda 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 ways satisfactorily as by a personal visit to the Bank. xeter:Branch--- A. E. Kuhn, Manager. RI/ED/TON BRANCH -5. M. JOHNSTON, Manages "i -rae# IINOMOOso i 1 rade Mart Resistor** GEORGIAN MFG. CO„ The Harmless but Else^ cant ronnedy for• Heetfi Hour algia,Anaesn ,Sloago.-. les.ness, Ncrifons �»m hnuetion, 1 cos A7 ALL eausotEYes, or by mail lbarYb. COLLINGWOOD, ONT. Auction Sale OF !CHATTEL PROPERTY AT EXETER There will be offered for sale by Public Auction at the 'Commercial Hotel on Saturday, August the 20th, tI.310: at 2 o'clock p. ca. the following valuable property . One sorrel !stallion; 1 brown marc. 3 buggies in good repair; 1 light wag- on; 1 cart; 1 set of !Lngle harness ; 2 new ,straw cutters; 1 hay rake; 3 cream separators; 3.. new force pumps 1 new pump jack; 1 litter carrier bucket; 1 braes cylinder; 1 new pump; 1 stove (heater) 1 writing desk; 2. chairs; 3 lengths of 1. 1-:; in. gal, pipe; 3 lengths of 1 -9.4 inch gal. pipe and other articles too num- erous to mention. TERMS OF SALE I ' Gash under 4.15 over that amount Lour months credit on furnishing ap- proved joint notes. Discount ti per cent on mutt amounts Lor cash. For further, particulars apply to Alvin Essery, Assignee for ,William Schroeder, Insolvent. Gladmen & Stanbury, for Assignee:• Solicitors E. S. Phillips, Auctioneer Auction Sale OF LE'A'RN STOOK AND IMPLEMENTS AND HOUSEHOLD leUHNlT URE The undersi,gacd auctioneer will sell by public auction, Lot 23, N. It R. Usborne, formerly the Glenn harm on Tuesday, Aug., 20th at 1 o'clock sharp the 1oIiowtng property; HORSES.- Farmers driving mare with Loal •by side; Gen, purpose mare with Loal by side; Gen. purpose filly 2 years, Well broken, dingle or double C ATTLE.- Itegintere'a Jtreey Lei- eer due Sept eta; registered Jersey heifer due January; •, Jersey cow freshened Aug. 10th; Grade Barham cow due in lL.)Jec.,; grade Durham•cow due in Jan.; Holstein cow freshes.ed in June; Heifer 2 years' Durham 2 Durham grade steers 2 yrs.; four ,Durham grade steer 1 yr.; 2 :Dur- ham grade heifer calves; 1 Ayrshire Leifer calf; 1 Jersey better calf. II(G;$ fah FOWL,- 1 reg. young eow, bred; rJ geese, 14 clucks, S0 pullets. 2 guinea fowl , :ftMI'LEiMEN'TS (Lt mower, near, ly new; 3 horse dose; walking plow; iset of harrows; corn scufilcr; two horse cultivator; 2 horse corn planter; set double harness nearly new; set driving harness; 2 pig crates; gaso- line :engine; pump jack.; buggy, cut, 'ter, `barrels, boxes forks, chains, shov- els, hoes, etc; ,9'1JBRN.ITii'RE - One Pandora a-an- ge nearly new and pipes, t,eatir.g !stove, extension dining table, six din- ing chairs, sideboard, cupboard, Lour kitchen chairs, kitchen table, oak Parlor Suite, 2 parlor .rugrs, writing desk. Set of 'bookshelves, iron hula stead, two wooden bedsteads, 3 sees of bed springls, bu!rerau, mattress, 'milk separator. nearly new, washing linachine, dishes, pails, pans, crocks, genes, lamps, oil cans, incheator, and other articles too numerous to men- tion • Positively no reserve as tbb propr,c- tor has given up the farm 4 TI6RMSt Five dollars and under. cash';• neer rthat amount 10 months credit on ;fp, !proved joint notes 5 per cent x):•r ,annum off for casle on eredtt a naiu ti IC, E.Prop. '( Thos. 'Cameron, JL rop, . I t l i i ,Abet._ .`� JAS. BEVERLEY FURNITURE DEALER Embalmer ani) Funeral DirectoJ re Phone 74a. Night Call 74b EXETER, ONIA It DR G. F. BO ULSTON, L.D.S., 11111 1 ' DENTIST 1.1 Honor Graduate of Toronto Unii ' site. Office over Dickson '&. ling's Law office, Closed Weclntano' day afternoons. Phone Wise Shit Residence Sb. DR, A. B, KINSMAN IL,DA Honor Graduate of Toronto Vadigto eraity 1 , , _ DENTISM 1 ' eth extracted without p bneae any bad effects. Office over Gia1 ' map & Stanibury'e Office Mahe ea Exeteare 1 e I • Ws BROWNING 112. D., ,I, a O. P. S. Graduate Victoria Uses city Office and residence Detrainis* Labratory., Exeter Associate Coroner of Heron I'! I. R. CARLING, E. A. , i.1i i2 Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Pu,'tie..itomb Public, Pommissioner, policitc s ,toff - the Mo1sons 1Hankt• etc. , , : .l ig Money, to Loan at 'lowest trate a'' Interest. -.4,1011 OFFIO,E,-.MAIN STREET, EXETERiee MONEY, TG LOAX 1 i i.. I I I We have a large meant erg tardas ate Lunde to loan en farm elk lage propertiee at lowest rate ted ltP terea4,; GLADMAN & STANDU]lti3 ! •l Barriaters, Solicitors, Main iik Exe teri l Ls.1di -.TN Morn and 'cern Farmer's Mi tuai Fire l��a ante Golnpanu kleasi Office, Fercitai ar, Co. s •' President ROBT. N(i+ti3131 Vice -•President THOS, E371A1' DIESOTGBs a (41 WM, BROOK , , WAS;' ROW 3„ L. RUSSELL J. T. ALLISOM AGENT) • "laid ,TORN ESSERT Exeter, agent Ulm borne and Bidduiph. t OLIVER HARRIS Munro word too Kibbert Fullerton and Logan. t ear W. A. TURNHULf I Secy.Treae. Farquhar GLADMAN & STAN'33•UB2, este Solicitors, Exeter. CAST For Infants and Childreia: In Use For Over 3OY eadl` Always dtorasci ;,, the .' ir:nature of ,r' +ursr..r+_c.,.•