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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-9-7, Page 4n USBANO Wife IDs I was OBJECTS TO OPERAT1QN Cured by Lydia E, inkhaaln''s Vegetable COmpOUrid Moines, Iowa.—" very sick and my spent. Four years ago life was nearly thThe doctors at I would get well with - an operation that without it not live one My .husband to any and got some of Lydia E. Vegeta- Compound.I took and commenced; now well. am own housework., Vegetable Com- who is sick and strength and husband says 1 grave ere this your Vegetable JE '1, EIi- Moines, Jowa. sargieel operas, to build up the its derange- Pinkham's Vege- has saved many E. Pinkhanz Blass., for 10"r„1111 f 1110"1""1111 111 a; a �s 11 ,i'' 45,, • - _ stated never out and 1 would year. ob$ected operation me Pinkham's " ble = it am do my the My in my for BLANCSE' Des tors try and cure E. it operations. Lydia Lynn, be confidential,,LLR#4T tie get 'better and ,totmtand able to 1 can recommend /mamd to any woman Nun dawn as a wonderful beetle restorer.. would 'save been If it tnu not beep C.rapound."—Mrs. Jole. 703 Lyon St., Referee eubmitting am it le wise to female system ments with Lydia table Censponnd; women from surgical Write tothe Medicine Co., wilt. At ONT. = 16th fares to stations in Ont- Jot.., and south train leer-- eer-•wirer excursions from dates. regarding train etc.. cease It, Agents. Agents ,G AKRIIN.K (. cstcrll'. Fdir LONDON, September e'tnatee tirekere at iLondon, Ont., from ario; (Belleville Scotia ear west thereof- eke.and low rate principal points ger full particulars Per ,,iee; fares, ticket., iiraxa'i Trunk Railway • Grand Trunk 8th :reduced Special on certain Fall Term from August 29th CER/ 1 41 As t COMMERCIAL s • SHORTHAND: AND • TELEGRAPHY DEI' T S i e• e Students may enter at any i 4 time. We place graduates in i 4 positions During July and : 3 ♦ August we recsived appli- o cations for over 200 office • 2 assistants we could not stip- p • 'ply Write for our free fatal- 4 ogtue at once. i • (6D. .64 McLachlan, Prin , eel • !t! • a44•N •••?••••♦••♦•♦•♦••••4 rS1l'a Made in Canada Fertilizer $18 and $22 per ton ft i Now is the time to buy wire fence be= fore ii advances in price. Let me quote you on yovir needs in the following lines,— All li:lrlcly oI Lumber ihete dressed or rough. Shingles, .Lath, Cedar , Fence Posts, 8 ft long, 9 long and 10 ft long. Cement, Wall Board and Ready Roofing. _ r A. J CLATWO .RTHY ORANTON esiseeeevesemenseireseseniesweevereerrieeseeterawee NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK Important Events Which Have Occurred Dwri ng the Week. The Deny World's. Happenings Care- fully Compiled and Put Into Handy and Attractive Shape tor the Readers of Our Paper --A Solid Hones Enjoyment. WEDNESDAY. Owen Sound Town Council will soon apply fora city charter. tip to the present 430,000 iron Creases have been conferred from Berlin. Three newspaper plants at Tralee, Ireland, were seized by the police and troops. Sir Horace Rumbold has succeeded E. M. Grant -Doff as the British Min- ister to Switzerland. Albert Alegnon, an electrician, was instantly killed at work in the Ex- hibition grounds at Quebec. The contract for the new Domin- ion menet at Lindsay has been let to the Westinghouse Company. • Austrian monitors and batteries have bombarded the towns of Vercio- rove, Turnu Severin, and Giurgauo in Roumania. Private L. J. Norton, an Indian, of the' 2271h (Sault Ste. Marie) Bat- talion, died at Camp Borden hospital, of pneumonia. idiss Adeline Wehser, aged forty, of 199 Christie street, Toronto, re- cently discharged from the staff of the Reception Hospital, committed suicide. Captain (Re'r.) H. I. Horsey, whir went overseas with the 38th Bat- talion, has resigned bis chaplaincy and gone to France as a junior officer of the battalion. The 'Judge -Advocate - General, Major-General Smith, is presiding over a board of inquiry conducting a searching investigation into ailegl ed irregularities in rations and fod- der supply for the St. Lawrence Canal guard. °THURSDAY,. Ten cases of Asiatic cholera are reported in Tokio_ The disease is abating at Nagasaki, but increasing at Osaka, wi ere the cases now num- ber 406. A notice issued by the Marine De- partment yesterday is to the effect that the breakwater at Godericb, Ont., has been completed to its full 3ength of 1,400 feet, and the check water removed. The Australian Government bas drawn up a proposition to hold a re- ierendum on the question of estab- lishing compulsory military service in Australia. The four-year-old child of Mr. and Mrs. William Dolbear is reported to have died yesterday at the parents' home in Brooke of infantile paraly- sis after a short illness. • William Ronlstou, a Toronto team. ster, living at 623 Dupont street, died in the Western Hospital last Sight from injuries received when he was kicked in the abdomen by a horse. The car ferry ice -breaker St. Ig- rtace, owned by the Canadian Tow- ing and Wrecking Company, of Port Arthus, was destroyed by fire yester- day. For the- first time since Italy en- tered the war the French Govern- ment yesterday ordered that Hags be raised on all official buildings in re- cognition of the declaration of war by Italy against Germany. FRIDAY. Mr. Justice Garrow of the Su- premeCourt of Ontario is dead. The total British losses for the month of August were 127,945. Two Russian steamers were tor- pedoed and sunk in the Baltic Sea. Thanksgiving Day has been fixed by order -in -Council for Monday, the 9th of October. This year's banana crap in .Jamai- ca has been almost entirely destroy- ed by recent storms. Sir William Mackenzie borrowed $i,a00,03G oy i.:- N. R. terminal bonds in New York to complete the Montreal tunnel and station. Mr. Justice Napoleon Charbonneau of the Montreal Superior Court was killed by a fall on his yacht while on a fishing trip at Three Rivers. The 127th, 129tb, 135th, 137th, and 138th Battalions, No. 10 Sta- tionary Hospital, London, drafts and details have safely reached En Iand. Daniel Wemp of Emerald, Am- herst Island, eighty-five years of age, has so far this season unloaded 102 loads of hay and 20 loads of grain on his farm. The Postoffice Department has of- ficially changed the name of the post - office at Berlin, Ont., to "Kitchener," and asks tbe public to adopt the new name from now on.. Meagre information from the Yukon would indicate a defeat for prohibiitou by a majority of 50, with polling places having an aggre- gate of about 2.00 votes still to hear i'ronr. Struck in his automobile by an L C. R. express during a thick fog at Dunstan, near Drummondville, a traveller for the Dominion Tobacco Co- of Montreal, named Tremblay, Was instantly killed. The Electrica' Development Com- pany issued a writ against the Hydro -electric Commisison and the .Attorney -General, with the object of preventing power development at Niagara by the Hydro. SATURDAY - The conspiracy case at Winnipeg may close this week. It is reported that Portuguese troops are now ready for the front. John Hatters, of Owen Sound, was found dead in his bed on Friday morning. Five hundred thousand Germans were •.disabled in the Verdun region since. Feb. 21. • • SeirereI persons were Wounded an conflicts between civilians_. and troops in Lisbon, Spain, A famine is now raging through- out Syria, More than 100,000 have died of banger or typhoid. The total number of -wounded prisoners, takenits the Verdun sec THE EXETER TIMES tor and Sonture neighborhood Is +IJ, 000. General Jostotf, chief of the Bul- garian staff, is reported to have died suddenly. It is thought• he has been "removed." The Royal Commission appointed by the Dominion Government under the Industrial Disputes Act opened its sessions at Cobalt on Friday. John J. Flanagan, of London, hog buyer, was seriously injured last night when alighting from a Pere Marquette 'freight train at Chatham. It has been decided to erect a permanent monument of Kitchener on Marwick head, in the Isle of Bir- say, Orkney, near the sunken reef where the Hampshire went down. TUESDAY. Italian troops gained further suc- cesses in Albania. The British Trades Union Con- gress opened at Birmingham yester- day. - Industrial Day at the Exhibition, Toronto, brought an attendance of 147,500. •The Italians were reported to have captured a German submarine in the Adriatic. Fifty thousand people watched the trade union sports at the Exhibition, Toronto. Henry H. Miller, ex-M.P. for South Grey, died rather suddenly at his home in Hanover, aged 55 years. Sir Ernest Shackleton cabled thanks to King George for Britain's aid in the Anterctic;reacue.•work: Greece will entirely meet the Allied demands, and, it is again re- ported, will .give them aetjeee sup- port. The annual Labor Day Baby Show at the Exhibition, Toronto., brought out a higher quality of babies than ever- Senhor. Lauro Muller, Minister for Foreign .Affairs of Brazil, was pre- sent at the Toronto Exhibition luncheon yesterday. President Richards of the Toronto Trades and Labor Council in a telI- ing speech at the Toronto Exhibition denounced the ruthlessness of mili- tarism. The trial of the ex -Cabinet Min- isters in Winnipeg in connection with the Parliament buildings is about concluded, the case having gone to the jury Iast night, and the court adjourned to this morning. REPLY TO RED CROSS PLEA. No Reprisals if Foe Will Become Civili zed. TORONTO, Sept. 5.—In answer to a communication from the Interna- tional Red C-ross, the text of which is made public simultaneously with the British answer, the Foreign Of- fice Friday stated its position on the question of reprisals. The Red Cross had larged against the adoption of reprisals on prison- ers of war. • The British Government answers by referring to "outrages which have put such a strain on the patient British people as to raise the ques- tion of reprisals." The reply concludes: "His Ma- jesty's Government will readily re- spond to the appeal, being confident that the neutral powers and the In- ternational Committee will recognize that the demands for reprisals grows in volume and urgency with the re- currence of abuses, and that the sur- est means of avoiding reprisals is the abandonment of the policy in- spiring them-" Vatican - Considers Action. PARIS, Sept. 5,—The Vatican is considering the action of Germany in compelling the inhabitants of the north of France to work in the fields, according to a statement by Cardinal Gasparri, the Papal Secretary of State, says the Rome correspondent of The Journal. The Cardinal de- clined, however, to discuss the status of this subject. Questioned as to the possibility of the resumption of di- plomatic relations between France and the Holy See, the Cardinal said the Vatican would be delighted by such an event, but that all would de- pend upon: the French Government, and whether that Government desir- ed it. Ferdinend's Address to Soldiers. • BUCHAREST! Sept. .5. — King Ferdinand has issued the following order of the day, addressed to the army: 'I have called upon you who are stout-hearted and full of hope. The spirits of the great Roumanian chief- tains, Michael the Brave and Stephen tbe Great, interred in the provinces you are about to deliver, exhort you to -victories worthy of them and of our heroic and victorious allies. "Terrific fighting awaits you, but you will endure its rigors as did your ancestor... In future ages the entire race will bless and glorify you." Germany's Last Call, AMSTERDAM, Sept.- 5. — The Frankfurter Zeitung says that the meeting of Socialist electrical unions of Greater Berlin, which had been proposed for Deputy Haase to speak on peace, was prohibited-- The rohibited_The Kreuz Zeitung says that a general examination of all men of military age in Germany, who pre- viously were exempted, is now taking place.. German officials who hereto- fore had been declared indispensable, the newspaper says, also are being examined. Leprosy in British Columbia. VICTORIA, B. C., Sept. fee—Hard- ly had the medical authorities taken n charge one case of the dreaded lisease leprosy, in the person of a Chinese who had been a resident of ,be local Chinese colony for the last ;car, than the discovery was made of another case, one more serious than no first. Fall Causes Boy'9 Death: KINGSTON, Ont., Sept, 5.—John 1ngiin, aged 11 years, soul of Edward nu glia, :Brewers Mills, died from in- urtcs tae received when he fell on u .rano c wan:adot Which -was in opera - CANADA'S Mtg .:PIM eTRlLDE.. ft Is the [lest Organized of Our Live Stock Industries, Poultry •J'aising is, says an Ottawa bulletin, one of the best organized and most progressive of any of our live stock industries. Co-operation. amongst farriers in marketing is im- proving the product and realizing for them a higher price than they have hitherto been able to obtain. The re- organization of Iuethode by the trade is providing against loss in handling, is assuring to the: consumer a better article and establishing our export business upon a firm basis. It is estimated that Canada and Cuba, during the last twenty years, received from the United States about three-fourths of all the eggs exported by that country during that period. Tbis situation, however, has now changed. As against an iinpoi•- tatiou in 1913 of 13,240,111 dozen, we imported in 1915 not more than 3,783,952 dozen. On the other hand, while in 1913 we exported only 147,- 149 dozen, in 1915 we exported 7,- 898,322 dozen. This constitutes a net increase in production, in two years, of at least 17,100,000 dozen. Practically all of these exports went to the United Kingdom. Notwithstanding the surplus in Canada which these figures indicate prices during March, April, and May have remained at an extraordinarily °higenlevel. , For the first quarter of the year 1916 the price to producers, selling co-operatively, has been 'at -ieest :four cents in advance of the price received,. for the same period, in 1915. For the month of March, !t was at least five cents in advance, and for the month of April at least three cents in advance of last years' price for these respective months. The demand for eggs for 'local con- sumption, for storage purposes and for immediate export, has rarely been so keen as at the present mo- ment. This situation is clearly re- flected in the prices just quoted. Heavy domestic consumption, in the face of the high price for meats, part- ly explains this condition. Confi- dence is the export demand, on the part of the produce trade, confirms it from `another direction. Notwith=standing increased production, the egg and poultry business in Canada is in a very strong position at the pre- sent time. '' .•, 17• at • ti Met Some Hard Words. "How did he come out in the civil service ex- amination?" "He had a bad spell." k k .I I. Daybreak. ;f+i The silvery gleam Of the rippling stream The listless eye caresses, And the golden ray • Of the waking day The Joy of life confesses. But the morning bright Brings no delight, Though the joys of morn are thronging. For they find me far Her Political Views. "Jane, I have discovered that our new cook has decided views about the policy in the east." "John, what do yon mean?" "She firmly believes 'in the gradual lisruption of china." 14 True to Life. - •- "First really realistic novel I ever read." "What's so realistic about It?" "Didn't you notice? The. heroine does about six times as much talking as the hero."—Exchange. - • Doubly - C • riminal. Mr. Grimes (with great indignation)— I've finished with that fellow Skinner, absolutely finished with him. He's a bad one. He has a lying tongue in his head. Mrs. Grimes (sympathetically)— Dear me! And only yesterday his wife told me that he had false ,teeth. - Resemblance. "I consider my own health and com- fort," remarked the intensely self con- cerned person. 'Public opinion Beans nothing to me." "Well," replied Uncle Eben pensive- ly, "dar is sumpiu' jes' about like dat de matter wif my mule.". Innocence Abroad. Young Actress—Will you tell 'me one thing about your 'lovely newspaper work? Interviewer -Certainly. What do you want to know? Young Actress —Is it the makeup man who writes all the fiction tales?. Exasperating.e "That man irritates mer" ; I�'a'r'- ewhy e, "He knows so =eh that isn't so, and be can prove all his statements."— ,Tudge, All skill ought to be•,e*erfedfor uni- versal good. : r Tuet is not the finality by *bleb' you often please, but by which you seldom 6/110T5 Wirth AMlgm Genera Au ll'asseeedele of German Blast African Capital. LONDON, Sept, 4.—;Gen. Smuts, commander-ip-chte1. of -tie British forces in Ge an East Africa, reports under date ofAugest 30 that the German forces in that colony are in Lull retreat. He announced the oc- cupation of Mrogoro, the seat of the German Provisional• Government, and said he believed the German military headquarters and provision- al government had retired into the mountains. .The text of the statement regard- ing operations in .Germa$n East Af rica as given out 'by the'British Offi- cial Press Bureau says: "General Smuts reports tbat on August 130 the enemy forces were in full retreat east and west of the Uluguru mountains and south of Mrogoro. He believed the German military headquarters and provision- al government had retired into the mountains. "We occupied • Mrogoro on the 26th, 'This is a most important town, and was formeely the seat of the provisional government-" NEW CAMPAIGN BEGINS. Italian Forces Have Captured T'epe- lini in Albania. ROME, Sept. 4.—Italian .troops have begun an offensive in Southern Albania aid have occupied Tepeleni, 31 miles south-east of Av4ona, on the Vojussa River, says the official statement issued by the War ()Eke. The"tree-k garrison withdrew from Tepeleni. - The official report says: "Wednesday morning our com- posite coluinn occupiedTepeleni, on the Vojussa, after a rapid march over very difficult ground. The Greek garrison withdrew. `;At the same time Bersaglieri made an attempt against the enemy's position on Mount Gradista and Mount Teubes, on the right bank of the Vojussa. late forced the river near Carbonara'Tand stormed the vil- lages of Klog and Hekai under heavy artillery fire. "We took 72 prisoners, including 40 Austrians and much ammunition. During the'night the news of the oc- cupation of Tepeleni was received, and the Bersaglieri withdrew from Mount Gradist. Enemy aircraft bom- barded Proveni-and La Pal, doing no damage, however." AEROPLANE BATIOf;ES. French and British Aviators Win Several Victories. LONDON, Sept. 4.—In spite of the fog British and Feench aviators are particularly active on this front. On the Somme front during the fore- noon four German mac'hiees were brought down by the French, and three others south of Perone, while two others were seen to fall badly damaged. Anti - aircraft guns brought down two others, and the oc- cupants were taken prisoner. In the afternoon anti-aircraft guts felled three additional hostile aeroplanes. The French lost one machine only. General Haig reports that during aerial combats with the enemy five German machines were destroyed and at least seven. others driven down damaged. Five British aero- planes were lost. Five Battalions Read► England. OTTAWA, Sept. 4.—It is officially announced through the Chief Cen- sor's office that the following troops• have arrived safely in England: 127th Battalion, Camp Borden; 129th Battalion, Camp Borden; 135th Battalion, Camp Borden; 137th Fattalion, Calgary; 138th Ba;.n!iss, Edmonton; No. 10 Sta- tionary Hospital, London; drafts and details. The 127th Battalion, "York Rang- ers," is in command of Lieut. -Col. F. F. Clarke; the 129th. from Went- worth county, of Lieut. -Col. W. E. S. Knowles; the 135th, "Pride .of Middlesex," of Lieut. -Col. Burt Rob- son. New Pension Board. OTTAWA, Sept. 4.—The new Pen- sion Board, which will have per- manent supervision of the whole war pension system of the Dominion, has been named. This Board will take over from the Militia Department the sadministration of the Act. The h 'i of theBoardJ. C a rman is J K. L. Ross, a Montreal multi -million- aire, whose generosity towards war association fuendes has been very marked, and fin possesses consider- able business ability. The other . members are Major John L. Todd, M.D., of Montreal, and Colonel Labatt of Hamilton. Names of Huns Removed. ROME, Sept. 4.—Last Tuesday workmen chopped off the marble memorial names of Emperor William and the German. Crown Prince, Fred- erick William, which had been plac- ed in the Senatorial Palace on the an- cient Capitol hill during a visit of the German Emperor to Rome twenty years ago. The names were ordered removed by the city government. , He Wants His Luggage. KINGSTON, Sept. 4.—The threat is made by Willy•Brubacher, the St. Johns, Que., German, who escaped from 'Fort Henry internment camp, and who is now in Watertown, N.Y., that he will sue the Canadian Gov- ernment for his luggage, which is still here at the Fort. He says he cannot seg how the holding of his personal belongings can contribute to the safety of the Dominion. Rouble's Value Rising. LONDON, Sept. 4.—The value of the rouble has greatly advanced in London, where Petrograd exchange had fallen. from 1.55 to 1.35 in the coursc of a week. The rise of the rouble is attributed to Roumania's entrance into the war, American buy- ing, and the pending internal flota- tion of a Russian railway loan of 350,000,000 roubles. Simultaneous- ly French. exchange has also im- proved.. F THURSDAY, S1 PTr?,isfrI .It 701. •" INCORPORATED 1855 MOLSONS BANK AAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,800,00 ► 96 Branches in Canada A General Bankiar Business Transacts) 2,11t;GULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT'~ BANK MONI?V ORDERS SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT , 1t;; , interekt aroweer at highest current rate. W. D_CLARKE, Mesrreger, Exeter Branch THE CANADIAN BANK_ OF COMMERCE SIR EDMUND WALKER. G.V.O., LL.D. D.C.L., President JOHN AIRD, General Manager. H. V. F. JUN'S, Asst Genera9'Rf rg1♦n CAPITAL, $15,0003000 RESERVE FUND, $1315E3006 SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS Interest at the current rate is allowed on all deposits of 52 asset - upwards. Careful attention is given to every account. Small accounhek•a ate welcomed. Accounts may be opened and operated by mail. Accounts may be opened in the names of two or more persons>- drawals to be made by any one of them or by the survivor. 'a3gol Exeter Branch— A. E. Kuhn, Manager's if I 1 PREDITON BRANCH —S. M. JOHNSTON, Manager '-1 ;1 tTrai. Mara tn.sirt.rwte GEORGIAN MFG. CO„ The Herinlees butE-- cent Neurahgla,Afl S ie ` Isssnsse. Nervous Mier- haustlsn, &C. 1 los AT ALL DOOOt*TS, .r A4 AAA. Mime. ONT. , Breeding Cattalos. .A recent issue. of the Agricultural Gazette contains an interesting ar- ticle on the cattalo herd which the Dominion Department of Agriculture has recently purchased for experi- mental purposes. The \cattalos, which is practically unknown to us, has been produced by crossing the buffalo with domestic cattle, the oh- ject being to produce a strain of beef - producing animals particularly suit- ed to the more northern and rugged regions of Canada. The herd which has been pur- chased ,is that of the late Mossom Boyd of Bobcaygeon, Ont. Mr. Boyd started this cross in 1894 and con- tinued the work until the time of his death, some two years ago. At the outset he used cows of various breeds but after some years ex- perimenting be limited his crosses to those of the Herefords and Aber- deen -Angus. The herd, therefore, which the Government has purchased possesses the thick form of these beef breeds and a modification of the hump and depth of rib peculiar to the buffalo. The herd as purchased consists of twenty head, made up of sixteen females and four males. )They range in age from one to nine years and possess from twenty-five to seventy- five per cent. buffalo blood. They weigh 'from five hundred to two thou- sand pounds, and are all regular breeders, so far as they have been tried, and,posseas every indication of vigor. "It has long been recognized," says the Gazette, "that the buffalo possesses qualities which would be of value if transmitted to beef -pro- ducing animals, more particularly for ranging purposes for cold -ridden dis- tricts. From the experiments of Mr. Boyd andothers it appears that the excellent rustling qualities of the buffalo are retained in the cattalo. During blizzard conditions the cat- talos like the buffalo faces the storm rather than drifts before it as is the tendency of domestic cattle." A Market at His Door. Farm and Dairy mentions the case of an Ontario farmer, living near a city, who has a bulletin board at his gate on which he daily puts his prices for eggs, butter, fruit, vegetables, etc. In giving his reasons for doing this the farmer said: "There are hundreds of people in our cities who now own automobiles. They take a pleasure trip out into the country two or three times a week in sum- mer and I -find that they are glad to buy fresh produce, especially when then can get it a trifle cheaper than from the grocer in town. I find, too, that I can afford to sell for a little less than the city grocer and still get more than I could realize on my pro- duce any other way." Small Boy in Hamilton. There is a small boy in Hamilton who is much given to the use of big words. Sometimes he k 0}�,ws what they mean, but oftener—Tot. So when he was heard calling his small sister an Ethiopian his mother stopped her work and listened. "You're all ready to have your ap- pendix cut out," he was telling sister, "you're an Ethopian now." To his mother's question as to just what he meant. , he replied, with glances of scorn for her ignorance, "Why? mother? an Ethopian is some one who has taken ether." A JAS. BEVERLEY FURNITURE DEALER = E m b a l m e r and Funeral Direst " Phone 74a. Night Ca/374b EXETER, O1+TTAPC DR G. F. ROULSTON, Dab DENTIST las Honor Graduate of Toronto. U>mtN•t " site. Office over Dickson '& leop lira's Law office. Closed Weelaeeme day afternoons. Phone i''fli'$ Ss. Residenee 5b. T.•.i DR, A. R. KINSMAN Honor Graduate of Toroaste U3aillr' ersity 1 DENTIST ; ;lel t� - 9th extracted wither'; psis. IIS any bad effeota. Office aver Glair Mao dt Stanlbury'o Offiee Maim Exeter, it t Li _i •tssi;u! I • Wt BROWNING M. 1)., Me •s • P. 8, Graduate Vioteria Ua1is city Office and residence Deanis,ill Labratory„ Exetere Leadl Associate Coroner of Huron 14 1. R, CARLING, a, A, , - ,,, liking Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Pm". lion Public, (Commissioner, 15o1ietter, 1'tn� tte Moltisone (Bank,. etc, , , , ,-Laid Money; to Loan at 'lowest tratellaate• Interest. OFF,iCy, MAIN STREET, ]Gi'wE.TT1M$1,.• MONEY, TG LOAIN t i i , We have a large ambnnt ta! !el'l's' ate funds to loan on farts tad lage properties at lowest rate GO tette„ GMIAJIMLN & STANDUStr1 It Barristers, Solicitors, Mafia Iii Exeter, • .Ina Osborne and Hibbert Farmer's Mutual Fire IQsurr anee Gampanu Head Office. Fars .l'aat Qw President ROBT, NOlEf.MS& Vise-•Presideut t THOS, 11 DIRECTOR'S I. 104 WIL BRO,CK , , WM, BOW J, L. RUSSELL , J, T. ALLISaltil AGENTS ' ' he JOHN ESSERY Exeter, agein IIsta borne and .Uiddulph. t1 OLIVER HARRIS Munro aired 1r' Hibbert Fullerton and Logan. i air W. A. TURNMULIII ' ! Secy.Treas. FarCitlhatila GLADMAN & STAN 3UBY Solicitors. Exeter. . ,..� CAST'ORIA' For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Yeaetrs Mirky* losail tha afgn attar• al A.