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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1924-11-20, Page 4�.fl JRwilA tl..', NO Ei f.13:.t' `2O Wri.' 1 T 1N W 1tiPlirSPAPER l':Altrl'i' 111 Bath. Cyr a drive about the>city of Bath, the party, visited sote miles put the George Inn, the oldest licensed inti in England, receiving the first licenate in 1397; It is a very quaint old place, still oeccupied and pre- eerved for sight seers to visit. b'ro'il the upeer room there is no difficul- ty ` to see through the roof in many. ,?lata,s , "only . sufficient repairing is allowed. to keep the building'to- gether: :rt v<'as in the court Yard at the rear of this innthitt the hie- torieal "13loedy Assizes" were held the ,notorious Judge Jefferies pavement in the court yard below. While° ixi.. Bath, wehad the pleas- ure of being shown. through a most uzii;;aal hotel -The Pultenay-un- usual in the sense that it wa's' a ,ver- ita'ble art gallery. The proprietor had gathered statuary, paintings, and firearres from ail quarters of the globe -and every room in the House contained' a wonderful array of pictures etc., many' of them being wort,, thousands of dollars each. It being Sunday many attended the ovening service in the great Bath Abby, after being entertained. by the Mayor . to a delightful tea in the gallery surrounding the Raman Baths. After church the usual din - nee • was partaken of in the various hotels. A wonderful thing about the trip Was that we were always 'ready to eat, and eat heartily -five times a day at least. Perhaps it was sect scary but ane could not eat like that . at home. Because:' Bath has -the wonderful curative waters it has ,been visited by nearly all the great ,E,aglishmen of the last twocentur- ies, and their temporary residences were pointed out to us Wolfe, Clive.. Chatham, Gainsborough, Liv- ingstone, Parry, 'Pitman, Dickens, Macaulay, Wordsworth, Goldsmith, CSheterfield, Burke, Byron -all seem ed at sometime in their lives to need toning up by the health giving springs of water. At Cardiff Wales From Bath on the morning o b of July 14th we went by train to Car- diff, and to show that the British' railway builders do not follow the line of .least resistance in building; railways by going over the moun- tains' (they go through them) we passed on. our way through a tun- nel three miles, long. Cardiff we found was not a city covered with coal dust as we anticipated but a city of -"`fine- buildings and clean ,.,atl•aets. After a civic reception and ,• tour of the public buildings we were <iztertainecl at 110011 1111101 at. the Ro- yaI Hotel, and at night to dinner by the newspaper proprietors. Many of us in the afternoon visited the clocks and warehouses the lock and power station, and the great nom appliances_ But some of the party, feeling' the need o£ a little reccrea-' tion, visited the bowling green -our Second privilege' to indulge in this great sport on British soil. We leave it it to our old friend, William McDonald, of the Chesley Ehterprise to describe the game which he does in the following words, -"The Car-. dill green is as smooth as velvet and never a bump to interfere with: the bowl or "wood" as it is called in this country. Our quartette consis- ed of Creech of Exeter, S p , llepl exsozz of Brantford, Fraser of Vancouver and the vice-president of theCites- ley t1to - ley Club. We had to leave at the end of the 16th iced were mighty fortunate to be 18 all. Creech, our k b zli, is a .sure shpt. The" Cardiff green is 50 years old and is a dan- dy. The members of the Club were ,;:endues personified. The xew s ere of Britain devot- ed co times each day toa list givet of the Canadian Visitorsand their dotage, and;,it• was remarkable how soon afte,r the event we were hand- ed a ..paper detailing the doings of the visitors during the day, No - Where in the British Isles: were we given a more hearty welcome than in 'Wales, and in an •advance notice One of the news )ape said, -"The l 1 rs Canadian newspaper men and -wo- men are assured, of a hearty wel- come, not only because we in South Wales have a tradition_ of hospital- ity Which it is an obligation ,of hon- our and an exercise of pleasure to maintain, but because the export in- clustr'ies and ,,mercantile interests of this region compel is to endeavour to cultivate the good opinion of in- formation -seekers from near and far We are sure of, the interest of our 'visitors because South Wales has established many economic links with the Canadian Dominion. We desire to'extend our trade with them and we know that they would rather trade with us than with lands which are outside the British confraternity of nations. ', It was from the Bri- tish Channel that there went forth the adventurous navigators who 'dis- covered Canada: and since that day many less adventurous but -more hopeful voyagers have issued from this part of the country to help in colonizing Canada or to establish new links of commerce," And on leaving the same newspaper said, "Our Canadian guests were quick to discover our .best qualities as was evident by their addresses at the lunch and dinner. They found us not only fellow Britons .but men whose sympathies were quickened by commerical contact with the Bri- tish Dominions beyond the seas and with foreign -countries, Contact of this kind gives a deeper reality to British kinship: it also alleviates the strangeness which is the stamp of the foreigner. We are glad that our guests were favourably impress- ed, for they will go back to Canada with a better . appreciation : • of the Hosie Country.' and with the know- ledge that Imperial ties are as real to us as to ,those who range the out- er marches of the Empire." At Swansea An hour's train ride from Cardiff brought us to Swansea, another "Welsh city and here we saw what industrial Wales was like. • We saw the harbor from a tug in the morn- ing and in tize afternoon we were divided into smaller parties and vis- ited the coal mines and Mond Nickel works. At the latter the finishing touches are put on the refining of Canadian Nickel from° the company's. mines at;Sudbury, Ont. At Sudbury ore containing 40 per cent nicked is transformed into 80 p. cent metal Nearly 1000 rues are employed in the worl;s at Swansea :and the px'o cess is most interesting, Her again we tried our hand at a gait of bowls and were soundly trizz�.zne in the ,attempt, A banquet at nigh was tendered us by the Aznalgarnat ed Colleries and the Mond Nicke Co. following which, we heard' a wonderfully trained ,Welsh Choir Under the direction of Mr.' Gwilym Jones, sing a dozen songs in such ,a matinee that the visjtokli: iu}a1 in'zcan8 voted ly v itatlle ,rest they had Beard on the whole trip. Swansea being a smaller; place and the e ho is not h to large we Were dived ed into many small parties, and one party travelled out to a sulaIl town called Mumbles to spend the night. We are not giving away any secrets as: to who went to Mumbles but their experiences were such that one of the party expresses it in a tune- ful poem, of whioh the following is one of the verses,- "Take me back to Mumbles' Head Where reputations 'were bent; Let me talk to those fragile maids Who lived where we were sent. I want to be a Miss-ion-ar-ee At the Ship and Castle Hotel Oh, take me back to Mumbles' Head And a different story I'll tell." e 0 d FORM T t Addison, 'Alex. - Allen, Earl 1 Anderson, Harry Alexander, Ruby Baker, Lillian Caldwell, Velma.: Dearing, P,osa Dinney, Lyle Elgie, Margarets, Ford Irwin Hackney,; Marjorie. Becks, lyiargaret Hicks, Helen Hodgins, Eileen Hodgins;' Ivan Horton, Harold Howaa,ld, Muriel. Jennings, 'Harry Kitchen, James. McClyinont, Harry Mitchell, Clifton Mitchell, ' Harold Mooney, Vera Mucro, Alice Nelson, Januita:. Northcott, Stella O'Brien, 1Vlary Read ,Stanle' y Reeder, Elsie Salter,`'Doz'is , Scott, William Sines, Verde, Smith, Hazel Simmons, Annie Skinner, Harold Thomson, Elizabeth West, Sidney Walter Edith Westcott, .Marjorie Westcott, Doreen Willard, Alice' Willis, Wanda Wood, Pearl T\Toods, Katherine Yellow, Minna Forel .(,2) Zool. A. Willard, 70;"V. Caldwe11,56. NOTES While going' on the train from London to „ Weymouth we were shown at. Westbury an immense white horse carved in chalk on a hillside. This work we were told was done over 100 years ago and its history as given by one of the guards is as follows, -At one time. King George III. "Farmer George" decided to live in Weymouth (his royal residence is now converted in- to a first class residential ,hotel) ` and the towns people, to show their' ap- preciation, carved on a hillside what was supposed to represent the King on the figure of a white horse. 'When shown to the King, he noticed that the horse was headed towards London and he took that as a hint that the people of 'Weymouth did not want him as a resident. He was very angry and ever afterwards. had a grudge against the town and never again honored it with a visit. The horse, however, is still main- tainedu o the hillside .and"Soni e rdea of its size can be gained from the fact that thirty-five men can stand lin the eye. While being ' entertained in All !Souls Masonic Lodge in Weymouth ' we were shown their Volume of the Sacred Law, which is a "Breeches Bible." the famous edition which in Geneses III, 7, says that Adam and Eve when they realized they were naked took tig leaves' and "made unto themselves breeches." Only a few copies of this bible are in existence the publishers recalling the edition when the error was discover- ed. The edition was printed in 1640. THROUGH AT LEAST' Mistress -,Miranda, why do you go around with that no-accocunt man? He doesn't look as if lie knew anything. Maid -No, ma'am, he don't know much, butt what he do know,. <he knows awful well. R N O T POLISHED wM1o,Yt.�'X4.i. Afila left The trim. Rig -lit -The first rift. Bekaa -Fifty anises an flour over the : "'fin- ished" road - b e d Gxhoath riding and dust-pranf. in 'the opinion of ^ the expert railread builder the world prob- ably does not con- tain a perfect -,piece of track. The best of them approach perfection, and when they do so, n z nearly as human : in- germity and the expends • Lure o.f much money can carry thcrn, they are called "finished,' and that is the term' Canadian Pacific 'officials - cuts arrr applying to the company's limes between Montreal and Toronto and to .many other stretches of Cana- jean Pacific track in various parts of Canada. It is rock-b;ilasting that is the final touch in Modern railroad track construction, and in rock-bal- .•,lsting this particularstretch lr hof main line three to � Ire 1 ,,>,�r� / r , . r •, 1 Hien have beenengaged Car the ��++past • lour Y"i �°".�,., �, rt rte'+,�. Q xi , p r hc,,.�,� o treat-Tcronto Ione is are ��im or- Our years, 1' p• art ci e, T e trot 4''c+ :rolling ever. it grows heavier t p n Iz rock i rear by year, and when, 0 i ballasting was first heave e1 steel 'Area: ` as for - contemplated the. need for ,. e I els e enol d be do •tr� :u�, eL re an t xis nc .�,z. al' ,b o 1 , y 4��y' tilt e: i , ;in rail:' had t e talon : up and re laced a1, i s o b s p ands t the ', 'ard: 111:c trao.�.. �, .r�lazng One h rad ed poy Tran, before the actual roela-b'allastl,'ng began, this throe hundred odd'spies of track had to, be pro: ., •e r, . facilities', 't=,lath,called /pt,t r with sl,eczal draining facr ztzo� t lei' main, tr, miles of tiling, after which. t, big job k, . 11,"I' goy l'.. oa e s 3,. /e. a' sal lid of f all, it a., ars. t.,., ere to red ir,e rzglatic.z iLo t:'''r it; Any roelz wound not do, After ma''IOY r;r.;at i e ei' 1Tarrl a.: Ocelt;, Oz iaiio, which , nan z t.rz,„" et aeloinite, and i(, took thirty- .... 2 five thousand car -loads of ,-this .to complete the work, in. actual weight well over. two million tons. The actual plat- ing of the ballast was a big under- taking. The old ballast had first to be removed. For that purpose a "spreader" went over it digging out the ear=th and gravel on either side of the track down to the level of the `bottom of the ties. A gang of nice followed to shovel out the gravel between the ties and ` then cane car -loads of new stone ballast, already screened andraded as to g size, to be dumped in the corner of the track. The p raised: the track fourgang that followed or five inches' and .tamped the stone solidly underneath every tie:'- That was the first lift and then followed other car loads .,, of Ston. and another gang gave the track another lilt and again tamped the stone underneath, so that every tie had a geed eight inches o£ stony i� � c between it andth e clay bed of the track, bbore stone followed then came the trirnmino cl alit, and�• . surfacing job Wes finished. gn „ gang t' and the All the time this work was going on many ,a ssen- gess and freight trains wereassing• Ti „ weer the line every . day. Their 'canning was not interfered with i'n the slightest degree, a fact which greatly com- plicated 'was finished toe the entirer it sa isfactiona of notwithstanding zthe which Com- pany's officers; which is to say that the, constructio ; -now, completed � is typical of the most tecent ,� tlrvelc;;1- zpents in high grade passenger track, constreatiee Another stretch of track which re; 'e va;'•'-`:.> atten'tion"',. thzs year is the i;!;z ^.y;atl"'r' a lair; aalteetreal and Ottawa. w•, Gill„ reel ieic:l t. La Fr Co Li CH Al' Be Ge Ar 96 100 69 78 54 38 82 79 53 88 50 44 58 90 50 80 50 84 90 60 70 68 78. 74 89 53 47 46 64 67 4.4 ab 60 88,100 78 80 76066 '65 '82 65 52 68 ab 4.7 61 54 70 57 22 42 95 30 68.•63,. 9!5.58 28 35 ';39 75;24 90 ab 75 ,ab 6�2, ab 53 ab 50 ' 52 68 52 62 5' 71 42 80 70 59 72, .46 47 41 64 60 52-'.50 64 72 50 69 51 ab 51 ab 90 73 76 68 64 48 62.20 63`34 `ab 54 56 54 '52 16' 58 ab '59 72 70 6,B 86 84 59 65 83 52 88 100 79. 88 62 69 70 79 66 60100 61 68 50 66 55 80 54 66 60 60 82 66 80 73 83 65 .62 100 50 44' 58 97 48 68 68 80.'90 49 70 584, 3, 47 86 48 62 100 44 34 4.6 57 50 63 44 92 90 78 86 62 79 68 79 50 '68 75 50 52 52 50 "61 65 60 34 70 58 7,6 40 41' 40 61 75 80. 90 60 80 78 24 61 85 53 90 100 65 84.44. 81.77 80 ,70 '58 50- 80 22.' 50 73 46 95 57 54„,54 35',„38 ab 54 92 95:7.63 68'52 85.'69 76 69 26 90 35, 58.3'2 44' 29 63,:45 84 60 50 20 42•• 7:6 :62 ab 11T0 75 68 50 79;:68 42.70 44' 80.60 72 76 5758 60 60. 53 '66 44 21 74 74 '65 88' 60 ,59 66 48 66 64 69 62 62 56 64 52 4'1 61 45 90 49 54 44 44 28 65 52 60 100 59 28 66 20 38 55 60 ,46 85 50 30.28 61 37.63 53 71 52 50 84 68 44 6:4 65 44 70 52. 66 80 65. 72 80 100 49 67 65 94 100 67 62 ab .72 48 64 ab 59 ab 70 100 44' 81'62 FORM Beavers, Reginald Clarke, Marjorie Creech, Frank Creech, Hugh Down, Melville Fisher, Harold Frayne, George Gambrill, John Greb, Lily' Heamari,, Kathleen` Howey, Eugene Howey Marvin Hunter, Lulu hunter, Marjorie Kuhn, Stuart Kuntz, John Medd, hfarjorie Neil, Murray. 011e; Norah Pfaff, Leonard Scott, Ina Sims, Hilda Strang, Maybelle Taman, Edward Thomson,- Hazel Thomson, Leslie West, Florence 'Westlake, Calvin Winer, Ahna II - LC Gil Co Li Ar Ge Zo Ph Al 42 73 43' 50, 80 ° 48 66 17 80 72F60 33 72 67 54 90 47 54 55 42 64 71 46 80 53 68 74 51 73 66 88 86 '92 100 60 62 59 38 7,0. 60 ab 66 71 52 56 50 41 52 80 57 19.68 78 30 80 ab 72 54'40 43 52 58 39 54 56 38 60 82 71 67 66 72 78 60 70 53 '88 63 71 62 68 67,100 39 86 79 66 81 65 25 70 39 88 63 44 58 63 29 60 76 33 49 ab 73*`3:7.*37'"54 61 38 60 18 ab 60 35'93 34 42 61 68 90 57 68 70, 64 52 4 40 ab _.74 60 60 35 8025 72 51 59 62 68 42 78-55 82 53 43 64 47 90 63 ab ab 63 52-50 4.0 •86 76 64 66 73'85:60 50.90 70 54 50 58 66 ",70 82 64 80 48 71 53 60 50 61 68 60 60 46 60 55 70 80 82,75 64 74 47 55 60 73 76°51 46 64 37 50 30 '66.79 58 ,73 58: 44=,90.52 66 41 Form III. Form:,h. French, Form T Latin, R. Beavers 90. i Anderson,: Elva Bell, ,Wil1'iam Bissett, Marion Chambers, Nona Deichert, Theodore Elliott, Kathleen Frayzie Irene Fritz, .Dorothy Guenther,. Edith Hodgert Charles Hodgson, Herman Jarrott, Gilbert Johns, Margaret Kyle, Emerson Lamport, Irene Hey, Milton McLean, Fern McLean, Rosa Murphy, Mildred Reid, Laura Rose, Lillian Salter, Meta •Schilbe, Gertrude Spencer, Walter Turnbull, Grace, Von Wascinski, ;Wanda Wethey, Helen FORM YIIC'' - Co Li AH BH Al Ge Ph Ch 63 21 20 15 34 63 40 ab ab •'`'" 51 87 78 70 ab 75 89 70.. 67. 27 62 45 73 32 50 15 ..78 83 75.37 50 29 66 48 0 ab ab ab ab ab ab ab 75 74 41` 64 0 51 69 68 63 67 86 43 88.82 52 53 45 44 05 5,0' 57 60 28 74 ab -68 87 45 65 ab '43 40 ab ,72 70 60 57 60 42 59 32 ab 33 ab 22 -31. 70 58 41 62 29 50 28 62 37 36 ''71 5.4 72 60 21 62 50.27 ab 52 83 56 42 59 79 39 77 64 40 24 33 74 60) 70 54 ab 13 37 64 62 60 54 28 7972 66 78 62 48 62';50 82 53 78 68 54 62 50 a 55 65 43 12 15 46 56 54 58 78 57 50 79 83 87 82 28 22 54 76 5956 75 R. McLean, U. S. Comp., 53; U. 'S. Lit., 70; G. Deicliert, U. S. Botany, 62; U. S. Zoology, 80; M. Hey U. S. History, 68; E. Anderson, Physio- graphy 54; M. John's, Gram.54, Form I AIgebra` 93; G. Schilbe, U. S. Botany -75, Zoology 92; Wanda Von Wascinski, U. S. Literature 76; U. S. Literature,' H. Wethey 18; I. Elliott, L. S. Physiography 60. FORM IIIB Co Li All BH'Al Ge Ph Ch- Aldworth, brargaret *'63'.56- ,75'90 78 Colliugwood, Grant 1'90 62 7'8.; 84, '-70 80i. Creery, Agnes, 56 38 ab 54 64 ' 56 Elworthy, Beta, 30 42 61 Feist, Frederick 27 72 78 88 89 74 Geiser, ,Clara 68 29 ab 48 99 65, Geiger„ Newell . *56*'74. 66 44 83 85 74 85 Gower, Herman 73 25 48 Gelfillan, John *77 44 6,4' 68 86,73 Hamilton, Elizabeth 87 62, 32 64 77 81 46 Hayter, Helen 76 42 64 54 46 73 Heist, Gertrude 74 64.42 5,9 76 52,41 Hunter, Gerta. 60 .40' .50 '51 71 45 Mitchell, Ada 59 27 44 48 ab 48 30 ,73 Murray, Violet . 63 57 44 63 77 74''. Manson, Grace 69 22 34 28 34 :58 McFall, Prrey 62 47 , 46 71 Mcisaac, Lester 69 22 72 70 •• 53.65 Pullen, Florence 63 29 ab 48 29. - 46 Snell, Harold 62.47 4 Wren, Glad~s 58 7 665 y 64. ab 42 47 75 '' 'T'aken in; Upper School." TI Gram., Reta� Elwoi•th " _y 51, A: Mitchell 63, I-1. Snell 58. P. McFalls, II .Arith. 60, 1 Botany 54; G. Hunter, I Art 67. FORM IIIA `L FC' Co Li AB' BH Al 64. 56 61 34 28 48 80 44 54 41 '80. 54 48 40 55 53 9 .62 17 83 74 83 44 62 Y 31 J7 44 36 18 36 35 *`73 45,•' *55 50 46 66 32°'°49*•72 93' 97' 51). 61 63 85'71 34 44 G •5 J 43 26 '• 44 ab '73 59 77 51 10 Abbott. Francis Alien, Wilfrid Campbell Bland. Ford, Lillian Fowler Good Gp p' m 1 z rl] Obert; Harvey, Florence Robert Hunter, 7lowarcl Mackonzi , Jean Morlock, Ella' Pryde, John Roulaton Verne ,,,app, .'aree 'nielselr, Oscar .'''b'lrl'rlbttll. 'Wilfrid Willis, .l'v'rarie Wood, Olive rapeer Seliooi. 75, lioteziy 65. 70'85 68 41 93 571'69176 60 58 34 46 Ge Ph Ch 71 77 � 71 33 .&lkcnhead, Margaret Aldworth, Edward Beavers, George Campbell, Charles Case, Peter Cornish}Ewart Creech,Rub" Pignan, Howard Farquhar, Maurice Feist, Nola Gilfillan, 'Mary Grab, Ledi and Hodgson, , ,Goal Heywood,Wesley HeywoodThos. ' Hoffman, Alice Hogarth, "Janie Howard, Evelyn i Johns, . Walter M ttn, `Lylyazz McGill„ 'Wesley Medd, Eleanor Pollen, 14arvey Rowe, Beta Sanders, Grant Sbus, Mervyn Snell, Lilla:Mae Staabury, Kenneth Statham, Lyle Tiernan, Lorne Thomson, .Pearl Woods, Manion Woods, Nesbitt ',t * in a lower form. FORM Ty ' La Fr Ge Gr Ce Li MH Al Ge Tr P11 61 86 74 35 65 *84 61u38 60 8662*87*89 82 89 71 50 63 *69 62 79 70 . x'61 56 78' 80 50 60 88, 74 ab5873 93,70 32 62 . '94 ab 32 74 T3, 97 64 66 19 0 ''' , : ,,' ' *; . 98 ' " 61 7,436 5L*•S2 63 %,71 '.66 "53 45 X75 32 , • ; 46128 58 78 50 '62 *12 ' 64 45 61 "68 Cli Bo'ZG 65 83. 84 ,84 92 *53" ab 83 *54. *:81 =96 98 91 *48 *77 *83 95 -,*31 J. Hogarth A. History, "S G... 83u66 57 66 73' 78• 50 7$,,60 31,54 t7-4' 36 *59 20 73' 48 95 85; 64 73 80 77 96 62 40 57 76- 57 69 29 52 68 93 78 51 100 66 .57 70 50 50 75 64 84 84u77 69 51 *' S 0 >* 9, 6 35 55 57 44 46 64 47 65 90e 74 62 94 56 46 60 AUCTION SALE CLEARING FARM STOCK AND IMPLEMENTS • FEED AND FURNITURE The undersigned will], seal by public auction at Lot 18. N. E. Boundary, Osborne, on THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1924 at 12.30 p•m, the following " HORSES' -agriculture -mere 6 'years. old, agriculture "mare' 8 years old, a general purpose mare 9 years old, goad in all harness.' CATTLE -Ayrshire cow due • at time of sale, Durham cow due Dec, I; nail- ed .(-tragus cow due in April, Durham, cow duein ;May, 2 Durham cowsfresh- ened two months, ;4 .Durham sie;ers rising, 2 years olds 2 Durham heifers rising 2 years o1di, 6 `spring calves, 2 young; calves 2 months Old. 1-IOGS -Yorkshire 'brood Sow due in Dec,, 2 Yorkshire brood .lows due An Jan.,' 10 store hogs about' 100 ib., 10 shd'ats about 70 lb. each, 18 pigs 9 w eek:;. old, choice collie - dog 13 months 14 HEns-60 White Leghorn Jaen; 4 cockerels. • HAS' AND GRAIN -I5 tons of choice 'Mixed hay, quantity; of strawy, 400 bushels of oats, 500 bushels of mix ed'grain 300 bushels inangolds, 65;) bushel:: turnips. ' IMPLE12EtiTS-/V1.-13. binder 6 ft. cut, sheat, carrier, nearly new; :M -H. mo.n*er, 5 ft cut, steel hay' rake, new; Success • manure spreader, ,' F. & W. seed drill, F. Sr W. disc harrow, In- ernat onai, spring tooth cultivator 0 s t s ingle.'furrow: riding plow, nearly new; Verity No 21 walking plow, scuffler, barn waggon and box and spring :eat, complete hay, ra;ek, stock rack, new gravel box, new used gravel box, land roller, set sleighs, top : buggy, light wagon, set ironharrows, harrow cart. fannitng mill, set scales, 2,000 lbs. cap- acity a p o- acity; ladder, set slings, quantity white brick, 2 cauldron kettles, of wim®- stretcher, crow bars, spade, whiffle - trees, neckyokesa bag truck, root pulp- et, grain, bags, set brass mounted har- ness, nearly new; 2 sets used harness;. horse collars, Premium. cream separator,. cream cans, 3 milk pails, crocks, ;awn- mower, Daisy c1turn, washing machine,. cookstove, dropleaf table, cupboard; corks; hoes and useful.arti'cles found. on the farm. TERMS -$10 and under : cash; over that amount 12 months' credit will •be•'' ginne.n on. furnishing approved . point notes, or a discount of 5 per 'cent. off for cash. No reserve as proprietor has rent- ed his farm. Sale witlil start shsrp'oh.. tune Nairn & Watson Jas. J. Vance Auctioneers P r oipriietar- Jas. Ballantyne, Clerk. LITTLE WILLIE'S TROUBLE` Mother- (anxiously) What is Wil: lie crying for? Willie's Brother- Oh; nothing.' much. He dug a hole in the garden,. and,'now that the rain's come on, he - wants to bring the hole into the- house. IS - 'et.•ialists may dev +e i .Y e)ap and ern gip; rp�, ,. variat: fi. brr'Js, but they' standar-d of a country's cattle d6- perids on the :!i arts of the farmer in this direc.ti ' OT,, ;, n.E YC CT DO:=':amu YOUR SIJARE? lire; are glad t o :z1.ciat any • a f: � responsible or.5lble farrrel• who requiios fi ineirg.: sea THE 'CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE Capital Paid Up $20,000,000 Reserve Fund $20,000,000 M R. Complin, Manager G. G. Maynard, Manager "Exeter Branch . - Crediton Branch - •Incorporated 1855 CAPITAL - $4,000,000 RESERVE $3,000,000 OVER 120 BRANCHES IN CANADA THE MOLSONS BANK 'Moue's should not be left lying around the house, even locked up or, hidden,,away.. Depos ited in a Savings Account "with Ther;, Maisons Bank it issafe, earns interest and,;is readily available.• EXRTEIi 1313.,NC$ T. S. WOOD)S, Manageai' USI3ORN,E '& HERBERT MUTUF�ii FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Flea(' office; Farquhar, Ont. President, ' 'JOHN ALLISOIy' V ice-Presi,den t -JAS. McIENZIE THOS. RYAN SJMJN DOW ROBT., 1VOlIRIS . W.M. BR,OCK AGENTS .JOHN ESSERY, 'Centrale 'Osborne and Biddu ate. DR A. R. KENHra1[axt, Mond!. Graduate of Toronto tielvtr- Eity. IT191NTIS`1C Office over Glad's -mu & Stabury'a office, Main Street, Fxrrter. MONXiy TO LOAN We have. ve rr large e "azrp�t � tt tet of oriva �• funds to a, Agent for'loan on farm and vi]iafw propertlea, ,at lowest rates of i z+ OLIVER HARRIS, Munro, Agent for I tar,=st, x G% ,. '? l4� spa • . i•,�r` LL e3'P' '66 Ribbert Fullerton and Iogaa .' 53 W. T 5 6 CTI'.NT3C.Lh .. Secre 49 60 r tart' -Treasurer 64 42 531 Box 98 Exeter, 'Ontario. 59 GLADMMAN & STANI3UTRY I - Ps,„ rixte'e, Soticltors, Main 1*, l,ao,ro, Outa.rin JAMES . tr 5T kt/ -,,t T N • 75 60 ; Solicitors, Exeter. LICENSELa U C7 , n.,1,1P 2 671 •%1.1„N'11.3a 70 44 5!126 r 59 81 G1Ylrm Hunter, CI.S Zo©loy 62 t '.1a i 13 ,r i „JT3ci, ,. p, C . w:..,oclogy, l)O') r0 ranee p re -tin psdaa t ta7,Mnnoo4. 1rer I. 1t Cer'IIa;g'€ Le; Sales concluz, j c.,c , lt; any, n y locality. 1i.trin Stoclr rr e ii .'tlr5 a sp�,,ta,J.Y: Sade-' faction gol1'int .r. Ecrl. <.bpr;,t„ mod- erato. Orders ref at Cla's efface will be promptly attended f . 11.11. No 1, J(irk;or,. Phone Nirl,ton 54r2.•