Exeter Times, 1915-7-22, Page 4'Ibenteeielaayorea kelMedicineAct.
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For Infanta and Children.
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lion, SourSlomacb,Diarrtioea,
Worms,eonvutsions.Fe+terish-
nese and LOSS OFSLEEP,
FacSimile 5ignalureoi;
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14ONTREAL&NEW YORK
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THE CF,T.1t COMPANY. NCW YO„K CITY.
atiminerServioloHighlands
of Ontario front Toronto
r,o5
a.m. daily for Muskoka Lakes,
daily except Sunday for Lake of Bays,
Algonquin 1'arT, Maganetawau Ritter
and Timaganii Lake points.
s.o.15 a.m. daily exclpt Sunday for
.Georgion Bay, Lake of Bays and 14ia-
g reaetawan River points.
R2 old p.nn. daily except gundap for
119 uskoka Lakes, Lake of Bays and Al-
tgonquin Park.
S TEAMSI1 IP EXPRESS
Leaves Toronto - tt,t5
Arrives Sarnia Wharf, 4.3o p.m.
Each Monday, Wednesday and Satur-
day, connecting with N.N. Co. -s pala.
tial steamships for Sault S. Marie -
'Fort. Arthur, Fcrt William and Du-
luth. and at Fort William with• G.T.P.
R e.ilway for Winnipeg and points in
Western Canada. Coaches, Parlor-
y.�lbrary-Cafe and Parlor -Library -Buf-
fet ears between Toronto and Sarnia
Wharf.
Pantie./ particulars en application
to Grand Trunk Ticket Agents.
N. J. DORE, AGENT, EXETER,
Woven Wire Fence
below Mena factor=
gin`s' Prices, either
Peerless or Mon=
.rch makes
buy at once'
as toes.- prices will not last
very long,
C Wire Fence 23e per Rod
O `'&Ell° antie . nor poste
10,000 t :edar Posts on band
--eieo A.n, eor Poeta
lumbar and Osrdon
Let n• quote you my Lew
i,, ices on .ue Lumber .require-
lrents, vier her large or small
leers. -AT t etueut,
A,. J.
CLA fW'lY
4 ; ••ftNTON •
1(
l - 'A n't a j t^or►ipTirii ^
Vining tbe South African war Mt
order we'd issued to the men of the
Highland regiments that they must
cover up their tartan kilts es they
made too good targets for the enemy.
Tice order proved very unpopular and
caused a great deal of dissatisfaction
among the soldiers concerned. When
Sir George White heard this he thought
of a way ant of the diC'i,'ulty.
"Let them corer up only the front
or their kilts," he said. "The enemy
will corer see tbe other side."—Lon-
don Answers.
"Cranks" Catalogued.
A catalogue of murderers is one of
the curiosities in the offices of the
United States secret service in Wash-
ington. 3n this catalogue all the
"cranks" in this country : are listed.
rarer alpbabetieaily under their naaues
and aliases :arid, secondly, under the
particular forms taken by their obses-
sions. The catalogue is kept op by
contributions from the police of every
town and city where a crack is found.
teurlfyisee the Air.
A pitcher of cold water placed on
the table of an occupied room will ab-
sorb all the gas with which We room
is filled from the respiration of those
eating or sleeping in it. In a few
-hours this pitcher of pure water will
make the air of the room pure, while
the water itself will become totally un-
fit for use.
LLOYD GEORGE AT CARDIFF
} iA,a..h ter of Munitions Hopeful of Set-
tlement of Miners' Strike.
LONDON, July 20.—David Lloyd
George, Minister or: Munitions, went
to Cardiff yesterday, there to meet
We miners and the employers in
an endeavor to make peace between
' Lieu and assure an early settlement
of the strike., whh h is daily becoming
snore menacing to the welfare of the
country. He WOD accompanied by
Walter Runciman, President of the
Board of Trade, and Arthur Fender -
son, a Labor member and the new
Minister of Education in the coali-
tien Cabinet.
It is known .that Mr. Lloyd George
(,resented a. peree al letter from Pre-
mier Asquith. Nothing, however, re -
e :.'sting the reture of the discussion
wee divulged. There teems to be a
eliee; at enueli-:f, as tI. result of the
eonferenee, that the strike situation
i:, much ireproved, and that an early
eettlemont i:. probable.
The special corresncndents at Car-
diff from Lot.cioe nee epapers tried
to induce Mr. Lloyd George to make
a statement, but this be steadfastly
refused to do, sa:•ying only; "The :sit-
uation is a most ditiioAt one, and per-
haps the less said the better: -4111
s;are to say at this time is that I hope
for an eerier settlement."
1
';'!'';y Cf lE,FilFrclin
xyr;5R'C'
a Iriu't
1: •:,c
1 NVU.Vo•�st?c, b, t.Q,
Alta"tr(Jl Ela TRIenICHLsS TAKEN
:<iliaans. 1'aeneno- Plateau and Also
f".•,tsOO Prisoners
ROME, July. 20.••' -Tho following
eernmunication was l::curd yesterday:
"The Italian o1Yerir.ive on the Ca -
Caere front, in the i+ leerceo district;
end in tee ;rpper valley of the An -
reel bat continued to develop favor-
ably.
"In (Sarnia we have opened an ef-
feetive fire egaimit Fort Herrmann,
.i rth-eeet t.1 Plcr.co, and are inflict-
notable damtr.:iiy. With our
uk,rtilc„_ t,. the Canso plateau sev-
leapt,
T
iz,n
.ee, eolidly armored
earl
ptc { d, Vn , <
u•rtessz
vely as-
a.c»rtc:ss a:.:c cant -seed. ' 'S''d.o thousand
a ' 'Y:;errt, includin S' offioers and
1 In:1,1141e tales, 1,5t4 tides, and n
s,., v-' seem:Site z1 eaueitioue were cap-
er: red.
renewed this
s.,c,..t,rtee wit ,•_; ...e ivii±,it- of the Isms-
go front: with redoubled energy's' '.f
T B E EXETER T I M
ALL EYES ON WAISA TURKS LACK MUNI
Fate of Polish City Now Hangs
in the Balance.
Vont Hindenburg is Pressing len the
North and Von tlaeltensen on the
South, Bending Back the Russian
Line—One Report Says Gradual
Evacuation of the City Has Al-
ready Been Ordered.
LONfON, July 20. --According to
the latest accounts, the Austro -Ger-
man forces, advancing from. Prza-
snysz, were within forty miles of
Warsaw, while to the south von i\Tac
kensen's centre was, at certain points,.
within ten miles of the Lublin-Choim
railroad.
The Morning Post's Budapest cor-
respondent reports that the gradual
evacuation of Warsaw has been or-
dered by the Russians.
Can Warsaw be held? With the
German Field Marshals, von Hinden-
burg on the north and von Macken-
sen
ackensen on the south, whipping forward
the two ends of a great are around
the city, it is realized in England that
Grand Duke Nicholas, Commander-
in-chief of the Russian armies, has
We most severe task imposed on him
since the outbreak of the European
war, and the military writers of some
of the London papers seem to think
that the task is well-nigh impossible,
There was sustained confidence
that Germany's previous violent at-
tacks along the Bzura-Rawka frontont
would never pierce the Russian lines,
but the present colossal co-ordinate
movement was developed with such
suddenness and carried so far with-
out meeting serious Russian resist-
ance that more and more the British
press is discounting the fall of the
Polish capital, and, while not giving
up all hope of its retention, is point-
ing out the enormous difficulty the
Russian armies have labored under
from the start by the existence of
such a salient.
Having been unable to straighten
out their line by an advance through
East Prussia in the north and Gal-
icia in the south, the Russians have
pereetually faced the pincers of the
Austro -Germans, and if these eau
now be sufficiently tightened Warsaw
must go, and with it the entire line.
In the Baltic provinces Gen. you
Bnelow, who is using large forces of
cavalry, has crossed the Windau
River, and is moving toward Riga,
and is declared to have taken 3,600
prisoners and six guns in the first
battle. in the I'a-zasuysz district
Field Marshal von Hindenburg, who
is making his fourth attempt to
reach Warsaw, has twice broken the
Russian lines, and compelled the de-
fenders to retiro toward the Narew
River.
in Southern Poland, after a period
of inactivity, Field Marshal von Mac-
kensen is again on the move, and
claims to have captured some Rus-
sian advanced positions which stood
between him and his objective, the
Lublin -Cholic railway.
Simultaneously with these attacks,
which are the main ones, the Austro -
German armies are on the offensive
west of the Vistula River, in Central
Poland, and along the Dniester River,
in Galicia. As was the case in the
drive through Western Galicia, the
Russians are fighting .stubbornly,
and on occasion are turning and de-'
livering vicious blows at their oppon-
ents. But whether they will be able
to hold their present lines is proble-
matical.
With the enormous number of Ger-
man troops being used for the offen-
sive in the east—the greatest move-
ment of the kind ever undertaken in
the history of war—the military
critics here do not look for any
events of outstanding importance in
the west for some time to come.
STRIKE AT ARMS WORKS.
Efforts to Settle Trouble et Bridge-
port Hare ]Failed.
BRIDGEPORT, Conn., July
Negotiations to bring about an amic-
able settlement of the difficulties be-
tween the machinists of Bridgeport
and the Remington Arms and Am-
munition Company, engaged on a
gigantic scale in the manufacture of
war munitions for the allied armies,
'have failed. Labor leaders announc-
ed'tast night that the first of the ma-
chinists would throw down their
Wale and walk out at noon to -day,
They added that within a weak all
'work in the Remingion shops and In
the shops of subcontractors would
be at a ctandstiil. Just how far the
strike might spread in other manu-
facturing communities of New Eng-
land the tabor leaders were unable
to estimate.
The announcement was made by J.
J. Keppler, International Vice -Presi-
dent of the Machinists' Union, and
John A. Johnston, Vice -President of
the Structural Iron Workers, •follow -
nig a lengthy meeting* of the workers.
ASSAULTS REPULSED.
Germans Used Burning Liquids in
Vain on Heighte of Meuse..
PARIS, July 20. ----Tho he_ghts of
the' Mouse are the scene of present
activity in the western war theatre,
the fighting on other parts of tbe
front being confined chiefly to artil-
lor;,- actions- •
The German.: made a determined
attack Saturday to regain the ground
they had lost a fortnight ago on the
Meuse between the. Calonne trench
and the village of Les 1:pargos. They
were driven back with considerable
Iose except on a crest south of the.
ravine, where they succeeded in ob-
taining; and holding a footing over
•
nrg ht, . Part of this position was re-
taken by the French in a counter-
attack yesterday morning.
Throughout Suziday the Germans
eentinued their efforts, launching a
freel. ea.c.l. with 1..r,ufr
_ t lf, lac 1<.ers.
i
't 1 :.y;', leo evct•, a^}ri>i> rtl ar:i•in
Vitt 'Very. tlefele• losscaa ,
'111(I,ul: SDAr', ,JtfI','Y 22nd, i ii s„-
IONS MOTHER Of
Enemy at DardanDlles Crippled
Says Correspondent,
There Is..a Nott:;; a);le Ditnittutio:a ilr
the Number of Shells They Arc
lauding at the Allied Troops, f4$ -s
Aslrmend Bartlett in Description
of Operation; Now Goitre ea in
Gallipoli,
LONDON, July 20.—A despatch
front I;, Ashiuead Bartlett dated.
39astern Mediterranean," says:
"'1'hc recent successful advance of
our left wing took place on both sides
of what is now generally known as
the gully ravine, nand although. our
troops made no effort to advance di-
rectly up the ravine, the fall of the
enemy's trenches on either side has
placed another• Tittle of thin valley of
death in their hands, The Turks,
who e: now every inch of tbe ground,
formerly fired a tremendous number
of shells into the ravine, but of late
there has been a distinct falling off,
pointing to- a growing shortage of
'ammunition."
Who will ever.' forget the scenes
witnessed in the captured Turkish
trenches on either side and in the
ravine itself the day after they were
taken fby. our infantry? Tbe Turks'
pcsitlons are invariably filthy, and
if the enemy goes through a cam-
paign without some great epidemic
ac+ is shaving undue luck. All the
way up a. portion of the gully there
was a litter of debris of camps and
a great number of scattered bodies
half protruding 'from the ground in
hastily dug graves. There were hun-
dreds of rifles and bayonets, some
broken, but the majority intact, and
thousands and thousand of rounds
of ammunition with a quantity of
entrenching tools and loaves of bread
scattered about.
"Soldiers' pack, Turkish letters, a
mullah's prayer stool, greatcoats,
kits, blankets. old sacks cooking
utensils and firewood were left just
where the enemy abandoned them
when our infantry broke through at
the bayonet's point.
"Great fires are burning at inter-
vals, but they are avoided by all as
they give forth a horrid, sickly
5111011.'S
Reports received during the last
few clays regarding the Dardanelles
operations, and particularly the Turk-
ish means of defence, have led to tbe
prediction that a victory which will
place Constantinople at their mercy
will be reached within six weeks.
Generally speaking, tbie confident an-
ticipation is regarded as ultra -optim-
istic, but it originates in a quarter
which- deserves attention.
A despatch to the Daily Mail from
Athens, dated Sundae', says:
Heavy fighting, continues on the
Gallipoli Peninsula. The allies are
attac.I ing vehemently along the
whole front. Each attack is preced-
ed by a bombardment from heavy
French artilleryand the guns of the
warships_ Ali _ the attacks are re-
ported to havr: been successful, but
there is no termite news concerning
thei=r..
FIFTY THOUSAND READY.
Great Army of Women March to See
Lloyd George.
LONDON, July 2e.—Fifty thou-
sand women of Britain gathered Sat-
urday on the Victoria Embankment
and paraded through the streets with
banners flying to demonstrate their
enthusiastic desire to be enlisted in
the service of the country. Tbere was
a remarkable scene when the Minis-
ter of Munitions, accompanied by
Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the suf-
fragist leader, appeared on a plat-
form overlooking the embankment
alongwhich th _ procession made its
way.
Mr. Lloyd. George bad previously
received a deputation, headed by Mrs.
Pankhurst, .who said it was a crime
for men tb be doing work which
could be 'performed by women.
In response to loud cries for a
speech, the Minister said that the
Government intended to utilize the
services of everyone r.epared to as-
sist, aiul declared that victory event-
ually would be won. Tbere were
dark clouds looming in the East, but
he looked to. the indomitable courage
of Russia to meet this hurricane. The
clouds would scatter and the hurri-
cane would disperse, and Russia
would "emerge Ince more formidable
reel deadly, to help greatly the demo-
cratic countries in the west achieve
a great victory for tho freedom of
Europe." ,
The conclusion of the Minister's
speech was the signal for a great
patriotic demonstration: Hats and
nags were waved enthusiastically,
while the band: played the National
Anthem,
Despite a .drizzling rain, it is esti-
rental that G0,000 marchers, led by
Mrs Pankhurst, were in tho ranks,
which &I:deinmi. many titled women,
and included Lady Colebrook, Lady
Knollys, and Mrs. Waldorf Astor.
-Securing Gold Supply.
PARIS• July 20.—The Ministry of
Finalise ]friday issued a note regard-
ing means adopted for resupplying
the treasury with gold as follows:
"The general treasury will be re-
supplied by joint measures which
bare been adopted by the Bank of
Franco and the tax officers. Specially
engraved receipts will be given to
those who will exchange their gold
for these receipts, which upon de»
mend will be exchanged for gold.
Plants to Make Europe Tremble. '
PE'Ti1OGTtAD, July 20.—The news
is current hose that Emperor William
hastelegraphed to -his sister, the
Queen of Greece, that be "bas petal -
nod Russia for at least six - months
to conic, and is, on the eve of deliv-
ering a coin) on the western front
th^t will melte all
Europe
stern 1
e.,•
Intssia hae not yet beeotae aware of
nine symptom!, of paralysis, .
SCHOOLCIRI
Tells How Lydia E. Pinkhalln's
Vegetable Compound Re-
stored Her Daugh-
ter's Health.
Plover, Iowa.—"Prom a small child
say 13 year old daughter had female
weakness, I spoke
to three doctors
about Maud they did
not help her any.
Lydia E, Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-
pound had 'been of
great benefit to me,
so I decided to have
her give it a trial.
She has taken five
bottles of the Vege-
table Compound ac-
cording to directions on the bottle and
she Is cured of this trouble. She was
all run down when she - started taking
the Compound and her periods did not
come right. She was so poorly and
weak that I often had to help her dress
herself, but now she is regular and is
growing strong and healthy."—Mrs.
MARTIN HELVIG, Plover, Town
Hundreds of such letters expressing
gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pink-
ham's
inkham's Vegetable Compound has accom-
plished are constantly being received,
proving the reliability of this grand old
remedy.
If you are ill do not drag along and
continue to suffer day in and day out but
at once take Lydia E..Pinkham'e Vege-
table Compound, a woman's remedy for
woman's ills.
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham llledicine Co. (confl■
dential) Lynn, Hass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence.
a ' - OR BORDEN
qtr
Sir Robert Will Be Given Freedom l
City of London.
LONDON, July 20.—Premier Bor-
den is to receive the freedom of the
city of London "in appreciation of
his services to the Empire and in
grateful recognition. of the splendid
part taken by the Dominion. of Can-
ada during the present war ani the
invaluable assistance tendered by the
officers and men of the Canadian con-
tingent on the battlefields of Eu-
rope." The freedom will be enclosed
in a goldbox, tho customary access-
ory on such an occasion.
This honor is the highest the citi-
zens of London can grant, and it is
sparingly bestowed. Earl Grey was
thus honored after his term as Gov-
ernor-General. The ceremony will
take place at Guildhall at the end of
this month.
Sir Robert -dined with the Colonial
Secretary, Bonar Law, last night.
"You are not merely fighting for
the Dominion, nor even for the Brit-
ish Empire, but in a very true, sense
for civilization, and therefore, it is
not too much to say, for tbe future
of the whole civilized world itself,"
said Sir Robert' after a review' of the
Canadian troops at Shorncliffe on
Saturday. "You may be Assured
that popular government based
on democratic ideals, such as all
British dominions have been accus-
tomed to, would be profoundly modi-
fied sbould Germany. win. But we
bave no fear of that. I know you
will emulate the prowtse and the
exploits of the first contingent, -
which caused a thrill or pride from
one end of the Dominion to the
other which bas not ceased to vi-
brate yet. I am sure that you will
render equally good account of
yourselves. H.R.H. the Governor-
General before I left told me to wish
yo -t from him God speed. I wish
you the same On behalf of all Cana-
dians." -
ORDUNA ESCAPES "SUB."
Cunardcr Narro-n y Avoids Destruc-
tion OR Kinsale Head.
NEW YORK, July 20.—The Cun-
ard liner Orduna, bound from Liver-
pool to New York with 227 passen-
gers, including 22 Americans, was at-
tacked without warning, it was learn-
ed on her arrival here Saturday, by
a German submarine on the morning
of July 9. -
Twenty mf_es from the graveyard
of the Lusitania off Old Head of Kin-
sale, the Orduna escaped the Lusi-
tania's fate by one-half a second of
time or ten feet of space, the Ger-
man torpedo churning the water that
distance behind the liner's rudder.
Then .the Orduna sped away. She
was followed by , the submarine,
which rose to tho, surface, manned ,a
gun on her deck, and shelled the
fleeing steamer.
For half an hour the Orduna show-
ed her heels to the assailant. Through
marine glasses the passengers watch-
ed the dark splotch on the water's
surface astern. They saw the low-
lying German warsbip coming on
with ao
herbnein
teeth, .
t butthe Or -
dune's flight was faster Or
than the
pursuit, and after seven shots had
been fired, without effect, the subma-
rine gave up the 'chase.
Protest will be made to the Amer-
ican Government by at least -one citi-
zen of the United States, and pos-
sibly other's, who' was aboard. Wil-
liam O. Thompson, of Chicago, coun-
sel -.o the Federal Industrial Rela-
tions Comnissioe, who went Abroad
in his official capacity last March
and ret
utnt
og to complete to his
mission by snaking a report, is the
passenger who saic'l to -day that be
would make vigorous protest to the
American Government. - -.
Children Cry.
FOR FLETORER';
".111'"11i"'iil'"911"911"11111"'lil'"Iirill'"111 Itr"111
•' 11
r ut lu'tIt
tacorpolated
1855
TUE .MO- NS -BANK
A GENERAL. BANKING BUSINESS
TRANSACTED ,
%NCLUnING -S
CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREOtt:
RANK MONEY ORDERS
CAPITAL
AND
RESERVE
$8,800,000.
92 Branches
in Canada
Owe
Mit
INN
11110
11140
Savings Bank Department
At all. Branches , ,
Isterestallowed et highest current rata i
;,EaTITElt. BRANCH
W. D. CLARKE, Monager
il.ltaittela nuteath itimutrdlindewnsione n„dfifieneelt„1Rf
THE CANA IAN BAN
OF COMMERCE
SIR EDMUND WALKER. C,V,O., L L. D., D.C.L., President
ALEXANDER LAIRD. General Manager JOHN t1IRD. Ass't General MnnageelTM
CAPITAL, -$15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, $13,500,000,
BAleTKING BY MAIL
Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian Bankc
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 as
satisfactorily as by a personal visit to the Bank.
Exeter Branch— H. J.rWBITE, Manager
111.1 ' 'DREDITON BB .NCH — A. E. KUHN, Manager,
TT -MOM* ISLANWP4r
Japan Has a Lake of Them, and two
Sometimes Capsize.
In Yamagata, Japan, is a small lake
called the Lake of the Floating Is-
lands, discovered about tbe year 1340,
which has from that time attracted
the attention of many poets and liter-
ary men. A report on the mysterious
movements of these islands, drawn up
by a party under Professor S. Huse -
Seise, rs published in the science re•
ports of the Toboku Imperial uuiver•
sity.
Tbe floating islands, which at times
number no fewer than sixty, are found
to be coutinually changing their posi-
tions, moving first one way mud then
the other. In the first series of obser-
vations wooden floats were placed in
the Take, showing the distribution of
the various currents, Subsequently a
model of the lake was constructed, and
it was found possible closely to repro:
duce the -various movements of the
surface. When both water and wind
currents were taken into account the
actual behavior of the islands was
found to be quite in accordance with
theory and experiment,
The islands originate from masses of
vegetable debris, which are first -car-
ried to the surface by bubbles of gas;
then reeds commence to grow from
seed on them. Sometimes the mass
becomes topheavy and overturns, and
reeds grow on the other side, until the
island has grown sufficientlylarge in
extent to secure stability.
TEST OF A 'TOASTMASTER,
His Speech, Whether it Be Good or
Bsd, Should Be Very' Brief.
To the average man an inset:neon to
"make a few remarks" utter dinner is
at once a terror and a secret pride. To
be asked to be the toastmaster at a big
dinner Is usually taken as recognition
of wit and knowledge. -
The toastmaster's speech should be
very brief. if be is a good streaker
himself a speech of any considerable
length inipusee unfair competition upon
the real speakers, usually •visiting
guests, Whom -be is to hitrurhaca It
the toasttuaster is a poor .speriker be
bores the audience and the waiting
guests as well. And in any • event
every minute occupied by. the toast.
master Is a robbery of the' time of the
real speakers or the • evening: and no'
After dinner speaker May !lire a rent
message 'that needs delivery, and the
gong drawn introduction, teeth • side.
.igbts and anecdotes, will really cbeat
the audience -of something worth while:
Tbe toastmaster has a task of courte-
sy—to prepare the diners for the man
who is to speak, to tame and train the"
audience into a proper 'frame of mind
and to turn it over to the speaker in -
termed as to his identity, -prejudiced .
In his favor a little perhaps, but cer-
tainly- not in the reaction foilowtng a
laugh raised by tbe toastmaster.--13os• -
ton Globe. -
Are Foxes Vegetarians?
Poxes are not generally accredited
with vegetarian instincts. You never
seetheir
track
se.
as you
see those e
of
rabbits, around a young oak tree shoot
which bas been nibbled down to 'the
tough Stem. .13ut Aesop evidently
thought otlrerwlse when he wrote his
fable of the sour grapes, and there is
plenty or testimony that Aesop' was
right. Poses do eat wild grapes, as
many observers have testified, climb-
ing a considerable way to get them,
and probably nt times they eat berries
and perbaps apples. I have found their
tracks, sr at ane rate, beneath apple11
e
trees, I have also been confidently as-
•surea that they eat the persimmons in
Virginia, that the "or houn' dards'
know how good this Malt is, too, and if
Sou wish
to rind tbe Very
best bee tree
take a "dawg" with you. — Walter
Prichard Eaton in Barper's tfngaztne, •
J. A. MASON
ARCHITECTI
425 Dundas Street, London, Guava ta
teed cost of buildings; no extras; 11 -
years New York experience. Phe to t
2'725.
Anyone intending to build will de
ell o write me. No charge for ceeni
sulat -
CJ.W. KARN, M.D.C.A!I,
425 RICHMOND ST., LONDON,.
ONTARIO.
SPECIALIST IN
SURGERY AND PN1TO-VE1P1AR'ir
DISEASES OF AND wo dEN;
D]3. G. F. ROULSTON, L.r'U.S., EQUI
DENTIST , i �1
Honor Graduate of Toronto Un`uvexe-
sit). Office over Dickson do /-
Zing's Law office. Closed Wednzae--
day afternoons. Phone Office flalp,
Residence 5b. •. ,
Lit. A, R. KINSMAN Irl37,b9'r D.IA„IL.
Honor Graduate of Grants $i 1W'
ersity, i ,,�_�.U,I.
r DENTIST i i •lhll
Teeth extracted without pleas seal
any bad effects. Office ove441nic••
than & Stanibury's 01Sice Maras Ur
Exeter. a ., i
1-• W, BROWNING M. •p11, >b
• P. S, Graduate Victoria Umtata- •
sity Office and residence 1)0011410 1111.
Labratory., Exeter, 1_Lsrl
Associate Coroner of Huron I' i
D ICESON & CARLING . I' '
Barristers, Solioitore - Notaries Ss-
veyanoera Commissioners, Eolisitl
for- the Molsons Bank eto, 1
Money to Roan, at lowest rates of ice-
tereat. t ., Idj
OFFICE-M.AIN STREET. EXN'UMB y
1. R. Carling B. A; U. Hl. Diana�i
MONEY, TO LOAN, t i I I I l 1
We have a large amount el Dprtpla
ate funds to loan on farm and Vt3.
lage propertiea at lowest rata ad tia
terest,
.J41
GLAN &
•BSTANBUB71 ! al
arristers, Solicitors, Maim
$h
ExeteraADM, r 1- 1., 4
Tee Morn and Hibbert
Farmer's - Mutual Fire insur-
anoe Goll pant
Head Office, Farquhar, Ossa
President ' t ,,,i • ROI3T. NOISES",
Vice-.l',resideut f i 'T/TOS. RYAS
' ' , DIR CC:L'0B,'S. 11,k1
WM. BRO,G1'i , „ , 4V.b7t R,OZ'
a, L.. RUSSELL i i .T,'T. ALLIS,Gb$
AGENTS
JOHN ESSERZ Exeter. agent Uaa's
borne and Rlddulph:
OLIVER IIAIU US Munro agent telt
[Robert Fuilartou and Logan. i
I a I W. A. TIJENUIJLII `
Secy. Treas. Fargthal
GLA75MAN &BT..N'BURZ, heatrel
Solicitors. Exeter. 1W
CAST.t .4.,.
:•
�
MA
For Infants and Children.
t
�� You Nage Always Bflughra
The g �d y
arst e
tae h
f 6 ,
r
i
.taro o, �'��
5
nw ✓Gt'"