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Exeter Times, 1915-8-5, Page 4• • Prki..4.:.H)4 • 'roudt4,10.4,4•44awrg404,1144avivatomm*P4x4n041040,01.4.41X4mt.ows40$04m4o4,00,4c.r4N40.40.401.0*."001.11.0,-..,0-.A.01.0440,04,401.41VolV41 Ira )10 • Oltr•lt,41.C4r•IVILIMVI.A. frMoft,ralrl.,,,,T,t,,,,- • . eve . Pispritiatycrilesettlencineld • AVeeelebie Fie iteration (stns.! ettnliatere learoodesdReeoune linglheSteinathsantineweisof 1,77erseeterse., ",,:zartt „.1011.• , • Th • • jI r Infants Mike! rolkhyn. Bothers Know That Genuine Castoria ,ways ;cam the Signatur Opit.ha1112SSIMilik5i,C0114111S1X,elinti qernix1814 NOT NALWartic. •••••••••••••••...•4. 4., r 1+1•0•1:1•••*• alalf,Pariat.CSJANZeil..W23 Jialatlit fred% . iel .illik0e,;,:i, ',0 .81101=Me:14.0 di k 1 I g al: get— Aza 4. ifirl.47 r.',. fil5va ,F84,,,. ri 4. 3 oir4•Arir.•,,!f,,,,e,,irr , 41We:3nm/ell forCotteeste I ion, Seer alotnecientet tele Woraneenevuletenentsent. , . nreh Ogdeeti$4.chittAtii.tW eateeimte iistateriel‘ iiacorm ea: itlievittilMIL&NEV/ In • Use Over iifiriy Years exatre Cefeet tee 'el:repent'. Vt•1 el CM NV40.1 SI Cet'i PANS". NW ¥* crrY. • rl.7" t - t74T1 taigi2C4 Senit812, fei,:erigt ei &dello kilo; Telma asett srn. deny for nluskoka Inkee. „nun; exeept Sade for Lko Br,ye, &,•.Vctoituirs Patere nineaneteran Ritter ene genti 'Lake pints. s tens e an. deny eteelpt Sendai fee .4•eorttlet Bay. Lake c,f Bays read fele., eteseetawen River paints. sneit p rn. cleilv except sundap .F.csf ifutitolca, Lekee, lake ef Peys and Al - ;n Perk. STEAMSHIP EXPRESS i Leaves Toronto - :nue a.re Arrives Sarnia Wharf, 4.so p.m. Each Monday, Wednesday and Satre. - ..lay, connecting with N.N. Co.'s pala, Ceti steamships for Sault St. Marie - Inert Arthur, Feet William and Du- luth, and, at Fort William with G.T.P. Railway for Winnipeg and points in Western Canada. Coaches, Parlor- Libraey-Cafe and Parlor-Library-Buf- Eet *saes between Toronto and Sarnia Wharf. Further particulars on application to Grand Trunk Ticket Agents. N. J. DORE, AGENT. EXETER, ••••••••••••••••••IP* annas! ..L.4.41.4.4441...NERS*4144.. Woven Wive Fence below Pilanufactur= ers' Prices, either Peerless or Mon= arch makes buy at once! these price z Will not taut -• very long • (1 Witn Fence 23e per Rod 7 ig .44 ig • gefar tt,,141tiitligor effbiL 10,600 Cedar Posse on bend, - else Anchor Poste. • Let mite queen pee my 1,..)w prices on your Lestresste require- ments, whether /rage •ree email orders, Also Cement, A. -CLATWORTLIV RANTON 1 -moter.c..,tosseilletlata:Au02404rttAka—e=3.'VElafteat.Viegart, • 019,7,C,I • irSiAiriz,*,, •"".'ssrpf:At tr,uli4 rom the Watch Assured Business and Established ttv Trade , the t Suc cessful 15 Merchant Looks down upon the mob of men who failed to suc- ceed in business be- calm they did not ADVERTISE ziLi'llkik:.1# I 1;:faiita.2 Ottsits4 114711 • tsioassOtStno aetee mullpser)rttou =alp tita,flOy ssmatuan oar opataon war.ther •wiveiat tarrobsTiTyriirifill3rnidet ;•,;.0 • re.e.zee eee, • kwarttazoks, ,114,;Ald, 411r, 0* Fe ritro teneeeenteetosen ietenotetellecttch r e.;4..twaor,t3retp.lit, n -or and .. Philosophy By 2) v)s/a/QvPir.-SMariff PERT PARAGRAPHS. rionosE.enthnsiastle ones wbo believe that the past is as dead as a bust- ed boom ought to try running for of- fice. Society must look - like a literal gar. den, there are so many bright young buds and !rest' young sprigs in it. Te difeeelty wrap most of ns is that we find it so bard o tell the real trou- ble from the imaginary. When the briber comes around all interested persons should feel and see if their good reputation is on straight. Some people eat more than is good for them. That is perhaps why others eat less than is good for them. tenne ttveill is a - ht ap easier than staying that way, though. • 568666066±000066600 SILAGE FOR HORSES. 0 The following summary is ere- sented by the Missouri station in stating in brief form the result of its observations and experi- ences in feeding silage to horses: Corn silage is now being fed With success by a large number of horsemen and farmers to all c1nses of horses and mules. Corn slInge should always be fed in combination with other feeds. Within the limits of Its useful - nese it is a cheap substitute for - bay rind adds rariety and sue- F..) culence to the ration. felinge is not a success except in tbe 'Lends of a careful feeder with an eye to tl le thrift of the 2 Under no eircumstances should epolledeilege, either moldy or molten,•5v fed .to bores or mule*, d ',,,:),:t;c4-XXX01::44,4:W=0000001:Y.X' NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK important Events Which Have Occurred During the Week, The Busy World's liappenines Care- fullY Compiled and jut 'Into Handy and Attractive Shape for the Readers of Our Paper -4 Solid Bour's Enjoyment. , WEDNESDAY. General Antonio Cantore bas been killed in battle on the Isonzo front, He is the first officer Of that rank lost 1;7I t m.a ly . Wm. Carwin, an Englishman, -21 years of age, was drowned last night while swimming in the Welland Canal feeder. Chas. W. MaeCormiele, of Brant- ford. a prominent officer in several Masonic and. Oddfellows' bodies, died suddenly yesterday of diphtheria. Dean Connell of Queen's Medical College yesterday received a cable that the War Office desires to send Queen's Stationary. Hospital to the Dardanelles. Dorothy. two-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jarvis of Toronto, was burned to death yesterday when their summer cottage at Season's Point was consumed. German sympetleizers are blamed for what is considered a deliberate attempt to burn a warehouse of the Ogilvie Milling Co. containing 20,- 000 litishels of wheat at Seaforth yes- terdaite A4` Gen. Oscar, Governor of Port au Prince, Haiti, caused to be executed yesterday all the political prisoners in the bands of the Government, numbering 760 men, He was later killed by a mob. Richard M. Appleby of Parry Sound and his nine-year-old son were drowned yesterday in Partridge Lake, and Wm. Solomon, a young Indian, was drowned in Moon River, each case being due to capsizing of a canoe. The Home Office gave notice yes- terday that after August 10 no one, except persons engaged, in the foreign mission service of the Government, erill be allowed to embark for Nor- way. Sweden. or Denmark without a permit. Rev. Father Fox, S.J. for the past two years professor of philosophy and theology at St. Boniface College, died yesterday at St. Boniface Hospital after a protracted illness of three rconths. R.ev. Father Fox was 56 yettie old. THURSDAY,. A citizen of Lyons, France, killed his wife because she persisted in praising the Germans. A eeeneral election for the Union of South Africa will be held this year, probably in September. A great typhoon which sprang up along the Chinese eoast Monday night, bas resulted in terrible loss of life. Fifty junk t were sunk. A blaze of mysterious origin yes- terday afternoon at Belfast did $200,- 000 damage to sheds containing large stores of ,Goveznment »supplies. Spies are suspected. A mob of infunated Haitiens yes- terday removed Vilbrun Guillaume, President of Haiti, from the French Legation, where .e took refuge Tues- day, and shot him to death in front ef the building,. Wm. Leffler was found guilty at Sandwich of dynamitin the Peabody plant.at Walkerville, and of conspir- ing with Albert Raltschmidt and "one Schmidt" to destroy by dynamite other buildings. The British Government has taken steps to stop the import of German diamonds into England. Henceforth all diamonds imported into the coun- try. much carry with them a certifin. cate showing their origin. Official announcement was made yesterday at Ottawa at the Militia Department of the appointment of General Sam Steele, CB., A. D.a, as commander of the south-east- ern military district of England. FRIDAY, Mr. Noel Marshall, Chairman of the Ex,ecutine of. the Red Crass So- ciety, has been made an honorary Colonel. • Word has been received. in. Ottawa of the safe arrival is England of the Queen's liniversny Hospital Corps, that sailed teem I "entreat on the 20th instant. Adolphe Messimy, former French Minister of War, was severely wound- ed in the thigh by a shell splinter while en the Vosges front, where he was in emu:nand' of a battalion of light infantry. With a formula. for artificial blood to refill the drained *veins of soldiers, Dr. jaixtes Hogan, of San Francisco, is on the way tc Germany. He sail- ed on the Norwegian -American liner Ilergensnord from New York, Inquiries have beer. made in. the U. S. by a represeatative of the French Government regarding the possibility of placing an order for sufficient mica to make 4,000,000 lenses for glasses to be worn by sol- • diers. States Attorney ILeyne intimated yesterday that a number of indict- ments charging manslaughter and criminal carelessness would be re- turned against persons held respons- ible for the steamer Eastland dis- aster. Mrs. John Chantler, While sitting' •in her home at Landing, near West- beterne, Man., conversing with rela- tives and friends, was shot dead with- out the slightest warning by John Chillas, who immediately Committed suicide. • SATURDAY, Two additional vessele were sunk by German submarines. Two more German spies were ex- ecuted by the British authorities in London. Nonaleations for the general Pro- vincial elections took place through- out Manitoba. Xtu estimated that the 'western Provinces mill need acorn harVost- ,..Triii•rom the eastern Provinces. IL W. Unwell, of Toronto, ad. 1* I X $ dressedthe votTcouver collodion ciu9 on "Dei 'envy vs. Mfliiai Mrs, Win, Reyeraft died in agOR from burnt received when lighting Are with coal ber home i Ellice township. Lord Northbouine, Seventy year, old, yesterday challenged the Germ et Utaperor to mortal combat will] speoung; at Dover Coliege, President Samuel Gorapere of tle ,Amoriean Federation of Labor yeSter day reiterated his cearge that foreign influences had been workbag to naale strikes in the. *United States. According to a special message from Berlin, the German army bats been increased by about a minim) men, mostly seventeen to eighteen years, daring the last three weeks. The Minister of Justice, or in •145 0,bseuee the Deputy Minister, has been designated by order -in -Council Minister of Telegraphs and Tele- phones in connection with the war, • Charles Becker was put to death in the electric chair at Sing Sing yester- day for imnigating the killing 01 Herman Rosenthal, the New York gauibler. Inbl el% last, protested innocence totbe MONDAY. Confirmation of the report that the German cotton indestries are coming under Government control comes from the Prussian frontier. The Grand Orange Lodge of Brit - Ws North Americe adopted the West York Lc:glee's reeommendatiOn to call no mordnlodees after living persons. • Edward James Tate, in cuetody in Cobourg, jail charged with taking the life of his little claushter, Blsie, corn- Mitted suicide by banging himeelf in his cell Friday night. The Church of Notre Dame de Tours, the parish church at Glen Rob- ertson, in, Glengarry county, was tot- ally destroyed by fire Saturday. In- cendiarism is suspected. Tames Ward, r. ste11 maker, living at 655 Woodbine avenue, Toronto, was accidentally drowned while in bathing at Brighton, Ont., The cause was heart failure. Joseph R. Henderson o: Montreal, President and. General Manager of Brandram-Henderson, Limited, paint manufacturers, died suddenly at Hal- ifax shortly after a game of golf. The Press Bureau announced offi- cially last eight that Lord Dalmeny, son and heir of Lord Rosebery, has been wounded in the fighting in France. He was an officer in the Grenadier Guarcle. William Rock of Downie, the farm laborer who recently confessed to having attempted hiS life by shooting himself through the chest, was sen - termed on Saturday to nine months at the Ontario Reformatory. it TUESDAY. • Three soldiers have been drowned since Saturday 1 Quebec and Valcar- tier. • Geo. Macadam, aged fifteen, was droWned at Sarnia; he was unable to swim. A despatch from Copenhagen re- ports the sinking of one of the power- ful new German submarines on her trial trip. Twelve men were drowned. Arrivals here from Constantinople report that'3,000 buildings, including the Germa-n hospital filed • with wounded ioldiers, were destroyed last week by fire. Geo. Fleming, a young river driver of Loring, died of shock in the am- putation of hls which was badly crushed. by logs in a chute on the Magnetawaai River. Tbe staff of Melbourne University has united in the invention of a re- spirator reputed to be 100 per cent. more effective than. any now in use in the European war theatre. The Wesleyan Mission in Port au Prince, Haiti, was attacked Saturday night by a mob ettempting to seize a man who hadmurdered a prisoner in jail and had been secreted there. The Firemens' .Association of On- tario, in session at Thorold, consid- ered a proposal to amalgamate with the associations • of Northern and Eastern Ontario and the Ottawa Val- ley. The Luxemburg correspondent of the Tyd reports that 140,000 men passed in ten, days tbrough Luxem- burg ett their way to the western war theatre. They looked jaded and war worn. Further informatine of the Turk- ish atrocities in Armenia received yesterday shows that the Kurds in the region of Bitlis have massacred most of the Armenian population in that district, numbering 9,000. FORCE WILL BE 150,000. Ron. Mr. Lougheed Makes State- ment Regarding Canada's Army. • TORONTO, Aug. S.—Canada will maintain an effective force of 150,000 soldiers, Hon. Senator J. A. Loug- heed, Acting Minister of Militia, so stated in an interview Saturday night. Asked about the aviation end, the Acting Minister said there was no present intention of forming a Canadian flying corps. The present arrangement of supplying airmen for the British flying corps was proving • quite satisfactory ane. would be con- tinued. Col. Stanton, A.D.C. to the Duke of Connaught, is looking after the military requirements, and Com- mander R. M. T. Stephens after the naval aerial contributions. An order -in -Council has been pass- ed appointing and designating the Minister of Justice, Hen. C. J. Doher- ty, Minister of Telegrapbs and Tele- phones in connection efith the war. In his absence the Deputy Minister will exercise theca powers. The position is a supervisory one, and does not infer that the Govern - meet has taken over the telegraphs and telephones of the country. The order-in-Cotinell, • however, gives power to the Minister to direct that the property of any such company may be taken poSsession of at any time during the war, to be used for his Majesty's service. , Strike at Midland. MIDLAND, Aug. 3.-0Wi1g to a strike of: the' ',Saw -filers, Manley Chetvis Mill Eta' eloeed clown, and 175 raen are thrown oat of wgrIt. „ , WIRS,MADEN. WAS--MADEIWLL • "....e•••••,* By Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg. table Compound and Wants Other Suffering Women To Know It. Murfreesboro, T e an. -"1 hove 'Wanted to write to you for a long time to tellyos what your wonderful remedies have dem for me. 1 was a sufferer from female weakness an d •displacement and I would have such tired, worn out feelings, sick head- aches and dizzy spells. Doctors did me no good so I tried the Lydia E. Pink - ham Remedies -Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash. I am now well and strong and can do all my own work. I owe it all to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and want other suffer- ing women to know about it.”- Mrs. H. E. MABEN, 211 S. Spring, St., Mur- freesboro, Tenn. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native roots and herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valua- ble tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful vir- tue of Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound. _• Why Lose Hope. • No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope un- til she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Einkham Medicine Co. (coati. dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Th'ursdriy, Wagti.a Egg Collestor. Hens need a dark IthiCe to lay in. so it is convenient to build a small house for then] within a barn or shed. but it is always diffienit to get the eggs out of suet] 0 laying coop, if it is bnilt economically. To el-creel:le lhbi ob• snide a series of .rthutes, all leading to the same padded pan, bas been ar- THE_ OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO MOISONS BANK CAPITAL, AND RESERVE S8,800,000 96 dBranches in Canada A General tanking Business Transacted ICIRCULARILETTERS OF CREDIT • BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGS BANKIDEPARTMENT 4 Interest alowed at highest current rate W. D. 411..,ARKE, l'Illaroasgior4Bsteter Branch THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O.,I.L.D., D.C.L.. President ALEXANDER LAIRD. General Manager JOHN AiRD. Ass't General Managew CAPITAL, $1510001000 RESERVE FUND, $1 3,500100• 0 SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS lnterest at the current rate is allowed on all deposits of $1 aue upwards. Careful attention is given to every account. Small accounts:, are welcomed. Accounts may be opened and operated by mail. • Accounts may be opened iri the names of two or more persons, with..- drawais to be made by any one of them or by the survivor. Exeter Branch— H. J. WHITE, Manager -00- MEDIUM BRANCH - E. KUHN, Manager! [Ai -M -4W 0000000Cuueneeeene0000000000 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • VALUE OF CROP ROTATIpN. No real friend of agriculture advocates the heedless noising of things. That has ruined too much good land in this country in the past. It is wasting the fertility of many acres now. But raising things by geed farming is a dif- ferent propositiun, because it re- quires the maintenance of the means of raising them. The first essential to a good system of farming is a crop rotation, the next proper and profitable use of the' products. A prevailing crop rotation is usually the result of the past experience of the farm- ers of the locality, and it should not be lightly discarded. But it may have become a sort of hab- it. It might be much improved. This is worth thinking about Is the rotation followed the best possible.one? Could it be chang- ed with benent to the farm and termer? What have been the effects of the past system on the land and on its present capacity to produce good crops? -National Stockman and Farmer. ranged. Each nest is connected to the main shoot and each has a hole in the bottom of it and when an 6geiskiicl .it rolls down to the "egg room" of the laying coop. A smell door into the "egg room" can be opaued aud the eggs taken out without trouble. If the chutes are carefully made there need be no danger of tbe eggs breaking on the way. -Technical World. 1.1 To Grow Head Lettuce. .A. successful grower says a liberal quantity of sand in the garden helps greatly with head lettuce. If tbe soil is clay or silt it is entirely practicable to board in an area of a few square yards and then haul a load of sand to mix with the soil in tbis plot. The same ground may be used year after year. for head lettuce. Decayed 'ma- nure should also be used with freedom en this ground. Grazing a Tonic For Horses. Don't confine the work horses in the stable stalls at night. Early in the season provide for a good sized lot ;nto which to turn them after they re. eeive their grain and small amount of :oughage. There's nothing in thtt world to °gun' grazing as a tonic and general conditioner. A Plumb Sob Level. Some years ago I needed a level, but could not secure one within ten miles, says a correspondent of Farm and Fire- side, from which this article and the picture are produded. The one I con- structed as a makeshift answered the purposese well that I finished the whole job by it. Take a piece of • board having a • PLUMB BOB. straigbt edge. To this fasten two other pieces, forming a triangle. Now with a square find the point on the base from which a line leaving it at right angles exactly Strikes the point where tbe side pieces meet. From this point suspend a plumb bob and your level is complete. I used an old peg top as a plumb bob, but almost any little weight will do. ,j' " ' ' 9 'lee es ...nes How to Load a Wagon, In loading a wagon place the load evenly over the front and bind wheels. If any difference is made it sbould be on the hind wheels. They are larger and hence do not sink in as deep as the smaller front wheels. The fact that the load is farther from the team does not increase the draft on the 'wag- on. When the team Is hitched to some. thing dragging en the geOund then the nearer the to is to the lead the tight- er the pull. This is due to the fact that tbe nearer the tenth 1.1 the more the pull NVil I be upward, tins helping to reduce the friction b91, -ween. th9 load mci the ;round,. 00000000000000000000000000 ADVICE FOR PEACH GROWER. Federal Bulletin Tells Him About Lo- cation of Orchard, Soil, Etc. In at least thirty-nine of our forty- eight states there are peach interests of commercial importance, according to a recent United :States farmers' bulletin No. 031, of tbe department on growing peaches. This bulletin is the first of three on I be general subject of peach growing, which will treat of fundamental orchard operations. It gives much valuable information to the fruit grower. The questions of site, propagation, planting, tillage and soil fertility are treated in the first bulletin, In locating a pench as well as any other orchard other advantages must be considered besides the natural ones of climate and soil. If an orchard is too remote from a shipping station, too far away from a suitable market, or located where ice for refrigerator cars cannot be conveniently supplied, it may not be possible to grow peaches there proStably. Peaches may do well on a wide range of soil types, including even some of the moderately heavy clay loons and clays. 13ut, whatever the type, a soil must be thoroughly well drained to be suitable for peaches. They will not succeed on poorly drain- ed soils. It follows that the heavy clay types which are so hard and im- pervious that water does not percolate through them readily are to be avoid- ed as a rule. Moreover, a soil should be moderately fertile. One very rich in nitrogen is not to be desired as a general rule, since it IS likely to in- duce an excessive growth of foliage. On the other hand, the impression which is somewhat common that a poor, unfertile son is "good enough for peaches" is erroneous. In districts in which alkali soils Oc- cur sites should be selected with a view to avoiding them. 'While the peach tree can be grown 'where there is a limited amount of alkali salts, they cause disaster if present In largo quantities. It is safer therefore to avoid theta as far as possible. As a general proposition a site that is elevated considerably above the sur. rounding area is' to' be preferred for a peach °reined. Relative elevation is generally of greater importance than actual elevation above, Sea level, Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S A S 1" 0 Et 1 A J. A. MASON ARCH1TgCTI 425 Dundas Street, London,' Guars ra:i teed cost of buildings; no extras; Iti years New York experience, Pho DIV 2725. Anyone intending to build will di ell o write me. Nocharge for coal sulat C J. W. KARN, M. D. C. M.. 425 RICHMOND ST., LONDON,,, ONTARIO. SPECIALIST IN SURGERY AND EN 1T0 -URINARY DISEASES OF AND WOMEN; *re DJ G. F. ROULSTON, DENTIST Honor Graduate of Toronto UniNNW 5113. Office over Dickson ling's Law office. Closed Weeniest - day afternoons. Phone Office Sas Residence 5b. jiE, A, R. KINSMAN D,D,L Honor Graduate of Term:4(.34k* ersity 1 4.nalsd DENitla Teeth extracted without pain. OS any bad effects. Office over Glaigo_. man & Stanbury's Office MnN Exeteee t . t • ,• t 't•r`.4.1 WA BROWNING M. De ..4„, 411 s -g I P. 8, Graduate Victoria U1!1& city Office and residence, Dotadmissi Labratory., Exeter, ,Assooiate Coroner of Huron 'tt, D ICKSON & PARDING 1' '4 Barristers, Solicitors Notaries Setlete veyanoers Commissioners, gio1iiiiine0 • for the llifolsona Bank eto( Money to Loan at lowest rates of tan. tenet.; - OFFICE -MAIN STREET, EXHIIMN L a 'Carlin.; B. A,,,t A••••••4441*.` MONEY, TO LOAN t 1 JII, 1 We have a large amount of PO,' ate funds to loan on farm and yee-- lage properties at lowest at et. ieree a tenteete GLADMAN & STANRURA Barristers, Solicitors, Magi Exeter •I t T • 4••• TDB UsDorne and filbDert farmer's Mutual fire 1usur° 01160 Gompanu Head Office, Farquhar, Offr President, 1 j1.t, ROBT. IsTO.RESE0- Viceeeresident 1110St RIKANi t„.• DIREOTOR,S, ' )3R0,0K WiLROW .T., L, nusslain 1 J. T. ALLISPS • • AGEIS'TS I , sorbil JOHN ESSER Y. Exeter, agent borne and and Biddhlph,. OLIVER nAnsis Munro azent Elibbert Fullerton thee4ogan. W. A. TURNOULTI . Secy.Treas, FarCILlhafir GLADMAN &' STANBUIVZ Solicitors. Exeter. /VOr CASTOR IA • For Infants and Children, Thelint You Have Always Bought:. Bears the Signature Of 4,1