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The Exeter Times, 1919-1-23, Page 4JANUARY oa f, 191 RUM= RIMUt Farmers Attention RIOTING IN GERMANY Make money in your ire time during the asn and winter Anentt' 1$y awns IDAInA.DIAN NURSERY; ,a. 0711005T itiah. land Ettreperat markets will r i ba • open; again for icanedJxiii -is-, F ''reit Ann R:ow ,is tthet hue too ender ,for alai gat el Fruit and, Crete tnt,astal S,toolc, rued .P,atotoes, etc., grown tat Canada Writs for partiouiare arms a WELLINGTON rake Olt! Reliable Fonthill !Nurseling :E tahliahed 1837 , ' TORONTO, ONT. H ij 14,.RAILWAY $YST.M Time Table Ciianges at change of time sal be made or. January 5th 1919 Sniermatoon New. in ,Agents' hands J, T?d3a€, Agent, Exeter Rhone 46er a4Ntileeete eeeeceee$?f Tie-' e• %' ai,tiTil�if:- rf. 1177.-"StSsenenia •-• ts elf Q Winker Term from i January 6th! 2 e tglaee graduates int posi- eelen. ate tote earning as hiigb as $15 and eves $20 per week. awhile boys are earning ntigher+ salaries.. We have )Commercial Sborthand and Telegraphy De- ♦ p,artmenta Write dor tree cata • iogue, • • W, Ix. ELLIOTT . President at D. ,;A.. MIaLAOHLAN,, Prineipai. • ooeAsab4eAO♦444146 'a+!tN0liHN War Time prices'. on Wire Fence (i etraatd tenet t5 eextts per rad, 7 strand nem 49 pante Pen zed, S strand Lie 55 dente pear, rod,. Steel gates, barb wire end brace wise, feeder ;fence posts at low price , W 9 ends lis afoot Anchor, posts, Let tant note you me prices on all kinds of blither; and shingles, Piave your, aardez now ler what Fertilizer am, weed, - FERTILIZES $0.610 ➢ ,µ Phone 12, A. J.1 CLATWDRTIIY GRANTON "O,ASOAI?,ETS" WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP Fur Sick Headache, Soul+ Stomach Sluggish Liver and Bowels— :Take Gascarets tonight. Passed TOMO, Bad Triad, Tndiges. tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head.- :althea ead.aches come from atorpid liver and clogged bowel$, which cause your stom each to become filled with undigestec od, which sours and ferments like gar base in a swill barrel.. That's the first step to untold naisery —indigestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental learsy everything that is horrible atul nauseating. A Cascaret to -tight will give your constipated bowels a, thorough you and nd strai htenout b� r, � g 3' morning. IhIy work while you sleep-. a 10 -cent boa, fronnz your druggist will *op yea feeling goad for rants. CAST° R i A For Infants and Children in Use Fier Over3tiYears Alweye bears the Signature of Excitement Caused by Death of $partican Leaders. Although Idebknecht and Luxemburg Fell ' Victims to Their Own Ter- rorist Tactic , Fresh l0ittermess Ras Been Added to Election of National Assembly--Monardists Mike a Hand at the Polls. LONDON, Jan. 20.—Grave election riots took place Sunday in Germany, Where the people are voting to choose members of the National As- sembly.. A general strike has been declared at Leipsie, which is without gas and water, according. to Copen- hagen advices to the Exchange Tele- graph Company. The deaths of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa lerzeauburg appear to have made a deep impression in provincial towns, and to have led to demon- strations and street fighting, it is reported. At Leipsio a mob is said to have destroyed the election bureau of the Democratic party and to have con- fiscated the evening editions of the Leipsic Tageblatt, Zeitung and Gerµ: eVal Gazette, compelling Hin8 those Pa- pers to publish a declaration deplor- ing the "murders" in Berlin, and blaming the Government for them. Strikes and demonstrations are re- ported in Dusseldorff and other towns. Airmen were flying over Berlin and bombarding the city with pamph- lets issued by all the political par- ties, it is reported. The greatest reason for believing that when the German National .Assembly gets into operation it will turn out a safe and sane product is the fact that elements opposing the Socialists are showing increasing signs of co-operation, without any expectation of reviving the monarchy. Now come the out-and-out Royal- ists advocating support of the Cen- trist or Catholic party ticket as their ticket. Anyone who in the old days pictured politicians who had tied up with Prussian royalty voting the Centrist ticket would have been laughted at. Yet Major-General on Maltzhahn urges the Royalists to hurry and choose between the lesser of two evils and support the Centrist ticket as the best way, to curb the Social Democrats. ' ' The Centrist ticket is the same as that of the German popular party, which is democratic, as the Cen- trists now call themselves a demo- cratic party. With. Protestant churchmen joining the Centrists the prospects of that party are looming brighter, as recent elections show. Gen. Fon Maltzhahn does not con- ceal the fact that he is net eathus iastie over voting any democratic ticket, but he observes that if every- one who feels that way stays away from the polis it will "help the So- cial Democrats, and them only." Hie appeal to the Royalists says in part: "Many .voters who are, like myself, staunch monarchists, will be unable to reconcile -themselves to voting for a democratic party, but will be glad to vote the German national ticket, even though the slate of that party is also that of the democratic party. "The number of voters of both sexes having monarchieal sympathies in Germany is much larger than is generally supposed. In consequence of the impression of terror occa- sioned by the violent upheaval and assumption of control by the Social Democracy, With its soldiers' and Workmen's Councils, those who are so inclined have not yet turned up to acknowledge that they will cling to the Kaiser and the Empire." "Liebknecht and Luxemburg fell as victims of their own terrorist two- tits," said. Philip Scheidemann, Secre- tary for Foreign Affairs in the Ebert Cabinet, in a speech at Cassel Sun- day. The Socialist newspaper . Vor- waerts, while condemning the lynch- ing of the Spartacan leaders, also sees in their deaths the natural result of the victims' appeal to the lowest pas- sions and violence. At a late 'hone Sunday the where- abouts of the bruised, batte`i°ed and bullet -perforated body of Rosa Lux- emburg, chief lieutenant of the late Dr. Karl Liebknecht, leader, of the Spartacan forces, continued to,be the most puzzling featnre'of the tragedy which brought to a temporary halt all Spartacan and Bolsheviki activi- ties in Germany. The military auth- orities are still investigating the action of the commanding officer as- signed to the motor car which was supposed to carry the woman to the jail and which halted just long enough to permit a stranger to jump on the running board and fire the fatal shot, after which other persons rushed up, seized the body and dis- appeared. The date of the interment of the body of Dr. Liebknecht bas not yet - been decided upon, but it was stated that the dead Spartacan leader would not be buried in Berlin. It is not un- likely that any attempt to make his funeral the pretext for a big demon- stration would meet with prompt op- position by the military Government, which for the present is prohibiting all street parades. Mow Russians Suffered. LONDON, Jan. 20.—Of the two million Russian prisoners Scattered throughout the Central Empires, one million died in captivity, according to the Morning Post. Repatriated British prisoners of war have brought reports of the inhuman treatinent meted out to Russian pris- oners in the Concentration damps of Germany and Austria, and these stories have been borne out by a report recently received by the Inter- national Red Cross from some of its delegates who have just returned froin Germany. According to these reports, the I:ussians were subjected to terrible brutalities and were forced to do whether r is the heavy and degrading or w 14.444, alet orwell, They were always hal f starvedWad Were under the constant ntimulus of the lash. - Setae 806,000 t of the Itussians still remain la Geo POULTRY MANAGEMENT TeMakethe Farnr Flock Pay Best Only One Mist Hasechargc, Electric Lighting Is a Great Cos ven- ience on the Farm—Waring Costs About Sleet While a Small Platt Should Not Exceed $000. (Contributed iy outario Department of Agriculture, Toronto.) UCCESSFUL poultry - keepers are found much more fre- quently among those who operate what is termed a "'one- man plant" than elsewhere. Thin simply meansthat poultry require some one person's attention, or that personal attention is so important that it is usually not to be found efficient among the ordinary laborers. Poultry know the time of day when it is customary to teed them, and, perhaps, equally as - well all other daily tasks. They re- spond fairly well to the bond of sym- pathy of the feeder. If the feeder rushes into the pen and throws the feed around; the poultry usually rush out of the way or out of the doors if they can get there. Fright reduces. egg production. Particularly nervous hens, when badly frightened, some- times cease laying for several. days.. The person caring for the poultry should be fond of them and take an interest in them. One's interest us- ually goes up or down with the pro- duction of the Rock. To maintain keen interest when the production is low, or when the flock is out of con- dition, ondition, is the real test. If you hold oa and study the flock, generally speaking, you will succeed. A change of attendants, even when both are good at the work, nearly always means a decrease in produc- tion for some days. The careful feeder knows just about what this or that flock requires as to quantity of feed, etc., and further, he or she usually goes about the work on a definite pian so that in time the birds know fust what to, expect, not only as to time and quantity of teed sir but the mordents of the atten- in the pen. �h' a writer ventures to assert that triopoultry ow the farms of On - were, on each farm, given over one person to look after, that there would be a very great increase in the success of the undertaking as well as a very large increase in the production; even as much as twenty- Ave wenty II, ve per cent. in many instances. No line of live stock responds more to careful attention than poultry The boy or girl on the farm can learn much o1 how to feed and what to feed. They may learn something of the problems in breeding. Successful poultry -keepers know that there is a time to hatch and rear, a time to cull„ a time to sell, a time to clean and disinfect, as well as a time to teed. Plenty of farmers are making money from poultry, but they know poultry does well only when given caieful and systematic attention.— Prof. W. R. Graham, 0. A. College, Guelph. Principles of Electric Lighting. In the year 1800, Volta, a famous Italian physicist, discovered that if a plate of copper and one of zinc were placed in weak sulphuric acid, and connected by a wire above the acid, there was transmitted along the wire a certain amount of energy, which transmission we speak of as a current of electricity, comparing it to a current of water. As it requires pressure or head to make water flow, so it requires electric pressure to make ,electricity Sow. The pressure of the simple cell described above is called a volt, in honor of its dis- coverer. A dynamo generating 32 volts would have a pressure equal to that of 32 simple cells. Electric energy passing through fine wires will heat them white bot, hence electricity may be used for Iighting. Current for this .purpose usually has a pressure of 110 colts, when supplied by light and .power companies, but private plants usually generate only about 32 volts., All current generated by dynamos is al- ternating when made, i -e., it. Sows in one direction for half a revolu- tion of the dynamo and then in the opposite direction during the other half, but by fitting the dynamowith a commutator (which means chang- er) these waves of current may all be sent in the same direction along the distribution lines. It is then called direct current or D.C. Now alternating current, or A.C.' may be used for Iighting, just as well as D.C. If the alternations are very rapid the light is perfectly steady, but if too slow the lights will fluctuate in brightness, and the light is hard on the eyes. Many Iight and power companies supply A.C. However, A.C. cannot be used to charge storage cells .and hence pri- vate plants which usually have stor- age batteries mustbe of the D.C. variety. This is also true of lighting systems for automobiles. One-horseepower will run 30 ordi- nary tungsten lamps, each giving from 23 to 24 candle-power, while if they are nitrogen filled each lamp will give about 45 c.p., hence it would takoeonly about half as many to give the Sarre light as before. As the ordinary farm probably would not re- quire more than, say, four lights On an average of two hours per day, tak- ing the whole year round, it is easily seen that the amount of power re- quired is very small. The outlay for wiring the buildings varies a great deal with circuni.stances, but probably $100 would be a fair average.. Where one 15 too far from the distribution lines of any existing power plant he may install a small plant of his own. The original Cost of these will run from $300 to $506, depending on size and type, and the interest on this amount would be the largest Part of the Cost of light• for the farm, the cost of running the plant being only a few dente per day, —rt. R. Graham, ILS.A., 0. A, W- iese, Guelph: WILLTRY THE Eli -KAISER First Matter to Come Before the Peace Conference. Holland: Cannot Refuse Extradition of Former Emperor of Germany.. Say Esparta on international Law, and Tribunal Will Decide Responsibility of Igen Wise Plunged the World in War. PARIS, Jan. 20.: The eurtain has risen at last upon the final act of the great war. Facing the delegates of the 27 nations convened to lay the foundation of the new world pia ce, President Poincare Saturday after- noon at the Qua' D'Orsay formally opened the Congress of Paris, as it will be known in history. In the name of France, its host, he sol- emnly expressed the hope that ata labors would end in removing the menace of aggression by armed force forever from the world. The fateful character of the con- ference was emphasized in these first proceedings when it was determined not only to write a new world charter but to bring to the bar of justice the authors of the! -crimes which ;led to the convocation • .o! this . momentous s gathering. Preinier, Clemenceau . pre - seated an iadctWertt:virtual4Eef the Kaiser in proposing that the IIret set of the congressshould be, ttefix'the responsibility of the authors of the war,' to which the congressafaye its unanimous consent. Theliae con- ference that fo`r'mally openeSattur- day will become the trialwart of the Kaiser. The gist of the report of the emin- ent jurists who examined the case of the Kaiser to which M. Clemenceau referred in his speech became known Sunday. The report was drawn up by Ferdinand Larnaude, dean of the Paris Iaw faculty, and Dr. A. G. De Lepradelle, Professor of Rights of Nations in the same faculty. The object of the enquiry was to investigate trona a purely juridical point of view if the crimes committed by the German Government and army involved the penal responsibility of the former German Emperor, what tribunal should judge him and whe- ther his extradition could be de- mandedi:: The authors of the report give a long aranent against the bringing of the :enc -Emperor before a tribunal of conithon law, because his will com- manded but his hand did not exe- cute. They say that he was not the principal offender and that'therefbre he could only be punished as an ac- Complice. An international tribunal consequently must be found. They consider The Hague Arbitration Court, founded at the 1890 confer- "in e; incompetent to fry, the Em - pe r, as the court was meant for eases -where no penalty is to be ap- plied. They arguethat an entirely new jurisdiction must be created, which should be the first instrument of -a League of Nations and in which should appear exclusively the states which fought Germany. The two French jurists prove that the extradition of the former ruler cannot be refused as he is not a political refugee. The report says: "It is anti -juridical to assimilate war with conspiracy. Crimes of war are crimes of public law and inter- national law." The authors of the report com- mence by establishing that no pen- alty is possible against a nation any more than against a company, but that the manager or director of a company can be punished. "The ,Emperor in the first place," gays the report, "as King of Prussia is President of the confederation by virtue of a special law in which hu- man will does not enter. The Ger- man sovereign depends only on God and the sword. With such a con- ception of power it would be pre- judicial to the highest degree to allow the Emperor to escape respon- sibility for his actions; his responsi- bility esponsibiility for the war, for which under the special law the decision rested with him alone; his responsibility for ligation of Belgian neutrality which was'willed by him; responsibility for acts o1 terrorism by his troops, which he 'Willed and ordered." The report quotes a letter from the former Emperor to the Emperor of Austria in the early days of the war, in:which the German Emperor wrote: "My soul is torn asunder, but everything miff he put to fire and blood. The throats of men and wo- men, children and the aged must be cut and not a tree nor a house left standing. "With such methods of terror, which alone can strike so degenerate a people as the French, the war will finish before two months, while if I use humanitarian methods it may prolong for years. Despite all my re- pugnance I have had to choose the first- system." The words "I" and "My" in the fetter are italicized in the report. "Modern law," the report con- tinues,' " do not recognise irrespon- sible authoritatives even at the sum- mit of hierarchy. It brings a state down from its pedestal and makes it submit to the rule of judge. "Can there, therefore, be no quer- tion of saving from the judge a man Who is at t he' summit of hierarchy, either by the application of internal law or of international law." Bolshevik" Occupy Mitun. LONDON, Jan, 20.—Mitau, capital of Gourland, has been occupied by the Bolsheviks, according to a Ger- man wireless despatch received here to -day. The Germans were obliged to leave behind numerous guns and supplies of amimunition. After the Germans evacuated Mitau fire broke out, destroying a great number of houses in the centre of the town. Rich Radium Lode. LONDON, Jan. 20.--A valuable pitchblende lode has been discovered in Devonshire. What Is said to be a m. oxide fair saariple shows a uranium content of more than $ 6 per cent. --- thirteen times as rich as American Ttldlum.. Q0. /ltippedd Ia. 31120211111 r .lir+LY�If WAR IN DALMATIA. litrahmat amperialiea Clash With taw Jug+o-Slays.. PARIS. JAM., 204— The grave ds eelopn*ontl in the i Italian-Ju1o' .V tend, which. have lied to the virtual )Penang: of hostilities, are presenting new anis very, pat ,lezing problems, to the Peace . CoUfference and the statesmen' ''n Pari : ,;are exhibiting no little cone(r pveri the state of af- fairs in Dalmatia. Many of them are inclined todoubt if the regular pro gram of the Peaoe Conference can be proceeded with while virtual war is raging in the Adriatic region. News received in. Paris from L l• back. in Austria, indicates that the complete reobitisation of` the Jule - Slav army will be ordered before a week is over.. Y'rom Fiume comas information that the Italians are pro - Paring for armed resistance to dm advance of ° the Jugo-Slav !Groan, which is expected at any moment. It is reported,.that part of the. Italian fleet is on the way to Flume with the object of aiding the retreat e! the Italian troops in exile of defeat. The Julio -Slava are expected to occupy Steinamaager, ftty miles south of Vienna. with the objeet of establishing hurried communications with the Cseehs at Pressbourg, upon Whose aid they are counting. Mean* while armed conflicts are taking place !n Carinthia. The inter -allied com- mission which has arrived at Laibach Yuu received reports of eonflicts fur'. iiished by a Serbian, who at the same lime revealed the demands of the aJngo-Slav chiefs. The Judgo-Glave, he intimated. will hardly be satisfied with the Inter- nationalisation of Trieste, although if it seemed in President Wilson's judgment the only way of solving the problem they would prefer it to the occupation of the city by the Italians. As regards Flume. the Jugo-Slays will refuse to 'compromise. They claim that the country without its seaboard is economically and -miH- taruy at the mercy of its neighbors, and inasmuch as nationality as well as geography supports Serbia's title to an outlet in this direction, the principle which ought to guide the powers in this case is obvious. ANOTHER BANK MERGER. Nova Scotia and Ottawa Institutions Will Unite. OTTAWA, Jan. 20. — An agree- ment. subject to ratification by the shareholders, has been entered into by the Bank of Nova Scotia' and the Bank of Ottawa, whereby an amal- gamation has been arranged of these two important institutions. The basis of the amalgamation i. that the Bank of Nora Scotia shall exchange four shares of its stock for. ever/Akre' shares held is the Bank of Ottawa. The Bank of Noes Scotia was In- corporated in 1832, and is one of the strongest and most successful banks, in this country. It has about 200 branohes established in Canada. New- foundland, West Indies and the Unit- ed States. The president is Charles Archibald of Halifax; the general manager is H. A. Richardson of Toronto. The Bank of Ottawa was establish- ed in 1814, and has made steady pro- gress until its assets have reached the large total of about $73,000,000. It has 05 branches, which for the most part are located in Eastern On• tarso, chiefly in the Ottawa Valley, where the bank has for many years been the leading institution. The president is Hon. George Bryson, tbet general manager D. M. Flume, • The amalgamated banks will have a paid-up capital of about $10,000,- 000; reserve and undirided profits, $17,000,000; deposits, 3178,000,000; total assets, 3234,000,000. Notices are being prepared .,and will be mailed to the shareholders within a day or two. The Minister of Finance has consented to the amal- gamation. SINN FEINERS MEET. Gathering Will Be Coiled "islslt Parliament." « . DUBLIN, Jan. 20.—Sinn Fein of- flcials announced Saturday that the meeting of the Irish Republican Parliament to -morrow will be open to the press and public on presentation of tickets obtainable at Sinn Fein headquarters. Representation will be confined to elected members of the Parliament, but the unsuccessful candidates and men occupying Gov ernment positions will participate: A conference was held in Dublin Castle Sunday, at which the Lord Lieutenant, the Lord Chancellor, the commander of the forces, the Attor- ney -General and Solicitor -General considered the situation. Differences of opinion are believed to exist as to whether it would be wiser to ignore the assembly and proceed only against acts of intimidation or vio- lence, or whether the assembly should be suppressed as illegal. A majority of the people expect that the former view will prevail. L3chnowsky as Delegate. AMSTERDAM, Jan. 20.—The Ger- man Cabinet, at its sitting on Wed- nesday, discussed the preparations for the Peace Conference and will probably soon issue a communique setting forth the principles it will represent. According to . the Rhenish West- phalian Gazette, the German dele- gates will be led by Prince Lich- nowsky, supported by Count Brock- dorff-Rantzau, Foreign Minister, and Karl Kautsky, the greatest exponent of theoretical Socialism in Germany. Dishonest . Hapsburgs. GENEVA, Jan. 20,—The news- paper Dell *Delay of Budapest says the Commercial Bank of Budapest has decided to sue ex -Emperor Charles for the payment of 100,000,- 000 crowns, representing the amount subscribed by Charles during the war to eight Austro-Btingarian ittir loans - Children Cry for Fletcher's .`?.\ .,,y`>,a ea ,,ase: y.., - \ s. �-�.. TORI The Siad You Have Always Bought, and which has been. in use for ever thirty years, has borne the sign` Lure of and has been made under per . �Sona! supervision since its infancy; . �Gk/ Allo no one to duce e . � v you in this,.. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just -as -good's are . but: Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Wants and Children—Ex�ASTaRIA rience against Experiment .) What iscastora is a harmless substitute for Cestor Oil, Paregori Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It con neither Opiunr, `:Morphine nor other narcotic substance. I age is its guarantee. `, For more than thirty years it haus been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising' therefrom, and by regulating the ,Stomach and. Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving, healthy and natural. steep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. 1 GENUINE CASTOR IAALWAY d Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought, THC CENTAUR COM NA NY. N ay, YOPIN ITV. INCORPORAUUR 1855 TIlL MQLSONS BANK CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,80C,000 98 Branches in Canada ' A. General Banking Business Transacted OIRVULAR LETTERS OF OREM BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Interest allowed. at highest sarrent rate, W. D. CLARKE, MANAGER, EXETER BRANDS THEF CO� E�RCE SIR EDMUND WALKER. C.V.O., LL.D., D.C.L, President SIR JOHN AIRD, General Manner -1 H. V. F. JONES, As; t. Gen'L Managtrl CAPITAL PAID UP,$15,000,000 RESERVE FUND. . $13,500,0047,1 4a The Manager is prepared to consult with prospective customers regarding their banking requirements: - Whether: it be the opening of a Savings or Current account, the maltingof collections or the - negotiation of a loan, the will be met with courtesy and given prompt servit;. MOTUE f1111IANlF}H—'A, IS. KURR, MANAGER ,e''..4 µ t' 1, t tiirediton Branch -J, A, Me Donald Manager. f flag L 1)aehwood Branch FA S. Kent, ,Mnlcaiger t ' 1 '! .1 at e- /, jVP, B•OMENSON 1 LICENSED AUCTIONEER AND VALUATOR Apr 1 ountiele of E(uron Perth and Middiemx, farm Stock Sales a Specialty. Office at Cookshutt Wareroome,'next door to the Ventral Hotel, Main lit. Exeter. Changes mod- erate and eiatiplaation gaaraateedk J,,..!W. BROWNING, M, On ¥s St Pr S., Graduate iFretoria University., Office and Soddens, Dominion Lebratory, Esetelr, Aasoakate. Coroner of Roan I. R. CARLING, ■.• d, Barrister, Solicitor, Notary' Pab'lis, Peram ssioner, Solicitor for the Motsons Rani, eta Money to Lean et ,,Lowest nags of Interest. t1 OFLF1c -+MAIN em EXETER, ONT, PERRY F. DOUPE, Licensed Aue- tioneer. Sales 'conducted in any Ie. oai ty. Terme moderate, Ordeal left at Times Office will' be promptly at- tended 'to, P,bone Ida, Kirktass, Ad- dress. Kirkton, P, Oa DIt. A. A, KINSMAN, L. i`;. D,, D. iJi A Honor Graduate of Toronto Craver. sitya r DENIUST l .'. ; l�u'ti'n. or foe over Med- ftica,, Msuri . ..l IatiiL[yN'N The Olympic docked at fiat ''Teeth extracted PI Of any thouuaa4 10181 'bad effe3ehi. Man & Steorr'beit°,f'N -. aauitpttt 4�r +daikM►4 Exetlitm ,;..,.,., THE USHOBNE an HIB'E'E.$I FARMER'S MUTUAL FIRE INdU.1401' ANISE i4OMPAN= Bead Offiiee, • Farquhar, Onto President, ROOT. NORDIC' Vice -President, THOS, E1YAEl DIBEOirTOBB WIM. maws. ' 'Wm` ROT, J, L, 1U ILE, J. K. ALLIS) ' AGENT f i JOHN iES,S:ER'Y. Exeter, Agent U' ' borne, and li3iddulph.. OLIVER RABBIS, Munro, A 14 Hibbert, Fallerton and lapis, I ,i .We IrUMNiid1JLL.. 1J Seety-Treaa. Fargxhigi GLADMAN & STANISD1R! ' ;( Solicitors, Exeter. .1 i i.. • Gl. P. i.OULSTON. L•.D S„ D,ES'IR DENTIST { t Boner Graduate of Taranto Unive04, eity. Office over Dickson & Varf'f tng a Law Office.: Closed Wedneedy. ' afternoons. Photo Office.5aan t Residence {ib, CASTOR I,A, Pot Ana and Children lire U1110 For Over 30 Years= Aiw blue it the l grtattttie oi'. iteif