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THE EXETER AD}TOGA.TE.
T.tLURSDAY, OCT.2O, 1898.
Pointed Paer^£iriopbS.
Often an
-fence.
Life. after all, is but a leg bundle of
little things.
Ire'l; usibility that carries no weight
3s root rs: SPOUs bre?'.
(Ranh^.e; lir •laeeet the l vet:eine, while
talent ahpp1:e :c them.
Te. re is aiwnys something elevating
+about roof -garden onte r e::nineate.
No artist, however talented,: has sue-
eceded in painting :l f.:earacnt dewar.
Molly eainnot buy on :,n nee of love. but
•tt will pureha (• tette of syn.e thy,
When a matt gess u as Woe hr is al-
ways willie„ to be aerie be as he should
de.
"When s1 wetee?r-' reaches 3 ee-"'•aen age
there is no longer ar.y uncertainty about
It's rot what teet p• seer lees in a
baseball game taut what the umpire says
t.t. ai t ef.itnts'.
There is a peeul'ar fa --cin t°(att about
litany things wine.o er'in is witrhuted
to Ms sat:Weal nl:;,est.:
It never n=aees nuek ii difference to tt
woman Where ;t men halo from Pat
Ito she is permitted to re3_n over Hirai.
Sleeplessueses -leo nervolt+ exc^te
meat. The eielfe:hely constituted, the
financier, the iaets:nes: man, and torose
whose occupation neeeesitates great men-
tal strain or worry, all suffer lessor more
from it. Sleep is the great restorer of a
worried brain, and to get sleep cleanse the
Stomach from all i•nnarities with a few
doses of Parmelee's Vegetable Piiln, gela-
title coated, containing no mercury, and
are guarauteod to give e satisfaction or the
meuey will be ref stn(°e 1,
T e Curves of Familiar t7
In their strife for mental equality
with then women- have unint• n':onaliy
broken down a fine tee -erre etf manner
whi.cn previously lent them an air of
utvsterteot super otirity. in the Lest ,+'meet
than wheel no e'('st ant is more silec('.a-
ful in held'og a neves e c L *ese ce. ewe anti
:respect. The y'ete•;, w •eat►'t wi:11 groan is
a men f:i nd wit!, fi •t•, o'd miter' or
its equivalent in alai:lent sloes. ;night n
return be called •'.a 1:1. ' but site
Z„oldbe
a 'peach the
bt
am rab-
bed off,
Every day 1 he, gree• there cro n•sineed
Hint at the root ;,f tie Lir.t in; eevi-
deue(•s of n tic•=pry ad mortal uniaappi-
ness would lae> f• eiel the f:ama°i:arity tact
breeds centetnl.r. \\"hen a hay el.ntbs
e
tree for gr(, -n rgiliiee or cherries.
whichever he er lers, : e eon*taut:,• s- es
a. bitter one higher up beyond his reach,
until he nearly bleak; his n• cit to get
the one out of his -tr telh. partly hid.
den by foliage. And sit mans Meal wo-
man hang at • the tip-tep of the tree of
krowl t Le. If the Well drops into his
hands be throws 't to the greens! as
worthless and begins to el•uzh ;teem.
Would it be rens milia to think, after
working so hard for cherries, that he
would value them 1on„ if he ate o. sur-
feit of them?-1'`•antes Evans, in the
October Ladies' Boole Journal.
excuse is worse than the of
iinard's Liniment foe Rheumatism.
fa,• •• L1vtn. t.• (•uuutry Town.,.
In The Ladies' Hume Journal Edward
Bok devotes mush of his editoriehl
'page to showing country girls and
women the way to make their
lives mean more - how they ean
partake more fully of the true eu-
joyments of life. Ha has prescribed a
method of country living whi h cal.
readily and pref.-Wily he pulse el, and
which will go far toward the t•maa:e:p:
tion• of the country wometu from much
of the drudgery, and tighten .the isula-
tion of farm life.
Mr. T. J. Humes, Columbus, Ohio,
writes : "I have been afflicted for soiree
time with Kidney ants Liver Complaint,
and find Partnelee's Pais the best medi-
cine for these tii,F t•=. Tue.e .Pits. O.,
not cause pain or erining, and should be
used when a e ttlnu• a is required. They
are Gelatine C s, ed, and roiled in :tau
Flour of Licorice ro preserve their purity.
end give them a p!.•:sones agreeable taste.
Iie'and and Scotland are said to
nave the largest proportion of unmar-
ried persons
Iger Chtliv :lr•.nner.
"Ah," he cried, "yesterday you wel-
comed •me warmly: To -day you re-
ceive me coldly. What is the cause of
this sudden. change?"
"Don't you read the papers?" she
calmly replied. "My father has just in-
herited a cool million."
••nirr,• . •.. ,••,ut,ra-
The number of suicides throughout
the world is 180,000 yearly, and is on
the increase. Tbe greatest number
happen in June, the fewest in Sep-
tember, and nearly one-half between
6 a.m. and noon.
ttic,-.-I. , in th,• British 3ruu-nm.
Bicycles have made their way into the
British museum, the authorities having
established a cycle stable in the base-
ment, for as many1 0 bicycles as 0 c c 'Va
y day
had been left unprotected against the
railings.
ilinnrd's Liniment the best Hair Restorer.
Tha.Quern Wears Glasses.
Queen Victoria, who has of late
taken to wearing spectacles in. public,
has for many years regularly bathed
her eyes morning and evening in weak
tepid tea. This odd-fa.shionled remedy
was in favor with the Dttcliess of Kent.
Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator is
pleasantto take; sure and effectual In
destroying worms. Many have tried it
With best results.
.n Ola S"ttnknrn.
The custom .of keeping birthdays is
many thousand yearsold. Pharaoh's
birthday festivities are mentioned , in
the Pentateuch.
VERY NARRO\Y ESCPB
GONE BY THE BOARD,
Many Election Trials were Formally.
Dismissed by the Judges at Osgoode
,$all on Saturday,.
Mrs. Niles and Son ,lumped in. Toronto, Oct. 17. -Air. .Justice Osler
Time to Save Their Lives, and M. Justice Maclennan, at Osgoode
Ball on • Saturday, spent some time
formally dismissing eleotiou trials by
asaihocotstteptMINNEDOSA EXPORTS BUTTER. dim without sparties.
the case of Rast Middlesex. North /last-.
Ingo, West Yictoria and Halton are the
three affected by the prorogation of the
House, amenable to the clause prhhii:it-
Ing bolding of election trials within 15
days of prorogation. . new date will
have to be set fur them
The following were dismissed oa Sat
urtiaay: South I3reat, Lib.; Monek. Lib.;
Ease Hastings, Lib.; West Hamilton,
A site fol the new post omee at Weed- l Con.; East Hamilton, Con.; Prince Rd -
stock has: been chosen. • ward, Coe. ; West Bent, Lib. West Ilur-
•ibe.tars and Siripes wilt be formally l:au . Con.; Welland, Lib.: Fast Middle -
raised at an Juan Tilt"ue:day. sex. t ou., with costs; West Haastings,
Con.; Centre Bruce Lib ; South Went -
Elections in the Territories will be held woath, Lib.; «sorb Norfolk, petition and
912..1\'0V. 4. nominations, (let. eS. cress -petition, Lib. andmeCon•; Dundas,'
a .At Listowel the staples owned by John Can. ; North I.;eti.ark, Lib. ; Lincoln,
Sb Ink were badly t.atnaged by ere. Con. ; Fran.Mnae, Con.; ; South Waterloo,t
\iiilia is Meliittriel.. who fell down the Con.; Add3agtln. Con.; .hast Algoma.`
A Chicago Coe 'Company's rresiclient
Meana mo by Three Negroes, .Beaten
Into tasensibluty and Robbed of
$400 - 3rilliunaire Coral Mer-
chant ii.illed iu New 7iork-
.rock c•etr,. lieArci.
stairs ate • his hone in Toronto on Friday ' Lib.
afternoon. died on Saturday.
.ha jury hat returned a verdict of sole
Ode in the mase of the farm hand, 1 hearem*;
Wilkinson, whose body was t'9u11d its a,
cistern at L'Atearoue.
M. Henry Allen, the civil engineer
whose disappearance in New York, WAS
rely:rapbeli last weeks, has been found `
and bas returner! to Toronto.
Four hundred p let:tees of dairy but-
ter, making owe i,wretu pounds, wvire
shipped Etat Weil, to 'kaneouvee, 13,V.,
by Alinnedosa, Man., shippers.
Dr. Douaid A. Taylor, acting assistant
surgeon to the mineral hospital at Fort
efel'herson, is deal of peritonitis braughe
on by hard work in the hospital.
Dr. Nancy Guilford will tt„ht extradi-
tion, and will go an the statist, when the I
Amerie ut oflleers reach London and tell
why she left Bridgeport, Conn., secretly.
H. D. Fulton, president of the 1'uiton
Coal Compeer, Chleego, was held up
Saturday evening by throe negroes,
beaten into insensibility and robbed of
$400.
Ou Saturday the sebooner Nasasu was
sunk in a collision at the mouth of the
Detroit River by the steamer Colby, The
loss will teach 8d0,Ot)0. No Ole was
killed.
At North 'Tonawanda :!'ars.. Orville C.
Burton and her daughter Inez., aced le,
were found dead in bed. Dearh had
evidently resukes; front asphyxiation by
/lateral gas.
Alexander Wiggins. wbo shot Charles
Hare at a charivari in Muimer
Town-
ship one night last week, hag loft tbe
country. while his victim still lies in a
pro. biosis condition at Lavender.
Tbe Gould family le tired of law aunt
it Is unlikely they will eonteet the right
of Howard Gould to half the money loft
bins by bis father for marrying the
aerress Viola Katharine Clemmons.
The wife of rho lata Prof. William
Beard of Pbfladelpllita is on her way to
the Klondike to attempt to secure the
body of her husbanst at evidence ariailiat
those she believes to be his murth rers,
Tho holy of 16.year•old Daisy Smith
of Shamokin, Pa.. was faun• riddled
with shot and her throat cut open with a
knife. Edward Krissenger has ehntesaed.
that be killed tho gIri because she jilted
him.
R. A. Beaulieu, said to he a defaulter
from Montreal, hat been arrested at
Plattsburg, N.Y. 1-p to last August be
was discount clerk in Hank to National
of Quebec at Montreal. He will tight
extradition.
At the Ontario Wheel Company's
works, Gananeque, Byron Keating while
putting a belt on a shaft used a sties; to
do so. The stick whirled around, strik-
ing him in the stomach, His injuries
are so serious that he may not recover.
James 1F. Clendonnin, a millionaire
coal merchant of New York. died at
Roosevelt Hospital from injuries received
by a runaway team at Central Park
Circle Saturday afternoon. He was presi-
dont of the Arcadia Coal Co, of Nova
Scotia.
The horse of Mrs. Niles and son of
Merrit;on on Saturday shied at a hole in
the high bridge crossing the hydraulic
race at the Lincoln Paper Mills and then
started to back. Both jumped and just
in time, for the horse and wagon are
now at the bottom of the deep water.
While the 2,0(10 miners were attending
the funeral of their dead comrades at
Springfield, Ill., the 106 imported negro
miners were smuggled out of the city to
St. Louis, Mo. The attorney of the Vir-
dee Coal Co. says there will he no fur-
ther attempt to land Alabama negroes at
the inines, but an attempt will be inade
to fix the responsibility for the tragedy
on Governor Tanner,
Because the assets of the Pullman
Palace Car Co. exceeded the par value
of its stook by more than $18,00,000 the
directors on Saturday increased the oapi-
tal stock 50 per cent. and allotted 180,000
shares to the present stockholders. A
quarterly dividend of S2 per share was
authorized. The annual statement for
the year ending July 31 shows gross
earnings of $10,674,868 and disburse-
ments of $8,280,985, net earnings 82,-
393,888.
PEACE JuEiLL°E AT CHICAGO.
12,000 People Attend the Preliminary
lieligtous Services.
Chicago, Oct. 17, -Tho National Peace
Jubilee of Chicago was last night inau-
gurated with a union thanksgiving
service at the Auditorium. President
McKinley attended and listened to ad.
dresses by a Jewish rabbi, a Roman
Catholic nriest,®a Presbyterian clergyman
and a colored orator. The applause for
the President was terrific and at ono
time he was compelled to rise in Ibis box
and respond to the frantic cheers of the
audience. The services, however, were of
a religious character; 12,000 people were
within tbe great auditorium ane prob-
ably as many more were outside unable
to obtain admittance.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL,
LESSON IV, FOURTH QUARTER, IN-
TERNATiONAL SERIES, OGT, 23.
.Text of the Lesson, Isa, vi. 1 -13 -Memory
S'erses, 5 -8 -Golden Text, Ess, vi, 8.
Commentary Prepared by the not. D.
51. Stearns,
[Copyright, 1893, by ia.1T, Stearns,)
1. "in the year that King •Gzziah died I
saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne,
high and lifted up, and His traiuflled the
temple." Although King Lzziah died a
taper, yet his life as a wbole was"right in
the sight of the Lord' "(II Chron. ,sacci. 4).
Thera is a King who never dies. and Iia is.
on the throne of the universe. We are not
qualified to serve Hills as we should until
we continually realize His pesition and
our reel tionsbiptoHim. The word"Lord"
is Adonai, not Jehovah. and signifies my
master or possessor. It was none ether
;ban the Son of God whom Isaiah saw
tJohn ell, 41). Ezekiel was qualified for
cervica be a'Vision of the Lordas a man
upon the throne (Ezek. 1, 26).
:' "Above it stood the seraphim.
These hely beings aro mentioned only in
ll,teest el.. this chapter in the Bible, while eberubins
are mentioned Many tithes from Genesis
tan B. veiatiou. t aha persuaded that the
cherubim represent tbe church. the body
of Christ. as pars of Himself, one with
Hint in Ilia glory and power when the
kingdom shall bave costae. The sererbint
theorising ones) may possibly be identical
with ehertthiru. Compare Rey. iv with
saris chapter.
2. "And one cried unto another and
said. Holy, holy, holy Is the Lord of hosts;
the whole earth Is full of Ilis glory. -
Compare the only other thrice holy in
Scrieture in Rev. iv, S. On the last chase
of this verse see the. marginal reading and
compare chapters xi, 9; Num. xiv, 21:
Babe 11, 14. There is no self praise in
heaven, but all unite in glorifying Hite
whet alone is worthy to be praised. No
flesh shall glory in His presence, The
Lord alone shall be exalted in that day (I
Car. 1, 29, 81; Isa. ii, 11, 17).
4. "And the posts of the door moved at
the voice of bitethat cried nod the house
was filled with smoke," In Ex. xis, 18;
Isa. Iv, li, smoke and cloud are associated.
with the presence of the Lord. Wo think
also of the pillar of oloud that led Israel
and of the tabernacle and temple filled
with His glary at their dedication ()x. xi,
34; Kings rill, 10 11).
5. "Then said 1, \Voe is mai for I am
undone." As the prophet saw the Ring
in His glory be was filled with a souse of
his own unworthiness. Compare Job .ilii,
5. 6, Iran. x. 8; Rov. 1, lis To serve the
Lard as wo should we must not only be
tilled with a sense of His worthiness, but
also with a deep sense of our own un -
v wisdom o
wcrihinoss. Not t eft words, but
the power of God Is to do the work. Not
any might or power of curs, but His Spirit.
This is ills way (I Cor, 13, 4, 0; Zech. iv, 8).
6. "A live coal from off the altar." Tho
brazen altar in taberpeclo and temple is
suggestive of the work of Christ on Oat-
tary for us, when Ila shed His own Mood
for our Fins, gave IIimself a saerificee for
sin once for lti1. Thu gulden altar speaks
of Itis present work of intercession for us.
I:y the one we are saved and by tho other
we aro kept tiny by day.
7. "Lo, this huth touehed thy lips, and
thine iniquity is token away, and thy tin
purged.'" The mouth suggests the heart,
for out of the abundance of the heart rho
mouth speaketh (Math. xii, 84; xv, lir).
Nothing but the snorlflce of Christ can
take away our sins or give us a clean
heart. No works of ours can h.dp. It is
His work alone that does it, and we must
accept it as His gift, ns Adam and Five ae-
copted the coats of skins witieh the Lord
Himself provided by thosheddn,g of blood
(Gen. iii, 21; Rom. vi, 23).
S. "Also 1 heard the voice of the Lord
saying, Whona shall I send, and who will
go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send
me." To bring the time when the earth
shall be filled with the glory of the Lord
anessengers must go forth in His name
and proclaim His nnnso and dealers) HIs
doings, that He may be exalted (Isa. xli,
4). These messengers must be redeemed
people, knowing their sins forgiven, recog-
nizing as their Lord the ono living rrnd
true Gad, who says "Whom shall I send?"
and also the Trinity, who say, "Who will
go for us?" When we remember that al-
though in ourselves utterly unworthy, wo
are yet commissioned by a Ring, oven the
Ring of kings, having all power in heav-
en and on earth, and that He is in heaven
for us, ordering and arranging all the do -
tails of the work which He would have us
do, or rather do through us, it gives groat
quickness and confidence in His service.
9, 10. "And He said, Go and tell this
people." Then follows a count» fission
which sounds anything but encouraging,
for he is told that the people will not per-
ceive what he is setting before them nor
understand his message. Tbe commission
to Jeremiah and Ezekiel was in somewhat
similar terms (Jer. i, 17-19; Ezek. 111, 7-9;
exxiii, 80-82). The words of these verses
in Isaiah aro quoted three times in the
New Testament (Math. xiii, 14, 15; John
xii, 40; Acts xxviii, 26, 27), and also re-
ferred to in Rom. xi, 8. When our Lord
sent forth the twelve, Be said, "Behold I
send you forth es sheep in the midst of
wolves (Afath. x, 16). He afterward taught
them that not all the seed sown would
bear fruit, that tares would grow with the
wheat, that birds would get in the branches
and that the food would become leavened,
but He also told them for their encourage-
ment of the treasure and the pearl and
that He bad given up all to buy the field
and the pearl. He is not discouraged, He
shall be satisfied, the kingdom hall be
the Lord's, and every purpose of the Lord
shall be performed (Isa. xlii, 4; ilii, 11;
Obadiah 21. J,:r. li, 29).
11-13. "Then said I, Lord, how long?"
The Lord's purposes seem slow of fulfill-
ment, and it oft seems to our eyes like
prolonged and unnecessary delay, but the
h
time will Dome when there shall be delay
no longer (Rev. x, 6, R. V., margin), and
we shall see that for all seeming delay'
there has been a cause (Itzek. air, 23).
Isaiah was a messenger to Judah (Isa.
1), and our Lord Himself and His apostles
were sent first to Israel, but it has Dome to
pass as He said, and Israel hes been re-
moved tar away and her land is desolate.
Yet the Lord's portion, a faithful rem-
nant, has always been in Israel, even in
her worst days, and 'shall yet 'burst forth
into much life to the glory of God. When.
the trees cast their leaves, they seem to be
dead, but the life being there beoomes
manifest In duo time. There will be a
springtime for Israel when she shall blos-
som and bud and fill the facie of the earth
with fruit (Isa. xxvii, 6). Let us now tell
every creature of the redemption that is in
(:heist Jesus, so that from' all nations
chose who will may come to form His:.
body, the church,; If we receive the same
tenement as the prophets and apostles, let
us not think it strange.
Close of tlho ;":tation;d League for the•
Year 14St );t- llee ret,
New York, Uet. 17. --With Saturday's
games the National League closed its -
Mire cbauai•tonehila-eatsor,. ebe following
is the record.
Won. 7.a(•st. P. t.
i. is on . 1 1, u,5
• 1 !-inns rat °"`; 5.i ;ti14 -
tiia° iau i ,. , . tt„ Dia ,(tel
t E it- a; e' 1+ t4", .50 p
Cleveland .,.,. a.l t;3 .:r11!
1'1zi:a.ia,I, !a , SSSS .. 79 70 ,51'1
New Y,.rli 77 71
!'att.ht r•-•
72•4 7f1 .4r+l
.
I.cuistal3e ,,.,.. 70 81 ,403
Id ,373
li a 'Langton , ... 51 101 .3155
St. Louis 30 111 261
Saturday's scorer: , gastrin 10. Baltimore!
k t ar';r ; arra»:Brute'. 4. i'+;iltlan4.rt' 1 is ee.
and: ended thlrei.; itroeklyn -1e, l'hiladee;
pitia'wed;teadieit tb clay Louisvillea e, Cle
land 4::fess Tore :1. Washington 0 tseion4t
called third); Chicago•Pittsburg, geld weer-
PEACE
ear
15,000 Glass '!Yorkers on Strike.
Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 17. -Window glass
plants throughout the United States
failed to start the season's operations at
midnight on Friday. Fires were blocked
and may be extinguished and 15,000
workers who have been looking forward
to a general resumption on Oot. 15 are
forced •to remain idle. 'The strike Is for
an advance in the wages of the cutters
and fdatteners, but is really the result of
a fight between the Knights of Labor and
the American Federation of Labor.
•
fir. Dobell en the ravine Cable,
Victoria, B,C., Oet. 17, --Hon. Ii. R.
Dollen addressed the Board of Trade on
Saturlay. Be strongly urged the need of
an all -British Pacific cable, and favored
Canada's paylug one-third of the east,
As to the fast Atlantic service, they must
take the platter out of the hands of the
Government, and ho felt sure they would
get the fastest steamers direct. He might
go to England next month in the matter.
lilt by a Itlszxard.
Sl ton, aan, Oct,17.-Work
on the
Swan River extension cf the Dauphin
Lino hag been considerably delayed by
heavy rain and snowstorms. A terrific)
blizzard snowed all the eamps under on
Oet. 1. and further work will be stopped
after Oct. 20 until next spring. The line
will bo located another e00 miles this
fall, and construction pushed rapialy
ahead next sunuuer,
CABLES STRONG.
The Wheat SIarkets en Saturday in
Liverpool and Chicago -- The Local
markets -('geese and Live stock.
Saturday Evening, Oct. 15.
Cables were •;rung again tu•day, cru ;he
Liverpisl i1••ant wheet:t futures advanced
Pied to Pad gate cental.
e•hira a sutures were strong early In sym-
Malty, Out sacra d st; the ehe•e t•a arms tee
Deem yesterday's liana tleurev. Present
stiffness of tee marset I5 baae,1 up en the
ex, elitie:h•illy^ gond acce;et:inees abroad,
which, it is figured. will neat ;a -t 1 -ng.
Leading \`Lent Alanrl:eta.
Following are the closing prices today at
In
portant centres:
Cash. Oct Dee ttay.
Cilie. g0 ...3.... $0 Criers $0 04 - 30 usy,
New lurk.., ..0 71e ti 71
et Lento .... 0.0S1:, 0 11104 0 67%
Milwaukee ., . O'Gt!t 0 tees
1t•:edo SSSS 0 t,8;1, 0 05 ., 0 1.1511,
Di trait. 117:q ,.,, 0 11? e 0 iSie
I,nlnth. NO. 1
1 o,thern.. 0 0514 0 4.5 0 0% 0 ti41/4
l,ufn,b, No. 1
lard ... 0 6isn
llinneapnlis. .... 0 63 0 61!2 0 00%
Toronto, No. 1
I;aril tnewi. 0 70 ..
Toronto, red,. 0 65 ... ...
Toronto St. Laawarence illaritet.
Reee‘p.s of faran produce were u,: nrar-
av .e large, an in usual or. Saturday '2'io0
Lt Lt•: .
11 he .Lt firmer. 659 bushels se-lit..;a. fol-
chu'-: Whitt. bbe, red s ec to lige, goose tette
to bile.
Barker firmer; 1500 bushels sold at 490
to 51x_c.
Oars firmer, 400 bushels selling at '281,4o
to 29igtc.
One Ioaa.d of blue peas sold at 000 per
bushel.
Flay -Fifteen loads sold at $7.50 to $8.50
for timothy and 65.50 to 36.30 per ton for
clover.
Straw -Three loads sold ex 36 to 37 per
ton.
Potatoes easier, selling at 60c to Toe per
bag.
Dressed Hogs --Deliveries light and priors
firmer at $1.10 to 36 per ew•t.
Apples sold at $1 to $1.75 per bushel.
Butter, 18e to 20e per 1•b. by the ,bas'kat,
and 'single pounds 22o.
Eggs, 1St to 20c per dozen.
Poultry-Ohiekens, 4(,c to 75c; ducks, 60c
t0 75c; geese, 5c to 6c per ib.; turkeys, 11c
to 13c ,per 1b.
Cheese Markets.
Ogdensburg, N,Y„ Oct. L5, -Seventeen
lots. of 1872 boxes, offered; 8l!ae hid; no
sales. Later on street 500 sold at &ryfic.
Watertown, N.Y., Oct, le -Sales of
cheese on Board of Trade to -day, 1700 box-
es
of 50 boxes sold afor Western shipment
at 8%e. Market dull.
London, Ont., Oot. 15. -At the market
held here to-datr, 4227 boxes September
cheese were boarded. Bids ranged from
81c to 811.16e. Sales, 585 at Imre.
Gunton, N. Y., oat. 16.- galea, 801 boxes
twin cheese, at 8%c to 8"5fac: 300 tubs bat-
ter, 191/50.
East Buffalo Cattle Market.
East Buffalo, Oct, 15. -Cattle -There
were no offerings. Veal calves were in
liberalsupplyandthe demand
less active.
Prices were lower. Choice to extra, $7,25
to $7.50; good to chalee, $6;75 to 37.25.
Sheep and Lambs -Twenty-two loads on
sale. There was a fair demand, Western
lambs, choice to extra, 33.50 to $5,75; good
to choice, $5 to $5,50; common to fair, $4.75
to $5,2„5. Sheep, choice to extra, $4.40 to
$4.65: good to choice, $4 to $4.25; common
to fair, $3 to $.3.75.
Hogs -Forty loads on sale and market In
good position, Yorkers, $3.80 to $3.90; gen-
erally $3.85 to 33.90; medium. $3.90 to $4.
Pigs, $3.50 to $3.60; light Yorkers, 63.70
to $3.80; roughs, $3.30 to 33.60; stage, .2.75
to $3.
British Markets.
L1'vempool, Oct. 15. -(12.30.) --No. 1 Norte.,
spring, ' 6s 21jsd: red winter, 6it; No: 1
Cal., 6s 8d to 68 81/xd; corn, 3s 7d; pear,
5s 76; pork, 50s; lard. 20x• 06; tallow. 20s
ed; .baeon, heavy, 1.0., 31e 6d; •ldght, 30s 6d;
short cut, 32s 60; cheese, white, 42s 66;
colored, 42s 66.
Lives -pool -Close -Spot wheat firm. with
No. 1 Cal. at es 3d, and No. 1 Nortlielm as
Os 21,!x0. Iced winter, futures. 51 10'0 for
Oct., 5s 101/0 for Dec. and 5s 96 for March.
Maize, 5s 7146. for spot. Futures, Is 71. d
Oct., Nov. and Dec., end its 633.4 for 71/di
1 F1aur, 19s 9d.
One Day's Work
we give this fire watch, Grain L& Charm
for salting the 4.a ptel'aets of Eay,•i•
site ,'..fume sr ;e ,cotseast* bead
ddre,umd r.•. turaard the pectnme.
r.•stpa+d. Add bur a,ealnin t.tht. No
IDOne,' rutu;ted belt the volume
among yens friends, return met,e}. and
3tt'we end the watch. prepaid 1 hu Isel.
get:tt, a Aoearle.w touch. guaranteed a
a ;1 'Ill rrnd 'iWepicee ,,,ennnn this paper
?
• r: Rem.SpeciaityCO 00victotieSt.Torontu
vei l flea.
The automatic alms distributor is an
ingenious device of rsuseriean origin,
and is a severed of the orclinery pethny-
in•the-slot matinee, in that it d'sp-uses
the coin instead of absorbing It
The contrivance is tteri::e.[ to ret as
irbear test for ri,grants and berg trs, for
it exacts the turning of a handle one
bewared tinges L,'ft,re it yields the covet-
ed penny. And this labor is by no.
means lost, for it actuates machinery.
el('etrieal or otherwise, which will per-
form some aetual work, 'or store up the
energy expended for future use. The
idea is certainly as good as It is novel,
and will doubtless find many useful .sp-
plicatlous..
Whaat Corn ltroonis are Made et.
0onhmatratively few understand the na
Imre cif broom corn, where it comes from
or 1:uw it grows.
Bae•-kh Bros. & Co., Toronto, here fur-
nielied our readers with some particular.;
comets sting this plant, which should prove
of interest to housekeepers generally.
The broom earn is grown front seed,
planted in much the sante way as ordin•
ary corn. It is planted in early spring, in
ground carefully prepared. The prepare -
tiers of tbe ground is irporteat, oust re-
quires years a experieace and study.
The climate is alae important, as it mess
be neither too hot nor too cold, but of a
even temperature. otherwise the growth
a the corn may be hindered and it would
redden quickly, The State of Minnie pro-
duces the bulk of the broom corn used in
Canada.
The length of this corn varies from
three to six feet, and, while growing, looks
somewhat like long prairie grass. Dur-
ing growth it has a root or stalk on the
end, which bans to be cut off when the
corn is harvested in the fall of the year,
The market prices decline or advance
according to the size of the crop, which is
materially affected ba; drought.
The corn is out its the fall when it is at
its best, care being taken not to allow
to become too ripe, as, like fruit, it be-
comes useless, after a certain stage, for
anything but seeding. After it is gather.
ed, is is culled, sorted and graded. Then
it is packed in bales ready for shipping
purposes with stalks outward to pre terve
the brush part. When it arrives as the
storehouse or factory it may be kept for
any length of time before being
manif
ac
tared into brooms, ;Intl always retains its
natural color if properly handled and
worked. Inferior et alt is sometimes dyed
to hide its defects. This is easily distin-
guished when exposed to the sun and air.
A. broom factory with a thorough equip.
ment is a regular beehive of workers.
Tbe bales of corn are opened and sorted
into various grades and lengths. Before
being made up the material of each broom
is weighed and tied in roundbuuahes, and
Is flattened when going through the pro-
cess of sewing and ilhisltiug. Then the
loose seeds have to be reproved from each
broom separately, as mice and rats are •
partial to these seeds, ansa are likely to
destroy the broom in an attempt to get at
thorn.
l3ueckh Bros. ek Co. personally select
the broom corn used by them direct t'rotn
the growers. Their output is several
hundred dozen brooms per week, besides
whisky, brushes, eta.
A Gr. -at Cit,u,e,•.
But a great change has taken place.
Capacity to imbibe is no longer a quali-
fication for newspaper work. It is now
recognized that facts obtained in con
junction with a glass of whiskey cannot
be relied upon; that modern newspaper
work can be done best with the brain
free from alcoholization and the Mani-
fold illusions incident to the condition.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any ease of Catarrh that can nut be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cur..
F. J. CHENI6Y & CO., Props. Toledo. 0.
We, tat undersigned, have known P. J.
Cheney ter the last 15 years, and be leve him
petfeetly henorab e in all business transactions
and tivauctatly able to carry, out any obliga-
tio Is made by their firm.
\1' -+•sr 3; Truax, ,t. hole:gale Druggists, Toledo, 0,
Wading Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Drug!
gists. Toledo, Ohio.
Halls Catarrh Cure is token internally, act-
ing directly upon the bloo 1 and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Price 711.. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
A Cheek Story.
There is a good check story in The
Westminster Budget. It is of a Pres-
byterian minister who had, to his in-
tense surprise and delight, received an
unwonted check from a charitable
donor. "This cheek is to order and
must be indorsed," explained the paying
cashier at the Highland Bank. "Eh?"
oIndorsed-across the back." "Oh, ayl"
And with the pen n,nd all his soul the
minister wrote: "I heartily indorse this
check."
There is not a enure dangerous class of
disorders than those which affect the
breathing organa. Nullify this danger
with Dr. 'Phomas' Eclectric Oil -a pul-
monic of acknowledged efficacy. It cures
lameness and soreness when applied ex-
ternally as well as swelled neck and crick
urea-ars a ,•e 'carried.
At the regent meeting of the Nation'
al Brewers' Association at Atlantic
City, N.J., the president in :his address
reported that the a•onsumiition of liner
had fallen ell 1.403.9ti3 games during
the past year, anal that the tax paid
into the national treasury for beer pro-
duced and gold lu the United States
was $1,212.uiS les§ in 139e: than In 1830..
He further stilted that there were IMO
less liquor millers its the country in 1897
than there were in reek
rt,ia:atoe•.,it,,Y•••,i tt'ith Catcry.
Take a sufficient number of fresh of
hot -house tomatoes. remove the seeds
andskin and place on ire until ready
to serve. Chop enw'gh celery ti. fill
each tomato anti mix with Mayon•
mise dre ss^nr. t\,'t•." on the delicate,
white teases +:r lettuce.
Eii98rfl 8 L 11 meat Ufa Laiiiria i .
„rola., tl+1tem14e t ails;„n1F.
In Persia among the aristocracy as
visitor sends a. notice an hour or two
betoro calling, and gites a day's no•
ties if the visit 15 IMO of great import'
aciep. I -Ie is suet by servants brsfore he
reaches the hoiuse, and other c•.neider-
atiotts are shown him according to his
rank,
ttlsles5 1a,vr. Leaiatr.
The oldest love letter in the world
is inr the British museum. It is a pro-
posal or marriage for the band of an
Egyptian princess, and it was made
3,50 years age, It is in the form of an
inscribed brick.
DEAR Sura, -I was for seven years r< aut-
serer from Bronchial trouble, and would
be so hoarse at time, that I could scarcely
speak above a who -;ter. I got no relief
from anything till I tried your MIN
ABD'S HONEY B.17» ASI, Two bot-
tles stave relief and nix bottles made as
complete cure. I would heartily recom-
mend it to anyone :mitering from throat
or ]hug trouble.
Frederiotoa. J. F. VANBUSEIBE.
\t'1.y ga Milpiu•. and wbining tthout
yaw corns, when a. 21 cent ho,tie of Rene-
wer',
olo-w:er'. Ceret.Ctsre ttli( remove them? Give
it a trial, :arab you will n:er regret it.
r aquefiod Ata
At a public dinner in Paris the ether
day the guests were astonished by
having liquified air poured into their
glasses of champagne. .4.year ago the
emperor of Germany was offered a
glass if liquified air. He raised the
glass in honor of science, hut refrained
from putting it to his lips; the liqui-
fied air in it would have burned them
like red-hot coals.
••• . • • • eessetnina.
The cost of keeling up she drinking
fountains and Cattle troughs in Lon-
don is $8,500 per annum. A single
trough in a busy thoroughfare costa
$250.
WOMAN
in every
town to 6o
house t
bousecan-
'vnssing for a well established medicine.
Easy seller. Liberal commission. No secur-
ity or investment required. Address
E. A. Sprong, Hamilton, Ont.
•
HEAP FAR1
V DO YOU WANT A ROME ?
whoop Improved and im.
If proved farming lands
in A RES un
uthern ebigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota
and North Dakota, sold on long time and EASY
PAYMENTS, a little each year. Come and see
ns or write. THE TRUMAN MOSS STATE
BANK, Sanllac Center, Mieb., or
191 THE TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE,
Croswell, Santlae Co.. Michigan, U.S.A.
HAVE YOUR FALL STOCK WELL
ASSORTED WITH
OECKH'S
BROOMSi
AND WOODENWARE.
Manufactured by ROECSTI RROs. & CO.,
Toro 10, Ont,
T. N. U.
189
Thorough instruction at the
NORTHERN BUSINESS COLLEGE, OwEN Sous
Shorthand Course includes Shorthand, Typewriting.
Business Writing, and Business Letter Writing. One
Business Course is the hest in Canada. Thorough week
guaranteed. C. A. FLEMING, Principal.
1
in the back; and, as an inwt;ell specific,
possesses most substantial elailue to purr a ttettoethm ar ae mwsztletesm.
lie confide's mao1
ncs-
CIO M's AM r1
Green is the color most beneficial to
the eye in diffused light, and reds and
pinks the most harmful. In. a strong,
direct light, however, blue and neutral
tints are the best for the eyes, and
pure white the most harmful, as is
proved by the phenomenon of snow
blindness.
ilinard's Liniment is the Best
Literary Note.
A correspondent writing from Texas
says: "I wrote a story ten years agog and
it was published in a leading magazine.
Here is another, the first I have written
since that time. What do, you think of it?"
Not so much' of the story as of its au-
thor. A man with such a fine restraint,.
who can write and yet only writes once
every ten years, deserves a gold medal
from every appreciative editor: -Atlanta
Constitution.
jREL
We give this fine
watch, chain and
charm,forSefling two
der. LEVEn COLLAR
BUTTONS, at ten cts.
cacL. Sid your ad.
dres and we.forward
theButtons,postpaid,
and our Premium
List. No money re-
quired. Sell the But-
tons among your
friends, return the,
money, andwe send
the watch, prepaid.,
A genuine Ame,ican
watch, guaranteed,
for a few hnura' wo, k.
Mention this paper
when writing.
LEVER
BUTTON
CO.,
20 Adelaide St. E.
Toronto, Ont.
am.•arti tn.atim. •oa .ra-.m.. •tsrtim evtian. •ur so a
l4,
•
a