HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1901-5-23, Page 5".1j11F,
0:5zieter 1„buocate
publisliee every Thursday Merniag,
at the °Moe,
*AIN -STREET, - ExETER,
• —By the ---
ADVOCATE PUBLISH I NG COMPANY
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION,
One Dollar per annum if paid in Advance
81.50 if notso paid.,
JA.azwertlatme .a.tont ors.
tiors.
No paper aiss o ntinued un til all arre rage
are paid. Advertisements withont specific
direCtions will be published till forbid and.
o harged accordingly. Liberal diseountnamde
for transcient advertisemeets inserted for
long periods. Every description of ,TOB
PRINTIONG turned out in the finest style,
6,nd at moderate rates. Cheques, money or -
ors, &e. for advertising , subscriptions ,etc .to
be made payable to
Chas.11. Sanders,
EDITOR Arm PROP
Prefeeetuaal Cards -
H. KINSMAN, L.D. S. & DR. A. It.
IKINSMAN, L D. S., D. D. s., Honor
graduate of Toronto University,
DENTISTS,
Teeth extraeted without any pain, or any
bad effeots. Offiee in Fanson's Bleak, west
site Main Street,Exeter.
DR.D. ALTON J)
-D---
honors Graduate of the Toronto Dm-
reity and Royal College of Dental Surgeons
of Ontario. Teeth extracted without paha.
All modes of Dentistry up to date. Office
in new block s ou.th of Carlings' block.
Medical
rea.T.P. McLAUGFELIN, MEMBER OF
' Al the College of Physicians and Surge ons
Ontario. Physician, Surgeon and leocouch-
eur. Office, Dashwood, Ont.
DICKSON & '0A.RLING, BARRISTERS,
Solicitors, Notaries, Conveyaricers,
Commissioners, Solicitors for the Maisons
Bank, etc. Money to loan at lowest rattle
of interest. Offmes, Main Street, Exeter.
CARLING, B. A.. ' L. R. Diceson.
FW. GLADMAN,rsucoessor to Elliot lit
. Glade:Lane Barrister. Solieiter, Notary
Public Uonyeyancier, Etc. Money to loan at
lowest rates of interest. Office Main Street,
Exeter.
^
Auctioneers
TT BOSSENBERRY, Grand Bend, Lioensed
1.1.. Auctioneer for County Huron. Sales
promptly attended to, and charges moder-
ate. °rears by mail will receive every at-
tention.
BROWN,Winchelsea. LicensedAnot-
11.. ion eer for the Counties of Perth and
' Middlesex, also for the township oftisborne
Sales promptly attended toand terms rea-
s °ribs] e.Sales arranged at Post office. Win-
ohelsea.
Insurance.
E ELLIOT,
Insurance Agent,
Main St.
Exeter
FARMS FUR SALE.
MONEY TO LOAN.
Theiandersigned has a few geed farm!) for
saleoheap. Money to loan on easy terms
JOHN SPAOKMAN
SamweThe Block Exeter
THE LEADING
MEAT MARKET.
evegearee--- ---memear-
For Fresh, good and the choisest cuts
of -meat, call on the undersigned.
While all our cuts of meat are the
finest, we make a spe,cialty of meat
delicacies.
Meat delivered to all parts of the
. . town . .
John Manning
TO CURB A COLD IN ODLE DAY
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tala-
lets. All druggists refund the money
if it fails to cure. 25e. E. W. Grove's
signature is on each box.
We giVeahandsomeopon
face, Polished • 201
tV
Nickel Watch, Amerl.
can Lever Movement
packages ofhlweet Pea.
for selling only 2 doz.
age
flood at 10c.apaelcago. Rash packoontainsassiendidmixtureofthe I
most fragrant varieties of all beers.
You can earn this fine Watch In an, )
afternoon 12y aettlng to work lit once.
edailus this advertisoneat and we will forward the Seeds.
'Bell them. return the money, and wo guarantee safe detir-'
err of your Watch at once. Write to day. as the season for
,WlingseedIfisberte Seed Sumtly Co., Tomato, .
The Molsons -Bank.
(Chartered. by Parliament, 1865.)
Paid up Capital $2,500,000
Reserve Fund 2,050,000.
Read office Montreal
JAMES ELLIOTT, Esq.
GENERAL MANAGER.
Money advanced to good. Farmers on
their OWD notes with one or more endorsere
at 7 per contper annum.
—EXETER BRANCH—
Open every lawful day from 10 am. to 3
p.m; Saturdays 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
A general banking business transacted
CURRENT RATES allowed for money on
Deposit Receipts, Savinge Bank at 3 cent,
Dresses & CARLING, D HIIRDON,
Solicitors. Manager
SOLID
. .
GO LD
118 gIVO lit is heentlail
Solld Gold Ring, act.
With Peoria, for Selling
only 15,.lideldigeS Of
Sweet l'oGeod'at12c:rinelt. Each
tat1O7.2o,eoeloinainiUlaialidnilg.
tine ortho 111) 1.
Ides, of color.
‘Yord thSdS. estrtitetiore.
teM the n, 1 ey, Midthig bean,
100 ltd GOld,PearlieA ging
ein 501 t yeti, daretellytifirdc,
ca. n v1VtUfl d MY*. Wilteto dee: :See eaa Son fOr 0011.
114 oc0,1c ti .R'fle4 SnppLY TroxktG, Can.
Ever have them?
Then we can't
tell you any-
thing about
them. You
know how dark
everything looks
and how you are about
7„,7'Y ready to give up. Some-
how, you can't throw off
the terrible depressjon.
Are things really so
btue? Isn't it your nerves,
after all? That's where
t h e trouble is. Your .1
nerves are being poisoned
from the impurities in
your blood.
);,
1 e'
purifies the blood and
gives power and stability
to the nerves. It makes
health and strength, activ-
ity and cheerfulness.
This is what "Ayer's"
will do for you. It's the
oldest Sarsaparilla in the
land, the kind that was
old before other Sarsa-
parillas were known.
This also accounts for
the saying, "One bottle
of Ayer's is worth three
bottles of the ordinary
SIM bottle. MI druggists.
WrIle the Doctor,
11 yoti have any complaint whatever
aod desire the best medical advice you
ems possibly receive, write the doctor
freely. You will receive a prompt rd.
ply, without east. Address.
DR, .1.0. AYER, Lowell, Plass.
1
1
1
1
Joseph Parton was committed for
trial at Parry Sound on the charge of
murder.
Mr. Andrew Carnegie has given
2100,000 to establish district libraries
in Glasgow.
Mrs. Richard Revell, a Woodstock,
who was so severely burned a week
ago, died of her injuries.
A young man veined Garnet E.Hoop-
er, of Toronto, was found dead beside
the railway track at Utterson.
About 180 helpers employed at the
Kingston Locomotive Works are on
strike for increased pay, and the black-
smiths and machinists are idle in con-
sequence.
Don't
Cough
Stop it with SCOTT'S
EMULSION of Cod Liver
Oil. '
A little coughing is nothing
.--the tickling, that makes you
'cough once, is some dust ;.not
the least harm. You scratch
an itch, and forget it This
cough is scratching an itch..
But the cough, that hangs
on and comes back,is 'a, 'sign
of an itch that hangs on arid
comes back. There is some-
thing that makes that itch.
Infiarnation : a germ, it's
alive ; like a seed in moist warm
ground, it will grow if you let
it, even in children.
Take SCOTT'S ,EMUL.
SION of Cod Liver Oil. and
the germ will die.
If you have nct tried it, send for a free
sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you
SCOTT & nOwNE, Chemists, Toronto
Soe. and See* ; all druggists.
EXETER FOUNDRY
J. MURRAY,
Manufacturer & Dealer
in ...
Portable and Stlitionery Engines and
Boilers, Plows, Land Rollers, Mow-
ers, Etc. ,Iron pipe and fittings, re-
pairs on Agricultural Implements
and general machinery promptly at-
tended to . .
2 Good Second Hand Mowers for sale,
cheap; also 1 Steven's & Burns' Por-
table Threshing Engine for sale in
good running order. Price $175,00
cash.
Sole agent in Exeter and vicinity for
the Electric Boiler Compound. Guar-
anteed to be strictly' first.class for
removing scales, etc.
J. iviutinpiy
r
r'1:111{I'S FOP6:, T
SOO Boers Cross Orange River
and Reinforced Commandoes.
Several British Patrols Ilave 'Been Am.
bushed -Bands of the Enemy la Several
Places -An Armoured Train Ras Been
1.1y,namited-Lord Kitchener Reports
3110re Beers Killed, Wounded alal
Cap tared.
Cape Town, May 20n -Eight hun-
dred Boers have crossed the Orange
River front the northwest, and have
reinforced the commandoes in the
eastern districts.
The latest reliable report laeates
Dewet neer Fitilippolls, in Orange
River ctolDny, arid not far from the
Cape line, with 40 horsemen. All
the commandoes in the Orange River
Oolony have instroctions to cross the
Orange River,
Several British patrols have been
ambushed.
more Captures,
Tionclon, May 21. -Lord -Kitchener
also reports that last week 19 Boers
were killed, 14 Were wounded, 288
were made prisoners and 71 surren-
dered, and that 212 rifles and 105,-
000 rounds of ammunition were cap-
tured.
English Major Killed,
London, May 21. -Lord ICitchener
reports to the War Office, under date
of Pretoria, May 18, as followsy
"An armored train has been dyna-
mited south of American Siding.
Major Heath of the South Lanca-
shires was killed."
Horses for the Armr.
Montreal, May 21. -The sLeainer
Anglo -African will leave the port of
Montreal this morning with 750 Can-
adian horses intended for the 'British
array in South Africa.
MILITARY DISPLAY BARRED.
Ceremonials on the 24th May Would Con-
stitute Acts of Disrespect to Late
OU.01.11 Vietoila's .3fernory.
Ottawa, May 21. -The citizens of
Cornwall will .be deprived of seeing
the 43rd Regiment in ceremonial
manoeuvres on Victoria Day, and
they will not hear the fue-de-joie,
which is usually fired by .troops at
noon on this day.
In reference to the matter, the fol-
lowing brigade orders were issued by
Col. Cotton, D. 0. C., commanding
the Ottawa Brigade: Attention Is
called to M. 0. of this date, as fol-
lows:
"District officers commanding and
commanding officers of units are re-
minded that, by the King's com-
mand, all the military forces of the
Em.pire are still in deep mourning
for Her Late Gracious Majesty,
Queen Victoria, and that such
mourning does not expire until July
21. In these circumstances, cere-
monial -displays, such as "salutes, file -
de -joie, trooping the colors, reviews'
and other military exercises, except
such as are for tactical instruction
or for rifle practice, would be an act
of serious disrespect to the metnory I
of our late beloved Sovereign:" •
H F. PAN DEDICATED.
11I0IffPEN131jBq'9
Lord 31i111,0 Congr atitlatio as to the " '
11b0 w (i&'' -.A. Eels: Day a:14
a visit. show.
13MTai.o, N.Y„ Alay 21. --in the pres-
ence of a. vast, coacoorse of people.,
,vi( h ceremonial lyeth conventional Tlie 11 0.1111,1 Firth Lived UP to Its
and novel, the Pan-American Espoel- r"1".'3' "ea."' Irt:°11
tion was yesterday forMally declicat- iri4;31t'
ed, The daY was fair 11.114 bc,gan witli a
parade, in which there NVere: men froze
nearly every country in the wOrld,
and ended with an aerial bombard-
ment fro01 flying bombs and a bril-
liant electrical illumination. Between
Le two were the formal exercises of
the decl ice. Lion,
The paredk. that, formed at the City
„Roll anti marched by way of the
main theroUghfares to the Exposition
grounds WaS interesting 'P .1,1,»;)'
and 1:11011SandS. of p er S 0 t1S CW(I
roti‘o.
ViCe-PreSident Roosevelt was the
guest of honor, an1 when. he reacned
the hall the parade was started with
a volley of aerial bombs. 'Pwo thous-
and troops, who got their lime from
four bands, kd the way, and after
them were a hundred carriages with
officials anti guests, Behind them
came the COnCOSS ionairs from the
Midway. Western Indians mingled
with the children of the tropics, the
Orient and the Mediterranean, and
gave the procession its truest touch
of color. They were in native cos-
tume, had a score of artistic floats,
and 15 bands furnished them music.
The entry of the procession to the
ExhibiUon grounds at noon was a.
magnificent spectacle. The crowd in
the grounds at that time numbered
fully 40,000, and the greater part of
it was massed in the esplanade.
Tho exercises began .at 12-45
o'clock with the rendition of Han-
del's "Alleluia" by the 71st Regi-
ment Band, The venerable bishop,
Charles H. Fowler, led in prayer be-
fore an audience stilled and bowed.
President Milburn read a series of
congratulatory telegrams from Cen-
tral and South Americo, and Can-
ada, among which was the following:
f"The Governor-General of Canada di-
rects me to express to you his hearty
congratulations on the opening of
the Pan-American Exposition., which
His Excellency sincerely hopes may
be itt every way successful, (Signed)
Harry Graham, Aide -'de -Camp to
Governor-General."
Yesterday's total admissions, from
8 a.m. -until 11 p.m., were 101,687.
1LFENCE,
11)71 1) ELAl 1111 V'S aerrAOle WAS
Ge LieeNTL'e BEATEN CPR%
The Inhibition of Prof.. Steen.
Montreal, May 21. -The inhibition
of Mr. Steen is the sole topic of con-
versation in Anglican circles. In
some quarters the action of His
Grace is approved of, while in others
it is condemned. Inhibitions, it may
be said, are very rare in the Church
of England in Canada, and it is very
seldom that a bishop has occasion to
resort to such a drastic method of
silencing a clergyman. It is prero-
gative, however, that belongs to an
Anglican prelate, and one, it is said,
from which there is no appeal, ex-
cept to the House of Bishops. An
Anglican Bishop has also the right
to excommunicate.
S20 For Horse Thieves.
'Woodstock, May 21.7 -Horse thieVes
are still operating in West Zorra.
Some time Sunday night the premises
of two farmers in that township were
visited and a horse, harness and bug-
gy taken. The horse was taken from
Charles Barret, lot 2, concession 7,
West Zorra„ and the buggy and har-
ness from John Parker, lot 6, gravel
road. A reward of $20 has been of-
fered.
An Elevator Burned.
Winnipeg, May 21.-A despatch from
Indian Head, N.W.T., says: Yester-
day morning fire was discovered in
the roof of the Lake of the Woods
elevator at this place. A strong
southerly gale was blowing at the
time; and the elevator, along with
23,008 bushels of wheat, were 80On
consumed.
Derelicts Dot the Atlantic.
New 'York, May 21. -Two ocean lin-
ers, L'Aquitaine, from Havre, • and
the Mesaba, feorn London, arriving
yesterday, reported derelicts drifting
in the steamship lanes now traversed
by crowded steamers, The Govern-
ment will be asked to send out a
gunboat to blow up the wrecks.
Ass Ontario Man Killed.
Ypsilanti, Mich., May 21, - Fred
Douglass of .Alvinston, Ont., a mem-
ber of the Michigan Central bridge
gang, was ineta,ntly killed' by the
east -bound pasee»ger train in an ef-
fort to avoid a freight which was
coining in an oPPosite direetion.
Will Be Charged With 'Wounding.
Toronto, May 21.-Nicho1as Clark,
the Central Prison convict who used
a knife on Michael Clancy, genril at
the inetitutioin on Saturday last,
Will be brought into the Pelice'Court
this morning and charged With
wounding.
Jape 1,ease Masons plus.
Yokohama, May 21. -According to
ad v ices from Seoul, the Corea n Cot-
ernment has leased to Ja,pan 450
acres Of lend, to form a settlement, re!,
etee;inipho. Tim land in question was
fOrinerly e,nxioously sought by Rus-
sia.
PARKDALE RANA It01113ERY.
Trial of Rutledge, Rice and Jones Corn-
meneed at Toronto.
Toronto, May 21. -No time was
Lost by Judge McDougall in the Crim-
inal Sessions yesterda,Y morning in
beginning the trial of Rutledge, Rice
and Jones, the three.raen accused of
breaking into the Standard Bank in
Parkdale on the morning of May 22
of, lest year.
Mr. Dewart stated the Crown's
case to the jury, outlining the evi-
,.dence to be presented, identifying the
Prisoners ae the -men who tied up
Policeman Ward hi Parkdale.
The first witness called was Mr. J.
H. Hyland, then manager ' • of the
Standard Branch Dank at Parkdale,
who said he found the window brok-
en open, the vault damaged and the
combination broken on May 22 last,
and the door knob of the safe bent a
littr.
The
Tevidence 01
Policeman Ward
(100), told how he had been tied up
by the thieves.
Other witnesses were Patrol-Sergt.
James Hart, Patrol-Sergt. Robinson,
Inspector Stark, Policeman Alexa,n-
'der Ross, Detective William Schu-
bert, William Myers, Aeidrew Hughes
and W. Webster. The court adjourned
at 6 o'clock till 10 o'clock this
morning. The court will sit daily
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. until the four
charges are disposed of.
The Elections in Spain.
Madrid, May 21. -Latest reports of
the result of the elections to the new
Chamber of ' Deputies, held Sunday,'
show that the Capital returned six
Ministerialists, one Conservative and
one member of the National Unioe
party. '
According to El Correo, the follow.
ing are the general results of the
election:
Liberals, 230; Conservatives, 70;
dissident Conservatives, 15; dissident
I Liberals, 18; supporters of Romero,
10; Republicans,: 15; Carlists, 6; Na-
tional Unionists, 10; CataIanists, 4;
Soeialist, 1, and Independents, 21.
A Onebec Ban Shot.
Edmonton, N. W. T., May 21.-A
despatch from Star, 40 miles east of
here, says that Louis 'Fontaine, D.
L. S., of Levis, Que., who left Fri-
day f or Onion Lake, was accidentally
shot near there on Saturday. While
Mr. Fontaine was'in his tent one of
the members of the party was hand-
ling a revolver' outside, which acci-
dentally discharged, the bullet enter-
ing Fontaine's leg, just above the
knee. The bullet has not been re-
moved. Dr. Harrison is with the
wounded man, who will be brought
here for treatment.
Boxing on Victoria Day.
Toronto, May 21, -John R. Ben-
nett, the Crescent Athletic Club's of-
ficial referee, was agreed upon to.day
for the world's championship bout on
Friday night next in the Mutual
Street Rink, when Jim Ferns of Kan-
sas and Malty Mathews of I3rooklyn
clash for 20 rounde at 142 pounds.
The men are both due to arrive to-
morrow and will come in perfect con-
dition, Willie Popp vs. Jim Thomas,
8 rounds and Jack Rowe vS. Charlie
Godwin box in the preliminaries.
Eauter'e Awful Crime,
London, Illay 21,-Sergt.-Major
Boitler ho hft5 just returned from.
South Africa, on Sunday night, shot
live of his children, killing four or
them, His wife and baby e,scaped,
Eight Families oineless,
St, John, N, 13., May • 11.1.--tilarly
yeeterday morr‘ing nre, destroy,:d ele:
reSidences rind rer.c1cret1 oightitt 11)1)05
homeless at utiforci tI1,131 ho:QA.
The London Times prints the follow -
Ing extract from a letter written by a
member of Paget'e lioese, under dete
Marcie S, deseribing Delarey's attack on
Lich ten burg : --
"Our defences consisted of an outei
circle of infantry pickets and an innet
circle of trenches, which embrace otil
guns and stores, and 10 11 centre el
which is the ehurch, where we at4
quartered. About ;1.15 a.m. on SundaY
morning, our fellows n:ere arousedlleto go
on picket. . , and proceeded to sadcib-
up; one of thern raid trust firing was
going on, but I took little -notice, think-
ing it was merely sniping. The same
fellows, hotvever, soon returned, and
said -the bullets were whistling around
ID) etty freely. We 'were ordered into
the erenehes, where we foun15 a lively'
scene. The artillery horses had been
brought up under cover of the church,
and very soon they 310 e ta Ice:n
for the bullets were coming from all
directions. Tile Boers (s,opie 250) had
got past the pickets on the south side
of the town and taken up a position
some 400 or 500 yards from us in a
wood, cutting the pickets off from us.
On the north a strong attack was .re-
pulsed by the infantry ; had they got
through we should have been in a bad
way. Altogetherthere were 1,500
Beers who commenced the attack, and
obout 3 p.m. they were reinforced • by,
600 more with two guns: We num-
bered some 500 or 600, so the odds were
pretty heavy. One of the artilleristS
was struck in the leg by an expansiee
bullet, which shattered his leg-. An
A. S .C. Sergeant-Major went down to
the hospital for an ambulance, and the
Boers peppered this furiously on its re-
turn. The Sergeant-Major,'Who was
inside, received a bullet through the,
body and died' very ouiekry-so much
for the chivalry of dur enemy! They
fired indiscriminately on ambulances,
stretcher-bearers, white flag (carried
by wounded), and the hospital, ,This
I can now swear to, having seen it
‘vith my own eyes. The Boers mostly
use expansive bullets, which inflict
terrible wounds. 1 saw one of the bul-
lets they use ; it was originally an or-
dinary Lee,eeletfordi but had had its
top filed off and four narrow slits cut
clown the bullet. ..
The 'Fighting Fifth' lived up to its
name. How those pickets did fight !
The picket trenches never containeil
more than seven men, and these ware
charged by some 100 or 200 Boers at
a time, but they could not get through.
In one trench only two were left, the
others being all killed or wounded ;
but when n relief arrived the Sergeant
was justsayine to his One comrade,
'Fix bayonets, Lek, we'll keep the —
back I' . Time after time the Boers
called on these pickets to shrrender, but
the reply was always the same, "Sur-
render be --- !'Fire a Volley into them,
lads I' And remember that these
small groups of men were isolated and
cut off from all help in many eases.
The Boer shell fire did no harm, and
they soon discontinued it, but the rifle
fire lasted until dark, and after. Late
at night, the pickets were recalled, and
eventually we had an our available
force inside our last line of defence..
TQ our astonishment the following
morning broke in. silence ; the Boers
had gone• they had had more than
enough of it. Their losses are not
known here exactly; as far as we can
make out they had 101 killed and. a
Proportionate number of wounded.
They lost a lot of ammunition and over
100 horses. We took fifteen prisoners.
The 'Fighting Fifth' say it was the hot-
test fight they have been in, not except-
ing the -big engagements of the early
part .of the war. Personally I am
proud to have beenin such a show
with them.".
A Late Poem.
Mr. William Watson's latest poem is
the following fine sonnet,in The London
Daily News of a recent date, to "Force
and Freedom" '
"Armed to o'erthrow, impatient to enchain,
Making the year all winter, how shall ye
Persuade the destined bondsman he is free,
Or with a signal bend the summer again
Oh, ye can hold the rivulets of the plain.
A little while frotn nuptials with the sea,
But the fierce mountain -stream of LlbertY
Born of the heights and in the deeps con -
Not edeelievt.sda:nd not hosts may long restrain
F ,
or this is of the heights and the deeps,
This, 'mid the lofty places 'of the mind
Gushing pellucid, vehemently upheaved,
Ileartit'estv,eeagsand heart's blood hallow,
Invincibly on, co -during witn mankind."
SS s
Tammany's Successor.
Mr. Richard Croker, jun., the 23 -
year -old son of the Tammany chief, is
probably intended for the political
arena, though he disclaims the idea. On
his arrival in Denver a few days ago,
on his way from California to New
York, he was interviewed by a reporter
of The Times of that city to the fol-
lowing effect : -
"I feel much better after a good
rest," said he, "and am ready to be
interviewed from now till dark."
' "Do you expect to be a politiciaa,
Mr. Croker?"
"Really, I can't say."
"Do you think your father will con-,
tinue in politics?"
"I don't know."
"Are you fond of bulldogs?"
"I prefer not to talk of plivate mat-
ters."
"Will you continue your father's rac-
ing stable after he retires."
11 can't tell."
"What do you think of the political
situation in New York?"
'It's me."
"In the country ?"
.A
"How long will you be in Colorado?"
"Can't tell."
"Are you going tobuy a mine."
"Couldn't say."
"Do you believe in free silver?"
"Yes -I am about to free some now -
have a cigar?" ,
After which Mr. Croker was driven
away in a ear room by a cob and
driven by a fellah.
What 11101e does a man want for com-
fort, elegent use than a finely tail-
ored. gall -tient wbich ,combines
grace and.style with ease, .A.,man
wearing such garments innst be at
,horne.in anysociety and on any
'occasion. Our new materials end •
our always competent wOrkmen
enable US to otter you just such:
service. .
Opposite Post Onie
Exeter---r-
ROLLER
MILLS.
Highest prices paid
for Clean, Red Wheat,
Large stock of mill feed
on hand.
WOOD \UNITE
Give us a Call.
COBBLITICK &SOY.
BICYCLE
BARGAINS
We have secured a munber of High
Grade Massey -Harris Bicycles I a
Ladies' and Gent's models, much
below regular prices and while
they last will sell them at greatly
figures. They are new n Lid up-to-
date in eyery respect and t ;ally
guaranteed. Call and see them
and be your own judge of them.
Our Pianos, Organs and Sewing Ma-
chines are the best the minket;
affords.
We are leaders in Children's Carriages,
Waggons, Etc.
She was at a party. He had not yet
arrived, but she was momentarily ex-
pecting him. The hum of conversation
through the room had no significance
for her; an her faculties were bent on
1110 Eefe.c.oenttleaCie°olrC'opened, at every sten in
the hell, she would start, while her face
wOuld flush and ner eyes light up with
feverish expectation. Then the color
would go back fr OM her 1 he. ks, her
eyes 11'01.1 Id dull and her heart: sink
when another than he came Into the.
room. •
Finally he a* •ved and took a seat be-
side her, and she leaned over his shoul-
der and joyously mush:lured:
"My darling! Silly darling!" '
She was too happy td say auglat mere.
Ten years later, and she again waits.
It Is in their evvn home. now.' His step
Id 'on the steep; he opens the door. She
epTings quickly to the halt.
'Wipe'•yott 'bOots!'she' eereatne.
'en years ago they were not mar:
Iled;„ new they are,--1.4ondish Spectator,
Sheet Musio of all Kinds.
GALL AND SEE US.
S. MARTIN
OUR
We have moved into our new pre-
mises 'opposite the Central Hotel and.
are now open for business. Our pre-
mises are modern and we give you
modern and up-to-date goods and,
made in the most modern style.
We Personally .
. . . Cut Every Garment
That's made up at this establishment
-as well as fit it -and look after
all the details. This is only one
reason why our prices are moder-
ate.
Gent's Furnishings . .•
Come and see us in our new place
of business and examine our stock of
Gent's Furnishings.
11ert. Knight_ •
R. II1CKS
REPAIRING
If you want your Repairing Well done
go to It Hicks -Watches, Clocks
and Jewelry a specialty,
MARRIAGE LICENSla ,
tria,ge Licenses isSne#and Wed.
cling14ngs always on hand.
ra(rlson..'s Block, Pketer.