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Exeter Advocate, 1901-8-1, Page 5THE Xtti r bloorate Pablished eVery Thursday Morning, at the 011ie°, MA.IN-STREET, EXETER, —13y th 0—* ADVOCATE PUBLISHING QQMPANi 'PERMS OF SUBSOltIPTION. Oiae Dollar per annum if paid in Advance 1$1.50 if not so 'paid, 25..e.TreXta..Sina.ff .7,iZato ox5. Mao lo1.3.Co.- tiOx.4, No paper diseontinued until till arre rage arepaia, Advertisements without spat:title direetions will be published till forbid and eharged accoraia gay, Liberal discount mad e for transoient advertisements inserted for long -periods, Every description of JOB PRINTING turned out in the finest style, and at moderate rates. Cheques, money o ors, &e. for advertising, subscriptions nettato be made payable to . Chas.1-1. Sander's, EDITORPROP 01.11.11.1.01.6.11101•11•00101.11•111•111•1•11•1•3•0•021.........••• a Profe$Sional cards. R. EINSMAN, L. D . S. & DR. A. R, KINSMAN, L S., D. D. S.,,Etonor graduate of Toronto University. 'i5tNrrig'r$, " Teeth extracted without any pain, or any bad effects. Office in, Fatason's Block, west side Main Street, Exeter. aVo.•••••newaa......*Mi....i....marvonOmmeameemn.wo D n. D. ALTODERSON (D.D.S. —DENTIST Honor Graduate of Toronto 'University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Also Post Graduate of Chicago School of Prosthetic Dentistery (with honorable mention.) • Alluminum; Gold and Vulcanite Plates made in the neatest manner possi)le.A perfectly harmless an- aesthetic used for painless extraction of teeth. Moe one'door south of Carling Bros. stora, Exeter. ..11edical R.T. P. Mc L A.UGIILIN, MEMBER OF 11 the College of Physicians andSurgeons Ontario . Physician, Surgeon and Dyspepsia ' That means a great deal More than pain in the stomach, else it might he easily cured, It means.that that organ lacks vigor and tone and is too weak properly to peafortn Its functions. It means, too, that ranch that ie eaten is wasted and the system generally, under- nourished. W, A. Nugent, Belleville, Ont., bad dys- pepsia for years ; so did .I-1.'lludan,'San Luis Obispo, Cal. Mrs. C. A. Warner, Cen- tral City, Neb., was so afllidted with it She could scarcely keep anything on tier storns ach and ecame very weak and poor. (-1()od's Sarsaparilla permanently mired these sufferers, accord- ing to their own voluntary statements, as it has cured others. Take it. POOd'a pills cure laver ills; the non -irritating and only cathartic to take with Hood's Sarseparma Varna: Oil Tuesday last, Mr. Wm. L. Keyes, of the Babylon line, lost a 'very fine driving mare in rather a pe- culiar way. Mrs. Key's and one of the boys werit berrypicking and tied the horse. After filling their pails and getting ready for home they went for the horse and were horrified to find it dead, having hanged itself. Ailsa Craig: Oil Saturday while 'Working on the veneering of Mr. Ben. Robinson's house, townline west, Mr. John McMillan met with what .might have,been a most serious accident. The scaffolding on which he stood gave way and he was thrown headlong amid falling bricks and morter, a distanbe' of about 11 feet. Ile had two ribs broken and also his left thumb, but considering the height from which he fell was quite fortunate in sustaining no further injuries. DICKSON & CARLING, BARRISTE:RS• Solicitors, Notaries, Conveyancers, Commissioners, Solicitors for the Niolsons Bank, etc. 'Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. Offices, Main Street, Exeter. I. R. CARTA NG, 13. A.. L. 1.1. DicxSoN, ElW. (*LADMAN, (successor to Elliot ,& . Gladman,) Barrister. Solicitor, Notary Public uonvoyaucer, Etc. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. Office Main Street, AttetiontoerS BOSSENEKIIRY, Grand Bead, Licensea Auctioueer for Comity Miran. Saies promptly attended. to, and charges moder- ate. (Jailers by mail will receive- every at- tention. , 11 B FLOWN , Winehels e a . LiCensed Auot- . ioneer tor the Conn -tips of _Perth and Middlesex, also for the township of5sborne • Bales promptly attended to and terms refs-, s onbal e . Sales arranged at Post office. Win- helsea. ed 11•11•111111=6....1111111111•111• Insurance. M.111,....•01116•••••101). E ELLIOT, Insurance Agent, Main Si. Exeter FARNIS FOR_ SAIJE, MONE TO LOAN.• , The undersigned has a few good farms for sale clieap. Money to lean on easy terms SPACXM AN , Samwell's Block Exetel THE LEADING MEAT MARKET. Itair plits aaiazasaa3E7=7"...-MTeramsszlas7Mirmaigamarat "1 have used Ayer's HairVigpr m for thirty years. It is elegant for g a hair dressing and for keeping the 11 hair from splitting at the ends."— J.A.Grucncrife1der,Grantf0rk,I11. Hair-splitting splits rxiQndships. If the , • hair- ', is done on your 4- 0, own head, it loses friends 1;1 for you, for every hair of L'o your head is a friend. ATer's Hair Vigor in ) a advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting !las begun, it will stop it. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. For Fresh, good and the choisest cuts .of ,Meat, call On 'the' undersigned. While all ourcuts of 'meat are the finest, we make a spepialty of meat Meat delivered to all parts of the . . town . . Johnillanhing TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Brom() Quinine Tab - "lets. All druggists refund the Money if it fails to chive. 250. E. W. ,GrOve's 'signature is on each box. • . WATCH „ face, Polished glvea handsomeop,,n Nickel Wattb, dtiineri- can Lever Movement Lor selling only 2 dor. padkages ofSweet Pea Seed at 10c.apackage. Eachpacla ago contains geplendid mixture call° most fragrant varieties of all colors. You can earn this fine Watch in art afternoon 12,7 setting td"woric at once.. Milt:stills advertisement aild we will forward the Seeds. Sell them, return the money, ana we guarantee Safe cleliv- . ery of your Watch 51 0110. Write to day, as the season for , sollingsetalls short. Sootl•Suptly Co.:Toronto. Thelitoisons Bank. 11 your,druggist cannot supply you, senil us ono dollar atal we will express tal you a bottle. Be sure and aiats the name c4 your nearest express office. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Blass. P-46=letiege0=364.. The finusLeXee.er'.o. Stone. It would be Very trnpat not to remark that there are many homes of wealth in which the helpers receive fine consid- eration and in which much of the dis- comfort of "the gulf" is am, oothed aWaY by Itindnese and thoughtfulness. But those laornea are, few indeed in which some evidence of, the stigma of aerVil tude, at least its bacbge, is not recog- nized, Remove that and, the new era Will have,dawned, The maid is the ward of the atiaLres1 and she must share inthe homeliness 01 home, which is the focus of human so- ciety, The mistress cannot conscien- tiously.deal with her as if she were pun.. chasing a pound of tea, She cannot evade a certain responsibility growing out of her personality. She shohlta clearly know the locality of the home 01.: her maid and something aboutthe family and its circumstances ; and she should take care to inquire courteous- ly from time. to time after its health and happiness. it is not necessary for the mistress to confide private matters to her maid," or, per centra, for the maid to disclose her own proper secrets to her mistress. Strangely enough, mistresses have often made their girls cm -ale -tants in respects most unwise and haVe reaped trouble as the. result. Such familiarity is fatal and must be deplor- ed. Yet a good measure of frank and intimate correspondence may be indulg- ed where a sufficiently long acquaint- anceship and mutual esteem suggest and Prompt it. Still there are mattera which should never be ventured upon. There is really no little responsibil- ity resting upon the employer. It is hers to train her maid in the best as - peas of housekeeping, to advise her in the Matter of dress and personal ap- pearance. to watch over her friendships, to train her mind and to help in the development 'of her moral character. Justic,e is to be shown in the arrange- mentof hours of service and provision made,for a proper' amount of recreation. Church privileges are to be borne in mind, also occasional mid -week social privileges. If the housekeeper feels appalled at such a vista of duty it arm only be said that this is but an illus- tration of the obligations that =coin-. pany possession. The little whitewash- ed log cottage on the hillside has few expenses associated with it, but our re- sponsibilities grow in proportion to our acquisitions. It is a day of advance In many respects. There are cooking and sewing schools and various other institutions for the -promotion of house- hold interests. Let the best of these privileges be utilized to the utmost and their products be brought as tributes to the home. There is one word of almost magical influence that needs to be whispered in connection with the theme of house- keeping. It is system ! Without it success is doubtful ; ivith it failure can- not ensue. There must be system for all work, system in hours, system in premptness,systein for occupation, and system for recreation, system in the rigorous observance of hours of rest and sleep and system in the hour of rising. When possible a girl should have in her own right a bright, well-, ventilated room; capable of being made comfortable in winter. Attention to this will react in advantage to the em- ployer. Whatever taste the latter ex- pends upon her maid's apartment is an investment sure to result usuriously to herseli.—By Rev. 'Alden W. Quimby in the June Forum. re,,ttle and the Railroad. TO PREVENT COLD AND GRIP^ An gin.in.ent Doctor Advises the tae 0 Palma Bhuldaorehiefe. A'svay with t -he linen handkerchief, says Dr. llelifer, tile discoverer of the lafluenza bacillus. The handker- eine? iiropagates 70 per eent. of all colds 11 ad inflammations of the head,, thre,a and pose,' he declares.' It often ett use's erysipelas to. Spread, and that influenza re-ooeurs season, after season la epidemical fortn. ia directly traeeable to the use, or. of the linett handlt-erchief, • ; Every physitaaa lcataws the, influenza lu's• It is t;-IsilY killeI, betiaase it eattnot lire where disinfectarita "are einployedit will "die quieltly if itS elenient, Water sithattinceS, are drained The bac,1111 of choler'a, typhils, te. tanus, blood poisoning, etc., even those ni the dreaded are 0001- fitied inhe intestines, an. the akin or blood; if a person is known 1.0 have unit' of these diseases, we take all'.poS-. ear°, to prevent the spread of. ii 0 nilcrobes 10 Mile t• pe rsona. So we noiv- seldom hear of, an epidemic of 'those' Taal:ides ih Anierlean cities. LI' - staphylokokke and strepta,e leoloke oil U, which cause eolds in.the head, catarrh and. sonietimeA erysipe- las, and the small rod -shaped mi- erobe which causes influenza . were treatial like the others named, like them, they would do only individual hatnit; but fashion, 111 underatool or wholly raiseonstrued notiens of .clean- lin:.,,ss, and, finally, eourtesY are against the self-suggested`ptecaption- ary measure. , Inethis case the poor and ignorant, also -the unwashed, are not to blame. It is the perfumed Wdmati of fashion d the man in pal-ent leather boots and a high shirt cellar Wile tit aJ,S distributers of disease. A cold in Lite head, influenza and simulttr Maladies cause ccipious of .tears and sneezing, and • tingling, of the nose, followecl by twatery and , other aerid discharges. These: tears and, tlie mucus teeni with millions upon millioas of rod -shaped, microbes which ought to and could be de- stroyed in short order, but instead are collected in handkerchiefs. The ha ncilterchiefs are buried in the poeket ; and, what is Quite as bad, or worse, a good Many microbes cling to the sick person's hand or glove, and are transferred to ther persons by means of a handshalce. No one suspects that, ilia sick per- son carrie.s a veritable aracinal of -mi- crobes in his poeice,t. Yet every, phy- sician can telt you that 0 hancLker- (thief and pocket faraish 1111 the ele- ments co leulated to prolong tin. 1, pro- pagate the mic,rob,e's life. The mi- crobe needs .nouri.shment, d a akness, warmth and dampness. The dis- charges furnish the first and last, handkerchief and pocket. afford warmth and darkness. Every time the sick person puts hisehand in his pocket he Ps. liable to infect it with the dangerous' microbes, and evarY hand- shake be deals may transfer to others the disease from 'which he islauffering. "Let as take patlern," says Dr. Pfeiffer, "alter the Chinese, and Japanese; who, instead of the linen square, employ small sheets of soft paper. which they ,carry, along in• blocks, and that are thrown away after use. This fashion is mach cleaner than ours, besides exelnding an element of danger that is always - with us as long as we stick' to the superannuated linen haudkerchief." EXPLORING SANNIKOFF LAND BrusSelS: Miss Ro-ddick, who bas been engaii•ed iu the Millinery business fbr a nurnler. of years doing a. large trade,- SOU out to Misses • Habkirk, of Myth, On Monday of last week; Hensall: Mr.. Trtienian Brin to ell, of near Chiselbursi-, fOrnforly of Hensall, has justreceiveei word from his son, Dennis, "wIni taught school near. Hen- sallthat he has token Unto himself a Farquhar: Me. and Mrs. James Hackney Nvent,Tuesday on a trip to Manitaba. Mr. eind Mrs. Hackney 'have well earned a rest, and we wish :them a Very pleasant and enjoyable visit. (cli'a,,6'4red by Parliament, 1855.) Paid -up. , .....$2,500,000 ReserverFund....... ......2,050,000. Read office Montreal. JAMES ELLIOTT, Esq. GENERAL MANAGER. ,Money advanced to good Parmeas on theirawianotes wit-la0:1e or more endorsers 'at 7 per cantper annitin. •• 13R.A.NCII-7--- Open every lawful fifty' from 10 eLtn.' to 3 p.m ;,S a turd ays 1.0 a.m. to 1. p.m. A general banking business transacted CURRE'NT RATES ailowet1 for 'money cm Deposit Recci ptS, Sit vin go Ban la at 8 cent Dieu:sox & CARLING, N. D DON, . . Mitnaae r • 'SOLID 6 0 L 0 /1 \ Ve give this beautind '71,0 Solid Gold ging, set wlkh rohrio, for selling Cady 15 tntekages 01 Sweet 1'01Sewil 010c. each. Each nackagocontainsasidendidndx• tura eltilt most tragrantvarl0. les, of all colors. Mathis this advertisonent and. ,NTOwIll for. \Card the stethi. sell them, ro. tar the Money, and this hea El ful, Solid ft old, Pearl sot ging will besentaMia earefullynaitdc, ea aTelvetlinea Thdsolliffin for son. 'ts42ow.4401-..sulmec4$11001,yt,v4.,Wrzl'Oitirirttili. uf)frona any sickness, no matter what sort, begin With a little Scott's ,Ernufsion of .eod-liver 'oil, It is food, and more than food: it helps you digest what- ever food you can bear. Echo Fon 'lane SAMPLe AND TAY It. SCOT' BOW N 1. cmmatsvs,TORONTO. 50e. and $1.00; all druggists. If 7,123 men were killed and 44,620 were wounded in battle, even the most staid newspaper would be pardoned for using',sensationab headlines. A thrill cf horror would vibrate civilized peo- ples, prayers ,would be uttered in all churches for the dead. and sympathetic feeling for relatives and wounded would be universal. . Such a, calamity, however, happens every' year, almost Without comment. But for the official report of the -Inter - State Commerce Cori -mission, annually rendered to Cong-res, the world would be 'Mit little the wiser for it, and as it is, goes on almost unmoved and uncon- cerned about it. The figures given above form the brief official announcement of the number killed and injured by rail- ways of the United States for the year ending June 30. 1899." The 'statistic iS officially softened by a ratio statement that only one person was killed. or ia- jured for a certain, number of million miles accomplished by - trains. The public is further reassured to the effect that only 231) passengers were killed and only 3,342 were injured,which gives over ,sixty mullion, Tuiles travelled 'for one killed and Over four and One-half mil- lion miles travelled •tor one injured, 'We are told that 4,574.. persons killed were really trespassers, as .were also 6,855 of the injured. They got. in front of the trains wheh they. ought to have had business elseWhere.Seme of them were only tramPs, Stealing rides, thus ridding communities of their mainten- ance and pilfering's, and saddling the burial expenses on the railway corpora- tions. A. careful examination of the ofileial report fails ,to reveal any other philan- thropie or reassuring, features. On -the contrary, a glance at a table In the re - pert shows that -dining the period from September 80,1 S8S, to same date, 1809, the', awful slaughter , o • • aail w pars amounted to 76,412 killed and 41.5,707 injured—a population greater, than the City, of New OrleanS. But what is strictly germane to this article, is the fact that during those years the num- ber of rail -way employees killed in the United States was 25,000, and the num- ber injured was 322,146.—Harper's Weekly. Yooz Need ',CraleepS ' , rrhoe%?-. Ali Bowel Corp.plairet,6 , , , ,a euro, s1 and quick remedy. icrc'e cala 000 PAIN -KILLER. " • • Ptsaux DAvist• " Two SiSeS, 251. and 50e. mrsacrwfmarzamcalampaanwn-.4,-,--=.,..,.. . YOUNG WOMAN KILLED. Harrowsmith, July 27.—Miss Flor- ence Snyderot younglady living about two miles from here, \yes.. accidentally killed this afternoon, She wits,helpiog her younger brother to saw .wood, when the circolar,Saw broke into pieces and cot.Miss',$nyder So badlythat she diecl in a few minutes. - A SECTION FOREMAN KILLED. S,t..111:1 rys F. Mel v has opened a wholesale and i fruit conninission besiness in the niill store opposite Car- . ter's l!, part of which is occupied by VV;.Coleinan, butclie.r. All kinds of seasonable fruit will 1>e sold at the 1 isvest market prices'. Hay: W. Noitheott of the 2n11 con. ia et with ;t painful accident on Tues- day while fixing 11 ca,r on the track in his barn. His son was up on a ladder which was too short, and while endea- voring to hold the cat,' it slipped. and fell SOMO 20 feet str•king his father's arm and smashing it se.verely. Goderich: Last week there passrd awaf at his residence"; East street, our well-known citizen. John 'Washington, hfter having lived over four score years. The old gentleman had 'been failing for 50100 time''s0 his death was nht a gurprise. thoug,h. ;ill who knew'hina sorrowed at his donaise. .. EXETER 'MARKETS. CHANGED EACH WEDNESDAY. Wheat.. 60 67 Barley. . . , , 40 42 Oats., . • .... . 30 31 00 . 06 25 30 700 800 1 75 Potatoes, per , tray, per ton .. Flour, per cwt., roller-, 111itnitolm flour, lii t Ler . . . . Eggs... Hides, per 100 lbs,.. Wool.... • ,, Live hogs, per cwt.., Dressed Hogs- --, Bran shorts, 200, 10 4_ 00 13 Cornwall, Ont.; July 24.—Edwar4 PelrY,' GoT.B.ssection foreman, was struck here this morning by the Inter- national *Limited, and fatally injured. Mr. Perry was in the middle of the track working, and was entirely ob- livious of the shouts of his gang and the whistle of the train. He lived on- ly -about half an hour after the engine struck him. He was married and aboutethirty years of age. HICK REPAIRING 2 you want your Repairing, well done g0 tQ.R. Clocks and Jewelry a specialty, MARRIAGE LICENSE . 111.arriag,e,Liee1lSes iSguecland.Wed- dingiling'a always on liand, THE OTTAWA MYSTERY. Ottawa, July 27.—The coroner's jury last night brought in a verdibt Of mur- der in the case of Ann Bella Morrison, whose body was found in-- the Ottawa River on July 16. The jury was com- posed of -fifteen men, twelve of whom decided thot Miss Morrison was mnr- dered, and the other three dissented. It is expected the investigation into the mystery will be continued. The detectives all along held the suicide theory, while the newspapers said it was a minder. • Panson's Noel:, Exeter Exeter-'gir A BRAKEMAN'S' FATE. Thomas,July 28.—Geo. .Bath- gate,- a brakemane working ' on a. gravel trairrat.Thatnes River, 'fifteen mileswest of this place, laid -down close to the track to rest 'early this, morning. As the Rainbow city special Wabash No. 110,- was passing', at 4.56 he raised. Op; and was strock by the .steps of one of the coaches, . receiving an ugly ea in the head. fre was pick- ed up.,by Engineer Bond and Conduct- or.Sinelair, of the gravel train, and .breng,ht, to this city. The mifortithate than died just beforereachine• here. Russian Expedition Which Maxon Toll wil Lead to an UnIcnown Region. " One of ' the most important polar ex- peditions to he in the field this year is the party that Baron E. von Ton will take into the Arctic waters north of Siberia, for the purpose of explor- ing Sannikoff Land, which has been teen; at a distance, but never visited. Many cartographers long declined to indicate this land on their maps, be- cause they thought the evidenee of its existence V.Ias not reliable. It was Admiring MOV..er — NOW, TO1nTflie, what do you say to Mr. 'Meted for giv- ing you that pcamy ? Tommie—Please, Mister Bildacl, I xvisht it wuz a nicltel."---Ohio State Journal. 00) He Wicltedly slandered an excellent dame; A jury' assessed him one cent for the Then he kiSse'- 5011010: d a young woman a.gainst • her *ill, ; atrid 'in jail he's serving his 'sentence - —01110020 Triune, first seen by the Yakutsir naerchant, • After hearing the evidence hi an as- sault case between man and wife, irt which the Wife.had had a deal of provo- cation, the Blagistrate, turning to the husband, remarked, "1\Iy good 11100, I really cannot do anything in this case." "Dui, she has clot a piece of 1ny ear off, air." "Well," said the- 'Magistrate, "I will bind her over to lee'p the peace." "You can't," shoutec.1 the httshancl ; "she's tin oxvn it away."—Tit-Bits." Jacos Sannikoff. 'When on a visit to the New Siberia Islands in 1811 he SSW, on a clear suranaer day, from the northern Leland of the group, the coast line of this hiterto unknown land. No one saw this land again until Baron von Toil, standing on Kotelnoi Island of the...New Siberian groua) in 1886, was rewarded with a distant view of it. Since then cartographers have not hesitated. to' indicate this land on their maps., ' It is the belief of Baron von Toll that .Sannikoff Land. is a part of an archipelago to which the De Long Is- lands discovered by the unfortunate_ Jeaneitte. expedition, ft.'s() belong. He. thinks it is probalole that he May find an archipelago of important extent, though it is not likely that it includes &elands of large, size. The, expedition is on a much more ambitious scale than that first planned by Baron von Toll. ite has purchased a Norwegian whaler, renamed it the Sarja, and will start from St. Peters- burg.about the middle of Jun6, accom- panied by twenty men, including an astaonorne,r, a zoologist and a. phy- sician'. . will steam through the Arctic, north of Norway, into the Kara Sea, but does not expect to advance in Lhe first season much beyond the Taimyr Peninsula, where he will spend next winter. In the stunmer of 1901 he will endeavour' to push his yessel to the north of the New Siberia Is- lands and find a winter harbour either upon Sannikoif Land. or Bennett Is- land. I -Ie will then give a year to his mxplorhtions in this region. The Baron' is well known to be one of the most scientific of explorers, and the importance of his enterprise is en- hanced by 1.110 fact that his scientific work will be of the best quality. He, svill give •particulare attention to me- teorological researches, and if the re- gion to be viieitecl is really the centre of a . considerable .cluster of land masses, he will carefully inap them and teem as much of thern,as possible, in the time :et his ,disposal. Then, in the summer of- 1902, he will begin his 'home- ward " journey, pa,ssing out or Arctic waters, through Bering Strait, thus being. the second to make the north- east passage which Nordenkjold was the first to accorn.plish.—New York Sun. Deceased livecta,t Parkdale, Toronto. Agent—Sir, can 1 sell you this statue of a Greek god ? It iS one of the rriost artistic, aclornmentS for the home to be 14 foun'cl, 10 Gotrich--Yoting feller, hev Y' got city statoos o' pigs '? I third,: a Ufa- , 12 size statoo o' a nig in 'bronze would be . 400 gTeat t' set ;nth' bail, cloll t you ? Y' .. 6 75 0 80 see, I made most 0' my munny in pigs. 8 50 . 0 00 --Columbus (Ohio) State .lourital. . 14 00It's usually when a anan speaks With- -•--Plillacielphla,11ecord,, • , LOSES BOTH LEGS. ROLLER • I • Highest prices paid' for Clean, Red Wheat. Large stock of mill feed on hand. W001) WARTED! Give us a Call. Tor:Onto; J.iily'.24.=,Tosepli Ryan, Grand Trunk Brennan, living in. Belle- ville, while shunting at a :water tank at 'Little York, to -night, was jolted off thetender of :his engine.,,. He fell. Un- der the: wheels et 'another engine, Which Was ,coming' :tip, and had : his. right leg eut.off and the leftso badly mangled:that it will have to be ampu- tated. .Ryan, the doctors 'at .; -St, Mic- hael's hospital say, willprobably liVe. He is 26 Years old and married. His wife and babe live at'BelleVille. FELL ON 'A PITCHFORK. :Stratford, Ont,, July 26.—A very distressinaccident occurred atabout three o'clock Yesterday -afternoon en the tarin of Mr: Michael O'Qorinor, Of the Gore of Downie... The young man was on -top of a load of :straw; which in some manner sudeleilfy Upset. • Iu Tailing he struck a hay fork, the prongs of which entered his htidybelow the heart, piercing 111 almost through. and through. :Medical assistance Was :at once secured,and all that was possible done.for the unfortunate Young .man. ,He'suffered intenselY throughout the night,' however, and this 'morning his father drove into the city' -to obtain further medical assistance and SPiri-- tual comfort for the injured boy. Rev: Father Costello left at Once for the afflicted home ..tnd at a VerV late hour this afternoon had;not returned-. The injured young man is about eighteen C a' J. COBiliEDIC K & EON BICYCLE BARGAINS We have secured a number of High Grade Massey -Harris Bicycles in Ladies' and Gent's neodels, much below regular prices and while they last will sell them at greatly figures. They are new and up-to- date in every respect and fully guaranteed. Call and see them and be your own judge of therm Our Pianos, Organs and Sewing Ma- chines are the best the maiket affords. We are leaders in Children's Carriages, Wae-cczemons Etc. ; . 00 10 09oitt thinking- that he says what he years of age. . 20,000 Harvesters Wanted Sheet Mnsie of all Kittds. GALL AND -,SE US. S. NIARTIN IN MAITOBA AND CANADIAN NORTHWEST. ,FARN LABORERS' EXCURSIORS WILL,BE RUN —TO -- Prom stations WINNIPEG -in Ottario And -ail stations oft Main Line Toronto to North-West, West Sarnia and North, except North of , Toronto and Cardwell June. , "'Was this man 1)ennis an entire stranger tO you ?" asked the clioes-ex- anaining counsel of a witness itt an im. portent case. "Sorr ?" said, the Witness, whose stupid fabe was crossed with wrinkle Of anxiety:for he had been -warned to be cautious and exact in his answers. The lawYer repeated hie question. '1,10011, no,' eaer;" said the witness with a sticlrlam gleam of enlightenment; "he Couldn't 1)e tbat, for lie had'init,tlis wan anon, sorr ; hut he was a .parrtial stranger, serrr. ,Oi'd niver seen hirn he. toor."—"YOuth's ,CoMpanfori.. and South-West to YORKTON MOOSEJAW ESTEVAN AUGUST 6th and 13. FOR 1. CYEIR IIEW 1,1111111SES. We have moved into our new pre- , . . wises opposite the Central Hotel and are now opep. 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 . . . . Out Every Garnaent That's made up at this establishment —as well as fit it ---and look after all the details.. This is onlyone reason why our prices are moder- ate. On coinplying with conditions of certificates which will be given purchasers of one-way 810 tickets, passeng,ers will be r'Nov. to ,starting i:oint hy same relate on or before ov.1411,t, 1001, on payment TICKETS ARE SECOND crAss., Apply for pamplet giving full particularto your nearest Agent or to , A. H. NOTIVIAN, 'Assistant General Passenger Agamt, King St. East, Toronto. , 441e...La 1) 0,3 Bai R t7 ,tAN1 Sy, -270PAA IONFSP ,VMS.N S , 'Used iI1terflay an Extor-ai'y ; CA1,11-.95I Avoid the 15e18 .watery Witch Hazel pi,,eparatiolEis,roprosehntedtlo !•the same as" Pond's xtrectiviclost y pear mut often contain ''woodnienhoi" an lyrItant externaIly and, taken" interna0y, a tmnsen. Gent's Furnishings . . . • . . . Come and see us in ORT new. p acie of business and examine our stock. of Gent's Furnishings., Bert Kni,o' EXETER FOUNDRY J. MURRAY, Manufacturer az Dealer Portable and Stationary 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 ... 4 good second hand Land Rbilers1 cheap; also 1 Steven's iSzi Burns'• Por- table Threshing Engine for sale in good running nrder. Price $175.00 ' cash. Sole a.gent,in Exei ,ter and. ycinity for the Electric Boiler Compound. Guar- anteed to be strictly first-class for removing scales, etc. FOR SALE. A Waterloo Traction Engine and NIonarcli Separator with 12 i n c,h Brant- ford Grinder, F. 0. .B., Exeter, for $850. This is a rare bargain and. must be sold owing to the death of the pro., prietor, d • Nitititinv Ails:, Craig: The young ladies of Mrs. Geo. Kerr's Sunday Sehool class met at her home Saturday evening and. presented her with 11 dozen silver teaspoons. Mr. and Mrs. Kerr moved to Parkhill Monday.