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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-10-28, Page 7BUSINESS BOOM NEXT YEAR Railway Men Are Exp Fctirg the Briskest Time in Many Years. 'A detljc• from Pittsburg, have arranged for a total of 310 new Penn., says: That the revival of locomotives. Tho New York Cen- business and general confidence has tral system has placed orders hero for four thousand steel cars of the taken a new );rip on shippers and Gondola type. Orders fair 100,000 manufacturers is indicated here by steel cars and 1,100 locomotives had orders that have been placed for been placed previous to the latest tigating reported gold finds in ars and locomotives by various orders. The largest order for loco- Whitney township, Ontario. ilroad companies. motives ever placed at one time by The Southwestern Traction Line, runningout of London. leas been Railroad men soy that. tl.e great a railroad became known Tuesday, r , •olunto of business that has I,ec•n when it was learned that the Balt i- purchased by a syndicate of Lon - booked for manufacturers will ne- more and Ohio will place orders for don, Hamilton and Toronto men. eessitutc an enormous outlay by the 25t' engines of various types among The Soo eastbound express was railroads for new equipment. Or- different locomotive works over the ditched at North Bay by some boys dors for cars and locomotives ag- country. who tampered with the switch. Two greenling $s,65o,0 0 have been Railroad men expect the heaviest then were hurt, but not very seri- placed within the last week. fl•cight traffic in years, starting the ously. The Baltimore and Ohio, the Erie first of the year, and all lines are It is officially announced that the and Norfolk and Western railroads placing orders for additional cars. fire insurance companies will pay the Province of Ontario $116,136 for the losses in the Pediment build- ings fire. Workmen excavating for a new building on St. Catherine street, Montreal, found the ruins of an old French outpost in a fair state of preservation. Guelph City Council passed a re- solution in favor of allowing towns cf over 7,000 population to appoint a commission and du away with the City Council. The foreign trade of the Domin- ion for the first six months of the current fiscal year amounted to $301,390,088. The figures now equal those of the boom times of 1907. CONDENSED NEWS 1TDIS lAI't'l;xlNcs 1LOM ALL OVEll THE GLOBE. Telegrt.phle Briefs From Onr Owu cad Other Countries el Recent Eteuts. CANADA. Leri Dell, a trackman, was killed on the railway at Welland, on Wed- nesday. A Government inspector is hives - SWEPT 0VI:RBOA RD. Mrs. T. Sampson, of Brisbane, Droit ned at Sea. A despatch from Victoria, B C., says: Swept away by a great sea which washed the decks of lila Ca- nadian -Australian liner Mara:'.a. whieh arrived here on Wednesday. Mrs. T. Sampson, of Brisbane was drowned before her husband's cyc,e during a strong gale in which the wind blew sixty miles an hour w•te•1 the liner was all hour from Sed ney, and many others had narrow escapes. Steward Noble was swept against the rail, clinging to two ht tle girls rescued by him. Fireman. Anderson had both legs bro::en, and from 18 to 20 passengers an.1 seamen were swept in a mats of broken deck fittings, but one 1;fe only was lost. Mrs. Sampson vas swept against the rail with such force that it broke and she was car- ried into the sea. Lifebuoys were thrown and a beat made ready f,r lowering, but it. %%meld have been Madness to lower it even had the unfortunate woman been sighte•1 af- ter the vessel stopped as soon as !u: warning cries were heard on the bridge. Mrs. Sampson was a y It leg woman, 22 years of age. s .1111 1I.11N LINE. . Completed (toad From askatoon to ►Velaskiitin. A despatch frons Winnipeg says: e new C. P. 1{. line front Saska- to \Vetaskiwin, in Northern ta, is now completed, and the ny is celebrating the conlple- the second train Zine through rairies giving direct connec- etw•een Winnipeg and Ednton- This stakes the fourth Main line between Winnipeg and the far west, and all will eventually go through to the Pacific coast. It is officially stated that the C. P. 1t. have completed the survey of a line through the fine niter I'ass in the Rockies in Northern :Alberta, and this mill be a continuation of the line front \Vetaskiwin. LOSSES IN F9ltl..1' i'II{F:s. Totaled Oyer R �:►,INNI,O+►0 in Canada Last Year. A de•<leatcll from Ottawa says: The Census and Statistics Monthly thews that there were S35 forest fires in Canada in testi, by which 56,290.000 feet of timber, board measure, were chuunged or destroy- ed, and the value of the bather and irnllrotements destroyed amounted to $25,533.5:00. Twenty-two lives were lost. The main causes of the forest fires were sparks front rail- way iucotuotit'es, bush burning by settlers. and carelessness by trav- elers and sportsmen. C. N. It. \►'ESTEit\ TERMINAL. '1'o be Qualsino on the West ('oast of Vancouver island. A despatch from Victoria, B. C., says: Mi. I). 1). Mann of the (.'a- nadian Northern Railway in a con- ference with representatives of the Board of Trade, stated that the ul- timate terminal point of the C. N. R. on the Pacific seaboard was Quatsino on the west. coast of Van- couver Island. Mr. Mann urged the people of the island to unite for the construction of a line of rail- way the whole length of the island when population would pour into the country. Hating concluded his negotiations with the government, Mr. \lann returns to the east at Prof. Martin Elkenburg, a well - once. It is believed that these ne- known Swedish scientist, was charg- gotiations have been successful, and ed in London with attempted mur- that Premier McBride has agreed der in connection with the recent t( guarantee the bunds for the ex- Swedish bomb outrages. tension of the Canadian Northern from Edmonton to Vancouver, with a connection to Vancouver Island by ferry. GREAT BRITAIN. 4. - FOUR YEARS IN CANADA. Bcdfort't Brother-in-law Docs Not Believe His Story. A despatch from London says: The right name of Bedfort, the roan who says he murdered Ethel Kin - rade at Hamilton, Ont., is John Corry. He was born in London. His brother-in-law called at tho Buxton prison on Wednesday. Bed - fort was well dressed when he ar- rived in this country and had con- siderable money. He did not look like a ratan who had worked his pas- sage over. I1 is brother-in-law clues not believe Bedfort committed the crime, as he confesses to doing. There is no insanity in the fancily. Bedfort would not tell Itis brother- in-law the name of the steamer be carne over in. Bedfort was four years in Canada, but when writing to his relatives in this country ho always gave the sante postoflice al' his address. - 4. l'FRE II -1M BY ELE("I'ltl('II'Y. Nett Device to ('heaven Produ( t Told of at Convention. \ despatch from Chicago .+ays • Ham curing by electricity is •tn." (lf the new wonders of the age, as tole) of on Wednesday at the convent Aso (.f the American Meat i'ackers' As- sociation. The idea originated with J. C. Lincoln, of Cleveland, three and a half years ago. A hang he cured by the electric process at that time, he declared, is as good now as the day- it got the electric bath. The meat is placed in large vats filled with a pickle composed of sugar, salt, and saltpetre, and an electric current is passed through the vat. The new method will mean cheaper haul, NNIS EXPLOSIVE IS SAFE Can be Hammered, Heated or Shocked by Detonator Without Exploding. UNITED STATES. fHE HORSE'S EXTINCTION ('Itt'.tS IS .1PP1101(ICING iN I:�G1.1.D. Due to the .Adoption of the Motor Both for Business and Pleasure. In five years' from now there will scarcely be a single horse left in England except the few animals which are kept for pleasure and the small tradesman's horse, says Pear - son's \Veekly. The 'bus horse and the cab Iroise are growing scarcer, not every year but every month and t .every y week and in a very short time they will be practically extinct. The extinction of the horse is duo tc the general adoption of the mot- or both for business and pleasure. Since the introducti•en of the mot(•r- 'bus and the electric tram the big omnibus companies have taken thousands of horses off the road, cad they are getting rid of others in large quantities almost every day. All the provincial horse -'bus companies are doing the same, and since the introduction. of taxi -cabs the proprietors of hansoms and four -wheelers are following suit. In two or three years' time the only remaining hansom cab will be in a museum. It is quite useless for horse-'bus- cs to attempt to continuo on the road except on a few cross routes which are unfitted for motor traf- fic. SERIOUS PROBLEM. The extinction of the horse is a very serious problem from the mili- tary point of vide-, and what we should. do in the event of another big war it is impossible to say. 1n the South African \Var we had the horse -markets of the world to draw upon, but experts declare that we should never be able to do so in a big war again. A War -Office statement rever.ls the fact that in the first year of a big war no fewer than 332,000 'tors - es would be required, of which 180, - Tuberculosis causes ten thousand 000 would be riding horses. But deaths a year in New York. • at the present time there are only about 150.000 horses in the country suitable for cavalry purposes, and t the birth-rate is dccliuing in an 2 alarming manner. If war was declared at the pres- ent time we could not attempt to 1 mobilize the Regulars and the Ter- ritorials, because we have not the horses to mount the men and con- a vey the transport. At the present time many of our Array horses aro being used three times over. That is to say, that , horses 'belonging to 'bus companies Mrs. Pankhurst, the suffragette leader, arrived in New York on \Vednesday. Henry W. Mack, counsel for Dr. ('ook, says his client is the victim of a widespread conspiracy. Elsie Bowman, a sixteen -year-old girl from Southampton, Ontario. was found on the point of starva- tion at Cincinnati. on Wednesday. Mrs. G. G. Hubbard, mother-in- law of Dr. Alexander Graham ({ell's son, was killed in an automo- bile accident in Washington, on Wednesday. and lob -masters which are now reg - The presence of a league among istered by the War Office to he importers and customs weighers has called up for service with the, Re - been indicated as the result of a gulars on mobilization are also be - trial for fraud at New York. tug used by the Yeomanry for their riding schools and their camps, and to a considerable extent by the in- fpntry Territorials as well. THE WORLD'S��i�t►zi;E��'SC 'SCENE IN BRITISH OUSE 1t1:f'ea'rs FROM 'rut: LEADING 'rlt-1DE CENTRES. Prices of Cattle. (:rain, Cheese and Otter Dairy Produce at Home and Abroad. BREADSTI'1'1 S. Toronto, Oct. 26--Flour-Ontario wheat 90 per cent. patents $ 1.15 to $1.25 in buyers' sucks on track, Labor Member's Hope for Those Who Signed Ferrer's Death Warrant. A despatch from London says; An unusual scene was created in the House of Commons on 'Tuesday night by the Socialist member fur Yorkshire, Albert Victor Grayson, Toronto, and $1 to $1.10 outside in and \\'illi:un J. Thorne, labor mem- buyers' sacks. Manitoba Hutu•,1 ber for South-west Ilam. 'flee first patents, $5.60 (01 truck, 'I'o i Socialist members tried to adjourn route; second patents, $5.10, and the House to discuss the execution strong bakers', $1.90 to 85 on track, at Barcelona of Prof. Ferrer, but Toronto. of Labor and Radical members , Irc- Manitoba wheat --No. 1 Northern sent only sixteen would tote. *1.02'S, Ilay ports, and No. 2 Nor- Grayson and Thorne then anathe- thern at $1.01, Bay ports. matized their colleagues, calling Ontario wheat. -No. 2 mixed $1 them "shameful cowards." outside, and No. 2 white and red Thorne shouted out that it was Winter, $1 to $1.01 outside. bis pious hope that "those who Barley --No. 2, 57 to 53c outside, and No. 3 extra at 56c outside. Oats --No. 2 Ontario white, new, 36% to 37%c outside. New Cana - di. West oats, 39c for No. 2, and 38c for No. 3, Bay ports. Peas -84 to 86c outside. Rye -No. 2 70 to 72c outside. Backwheat•-55 to 56e outside. Corn --No. 2 American yellow, 691 to 70c on track, Toronto. Bran -$21 in bags, and shorts, $23.50 in bags. COUNTRY PRODUCT. Apples -$1.25 to $2.75 per bar- rel, according to quality. Beans -$1.50 to $1.60 per bushel at outside points. Honey -Combs, dozen, *2.25 to $3; extracted, 10c per Ib. Hay -No. 1 timothy, $15.50 to 816 a ton on track here, and No. 2 at $I1 to $11.50. Straw --$3.75 to $9.50. Potatoes -47 to 50e per bag on track for Ontarios. Many houses were blown down in Poultry -Chickens, dressed, 19 the vicinity of Macao, where. junks to 13c per lb.; fowl 9 to 10c; tur- and fishing smacks in large keys, 17 17 to 18c per lb; ducks, lb., hers foundered, involving many 12 to 13c; geese, 10 to 12c per lb. casualties. Grayson made an attempt to move for the expulsion of the Spanish Ambassador, but this was prevent- ed by the Speaker, while the pro- test of the Socialist forces against the killing of Grayson's nettiou was quickly silenced by the majority. Arthur Henderson, a leading La- bor member of the House, opened the discussion by questioning the Foreign Secretary on Britain's at- titude toward the Ferrer incident. The Secretary responded that the Government at no time was in pos- session of special information re- garding the Ferrer case, and that signed Ferrer's death warrant will the proper policy of non-interfer- be sent to heaven by the chemical ecce with the internal affairs of a parcel post." foreign country had been followed. Good lots of fat hogs 8%c to 8',.c per pound. TYPHOON IN CHINA. Many Casualties Caused an Coast Near Hong Kong. A despatch from Hong Kong says: Many casualties attended a typhoon that played havoc with the native shipping, and damaged other vessels at various points on the coast, during Wednesday night. At this port the Standard Oil steam- er Lyndhurst fouled the Japanese steamer Hong Kong Marti, and both were damaged. At Macao the Portuguese gunboat Patric was lifted from its moorings, and car- ried up the Canton River, where it stranded on a flooded rice field. THE DAIRY MARKETS. Butter --Pound prints, 21 to 220; ubs and Targe rolls, 19 to 20c ; in- crior, 17 to 18e; creamery, 25 to Go, and solids, 23 to 2 -lc per Ib. Eggs -Case lots, 25c "per dozen or fresh, and 27 to 2Sc for new aid. Cheese -12%c per ib. for large nd at 12'.!c for twins. GENERAL. ('aunt de Lambert. the French aviator, flew over the Eiffel Tower in his aeroplane. A bloody battle followed an at- tempt of Hnytien insurgents to am- bush a body of loyal troops. The German Emperor's South Af- rican diamond fields are said to have been robbed of large numbers of fine stones. Russia may send troops into Fin - THE SAME HORSE will very often attend carr.p with three different regiments in one ear' 43e; new crop oats, No. 2 ('anadi'In ranging up rind down the Seine riv- I'very day suitable horses grow Western, 41!; to 42e. Barley -- \(l. 1 er between Shoal Lake and Turtle more impossible to obtain. As tho 2 66 to 67e: Manitoba feed barley,Lake, and women and children demand for them for business and 52 to 58e. Buckwheat - 57e. Fleur- along tile. route are in apprehen- pleasure declines, so farmers cease Manitoba Spring wheat patents, sieen of being attacked. The Indi- te breed then), and in addition all 133.70; :Manitoba spring wheat pat- ; arts are securing whiskey, are con- te(' (rest snares in the country of ents, seeends, $5.20; 1Vinter wheat' 1100 PROI)L'CTS. Bacon -Long clear, 15 to 15' Yc er Ib. in case lots ; mess pork, $25; bort cut, $27.50 to $28. Hams -Light to medium. 15II to 'else; do., heavy. W., to iSe ; rolls, 11!., to 15e; shoulders, 12'/ to 13c; hacks, 18' to 1(10; breakfast bacon, 17c. Lard ---Tierces, 15;;c ; tubs, 151!c; pails, 13 4c. BUSINESS AT M0NTl; I:.1L. Montreal, Oct. 26. -Old crop oats, No. 2 Canadian Western, 42'•:: to 31 URIIERED:1w TR.111011 I Russian itevolalionist Disappears F1'0111 81. Petersburg. A despatch from St. Petersburg says: The police have received a de- spatch from Paris informing thein of the disappearance from that city of one of the principal agents of the Central Committee of Social Revo- lutionists. Tho police here think that this disappearance may have some connection with two mcsteri- one murders recently committed in this city. The theory of the police is that the iictims were revolution- ists, whose gond faith had been suspected by their associate's. -4h. INDIANS ARE UNRULY. Redskins in Rainy River PiMtri(•t Secure Whiskey. A despatch from \fine ('entre, Ont., says: How to handle drunken Indians is getting serious in the Rainy River i)ist•ict. Redskins land to force the people to comply a suitable type were sent out to p with the wishes of the Russian Gov- the war in South Africa, few of b ertunent. them returning, and we are there- $ fore breeding from inferior stock. 35 V - There is only one small gleam of $` satisfaction to the "horsy" man in 50 the universal adoption of motor Di stents, 7113.50; \innitohn strong' `nnny (trunK, am to trouble. 11 ate 19, $5; straight. rollers, >i. to some one does not take steles to 1.25; straight rollers in bags, $•_.- stop felthe sale of liquor to Indians, to *2.30. Feed -Ontario bran, i u, is dathere will be a tragedy 21 to X122: Ontario middlings. $23.. some day. in a similar capacity on the fast to as2t; Manitoba bran, (�21; \fa-, F.1RM.1\'S 1:9.11E.1T I'I,IGIIT. trains bet ween Carlisle and F:din tuba shorts, fc•2;1 to $21; pure ! burgh, was rho other d+t -I•1 to 'WISDOM WHIFFS. True lute will run smooth while the track is well greased with gold. The price of theatre tickets often accounts for a man's suddenly ac- quired domestic tastes. 'fhe longer a roan studies the curves of a decanter the closer Ito is apt to imitate them oe itis home- ward journey. Before marriage a ratan asks but for one little word, afterwards he gets plenty- without the asking. Some men never succeed because they are afraid of doing more than their share. People will nearly- always tell the truth when they can make some- thing by doing it. Generally a man who thinks he is witty is About as successful at entertaining you as it trail in your shoe. The average roan seems to think the best way to get ahead in the world is to hold some other fellow FROM BONNIE SCOTLAND NOTES OF INTEREST f 8011 HER BANKS AND BRAES. %►'hat is Going (171 -in the Highlands and Lowlands of Auld Scolia. Fire broke out at tho Palace brewery, I:Alin:burgh, a large malt- ing building being destroy -ed. Dam- age about $40,000. A collection of specimens illua- tratiug the progress of aeronautics is being formed in the Royal Scot- tish Museum. Lord Advocate Ure has address- es' 'store meetings in support of the budget than any other member of the Goveru'►rrent. There were 16 outbreaks of anth- rax in ,Scotlard for the week ending 28th August in Aberdeen, Kirkeud- Iright, Perth and Wigtown. About 1,000 attended a service recently in commemoration of the Ba'ttlo of Bullion Green, held at Flotterstone Haugh, in the vicinity of the field. A boy scout named Frank Burns was drowned near ('ramond Brig on the 25th ult. Sieoutntaster Og- ilvie made a plucky attempt to res- cue the boy. Tho ('arrul,bcr's ('lose Mission, Edinburgh, has been in existence for fifty years, and no fewer than 13,- 262 consecutive nightly meetings have been helkl. The Glasgow- School Board are taking steps to carry out a scheme f(•r the medical examination and supervision of children. It is pro- posed to appoint a chief medical of- ficer and 26 medical practitioners. By way of celebrating the semi - jubilee of the Co-operative move- ment in Iturntisland an imposing demonstration took place recently. About 1.500 khildren took part and were given sports and prizes. Report sa s that Clydebank Burgh band hos received an invita- ten from a New York impresario to tour the United States and Can- ada fur ten weeks Cal the condi- tion that they wear the Highland garb. 11.)avid Bro•vn. the first passenger guard on the Edinburgh and Perth line after the opening of the forth Bridge• and who afterwards .rrte(I traction, and that is, strange to gram nsontlle, $3:3 to *3.', nixed l'orly•seien Miles in an Hour and a rest in Carlisle ('enutery% say, , that it has green n 1 temend in Half. bet Rt,rcrt blunt chief lusher o ons tilip to horse riding for plea- erns, 11'. to 11''„r, and easterns at New Zealand a►:d former T'ri'm er, sure. Possible this may also he II to 11%r. Butler -finest cream- :\ despatch from Blackpool, Eng - 11 it meeting of temperance At et kers in (il'tsgow• recently (.n the advance of temperance sentiment •11 the colony, which lie attributed to the educative value of local op- :S M 11th EIS. s this country. ry. tc tion introduced 16 sear' ago. 1'tenchruan emery(' 4. miles and Stirling has its Ah►d 13riq as well iluffale, (let. 26.--Wheat--Sprint(, 1.151 yards in one I►our 32 minutes ..r Ayr, but it is without n poet to wheat, steady : No. 1 \orthern, car- 1(, se, seconds. in the first hour ht• render it imnu,rlrll. It ha+ been loads, store, $1.00;';: \\•inter, firm.' made S,,0 utiles and 1,:,77 yards, and rei existence for 500 years, ane) is The consequence is that there has ('ern --Higher; No. 3 yellow. 66' .e ; the spectators cried out in their en- naturally experiencing the frailties beer, a big "boons" in horse riding No. 4 yellow, f,(k' ; No. 3 corn, c:,c; thusitls►n that he had cstablislicd a of old age. It was much iutprotetl ter pleasure. not only amongst \e 4 corn 61 c • \e 't whit• • ottillc, 825 to x'27. Cheese \Vest- I f partly' accounted for by the fact. en., 21 to 21'te. Eggs - �rlccted; land, says: Hcnr I'arman, the that Itu•ge numbers of men who had stook, 27 to 28e ; No. 1 candled at j French aeronaut, tea Wednesday never previously been astride a 25 to 26c per (low, accomplished at the avintion meet burse learnt to ride during the war, - -_-_ 1 by far the finest flight that has been but it is also largely dor. to the fact UN i'I'i'1 STATES is itn's (d in tl r t The that, milli the adept ion of the mot- or. people of means get far less ex- ercise in other ways than they did forulerly. 1 • • , worlds record. This )s not SO, hofs- 23 years ago, hut i� again in (Ian - those who can afford to keep a 66 c. Oats -Higher: No. 2white, i ever, ns i'aulhan Clew 31 7.10 miles ger of falling down from the gitiug horse of their own. but. amongst 41 others who can only afford to hire w1 •t mount for a Saturday or Sunday in efterneeiCs ride. '..e; No. 3 white, 4:3t,c; Ne. 1 tile, 42%e. Barley- Feed to matt- e, 60 to 70e. ('hicago, Oct. 20. --Wheat ('ash No. 2 red, *1.20 to #1.22; No. 3 reel, $1.16 to :4I.20: No. 2 hard, $l. lt. 3111.I IN I\ ('Oi'ENI1.1GEN. I of A despatc\Vashingt..is for taus inserted could the sub- back. (:epenhngen. I►enninrk, is suppli- tt� says :.\ nes exl.l a British ite stance he exploded; but then, in n 1 The man who 1►ecei e' (amens ed with milk I,y it company whit•!' 1)K few shot. that were shot off, it usually dura so through 1 efforts storks in the public interest on a tent ion which Ise .- possibil;t bilitir it is said, of revelutieni, sl"owed itself more powerful than ('f others to peeve that ► n't. lice per cent. basis, all profits ex. 61 .I nonlife. it can only fp, set off 'there's h IrIIIc All who cced)ng that percentage being np- '31 ing the blasting work in connection I.• heating n small platinum wire tlt PAIL t Itlke In proton, ..1il he goes plied towards reducing the price of It,t M 1 to 11.12: No. 3 hard, 81.it; to .10: No. 1 Northern, $l.(si le el. ' • No. •> Northern, *1.01 10 $I. No. :3 Spring, 111.03 to $1.0:1. ern -No. 2. 61!';e; No. 2 while, 1 s to 61',e : No. 2 yellow, 01", to 'fie: No. :3, (31 to 6112e: No. :1 yeI- amounts to :1,071;, 7'nsal►le peeper- i meal, mime time is required fee e, 61', to 61';e. Oats --Ne. .' ' 1y is given a talnati'n of 53,3•$M,411, those around the table to hec,eueee No. 3, 39',e: No. 3 white. 40 which is nn increase of $I,940,(►00'comfortable again. 41c; No. •1 white. ;34'. to .toe; (luring the year. 1 newly-mnrrierl woman's dinner ---4.---- .. table always looks pretty, but re _. 1'UI N11 I)E.11) IN Itl'GG1'. takes an older housokceper. with 1.1\ 1: STOCK \i.\ R K i:TFt. -- her best china smashed. to get lip s dinner that tastes good. in. sixty minutes at Rheims. •{ 0I I'.111. 1'S IittO\%7'll. Population Dover 53,990 1ssess. meal Fifty-three Million. .% despatch from Ottawa says: Ottawa now has n population of 83,- 3(i0, nerording to the animal een- sus of the .\sscssment ('emmisvi,ll- er. 'flee increase during the year au ay of the art hes. A FEW POINTS. Some Ween find a sort of inlnxi- catien in avoiding payment of just debts. If you haven dog whicit barks a gte,11 deal at night and disturbs the neighbors, du you care l After a man has said grace at a with tete construction of the Pena just inside the open end by an dee.' '' res nnrnnt that he's so well.toil;, sold to the charitable instit:l- 10( known there they always try to do mn Cennl, has been tested fere the Iris spark or fuse. It will not es-, • h ( nuns of the town. The company. to Isthmus et Panama recently. and plode by concnstiun. . sonlctulq ttpreiiti f r hem was started about thirty tears age sll See how fa i a result the Panama Canal Comit is claimed that the new explc'. Have yon helped by by the medical authorities. and it sign ordered twenty teens of is 1 cis 50 per ee:tt. stronger than the ;1 re you keeping yourself brave and works under rigid sanitary rules ' trial. 1 ('(; per cent. grade of dy nansite, nnti duet :\re ton reaching your mot - he inycutor's exhaustive tests. that the cost (lf nlnnufnetnring mei at ideals, and, above all, are you efore the members of the Nth- 1•' more then *20p er ton cheaper. alien Canal ('omeni:sleol showc(i, !n confident is the British itiventor rni:ing each ideal AS you reach it, alien ,. pig higher.? The milk is drawn from forty farms) within n radius of sixteen to eigh- : teen miles of ('openhagen, and the No company sends special milking cans Iso to its suppliers. The cows and the. Ise dairies are periodically inspected. (,o and the test for tuberculosis is in- liy sisteti upon. that it is abselntely nnp(lssihle 1., that lie will secure the contract to There are some people whose re- •xplode it by ordinary means. it.furnish all the explosive:: to be used lieion wouldn't fool the most credu- sas hampered (lith a slater, .1e t on the canal nestsear, it is stated lows person on earth. but -they ex- :ntu by it rifle. h,,rnvel, and orcin- tlytt he has organized a company pest the Lord to swallow it. so. etynan1.11" •let„renters were c''. vide!, will at on.•e erect a factory I volae people seem to think they lel d,:1 in it t r 1.v fit*c el by en ths 1stlenets with n eapnrity of are charitable because they dream •Ica t 1-•1 . 1, ' ''0 ct.inpt,itittl w'es 1•etwecii 6,ILtJ and 7,0d9 tons per of Rising away money --and let it ilei t. .\, : taut'. .1 :1,: tial (Ietan;l- , V,aaaIU,B'' at that. AIL itnlard, 41 to 41'20. Sewing 11achine Agent Ecpires Montreal, Oct. 26.-- Good cattle :Near Cobalt. re scarce and higher priced. Six rtitwt•,t heifer.i sold at -1',t• fler :\ despatch trot', ('.el,alt sacs: and and from that clown t•, :.. While that ing h, the 13tt.•kinuhato r pound for pretty gaud nninsal-. Hotel, at North l oh.l:;, a gentle. muton and lean steel: sold from elan en Titesdat- Melo r . r ,1 L;:gy• . c to 3''e per 1e.ilild i;Ilil • f -, t,t npf,arenti.‘ wills ;:f tl: ,. (`,t ynn are unable•►'• sell or exchange v le to 3c per potltlll. \I is It c,ee .. Itlnktng a etntltittntie,:, 1. ,1.s 11 $30 to $60 each. ' 111)0,, f r,wt e t (•f the body of Janes M ,t keno -e the mild Ii-otlt your "11 to 4c I,er Immo; net t. 1i •, 3e I" sewing machine 112'^,t. ale . I:.:.i ; •f, i,rf.,r•e calling attention tit thi c per ►neund. 'been agent :,• Cobalt f•er Haile 1,1:1 • a'., •i:; a .' ;.1 a the footaea unr ncidtt• 1. Ge per pound. I hour pre\ioes. bvc. -$ Get-. ich-quirk sclleines enable n Iv( ..f people to get p,vr quicker. it's easy for A man to he il(,neit -if it pays better than firing otherwise. Make the •F,ert of the pre eat - if 5' .•