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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1905-08-17, Page 4• 1 • • extter 1 • 0 110 r 10 �lirl�lllt haute~ of to den which by the way, is Sande: -s. & C:.r.:ch Prop:). e, not neatly so hot as it was years: ago. tAnd. in passing. it might be re- marked that if the prominent divines all over Christendom seep pouring cold water on hell as they have for the past five years. they will have it "aquinehed," as the Irishman stye, be- f.•re you, Mr. Editor, step out. and that will be a good thing for you -and others.) Well, as I was saying. after being boiled, baked, roasted, stewed and fcizzted, so that you would tnake a sweet morsel for a South Sea island- er, you are finally withdrawn, tubbed with salt, given hot and cold sprays o1• a swim. and you are released for that time. Its great. If you could live here always you would never die, which is an Irish bull. Finally after keeping up this stren- uous life for a week, or a month, or a year or two, and if there was nothing radically wrong with you to start with. you are deela fed cured and al- lowed to escape, if you have cash enough left to buy a ticket home. Of course, there is always compensation. Now you keep so clean here that you can wear a pair of socks for a ,month, and thus save laundry bilis, or soap at least, which is an offset against tl:e expense. Then you learn to do with- out meat and tobacco, which is a fur- ther consideration. It is a better cure for laziness than any Daher disease I know of. Laziness, to be sure, is a disease, brought on front a bug infecting the system. Some have it from birth, others catch it. Usually fatal in case of editors -so beware! - Yours, etc., J. A. R. Battle Creek, Aug. 6th, 1905. THURSDAY, AUG. 17, '05 Letter from Or, J. A, Robins. To THE EDaTO1( of THE ADVOCATE. DEAR Slit, - As an editor (who is supposed to know everything- but don't) of coutse you are always looking for one of Carlyle's fools, 1. e., any of the human ace, to wi ite you conte trash that you may inflict it on your patient and long-suffering reader's. I wonder you haven't better sense, but, then, who would expect it of an editor? Battle Creek, Michigan, ou fettle ereea, that empties into the Kalain a- ZOo, that empties into Lake Michigan, is a city of 25,000 people, besides its sick, of which there are always an ad- ditional thousand or two. It is the home of the Seventh Day Adventists and Health Food.. Thi, i.tbe ortho- dox Sunday. Yesterday was the Ad- ventist Sabbath. So you have to be real good hero by keeping two holy days. It is in ways a beautiful city, actuated partly in a valley. partly on hillsides and hill -crests. and tilled with elm and maple shade trees. Trees is its physical feature, health seeking its moral and ethical feature. It is 120 miles from Detroit and about 160 from Chicago. At one time there were twenty-five food manufacturers here. Now only a few. The reason of that le that one man beat all the rest out by advertising. (Now, I suppose, you will be wicked enough to cite this amongst your patrons. as an instance of the value of spending money in ads. ) . Post was a few years ago at the eani- 'tarium working and caught the idea of .making some patent food. He indue- eed a Ivan with a few hundred dollars (he had none himself) to go snooks, and he built u little shanty and began making Grape Nuts and Post um Cer- eal. The but still stands as an "ani." in his yards. It wits built in 1805, only ten years ago. To -day Post is rated at 17 millions of dollars. -Not bad for ten years. (,rinds 1800 bushels of wheat alone a day and ships out 16 •cars of food --trust he some profits on Grape Nut and Postum Cereal. And after all the foolish ass wasn't satisfied -like all the race he wanted something behadn't got. In his case it was a brand new wife,so he gave his wife one million and married his typewriter. and, as the novels say, itis to be hoped they lived happily ever after, but even that is doubtful -a man with over a million can't be content or happy even had he taken forty pretty typewriters to tvife. The Sanitarium is the principal feat- ure of the city. The main building is a beautiful structure with fine lawns and flower beds, back and front; over 600 feet in length and seven stories high. Attached behind are vast male and female bathrooms, a gymnasium and palm house. It is run on Advent- ist principles. If you want a Satur- day morning paper you can't pay for it till the next morning. It takes about 700 employes to run the estab- lishment, three other large buildings in the vicinity end dozens of houses and cottages. The receipts *trust be over $20,000 per week. A purely veg- etarian diet is given --the menu, flesh every meal, contains 10 or 50 choices - but you don't know what the dishes will be like till you try. First meal. of course, you order "Protose Steak", be- cau,:e it sounds familiar, hut you never repeat it; and, so on; eventually you get eight or ten things that suit you and after that you stick to the devil you know rather than experiment with one you don't k•: 1w at all. One thousand patients from all over the continent, southerners and women ,predominating. Six hundred females, of all ages. shapes, colors, temper- ments, conditions, and degrees of wealth. What do they do for you? Well, they rarely give you it dote of medi- cine, only on compulsion. They feed you on vegetables and grain, fruit, milk and eggs, apple juiee, grape juice, and all such. No smoking anywhere on the premises. Then, they work the disease, or the life, right out of you - up at :,:tin, cold hath at 6, gond brisk walk et 6:30, breathing exercises at 7. breakfast at 7:45. Swedish toom at 10, ewcat at 12, dinner at 1:30, etc. They have it score of ways of shaking dis- ease out of you in the Swedish room. The fleet tittle you suppose it is the life imstead of the disease they ate ti y- ing to shake out. This is supposed to shake off everything from itch to tuberculosis, from toothache to lep- rosy. Then you are taken, or go, to the hath rooms (the finest inn earth) and, if you are fat and Lazy, you get an electric light bath. You are laid in a shallow cofll1),nttked ate Adana 1a'foi•e leve found the flg•letaf, and tram feet first into what links like * heat se, noel the lights gradually turned on till that hearse gets hot enough to cremate you. it gets hotter Than the orthodox Ayer's Fred your hair; nourish it; give it something to live on. Then it wilt atop falling, and will grow long and heavy. Ayer's Hair Vigor is the only Ham Vigor :lair food you can buy. For 60 years h has been doing just what we claim it will do. it will DOI disappoint you. •' try trtr load to Ds very short. But after using area Rate TI`.•r a short ties le b..�e tc rrn.w, and o,:o tt 1. fourte.n It etre toets. s ,••erns a s aewdM rasa:t 1, me attar betas sJne,•.t wf.o fa. hsU.- Ysw. J. 1.h► Cvlotalo an vtag , Coto. 11.0 s 1...1t1.. I C •ern c. All arum ts. for Lowell. Mari Short Hair Stephen Council The council of the Township of Step- hen convened in the Town Hall, Cred- iton, on Monday, Aug. 7th, at 1 p.m. All present. Minutes of previous meet- ing read and adopted. Webb--Fink- betnet•-that By -Law No. 11, being a By -Law to levy the respective rates for the Township of Stephen for the year 1905; By -Law No.12 to amend By Law No. 9 of 1905 and By -Law No. 13 to appoint Gottleih Brown its Collector of Taxes for the year 1905, each hav- ing been rend the third time, he passed and signed by the Reeve and Clerk. - Carried. Anderson--Yearley-that the Reeve is hereby authorized and in- structed on behalf of the Corporation of the Township of Stephen, to request the Solicitors to enteran action against John Matz to recover damages for trespassing and removing timber front the public highway, -Carried. Ander- son -Webb -that the Reeve take le- gal action to collect from A. A. Mc- Tavish, the Solicitor of "The Parkhill and Grand Bend Electric Railway" the amount due for printing. -Carried. The bond of the newly appointed Treasurer was approved of by the Council. The following account were passel: W. Hayter, ditch across road, $1.60; C. Hoffman, culvert, $1; Crans- ton Novelty Co., rubber stamp. 35c.; Municipal World, forms, $1; J. Nea- man, rep. Ford's bridge, $1.75; G. Es- sery, drawing tile and atone $2; Thos. Rowtcliffe, shovelling enowoff LR..$1; S. Morrison, rep. culvert $2; W. Luker, drain on D.R., $13.50; R. Taylor, gra- vel on L.R.E., $2; J. Querin, gravel contract, $19.10; Geo. Orange, do., $89; B. Cunningham, Com., $8.75; T. Bayn- ham, drawing tile, $1, T. Webb, rep. Hayter's bridge, $15; Do., rep. Stats ton's bridge, $12; W. Pickering.rep. Pollard's bridge, $19.75; J. Mdden, rep. let s.r., 812; M. O'Rourke, _gravel, $1260; C. Willert, stone, $1; J. Wil- helm, Corn., $3.75; F. W. Farneomh, Barry award, $15.95; Ezra Heist, rep. htidces $7; C. Eilber, do., $6.50; John Eilber, do., $1.50. Council adjourned to meet in the Town Hall, Crediton, on Monday, Sept. 4, at 1 p.m. H. Eilber, Clerk, Zurich 11. Hieronnius, of Alberta, is on it visit to his father here. -Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Miller, of Naperville, are here on it visit. --Dan Bennett has accepted at position with Louis Foster on the rick yard. -Rev. and Mrs. Alt. Gei- ger have returned to Elmwood, after It pleasant visit with friends here. - Mrs. F. Schuetter has her daughter, Mrs. Gordon, and granddaughter, of Cleveland, visiting nt her home. --Ed. Sipple and wife, of Pontiac, Mich., are enjoying a few weeks at the form er's parents hotne.-Mrs. Werner and Miss Una, of Kenmore, N.Y.. spent a few days at the home of J. Weido, during the week. •- Rev. and Mrs. 1Vhitesides and son, 111 Ottawa, are on a visit to Mrs. W's. parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. %Villiarlas.--Chris. Swattzentrmber, Jr. of near Blake, has disposed of his black driver to John Pfeffer, of Milverton, receiving the handsome sum of $176 for her. --School opens of Mondayy next with Alex. McLeod of Bx •flelel as To make the best Bread you must have the best Flour. Yhat will bake into flaky, deli- ciously �9avmed, nourishing bread or Pastry. It is really the only absolutely Pure flour you can get. Guaranteed by its makers and Branded When the dough is flat, sour, heavy, will not rise,—when the bread is soggy, tasteless, indigestible—then you have cheap and inferior flour. You may use pure fresh yeast, faithfully adhere to the old-time suc- cessful bread making traditions, the methods usually successful—but the baking turns out badly—simply because you have not used the right kind of flour. Royal Household Flour is purified and sterilized by electricity, it is there- fore uniformly pure and wholesome. And because it is thoroughly purified it will yield a sweet, wholesome, light sponge that will bake flaky, deli- ciously flavored, nourishing or pastry. It is really pure you get. and Ogilvie's Rosa Household Floue Ogilvie's Royal Flour. L McGillivray Council Council met pursuant to adjourn• ment in Town Hall, McGillivray, Aug. 7. All present. Minutes of previous meeting read, approved of and signed. Ulens-Robinson-Accounts, amount- ing to $320.05. Marr -Robinson -that this council adjourn to meet the that Monday in September at one o'clock. W. Fraser, Clerk Henault Mrs. Richard Warring passed away on Wednesday of last week after a brief illness. -Wilfred Troyer, who for the past few years has been the efficient clerk in J. 1Veisiniller's store has gone out West. As be is well re- spected here we wish hint every [Me- ccas.successor Miss Drysdale is his sm�ce or ct>aR.yy in the store. -Mrs. Hunt is on a t•isit to her daughter, Mrs. Johnston, nt St. !Amis. -Louis ,McArthur, of the Sov- ereign Bank staff, Thedford, is spend- ing the holidays at his home here. -- Mr. Langlass bas returned to Toronto after a pleasant visit at the home of Peter Melville. -Rev. %V. Aitcheson,of Dumnock, is the minister at Carmel church during Rev. Mc1. Smith's tib- senre.- IV..1. Miller, carriage builder, left last week for the Nest, tacking with him a number of vehicles and im- plements which be will dispose of. This is Mr. Miller's second trip and we wish hint success.-Misi Susie 'Melville who has been in Toronto for the pa't few nu)ntbs, has returned home. *Ae('tlnc TH.-Thos. Peart had the misfortune the other (lay to get very severely injured while assistingWm. Hoggarth, of Hihlaert, in cutting his grain with a binder. it appears lie was leading it colt that was newly hitched to the machine, when it get frightened and began to spriutt, (:sus - principal. -F. Mess, Sr., bas exchang• ing Mr. Pv:u t to iose his footing and ed his six acres of land east of the oil- in falling he was caught by the hinder lege for the ten and a half acres be- and dragged so1nedistance. 1 119 shoul- lot:ging to E. %eIlei.-Larne Scott, of der bone was broken and he sustained the Hovet•eign B,(nk staff, is away on other injuries. 1Ve are pleased to say his holidays. O. H. Ehnes is filling his that he recovering, -Alex. Ingram, of place. -Mrs. Chas. Frits, who recently Hay, while cutting grain a few days returned front the London Hos ,tai is ager, had the misfortune to get the top rapidly recovering from her recent ill- of his thumb cut off by getting it near, which will be learned with piens- me by her runny friends. -Elgar Ma - gel, who has been the obliging clerk in Merner's store for several years, has severed his connection with that firm, :and will leave shortly for the West. Edgar will be much missed in our hnrgh as he was a great favorite. We join with his many friends in wishing • ',very success in the far -farmed %Vest. --Zurich Fall Fair will be held on Sept. 21. -Miss Elennra Flartleih is on a few weeks visit to friends in Eg- nnoaidt•ilte.-Miss Ethel Williams has returned from her visit to London. - (leo. Schnell, of Pigeon. Mich.. is on .a visit to his parents here. ---Messrs. H. E. Faust and Tall %Vurm spent a cru. 1,l,' of days in London last week. --Miss 'loonier, of Michigan, is a visitor at he hotue of if. Randall -Mr. Henry 11eiehert, wife end son. of New Haven. Mirk. are here on a visit. -F. W.Itess :aid fancily ase holidaying itt Poi 1 Flinn. • • ,'nue, daughter of Mt'. mid %Irs, John Foster, while nn a visit to Lime'ti. k friends was suddenly taken i11, hot w,• are pleas, d to Mate that she 1s on tits mend. -Jacob illiehnn a for ene'r r. -,dent of this section passed A say at Kansas a few days ago, at the age of 72 years, Deceased. who ,(eas a 111 other of Mrs. Gottlieb Mernet •1 this tow 11, left these paha about 20 years ago. Ile leave's a widow, six daughters and two coma, Wil,` 11 VP (he sympathy of their many fi Otitis bete. P caught in the cogs of a wheel, w ile adjusting a chain, Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, es they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness raid that is by cnnstit utionnl remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con- dition of the mumps lining of the Eus- tachian Tithe. When the tube is in• flanged yon have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing. and when it is en- tirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken nut end this tube restored to its normal condition. hearing will 1►e de- stroyed forever; nine cases out of ten ate caused by ('strati r'h, whish is ,loth• ing but nit hill tined condition of the rmnern1s $111'falCee. We will give One Ilendred Dollars for any case of Deafness (enrlseel by eat :web) that cannot be cored by Hn11's Catarrh ('pre. Send for eitcohors. free. F. J. ('NI:NLY.l Co„ Toledo, 0. Hold by Maggio.. Vie. Take Hatll•, Fancily ('ills for con -al'. prlDon. _ Parkhill: (fees. %l•. {Listings experts to leave :lbw., the lir-4 Wool, in S'1 - t'Inlrer for 1V.' nipe'g, Iie and We col • One d • Mouth of Metropolitan Hotel ,in. L %V. Iliek,, will be managers for the London and Iaancashire insurance Co. for the territory Vola Winnipeg That's w11 r.• y•or t ;11 get the highest t 1 At1C011t'er. ts►sh,,(I. a lot thew. Don't Throw Out That Old Carpet It'. good for a lone{ tints lett if cleaned with SAP -O -REN -O "IT EVAPORATES," Odorless Aon -poisonous Aon -inflammable COLOR$ restored like new OUST entirely renaut ed OERMe nb+nint.ly de--troyat $iZINO revs All in at few Moments. for a few Cents For coarec..tor tluo.t, most deli.:ato fabrics. I km', buy new sill, teal -t-. dresses or skirts because they aro dirty ora few grease spots or t t.ilu. Os them -get. BAP -O -REN -O At your grocer x raid +at c money. Absolutely guaranteed ur nom*, refunded. Thu Huffman R Tooter Co. Toronto 5 THE MOLSONS BANK (luvorporated I Art u1 I'arlisuiea.t Ia.Sa Head Office, - Montreal Capital Paid 'Up $3,000,000 Reserved Fund••' . • • • • • • • .. • $3,000,000 FORTY-Et((IIT BRAN( IIEM IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA ▪ EXETER BRANCH oFFIe•E HOl'10 to a. In to31,. nt. SATURDAYS, 1" a. n. to 1 p. m, A OENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED. Farmer s Sale Notes cashed or collected, Forms supplied on application. DRAFTS on all points in the Dominion, Great Britain and United States bought and sold at lowest rates of Exchange. ADVANCES made to Farmers, Stock Dealers and Business Men at lowest rates and on most favorable terms. DEPOSIT Receipts issued and highest current rate of interest allowed Saving Bank Department. Deposita of ssl and upward* revel% ed. Interest com- jamietihali•yearly and added to principal June WOanJ hlrrmtrtr 31st. Agents at Exeter for the Dominion Government. DICKSON & CARLING, Solicitors. N. 1), lil'RDON, Manager? FOR THE NEXT 30 DAYS j WE WILL OFFER THE GREATEST BARGAINS IN FURNITURE Ever offered in Western Ontario at the Dashwood Furniture Store. We have the stock and it must go, . If you want any thing in our line you should not miss this sale. Z.TNZ:ERTAKIN G - We also carry a large stock of undertaking supplies. In time of give us a cull. need P McISAAC, -- Dashwood. Western Fair TMr a*M,.,T,.a •Mar WOOD. TALI *...CULT,..*L ra... P.WLaa Wbeo Governor Simcoe laid the foundation of London, Ontario, one hundred yeara ago he knew It would grow to be it great city, but had no thought of the Western Fair. The Weatera Fair gives the people of this country en excellent opportunity for a pleasant outing at a t:ninim= of cost, and at the tame time develops. their .tore of practical and useful knowledge. Its educational features have always been carefully fostered by the Directors. This year several Important improvements of an Instructive nature have been added. The celebrated gist Highland Regiment pawl will give three concerts /laity during the exhibition. The entertain- ment department will be better than ever, and will include leaping the gap in mid ale on • steam automobile. ,.a ,seesrare.* w.iTS W. J. nae., e.,a.aa.T, ow J a. N lfyna, year Wendt or relatives suffer with Fits, Epilepsy, St. Vitus' Dance, or Falling Sickness, write for a trial bottle and valuable treatise on such diseases to Tub LIUDIU Co.. 179 King Street, W., Toronto, Canada. All druggists sell or can obtain f r you LEiBiG'S FITCURE o F&m&s aid 1Qe Public III cneraI. As the spring is coming on now, gather up all your old truck such as Rags, Rubbers, Wool Pickings, Horse Hair, Old Rope, Bones, All Kinds old Iron, Brass, Copper, Lead, Zinc, and take them down to M. Jackson & Son Main Street. Exeter. 1905 LONDON Sept. 8 16, 1905 THE GREATEST VET THE GRANDEST EVER 1905 CANADIAN NATIONAL EHXIBITION At TORONTO - Aug. 26 to Sept. 1 1 $15,000 IN PREMIUMS $38.300 IN ATTRACTIONS The Irish Guards Sand 1'e p,nna+sinn of 1fi+ )last (lrarinna Majesty hart i tasM 1'11. the band of the Irish Oltenia, IIs Majesty's Is. nrite household band and the finest military musical organization in the Etu- pir.•, '.41111,4. e two concerts ea.•h and e)•ery .fav, Art aro Treasures In an eape.•iallr built, extensive, flre•pmnf art gallery will is presented the grandest collection of art and art treasures ever got t..g* cher on 0.1. .-wdinent, including loans from the King, the ('orp.erat inn. of the City of Inudon, the great Rn,a.-h 1•niyersitirs, the Republic M France, .unth Kensingt.nt Museum, Lord Strathrona, the I.i•nt.•Oo,ernor of Ontario, and other dig• hnpaiehrA'.pekes and gentlent•n. Coro1letrove Picture nq goeeia!ronentand •f 1114 Malw.ts th. King, 1 1. ' w' } n Ab .Lt's noted and hi+tnrir pwa mog will � n exhibition during the entire Farr. Fall of Port Arthur. The greatest pyrn military .hs``.layeter produ.,+f before the Canadian people. Beene.. in the mos -t recent of the world's most ap raling event will 1e vividly portrayed with real Japaneese and Rus- sian s„b,iery taking part. The Sees orbs display will he on a brilliant *.ale int r'sl . ing new 1. . tures of an Oriental character. Other Thisg_+ to See. The Process nodding, Samples of all the Indus tries and Resources of the Country. Thousands of hones. Cattle, Sheep, Swine, Poultry, and Dogs, all Canadian Cereals and Minerals, Good Trotting and Pacing, a superb Varlet) Show, the World's 12104 inventions. Special Excursions Spe.•1a1 *heap rails ay and steamboat exeursinns have been arranged. Enquire of ,our nearest statism or 1L kat agent for rata. W. K. McNAUGHT, Pres. For Pr.,.- I...4. F;n!ry ►flanks J. O.Oilff, Man.See. awl Information adders. Entries Cloves Live Steel'. etc., An¢ 7thPoultry and bogs. AME• 19 A census of Russia shows that the twirl population is 125,0M0,692 of whom 02,512.6914 are leen and (N.151.1041 or,. tworuen, 79 per cent, or !09,(17,0, lab can R(1) ffT•Thneither• read or twit. L L 1(L/j' K CREDITON MILLS. EXETER MARKETS. CIIANGEl) EACH %%'EDNF*DAY Wh••at (ol(1) 75 85 Barl'•y .. 38 40 Oats , 38 yens IW) (k► 1'Otaet oe0, per bag . ...... 75 80 flay, per ton 6 50 7 00 (lions per cat., tin: 2 15 Flom. low grade per cwt. 1 25 1 25 Rutter 17 16 Ave 1, r•, per cwt 0 Of Mho rte per ton.... 20 00 20 0 arae, per ton 16 00 16 00 •%ggs t►40827,333atlrcoaoscc:essessimos We are giving excellent + satisfaction since le - modelling our mill. GRIS'I'INU ants CIfOPPING 1)ONE PROMP'T'LY. SWEITZER i 1