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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-6-27, Page 5f . , • 13) E4 E-1 rzi 01 "1°14 1 ig71 ria 11.•-• 1., ozi : P',.,» 2 . "0 •-- '4 ?si -0 rw- 1-'F-4 IrT1 gc 8 rill CI) o pc1 -.1...M '•-• (z4 A. lecja ss 0 al . 0 0 ..... , . • H H oi co ,, ,.. 4 *.J.,...., ce „, , ,.., 0.,...,,,•_. , ,.., 84 0 ^0 c ai 7:1 ,4 0 0 cd • cn En U. n erli"11 te ' 4 c 0;4 <1(A 1 4-, d .1.4 • cn 1.4 — 0 ...I ° C -a• Ee Pal o 0 „ . • .••••• ca 9.) • e-‘, ,g -,1-4, ..0 g bc) 0 ,.0 t.. .H. -,.0 00 o p k 72 ''' o sa 'al ' t' 's•crd .4, , ril -ts a j CIO -o •4 C.,, g4 •• 0 ' 77i ' g W u5 0 In F,Q,g-g p•-• a., ,,... ,•5 v, • ., +. j Fi, '1.) e° - $.0 0 l• , co 0 .4.), ,44 •,,,-4 ..... Q L' ' ' " , Q : , . • . ir4 .. . L.'" ' .. - . ' P. ) . m.S, ,:-:',, T..t, cd 2 ) - 0 5. 0 '' •'-c-ri 0 co'rz •,-, 0 ,..4 .. ,...,..., ,,,... Ul "CI a, ,*. ." ' t.. Q -,n a) .....,.) ca co,4inciaese • '')b,00 t rtT.; -•S r0 0 •H - 0 ,-- 41 1:-, •-• 0 •,-. 0 0 t.. 0 '-'' Sd .4 assra ei a r -t,' , ,scse ss g 0 1 E-1 E -ii) -1 I E-112-1 < i -z NEWS IN GENERAL ( Canadian. It is removed that Hon, A. Chapleau may be made Minister of Railways. Sarah Thoinpson, of Windsor, claims to be 109 yeare old. ' Wash woman's friend is London Electric Soap: Just think Washing day made shorter by using London Electric Soap. Voting took place at Windsor Thursday on by-laws appropriating $25,000 for ,im- provements on the mirk, $40,000. on the new town hall and paving of Sandwich gravel road. The two first were defeated, and the third was carried. Tho Dominion Government has been notified of the discovery of an anthracite coal mine by Mr. Brinkerhoff, at Canmore, N. W. T Its veins were traced four miles, and. are over nine feet in width. London Electric Soap will not injure the hands and clothes and do more work for the money; try it. In the village of Langton, near Tilson- burg, Thursday evg., a bey named Davis, aged 14, shot and instantly killed John Rohrer, aged 12. There had been an old grudge between the bos s, and Davis, on meeting Rohrer, said, "Stand back or I will shoot you," and immediately fired, the ball pluming through the temple. Davis was arrested. Ask your grocer fur London Electric Soap. A young wan named Frank Bear, about 23 years of ago, was sitting on the steps of the Exhibition ground, Chatham, on Thursday night about nine o'clock, when two other men passed and making some comments about Bear were ordered to move on by him, when one of the men, as Agustus Park, aged 20, stabbed Bear to a a the heart, killing him almost instantly. Park surrendered himself to the police. The Point Edward Post says :-No. 41 on Thursday night lifted Anson Gunnen, of Pittsburg, Pa., off the tacit as it was coming from Sarnia to Point Edward. The train stopped to pick him up, and in answer to inquiries as to his condition he said he felt as though he had. been through the Johnstown flood. When asked if he had been drinking he said he had taken a couple of beers. He had eyidently started to walk from Sarnia to Point Edward, via the G. T. R. track, and becoming weary bad lain down and fallen asleep. The en- gineer of the express did not see him in time to stop the train until it was upon him, and Me escape from an awful death was truly miraculous. Upon arriving at Point Edward he walked up town, seeming- ly none the worse of his involuntary hoist. American. An English syndicate has subscribed $10,000000 to establish extensive iron and steel works at Vallejo, Cal. Mr. and Mrs. John Leavitt, of Lincoln, Neb., were arrested on Wednesday charged with the murder of their two daughters near Gresham Sunday night. Four bars of London Electric Soap for 25cts. London Electric Soap is only made by Richard Woodstock, (Trade Mark Regis- tered.) The markets generally are firm, while Chicago showed weakness towards the end of the session. There was a rally in the prices of pork lard in Chicago. The stench of Johnstown is becoming more sickening every day. A family of five persons has been mar - sacred in Fergus County, Montana. Gardiner R. Colby, a prominent New York Baptist, died suddenly on Thursday. Insist on your grocer giving you London Electric Soap, it is the best. Official and estimated returns from every county in the State of Pennsylvania show the prohibition. amendment was defeated by 188,449 majority. Reports from all but '12 counties elm se a majority of 146,996 • against' the poll tax amendment. Don't fail to try Louden Electric Soap once, and you will use no other. Wheeling, W. Va., June 21. -In Putnam County yesterday James D. Paull, a bachelor farmer, was killed by a tenant whose daughter he had seduced, John Moore, another farmer, killed a neighbor, Henry Bradley, with a club, and Doe Lawrence, a miner, killed Tom Stevene, fellow miner, with a pick. All the murders were within a radine of three milea. The woniirr of to day ie,London Electric SOOP.. •4( .All first class grocers Belt London Elec. trigs Soap. Cardinal Peed, brother of the Pope is seriously ill, tt is estimated that 1,200 person e were killed in the conflagration in Laohan, Chine. Several riotous strikers were killed or • wounded by the gendarmes at Ketadno, Bohemia. Shanghai, June al. -One-half of tho city of Laohan was destroyed by the recent fire. The conflagration raged four clays, 11 is estimated that 1,200 peasons were killed, meet of them were crushed in trying to escape from the narrow streets. Ten thouriand persons aro hornless. A fund has been Started for theit relief. 14,000,0001X ONE DAY. Over 14,000,000 bushels of wheat were recently sold ittN. Y. el -by in a single day. What a MOnarnent of magnificient bread iliis would make if properly reduced to flour and rimdointo snowy sweet, palatable loaves with Imperial Oream Tartar Inking Portalor, It le sold by all'irocors, and is LIAO best. • 41311.622C.IRMIIISONSICIP •11C0"41 V rtzr8 g .4 71ga. 51 4 4'6" "kcsgs Q eeia=1 (;) F•14 crsl. '''' 01- Q .4 •„„4 '''' liew"1 bP-44 ° '"ti id -o4''' •0 '.+4 -rti t'l ti, , 0-- -,..0-- • ..,.,. ‘,..,,,_., . ,.._1> L,,,,, 4 to g r. , jfp, .1...q., 44'1 11E-0 5 4 . H i 0, .F - 70 , . a .,.° - -z-44 -4,4 0 Orx M-. ' ;4 '"-; , E 0 , ,..,, Q., ... • ,.., ... , , „. 2 . tMD - ;-,i' , SR, 76 , p0) . P• ": r... °,, ,!..a' 75 r..4 „, -&I 1;=t1 t'..1.6"c:1; P-.9 01 r•rcr 0 ani: cp , `','' 0- 4 .L2,0 41) 'bijr 7-1 •r. 01 04 8 .7,., 45 , it= '6"-‘, W * Ed ,:b: 1-2-7-4Thi . ,r. 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Thus by returning day and night to both parts of the earth, once in twenty-four hours, he preserves both their heat and moisture upon which all gener- atious depend in a due and regular temper; so that neither their radical moisture is consumed by the parching heat of the clay, nor their vital heat extinguished by the cool moistures of the night, but the one stilt allays the tempers of the other .by their quidle and alternate revolution. 'Will the Atheist tell us how the sun, that under- stands no utility and designs no end, to bo determined to this course of motion which above all others is so admirably useful and so advantageous to this world we live iu 1 What is the reason that gime he thus „equally moves round the earth, he doth not always move in the same circle, but runs out every day into a different circle almost a whole degree further northward or southward, and tnis so constantly and so precisely that in six thousand succeeding revolutions he hath never varied so much as one minute. from his course either one way or the other, and by these his stated excursions towards the north and south, he makes the seasons of the year and gives al summer and winter. a spring and fall to al parts of the earth, without which the earth would long ere this become utterly useless and all its fruits and for want of V, Well its animals too, would have forever perished? For some parts of it woulcl have been scorched with endless heat. others bound up with everlasting frost ; here there would have been all a sandy, there all an lay desert, and so both vegitation and all generation would everywhere ntterly per- ish and become obvious. How came the sun, which hath neither sense nor reason of its own to gnide him, to be directed into ,such a commodious course of annual motion, whereas in that vast space he moves in he might as well have run thousands of other courses motion? He might have movel all the year round the earth's equator, but if he had done so, all the middle tracts of earth both northward and southward would soon have been scorched up with his con- tinued presence, and all the remoter parts both ways would quickly have died with cold through his perpetual absence. Or he might have run his annual course on one side only of the earth's equator, and made his circular excursion to or beyond the pole ; but if lie had done so, he must have left a great part of the opposite hemisphere exposed to everlasting cold • and night, whereas an the annual course of motion he now performs he sheds forth his light and heat and influence over all the world, and by turns gives every part its yearly seasons which is a plain evidence that all his motions are guided and conducted by a wise and over -ruling mind, which among so many courses of motion that lie before hirn in the boundless space he moves in, hath determined him to that which for perpetuity is altogether the best and most commodious. And the same is to be said of the motion of the ninon which nature hash for a vicarous light to the sun, to supply his absence and perform his office in the lower world. For what makes this senseless and irrational planet, that moves without any intention of its own, wander by turns northward and southward some degrees beyond tb'e rein. And what makes it move northward when the sun is south- ward and again eouthward when the sun is northward, whereas in that immense space wherein he swims it hath room enough to run a thousand other courses of motion, none of which could have been so advantageous to us as this. For by mov- ing northward when the sun is southward and soon contra, it moderates the cold and the darkness of the winter rughts, and by posing beyond the tropics, svhich are the ' boundaries of the sun, it in some measure supplies his absence by enlightening those long and tedious nights in which the region / tower* the poles are buried ; which is 5/ plain instance of the singular care of Pro. andenee'lthat imparts of the earth should be left altogether destitute of the necessary comforts of the heavenly light and warmth. Will anyone who boasts, of being an "Atheist" tell us how it is that the moon changes frotn new to new four times every thirty days, neither more nor less, and twelve such moons every year ; also inform us of the total obscuration of both the sen and moon for several hours on May 19. 1780, so that nothing could be seen with- out the aid of artificial light. yet miter any astronomer sounded in aclaance of the terrific occurrence, never, nor yet since? both the Mtn and the moon are givou unto ne by the Divine Ruler of the world and we have them in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night, and said to bo for signs and for seasonseand for days anCI, for years,. -J. U. al eINtrosn. • CONSUMPTION CAN DE Ot/IIND fly proper, heelthfel exereise, and the jimlicions use of Schtt's Emelsion of Cod Liver Oil Hypophoophites, which contains healing and strongthgiving virtoos of the two valuabio specifies in their ftilleet form, Mr, .0 McDonald, Petitcodiac, X. D. , .says; have been prescribing Scott's Einuleion with good results. Its onnoc tally usefui ft persons of consiunptive tondencis." Sold by all druggist, 300113. and ';•1,00, Cry r:;r Pit6vs Castoria MARKET REPORTS. Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly. J. EXISTER --- von JULY, 1889 FRANK LESLIE'S POPULAR MONTIILY for Juls has a picturesque and well -illustrated article, entitled "Into Oklahoma with the I3oonaers," giving much interesting infor- mation about the settlement of the Pro- mised Lend, as well as of the adjoini ag Cherokee Strip. "The Samoa Cyclone' vivid'y depicts the groat naval calamity of last March, which has been compared to the great historic destruction of the Spanish Armada. Another notable con- t ibution to this. number is the account of the ascent to Mount Ararat, the Bibles:. "Noah's Mountain," by the Russian Geographical Commission, whose notes aud photographs were specially secured for Frank Leslie's Popular Jima— ly. "The Dynamo" is a t'mely popular science article. The bicg.a shield and natural history papers, sketches of travel, short Stories, poorus, to., are numetous and exaellent. BORN. In Exeter, on the 24th inst., the wife of Mr. William Down, of a eon. MARRIE D. (Corr:rioted a ts o'clock ri....m .w...ecia(838:570 80 RS.p•tipio:nirdrtilson7tg3hayaWan..:e v. t" .......... - .......: - ....:.: 5 528%060 it 00: 60 485,200, 6, Clover $ ma ... ... ... ... 2 50 -so )1 06 POeoarrs) ... ... 0 48 to 0 48 ... .... ... 0 40 to 0 60 Eggs ... ... .. : .. .. .. .. 0 1110 t oo 00 1131 FBlaottuie'pl•erbbl ....... ,.. 00 to 5 55 Potatoes,per bushel A.pples,per bag : .. . .. .. 0 20510 ttt 000 00 580 405 DriedApplespr b Geese per lb. ... 006 to 006 ;Turkey perib ... 0 07 to 08 Ducksper pr .:. 0 50 to 0 65 Chickens per pr ... o 25 to 0 30 Efogs,dressedperl 0 ... 6 00 to 0 25 ... 400 to 5 00 Sa8 hei 'dee' eefp8:al:rielinsgs8ilee'd..60 a c::).., ... 0 60to6 5 to 00 ... ... 3 50 to 4 OG 0 °'. Woo]tfikpi en: 1 b ... Woodper cord ••• ..,-, 08005001°080 (7.:11 Onlonsnerbust ...... 00 1760 tot0 00 1705 Elayperton .. - „. 25 to 3 oo ST: MARYS Fr3aarll,elyvheat.. .. .. . ......... .......... ...... ... ao 81 0 80 Spring When.t . ....... „....... ......... ... 0 80 0 83 OatsClover Seed Timothy . ..... ... l 500 623005 600 64 2 50 5 092065 Peas.... ......... .......... .......... . ...... .... 0 48 0 48 Eg • 11 0 11 •Hu ex g Potatoes per bag .12 0 12 Ho, •t : 1 48 • 0216067010804 1880 Apples00 w00ipperbush0 55 2,080000970 0000 WORDEN-Scorr.-At the residence of the 1 bride's parents, on the 12th inst., by the Rev. P. Scott, Mr. Joseph Worden, to Elizabeth R., eldest daughter of Mr. James Scott, all of Hibbort. Hoon-Fisnam-At Kippen, ou the 20th inst., by Rev. Samuel Atcheson, Mr. Joseph Hood, to Miss Jane Fisher, both of the township of Stanley, A gentleman who was in Arkona the other day states that Constable D. Black, of that village, has received a telegram from some point in South America that a person fully answering to the description of Albert Wilson, the murderer of Miss Marshall, Of Warwick, has been arrested there, and would be held until means were taken to identify him. It is under- stood that a communication is now in progress with that object. • TO THE DEAF. - -A person cured of Deafness and noises in the head of 23 years' standing by a simple remedy, will send a description of it viten to any person who applies to Mammon, 177 McDougal street, New York. CONSUMPTION SURELY CURED. To THE EDITOR. Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named die ease. By its timely use thousands of hope- less oases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy rroaa to any of your readers who have consumption if they will send me their Express and P. 0. addresa. Respectfully, Dlt. T. A. SLOCUM Toronto, Out. 37 Yonge street. JOHN BRAWN Ul\.IDERTAliElt Bran per ton Shorts '• Oatmeal per bbl. LONDON Wheat, ' ati6 0p3eer h LehL r ', e ush , • Peals, 48c to48c per bushel. Barley nialtii.g. 43o to48c per bus Barley, feed, 38ae to 454e per bushel. TORONla TORONTO, Jane 9.0 g.AT-fall, No. 2, $ to $0.94; spring, No.2. $0.90 to e.50.98; red win- ter, No 2, $0.96 to $0 97; No 1, Manitoba hard. $1 08 to 01.09 13saaey. No. 1 56c to 57o No. 2.52c to 53c; No. 3, 42e to 45c; No 3, extra 47c to 480. PEAS, No 2,520 to 53c. Nes, No. 2,28 o to 31c. Fr.ou a extra, $4.10 to 54.20; strong bakers. $4.50 10 04.80. Market quiet and firm. Sales No.l. bard 1%1 anitoba. 51 08 to S1.09, and No. 2 do.at 80.00 No. 3 barley, outside, at ovic oats, on traok, at 310. TORONTO LIVE STOCK. The receipt of cattle 'Oto -day at the local market was large and feelings much easier. The dernand for shippers has slackened ow- ing to weaker advices from from Great Britain, and butchers aro pretty well supplied Choice steers aro nominal 11140 cents per lb. Bulls eold a531 to 40. andnli"vTat from SOOto 1380 „3end. Butchers cows moderate demand, prices lower; the best fit 3 to 4 ordinary at 21c to 21 and common at 2. Sheep are scarce and steady, with limited offering; the best sell at 55 50 to $6, per head; inferior to medium at $4.00 to $4.50 and rams 3e to 3Ic nor pound. Lambs in fair demand and firm. choice bringing$3 00 to 05, and inferior to medium $3 00 to 85 00 Calves dull and steady. Choice beasts, of 125 to 150 lbs., sell at 70 to 9c dressed weight; rough calves. $3 to $5, a bead, Hogs are steady: choice light fat sold at 54 to 5ac, store hogs at 440 to 5c. and stags at 3c to 34o. ADVICE TO AIOTFITIES.-Are you disturbed as night and broken 01 7001 rest by a sick child suffering and crying with paan of Cuttin4' Teeth? If sd send at once and get a bottle' o f"Mrs. Wins low's Soothing Syrup" for Chil- dren Teething. Its value is incalculable. It willrelieve the poor little sufferer im mediately Depend upon it, mothers ; there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diarrlicea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colie, softens the Gums. reduces Inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system 'Mrs. Wins] 's Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste midis the prescription of one of the oldest and best female physiciaus and nurses in the United States, and is for sale by, all druggists throughout the world, Price twenty-flve CABINET-MAKER, coots a bottle. Be sure and., ask for nMartS0. W N LOW S P',ITECING. 8 WM' %Dd. other incl. Walnut & Rosewood Caskets ra,h„„aili & t iyios LSO COSTIN8 OV EVERY DESCRIPTION A Complete Stock of Robes & Trimmings Always on hand. z.) FUNERALS FURNISHED 4" CON- E...i DUCTED AT Low RATES. Cle 7-k ...i My stock of Furniture is un,- Z H I excelled. g 1:'"GIVE ME A CALL 12.1 DR. FOWLERS g , siss- •EXT: OF • 0 owiLD. .3 CURES OLERA, holera Morbus °Lel Cark-O-T. Fl A NI PS IAR IKEA YSERTERY AND ALL BUMMER COMPLAINTS AND FLUXES OF THE BOWELS IT IS SA FI- AND RELIABLE FOR CHILDREN OR ADULTS, THE BEST YET THE CHEAPEST YET THE BIGGEST YET! z 0 0 t-1 Li Overcoaitings at any price Suit- ings at any price; Pantings at any price, e8t Oraered &thing prodllood in Exeter flontIernen 1 1.oive your orders early, for with the best staff of Tailors ; the hest quick of Fine Trhnnuitigs, and theb' t (Cutting in Towli, you aro rime of stitisfao- moo. A. evlorati CONSCAll.PTION CUi8S8D. An old physician, retired from practice, I having hs4placed in his hands oy an East Indian missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and. perma- nent cure !of Consumption, Bronchitis, Ca- tarrh, Asthma and an throat and lung affections, MHO apositive and radical cure for Nervous Debiiityandall Nervous Com- plaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands ofoasee, has felt it his duty to antics st known to his suffering fellows. Actuatedby tuie motive and a desire to relieve hum an sufferins, wi.a send free of charge, to all who desire lt, this recipe,in German,French or English, with fulldirections for preparing and using. Sent . mail by addressmg with stairin naming this paper, W. . NOTES 149 Power's MOO, •licohestet. 1,1 7 A FORTUNE FOR ALL It is said that every person has a chance once in this lite time to make a fortune and if they allow that time to pass may never have the opportunity again. That time has come. You can depend upon it that every person purchasing their goods at PARK- INSON'S saves money by doing so thereby will make their fortunes. His prices are away down. You are not asked high prices to make up losses for debts contract- ed by bad customers. Don't you see there is thousands in it. Parkinson's etock 1s new and consists of Dry Goods, Groceries, Crockery, Glassware, Tweeds, Boots and Shoes, in fad everything usually kept in a first class general store. Seehis black and colored Cashmeres at 25 cents, and up. You can get the cheapest all -wool suit in Exeter made to order at Parkinson's. Make no mistake. Consult your own interests and examine his stock before making your purchase elsewhere and you will soon save enough for a fortune. You can do befter at the Cheap Cash Store than any other place in Exeter, Highest market price allowed for farm produce at Parkinson's. First Door North of the Town Hall. J. PARKINS01. •, ' • THIS YEAR'S yrtle• CUT and PLUG Smoking Tobacco FINER THANEVER. See dZ' 'BR IN BRONZE, On each PLUG and PACKAGE' I ' •.( DO YOU WANT TO BUY FURNITURE AT LOWER RATES. THAN SHAM GOODS' —ARE USUALLY SOLD- -TAEN CALL AT- GIDIAEY'S -ONLY FIRST -CLASS - Reliable Goods At Prices Lower that so -og- led Cheap Houses can give Undertaking in all its Branches. S. GIDLEY, (Successor to 0. & S. Gidley) ODDFELLOW'S BLOCK E 11E1E11116 111111 OUR SPRING STOCK --OE— Spades and Shovels, Fence Wires ANNEALED, BARBED AND OTHER MAKES, —Which we are in a position to offer to the Public at the- - Very Finest Prices for Cash -We have also on hand a full line of - SHELF and BUILDING HARDWARE Paints, Oils, Griass, Etc., at Famine Prices. Stoves and Tinware of all kinds, always on hand, at prices that defy competition. Sewing Machines, Baby Clarriages, Field and Garden Seeds. Eave-troughing zt, BISSETT BROS, Specialty. A call solicited. JAMES PICKARD Every Department in, the Old Established iS• IZOW most complete, and fall of the cates4 novelties. The French'English and American Millinery cant, be excelled. The stock of Dress Goods is larger a, cheaper than ever shown. A.11 the best inakes of rich colored and shot silks, Cheap. Parasols and Sun Shadea of every design (both long and short stems. Fite fancy zephers, plain zophers. Sateens and Prints in endless var- iety. A special lot of Swiss Embroideries for Dresses, (lovely goods.) Every lady should see our Dress Trim- mings (which contain all the latest novelties, Come all and inspect our stock, N. B. --The attention of Dress-inali.ers ig specially called to the Dress Goods department, JAMES RICKARD Exeter