Exeter Times, 1901-8-8, Page 5114
Ti[EX B .E R TIiiS
THE SIRE ORDIR 1885
President Shaffer's Decree Takes
Effect on August 10.
Tho Great Struggle Thus Began. Betvreen
the 3311110u Doliar Steel Txust and the
Amalgamated A.ssociatioa WillEveran.
ADO Being Out 2,400,000 workmen
• Against the Seventy -Fire Millions of
the Trust -Begins With. 100#000 Men.
New York, Aug, 7, - With the
sending out of the general strike or-
der last night, the struggle between
the Steel Trust and the .Amelgantat-
ed Association is Precipitated and
Assail be fought to n. finish.. In brief,.
it meas that 2,400,000 toilers will
ehotly be arrayed, against the $75,-
-000,000 of the Trust.
• Muster oe Money.
Stock - .. .. $1,000,000,000
Stockholdere 40,000
I.Itiderteritiug Fund, $25,000,000
Other available money $50,000,000,
Total Trust War Fund 875,000,000
muster of Men,
liTen Dow on strike 70,000
Men whO awit the strike
order 380,000
Federatiou of tuber •A,000,000
The arra of workers 2,400,000
AUGUST 10 THE DAY.
Prealeent Slinfrer XeStfelf the General Steel
strike Order to, Tette lilfteet on Tbat
Dote,
Pittsburg, Aug. 7.-.A. general
/Strike order Wee. President Seeffer
was to be mailed to all the vice-
presidents of the Amalgamated Asso-
ciation last night ordering the meu
out on Aug. 10 unless there is an
adjustment of the differences in the
Meantime. The strike will effect all
the Amalgamated men employed by
the National Steel ConmanY, Federal
Steel Company end National Tube
Company. President Shaffer say,s
the manufacturers have had sudicient
notice. Ile does not anticipate any
,settlernent before the strikes goes into
effect.
Tile men are ordered out after the
last turn on Aug. 1.0. The order
will throw idle about 124000 union
men and about 00,000 in the mills,
who are connected with the Federeto
tion sif Labor and who aro not or-
ganized, but who will have no work
by reason of the strike of the skilled
men. Altogether 100,000 men will
likely be idle. The order, it is said,
will also call tout the men at the
furuaces owned by the U. S. Steel
Corporation, who are not member.%
Of the Amalgamated Association,
but who are connected with the
'Amor/tea Federation of Labor.
Not only are the Federation men
in the mills and furnaces directly in -
Volved. but there is an ominous
threat that structural steel workers
will refuse to handle tbe Corpora-
tion Steel in building operations.
Dissatisfied With Oesennell.
Buffalo, N. Y., Au. 7. -The Cour-
ier says: "rho first wedge has been
driven honto in a great split in the
'International Machinists' Union.
President O'Connell has sent four
special agents from Washington to
disband the lodges of Buffalo repre-
senting 1,400 men, who have been
fighting for the nine hour scale. The
Buffalonians have rebelled, and know-
ing that the entire country had ma-
chinists' ,lodges, whieh were dissatis-
fied with O'Connen's rule, have sent
a call to every lodge in the country
to join a, new organization, the con-
vention of which will be held in Buf-
falo next month."
Una Over 137 Train.
Ottawa, Aug. 7.-Jaines Galla-
gher, 147 Clarence -street, met with
fatal injuries at South Indian at
• 11.15 o'clock Monday night. The
• regular night freight on the Canada -
!Atlantic going east stopped at In-
dian Station, and on putting out the
trainmen heari cries from beheath
• the wheels. Upon investigation the
crew found a man beneath the
•,wheels. He had been run over and
• one arm was severed. Ilis back was
badly crushe'd and he -was uncon-
scious. No doctor was available at
-South, Indian, and a special coach
• was sent to convey the man immedi-
ately to Ottawa_ An ambulance
Was waiting, and Dr. Powell accom-
panied Gallagher to Ste Luke's Hos-
pital. But, owing to the great loss
of blood on the trip up life could not
be preserved. Gallagher died at 5
o'clock yesterday morning. James
• Gallagher is Neel known in Ottawa,
• having lived here since his birth, 32
• years ago. His occupation was sell-
• ing patent medicines.
A. Youthful Firebug. •
Iteamsville Aug. 7,-A small boy,
son of L. Karr, was caught in the
act ot setting fire to a, builditag on
Station street Monday afternoon.
Two fires started in the afternoon;
the iirst one was in the sheep pens
of the Pair Grounds, and the sec-
• ond one the outbuildings of ,Mr.
-Tufford's place, Station street. Par-
ties were watching, and young Karr
was caught redheaded. He is only
a small boy. There is quite an ex-
citement in the village over the mat-
.
Bullet Wound nelow Heart.
Toronto, 'lg. 74 -Albert Parsons
• of 74 Blair avei:Os Was taken to the
General Hospitals about .2 o'clook
this morning saffeZent from a, bullet
wound just below the heart. Parsone
was riot in a condition to tell how
he received the wound. The shoot-
ing occurred at his hoMe. Dr. I -I -un -
ter was called in and he dressed the
wound. Parsons is about 50 years
of age and married. His conditton
is critical. • -
•Lisl,zar 1-:ye-E1ection.
Montreal, 'Aug. 7, - Hon. Mr. Bro-
deux, Speaker of the House of Com-
a) o no . has received ' the report of nhe
judge in the Liss ar 'electinn case,
and will at once issue his order ler
a' bye -election.
• s,
NEED FAITH IN LIFE petition mrill no lenges wor1/0541
Will literally block the wheelf the
world, It may be that we are actu-
, ally coming upon the time when the
fraternization of the nations with
KINGDOM OF HEAVEN DECLARED TO
universal Co-operation. in production
BE THE WORLD -MAKING MOTIVE. end distribution and with free indt-
virtuality for all men and all peoples
will • be the only way out of the
Viewsof of G. n, Berron-evaat
Eequir.d to Secuxe Definite and Purs
•pineal Effort - Biomass Nature sold
edemas -wind of MarA to Be Made Vfhole
-Life and Tragetty-eImpeading Crisis.
Prof. George D, Herron, in the
course of his recent lecture on "The
World -Making Motive," said:
"A far-reaching ideal is comutonly
ebleeted. fte a Qtive ii the
ground that human nature is un-•
changing and that it is not idealis-
tic., And that you cannot change
leurnan nature is the most, vulgar
and unthinking of all objections to
human progress. It is the cheapest
and most indolent ferm of old fatal-
ism that roakes man the victim of
something outside of himself. There
is nothing outside of human uature
as neightY as itSelt: er that can. pre-
vent it from heing what it lovingly
and persistently wills to be.
"You are not startling the idealist
Ythen you reply to hirn that he must
change homeii nature - as theugli
that really meant semethiugt-beiere
lee can get his ideal realized, Oer-
tainlY: that is precisely what his
ideal is for -to ehange man into the
likeness of the divine reality, which
he really is, and Which his ignorance
and servility never wholly bides.
"What would you think of a man
Who should order his life on the as-
sumption that the highest attainable
healthmild come to him only
through keeping disease in his sys-
tem, because disease has always
been present in the world? Yet is
he acting any more irrational than
the civilization which bases its pro-
duction and distributioa on the as-
sumptiou that safety and prosperity
lie only in econemic and legal ceer-
clan, because men have always been
kept in some form of slavery? Is he
acting with any greater nia-dness
than the society which forms its
faiths and its institutions ou the
plan of a. peeitontiarY systembe-
estatso some men are bad and shift-
less? is be acting any more strange -
JY than the church which =cane
selously insists on keeping the devil
in the world in order that it may
find perpetual employment in sexing
mon from bim? We can never build
a free and just society upon faith
In what is eel, or upon unfaith in.
tint good which is the worst form of
faith in evil.
"The kingdhm of heaven is the
World-mtdting motive, which both so-
ciety and the individual need for de-
finite and purposeful effort. In this
ideal is a religion we can all believe
in, and the heaven. wo can alt work
for, without regard to our theologe•
cal or materialistie speculations. The
fraternisation of the world, a love
organized society that shall give
limitless 'usefulness and 'tepidness to
every human being, is a tangible and
realistic heaven, which we may make
the motive of all we think and do.
"It is in its confession of faith in
Bic that we must find the first value
of the kingdom of heaven as a social
and individual motive. It matters
not whether we call life -good, or call
it God, or call it force. Life is all
there is, and we must cease to be
afraid of it and begin to understand
and trust it if we aro to do tho
work that is bold and honest and
purposeful.
"It is faith in life that man needs
in order to be made whole. Not a
conviction of sin, as the revivalists
say, but a conviction of life's inher-
ent divinity and goodness, is the ex-
perience you need to beget the reviv-
al for which so many in and out of
the church are crying. Men are not
sinners first of all, or worms of tho
dust, but free and comrade -sons of
God. Human life is God, and eacb
individual is Immanuel -God with us.
The spirit of God is the breath of
our being and our beautiful selfless
impulses are God's throbs. That
which is deepest and most elemental
in man is that which is highest and
first in God. Our ruggedest sense
of justice is but the struggle of the
universal soul of things for freedom
and completeness of expression. Thee
universe centres in you, in me; and
we are each all there is of the uni-
verse.
"The announcement of the kingdom
of heaven first came and always
comes as the supreme optimism. Not
the tragedy and menace of what was
behind xnan, but the nearness and
glory of what was within and ahead
of man, was made the motive of in-
dividual and collective appeal. It is
to fear or suffering, to dread of neath
or selfish hope of . heaven, to some
kind of ignoble escape or mean per-
sonal regard, that religious naotivity
has largely appealed; rarely or never
has it appealed to what is loveliest
and boldest in man.
"The life of the world pivots ft -
sett upon tragedy. Along the lines
of tragedy do the great religions
miree,, and in the tragedy of the cross
historic Christianity ' centres itself.
-From the tragic facts and forces of
life has literature gathered its in-
spirations and, the great dramas and
world poems are tragedies. But may
• not the time be near in -which Christ
can come without being crucified?
May not the inevitable social revolu-
tion be also a revolution in revolu-
tions -a freely cho,sen revolution of
reason and love culminating in
bloodless andglad deliverance 1 or
every class of people?
"We cannot drive out the darkness
by shouting at it; we must bring in
the light, for light alone casts eut
darkness. We cannot overcome any
kind of wrong or injustice by attack-
ing it; we can only fundamentally
overconsee evil with good. It is only
a trusted ideal of good that can re-
alize the good. '
'The nations are seturated w-ith
the idea of a conflict that will change
the face of the World, and the cen-
tres of power are preparing or the
A rhnagedclon battle, while' , every
science is instinct ' with expectancy.
Wo are politically and econorrdcaely
roach ng a universal deadlock in
a' 11 Oak industrial and national cola-
_
' world crisis. So full Of heaven is
1 our dust, so charged with messianic
i forees is our social atmosphere, that
1 it would seem as if the world -mak-
ing motive oa, Jesus were about to
Iliberate itself M. combinations of
faith for economic associations and
: daring social odventure. And Who
I dare say thet the next slioek of civil-
ization may not precipitate the revo-
lution that is to disclose the world
I
as the kingdom of heaven and God?
I Whit) knows but what the dynamic Of
(love which has been the hid force of
j life and labor and history of the ages
i may suddenly come to its royal reign
ill /Milian life?"
; MONASTERIES OF METEORA.
An Extraordinery Scone on the Frontiers
of Macedonia,.
Between the curve of the Macedon-
ian frontier of the mountains of
Ithassia and the open town of Kale.-
baka, which terminates the long
westere Plain of ThesSely, lie the
monasteries of Xeteora, says The
London Illustrated New. A casual
glance gives the idert Of the whole
space being occupied by lines of bare
hills, but on a nearer inspection a.
curious amphitheatc is found, carve
ed out among the moue -teats, and
this is occupied by a. DIRSt extraare
(finery collection of rocks, on which
are perched, like storks' nests, or the
turban On a. Turkish tombstone, the
aorta. Monasteries of Meteera.
one place a huge monelith is found
literally crowned with buildings, as
fti the case of the monastery of All
Saints, popularly known as Eagles
Barlaam; in gm -lather a group of
Jagged rocks will aave one point
capped by a monastery, as is seen in
St, Niche/as. The most striking
features about these Monasteries is
the method by which they etre reach-
ed, either by loose la,ddere banging
outside the perpendicular rocks or by
being wound up by menus of a wind-
lass in a uot at the end of a. rope.
From its beautiful position, its
size and the fair preservation of its
buildings the monastery of Baglos
Berea= is a very good specimen of
these lifteenth-century monasteries,
but what makes this one of speeial
interest is that the rope is said to
be the longest used for the purpose
-340 feet, The ladders to this mon-
astery are not so difficult to climb
as some, but inasmuch as they pull
out every time you grip them and
oscillate frightfully it is pleasanter
to risk the not
The monastery of Ilaglos Nikolaos
appeared to be in a totally dilapi-
dated. condition and entirely desert-
ed when WO visited Meteor°, while
the ladders, Which rise from a neigh-
boring peak and bang from the bare
rock, are impracticable. All these
monasteries are under the archiman-
(trite, a. rann of commanding pre-
sence and saintly countenance. The.
village of ICastraki is jammed in be-
tween the outer rocks of this curious
amphitheater, and in. the slit of this
rocky wall at the back- of the village
stands a most peculiar hourglass -
looking monolith, The 'rocks an
either sole are perforated with
strange holes, Which in the 1 our-
teenth century were iohabited by the
monks of St. Anthony.
A Strange Experience.
Here is the strange experience of a
young merchant in Philadelphia.
Prior to getting married about two,
months ago he had his tailor mako
him a very fine suit for evening ,
dress. The material was of the best
imported broadcloth, and the suit
was lined throughout. with the best
silk. The fit was an excellent one,
and the young benediet was very
proud of his swallow -tail suit. Soon i
after returning from his honeymoon i
a very intimate friend of his bache-
lor days called and asked for the ;
loan of the suit, saying that he
wanted to attend a reception, and '
would be sure to return the clothes
promptly. The merchant.. found it
impossible to refuse and granted his
friend's request. Three weeks elaps-
ed and the clothes had not been re-
turned. The merchant called at his
friend's house to enquire the cause.
His surprise naay be imagined when
he was told that his friend had been
dead for almost a week. After ex-
pressing his sorrow, he gently
broached the subject of his dress
suite "Why, we found the suit in
his closet, and buried hiln in it,"
was the reply. Now Afr, Merchant
is mourning a dear friend and an ex-
pensive suit of clothes.
THF MARKEtt
wht.t Cables eligher-Faihre0 .dielvAmeed
in Liverpool and Peris-Ae natist
Guetatiems.
Tuesday F1'rening, Aug,
In Liyerpool to -day witeat future8 fret
Sid to %d per bushel, and maize opt one
tell 340 to Sin per cental.
In Parte, wheat options anyanced 20 to
40 centimes, and flour 5a to 5$ centimee,
In Melte° to -day, Septentber Willa* tell
oft %c ,per busbel, and eePtettliter Corn tell
eent a bushel.
ne:Aistxo Nettener erAnnerrS.
Closing quotations at iniportent wheat
centres to -day :
Cash, Sept. Cat. Dec.
Chicaro . $o Tim $o TO% so 1224
New York a 0 75%b 0 761ntb 0 17%
" b
Toledo .. „ u Toes 0 '11% 0 73-rs
Duluth, No. 1
Northern Mie 0 091ib 0 13014b 9 Tom
Duluth, No. 1
hard . , s... 0 72yeb a... •
ilitrriiit
Liverpool-Closeo-Wheat spot tirml No,
1 Cal,, es to 0!,'d;58 lld to 5s
11%,d; No. 2 red 'Renter, 58 8d to 58 90;
No. 1 on. spring, 5s 8d to 0e 934e0. Futures
quiet; Sept. 5s 8340 bid, Dec. tis 91/24, Yalu°,
Spot maize arm: mixed American, old, nom -
Mal; new, 4s 8n0 to 4.1 faSil. Futures
steador Sept. 4s 8340, sellers; Oct 4s SSid,
value. Flour, Minn., 1.9s. to 20s 5d.
Loution-Close-Wheat cargoes arrieed oft
coast since last report, 6; waiting at out.
ports for sale, 4, Wheat on passage rata,
er arraer; Australian, iron, arrteed, 298
Paid, Maize on peasage firm. but not ac-
tive. Spot American, mixed, 21s 90. Flour,
spot 1inns, 22s 60.
Paris--Close-Wheat Aug hat We.
Nor, arid Vela =1 35e, Flour tintil
281 00e, Nov. and Feb. 291 05e.
Antwerp -Spot wheat steady; No. 2 11.W.,
1St
TOKONrA1 P„
:..a Qt stattner.
Orant-
Wbeat, white, bush. -•.$0 09% te
red, bush. Ott
busie „...• 0 et 0 as
" govise, bosh.,,,, 0 63
Peas, buigh. ..,.... .... 0 07 „
Rye. bash. • .• R*41 ... . 0 50
Beane, bush. 1 20 1 40
Berko., hush, ...4 t•t.•••• • 048 ...
Oats, hush. , o118934 s
Buckwheat`, busa• • • ••• 0 03 • ••4
ronmero nanst ruonver.
Wholesale.
Hay, billed, ear lots, ton,;S 40 to ef) 00
Straw, beled, ear lots. ton. 4 75 5 00
Butter, dairy, lb. roils- , 0 17 0 18
Butter, creamery, boxers,. 0 10 0 20
Butter, creamery, lb, voile. 0 19 0 21
Butte; tub, lb. . 0 16 0 31
Butter, bekersa tub 0 13 0 14
Eggs, nesvnald, 0 1134 0 1234
Honey, per lbs 0 03 001)
TOKONTO :vein woon,
Hideo, No. 1 green.......40 0714 to $....
Hides, No. - green ....... 0 Oa%
Hides, No. 1 green steers. 0 03
Hides, No. 2 green stem. 0 07
Pildes, cured .. ....... 0 08n
Caltekins, No. 1 • 0 09
Caltskiits, No. 2 0 07
Deacons alairlesh enclin„ 0 55
Saeepskins, fresh 0 00 1 00
Pelts, eacti . 0 25 0 30
Lantbakins, each ... . 0 35
Tallow, rendered 0 MS (1 004
Wool, fleece 0 1234 0 1334
Wool, unwashed, fleece 0 08 0 09
-• •
0 08
TOROX r0 Lion 51.04-1.
Recelpta ot live stock at the Cattle :1far-
ket were moderate -66 carloads, composed
of 1204 ottle, 400 hogs, 531 sheep and
lambs and 20 calves.
Trade was tale for shipping cattle, the
best of whleh were readily bought up. Tbe
bulk of the exporters sold at $4.75 to SO
per cwt., but a few of the choicest lots
1 I tinitil Tt°,1 au on 1°g1' 5.1118
1.)) s e rk al t h 5
per cwt.
Export cattle, choice $5 On to $5 1234
Export AWle, 1111o/ht.... ra 4 80
4 23
Bulieliers' cattle, plete'd Vai; 4 35 4 00
Dutchere, loads ot good, , 4 00 4 23
negOc73r comgio1
Butebers', Interior 2 50 3 ZO
Feeders, heavy' ..... . 4 00 4 25
• Feeders, light 3 25 8 50
ck
mstioiehercsow.;.- 302 0000 403 0023
Calves a ....... . . 2 VO 800
Sheep, ewes: per cwt3 30! :.) 74
Sh• eep, becks, per cwt !..
Sheep, butchers' .. , 3 00 3 50
Lambs, argancliteriegettii.a.u4 00 4 70
4:gelid up to 200 lbs7 25
Hogs, lights, under 160 lbs6 75
Hogs, fats .................0 75
Hogs, sows .. 3 50 4.66
Hogs, stores .. . .. 4 50 • _
Hogs, stags ....... ........ 2 00 ....
EAST nurriLLo CATTLE; lIAltICET.
Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 0.-Cattle-Recelpts.
3 cars; steady to firm, all sold. Yeats and
ealves, easy: good to fancy, 53.75 to 56.50;
light to falrly good, $4.50 to 55.50; grass-
ers. 52 td $3.25.
Sheepand irsy-Recelpts, 3 ears; light
demand
: spring lambs, Choice
loilgina andney,55.5eL$5.50; fair to good, 33
to $5.25; common to good culls, 53.25 to
54.75; choice to extra yearlings. $4.35 to
S4.5); fair to good do53.90 to 54.23;
handy wethers, 53.25 to 50.30. •
CHICAGO LIVE, STOCK.
Chicago, Aug. 6.-Cattle-Rect1pt8 4000;
good to prime steers, nominally, $5.60 to
5%30 uiclettioermelt, t$04.12. to c05450i2sA
;At; heifers, f$'215. to 54.85; canners, 51.50
to 52.40; bulls, $2.25 to 54.30; calves, 53.50
to *5.50; Texas steers, $3 to 54.60.
Hogs -Receipts, 19,000; mixed and butch-
ers', 55.70 to 56; good to choice, heavy,
55.50 to 56.20; rough, heavy, 55.50 to $5.30;
light, 55.85 to 55.90; bulk a sales, 55.80 to
55,9_5.
She -Receipts, 8000; good to choice
wethers, 53.50 to 54; fair to choice, mixol,
$3 t� $3.50; Western sheep, 53.25 to 53.6e;
yearlings, $3.75 to $4.25; native lambs, 52
to $5; Western Iambs, 53.25 to 53.15.
Official receipts and shipments for Mon -
4g. steeteil.Pts3-2-3g.1
4953; hogs, 7251; sheep, 1567.
CHEESE, 3fAHKETS.
• CampbellfordAug. 6.-1265 loxes offer-
ed, balance illy make. Sales d20 to
Cook at 934e; 495 to Magrath at rene; bal-
ance refused 0 7-16c. Board adjourned for
two weeks.
Ingersoll, Onto.,Aug. 6. -At the meeting
of the Cheese Board, held here to -day,
094 boxes colored were offered; Mae bld,
but an sales were made.
The Sensitive Plants.
Plants for the pleasare and in-
stroctiOn of children are often sought
•
ter • The sensitive plant, Mimosa
pudica, is an excellent one for this
purpose. It is easily raised from
seeds sown in spring. The habit is
rather sprawling for a pot plant, but
by a little pinching in management,
compact specimens may be obtained.
Pew pla.ats give more interest to
children in watching the leaves close
or fall on being touched. Even
grown •people have their attention
attracted • by the remarkable motion,.
--Meehan's Monthly.
The End of Fox Bunting.
It Would be useless to deny that
the golden age of fox hunting is
over. Hounds, horees and hunts- ,
men were probably never better than
they are pow. But the face of the
country is changing. The golden age
lasted to the fifties. Now railways
have turned sorne of the fairest dis-
tricts of England into the likeness of
a gridiron. , Wire is everyvvbere be-
ing generally used for fencing , pur-
poses. lifIXO,S must give way before
the increased,- culture of pheasants
for , shooting .e -d inburgh Review.
Li,nalted,
Drown -They say Green. has been
wariciering in his mind lately:
Black -Well, he's safe enough; he
can't get far.
' Torpid Liver
le. DYSPEPSIA. '
110es responsilele for difficult 45'
' .
p ,What lieu:lathe, dizziness, conetipatiota,
1*, What fits of despondeneY, -
rg What fears • at Imaginary evils, condoce
Asith the distress after eating, tbe sourness
the ;stomach, the bad taste in the mouth,
O so forth, to wake the life of the sta-
iner scarcely worth liYing 1
4 , Dyspepsia resulted frora torpid layer in
Atte case of Mrs. Jones, 2320 N. 12th St.,
rbiladelphia, Pa., who was a great sufferer.
' Her statement made in ber 77th year Is
that tree was completely cured et it and all
dit t el t h and pens as othere
IlhaVe been, by a faithful use of
T •oee lelltheee pelsons win) suffer
frem rvonsness, dyspepsia should use
Carter's LittSe Nerve Pills. which are
I ate fen,' ee-elv for sleeps as, ne VOUS,
• s, toe -1 1' Pia e 26 cents.
....-
Melon's Heart and Nerve Pirs cure An-
a nee, Nerve:otos, Saellesaness, Weakness,
Val pxisie, Thi Sobbing, Faint Spe Is, Dizziness
✓ any c•oitlitioe ar ing from fmpoverished,
Blood, oisere oriel N or ves or Weak Heart
.1s.tc101e of nothing a
• 9
loot
A shoe am* look
well, and itt badly --may
and wear badly.
The Shce. with a five
year recol.cl, and the
Makers' peke stamped on
sole is a sans thine' "even
A if Tiou 'he d, tk
uthp siafer Shoe"
•5'. J. SPA.OKMAN, 81:Y:e Local Agent.
Woad' s Sarsaparilla
That :tele on ell the digestive organs,
the
cures dyspepsia, and give permanent vigor
oxtd tone te whole system.
BORN.
nth!, -in Stephen, on Tuestley, July 33 Ib,
wif of M • itichard 1O . 01 a 800.
MARRIED
MO1 i:-Tolarox--At the brides residence.
Tao matte, on Wednerelay. July 31st. Annie
(.. Salton. ro R.. H. Moir. of Ottawa.
CollilLEDICK.-At the Parsonage. Parkhill.
• n slier 201h, to )rev 0 11 and. :ars Cobble -
do 0 eon.
DIED.
PRA RTe- In Exeter. on August 6111.
(trace Vansione. wile of Joseph Peart, aged
St veers
0WA111)---In Osborne. on Augast 3rd, Lottie
1.. tawerd, wife of Thornton agnate, aged
ei years, 2 months and e5 days
N10113 -1u lit, Marys. an July ?Ph. Mrs. A.
Moir, sween years, 2 menthe and 7 days.
Mee; ISIS -In Fullerton. on July 23r0, Sarah
SI Klee, deughter ofv1r. AllleS 31eGeO_
sudook mood Bitters is a medicine made
froln Mew, bark and berbs, and is the best
known rerneey for drspepem, constipation and
biliousnese and will cure all blood diseases
1 10 a common piralle to the eerie, screfte.
ems sore,
FOR OVER FIFTY' YEATtS
01,1) .an ItE7OF.I,V.-Afrs
%Vinslow's Soothing Syrup has been u -ed for
)ver fifty years by milieus of mothers tor tbew
iltildrega wbile teetbing. with Perfett have%
le enotlies dm child, settees tbe gums. allays al
axle, cures wiud colic. and is the best t eutedy
for Diarrhcea. It. is pleasant to the taste. :Sold
tirug,;_rists in every part of the world. 25
vents a bottle. Its value is incalculable Ile
olio and ask far nire Winslow's aeuthing
Syrup and take no other kind.
TEACHER WANTED
For S. S. No. 3, Usborne holding a S-econa
(lees certilleate. Deno will commence Oeo.
let. Applications for the balance of the year
elm Ing salary and experience will be reechod
01 10 sopa 15111. SiLAS, Surma See,
Rirkton P. 0,, On
FARM FOR SALE
The undersigned offers for sale his 100 acre
term, Sot 5, eau. a. township of Ray. The farm
is wen fenced, well utulerdrained, has two
good barns. first class brick house and rt acres
ot orchard, 10 acres hardwood bush, balance
90 ;sores good clay loam. There ore two wells
of splentild water, and is convenient to church
and school. The farm is situated 2/ miles front
Exeter on a first class road. The farm must
be sold as the proprietor is giving up feristing
on account of ill health.
J eitte Noirruceor, Hay P.0
1
FARM FOR SALE
Ono hundred acres of good elay land in the
Township of Hay, in the county of Buren, lot
7. 00.12. Good buildings, consisting of frame
house, bnnk barn, driving shed, and all out-
side buildinge necessary. All clear with the
exception of 4 acres at timber. Four acres of
valuable fruit orchard. Well fenced and under•
drained, mid under a bigh state of cultivation
well watered with a beautiful spring brook.
School and churches very convenient. The
property is 1 1-2 miles north of Dashwood. a
very beautiful locality, Must be 3010 for the
proprietor's health bas failed. Apply to
Gso. DitTETt/CU .
Dashw000, Ont
"_ANADIAN
It# PACIFIC
PARsa LABORERS' EXCURSIONS
will berun from stations in Ontario west of
Toronto, South of main line to Sarnia, .Aug. 7,
to Winnipeg and all stations northwest, west
and. southwest, to Yorkton. SloosejawsEstevan,
for 510,
On complyingwith conditions of certificates
will& will be given to purebasers of one-way
510 tickets. passengers evill be returned to
starting point by same routo on or before
November 10, 1001, on payment of Sla Tickets
are second Mess.
Apply for pamphlet giving full particulars,
to your nearest agent, or A. H. NOTMAN, as.
sistartt general passenger agent, 1. King st.
east Toronto.
This signature is on every bee of the genuine
Laxative Broino.Quinine Tablets
the remedy that cures a cold in one day
Exeter, JINX 24th1901.
... 6310 64
28 to 29
3$to 40
-60 to 60
-14 to 11
.....10 to 10
...... 8 to 8
5 to 5
. 5 to 5
7 to 7
16 to 17
Wheat per bushel
Oats
Barley.......
Peas
Butter
Eggs
Turkeys ...
Geese
Chickens per fo
Ducks
Wool
Dried Apples..
Pork live weight -- .- 27.00 to 57.10
• •••
A RED HOT SEASON.
During the hot summer' season the blood
gets overheated, the drain on the system Is
severe and the appetite is Often lost, Bur-
dook Blood Bitters purifies and invigorates,
the blood, tones up the system and testores
lost appetite.
It seems as if tl e melon fly has
mastered Wm. Warnock, the cham-
pion squash raiser, as it is reported
that the insect deetroyed the buds
that should have developed into big
squashes.
In the Supreme Court Tuesday, Mr.
Justice E. Magher dismissed the Pic -
ton election petition against 0. H.
Tupper.
IAw
if OU
are lean -unless you are lean by
nature --you need more fat.
You may eat enough; you ate
Losing the benefit of it.
Scott's Araulsion of cod-liver oil
will help yeti digest your food, and
bring you the plumpness of health.
gspecially true of babies:
8850 roe nets MAIIAPI.D AND TRY LT.
1017 & sieweak. ememteve.
*too; an
m ONEY TO LO,AN.
."
Sutherland Innen Col LTD
i
arsiget ullhovnentaommiote,d,pinarivgaoteguopyrstyfoai rtw:svett. .4.,_.,E pitzp4RE") TO pultolusii
rates of interest. I
Exeter, ,
DICKSON 8s CARLI,NO
riONEY TO LOAN,
I leave a large amonut ot Private runde to
loan on farm and village propertio at new sates
of interest.
F. W. GliADMAN,
Berrister settee St. Exeter.
MED10.41:4
1
fl It. J. B. RIVERS, M. B. TOIIONT01.1NI
TERM...XS OLD. C.11, Tibias* Univer
Wes (iffice-Crediton, Ont..
W.OWNING D.. Al. C
t..f • P. S B.RGre dente Vietotio &Diversity
office anti residence, loonnite
go n Labor
ten?, Exeter.
LEGAL.
DICKSON & CARLING,
sorristers solicitors Notaries, conven.acers.
,Oommissiepere eolicitore for the Molsens
Menee tolscan at lowest notes ot letsrese
OFFICE:a-MAIN STittglie =EISA,
2. R. C.SRS.IXO, B. Se le, ateneeet
W GLADMAN
(Successor to Elliott ,F4 Gladman)
Barrbter, Solicitor, Notary
Conveyancer, Etc.
amity to loan en Farm and village
properties at Lowest rates of interest
OFFICE MAIN STREET EXETER
•••••••••••,.
Tf KINSMAN. L. D.S. AND
aso DR. A A. KINSMAN, L.
D. 8.13. D. S.. Honor Gradvate
of Tereeto University. Dentist.
Teeth extracted without pain or
bad eller effects, 011ie° in Fan -
sone, blocks West eitle of Main
1. Exeter'
• ......,.•••••••••••,a,•••••••••••T•••••••••••••••,•••••
. „
••••••••••.A,..111)..}naa•
IIw•
• • •••
• • •••
EITHER STANDMG. Olt IN Tait
Loos,
11A. ANDERSON. (a. 0. S.
DENTIST, i
Honor Graduate of the Temente Vutvereity
and Rept College et Dotal Surgeons of
°made, with honors Also Postgraduate of
chicage Sehoonof Prosthetic Demistre twith
honorable mention.
Everything known to the Dental Pelee:ion
&mein this ottlec. Bridge work. crowns, ea
lunduunegold atd vulcanite plates all done ie
the 11C0.14.t 'Isomer pesoule. A perk -elle. .
ti...
bausit,,.:, anact.ii.clic irt,td Aociz. s rallextrae. 13 uggies Buggies
Ofilce one deer :•oute of eartirg Broa store
E toter, Opts
Apply to
E C Kessel
Il'OBEMAN, HosaTElt, ON
Exeter
Roller Mills.
Highest price, pAic1or clean
red wheat.
Large stook of mill feed on
hand.
Wood Wanted!
J. cobblediok 0, Son
TWEEP:a....
At .Corst Nice"'
FOR THE NEXT la DAYS.
A, good Assortment
ALSO HEAVY PANTINGS
AT COST.
W 'ant to elear these lines at Once
W *JOHNS,
The Testier
TEL WATERLOO :t1UTUAL J. F. Russel
llifinitANC ('(30 .
Eetnbliettett L n 1.803.
UEAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, OtIT
31,1e Company bra been over Twenty-ein
eters in successful oper elan in %Vesture
mantle, mei centimes to Insure:toeing Wen
dell (leehy Inre. buildiugs, 11283(15032ara1tiel ants mei all ether descriptioas of
h Ingraide
protons: lidending insurers levee
1.1me
,4 _lon of insuring on the PreatiumNoteir
tett. to tele.
Derive tile past teu years this cotapaur hes
int al 51SOS r oi Wei. covering property to the
u
see nt e40,672.g1te mud ride In MOW alone
17CSaft .01.
Abe.. 1l, 8170,100.00 consistine of Cash
in 1121 h Goveremen Deposit and the etnasses-
eed Poobium Notes en baud ;suit force.
J.1).1% A OLD., rresideut ;0 *1. 'room&
seerstray ; .1. IS II mite. Inspector. CHAS.
BELL, Alec nt for Exeter and vicinity.
TEACHER WA T
of
u
Oat. Exeter,
for Sebool Section No. 8, TONVIIStiluu
c -hard Hamilton. Sow Treasurer Grand Bend
Applicants address any communications to
RiStephen, duties to commence Aug. 1011a, 1
Two Doors South Town Ball,
Exeter, Apr111001.
Allapplionts mustappear personally,
wishes to announce to the public
thathe has for sale a large assortment
of First -Class Buggies, irieluding
SQUARE BOX BUGGIES,
INIIEADOb. and
PHAETONS
up.to.clate,
The rigs:are of the latest style, hest
workmanship and perfect finish.
AGENT FOI, WALKER-
VILLE WAGGONS.
GET MY PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY
ssel
FARM 'FOR SALE.
The undersigned offers Lot la con. 5, Town-
ship Stephen, for sale, at a reasonable price.
There is situated on the premises a dwellingi
good bank barn. orchard, 113 wen fenced and
drainedeond fast -class clay for the manufac-
ture of either brick or the.
For particulars apply to
43- ey-3m JACOB SWEITZER,
Prediton P.O.
A GC OD INVESTMENT.
Fauson's brick block and dwelling, in Exeter,
for sale. The brick block is evell situated, on
Main street, is 70x55 feet, three storeys, and
contains fouretores, offices and halls, all leased..
This is the best business stand in town. The
dwelling is brick of two storeys and contains 10
rooms, ts admirably adapted for a boarding
house. The property must be disposed of.
Terms easy, apply to IL L. ransom Exeter.
Ont.
pROPERTIES FOR SALE
Brick hciuse situated on Andrew St„ Exeter,
containing ten rooms. with from one to ten
acres of band; also tares brick dwelling(oceu-
pied by owner) containing twenty rooms, good.
furnace, with from one to ten acres of land,
good orehard and bank barn One hundred
acres of land partly cleared. small house and
stable, situated two and a ball miles west of
Exeter. Twentydive acres of good land in
Hay Township. Several choice building lots
situated in pleassub locality. Terms easy.
.Apply to,
a N. HOWARD, Extrela P. •
VOTERS' LIST 1901.
Municipality of Township of Usborne,
County of Huron.
NOTICE is hereby given that I have trans-
mitted or delivered to the persons mentioned
in Secs 8 and of THE ONTARIO VOTERS,
LIST ACT, the copies required by said sec-
tions to be so transmitted or delivered of the
List made oursuant to said Act, ot all persons
eppearing by the last revised -Assessment Roll
of the said Municipality, at Elections for Mem-
bers of the Legislative Assembly and at Muni-
cipal Electioes, and that the said List was first
posted at my office on the 30th day of July, 1901
and remains- there for inspeetien.Electors
are called upon to examine the saidList and if
any omissions or any errors are foetid therein,
to take immediate proceedings to have the
said errors corrected according to law.
FRANCIS MORLEY.
at Clerk of the Township of Usborne
Dated Whalen, this 30th day of July' A. D.
London, Huron and 13rucc
GorNe Nouerx-- Passenger.
London. depart........ 98.3105 A, M. 04.040P.m.
ix01 upneptreeafinlei . ... . . . 50
a 5
Exeter
Henson
Clioton 999;885041 066:.33122"
10.15 6 55
GotWtectiteottliaomasLatTive Passenger
11.10 8.00
oWintngolinam, depart . 6 53 A. et. 3.15 P. .
ii
7.47 4.25
ntiopneseann ... ...
... 88:16 4.
2,2 50527
Ethlxiecterelioeld 8 0o 4.49
i
835 5.14
Centralia ... ....... 8.46 5.25
Leedom arrive . 9.37 • 6.12 •
To make money it is necessaryto have a,
clear, bright brain, a coolhead free trom -oain,
ate. strong vigorous nerves, Milburn's Heart
and Nerve Pills invigorate and brighten the
brain, strengthen 1 he nerves and removes all
heart, nerve and brain troubieo
.••••••••••••••••••••
C1213DITOIN
oiler Mills
INMAN
Our mill has been remodell-
ed with the Gyrator System
and people tell us they now
make better bread than bak-
er's when using our flour.
Gristinu an Glioppillo
Done Proffintill.
11 SWEITZER,
INMARDIDCDROMNIININ
pUnLIC NOTICE -
Notice is here -by given that, Wm. Kabelinan
my step -son having left his home without
consent. I will not be responsible for any debts
contraoted by him.
Dashwood. June, 27th, 1901.
ei•••••••••••••••••••••••••
F.R.
lElargaitis•in
F;icycles.
•
Having secured a quantity
of high grade wheels at much less
than regular prices, we have de-
cided to give our customers the
benefit of the deal and will sell
while they last a wheel of the
hi
1901, gh es
t quality at the price you
are generally asked for one of
third quality. Come 'quick for
at the rate they are going they
will only last a few days.
Don't forget our Pianos, O'r:
gans and Sewing Machines are
the output of the best -houses in
the trade.
We have nobby carriages
and waggons for the children:
give us a Call.
S. .MARTIN„