HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1912-2-22, Page 4EXETER
T`1'9
T7 RSDAY b`
TT;ti 'z $21 t
Granton
Coal
We have on hand a good
supply of freshly screened
Den L. & W.
Scranton
Coal
Woven Fence
It will pay any farmer
contemplating fence building
to see me before placing his
Order for Woven Fence.
A.
J. 6tatortliu.
G•RANTON.
• ANGELS
In the did days Gad rent his angels
sift
To men in threshing floors, to wo-
men pressed
With daily tasks; they came to tent
and orate
A• nd whispered words of blessing and.
of rest.
.Not mine to guess what shape thelse,
angels wore,
ttlor tell whab voice they spoke, •nor
with what grace.
They brought 'the dear love down•
that evermore.
Julies lowliest mils. its bent obid-
i • ing place
But in these days I know my angels
well;.
/They brush my garments on the com-
mon Way,
They take my hand and very shortly
tell
gore bit of comfort in the waning
day. _ -1
And though their angel names.- I do
not ken,
Though in their faces human love I
read, '
They are God given to this world of
men
'
Tad Bent to bless in i t its
Tohours of
need.
Child. mothers dearest wife, brave
hearts that take
• rough and bitter cross, and help
us bear
Its heavy weight when strength is
like to break,
Gold bless you all, our angels una-
ware! •
r —Margaret E. Sangster.
BREVITIES
A deputatio'n one hundred strong
xxpresenting the W, C. U. invaded,
Oremier Borden's office at Ottawa
on February 15th and asked, that the
•Groaernment enaot a law prohibiting
in Canada the, sale and manufacture
of cigarettes.
* * * • a * ' O
"Does your wife, go to services to
see what other woman wear 3"
`No" replied Mr, Cumrox. "We
cue now sufficiently prosperous for
her to go to let other women sea
svi:at she weare"-Waahingtah Star
* . . . R
It is announced at the Hague that
the :third Peace Ccln€erence of the
Ilepwers wilt ,;lot aasomble there be-
fore 1915. It is hoped that the Car-
elegie Palace of Peace will be ready
for opening about the middle of 1913
"I am all right now,
thanks to Dr. Miles'
Heart Remedy.",
Y ,
The same relief is ready for you.
,hire
sure ou you do not needit?
Y
if Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy helped
Charles Holmes, why won't it help
you;'
"1 was troubled with heart disease
and after reading about Dr. Miles'
Heart Remedy, I got a bode. Be-
fore .I got the Heart. Remedy I had
to sit up most of the night, and felt
very c
bad at my stomach. 'Whatever
lwould eat made me feel worse, and
say heart beat very fast. But thanks
to De. Miles' Heart .Remedy, 1 am
all rightnow. I eat
g,
cod sleep
good, and feel like a new mart, al-
though I am almost 68 years old. I
have been a soldier in the late war
of the rebellion, and was badly
wounded." CHARLES HOLMES,
Private Co. B, 54th lee Y. Infantry
Volunteers, Walton, Delaware Co.,.
Dr. Meg' Heart Remedy
Is kept in thousandt of homes as a
Ment always to be relied upon in
time of need.
°Sold by ell I7ruelolsts If the first
bottle falls to benefit, your money
is returned. Ask any Drtaggicst.
MILS MEDICAL. 00., Toronto, Iran.
Sir James . the Premier.
of Ontario announced n the Wee•gisla-.
tare 'that the Goverment would ask
authority to borrow a sum of mon-
ey ,not• exceeding five million dollars
towards the ,settlement, colonization
tend , building of . necessary road., in
New Ontario.
• e a to 0
A little chap was tdgning along with
his parents,, at a friend's hoars,e,and
looked very ,mpertaat.
• The soup, which was very thin,,
was pas;,ed around, hat .fgahult was
observed trifling with his spoon and
hardly tasting it.
The hos tests said; "are you
hungry Joshua is " •
"Yes" replied, Jesbua, "but Pen net
thirsty" --T, P's lalagaztne.
O A Q. ! R.
mot,
The Anglican Synod of the Diocese
of Montreal, at . its recent meeting
In Affcutreai. discussed the Ne•Temere
decree. ,andhaquestion involved
t by
recent udIcal decIIns. finallylly ad-
apting eselutioinproposed bythe
Rev, Canon Troop calling for the
plaei:ng of the rnarriage laws •en a
uaiform basis throughout Canada.
• * r I *.*
SerioUis floods are reported from
all parts of Spain and ,Portugal.
Macy rivers and email, streame have
overflowed their banks. inundulatina
entire villages. All oommunicatione
by rail. water, ar highway a5 inter-
rupted and this fact ie preventing
the sending et help to the :stricken
towns. The King and Queen • of
Spain are visiting' the ;stricken dia.
trials, while the Portuguese Cham-
ber has. voted $500,000 to aid thet vis-
aims of the disaster.
r * * * *
A passenger on a New York -Cleve-
land sleeper en awakening in ' the
morning found ,ander his berth one
bleak and one brqwn shoe. He called
the porter and directed his attention
to the error. The Hotter scratched
his wooly head in utter bewilderme at
"Well" said the exasperated pea-
senger, "What's •the rnatter1"
"Now if that don't beat 011' ex-
claimed the porter, "Dat's de second
time dis naoSnin' dal dat, mistake's
happened."—Illinois Central Employ-
ees' Magazine.
• so A R ;I•
A conference of the representatives
of the whole of the 800,000 coal min-
ers in the United Kingdom, which
was held. in London on Tuesday, con-
firmed the decision reached during
the recent ballot to bring about s
national stoppage of work in the coal
mines on Feb. 29. unless in th:.
meantime the mine owners accept
the principle of a minimum wage for
all men and boys employed under_
ground. Upwards of 40,000 coaler
employed in the mines itt Derbyshire
have handed in their notices to quit
work. and by Feb. 15. all the ;nein
employed in the mines throurho t
the country will have followed sait
It is hoped that a way out . of they
difficulty will be found before ex-
treme measure_ are taken.
a s K * * * *
Mr. Winston Churchill. in a speech
at Glasgow on Feb 9th, before th;
Clyde Navigation trust. spoke at
length on ;the, subect of the German
awl British tree. rivalry 'taking the
view that while naval power was nee
essary to the exestence of Great Brit-
ain. it was a luxury for Germany
Touching on prospective naval in-
creases in the two countries, be said
that there was no need for excite
went or panic. Great Britain had
the situation well in hand, and
there was no• chanes whatever
of her being overtaken en nava;
streng,b. All the the money all .the
ships and all the men that were nec-
essary
eees_ary Geula be uuppli•ed by Great.
Britain Mr. Churchill said that ht
woul- welcome a retardation of nav-
al construction. bat if there was to
be an increase of naval strengtb
the continent it would only result is
foreign powers being further outdis-
tanced by the measures with the
British Government was ready tr
take which would enable Great Brit.
ain to pursae her path 'through th.
world not seeking a quarrel and
fearing none. Mr. Churchill's speech
is thought in. London to be part c
a plan to encourage a belief in for
useiesisneas of Germany's trying tc.,
outstrip her rival in sea power.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought!
Bears the
Signature of
Buy Florida Land==w
oy�
Because
1 itis very productive. 2 It is not
hot in summer and their winter,
is June cv a
e that
3Youri
bre ]clings do not, cast:. r.ne.
quarter , of Northern Fared
Buildings.
4 You sieve your large winter fuel bill'
X adoi tv •
ret L work all Etitrimt.r t
l o
winter your Jive stock.
0 it growscrops the year round;
THREE CROPS in the year.
7 Your croon ,erre toady to rnarke'
whcu bier list of the continent
is inthe dead of winter.
8 Splendid markets.- 0 Regular and
plentiful: rain fall.
10 Pare water easily obtained.
11 Healthful[
cl4r rt ete--Cures r'heunya•
tisni gond ttxlierctrlosis.
Wk; -'Haug 12 400 Ateinn Fort Sim.'
Aaa Wrenn; A,7 1 to Minus OF V,A.IL.
WAY STA'rtuv.
Write for Pali Pertictila,rs and
IIIuett:edHcl Literature.
WOWS kS ZAst"
Address:
Florida Ct igni. t t'
r z�l lalt
21 Qvni'rl Sr. 11oltxn, Thsattrz, Olyx'
MISSION FIELD HERO
DR. GRIFFITH JOHN IN ENGLAND
AFTER 66 YEARS.
Valiant Representative of Christianity
in Chinese Field Returns to His
Native Shores Broken In Health
at the Age of 81 Years --Translated
Scriptures into °Chinese •-e Never
Lost His Optimisrn.
When come years ago the Congregat-
tional Union of Ragland and Wales
elected the Rev. Dr. Grimtie Jolla,
the„ famous missionary, to the presi-
dential chair, and invited him home,
s that
V they might show their appre-
ciation of his magnificent work in the
China mission field, the veteran mis-
sionary, with eharacteristic self-efface-
ment, deolined the invitation, saying
the demands of his work would
not
permit t ham to travel hoEne. The other
day, after being engaged, die C11tina
for 56 years, he, reached his native..
shores, his work accomplished and
his health broken. Now a grey-haired
veteran in his 81st year, Dr. Griffith
Sohn hss retired from a sphere in
which his high character and excep-
tional mental and physical qualities
canalilea him to wield a tremendous
and flee -retelling influence. For fifty
years tis remarkable man has 100 -
sod in the mission field of Hankow.
Ile reached there in 1861, after the
Taiping rebels had just destroyed the
city. On the 50th anniversary of his
arrival he left for England, as th
new revolutionaries were on the point
of destroying Hankow again. On the,
voyagep to England—which he has not
visited since 1882—he celebrated his
80th birthday, in, the company of his
son-in-law and daughter, Rev. 0. and
Mrs. Sparham, themselves missionar-
ies, who are his fellow -passengers.
Dorn in Swansea in • Deoexber, 1831,
Griffith John early. joined Ebenezer
Church, and at the age of 14 he
preached his first sermon at a prayer
meeting in a Private house. In 1850.
he entered Brecon College, where he
pay. DR. GRIFFITH JOHN.
earned many distinctions. Subsequent -
1y he was accepted by the London
Missionary Society. He married the
daughter of David Griffiths, one of
the pioneers of the Madagascar, mis-
sion, and on May 21, 1855, with his
wife and the Rev. A. and Mrs Wil•,
liamso he sailed for Shanghai, 'one
of the five ports opened to foreigners
by the treaty of Nanking thirteen
years earlier. He quickly, mastered
the language, and set himself to study.
the national character •of a people
whom he described as "the most in-
different; cold, callous, . and irrelig-
ious" of any he had ever seen or, read
of. He made innumerable journeys
into the interior to extend the scope
of his mission. His departure from
Shanghai a few years later synchron-
ized with the Taiping rebellion, in
which he was greatly interested. Once,
far inland on the banks of the Yellow
River, he was in danger of his life,
but he saved himself by the simple de-
claration, "I am an..Englis'hman." In
1861 he settled at Hankow, ,where he
remained until, a few weeks ago, he
left China for .the last time. After
many depressing experiences, he sac-
ceeded in founding this centre of com-
merce a remarkable mission,' which by
1905 had a churele .membership of
6,500. The foreign `in'erchaiit commun-
ity generously supported his : enter-
prise. He continued his practice of
visiting towns and villages within a
few hundred miles radius of Hankow,
and established the society's work" in
Chung -King, Sze Chuen, and Annan.
The opening up of the great province
of Hunan, with its . twenty oddMil-
lions of people, realized one of the
chief ambitions of the missionary's
life. Stories are told of the fidelity
of many of his converts, desphe per.
secution ona widespread scale, and
teachers
t
native t
sanumerousrmerous did the nat1
become that: six years ago a college
was founded. for their training. Not-
withstanding many hardships, such as
the destruction of the Hankow mis-
son station b Dr. John never
f ods
y fl p
,
Surrendered to pessimism, and his en-
forced retirement removes one of the
really great ;nen who have sacrificed
irherneeleee op the altar of missionary
enterariee, One, side of his work needs
special mention. He translated many
books, and established the Central
China; Religious Tract Society, which
has distributed millions of . publica-
tions anioug the Chinese. It was his
translation of the Scriptures that
gained him the honorary degree of
D,D., conterred by Edinburgh Tfriiv'er-.
Sity in 1860.
Cairo's Books.
Books printed in Cairo are read by
the camp fres of the Sahara, in the
market of Timbuktu, under the very
shadoWs of the Kaaba and are treas•
tired in the mosques of ,lava, and west-
ern Chvna,
A WIZARD OF FliANGE
SIR RODOLPHE FORGET' REPUT-
ED TO HAVE GOLDEN TOUCH.
One of Canada's Newly Created
Knights Bachelor Is a Busy Man,
But Has Found. Time to Devote
to Politics and the Militia—Start-
ed
t
ed Broker Business With His Un-
cle, Senator Forget.
Mr.. Rodolphe Forget, of Montreal,
who did not get into Mr. ilcrden'e
Cabinet, but who got a knighthood
later on, is not a son, but a nephew
of -Senator Louis. J. Forget. Neither
of them had much money to start
with, but L. J. Forget & Co. became
the .biggest brokerage firm in .Canada.
They organized the Montreal Light,
Heat & Power Co., re-orgaiii'zed 'the
Navigation Y:
Richelieu & Ontario Na 1
x v 1, Co.,
and madegreat name for themselves
..s, a s lv
QUEBEC MAN HONORED
PREMIER GOUIN TAKES GEO, E.
AMYOT INTO COUNCIL.
Prominent Manufacturer of the An-
Giant Capital Who Will Succeed
Hon, T. B. Gareau In the Upper
House of the Province, Is Interest-
ed Itt Many Concerns, Both Com-
mercial and Philanthropic.
George E. Amyot, the well-known
manufacturer •of the ; ancient capital,
has been appointed by the Quebec
Government to the Legislative Comi-
cal of the Province of Quebec as sue-
oessor to the late Hon. T. D. Gareau.
The new. legislative councillor is one
of the most progressive and enter-
prising of Quebec merchants and the
announeenlent of his elevation to the
Queb
ec Upper Chamber was as fittin 1v
made byGouin Premier ler Gou n at the recent.
SIR RODOLPHE FORGET, LIS.
generally as promoters and stock mar-
ket operators. The Senator furnished
the ballast and the younger Forget
supplied the youthful daring of the
firm, • and they made a great team.
The partnership, however, was dis-
solved in 1907, and since then both
men have been very successful, each
in his own way.
Sir Rodolphe Forget has been a
member of the House of Commons
continuously since 1904, and has tak-
en an active interest in military work.
Heia fifty,years of age, but could pass
for thirty-five iii half light. Electric
in movement, shrewd in mental equip-
ment, vigorous in physique, he is a
conspiouous example of Lower Cana-
dian thriftiness. He is probably the
boldest of. Montreal stock -brokers, and
"everything he. touches: turns to
gold."
The honor of Knight Bachelor which
he has received is now bprne by twen-
ty-eight
weety-eight Canadians.
Adventure With Runaway.
The Earl of Enniskillen has enter-
ed upon his sixty-sixth year. He is a
descendant of John Cole, M.P., who
for his warm support of King William
III. received large grants of escheat-
ed land in Ulster.
The Coles are noted for their stat-
ure. The late earl was six feet seven
inches in height.
Theen re e v
s t pen's love of hunting
p
g
has led him into .some tight places,•
In 1897, whilst driving a pair of
horses to the meet of the North
Cheshire they topk fright and bolted,
and his lordship stuckto the reins
until the carriage was overturned in
a ditch and received very serious in-
juries. Later he was returning from
a meet when his horse was caught
between two vehicles, and he was
thrown, one of the vehicles passing
over his legs, causing, however, only
some severe bruises. He has semi
service with the. Inniskilling Dra-
goons and the Inniskilling Fusiliers,
two regiments with fine fighting
records.
Among his lordship's treasures at
his lovely Irish home in Fermanagh,
are a couple of cannon mounted in
front of the house, which are said to
have been Used at the battle of the'
Boyne.
A Manx Cobbler.
On the Isle of Man—still a priori•
tive place—you find the village cob-
bler. He has a last for every man,.
every boy in -the place, and centuries
before the card index system came
: vogue the village cobbler of Man
•:-ceded only to .be told by Shamus
that he wanted a pair of boots and he
•cent to the back of his shop and
.rodueed'the lasts and patterns. Of
_ aui.'se with children feet would
change, and so now and then he re-
measured. The village shoeshop in
.i Man town is apt to be the rallying
place of the gossips. It's pleasant
i `alt and gossip while a man makes
a shoe and watch the piece of foot:
weal: shaping.
A Pensioned Tramp.
Wiiliam H. Davies, recently planed
'Al England's civil pension list with a
!':erasion of $250 a year, is probably the
rst actual tramp in the history of
that country to be so honored. Davies
is a Welshman by birth and a tramp.
by preference, having lived the life
for many years in America and Eng.
land. He is minus a foot, the re-
sult of a stolen train ride. After years
of vagabondage he turned his ' eaten,
tion to literature and, following many,
bitter disappointments, arrived.' lie
has written both verse and prose.
independent of Cables,
London papers say that Great Eri•
twin is to, be the only nation abso-
lutely in.depetident;of cable communis
cationi h any t pail of the globe,: •a
result to be brought about by a chain
of world encircling 'wirelC3s statioiydi.
GIToRGE R. A YOT,
baulyuet in celebration of the twenty-
fifth anniversary of the foundation of
one of his industries.
The new legislative councillor was
born at Quebec, Jan. 28, 1854, and is
a son of Dominuque Amyot, and he
was educated in the schools of his
native town and started his success-
ful business career as a commercial
traveler, and in 1886 started the manu-
facture of corsets andaper boxes.
He is now president of the Dominion
Corset Co. and also president of the
Quebec Paper Box Co. In 1894 he also
started the Fox Head Brewery and
is proprietor of that big eoncern as
well as director of the National Brew-
eries Limited. . He is a director of
the Quebec Exhibition Co. and of the
Home Life Association as well as of
the Quebec Technical School. He is
a governor of Laval University Funds,
and ex -president of the Quebec Board
of Trade and ex -president of the Cana-
dian Manufacturers' Association. He
has taken an active interest in mili-
tary affairs for a number of years
and is a lieutenant -colonel in the
Sixty-first Regiment..•
He is married to Marie Jsephine
Tanquary and has five children, two
sons and three daughters, and is a
Roman Catholic and a Liberal. He is i
a member of . several of the leading
clubs of the ancient capital as the
Garrison and Hunt Clubs.
How "Willie" Won His V.C.
"Willie" McBean; V.C., who enlist-
ed in the 93rd Highlanders a bare-
footed .lad in 1835, rose through all
the intermediate grades to. the com-
mand of his regiment, and died a
major -general. In connection with
this distinguished soldier's promo-
tion, says W. Harvey in "Scottish
Life and Character," it is recorded
that he remained a lanoe-corporal for
seven years. "Willie" got his V.C.
for killing no fewer than eleven muti-
neers, one after the other, at the
storming of Luck -now; and in connec-
tion with its bestowal an anecdote is
still current in the regiment.
Of course, 'there was a general par-
ade of "every man who wore a but-
ton," and Sir R. Garrett, who pinned
the decoration on - the hero's breast,
made the customary little speech, in
the course of which he alluded to ;the
episode as "a good day's work."
`Toots, toots, man," replied "Wil-
lie," quite forgetting he was on par-
ade, and perhaps a little piqued at
his perforrnanoe being spoken of as a
day's work.
"Nu Speliin."
The calendar of the Provincial Nor-
mal College, Nova Scotia, and the offi-
cial "Journal of Education" which ac-
companies it, are printed in' accord-
ance with certain of the recommenda-
tions of the Simplified Spelling Board
of the United States and the Simpli-
fied Spelling Society of Great Britain.
Nova Scotia is the first
state of
the Empire to adopt the new forms.
The United States "Education Re-
view" already uses'"thru" and a lew.
other innovations.
Wesley Was an Early Riser.
-John Wesley was a strong advocate
of early rising, which he asserted was
beneficial to weak eyes. "When I was
Young," he stated in a sermon on
"The Duty 'and Advantage of Early'
Rising," "my sight was very weak,'
but it is stronger now than forty yarn
ago. I impute this principally' to th
blessing of God, Who fits us for
what-
ever he calls us to do," but undoubt-a
edly the outward, means which he
blessed was rising early every morn.
tng.—London Chronicle,
Clerk Helps -Scholars.
Among the voluntary helpers in the
work of aiompiling the Oxford Eng.
Ilsli dictionary, the most learned att.'
thority on words and phrases, of the
Elizabethan period, according to D ;
tL. t1. ,Miers, principiil .of.London not.
s -city, was a railwalr clerk.
Farm for Sale
SOUTH HALF LOT 22, 'CCN.. 1,
IXS13ORNE, hall way between lien-
saJi and. Exeter, conbainin ' 00 a.creis.:
On the premises 'there e9 •a frame
dwelling house, barn and stable 3640
Good orchard of 100 "trees of chofoe.
frdit,,'2 good spring wells, ' 16 acres
in greets anal balance ready for :crop,
This is, a.igood ,Farm well underdrain-
ed and must bo sold. If nqt Sold Jeri
vately on or before the, Sbb of March
1912 it will be' sold with the';shat-
t5els by public auction. on 10tll of
March. Fora 'terms and particulars
apply to'T'hotnas Cameron. Auet,,Fir.
quhar. John Coleman, •Prop,'
Clearing Sale
of HOUSEHOLD EFFEC'1S.
Mr. B. S. ,Phillips has been instruct-
ed to sell by Public Auction :alt; the,
Residence of f Mrs. James Snell, Main'
.street EXETER, ER anSA SATURDAY,
FEB'Y. 24th, at one p. m, 'sharp the
following HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS -
1 dret(ser and stand; 3 stands; 1
Wardrobe; "1 bedroom get; 2 feather
beds; 2 mattresises; 1 bureau; 1
bed stead; 2 bed springs; 1 sideboard
' 1 couch; 1 sofa,; 2 centre 'tabled; 1
large centre table; a looking ;lase -
es; 1 kitchen table; 1 dining -room:
table; 1 coal or wood cook stpve,
neai4y new; 1 coal heater, with oven
2 small wood stovers; 2 rocking
chairs; 6 parlor chairs; 0 dining -room
chairs; 12 kitchen chairs; 1 commode
chair; 12. chamber sets; 12 :floor mats
B setts china dishes; 3 pair curtains,
three pair window iblind;a; 1'
clathes horse; 1 •Brussels parlor car-
pet; 1 dining -room rag carpet; (2
beds room rag oarpetis; 12 picturcli;
6 lamps, a doz. glass sealers;'1 parer
rack; 1 case flowers; 7 pair of pile'
lows; 1 flower box; a number of
&ease planets; 3 doz. jars of plums.
raspberries. etc.; cook stove Lurni•.'
tare a quantilty of onions; 1 flower
stand; 1 (seep ladder; 1 Ishorlt ladder
1 long ladder; ti barrels,' 1. 1 -horse
roller; 1 wheelbarrow; 1 single cut=
ter; 1 rug; 1 grindstone; 1 iselt pari
rows; a quantity of lumber; a quare-
tiltty of coal; ,glassware, china, ,flowc-
er,-pots and other ariticlwe too mum -
crows to .menition. All in that house
will positively Abe sold.
TERMS—CASI3
Mrs. Jamets Snell, 13; lssiPhillipis
Proprietress. Auctioneer.
Auction Sale
Cf DAIRY COWS And HORSES: alt
the METRO pOLITAN HOTEL.. EX-
ETER. on. SATURDAY, MARCH, :2
1912 at .one o'clock p. ln., sharp.
130 Choice New .Milohers or Spring-
ers. UIolistei'r and ;Durham Grades,
Also a few Nast aloes young ,horsele
These core: are •a,n exceptionalliy
fine :lot of dairy cows, all young and
in good condition 'and should cam
mand-the attention of the, best farm,
ers and dairymen. Partial' wantia,I
choice cows should attend this sale
TERMS—Six months eight on
furnishing approved joint notes or
six per saint off for cash.
Thos. Cameron and, 13. S. Phillips
Auctioneers. Campbell & Dow. Pro.
Auction Sale
CHOICE YOUNG 'HORSE'S ,
And CAT7,'iLE.
The undersigned auctioneer has
been instrucbe.d to !sell by p,iblic
auction on LO'.l' 7; SOUf1:iII• TJIASeES.
ROAD, USBORNE, eh" TUESDAY,
MATICIH 5 th,. 1912, at one o'clock'
sharp the folio -wing stock, vis;—' B
brood mares 4 Sand! 5 years 'old, a;g-
ri,cultural; 2 mares '3 iyearrl old, ag-
ricultural; 3 geldings d years old.
agr.'icultaral; 3 p eldings 2, yews' old
agricultural;. 2 fillies. 2 years old,
agricultural; 1 sucking filly agricul-
tural; 1: general purpose mare 2
years old.
CATTLE -1 renewed cow: 2 cows
due at time of sale.; 5 cows due in-
March
in14farch A:prii; 4 heifers 13 years
old. 'nearly fat; 4 steers 13 years
old; 14 heifers 2 +yearly,old; 10 steers?
2 years old; 5'calveis.
t IOGS-4 brood sows •due in Marchi
April and May
The above mentioned horses'; e' an
exceptio'rually fins lot, and .thee Cattle
are all in fine 'condition. All' win.
pcisitively be sold without reserve as•
the proprietor is 'sihort of winger feel,
aiud bas no grass,
TERMS -8 months' erediit. on furn
ishing. approved„ •joint nates. J per
cent. 'per annum aft for cash.
.ro;h,n Ratcliffe. Thos. Catneron
Pro,p- •Ana., •
Do you know that more; real danger,
,lurks in a common; cold than any
other of the minor ailments? The
safe way is to take Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. a thoroughly reliable
preparation. and rid yourself of the
cold as quickly as possible. This
remedy is for mala by all dealers.
SETA
TRAINS
Al
NS
—TO --
MANITOBA, ALBERTA
SASKATCHEWAN
KAT
TC
NEWA_.
. N
Theo
arslythrough line
LOW COLONIST -RATES
For settlers Iteveflfrg
with iivestock end
demi
Special Trains
Will leave Torun o
Each TUESDAY
MARCH and APRIL.
10.20 P.M,
Settled and families
without livestock
should use
Regular Trains
Leaving Toronto
10.20 P:M. pally
`Through Colonist
and somata 8fooptlre
Colonist Cars on all Trains
ns
No charge tor berths
rs
Through Trains Toronto
Winnipeg and West
Art ear C.P.R. Agent far copy of Satire;*.' Guide"
Farm for SAO
Vet, Sale at once—'200 none Stanldp
3rdloon., KI miles from Clinton, 'Sohtol•
40t rods, !In good state of celtivatioow
100 acres La grata. 10 acres alfalfa.
12 . acres bush. rest bay and pas ams
Stone house. '1 y1 o storey, ria to root,
cement door in cellar. furnace elate
telephone, One barn 85x56. wind'.'
pumper. 'Wei.w ei Ics. Stabling
head cattle anti 9 horses. ipeco
barn 56x40. Itay 'barn 50x35. Cr
solei with torm if desired. Apply
Ildattoolm 141oEwen, Box 56. Clintiifn, ' s
Farm For Sale.
For Sale— Earns containing
acres of 'first class land at tiee, ere
age "of Woofiharn; Good, two-sbor
frame house; bank barn 334 x
with up-to,-da'te stable. foundat'ft
built" about a year ago. 33uildi3(
c ent throughout. em Also u'
g
rt
bi3
lUsr 25x7. with cknlenk•at,iMP undue
gangway. • New driving eked of on
rogated steel siding 24x40; hen hon
17x18, Also a good supply of soft ai
hard water,. The farm is thoroag
drained and well fenced. mostly evil
all new wire fences. Also ten Ser
of good bush mostly has I wood, . En.
Wartieculara apply to Wesley She.
oodham Ont. , • Ig;
House for Sale or Rent
tWe have for quick sale or to rant az
very desirable residence .in Exeter.r
Well looated, comfortable and mower
Gladman & Staubury. . 74.'
Farm for Sale
Thabb choice property consil&ting
96 acres situated on Let 14 con
sign one. gay about 1 1-2 miles fro 1J
Hensen and four miles from Exeter'
Good frame house with first-clatt;
cellar. two good wells;; 4o acres
grace, 10 acres of fall wheat in;
acres of good bush land; fall ploug
ing mostly done; fairly well undo
drained; fences in good re.pair; frame
barns 436x50 in fair repair with goons
frame &table 28x60 and good dri
shed. For further' particulars appy,
to Louis Walper Hensall.. 11-4,12-10
For Sale
HOUSE AND 6 LOTS IN IIENaSALI1
the property of 'the late John McFari
lane: Rouse in good repair, 1 roosiA
furnace. woodshed, well, cistern, go
stable. Terms reasonable. Apply lteed
Gladman Se Staniiury, Solicitors, Heli;
sall .and Exeter. is
For Sale
12 .ACRES BUSH LAND
Part Lot 6, Concession 13, (Tao
smith, H. It. ,S. Apply to Glad
& Stanbury. Soliei'tors, Hensel!
Exeter. - •
Debentures For Sal
The Corportation'ef the Village o
Exeter will receive tenders up to
o'clock, p, m. March 1st, 1912. for thel
purchase of $5000.00" Water Work
Debentures ranning twenty yeare,
bearing 5 per ;pant. interest per ant
lnum from the date of the isaalei
thereof. payable it annual sums
t$4g01.22 et the . Canadian Eank- o
• Commerce. Exeter,- Ont.
T, B. CABLING, Oler
Horses for Sale
A number of good work horses are!
being offered by private . sale on Ise
10 Concession 2, Hay, Johu Campbel
proprietor.
Stock for Sale
Stool; For Sale --We are at prescan
offering three choice Shorthorn bu
10. 92 and 15 monfbs old; also a foes,(
cows and heifers. and a r..sgisteredl.
Clyde mare bred ;from importwdj '
stock. 'seven years, old and in
foal
'tat,
T. J. Berry's King rhomaa 'Lot 1k�';
Con. 2. Tackersmitb. A. G. 6milli
Hensall. .r
Dental Offices Closed.
Kindly 'take notice that my oflie
olosed a 'ery Wednesday afiternotiigt
DR. BOUL T�os#Ti
CLOSJN[ NOTICI3 '
Please remember that rely.; 15e04
Office is closed ever W c , t l 3 ati�-
—VOID 1 1rcS liA3Eiie.
ttt09',"
to
rR%
t� auble�rei k
iv:
0.w a Line,
INTER RESORT
Round Trip Tourists 'la 1 rte 1110111P
on Sale to all Pring( (TO V. inter 'Reit
it
sorts including
California, ni Mexico,
Mexico,.
Etc.
The e Polite
1'�i Atratctiv1, top'
WOt r Ganad
� e Il a
is 'la Chica .o
sh . Sale
Steamshipxtekete
liitep l9 on y all
J, ITIf1rtT,
a .i ..Beget Agent,