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The Huron Expositor, 1896-07-17, Page 37, 1896 EAFORTIL he United States, -ailable in all parte nces made on same at highest curren e and December posit. ROE, Agent. exprees the Clear riete-Art Print- `FRITEIt ut ribbon, and soon , ribbons alone. tg alone is worth weighs only tetera. It wilt la d a, a i (5 lbs. do ail d) it t Co. East. 11864 .INGLES ing Goods )wARE eaforth, IURDAY, rupt Prices. SEAFORTII. ae are f ur- pur- pi ice, respect, and neral Director. Lee. 'a ter's Old Stana - JULY 17, 1896 .1 IMPORTANT NOTICES. °for 10oeach at COLEMAN'S, Seaforth. 1480-tf SPAR rosTs,-Ten thousand choice cedar, poste a se• s TH HITRON EX VOSITOR. a LlicKENNA, Dominion and Provipoial Land Lsurveyor, Member of theAssoolation of Ontario . Surveyors, Dublin, Ontario. 1380-62 /TIMBER FOR SALE. -The undersigned ha on hand at Kippen station a lot of good hemlock lumber of all kinds for sale cheap. - JAMES coOPER. 1486 tf ' 011N BEATTIE, Clark of the Second Division cowes, Oeunty Commissioner, of Huron, Con- veyenoer, Land, Loan and Insurance Ageot. Funds invested and to Loan. Office -Over Sharp & ieene' store, Min Wed, Seaforth. 1289 ASSISTANT TEACHER WANTED. -Wanted for school section No. 2, Usborne, for the balance et she year, A female assistant ter:cher, holding third class certificate,. Apolications will be received until July 24th. Personal application preferred, HU THOMAS NKINa secretary -treasurer, Farquhar r. 14901-.4 $ no Private funds to loan at lowest b00 rates of interest in sums to suit $ 700 borrowers. Loans can be cora- $1,000 pleted and money advanced $1,500 within two days. Apply to R. 62,600 S. HAYS, BarristeriSic.,Seaforth. 125 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Pursuunt to the statutes in that behalf, notice is hereby given that all creditors or other persons having claims or demands against the estate of Ellen Campbell, late of the town of Seaforth, in the county of Huran,widow, svho died on or about the 261h day of May, 1898, are required to deliver to the undersigned- solicitor for Biased Murdie, Esq., administrator of the estate of the deceased, on or before the 6th day of August, 1806, their =bee, addresses and descripti sn, the full particulars cf their olaims and statenients of tkeir accounts and the security (if any) held by them. And notice is further given thatafter the said 5th day of Auguit, 1606, the said administrator will proceed to distribute the assets of the said deceased_ among the persons entitled thereto, having regard ouly to the claims of which he then has notice ; and the said administrator will not be liable for the said assets or any part thereof so distributrd to any person of whose claim netice shall not have been received at the time of such distribution. B. S. HAYS, Solicitor for the said Administrator. Dated at Seaforth this 9th day of July, 1896. 14914 STOCK FOR SALE. .felEfOROUGURRED DURHAM BULL FOR SALE. The undersigned has for vale a thoroughbred Durham bull, 16 months old. He is red in color and i9 eligible for registration in the Dominion Herd Book. Will be sold reasonably. WM. CARNOCHANa JR., lot 13, concession 4, H. Ita S., Tuckeraroith, or Egmondville P. 0. 14814f 100IGS FOR SALE AND FOB. SERVICE.- The 1 underaignecl, breeder of Large English Berk- shireitha.s for sale boars and sows in farrow. He will also keep for service the stock boar Gladetonepur- chased from Mr. George Green, of Fairview. Terms, -41 payable at the time of service with the privilege ot returning if necessary, if booked 81.50. JAMES DORRANCE, Lot 26, Concession 6, McKillop, Sea - forth P. 0. 1465-52 BOARS FOR SERVICE. MAMWORTH BOAR 'FOR SERV10E.-The under- WO/. signed will keep for service, at the Brumfield Cheese Factory, a thoroughbred Tamworth Boar. with registered pedigree. Terms, $1; payable at time of service with privilege of returning if necee- tory. HUGH MCCARTNEY, Btucefield. 1405-tf CLEARING It requires no head to see the Bargains in our great stockof high grade goods. You can't 40 wrong wheu you buy from us, batause we can give yo ti dollars worth at prices that other corapetitors cannot touch with the same goods. Our stock is rapidly going off, but we have still ,Bargains you cannot afford to miss, as we are always reducing lines in price so as to clear them out. Our stock is well as- sorted with up-to-date novelties and styles, and you have only to step in and be convinced we are selling goods cheaper than any house in town. Richardson & FrInnis 'MAIN STREET, SEAFOR,TH. ootenay Contains the new ingredient, and is made by an electrical process that will revolutionize medical science throughout ,the world. Kootenay cures all kinds of Kidney troubles, and is a positive cure for Rheumatism. Spring IT CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS, And every form of bad blood, from a pimple to the worst scrofulous sore, and we challenge Canada to produce a case of Eczema that Kootenay will not cure. edicine S. S. DOMAN HEMOINE CO., HAMILTON, ONT. a REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. - radian AND LOT FOR SALE IN BRUCE - _1111 FIELD. -The house contains eight rooms,with adjoining woodshed and cellar. The lot consists of one-half acre of land and contains a well and a num- ber of fruit trees. Toms reasonable. Apply to R. McLEOD, Brueefield. 14904f . ARMS FOR SALE. -The undersigned has twenty X Choice Farms for sale in East Huron, the ban - per County of the Province; all sizes, and prices to salt. For full information, write or call personally. ctrouble to show them. F:" S. SCOTT,usgels 0. 29141 FARM FOR SALE. -That valuable farm, being lot 13, concession 16, township of Hay, the property of the late Jacob Schatz, containing 85 acres, noreor less, about 60 acres cleared, balance well timbered with hemlock and hardwood. Good frame house and bank barn. Well fenced and well underdraine.d. For particulars apply to GEORGE EDIGHOFFER, Zurich P. O. 14898 -PAM FOR SALE. -For sale, lei 20, Huron road, Tuokersmith, containing 100 acres, all cleared except 10 acres of good bush. There is a good frame house and good frame barn, and other outbuildings. The farm is an excellent one ; i is well underdreined and well fenced, and there is plenty of good water. It is two miles and a half from Seaforth. This desir- able property will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Poesevsion given October 1st. For further particulars apply to WILLIAM FOWLER, Huron-lood, or Sea - forth P. 0. 1490-13 QPLENDID FARM FOR SALE. -Lot 10, conces- sion 8, township of Stanley, containing 100 acres. This is one of the best farms in the township and is situated in a good and pleasant neighborhood.. Soil of the, best and not a rod of waste land on it. There are all the buildings on it that are required. The whole farm has been newly .fenced and drained. An orohard of 70 bearing trees, plenty of goad water, convenient to Schools, churchee, post office and market. Apply to WM. SINL AIR, Varna P. O., or to WM. COP, Seaforth. 149141 -LIAM IN GREY FOR SALE. -For sale lot 12, 32 concession 14, township of Grey, containing 100 acres, about 85 of which are cleared, is in a good state of etiltivation and well fenced. The balaneo is good hardwocd bush. There is a good frame house and barn and good bearing orchard. There is a well at the house and a Dever failing spring on the farm. It is within two milea of [the village of Cranbrook, five miles from Brussels and the tame from Walton, with good gravel roads leading in all directions. This is a splendid farm and will be sold at a bargain as the proprietor is anxious to retire. NEM DUN- , CANSON, Cranbrook P. 0. 14864f The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company. FARM AND ISOLATED TOWN PROPERTY ONLY INSURED FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, lot 3, concession 17, Grey, contains 100 acres, 3 of which are used as a brick yard. The land is all cleared, except lour acres of black ash and cedar. It is well fenced, well underdrained and well watered. There is a good frame house and large bank barn 80x40 feet, and other outbuildings. Thi e la an excellent farm and there n aterial on it or four brick yards. 1119 half a mile from Walton, where there are good stores, school, cheese factory, churches, saw mill, etc: The farrn will be sold cheap and on easy terms. For further particulars apply on the prem- ises or to Walton P. 0. DAVID CAMPBELL. 1485-1e, °Mesas. Geo. Watt, Prealdent, Harlock P. O.; 'James Broadfoot, Vibe.President, Seaforth P. 0.; w. eharinon, Secy-Treas., Seaforth P. O.; Michael Murdie, Inspector of LOSSIOS. Seaforth P. 0. , masorop.e. Jes. Broadfoot, Seaforth; Alex. Gardiner, Lead - bury; George Dale, Seaforth ; Thomae E. Hays, Seaforth; M. retard le, Seater, h : Thee. Gar bit tt. Clinton; Thomas Fraser, Brucefield ; John B. Mc- Lean, Kippen. AMMO. Thos. Nellans, Harlock ; Robt. McM11ln. Sesiorth James Cumming; Egmondville ; Getrge Murdle and John C. Morrison,audiors. Parties desirous to effect Insuranoes or trans- act other bualnese will be promptly attended tn on spplication to any of the above officers, addreseed to their respective post odiees. -DARN AND VILLAGE LOT FOR SALE. -For _U sale, Lot 15, Concession 10, Hibbert, ad j .ining the village of Cromarty, containing 100 acres, less two and a half acres disposed of for village lots; 70 acres cleared, well drained and in a good state of cultivation; the remaining 30 acres is a fine maple sugar bush. There are several never -failing springs on the farm. There is a small frame house and frame barn, also the village lot in the village of Cromarty. There is a good frame house, and large etable and shed on it, also a splendid garden. This place was formerly used as an hotel, and will make an excellent businees stand. This property will be sold together or separately to suit purchaser. POS - melon given after hervest. Terms eaay. Apply to the proprietor, ALEXANDER 'BOYLE, Cromarty P. 0. 1487x13 MOITLSNIT'S IDEALS. DESIRABLE FARM FOR SALE. --Lot 22, conces. Bien 2, H. R. S., township of Tuckersmith, con- taining 1C0 acres, with 90 acres cleared. Land underdrained and in a good state of cultivation. There is on the premises a good orchard, also a good brick story and a half house, 24x34, with woodshed & brick kitchen 18x20 attached, hard and soft water. Two good frame barns, each. 35x60, one with 12 foot lean to and stone stabling underneath ; driving shed 20x35. Buildings in good state of repair. Farm is well situated '• but five miles from Clinton and six from Seaforth, on good gravel road ; school within a mile ; church opposite place. Posseesion any tune to suit purchaser. Price very reasonable. Apply to A., E. TURNER, Clinton P. 0. 1481-t1 FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, lot 8, and part lot 9, concession 10, Grey township, containing 165 acrea, all cleared except twenty acres, which is a good hardwood bush. The land is in a high state of cultivat'on, well underdrained and well fenced, without any waste land. There is a good 1 Tame house, with summer kitchen and woodehed ; a large bank barn, 81x52, with storm stabling underneath, and other outbuildings. There are four acres of orchard al one of the best varieties of fruit ; three good, never. failing wells with pumps in them. It 14 a mile and three-quarters from the village of Bus - sale, with good roads leading in all directions. This excellent property will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Apply on the prem'ses or by letter to box 1.3, Brussels P. 0. JOHN HILL. 14894f DOR SALE OR TO RENT ON EASY TEEMS. - As the Owner wishes to retire trent buoinese on account of ill health, the following valuable property at Winthrop, 4i miles north of Seaforth, on leading road to Brussels, will be eold or rented as one farm OS in parts to suit purchaser; about 600 acres of splendid farming land, with about 400 under crop, the balance in pasture. There aro large barns and all other buildings necessare for the implements, vehiolee, eta. This land is well watered, has good frame and brick dwelling houses, etc. There are grist and saw niille and store which will be 'old or rented on advantageous terms. Also on 171h con- cession, Grey township, 190 acres of land. 40 in pasture, the- balance in timber. Possession given after harvest of farm lands •, mills at once. For par- ticulars apply to ANDREW °OVERLOCK, Wirith"Ps 148641 • CONCLUSIVE PROOF. THE EDITOR OF THE CHICAGO TIME ' HERALD INTERVIEWED. ! Ho Runs Two Papers and Has Unbounde Faith In Journalistic Independence an Conscience Even In Chicago -His View s and His Methods. [Special Correspondence.] CHICAGO, April 20.-"I could tal newspaper all night," was the reply I r oaived,from Mr. H. H. Kohlsaat when 1 apo1p41zed to him for taking up severs] tours of his valuable time one evening r aently I think Mr. Kohlsaat exaggerat d very I ttle, if any, when he said it. It i just a yeer since Mr. Kohlsaat tool. posses ion of tho Chicago Times-Heran. For a long. time before he had boon see ing an outlet for his journalistiu enthusi- asm. He had been looking for a Ne Yorkaper, and several times he thous° t he ha, one. Ho hoard The Tribune w s for stile, but on inquiry ho found that w s a mietako. He made an offer for T19 Times, .but some of tho stockholders at t e last Minute refused to sell. He did net want The Journal or The Recorder, e - cause he felt he was not well enou h knowa in Now York city to emdertake o convert the typo of either Tho Journal b - The Recorder to his ideal of a newspaper. Mr. Etohlsaat's ideal is heed to fulfill, lont be is living up to it in The Times -Hera d. Ile 'Sneaking that paper as indopenclofnt and as fearless as the most pronoun 'r3W- t, 4 Frioril a Well Known Citizen. "My daughter Polly, has for more than a year been troubled with severe symptoms of kidney disease. She had constant and acute pains in her back. The pain in her head was fearful and almost unendurable. It frequently .pre• anted her from attending school, and she found study at home practically impossible. She bad no appetite, and did not sleep well. The pain was very severe around her heart and she was much troubled with fluttering and palpitation. She was completely worn out in body andwae tired and drowsy all the time. Fier mother and myself became seriously sierras&as ehe was constantly getting worse. Last July my daughter Sarah, a teacher in the Public School at Kingsville, Ont. *eras home to spend her vacation, and finding her sister in such a distressing and dangerous condition, said, I am taking Dosn's Kidney Pills and they are doing me much good, I have a box with Me and wt11 divide with Polly, which she did. 131 the time Polly bad finished the " half box her improvement in health waS so marked, that I procured more from Mr. Fraleigh's drugstore. Her full restoration to health and spirits was rapid and continuous. She has now none of her former dangerous, painful and distressing kidney troubles. She eats and sleeps well, and for more than a month has enjoyed •the most vigorous health. She has not lost aday at school since she commenced taking the pills. and has so much faith in them since they restoredher to full health that she wants me to keep six boxes in the house all the, time, in case they should be needed and not available. Her cure has been so wonderful she thinks they will cure any complaints If the pills had cost $10.00 a box, I would not have begrudged the money. The restoration of my daughter to fuH health and strong girlhood, from her former seriouvi sickness, elm, has made her mother, myself and daughter a happy family. "I make this sworn statement with the full approbation of my wife and daughter, volun- tarily and without any urging or inducement whatever, to show the gratitude my daughter, wife and myself 1 eel 1 or the wonderful cure wrought by the Doan Kidney Pills. We have not the least doubt that her trying the pine just at the time she did saved us a large doctor's bill, as she was all but sick abed at the time. I am sixty-two yeare of age, a car- penter by trade, have heels a resident of St Mary's for forty years, and county consteble for thirty years and am well known, and I teaks this solemn declaration believing the same to be true, and knowing the same to have the same effect as an oath, and stoma:ling to the Act respecting extra Judical Oaths 1893. Sgd. WILLIAM BROWN. Taken and declared before me at the 'roam •of St. Mary's, in the County of Per*, this 5th day of March, A. D., 1896. • Sgd. e 'WM. N. FORD A Commissioner 'hi High Oourt of Justice, Ontario. HE EAGLE. ALUMINUM 4 4.4IA;it II 11,.;•;•%;. of the paperlanot suppGsed to knew what the editorial policy of the paper is. We instruct our correspondents to send us the truth and if we think they may be infita enoed in a special case we sen,d instrue- tions supplementing our printed rules for correspondents. I am accused sometlines. 00/3110111011"... Nature's Method .of Curing Kidney Dis- ease -Nat by Pills and lowders, but in Dissolving the Mon SUbstances That Prove the Rt1 Root of the Troub e. Everybody is talking about the pre- valence of Kidney Disease. Bright's of making my ciorrespondents lean the Disease, Diabetes, and other fel/11a of other way." kidney trouble, are Striking at all Mr. Kohlsaat is a great personal friend kinds and conditions of people, It is nonsense to say, that these condition!! and admirer of Major McKinley, and his ' are incurable. The trouble is in trifl- ing with the disease, and employing pills and powders and other nostrums that are wholly lacking in. the ele- ments that are necessary to a cure. Where South American Kidney Cure has been used it is a rare exception that a cure is not effected. It cures the most aggravated cases, because it is a. solvent, that removes the uric acid and hardened particles that gather in the kidneys and blood. As Mr. Frank ..)Emerick, of Alvinston, Ont., who suffered intense pain from kidney trouble for two years, says : "In e, few hours from taking the first dose I began to find relief, and as a result, of four bottles, I a,m to -day complete., slyo'ldwbey11." 1. Fear and Lumsden & Wilson. • State Care of Orphan Children. It is possible that Australia has the model system of caring for homeless child- ren. A number of years ago Hiss Catherine H. Spence and Miss Clark, convinced of the evil results attending the herding of child- ren together in, huge, gloomy houses with political keepers, instituted a movement that ended in doing away with the orphan asylum in the Australian colonies. There is in each designated district a receiving house. There the children are first taken. Thence they go into private families ap- pointed by the state to receive them. In each neighborhoad is a local committee that watches with the utmost vigilance the treatment the child • gets. Under the eye of the local committee it is well fed, well clad and well educated. The family is paid by the state for the care be- stowed. When the boy and girl are 14 years old, they go to work and get wages, which are invested in a fund for them. At the age of 18 they enter life equipped with a trade by which to earn their living and a sum of money to establish theirs, besides having an ordinary common sch ol educe- wtioitohparents. papers aTrhen. Theyhaveas fair a start children papers have supported the Ohio candidate so earnestly that it is quite likely some of the correspondents have caught the enthu- siasm of their employer and permitted it to influbuce their judgment, but it is Mr. Kohlsaat's intention to publish the news without bias. - In nmaicipal politics Mr. Kohlsaat has been working for clean government, and he rejoices in the fact that many of the aldermen who have made Chicago's name a byword are to be forced into obscurity by the reform movement which now has possession of the better element of the city's population. He thinks there will be enough aldermen in the next council to sustain the mayor's vetoes of objectionable ordinances, and that is the first stop In the direction of better government. Munici- pal governments, he says, do not withdraw when they have taken the first step toward reform, and. he has great hopes for the Chicago of a few years hence. "For example, civil service reform," he said, "has been growing year by year. It began in the national government. Now it is being extended to municipal govern- ments. We have had it in Chicago for some Mine, and the mayor says it is the od one thing which makes life endurable." Mr. Kohlsaat may sometimes tilt at windmills, but no ono can accuse him of lack of sincerity -in fact, nO one does. He bas firm convictions and the courage to support them. He has set his business standard high, and lie lives up to it. He Lan set his journalistic standard just as high, and he is living up to that. 11 18 a pity he did not get a Now York paper when he made the attempt a year ago. He would have raised the average of the daily journals in that center of newspaper activity and furnished a more conspicuous example to the newspaper world. He had that New York paver all planned. His staff he had made up in his mind from the active newspaper men whose work he has studied. He has been interested in the workers of journalism rather than the ed- itors of great papers since first the news- paper bee began to buzz in his bonnet. A Hard Worker. While I talked with Mr. Kohlsaat there came a ring at the telephone and he left me for five minutes to give a long range interview to the correspondent of a New York newspaper. A little later he was called up again to receive a business mes- sage. I left him busy with the proofs of the editorials which major Handy and his corps of writers bad contributed for the next 'issue of the morning paper. Prob- ably before that duty had been completed another presented itself. He never seems to tire, The restless energy whioh mark§ his thin pale face sustains him through 14 or 15 hours of labor every day. He doea more work than any ono on his salary list and his only fear is that through overwork he may be incapacitated for further labor. But his temperate life, regular habits and cheerful disposition make such a contin- gency seem very distant. Mr. Kohlsaat lives in one of the most beautiful homes in Chicago. It looks out over the lake. Within a stone's threw is Lincoln park. All. about are handSome residences and the Lakeside drive stretches far away in front. There is no sound of the city's uproar, but in 20 minutes he can reach his office on Washington street. When a madman climbed on the Audi- torium stage to attack Jean de Reszke one night during opera Week Mr. and Mrs. Kohlsaat were in the andience. Mr. Kohl - seat went right' out to telephone tea. his paper about the matter. He congratuiated one of his reporters, wbom he found al- ready at the telephone. "Then you do not hesitate to gather news for your papers?" I said when Mr. Roblsa.at had related this incident. "No, sir," he replied with an emphasis which carried conviction. GEORGE GRANTHAM pAIN. COLONEL "BOB" AMMON. When He Was a Boy, Uncle Sam Asked Him to Allow the Mail to Go. [Special Correspondence.] PirrsBnRo April 21. -Everybody in Pittsburg w o is old enough to remember the first gr t railroad strike, something over 20 years ago, remembers also the re- markable yo th who assumed the position of leader am ng the strikers. He was not chosen inan formal way. He was hardly more than a oy. He had not been prom- inent among the men before the strike was have declared, yet inside of the first 48 hours of the the trouble lie was recognized by conimon The consent as the commander of the striking ts he forces, and the government of the United his States was compelled to appeal to him in sults order to secure the passage of the 'nails nake without a disturbance that would certainly OWD have cost a number of lives and very ever probably have drawn the United States urns army into the fight. It is not every ono, however, who remembers that the young- ster's name was Robert A. Ammon, and very few know that he is the same person who was the most prominent figure in that queer group of speculators who formed themselves into the New York Mining icles Exchange recently. the It would probably be impossible for rial Colonel Amnion, as he is now generally outs called, to be anything else but conspicuous was in any communitra or under any oiroum- ple. stances. The same qualities which brought in him to the front in the great strike always attract attention to him wherever he is. The incident of the passing of the ntails was really remarkable and is not recalled with any great satisfaction by the authori-, ties. The strikers were half maddened by the fact that tbe railroad corporations were firmly refusing to accede to their de- mands, and i'aey swore that no engine 4 • Ff. II. KOHLSAAT. theorist could wish. It was said of him iti recently that he could afford to do till be- cause his other largo business interests. made him independent of "the e01.113 1ng room" of his paper. In the light of his statement I bad a little curiosity to know whether Mr. Kohlsaat's journalistic vittue was his own reward, aud I asked him. He replied that from March to March un- der his management the newspaper prop - RIM. erty haa been more prosperous than it been in any like period before. This not prove that decenoy pays, because Times -Herald is a better newspaper it was under the old Management, b shows at least that decency isnot h cap in the pursuit of newspaper proper- ity, and it- demonstrate, too, that -a paper need not be edited from "the 'counting room" to be prosperous. Mr. Kohlsaat bas a wholesome dislike for the bu4ess end of his newspaper. , "I would . rather publish a newspaper without any advertisements at all,!' he the 1 to- yer- ad- port I it. ents said bad nay The Lan t li ndi- said to noe; but he acknowledged tha idea was impractical. The big paper day is almost as much a vender of a tisements as a purveyor of neWe. • Bu vertisements are necessary to the, su of a paper, and besides they help to se "A newspaper without advertise would haven very small circulation,' Mr. Kohlsaat. The Times -Herald turns away year many thousands of dollars' wor wivertising, The advertising colum the paper are edited as carefully a news columns. UP. Kohlsaat manages with a firm the editorial departments of his two the Times -Herald and The Evening While I sat with him in the reception of his beautiful borne on the La drive a messenger brought from Times -Herald office the proofs of th toriale for the next day's paper. His ticed eye ran down the columns, a checked off with his pencil one afte otherof the paragraphs. "I go to my office early," he said, the proofs of all the editorials fo Evening Post are brought to me the see every line of editorial matter bef goes into the paper. I never interfere the news department of the paper. one of the best managing editors i world. Mr. Meek uliff is devoted to Times -Herald. In his waking morne Lan no other interest. He ban chose own staff, and while he sometimes co me about things and I sometimes suggestions to him he gives all his instructions to his men, and they come to me except when something u after he ban gone heine.'t The Apple of His Eye. The editorial page of the paper is in charge of Major M. P. Handy, wh has made the editorial page of The T mes- Herald something unique in western 'our - 'salmi. He has introduced signed ar by well known vvriters and improved character of the leaders and the edit paragraphs so that an eminent St. editor said recently that the page above the beads of the Chicago pe Mr. Kohlsaat and Major Haudy ar tharough -sympathy, which is a fortu ting, for that edititrial page is the of Mr. Kohlsaat's Mr. Kohlsaat has a telephone in dressing room and it happens not quently that he is aroused out of a s sleep to answer a query from the o He has to sit on the. side of the bed s times until he can colleot his scat ered should move from tbe yard after a certain thoughts. But he never says, "Bothe the hour. Either they did not know what is telephone" or "Hang the office." Has en- common knowledge now -that the entire n a force of the general government Is liable n of i t,o be exerted in case of interference with his the mails -or they were made reckless by their desparate fury. However that was, ye so. the mob that had gathered around the en - STS NOTHING FOR •REPAIRS. Does not Get out of Order. LD ONLY BY . . • 1, W. PAPSTI SEAPORTS. $ very h of s of its and peas; ost. oom eside The edi- rac- d he an - 14 • 0 'and The . I re it with Our direct connections ill save you time and money for 1 points. Canadian No th West 4 MONTMEAL JEART FALLS INT LINE. An IMportane Statement From Alphonse To Lepine, M.P. Of the many wise acts af the mem- ber in the Hobse of Commons for Montreal East, it is a question whe- ther any is more . widely important than his end,orsation of the good ef- fects that come from the tile of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. Mr. Le - pine had used this medicine! himself, and found that it gave all he relief In the case of catarrh, thatit pro- mises. The results accomplished by thie medicine are simply Wonderful. In Toronto ther'e is the ca. of Cap- tain;3 Ben Connor, of 198 erkeley- street, who was cured . of catal.rrhal deafness of twelve years' st nding by the use of this medicine. It relieves in. 10 minutes_ Said by all druggists. Sold by I. V. Fear and Lumsderi & Wilson ' • A Reciprocity of Thidvery. Alittle boy was charged at the Glasgow City Police Court,on the 241h u4., with the theft of a. penny cake of chocolate from an automatic machine in the Wavealey Station. . Judge Colston said that if a ecinviction for theft were asked he would net allow the boy to plead guilty, but would at once find the charge not proven. The charge was g with the if the put - and the ab - theft, who hine or the be said it ate pple his fre- und oe. me - then altered to one of tamper]. machine. The Judge said ,tha ting in of a piece of iron or ti stracting of sweets constitute was wronged? Was it the ma doroprietor No doubt it wou itras the proprietor. That was one side of the case. But if it constitute theft, there must be reciprocity. That wa the other side of the case. The boy.pu a penny into the slot and he gets no ing. That might be the fault of the maahine, but it did not consume the penny. The , nny went into the pocket of the proprieto , who gave no value for it. The boy, the efore, was cheated of his penny.' Was th • Via Toronto or Chicago, -British Columbia and California . points. Our rates are the lowest. We have them to suit everybody and PULLMAN TOUR- IST CARS for your accommodation. Call for further information. Station G. T. R. Ticket Office. Train Service at Seaforth, Grand Trunk Railway. Trains leave Eleaforth and Clinton stations SA follows; GOING WART+ Paeeeager Baaaenger„... - Mixed Train- - - Mixed Train.. OING Karr - Passenger. Passenger - Mixed Trein- pro- prietor liable to be brought there as a'thief? The cases were very much the same.' Pro- prietors of automatie machines must suffer losses, just as they caused lathers to suffer loss, by the machine not working properly. He dismissed the boy with an admonition. , • , CAN THE HEART BE PITOTOGI11196ED 7 i It Certainly Can be liicaehed and Its Worst Diseases Cared. 1 In the wonderful experiments eing Made at the present time it ha not yet been demonstrated that the eart has actually been photographed. ' It is a questian if this is necessary, 4spite the terrible prevalence of heart dis- ease. In Dr. Agnew's Cure fot the Heart is a remedy that goes atI once to the disease, as certainly as if the particular spot had been Photograph- e_d by the new nineteenth centurY pro- cess. James Allen of St. Steephen, N.B., who had been troubled : 'with severe palinitation of the hea.?,t' for years, says that before he took half a bottle he was feeling better, a,nd to- day is a sound man, though ' using only one bottle of this remedy. , Sold by I. V. Fear and Lumsden & Wilson SsAvoIrru. CramTom. ".,2 46 r. m. 1 02 Ir. 0.06 9.22P. 9.80 A. at. 8.20 2▪ 11, 7.05 P. 33. 7.41 a. tr. 7.25 A. it. spa r. . 3.05 p. n. 4.25 r d .35p Wellington, Grey and Bruce GOING NORTII--. PASSONFMT. Mixed. Ethel........ .. 12.41 r. n. 9.80 P.M. 9:00 a af. Brussels . 1254 0.43 9.46 Bluevale 1.08 9 67 10.10 Winghlun.. .. 1.18 10.07 11.20 GOING SOUTH- Paseenger. Mixed. Wingham.... 0.04 A.u.11.20 A. li. 7.2a rat Bluevale .. .. 6.13 11.86 8 06 Brussels 8.98 11.59 9.00 Ethel.. . . .. 6 41 12.14 P.m. 9.30 London, Huron GOING NORTH - London, depart..____ Exeter.. Hensall.- Brucefield-- _ Londeshoro - - Beigrave_ Wingham arrive- .. - GOING &UTE- winghom, depart - Belgraye Blyth..' . -.- s LonclerstOro-..... - - Clinton.-- - Bruceffeld- - a... - - Kipper... II.. di, • fa: 6.•• !Ma 41... Hensel .... _ Exeter - and Bruce. Passenger. 8.154.3. m 9.50 6.00 9.44 8.15 9.50 8.20 9.68 8.28 11.15 855 10.83 7.14 10.41 7.23 10.16 7.87 11.10 8.00 Pieseager. 6.80A.m. 3.25paa 6 41 3.15 6.66 3.1:5 7.03 8 48 740 359 7.69 4.23 108 441 8.15 4.53 8.35 5.08 9.60 A.M. 6.26 rail .••••• ••• ••••• SON. 41•11 London • (a rive) F. USHE GITTTERIDGE le.Agent in Seaforth for QUEENSTON CEMENT GUELPH and ACTON LIME. This is t tions give keep in e Hair, Brie etantly Of of the rail • e best lime on the market. Full instruc- for all kinds of cement work. I will also ck Portland Cement, Paris Plaster, Lath, , etc. A foll !stock of all these kept con - hand. Prices right. Warehouse south ey track, opposite the freight shed. F. GUTTERIDGE, Seaforth. 11814f JU •• • •4 Were giving the best,value in har- ness e er offered in Seaforth, made by skilled workmen, and only first-class mate 'dal used. airing promptly attended to, along your old collars and We ake them work. Light harness a specialty. T A WORD -ABOUT- HARNESS •* ••••0. Re Bring will A Tan Dog Story. , "1 have a dog," said a minister Who had just heard a precocious crow story, "who is very sagacious. One Sunday he followed me to church and sat amongst the people, and watched my movements in the pulpit. That afternoon I heard a terrible howling in my backyard, and of course I :went to see what it meant. I found my dog was in the woodshed, standing on bis hind legs in a dry goods box. He held down a torn al- manac with one paw and gesticulated with the other, while he swayed his bead and howled to an audience of four other dogs even more sadly than I had done in the morning." The narrator of the crow utory threw up the sponge. thuslasm would contribute nsore th • Wisted our of sleep to the perfeeti Kind Words From Hamilton Regarding even one petty detail of the affairs o the Great Remedy Which. Cure,/ Rheu- - ParIrgso. metimes ask myself why I g matism in One to Three Days. much of my time and energy tomy ' Mrs. Phillips, sr., corner Hunter and papers," he said to me. "It is not 1 Grath -streets, Hamilton : 'Several neeney." Iauggested that it was f r the out a mail train. Not a nian dared if mamths ago I was afflicted with rhea.- eWS- r the gine yard proposed to make no exception when the authorities undertook to start matisan, which completely -crippled me. latisfacition to be fo.und in being so great any wished- to mourit an engine for the Ing recommended to me, I procured a South American Rheumatic Cure be - a factor in publio affairs as the &lithe of a iun, for it seemed to be more than amen s bottle and obtained perfect relief from "Thati' the life was worth to make the attempt. It was at this juncture that the govern- the first few doses. It lw Without menofficials aaked Ammon for assistance, doubt the quiekest relief for rheuma- and he, cooler and more intelligent than tisni I have ever seen, and I heartily 11 ve orders which they did not recommend it to all ,sufferers from great newspaper can be. principal reason," he said; "the whioh-a newspaper wields." MT. Ko as the old feshione belief that a eper 6an make publ c opinion. W rauotad afitat a well known editto or s id a venture dispqte. Tgarmval.train went, year br tVV4 ago -that newspapers iertly•and a terrible fight was averted. tinoo fellawed puhlio oainion-he combat proreasition Strongly. TheiNetrs COlurtintil , asked Mr. Kohlsaat if he perMitt d his ileWs on public; questions to infiuen •e the ewe oplumura Of the paper. "No," he said: "The news depa4meni ewer ilsaat ews- en I his fe ows ga d the. that tlme Ammon has had more ups and downs than half a dozen men. He has drifted all over the country, been in vari- ous kinds of business and is now ae,counted a rich man. Pei:Tie iv Pittsburg till re- member 33db Ammon and know that he was a real hustler. I)* A. C. • I have before me a letter from a Parisian friend, a gentleman of some literary note in his own country, who informs me that he is learning English by the aid of a small text- book and a dictionary, without any other instructor ; and he adds: "In small time can learn so any English as I think I will Come to the America and go on the NO WITNESSES REQUIRED "eaff°Id ta let'atej?, MARRIAGE LICEN -ISSUED AT - THE HURON EXPOSITOR 0 SEAFORTH, ONTARI ES FICE this disease." Sold by I. V. Fear and. Lumsden as Wilson. • 0 , A Dead Bargain. There was a Roman Catholic Bishop who wanted to dispose of a piano, and which a friend, a Protestant minister, desired to purchase. There was much chaffing over the instrument before the minister got it, at a price which the Bishop thought very low. The only vehicle which could accommodate the piano, when the time came for its de- livery, was the hearse, and ia this it was sent to the minister's door. Off to the Bishop the minister went , in great anger., "Why on earth," he said; "did you send my piano home on the hearse?" The Bish. op's eyes twinkled as he remembered the bargsluing and answered. "Oh I" said the Bishop, "because it was a dead bargain." EGGS A.IRM CIELMAX) THIS IS THE TIMt TO PUT Away your Winter Supply. We have . . „ - EXCELSIOR EGG M. BRODERICK, Corner Main and John Sts., Seaforth, SIGN OF THE aaaa maka am, PRESERVATIVE Which will keep there fresh for 12 months, So simple, so easy to do for only one cent per dozen. We have it in 25c, 5Ce and $1 packages. These will put down 1.0, 50 or 115 dozen. Full direct- ions with each at CIRCULAR. • SAW.Ne, • Fear's Drug Store, SEAFORTH. P. KEATING Contractor and Builder, Seaforth DEALER IN Lumber and Shingles. Good Hemlacir Lumber always on band. Parties wanting lumber don't need to go 20 or 26 miles when they can get it as cheap at home, and better lumber. 146941 CAM & CO. •••••• ARE PREPARED TO SELL TURNIP ANDAnylla MANGOLD S -P -11)-S As Cheap as any in, the trade And will not be undersold. Before buying give us a call. During July 5 lbs. of a clti3ids .it3Greennota Tteeadust.-- Tea, 50e., -cash. Some good Soap yet. Will give 47five cent bars for 250 ; 12 three cent bars for 25e. In Canned Goods We keep nothing but best brands. We have yet some a u mepzraertrtple Syrup at 25 CASEY & CO., . SEA.FORTH. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. ILL KEEP Exce l Wsior COOS FRCISIN FOR 12 MONTHS. etrq oremparett alp t:54 SEAFORTH HANDLE- WORKS. IT IS NO PICKLE. You simply treat the Eggs with PRESERVER, and fay them away in a basket or box. 4$4400*** LAY DOWN A SUPPLY WHEN THEY ARE CHEAP. Call for book giving full Inforroatioo, free of chaurge. FOR SALE BY ALL MillOGISTS. Karn Organ & Piano Company What we say is true, and Everybody knows it I will do all kinds of Turning to order on short notice, and I Will do it as cheap as it can be done. I will pay a good price for No. 1 White Ash. Gave me a eall and see. JOHN KLEIN, Seaforth. 1460-U Our success demonstrates that Business can be done on a fair, square basis, and be successful. There's a reason for us continually getting the greatest share of trade. Never has our mastery been SO complete as it Is now. No other concern can sell at the prices we can itIld will; none can give you the choice of so fine a line of instruments as ours, in square or upright pianos, or for church or parlor • 11 new mans and pianos warranted for the tenn of seven -years. TERM -93,05, or S 110 or more menthly.until paid. What c.an be more liberal, more induches, more safe than to buy e KARN. J. L. Downey, 1429 MANAGER. FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS DUNN'S -BAKING POWDER THECOOKSBESTFRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA, Kalil%) Directory for 1896s JOHN MORRISON, Reeve, Wbathrop P. O. vrajaa vat ABCHIBALD, Deputy -Reeve, Load. bury O. WK. McGAVER. eaunciller, Lesalbury P. 0, - - JOSEPH C. MORRISON, Councillor, Beachwood P. O. DANIEL KANLKY, Opuncillor, Beachwood 13, 0, JOHN O. KORRISON, Clerk, Winthrop P. O. DAVID M. ROW Treasurer, Waiters* P.O. WM. EVANS, Assessor, Bossobweed P. 0. CHARMS DODDS, Collector. &Worth P. O. RICHARD l'OIALLSD. Sanitary Impeder, Lea* bury P.0, _ _ a