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Exeter Times, 1901-9-12, Page 5fIERALD SIFT0h1 WILL FIGHT FOR HIS LIFE. The Miedlesex fall assizes will begin Monday Sept, 23. Oee of the first cas- es to be taken up will be the eharge of murder preferred against Gerald Sif- ton. The witnesses so far as known will be ready, The defence promises some very in- teresting if not sensational evidence, What counsel for the prisoner will have to offer in proof of the innocence oZ their client they, of course, gua closely. but they will make a eleteri e1 effort to upset the tbeory of t crown as to how Joseph Siam), refit of Gerald Sinop, came to his dee, That the emu n will have numb e dence to offer is questionable. T theory already outlined will be a hered to, and an afore made to tablistt a weave of evidence that ea reot be broken througlo A good de of the evidence already given previa ly against the prisoner is decided eensational. But since the adjour Inept of the trial the defence have su ceeded introdacing a new featu that is very much in their favo They have established as a fact th the famous "butter paper" will we forgery. This is the will which t deceased WWII is alleged to ha made at the home oe Edgar ramie and which gave the major portion the Sifton property to Mary MacF a lane, whom the elder Sinop w about to marry.Mortlete'sstorywasth the Neill Was made by Jaiseplit Sine rd ea- er thhe. iie d. ea - al us- ly a- 0 - re r, at IS due or net to the fact that butter s a wItit a comparatively mild flavor proves he to be a better keeper, One Wag Is aura that a number of creameries and deals 11* era also have already established a rep- ot' utauon by this grade of butter. It Is very evident* provicline, the milk is r- I . at right and an other preceeeee are e9r- n, redly carried out, that tiaTer In better er Pt is to t- 11 a, 0 TtL X. • .4/448.. been alloeed to work about the jail. I Sitton has t qcopied a wA, STORY OF 'TORTURE ere altele. Both have (onditeted, bete,e1 te model manner, geving the j 4401.. PO trouble of aut. &sere. e, TriRILLING pAS$AGES FROM DIARY OF EX-OAPTAIN oRYFus. A COMMON MiSTAKE. Mee Flavor at the Expenee lieeep- lug 41tality. The follow -leg paper Was read by Sondergaard at the Minnesota butter and cheese makers' meeting:* MI but- ter, even the very finest, is more or less apt lose its delicate darer and by this some of its -value, for every day it gets older. The keeping quality of but- ter is therefore a TerY inaportant mat- ter to dealers as well as consumers. It Is fact tbat butter with bigh flavor ha S for a good Maur ream been the leader in the American butter mark -et. Close study, however, prows that the demand bas been moving constantly In the direction of a milder, sweeter and more delicate flavored artlele. Wheth- er now this movement of the (lemma practically disinheriting his son. aft being told by Morden that an attem of Ins life was being planned. by h eon Gerald. Morden was one of th chlef witnesses for the crown, and ti effect or lituling the will a ferger may so diacredit his testimony as make his evidence worthless.Me den has remelted in the eouutry, an has not been prosecuted for perjur His home is not far from that o Gerald Sifton, arid he is very frequen ly in the city. Notwithstanding th will disclosures, inorelen appears t av be lost none of his friends where h lives. He maintaine tbae the wilt I not a forgery. and his statement i enamel by his wife. It Neill be ee membered that no defence was offerecl in the civil action to invalidate th will. By far the greatest, interest wi centre in the part Walter Herber may play in the ease. Herbed, is young Man of ebout twenty years He was employed by the prisoner as farm baud. and was arrested with Sif tou as a partner in the alleged crime .At the tune of bis arrest he was sai to have confessed to the High Con stable, and implicated Gerald Sifton Nothing more was beard of the eon ference, however until the prisonet earne before the High Court in du **se eoursa Then Herbert created a see sation bypleading gouty to the mur der. He was remanded for sentenc and has not since appeared in. the court room. Should he do so at th trial of Gerald Siften, it will be as a crown witness, and the effect svflI be a tremendous sensatisn. The crown will eay that murder was done. The defence will set up that their client is a victim of one o the most diabolical plat ever con. ceived. - The late Joseph Sifton came t his death on June 30,1900. The day was to have been his third wedding day, In the morning he went, to his barn, where were Gerald Sifton and Walter Herbert, to show them when to put. up a bay carrier. It was necessary to knock out some boards from the gable end of the barn, and while doing this be, the elder Sifton, fell headlong to the ground and bis skull was crushed so that he died the same afternoon. This is the story of the defence. The crown will seek to prove that Sifton Was killed by blows from an axe, ad- ministered as he was climbing up to the hay loft, and was f ter v., d placed on tbs ground, where bis body was seen by persons called in subse- qnently. For every murder there must be a motive. The crown set up that the prisoner Sifton wished to prevent the marriage of his father to Mary Mac- farlane, a young working girl, because as be Was the sole heir and would not re- -main so Medical testimony lost eorne of its value by the fact that the deceased was buried three weeks before the charge of murder was preferred, and the body exhumed. Then the remains were found to be badly decomposed. ess Dr. MacNeill, who attended Sifton be- fore his death, found wounds in twe or three different places about the head, however. At the preliminary hearing, there was considerable sensational evidence. Edgar, James and Martin Morden stated that they bad been approached - by Gerald Sifton, the night previous to the tragedy at the barn, and their aid asked in putting the elder Sitton out of the way. Mary Macfarlane, at a morning session of the court said she believed the prisoners innocent, ' nrder, and at the afternoon ses- sion made a statement to the opposite effect. Dr. MacNeill said that vvhile Joseph Sifton lay unconscious, this son stood by and moaned, 'ph my pool father, how I hate to see you. suffer." Then be asked the doctor if he 'had not some thing with which to put an endeo lakfether's sufferings. ..At this time, the doetor had not expressecl an opinion. he says, as to theshances recovery.Dr. MacNeill said• the patient was not suffering. "If you liave not got it I have, Sifton is said to have told Dr. MeNeill. "I have strychnine," The he added that '9f money was any consideration---" But the doctor says he clopped Ids • hand over Sifturfs mouth.. Later while alone with bine Sifton gave hi, • father "something," so the doctor says be admitted todelitnself. This state- ment leaky or may 001, be come -More Led at the forthcornieg trial. Dr. Ellis, provincial analyst, will be called to say if there was poison found in the' • store ieh of dece0 Rev Mr. Cooper mleges Sifion, 1 he pris 'ter, told him be gave D. Mac, • Neill, Tyne was at, t a coroner, $1,000 in notes, on i• eulition that there • should be 1) 0 • Me, test. Dr. Macisleil • has already denile this. The trial, may •I st a week. The p, e- sehrig judge, will' ee ,jostice Mahon, who preeAed at t he leint.us B ea) a I I trial. • The prisoners). ee Fton and lite 1), rt. have 1)00O confined intim coutite j "1 ei • t bee!' eatreee. a.t. depends largely on the degree of acids ay or the crefun when churned. Yet the species or kinds of bacteria, the 'Medial. of Willeb Is to carry eut the fermentative chaeges, are surely fee - tors of ea less Importance n olstalnleg a high or mild flavor. The science of producing a certale, desired :laver le tint to develop the deitired bacteria for etarter Alta then to protect them against all the undesireble enee by at- tending strictly* to cleaultuess and regu- lating the temperature. Whether It le certain bacteria or a chemical Process that gives butter made frem ripened cream its delicate aroma, ono thing 1alow4. that as soon as the lactic acid bacteria haee produced a certain qual- ity of lactic atitl, the limit Of their rte. tion haS been renehed. They do est die, but simply discontinue their :tenon. This Is the danger 'mint In the ripening process. From now on there Is nothhsg to keep the undesirable bacteria in check, and as some of these foreign or- gaulsres develop very rapidly It re- q,ulres but little to effect the butter by giving it a strong or unclean !lever. This Illustrates clearly wby It Is ao dangareus to ripen ereare above ite proper degree la order to gain a high flavor. It else gives us an Idea of why butter with an abnormally blgla flavor in most cases turns rancid ill a few days. The undesirable bacteria. ba.vIng just couinsenced their action in the Cream, coutlnue their work of deatxue- ton la the butter. We learn not may from experience gained in our dairy schools and a few creameries, but also from what bas become customary in other countries, that by taking up the Paetear system we would be able to produce a much healthier, more uni- form and especially a better keeping quality of butter. What holds us back Is not a lack of knowledge of -the res suit, nor is it because our creamery in- dustry or our butter makers are not up to the high level of other countries, but merely because the present demands of the American butter market do not favor the mild flavored butter made from pasteurized cream. When the Danes, SOMO ten years ago, started to pasteurize, they then met with the very same trouble in the English market. However, before a year had passed, the English people were will- ing to pay a premlum on pasteurized butter, on account of its better keep.. Ing quality and more uniform grade all through. pantrunr[c, I A lieta A DA.Nei eft elIGNA -- Prompt is t Bait.- ieueet• pain immediately welt Rolse•de Nei vidite, quiekly teed ee eel e.telitge erink Vvil h Dint... Never kneen rail ('n *8).. ,,n *..t iekt. n ly, nemetleie, teethaelle, reeetuoiem. and lumber() nre creed by N ea+ ts Jae as re telly. !eels m's tires all pet. i I be fl...1 0, a.rge holt e• . 011 1 ito the C Give them oil—cod-liver oil. It's curious to see the result. • Give it to the peevish, fret- ful child, and he laughS. Give • it to the pale, anmic child, and his face becomes rosy and full of health. Take a flat - chested child, or a child that has stopped growing, give him the oil, and he will grow big and strong like the rest. • This is not a new scheme. It has been done for years. Of course you must use the • right oil. • Scott's Emulsion is the one. Scott's Emulsion neither looks nor tastes like oil because -we are so careful in making it pleasant to take. Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Toronto, •soo and Lou; all druggists. delete. • The3: Aelat.e• 1.4cOV IfS• Was Chahle4. 2024 t Tormented by Hie 114flerif 424 111eivil'5 Islan4-11Di First r atm. utterulv His Nut an .22revac.—x;ncis With, Appeal—geete Nis Faithful, Wife., 43— an After the eouvictien of ex-0apta Alfred Dreyfus and his remoyal to t barren. sea -bound rock, appropriate called Davirs Island„ there arose a raged in France teat coutrove which convulsed the nation and re, ated its disturbing influen throughout the natiens of the wo -the Dreyfus affair. I5 is hardly t much to say that the one intellig and educated mart in the wbole wo svho was completely shut off Ir knowledge of the strife between t Dreyfusards and the anti-Dreyfusar was the Cense and ceutre of it Girt about such barriers as ha, shut off no other prisoner of mode times, he knew nothing of the aw cowling events in France. Ou the other band, the world lee nothing of him; how he fared. wbat treatment he was subiecte how he was bearing t ordeal of. his imprisonment. The were loeg periods wbee the public d not lutQW whether he still lir More than once his death Was ream ctit there were whispers of suicid Thousands believed tbat whaesoee the outcome of the struggle in Wien be would never he perntitt to return to Prance alive. 13 Nvhether for the tumor of a, dead eta or the reclamation of a living on bis partizans kept up the fight. "I shall have the neceesary p tience," be writes in his diary. "T roh achinatioris of which axle the vi tine naust be discovered; it must I so. * * Sooner or late in 11 everything' is bound to come out." This diary, together with his a (mut of his triel, coudeMuation, r telal, conviction and pardon mak up the book "Vivo 'Yeas of elf Life." the first public utterance b Dreyfus etreselt since bie arrest i ma, Prete this remarkable bit history the following extracts as* taken, as typical of the viethres own view of the ordeal through which be bas passed. After describing the now historical court-martial and couvic- tion and degradation, be tells how be was sent to the Ile de Re, and from there to the lle du Diable. Here he was imprisoned in a stone hut, with armed guards always on duty, By day he Was permitted to walk about in a /salt -acre space, Ms corre- spondence was rigidly ceusoretl, and even his wife's lettere wens forward- ed only after every reference to hie ase bad been excised. All his cooks Ing end washing be had to do him- self. It was life reduced to its lowest and most wretched terms. Of his ex 'stone° on the island he writes: "Since landed a. month, ago e have remained locked in ray pen without once leaving it, in spite of ell the bodily fatigue of my painful Journey. Several times I all but went crazy; bad congestion of the brain, and conceived such a. horror of life that tho temptation came to mo to have no cere of myself and aa put an end to niy martyrdom. "At 10 o'clock they bring me my day's food—a. bit of co.nned pork some race, some coffee berries in a filthy condition, and a little mole •sugar. 1 have no merles of roasting the coffee, which in. bitter derision is given to me raw. I throw it all late the sea. Then. I try to incite a fire • After several fruitless efforts I sua called. heat water for my tea. MY luncheon is made up of bread and tea. "Saturday, April 20, 1896, 11 o'clock in the morning,,—.I have finish- ed my cooking for the day. This morning I cut my. piece of naeat in two; one piece is to boil, the other for a steak. To cook the latter X have contrived a veil from an old piece of Sheat iron, which I picked up in the island. For drink I have water. My food is all prepared in old tin cans. I have nothing with which to clean these properly, and have no plates. My days are interminable — every minute of every hour a long -drawn out weariness. I am incapable of any considerable physical exertion; more- over, from 10 in the morning until 3 in the evening the heat makes it impossible for me to go out, I can- not work at my English. all day long; my brain will not stand it, and I have nothing to read. My only re- course is a perpetual companionship with ray thoughts. . "Wednesday, May 1, 1895.-0h. the horrible nights. Yet I rose yes- terday as usual, at half -past 5, toil- ed all day long, took no siesta, and toward evening sawed wood for near - an hour, until I trembled with fatigue. Yet I could not sleep till long past midnight. If I only could 'Feed or work through the evening. The lantern of the guard -post, svhich Is sufficient for iny waking pursuits, •is 'still too • strong for sic when I am in bed."• • "Saturday, Sunday, Monday, May 11, 12, 13.—Bad days. • Fever, stom- ach trouble, disgust for everything. Arid what is going on in France all this time? • At what point are the investigations? • Sunburnn , too, o my feet, becatise I went out -without my shoes for a few seconds." Entries hi the diary through the summer relate how the prisoner was kept confined to his hut much of the time in extremely hot weather, be- cause convicts were ett Work on' the Island, and it was feared that • he might communicate with them. He suffered —greatly from the bites of mosquitoes and other poisenous in- sects, from heat, fever and stomach trouble. By fall he was very weak, hardly able to walk or write, and in- capable Of any continued mental ex-. ertion. • '`Oct. 6, 1895.—Awful heat. The hours are leadeb.." - "Oct. 14, 18'95.—Vio1ent wind. Im- possible to oUt. •The day is of terrible length, I no longer know how to live. MY brain 113 crushed Violent „heart spasms. The sultry in il0 ly nd rsy cea rld 00 int rld OM he ds all. ere 1. rn ew to he re Id ed. 1"- 0. et. 18 ed ut a 0. 0.• 10 fe 0- 0 - of *seethe* tekeeaway ell energy. They will certainly end bY kiuing Ple through repeated. sufferings or by forcing me to seek in suicide an es- cepfrom leseniey. Tete epprobrium ot ray death Will be upon cammende wet Paty, Bertalors and eel these who have imbrued Ode hands in this iniquity. night I dream of my were and .children. , But whet terrible .e.weerentege. 'When 1 open My eyea 414(1'11nel Myser in this hut 1 have a - grommet of such anguish,that close nty• eYea forever, never to See Or think again." As tiOle Went PA Preying heeame weaker and weaker. There were bang weeks when. he wrote nothing .in his diary. Then, in the fall of 1890. seems the wether was so deadly that many of the guards broke down un- der • its •• the • :auteseeities instituted tveat APPeara like a deliberate et - tempt to hasten the prisoner's death, "Monday, Sept. 7, 1S90—Yester- day evening I was put in irons. Why I know not, . Since 1 have been .bere lieve .alw.ays scrupulously observed the order e given ma Row is it 1 do not go crazy during the long, dread - Id night? What I suffer is horrible, yet I no longer feel anger egaieet those W130 thlta torture an innocent l21413; 1 fed only e great pity towerd them. * * These nights in irons. I do net even speak of the physical sufferieg, but what moral igeoteley, and without any explatiatien. .with .out hilOWifig why or fur what awes. Nearly Use years of this have wore Me out. ,1 can do no mere. The very instinct of life falters; it ia to numk for mortal .reala to bear." The diary ends On Sept. 10, 1800. With the entry of .an appeal by letter to the President of Frame for tufa tice. Tbereafter Capt. Dreyfus' ner- retorts coutiuues. 110 Wile bow fur two months and a. half he was cone lined to his hut Without. a minute :of exercise, when the heat was so greet that his guards heel to keep their quarters sluiced_ out with water. Pon nearly two months he ;slept in irons every night, the ankle rigs being eq. tight that they tore his flesh. In spite of all this he writes to his wife, whose courageous letters were his otrougest support: "A pure soul that bus a weed duty to fulfill must rise above -eute tering, Have courage:. have come age! Look straight before you, too, neither to the right nor to the left, but steadfastly to the end. I know welt that you, too, are but human. Yet whet grief becomes too great, .when trials still to moo Kura too bard for you to bear, look .into the faces of our thildren and say to yourself tbat you must live, to be with there and care for them until the day when our country shall ac- knowledge. what I have been and arm "Mutt I wish to repeat to you with a voice that you must alweys hear is 'Courage, courage!' Your 'patience, your rmolution, that of all of. us must never tire until full truth is reveled. "X cannot fill my letters, full -clie ough of the love that .ray heart bolds Cor you all. That I have been able to withstand .ect much agony of -; out. such. :nearer and strain, is be- cause I have drawn strength fro.zu the thought of you and tho children. Alfred." Matters went • from bad to worse for a time; then the treatment of Dreyfus became somewhat Seas rigor. ous until finally on jute •5, 1890, thefollowing note Was put into his hands: "Mose let Captain. Dreyfus know lenineltfately of this order of the Su- preme Court. The court quashes and annuls the sentence pronounced on the 22nd of Deem:abet., 1894, upon Alfred Dreyfus by the erst court- martial of the military government of Paris, and remands the accused party to n, court-martial at Bermea, entcei Bis on the war ship Sfax follow - return to France in close con - ted. Once in France he learned the history of the fight for a revision of his case and was ready to face bin accusers at the second court-martial at Rennes. He writes: "Of my 'own story I knew nothing. As I said, I was still back in 1894, with the bordereau, as the only docu- ment in the case, with the sentence of the court-martial, with that ap- palling Parade of degradation, with the cries of `Death to the traitor!' from a deluded people. I believed in the loyalty of General de Boisdeffre. 1 believed in the chief magistrate of the state, Felix Faure. 1 thought both eager for justice. Thereafter a Veil had fallen before ray eyes, grow- ing More impenetrable every day:' It was some time after he landed adore he was allowed to see his , wife, and of their first meeting, in prison, he says: • "It is impossible for words to ex- press in their intensity the emotions which nay wife and I both felt at seeing each other again. Joy and grief were blended in our hearts. We sought to read in each other's faces the traces of our sufferings; we wish- • ed to tell each other all that we felt in our souls, to reveal all the feeling • suppressed and stilled during those long years, but the words died away on our lips. We had to content our- selves with trying to throw into our looks all the strength of our affec- tion. and of our enduranee. The pre- . sence of a lieutenant of irzfantry, who was stationed there, prevented any intimate talk." Then came the retrial and the con- viction, of which he writes: ' In spite of the plainest evidence against all justice and -equity, I was condemned. Two votes, however, were given nee. As to, the sentence which five judges dared to pronounce, I do not accept it." The offer of pardon and his accept- ance of it Dreyfus explains thus: • 'A pardon was offered me on con- dition that 1 withdraw my demand for revision. Although expecting nothing from ray demand, I hesitated to withdraw it, for I had no need of pardon. I thirsted for justice. "But on the other hand, my bro- ther told inc that my health, already greatly shaken, left little hope that I could remst much longer under the conditions in 'which I should be placed; that liberty would give me greater opportunity to strive for the reparation of the atrocious judicial Ee- , That is eceoftea. No disease 14 oldea No disea.se is really responsible for a larger mortality. Consumption Is commoely Its onterowtb. There is no exam ter neglecting it, it makes Its Presence known by se many signs, sucb, ea glandular tumors, cuteueolia eruptions, inflamed eyelids. Bore eara, rteas eta, Patarrb, wasting and general eebility, Children of W. MeGinn, Woodstock. Ont„ bad Scrofula sores so bed they coelci not attend school for three months. When different kinds of reedAciaes bad been used to no purpose wbatever, theee sufferers were cured, according to Mr. efeeleues voututary testimonto, by MONEY TO 140.A.N. • We heYe unlimited private Aegis for invest - meet upon lama or"vellaee property at lowest rates or haterest, DICICSON es CARLING Exeter, rION.EY TO LOAN: I have a leege amount derivate heads to leen on farm and village properties atlow rams oL lutereo. flood's Sarsaparilla hivb bas effected tee most wenderful. redical and permanent ceres oe scrofula in old and yonng, error of which / was still the -victim4 since in would give me time, and Mae was the only object of ray aisPea/ to the military tribunal of reit/Meta Mathieti, added, that the withdeemal my del:nand was counseled awl ap- proved by the men who had been, in the press and before the world, the chief champions of my cause. I thought of the sufferings of my Nerfe feed feeeily; of the Children W110.41 1 had not yet ggela and wheess ItiemerY tted haiteted me day :lad night Oleg my return to Frange. Aer, cordingly 1 agreed to withdraw my appeal, but at the Name time eyed - tett unmistakably my absolute awl intelsangeeble iutentiou to fellow nel the legal revisiou of the sentence at Rennes.," lee!! '-'et'f• FIFTV 1E.1"e (12j. s. ^43; tiLleTtnikat r -s -Arra V-114 r•yrup has 'at* for • r rty yrarsi o't w6/1011:5 Or mother. r :heir < h120 teetitleg, with perfect o vress ^ hen, 1he child, SoftenSthe gums. allays; al 1; cures wind cola^. and is the ben ietnetly Itiarrhreat 11 18 pleasant to the taste. Sam y glieiggiets in every pert of the weed. 25 Lettle, ite value is tuella:ate. tte :utti 442 ier etre Virinslowe Stenteng .44224, 1 talit 220 otter alud. ga ter. See lille 1501. liv,41 pee eat4.1-4,1 Si •44 a Itirlrw • Raul er• Figf. ie3n,-14. err le ieese, 1•• • 40,..• .P10 1.14.1 01221e I.Ve APO. re -13 see. ...6 £Ql5 fl 20 31 .-,•., to 8 se••••• 4 to 4 • s 7 Hu 16(0 6 34 14 (41 "Opportunit3rma:zes the thief?" Shoe soie"robbery prevails—Eccause ft can't be discovered till the shoe is worn out. The Makers' price stamped ortthe sole— pledges value up to that price in— "The Slater Shoe" loodyear WW1" 1. E. ,1 SPACEMAN, Sale l.o°s1 Agent Reba *ad sweat here ao effect oo liereees treated wit12 Zurek& Her. seta Olt. It re. also the damp, keep dowleeth. tr Boated pli- ab/e. Stiedule do oat break. No rough mfr. fate to there ' wildcat. no hareem sot •elykeene loather/ Mot sews oils wears twice as loarby the use ofilireit., Nimes* 011. WELL DIGGING - Thomas Sinale is -prepared to dig wtes on shortest notice. Old pumps repainet and legs rejointed at moderate prices. Elimville P. 0. Bargainsitt ,b7Licyc1es. • As we are anxious to clean out our.stock of Bicycles we have decided to offer the balance of our stock it Cost ter Cash. Our Wheels are all high grade with the best fitting S and most of them bought at Special Low Prices. If you are in need of a wheel cell and see what we offer you. Our Pianos and Organs,Sew- ing Machines &c., are of the best makes and prices reasonable. Music and MusicBooks al- ways in stock. Also all kinds of small musical iristruments on sale.•, S.MARTIN. le W. GLADIKAN, I Berrister Main St, Exeter, , MBDIOAD levipt M. 13. TOHONTOjmfl • RASI mite Vere elide cffice--Creditori. Ont.. 41 W.131tOWNINCT •L• 2 • 1., 5„ Orrlduattt, 1.710.0f..14 otueersity cola) and reaideeee, Dettrouse Labor& Wry, Exeter- - I,EGAL, DICKSON 48z.. CARLING, .arristersteoliciters. ls.toterles. Couveyencere gaarnz ners, Soliciters fee the -Wilsons Nerey tel.oara at lowest rates efinterest OFFICE:eat= STR,Er, Ls- e41313..rr5(1,.P..3.. extesee p W. GLADMAN (Saccessor to Elliott ee Gladresen) BorKet., cite, htuy. Conveyancer, Eta, aoney Wan On Farm andvillage- ropertiee at Loweet rates of intereet °num =IN _STREET =ET= N;%'RelAD SA. AND I leiNalN. Quer Ciraduate ersity. Demist, leleti without pain or tee effects. Office es Fan. block. West side al Main DA. ANDERSON, (1.),D O,L,D.S DENTIST. Roney Dradeete etthe Tannage 'University *ad Rept College et Dental eureeene 0!oereare with blame .lees Postvradeate .0: 1.1.1coge Scheel of Prosthetic lienteerxtnitb haulm -oleo mention. Even:Meg lateen to the Dental Prefmion ibie Mee. Dridge work. mums, al, levee:m.0X and veleautte plales eit dope in ate Ittetftbl. ZU41:111eT lp,4,5:40le. A perfect!), lacitatv.surawl,cde 111-411 tc4 taiami eNIT4C- 131411. eUe dear setteli -of -Coaling1,370c",ii, store sviiar. 051. THE WATERLOO '114!:,1401tNu.ShrololtooN4111‘4,0(0. 40 hEAD OFFICE WATERLOO, ONT alls ,TAigeLes0:r TturiAltielal 15 esrui,er4J1in 2112221o, vial continues 10 beeireagaitutt, WM- lir Oil eye 11Y. Pire.31erchruttli114, ciot,taticlerits ;Ind ell ether eaoreateas or It enemy promos lutepettie ansurem bar) al e nagicat at insuaingon the Pronalann So(o): trat,:late ..bunrn theirst ten ;eats ceinnnnY bat 3113 CH 14.1.91; elicits. comma property to the ae tea Of tag ate% intd raid Mimes atone I4"s'ift.111.**170,100.00, consatiee of Cate. In I 01 3 Government liopositand Ilio emotes- tcd. .1 14.3; ;mu Notts en baud and In totters. JAI .11 AI 1 0 Xt. 3'4T1.914 Reentary; .3. r. Inman. insuertor. . CHAS, 31.1 L. ARC nt for leter and VIC11314,Y. `•••••••••••••••••••••••••=0.111•11 FARM FOR SALE. The undersigned offers Lot 10, eon, 5, Town- ehip Stephen, tor sale. nt 31 reasonable price. eine e is bin:and on the premises a dwelling, good haler ban*. orchard. is well fenced and drained, and iirst-class clay ter the manufac- tuiberopf:rittiboeurlabrsrhuicppoirytilicie. 48- jy-Sm SWEITZER, t'recliton P.O. A GOOD INVESTMENT. l'ansores brick block and dwelling, in Exeter, for Sale. The brick block iS well situated, en Alain street, is 70x55 feel, three storeys, and contains four storeS, °theca and halls, all leased. This is the best busineos stand in town. The dwelling is brick of two storeys and contains10 rooms, is admirably adapted for a boarding house. The property must bo disposed of. Terms easy, apply to It. L. Fanson, Exeter, Ont. FARM FOR SALE The undersigned offender elle his 100 acre farm, lot 6, con, 3, township of Hay. The farm is weil fenced, well underdrained, bas two good barns, first class brick house and 11 acres 13f orchard, 10 acres hardwood bush, balance 90 acres good clay loam. There are two wells of splendid water, and is convenient to eburch and school. The farm is situated %miles from Exeter on a first class road. The farm must be sold as the proprietor is giving up farming on account of ill health. Joss NOR, ncorz Hay P.0 FARM FOR SALE Ono hundred acres of good clay land in the Township of Hay, in the county of Huron, lot 7. con. 12. Good buildings, consisting of fame house, bank barn, driving shed, and eel out- side buildings necessary. All clear with the exception o14 acres of timber. Four acres of valuable fruit orchard. Well fenced and under - drained, and under a high 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. very beautiful locality, Mustbe sold for the proprietor's health bas failed. Apply to GEO. DIETER1OH Dashwood, Ont. ADJOURNED COURT OF REVISION—EXETER Notice is hereby given that, an adjourned court will be held,pursuant to the Ontario Voters Act, by his honor the judge of the County Court of the County of Huron, at the Town Hall, Exeter. on Thursday, the 26th day (>2September, 1901. at 8 o'clock, p m., to hear and determine the several complaints of er- rors and omissions in the Voters Lists . of the Municipality of the Village of Exetee for 1501, .dll-persons having business at the ' Court aro required. to attend at the said time and place. Dated atExeter, this 'eh dee of Sept., 1901. GEO. 11.12118SETT, Clerk GOING NORTH— Centralia- .... 8.15 .A, 32. 4.40r. is. KiL pOpll den Oa, Exeter . Reiman ---. Huron and Brucc s 1 9 3C 6.0 9-41 6,15 Passenger. London. depart .... 6 50 9.60 6.25 Bruceileld . ..... 9.58 5.33 Clinton ,., .. . .. ... 10.15 6 oa Wingham, arrive 11.10 8.00 Genre Soma-- Passenger Veinglaun, depart 6 53 a. M. 3.15 P. er. Kteliiinmtoe: .. ..... ;7.47 4.25 Brucofield 8 05 4.49 nExeentsettril 88..2125 54.0627 8,85 5.14 'Centralia, 8.46 5,25 London. arrive . , . . 9.37 6.12 -.- nagyare's Yellow Oil is a useful remedy to have in any house, It is good for man or beast. Relieves pin, reduces swelling, neaps inflammation, cures cuts, burns, bruises, sprains, stiffjoints, etc, • Price 25 eents, gutheriand tones Co. LT ARE PREPARED TO PURCHASE _ELM OTHER TIMBER* =TARR STANDING -013. IN TRF LOOS, Apply tse E. 0: Kessel FottEreseN. Examt, ON Exeter. Roller Milts. Flour wholesale and retail. feed on baud, qualit OriStmelagge PRICES RIGHT. Rao INti.EAT IiI0111r$T PRICRS P.4111). Wood Wanted. J• Cobbiedlek Son T EEDS At Gosi Price. FOR THE NEXT:16 DAYS. A good Assortment. • ALSO HEAVY PANTINGS AT Q.OST, • e want to clear these • Hoes a, W "JOHNS. The l'olleere agons, Wagons. e We are agents for the celebrated Wilkorville Wagons VIE BEST MADE. F Russell Two Doom South 'Town Hall. CRIBDITON Roller Mills 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. OriStillff dna GDOPOilla. D0116 n3011011 H. SWEITZER, BROWNING'S tote Headquarters For Dyspepsia Cure Blood and Nerve Tonic Stomach and Liver Pills Iron Blood Pills Liver and Kidney Pills Kidney Mixture Sciatica Remedy Sarsaparilla Clough Mixture Cholera and Diarrhoea Mix- ture Clhilblain Lotion. Try any :of these preparations and you will be astonished at their wonder- ful healing mice eating properties. Al Full line of Patent Medicines on hand. TOILET ARTICLES SCI400L BOOKS AND SUPPLIES J VL- BROWNING Dominion LabOratOril. Burdock Blood Miters is a medicine Made from roots, bark Ana herbs, and is the best known remetly for tivePoPsia, constipation and biliousness and. vvill mire all blood diseases front a compion pimple to, the worst scrofo- lous sore.