Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1888-11-22, Page 4THE xcte r ;ArbroC" the West, SA.NDERS, Editor. Thursday, November 22nd11888. SPREAD E:1 CL.FIS L Ox>s or two American orators have, been indulging in spread-eagleisrn in anticipation of the time when the Stars and Stripes shall wave triumphantly over the entire American continent— in iother words, z 0 h r to rd whenthe continent t on t th n shall be ruled from Washington. For iustance, General Ben Butler said the other day at a Reptlbliean meeting; "-et prosperity will aloin to us such as wetee ver Saw by the gond God' who seems to hold the country ha the hollow of his hand. and our g loiious banner shall doat r'o far north that the wondering ksguimaux shall mistake it for theauro rya here ilia. America belongs the Amer. lea. and thee i'3 the future. No island shmidhtai a any et e''vtehalination over a eo11tinenu. No !Aria twee should have any del ieliotl.nntl + e the line of Mexico will bre ate tl,e: tai - tvnetion, but to its own glory, Yonne. men, remember that 1 lar let in not ie e spirit of prtoph- P,Ps,hu:,afth Atais 7ke;inenterlerlseand th'et spirit tie etiprevietion, of the good gifts that pine 1leiiet throws over ell." of clears. the lal'illi trtt rIietnrle of flit ~:Pen here wee enthusiastically eheeered by the asssnible'd Republicans, an each. in his trinda eye saw, in the near or distant future, the glorious day prcedictedby they orator a the evening; What a happy tial,• that will be --only homes and the husbands, we do not know; but one thing is certain; if the deunauds of the more advanced of the strong minded women's rights Agita- tors were conceded, alt. theirprinciples were generally recognized; and gener- ally put into practice, society would soon ; become revolutionized and de: nzorailzed, the entire social system would be upset, and the ideal home would become a thing of the past. Wo- man has one mission in the world—Mari another. Let the natural order of things be eha ged, and very soon a reign of disorder would set in But it is aHappy thoughththat while a few w.oiucn of the Leonard -Anthony type are clamouring for the admission of their sex to the exercise of respollsi- bilines in positions now exclusively 1 fiilied by men, the great mass of Arueri- ean womanhood looks with contempt upon their efforts, andscornfully re- pudiates any sympathy with their ole jects, one tinge for the American continent, ;alai au i+rililaut the ell t of lie display what. In the words of General Butler, 'the wonderiup; Esquima.nxshe llnlistake It eke the rate, . t °,,erasiNe'," Btu what wail the au:... , iae.ali Le tfaiaa under the circumstances? Will it. finding its i>xill;ilstey p'hh d in presence ref the only flats; al as VOW iihttet/toil 11te1tnl;Ilr, rehire toe enter listen c,ra,ll% 1ia,lsgt with tht' Stars and stripes, mad pie mind than such a radical chengt'' shall take place in the natural law that called it into exist- ence as shall hermit of ite allatirelute ex- tinertlon, or its being given employ- ment in Solite other portion Of the globe? We very much mistake the spirit of our old friend aurora borealis if it will tamely submit to this humili- ation of Mede;; superseded as any li;,rht- gi e i.eg poiver, 4 %t'hl by the thnt'.honor- ed and much esttennet'd and respected Stars and Stripes. There is the great tt,lteric eti s eta .the bird of freedom - 4 When he: u.rs ori whit about Mete t nt t 1 , high and his expansive wings shall reach from eret sin to ocean mews the eoutirict)t, what a sensation he will produce! If the national nag may be mistaken by urisophieated Esquiinnua for the aurora borealis, may not the national bird be mistaken for the great. solar luminary when shining in noon- day glory and splendor. We know of no reason why the national bird should not be as successful as the national flag. Each should have an equal eleinee, and there should be no jealous- ly between them, But rhetoric is one thing, fact another; propheucy is one thing, realization very often, some- thing very different. General Butler does not fix a time for the consummat- ion of the wished for supremacy of his country over the entire continent, and he was wise not to fix a date. In the opinion of not a flew people, however, who are just as wise and just as astute as that eminent American warrior and politician, the time array come when in- stead of the entire continent forming one Republic. ruled from Washington, the country now known as the United States may become divided, and the territory which it now comprises may include two or more separate nation- alities. Such a change is just as pro- bable as the continental supremacy of the United States predicted by General Butler and other spread-eagle orators, whose admiration of their country causes them to frequently indulge in absurd rhetorical excesses. EDITORIAL XOTES. Alli. Ci.1:li ntien fat begining to roileCZ that after the 4th of Afairch public oflice will for hint be no longer a public trust, Mn. Gb .usTooxu says he is quite will- ing tkat the Conservatives should set- tle Irish difficulty. The g o. zn. ought to be happy, then, for Lord Salisbury has settled and is still settling a good many Irish difficulties. IT is said that the proprietors of the Loudon Tines have "written or £5O, 00 as the probable Bost of their re- presentation by eotuisel before the Parnell, Commission, The Attorney General and Six henry Jailors each re- ceived a thousand guineas with their brief and their "refreshers" are a hun- dred pounds each. Dram the month of October, 1888, there arrived in the Dominion 18,940 immigrants. From January 1st 1888, to the end of October there arrived •, g fi these78,212in a l4 ,FQ7. Of acttiect the Dominion, 04,593 passed through to the 1 United States, every mother's son of them being counted as an exoduster from aria. r mCan,1 . A Y ,t'xltlsn girl has secured a n wealthy English for a husband, and the press of the United States mettles over the event like n pullet over her first Legg. It is true that Mr. Chamber - Dein lain is ay widower with a family of Broil n children; but then ho writes "Honorable" before his name. The peopt of the United States are nothing if not democratic. A prominent Indianapolis Republican admitted a few days ago that whole- sale bribery prevailed. in the. State on the eve of the late Presidential election. The average price paid for votes was from $20 to $30. In regard to "float- ers," he said it became a matter of whether the Republicans or the Demo- crats would get them. The Republic- ans had the larger bribery fund, and consequently were successful. It is es- timated that $500,000 was spent in the State in the purehase of '•floaters," Tan Equal Rights for Women party, the Prohibitionists, and several ofthe other organizations that put candidates in the field for the Presidency, might as well give up trying to reach the White House at Washington. ' No nominee of theirs can get there, and therefore their time, energy and money are wasted in election campaigns. "Ife at first you don't succeed, try, try again," is a very good motto to adopt under some circumstances; but in the case of the Presidency d the United States, the organizations referred to have as much chance of success as they have of electing the President of the French Republic. It is simply impossi- ble for them to secure the object aimed at while working as separate parties. They deserve credit for their enthusi- asm, their zeal and their perseverance; but they are 'lighting a battle which Minot result in victory for the causes espouse. MRS. LEO. AD'S CANDIDA- TURE. Mrs.. Cynthia Leonard, who was the. Woman's Suffrage candidate for the,: Mayoralty of New York, has been tali ing part in the discussion, recently started in a London journal, on ' the question, "Is marriage a failure ?" Mrs., Leonard declares, most emphatically, that itis. Some time ago Mr: Leonard obtained a divorce from Mrs. Leonard on the ground of desertion. Mrs. Leon. and is one of the leaders of the Wo- man's Rights movement, and is among the most outspoken of the band of fe- male agitators who are clammering for the privilege of being qualified to fill all the positions now occupied by men. Whether her programme includ es• the right of women to desert their A BIG CROP OF GALL: wo years ago." remarked a prom- inent business man, "my house was robbed of $400 worth of stuff. Two of the gang were caught and sent to pris- on for five years eacu." "Well?" "Well, the other day a man came to me to sign apetition for their pardon." "True, as Ilive. What do you sup- pose his argument was?" "He. couldn't have had any.—It was all gall." • "But he did though. He said the man got into my house by mistake. They intended, to break into my broth- er,s house, but got the localities mixed up, and he thought I ought to be will - in„ to overlook a mistake in such a thing as that. "Did you. overlook ?" "No, and thefeilowwent away saying he hoped. I might never know what it was to languish in a dungeon under all unjust sentence." NO EXCUSE FOR A JUROR. The judge was hearing a case that called for a jury trial, and after the us nal wrangling whichalways t'lies his patience, the jury was secured and sworn. The judge settled back in his chair, thinking that the case was fairly started, when up jumped a little Ger- man who was sitting at one end of the jary box. 'Shudge,I' he exclaimed. 'Well, what is it, asked the judge shortly. 'Shod g e, I t'ink I like to go hone.' "You can't go. Sit down.' `Shudge, I doand t'iult I make a good sliul'ror-' 'Sit down r -Veil, shudge,' and the little fellow was getting desperate. "I doand speak good english. 'You dont have to speak any at all, And I can't make nodings oudt of vot rinse fellers'--inuicating the Iaw- yers--;ire talking aboudt' "That's no excuse. Neither eau any ollit else. Sit down',' —WILLBE AT TEE-- 5114a hal, Zotgr, .,-.....04 .,w... Wednesday Dec. 6th'88 ONE DAY ONLY. PROM 8 a.. nt. TO 5 p, tale Patients please call.. early, Thos. Spear M10, Surgeon, &e., M. C P. S. 0, S. Se Le T. C. D. T1IE GREAT EAST INDIA SPECIALIST; 1 or, the treatment of all Chronic Diseases and Disease s necutiar to Women. Thirty year. iierttetice. l ead trill to ---St Thoma. The Doctor has been educated in nearly nit the leading Mtelical Colleges and iiaspit- alain 1 urolic.hasnerved a� r+urgcoain the, British.trmyLn theEast Indies ,burgeon in the American Army during the tate war, from ;Nal to the e•1un., Oft be dam e.has treat. ed all nationalities and circumnavigated the g1..Lc•--1lis thorough h clinesitiula, largo snit varied rrnotiee•eta . aperience.entitics him to rank as a Specialist --Second to none on this celnthien t..fnrtlie treatment of those dangerous and difficult diseases that have tallied the skill of the local physician. The following diseases with many others 9uccetinfutly treated • .Aatlitnei, BronaltitIs, Catarrh. Diseases of the Lancs."Dvspensia, Iii.easev of the,1y Eye and Ear, Ifeart iliaeaaes. Eiglei.v, Paralysis, Strictures, Ruptures. Mein Diseases, piles, Sc., Electricity Ascii when required. Test haonials of E,lneation--Tho folio wing testimonialsuud diplomas may be seen at Any aflice, with many others frexn errIv all the leading medical schools inn Euro >, ity College, lark St. School of Medic no and and Royal College of Surgeons. linl,liaa Royal College of ~organ., Belfast, Eng- land: e of Surgeons, Edinburg and Glasgow, Scotland ; Licentiate in M id- ntf,r ,,am endorsed ll the highest medical authorities in the LTnftcd hates and Rain- anion of Canada. The above with many letters from different parts of the globe are a medical pn9port--without re-examination doubt or quibble -over every sea, and in every land from the rihinn to the Netting of the Consultation free, Bead circular and re- member the date. MARKET SQUARE GERERAL TORE 4 404 The undersigned would inform the Public that he has just received his WINTER- , - >, STOCK, .. NCL V -✓�..�\*V, A FULL LINE OP DRY GOODS, BATS AND CAPS, AND CROCK- ERY, ROCKERY, BOOTS AND SHOES. Those Wishing anything in my line will find it to their advantage to call and inspeet my goods and prices. Best Roller Flower always on hand. • Highest Price paid for Butter and Eggs, and all hind of Produce, J. P. ROSS. (10-22-'88.) FEW MORE 8x10, 11x14 and 14x17 PlIOTOGRAPI FRANIES -o—JUST 115 AT—o— BENIO 'S FREEMAN'S' WARM PQWDER$ Are ',mane to take, Captain their own Pcartativc, Is a safe, stare and efectaaad dcstr'jeeofwornsii Children or TISSETTJ3R0S. SI )'izst Class Horses and Rigs. SPECIAL RATES WITH COMMERCIAL TR Orders left at Bissett Bros: Hardware Store, will receive prompt attention. TERMS - REASONABLE. A TRIAL SOLICITED, RISSETT EROS. ■ Dont fail, to see them. Also a New lot of Chromes and OilPainting's,-such as yon have never seen ,before in Exeter. The highest finished Cabinet Photo's in the County, S3 per doz. J. Senior, THE PROVIDENT Life and Live Stock As- sociation. INCORPORATED, AUG.1887. Head Office root. D Arcade. TORONTO, ONTARIO. In the Life Department this Asso- eiation provides indemnity for Sick- ness and ,Aeeideut, and substantial as- sistance to the relatives tot deceased lnelnl1ers at terms available to all.. In the Live Stock Department, two - t birds indemnity for toes of live stoek of its members. Send for particulars, claitns paid ete. WILLIAM JONES, Sept.0,'88. MANAGI4t; DIRECTOR. PS The Subseribers wishes to inform the Falrmers end General Public: that he is Prepared to furnish all Sizes and Kind of Well Digging Promptly Done and at Reasonable Rates. Ucsillcnca anti Silole • 1 AO Street. Mid Chrisliu'S i,ii'ery Stake, A CALL SOLICITED. JOHN MOORE. Btttu and Eggs Waned! EXETI .It NORTH. OUR '-TOCK. IS WELL ASSOr'TED FOR T r. A.St1N'S TRADE. GROCERIES: 16 lbs. Sugar for - 81.00. i 3 lbs. White Sugar for • $100. We can'ttbe undersold in Tette from 20c. to 75c. per 11; Boots and. 'Shoes, all styles, at low prices. A nicely assorted stock of HARDWARE, FORKS, SCYTHES and GLASS all sizes (cheap). Best Machine Oil 60c. per gallon. Coal 0i1 as Low as the Lowest. A NICE TEA SETT OF 44 PIECES, A good suit of Ready-made Clothing for $6.00. Ordered Suits got up in good style. Our Dress Goods are mark- ed arked down to the lowest notch. Twenty yds. of Cotton for one dollar. A house and lot, also a farm for sale. Apply to John Mathesonf; HAY P0ST0FFICE. CHRISTIE'S 4Y S.TggI£ A Positive Cure. A Painless Cure. molts Dm NEN OF ALL AGES* 17I$.4S 5 or ' a.' 17 THE #sitE4i`.d' r' E4SLTR 1[ l orvJPE.R, Marvel of healing, and Koldnoor of hledecines, �►� the teaGr;Me consequences of antis Heart, �/► 4 � lEaSpe stire and Ogerwort':t. Who ale Uro1euown from the nsTacts, of obesefind in t+o.8nradis 1 rum for rvoue debility, organic weakness, involuntary vitae looses, els. Brorvolte Iron wawa No. S ancars' nr the n, -.Want o; energy, vertigo want of purpose, dimness of sight, aversion to society, swift of conti,ience, avoidance of conversation. desire for solitude, listlessness and inability to fix the attention on a particular subiect, cowardice, depression of spirits, giddiness; loss of memory, excitability of temper. *per,. nnatorriaeea, or loss of the seminal ±,iia -thee result of soli.ubbuso or marital excees*•lurpo- team, innutrition, emaciation, barrenness,. palpitation of the heart, hysteric 'eelings to females, trembling, melancholy, disturbing, dreams, etc.are all symptoms of this terrible habit, oftentimes2unocentty acquired. In short.. the skin; of vSaI force having lost its tension, Avery function Wanes fn consequence. ;'caeuti»4 rasters and the superintendents of insane asylums uuitc in ascribing to irhee effects of eeif.at, 0 :the great mslozity of wasted lives which come under their notion. If you are incompetent for the arduous duties of business, incapacitated for the en eryments of life. No. Soffeor en escape front the etfeets of early vice. It you are mivaneed Lo rears, two. a twill giviyon full v%gor ate strength.If yeller* broken down, pliyisical^y ane1 tuoralty from earl tndiseretion, i#'e» result 0! gnoranea and folly,send address and rat cents in, stomps for id. V.40. aos'a Treaties. in Doak Form on Diseases of Use. Seated end secure from observation. Address all communieatioue to U. V.1�.,7�EWWWN, 47 pl,ellingtors $t.110 Toronto. R Man without wisdom tires in a foul's paras,se, CMS CtM.g'A5T ED. KM, nig SICK. THE BEAUTIFUL MID CLEAR OUT from w1lie le thio paper is printed was ; upplied by the ro TYPE Dealers in Typo, Preoees. and Printers' Supplies. J. T. JOHNSTON, 80 82 Wellington St. west T010NT0, ONT. TEE Elt TEP "ADV FROM NOW TILL JANUARY 1st., 1890. 4C1 The Newsiest .Paper an. the District. SUBSCRIBE NOW. COMMERCIAL) L1VE) Fi-st Class RIGS And HORSES. ORDERS LEFT AT THE HAWK- MAW HOUSE OR AT THE STABLE WILL 13E PROMPT 'Tay ATTENDED TO. To}rra � 2 meamors aloe s. Teiephone Conne6tion, EGLQBEC!?ristmas READY FIRST WEEK IN DECEMBER, A GREAT HOLIDA'SV PAPER New Type, New Press, Fine Paper, Five Handsome Lithographed Plates, First -Class Illustrations, Original Matter and Superior Workrnanship. THE BEST XMAS PAPER EVER I€SUED IN CANADA. THE LITERARY MATTER in the CIXttIs7MAS Gnolnn will be entirely original and will include stories from the ablest pens in Canada. The subjects treated being wholly Canadian. . FIVE HANDSOME LITHOGRAPHED PLATES accompany the paper, the prinoi pal one being a scene from Vancouver Park, B.C., from a painting by Mr. TA R. O'Brien, the celebrated Canadian artist. MECHANICALLY the Xeres GLOBE will be in every way first-class and no expense will be spared in having it surpass anything of the kind' heretofore published in this country. AS THE DEMAND will be very great, we would advise intending purchaser* to leave their orders at their newsdealer's or send direct to this office, not later than the end of the present month, as the supply will necessarily be limited end we cannot undertake to print a second editiorf. The price has been placed at ONLY 25 CENTS PER QC4,tio • ' ' It is intended to have the edition ready the first week fn. 'Deeeember in order to allow plenty of time for mailing copies long distances so as to reach destination before Christmas: THE GLOBE PRINTING; CO, Toronto. THE WEEKLY GLOBE, the best 'family newspaper in Canada, and TF RURAL CANADIAN, the best agr1Fu7,ta,lx'al paper in, Canada. Both from now to end of 1880 only $1,20,