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The Exeter Times, 1878-8-15, Page 3career tomaocoant for, He has sup- ported Mr. 1\Iaclkenzie through thick and thin. He has been every ready to dance as Mr, illaokeuzis fiddled. lie has approved of the enormous expendi- ture of the Government, of their uu- arrautable, watiton extravagance ; he sustained the steel rails transaction, by w iii h tbo eountry lost two millions of dollars, the Neebhng hotel Job, the ICatniuistiguia land purcllaee, a most flagrant act of favoritism and corrup- tion, the waste of money on the Fort Prances locks, the Gotleriele harbor Job, the Anglin, Jones and Vail " Wad- ' verteneit'ri" ; he has supported the policy of a Fivaaeo liiuititer who has converted a su plata lute) an annual tie - licit ranging from one to two and a lit►;f•lnitiiens ; he has voted to susteliu 110 awarding of e:"Fltr lcta for public forks of magnitude without tender, mi, what is of stlrpaase•itag moment to 1ua) veaple of North Middlesex, he hae voted to uphold utehh wit ora crashing every in,int=try in the country out at xietence. Leese things he sin ul:i bt shade to trhpl;tiu away. Ilut Ito caun t do it. Mr. (,'onelitiu's platform is aimed. It le i, trenchnueut and e;touo• Illy in the 1 t,blic Service, the colleen( ons Sank nLATEn ny ACT oV PAIiLiA]tt .'r, 1.gym. c'rtpit<tt, $2,O00i000, Re ". p0,0'11t1i HEAD OFFICE MONTREAL, THE TIMES tion produced by the ,vast money inflation of I the war debt the flow of emigrants to the States continues immense, In 1861 aua11862 they were getting 811,000 yearly in 1872-73 it reached iearlyhalf a million yeatirly; and even the last year the writer has report of, 1876, 157,000 persons went there, (Contrast this with Canada. In 1876 we paid nearly half -a. million of money to procure 3:3.000 emigrants, vt•ho do not all stay, awl in tlw sanleyear 21,- 000 Canadians—valuable citizens, many of whom had been edneatul in our seltools--weut to the United States.) The reader is particu- larly afsked to notice the immense incicase in American trade with other nations since the high protective tariff, Of 1861. Let us compere their imports and exports in 1861 aud in 1877. r,t.•t'()R'r$ EXPORTS 18111 ....,$274;000,000 $20,000.0(10 1875 402,000,000 i)u8,0UU,000 It n'i'1 be wen that before the institution of high p.o•e(live tariffs in 1861, the imports were „`.471 t1(1(1,J110; tis• exports $21)4,000.000; that is to say, they were buying under their tow tariff more by 5711.000,000 than they were selling, and going iii aloha to that, .amount. But trot, Kim changed this gr;elually, till last year the imports' fere 5162.000,000; weir exports, 5658.0000e►, thus showing Hutt nut only has their foreign trade nearly trebled under a fess years of I'rotttetivu, but that tate enormous sum of 5156,000.000 is now on the right side of the ledger instead of ,570,000,000 on the wrong— they rung—th > are sidling $156,000,I)i) worth more than tltty air lni,vlug, all of wliieh, When it is Pow, gdeiv J th.tt datriug that period they endured the zuu.t expensive war ever ltnowll--a civil war, too. detastatiug nothing but their ova property -•suit that they have paid otl already revel: httudt•ett nti.liwt dollars of their war dela by la;ivy taaatiout slams an increase of collate 1=rustc•rit;• never b feat equalled iu inc lii: tors of the wurhl.'' 1'.itTY PULLTICS, (1f 1_ arlil>',nlent to tike txt'(anditufe of \\'e would particularly request the looney, the aeardieg; of teitraets, not :leecttxec ()f Fvtry shatao of politics, be t; reward potiti(al ft vniites and vista they Grit or Tory, laderm or politics, e 'Ton'e 511'1 ux. T • . - Pic: 1.'0. traitors like 1)atiitt Glass;, lint by pnblte nee. 'Nee ee is w ,IiT i6\, 9i.t . rice -?ret, twit t t le) aX Lir:a.ts, 1:�t�., - e !vat, r. .1. lirs.Tox, 1. ^2 , - iN trio rretr. 114X01t'1' 1 teal•:tllv''lt. • i 1 N11'a (1'7. e itI' til t:lt - 5t t\.1atI:It. • Rr, 3@a't'. a •t 't if+ !`f'A•,, ai---'h 1. Ft, t a'iirr4 •y 4i iftd t,a..yllteaa't4,rt 1. 8trtlattt, l:<•'laulat,'o!l,t,tl.; 4 4S4,-1 sola het.+,‘'r'rei FAh X01 t 4, 9teaat•y a tstror t 1 ti) tntu•r.: tui .ei� tera),s. on t ;ell at v.i rat•?r -at notes wits ,,ue or un41. ,;u 0,1 et- '`-N.'ri, No I oi;;t4.i 4..• r'=ttai c-,1 as ot,i ,'ui$, - (olt+t�tl,sa,tta,10 tea all 1.1•1i to OP 11^,aaaloou at -1,,i 1 teras I, ,•111ptt;` te-t,ttttt•t at t`,we ,t1,114-5 ui ext Rosana;!. t:teter, Arg -aa. i :tt,1M78. tl•tat t�.It ter ,ITtf1C,5. •J fry phut) most reliance in is that if w 1111% ArtiU,:iT la, 18713 innente a duty that will steep int foreign articles whiclh compete with articles IIIEt LLit.i.IIUNS, wo luannetaetere, there will he ne The uucortainty and !`aspen!e to means of cellvetiu a revoune, That which the electors of the Dominion this is salt illtt my ht1 a auyoue eau se' haves been held with regard to the that(;, at u Onnee*, but the follerlciug state a:i alar. olvctious !las bees, at hast ter- 'limits of revenues collected in tl.e I'uit- uiithtatecl, Thu (mitt, anuounci 8 ou ell States ought to prove conclusively authorit • that, they win ba heltt on or thatolty of smelt t('aasouittg y Ruvr;ara }'tett TF`\ YEa r. ,Hi', ••, (about the 1t)t1T dlav of i7e1'tpt'tlu,• "1'i,,t soon t ro 18.i, t tune is well enough elwsen, as the pro- 1833 $ 21,177,578 tion to politics. ahem is but little Ile will thoutee at liberty to pay atter'- 18(315,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2175:4169t1::771:1;.;18:;0 30,818,827 1837 18,134 131 1838 iouipetitlon, the. steels' c"V strneliun t,. the Patine Railway, and the ad('i>tit't of a National Policy tSltich trill fostei hod dev('Iopo the varied and a„w dyi;t:t. tltdnstriO$ ttf the ootuatiy. 1i. Sentell• eras has opposed ell this, is it good fir the ceoutry to have it, adopted 2 lI est, work and vote for Mr. C'‘•ughliu. TUE QUESTION iib' REVENUE. One of the sargnutents ain't free trawl - Mire, to al proaeb nil questions which tliti"te the Upk'o-kion and the Govan - mean, oat in 0 party spirit which is wilful: to accept without queetioht ever)tlliltg ftivutablo to their Carty and rt je fes as nett no all that their option• ente may advance, but to weigh well. it, )tn uubi ist:e"l, ()attiutio mind the aro- meats that lua) be advenceal for and agoinet the adoption of a national pot. icy, or in oondemnation or eeteulaatian Icourse, lvery'statefnent that lir, For- af the general policy of the Govern -1 row objected to he proved clearly to be a lile01. Tint, is the proper epf hit in untrue=, when, to get ant of a tight •, 1 '1:comer, .Sloan lames the errors on Ills S t � which tltctiotls should bn eolite3)ed.Dr. b some one Inns fetid tont he who for. the printers. b'lt unfortunately for hies sakes his party for his country is a pa cafe, 1tr, Meekenzioreceived the bene. 'riot,anal if Reformers desire the good fit of all these mistakes. The abjet- opiuion of olmervant, 113101 0g classes ti- ns ore called trialing by the Reform of the community, who have hoard press, but when a tnau mattes a "Mk' their cries of puaity and economy ill take” to the extent of $14,000,000, se theaiitniuistrirtion of affairs, they Dr. Sloan clad, they are not so very will vote agaivat the candidates of ;air. trilling, Whether the result of the Mackenzie, if it can ba shown that the printer's carelessness or not, they were Goverutueut of which he is head base i serious and calculated to mislead the been recreant to their priuchlhles and. i electors. and Mr. Farrow in exposing traitors to the pledges of economy they them and showing the trickery of Dr. made SO lavishly before their aoaession to power. We are all intro 'having the sante lot in common, our Object being to build up betweeu the shores of the AUGUST 15,1888 tions, Hien the population employed by them must leave the country aud seek employment elsewhere. Noone will be left but the farmers themselves, aud a few small villages here stud there through the country, with 1 erhaps a shoe:shop, blaelcsmitli shop ana the corner store to consume the produce of the farm and supply ,the necessities of the fanner, Canada will be reduc- ed to one large eow pasture ; the cattle INFIDELITY and self-oouceit go baud in baud. TIER framer of the l'reaty of Berlin mast have been religiously ilholiued, for the Treaty begins "au 7401n de Dieu ti uC pole:lab t. If any one would like to read the treaty, end see the very large amount of work Clone by the ,P1elripoe tenths ies, is e will be happy to lend them a copy which we have received. and the grain raised will have to he : oWIIA'l' WILL THEY SAY IN ENG. sent to Europe to liu(I purclaiascrt' LAND." stead of having them at hose, and Ca election movements Hill be refiro;;rade `e neat the Parlihid Gazette, lieform.) Luo !ileus,^ :flat some other payers, instead of progressive. This is not an r hn di,,toe,ilsg the gue,tiOZI of Protection overdrawn picture. No loan that will vs. Revenue Tariff have er,deavoreii to reason out the question honestly eau fat.tee upon 'sir John A. llectio,atld as come!? any other conelueion thau that : ell argl' "f dl -list tai ti b(C0use the nrOI>oee' a judicious protection Viet will foster "A tariff t11at}wt.thi'tl virtually !Baht out the heath tit ihit" manufaetnh•ed g'bo our i,.duitries of till kinds is necessary l as well es nose, of united States. to the welfare of the people. FARROW I"S SILt1AN, } Such an atgenieut appears to us emi- m nlcy silty'. If the right is allowed us of hhh.ah,aging our even fiscal affairs, and we find preti etion 11ee4asitr'y tor our Some lits age Dr. Sloan, the Re. town iutett•a.ts, it is ;Absurd to milt tho forth candidate for North Huron, le- Put p!e of (:tuada to suffer depreasiun, out it a campaign shoot to the e1eetor", tram; eta;.'ultti•rn suet remelt) i11HJr;l:lfi. Mr. T. Fele ow, the preserve member, tan looking over the sheet fotn1 a num- cant, alien we might IA conte great 410.1 tl')Li:us, bectln.ee It tvamt(1 prevent 13riti,li trrlders from making moiety out ber of glaring untruths., and challenged of ns. 'that Pi e 80C148 of over drawn the .Ur, to meet Liao tat any place, Hud tnc alty 11)11 would find but few symptl. could 1 11112' in alts 1 )rtabulcal age. It we c if he aul nut peeve there were twenty that l 1 gent that Protection would bt•uent us, there ueetl be no galrstiun of '•\\'hat will they say in Et:gliud ?" The nat. ural sea -tiniest; of those British peapte directly interest, a in our trade might provoke fr„uh theta cousi(1e+rable grime. blit"•g, bot what of that ? We joie untruths In too sheet lie would resign and 1)r. Sloan w:nthi be permitted to wall; the eour•te. Mr. Farrow very reasonably prnpnsed that he elhonla point out the untruths in the circulars, aud 8s1r• Dr. tiloan to prove them true', ; loofas with Sir John A. 1larelonaud iu and after a gond aeon of wratlglulg the the sentiment of •"Cat,ada for the Om- ! e, itu- t)r„ who evidently desire's either to Anne," anal' if net here itnpreesr(l with break up the meeting or snake a speech the feasibility of 111e shoal(", 11') rl•g:trli F that had no bearing on the immediate for what thea might say ill Eng;itthd . twonl.l deter us from 6nllpurttug his pal. 'natters of discussion, teas obliged y ier, What we fear is that his pt,licy is u10011 against lois will to submit to this to make "Canada for the manufactur- er,""—tae many for the few,-- to !;seri- flee the welfare of the masses that a few apeculatore may emote immense fortunes. Au'( the contend t,hatt tiheeo are the ally tillable grounds to take againet Protection, Whenever Britain finals that we in tieing the best we can for ourselves have become a burthen and a ueelese responsibility to her, then let her set us adrift it she will. If lire are only to be a colony .'f wu) kers (here for the imperial hive, we had better set tip for ourselves. Over 0 Inoutll'S bine to spare, anti it behoves the candidate to he up at d do iug. Every legitimate effort should be put forth before that time to seem o the return of when pledged to retreucb • 10,70 8>.• 1+1:39 ..................... 26,551,533 1810 .....................'.. 15,101 1101 1841 10,010,192 .1112 n 16,622,736 5211,885,6x, Pacific and the Atlantic a Dutninion meta in thethe?ublic service, and a jn 1 which we may with stride call our meta1 ituv£xl•r) run ITN Yl YEARS rrllliR 114103 TARIF'Fka.1 bonne If the policy of Mr. 1lackenzie dicieus protection to our native Indus- or 1821 AND W2. It must be inyllrious to Reformers as well. If the National. Policy will benefit Con. eervativee it lutist benefit Reformer, too. Our interests tare identical. They tries. We would espe't�i,tlly urge olio!.the e;oeiservetive patty in South Huron' necessity of united and vigorous action from the present time up to the close of the polls. \\'e do not expec> the route.et to be very close, but every opponent of the Government shuttle' work if the election of Mr. Porter tl,:peudt:d upon securing every tavaa:ntblt vote. Let there huh uo supineness, but Int the party close their ranks drreeealt au unbroken front to lir. Greeuway. Ile is woil(ing bard, anti if he lose the election, of which thea t can be no reasot,atle doubt•, it %till aloe be through lack of !bort on hits pert. We „would advise the committee: whose ditty it is' to see that every see - tion of the riding is thoroughly canva secs, to bestir themselves, aud if an.portion remains uuoativateaed, to set that it be done at Once. NORTH MIDDLESEX. We see by oar Periahill cotem. that. IL•. Celia Soa"euerd, 111 preleut M. for North 1li,idlesex, is paying leis c )a- stituents a visit. N " doubt dr. Sentell- ertl will nlalie n house to house canvass of the rifling, but we are of (pinion that his escalatory exercises among the infante will do him no good. IIe may be to very mice 111lu, " an honest, neigh- borly eigh-borly mat.," but these qualifieatione ere not su,licient to entitle him to li seat iu Parliuu>eut. There are live iidestious atfit.ctiug the interests of-th c ^uutry. !lint the people should ponder over and et4atniue thoroughly before e,uction (lay, Th 'y' should not at all eev(n,t8 promise to vote fur Mr. Scaatch ('rt1 without examining his record. H.. has toasty erl•ord iu !Ai Pthrill uheutr-y ........................ 5 31,653.877 18 ililtlrhous t) the Consery es 11$t>26 97 18.28,. 1820 (8:311......... 18:31 . 36,5U0,111- 1r32 29..,•ll,17, cannot be aej•atritted. Legislation catu- 1844 211,2:16.35, not benefit or injure the members of 1845 ..•., 30.052:1A ---- one political party without affecting, $•?:17 849,211 the other party to the same extent. 214,885.853 v • • rhi 'la t wily, we ttti; slut 1 , of Then tl 1 11(11 "a I lftr(l e in >•, ,,t t3 q 113• tariff+iu ten years $824156,:34, tion like the National Policy be tali. Now the reader still carefully nota (1: J proached in a purely party spirit or tlhtat in 1832 the Americium eoeereci even in a !pieta of hostility ? It should their tutili'; (2) as a consequence the re not be. but ilufurttlnately mon whose venae fell the next year ,$5,00,000 in 1 pars -mei interests wilt be better served round utuubers ; (3) that the revenue by \]r. IIacitonzie's retaining power, c nttietted to decrease uu;il 1842, whet ares Jilin„ it •••' •T• •• teed the 2(4,1838111 27,118 g4t 211,651,2551 • :37,0,`$,701 , •28,3811,505 it was 1, enty-threemiilions of dollars peole to cousidsr it on its merits. less that under the .l, gih tariff; (4) 1liat 7tl16' are trying to make scapegoats of in 1813 the high taxi! was I'einipo'aed, t.h4people. Partyism les long 1 eon when the rev ane swelled at case tt call -kid too far in tlii- country for the 29,000,(:1)0. 'fja is exit aor livary and eointry's good, and the electors should immediate il.crease could only have mike an effort to shake off their been due to one cause, the high tut ill sfl'ickle•t They can look atoned thein. Does this convince our free trade read- ers that high tariff does not mean r decrease, in the revenue ? A law tarita dyes indeed seem to pointthatyear. \Vrrii referenoe to the beneficial rt'. sults of protection, ;v 1r. it. N. Phipps, in a pamphlet lately issued, ;eye of the United States :— "In 1301 their productit.n of pi, iron was 731,000 tons ; by 1871 it had risen to the en- ormous quantity of 2,686,001) toes, or five times what it had been. Of late it has ue,'et sunk to two in Minus. It must her=nhehw :reit Heat this is not for export. '111 it protectivd ;ys:fin secures its use in its own country ; and rhi- vast 11 crease, therefore, shows an equal i1L(•re 'tee ir• all their itnlnutries, for iron is the base of all. In 1861 111.)y had 31,000 miles of railway; in 1877, 85,000. It must be noticed that this great addition does not mean lines built—as we in Canada, seem to bui cl our prin- cipal—to carry' our neighbor's goods. The in• urease Of united States roads meatus that they have so inteell _,uure of their own produce to t})end opera. osier•, ,iu.tyiillstu.tdiug tate over -emigre.- fa t:Gurera are force to btls i a1 anis wii'tt do they et e ? 'Workshops, once !lives of industry, now idle and crumbling to the earth, towns and vil- lages depopulated and their b•lildiug� tenantless, armies of unemployed men walking the streets of our ci ies and asking for employment in V tau ; trade of every kind falling off Rua the pockets of the people becl•nieg empty; iu short, where pr )sperity once shot its genial rays, ruin now rears its head Maud moci(s us ill our desolation. This cannot be denied. `Vlore is nothing to cause the conutry to grow. The agri- Cultural soctious cannot until .the end'. of time become mere thickly populated, and there are now itlnl'e cities and towns in the Douai .leas than agricnl- 'are alone can sustain. If our !Manu TINE T41.111,1_L. II. tc 13.11 GOES(: \8RT1E. 'Mixed . .... 8.03 n, m. :11111 *1.35 p. u). Express . , ,.. ... 7.35 p. nt. (tois(4 ti Tht. Sloan, has ,lone good service. 'That he 1Mail .. ' 14A9 a. m. will bereturned by an overwhelmingr, I: Nixed.,.,.,. 2.50 p. zu. Emmet: 4.. 8.2,5 p. u1. majority there is uo room to doubt He is an ab e man, and the .frequents scandalous end vu'gar attacks made on him by the ,\Iiuist .rat papers throrgh. out the Province show that ho is n thorn in the side of the Reform party —90 e'ylktl. CENTRE I11:1.10N. We are happy to helve received i. - formation from the Secretary of the t Centre Huron Cm set vative Associa- i (ion that the Couse:vatives of that rid- ing intend opposing Mr. Horace Hor- ton l atthe cominge c 3U 1. rileelltl totA t., of the C()nt•eutinn will be held at the Commercial hotel, Seaforth, on 'Wed- nesday, 21st inst. \Ve hope the stron- gest 'available man will he selected, and that a 11 the energies of the party, Sup- ported \t lltVIE D. SP.teRzIA:v-- LArz., - Iz, Landon, on the 13th in -4t., by the Bev'. S. J. Allin, Edward u•d •1. Sinwlonau, son of 9Ir. John Spackman. to Miss Louisa Mand Latta, all of Exeter. i N; t)I:t\r1' T ACT OF 1875 AND AMENDING .CTS. IN THE NATTER OF JAMS c A B, AN INSOLVENT. .F 1 � 1, 'G 7 'Mena � S ^'4•- •S 13y virtue oftYt x . 11nt:i a � 1 nt( ,,f tho !:.tate oath effects< f t.at .obi-ve-t:aaued In- solvent, I will eller for sal. by Public Auction on the Pr8111b es, ou by patriotic 1 11 farmers, will be Wednesday, .Ang. 28th throwlh into the 0011test, The Riding, f t n 3878,atONE O'CLOCK inIIeeirTEn2o0i . we ](note is thoroughly 13et,,lll, I-,,,4,llthnri8,ttttlrnvdaatorbstartitesaidInsolvent eplorn le tt Gil t e coup ha le 1. All sad .p ul1I,Vnt cet•ot ) an (lop Ortt e that nudrotia who have of land and paomises situate and 1icing in the Village of Exot,+r, in the County of Herrn' and Province of ('utarh0, 00131 ,osod ut part of lot own - her twenty-fouritt the 1st concession of the Town- ship of Stephan, continuing by adnti;asurement thirty-two perches of laud, be the same more or less. nett which p iect> of ltu d is sliotvu by the reg- istered plan of that putt of the seal +^ .r . ,a,>„ in ct 'roe,.,. ,,( ..-.'lxeltt 2Tltltlelt•: 1 bl a h T 1 G i ar4al nr tract hitherto fought i1, tl-e, front ianks bt the Reform party are determined to vote for the Naitional pi)licp this time. We feel asap ed that among them 'herr are. Many of the censcientinus Reform- ers of Centre Huron. They have no personal interests to serve, and the country will be benefitted by their de :tertian for the time being from the mel. who will not lift 41 finger to save the country from ruin, Oun t eaforih cotem. alludes to the progress Exeter has male during the latish 5ve years to prove that the conn try has been prospering under Mr. MaLciconzie's rule. Exeter's population tncresae(1 because it railway was built through it, and opened up the country, taud besides, its progress .. was made in the first year Mr. Mackenzie's Govern - anent was in power. Since that ti)11N, ;his village as well as well as all other places in the Dotninien has felt the evils of depression -evils that vnnld have been mitigated by, a wide Government.ExeteSolicitor. ,3rclAue st, S7et. 1 -tad other parts of the country been1 H COVEN: 'OFFICE — more prosp'rt>ns Exeter would have l i. O MAIN + / Street, Exeter, up-ot;4rs, opposite Oentt•al moreaYei mitre rapidly still, Hoto'. Si^le ••utranc0, on fiats south --trout loud - V lag o1 ete formerly collet: Praucestoen and has boon and is la'aown as and called Lot num Jar one hundred and etgl>ty---i1. On the above is ereotod a large BENDING AND, I U MMI FAC O Y3 furnished with first-class nlactiinery in all its dc- partntenta worlo'(1by ,a steam engine of eighteen - 'horse power. This atffor(1s au excellent oppor- tmaity for embarking in a profitable business. 2. A11 an0 singular tllat'40ertau) ltareel or tract of lnn,l and preniitscs sfttaate.and being in the Village of L'xetertatores,tul centuming by a du1ettxl- mr'naeut two-fifths of a)1 acre, b ilia same marc t > loss, consisting' if ci111age lots numbers S+53 and Ike as shown on the registered plan before mon- (deflect There is a comfortable 8051)4e dwelling house thereon with other improvements. S. All avid singular that cc ruin parcel or tract of hula and 130011 (08 situate and. being in the Vil- lage of Exeter aforosald containing b-. atlmeas- m'otnentouo-fifth of an acre, bo the sang more or less, comprising linage Lot t>nml>er 8,5e as ' bown. ou the roistered plan before mentioned. 4. Also all the stook in trade t,i'the sold Insol- vent, coin prising ialarge quantity of finished. an t unfinished stuff, consisting of carriage and hoary work, including spokes, hubs, &r.. • Particulars of metunbranees, and ccnditi.1n Made known on•clay of sale, Tor further particulars apply to MRL. Ti. V. ELLIOT, •ISAAC CAI(I ING, o ica or. Exeter. - As,lenco. t•cl ug to J. .0:aardi., 40-1y. 1 t