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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-6-6, Page 4• tablished 1E377. 73, s, CVINTNIZAI BANZER, EXETER, ONT. Transacts a general banking busieese. Reel) Ives ,the aceounts or merchants and hers on favorable terms. effers every accommodation consistent with fa and e ens erv ative 'haulm g P rinelP les - Five per <10111, interest allowed 011 deposits. Drafts:issued Payable at ttny office of the Merehants Bank. NoTns DISCOUNTED, & MONEY TO LOAN ON NOTES AND MORTGAGES Ow tutu 'oinaeo. THURSDAY, .1UNE 6th, 1889. Tani GLOBE'S JESUIT PROTEST- ANTISM. -- The Globe newspaper in its issues of 29th, 301h and 31st ult., in speaking of the doings of the Supreme Orange Grand Lodge at Goderich, ,betrays its real Jesuitism. In a series of articles, which fur coarse abuse, lying, prevarica- tion and, intended harm, was hardly GOOD BUTTER. Why is it so little good butter is made by our farmers, ; or, rablier, why butter at ail, i tluv do. not make good butter'? The compleints are general, especially at this time of the neer, that some of the butter is rancid and ill - flavored, In fact, good. butter is the exception, and not the rule, With the many improved appliances there is no excuse for making poor butter that ,sells for 14 and 15 cents per pound, wheu choice "gilt edged" butter wonla sell for one-third more in, our marketa and for exportation. Farmers are com- plaining; that they do not get enough for their butter. But if they make good butter by the aid of the faaan creamery aud otherimproved appliances, and put it up in an attreetive form, they are sure of a good price for all they can make in Exetei markets, and also if our market has an over -produc- tion, butter can be profitably shipped to the English market,. Speaking of good. butter au English ex- change says: --"There were Ave things the foreigner aimed at in regavct to the butter which was sent to the EngliseMar- ket. These were uniformity in color, hi colored beast. The beast neighs at the texture, in saltieg, in packing, and leaving Pope and is in good order to carry the old no water in the butter. In Denmark they emu e, to a triumphant vietory over all the counted that the butter made should kep nationof the earth. The Pope's cardinals, a fortnight. At their shows they never bishops, and priests, together with all the offered prizes for what we call fresh butter, leading lambs of the Papacy, Abell work just churned, to be eaten withintwo days. and triumph in getting authorative power The butter for competition had to be lodged with the secretary of the show three weeks before it was judged. And Why? Because they wanted that butter to be good butter for three weeks, know- ing that it might be that time before it was disposed of in ovr English market. "The Danish government had an agent in this country, and if any complaint was made as to the quality of the butter, he wrote to the head of the Agricultural clepartmeut asking him to look after the fernier, as the quality of the butter he was sending over was injuring the whole of their production in Denmark. We might depend upon it that foreign countriee would not leave one stone upon the other uuturued to keep the grip they had al- ready got of our best markets, to keep that fourteen millions of money for a thing which we ought to be able to make at home." - - FROM. Montana comes the news that a steady procession of Mormon emi- grants can be seen wending its way to the fertile fields north of the inter- national boundary line. If they can be induced to leave behind them polo- gamous practices which have brought them into disrepute, their settlement on the prairies of the Canadian Northwest need not be regretted. By their indus- try they have made the desert of Utah to blossom as the rose, and with the much greater natural ad- vantages they will find. in the new land they are seekine, there is no reason why they should nob in a few years be among the most prosperous citizens of the Dominion. But they cannot be allow- ed to introduce their obnoxious ideas on plural marriage, which are so much at variance with the laws and customs of the country they propose to make their home. Canada has room for everyone but law -breakers, providing they come unassisted and prepared to meet the difficulties inseparable from life in anew land. ever exceeded, even by the Globe, it finds fault with the Grand Lodge for not insisting on disallowance of the Jesuits' Bill, It knows that such in- sistence were fruitless and ram; but it would probably help its party with some who do not see the utter impossibility of disallowance. It grossly attacks Grand Master Wallace, who suggested the only practicable way of dealing with this obnoxious Act. The Globe does not -want it dealt with, because it sneers at and ridicules all action, but the im- possible one of disallowance by Sir John. The fair eloquent, practical, and sensible speech of G. M. Wallace on this ques- tion, the Globe describes as " gabble." Compared to all prior insult and abuse, that the Globe has for tmie immemorial heaped on Orangemen, the present attack boars the palm. The Supreme Grand Lodge is composed of representa- tive men from every province in the Dominion. Many of them were men eminent, not only in their locality or province, but in the Dominion. Yet the Globe describes the meeting as a gatherinz of men without principle, sense, religion or any redeeming quality. The Grata Lodge in its wisdom has taken a course on this question, that is at all events, harsh and severe enough, but a course probably justified by the events. The Grand Master recommend ed practical ways of dealing with the subject. And because the Grand Lodge did not take the Globe's method of howling for disallowance, (when dis- allowance is impossible) the Globe says the Lodge has stultified itself. The Globe describes the Jesuits as insincere, diabolical, seeking self interest first, last and always, bound by no constitutional form of government, constantly seeking war of creeds and peoples, hoping to gain by general disquiet. If the Globe's description be true, the ,greatest and most perfect Jesuit we know of in this cou.atry is the Globe. No person or institution in Canada .so well fills the Bill of a Globe Jesuit as the Globe itself. Hatred of Oranvoism, hatred or regular constitutional govern- ment, hatred of the ruling power in this country, hatre& of the general good.feel- ino- between the Catholics and Protest- ants of this country, hatred of every- thing but self and party, have always been the Globe's characteristics, but -were never so well marked as at present. In the furore of its frenzy it states that the Orangemen made Sir John Mac- donald shed the blood of Louis Riel, The law of the and shed hisblood, and Orangemen or Sir John had. nothing to do with it. Grand Master Wallace and the Grand Lodge, 'can well afford to laugh at the frenzy of the Globe, when its object is so apparent and so hellish withal. Its object since Riel was cap- tured has been to foment a most better hatred between the Protestant and Catholic portions of this fair Dominion, and. certainly " " is not too harsh a worci to apply to such an object. But it is well for the peace and well-being of tbis country that the Globe's influence is gone, that it is old, doting, hateful, but impotent. Both Catholics and Pro- testants know the animus that besets it, and pay no attention to its frenzied vaporings. And nothing shows the animus better than the fact that in all its pretended. Protestant solicitude. it falls to mention once the fact that Mowat & Cc. are governed by the heirarchy and Fraser, or that G. W. Ross alio ws French and Sy liabus to be thughtin Eastern schools to the exclusion of Eng lish, and the Globe flies off at a tangent. Mowat, &, Co. with all their doings and sayings are sacred with the Globe, no matter how the interests of Ontario or Protestantism may be endangered by their action. In fact the action of the Globe lately has been so peculiar, un- meaning, hidden,disturbing, hateful and anti' protestant, that many well-meaning • , people begin to eels- whether the Globe it; not really controlled by Jesuit in- fluence. And people will continue to ask it more and more so long as tbe Globe persists in its present impetuone and mischievous course. It is now in order for the Globe and other anti - Jesuit institutions and organizations to exhibit their Zeal for the Protestant cause by supplementing, in a similar amount, the $1,000 raised by the Orangemen,to have the case at issue taken before the Privy Council, and its legality tested UP to yesterday- it had rained during the preceding ten days, the results •be- ing disastrous to crops and stock in this section of country, While in the U. S. many lives have been lost and property inestimable has been destroyed. At Sang Hollow and Johnstown, Pa, a heavy flood has taken place, gentailing death to the number of 12,000 persons,. Two small towns were swept away, to- gether with their inhabitants. •The eatiSe is assigned to the bursting of a reserVoir. Itt Canada, in the vicinity of Cobourg and Port 'lope, serious floods have also taken. Place. Bain is tiilt falling And WhAti the sequel' will be Yot to be eicperienced, COMMUNICATIONS. We do not held. ourselvee responsible fop the viewset forth by our eorrespondents in this eolumn. The Pope, he will andmust reign. To the Editor Of the Exeter Times. The casual teeder, I trust, will not be • startled when I tell /aim, •on truthful aSeillity, that the Pope cif Rome, ere many months shall pass over, shall mount the "Scarlet colored boost" of Rev. XVIII, 3 The Pope's predecessors rode the same "Scarlet colored beast" hots; A. D. 588 to 1798, whea the noble 3oniparte command- eci the old man celled Pius the sixth to step down from the "Scarlet colored beast. The Pope had to obey and stop Ms pre- daceous onslaught and flagitious career. Peace to Boniparte's ashes ! Justinian, a Papist emperor in Conetantinople, gave authorative power to rule by the sword to the then Pope of Rome, and in consecu- tive ordererotle the "Scarlet colored beat' for a time, times and a half, or 1260 years and ended in 179S. Ever since 1768 the Popes, by hook and crook, hath, with great aseidnity, labored to coax the ten "horns," or kingdoms, to give him a help ing hand to soar and mount the "Scarlet Lucan Topics. -- Biddulphons have built fiat bottomed boats and are now navigating their farms successfully. Mr. Smile's building is rapidly nearing completion, and promises to be one of the handsomest structures in town. Mr. Armitage, representing: Messrs. Levi & Kauntz, of Belleville, spent Saturday and Sunday with his parents here. The Rev. Mr. McGinley, of Seaforth,ac- companied by brother•in-law, Mr. Papst, paid this town a visit last week and were the guests of J. R. Grant, merchant. Two Chicago pedestrians arrived in town some time ago and are now entertaining the citizens with legerclesnain. Talk about your fun I Bob McLeod's colt is iapidly conval. To the Editor of the Baxter Tivies. escing, and Robert wears his wonted smile once more, to the great satisfaction of the community, as it is so seldom Robert miles. "Take some yourself.' Mr. Jonathan Hodgins, our corpulent city father, felt somewhat hurt at the sly dig the TIMES correspondent gave him in last week's letter and threatens to enter an action for slander. We'll take it back Jonathan. Billie Taylor, the jovial boniface at the Stetion hotel, has just procured a hooping lend gander which he is exhibiting among his many other curiosities for the small charge of a nickel, It is needless to say as a summer resort, Billie's place is un- livalled. The weather has been one continuous down -pour of raio, and in consequence our merchants have lost that angelic smile which generally illuminates their geinal and handsome countenances, while the Lord is pleased to penetrate • the clouds with xa ray of sunshine. Mr•Claud Sanders arrived home from Winnipeg looking hale and hearty, and says the El llemdo of Canada is the North West. The floral wreath the red and white roses of the British Einpire circles around Winnipeg. Last Sunday afternoon the S. A. with their blood and thunder banner; paraded the streets singing, "We will awake the dead." Perhaps One annointed by 0. Supreme Being woolcl be justified in living the expression, but such blasphemous oat - tries ere at disgrace to any plane, especially when they are to combustible that less woUld cane° spontaneous combustion. • Your correspondent has beeia for the past two months laboring tinder a severe attack of pneumonia and has been very lali as regards writiug tp the classical tow% of Liman, but hopes in future to swing a hatcher knife whigh has never been be- smeared with anything brit galore, simply beeattee the (lusty page was htid deem Inr disciples of Sinbad the Stator. Cors Aylmer and Irwin paid Lueat e vitil last Thursday and made an ill- speatioli Of No, 5 compapy and armory, arid found everything in first clatis order, paying a very. high compliment to &vb. Frank for hevIng the best kept company and aceoutrements , in thiS district. 'Messrs. Albeit Stanley and Prank Davis have been appointed to the pPaibiOna 1Sb and 2ed. lientenants respectively, isa ale,5 campany, and they • are already making gigantic strides to got their • company in an efficient state of diseiplint for the annual drill which takes plebe on from the papal nations of Western Rome. The papal kingdoms are: France, Austria, Italy, Spain and other papal states which are on the spring, to see the Pope raised to full power. to use the musket, sword and spear, similarto his tyranical predecessors, who, according to the account that Foxe's Book of Martyrs gives us, 50,000,000 of the innocent followers of Christ felt the papal steel and were burned at the stake. England and. Germany will be the last of the powers to consent to raise the Pope to the power he seeks after. 13ut the rest of the papal kingdoms of Europe will cause England and Germay to cave in. The Pope says. all he wishes for is power to educate the Papists. Doubtless this is correct, but it means not spiritual teaching only in part. Then every Papist is instructed to look upon every Protestant as a heretic, and hence lost unless convereed into Papacy. To kill a Heretic in the eyes of Rome is meritorious, and worthy of endless praise and exaulted. adoration. The Pope will have a well trained army of true and devoted Papist soldiers drilling a,ncl recruiting alt over the habitable globe, so that the Papal army alone will amount to 100,000, 000. With this 100,000,000 of true and devoted Papists, all the Annihilists, Socialists, Fenians, and Anarchists are sure to join the Pope's army, don't forget. Add to the aboye list the riffraff, loose fish, and the off -scouring of ail nations. What a mighty host in one army 1 and all united as one man. This army on their march for death and destroction shall my bolt every jail and penitentiary on this earth. What can you expect from such people but rapine and arson, slay and slanghter, no mercy unless you are ready to become a Papist. The "ten hem" are to give their power to the Pope. -See Rev. XVII, 13. 14. For one prophetic hour is 15 litereal days. But bear in mind that the papal army is training and drilling for the work of death, and when the prophetic hour comes the army well go on the march from city to city, demon ing in all places their money, food, cloth- ing of all kinds, watches, jewelry, and whatever the army win take a fancy to. Read with great care, Daniel XII, 1 ; Zechariah, XIV, 2 ; Rev. XVII, 16, 17, 13. Wonder if the Pope will not aek the old veteran, John A., with his Tory ma- jority, and the Grits that sold their party to the papacy, to lift the "old man" on the "Soarlet colored. beast" to ride to viotory. Even this would .be less flagitious than the passing of the Jesuits' Estates Bill in one swoop 1 giving half a millien of the people's money to the Pepe to pay, his army I Shame. Equal ' rights, equal privileges, no more, no less to Grits than Tories, Catholic than - Protestant, this would be superb and magnificent. The nations are restless and jealons of each other and spending their millions in equip- ing for slaughter and murder. All the above terrific events are right upon u; prepare. -J. C. McIntosh. of Perliemeat are our dely appointed repro- eentativee for a term of Years, and are eueli have disoharged their duty in sup porting the govern- ment in whet they hold to be t e only legal course that (meld poSsibly be pursued. •Mon oecuptling those higll Positions heve • to be fanatioism.1 may have been religioue etworite sem that prompt ed rremier Mereier, in Quebec,, in originatieg sueb a bill, but when it had pauea, end the question pf disallowance is coneidored, then 01S metive that prompted tlhegoaAlitt,eparntireeAbeettlattipiikohoeveceoduenratibgeoievetrha.° men t may hove decided wrongly but then is a Court of apPeal may tweet that deoision, but it must be remembered thet it is the highest Court in theland that eau do it end not a howling rabble of agitaters. This letter I wish more particularly to refer to those petitione that are being circulated by the self-a,ppoioted "Citizens Committee," of trorontee nraeing for the disallowance of the Act ot the dissolution of the flame of CO:a- mens, In these petitions it states that the Jesuits' Estate Aot reeognizee the right of the Popo to iaterfore in Q11, boo legisianoe, which is derogen)ry to the supremacy of the Queen, New I wish to differ with agitators on that point, It is a well known fact that the Pope is the supreme head of the Roman Catholic' cheroh. and wihout his situation no bargain of the nature involved in the sk ttlement of this Question would be legal or binding, and there- fore es a principal to a bargain made by d his egeots, the Jesuits, his satisfaction of the t contract had to be obtained, not on tho_part of the government. but on the part M• the Jesuits, for it must be known to all that their two agents, Mercier and the Jesuits, aould not make a bargein binding without the consent of their reseeetrve principals, the Parliament of Quebec and the Pope, and hence the Ace le passed reeifying_the ba,rgain, subjeet to the approval of the Pope, not of the governtuent's part of gaid her am, but eubjeet to his hP- Proval of that part of the bargain made and in behalf of the Jesuits, and hence to make a valid agreement he had to give his eensent. No insult to the Queen is intended or munlied in the Act, butes in all contracts the principals to it must assent before it is binding. Now let mo give the following reasons why these petitions should not be signed: -(1) Because there i8 110 possibility of obtaining what is asked for in them. If the prayer of these petitions could be granted at allat could °MY be by upsetting and trampling under foot that great underlying principle 01 British freedom for which our forefathers fought and died- eamely responsible government, It is the duty of the governor general to rule by the adviee of his regularly elected ministers, and were be to step out of that course he would be taking to himself a power asGaboysoelyttetmeeanst thatofpetition Czar of Russia. (2) would be a dangerous and mischievous preced- ent or system to seok to establish. To set at naught the lawfal mode ot government and our constitutional practice, evould be to abrogate parliamentary government altogether, and ubstitute in its place government by agitation and petition ,which if allowed would expose the country to a ceaseless turmoil whenever any sot of malcontents saw fit to clamor f or a general election. (3) Because steps are being taken to test the validity of said Jesuits' EstateBill byappealingto the proper nuthoritY the Privy Council of heigland, and we notice with pleasure that the Orange Grand Lodge, now in session at Goderieh. has appropriated stool' for that purpose. (4) Because this agita- tion is (maenad almost exclusively to Ontario, while in Quebec the Protestant Board of Edu- cation bas eneepted the $60,000 tendered to it by said A et, which shows that they are satia- fiedin Quebec, and it is none of our business. In conclusion I wish to say that the fact that the Quebec Protestant Board of Education has accepted the $60,000, is a well deserved slap in the face to those in Ontario who have made themselvesbusy in meddling with what every one must conclude is a matter pertaining to Quebec. alone. ANTI-AG/TATION• guide bY hillier motives than prejudice or Dun Fee by the last issue of the TistEs that one of the tail-endere of' the agita- tors is still wriggling, but the signs of life, like the agitation itself. are getting f inter, and judging from I his laat effort he is deter- mined, like the woodpecker seen by the native of Emerald Islet° betterbis own brains Pun It is not worth spare to refer ae length to his twaddle about the mighty convulsions of his master, but I shall confine myself to discussing ether features of this agitation that I have not hitherto referred to, b4 be- fore paesing on I might say that whether Mr, Cook commi teed sac' i lege or not seems to be a inatter of opinion, I may think that he did, -while E. C. declares he did not, but it must be borne in m nd that some people's sense of propriety may become perverted, and to them any kind of eters, lecture, or eeer meeting, political or otherwise. may be good enough for e church, so long as it does duty for the ight party, wbile others again think teat a church shoula never beedegraded to eny secular pur- pose whetever, E. C. does no deny that Mr. Cook exhibited a copy of "Grip" but of course it was done o teach an object lesson to the Sunday school children. Certainly that is all right..children niuet be interested see amused while Instructed. and mut victoria 1 iilustratioti will serve the purposes. I concede t -he point, It is all a matter Of opinion. but this new use of 'Grip" in the church and E 038 mixture of religion and polities Then referring to the third party reminds orteeieety forcibly of the following setiret • Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong, Was everything by starts and nothing long ; But in the course nf ono revolving moon Was eby mist, fiddler, statesman and buffoon Especially is this the ease when one thinks • of the era sell re in policy pursued by the mail and Globe, the father and mother of Olio bastard agitation now oceupying the humiliat- ing position of' beine, disowned by its own mother, who is afraid that its offoring will do berm to. its godfather, Oliver Nowt, But E. O. forgot to inform hie readers that the Third part els only intended by its originators, for Conservatives, and although he weeps crocodile tears over the deprevity of the two greatpolitieal pertieg, it appeare to me that the greet coneuleion that he temaks of so soleninlY, will be tie nothing compered to the convu'ition that will drive him and his allies out of the Gri t ranite d ill to that tefuee foe the hots -mined, the Third party -that heuse of many mansions designed by Gritarelliteets for unwary Conservatives. NO movement,it maktie no di fferenee how lona it may be a reclaimed, w)ttsuteodboynd. the sincerity of ite nro- neaten", and to show the inooneisteney ef some of the prime movere in this egitation, 1 ecu - nob do better than quote tho following worde spoken en regard to resolutions anent the s esuits' Bill offered at a meeting in Ottawel-- " Rev. W. , Garage, pastor of the Dominion ehureh. spoke strongly Against the rose] utions. end said that while mee were crying out nsceinet the Jesuits getting Government aid, their eWil the Meth OdiSt,body, had resolved a grant of 1100,000 itl land for college entootes in Toronto, and Principel tn,ven, who was taking an PAC ve part against the Aot vatting Go,ernpient aid to tho Jesuit body, was him - se t on aeretrori cr to get the Oritatio Govern In en tr to give his Church itiC te the extent, of 3125,e 002- neirlentlY it made all the difference it tb Weed rthoSe or vas gersd,e Thai as to whothenWe cen have eon glonom - the in one no - the 1811 a this month at ''Vxtulsor, hors ramitmenG WhY net / Onr thetribere The ivondrr of to day is London Electric Soap. One box free at J. P. Clark's. Just think' Washing day made shorter by using London Electric Soap. Despatches from Oklahoma report the finding of rich iron mines near Guthrie. A shaft will be sunk at once. Wash woman's friend is London Electric Soap. starasEasstgamsh. )(Toney-. aved Money -,Made. VOR SALE OR TO RENT That desirable property of the late John Link, situ ited on the Lake road, Exeter North west, of thetlax mill. It °mite] ns three acres of good land, there is a good dwelling house and stable, hard and soil water, a eoupg orchard of first claes fruit and a num- ber of eurrant bushes and grape vines; will be sold on easy terms. Bermes -sloe given Nov. 1, 1889. Samuel Liek, 160 Columbia it. East, Detroit, end Thomas Russell. box 83. Exeter P. O., Ont., Execetors.-2mos. Goods Goods! Good. Value! New Goods New Prices. EVERYBODY SMILES. Our spring and summer stock is now complete, every department being replete with goods parchased at the best houses -- selected as ith care. Everything fresh. In dress -goods our array is equal to any itt town --all the newest shades and colors -and are sold at prices positively lower than any. Please examine them and be convinced. In every other department we offer as good value for as little money. Produce taken at the highest market Pilo. Roller Flour always on ha,ncl, for sale. A Cali Solicited, J. P. Ross, Market Store, EXETER. TO RENT A. first class Blacksmith shoo to rent in the Village of Orediton, the best stand in the vil- lage. Possession een be h eel Une 1St 1850. Nobody but a good general blacksmith need. apply. Jotter TiteevEvexon. Crediton To Advertisers. A list of 1000 newspapers„ divided into STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on a9Plica tion -FREE. To those who watt their adveetisingt o pay we min offer no better medium for thorough and effective work than the -various sections of ow Select Local. List GEO P ,awevELL & 000 Newspaper Advertising leureatt 10 Spruce street, New 'York xavzizzr NEW IMPROVEMENTS. D.13. McLean in thankinghis customers for their liberal pat eonage, wishes to inform them and thepublic in general that he has re- litted tho Grist Mill and put in new improve- ments, and hexing secured tb e services of a thoroughly competent miller, is now better prepared then ever before to turn out a good guylity of Flour. Flour and Feed, Cornmeal and Oatmeal kept oonstantly on hand. Chop- ping only 5e per bag. Don't forget the old stand. I will also be premixed to attend to al Custom Sawing. D. B. MaLEAN. Nippon. —EXETER -- PHOTO /11 STITD14, Eyes Tested FRE -F-3 —BY -- A. EL IVELTRRA-5r) Practical Optician, Graduate Optic School N.Y. Byes tested ; defective sight restored by the aid of fine glasses. Large assortment of the finest glasses on hand. A call solicited. S. IV/ ler leeleeets..72-, 4e..s meeMCIten1e201\reD-ST 'Louden. For Finely Ei*ished Photos of all sizes, from small album size to 11x14 from life, try 8 M 1\T I 0 IR, He has Is() an elegant; display of Photo- graph Frames Sizes : 8x10, 1x14 and 4x17, AT ALL PRICES It svi I be c the advan age of th having pictures to frame to sxamine his stock of Picture Moo.' thug. Get pri2es be inches ng where. 10S. S1NIuft tTallerv Opposite Pcst-Offics BRICK AND TILE FOR SALE. linnlICED HUSS CENTRAL Drug Store A full stook of all kinds of Dye- stuffs and package Dyes, constan.tly on' ‘1, hand. Winan's Condition Powd- ers the best in the mark- et and always fresh. Fathily recip- eeoarefully prepared at CentralDrug Store Exeter. C THE KEY TO HEALTH. TO ALL POINTS 1N MANITOBA, BRITISH COLUMBIA -AND THE - NORTH WESTERN STATES, -VIA- B-RIA TTY'S SARNIA LINE STEAMERS. "Inneen BlisIRE”, "ONTARIO" and"CAMpANA" Leaving Sarnia every TuESDAV and FRIDAy night during navigation, (weather permitting) and calling every WEDNESDAy Bald SATURDAY at Goderich and Eineardhee where they con- nect with the G. T, R. train leaving Exeter at 9.16 a. m. for St. joe's Island, Garden Riv- er, The Soo, Port Arthur and Duluth. connect- ing at Port Arthur with the 0, P. R.. and at Duluth with the Red River Valley R'y, Lowesr RATES, BEST ACCOMMODATION EXPRESS Tres .AND CHOICE or Rouen Ask your nearest Grand Trunk R'y agent for freight and passenger rates, JAS. BEATTY, General Manager, Sarnia. Any quantity of brick and tile of all sizes for Sale at the MOATZ BRICK YARD, Orediton. .Pirst -class brick, $4 per Thou- sand. Tile Correspondingly. u_lean. The creditors have e. tripowered Mr. Moate to look after the sale of th e brick and tile, ahd he will be found in the yara at e 11.times. Nett year the yard will be run by Monte aa usual. Oredi toe . jab uaty 1511) ,1889. E OVED DOMINION' LINE. ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS. Liverpool Service. , SAILING DATES. From Portland. From Halifax. *Sarnia Thur. April 25 Sat. April 27 From Montreal. From Quebec. *Oregon.. Wee. May 8 Thur. May 9 Toronto Thur. May 16 Montreal Thur. May23... *Vaticouver....Wed. May 29 Thur. May 80 BRISTOL SERVICE FOR AVONMOUT Texas, from about oth "May. opnOtrCeaKI, Bates of paesaoe from. .111-ontrea/ or Quebec to Ltverpool. Cabin, geo to 380, according to steamer and position of stateroom with equal seloon priv- ileges. second Cahin, 380 to Liverpool or Glesgow. Steerage, $20 to Liverpool, Lou- ditlioondat. esrry, London Queenstown, Glasgow or *These steamers have Saloon, Stateroom, Music Boom and bathroona amidships. where but little motion is felt, and carry neither cattle nor sheep, For freight or passage, apply tin Live rp °el, to Finn Main At Moritgeraery,94SRIDOS etreet; in Quebec, to W. maepherson; at all Grand Trunk Railway Offiees, 05 10 DAVID TORRANCE & CO„ General Agent. Exchange Court, Montreal. • CAPT. GEO. HEMP, Agent, EXPI5ER6 DAVIDSON 131108., Builders and Contrite- orsheve removed to Swallow's old stand, ear- ner Mein end felines+ streets field ere preeerod to Sell Deets, eitteh anejilinds end Ifouldieg cheaper than 'mit otliee dein in town legs sotottaeted 'fur, Sneeiflealions and Estimates furnished if' requited- Ali svo)k &ma Wtbh naatzfas and doetiateh and satisfaer tion grvoa. Seasoned Linnberalways on hand -ZeLvic:10:04. WiiI;DAVIDS01. ,TOIIS DAVIDSON ,- TILE INTERCOLON TALI flAILWAY OF CANADA,. Znlocks Blithe clogged avenues of the Bowels, Kidneys and Liver, carry- ing off gradually without weakening the system, all the impurities and foul humors of the secretions; at the same time Correcting Acidity of the Stomach, curing Biliousness, Dye, pepsia, Headaches, Dizziness, Heartburn, Constipation, Dryness of the Skin, Dropsy, Dimness of Vision, Jaundice Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Fluttering of the Heart, Nervousness, and. Gen- eral Debility; all these and many other similar Complaints yield to the happy influence of BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. T. Imptini 4 CO., Proprietore. ToronbN a 044-- 0040* One Door South of Post Office —HE HAS -- A NEW AND COMPLETN ::--STOCK OF -- Boots & • Shoes. Sewed work a speciality. Repairing promptly attended to. GEO. MA.NSON, Tho royal mail, passenger and freight route. between Canada and Great Britain, -and- Direct ronte between the -Whet and all the pointe on the Lowet Sts Lam/tenet) and Baia do' Ohaleur, aloe New Brunswielt, „Nova eeotia,PrInee Edward Island, Cape Ilroton anti Nowt one dlan d. New and elegant buffet sleeping end day eare rtus on though exprefiS trains. P.uoseugorio fer Groat 'Britain ns tho conti- nent by leaving frorente by 8 n. m. brain on Thursday toin ontward mali steamer at 116111'/ter setorday. Superior elevator,warelmuse ansi dnele ac- commodation et Halifax eor abeipinent of grain and general morchandieci. • Yeats of exporter] do haVe preyed 11)5 Inter- dolontal, in connection with sterimehip Burnt to and teem London, Liverpool 'aid alas - SOW to Italibex to be the piloltest freight rOtitebetWeen Oen ada and Gto at Britain . Xnformation as 15 passenger and freight • rates eau be had on,applietitiOil to NWBAtttEON• • Westerio Prelght 84. n a Anon g er Agent coitogoinftetootionkArerk ret. Toronto OltiefSimeriatendent Railway eittedittentiton,tit ib, Nov, 20, '88. YO 0 CAN GET 20 POUNDS _01 -- Raw • SU gar FOR $1.0O. 12 Lbs. hite Sugar FOR $1,00. -AT- ATHESOIrSI POST OFFICE STORE, xeter North. Dorinniontaboratory HEADQUARTERS —FOR --- Pure Drugs; Patent Medi - vines Dye -stuffs, y Perfum.ery and Toilet Articles. Se,hool Books and. Stationary, Photo Frames, Albums, Purses, etc. Oictars Pipes and 'I'obacco. Also a large assortment • of Toilet and Bath Sponges always on hand Prescriptions carefully pre- , . pared front the purest Drugs. Retnetnber the place, Sign, GoLogN MORTAR, oMath Brow:Int