HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-10-3, Page 4tstablished
• 23. es cvliziza,
iVaeMBTt,
XETEB, ONT.
loelteseets aeenerelbenking business,
eteettives the aecounte of suereheute and
4therso feve),'able terms,
, Offers 0 -Very ae4eunno4t.len eonsistent with
nee an doone ervetiv e b3nS1riUOflie5
Fivetter coot interest ellowed on deposits,
Draf tsissute payable at may °Moe of the
plereimuts Bane.
NOTES DISCOUNTED, es MONEY TO
LOAN ON NOTES AND MOBTGAGES.
1877a
teNtitreT
THURSDAY, OCTOBER ard, 1889.
EDITORIA L NOTES.
TieD Church of England socities have
giver1 to foreign rnissoins durieg the past
year Z/60,000; joint societies of Church-
men and Noneouformists, £187,000 ;
the English and Welsh Nonconformists,
2377,000 ; and Presbyterians in Scot-
land and Leland, £202,800. The total
of these contributions is £1,226,800, or
more than $6,000,000,
Mr. Eater, of Quebec, interviewed
the Minister a Aterieulture Friday re-
apecting the appointment of a dairy.
commissioner for the Dominion. Mr,
Foster is a large and practical dairy
farmer, and thinks that the appoint-
ment of a commissioner would be of
great importance te the dairying inter-
ests of the Dominion. Farmers through-
out the country have been canvassed by
Mr. Foster regarding this matter, and
are of the one opinion that this appoint-
ment is a necessity. Hon. Mr. Carling
promised to consider the matter and lay
it before his colleagues at the first op-
portunity.
Fume and after Teesdey the DoMiej
on GovernMent will Peer oAwro tha,a
3i per cent. Per =Mem for Money de-
posited in the poistoffiee teteines benlefn
THE eeniteey Ponelition of (Mr teem is,
at the present tune, eemewhat bad, end
although not much eieleoese preveils,
the escape seems almost miracitious,
There are Several reasonwhy we make
this. etateroent, ocle of the ohief of whiole
le that our ezeus have to depend upon
Wella for their supply a Water for ao,
meetie perposee, there being no water-
works from wbieh they can obtain pure
spring •Water for this purposeThe
water from these wells, especially in
low-lying distriots is certainly tainted
with the germa of disease rendered so
by the age of wells, wed soakage ot im-
pure surface water year atter year.
Water from wells is the chief source of
sickness and the longer the people of
Exeter continue usiog well water the
more perilous will the sanitary couclition
of the town become. Then again the
defective drainage in the southern pre-
cinets is a factor in the rise and spread
cti disease. We also believe that a cer-
tain per cent, of the diseases ere due to
H, Pratt and John Allee, who- 100
York City, Vin7 14on horseback, with the
hatoution crossuag the continentt arrived
elaorameuto, Cal.Wednesday night.
Mrs. Hiram Snell, a *aka, _wan°, nee
given birth to three boy e and three
They weigh eignt pounds altogether. All
are bright and hearty end promise to live.
TRIED! TESTED 1 3ROVIeD1
A ewe ago 18,4 summer I was troebled
with dyeentery, I procurea Dr, Fowler's
Extol° t of Wild Stra berry aud took tun
oordine to directions, who completele
ourect nee.—Robt, E, Green, Lyndhurst,
One This medioine ()urea all loosepess of
the bowel.
NATIONAL PREJUDICES VANQ (HSU-
se.—Tlen TRIWITHS OF A minas:
Discovenx.
'Ike magnetic infl aeon of field attreete
the people of every clime to our shores.
Men of all netions and epeakieg all tbe
languages of eivilizetion, are to be found
congregated on our artriferoue plain.Dile
feriniz in all other things hi their mitosis,
bebits, and religion—vet there is one point
upon which their opinions coineele. Eng -
nehmen, and Automatise French, Swiss,
Genuses, Swedes. Italians, and Chinese
admit, without a dissenting voice, that the
great remedies introduced to the world
the filthy state of back premises an forty years ago by Hole:trey are better
• adapted to the cure of diseases in this
the utter disregard of peeper sanisary
precautionsby citizens themselves. Just
now is the time for action. With the
appreach of winter citiaens will be com-
pelled to remain indoors pretty much
and hence, are tniore liable, •where any
contagious disease makes its appearance,
to contract it, being unable to get away
from it as wettlel be the case in summer.
There is nothing' ab the present tine
that would proye so beneficial to the
town as a direct supply of fresh spring
water for domestic and .flushing pur-
poses, and the time is not far distant
when we must have it. Its cost will be
comparatively small in lieu of the many
advantages of a healthful and refresh-
ing nature. ,
At the last meeting of the Grand
Lodge of the Sons of England a sugg es -
tithe was made which met with some
approval, that the Sons cf England
Lodges should form brigades of corps of
naval volunteers. The idea took root
in Toronto, where there is a naval brig-
ade 500 strong, and now Ottawa has
become infected with it. At a meeting
of Stanley Lodge recently a committee
wad appointed to wait upon other
lodges and endeavor to secure their
co-operation. If successful uniforms
similar to those wain by the tars of the
British navy will be procured, and as
there are plenty of naval instructors to
be had inCanacla, drillingwill commence
at once.
--
TDB towns accumulate in GreetBritain,
as well as Ontario, and yet the farms do
not decay. Dr. Ogle, an English statis-
tician, while admitting to the full extent
alleged the movement, in England and
the United States, towards the towns
and cities, denies that it is attended by
a depopulation of the rural districts.
Be has found that the rural population
in England did not decrease between
1851 and 1881 by more than 1 per
cent., a rate quite within the limit
of allowance for error. The author
believes that the rural populationis only
stationery, and is ample, with the mod-
ern improvement in farming, for the
tillage of the land, while only its in-
crease and surplus pour into the towns.
BARRIE Advance :—The outrage per-
petrated ort the lad, Charles Hambly,
on board the steamer Baltic, on the 26th
of August last, shortly after the vessel
left Owen Sound, is one of Ile most
disgraceful things that ever occurred in
connection with Canadian marine. For
an alleged offence (whether committed
or not has not been established) these
rough and brutal steamboat hands strip-
ped a young, unprotected lad, covered
hint with tar and feathers, pushed him
about, struck him and otherwise mal-
treated him, so that the boy, rendered
desperate by the indignities to which he
had been subjeeted, jumped overboard.
So far as the evidence goes, no really
effectual means were employed to rescue
him from the watery grave which he
sought. It is satisfactory to know that
the fiends in human shape, guilty of
this outrage, will be likely to get their
• deserts, and that the authorities are
&ling everything in their power to
bring all who in any way aided in the
perpetration of the crime to the bar of
justice.
An American agricultural paper says:
"Choice turkeys command 64 to $5 each
in the London market. One steamship
which sailed from New York City lest
Saturday carried 700 cases of selected ,
turkeys destined for the British markets.
It is quite probable that similar trans-At-
lantic shipments will be made by all the
steamers leaving the port of New York
during the winter months. John Bull has
taken vita a fancy to :American apples,
oranges, cranberries and turkeys, as well
as to our breadstuffs, dairy precincts and
dreesed beef."
But why is it necessary to send these
preclude three thoueend miles &cross
the ocean to find profitable eale? What
is the matter with "the ,markets of sixty
millions" that the Grits are talking so
much about as the best for Canada If
• the British market is so valuable to the
United States, it follows that it must be
equally or more valuable to Canadians.
In cattle and dairy produets, the British
market is peculiarly benefieial to us.
Our bullock e command hem ten to
fifteen dollars a heed More at loverpool
than American, and our ohesese is at a
detided premium. The New York
Tribone, its art artiele tin the beef trade,
Canadian aud American capitalists have
applied to the Canadian Parliament for a
charter for a railroad from the Canaclian
"Soo" to Hudson Bay. Recent discoveries
of coal on the Moose River, '260 miles
north of the "Soo," have excited interest
in that region. The road will be 370
miles in length, and cross the Canadian
Pacific at Windermere, 107 miles north of
the "Soo," The country is said to be rich
in pine and minerals.
The Hon. Sidney Smith, Q. 0 , died at
his residence, Hamilton House, Cobourg,
Friday morning, in the 66th year of his
age. He was born at Port Hope on Oc-
tober 16, 1824 ; was educettee in Port
Hope and Cobourg ; studied law in the
offitie of Smith ik Crooks ; was celled to
the bar in 1844, and practiced. in Cohourg.
In 1862 he was made a Queen's Counsel.
He began his public career in 1854. when
he was elected a member of the Legislative
Assembly. In 1858 he was appoiuted
Postmaster -General, and was very active
in the negotiations which led to the sub-
selizing of Canadian mail steamship lines.
In 1866 he was appointed Inspector of
Registry Offices for Ontario. He enjoyed
a large practice at the bar of his district.
Last Friday the Michigan Qentral and
Grand Trunk railroad clerks employer] in
Detroit and living in Windsor were notified
that after October 1 they would have 40
reside in Detroit, and a failure to comply
would lose them their situations. This
move upon the part of two corporations
that have already received inpumerable
benefits ft om Windsorhe.s caused consider-
able criticism. Among those who have
received orders are young men who have
just succeeded in fuinishing a nue room.
FALL ,FA1R LATES.
Blanshard, aleiekton, , .0ot. e and 4
Northern, at Allse Craig , ..,000 19 and 11
climate than any other preparatioue in
existence, This appears, in tact, to be the
experience of menkincl, in all pal ts of the
world, aud hence the univereal p,opularity
of these medioinee. We eeneider, however,
that tbe boundless confidence placed in
their efficacy by the representatives of so
many nations at the mines, is a striking
phenomenon in enedical history. Meny
of these people in tbier youth, and even at
materity, were accustomed to the use of
drugs and nostrums peculiar to their rieveral
countries These remedies were connected
in their minds with assoniations of home,
and indorsed, as it were, by their national
prejudices. Yet they have been thrown
aside and utterly repudiated, while Dr.
Holloway's Pines and Ointment have been
adopted by a coral:non impulse throughout
the entire gold. regions. It is the result of
conviotion—oonviction grounded on person-
al observation and experience.
The Ointment is met with ellen wonder-
ful success as a dressmiz for wounds, uleers,
and sore legs, and tor all the external di -
eases and casualties to which the adven-
turous gold hunter in peculiarly liable, that
scarcely a digger's tent can be found within
the vast area of the gold fields unprovided
with a stook of this healing, soothing,
cooling preparation. The hard fare of the
digger, and sometimes his habits, tend to
vitate the blood and develop running sores
and pnruleut ulcers of the body and limbs.
Bad legs, especially, are very commun at
the diggings, and seriously interfere with
tbe labors of the diggers. Tbe worst Oases
of thia mass are cured by the Ointment
with extraordinary rapidity. The best
method of healing sore legs, and sores and
ulcers generally, is by rubbiug tee Oint-
ment into the inflamed parts around the
orifice, first opening the pores and soften-
ing the flesh with warm fomentatious.
The part affected is then dressed with lint
and linen saturated with the Ointment.
Such is the external treatment, but it is
also proper to give the patient a fee, doses
of the Pills during the progress of the cure,
as they serve to purify the blood and ais-
oharge morbid matter from the system,
while the Ointment is doing its work on the
surface.— The Scientiac Witness.
Gentse—I neve used your es(INARD'$
LINIMENT attecesesfully in a serious case
'of °reap in my family, In foot 1 consider
it a remedy no home should be 'without.
J. F. Cleenneenere, •
•Cepa Island,
So Sex ALL.--Thet MINARD'$ LINEMENT is nos standard liniment of the day,
as it dees just what it is represented to do,
T
EACHER WANTED--MA.LE
--For fiehool seetien No. 6,, Usborne,
An experienced man preferred. Applications
will be reeeived far one month. Adddress
Joule Iletvwoon, •
Secy.-Treas.
Exeter, Sept. 4, '89
WELL DIGGING.
V
The undereigned is prepared te sine wells
on the shortest notice, at $15 OQ for 25 feet,
digging, bearing and bricking included.
llaeb additional ton feet 25 (mute.
%HOS. SHALE,
• Elimville,
LEGAL MATTERS.—The report of the
Ontario Inspector of Legal Offices gives
the following facts :—The total amount of
the fees earned by the Sheriff's office of
this county for the year 1888 was $4,472.62,
of which amount the Sheriff received 82,-
504. The total number of convictions
made by Magistrates in the county during
the same year, was 296, certainly not a
large number when population is taken
into account. The total a.nootint of the
fines imposed arnoented to 4;3832.93, but
over $1700 of this was not collected ; 14
of the flees were for violation of the
Crooks Act. and 48 for • violation of the
Canada Temperance Act, the fines in this
connection amounting to 62900. As Sur-
rogate Judge, Mr. Toms received a salary
of $1000 ; this is in addition to what he
receives as County Judge, The County
Crown Attorney and Clerk of the Peace,
Mr, Ira Lewis, received $1925. Mr. Mal -
eon -leen, Locel Mester in Chancery, receiv-
ed $2500. Mr. D. McDoneld. as Deputy
Clerk of the Crown, County Court Clerk
and Snrrogate Registrar, received the sung
salary of $3029.75. go wonder some of
the residents of the county town menage
to get threeeneels a. clay whether store
keeps or not." They can be happy and
conteeted, no matter how hard tbe times
fot others, in feet harder the times, the
better these people fare.
NIRS DICKY, the leading dress-
maker of Crediton, makes a specialty
sllsois 'stint
of tellies' wraps. For style and newness the
work is not, mseelled. Thorough satisfention
gear nteed. Careful atteetion given to Indies
dresses and jacikets.
Crediton Sept. 12, '89 MRS E. DICKEY.
We are prepared to meet the publics re-
quiremeets for fall and whiter goods. As
our stook of
DRESS•GOODS, FLANNEL%
' MANTLING -S. TWEEDS,
OVER -COATINGS,. &o.,esoo
Are now needy complete and have been
•pureinteed in the best markets and are
marked at very close ?mine ,
Special attention given to ehs tailoring
and dressmaking department.
Our stock of Groceries, Crockery, etc.,
is as heretofore complete, and for quality
end price, second to none.
ITew Arrivals
Of teas ace A 1 values viz:
New 'Japans, Gunpowders, Y. llysows
and Meeks.
Highest prices for produce. Butter 15,
eggs 18. We solicit a eall and guarantee
to please, All goods marked in plain
figures.
ILL AGE PROPERTY tor sale,
On Main-st being lots 1 and 2 opposite
the Main -sI Methodist church, recently °coin
Pied by the late Mrs. BalkwilL,The property
consists of two lots on which is a comfortable
frame oottege. There is also a, good orchard'.
Good wells and pumps. Other conveniences.
Will be sold at a reasonable Enure. For par -
neuters repine to Jas. Piekard, exeter ; or to
t4 S. D.BALIewILL,
Exeter, Septose.n. Kingvine.
GOOD CHANCE FOR A
BLAO1SMiT11.
Good paylen Blacksmith business and prem-
ises, oomprinng shop, dwelling and stable, for
sateot e hsiving village of Ellin-
rtotwonrseltlp‘ iont
f lehsborne, on corner opposite
liedgins' Betel and Smith's store and tee post
Mite°. Possession at once. Apply to
Wm. WHITE
3mos, Centralia P. 0., Ont.
FOR SALE OR TO RENT
That desirable property of the late Jelin
Link, situ tted on the Lake road, Exeter
North west, of theilax mill. It sent ins three
sores of good land, there is a good dwelling
house and stable, hard and sot t water. a
Fining o /chard of first class fruit and a num-
ber of currant bushes and grape vines; will be
sold on easy terms. Peeseesion oxen Nov, 1,
1889. Samuel Liek 160 Columbia st. East,
Detroit, And Themes Russell. box 88, Exeter
P.O., Ont., Exeoutors.-2mos.
1121131=1=1117x5nzamtLxIttl3
FOR SALE
A new brick residence toeether with one-
fifth of an acre of land, on Main-st., south of
Willis' lumber yard. The building is a two -
stone, and contains nine rooms. together with
three olosets .nd bathroom. Hard and soft
water privileges. Pint -ohms new stable.
will be sold cheap and on easy terms, Apply
to
• W. FlOwalite
Oct. 3, 1889-1 m. Market Square.
Searesmics.—The report of the Bureau
of Industries for Ontario for 1888 has just
been issued. It contains a lot of informa-
tion of interest to all classes, but especially
to the farmers, arid we make the following
extracts from its pages. During the year
it rained et 89 days, (nearly a quarter of
the year,) and over '25 inches fell in that
time; it snowea on 58 days, and nearly 90
inches fell. rhe total occupied and as.
sassed land in Huron last year was 799,322
acres, of which 537,325 are cleared. The
amount of fall wheat raised in the county
.wat 021,500 bushels ; in this grain Mid.
dlesex Kent and Simeoe were ahead of
Huron', hi the order named. In spring
wheat only 28,788 bushels were raised lent
year, as compared with 71,618 in 1887.
Over 900,000 bushels of barley were reised,
an increase of 300,000 over the previews
year; 3,e56,022 bushels of oats, an Increase
of over 600.000; 3,540 bushels of rye;
838,847 of peas and 4,080 of beats were
raised. ()Vet 94,000 toes of hay, nearly
700,000 bushels of potatoes, about double
the amount in 1887. 683,942 lenthels of
mangole vvurtzels, 179,979 of terrots and
2, 651,123 a ternips. The acreage tinder
crop was 332,310, and taking the year
from 1882 to 18$3, the avcseage aereage,
under crop was 828,388. • In paettitage
there Was 141,642 execs. Live stock
in
county ars recorded es follows t—Work
ihg lierese,12,130 ; breeding mares, 6,894;
unbioken hones, 8,086 ; cattle, 106,928 ;
:sheep, 64,923 ; hogs,. 29,246 ; turkeye,
11,227 ; geese,' e2,480 °thee few], 994,-
511. Wool, Soares, teased 186,734 Ilee,
fine, 49,346 lbs. Feetery chteee, 1,011314
lbs valtte thereof, $14e,o83,16.•Oreetnery
butter, 45,250 lbs., valtie $9,088. The
ageeeerrient relle ebovv the valeta et all
farni lands in R (von to have beeei 831,t
668,697, which ie eYer ohe milliou denture
lege than the yeee before. The vales of
teeth builrlinge vnta $8,8a6494.; Wen ime
9p7leii.neetts, $e,373,75fi litoe stock, 08,49/,.
"The magnitude of the export testae in
, deemed beef is rectlized by very few. It
has Increased enortneuely of tate, mot only
heel:Luse :prices in this weary have been
low and ut teethed high, but &leo beceuse
new and greatly improved feetlitias for
trauspertetion ecrose the (motel have beet'
provided. The ,point to be observed is
that this treao capeble of almost int
definite expetolion. English prices are
muds hiebet than Anterieen."
The English pekoe are much higher
for Canadieet than Alinement; for the
reason that eer cattle are allowed to
enter and remain on the hoof, while
those from United States ports meet be
slaughtered within twenty -fent, hours
atter arriv$1.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
The creditors of Sarauel Carlisle, late
TMPORTANT
Having done business in Canada for
years, our reputation and responsibility is es-
tablished, We want three men in your vicin-
ity to rep.rest nt us, to whom exclusive territory
will be given. Handsome outfit free. Salem -
and expenses paid. weekly. Steady employ-
ment the year round_ Write at onoe for terms.
Beady stook for Canada a sped:tile'.
MAT MOTHERS,
Nurserymen,
Rochester, N. Y:
of tbe township of Hay in the County of Hu-
ron, fancier, dece.sed, who diedon orabout the
loth day ,•if June A. D.,188,8, and all persona
having claims against the said deceased are
in pursuanee of Chapter 110 of the Revised
Statutes of Ontario 1889. hereby notified and
required to send on or before the 1st day of
November, A. D., 1889, by post prepaid and
registered or delivered to the undersigned
solicitors for the administrator of the estate
of the said deceased. tbeir christian and sur-
names, addresses and descriptions, the par-
tioulars of their claims. a statement ef their
accounte duly verified by statutory deeleration
ard the nature of the securities (if ani) held
by them; and that immediately after the said
1st day of November the assets of the said de-
ceased will be distributed among the perties
entitled thereto, having regard only to the
claime of which norice shall have been given,
and the said administrator will ndt be liable
for the said assete or nny part thereof to any
person or persons of whose elaims notice shall
not have been received.
. • ELLIOT St ELL/OT,---
• Solicitors for Administrator, Any quantity of brink andtile of all sizes
Dated'Oct. 1, 1889. Exeterfor sale at the
Lumber For 'Sale! .4110ATZ BRICK YARD, Crediton.
First-class bcri:ea.0
k, 43.4 per Thou-
sand. Tile Correspondingly
--
• GEORGE MOATZ.
Crediten.Sanuary 1501,1889.
ALESIVIEN
WANTE D.
HAPPEL tJ CLEGHORN.
WHUTROTT
—TEE POPULAR --
• t CE•.1SOVRAT.4
Drug Store
Boot &Shoo akor
A full stock of all kinds of
Dye- stuffs and package
'Dyes, ' constantly on
hand., Wrnan'S
• Condition
Powd-
•, ers
the best
in the mark-
et and, always
fresh. Faimily recip-
es carefully prepared at
CentralDrug Store Exeter.
• e.LALYTZ.
THE KEN TO 'HEALTH.
Has opened business in the
premises of R. •SPICER, op-
posite SENIOR'S Photo Studio
wbere he is prepared to meet
his old. customers and as
many new ones.
Having done businessin Canada for the
Pest 30 years, our reputation and responsibil-
ity is well known. We pay salary and ex-
penees from the start if everything is satis-
iactore• No previous experience is required.
Write us for terms, which are very liberal,
before eugaging with any other firm.
• Iteeenmeoes.--Bradstreet's or Dun Wituan
& Co's Commercial Agencies well known to
business mon; or Standard Bank, Colborne,
Ont.
CHASE BROTHERS' COMPANY
_Nurserymen;
COLBORNE, - - ONTARIO.
SewedWorkgvecialty
Eyes Tested
FREE
Repairing promptly and sat-
isfactorily done.
A CALL SOLICITED
W. H. TROTT.
DOMINION LINE.
ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS.
Liverpool Service.
SAILING DATES.
--„,
From Montreal. Front Quebec.
Woronto,......Thur. Aug. 49
Montreal Thur. Sept. 5th.. . ...
VancouverWed. " 11 ........Tbur. Sept.12
Sarnia Thur. " 19 .........Fri, " ee
Oregon Wed " 25 Thur. " 26
BRISTOL SERVICEFORAVONMOUT a
DOCK.
Texas, from Montreal, about 20th June
Dominion " " eth July
.Rates of passaoe front lifonireal,or Quebec
• to Liverpool.
Cabin, $50 to 880, according to steamer and
position or stateroom with equal saloon priv-
ges. Second Cabin, 88050 Liverpool or
Glaegow. Steerage, 520 to Liverpool, Lori-
donderry Loudon Queenetoiyil, Glasgow or
Belf est.
*Thee° steamers have saloon, stateroom,
Music Room aud bathroom amidships. where
but little motion is felt, and carry neither
cattle nor sheep.
Fax freight or passage, apply cin Liverpool,
to Finn Main & Montgereery,24 James street;
in Quebec, to W.lvI. Macpherson; at all Grand
Trunk Railway Oilloes, or to
DAVID TORRANCE & CO„
General Agent.
Exchange Court, Montreal.
CAPT. ono. HEMP,
A.ae0,,E7rwrz0.
A. Ez MITIZRA.Y>
Practical Optician,
Graduate Optic School 11%T.
Eyes tested; defective sight restoredby the
aid of fine glasees. Large aseortinent of the
finest glasses on hand. A eallsolieited.
S.
ieolo.o-iNT3:)..A.s-s,r London.
BRICK AND TILE
FOR SALE.
ABOT,IT 15,000 FEET.
-77
Cherry, Butternut, Ash, Elm
and Maple Lumber.
Well Adapted for Cabinet Makers Use.
Apply to tf.
B. W. G-RIGG Exeter.
1191 sru:Rsc::::4 1815
REMOVED
1
TUE
INTERCOLONIAL
Znleckes &lithe clogged avenues of the
Bowels, Kidneys and Liver, carry..
ing off gradually without weakening the
system, all the impurities and foul
humors of the secretions; at the same
Carte Correcting Acidity of the
Stomach, curing Biliousness, Dys-
pepsia, Headaches, ' Dizziness,
Heartburn Constipation, Dryness
of the Skilt, Dropsy, Dimness of
Vision, Jaundice, Salt Rheum,
Erysipelas, Scrofula, Fluttering of
the Heart, Nervousness, and Cten.
eral Debility ; all these and. many
other similar Complaints yield to the
happy influence of BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS.
enLetene & at.. Proprietors. Toronto.
(0410414 ani$On
One Door South
of Post Office
—HE HAS—
A NEW AND COBILPLEMI
e ---STOCK OF ---
Boots &
Shoes,.
Sewed work a speciality.
Repairing promptly attended to.
GEO. MANSON,
YOCJ CAN G -ET
20 POUNDS
RAILWAY
OF CANADA.
The royalmail, passenger and freight route
between Canada and Groat Britain,
—and—
Direct route between the West and all the
points on the Lower St. Lawrence and Baie
de Cihaleur, also New Brunswick, Nova
scotia,Prinoe Edward Island, Cape Beaton
and Newroundian
New and elegant buffet sleeping and day
ears run on through exercise traie e.
P „wee ngers for Great Brit sin r the conti-
nent by leaving Toronto by ' p. ni. train on
Thursday will loin outward rnail steamer at
Halifax Saturday.
Superior elevater,warehou se and dock ac-
commodation at Halifax f or ehipment of
grain and general rcerche.ndiee.
Years of experience have prove d th e
connection with eiteamahip lines
to and from London, Liverpool and able-
gow to Halifax, to be the quiekest freight
routebetween Canada and. GreatBritain.
Information as to passenger and freight
rates can be had onapplicetionto
N. WEA THERSTON,
WeeternFreight &Passenger Agent
93Rn9e1n House Blook,'York St . Toronto
D POTTINGER,
Chief Slinerintendent
Rail -will' office . Moncton .N. „Nov. 20, '88.
DAVIDSON BROS., Builders and entree-
orshave removed to Swal low's old stand, ear-
ner Main and Gridley 'Areas and are prepared
te sell Doors, Sash and Minds and Moulding
cheaper than any other firm in town. Build-
ings eontraoted for, Plans. Specifications and
Estimatee furnished if required. All work
done with neatness and deapatch and satisfac-
tion given. Seasoned Isuraber always on hand
Davidson.
WM. DAVIDSON. .70E01 DAVIDSON
CANADA'S LEADING NEWSPAPER N()TICE.
Patriotic in Tone
True to Canada
Tittle to the Empire.
THELI1P11E IS NOW
The Great Weekly Paper
0.0=.=
Led syleciel errangenients are beim: mule to
add new mid attrentive features, whieh Will
greatly movies° its intereat &ha value.
As an inditeement to place 1.1 hi the hands of
all P A.TRIOTIC CANADI A.NS the bal ;ince
Of the prodent year Will be Overt
FREL TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS
Tim maks,
Thret Papers4 tug pvtritot., For $1.90.
T:sr, Atenntenie
Iresh and New
STOOK OF GROCERIES
AND CONFECTIONERY
Just atrivea ab the family Grocery, ADM
Pure Extraets awl Spicee.
betneeltifell piece of glass—
ware given away with one lb.
Mayell's ,Baking Powaer.
DasshWeed Roller Fiettr etre tele,
—OF—
Raw • Sugar
FOR $1.00.
12 labs!
White Sugar
FOR$1.00.
Call and examines ode goods 'before puts
chtieirig elelewheest,
G:' A. HYXDMAN,
lioney -ie.: Saved
Morley Made.
?
POST OFIIICE STORE,
Exeter North.
Donaon tabrattry
HEALQUART.E1S
Goods, Goods! Good Value!
New Goods, New Prices.
EVERYBODY. SMILES.
Our spring end summer stock is tore
complete, every departreent beitg replete
with goods purchased at the beet houses—
lobed with care. Everything fresh,
In deess-goods dub array is equal to toey
in tbwn the newest shadee and eolore
—Mitt ere eold at prices positively lower
than any. Please examine them and be
O•nvineed,
In every other' clepartinent we offer as
good value for as little money.
Produce taken at the highest market
Ptie
Roller Plot* always fin heed, foe sale,
A. C1a1l Solicited,
3. P Rozs.
Ma kot Storef EXETER,
----FOR -----
Pure Drugs, Patent Medi-
cines Dye -stuffs,
Perfumery and Toilet
Articles.
School Books and Stationary
• Photo Frames, Albums,.
Purses, etc.
Cigars Pipes, and Tobacc
Also a large assortment
of Toilet and Bath
Sponges alwa,vs
on hand
Prescriptions carefully pr
pared from the purest
• Remember the place, Si
GrOLDEN MORTAR,
Main 'S
Browai