The Exeter Advocate, 1893-3-2, Page 1VOL. IV
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Exeter, Jan 28, '88.» Sub Manager
THE
05Xtter Lniorate,
LHVIIJEI
Notice is horeb
of the coNsu
iiave t1i4•day do
01 ,0170 and throe
three MOTItliS end
able at the Hem
Mon treat. on Mar
o f reCord Pubruar,
The.transier.Be
date to March ist
M0NTr1n.A.7., 170
r•srstistv.a•ear....••••••••••••pami
COM
,Investigator
To TUE EXL1TID
Sre„-Iii the
is a letter eritici
your paper, sigi
2."
From no disc
and conveniene
critic "No. 2,"
carefully and m
that he feels str
debate. I have
with its generat
ily harsh, bitter
matic. If these
at all they shou
rancour.
Let me, remin
"Materialistic 0
gument and is
convincing. Hi
my " erudite pr
ne to the public.
myself. "No 2"
tug for a few w
words and po
should be forgot
my letter. a ha
his. The lette
week sueceedin
here The fteell
therefore untru
of misrepresent
views and word
gives one install
I said that Dr S
years as the per
of the earth. "
Dr. Sexton "said
I have asked 7
they coneur in s
Dm say so. His
000 to 18,000 ye
sent at the thii
have heard it, if
did.
My intentions
ton fairly and
erred in that it
ment.
On re -reading
find nothing unf
or any reasonab
to. I represente
positions and ar
accurately than
"No. 2" says .1
ianity and the B
of Dr. Sexton.
only the position
I simply ,geeve
Sextoe's view at
of each position
judgment to the
Those who he
"extreme pleasu
ised as "fools" b
be good, intellig
leg people.
"No. 2" finds f
ing that B uman
and final court
ions. He asks "
I reply, where r
one and the sa
mentally disasso
"No. 2" mak
allusioes to my
a seerstion of br
the brain secrete
it. "No. 2" says
so. Then le,t.hi
Let him couvinc
view is right.
"No. 2." says,"
will is force." I
not have, will t
seat is n modicu
the same forceu1
}low will can be
I cannot compreh
Then No. 2 ma
able statement.
ion of the mind,
enco from themi
the brain is the
only transmits th
mice bewilders in
andmind are
They mean the s
majority of 4ati1
create thought, a
dependently of t
is a problem t
edge is beyond
Even were thoug
entitles, how the
independently of
letn that to me is
mind of No, 2 ca
acknowledge at o
mental coneeptio
no claim to.
If No. 2 roe*
euss this question
tone of abuse,
worcas chat mean
is material and m
the mind and
thought, (accerdir
can the mind or t
organ or transmit
bistro mind or tho
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•
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IRY,Hensall Ontario. Liu
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EXETER MARKETS.
Wheat per buthel,..... $0.65 to 0,66
Barley 30 to 35
Oats 30 to 32
Peas ........ 55 to 57
Butter ...... 18 to 19
Lard •••ia• • •••••• 10 to 11
Eggs • • .... • . 20 ge 20
Chicken per lb ...... . 6 to 6
Ducks " '7 to 8
Geese " ......., 5 tO 6
Tiirkeys " . 9 to 10
Pork ...... ,......... 8,40 to 8 50
Potatoes pex• ous .... 50 to 50
ay per ton . • • • • I • • • • 6.00 to 7.00
unala•mt..••,•••••Vr.P.R1.1.0.9.•••••••••••
EXETER, aNTAIII0, TT-117RSDAY, MA1ZCII 2 1893
YO 299
1 I:
0
' 0
t the Directors
NY (Ltd
1 0
divido1"1
cent for
the Company,
to 0iuvroholcler8
from
,
to No. 2.
23rd inst.
letter
for brevity
.my
his letter
therefroni
subject
fault to find
unnecessar
and dee
debatall
,vilhout
calling'
" is not
then
allusion
is no 'vat
"No. 2"
of ewait
tee exact
Dr. Sexton
publishina
error
the
lectures
meanness
accuses
stating. ,tee
,
repeated
18,000'
'a habitation
twice that
the kind."
present and
Dr Sexton
‘,16.
2" was pre
and must
all the others
Dr. Sex.
and if
of ' jilde•
•
however,
br..Sexton
would Object
words,
much more
mine.
at Christ.
shoulders
at 'nothina
Dr: Sexton:
yiew, Dr.
view
and left the
• •
with
character
them
well Mean,
me for stat-
the highest
all que,st
judg,inent?”
They are
I cannot
• •
sarcastic,
thought
says, that
and evolves
to say
right.
that his
, not force,
VOU can
' that
that it
point.
thought not,
remark-
is a creae
exisi-
itand
mind and
That sent,
thought
inseperable
to the vast
mind can
exist in-
' created
ae,knowl
grasp.
diatinet
could ' exist
is a prob
If the
then .1
he has
that I ley
fairly dis•
cease his
this in
If brain
organ of
of
how
after the
Can we
, .. ,
. _
)
tho
this
it,.
No
,
of
me
ar
to
or
of
is
me
He
.
I
e
I
b
to
as
is
ianity
found.
family
influences,
any
opinions.
corivietions
a
anger
ly,
send,
he
hirriSelf,
en
greater
existed
day,
_
If briiin dies, what becomes of the pro
dec;Icati,`;ftiet,!?..r° li)61,11iint? en?yulthi! Iiinviend4101,..
thought that was moil need before
dtetth of the britin, that li.ves? ' If so, is
it eter nail), etialiaseeees le No. 2 will
, , ,
only enlighten us on those 1/011.aS, then
he will be cli.eeussinecs setnething Of In'
terest and Value to humanity. But he
must be more loolcal Until ie his mind
. ' 8, • , .
•Lilci thought theory. et wilt not do to
divide a distinct thing into two sive',
' that , °elle part CLO
ate•parts, say
the other •tud. that e'lch nut exists in-
' ' r` • '
dePondently of th•e other. Ordinary
people cannot grasp that.
,
Uur friend No. 2 says "that Dr. Sex
ton in a masterly milliner showed that
the. immortality or ow soul the resar
reetiou and other eitestions were be-
youd the doinain of science and human
reason." It ttppears to me, that if they
are heyond the domain. of science and
reason, they • are unknowuble. One
Man knows as much about the un-
knoWable as 'anothee. ' 'Why. should
Dr Sexton and No 2 be so Certain" and
- • d , , •
dogma, tic about things that both ac
know ,edge are unknowable, If be
yond the domain of science or reason,
what dyes either one know, of these
questions? . Both mate speculate, go
.d- -
may 1' We 10aY ail arrive :at flin'r
out conclusions. That of itself. is not,
stack:tit cause. for denunciation. All
are equally convinced; all equally hon
est. 'None, of us leNow,
NO 9 slys that assertions of Investi-
- • - ` '
getter without proof i.ri,‘ of no value;
that his essertious are as good as mine
, . • - . e '
I allow .all that. If his assertions are
more in harmony with ()Winery corn
mon, horse sense, more logical, more
easily believable,•then they are bet
ter titan mine, orviee versa. '
My friend (asks NV hero are the inill
ions of people who unwillingly believe,
in. organic:, evolution. .1 reply, some ot
them,are hero in Exeter, in Huron, i n
Ontario, in the American:Republic, i
-11
almost every village and. hamlet in.
America and Europe, probably' 'one
fifth of the population in,England :end
Scotland, hundreds of thousands of ed
ucated.. •Hindoos and other Asiatics
'
amongst the Pr6fessi6nal men of edu
°ate(' humanitY, the doctors' lawYers'
ministers, in the halls'of learning' 'ven
in theological • colleges, . amongst the
iodeP.eftden't'Preachers of all clen-mina
tionateiho are being tried for heisee
every weele, scholarsereaders, thinkers:,'
. .
magazine writers, atriongst all. classes
of modern, educated people, this clod-
rine of Organic evolution is accepted to
some exteut. That•man was evolyed,
notereated is the coming belief, wheats
er it is true or , . . es.
' ' false ' '
4.---'
"No. 2" says that "it wait neyer
knowu that a Christian regretted his
Christiapite' when death knoeked at
his 'chamber door." I. believe ehat im
PlicitY• They did what they conceived
to beaheir duty and were satisfied.
Neither was it eta r known that an
houest Buddhist, Mahommeclan, •Brah
min, I-lindoo or ConfUseian :regretted
his religion teh,en death came. ,They
all face the ineyitable doing • the • best
they can, con . to die, i d
tent• whei oath.
comes, if they have lived up to
their belief Secularists, Agnostics,
Materialists, Infidels and eyen A4heists,
face death with the content, and
stoicism, They dread no future and
are•often Weary. and Want rest It is
till a question of intellectual conviction
and honesty.
My friend says that the truth of
. . , .
Christianity mid immortality, has. beeo
attested by millions of men,some great
in theit• deli aud aeneratiou Se has
' , e, .-, '
the truth of MahornmedisinS.Buddhietn,
&c.; been attested, by more Millions of
--
men, many of them great in their day
ni the country in which. they lived.
That NVOUld not prove the truth of their
1 -articular religion to "No. 2." But S. it
was.good preof „tp millions of others in
the world who Lere, taught' these re-
ligious in their infancy. Thousands of
great men in Europe and Britain,,
minieters, bishops, arch bishops,, law-
yers, scientists, jurists, judges doctors,
. . . ' ,
politicians, atteSted for hundreds of
Years hY voice, pen, judgtn,ent,• learn
ing, approval and by general consent
to.ahe existence of witch ciaft and
witches Would No. 2 accept that
t tint n es 1 itel r vina th
es os,t absot y po , , e
-
truthof witchcraft?
• Brigham Young was a great man-
to his followers. We are not now dis •
cussing the truth or falsity of Christ
or Bible,. I am fighting neither.
1 surditi,s wher er
I am fighthig a ) 4 ev
I am trying to 1'. the
- find WI' ---
true and the false, and seperate them.
•`IsTo. 2" says that I committed a
nuisance by writing the letters at all,
We live in a. Christian country , and a
Christian community and heepeants big
brought up under Christian
consequently he . resehts
interference with his pre Conceived
Jeast so a Mahommeda,n
would resent the efforts of a Christian
missionary o . „
' ' t unsettle the relieSous
of his family, 'or interfere
with his otVti pre conceived opinions.,
He would have jtist its much cause for
, -•
with the missionary as No. 2 has
with vie, Yet No 2 pays money Year,
7 . .
(arid prideS himself thereon), te
missionaries to do to others what
resen•ts 86 keenly being done to
•
' ,
That is his idea of obeyincs the gold- the
rUle. Dr. . Sexton States . tliat a
,, read
and grander civilization has in
On this earth than that of to vince
l'hey had no Christianity in that seseeS
...
ttlountli*onfs:ie)olalivintlicedismas, a TPlul:i°11°•1 roefliatioll:
and ciesill,eat'lem are bOtit gone, Th'ere
18 Ile nu" In 41°11413'
Preconceived opinione must and tv.,111
.
go. and it is better eo, It the majority
opinion of the eommunity oe country
wise never ieterfered with, the,re would
have been no h'eforrnali011• 'I he ma,
invite- °nee favored elavery. Somebody
stirred them up with pen and Y0i00
!l.,I„)d the ,n11,11°ritY became the majorit.Y,'
1 mator_ity once believed this. .earth
was fiat, teolumbus thought it was
round andestated his opinion. He was
denounced by orthodoxy' as No, 2 de
• a ' .,.. ' •
nounces me. let the ontinote of the
h d •h did '
ortt • o io.xt rnafjohri .y ih. not prevent the
roy..inc 1 taleyioeNeart .
11 e w11.•• ', ce 2 .as a consistent
person, Then if he lives , here us a
-.1 . . • , • . . ••
ui ristian cottetry, he sends 'onssionar-
les to change, the opinions of the Budd.
hists, &c., and thrust his'•'..'eninions on
them. If he lived in Turkey, Asia or
Afilea; he would ,resent the intrusion
E • - • , • • . h• ,if
o misesionaly opium' 00 • imse or
family' and. denounce both • missionary
and opinion as being unfit for his par••
Ocular locality. Had he lived' at the
tune of Christ, to be .consisteut, he
would have resented new opinion, new
doctrine, new ideas; and would have
helped to desionoce and ' persecute
Christ. Had lie lived 111 the Southern
States before the war, he would have
rotten egged the abolitionist, as the
usual orthodox Southertier did.
• , • ,
What a. hoe character No, 2 would
be if he were consist- t 1 • tl > -
. , en 1.11.1C 61 1(., N , ).-
' ' •
riety of positions.
tr he. doctrine that the opinions of the
majority must not be interfered with
.,
is not sound doetrine.
The men 'who interfered With major-
ity opinion in days gone by were de
nounced inaheir cley,only to be canon
when thei'r particular opinions be
came popular.. • One century curses
them, the next cawouizes them. No 2
would be the first to condemn the per-
seentors of any of the theoretical spfic
Waters of bygon,e .days vet repeats
this error he so condemns in his ances-
tr , ,
y' '
.. Great names aro only valuable in
Connectiori with some specialty aed
not always then. Euclid ' lived :iiii
Alexandria about the time. of Christ.'
His Mind i•iin to 'mathematics. His
problems could init be written by any
other man that his lived. Some of ' his
books were.lost. No man since his
day can even guess at what kind of
,mathematical 'problems • were deal,
With in the. .1)st books. . Yet Euclid
probably belie'ved in the ordinary' re.
, eNe. 2,,
lieion ofhis time which to
' . '
would be pure attsurdity. , :
St. Paurwa8 kgroat man, e -et he did
not believe' 'in marriage. Notwith
standing' hi•ti.greatness, I take the lib-
erty and responsibility of • differing
with him :in that ...particular. So I
think does "No. 2." if No. 2 tries to
make himself •belleve . all the 'many
vagaries of the great and geed men of
the past, I do not lash his mental
ease.
• , All we plead fer is • the liberty to
. .
think our honest thoughts and express
• them if we wish.
John CalviSiwas a great man,. yet
beeauSe Michael Servetus and . himself
could not "agree as to the exact terms
to which the three persons of the Trite
ity should be•addressed, he got mad
and set fire to the pile. that •burned
Servetns., How would No2 relish Cal
yin as a .gtea, man in ia capacity
t d ' tl t • .' ?
_ John Wesley was a great man, yet
he believed in and preached' the im '
' ' • '
mortality of cows, he believed that'
earthquakes were eaused by sin and
prevented.by'prayer.
Millions hatie suffesed for express
icns of honestopinion, but the world
got the benefit of the honesty and ' the
opinion. It is not pleasant to he is
martyr, but it is still more iinpleasant
to be a hypocrite ' Orthadoey is ' that
Mita is rotting itud decaying. Het
erodoxy is that which is ever esreen in
the present,' becoming orthodoxical
d - t with the f the f t
an , wont. ou wi„ e age o e u
ure, becomes orthodox only to become
extinct, giving' place to a more recent
and generous heterodox - So the •
y. .pio•
cess goes on eternally, The heresy of
50 years ago is the orthodox yof to day
, ,.,
The heresy of tO day will be the ,ortho-
doxy of next ,certniy.
' meantime . in
the always present, heresy suffers and
orthodoky rots. Such is past history ;
such probably.will be future hietory
aise. , . .
' •
We curse the iconoclast of the pres
ent; and applaud the iconoclast of the
past -the' orie of to day ' is • always
wrong, the one of the past generally
happened to be right, Each' one was
denouneed in his own day and got his
only reward from. future generationa.
That personally did him no good, but
the race got the berfefit. •
Yours &c,,
Feb 25tIn 1893. INVESTIGATOR.
-
P.S.-Kitidly hand a corrected - copy
, . . . , ,
to the Dotes, for publication, , so that
both. letters ,may reach the game par
ties, I thie.k , that the only fair way,
No a a parentl does ot
although• P Y
agree ivith me,! T.
Dasliwood,
Brewster
:The chicken pox is %flatting the fain-
Ries in town ,and. shows no fa vox to any
The butcher lias laid in a nice supply
of lake iee for summer ilaid others se
the neialthorhood have followed his ex
arnple.--. 7.116 ' revival meeting's held
here has come to a c1080 ilfter a long
and tolerably successful continua.
tion,-Thore were a great man of the
y
People from Gritild Bend here on,Satur,
day doing ttleir shopping and enjoying
the beautiful day, To see the quarth
ties of dry -goods and groceries that
(roes f rein' here to Grand Bend on a Sat-
'7' • e ' •
urdes one Ivo ld ,h-tve a bard job to
'' " '1' ' . j
credit the story of one of your report-
ers that they were not able to build a
•
school -house.
—
On Wednesday of laet we(
those pleaSatii eyentS W ilieh
agreeable flutter of exeitemi
ed at the eesiditece of Mi Jo
the .occesion below the mars
third.thinghte,r Al-'. M. to Mr.
Mahon, of Exuter, The cell:
Performed by the Rev, 11. S.
• 1 (.41. 0
the presence of a "mill), • f
. '
tractitig parties relatives a,
The bride Wes the receplemt
her of valintble prese,uts, Y
conaratalations
'''' .
v elven tin
MEW
u
10110110E
hilkiPt
......,..
!.Istrselfaeuartsels
guii,rtt-rs per
ilig P6brIlArrISt,18NIPAY-
I Odle° of
lb ht., 1803,
,as will b 4 caossa
inttnistro,
cf-iii.s.,13,KORRIs,Seoy.
Feeniarv 1893,
.
lunications•
-
"Varna.
-----
„OnT•ruevaY.-We find it ou
to chronicle the death of MI
. •
Gunning, who passed peaeel
over the "River of Death" to
tif• gi ,real.ms ,baY.°Pd. 8.11e 811
• about a 3 cal wan. that circa(
consurriptiou,' to whiCh she E
on Friday morning:at s1x. o't
bore her sufferings with m
tience,had always a pleasant
Cheerful ward far "erYnue 1
ehe eame.in contact, which
her to the whole comm.unity
been for some years a prorni
ber of the Methodist church,
how gone to reap her rew,
leaves behind a husband to 1
loss,Dtothwyholitin h7se bteeltevrern.oueri
ee •
"4 -tile a
ed are' the dead who die in •t
-Miss.Lizzie \Vanless has
ft ' • ,.
a ter a letigthy vieit.---Our
has not been ahle testae -ad t,
ties for the past few deers ow.
ness --Miss Mery Johes yes
'. ' ' - N c
marriage to a Mr, ..Treat, c
CI „, •-Mumps are going the,
and, several are confined to t
censequeut14"'
/8 Reply
, ADVOCIATE.
Nines of the
sing my tiest
led 'IiiVeStigatOI
urtesy, but
3 I shall designate
I have read
ust conclude
mgly 011 the
ouly one
tone; it is
vindictive
thino•S are
d bebdobated
I No, 2 that
hfusticator
.
sore discourteous
s sneering
..fundity ,"
i Dr. Sexton,
accuses me
3.ees until
itions of
ten".before
; is an evident
r was 'published
,,•• Dr. Sexton's
,,,iion ef
"No, 2"
ing, • mis
of Dr. Sexton.
ce only,Iwice
3kton allowed
bad of man
fo. 2" says
nothing of
perSellS
'i3 ing that
word% were•frem
lea" "No.
d lecture
he heard
were to treat
generously
eaea fault
,
my'letters
air or that
le person
d Dr, Sexton's
;•uments,
No 2" does
at I strike
ible over the
I. struck
3 taken by
this Bible
,d the scientific
•,riticized,
public.
.rd Dr. Sexton
..6" werenot
• me. ' I took
int, honest,
suit with
Reason is
f appeal on
vhete is
;ason is.
le thine'
e•
date them.
:s frequent
Austen to
Lin. Science
s thought
it is ridiculous
n set . science
a scientists
lotig•lit is
believe•that
-ithout • thought,'
1 of thought,
a to a certain
force and
end.t
kes this truly
"Thought
la yin a •distinct
,nd that creates
rgan of the
aught."
e To me
me and
line thing
And. How
nd thought
e mind that
.at I at once
my mental
ht and mind
created
the creator,
inconceivable,
tsrasp that,
tiZe- that
1 of thinsss
a
lesires to
let, him
aid answer
iomethino•
oi•tal, the
.,,he .transinittet
ig to himself)
ought lit'icit
ter la 'dead?
. . ,. „ .•
Orectiton.
The revival services are still being
continued in the English church be
Roy Baker' Much seood-has been done
• ' • '. ,, . 8' .• , '
Mr, Isaac Hills house was the scene of
a very pleasant • Surprise party one
evenine• last week, in which ' their
friends of the'2nd-con , and others took
part -John Lamport.of'Detroit, is at
present visitind, under the parental
roof. -Mr. Jae Lampert has 'moved
.over into his own house,Wm, Sims and
family haying purchased and, moved
into the one just vacated bY Mi. la-
Ben Either has returned irom Uncle
S:tm's land; We wish him a ph3asant
visit.La Kuhn is recovered from his
' '1 ' • ' '
, . , ,
severe i Mess We ere glad to see him
around.-Mr.,Glanyille has moved his
stock of goods from his • store hetet to
Centietliab where he is holding auction
sales. -We are to have two new bridg-
es across the river, one Li miles. South,'
and the other 2i• miles North of the vie
lage. J.. LaNN-800. has the job of build
ing then], and as he is a vela', enter
priSin o' fellow we 'may depend they
'will bee' wall built. The budges are to
be over 100 feet Jona' ' C '
Ventralia.
Grand Bend,
'
•• 'Last fall, Master Frank
lives about 1,1 miles from ht
quanty.of poultry to Mr. VI
d insid
produce merchant, an (
the ducks •of this earticula
Hill pieced a, note desiring
into •whose hands the due
eventually' fall, to write hitt
lars as to what state of pri
the was in when being
for the table. • Mr.• Hill recciv
.. •
last week dated Feb. oat i
and the fact that the' duck i
in British Colutobia, (a di
about,2500.miles' from here
.. .
suggestive. The felloWing i
'
Vidltoria, B. 0,, Feb
Deaf .Sir:- • .-.' . ,- •
• Having found your note in
when I was d.ressing it for d
as you wished me to tvrite an
in what condition I found it
so. • ,It wasJust as tender as
be, we neve,r had one better
sorry that we have not got sc
If you could let ns knew how
them, we would be very- glad
I remain, Resply '
• Miss K
J. Huxtable is visiting at A
dick's at present. -Several
voung men are trying to lea
r.
ee mg . since C. Smith startei
Jno. Neil who has been laid u
last month with a sprained al
to attend to his work agaii
was about 50 young people jc
church on Sunday last, it bet]
sult of three weeks special s(
G. B. Glanville of Crediton It
. ,
out in the corner store and is
auction sales every evening:
kerville has engaged Mr. j R
teamster -The followhee pa
' ' . ' .
hereon Monday morphia' for i
Mr Halls, R Era lls acid w7fe, Mi
HaAls,G.Motz,Andy Link,Miss
and others. -Mr Joseph Antis
old and. muChesespected. cit
on Tuesday Visk•-, Calgary, 1
where he will remain ,for som
Mr Walter Hill, who tuts bee,r
ly ill both mentally and phys.
we are pleased to state on tin
, , .
Between the ,grain store arid
choPping mill itis surprisince
' • '
Iter of loads that 'come to t
daily. -A 'meeting of the Ro;
piers of Exeter and Crediton
will be held in Smith's hall, ti
die, eveninge, A large, attem
pected. Come one! Come all!! -
Short has pulled down his sin,
P .1 l 11 t '
removes to al t it to day (I
. .
where he will open out a sh
cees to you Ben. Ralph Hat
visiting' in Exeter. -Our dele
port ‚igood time at 'the S S.
tion in Exetttr last week. -
nninber of young people assel
the restdence of Mr John Kee
con, McGillivray on Tuesday
con
themselves to a sock -
, . ' . . ,
and a very enjoyaolo time sy,
IIe intends holding a wood bc
day next
• •
FROM ANOTHER SOUR(
The special meetingS' hel,
Methodist church the past fir
• I 'n ninth o•ood `o •
has iesu ted i ., ,
of people -old and youoa, L
' '
day evening' the .pastot, ReVi
.
received 40 persons into nie
and ..tbout 30 younger people
formed into catechureen clam
church has felt the ewaltening
department and laet Stuiday i
more than, 80 persons we to l
the Bible clase, ivhile, the scl
waSscarcely, large entiugh ti
, . ,. ..
.
. .,..,. February ,28th, 1893.,
To THE EDITOR or TECH) ADVOCATE.
e In answer to irLine corre,spondent
of your lastissue, allovv me a •small
specein your valuable. paper to • try.
and put hirn or her (hilt I am pretty
sure •it •is a him) on their feet
again..:. He would like to know
whether "B" Line or Grand Bend
'handles the most fish, Well, Mr. Edl-
tor, we have in Grand Bendone fisher.
man, and it 1, a good job there are
no more -as they would have to , go
beyondDrysdale for grounds to fish•on
all the ground between there and the
Bend cut being taken up by the "B"
Line fishermen, and furtherneore, take
the tinkere and fishess off of "B' Line
and you would have about 3 farmera
and 1 thresher left on both sides of the
'road.. He says he was Lot aware that.
Grand Bend was noted for its wealth,
as we ,have to go to the . council for
supAsefor some of our section. . I will
' admit, Mr.,Editor, we 'have one poor
. .
family m•our section, but we have no
body to blame but our sister sestion as
t „ . '
they monopolized all the lake beach,
and he being a fisherman had no•other
chance; and again they have one man
in their section who receives from $100
tn$112,a.year, and deny it if they can
(Time will tell•whether thee -lose a por
tion of the north end of their section or
not), He presumes we are about to fit
our school.up for a•hog pen. Well, Mr
Editor, we do not care to follow their
exam. le as one such hoe- en every
• A t b p
five miles is close enough together, He
says they have come to the conclusion
to live and clie in poverty, rather than
laernated wi,h us ' Veil we
be ama te . .. 1, ,
are very sorry as we really have a
very kind feeling• towards them, and
as for lending them scnim of .our spare
funds, we would only be too glad to
supply them with all they want for a
long terna and withent interest. Any
thing to sa,y.e, them from. utter ruin.
Thanking you Mr. Editor for so Much
space and hoping, I have not trespassed
on pour valuable time,
' I remain •yours,
A B C
' '
.„, ,
To TIIE EDITOR ,Of Ti , .
• IE ADVOCATE ' •
Reply to "a subscriber inT,behalf of B
., „
Line and S, S. No. 5 ,
In the first place "a subscribe]." had
better tell us something' we do not
know he says the proposed union sec -
tion is only fatroured by a small nor
•
tion of either seetions, we know that
very well. But what is that to do in
e
the .matter, as _only five families
are, needed to apply for a new
eection, And about the location of the
seperate school I think I am better
posted on the location of the sehool than
he is on the reading of the article ie
ferred to, I said the change . in the
.
f Lake View is when the
school in:nth o ,
first change Started, they now having
.
a separate school and a public school
' • • ' • .
If "a siebseriber" Can't understand this
he had better call. in , his friends and
help him, And about the arbitrator'S
• *, ,., - '
decichne that the schOol sections were
in 98 good a position as they' emild be,
9
I think he is entirely 'mistaken as the
.
meeting held last sumnier as illegal.
"SUbSeril.i6T" thinks We were simply
,
trying to fob our sister Oections. Poor
thing! He had better not ineasure us
by himself, Our motto is "Live and
let, live.' ,
Thanking yill 114r. Editor for the
abOYet filattbe,.•
TO GET AT THE FACTS.
Regardinss Hood's Sarsaparillas ask
people sap take WS medicine, or
the testimonials ,ofteit publighed
thi8 paper. They will certainly eon
you that Hoods SarElaparilla.pos.
unequalled nieriti Atcl that
ou
ram
Oo s urese
..KATEPAYER 1.*, mociate all
k one of
cause ail '
rit °Cell 0r-
130110ek,
mge of Ins
John Ke-
meny was
arriere lit
the eon.
freends.
of a num-
e extend
• sad duty
s. Robert
ully away
the beau-
ffered for .
ed disease, '
uce um bed.
locic, she
arked pa
smile and
eth whom
endeared
She haa
ent inem•
and, has
rd. She
ourn her
heartfelt
t. "Bless.
he Lord."
returned
Principal
his du-
ng to ilia
united in
E Kansas
r rounds
heir homes
Hill, who
re, sold a
. Parsons,
of one of
✓ ict, Mr.
he party
k should
partied -
servation
prepared
ed,a note'
1 answer
,as eaten
stance of
) is very
S a copy:
5th lsos
the duck
inner and.
tell you.
I now do
it could
ud were
me more.
you sell
Yours,
M. West
r. Cobble
the
•o engin-
the mill.
p for the
m is able
1. -There
dried the
e• there,
rvices.-
s opened.
having
C. Bas -
Bins as
-ties left
lanitoba:
b Martha
Eva. Link
rson, our
zen, left
Manitoba,
O tirne.-
serious.
ically, is
raen
the num.
his place
al Tem -
Councils,
is Thurs-
lance ex -
Mr. J.B.
igele, and
huraday)
op. Sue-
dford is
•ates re-
conven-
A large
bled it
t, of 1.1th
Mit and.
1 "hop,"
s spent
e on Fri -
113.
in the
e weeks,
, number
a,st Sun-
nibei•Np
are to be
es, The
in every
fternooni
ound ha
oot room
accom.-