The Exeter Times, 1889-4-25, Page 4Established 1877
B. e,
BANKER,
EXETER, ONT.
----
Transaete a generalhanking business.
Receives the &counts of raerchante and
hare on favorable terms.
Offers every aoeorinsiodatioe eqnsistent with
fe and c one erv etiv e banking prineiples.
rive per cep t. n teres t allowed on dee:nits.
Draftsissued mixable at any office of the
Merchants Bank.
NOTES DISCOUNTED, & 'MONEY TO
LOAN ON NOTES AND MORTGAGES
Vbt Mvittiev ranato.
THURSDAY, APRIL 25th1 1889.
THIRD PARTIES,
It is well for Conservatives to take
notice of how the Reform Press, of
Ontario regard a third parties. It is
abundantly evident that no Liberal will
join the third party with the consent of
Reform leaders and press. Jesuits may
come, Jesuits may go, but Liberals
must be Liberals still, Just at this
juncture it is well for all interested to
take notes. The daily Globe ut the
llth inst., in an assumed correspondent
from Ottawa, but evidently written in
the Globe office, Toronto, has an article
laying down the law to its readers.
The following is from the London Ad-
vertiser of the 20th inst.—"New brooms
sweep clean, and the third parties pro-
mise fair. They are. honest, zealous,
and patriotic. All the rest of the
world is out of joint, but they were
born to see it right. Other inen are
influencsd by considerations of office
and its emoluments, but their motto is
"Fear God, honor tbe King and take
place and power as an accident. They
are known of all men, and their praises
are all in the churches. They are gold
24 carats fine. Such are all Third
parties as the world has known them in
all ages. But somehow—it may be fate
or it may be human nature—they have
always in the long run proved to be ver-
itable sons of our common Father
Adam. We have seen illustrated in
them the old, old story of temptation
and a fall. The temptation may have
been a fat office, or a cabinet portfolio,
blind shares in a railway, or a seat on
the ground floor of a colonization com-
pany, or something of that sort, and
down they have gone with as little cer-
emony as Father Adam himself. It
may not always be so, we admit. The
world is growing better, and thetime is
coming, we hope, when Third parties
will remain true and steadfast to their
professions. But the world is moving
slowiy along the better line, and we
fear a few more leaders must rise and
fall before the political millennium
comes."
ENG -DISH AND CANADIAN
FORESTRY
trust that the present spring
will see a considerable amount of tree
planting done. When travelling last
summer through England and Scotland
nothing was as plainly observable to a
Canadian as the fact that the country
was well sheltered. Everywhere were
hedges, everywhere fine trees along
them, every here and there plantations
Those who owned the land aoparently
were far from grudging the trees their
standing room and the result well re-
paid them, such crops of wheat, such
weight of grass per acre as was there
obtained doizbled or often tripled Can-
adian products. Comparing Canadian
with English farming praCtice, no one
could doubt the shelter given had much
to do with the fertility of the land. It
was a painful contrast to many of our
Canadian farms, where it looks as if the
owner had cut every tree from the sur-
face to produce a square expanee of bare
earth, as bare, as hard and as unsightly
as an Illinois stock yard.
flow different is this to what a farm
should be, with its reserve of forest well
kept, free from the intrusicn of cattle,
and in good forest condition, its beds
deep with leaves, its young trees rising
emulous to the height of the old, ready
to replace them when they are cut
down for use, its massive reelth of foli-
age, its pleasant walks, cooL'andumbra•
geoue in the hottest day ; its living
springs preserved by trees, its line of
wind -breaks opposed to the cutting.
blasts. Such a farm so kept is a place
of beauty, a place to live and die in.
The other shaved. flat to the surface, is
a place to toil, to make money, if arm-
ing pays perhaps ; but it is never a plea-
sure to those who inhabit it if they poss-
ess any of the finer sentiments of our
nature. It is not always even the hest
piece to make Money by farming for he
Who has the trees will have the grass
crops, he who has the grass crops will
have the manure and he who has the
manure will have the wheat.
The new forestry report is now being
distributed and any one desiring it by
sending his address to me will receive
it. by mail. It is a pamphlet distribut-
ed free by the Ontario Goyethinent.
There is no price for the book and no
charge for the postage. It will be found
to contain much information interesting
Lo all who interest themselves in the
forest ,
Yours Truly,
R. W. Peures.
233 Riohmond street, Toronto,
April 15, 1889.
"THE IRIS11 CATISE."
t is to be reeretted that se able a
lecturer as the :Rev. Br. Burns elieeld
jif)b have been greeted by a tarn,
er house On the Occasion Of him vieit to
Ex( er Islet Friday evening. The subs
its'e.lf wee of SpfliOie.ni; intertst to
hard led' the lecturer to seined,. a full
lemeei Tito loot:ire wae eble and ido-
quent, tbo. ectnior i n many Placee eie
i bi tin n dee p .feolitne.in: behalf or'th
welfrire Of hie n(itiVe 1 nil ire vosv0r,
NV thought when he spoke of the
poverieh exit of the people,' Jiring in
grass 'bowfin) With ryld it or
glow pitOr lt fa la o oiki,;bt
jeob justthere, giving the audience the
impression bliet that stets of thinga was
universal, while it is known well that a
feir portion of the population gives evi-
dence of thrift end oomfort. In his ac
count of the conqueet of Henry II, he
spoke of his dividing the country up
among ten of his nobles, as though this
were the beginning of landlordism.
Landlordism) was the burden of his lec-
lure, But the Irish historians, Davis
and Leland tell us that Henry nomin-
ally gave the land to ten of his nobles,
but that it virtually was in possession
of its former owners, and that the old
Irish chieftains while making an out-
ward show of submission never thought
of renouncing their authority or the cus-
toms of their forefathers. Long before
Henry's time the land watt he the poss.
easiest of the chiefs and the nobles who
received rent or tribute from the com-
mon people, who froin time immemorial
had not regarded themselves as owners
of the soil. The origin of Landlordism
would be difficult to trace, but the
onus of ib cannot juetly be laid upon
the British government. Another
thing the lecturer did not tell was that
the christianity of Ireland was prima-
tive rather than Roman Catholic up to
the time of Henry 11 when the Pope
assisted to conquer the eountty on con-
dition that the country should be Rom-
ish, a condition well carried out until
the time of the Reformation. The roy-
al proclamation of Henry VIII that the
religion of the country should be Pro-
testant was inveiged against as though
it were a charge against Protestantism.
It was unjust to be sure, but it was the
-
act of a despot rather than a protesn
tent. He did not tell that in the reigt
of Elizabeth an Irish parliament adopt-
ed protestantism and did so no doube
through English influence and that
this furnished the cause for Romish
jealousy, and that this Roman jealousy
and Romish desire for absolutism was
at the bottom of Ireland's trouble
through the revolution of 1641and down
till the disescablishment of the Irish
church in 1868, and that it was their re-
ligion rather than landlordism that
brought upon them the oppression which
they unfortunately suffered. All occas-
ion for religious jealousy having been
removed the attention is since turned to
the relation of landlord and tenant as
though that had always been the
grievance. It is a wonderful thing to
think of twelve men owning stich large
estates in Irelandas the lecturer spoke
of, and cannot but be injurious to the
country, but he didn't tell that about
the same quantity of English land is
owned by twelve men in England and
that twelve Scotch landlords own three
times as much inScotland, a thing of
course, not worthmentioning in connec
tion with England and Scotland, but, a
grievance against Ireland. Then ab-
sentuism is discanted upon, but only
one fourth of Irish landlords are absen-
tees. Then as to the exhorbitant rent.
Official returns show tbe average esti-
mated rental per acre in England to be
four and a Waif times greater than the
average estimates rental per acre in
Ireland; that in England being £3, in
Ireland 13s. 4d. He dwelt upon the
disadvantageous position of "Tenants
at Will," whereas, occording to the best
authority, "Tenancy at Will" is pre-
ferred by the tenants themselves, part-
ly because it allows greater freedom,
ancl partly because it is thought to in-
volve a tacit cement to permanent oc-
cupancy, and hence the large 'number
of tenants at will compared with those
who are leaseholders. There are no
doubts instances of oppressive land-
lords, but the existing laws provide for
the protection of the tenant to such an
extent that it is conceded by most
thoughtful and impartial writers that
the Irish rent laws are the most favor-
able to the tenants uf any rent laws
in the world, and the history of the
present Irish Agitation would seem to
prove that the much lamented evictions
result not from the poverty of the
tenants so much as from the boycotting
principles of the plan of campaign —
the majority of the tenan ts having their
rent laid up on hand, being obliged to -
v,ithold from paying it, In giving
reasons why he is a Macistonian, the
lecturer seemed rather hard on those
who take exception to that Home Rule
Bill, saying those who cry out "Separa-
tion" or "Rome Rule" had never read
the Bill. Lord Hartington, Joseph
Chamberlain and the late Hon. John
Bright could scarcely be accused of ig-
norance of the above men Coned Bill.
They appeared to- see the danger of
"Separation" and "Rome Rule" and
consequently cut themselves loose from
their old party on this question and,
became /seders of the Liberal Union-
ists, a party which the lecturers sarcasin
will scarcely wither.
He Came to the point 'where all pro-
testants would agree with him, the
thing which wonld forever settle the
Irish difficulty, via: that the nofth and
south shake hands. Be here gave ex-
pression to the true spirit of liberal'
protestantism, but while the protes-
tants might be willing to reach over
and shake hands they could. not Sur-
render protestant principles nor could
they trust themselves under the rule of
Romanistn until Hornanism threw off
its intolerance, and that the lecturer
well knows will not until the Pope re-
nounces infallibility. The diffi cul ty in
the way of slieleing hands is this, that
protestants eennot satisfy the Roman-
ists with shaking hands, unless they at
the same time shake hands with the
Pope.
Tres: Leee Dn. 7. G. TiottArtn, the emi-
nent writer and physininn, wrote and pub -
in Scriber's Itragazine: "It is a tact
that Many of the beet proprietary medicines
of the clay aro more succesetn1 than many
physicians, and most of them .are first dig, -
covered rind tiscd in actnal insd !eine prim.
tido. When. Imarever, any shrewd person
knowing titers virtue, foreseeing their pornlarity, secures and advertises' them, then in
the opinion of the bigoted, all virtue went
out of them." The late llr, Lowie, in
kitto Warnor's 'We anre says If
I found Invself tho 'victim of a serious kid-
ney trouble,1 would use yout 'preparation,"
11, A. Gunn, M. D. author of Gunn's
• Now 'Improved Handbook of Ityaiene .and
.Jeomestle medieine, " says: "Moro andulte
e earried off by ehrotne hidney disease
lan by any other orm maladav excepl
nstimptiate"u
TRE 4 PLANTING.
2'o the Oditor of the Zxetev
Deer Sir.—As the sewn for lire(
transplanting is now upon us, and a,
the art of plaoting is in many instance
very imperfectly understood, judgin,
from the class of trees that are yea
afteryear planted along our highways
eepecially in the country, a few word
of advice and instruction may not b:
considered impertinent. One tre:
properly planted is worth three care
lessly planted, and the desirability am
advantage of planting trees will not b:
dieputed by anyone, when the denudes
condition of the country is considered
First. —Tho trees whether hard. mapl,
Canadian elm or any: other kind sel
eeted for planting, ehoulcl average a
least seven to eight inches in oircum
ference, two feet from the ground
The tops should be out offso that th:
tree would stand when planted fron
nine to twelve feet high. The reasm
why this large size is seleetedis becaus:
they resist the great heat and tirmagb
which is so trying in exposed localities
when they are taken from the sheltere(
forest. Small sized trees are literall;
scorched through during the great lien
of summer, especiany when there i
very little moisture in the ground
Then having selected the size, the
next poiat is to see that the tree sel-
ected is a strong vigorous grower, witl
°lean, healthy bark, and before an,
attempt is7made to lift it the earti
and roots should be cut round the bre:
at least 15 inches from the tree ah
round, leaving the small feeding rootlet:
as much as passible undisturbed an
uninjured, when the tree should bi
lifted squarely out of the ground an6
the superfluous earth removed i:
neceasary. The places or holes ii
which • to plant them should be due
and ready before the trees are liftei
and they should be deep enough am'
large enough to take the tree in with-
out cramping or crowding the roots.
They should also be dug deep enougl
to refill them half full with surfact
mould before the tree is put down,
when the tree is then planted the roots
should be protected hone drought be
surrounding them with boxes eighteei,
inches at least in diameter and eight in
depth filled with leeched ashes and
chip manure, which retains moisture
better than anything else that can be
used, and at the same time feeds the
tree, leaves the ground loose, porom
rich, ready to retain moisture when it
rains.
It is a mistake to plant trees on the
inside of farm fences, along the high-
way, as they do much better when
planted about two feet outside the
fence when properly protected by
supports. The roots are less in the
way of the farmer ; they derive their
nourishment without interfering with
the crop, and they do in.uch better in
land that is kept constantly cropt by
cattle, than when the long grass inside
fences, is allowed to mature and absorb
all the moisture from the roots.
Trusting that some of the hints
herein contained may receive some
consideration from tree planters, I
have the honor to be
A LOVES. OF TREES.
The Windsor Clarion, in referring to
the Mercier Jesuits Estates' act says
that "Quebec is not the only province
in the dominion in which the church
of Rome has been aggressive ; but a
series of aggressions have also been
made in the province of Ontario. The
Schools have been seperated, the Cath-
olics having a school of their own over
which they have complete supervision,
the state not 'being allowed to interfere
in any sense. They have their school
taxes collected by the general tax col-
lector, and the assessor obliged to furn-
ish a list of all parents who should be
suoporters of the seperate schools In
addition to this., the public schools have
been preeticaliv placed uuder the con-
trol of the Catholic clergy by elimin-
ating from histories and other books
certain histerical truths which are offen-
sne to the Catholic church. We have
schcans in the r;ouety of Essex in which
no English is taueht, schools in which
the teachers can hardly speak English,
schools in which generations have -been
taught and not one of the family can
sneak English and in addition to this
there is an understanding that the
French areto control our affairs. Their
latest move is to petition for a purely
French bank in order that even finan-
cially they may be inclipendent of Eng-
lish speaking people. All these inci-
dents, we repeat, are beginning to
arouse the people from their lethargy.
They know they must nieet the aggree-
sion firmly or they Will in a few years
be overcome. , They will e conquered
by the peaceful methods.
Let the people of Canada actnow. A
few More years and it will be too late,
Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly
FOR MAY.
The May number of Plume LESLIE'S
POPULAR. Mowrin.v, crowded as usual
with a,ttrautive pictures and good reading,
opens with a well illustrated article, by
George a Hurlbut, on "The Paris Rx-
posinen and its Significanee " which is of
special interest and timeliness, closely
preceding, as it does, the opening of the
great French Universal Exposition in
commemoratimi of the one bendredth
anniversary of the fall of the 13aetile. An.
(Aber notieable contribution is David S.
Banke's "A New • Yorker in Vtuattan,a
giving with e profusion of pictures, a
modern traveller'impressions of the
mysterious archmolRgical svonderland. o
Central America. A review of the
principal "Artistic, Conceptioes of Cleo-
patra, ' accompanied, amongst other inus-
tretions by John Serteitt's beeutifel copy
of t he Eucaustic Tablet Ionian at aladrian's
V ilia, maternal y el ps the finmagin atm
to fancy how Egypt's queenly beauty
looked. "Madame (le Sevigne's Grand.
unalict ''18 a ,pleceetet bit of literary Te.
egrephy ; and the fully illustrated artic'es
on The Lake eh n P.;eginii" an:1
"Glasgow" ably represent the depert-
monis of travel` am! description, These
are en's, a few of the many attrec.tione,
in the form of docks, iiketehee eeeeve
poutria, scientific articles, tirt illttetts,tions,
Which makc up a ttunlel nundmr of Wu
p1eb r In c zi
neah
FARM FOR SALE,
Ninet,v aOreS—Lot 6, eon. 2. in Stephen
orruship, linron co., over 70 eeres eleeree of
vhiell 60 acres are in grass +India first -eines
,endition• nalf mile from Centralia. Good
,rxek house and out -buildings, Must be sold.
tor further eartieulars manly to
3 n104. MATTHEW MORECOR,
Crediton P. O.
'ZALESMEN Wanted.—Good
so" ealaries or commission paid to the right
con to sell our Qhoiee and hardy 'varieties of
'army stook. Now is the time of the year to
micas°. None but boxiest and upright men
leoct samba do not dean; if you cleeide to join
as delays are dangerous, Apply with ze-
'erciloas, MAT BROTHERS,Nurserrxen,
Rqohostor, N. Y.
4fICS,LikrvAso-41 • iltor
'0eadvacov g,
o
tizi
o
ILA'S 4,,WQ
Eti !its
tg4-;44 t
Al.s..8 3 La
rre:3 tti
41'491 471 It' /14
CO
CT1
VP*1.77a
ra.a.dlet
.11,11'4 4"
(3..•-• •
EgIIPPEINT MILLS.
NEW IMPROVEMENTS.
D.13. McLean in thanking. his customers
fortheir liberal patronage, wishes to inform
them and thepublie in general that he has re-
fitted the Grist Mill and put in new improve-
ments, and having seoured the services of a
thoroughly competent miller, is now better
prepared than ever before to turn out a good
quylity o Flour. Flour and Peed, Cornmeal
tud Oatmeal kept constantly on hand. Ohee-
Ping only 5e per bag. Don't forget the old
Atanti. f will also be prepared to attend to all
Custom Sawing. D. B. MoLEAN. Kippen.
Eyes Tested
FREE
.-2?'---
S MURRAY1
Practical Optician,
Graduate Optic School IVY -
Eyes tested; defective sight restored by the
aid of fine glass 3. Largo assortment of the
finest glasses on hand. .A call solicited.
S. 2VETTXtR_A.'"Z",
dn_9 11.MCMCMC)1\TI) -ST London.
BRICK AND TILE
FOR SALE.
Any quantity of brick and tile of all sizes
for sale at the
IVIOATZ BRICK YARD, Credlton.
First-class brick*A$4 per Thou-
sand. Tile Jsponding1y
Cue D.
—
The creditors have o ' Moats to
look after the sale of th ad tile, and he
will be found in the yam at times.
Next -year the yard will be run by Mr.
Moatz as usual. ....—
Crediten.J nuarY 15th ,3•889:
TN THE '.I HIGEl COURT OF
-1 JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION.
In the matter of lot nunber 10 abutt-
ing on the southeast boundary of the
township of Osborne, in the county
of Huron.
Notice is hereby given that John Hanna
and William Hanna both of tho township of
Osborne, in the County of Huron, farmers,
have mado an tipplieation to tne Chancery
Division of the High Court of ,Tustice for a,
certificate of title to the above mentioned
property, under "The Aet for Quieting TitlaS
to 'Real Estate in on taro" and have produced
evidence whereby they appear to be the owners
thereof, in fee free from all encumbrances ex-
cept the terms and conditions of the last will
and testament of the late William HannaJr.,
Idle:1°11.a:: mi also except a certain mortgage
COW on sni.d. lands, dated the ifith November,
A. D., 1868. made by Wiliam Hanna to one
George P. Jones, and assigned to one Robert
Whe-efore any other person having or pre-
tending to have any title to, or interest in said
lands, or any part thereof, is required, on or
before the -seventh day of May, now
next ensuing.to filo a statement of his clainx
verified by affidavit, in ley office at the City
Stratford, and to serve a cony on the said John
Hanna and William Hanna or on W. On,ven
Museript, their solicitor. at his ofifieo in the
town ot St. Mary s.in the county of Perth, and
in default every mall claim will be barred
and the title of the said John Hanna arid
William Hannabecome absolute and indo-
f easable at law and in equity subject onlY
to the reservations mentioned in the 26th sec-
tir,rz of the said het and therein numbered A.
B. C. D. It% anal and to tho charges and en-
unibranoes herein befor) islL
et out,
7t.loree of Titles n.; Stratford
Dated this 2n1 day of April, A. 2,1889.
Oftemem••••••alemonauz.
NEW FI
Davidson Bros.,
8011 ders cg Contractors
24 _t,_1 1 I
Stop enealeeeeaat.sof -Parsons' !Meek-
smelly/Shop. Manufacturers of Sash es , Doors
and Minds. 13ui111.4s eon traoted for. Plans,
estimates and specifications furnished if re-
quierd,
loroni their past experience it the building
line they guarantee satisfaction. All work
done with promptness and dispatch. Season-
ed lumber alwaYs en band.
WM. DAVIDSON. JOEIN DAVIDSON.
Market Square
General Store
. a
The undersigned would inform the Pub
lie that he has moat reeeived hrs
SUMMER
STOCK
—IN CLII DIN G—
A full line Of Thy-Ooods, flats& Caps, and
Crockery1 uota end Shoes.
Thesse wishing enythlug in my line will
find it to their ea ventage to eell and in
spaet my goods and prier B.
tligh,est pricos paid for .But-
ter an (1 Tilggs and al]
I(ind,i of pro(luce.
OUR FIRST WORD IS—
nannana-laale.
Fi A. R, G- N S
•
And all from a practically unlimited line of Bright',
New Styles tor Spring and Summer.
Facts and Figures convince all comers that we offer
the opportunity of the season in
Dry Goods, Groceries, Hat, Caps,
Boots' Shoes Clothing Furnish-,
ing Goods, Notions, Sec.
This stock is made up of the truly new, the really tlia6
and the thoroughly genteel, in styles and fashions; The
LOWEST PRICES yet named; For equal value you
can't do better anywhere, than at CABLING BROS.
Not in prices, for you Call' t go lower than the lowest; Not
in quality, for you can't get better than the best; Not in
Quantity, for you can't get more than the most.
OU LAST fORD iS,
A G N S
CARLING BROS.
—EXETER—
PON TUDIO.
^
For Finely Finished Photos of all sizes,
from sinall album size to 11x14
from life, try
IO
^
He has 'so an elegem: display of Photo-
graph Frames Sizes : Sx10,
l:x:1 an -I. Ix17.
AT .(1.. DRICES
It wi I be c the advan age of th
having pictures o iraina tia xamine his
stock of Picture Moil cli
Get prices be urchas ng e Where.
JOS. SENT ) R
LTallerv Opposite Post -Otic
T
gonualoamaJb
HEADQUARTERS
Pure Drugs, Patent Medi-
cines Dye -stuffs,
Perfumery ad Toilet
• Articl s
School Books and Stationary,
Photo Frames, Albums,
Purses, etc.
Cigars Pipes, and Tobacco,
Also a large assortment
of Toilet and Bath
Sponges alwa,vs
on hand
Prescriptions carefully pre-
pared from the purest
Drugs.
Remember the place, Sign,
GOLDEN MORTAR,
Main St.,
BrAL
Notice to Contractor.
Sealed Tenders will be received up to the
fp Y my, 9, e 'undersigned,
Or the eketivation of the cut at Grand Bend,
'We dredging of the rivet Aux Sauble, and
ditching of Haycock's creek.
Tenders to state the estimate for each
separately. Plans and specifications ean be
seen at If Bilber's office, Croditon. The
lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.
Work not to be commeheed until the liability
of the townships concerned is tested. Plans
and specification are in the possession of the
Councils of McGillivray, West Williams and
Bonn q uot.
The -work will eonimenco n,nd terminate at a
date '41 be hereafter agreed upon.
The engineering was dono by It. Dead, Esq.,
Glencoe, The proposed cut is about 81 rods
long, average depth 2031., bottom width 30 ft.
le river dredging is about 288 chains, 30f1.
wide, at variable clonal.
Tenders to stat oon outsicle(Tendor for G.D. 0)
and ftddrOSSOd DO
0. PROT.17.'1", my, 0, On.
By order of the township of Stephen.
Isf. 33,—SeettritY ivill he required for com-
pletion of work,
•Assignee's Notice.
In the matter of the estate of Thoina,s
Sims, Iesolvent
Oreaithrs of the above estate aro horobV
notified that r have preen:rad an account tie
the receipts and expenditures heroin, and
that,tli o same 11103, bu inspr,cted at the °Mee
of towit; If, MOICh0/1, barn htm., V;:totor.
All realms rtee irerr; o said ectnfe must be.
Med proper/ v od , wir 111110 IV With 1113t
00110itOr tir, hicAcson on or befeie the first
day' of May, a .11, 1880.
Trowrs, Assignee,
hated° reditott,3rd erreeteee,
BOVFALO 13:ILT. C051014
With 108 Wit(' West Show catiSca inn
moose exeieement, 'neatly eghal to, that
eaused.by the fatroduetion of that wholee
wane and puee tutieln known as the
'Imperial Cream Tatar nakiug Powder,
Sold by all grocers
Notioo To rumor:
—CALL AT THE_
ontreal General Store
I am wanting any amount of
.1.1r1cey and geese tail and wing
quills.
—FOR SALE :—
Ladies' and Ohildren's Boots & Shoes.
Ladies' and Children's Rubbers,
Ladies' Bnbhers and Hosiery cum.
oined,
Ready-made clothing, Flannels, Underwear
Top Shirts and Cardigans. 1,
Irgans and Pianos, Sewing Machines
Dwee owe for sale or to rent, oppos-
to hall.
Give ree call Before purchasing
hees
T. DEARING.
fi
ourch.
,abot12 street, south of James -at lieth
WILL CURE OR RELIEVE
BILIOUSNESS, DIZZINESS,
DYSPEPSIA, DROPSY,
INDIGESTION) FLUTTERING
JAUNDICE, OF THE HEART,
ERYSIPELAS, ACIDITY OF
SALT RHEUM, THE STOMACH,
HEARTBURN, DRYNESS
HEADACHE, OF THE SKIN,
.1ind every species of disease arising
from disordered LIVER, KrazvEys,
STOMACE,.BOWELP •n2 BLOOD.
T. V1ILBERN ez CO, '''"I'gr.41(5Nruo.
• DR, Washington,
Throat & Lung Surgeon,
Of Toronto, will he at the Central Ho
tel, Exeter,
TI -1171-1.
Until 5 o'clock.
Catarth,Bronahltis, Astha, Consumption,
eto, permanently and effectually cured.
A few Pronament Testimomalet
of Permanent Cures:
Mrs. John McKay, Kingston, Ont., Catarrh
and Consumption.
John McKelvy, Kin gston,Ont., catarrh.
Mrs. A. Hopping, Kingston, One., Broncho
Con tumption.
IVIr.•aEn.ciSxd
tt,fingston, Ont,, Catarrh, hea
Read W. H. Storey's •Original Testimonial,
Catarrh Throat Cured.
Listen to W Storey, lisq,, of the ft rm of
W IL Storey & Son, Acton, Glove Manufactur-
ers, also President Manufacturers' Association
of Canada.
Da, W.esniteamON, 215 Yonge-stf. Toronto,
Etat Sta.—I assure you I feel grateful for
the radical cure you h rive effected in illy throat
trouble,, and though I dislike having my mune
appear in connection with the testimonial bus -
loess, yot, having regard or tepee who, are
similarly affected, as well at having a ti eSI re tb
re cogn ize the results o yeer treatment Intake
uoparture ni this Prior to rnYacqufiat).
111100 With 'ou,T 1 suffered for two years
front repotted,. tacks of catarrhal 00 throat
(moil suceeedit ttack being more prolonged
and yiolont4 Of t the former, At those tiniest
had violent f.ts ctcoughmsg, and tvould
dis-
chargo large quantities of mucous. Peeling
ala,rmed, I sought the best !Decherd skill avail-
able, in eludin.g mite la -noted Specie list; and
took almost everything known to medieine
with ou t experloileineaparticlo of relief. Last
spring I wont to Europe. The ehange did me
good, but on my rot Urn the old trouble was re-
newed. Seeing you advertised to visit thisi
place. I thongh 13 would consul tyou.although
eon fess with not mud; hot e ofves vleg nee
bop of, however,' w f a von bY rn pressed
with your candor. and resolved give yout
treatment 0 trial. %he result., hitivy to
inform you, isa corn p ft f 1!. .r.11 Drib 86',
marked in its eh artici ei a : both Alf
scif aud my friends, Front the; rat vo xriviodk,
icint Sewn eit adapted to PIVOSSMIld 1,atg to
th Inc ;PM, I WaP oh If ray tv ,aaa bar
SO eentinued through the mast u davotab
season of veal., You are at tiberte to make,
what, me you please of this etter end I' Oulu
be pleased to answer any enouir.ser Oat iazto
mY eas e. Yo ors v 't ay ,