Embroideries in very choice patterns. WE SOLICIT YOUR PATBONAGE. ,.-_- _..v... a. nu uuucl one llbyl I110 F1518 OI DOUGALL Enos. ng, MI-._Dav1d_ Dongall hereby thanks his friends and the nnhlir CHANGE on _ ,,__- _ . _ _ v -u, vuuucu Iluu IJUI-II-I 1101183110 '1 Im:h'i; eat on the same sound principles. which have secured so large a share ~ The firm wi hereatter be under the style And title of for Infants and children. I6 g.l_'e,atA Grit Turk, won like to bind fair Y0"b' I30? 40.11811 "Baton the 5 f March the counfli` - s -5- -_-6-cuy uuauxu nil Inenas and the public for their EU?" a penod, and hope: the new rm wxll be favored with 11` in the Cabinet Business in Barrie for Forty Year! '11 x __h- L Hi: snug T--.4- -_.l 1_I__ I\ n u uuv unuuwu nuaxnesll In barne tor 1"or!_V 193. ! His 8_0ns, James and John Dougall. will laereaftf - Dflnclblel- `IAVA lnnupn can `snag. a 4.-1-Rn 1 _. -_-' ..--- vv -av av "055 UV CV5 UU< The whole thing is 9. sham and fraud. -I" n. g ::'," Cup! onu - ' "5 R ' 1 Youth me: any um; nmmgm [>}non out on. who can nud amt lnunedomwnl work In howtoeafnflnoflououd and wudusd '1' 3" vi: noun` .;:.....:'*..:.'.'*?.'.':'.;.:""&w;.:.c".'::'. '!..':-:.::':.:::..":`-'= DUI? hruouuepuuouluahon. llunynd l.o'Ir"I9ul.. dcplnhconoworkcnonuehdbuiezor ' __%M-t and revues with c_-g X-' 1.13 n..:A'A::u it P!` Tan Cxxmuzn Coxpuzv, canto:-In cm-es Colic. constipation, Sour Stomach. Dian-hma. Enxnmnin `A I lundcrtnko can I m r on. J. 3'"n'3' .. r'u3? 131 {'33: and the public for their sup r:-In mm 1... :....,...,.A "Mb 1?.` Febxuary 26, Y, 7? Murray Street. .`~' gen and save her 1 --- vwvvn-cut . itwocssible tor the contrast. either"in' aim or character of two men to be greater ? Will the honest conscientious voter for one moment hesitate which man to sup- port `? Voters of North Simooe, quit ya like men--vote for D'Alton McCarthy, the statesman, the man of principle and the eloquent advocate of right, and save old North Simcoe from everlasting dis- grace. from The one will diverge from his party alliances rather than do violence to his principles and his conscience, the other is not troubled with either principles or con- ` science to the injury ct his party. The one is the farmers true friend, who tells him honestly and. sincerely where his best interest lies, thecther shows his love for the Simcoe farmer by purchasing American oats, corn and pork for his Georgian Bay camps and mills, to the in- jury of the farmers` home market. The one has. the courage of his convictions and the ability to defend and sustain them before all the talent of parliament. The other`s main convictions are timber limits forced from a defeated govern- ment with an eloquence that smacks of the saloon, and the I bet you, of the political race course. ' The one contends that all religious de- nominations are equal before the law. the other, for party advantage and a corpor- ate vote, yields to a church, privileges to which it has no right. The one advocates only one oioisl lamzuege for the Dominion, ond eapeoial- ly opposes the extension of the French languogeinthe North West. The other is willing to vote the very opposite to get his party into power. The one advuoatea oleaer relations with the Motherland, the other advocates a system that must necessarily out us off from the Motherland, and lead to annexa- tlou. The one advocates trade with England and all the rest of the world. the other wants trade with the United States, with England and all the rest of the world shut out. The one advocate: fair trade with our neighbors, the other wants a system where a the advantage is all on our neighbors" aide. The poli<:ryVt:l:a'-one is to build up our illdllItl`i0l,> the policy of the other is to 1 destroy them. ' I V I I ';I, ,..__ won --- vvvw wuvu-`.-_.-_ -- The public policies they repreuont and advocate are an opposite and II` distinctly marked. These men are D`Altou Mo- Oarthy, tho statesman. and Herman Henry Cook, the politician. . ,_-u__ .1 A`_- -___ __ L- L._:I_l -___ -_-_. 1;. addition to this the aold about $4,000,000 a year _ to other eoloniea, making in 18 years the enermoua aim of $200,000,000 in exeeaa of what iveaok_11to the United Staten. '. ` ' an wnnisrnn 31: urban. . V (Jae week from to-day the olcotou of North Simooe have a great and responsible duty to perform involving the future 1 deltlniea of this Dominion. J Two men `are asking for our "vote: has our representative in the great council of the nation. In almost everything thele i men are the antnpodee 0! each other. ' Al V , . _ _ _ _ A _ _._L __.I THE Nofamaan ADVANCE, 1 1: 1|. 1--....` II---3-Innis. mans or sunsonuvrxox. ` 4 [1 Per Annum in Advance. 81. C No new name will be addodto the Sub- utl a not until the money is paid. ` ` boa now in orrou-I for three months and our will be burned 01.50 per annum. ' ` - ` XII g ` Fleming and I` nIuVlCCQ` 0' d; Nlercler I II President lane. at Ila" Out ldberalv frlen laonuloy ol Nova 8. Prince Edward Is lanurlor. on Que ontu-Io. and a In ` benldol. loo to In. mama. for who sign all conquer. - em 7 on-cw In. 1 of .-vvu:w-:- Au 8 l Iloo-|80olulnlIN.OWll|I1!0l`g_ Published tr-om the Omoo. Dunlop Street Bands. in tho County at Suuooo. the Pro-` ' vlueo of Ontario. Gansda. ovary Thurs . day morning. by V IAMUIIL WESLEY; l lIOPlIII'l`0lIo sxmcomnunns. ms:-mu. A -I4\II- _.`_..-._ A. V The 031:5 7:E"::33 nw:it(l;`ofOol- lingwo n on ter- noon lutwhon it was dboidod yum: it would be impouible to have the dobste wichthat Iohool._ The note _w_u in- Lost your our sales otpnimtll and their productu, lo:-out product: |nd|rioul1_:irnlf produce In the British 'muke dpiu;'It9d' to 86.337.000. " ' 7732-IIIC `CZ bout Imam, and for tl material we!- untrr of North Guthrie. Advance Correspondence. Monday evening, Feb. 16th, _the G. C. M.` 85 L. Society held its regular meeting which was very successful. Those who participated in furnishing the evening's entertainment were the Rev. Mr. Hunter who gave avery interesting and practical address on the subject of "circumstances." Miss a Muir, who. read a biographical sketch of Dr. Norman Mcheod, Miss A. Currie, who gave a reading entitled, Stop before you begin Mr. A. Youn e gave an exhibition of club swinging. hese were interspersed with music consisting of choruses by the choir. a vocal duet by the Misses Duncan, a violin solo by Mr. W. Robinson and a quartette by some of the members. Mr. A. Yonnge then performed his duties in the oilice of. critic and the meeting was dismissed in the usual man- ner. . ' , s ' lure IIIIO one Alnu-lou.-D0trolt 'I_`rl Herman whoue lov noon b or]: eorulan Bay III: on nun-n DI...--- 1.. ooauue he can get them cheaper than In , annaa. Then : how he % auras an uw fl, lo!` llli men on the help: the slmcoe farmer. ...._.._.___. . EDITORIAL INKLITS. It is `currently reported that Cook has been supplied with elerge sum of money from Quebec to aid in defeating Mr. Mc- Carthy. . Let the friends of honesty keep a sharp look out for the bribere. v 0 la! lvwlthoa 113 Ill ,,..','":.'.'::....:`.\.'. :. ..... .2-.2. rnaoxarswnncir m nicuvrrow. a Last Saturday the Globe published` a page of pictures and comments to show how the Canadian working man was taxed on everything he wears and uses. It is the pictures -the Philadelphia Record, Puck and other Yankee papers have been using for years back, only they show that the working man in the States is taxed twice what he is in Canada. The central picture represents immigrants leaving the ship at Castle Garden. Nothing can be more dishonest than this attempt ofuthe Globe to get the working man to vote for a tax double the amount he would pay if he bought the imported article. `The working man need not buy one of the imported article named. By purchasing Canadian made articles which are just as good, he does not pay one cent of the taxes pictured. There in no depth of falsehood to which the. Globe will not descend. Voterb of -North Simooo, is this what you desire? By voting for B. H. Cook. you any yet, bv voting for D Alton Mo- ` Oarthy you say no. Which will you do ? W'i`hcre is something to be gained by making closer trade relations with Great Britain, which practically buys all our surplus cheese.` All our surplus cattle. All our surplus apples. Will take all our surplus eggs. And all our surplus hog products. Would it not be the most insane folly to sacrifice that English market altogether in orderto gain access to one in which there is no profit to us--to make our country a mere dumping ground for the surplus products of United States manu- factories, destroy our infant industries, blot out the name of Canada from the map of North America, destroy the grand future of the Dominion, and bring about national extinction. V Z 'm'eI: '13.:"on every beef animal 5 you export to Britain of 815.00 Ponder the following fact: :-- Britein in our best market. From 1873 to 1890 our exports to Britain exceeded there to the United States by the enormous sum of $191,000,? nnn Hal not jireented people `abandoning Vermont. 1 L ' V(-)Vz-wed Dakota (armors frpm starva- tion. } 7 There is nothingtto be geined by get- ` tingnooeu to I nmfket which has neteeved Maine from losing populetion'}"hee not saved New York Yuma being mortgaged to theiefull value ; has not prevented the farmers in ten state: only from being mortgeged over four billions of dollars, or 160 times the whole debt of the Domin- ion. 4 msncnt and an increasing one} Remem- ber. without wofbuj ftcm Britain" occu- not tell to her," cm! the Ynnkcoji ,t`nI"itf tvhich Mr. 0001: wants you adopt in a prohibitory cue. ` L AGRICULTURAL PROSPERITY. _ tumor: of North Simcoc-"know ESE: Richard C|l'IW!i|zhl I~ bluc ruin talk and its repetition by H. H. 0001:, is in grant part more romance and largely` destitute of truth. From _1884 "to 1889 T VLIVWWYOOI` the farmers of Ontsrio b.r- ` mod 821105.000, and repaid $21 330.- 'i'}}{Q1i{o gm. stoki inj o..s.%.:o` in- o:oued> by 32,600,000. I IE1 _ [Tho fuluo of farm land: by 81000.: 000. V ` 000. "i'he grand total inorenso of nearly 833- AA AAA "W" ""C'_" U value of fIr'u'3nimplementa by; 84.; AA I\I\I\ ,- --_ ,v,-. -,-vvv vv Are you farmer: 1)! did 1 Mo T W "..$c`:"."s:...o..m. in; to uorloo ill lost this pplgg. Italy, a puff The value of buildiugal by 31900 - n.o.Lu8i.;omw}. EU (`I snalnlnfn Dan. `I.-.. .- -uvIOo$o$1uCUUI.Wu 4. M83150 Society`: Own Rcponyr --1 l_-'... LIL- II II 0 , ., uuuuuuguu UUlnpIl.'l.l0D. Mr. Cook is a party man out and out. If he has ever. voted against his leaders he ought to make it known for no one to whom _I have spoken has ever heard of it. Probably he holds that a party man should never_ vote against his leaders. His `conscience is that of his party; I should rather sv of the medium members of his party, e belongs to the rank and le, and the `rank and le can always swallow a good deal.- Mr. Cook is no better and no worse than the average politician. I feel sure Mr. Cook does not understand Mr. ,Me0arthy.- He , of course? believed that McCarthy was not sincere. Most likely he thinks so yet. If not, MeOas-thy must. beounslderahle; of a puzzle tohim,~" That a man sh onl`do as Meoarthy has done is not explainable on any principle hnownto the` morality of 'f!!:__,_._ > wliotene P9li!t)i:;vou see.is oo .9.rI.Io I 5 '41 vi use one : vvvn Va auuvntauy. Vvlllllll '1 Follow Electors. Two gentlemen "are asking our votes who have been before the public as public men for a great many years. We_ have a good opportunity therefore to iudge of them, of their public characters, of their talents, of their stand- ing in the country, of their inuence upon. legislation. The contest is very consider ably a personal one. Mr. Cook was eager to try another contest with the man who had defected him. He has practical- ly challenged comparison. . ` ' M . `I Q nun`: nnnn - ---` ' "lc'En land. Cattle ............ .. $7. 0.000 Cheese . . . . . ... . . .. 9.400.000 Wheat_............ 880.000 0a.ta...... ........ .. 139,000 Pmcooslu o c - n u c u In 1,287,000 Apples .......... . . 836,000 Canned meats . .. . . . 141.000 Totahiiliiliiltll 5359.100 Which is a Balance of $18,423,900 in- favor of English trade and British con- nection. batter market? . Yours etc., My fellow farmers which is the AN INDEPENDENT Fmmm. vn yvnovlvwt IAIIIVIIO Uamparing our expbrts for 1890 to the two countries I nd :- IIV- `nI.._.I__: -- -- QUUI Rest assured sir we farmers will on the 5th of March record our votes for Liberal Conservatism and ght to the end all at- tempts to deprive us of the English market by the Cartwright--Wiman scheme of political union. ' said :--" Farming lands during , years have largely decreased in value and ` of their value. Governor Hill, addressing the House recent the occupation of farming is almost un- protable. the prices for farm products have been greatly and ruinously reduced. The taxes on farms are very oppressive. There is a depreciation in farm values of - 33{;per. cent and our State assessors _ report that sales of farm lands arenot frequent and, in the majority of cases mortgages upon farms represent their _ fall saleable value and unencumbered . "farms are unusual and exceptional whilsttheir assessment is 75 per. cent Therefore I have no "hesitation in stating to you that the taxation on farms lands in our State of New York is very excessive and far tx- ceeds that on personal property. That " taxation on the farms already bowed down to earth with a heavy mortgage is steadily increasing whilst the personal- ty tax is decreasing. `In other words the farmer is taxed for his debts while the-private citizen is taxed after all his debts have been deducted {and thus the former is robbed while the piutocrat practically escapes taxation and I hold the farmers tax ought to be reduced 50 per. cent. Now sir in theface of this evidence how much better would the Canadian farmer be were we one of the States of the Union? I do not point to the poverty in Dakota which surpasseth our understanding. Train loads u loads of necessaries are carried daily into Dakota to feed and clothe the proverty stricken farmers whose crops have utterly failed. Readers of the Globe, in 1889 will recall the glowing pictures of wealth and happiness in Dakota as represented inthat newspaper and can now form a conclusion as to the truthfulness of that paper's Editor ials and which country it has been assist- ing. The Conservative Policy is the true one for `the farmers namely "Fair Trade with the neighoring Republic and with all the world besides, no_ discrimination or high tari` against our motherland and a building up of our young manufactor- l.e.s pon train. p , 'l'hcI'_arsn Itcrtaezs. ] S113,-Some leading R:iormera,`.for the purpose of deceiving those electors ofthis `Ridin , who are unable to get the true facts rom statistical returns, are spread- ing the false report that Ontario farms are more `heavily mortgaged than Ameri~ can farms. New air that is a deliberate falsication of the truth. If it were true why is Uncle Sam so anxiousito coerce Canada into annexation by adopting prin- ciples on a- line with Editor Farrer s pam- phlet on trade relations?" The truth of the matter is that the Yankees covet our wealth in the forest, the minerals and the soil and they are shrewd enough to see through the Policy of Cartwright, Wiman &Oo., a sure road to annexation, but sir the British Lion will have some- thing to remark before the conspiracy be consummated. I admit the majority of farms in this county are encumbered, sale but ' only to one-h-W u the price of each farm at a forced auction which is decidedly less than the true value by ordinary sale whilst in the Empire State of New York one of the foremost and best in the union, the tes- timony of Governor Hill in his address from the throne to the State Legislature at Albany. shows to an unprejudioed mind the true condition of the American farmer. Y`lsII Q I e .n w- vv `*VV.UUC .VVUl Iu"9 yearn tho value of our cattle ahip-4} menu to Britain ':`lromf $3,000,000 to 86,664,000, iI'1joai,o;fdf' over 100 per cent. 1\___j__ __ AI, Ffarm rnornnnm to an. ';.?o.......'"" Thu folio ' `letters nddmcod to_ the Editor of Ta: ounn1t._A1>vwo:, have boon received torpnblioation: ADDIISSID 1'0 rnnnuon T. TTCC?T ZCV at NOOOIIIHII 11 that W0 Hold.` `LA -I:I:- AC g $515.-. cook or Inca`:-thy. which 1 ._ I1l..a...._ my THE % IIl\l a To En :17 mnnn VDl'i98r1':ho I;mo period our export; of ohoolo to the nine market have inc;-....d mm 95,471,000 to. oo,a;oooo Ann un`nvI-'-5.... .217. I. ,n!__ 5..- nma`. Fab. 23, 1891, _- -vu-VIII-IV-DD . . V - 4 ~` ,_ , _....V" -"`4"" 1-3'-`noes. Well, are you` `cure of it my friend? And mnyV`we notbxpeot-good th`_ings._frot_n Mr. D"A_lton"MoCarth , pfgood thinglnre to be had? _ Would ti addition, nd. an suthorityfor up, in the forming of any nqroemont which may come up? `Thurs it: saying, when you have '0 goodthing keep it, Mr. monrthy % has been 0. good man for us," lot,-_uu keep himo ` ' is gentleman not be an mu 0 aranlutll ll_IlU8I'IIIyo Sm,--It might be seen superuous to write in favor of the above named gentle- man, he being so well` known, and his` services to and for hieoountry being so generallv well , appreciated, How we, both Liberal and Conservative, have talk- ed down, as well as frowned down party, boodle, bribery and corruption, and yet when,` ourtime of innings (viz., voting)` come: round, howfwe agsinveer toward party, fogigetting thntthere in principle at stake. V ow we have, `(in-`the, main,) 3 mien that unite us,` let `us not then, nort- _oe lIllIl,`f0lf," _I wa_r"going_-to-`Ia we know` not what, "but._uo.nr,eone;IoyI K ree Trade. 1 Well,` are yofneur_e` friend? A And Inhn hi... --"-A-"`--~'= - wsnlvu uuuuu guns uscauug were W011. Yes, Mr. McCarthy is a statesman and Mr. Cook is-well, a politician. Now a politician can do some useful things in parliament. He can see that steam boilers are inspected, that retired judges ` don t get too big a pension, that blawsted young Englishmen don t get situations at Ottawa. These are things needing to be looked after, but they are small tooth comb legislation. I am not ridiculing them. A small tooth comb is a most useful article. My wife always keeps one on hand against emergencies. But , you can't run a house with a small tooth comb any more than you can run a nation with steam boiler `legislation. Mr. Cook has very wisely abstained from any at- : tempt to run this country. For some reason or other the Reform leaders have never asked him. But Mr. Cook `oc- casionally speaks on a big subject, especially if Mr. McCarthy has spoken. Now that is interesting because it gives one a chance to measure the men. Most of the electors, I suppose, got a copy of Mr. Cook's speech on Mr. Mc-' Carthy. It was not a speech on the sub- ject under discussion. McCarthy` dealt with a great national question. Cook didn't, no doubt. for very good reasons. McCarthy stood` forward as a leader. Cook came in somewhere among the 4th rate men and told stories about Biddy and the bear. It really is not fair to Mr, Cook to bring him into contrast with Mr. McCarthy. His littleness becomes too apparent. He should not stand up to be measured with McCarthy. Fellow electors, we have the opportun- ity to send to parliament a man who is making history, a noble true man. Let us do so, not by a mere majority, but ' by such a majority as will show that ` a North Simcoe can appreciate a real statesman and a true` ma .. ' Ixnnrnnnnrrr Lnssasn. I C UIIV IIUIIVI UIIIVO I am afraid Mr. Cook's name is not generally known outside this province and not very widely in it. Some years ago his name was - rather prominently before the country. A man .can t spend $28,000 in an election contest and expect to remain absolutely unknown. N o matter how modest the man is, he must expect to stand somewhat in the public eye. .The' Mail of those days did make Mr. Cook somewhat. a public character. I think the people of British Columbia heard of him then. But of late he has fallen out of public notice and his onl chance to achieve a passing renown is t e rather remote one that he will defeat D Alton McCarthy in North Simcoe. Really "North Simcoe can't afford to sink into the oblivion of being represented by Mr. Cook. It has something better in view, and a hundred years hence when this will. have become a great country, when a great Anglo-Saxon community will ex-p tend at least from Quebec to the Pacic, when the battle of ecclesiastical aggression. wiill long have been fought out, the children of one common public school of the country sitting side by side on the same forms, leaving by daily contact, not mutual distrust but mutual respect-will learn that D Alton McCarthy, of North ~ Simcoe, was the leader in the battle by T which these great blessing were won. Van Mil Mnnnwhn 3- n -L-a'..-...-.. _---1 A Mr, Cook has respectable talents. He speaks quite uently and he knows all the arguments -in the party organs. There can be no doubt of ' his business capacity. The bargain he drove with that Scotch company about the timber limits is a proof` of it." He is `a rich man and to be a rich man needs more -talents than. most of us possess. `I have not _ heard what, use he makes of his wealth. The Barrie Hospital would do well with a little of it. No thanks required for the suggestion. But it scarcely does to mention Mr. Mc- Carthy and Mr. Cook in the same sen- tence-no, I mean paragraph, when speaking about talents. McCarthy is one of the leading minds of the Dominion. He has his rivals but he has no superior at the bar. It was certainly not Mr. Mcwat s superior talents that defeated McCarthy in those appeal cases. Sam Blake does not leave much cross-question- ing to his juniors when McCarthy is on the other side. __ ` I` state. `And McCarthy seemed to be" doing all this conscientiously. He stood right up and faced his own leaders and the onposition leaders and he never wilted. though all sorts of pressure was brought- to bear upon him Why the man 'do`e!s not really seem `to know what_ fear it 2. Now I dont think anybody in North Simcoe can imagine Oook doing that sort of thing. His best friends must ackno av- ledge not only that he couldvnot do `it, but that he doesnot understand it. He is not builtthat `way. I suppose there II no use blaming him for being made of in- ferior mental and moral metal. . You -might as wellblame him for being big. But then he is forcing us the electors to notice these things. And Mr. Cook may 1 rest assured a good many of us are notic- ing them. . - Mn nan`! `an: -annual!-hula fnlnwalvn an 1e'zii.{:}Q direct taxation oi the Domin- ion Government, to the amounto! least, $10,000,000 per annum. 1-,, _ .1 u - ,e.t % You:-a, etc.,; - = A Lxnnnu.-I 0- Ln'r.-ono or those `beautifully unwed * brush: *1: - ppod th Action mu 3'... ...;:':.r*1=. 1341:. ::...:.., alt. Au touring, J11`. UCVIQ U0 port and patronuge for no long continnan.-we. Barrie, May 14th, 1889. . Mr. David Dougall, who has been the Cabin retired from it on the 1st of April last. His sons, . carry on the business the public confidence. The noTi;1 L" TT3T:0.7 -v-av-vvun C` aililllls IlIH'I'Ns Use your reason and common sense. Do not bamboozled by the falshoods which H. H. Cock and his emissaries are pouring into your ears about Unrestricted Reciprocity and what it will do for you. rm... ...rm1.. n.:.... :- - it - FRASER, CLARK 81. cu. Sheetings in twilled and plain. Pillow Cottons, all Widths, in plain and circular. %B1eWa.ched Cottons_ in all qualities Lonsdale Cambrics. Twilled Cottons in bleached and grey. New Arrivals JUST TO HAND: Squr Stomach, Dian-hcna, Eructation. Worms, gives sleep, and promotes U..- gestion. about injurious medication. rm: wm neiwouw LI E7? L CANADA `Fob SAL?-'._ m'IVI_rii'eatrioted Reciprocity means doubl- ing the toriti` and ultimate annexation to the Staten. ' J