:F at It (a! came, ï¬rst: and foremost, Tm: Post be- novelinCadefortheCamdiam. The Globe': ntï¬tudo is the correct one. In: digniï¬edom. Ithrloyll and patriotic one. suitortheShJohn’ISuntotollm Mr. Chulton has phoed CM in 3 very false podtion. He is a prominent mmdmgpoechumdnyingsmwt bohequolmdllexlil’el'ingth"719‘"0f the W pu-ty. HI: views are not than at the libenl Duty-'1‘“ P0“ â€panama and romaine-him.“- It in mid by the imposition of an ex- port duty we ere violating a principle, but it muet be understood that: principles many auch'opportunitien of hearing him will be aï¬'orded the ratepayers of this prenilâ€"nooording to conditions, and the existence of certain conditions sometimes prevent: the application of principles, and so it is no 7. Conditions ere forced upon us by the American government which pmént the cm people from curr- lng out a principle which the liberal puty 33y inhohld prevail regarding ‘11 ï¬nds questions. It is an absurdity to see American citi- zens owning immense territories of our pine, which they saw up into lumber in their country, and then to be told by the American government that the same lum- ber from neighboring limits is to be taxed $2 a thousand if sewn up in Canada by Canadians is really too much of a good thing, end then to be told furthermore that if we attempt to prevent the Ameri- the logs from Canada, so far as export duty will prevent it, that they then will punish usstill more by adding the amount r_L -_.. of such export. duty to their present im- port duty of $2 a. thousand. in rubbing it in to such on extent that no one calling himself I. Csnsdian citizen should tolerate it for an instant. Mr. Charlton's views upon an export duty upon logs and pulp are not the views of the liberal party. There is an appearance of “give away†in his treat- ment of the lumber question, and the people of Canada are not disposed to hand over any portion of their heritage to American citizens. The liberal party are now, as they have always been, open and anxious for freer trade relations with the people to the south of usâ€"ae free as the relative positions of the two countries and the interests of revenue will permitâ€"but they will not he slapped and threatened without standing upon their rights and taking a digniï¬ed stand to the very last ditch. The people of Canada are British, and while they would always help, they will not be kicked into helping. am @aundia§_ £95k Academy of Music. in the Town of Lindsay! 8c Sunday School Edition. 100 Pocket Edition, limp cloth. 2015 Pocket Edition. extra. cloth. 80c Bold Type Edition. ‘ 80c Large Type Edition. REFORM CONVENTION 187].» the hour of 11 so 1». 1a.. for the Election qt Oï¬cen “ï¬ï¬hï¬ Selection of 3. Canal; an-.. -. oL‘ “A†mun!“ 90c mic Edition. $1.25 Music Edith PORTER’S Bookstp_re SATURDAY, SEPT. 4th, “dress the Convention. LINDSAY. FRIDAY. SEPT 3. 189‘! The Went chwm Be'orm Convention held in the in various mes. HEAR PREMIER HARDY. KW" Ell-I“ In“: Wavvâ€"vâ€" -_ _ -ï¬i , to content the_Ri§in¢.gt the next Gene“! , ,1,..A____ THE LUMBER DUTIES. lav â€"â€"-â€"'_- din-1c Edition. leather back. see are a. few of the leading etflee, A full sqpply now wu-w- _- ____7- Elections for the Local MAI-Btu"- GOD SAVE m QUEEN. so 13196329112 '. DR. uchY. M. 13, types and bind!!!“ New by equally zealous free traders in England. By denouncing the treaties we have set our colonies free. If it suits themâ€"as it does suit Canadaâ€"to reduce duties on English goods while leaving them to stand on foreign goods, they are at liberty to-do so. If foreign countries dislike the arrangement they have the remedy in their own hands. If Germany is willing to welcome Canadian products as they are welcomed in Great Britain, doubtless Canada will open her ports to German goods. As for ourselves at home, we are threatened with the wrath of Germany for denouncing this treaty. But it is difï¬cult to see what practical expres- sion that wrath can take. Germany is undoubtedly one of our best customers. but that is not because we have any tarifl' advantages in her markets. Other countries come in as cheaply as we do, and if Germaty buys our goods it is presumably because they are the best for her purposes. The only hostile step which Germany can now take which she has not already taken is to impose an additional duty on British goods as compared with France and Belgian goods, and it is not easy to see how evens German protectionist could discover p oï¬t in that.†that no school in the province is doing better work than is done in it. We hsve no hesitetion in stating to our readers that students of our county can conï¬dent- ly attend our Collegiate assured of receiv- ingesgood staining as an bagivento them in my school in the province. The Collegiate is no longerrs Lindsey school, but is essentially a county school, receiv: ing from the county nearly ss Inge s ï¬nancial support ss from the town: receiving in pupils nearly as many from the county outside of Lindsey as from Llndssyitself; sndheving on the bond of educstlon these trustees appointed by the county council. Our M is good, the building is ï¬reballs, the equipment is excellent, thesimof thehoerdof edu- cation is to hem the Oollegllte in highestpesdhleshbdeï¬olflflyso In our issue of Saturday we published the ï¬nal report of this year's departmental examinations. We have never considered that the work of our schools should be judged solely by the results of these examination, as they are only one of several tests, but the large number of successful candidatesâ€"one hundred and ï¬fty-ï¬veâ€"in the several examination, as The London (Eng) Daily Grephic says :-“By denouncing the eommereiel treaties with Germany and Belgium her majesty’s government has token a step which protectionist: join with free traders in applauding. Looked at from my point of view they were stupid treaties. They bound the colonies because they were subject to the Queen of Englend, but at the same time treated themes seperate countries independent of the eUnited Kingdom. They compelled England to curtail their liberty, not for her own sake, but for the sake of Germmy snd Belgium. And yet these silly treaties would probably have gone on till the crack of doom but for the attack made upon them by the free trade premier of Canada and a result of the past year's work, is in itself sufï¬cient evidence that our Collegi- ate Institute is doing excellent work. Added to this we have the brilliant stand taken by young Kylie, he standing ï¬rst in Latin and Greek in competition with all the students of the province. In addition we have the report of the high school inspector, who spent two days in examining into the working of the Insti- tute, and whose report to the education department was of the highest possible character, his classiï¬cation of the work being done in all branches being the highest that could be given. Added to this we have the testimony of young Kylie, in his vsledictory address, to the high estimation in which the students hold the stafl' of the Collegiate. From consultation with students we know that the statements publicly made in thst ad- still ample. They want our pulp wood, and yet if we manufacture_'our wood Into pulp in Canada they tax our pulp with an import duty of 1-12 of a cent per lb. In the case of pulp and pulp wood the out- rage is still more glaring, for they take the raw material in and manufacture it into paper and send the paper back into Canada, but when we attempt to manu- facture paper in our own country from our own wood they tax the the paper going into their country as above men- tioned. We have practically come to the parting of the ways, and is is for Canada, as the Globe says, to go that way which is dig- niï¬ed and proper exclusively in its own lntereau, utterly regardless of the people to the south of us. dress only voiced the opinion of the students of the school as a. whole. To our mind this is the strongest testimony that can be given. Large numbers of the students of the Collegiate Institute are young men and young women who have spent a few years teaching. and who know when good work is being done, and when they speak in the highest terms of the teaching they are nothing we feel per- fectly sure that the work is in the highest senae satisfsetory. Comparisons u-e odious, so we will not compare the number passing from our Institute with that of any other school of the province. The large number of suc- cessful candidates pieces our school away up in a. foremost place. and we believe ionjingoamrozmelobeuoukom «and 1t doel in too utterly shard. ‘ We print elsewhere an abide from n NZY. undo journul of the 14th of August Int. It entirely dispel: the notion. seem- ingly strengthened by Mr. Ohulton, that the pulp wood resources of the U. S. ere THE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. THE GERMAN TREATY- urge.“ town: 7 from I from satay?" TEE CAEADIAN m LINDSAY. ONT» What's this we read shout the schooner Genoa arriving at Hamilton with 1,400 tons of iron and wire for the rolling mills and the screw works? Were those not the estsblishmenu that were going to close down. discharge their employees and become a. scene of desolation if the liberals won the elections and the fielding tarifl' went into force? What bluï¬'ers those protectionist: must. be. The Philadelphia Record shows a keen appreciation of the trade situation when it remarks: “The English policy is to deal, with the world. The American policy is not exactly to shut the doors against it, but to ï¬x them at right angles. so that while they will let the goods out of the country, they won't let them in. 2' And trade, resting on a basis of mutuality, naturally seeks the open door and declines to squeeze out of the half-shut one. ' "-‘_ _-, u’ir‘ém two hands-ed ind ï¬t to ï¬ve hundnd thou-mi Inn-oh, a! the A contemporary very reasonably says: "We cannot, of course, expect my amount of loyalty to imperialism on the part of the Briton st home to nuke him buy inferior goods because they ere Canadian.†We ought not to es]: htu’to buy inferior goods. Let it be the object of every producer to muke his bread of goods the standard of excellenceâ€"and to preserve that. reputation. The New York Tribune has published a sketch of Major Walsh, the newly ap- pointed administrator of the Canadian Yukon country, which, It is to be hoped, will be widely copied in the American press, snd will serve to correct the im- pression which the jingo press sought to convey. that the United States miners in the Klondike might successfully resist the enforcement of the customs and mining regulations passed by the Canadian gov- ernment. Some of the Csnsdisn papersâ€" which, in order to make party capital, have sought to embarrass the government ,,,A,,LI2mL AL- â€"-wouldâ€"°;l_|6 do well to reï¬ubluh' the Tribune’: uticlo on the chuncter of the man who has undertaken to execute thnt ruled were [0 low thet it wee badly: proï¬table crop. This year the crop will be below the avenge, wording to the Trade Bulletin, ebout four tenth: of en avenge full crop, but the preuiling prices ere high as computed with lat year. Lest year prices opened It from ï¬fty to seventy-ï¬ve cents per laurel. end declined elmout hmnedintely to from thirtytofortyeenteperhmel. This you prices opened et ebont two to two doll“: end twenty-ï¬ve centeperhernl, and have fellen oï¬' tendons! nndï¬fty cent- to e dollu' end leventy-ï¬veemu per barrel, though lntheweetltll-id two to two dollars and ï¬ve cent: is d ed by growers. Bulletin any! ’e {up to: expert h deleted ,As4un -_.I an:â€" L. 8-. The Ontario government has instructed- Mr. W. M. Orr, of Fruitland, to prepere a complete exhibit of the Sun Jose eeele and similar insect pests in diï¬'erent steges of work, together with examples of their efl'eet on fruit and foliage, and to have it on exhibition at the Industrial Fair in Toronto next week. This will be I. most instructive and timely work, and will afford fruit growers e demonstration which will put them thoroughly on their gnu-d ageinstthe first invesions‘ on their orch- policy. Mr. John Burns, member of parliament and labor leader in London, has his own views of popular education. To an American correspondent he said the other day, speaking of conditions in the United States: “You put too much useleea in- formation into the heads of your young people and too little of the learning they require in the practical afl'airs of their lives. You should take the desks and the books out of your high schools, and put in benches and tools and the utensils and instruments of the laboratory. That is what they are doing in England. “We are.†he says. “extending the technical school system so rapidly that it will not be many years before every worhngman' in England will have a roper training for his task." That we d seem, after all, to be the only naturalandsuï¬clent purpose of educationâ€"to give us a proper training for our work in life, whatever it When 3 great people like our neighbor- ecrou the line stomp 42 oenu' worth of silver one doller end proeleim on it: obverse “In Gold We 'lrnlt" is it to be inferred theta their feith hltrong in pro- portion to their frond? The experiment. of working convict- on the public “root: In aid to heve proud to be e euooeu lnNorthCeroline. Ab ï¬rst there were my eornpleinu, prin- cipelly on sentimental grounds but now none are heard. The oomph-do) greet. fl 7__A better and no more when shut up in the wornh ardn. Mr. Dryden is evidently fully elive to the importance of his oï¬cinl duties. A comm of Greece In: just been completed. In IhOWI the kingdom to have a pupnlltlon of 2,435,806, u: increase of 11 percentineight yeen. The apple season he: opened this year with propeots of fair to good returns for the growers. Last year the crop was s tremendous one, but the prices which may be: Inclosing this ertiolewewould liketo impress upon ell students the lesson thet unbedrewn fromthesucoessolthis yeer’s heed boy. This young men could heve mstriculeted e you: or two ego, but he wisely decided to ' ley well the found» tion for'his future University work, end not to write until he hed thoroughly ever- taken his work. By fer the grater num- ber of students who in pest yeers heve written upon these enminetions, end especially those who heve written for University matriculetion, would heve been much better off in the long run if they had remained at our Institute e yeer longer before writing ; when at ell possi- ble, those who intend taking e University course should not write until they cen teke honors in et lesst one depert'nent. or énroonntyiho attend our Collegian for the your 1897-98 dominant work throughout the your. they an keep thogoodnuneofournhoolin apt-ami- nentrphoeuthoclmof '97 In! nude for it. EDITORIAL NOTES. Recelets ii LIV tor put three day- 'ere: \ 'hent 178. can Includgtxï¬ 148.- 000 oentnls o: W n 55, ecu- an o! Amerlan. 00ml: In Mada: 112 5-16 cub And no count. Basketball!!! named“ 2 : cent: open nuke: discount 15-16 to per cent. Londonâ€"0 â€"Ede ref. 42%. C.P.R. 74%. St. Paul New or! Central 111%. main: 14. Penn. Conn! 58. Discount rate a. 2 per cent. LondWWhut. arrived 4 argooo, mun: order. 2: 0!! coat easier. “caller: No. Cal... u'rlrcd. oollou. on coast. nutty due 1nd on pumze nan for American. doll for Dumblnn: 89 L Donation. 17- 94; American. 150: mu; 1 roller floor 82:. “Newmwmm Pubâ€" eatqulet; (â€ClorAu‘dm motor Sept. Flour-queuflfwc. norm I ladies. Bur Ont-Ho's m. The pa In caulk“! W“ '9 h.“ MAS. omdo' m new; _II9.OIA_S:MW‘. wi‘ifere were 900 hogl on the mrket. and the begs: wge‘woxgh 85.75) gr any“; 3 very ew o co mu .8715†a ct we“ and c downward fluency. CHEESE MA RKETS. Bellevllle, Ont. Aug. 31.â€"honty-gcvon actor-lea boarded 2275 white md 2m colob ed cheese; 93cc Nd for board: no sales. . Ont. Ans. SLâ€"Oll‘erlngu to-day 1600 boxel: no sues. First but about all told and ale-men not Inclined to otter or get a price on In: an: :t present. Compbeutord. Aux. 8Lâ€"At the Cheese Board meeting held here this evening. 950 white were boarded; ottere 9. but would for some extra good ones. toEx' rt n how sold as toilowe: Ewe- 33.5 50 per cwt. bucks 50 to $2.75 per cwt. anhleoldatflto pedrMu-i $2.75 to 2!) each. Arew or extra Weight and qunity brought 83.50 each. There was I In run or lambe. more than was needed. P. cCom-e sold 100 lambs. weighing 85 lbs. each. at. 10 r cwi. and 50 ewes It $3.50per rcwt. D. 'Lenryhad35extnnu ,which some. at $3.50 per cwt. eteanmenu perC. P.:R. J. a J. W. Dunn, 4 UK we vauvlw. VII-noun“. -v- -_._, ,,_ v per cwt.. and the balance averaged 700 lbs in amel- cwt. R. Cook sold 54 cattle. light t era. 1t $15 per hood. Mr. nub: bought tour unloads of light stocken tor Bun’nlo market at $2.875 per cwt. Buil- scanoo. Mr. Zen an bought two, one weighing 1600 lbs. an another 1470 lb... for which he paid $4 r cwt. Milk cows oold m: 3 well 1nd chalet ones m wanted. There were about 12 on the market. which sold at 820 to $40. Calves sold at $3 to $6 and 61' m pdd for some extra good ones. Export sheep gold gigomyno:Ԥ:'eonw snI menu per C.P.B.: J. a J. w. 0% , doube decks of sheep and 1 an ot a. c, all for ex : W. bench. 71 attle and 191 sheep; J. Roman-cc, 1 car 0! cattle, u] u- iot’hecept. no “Maw.- ua ' 3 H William mack. as usual. bought quite t number at prices ranging all the w from $2.85 to $4 per cwt. George Robinson sold 7 cattle. aver: 1000 in each. 1: $3.50 1' cwt. J. W. odlon luld 4 cows. w - 1000 ibS. ouch. for 8107, and 1 heifer weighing the nine. 1’. McConvey sold 10 extra butchen‘ helien at $3.50 pet cwt. W. Sinkinl sold 1 wiond of choice butcherl' weiï¬hing 1100 lbs. each. at $3.8) per curt. to \ '. J. McLeilan. Stock came of all classes were in good as mud and prices mumbled nun at our int «Quayle. .-.__-_ e.-....e.o on Mon. mm. E TORONTO LIV] STOCK Themotuvemmnothrxe. belngultoldflurlondsonthemrkea composed “muzzle m weep lambgwalmnndoa‘lhou- The tndelnexport atue'udnnud themrkettorthu us end rices ungodtmm at. here were never-J good loads of extporten. Brown8neuhouxtlltlarlocdo ex cattle, "erasing t cwt. T. Crawford 4; 00. t 1 erasing 1230 lbs. each. at per cwt. Choice butchm’ cutie were were! Ind In tact there was not enough or this data on the market and prices were nun n Fri- day's quotations. _______ - L _- _-_-r kin-ah. nu". I E uuvu: Muno- u:. C. anmn bought 28 cattle. some or the feeders.weisle!3€99‘1.°:¢_’hÂ¥~ï¬.i‘9 L I": 1“ UI‘.“-.- â€"â€"-v â€" . -7, _ Wheatâ€"Tb. altering- were ubenl was: and the market was we“ and lower. otnew rmmalctomm‘ndwen. was. when 31.01 mm. ton mum and $1.08 to 81.07 Goat-Ida. “mtâ€"There :24: con-Ideal: Malta to! to-dly. a good deal sold 8-†to “.35 west. Weedâ€"I- study at In short. and 87 to $1.50 tor bun veg.“ Ryeâ€"In In. 3: ac. wgémâ€"Btendyd’u 27c to 28¢ to: yen". Oatsâ€"Are num- euler Ind new white gold north and west today A: m Pent-OMINMItl-hm tad Mr. John Hughes. Box 138. Prescott. Mr. M. DaBmoy. Pembroke. Mr. R. A. Smith. Nomi». Ml- Ltulo Day. Moose Creek. mu mun Mad. 8:: 92. Nathan-sh. The Above competition will be mun. nod each month or 137. Mr. Geo. A. Bialr. Box 15, Ram. Mr. E. Goodall, 289 Woman. Otto“. The allowing us the Winnerl in DEW“ No. ,8. Eastern Onutlo. WINNERS OF STEARN’S “CYCLES. SUHUI‘IHT SflflP LEVER BROS. Ltd. Toronto. The loctLpnndmfll whet I: very quiet. IILAâ€"‘I “ A-- COMMERCIAL NEWS. WINNERS OF GOLD WATCHES. WBAPPER COMPETITIMI. Linda-y lurk“ P1100.- oonn'onn ml BRITISH MARKETS. TORONTO 118K323 Snugw July 1897. We have the best Wood and Coal Furnaces made in the I give Special Attention to Furnaces and Heating W01 COAL OIL! COAL OIL I Best American and Cnnndinn Oil 3t right prices. Machine Oil always in Stock. TIN SMIT BIN G and REPAIRING in all its difl'enent bunches promptly attended to by akilful workmen. SEE OUR BLUEiFLAMVE OIL COOKING WWW The New Hardware Store is now open and in full running order with new and complete lines of Shelf Hardware, Paints, Oils, Putty. Glass, Tinware, Homefum'ish- {my Goods, Granite. Iron Wows. Copper and Sheet Iron Ware. A Splendid Line of COOKING STOVES AND RANGES worthy of your inspection See them and you will not purchase elsewhere. ‘ FURNACES I FURNACE s z The JUBILEE HARDWARE and 6 05mm pm The (.51 WHO JEWELLERS. WG’O‘D’GO New Admirals-nu. Button Bros. HOUSEFUBNISHING EMPURIUM . BINGHAM, 57§f§§é?§. Comparison shows the Prices to be better value than elsewhere. Inspec- tion proves the stock to be unequalled in quality and quantity. That makes this store a good place to trade. We but recite the fact. It is what the people ï¬nd hereâ€"what they have found at this store for years in the past. The evidence is here for you as plainly as for us. Beautiful designs in all lines of JEWELLERY, WATCHES. CLocxs, SILVERWARE. CHINA and BRIC-A-BRACX. A cordial welcome whether you wish to buy or not. SEPTEMBER 8 1897- STOVE: the hast in the market and cheapest. We came here prepared to sell the very best goods and do the very best work at all times at the lowest possible prices for CryASH. Estimates promptly furnished. The patronage_ of the publiczrespectfully solicited. McLENNAN CO’S OLD STAND. i335“; ! WWW WM nu a nun. an: mu, MWL' mmmmuonm mandamus! vum. W. .A. WHITE .M'! 9:.m .“ “I! W 1.4» I»! TRAYED HEIFEB. â€"W meâ€" FARM PROPERTY New Advuruumentl. UCTION SALE mmwuvm Builder and Contractor. B. B. 41131: a Go. W. Bugham. J. I}. EIlWflflJS 81W ‘3 W.tm.al.0¢-at EMPTY and LOADED SHELLS, Powder, Shot, , Wads and Primers. Satisfaction guaranteed to Pm†chasers of Shot Guns Thgoodpekfl LOUDLY and ’ GLEABLY the Dominion, and will ' Work. TRY US. J. G. Edward: £00. â€"-â€"ANDâ€"â€"- Ammunition 1897- 22nd Cm!- mar. TERM 16th