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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1886-04-14, Page 2Zhe Xixtr.on Ocwo •r#0,cor4 18 Poor.istihn vpry .Wednes45, Nemir •••• rn°10 °num. ' Albert Street, .011n.to,n, .Opt, $1.24 in advance $2 V not , • The propriatorsof 'run floosIN tut I'rnws, having purcbasInt the business Mitt plant of Tau truitos Italian, will - in flame th amalgamated papers in Clinton, ' • under the title or "Tun Unisex NKIVS-- 1.1300311." . 0113t0418tlio Vest. prospernuS town In Western. On tario, is -the seat orconsiderabk. manufacturing, and the eeutre er the finest agricultural Floution in Ontario. The combined circulation ofT1ir.7,1*Ews. neepita exceeds that pr. ally paper pith- ished ln the County of Ilmon. It is, therefore,unsurpasse&t tts gT tutvot.tising - • • argateli tcf advertising, liberal and- faraislie.„4 oft tiptilleation,. IfrPartiesmaking contracts for a speri- fled U IIIQ, wlartliseentieett their tulrertise- monts borer° thtroxpiry or the same,' will be charged full •rates... Adyertiseutents, -without instructions as to speed antl. time, will •be lert to the ,judg• meat of the compositor inthe display, 10 - until forbidden, ineasm•nd - by a fitWe • or *04 nonpareil (12. lioeS to the charged 10 cents it line for first insertion and 8 .ceitts.o 1.11a; for eaub soquent insertion.. :Orders' to discontinue - adirertisements•innst bo in writiutf. • . 4-0.7 N.ottees. 'sot it*ni NO 1‘1,11731t, 030381iioa by a Seald of $01,141 Noopariel,•12 lints to the melt) charged fit 1110 rate 01 10 coats a line for eeeb insertion... . JOB WORK: 'We have -011e or the best appointeli Joh Oflitto.4. vest of Toronto. Our futilities in this department enable ns to. do all kinds ' or wor1:-.-41'rom a 'veilingtiara, to 0 al ion moth poster; •in the •liest •styie known to the . • eraft, • and at- the 1owe4t posSilde rates.. Orders, by Mail promptly attended .te.-• Addre ". '• ' • The.News7ReOord,' contau. Ilott Deeember,...1,882. INk18. • , CANAOUN, • , • • --A. Ateddingbf •very p usn't1 i n- . tereSt, owing- to die advanced ago of tIM patties doncerned, took place -at dlencee, Ont..,:•on the tifililimst, :AIr ;fame§ . Stepson, of Criendoe, • forinerl Sr:a yeenimi,. a.4e1)87, Wing • united:in.- the • "Indy bondS" to ,W id - oW linitr, of Eatpheuris; . the lady ]a-iog:a1.so-a1tthxedthe nntture age • ta 18. , • • ' . tkrana CrUnk expresS f rout • Chicago fot gouttetil wasderailed • at Berlin, 'Wednesday: last oWinci•to • a 'switch ., being °One.. Font' 1;110 engine and. tender. Welt almost complete1y. wrecked, and Engineer • throrge Brown and Exinfessman G. Hickey slightly injiired.--The• ' derna6e.t0 i61.11110' :.stock is eonsicler- abl. The accident was the result uf-3 13 ista4e i ninstan ionto a, , ]flLfl t eliarge"of the switch, _It appears. 'the express was few hours late and • a special was, ikrade lipat: Stratford •and • ,sent 'east. ;The' switeh11131.1 .thtgbt-th1sisiis •thir• regal ir express . and +Medthe nit for :the: :' Galt . . •,-.The,no* fatimas, 'case ' Of th.i „city Of Montreal againat •Shars. ..pleY&SonS for- ex poainc, indecent etathary in their store windows, came before the court•to day... The • stateePriy •question, were -copies Of. tho &melte stataeS of "'Night • and „Morning" by Mialical Angelo, now tha Batt Paine), at Florence: ' • The Chief of 13„).lice give evidenee thab. he had ordered Mr, Sharpley to take thtni out of his wintidw, as he cousidered %hem • intlecent. and- ----dongarcrui-to p-t4ilic•-itturairr, • ••Mr. Stiarpley had , refused- nuidss ho would MONT 631'11 by parchaPer: Personally,•he,d id' not Consider them hut 11°41 Id complaints fkotn ltdies who were se mdaliged af; ;remarks:they had overlinard :their ehildren make. • A. inintilMr- Of Wit - ass testified tit it they w.ire works ; of art in the highest sense, .m14 highly ntorat, The case was adjourn ATLIctt • , 4.i:raft miles -from Eon . •W is.p in a log cabin in. the . hush •• INIT:i'litra Gould:dui, aged 31, Stin- day goie, birth to four male babies • weighing 2,0 :pounds in all, each' alive, bright eyed and healthy, They will live, 'life mother is doing Well. Hlie married. 16 years and 1001six children hefore • 111080. Alt•All the ehildren lia,Ve 'blue eyes•ami g..,olden hair, . 4 -The eoiltest ovor the Will of, Alm late "lhoili ts „It'allon, of San .1431131400; C111.3 or rho lite4f. promin- ont fletnecrats Or tlt 8t3to 111A 0131143d, ThO 0A14-1 1,1 V.1,111,01. ni $3,60;110). r011(411 11,ft LW() f311104. • [Mr. Fallon Was tat old resitien; or. London) 'Ont.', a1111 craoseti. tho plains' iti 1815 .1,lom.t. with 14: it i (l nutrrstt-Fonula.a. --The Scotsman says Mr. Iliad- . stone's scheme et' Rome Rule in - eludes a separate coinage for Ireland. ---47,SEr. Gladstone and 'Air, Parnell aro. 1)1.411 confident that in a ROW eliTt1011 the Irish votgwould give the Liberal party 60 additional seats in England, .44.• • 1111: 11-(1)GET 8,pEtclit. (00,40/what..7 • . Continuing, nob. Mr. .McLelan now come to Mil QURSTION Or 839411. T11080 W110 hAYQ studied the rettuns ofyast years will see that the rev-: elute from sugar has been ' largely declining.'.; What I `propose is to place on sugar concentrated Masco - Veda, concentrated cane juice, and so forth'for relining purposee, not over 13Ihitch standard. or TO de- grees by.polariecopie test, 0 Spe01110 duty or one cent per poirnd, and for eveity additional da,gretr three and one-third eents per hundred pounds. The' Amet•ican tariff imposes a thity of $1.40 per hundred pounds' for a test of 75 degrees, and (Merges four cents for every degree abeve 75. What we have taken is a little Over three-fourths of the American tariff. rnow come , TrtwunvEntp FOR rut rt.O.11 1886-87, • and in tail:king my, estinette 1' ain not.coonting upon any yery datge increase to customs revenue. .Wo are to have the 0, P, .J1, open , throng -11 to British Columbia, and ,Hon. gentlemenknow by tho terns -that the duties received and collected in British Celambia, and in ManitobahaVe, been ont ,or. Pro- portion to other parts of the conntry or sim i liar population, because* they . have beeu shut ow crow the. mann- facrtirere .. of . the °Wintry. (Heat! hoar.) %But. I • helieVe will( the aliening Of tho. road a great • deal .of trade ...)v i b tit elle Went from Pultuubia to. the •Q: S. will b11. given to bur own Panufifehrrers: (C eel's) ' 1 Clore fore,.. do net ti- cipate as large'a revenue from th ORO two PrdVinces; as wt 1iaver ihad in the 'nest. My •estimate of revenue, then fur 1886-81 is from customs, $20,-. 200,000; from.: egoise, $7,000,000; from post of.Poe, interest and Mis- cellarnions• • services, • $7,300,000, making •0,• tOtal thiay4oiri‘ 3,11(1 • it= half millions' dust virliieh I haye an estimated ex•pelidifuro of e, 124,0150, 'reeving as the _estimates . • . . 110‘1 Stailit $1,3i o0:16 lot. a surplus. is, when hon.. friend, the f • 'meat's (4.:teio, bed, hissav,•_n:iILprobtbly be. reneed, At any rate • r ..hope that this.antici- pated eityples fur, 1886:87 willildt be very largely' redneet1. at least .1)3r',.the auppleinentary estimittes. (Cheers,) • It is true :that .We 11:1W_O. not had- that .cors 1ft not ...keTTV - vh 'eh existedin 1881-82, hut there has been great caution oil • the part of our hi...view. of •the great 'reduction that:litiS:been. goiiii.s.'On in. the priees of various•„,,,eitrods through: bat the world, and there has been a *arylardo reduction,. mote especi- „ , , thiy m tree -tratte counttans, • \entire the . (101/r0:114i01:1 Wn 111;.Mt. -strong. The revepeo, to be derived' depoudS ctisiilorahIy upon. the -.ability • end of -the peOple to purchase • ' • • * (too. know . the Incl „ination exists,and 1 think there .18 every. reason . to bariture that • the agvicul- tnralistir this country are• IN ABhiiiI1i FOSIVION to.day, financially, that they been,attall events, from- 3874 to •.1878. ..We have Changed the policy 'which forinefty• existed of -allowing Aineriein 'a,guatiltural .produce .te. corrre-ltrtv'llitg -601aftif• y-frifirritird.- otortpete Nrit,11 the prodace of our own farmerS, and under this change of policy. the:'cotidition of the farm- ers seem .to ha.ve rapidly. improyed. Tho inipottation of American 'agri- cultural produce has largely ished, and WC'. havo 80 stimplitted agricultural activity that the pro - dime of our own farms has largely' taken the place , Of those intporta- 1101i8 3101113 W3,11.t8 of the ineruasi ft I”; population have b len ettPi)11.od as %veil.(Hear, hear.) In . tho font. yeare ‘'iiii.41.1w 187 8-.i've wara3 of fit1y m ill iouo worth of' „Atnetican lp-otnistutrs, and. we OX., ported twenty four million* worth of ear own prod tido! leaving a• bal- ance eunstuntal by. this Country of iinp3rted pioduce irinounting to .the vain() of $6,57(1,000 frer annum d itt- -ing tiro, rot' the .six folio w-' ing yeurs. hailer the present tit total inuthrta ofitgtiuIttiia1 pro- trude were of the value of $3,13•4; 511; Or 1084 Ili 11. 0110 Ittlf of that under tlic forting, period. 15itring the sone rospeetive periods -we ex, . portet1 of farm pial nec $ [65.000,000 and F0,12,000,000 respectively. • These figuretils4"', on Bic one liana, a .1 ti,ii 01 itt Pertei ion br .a.griout. tvir.t.i prod toe or three and a 11,111 tjiI1 11 svArly. mid oil ltandi an increased. yearliegPott tf 89,3714700, nttking in all MI ill- crortmea deman1 for the prodium of our farms of nearly $13,0001000. yearly (Hear, hear.): Thou we come to • . , QUA_ :$3,L,WAIS • IP 1818 we had 0,864 miles in 'operation. The 'train mileage Wati nineteen millions of miles; tlie total number of passenger?, carded was 6,443,000; the total nuMber of tone • of freight carried WM -17,883.1000, IR 1885 we bad 10,149 mites of rail- way in operation: tile train mileage was 30,693,000; the total nuniber passengers carried Mitts 9,01123099; - the number of tons of freight mulled was21,079,000. Here is an inerease. of fifty per cent in our railway •buss bless, which clearly indicates an in- creasetl trade activity throughout Canada, Tile deposits in chartered brinks have increased by ail:di-three millions, 'and deposits in savings banks which last year reached $315,- 280,000 have increased* by $26,783,- • 079, Besides air this' We have an in- creased number of trader° with 1. • A DECTILIAAREP xuuntiin 01' IP -amounts, In 187$ there' werd 50,000 traders in Canada, and the lailureS amount- ed to $26,8715,000. In 1885 the trade1s`3,11rubored seventy thous:did, and the failures reached only $8,- 743,00 1, '(Iear, beat)) Three has tlrus been. an.increase 0113,698 trad- ers and a decrees° 'of 1$18,132,000 in the failures, (Applatise,) Th.o number cif failures for the first six weeks of this year 18 192'in agast • 225 in the.saine pd 0 erio1 885, and •. 287-111 1884, . Since the period:lion, gentlemen Opposite • were in, pOiVer there has •begn a considerable 'de- crease in .the , .number of failures.' (Hear, hear) •was thth.ply impress- oa with Um explanation the hon. member' for Bothwell (Mills) gave a year or two ago oi' the cams of fail- ures in 1874 to 1878. -He put the whole thing in a mushell when he told the If ansallit reb an t's failed Or the 'went of customers, anti 1 sukeso there was J1. enstoiners 13e-* Muse there Was no emplOymen't for tho peOple and nd money.aniong the" people; I start frem one point 'at idleness .of- the people. 'Want •Of - eel plop) out Means no 'cast. o in ors 'for the, merchant, the inerehent has no business and the. colintryhas an mnPtY trOtisirr;', I Start from the 'other point: ethployinentt for' the peoplo • Means money: for them. money for the merchants, ...merah- ttnts brisy, and • 'full trett•Sinty,. (Hear,. hoar.). And it is the proud. satisfaction of this graven:intent that they have 'endeavored,. to:give .eroployitien tu Vat'. 31•483.11s. • p0A0 to .811-0W--- • • • • dOW, THE NA0,107s.m.,• vor,tev. ias AV- , F.VOT.ED WAOR-FaRNR,38 • of this country. All that Ivo re.: quire for the production of' cheap • goods in this caruni•ty is that there. .shell•he a.' market for-lhose..geods„• • and tile.linger Omni:apt the cheap- er Will he the, toollS. Our 'pee* . ate .tts nett ve and ••intel igteirt„... and. When they kite forted abroad) as they have been they. make .rislarod 31.0,1Sr 3118 witIt. littlo experience au L1.11410 Any to thc world, (116u; 'hear) Tire Capitalist. seekS turn for his capital, and:the smeller • the*. Output the. larger .percentage.tho, manufacturer .must Tut,. uponitjs :capital an&depreciatton of his plan ti' The intention of the 'N.. P. is 1114 .. • 0 We 811.til marise't to our own manitractarers. Dat id. 'Wells; the Ameridan -apostle, of free trade, who is so erten t-pletecrin this House, eays that ."nct eteployer of labor elau. contiutte to. pay a high yete of wages Unless his prolnet is:pre_portionately large." . ..Wished 111 :this country to ttive a barna) market id 031' MIMI- • Mc• T' nuns, aol too result hao. been rw- arc being paid by ..emplo.yers than. WaSpaidiprevions to' the' introduc- tion ef..thti policy. .((Jheeri.). 1 have reeeiVed from the Canada; Cot: ,toil Manufacturing Conipany„ Cern- wall, a comparison of the wages peid in '1878. and 1885, and whieh is a fair estimatee of-tho state Of atraire in otherfuntanfacturing establishments. For six Months ;ending Peconther fst., 1818, • there were 497 hands emPloyed In the factory, who. receiv- ed a total of $47,557 in wages, .or 8205 in dal I f wages, 111111,m) average 11e1 hand at 75 eents a day, while during the seem period .111, 1p.485, ttn- der thuoperation-of the .X..P.,lthete were 610 hands employed who re. - cared a total Qt $01,104 in wages, or 8584. daily,. and an average .per hand of. 91 cents. These figures show au increase of 57+ per' cent, in the number or hands. employed, 914 per.•cenk in the amount of wag s paid and or 11 pop cent. in olaily wagos paid; (Plows ) And me,- withsenultng tide Merman lu Wages the Prim) of cotton to the eonstimer has hone 'Aimed. • (Loud olefin's.) It...Isnot the cotton or the ore in 1101 mount:lint; or twirl in the mine that av1 . want to protectt but it is the 'hands that ere rernung and in.1,11(1" 1'0131111g .1 !WHO Matti! 1.41M into Ili3 • t ihrifflieti intednet, so UM they i31t311 r,te-ive higher wages and more eon - :twat employment,. (fIelr, hear.) Mr. Speaker, 1 have already detain - the 'louse too long, and 1 nuist draw to a close, 1 have gone oveli,, the Public mounts and 1 bare shown that, taking Into consideration the troubles id the North-Weat,, WE STAND VERT WELL ,?•2 1 11.3,VO shown that •the inereaSe in the taxation since 1867 hes been eumparttively. trilling aud I de not expect we ha,% will-heat:4 010 91' tlitbttfr eharges that -we taxation in. those 18 113ee Before that ()barge will be bi1itivei by the people they. 3.111 have 10 1)0 o'onvi 330- c11 that the merchant or the meehante,' who now does a business so 1110011 larger than formerly, 18 31013101 bank- ruptcy CM ,that acconnt Wii bave had 0 large necesSary undertaking to complete. We have had it great struggle to 'Ineeomplieh this work ;. but we have sticetreded„ end the I inbi- . titles arising out of it have .been: placedupon us earlier than We anti-- cljioteartaetd. nsWe ha . . vecdine'oet, of our o .wrrn LESS nuromg ., . per head than the United states. had ...w1cen they eaane out of their struggle. Thch 1 ani able to announce to the Hoase that, arrangements have been made by whieh the Canada Peale. Railway Company agree to . pay no the $20,000,000 in Quit which .we liato tidVituced thou, One-half on first or May nod the other half on lint of Jnly next, aml parts of the lantls to be released t� *out, (Cheers.) • At the 'ewliest possible. day .1` will submit to the House .0 proposition .to curyout this under- taking, and to enable'us to,stfttle, all eccounts and to .receiye twenty, mil- lions of dollars hack: : (('heers;) Sir, I think that, taking 'everything int) consideration, we have conse ror cupgratalation, that so amich has been done foribis country without • imposing greater burdens, than hare been 'imposed on us. 'TIM ex-Vill- a:pee 'Al:roister . opposite, in a speed]) • which the, Blouse will repent heiwith adintratia.---forhe Hien eame out of ;the shadow of party WM'S end: spoke eS 3 13.311 8,3d 3 C41)3(11011-401 11.8 that tile. in an per in•stWhieh we hut dealt with the trouble in the :?.Torth-.. west lied raised ,ns in the:estimation k.... •orthe world,.and that it I °add re; dolind to our advantage!... o,_der- ta int y d i (1 cdrin-f-briek front:that right • lamenting. those. who bad -fallen for their , country, lint we, retnrned also with (mi. ;mile tried and . sti migthen • . cal and skilied to. (*Try forward the banner of' our eduntry. •andwork' out a grand (19411V:far • ow:Selves ainong the nations. • (Clieers.• • ' . . - .,...._-........o. 4* ' ' .. t a L''',:tsi-Nb• ...AN' D. THE •Lip.s.. 3Ien ,gerierellY cross their lege when there i the least .pressure 011 'their Mind's; You UeVlitfiuiCla man nIlutIly engRgal in 'huSiness with• hie legs -crossed. • The limbs at those' tinies 11113. straighter thanat • any other, 'because the mind and b dy. • work togetbee. A man engaged in auditing aceetfure will never crOSs, his legs; neither a man wile is • wliling ati "atticle, or 1V110 is cm-. ployed .111 airy manner' where his brain ti actively engaged -when at in a Wang .posture the limbs naturally ektentlto the floor in 'a .petfoctly straight him, A man may cross his legs if he. is. sitting in an 'office Clair discussing seino, business propeSit ion .witli .anotl;or •nern„ but the, instant lie-beCornes really in _earnest and perceiveFi something to be gatned., his limbs uncross as quiclr aS a flash, tie.bentls forward toward hie neighbor, and begins to use his hands, Thatphase that I -he- Men' often oross.their legs at pub- lic) meetings' becanse they go 'there tb list'.en 'or •te be ortotained ;'• they are net, t1.03 facto -is itt 1110 perform- ance, and ey net111.:1,11y place...the selVes in the hest.. position known to them, uttruelY, • that of' leaning' well 'b chairs rittirgess- tug their foga. . A man always eresses •Iiis legs' when. lie reads a ,nOWSPaller, bat is pore'apt to lie davit When he 'reads a book, Ile "toads the layer,. of course,' to inform himself, but at rho 8:11110 time the .pertisalott its 0011.. tentsis reereation 'for hint,. and his baily ag..,ain seeks its position ora'e. lege:tie if. When a matt read Ng a 11 rms. P11101 and waiting f'or his breakfast. his legs are itlways crossed, but as seen as the 1irelikfast 11 1)ronglit to him he puts the paper aside'straight- ens out his legs and goes. to work ; that is, begins to eat, his mind now Writing on the theta° of the day bil�ri ltfitt. Men eross their legs in a hall tome, 'het Itis far from tifl.. elegant; thing to do'and is not dune by those who have been brought, up in good society, It • is yoirr "three - v tine' man" alio eta Ilia logs at t ball, mph would y011 it. 1 11'1.rt3 80011 young ladlus. 14 1111. 4:tiuu '04 nf.i. 1 • • • TI115 I41oi1M erV Axitti, 4444.41,4,44.444 ' 17s, norXos 1- oxi'Af110'. The wolit snow ;1101 whnl storm of the yelr in Exeter. A munlee• of large 1 ig1it 1 glom were .,brolien • itt the store fronts oat the west side of Main street,. Part of the dilIl • tilled roof was blew)) olrt Twelve or thirteen inches of snow fell in Petrolia. Tho worst atom' Ibis winter, - The storm at Guelph was the worst which has IrSen experienced ',for many years. A great wow °hitt:imp were bloWn down, 1)111 111A- '8111)Stfilltillicharacter of the buildings was.provbd by tbe fact Met all' ow called damage except the *high Area- • tuf•e °coupled by the Bet Organ Co. This wascoMpletely entoofed by e. gustof,wina, the roof sailing. away iiodily an1 becomin,ti detached in the air. One part fell 0110 building nem by, the other dropping in the street, Considerable -damage • was done to Material in the building, 'A terrible storm atWaterford and snow froo:. two to five feet deep. The et-ist4II.of the large reaper and - mower MVO ufacte ring .estab 1 ish meta was blown 11',IT; together ith about twenty.Thet of ttie south side, and is partially nuroofeds with other meali- er Castle] t ieit--busifloss boug' en t re,. ly suspended.- • • 0. A heavy gale struck .Cpurtright aboid, noun and carried away the south mid of a building' formm•ly ki1051,1l ag 11111 "Royal ExCliange Ilotel," owned by ,Tames . Fluke, of. Toronto, aaul smashed in the. front timid o w ofit tailor shop. • • .At Brantford a Very higb. north- west, wind,- with snow, 'set it' and continued. blewing end 'snowing a perfect herricane ell day, .Seme let tidings su Wined 'badly bY pert 'of the Walls • being blown 1 in. The .stibw drifted from two te.fo.ur, feet, end have1 was almost stopp6d, About 10 tr'cleck a gest; blow ea the 'front of a houee, No. 24, Oneirn street West Toronto. . Mimi) illimage• was dono.ne Hanlon's; on the island, it ttge Vaqs tearing ,ftwey wharves end . everything Within reach-. While bricklayers were at Woron two houses' on HoWard .street, both collapsed. There were twelve 'men' at work, end most of' them 'Were buried 11 the but only' pile was seriously hurt.. . • • • • • , At Hamilton the whatwes , were washed away, vessels damaged and 'coal sheds rthroored.' •At•the beach the storm raged Withgreat fury, and: the effects have been' seriotdi. The damage done Wiltbe away up in- the thousands. • •• - -- ,At Biri itt tlic:su ow s oim 1h OC sPi up the,road in Many places and its seettlm. er!..ts, .11e,s not been equalled,•fo yr • , Al, Belleville • the- storm was 'very re?yere but T10s01i0110 damages' are' reported, Snow .•-drifts. in• 'many pieces- from fent to siX. • feet deep-, anq, tho 'snow very tightly packed; Tiattl lifts been greatly. interfered. With. All roads. leading .noitli and west were badly drifted. • • . At Oakville' the .storin raged all day,. `s,weoping af;Ytty the lightlitnisd. and taking. away %be east pier the waves .sweeping through info . the 'harbor and. over the, large. piles .of: stone to the. east 'of -the pie •r into the. cieek. • • • • talttElYk+ G 0 trLD.:. • • <Tay Gould said' a'. few dayit ago: 'The ett'ike on our railroad is pr1m- .1100113r over. 11185(11 )0011 astonish - MI (Et., 11.111ett of the 'revelation that. has corne through' the recent dis- turbances, bat nothing 'has been lo surpng ttOlie proof,' I havehad, of, %he weakness of the Knights. •They, have no sea Organization had supposed. Their. demonstra-,• tions end assertions had led meto inflieve' them not only foriniclahlo but practically Ittmonqnerable, • Re-. -cent 'history:bas proved this idea 1111 false. They are not strong, they are week, They. aro not the sort of vrganization that wins victories. They:, are not what they led 'the ,retblic to believe them to bti; they are readily overcome..• So great was my apprehension as to the .strength 01 the Knights, end so GRIM WAS Mt Mg Of Wild might, eome-froin a fight. with theni that for over a year- we have been carrying hundreds of • on the Missofti. Pacific Railroad's pay roe I Tor. whom we realty 1341 110 need. 'We were paying them their wages only beeause. we prellensive of an eXtreme emergency to follow a strike by the Knights, Now' WO '1111it that tliel•money spent in this way was practically wasted. 4..1•Sre had :ito suchthings to fear its we anticipated. , tip to this. time re have taken litek just 25 men whti have been active in these strike • troubles at it. LOW, Wo eau got . • -• ittT VIII sing wi; wo.rty tv Weed having" to 4 -0;11113110U a thigh+ 1, • • • lien'of the sttil“ns, ..,I,abor in tuft is tivei..thiinflant in all ilia sulk n dis., i frie314. Tlu:re is 140 10,31: 3111.11dior3 of M-110110,1 fat ttnifintell. rime in .New York, fur ilistanee, the elevalcil iltflioatla have constantly on file applications fi out between. 1,500 end 2;1(100 mon who Will '1111.,IWPr a eal I tor svorlc. The same condition of itirairs exists in the Stith -west, • SAM JONES. , l4•44.44••• A szttotox To Tougo MLA ONt4t citjeA00• • •Sant Jones elosed hie labors itt Chieago With it Sermon to girls only, There were over 4,1500 'present, Antong other things,- 11r, Jews& said i•-hgirls, wateli your -company, An angel from 'heaven could not keep 'sump company that girls de 131 Chicago antl • not he etrutipted. 'Pare, noble girlS stand dune on this earth for beauty and glory. Boys got hi bad company, 'hut •the hope of this land ia in its ptii.e girls. 1t1r.; 3 onesii01 ulged in 14 lung descri ption and denunciation or the perfumed • .young matt,. awl 'defieribed a elitist. •uf young lath 08 01.101 it spider legged Chide; Sonie Pothere lib Paid, • lig, their datighters to be damned, They insist on 'having little par.tieefor tiniir -children. A little party in . slort elothes„ Then comet* the party, and then the hugging f_cert»an. I want to have the grase growing oil Iny. grave when my- daughtels ate ertending ger/nabs. After the • ger.: tuan, thett—ii,hat will not go further. Take the words or found priest, who. 'says.. that a „II is - confessional nineteen out of . every twenty young women Who had Ai 333 . ed ascribed their fall frum pulite • and virtue to the influences 'of. the 1)3311 10011). ' . . • . THE ext,A.,ITA,.• '.1 litrye is .0. goc.11 • test---. can yan, on .3. long iilwiy, juirrney, think :out a problem •di t *a great 'social subject 7' Will you gin to thitiltout that prOblem Whim yea have before youtwo.hOurs,' halt railway carriaget. Tido is sianply a • feral. of; mental -hid ulonee ; t liey not concentrate themselves au db iig ' their thoughts. sufficiently togerher'._. to do sponteneons work, , It part ly• comes from this agiiiii,that they • • not•give themselves tioar'; trout that -they get outot the.. habit ot steady. . 0141p1a, and they .w it I .nut. .d w11 I ," long upon •one subjeet. :Both ... , reeding and ih thinking you 'neve)! get far unless , yeti will have 'tt:lang • .conecaitive tete-a-tete with ',emir.' book or.with Your problem:. 'People . lead -and think in thosameaveythat. Alley isi 1 their • acquaintances mill •' ' friends., -They have air excit ingoon- •vereation for a 'few 'minutes, anti then the visit is over, dr yon • wisli • to so a landscape .or eget 0.143'it a6ter. S'0.11 TOUSt • take . it • meet be...done by steady' , oonsistent, . 'and continuous theoght 1 lmapenk, • therefore; fer'yeailing and rot think,: ing-greater tleliberation, More oare, fill choice of material, pore 'con:Seen:. ti:uen.ess and 001111331ty, .and11 above all; that it 8119014 never beeome, ne-l• cessary to hurry through 'anything, whether it be lecture,' er. book; or problem.—Prom (-Iodiele$ taro at ihe „Mansion :flow, "ClIN A 110DV • K ISS,A BODY There is a Remo coutrolirsy' , . • ing in the Daily Tel,eyrajdi as to the prayalende; of BatnaltY, :sebools.. "Pertnit 1ne,7 writes a Cor-• respondent, "to suggest,that the riSe and progreis of this kissing custom • , . indoors dates 'from the foyination of Good Templar lodges,' the mein; bers of whieh, consisting elf lefty or 2 the young ofboth sexes, moot &very' ' week le twiddle their thuinbs - wear their regalia. 'Finding thumb, twiddling monotenons, the kissing game was hailed as a welcome varin- •tion, and lice practice has' spread, 1 do .not wish Ao do the I, 0, 0, 'I'. wrong, but I have a shrewal Suspicion that the indoor kissing game fets more to do with Geed Templary then with S 1111day-soh 0 ols. sehools meet on Sunday, the kissing._ game is a 'week (ley athimement," Perlinps.soine Of the Go,caf$T)niplei A ' ean dispose of the: correspondent's • suggestion.. The out -or -door kissing '8001118 to he part of the eotn•• inon ,inhexibutee of English youth, ivrespeetive or sect, lodge, or Sim, • dey-sehonl. Xiss-ill-the-ring *111 probably survive the House ur • Lovds, • 1P(111 DY's P1Pt41 A and fa V rr I yoli have it printed giorralo, on every (Kittle ot tshilub's \1' 115117.1(4 It never fails to euro. 'sew 14 .1 • 1 1. (:ottt 326 ly.