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The Wingham Times, 1893-10-06, Page 4H WINGIIA?sil TIMES, OCTOBER 6, ' 89, . G. E +S ,� iX3, i4se Many. The vi Roe on entering, is kn Vol znediatoly co '`routed with endues of r � �: ttxw. a1ii —AND— DRUGGIST. AND— DRUG I T. 1.. * 0 Opp. Brunswick douse. Wingbarn, - Ont • COt lr t nti,pai Cull r$ FBLD kY, OCTOBER 0,1593. mon who lett the stainp of their intellec- tual greatness upon the nation, as Pitt,. Palnlerst& n, C•ou]eg, send Beaconsfield. On one of the latter aro the memorable words need by bun on his return front the Contuses at 'Write, in 1878 t "Pave With honor." itr tiro Poeta' Corner,. Mingle the dust of Chaucer, the father of English poetry, 'aeunyson, Addison, Southey, Campbell, &o., while near by are those of Macaulay and Dickens. Poets, statesmen, artists, Historians, ex• plorers, the ashes of the mighty dead repose here, who in their day, runny of them, by the purity of their lives and the loftiness of.their thoughts?, changed the tt iu:1e ft o + of things, and are thus, by a nation, given a last resting -place in this vast tempi e.e I was present on 1 Sunday afternoon al the service. it was tn,:.t ival,te3sire, made so to me from the places ; the memorials of great mon iu full view of the preacher ; the ashes or departed greatness and worth almcst beneath his feet. The eager and expect- ant faces of those present, and the Alan, the theme, the hour—all conspirers to write that service indelibly on my mem- ory. Tho sermon was intellectual, chaste, retined is delivery, and withal highly spirituel. from the life of Elijah. Tr; preacher wt.s Canon Robinson Duckworth, a man of dignified presence, inteltectsal face and rich voice. On the evening of that day, I went to St. Margarets, thiukiug to hear Canon Farrar, but was disappointed, he having preached in the morning. In common with many persons that go to London, 1 went in the morning to the Metropolitan Tabernacle. There was a very large audieece to hear the son—Rev. Thos. Spurgeon — of the late celebrated preacher. His sermon was on God's guidance of His people. It was simple, spiritual, pointed, and replete with stories gathered from Christian experi- ence, or what he, the preacher, bad seen. EDITORIAL NOTES. Sin Orevert MoweT in not en o,ring the best of health, and has gone to a sanit- arium in .yew Y ortt::•tate for a complete rest ::•: a few weeks. THE PioxunITION COM missio n will visit the following places on the dates given to hear evidence on tbo liquor trailie: Woodstock, Monduy, October 9: Wind sor, Wednesday, October 11; London, Friday, October, 13; Berlin, Monday, October 1U; .Guelph. Weiluesday, Oct- ober 18; Owen Sound, Friday, October 20; Toronto, Monday, October 23. TpiloN'ro Ne.vs : Sir John Thompson promisee 1 Lo ; eople cf North Bruce that his Government will introduce a prohibitory measure if the Royal Coin - mission now sitting reports in favor of that policy. This was a reasonably safe promise to make. As there is only one Prohibitionist on the commission It is scarcely likely a report in 'Savor of pio- hibitioa will be presented Ly duet body. TonorreO NEWS: D' Alton McCarthy does not expeopt the Government to bring forward a measure of genuine tariff re- form during the coming session. Nor will t member for North siuncoe tiud cause for surprise in the Ministerial pro- posals when they are brought dowt,. Tbere was reason for expecting a radical change last year. Sir John Thompson declared his readiness in ad- vance of the meeting of Parliament, to lop off the moulderiug branche'e but when the House met the lopping was confined to 'tWo very small twigs. This year the Government does not even pro- misereform but declares, 'Oa the . on- trary,that they will stand by the princip- le of the N. P. Relief from traff burdens can only bo looked for through the efforts of Mr. McCarthy or of Mr. Laurier. Irisli members, on which we to the ut- most rnntarm to the will of the people, flit+ r'`uuttry ttir.played no dispositfuu to enter ken details, but watt coutaut to leave it to the dieeussion of Furhuntent. There could not possibly bo it more frivolous pretend than tbat the people do not know the hill. The plea that the Hoene Mule •i'3i11 wee iusutlicieutly discussed is equally Aimee and the Bosse of Linda did well to avoid these fallacious pretences', the adoption ot whiob would leave shown egregious folly and want of tact and skill --for they disposed iu four days of a bill tbat oeoupied the attentfoa of the House us the autbority and propelled tie on our of Co:tunnus 82 days. course, and it ie our duty anti our hope Then there is the third plea, that the and belief tbet we shall find, with the help Lords are eutitled—indeed I think they of the Almighty, Klemm to reach the goal. say bound by duty—to require a reference to the country. That isnot conatitutioual. Bir John Thompson onProit bition. The doctrine of the constitution shows that if a respouaible I1ini:dry advises a dissolntiou of Parliament there ought to be a dissolution at the risk of the Ministry, aid the house of Commons ltat, power, which it has frequently exercised, to force at dissolution by vote. But no such thing bas been recorded at any period of our history as a diseolutiou brongbt about by a vote in the House of Lords. Such a contention is gross, amoastroue innova- tion, an odious NEWEANOLED DOCTRINE, LETTER NO. 5 re are many beautiful places for ste-ite in Si:ottand, chis: among them beine the route down the River Clyde, from Greenock or Gourook. Availing myself of this opportunity, it found me among many others nt the central sta- tion, Glasgow, to take train for Gouroc:k and thou by steamer to Cacapbellten, Argyleshire. The day was all that could he desired for pleasure -seekers on the Clyde, with the beautiful watering - places of Rothesay, l)unoon, atlil]port, on the right, and Wemyss' Bay, with its homes of retinoment and culture, built of red freestone, on the left, while away up further to the west, through the Kyles of Bute is Oban, the "Charing Cross" of the Highlands, so aptly ex- pressed. The Town of Campbellton—tny desti- nation—is beautifully situated at the head o: a magnificent land -locked har- bor, on the Atlantic Ocean, surround& d, back of that, with high ranges of moun- tains. The town depends mainly on distilling; no less, I was told, than twenty distilleries being there in full operation. This needs no comment. It speaks for itself of the drinking pro- pensities of the people. The liquor busi- ness in Scotland is a strong combination, being looked upon as respectable, and yielding large financial returns to its holders, but its effects are patent and awful to contemplate, especially in the haps, be prudently restrained atlaiu. 1 w iii,. TUE LOURS let;'fiT 71, Ai "'For my port," said her. Gladstone, "1. find this retrospect 801eien11y uueourag• ing. If the nation is determined it will hot be battled by a phalaux of 500 peers, we have the will of the eouutry to exeoate and es-naot submit to the house of Lords, although they hear high seuud'-ug titles and sit iu a gilded cliarubor. The next mission will not pees without your Hoeing this subject again appearfug above the waves where it has for the moment to . peered to founder. The uation lues given I ourselves a zuaehine to put the result in- to l force, but we will put before the country our pulley on that question and stand or fall by it. sin oPPosi5 THE remount. Sir John Thompson, at Stratford, spoke as follows an the Temperance question: "We have had the temperanoe question pressed upon us with the groat - est earnestness and the greatest, ability by men representing every quarter of the country. I propose to tell you a few words what the difficulties are that have presented themselves, and how we have endeavored to deal with the question and no men are fonder of these doctrines down to the present moment. As you than the modern Tories, except it be the are quite aware, thequestion has been modern Uuionists. But in addition to raised by an authority no legs than Sir being a newfangled doctrine, I hold that Oliver Mowat himself es whether the it is nothiug less than high treason if this power of prohibition lies with the Pro - is to continue to be a self-governing Doul• vines or with the Domiulon of Canada. try. That question is to be settled, and Sir "But we make this plea,: We say if we Oliver Mowat proposes that it shall be are punisbed why should not the majority settled by a reference to the bighest in the House of Lords also be punished court in the country, But there were when it misinterprets the judgment of the : other questions, too. It was admitted couutry. by the most reasouable and thoughtful "Let us have lot temperance then that the first requi- rAIR PLAT AND NO SAVOR. site to the successful establishment of a Why should the House of Lords be allowed prohibitory law was that the overwhelm - to pass off with impunity—an impunity ing sense of public opinion should be which Duly encourages them to repeat ; fn favor of it, that a law forced at the He preaches entirely without notes, and u1300 the first occasion a similar prank to instance of a Parliament merely, and his etelei3 conversational. Through the u, ek 1 made hurried wits to the Tower within whose walls the most bloody armies have been prepetraeed. Madame Tussaud's wax works were, rep- resented in costume, figures in wax, com- prising the heroes and desperadoes of bis - tory, the grandeur of the courtroom on Coronation and Christening days; tableaux showing the death of :N elsou ; execution of Mary Queen of Scotts, &c., down to the most evil acts of mankind in the chamber of horrors, are preserved : also the South Kensington and British Museums ; the National Portrait Gallery, being a col- lection of the most famous English men and women ; St Paul's, the wouderfui work of Christopher 'Wren, iwside whose w Lingland's heroes lie buried, as Wel- liu;tnu, Nelson, are., amongst all these a stranger might spend weeks, and look around and learn much. Homo it. The eouueil met iu township ball at Gorrie, Sept. 20th, 1893, purauaut to ad- journment. Members all present, The Reeve in the chair. Minutes ot last meet- ing read and approved. Letter read from Mr. Irwin, re damages to Ur, Geo, Henry's property and pay for gravel taken out for road. claim being !15.- 04. Moved by Mr. Ferguson, seconded by Mt'. Doig, that Messrs Graham, Gregg and the Reeve iuspeot the same and report at next meeting.—Carried, that. they have just committed ? Depend : unsustained by the public sentiment ot upou it it is an extremely serious matter.: the country, would be liable to fail as it On the supposition that you could subject had failed in some other countries in a majority of the Lords to the same peual ; which it had been adopted. The first consequences as those you can lay upon a l step in order that publio opinion could majority of the Commons, there would be li be fully instructed upon the question was something at least like a prima facie ease to ascertain by means of careful inves- of justice and equality, some small Mee , tigations and by a public inquiry the ex - for this title of the House of Lords to the tent of the great interests involved in right to correct the judgment of the House dealing with that question—the munici- of Commons and to send them back to the !pal interests which are involved, the country. But tbero is not even the thin- , quotation of licensing, the provincial in- uest presumption ofjustification for sucn u terest involved, iu the carrying trade, proceediug. That being so, we have I the employment of labor, the industries arrived at a very serious position, and the 'of tbo country and the requirements of grand question is how are we to escape ; revenue, provincial, municipal and from it?" national—and for the purpose -we ap- After passlug a reference to the intelti- pointed a commission which, as regards genua . and incomparable unity of the its composition, has been nutirely un - Liberals, without which the minority i challenged successfully in *this country. would, he said, have broken down and : This commission has carried on its labors I destroyed the bill withoat sendiug it to ; end enquiries in every Province, iu the But our fine ebip "Parisian" is nearing I the House of Lords, Mr. Gladstone con- ? territories and in some portions of the Quebec, on one of her fastest trips, with i tinued : { United States, and we fully expect that her many p et singer -, and some notables, THE LORD'S EXISTENCE. I the report of that commission will be too, Sir Jelses Tco:ir; sou, our Premier, and { "I was net so sure when Lord Salisbury' laid before Parliament at the next ses- Sir t'has, i'upper, our Commissioner at { threatened a year ago to destroy the'sion and distributed broadcast amongst London. I shall close these horridly- Horne Rule Bill that the Lards recognized the people of Canada. The information penned notes with a pregnant sentence I that tbis might involve the question of'vve think essential should not cnly be from a Gsrwnu writer t "I h rte teen the greatest wonder which I their own iudependeut and responsible ex- put into our hands, bocnuse we are istence. (Prolonged cheers.) 11 it ehould better able,to under•staud the magnitude the world tau show to the astonished Letter read from Mr. Irwin, demanding 83 balance of account claimed for extra. printiug done by Mr. Nash. Moved by Mr. Ferguson, treoouded by 31r. Doig, that no action be taken,—Carried. Letter read from Mr. Irwin, demanding 8118 for Mr, John Knox, being damages 1 Kill` The rt. Cold. 11 1.111 It by 'feeding it with Scott's Emulsion. 1t is remark.. ON how `,.,,9 ra, • Of Pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hynoghosphites will stop a Cough, cure a Cold, and check CfUol tin e aswcilasoll8allformaof1011 WastingleeearliDiseasesrstages , Scrofua and Bronchitis. it 18 almost aspalatablo es milk. Prepared only by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. sustained by hire, not baying outlet for ----- •---•-----' his drain properly oleaued out. Moved WI: GHAlti M 113•$19T:t, by Ur. Grabitm, seconded by Mr. Doig tytr cuAst. October 11,1403 ' Corrected by P. Deans, Produce Dealer. that it be laid over and the Reeve procure 1 6o t legal advice on same, —Carried. Moved by Mr. Graham, seconded by Mr. Doig, , that the Reeve have lawful notice posted ou the Gerrie audli'ordwioh bridges forbidding any person from drivingMoved by Mr. Fergusou,seconded by Mr. Pa^s per dos. fatter tbau a walk. --Carried. Wood per cord, Hny per ton, Foreruns, Flourper 100 lbs, e Pau Wheat per bushel, 57 to Spring 55 to Oats, Old, 30 to Oats, New, 28 to Barley 85 to Peas, 50 to Butter, tub 10 to do Molls, 18 to 11 to 1 '15 to 6 00 to 35 to 18 to spirit; nave seen it and ani still astonisb- ed, forever will there remain fixed on me memory indelibly the stone forest of houses amidst which flows the rusbing stream 'of faces of liviug then, with all their varied passions, and all their terrible inpulses of lave, of hot ger, and of hatred—I mean London." W. MacGnxnon. S. 8, "Parisian," Aug. 25,.'93. GLADSTONE AND THE LORDS. The Premier Speaks Out to the Ejectors of Midlothian. THE Pl'rine ]NEST BEWARE:. In the course of bis speecb at Edinburgh lately, Mr. GIadstoue said : "The verdict of the people the Lords have now reversed. What are their pleas for that reversal? A majority of the Lords gave au opinion hostile to the bill ; a majority of the Commons an opinion in its favor. Yet it is hardly a ease iu which oue opinion is as good as another. The Peers form their opinion for themselves; tbey are respon- sible to nobody, and if it proves wrong they will neither be abused nor made to suffer in any way. Our opinion is not cines, among both men and women. solely our own, but was formed in discus. A. few days spent with a sister in this mon with the nation and was ,riven with place, and then I was back to Glasgow, all the authority that to take the London and North-Western line of railway to London, prior to my sailing on the "Parisian," on the 17th of August. Arriving at this great centre, teeming with life, full of bustle and go, 1 their friends in the house of Commons. naturally made the most of my tine at The latter set up the fantastic plea that the points of interest. the people kuew nothing of the bill. WestministerAbbey is a moot historic Necessarily it involyes a multitude of len- place, very ancient in its style and build- portant details, bet with the single excep• inn ; it has boon and is the wonder of tion of the retention in Parliament of the A NATIONAL VERDICT CAN COSPEIt. I think, therefore, that the Peers do not stand well on their own showing. They cortaiuly stand worse on the showing of ever happen in the vicissitudes of political of the interests involved, but in the affairs that the House of Lords by some hands of the people of the country, bo- acciecut or collateral process should bring fore the people should be asked to make a dissolution of the House of Commons, up their minds on that momentous depend upou it the people will not consider question. Our opponeuts challenge that the Home Rule Bill alone, but will mix they declare it was a . subterfuge to get with it another question on which the rid of the responeibilities of the questiou, Lords may bitterly lament, when it is too and yet 1 find that when the leader of late, that they ever raised an issue." 1 the Opposition party snot bis delegates in After a tribute of respect and admira- i convention at Ottawa he declared that tion for the personal qualities of the peers i he had no policy to suggest on the quee- ns Individuals, Mr. Gladstone contended' tion, because it was being, investigated that abstract rights possoesed by both the 1 by a commission, and until tho investi- Lords and Commons must always be ex- ! gation was concluded ho was unable to ercised with the utmost discretion if those state what policy ho should pledge his rights are to be permanently preserved.1 party to. Therefore no responsible On this occasion he said that discretion , Minister is able. in advance of the infor- lied been eutirely and absolutely wauting. 1 oration that is to be conveyed to the In regard to the nmauner of facing the j people of thti3 country, to instruct public situation Mr. Gladstone said that there men and public opinion as to what could not bo procured a cut-and-dried measures will be adopted for tho fur- eolation of the dilemma. This was neither ! tberance of temperance, because meas - the time nor the place to consider the ores for the furtherance of temperance matter. He counselled t are measures which shall be advanced in NEITHsm tamm !:see Non yeanate•'NC . so far as it is possible for the National All that was necessary was a quiet deter. Government to advance them, and in so mivation to cling to the hope that better far as itis possible for Parliament to deal counsels would prevail and induce the with theta. But in so far as the Oppo FIouse of Lords to grant to Ireland some sition party has pronounced a policy up - just satisfaction of her national aspire- on the question we are not of the same tions. mind. Mr. Laurier has stated that If the worst carne, the worst consolation while he is unable to adopt any position that could be offered would be to remind for his party, he is willing to have the them of recent history and of the vast question decided by the country. We changes of the past sixty years, not oue of thick the system of evading rosponsibil- which originated in the House of Lords ity by sending questions to the people to or was promoted by the Lords, or the ex- be voted on at the polls is eaten:nant to istence of which on the statute book was our constitution and to the British cat- chier to the impartial opinion of the Lords, stitution. When the time comes that To every one of those changes the opinion it will be our duty to put before the of the House of Lords had been adverse, people a policy on this questiontwe shall although its tiyanifestation might have not seek to shelter ourselves behind the been prudently restrained, and might per vote of a plebielte and simply constitute Gregg, that the rate on the dollar for Wool county purposes be 2 mills, for townsbin purposes 1 mill, for railway purposes 2.5 of a iriill„for sinking fund 8-25 of a mill, for general aohool rate 825-1000 of a mill, and that a by-law be passed for the same. 1 80 58- 55 20 251 20 11 2 00 6 25 22 EXECUTORS' NOT E. Pursuant to rho Revised Statutes of Ontario, 18S7, chapter 110, s&etien, 30, the creditors of Alexander —Carried. Campbell, Into of the Township of. Morris, in the county of 'Huron, and Province of Ontario, yeoman, er o tU ell Bylaw No. 4 rend and passed. w Accounts passed—J. Stewart, 313.08, for gravel; T. Baird, 32, statute labor paid in I taxes; R.Day, 33.00, for gravel; Mrs. Potter, 814.94, for gravel; E. Rbsb, 31.50, for rep.' culvert, lot 8, come 2 and 8; C. Adam, 813, for rep, road and ditch, lot 3, con. l3; G. Henry, 54.38, for gravel as per certificate of Pntbtnaster; A. Johnston, 02.40, for gravel; J. Shafer, 39, for 2 culverts, lot 20, 1 eon, 1; A. McNeal,, !3.50, for rep. culvert, lot 0 and 7, oou. 18; S. Braideu, 32.50, for ho died 011 01• abnutthe 1st d , t 6• t her, A. D., 1803. aro required to send to J, A, Horton, of the Town of Whtghnnr, in the County of Huron, Solicitor for the undersigned in, of tiro tail deouased, on or before the 1Sth Clay of October, A. 1,., 1893, their names, addresses and descriptions; the full particulars of their elahns; a statement of their accounts and tho nature of the securities (if any) held by them; and notice is hereby divan, that the said Executors' will immedbtael,y after the last men- tioned day proceed to distribntu thu assets of the said deceased among the parties entitled thereto, having retard only to the claims of which they shall then hair. had 140510.0. GX1rNG33 T.I71EVFy, f Executors. JOAN Bt7iwa' a, d, A. HO1tTf N, aoItoitor for Exeeutnrs. Wingharn, September 18511, 1891 41e gravelling on lot 20, cone; W. Chapmau, 35, for culvert a. 1.80, con. 1; C. Rogers, I 325, for 'rep. road and gravelling in Ford-' wich; James Sutherland, 35.72, for Olean- I ing stove pipes in town hall. •1 Moved by Mr. Graham, seoouded by Mr. Doig, that the oouncil do now adjourn to 1 meet in the Arlington hotel, Fordwicli, ou the third Wednesday in October, when the . collectors will be appointed.—Carried. Win. Thum, Township Clerk. The Fall Assizes. The Fall Assizes for this county were held at Goderich last week,'Uefore Mr. Justice McMahon. There was not a heavy docket. The several eases were disposed of as follows : McDougall vs Allan, assault and damages to person. postponed till next court ; Jackson vs. Brady, breach of a warranty of horse, postponed until next court; Irwin vs. Broadfoot, postponed until next assizes ; Senior vs. McGillicuddy, libel, post- poned ; Foss vs. Wilson, seduction, verdict for plaintiff for $500. Wiltze vs. Doig, broach of promise of marriage, settled out of court, defendant paying 0200 damages and costs of suit ; Ander- son vs. Wilson, malicious prosecution, verdict for plaintiff, 8100; Corporation of Brussels vs. Ronald, verdict for plain- tiff. The Grand Jury, its usual, in their presentment, strongly recommended the erection of a House of Refuge. It is a pity that on this questiou the Grand Juries and the County Council could not be bettor mixed up. Row to Got ri ''Sunlight" Picture. Send 25 "Suulight" Soap wrappers(wrap- per bearing the words" Why Does a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Slau") to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott 85„ Toronto, and you will receive by post a pretty picture, free from advertising, tied well worth framiug. This is an easy wuy to deem ate your home. The snap is the best in the market and it will only cotes one ewe mintage to send iv the wrappers, if leiive the ends open. WJritey,.ur eeltlreee s:crefnlly. East vt'awaxiosh. The rtutiwil tr+.k uteetiuti of the West- field church held en Monday even - lois. There was a inattltliieout attend. seer, th«t church being crowded. Addr'esse's ware delivered by the foilowiintr ge"ttleinen, Revs, Wilhelm, Swett, L'uguin, Philip and Henderson. Some ii11t+ mu3ic was furnished l,y the chair oI the zhnrch, and Mr. D. mud miss Lizzie M Gi11 gave some splen- did sr,Iceciinze. Proceeds with the Sun. day Collections amounted td $$100. ?4'r. L. Shorts, of SYalhace, is et present the utie$t of hitt tither, Mr, Wm. Shorts. of the 7th litre. . Mr. R. J. Russell, of ?3russels,spent Sunday with friends on the 6th. Mr. 1. Situs, •of Blyth,was the guest of Mr. W. J. Fenwick, this week. • FAR AHEAD 4 7 ',,\, , P'/1\. • .s 1 ', (� .i:1\.>, -Vii /0 �(( ale,. .,..eIV\, All kinds of jewelry this season is far ahead of any before, its beauty and navel designs. We are rt'a`•ivent,' ,vlI the latest designs in Brnoehe'e, ntverd Ilaardlee, Lace Pius, Watches, Olnclss. Tie Pius, Engage- ment and Woddi.,g hinge. We lead in Silverware, others follow. Repairing a specialty. J. R. MUNSHAW. Mason Block, Winghain. Je rig CUMMINS e Bea. to intimate to his numerous cus- tomers au'l others that he intends moving to the stand lately used as aboot and shoe store Two Doors North of Post Office where will be found a large stock of Musical Instruments, Sewing Machines, Washing Machines and Wringers, with all nodded repairs. Also a full lino of SCHOOL SUPPLIES --AND -- GENERAL GENERAL STATIONERY. Store will be open on Saturday, 3u1 MAL. ) GIVE - ;VIE A CALL: J. B. aumminia /lily gals, '90. are. w B LQRAl The annual fit;l ) awanosh Agri at Selgrave, �. ,11• , of last - was delightful, as attendance op+ tthow was good, i and pigs. The not large, Mr Ja the whole exhibi ducks, 'There implements, art. this town, had pumps of dii ere The inside de up to farmer what was lack made up in qu representing ti tuxal Society, w ed a quantity o and fruit for tl following is the Holism —He mare, '1' Todd, foal, T Todd, year old filly, Dow, Two Cumming 1st filly, Win W Team horses, Foster, R 5 horse, T Tod Brood snare, 2nd and 3rd. 1st 2nd. T Rossand. T Baas, W J 1'w gelding, T R tidy, J Dow, gelding, T H horses, T H. Jas Dow. mare, .3 Do Spring foal, year old filly normal. T S, V geldingcott, Han Buggy her Geddes, b carriage h Brood mar T H Taylor OATTLE Armour, R. heifer, G 5 heifer, R Heifer cal Bull calf, Bull over t Barr, Rob years, R cattle, R 0 cow, R 0 Two year Chas Pro heifer, M Heifer cal two year Proctor .& steers, R calves, T J&JAn .R Oorley. tS' IIEEP —Aged r Bon. Sh N Cutnn sr, N• Ou Barr, N ewes, R ewe lam Downs R Mo Harrison 1st and Harriso Harriso Gowan, Jno 0 sep, PIGS F.adwar Hehenry litters 2nd. ward's Aged Walt iu 18 Pen o Po l.st a son 1 Jas 1st a lot a ROD Is nor D Dou Van JL wh wit Re oat oat pe M