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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1895-10-25, Page 7L L/7 TUE WXNGUAM TIMES, OCTOBER 25, 1895. 4 SSS C. WI LLIA CHEMI$ AND DR GGIST maw Keeps Pur Drugs AT MODER PRICES. YOUR PATE'. NAGE IS SOLICITED. 1 ESPECTFULLY T OLD RELIABLE STAND, „cz OP OSEM THE BRUNSWICK ;) .b%1) HOUSE,WINGHAM. :s ..i&S,'*1 • sL;LTS,.. i•=1:7=4:mmeminormesraearv.. !!1•.!!!!!,77 p1 :SS'S:T;• • _ A FUR IT - - - 00.1-1133.131,E E. r MAE 224k 14411 1E JERt Ireland's Furnitu Store, OPPOSI MACDONA BLOCK. Black Hair Cloth Parlor Suite, x pieces, $33 Silk Tapestry Pa lor Suite Oak Parlbr Su te, thre Centre Tables from Bed Room S it Sideboard, n4x24. glass, half doze Here are a few 11116 that I FIRST COST • • Y $28.00, . prices, for $1 2.00,, 1,00 up. 18x24 glass, Springs and Mattress, $14..5o ining Chairs and Extension Tables, $14..00. ing,out of and they will be sold for less than. IA TABLE COVERS FOR $3.75. $5.50 TAl3LE, COVERS 10tV, $4.00, 4.00 " " '-) 3.00. 3.50 " 3.00. 3.00 " - , - 2.75. 2.50 15e, CURTAIN' C ixs voR 10e. 25e. ., . " . - Ad, aoc. 4t it 20e/ 60 TOWEL RING ' 30c. now for 2 " STA gc , 10e. " 5e. r BOYS LEIGHS, - ,' - 20e. . , RUNNERS 7 R BABY tuaomp, 61.75; ALSO ABY CUTTERS CHEAP. I also have t ot of PICTURES- that will be sold for the cot of the frame and glass. Call'an see mir INDESTRUCTI4LE COVER SPLASHERS for WASHS' NDS at 25c, per pair, • Stu 1.00. 1.00 4;i'INDOW SHADES FOR 75e. e. " 60c. -PLACI'ES, 15c. poi. dozen. it 50c. keel) a complete stock of MOULDING al also Stretchers,for Canvas at Right Prices. Remember the I34ace,--;Opposite Macdonald 13* ,!+• riake Frames of 'any kind; , . Foundry. TERMS 0.4817.4 Residence -Opposite the 0150. L IRELAND, IVALIlit AND UNDERTAIMIt, WINC411AM, .41tataiiir lifigligaz4411 11111111 MINN 1•1141" WHIM. The Ludieroue Tupper, All the independent newspapers tlf Canada, are making fun of Sir Charles H. Tupper's telegram to Mr. Laurier, in reference to the Liberal leader's condemnation of the Mc- Greevy•Connolly pardon. The Toronto Star, for example, says : • or 5 Grand Trunk Affkire, POINTS FR= VIE FIRST REPORT TUE NEW PMECTORS, OF in 1894. The figures are given by les 11 tgegi:rie:exiu'eseleuPsg , g _, with till tWerit6 a wo th 4r, werepaid. In rnagi g6,:o; pos,rreo:e,reto6ievlfittoemIttoie5:142114}1ttiv31:2,„ LI - fotheetorsitesatlostpeic:ot°efd in Ontario the 1,01/ of counties and are estimated trona returns received, from 456 factories. In the Lake Erie grOtill are 77 factories, making elumiG w ing $48200 Worth of cheese, 4114 or with an average of 4,929 patrons, to dr. whom $383,751 were paid. In the a- Georgian Bay group there were 36 IS factories, making $111,897 worth of le cheese, and with an average of 1,781 g patrons, to whom $113,281 were k paid. In the West Midland district S there were 134 factories, making. e- $2,004,396 worth of cheese, and, with a an average of 10,486 patrons, to e whom $1,682,828 were paid. In the g Lake Ontario group there were d 96 factories, making $778,571 worth e of cheese, and with an average t of 5,934 patrons to whoni $632,- • 425 were paid. In the St. Lawrence and Ottawa group there were 471 factories, making - $4,186,021 worth of cheese, and s with an average of 20,163 patrons to whom 83,576,71.0 were paid. In the East Midland district there were 138 factories, making $1,174,651 worth London, Qat, 19. -Sir Char Eivers-Won evidently does Sir Ribbert Tupper . .. i$ no a propos° to f'plod along" in handl' Chas. M. gayes, the nes gener dense nd Trunk.hafrOrt.37 ,4114 is nobility to refrain from making young man-eXeept so far U the " himself ridiculous, and he could manager, is to have some brand ne scarcely avoid seeing the point of rolling stock'with which to eater f Mr. Laurier's very justifiable com- new business and retain the ol ment on the glaring travesty on Sir Charles has "sized up" the situ justice which gave McGreevy and tion, and even now, so soon after h pCo°snsnibollelYexplanation of arrival in England, has made up h their freedom. The only Sir Hibbert's mind what steps to take. The fir letter to the Liberal leader is that he report of the new Grand Trun has suddenly grown extremely directors is issued to -day. It say punetillious as to the dignity of his that the president and other dire position; and in his anxiety to assert tors returned from Canada with his claim and the claim of his depart- distinctly favorable impression of th ment to the very highest sort of re- material condition of the ronin speet, he has again given way to his stock and the work shops of the roa constitutional failing and made him- east of the St. Clair River, but th self a laughing stock." permanent way and the equipmen The News, referring to the same of the controlled lines west of the St matter, takes this position ; Clair are defective. "A powerful battle cry of the The boar&rkas ordered 1,000 new Liberal hosts now advancing on freight cars. The board cannot re Conservative strongholds under the leadership of the Canadian Demos- thenes, the silver-tongued Laurier, is the liberation of the boodlers Mc- Greevy and Connolly from Ottawa jail before they had served one- third of the insignificant sentences Imposed upon them. During dis- courses on the subject, Mr. Laurier has made the assertion and repeated it timo and again that there were convicts in the jails of Toronto and Montreal who had just as good reason to regain their freedom as these two political tricksters. "The point was obivious. But the present Minister of Justice, Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper, who has been given credit for rare common sense, immediately sends a ludicrous communieation to the Liberal leader asking him for "names." Mr. Laurier's reply on the stump is characteristic: "'Their name is legion, 'he says, 'If no case has been reported to you, I advise you, as a philanthropist, to inquire into the matter, and you will find that the health of all prisoners is affected by confinement, and they are all entitled .to the same tender mercies extended by the Government to McGreevy and Connolly.'. "Young Mr, Tupper did not show his father's political sagacity when be asked the question. He Will show it, though, if he remains' silent on the new answer." Brussels Post: The House of Refuge will be completed on Monday of next week and the Building Com- mittee will meet in Clinton on Tues- day, at 10 a. m., to arrange for tak- ing it off the contractor's hands if everything is all right. Arrange- ments will also bo made for the date of reception of inmates. -The Thins and Toronto 'Weekly Globe vips will be sent to new subscribers from now 1:1„;111 till the 1st of January, 1895,fcr 25 cents. 11 • London's municipal debt is $58 per capita. Toronto's debt is larger, per capita, than that of any other city on the North American continent. It amounts to more than $90 per head. The next largest is the debt of Cincinnati -864 per head. There are only seven cities in the United States with per capita debts greater than $60. Hamilton's debt is about $60 per head. io ow I n awe ammo. ex van on CALL ON Campbell, THE NEW DRUGGIST, FOR PURE DRUGS. Try his . BAKING POWDER, • ONLY 24 CUNT'S PEE LE. It is the bestir H. le. Clordos's OM Stud. commend any nirnediate method for removing the ‘..x.rdens of the unprofitable extensions 't.i.nd amalga- mations into which the Grab Trunk has entered. They have, lio+,1:ver, ordered that the train service on‘tb Toronto belt lines be discontinue The report states. the traffic agre ment of the trunk line presiden respecting rates should releive t Grand Trunk of ono of its wor difficulties. After noting that M Seargeant has retired, and that Mi Hays has been appointed as gener manager, the report says that othe plans regarding the staff will crease the economy and efficiency o it. The board is hopeful of th general prospects, as business ha distinctly improved in the. State and the war of rates will probabl cease. It is hoped that the harassin and pooling provision of the Inte State Commerce Act may be repeale at the next Congress. The relatio with the a P. R. are most friendl• according to the report. Farm Statistics. The annual report of the Ontari Bureau of Industries for 1894 ha just been issued, and is a volume o 140 pages, giving an iramens amount of varied information relativ to the rural portion of the Province A comprehensive statement o the chief phenomena, connect- ed with the weather and the climate opens the report, and it pro- ceeds to deal with the statistics of the chief.crops grown. Much. that appears in the report has already been made public, but a great deal of valuable information is published in it for the first time. One new table is a comparison of Ontario with the principal grain growing States of the union and with Manitoba. in re- gard to the principal cereal crops. From it is shown the fact that in fall wheat Ontario in 1894 had an aver- age yield of 20.1 bushels, and this was aheacl of all competitors. Ohio coming next with .19 bushels for 1894 and 1.3.9 for the ten years, and Michigan with 15.8 for 1804 and 15.4 for the ten years. In spring wheat for 1894 Ontario stood fourth, her average being 14.9 bushels for 1894, and 15.2 ter the past ten years. Manitoba ranks first in this, with a yield of 17 bushels for 1894 and an average of 19.5 for the ten years. Next came Wisconsin, with a yield in 1894 of 16.5, and in the ten years of 12.8, and the third was Iowa,with 14.8 bushels in 1894 and 11.0 in the ten years. In barley Ontario had in 1894 a yield of 22.6 bushels to the acre and in the past ten years an average of 25.5, as compared to 28.6 for 1894, and 28.8 for the ten years in Wisconsin, 24.9 for 1894 and 27 for the ten years in Manitoba, and 23.5 in 1894 and 23 for the ten years in Minnesota. In:feats Ontario had in 1894, 30 bushels per acre, and an average for the ten yoars of 84.2, as opposed to Illnois, 36,1 in 1894 and 82,6 for the ten years; Wisconsin's $2.3, for 1804 and 80.4 for the tett years; Indiana's 32,8 for 1804 and 27,1 for the ten years, and Ohio 80.3 for 1894 and 29.7 for the ten years. A feature of this pertiOn °tele re- port 18 the reproduction of several pages of reports from various por- tions of the Province, ammo's must FACVORIES. In the portion of the report deal. iPrviakee a neiv feattaretale v with the dairy ntrets of th iese Canada has no debt of $252,4 000,000. ThisT debt was added to last year by over $6,000,000. The debt has increased by $100,- 000,000 since the high tax Govern. ment attained power. Over $10,000,000 .a year is taken out of the people in taxes to pay for the interest on this debt. The people pay $30,000 a day for interest on the debt. That is at the rate of $1,000 an hour, Much of this debt has been incur- red to pay for boodled, public works, out of which many millions have been stolen to maintain corrupt public men in power and to debauch constituencies. Sir Adolphe Caron's unwilling confession lifts the veil partially. The country needs a change. - London Advertiser. Hon. Alex. Cross, retired judge of the Court of Queen's Bench for Pro- vince of Quebec, is dead. Rev. Canon Townsend died at Amherst, N. S., in the 88th year ,of his age. For 61 years he was rector of the Parish of Amherst. The Presbytery of Huron has sustained the call from Leeburn and Union Church to Rev, James Hamil. ton. Mr. Hamilton having accepted the call, his induction was fixed for Tuesday, Oct. 20. Application will 'be made in ?Arlin. meta next session for an act to fn. eorporate the Canadian tleetric Railway and Power Company, witk power to operate an eleetrie raiforay from Montreal to Windsor, via Brockville, langston, Iieneviiie, To. ronto and. London. Mr. Alex, Mitehell, Stanley,died at the advanced ago of 86 years, the other day. Ile was one of tho earliest settbsrs, having been a mat- ' dent of the township for Go yet and helped fs hop the Beyflold roa when it was all vfife pro n ;11R" Alk of an Diov