HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1850-07-18, Page 2, hse0, le the pennies ge • n•IMItlw .d.eh.
Crews. Mr,
bee. ge.tleds• for tro�etsaesd
cowl wow. sad tf the Meese km maA t
toPreeried by MI, •edr
e►jest tire, bad m Mew drkly sod
tree be ehsa/d vete for h• .roti
clearly of ammo* th•I ..e nes to le -
velum sed ghee ►t 41f0110! led MP -
ported ►y the est/ Misellare lash ''
wt, t. be mei utas., 1 by /s-
aese.h.s reprepta•tug the Mete of foaling to
the commit. IM facie el the cabm sod it
0ecen•ry, ereompamed by a member •i the
Goreremeet t►-r'gdidil ib. MItey perao.4.
If thm were proposed bow theoreelly wnrttd
the Msestet' h.,g iaed 1 Where wew!d be
lie oppeeenies to Ibis Hoots or the Gum -
try 1 World their friends be alienated or
oppose thew 1 No : the *permit log would
.117 eoeei't of tones, sad the miserable
member of them week have oenirfnel./ to
the consist, o1 ever oeuvre. But lbs boo.
Commussinner of Crown Lands. says, it is
not s greel'r deal question, and we had ne
nest to expect it would be made • cabiasl
gs..tina. Not • vise( gse.tios, Mr. Spies •
bee 1 the bee. ,.themes stultified him,lf
in hie own speech, on the suer of tile
hue. ; for he began by telling e. It was an
all &Warbing q.reauon-a questing that it
not settled satisfactonly, would for ever
dieterb ad distract lbs tousle, ; without
t1.e fair ss:iluacat of which, ire meld
hair ,etas,.
'Phe bon. m+tnber for the Second Riding
bed said, we had one rebellion growing out
•t lI, •*d if left snsettled, we would have
another, a*r that was jet what the Corn-
ed
of Crowe Leads' speech amount-
ed to; end yet, is "boxing thq campers"
k. Caine to the conclusion. in defence o' his
owe posillaoimity and want of moral eour-
etr*. that it was onl an important question.
He bas been afraid to avow his intentions
In these reeolu'ion., or he Is grossly disho-
n est, without etudiness of purpose, with-
out confidence is his principles, and desti-
tute of that high moral sense for which be
has too long been eheracterized. Do I un-
jnetly charge hum 1 True, he tells us be
n ee not charged ; he gives • long string of
rsenletlons, to prove that the people of Ca-
n ada aro unitedly of opinion that these re-
ser•es should go for genera! purposes ; and
vet be .o words them, that the member for
Vercherres sad other., who hold that they
are the vested rights of the clergy. can vote
for them; aye, the member for Vercherre.
has sbnwn, ihst so far from interfering with
the clergy. these resolutions show a tender
regard for them, and he prnperly argues and
proves the fact. The member for the town
of London, is taunting the C
of Crowe Lands with ingraining sod trying
to please everybody, oompared him to the
man and the ass, who, trying to pleas eve-
ry one pleased none, and loot his animal -
but 1 think two -night, it is soother story of
that gnsdraped-he woald hire told or the
animal is not Inst -he still grazes in the
cabinet pasturage; ttie member for Vercher
roe has only pulled tinkos'kis A and left
exposed /n a(I its hoW.d.formity-'The
aria, the whole aa. k nothing but the aa."
Mr. Speaker, it to unjust, dishonest and je-
suitical, to obtain rotes under false preten-
ces -to profess s policy, the object of which
was totally different. The government
should say what they mean to do with these
lands, if they had them ; they should
Ise more definite in their view., mon decided
In their policy. And who will dare to deny
that they were solemnly bound by the Re-
form party to make this acabinet gnestin*,
let.whn would go oat or come in/ The
hon. Commissioner of Crown Londe was
dear it was Mot a question to go mut tee, be -
canes there were no persons to he fogad fit
in fill the places of the bo. gentlemen !-
This might he so, but he (Mr. C.) thought
that wovlu have come better from some of
their friends ; that a as a coesid.ralion for
the country, not for them ; from him, it was
egotistical and vain -a mere sounding brass
and tinkling cymbal. The end did not al-
ways justify the means; and it was immoral
to stand as • Reform Government, whew at
Nene with the Reform party on • vital
question. He (Mr. Cameron) would now
address his brethren of Lower Canada, and
he called them brethren ip the best sense of
the term. Ile eau a native of L. Canada :
be loved them as his countrymen; he appre-
ciated their kind and benevolent di.postioas
and liberal and tolerant hearts. He was
not the vietim of religious or national pre-
judice.• he desired no secollectio• even of
an imaginary division line between Upper
and Lower Canada. We bad the same in-
terests; end except when local peculiarities
required legislation. he thought we should
always legislate for beth. The grootios
was as Mer to the hart of • Lower Come-
dian, as to that of in Upper Casedian ; Ise
fall and .ymp•tb tied u tench for the rights
tad privileges of every Episcopalian both
Protestant aged Catholic, in Lower Cased*,
as he did with thou of Upper Canada. He
bad ever admitted Catholic liberality ; he
dud not impute to their religion the accident
of cireomstanea is other ages ; be was
/used to confess that history defended them.
The Attorney General (East) had claimed
deserved credit fear them for attempting, be-
fore even Upper Caned• did en, to grant re-
ligious equality in Lower Canada, on the
subject of marrisei and bepti.m, tho.tgh
thwarted by the illiberality of Prntesieat•
is the tipper House. He (Mr. Cameron)
wee wilier to corroborate this, and refer
to the fact that they were the first leeisl•-
tore in the world to grant perfect civil and
religions freedom of the Jews ; ind fn the
British States of Amerity • catholic, in a
catholic colony, eau the first to grant free
religious toleration to all. He alluded to
Maryland, under i,nrd &tinnier*, when
Pre.byt.nan New Berland and Eplsenpeli
•n Virginia bdth were notelets/it and pares-
cultst. He (Mr. C.) trusted therefore.
that in this age of enlightenment and upon
1111. question, his brethren of L. Canada
weold art with the same liberality
for be would ..are them that *either sell.
lotseest, nor politksl sdvsulates, woe at-
t•ehespt to any est of moo mantel ever in-
dorse tis Rammer, of Upper Canada to
peal nue this gneeties. Mr Rp-eker, the
question has bees asked by niseinhers of this
►nue, have we an eeta►liabed church I -
And be would just take ep this pots; tied
remind the Hos.. of the way 1111e queens
w anm treater fw Canada Weed, esti show the
Iaebdity..d dietinetteme that were enders
yet placed mine all other Protest/tete. 1t
was argued legally sad i'goaiosaly. by beth
the Attorneys (Amoral, that we should have
se desioa.t or e.talliebed church. but o.s,
Med that oma, by the treaty, wee the Cathe-
ter church ( henna, the •sasses of an R.-
4.bU.bmeet wan the brag the nee or pre-
«a.r eh. of tb. .tate. That is an
elegy Moe bkgel ears. But if the lotnie-
t*,.etms. s►sr'eb ewe marry and baptise is
tjbi of hie Needing is hie ewes body, Mad
.11 °there weir apply toeourts rethesole
Is, 1right i.
la Win I if the
s1MMe beyealat sad sol.sr-
sed.wed Mob .R the puree, pejvt
g., sell i el teems is limgt.nd,
aid 11 l bishop Haim jortedistise, .i. eget
this m sst.Mihtseet Thre lees oet•b-
UMbed Mareb, sed estil the power granted
w get Gee. HIL tri establish sod Mow
ie tepo•led, Mid • declaratory set
,sewed tsesg.isteg the emirs pent' of all
desemisattese, we have as establtshmat.
Hee. teartleates opp.erte say, they do sot
weal it ; them let them house theinegel,s
be bristle, In the .ece.e•ry declaratory
Act. It would as well become the hon.
m.mb.r for Carswell as the member foe
Toronto. Ups the quotes of the Rectu-
ms, he (Mr. C.) weeready to aka a dif-
ference suis as the Altoney General Feet
deigned, belieeuog in the right obtained by
an isdte*Jual under the operation of en act
of parliament ; but the rights argnird by
bodies fur general and specific purposes -
b. (Mr. Cameros) considered, in regard to
the Cburcbe, of Englad aged Ireland ties
they bad so such vented right in the
Reeenta ma the rector had In the letds
patented to him. Ths proposition to.re-
ftw reserves originated gen the opinio• that
the government se trustees of the people
bad a right to promote their apiritutl teter-
nts, sed they mode this prnpoeitios doubt-
less in good faith. The power that creates
can destroy : and finding that the people
are of opinion it is not for their interest,
they may remonstrate with their tru'tee.-
It is not only to their power, but it is their
linty to reps*: the whole. The Attorney -
G I West says the lands aro not nun :
they belonged to the Crows. He (Mr. C.)
denied the doctrine ; it is pot liberal -not
Whiggish -it a abeoluto Toryism. The
lands of the Crown In Canada are the lands
of the people of Canada ; the Crown was
merely their tnutee : and has this not been
definitely settled and acknowledged years
ago 1 are they not now anter nor entire
control, though still Crown lands i do we
Dot sell to whom we please 1 do we not
refuse to make good the pledge and promise
even of the Crowe, to soldiers and others 1
and yet, forsooth; the Attorney -General
West arena. they are not ours. Mr. Spea-
ker, the Reformer. of Canada caro little foe
the Rectory lands, as to their intrinsic value
or quantity -valuable though thev
Other denominations bate had their tees or
10 aero*, or snmetimes, under good Episco-
pal or Executive influence, it may be their
900 acne but all keep those they have Rn
obtained, and which are patented ; but it io
the creation of a Rector or ruler of • pariah
that is complained of -the recognition by
law of one ruler in a pariah -tis setting
apart, choosing and endowing a favoured
and particular sect -in a word it is the prin-
ciple, the unjust, illiberal principles that the
country deprecates -this is what is felt,
because an insult and peroeeouon to num-
bers of other denominations. It most be
abolished. The lands aro the dust in the
balance -it is the .urpremacy that is the
trusbing weight which is felt to be as op-
pression- Mr. Speaker this involves tits
great question of Church and State connex-
ion or toleration. H. understood and vee
petted the prejudices of those who were in
favor of nrinciple-and upon it, Lower as
well as Upper Canadians will materially dif-
fer, every man according to his owe con-
science and education. He bad ever view-
ed endowments, and Church and State con-
nexion, as an unmitigated evil to the
Church of Christ --end wee aware that vert
many Episcopalians sow do on ton -they
as. the higher and better stand their ehnreh
would take -they know that it has been
fairly tested in the States, and they are wil-
ling that for the pace and prosperity of
Zion, all should contribute of their sub-
stance for the enpport of their religion, and
every denomination be plated on a common
basis. Endowments are remnant• of king-
ly sod priestly tyranny, and de.nnusm,
',bee, as the hos. 'nemher for Nt. Maurice
said the people wore enveloped in ignoreeC e
sod superstition when the Pepe was able
to put big foot physically es the neck of
Kiegs-and when neither kings nor priests
eared for the will of ibe people nor rights
of man. Mr. Speaker, though there .re
many who may still wish to we the Church
with harlot bead yet reclining, upon the
corrupting bottom of the State, boned Med
compressed, cripled and deformed by Liter-
gies and Confessions which they dare not
amend ; yet the time is at hand when these
religious barricades would be erased, and
the Church could not be bought up for a
con.identins le money or lands. Th. hon.
Attorney General East has avowed hie de-
sire to divide these leads among all protes-
tant churches and theum by bnbiig all,
please all. This i. Ito sew policy. Mrm-
bon have bees tampered with on thi..ug-
gestion, and were ft not for facts that are
pat, b. (M►. C.) shonld doubt hie owe
truth by finding if cmereierefed by tae Cam -
missions,. of Crease Lands. He (Mr. C.)
would have appealed to him to ay how
he (Mr. C.) bad treated such a proposition
sixteen months ago, when it was frequent-
ly broached. The bon. member ter the
First Riding says be came nut to Canada
to learn her civil rights -did he learn from
those who preach fe England the secular
nature of Christ'. Kinednm, its indepen-
dence of the State for its prnpegatioi a.d
.u.tent*tiss • sed, having learnt this, diei
he infer that the parties in thi. country who
had disturbed its pear:e for thirty years -
who .ought for every exclusive edvantags,
and the .00remacy of their church -who
had styled theme.lvss, by way of eminence,
" The Church," and filched the country of
their lands, did be lean that such property
must be toneldered vested nem 1 $,ch
learning, Mr. Spas er, is amalgsat.d
with tteoresee, and' �1(( those are really lei.
principles, I fear be has yet te learn in what
civil end religious liberty cessi•ts. Mir, we
aro told the nropesnlion to legislate by bill
is slued. But sir, it is completion( with
pesetiee. The Attorney General Feast hes
established eleerly, that we hod power to
'etiolate soder the 3st Gen. 11i., aged might'
within sir months after tt peened, agree the
whole appropriat-e.. Ho has shown, too.
that we were deceived by oar ruler.-ke?t
is itpoence of diepete►est whueb would
have settled the question•.nd yet he •peaks
eendetssateeily e1 our se•pieieos Time
h.e hews, velem he was sseete:nns sr germ -
sore. bests -r eretseimi, and estimative um.
mosic.tises ; 4.t Mr. Sppek.r, he hee
awakened obi .r.picioss. is ib. Honm
not resnisded a the enures of soother At-
unrsey.Genersl. who to jmsufy • chats of
milky en the University question, dug sp
from the nsltwof the Ereevtive Coa.di
acether liberal tIllispeteh that would have,
/fe.es y.ers age, preveated all the feted,
hard belie,, sed, extenuated skeet the
Catmint! ► Yee, ear, by this bee. gee -
themes we mem learn that there 1, • nem
n/y fee mar doing ererythisg shove beard
.is. He (Mr. C.) .mgieMsd that the
matey w demigod se We subject (.a
year. He b.UU ie hie head the Mato is
which Ibo f
to sepslste nub the 11 Gmentelloll tete
tabs Me lana..• with all the Mame et
their parties', sad ,repose the way fee
Ieg4lstme-leets teetotal w Yea tb. sab-
jest til .•eros. i1. (Mr. C.) the. lied
the Mr to be • mobs el the Growers -
met. sed bad meds the pledge en geed
faith : bet saem were gives why the O.-
v.rs.iest sb•.N pressed e..alesely, timer
to their psoases sed the per sties spier
them t bet sever did be bear se know 'bra
a dt0,resce of opiates emoted • .4 tjat M
wee kept is tga.ee•ece. Het hew thele
pledgee/ made in gond fresh. baso kept t
have they espoet•ted 1 did they tabs the
initiative 1 apd are they agreed epee the
question 1 Mr. Speaker, there is air con -
c. -Mast the foci, the eo•atry h.s been de-
ceived, mad we should wait se teeter. -
The Act of 1827 had Mot reg. alluded to oa
this debet, -it provided for the sale of oa.-
fourth of the Reserve for religious purports'.
100,000 sorts fly might be void. And
did this p t the Legislature of Canada
is 182d, and from that to 1840, from pass-
ing It bills directly in the (free of the Impe-
rial Acts oP 1791, and of 1897. The foci
was, the poser to oar or repeal wassot
repealed by the hill of 1817, 1817, sed is not rr-
pir.ted by tie Union Act, sot by tbe bill of
1840 : and he defied any lawyer to show
It. We have the same right we ever had
to legi.late beforehand on duties on the
pest office, or the civil list, .ad It is the
way to aocompliish the object. and it b the
way to assert our right to local self govern-
ment, and in ibis coasting the very a .encs
of Responsible Government. The Attor-
ney General (West) has said that the set-
tler after 1791 had so right to complain of
the existing law -they knew it when they
came, and if they eertched the clergy lands
by their labour, it woo a part of the contract
that they settled. This is the most extra-
ordinary of .11 the strange t'•isgs we bare
heard. The Attorney General thinks peo-
ple ors bound to submit to laws as they
God there, or leave the country. Time was
when able very Nem was applied to himself
- be, Sir, know the law of 1791 on another
Point ; his veserated end ever honored
fatber came to this cottllry under a law
which gave the people no power over their
Executive. an, in6oenee in their own •wire.
He brought with him a British spirit of
resistance to t.j 1ry and oppression, he felt
as a Briton that be had • right to complain
of any t;njuat law, however old and he and
his son advocated an utile change of con-
miluttos, and nobly and steadily eontsnded
for it, and knit the it f thousands and
tea of thousands to them, by their resis-
tance to a cos•tituhon that existed when
they came to the country and they were
tanned as traitors ; they were told, if the,
did sot like the constitution, to leare tie
revelry -they knew its nature and extent
when they tamer and baying cbo•es it,
with its disadvantages, for some reasons
of tbsle own, they bad no right to seek a
change. He (Mr. C.) felt that LL. hon.
gentleman was endangering his popularity
by such doctrine as he hal announced. -
The boon of Responsible Government was
never sought for as a finality, but as a
means 10 an tied, and that end was the liber-
alizing of our insti:utions-the reform of
knows and admitted abuses, and the exten-
sion of liberty, fraternity, and the natural
rights of man.- For this object therefore
we stand upon the door of this Hosie. we
eek only a f•itsfal and cnnsielent carrying
oat of the system of Responsible Govern-
ment, we will accept of nothing less, and
it it to be hoped that bon. members will
vote on questions affecting our interests and
our cou.try's welfare, with that indepen-
dence which characterizes the representa-
tives of a free people. The question now
before the House is parol, local -a quo.
tion which the Attorney °rural designated
as our owe, and one, which the home Go.
worriment in 184?refused to interfere with
because it was purely local. lie would
tberefore.ubmit the following revelations
*amendment :-
'That • Select Committee of fire Mem-
ber. cotnposed of'he Hon. Mr. Bolton,
Mr. Notmsn, Hon- Mr. Merritt, Mr. Bell•
god the mover, be appoisted to prepare and
report to this Hoose • bill embracing the
following Resolutions':-
Re,mleed,-Thst it is the duty of the
Go,enment to extend the sante protection
and the sante privilege', and Immunities to
every member Melva society:
Resoloed,-That as the stipends male to
the Clergy of certain Christian Churches to
the exclusion of other., and the great di. -
proportion of public grants to di(brest
Churches, ere at marlines with sibs first and
most sacred duty of all good Goversmssts;
sod es the State endowments, known as
the Clergy Res. , have proved a sourer
of great and manifold evils in this Provisos,
obstructing the physical improvements of
the country, engendering and embittering
political strife and deception, end fomest-
img to a eonsidersble extent, mutual
jealousy, distrust aged slienatios among the'
C6ri.ua Chmehes planted is the Iced( sad
as the imperial Parliament have at various
times invited the atteetion of the Legis-
lature to this subject, and granted es full
power to manage our local affairs; it Is
expedient to enact that it shall Mad may be
lawful for Ilse Governor of this Province,
by and with the advice of his Exrcetive
Council, to sell, great alienate and convey,
in fee simple. all or any of the lands celled
Clergy Reserve lads.
Rexe(.ed.-That it is expedient that all
past salsa ofsuch lands which have er shall
be foveated under tie 8111 George IV. esti
Sand 4 Victoria, shall bee subject to such
order' se the Government ie Council shall
make for Megawatt either is sow public
feeds in this Prunus steered ns the eoa-
501,4.te food, or en the pnhlic feeds of
Gnat Britian and Inland, the must sow
funded to Eagls.d, together with the pro-
ceeds hereafter to be received Newt the sales
of all or any of the said revenues.
Rrsolsed.-Tat the interests aed dtvii4-
ends seeming nue melt Isvaetimete of tie
remade of all Clergy Reserves sold est te
be sold, sad also the lets eta to Masse
apes mire apes credit of Clergy Reserve
la.4s and all rents arising from swell bads
that kava been or may he demigod for gay
term of years. 116.11 be ped to the Rasmus.
General of this Promise. or each other pr
neo e• iaeteltatins as shall he .ppeiated to
rsegive the p.bhe reveres, mod .hall toget-
her ream as animal feed for the perpoeses
of gums' education .
We aide steed that the Maher tomb -
seta ss the Ottawa have detgesisd le Meed
to the Exhibition of RIM, in Leedom, epse.-
aoee of the most Mashie d.scriptioae of
Umber pearlier ie ear Csselis0 fevers.
Crimean M.'eracvvaa.. Timelier*
Mohair' yoga, Hamtkee at my time de.
Mg the lea two se lhrse years, have eel -
vessel, adankted Item Na Hotels are •uses,
W int 11 set the very Met, is the Prr-
vise, sad Mt IM muss of rouble, them
ate lar b.Ave those of soy other Cloy os
des sale et the isoet all degrees. It mem
e ndue that the parties pnecipally 005.10. -
.d are daermued to matstato tibia pre vmi-
s••st if we as judge by the jure they
ere mekisg to captivate somatise. Our
old trued Wsas has pissed es the rood
Mt Geer mambos we have sous, the MMI.
else el the City of New York, is witch we
were seated a umiak ego. sot exoepted.-
it is very large, a.eommsdati.g fro. •
more totwo desen reels comfortably. and
✓ bautifully Neighed is every teeeoat.-
The week is at o.ce substantial and rich,
aged well worthy the establishment is which
it wee manefaet tired. The " Queen City,"
as the new omnibus is a.prep►istely celled.
runs is enasoetios with % e' sow Hotel
sad was built at se expense of d 000-a
MAW goad sirs, both of the enterprise of
the owner, and the eosin and decoy' which
exist amosg 11ote1 keepers. in notteisg
the omnibus, it would be unpar4o.abls in
us to omit the same of the maker. The
establishment of Mr. J. M. William., esti
the carriages °revery description which he
turns mit, are known throughout the Woe
tors country. The omnibus whieh we are
noticing is a credit alike to the Cut, the
owo.r, and the manufaelur.r.-Npeet.l.r.
CA ctora•te.-A correspondent of the
T1i6ra. writes that Journal as follows:
The market is completely overwhelmed
with property, especially of Limber, stores,
iron, and wood house., firearms, munitions
kc. And unlike other market., wbea an
artical is sot wanted, it .inks so fast under
the weight of charter as to be soon loot
entirely. At present large shipments of
anything are unsafe, but well assorted car-
goes of choice provi.ions, in good order and
small packages will always find a ready de-
mand.
The pestilent tide of emigration to this
country is altogether excessive. There is
gold enough for •II, but only a few men get
rich in digging it, and still fewer will make
money in the overdone channels of f:mode ss.
its well knows that the summer month •
aro the Daly time for successful mini,,
operations, the rainy season commencing
in November and enntinuing until April,
daring which lime heavy expense., priva-
tinal and inclement weather most blender
ed. Thou who leave home in mid-eum-
mer or afterward should be well provided
with money, have good health and a Oren
resolution for the task, for they will End,
•1 ght drafts epee each awaiting them there.
It is not, however. for the purpose of dis-
couraging emigration that these suggest-
ioes are offered, but rather that it mat be -
more temperate and seasonable. And •s 1
am established here. the advice may bet eon-
.idered as at least, disinterested. The eGetei
Hunter" is with a crowd of pesseneers, and
seven vessels are now coming up the bay
loaded in 1:k. manner.
STARCH MANUFACTORY.
There is an immense Starch Factory
at Owego, producing the following results:
It eonenmes 2000 bushels of ripe corn
per week and m•nufact.tres 40,000 pound s
or one thousand boxes of stares dints, the
asselime. There are elev.. foresees.
with corresponding drying rooms, and 200
cisterns for receiving the starch in the fluid
form. The number of men occupied is
aboot 70, and the value of Starch annually
msoufactured exceeds $:24,000.-Tra*s-
Boston is 235 miles nearer Liverpool than
New York.
The late Emperor of China reigned over
360,000,000 of human beings.
Snap rods ie said to be the bat fertilizer
yet discovered for grape vines.
There ere said to be 150 printing offices
in the city of New York.
The small pox and cholera are making
'terrible ravages among the overland ami.
grant., on the plains. The number gnio,
to California overland this year, tit estimated
as high as 60,000. .
The steamer Pashtos arrived at Lonie-
ville a few days since, in 49 hours from St.
Louis, tb. fastest steamboat travelling on
record.
New Yoke. June 14.
The New York Mail Bag, which should
have arrived last night, was amour the
missing. it wee foetid ibis morning ire the
car, and its contests rifled. A large nam -
bet of the lettere were broken nun, but the
amount realised could not have been large.
Some traces of the robbers have -bean dis-
covered.
Bo,-ro°, June 13.
The Connecticut River Bank was robbed
of $19,000 isold, silver. end hill., on
Tuesday eight last. On the robber's trail
• team was foxed containing the silver
money, soppnsed to have been abandoned
by the robbers from fright.
Brae -roe, Jose 15.
A daring attempt wee made to rob the
Montpelier Bank last evening. The rob-
bers fired a pistol at the Bonk watch -teas,
the ball peered through bis bet. Th.
watchman lied is return, when the robbers
Aad, leaving . lot of skeleton keys ea the
road.
Edwin Forrest, the New York .belly bed
tragedies, attacked N. P. Willis M 11.i
streets of that ally • few days tire., .0d
after kaneking him down. brutally hest std
Masted him. Mr. Willis was pstteosbly
0ed quietly walking t►e streets.
The neves. of Great Briton' for the yew
sediog Ja..a►y 6, 18 S0, was 0145,000.000.
A ma .f pold and quarts was freed tear
Marker. • arena retest end important
iliuegagetee hew bees male --sot of ewe
hole time wee is tee 4.7. look am.,
Seem large hunks have bees lowed
mei *early every tea Is sakrog se some a
day.
'Ph. Emilie' railways are said to hove
'.red the millet more, ehaebiee.d
etesmbesta, wp.reeded male, trod used sp
amicable rivers.
A was (1) fa New York, .simd the dad
belly am of his ledgers foe a debt of $6,
sad refund t...rrssier kis body veal hie
.wisdom paid the debt.
'Telsasy,' .aid a t.pfsg Ash.,, a little
'tight' 10 his s.s-"Tenn,. bks -..y bey,
sled Tow daddy, sad woe we.% ie ►irhi.
teem*' 'Tibet might de, perhaps,' n..
Hi
plN4 e}sell.. ' M1 waves t. g. Irre
the each -ram a Vitriol& Moe
Thal ,easel g wires edmd Ms me bit
Tasty dodged ft.
HURON SIGNAL,
TIHURSDAY, JULY I8. 1886.
TIIL CL[ROY RESERVES.
Tea deboa ea this I.pona.t es►jeet wrtui•
sated jest ss eau a be expected, vit. Ie the
cant's.' ed Mr. Primes Re..4ti.s•: sad wheth-
er the punt( of these Roulettes, still have say
egret is Magl.g about as revisable motorises'
. f the " vez«I ase.ues" missies to M decided.
We ere iodised te tisk see. vied we only hsps
we test' he diespiteisted. F.,, ear ewe put. we
MOWN regard the I.guMsed Iiasswicie as a
very pr.elftable w. The argemeaus edd.eed se
both sides have long hem familiar to *very sun
is tis Provisos who lies tate* say ist-reau i•
the gowise, awl the reyapttslatiea of Mom w
have little i.11.roee .. the public mind. aged kr
ler ea the naiad of the Imperial Govenmest.-
The B.itisb Oovenmret, eves i* taboo d.. ed
progress sad liberal cheers. bas eertaie Ilasd
principles which memo. seder any .lresmmep•
eco, sew existing. be departed free. -they are
pert and parcel of the thing itself. aged mit e•
main mem' till the slow sed grades! regrew
of a miaow? philosophy shall ea11 forth • esperiw
else of minds. Of them 'fixed priieripuper-
haps the most i.vetem15 fe the civil esdowereet
e( Mitts.. that is. the psyi.g largo sssmfiem
the predated p.Mic iedaorry to rapport ere or
mere dennmieatinsa of riligiesiata. Th. people
may be ,reedy iga.ra.,, bet they wrest he re-
ligin•a according t. Aet of Parli.nr•t. Th.,
may be immoral awl istempents-their physical
amitiese. may be mon thee weetehed, eves
tottering with fancier and tags, as ie the ease is
Ireland to -day, but Government wi11 oaks an-
pl. pmvisioe for their .pirtrral well-heieg. in
so Groat 1a.t. as Act-of-P.rli.n,est Christianity
awls well kd elerry can 1.e called spiritual fond
1t Is a matter slime" isdiferewes whether it be
• tree chetah or a false church, Cathelieiam.
Episeop*lisairm, P . Methodism,
et ay other ire that els he Mdseed es mune.
the seeomodsting paoities s7 • State Church
will recti.. the Stat• bow.ty. ft rosy be die.
believed by the wow, and dirpieed lag the Ina•
joriy of the peal,. but it it will prese► the
doctrine of sehesiaios to the "reams shot he "
the people will ►. .repelled to pee far it. Thit,
remedial,* piety or perhaps we .h..ld .v
pembAaat for t.tisg eery .f mts'a magi. *kit.
their bodies Myo Sera nerved u the intiqeete
e( fsmi*• and og reseinw, ane while their misd'o
have bee* left to rot is iperante and /silt, he.
hens • lesdi.g k■t.er in the pokey of nearly all
civil Goversmests for the Inst thoswnd Teem
and it Ma bees peeslurly se is the pnl,ry 4
Arida.. when the ...levee of • mer. mei try of the
popelaties an receiving from the Ind softy of the
whole people. • cam which wield be imply
' efficient to toppers ■ reef.( priesthood for the
satire pepsl.tiea of the Gists. 'nom this ..e►-
mity efdelusion Ma aimed sad Imo sew ant.
se lomat saw will attempt M day - and
whether the time when it should ee.es t. ,rete
has yet •ni..d, Is • merger of opinion. We
think it M. not. and one sf ear chief ream for
thinking .e. is the fact, that with • very berg.
propan qa tram 4 what en called the 1. ,..4
mos -that i.. As was lobo speak les Croak end
Lena. the *otiose of ►eli.isw-ref homes ma-
ture, sad of harem duty. are jaw the nue to-4sy
a. they were • th omeed year" neo. Tho same
foss and Mester about creeds end formula that pre-
vailed in say other age prevail sow, amen, no-
sy of the l.adiag ted anion, the gnat maw. of
the followers, people -end ' h • ufisaarinn o• Mr.
Prie.'s Reeolstiesv he. .44.4,14 the.emrwhet
fi.enengi.g fact• that reen moms the Werra
men of our Cssolu.. L.gielai.re, then it. yet
strop, Nankai.( qualms of ennreiesee shout the
"• Divine rights." and the waled ri.hs !" in
this stats of this., w. canard exactly indulge
•the sane sa..4.tt sod rather .x.mre.ot rz-
peetatiees that mem of ear-estempmaria end
. egasintaseeo sees to enjoy from the pari*,
of thee. Retentions Still we find no bolt with
the R.onlatiees, ser with the hoe. moa.► of
them. We are inclined to believe thin there is
set nee ewe le Canada more wrineely In ranee
0* the Clergy Reserve ,Maine Mae the Hos.
Commiaoi.a of Crewe L.mle, oM w wit..
weeld be walla, to make ,rester pressssl ren-
fieee for the psiakle eettlrewst sf h, .red .1-
ihesgb we ha.s stria' doable if rhe Resnle-
ti.sa, or the Adders (seeded es them, win have
n isch effect in iwiwgle, abut • hal sad setl.-
(mtory .ettkmsot of the enemies, mill we
are dimmed to give Mr. Priee credit f.,
heel.' done all that the coleni.l Oove,.s..t
has power a do in the present .1511 of m atter1.
The wrests of the Hoe. Motivate' Cameros.
.hick will M Need is to -day's paper, is eer.1..
ly the best mewl' is the ingthes.d di.esesioe,
and eeeteise .he pixie views of
the quoties, bet at the meow Inc., we gene, .
Tome to eed.rmead haw loss "aseedmeet" would
have bees say Improvement es the Rrseoti..a
if the imperial Oeversmeet have any i.testies
ef.sial., the .djewme•t sf the gseseies a the
Coles's' Legislature, the Adders will be swill-
clewt fey the pope . std if the Imperial Gee.
mimeos hew Mwkdsed othewise, as Aet
Bead by Sr Wield LesiJ.een would she
alter 1st There has bee. web
said sed written egsi.m the ..Mteseo of the 19t11
sod 30th Ilwai.:lea. te it rouge:see tea erv.ale
Mimi, the.ktmd deeuim of •• meted rights."
We Ire se strode eppos,d rem t►Io vvaaable d-
atdity ft ay ether sae. sad pother It sighs
have bees as well that Mr. Msnimes's '• hewed.
meri " bed bees abeieud fee .hear Re- -
wtvti.es. Bet we bees bees ulliap the atom
esusise Moeda of eel Mall retirees liberty is
C..ai, for mmw yeas peer, 44.1 if the Imp.riel
0o,,rstweet shook emir 1110 S , Re sled M•
timer t of she Rem...* modes se the briers!
Pathogenic it would he ea the stilly .zpeeesd
.sedhies Iia the pretest rostrum of the m-
oires And Meld ustime is the emir .4 their
i.ep.etiea erpMtiesM•a ler Ifl► '1'ilr is
WWI isemeedsuea wit► "IMO* Perdee.w
and Use tl0wdw Mere W pW . sada ogre
i. reeiesede re hawse lith,a Or the parties
aseM bi4sPie edlies a ve,Osseh e. seed id!
P. eymiseeMe limateskes se beim, swplr.s
sa.hlgttiq d ter leigeiel lot gird wbedM use
1.0e1Mwte llalpplwa d this p6eiele. we et
Ines sae live eimajege i.Ma w
etrWade we •e•iditat ebria
w deities gist the e•y ass sees Its Qs*
is tailless te the @Mese .1 rhe Airs no,
impale Q•M1imnK Mem imp suets%
charmless that hate warmly seer firth is*.
tif' to the wl4i.p.tis of the sesliwemiyb
nurses u with the eaglet maag.•ee.t efsetw
settle. Ad it Me. hires II.sebdesee..y
law. •e ether efeet, they will at least hat, to
real of seoties the reality el them dell. .
time
•
EDUCATION TO QOM
We did h.pe that gems el the Wm Ago
sntati.es d the pe ple would kayo preps,,
cult amesd.s•te t. the sew holier Rin,
wesld hers weed the Hes. Mr. Hiaka female
•saris/ the dtedsris
leere of twhole iatsllip.,
embers of eonimuity, by beieg pasted N ■
tis est►m of soh • swears. Wo Mw I.e
disapp.i.td. The dui, hes hem* Mw.
Mee serried with rasher mese Me all its sop.
awl irpetfectinso se its hood t m.d we tbi•k i
map safely be mewled, Chet with the exceptie.
.r Ernes Remote •d k4 "lee, r..gse tt
poppet metshvs, who are a five by Ih tenses,
there uses one 1111i..eal -testi i• Upper Coach
who 1. aui.6ed. We gen very far frim *spec.
u., perfacti.mi is the sero of ay MY Of Goren.
meet, sod hew* we Molise to be charitable, tad
to apologise for the siert. eemisgs of ear 4fbw.
ewe. ti whe'.,er static.* they may la.ai6et
their ernes. 1• porsw•ss of thew vie.., we
ere eatformly is Ike tomtits of 4sfe•dieg w
least of apsingi.tng for sets that de am weed,
earn. sp to oar neo setioss of thief". Det, it
expert prsgrea-we be:ieee that every sets Mil
every Gevonese., are mean, bead to ,eases.,
to some retest. the march .f hems Improve -
meat. To eters ss i.is...e is readeaveriag i.
le... mewl um Me" is sd.sneo M when they
Need It -we hove so .ympathy sad so apologist
For going Mckro.rd., sad therefore, we feel
bound to deprecate, ie the stow tersest meager,
the menue which h.e jest received ibe mea-
nie* n( the Ieti.l.ten• ander the slkri.g title d
• Cem.an School Bin. It is ■ nastier of ens-
naritive i.diferesee to the Candies peblis
whether the Bill was framed by deo Hesoable
Fnsei. Hiocks or by Egerton Ryersea...it hoe
hes. mark kw by • large majority of the pee.
pie'. R . •.des them mut be aid
the e.pesoihiliy. It me, he all well .se.gh is
M biek.ri.p mei bantering' of pnli4nl war-
fare, to talk of defending and roppenise glee sets
of the Go.,em..t or the policy of ore's eve■
porgy. bat the aro who would titled himself seek
. ad heel to some* • party, without dioerislut-
' iso between geed sad 4.4 mrwreo, is me
worthy td pestle ceofideset-night set to M
trusted wish the deep reps•oibility .(law.tak-
iee, 1t is sot ewnegh to my that dm we
Scheel Bin is. do4 mestere. W. will oat esti
it • c.af sed mer of eapew.i.e, pro6tlen, ear•
row-weakd. retains reaehi.ety ; Mt we sea-
m* refrain from dnhrisg the.' It Is by far the
Int ehjeeftea.ble meatier, that lite yet bees
offered is Upper Ca••ds is the Mr of a Cm -
Ws School Bill- It is Pnxw.ieiete wade
berme.
This is siron, s.a.e.s, .s4 we feel moth m-
istime" i. it. Bet we weld be
.inking owe of the went sacred della whelk
we acknowledge, were we to allow this 1011 e
eye late *ensiles' without ezpresslsp our eller
di.like of it. A.d we are meth gratified to per-
ceive that 'jeer, is sea►e.le ere liberal aerial
is the Premise. that refni.s entirely fro de -
in, it. This is a. it .hemi be. The es.
eller ereestioe .1 the people i., .f .11 ethers, Ike
tel imporuat ..hj.et that est varies the at -
teatime of .he Leeistatore :.nd 'Amid lb' Proem
. newele rnfkr this Ent of sehj•'s to be tampered
with. and ,Luted at the uietarin• of w an.
it wnskl he •hn..tb.r asworehe of the .mper-
taue• and hero, which ere ,..oily .warded u
ie. We believe the Rill. as it was isusdseed.
was the perueties of F.,-,tes Remise. sad we
. hell briefly erste our re..oes for believing ss.
Our modem will naolleet that the ease Why
the Reboot Bin of I..* Smoke Adult po lesa
operation was a memorial to the eareeti.e Ger.
erament prr.reted by Mr. Rv.r.es. eestal.Iai
n.mr.noe nhj.•etiws to the Ri11 of the Rsssta-
hle Maladies Gmers..Rd a kw rejaia.. •d
insideen..1s%e .t the howew.le O..deses bill -
P elf. We wrote, at the rime. • umber ol arti-
eke ie review sf Mr. Remise.' .li•vti•s• e.1
Mewed ohm in reality M bad jus twit sb-
ieetie.e. The fast of thew. w.s ubet the Bill
rid net gi•r s rnf6ielrwt pemnisescy power, tea
thnaty to the Chid Sarelstioelea. Did s.t
soffit -jade r.eopi.. the isedivilesl 1111111, 11
olmgeefff (sones Rye's**. This nheectias 1.
amply o elated M the sew M II -the Mid
fr is the Altsh. sad Osrp el tis
whole silica -tis este of owns. to the retire
.,,4.m. The 'mafee earl., .f the Teeehns-
the Rola and Renl•tioes .f the Bosom► -A1
*glades d t►, wheel books -rhe method el
t..ehiag them -she sbes.ies r Libr•rb..d
the whole '0.5.0..t Of .ppwlieiase.t el the
p'vsds Alamo mid poets. eft sea .irt•eny wa-
der the emote' ref the Res sees, EOM"' if"'
sets ! We mese. is is the alreasa es 4
Pr.mi. rs.Lr.i • Neste sea* etta.lees W►.
Ry.nes's aper 04 Rkji•tl.0 w. tkatClwgy
m.e wee sea mei* *et►wird a herd'
,.,,-4.,,IbelliNiVellAftb the @•beets is the iq•isitwrid
enmity et "Oohed vireese." Th. djesdes
tee likewise hese .vmaed le lbs 5511 ail. ea/
the ei.es@ weigh MvwM the Band prim
aim with ibis uthwiey b tpthye the mart A-
irline/tie end mest'dseigedm eeaides d M
whsle Bin. W..H4 bead se dear.d *Ism
tier is Megrim reads, se &,@Mang the ren
lie esemis•tfees el the trieisse Il.bs•lti 11a -
esti.' dm did se wither mai seNawq •diad•
tag, .sd Sema Meet ds.tln'lkeld.p es home
i. Q1wm lekeetel0sai.r.i M a MiMw
mit es Rhodead, fte A seasieat"t}bMr Mil adie
'7
to, WI/
surtity **hie* both
of NW malke allehms hi*
merely mob bees meb4.p
atiitimr.1 diI Possum eat
Wee is e400mb e 411/mit.
nntwd pepsbdas, t&e rre
hems meek sad dais
►► lis deet ef the germ �. ear d
Mss. smile s..^ macre dM
i. es.ssa Meta way emS4111if1' 141111141, d/
these walked -' -Wwm.. N meal Car
sr 'doomed age. eWM W.mita r
est~ _7e.lf @[ eerier �►1
:res
a