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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1882-05-05, Page 6I1 111 e i V tan.. To this res.:tttion all the Cleuser- M vtive members uf Illhe Ontario Legisla- ture voted but cone. Here, then. was the Opposition iu the Coinmuua in as- c,nl with the Local Conservative mem- bers of Ontario. He warned hon. gen- temen opposite that if they opposed the anttention .4 Ontario, the Province would he more aroused than it had beet. for many-- hears. Ontario had given a l..yal support. to Confederation from the outset. This was the first serious at- tempt that had been made to invade her rights, and if persisted in it would be likely t.. lead to an unsettle! feeling, which would bis detrimet:tal t., the in- terests of the country. He trusted On - The resolution sought directly tario would recei.0 that justice which a Coit the Homo to o ooatliet with fair and unpartial arbitration decided gislaterr Of the largest Province she would receive. Dominion, which hall within a ;ls declared ita purpre on this o. Then wen a few plain. fads of all technicalities which would he minds of the electors After nct had been for a long time un - j urisdiction of Ontario it was warded to the Province by arbi- What had the Government regard to this award 1 They had usurped the session of that territory, taking possession of aside timber property and land, was awarded to Ontario, and bad r yeses in possession of Ontario, the while they refused to Dome int , mieable settlement with the Local meat. What would have been ad this case been that of the Pre - of Quebec 1 He had no doubt that twenty-four hours of the usurps- ( Quebec's territory by the Govern - not one Q.ebee member of the nmeat would have remained in the et. He commended the Province ebeo for the attitude which they Iways maintained when their rights Wine. trenched upon, and only d that Ontario was so fully alive to tercets. But there were limits to Alcune even of this Province. * * * i was too much reason to fear the ance of this award was but part of •, perhaps not thoroughly matured plot against Provincial rights. (Oh! ! from the Government benches, and cent.) h was well known that many these who nlw stood high among the tt} in power had gone into Confedera- n • ery grudgingly. As one who had 3 s favored Confederation, he strong- ur--ed upon the House that one of the props of union was the thorough wiedgment of Provincial rights, this proposition as contravening riticiple should not be adopted by it Ouse. (he Poet's Corner. Tb. w`...,. i &Mg TRNTSON 1ST agar HARTL re /Wee Waking.call sae early, mill garb'. dear,maw Hila ass that W room, is warm, mother. sad the ere Is berates clear: AIM Miley my sem near mark mother, sew mere ere you go away. Tee Pa lobe Questa ♦' the May.$ otber. Int w be Queen of the May. 1t Hese so bard last night. mother, that really 1 couldn't break The lee la my Utile pitcher, mother. WI I tbo$ Use poker to take: T.de7l And 1t there on the beartb,sotber-but, oh, let that bot brick stay. I'm to be Qe.en o the May. mother. I'm to be Queen o' the May. 1 I be put ria ay aeue-usdras outside of •n7 w15kin obit, AM two or toree yards of humel, dear. will go round my throat; AM you'll see that the bone.et-ts., is drawn while your child's away, 11 * I'm to be Queen o' the May, mother, I'm to be Queen o' the May. 1Mtte Erne shall go with mei, if her nose la At to be seen. Aid you shall be there, too, dear mother. to see me made the Queen. Provided the doctoril let you; and if it don't " rain instead, Little Johnny la to take n e • part of the way oil hi. sled. 8D. if you're waking. call me early, call ate early, another, dear. or to -morrow may be the chilliest day of ill the glad New Year: to -day is the thirtieth. mother. and bless td if year child can say ain't aa April Fool, mother, instead a a Hynes' o else May. (Mr. Laurier) had no doubt that if Bir George E. Cartier was alive he would still have maintained his pugilism, sad this repudiation wotild never have been heard of. • • • 'lyse her that the en- largement of Ontario was inimical to Quebec was chimerical He held this insinuation as being unfriendly and un- fair, and chews t• look at the natter from a judicial point of view, The eter- nal pnnciples of truth and justice were far mon important than millions of saris of land, and they should by aU mesas adhere to them principle. (Cheers.) ML u. w. Koss The Award was veey impoeteat be On- tario, representing 100,000 span mile, containing timber valued by the nen- ben of the Legislature of Ontario at $120,000,000. The average revenue from the present timber limits in Ontario was $600.000, so that this was a proper- ty of great value, and it having been given to Ontario by the arbitrators, were hon. numbers prepared to take the responsibility of keeping the Pro- vince out of pneeeseiom t In the Ontario Legislatrre a resolution was passel, only one member voting Nay, expreas- int; regret that nip legislation had leen passed in the DominNm Parliament to confirm the Award, and reaffirming its determination t.. assert the rights .1 t ht- NDARY AWARD Very Pertinent Observa- tions. a . be Comae et she 4-.ascaea. debase. -ta ZI('MAIW ' A*TWale;MT. * There was something pecular- urs in putting forward a gentle- .) by birth, by �i.� .-� t...a.... t, to move this ion, and be trusted that no native 'anadias could have been found ff in an attack on Provincial tr HON. MR, LA 4:RIRR. e now came to consider what would mid by the supporters of the gentle - opposite in his own Province. He w he would be violently assailed for stand he had taken by the members old Conservative party. (Loud hears of hear, hear, from the Govero- itn t benches.) He was evidently not mi aken in the judgment of the temper hon. gentlemen. He knew they Id appeal to the prejudices of his trymen, but he had too much faith sir honesty of purpose and patriot - to be afraid of the result of any *Fi- te their prejudice& it would be old that be was acting against the in- Upsets of this Province According to *as gentlemen be very well knew they ght that to do jeatice te Ontario t,e do injsstics to Quebec. This was a grant to Ontario, but simply to di - what her territory was. He had asserted that the Quebec Conger - party of today was not that bad been led by Sir (techs. E. ter. He quoted from RMtsorand. Sir George E. Cartier when in power 1800, in answer to protests by the n Bay Company against c,ndrwd the Dawson route, in which he re - the claim Gat Canada eztend- at Lead, to the land bete. ea the M the Woods and Red River. He MR Jon. RYMAL Mr. Rymal expressed regret that this question had become a bone of cantos - tion between the bonds of live which ought to bind together the portions of this great Confederation. Looking at it teens the standpoint. -of common sense, he thought it was the 'proper thing to submit this question to such distinguish- ed men as Sir Edward Thornton, Sir Francis Hiacks, and Chief Justice Har- rison; and whet they declared that it was right to submit the (ideation, he thought he was right in accepting the view of Sir Francis Mucks and his col- leagues rather • than that of the lesser lights which had been et:premed. He regretted that this matter had assumed a party hiss, but the Conservative in Ontario had, until very recently, united with the Reformers in condemning the action, or rather want of action, of the Government in not ratifying the Award, and it was not until after the recent Conservative gathering in Toronto,. that there seemed to be concerted action looking to the repudiation of the Award. THH BOUNDARY QUZSTION. The Mail was a respectable journal and respectably written in 1872, the the year of its inception. Therewas no use of words like "disloyal," "seditious,' "knaves," "charlatans," -etc., toward political opponents, and there was no place ft'tund for such pretentious awash- bucklery as nearly fills its editorial pages. Well, after refusing to swallow the columns of wretched stuff that has been offered to Mail readers of late on the boundary question, it is a pleasure to turn to the early numbers and read such an opinion as this: Wail, April 41h, 1872'.1 "For this as well as for ether reasons, any unnecessary. delay in coming to a settlement of the boundary question is to be carefully avoided • * * We have only to say tkat the people will tolerate no delay in coming to a conclusion, and therefore, feel sure that any thing t., re- laid the developement of the mining re- gion, will be equally avoided by both Governments." The value of medicines compounded by a thoroughly educated physician and scientific chemist must be apparent to all, As such we take pleasure in :um - mending Dr. .1. C. Ayer's Catharic l'ills- Pubhc confidence in them has steadily increased, until now their use can 11e said to be universal. Great and perma nen[ popularity does not come without great merit. Our experience convinces us that Ayer's Pills are superior to any ethers in alithesaes for.which a cathartic medicine is employed. They are Idea - sant to take, and are perfectly safe, sure and effectnal. Ayers Pills satiety all the requirements 111 a reliable tinnily physic and their timely ass undoubted ly peolempluves end peomotea the health andeseal.rrtt d tbomesada. Heathers Ohio Democrat _. .rue....« THE HURON SIGN ., FRIDAY, MAY b, 1882. la the Peter HAMMM Inhabited. Tu deny that thin is an extraordinary age is to lay one's self open to the charge of criticism. Railroads, steamships, el- ectric telegraph, telephones, and a hun- dred other useful fwd useless things have been discovered and invented since the beginning of the parent century. And it would be still more than cyuic- iamu to deny that none of the diacoveries are of benefit to the bungs race. Soto. soientiste go se far as to say that what has been done up to this in the way of scientific experinaest and invention is but child's play to what is to come, even before the century closes. An editorial in a late issue of the PaU Malt Uatette- a sensible, practical paper by the way - reminds une strongly of Bulwer Lytton's romance of the "Culling Race." The race was called the Vril-ya and inhabit- ed the centre of the earth. In se far as science went our wisest philosophers or moot euebrated expecte and means ate but as children to them, for they were perfect .masters of the mysteries of *lee- tricity and as such were possessed of tre- mendous power. For travelling pur- poses the Vril-ya used artificial wings, with which they cleft theair with incred- ible speed. The Pall Mall (Ju:.ette does n••t pretend that in the near future im- proved knowledge of the secrets of elect- ricity will bestow such mighty powers un our race, but it prodicta that it will so altar the onoditiuss of life that then will be an almost equal dietribetien et wealth and a ooneequent break down of social and class distiactiou. This, in fact,woold mean the millesium er suu,e- thing akin to it, f -•r if this take place we s all have universal education, and we shall not have crisidsl chamse& or kings and emperors. The Pull Melt Gamete is not aloe in looking to the fetes. fur [nighty cheese& Several deep chinking, both ..0 the Eur - 'pew and this consiseat, are of the opiniva that if the Neth Pole searches am continued -which is more than like- ly --startling results will be obtained- In t be year 1890 Cerium Clevehaad Sysa- mes, an American, published a pamphlet containing the theory that the earth is hollow and habitable m ita interior, and 1rut it has large t'pesings at the Pelee. It Reay esaly be imagined how lush a theory was mooted fifty-six years ago. The pamphlet did not sell well, a it:end edition was not called for, but all the mase it excited attention and canoed en- quiry among scientific men. The phsm- phlet is now eagerly sought after, for men have arisen who do not hesitate to say that there is a good deal .f plausib- ility in the theory. Spumes said that the openings at the Poles, North and South, are two thousand miles in di- ameter, and that vessels may glide into them imperceptibly except for change observable in the Celestial bodies. and the fact that the magnet points away from the Pole. Indeed, it is net diffi- cult to believe that a vessel may turn a corner, without knowing it, justas a fly would enter the mouth of a large vessel, thinking all the while -if a fly dues think -it was going straight on. Why also should ,there not be islands and small continents in this region which, fertile and inhabited, receive light and heat from our system by the medium of reflection and refraction? When and comes to think of it. it does seem absurd to suppose that it is only the outer crust of this immense globe should be utilized. The early mariners, when they dared to look beyond the Pillars of Hercules, thought they were gazing on limitless apt ee. The London Time.. of a year ag, pub- lished at article with the description' of a voyage to a region supposed to be that which geographers are in search uf, in which the people are described. A Cap- tain Wiggins sailed from Dunoee, and, on entering the Polar Sea, found tho country inhabited by a tall and intelligent race possessed of full and plenty, but especially rich in ores and peltries. Wiggins imagined he was all the time in part of Siberia, but when he described the place after going to Russia all confessed their ignorance of such a people. Mr. Seebolin, who accompani- e,l Wiggins, road a paper on the subject before the Geographical Society, which attracted much attention. Nordjensforl of the late P..iar expedition, and a Captain Tattle also, claini to have been in tbo new country, which they describe fn glowing language. Why., should not these countries ix• merely an inward sloping continuation of Greenland and Siberia? It is a fact which no one at- tempts to deny that certain specie of birds and beasts, Witch flourish in cer- tain teatpsratures, go worth on the ap- 'lnoweln of winter,, and re -appear again when the spring draws nigh, with their y. atg brtxwls They leave evidently gone to a warmer climate, and this climate is in the north. An- other sign of a habitable Polar region is the Asrots Borealis, which some smart is connected with electricity, but which it is begianing to be aespeeted, has some .Winship with the interior of the earth, or at least, the Polar region spok- en oL It is wall known that the Ammo) Ilorwlia appears in iia greateet splendor n the depth .4 winter, when the sun 10 totally absent from the north. Why annot the Aurora be an emanation from his interior world! It is the simplest wars al.e.«e IMeags•a wee .awaie,M.s Nothing ie more variable than the dif- ferent iiptnluns .ref method men; but when they fail to Wee, or to perform a cure in a chromic disease, the patients odes decide for tbeesselvr, mad take Bur i dock Bleed !listen. and speedily recov- er. it is the grand key to health that unlocks all the secretions, and liberates the slave from the otaptivity of disease. explanation certainly. We nisy legitim- ately hope that the .xplorstiens now be- ing made by se many Governments will reveal a country in the Pular region ir.- habited and cultivated. There iso tw- thiag impossible about it-[Witnes& ewe SSbIUIy and R Mead=ehe. Chronic, sick o• nervous headache is generally dependent on, or accompanied by, impaired digestion, by which the circulattou and nutrition of the braiu are deranged, and the nervous Dent vitiated. The PeauviaN SYat'r, by iavigorasting the digestive powers, la s the axe at the rout of the tree; the brain is duly nourished, the nervous symp- toms cease, and the headache disappekrs. Sold by all druggists. The Ilectora seeesi. Probablyno new developenteut will more serpise the public, than to learn the secret of success 1,1 certain leading physicians, when they have a difficult case of throat or.lupg disease ,that bet- ties their acieutitic skill, they prescribe Dr. King's New Discovery foroC nsump- tion, Coughs and Colds, having it dis- guised in • prescription bottle, with their own directions and name attached. The patient is cured, and they get the crtidit,-Tribune. Trial bottles free at Rhynai drug store. Large size $1. (2) i compel '-ar oily o) r,•w• .red Mfrs or lan e sak nt:oeGEST and CHEAPEST 'ubrlea- tor, to ht.; wo:;d-the BEST because It dose won mena. Lou.. runs a highly polished *air- time o•er the sale. reducing Motion and IIghearaithis draft s th-CHEAPESTtr> mer" K poets NO MORE than Inferior manes. •oki oat. bot w.a do the work toe M sup other [wake. AMwws All wen 1"r Harvesters lila Gearing. 'threshing Na-, l:Lesa CardRaaters Hs Carriages. ggios. !eette.. se far wagon& CURRANiUEO to "envelopNO Petroleum. Do:k1 Dy r.:: dealers. Our Akre (yetspeis d Maps Faral Ivo es. malted tree. MICA MANUFACTURING CO. ase Nudeon Se., New 'fort. Clevolsnd. O. and Chiang*. In. SANUE I. ROC ER$ d CO. jpeonto.Oet. sole A Teets for the Dorsch(. t. ALLAN LINE of .1 ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS LIVERPOOL. LONDONDERRY, GLAS- GOW. WINTER SERVICE SAILING FROM HALIFAX EVERY SAT- URDAY. SHORTEST SEA ROUTE. ' Cabin, Intermediate and Steerage Tickets at LOWEST RATge- Steerage. Passengers are booked to London. Cardiff. Bristol. Queenstown. Derry. Belfast. Galway and Ola' ow, at same rates as to Liverpool $50 CABIN, HALIFAX. PORTi.AND or BOSTON. to LI V ERI'OOL. $100 RETURN. linaide }Rooms. Under Saloon.' WINTER S.&ILINC�Bc Polynesian. Boston t7 a. m-) Mar. 30th. Halifax April let. Peruvian. Portland, April 6th, Halifax. Apri 8th. Nova Scotian, Boston 5 p. mei April I3th, Hal- ifax. April 15th. Circassian, Portland, April loth. Halifax. April 52nd. ,. Parisian, Boston I5 p. m.i April 27th. Halifax. April 21th. Sarmatian. Portland. May tlh, Halifax May 6th. For tickets and every information apply t H. ARMSTRONG. Agent. Montreal Telcgrapb 1131-3m. Once Godedcb G.H.OLD Legs tea announce to the public that he las just received arilen Seeds Of all kinds. Tiir�il� Maiigold Seeds l Of all kinds and at bottom pry, es. Also a very largo stook of first class Groceries. T E A A speciality. s 13 YARIETITS GN 11 IP. AT 25, 40, 50, 00, and 7bc. Per Lb., AND 5 lbs. For $1.00_ Tx rTh em_ I have jets received y�s t Mock M $1.00 -Crockery. t:awwara. (1� maws., ver e d la Oeoberlek, at btln pr Ptaaen rail see RM my Went pLrchu- ing, and sere your money. CANNED GOODS, of ell kind* OZ= t WEEK. 11 s As at here mailTHZ t+tiUA$6 S72 fait & CeN Dotal free Arer wase ce engird: 1ed raUe ws CoiTaac.D tu,inasrt Mack's Mag - pectic Medicine because we are assured that the firm► was oompused of reliable and honorable gentleman, and ala, be- cause the m•idiolaewas recommended as beton all and than the advertise - meat claimed. We are informed by druggists that it is the best selling arti- cle they have, and that it gives waled - tion to their custeMera. rue sat raise - mint in another column. assert ism .r lural.. Toe much cannot be expressed in favor of that unsurpaasuid remedy fur coughs, oolds, asthma, Group, sure throat, and all lung complaints. If you suffer from neglected colds, try Hagyard's Pectoral Balsam. The oed is trilling, only 25c. .t Weed e. caattea. As is usually the tele where an article of true merit has attained a world-wide reputation by its wonderful results, as the celebrated Electric Bitten have done, certain unprincipled parties lave endeavored to imitate them, and expect to induce an unsuspecting public to pur- chase their fradulent ware. Ask your druggist fur the genuine Electrie Bitten, that are guaranteed to cure, and t.•ike no others. Sold by Geo. Rhyne, druggist, at 50c. [2] ANCHOR LINE. UNITED STATICS MAIL A ILAMHRU Bail Weekly le aad troa Had YORK ANt,OLAaeew, VIA LONDONOgRRT labin Passage. /6t is no. Itetaraw sus w SIM. Sstwn t ('akin, $110. Relent Tickets. ttlrtoam Steamers sail every Saturday to and Naw Yusk *50 DQN DIa5L.t. Cabin Passage. $SS andIteteras, $101ud Steerage passengers booked at low rotes, Passenger accommodations uaeswllW ♦Lt.tATIMOO a oN MI MX Datta. Pasesagere booked at lowest rates to or fr:Otal tiernwuy. Italy, Norway, 'tredve De Rc. Fur Book til. "Tours la Scotland.- New Av.. apply to HENDERSO I$ k - Or te Mtty. E. WARNOCK. Bananas St 1110111. Oodstak. AFTER 4 SEASON' S TRIAL Condensed Fire Kindlers are the bed In use, .:oil' away with coat oil ere shavings. hate( ln.d:er will burn soveu minutes. long en..u,;h to ignite hard wood. They are made from best white resin sad will not oil Lido e' hands. Sold at TWENTY CENTS YEG HUNDRED. No dlfferrnue In prkc or quality. James Zear18. Maker and sealer, Goderich. St. Catharines Narserie s, .,rTMSLISHSD IN 1886, Having fully tested MOORE'S EARLY & BRIGHTON two new grape. I unhesitatingly advise my patrons to plant them. You will not be dis- appointed. MOORk'S EARLY 1s the beet very early black grape yet grown in Canada. It Maa stood thirty degrees below zero unhurt. 1I1t10itTON is a delicious red grape; ripenlag just after Moore's Early. They aro both targe in bench and berry. and very productive. 1 will mall both to any addreee, postpaid. on receipt of $2, or either for V. Agents wanted. D. .W. BEADLE, ry ST. CATHZZINsa, OtvT- 16git. Fiala RHEUMATISM, Bearalsia, Sciatica, Lu *hp, . Baehache, Soret. al 11,. Cot, Coat, Qaiasy, Son Threat, 8,011• igs and Sprain., Burns and Soul., femora/ Bodily Prise, Tooth, Ear and Noddsch., Frosted Foot aid Ears, and all odor Pain. and Achos. N. Prepared= ea earth mesh 8r- J.rou OIL .s a sets. ser.. oleo Leal .*cap Leese Moody. A NW estdb bet the coapareu..ly outlay of 11 Omts...r Nen sus mem tag w tb psis c.. Mao dam sad podun reef of Its dam. Duna(... I. nee.. Teamegas BOLD BT ALL DIS � DELLEMI In A. VOGELEB & CO.. nsfskaerr, Md., V.S. A. SEEQMILLEP. Chilled Plow -AND- AGRICIJLTURAL WORKS. }laving purchased the Goderiel, Foundry, ani fitting the premises for the manufaetur of CHILLED PLOWS and Atilt IC l;L1-i•IIA IMPLEMENTS on a large scale- Mill Work General isepairing and Jobbing will be ton Untied. All work guaranteed- • Mr. 1). Runcimanls the only man authorize to collect payments and give receipts on be half of the late firin of Fluncimsn .f 1'o-• an all persons indebted are requested to gayer themset ver accordingly. S. SEEOSIILLER. Proprietor. UNCLE TOM. The Great Cleansing Fluid, MRS. WARNOCK Illustrated Floral Guide I ler 15111 1s as Hlegaat Beed et MD ragas. awe Petered relates er newers, .M were Musa lee tlleiseraMleas .f the obelest Flew - en, Plants and Vegetable. ant Dlrectloss ter growing. • It is handsome eseugh far the C.a- tre Table or a Holiday Present. Send ea your name and Post Moe address. with 10 meta. and I will send you • copy. postage pidted in is not a quarter of iu oast. It is both English and Oermae. If you afterwards order seeds deduct the 10 ads. VIr5 a MILIUM aro the brat In the maid. Tie FLORAL GOADS will tell you how to Ret and grow them. Tick's /lower sad regsIable Sardis. MTS Page*. 6 Colored Plates, S0 -Engraving. For SO amts In paper Doren ; *Labia elegant cloth. In German or English. rick'. IIIaMr=ted Ipathly Mapsta.-Z, Pages, a Colored Plate in every numbe [sad man fine Engravings. year: Five Copies foog6.05. Specimen Numbers scot for 10 Bents ; 3 trial mph. for 26 meats. Address JANE* rlt'Kr.teekrster. R. TO BUILDERS._ KINTAIL BRICK YARD. A quantity of goad white brick on band an for sale at reasonable rues. The bubacriber is now carrying on the brick making business at the Kintail kiln. and will give all orders which may be sent him th most prompt attention. The brick is of Ire class quality. and the teres are roommate Address JOHN K. MtCREGOR, Kintall LUMBER. 1 HEMLOCK, ELN, BASSWOOD, &C. IN 1tt )ARDS, PLANK, SCANTLING and .JOISTS. BILLS CUT TO ORDER. HA. great `,icaeure in announeine in her many friends and patrons le (iedrrich and vicinity. that she hes negro} the sole right and privilege to mannfec'nr and ..11 , DR. LUCYAN'S CLEANSING & RYJIATIN1 FLUID, rot, removing cream and nal from as) thing and everything. free, the nae.t fabric te tae "6"611t garment work. No matter if rho gone(, lave been sann'M with oiL grease or dirt of any kind- It can, fora ti01111t rest, betnade to look Mme MW. D. cleans all anklet without i ung thn color, that would he deetroed by the use of water. No need to send to Toronto nr and where else to haveour feathers cleaned and carted when It east be done for les* thee ball the root In your own town- Iasi) at MR. . WAKNOCK:4 Millinery F'wtahttphment ne Hamlltos Rt. *adore ter Imamate ItIN-11. CUSTOM WORK DONE. ARCHIBALD HODGE, taw mill. Dunlop P. O. HODGE .t HAYNES saw mill- ilheppardton P. O. *827-3m. • MANUFACTURED iN TORONTO. permanent, sure cuter for Dleresee, jf►s- nrden and Ailments of the Kidneys. r end Itrteary r4Yrettee Kyetesn, or A t (braplaittta rousing Pala in Small of Hook tilde. qtr. !Urinary 1)isoider. Gravel, Onterrt, of the Bladder and princes..; itrlgbts' illseese. IJlabete. Dropsy. PIM.. Nervous Dehtlay. etc.. etc. Pamphlet,' testimonials can testimoniacan hIMe e obed frown !inmost,' free. rinse w'Ftee�gCuIIIM ii' $1.50 )corns Bed -,ruts MIA Chtronlr iKseascw, ELM. Meld byclal I'M liar .500111 h. '.1 T. Bray. Wingbaam. Johe P. Teent. mente N. 10. I.n.gn.w:eel. Witt 11. Miwtyn, it( D. errs. Wall: Co ciliates; J. S. Rob- Hrnl Mitchell; b: (nevem. hayfield: P. A. Rob - Hodge. . ('Petrel Dreg Ware. Exeter; H. R. Jackson. Heiall; Mrs. John M'tntosh flrucencld. taw'sesn t4IIamOlar; Ninth 4161