HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1882-06-09, Page 2H
THE HURON SIGNAL,
Y. JUNE 9, 1882.
POLITICAL POINTS.
Pithy Extract* from *or Ea -
the apAt of tills`arRem of Saepl.
The teatimes t+eag is.itlfft
mike.ow,s thitlgriw
LEAVING THE SNIP.
Ma. w lsdtam Neal.ws.11 I/.ttwfi to the
W
la ma
at Ottawa,
1 win$
O.terte 1
♦.Lap th{e p�trfee a the
titasd tort► scot h.+aaec bright,
"T1s for thy liberties welsh
OtttarU, patent) !
The desperate, rootless Tory crew,
Ontario, Ontario !
At bidding of the Quebec Bleu,
Ontario, °snarl° !
Would rob tbee of thy rick domain ;
Belau their plots shall be in vain,
They'll sever get thy votes strain,
°ut rio, Onurte !
To tie thy bands behind thy back.
Ontario. Ontario !
They've passed the Gerrymander Act,
patriot Ontario, Ontario !
ha
Shall buret tbnt tyrant. coward
And they shall feel thy anger strong.
Ontario, Ontario!
Thee up and follow sdward Dinky,
Ontario. Ontario !
1111e same makes miscreant Tories quake.
Ostarto, Ontario !
Wen stags b Blake, and help btm fight
r Justine, Lik
Liberty, sad F1iltiggkbt ;
lot's ring the Tory nell Loa ht.
h
6 Carlo, o ou tano !
Mr. areal*" s O- rpiment.
What chance Mr. Bunting will have
in West Durham renown to be seen.
He cannot aspect to carry the constit-
uency against Mr. Blake, unless the
elseters are most extraordinary people.
Perhaps he is acting on the l:rinciple
laid down by the than who said that if
he really had to be kicked down stairs
he preferred to be kicked by a gentle-
man to being kicked by • tramp.—(Tele-
gr in, (Ind.)
Wb. iti.ow- s nest r
Mr. John Joseph Hawkins does not
believe the Mail when it says that the
producer pays the duty on coal, 110
thinks the uty is a good thing, as the
railway companies have to pay this
to the revenues of the country.
Rail-
way people will recollect the statement
of Mr. Hickson, the General Manager of
the Grind Trunk, that the duty on coal
so increases the cost of working the road
that the wages have to be kept down.
High wages would be better for railway
men than increased surplus in the Dom-
inion treasury.
The tinning Ilan.
Blake's services in the present crisis
are simply invaluable. The young men
of both parties and of no party, rally
round him with confidence and enthu-
siasm, and everybody recognise, in him
the next Premier of Canada. There is
every pr'obility that he will occupy that
position in a few months, but whether
then or later, should his health retrain
nnimparted, his advent to the Premier-
ship is as certain as any future event
can be.—[Stratford Beacon.
Pretty Vest.
We admire the coolness of the journal
which can tell the reader that the pay-
ment of $209,255 too much on the On-
derdonk railway contract effects a saving
of $1,000,000 to the country. It is like
telling a man that when he spends $1,30
for $1 worth of cotton and $1.55 for $1
worth of sugar, he hut more money left
than he would have had if the same com-
rnodities had it cost him only $2. Tory-
ism is peculiar, but the general election
will straighten out 'tome of itscrookedness.
—[Hamilton Times.
as a�-•'Iwo• .f the
es! policy hi isms -- - t
the formation of the Govertlptent scald
the phey .f the Government have tend -
.d te detach from their support thugs
politicians of the liberal school who
joined in 1878, and I did not feel that
I could g. beck to that constituency and
carry it, because I could not ask the sup-
port of the moderate Reformers of the
country to the policy which the Govern-
ment leas now anaounoed on other mat-
ter. --I mean in regard to the Boundary
Award and the railway and land ques-
tions. I do not believe that the
Government has dealt with the boun-
dary questioner itch uldhave beendealt
with. They should have settled it in
the first .rsim of this Parliament and
it could have been settled thee. I am
also opposed to certain features of the
policy of the Government relating to
railroad construction in the Nertb-West.
I ..o to their land policy be-
cause do not believe in locking up
large tracts of land in the hands .f com-
panies fee the purpose .f mer. specula-
tion. Public lands should be held for
the benefit of the settler, whit should be
able to secure lands at the lowest price
and net made to pay the enhanced price
which •peenlaton may put upon it. I
fowght the Canada Company upon this
ground, and when Crown Land Commis-
sioner, endeavored to reduce the price of
lands to the actual settler. I am oppos-
ed to the creation of large estates, b.-
lieving that such a policy would be in-
jurious to the country and retard settle-
ment My views on these questions
prevented my .gain offering myself as a
candidata in the Conservative interest in
the county .f Halton."
A.
The .agrleelt.ral Vote.
The Reform leaders are resting their
hopes and basing their calculations on
the agricultural vote. The majority of '
farmer, vote the Liberal ticket, and if
they stand by the party this time they I
will considerably reduce the Conserva-
tire majority. Last time there was a
serious defection of farmers from the
Liberal camp. This time it is said that
the f.trmerswill stand firm. Whatever the
N. Y, may have done for the industrial
centres, farmers are very slow to admit
that it has done anything for them, and
we may be sure that the farmer is the
last man in the world to throw up his
hat for a measure that gives aid and !
encouragement to other classes of the;
community and not to him. It is quite
likely that the Reform party will make 1
great headway in those constiuencies in
which there is a large preponderance of I
agricultural votes.—[Telegram (Ind.)
Canoe .f Mad Thews.
The Tory press and leaders never tire
of snaking the false and absurd charge
that the depression existing bete een 1874
and 1878 was due to the policy of the
Mackenzie Government. Had the de-
preseton been confined to Canada there
Would hare been some color for the {
charge. But it originated in the United i
States and spread over the whole com-
mercial world. No change in the policy
of Canada that mould injuriously affect
our interests was made. The Govern-
ment wss economical, the expenditure
for 1878, its last year, being only $186,-
842 greater than the expenditure for
1874, its first year :
It=rJNDIT1'al, tfAc&ZNZIF, 'K)V$KANnlT.
Year ending June 3e., net atlslllf,�
IffTh U. .• .. .. 1576
•
The raloi,l
mos Mr. Mac
shown by the f
DlrgltDlTL'aC,
Year ending
Jane (57; TA lfilal
lit7N tSa
increase "f expenditure
kenzie ceased to exercise
his honest an
d prudent leadership is
ollcwing table of
MAt ix1NALD u..rLltltYl PT
= e 10. WM 1 pbIMM
1001
This shows an increase over the
year of the Mackenzie Admintatrstson as
iollbws
Ter year .earl Jcar se.,l 1 iia
tras1lrtl e,
• aro a.
tal estimates to
Included, but further esti-
r)1010M amount for 1883 will be
next neer i€
-Ames taupe by the Mac �
t�
bassi@ esai_' its the tariff under
grj{gk fit d•paosgerel was an in
wit l , Wy�1ot�her minor
,, e. aaOtlOritl ..ec
tint
illr 4i
This election is less a fight between
parties than a straggle of the people to
fres themselves from strangulation by
monopoly. Bence the great accessions
to the Liberal ranks, and the deep,
strong current of public opinion now
sweeping through the land in favor of
the Liberal..—f Ottawa Free Press.
Whit iss.test Law.
11 plus 6aed fur the Ise.ir
time e f rtes shall et the Ooart
teal ow anent
gaunt bay of the else1MU d
1 diarlist
tial s, rid kr dr asaa-
satiss a! amanitas UM he U minha
Lour ut'twehe at aeon until sirs lawn of
two io the afternoon of the Ay tilled far
that purpose.
18. Aly twenty-five electors easy
nominate a candidate, or as many can-
didates as may be required to be elected
for tM electoral district fur which the
election is held, by producing to the r.-
turnitlg officer .t the time and plane in-
dicated in the penclamation a writing in
the form of schedule F. under their
hands, giving the names, residence, and
addition or description of sack person
proposal, in aitch • manner ee wt>ltitisat-
ly to identify such candidate; sank can-
didate shall be nominated by a separate
nomination paper, but the same electors,
or any of them, may subscribe as many
nomination papers as there are members
to be elected.
Such nomination papers may also be
filed with the returning officer at any
other place and at any time between the
date of the proclamation and the day of
nomination with the same effect as if
produced at the time and place fixed for
the nomination; and at the clue of the
time for nominating the candidates the
Returning Officer shall deliver to every
candidate applying for tke same a dilly
certified list of the names of the several
candidates who shall have been nomin-
ated. And any vote given at the elec-
tion for any other candidate than those
so 'nominated shall be null and void
16. No nomination paper shall be
valid and acted upon by the returning
officer unless it be accompanied by the
consent in writing of the person therein
nominated, except in case such person
be absent trom the Province in which
the election is to be held, when such
absence shall be stated in the nomin-
ation paper:
Nor unless a sum of $200 be deposi-
ted in the hands of the returning officer
at the time the nomination paper shall
be filed with him; and the receipt of the
returning officer shall, in every case,
be sufficient evidence of the production
of the nomination paper, of the consent
of the candidate, and of the payment
herein mentioned.
The sum so deposited by any candi-
date shall be returned in the event of
his being elected, or of his obtaining a
number of votes at least equal to half
the number of votes polled in favor of
the candidate elected, otherwise it shall
belong to Her Majesty for the public
uses of Canada; and the sums so paid
and not returned as herein provided
shall be applied by the returning officer
towards the payment of the election ex-
penses, and on account thereof shall be
rendered by him to the Auditor -Gener-
al of Canada.
Schedule F. referred to in the above,
reads as follows:-
1'ominate,n Paper.
We, the undersigned electors of the
electoral district of ---hereby nomin-
ate (names, residence and additions or
descriptions of person or persona nomin-
ated) as • candidate at the election now
about to be held, of a member to repre-
sent the said electoral district in the
House of Commons of Canada
Witness our hands at ---in the said
electoral district th's day of 18 .
,4iynuatere anal re-
sidenmol
dresses.ees
our $spendstere.
The enormous rate at which this gov-
ernment have increased the public ex-
penditure is shown by the annexed
table, commencing at Confederation and
coming down to the last estimates for
1883:
1867-8
1868-9
1869-70
1870-71
1871-72.... ..
1872-3
1873-4
1874-5
1875-6
1876-7
1877-8
1878-9
1879-8(1j
1880-81
1881-82 ...
1882-83 (Estimates) • ,
$13,486,082
14,038,084
14,345,509
15,623,081
17,589.468
19,171,647
23,316.316
23,718,671
24,488,372
23,519,301
23,503,158
24,455,381
24,850,634
25,502,554
27,672,223
27,909,485
curiosities .t the Cessna
According to the census of this Pro-
vince for 1881, the largest number of
the African race are to be found in Kent
and Essex, more t an e en re
number in the Province. The Chinese
are nearly all found in Toronto and Bar-
rie. The Dutch are found in nearly
every county, but the largest number in
Stormont and Monck; the township of
Osnabruck, Stormont, is their head-
quarters, where they number over 2,000.
The Icelanders are nearly all in Mus-
koka. The Indians are principally in
Algoma, Brant, Middlesex, Bothwell.
The Italians are scattered all over; the
only.places where they have congrega-
ted to any extent are Toronto and Lon-
don. The Jews are confined almost en-
tirely to the cities The Russians and
Poles are mainly in Giongarry, Cornwall
and Renfrew, with some in Toronto.
Muskoka has the greater proportion of
of the Scandinavians and of the Swiss,
though the town of Berlin has a good
sized colony of the latter. The Welsh
are pretty well scattered, but aro chiefly
f sand in Western Ontario, especially in
Middlesex and Elgin. The Germans
are to be found in every county, but the
greater proportion in Waterloo and
Perth. The greater number a French
are in Essex County, and in Ottawa city.
The British are found all over.
Jest as tri. Wrens TIme.
Mr. Robert Winton, of the City bur-
reyor's office, and Street Commissioner
of the Eastern Division for the Board
of Public Works, Toronto, Ont., who is
very fond of shooting, says :--"Tv lose
a duck hunt is a loss for which there is
no adequate recompense. This misfor-
tune lately overtook me The boys got
together recently and mule arrange
menta for a good hunt. At the time the
arrangement were entered int.. I was
in good health generally; hut, just as
the shooting was to take place, my old
enemy, the rheumatism, came heck to
stay with me awhile again, and I had
to forego the pleasure. The thenmat-
ism bas been a source of great bother to
me. and I had a great deal of doctor -
jag for it, without much s,00d. Whoa
Otis last attack oame on me and crippled
d, hands so that they were drawn up, a
friend of mine reo ommendeel St. ,Taeohe
Oil, the Greet German Remedy. i
tried it, i am happy to say, and the re-
sult is that i am now cured and as well
as ever. St. Jacobs Oil succeeded
where more than a acre , f ether
inents and medicines had failed."
Wm Sweet, of Exeter, tried to pours
himself the other dey by taking a dose of
Paris green. He succeeded in his de-
sign in twenty-fourhonrs after talons the
d eseght
woman wield her hatband clean Lis
own bouts 1 Come now ! and make the
Ate to the morning 1 Oh, what lasy
Wass I"
I tisemmati the ahoy* portion d
Weis kale M the aMsatiaa of the aeliar-
ississami. et young menial otitis
tri► will -read this papa loins IYttt
he stars, b no Mak whoa--4LY i fi> WIT
pa ant siylli t of ptlist , their bairn
ed.
• rawness meati regimens.
A young man from the agricultural
districts was lately u1 a tailor's shop get-
ting measured for a vest
' ,Married, or unmarried r' queried the
tailor.
"Unmarried," said the young man
with • blush.
"Inside pocket on the left hand side
then," observed tits tailor, making a
memorandum to that effect
-Inuit difference does my being mar-
ried er unmarried make as to the inside
pocket of the vest 1"
oAb, my dear sir," observed the tail •
or, with a bland smile, "all the differ-
enoe possible. Being unmarried, you
want the pocket om the lett hand aide,
so se to bring the young lady's picture
next your heart."
"But doesn't the married man also
want his wife's picture next to his heart?"
queried the amxi... youth.
"Possibly riser* is an instance of that
kind," said the tailor, "but I never
heard of it."
Signed by the said
electors in presence
of of
(additions)
Nadel Women.
An American traveller, writing from
Glasgow, Scotland, says: -I saw that the
girls, and women, too, for that matter,
all had red cheeks, and that they walk-
ed just as though they knew nothing of
tight lacing and tight ,hoes. I noticed
also that all the women who were not
the wires and daughters of the very
wealthy, seemed to take it as a matter
of course that they, as well as the men,
were bound to work for their daily bread.
The majority of the small shops (stores)
were conducted exclusively by women.
Young women acted as clerks in the
hotels and in the large stores of all
kinds, grnosriss, boot end shoe stores
and, in fact, everywhere. They stand
behind all the cigar stands and many not
the drinking bars. One place where i
stopped to buy some grapes (imported
from America. a large confectionery
store, 1 lingered and chatted with the
proprietress, a comely, matrunly, look
ig person ..f abort 40 years. "Yen,"
said she, "1 am worried. My husband
is in the oral and Iron hee,neass yes, it
is his own bovines* tt a Scotch women
you si , helleve in helping our husbands,
I'Y tell yen what 1 doI est up every
mosailig before my h.sband, snake the
lag, dean and blacken hie boots, brush
hie clothes, cook his breakfast and then
call him to eat it. After he has eaten
and Rowe hitt to his lessinees, 1 est my
breakfast, and then come down here to
open up. .Yen, niost Soutch worsen who
etre wives and wbo have more money
thee we, de about the same Why.
von don't my that in your enontry s
The Wo. e. Mame People
A
At the Olden' Est*Wished Shue Store in Tenn,
in End1essVaritY,
to Pit the most hatidwas ami too obit OWIWINItic Ysys
The only way by which people can be
thoroughly known is by living with them
in the same house or travelling with
them in the same carriage. The .nsooth
surface which we can maintain with so
much sumo for a shat time gets brok-
en up then by a thousand petty details
of daily life, and teopers are tried and
characters revealed te an extent which
years of an ordinary drawing -room in-
teroourne would not have allowed. Then
the real man or woman comm out, and
the human nature which has been sup-
pressed reasserts itself, sometimes with
startling sincerity, and almost always in
unexpected places; for no one is what
his casual acquaintances and superficial
friends believe him to be, and the depths
reveal secrets never so much as outlined
in the shadow.
T. the Medical Pr.fesai.n, and all whom
it may cases.
MY SPRING STOCK
Phosphatine, or Nerve Food, a Phos-
phate Element based upon Scientific
Facts, Formulated by Professor Austin,
M. D. of Boston, Mass., cures Pulmon-
ary Consumption, Sick Headache, Ner-
vous Attacks, Vertigo and Neuralgia
and all wasting diseases of the human
system. Phosphatine is not a Medecine,
but a Nutriment, because it contains no
Vegetable or Mineral Poisons, Opiates,
Narcotics, and no Stimulants, but tamp:
1y the Phosphatic and Gartric Elements
found in eur daily food. A single bottle
is sufficient to convince. All Druggists
sell it. $1 00 per bottle. J.uwuwr &
Co., sole agents for the Dominion,
65 Front Street East, Toronto.
Medicines taken into the Stomach in
concentrated fora such as Pills and
Powders, :re most injurious. The great
substitute for these muumuus little Calo-
mel pills is Dr. Carson's Stomach and
Constipation Bitters. They cleanse the
bowels, stimulate the Liver and Kid-
neys, and cure all stomach .disorders,
such as Dyspepsia and Indigestion. In
large bottles at 50 cents. Geo. Rhyne',
agent.
Is now complete, and I take piteous in informing my castanet', that et no pre-
vious time have 1 had sucb a
ti In the spring of the year almost every
ono requires a good Blaoa Purifier, more
especially in the month of May. We
would earnestly advise our -readers to
try Dr. Carson's Stomach and Conatipa-
tion Bitters. A few doses will soon
oonvince you that it is the best remedy
known for affections of the Stomach,
Bowels, Liver and Kidneys. In large
bottles at 50 cents. G. Rhynas, agent.
F1ESII ARRIYAIJS.
CANN-BD
CORN BEEF,
LUNCH TONGUE,
ENGLISH BRAWN
POTTED
TONGUE, • •
BEEF,
HAM
CHICKEN
FRESH
SALMON AND LOBSE R.
A FINE ASSORTMENT
OP'
Christie Brown & Co'f
DISCI' ITR awn
CAKES,
TEAS,
SUGARS •t
Pure pines.
TRY THEM
Chas. A. Nairn.
Large & Varied Stock
As at present I have raised the Standard of Quality and "'Jeered the Price esti
it i• • positive fact that no such value in foot weer can be gut elsewhere.
CUSTOM W ORS
of every grade still receives my prompt and careful attention, and will be made up
in the most approred styles by first-class workmen, end
of the very best material obtainable.
Ladies axd Mus Book Heel 1)1a1d Fro, of charge,
At time of purchase if au desired.
E_ DOwN=NG
Crabb's Block, Cor. East Street and the Square.
HE VARIETY STORE.
1 kava lust received a large stook et
WALL PAPER, CirREEN
WINDOW BLIND
PAPER, CAR
PET PELT, ETC -,.2.'11C_
1 have ansa oa hand • lame stock of W Wads .f
RACKETS, SMALL TABELS, CHARIOT HORSES,
EXPRESS WAGONS, and CROQUET SETTS.
All kinds of repairs done to Lounges. Sofas. and Chain. Chairs
encased and pertoreted seats put in Carpet and ollcloth Lid, and
pfaure beatingei ninon
C
G. C. ROER TB�O T,Es.
tom
H ARDWARE!
far'
AO-
pa -
GO TO
C y,� - hops -fit
*Jr
/ - J am., I
TO BUY YOUR—
Farmers' Hardware
1"t it i;
Builders' Hardware
YOUR
KftIVES, FORKS ANS SPOONS
In fact, eve:- .1 g you want in his line. +
HE IS BOUND TO SELL =max
This Spring ant Sumner. See his FENCE WIRE, the best yet.
M. W_ McKENZ=
G 1EArr BARGAINS!
BOOTS AND SHOES!
CHEAT CLEABING SALE FOR 30 DAYS
Previotts to stock taking at
AT CAM PBELL'S BOOTAND SHOK EMPORIUM
Paries wanting cheap grods aboeld call at on, a IIav,ng secured int chat war
1 am prepared to manufacture to order.
Nothing but First Class Material Used,
eA C -o d. F'it Guarantee
WM CAMPBELL.
Oode.. A Tela 10" IBM
GET YOUR
3:3oRSE Bzzzs
t►F EVERY DISCRIPTIOIr,
Pasters, Circulars, Cards. ice.
PRINTED AT THE OlTICE,OF THI HURON $1ONAIi
North Street, underlet.