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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1882-10-27, Page 4RN SIGNAL 1MorsfeM ht Ir ce, �wtb St enrol Oe 1 1 ONTA1110. Aad parte of the I os t mins and Dur �d O U.is pored ' • '�=Mr wsiest, j paten• ns, as it does, the fore -soli rsseatlals being 1n addition to the above, • arst-elsa- fageily !tendo gtpsr it is therefore a test d edge filial medium. ll'14 au►1lAaag 50 la 1t paid btfwe sl: moatbs 111160 if not so paid. This rule' will be strictly *forced. EATaa or AnvtbKTIMINU. Kight cents pe lee for Madleaerun; Wren ce Uus for asdeaChq eriedt Cont.r acts at to ltilM-Taad7 N JOS ril!ITls"L.- - we t..,ve Also• first-class ebbing departs/ et a 00,1"01.114.4. pins sig the most osiphite eat -$t ant t►cY1gt•s lig turning out work in Godericb,are tempered ado business in that line at prima that cannot be beater. and of a quality that cannot be w rpaged.- Tarots cash c 7 --r-'_`- FRIDA Y , OCT. 2'rth, 1882. C- THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIbAY OCT. 27, 288'2. - Ey sat oonatitlwrep' lg whigh -r. I up fur the rights of the Proving, against )�ewdtthatwkegehtfyedeepeturtalts ()Oho the enoruselueenta of ilii Dominion, li *toe (i,vememet, behind which 1* Seth the shadow o Quebec, takeu a bold upon the minds of the peo- ple of this pro i tan u ; but what is re'►lly! the strung puwt with the people is (hat the Government is doing its work very well and has given no ground for being ejected from office." %ZVI* .tON MM"r P live Are\a4s * ltemeaatras:4-cask- I W elks sad Morale -Tb '• Mal" and Its Abase of Arebb shop Lista Let Fortis. i --- - lhlb its, Oct. dl. --There is great ez- Archbtshop Lynch, in his dieouur. n oiteweut here to da uvrr a letter in the ye t.tday wuruwg fru"' the pulpit at Irish rotes positively mousing the Par - tit. Mllohttel's oathia tel, said that he had nail parliamentary party with using with- akst Temark to tinge un the Marwivu out warrant £911,000 of the land 'segue gquiti is, On kis return from Rowe he 1uoda for their owtl private purpus'ts. reosived utaay letters ouucnrninil the anti circumstantially, aeging that Far- prupnwty of piecing Mi wiou un the list null and his party by collusion with the fur exsuutiatu,m iu liteet halls and cot- had ul• managers of the league, attempted to hadtwthirds e 'towing ilre that we hush up the wetter by dssolving the had tant.thtrdq(httlwliuuhilschool ,here- league without accounts for the fund& tng the edi and is d duty, he s id re- O& 1N10Na ur rem ensue mimeo the minister es was his duty, he said, to 'The Irish Times says the act is tele of the animater of l led the The sequel the reetust pieces of political villa{•ty u familiar to all amd vile abuse the g P honorable the minister of education and ever perpetrated in modern times, and himself received from the Mail news- urges the Irish people to gnosia for the paper. It was in cspatoity oif Archbishop ac.wuutmg of the land league funds. est the {priests and Cethertto Qeuple, he The lsrprrss states that uo ezplsuatiutls condemned the book Marmon u im- or answers have been made by Parnell proper as a class book in the hands of of his colleagues to these occue:ttimee al - Catholic teachers and pupils. On the thou h every effort has been made by gelation of faith and morals frisV to secure a statement from them. TH•CATHWiC* MUST BE WIZ. PARNELL IN TROIIHLE. r by the Lead s+eeM was tb ed --♦Na' la Iona N ta• liable retie. to Mowat oveln414sgi. - 1 rolled up the tremendous majority of had f domination, loss 1n 6� for the Taberaa ads ate, who also resolved atygjorsiyofmittf thoc'1d time (1batis'vstivetown of Wiesprdrpo where jrgles rgg4shisgrwd stied. The lesson is obvious, but what Tot, joerusi will have the candor end cuura �o tell the OppeOitiprt leads! .dui to 'suture Tom hoses to disnnes polities• Trus people of Ontario .. anxious tMs their Le islsture t boeld Its °patroll- ed by men like Mr. *mat and his tad- Jeagues, who will work for provincial Rights and t ztarios Internals, rather than that it should pass tufo thehtpa4s est a m*joriiy {tailors of pleasIl J}tsebec, ) abs, the Ott.twa °overaweDt, and in feot,every other interest except mast of their own Premise*. "Odtale;for the Ontario people" is the mu►tolethblaz on - d on the Liberal lies. iN I to honor thpt motto miens j olitics d t/kl this province just now. TINT PR(kTEST. As we anticipated the course of the petition against the return of Mr. Cam- eron, M. P. ter West Huron, has been stayed in court, owing to want of juris- diction. This practically settle* the question so far as West Huron is con cernea. Of course the usual loud talk about appealing to a higher court is in - Tel •Torcette Moil takes much satis- faction to {teen that the Gr. members elected for the vacant seats hme bpeu re- turned by "reduced taajor$ies." The dulged in by a few of the less sen earl. Mail u t71ily pleased, but a- little "off - agitators, but the most knowing mem- when it calls the Reform saajolity in bers of the Lib. -Con. party in this sec- Scuth Bruce, which was incased from 217 to ti05, a "redoes* ' or tion are heartily tired of the farce, and ' ,yrs quite willing to • let the curtails the Tory majority of 48 to Glengarry drop on the absurd scene. WMA& has come over the Tory organs that they don't bristle with the old stere- otype, "Mowat must go," any more. A CABLE despatch states that James Caird estimates the requirements of Great Britain for foreign wheat from the first of September at 15,500,000 quarters er nearly 2,000,000 quarters less than imported for the lune period last year. "Fern are thiels that witina ding." In 1881 some 2,978 Conservative ap- plied for licenses. Of these 2,707, or 91 per cent.. were granted. In the same year 1,266 Reformers applied, and of that number 1,102, or 87 per cent., were granted. 1y the reoent Provinsi*1 bye -elections stn be oonsidered a shadow of coming events, the Toronto Mail, may ea well change dation, to the /Wail. The edi- torial "Jeremiah" who furnishes the "weep" for that journal will have a big contract on. hand. Oh the 16th inet.t Jit Loudon; Mr, William Court was joined in wedlock to Miss Alice Joey. Froin the foregoing we would judge the Jury paid consider- able attention to the address of the Court, and rendered a satisfactory ver- dict in accordance therewii.h,' Ir the late Mrs. Partington were in the flesh,one could imagine her adjusting her spectacles, and yearningly gazing up- on Ike, for information on the "Mar- mion question, ss she asked him, "what on this earthly semiphcre, has come over Scott's "Marmalade" that. it now has so defensive an odour 1" THE Brussels school trustees are ad- vertising for wood for their pudic school, and stipulate for beech and maple, two feet long. The Brussels trustees are particular, if not to say per- nickety. 1Jtow, where we received our educational training,the authorities used birch, and were not particular to an inch or two in the length, changed to a Reform eiasseIty of 84 ; or South Essex converted from Tory 157 to Reform 74. A few more such "reduc majorities" and the Mail will not be in a position to refer to the Ontario Oppose tion at all. MR. AREELL, the President of ala Saratoga Sr Mt. McGregor railroad, been through so many accidents of SE kinds -from a mill explosion to a rail- way disaster -and suffered in nearly all of them, that at different times it time been found' necessary to graft portions of other people's flesh on to hues, to replace pieces of his own particular flesh that were sliced off by accident. He carries on his body 806 anuveniers of the good will and esteem of his fellowmen, in the shape of flesh grafts. Mr. Arkell may be "bone of one bone," but he cer- tainly is not "flesh of one flesh. THE editor of the Blyth Rarieu• boasts in his last issue that five outside editors visited his sin -turn on show- day. He doesn't say that they called at dinner- time and that his pastepot was in good condition for fattening {wtrpses. At any rate, well beta toothpick ho would have been further ahead if five new sub- scribers bad called instead. Tna a ,tistieal editor of the Moil has long been declaring thot somebody must "go " . First of all it was Mowat, them Crooks, then Hardy', and at last Arch- hishop Lynch. "Lynch trust go," shrieked the rib -stabber in the tall tower, and the vat,erable prelate has since bees "going'. 1''r the little man in a way that that individual never experienced bef•.-e. Worn the ka.ling organ o1 the Tory party hounding Arch''ishop I1ynch, and Me Oran), ."' ditiri calling upon the *lbw to "neck troth and nail for thn gays candidates, who will' g ruga the inselte the Mowat -Fraser tration have y ar after year h nn the order," it is not reaio , .1e suppose that Catholics should vote the Tory ticket. Dr-aiao the past few weeks some of our 1 veal exchanges have been giving a� lager quantity of "original matter t JIM been their wont. The Overage hard was boon a ach"oI trustee rq� ti is the village Council mei thig, two y� ! ohiB Mooed mestiae, and a c•.uple of a 4 thtnitlil Is fee holiest. The peweit will /s,,w he aelegatail to the vest pocket of the editors. and the editorial ✓ ater wilt twist be written with the missorw Joy will now be the port tun of the subserib.'r who didn't exhibit the ab- normal pumpkin or the massive o'iussh. 1 A m rarsu of the railway committee was held in the clerk's ohee ea Monday evening, and the clerk was ungraded to open up correspondence with Mr. Hard- ing, of St. Marys, the promoter of the charter of the Credit Valley, St. Marys and Huron R R. It now turns out that one, if not more of the railway commit- tee is oppeed to the iabringing of an- other road to Godericb. Shnnld thiere,- port prove true, it would not be out of order to reoonstruet the railway commit-. tee, and allow gentlemen to be members only who are willing to aid in gutting in- creased mitre, facilities. THs ConserNat{ees are now sack of the Merrniou affair. The Mail insultingly declared that Archbiiahop Lynch had not the support of any leading Catholics in his stand against the work being used u a- text book in the High schools, but Bishop Jamot, of Peterboro, has come out in a plaits and vigorous letter, in which he says that rtery bishop and priest is behind the Archbishop iuhis stand for fair play to the Catholics. The Mei/ will repent that it has classed the bisiope and priests M "poodles." Bish- op J•rnet's letter wit appear in our nett kale. Sportsman coentiug spew t)l�f of,,tlhe Hamilton Cale - in debarring Donald Din - C. Ross from taking et* sports under the , owing to their dlshaviour at the last ging" htaitt, tart the pro place to dans Athletes feel sensiiivsly is by `atduching their breesbea pocket& " New the breeches pociet may be the most ssnsltive put of D. 0. Ross, bat as Don- ald Dinnie during his American tour masqueradd in the primitive garb of the Gael, the Sportsman will have to in- vent another sensitive spot to suit his particutir case. " Breeches pockets" and kilts don't go in pairs. Courl.Au rs of excessive freight rates on the Canada Pacific Railway continue. A merchant who purchased wheat at Portage la Prairie complains that the Canada'Pacific Railway charged $67.50 per car from that point to St. Vincent, a distance of 120 miles. The cost from St. ti invent, to Minneapolis, about 450 miles, over the St. Paul, Minneapolis .0 Manitoba Railway, was only $56 per car. The same informant states that he is acquainted with several farmers who have sold out their 'Manitoba farms and gone to the States rather than pay the exorbitant charges of the Canada Pacific Railway. It takes, in some in- stances, the price of two bushels of grain to pay for the transportation of a thin: to the market. THE pronunciation and reaoin, of words is an important topic in thip sec- tion since the last session of the West Huron Teachers' Association. The other evening, Miss Venerable dropped in to take tea at a neighbor's, and the dis- cussion turned upon the healthfulness of "stale" bread. The inquisitive small boy asked the meaning of " stale . " The mamma replied "It means not fresh --old made -my dear." "Then," re- joined the incorrigible youth, "you would call Miss Venerable 'stale', for she's an 'old maid', aint she 1" And the literary diacussion terminated abruptly. 1 r at Orange Hill, Howick township. they are going to have a friendly de- bate on the political questions of the day on Friday next. Things are evidently changing at Orange Hill when they now admit politics to be a debatable question. In the "good old days" when we had the privilege of attending poli- tical meetings in Howick, the Retormers used logic, and the Tories gave solid arguments in the shape of brickbats, which were hard to get over or get un- der, as the case might be. We gladly welcome the dawn of the new, era in Howick. • Soterrium thepanxiety of friends for one's welfare induces them to advance strange reasons for the acceptance of their advice. For ,instance, a short time since a particular crony of,ours who oc- cupies a well -merited position of trust is the county, was importuned by a rel- ative residing in the U. S. to leave Canada and go to one of the Western States. The encouraging epistle, con- tained, amongst other reasons for emi- gration, the following : "You wguid do well in this country, John ; awful basalis men get good positions in this State ; they would make you Sheriff inside of a month, if you came out here." Jeer 'refers the bye -elections our pe- •lantic contemporary the Mui! remarked that Mr. Mowat "dare not go forward; he dare not retreat. Before hips are the Alps ; behind him Eridanis." We beard of the Alpe before, but our classics have been rusting , f la$e?4$ we can't place Ertilli1us jest cow. .-Rot if the old fel- lni °gyp nail r. Semliki he mint have bt> a ale �e fl Sn Id. * stood title agile' %'`Pleat bead, err honest. heart and a large family of bola Ref these were the gentlemen who , earth-- 1 iter b - hind the Ontario Premier at the recent elections. We w .old also venters the remark that Mr._ 6Lisu 4 has g.,ue for - wood. L r n *. • • - ' Tim Tei is an indepee- 4e*it Rte s e of the politkel situation in the prorince isjuetly sem• feed np is follows : "if the result of -life bye-eieetiwss oan be taken as ft fan$ the pr'bable resalt of a ge4era to the eountry, it will he a'god/rile They may oonaeientiuusly differ in poli - dos We way add, said aha archbishop, that ,many Protestants dt taunt; .tdues- tien and high morality, think with W that Marwiou should not be forced oh the Catholics attending the high schools. N items the eight members of the Toron- to university senate who voted to have the book. reinoved, as well as respectaule writers in the newspapers, who wish to treat Catholics as they would wish to be treated themselves. It is needless to remark that the true Catholics will take their ideas of morality from their bishops and priests rather than from wen -lu a oN NEwa?APER11. With respect to the political side of the pupation,, which was dragged into it by the unfortunate writer in the Mail when it threatened that the minister of educa- tion and the whole Mowat Government should go, because indeed they heeded the fair remonstrances on the Marmion question, we will -say, continued the archbishop, that the Catholics beinu forced on the political platform to defend their rights will recollect at election time THE TH&EATM AND ILLS LANGUAGE made use of by the Mail newspaper, and will vote in such a way as to protect their rights as Catholics in the eduoa- tignal system of the (reentry for which they are taxed as the rest of the citizens. Catholics are not fotbidden under any ecclesiastical pains or penalties to this or that party, but they will use their righta as Catholics and citizens to protect them- selves in their civil and religious rights and liberties. The common schools are not exclusively Protestant in this coun- try. They are free to all the people and it is not the intention of the Gov- ernment to insult any of its people. -- [World. THE Tory papers are now beginning to turn upon the Mail, for its blind and senseless attacks upon the Mowat Gov- erment on the Marmion question. The Setiforth S.O,, usually a very hitter Con- servative paper, tells the Mail plainly that the thing must be stopped. It says :- "In the `Marmion' controversy the Mail is wearing the subject threadbare and trying to draw wrong inferences. It should bear in mind that it is not above criticism, and should it continue much -longer in its career of trying to raise sectarian bitterneesandparty strife, many who have been its friends will become public censors of its conduct in this case. Before the editor denies the assertions of its contributors in the "Marmion" cnntrov he should read what they say. The M items perfectly well that the poem, tidiiigh readable u • novel is not fit for a school book for grammatical analyses in high or comrer. sawed', and, on that account, whatever blame may w attached to its introduction, Mfr. Crooke deserves no blame for its eemnvel. 11 tamst remember that too far east is west, and, if it persists in remov- ing ever? one that opposes the nnrel as e text book, it will have more than it fat and meet semeve many of ltLait raga the province, which anff Fagg. to tarp . heavy an under- fllir the A Cessasrlaoa. Thrown into the scale as a;{ainst Mr. Mowat, Mr. Meredith is light, viewing &liar the men or their praetic^. Mr. Mowat is esteemed highly by the public. His admlwtstvatlem, while not brilliant has been fairly free from blunders and the stns of dominant parties However he may bate snooeeile'd, the public have faith in his integrity and intentions to fprther as far as he can the interests Of awe Province. - j1'uiw sato World. Mr werter'n JoMw. S r. Hector Langevin Rot of a rich joke en the Mestrral Harbor C.rm- ,� tea days ago. They wanted nest to assume the Bost of the chinesis sad he replied propeeition would im like his asking Sir /high Aliso to pay his (Sir Jlmtof ti debts tui kine, h he seem - an thlub wry .7Tet no roe Min of feet Etir Hugh, est :rte •-v . tt em this e for !1fr. Mowat and his rolleagnes when I this day no one keys what became of it. they go to the pelts next spring. No the idea was not en absurd after all, the doubt the ides that Mr Mowat i• stand- Waterloo (A vottiela pari - BLAKE AND TEMPERANCE. A Good Opinion of she Cranks Liquor Aet firms • Teta' Abstainer. la 1a •S*11. Due op, cis the poi mist. , b *es of . r D. Cumle ad u(• we. (argslete, e . tart Ott,. We alt. of R'ut. al, bay, ut • uttbier Hacksaw, es INrsdy. t/et. luta the wife of Arthur titury, 01 • au hire. Cdetuo, on has Mrd last., the wife of Mr W. Si. bud et e dattebter. Mam:hesier ea tba'Sit rat., the w to oN ,Mr. J. P. to G Mid sob . MASS. At the riisWonse of the briie's fv lut4 un the 13tKnight, tto r r esu ps da ttc of Jeww e», of (loser cu. At et. Oeoargee's Chity ta�rds 111. (kithast.a& on the Huron. b ev. rT1r*n Davis,p the Neo. Mr, HAW ped tan idekeur or est. (leo itev. Craw Davis. of Loudon, (brother of Messrs. Davis. of the Mitchell AevtKWe. ty Mi.s 1pwise, secoo•1 daush ter of the we W. wood Mud peke ot Lr. IL Yetass4 el the tamtes N•w ILL In Cttatos. on the 17th last.. "at 'be residence • d tae bride's tatber,.by the ger. Win. Me - Mr. John Malloy. to Hiss Mary Am , W of Cleats& Oa las tib Inst. to Wast Wwasosh. '"y air itev. W.1'..Vtlktn.s, Mr. 11. goh1L. w the Nwaabc ql fata, is Wellingtun- to Mus ay isjs pvterl of West Itawa•vh, The rpra.0 says the impression mode 1 At ' Olengos►aa,' rte reindeer, rd the brlde'e upon the people by tour charges and by ta,L•r. ort %Fo D. tk:wber !x!, by the abet/lice.'f deaials is very bad, and the Ree. k. ore, D. D.. assisted 1 y the ♦. ed growing urly worse. The ends of of Mwar h Tow..PCsut !t nm',,Itar ui 'the peophole are besomsrtf( t orutl�ly MMIC .euw ftat; sines, lase. O s Nrfoi aroused against Parnell and his girls, 1 and. ugless some reaction is at once se- cured the dowafall of Parnell and the ppaarliamentary party of Ireland is iuevita ble. - Tris Act'031NO LITTER CONaIDa111YD. LONDON, OCT. '22. --Justin McCarthy and Michael Devitt, trustees of the Land league fund, and McCarthy, jr., who is his father's secretary, have been inter- viewed regarding the alleged misappro- priation of the fund. They declare from personal knowledge that the allegations are utterly uufounded and is • rehash of charges which have been circulating among the landlord party ever since the land league was organized. AU three point to the fact that the ru,rn .le plume, "One who Knows," by which the com- munication nuking allegations is signed, is one used by Arnold Forster in a pam- phlet attack on the league, which like this was first sent to the organs in Ire- land favorable to landlordism. Mr. Devitt scouts the charges as false and says Egan did not receive anything from the ladies' league. Every sixpence collected by the ladies was.expended by them and they moreover drew on Baan for £60,000. The ladies, league now is preparing a balance sheet entirely inde- pendent of Egan, which will demonstrate these facts. When Egan and Devitt met Parnell on his libetation,they hod a con- versation in which Parnell spoke of the ladies' league as being somewhat profuse in their expenditure. Relative to the charge in the letter that Parnell stated at a meeting that the expenses of the organization never should have exceeded £160 a week, neither Mr. McCarthy nor Mr. Devitt remember such an utterance by Mr. Parnell. Davltt declares that on account of the great activity of the league the expenses must have been fie- quently doubled at all points. He says the publication of the letter in the Irish Times has made no stir in Ireland. In Mr. Blake's speech at Kincardine we rind some Pregnant remarks with re- spect to the Crooks act and the temper- ance question. The following synopsis of his speech on this subject. taken from the London Advertiser, is worth giving and worth remembering : "He touched, he said, for the first time in his life, �n the temperance question. and if, as he believed, the Crooks act had a most salutary effect on the habits of the peo- ple, it was a most mischievous and cen- surable preceeding. to attack thin mea- snre. He had little faith in the faith of a sudden enactment of prohibitory legis- lation. He was a total abstainer, had been so fur eight years. He charged the intemperance abroad in the country upon the moderate drinkers, and in re- cognition of this fact he had become a total abstainer. He, however, was not in favor of making law faster than public opinion was manufactured to support it.. He did not believe the respectable licensed victuallers desired a change. He did not think the municipal councils desired a change. He knew this invidi- ous duty of granting licenses was one of the gravest perplexities with which mu- nicipal councils, under the old condition of things, had to deal. He did not blame his opponents for their jealousy of centralization. He wet jealons of ceetmlization himself, but wherein was the virtue of this charge of centraliza- tion 1 Had not the Conservatives a fair proportion of licenses f Surely so. Why, they had more than too to one. In his own riding, West Durham, they had 16 to 4, in Kincardine they had 6 to 2. But Mr. Meredith had changed his tactics on this point. He did allege. the Conservatives did not receive a legi- timate proportion ot licenses. Now, he says they -give them licenses to keep them under their thumb. Why, hare we not the ballot, cannot a man -vote howsoever he pleases, in utter and abso- lute secrecy. and as to the charge of political favoritism, did politics never enter into municipal councils. They shouldn't, you know ; but did they?" "fladtetive leeraeentlea," An exuberant ehas brih found polittician of t.be (Itiotpersaa- Niap•. url entity atNarking general elew •c- tiTwo dlslteot charges against him have been proven. HBO mistaken iatmrs on behalf of "Ontario. Ontario" *SI cost him idetk f Mail• And do any Reform papers squeal and say that "it is a vindictive prosecution." Not much. But bemuse Mr. Cameron is punishing "exob er,tt politicians et the Conservative persuasion" all setts ot epithets are al,rslied to. him ---[New Era A lead SletMrr. The worst blundeg of the Conserva- tives was the propewtion to reverse the legislation of the Mowat Government on the question of licenses, and to give the control of the liquor treffio once more to the munimpalisi.s. By doing se they amused the moral eon/Abilities of 'be wbeie eoenbry. and did not even secure Me 11110(*ort 1 Used engaged in the liquor trade. The proposed change esthete the t inpa*ttiosakne of the ward politieiass and tbaseum of society, who desire to take advantage of the freedom it would Rive than to tweak the law, and •mold add inMitely to the evil of intemperance. Than shams are slreed1} In the Cnn- serrative ranks, and Mr Meredith gained nothing by ennciliating them, while be lost the support of all who dread the unrcetricted nein of liquor. ---(Es. . "Mad- a'C.■gee's tseetle■. On the evening of Wednesday after the returns brought in &house.i Mr. O'Con - nor to be ahead by at least 530, a large crowd gathered at the Qeeen's Hotel. Markel Square, and speeches were de- livered by Mr. H. P. O'Connor, the suc- cessful candidate, and by Dr. Lander - kin, M. P., for South Grey. A very enthusiastic crowd had now gut together and cheers were given in deafening roars, amidst music from the 3221 Batt. band, and under a blaziug bonfire w1 ick had been erected by the more enthusias- tic electors. An attempt was made by some wood Tory to drown the blaze Hut he was unsuccessful Stones were ale.. hurled into the crowd frnw the back- ground, showing that the predominating spirit of Conservatism was present in full force. A second b .afire was started on Durham Street in favor of Mr. Eck - ford. It burned brightly and may be taken by the defeated gentl4tnsn as an indicatioq that the people wish hint well even though he is to stay at home. -. [Walkerton 'Telegraph. At tae w•seenea of the bride's as wars esu the 1����is•t�d,, ib�rk 1 by Rev. M r. K • of W.it nos iy. ori. lata M saasel en- aebl, photographer. ofr *asp le ter Ann, d.u;hter of Mr. "Art Hard lei• At tae M ria, the 1115 In•'., by the Rev. A. Y n. T$1s.i s Ewhohtel, of tllrtssl.so Lac/ t1arm Weer, of tiny. At the Moses. Myles ugh ti7t1s Lila moo by the M Rev. A. 11. -Lean. aY C1fiaron, of Nruostss. to Mtn Loran Hu:.:-i.neun, of Grey. algae,. In R'Inutpes, ne the Nth feat M net. Rau af14 e1deM Ase ba •f William and KLen esu e, of Villi ate, r of Clinton), Weil IS yeses sad a nesse. In Chagos, on the head last.. Lobelia. rel:et of the late Hew Rldost, aged TS yeas.. In Staab,. as tae Ida ln•t.. Sea dettijtter of Mr. Jobs Stewart. of o S eaduu of the brain, aged Il roam In Hine(, ea leaps last.,C s. wife of Mr. Thos. Care tt. *sod e e. In Hnllet, oe the Tad teal, harry Nil. aged M years, 11 swaths sad ! daze SHERIFF13 SALE OP' LANDS. em :err or Hcooa. ( idy vines •f • Writ If TO wee ' i- nevi mem masted out of Her *rests comsat Gmetsf las fount, of Limbless, aid to tae dlrse1N not the leads muse seasspassoofJ ('HAN. al the sad of FINLA Y . I have seised and tabs to o --sell a lie right. utte, Isis=s�•nd- fuel a assssIs t l the aborts aatMa•elt"rl •g/_te tot e.e TOwa cwt. 10r in the of Heron, Mai ..l beam ad e e quarter of aa nate elf Medlowore or lams mid subject to a of these lt.ir•d dottswis, which Medyassp�ss• 1 lysall oar for ,tale. ar my i1s•_Q*w.Y•tMtylt ss•. fa eb Town of Geste/rash. a tie MA dayof Jan nary. MIL at at the bier • twelve of te clock, Moo. Tee Mari. The most ridiculous thing about the miserable farce is the attempt to turn all Scotchmen in Ontario against Mr.Cruoks because he doubtel the propriety 04 Me - high school girls analyze setae .,1 the Tines in "Maranon." The creatures who .try to stir up strife in this way must think that Scotchrnen are terribly thin- skinned and silly. Burns lies nearer the heart of the average Sootchmen than Sir Walter Scott, Burns is a uatienal poet Burns is in many respects the *opener of Sir Walter. But we do not think any intelligent tootchnan would feel his na- tional pride seriously hurt should Mr. Crooks say that it would scarcely do to have Burns analyzed in the high schools. "Holy Willie's Prayer," for example, is not a bad thing in its way, but would it not offend an average $ootchrsan acs say that "prayer" in mama before a let of big boys. "Holy Willie" was a teeth- ing diameter, but he was not half lbs great • hvpoorite ea the Tones who are trying to make pdtttcal capital out of this miserable "]Ilanssion' oontroveny. •-[t3tratford Beacon. wreck la Seerpan tiny. Collingwnod, Oat. 24. --The steamer nettawan arrived here late list night frena Byng inlet The purser, Mr McQuade, brines *report that the barque Thurston, hound for Byng Inlet from Algoma Wills, light, went on a abt,a1 at a. m. net tine' teem i ng of the 23rd et Byng inlet lfghthnose, eonth of The Stakes. She stove a hole in her bottem, and is leaking boldly,Wyse hag Toe of water. It is tnsprtea{to get her elf nigh - nut the swtst vies of • wreaking log and Nesta infanta. Nee owners et Amherst, - berg were notified •hi• morning "1 the accident. Many portions of the highest rank in Tnrkey are deeply eesmptr,mised by Arwp bi's eorreew,des+ee The Chinet has decided to pr.wcete the tapeaker at Rhe anarchist mooting in Lyons who said he was quit. ready to murder President frevy ROBERT GIBBONS, Sberifrof Huron Sheriff's Oho•, A•istMr, tact. lath, LEL t 1.161-3m IN' IG THE HH COURT OF JUS TICK. CHAVC!! T iBtV1 OR. Auction/kale of oat Ptopertles belong Mg to the Leacesstor Plummet to aa order"( taatd Conn. mad se in a cauof Iamb vs. Falrbrotbsaer, and date' the lath svctober. Ili there will be offered fo sale bi Public Auction, with the apitmhstio- of 8. >satoom .s r•'. Heater at ttoieric lay miss ms4.CarrTe, a et deer,ttt hos Au• t i* t o Tessa of [iodeelbh, on th Rerrladolf,5014 •t 12 Veleek soon. th fotlewts( pentsW2ee. is i patssvM : nasal/ - PAwOgLL-Lt aaiag siS.aber, Town of Oed b abeat ss• Elk of aa sere, on tb earner of West add ~too Streets. abou se yeri. facie ors or reals bu+Ines, part of (iedatcR w a arta street, and In a very sltuatlea mu, for • business ▪ or posbleaeo. Paecga .-Halt lis. remits& smasher, Town et &oderto*, abet sae !Rl of as •erre, to the W erten pars of the Tows. near the lake and Harbor. sad la easel the moot ptessaat situs• darts to Oodertek. There M a verysubstan- tiallybefit two dory brick dwelnglately pit is r.pntr, with new and thorough dor�[ain- dryM, and tube b Mos glledingly r thoroughly able one. Tutsi Ma1ss•Mettle on the prem - is•% rad Bosse trait Mans. PAscce 1- Is in 1011 and part of 101.;. rennlsq nsmdbefs, h, known as the Foundry Pt. a t '1,. * 1a nearly an sere of s*out.o w µa• Mks kaiak buildlatr which e- is 1■ sas a fesWly et sassionag &bop- •sign a Iran.. hoililai odd ee • aaagabouse. The prepertr has ayew 1r�p frwstage on three etrsete, and is sgeta>1sd very conveniently to areetke RtasialwauedeocaLy Wallah ate w one of the main oe PToAarncat to Il.Itdeet-Tae worth Ivo eighths of Lot 12 P.RCLL S. --Let 12, w n.t Street, Go.l- erich. near Hie bask of River Maitland. and in very desirable ghee for a residence w•v ritsrk eaperialh ,s fora radtM oarb S ed at the Rail sappye,, TERMS. -elite teeth of ti• tfarebaae money to be paid to the t'evident tisticitor at th Maw •f ssle- sad the Wase tb one mint` tasrsabar without interret, when full pooses Mos sed • clear decd will be,Rlven. A per feet tide will taw gives to tae plrrhaser, or hl sears rellearied. Then will be one reserve bid flaws by the Master. and in the handy of the Auctioneer at tie comm eew%ene of th.. The ethersColis of will be the m gh11 ttAtOr agave to Measn. Orwlelh. iaaib ]',•p.. Q, Toronto, or to the Mair^ ch, rheC.Ukb tletober. 1(92.c P. MAL('OMSON, Matter at aoderich. 811A6t1t lel neesON. Yrrvitsea Osyderieh. 1831 -td Tonsorial R%.iutiorr HiCTICAL BAR -- ' e to return ,and 'NsjcM. • can Ms Millbrae Parlor near Ores Oed•rtch. 1753 • T Al RENHEAD� V."$, , ft1TJCCESSOR t to Dr. Deme.•1 Graduate et Ontario ve nth N Tee^ f . es thea ata aquid restden(Colbo eo. afoul, &-M•rsse examined as to sound Oe'e N 1761 EGYPTIAN OIL. re.m Mat, ('omrswr 1 11.,1.1. Hrannfor.l only : w$.tro,tMeA wtrh a dlntrnssln.. hws.l soar.+ deer days 1 srold %Other est no :tar WWI r�J distractN1 1 coots no want (erirT+ ttgJ M•1setfos 5. omni . *v •m, nettle of yr %tf fill, and rare m stere and rit iiie a es>• libel., head, and i s�ef palms belief. !I- s M 1 me this newest =tea p1 telt as once a 11f1a h•ppwnort e�eeqt. ��y�$ return of the Ess batYw sf 1�1lFra Palm• f pot yMi tsrdM•' Qr++#Riab •ref it • V Gsta psis Bettie S. T a retell? oTT w to.. •PCI Frown Rvwtrvford. rallt • W. J. Q. inti Necfel, Agee* for Godes ler. S5 to .DLO worth al tri *44,... etTt VOW! .t- ('n. P'wti& 4 .tarn•