The Huron Signal, 1886-4-16, Page 8°I Catholics uisii fele without a division.
t e t ase cunei r w that the proceeds ° d which dl the civil servants and nAicers i - old be held for the benefit of to the office, w6uld be removed.
to a rpt arm o ) h the genera pis h Id se uvo. she now enjoyed lir would so- The whole lab .r of the had amt amidst bursts of enthusiastic sheen.
{ re Cwr.
coon, however. had, he said, proved no present there were three chases of peopue Sly into the hoods of a do• fay been frustrated by the of whist were sustained for several san-
cure. Serious dissatisfaction continued whom they were bound to consider : sift legulatore in Ireland ; second, The religious di�al►ility now existing,
selfish interests. Parnellit. cheers) He otos. The bill prim,! its first touting
to proved in Ireland, and if England }int h 1 t 1 n•th the la ted d th custom. an vz h h nukes Roman fi
Tera reap
i r
and Scotland
it had suffered similar hard- Neon ] cue should ships, he believed the people
of theles
t.0 means nim la of the i Ireland d thirdly, Ireland, and for the discharge of the ob- Txa Jcut.-tAxr•
countries would lea .rt Iia protestant minority. ligations of Ireland, and payment of the
I, those es. Irish used to heels.) their _. THL l LAII M Or c1sTLt. ; balance after these obligations were With regard to the judges wh„nad
cion was a (Yemenite to b cheers.) Coon, , discharged. should be mitered into the been concerned in the
cion was admitted to have been • fen- The speaker could not admit the claim , Irish exchequer and fur the free disposal the criminal law in Ireland. He: Majes-
ure kr the psat fifty three peen, only of the Protestant minority in l later, or 1 p e- tymight, if._ she saw cause, by order -In -
two Of which had been wholly foe fm°' elsewhere, to rule on questions which of the Irish legislative body. The Rel
repressive legoslatton. (`oercum, voles were for the whole of Inlaid. 8evseal I ernment bill provided for this, sed the souscllI andate the pensions t of thous
stern and unbending and under an auto- schemes for the separate I 11 d hill then provided that repreeestatives particular judgie •ed In
ftheuture
blah g, vege
t, must always fail. Ulster had been submitted to hits One I d inland shield no longer wt in the would M appoi y
craft.house of commons nr iriah pecan in the meat, lie paid out of the con$,lidated.
Such coercion England should never re was that Plater province should be ex- i house of lords but at the same time fund, and be r.mor& eon ly on the joint
sort to until every other meana had fail -bided from the as that
operations pf the presort -t i ch would have the right of addressing address of the two order..
ed. bill. Another was that •separate aatom- °y all consti- Tat coNo.TAK•trRr•
sits Atekni ♦IMI. To ontlelo.. pony should be pruvir_10r l iter, ani the crown, and se possess
ji h ,'sauna! rights they had now. the o ' andThe would reason ander
he basis of the whole mischief was • third suggested tat rights cheer.. ; It would therefore relieve the the present terms of service and under
the fact that the law was discredited to should be reverted and placed under Irish members from attendance at their prevent authority. The charge or shield be their own laws (Irish cheer
Ireland. It came to the Irish people provincial councils. No one of these Westminster. Mr Gladat°ne eon lin the constahulsry was now £1,500,000 "At times 1 doubted whether this t►ecee-
with a foreign aspect, and their therm- proposals had appeared to the govern- • , had several rsasMr why this eboald b• annum, and the speaker felt bona- city had been fully developed, and seeps
live to coercion was to step the law of sent to be so justified by its had
case. Even it it were Ix.esibls for er t the charge would be reduced, but dally with respect to Ireland. if doubts
its foreign character and invent it with • merits, nr by the weight of public opinion 'them en attend, as they had had a par• ter the present he pro sod to relieve could be entertained before the last gett-
domestic character. (Loud Irish cheers.) hament of their own, hod
lraised, though .1 in parliament
numerically equal with England nr Scot-
land. was really not in the same position
politically. England nude her own laws.
Scotland had boon encouraged to make
her cern laws as effectually as if she had
six tomes her present tion. The
was that the •'f
the law in England and Scotland was felt
he . NI the English or Scotch. The
of the law in Ireland was
n of 'it by the people of Ireland. to
M the Irish. He, therefore, deemed it
little lee than mockery to hold that the
state .•( the law, which he had eleecribed,
conduced to the real unity of this great,
noble, world-wide empire.
Mr So.
THE HURON SIGNAL, FR4DAY, APRIL 16, 186.
NEW PARTNERB�lr. --- R. B. SMITH & CO
ERASER & PORTER,
CODYTINTJATZON OV Tiff ID
DRY G
OPENING
•
purchased the Rout and Stauuarr anodises, of Mrs. (11,01::. a,"1 mooed with It the `" ' ■ NOTICE.
business 1enn.rly carrot d 00
the I1•uWi '; at ;:loava a m"" a•. `" u'a�a' EVERY DAY u 11TIL FURTHER
LARGE AND CHOICE STOCK
We are superseding old fashioned Wens. sad loan prices.
' I
and are strediThe �cof oar uo isa-lWlthulrn.ibat, .•. "lir Immense Stuck ee Wedu.e :.) and Matadi,' are DTEL ZG3HTED- F'r1D®f8.
tx7e u ve the Best Assortment at the Lowes SMITR & Oa r
R. B
BOOES, STATIONERY & SCHOOL
SUP LIES
OF ALL �CINDB.
Wall Pallor, Fancy
N'HI'-11 "r Hj
ods and Silyer'arO!
:\ %( 11.LSEI.L .1T Till
LOWEST PSSIBLE
PRICES.
From their lone experience In the busters. t .v ess. with .maiden.- proml a to
tlys{J 1ue.�Ii►
b ++ N t'TION.
gpecial Atteallag \ Benisons.
Ooderich, Atoll 6th. ItiK
Oat
EUREKA BELLING
OFF
B A T_,T C
AT
1011 Pt•KITT, 9N'1Li:TALLE1 . A\frit GREAT BAR&AIIIS
IS IINEQIIAI,LED. N
DAIRYM
it will greatly lapse%• your
BUTTER It CHEESE. =Gas, c -
ARenc•
will be ,uvea to the ?team
y for Wester, Os.ada :� V '
Magazines, P � N 0 �la�d s Jerser Dam
•
Legal.
fou .4 local patriotism. The lietoher a
is full of lural patriotism No ; the
Scotch nationality was as string se it
SEALER A LEWIS, BARRISTERS, baro was, asd if the .asd were to arise,
(3odrrich. • J. A. Miswrote I believe it would be as reedy to amen
C. t3sAu►R, Js. K. N. Lewis 1111- itself as it was in th. Joys of Beatnook-
burn. 'CI It toned,*
Irisir hi.toey
R C. HA YES, SOLICITOR A•., end ealamit have
Ogee curlier of the square and N'r•i
arytht, 11 y.
suet. tioterich. over Ballet's bookstore. wwlJel her sues to their buil with sa
Mae -
Elton., to end at tomes nenet Interest. embrace yet closer than u known oleo
when, and the Irishman u still naore
fol -
fl ARROW & PRt tl'DPOOYT, BAR profuondl] Irish But dose stet tnl-
T RhlT1[Ittt Attorney-a.tr. df 01. lie Iuw that bemuse his local patriotism is
Ooderleh. J. T. uarruw. tt . I•reeAtoot. strong be should be incapable of an im-
perial patriotism. There are two modes
of pre outing the @abject which 1 have t
argued. One of them Is to pretest what
we now .1 as good. aad the
..then u to press: itthe varied evils with
hoice of evils,
and thele arert among Well, I raw
which we aoafnoetad.
argued the settee as if it had been a
choice of evils. 1 de wt know whether
of may appear ter. bold, hat in my own
heart I cherish the hope that this is not
erg a Malmo( al of the lesser mil, het
C4MERON, H:)LT & CAMERON,
fiarrlat os. 9,.aleitore 1a Chaarevy Re.
Cr��siy•� 7odench and Wtn.ban, M. N'.
a e Casoeron.
Perio• /�1 Newspapers ; a Holt. ng O. roe.
dicals 1 SMALL. WARTf3. Et.:.. etc. C.ar. H N iaitliam. 131
sUPPLIIU) PROMPTLY. (' 1
gAMILTON, ONT.
AT S{IEPPAHI» OLD STAND, l!t►R \(►RTH-ST. AND SQUARE
Sar
TZ„1 feed for Free l lnular.li Gables Weak. Court Howe sick.
pdsetch, April Nth, taut March 1141. 1511. 1RH41y Alyn l;b, tset.
• s;lsdsse.e's Nemo t.te severs. and, "have solved it with respect t.o
itontaeed from thud VSIe.i Ireland during the time that Ireland had
Mr. Gladstone said : "I could wish a separate parliament. Did it destroy.
that it had been possible to expound to the unity of the British empire f"
the house the whole policy and intentions ;Cheers.:
of the government with reference to Ire- s.1.•N PLG% THAT Dar SRN.
land. Although the questions of reform Mr. Gladstone then pointed to the epee
in the tenure of land and Irish Govern- of Norway and Sweden, which *sentries
mons are so closely and• mu- were, he said, united en a footing of strict
netted it is yet impassible to undertake legislative and co -equality.
the task of elocodatiog both questions Then. there was, be added, the case of
together. I do not know of any prev- Austria and Hungary. And with regard
ious task laid upon me involving so di- to those o,untries, he asked whether the
versified an expoitIolI. In contemplet- condition of Austria at the present me-
in* the magnitude of this task I am filled ment was nut more perfectly solid, swore
with painful mistrust, bot that mistrust and harmonious than it was prior to the
is absorbed in • feeling of the responsib- extsung condition between that country
t11ty that will be upon me if I should fail and Hungary. It could not be question
t., bring home to the public mind the sed that Its rendition wee one of sohdtty
magnitude and the various aspects of the and safety compared with that of the
gaestlan. We should no longer fence or time wiles Hungary was making war up -
skirmish with this q.satiun. !Loud on her. The claim of Ireland to make
cheers) We should come to eloMquar- laws for herself was Dever denied, oon-
ten with it. (Cheers., We should get tinned Mr. Gladstone, until the reign of
at the root of it. We should take means George II. Tire parliament of Grattan
not merely intended fur the wants of to- was u - 1 in point of authority
day or tomorrow, but should look into as it could be.
the distant future. We have arrived at
weer THE UNION lauNx
a stage in our political transactions with
Inland when the two roads pert one They (the .) were not about
from the other, not soon probably to to propose the repeal of the u.ion. It
meet again. The time is come when it was Intpne.ible to propose the repeal of
is incumbent on the duty and the honor the union until they had settled what
of parliament to come to some decisive was the sense cel the union. He defined
resolution un this matter. our mem- the essence of the union to be the fact
4ioo u, therefore, to propose to the com- teat, whereas before the union there
mons that which, if happily accepted, were two separate and t par-
the
people With regent t., the powers of
will, we think, liberate parliament from liaments, after the union. there was but "It waste to I,aveiaxa(IUnwitiroutrs re-
tie ineffectually
restraints under flinch of late years it one. To speak of the di of i sent•tion, then then would come an•oth- election, the constituency would be com-
has ineffeetwlly etruggltd to perform the the empire was in this century • misnomer i seller question whist would nese a practical' posed of occupiers of the value of £25
bnsinos of the country, and will restos and au absurdity. The fault of the ad• dll14cuIt and this is, are we to gITI rap and upwards, and they would be elected
P
British legislation to its natant, ancient, minutntive system of Ireland was that the tical unity of the empire r He did fur ten year. The property qualifies.
• lcourse, and, above all, setae- its spring and source of action was Eng -not think that by giving up the fiscal tion of these would be
lish 1 relations between forest liah. (Cheers) The t,overnment, there unity of the empire they were gibing up 4."200 annual vales, .,r a capital value of
Britain and Ireland -(bear, hear)- - on a fore, felt that the settlemeni of the •)nes- the unity of the empire. Hs, however, £4000
i.x.tino of those free institutions to tion was to be found by est•blisbmz a• hoot upon the substantial cul ground that Mr Gluletone thea said he proposed
which Englishmen, ';c tchmen and Irish- parliament ioDublin-(Irish cbeen -for t„ glue be the fiscal unity of the em and that the 101 Irish members in the house
f h
apire
woo
►Thos AT - fortune to Ireland to be separated from
NO $ land. The Irish parliament would
lave nothing to do with coinage or the riding the necessary money except b7 that it fns] bw prr•ved te be et"' lawn a
The speaker said its would now {.w to •R carving it out "f 11.0 year'. bt d.et, end cod in Itself. (Loud .beers) awnThere
the plan how to give Irel.sd • latoula- erestioa ..( legal tends. The sub ed s.f M proposed that in tb+ futon I»laud g
1 u. I kan simmer w this, sad heat
taM u• deal moth iriah •• d�►�ui�°d the tuAice would bs lett k. the �udq•
!1 I should pay one -fifteenth towards th° five u 1 k •n°wer 1 The •newer u osly
from Imperial athe steer.) •was mentoof parliament, though the govern
f.ltconto be at the outset with what he mint ioclimed to the view, that it would perish bzpenditun. (pond in the view which row apes •
bit to be • formidable dilwmasa I»- be more cunenoi•nt to lewre pustoto• rxs F1 A ae•Ls or Tx. ••oWTTR\ . boom of despair, of slisoleit• oesdasna-
knad wigs to bare a domestic legislature matters to the hods of the nun rat Inland and ]ti.►s. •• •14111P -
other
He went on W speak of how .nueh previsions which
for Irish afLun. That was the postulate other a Quarantine le and one lir two Ireland would gain by exporting spirits time to those beneficial Pre
from which he set out Were the blob genrather wblees were left to the same cat- have made in rearsl. European in par-
to Great Britain, sad how such Greet titular, Englishmen and Americans,
,
bees to Iralasd b] the
be the solitary !."0.000 from the Irish
church fund. He know no way of p5t.
member. and the Irish .gory
peers in either house t000nttuue to form or THE rAauatht`tT.
rt of the ire assemblies i
Tee speaker thought it would be perfect- The next subject he had W approach
ly clear that if [raised was to have • was that of the composition Ate pro -
domestic legislator the Irish peers posed legislative body. The bill propos-
and the Irish could not ed to introduce two orders who would
some to ' 1 1 to eontrul Eaglaud sit and deliberate together with the right
and Scotian& etas. (Cheers.) Then of voting separately on any 000auo°
with v to the gaestiun whether and on the demand of either body which
Irish lydpresestatives should come to could be able to interpose a veto upon
of Oeraa>oae for the enttlemeat any measure for a limited time, either
ts• noose
of imperial affairs, he thought that could until the dissolution or for three years.d which he stated that the foist charge
pet be done. 1. had, therefore, am•- The orders would be constituted as bol- et hiland, stated
imperial total charge
.lq hs balm checked, wisp it w became
ed at the conclusion that Irish member lute : Fine, seo°could notiwere er he rep to (Y.uld be put at 4.23,2'42,000 per annum rite laws by which he is gowned do not
and Irish peen ought Kiat to sit in the tether peersresent thetnselvee to hies. artby do to
of W (Oh ! oh ' and sit in the house of lords atter the »p»- {;. stated sa an instance of the interne us. in iigtaud or Scotland, midi a mum
palace h ) If Irish members won not w mutative' of the Inch people left the I deoiuraltr.tios sof the Irish and cosnnial element [ eels the hoes,
have h A n Elft
Britain would a W. of bel( •n
flow of money freta one to the other.
As a vomit of mean' .agsiry. he stated Irmbman is •loses setsre. ; that jaaiiM+
ousmon sense, rwdesation. natural prow
with o titration, bui cot °• t tl sof c demur• have no meaning for him ; that
witregard but as matter of certainty, verity that he can ondrit•taad and all that
that eIrish
h the faa;ruld portion, hs san •
that the 4+elt rseepte would gain from hppren°w, ta°a1° � �pesgoing
to
Great Britain a sum that would amount ussio . No boos mens n this gem.
w two lass • total then '1,400.000 per argue in this outgrow view (Irish sheers), in a
annum. He then .watered into an L�rtmd ooa 1 say the 'rightism r as
elaborate cat:slalton of the total income to•PA cot loyalty M sas seise wow.
sad e:peodoture of Ireland, in the course
Resew/4 Irish chews.) if his toy -
ought
n hove of commons. They would •e ten that, while a poMu ee 1
out to he hoose of in the other
pee land showed a large surpbp, in Ireland to •bow to Berope and Austria' that wo
ought nut b sit in the other house lit the option tf sitting as a portion of the it 1� pail its expenses. He estimated too c•• face the political problems whisk
. lliesr, hear and oh '
first order is the Irish parlament, with 4mmn had so {bee 1D yes.. ago and
the power of sitting for life. Some pen- the total expenditure of Ireland, fnel`n whocA easy countries a .raps
THY tTAXATION,
>m had
pie thought that t option was • Inc a paymen
d Dt t
•e.T1OY or b. he n, t t as a sinking fund
or
How were the Irish people to he rax- likely to be largely used, but tha speaker Irish portion of the national deist, • bashalrid ell to Nos awd witfi ask that fear-
ed
em 1
ed if they had legislators in both c,un- was not of that n.rsber. (Hear, hear.) £7,946,000 per annum. Against that .actio. as we have very often preached,
.
tries 1 He believed that Great Britain He pruposei that with the 28 peers now th.re was •ictal iocnme of 433.580.000• end that in our awn ease we should be
would never impose upon Ireland laza- in the hause of lords there shoold sit or a wrplus to the good of £404,000. firm and fearless In spplyiau the doe
ti without representatlan, and added : 75 representatives .ieetei by the Irish r ILCRI lir IN4LAND•s rrvotr4 trines we lave often inealyted on
-It has naturally been said in England others ; th.t tete d.neess►oa tit local elf-
t isrant the way tit sap and
and Scotland,"continued Mr. Gladstone, impair, but to drenzihen and eooecdi-
"that fur a great many years past we P•
hs bee frog 1 to Apse good laws bate unity. I ask that we shoaled apply
ve n s g Ing z too Ireland the happy we have fur Ireland and that we have sacrificed paid ined to Eneland and Scotland, where
our time, neglected our interests anal paid Iia hu now taught
our money, and we have done all this in $ puree dream or • t bot �a
the endeavor to give Ireland good lits. umatter of practice and et that the
This u quite tow with regard to the
Deet and wrest toeadalws w eta tied
X
n me , • •
unalterably ttached." the conduct of business, of both . lequ- � id be p bite inconvenience as { commons should b members o the , i , „ � o eve •tan
to d cheers, prolonged by the home lative and T 1 f P d h first
„/ , at to 1 he a oven
misfortune.
bud would d tl h h I n
ke are
men all
•n live nature. he
a u o
1 u c t would be a great Inktor- Irish •rlament, u whilst t ease ams r t"•'�" the affre•i..ns and convictions sad will bit
rule members-) political economy of the three countries' tune Eur Great Britain and •greater order •f the legislative y inn under .a influence which t• hardly E man and that it u the by the decree d
�;otiRrloN A 7LiLt-LT bl distribution of Imperial bar from that Ile co would After reviewing the condition an would consist of 20G. ear.
d ria. Next then must be reasonable such an
men build on is the foundation afforded by •
as would give
moat be reconciled. There shoold be .n i misfortune for Ireland. He conceived
.lit of 103 members. the ascend order describe other than as the indue.ce " the Altnigltty that hr moertfan b7 TO d ..tufts • - that one ..cape f .other method we rsa be won bifid M
°Txz t sRos With regard to the hoetory of the land y
crime existing in Ireland since 1833• sa(egaartla for the minority,tod why Goold h• imperial t authority to question no man could hoot that until curve .t Duos the euoial happisss. tie
Mr. Gladstone described the Cyerelre not this minority in Ireland tak° are of It elm proposed to stain the ciceray, he had followed it from year to year, ins- power and this of the em -
legislation enforced during the same per -
itself 1 He had two doubt shoot its ability levy•
customs duties and such excise ..
eel as not exceptional but habitual. He dupes as were iwmecliatsly connected but he would not he the ginning with the Devon the Pun-
to do that, when we have passed through 1 with the customs. The eonditivas ••f of a party or quit office with the lietgn- of which, in the speaker'+ Mr. (iladatnne finished ►u address at
compared Ireland during all this periodthe resent critial rind and been die- lawn an arrangement erre : Fine, that Ing t. The Queen would be
opinion, did the highest honor to the 8 o'clock, keying spoken three boon and
In bo
man trying to find ed f the jealousies with which any 1 mer of tazatton over end 1 too delegate to him any pr.- memory of Sir Robert Feel.'Cheers:, twenty -6w manatee, and resumed
his
medicine only meant lir a cu . change was 1. Bet for t • above these particular duties s au P• roka °
did not deny the good intentions of the
British parliament to pars good laws for
Ireland, but he said. in order too work
out the purposes of t, there is
something mire In this world occasional-
ly required than the parsing of good Isere
(Hoar, hear.) It is necessary,
not only that good laws should be paved,
but also that they should be passed by
the proper persons. The passing of- many
good laws is not enough in oases where
the strop instincts of the people, dis-
tinct marks of character, situation and
history require not only that these laws
should begood, but that they should pro-
ceed from congeal,' and audit. sources,
and that, besides being good laws, they
in its favor, as to warrant the govern- •it would he very
meet int includingdit in their 6111. H••w difficult to have two classes of members
ever, they deserved fair ' in the British loose, one class who could
and the frac discussion that would mightfollow' 1 vote on gnes(Inns connected with the
the introduction of the present hilt hich business of the country and another
lead to the dieooveey of one plan which which Gould only tote on special and
lied s predomination amount of support, particular Ineetions which were Moutht
an▪ d the t would doe mthein of before parliament. Again, it would be
most to adept the plan that seemed the verydifficult for gentlemen in Inland
most likely to Rive general satisf.ction• t. decide who should go to Westmister
TH. IITTLt71LNT Or 1;82. or who should remain in Ireland, and at
Referring to the great settlement of he same time to maintain the final uni-
1;42, Mr. (lladnione said : "it was not ty of the powers .•t the legis'ature. Twe
• real settlement, and why 1 WAS it ire- merges might i:ave been taken -_--one was
land that prevented a real settlement to endow this legislative body with par -
Mine made 1 Irish cheers.) No ' it was titular legislative porton, the others was
Ct
• mistaken policy of England, listening
Ionia voice and claim of as-
cendancy. (Hear.) The Irish perhoun tot
the Irish legislative y of all expendi brat election they cannot now be enter -
tura from the in excess of tained.
$1,000000 per annex. The govern WIT!t0V5, Tx1 vowelise
merit had no desire to exempt the peace •Ithe principle i have laid dcwn 1 am
of Inland in reference to its final poet not laying down for inland exception -
tion from the ultimate control of the ally. It u the principle upon which,
Irish legislative body. The speaker had within my recollection, to the immense
no jealousy neon that subject, as the ad •.ntage of the coontry, parlament
care t poinding int the ordinary boeu• his not only adhered, brat has »vela PTrvleg oarchosestthe benison's, JOSpPH
riff ..f life and Property "'u the Kut tienised on; method of - \-ANI Vit. Me.Ale tatter, i take Mg . -
duty of a local tovernment Wk.. 1 had office at the colonial office, pertuaity or ausenaeistl to inte weeple d tet.
Tag CIVIL .feline. tiff ears -ago, the ce env'""- exec roomy of Huron. that f am sew tlreg•r•'l to
1 y execute all orders 1■
With respect to the civil service the •d tram Downing street. The result MARBLE GRANITE
. did not think their case was was that the home was al- _ i
the same as that of the constabulary and way in coudiet with the countries which m . lla(1s1lls,
pp
to ezcepl fro
Eo1miui1 la.
Thos. F. Calbtck left for British Col-
umbia Tuesday morning last
There was a successful social at Mrs.
McDougall'., on the cut line. 1iwnday
night, in aid of the D.thanr•Ptesbyteriaa
church. Comeau* McLellan leas pres-
ent, and aided much in making the peer
...dings interesting.
GODERIOH
lEkR8lizt
m the sphere of its + no l le ialatniveerof bodyw would verities effect tothe
had legislative
shocks withastie. .monies the had en. O�U11141.
those t ought
I. whine the He, therefore, thought it Bet all this has been ehsnged. The )
meshing must he done," continued to the pernicious
thought to M steepled and tc economy.
darns e, "from hing u impairs, s . t Imre to tt evttry other powK The let- would be wise to authorize he civi ser- British parliament tried to pas goal -
I demanded from us t.. neon Or had been sap •arta nn"' •arol.g to claim the peseuoels lama r fey
d to them s n the oaid a nn'
t
RA
WHO* NUItYYR tela
THE HUROr
1...Mlehed 'weary 1rtela;
O t LLleae.T Boos., at tt«
OODEIIIOH. t)
the; is degatehea to all m
by tM.sellas.
.° ;m -Alm is 'Avast
►l eblW,re:61.70.' est r
SLIM If set se paid.
setereed.
RATtW or AN.aTMta
lee tar deet t.serges : t►n
molt ss oeslesde at
JOU /�TIMR.-W.
�° Wa(4.,.1 sstIss s
oat -
tor tends" othe mart at work 1r. Ogists Gr
to do hue sees l• that 11.e
srM.ed.-Terme on.
FRIDAY. APRII
A NEW HUD AT 1
Our least eeates.p•s
had plight for some tit
Twee et the Oovenie&
Wulff May sad thrpt
ge�ui velees' het hay,
er lee taxing up
the aide editor, and as
viae. of the "tired mt
ed b M kelp him ewes
Siam the day of hie i
editorial tripod ef war
terraria hent et the
bees an ailatioa of s
the truly red editor
nal. It was the
dally mamma h 11
Star that M. 0. Cor
liar all the same,"
editor sandy would a
estimate of the Dem
. West Hero* in W jig
he "hired man" wee
Spectator the fable
Cameros," sed insert
few weeks ago,and fel
well-deserved dra►k
tired to the truly
Ssatorth Expositor.
" hired sari" tried t
of the pit bite "'hied
writing a lab.rd art
although )Ir. Came*
'august* imputed to
tor, nevertheless the
• per was perfectly j
the member for We
Ater was worthy of
Baying what it bum
falsehood. Bat won
the Mar speak for t
Expositor :-
r t+ "Dar contempon
defense et Mr. Can
'Nowhere is ttet •
alsg w the sal dee
housed to be rile Yri
sch•wtag rebel: ate..
so wager what hid ei
Mott la his veto. h
Curia:readily ado
did net two these
we imagine the Hpt
so understood, alit
needs net two be fool
Did anyone ever
avowal of ribtbb
The Stir admits td
used the language
dos '-not imagine
ed to be s *name
the hardihood to
it knew to be not
able townsmen
• Haxtlte° liters
of the (h,ernm,
editor 'weld curt
self away by s
No, no ; the baa
plainly diseernib
u Jamb's hot tb
that overlies s
writer sed fru
Kng�„ (1) eh
temporary, w
ging wither/ e
rises ser made
lie may be remit
of ' E.gtiah" d
to the alimene
e.*tt.m/•*•r7 k
"Jest a word
about '.absidi
Illtmgrosso be
own virtue are
sad it i° gaits
the as
is t
.y� tdssul.
Pierlese el d
let as ether
�"
Nor the 1
ssigimal ante
affirm wide
the uamistal
'Vend mea,"
IT tangs tis 1
1» resimieed
std the With
I
ed .1 .fret
• 'art brisk.
Weal type,
to the polos' bat the eolntiee Havl twel.e O.an prsettoal e:petoaea 1
five y In 11 1044 ander. groat 141. spirit
a .d ted•The s. 1.1
"W d t want iter good lawn fwni rna dant tet gt•Iri� aaats`eNw to rtes
Ireland the fist conditions of civil lib- it had int •spark of the spine of fres• httatT l pnwef would pass with the leg- tbo tioold their
w Q° • gond ,,• �. wtw wisp Saver me with their boilers.
of �m d it ted the Emmet• abeJitian of their ofioes, proof they n haat our ownsad u- -
and their h no country
with the law, apart opted m , and w Lord lr awll la t
from which no mnntry can 1M called aa .peon arm., and when tan a brie( career fire body should not .prop five fro vita bob D�� should be tree to negotiate h d the h has M
country."What then was the A• was lea England d h Irish The fonnii•r� which it loropoeecle lepbla- atresA•of fewlasi
problem before wd that five body were three grand
the free course of the law, the liberty and ° Its dslstivs Fewer.
every individual right,
in 1410 mercies of every Catholics in Ireland when the Remise n-x� e Or TAR ialax r.eu.iugyrr. served two y from •rapid fes •
Mzal right, U .fir eon6 hence in the law Catholic. in Englund 'remain enema duration et the proposed leglala-
he serntte, and at the chis of that titre hu now .bort• home b a from scutsyi•
It received ears in .order to prevent the Islet at length admitted M. re•eoss►le- ilOS1iidOOII Sill.s
naitirei of teem of this principle. Thiel prisaiple
sympathy
civilized rivalled in n an t o par
Ai 9 It was this -how lament registered their confidence in draw from the onttttizanee o
and principal ratl.ANri'e rater?* To Txt ttnrtaa. "We Doe tlaed lsee !n twos with whet Rnpetllsd at Reasonable Raea
to lregislature"
imperial nutty an held
that
Lim * ld sail • leminiia° siringg u termed eriia nationality.' l venting at Thr. epolkemomently is �nrehsw of Ratan.
rat.. purpose were
Grattan held that se i. Ll still lmi.a' the promoted ed tont he e,o00 ; salEverythingthat belonged t° tie . had 10.0 Mon tb• saltiest of thecne . st in • denaed inr `.nst self ming. * HThn.0 ens bad it 1e theft iesem t
7honoree
these hat. he were ted • l• ve. More meet. Lord Fotxwiom n had prothe r.• the now (rye ensstiteti.a. Tb. p.oporti, s
the that h• dimwitted • seo the "t the Irish parliament. rat twnan d tholiew int• the a ores., u° of twined forces .nd of the imperial bu dens whish he had to 0.111 in 151.41. 1155 M Imperial, affair..'
the moa. •e • nesse now a.H*-
.ider whether it i° atpbe•bie to t►. cam HOUSE FURNISHINGS, L,
n erljaatlm c.e
th th iriah and there wee • entire it propose that Inked shoed V. was .re rAT°n^*>eY•
GIVE ME A CALL.
the p•rfiamtmh with a view tot a con- • and colonial relations. Ili sniteN as letspetit iea et the wart hew M
tiniest), end everlasting °nit, n{ the em spirit in that parliament whish, if it had our foreign tight in etwidaeiewa lir. Oladsinue said "1 ter AMR
pine Was that an •ndaet.•tw paesd..s t tree aetope, would have done • noble would not M enmpHe*t to pas laws for as one t• h'am r�tet rat . H. thought 55�iilk h� dist liMa i. mesh • tbiOS as lnr°I
Other countries havel eof:ed the problem, work, .ad probably omelet have solved the establishment or endowment et any Irish
weep two Hb credit, bat the only head pas mash is has11 ase had
d it- meek ream difficult circum all the Irish problems and have saved ani t it snide • ms
J. A. ROBERTSON.
partisalar evigioa• (Chea.•• b• Al t• - tibia It woold have, tf left alone, woad♦ �t pod, (theme.) The woolliest, it • t�e.tert•t liem . ism tb . own an s
fiances. "We ourselves might,•. M this gevemment 'allude koaMw" s mai My