The Expositor, 1869-10-29, Page 2-
NE W ADVERTISMENTS.
_ -
Chancery -T. W. Taylor.
Notiee-P Adamson.
Giving up Business -R Meths.
Boriies -wanted-J.- 11 Small.
Seaforth arayis-1-.1 Colliday &-80n.
Back Agaiti-LJ Waash.
P Ball,
Canton T-1 0.41elliaw..
Strayed Steer -0 Weaks,
Strayed.- a MeCartey.
Strayecl-W CIu
Stray Cattle -3" Peacock
thr 64vpooitor.
The Official Paper of the county.
• FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29 1869.
MoDOUGALL AND THE
NO3ITH-WEST.
There are rather strange rumors . a -
flea t about the purchase of the North
West, and the appointment of the Hon.
W. McDougall to , the Lieutenent
Goverinship. Regarding the purchase it
i8 now s'aid that the paymen te of X300,
000 only extieguisheit the Hudson Bay
Co. claim but does not extinguish the
Indian claim to. the -territory. Should
this be true, the Canadian Go-yeenment
will have a nice little joo on hand. in
the way of Indian war and massacres.
It isevicleat fro -m the accoleit of the
visitors to this territory that a good
deal of disaffection already exists in the
minds of the old settlers, and that it
only awaits sufficient pretext to lead
them to make an open -declaration of
their hostility. 2. As the case now stands
they will_not, permit settlers to take up
e,arie on some of the best iarts of the
territory,. because the land is theirs/
they say, and they will not part with
it without .some compensation. Un-
less the Canadian Government pro-
.
eeeds with great caution, we may, not
only have to pay dear for °Ur new pro-
vince, .but also, have to sacrifice Many
valuable lives, in order to keep it in
Possession.
Next, the appointment of Mr. Mc
Dougall. It now appears twit he gods
to the'North• West only as pro eisienals
Governor. He has -not yet resigned his
- seat in North Lanark -and consequently
should any difficulty occur in the new
Provieice 'which he would not like to
face he may return, retaining of course,
his position as a Menaber of the Dom-
.
inion Legislature:. Such provisional
appointmetits are certainly most repre-
hensible. 2 Theymust mean some un-
certainty on the part of those wlio man-
age our political allairs. Why not
send Mr. McDougall to bis post. to
; take charge.ofthe affairs of Red Rivet
settlement in an - %en, honourable
way? Why -114)w him to tetain a
_position in Canada to etnich be has
HO just claim, while he is salaried
as Lieutenant Gover-ntir and receivine
0
the little considerationof $7,060 for
the same? 8teeuie i,is, but , no more
strange' than true, that the Goveirr-
tnent at Ottawa_ has become so de-
moralized as to render it morally im-
possible for it to bransact business with
candeur or rig'Itteou:liesk
UPPER CANADA GOLLEGLI.
True to its eeltish proclivities, a por-
tion of t.te Totonto Press has taken to
the canvas in favor.of Upper Canada
, .
College, in anticipation of legislation
thereon at the comieg ' session -of the
Ontario, Parliament. 1 is
,
'Tlre:O/obe,_ does not atetript a justi-
now i
'ficarieu of the methed adoptedfor the eve,
1
Ifoundiug of this itistitution, poi even of offer
its management since) it MIS been in 1 1-11(13'
Iswall
eperattan, tout practically admits that! u/41 much
it was evil 4that ccritinually." it, Lae at
howeetar, sets tip an opposition, to the I ieet it,
popular 01.1 that has rung through the! itiot•e
. leneth and breadth Of tlie couetry foritheiti.
THE SEAFORTH EXPOSITOR
ing that it was te do university work, sed et Ottawa and skilfullrapplied in ten for the martyr are moved -our
it has failed in doing it -that it has several constituencies throughout the entheeiesm has reaelied its highest
absorbed the major portion of all the e mritry has (lone) and what it may do point of iutensity,-Princes and Came -
again. , , .
,
I Sin F. -I aui glad you think my dies Alegeates may Low "pale their
reserves made for educational pnrposes :
, in the country,. specially weakening the chante so good, although we should be Ineffectual tires" before this -*ere of
financial posidoe *, of our Grammar: compelled to sacrifice inore than we purest ray serene." Is it not asking
schools -that le actually wrested from estimated at first. Bet I realty have of an ex -governor too much to thus
my doubts. The Conservative press, immolate himself .,.. Will not Renfrew
lately have acted so very ungenerouldv ot rotten Niagara, or iiny other. Come
the Torcuto Grammar School at the
time of its inceptiett the property, it towards me, and then the Globe rakibg ty where Sir Frencis is to throw hien-
with pal.
owned and had in use -that in mote up that old Toronto Debentt re 'ol de t irritlitn. agWilVt:ektrisudiYofsagyieit)ilelt, 'Not for
n take has been buried these fifteen years. It Paancis, if it knows it?" The North.
i
.Yfars than one the cost of it mai
ance exceeded the aggregate of a num. is altogether too bad. .And to crown West has a vacilleting McDougall-
]] I ' '
her of pre-eminently superior institu- • •
insnitiated as uni
, the on lea era t ie ot er day Ontario a shelved Ilowland...the lo-
ch as thet I should be
tious, for the same periods -and that regarded as a "Ticket of Leave Man,"
while all those charges may be truth- I just returned from penal servitude and
fully urged against it, ca.nnot be said, its ti3at i':' ia a piece of shameless e,ffront-
results, as ma.nifested by the respective' °IT °n nlY Part, to expect that t should
, be allowed ou my return to have charge
numbers of university inatrieulante, . of the nionetarv affairs of the country.
averages with the Grammar Sc hools of It, 18 really deplorable to thilik how vi-
,
the Province, -notwithatandfiig the tiated and degraded the newspapers of
weakening they have sustained by th these Provinces have become, and I i
tereohmial an offiee idling Welsh, all
sacrifices, end mei-eels, and devotees.
Is our Coubtry like the Theoan sphihe
so unsetiable that a poor, trembling
and dievoteci- Hincks must aleo be offer-
ed up. 0, electors <et Renfrew. spare
his feelings, al d tax not Ids imbb con
duct and n n exe in pled se: f-aen egation.-
Princeton Review.
need not tell you what an infiemece 1 .
life.blood-sucking of this huge incte.: ' -
4hey have among- the people. But ' Death of Earl Derby,
bus. i - _t_. .
. . what galls me most is to. see both per- ; The Atlantic' Cable teiegt apt) of Sat-
Why'then, we ask the Toronto Press, ties quoting again and again that old ; utday announces the de ttli of another
„.
for they alone aro its advocates shall ' taunt of
/ I yours, "Steeped to the lips in i of England's ereetest stitesinen and
-Lcorruptiort. It gives me a bilious ate , Orators, Ed wari Geo y Siuttl Staniee,
1 ''s ''
this institution be continued? They
i tack every time I see it. = 114th Earl of Derby K. G. p. ().
, ffr . , r
answer "it is necessary as a
, . . . •, .
gYmnasiai SIR J. -If you are so timid WI all I lie v•hose decease, by,
entire' ly, unex.
/
I etween the Grammar Schools and the ,
Il.
that I mu afraid you will 1e worse tee- pected, tookS. t .1. r )1 -
University." Spare the mark. First ' fore- you are better, espectilly if yon ing. The E'er] of Derliv, " second -title
place on a mit ey iJc
let them show that Ds work has
• ; beelii.are Finance .Minister during next ses- Lord Stanley. of Biekers:afre, was born
ef.en of as high a standard as tle Gralill i siun'
If the use nowadays of those old in 1799, et Knowsley Park, Lane -a-
t party squitishave a tenclanev to produce shire. I -laving b-------2ted at Eton
mar Schools, and then, that our Gram -
biliousness r 141cDeugall must haye and at Christ Chnn.h, Oxford, where
y p • .
mar Schools are not desienede- and do had it pretty had for the last two years he oleaini d the Chan ellor's prize fer
e .
not present their pupils at the Unieer7, Sat F.-1 dare say that wee the reas- laein verse Mr Steel( y in 18'.'1. be-
, /
. .
sity doors prepared, aye, and well pre- cn. be was so keen to get away to Red came a member of the Reuse of Com-
e o t ie scurrdeue attacks and bitter 1824 he delivered his netidcn speeelt
I
pared, for matriculation. Rather/let f• i ' •
Rivet and also to get out of the reach nione, as M. P. for StookInidge. In
our disputants be honest, and tell the I.
Unalloyed truth, by acknowledging.
that. its continuanee while altogether
uneecessltry, nay, it positive injury, to
the educational system of the couutiy,
it adds a trifle to Toronto, and at the'
same time affords the 'gentry (;) of that -
city an opportunity of edecating (nom:
anally least), their ehildren in an
inetitution of a high-sounding name as .neik me and the obligation you are und-
coin pared with that of "Grammarler to the patriotism of Rankin. Do a
taunts of that vile ,7 -lobe. For triy part whieh though on a matter of mere
lecal interest, elicited tee highest ,elo-
giums from eir James Mae'ainfo,h,
himself one of the greatest orators of
the day ; and in the same session en
the subje.ct of the Irish Chureh, his
'second oratorical effort exhibited a,
le,adiness, aptitude and vigor, which
nad hardly been witnessed by the
Home of Commons in one sel. young,
since thedays of Pitt. In 1825, Mr,
Stanley married Emma Caroline, fie-
cond daughter of seie first Lord Skej-
nfersdale. In 1826 he became M. P.
for Preston, which he represented til
the year 1830. Doling the . ad-
ministrations of Mr. Owning HA Lord
GoderieLe Mr. Stanley entered upon
official life as Und, r Secretary of State
for the. Colt nies. On the e-mation of
Lord Grey's Government he was offered
and accepted the Chief Secretaryship
of Ireland, but upon, .eelting re election
from hie conetituents he was defeated
Iy If( nry limit, but be %vas soon after-
wards returned for Windsor, which he
represented frem 1830 to 1832. It
was at this period while engaged in
single.hitealed coefliets with Shia ,and
O'Connell, that he displayed the high-
est. intellectual powers, and his great
ability' in debate. 'While the Reform
Bill was under discus...40m' in 1832, his
genius fen debate w -is frequently called
into e.xereiee with effect m defence of
its pi avisions, and aboot the same time
he carried a ministerial measure
national education hi Ireland. Mr.
Stanley was returned M. P. for the
eonstifueney of North Lancashire. in
1332, and in 1833 he carried the Church
Temporalities Bill, and .the measure fee
the emabeipation of the West India
sle yes, h:i vi lig been merle Colaniel Sec -
retitle, and member of the Cabipet r
that purpose, an ()thee he held for one
years. .Up to that time MI Stanley had
been a consistent and unflinching Re
forrin r, tlaugh not of the extreme type;
bet in 1834 he beaame alarmed at Lord
Melbourne's projece ie. still limber
reducing she -Irish Chttrch Estes .lish-
_ment, and retired froro °thee,
Graham,: Lerd Ripon, and the Duke
Of Riahniond going out with hint He
continued to represent North Lanca-
shire from 183't() 1846. lie de( lined
to tike otlie:-e in the Adiedeisteetioe
formed hv Sir Rehert Peel, on Lord
Grey's resi t.
I wish t coeld have got the Covernor-
ship or the Mauritius, I` would net have
remained here. to be flayed alive in this
manner.'
. SIR J .-Letthem play away. Why
.rieed you care? You are sure of Ren-
frew if itois. only sl managed.
Go Out there In a few days, enlarge
consideraldy on the glattitude you feel
fo. past favors, the sacrifice von are
School". This is the truth, nothing good deal in the way of supplying the
-more nor less, and we sincerely .hope, ! &suiting olies with the needful, promise
a &tete dee] more, and you are its :ncig
that • our. legislators will. evince that i as
• • • jou like in the enjojment of $5,000
.'ti,Mount of respect for enstiee, when the , a year and the etcetras, which you knew
matter comes before them for cleliberae how to appreciate so well twenty years
tion, that wiile preeript peremptory ago -
action. Sin .F.-1 intend to do all that, and
do it immediately. But the bankine
question. They will be sure to badger
It would seem feoin the efforts whichInly life out on that. What is. to be
the European powers. have agreed to I done?
put; forth ;should tale Emperor I SIR J' --Tell them anything you like;
Napoleon fail to recever from his
I but it is not necessary to tell -them that
, you will pusn Rose's scheme, or that
pment illness, that France -would ; you yourself are in favor of a hank
isprobably be spared the horrors of a sue:. Tell them you will intro !Lice
Revolution. England, Prussia, Aus- I neA session a oinking scheme that
tria mid Russia have agreed to use I will Meet the requirements of the cowl-
! ti v and be eminently satiNfactoty to
efforts. to .1estt-ain the populace, endi ' . .
the gleatmajority of the people, and all
shoul: their efforts be successful the • that sort of thing. Keep (link, howev-
Prince imperial 'neity succeed to the I et, mi that little sinecure of Rankin's
throne of the lionapartes andthus con- It will leak out soon enough perhaps,
tinuethat dynasty. the fate of 'which and will d° you no good you nla.Y
depend.
would otherwise be very uncertain.' szie Ftee-well• I do he.pe it wiii come
out right. I ani getting less hope -
A N OTTAWA CONFABULATION fill and more anxious every day. You
see I will not only be completely snuff
Bil the Reporter of the Secret Service ed out, but there will be a perfect Subi-
Gotnersittee.)
lee all ovea the country at my defeat,
--- . . - and you Sir John will be in rather an
SIR FRANCIS. -What's your opinion awkward predicament yourself.
of my Renfrew address, Sir John? Wid SIR .r. -That is where the shoe pinch -
it take do you think 7 • es. There, is no help for it now hoWe
Ste JOHN. --Take ; -0 yes ! We must ever, go it we must if it'sinkm the ship.
make it take. Yes, -upon the whole 1 But there is no use of disc 'sing future
think it.,e,ill answer pretty well. Your possibilities. At all events it insult go
ly put. And eire-e urp have -cajoled
i
sueri lice and Rankin's patriotism -can- now. ' Pm awfully thirety cotee along.
not be easily overlook ed---prett 7 1•3hrlifle- - - exeunt win, in arm.)
Italikin so needy, out of his seat and in
1
forthvceording to quality go - to Cov-
Or the cheapest Boots in Sea
en rA.
-87-tf.
terested Lim pretty largely in your
,election he will ee of no small servi-e,
• II
SIR .F. -The questifie :with me just
s, wt.! the people le..as easily won
as Rankin ? You see we cannot
them the *Mine indticement. If
are enly unthinking enough to
ow the bait' et onee there is not
danger, ; but if they oegin to nile
it, they will find the hook and re -
or wait tintil there is something
su bstan t ial and tom ng offered
f this little ruse only succeeds
I right. But if the people snould
et the idea into theii heads that
n has sold them, and if they 1.
)tit
a,
I al
its oisesta,bliekate.nt, since the cans,iid ;
once g
exposit:on it ;retieiviial from the hands Ranid.
fa fe w earnest and disinterested then
in c3Inglion jaStioe to other links in
Vac: (shale of our exitecationa,1 system.
'tile Torohte Press while adnlittinlY
g e en in 1834, but allet
. The Tenth Martyr. 'acting in cower with the Coeserva.
tive opposition or seven yeare, he
We coniniia*erate Sir Francis Ifincics. coneented, in 1841, to aecept the - 0 )1
We are tiot sure but ".here is a degive onial othee ureter the second adminis•
of reasonable pi ide in ottr ft elings ie1- tratiorf of Sir. Robert Peel, a post wh i h
wards hini.- As a sa flerer be has our he occupied moie then font .yeers.
pity, but as an unexampled patriet his At the d.(se of 1846, when bit Robert
name should be held in lrateftil remetn- -Peel *arrived at the &terming. lion k)-
brance. . His adtiress. to the Renfrew- abandon the cause of Aglitalturel Pro -
its tells. us of his "to be, to do,„and taction, Lord Stanley, who had ...Met
to suffer." He had no desire to enter been sunammed to the -House of Peers
the arena of Canadian 'politics not, he meler the title of Loi Stanley of Biek-
.
erstah-e, rather than abatrfou his - 0 in-
ions, retne d fr( m the Cabinet, Ithal
next year, though with apparent re
IA of if old -Renfrew should tun) ent "it( . palm, end search we teetiouist Opposition, foe whieb the
e teluctance appeared as heed of the Fr (-
,k on me °pelvis .frorn east to Where we'may,.no prodigy of disinter- energy of Lord Georze Asentinek an(1
v -ill be-otne hotter for me than rested hones. y could be found but him-, the abilities of Mr. Dieraet i er. d t - 11
I
the West Indies. and Heaven self. Wes it for , i o ie sup- seeured public reecguition. Their titrug-
.
I- found it hot enough there posed -that the " incetrupta,ble" could .gle seemed at first to be a hopeless one,
. e .
,
mes and that too in more senses stand aloof from us and ours when our but. at length, in 151, the Conserve-
J-,____Doe'e lie alarmed old fellow, Perish the thought Noble nein that *1 the r"esignation of Lora John
re. (Shrugging his shouldele.) distiacted ceunti y wagon "its last legs!' tives had 80 fit/ sueceeded as tRonsfsoorielt:
t the helm and mean.,to keep it he is, he tells els that onr intereste arejand after mid after the Whigs bat, re
bile, and if we cait't sail through dear to his he'irt- that pecuniary con- ! tained office a yeer longer, in Febrnary,
. fen ut Bill, and the Milita Bill, and
formed with the Emperor of the
euit measie es, carried the Chancere
aspumatielitt.iwesboiefh?fiii,:tneei,th,s other impor.
1t.irlelentet:
an aIllauee whkli snoseenciit eh cline.
Stances have rendered of eine; nepere
taut& to the British Empire. After the
geetral electioniu 1852, the Rouse of.
Commons gave a vote adi et,* to thiiiiuitjale
echent as, of Eailleetz.,v'a
collor of the Exchequer ; weeenpon
lee 1-remier tendered hie resignatien
tier Majeety, wilich wee accepted.
Earl leer i)y then at:pep-Led tee post
of leader (if the Opposiititz_.
whiset he held tan
offered the :wale- ef office in 1855, oft
the fail uf the Coalitien Minietry, but. -
deelined On tilt! grourel that he
could not form a goverument which
would- ;lot owe its existenee to the tor-
bearanee d its enendes. tie tvete how-
ever ,egain called to the Premiership in
1858. MI the defeat of the. Pa 1 in erNi
Govenr ['lent ; but Was deftiattA tbs..
next year, 1859, on a Reform Bill, Ana
was agaiu sticeeeded Loed - Pe Inter -
stun. the session of 1864, Earl Der-
by made a eeries ef desperate attaeks ort
the foreign in)licy of the --Governnieet,
being eepeeielly severe ou Earl RI'S-
sad, the object feing to out kleaner-
ston's Government ; but it ended fie
Lauri. Lerd Panner.sten died in 1865,
oa wile,711 the Ruseell.Glecistrne Gov-
ernment, was formed In 3866, a meet
_powerful and combined atteek wee"- made
upon a Reform Bill introduced by the
Russell Goverinnent, by the Opposi-
tion. It was successful. The Retesell-
Gladstone Ministry went ocit of -(,ffiee.
and Earl -Derby became Premier for the
; bird time, aud held that position. till
1867, when he retired from offiee fie
consequience of freqent and severe at -
teas of the gout w4 -h disebled ira'
from dischargieg the onerous duties of
his position. Ma Disraeli sticceeded.
110 the Premiership, and In -ought et, .
Reform Bile which, -after being sek
amended by the iberels as to bear but
a remote r, sem lihnee to the origired,
wee carried by Liberal votes. Mr.
leieraeli's Government was, however,
oeaten on a, motion made by Me -Clads
stone having reterence to the diseetati-
lishniebt of the trieh °flume, end a
general elet it v subseqitently
tal ea pliwo, Mr. Gladetone arid his
friends carried the election by an Over -
whelping niaj, rity. Mr. Diseteli re-
-signet' before Parlia mi t was called to-
eether, arid Mr. Gladstone's Govern-
s)
meet succeeded. The DisestaLlieh-
merit Pill evas earried ID the Hen;e of
Commons-, telt the influence. teg Earl -
Derhy, who was bitterly opposed to it,
united with that of tie new leader Of
the Conservative Nem', Lord Cairns,
was euffiment to defeat the bill by tar-
rying such aniendments as the Commone
could mot possibly assent to. The amend-
ments added by tbe Houee. of Lord*
were stricken out, with two or three
unimportant exceptions, and the hill
was finally carried, and is now the law
of the land. It was oa the Church
piestion the great Earl became a Con-
servative 1834, end on the Irish
Church questiore he fought his IstSt.-
battle and was defeated.
That Earl Derby was as lronest end
suni*as he was great as a debater
and 88 a ltatPsID011, 110 Man can doubt ;
and though tor niore thau thirty years
of his life opposed to those pi int iples
and reforms when his country &mend-
ed, yet all the world admires lits gen.
abd gi•eat abilitieN, his briilient
oratory and his phendid powers, in • (le-
te, and all w deeply regret hia
death. I deed, he has ..1eft bins
a nenle hid' manlitad will hot
iely let die." MS sere the let*.
Lord emeriti y, encee, ds him es the fif-
aeentli hal of Lerby.
ir4L"- f you want good 'I for your
money in- Boets and Shoes go to T,
Coventry's.
87-tf
liullet Council.
- The Municipal Cour,cil of the Township ot
Bullet met -at, Londstorough on fttli i y
. last the 22nd inst., Alessrs. Morrow, ;nail,
Wart er and IV; onteith present 11,1ihli' tb of
.
OrIIIC i n eetmgmtre r.eafl and confirmed. It
was moved by Nr. A. Monteith, seeonded by
h. z.nell, that this Township be divided in-
to five Electoria: tul,d,V;6:011k, pursliant to.
the 41Election Law of P-68," and that a By -
Law bc prepartd 'and passed to confirm the -
same -t arried. Moved by Mr. W. NA krner,
seconded by Mr. A. 11-1(tittith, that the Him°
of ti5 be allowed to IA llliam Vodden to as-
sist him in defraying the funeral expenses 4
Edward Ward, his hired man -c arried,
11: oved by Mr Monteith, secondtd bv .1‘-rZ.
)Sne , t at the Tre /vitro. be insirrete.ei lo
I pay all accounts mrt:he. by the connal, JP,
Ifur walk done in this -Municipality,-as s, (11.
rad. Moved by Mr. Monfeith, scci ndt1 by -
as there are funds in the lrtasury---Cait it d,
Moved by Mr. Warntr, stcondid bv lk r.
1 Snell, that the account of E. It olny li, 11:- -57
lfor printing and advertising, be pail- ( ar-:
. a Warner. that a By -Law be pre -pared
and paSsed at the next meeting of Council,
to detach Lot No .5, Maitland- Block, fv m
Union School Section No. 5; Wau anosh,
attach said lot to '..ehool Section No. 9, Pill-
leet, and that the Clerk notify all parties
t rested Carried. The Council then ad-
iourried. to meet again at Londsborongh. On
okt,colnocdtaya,:tmhf: 13th December next, at te
any4aith In those confounded editor'. tut the exigencies of our unhappy coun-
als in the Globe, r am done for. I have try required a giant intelleet-an
ir
taken my wily chanee on Renfrew'. coruptible politician a Sac:5rifiCia-1 offer -
.1
Lanaric and Huntingdon are not to be ing, and honeet I Who never I . I
all' that is -laid to the chat ge of neria
College still argees furitscontinuance,i west
lupou a corrected basis., and fOr no -other even -
reasons, we positively believe, than that
I knows
sotneti
it is a Toronto Institution. It has nev- 4-t
saan
er yet endeavoured to contradict any Sin
of tile statements urged against; this. I: go
.ilege7-that though it received its first ,
ivit:itafr‘evw with the tide, we'll turn- on siderations are nOt to be thought of, I 1852 the Coneervative chief, who hed. I
grant feoin the government eduCational ; the steam and go it in spite of wind and end that he•-e-t.n he -is to be the in 18l, succeeded his father as four.
e‘esorees. upoi; the express -underatand- wtathere know what steam eonden-1 forlorn hope. Our bowels of compass- ; teem Feel of Derlq, accepted the res.!
JAMES BRAITHWAITE',
Town.dalp Clerk.
et, Oct. 26, IEC9;
ihOve
nes 1
IV!!
011•!‘"..
retni'lo
rneo
1
.21 •
THE
the 5.1;
est iI
took
leodi
are.to
vi else liae
for the
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