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THE HURON EXP0`.4ITOR.
ADVERTISERS
ARE respectfully informed, that to insure inser-
tion in the following issue, Changes of Advertise-
ments must be at the office by SATURDAY NOON, _
and New Advertisements by Wa.'ITESDAY NOON,
tite
won expoottor.
The Official Paper of the County.
FRIDAY, ,fuLy' 8th, 1870. e
from certain members of the Dominion- Gov-
ernmentwas such as no honest or right
thinking man would for a moment attempt
to justify. These Bente parties will, how-
ever, reap the reward of their treachery.
Although they succeeded in carrying
their point, in so fat as taking from Mr,
Macdougall the Lieutenant -Governorship,
and ousting him out of his s'eat in the Cab-
inet, and handing over to the French of the
North west, the best and most fertile por-
tion of that country, yet, in so doing, they
hayeplaced in his hands weapons with which
he will yet scourge them. These weapons
he is neither slow nor afraid to use, ,and
with them, he will, ere long, work the de-
struction of those who tried so hard, and in
so contemptibly mean and sneaking a man-
ner, to destroy him. In this good work we
trust be may earnestly persevere, and we
are sure that, a large majority of the people
of this province, join ue in heartily wishing
him a sureand speedy victory.
In a speech recently delivered at a meet-
ing of his constituents held at ,Carlton
Rface, Mr, Macdougall ventilated the con -
duet -of the Dominion Government, upon:
Red River affairs, in the followingspicy but
true words a-- i
"He found that by some means the rebel
leaderstand sympathizers knew tnuch better
than he (Mr. Macdougall) did the real in-
tentions of the Goi=ernment at Ottawa; they
knew, for instance, long before he did, that
the Government at Ottawa intended to
break faith with the Imperial Government
and the Hudson Bay Company, and would
refuse to accept the transfer; they knew,
and boasted of the tad, that they, the iebels
--the robbers and murderers of loyal Cana-
dians—had "friends" in the Canadian Cab-
inet who would see that they were not harm-
ed for driving back the Governor, and. im-
prisoning, plundering, and expelling fiat
the 'country, every man, Canadian -or half-
breed, who dared to resist, or even to speak
against them, and the revolt proved that
they were well informed. The delegates of
the Provisional Government, red-handed
from scenes of murder and outrage, were re-
ceived with open arms by their "friends" at
Ottawa, o4tentatious1y paraded through the
streets by.Ministers, and lodged and fed at?
the public expense; while officers ef the Go-
vernment and the loyal Canadians who
had been first robbed of their meney and
goods, and then driven out of the territory,
in mid -winter, at the risk of their lives,
could hardly obtain an interview with these
loyal advisers of ,the Crown. The rebel
priest, and the Yankee loafer Scott, were
recognized, and consulted, and indulged .in
hospitalities, while the others were upbraided
by Howe and. Langevin, for their loyalty,
and denied even the payment of their lawful
, wages, until every quibble) could be met,
and every delay that offcial obstructien
could interpose had run its course. The
Manitoha'Bill was the natural sequel of this
policy."
, Referring to the Manitoba Bill. and com-
menting on its land clauses,Mr. Macdougall
• THE ROYAL CANADIAN BAN.
THE annual meeting of the Sher' ehold,
ers of this Bank was held in Toronto on
Monday last The principal business
traesacted, was, reading and discussing the
Aunual Report, and the election Of Direct-
ors for the current year. It is gratifying
to learn that :the affairs of thiseinstitution,
so long mismanaged, are now tieginnitig to
assume a most prosperous appearance. Ac-
cording to the report Which has just been
laid before the -Shareholders, the Bank is
likely to regain the public confidence and
patronage.. which it possessed before the
suspension, and that, too, on a mire and
sound foundation. The men at'the head of
affairs seem to be fully competent to per-
form the arduous and responsible' duties
which they took upon. themselves when
they assumed office. They appear to bela-
bouring zealously to bring the institution
under their control to a high and secure
standing in public estinaation, and at the
same time to make it as profitable as pos-
sible to the Shareholders. Ti this, we are
glad to learn, they are sUcceeding admirab-
ly. The constantly growing business is a
siire indication, of the former; and the fact
that the operations of the year realized net
profits to the extent of over one hundred.
thousand dollars, shows that the manage-
ment is not only economically and prudent-
ly conducted, but the investment of the
Shareholders must ultimately be a very
profitable one. In the report of the Direct-
ors we find the following satisfactery and
hopeful statement :—
"The business done by the Bank since its
. resumption has been of a most satisfactory
and healthy- character. The customers are
gradually return- ing, and there is every rea-
son for looking hopefully to the future."
There is one cause of public ccmplaint,
however,—which we hope may shortly be re-
medied, now that affairs are,,being set on a
firin basis,—and that is the unwillingness or
inability of the Bank to discount. This has
been a serious draw beck to business men,
especially in places such as Seaforth, _where
ther e is no other agency. We frequently
hear complaints against the Royal Canadian'
on this score, and we have been informed
that our business en, -when they. require
accomodation, are compelled to go to neigh-
boring towns in order to secure it at the
agencies of other Banks. This is not as it
should be. The principal benefit such in-
stitutions are to the publie, is the dilectunt-
ing facilities which they offei to business
men. It is not necessrey that the credit of
the institution_ should be again imperiled by
accoinodating, indiscriminately, almost ev-
ery Toni, Dick, or 'Harry, who might ap-
• ply, as was done under the old reigme, but
we certainly think that needed accomoda-
tion should be readily granted, for a reason-
able time, to those who are prepared to fur-
nish sure and sufficient security. This ac•
con:iodation, business men must have, and if
they are not allowed it at the agencies of
the Royal Canadian, especially in those
place.s.where there is no other, they should
at once take steps to establish an Agency in
connexion with some other Bank, more wil-
ling to comply with therequirements of
trade. We trust, however, -now that the
prospeCts of the Royal Canadian are begin-
ning to brighten, and. the Directom are get-
ting its affairs in good shape, they will at
once remedy this grievante. Should they
do so, they will not only confer a great boon
upon the business public, but will bring
.their institution into still higher favour; and
much increase the business, and consequent-
ly the profits of the Shareholders.
The following are the names ofthe Direct-
ors elected for the curient year: Sohn Craw-
ford, Esq, ; Wm. Thompson, Esq. ; J. Mc-
Gee, Esq. ; James Crombie. Esq. ; Wm.
Barber, Esq. ; Wm. McGiverin, Esq.; 3.11.
Dumble, Esq.
BO
HON. MR. MACDOUGALL.
WITH all Mr. Ma.cdougall's faults and
failings, end goodness knows they are le-
gion, we must confess the course he has re-
cently pursued with regard to the North-
west question, and that bastard measure,
the -Manitoba Bill, has been straightfor-
ward and honourable, and such as to entitle
him, in this matter, to the thanks of the peo-
ple of Canada. In the first place, we did
not consider him at all a suitable person for
the position of Lieutenant-Cevernor of that
country, but his unfitness for the position
was not his fault. We feel that while he
-occupied the position he acted conscien-
tiously, and in accordance -with what he con-
• sidered to be a correct - policy. That he
failed to carry out the policy which himself
and his colleagues had agreed upon to pur-
sue, was not, however, so much due to his
unfitness or incompetency, as to the treach-
erous and unprincipled conduct of certain
of those colleagues, in successfully endeav-
ouring to place obstacles in the way of car-
rying out those principles to the correctness
of which they had readily given their con-
sent, in order that they might thereby 'de-
stroy a rival. There is no doubt that the
treatment which Mr. Macdougall received
Juts 8,
of Samson & Co., of North AAdams, mama.
cliusetts. That the Chinese will prove as
satisfactory at the making. of shoes in the
East 'as they have done 'in the washing of
clothes at the West, there is little reason to
cleubt; nor is there arty obviovs reason why
they should not eventually reach Montreal
as well as the neighborhood of Boston. The
waves of 'European and Asiatic emigration
seem destined to meet on this continent, and
here either to mingle or to recoil from each
other.—Mon. Witness. •
Says :—
"They have reserved from settlement and
occupation by inanigrants four miles on
each side of the Red River, and also the
Assiniboine, from the American boundary
to the White Horse Plains. Thus an area
8 miles in width, running,through the en-
tire Province, or nearly so, comprising the
best land in these great valleys. • the only
land indeed that atiy intelligent Canadian
would seek, in the early settlement of the
country, to purchase or to cultivate is "re-
served,"locked up in the hands of lazy and
ignorant half-breeds, without .any claim
whatever to the larger part of it, and for no
purpose that any one can see but to keep
out white men'or to put money into the
pockets of the Priests. This "resprved" tract
contains the water and the timber, a.nct the
Red River system which constitutes the
highway of the emigrant and the trader.
It contains all that is at present of any val-
ue to the Province. But this was not en-
ough to exclude settlers, and so a further
reservation is made of 1,400,000 acres for
children of the half breeds when they grow
up. When the Hudson Bay Company's
20th is;added to this, and the proportion of
swamp or land incapable of cultivation is
deducted, we have about 900,000 acres,
s,ornewhere on the outskirts of the Province.
to tempt the young men of Canada and Eu-
ropean immigrants to leave behind them the
millions of acres in Minnesota and Da kota,
to be.secured by mere occupation, and pass
on to the new Paradise in Manitoba under
the control of half-breeds, with Monsieur
Riel and Father Richot at their head! He
declared that in his opinion the country was
more effectually locked up from settlement
by the Bill of Sir George and his Jesuit
masters than it was by the Hudson Bay
Conipany."
•• For the cheapest boots and shoes in Seaforth
according to quality go to Coventry's.
THE CHINESE COMING.—The Arrival of
some seventy 'Celestial' shoemakers the oth-
er day at North Adams is a circumstance
seemingly trivial, but whieb, nevertheless,
may be fraught with the most important of
consequences. These Chinese are docile,
thrifty and industrious to a degree, working
for and even saving out of; wages on which
a European or American would- starve.
They already monopolize more then one
branch of business in California, while for
what may be called unskilled labor, such as
the rough work in the construction of rail-
ways, they have already, proVed themselves
formidable rivals to the Irish, as they may
yet do to the negro in the Southern cotton
field. Hitherto, so far as we are concerned
all this has been a mere matter of news,
coming chiefly from beyond the Pacific
slope; but now the Chinaman is coming
himself, or rather has been biought, to a
New England village by the shoe -factory
.....ssmossomsommi
The best selected stock of Boots and Shoes in
Seaforth, at Coventry's.
oniamsomml
Unveiling of the Ridgeway Monument;
The great feature of Dominion Day in
Toronto was the unveiling, in Queen's Park,
by the Governor-General of a splendid mon-
ument in honor of the brave volunteers who
died at Ridgeway. We have room _only
for Sir John Young's speech.
The Governor-General rose and said We are assembled on an appropriate clay to
discharge a patriotic obligation. We come
together on the anniversaryof the 'day on
which was proclaimed the existence of the
Dominion, and the entrance of the Provin-
ces on their : career of united action; and
-we come together for the prupose of inaugu-
rating a monument—the enduriug record of
the sentiments of gratitude and admiration,
which dwell in every heart for the memory
of the brave men who ran the greatest risk
and made the greatest sacrifice which mor-
tal man can make in defence of the princi-
ples of generous independence and orderly
freedom, which are .embodied under the
• name and .auspices of the Dominion of Ca-
nada. It would not be easy for .any speak
er to portray in adequate terms the vari-
ous emotions which on the occassion of such
a -solemnity as this, cannot but recur to the
memory and depict themselves vividly on
the imagination of numbers who . are here
present. To accomplish such a teak would
require the pen and the fancy of the classic
writer who described the different scenes
and the conflicting feelings of the groups
, who traversed; the day after the battle, the
field on which lay heaped the dead bodies
of Catiline and his conspirators—bands not
more reckless, unprincipled; and averse to
honest labor, though far more formidable
in arms, than the banditti who style them-
selves Fenians. They Were Crushed with
greater slaughter, but indeed not more com-
pletely than the disturbers of our -peace
have been on two occassions by the superior
valour and discipline of those who stood up-
on the side of honesty, and constituted au-
thority. , This was when Irish character -was
depicted in far other and less odious colors
than those which it has assumed of late
years, since the monstrous birth of Fenian -
ism. We were taught to believe by many
pathetic tale, such as Miss Edgeworth
used to write, and by many a powerful ap-
peal such as Glattan Plunkett were compe-
tent to deliver—and we believed—that the
Irish nature was kindly, generous and sus-
pectible of all good impressions, though eas-
ily misled by false lights and trust in un-
worthy guides, and injured and warped by.
centuries of mismanagement. We were
told that errors would disappear and all evil
be cured by the reversal of the harsh policy
of the past, and the adoption of more gen-
erous and - conciliatory measures. Well,
that advice was adopted, and 1 think wise-
ly, in a statesmanlike and Christian spirit
Two generations have well-nigh passed
since the remedial process began—link by
link the chains of oppression have been re-
moved—every effort has been made to re-
pair the injuries of the past. Some states-
men and zealous philanthrophists have la-
boured in the field of improvement, and at
this moment Ireland stands erect, as free in
all respects as Englaud or Canada --without
a vestige of inequality remaining, either in
secular or ecclessiastical matters. Even
now a great scheme is under the considera-
tion of the Imperial Parliament, and well
forward, for placing the relations respecting
land on a satisfaceory footing. This urea&
ure, whose adoption seems certain, will place
the occupiers d land in Ireland, in as favor-
able, if not a more favorable, a position,
than any similar class in any country in
Europe. Yet, still, notwithstfunling all
that has been done, Fenian iniquity still
rears its head, as if to bring the well-wish-
ers Of Ireland to shame, and baffle all the
calculations of wisdom and philantrophy.
Now, let me not be misunderstood. I speak
not Of the whole Irish people. I know that
there are thousands and hundreds of thou-
sands untainted; but the taint of this wicked
folly is spread too far and too wide. The
Fenian conspiracy exists without a single
object. in view which any rational being can
propose to attain by its continuance. Thou
sands, as we have seen of late, are ready at
its bidding to leave behind • them a vast
country, abounding in its resources, where
every steady, sober man can find employ-
ment, and rise by his own exertions to
competency and comfort. They turn away
from this fair prospect, and cross our bor-
ders in defiance of every moral, and inter-
national obligation, and in contempt ,of the
warnings and teaching of the clergy, they
-were in better days wont to revere, rimy
seem to grudge the Canadian settler' the hard
earnings of his honest industry --the houses
he has built, ihe fields he has cleared with
his own hands, and aboveall, the free insti-
tutions of his own Choice, under which he
hopes that he and his children may prosper.
But the Canadian settler has no - idea of
weakly yielding himself up a prey to the
spoiler. He has proved himself as superior
to his would-be conquorers in military pow-
eri as in honest purposes, and administered
lessons to them on two seperate occassions,
which it is to be hoped, will prove of lasting
impression. One of the worst of the designs
may well be pronounced fiendish—was
theirs, to embroil England and the United
tees
Statesinsome dispute, and bring On all the
horrors and miseries of a great war. For-
tunately this design has completely failed ;
and instead they have worn out the long
continued tolerance of the people and au-
thorities of the -United States; their leaders
are in prison, the greater part of their arms
have been seized, and thete is not, I am as-
sured, a sensible, rightous man on the other
side of the border, who does not lcok upon
them and their proceedings with scorn and
loathing. They have signally failed in
their efforts to produce discord. May a
like failuure ever attend such =hallowed
designs! It is too fond an imagination,
too sanguine a dream -to indulge in, in, the
present state of the world, that wars may
entirely cease; but I do most earnestly hope
that the day—foreshadewecl by poetic vision,
and foretold by the unerring voice of pro-
phecy; ma.y not be far distant—and the
councils of peace shall prevail rn at least
in a greater measure than hitherto amongst
the nations. But though we may not hope
for universal peace, this we may hope for,
and each in his place tend generation seek
seek
to procure' namely, fair record between
Britain andthe -United States. I trust these
two great and free peoples will not again
range themselves in hostile arms or engage
in what would really and truly be fratrici-
dal -warfare. May their rivalry in all time
to come be in the arts of peace the means
of increasing the happiness each of its own
people, and the spreading of good will and
civilization throughout the werld. May
the Almighty disposer of all eirents grant
that the stern and terrible arbitrament of
the sword be less frequently referred to, if
not wholly discontinued, and some more en-
lightened and Christian mode provided for
dealing with the international differences
which may frorin time to time arise. But to
revert from theseperhaps premature and too
brilliant aspiratious to the inamediate, pur-
pose of the day, may the prayer be heard
that we all fervently breathe, that Canada
may never again have occassion to raise a
monument to the memory of her sons de-
stroyed in those senseless, wiAked raids, or
engage in a ceremony which inektricably
blends, as thi4loes, the sentiments of pride
and SOITOW—pride in the courage that was
displayed and the success that ensued; and
sorrow at the loss of those who fell in the
early pi ornise and freshness of their lives.
It is sad to think that all those whose names
are enscrabed on this monument were young
in years. The generous sympathy of the
public recur to their memory, even amid the
clamours of exulting joys over recent tri-
umph, and over the .prospect ef increased
security attained by bold exertions. It
loves to heal the -ttoundstof the sufferers,
and - m.ourns -with those who mourn over
irreparable losses in their family circles and
over domestic affliction. But no sympathy can
restorethose who, foremost fighting fell—the
places that knew them shall no them no
more—but their fame remains embalmed in
the grateful recollection of their country-
men; the example they gave will everbe re-
membered' -with gratitude and respect it
will never fail to .excite emulation Ocl fled
imitators throughout the Dominion. To
them, with complete propriety, may be ap-
plied the lines of the poet:
By all their country's wishes blest,
When Spring, with dewy fingers cold,
Returns to deck their hallow'd mould,
She there shallfind a, sweeter sod,
Than Fyicy's feet have ever -trod
By fairy hands their knell is rung
By forms unseen their dirge is sung,
There, Honour comes a pilgrim gray,
To bless the surf that wraps their clay,
And Freedom shall awhile repair,
To dwell a weeping Hermit there.
And true it is that honor conies to bless the
turf that unwraps out fallen brave; for 1
see aroued me, many persons of note and
distinction'some who hold or have held
high place in the public councils, and oth-
ers eminent in the learned professions, and
Freedom is well represented here by the
nnmbecs that crowd around. From those
ranks sprang forth the brave who met the
invaders on the threshold of the land and
hurled them back in confusion. They are
brave because they know that they are free,
and that they possess institutions which, if
properly guarded and prudently worked,
will insure to them and their descendants,
for, generations to come, all the advantages
of order, security, and intelligent progress.
[Loud and continued cheering, amid -which
His Excellency resumed his seat.]
better known than that of his son in the
days when the affairs of George the Fourth's
unhappy queen Caroline—whoTe cause Sir
Matthew warmly espoused ----were the talk
of the town.
Sir Bounden Palmer might have been
Lord Chancellor on the accession of the pre:
Aent government, but he could not subscribe
to the policy of the Cabinet on the Irish,
Church question. He is a man- of marvel-
ous application, and makes an immense in-
come, a large part of which comes from his
Chamber practice, five hundred dollen being
the price of an opinion" from him. The
life of a great lawyer in Parliameet is about
the most laborious in England. He has to
be early at Chambers, an -d yet has to stay
late in the House of COMITIODS, while a
member can lie abed in the morning it de-
tained in the House at night. Lord Palm-
erston, wht.used always to sit out the pro- -
ceedings, neva rose till about 11 in the
morning. -More than One great English
lawyer hes sunk tinder hard work. Sir
William Follett, the most. brilliant English
barrister of the century, was in his grave be-
fore he was fffty ; and Lord Cairns, an
Irishman, who without, any advantage of
birth and position, wak Chancellor before
he was fifty, and subsequetatly leader oftbe
House of Lords is 110V7 in a very delicate
condition. •
Sir Bounden Palmer never seems to fail,
On Sunday be regularly takes his school
class of boys in humble circumstances; and
many of our readers are familiar with his
"Book of Praise," almost'. as well known
about England as "Hymns, Ancient and
Modern." He is the son of a country gen-
tleman, and the ablest of a very able family.
Sir John Duke Coleridge the Solicitor
qeneral, is also a man cf high private char-
acter. Like Sir R Palmer, he is an Oxo-
nian, and at the University was equally
clearly marked out as a man secure of fu-
ture eminence. He 123 the son of a distin-
guished father, the Right Honorable Sir
John Coleridge, tor „nany years an eminent
Judge, and thus favours Mr. Galton's theory
of hereditary intellect. All the Coleridges
are clever. The poets, S. T. Coleridge and
Hartley 'Coleridge, were of this stock. The
family has long been settled at Ottery, a
secluded, beautiful little town, which lies
nestling beneath its minister church in a
lovely nook of the county of Devon, and de-
rives its name from the river Otter, proba-
bly so called from the number of animal -
of the name with which it used to abounds
The celebrated poet was born here, and the
Coleridkes cling fondly to the plaee which
is so closely associated with their /tames.
Sir John is a member of Parliament for
Exeter, the capital of his native county.
He is iprobably now earning between $50,-
000 and $60,000 a year. .
No. 1 homemade kip boots for 84; cow hide
do, $3.50, at Coventry's.
4t•
• Three English Lawyers.
A rumour is again qirrent in England s
to the resignation of the Lord Chancellor,
and the succession of Sir Roundell Palmer
to his office. Great English lawyers ha-ve
not alwaye been by any means remarkable
for a lofty morality in private life, and
there are many of the present day holding
high positions in Westminster Hail who are
very loose livers, but, on the other hand
it would be impossible to find in the ranks
of the profeseion anywhere men standing
higher in point of purity of life, or in foren-
sic reputation, than the Lord Chancellor,
Sir Roundell Palmer, and the present Solic-
itor General,
The first, Lora' Hatherley, far better
known in his character of Lord justice Page
Wood, is a deeply religious man, rather high
church in his theological opinions Every
morning for many years, wet or dry, sum-
mer or. winter, has seen him a regular at-
tendant at the early service in Westminster
Abbey, close to which he lives. Some years
since, soon after the appearance of the fa-
mous Essays and Reviews," he published
a i heological work intended to refute the
views presented in that remarkable-vOlume.
Lord Hatherley, who is childless, is the son
of Sir Matthew Wood, an eminent Lord
alayor of London, whose name was even
.NE.WS OF THE: )151-E:E&
Sir John A. Macdonald is in Quebec.
Small pox still prevails in Paris, and
shows no signs a decreasing.
It is expeeled Mr. G. Haliburton will be
appointed judge in Manitoba.
Latest advices from Australia state that
excessively heavy floods continue, and that
twenty persons had lost their lives thereby..
About 90,000 sheep are to be killef for -
their hides below Santa Cruz, California, on
account oF the searcity-ttf pasturage.
Gyeece has suffered an earthquake, which
levelled a town and submerged an island in
its vicinity.
The Proclamation annexin- g the North-
west Territory to the Dominion is to be is-
sued on the 16th inst.
Cornell University has conferred the de-
gree of Doctor of Letters on Professor Gold -
Win Smith.
Rev. Mr. Griffin, Wesleyan Minister, Wit&
presented with a purse of $150 on the occa-
sion of his leaving Guelph.
The machinery used in the State of Mas-
sachusetts is capable of doing the work of
mote than 4, hundred millions of men.
When the Education Bill now under con-
sideration in the Imperial House of Com-
mons became law, itis said the Right Hon.
3. E. Poste]; is to be made Minister of Edu-
cation,
The Czech Catholics in St. Petersburg have.
declared that if the (Ecumenical Council
adopt the infallibility dogma, they will join,
the Greek Church.
A woman and her little daughter; a child
of three years, were attacked, on Saturday
last, at Sunnidales on the Northern Rail-
way, by a large wild cat and seriously in-
jured.
Upon his arrival at Fort Garey on the
17th ult., Father Richot was met at the
steamboat landing, by Riel, O'Donohue,and
others, and escorted to the Government.
Hoase, a feu de joie, being fired from the
Fort in honour of the event.
:Strayed Horses.
TRAYED from the premises of the subserib-
cr Lot 20, con. 14, Stephen, on the 25th
u1t, & blaek.horse, with white spot on the back,
and a slit in one ear, also a white mare with a
lump on tlis left side, and a yearling grey colt.
Any person giving such information as will lead
to the recovery of the above will be liberally re-
warded..
JOHN PREETOR,
Serepter P.O.
135-tf.
Stephen, July 8th, 1876,
PROPERTY FOR SALE.
T OT 37 and part of 25 Sparling's survey Sea -
Ai forth. There are ou the premises a good.
frame house, and barn 7 andthe lotis set out with
fruit and ornamental trees. For particulars ap-
ply to
SAMUEL DICKSON.,
Post Master, Seaforth..
Seaforth, July 8th, 1870: - 135-tf.
JULY 8 11
DISTRI
ONE ThOUS
at Scott B.ebertso
MR. Samuel Ha
the Ist inst, a pee
and. uniform.
One day last w
Wroxeter road.
ing it at Foster's
Tnnorona pr
last moment befoi
tity of interesting
MESSRS. Bishop
near'Malcolm's
the 13th inst, fe
the to: line bet
THE ladies of the
villager; purpose op
buil& g fund, on
ly occupied by Mr
•ter's drug store..
We are'in reteip
Robinson," as
immense Circus,
entire. Posit -is -el_
Queen's Dominion
be what they may-
VziitY's Panora
y. It is spoken o
of art now on exhi
which it is apt
mind are of the 311
speak for Mr. Ver
AT tile laSt Mee
of TeMperamee, th
led E. A. Armst
W. A. ; B.. P. Tai
D. MOr2.31, Sent 1
Andrews. :Treas. ,
A. C. ; ..f."Trott,
CONSECRATION.—
this village, will 1
- 17th hest by his
Dr. Walsh, azsiste
Amongst others E
treal, who delivers
over the remains o
Gee, is expected to
We have repeat
and Hills Green'
their destinations
with us, and as t
feet, evidently, the
office through whie
we are loath to co
next irregularity -w
a dose investigatio
• THE SALT WO
salt rock, to the
feet, operations in
- though there were
thing near through
tubing is daily exp
be immediately pu
like twenty men a
material ready for
Moi E Tnoitovo-
County of Huron
the enterprise of
manifested by the
stock. On Thurs
Tack'ersinith, brou
seven months, w
Wm. Douglas, of
tionable pedigree,
ing animals we eve
SuflooLExAmx,x
nesday the 29th ui
tion of the school
ly number of spiel
school is taught bv
has proved himse
teadier. Some of
Mr. Sutherland, in
. teacher of S. S. No
-examination fe
Campbell. A goo
Eexes were present
the Reeve and De
All present seeme
ed: -with the state
were well pleased-
ses were delisrtred
by Mr Morrison
pile were diemise.
To CORRESPONO
that what -We inter
nication`; was -4'1
- assure him that be
the reporter of th
Comniunication tr
late for last issue,
this week. Pleas
tor the same. II
reach us by 'Wedn
The Kinburn ee-
ly overlooked, a.
that of 'Progress"
for reasons, which
stand. We t
—The communioa
ceived, but as it e
thiedr, the matter
- understood by the
for not publishing
DOMINION DA1
b011TiloOd, notwi
morning, repaired_
the faiui of pieliie
formed a goodly,
Huron, where th
Mon was eelebr
style. Several. bo
swings 'was eree
corepeny. At th
corapany*as rega
stirring speech
which le treated
comparison with a
proceedings 'were
cheers for the Qu
'11OTEL 11:ArROV
ing trade of this
aacorfecothineroniaouhraV
drgaging'tiottLthe,
cel
Cranbrook Hotel,
• his already site
fitted up in first e
trade.
CROPS.— e -sr
generally spealiin
the principal crop
a large yield. 0
farmers ere busy s
CELEBRATION*
Eery of Cotiftelera
The competitien
-ate., was 'very ke