The Huron Expositor, 1870-08-19, Page 6_ • • _ • • - - -
•
THE HURON EXPOSITOR.
Harvest of 1870.
REPORT OF THE PROBABLE YIELD Or THE
CROPS ALONG THE LINE Or. THE GREAT
WESTERN .FRAII/WAY.
Heseeeme—A good deal ot the fall wheat
was winter -killed, but it will average twen-
ty, bushels to the acre. Not much spring
wheat sown. Barley is good and will yield
about thirty bushels per acre. Peas will
average twenty bushels, and oats thirty-five
bushels per acre; Hay has been a good
crop, and was well secured. Root crops—
fine promise of abundant yield.
GLTELPH.—Fall wheat will yield about
• fifteen bushels to the acre. Spring wheat
very favorable, and will yield trom twenty
to twenty-five bushels per acre. -Barley
• good will. yield from thirty to thirty-five
bushels 'per acre. 'Peas very good will
yield from forty to forty-five bushels per
acre, and oats fifty bushels to the acre. Po-
tatoes will yield abundantly.
WATERDOWN.—The probable yield of
crops in this neighbourhood per acre will be
--fall wheat, fourteen bushels; spring
wheat, ten bushels; barley, twenty-one
bushels; oats, thirty bushels ; rye, twelve
• bushels peas, thirty bushels ; corn, thirty-
five bushels; buckwheat, twenty-five bush-
els. Potatoes and turnips will be a very
large yield. Hay will be a fair crop.
WELLINGTON SCiUARE.—It is estimated
that the crops here will yield per acre :—
Wheat, about thirty bushels; barley, ,for-
ty-five bushels ; oats, fifty bushels.; turnips
500 bushels ; potatoes, 250 bushels. All
root crops look exceedingly well.
13it0elee.—Fallt wheat is very fine, but
will yield only from 15 to 25 bushels per
acre., Spring wheat, 15 to 20 bushels to
the acre, barley, 35 to 40 bushels to the
acre, peas, 20 to 25 bushels to the acre.
Oats are rather light, but will probably
yield from 30 to 40 bushels to the acre.
Hay crop will be fair. Root crops look
• well and promise an abundant yield.
• 0Ail4ILLE.—Ib is estimated that about
twenty per cent of the fall wheat was wint-
ter-killed, and the average yield will not
exceed ten bushels per acre. Spring wheat
suffered from the early drougth, but has
• since improved ; it will hardly be an aver-
age crop. The barley crop will not be so
large as last year, as much less was sown,
and the drougth stinted the growth; the
quality is very fine. Peas were sown very
extensively, and the yield will be good, say
• not less than thirty bushels to the acre.
Oats will be a fair crop, but not up to the
average. Very little rye was sown find the
yield will be small. Hay will not be over
an average crop..
PORT CREDIT.—Fall wheat will be good
in quality, but the yield will be less than
that of last year. There will be fair aver-
age. crops of spring wheat, barley, oats, and
peas. Root crops are good, and will yield
an average crop. Hay will be less than
average crop.
•
TORONTO.—The fall wheat was largely
• winter-Elled, but the ,samples are good.
There are, however, indications of rust.
Spring wheat looks well, and the yield will
probably be a good average one. Barley,
oats,' and peas all _look well, and will prob-
aoly yield abundantly. Root crops are in
excellent condition, especially potatoes.
NIAGARA.—Fall wheat is thin; the yield
will be very light. Not much spring wheat
sown. Oats and peas will be a good aver-
age crop. Hay is very light. • B.00ts crops
are all good. Fruits of all kinds are plenti-
ful.
FORT ERIE.—Fall wheat is considerably
under the average. Spring wheat will be
a good crop. Barley is only. medium. Oats
will be a heavy crop. Hay is very light.
Fruits of all kinds are abundant.
• The Massacre in China -
The attack on the missionary party in
• the vicinity of Tientsin, in which Mit Wil-
liamson was murdered, has,, now been suc-
• ceeded by a determined onslaught against
Christianity. According to a telegram by
• Grant's line, via Kiachta, received on the
6th inst., it appears that a riot occurred at
Pekin, and that a mob attacked and fired
the Roman Catholic cathedral, murdered all
the priests and sisters of mercy to be found
itt the neighbourhood, and then retired.
The persons murdered are French subjects,
and for the general good of foreign relations
with China at this moment it is well it has
fallen to the lot of France to avenge this
atrocity. The Under Secretary, in reply
to Mr. Magniac, stated that no information
had reached the Foreign Office on the sub-
ject, and they very rnuch doubted the re-
port. It is certainly singular that the
French government has no special telegram,
and the Russian government says nothing
on the subject. Our press are backward in
their comments. Only the London Post
talks of satisfaction for the outrage. —Lon-
don Telegraph.
ate • spe
A correspondent says that •it is the cor-
'net thing in Pittsburgh to roll up your
trousers. All the millionaires do so.
It is estimated by some mathematical ge-
nius that it would require a canal five miles
long, fifty feet deep, and two hundred feet
broad. to held 'the beer annually consumed
in Europe. .
The New Orleans Times says :---" Eng-
lish ale and brown stout, sold in England
and Ireland at forty-five cents per dozen, is
retailed in Nev Orleans at fifty ;;cents per
bottle. And yet we stand it."
The impending war is affecting British
commercd. severely. -There are already
twenty steamers' laid up at Sutherland,
which have been in the habit of runing be-
tween that harbor and , North German
ports.
• A douple orPrintere.
i
I met Ms. Thurlow Weed a day or two
since in the office of one of our leading pa-
pers, and I alluded to Mr. James Harper,
and mentioned his views as to the ways for
a workingman to acquite independence.
Mr. Weed reflected a moment and replied:
"It was most emphatically the rule of
James Harper's whole life to study, .not
how little he could work, but how much.
Mr. 11 rper and I learned our trade about
fifty y rs ago; of Mr. Seymour, then the
leading/ printer, of- the city. He was our
master, and one of the best men God ever
made. He resided on No. 46 John street,
and lived directly opposite his place of busi-
ness'. James and I were partners. The
advantage of haying a good partner, where
you are month after month together at the
same press, must ee apparent. Often after
having done a good day's work, James Har-
per would say, "Thurlow, lets break the
back of another token—just break." I
would generally reluctantly consent just to
break the back of the token, but James
would beguile me, or laugh at my com-
plaints, and spever let me off until the token
was cOinpleted, fair arid square. It was a
custom with us in summer to do a fair
half day's wok before the other boys and
men got their breakfast. James and I
would meet by appointment in the gray of
the morning, and go down to John -street.
We got the key of the office by tapping on
the window, and Mr. Seymour would take
it from in under his pillow and hand it to
one of us through an open in the blind.
" A ssressman. " continued Mi. Weed, "who
would do 20, or even 10 per Cent. more
work than usual, was always sure of a situ-
ation. James Harper, Tom Kennedy, (long
km() dead) and I made the largest'bills in
the city. We often earned as much as $14
per week—liberal wages, when you remem-
ber that good board could be obtained as
low as $10 a month." As Mr. Weed ut-
tered these words his eyes lit up with the
fires that illumined them in his youth, and
there was that expression a moment about
his face that showed he was for an instant
living over again what were probably the
pleasantest days of his varied and success-
ful life. In alluding to these "giants
amongst us," let us ask: Does the modern
system of labor, under the supposed ameli-
orations of the eight-hour law, trades unions
and constant strikes, promise to bring up
any representatives from the rank of the
toiling millions like the legitimate fruit of
the old industries, as represented by Thur -
low Weed, James Harper, and their equals
and associates, "self made men 7" Contras
the bitter spirit of antagonism that now pore -
veils between the employer and the employ-
ed, with Thurlow Weed's utterance, with
deep emotion in his voice, speaking of his
master who has been dead scores of years,
as "one of the best men God ever made"
It is something for the youth of the coun-
try, thrown upon the world with no resources
but his hands and brains, to figure to them-
selves James Harper and Thurlow Weed,
tall, athletic, six feet high, splendid young
men, of the best American type, shaking off
sleep ere dawn, and hurrying to their busi-
ness.—Cor. Troy Times.
--• so.
A Game of Cards for a Wife.
1
About eight or nine months since, a man
living in the northern part of this city went
out into the eastern part of the State to
seek his fortune in the new mines of that
section, leaving his wife and child here in
town. Some seven months ago, a gallant
•deciple of St. Crispin persuaded the White
Pine widow to take up here abode with
him in a house which he furnished for her.
The new pair lived together for about seven
months, when a few days since the genuine
husband returned. Of course, there was
trouble in the camp; but, after some quar-
relling, the two men agreed to play a game
of seven-up for the woman. The game came
off last Saturday night, and the husband
won his wife back by just two "points."
Tbe man chimed his wife, and the man of
leather could not say but that he had fairly
won her. The woman preferred the shoe-
maker, but the husband and winner was de-
termined to have his own. He packed up
what furniture they possessed ; and last
Sunday evening, with all his household he
left by a fast freight waggon for California.
When the waggon started from Nortn C.,
stree the was quite a scene. A crowd of
nearly one kindred persons had collected
to Seelthe husband carry away his "stake,"
and there was much merrimentover the ro-
mantic affair. The woman cried and want-
ed to stay with the l shoemaker, and the
shoemaker cried at parting with the trea-
sure he had lost by not holding enough
"trumps." He asked some of the crowd
if they thought he would be arrested if he
attempted ,to take the woman out of the
waggon. They' told him he had lost her
" on the square," and must bear it like a
man, so the waggon moved on and soon the
fair one was "gone from his gaze."—Virgin-
ia ( Nev. ) Enterprise.
A new anesthetic hydrate. of chloral is
.almost miraculous remedy in deliriuna
ttensens. Dr. George Yialfour, of Editir
burgh, has tried itin a case which was .one
ot maniacal , violence. Two half -drachm
doses at one hour's interval produced sleep,
and cured the patient.
A man in Verne -int has succeeded in ma-
king a folding globe. It is hollow-, and can
be shut up and carried in a small space.
Much ingenuity is displayed in the con-
struction.
The snobbish custom. of having liveried
servants is more prevalent than ever at the
watering places this season, especially among
those who should wear liveries themselves;
if anybody has to wear them.
TREASURER'S
SALE OF LANDS
FOR
COUNTY OF HURON, ) •-DOY VIRTUE
• To Wit : of a Warrant
under the band of the Warden of the County of
Huron, and the Seal of the said County, bearing
date the seventh day of July, A. D. 1870, to me di-
rected, for the collection of arrears of taxes due
on the undermentioned lands. These are there -
fare to give notice that _unless the said taxeo, to-
gether with ail lawful costs and charges be soon-
er paid, I shall on WEDNESDAY the 30th day
of November, A. D. 1870, at the hour of one
o'clock P. M., at the Court House in the town of
Goderich proceed to sell by PUBLIC AUCTION
the said lands, or so much thereof as may be suffici-
ent to discharge such arrears of taxes and charges
thereon.
TOWNSHIP OF ASHFIELD.
....)
4
o •/ g3 5
ri
44
0•D g• .r::)
0 P'd 0
't g •m
w 8 :+1-2) O .-C .2
0 0 J. g g 2
a.•
....
W.
64
0W
W •:! ca a
PI 0., 5
5 ....
w
o
10
•N I 4
N I 1
E 4 of E 8
E 4 of N 4 1
N VV 1 2
E 4 2
SiofE4 2
SptofEpt5
N E 1 1
17
E part of
28
VILLAGE
22
23
24
25
26
1
t C, • )
4th e. d. 200 p 92 37 3 17 95 54
9th " 100 up 90 943 12 94 06
• 10th " 50 p 13 -13 1 20 14 33
12th " • 50 u p 36 61 1 77 38 38
6th w d 50 p 19 57 1 35 20 92
8th " 50 p 23 66 1 45 25 11
do 100 p 45 11 2 00 47 11
9th " 50 p 5 80 1 00 6 80
do - 69 p 34 69 1 72 36 41
14th " 50 p 29 75 1 60 31 35
• do 158 p 77 202 80 80 00
S part
n t plot 4 p 4 86 97 5 83
OF PORT ALBERT IN ASH -
FIELD.
W Arthur st.
'7'e
272 93 365
272 93 365
-do4 p 2 72 93 3 65
do p 2 72 ' 93 365
do 4p272 93 3 65
S Ashfield st.
5 p 10 43 1 12 11 '55
2 do 4 p 9 73 1 10 10 83
Subdivisions of lots 5 & 6 E London Road
1 E London Road
p 268 '93 361
2 do 4p 268 93 3 61
_3 . do 4p 268 93 3 61
4 do 4p 2 68 93 3 61
6 do 4p 268 93 3 61
7 do f p 268 93 3 61
8" do 4p 268 93 3 61
9 do 4p 268 93 3 61 .
10 do 4p 268 93 3 61
2 S E William street
p 267
2 do 4p 267
4 do 4p 267
6 do 4p 267
7 do 4p 267
8 do 1 p 67
1 N W William street
I P
4 do p
5 do 1 p
6 do / p
2 S E Ann street
2 67
2 67
2 67
2 67
93
93
93
93
93
93
93
93
93
93
p 267 93
3 do 4p 267 93
4 do 4p 267 93
- 5 do 4p 267 93
8 do f p 267 93
1 N W Ann street
1 p 267 93
,2 do 4 p 267 93
3 do 4p 267 93
4 do 4p 267 -93
5 , do 1 p 2 67 93
6 ' do 1 p 267 93
7 do 4 p 267 93
8 do 4p 267 93
95 W Wellington street
• 4 p 8 13 1 07 920
30 , do 4p 7 29 1 (40, 8 34
26 E Wellington.street
•p 12 42 1 17 13 59
VILLAGE OF DUNGANNON IN ASHFIELD.
Mallough's Survey
4p• 409 97 5 06
TOWNSHIP OF COLBORNE.
2 Lakeshore 53 p 30 48 I 62 32 10
2 W Lake road
100 p 54 68 2 22 56 90
VILLAGE OF CLINTON.
256 4p 319 95 4 14
302 • 3-16 p 6 16 1 02 7 18
355 4p 2 41 93 3 34
357 •p 183 90 2 73
730 p 99 88 18,
731 4p - 99 88 187
• 826 4p 117 90 2 07
892 4p 381 95 4 76
953 4p 313 95 408
1222 W Rattenbury s new survey
p 139 90 2 29
• TOWNSHIP OF GODERICH.
8ulxlivision of Lot 4 in lst Concession
• 1 lst 5 p 14 40 1 22 15 62
6 " 5 p 9 73 1 10 10 83
5 p 9 73 1 10 10 83
15 • p 8 60 1 07 9 67
24 5 p 9 54 1 10 10 64
25 " 5 p 9 54 1 10 10 64
5 D 9 54 1 10 10 64
Subdivision of Lot 10 in lst Concession
6 let 10 p 8 30 1 07 9 37
15" 11 p 11 75 1 15 12 90
W part 24 2nd 40 p ,5 91 1 00 6 91
N E part 7 B 6 p 20, 66, I 37 22 03
W part; 9 Maitland 10 p 80 1 00 6 80
N W part 46 " 20 p 17 22 1 30 18 52
Centre part or, E part of W balf
105 " 36 p 36 96 1 77 38 73
TOWN OF GODERICH.
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
360
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
3 60
7 64
26"
10
15
• 92
94
W part 111
372
392
393
401
555
902
• 959
962
1041.
1048
W4 1058
1115
•E 1188
1232
E4 1316
1323
P
P
4 P
I P
P
P
1 P
1 P
t P
P
P
P
1 n
4 r
P
P
3 P
1-5 p
1=20 p
1-5 p
1-40 p
1-5 p
21 00 1 40 22 40
13.34 1 20 14 51
17 41 1 30 18 71
17 41 1 30. 18 71
5 66 1 00 666
15 47 1 25 16 72
8'41 1 07 948
9 34 1 10 10144
275 93 368
13 50 1 20 14 70
16 24 1 27 17 51
19 34 1 IZ 20 69
19 22 1 35 20 57-
43 72 1 95 45 67
15 311 25 16 56
365 95 460
141 90 231
84 88 172
392 95 487
33 438 121
125 90 - 2 15
Let. Con. .Ae. Pt. Taxes. Costs Total
1324 1-5 p 125 90 215
' 1332 1-5 p • 2 05 93 2 98
1361 p 2 21 93 3 17
1362 ' ‘,` p 2 24 93 3 17,
70 Subdivision of lots 2 & 3 con. A i
" p 1 23 90 213
77 " " p 4 06 97 5 03
1 Subdivision of lot 4 con. A
• :3
5
7
10
• 12
14
16
20
22
24
26
30-
:32
:34.
38
40
42
45
47
49
* 50
• 52
54
56
64
66
67.
69
71
73 " p
31 Subdivision, of lot
Park and Marwoed's survey
S E 4 8 Toronto st.
E 41 1-20 p 64 88 1
7 Cedar st 1-10 p 76 88 1
S E 4 8 ; do 1-20 p 38 88 1
20 Con. C 10 p 5-13 1 00 6
) Stibdivsions of lots 17 &18con. 0
• 5 5
1 p 161 00 6
Subdivisir fsr:ifitil..,nogtsTat '477t,&.
• Toronto is 8367L front
p 5 16 1 00 616
p 5 16 1 00 616
p 5 16 r00 616
p 5 16 1 00 616
p 1233 90 2 13
p 12
90 213
p 1233 .90 2 13
p 12
-90 213
p 103 90 193
p 1 03 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 10:3 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 123 90 213
•p 123 90 213
p 123 90 213
p .123 90 2 13
p • 123 90 213
p 123 90 213
p 123 90 213
p 1 03 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 103 90 193
p 258 93 351
p 132 90 222
p 132 90 222
104 90 194
10 con.o88 1 28
'1 p 126 882
• do 3 • do 40 ft front
p 329 95 424
do 4 do 10 ft front
p 329 95 424
do • 6 do 53 ft front
p 448 97 545
do 7 fronting on Picton st. 53 ft front
p 447 97 545
TOWNSHIP OF GREY. •
8 4 36 lst 50 p 6 71 1 02 7 73
N 4 29 4th 50 up 4 61 97 5 58
-24 5th 100 p 42 76 1 95 44 71
28" do up 59 50 2 35 61 85
29 6th do ' 38 21 1 82 40 03
• ,33 " do ,p 34 77 I 72 36 49
34 '‚do ' 34 77 1 72 36 49
• 35 ' • do up 34 77 1 72 36 49
32 7th _ do p 21 33' 1 40 22 73
35 " do u.p 31 09 1 65 32 74
:35 10th do p 25 77 1 50 27 27
:30 I7W do u.p 49 202 10 51 30
VILLAGE OF AINLEYVILLE IN GREY.
• 3 Wm. st. 4 p 12 55 1 17 13 72
4 do •/- p 12 55 1 17 13 72
• TOWNSHIP OF HAY.
Northerly 45 acres being N 4 less 5 acres ; off
S E Corner
13 lst 45 p 75 69 2 75 78 44
VILLAGE OF RODGERVILLE IN HAY.
2 4p 7 94 1 05 899
3 4p 7 94 1 05 899
TOWNSHIP OF HOWICK.
52-
64
26
16
16
14
S part
E .4
S E part
W
W part
E part 28 "
N W part, 31 "
23B
30 2nd
13 3rd
28 8th
13 9th
23 10th
1 llth
6 13th
25 14th
3 A
94 "
25 "
27 "
50 p 11 26 1 15 12 41
50 p 12 63 I 17 13 80
100 u.p 8 73 1 07 980
100 p 37 10 1 80 38 90
50 u.p 18 72 1 32 20 04
100 16 33 1 27 17 60
106 " 11 47 1 15 12 62
100 p 30 10 1 62 31 72
10 u.p 1 30 88 218
45 p 23 98 1 45 25 43
45 p 20 37 1 37 21 74
34 p 11.11 115 12 26
15 -p 12'79 1 17 1396
1 p 395 '95 490
100 p 38 61 1 82 40 43
VILLAGE OF WROXETER
4 S Queenst. 1 p
6 Centre st E
1-5p
2 Main stN 4p
1 Marrietta A W
1-5p
2 " 1-5 p
0 Mill st S 1-5 p
2 Neivrnan,st
. 1-5 p
8 Anna st N 4p
9 P
IN HOWICK.
69 88 157
6 37 1 02 739
69 88 157
88 88
88 88
400 97
1 76
1 76
4 97
131 90 221'
88 • 88 1 76
88 88 176
'VILLAGE OF HOWICK IN HOWICK.
• 143
144
156
178'
179i
196
1-5 p 7 931 05
"•p 794 105
" p 264 93
" p 8 59 1 07
" p 8 59 1 07
" p 37 88
8 98
899
3 57
9 66
9 66
1 25
VILLAGE CF BELMORE IN HOWICK.
2 Howick st p I 68 90 2 58
N part 3 " 4 p 1 41 90 2 31
5 p 29 88 -1 17
9 " 2p 282 93 3 75
3 Kinloss st 4 p 25 88 1 13
• 13 " 4p 25 88 1 13
-
VILLAGE OF ALMA IN TOWNSHIP OF
• HULLETT.
27 24
28 24
36 48
70 24
74 4 p 24
88 1 12
88 1 12
88 1 36
88 1 12
88 1 12
VILLAGE OF SUMMERHILL IN HULLETT.
13 4p 24 88 I 12
VILLAGE OF MANCHESTER IN HULLETT.
15 ,• 4 p 5 35 1 00 6 35
TOWNSHIP OF MORRIS.
S 4 9 lst 100 p 23 03 1 45 24 48
S 10 1st ]00p 23 03 1 45 24 48
N 4 9 5th 100 p • 33 47 1 70 35 17
N 25 8th 100 u.p 84 64 2 97- 87 61
VILLAGE OF AINLEYVILLE IN MORRIS.
p 102 90 192
4 P 477 97 5,74
p 2-46 93 339
p 167 90 257
p 48 88 1 36
51
52
104
123
134
135
• 136
142
143
144
145
VILLAGE
61
70
71
73
89
90
p 48 88
1 36
48 113) 136
1 36
•
P 48 136
it Pp 4471 88 136
1 36
OF BLYTH IN MORRIS.'
P 436 97 533
p 117 90 207
p 2 39 93 332
p 8 29 1 07 936
1 p 202 93 295
p 202 93 295
88
88
88
88
Lot.
• 91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
108
• 119
120
130
131
132
134
135
136
• 137
138
139
140
141 ,
142
McConnell's Survey
• 6 13lock C
Con.
AUGUST 19, 1870.
66 7 4.4
Li 8•,,
46
Ac. F€.Taxes. C088Tota1142
po8
p 40 88 128
p 10 88 128
4 p 40 88 128.
p 40 88 1 28‘.
40 88 1 28.
.44 1: 40 88 128
p 40 88 128.
p 40 88 li
P 40 88 1 2
1 p 81 88 16
4 P 81 88 169
44 ip.) 811 88 1 69
8
88 1 69
i) 3 2,4 95 4 19
p 4
88 128
.. .1)) 4040 8888 11 288
4 p 40 88 128
p 40 88 1 28
p 40 88 1 28
1 p 202 93 295
p 202 93 295
p 202 93 295
4 p 202 93 295
4p 202 93 2 95
1 p 40
1 P 40
4p 40
9 " 4p• 40
10 • `` p 40
11 " 4p 40
13 " P 41
12 "
4 P -
!4 " 1 40
" 15 p 40
1 BlockD 4 p 1 89
• 2 " 4p 58
3 4p 58
4 •p 58
TOWNSHIP OF .MC/ILLOP
W 7 lst 50 p 49 50 2 10 51 60
. VILLAGE OF SEAFORTH
Beattie and Starks Survey
"• 7 Block B 4 p 2 10 • 93 3 03
p 230 93 323. 29 p 2 31 93 3 '24
Jarvis' Survey
" 39
60
bl"
" 106
" 107
IC
64
it
88 1 28
88 128
88'0 28
88 1 28
88 128
C8 1 28
88 1 28
88 128
88 1 28
88 128
90 279
88 1 46
8.8 146
88 1 46
14
p 15 10 1
p 8 19 1
I p 9 31 1
p 296
p 426
Gouinlock's Survey
S4 18 1-10 p 153
25 16 35
07 926
10 10 41
93 :389
97 5 23
90 243 ..
TOWNSHIP OF STANLEY.
E part 13 Range A 14 p 24 61 1 47 26 08
• 7 " J 20 p 17 92 1 30 19 22
W part 12 " N 44 p 4 31 97 5 28
TOWNSHIP OF STEPHEN.
S4 35th 50p 40 14 1
Part 10 6th 1 p 5 62 1
N 4 4 10th 50 p 28 71 1
8 " 100 p 79 14 2
N4 (- 12 13th • 50 p 22 64 1
11 N Bdy 100 p 55 57 2
12 " 100 p 46 22 2
W4 • 9 S Bdy •50 p 27 32 1
28 " 100 p 71 07 2
87 42 01
00 662
57 30 28
85 81 99
42 24 06
25 57 82
02 48 24
55 28 87
65 73 72
VILLAGE OF CREDITON IN STEPHEN.
5p 133 90 223.
TOWNSHIP OF TUCKERSMITH.
Centre p't 16 1st Huron Road survey
p 294 93 387
VILLAGE OF EGMONDVILLE IN TUCKER -
SMITH.
1 Clinton st 4 p 89 88 1 77'
TOWNSHIP OF TURNBERRY.
N part 32 C . 60 p 56 13 2 27 58 40 -
S part 32 " p 29 11 1 60 30 71
N4 40 lst 50 p 8 32 1 .07 9 39.
26 llth 100 u.p32 25 167 33 92
31 " 100 " 54 66 2 22 56 88 -
VILLAGE OF WINGHAM IN TURNBERRY.
Park lot 42 • 6 p 1
" 43 6 p 1
" 59 5p• 4
173_• 1 P
227
VILLAGE OF, ZETLAND IN
10 4p 4.
11 4p• 4
81 3 p 12
25 .40 2 15-
2.5 90 215
26 97 5 23 -
76 88 164.
76 88 1 64
TURNBERRY..
53 97 5 50-
53 97 5 50
23 1 17 13 40-,
TOWNSHIP OF USBORNE.
Spart 19 lst 45 p 50 59 212 52 11
E half - 14 NE Bdy 50- p 16 541 27 17 81
VILLAGE OF EXBTER IN USBORNE.
Subdivision of 17 & 18 con lst
21 McConnalPs survey
• 1 p 80 88 1 68 -
do 37 do 1 p - 58 88 1 46;
do 38 do 4 p 58 88 1 46; -,i,
do 39 do i p- 58 88 1 46;
do 43 do 4- p 2 94 93 3 87
do 44 do 1 p 2 94 93 3 ST
do 45 do 1 p 2 94: -03 3 87
(Subdivision of lot 20 con. lst--
12 McComiell's survey (.1..g
• 4 p . 1207 1 17 13 24•
do 13 do 1 p 9 18 1 10 10 28
do 35 do 4 p 1 41 90 2 31
TOWNSHIP OF EAST WAWANOSII.
SI 31 llth 100u.p 1g.-65 2 07 50 72 .
VILLAGE OF BLYTH IN EAST WAWA-
• NOSH.
20 4p F48 90
• 21 4p 148 90
22 , 4p' 1.48 90
S4 28 4p.337 95
32' 4p 167 90
37 4p 373 95
TOWNSHIP OF W. WAWANOSH.
N.4 18 lst 100 u.p 41 26190 43 16
W4 24 4th 100 p 87 31 3 ,05 90 36
E i 24 4th 100 p 91 00 315 94 15
E 4 14 12th 100 u.p 39 54.51.85 41 39
2 38•
2 38
2 38
432
2•57
4 68
VILLAGE OF MANCHESTER IN W. WA-
WANOSH.
110 4p 112
111 4p 112
112 4 p 112
113 4p 112
114 4p 112.
• 115 •Ip 1 121.
116 1 p 1 IT:
117 4 p 1I12
VILLAGE OFST. HELENS IN\ W.
NOSH.
Mather's Survey
7 •p 1-71 95 4 66
do N4 18 4 p 412 97 5 09
VILLAGE OB-DUNGANNON \IN W. WAWA-
• NOSH.
Malath's Survey -
36 . p 7 56 1 05-. 8 61
90 202
90 2 02
90, 2 02
90i 2'02
90,1 2 02
90 202
90 } 2 02
90 202
WAWA -
A. M. ROSS,
Treasurer,.
Co. Huron._
Co. Treasurer's Offic,
Goderich, Ju1y.,8th 1870.
AUGUST 19
Singular Det:
As illustrating'
presence of mind,
es for the truth of
was orriginally pt
of fictisin :
Caroline 0 --
proportioned vont
maid with a, fashil
ther passe. One,
sisted at her mists
party, she amusetl
away the various
the room, in tryin
in and dress sho
tress, and having
well-turned linses ,
aloud: " There's
there's a foot for a
herself as to their
hersclf of her bo
• room to rights sas
hermistress, who
was the last time
was found in the
bed -L ---the jewel cal
open and robbed. '
• er left no trace by
tared, and, inspio
escaped. Three y
engaged in a simila
took her to Patis.1
ten the murder, a
was not with any
criminal.
It happened tha
of the public nrome
as she passed a. e
these words :
and there's a foOt
the events of the e
was murdered flas
now for her mary
'pretending not to 1
glanced sideways a:
saw there were thr
'which of them had
slowly as them, t
cided manner, and
walked up to them
ed to a certain str,
all of them had a
the voices she eas
Jaad jest bpaiien.
•were both very fr
-that they were ver
she would get the
from the first ge7
suspicion, if they
policemen. • The
inform a genticunne
• had only been a for
• knew scarcely a ;
however, carried at
her, to assist itt mai
means of acquiting ,
over to a bench, she
through the dictiox
she wanted, and sh
- a pencil on the fly
•The sentence ran
• omoir besoin vous
grammar was not ve
-es do not teach syn
understood it, and t
the mutderer in his
• wards Convicteden4
timony,
What War Coal
When great nati
their own people an
tions make ready fo!
is broken up, credit.
;
property becomes u
neys must find unct
mid capital shrinks
fright and tonfusios?
-commercial world i$.
and if war resulted
mankind than this,
.all- the maledictions
It is of course i
-even approximatel)
amount of damage
and still more so toi.
channels of robbery'
results, at last,in t
and ruin of unnurn
,branch of the work
•for it is represented
values upon the sts
world. Every dolla
ties issued by differe
somebody, and its ow
after the declaration
The London Econon
dertaken to estimati,
, .eightl bas,asdasyIsioi3w:t wbeyetnhl
the first alarm in th
Deputies,ancl July 1
trst reached its heig
rentsdifeis11°I31e-0,w00e0e„
-consols 8,315,0001- ;,
8,315,0001.; tha't of
12,600,000/. ;' and ti
the sectuities-sold i
than 76.295,000!.;
000,000, without il
Germany, Austria.,
some other countries
•mitde in London.
. In 'railway stocks
took place; and in
nent English linesa
thanop evfa r tltuhyei sfitof2,egreiiinvestors4u3ns7s0vr ee0a07/b, . :
greatereforeintheper
amounto,wperi
-destroy, and which:
says, implies ins:livid
to over-estimate.
but it is not
, fiwill express the end
Post.