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The Huron Expositor, 1875-04-16, Page 11 al DEPARTMENT NS T J(1 TTS ENc7.t1 (ASSL\XER , s Ta 3I TWEEDS, ,tiER'MAN TWEEDS, EThe, 'UN TW BEDS, SDI AN TW EDS + SUITING S, •f STINGS, E SERtr C'GAMINGS SUITS ice, t nderson- SND GAPE Newe4 Style in the 'UR INCS3 . Scar 4tf it 1 rr t 7 e fS&ara •8 kj CI, S `ki L Li•F �. HIRT. 4 eu .-lst�ulel buy aixL 14. . •.iii telly perfect fittin; wi:l nota4 eer than ur.y othet €•'.t i always smooth. ttf� nutter the Lex `•^ti..•fry!se•iratk ft mei lice .( nn. be _ I I • eolatectPtl at the !..;I V: down Of I' t OM breaking' • iE_sl ?: ae sitting ist:€E:te pt :a tter i- t ed that it body of eby. b t -fitting oni,y one Ellie Villa: &Co Atitt goat?: tor *tic HOTFL FOR SALE. VFOR SALE, the Union Hotel, Harpurhey: TO . be gold by private sale on ensy Wiens. The ° above le a large team° hotel, with etable end good well of water, line oroshard and garden, and 80.*4 JOHN DILL, Proprietor,' FARM FOR SALL T41011 sale, the north half of Lot 15, Con. 9, -I; Morris, County of Huron, containing Macrae ; 0. cleared, balance. pine, cedar, tee. Log house and barn; well watered; young orchard, bearing. Terms, easy—part may remain on mortgage. • Ap- BUILDING LOTS IN SEA:FORTH FOR SALE 171B, COLEMAN, having laid out the iiounds ing Lots, le prepared to diepoee of loto on reaeon 11 able terme to auy who may desire them. Partles desiring to parchaec should make immediate ap- plication. -804 COMFORTABLE frame cottage, containing dinieg room, parlor, 8 bedrooms, kitchen, woodehed and cola house. Good cellar, purnp, ofee., Poseeesion given on the 1st of May next. TERMS—One-third down; balance in three yeare. Inquire of proprietor. 875 A. O. MoDOUGALL. FARM FOR SALE. OT 18, Con, 0, Hallett; loo acme, 65 acres -Li cleared, remainder wooded with beech and Olivier, frame dwelling; River Maitland and a miles from Clinton. Terme to onit purehaiter. For particulare apply to L. MEYER, Harpurliee, or -BENSON ot. MEYER, Seaforth. . 346 HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE, von SALE, a home and lot on the Huron Read nearly opposite the Roman Catholic Church. The iireperty conveniently situated, and the houae is large and commodious. There - is a good well and other convenienceff on the preniisee. Foe further perticulare apply te the proprietor on the premises.' 6809. THEODORE RLINKHEIMER. HOUSE 84 LbT For SALE IN EGMONDVILLE VCR SALE CHEAP, a good frame dwelling --IL' house and three quartere of an mere of land in the Village of Egniondville. -The house contains four roerne, With a good cellar and a never failing vtell in the cellar, The lot fenced with a picket levee, and planted with, various kinds of fruit treee. For further ilartieulars apply to the pro- prietor on the ewer:noes. "REIN° Lot 6, eon. 17, Orey, County of Huron, On the preinieee itrO a good logi house and frame .Thiflarin eittutted 11 miler; from Seaforth and 6 fi'enn 13-1130$010, and le convenient to churches and Ke14001s. For fnrther partioniforo apply to 1178-41 JOHN MeNEIL, Walton P. FARM FOR SALE. - 1CeEING part of Lot 28, Con. 12, Hal, containing -%-' 80 aeree, 65 of whieli aro eleared, the balance being beech and =plc. On the land are a frame bearing fruit, In a good etate of eultivat on, The farm hi sitaated within two miles of the thriving village of Zarieh, and convenient to a grist. mill and saw mill. For further information apply to FARM FOR SALE NEAR SEAFOR,TH, - VOR Sale, timtbeantifully eituated farm, on the , -11: Huron Road, adjoining the farm of Mr. L. 1 7 , Meyer, centaining 101 aerate of whieh aro dear- , ed. and. in a idiot° of owl, ltleation. The bal. ante is well timbered Th e are eight acres ' un - i der fall wheat. For urther particulars apply to FAE.M FOR SALE, To101t, SALE, Lot No. 8, Con. 9, Iluilett, contain- • (elle°, the balance well timbered with hardwood. There are 2 frame lidiiTifice, frame barn and Al retiree stable 80x86, also a hiree log bard. Two good bearing orehards. The farm is well watered' with never failing wells, Situated lf "allot; from the 'same distance from, Clinton, on a good gravel road leading to (tech place. This is one of the beet farms in the County of 'Huron. Apply to 8844 JAMES yEASE, Sr., Conetance P. 0. GRIST MILL IVA SALE. T ere No, 5 and. 6, in the township of De'wnie, 40 27 cleared, balance in good hardwood, with a good Grist andFlonringenill, doing a find-, clue bueineee. Size of mill, 24x40, throe stories high ; dwelling honee and bank barn, 80x40; two good grafted orcheeds. Land well fenced and watered. Only three miles; from St. Marrs, Ott the St. .Meryeand Stratford Grand Road. i'rice, $6,000; $3,000 down, and balance in live yearly inatalments, at 7 jeer cent. Apply to JOSEPH IREDALE, St. Marye, or to FARM FOR SALE, FOR Sale, Lot 28, Con. 7, 'Osborne, containing 4' 74 acree. 55 of which are eleared and in a etate • of good cultivation. Therois a good ft-amen/VIM arid STABLE. The farm is located on a good !gravel road, hi conveuiently eituated to eehoole, churches and poet office, and is within 13 milem from Seaforth and 7 from Exeter, For further pirticulare ripply to the proprietor on the premioes. WILLIAM DINNIN, Jr., FARM FOR SALE. VOR SALE, Lot 9, Con. 1, Lnndon Road Stan- Iey, 100 aerate 80 cleared and under fenee; the balance timbered with tiret-elass hardwood ; frame barn 60x40. frame mtable 18x40, log house, good bearing orchard, well watered • situated within 7 miles of Seaforth end a like dietance from Cline ton. Farm well underdrained and. in eirst-chois cultis-ation: Apply on the preplide8 Or to the Jiro- prietor at Bracefield P. 0. '- 362 ANDREW MeICENZIE. FARM FOR SALE IN BRUCE. FOR Sole, Cheap, Lot No. 30, Coh. 6, Townehip -A:. of Bruce,- County of llruce, containing 100 fierce, 80 of whieh are cleared. This farm is tan- . tiled within live miles of the rapidlY.groWing vil- lage of Paisley. The uneleared portion iff well through the place. It is a desirable' property. For further particulars apply to the Proprietor, Box e4, Seaforth P. 0. 852 A. M. CAMPBELL, SAW MILL IAND FARM OF 100 ACRES ii•OR subeeribere offer for Hale, their 'A' ARM mill and farm, Lot 85, (Jon. 5, East Wawa- noale. The contains large eirculer, edging saw, nateoor law, shingle few, edget and peeler— all in good °order, There are on the lot hi:Hideo the mile; two frame dwelling houses and frame - hemlock and other hardwood, with a large stook in the vicinity to last a; number of TOitrf1. at any time. For further- particulars enquire, if eetter post paid, of 'W. (e. HINGSTON, Brue- sammenewessome SEAFORTH CEMETERY. VereteneD, 500 good cedar poets. For 'tertian- * lare apply to WM. HILL, See. Com. len VALUABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE: „e NV oae wanting a, and clams Melodeon can proem t a great bargain. by epplying :Vain Street, North. Seafortle rthilltrE OR TO RENT, THAT eliedhee honk. and lot situated on the "1-` corner Of John tercet, and former]) owned by Mr Griffith Daviee. Apply tO ere Goott wages will be pea: Apply to TEN DOLLARS REWARD, . r11/1E above reward will be given lot such irifor- . motion do will lead to We deteetion and. con- viction el tho party or parties who on the night of the Oth pf March lest cut and carried away a fliekory TREE witich etood at the gateway cm the riond011 Road opposite the farm of the uudereign- 88o-4 WM, WILSON • A WINTER IN • R yen, FLA., Marebi Considering yse f entirely!' 1 late ain for the present write anything ab having been re res from home that ce thought of rorida, original intenti n, and, sible, jot dawn he resul tions and expe "ences weeks' residen e in The cliniate Florida, and ce season it is de that it is perf to find a perfec dise. Neither it cannot be g to see anything • find fault with the most delica whole of almost ter Out doors in ter, in 'January and. in both Ja a good many r were by no mea dents assure m s the gr tainly t we cli ate mb ed cell g perso very d the ope here W: r uary an s *air that th ally severe win r here, North, and th4 damp quite rate in th wiriter of Jacksooville forty the lowest pol t mark en one the Col and -t ot to when uch th not in s trip vill If as brief agtit if w • ter, and not 0 lam bound to sa reason one feels at the North, changes from quickly. Often at noon would sun, the evenin almost neceseary, Of the suinM above 90 in th day t• o and evenings are c 01. As Wri last week of M rch th emu from 70 to 80, II find e t I have not to got y here a 1 inn!' course, even io Canada e 'exceeds the de ree intl ted We have no it ea how t rv beco es 'when ntinu for" more pleasant nd tei rete This it WO to its insul Ositi fanned by the 'sea ',Hem fro Though. Florida was t e wit est set - beau veryailow. It in. rises an area ei nearly as !large as th tato f New - black, is only bout '211,000. -It has about half redoz n good -in ed to ns, and only two or: thr lines of railw . The St. John's Rive is the reat ighway for trade and co municat ori fol. he eas- tern part of the 'tate, opg: I is river who visit the IState in i toren arty all spend their tidie on its a ' los, r in, its vicinity. The. St, Jelin s a ieceliar river in several res,peiets. rig s a few miles from the gentle, ii i n north- ward for about 00 Mile e pt ng into rice. It runs n arty par 1 el to ie coast its, entire length arid at poin s much mote than 20 mi ee dista from t. For 80 piles from ts mou it is broad winding stream, and i a in i course into the large and e titiful Laker; lte banks ere el sely lin d With live oak, cypress, paAmet o and 0o her ; Southern trees and shru s, whid ith the long grey moss hang' g down ir ranches, giv.es the scener .a very a ked , and, to tbe Northerner, a peen r' ap (Armtek. St. John's, to its he nate 8, daily steamers ply, hich de g th season are crowded wit_ Nort nevi i i search points along th river la h tels and boarding ,h,puses, ere tile ally excellent accoi -modal • to be foun d. The average 'medial be apt te form, on a cuts cultnral country. He to agree with a certain 1N who said that " Florid water and one -teeth 8 country, espeeially the ea t, is is said Ware is not a mi 1 nivil Florida The soil is edi osed deiv FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1 75. AlcILE 81101r1tE IRO, ubli*heric. onms ff flinty"' nded to Bnt it n Jotters s of the w what ige, my as pos. observe - out ten and of' tion of winter nOt say expect of Para - ch that uld like ly sa factory bier' uld ,not • iS eh that mayl rend the 'inn the win - r. his win - it s at the ether is son: All this rees- las been e ther- e ee ere win- ct 11 more me! re thaii the weather' tha I or some eti in the ool that ; Months o have m gets hat the in the marks varied s begin- hankfal ter. Of t otten y these ing and ike this eks and reptired a has a urnmer States. farpie would ida as an agri. uld likely am p. The eo:y. flat 1111s at that it ge in all 1 white it 'snow, cc ki ids, the id am sieamp asily .leaned, quail The • la a thick 'ate he- live shrlu ) of all ficelt to clear, ferti e, The rage, hut °re - ale -4g to ren- t ani ot pre- leictiv4ness of klIOW 01.11. vege- pro u ed, but at North, table, as they local I emend, hippo, north, .egeta les can round Pota- and ne\ver of darker c land... The pin land 1 hut is . light an poor n hammbeks are where h growth of hardwood, st 0 kinds ; this land, is very t swamp land afgards pa t quires a great amount of d der it lit for eultivatioe. pared to speak Of the p o any Of these qualities of 1 that cotton, sugar gene, tables of all kinds earl. e whether in suftipient qu it pay 1 ain no able t tables could be raised n thing like what they car they should be very pr conunand a high price for and any surplus could be The climate is such tha be had fresh all the yea toes can be plaided any ti e du ng th fall, winter or sprinig, and A six r ;Jewett weeke the new on s will be r*iy for the table, 'and it i just t e sa is e with is no doubt that hree or four crops a would equal ane no -them rop f out the Same breadth of la 1 •Co al ca I never be a profitable crop on this soil,i or eau they can be raised to prof t an ;where, except on a large scale, e d it la said to be impossible t prom la r here and grfiss, such as ve use for asture, will not grow, T ere is , o tur grass sand, through whioh wee and, rough, wiry grass' make t o eir Wa and appear! of Floride and the so urce of muc of its1 ture. The climate nd soil Ire p, culler - of the other tro ic 1 fruits Th:: apple Melly situ ted. 0. the its have; ange takes the firs place : : be" ig the the TOOfit eaasily rais d. On. his count, and because in ma ty mind the orange , I will try to tell w at I ka w al out: it, and describe the n due ope 'anal neees- The orange, is the most ,b utif I tree tree, as large as an pple tre ., wit, thick foliage of a fine da k green • the i fleck the dark green wit i a the sand bright and brilliant' mon' t, and ou h ve the orange tree as it a pearolwth it fruit. It is almost equal y beaut ful *hen in blossom, and it the 1 emits a delightful fragrance which is ereeptil le at la con- siderable distance:- %he ora ge ree be- gins toe blossom i Felon: ry, and in •11areli will be in f 11 1.Aoo oo The fruit begina to ripen in 8 •pterobb and in OC, it is all ,gathered at once. The eanges are only ta •en off requir for use or market, an the lot ger the rem in on _not disturb fnany of them. Oran es are often left on the tr s till , reh; and it is nothing unusual o see n e fr it and which remains on he tree late in the in the North -have been j uck d half green, aud bear ab rut as uch resem- blance to the Mon a oran e as piece cious Spitzenberg or Seek -no furth r, The orange tree is grow -fr in the seed. The first ye r it is u ual plant about two feet rip rt ; the lir l year ftext year ,they are t ansplan rows, they are large enoi gh to ee out n the grove, about one 1 unclred trees being generally planted to an acre. Mt er fa- vorable circumstan es and witle good luck, the tree mg e expec ed bear the sixth year fro the ed r the fourth. after setting ut, but it ge ierally takes longer. If a rove ge s in pod bearing within ten ears fr m th seed, it is doing pretty w 11, The oran e tree is very durable. 01 ce it ge s a tart it will last for generat ons. B t in 'its in- fancy it thrives mue i the be ter fo care - kept? from its wood and eave . It quickly responds t : such tten ion in rapid growth and f 'eshened color of its Let us now see ho v the or pays. 'In Florida, e rly in about Christmas, or nges ar scarce, they comma 'd as higl a fi orange cannot now e bough • in kuville :fer less- the, ten cen s. tree, in full bearing will pr due cents eech these wo Id be. ort ,520 to $40. Sappos ng a ma to grove of 500 trees, hie ineo ne, —nearer the latter, In feet, or tree witi mere often bear 2, I i i than 1,000.1 This w uld pay let *sing fall ;wheat, e en with 30 to the aere.I Our as erage Ca adi mer begins to free the vihite s much as: at first. , he abov is ineans an ver -stat ment of the of orange c lture. know gr Enterpri;se, on Lake Monroe, con only ah int 80 trees, some 30 yea this with very little attentioi bei containing some 700 trees, yie ds $ annually. I do not kno•w o an only drawback is he long tiin must elapse before t ie first re urn in,. A eettler here with sm 11 12 years, _till his 'orange tree be make returns, then he would e al A young man who 'desires 4 omp wishes to make his ,hilciren id mend - children nth, could take no 'nor cer- tain way to reali ,e theii am iition, than . to plant aucl cultivate au • range he lemon, ecome tire as rt:tro0cooOkndcil t two - from five a t -this 6,000, good sages r than wallets n far- nd is 08 not ite se irofits ve at Dining s old, and be- nera- The ecime or an to grove. 0 I hope anything 1. have Oat so f not result in rand g a Florida among the farmers of Burn l' North Carolina fey r, vehieh rag or three years ago, There ar , of telee sides to the pie ure, and lo disadvantages as well as o her r will fever -e the 1 two has Except along tbe main thew ughfares of 'travel, the country is a vas wilderness, There are no roads, such we would call roads ; churches and schools are few and far between ; there is n society, or very poor soeiety, and the S ate govern- ment is, like that of most o i the other Southern States, in very dou tful hands, many of these disadvantages would die - appear. Butoit does not eeni likely that Florida' will fill up ve fast. The transient winter population ill increase every year, Out the influx of regular settlers will not keep pace ith it. So long as the Western States offer much hardly be diverted Southwar The price of land in Flan a is very varied. Immense tracts are atilt in the hands of the Government, nd can be had as homestemlar by act 1 settlers. But malty all the land on t St. John's River and on the principal avenues of communication, is in second hands, and commands from $5 to $50 an acre, ac- cording to loeation and improvements, The hardwood land is •difficult to clear— more $9, I should judge, tluni the aver- age of Northern bush !an& Much of the land is covered with the saw palmetto, a shrub which gro s three or four feet high, 'and sends out oots thick- er than a maife leg. After t e trees are cut down, these roots Must grubbed out, at a cost of from $10 to 30 an acre, according to their abundan e. By the moved, and the palmetto ro ts grubbed up, he has paid a pretty g price for his land, even if it did eeast im little in the first place. . It would astonish e Canadian farmer to see- the live stock they h ve in this country. The hogs are wonderful ani- mals. They would be a great attraction at one pf our fell fairs, and Would quite take the tibiae off the Berkshires and Suffolkee—judged for racin,0 qualifier', tions, The Florida bog is boilt like a bound, with long le e and no e and slen- back one of them for ten mil s an hour at least. The cattle are s all, lean, hardy animalsewhosubeist o the coarse grass of the woods and swa ps. They run wild nearly all the year und, their owners taking them in o ly in the spring, when they are b anded and° " cow -penned" for a short ime„ The cows are hardly expected to yield milk, the calves being allowed run with them froth their birth. Veal • unknown as it is considered unlucky t kill le calf.' lt is a common saying Ord a Florida " cracker" woul as soon lei a _baby as kill acelf. Th horses are mall hardy animals,: very in enor in appe ranee, but equel to a good Carat of hard ork. They are never shod, as thee:soft and ,which composes the roads does np break up their hoofs ; for tbe same r ason they Before th,e war there were rge sugar and cotton plantations, but these have been almost all discontinued, on amount of Abe difficulty' of proeurin labor, or because it does not pay to e ploy free labor. Many of the old pla tations are lying waste, their owners ng neither able to eafry them on nor to sell them. VVhatever plantiog or fartnin is done is Their mode of fatming seems very prim- itive indeed. They have n es of the' labor-saving implements wh ch makes work easy to thelNorthere fa mer, They scratch the geound with a fu ny looking little plow, drawn by one ho e or mule or ox, as tbe ease niay be, a d the hoe accomplishes the rest, The number of Northei ner who come down here to spend the winter, or a por- tion of It, increases every y ar. They begin to come early in NOV mbee, and the influx inerearies until the beginning of 11•Iarch. Theo every hotel is full to overflowing, and many find. it difficult to obtain accommodations of ny kind. Aboutthe middle of March tbe tide turns, people begin to look onieward, by the let of May Florid is almost deserted by Northerners. ihe great majority of winter visitors se tter them- selves along the St. John iver from Jacksonville to Enterprise, nd at St. Augustine, pia the Atlantic oast. Thie past season tha Indian an. Halifax River countries further south have also atttacted a number of tourist . Accom- modations for travelers have e eatly im- proved in the past few ye: Large. well -kept hotels and boar mg -houses have been established in grea numbers. .-No one mining here need fe r lack of accommodation, except it be when the rush is at its height, about t e end of February. Then, as I hav said, the hotels are overcrowded.- , Whether Florida has *hat is called a " bright future" before it, I cannot say, but it evident that it -ha a better chance of prosperity than al ost any of the other Southern States. ts orenge groves will be a source- of wealth to many or its peOple, aed it beautiful winter climate will always ttract an increasing host of Norther ors, e who, during their sojourn, scatter their sur- plus change with a very laeis hand. are drying of a good rge milies will he sprink, licly bap - London, k. can ot get at the fish t rough t e ice. Th re seems to be a pred caMent r the fish in either ease, — The Right Hon. J Brigilit, the gr t Liberal leader of E gland, pi one of t le directors of the shwa Cabinet Co pany. The petitions for apr hibitory liquor lew his ;wagon have bee extremely nu - mer us, the total presen d being no less than four hundred. and fif en, -1 on the night of - Wednes y, 3114 lilt, The victim is said to ha wife's sister. Wo tak wee place in the course between the boys a Hig School. clai s the championship as Lein pos, ses d of the largest calf in the dietrict, It as raised from an rdinary 'grade cow and weighed 107 pounds at birth. n, under the date of arch 29e says Toronto, Grey and race Railway hs and three hours hind time. throat "I for a reat W; have e all cam e married has r match of a cou girls ie e of f the ris the trai 30t1 mon pain the t, Lawrence is still rider th eon - side ation of the Premier f Ca ; who Kin ston, Jamaica, for 9, lbs. of their cele rated hater, to b delivered ati type ily as possible, at 2rc pee poiind. wee (:.ni nidi GiAlrfeatri neiat orbd 1 :PT i Yin' ni 13kegi I ail 'lei veu at of The Can Suet B tter Company The project of winter naviga on of have receiv au order from e car- tered ting wilt tern appoint a me persen eased • Marie ich the efendant, l' ter Me few da, s ago, durin the pr tried in Lon - to mairy the girl half a hour der to settle the mat r. Th girl ated, then said she guessed not," McGregor had to f rk over $600 obn Street, a young builder, while nag a bundle of shin es up the roof house, the other day, in Walkerton, d and fell. Taking wo bun les of les with him, he t bled o the into a well 23 feet de p, in wh eh at ge to say, neither w re hurt, , at Bel;tville, Wa8 Mpleire y de. s all escaped. The urniture illan, re iding near rgyle, was out harn y rd trying catch some re The ate being o n, the orses ed two d ys after. ng the j gular vein. He h been d the fa al deed. e had e wife ✓ end 50 cent pieces n eircu time: 11 made, and so muc like th gen. at one can carcely etect eing the c e, sharpness exercieed now that the silver coin li been put in don of w offe in o beg and da ea of a shin roof the Stra egor, The reads ill the country up fast, o --There is every prospect fruit season. :--Appearances indicate a —Three hundred. French. eorne from Massachusetts in to Sherbrooke, Quebec. —Two youn men were pu tised into the 'Aomori faith a Ont., en'Thursday of last we burg, and sporting men in t t vicinity are having a good time. --On the 1st inst, a son of r. Andrew Lemon, of Guelph, bad his band badly mangled by the explobion of a flask of —The fish of Lake Erie, mprisoned by the ice, leave been dying b cause they bad too much water and not pugh "air. Now the fowl on LakeHuro are starv- ing becaue they have too ,mu h air and hom strp is it ina ding mew in t hor rau driv in t he d suici seve in d reco mit and feit 80 NV the . Such :ne0__wrti unaxi,urbeadriddiathgne give notice o ever, buildin Arth r, The inch 8 in eke inch s the ot its 9 the cor and :he places riosily in the Mg( of whic take to pre the s relying he edito quil of ma one, o to spe. k, knocked of ti e and ca aed them to man pieces h ve stepped others, like J seph's coat ors, ave com to the front of St Vincent has lust com your quilts of any col'ors. I 11 has fire spectors who ental only, or they have their inten ion -to inspect and yard Vein the 'ite- ration, in o der to ewer - her proper p ecautio are where ashes are. stor of the Mou t Forest Can - at he has at is officel a eu- hape of an gig within an hie egg was aid by &S - farm of Mr. yttle S d Will s, living Centre btr was n. the ya splitting so year of age, as in the way, right be- hind him the consequence being that in swirr ing'the axe round it a ruck the lit-, ting he skull nto the brai , which es, cape by the rifice, prot ding to abod the , size of the thumb. Medicel ai so w 11 that nothing unfair orable is an,- ticip ted fro it. ie Jury said (f eonsid rabic the diff tenet) ' from ae tail - point and re- lay pasSenger for the time ith the mo- bile a general pf late . bout hat Pr ston hide th ir di - if qui ts eg own au milk f man col - and de and the -tow ship leted quilt 'email the n trot out Mr. Charles t, Cha hain, the the ina bet way turn tick turn issu diti udge, in addressing t ase before them was o rtanee, and he defined een a ticket purchase company to any given and a general rail t without speeial con ticket is valid only d and in accordance us specified upon it, ticket rate is' an abs verdict kb. is no e of two or the defe y's cabinet was bit ned down volving a loss of $2 —Th have som Elora. t a recent shooter of 24. —Th raise th orders f cons fro —La ab e ekne ds oP er e dt m. de commo ig0118.1:Tar a'etlitjTilUarYeds'i"litawif4thrl n Saturday last in - match eight pigeon ranaged to kill t o birds out 3ishop of !Niagara proposes to eateries of 'the eler in priests' Om $600 ty1,000, and the d numbers of wild docks e len ashore- n the so th shore of ring the se ere we ther in F b - To Let," the olunteer —Tw lyoung me , nem, James Bal- four, of liaimItem, nd Ja es Kelly, of Freelto have been, sente d- to three months "O. the Central Pris for dead - beating a ride on the Great estern. —Th sugar -refining bust ess has be- come so unprofitable in C ada, owing to Ante •ean. Competition, t at Redpath, of Mon eal has given notice of his inten- tion to lose -doors. —Re orts from all parts f the coml. try ind eate the fall wheat to be in, a healthy eondition, very littl being win- ter kill . Should the fates be pro 1 - current hat he will not ret rn, but w 11 be appo nted to India. ployed the County Office, Cayuga, was found d in the woods, on Wednesday, 7th ins he had been miss ng for some days, a d as he was addle to drink is sup a,sed. that he di .in a lit of deliriu `tremens. ricultur eta of Esse , after enquiry into the tter, h to pr tically test the -growth f beets for the Ma sugar. cation as to ate of that a profitable - uboture Of - --Th 19th orAptil is no the day n go up, The 6th een et aside for that pu le, but the ev nt did not take pl e, it was p rogued ill the 1 -9th. —Th musical c tie of t e Globe bail stars vi it Toronto. he give's them to un-. derstan that unl ss the fork over His litt el game coin lig to th eare of the editor, he critic. now search of fresh fi s and past res ne —Th ury in the case of atie Blake, of Woo ridge, charged wit child-mur- said inf tit came to its_ death n the month of Marc last in the villag of wood- hridse, unty of York, at he hands of Katie B ake, its mo her, by cutting its ruler maile to Mess s. Chisholm en overpai by th: on a load. four year , ago. he Banner would touch the consciences who have been gat ng their pe - laxly for se eral ye rf without pay for it wedding of liss B des to Mr. 'tuert, on nesday said to Montreal. There were eight ailds; ell dr sed a ke, and the of the bride, which as imported eels reported to ha -v cost $1,500 throat he had of whea wishes ;forger: have b seen in brides - costume The pre dressed to a Hu tity of tmhex.e0ohr da has sire sor as a ufacturi irnpoprtra iinme season. the Gra, in one Shaw's ganized shops i various a great ladies i mother 'an old and is does al things have a vtT:13.0t eo rirde ps Ullman its; E. Hut6hins, of Huntsville, p in men'sticlothes, pa,id a visit Rev. R. /1L. . Hill, nearly sue- ilaerchandise. The eontents ,of rtevere so badly sp It that the t 'suspected his cue I mer, and by Pecorci says the proposition to la line of steame 8 between and the head of ke Su ' rier g purposes should he line be - Sites for an eleva r and other Nearly $1. ,000 w re taken at sr for ticket to Win ipes. Col. ;:.IA large c mpany is being (*- the City of 1Winnip g, while the immigration burea es anticipa i the Dominion, frs. Brow ,_ LI, was born in th year 177e, consequently 105 y ars of age. eative of -Munroe, 'au tity Li eland. Sh is still quite ma the marketing, and attends , o lance she Iooks as. much like ong those of the vete ans of ,.18i -i - the ;t. Catharines .1s7 ews, who lied 'for a share in the grattritY Parliament are Mr, --Barnet UN, !wan McFarland aed John S. on, of Niagara, They arenow Of eetive nee of 77, 78 - nd 65 years, was at the eangum ry battle Of Lundy' Lane; McFarland a the siege of --ftboreceeas oder ColoOe ,Murra and also at Ftaanlearitnt: riler 'Faonitd N34istarTa,b°b1; thQen Batrittillher can side cif tahnedNBn aro!, River tween ort Niagara • ze-