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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1916-05-05, Page 1LL 2, 1916 if,mmepai theB1j Btorc en lemairammila ..nastemet.M.e. Nunimummummzummimaziftwa===mium• MeLEAO EROS., Publiskers $1.50 0, Year iii Advakce t line- of Ne for Women, to * Most Ilandsorne 4:2 Best Qualities, Z. • F we do not ask *; ite that tbr earrizents New wed Suits he careful work - which they are r perfeot fit and These are please you. • 's up to $25.00 • from $5 to $20 01 0 and upwards 4,:* • *I ry Book of uir.44v er Co for afternoon,• for weddings, 4i )11 for confirm- ,rf-bathing, for motoring, for one and all, t nd old, for all t, Vith the newest tpi ifor trimmings r Is, and all the • most popular t • iard Pat Ions shion journap, If not, plac' keep in touch igner Special a -a10 tsc. 404 Paz ed • P. ret. eee -TUVE= YEAR OLE NUMBER2525 MAY 5,1916 ****••••••••••••••*•••••* ****•••••••••••••••e•eeee • • Co j. 4, : The * • tammemonEr "Ik 1 1 Creicr Clothing tii, -. Pr a riti ater ro • ' r' ''''''117.371-Ffacci..-itr.z 1- : HEN customers who a year or more ago bought • these coats come back to our store with words • , , : of highest commendation and .praise for the sterling 1 qualities, Worked into these garmets we naturally • feel it is no more than our duty to communicate the • • • information to the public generally. Any number of • people have been fooled with a 4heap imitation of this • ; great coat. But there should be no excuse now for * disappointments. We have the REL I WATER- * PROOF COAT that everybody shoul have, capable • * of resisting the severest tempestof rai and wind, un-. • • , • • fadable and unteara.ble. I Price * I Tv omen's Raincoats $12 to $15 $3 to $7.50 -• • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • ••o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • iThis season's suits have got t .J3 u Eo pleased with : ourselves that we don't know ho..i• to allv,ertise their : goodness strong enough! The v-, ue e offer at every : price is remarkable—the fabrics . re handsome, and 2 there are so many different modeiz; that you'll have : plenty of c13 )ice whether you incline • toward the new : nglish at) les or the more Conservative Canadian : ideas. Thun remember that back of it au stands our • strong guarantee of Perfect Satisfacti n in every in- * • stance. e • e e i Our Prices $101, $1 You Take no R sk t, • Highest Prices Or • • • • .! Tit° Greig Cloth SEA.FORTH :*************************•44.**** 2,.t� $18 • and Eggs Vor a •sesel .11d nd un just come to en ,gpine, sem tion whin itatute-books tene ortant eve. 1 lt.e Libera, the big ereaa eri:perance 3 it (give's ef onelstently , r, N.W taowell, K re secordlliely expandin to; jacene TA-id:co.:able elegr erP are a lot of Con I perfectly rveilling and 0' (give the oppesition, e teMperance legblatioe onaervativ-ee declare o u,h conviction Ila an tererence With the liber Runnymede. Other go portere think ;be,new la and are, ther fate, peev position of ffeiberals to kudos. Theee Conservatives pa fact that the Hearst ete. goei3. very Much farther peSed id, the P.aWell ,;pel arguethat thia fact; d, Grit &aloe The. Heat does. go .a long way far Pwr9Efaixtta.ercir tibeyd 'Mr. e dilRe l n,:ly'll, When finally at g•ot flu nearly everybody. was Ip The bill .became Lew Wit -don for compensation; of government having 'set 1 tthegranting of even par iox). 1 The reault is that al :hops will plose up in S that the etrongeet stiff then 'sold openly and 1 day' will be reatricted t tent otf, 2 1-k per cent, 1,31 theit a sor.ti of 'beer' wi with a backbone 04,2 :1-2 perienced toper's say thi oult to njury. Liquor loudly and ,refase to be the prospect of selling, ecribe as rainwater. many able students of examined the new act, flrin opinion that t There are to joker,a to It prohibits. , But it d(oes not mean , will be ahaolute.Peepi the boundary of Quebec n-u;h aa they wish for an peoplei living event of the province will be trport a. ease for li or perchance ae keg. T the breweriee -; and t Their home market 13 a as 1 the bar and the, 11 coneerned, but the eXP tirues and the manufac tinne to the extent whi ed by the expont deena, The queerthing ler t tee° .an has a fanny beer or a tipplet of rye rprovince, he will have eihne place outside. Fo Toronto man, ,who likes 1 in , Toronto, Must bring 1 some bordering oom gOve,rnment h -as 'admitt 13 an abeard situation, late hour wa.3 a salultio TA.Itio'S CAPITAL --- Torozto, May 1, 1016. latter acme at porters but ttie :rattier -a Lsappointment to the more nthuelast of the .hydr.radial government lakes t duringited, and avity of rought(tho not otherwIse pose power use at the pan los w as not gislature wiehout some Criticism. t came forward that all privatin treated fairly if by the ,govern - n rights. given by, : 'The beWl pro - tent at Niagara Ivel an -1hvesfe milliona rial pro- develo :nent of creeSing ,up to. a norepooker • n ; ithe 3.6ist houid stir within man a feeling of in the know - y, -of an ,:epire',3 had the glorious her. own Batted- hoposed of the of thoae Sturdy the yeans gone e border's of the sweat o their broad ars and for the Unexam- pled proapeeity of Huron. To the leans of heee :nen—t) the aons and grandson- who, have not listened to the e d of King and Country—I make a.ppeal. on thee been or - portant, flat which has n tha.t promised to be that rew obligation ni end to OQueen' al Park Period Should be IL ,.. Some o" the legiela- 'such Ihnitation, the ent he provincial. '3ituatto itself IS ,raiiks •enactedel res fl boast tha t gs, their eet :wai voeated ib. lig Co ••••••••••••• the Most Peon e ith a force The restriction of Falls by private co. ag,reed to by the 1 Ontario. Of lid bill coMes the Ontario aet, inasmuch t ha,s been 'some ellepussion an the. Liberal but the gove,rnmen C.. 2.. Olen Nvith an arasurance their cheats companies vvould be e. ervatives *he, the powens now tak •client encroached up even anxiblus former icgislatures. edit for the develop gramme of hich these by the province Inv niy and_ With fnent of ebout ten Iniquitous. Ina vides for an initial, ty setured at 100,000 horreepower, ernment laup_ maximum of 300,000 is air righ t. d at the 43- c sup- veme t, e viewg title war that by the war me to the Huron's Battali -ether in the Surely the phrase the breast of every nt to pride 'and of patriot ranee .led461e that in the han was pro- etress our County ha cy; .and they (privilege of„fomilng poses of he lion. A battalion c law, certal ly eons and grandso her than as old pdoneerse who but the 11 by, eettled t Mr. Ro -,County and by% the he leglalathre brows carved out inghlt alOng, laid the foundation out ayn previ- any kind, the s fa,ce against [al. compel -Oa- ' ct Saloons and The I-luron tBatta ptember, and dered Meholize about May Intb, and which may be the. ,need,ed 260 mei, to complete the the light; of eatabliehment of e Battalion must a spirit .on. be enuisted, by the t: e of moilization, e expectation This, is direct pa year Which must be ry man In the efarp of age your urglng and InSist- ✓ men do: their r4 of ,a,ge and ou can, et: least, on which will be Medleal 4iazrirer _ant, after he hi certif- be marketed peai cent. Ex - is adding dealers seoff amforted with what they de - Furthermore, the law have nd are of the 13 watertight., e found in It, drought that who live on an bring le 543 their, own use n the zriddle permitted to e consumption en there are e distilleries. goner, as far u.or store are rt trade con- ure will can - h b warrant - dr ° at If an On ora brand of o'o buyade rt hlso anexaalmepialreeaveda it In finen unity. The d that this but only at a , of the probr nen 'suggested. The temperance act way then ,passing tbr 'stage and it was not spring an Important a laav may be amended to pe,renit the agate to coneurne,re by breWer under certain condition a houaenoider wanting dotreatic use, could, un amend:trent bay at fr or the diatillery, provid ary permission, was f from an inapector of th par Omen t. The objection toch It would (restore th,e pretty 'much on the( '13h brewery and the disti wholeaale and retail In Henorable W.I. Hanna, retary, whoIlea thin ‘, tsideration, appears to. wauld work out ail W. Rowell, the Liberal 3Ure. Any'how, it isnq I and .for .aWhile at leaet, vaanting Ontario liquor get it only after it h of the 'province and, in APO 60 But even, 0f there hs been nopro- hibition bill at all, ,th 'session -would. have been notable. The new legisle_ than for lextending,th cope of the hydro -electric power heme in OA- tario lv important tnr far reachin. beeides being, expensive. There is the bill under which the province takes loner the ,score or more of power works included in the. Sern .-Tent valley, ,diatriet. blue an all 22 water came into pessession on clals are already In th varlave companies affe cpgainted with the bu, system. The ommissio next week and will op develop:nente In this g mission lines land the tem3.. The :rights are to be year bond, a total ise For the filet ten, ye the munic1pelitie3 taki from the coMmission and operatilig 'charges, or that time ttle, sYst ith under the ,genera he Trent powers wi gerve a Large number eitie3 in Central and hich hitherto have of "power e cltles a agara pOw attar', dealt Aro-electric ,scheme 30 of firs import n tic!, vLewp1n t. T hydro-elec ric corn xtended, a limit h the use of Water at ate powe,r companies etruction of radial ra wilstponed Until after gh, his final ought wise to endmenit. The ater, howeVer, liquor 'direct and distillers . For instance, a supply for der such an ' the brewery d the necess. rst obtained license de - a plan is that ale of liquor p baeiS, the lery. becoming titutjons. The provincial aec.. Ian under con - think that it t, but Newton ead,er,13 not.so n the law ,now n Ontarloman will be able to .3 traveled again. tie benefita eI by thos with the Ni The legial nt 3 ✓ group In the he government: powers/ and will May ist. Offi- offices of the ted, 'getting ae.. iness of each evill step in rate the power oup, the tr,aneo tribotion sye- paid. for in ten- , of $8,300,000. s of operanion g this power Ill pay interest but at the end will be dealt hydro 'scheme. be used to of towns and astern Onta,ricy en, ,shut oot of ,at cost" enjoy - d towns lyiag ✓ zone. g with the gen erally 1B e from the Ora ower,3 of the slon have been een placed upon • e Falls brr! and, the con- Iveays hag been the, war., The King and la comma hearkened to by ev County o If over 46 duty can be done by ing that the youn bit. If 'under 45 net phyricaIly Ifit, ,wear the button -rib eupplied you by ,the of your local Detach examined, you and ricate of military Thia Ls the last tome forward, of and to save the Cou era. of, reproach let do ller, duty.e.." Kitchener 13a5ris the leat Shell Will May be, your indivi be the pneAnsot t triumph, Put aside and conaiderIng onI and a County'a we and take the place arnon,get the 'men come will prove wo pride and a County The twelfth hour ti -re 4for our ele The 'anawer rnuet b it be "Ready, Ayer 1613t? .1, B. Iven you nfitness., 11 for . eir own, f ny from that ',she he 'eat win. the ual enlis e Allies I II petty J afn Etrog are, conic reserved o in the thy of a a honor. 13 striking. The ion has arrived. Aye or Nay. -WIG Ready 1" in the OMBE, Lieut. -COL in Ireland — Dublin Rebel, UnconnALIOn_ally ' . Surr rn der . • ---+— of the dusk of Wayupon tile city Republic" passed d lived e little more than. 120 hours. Proudly, tri- u'repbantly, it "tset t on its short - f liv.ed. ,ca-reer la;at M day, defying ev- erybody, Making th world 'ell up and take notice of "ourselves alorie." Una conditionally it re:aigned last inight to ita pre -destined ffa, e of fall From the tops o . a few houses in, the Irish capital t flies the t flag ,tof the 'Repub the clatter Of Snipeits' rifles h the last. But the banera are battee- ed wink, bullets apd reduced no 'mere rags, and the snipexis are at by Small Mee are etlil smortidering in va,rious parts of the city. i Otherwise Dublin to -day experiencea (am almost perfectly normal Sunday. ! The "army of the r• epublic" ha3 un- qualifiedly ,3urrendered; the "seat of the Governznent," , office ol) Sackville rti,in,s, the "c en Lb ee will; he stig- dtd not an and ictory." sent wi' evitable alousies eoe need. forwar0 for you days to Coun ty"s- The Rebellio With the ,settliin the last Easter wee of Dublin, the °Iris into leistory) It no e. ieolated ere still c"- amid Ming to he general post- treet, t a heap of . mender- n -chief," James Connolly, As dead, and the °president," Peter Pearce, al prIsan-er in, the 1iand3 of the.Gove,rnrnent troops, The republic'.3 newsnaper, The Irish War Newa, has sulspended' publicatian —as such at leasteits day -dream of "our ranee In Eurepe," the Germans, "conquering England" having failed to become a reality A despatch from dated 8 &clock, S The proclamation vi3ion,a1 President" surrender of, all tit 'In order to pr slaughter of amaze the hope, of 13.2..v1n. followers, who ar hopele3sly outnum of the provisioned quarters have agr 'surrender'and the -3 the unit0f the r or -der their followe ehigh alley ...Coal. is alaolutely toasurpass- ed for domestic use. TRY IT. N. Oaf & Sons Seaforth - OtitariO jesmoisdom isengere .to revolutioniat bodies in the Welat azid, South, inc1nd1nE4 Mel Coun- ties of Clare, Galway, Wexford and .Louth and thenee tronediately adja- cent to tele Irish capital and, Ordered them to la -y down their arms and glee up to the Govenotnent troops. Priests -and ponatablesat on spread this neits 'broadcast to bring abOut oPeedy end }of all the outbreaks in When the message from Dublin reached the ;rebel leader In lEnn13- earthy, ,it ;float fell opon cle4 ears. "1:epee:Able I" "Never. igree the bringer of ( the order, to ,suriender. Pereuagon enithe part of the Mep- eengee however, finally succeeded' ;In prompting the Enniectirthy "genera.1" to order a truce and then toebetake himself to Dublin in • a conVeyed motor car to find out the true latate of affaina, for himself. Similar idaubs were expressed by be 'rebel chief in Ashbourne vetence a deputatiOn now on 'the way to ifhe levelled Dub- lin post -office. In. Galway the rebena heeded tbe order from Dublin and began diabanding. Peace was established in Dublin on Sunday morning. Complete, 13uerender of the 'rebels took, place only Scatter- ed units of rebels holding out th otber places and !that these have been in- vited to lay down, t e1r earnsi. Anxe iety ;has, iended. The Countess Markiewicz netoriout Lor Yeare as a militant Socialist play - 'ed the, role of he Sinn 14'elnere "Jeanne el,'Arc" In the juat-concluded rebellion having takeet active pert, according to reporta In, the fghting. Wearing the °republican" unifbrrn it is said she inspired the rebels With spirited speeehes and fiery ',battle- erieaf' Dit was the same countess Whose outcry "Three cheers for Larkin 1" resulted in one of the .‚mot san- guinary riots during the effeeet car 'strike in (Dublin in 1913. Only lazt January her residence was, raided by the police who ,seized. a printing press and 'type alleged to have been put Lo uee In Spreading pro -German propa- ganda, The countese is the daughter of one bf the, Sligo Unionists Wife of Polish painter sister'. of SIrI Joslyn inootb ,and, cousin of the liarquis of Zetiand. Late reports from Dublii on 'Sunday night, indicate, that the order "cense firing" was passed through the ranks of the Government Sunday night after the post office the Sinn Feiner' '‘gen- eral 'staff headquartere" had , been burned to the ground fired, it Is said, by 'the, e.ebels themselves by means of parafin oil. Kingston Ireland, nday nig t, says: Lasued b "Pro - Pearce ad4ising the e rebels : vent the furttee -ed people, and in the lives of , oer surrounded and red, the members overnment at head- ed to uncenditional cOMManders a all publican frees will .3 to lay d wn their (Signed) "The roiain body of the rebels in Dublin su_rrender the course cif the day. "The,re wa.s h ever, co fighting througho t Sunday and the isuburbe, t was es vere at Pains Bri ge,1 -outsi ‘"The ,rebela in he Calleg geons surrendered of the prisoners Countess Iniaricievi Briefly. this is t fallenthe Sinn Fe PEARCE inn Feta d during In. Dublin .siladueyrabsele, e • of Sur - this mor l ing. One ken herewas the I al •e fate that has be- iter4 revOlt, as far rned. Offielally, the s They ,attempted .f,inal stand lo Coils - 'scum Music Hall at the top of Sack• ville Street out their resistanee was ueelees in the faze of the '‘Iroh ring" of Government troops, The getropole Hotel one of ttle oldest sites -on Sackville Street also wa,,3 deatroyed by fire. Sackville Street Talbot Street, and Edell Quay are the ,principel thoroughfare S where destruction r.egined 'supreme during the 'rebellion week." Most houses on them are reduced to soot and ashes. Although it ns impossible tol obtain an e,stimate Of the &image done since the outbreak of thet revolt, it can be placed conaervatively at something more than $10,000,00. Seven hundred and 'seven prischera have been taken including the Cowie tese Markievice. An 'official list of casualtie,S aMong the latzny officer,3 at Dublin given out, contains 21 names. Of t.his total, five 'were killed, 21 Wounded, and one, ranging. Mail% list is addi- tional to the one annoureced Friday giving the names of two officers killed and fivet wounded. An exact list of casualbles could not yet be obtained, but it Is consider- ed certain that Saturdaan3 P ex- ce4s th eeds by tar ose! of the Orellous dap. This Is due chiefly to the fact. that the Government troops. once their "Iron rnig" around the rebels' stronghold had ;been closed, let lbose a tearific of ugnt attillery against the boildinge, The belief Which has been -widely prevalent from the outset, that the rebellion waa plotted witaii the active 'aid and possible at the instigation of German Government .agenf3, he^arile a certainty on Sanday, ia IM the inedlate eeighborhood. of a harricade, aban- doned by the rebels an ammunition box "made in Ger,many" W2.3 found. It bore German letter,31 and, contained rifle anunueltion of the latest and most effective type., Chief Secretary Birrell has esta- blisned his headquarters at the vice- regal lodge, where he 13 co -Operating with Baron Winborae, Lord Lienten- ant of Ireland. There is terrible suffering from hunger aznong the eivillan population of Dublin, aluelargely to the faet that as Dublin is cone the rebels and the GovernMent troops end of, their re of ter or ide- had commandeered the bulk of food scribed by the fellowing summarized state Theueetele ee -mere weeeee ^ of the( hOr3 orrof. the last few days. Bodies of rebels lay scattered amid the care& a x)if cavalry horses. Baron Wi borne, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, exp ea,sed the assurance that the aeditlo ;movement would be sup- pressed in e course of a few hours. 'The Viceroy WaS full of prate for the loyalty dia,p eyed by the great ma- jority of t e Irish people, and cou- oidered the omentary euceess gained and t.lie age done by the rebels 1 aa 'small 'w en viewed in onnectiorg 1 with the I3u prise of the outbreak and l the evident prepara.tIona made for It. Why lien Should Enlist . The most -ominous piece of intelli- gence which has came to us since the great worlds' warfare broke out. reached ue last. Saturdayt tO the ef- fect that the British force of 9,000 men who ,ha; been cooped up, lei Kut - el -Amara f 'several moetne by a greatly „superior Turkish force under German effirer,a, has been forced by starvation ta surrender unconditionally. Such a fact coming at a tlme when we were, fh Ing that' the final drive T to Berlin, - hieh 13 to end. the war, was about o begite, will be a ser- leu3 Isheek ti!) every loyal British sub- ject, fated 1 btingt to us all tile conviction th t a mast ctrenuous effort at etrengtiti ing the British forces on every battle rent ,. is Znost necessary, and to do is fighting men are the most urgent need. To meet this need, every man ti, the wide expanse of the British Empi e capable of bearing arms —and eispeci ily the young men, mar- ried as otel as singtle—should enlist , at once; kinder the banner of our King to avert the peril of des - militarism, and the tri- iCaiseet over the British ding our own beloved Do- ada. , doubt that the Kaiser's 'borrible warfare, with tie, is world domination triunyphi id it Canada 41.. Prussian, colony. already done much in the integrity 'of the e and for our own liber - Canadian troops who took onfitet so far have gain - and tCountry patio Plates! utrph of, th Empire, Inci trinion of C There Is n ake In thie all its atroe and ;She•uld will beporne Canada h this w,a.r British Emp tie, and the part in the ed honor. , arid distinction beyond all expectation by their valor ana success. But there are still many laggards who ought to 410 their share, In the work of 'defending bur country from the ruthless invader. It as reMarked that the large towns and cities have gieen a much (greater percentage to the ranks of the Canadian army than the rural 'districts. This should not be the case. Our farmers sops should do their Share* loyally ann. cheerfullYi But it thee been, said: We farmers' sons are .needed till the soli, or the cou.n- ;try will pp abort of food. the farms must * tilled„ for the lack -Of farm products would- be a serious cala girls could work on th large propo join the. Ca cessity of they would era and lei ity. But the women and do ea.t least the lighter farms, and, thus free a tion of the young men to adtao army, and in theine- he ease we tria,y be sure willingly do so. The moth - tars of these young ;'nea should ever urge them on to enlist In the Inankis of thef a,rmy which is being formed lto save the country from the Invaders who have ruined Belgium, POland and Serbia. Ifi these hordes win, Canada will share the fate mothers an their daughters urge the of these unithappy lands. And let the young onen, their sons, brothers and eweethearts, to enter the ranks of the Canadian areny (to save, the coun- try from }destruction, If the Kaiser wins in I. is twar, the farmers will th 4s enjoy 1 he crops which they shall have produ ed by their ehard labor. The Kaiser will give, these crops and the farms who will h him. This the countri hemselves to the soldiers ve won( th,e, victory for as already been done in which he has succeeded In occupying .for a ti:ne, and the sa'„-ne, will be clone in Canada shottld he gain even 6, temporary foothold, here. And your 13,avin.ge which in all prob- ability are ,eposited-. in the banks. The Kaiser will take possession of these to f,acts: and children, almoat exhausted from Ierrnediately upan their uncon-d1-1. Leek of 'food, 'gathered witnin lone time' 'surrender at the hands of the tithes drawn by 'Government ' ooldiere Government troops, who had prae- I who '3upplie,d them with food. tically "burned them out," the leader 1 The istreete, in the centre of Dublin of talei Dublin reltelg sent out mes4 Sunday ntslit gave gruesome teetimony pay the ex Nas br not hide1 t aelze the just theati alLaposal, an refuse to al pepses of the war which Light up= you. You can - m fromn him, for he will ank books, and, will know aunt you have at your d tif you or the bankers and them over, he will set you :againet a w,a1.1 with a line of soldiers- in . Trent to shoot you for your obstitiscy. This he has already done in the countries he has invaded, and he hani even commandeered the aavings of the whole German people to pay for his extravagance and crimes Be wili 'non spare you or your nioney. The la,dies Of Sealorth and of all Canada haVe done much to aid thepat- riotic fundis, Red Cross, etc., and we moat accoril them all honor, but the great want of the moment is not tO be supplied by furnishing the sold- iers with ,stwkinge, tobacco and other The real and most urgeat 1.e bodied figntIng men to front and therefore I say to the you g men, Enl*-4,,,,,. Enlist, En- list aed v nquiski the Kaiser before he co:nee too near. 4 The dep h bf the Kaiser's cunning may be t en In the fact that—most likely by bribery --he induced a trait - &roue Eng small bod standard claim a0[ Rai city the eause o by giving ti new battlefront which had, to be de - folded. Tilde diversion laeted but a few days and then collapsed, but it showed cotisiderable cunning or the part of the Kaiser, Sir Roger Case- ment was indeed born In Ireland, un- fortunatelf, but he was brought up in England, and ihe was even given an important position by the British Gov- ernment in the Consular service and even kniglf,ted. Sir Roger wa.s'euptur- ed. immeditely on h arrival at Tra- lee and f a German subrnarin.e, and later op., a Polisli Countess, Madam Markiewl&z, who aPpears to be one of the phiefet of the insurrection, was also taken prisoner. It may be that the lady 111 escape capital punishment awing to chivalry, of the Britiali officials, , t At Is very possible that necessities, need is a go to t.1),e, eh knight to wheedle a. of Irishmen to raise the rebellion and to pro- ish Republic from the cap - Ireland' and thus weaken 1 the Cordial Entente Allies rest Britain trouble on a .e.e.a...,,eraeeeree•reaeente Sir Roger Casement as a traitor ad a renegade may net his doom by the executioner's axe, At all events the five days' Iriati Republic engineered by the Kainer Is no more and the great body of, the Irish. people have proved their *loyalty without distinctlOn of party or creed. This base Caserneat episode %111 noubtless have the effeet 01 caudng increaSed numbers to ea - list for (the. just war of the lathes. AN IRISHMAN AND PIRIOT. Huror Notes —The a.nnounceMent is made of the appaintment of KteL H. Dickaon, of Exeter, to 'succeed. Judge Doyle as sex-. ler judge of Huron, County. ho—anAe ocifuiMetr.viCeredoarig Ktooemkp,ilaca eAuabtut4Er.:. on :Monday teat, When their eldee€ daughter, Melindae was united in mato ria,ge to Mr. Lawreece Ryll, of Hantli- ton, Rev. Mr. Zeigler performing the ceremony. —The annual vestry meeting' of 'It. Paul's Anglican Church, Clinton was held on Monday evening of last week. Reports were received from the Lad- ies' Guild, the WoMen's Auxiliary, the ,senior and junior ,11,,Y.P.A.a the Sun- day School, choir, and Sanctu.ary Chap- ter, all 'allowing that 'Wiese prganizci adonis are in a healthy condition. The following officers Were elected for the coming year: MInISter's Warden, 34 IL Hovey; People's NiTareletn tr. 3- Mur- phy, Vestry Clerk, C Bouck; Sides - men, Bawden,. C. Middleton, R. Ford,Draper.T. :3.1-Ipanewnkslenilsi: W. HJeottrn..9c::: 131: Mitchell, isv. Reed e Lay Delegate:a to (Synod, J. Realaford, II. B. Falai; Substitutes, Jaekson, I. Rattenbury. —A most painful land. unfortunate se - dent befell B.F. Treleaven, come-otos_ 6; Ashfield, Saturday of last vreek. Mr. Treleaven was taking a load el 13t to Miler's Mill, when in front of 1. A. Reid' farm, one of the, cone he wee /delving became frightened, and It reeehea Mr. Trelea.verN in endeavor - to obtann! control. Of tale teesere lost hie. balance and' fell off the load, one of the wheels passing over his leg, which was badly broken and shattered below the knee. He was taken te his own theme where medical aid was awn In lattend,ance. Mr. Treleaven le 5uffer1ng great deal from his in- jury ,a,nal will no doubt be confined te abed for' some time,. Hel has the sympathy of bis *any? friends, who hope to lace hien, Oompletely recoverei: Soon. —A lifelong resident of Goderich township in the peraon of Johnston Mcliwain, ;passed away on Saturday; April 22nd. Deceased was in his six- ty-ninth year and had been ailing for over a. year. When the -call came Ide children were. tali at his bedside with the exception of ,hia de.ugther, Mr& 'Wen. Rams -ay,( Margaret), of New Liskeard, who wee prevented by ill- ne,es from returning home. Besides his widow he leavea to mourn his loss three sons and two daughters—George, Robert and Samuel, all of Goderich township; Nfre. A. Buchanan, of Dula - Church, Ont., ,and Mrs. Wm. Ramsay, af New Liskeard. He is survived also by three brothers and two eisters George, Samuel, Hugh and Mrs. J. Griffin, all of Goderieh townahltaand Mr 3. WM, l\ic.Allister, of Ds.!trolt. —gra. S. G. Castle, whose death oc- curred IR Clinton, on, Thursday last, -was the =only daughter of the lett .Enos Crich, of leruessele. She Was married to her bow bereft husband eight years ago and is survived ,by four email children. One brother, Hugh Crich, a Spirit River, Alta,e also survives. The deee.ased was III for a- bout .a Month and made, a brave fight far her We. She wes a member chof Ontario ,street nrch and, was of a cheerful and happy disposition, devot- ed to her husband and little enes. The funeral took 'place on Satur- day afternoon frarn thehome of her uncle, Pte. Onsiew Crich, interment being made' in the Clinton, cemetery. Rey, ;S. J. Aillrt nducted the nee- vicea and six uncles, of the deceased acted as pallbearers: OnslOve, Gif- ford, Whitfield, John T. Iddo and Ell Crich) —A ,social event In. Which great is- tereat`was taken by all, especially l;iY the bride'a nu.-nerove girl friends. was the rearrianal at high/ noon on Tuesi. day last iof Miss Iris May Warnock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Warnock, Goderieh, to Mr. 'Roy M. Sparling, oper.ator at the G.T.R. sta- tion. The ceremony WAS perforined bW Rey. George E. Roo, pastor of Knox church, in the presence of about 30 invited, gue3te. The bride and grocot were unattended and the bride wore her suit of blue teffeta. Wagner's wed- ding march was played by the bride's ,sister, Miss Grace Warnock. The house decorations were in white and yellow, Easter 1111es and. daffodils. After the event a recherche luncheon was serv- ed and Mr. and Mrs. Sperling left oe. the 2.35 G.T.R. train, for a visit of six weeks with the brides' sister, Mr. Black, in, P,aeadena, Cal., and both at the hou3e and station they wereehow- ered with a copIcei3 supply of confetti. —Mr. Frank S. 31,acKenzie, son of Mr. John Nell MacsiCe,nzle, of the 12th =cession of Aelifleld, has made distinguished record at the PrOby- terlan College, Montreal. The Mont:eat Gazette, in its account of the gradu- ation exerebes of the college, makes the following reference: Mr, F. S. MacKenzie, it was a.nnounced,c as been the most successful student of the year, 1113 reoerd comparing faVnr- ably with any in the history of the college. On a 'total of ten 3ubjects he made an ',average of 94 out of si Visa -Able 100; only on one of the minor sublets did he go below 90.. He wo,3 the Robert elh Dryadele gold medal for church history, the Principal MacTlear gcholarship, the Judge Hutchison prize for ecclesiastical architecture' snit at the meeting of the senate. ofthe Un. nglty It was decided to waive the special examinations for the degree a B. D. andIto confer it uPon htm ecognition of his splendid career In the collPge, and the, Joint faceulty a- warded him the travelling acholarlithlk The :scholarship won by Mr. Madre*. de 14 worth $800 a year for tfro and enableqa hirn to take pot.grti work At APy university; of recossisei Ateaditagi _