The Huron Expositor, 1939-07-14, Page 6ij
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, • • • THE 114.3RON E 0 ITOlt• •
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RECIPES
Oaten during the summer one , and sherbets are tram in general fav-
eritch expressions as "I'm not
1 haven't any appetite in
Waadatere." It is natural that there
;neither the desire nor the need for
:iRalirehr -heavy, fat food at this season
„tin5atat. the year, but at the same time
atitn011git of the right kind of food
Should be eaten to keep a person
• physically fit. With .se many Cana-
- dian fresh fruits and vegetables on
the market during the summer months
the problem of desserts, salads and
accompandments to the meat course
tate easily solved. With meats, fish
or ,poultry as the basis for dinner
they may be served cold to suit the
...summer palate. Cold roast lamb, cod
baked ham or cold meat loaf served
-wtth fresh, le -ell -cooked vegetables
are delicious. Eggs are also a good
summer food. Scrambled eggs or
omelettes ane not too heavy IOL sum-
mer fare and, if preferred, hard -cook-
ed eggs may be combined with fresh
vegetables to make an inviting and!
satisfying .supper or luncheon main I
course. Cheese, including cream and
cottage chees•e, is another food which
may be eerved often during hot wea-
ther. Nourie•hniag, and at the same
-time thirst quenching, well -chilled
dtin,ks are popular in summer and
frozen desserts including ice creams
ow;
Lamb Moulded at Mint Jelly
lla tablespoone gelatine
ta cup eold water
let cups boiling water
la cup vinegar
3 cups coal diced lamb
1 teaspoon gait
let cup argot
% cup taloned mint leaves
la cup diced sweet red or green
pepper.
Soak gelatine in cold water,
bine water. water, sugar. vinegar, salt 'and
Mint leaves. Boil three minutes in
covered sauce/panStrain out mint
leaves. Reheat to boiling point and
add gelatine. Allow to partially set.
Add lamb ame pimento. Allow to
eel in one large or six individual
ruoulds. Serve on crisp lettuce. Gar-
nisa with freak vegetables.
Note—This jelly is more attrac-
tive if green coloring is added to mix-
ture before jelly sets.
Devilled Eggs in Tomato Jelly •
2 cups tomato juice
2 tablespoons gelatine
Seasonings
la cup cold water
6 bard -cooked eggs (devilled).
Heat tomato juice, with seasonings
to' Mete. Soak gelatine in cold wa-
ter. Add to boiling tomato juice. Cut
hard -cooked eggs .in balft Remove
yolks. Mix with salad dressing and
add chopped ham or beton. Season.
Refill. whites and put two halves: of
each egg together. Haleallasix moulds
with partially set tomato jelly. Place
eggs in jelly. When set
WHEN USING
/ WILSON'S
( FLY PADS
READ DIRECTIONS
1•''''."eteele. CAREFULLY AND
ealatzerat Tate FOLLOW THEM
EXACTLY
Each pad will kill flies all day and
every day for three weeks.
3 pads in each packet.
10 CENTS PER PACKET
at Druggists, Grocers, General Stores.
WHY PAY MORE?
THE WILSON FLY PAD CO., Hamilton, 004
Huron County
(Coritinuml from Page 3) •
lotvat
4adviaurY Ptteeident, Mee R. J. Tin-
dal), Wingbacte; advisory president,
Miss 3. SMurray, Ilensallt advienota
•Preeident, afts. A. E. Lloyd, Wing-
haM;aide etistrey presideot, Mrs. Aae T.
Cooper. Cleinton; president, Mrs. Go'
Johnston, Godlerelch; 1st vice -pees.;
M. a W. F. Beavers, Exeter; anti
vice -pees., Mrs. W. C. Pearce, Exeter;
torresPorading sec., Miss Jean S, Mint
ray, Heosall; recording sect Annie
Coateitt, Hansen; treas., Mrs. Walter
Her, Godenicia Assist. treas., Mrs.
M. E. Howell, 'Groelerich; L.T.L., Miss
Eva Penrose, Exeter.
1 Superintendents
Evan and Christian Steward•ship,
Mrs. E. Johns, Exeter; Anti -Narco-
tics and Medical Temperance, Mrs.
W. C. Pearce, Exeter; Flower Mis-
sion, Mrs, Walters, God,erich; Sab-
bath Obseevante, Law and Leglisla-
don, Mrs. A., T. Cooper, Clinton;
Little White Ribboners, Miss R. Lew-
is, Wingbara; 'Nledal Contest, Miss E.
Itayaner, Box 424, Wan•gham; Moral
Education, Mother's Meetings, Health
and Heredity, Mrs. 13. W. P. Bearers,
Exeter; Publicity and Social Meet-
ings, Mrs, R. T. Phillips, Goderich;
Press,. Mrs. Cook, Exeter; Temper-
ance in Sunday Schools, (Mies Jean S.
Murray, Heneali; Scientific • Temper-
ance, Instruction in Day Scheols,
Mrs. Ethel Craw, R. R. 5, Seaforth;
Travellers' Aid, Mrs. M. E. Howell,
IGodenich; Worleas and Canadian Mis-
sionary Work, Mrs. A. E. Lloyd, --
sionary Work, Mrs. A. E. Lloyd,
Wingbarn.
add rerathoroughly aining jelly, and chilL Un- Interesting History
mould on cups of lettuce. Garnish
with water erns. ••
• Lettuce Rolls
let cup cream or cottage Cheese
at cup chopped ham or nuts
Salad demising
6 large lettuce leaves.
Add ham or tints -kw cheese. Mix
thoroughly with suffiaient salad dress -
in g' to make mixture soft -enough to
spread eastly. Spread lettuce leaves
with generous layer of cheese mix-
ture. Form each leaf into roll, Chill
well. Cut into let -inch lengths and
serve three or four rolls on oath let-
tuce -covered salad plate.
(Continued from Page 2)
Englanders under Pepperell, aided by
a British fleet, ,captured Lauisburg.
Lnemediartely after the capture, Pep-
perell sent an expedition against Isle
St. -Jean. This force divided, one part
going to Three Rivers, the other to
Port Lajoie.
M Three Rivers, de Roma's estab-
lishment was reduced to a man of
ruins. The other detachment landed
at Port Lajoie and carried out a simi-
lar plan of destruction—burning the
capital to the ground. The small gar-
rison of 20 nee under Du Vicier re-
treated up East River, heap pursued
For a few, cents you can get a
RUBBER. STAMP
that, may save you
many minutes every day.
Manp type stales
to choose from.
f •
Stamps to suit
all requirements
Paid stamps
Collection stamps
• Date stamps
• Signature stamps
Prices from 50c up, depending
upon the size of stamp required.
E •HURON EXPOSIT°
„Established 1860. McLean Bros., Publishers
-41,
SEAFORTH
• •
•
•
TOPPED
id taift
sor Money Olock
For qui rellOf 'front itching o c;sema, &vim sib-
Jatea foot;soales, scabies, rashes and otter est/gladly.
eaused dot troubles, uso world-famous, cooling, anti.,
septic, liquid D. le D. PreseriPtion. areas:elem.
etainless. Soothes irritatinn and quickly etre intense.
itobina. 35? trial bottle proves it, or money back. Ask
your demist today for D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION.
•
by the New Englanders, until re -in -
forced by a number of the settled;
and some Indians, they rallied and
drove the bevaid•ers te their boats with
the boss of 9 men killed or made pas-
°eters. This would seem to be the
only military engagement that ever
took plan 4n our Island. Soon after
this, an agreement was arrivedat
whereby the inhabitants' of Idle St.
Jean were to be unmolested for the
space of min.e year on giving six host-
ages for their good behaviour.
Even at this early stage deporta-
tion ot the habitants was considered.
On October 5, 1745, Admiral Warren
proposed to the Secretary of State,
the Duke of Newcastle, the trans,port-
Mg of the entire French 'population to
France, and only the lack of trans. -
ports ,prevented the immediate execu-
tion of the plan, However, on Oct.
18, 1748 by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chap-
pelle, Isle St. Jean, to the disgust of
the New Etaglanders, was given back
to France, in exchange for Madras,
India. The new governor Denis de
Bonaventure arrived to take pones,
sion in the summer of 1749.
In the summer of 1758 the British
captured Louisburg. On August Sth,
General Amberst despatched Lord
Rollo with four ships and 500 men
to Isle St. Jean to take possession,
to destroy tthe settlements and to de-
port t'he population to France. On
November 5th, Admiral Durell report-
ed that 2;000 had been embarked in
16 transports and sent to France. On
November 6th, General Whitmore re-
ports 2,200 embarked. In addition to
the 16 ' reported by Durell, 7 other
transports left Canso with nearly 1560
exiles, Of these over 700 were drown-
ed, while the remainder finally landed
in 'France. As evidence of the com-
plete nature of the Deportation, we
have .Captain Holland's report of 1765.
Seven years after the Deportation, he
found only 30 Acadian families in' the
very complete survey he made of ev-
ery township in the Island.. A British
census taken in 1767, nine years af-
ter, gives an Acadian population of
207 souls. Nearly 40 years later in
1797, another census gave only 112
Acadian families.
An enterprising, energetic but un-
fortunate French Colonizer in Isle St -
Jean was Jean-Pierre de Roma.
On July 17, 1731, at Fontainbleau,
France, a grant, signed by King
Louis XVI and his great Finance Min
ister, the Count de Maurepas, was
made to the Sieurs Cotard, du Dotage,
Na,rcis, and de Roma, under tbe cor-
porate name of "The Company of the
East." The grant ,comprised all the
land drained by the rivers now known
as the Etatenelle, tbe Montague, and
the Cerdigan. This large estate was
to be free from all Royal dun but
to be held in homage to Louisburg.
Authority was also given to the Com-
pany to establish stores and fisheries
on the north coast .of the Island out-
side of their concessionwibere they
were to be given grants of land) in
proportion to the number of boats
which they should employ in the fish-
eries. The obligation on the Company
was to take out 80 settlers in 1732 and
30 each subsequent year, with all the
livestock, seeds and implements of
husbandry necessary for the establish-
ments of.a permanent colony. ,One or
two churches were also to be built by
the Company in return for whieh they
would be honored as patrons. On
their failure to carry out these condi-
tions, the Med was to revert to, the
Crown.
Of the partners of "The Company
of the East." Jean-Pierre de Roma.
who was appointed Director and un -
dental; the work with energy, was
the only cne who interpreted the con-
ditions of the grant literally and tried
to fulfill them.
De Ro-ma was a native of Bordeaux,
France. Trained in the counting -room
his mind had received, so severe a
mercantile bent, that schemes and
projects of traffic were its conetant
Med. ' Some of these created strange
misgivings among the shareholders of
t'he Company, as to .the mental condi-
tion of their Director. He proposed
to them for instarcoe, to establish a
brewery at Three Rivers (this was
the name he gave to his establishment
at Brudenelle Point), "in order to
brew beer from the excellent barley
that grew upon ads cleared lands."
'Phe beer he intended to dis-pose of in
the markets of the French West India
Islands and on the return trip his
shim would carry back to his settle-
ment molas,ses, sugar and coffee from
Martinique. In furtherance af this pro-
ject, the asked the Company to send
him six bettlemakers from France.
The shareanoltlers of course did not
see fit to comply with this request
but they drew unwarrantable infer-
ences from its proposal.
Notwithstanding this, De Roma was
a man of unflagging enery, quick ap-
preh•e'retion and ready action. Zeal for
the Company's interests undoubtedly
possessed tem in a Iheroic degree:
but it was fatal that this zeal far out-
stripped the efforts which the com-
pany was willing to make. The share-
holders, in fact, lagged irresolutely
far behind their resting manager. If,
laoe-ever, De Roma saw vielons and
dreamed dreams, 'he nevertheless
struggled m aela 1 iy with realities.
Among the busy workmen wrestl4ng
with the rugged wilderness, he was
foremost. r Be toiled, he planned, he
superintended. Inactivity had no place
in his make-up. His brain teem ed
with •projects, which his hand was ev-
er -weedy to carry out. But the fires
which fed these exertions for the
good and useful, warmed at the same
time into action other propentsities,
which sadly interfered with thesuc-
cess of airs undertaking. His ambi-
tious projects were drawn up witIi his
own hand to the minutest detail, and
were regarded by trim as perfect in
matter and in 'form Suggestion or
criticism, he immediately interpreted
as personal hostility, To differ from
him in the least particular was to in-
cur his severe displeasure,' and it mat-
tered little whether the difference a-
rose over the site .of a building at the
location of a new • fishery, the mea-
sure of bite enmity was always full
and heaped tiver. To him the life of
a "Direetor of the 'COMparty of the
Emit" had no tribes that Could be
sneered at. The sinightett Cheek ap-
peared to hie excitable Vetere the
violetree ef pertneation and the Inver
sten of the piaattd •righte of hie COMP
Vault StraightwaY, his feeling° found a willed* he gabattliutntlY lost;
vent in lengthy coMantraleatIOIle Of in-
dignant expostulattea and bitter in-
vective, which he Sent to every. one
from wbom either redress or sympa-
thy might be expected.
The tongue of land now known as
Brudenelle Point was the site calomel,
for the .headcarerters of the New Com-
pany. Here, ,clie Roma with three well-
stockedl ships, bearing hardy Breton
fishermen, tillers of tbe soil, and
skated artisans arrived In June, 1732.
Nature' there presented herself in a
tangled wilderneee created by tenant
les of license. A,dense woodland down
to the water'sitdue occupied every
spot where •a tree eorrad grow, and
stretched back into the interior of the
country further than the eye could
Teach. At this point Mane had rear-
ed a cape 36 feet high. This he soon
levelled by reducing the peak and
building up the base with rocks i o
increase its power of resisting the
wastes. He built a pier 75 feet leng
so as to get 11 feet of iwater at high
tide. To do this necessitated the
transport of 300 Mimi of stone. He al-
so icmmediately cleared the land to
the extent of 50 acres. Through the
hot summer months, with unflagging
vigor the work -went on, and in late
autumn, when the trees were still
shedding their leaves, the headland
Presented a much changed aspect. 'Up-
on it stood mane large buildings for
rate accommodation of the settlers,
Workmen and fishermen,.
But the grand designs of De Roma
were not well received by his part-
ners. The first year they had advanc-
ed about $16,000, and although lie sent
back in the company's shies fish to
the -value of more than $9,000, built a
splendid fishing establishment at at.
Peters, constructed two batteaux and
twenty shallops and supported his col-
ony, yet he was refused further assist-
ance. After a voluminous correspond-
ence and much bitter recrimination,
De Roma. visited France in 1736 where
be obtained some assistance from the
Minister and in May of the following
year he bought out the interest of the
other partners and became the sole
proprietor of the Company.
Returning to the colony in 1737, he
took up 'the work with renewed hopes.
But though his energy did not abate
one prarticle, nor his enthusiasm for a
moment flag, his ill -fortune remained.
In, 1738, he was rejoicing in the pro-
spects of a bounteous crop, when in
common with the other settlements
of Isle St. Jean, his lands were rav-
aged by field mice ,which consumed
even the grass. But nothing daunted,
although faced with the prospect et
living for a year on fish and game,
he cheerfully and methodically set
himself a treatise on field mice and
to comfort the people with the thought
that this pest would disappear as set-
tlement increased and ' the forests
were cut away.
In 1741, De Rome, lost his' largest
vessel with all its cargo and he was
driven to ask assistance from the Min.
ister in Paris, not as ch,arity, he taid,
but as an advance credit, which ad-
vance be hoped to meet out of his
crops and fishing in the following
year.
During the next four years De Roma
managed to exist only through the
strictest economy, but in 1745, just
when he had reason to congratulate
himself upon •a happier future, a de-
tachment sof New Englanders sent by
Pepperell after the capture of Louis-
• burg landed at Three Rivers. There
was no attempt at resistance. De
Roma with his son, and daughter and
five serrvants bad barely time to gain
the woods, while the invaders search-
ed with patient industry every nook
of his premises, end what avarice fail-
ed to appropriate was doomed to de-
struotion. The buildings and all that
could not be carried away were given
to the flames. The license of war in
a few hours undid the labor of years,
and utter ruin was now De Roma's
lot. Aftet a weary journey, starving
anti worn out, they reached the village
of St. Peters, A few days, later a ves-
sel bound up the St. Lawrence landed
the unfortunate family at Quebec.
Upon, the reduction of the great
fortress of Louisburg 'by the British
in July, 1758, Lord Polio with sev-
eral ships of war was despatched by
admiral Boscawen to seize Isle St.
Jean. This was effected without any
apposition. The small garrison of 30
men and the 'gallant commander Rou-
seau de Villejoin were sent to Eng-
land as prisoners of war, while the
four or five thousand Acadians were
collected' at Pont Lajoie, placed upon
23 transports and sent to France.
When this task had been accomplish-
ed, Lord Rollo lett Captain William
Johnston in: charge with a garrison
of 150 men at Fort Amberet, which
had been hastily constructed on the
slope near Port Lajoie, and on Nov.
14th, returned to Louisburg. Thus
for the next five years, our Island was
undler military rule.
By the treaty of Fontainbleau in
1763, in comenon, with the ,rest nf
New France, Isle St. Jean was form-
ally ceded to Ga -eat Britain, and im-
rotediately was ,placed under the Gov-
ernment et Nova Scotia.
Four years later, in, July, 1767, just
dne century before Confedetestion, the
Government in London all15tted the
67 townships into which the island
had in the meantime been divided, to
a group of Scotch proprietors who re-
peived it on condition that the gran-
tee of each township should cause to
be settled within ten years on 'the
land so received at least one person
for every hundred acres of 'his hold-
intl. Ad armee) rquit rept ranging
from 2 shillings to 6 shillings per 100
aores was to be paid to the govern-
ment, Olt one half of each grant at
the end of ten years. It was also
agreed that if one-third of the land
allotted was not settled upon within
four years of the date of the, grant,
the whole should be forfeited to the
Crown.
310IN t4,1939.
SmNailapo°1tiwittlirilallhIguart4 of the1=41174. SORE- ,INFLAMED
PERSPIRING FEET!'
Roma GOvernnlient resolved to grant
11 a complete eenatitution. This step
Governer Patterson was commanded
to take ate .eatiynati possible. This was
effected ton February 17, 1773, In a
clisPatch f the same date the Govee-
ner 'states that the house was to be
chosen by taking the vetoes of the
whole people coneotilvely, waiving all
kinidls of 'qualifioatione except their
beam Pootestant and resident. The
number of representatives, was limit-
ed to 18, as 'that was about the num-
ber 01 inhaldtante "whno could make
a tolerable appeeeparee in the Blouse."
The fitet asserably met in July with
Robert Stewart as Speaker. 'Thirteen
Acts were passed, the .mest. import-
ant being "An Act for the recovery
of certain of His Majesty's quit. Rents
in the Island of St. John. On July
latta the Assembly was •disselved "as
the Governor had been advised that
many respectable people were corn-
ing to 'the Is endetthdie, summer, which
on a new election would give a great-
er ehoice of men." From this date
till 1839, the Governor's Executive
Counced also agtendl as the 'Legislative
Couneit or 'Upper House. Needless
to say, both were absolutely inde-
pendent of the Assemtbly and of the
people.
When Patterson arrived in London
he found his means extremely limit-
ed. Pressed by lads creditors, he was
forced et sea his extensive and val-
uable properties in the Island at nom -
Mat prices. He died in great pov-
erty in London, September 6, 1798,
His widow was unable to recover any-
thing from the wreck of hist fortune.
It might be added that his downfall
was also nlaamtly due to a private
quarrel with Mel Justice Peter
Stewart, whose son, John Stewart of
M,ount. Stewart theauthor of.- a His-
tory of Prince Edward Island, was
the principal ,purveyor of information
from Prtittee Ed -wand Leland to the
proprietors in London.
His ',successor Governer Panning
also, found his first legislature quite
refractory on the question of money
grants. This dad not worry him in
the least He immediately dissolved
;this Amembly 'and called a new elec-
tion. The new Assembly seems to
have been very subservient and most
satisfactory to the Governor, if one
may jedge by the sequel: This .Ae
sembly was continued V te existence
for 13 years and held at least nine
seseionist it may fairly be christened
"The Long Parliament of Prince Ed-
ward Island" However, Fanning did
not get along so pleasantly with a
new Assembly which he called, in
April, 1801. Immediately upon its as-
sembling, this House took up the
qoestian of the control of the expen-
ditures and adopted, the following
resolution: "'Pleat in the opinion of
this House, it is necessary to the
support of the public crediatand to
the rendering a more willing' inclina-
tion in the people of this Island to
,the paying of texes, that the As-
sembly should have the' exclusive dis-
posal of all public monies raised by
theme and therefore pray that instruc-
tion be sent by His Majesty to the
Governor of tads Island for placing
the money of the public in the same
channel as is customary throughout
his IVIajettsts colonies"
The next Governor, Col. F. W. Dee
Bemes, who ruled from 1804 to 1813,
seems to have got along very well
with lie Assembly'. This governor
who was then a very old man, !strict-
ly adhered to the official line of du-
ty, and gavel nto evidence et a selfish
or tyrannical disposition. Yet, in the
last year of his governorship, we find
the Assembly in September, 1312,
adopting tbe following resolution:—
"That the giving to the Anemia-3st ite
shame in, the appropriation of the
monies 'voted, would, in the opinion
Of this Home, conduce in a greater
degree to the prosperity of the Is-
land 'amid most certainly would pro-
duce in the House a spirit of liber-
ality to meet tbe future exigencies of
Government." Evddently, the germ of
eesporestale government, was stowly,
but surely, developing.
Walter Patter a, the first gover-
nor, was an Irishman, son of William
Patterson. of Foetal, County Donegal.
He had seen active service In the
8th Regiment in America. He seems
to have been a man of very fair abil-
ity, and of a sanguine disposition—
too sangulas perhaps. The accounts
we have of ,him, unfortunately for his
memory, have been handed down
chiefly by ate enemies, of whom he
managed to acquire a ,considerable
number. However, from his own cor-
respondence and from that of other
residents eontemaxintry with him, we
can gather that at least in, the earl-
ier part of bis time here, he worked
hard to improve the country and to
promote We 4riterests. He evidently
had the utmost •faltii in, the future of
the island, in whieh he, invested the
greater part Of hiet fortune, and where
he aeqUired oonsitlerable property, all
Satistaion 1 Goarrantged or
• gooy II _ark. and • :
anCttravallirbr)iiira ItifIWAgthaegetatwilaiSten I
wgi you
The
thoroughly madam yam drat by sticidrag
falthfuW to It for a dust sahib your
foot- disks= will be a thing of the Ii
ert
:2, first avows". give
and bast at all. free tram 141 offensive
odors. •
.ot last dhomered Ova yaw te 'WM _
You beyond. all ormion that you i
And one bottle we know vAilitip
comfert and rod Not *mum at
reale an few short sseuttnents Wig
hard been able td secure the appoint-
ment of Sir Donald Campbell, whom
they warmly recommended to their
triendis in the pa-ovitnee.
Meanwhiantin the parliament of the
two 'Canada's the pantiles 'were so eq-
ually ba1.anced that it wits found int -
passable to conduct the business on
the country with any degree of effie
dewy. The governor-general there-
upon addreseed a despatch to the lied -
tenant governors of the Maritime
proviaces widen' that a delegation of
the canard/an Cabinet 'be permitted to
attend the meeting at Charlottetown -
This request was readily granted. The
aorderence at Charlottetown opened
on September 1, 1864. The delegates.
from Nova Scotia were: Merles Tup-
per, William A. Henry, R. B. Dickey,
Jonathan McCully and Adrame G.
Archibald; from New Brausvalick, S..
L. Tilley, John M. Johnston, Sohn
Hamilton' Gray, Edward 13. SChand-
ler and W. H. Stevens; from. Prince
Edward Island: J. H. Gray, premier,
Edward Palmer, Attorney Geaterael, W.
H. Pope, Col. Secretary, Geo. Coles.
and A. A. ManDonakl. From Canada:
Geoyge Brown; John A. MacDonald,
A. T. Galt, George E. Cartier, Hector
L. Lamgevin, William MacDougall„
D'Aesy McGee, and Alexander Camp-
bell. No official minutes of this
meeting were ever published. It is
known, however, tame the Canadian.
ministers were first asked to present
their proposals, after which the mari-
time delegates) met separately .to de -
Sir Aretas W. Young succeeded
Govennorr Ready in. 1831. The House
of Assembly met annually but the
question of responsibility for the ex-
penditures of the npublic revenues
does not sewn to bade been acute till
the last year of this Government's
term (1835). In the new House which
met January a 'dispute arose be-
tween the Assembly and the Couileil,
respecting tare revenue bills, which
led to the necessary supplies being
refused by tube assembly. But Gover-
nor Young who was very popular a-
mong .all elegises, suggested a confer-
ence between the disputants. It was
arranged that the revenue bill should
be separated from the appropriation
biN, Le. the Antembly got full control
of the revenue, on condition that they
would vote tthe supply hill as it came
to them from the Council; this was
a new .and ,important concession ofl
the part of the Council; it would not
be very long befitte• alley would be
forced to concede the whole princi-
ple; that ins that the Assembly should
control not natty the revenue but the
expenditures also. From that date,
the subject therefore was a matter
for neliecossion in every Assembly. Re-
fusal to vote supplies' had been re-
matecti to once before, during the ad-
ministration of Governer Ready, but
it had occastened so much critioisrn
by the people theft the .representativane
'hardly eared to try this expedient
again, so for Several years they bad
to be satisfied with campronases
which gradually but surely were
bringing ,them nearer the desired
goal.
Immediately therefore, upon the op-
reniPg of the Legislature, on. Meech
28, 1847, a tenant -Ian requesting the
establightment of Responsible govern-
inent was introduced. It was carried
by a vote of 18 to 31. Longworth,
Haviland and Palmer voting against,
it. The Conservative leaders thad now
fleetly been deteated 10 the Assembly,
but there were other resources to
support their continuation in power.
Three Of theer Most influential mem-
bers, Pope, Palmer and. Duncan, set
out for EInglarnd in order to commun-
teeth with their friends, the proprie-
tors, and with the Colonial office. In
August, Iltantlee Was notified of the
expiration na his tenni, as Govetnor.
It is probable Chat the ,delegation lead
Andreence tin this decision, but on
their referral, *ay !boatelted that they
(Continued on Page
"Kill a Fly and Save a Life"
Such outdoor danger spots as man-
ure piles, uncovered gtatbage, beeps
of rotting matter, etc., are potential
breeding .pliaces for Wee, and one
each spot may produce flies in, mil -
hone. Now, since itis commonly
known that diarrhoea and entiritie
(which are senanymons with summer
diarrhoea) bave always been a first
cause of deaths amongst children in
many communities, how important it
is that all the flies shosald be ex-
terminated. The common house fly
thrives in the filthiest surroundings
and ca,rnies .gerine of disease and ev-
en 'death from its feeding plates to
butraan feeding places.
What about your home? Have you
done all that is possible to clean out
or to contract tire snots where flies'
are likely to breed? Have you tried
to close all possible avenues et en-
trance to your home by screening
dloors and windows, repairing cracks
and covering holes? '
And amide your &mine, is all expo -
ed. food and daink covered if it sex
happens that flies do find their watt
in? In the latter emergency, any
way, there is a. tried and tested
remedy available for getting slid oC
all the ilies, easily, !quickly and once -
and -for -all. A few Wilson's Fly Pads,
placed in convenient spots around
the house, during the fly -danger
months, will give You very thorough
protection. Isn't it worth a little
thought and trouble to take such sim-
ple steps to rniarrietze the tisk of
diseasie and worse, famed by your
'children, yore- faanny and yourself, if
Mee rule aBowed to multiply?
LONDON and WINGHAM
NORTH
Exeter 10.34
Herman 10.46
Kippen 10.52
Brucefteld 11.00
Clinton 11.47
Londes boro 12.06
Myth 12.10
Belgrave 12.27
Wiugham 12.4.5
SOUTH
Wingham
Belgrave
Blyth ,
Londesborn
Clinton
Brueefleld
Kippen
Remain
Exeter
..
• • •
• •
P.M.
1.56
2.06
1.17
2.26
3.013
11.20
3.30
3.45
C.N.B. TIME TABLE
EAST
A.M. PAIL
Goderleh 2.25 236
Bolluesville 6.20 2.62
Clinton 628 220
Seaforth 7.11 2.10
St. Columbau 7.17 11.22
Dublin 7.21 3.20
Mitchell 7.30 2,42
WEST
Mitchell 11.00 2.26
Dublin 11.14 2.36
Seafotth 11.30 11.47
Clinton 11.45 30:061
Goderleh ..... 52.05 .110.20
C.P.E. TIME TABLE
eAay.
Goderleh ....
Menset
McGaw
Au batik
Blyth
Walton
MeNanght
Toronto
• i„ WEST
P.Ilf.
4.211
424,
$1.113
4.43
4.521
5.05
5.15
9.09
LM.
Toronto 8.30
MoNaugbt 12.09
Wattott 12.19
Blyth • • • • al 12.218
Auburn 12.31
McGaw 12.40
Merit • • 12.441
GVdefigh .0.0.11a.• eat,e,i; e
•
* •