HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1892-02-17, Page 4ore Jied o i
ress Length th B1aci Tricitine `Silk worth ,4 , 00,.for *1 0 .
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ooe Mick Main) Ireni etttui for 70o, 50.0, Black..and,ColOred
75c, r.ive1ipe Checks, $11 colors, 'for °5.0c,
All oar Beautiful Dress Materials red ,eel the same . proportion . '
Heaviest Ticlii>.itgs, worth 250., for 1$0: Hew Sllxrting$, worth l 14 to 15c., for iQ G.
,Si•
00 Black Brod
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65c., Heaavy•Series,, a ll sha4os, for 45c;•
IJea y Shirtings,'worth•10 to Ixe.,for Sc.
1 ; ° Carey Cottons, worth 9 to 10c., for 7 c. Grey Cottonty`vorth6 to 7c.., for 5$,,
Comforters, worth 90c. to $1 00, for 60c. Scotch Tartans, all wool, worth 40o,, for 30c. A. fes' Mand ngs ridiculously low
the above (hods are not damaged in the least, but are all good, new and, desirable articles- Space will not permit oa • continiiin g the`
list. Everything is :going regardless of what we paid • for it. You must CONE':Y,AND . SEE to appreciate,
Terms Cash ONS. -
14 TEE ELECTORS
..
J1iara old stand.
C. GILROY, CLINTON
OF THE
WEST I1IfflNG
VPt'.
�r =
OF THE
COUNTY OF HURON 1
•
I hereby publicly request
my. Agents and those
Electors who may act for
isle; or who may be desirous
of assisting me in the corn-
ing contest for the above
Electoral Di,vis'on, to strict-
ly conform to'he Election
Law of the Dominion of
Canada and all the provi-
soes contained theI'ein in
reference .to corrupt prac-
tices-a,nr1 other illegal acts,
and I especially request
them not to be guilty of any
illegaltct, or of bribery, ,,qr:-0
any co tral%ention: Wliatever.,
of the Election Law of the..
Dominion.
My express wish is that
the said Election may be
carried on ° in a fair, proper
and honorable manner.
J. C. PATTERSON.
Clinton, Feb.
15th, 1492. s
e�luron 1Uewe-Record
2.60 a Year—•01.26 in Advance.
Wednesday Feby. 117th, 1892.
THESE BE GLORIOUS DAYS
Last Thursday there were seven
elections hold in the Dominion, of
these 'six went for the Conserve -
twee. Two of then; East Brune
and North Victoria, had been held
by the Grits. Necth Victoria was
a particularly graifying 'victory.
Mr. Barron, Grit, carried it a year
ago- by- 202, -now Major Sam
Hughes, Conservative, carries it by
,atbout'240,. ` This was a glorious as
well as significant victory. Shake!
Major Hughes. Major Hughes'
victory, was *triumph of tho honest
sentiment of the people over the
cosabined influence of the Provin-
cial Government and the boodling
of the once ruined political gamesters
of the Opposition, for the time be-
ing set up ih their nefariais bed -
mess by foreign $shekels. Hughes
;,certainly, had an army of Mowat
heelers, Contractors and officials to
fight againat, besides the money of
a personally wealthy opponent,
While the Major himself is only a
"poor printer" but rich in brains,
pstriotiAnp and British pluck. 'Rah
for Meijer Sam Hoglies and loyal
North Victoria.
I',IRADE TP:TTH THE EAST.
tIn another celutnn We give a state-
nylon€'alrottpg hots the efforts of the
Dorisinioh Government have 'result -
lit op001;4 up a big field for
Canadian farm and other products
in the 'Vest Todiee. 'The following
will give an idea how the liberal
and enlightened Cousorvutive reit-
way policy has laid the Est Indies,
even"to--"ra-r " China and
Japan, uuder tribute - to our pro- ,
ddeers.
' Vice•President Shaeghnessy of the
Ca:►adian Paoific Railway, who has
been visiting the leading trade cell.
fres of t'hina and Japan, arrived
recently in Vancouver, B,C,, on the
Empress of Japan, which vessel wade
another remarkably quick passage.
Mr. Shaughnessy states that the
possibilities of trade between Canada
and China and Japan, with a com-
bined population of over four hun-
dred millions of human, beings, is
simply a wonder which baffles the
ordinary conception.. • IIe states that
if prop.erly watched and judiciously
handled an enormoue trade is certain
to spring up for Canadian millers
and manufacturers in flour, cotton
and woolen goods, boots and shoes,
provisions, fresh, canned and pre-
served fruit and manufactured
goods.
The Chinese and Japanese tare just
beginning to use the staples, and
Canada is preferred to the United
States in China, in consequence of
the manner in which the Chinese are
•legislated by the United States.
The goods from this country are cer-
tain to become a favorite with the
surging millions of human souls in
the Celestial and Flowery Kingdom.
The warket for Northwest -and iin-
t r4400Ofr. i Ia C trb�w-fli rlr Will
b►icoire not
MAO' .h ,steady brit,'practically' an 1111 jtable on -e'.
_Shaughnessy stationed Mr. Callaway,
who went out with,. him, alt IIon
Kong, where it hall been deeidel
upon that the Canadian Pacific will
establish 'a &pecial' office under the
latter. •
�,... .
CANADA AND THE WEST
INDIES.
Tho Canadiangovernment con-
tinues to receive the most gratify-
ing information of the growth of
Canadian trade with the West
India Island. Duting the Old few
months the steamer Alpha, Duart
Castle " and" Tsyrnnutli;as-}le hiive `
taken out, via the porta of Halifax,
N. S., and St. John, N. B., e very
considerable quantity of merchan-
dise and produce, but what is ee-
.pecially gratifying is that flour, in
the export of which to the West
Indies Canada did practically
nothing before Adams Brown's visit
to Jamaica, is now going out in
large quantities to all the islands
Already ahipmente-have been made
to the following islands.: Jamaica,
Antigua, St. Kitty, Guadeloupe,
Barbadoee, St. Thoinaa, Martinique,
Demerara, Bermuda, Turk's island,
Montserrat, St. Lucia and Trinidad.
Ontario millers can ship flour from
as far west as Paris, Ont.; at rates as
low as by New York. It is also
learned that large quantities of
split peas are being forwarded ; the
Gananoque carriage con►pany is do-
ing a very large business in its line
and ooneiderable quantitiep of gen-
eral merchandise euoh as ready-
made clothing, boots and shoes, etc.,
are being sent to these islands.
THE COMING ELECTIONS.
Dominion elections will be held
for the following conatituenclee on
the dates given. The seats to be
contested have all been held by
Reformers, so that the -eight on a
division gained 80 far by the Con-
servatives in the bye electiontaro
ensured ; and every eent gained
by the Conservatives in the coming
elections will count two more on a
division, tor Om government.
East Hoistinga Feb. 20
South Ontario . u
Wes Huron ti • r3
'London cc 26
Quebec Weat...r..,.>. c' 2G
Two Itountaine, Que.:,ci 27
'Y,Y. rr 20
t11O{ltCaltn.i... ...... ..rY.Y Marsh 3
Vttttdrf1n11.t..Yr.4-4.tt .r..t.. r.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
In the icy air of night
While the stars, that oversprinkle
All the heavens, seemed to twinkle
With a crystalline delight •
That Patterson, The Hon. J. C.
WilUbeUrea tliai on a next: P.
The monumentally untruthfut
statements builtop Babel high by un -
ecru ulcus partisan Grits to affect
the bye -elections seem, like the tower
of old, to topple over and crush
the builders and their idols,
A Government that has wiped off
$3,500,000 of sugar duties this year
and yet had a surplus cannot be
bad managera of the 'trust they re-
ceived at the hands of the people
Hon. J. C. Patterson, Conservative
candidate for West Huron, ie a
member of that Government. A
word to the wise is sufficiept.
When Joshua blew his trumpet
the walls of Jericho fell down.
When "Billy" Paterson, of Brant-
ford, blew his trumpet built lungs
in the Clinton Town Hall on Mon-
day night, the walls of the building
.did not come down, neither did the
Conservative cause suffer, though in
Clinton as at Jericho there was con-
siderable wind.
The New York Grin says :—"The
C+aiadian Gtita-are our friends-and,a-
large proportion of them are annexe
ationiets at heart and honestly be-
lieve that free 'commercial inter;'
course would form the Shortest road
to annexation." Save us from the
Canadian annexationists and their
New York friends by voting for the
Hon. T.C. Patterson in West Huron.
Personal abuse should go for
nothing. Whether Mr. Cameron is
a moral or immoral man ie not the
question at issue. °The trade ques-
tion and the question of whether we
ltALicAgg9. Brtti4 trAditlone and
the benefits we derive from British
markets and British connection, for
the more than doubtful political and
commercial union with the, highly
taxed mob and anarchistic ruled
people to the south of us.' Choose
ye which ye Will.
The character and intelligence of
a people are represented ' by its
legielatore. Hon J, C. Patterson,
Conservative candidate, for West
Huron is an exponentof independ-
ent, honest political bravery, and
of undoubted personal purity of
character even according to the
estimate of his opponente. As a
minister of the Crown ho re-
presents the Queen and country, as
M..P.t for West Huron he would
represent and be in a position to
serve .the special interests of this
constituency.
A resolution has been adopted in
eotnmitteo at Waehington. recom-
mending Congress to reduce the
duty on barley from 30 to 100 per
bushel. This is accompanied with
the resolution adopted by the Buf-
falo Merchants Exchange a few days
ago. 1t seems peculiar that those
who use Canadian barley should be
so anxious to reduce the duty on
barley if . Canadians pay the duty.
?Shaw, it is as -plain as A, 13, C that
if the Americans tax our barley it
it the Americans who pay the duty.
Let them take the duty off, or
portion- of it; and the Amartcartr
will buy Canadian barley just tire`'
a'ntcunt of 'tbo reduced duty lair.
American duty offor on, the pride
in . Canada will be about the same.
Supply and demand le what Will
regulate the prico to the Canadian
producer.
In 1879 thre were imported into
Canada from the States 292,825
Wrote of flour, list year only 57,•'
387 ; in 1879 we imported 4,208,-.
,765 bushels of wheat, last year we
imported only T46,521- bushels.
Thin is one ono of the ways in
which the National Policy protects
and benefits the farmers.
Of the new Secretary of _State the
Toronto Mail sa„s : "The taking
in of Patterson ,adds strength to
the Cabinet, for the new Minister'
ie a man of executive ability aid
integrity, bringing with him an im-
portant degree of popularity. Mr.
Patterson hos also a streak of inde-
pendence in his composition. He
has opposed movements in Parlia-
moot which he believed to be
wrong.”
Of the.increase of population in
Canada during the past ten years,
95 per cent of that increase was of
persone engaged in industrial per -
suits which owe their origin. or con-
tinuation to protection—to the
National Policy. That is the policy
;which the Hon.- J. C. Patterson
supports. Conservatives and Re-
formers can go honestly hand .in
hand -to the polls on tho 23rd of
February and vote for Secretary of
State, Hon. J. C. Patterson. What
can be laorlestly done in the intere'E, f
our eommon country should be •done,
• The opponents of Canada and
good Government are constantly
asserting that the Conservatives are
standing in the way of fair trade
relations between Canada and the
United States. Members of the;
Canadian Government were at
Washington last week for the pur-
pose of .ascertaining how far the
United States -will -go -in, go...,in -making..
suggeetione as ,to closer trade rela-
tions between the two countries.
Whereupon the Canadian Grits
swallow themselves by saying that
the Canadian Ministers went unask-
ed and are consequently acting a
reprehensible part,
Should' Mr. Laurier, the Grit
shoot -the -volunteers Leader,come up •
to West Huron to talk in the inter-
est of M. C. Cameron, wonder if he
will repeat his statement that "the
Conservative policy was only calcu-
lated to put money into the pockets
of the Ontario farmers at the ex-
pense of the other people of the
Dominion". Mr Laurier would have
been right had he said that the Con-
servative policy not only put money
into the pockets of the Ontario`
farmer,, but into the pockets of the
farmers in all parts of Canada, and
into the pockets of all classes of
people throughout the Dominion.
Congressman Springer, of the
United States, insists on having
"free wool," "free lumber" and "free
salt." Now you're shouting. No
power - on earth but the United
States Congreve cin give the Ameri-
can people those articles free. And
if they wish to have "free barley"
We will not say them nay. But
Canada hag about as much to do
With passing the McKinley pro.
hibitory tariff bill or the Spinger
frail trkite bill as the Grit. leader
hereto to do with a Reform politfy
-nbthing at all, though the said.
Grit leaders would make ltefortne -a
believe the contrary.
e
It'ie inoro than probable that the
Conservative majority in the com-
ing session of Parliament will be at
least' 45.' 'West Huron we hope
will be one of that number. The
signs of-the--titues-pointto- a tad
jority in West. Huron of certainly
not lees than 100, for J. C. Patter-
sonf aed how much • more we
do not care to say lest it might
cause our friends to relax their
efforts in his ,behalf and that
of good Government. Let the good
work, go on, We should not be
r;satis fled with 100 majority. We
.beve got the people with us. All
that is required is to see that they
record their votes.
It must not be that the main
iOsuo before the people in the pres-
ent campaign shall be dwarfed by
minor or impracticable issues. Our
.opponents say that the tariff is
"iniquitous - unconstitutional and
inequitable." We should oppose
those who hold these views, because
the effects of the abolition of our
tariff would result as a New York
papers says : "In wiping the Dom-
inion of Canada from the map of
North America, and place the stars
anct;.stripee triumphantly floating
from the Atlantic to the Pacific end
from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic
C08A�".'_.::5 � ,wrntryr-a� _,
t 'ice-.•.-�k ..
The l3rtte aro boouring_lhe barley
question as a fever to raise themselves
into poaaen But -the Grits hoisted
tfiemdetaes- it la their own lever.
The couutiee that prodtic'e bine
tenths of the barley raised in
Optatie have returned representa-
tives to support the present govern-
/ If the farmere most inter --
1)8W in growing barley vote to eus-
tain a Governinent that says it is
not responsible- for the McKinley
bill, be • that bill right or wrong,
surely the farmers of the county of
Boron Cennot.-eleva:teatheaqueetion>;,
toxone of any consequence as Huron
is nota special barley producing
district, and the crop at beet is a
Prom -ions one.
The year 1878 marked a new era
In the history of Canada. That
year marked the advent to power of
the Liberal-Coneervntive party with
all That title Implies. It marked
tbo second birth of a National party
born at the time of Confederation,
eleven years before. It marked the
re -birth of a party supported by the
real liberal' element of the Reform
party as well as by the Conservative
element of the Tory party. Now
for fourteen years the greater por-
tion and best elements of the two
Old parties have Stood side -by side
as Canadians, with the result that
this country has accomplished more
in material prosperity and progress
during that period than in any pre-
vious quarter of a century. We are
now in a campaign in West Huron,
the result of which bids fair to be
as historical as the triumph of the
National Policy in 1878. In fact
the return of Hon J. C. Patterson
will bring the result of that policy
more closely home to the doors of
every farmer, laborer and manu-
facturer in the county. As a Ca-
binet' minister, he will have the
power, 59 a representative of Weet
Huron, It will be his dnty to serve
our local interests; as an honest man
that,ho is he will exercise his power
and do his duty in sacredly guard-
ing And intelligently forwarding the
interests of 'West laurell. Vote for
J. 'C. Patterson• and give a gentle-
man with the power and the will
an opportunity to serve you, electors
of WnVeet Huron. .
Now Iusio Books,
Triumphant Songs No. s
Nos, 1 and 2 have- given -such- sable. -
faction that we are sure No. 3 will he
equally as successful. It contains -
songs for the Sunday School, Hymns
for the Church, Solos for the Gospel
Singer, Quartettes for the Choir,
Responsive Readings and Orders of
Worship.
PRICE 35 CENTS EACH,
83 00 per doz , express or post not paid.
THE ELITE SONG FOLIO:
with Piano Accompaniment, contain-
ing the finest collection of Songs, by
favorite composers, ever offered in
one volume. Lithographed from full
sized music plates, on heavy white
paper, containing 152 pages, with
beautiful four -colored lithograph
cover.
Dear old sunny home Gorton
Faithful yet Justice
Farewell Marguerite Boardman
Florenstine.ight
..,Bray
Gallant Kns of old ..........Jewell.,,,
Good luck is mine Reward
Guide us, guard us (sacred)..Jordan
Harbor lights are shining Skelly
1 alone the cross must bear,
,White+
I'd a letter from papa, today
•
Westendorf
If the waters could spank, -.Graham
Picture that is turned towards
the wall Graham
.,Iia heavenly love abiding (duett)Steif
Irish jubilee...... ..............Lawler•
Leonora White
Little 'darling:: .......... .;..,.:Bloom -
Love's sorrow Shelley
Love comes li)t:e a Hummer sigh
Spenser
Love's a magic spell Starr
Maggie,the cows are in the clover
Filson -
Maggie Murphy's'home
ilson-MaggieMurphy's'home Brabam-'
Marguerite White
J,ly favorite, my. Queen Winter
My mother's kiss was sweetest.Allen
Old home down on the farm.Du Bois
Only promise ...Howard
Only tired White
Pretty one, Bleep ,, clawley .
Rook a.by, baby........,. Canning
ff's sale Mullelle
•
Since
SheriCasy runs the flat - Janssen
Songs my mother need to sing
��a •ZtfaCriatitiv
Song that restatedmyheart..Tordan
Songs my mother sang. • Towner
Sweet Heather bells Howard
Swinging under the old apple
tree Kase
That sweet refrain...............Jordan
Tired eyelids ;�Vitberellt
Twilight Williams
Two little birds are we (daett).Wf`rite,
Visions of the old folk at homeStulta
When the dewdrops kissed the
daisies Blake
When theaisun his set Harris
Handsomely bound—in four different
styles. Price, in paper cover, 75o.;
half cloth, 900.;. boards $1.25; full
cloth gilt,' $1.50.
The first lithograph Folio ever put
on the Canadian market.
Every page is a work of art, and
every piece of music a gem. ,
�m:Oooper&Cn.
CLINTO
There are eight applications for
divorces that will come before the
Dominion Psrliament at next ses-
sion. And American -papers ate
pointing the finger of derision at
our moral people in consequence
therefore. Yet in the last twenty'
years 328,716 divorces were granted
in the United States. That is at
the rate of 16,436 each year, on the
Average. But it ie well known that
divorces in the States have increased
in a'greatcr ratio than population for
some years past. However, taking
the average number for the large-
population of 65,000,000 people,,
and assuming that we have on the,
average 8 per year for our 15,500,000
it strikes us that Canada is not in it,
and that the United,Statea can grow
more divorces and produce them.
more cheaply on one here than we calk
on five. If divorce i;p a test of motet
ity lhan our American cousins at*
ober 400 titnl+a more *moral Than:
Canadians. -
•
rr _ter;,
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