The Huron News-Record, 1894-06-06, Page 6{
f.
ar`l"(' e is.
SHEEP PIP AND
Ma
r R.... TI.QK,'DESTROYER
;,
—;ATS ,.
S OI84
4.
DEA.MEIpS
Station-
egs and. ry,
. Patent �iediex�a:es,
die•'
ex � ` I�hQQx. Books,
Ver a. Omit• time we will offer GREAT BARGAINS IN
Mews Soft and Stitt' Hats; Children's fiats, D+len'a Clothing, Men's
Shirts, lhints, Faotory.Oottolr, Gents Ties, Sheeting, Gini banes, &o.
RIES we lead in Teas, Sugars, Raisins, Currants, Salmon,
�I�Qc.
Starch, Hams, Breakfast Bacon, Lard, &o.
n,e.aan touch us in the following lines:
- ]Butter. Tubs 25o. each, Pails 2 for 25c.i Clothes Lines 10o. each,
Bottled Pickles 10e, each, Fine Mixed Pickles 12e, per quart, Chew-
ing and Smoking Tobacco 4 pluga for 25c., Oranges 25s. per dozen,
Lomoos 20o, per dozen., Bsunauas 20c, per dozen.
Como right away and get first choice.
BLBLYTH.
�y
d, T .
SSOP & McELROY,
3IS SPACE
ELONGS TO
C. RAGE,
who is opening out in the
STOIV[
rAILORING,
Next door to
DEBBON & ELDEEB,
BLYTH.
Grand Trunk Railway.
Trains leave Clinton station for all points. as por
following, time table:
00140 BAST , GOING W8ST
37.87 am 10.90 a m
n 2,Ooym 215pm
50pm 9:L2ym
POING tOnTII OOING SOUTH
10.186m 8.45 am
0.5Cv p m 4.48 p m
MANITOBA
EXCURSIONS.
JUNE 12th, 19th, 26th,
JULY 17th.
Tickets good for 60 days, FARE $28 to
all Manitoba points. For full particul-
ars apply to
W. J u ekson,
TOWN AGENT G. T. R.
U � E R For Teachers and
others
Y �a� 1� at the Central Business
College, corner Y�nge
and Gerrard Streets, Toronto. Unqueatioittably
enneda'a.Glreateat Commercial School. In
session the entire year. Special circulars for summer
classes: Write for one.
saw & ELLIOTT,•8E88/014
P,incipals.
CURRENT TOPICS.
The 'section of Ferguson's school
hilus, in Oxford, a former stronghold
for Sir Oliver Mowat, is now unanim-
ous for Mr. Horsman, the Patron candi-
date. Mr. Garrow in West Huron
finds many school sections with the
sanle.change of feeling. The farmers,
bhe patrons, the people—a, l and com-
ination—are tired of misrule and have
decided to give Mr. Meredith a chance.
Patron candidate Connolly is gaining
trm end, while Mr. Garrow is realising
hat he is losing his grip on the elec-
tors. without a doubt.
dependent in his views and votes in
Ontario politics—which he has not
been=Mr. Garrow has deliberately
dragged and forced politics into the
municipal arena. We have known
this for years. He has in the^past
urged his friends in writing, we
are informed, to' vote the straight
grit ticket in municipal elections.
fie was interested in a political
sense, he said. To -day he is interested
in a political sense, But he claims
independence at the same time., We
houor any independent politician. A
parliamentary. candidate svho professes
independence in provincial politics and
warns and advises bis friends to in-
troduce political, strife in municipal
matters is nothing short of adeliberate
political knave and we warn otir
readers to beware of such deception.
James Connolly is a farmer; as such
and as a Patron we believe he is honest.
The people should not hesitate in plac-
ing their confidence in an, honest candi-
date rather than trust a polished and
unreliable politician of the stamp of
Mr. S. T. (farrow. There should not
bo any politics in municipal elections.
IIILGiii.:l,CE O1 KINGSTON.
LAUNCHES FORTH ANOTHER
MANIFESTO.
ARCHBISHOP CLEARY CAUSES A Past
TORAL ON THE ELECTION CAMPAIGN
TO BE READ IN ST. MARY'S CATS-
EDItAI:—SOME STRONG LANCUAGE
USED—THE LEADER OF THE OPPOSI-
TION INSULTED AS A HUNGRY ADVEN-
TURER.
Kingston, May 28.—At-the first com-
munion service in St. Mary's cathedral
yesterday Archdeacon Kelly read a
manifesto signed by His Grace A rch-
bishop Cleary, which dealt with the
present election campaign. After
pointing out the duty of parents to-
wards their children, the document
said:
e "This primary parental obligation is
all the more imperative because the
atmosphere of the province is poisoned
just now by the anti-Christain doc-
trines of a host of impious journals, and
the lying speeches of no -popery poli-
ticians and place hunters in Parliament
and out of it, who are strivingto attain
to power and the handling of the public
purse by proclaiming a mean and dis-
honorable warfare against the Catholic
minority, Her Majesty's most loyal and
law-abiding subjects. It is mean
enough to make war on a minority,
but it is an unspeakable outrage upon
civilization to concentrate the combined
fortes of attack upon our innocent child-
ren, whom they are trying to deprive
of their most sacred rights, in which
their welfare for all time and eternity
is inseparably bound up."
"Independent" Mr. Garrow,on March
15th, voted against Mr. Meredith and
the Patrons of Industry on' this mo-
tion :--"That in the .opinion of this
House the present mode of appointing,
and paying by fees, registrars of deeds
il,other county officials is unsatisfac-
ryy and should be changed, and that
tie appointment of all the said officials
aelibSe salary or remuneration is pro-
vided in whole or mainly, by the
Io les for which they are appointed,
shill not he vested in the Executive
Of tie. Province, but in Tan PEOPLE of
the locality,, either directly of through
their municipal bodies." James Con -
2:1011Y would have supported' this
resaltition: in doing so he would be.
'Wil'y Independent. Most farmers are.
Alt arrow is so independent out-
*airdly,, that he should blush when his
mtany p6latical sins are brought home
him. Tun 1sTuwe-REcoRn has be-
fore ttitegtivocally stated that he is not
1ndepiridelit. ' lie cannot point to n
raolitat'y independent vote he has given
ai r ng+ .the late session of the Ontario
ion O vett 'though he had been ill -
�leads, of the Cathslic ,.and we know
r�lrat goneraily speaking they arta, and
ova ,frscluently i,ven proof of t. ca t'
g,gad-will and fatiir cozlaidel'atio1a
wards the •Oatliolios in this A lance It
well ata throughout. the D tilt n n,
is pseudo -Conservatism• that professes
'with the'lips_ to respect altrreligious be,
liefs artd by a mental reservation hard-
l• disguisecl makes air exception of
Catholic, belief, and aln;iost in. the saltie
a k.
are, to: de on rate in to war agiainet `.into it do iti for :at1 unworthy pork
religion..Js his bigotry? Is this in, pose. I si a endeavor, a, in the t,
Workings li (Voices,. u, no:) T'llese to gond wt the -controversy ill this to t
Ore the charges' that are Made against •tor,t a 011e: who bas the interests .of his
me, And. I say country at heart,. a.Itd, I believe it
rA.Otf.INN BEY A.i MADE w1TRO JT will he in the interestrw.of the country,
ortr`tD�'rzoz�. "delft t)repnlloywbich I agitate shall be
sttstan'i (t by the'Peopie'o this province.
t ani ea hnugry r what ? 1P . (Tao*, foL I sin ging to advocate it >n. the face of
tea, ti Hila rh;�,for wotf , upon ter defeat. t. I ^til) advocate it whatever
position ? �.plrtise who sit -upon, the of a 1 be. tat o
pthe iesai t nsiay I anneal li
4
platfor,,, know if xray way had benne o0 le of I.hh coul>,i'y and knnvrthtit
p I,,
breath calls for penal lcgaslatiori and accepted I would leave preferred two
the inhietton of heiavy dies iii t.hefozrut years ago to have retired froia public
of double school tax aga>-inst.all the life and devoted nlytelf to to fainly,
Catholic parents of tneprovince •Who.
dare to obserlro the first • precepts ,Of
their religion by givhig Christian
education to their offspring, The very
lead ; language of the leader, of the'
Oppcasition, the open alliance between
his. party and the shameful organize...
tion; known las the )T"/ .t', A•; tlio •vote
given •by hurl and {lis entire following,
with barely one excea ption,. in. favor of
the Me0s..)Inni Bill,' which 1iruTposed the
utter •abolition of our constitutional
right to supply Ciiristiaia education to
our little ones, are all in direct eon-
tradietiun to the principles of'Conserva.-
tasiri,. Why should mit political, elec
tions be conducted on. political lines?
Why shatild this province be, period-
ically disturbed and neighbors' forced
into quarrels with one another hymak-
Ing eta popery the camp iggn__ cry an this,
as in -the elections of 1886 and 181=0?
Why, 1 repeat, should .respectably con-
servatism be brought into disrepute
and the true Conservatives of Ontario
be made , 11 by -word of reproach by
tolerating the hyprocrisy of a hungry
adventurer, who employs the term
'Conservative' as a blind for the decep-
tion of the ignorant and the .persecu-
tion of his Catholic fellow -citizens?"
Mr. Merediths Reply.
HE STATES SOME FACTS FROM A. TORON-
TO PUBLIC PLATFORM.
Now, Mr. Chairman, a word with re-
gard to the other professor. (Laughter
and cheers.) Mr. Chairman, I am not
going to say anything to -night that
will I hope.
GIVE OFFENCE TO ANYBODY
1 am not here for that ptirpose; 1 am
not here to meet abuse by abuse; I am
riot here to meet vul arity9by vulgar-
ity. (Loud cheers.) I am not here to
appeal to the judgment of my fellow -
citizens, and to stand or fall by their
verdict. (Renewed cheers.) This
gentleman to whom I am now referr-
ing-03h, Oh, oh")- breaks out at the
period� of every general election.
Laughter.) He broke out in 1886; he
broke out in 1890, and be hasbroken out
in 1894—(laughter)—and he has always
broken out in' the same spot. (Laugh-
ter.) We11, now, he is terribly exercis-
ed about bigotry; he is terribly exercis-
ed about intolerance, and he appeals—
as I hope no man with a good cause
will aver appeal in vain—to the fair
play .of the Protestant majority of the
province of Ontario. (Cheers.) But
let us see, sir, what claims this gentle-
man has to call men names, to appeal
to sectarian cries, and to
CHARGE A GREAT PARTY WITH
INTOLERANCE
-0 -,
(Cheers) 1 .flan. now' upholding the,
,honor of the Conservative party only
bearause MY" ,party licked ixte, and 1
\VOulcl have' been a traitor if1 had not
responded. ° (Cheers,) Adventurer, ion
IS When this worthy lean was' still
}ere the gtedninllltl a sroillof C Canada.
(A pla loo) I wars barn Upon, a,free
so11; I have lived my lifetime there
and I hope to die there, and II
appeal to those amongst whore I
have lived, to •those who have known
line, if ever a breath of a charge, of in-
tolerance has ever been made against
me, 'unless it was for unworthy par -
poses, by a party widish is staggering
to its tall, (Applause.) Now, Mr.
Chairman, I must say a word, too, in
regard to all the questions which have
agitated my venerable friend. I do
not understand that to
and bigotry. This is the same gentle-
man who, not six years ago, insulted
the poor defenceless young women of
the's,hools of Napanee. (Loud cheers.)
This is the same gentleman who in
1890 insulted the whole Protestant
clergy of this Dominion. Let me give
you his language. Bear in mind thegp,
things are not said as politicians say,
upon the stump, but they are said
from what was undoubtedly, in the
sense of that religion, the house of God.
This is what he said, speaking now
about the last campaign:
"The diabolical spirit of hatred of re-
ligious education has found its way un-
fortunately into the province of On-
tario. Satan has raised his standard
here and has sent forth from the gates
of hell—(cries of 'Oh, oh')—his army of
demons to propagate his .- wicked
maxims throughout the cities and
towns of thj's- prohxince. (Laughter.)
These are the poisonous pastors that
would lea. the forces of infidels,
atheists and bigots against Chris-
tian schools. Poor, little, wretched
ministers 1 Real pious, unctuous,
evangelical, sanctimonious, ministers!"
(Loud laughter.)
This is the gentleman who appeals
for tolerance to the Protestant people
of Ontario. (Cheers.) Though he wore
the scarlet and purple, I tell him the
men to whom be thus refers are entitled
to as much respect, and deserve and
receive the respect of the people of this
country. (Cheers.) Sir,
The document then referred at length
to the manner in which Joseph and.
Mary cared for Jesus during his boy-
hood, and continued as follows: "It as
the first duty of the Christain religion
imposed on every parent to do this for
his child by means of thorough Chris-
tian education. It is the, duty of the
priests to see that no Christian parent
neglects the most essential of all paren-
tal obligations. It is my duty as chief
pastor of this diocese to require both
parehts and priests to fulfil every com-
mand of God that lies upon them, and
first of all, and beyond alt, this com-
mand to rear the children of God for
God. in the likeness of the boy Jesus of
Nazareth. It is the duty of every
Christain man, be he parent or not, to
uphold and defend in every legitimate
way this inalienable right of C€itholic
citizens that no combination of secret
societieshostile to the Christianreligion,
and most particularly to the Christian
education of youth, shall be successfully
formed against their religious and civil
liberties in this province. We are loyal
to our Queen and constitution ; we are
peace loving citizens; we desire to live
in peace and harmony with our fellow
men. It is a shame to Ontario, a shame
to civilization, that a motley crowd of
secret society men should form a con-
spiracy against the Catholic minority
every fourth year, and just now shoujdl
import from the adjoining republic an'
infamous anti-Christian and anti -social
organization to combine. with them in
aggression upon our dearest religious
rights and our peace as citizens. This
is subversive of good order and good-
will among the citizens of Ontario.
This new combination aims at turning
our fair province into apandemonium.
We are fully confident the Protestant
majority will show no favor in this
warfare against society, We believe
that the respectable Conservatives will
now, as four years ago, frown down upon
the effect to disgrace (Jonservatisrp in
the eyes of all men by the dragging of
the Jonservative flab through the, hire
of anti-Christian bigotry iaced inteler-
ance. True Conservatism repudiates
the prosecution of any section of the
coinmunttyon account of their religions
belief and practice. It holds conscience
hi high respect and treats it as sacred,
The true Conservatives ought to be the
DISCUSS THE SEPARATE SCHOOL QUES-
- /ri:N
ought to raise any sectarian. issue in
this country. (Voices,' "No, no.") It
in no way involves any question of
race or creed unless you choose to
make it so.
Voice—You are trying to get votes
by it.
Mr. Meredith—The gentleman is just
as unfair to me as the gentleman I
have boon referring to. I venture to
say if I had consulted what my own
interests were I would not have been a
party to raise these questions. I feel
tt my duty in the interests of this
country, present and future, that I
should stand by these principles in
which I believe: (Applauss.) Indo not
care whether it makes votes or loses
votes. (Applause.) In regard to my
position on the separate school cues-
tion, I believe it would be eminently in
the interests of this country if we had
one national system of education.
(Applause.) I believe that all, Catholic
and Protestant, if we had that system
here, would soon recognize it as the
best for all, where our children should
go side by side, instead of from the
cradle to the grave being severed into
hostile paths. It is
NOT WITHIN OUR PROVINCE OR POWER
to make "any departure such as that,
but'I want to say this, If ever the day
does come when there shall be a live
agitation for the abolition of separate
schools in this province it is such con-
duct as that of his grace of Kingston
that will lead the people of this coun-
try to say it is not safe to
entrust the young of this country,
to sentiments and opinions such as
these.. (Applause.) While I believe sin
standing by the constitution, by the
Act of Confederation, I want to tell
him that' constitutions are made by
the peopfe, ,and that Meyer it becomes
in the great interests of the people to
change that constitution the same high
authority thatmad made
tem can ti revoke
them. •: (Applause.)
tion has given separate schools to the
•Romani Catholics of thisprovince, and
1 want loyally to live by the,constitu-
tion, but what I say is that the schools
are schools in which the state shall be
the chief and the citizen cha11 be the
dispenser of the moneys and control all
the schools. (Hear, hear.) I say you
will search in vain the history of this
country, search our statute book to find
the
CONTROL OF ANY SCHOOLS GIVEN TO
ANY CHURCH.
I HAVE ALWAYS BEEN HIS HATRED.
Now he has issued again from the
church his fulmination against me and
the party which I have the honor to
lead. He says he does it because of the
very bad language I have used with re-
gard to the Roman Catholics, and their
schools in the Legislature, and through-
out the campaign, and he says that I
am "a hungry adventurer"—(laughter)
-seeking by reason of false cries to
disturb the people, and to ride into
power. Now, 1 want to meet this
ggentieinan upon his own ground. I tell
hinm that he slanders me in any charges
which be makes. (Loud cheers.)
What I have said is upon record, and I
demand, in the name of justice, in the
name of fair -play, that he shall put his
hand upon any utterance, or upon a
line of mine which justifies this foul
slander against me. (Cheers.) I can-
not do it ;
f they a
$a4.103 Orr THEIR PARTY TIES
they Would be in favor of these prim
ciples. I auam advocating to -day. (Ay,.
inla. se; I areal to the independent
len and the gating peens. of this city to
stun. by these principles which, upon
thie 1pnat€ore; said elsewhere, through.
out this campaign, the Liberal -Con-
servative party has put forward.
(Cheers'.)
CURRENT TOPICS.
We had in the province of Ontario,
when this •Government succeeded to
power, the finest pine forest preserves
in the whole world, one might say. I
don't think it is too broad a statement
to say that we had in the Dominion of
Canada and in the province of Ontario
the finesttimber preserves in the whole
world, civilized or uncivilized.—Mere-
dith at London.
Nicholas Awrey has been endorsed
by, the Prohibitionists of South Went-
worth. When Nicholas Was running
the World's Fair for our American
cousins the farm hands from Ancaster
and Bullock's Corners gathered daily
in rear of the Canadian commissioner's
offices, and devoured' their biscuits
and cheese seated on cases of. Walker's
whiskey. The whiskey bore the ad-
dress :
Nicholas Awrey, Esq.,
Canadian Commissioner,
World's Fair,
Jackson Park,
Chicago.
The Prohibitionists should ask Nicho-
las what he did with that whiskey.
On the subject of Archbishop Cleary's
manifesto, the Guelph Herald makes
the following vigorous comment :—"If
any one man more than another is
responsible for the sectarian feeling
abroad in this province to -day, that
man is Archbishop. Cleary. On more
than one occasion he has brought the
blush of shame to the cheeks of moder-
ate,fairminded Catholics by his bigoted
and intolerant utterances. He is an
ecclesiastical firebrand whom those in
higher authority in the church of
which he is the misguided champion
should instantly suppress. It is surely
poor imitation of the life and works of
the Lowly Nazarene for this alleged
moral authority to call an honest and
trusted political leader a hungry ad-
venturer. For the sake of peace we
hope the words attributed to Arch-
bishop Cleary are not true. If they
are true, the.sooner his utterances are
repudiated by his Church the better for
all concerned."
We permit the Roman Catholic citizens
to establish these^schools under certain
conditions ; but I say they are state
schools, and the state must control
then. (Applause.) If the state is
entitled to require its . children to be
educated, and that is essential in a
democratic country, it follows that
every school that shares in the public
moneys shall be a school which the
state has the right to control and in
regard to which the state has the right
to deal. (Hear, hear.) In all this
controversy what 1 have said is this, I
want the ballot applied to separate
and public schools. (Hear, hear.) I,{
want not a sham ballot, such as we
passed last session, but I want the real
ballotby which every voter, every
public or separate school voter, can go
to the polls and
HE KNOWS HE CANNOT DO IT,
and yet he issues that charge from the
sacred altar of his church against me
in order that I may be destroyed in
this election. (Cheers.) , Sir, is It rous-
ing intolerance, or bigotry, is it bad
language when, upon the floor of the
House, 1 declare against the ostracism
of any man by reason of his religious
Connections, when I proclaim that my
principles were that while no man
p n
should receive office by reason of his
religion, that in this free country no
man should be excluded from office
because of his religion ? (Loud cheers,)
Does that savor of intolerance and
bigotry ? Is that raising the
RED FLAG OF INTOLERANCE
throughout the country ? No man can
say so ; it is an unqualified misstate
ment. (Laughter and cheers.) Was
it intolerance or was it bigotry when I
proclaimed, in making the appeal to
my countryinen which I make, uprob
what I believe to be a high public
ground, I wanted thein to avoid all at-
tack Upon any inan'e religion f We
have nothing to do with any man's
religion ;-it should be free to every roan
,to worship at whatever altar he pleases
and no man shall say hili nay, and I
have appealed, and do appeal, that no.
mall in thecontestin Whit! V( are&bent
,to enter shall cause this contest, these
questions, burning questions as they
i r .fi"www • ^
roorteato4 orsrY 'te1Pisy ptteriapou, ,.
Pail Wheat!, . r, eff.:,r}i}:.Keri 0 04 t,Qt I)
Spring Wheat.,, ..,,,r„r,,,, p. 5! to Q.
tQvflaj!:e..r r•,,.xS „.,...,rr, r:, Q 044n to ft�49}.
4,O, 0 AS
0 YN �tG M'YK
Potatoes per k►ua>t,,,,,,.,r.r Q.
4i, to 00
�
Q 12'to 0 1
goat per ,des..”4,.},Rx.,.,0(,7 to •st,i0
rSaay.,..,pr !l•.
Si. r ,..,,,,.,A 0 0 00 to 7 0
pardwaoa,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,r,,., s Oil. tu4a
Beef ,,.,.f...,,•.,., r•,, ,, 0 00 tQ B rob
tr4tlle.A,raf ..a,r.,..,.,e•.,..0 U•CaI20
TO10Wr0 +A13414l;+',1tl ' 1t1ARIt T
There was no_glain recelved on the. ,
street market, Prices were »o (►ipa?l
tlilehangect at quotations.
Hay and Straw—Steaady; 3,5 14)4)4'80
hay sold at ,$10 to $11 for timothy and;$1 .,.
to 58 for 2,over; .A few loads of strww
sold at 57 to 5li,
Dressed "logs—The offerings were
fair and the Market was steadier 4
$6,25 to $6.40.
Wheat white, standard$ 61 to $ 60
Red winter 60 to • '90
Spring 00 to •00 .•
Goose 58 to '90
Barley 411 to Ops
Peas65 to lily
Oats 38 to :39
Hay, timothy 10 00 to11.00
Clover 7 00 to 8 00
Straw, bundle 7 00 to 800
do loose •5 00 to 000
Eggs, new laid 9 to 00.
Butter, lb. rolls ' 13 to 14
Tubs, dairy... 18 to 00
Turkeys 9 to '10
Chickens .50 to 80
Spring Chickens 50 to 70
Potatoes, per bag 65 to 1e
Dressed hogs 620 to 4 40 r
Beef, forequarters 4 00 to 0.:50
do. hindquarters ' 600 to 71)0
Mutton 7 00 to 8:50
Veal 700 to 900
Spring Lamb 350 to 6)00
Yearlings 10 00 t410.M
TORONTO LIVE STOCK MAAKBT.
Milch cows, each $22 00to$45 OD
Springers, forward, each ..3000to5300
Export cattle, per cwt...... 4 00 to .4 -50
Butchers' choice, cwt 3 00 to 5 75
Butchers'med. to good, cwt 250 to 2.90
Bulls and rough cows, cwt 2 50 to 390
Long lean hogs,cwt . 5 00 to 510
Heavy fat hogs, ewt 4 60 to -4.4Z.
Stores and light hogs, cwt 460 to 475
Sows, per cwt' 400 to 425
Stag hogs, cwt 250 to 3'00
Yearlings, per head. 425 to 450
Butcher's sheep each 400 to 4'25
Export sheep, each .. 475 to 5.50
Spring Lambs, per head... 3 75 to 4 rill
Choice Veal calves, each... 5 50 to 60)
Medium calves, per head.. 450 to 500
Common calves, per head. 1 00 to 300
BRITISH MARKETS.
The following are the Liverpool •
quotations, for each of the past four
days, the prices of wheat and flour
being top - figures :
• s. d. s. d. s. d. s. x1 -
Red winter.. 4 5 4 5 4 5 4 44
No. 1. Cal.. 4 84 4 84 4 84 4 '7
Corn... 3 74 3 74 8 74 3 7
Peas • 4 104 4 104 4 104 4 10
Pork ' . 68 9 68 9- 67 6 67 66.
Lard 36 0 35 635 6 35 41
Bacon, h'vy. 31 9 31 9 31 6 .31 •6 .
Tallow 25 0 25 0 25 0 24 .9 •
Cheese, new. 53 0 53. 0 52 6 52 6 •
Hobbs, the Grit candidate against
W. R. Meredith in London, is a mem-
ber of the Sons of England. The other
day there was a church parade there.
Mr. Hobbs sriobbed the loyal Order by
refusing to put on, regalia or marching
in the procession. He is a politician of
the deepest dye and as tricky as a
treacherous being. This man Hobbs is
true to his name. And he is named
very truly as a follower of the hob-
nobbing Mowat Government. If the
Sons of England of London carry out
any one of the principles they profess,
there will certainly not be a corporal's
guard to look after such a renegade in
the city of London. The Sons of Eng-
land are a loyal, conscientious body of
men. • If they do their duty Mr. Hobbs
will hobble in future in the ranks of
deserters and the playground of the
Mowat party. Meredith is the man of
our choice. Britains "never shall be
slaves," and surely the Sons of Eng-
land will say so at the ballot box.
CAST HIS BALLOT UNINFLUENCED
by anybody. I want to know if there
is any bigotry or intolerance in that?
(Voices—No, no.) I want these schools
shall be made as perfect as possible.
These schools have been in existencein
this country, for upwards of 30 years.
I say this is no sense of casting reflec-
tions upon the separate schools, but I
want to know is there anything in the
comparison between the separate and
public schools that will show any ad-
vantage in the separate over the public
schools in that time? I venture to say
no. I want to make these schools as
perfect as possible. What I say is,
every teacher in these shoals should
have the same qualifications asateach-
er in the public schools. (Hear, hear.)
I want that in these schools, apart fr om
religious instructions, I would not im-
pose-thata on anybody against 'his
conscience, that the text hooks used in
the public schools shall be used in the
separate schools. (Hear, hear.) Is
there any difference between the arith-
metic that a Catholic and a Protestant
would study ? Ought there be .any
difference in the history ? (Voices—
No, no,) The argument about history
means this, that two different kinds of
history have been taught to the chil-
dren of this country; that they are
brought up on different and antagonis-
tic lines, and much rather would -1 see
the tenet -book of.tho history put in such
a $position that these disputed points
were left out altogether than the chil-
dren should be educated into opposing
views of
Tian nis't'ORY' 43 'i'a',E OttEAT NATION
from which we have • sprung.. (Ap-
plause.) I want alsl bent•
these sep-
arate schools should ' sjxbjeewt to the
same inspection
e�ction, aaaz t re 'sehoots of fife
province of •OittarlO.' , ' Gear, hear.)
These are the tour main paints upon
Which T have asked the people Of this
cotlnfry. tD stippor't,tht3 Opposition, i1il
lar as the srhool ballot is concerned.
1 waht to know, :whether we cannot
discuss 'these without •Importing race
and religious questions into them. 1s
there any reason . why . it should be a
sectarian, import There is none at'all,
and thoe who' these matters
BIRTIIS.
BEGLEY.—In Blvth, on the 31st ult.,
the wife of Wm. Begley, of a daugh-
ter.
DEATHS.
COOK.—At the residence of her son-
in-law, Mrs P. Triggerson, Hensall, on
May28th, Mrs. Cook, widow of the late
Wm. Cook, aged 70 years.
SHAW.—In Seaforth, on May 28th,
Jane Beattie, relict of the late William
Shaw, aged 58 years.
DYKE.—in Goderieh township, on
the 1st inst., Thomas Dyke, aged 79
years and 4 months.
For .date
Houseeieanei's
WE ARE GIVING SPECIAL
LINES OF
MARRIAGES.
DOUGLAS.—ITARRIS.—At the Metho-
dist Parsonage, Walton, on May 23rd,
by Rev. T. Wesley Cosens, Mr. James
Playford. Douglas, of the township of
Grey, to Miss Elizabeth Annie Harris,
of the same place.
POPE.—TAYLOR.—At the residence
of° the bride's father, Stanley, on May
24th, by Rev. J. Walker, Mr. William
Pope, of London, to Miss Mary Ellen,
eldest daughter of Mr. George Taylor.
County Currency.
The Seaforth drug stores close now at
7p. m.
• The Foresters of Brussels are pre-
paring able demonstration on,Mon-
day,
day, July2nd.
Geo. 'Wilkinson and Thos. Garness,
of Morris, left last week on a visit to
England.
T. W. Tanner, of Blyth, has been
appointed to the offlee of J. P. for that
village.
flaring the late storm the manse at
Erucefield was struck by lightning and
slightly shattered.
1�Ir, Jas. Heron; of Staffs, got his leg
"woken oft the 24th ult., while:blasting
14'block of wood.
Mr. Rainey Armstrong, the noted
!lfer 'pt` Stanley, is quite i11. He is at
lila ca'p'e o>;t. the Goshen linea.
ltev. T. S. Kelvin, of Bayfield,
Cpreached au eloquent sermon• to the
anadian, Order. of b"oresters of that
town Mat Sabbath.
e:6 S.A...lt-
A
1A-1 -.�.[.
a
Will Paper
At prices much below the re-
gular, and in some cases
where patterns have not
sold as well as we expected,
at less than cost.
If you have any rooms which
you thought you could not
afford to paper this year
now is your chance to do so
at a very small Cost.
Each Roll trimmed free of
charge notwithstanding the
reduced price.
June Delineators and
June Patterns now in.
Remember Butterick
patterns are the best
in the' worid'o
P%.