The Huron News-Record, 1896-06-10, Page 4e have bought too many
Sager Saddles
a°")e neje
ode
VapV
and in order to reduce our stock will sell them at $2.25
while they last. This is a chance to get a saddle at
less than many dealers pay for them,
EMERSON'S BICYCLE AND MUSIC HOUSE, CLINTON,
.Who 1111111_
would not have
Spring Rollers
on their
Window Shades
when you carr get a
nice `? `(1 shade mount-
ed fiir 25c.
Of course they are notes nice
nor as durable as the one here
illustrated out but they are
better than anything else you
can hay for the money and the
Spring Roller is a great con-
venience.
Our opaque shadings are hand
painted and guaranteed to
neither fade, crack nor curl.
CAN WEHANO A FEW FOR YOU?
•111o•eoos1111110•
Cooper's Book Store, Clinton.
ljely Nuertionnentii.
A man—Jackson Bros.
It pays—Hodgens Bros.
Millinery—W. H. Beesley & Co.
Steamer Camhrie—A. T. Cooper.
A Romance—The W. D. Fair Co.
The Elections—Plumsteel &Gibbings.
Spring Rollers—Cooper's Book Store.
A large proportion—Alien & Wilson.
The Higienie Boot—Jackson & Jack-
son.
TMP, Huron News -Record
t.16 a Year --81.001n Advance
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10th, 1896.
Nomination
Election
OUR CHOICE.
Prete ler SIR CHARLES TUPPER,
Canada's greatest statesman.
West Huron HOBERT MCLEAN.
East Iluron E. L. DICKINSON.
South Huron.... .....THose E. HAYS.
THE CONSERVATIVE PLATFORM.
1—The National Policy.
2—Preferential Trtuie within the
bounds of the Empire.
3—Fast Atlantic Service.
4—Pacific Cable.
5—Justice to Minorities,
(1—Development of Agriculture.
7—National Defence.
8'—Enconrngement of immigration.
9—Admission of Newfoundland to
Con federation .
10—Maintenance of (Canadian Credit.
JUNE 18.
JUNE 23.
"THE COBDEN CLUB CHAL-
LENGED."
An English manufacturer hits Can-
adian Free Traders on the raw
most severely, according to the
above headline and what follows.
A $5,000 challenge from such a
personage as Lord Marsham is
not to he despised, for he is
in position to speak intelligent-
ly what will benefit the country in
which he lives. The MontrealWit-
ness (Grit) gave the challenge on
June 2nd as follows:—
"Yesterday Lord Marsham, better
known as CunlitYe Lister, a great,
Yorkshire manufacturer, challenged
the Cobden club to prove that pro-
tection will not give more employment
and better wages, and that during the
past fifty years free imports had not
been injurious to Great Britain, the
,loser to give a thousand guineas to a
hospital. Up to this afternoon the
Cobden Club had not accepted the
challenge. The newspapers now
egging the thing on are asking what
the Cobden Club exists for, and wheth-
er commercial federation with the
colonies is possible While England ad-
heres rigidly to free trade. It is un-
doubted that protectionist principles
mat mstking at headwayin England
among masters and workers notwith-
standing the briskness of trade. When
lean years main come round, British
Statesmen will be unable to resist th q.
ggrowing demand for the revision of
England's fiscal Wier,"
GRIT TACTICS.
Never was a party in greater straits,
never in a more pitiable, despicable
condition, than that of the noble old
party of Reform in Canada to -day. The
nominal leader in spite of his proficien-
cy as a student of the English lang-
uage, is better known by what
he is not than by what he is.
His chiet exhibit is weakness, lacking
continuity and fixedness of judg-
ment, seems to have no particular in-
tention or purpose of any kind except
craving for office. The real leader of
the- Reform party, after a notable
"ratting," tried his ingenuitytit..legis-•
lation, and amply proved his lack of
sense. He was a miserable failure.
Yet these two worthies with a cor-
poral's guard of whit Mr. Charlton
calls "machine politicians," are the able
statesmen whom the Globe delights to
honor. These form the Alpha and
Omega, the first and last hopes of the
Reform Party. In the present cam•
paign, the Grit tactics are a rehash
of their contemptible conduct during
the late session of parliarnetrt in Ot-
taw•a. Impudence, wholy unjustifi-
able, disgraceful abuse.
Pride, selfrespect, love of order, once
the boast of Reformers, all gone; all
eclipsed hy their greed for office.
Everything by turns and nothing
long. `e.
It is sickening to hear there, as Mr.
Laurier says, blabbering of bribery,
corruption and scandal in the govern -
men I ran ks, when court records show Re-
formers to he a hundred per cent. more
unclean. They can not neny this, and
it is but illusive hope that tells them
these truths aro unkonwn to the vot-
ers. They ere a set of living nega-
tions, and like a public servant who
slakes his office a contradiction, they
betray lack of sense and are not
worthy of being raised to power.
Coercion is now the grit talisman,
the philosophers stone which is to put
their cold fingers into the treasury
boxes. "Hands off Manitoba," is to
put the hands in in the Dominion. The
Remedial Bill is not coercion, but
rather a guarantee of freedom, restor-
ing to Catholics what Greenway took
from them. It is not a party question,
nor yet a government question ; it is a
Section of Constitutional Law.
It 'natters not whether grit.; or
tories succeed to power in the ap-
proaching elections. The school ques-
tion has got to be settled, and that too on
remedial lines, because it is a cardinal
factor in the British North America
Act of Confederation and it will be
obeyed.
If any voter gauges his ballot by the
Remedial Bi:1 or has his mind dis-
turbed by the grit cries thereon, let
him be assured that the weight of ten
thousand ballots will not affect that
Bill a particle; it is the law and not
our personal feelings that we must
stand by. The party in power must
obey the courts.
The country is heartily tired of this
ceaseless, insensate claquering of the
grits giving the people competent
men and honest government.
The query now is, if the Grits are
so invulnerable, why have the courts
proved them corrupt ? If they are
more competent and ahle statesmen
why in the past eighteen years have
they manifested no evidence of such
superior wisdom? If they knew Net-
ter what the country needed than the
'nen in authority why have they never
given their Ideas relative to those
needs and how best to secure them?
Why in all these years that they have
been jabbering "wrong! wrong!
wrongthey never they right? Th t
Bole arieworto thl t"le o. t
not wink to aksist or inetruot the Party'.
in power, "ave ue the reins grid wo
will show you 'how to drive, and
if you do not give us the reins we
will do all in our Q,ower to make your
drlving a tailure !'
errant KniNeither ght Laurier
dispute thea just
nese of these charges.
The welfare of the people, the
prosperity and improvement of the
country, forth no part of the Ghat policy.
They know their record of corruption
and incompetency is but just, yet they
keep up their preach about clean
hands, honesty and wisdom. The
Tariff, or N. P., has long been their
chief bugbear, but now it isn't so very
had after all, and at ruoet they will
only improve it a little so that it will
be better for manufacturers and the
rest of the human nice, though on the
whole the amount of taxes will not he
inateriallylessened. All this is political
trickery on the part of Laurier and his
friends.
If you are a national policy
vote for McLean.
Ulall
If you want Laurier in power vote
for either Cameron or Kitty.
If you want a decent price for your
grain vote for McLean.
If you want to see the soup kitchens
resurected, vote for Cameron or Kitty.
Tf you want your land to realize a
fair price, vote for McLean.
If you want 16 cent oats and 50 cent
wheat imported free of duty, vote for
Cameron or Kitty.
If you want to be a man and live
under the flag of the freest counts y 00
this earth, vote for McLean.
If you want a premier tnat will
toady to foreign con ntries, vote for Cam-
eron or Kilty.
If you want to see Canada prosper-
ous and her people happy, vote for
McLean.
If you want your fauns to fall 50 per
cent in price in fifteen years, "As it is
in England," vote for Cameron or
Kitty.
If you want your wagon, your ox,
your gun, your receipts, your tea, etc.
free from duty, vote for McLean. If
you don't, vote for Cameron er
Kitty.
If you don't want the Dominion
Government to pay three millions ex-
tra to the Provinces for the Liberals,
vote for McLean. If you do, give a
vote to either Cameron or Kitty.
If you want every manufacturing in-
dustryin Canada kept busy, vote for
McLean.; If you want them all closed
you can close them by voting for
Cameron or Kitty.
The electors of Kippen are clamoring
for a visit from Mr. T. E. Hays, the
popular Conservative candidate for
South Huron. He is sure of loyal sup-
port there.
Because McCarthy cannot rule, his
desire is to ruin the Conservative par-
ty, and along with his candidates is
Fcite willing to place in power a
rench Roman Catholic premier.
Laurier and Cameron and McCarthy
and his followers are working directly
and indirectly for the most severe form
of Separate Schools for Manitoba.
Deny it if you like, but the: factor re-
main.
M. C. Cameron favors Separate
Schools in Ontario, but wheels to a
right -about when it comes to Manito-
ba. Principle will first, last and al-
ways commend itself and begin at
home.
Laurier, McCarthy, the Patrons and
P. P. A.'s will combine to defeat the
grand old Conservative party in at
least twenty Ontario constituencies.
Surely Conservatives will see through
such a miserable and unworthy com-
bine to lead them off the track.
M.C. Cameron, and McCarthy and his
candidates are in the same boat. Con-
servative electors should heed the
warning`
McCort by says he will oppose the Con-
servatives in everything and give the
Grits a fair chance. The Conservatives
of the three Hurons should take warn-
ing and notlettheir feelings carry them
away from the old reliable Conser-
vative party with so many noble tradi-
tions.
—
Traitor Ferrer is again dabbling in
Canadian politics with the object of
assisting the Americans to absorb a
free Canadian British people, but the
game will not work, even with the as-
sistance of Laurier and McCarthy and
the Patrons.
The Blyth Standard, the only Mc-
Carthy and P. P. A. organ in the coun-
ty of Huron, reports what is not true
when it says a meeting was held here
and Dr. Holmes was chairmen -1. There
was no meeting held here last Friday
evening. —— ----
Our esteemed town contemporary,
the New Era, chastises home' Return-
ing Officer not far from Clinton for at-
tending political conventions and be-
ing active in political work. If such
has really been the case the Mayor of
Clinton should prosecute the guilty
party and Tan Nnws-Rwoontn will as-
sist in ' such a worthy undertaking.
The fact of the matter is the New Era
has as usual gulped a whole ball of
yarn manufactured by one of h1s
friends and he may in the near future
be expected to secure expert medical
advice to relieve his bilious soul.
U
The iroii grailp oil eorofule les no
mercy upon its victims, r.Clrl, demon
of the blood is often not eatisfled with
causing dreadful sores, but ranks the
body with the pains of rheumatism
until Hood's Sarsaparilla cures.
"Nearly tour years ago I .became af-
flicted with scrofela and rheumatism.
ad
Running sores broke out on my thighs.
Pieces of bone came out and an operation
was contemplated. I had rheumatism in
my legs, draws up out of shape. I lost ap-
petite, could not sleep. I was a perfect
wreck. I continued to grow worse and
finally gave up the doctor's treatment to
11
take Hood's Sarsaparilla. Soon appetite
came back; the sores commenced to heal.
My limbs straightened out and I threw
away my crutches. I am now stout and
hearty and r.m farming, whereas four
years ago I was a cripple. 1 gladly rec-
ommend Hood's Sarsaparilla. ' URBAN
HAMMOND, Table Grove, Illinois.
0
Sarsaparilla
Isthe One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. 81.
Prepared only byC. I. Hood & Co., Lowell. Mass.
cure liver Ills. easy to
t -i ood s Pills take, easy to operate. ago.
• Robert McLean is the poor man's
friend. Mark your ballot for him.
To have seen it in the Now Era is to
say its not true.
Two of the Laurier candidates in
Quebec are men whore the Globe said
should be in jail.
When a Grit heeler offers you money
make a memorandum of the fact. It
may,' possibly come in handy after the
election.
Mr. Laurier has dropped his easy and
gradual plan for killing the N. P. and
now proposes to cut the pesky thing's
head off at one stroke.
McCarthy and the Globe acknow-
ledge the combination between the
Patrons, McCarthyites, P. P. A's and
Grits. Laurier denies it. There is a
combination and the Grits know it.
Are Conservatives going to cast a
vote that will help to put the Quebec
boodlers in power? We trust not,
hut it must be remembered a vote giv-
en for an independent is a vote given for
the Laurier -Tarte combination.
And now our G�it friends have com-
menced abusing the Goyernor-General,
a sure sign that, with all their boodle,
things are not as bright as their news-
papers make out.
On Sunday, November 22, 1885,
Laurier on the Champs des Mars,
Montreal, made his treasonable speech
against Canada's defenders, declaring
that he was willing to shoulder his
musket in defence of the rebel half
breeds.
Wingham .'.,lvance :—The Conserva-
lives should elect, their candidate by a
handsome majority. The farmers have
a man they all know and no man in
the riding is better qualified to repre-
sent there than is Mr. McLean.
Because the Grits have failed to cap-
ture Mr. McLean's meetings they have
adopted most unworthy tactics to
break them up by holding open air
meetings at, hall doors where Conserva-
tive gatherings are. This miserable
breach of common decency has so far
failed to succeed.
As will be noticed in another item
the Signal of last week shows that the
McCarthyites have joined forces with
the Lau' ierites, the Tarteites and num.
erous other ites to heat the Conserva-
tives. Such being the case can any
elector who believes in the National
Policy honestly cast his vote for the
independents or whatever they are
called.
11 is'now its clear as noonday that
the third party is only in the fleld to
try to split the vote, for in a riding like
West Huron, where party lines are so
strictly dcjrawn, there is not the slight-
est; possibility of an independent sav-
ing his deposit.
The people of Goderich will not be
surprised to learn that the Signal of
that town does not like Mr. John
Rnnsford of Clinton. No loyal Grit
would be so foolhardy as to follow Mr,
Laurier in his policy of "Free trade as
it is in England," especially since Mr.
Ransford has h�te the goo.l physician
exposed so many sore spots to view.
The Mayor of Clinton is "talking
through his hat" when he says he
would not have to travel very far to
fled a Returning Officer who attends
political conventions or takes an ac•
tive part in politics. A sworn officer
will perform his legitimate duties at
his convenience and in proper time,
whether the New Era may or may not
be pleased.
The midnightassassin who•penslying
indirect charges for the New Era edi-
torials against a.IEeturning Officer not
far from Clinton should be manly
enongh to come from under cover and
make a direct charge. The New Era
is too cowardly to do so, and THE
NIH -WS -RECORD does not hesitate to
say so.
Goods that are
•
S47
Carpets both in Tapestry and Brussels, Unions, all wools, Hewps. See
prices.
e.
44,0
Curtains are right in line these days, our stook was never larger or better
selected, prices from 35o per pair to $8.
Window blinds, window poles, carpet sweepers, stair rods and orna-
men ta,
Floor Linoteume from 36 inches to 4 yds. wide. Float oil cloths all
widths and patterns.
Opened to -day new lot men's and boy's tweed caps from 25c to 75o.
New stiff hats in browns and blacks, the latest shapes.
•
Large supply men'e and boy'a, latest styles in new straw bats, all new,
last year's goods all cleared out.
0--_.-_ aY
GILROY & WISEMA
he Elections
Everybody knows that the 23rd of June will settle the Elections, the
people will decide which policy they consider the better. Our policy
is both Liberal and Conservative, Liberal in selling goods, Conservative
in holding Io all our customers.
Our Platforn--Good Goods and
For the next two weeke we shall offer SPECIAL
following lines :
Tweeede, Suitinge, Pantings, Worsteds, (made to order).
ing, Hats, Caps, TIes, Collars, Cuffs, &c.
Low Prices.
BARGAINS in the
Ready Made Cloth -
Boots and Shoes—we have Special Bargains to offer in these goods, we have
many lines that are nearly sold out and have odd sizes that we wish to clear
that we will cell less than cost. They are Bargaine. We cannot give prices as •
there is not enough in each line to keep up the supply; come and see, we will
show you what we have. If prices don't suit, you need not buy.
Millinery and Summer Dress Materials well assorted.
0
PL- iJJTSTEEL & GIBBIHGS, - filbert St,, CAL
Joliet) McMillan is receiving a cold
reception in South Huron. At his
own meeting at Varna the other
night there were only a very
few present and the enthusiasm was
so cool that neither he, McCarthy or
Laurier coot(', muster a cheer. Thos.
E. Hays is the rnan for South Huron,
The secret bas reached South Huron.
Laurier will carry out his Quebec
pledge and force an obnoxious system
of Separate Schools on Manitoba. line
McConnell, a Grit emissary, spoke in
the Hullett Separate School in favor
of John McMillan and gave away the
Laurier programme. Is it not time
the Conservatives of West Huron
would awake to the Cameron -Mc-
Carthy deal and see for themselves?
A -mte for Kitty is a vote for Cameron,
McCarthy and Gritisul.
in the Signal's Ottawa letter last
week will be found the following: -"It
is one of the strongest combinations
that ever joined forces to overthrow a
government in Canada, and it will suc-
ceed. This time we see Liberals,
Patrons, McCarthyites and Wallace•
iter all working to the one end."
The cat is now out of the bag and the
unholy alliance footled to heat the
government is plainly set forth so that
he who runs may rend. Do the men
of West Huron, many of whom have
sworn to defend Queen and Constitu-
tion. want such a combination to rule
at Ottawa, for they may be sure such
opposites could never unite on any
plank that was for loyalty to Canada?
er..uc
The Globe's'BUT to Patrons and Mc-
Carthyites is something like this :—
"You may call yourselves what you
please, and hold to what principles
you can, BUT under all and any cir-
cumstances you must vote against the
Government, kill the National Policy
and rip the old flag to ribbons."
While the Winghain imes declares
so many manufacturers are in favor of
Free Trade and surely the people can
stand it, an emissary of the Liberal
party was canvassing the manufactur-
ers of Wingham to sign a petition in
favor of Mr. Laurier with the under-
standing that if he got into power the
manufacturers interests would be pro-
tected. Laurier's two faces again
shine forth, even among his followers.
At his opening meeting last week at
Kintail M. C. Cameron said he would
vote on the school question for the pol-
icy adopted hy Mr. Laurier, which, ac-
cording to Mr. Laurier, means a more
drastic measure than the Conserva-
tives propose in regard to Manitob
schools. As in the bye -election M
Cameron will have another story flit
Clinton and Goderich township in or-
der to capture the support of the men
whom he pictured as gloating over the
blood of murderer Louis Riel. He
hopes to either secure these votes or
transfer them to the McCarthy candi-
date in order that he may defeat a
trustworthy Conservative candidate.
Will such a game work among think-
ing electors?
The Higienie Boot
Oh ! what ' a thought, in summer cool, in
winter hot. A circulation 'neath the foot
insures a clean and healthy boot.
0
JACKSON & JACKSON
W. Jackson. Fred T. Jackson
The New Boot and Shoe Firm, Clinon.
SOLE AQEN2'W FOR ourny 2Q'.
•
7