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The Huron News-Record, 1886-05-19, Page 4•.•F .F New AdvertisemRnts this Day, Notice :Peter Adamson. • Printer's ink--Jaokson Bros., 'Clothing --C. C. Rance 84 Co', Tickets—F, W. Watts. Deputy=Reeveship---E. Corbett. Straw :Hats—J'. 0, Petlor 8&' 'Co. Bayfield Court of Revision — W. A., Morrison. Goderieli 11Taattle' Works:-•I'iob- ertson• &. Bell,: • The Huron News -Record Wednesday", May 19th. • AN INSATIABLE SENATOR.� J`ulin O'I?ouohoe, a -Toronto • Wryer who has all his life traded and • bartered away confiding Irish Catholics for lith own• political and pecuniary advancoment,:svas niade..a Senator in, 1882: At the• tizuelye considered the aplloiutni9rit a 'dis- grace to the party making it, and;a disgrace to the Irish Catholics of title Province 'whom it appears from the best evidence he does:reflect the sentiment of'. Jolin O'Dohohoo could not by any means he:. a proper re- presentative of Irish Catholics,, for he has not the first particle of the manliness or common ,honesty dr loyalty which that glass :•possesses in. common with the majority of (Mr_ fellow citizens of otlior race extraction and creeds. O'Donolioo ief totlutng. but a verbose firebrand. wlid` should never havebeen: made ti; Senator,' and whom. it would have. been• an. everlasting .disgrace to -have taken into the Cabinet,•. Ire represents; chiefly,John ;Q'Denohoo,. Mid lie .is now trying to self' himself to the Opposition • by: making a blather- skite harangue . in the Seuate.. His burden is that he was not taken :into the•Cabinet at :tlie titre he was made a Sonata because the, Govern - Ment was .ruled by• tire' '°tango' Lodges. Senator Rank :Smith,wl10 • was a party. to, Q'''Donohoe being • niadea Senator, and Who pressed his.. appointment, which.he is now sorry for, , says that •O'Donoh'oe •eves• not taken into t1to.Government "because leading Catholic and Protestant Cum servatives objepted.to it.'' ".third,"adds Mr. Smith, "leacili•mg Irish Catholic Conseruatives•said they would never support. aa Ministry of .which` John. .).'Donohoe wee ani utbor." Leading, frisk' Catholics are rather:. fenny sort of 'Orangemen,. It:'is true no -doubt that Orangemon,anc Protest- ants cotnbinodt'tiwith .representative Catholics .fir 3sueeessfully .'opposing- O'Donolibo''s •entry. iiitoa-tho •M.in- istry. Itis antecedents .. Were of too unsavory • a character.., .And, his •present,attit tde isonly. in character with his. antecedents..: Ilea "isa'tt traitor to all .. parties.' and persons: Ilverything . by. 'turns.' ami nothing •long •at one time,, excel .�•.Iohn ..a A ale' is li�=s-t1n' O Donohoe. nd y, same unprincipled ;Inn O'Dono.hoe, no niatter•,what.his professsions, may b.: • -__- .Bnt-a'Donahae ot-th feat••: an the bag in the Senate. the other day whenhe villified'' Senator . Frame' We think it a detestable practice to guage a man's fitness to manage the affair's of State by the color of his creed, or hie race prej udtai ]h t looki ig at it even fromthat stand points, Signator O'Donohoe's conten- tion is iinfounde •, •Ile says Orange 'influence paramount influeis . ramottnt in the Conn. oil Of State,. that Catholics are not fully represented, their numbers. 'had importance considered Senator O'Donohoe in so saying falsifies the record. There are six Catholics in the Dominion Cabinet, out of 13 membersaltogether. Senato#°Prank Smith says, "surely that is enough." The insatiable desire of Orpouohoe is notieeable, in his remarks in. the Senate when he asks for information wliy be was not taken into the Cabi- net, when he states, "I not only be; Bove the minority should get that position which it is entitled to by mangers, but I believe it should hare. -more. I believe tltcct would be the way to make therm contented and happ.;l." This is genuine O'Donohooism.. He knowsthat leo as; an individiunl'and his co -religionists as a. glass, have at least all he and they' aro entitled to,. but he says we should have more. .The everlasting cry- of "give," ."giver". could notbe more clearly' enun- ciated. NOr could ' blackmn ilzng. throat be 'more distinctly made "If you do not give us more than we are.entitled• to•. we atrial ' be a • thorn in yeti side." . • fortunately,.. as Senator Smith asserted, and he knows whereof he spes;ks; the Irish• Catholics' have no confidence in the O'Don.ohoe breed. for he. is not a r.epresentntivo Irish Catholic. Wo ' should be • sorry to have to think he Was.. ANANIAS ; CAMERON. Seine: tithe ago a well informed ,correspondent, .in ' showing up the more thaan.'tergiversations of M. C. • Caeron mthe teapected,ntember• for Teat -Raton, ; dubbed'that g ntleman "Ananras Cameron,: an expressive title which has been considered by the presto of the' Provinoe'so:appro-` prtately expressive, that .lieis now •widely;ktiowri:by it . `Vire must con- . fese on-.fess that we at ifirst. iliad .qualms: .of ooi s.eicnee. it a.11osving our'.ccu'tes- ondont'to drib the 'de.Jacto rep re - P P sentative of the honest electors. 'of West Huron. with such an opprobri-. ous title.. But subsequent' events have.. shownthitt• it hes=:been Well earned' ancl'.is�deserved::. • We,' outselvesi. shooed''tlfat in, liis Riot .seech,Mr. Catreror violently y departed:from the tl!'utli. ' We cou- -aided .frim from the official •:records af falsification: Gur.co:a'resP ondent referred.. to. howed'..that in his ; rucefield, and inghani speeches Mr: Cameron as as fi r fro>nr the truth iis:tlie poles ere 'irafinll r, •. • • It }mill bo remembered also. •that Mr. Farrgsv, both at4Winglihtn: and -Blyth, at which.placesi lir. Cameron sett,s.iafi:satl. t.m41 ;h.iiu,_- declared Vhat Mr. Cameron• dared trot to inake Iti's infamous: 'Charges against mom- , Smith.. Mr. Smith was not only:a. trade a 'Senator blit' given a port Thottgh • he wore not a re.- ' presentative.Oatliglie he. is .a re- )1resontativo0iinadian. His services.. a's a successful• business man, which. are • honorably recognised 'all over' the Province, as. well ;its other pota- tions orntions of the Dominion,' eminently - fitted him as one..of. her •Majesty's' •advisers. But like all .mean ininds t)'1D.onolioe • now states that Smith was anxious, to, be -taken • into the 14ftnistry so that.as. ars besiness man ho 'Phil i ;inako money by,' informa- tion he couid obtain iii; that•position ;about tate. custoi'ns'and oitciso dtttios. - This is it 'ser'ioua • charge foe ono Senator to • make . against another, who is. also a Cabinet Minister on the floor. of the •Ciiainlien. , If it is .trnc,• O'r)onoltoo is a perjurer and traitor to hi.e il: ties in that he. has taken no stops•-ttltibying. llama ;by impeachment or otherwise the gtoas breach of trust ha olutrgcs- against his ltrother Catholic and Senator. • _ it his allegations are net true, and if he does not. know they are .tette,. he is equally a villain ' to rialto bers of parliament whore he alleged: wore subsidized by 'laud grants and timber lioenses,' on the floor of -the •house... And Mr..I'arroartwaasright:' Tho House• has been nearly three months in session. and .Mr, Caineron' has been a '4l imb dog" in the : neat-' tars which his unlicensed . tongue and • load. month,. belched forth. against his foliow,members. Not dttmb, however, have the ac- cused been, They liave iii its padre nentary equivalentt told Mr. Carnet - on en the floor of the House, "thou Best," Aaid ho has not 'had ,the. manliness to retract that.tehic'll he knows and liasbeen told 'aro barefac-. ed falsehoods. Neither hullo remotely in. his well known special Pleading, , quibbling: and jesuitically sophisticated style at/en fed to jl}s= tify his outrugeotts statements at T3rueefrold and lti`ingliam. But the members of rarliament whom Aft. Cameron libelled by say- ing they had got land grants or timber licenses as the price of than. adher- onoo to the 'DIiitistoru l -patty, have; aa we said, on the fleoror-elie Henan, denied his infamous asaertiaius.. A:tld. thm, the re pen 5t . of the silver -tailgated orator of West Huron has been a goldeu,..at least a wise silence. • We. cull from reports of the House:— 34TR. TheknasoN drew attention to, the statement xnade.by the member for Huron (Cameron) at' Winghain and afterwards repeated by, the mems bor for Simeoe..(Cook)• in the house that he had applied for and received a timber limit while holding a seat in parliament;, and that he had pro- cured it for: the purpose of selling it. There was no truth in the state- • tient, • Mn. TaYLort .said he chaired briefly to refer to the slanderous statements made regarding himself in th.e town of Winghatn last winter by a parson uaxned M. C. Cameron IIe (Mr.- Taylor) wished to say that he had no interest in ti>.uber limits, coal- and grazing lands, either in Manitoba or the Northwest. He never applied for any snob lands, either for himself or for any other party. This fellow Cameron, who knew when he tirade the statement that it was false, that ib was manu- factured out of whole cloth, he sus- peeted was, a paid agent of the Grit iiarty,going ; around the country and slandertnag tiroso whom he could not oppose himself, viz., gentlemen. If this follow Cameron, who circulated these wilful and malicious false- hoods, was the M. 0: Cameron who 'represented West I{'uron in the House, it was: deeply to be regretted• i that any:gentleman aspiring to the position of a statesman• should stoop so low. (Hoar, hear:) L r1l11. I:ANDRY (Kent) said alis tame, had been , mentioned as :that • of one who while a •motnber of Par - Ilan -tent had "socured fun advantage. for • hiriiself. • Tlie statement was' uu-. true. • • ' Mit. brA_oKlNTogxi said;he to had been charged. with profiting in lauds• o.rtt of his support of the Govern- ixient.. Hailed received .no • lands. -UR, MOCar1Tiir 4 -said he desired to make--a-brief personal . explana- tion with• regard to charges made ageing him. that he was interested in timber limits or in grazing.l4ands. • IIe bad only. to .give them a• distinct `and positive. denial. 'Ile never. ap= ,plied.for either timber• lands, coal lands.ox gratin; lairds,. for hiinsolf or for anyone 'with whom he was counecteda.directly'; or indirectly; in, any foyni Whatever. It. was evident that the policy; of the Opposition was to Slander indiscriminately= .(loud, cheers) aiii, e iet;y r; possible way'mombers.of Parliament, wh:eth- er:there was any grounds ..Or 'pre- . totice for it at not:, • (Cheers.) 11'In: SattonLn said: lia:`habeen: d bee oliarged with. getting amine favor's 'from the ,Government it the shape of timber limits for' friends. The charge was untrue.. fie had for= warned applications:.: to: thea depart- tient of fourteen gentlemen who Wanted limits, and of 'these' fourteen :twelve were . Reformers:.: (hear, hear)... •It'could not be that, these. mfttters: •would affect • 11is vote, nor'. upon theist epteld he hesuccessfully' charged with eorituption. Probably the no'stcorrupt pian in this House. was orie M. C. Cameron; the man who travelled thecountryrnanu fac"t7ilt,Ag and •,repeating these. falselfoeata to pnbhc • audiences.; • It wad' well. known thathe, though the sliyiock of..his,tprofession,--hat bean exceed- ingly: liberal at ;e1•ection tidies He even attempted to bribe bile •ltronse of Godbynling,'during lie's cora rapt election canvass ostentatious • suliscriptioiis to' churches of all denominations, •(It,aunhtor.)1his was a lei," anct1he •jet e w110 tiled- his case declared. that- lie., would': as• SOPA bollevo.:thabthis inan.could be dipped into• the- lope• and:. canna; out dry as that lie•was-innncentl • Mn. W nate (York), I can tell • i you inorethe.jludge said about 1Ir.. Cameron., He said; -"Had the judge at the trial found'• him guilty,of.:per- sonal bribery, I would lir ve sustain eel the judgment." ' `. AIR. Dawsoar Wein ember for Huron stood branded asa slanderer by the denials which . had.. fallen from hon. 'meinbors . To those de- nials'he added his own., desired emphatically to ,state• that he• had, received no timber • limits from the Government.• • ' M. ORTON said he desired to give an etiphatic contiradictiati, to t.'the 'statement made by i1lt..Cameron.,in' his speechat, b4Tinglfam, that hawed.. a paid ' servant of the banarllan, Pacific. Railway, Iris` connection with• the company was dimply that cpntraet' to supply .incritual' assistance and construct hospitals along the line.. 'hfii •h'hri. never.•i'f)- oeived atimber lirrrit froati the Gov- eintionti not had lin ever, applied ida a-loasd of coal funds, SII1 Mr..7lno0art'r. gave all ea•pliett,r denial to the charge that lie syas•an 'applicant. to. the Government for coal lands. With regard "to. the eharge that•lto heal sought to oltrsin a timber limit of •26 miles. on tine Turtle river, he. might, say• that ho; simply applied on, boltittfz,. off.. twos. gentlemen, Messrs. McLaren and Sinclair, Dr. Sinclair- being a well: - known Reformer,.. The member for Huron bad .3natle°charges against' lion members in the country which he bad not the courage to repeat fu the House. He (Mr, Haggett) simp- ly said .that the ataternents made against himself were cowardly and lying statements made outaof the whole cloth, with not a patitfele of evidence to sustain thein. If the hon. gentletnaiz would formulate against him in .the proper way the scandalous charges ho had made at Wingham, he would prone that the hon. --gentleman• was a man with whom it was a disgrace to be as- sociated with in the same. Assembly. Mit. Carr norr—It is se reported. Ma. Hs.•oa.&nr--That is a cowaadly wilt, of escaping resperrsi'bili'ty for your statements. (Bear, hear). • .EDITORIAL 1 OTE& The Senate hac refused to sane- tion STio House till permitting ng- noshes and infidels Co affarm instead of taking the ordinary form of oath, Tire Senate is right in tains instance at all events. B.L. C.'Cametron fins circulated his speech on "Indian' Administration in the Northwest,"• For buncombe' and ananiasisms it' equals any of AI. Ca;titeron's previous ' efforts, Need we say more'! It is as fat with . lies as his Wingbam and • Brucefield, speeches which • have been .declared^ to have• beefs lies made out of tile' • whore • cloth, by, thuse'rvho ought to: know best, and that on • the floor of the House while Air. Cameron '•vas present, and he made no attempt to .ijustify his slanders..' His speech on.Indian • affairs, we say,,are'equally, false, and we shall next -week pay. ourresliects • to this remarkable .effort. of Mr. Cameron's fertile imagination.. Government has passed' a )3il1• prohibiting the 'importation or manufacture in Canada of oleoniar_. garine, butterine .or other deleteri- ous and fraudulent imitations 'of lii3ttor; . It %was at firsts tho•nght a duty of '8 or •10 cents a lb would bo ',prohibitive, but the Governinent • :•considtered that : the . interests ' of consutueasand: theP roteetion of an .'important branch of farming indus try demanded itta: total siuppression. Now if ,it is wrong. to legalize the sale, of b.utterine chiefilyr because. it's use is , injurious: on , su rip1uary grounds, is an ;opening for suPPp • ressing t the .'importation apt manufacture of spiritri' which many hold ,are r irr'titous; . 't easy. •) .t, on ' sumP. grounds. •• • The.. Wingliaiu. Times says• • Mr., ,Faire.tva '. M.; P.. for East Writer, "leaked the::eoprage tee shirk" a ;recent vote in .,the Hauso:;. Most people. are of opinion. that 'it `.foes not require much cauage to shirk a' ;ditty.. In, fact the generally ''re- ceived.. opinion.; is' that it is the lack of courage that canna • shirking. Mr. Mr; .Fano.w, is one of the most '.coarageoi•c as wolT'tis consoierittous and industrious arid' useful members in the . House. Tie' lacks the • un-- • enviable courage of ; the .member for West Eaton .•: Mr'..Farrow has net the courage' to tell untruths ;:By the wholesale and have dozeiis' of his. fellow members in the Hotho' ,tell •in witioutrefutation'.th i.hisstate- 'mente• were untrue: `Mr: Farrow lacks that courage; he shirks un- truths. • , The scandal mongers in the litause are growing weary. One by one the bubbles of the Op1iosition have Quist, and, like all bubbles, the re- sicltie is insignificant., The alleged scandal . against Hon. Mr. Rowell first exploded, then the Inch Arran Hotel allegations fell through with what the sonaniotisl 'papers call a "sickening thrid" and the other day Ur. I11ake'st irea finned indictment of litirra .Y Dodd anal n. F, Macdougall was abandoned.'. Why'1 ' Became they had no foundation to aV'est upon, hotih'bor innate nebbish which M: 0. , Cameron anci;a John Charlton Basked around : tho country last winter:; h:1s that been atepoated in the House and a1rnost:r.every. day mem- rise in their laces -earl sa 'lid. b'creur p y, � y Latae waited ,foatheall egntiglls.tu.bo InoVerr Grand data Day in Oiintbn on the 24th of May, People. of the County :of Iluroti, if you want to spend a good (114 orithe date, ate'fait this thriving town and yaitt brightest hopes will be realised, , Remember too; that the town that can givo you the Most •fun for 25ots, can givo you the best'Paine in Y.GcODS of which fact a visit to rts will eoirvince, your, IIe sells Gray cottons 'at 3c, worth 5c. ; White eottons- at 7c. _ worth 9c. ; Dream Efoods of 10c, worth 15c. Prints at 5e, worth Sc, Gine:mins at 10e, worth 15e, ; ahirtings'at 10e .worth 121c.;,liossiury at lOc.• worth 15e. 1;ig assortanont.-In Notions, Domestics, Linens, arid' all alma, departments. We are snaking a big drive inkid glavee- at•350. .. MILT,INE1 away clown to starvation prices: Favor us with a -call and we will prove tl> youthe truth ofour asssertions.. We wish you all'+ a pleasant anti • • day. . Robertson, The ]Peoples rriend. macro in the ,House, and having waited •lona enough they . 31Ow chid.. lenge their malignors to the proof.. 'Tho result is that tile Cameron fees tion is dumb, or plead that they, were misled. Such spectacles are humiliating, • and show the petty tricks to which the party is'reduccd. Toronto Tata says tliat.tiie Wit- ness has long been. considered the only religious claily+'paper.in' Canada,.. find James Beatty tlie•'only religious. M. P., but that both- have sadly fallen front :;doe' lately.. If (Beatty' has preserved his integrity` as well as the Witness; Iry is .riot ilii; Beef "boy" that hat-iasoinotiihesdescribecl to lie: • PRESS OP‘NIONS. A prophet is not without. honor, save.P-P. his own country..�, the French-Canadian ;whom •irr. Mawtat took to hie bosom in connec- tion with the Pier q citement in Essex, was: ordered' out of the. Exe-. tcutive . Cominitteo meeting : of the Windsor St. Jean Baptiste;, Society .the other day.—Sarnia Canadian. Windsor Peaard, (Grit):—::It is abotit.tilina our legislators'at Ottawa were coming`. home,` When . they find time to: introduce such bun- comb!' resolutions as that of Mr„ Blake's :upon the 'home. Rule quer= tiot it is evident that the roal busi- j nes, of the :Iiouso: is pretty well ex- hausted. • The sessions of onr Par- liaments are ,trade Sufficiently ex - ;:pensive loyal, good deal.. of 'purpose- ; less wrangling. and recrimination • over what may be called. Canadian affairs;. and eve object to the lnggiirig ' in of purely Imperial; issues for de- • Tho Sarnia Srtn reports the ithv.. Dr. Thompson as "causing more than a ripple last Sunday" by crib- cising "a prominent diiily paper in 'thiseountry," (he was understood to "refer -05 the isloiE�"'i1Tic1i'"li Tl nouncod the government as afraid !to do,its duty in a certain case; and when�'.the government did do its. duty the paper. then turned around and denounced •. it for so •doing.". This palpable • reference ,;to the Globe's reckless change of front in the 'Mel el; iluestion is all the more. eigilifi= cant from. the 'fact that Rev.. Dr. Thompson is rho' Non, ..Alex. lac= Kenzie's son-in-lftsv. , ' ALL FOR IRELAND Th8 Belfast papers publish an advertisement inviting tenders for 20,000 Snider rifles and tato same number' of bayonets„ to be dolivoreclt on or before June 1. A. inontnnent has boon erected at •Ghasnevin,•in memory of O'Donnell', the nuirdoler of James Carey, who brined informer in the trial of the Phoenix park, murderers. An in- scription on the monument says : "Ho . died• for ToliinclY" The ex- ponse of erecting the)_• nion.uinent was defrayed' (dimity by Irish -Am- ericans.' A tires olittovrvx. Baron Rothschild, .Metal mem- ber of Parliament for I nckinghani- shire, has written a ptiblie letter op- posing Mr. C ladstone's Home Rale Bill. r,tvottiNo •mite 'ataxia remains. At n.moeting of tit^ha aesuulon and Counties Liberal tTitiott, resolutions, i were fbcl'opteFl favoring he maim principles of the Hama ]Mule Several amendments which Weis proposed wore noiselessly rejected - natviTT's vXarws.. • Michael. Davitt;in an interview delated that the would rouse ti','.- tnembers'of" the National .Lefagno i i),. Irolend.and 'America ` if Mr. Glad.. ;stone'yieldecl to .Mr. (*ltitutborlain'a demands for; the nmdiffcatiun of Hotne•Bule 33017 1.3111. In ref`er'ence. ;to the opposition • of !the people ;of Ulster to Honie' Rule Mr. `Dayitt • ;said scornfully : --"leave thein alone to ns ; we will. make . short w•ark • of .'these gentry. They aro not Irishmen, but only English and. i.Sco.tehanen who have settled ,among, ' its. It would be an absurdity to.' :allow them to dictate- to Iriehnten as: to how Ireland should be governed:. The Nationalists will wage .• war: to the death against any Bill 'whichi does not subject Ulster to the rule Of the statutory Parliament, at Dub? lin." CONC1.tL1 QG•' It is stated that the Loyalists in Ulster- are conceatliiig,;' arms, feat- ing that Mr. Morley, Chief •Secre•�- tary for •Ii'etand,'- wilt order them police to,ranke raids .for the purpose • of 'distant itig the people. A leading . , English: Liberal lata sul)seribecl £100 • • to aid .in buying arms for the '• Orangeman of Armagh.:. 'Drill: " clubs ate. beingfoiri ed'by the ..cif moat Loyalists. • • • � • . "Two N,'TIOL\S•' 1 ' IR> LAND.' lIa y ' Ghamboglain . wi•ite's ,.ta their Beifast`Libei't1L .ssnciation that the ordinary. Englishman .hardly • recog- nizes at. rosent• the fact'' that there - P } are two nations • in Ireland. and that. *hen' he • does .he will see that it• would`..bo. as 'unfair to 'force the :•.. Ulster Protestants;to submit ,to.. Catholic 'Nationalists as to 'expect the. latter.. latter to aeeept peel the views. of.Englishmen nglishtma epn and Scotchnen. nay.•Observe -' - ' in passingt'.'aays- 1T.r . C 14Amlierlam, . ., "that if•. oogra liicai, considerations a P iaze'tt0'ieidtto natural sgntiinent, it ;appears to me that•.tbe prayer of rR0'1'ESuc&Wr•.'tII.ST'ER FOR separate consideration is entitled to' at least equal attention to that which -I been. givon"Tt-th`e cl'em,ands of"®' the'population, represented' 15y- Parnell. 3yParnell. The fate of -the Province however, is in the haat of its own people,and ,if .;they .are: really in'• earnest in refusing to entrust their liberties and fortunes to the contrpl ',"of a Central Parliament in Dublin, it • is• not 'likely that their .fellow - subjects in fellow-s.ubjectsin England•`•anrl Scotland will sufer;them to be coerced into sub -Mission, I am convinced after careful inquti'y th .tithe loyalists of the North of Ireland will not quiet- ly' submit uietly'sulimit themselves to the control' of . a Dublin Parliament, which they' bell -Aro With' much reason 'would be hostile to their • religiuli and material interests, • • woMt4Y'S . OPPUSIT.IOty A petiticiU, 371 yards long and signed by 30,000 women of illster,. Lias boon• handed in at the •home ..,f Offaoe. It is addressed to the (anew)", ' `-g withhold Lel' and boseecliiria her tow 1 , assent from any Homo Rule Ilial , which may be passed The firs?' three si toetures tthe petition are. thiyseof the I')aicliess of Abereorr the wife of Bishop l(nox, and ills.. Henderson,. of 'Norwood ''rower,' Belfast, and they represent respeet-• ively,. the nobility,, the elinrck. earl. the people:. . CARi.ri T At,tt�I cI. Tho Radical seceders will 1)0 con- tented with •nothing short of reg" - tar representation of .l:relanrl.a;.' Lord'ilurtington is ready Jo form 0 Ministry of.meditates. Lord Saalia,