The Huron Signal, 1886-5-28, Page 2•1
1
MICHAEL DAVITT.
On Hoene Rule I I Ulster.
The Vorarder Use Land Lereene before •
Glasnew •adaeocs A. Iltooisena rue
tor drelsierrs ethabas.
One of the atom euthm isitic meetings
oil Irish Netionalists that has assembled
in Glasgow fur many years was held at
Um City Hall un th• trveatng of April
20, to listen tei an address by Michael
Devitt on the Homo Rule Bill introduc-
e] by Mr. Gladetons. :Mr. Devitt uss
rising was greeted with prolonged ap-
plause. Thu time, he said, hos text
s!iould be, not from the Natoural
League's pranted program, but from the
Home Rule Bill lotruducod by the
ag I is h Niamey "lin and after the
appointed day, there shall be establish
ed in Ireland a Legislature cansisting of
Her Majesty the QUNO, and an Insh
Legislative body" (enthusisatic cheers, ,1
Bofors offering a few words upon this
measure, I may be permitted, as as Irish
Nationalist, to say that, in Mr. Glad -
stases' $ great speech of last Thursday
week, into* than in his masterly scheme,
am we to fiud the complete vindication
of the struggle waged by the Irish peo.
ple for self- t since the passage
of that iniquitous statute, the Act of
Union. I hed the privilege of listening
that treat oratorical effort. Looking
down from the gallery of the Home of
Commune epee one et the greatest and
most beillimit usemblages before which
any statennan has ever speken, and lis -
teeing to this phenomenal old mow, in
the most eloqueet leagues et bis cono•
mud, paring a just, though tartly, tri-
bute to the subject of Irish /not ionaloty,
I could not help saying to myself at that
Inconteet that 1 bare net spent
Mat Yllsail Dr Rartlaa 111111401.111
in vain. (Enthusiastic cheers.) At the
imam time, however, it is only natural
to reboot upon all the sacrifices that
might have been prevented, all the dis-
asters that might not have taken plus,
all the creme that might not have stained
the modern history of Ireland, et some
Delilah Minister, 50 years ago, had bet
then recognized the justice of Ireland's
national demigods, and had been then
conceded -what would have been accept-
ed graufulty sod with enthusiaam-that
whit& has now to be given in °bedlam*
to an orgiuxised Irish rase, and the pree-
mies, in the House of Commons, et the
strongest and the ablest parliamentary
party which Ireland has ever sent to that
institution. Apoilause.,1
Perhaps the loudest ery of objection
to this scheme is fc nod in what is called
TBI tLATZ& PROTZeT.
It was somewhat amusing to listen to
English orators -most of whom have
never been in Ireland -who know noth-
ing whatever about the country -talking
about the Northern Provinces@ if it were
a solid unit in opposition to Home Rule.
Wel], indeed, do 1 bow one
or two members of the EIMISMIli Cam
mord opened their eyes le !.
the other night when, in discussing this
question with them in one et the lob-
bies. I took °coulee to remind them that
this Ulster had actually • majority of ita
I 1 members in the British Parliament
t. pledged to get Horne Rule for Ireland.
(applause). They were ignorant of the
fact that more than one-half the popula-
tion cf Ulster is decidedly National (loud
cheers). An/ with the fact that 17 Ul-
ster Nationalist members, against 16
Tory lumbers from Ulster, are at pres-
ent in Westminster to hold up the hand
of Mr. Gladstone in the muse (of Home
Rale, I am astonished that even these
ignorant English orators osn forget this
palpable and objective fact in the strug-
gle. Why, sir, I think that Mr. The
Healy-(lood cheers; -is as much an Ul-
ster member and an infinitely ablm
than the valiant Major- laughter)-erls•
represents some constituency nearer to
,what is called the rebel provinces than
kBetith Londonderry 'applause). On the
'tether hand, we have men like Mr. John
ibillon (cheers) and Mr. J. F. SmallIgt
issued applause), and surely thus. MIR
elan WI said to have as much right ,to
'peak for the Northern Pew** m abb-
ot William Johnston, Mr. %Cobalt Olt
1110ount Coq
The lister Proteigant farmers ere as
•••••••4110.40 •••••-•
ben whisk the lamilluedegre eurryieg ns
this .14. 01 the wale*. (applause). Wby,
of an; mash efforts were made by the
Oatholie farmers of Mates, is it to be
um seed fur a mowed that the Irish
Legislature would give the slightest pos-
sible senetiou to, or would hesitate to
use all the hoes sad authority of Irish
1.1v to prevent such an valises upon
age Protestant fellow -countrymen
(Cheers.) 1 dont care how -by what
means- Ulster was planted minutiae
No. I dual care to lire too much ie
the past. These Protestut teoant
farmers are bone of our beim -(load
cheers) and flesh ot our flesh, (Renew-
ed cheering) They am Inahmen-(an
phase- -sod their rights and their pri-
vileges in their 17Istor faints wculd be
▪ jealously watched and protected I
Irish Legislature -ayo, and far more so
-than ever they were by an [notional
Parliament. (Kiilhuaijmtic chinos ) We
hear a gocd deal about lister
-about handing over this wondrous
Priorities to the
Nationalist and Catholic majority, and
this is part of the stupidity of dues peo-
ple of the loyal and patriotic union who
are hawking their ignorance thmughout
the cities and towns of Great Britain.
• FALLstit OF ULIITeles
Whatever degree of prosperity Uleter
has, has been doe almost as much to the
Catholic portion ot the Ulster population
as to the Protestant portion (hear, beer).
But I deny that Ulster is the most pros-
perous province ia Ireland. The wealth
per head of each ot the fur province.,
ascertained by dividing the population
into the income tax , would
gine Leinster about £19 and Ulster £6
per individual. There is a nut fur the
enlightened orators of the loyal and pat-
riotic union to crack (laughter). But we
say that we rejoice in the
of Ulster (bear, hear) and we
declare, what every rational min wfil ad-
mit to be a justifiable deceleration on our
part, that self. t for Ireland-
• Parliament which will take under its
fostering wings the interests of Ulster as
well as of the rest of Ireland -would
make that province, in a abort, ten times
more prosperous than it is to -day (sheers).
Well, the next ery, and I think the
hut, is a good one (laughter). It is tke
persecution ery (more laughter). They
declared that House Rule means Home
Rule (laughter) and the t hand-
ing owe" of the Protesiaat minority to
the tender imereies of a ferocious Cathe-
lie majority. They don't go quit* se far
se to say that we would revive the Span-
ish Inquisitise (lasghter). Sews of them
would not hesitate about paying it, if
they got an audience gullible enough to
believe them (laughter). But there is
Retbing, or warmly anything, more con-
temptible In the whole catalogue of
erable sgsinst Home Rule
than this cry of probable Protestant per-
secution. Those who now protest so
vehemently against what they term the
handing over of the 'loyalist minorityto
the imaginary persecution of the Nation-
alist majority were those E
who never felt or expressed any sympathy
whatever with the real sufferings and un-
just of the Irish nation in
the past. (Hear, hear). What is there
in the history of the Catholic people of
Ireland to give any resionable groued
for the that they would at-
tempt te iuterfere with the religiose
rights or privileges c.f their Protestant
fellow. 1, 1 (Great applause).
What people on the face of the earth bad
suffered se rnoch in tbe , of re.
ligions liberty as the Irish peellT-Mil
ratioual to suppou they Could be so
"resat to their own mooed in fighting feet
religions freedom as to retort to the int.
quitous policy of , their Pro-
testant fellow- . 11 11 is so I
utterly impossible from a Nationalist !
point of view, I only allude to it he..
- - oftees- a ItesaseArlitriniger
•
sad the Oathehis people -sad 1. 1.,., of
whom de you tidal I Fer a stmody
Methodist from Itionliskillem--11114. Jere-
misli Judea. (Prolowirei applause).
New, is essielimion, I eaneut help point -
lag est how singular is the positive whisk
Sestland occupies on this oustroversy and
ia this crisis oe the Hume Role comities.
Beyoad • doubt Scotland is the arbiter
not only of Mt. 011sdatmee's fate, but of
the 1.4. 01 Hogue Role. It it still sum
singialar-and suet fiatteriag tellestband
-.--that, at the present time, a tlestehmaa
- -the Karl of Aberdeou --(applause)-
is goveruing Ireland, eud I must say,
candidly, ia doing so with a kindness and
• sympathy which aro fully appeeciated
by the Irish people-(chopers) -while at
the same time a member for Siotlanti is
proposing W settle Loom sod forever the
Anglo-Irish difiloalty (eppleuse). la
strogitling against reek -roots and eviction.
the Irish peasant kas been fight lux on the
side of true economic liberty- (applause)
--and the ascribes, which he bag made,
I maintain, have been endured, not ter
himself alone, but for • similar class
throughout the length and breadth of
Great Britain (prolonged ead euthusiastic
cheering). Mr. (Hedges*, in beautiful
language, on Friday night het, speaking
as • Scotch member, paid Seotland the
high tribute and the just tribute, that it
wee in no way responsible for the past
t of Ireland, and he said that
the injustice and the misery Indicted
upon the Irhih people maid not be
brought hem* to the doors of the people
of Sootland (cheers). Well, let moms
future historian have it to record, to the
additional honer mid glory a this en-
lightmed land, thou, in the year 1886,
when the greatest statesman of the coon
try brought forward a roommate to termi-
nate the misrule of the Irish people, and
to end the struggle which has gone on
for eentaries, te the injury of Great
Britain and of Ireland alike -that Scot-
land, by the voice of it. people and by
the votes et its members, held up the
hands of tbe member for Midlothian in
the
a a righteous
whish the sister Wand began • new
same of peace, t, plaby
rogressw
and prosperity." (Kothusiastie and pro-
longed applause.)
• sorra Per Tim Ladles.
bleed. • .ad all blotches that
The rest newel of beauty ie pare
disfigure the fees, may be quickly cored
by Burdock Blood Bitters. Annie Heath,
of Portland, certifies that she wee
toured by this remedy, sifter suffering for
twe years 2
A Ter, Leaden Ma Irloaarra.
A great meeting of the of
Heine Rule was held in St. James' Hall,
London, last week, Mr. E. Ashamed
Bartlett presiding. The side galleries
were crowded with ladies. Lords Salis-
bury, George Hamilton, Lewisham,
Limerick, Bury, Sidmouth and Bra -
bourne and many members of the House
of Comm.,,. were on the platform. The
Chairman announced that a new *cheese
of organization had been ratified to -day,
making the C party more a
party of the people than it had hereto-
fore been. Mi. A. B. Forwsed, M.P.
for Lancashire, introduced a aeries of re-
solutions to the effect that the meeting
the C Associetien
of the Kingdom, had confidence in the
ability of Lird Salisbury to maietain
Great Britain and Ireland an one United
Kingdom and to guard safely the union
&aid greatness of the Empire. The reso-
lutions were carried.
Lord Salisbury said hie policy on the
burning question of the day was to main-
tain the onion. This was the unbroken
tradition of the Tories. He denounced
the insinuation that the Conservatives
concealed their policy. Lord Salisbury
led that • portion a the
money with which it wu intended to
buy out Irish landlords be spent in help-
ing the Irmh 1 It remained
I with the C . to say what would
becalms gran, nail-intenti°n•d Scotch- be the result of the present disc ion.
men are being led astray, or are in dan• The loyal party had a fight before it. It
sr of being led astray, by this cry of would take • long time to not out the
poosibio potsuouttom Why, sir, you potoonous weed. because its seed had
Wee sown with an unsparing hand. In
know right well, and have often said on mord thu alleged to haw.
ibi. platform, been made by the Irish members, that
The most . mtwit,4 tu mom His. they would accept thia Bill with an
, roltif amendment providing tor Irish repro-
- sontation at W the appellee
age Ibe names of Irish Protestants said that the Paroollites showed that
(ehesee) ; the leading lights of the Irish they did not desire to emu to the Eng-
lish Parliament. That would involve
1112111161 struggle have been the names of •
critimem of their treatment of their Pro -
Irish Protestant patriots loud !applause). tesient, , and that was what
Doubtless, some of thou loyal and pat- they did nut desire. After criticizing
none people would try and corning* you Mr. 4411task'°••• action ts'Intrd Ireland
since the enege of the Irish Church
ugly opposed to Isndlordism, and that Grattan was a Catholic (lamthter
vs Just as great and as religious an ob- that Flood was a Papist, that WoUsi Tome
adios to pay unjust route as the farmers loved Rome more olimm Irelaad, Vat
Munster or of Counaugto (applause). Robert Itallolai (prolonged applause) diedI
'
• , Lord rfishery sail he did not wish
--his audience to order that bit. Gladstone
Wan not an honest man, bat he said the
Premier could not be trusted. The
ye never hied to profit by the a Catholic, and, probably, they think sapealiemi
, because
r contended. that Ireland wasnot
and the sacrifices made iy the that John M051
itchell was • ferocious, ultra- ent, deeply -divided mesa. It d clod,
eetiZreland, and, if they spoke out montane . list, that Isaac Butt he said, on the habit vf • people wheth-
asstoday their sincere convictions, and John Martin and Mr. Parnell (ap- or self- I should be conferred
would admit that it was the Land plume) are only Papists in disguise. Let upon them. The habits of the Irish
y .
siltation - loud applause)- me give to these good -minded were verbedThey had become habit-
inded people in uated 10 ihe use of knives and slugs.
ed in Catholic Connaught, which kieutland who fear that this
I riven to them whatever tenent and The question of religion di•ided them
ion they have receiver] from Mr.
one's agrarian legislation of 1881
the bib to unhinge. This, he mil,
weeded he the best remedy tee Ireland.
list synod lenity sad adieu. and said tad
the tone for smisioloolli wee ekes at bead.
Laird (Ivaco Natalie' peeved • veto of
thanks to Lord Saliebery. The motion. -
was sesonded by Edward James &sada • I
son, and wee earned with great
eathusieut.
Itailasse kmasmaibte
When Polaue's is woad for pain.
It 'bolters not a how look stendieft ti
may be, or how °two other remedies
have failed to afford relief, Norville',
the great pant cure, dome ita work
promptly. Buy • 10 mot saaaple bottle,
and try it for intense] ot external paina
You will be oceviseed of its estrauidic•
ary power in relieving pain. Ten TO31
bottles sod lame bottles 26 ovate, at all
Drergists. Take no substitute
aletelola Grange,
aware that tureips weirs bit's: tor is all • 1
ore thee mangolds.
The subject fu e discussion as 0 neat
meeting io, "11 the productioa of • fano
will not raise enough ki put It WM in -
good arorking order, diet us, to reaCe,
drain, pot up necessary building*, get
mechinery for working, and provide the
Luise and [molly with the necessaries
M the April meeting of Grange No,
903, Mr. W. Weymouth wee appointed a
delegate to the Lesvisiou Grangs, to be
held at Brussels, ou the 8th of June.
After other business had been transact-
ed, the subject of "Bout Raising" wee
i by Mr. James C .
lir. Humphrey Snell, speaking on tbe
subject, old he believed root ragging was
good belliellea it provided food for stock
ad dm helped to clean the land, as it
took a sertein &meant of liming to keep
them in order, which was as good as
plowing; he thought that turnips were
better for horses in the winter than car-
rots, ae the latter affected the kidneys; a
few carrots might be fed, but not many.
Mr. John Cornier stated that he never
tried W fatten stock without roots, espe-
cially turnips; he had only raised • few
tenets and inangolds, but was satiefied
tluit 11 11 paid to miss stock it iden paid
to raise moots; they should be hoed at
the proper time ; be thought it best to
take clean land for roots and summer
-
fellow the dirty land; in his opinion about
the 20th of Juoe was the best time to sow
turnips, and lie had never failed in hay-
ing a good crcp if gown about that tune.
The question being asked whether it was
beet to manure in the fall or spins; for
roots, Mr. H. Snell said that in his ex-
perience he did set see that it made
nisch difference to the crop, except that
it was so much labor saved in the spring.
Mr. H. Radford said he had always tried
to plow twice in the fall, find did not
e gree with Mr. Camino in taking • clean
Gad, as he thought it allows took • cer-
tain meant of labor to do justice to the
ruts. Mr. W. Waite then read the fol-
lowing =nay, after which the meeting
adjounsed :-
"What crop ea* the Fanner froduce 1.,
take the place of roots. '
Let us in the first place suppose • far-
mer ism five acres .4 1.,..] for rootsorhich
we will 500 bushels to
the um, or .104.1 of 2500 bushels, sad,
allowing that the fanner is feeding stock
twenty•fiv• weeks in a year, end that the
same man has twenty head of stock;
n ow, 2,500 bushels for 25 weeks woeld
lbe an average of 100 bushels per week,
oe a little over fourteen bubo's per day;
when sliced up these would make about
twenty bushels, or about me bushel of
sliced roots per bed. Again we will
reooss„
suppose the same had sown the land
with grain instead of -which would
torn out thirty-fivio bushels to the acre,
or a total of 175 bushels : end again al-
lowing this to be fed fur twenty-five
weeks would be an average ot seven explained that he only met witness to -
bushels per week, or about ono bushel Mr. Towneherid, blushing to tho 417014 The Cheapest gatule
per day; when ground and fed with the day, but the cheers and laughter that
straw after cot, this would be only a
mere taste divided soonest twenty head
of stock. Again if the farmer should oell
his grain and invest the =Dom in bran,
how mach bran ahould he receive fur the
aad funnies uf the present day, which
should omit fur the accumulation of
uiuney, the farm or the house aud fain
ily." A large attendance is minuted
for this westing. --(Now Era.
Never drug the atom/wit with nausea-
ting and weakening arid
opiates; Hagyarde Pectoral %LIM is
pleasant and reliable au its efforts, and
mite to throat and loom oomplaiuts that,
it neglected, end in oonsucoption. 2
A WOMAN IN THE CASE.
— -
Pan Isle& • Female WII1111046 la tar Meth
•rmia araindel 1
Ottawa, May 19. -One of the must
amusing scenes ever witnessed in Parlia-
mentery Committee took pleee'this mon.
um whom Mrs. Peter Grant, of Dalhou-
sie, was essinined 111 reference to the
Inch Arran hotel scandal. Mrs, Grant,
it will be reinembered, was owner of llie
hotel before Mr. Schrieber obtained pos-
session of it by promising her husbend •
situation on the Intercolonial dodos,. Direst 117,11e1 raarealatid
The witness began this morning by pro- *err"' viToreu ti=ibTle riVir..drorBits. t;
testing against being obliged to answer clean and sweet ; will not mil. 6
any question& She had no both what- intaaasawask.a *If sass Shallsre•
Ilaseatie. Maarten. Iseentiessien ef
ever in the politicians here. la the °sly Liniment in the world
bw Bschard Cartwright mid he wished alterative powers can be taken
it to be noted that this lady's sympathies
were with the Ministeriel party,aud thet
shoe could wily speak of politicians on
her own side. (Greet laughter.)
la answer to a question put by Mr.
Davies, Mrs. Grant said that she did
apply to the If t to aid her in
her private enterprise, and that she bed
a reelect right to do au. Wasul that
what everybody came to Ottawa for I
Cheers She never Kid anything froes
Sir Charles Tupper but verbal promises
Being questioned in regard to a d mo-
ment that was givon her on behalf of
SolirMber, pronaising her husband
a situation If she would give up the
hotel, Mrs. Grant said she had brought
it to Ottawa, but would nut pruZuce it.
"It is • 1 I princioal of British
law," cried the buxom lady, "that • wife
IS not to giv• evidence against her hue
band." Being tu:d by the Chairman
that she must answer the question and
produce the document, she persisted in
her refusal, and a number of "scenes"
ensued.
Mr. Da vies somoht to prove the contents
of tbe document by asking guano's*,
when Mr. Tupper interfered, arousiog •
supicion that he feared hie "governor"
might be by the answers.
The young man coutended that sume of
Mr. Davies' questious were unfair.
Witness was then asked whether alt.
bad been instructed by any one or advis-
ed as to the answers she was to give to
°quests na, and Mr. Tupper agam object-
ed.
Mr. Mulock said that Tupper waa so-
eouraging the witness in her refusal to
mower proper questions.
Sir Richard Cartwright said the pro-
ceedings were farcical.
After a greet deal of cross -firing Mrs.
Grant mid she would go to "the dun-
geon" before she would predate the doc-
ument, but afterwards relented and
domed being personally acquainted with.
promised to produce it tomorrow. She liollse Furnishings
Mr. Schreiber, and then Mr. Moloch,
esswesiesersettiVg
Ttie Great ilesinis of Oesnmespdats
nes, wee -lbw forum a disuses, 4 suet-
ula lurking In the system. The tree
specido for this eueditioe is band In
Iturduck Blood Bitters ; that landiedao
purities the blood and Wilds up the es-
totobles1 frame. 111
7 Shiloh's Vitaliser is what seed
tor constipation, lama Aweit flies.
nm., and all symptoms of Dyspepsia.
Priem 10 and 76 outs per bottle. Foe
sale by J. Wilson. Druggist.
ILS 001/11TRATIETO !
CaXX..71119"
Liniment Iodide Anoint.
The speediest and sinstorkertain
aredieure In the w
.ALL rANILIEs URZ 1?.
Weak Rack. &Warred Joints Paralysis..
Rheumatism. ~Qui& INIIIMaalfia.
ectatini. Utica.
tem&
me best and eel; certain to relieve
in or all kinds ao matter of how Magid -
carts Cramps and Colic, Diarrhea sad
Dysentery.
aged OF all Dragdada Trial
Write Dr. 011..Ett. bon kin N. r
will (Ivo intro* oft ail diseases tree el
charge.
MTLieware at dealers and nese-
terfett• The sentone has the Raise Mows ta
the 10111111 and facsimile el the diseeveror•
name over rock cork.
Ellis' Improved Ilselrake PIIIs
Sae. sure. reliable. and effective. Do sot
grilse. l'orely %timetable. No mercury. Asti -
'noisy or aloes Timm caa be roiled so for all
Disorders of the Stomata, Liver, Bowels, ate.
froid Py ell Amorists et Ilbs. per boa.
nal noddy ot Dr Wes' Pleawidlims et T.
JORDAN -8 drug store. Oederieb. Oat fidliby
=mem
SO ME
GAS.
That are print to be
SOLD CHEAP
•7—•—•
SAUNDERS
VARIETY STORE:
Wall Paper,
Decorations,
Wall Tints,
Carpet LiAing
Hanging Lamps,
And • General Aaeortareat
•
oet of mischief, asked her if *helms ac-
quainted with Mr. Townshentl, M. P. - •T
greeted him drowned his remarks. UNDER THE SUN.
The last *cane was when Mrs. Grant
went to the Chainnan (Mr. Rykert), and West -.t., next door to the Poet Office.
putting her anne around his neck, began Goderacb. April lst. Ina.
to whoper in his ear. Cries of "chair"
,,,, roes on every aide, and Mr. Rykert tried .
erase 1 We .111 la" that the Ile,'" ",' in rain to extricate himself, but only did
bushels brings him 50 cta.
this would be $87.50, and allowing
Pee "'"'", ! so after the loving witness had told him
4--"Ilehe would "end the ret weed docu at
by taking • quality /in "ma"' nine; to hien this afternoon. 1
torts of bran, and allowiag it to be fed 1
the same twenty-five weeks to the same !
number of cattle, it would be about 720 6 Shiloh. Cough and consumption Cure
popoda per week, ar a hole *Toe 100 me. is sold by us on • guarantee. li cures
per de_y, or fire pounds per head each i C . . For sale by J. ‘‘ Ilion,
day. Now, although them 4 about six Druggist,
times the amount of water in the roots
that there is in the bran, stock that are lamellae *osmoles.
fed on roots will do with half the amount
of hay or straw, and thus is no crop the We do not believe the house cellar is
farmer can raise that be can clean his the place for keeping aosny vegetables at
land and raise his crop at the same time, • time, but, if they are to be kept there,
as be oan with rows. Tree, he gannet we should approve of the following meth -
make it as clean as with summer fallow- nd Id their freshness, from the
ing, but it will clean the land to• certsin (--.4ingrY tk"giem""
extent and better than • great many W• nh••"• that 'Kim° writ". on ••11*
summer fellows get ; while, on the other etable gardsaing speak of the difficulty
hand, to miss • crop of grain instead 14 01 ksePlnli succulent vegetables like
• crop of roota, the fernier must either bests, turnips and parsnips, from wilting
lose a estop te slue I . , , whoa in "Aare, and mound packing
land in • MOTs dirty condition than it . them In sand or burying them in the
was before be sowed the crop, and al- myth of the cellar bottom. This mode
oug the root crop stay Wks the most IS. ,rnentosnlY and inconveso-
work, the extra amount of seed and the lam Aa as•tar and flaw* Polled tray
cost of threshing the grain when counted is to pack them in damp sawdust, placed
would make up for some of the root& in barmili at tn°d•••t• •1•°, tit itt h'••••
Now, uu for mu bow mod, of raising of not more than two feet in widtlt.
roots, if the laiendthiso "very osTbStrow_ithouWeseet tPlele•hen asialary.ert ooftissilowdrnoustat i,nthtenho6boil itntomaii
isherfolire"w1"..iinterMecoamft: rtry-eutand atndhenaggaivine aUlned isontanti4xlisen till tl:Peitbob zanotwillueirl. Lavevoin,eannd.
it a thorough manuring in the spring,and crevices. We have taken beets out of
plough it two or three times, and sow in such bores after remaining in them • fell
dri
that no se-
lls &boat thirty iochesapart, about the Pero ea *fresh in
15th or 20th of Juno tarsal differeece oould he seen between
them sad rosts. Nurserymen p mos. 4
At the May meeting, held on the 17th ewer thun usitduot limn it oso its him,
inst., the discussion on "Root Coltiva
tan and serves an exeslIsM purpose fur
< - •-• -0 SPiltl.ftC'1"..'"
PRESERVE YOUR
SIGHT
Hy wearing the only
FRANK LAZARUS
fLate of tbe tirm of Lazarus Menial
Reeoweed Spectacles eel Eye Elutes
ingleoce unbounded
wart Pr -tsetse &ad By. Mame* ram
papa ye=lice.ven every
are
wille Our TH. WORLD. rhos mom the.
see lest loony Year. WIthellt e
P95 eats ay -
Yates 8‘, Acheson,
11•RDII•RM ximacatanve.
GR:zomomazucrittx _
FRANK LAZARUS, MANUFACTURER
St Maryland Road, Marrow Road,
LONDON, ENGLAND.
(Late Latarna & Morrie. Hartford. Cosa 1
IS.H vdth Kay otber dna la the
Datainloa of Onside-
Jaa. latb.
MIS- I y
said hop did not see that we mold fatten
" was resussed. Mr. George Smell puking winter cabbage in large bores. Au a coRNELL,
sloe
wall happen on* singlo instance not very The peculiar influence of the t.,stholie 110 f
far back in Irish ancient history (laugh- clergy. and the manner in which that In- wu
fleene• had been need, must be consider -
ter . At the last emend eleetios the
k without roots, bet did mot believe
fading too large a quantity at ones ;
in favor of pulping ternips for feed.
54 ore placing such a weapon as Home
tad applaiow). The infamous iesth. Catholic priests and Cetholie people -the Role in the hands of the Irish. There an
4
kg of landlord hirelings almost , Catholic people -of would be no necessity for sosteion if the gold
‘t, uoder Home Rule, the Catholic the County Clare rejected as their condi. Irish had abandoned their habits of mu than
E: tilation murder and robbery. and of
of Ulster would come down from date a 'nen intro had atonally fought with .`.
icpesvenung even who were attaches; to nili
*r mientaln holdings and re possess 0 Connell the battle a Catholic Rosana- ngland from earning s livelihood. Ire- 'hoe
ves of the plane lands, now large- potion in the year 1829 (cheers). The land wanted • firm, consistent poliey - • ed,
the uf ihe Pretests:it O'Gorman Mahon- belonging to an an- fin" 1 That was the policy o„e
--I say, these infamous lush -Mont Irish family, boasting of his Ceitie " i tor
ef the T. party. Lord ftedisber re-
commended that s portion of the mosey
ONINIIIIIRa ISM NOM dhreputa:iis i origin and a staunch Catholie am well- with which it wee Distended to tiny not with
14 ell i
•at -is bushel was • good food for
ordiaary animal : in hie opinion nun-
s were better for fattening cattle
turnips, and especially the globs
Rays Dry rime
Ma knows her inan000d when yoe rant
rigol.le. Mr. John Shobbrook mid
es far as 'rowing roots was eipocern- and wear
he did not do very mace at it ; be Oan draw pie to heir with • single hair.
Id peeler • dirty field to a stem one But it meet be beautiful hair to have
sub power; and hsautifol hair can be
a erip of this kind ; did not agree
eusered by the use of Crweauess H•111
Mr. H. Snell, that menet' were not Rues -ass. Sold at 50 me. by J Wilson
good for horses, sor was he primevally 2as
Good Iralas.
sulierers buying asedscine have
been disappointed, don't give ep, buy.
reliable article like Dr. Chase's Liver
Cure. and with it you rot a recipe book
alone worth the money. James 'A'ileon,
solo ageni.
et oalemay and was rejected at a conventioe of the priests the Inst. landlords be spent on holiest(
UNDERTAKER,
liaa the Wisest Aeaortrnest of rtree_cue
COMIldl. Caskets aad Undertaken.. meads la
Toms. Mee Hearse tor Hire atRa
TUIS•111111111.141i
FURNITURE! • - FURNITURE!
As Loral 1.. EdielP11 the CHRA PENT •ND
BIM Sleek of all Rimiest Furthers 115.1
tor Cosh and
I Ctan Undersell Ani Other
Furniture Man in Town.
1 Also Hell the Celebrated High Armed fin -
Peeved
Raymond bring /Lachine 1
0150 .... Cell sad Rave )1
=ice Martin's Hotel, Illandltritreet.
h. Dee Int. 150.