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The Huron Expositor, 1876-08-04, Page 4• 4 NEW, ADVERTISEMENTS. Sugars, Teas and Coffees --J. Fairley. Great Remnant Sale ' T.he Golden Lion. Farm for Sale—William Weetcott. • New ThreshingXachine—C. Aldworth. Miller Wanted—Andrew Gosenlock. . The Montreal. House -1 --Duncan A Duncan. Insolvency Notice--- hornet Miller. Card—Miss Brydon. _ New Billiard .Boom --eAlex. Davidson, Estray Sheep—Joseph Dennin. icxan (tixfoxiitor. 8•EAFORTH, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1876. The -Cayuga Murderers. It is stated that efforts are being put forth by the friends of the murderers Young, to secure the reprieve of James William, the younger criminal: The reasons urged why executive clemency should be exercised in his favor are that there was no intention on the part of the Youngs to commit murder.; that they had no malice and meant only robbery, It is still further urged, we believe, that the young man neither cut the stick nor dealt the blow, and that consequently there should be some distinction made in his ease. Instances have recently oc- Burred when the death sentence has very properly been commuted. The circum stances attending these - were, however, very different from those in the • present.. case. If the younger Young did not deal the blow which -caused the death of the victim he assisted and encouraged the one who did, and he was equally promi- nently engaged with his companion in the robbery of the victim after the mur- der was committed. Judging- from the evidence and ciceumstances connected with the escape from prison, this one is the most hardened and most daring criminal of the two. If. ever men desert,. ed to be hanged, certainly both these men have well earned that fate. We have every confidence that the Minister of Justice will do what seems to him right in the matter ; and that neither threat nor entreaty will induce him to exercise undue clemency. The law should, and no doubt will, be allowed to take its due course, and we hope both crim- inals will be subjected to the fath they havesorichly earned. I The Political Reaction. Ever since the defeat of the Govern- ment candidates in North and South On- tario, the Opposition journals have been unwearying in their predictions of a po- litical reaction in this country. ' Accord- ing to these wise-acree, the days of the Mackenzie Government were numbered, and the happy time wiben Sir John and his followers would reign and rule triumphant at Ottaw , close at hand. True, the grounds upo i which these pre- dictions were built;, were not the most encouraging, but drowning men will grasp at straws, and the straw upon which the Conservative party has re- cently been founding its hopes, was the most frail and brittle. The result of the Glengarry election, —the return of Mr. McNab, the Government candidate, by a majority of nearly 300;--lias somewhat cooled the ardor of our political oppon- ents, and they now seem to be opening their eyes to the . fact that the happy - hour is not so near at hand as they an- ticipated. The truth seems; to be gra- dually dawning upon them, and they are beginning to see that the fancied politi- cal. reaction was the result of imagina- tion. It is well that they are being un- deceived, and that the knowledge they are now gaining, though unpalatable, is at -least substantial and reliable. - The fact is, that so far from there being a political reaction, the very reverse is the case. The present Government never stood better with the people than it does to -day ; and why should it be otherwise ? Why should there be fa_ political reac- tion ? What has the Government done to render thein less deserving of public -confidence than they were two yea's ago ? or what has the Opposition do that they should have come so rapid! r into public favor ? True it is, that grave chaltges of extrav agance and 'mismanage- ment ismanagement have been.burled ! against the Gov- - ernment by the Opposition; press, but has any one of these • charges been sub- stantiated ? The Opposition leaders have not dared to utte=r these;charges on the floor of Parliament, simply because they were, like the re -action, bubble, formu- lated to deceive. It is 'charged by some that the policy of the Government is an- tagonistic to the industrial institutions of the country, and by ethers that they are playing fast and loose with the tem• peranee people, in so much as they re- fuse to grant a_ prohibitory liquor law. These are the main objections which are against the policy and conduct of the present Government. Now, grant for the sake of argument that both these objections are well founded, in what way -- would the objections be remedied by. e- moving from power the present Govern- - ment, and restoring Sir John and his colleagues to position ? Would they be more likely to foster the industrial - in- stitutions of the Dominion, or to pass a prohibitory liquor law, than those now in office ? We can only judge the future course of a man by his past actions ; the. same of a party. Looking back, therefore, to the legislation of Sir John, is there anything in it to assure us that were he to .assume power again, the indus- trial and moral interests'of the country would be_ more zealously guarded than they are by Mn, Mackenzie and his col - leagues ? Certainly th a is not. The tariff is higher now th ever it witsun- der Sir John A. Macd nald's rule, and the only temperance 1egslation we have secured, has been gran us by the Re- form Government. In what manner, hen, would we be vantaged by a change of political rule ? This is some- thing we would like thse who are so =done for a change toshow us. We are strongly in favor o increasing the mport duties, so long the Americans rsist in hedging the elves and hutting us out, and we are equa ly de- irous for a prohibitory iquor law if the ople are prepared to airy it out, but we see a very much beter chance of se- curing both these from he Government now in power, than fro a government composed of their political opponents. The present Government have given us many useful and needed reforms, which their predecessors denies ocjnducted public affai and honestly, what their 1• • us ; they have s economically predecessors did not do; nd' why, then, Should we fear a political re=action ; or by should the country esire a change ? The fact is, there is no fear of a r -action, and the country does not desire change, and so. long as the present Government conduct themselves as they have thus far done, they will continue to gr w in favor. It is :a knowledge of this ,fact which in- duces the Opposition press to labor se hard in endeavoring to c evince the pub-' lic that the Government s losing ground. Facts are, howeder, stub ora things, and cannot be overturned by mere assertion, no matte how loudly or how -persistent- ly, or how confidently u tered. MR. MCNAB was re -e ected to repre- sent the County of Glengarry in the Do- minion Parliament by a ifajority of 290. Mr. McNab was opposei by a Mr. Me Leman, of Montreal, who is a native of Glengarry, and who has a very large fam- ily connection in the co stituency. A stronger candidate could not have been got to oppose him, and th handsome ma- jority he has secured shos the constitu- ency to be as sound as ofre. Mr. Mc- Nabb, it will be rernembe ed, was unseat - rd a couple of months ago by the Election 'Court, on account of one f his agents,en- Itirel without his knowle ge and contrary his instructions, havi g attempted to ntimidate some electors o vote for him.. r. McNab is a good, sub tantial, intelli- ent farmer, and is thor - uglily conver- ant with the requireme is and neces- ities of his constituents, and during the hort time he occupied,a seat in the House I • roved himself to be a useful and efficient ember. 11 News of the - !Peek. DIED. -Joseph G. Moo] t Trinidad, died on Tues ver. FAILED.—The efforts 'vers of Victoria, Austr on, kave completely fail SLAVE FIELD. --The wh e great,slave field, Lieut a ys, and the trade is on t FIRST PRIZE.—A Detr acid his wife because the like a first prize at a baby? HEAP. -The Farmers z 1 nd have mowed their e ening and night, on account of the ex -a c ssive heat. q SNOW ier JULY.—Four inches of snow t !' - gr Ti 'tip vi w1 Si -t Itq.th - girrls kvo mss rel ai th 'th T1le la ter prepe - clan Domi is Sco clan 1 1 rich Mo Mood .4 114 e, U.S. lay Consul of yellow to stock th 41ia, with sal d. file of Africa, i ,nant Cameron . C ie increase. b it man whip- b baby did not show. l o n Rhode Is- i i grass in the gi em ng n nce es T. nr abdi the tbe pre for brot e 14, he ad ro ve T E HU N EXPOS! produced .early as cheaply as in nd, but for . ruin qualities of factured' in omte of the N w Y rk ew En mills mills a: decid pre s- exists over t• e highly finis ed c li- and shirtin .. of Manchester ,1,f SULTAN :'LING. The Sul n, V., is i ! wing weaker, and is ation is ex • acted. The meinbe of lema, a f strong party com ose4 of inisters -of religion and th inter - are already gitatfng r, probably urd's rs of the; la a new rul er. BERALITY;— lady in England has Bishop Q interd, of Te nessee, for the U iversity of th South. good bicho , has, we and rata d, considerable success in Eng and in oting the in rests of the ins itution which he pre ides. 0 F• THE TRAc The flying Du ch - a �, a fast mail train running at Il pe : d between au ton and ristol , a ew days ago, lef the track ne r Long As . ton. The en in er and fire an ere kill d, and it is f are a number of as - ten era were also kil ed. The t ain as wre ked. SMALL Bo, T CROSSING T • AT- LANTIC.—The ste ince Greece, which ar- rived at New Yor o the 25th of my from Liverpool, r s that on ul 19, atitif$e 46, longi ud 39, she s ke the mall cutter rigged 1 boat, Cen en ial, rem' Gloucester to Liverpool, w th my ne man on board, well, and wan no• sistance. i agr ye fro B:_ Th Sea dea say Ha cab a ,bO ou and hea ra ,0 ea was A oh los ee in Columb r :trd last Saturdi nd abstracting m • ith the crime an active men 1 ch, Treasurer Vie, a Mason, a z er, and he- h the commuuity !cion. THE LATE MR. G RNER, —One; Of he b st things said of illiam T. Gar er s nce his heroic death in trying -to.s ve h' s ife and friends, i that he paid g od sala ies and gave proper vacation to 's cler s, and when any of them fe 1 s ck n h employment • e sent the the k r gg- larl when the p. y day came ou4d, is the kind o' obituary tha tells. Wh a man dies I. eeple think of the od of his life, ncl never min the in s and frills o its edges. T E WIFE OF 1 FN. CUSTER. Mrs. ust r is still prosl rated and confi ed to d •. ost of the ti e et Bismarc On fist hearing the ad news of h r hes- and s death she as! braver - tha any the 1 of the bet -ea ed ladies. - Sh vis- edthe wounded i 1 the hospital. Her ief however, vea: tpo great to bear, d he finally su cuMbed. Sh fre- en ly lies_ in a woon for an- h ur or ire and l her cond•tion is alarmin - I MASTER IN C . INA.—The latest n ws China repos s ;disastrous Mu da - at Foo -Crow and the surroun ing try which co menced on Jule 10th ended on the 15th. It was the iest flood' w'thii foreign empm- ce and entaii d great loss • f life, 0 dead bodieshaving been • ou 'ted Foo -Chow alne. Foreign p operty but slightly dmaged. Woi. IY SH EP'S CLOT' IN(.— Rees, for- th}rt:en years . n oin- �s .ost office, astar- y f. r opening letters ne , and when ch `rg- ie onfessed. ' ee es be of the Me ho ist o an Odd netts' alous tem • eraiice been re.. arded as abov ss- e as hu od or i u e b f s f ll at the Mount Washington Stimuli ouse on Wednesday morning last week st after sunrise. CHINESE NAVY. -The ;Chinese navy c nsists of forty-five ships of war, divid- e into three squadrons, and the army is c mposed of 1,200,000 men. - ITIEAtl OF THE ARMY.—The new Eng li .h army -list, for the first time in his tory, has the words "The (ween" at the h ad, thus putting forth Bier Majesty as t e real head of the, army.'' PENITENTIARY. — Dr. Worms, who sN indled the United States Government a d was extradited, has ben sent to the p nitentiary foe two years. Coe. BAKER. Colon 1 Valentine B ker's teem of imprisonsrient has ex- pired, and he has accepted a commission in the Turkish Army, and leaves London i mediately for his post. A BREAYi. A break oe urred in the C amplain Canal, near Sc ylerville, on T ursday morning, last ]week. Some o e bored a hole in the ban ; hence the accident. Navigation wi be delayed several days, Searnsit.—The Methodist mission in °M xico has been so suesssful that a n tuber of Spanish publica ions are to be is led by the book concern n New York. A illustr ted religious pa er will also be issued in the Spanish Ian age. ARATO4A BoArTINa Dee 0UXCED.-D. M Cosh, President -of Prin eton College, w 'tes a letter in which he approves of bo ting and other athletic s, orts for Col - le e boys.. He does not, however, ail- pr ve of that kind of boating which is se n annually at Saratoga. J 111, MACRE B. T ame give details of the massacre by t irket in Bosnia •'hree hundred hrI were tortiured and drowned in -t es of Pervane nd Tamer. well m : n were• c t to - pieces at . P vo s. children ti ere stoned - to de th t oro. - O e hundred. and igh y nd murderedt - and Christian e un s.—Special, te .e - he s- Ile ve ns la Ba Dr yea exF mo. acs ma be great many years before alt churches, as well as its own, will use prayer boo s. It t° inks there is at least as mu h- sense', in using pray r books as hygin books. HEAT IN CHICAGO.—Th Committee ail inted by�1 thePresident �'f the Board cif rade to investigate the condition of the wheat int the elevators, report that it is ' good condition, with the exception of about a I' dozen bins which contain warm wheat! ENGLISH IND AMERICAN -11"IANUFAC- TURES.—ThejNew York Poet says: "The British consul in this city, in a recent re- port to the British orgn five, speak- " f the decline trade tween this sou try and the United Kingdom ob- sery : " British manufactures must hen forth expect : n increasing compe-, titioe in the Unite States in these two bra hes of industr , iron and4cotton as well as in fabrics o silk. In regard to co n goods, it is 1a • t alone that they are GOOD ,OFFER.—The nion Square Mist Church of San Francisco offers Malcolm, of Newport, R.I.; $3,000 a r'in gold and $500 for his travelling lenses thither, and will give one oth's vac tion every year if he will eptthe pastorate. P. AZ ER B' oKs. —The Southern Church - a (American) imagines that it won't LH 0 epl 3 1 3d ere violated F • Three thou: cred at Pryed CLAN M �D dent's corm to anequ ames McDon we NAi.D.—In th ccir- of! the Boston grid, rer says Be we n oId and McDo 1, fference is merely orthograp ic' I. . rmer represents the Scottie , t e the Irish, form of spelling. The name, Donald, from whic h the name is derivled, - is in Irl h naill. Though the name McDenatd a ranch of the fila, and derives fro ne tish, it is great olla, or C m sin ource. DY`S SER: ON, IN A1::tBIC.. 's simple • a. d. direct sty e f preac ing, -is le vin - its effect a ou the g obe. One of his sermons ran - latecl nto Arabi W. s read to som n tive reachers, wh, were greatly sur- priee that so pain a discourse s ould attrac so mus at ention amon en• fights ed people. ike some pi eache s Inc rer home, t es Arabic- min stei'�a : !see think th t tl e less the co mon pe ple can unde star d them, the eat- er he proof of hei deeming an e1ol- du nci i ZR. Spi rgt tai in con . It SPURGEON N on.recentl a newspa er. to plated vis'tin ff r o $1,000 in gol e of ld deliver. I oil w' g : " I c nn para raph sho ld pert, a -sept by d lib • and-ujt editor, f r I idea of leaving 1 om ome tit a to co e. lief re, if l come I or wo Id I,recei e a ng. T RAS8HOP ER. cq: rre pondent f t re.$e, siting fr m he 26 h July sa s : acne . ere last Sat hem. They cam fr omPle ly cover d ad a falir prospec fo utherii part o t • ghted.ted foue hou li. They ov e millet ly, and are teen g. The airnno nt, Ma C inc ppf et e State, . • df i unce Statin fr T INITIATED. ceived a note con - America, an. a for every le ture reply he sen r the t imagine how ucli apPear in you I rate invention of ave never ha any for America fo As I eaid to yo ything for pre ch - e St Paul's Pi neer Jackson, Minn , on The grasshop ere rday—million of in the north, and the ground. We a good crop in the e country, but in ✓ ;prospects Were red the grolund. devouring efery guilty, to the west I. ow much further tin the Northern They are eating heat, oats, cern, k, etc. Farmers hitig that will do to put, oats and w + eat, but ity will not get ' alf—no, crop. They are epositin What is to beco : of us t knows. LOST AND Fo • .—A qu told about the los of an which sank in smth water C. B., from break ' . a -hole tom by fouling a ' anchor. was immediately condemn • for $600 to a club r ring. was righted, and • aid of wood and copper, ' as put and immediately re -chase years. The ship • as insure sterling at ,Lloyd and th carried home news of her los the new classifica on. The of the loss and re-.lassificati within five days. STUDY OF ENG ISH IN JA last year the high r educatio perial University : t Yeddo, conducted in Eng ish, Frenc man ; but the di n' culty an carrying on high: r, special sional edncation in three guages were such hat it w to employ only o '_e foreign the purpose, and English guage chosen. D • ring , the dents chosen fro •• the highe the University, w re sent to studies in - foreig countries, number of 349 st ' dents are n the books of the ollege. T trative body cons sts of 13 J vials, and 26 fore gners are professors, of wh • m six are en French, five • erman, an erican. ' THE JESUITS. The whole ical Republican p :: made the heads of the esuit Colle leging that they �. warnedtheir stud:•nts-once jests of their exa - ination a technique, hence he libel su been decided in f : vor of M. rector of the Col ege, and 5 The affair has ca sed great and has been the : ubject of ary enquiry. A d apatch fro that M. Cassie, -,adical, wil motion in the Chmber of eput es de- manding the exec tion of the unrepealed ordinance of 1828 prescribin' the expul- sion of the Jesui s from Fr. nee, The judgment recentl obtained •y the Jes- uits against the n wspapers, t is predict- ed, will give imp tus to the movement. Steps are being to en everywi. ere for pe. titioning the Cha begs to ex el Jesuits. Tire MARKETS. The Mar Lane Et - press of July 31st in its• reg lar weekly review of the Bri ish corn - ade, says The crop prospec s both at -home and abroad are satis story. he present state of trad,e is, n doubt, • :couraging. Should adverse eather 'pre ail during the harvest then will be c. nsiderable alteration of opini n concern ng the fu- ture course of prices. The • rmness at Liverpool and London after the recent rains is sufficient roof of thi:. The lo- cal wheat market as shown .. ore activ- ity during the wee , a furthe ' decline of a shilling per qu rter, tempt'ng millers to operate somewh t less spari gly. Flour has been so inani ate lately hat many millers are workin short ho rs. Oats have declined and heavy su !plies. In- dian corn seems p oof again:t any de- cline, the'enormou consumpt on absorb- ing large imports. = The grafi . afloat and steady cargoes o the coa: t, having dwindled, holders ave shown more firm- ness, and in some ases a slig i t reeovery has occurred. n this viein- ot aquarter their eggs. e Lord only er story is Ilan vessel ear Sidney, in her bot- The vessel d, and sold ext day she 10 worth of ,good order for four for £9,000 mail that also carried whole. affair n toots place AN.—Until of the Im- Japan, was , and Ger- expense of and ; profes- oreign Ian - determined nguage for as the Ian- ear,111 stu- t classes in ursue their and a total w I orne on e adminis- panese ofi• mployed as nglish, sev- eight Am- rench Rad- a attack on e, Flaris,.al- ad fraud lently fore- ing the sub - the Poly - which has Dupac, Di stedents. xciiement, arliainent- Paris says submit a The Ord s in Huron. From the Mote's tract the following of Huron: peas good. Fall w tive to seven bushe rust. wheat poon-destro Iley good. Oats ood. Hay geed ; all housed. Potatoes good. Roots, look ew ell. Fruit poor. CLINTON. Ha crop report we ex - relative to the County wheat, barley, and eat, poor ; will yield a s to the acre ; cause a g wheat fair. , mostly all out now. Speing wheat so far is pretty clear of rul and loOking -well+ all other ,croeis are looking Ivery -FAMBERLEYr—Wluit little fall *heat there is is pertly- damaged with rust. Some cbmplamts about Spring wheat. Peas, barley, and oats greatly improved since therein, and peomise an abundant return. Haying nearly il through , and light. Potatoes very godd; very dtle _ PORTALBERT.—Wheat bout an aver- age, the midge having ! injured it in' some places. Oats food. i Barley !mid- dling. Peas good. Root t crops all look well, the potato bug , havi 1 g clone ittle actual damage. Fruit crops are p mis- ing, especially apples. The -recent tains have made a decided impr4vement in all, but particularly root crops,11 i Knreern—No damage by storm or rain; little or no rain foe twoi weeks. 'Fall wheat almost a failure oWing to blight and rust, much of it not, Worth cutting. but half eaten up by midge or weevil. Barley almost secured, e fair crop, although much stunted by !the hot Spell. Root crops lookin_g Well bUt need 01M. To all appearande fruit will tar* out yeetreee—Hay-crop was very neavy this season. Red winter Wheat is hard- ly an average crop, as it wts affected by rest. -Spring wheat will b. an avetage where sown early, but la wheat iwill be very poor. Barley will be an average yield, although short in th straw. eas not anite as good as expe ted, as hey have ripened too fast on a ount of the warm weather and want f rain. Oats will be an average yiel Vegetables and root crops are all isuffe ng for Want WINGHAM.—Fall. heat is very poor ; will not average mote than fifteen bitith- els per acre. .Hay s been well stored, and will average two tonS to the acre. Itis not necessary partitularize Other grain crops, as they a e all equally good, and by the present ' respects they will yield far above the ave ge crops of other years. Potatbes wil be an extra crop. Fruit of all kinds a undant The_ late rain has not had an, perceptible effect, as the crope were th far advanc- BRUSSELS.—The crop. 'prospects! are very encouraging in almest every! in- stance. With the exeeptioa -of whett a more than average yield is expe ted. Hay, about average wed of good qua, ity. Oats, fair yield. Fell Wheat gr atly damaged by rust ; caesed through heavy rants and. -warm weat er. bpring wheat a very poor sample. vety good. Corn, MO miich grown. Root goed. Potatoes abov of every variety looki ing an abundant yield ark" fair. Peas rops i:of all kinds g well, and promis- rops in this viein- ity are not so promisi g as few weeks ago. Fall wheat is very uch rusted, average about half the panel yield. ketnels being small ar sl rivaled. *ill Spring wheat, rather light, will not be a large yield. Barley iiii very good. Pleas are good. Oats look exceedingly Well, will be a heavy crop. Hay 21 tonsi to the acre. Potatoes and turnips *re doing well. Apples are abundant, the early species now being fit der Ilse. The recent rains have not affected. cropsi to From its reports from all parts of !the Province oar contemporary bases Ithe following conclusion : Unprecedented haY crop, quantity being enormous end quality excellent. Root Crops doing well.. Barley inferiort being thin and light. Oats heavy, ahove the average: - Indian corn good. P tatoee abundant, grotving well and. th ' Colerado beetle being kept under. Pe s fair. Fruite, a smell crop ; apples av il plums liter- lly none ; peaches sea* ; cherries arden, much injure le rain. Fall wh at will not pa har est ; spring itt e better, but both onte cl with rust, mi._ ge, and weevil..t Total evheat yield. vit be much below the a erage. The oWer Provinces report fa.vo ably. abundant. Oats good. Barley go d. Peas aleuedant Potatoes abundant Fall wheat im some places injured ,by rust._ Spnng wheat r in some places inju ed by weevil. Apples abundant. Plums carce. wh at damaged by rust; will be half an a erage crop. Spring , wheat slightly da aged by midge and rust ; in some plac s will be an average crop. Hay, barley oats, peas, and root will be an extra he BAYFIELD.—Cro be three rly- how the !wee The Jesse Wild VI story. A reporter for the Globe at presnt rus icating in this vicieity, ends to that paper the following additi al partieu- " Within the last fe days rumors, at Clinton to the effect that a young man s had! been frequently observeil wandering about in and near di immenee swamp, a - shoetelista,nce from the sine 1 village of n Kiaburn. about eight mile from this plade. Little attention was t first paid 1 to these flying reports b the oung man's r parents, who, to say nothl g of their tortures from the unce taint_ as to the 11 youpg man's fate, have bee constantly , by the lying stories which are daily - brought to them as to the whereabotits to his having been repe tedly seen nee, Kinburn having,‘ owev r, assumed 80M thing like probab. ty, Oey deter - min d to make enquirie in leder to es - in the amount of trath in them. as stated that a ma. nem; d Marsh, a er living near the glace, hose cred- y there was no rea on to doubt, had t vy crop. s likely to fourths of an a erage. E spring wheat good at huit b vil. Late sown ve y poor cro wheat rusted and oor. Bari crop. Oats and pe s middling. wheat poor. Sprin wheat f good. Peas good. Barley goo none. Root crops, prospects tatoes good. Fruit !ood. Ha since about July ls good. Sifting Whe t fair. F t,11 whea fair. Barley good. Peas go, I . Corn none grown. Roo s, prospects good Potatoes good. Fr it fair.' F x good Had DO rain since J ly lat. oats good ; barley n, t so good . expect little with rust ; spr g wheat medium, affected. a little wit weevil ad rest. Potatoes and turnip good, rec nt rains caused rust but did r ot crops g od. ter than or some wheat v ry poor, bundant, ern not late rain did no bundant nd. well ht and q laity in - some fine showers heat is ba ly rhst- with th midge. are a good *erne. mit not ne-half. ndant a ad barl occasio Root ,cr • . cert far is nct given, met a yo swaMp, and had conver sly disappeared h abound in tha ment was support of a girl eleven o named Ateday, wh parents dose to t who also bears a go fulness averred. t • ity promise to be be years past, Hay is spring wheat fair, fal barley good, peas grown here root cro toes plentiful. The harm to the crops. SEAFORTIL —Hay saved. Fall wheat li peas good. Root cr good. Fruit geed, crop.. We have had during the past mont BEUEVALE. —Fall ed and is not half a c looks well but is ba Peas, oats, and bark Hay is excellent. Potatoes look well. had a good effect gen WALTON.—Hay ab saved. Oats, peas, Spring wheat fair wi Fall wheat not iood. pects good. Potatoes good. Corn, not mire The late rain had a slightly damaged gr vicinity, but to no se wheat has but very I • AuusT 4, 1876. cribe to his man:ler Or to 'the conscious. heiesreititannisetaynor expef eslisroneteW115 hailh7:Vinedovert: viewers were un rtain whether to as. nosesnsatphaaret hisnts stofortbewlinstuae lircitiz.re that called upone They appeared- to be -re- spectable and well to do people, and cer- grandchild is of truthful position, lead to the suspichm that . the ,*ere en. and they &ply believe her s ry. The little girl herself as next seen, apt re. peated in detail what had been said he ... tothge:pouhnogf nip:Litwin hisiid,vaarnidoust eoonneeees: tions with her- . he was sho a the pan sthahethiatawmaser.hesphi tawrane ofntehxet ythotomwt mac: piecee of cloth of the same kind as that and stated; , very emphaticallye that they corresponded in olor with the clothes worn by thii youn min. This Was the first close exam tio that led te, enspicion, of her statements in the couree of very ina, for she ha previ nsly been asked to de- scribe the lothes worn by hien and her wstatitsteiclwaattCfaertinsghaetwhhae arance of th dIcwsolasrioeetsmthehensepbhimei:atinwe.velii. ihAshsidieleveessteesshbrareee.i nminni:nr enbedi ntgtbaoe at ei lb:snuttthtetb test oni lye r nbi ny gs, ens vdbiiin eg mhte,e and Mrs. Wild kept watch at *distance. This was done, and she came back stet- ing that she had Seen the young man and and that a e are cl him to-coine to the hohffa d° 11, saeenCIPhtri hen: idgh eaa r ni Bah :Ili s ,e ehees hWaade hnuer et if ae dr Mr. ana Mrs. Wil was such t, at, -while Iv off to the s amp. This .was very'Short- it was bare y poss ble that such an inter- view as th . girl peaks of might have taken place witho t their seeing the man arrive or depart fr m his ac,customed ren- dezvous, it, was ery improbable. An- other cirehmstan e, which seems to throw disciredit n the girl's story, is that no traee of t e young man's course was afterwards iseovered in the .tall beaver meadow g s which skirts the swamp, and thro gh which, if the girl Abby tells the ruth, he must have passed. There ar other circumstances which taken into onsiderationi with the above, seem to b lie her extraordinary tale, though they re not entirely incon- sistent with its t uth. Mr. and MTS. Wild, who taarra d the above in con - after their return om Kinburie seem to be in a state of uncertaintY, though Strongly inclined disbelieve the whole ; but highly improb ble as it is, it seems equally uuabcount ble that a girl of her age, respectably b ought up, should in- vent the whole aff in persist in' its truth- fulness, and make o very important con- tradiction in the co rse of a rileicl exam- ination. This is ho the case new stands, but it is likely tha further inquiry will shortly be made. fr. Wild, states he has little doubt that bis son was tomewhat About Trout. To the EditOr of tge Huron Expositor. SIR : I have been going to write to -you some time back o the enly cauee why our rivers and eree s are abnost depleted of speckled trout. As there is a Protec. tion Society starte in London townshi for the protection of genie and fish, rect an idea the s ciety has about the breeding of rout aed putting them in the rivers and. c eeks. I First, I Will show why the tr ut hate deserted Or rather died. in our rivers and creeks and it is this : The oods having been eut away, the sun is owed to shine on the water from motni g till night, niakitg it too hot for the teout to live in. Put a trout, hotter than it can live in. A tront cannot a live trout, iin the Thames river at this present dateL I do 't think it Would live 24 hours, because t e water is 20 degrees live in watee over 60° or 65' of heat- If hotter it has got te find colder water or die. It is Wily at the extreme top of the spring creek that t out can be got at all, unless the st eams re covered Or partly covered wit woods or where seme cold springs run i to th streams. I am hap- py to say, h wever, that there is a rem- edy, and ati asy ong. Plant willow limbs rods, in one afternoon. I have been talk- eacil can plant the br th of these lots, 80 ing to a number of f rthers about it, and rema.rking that it would ber•efit the without an excepti n everyone I spoke to expressed! willin ness to do this, one country. Without using this means te shade the water it would be in yain to try to replenish the river or brooks with ie is, trout will soon past, but plant the - speckled tront. As be something; of th limbs of willow banks and the gin to be I shaded. in four years. If a la* eta passed making it compulsory to have these streame shaded in this way would be a good_ thing- Anotheridea 'hat most peoplehave is that rom the mills kills the fish. hor, Whose name Now, sir, proire that thia has not ich he had mye caught trout ;30 rods below one and 50 in the thickets rods below the otheit but in these places localhy. This the water is -shaded y the woods. The cl bti• the testi- draining of t e country has mote to do twetve years bf with it than t at she has re - ale who made swienip in the in the evening. ith the girl, in s he stated, at Samuel Hill, near liBnicefield. to her story, e affirms that th e lhouse, but tterly he had name was mat d well y good. p pros - good. F it not ood effect on the crops aro ttle rust, s have 11 this te saul terio whi sta mon age, gran trut pea dly met a young his aPpearance out, of t morning and occazionall He seemed afraid. of di tere into conversation N repl to whose inquiri first, that his name w - and hat he came from e lived on 'berries in the swamp. 8 ged him to conic fused, and, that to her that his that he r he sawdust PG Sam. el Hill, but Jesse Wild. She de - seri e his dress and ge eral appearance very ei nutely, and wit eve evidence of t th. These stories, and ethers more or le s confirmatory of them, were re - pea so frequently, an -with such cir- cums ntiality of detail that!. Mr. and Mrs. Wild started ear y thie mornin$ for the nei hborhood, d mined to int photograph of their n, and pieces the cloth of which Jae 's el 'thee wer made. The man Marsh as rat called upon, and while adhe to the mam water being s much see the Winghanape the sawmillers from into the Maitland ri driving all tlie fieh o t Of the river. But they don't eay anything about many ef the rivers and. mostlY all the creeks that never had a sawmill Or a grain of eawdust in them, just like the Maitland, can't get trout in them Only where there are cold springs running into them, or shaded. with the woods enoagh to keep the water cool. I can give tote of preof of what sayt desired, but enough at present dust, the volume of )ple are going to stop etting their sawdust enblaming them for a pTlew-noiehauttiNdrirgaraan.d thirty Snlitl ---Rev. Henry Ward Beecher has been engaged by the Young Men's Christian Association te lecture on one of the evenings of the Western Fair at London, —The wife of a respectable mechanie in London has made, three attempts of late to Commit suicide by poison. Each tirne she was restrained, but she threat- ens to do it yet. —Last Sabbath afternoon a man when walking down Yonge street, Toron- to, was bitten in the lip by a fly. The li immediately began to swell, and in a ut ten minutes it was about the si,TAI It is -auP ikm. tha wane Ge:rra.°:voerll'nSPIretnfl°E:rzemtfhertlmssa:e tate& She --sent t ITli:anallin:6—ociititesrt".5.5, h*:1:7613°Ituruleeditalls.-Ip5 iy:ealrlirlia-C:11:112tit.:,iviiiia.43Timf4:Ellpi ,character ;1 and has f County onithe Liber , aiOuicivfledybtbnlintenenle*nitatellbeeenArytniatlia.IJ 2111/11181:0tillreerYl, hanial:nginth Baptist denominatio . i silt: a:0e: 11 1,ese;:vni, n atiht6b1 lib:if oillint oir. eni nexdi eyi tures. It iS Stated 4s-tioten mhofe:,trhae:Bavvgaoporeodstist:d , the medical professio' to India, Where she great use her sex. .17 7b3eeassomnteelvistirli!wi:hewn:Itvhill;DirP4-.1° linstr70/ggtiyalrernewssfaitthinntiiigryoeam, t, The "aroWned" ma ma in j Mentreal wife omfertabi ilh has aa ertisea in to be mad from 1 Berry, wife of Wm. aiding on ithe -Otte, 10c oceaalte dhepoai ill: aey ley haul 1r ell ,h essi -the township -of Ma morning. ;For sev-e miles fr°74-1-ii.LYallihmaeresrhhre She had been out Int she complained to he ,near the s ore at th, er was col *pease that she had liciThane ninextth 1:11w0allit er B or four feet deep. ately went to her r ashore. Before he however, ehe died in uo—unTeehe-tha-Pckt thileeyPhrt: ing a conteact with RailwayCOmpany fo special Globe train o'clock every mornin ll illation f the Gic/k. out the / est. Thi place the `i,obe on th 8110 ; Brantford, a' at 8:30 ; Weodstock, - —s°11t1; raete9eo5a1 ilinds.a..1% . 41°:1 1)am:1'7i n'ehlielluoat!il a u:: t onYI:Tli 31 11 'nee I:: - las—t wTeheiee fi eNTeni. 13:NY Tawnr uadi tn i nkt ;RI 1 :1, 0, 1 n1 envianaeyncit rilinfl Central. i It artived of the ,Erte and. New run fromi Stratford . inthianut teths,is itinmeleudie nal: lb might engineer R. three boas from'', took No. co expross oither the Great ) Si oteu,rtehuetern! with all carried.° by Mr, 3 11 9:as:aottlraii a:lilt h:;°:1 ri awe7ei i-tegr:dii saxttbhcnYeo: toy;oeoclid,w:firrio;:rhippoxasentpi WiatiratvbReartT,Itrphr;D: ith warm time is olly from S 1)3 Tp rt ae or srp:oe cue Pti a t 10 ef,ewdrb:wnirtrta: wetwt.;:ael al out th firet wed .and the Vnited Sta -even at that figure Producing them alt BII Ihetcsa4---In Sea/ 23, tirci wife of :daughter, ; Nvii'e of Mr, the wife of Mt, Viife Oi Mr. Jeflii wife of MT. Jose 'Wife oit Mr. v4fe of Mr daughter, , Seifoi the wife of Mi.