The Huron News-Record, 1889-05-08, Page 4Jo
The Huron News -Record
• $1,40 4 Ypzr—il:2tt In attweicv.
perjury. But it is a severe blow to attract settlers, we have a, miserable
\Ir. Paruell'e veracity when un- i 140,Q.OQ settlers altogether in the
e tY
ferritories and Manitoba.
nail• Mr. Maedowall—I should like to
Ile lacked firmness of coneeieuce call the hon. gentleman to order for
'1 OdileS14liY, 'flay+ Sts. 1889 to abstaiu front telling untruths, calling the population of the berth
- -"T` ' but is honorable enough to abstain West "miserable."
,^1\fr. Lister -140 000 white people
TIJ� REAL 1SSGTE• from swearing, to them. r
.----- This is a deplorable position for is all the population we have in
The Toronto Mail has, until re a gentleman occupying Mr. Paruell's that country. Why ,is it I
Gently, contended that the now tam romiaouce to find himself in. He Mr. Hasson—It is on account of
oils Jesuits Estates .l`ct was beyond does not find a heaven upon earth. the bad speeches from the other
side of the House.
the power of disallowanceby rho Bacuu says : "It is heaven upon Mr. Lister— I can understand
Dominion Government. It has some earth to have a man's Mind turn why :he hon. gentleman has just
what changed its views now, though upon the pules of truth. A mixturei spoken. I would like to recall the
holding that the Act should be of falsehood is like alloy in coin of time when that hon. gentleman
held ultra cors by the court:. Thisold or silver, which may rusks the ever voted against anything this
would seem to be the correct idea bmetal work baiter, but it ewbaseth Goverumeut proposed, be it ever so
and for the reasons given in the
bad ; and he never will vote against
„
it, it. The government have the hon.
pleadings of the Mail in the libel Pinned, on his own showing, has 1 gentleman bound baud and foot;
suit in which it is defendant, and ltembased" himself, for there is no he has two sons in the public service,
which we give in exteuu1 in anothervied that so covers a wan with and we do not know how many
more he will ask to have put into
shame as to be found false and per.Government positions, and he will
fidious. Muntaigue says :—"•1'u say wind lip by asking a position fur
that a ;lieu Beth, is as much as to himself,
say that the is brave towards God Mr, Ileseuu—You have not a de -
and a coward toward'stneu. For he cent sun to put. in ! ! (Laughter,
faces God with a lie but shriuks and Mr. Lister looked exceedingly
sick, not d:u'ilig to make any reply.)
from 111411. But he who deceives lir. Lister elf the hon. member
by au oath acknowledges that he fur South Oxford (Si r Richard
fears man but despises God." Cartwright) (hos invested his honey
WE •presume, however, that Par itt the Nurth•\\'1st, perhaps it is it
tell is not the only public loan good deal mune than any hon. gen
tlenein . apposite has done. It
shows, at all eveuts, flea Ile has
faith in the future of the country,
and if his lands ate worth $9 an acre
so notch the better for him, But
hon. gentlremon opposite, instead of
going to Manitoba, spend their
money in 'Texas in cattle ranches,
which have not turned out very
profitably, 1 louderetaml ; and when
they want to s•pentl their own
money alai takes their fiends in
season, they w'il'l prelait)la go- to
\1',du e' and the North-\fest,
Chapter 28) does not disclose, define
or set forth the objects of the said
Society, and does not in any way re-
strict it to Provincial objects but, on
the contrary, impliedly purports to
authorize it to follow and pursue ob-
jeots'that are not Provincial.
6. Because the sail act purports
to declare foreign and alien Society
whose objects are necessarily extra
Provincial a corporate body.
10. Because the objects of the said
society are not Provincial, but ex-
tend beyond the Province of Quebec
and even beyond the Dominion of
Canada and the British empire into
every quatter of the globe, and the
said society by iia constitution and
the rules which govern its very exis-
tance has a solidarity among its mem-
bers throughout the world and an
indivisibility which prevent its being
in any sense "Provincial" within the
meaning of the British North Amer-
ica Aot,f.QAnd the:said society and
every member thereof, by solemn
estate and obligations and all that it
or they can possess, are uncondition-
ally subject to a head or general who
is alt •alien and.not resident within
this Province or the British a lipire
and who, under the rules and regula-
tions of said society,
column.
'Phe right of the Province of
Quebec to deal with the Estates fur
the purposes named in the Actis nut
so lnucli attacked as the inedi1.l0
by which the Proviuci,tl money is
to be extended.
'lits 1.V I(WS-RECoRI) so air a8 it
watt able to grasp the situation had
already taken up some of the plead-
ings of the Mail.
We have always contended that
who shrinks from telling the truth
the Jesuits were au intriguing and to his follow luau lest it should out
tr dangerous Society, and as such an }help his cause, vet he is not aft'aid
improper body to entrust causation to tell the lie to the Omniscient.
al funds with.
But that the 1)oluiuiou Govern -
anent co.uld net dictate to the Quebec
Government what mild iein it should
employ to expend education al
funds, that' beiug a )natter within
the exclusive power 'of the local
legislature to deal with,.
But if, as we believe, the Jesuits
are not only a dangerous body of
1000, but also as now Constituted en
illegal body, the courts will declare
• the Jesuits Act ultra cine+.
The .Jesuits are' held to be an
illegal body because their iucorpur-
5000 is beyond the cutnpeteucy 'of
the local legislature, and fur lite
reasons stated in the slitiiU.s plead-
ings given elsewhere in this issue.
Tliat being the case, th matter
thatcuulA not be decided by Totalis
meat but by the courts, they cannot
hold property or act as educational
agents of any fund appropriated by
the legislature.
\\'o still hold ,til out contention
that rltsallutvauoe shunlul uevcr have
CQtue up in the Dominion Yarlin-
ineut, mereet:Itecielly when othe• r .I:uu. gentlemen are .hypocrites, ,and
and proper tsihtn'lls are open to I brand that lion. gentleman (Sir
test the mutter •uu 'iia legal luerits. 1Lichatd Cartwright) as the worst
enetuv to ,Manitoba and the North-
West that stands in Canada to day,
and 1 will tell you the reason of it.
He bought land years ago at 51 an.
were, and he. has not got the money
out of it he expected to get. But I
want that tun. gentleman to under-
stand that that land to -day is worth
$$9 for every dollar that it was worth
uine years ago.
Mr. Laurier—I must protest that
the hon. gentleman is departing
front the question under discuss •
This vice is all too 'novelette
,lir. Pitmen lied deliberately, on
his own :ituw•iug. But' thele is a
class 1'110 when they lie claim they
do it unintentionally. 'Thus(' who
are in the latter class are equally
guilty. Beeanse nature has given
thew putters to discern the truth
and when they neglect to -use those
powers and tell untruths they aro
equally guilty as though they had
i1 teutionally lied.
The lesson to be learned from
this Parnell episode is •to ulwcues
tell the truth.. Nur in, his future
unsworn Statt•metis what reliance
earl be placed iu thew '1 May we
nut be pardoned fur doubting thein
when he has swum treat heretofore
hu Ilan resorted to deliberate, syste-
matic lying?
.1. SCENE IN L'liE HOUSE.
Mr. T. M. Italy (ot' lirauduti,
formerly of Stratford)—The pens
;pie of \Ltnitoba found that they
(the Mackenzie Government) were
rutted, they have foetid that these
And we hope that the' people of
Quebec as well as the -'fail will
fight the matter out in the courts.
Tjne protesttwts of Ontatiu will
willingly respond to appeals for
funds in that behalf nettle by their
brethren in Qnehec. •
PARNELL AND TRUTII.
In examining Mr. Parnell the
other day, Attoruey•GenCral Web-
ster quoted a statement made by Mr,
Parnell iu the House of Commons
during the debate on Mr. Foster's
Bill in 1881, suspending the writ
of habeas coPjnI-s•, to the effect that
secret societies had then ceased to
exist in Ireland.
" Did you believe that when you
said it?" asked the Attorney•Geners
al.
"No," replied Mr. Parnell ; " At
any rate it was a grossly exaggerated
statement.'
There was a buzz of surprise
throughout the court room at this
response.
"Did you, or did you not," con-
tinued the Attorney -General, " in-
tend to misstate the fact when you
made that statement?"
" I have no doubt I did," was the
reply.
The .Attorney General—" Deliber•
ately ?'
Mr. Parnell—" Yes, deliberately."
The Attorney General—" You de-
liberately made the nt'1tement, know-
ing it to be untrue 7"
Mr. Parnell—" Yes, it not untrue,
very extravagant and boastful."
The Attorney•(leneral—" And you
have never since withdrawn it 2"
'''LIF. MA112S FIRS''' iiEPLY Ti,
TIIE FAMOUS LIBEL SUIT
REASONS FOIL 1'111011 Toni t(C0a1'OlA•
VON OF TILE JESUITS IN TMs 1'aOYINCI(
18 CLAIMIED TO 11E TUM, AND VOID.
s fir
Another Lot of Those
Wonderful Dress Goods !
ROBERTSON'S
8c., 10c., 12o. and 15c.
Everybody should see then'. The best value
country. Going like hot cake:;.
.o
OUR SFECIALTIE S
COULD NOT BECOME A BRITISH sUnJI OT,
or conform himself to the laws of
the Empire in force In this province.
11. Because' the coustitution and
object of the said society are incon-
sistent and incompatible with the
constitution of this province, and of
the Dominion of Canada, which !8
shriller in principle to that of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Ireland.
12. Because the objects of the
said society are the teaching,
promuigation and propagation of
the following doctrines and prin-
ciples which are iuoonstster.t and
incompatible with, and contrary
to and subversive of, the eonstitu•
Lion of this province, and of the
Dominion of Canada, and of the
1'ni,tedt Kingdom and of the •supre•
Macy arld prerogative of the Queen,
and which said •Legislature is not
competent to authorize, that is to
811 y, inter alis. :
(a) '1'httt the church of Rome is
superior to the State and that the
Legislature of Quebec has no right
to legislate upon
ALL THE setJECT4 A8511LNi'U 're er
The fallowing was filed in the Su-
periorCourt,\Montreat,by Messrs. al ac
laren, Leet, Snaith t Smith, atter•
neys for the defence in the case of
La Compagnie de Jesus )•s. the 'Toron-
to Ala if:—
The said defendant without enter
ing into the merits of the present ac-
tion and demand for exception to
the form saith, that the, summons
and declaration in this cause are ir-
regular, informal, null and void, and
ought to he so declared by this Hon -
()liable Court and be set aside,and the
defendant freed from further answer•
ing the Baru ; for the following atilong
other reasons:
Mr. Daly—But you have departed
front it, yon cannot have all this
thing to yourself. I respect Mr.
Leuu'ier-1 beg your pardon, the
lion. member for Quebec E'+st—I
lespect you, you aro a gcutlelnan,
but I want you to understand that
the hon. gentleman from Oxford
(Sir Itichatd) is everlastingly, on
every possible occasion he can get
in the House, trying to depreciate
our country, and I stand hero as it
representative of that couutry to tell
him that 1 will not listen to it.
Mr. Parnell—" No, 1 have not."
The nonchalance with which the wits
nese made these admissions astonish-
ed the audience and elicited hisses.
"Probably," added Mr. Parnell,
" the statement was meant to miss
lead the House. I am afraid it did
not, for the Bill was passed. My
purpose was to exaggerate the effect
the League had in reducing the nutn-
ber of secret societies. .The League
nndoubtedly diminished^ the number
of secret societies, though it has not
swept them away as i stated."
One cannot but admire the frank
way in which Mr. Parnell under
oath acknowledged that he had
"ilPliber>Itely" made thie-it,tleutethts
in the 'Huesca
It is well that he did not add
the clime of tntruthfuhless thit
1. Because the said plaintiff so -call
eel Compagnie de Jesus or Society of
Jesus is not a body politic or cor-
porate, as is feisty alleged in the
writ and declaration in this caus•.
2.13ecause the said society hifth no
right to and cannot appear in this
court and plead 10 said name ofCom.
pagnie de Jesus.
3. Because the act of the Legisla-
ture 1n this province(50 Victoria,
Chapter 28i, under Which alone the
said plaintiff can make any pretence
to be a corporation, was and is ,shill
virts the said legislature, end tins
never of any legal force or effect.
4. Because all the members of the
said society whom the said act pur-
ports to erect into a corporation
are, by the laws of the Britisb Empire
in force in this province and by the
laws of this province
Sir Richard Cartwright—You
will have to listen to it.
Mr. Daly—Yes, no doubt ; but I
want the hon. members fur South
Oxford to U11,lerstand that uotw ith-
standing anything lie may say, not-
withstanding auy'thiug that hon.
gentlemen opposite may say, that
country is going to prosper, is going
ahead in a ratio to-dity that 1)tikota
will nevi r exceed. That hon.
gentleman on' every possible occas-
ion holds out to the people of Can-
ada that they should not go to. the
North-West, that they should not
go to Manitoba, but that they should
go to Dakota All 1 can say is :
God help the ratan that goes to
Dakota.
An hon. Member—He never said
SO.
in the
111111lin UM.
Robertson's roat Cash StoFe
by the British North America Act
and the constitution, without the
permission or consent of the author•
'ties of the said Church.
(h) That the Pope of Monde has
the right to depose soveriegns and
that he has the right to absolve sub-
jects trout their allegiance.
tc) that the Legistature of this
Province has not the exclusive right
to melee laws as to "to the solem•
uization of marriage in thin province"
as assigned to it by the British North
America Act, that it is subject
with respect thereto to the Church
and the Pope of 'tome.
(d) That th•e Legislature of this
.Province has'- not the exclusive
right to make .laws relating to the
civil .rights in this Province subject
to the institution of this Province
and to the Dominion of Canada, and
that, so' tar at:least as affects , the
rights of those professing the Roman
Cathode religion, and especially the
clergy of said Church and the mem-
bers of slid Society, the 'said Legis-
ltture is subject to said Church and
to the Pope.
(e) ''hat the Legislature of this
Province has not th„ exclusive right
to make laws for said Province
relating to eduction subject only to
the provisions of the constitution
and especially to section 93 the
British North America Act, but tent
it is still further subject with re-
spect thereto to the said Church and
to tate Pope.
(,/) That the Dominion Parliament
has not the exclusive legislative
authority to make laws for • Canada
as to "Marriage and divorce," but
that it is subject with respect there-
to to the said church and to the
Pope.
(g) That in case of conflict between
the civil laws in force in ,this Province
and those of the said Church, the
latter must prevail.
ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT CIVIL RIGHTS
and by solemn vows which they
have taken as such, including a vow
of unconditional, absolute and pas.
sive obedience to the general or
seperior of their order or Society,
and by the rules and regulations of
their Society they are incapable of
exercising any civil rights in this pro•
vince or of perforating any of the
necessary functions of members of
an aggregate corporation snch as the
said Act purports to create, and the
o -aid Legislature is incompetent to
constitute them a corporation, orde-
clare them a corporate body in this
Province.
5.Because the rules and regulations
of the said Society to which the said
Act purports to give the force of law
and the ecclesiastical rules binding
upon said Society, end all the mem-
bers thereof prevent the said
Society or any of its members from
holding property or exercising
any of the functions or frail,
chiles which the. said Act purports
to confer upon) them.
6. Because the said Act is repug-
nant to Imperial statut' s and laws
having the force of law in this pro-
vince and utter tylia to the statutes
relating to and affecting said Society,
and to the statute relattng,to the
Queen's supeeinrtc,v (1st Elie. cheat,
Chapter 1 i and to the Quebec Act
14 (George 111., Chapter 83) and in
effect purports to give the force of
law to rules and regulations of the
said Society which require all 111e
members thereof to give primary al-
legiance and obedience to
declared ultra vires the Legislation
of the Province of Quebec, and null
and void, that defendant's present
exception be maintained, and the
plaintiff's action hence dismissed
with costs distraits to the under-
signed Attorneys.
BAYONET AND I3ULLE"I'
The following description' of the
riot at Ltlus, ural' GuyuaJnato,
Mexico, a few days ago, over the
ilIe,rcerattou of tit'e. Jesuit priests
w i u were stirring up the iguuraut
people at;uiust the government, is
glVeli Ily a pi o,itiuteitt citizen of
Guanajuato, who reached 'l.'exes
last week. It was nearly dark
Mr. Daly—Yes, lie has said so
in the coinlnittee the other day we
hall the same thing. 'TI•e hon.
gentlemen tt'ied to hold out that
Dakota wee a better place then
M, eitohe for our people to go to.
I w'onitl tell the lion. gentleman,
for his satisfaction, that, there are
thousands of people who have gone
to Dakota througlt the agency of the
American railway companies, who
fish to God they hall never gone
there, who were starving, and who
are now coming over the border.
\ft'. Lister—You will filet in the
States whole townships peopled Ly
to Canadians, \\'e have the fact that
;f j i0 \ftntiloba, with everything to
—The Court at'Tip;,erary has ups
held the sentences passed oil Isiah
111. P.'s under the Crimes Act.
—All (-)tta we young 11111n i1 till rt1
\l.nnabau, wee to Want real 00
Monday last to marry the gori of
his choice 'lb -day lie was aunt to
Kingston a ravinetltaltltll'. 1lle
unfortunate young man hal known
the young lady, Miss Gough by
name, for a Ioii, time. Acquain-
tance ripened irttii love. The young
MUD'S aft'ecticn ('418 'recipruoated
and en_ngeluent followed. Mr.
.\lunnhall, (C(0l(liig to errnlli'r
newts, went to Jluutreal to marry
the your g h ly, Arrit it g titere.
set slag of his pria-peetive, r,•letiones
apposed the match nn. tae around+
when the priests were iulprtsoued, that insanity existed in t0,• fanti!y,.
but by the time the street lamps
blow was a cruel., ane,. auuj
were 'lighted 2,200 emu roared and
J'cung \lonaltati Was pro.;trnt'rtl.
He was brought up to ()matte ooh
Thursday by th•, father of the y1 null;
lady. 1lis condition 8hnwir,g no.
improvement he was transferred to
the Kingston Asylum.
surged egtlitlst the walls of the jail.
They attacked •its heavy doors with
pickaxes, stones and crowbars and
heavy beams of wood; and some of
them in a wild frenzy dashed their
bluetl1ug hands awl heads against T_ .—.0.—
die utas$ive wail.;. Many of them
were armed, and in u short while I FARM AND MARKET'.
a heavy tire was pouring into the'Put two foals in a box stall, null
windows. The mayor'of Guauajuas I take the mother entirely out of
sight and hearing. Commence feed-
ing on crushed oats and gronnd bar-
ley or rye. Commence also then and
bleak there thoroughly to halter: I
forgot to• mention, that 1 always give
to, who was 1111lde, was one. of the
first to fall. Policemen, who rusted
up in squads of two or three, were
remorselessly butchered, aul.l in a
short tiwe. More then twetty of
foals an ection of warm water
them were lying dead oil the paves ns soon 118 they are dried, and satisfy
meet. A few seattered soldiers myself that .all the hard lumps are
who were in tulvil were treated in p.assed• from them. I consider this
very important, and atn satisfied that
there are many foals lost for want of
this attention. The best remedy 1
have found for scours Ise tablespoon-
ful ofcastor oil, followed by a few
drops of laudanum.
—An acre in. fruit, especially of
strawberries, will . sometimes -.pay
better than five acres of grain. 1t
should pay the farmers to have a
sufficiency of fruit for his own use
alone. A large quantity can be can-
ned for winter use, and it affords an
agreeable change without much
cost.
—A complete change of soil in
flowerpots is sometimes necessary,
and will enable a plant to secure more
food and grow better. If the same
Soil is used too long it may become
unfit for the health of the plants, as
well as harbor worms and parasitic in-
sects.
like ntaulter. Thu 1001,, wl>ich
by this LIMO mus utterly uutuanages
(able either by the goverinneet or by
the priests who had iucited it, now
set tire to the jail doors, hut, just as
the inmates were about to Burl ender,
200 regular withers arrived ou a
double quiek and formed across the
street. The mob answered the or-
der to disperse with a yell and dis-
charge of firearms. The command
to fire mai at once given. The bul-
lets at fearfully short range swept
through the ulasse4 of Men, women
at,d children like a scythe, Mowing
thew down in rows. Still they
came on, and volley after volley
crashed tutu theca only to cause
those behind to "spurn the mead
bodies with their feet as they
preaard forward. The streets were
sticky with '.,good and the shallow
gutters rail with it. Iu the mean.
time a numbed' of insurgents armed
with pistols and rifles had climbed
upon the adjoining houses, and the
soldiers began to drop one by one.
After a half -four's continuous
tiebtieg a ctargp with bayonets was
ordered. \\lieu the front rank of
the, mot, felt the steel the entire con-
course • broke and dlseppeeretl
through the alleys and by -ways.
Altogether more than 280 persons
were slain, by far the, greater part
of which were miner, and other
\lexicau laborers. The soldiers
lost eixreeu killed and wounded.
Among the slain was a lieutenant.
The fire in the jail was que'hched,
and the live badly frightened but
determined priests were taken to
Gauanajuato for safe keeping.
They are now confine.' in the Castle
de Grandelas, in which) the great
Mexican revolution had Its birth,
and iu which the patriot Ilidalago
was subsequently hanged. it is
thOua'et that ba 1 .the rreeut riots
proved successful, and had the
priests Leen rescued and the local
authority broken, o serious uprising
might have been developed.
(h) 'That, as to the subjects men•
'toned in the foregoing clauses—ea/at
and f, the authority of the said
Clairol) and the Pope
Is AltJVE THAT OF THE CIVIL POWER,
And the supreme, and in so far as
the legislation of the latter conflicts
with ti, former it is riot legally
binding.
(i) That in case of conflict or dis-
puce between the civil power and
the said Church 88 to their respec-
tive domains or jurisdictions, the said
Church and the Pope have authority
to decide such conflict or dispute,
and such decision 1s binding upon
the civil power.
(k) That the same Church has the
right and power to avail herself of
force, null to apply external coercion,
to enforce the foregoing objects, dos•
trines and principles.
13. Because the objects of the said
society:are the teaching and proximal.
,ration throui.hout the world of the
doctrines end principles, set forth
and animadverted upon in the print.
ed work Defendant's Exhibit A;
herewith filed entitled "Compen.
diem," "Theologise, 11Moralfs," and
"Cases Consi:ntite" which said last
named four exhibits were and are
a recognized guide and text book of
of said society everywhere, and said
doctrines and principles were and
are contrary to the Imperial statutes
I. Elizaberth, Chapter L; 14 George
111, Chapter 83, the British • North
America Act and other Imperial acts
and laws in force in this province,
and are moreover subversive 'of the
rights stud
I'ItRIOIATlt•E8 OF IIEft NIA;osTv ems
QUERN ..
and' all the moral principles which
forrn the foundation of ciiii society
and of ftll laws.
Wherefore, defendant prays thtt
the seal pi''tendO'I Act of Incorpo,-
tion, 50 Victoria, chapter 28, be
A FORF,ION POWER AND 'AUTHORITY,
I,0 wit, to the (general of their order
and to the Pope.
7. Because the said 1•egislattire has
only the right to incorporate "com-
panies with provincial objests," and
the objects of the said Society are
not provincial.
1). Because the said Legislature
not having the general right to incur•
porate companies or to create cor-
porations, but only the above men•
tinned limited or restricted right,
the objects of corporations, purport-
ing to be created by it should appear
in the actor instrument in corpora-
tion: mei the said act (501 Victoria,
—A Correspondent of the Rural
Neta Ferfcr'r tells of an eastern deal-
er who advertised a new potato as
much earlier and better than the
Early Rose. Orders came in great
numbers, and his profits were corres•
pondingly large. Ile filled his orders
with Early Rose potatoes bought at a
convenient commission house. His
customers reported splendid croups,
earlier and finer than Early Rose
and this is easily explained by better
soil and culture given the more high-
priced seed. This teaches the im-
portant truth that a common sort
may by good cultivation he made to
appear , so good as to be thought
new.
--Mr. Parnell rather astoni.'ht•d
Judges end spectators in his examine•
Ci011 on oatheme day last week, by
coolly admitting that he had, in a
epeeeh in' the . House, exaggerated
the effect of the Lettgue's operations
in the way of effacing becret societies
in Ireland, .
—It is rented, on the vett; 'beet
authority that Katisas farms are
mortgaged for such ad amount ,AN at
4 per cent would produce the sum
of 523,003,000 as annual idtere'st,
which is mere than the whole value
of the wheat crop of the ;irate.
MARKET REPORTS.
(Corrected every Tuesday afternoon.)
Toao:V•ro MARKETS.—Whcht 1.07
to $1.30, the latter price fdr No. 1
1Mauitoba hard. Barley 48c to GOc.
Oats 32c to S6c. Peas 60c Potatoes
25c to 30e per bag. Eggs, fresh, 17c.
Butter IGc to 19:. Hogs 116.25 to.
$6.75.
DETROIT MARKETS.—Wheat $0.9'2
to 0.98. Barley 45e to 115a•. Oats
27c to 9))'. Butter 12c to 14c. Eggs
10e, Apples $1.110 to $1.50. Dressed
hogs, £15.00 to 115.50. Potatoes, 18 to-
pic. per bushel in car lots.
Bureau) MArtr.E'rs.—Graded steers
1.500 to 1.600 lbs 214.25 to (14.65 ;.
from 1.300 to 1.400 ihs $1.80 to $4.15 ;.
light butchers from $2.50 to $8.0..
!fogs 94.10 to $5.95.
CLINTON,
Flour 85 CO to 5 50
Fall Wheat, new & old 0 95 to 0 f)8•
Spring Wheat.... 1) 95 to 0 08
Barley .. C 40 to 0 48
Oats .. 0 '28 to 0 28
Pens 1 . 0 54 to 0 54
Apples,(winter) per bbl• 1 00 to 1 50
Potatoes .. 0 95 to t) 30
Butter .. 0 17 to 0 20
Eggs 0 10 to 0 10
Hay 00 to14 00
Cordwood 3 00 to 4 00
Beef ...0 00 to 0 00.
Wool 0 20 to 0 '25
Pork . 6 50 to 6 70•
1