The Huron News-Record, 1892-08-17, Page 4SPECIAL NOTICE,
Owing to the Contemplated
r dissolution, in the near future,
of the printing and publishing
firm of Whitely & Todd, all
accounts dna the firm must be
paid AT ONCE.
Call at the office or remit by
Registered Latter or Post Office
Order.
WHITELY & TODD.
Clinton, August 15th 1592,
The Huron News -Record
1,60 i Tear 3i.26 in Advance.
Wednesday August 117th, 11892
EDITORIAL NOTES.
At the present market price of
silver bullion the value of a stand-
ard A+uerietn silver dollar to 65}
cents.
Imports at New York for this
week exceeded those of last week
by the difference between $16,704,-
540 and $11,536,084 Exports fell
from $6,919,031 to $5,057,398.
The losses by fire in the United
States and Canada for the flrat seven
months of 1892, is $76,967,520,
against $79,247,370 in 1891. This
does nut include the reeent $15,-
000,000 fire in St. Johns, New-
foundland.
An amateur astrologist has sent
to Vanity Vair the following result
of his observations. "It is very
odd th at Jupiter's tiausit through
the degree of Aries that it occupied
at his birth has alwa}•a• brought
Gladetoue into power all through
his lift, but when Mars enters Aries
and Sate'n forms the opposition, in
early spring of 18J3, Gladstone will
go out ,"
XIX 'QW4/ NOVA
Over the. Canadian 1aelfio rail,
lues, bound for the rout, five tea
trains passed through Winnipeg on
Friday from the coast. All told
there were 100 oars, which repre•
settle a huge sum of money. Qu
one train were three oars of silk,
which, alone, were valued at a sum
not far from the million mark.
Con cern Ng retaliation the New
York Commercial Bulletin says,
"On our own side the President can
aearcely fail to see t'Itat the consa
quences of the resort to a po:icy of
ietalintiou might be• very serious."
And the grain handlers and pro•
ducera of the West, lake and rail-
way shippers and fanners, are also
warning President Harrison that
the city ofOgdensburg and is railway
connections are not paramount in-
terests to those of the wild" and
woolly west.
The Nile has a fall of but aix
Welles to the 1,000 ranee. The
overflow comnliencea in June every
year and continues until August,
attaining an elevation of from
twenty-flvtr to t.wenty•aix feet above
low water mark, and flowing through
the "valley of Egypt" iu a tur•
bulent body twelve miles wide.
During the last 1,000 years there has
been but oue sudden rise of the
Nile, that of 1829, wheu 30,000 peo-
ple were drowned.
.Reformers that do not reform
seen to exist in all countries. They
live on the magic of the name econ-
omy. The American Democrats
mouth reform tariff reform, civil
service reform and economy in ap-
propriating the people's mouoy.
They have a big mejority in the pies•
ent Congress. And with all their
shouting of economy they spent
$45,000,000 more for the current
year than their Republican prede
cessors of last year. plow like our
Grit Reform friends in Canada.
When Canadian 11,eformere con-
trolled Parliament, "they withheld
money with a niggardly hand where
it was needed, while where it was
not needed they egeandered with
rockiest; extravagance."
l!t 4iaQ tliborniau at?+r sat prones
alai ill T allalit40 Qa Ronde)! time
tree lots of Welt and Yankee flags,
but not one British or Ctluadiab
tlag. This is $. pointer for Conti•
nentel unionists to harp upon.
Prenii"r Dibbs, of New Zealand,
is on hid way home from A.tnorioa.
He will advise hie people to have
nothing to do with the big show
being gotten up by the great Anleri
on hog at Chicsoo. His Nibbs
Premier Dibhs is right. The ooua-
merciel policy of the States is one
of seclusion. Other oountriee
ehould refuse to take part in it.
Tho Parkhill Gazette advocates a
reduction in municipal and County
Council representetivee. THE
NEws RECORD has long been of the
opinion that the pruning process
should cutnmonce with the 'big
County Connell of Ontario. Gradu-
ally the powers and privileges of our
municipal bodies are being relegated
to Ontario, when the same work
could be serf >rmed at home, just
as intelligently, at a lower cost.
By all modus agitate to clip the
wings of the Ontario Government
and restore to municipal bodies
powers that have unjustly been
wrested from therm.
The non-euforcetnent of the law
in Canada. against seduction has
caused tliat offence to be called "the
permitted Crim '7Even' where the
nature of the seduction constitutes
it a criminal offence, the non pun•
ishment of the offenders seems to
have justified the application. \Ve
have Duly to refer to the dastardly
crime committed upon tho person
of the deceased orphan girl, Ellen
Lamle, as one of the many inetences
whura the laxity of the Crown has
amounted to condonation, if not
portniseion, of the crime. It is re
freshirig to find the adjoining coun-
ty of Bruce furnishing an instance
of the alertness of the Crown officers
in endeavoring to secure the pun-
ishment of oue of these libidinous
brutes that proy upon tho innocence
of childhood. Last week Michael
Gill.ind, a cettlo dealer, of Milimay,
was arrested on a charge of criminal
seduction of oue Catharine Limner,
of Carrick. The victim is under
the age of 16 years. The offence
was committed last fall, it is alleged,
and immediately after it Gilland
left fur the Old Country, and his
father settled the trouble, he sup-
posed, by paying the girl's parents
$1,000 With this understanding
the defendant returned. Tho mat-
ter..having become public in the
mbdntine. when he arrived home
the law officers pounced onto him.
At a preliminary trial at Walkerton
he tv.w committed, but released on
bail till the hall Assizes.
The Manitoba Government has
just issued another bulletin for
Manitoba. It states that two or
three weeks of the presant favorable
weather will unsure au excellent
crop. The wheat yield is estimated
at frotn eighteen to twenty bushels
to the acre. Oats promise a very
good crop and barley will be a
larger crop than ever before. Peas
will average twenty-five bushels to
the acre, oats sixty-five, and barley
thirty-five. The potato crop, all
the correspondents agree, is the
Largest and best crop Manitoba has
ever had. The estimated yield fcr
Manitoba is :—Wheat, twenty niil•
lion bushels ; oats, fifteen million';
barley, four million.
Mr. W. F. McLean, editor of
the Toronto JVw'ld, was committed
at the preliminary investigation et
Goderich last weak, for trial for
publishing alleged libellous matter
concerning Mr. M. C. Cameron, ex -
M. P. Mr. McLean gave bonds
to appear at the melees to be held
an the 19th September. Referring
to Mr. McLean'a newspaper work
the Hamilton Spectator rises and
somewhat irreverently reg arks :
"We believe that hilly Maclean, of
the Toronto World, is not in jail at
Goderich. But the matt who can
say, in his paper, that Canada ought
to knuckle down to an uujeat (lie
admits it is unjust) demand from
the Uuited States, ought to be in
jail somewhere."
—The Orangemen and Foresters
goat their "bumper goats" and nearly
all their lodge property in the late
fire at Holniesville.
—A fine lot of fat hogs were ship -
pled recently from Atwood station.
One lot of 41 hoges weighing 11,
395 lbs., purchased for White Bro.,
of Mitchell, by George Pearce, and
another lot of 60 hog, weighing 13,
430 lbs., were purchaeed by Baw•
tinheimer & Heffernan, of Grey ;
in all 101 hogs, weighing 24,825 ibe.,
making at 5 cents per pound over
$1,200 paid out to farmers. The
average weight was about 250 lbs.,
one brought in by l einpill weighed
500 11s,, while quite a number
touched the, 300 mark.
—The following aro the navies of
the s; ui'cessfully conpetitors at the
bicycle tounnnent held at Seaforth
ou August 5th :—One wile green
race -1, J. Li• ingston, Seaforth ;
2, A. Rudolph, Walkerton. Time,
3.05 1-4. Half mile open race, two
in three -1, W. Hyslop, Toronto ;
2, W. M. Carman, Toronto, Best
time, 1,21 1-'2. Two -anile, county
championship -1, G. Baldwin, of
Seaforth ; 2, J. Livingston, Sea -
forth. Time, 6.24 12. Two
mile, open -1, W. M. Carman,
Toronto ; 2, 1). N-asniith, Toronto.
Time, 5.50. One mile, local --1,
J. Livingston, Seaforth ; 2, A. C.
Win tent, Seaforth. Tillie, 3.06,
One mile, open -1, W. M.
Carman, Toronto ; 2 W. Heslop,
Toronto. Time, 2.53. Five wile,
open' " open -1, Dr. Robertson,
Stratford ; 2, D. Nasinith, Toronto.
Time, 15.00 1.2. One mile, con.
solution -1, J. McCarthy, Strat-
ford ; 2, S. H. Gibt,ons, Toronto.
Tinie, 2.55.
Tho Dominion Government
should not recede from the stand
taken for years past in the matter
of granting a rebate of tolls on all
freight passing through the Wel—
land canal that afterward passes
down the St. Lawrence. 'Flier() is
no discrimination about this.
American vessels are treated precise-
ly the saine as Canadian vessels. If
the Americans think there ie a
grievance let them ase: to have
the matter referred to arbitration.
The proposed American retaliation
is not in the line of retaliation at all.
Retaliation means the return of like
for like erthe doing that to another
which he has done to us. Canada
has placed American vessels on
precisely the same footing as Cana-
dian veseels in regard to the use of
Canadian canals. The United
States have not , placed Canadian
vessels on the same footing as
American vessels in the nee of
American canals, notably those in
%t:he State of Now York, ail Cana-
dian lumbermen in the Ottawa
district known to their pecuniary
loss. Tlio antonym of, retaliation
is pardon. The Yankees should ask
the pardon of Canadians for having
for many years deprived un of our
treaty rights ill their canals while
they hale enjOinidWeresiSkirriglits
in ours. Their attemptud bull-
dozing is far more apparent in this
inattor than in their flagrant viola-
tion of treaty rights and interna-
tional law in the Behring sea affair.
The better class of Americans have
admitted that the Yankee conten•
tion in the latter case is untenable,
and the same class admit they are
equally wrong in the canals affair.
Not only is Canada right ,but she
would be far less injured by tho
enforcement of so-called retaliation
than the Americans would be.
While Canada might Buffer some by
it the Americans would suffer in-
finitely more. If the Americans
should bite of their noes to spite
their own face they would so
materially obstruct their commercial
breathing that the result would be
as great a national inconvenience t0
diem as catarah to the individual
who has to breath a roundabout way
through the mouth instead of the
more direct way through the nostrils.
It would not mean commercial
death to them, but a mighty deal of
inconvenionce and extra expense in
the carrying of the products of their
, teeming west to the seaboard.
•d"atnoe .B+''iseryr of Uflbprne, inlet
iota, a hotel shed, at refer for his
horse; it was quite darlt and fin*
other horse kicked hire so seri rely
on the Jibs and 'other parts of 'the
Body that the result is unuertai'.
OAUT1ON.
EI4111 PLUG OF THE
jIlgttle �IaQg
B.
MARRIAGES.
YATES — SHEPPARD. — At Sarnia, on
August 10th, 1892, by the Rev. J.
Learoyd, Mr. Edmund H. Yates,
merchant, to Miss S. Sheppard
(formerly of Goderich township
and Clinton), both of Oil Springs,
Ont.
•
IN BRONZE LETTERS.
NONE•
OTHER
GENUINE,
E,
A=I4 D,l A N`'
?.ACI F`IC
HARVEST
EXCURSIONS
FROM ALL STATIONS IN ONTARIO, RETCI'N
RATES
OXBOW
DELORAINE
MOO$OMIN
BINSCARTH
NgSBITT
REGINA
MOOSEJAW
YORKTON
FALL SHOW DATES.
Huron Central, Clinton, Oct. 6-7.
North Western, Goderich, Sept.
27, 28, 29.
Wingham, Sept. 27, 28.
Culross at Teeswater, Sept. 20, 21.
Eima at Attwood, Stpt. 29.
Montreal Exposition, Sept. 15-23.
Industrial at Toronto, Sept. 5-17.
Western at London, Sept 15.24.
North Perth at Stratford, Sept.
20-30.
South Huron at Seaforth, Oct. 4-5.
East Iiuron at Brussels, Oct. 6-7,
South -Perth at St. Mary's Sept. 27.
23. •
Mornrngton at Milverton, Sept.
27-28.
Northern at Walkerton, Sept. 27-
30.
Southern at Brantford, Sept. 27.
28.
North Brant at Pari*, Oct, 4 5
Wilmont at New Hamt3urg, Sept.
29-80..
Mitchell at Mitchell, Sept. 27.28.
Palmerston Horticultural, Sept.
26-27.
South Waterloo at Galt, Oct. 6 7.
North Oxford at Woodstock, Sept.
28-29.
East Wawanosb at Belgrave, Oct.
4-5.
Wellesley and North Easthope at
Wellesley, Sept. 20.21.
Morris Branch, Blyth, Oct. 1112.
} $20.00
$30.00
CALGARY
PRI NCE ALBERT} UUiQQ
Edmonton, - $40
To leave all points in the Province of Ontario
_ox_
August 16
MARKET REPORTS.
(Corrected every Tuesday afternoon.)
CLINTON.
Fall Wheat 0 73 to 0 75
Spring Wheat..... ........ 0 73 to 0 78
Barley C 40 to 0 50
Oate.. 7 28 to 0 29
Peas . 0 57 to 0 60
Apples,(winter)per bag 0 40 to 0 50
Potatoes .. 0 25 to 0 30
Butter .. 0 13 to 0 14
Eggs, per lb 0 06 to 0 06
Hay 11 00 to 12 00
Cordwood 3 00 to 4 00
Beef .. 0 00 10 0 00
Wool 0 18 to 0 16
Dressed Hogs 5 00 to 2 55
Return until October 1e,
—1802_
August
1802-
A'ugust 23 Return unitils9sOctober 23,
Iteturn until Nov.
ember 0th, 1892
Sepetrnber 6
Parties ticketing from other points should
arrange to arrive at Toronto in time to cuimect
with the 11.20 p.m. train on above dates.
For full information apply to A. T, COOPER,
Clinton, or any other agent el the Canidtan Pxci-
tie naitney.
718..41
iso•,,
New Era !
CANADA'S GREAT
s
RE.'16
We Never Cut Except We O
Square in Two.
This is what we are doing now with a line of TWEED
SUITINGS for ladies, Wg have not many and those we
have are beautiful, good goods, and good value at 15c.;
but we cut square in two and call them 8e. a yard, Now
is your opportunity while they last.
We are busy this week receiving and passing into
stock a large shipment, of New Goods. so that at the
present we are a little pressed for time, but will talk to
you next week and give you something of interest,
Industrial Fair
TORONTO
SEPT. 5TO 17,
1892.
Enlarged Grounds.
. New -Half -Mile Track.
New Grand Stand.
And many other Improvements
Greater and Better Than Ever,
ENTRIES CLOSE AUGUST 13,
New and Varied Attractions of a Superior
Character, Instructive and Amusing, the
Latent Inventions and Grandest Exhibits
in all Departments.
The People's Great Annual Outing
Cheap Excursion on All R'ys.
For Prize -Lists, Programmes and all
Information, address
1; J. WITHROW, H. J. HILL,
President. Manager,
Toronto
719-tf
0
GILROY & WISEMAN.
To Farmers and Planters !
As I do not intend to canvas the
country, I can supply you with
First -Class Nursery
guaranteed true to name, for letter
orders sent to me only, as below :
Per 100
Standard Apples, 5 to 7 feet, $o18 00
Standard Apples, 4 to 5 feet, 15 00
Plums,lst class,4'a to 6 ft, perdoz 5 50
Plums, 34 to 44 ft, per doz 4 50
Pears, Standard, 1st class,
[5 to 7 ft., per doz 6 00
Pears, Standard, 5 to 6 ft, per doz 5 00
Cherries, 5 to 7 feet, per do 5 50
4J' All Small Fruits and Orna.
mental Stock at equally low prices.
It will pay you to order early.
All Canadian grown stock and
reliable.
Give name of varieties wantedland
number.
ALEX. WEIR,
70943m Clinton P.O.
New and Authorized
SO/IOOL 8001(8
CoopeF's Book Stare, Clinton.
50,000 Barrels Apples Wanted
DCANTELON, OF CLINTON, wants 60,000
, bnrrefe of Fall and Winter Apples for
which the best market price will be paid. Hold
your apples for Cantelon aid gave money.
D. CANTEGON, Clinton.
STRAY CATTLE
Como to the enclpsure of the undersigned, lot
31, con. 0, Township of Iiullett, on or about the
16th of .June, SIX YEARL1NOS—three steers
and three heifers. The owner is requested to
prove prop -ray, pay expenses and take them
away
W. J. McBRiEN,
Summerhill P. 0.
712..41
Hallett, June 22nd, 1892.
0
Text Books Used in Public Schools :
Public School Geography 6 0 75
Public School Giammar 0 25
Public School Arithmetic. 0 25
Public School History (ready shortly)
Public School Temperance 0 40
Public School Copy Books, Nos. 1.6 0 07
Public School Drawing Bnol:s, Nos. 1 6. 0 05
Public School Music Header 0 20
Helps for Teachers.
Prize Problems in Arithmetic, Ballard & Robertson 0 40
White's Problems in Arithmetic, 2nd and 3rd classes,
White 0 25
Armstrong's Problems in Arithmetic, senior classes 0 25
Grove's Problems in Arithmetic, 2nd and 3rd classes
(ready shortly)
Grove's Problems in Arithmetic, •1111 classes (ready
shortly)
MoGuir'ls Perspective and Geometrical, Geometry 0 40
Strang's Exercises, Composition 0 25
Libby's Exercises in Ex.glish Grammar 0 35
Itow's Practical Language Training 0 25
IIuston's 100 Lessons in English Composition 0 25
Text Books used in Collegiate
Institutes and High Schools.
High School History, Robertson
High School Algebra, Birchard
High School Euclid. McKay
High School Physics
High School Drawing Books, 1 0
High School Chemistry
high School Arithmetic
High School French Grammar
High School Latin Primer—new issue
High School First Latin Book—new issue
High School Composition—Williams
Higlf School Grammar—Seath
High School Geography
High School History of Greece and Rome—Schmitz
0 65
O 75•
0 50
1 00
0 15
0 75
O 60
O 75
0 50
O 75
1 00
0 75
High School Book -Keeping 0 65
11 igh School Reader . 0 60
High School Zoology 0 75
High School German Grammar 0 75
Cassels Lessons in French 0 75
Caesar's Bellum Gallicum, books 3 and 4 1) 50
Irving's Sketch Book—Notes by Chase- new hate.— ,
Irving's Sketch Book—Notes by Sykes—new issue •••• •
Wordsworth Selections—Notes by J. E. Wetherell—
new issue
Wordsworth Selections—Notes by Libby—new issue
French Literature—Sykes & McIntyre—new issue
Talisman, annotated 0 20
Model School Books,
'vim'BrArtr,Qfe5;°7� »A•eexte nt—revised.. • 0 75
anuni 8f Hygiene . •4, . -..•. • 0 50
Houghton's Physical Culture. 0 50
First Year at School—Sinclair. 0 50
McLellan's Applied Psychology 1 00
0
We invite Teachers and Scholars at a distance to enclose in
a letter the price of books that they require, and we will
forward them post paid.
0
W. Cooper & Co., Clinton.
COUNTY FUNDS TO LOAN.
On the security 0t Cultivated Farms. Interest
eta per cont., payable annually. Any portion of
the principal may be repaid at any time the
borrower wishes. All expenses paid by tbo
County. No person except the County Auditors
allowed to ere mortgagee or to know to whom
money Is loaned. Apply to
AOT.hIES,
Oodorich, Aug. 811, 1892 Co. Treasurer
718-4t
HOUSE PAINTING
All persons 'wishing to have their houses
papered and decorated inside or painted outside
In first-class sty -la and at moderate prices, will
find it to their advantage to call on
C. WILSON
Painter and Paper Hunger
Shop on Rattenbury Street 097• -Sm
NOTIC H�
18 hereby given that a Court will he held, par.
want to the Voters' Lists Ant, by His Honor the
Judge of the County Court of the County of
Huron, at VARNA, on the 2 nth day of AUGUST,
1892, at eleven o'clock a. m., to hear and deter-
mine the several complaints of errors and
omissions in the Voters' Lists of the Municipal-
ity of Stanley.
All persons having business at the Court are
requested to attend at the said time and pinee.
Dated this 9th day of August, 1892.
G. .1. STEWART,
718 -2t Clerk of Stanley
GIRL WANTED,
At once, at the Grand Union Hotel, Clinton.
Steady employment and the highest wages paid.
Apply to CHAS. SPOON RR,
719-tt Grand Union, Clinton