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Ontario Reformer, 11 Apr 1873, p. 2

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fd 4-04 456788 85 sz send Ey Ea -y & Frees EEELE iit iis yo 1 ¥ gibt ed \ r il fii { S88 V0 50 his Sommaei J har " 1h # fuss fa Ep rt TA Ss ec a Lhd \ E "sides being pertinently asked at the pre- A stitutional usage, and: for the seeping {out of existence those abuses whicli now | unfortunately exist. The @ppusition sow {largely shapes the legislation of the coun. { try. The ubsencp fron the Hedee of such Grand Trank Time Table, ir "aud Sir OSHAWA STATION. --QLHAWA TIME. | wen hs the Hom COING WEST, I GOING BAST, Passenger | Ww a.m, | Fxprous Eh ; Rdsam. | Mixed. dl xed 4.30pm. | Passenger. | Express. RS pom. WHITBY STATION. 7.10 pam. + | Govern in | nm. Macdouga r tellsigreiitly a the del y abilities, | Oo | George E men of no erdin { absenco is severely felt ainst the ates, they (were and their by the Govern- [ Toalna going Fast leave Whitty Staiton ten | MORE TH EHSIE prosont critical 'condition biates darlier, and those wolog West ffteem:| That defeat way overtake them at any | 11utes later thay the hove, ) Wontent, they feel to be quite possible. ime as follows: GOING EAST. Horning mail, §.00 state. l Yorning mail, 7.00 ma 00 i 3 venmg mail, 8.00 The Northe.: d After the arrival of the Train from the West, at ~ 990. wx, daily, Sundays excepted. The nail, vin. Quebev, is closed at 7.30 o'clock on Thursday Evening. and via. New York #: 7.15 Satarday Evening. ; The Mail for Enfield, Foley, and Taunton, is - ollosed a: 12.30 o'clock every Tuesday and Friday. "Registered Lotiorshould be Mailed 15 minutes before the hour of closing a mail. OFFICE HOURS. From 8 o'clock a. Tm. unti 7pm part of the community, | cunning intrigues is apparent. WANTED IMMEDIATELY. SMART ACTIVE BOY, WITH g A education, to work in a Print- | that maust cross the mind of the R g ; one having a knowledge of the | business preferred. Apply at this Office. | 8ge to perpetual oblivion. Under those | afflicting circumstances, reader, to yourself the feeling of dark ¢ ai | faithful and devoted sarvice. Just as the { obj Ouimio Reformer, TAAMBTVIARAAAEL VAR GRAAL ALL LY % i Oshawa, Friday, April 11, 1873, | "0 MUNICIPAL Law. | his reach, new to exclaim all is lost. | . | draft of a consolidated Municipal Bill, RENEW YOUR SUBSCRIFTIONS. | | | prepared under the supervision of M. C. With this issue the second year of the | Cameron while a member of the late put lication of the OxTarro Rxrorwer | Ontario. Patent:Comlination Government; ends. Next week the first issue of the | the preparation of which, it is said, cost third year will appear ; and we call on all {about $800. We venture to " our subscribers to renew their subscriptios, | without the fear of successful contradie- assert and to bring as many new ones with thew | tion, that history affords: no example of | ¢, "as they can. : | an effort at th ET Ea ------ » rraduce anything at all useful, was so HURRAH FOR WEST DURHAM! | jou Hen. E. B. Wood clected by acclamation. led as the effort of Mr. Cameron now : We think the Dil ; con'ained between 400 and 500 pages, and The nomination for West Durham took | from 1.500 to placeon Wednesday, at Bowman numerous and lengthy repetition, one resulted in Hon. £. B. Wood being clected would suppose Mr. Cameron had gathered by acclamation, to represent that Banner together all the Municipal Bills he could constituency in the House of Commons 1 during the present year. aw office, with intentions to *¢ or The following gentlemen werenominated | them into one." many of whom retired in favor of Mr. | Wood, and the rest of them selected the * better part of valour, remembering that | 4 + wake" ora * quake," mast have been # ho who fights and 1u s away, may live anything but fattering to its antlior, to fight snothep day." Messrs. E. PB. | Wood, Geo. Haines, Wm. Thompson, Li R. Osborne, John: McLeod, F. F. Mec. ber Arthur, A. McNaughtan, and Dr. Me. Laughlan. These gentlemen retired in favor of Hon. E. B. Wood. Messrs, F.{ Cubitt,.8, Wilmot, John Milne and Dr. ! Allison, after takiug a good look at the |; on; determined eonntenances they saw at the | Town Hall, gracefully retired, preferring to. fight some future day, but not jrst I, 1G0 clauses, and from 3, and 8, « and handed them to the boys in his nsolidate The extremely quict way in which this offspring was allowed But we have a New M to the | c..! "hange of Decom- STL To may this law would perhaps be going ipal Law now o> egh, too far, but cer tainly its arrange: y the, Hon. Ma { incorporated 'in a Lill of this kind, as well of Mr. Cameron's h: it has but 124 pages, d of the bund!s to which io sut stance This is another comment mation of the country, and conservatives themselves, of the position of Sir John Mpedonald's tottering government. At eviry contestthat has taken place since the gederal election, Reformers in each in. | months before.the Statutes can be issued, stdnce have carried every thing before | which morans Fy even in constitnencies held formerly. | {hosp who de by the Tory party. When a 'Reform | ap? as thi constituency fall's vacant, To : even show the semblance of resistance, e "in West Durhain where the reform candi. | ! 7 y on: the-esti- ' .r 1 lena and yet This law is rathar long to pubis} but ! newspaper, as it will be severn rare notalwaysava Ith our next tes, date walks the course by acclamation. Sir | John Modonald tried his best to get upan opposition in that Riding but iznomini- ously failed. Liks young colts. when for the first time bronght to fice the roaring blast of a full insframental brass band, | John A.'seandidates, at sight of a cheering Durham political meeting, prick up the as follows : -- 301. --The Treasuraor of evary lity issning any debentures and keep a Debenture R wok in which he shall enter a copy of rtificitos of owncrshi hich he may give i quent frm hall 3ip of Deb id also ever: { i 1 8 N { such entry shall not bs made except np | al esmAWA resTotricr. | Insome respects, they would feel greatly The malls are closed at this office, by PostOmoe | Toiieved if the mantle ¢f power should . | fall upon others shoulders, who are, no GOING WEST. | doubt, anxious to assume the cares of The ejection of 8ir John and his n mails are closed immediately | associates from official life would be hailed with delight by the moral and respectable That in the land f retributive justice has been long Uclay- | ed in conseguence of his many wily and The blow { i that must sooh come will fall with crush- | ing weight, and consign the most consum- | mate political trickster of the present picture sev- | [ gh | tative of Bouth Onuterio, afteriyecars of | subject which it richly merits. Drunk i litical ambition was within | i i } ject of his political ambitic , | with its foul breath, scathing and hlighting Doubtless, many of our readers saw the | the carfsolidation of any lr, | { in any eivilized coputry where the failure | and ¢ ympactness | | it pre we give a fow of the ew | transfer of 'any such Debeuture. | | - TEMPERANCE MEETING | Below 'we give a lérgo postion of a Lacture delivered by the Rev. J. Kenner, B. C. Miuister, ot the Temperanco Meet. | ing on Sabbath afterucoa ks'. The lecture is an able one, and well worthy the atten. tion of vur readers. The ew geatle- man commenced as follows: Ladios and Gentlemen, Mr. Chairman, It is with mingled feelings that 1 stand { bef I feel a pleasure in contributing any words I can utter, any | argmnents 1 can employ, or any influence I can exert in favor of Temperance and in | opposition to the liquor traffic. The Temp- | erance cause I believe to be heaven-born, | breathing peace on earth and good will to- { ward men; but alcohol I deem an embodi- ment of the direct woes that ever afllicted humanity. When I think of the number { of orphans and widows, prostitutes and knaves, backsliders and felons strong drink re you this day. | hath made, and in making, how it drowns | men's senses, dims their intelloct, cripples | their graces, sends them to New South | Wales, the sepulchural vaults, and the region of the damned, I feel a great Jiffi- nm unfavorable to the cause 1s 1 do that | not awaken that interest | any Tiprossi rot Temperance, an knowis in the » | eness is like a foarful pestilence stalking | t gh the land, poisoning the balmy air | every fair flower it comes in contact with, blast | specting the rising generation. ka found under the bre likely as any to excite the red wrath of an offended deity and call him from the cloud | the blasting thunderbolt of Lis fiery indig- nation. To remedy the ills flowing from this cursed system, have been resorted to, such as Suasion, though the age Moral ies of Temper- the 'number of shops and dustillorios, granting licenses se only who could produce a cer:ifi- at of good moral ch ding its sale on Sundays and set times | But all these expe { woeful failure. Perhaps with ail the good acomplished through rts of Temperance 8 | chee | enactments giving allowance for the in- | erease of population, there are more drunk | ards in the world to-day than thers were twenty five years ago; Tho reasons as- | signed for so little success, are about as ance Societies, limiting beg {ies anc various as the methods employed to pre- | : | throne of heaven and mingle the groans | | | vent the ovil. SBomé say .it lies in the | weakness of its advocates, that men alike destitute of mental grasp and experience { have taken upon them to advocate its ness of argument illogical reasoning, in- | temperance of expressive snd undignified { it wero able to be delivered from its | friends. Others find the reason of so imited success in the fact of professors of | religion failing to espovse cause and ti of their influence. That while the cause is honored by statesmen nsecrated by - Philanthropist, and Priests and Bishops, 3* is vuin for ystem to be broughtin'e 2 or universally abandon- A | give W the weight disrapul Now whilk we readily concede that the neeches made in re » to Temperance | Teetotalism, or Prohibition, have mot lweys been characterised by that close reas perspict of style, philasophie lepth and charitable forbearance for the } thers +hat eould have A int if the good Samar- | with compassion, act out the lings of his heart, dresses the wounds | mind provides for the wants of the bruised broken and half dead traveller, he will not to enj ile of eouscience and approval of heaven, thouzh he fail of » 4railing; robe, the classieal education, 1 2 suka} wmon.ous look of the unfeel- v the sm riost w ign the feebleness of his effurts may ite a grin of contempt in the selfconceit- spire others with theglft of prophecy so f his speech, the extent of his 2, the vastnoss of his wealth, or the gaudy attire in which" he appears before bl { days of yore that he chooseth the wesk | dence lest I should say any word or make f ing the fairest hopes entertained re- | ¥ It is the | | ureatest curse that can afflict humanity, the | most God-dishonoring system that can be | heavens, and as | various expediocuts | acter, and forbid- | s have proved a | =s put upon drunkenass by Legislative | ) passes by the other side. | they foretell his efforts to bo a failure: | } God who Joves no man for the | ONTARIO REFORMER, OSHAWA, damning tide has rolled rill sdding its tribute to rill till nations, feutilies, cow | wunities, and individuals have been swept away. Tho stroug oak Lath bowed to the { storm as well as the tender plant, while wopt over by humanity and denounced by Godan. Intion of ages it hath swept on a withering and sweeping course a sevthirg and deso lating tides black with the wreck of hopes, hearts with woe, the almshouses : paupers, the prisons with felons, lunatic assylums with maniac, the garth of God with graves, and nell with the damned. Do you say the cause is very ancient and therefore should be cautiously removed, I answer it is ancient, it is hoary with ages and infancy, for millions have been offered up at its shrine, and millions still go up to sacrifice, till like that idolatrous pilgrim path of Lheathendom its course is marked with the bleaching tribute of sculls. Could all who have died pass before our vision, the mind would reel at the sight. Could all the blood it hath shed be gathered to one stream a mighty river would roll to the ocean: Could all the groans it hath evoked be gathered into one, the earth would tremble. It is old and ever a wrong. Itisa falsehood and exists to-day upon falsechnod. From the give tham enduranco while laboring in their mines to the drunkarda and tipplers, and topers of the present day it hath been a falsehood. The history of the past and of the present avows it to be se. * * * * , You think the matter might ba regulated * what hath been the history of its regula. | tion 1 For more than two Wundred years the sale of intoxicat'ng liquors hath been regulatep by law. Men have been licens- ed :-- " Licensed to make the strong man weak Licensed to lay the wise man low; Licensed the wife's fond heart to break | And make her children's tear to flow. ' Licensed to do his neighbor harm, | Licensed to kindle hate and strife; * | LicensCd to nerve the robbers arm, | Licensed to whet themurderers knife, Licensed where peace andquiet dwell, To bring discare and want andwoe; Licensed to make this world a hell; Azxd fit men for a hell below." Liexnse and regulate a wrong, the idea is not more absurd than infamous it is a foul compromise with iriquity, | a yoking of saint and devil, a compound | | 1 | {of heaven and hell, an infernal adulteration which lifts wp and | legalises wrong and pulls down the right, a draping of the three mouthed { dragon of the pit in the habiliments of an | angel to stand and smile on the doorsclls | of destruction. The principle would as- sociate the larch fiend with deity, on the and wails of the Jost with the loud halle- | Iujahs of the redeemed; it would unite the worlds of bliss and woe, and place angels on i to die, and be carried to oblivion without | claims, but have evinced so much feeble- | ® footing with devils. Does God, Mr. Chairman, recognize such a principle in his govornment ? murder | Doos he strike hands with m- iquity ? Where in any civilized govern. ment in the known world is this principh made the basis of leg'slationsave in the ram traffic and' that wh it principally supponts, viz: prostit n. * |* * * Suppose in your midst some lover of natural history, for the sake of | studying the subj shoald collect a large { number of wild animals, and that among the rest was a ferocious lion, when every | now ana asain was breaking from his den | and making havoc of tha people's lives, and that some mother who had lost her | infant babe, some widow who had los* her son, and some wife who had lost her husband, and some fair dagsel who hud | lost her lover, should call the attention of | the naturalist to the fearful havoc the l'on had mide, and the irreparable injury he had inflicted, and scek' redress for their | | wrongs, and suppose thoy shonld be in- { sured by the naturalist, I am sorry for the injury done, I did not think he would treak from his den, but I will take pre. | caution to prevent such a disaster ocear- | ain by having a chain put apon his neck; yet the next day or week he breaks | his chain and makes as many Rachel's | more, to weep becanse their loved ones | are not, and ou each vceasivn the owner | | will confine the lion, chain the lion, shorten | s tother of the lion. "Do yon think the { Le s.efied with his regula- wi? | people wou ny ge tions? No! the vilinger: | by your promises, our homes are draped In 1 Strong behind the infamous Legis- | happiness and life; ard in every land and | clime filling howes with poverty and wants | with | time the Hungarians swallowed alcohol to | Do his laws regulate | hirnseology that the cause might well pray | knavery, lying, perjury, seduction, and | % | der it the most successful yet held. { celebrate, | mi | months holiday to Whitby, ear, dilato the eye and nostril, up head, mane and tail; and off they go helter | Ptered in the sad Book, ns the owner of | y 3 skelter, through mud, hail and rain, to the tung of " Deil take the hindmost on | they drive," each trusting to length of limb, * wind and goad bottom, Glen leading, | the written authority cf the pers. such Dcbenture, 1'is exccutors or admin- istrater, or of his or their lawful Attorney, which authority shall be retained by the suid treasurer duly dled. Section 303. --After such certificate of [ things of this werld to confound the mighty i mourning in ebsequsics of your Joon, H and the foolish things to confound the wise | ¥OW nothing will satis 'y us short of the | ind the things that are not t being to | oR being destroyed," and the plea 5 | ind the things re 3 gto Ee : tel naught the things that are. And while | FeA30Na. le, so earnest, ong ou Fun | | we.concede that ministers and members of | 37°2 result in compassing the life of the | | religion have not felt that interest. nor | beast. Now the lion of intemperance has | I evinced that vigor in drivin serance | een making raids upon'society from time v a i) LO d 1 # " i pi | immemorial, the people have complained intemperance ild have done, ; ty : ownership has been eridorsed as aforesaid, YP . by Cubitt and Allison, such debentures shall only be transferable Wilmot and Milne bringing up the rear | by eutry by the treasurer of the Munici blowing and laboring mot to be last. pality, or his deputy, in such Debenture When next this motley race begins; may { Registry Duok from time to time us we be there to sce. transfers of such Debentures are aut! -- [ imed by the then ow:zer thereof or hi: i | The Balance of Power. | lawful attorney. : Section 303. -- The Conneil of every . | Municipality may euthorize its head, with There is oné question, which is on all | the treasurcr thereof, under the seal of the Corporation, to borrow from any person " : tax or bank such sums as may be required to sent time, by whom is the Dominion of | meet the then current expenses of the Canada ruled? No one who looks at the | Corporation, until such time as -the taxes "matter fairly snd squerely, can fail to | levied therefore can be collected, and the atiswer Bat those who. have the destinies | Council shall by by-law re:alate the othe Domuion nti bud, are th | 20s 0 ba bored" hd te half-breeds of Manitoba and Fishermen of | [| security thereof. = the Lower Provinees. Sir John's support comes not from Ontairo or Quebec, ghe | 0 times during which stumps, wood, old province of Canada having at the last | election given a majority against him. | refuse may be sect on fire or burned in the Those who really s'and by kimnow, do | so only from hope of reward Manitoba and | Newbrunswick desire,and are now seeking | fot better terms, snd that they receive | the nare the conditions uf their allegienco. That confederation is endangered by this state of things, few, if any, will deny. That our systgm of Government has be- | 'come one of bribery and corrnption is | very plain. That each province is being arrayed against the other, solely for the to Le observed during such times, and for preveating such fires being kindled at other Limes, {| For allowing to any person who shall | plant ary fruit trees, or any trees, shrubs on any highway within the Municipality in abatement of statute labor or vut of hie general fund, a» sum of not less than gat. oc . | twenty-five cents for cvery tree so planted. purpose of keeping the Government in Secticn 423.-- No Council shall lay cut is also plain. What a sorry reflection to any road or street more than one hundred, me this Province which con'ributes the nor less than sixty-six feet in .width, "largest share of the revenue, forced to | ystenting whieh a existidg toad or stree i lor | 18 Widened, or unless with the permission Tori Joe mers Ee the iol | s a sl Fd the Conaty in which the ment that has been almost universally | WH jp oy Any Yom condemned in Ontario. That the perni- cions example thus set by the rulers of the country, affects the whole foundations of society, must be to the most easual observer. That trickery and 'deception has "become the order of the dey in high places, is o lamentable fact. #low long this unfortimate state of things will continue to exist is a quection difficult to détermine. Ilad there been a stringent election law in force prior to the late election; we think things would have had » more promis"ng outlook ; as it is, there {is formerly, and no Lighway or street shall be Jrid out by any owner of land of a less width than sixty-six feet without the consent of the Council of the Muni- obvious cipality. _ Section 483. 1. caso any person shall find it necessary to cuntinve an under drain isto an adjoining lot or lots, or across or nlong any publie highway, for case the owner of such adjoining lot or lots or the Couneil of the Municipality, refuse to continue the drain to nn outlet, or to join in the cost-of the eontmuation of such drain, then the firstly suontioned person shall ba at liberly- to continue his or- | Councils may pass by-laws.for regulating | | logs, trees, brush, straw, shavings, or | open air, and for prescribing precautions | when altered may be of the same width | the purpose of an outlet thereto, aud in | iis great cause for rejoicing, the Govern. « saent is to a great extent, shorn of ils = power to de farther mischief. The great « whange in the political complexion of the House sinee the late elections, is an omen « of sy purer.and sounder state of things. The Opporition is strong in talent and + gonfident of success, they have the warmest sympathies of all good and' true men for the speedy redemption of the country said drain to an outlet through euch adjoining lot or lots, or across or along such highway ; and in case of any dispute as to the propertion of cust to be borme by ths owner of any adjoining lot o unicipality, the same shall be determined by the Fence Viewers, in the sane manner from the land that they she vet we can bv no means hold govarnment's | fee from blame in failing to take effect- ive measures for the suppression of the liguor traffic. Everything that hath a ndency to injure society at large it is the duty of the State to surpress, and the voice of history stands against the license system. Intemperance is one of the most reartul words known in our language; it is an embodiment of all that is crushing in poverty better in woe, or black in crime. The rum traffic is an unaltered and unmix- ed curse; Coil, only evil and evil continually A parent scourge from its first concérous seating upon humanity to the presenthour. That canvas as it moves before us with its fearful scenery of poverty ruin and crime sketched from life in its deep coloring of tears and blood has not one bright spot on which the wearied "oye can rest. Not a | single ray of light illuminates it. Rum has been a maligin 'star to man, from the cradle to the grave. It hath lured him by |'its ignis fatues light to ruin and death. | From the day that Noah fell a victim to | | its unknown tendency and Lot was dis graced by its poisonous effects on the { brain, to the present time drunkencss hath | | been the same. Empires have passed | | away, Nationalities have been forgotten, | | pyramids have crnmbled into dust beneath | | the effacing hand of time, and cities strip- ! : 3 : { you think my address on this occasion too « plings, suitable fi Tordi ir oreat ave be overed | 7 y y or saplings, suitable for affording shade | ped of their greatness have hb on COVETed | (ocular and political, I regard nothing as | with the dust of oblivion, but intemperance | still lives the most desolating scourge that f ever darkened the pathway of man. The | pestilence stalks forth and feasts npon its | rotten tribute then passes away. War rages, | houses are burnt, villages are sacked. | smiling cornfields are devastated, earth's | population decimated, the green grass | envurpled with human gore, and the battle field strewn with the mangled bodies of the fairest son's of earth; but war ceases, {and cities rise from the scenes of confla- | gration, rnd fields smile with a harvest of golden grain where hostile squadrons met {in deadly conflict. Famine, gaunt, and | spectral stalks to the fireside, and the i famished skeletons lis. down in death, with- | { out shrowds or coffins fo bleach at the | threshold, but the earth teems again with | buds, and the judgment is stayed.' But | how different'with rum !1t neverslumbers. | | Its work ceaseth rot for a moment, it is not like the pestilence confined to localities | or classes, or times, it's injurious effects { are seen on the throne, and in the hovely- | { The civilian and the divine, the orator and | | the poet, the statesmen and the warrior | the active doctor and the 'subtile lawyer, | | the 'prophet and the priest, have all in | turn become subject to its power. Like | a sernent of glittering eve, its deadly | coils slimb upward over the pedestal where gening is enthroned, the chiaplot upon the { eodlike brow is withered, and the fair { fabric which fame hath raved, hath crumb. | | led into ruin. The strongest intellect | tendency, and the the government has re- { chral vojce, * slay the lion." | hence to act, and | "On hizh let the flag of Prohibition wave o'cr us disputes within the Fence Viewers'! from the hand of God ns well as the of its deleterious influence and dgstructive plied we. will prevent the ill by regulating the thing, it shall only be sold by licns-d persons, these shall only be persons who can produces a certificate of moral character tain hours on the Sabbath day their | es shall be interrupted; bet sill the lion carries on its work of death. Now what is the rational course after 200 years of abhortive regulation, but to slay the lion? Nations groaning beneath the weight of taxation, with its revenues and | resources being wasted by drink,ecry, "slay the lion;" felons in prison, wounded ones | in hospitals, paupers in unions, criminals in penitentaries, lunatics in asylums, cry "slay the lion;" limited educuted, corrupted litsrature, empty or sparsely attended churches, retaraed science, wasted krain and poisoned water ery *" slay the lion;" 600,000 paupers reduced to eating the fruits of sober and industriois toil, the bones of sixty thousand annually slain cry from their closed graves with sepul- Ministers hurled from the sacred desk, 30,000 members annually taken from the church, and hosts of our institutions cn which might be written within and without, without any injustice ichabod the glery hath departed, cry *'slay the lion." Perhaps too sccular that affects tle interest and oteinal destiny of humanity, nothing does this more thay drink; it is no good our loppiug the brasches of the tree for it | sprouts as fast as we prune it, we must invoke the strong arm of the law to tare it mp by the roots. Fistory the most truthful, science the most elevated, phil- osophy the most soand, physiology the wost imffartial in its stat:ments, chemistry | the most rigid in its investigations theology most sincere, aud religion the most sacred, ery away, away with the demon, strong drink. My dear friends don't come hern mere'y to hear but for God's and humanity's sake 'go out from wa, Unfurl its brigi_t folds to the ght of the day: "Tis a flag of true freedom, a standard of pro- Kress, Then holst it aloft and its beanty display. The voice of a suffering people demand it To save their loved land from Inglorious desay; Then lend us your aid for reason commands it, And points to a brighter and happier dav, Then aloft raise the flag when it floats in the recze, The demon intemperance will cower at the sight, And ikuorance poverty, erime, and discase, With magical power will make wings and take ght, And free from tempt ation by drink long subjected Ten thousand poor drunkards shall cease to Aespndr, And thelr wives and thelr children by law nows Jratected, Shall Join them ia songs of 1! anksgiving and prayer, I E -- | every pattern, chairs, and badges, for the | The stars have been thick for his coun'ing, APRIL 11, 1878, FRIDAY, | The Council met on Monday evening | last. Members! presért: Mesars, Cowan, | Glen, Thoruton, and Wall, : Nothing important transpired, but con- | siderable was said concerning the best but | nothing definite was arrived at, the ques- tion laid over for further consideration, A grant was made to the Firs Companies for uniforms as follows : No. 1 Company £150, and No. 2 Company $250. The taxes on Wilson's Hall were re- mitted, on condition that the citizens have the use of the hall for $10, while outsiders pay $15. A large number of accounts were pre- sented, and the following ordered to be vaid :--George Gurley, clearing snow and drains, $29 45 ; James Luke, lumber and work on road, 816 ; R. Larard, furniture for Council Room, 81550 ; C. W. Smith, addijtion to Village map, and es poll clerk, $10; G. H. Pedlar, supplies to Fire Co. and 1lall, 367 85; W. H. Higgins, print. ing, #3 50 ; Fireman, indigent to date.814; McCarthy and Cheney, do., $21 ; Arthpr mode of extinguishing fires, &e., W. T. Dingle, lumber, $700; G. | Pedlar, Jams for Drill Shed, $60. -------- H. A Noveury.--How to become loyal, good subjects--Pull-down your signs. Lapres White Kid and Jane Boots, at Hawthorns. | Hox. Jos., Howe it is said is soon to | { | Teceive, by way of a Lieutenant Governor- » | ship, his last installment for the sacrifice of | | his honor, his colleagues and his country. Mr. Joux Tavior will address the | temperance meeting next Sabbath in the | G Ls hat Al Mack | Son's Hall. The Public are cordially in | 'TPC commissioner; that Alex.: Mackey | | vited. Tae Whitby and East Whitby Spring Fair will be held on Thursday, the 1st of | May, in the Town of Whitby. It is ex- | pected to be one of the best held yet by | the soeigty. | sortment of New and Fashionable Clothes, | New Hats, Collars, Ties, &c. Boots and Shoes, a speciality, French Calf Boots, | very cheap. Ladies White Kid and Satin Huld Slippers. Call parly and leave your orde: S. | EveRYTHiNG in the!Boot line can be ob- | | tained at Hawthorns. i -- Soctat.--The usual Young Men's Social in connection with the Wesleyan Method. | ist Church will be held this evening (Good Friday.) Those tngaged in making arrangements are sparing no pains to ren Let their efforts be rewarded by a crowded | charch. Doors open at 6o'clock p.m. Exercises to commence at 6}. Tue Corinthian Lodgs I. O. 0. in Wilson's Music Hall on Monday the 28th inst., the anniversary of | the institution of the order in Ontario. | Talent of the highest order hay been en- | { | | | | I. will gaged for the neeusion. The programme will | | comprise the best selections, and will, we hava no doubt, fully mect the highest ex. | peclations of all lovers of veeal and instru mental musie.- Me. W.F. Coway, Reeve, unpleasant task on Saturday had the | last of ad. nistering legal punishment to some | young men strongly given to displays of | pugilastic skill upon the streets. Four | of the lion makes fair promises that he | were made dance to the tunc-of £5.00 and | thie coal, in case, as has been suggested, | the full number of tons of a poorer and each. amount , costs, Four others double that while one had the pleasure of a The Reeve | ; { : ww boqe ill find all lovers of good order heartily | : is | manhood, any humanity, would say "'we | wi g artily | wiety, will not withold the smile of his | M24 ANE 4 ' -<, § : : . : 4 . | Nickersen, of the Inman line, could not ing and a yithold x fo ite & the | have been injured by your beast, dec.>ved | mstain him in his efforts to maintain Be Fh d 1 Sli al or SL i] ow i 5 price. ee ------ We clip the following from the Bt. Paul's Evening Journal, Mihnesota, whizh will no doubt be read with interest by the friends and acquaintances of Mr, F. J. Drew. Exterrrise.--F. J. Drew, manufactus er of Jewelry, came to thiscity in Septem- ber last, and opened an estublishment at No. 90 Wabashaw St. Through kis skill and enterprise St. Paul is not now entirely | dependent upon the Eastern cities for a supply, or an odd job' of manufactured jewelry. We noticed on the bench and in the shew cases of his artisan, all kinds and qualitics of cuff buttons, rings of various benevolent societies, Minnesota | cornelian and amethyst form no unimport- ant part of the stock worked up in the lapidary line. Mr. Drew deserves especial encouragement and patronage in his business, Hawrwory sells Boots cheap, for cash only. fe. To the Edutor of the Ontario Reformer : Drag Sir, --=Cot™ You ot cither of your numerous readers supply the poem or give its anther, of which the following is a part, viz : * The hills have been bigh for man's mounting, The woods have been dense for his axe; The sands have been wide for his tracks, The sca has been deep for his diving; The polls have been broad for his sway, But bravely has proved by his thriving, That where there's a will there's a way." By so doing, you will confer a favor. Yours, Truly, Literary, To the Editor of the Ontario Reformer : Dear Six, -- Under the heading of those unfortunate Orange Bills, the editor of | the Patriot gives vent to his overburdened heart in sighs for the days of Sandfield Mcdonald, Now what Sandfield over done for Orangemen, I for one, cannot find out, unless comparing them to the Thugs | of India, was a benefit to them, (if so,) | | they eertainly were many times benefitted | | by that gentlemah, The Orange Bills | would never hav: got three readings if | Sandfield had lived as Premier of Ontario until 1999, The truth is, the Bills were a trap for the Government, and sprang on | the trappers, ns many of their party own, | Hence the indignation of the Patriot! The Bills are sure fo be sanctioned by the ¥ -- PICKERING COUNCIL, - Saturday, March 29th, 1873. The Pickering Council met pursuant to adjournment. Members all present. Minutes of last meeting read and approved. The Orange bills-Tory Mi: statements | A Padlisnientar r p-Tory Mista * wr of entary murder in sland ¢ ng | the year 1872 ha 2, semi | women, - Tho number on { all of them wen, The Toronto Mail in conjunction with all the loyal Tory journals, are at | present secking to drag the Orange ques- Wi Petitions presented of Alex. Mackie and | tion into the urena of party politics by others, praying for aid to widow Gates; of | endeavoring to make it appear that Lieu- school section No. 4, west, praying the | the two Orange Bills for the approval of Geo. Hick and others, for aid to Phebe | tenant-Governor Howland acted under | Johnson; by Mr. Green, of trustees of | the advice of Lis Ministers in reserving | | strangled Limasolf in to Broadmoor, and | ces commuted to Ix answer to Penal ta Mr. Chis House of Common, the Finance Minister hi Palmer, indigent, 86; R. Groom, $2; v PR Rad) { | Tartortye at Wm. Dickie's a large as- { Liverpool by Government officials, and { while the sworn statements of ihe captain | next day's experience was a reversal of | this, and the fresh breeze went- back to | strong breeze directly west and westerly | fered 850,000 to deliver fifty lectures in | the butt end of a goat 1" | of Spain was that the insurance com- Act, and their award shall be final, ET -------- Ir you want a first-class Boot, and a snd of ite Goyernment, according to oon- perfect fit, go to Hawthorns, foeblest ram hath destroyed, Stars of the | first magnitude that have beamed in the | worlds sky have fallen from their radiant | orbits. while these of lesser note have | | been guenchel unnoticed, Such has [the work of aves | Opward the dark ani Boots and Shoes of all kinds, at Haw- thorns advice of John A. Mucdonald, John O'Con- ------------ Tre loga! weight of a bushel of corn sighing! been reduced in Towa from seventy | : Yoars, roapectfully, to rivty.cicht pounds, : Ee Onexer | nor, and company. So poor Petrist cease | | average human can boar with any degree ' N de Council to pass a by-law to authorize them to borrow the sum of $300, etc., presented by Mr. Brown, On the motion of Mr. Green, the by-law appointing Township Officers, was read the second and third time, and passed, The standing committee on petitions and accounts presented their report as follows : The standing committee on petitions and accounts beg leave to report and re- commend as follows, that is to say :--On 4th con., lot No, 13, for cutting down hill and widening the road, Ambrose Boon, commissioner, $100; on side road between lots 12 and 13, in 2nd con., to finish | Dixon, commissioner; on town line west, suth of Kingston road, on condition that | " municipality of Scarboro' grant a like sim, 820, Thotnas Chester, commissioner; lot No. 10, on the 8th con., for cutting ry hilf, 100, T. Gibson, and T. Me- | Ayoy, commissioners at lot No. 11, on [8th con., for cutting down hill, $100, T. Pugh, commissioner; at lot No. 11, on 3rd con,, for cutting down hill, $25, 8. K. | Brown, commissioner. That the following parties receive aid to | the amount set opposite their respective | names :--widow Gatos," 80cts per week from 1st January to Ist June, Levi Mackey | | commissioner; Phasbe Johnson, 40cts per | week from 1st April to 1st June, S.J. | be paid the sum of $8.for road scraper | supplied by him to James McAvoy, over- | seer. Report received and adopted. | On motion of Mr. Brown, a by-law was read three several times and passed, author- izing the trustees of school section No. 4, West to borrow the sum of $800 to pay o debt insured in building an additiup to the school house in said leection. Mr. Miller moved that the recounts of the corporation of the township uf Pieker- ing, for the year = as set forth in the | report of the audifors, be now" finally audited by the Counkil and the same are hereby confirmed. Carried. On motion of Mr, Palmer, the Council stands adjourned till Saturday, April 26th next, -- ---- © -- ee The Loss of the Atlantic. - | " * | Tue Weatner ox Tae Voracs as INpica. | tO any Bill of any of the classes herein. i | Tep Byun Passage or tee City or | Moyreear, From the New York World. The Inman steamer Citylof Montreal, ich arrived on Wednesddy night, left 1 Liverpool the same day as ithe Atlantic, | far as Cape and took the same passage as Sable, where the latter put in for Haiifax and the former turned southward. The weather ezch experieneed for much of the way was therefore precisely similar, and, with the same conditions otherwise, the same resulls were to be expected. With | the equinoctial storms in view provisions were made for a winter's tr Each of the transatlantic steamers is inspected at her stores of all kind tested as '0 quality ind purser are taken as to the quantity of coal, food, &ec. Whether or not these inspectors could judge of the quality of | uicre rapidly burning coal had been pro- cured for the Atlantic in eonsequence of the high price prevailing in England, Mr. tell. The City of Montreal, after leaving | Queenstown vn the 21st, met with lizht and favourable winds only, steaming 726 wiles in the Grst three days. On the 24th inst., however, the winds, which bad Boon easterly, fell around to the souik- west, ané there wie a prospect of a gale. Up to noon that day the vessel had run 230 miles, against 320 for the twenty-four hours previous. The weather became squally, and the wind shifted constantly with a general westerly drift. This con tinued through the day and rose to a strong gale, which on the 26th ultimo became very heavy, the wind varying from south-west to north-west. The vessel made but seventy miles during twenty-four hours up to noon of that day, zetting the wind directly iu her teeth for most of the time. Her course was south-west in latitude about 47 deg. no and longitude 36 deg. west. By morning the wind had come around to north-west, but shifted back to south-west during the day. A run of 208 miles was made. The north-west gain. For two days further it sat with some shiftings nearly in the same quarter, butaverage runs were made. Ou the 31st quite a gale vas encountered as the vessel reached ths Nova Scotian coast, and continued for twenty-four hours, passing off finally with a good winds ccntinued till the vessel reachedSandy Hook during a moderate west aed north- west breeze and a dence fog. No weather was encountered during the trip hore severe than every passage at the .equinoc- tial season is liable to mcet and is custom arily prepared for. Rev. Charles H. Spurgeon has been of- the United States, Tue St. Louis Republican recommends an ambitious debating society in Kansas to take as its next subject, is ** Which A MmaJoRrITY of the mortality cases in this country may be traced to disease of the lungs. Indeed, these maladies are alarmingly on the incrense. We do not know a remedy better suited to this dis- ease than the Combination of Hypophos- phites discovered by Mr. Fellows, It issaid that one of tho reasons why ex-King Amadeus abdicated 'the thrown anics asked enormous premimins on his fife and on that of his queen, This is an indication of the important influence that the question of insurance may exercise on the destinies of nations; and it will | be in order for the companies to make | mention of this fact in all their publica- tions. Unfortunately, it may also serve us another ** point" on which agents can | talk ; and we are sorry to spy they have | got wore to talk about ulrendy than the grading said line the sum of 850, William | | Brunswick case the Queen did refuse her | case with the Orange bills, we believe), | Governor-General of the whole Dowinion | Province has greater power, or do those the Governor-General. They hold that in giving such advice to tho Lientenant- Governor, Mr. Mowat showed that his support of the Bills in the house was hypocritical ; that there was no reason for reserving these Bills for the assent of | the Governor-General any mcre than for any other local Bills, and that the whole affair savors of a double attempt to shirk legitimate responsibility as well as to kill the Bills, Orang are quently called upon to condemn Mr. Mowat's conduc'. We may add, that those same jorrnals inform us that a Bill of a similar nature was once sent by New 'Brunswick to the Queen, and that she refused her { assent. Now, without any arguments with regard to the merits of the Bills themselves, let us look at the question from a merely legal point of view. 1. The Tory organs have no right to assume that the Lieqitenant-Governor acted on the adyice of his Goverment on the matter at all, and such an assumption that he did so is valueless without proof, The Lieutenant-Governor has official | powers in this respect which he cin ex- { ercise independent of, or even in opposi- tion to, his Cabinet. In the Royal Com- mission issued to Lord Dnfferin when he was appo'nted Governor-General of Cana- da, he was instructed by the Queen that, as her representative, he, or to use the exact words of the Queen's Commission: -- * We do furthe~ direct that, if in any case ' you see snilicient cause to dissent from who had voted againet hi '" the oriuion of - the major part, or the { humble. Without bei "' whole of Our said Privy Council so 14Uppete | ua say og i - § ieals, on 4 oi it shall be" competent for you othe rs really . hi | to execute the powez and anthorities quektion, viz : The vote ' vested in you by Our said Commission, | Aud really Mr. Fawcett is od "and by these, Our instructions, in op- | 28 ind pi hemuhal Sr "" position to such their opinion." Now | Glafistone tha oon a the Lieutenant-Governor has ths sime EN aivety Chin ined = ed L, discretionary powers within his more PA Cs ago wo limited sphere of action, and the Tory Ee S press have no right to say that this was not a case in which Le exercised it. They are simply speaking at random on a of which they cannot know anything cer- tainly, and so their words are mere ide wind, 2. In the Queen's instructions to Lord Dufferin heis ordered positively as fol. lows : " You are not to assent in Our name a a i h atér i Ee intention of the Coy, to submit ga IEAsure to pa x hibit the manufacture or sale cr 2 ing liquors. pt ' A crrizex of Boston, \ laced £1,000 in the hands. olice, to be loaned {o having persons support. The sums twenty an without sceurity but the werd ¢ is required. About fife he been aided in this way fj . Tue ExdLise Peesms. 18 once more testi ever may be Prem i dissolution of the comes just after autumn, the real sete fusion bramght about the Jah University cision of the peopl Mr. Chdso: To he his characteristics that yea FE either to adore him op tof have never found y! A rather liked him» Yhody much about Lim" i eloquence, he iy en wel ; his wn + ies ; the poliey of opeil; . the United States ; these thine to his capacity for theinstinctive 3 prominence which lod sll of the House to give him they did when he glided the evening on which resignation. There was in the ery, and the discs © MARNIEN. In Oshawa, on the Sth inst Thornton, Mr. Thomas Maxwell, all of Ol ava, 44 Cad HE DRUGGISTS HAV received a rapply of Pr, 1 HEMICAL D and Ny tha CoMrouxs Ewxir of Carisava, as he private practice dently recommended to elegant and reliable tonie up eonstitutions chat Rave for suffering from Chronie Wasti) upon peor h p pr A Ee aio) and i and Bh building up and + organs dnd tissues the bo Joculiar to women, and in t supplies a want long felt by a safe and agreeable re fi period Jor mated gx y ary, or of becoming Sold at $1.00. patient, " ; > Commercial, : OSHAWA MARKETS £ 2 "after specified." Then follow -eight | differont classes of bills which the Queen commands the Governor-General not to | assent to, the eighth of which is thas de- { Bned : "amy bill containing provisions to | which Our assent has been once refused, 'or which lms been disallowed by us." But the Tory press say thatin a New assent to a Liil which contained provisions similar to those contained in two Orange |! EF oP shai bills in question. If that be the case, then | Wheat, Spring, ¥ b even Lord Dufferin, the Governor-General ie he " of the whole Dominion of Canada, would not have tho power to assent to those bills unless as ths Queen's instructions further tell him : 'Unless such a bill "shall 'contain a clause suspending the *¢ operation of such bill until the signif- ** cation in Our said Dominion of our pleas. "ure thereupon," (which was not the cus go onan - Black-eyed Marrow fat Potatoes, ¥ bushel, .... .. Butter, 9», Lard, ¥ oy ¥ bushel, . A ae ob au Dried Apples. Clover Sood "or unless you shall have satisfied ' yourself that an urgent necessity exists, * requiring that such Bill be brought into " immediate operation." If, then, the Wheat, Fall, ¥ bushel, ... Wheat, Spring, do. Barley, ¥. bushel, .. Oats, do Peas, Potatoes, do . Butter. ¥n....... Hs BOWMANVILLE M1. is 50 restricted by the Queen's Commands, do the Tory journalists venture to say that the Lieutcuant-Governor of a single do Oats, di arden Clover Seed. ® bushel, Timotkyge ed, do Butter, 9B... ........ TORO! loyal Tories wish that Mr. Howland should disobey the Queen's Commands in a case in which Lord Dufferin dare not do so] A 3. If the Lieutenant-Govermor had given his assent to the Bills in ques- tion, it would not nacessarily Rave convert- a ed them into law, for the Governor-in- | Hay, ¥ ton, voueil would still have the power of | APPles,® bri... disallowing thym, and, if the facts are as | ---- -- Few Advertisments.) the Tory journalists state them, and if the Wheat, ¥ bushel,...... | Barley, do Peas, law is as tho Queen's comuilssion lays it down, the Orange Bills would still have to be reserved for the Queen's consideration. In that case the Orangemen would have acquired temporary legal powers which if subsequently taken from them would have made the watter all the more irritating. Bat, as it is, the question is so put that it can be settled once for all, can be arranged permanently by the highest authority in the land. 4. If as the Belleville Intelligencer as- serts, the bills wersreserved for the Ottawa authorities, so that 'French influence" might *' strangle" them, then if the Lieutenant-Governor had assented to them | the same " French influence" could still '" strangle" them, as the power of disalow- ance still rests constitutionally with the Ottawa authorities. But it is a poor com. pliment fora Ministerial journal to pay Lord Dufferin or Sir John Macdonald to assert that they are the, slaves of French | influence. If we had said that the Tory | journals, and especially the Intelligencer, l would have been the first to deny it. 5. The worst that can happen to the Orangemen uuder existing circiimstances | * is that the fate of their bills shall depend on the decision of Lord Dufferin, the Queen's commissioned representative, or, as the final resort, on that of the Queon herself. We are shure that our Orange friends cannot fear to lay their case at the foot of that Throne which it is one of their cardinal principles to revere, uphold and defend. Is their a single Orangemen in | the land who is willing to say that he | with of obtaining an eligible pote cannot trust the Queen to do justice in the front yoad. ; the matter !--and that is all that the | ; : # Victoria Lodge, WARNING HEREBY CAUTION THEP azainst purcl asing vid 4 A NOTE FOR $300 nr wv the orp gi Bhim NO NATUE JAMES i | J Oshawa, April 8, 1873. Dissolution of Partnership HE LAW PARTNERSHIP JO MERLY existing between the at O haws, as Barristers, Attorneys, Notaries Public and Conveyancers, A INO. F. FAREWELL > "" R. McGEE. -- 3 Oshawa April 7th 1872, The St. Lawrence Bank FJTEE SECOND CALL OF TEN cent. on the subscribed Stock of This Da le, day oon mada, thd the Bank In Toronto, orat og ot By Order of the Board. 3 K. F. Lockbagt, Toronto, 1:41 March, 1578, House and Lot For Sak. iG ST. WEST, OSHAWA ORS, a Acre well stocked with Choice Fruit Trees. Apply to J. P. JOHNSTON, & MR. R. McGEE: This offer an opportunity not often ml a", ---- Lioutcnant-Governor has asked them to | 0. Y. B. do. Woe are shure that they will insist on | ' : nothing that is not to be obtained legally | . and loyally, and no 'one desire them to | 4 : have or claim Jess.-- Hamilton Tins, | Tue recent race won by Cambridge is the thirtieth Inter-University contest. | On sixteen cceasions Oxford has been | successful, winning from 1861 to 1869. Cambridge has won four. consecutive | times. The boat in which the Cam- | bridge crew rowed was built by J. H. | Clasper, and is of cedar, 58 feet 4 inches in length, 25 inches extreme width, 14} inches deep awidships, 74 inches in depth at stem, and at sternpost 7 inches. he Oxcuisns' boat vas four inches shorter und slightly wider than the Cantabs.'| comple o° Wednesday ow ¥ THE, ard Carpet ot by ular meeting of this in the SONS' HALL, on next, 16th inst. Every member quested to attend. By order, of patience, amiMon ie Iw W. TREWIN, WX i Poth crafty werp Sited with sliding teats, | ~ .' $8,000 " Nov IS YO WATCHES, JEW LEY, FAN Phil 3 GREATLY

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