` Plnoopliuto Mine: 0! Frontenac. Kim:s1~n.\'. April I6 -(To the Editor): ln my previous communication the Advan- mean of prmnaflrul the solubility of native plmaplnzu hy gtllltllllg it nely Ins pointed MIL if there exintekl a mill for `his pur- pose the mineral coulul he shim-'-I mhnrreln. hearing an inspection brmd showing its quality. In this vruy the high rank of the mineral, higher than nny Illllcr phusphlte mnnnro, could be eausblilhou. the sim- plicity cf it: composition would ca-unnentl it to agriculturiutx who are so often the prey hf mixture mnliiug LllLlnlI'.C. It woulrl nlso be more acceptable in this form to the munnfnctnrers of porcelain W\l"8 and of phmplim`uns. Should it. be desired to enter upon the mnnui.u:`uve of fertilizing chemi uh thvrc is hum: nil}-rs I more inviting lield tlmn the niuiufuct~.iro of ummoniatccl sap r- phoi-ph.ste,nr Iuinemi Iulpho-phuaplmtr. The htter is simply a mixture of Innul plaster, or lime sulphnte with the mineral phosplmtc, utluniing the larmer the readv menu: of u-compliahin,g in the soil what the chemical xn.umh4`turu- attasinu by means of acid: ...,l ...:..-..u.. I l|.xunl|n.?\aI`Il\'lAl| omuin box at wane`: drug more. 3 dbzen half-soiled white quilt: will be offered for half price. Crotouuea for 100., worth 20c. at R. McFsul`I: I I) `D..:A nunh;.Al\9 hug rnmnvna` hi: Uruwfordi. tool: ot queen uroes. Brock & Booth have the but slabs, hard wood and dry blocks. You om get just what you want in the fuel line at their yard. Some hold it true whnte'r bofnll ` And deem it 100:1 whnm`er betidu- "ri. ha-Hnr In nu. mama and lied nod whnufer bende- "l`iu better to um shed 'l`lmu mum: to have shed at all. All this month we will sail lace urtainl It wholesale priceb. (jomc and are the im- mense bargains we ure ollering. R. lo- Faul. ,. ....;-:... .....o-..2..l. ..l Aluarv him}. nnrtnin Faul. Curtain materials of evry kind, curtain poles. nrt blinds. and every description of house furnishing goods at very lowest prices. R. MUFMII. Thu nherman of tho Bu of Quinta have u is though! to be nearer me mart. For coughs and colds uke the Dinmoud Cough Remedy, composed of elecnmpamc, wild cherry and hnrehound. `)5 and 50 cents a bottle At Wade's drug stun`. N... .....o... in um um .u.....-nnir in not in CUBE DOING II V! luc E Izxug aunt`. rho water in the old neaurvoir in not in use. If it in Allowed loxomuiu utanrlinu it will become in-.Ipur'e uml injluinm In health. The reservoil should be elem-cal uut. u.._.......|...- uh. -.moi.m halo of I \\ 1 ms reservuu auuusu u Remember the nuc Brown & Cofu entire I chinery, tools, eh: , Thursday. Sale 171.11 4 1 p.m. A nitinn nmmented Plllll $00.15;: In Al`: I 100 to I: Dunn. wm ADDRESSYOU. slus 2%? Ilodonto winds. mostly out. loath. Ana ` wutlm, not null cusp h hlnpontnro. IOKTIIAI. rluuuvn -nun-u. Iolrmlu. Am-ll I7. nadkru IN blah. inn. Ilbuon. u-ht Q and without onus. Patna what. 5.50 to usual such; 75 . A. $ 2` Lzfg uvnuvool. on IuIAIAu:= 1;,` about-WM and (Haul 01:. -L-_.- LIVERPOOL C0`I'l`0N IAUIII`. |.IvInonI..ApuIl1. - -- ,.,_:_ . ._...a.._ ..u.|n.._ A ILII IJVI-PWL Ipul ll U Ootunatouly : Audion Inlddllu. 6 lb-IO. VHlh-u.l AND lrtul. PR_QDl!CE 00l_dMl88|0N DEALER. , 11,--- -u_._.L_ IONTIIAL B;00I IAIIIITD. IoN'nn.L. April l'I.-l! noon -min. art). on I! - -. IONTIIAL PIODIJCI IAIIII`. IlnuuInnAI Ann-II I7, I.lVIIl 00l. IIII IAIII I`. , uvnnnom. And] I1-J I-I C(`)Mh-R-CIAIT MA"!-"i ERS. Inn. 'nnnn|nu\lnAn nr forty pupils are enougn ror one wuuuur. uuu some. w 0 seem still wiser, claim thnt it is economy of money And effort to give one teacher not more than thirty pupils. This is not A plea for less work for teachers, but for nwre ellic ent work, more set-isfector wnrk, and hence more really educative wor And better results for the money expended. When a tencher has sixty or seventy pupils About one-hull of her time and energy is ex- pended in keeping order, and hence is lns. so far es educauonnl result is concerned. Allowing forty pupils to It class Kingston needs at least twenty-live new class rooms, not next your or the year after, but now. Ania the Kin lenmrtcli classes almulcl " Ionic Plhlliuln __-.|.. --.o ...` Ha lie CIE|lC\| UUI. nuction sale of J. \\. he stock of curriugu mu-s Kc on Wednetdny And 7:! and 18th, each day It ura. - vg on the maples; x uh-nAf.| ` training may get It. While the city is some what heavily taxed for other needed ilnpronuxnxxts. public edu- mtion. the most. important. of all, should not be neglected. There will prulmbly never he I tune when the Laucuslerian fund cnuhl be used up better advantage than now. I hope cnreful enquiry may he made regauling the `whole mater. and that wise auction may be taken pr0xnpLly.-R.~\Tt:l`A\ l2R. lowing the regulation uumuer uiny; I0 3 room these would require fty rooms. The public schools occupy forty rooms, of which ten or eleven Are poor and at least live quite unt for use, leaving thirty ve that range from excellent to tolerable. From this it will appeal that Kingston now needs fteen new public school rooms. But this calcu- lzslion is made on an old standard. Any of the best modern educators believe that forty pu lls enough for one teacher. and nnme. w wiser. very reasouuble to lay me rent. The first of these assumption: has been jbuntlnlhtly proved lny Inspector Kllltlh re cent. report. The public schools took the Lsncuteriun school pupils at your reqgxggtr lnnd these school! not only supply gool ` tuition free but uls(5'h'In books to those in N u need. V 'I`L.:- :. ....o |:|.n..lu tn I-A r-llanmad. On the l need. This is not likelyto be changed. On the contrary the opportunities of the poor child ere becoming better from year to year. The /eetnhliahment of the kindergarten marks an epoch in the public education of our city. When there in a kindergarten in every school And its spirit has to some extent permuted ell| our prinmry work. the eet:_sb- liehmene of an induetrinl achool,euch as that `II Mimico, will be out of the question, even should the population of our city be doubldd or trebled. \ I --> munch 0 0&0 nnnlln warn rnnortml Bl ' i Last month 2,250 puplla were reported in ` enrolled in the public schools. At the very lowest culculution there Are 2,500 children who should be ntwmling these schools. Al- the regulation number (fty) to a rnnln tlmse re-uuire fty Lonoh ;A. 0. Andonon. D J. Lu Rory, 1.a;::::*!-r:%sa.s:,f;:i+e.*s*.`:e.;... . %g..;; R [And]. Tnunnn 9 J`: J l`.unIlI|n l $I\'. ur. \!l'IllI I-IIIDII U. K. HIWUIIIIUII did not epesk Irngloperly when he deelered he would not nor his citinenehip for money. He lied reference to the 0. Ge. re~ nnerk tint. he'd rether mete II lIICenede than 810 in the United Steven." The. prin- cipelwae not oppoeed in men going en - where tn make e living: nli wee Go `I earth ; but it wee diiferent with e netion to Ive npiie riahie to n foreign lend. He ed been olered two or three than the en- iuy he now received under other . but It wee no eelnpmion an be deeired itieh oitizenehipplone. developed his mine witmn me last year an , as to render a large output practicable. Capt. N. Ii. Moore has successfully endear . onred to revive a drooping market and by means of a pamphlet on the subject of our apatite deposits has drawn the attention of the fo.eigu trade to the merits of the mine- ral of this district. The spring of l889 opens more auspicuously for the phosphate inter- est than at any'time since the mine: were opened. All that is required is systematic development and extreme care in keeping refuse rock out of the material brought to market, to make this a very prosperous year in the phosphate minee. One thing only hinders somewhat the prosperity of the Luugliboio mining region, and that is the long Waggon haul. A branch railway track to Syclvhillln village would materially help the phosphate and mice trade which nds its llemlquarters in that interesting hamlet. The northeast section of Lough- boro and nurth-west part of Storrington should construct a road to the Rideau canal at Poole`: landing, and thus reduce the coat of teaming over 8| a ton. l\'ilI (ho nlmgnhma mince nav for this de- ACCOMM- .`>DAT|ON pemmnso ron _;_aDucAnoNAL PURPOESS. \ or teeming over {I a ton. Will the phosphate iniuos pay for velopment? Will they hold out? Will the bottom isll out of the solid crust to marrow`! Starry Hunt, in a paper, on the Genetic History of Urysrnlliue Rocks," in the fourth volume of the transactions of the roysl society of (,`smuls, tskes the Neptuuilt view of the crenitic origin of this mineral. Mr. (Taste, of the geological survey, takes the Plutouist view, that the phosphate benriug rocks are of eruptive origin. ln this he has the support of the very high Authority of the experts cinpluyc-l hy the Norwegian government ti examine and report on the Imureutinn spntite formation in Norway. Hail this countr s mining buresu whose husine.~s it ehoui -l he to explore carefully the mineral bearing formations of this and other sections of the province something might be oered to public enterprise to wnrrsut condence in the depth of the plioaphstes. \\'hat with Mr. Foxton`s per- sistent iuilustry in the development of his mine through good snd bad times, Mr. Coste s views and those of the Norwegisn mining engineers, there is little room to doubt then. the ouput oi this county in minernl phos hstes alone should rise so the gure of mil ions of dollsrs. The Her 0 cost of mining is 86 s ton. st which t e miner can mslte better wages thsn in my other kind of mining. With 80 per cent. phosphate selling st 813 A ten there is I iving prot for the miner. the tenmsler. the mine owner sud the broker. I. .....-. _... L- ......t...o.....l oi. -L- Mti... radon. J. A. runcnuu. a. n. on my. 5 Johnson, C. E. Whitn , H. W. lth, J. Edqnr, Manual :8. also and WHO, London Andonou. R0 tl |A..AII-_ "I" ll Duh"-I. A Ann: Ir?!` r`lI|A .1 37` ' .' '. Dunnin . gntlnm. E.xiT- dor. J. Coulshn . R. boron, Toronto ; J. Uurdn. Bacon :0. 3. Shannon. Wu"- town : P. McCullough, T. E. Luther. Hu- milton : W. R. Ayluworth and wile. Dour- onto ; J. Forln, Pollovillo :0. 8. Danton. S. S. Rogers. Cardinal ; W. McCormick. Corn- wall ; W. C. Caldwell. Lunrk ; F. H. Crugg. New York ;Jnhn Oct. Bnnllord. ..__.,` portion in xpo.-el thuf thin mineral in to iooltad for. Thin fwc now olurly entab~ I-imed. at once explains why vnf`huve As yet only met with two productive sections. throughout the whole of the great Area 00- _ cupied by the Lsnrentitn rockl. ` "(,'unfusvdl_y as the phosphate-bearing` .......l....n..`.... .9 0}... Join In In disturbed. continued to run nortnwaru. The history of phosphate mining in Fron- tenac has not many brilliant discoveries on the one hand nor my extravagant loose: on the other to record. More money bu been taken out of the phosphate pit: then bu been put into themmnd eo much an that enn- not be enid for sery many mines. The mar- ket has been occuionally dull. It does not detract from .the value of the mine: so much an the intelligence of the miners that not eelxlom rock has been hauled to thin city which was not phosphate at all. But there ll-L! been enough phosphate mined by indivi- dual: to warrant belief in the permnnence of the phosphate bearing formation. Captain l"-nyd Smith`: mine and Mr James Foxton e mine have been worked systematically and have produ"ed lmgely. .\lr. Spnnlding has developed his mine within the last year an .n m rnmlpr A larva mitnut nracticable. the mune owner and In: oroupr. It must. not he underetood that the opiu- ion in advanced that every phoepheu pit in I mlne. There ere thoneendn 0! null urlng vein: end pinohinf course: the: will never pey the ex on 0 working. B_IIt It ll Id- vemed the "ibre are many mine: In the county" the: will be found productive of miners! phoephste in ler e quunlltlu when thexvreecnt generation 0 W310 ueden en doe and forgotten. A. J. hwnut. Al'I"lVI|I'Il II Dfllllll IIIIIIIW L. Mclldowlo, F. Rkport. A. Q Pedon. J. A. Pncblrd. J. B. I l..s........ 1` I?` 1115:... ll W _ cupiud by the Laurenliun roclu. phosphate-bearing rm.-ks appeal, at. tint night. to be disturbed. investigation: have shown that I regular succession or sequence in IIWIYI Intintained and may invurisblybo looked fpr. There is. for exnmplo. -always I lower and an upper belt of oryutnllino limestone at well u an intermediate, and between each of chum. umxin hnnrlo nf nvrnxnnin rock. Chl intermediate, Ana oolwoun own In these again band: of pyroxonic rock. chur- ucterized by deponita of phosphate of lime in one or other of the three forms yet to be dc.-cribed. So great imtHs=q_qucut, however. urn Ihn nnntnrtinnn And nlicntiona Of the , margins, although converging preceptibly, dc-.-cribed. :50 great antrweqnenc, nowevu. are the contortions and plications strata in each of the areas we have under discussion. that it is by no means unusual to find the same band of liuiigsmne or phos~ ph.tte-bea'"ing,reck lmrcu'zT1 t'\a.gaix1 and agai to the surface within very limited areas. Thus. notwithstanding the fact that `the WhLlt3 thickness of the phosphate-beurimz strata is but small as compared with the great mass of Laurentiamwe tiud strata often spread over ery eonsiderable areas of coun- try,ns for example,in Elnsley,Buress, Bed-A ford, and Lnughboro. Indcpeu ently 0%. this crumpled up condition of the phos- pinto-lieuriug rocks, it lies been found that. us a. whole, they are arranged in the form of agreat trough or synclinal in each of the sections cxplored, and are beyond a doubt the highest portion of the Laurentian sys- tem yet discovered. To simplify descrip tion as much as possible, I may at once state that the trough form of these rocks in the Ottawa county mining district is clearly nu-iely the extension of that in the Perth and Rideau district. although, as has been already shown, the rocks are entirely cap- ped over and concealed between Perth and Ottawa city by the horizontal sandstones and limestones of the Silurian formation. How far this great trough of roclu extends to the northward between the Gatineau and Aux Lievres rivers is a point yet to be de- termincd, but in hr explorations around the Desert river settlenu.-nt-about ninety- ve miles to the north of 0ttuwa-the trough still had a breadth of several miles, and its continued to northward." 'I`L.. L:-s...... .J nknnnlincn vnininu in Fr-nn. uliurmng the h\l`l|'N3l` me rcuuv rm-nun u. the m.umm -tun-r aml mixturcs l lmspho-peruvian guano contains 3'. per cent. of lime sulplnue, '23 per cunt. eolublo. and l0 per cent. Lunluhlu plwaphaten. The vicinity of the p`:--splmve mince ail-rrde in the he-npe of reiuee mi.-a, another miur-ral wl i.-h. when finely ground. _\`icl-le a valuable fertilizvr. The ion per cent. or more of potash contain ml in brown mica would make it a valuable addition to ground phoephatc or sulpha- phoephate, cure always being taken to cert tify the aheolute character of the mixture to the urchaeer. I`he riches of Peru, by some eta tlclene claimed to be greater than those of any other country in the world. an large- ly made up of the enormoue value of her manure heepe. When will thin country awake t3) the value of the enormoue quan- tity of hcephate of lime stored up in the ninee Frontenac, Lanarlr and R'pn?tew in thie province. and in the countyo! Ottawa it the province of Quebec! The late Henry G. Vennor, in an article publiehed in I882, traced the hlerory of the diecova of phoe- phate in Lanarh, and efterwarrle n Ottawa county. and chatted that the formation in thin province and in Quebec in identical. though the Lanrentlan rock: between Perth and Ottawa city are entirely capped over and concealed by the horizontal eanduonee and limeetonee of the Silurian iormation. The iolloeina extract from the article men- tioned ie of lntereet : - u I`L- .....I.. I- [melt A, the nlunnnleaan non. AVIJ J--lyI-DIICU In Ito H.) _..p -......|. .-..._._.-l.. ..I._.. LA 4I--I__..I no noun An-Ink. Arrivnlrnt the British Auction Boul- u..n.a....:- n 124...... A mm. A N o Tonpgutlou II II. ._. 4 4A__A4 THE BRITISH 'WH1G'.WED\ ES`DAY Ill AEUTTII 0l.Ul'- port, xmon. A. a, Br: Icy. R. .3, lg. lhln, R 1nn_ rolorml OI Inc ptll Ilxty yearn weu1 rithh loyalty. n this vindication of that --- -u-n---n C..- l`-_-J- --- IIQCAD -uunn Inna` IIIIUTIXIIWIV vlndioetionnl` thetr wee proven for (Jenede wee never more lo el thhn now. And would Cuuede be no le- honeet now ee '1) Ieek eeceeelon efter ell the: hed been given her? Never 1 There would be no evolution in such nodal. It would he devolution. revolution end deetruotion. The price to be pllal {or lllperlel federetlon would he too eet, eome eeld. Bul wee eny meeenre of ee I-government eeoured wlshone ooetl Would not eroeeelon be en ooetly! `Would my netlon hunrea-eeeegheedwieet lie uetlonel development to eeve expeuee? But there would he no cook I! we cunlklered the compeneetlng edventegee I Who! honor end dl lty end eel!-relpeot would ow lean full .4: tleenhhlp! But then the dlloul- tlee I Well, wee there HIV qlleetlone thet wee not I0 heeetl And whet ere men end eteteenen for but wlneet them. But whet II the pleul "Whet right heve l." he eeted. "to do z-our work." He held Qh (Inn nlnee nnenhl neneln h ILA enamel: -..> THIS WAS THE BURDEN OF PRIN- CIPAL GRANTS ADDRESS. 1. ' no Inna. "50 an our won. an In that the ho oo dA undo the re] and what .000. dooidod VII t. on -nu-A ILA Innllunr Ignal nnnh` Annular I IIIII WIIIK 0'.ll.II,|KIl CCOICX VII Z5. III WII mm the mother Ind would noooptot Im- uonea n or uuerou - flu rock: in both of the houphato noc- tlonu nunod In almilnr. T 0 comm of white crvualliuo limntonn, wit. grain: and lump: 0! urpontlno, roddioh colored {o|d~ ...u.|-, until. duh amen nvronnitu. unort- I4ZENSHIP. tney went In tne wmmz uirecuuu. The next question discussed was : If ("ansda is not stable, as every state in the United States or every well ordered coun- try is, what is the reason Y" He held that the colonial condition is one of necessarily imperfect development. Canada has been growing and only now has reached that state when its people begin to think of full citizenship. Only fifty years ago responsible government was granted, and only twent - one years since, confederation occurr . Canada has been doing so much that no time was allowed for considering the ques~ tion of external relations. The time had now come. He showed the material develop- ment wrought since confederation. showin the questions that had been grasped an settled-tl|e geuuru hical problem. the in- dian and half-lmed) questions, represents` tiou by majorities-and if there were other questions to be considered they could be similiarly met end arranged. Canada had done much in the way of grand etforts, win- ning the admiration of the world. and all al-mg Britain illii aided her, and that too without expense or drawback. He held that hitherto it would have been premature to consider the subject of external relations. and it was on this point he differed from Hon. Edward Blake. That gentleman in I874 pleaded for the unity of the liritish empire, but in was he had written that the subject he presented had been so coldly received that what was difficult then was impracticable now. This View the Principal conibatted. lie held that the ditiicultiee were fewer now then in IST4 ; the whole trend of events had lessened the difiicul~ ties. It had ditliculties now, but he claimed the help of Mr. l'-lake and others who had spoken from principle, to help make it practicable. He was not afraid of imprac` ticable things. for on former notable occa- sio1s_had these been knocked in the head. l`he scientists and hysicists of the British association declaret that to cross the ocean by steam was impracticable. The work was successfully accomplished ! It was held to be impracticable to connect the maritime provinces with old Canada by rail, but the ntercolouial railway through Canadian ter- ritory had solved the problem ! It was held that no railway could ierce through the rugged country north 0 Lake Superior or be built over the terrible Rocky mountains, yet the C i .R. was the best evidence that the impractical was surmounted. In De- cember of last year he had rolled over both sections in a l'ullman ooach without the least ditliculty. He was not afraid of the impracticable now. Political` manhood was the aim and if the people willed it the scheme could be developed. Complete equality by union with Great Britain could be secured. ' I|lI'L... I- aL_ __._- I.._ Ann -aaI=aI__` -H DO ICCUTCU. \\'h|t is the cure for our politicsl sil~ mom 2" Full citimnship. Ho good-humorod- ly sctsckod the opinions of some who sought after secession or nstionsl snioido Thsso feoilngs led to revolt snd Jisirust. Tho neediul wss psrtnorship with the old lsnd, 5 share In its rupousibilitios. risks snd dun- gers. Secession or inde mission would lend to self-destruction. Con d Csnsds [in with- in hsrsslif Can Csnsds doisnd hsrsoli ? The snswers Ihuwod that secession wss ut- terly. totally, sud forever imprsotiosblo. The only possible cure for the unrest. in Cs- nsds wss the stuinmsnt oi lull citizenship Thorelorms of the put sixty yosrs wers 1nIutud`tn2|1nI 7 Iu Cure-rho tum: ---- vv --- v--- Idl to be -an Iuuou-ImP|`lnl Fedor- ntlon tho Only Wan to Square It. Luz (waning 5 guodlf Iudienco injhr citf hall hoard Rev, Dr. Grant lecture on Soceuion or Citizenship ! Which 3" Ex- Mnyor John llclutyre occupied the chnir, pm! on the platform with him were: G. M. Mncdonnelh Hugh Rankin, Duvid'Nicol, Hr. Struthy, R.-J. Miltun, Col. Cotton. Major Nash, W. Sawyer. D. M. McIntyre. Prof. Fowior, Prof. Muruhall, Dr. Bniu. `mi. Day und acverll UNI"!- 4_ _ Princilpgl Gpgut gpuke `OI IHTIOI` .3, hon, ` i. pernratlon, tracing the history and fuundem of the British pmpiru. min I tine ebrt. eluquent in lnnguuge and .:..n........l -;n. 4'...-.-.. and Dower; In (men- was assured. \ Canada is today in an anti hellum state. It discusses secession under the mum of in- dependence, and that means that '8 no longer wants British citizenship. 5` me of its people go further und suggest national suicido. When people so talked something was wrong. "How I proved that point." he asked, and applause gave the answer. But, he gave more pu,~lli\'U proofs. This un- stablent-as was due in the fact that Ususds was a dopentlen.-_y. The time had come when something eisd was required. The question will have to be settled and the political leaders must consider it. The young men will make Canada a nation They came from too goml a stock to have the brand of political inferiority stamped on their brow. It the political leaders did not act the youth of the ccuntry would even if they went in the wnr-nu direction. Tim mut um-mim: discussed tine eort, eloquent Ill inuguugu uuu delivered with force power. open- ing he will it wag n pleasure to discuss A: question before it entered the nrenn of Enrty politics. He would rather nddreu Ali is dozen men uuhnly anddiapnuionntely, thnn ten thousand men when their blood was hauled. Now they were open torenson. and men who entered on I question and took a Itand on principle could herenfter be depended upon After the question became in political one time for speaking in: put. He discussed three quentiona. . _Ia Canada, as a part of the British em- pire, inn condition nl Itnble politinl equi- librium ornot?". Coulll it be depended u n? He thought not. It win not sure 0 its foundations. It was doubtful an to its future. No couutrydiucusseul its future as .".....a. had In. newnmmern were full of future. No couiitryamcussm ms uuuru an Lnnnde had. In: newspapers opinions as` to its nt-edl. The United States had reached in stable condition. Secession was never discuecml now, but. it `had been argued for e centurv. Before the war the country was unstable. After the! event the discussion terminated. The cost of the Iettlement of the question was enormous in blood and treasure but the eettlemenl was worth' the rust. Now its prosperity assured. n_._...I.. :_ .. .1... ;.. -.. nu: I...ll..m nah: M... L..u..g Quentlonn Presented- C|llIdI'l Unnul-||"i""" C`' `mi 1 cnr_`-h. `quux DIII Wllt Cil- _,_ -- L- .. -..onn_ImnnrlnI Fido!`- APRIL"1f. prove. on. The priiciple to 'be`wo`rked ujpon Inn`: The, union mun. be preserved. Some nnn uluut \Vhnt in involved in fun lump! ol urponuno, I'Ill(llIll cmuwu nu-u~ nrnhlc rookn. dark green pyroxonitu. quac- tutu, nnl-colored quuru, sndloldn rock and gnoiu nhonndln in push. T re are Also other vuktlu. t that no the most was " me, union must be pressrveo. = Some one ulted, Whnt is involved citizenship beyond, what we now enjoy ? The speaker then sketched the politicsl -and commercial edv3nt that `would ensue. It made 31] equal and 3 lrespousible. It could be broughtsbout by giving home rule toeach seper3te country in the union with e- sue . preme council, 3 sennte. with representntion by popul3tlon.~*`h3ving control of the peace, w3r 3nd treaties of the notion. Then ell would have 3 common share in the responsi- bilities of the empire. Uommeroislly he suggested diserimimtions in tenor of sll those in the union and if this were given he held th3t the farmers. the consumers 3nd` the In-nzlfaoturer-of Caged: !v,o_u,1d,1>eJwue- tted; then only would the United States he Wllllng to Irive free man for 300.00().()01| would s eh as` one` ton nation of 6L),000,()()().. It wss s smeful for men to talk of giving s foreign country sdvantnges to be denied to their own kinsfolk. ` He opposed cou'tinen tslism. he praised combination with one ! own brothers. It would take time to de- velop the federation of the empire but with that end in view he sdvised the eultivstion of friendshi and trade with Australia, New Zeslsnd, t e West Indies snd England. The great object of 3H C3n3din.ns should be the preservation sud strengthening of the hands of unity now:existing lnetvt-een`G rest Britain end her colonies. Then followed the eulogy upon the gre3t heritsge, the birthright of every ()3n3di3n. of L500 men. M rs. Smart, wife of Sheriff Smut. Brock- ville, driving along Mniu ntreet, was upset from her cnrringe. She received serious in- juries, hpr collar bone being diaplnced. two rib: fractured and her (see considerably scratched. Bo Loot Ills sermon. Lut evening A clergyman. well known to Kingatonianeweme from liath to do duty for a brother pastor here. He depoeited hie sermon in an overcoat pocket, wnlked two blocks to the church, end when service be- gan wee minus the manuscript. It had mys- teriously disappeared E Fortunately he had brought Another sermon in his pocket, but it was not nearly on good an one, and the congregation don't know what they loat, and that loes will be perpetuated if the nder does not return that sermon. We may remark that it in of value chiey to the owner. as it can be recognized on an old in- vourite wherever it ie preached : and it won't do for any Methodist or Presbyterian church that we know of. save perhaps St. Andrew's, for it in quite ritualistic in tone. It won't (it say Baptist church that we ever heard of either. The lteuurd sun Maude. At A meeting of the executive committee of the petitioner! for the repeal of the (Jen- ede tempennce net in the county of Fron- tenac. held at the Suuley house. on '1 Mrs- duy, the llth inet., it wu reeolved to leave open for one month longer the oer of M00 reward for the npprebeneion end conviction 0! the pereon or pereone who Attempted to wreck the reeidence of the Rev. R. Stilwell At Sydenhem. on the night of Mnruh 29th, Inn, by exploding dynamite At or neer the eune. How in it then neither the county nor province oered any reward? The. Anti-Sootte evidently mun bueiueee, end feir ploy to opponente me well M frlende. Mn. lcogerl; recoruu: Iooroury, -rs. Du: commmoo. M unol Boll. Blnh. Chown, Lady Curtvrighs. Hondry. Kant. Maoneo, Muohnr. Mwllo. Iloliolve . llo~ Bonk. Muchluton. Robortuon, 8 Inner. Simpson. 8 non. Patch. Von Slrnubennio, Waldrou, \'|lkor; Min-on Pouuor. Robert- non. Spungonborg, Mucklonou. - WOOIII. uIIuunu,.J. auunn, Jucnnnuns W. E. Donaldson, 86. Lawrence, N.Y.. And W. J. Council. Sunbury. Mt VII 0. T. R. for Tomato on route for Tacoma. Wubln - , ton 'lorrltory.' A large number of {mu I gnthond at the mongol` nation to bid them lmvoll and `I spud. ur. I1. nulucruu wul IUUIUU ug um `nu- vince of Quebec. ` Cu rley Cnnnem, of Wilbur, has purchased I hotel at Kingston Mills. Raw \V, I); Mamer. Framkville. ha: re noun u. xungnxon Mlllll. Rev. W. D. Mercer, Frankville, covered his wanted health. u....... I:-:-m. ...:n ......:.m rmm A" hat. ter to go to England In nay. I . Corby, |l.l ., and wife, Belleville, will Ipend nevernl months on the continent. Mrn, Saunders. of Kingston. Ivua regis- Ipeua neveru mourns uu um uuuuucuu. Mn. Saunders, Kingston, regis- tered at the Rouin House. Toronto, yester- an: lo nuogun II we aullrnu nyuem. TM phonplnto ol llmo occur: only ln the tilted Lnrontlun touh, although there are exooptloul luhnuu In which the very lowcruoot nldnonu ol the Bat lying Silu- 9! "P9 ml-mt In uuo oust. Sowcvor. ' IE3 p6ii>lfnI'o' his" clearly boon dorlnd from the dlninugntlon of tho Inferior o l Iulllno Itnu, But , the rock: In which `zoqalnu of lime oocun no but: very Incl of tho (rut. Lnu- rcnun 3 III, and (bolt II-no nntiguplni. col poul lzu oul recently been deter- mimut Thaw lawn I: found tore.-nruent gnve mm I nnver service. Mina Cuhmun, the mining expert of Ari- mnn. in I tall, dark eyed girl uomewhnt nngulnr in nppeannco. but with immense energy. She is the only wnmnn in I camp of l,.")00 LI-m Qnnnu-O 1": n` Qhnv-if? Qmnrt. I`l`0(.`.k- lhotlon or ulcers. The qualied members of IJIO orphuu homo hold their tlllllll mating in the build- ing on Monday. A ril l5'h. The lollowlng were olootod: rccu~ouoI--Mn. Frau, Mn. Britton. Min Gilda:-uloovo; tuuurer Iln. Wnddoll ; cornoponding Iecrohry. Mn. Rogers; recordin secretary, Mn. nuns nnlnlnhlnl. M AIIIII IIII I-urviuuri I- vulupo A public mating in the lam-out of the Indo ndont Or her ul l-`nrenarl Ivu hold II Inland Int evening The nttondnuco _-- l-....- --4I nu..- hug:-n-Dina nnhlnnnnnn {Mild III! ovenmu llll IIllll|lIll'.`I was large, and V0! interacting nddrcuu were given by}! Mick. A. Sine, And H. Burden. Capt. W. Horn noted in chnlr- mnn and fullled llll duties in nu nblo way. The indications bra that the Walla Inlmd court when established, will be I prosper-` out one. H. Bnvdon will orpnln It in 5 few days. H. I II' I'|' l\IllIlIIIl Wl'I loovo Sum`: wlurf on Soto!-do morning at n o'clock for Montrool. col 3 oh [nur- modloto pork. Bate! uooouunodntlon for (VUVI. the ciy covered ms wonteu m.-sun. Sergt. Fields will resign from A" batv ter to to England in May. 1 , Cnrhv. ll.l .. and wife. Belleville. COUTBO. . Rev. A. Macgillivray, ockville. `Nil deliver the bu-cuhsureate a on at Q2:-'<`n 8 university. on Sunday. R6-lmn ()'\hhnnv nnwina at 1.03 Avg" will soon return to Joromo. Mrs. (Bordon Maclmy, Boefon, the wife of the inventor of u. sewing in.-whine, hn $300,000 worth of precious sznuca. J. D. Clark, Bhsucile uiilur of the Hum- ilmn Tinmv, will assume the pueiliun of editor of the London Avlrr mm r. A. Holder. Plevna; M. Uochrnne. Wishsw, Smtland, and 1). Armstrong, New York, have entered tho Dominion business college. \\' |l:..-I....H .-. Arrxnlninn nf than lnonmn. injuries. J. H. Mucloan, of the Toronto World, msrried Min Dorm Ring, oi Ottawn. Int evening. His usocintu in the prom gnllory him silver service. Min (luhmnn. the minim: expert CII poumon llll om P000051] DOIII unwr- minod. They Ian I: found to represent very none! ponlodol thin moi at urlu (`vi nah, W undo:-lulu by one Immense menu. cl pun mu mmmuaoa oryl t In Iluotooohvhhh ooplnuollim o:d|o?douIotooo`ur.or 5321:. more traces? Home II It only when this now: and upper Yesterday dn lcu;n. A. l"nnk-lln, S. Woods, ` J.Hunnn,T,Bu:rhnld; F It`. ll-ngltlunn t 'A-IClIICQ N V , and rooplo Whole Movamouu. Saying: uud Dolnu Attract Attantunn. T. SIM] left to-duy for British Columbin. E. Melvin leaves for Oswego to-mor- I'r\\II ` Ill . \ unner Iiurnham ha: arrivei at the bar- racks from Port Hope to take I Ihort 1-nnrna umverauy. nu aununy. ' Bishop 0'.\hhuny, staying at 1.03 Avg lea since October is restored to health ..u.1 will return to Toronto. ' n... n.....I.... I\I-..l..... l!...o.-.n L. ufn` llI\'e ODICTCH In. IIOTHIHIOIJ DUEIHEUI CUIICKII. \\'. Minahull, an employee of the locomo- tivo works, while working overtime hut night. fell from I ladder, sustaining severe injuries. .l, H, Mnnlmm. of the Toronto World. Ian ht Wuhlnnon Territory. 1 rdad u 4.1- kllms. u...5i' nn.=u.n.1a: Ilru look For loaned. The elegant new theme: Kethleen will one at |_- -I.I..I. 1.. |l-_n...l ..l .. .5 ha.- PERSONAL MENTION. : Holdcroft will loans in the pro- n..-L..,. ` `u Ionotori II Camp. In H c .1, I_.,__-_.. The Lnnoutorlnn Fund Should In Do - Vutl to` Public school P|ll'DOIOI- More school I-Iulldlnn than be Provided-L The uueollon Facing the Eltuon at tho Prouonl Tlma. ` To slm tI"nnt'ou of the Lnucuteriapchool fuml, Gentlemen : You-"will, I trust, pnplon me for culling your,nt.tcntlon. and that of the public. to the claim: of the school bond npog the fund held by you for educational urpoloo. If it. can be nhown thnt. the pub- ic school: are doing the work for which the Iocioty was-tm;m_ed, that they_ are likbly" to continue toado it.'E3`'1'll'6'ra1 is no probable nooenity of reueatabliahing A school a ecially for boys, and that the public when board now ueed funds, these claim: must seem roahouuhle to the lent. Th. first M then nasunxmions Mnvety, H \x\'inchestez,: if" in INGIDENTSOF THE DAY. \ . I The Bploo ol Every Day l.II6-_-Wbpt the " !fubl`lo,u-0 Tilting Abognt--!(othln lo- ` capo: the Attontlorot Who no Tslcgnx Rota. _ v `* _ Beeoh|m I Ptlcure biiioun sud nervous ill . `- _ .` M 3.. nova: from 82 upwu-do at thogu workl. . I TL- ....l mm}; min in nut I mun of words. works. j . - The real auto mm in not I man of words, he in I man of doedu. N, , , I`.-. -gnninn Qnrnntnn N0. ` [MIA] DO I PARAGRAPHS PICKED up av dun ausv naponransy nre swelling on the etreou. . , ~ (:1. Metoalfe will stnrt his running hone Lime:ick in the Picton rum on thy 24th. um. .....-..~|....ri..n.u for 75s.: wool heuri- Limerick" in the rlcwn rem on -|_v um. Silk weruhenriettu for 750.; wool heuri- once for 504;. in every ehedd ct `R. Me- Feul'I. For good It uare dealiu in the tailoring line try Lamife street. '.lhe lnpdiee should call at the (he com- pany : ulco and we the gu cooking stove: in operation. rt & We uh. H0 Princess ` 'l'he'Sn en Ielend cricket club, of Steten ' Inland, N. '.. will pity the Kingetou crick- et club here on August 8th. . Henson ; m 'o corn ulve cures come and bunionn with hree applications. 150. per box st Wsde'e drug store. i R riiwnn hnlfmniled white ouilte Will couree ol Ayere Nereepenue. A compleint hee been received the: let.- tere posted in Kingeton en hour before the mnill cloeee ere not delivered in Tomato till 3 day after the time they ere due. This delay, it ie etetod, in not occeeionel. but hebituel. After e veried experience with meny en-celled cethenic remediee. I em convinced the: Ayer'e Pille give the meet eeliefecmrv reeulte. I rely excleeively on theee Pill: for the cure of liver end etomech oom- pleinte."-Jehe 3. Bell. er. Abilene, Texas. JOSEPH FRANKLIN, Vim !*9%91.?!9*~`P'*=*=*= SW no uuuom Choioolfu I upoohlty. next the alter, Out unw. ` Again the Kiulergartcu ~ and must mun be made general and entarely free in order that those who most need the training get it. while Hm pin: in somewhat hezwilv taxed worth 200. ll ts. Iucrsuu: J. B. Reid, nchitact, has removed his uice from the Anchor buildings to `Ford : block, over Niabefs bookstore. ` Ir-.. J-.. null null .1-J9 mania nnft Innd Niabatfs bookstore. For dry oak md loft maple. soft wood and hard wood` nt lowest prices, go to Unwfordi. foot of Queen uroet. n..-..|. .6 RM. hum nu. hum nlnha. hnrd pricu. K. Mcruul. The _ahermon of Bay Quinta placed the uluo of fish uken from the buy during the put yell` st $60,000 :- $100,000 is thought to be the mark. Fur nnnuhn and colds {Aka the 1 A citizen suggested last evening thnt I roury scraper to be used on Princess street every night should he purchued hy uh: council. fhnl. thoroughfare could then In- ket clear of rubbinh. I... u... ...o :. Min Hm nnnn " Inn in urn kc`?! clear or ruboun. . he Scott Act in in the soup." but we are right 0.. deck, rendy to ulna orders for Quits and punt: from elegant new goods at human: rices, made up in the latest style. Lsmben. Walsh, 110 Princes: ntroet. = A 1-....- 4.... n` nunn urn nu. um-k lmtwm-n It Wslun, nu rnuceu ntroer. ` A large {urea of men are at work between Marlhnnk And Erinnville, on the N.T. & Q. R R. The nilvny brid at Stocu is now well under vny. no pier huving been completed, they Are about to stun another. l-..I:_-' I..-ll -.5.-.I- --nl nnnrtnl wins Bnnt.hI'. Lidia` hnlf, whole Ind quarter wigs, bangs, switches, hair chain! ringn, mule to order. bran and mantle making. Cuanif corset, but ever made, over Walsh at St.oacy'u. I05 Prineeu nnot. liingnlou. w Rdhinnnn iill nresent Robinocn St.o&cy'I. IU.) rnnceu linen. Iungnwu. W. Robinson iill present Lodge" True Blues, Portsmouth, with 1 banner valued M. 875. Fourteen new mem~ lwrs were initiuted Int Thunda . A fe uud drum band will be orgsni in con nection with the lodge. \`...-4-Jul. in h-nnnnnitfnd from mmnt M5 necuon with me l0(lgB. S:-rofnlu in tnnsmittpd from parent child, and thus become: 3 family inheri tance for generations. It it. therefore. the duty of every Icrnfuloun person to clennac his blood by I thorough and persistent of Ayern Surupnrllls. A unnnnlnint. hnl been l Qc8iV&l I IIVUVVC WWIVIIVIWVIVII w:-----.. u "If l~loI?uuunIotCIqvu-. Timothy. Hold Choioo hmu. Strata mum nou- A nnnnlnlti, TIN] IN I portion 01 Inc on: Iaurunusn uynun ol rocks. or shut crynullino and highly slaved Iorlu which conutuutol our gnu 0 of Louunddo mountain, and which n otlloc tho hotllontnlly dilposod uudntoou and limestone: of what In known nologhtn the Sllnrim Iyncm. -Th. aim-nlnn at llmn oounrl onlv