Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Standard, 26 Sep 1867, p. 2

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JCTIONS OVER AND + | iness Reviving. CHEAP, GOODS AND GQOD PRICES ra Gon PRODUCE. Subscriber respectfully requests the attention of the Public to his splendid stock of Fall and Winter Goods just for- : ward, and offered AT VERY LOW PRICES ! F Cotton at 4id Je, Yard. Yard- wide Prints at 6d per Yard. A splendid lot of Dress Goods, newest patterns, very p. Double-fold Winey at 74d per yard. Best Cotton Yarn at 8s. 9d., per Bundie.-- Grain Bags at from 1s., each. . Particular attention is respectfully requested to thed splendid lot of READY-MADE + CLOTHING !! which will be found to excel in quality; style of Sut, and low prices. Suits made up to order in latest styles, and on reasonable terms Mr. Squires, A large lot of Ladies', Gents', Misses and Boys Boots and Shoes very cheap. A fine lot of Teas at from 2s. 3d, per 1b. Excellent Machine Oil at $1 per Gallon. N. B.--@oode given in exchange for Butter and Eggs at Cash Prices. Present price of these articles 14 cents per Ib. and 10 cents per doe. Cush paid for Wheat, Barley, Peas and Oats in any quantity. ADAM GORDON. Manchester, Sept. 18, 1867. Thompson and P: take on the floor of Parliament. The Leader first classified thew "members of the opposition whereupon the Prototype " had great doubts with ve- gard to the position that Mr. John Thompson would take in the House Commons," and when it * saw 'the flourish of trumpets announcing his victory over Mr. Cameron as another triumph for the opposition," it ** had such was not the faet® A correspondent writes the Leader, however, atay . " gets the matter at rest, by," it js [8'V'"E great bargaius, alleged, * quoting Mr. Thompson's declaration on the hustings." The Organs and our Mem- bers. The organs appear to be somewhat nd which Messrs. ton are likely to " He would reiterate what he had often said during Lis canvass, that, if elected, he should give the present government a genegous support, un til, at least, he became satisfied that their acts and measiires were contra vy tothe welfare of the Dominion; and he held, thatit was not only anti-British, but unmanly, to seck to turn them out of office under existing circumstances, merely because some of its members are obnoxious to cer- We deny most emphatically that Mr. Thompson ever made use of any Juvenile CricKeting. Cricketers of Uxbridge an fellows, acquaintance with the game. of mutual friends. In reference for the language made use of wards him. Perry played a friendly game, in this village, on Saturday last, in "which casionally a necessity in Uxbridge again came off victorious, in ona'innings, and some to spare. It is but right to state, however, that | that Abyssinian i for which whilst the Uxbridge lads have had i 4 considerable practice, those of Port {the public, * preparations a Perry have had scarcely.any at all. Those from Uxbridge are clever little New Goods at Bigelow's,--Who is open- ing out a very large stock of Gener Merchandise, and to further extend his large and increasing trade---is campaign. this suit we beg to state, that the article on which in was founded, and | tions of 'wells' and * villages! A wherein it appeared to reflect upon the character of Mr. Bigelow, we lave subsequently learned, that the construction put upon it by the public was not true; but it was written under great provocation, as we 'supposed, and we now express our sincere regret UNDERSTOOD to be applied by us to- On the other hand we mes, *# A Leap in the Dark" may it is hard that we should find war. Yet we really don what better description to us our military intelligence fairly begun." = We are throw a little army upon a the cast coast of Africa, ther and display considerable | march by unknown roads into an un- known country, against a barbarous, and, possibly, an inaccessible sover- eignty. Taken altogether, Abyssin- al |i is, perhaps, the most out-of-the- way region of the carth for a regular Not that it is very far off, or, as far us its shores are con- cerned, unapproachable, but there is par We clip the following para- hardly a spot on the habitable globe Here | graph from last week's Observer: -- * BigeLow vs. Balkp & Parsons.-- This suit brought against us has been brought to a close, having been arranged through the intervention of which we know less than we do of its interior. Of course there arc maps of the country, but they serve only to render the darkness visible. Tracks of enterprising travellers, ancient and modern, are refully to] aid down and marked at with somewhat indefinate ecificas * great forest abounding ine and a * country producing frankin cense and myreh, are notable fea- tures in the chart, as are also a point where a certain river is lost in the sand; and another designated as the probable source of the Blue Nile. Be- 8 | yond those districte--that is to say, on the south-western frontier of King Theodore's dominions--we pass phants' | Addington E Lapum. | Algoma W Simpson. "Bothwell David Mills. Brant {Nota Brant (South Bruce (North) Sproatt, Bruce (South) Carleton--J. Holmes. Dundas--J. 8, Ross. Durham (West Elgin (East) Essex J. 0'Connor, Haldimand D Thompson Halton J. White, Hamilton--C, Magill, Bowell, Francis Jones. Members Elected. THE FIRST HOUSE OF COMMONS.,--THE : PROVINCE OF ONTARIO, J. Y. Bown, E.B. Wood. Francis Hurdon, Brodwille--James Crawford. - Cardwell 'I'R Ferguson. Cornwall--J. 8. Macdonald. Durham (East)--F. H. Barton, Edward Blake, . W* Dobbie. Elgin (West) J, H, Munro, Frontenac--T, Kirkpatrick. Glengary--D. A. Macdonald, Grenvelle (South) Walter Shanly. Grey (North) = George Snider. Grey (Sonth) George Jackson. Hastings (North) McKenzie Hastings (East) Robert Read. Hastings (Wesi)---James Brown. Kingston--Sir, J. A. Macdonald. Kent Rufus Stephenson. Leeds (North) and Grenville-- Leeds (South) John Crawford. Lanark(North)--W. Macdougall Lanark (South)--Alex. Morris. Lennoz--R. J. Cartwright, Huron (South) M. C. C meron. Huron (North) Jos." Whitehead. + Glengary Crai, . 13 "Grenville (South) M Clark, Hasting North) GH Boult Ings oulter. Haldimand T P Pardee. Halton W x 1 . Hamilton, J M Williams. Hastings (Bast) Corby. Huron (South) R Gibbons. Huron (North) W Torrance Hays. Hastings (West)--Ketchan = Gro- am. 3 Kingston--M., W. 'Strange. ' Kent John Smith. Lanark (South) W M Shaw. Leeds (North) and Grenville H D Smith. Leeds (South) B Tett. Lanark--(North)--D. Gilbraith. Lennoz--J. Stevenson. Lincoln--J. C, Ryert, London--J. Carling. Middlesex (East) J Evans, Middlesez (North) J 8 Smith. Middlesex (West) Currie, DMonck. Geo. Secord, Norfolk (North) James Wilson. Norfolk (South) 8 McCall. Niugara--D. Robertson. Northumberland(East)--John Eyre. Northumberland (West)--Alex. Fraser. ' Ontario (South)---Dr, MGill. Ottawa--R W. Scott. Ozford (North)--George Perry. Ozford (South) A Oliver: Ontario (North) 'Thos. Paxton, Peel John Coyne, Prince Edwrrd A Greely. Perth (North) A Montieth, Peterborough (East) G Reid. The Fenian Raid on C: "The correspondence between 1 Stanley and the United States Gov- ernment develops the fact that the Tmperial authorities intend, i the question of the Alabama claims comes before the 'mixed commission,' that the damage caused by theFenian | raid upon Canada shall also be taken | into account, as well as the claims of British merchants for damage done to them during the late civil war, A despatch from Lord Stanley to Mr. Seward says :-- i : "Mr. Seward draws a contrast between the conduct of the British Government during the recent Ame- rican civil war ard that of the United States Government in dealing with the Fenian projects of aggression against Canada. It cannot be admit- ted that this conirast is justified 'by the facts of either case. The British Government was ready, anxi- ous and determined throughout the whole course of the civil war to exert all the power conferred on the Queen by the Inw of the land to pre- vent British subjects from taking part in the contest. But the law could 'not be put in force against offenders unless on the production of evidence first that the law was vio: lated; and, secondly, that its violation was the act of the persous charged with that offence. The secrecy ob- sérved by. these persons in, their un- lawful proceedings baffled all the efforts of Her Majesty's Government, no less than those of the, diplomatic and consular agents of the United troo| and charged upon tl sons are reported w \ man killed. The conduct: troops is condemned, Dublin, Sept. 24.--A report reached here from the South lind that a suspicious-lookin : supposed to be a Fenian vessel, has been seen cruising off the coast Kerry. ' A ELA #0 . Paris, Sept. 24.-- Troops have left France for Rome, = ~~ ee------ 2 'United States News. Boston, Sept. 19.--Siv Freder Bruce, British Minister to the United States, died suddenly this morning' at the Tremont House, of throat discase. wd Boston, Sept. 19.--Mr. How ard the British Legation, left Washin for Boston to-day, to take charge of Sir Frederick Bruce's remait ich are being embalmed. The the public buildings and the shij in the port are at half mast. Sir F. Bruce arrived in this city last night at nine.o'clock from Narragansett," R. I., where le bad been stopping a Gov. Gilpin, of Colorado. few days. He was accompanied by = He wos such language as that attributed to|haye always found Mr. Bigelow him in the above paragraph. * What | straight forward and honorable in Messrs, Thompson and Paxton both [his business transactions." said amounted to this--they were " not disposed to offer any factious opposition to the present Ministry," but ¢ would. judge them by the ~~~ | measures they introduce." Peterborough (West)=-J. Carnegie. States in this counutry to detect |quite ill from the threat disease and Prescott--J. Boyd. t hem, much prostrated. Dr. J. H, Bigelow Renfrew (North) J Supple. " "tlie action of the Fenians, onthe [and Dr. Hodges were 'at once sent , * Russell William Craig. contrary was open and avowed. It |for, and also Senator Bumner, who i Renfrew (South). J McDougall, |showed itself in public meetings | remained with him until two o'clock," Simcoe (North) W Lount, and in the public press, in the en- | when he died, Mayor Norcoss, on Stormont Colgquohon. rolment of troops, the collection of | learning the sad occurrence, issued Simcos (South)--T. R. Ferguson, | arms, the solicitation of money, and | an order, directing that the flags of Toronto Ea TM. 0, Cameron, | finally in the establishment in the the city be displayed at half-mast, ~~ Toronto (West)--J. Wallis. territory of the United States of a|aud that the bells of the several Victoria (South) T Matchett. so-called provincial government, with | churches be tolled during the removal Victoria = (North) A P Cockburn. | its legislative assembly aud adminis- | of the body from the city. oe Waterloo (North) Moses Springer. | trative officers. Throughout these | Cincinnati, Sept. 21.---A terrible Waterloo [South] I Clemens. transactions there has been no at-|destructive drought prevails in Indi- | Wellidgton (Centre) A Ferrier. |tempt to disguise, but rather an ar-| ana, Ohio, and Kentucky--there will . Wellington {od R McKim, [rogant display of publicity. The |not be more thun half the asual corn' Wellthgton (South) ~ Peter Gow, | Government of the United States|crop. The grass is killed entirely, Wentworth (North) R Christie, | needed, therefore, no research on the |and many forest trees are dying. Welland--W , Beaty. part of their officials, nor even a de- | The weather last week was the hot- Wentworth (South) --W. Sexton, |nunciation by British authorities to | test of the season. Plants York (East) H P Crosby. establish these Fenian aigtators al Now York, Sept. 91.--The Heralds York (West)--T, Grahame. palpable case of infringement of the San Francisco telegram says: There York [North] J McMurrich, laws of the United States, coupled |is jows from Nagasaki very iin with a dcliberate design to undertake idiy oi a f murderous character. ko. Prospects of Ireland. from the territory of the United |}.,.s have killed one American, (40 States, whose government was in : Bogli 3 i At the banquet of the Agricultural | amity 'with that of Her Majesty, a ug ame nd hie Ching! Society, the Lord-Licutenant was | military operation directed against soning Jupaneso Christians i recciyed wis the warmest Qempa~ either Canada or Ireland. numbers. If the Japanese ro. strations of respect. - In responding ------------------ hi this conrss trouble thay ; 4 . doLi . = 3 y y be ex iki {i This Excel Huropean Hews, ed with the Franch, as the Christie ii oy statistical returns to The Paris Liberte of Sept. 10, says | assailed are under the French pi sh 2y aa {he bropadts of the coon. the Sultan has granted the English | tection. The harbor was full of steams rin on that its wealth | Government permission to enlist | ers and vessels wailing for Japanese: i ye in ings By time. is de= volunteers in Arabia for the Abys-|purchasers. The Japanese have a a ho distress had been oe: ghiyja expedition. | money, aud trade is dead, casioned by the exceptionally severe It is stated that an attempt ins | Molummedan rebels in Yonwag winter, and in February last the num. | been made to assassinate tat Empe- | every thing before them... A mo Welland--T. C. Strcet. ber receiving Poor Law relief was |ToF of Russia, by tw men disguised lghty attacked, the British, Cone Wentworth (South)d. Rymal. - | 18,000 ; the average for the preced- | 49 females. th 74 pu isk und bruised. him , Wellington (North) Geo. Drew. fing four years having been 72,000.) ~The transformation of old arms into . wef wir: was in-port at th Wellington (Centre) * T.8S Parker. | Tlie number is now reddced t0.63,000, | needle-guus has. commenced in Ttaly. ig Ax Wellington (South) te "Phe stock in the Bank of Trelind atl The Prince and . Princess Royal of' y orth (Nort 3 s £18,000, Pivkcla will visit England on the last | be A 1 of October, 7» SI 28 than the rqturn of yea * Tlie Russian Grand Duke Michael {In the Post-office; Savings bank de | is expected at Consiantinople from | = ; : posits, there had been an increase | the Crimea on a' visit to the Sultan. New York, Sept. ==Th in the last. half year of £40,000, a| The London Times of. the 10th, {243 City of Mexico corresy larger amount than the whole year's king of thel ial { * [says the Palace was lo begtii turn for 1866. This showed the sre Bug of the late ria B.0f the 15-1 ted on the 16th, and th return, 10 - inch America uns ar lish * s increase of wealth, and indisposition vifled amok sal hy ii Aart ly celebrated. on through au' country inhabited by Pagan negroes,' to the Mountains of the Moon, a spur of which mysteri- ous range seems actually to coter the Abyssinian kingdom. Lincoln--J. R. Benson, London--J. Carling. Middlesex (East) Crowell Wilson! Middlesex (North) Thomas Scatcherd. Middlesex (West) AP McDonald. Monck L McCallum. Norfolk (South) P Lawson. Niagara--Angus Morrison. Norfolk (North)--A. Walsh. Northumberland (East)--Joscph Keeler, Northumberland (West)--James Cockburn. Ontario (North) 3 H Thompson. Ontario (South)--T. N. Gibbs. Ottawa --J. M. Currier. Ozford (North)--T, Oliver. Ozford (South) --E. V. Bodwell, Perth (North) J Redford. Perth (South) R Macfarlane. Peel J H Cameron. Prince Edward' Walter Rosa. Pelerboro' (East) P M Grover. Peterboro {Wati)-eChae. Perry, Prescott--). Hagar. Renfrew (North) John Rankin. Russell James A Grant, Renfrew (South) D McLachlin. Stormont Samuel Ault, Stmeoe (South) W C Little. S¢meoe (North)--T. D. McConkey. Toronto (East)--J. Beaty. Toronto (West)--R. A, Harrison. Victoria (South) G Kempt. Victoria (North) John Morison. Waterloo (South) J Young. Waterloo (North)--J. KE. Bowman, Rk ; 4 RYE ETI srl! eid @he Put Perry Standord rt pa The Bowmanville Statesman, JUSTE ONTARI) Move : referrirg to M. C. Camerou's defeat, | phe preparations' now anounced says : from Woolwich are excellently " M. C. Cameron has been taught | adapted for the occasion, We ere ar oR When | a lesson in North Ontario, not soon | muking ready for a battle,vot against The Result of the Contests. | we consider that this, language was |to be forgotten : blatant disunion, in | man, but against nature. The object The election contests are now over, | not sufficient to appease the wrath of the mouth of a Tory, has received an | is not fo seid out merely artillery bat i 2 unmistakable rebuke, and North On- | portable artillery guns which can be and the organs claim that thete ate) thogs who opposed them, and that tario has suved itself from the dis- | carried on mules' backs, or possibly elected to the House of Commons, |%heir alleged opposition wus made > . grace of sending to the House of fon men's shoulders, over hills and from all the Provinces, one hundred |¢ the test question" at the polls, we |Commons a disunionest of the deepest through passcs where no carriage «and thirty-one who are supporters of | are surprised that the organs should dye - The laugh is now on the other | could move. The contrast between the Government, four independents, | have any desire to claim them side ; and itis pitiable to sce the|the implements and the service in | y d to th Pine : [lengthened visages of the noisy dema- | this case is most extrarodinary. We and forty-five who are opposed to the Playing the sycophant," however, gogues who a week ago exnlted at |are actually building miniature can- Government. To the first House of As-| will have no effect upon the|the defeat in South Ontario." non and miniature carriages of pol- sembly, in the Province of Ontario, | course which the rey tatives ished steel for work in an African they claim there have been elected of North Ontario have determined to Torre 5p 0 ny ence, desert These weapons, hardly big- fifty four who will support the com- | pursue, for if the Governments, of the ger than children's toys, and weigh: bination," five who are independent, ' : ; 'Ya "We wish it to be distincily understood | ing no more than the luggage allow- Houses to which they respectively | hat we do not hold ourselves responsible for | ed to a first class passenger ona and twenty-three in opposition.-- belong, bring in good mensures | he views expressed by cortespondents. railway, will, nevertheless, throw a Whether these figures are correct, or | they will be supported ; if not,| Zo the Editor of the Standard, projectile of seven pounds, being not, matters very little at present. opposition from this quarter may |p Gibbs in North Ontario. thos mo' oe Som: The excitement, at all events, which be expected. ; No Bride, Mich: pains. and someies non Soin diaovered" that they they have caused will soon have > IgE money was spent in getting certificates and | would ride best oh a mule at right calmed down, and the electors from| Meeting of Parliament. |sending out Posters to inform the Electors | angles to his back, instead of in a being a host of political aciogs, will|' Tn reference to the first session of of North Ontario that Thos. Paxton had | parallel line, avd so new fashioned be changed to an audience 6f observ- Parliament, under the new order of committed the crime of voting for the Hon, | pack-saddles arb to be manufactured 8 ot x 4 xy § Ged. Brown, against Mr, Gibbs; and mow, | accordingly. The troops will carry ers ; and we do not hesitite to affirm | things, John A.'s organ, the Kingston + s , SR without resorting tq squibs, or getting -cer- | their own arms, bat in some way or that in this Province the principle of | News, says :-- tificates to' startle nervous voters at elec- | other there must be carried for them vigilant watchfulness on the acts of ¢ The anticipations of an early tion time, it may not be unprofitable to fol- | food and drink, as it does uot appear {cians was never exercised {0 one | meeting of Parliament are redeemed. {low Mr. Gibbs into North Ontario for the to be ullogether ig whether gai Lilealc .11t was supposed, and it has been pub- | purpose of comparing notes. - Thos. Paxton | Water can be Had on the muich or tenth the amount it is likely to be in lioly sjuted, that the meeting of Par~{iy and 'always has been & Reformer, as was | Dot: Huviug s id this mugh, * hove fatare. 1i would follow close upon the, yi ratheg and grandfather before him ; and | EYEE, we lave guid nearly §il in the. ns 3 but we learn by telegraph.(I havo heatd his mother relate, with pride, | W far gs wa enn; awa that the C e ol hat 0 3 he city of Due=Lindec, iting to} PORT PERRY, SEPT. 26, 1867. hand." Soiree at Greenwood. The annual soiree in connection We have fears for the future be- cause, 08 a contemporary remarks: "the general election of 1867 will, we fancy, be long remembered as the time when the work of corrupting the constituencies of Canada had become Yours, &c., Ax Euecror or 8, 0, Pickering, 48th Sept., 1867. -- : the 20d of Ato , bring forth his first eloguen ; Bi 3 o Er on behalf of the liberties of the 5 ! P 3 * Xn 0 November ; and bed not appear ovat atime when to be a Reformer was | 11€: eodore, | best | rk (North) James P Wells, 4 that this is final, since it 18 not men-|not to follow, elections and pick up' the | intelligence, car. sca 4 ¢ PROVINCE OF QUEBEC. " y-his very immorality he has|tioned that the call is for the des- | crumbs of State; but when it was. a battle | own against his behelliong subjects, . Y in getting the name of be.| patch of business. « The idea of a |forliberty. Thos. Paciou's futher was a | and thore ja no reason wig.eny oluss | 4rgentudt J G Abbot. i vr : Ii | epecinl 'session has probably. been | jE BE HC RE require a team 10) of {jose subjects should regardus as | Bagot Gendreu. 'ing a right good fellow. If such a d ag "VU | drive him a mile and a-half to the polls : : Bice Pi : d at the 1 d of Cana abandoned ; and it may be the desire | for from Whitby to Yonge Street, time and | CPeMIC8. We shall not be exposed Si gzer : 7 : : man is to stand at the hea R to"have but one winter sossion for |again, he went to record his vote, when no| to the fanatical hatred of Shefiwhole| | Perthic AH Pagact. to apply it, owing partly to political | ments with the American gans have lion of ~petie was on its way t da he must do so by being supported | he transaction of all the business [one sidod at the. poll to say « Well done-- people as in China or Japan, An Pouduicure T Robitaille. distarbances. It showed that the| not led to any desire on the part of Cruz, All convents are to be ¢ Now who will be his stay ? Moral | that will require to come before ' the hase something dy aeinr" 2 During sll is Abyssinian war, ought not, in short, a TunaTs a ylaye insane and unmeaning Fenian out-| he Bnglish artillerists to adopt the ted to public use. Telegraph "fi men? Can moral men be his sup. | first meetiug of the House of Com- YN iere? Was it not presumption, Hel to be so difficult or 80 deadly 'as an os jd D Duseunle break did not diminish the country's system, but admits that the liuge Jalapato the priecip.l eapitsls il orters 1 But we fear that we know | mons. The country is now of great- {for him ta expect Mr. Paxton's vote ? Bui | Ashantee war, and yet we have man- Irom % M Ant wealth, though it stopped the issues | Rodman is a magnificent gun of its be opened in October. 'Three trai : por W | or extent, with the interests of sever to the subject. 1t is Bot td the nomina- aged Ashantee wars more than once. Charlevoix. M Cimon. of it. There is a decrease of 60,000 kid. A leave Vera Cruzdaily for the nterio already. Men bought by public ul Provinces to consult, and the out- | tion--when Mr Gibbs made himself ridicu- The srmy will be a small one, but Chicoutimi . P A Tremplay. acres under crops, and an increase| nr..choster. Sept. 10. Quit Gen. Diaz, charges Mejias P money into Parliament will have no lying members might naturally object lous by declaring he did not expect to be | every man and every department of Compton--J. H. Pope. of 500,000 cattle ahd 1,500,000 sheep. ois Fontan. ol Pls : a 4 Hi Minister of War, with selling & jecti folk lead, rather to bei d to Ottav J | called on to speak, aithough days before ho "fi co will beas well furnished Chambly M Benoit. ( Tho increase of cattle and the de | ocr pr dns. oo riot occurred in this | hundred cargoes of corn to objections to follow any yok to being summone; Hawa twice | xo "porcier had announced that he had } A Er Champlain. J J Bo : : city to-day, resulting in the killing | French during th than loose that which has given them during a year when one visit could | written Mr. Gibbs to come, and that he was and as affective as possible, With Camp Hi LH jr crease in the means of feeding them | 4 wounding of Gaveral | persons. rench during the war. id iti "rand cannot. doubt be made to suffice. It is nlso to be | expected to speak on that occasfon-- ti2at I these preparations we may lope, at tateaugucy Li olton. {was a question for practical men to] Wile a strong police escort was PRN = a: position ::and : we: ( : supposed that the preparation of 'the [would direct your attention, for I wii! leave | the best, cither to frighten King Drummond and Arthabaska - consider. The export of cattle in| av in) 6 J fan Rolle recent ts 0% neral Intellipen Ll bat that men who are in Parliament, |. : y i that, to the valued friends within his chuveh | {"beodore into reason or to penetrate Senecal, 63 amounted to 355,000 ; last year, if the Tenian, pully, recent, rere g highly important business which | 2000 Fi is it at th a u 4 pe Dirchester~H. L. Ly ; 1863 = 000 ; last year, | |g arrested in this city, and Deasy| = om because public money was, plenty, | must come before the House will re- 1 ete o Ne polls; where Le the prison in which the Satire are aus aap angevi, to 519,000, giving an increase ofl om the goal ta the cailioad depot Just Waar Trey. Don't WANT. will be the support of the man who | quire considerable time, and it may | prides himsIf on being a Conservative, and | COMM IEY, ad bring them out of Tanti 4 73 i £3,000,000 in valne. In the flax preparatory to their removal to Dub. | The Ottawa Daily News tells a story 4s so liberal with that which costs|not be completely ready until the pe- | for Malcolm, who has nothing to recommend | bondage. a2 we can do tliat, we need s ning on 5, ose, crop there had been a total decrease | jf eo tial it was attacked by a|of a poor criminal who burst into y ¥ , i | rie iolding a winter session i him save his politics, which 1 will not risk | give ourselves little trouble about berville echard. of 10,000 acres, chiefly in Ulster, : : ith c tears whe ¢ i ! rind for holding is at g S : y mob of people ped with clubs, | tears when made to stand up in. the him nothing. We hope, therefore, a failure in attempting to desctibe ; but it is | ouher affairs iu Abyssinia; but if we| Joliette Godin. showing a return toa healthy state pe Be armed with clubs, | Ck * Never mind crylog? sa that every man will read, and that Inusing his Lisdger Sceouns to, Spare Ms fail we should be cominitted to very Jacques Gartie/ 2-8, Gaucher. of trade. The emigration in Stans oa rm desporate the judge, "Tl seo that Ha uss, in ep ote, inst his will, for the Tory on . we LU Tt TO et i . : % aLl ued tor hy 1% 0! SLA you gah Juss, < diligently, the record of events as candidates that 1, as a Reform elector of utpleusunt obliganions. ie En Taval--J. Toliol rose. the geek op onthe of tis gouty police, finding themselves Overpower- vce," ' Justice, > echoed She prison they transpire, that all. may be able Sotith Ontario, complain ; and I think that| aud not without reason, , Tetit--d.G. Bl compared with that of last year,| gq ive obliged to give way, The |or * thats just exactly what I don't to gi intelligent a in five years, or sooner, the Reformers of [reign in India, by reputation po less vis--J. G. Blanchet. ' showed a diminution of 18,000, or, in | J do) ners were redoucd b the mob, | want." That prisonor's case is giveaniute. igen! opinion in Te- with the Greenwood. U. 8. School, this riding will teach Mr. Gibbs, to his sor- | than strength, cannot afford to be de- 1*® Lapras _ A Pinsonneault. other words, was nearly one-third pn carsied off in trinm Jy The city | exact counterpart of the position ferbnse to: the doings of ithe. Coali- was held in the Orange hall, Green. joe -- i ti. ie Tal pare fied by un Eustern despot. If other J Asta nption, 1 areigabaslt, less. The number of indictable of} 4,00 quict. Oue in wag | the Coalition Government. * Af tionists ; and if the Leopard has not 5 8 ly teeth foria principles, And to Lave loft the Hon. | S0vereigus and people discover that Loihiniere HG Joly, . fences in 1864 was 10.800 ; in 1865, | tiled and several See injured, | present electoral eoutest the Coal changed his spots they will see do- avood, on Thursday, the 19th inst, ly 6 Gonlcron and M. Gillespie to tear at | King Theodore derides our protests Montmagny--J. O. Beanbien, 9,800 ; in 1866, 9,000. His Excel Many of the roiters were also Yadly tiogists ran candidates on: 'the * ings.of which they have little idea and was well attended, (there was Bull Beef, and paddle their own canoe in| and challenges our power, they may Montmorenci--J. Cauchon. lency expressed his satisfaction that injured." A yroelamation was imme= | trial"? ticket. But now tha ¢ 9 * | about 400 persans present). Tea was | North Ontario. be tempted to follow his example,| DMaskinonge G Caron. no such coid blooded atrocities bad diately lh by the authorities, | «le is nearly over, they fel Aid Educated in the good old days of 1og | ud it is, therefore, incumbent on us| Megantic George Irvine. been committed in Ireland as the | oo oWRH > lin « fair d {Ye list has ti fair t served at 1, p. m,, after which the | school honsés and sound polities, I cannot in . : Mussi: i BC ber! Q offering a reward of £300 for the re | 118% has 100 MARY A ; ! 8 al ! rl to dissipate such delusions by bring- ssisquoi Chamberlid,. Sheffield outrages. Lord Talbot de % . tl o 11 over th et v Company repaired te the Drill Shed, | treat you to a dish of Latin, but will sub- |' ni R : o : capture of the prisoners. so the organs all over the We : > | scribe myself, ing the offender to justice. This| Montcalm Joseph Dufresne. Malahide stated that no such ill-feel- | "yr Op . now shonting in perfect unison, no where some of the children recited argument is entitled to weight, but Montreal (East) G E Cartier. ing asis represented exists in Ireland | . anchester, Sept. 2 ~-- Everything more " fair trial" men. a pieces, followed by speeches from the we have ouly to observe thatitsforce| Montreal (Centre)--T. Workman. | between landlords and tenants. He is gies hare _The rioters appear sat-| o © 8 ool "just what thay. ack Rev. Mi Wilson, Mr. Reid, T. N. will be infinitely increased when we | Alontreal (West) = T D McGee. owns estates in both England and | !S1® i their success, and there " Gibbe, Bsq., Dr. McGill, and others have actually embarked on thé expe-| Nagierville Sixte Coupal. Ireland, and said the condition of the fave ir more disturbances No developed into a regular system. In|p 0 00 1 it be, # in at.| A telegram to the Globe from King: dition. 'The spectacle of a British | Nicolet Joseph Gaudet. Irish tenant is as good, and, in some ee, & Ah Prisoners, Belly all elections the demoralizing influ reemaw's excellent banc was I 8 | onthe 93cd, inst., says :--On|force returning discomfitied from Ottawa (County)--A. Weight. respects; better. than that of the|2nd Deasy, have been discove ed . They want that hi ! elections the demoralizing tendance, and enlivened the proceed- eb ov BOY iON | Abyssinia would be far more damag-| Pontrac Edmund Heath. English tenant. Arrests continne io he Made oF Pein/ed with on ho will vot ence of bribery has been more or less |; og with choice mhsic. Altogether Snufsy morning, between 19 and ;.2 ing to our reputation than the fact| Quebec (Centre) G H Simard. ------res Sous who fools pasiin thesiok, cet ht ticket theoa " vie apparent; but the evil hitherto, |i 1g (he most ngreenble duy that has | clock, a watchman at Mortow's| gat the enmerprise had never been| Quebec (County)--P. J. 0. Chau-| «Tyg Wows mave ir"--Undesf Dublin, Sept. 21.----Arrests of the | op Sway and other plo _ though great, has been comparative |}. spent in Greontwood for a lung brewery and distillery, named Duis- | undertaken. Perhaps the latter dan- yeau. this title a weekly paper has tli|Suspected Fenians continue. ~The gil « go'it blind so long as the Jy trifling compared with recent |, Th Yas als coll, was murdered by a party of | ger may Lave been overrated, but it Quebec (East)--P. G. Huot, following as a "communicated" {latest arrest is that of James Walton | gj,are in tho spoil." -If the Conliti g nis. Te pasa. Lafhit & ime, e proceeds fromathe sale of | yuffjans, and afterwards the safe be-| is impossible to exaggerate the mis- Quebec (West)--T. McGreevey. |article: * The Chancellor of 'the|supposed to be an agent of Fenians|ginply wanted a fait trial, it. velopeme 3 pay r tickets amounted to 870, T. N.|longing to the above establishment |chicf which might arise from defeat| Vaudreuil--S. McMillan, Exchequer und his friends thought |in the United States. He has been | jaye shunned from the first, th few. dollars for his team to bring ¥0*| Gibbs Esq., with his usnal liberality, | broken open, and about 2,500 stolen. | or failure. When wehave begun we Richmond and Wolfe W. H. Webb. | themselves very clever in framing | imprisoned, and will be examined on | payionship of such steeped tors to the hustings, to give an inde-| gi ticeribed very handsomely, Dr. | Tie murderers were traced to Cape | must needs go on at any cost uutil we Rimouski George Sylvain. their Representation Bill so as to|® charge of treason. tion jobbers ns James Beat; Rounrlle M Cheval. Richelliew McCarthy. Shefford L 8 Huntingdon. St. Hyaci Kierzkowski. Sherbrooke--A. T. Galt, Staustead Charles Colby. Soulanges--Masggon. St. Maurise---Dr. Desaulniers. 'yoter ms dinner ora few y 3 Vincent, where they hired a horse | have accomplislied something or other 'whiskey, to furnish an inn- MeGill also subseribed $5. Great aud drove towards Watertown. The | which cau be represented as victory. the needful to di raise is due the young Jadies of | police followed in pursuit, and we | Possibly this achievement may be; X a 1Spense | Greenwood for their exertions in pro- | learn by telegraph that last evening | considerably easier than we now sup- viding the delicacies for which they three of the party were arrested in| pose, but itanust in any case' be so are so famed.--Com, = Watertown. One supposed accom- | costly, and is obviously so ungertain, . i plice is still at large. . | that we can ovly hope King Theo-, : pe ( listen prudently to th _ Fire 1 BramproN.--The Bramp- Soromay Pend rg rej Ho Three Rivers--C. B.De Niverville. ton Times says :--* On' Wednesday | all amicable overtures with the sav.| Zo Hountuisird. Cy Davust. : ight last, the 11th inst. capriceof an irresponsible tyrant; emiscovata rand. Bight Jas, the fusts, shout Yen| sEs apres I Sibley runt; + Terrebonne L R Masson. Vercheres F Geoffrion. Yamaska Moise Fortier. THE FIRST HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY. inclade only males as voters; but the| Florence. Sept. 22 ~-Garibaldi has| P. McDonald ; instel Act of 1850, known as Lord Brough | issued a stirring address to his follow. | them at the polls, am's Act, for shortening the language | ers, announcing that the time had used in acts of Parliament, provides | come for them to overthrow the tyr- that in all * words importing the|rany of the Pope, and restore Rome [ready been suckin, masculine gender shall be deemed | to Italy, and to give the eternal city [of tiie country, and 1 Jand taken to include females, &c.,|its ancient suprerhacy as the capital | the laste so t_ that. unless the contrary is expressly pro-| of the Italian nation." A Royal pro- | resist the tempfation of vided" Mr. Disraeli has not 'ex-|clamation has also been promulgated, | other and pressed the contrary, and therefore|signed by King Vistar Emmanuel, | | in women are safe to vote if they like. | warning all Italians against taking| REVENUE AND The same act also enacts that ' county | part in the revolutionary movement. followin is shall be held to mean also county of| The proclamation closes with the|reven 0 and ¢ a town or of a city, unless such ex- | threat that Gévernment will not fail month : tended Meshing is expressly exslod. it vigorofis punisiument ou alH 1: at ed by words' In this case tl found engaged in the ille, Addngion, a Hover. 4. |Representation Act expressly exclud | hostilities against the Pe a the wood-sheds, and the inteuse heat] 1: Bothwell A McKellar, $8 'ogunty and gity and souney of 4 Florence, Sept. 98.--The from the cordwood and burning sheds | fevel: Bruce (South) Edw (town? We might have noticed thir| Government is taking preoa m ge, Wal Sorslop the mince Brant (North), H Pinayaon, | Rater during tho progress ofthe div tape to guard agaiuat an thas Eto | sop, Sui isos EE | |b pi oe | er a loss of over six thousand 9 sot docs nok ar 12 Save vest i$. wall the ; b '| thought of by any one, The origina! acto 1832 deals with 'male persons' money during election con-| «Electors, show 'your detestation : indeed, an enthu-| of this two-sided politician, 'by re- ra to go further, and [Jecting him at the polls 17 ~~ id it id De oes Me i rh ind o'clock, a fire broke out in the wood: bithe may portage 3 ae CE hie sioss sof advice shed of the Grand Trunk station' i bre 08, sup: i Brown, this piece of advice was icon originated ee ported by threats of immediate and: the steam wood-sawing ho irresistible force L. spread rapidly, aid extend-| - : od ia Tavares. the role Tength oF) gon. SyLo dan Ue 4 8' m "without inter=| ce, : persion the act of be take care of ; and their cases will be| that Kelly and. Deasy sailed .from attended to in due 'time."~=Zoronto| Liverpool 'on. one of the Atlantic Leader ofthe Tthinst. 3 =~ steamers for the United States, on eutenant-General - Sir) © Hed Wisdun' , C8. ute sup: enry Sil ceed Sir John Michel in command of} impr % (Ni 1 Scott. the forces in British North America. inprovin is unyielding. = 3 oa or oy Ly wder, | mdf

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