Stratford Times, 18 May 1887, p. 4

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<Z OE a weer _--" a Yew Advertisements This Week. Waated--John el ee! -- Juggan 's Birthday Celebration of Revision--To of Ellice. Court of Revision--Tp: of wee Tr ing and Malting Company. pee Kennedy. Stratford Cimes. x tr. qT. SUTLER EDITOR AND MANAGER Weoxespay, May 18, 1887. ~WOTES FROM 'wrawi" STRCIAL EDITORIAL CORRESPOSDESUB To "THE STRATFORD TIMES Papen May 16, 1887. opening of a session, es- pecially + ie first of a new Parlia- ment, there are always many subjects discussed to which it is impossible to do justice in their proper order in the limits prescribed for these letters. Sach « one waa the Governor's war: --_ mestion, a mode of appropria- ublic money itted by came or objects : unforeseen and t necessity. Ido not m these Notes intend to be against my own convictions, the mere slavish echo or ma al = everything done or said '} and therefore I do not faite on say that with the general eontention of the Opposition as to confining this mode of expenditure to the uuexpected and pressing cases for which it was 'intended, [ fully eoincide. I go farther, and am also prepared to admit, with Mr. Blake, hat a technical mistake was com- mitted in using these warrants for such pu ay paying the lawyers retained by the Government in the St. Catharines Milling Co.'s case, and- possibly in the Banff Park ex- penditure. I trust I shall not be misunderstood as objecting to these items, or indeed any of those for which Governor's warrants have been used. The warrants have in no case been used to obtain funds for pur- s to which there would have been the most remote probability of any serious objection being made ether Par! t or by the coun- try. My only objection (and in this I feel sure Io m conversation with many prominent eget tn that I am ex prevalout ng is- the canes of creating a very bad precedent, which by other Ministries than that of Sir John Macdoneld may be used for procunng money for objects for which they fear to ask a Parliamentary vote. How- ever, the mistake is not likely to be repeated. The Opposition has done its duty in the matter, and so have Sir Charles Tupper and Mr. Winte, by their frank admissions. No harm has been done. Not a dollar of public money has been expended un der these warrants that would not have willingly been granted by the House of Commons and approved of by the people of Canada. 'The error is merely a techmical irregularity, which if allowed to become habitual might in the future endanger the control by Parhament of a large part of our expenditure. It has, I think, been chiefly due to lack of arenas a quality in which our late Finance Minister. Mr. McLelan, was as defi- eient as his successor, Sir Charles Tupper, is pecollany nee. In sensing the Banff Park re- servation, Mr. Kirk, of Guysboro', to make a little cheap the pro ted by rich people, and that the poor among his constituents would derive no advantage it. One is irresistibly reminded by Mr. Kirk's protest, af similar objections, couched almost in the same words, Judas Iscariot, some eighteen | j eenturies ago, to the di o certain box of precious ointment. The Canadian House of Commons is by no means generally gifted with keen sense of humor, being, in the art of inventing and applying suit- able nick-names, by no means the equal of its British prototype. Had Mr. Kirk's piece of silly claptrap been uttered at Westminster, he would certainly have been known as Judas or Iseariot Kirk to the end of his parliamentary days. The faets are, that apart frotn all aesthetic eon- siderations, such as those which have very properly induced the Mowat Government.and.the Stare of New York to expend Jarge sums of public money in purchasing the land about Niagara Falls, in no other way can 'so much revenue. t be ob ing Mr. Kirk's constituents, will, as /a member observed, be.recouped not ouly for her expenditure, but will from building bases dr hotels and private mansions derive ten times any revenue that could possibly be obtained by dis powng ef the land in the usual manner. \ pleasing inei dent of the debate was the sense of justice and kindly thoughtfulness +4 others displaye d by your member, Hesson, by jus "reminding the Gurermment of the well-founded claims to remuneration of the two young working men who discovered the now far-famed springs, which but for his timely remark would perhaps have been forgotten. But in writing for Perth readers, mention of your member's kind and considerate na- ture rs, | am sure, superfluous. His unassuming dignity of manner, his unfailing courtesy, his fine presence, and his kind heart have given him a" weight i in the House that few A er met 'attain to. his" no atlas, pat the unadorned sroith, 5 testified to last February for the third time by the votes of those among whom he has passed his life. Mr. ne is, I notion a strenu- Tous opponent of the proposed" Insol- ! veney legislation. The supporters of | 8 lation have much to aay | men who have been unfortunate to | resume business. A. searcity of | storekeepers existed, iis argument | would possesa weight. It is well) known, however, that one of the, chief causes of periodical recurrence of dullness is the too great number | of retailers. Many men believing | that to attain success in commerce | session of a goods, rush into business with no | commercial aptitude or training. he result is disaster to themselves | and to those of their friends or rela- | tions who have endorsed their notes. | There is scarcely a village or farming community in "Canada without: its share of victims of this strange in- fatuation and the too great for credit given by wholesale houses. | Any law, therefore, is to be depreca- | ted, which by ensuring to the whole- sale men a greater or less percentage of the amount due them, relieves | them to a certain extent irom the | exercise of due caution, and enables | their unfortunate debtors to ruin! themselves and their friends or kin- dred a second time. penkayey laws are a partial guarantee wholesale men, against the natural | results of their own carelessness, by giving them an equal chance with others of obtaining a dividend. Where no such law ee the local croditoP. hee tho hest chance, a4_in most eases he ought to have, his claims being frequently for neces- saries supplied te the debtor or his family, or for money lent through considerations of friendship or kin- dred, The absence of a bankruptey lew forces wholesale men to look vell to the business ability and char- acter of their customers, and pro- tects the solvent retailer or country merchant from the loss of his legiti- mate profits by the flooding of his neighborhood with bankrupt stocks to be sold at less than wholesale prices. Some hardship is of course inevitable, either with or without a bankruptey law. But when we re- member the glaring frauds practised under the old law, the bankrupts driving to chureh in carriages, while many of their creditors had to use their legs, the collusive debts, and the general injury done to public morality by such spectacles, and set against such gross injuries to the public conscience, and the honest, of our rising generation, the fact that here and there, though very few and far between, may be found some de- serving men whom the want of a business in their own sarge me weight of argument against i enactment is imply careuiraiey, 'Me. Mille- gave « eplendid genet illustration ot the of raisin storm in a rain die in bis attack Pe Monday on Mr: ; the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery, for his alleged favor- to Conservatives in giving F Gazette true, no one, Grit or Tery, any actual injury sion di Mr. Pope's de- lay. This admission id not, however, adhe sd is ng a. . Pope as a a partisan tool, , ete., nor --e Charlton from shauioaing an hag cor that ' blood, were pardoned a! about its desirability, as enabling | ings, as Sind | of the first water. tankruptey law prevents from doing and the Government on the dubject of com- to the latter for the loss as con cerned pect some may throw strong, though unexpected light on the reality of Grit professions of love for Lrishmen and the Irish cause. We have heard of wen making reds for their wn backs, It is possible that this :s . Barron has demanded the productton of a rod for the Hagellation of his party leaders, [ assert nm thing, fur 1 know nothing, not having seen the correspondence asked. for. But as 1575, when seal: &. eae prominent loyalists on this O' Doseghde " aestion, especially as to the part a be by W.B. O'Donoghue in the Scott murder, which proved beyond dispute not only the entire innocence of ° "Donoghue of ail ticipation in that a naires crime, bat Eis having attempted, at the _ of his ly Riel from his atrocious pu records of Kicl's mock tr ibunal, "sworn testimony of Nolin on" the pagers oung | fellow villians desired to utilise as a Lepine, after a short pro "Hon, for = had 'at their backs the eolid | rench vote of Quebec, but poor 0' Donog- | hue Beds an unpardoned ritive, and the tand, in which he invested bis honest earn- a teacher before the insurrection, was withheld from his heirs, Let me here correct one thisstatement of Mr. Barron, which is rather risel 'aod replied the question was 7 to in Parliament some an alas ago. M. F. O' s true that Mr. hee aaphyet his very conten a public speaker _ hi eoaueyiien during the late "eae » in| | support of Conservative candidates, but it 7 a | was R#. the exercise of his en ba! ® bors' subject'of Her Ma' tine be ce so acted. # had for a short time before the election held some small tem rary employment in the Inland Revenue partment. When Parliament was dis solved, he position, in order, as he stated, that he might feel a A reference to the booka of the ment of go Revenue would aa Barron on this point, and | prevented him from pans this unde- served slur on Mr. M. F. O'Donoghue's SEJANOS. The estimates and Sir Charles Tupper's een are too late this week to be fairly |4, ve CRUSADER O'BRIEN. Wo fancy that Mr. William O'Bries, the Quixotic Dublin Editor, will realize by this time saat = mission to Canada--"to educate "--has proved s farce Whilst we cannet en- dorae the views of those who are opposed to allowing him freedom of speech, we moat unhesitatingly declare our opposi the mission which he himaelf declat he left Ireland for, viz., to abuse Governor General Lansdowne and endeavor to stir up strife in Canada. rs There are tens of thousands of people in Canada, who while favoring a policy ef Home Rule being granted to Ireland, de- plore the excesses which men of the stamp of O'Donovan Rossa and Wm. O'Brien are urging people to go to secure it. These reckless and unprincipled agitatars have kept Ireland deluged in blood, crime, and misery for years past, and when they find that the more sensible people of that country are beginning to believe in legitimate political action to secure the benefits they have so lo craved, they wish to transfer their quarrels to another hgmisphere, and make their battle ground th Canada, just as they did in 1866, when scores of loyal young Canadians met their deaths in re- pelling the invasion of our soil by a few thousand mauraudera from the slams of the populous cities of the adjoining Ke- public, who called themselves Fenians, and who were encouraged in their murder- ona mission by such papers as United Ireland. Canada is over 3,000 miles from [reland, has nathing to do with the tical, social oor other troubles which afflict the populstion of that Island, -- extending sympathy and substan- al assistance to the suffering people there when famine and other causes have some- times reduced them to d distress. Then why should a few unprincipled agitators plot together to set neighbor against neighbor in this country, the same as unfortunately prevails in Ireland?. Ged knows there are troubles enosgh in Cam- da--which after all, is the most peaceable | ¥ country on the face of the globe--without men of O'Brien's order, en hg his paper, United Ireland, and in bi utterances, urges murder, assassination, dynamite, incendiarism and riot'as the proper means that all tenants should adopt toward their rishman, whom. Riel and } pp os ae sent Her Majesty in n.| stitutions But Canadians do not wish j to be edweated by an O'Brien or any other man in the argument which sees in blood shed and crime, the true solution of freland's or any other Hritish province's political differences. O'BRIEN DENOUNCED. Immense Wass Meeting in ucen"s Park, Toronto. BETWEEN 12,000 any 15,000 rrorLe PRE SENT --TNE AGITATOR'S MISSION STRONGLY CONDEMNER, ANT) CONFIDENCKr E\PKESS ED IN LORD LANSDOWNE, Toronto, May 14. -The pubtic meeting held this afternoon in Queen's Park, to protest against Wm, O'Brien's action in ey to this city for the purpose of ex- citing a hostile feeling against the Gover nor- eee waa attended by between 12,- 000 and 15,000 people. The proceedings were pleted ant by the greatest en- thusiasm and perfect order ; !n fact, it waa blie- the most orderty pu ever held in the city. The speakers were listened jis were no -unseem! inte: Mayor Howtand presided, and dn on ee i orm with him were, among Body, and Rev. Professor of Trinity Callege ; Rev. G, Rev. Tho: . Dr. Canon Damoulin and many other lens ™men and a citizens, After 'read the prociams: tion calling the o mesting, The Bishop of Rico moved the first resolution as 5 Soliows eS is meet- ro, cater tes the ont Wm. O'Brien in visiting this city ot Ti Bx dis Ex- of exciting hostils oe gaunt eellency ¢ the Governor-G of differcuces between His Bxcellen au vii in Canada, moving the resolution, protested the great wrong, unblishing in- ecency and audacious impertinence about te be ted by Mr. O'Briea in coming to Toronto, and said this fair Dominion pono, in" Mr H.E. Clarke, M.P.P., nescnhel he second gi gp as follows: is ee perfect coi the Parlianfent of the United Kingdous Pg awise and just settlement of all questions relating to Treland."' He said, while willing to give all benefita to Irish citizens, he wanted to be done with this truckling to the Irish vote. Speaking of O'Brien, he said they did they did not want to have His Excellency attacked by men steeped in venom, and lips envenomed | with untrath. Rey, Dr. : tion, made a speech audience to the wildest enthusiasm. asked, shall the Fenians of the United States, represented by O'Donovan Hossa. settle this perplexing Irish question? Shall 'thei cousins in a settle it? {Cries of 'never !"" and cheers) No. The settlement of the question rests with the British Parliament ; but before one con- Gession is given they must first and fore- most insist that British law and order mast be mainta: . Rev, G. M. Milligan supported the reso. lation, which was put and again carried amidst tremendous cheering, only one or two hands being held up against it. Kev, Canon Pumoutin, in moving that copies of these resolutions be transmitted to His Excellercy the Governor-General and to Lord Salisbury, as Prime Minister of Great Britain, made the most effective ofany. He charged the trouble in Ireland not to the landlords, but to the tenants who were mocnlighters, boycottera, ke. He said Brien was coming for the foul and audacious purpose of inciting loyal citizens to rebellion by the parade of blatant and impudent falsehoods, and that the very purpose of his visit was an out rageous lie. He characterized O'Brien as one of the most audacious liars of the present time The resolution wns seconded by Mr. James L. Haghes, Public School Inspector, and carried amidst great cheering. Mayor Howland then addressed the meet ing, thanking them for their orderly be- havior and urging them, amidst cries of " Never!" to give O'Brien a fair hearing if he came here A vote of thanks to the Mayor for pre- siding brought the meeting to a close. rousing cheers anda tiger were then given, amidst t enthusiasm and waving of hats, for psig and for Lord Lansdowne, and then the vast multitude, with uncovered heads, joined in singing the ing im bates O'Brien's mission, and Aen fidence to the British Parliament for a wise and jast settlement of the Irish question," THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL'S REPLY TO MAYOR NOWLAND'S LETTER. Toronto, May 16.--His Excellency the pg eel General sent the et etter to Mayor Howland this aftern a I have the honor pe acknowledge he day last in the Queen' 5 in's Park. mrtg oar read these resolutions with the greatest plea- sure. The ae reception given to me on my arriv Toronto had already af- forded a striking proofof the loyal fect- dogs of your citizens towards Her Majesty and of their desire to show theis respest for her sake to her representative in this landlords when asked to pay their Chaptesr most are precomde the Tatility of these wants..no...suchttoc. | trines taught to her people, and when | charges, a rewinding the House Secretary of Strate Cazette wes uniter his othctal -- ye t that his own return ss M. P. was one f the last Kasotteds --"' Sarely," Tupt agrees < sepia the Gorernapeat aod ies. Pope, 'Ly would have taken care that Bs own ni hae, and those of Mig As eagues, ' were lirst gazetted," ry eaten to refer the matter to the Committee of Privileges & Elections was lost, and an kmendment by Sir John carried, directing the Clerk of the conn to state for the tion. : the pablication of the | and j "Mr. O'Bries goes back to Ireland he can | tell his fellow-countrymen that people of | ' all religious nationalities, ideas ha £34 political opiniottas, live here side by side, in "had Rs rere existed nt such } ged peace and harmony, and that the dagger of the assassin, the torch of the incendiary, cr the dynamite of the Rogsas are un- knewn amongst us, except when some poor half-demented creatare like Whalen, the cruel murderer of D'Arcy McGee, be- -- carried away by the eloquence and doctrines taught by unpriscipled and and | part of her Dominion. I trust, however \ that | may regard these resolutions not } j eat ad giving aditttionast neste to thet emarkable dec monstration, but as an in- | die ation that in the opirion of the citizens | of Toronto, wrgiee cxed at one of the largest I and most repre esentative meetinga ever held in sour city, I have done forfeit that respect or to justify a with drawal of the goo will, which has hitherto teed shown tow ow tra = I may pa vge to merit the contid your peop ype ; and that when my pired no act of mine, watt be found to have have received since my arrival in Toreote and my gratitude for the su upport and en couragemeut which I bave received at the fhands.of your people." +904 --- The Ryckman Poisoning Case. ' { AN AV ALY Sis SHOWS NGUTRACES OF Pods THE HENUKICKS CASE KYORMAN AFFAIR. Nu atha Dr." Ellis bas sent his report on the analysis of the contents of the stomach of the flate Mra. Hendricks, of Thedford, to the Attorney General. A full account of the inquest en the remains of Mra. Hen ricks and the arrest of Mrs. Ryckman, of Thedford, waa published in Tur Tiwes several weeks ago. The deceased having died under suspicious circumstances at the prisoner's house, Mrs. Ryckman was ar ona charge of poisoning her and states that the ga gall stones, one '7 which was rather large. Ryckman to that place in counection with the death of Laura Kyckman, a daughter risoner, whe died suddesly ~ there with, her the Virgin authori ea, before eteonagiote barged on the Hendeicks mate to the Atterney-Cieneral Rar Yeaire to extradite her, she will be detaised in custody. ------ --+ +9 An English View eof O'Brien's Vi y iste, The Day Telegraph, commenting on Mr. O'Brien's aa - : "If the fortunes of Mr. O'Brien's are correctly fore- shadowed by the Tocldent of his heding we may expect lively proceedings, The public intell nce o| f Canada ought : oon against Mr. O'Brien's independen aganda ; and if it does, it is quite a le im revolt may rise go indignant heights and lead to riotous collisions."" Keferring to O'Brien's visit to Canada, the London Times says the Dominion Government and pore are not withont experience of able attempts, aad may be trusted to act with vigor and promptitude in view ef this singularly impudent assault upon their ane midi 2 4@ee A Marine Disaster. San Francisco, May 12. Lhe steamer City af Rio Janeiro, which arrived from China and Japan yesterday, brings news of a terrible marine disaster in the Strait Settlements. The steamer Benton, plying between Singapore, Penang and Malacca wasrun into about midnight, March 29, by the Steamer Fair, of Penang, shortly after leaving Malacca and sank within half an hour, Of 200 persons aboard only ped thus ar are known to have been those lost are natives. 'After the collision the Fair of*Penang con tinued on her way. Loss to the veasel and cargo in $60,000. a London, May 13.--Tge Times has re newed the publication of regular acticles intended to show a connection between 'Tarnellism and series of articles is entitled, : Secnes ca." The matter is the result of an inquiry, which the Times says it instituted last summer, into the rela- tions between the American Feniaus ans the Parnellites, and purports to contain a number of the secret records of the Clan na Gacl Society, obtained through a sys- tem in the suciety and quarrels among its seas Among the documents published re what ia alleged to be copies of the con stitution of the society, a list of its officers at various times, letters from its past and present leaders, secret c irculars aud reports of the Society's conventions, The t says its inquiries are not_yet complete,tfor the reason that the Society has been re ganized eo that its system of werking has become a seemingly impenetrable mys tery. Editorially commenting on its re- velations, the Times says it is impossible to doubt 'that the Policy of the Parnellites, and therefore of Gladstone, is ulti- mately directed hy the herds of the Soci- ety, and by Patrick Fore The will of the late Me Barbour, the eminent Scottish phileatiopet, has just nes been proved at Edinburgh, the personal estate amoanting to nearly $2,250,000. Mr. Barbour leaves the penne domain rthshire, to his widow, to their eldest son. ry or gprenertel is left te the second and, subject eos ver © ee Vision for for Mr. Barbour, th hia im fortune is eses xthed the 7 children. Exciian --_-- m™ tne C, P. R.--Sir e pe sage | the Canadian Pacific ronte to China Japan, and next month he will call attention to the proposals of the Cana- dian Government and move a SL It is expected the Government will be pre to state a" detinite policy on the subject by that tim ADVIcz TO THE tise Currey.--Card- inal Simeeni, who was charged by the to examine the situation in Ireland, the Pope advise the to adhere vigorously to the ded upon by a former coun py at Rome, aaa that the clergy Pal reek from associating themselves with j | agitato vw ° The saje of the Frenoh erown jewels be- Fa al Pare dbeee Ten tot ora Jisposed of, roatizing 506,- 769 ivan «. Amang the articies sold were | » diamon rh necklace for 181] ) franes, and ne armond cpanlisien tn 34,000 | that the etvtest son is to be shortly "Vetrothed to Clementine of that the otticia] ¢npouncement of this may be looked for during-~ the fact art demagogues who bear murder in 'hearts ind and thus 'perve the arei of a > Meee' ere. | French an od. fosecign jewelers in attendance. deep appreciation of the kindness which I | } No of arsenic or were dis: covered. The re will be nent to the the jurors together at Arkona and conclude their inquest. len reply from the Virginia State authorities has by the GENERAL NEWS. & FATALITIES at OTTAWa. John Macfarlane, a lad employed in the Canadian Granite Company's works, at Uttawa, was struck on the head by a run- away horse last Saturday evening, and had h's brains dashed out, being instantly killed. A child, pan ed Meury Sims, eight years of ave. wax drowned at the foot of ing, ia cemmpany with two others, fallen in while playing on the ed named Weston saved two bat did vot know that there wasa third until too ate. KULSD BY a PANTHER, Word has reached New Orleans that « colared child who was picking berries on the Daigre place, near Baton Rouge, Thurs- day evening, was torn in pieces by a wild anima! supposed to be # panther. The other children saved themselves by taking to their heelx, abandoning the youngest to tte fate, The -- tiger # by no means rare in the swamps of this State. One waa killed in Fires Hs Parish last wear ring-over twelve feet in is had astned oad curried eway 0 'oh and 'as trailed by the. colt:s hools draggipg-ew the ground. SHOT HIS OWN BOY FOR A BURGLAR. The saddest tragedy that « in Indiana occurred last Friday pi ate te as the accidental shooting, by Wsitian anford, - on his son Hamlet, aged 16 were spending the night in a ouse on ed Sanford's farm, near the city of . Washington, - ce the boy in a somnambealistic and went out into the y. ¢ corpee was ught to the father's house in this city, where it is being viewed by many of the people ae A CHICAGO FATHER'S HEROISM. ~ heroism of John -- in sav ing hia infaut child from death nearly cost him his owa life on. on Senetay afternoon. His eighteen-months-old abe had toddled down to the railroad track near bis house and sat down between the tracks to play. The whistle from an ap- roaching switch engine attracted the at- tention of the earl who was at work in the yard, and up he was horrified to see bis chil sitting on the track, watch. ing the swift approach of the locomotive. Atter an instant of mute terror the fatner rushed toward the track, and throwing soar h direc it MSlely, to one side. save himeclt but waa mals by one of the wheels and thrown across the rail. His left leg was horribly mangled, and it was afterwafds necessary to amputate it. He also received bad injuries about the hips and head. Vorbank is a young, working man, and has been married about three yea PROUALLE CHILD MURDER IN LONDON. Shortly after dark on Friday evening as Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Ardell and Mr. teith were walking along a lane of off Adetahae street, city o on, ween third and fourth concessiona, ~~ atten tion was attracted by the sound of some one using a spade, After listening a few moments the sounds ceased ard maina of a tine, ein fant, which had apparently been smother- ed to death. Coroner Smith Saturday began an inquest on the body, but adjourn- ed the inquiry --_ Tuesday A gypsy named Ro Watson, i sister, w fe and Sear have be rested and remanded as authors of the crime. Watson is a brother of ex-Ald. Watson, who levanted from the city some time ago. He came = on Friday with his family from St. Mar +<9+---- _ In the Lion's Den. A MIPNOT aan YOUNG LADY ~~ HER MEAD IN 1ON'® MOTT Paris, May 15. A highly sensational hypnotic experiment was achieved at a private performance yesterday at the Folies Bergere. The curtain rose and revealed a large cage containing three lions. Giscometti, the lion tamer, then entered the cage and made the lions jump about and ro the purpose by the tamer. wound = by ogg young lady--who had been put in a rigid acute cataleptic resting aga ot her head on one stool and her roared orgy | and in the midst of the exci le Torey brought a0 patient out of the by trance and oved = from the cage The prefect of eclies hes not yet allowed this gp coronene ll = peiven in public, but the private perf ce was so vociferously epplacded that it sbeliated the restriction wifl soon be Agrarian Outrage: in Ireland. A return lately piste says the Loudon Timex, Ag He all reyes the Royal Irish anata ; ported in Ulster, 146 in Lenister, 761 in od} Minster, and 299 in' Connaught. In 72 cases only were convictions obtained ; in fhe assertion has on more becn made | 106, persona were made amena! ble, bat the Prince of Wales} were accused. the Princess ; are now awaiting trial; It is now. added | the offenders were neither copricted 9 or ieted ; 29 and in 1,103 cazes made amenable, The propottion of Jubilee | victicns to outrages sneode as fellewss-- the aera out- of from January ' 1, 1886, to Marah 3 present your. The total is 1,310, 'oh which 104 were re-

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