Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 30 Apr 1885, p. 4

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LA comma mm mm READER! PAUSE JUST HERE. THE CtLEBRATED DR. UHASES PRISCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDIL` 31390 EB IE5 TOILET ARTICLES-A FULL LINE) A Guaranteed Liver [lure Remedy '"s'3fE':I;""" ' ---- J o H N W o o D s 15 AGENT, BARRIE. THE DIINAMEITAI. nmnmnn. abqndgny furnished with the .-r...:..-_. `- V 1 on v-AUWIISIIUVDIIU IDIIU` Grit ti'ibo`whioh'e'cho jinn, ` . :_.`P. Br-*0. Opposite B. Hinds` Dominion House. MONEY. AT BECK `1o'1?>.\1wp'xJ5E:. XADE ON THE PREMISES. ALSO wni. CAMPBELL. H. H. WILLARD. TRY soils or AND TVICTORY. BEST QUALITY. (LIMITED) Of the value of this greatnational work to the empire `at'large it i8 impossible to calculate. . The parent state is evidently -`on .tla.e as `of one of the most gigantic wars--of moderzytimes. It willbe` neces- July-.t.6;-have.meanefof~_,rapid..-transit--not v India where war mat,erig.l_anc/1 troops ..wil1, : the required "l'r'omv ,En'gland. .uWhen-this road is completed, India can be reached twenty days quicker than bv the'ordinsry V route through the Suez canal _or by way of! the` Cape of Good Hope; In a military- point of view these twenty days may mean victory on the eld, the saving of an ' empire to the cause ofliberty and christian} civilization or disaster and the triumph of semi-bsrbarism; . " ROBERT HUBBERT. go by tpe Year on 33;. Good inducements to Counties of . Box 46. S1; BAIll{l'.`~. :o.h._ A2... A, 1! verdicts r'endeT1-e cI*1:vy `J"?1`1 " froth % ______ AI. -_1 ]i`nnIIv;nn thn Inna n` tin: . uuuu auuuuvu suuucxvu ll, JIILIVD uvnu --- ~---- - mg go gin, `mg the no_"j1..n`,.n.;.g5,y .Fq1lowing the lead ,of_ the_ chief `Grit oometimei uIe;t.,o arrive at their decision` @339 W T1`ntfa "19 Grit R`9ll! 8_11Y tends to ahgkemch in eithr the wisdom shows at unmistakable -vmmthy mt - I AL- __-L,_I._ _~4I__ `Y _,AI_ II1,,A T; ___,_Ij .. `w-q vs-uv K VTVC" larger body of men have been placed hundreds of miles west and north west of Winnipeg in about three weeks. _'|`hia may be, `and no doubt is, 3 source of re- vret to rebels in urine and their Grit aynipathizera,` but that such an did to crush rebellion and stamp out treuon exists,` must gladden the heart of every loyal citizen._ C or justice of trisl by jury.` _ ' the one that juries merely lswyere in clesringyscstmps from the punishment of their crimn; In. View of the verdicts which are often rendered the conviction forces itself on the mind that trial by jury in its present form has about out-. lived its usefulness. ran canana raczrxc. Never was the wisdom and foresight of the government more completely veried than in the rapidity with which they have built the Canada Pacific Railway, and every patriotic Canadian rejoices in the the thought of its near completion. The very integrity of the Dominion was in- volved in it and if the cost had been twice what it is, the government would have been justified in incurring it. The large inux of population along the line of rail- way and in various directions from it, the important settlements that have sprung up, the development of numerous indus- tries and the wondrous possibilities of the great Northwest which have beentrevealed, indicate how vitally necessary the con- struction of the road was. Its absolute necessity is demonstrated by the Riel rebellion, and its immense value by the rapiditywith which over 4000 men with munitions `and supplies have been con- veyed to the `seat of the trouble. In 1870 Col. Wolseley was from April till late in August in going from Montreal to Winni- peg, but now even with the gaps, a vastly. I....-;. t....I.. -3 .......' L--- L--- The contest between Britain and Russia which is close at hand will be really a struggle between civilisation and progress on the onehand and semi-harbarism and despotic power on the other. Though the position of a "boundary line in Central Asia may be the proximate exciting cause ' of the war._ its chief theatre ' will be in Europe, and the objective prize-the mastery of the Busphorous. The ultimate object is the palm of superiority between Saxon and Slav` Nobody can doubt the nal issue. `Throughout the ages the Saxon has fought in the interests of human freedom, while the'Slav has fought as a blind unthinking machine. The Saxon has always fought with an intelli- he wars, while the Slav - has been moved as. mere automaton at the_`command'of` his masters. The Saxon is `individually a hero and isessentially a. volunteer. The Slav is individually a cowald and forced liketa dog to `become a target on the battle eld. Russia depends for victory upon its numbersand their submissive obedience. Britain. depends more upon thought, intelligence, skill and patriotism inher indomitable.warriors.. The Russian peasant soldiery in the, mass will match up to the cannon s mouth likes machine urged on by some external-motive power." The British soldnery in the mass will attack or resist overwhelming odds, each individual soldier feeling that the cause of quarrel is his own, and that the honor of his country depends on his individual -action. .Whether at Oressyor Blenheim. at Worcester or at Waterloo, at Plassy or at El Teb, the Euclish soldier consciously fought for liberty, for commerce.- for the extension of knowledge, or for the love of ghting itself. The ultimate triumph of the Saxon is assured. Whatever may be the partial defeats and failures which will chequer the struggle as it progresses, the end must be victory tor human progress. civilization, constitutional liberty and the ` rights of man. gent conception of the objects for whch I SEAV `AND BARON; tvvll-II In Wuu mu-nu W. III!!! -0111118 on . 0'0-Ibtkul `in E ' as the blnckeat of bluk nhepo. They , vs no. % condence in*'hi_I`1 }';hre.* andhin~politietldny I are onorslduien` i8`I'0Il'd6d" I19 hin'.'Apo1it-. "rue Noay_qann%5ovAuc:A;i%| v uu vuuw uy uuu`_vprul0_ 0! 13116 Ouood .'~9f' the poryfauuu auv Juugv "CG UUullJIl'HIIlVI.'1y Lyoiing man with a` good deal of energy and push in him, and took a lively inter-' at .,in,chu:ch and qther matter: He Io`a.v~e`asld-mi family Taohind him. Tan smell fry of the Grit Press con-. tinue to ' on the bribery case, with a pretence of _or-getfulneee of the character hi h,{M ,,..d C. A. . 3.: in 6:3. to oo`r"n}`e 1iy(")(l:"sP'e 1~die`I:rif `I33 V|I,..;....~`' ` ,z*...~..'~,' n.u.`.."' 1.l.a;.*..: .. ..x :';.a. 4- ., : "Thomas B: `McMa`lion," 'Etq', `County Judge ofANorfolk, and brother of Hugh" McMahon, Q. 0., who conducted the_" orownbusineu he_re_.at the, `late aasizes; di'od~ at:-Siinooe: onztha 18th`imit from ery-L.` pipelaa. The judge was comparatively a. .vo`Ii'na man with n." anm-I Anni at ...........;. .__- --.-._5-- w---- can explosions House of Commons and the venerable Tower of London have been" tried for that devilish work, another ex- plosion has taken place, this time at the Admiralty oioe,` It `is true that there was not much damage done, and Mr Swainlon, the Secretary, 10 not very seriously hurt. but it seems to us but an- other link `in the olfain of dynamite operations which have been threatened in "London. .The theory that it was the re- sult ofymalice towards Mr. Swainson does notappear to be well founded. gtny per- son engaged in tl_1_ese. '5d'yna'mite" outrages .=P1!9&himl9lLeub14r-*h.98t&l08ne of ;or- .din_ary .crix_n_i1_1,aIs_,_ and deseryes the instant. sttentionmf JIz.d&`a'IJyIi6.h ;.'.. _.. ;.- - the rebels of `the.North-West. `It would beimpossihle for the Globe. to give com -. fort to Riel and his followers `more effec- tually than it is doing. Everything they_ need to know about the movements of the forces sent . against them, they can get from the Globe by means of Jackson, the Grit organ s trusted correspondent .at Rie1 s headquarters. The persistent and malignant attacks from day to day upon the Government, which in bitterness and virulence against` Sir John Macdonald personally, canscarcely `paralleled in political` warfare, are wcepted by `the murderers and traitors in arms, as justify- ing the course they are pursuing. It `seems that the utter. ruin of the country would be `hailed with pleasure If in its wreck a party triumph could be; gained` and the Ottawa Government defeated. A fearful responsibility rests upon the Grit leaders and the day is coming when the reckoning will be made, and they who are largely answerable for the bloodshed in this revoltswill held to a strict account. , -It would be a sad day for the best in- terests of the human race, if Britain should be dethroned fromethe position she now occupies. 'l`he;current of the world s history would be changed, and the sun of true national libertv would suffer eclipse. aasuvll uuu yaugl. can Ul. uuu groan b"Z5"3s the fieople, have been and are our objects also. Would any sagacious American see with pleasure Russian privateers `sweep England from the ocean, or Russian military hordes expelling Eng- land fromlndia, and .the Czar replacing the Queen? Undoubtedly England and Russia are both invaders of India. But the present question is not that. The question of to-day is whether the world. whether liberty and civilization, would gain by dislodging England from India and planting Russia there. Would we substitute Russian inuence for English inuence in the world l In a great controversy for dominion, therefore, between England and Russia, American sympathy will naturally lean to- ward England. It is not that as a state England has been always friendl to us, for she has not always been so. ot only did the Revolution and the later war tend bitterly to alienate feeling, but the atti- tude of the English government toward us in our civil war was cold and unfriend- ly. It `must not_ -forgotten, however, at while the ministry and Parliament, and the London clubs and drawing-rooms, and the Times, were hostile, the English` people were kindly, andgreat Englishmen were our friends. The `Russian Govern- ment, indeed, assured us of its sympathy. But to the Russian people we were prac- tically unknown. It is not that England as a state has been uniformly friendly that in such a controversy as that which impends we should regret her defeat. but because, historically and `upon the whole, England has been the great champion of liberty in modern Christendom, and that her objects and course, the extension of popular rights, the progress of the great Innrln A` 6314: nnnnln Inn:-us In... .....J ...... A srans svnirnv. , V In any struggle between Britain and the Great .Northern Despotism the United States will naturally be in sympathy with ` England. ' A common origin, language and literature, common aims in the race of progress, a common interest in the ex-_ tension and preservation of that freedom for which a. common ancestry fought, bled and secured, and also the consciousness that the English speaking race is marked out by the Great Disposer of human des- tiny to civilize and christianize the world will tend to draw England s great Ameri-s can. daughter in sympathy towards her. v The American press as a rule exhibits the same friendly spirit, as the following from | Harper's Weekly : T 117 I I` `no crime, the other oozivicti'ng' him of e ` you-e ego, Tit ieeeid, e jury at in flmmediately after the verdict of the" coroner : jury had been renderedgghief of police Fewings arreeted~hiitchellffIon the charge of murder. The sent him to the eeaizea for trial. ` He we: tried": " last ireek _on the charge of Vv5vilful'rnmder and the verdict of the jury was Man- slaughter with 3 recommendation to- - mercy. The sentence of `the court, is de- ferred till, the 18th -.of"Ma.y. i_He,re we heve two juries in the same con-, eidering the some facts and circumstances,-I the one deolering themen `had committed crime the judge can`. banish if he like: _by imprisonment for life. Some the trial of '18- ceee*of eueult could not" egree. end when? naked if there "'ugf_ likelihoodof their agreement the sergeant innocently replied, he thought theyouould :51 if they could leern how. much,aqJt.5the prinoner mission. . %nm";.....` us. Bafdrp the. two men Vchuged with the .._I-`-:-_.. -1. LL- `I'1____- ,3 A - THE ORTHEW ..... vv\-`p .. -4..-:-....- '-l5`n1nAv,_nMn y lands in Mulmur, At one 7o clooksp., IL, -at'_Fooler n Hbtel, ;;:;1g.. G, A. ngdangmut; YqI,Ido;fa`SoIici- opp. ..unl 1: a record of wVh,iqh we his `fs;l`;hn {rand I ma itill inoregproud o 'e`_fi:tjih_ the conduct of the menhu been nldut excellent. They htve left behxnd mm `all-felong the route ' n` retae` repu- htmn fer and good diaciptine. while their `stout ens! hardy appearance! and evident fitness for hu-dnork has .I.ttrac17ed general ndmiration. . . . .- ' up-u,p\_oonAu1U nu 10460 DB. r , Onr;laet marchof 18 miles from Qu Ap- pellegetation onthe G. P. R. to this place (pa_r,tof,the way was slush and mud to the -ankles) -we -made in seven hours, including pegee. The men did not carry their eto pee , itie true (as none of the men have as yet done). but _etill the march` was a good test of their powers of endurance. Two of our companies, which were recalled from the 'Sukatohewnn`, had -two` 6f` 82 miles each inaddion, r yet. .we u'e~._eJl~ here` to- .se.th6l.' 88859: having left. dbonlnd but two men, wh,q,r1t now apnea;-_a, were-.not t for eervree,.n_:_1d with hnth'&lf_e dozen men. teln- fnr duty after more than three weklxzibnilre to every ` ,ri`Al_]bn_t that of gctusl o_enrha_t. Thin is a record of wh.iqh=we meyfeirlv be proud.` I uni ntill `.....~.. .-.........a e uuu UUUII UIIIQIUI-I3, IIDW 00!!!- `mand. ` They are not only fairly eioient an attic, drill, but they have been molt amen- ab e to `discipline under `very tryin circum- stances, and have borne most cheer ully_ the gi-eatihardahipa to which they were neces- sarily. exposed during the journey round Lake Supeljior, and subsequently in reaching this etat1on.. ,.We were less than eight days from` Barrie to Port Arthur, and of that time we loet.24,houra by the delay of the regi- ment'ahead'of.na.y We did not suffer much _f;_om col except during part of one `night, but, on __e o'ther',hand,' the rain and thaw .,w_l,1ich_pre}v.aili3d;durin part of the time,- ma_dq-the'ma_rch'mg on t e ice as bad as it. was" possible for it_.to be. _ (Inn I....L ....-..-I. -1 1n _. SI 1- A - A `v::aaua"ap.o:.s.a.;y`~a:suaca;-,~a.sso to his chief and. ` in` 7th`eI and de- r liver? style, vd_e_,rn_anded the Q intment of `Willis Brown, "one of ` his`( ' ascatlen s) Elgin supporters, to the vacant position under the threat, if it was not" done. torthwith. that the government was doom- ed. A The appointment was suddenly made to the disgust of the whole party in the East Riding, and a large number in the `West This is the sort of a man, who swears that attem ts were made to win him from his 1:`: elity. Out upon such dishonesty and hypocrisy. It is enough to sicken a horse. 4 ' -vuvv- `ovum: CVO: VH5" Ulla Col. O'Brien, in command of the York and regiment n9w_ at Fort Qu Ap lle, write; than from Fort Qu Appelle to A riend in Toronto respecting hi: men : I hum Am-n-u rnnnnn on 1...` ..1----.1 __2Ll A jury in Lsricuhire, England, some time ago, convicted a woman of murder, their vegfdict being dgteggningcl by the ton of a penny. _'l_`he facts in thin cue became known the timg pet for up axecution of.-hcf She was by .01-dorof the Home Soorotsryf rapriovqd "Md," Thl. ., b- I . .,z_r_.: ,1.:a:`a:.:.`v qIn'.mny.`bo':ntgc zn9-l punt; out `:1 hsve every reason to be :p1eusd with themen ofthe York and Simooe to `meat, at we call the Simooe companies of t 0 12th Ind 3581: btttalions, now under my. `mand. Thev are not onlv fsniu-In nmnna .. "us on uuuvsw vuu IJIIUU D536 lUl.' II! No. 5, which will be issued on the 2nd May, will be an intensely interesting number; as it willeontsin, in addition to other ne illustrations, sketches represent- ing the Relief of Bsttleford, and the Battle at Fish Creek. The price of" the paper is 15 cents per copy, and it can be procured either from the publishers or from local nswsdeslers. IIII3I\III I The third number of Grip s War News is a. capital one. 0ur_advice to every- body is-go and buy it. Illustrated War News. We have received N o. 4 of Grip s Illus- trated War rNews, and a magnificient number it is Its illustrations give an infinitely better idea of the stirring scenes of the North West troubles, than any amount of descriptive matter. It is worth double the price asked for it. Na K nrbuds-J: In;`` In.` .........`I'.._ AL- he `I 'm:nnrron's`-usu. some Publications Worth 8034138 #1! An. _A._ A __ -___ _-_...-_A.. :l`he New llllldependent is one of the best conducted and `most scholarly re- ligious newsnapers inthe United States. We always read it with pleasure and prot rm... DL:I-.I-I_L:- n-_-u -__, 3,, _. 1 . Philadelphia Herald. conducted by Mr. Lum Smith, has done moreto expose frauds, dead beats, quacks and other hum- "bugs which prev upon society, than any other journal in America. It richly de- serves the support and ' sympathy of the [press and the public in its important mission. [III I `sq u .;u.._...__ The Canadian Poiiltry Revieir contains. a large amount of `exceedingly useful in- formation ounoerning poultry and pet stock. When the magnitude of the egg business of this country is considered and poultry raising` enerally, such a journal as the Poultryile view -becomes a most. important aid to all engaged in it. We can heartily commend the Review as a useful and well edited journal. _. I ? "5 In A A I J Harper`s Bazaar for May 2 II to hand, and as usual is neiy illustrated. The first page has what will immensely interest the ladies in the way of examnles of the dear little spring hat and the ` duck of a bonnet. Passeggio or the Promenade from a painting by Ludwig Passini R]. is a study. It represents a stroll on an Italian Pier with numerous gures in various attitudes. A numberare staring `at a lady who is demonstratively carrying a fan and leading a pretty child by the hand. A shing boat is lying alongside. the sea. wall and the crew are talking with the vendor of refreshments, and away across the water is the misty outline cf the city. The original is a water color painting which attracted considerable attention when` on exhibition last spring. in the roornsof the Institute of Painters of Water Colors. This number of the Bazaar is fully up to the usual excellent standard. ` Rural Now Yorker. The number of this ne agricultural iournal for the 25th inst., is a complete repertory of agricul- tural, horticultural and general know- ledge which is suitable for the season. I '1' `II D I` Illfnl ` I vinnxcrs or warms. The coroner's jury which was chosen a few weeks ago to inquire into the circum- stances of the. killing of McIntosh by. James Mitchell at St; Thomas, returned a verdict of justitiable homicide. The verdict met with general approval. The _ events which led Mitchell to shoot Mc- Intosh, the place and time, the utter ruin, domestic and nancial, which the` con- duct of McIntosh had brought on Mitchell were suicient to reuse in any man possessing the soul of a man a desire to get that redress which the law denies him` in cases of such domestic wreclr. - - Harper s Weekly for the 25th is at hand. This nely illustrated paper is always wel- come and always interesting. The por- trait of Theodore Thomas on the ` first page is a good specimen of the perfection to which wood engraving has been brought. In artistic excellence the Weekly is fully up to the London Illustrated News, if not superior Besides other interesting illus- trations. the present number contains cuts of members of General Grant's family," and views of the collapse of the buildings in New York by which so many persons lost their lives. This favorite paper de- serves the wide circulation and the high reputation it has attained. V I`:-uni" col. O'Brien. '\)D_.2-__ 3.. , 70l_d: P.: u ma. uu.-nxunu INSURANCE COM- 1 PANY.E ubuanodnaos. On 1 1 mo.- ooo. For Firoginnineu only. D I ' , - --_ - .--v u---- wvuwl IWFUIIDW I THE APHCENIX FIR! INSURANCE 00.. , ogunaou. linllond. 'l:qta.h_luhed1-182. an iup1ca1AL `INSURANCE PANY. Eutsbllnhod nan. onpmu: (III was IF!-A hII-3--- --'- an UEEN 7m.sUii ANcs~ oonnmr _ .oum?:u1s1s.ooI_.<,I00._ : -uu uruur, tnerelore 1 118% England. . $i've le Mahdi Without the services of European oicers; the Prophet could never have achieved the measure of success which has `attended him since he has assumed the . role of champion of the Mohammedan race 0sman*Digna, like Paine, is a full-blooded Frenchman, and was at one time a slave having been sold to El Mahdi. He, however, rapidly rose in the Prohet s favor, and was given one of, the Prophet s daughters for a wife. He fondlv cherishes the ambition to rescue the `whole Nile valley from the Great Lake "sou"!-oesto `Alexandria from the grasp ..of, Khediveand Sultan,. Englishman and Frank, to untrammelled Mohammedan con- , trol. Being the enemy of all law and stability in soci , Paine will feel most at home in a gland w are his hand can. be lifted against every' man's `hand and every man s hand -`against him. Whether he is now with the Mahdi or sknlkinq in Lower Egypt as was some time. ago . reported, fearing the fate `which he wishes for all Englishmen, . is not certainly-known. His career furnishes an- other "illustration how respectable abilities prostituted to unworthy . ends, and how a man who might have achieved a per- petual embalmment in the memory of the good is fast earning an immortality of infamy. . ,. . _ %AfLEX.MQRROW . All 8 Page. 4! Column Ncwapapar. 1. Published from the 01oa..Dnnlop Street; Baulqlnthaconntyot 8lmooa.thaPro- vinco of Ontario. Canada. every Thurs day morning. by . , IAMUEL WBLEY, PIOPIIIBTOB. es ana ages I01 which such wars are noted. Soon after his escape from New Caledonia. he hastened to offer his services to Osman Pasha in the Russo-Turkish war. He was Private Secretary to Osman at the siege of Plevna. After the fall of Plevna he was of- fered by his captors to the French Embassy, but being recognized as an escaped convict he was refused the protection of the Repub- lic, and was thrown into a Russian prison. Upon his escape from Russia he "returned to Paris, and for a time turned his attention to ionrnalism, advocating the wildest revolu- tionary schemes.` He left Paris last year and made his way through the Egyptian lines and offered his services to El Mahdi. As Secretary and adviser `of the Mahdi, he has very largely contributed to the present condition of affairs in the Soudan. His pen mustbe credited with -the despatches from the Soudan, which not only hood-winked and deceived the Egyptian Government, but `even the Prime Minister of Britain and Wol- esley himself. When quitting Paris and en- tering the Mahdi s service he ll said to have- remarked, that all Englishmen in Egypt must share the fate of Hick s Pasha. I ate all law and order. England is the home of law and order, therefore I hate England. 1 Wlthllflt f.l'I In!-vinnn n` avvv VI QISCIUII Illtlilllllc Upon the collapse of the French Empire, fourteen years ago, he took a leading part in the Communist atrocities whichfollowed, re- sultin in `his banishment with that of Roche ort to the penal colony Iof New Cale- donia, from which he escaped with four others in 1874, and with acelebrated anarch- ist he travelled across the American Contin- ent. It was at this `time that he had his photograph taken in N cw York, of which the picture we give is a copy. He is a man of very considerable talents not only in mil- itary science but in general literature. He is a clever iournalist and an acute litician, but he loves war and delights in loodshed and prefers oriental. wars to` those waged by professedly Christian states against one- another, doubtless from the unmixed cruelty and the undistinguished slaughter of all sex- es and ages for which such noted. Qnnn :54-nu Lin .u......... 8..-... \Y-__ n-1_3,-, 3 There are men whose names are engraved on the historic e because of thexr dis- reputable lives, en` evil deeds and the ruin the have wrought. The actions of the great on good are xed as land marks on the banks of 'l31me s Current to elevate and beck- ononwsrds in the pathway of virtue and honor, while the names of those who have sought to crush the good, to 11ft up the bad and to destroy rather than preserve, will live in the record of the ages as the foes of order and progress, and will be execrated as thgenemies of theirgiace. . VI-J9 VIIWIIILUQ VI IIIVGI [CV90 The man whose likeness is given above would have been closely associated with Robspierre, "Danton and Marat had he lived at the time these human monsters ourished. and instead of aninfernal triumxiate, h`s- tory would doubtless have recorded the deeds of a quadumvirate if possible more atrocious and bloody than the deeds of those actors in the'rst French Revolution. l\I:..2-.. Y)-.'_.- __ _ I`1_.__..,-_ ,__L ,1` LI, IN ,, RUUUID an IILLV Annals .|. svuvu J.I:UVUJuULULls Olivier Paine is a Communist of the Com- munists, one of the most pronounced types of these excrescences on the social fabric. He is a. professed enemy of law and crder, and because Britain is the world's great repre- sentative of social order, constitutional gov- ernment and rational liberty, he has openly declared his hatred of her and his determina- tion to do all in his power to her injury. To accomplish this was his object in entering the service. of the Mohammedan fanatic. El Mahdi. He was born about the year 1844, I and is consequently now forty years of age. His life has been that of an adventurer, chequered andstrange almost beyond credi- bility. It weuld be instructive to know just what inuences surrounded his childhood that tended to implant in his mind his hatred of social restraint and his professed love of anarchy and ruin. TY.-- LL- _-II_.._- -2 LL- 1': ,, u 7'3 . . V Ag-:m"1\'r-r . ".3, THE FCLWWIIR `GOIPQI-E8 1 mi I.nlIlII\YII u-Q1: ---___._ . __A-~A 3 hour. cnunuu ml: AND hams Iusun.AN_oI_COn1fANY. - ` T Sovnnmxozi . 1 IIIIOI ill kind: ugly - ..`.3.`.`.$.N..`. .'.' rnnlsul INSURANCE CO Y. a {Pro dPri ' Ovkeirn d&,m withvtlrg .`7Buh.j' * ~a oa;.. .s: Oonur of Polhcr mt; v r"in-n-rsa'7i"iT% The first battle has been fought by our gallant forces in the North West, and the victory won. Twelve of our braves have `been killed and over forty wounded, while Gabriel -Dumont, Riel a right-hand man, and twenty-ve rebels, have bitten the dust. Canada may well feel proud of. her gallant sons and may safely trust to them the honor and protection of the country. Old soldiers could not have been steadier under the deadly re of the breed ries, than these young volunteers It is, however, just what we might expect They are the descendants of that long line of warriors, whose deeds of glory on innumerable battle elds, from Hastings to Fish Creek, are emblazoned on the page of British history. The call of duty nds them ready to leave the comforts of home, and without complaint to endure hardships which few men -of the regular forces of the Empire are called upon to bear, and it is aninsult tojtheir manhood, which they well know how to resent, to speak of them as the Grit press is con- stantly doing. They have undertaken the soldiers duty, and they are prepared to bear cheerfully the soldiers toils and privations, to win the soldiers reward, or to die if need be, the soldiers death. All honor to Canada's volunteers. and the - traitors to the country's interests. who would detract from their merits or seek to make them dissatised with the duties they have assumed, should meet the traitor s reward. bnvmn PAINI. ` dridis 100 Columns and lo0.l:'n`s'z:-:;x.rt:1g.1s ;: issue. 43RI'Yl;KB % I 31.50 A van. - "Send three (Enz- u.h..a.r...?.`,`..'..`:: .::.$2`:;.`2 :Aam- m'VRAI.- Jounxux. 11 `ml wonm. -ammo: (mun co;. ' mvm w. JUDD. PM ' . ,"1.BI99d."_u. New York- oney to lend atlowest rates. Agent 10." a.no2.i`J3:'.`? ia`.n i3}`.: ?f `$5? -$1-' I 1.1 mm and eservo Fund Accident Assocastions. THOS. 8. MCLEOD, Dalston. 4 V sd 1 Cams: ove1'v(`3ou1ter & Va.ir s, Barrie. Tug)? umoe 0V6!` U0 and Saturday. |_MERlCANAGRlfULTUBJ$T uuun run. :mm:.'.-m: AUIUSJ rm mu 1- Ln- fa.rm_for sale or rent, Lot 23. 7th ('on. V9 DP! 1% mlles from Barrie. on good road: land : = sandy loam with clay bottom; 90 acres" clcurcn and well fenced, all under cultivmion. 40 ar-rug in crop. balance seeded down; good well I wgter, 3 small pond in the barn yard: '00 house. large barn 60 x 40. stable under the mrr `that will hold 20 head of cattle. driving and in` - `nlement sheds. shoe and pi houses. &c.. I Y0 orchard. "i]1be so d on easy u-rm~` or rented or 9. number of years. App) 'nL thv ADVANCE Office, or to the owner on I e pr:- mines- OR SALE.-LOT 6, CON. 8, VESPRA_. acres. well timbered. within half 9. nnlc or railway station. There is a. house and so_mv im rovement upon the property. Also ;=*-'- of the East half of lot No. 10. Con. 10. ` 9*` D111. consisting of 50 acres, . twenty cleared. A never falling stream runs through the propem" .'1`erm;$eesy. Within 3 mile of churches st0I'`3: _`post_o_ico. 8:0. KENT. Mincsing. 49 ` ARM FOR sALi.+122 ACRE FA RM F0!- farm for \'e- T nun 1.1 -n.-n. 0-...-... `D......:_ -_ ...-_J ._.,..,1 . lnnrl -1 lsuann ouneu `ms sauna ensue urn. Mr. Ryan, whose `letter appears in another coluvnn. has evidently miscon- eeived the spirit and intent of our remarks .9! the Barrie Spring It was with ,no'desire to find fault they were made, ' but simply as a comment on facts as they presented themselves to our reporter The general course of the Advance, with ' relerence to agricultural interests, amply demonstrates that nothing unfriendly to measures calculated to aid them would End a place in its columns. The utter lack of knowledge on the `part of farmers - with whom our reporter conversed. as to what means had been taken to bring buyers and sellers together. with the fur- ther fact, that no sales were effected, led. to the comments of which Mr. Ryan com- plains. It is quite evident, that so far as our correspondent is concerned, he is not to blame for lack of buyers on that occas- ion. Every enterprise must of course have a beginning and cannot be expected toiattain success by a single spring, but Mr. Ryan must acknowledge that had the Advance heralded as a success. what those who came to sell know waste` a great ex.- tent a failure, would not tend in A any way to subserve the interests of the newly established enterprise. The Advance announced the fact in the ordinary way, that the show was to take place and it is prepared to do what can reasognably be ex- pected to make it a success in the future. We shall take another opportunity of saying something about these fairs, and the means necessary to their success. JWll.l.nlIlI S Ttlllns z next noon To Rm or commcz. A call solicited for all kinds of DRUGS, PATENT MEDICINES, DYE STUFFS, SOAPS, COMBS, AND BRUSHES. i ---will be found---- 2 DOORS WEST OF THE BARBIE HOTEL. IS THE PLACE TO GET CHEAP ANO SUPERIOR GBDBERIES LIQUORS AN D CIGARS. Carling : and Laba.tt's Celebrated Aim 1 ways on hand. DUN LOP STREET - ....u IVILNI. Isabunds t] 1 1h (1 '7 - moat desirgb e 15'Jc ?uuaVr}te';% 1i9:,e"' 8110 Shrubs. Climbing Plants. (extra asaortinm , 0 glgmatis.) Roses, Peonies, Border 1*1;.m,,,_ Bum A....._4.. __-_L_.I L- _., Mandrake Dandelion Liver Cure in no pate: humbusz but 8. scientic preparation .,;ompoun.; ed from nature's well known liver rc-;;uIator9. Mandrake and Dandelion, combined with many other_ valuable roots. barks and h'rb8' h8Vim; a. powerful and specic action on the Kidney Blood, Stomach and Bowels. 11?- L..I2-_- ___.I A- _n_ A__I1 l We believe-and facts fully prove it tha- the liver is of more vital impormm-c to 25., l animal economy than the heart and lunsm 5-!) L_ mans on-' sunscnmrldx. 91 Per Annum in Advance. $1} Q No. new nnme will be ndded to the Sub- gorlption met until the money is paid. Bnhlorlbere now in nv rear: for three months and over will be oherxedl 60 per nnnum. w - ~~--v- I \III Yielding 1.140 33/60 bushels to the 1 written evidence of the Rum x n m,Walnum.c. u e] Xgents wanted to ctggagc the V ary, with expenses pa: . Good ind1 live'mcn. Apply to . - --j-u: -yj General A em. and Manager for Simcoe an Grev. Barrie P.0.. Ont. DONT FORGET THAT 8 '1' E. I T C! I-I S GEORGE MONKMAN CHEMIST AND DHUBGIST. _OF S'l'- C'A'l`HERiNE 8 om. gggg gl\yoy:_9_in stock 3 well mom. a.) ., Including the celebrated Niagara and BS a::'.f*.`z.`:.?:::'..`.:.*.:z;?`=*' M c `rue conuss POTATO 1.140 m/ml hllnhnln 4.. AL , I ICC CVIIIIIIIIGVV I fl UK Is abundant] tn 1 h ` deoirab D(:cl;(l8utSs,IInv"l"`r-t:PnEl3.?..." MUN!) AT MST! Uo"entnl- Auietie trade in the nee:-future. t>oint_ef `view its value cannbt be computed. 11: will form the- groet_highvuy of Britnin s eastern` and "1.tV'i!'tf-11tli6~ oiierstibn the ,tlI`6f 64>-`t;ote,. :thoh`;h`."'_li_igh 5: or .'1i",i.,"""li'11Pf"'9V ee""P5"`Al=*..i.` -...'h`?.: results, and the governpent its energy and push Ho fer . ueqmplinhed the oonetruotio1'1ofthiu new peerleofz .1`. V -; ` ' otsxx'd`1i:'g"t1;`a_i:'9'e'x"_, ` r 1. J . ~ ;_.%9;;,qn,1`;_ug, On'twghtVmd5I\ `G-b`r.H|I'n"`:"|'3n"` `d n`u4. `Id- --'_.-. 1.1.- .._- 7 A

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