Ontario Reformer, 26 Jul 1872, p. 2

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r- ONTARIO REFORMER, OSHAWA, FRIDAY, JULY 26,1872. ad here 1 sit writing | MR. GIBBS, MP, FOR SOUTH ONTARIO. -- ' oi mE Ee emmy -- being then made) within ten years; to | A pause ensued, but silence peigned SOUTE ONTARIO ELECTION. Ontario to be Fut Down, pay the British Columbians $100,000 a | frien Then I quit that, masters have sold the codfish to the Ameri- this episde. I feel 'cool enough now, be cans? I would suggest that Mr. Gibbs' ft ieee seis RE Ira flat on let him it is sb fiowing itself tl troublec" in thesi burns, | + bottle of which is plaints. Some: pecular 1 ent eye ¢ and gra his obed -use, all « look at a in the in but it is cared for or unsou exibit tI - without by all A COR; Hamilto Times as cle that time agc champio! of her ¢ writing { a space { - piece. pen, aud oe ee av Cr ArT Re va | supreme--the slanderers, cause I am sitting by the open window, | year for the land they had granted for the | "Oshawa; Friday, July 26, 1872. Grand Trunk Time Table, | OSHAWA STATION.-OSHAWA TIME. GOING WEST, | ones 140 AM, 9:40 pm. | Mai 0p. m. Mixed WHITBY STATION. Trains going East leave Whitby Station ten Inutes carlicr, and those going West fifteen | inutes later than the above. | | ras = - | Mail Mail Mixed, GOING EAST. | Mail .. 6:55am. | OSHAWA POST OFFICE. The mails are closed at thisoffice, by Post Office time as follows: * : GOING EAST. GOING WEST. Morning mail, 600 | Morning mail, 7.00 Evening mall, 8.00 | Evening mail, 8.00 1 The Northern mails are closed immed! | after the arrival of the Train from the West, 7.002. m., daily, Sundays excepted. Re The English mail, via. Quebec, is closed o'vlockon Thursday Evening. and via. Ne! at 7.15 Saturday Evening. | true or false : though present, slunk from view. hid Mr. White again called for his malign- ers to appear ; and denounced the cowards' who would steal a man's ghibracter as cap- able of usirg the assassins poniard in the dark. Another pause ensued, but still the snéaking cowards remained dumb, afraid to appear before Romest" men. And yet again White requested that if any | rsons had anything to say agai ter, they should ap- pear and e the same fearlessly and aboveboard, ahd not like snakes in the grass emit their venom bchind his back {and when there was not an opportunity of answering them. The charges were either if true, that large assemb- lage should be made acquainted with the | facts ; if false, le* the falsehood be ex- | ploded, and heard nothing more of. Registered Letter ' before the hour of ¢ OFFICE gOURS.- m 8 o'clock a. 7. p.m. Election Meoting ] TRUMAN P. WHITE A PUBLIC MEETING For the purpose of addressing the ELECTORS OF SOUTH ONTARIO, | IN THE ! DRILL SHED, OSHAWA, | On Saturday, August 3d, AT 7:30 o'crock, P.M. MR. FAREWELL will also address the Meeting. All ELECTORS are invited to be present. Oshawa, July 26th, 1872. 15-2in | Onimis Before. THE BUBBLE BURST. Just as we go to press a little fly shect has been shown us, issued by Mr. Gilbs part: { slander, with the notorious Tow Ici-Dingle put forward as the father of the precious document, in which / he whines at the chastiscmént he has so justly , and tries to escape the consequences of his libellous tales by denying his previous utter- ances. We have not space now to say much 'about the squib, but would only remark that the document proves the falsity of the tales cirzulat- o1 by Dingle, Gibbs, Finnimore and others--and €hows what ? why, simply that Mr. White was convicted of assault about twenty-five years ago, when he was almost a Boy, and fined therefor. If Mr. Gibbs and his henchmen can find any comfort in that circumstance, they dre 'welcome thereto; bat their MURDER story hasbeen proven a base die. + Poor. Tool Tom never wrole half a dozen lines of the precious document he fathers--it is the : work of Mr. Gibbs' pet scribe. _ MR. GIBBS' MEETING. A public meeting of the Electors of Oshawa and vicinity was held in the Drill Shed, on Wednesday night last, called by | Mr/Gibbs, for the purpose of rendering an accoynt of his stewardship as represen- tative of this riding during the past five years. About five hundred were present during portions of the proceedings. At thé request of Mr. Gibbs, Mr. W. F. Cowan presided as chairman, and filled the position in a fair and creditable manner. Mr. T. P. White--and a large number of his supporters--were present, | l into the And yet the vile-hearted slanderers proved themselves base cowards hy shrink- ing from a repetition of their lies. They were mute as was W. H. Gibbs when asked by Mr. Brown if the $500 had been paid which was so vauntingly boasted of as having been subscribed in aid of volunteers. Mr. White then in fitting terms denoune- ed the men and the party who would avail themselves of such contemptible means as the spread of lies and slander in order to injure a political opponent. The Drill Shed rang with repeated applause as Mr, White proceeded; and it was evident that the villainous slanders circulated by Mr. Gibbs' hirelings had tended 'tnly to dis- gust the boneat and right-thinking men of his own party. Following Mr. White, speeches were delivered by Messrs. F. W. Glen, A. Fare- well, Dr. McGill, Mr. Grierson, aud Mr. Gibbs; but we have not room for further report this week. Messrs. White and Farewell having been represented as not being able to tind fault with but very few of the measures of the Dominion Government--when- the fact was, they were allowed time to ester question only partially-- Mr. White announced that he weuld hold a | meeting in Oshawa on Saturday evening | of next week, 3rd August, at which he | and Mr.- Farewell would answer the taunts | launched at them. The meeting closed with cheers for:the Queen, Mr. Gibbs, and Mr. White. No expression offopinion was taken; ut it was evident that the meeting was pretty evenly divided in favor of the candidates. | This, in Mr. Gibbs stronghold, is an en- couraging omen for his opponents, I ----------. Ir there is any one man more to be de- spised than another, it is the man who will | circulate a mean slain ler about.a person, declaring it to be true to those who do not know the ecntrary; and when a ehance | is givemthe slanderer to repeat Kis words ! before the slandered and he fails" to do so, we should suppose that slanderer would hide himself and not dare to show his des- | picable face again among honest people. At the meeting on Wednesday evéning Mr. White challenged any man to come The writ, autherizing the election of a " penny whistle," open a column in its (From the Globe.) acitic Railway, and the other extravagant representative of this riding for the House | pages, as the wofe market in Oshawa, for | : { the benefit of his supporters elsewhere. 9! Common, han best recvivel by Me. J. Some of them wish to know if the price H. Perry, Returning Officer ; and he bas | J," 13" or is likely to rise as the con- issued a proclamation appointing Thurs- | «est advances, and what is the general day next, 1st August, as the day of nom- price paid for such articles? It is well ; ati to take place at Whitby, on the | known that Mr. White is not in the rhar- nation of ate pace a ary ket as a buyer, being too honest to buy grounds adjoining the Town Hall. Should | 0 way into Parliament by such cr'm nal Mr. Gibbs not take warning from the | proceedings, therefore Mr. Gibbs will have withdraw from the contest, voting will his own price. take place throughout the riding on Thurs- day, August 8th, at the following polling places : -- Yours, Truly, ELECTOR. Pickering, July 22nd, 1872. EAST WHITBY. | Adam's. signs of defeat now plainly visible, and | a monopoly of the market and purchase at | Gibbs and his 8300 gift to the volunteer fund. costume is only one rag ahead of ; | a Next to on eon at Mr. Gibbs, the member in the late | Peterboro," I'm about the * coolest" thing | House of Commons for South Ontario, is of the season. | a true representative of the era that de- | What un age of humbugs this is, and | veloped him into a Parliamentary Repre- | what an amount of food for laughter and | sentative. In all countries blessed with ridicule is furnished to nineteenth century | free institutions, there is sure to cone mortals! Tom Ferguson and his sore toes; | after a period of active agitation or the John A. and the temperance pledge; Beatty agcomplishment' of great constitutional and the workibgmen; Thomas Nicholson | changes, a reaction in favour of compro- mise, rest-and-be-thankfulness, buryirg | dead issues ; and a geneaal endeavour to | banish from memory, in a spirit of per- | sonal indolence and selfishness, -the mem- | was there ever before such glaring instan- ces of husbuggery | And now Toronto is, convalsed with laughter in regard to cer- tain revelations made concerning the pre- | ory of the past and a sense of duty as to | sentation of a gold casket to Lady Mac- | the fature It is then the "heavy donald, presumably by the workinginen of | weights" have to turn, that full money- To the Ediior of the Reformer : Dear Sir, --Have you ever been in R Whitevale | If you have, 1 think you will No. 2--Town Hall, €olumbus. join me in say -- it i otte of the must Jaw No. 3--School house, Raglan. | abiding, industrious, sober little places in WHITBY TOWNSHIP. | our novle Dominion. No. 1--Toll gate house, gravel road lot | 26th, 4th concession. { truth when 1 say, the most strict observer No. 2--Town hall, Brooklin. might remain here for yours and scarcely, No. 3--S8chool house, Ashburn. Jor once, see a young man of this place or PICKERING. Jian' so much as meddle with that . is which can inebricate, to say nothing of No. iy nion school house, lot 1, 2nd | gétting intoxicated. . And with one or oe coneession, exceptions I might say equally as much No. 2--Orange hall, 8th eon. 3s Creek. } for the older on Ro J po community, No. 3--Temperance hall, Duffins Creek. | gy being the case, what meant those Ne : ~Sowh Hall, Broggham, t howlings, cursings, and rawlings with NU. A-BEBOO) NONE; ARSMONT. which last night and ths morning --the . No. 6--McCreight's school house, lot 30 slumbers of our peaceable citizens .jyere 3rd concession. > o | disturbed and their senses shocked? And No. Ti--Bentley's schocl "house; lot 32, what still mean those prostrate specimens 8th concession. of beastly drunkeness that encumber our side-walks and polute the atmosphere with the muttered obscurities of their de- lerious dreams. A word or two will explain: That no- toriously *' profowend thinker," that paragon of religion, loyalty and temperance--T. N. --with a flock of his lambs--was in our midst last night. { It remains for the electors of South On- tario to distinctly say they have no sym pathy with such orgies, by electing their author T. N. Gibbs to remain in Oshawa Yours, Truly, No. 1 --CedariDale Warehouse, opposite G. T. R. station, Cedar Dale: OSHAWA. No. 1--Mr. Carswell's office. No. 2=Town hall. No. 3--Pedlar's Warehowse. No. 4--8mith & McGaw's livery office. TOWN OF WHITBY. No. 1--Mechanics' hall. No. 2--Skating rink, Dundas street. No. 3--Town hall. ---- Public Political Meetings. The time being short previous to the ONE OF THE DISTURBED, | election day in Scutk Ontario, meetings | have been announced in different parts of | PLAYING BLUFF. { ; Dag a -- f the riding which will be addressed by 'the To the Editor of the Reformer, | opposing candidates-- Messrs. White and | Mm E N = Gibbs--as follows :-- | R. Epiror,--My inten'ions were | : . strictly honest last evening when I asked { _ Brougham, Friday, July 26th. (called by | Mr. Gibbs to define his position with ref- { Mr. Whate.) T I am keeping well within the bounds of | the city. But Mr. Terrente Clarke, a | bags era regarded as the best proof of leading ember of the Bricklayer's Union | parliamentary ability, that the ** practical aud an [wat-and-out Conservative, has | politician, who despises all ** theories "-- | shown thifhigs up in their true shape. Dis- | by which he means all active convictions Igusled With the attempt of Beat'y and | or principres--is to the fore,' and that a | other démagogues to use Trades' Unions pledge to subsciine the local charities and as a means whereby to attain political | vote on a bee-line for the Government of power, Mr. Clarke statea that the casket | the day | was bought, and paid for by a gontleman candidate is the ric ht man for the situa- | living just putside the city limits; that tipn. It was owing partly to this st te of this gentlegnan penned the address which things and partly to a species of tactics | accompauivfl it; that at a weeling of the | which it may be hoped the on:-day polling | Trades" Assi mbly the casket and draft of | system has almost, if not entirely abglish- | | the address Were shownbya '"' g »-between" | ed, that Mr Thomwos N. Gibbs wabk re- | who statedd that "the donor wished his | tyrned in 1867 for South Ontario. | We | name kept Secret, but that he wished the doubt whether in courting a renewal of | workingmefi to accept it, and present it to | Sputh Ontario's confidenc: Mr. Gibbs has | Lady Macdinald as a gift from themselves | hpen very specific in staring his claims to | | that up to that time no workingmen had | that hononr, * The fate, last year, of Dr. | | known anyghin about the ** gift" that no McGill, who - dopted the Shibboleth of the | workingmail had paid one cent towards its pariy Mr. Gibbs belongs to, may have | purchase, gr had one workingman been | dade the Dominion m:uiber cautious. | asked to ddiso. ME. Clarke isa ** brick," | Mr, Gibbs is not so dul as to despise a { as well as A orick layer, and at once refused | warning, nor so blind as t»> be unabie to | to countendhce such a stupendous fraud; | sée whereunto his votes are leading him. ! and although his statements concerning | History records, in fact, that he once | the franduleat character of the testimonial | avoided figuring on a highly prejudicial were published over a week ago, not one | division by resigning himself incontinently Tory journal has dared to deny them. | tg the embraces of the sleepy god, and | The fact is, the whole affair was a plot | would not be shaken" into .consciousness | concccted by a few Tories, to influence in time to ' hear the question." Dut voters at the coming electicns. They | South Ontario is too fine a constitnency wished the idea tp go abroad that the | to be represented even by negative virtue; | workingmen. theoughout the country gen- "abd we are afraid that, before we have | | erally to vote the Tory ticket. But their dowe with. his record, we shall find that plot 'has been nipped in the Lud, and they. Mr. Gibbs has to answer for a good deal themselves held up as subjects for laugh-. of what must be set down as positive evil. ter and contempt. However, the working- He had hardly taken his ®eat when his men * smell a rat," and| in the reaction regard for constitutional forms rnd safe- { that is coming on, I anticipate a hot time | shards was put to the test, "and he voted | for Beatty and other political gnacks. | (December 17, 1867) to support the Min- |; 1 went to Van Amburgh's ** three great istry in ** departing" from {he wise and shows" lust night. It isa downright hum- | 4 cSnititutional practice of basing the | bug. The collection of animals is quite | 'appropriations for the year on detailed | are the highest proofs that the | " 1 | officials appointed by th | ments and salaried Inter eid objectionable arrangements comprised in that measure. On April 4, 1871, Mr. | Gibbs voted Nay to a resolution declaring that the bribery of a Nova Scotia Legis] - tive Councillor by Dr. Tupper, a member of the Dominion Cabinet, was *' a flagrant violation of the laws of morality, and calculated if unrebuked to infliét deep disgrace on this country and its institu- tions." On April bth, 1871, Mr. Gibbs was one of 8 who, by a majority of only three votes, decided that the Government should proceed with the construction of the Iutercolonial on the broad gauge. thereby incurring a ecdrtain future ex- penditure of three to four millions of dol- lars instead of a present one of less than million. He voted (April 8, 1871), against proposals to have all the elections at a general election on one day sand to refer the trials of Election Petitions to the | judges. 'He also voted (April 11, 1871), against Mr. Blake's proposal to exclude Local Govern- onial Railway Comuissioners from sitting and voting in the Dominion Parliament. He voted, | (April 11, 1871), against Mr. Rywyal's motion in favor of bringing the murder- | ers of Thomas Scott to justice. | So that, in four sessions, Mr. Gibbs had used 'h's best exertions to transfer the powers of the representatiy es of the people to the hands of the Executive; to sap | and destroy the basis of the union of the Provinces ; to restore the old grievances | and abuses to avoid which Upper Canada sought Confederation ; to 'violate principle of Representation by Population ; to neotralize the benefits to be derived from the acquisition of tlre North West Territory ; to waste the pablic money ; to corrupt "the Legislature ; do pldge credit of the country blindly and reckless- ly to a work of which no one coulu tell the cost or prevent necessary electors] sustain one consequences ; to reforms ; to | corrupt practices at elections, and to en- able murderers to go unwhipt of justice. The events of the late session are' so fresk in the minds of Mr. Gibbs' constity- ents, that it is only necessary very briefly to simmarize his remaining vetes. He voted (April 11, 1872) to support the dis- graceful and ignominious withdrawal of i down. i Nova Scotia an extra subsidy, At the meeting held in Toronto night, to ncmivate a Reform for the Central Divisicn, Col. Denison Conservatizer--testifivd to the fullowidg fact: A prominent politician of Brit; Columbia said recently to him (Col. Deny. ison): *' You .in Cntario belong to the pivot. Province fin the Dc winien, 8 John jis cur Jeafler, and we will hit with Him to keep Untario down." Elect ors of Hamilton, there is the very pith of the present contest for you. Ontagio was always a sore fpot to Sir John A. Mae donald, even. before Confederation, and last candidate | he is ow resolved to employ the other Confeflerated Provinces down. | to put Cntarip - He gave British Columbia more repres. entatives than the @onstitution allows and extravagant sums of meney to help him to put Ontario down. He gave Manito a niore representative thau the Constitution authorizes, and cop. doned the murder of a British subject to get the aid of Manitoba fo rut Ontarip He violated the Constitution in giving ; in order get the aid of Nova Scotia to put rb | down. He promises New Drunswick better terms an order to drag New Brunswick | into the work of putting Ontario down, the | the | t down Ontario. the Fenian raid claims ; he voted (May | 16) in favor of the surrender of Canada's commercial privileges and territorial rights involved in the Washington Capitu- | lation ; he voted to place THIRTY MILLIONS | Columbus; Monday, July 29th. (called by Mr. Gibbs.) Brooklin, Tuesday, Gibbs.) Duffin's Creek, Wednesday, July 31st | --(Mr. Gibbs.) . Whitby, Thursday, July 30th--(Mr Greenwood, Friday, Aug. 2nd. (Mr. 1'Gibbs.) | August 3rd. (Mr. White.) | Dunbarton, Monday, Aug. White.) t | Claremont, Thursday, Aug. | White.) | 6th. (Mr- | A marcH game of Base Ball will be nomination day. | Oshawa, at the Drill Shed, Saturday, | Sth. (Mr. | | erence to the ** Tupper scandal," but it seems to be characteristic of some men to | wet through this world by bluffing. Here is Mr. Gibbs reply to the question: ** I | will answer you by saying that the Hon. Mr. Blake wrote a note and sent it across | the floor of the house to the Hon. Mr. E. | B. Wood." What in the name of com- mon sense has this to do with t -e¢ Tapper scandal? Iam not to_blame for what | Megsrs. Blake and Wood do, but Mr. Gibbs is to blame for the dishonorable course he | The * two-horned" rhinocerous is a tem- | point did not perhaps carry with it very | took with reference to the matter referred | | to. He is not only accountable to his | constituents as a gentleman, but account- | able to his maker as a wan and a chris- { tian. Should Mr. Gibbs be again called { upon during this contest, for an explana- { tion with regard to his course in this mat- ter, 1 would strongly advise him to come | head downwards, and arms folded on his | deyands of ths French leader in the oF poLLARS, for the Pacitic Railway, at | the absolute and unchecked control of the Government of the day. He voted to | place FIFTY © MILLIONS OF ACRES OF | LAND in the hands of the Minister, to be | manipulated by him at pleasure. He voted to give the Governor in Council power to charter the Company to build the road, to select the route, and make all the arrangements, without reference' to the authority of Parliament. He shirked | the vote on Mr. Mills' motion to exclude shareholders in the Company having the contract for the construction of the Cana- dian Pacific Railway from sitting and vot- ing in Parliament. He again, n this, the last session of the first: Parliament, voted against simultaneous polling at :eneral elections, and against the abolition of dual representation, bot shirked the vote on Mr. small, but they appear tobe well kopt. | «{ estimates." The particular casq in perance man, and don't indulge in ** horns' at all. It may have two hprns afier a finmber of years, but at present it is an insignificant looking little | quadruped. The ** hippopotamus hog" i§ a strange looking animal; and I think Rhat my lord | he (Dec. 18, 1867) to leave the settlement Prospect, even for the sake of obtaining a | of the route of the Intercolonial Railway vote, would hesitate about] entering its | jj the hands of the Government, and thus pel. By the-by, a sight off Prospect im | th render possible the first great fraud Grgenway's vig-pen, scratching the pigs | chmmitted by the ney Administration in fora vote, would be as godd a show as {|,¢ selection of the North Shoré Route, Van Amburgh's. and the determination to throw away In the gymnastic department, 8 man | pweive MILLION OF DOLLARS in order to walked on a temporary ceiling, with his satisfy the arrogant and uuscrupuloas serious consequences, but it became the first precedent for a course of action that, before the Parliament had run its course, was to assume gigantic proportions. It 1s not wonderful that his next vote should chest, Two men attempted it, but one fell," and injured himself slightly, although he fell on a netting. There was some Cabiuet. Shortly after (May 7, 1868) the Opposition endeavoured to obtdin for . : ia ow | out like a man and give the electors the played this afternoon, on Dickson's field, | truth, the whole truth, and nothing bat west of Mr W. H. Gibbs' residence, | the truth, even if it should tell a little between the Oshawa -" Red Stockings" Parliament the control of £5,500,000, to! be appropriated for fortifications at Mon- treal and elsewhere. Mr. Gibbs voted in favor of allowing the Government to "* g { tine tight 'rope' performance, and globe balancing and twirling; bat the whole show was very disappointing, and concluded Blake's Controverted Elections Bill; and, tinally, he voted against every attempt to make more just and equitable the trickey and disgraceful Redistribution Bill, | the Indians. and the Cedar Dale clubs. | Tre Central and sub Committees and | supporters of T. P. White, Esq., | this (Friday) eveniig, at half-past Seven o'clock. forward and repeat che '* murder slander" | which had been circulated against him by | Dingle, Finnamore, and others. Nope of thgm dared to repeat their contemptible, malicious, bs re-faced lies before Mr White We thought that would be the last of the murder 3--.pe. But no. ---the Tom Ferguson of South Ontario-- the person who was not manly enough te get up in the meeting and vindicate his charact- There is, ene | { man wro is found mean enough to repeat | t ese slanders. That man is Tom Dingle | By reference to our advertisir.g columns it will be seen that Tripp & Shaw have | dissolved partnership, and that the busi- ness heretofore carricd on by them will be continued by Mr. Shaw. He solicits a continuance of the patronage extended to the late firm. SERMON To CHILDREN. --Rev . Robt. M. { Thornton, of Knox Church, - Montreal, will preach a sermon to the youngat 11 o'clock, on Sabbath next, in the Canada are | requested to meet at Lukes' "Warerooms, | | against him. | Yours Re spectinlly, J. P. WOOD. Oshawa, July 25, 1872. That there may be no misconception re- garding the question referred to in the above communicati n, we publish here- ! with a motion introduced into the House { on the 4th of April, 1871, by Mr. Mac- kenzie, seconded by Hon. Mr. Dorion: -- * That itappears from the statement made to this House by the Hon. Charles Tupper, C. B., President of the Council, that on the 3ist day of March last, a Bill was depending in the lative Council of Nova Scotia for the dis chisement of Dominion Officials at Nova Scoti Elections, and that the vote of the Hon. James McNab, a Member of the said Council, was ma terial to the decision on the Bill, and that the | said Hon. Charles Tupper was desirous that the | Bill should be d ted; and that on the said day | he received a telegram from Halifax, as foliows | Hon. Mr. [cNab votes to-day for Disfranchising Bill. Can you guarantee Peter an Office, if his father is put right, A. W to which he replied as follow Your Tel | Anything Hill engages todo, I wi about 9:30 or 10 o'cleck. | fringing on his patent now s it blind," and spend just as they ple $5,500,000, without telling the Hose or at the time knowing themsclves--how | they should spend it, when they should spend it, where they should spend it, what were their plans, or whether the won y X | vated was to be only the beginning 6r the me, and subscribe for the ReroRMEeR for | whole of the expendituré, And in order another year. [I intended giving you city | tp prevent the possibility of Parliament political news, but the letier 13 too long knowing anything about it Mr. Gibbs now. However, 1 will just say that a voted Nay to a further resolution (May meeting of Reformers for the Contre Rid- | 15, 1868) declaring that no. sus should ing of Toronto will -be held to-morrow | he night (Thursday,) and that Robert Wilkes Esq . will be selected as the Reforn Candidate; and there is not the l.ast doubt of his success. He is one of th best known merchants in the Province, and is a soutil Reformer. He will baop- posed by ng nan Mauuning. Result --alas, We have arrived at the end of the re- cord. If Mr. Gibbs has occasionally given an independent vote he will not be slow to sound his own praises. The very few mportant - occasions on which ho has acted otherwise than as a pliant tool of «ohn A. Mzedonald, may, we dare say, be told off the fingers of one hand. They would constitute a wiserable poor plea for mercy. What can they avail against tie utter cond 'mnation of a representa- tive who has aided, accorling to the best of his ability :-- To limit the anthority of the represen- tavives of the peopl: ; 1 1t will be seon, thirefore, that, before | To destroy Ministerial responsibility ; lie had been one session in the House of to violate the Chinter of our rights and Commons, Mr, Gibbs had done ail that | Privileges as a confederation ; 1 To place the most extraordinary and ane member ¢ould do to support and en Sf 1 tional ters in ihe hands of courage that system of usurpation of | Wneonstitutiona power In he hanes o which the Pacitic:Railway Act was 'four the Uoverpment ' w years afterwards 10 be the climas. To levy needless taxes, and to sustain an increasing expenditure ; ** Heaven's bléssinzs on the gnan who first invented sleep, said the inimitable Sango Panza, and so pray I I'm in- i most, and if this'letter will help your readers iuto the same biissful state, why let them thank :xpended for the fortifications afore spid, until a separate estimate for each work should, have been submitted to Parliament. poor Manning !| All elasses here are dis- satisfied witiifthe Treaty, and its concoct- ors, and are bound to let Sir John A's Euzland shows And and several prominent members of both it : ; piiitical parties occupied positions on the strutted around the Drill Shed with his platform. The Chairman announced that | buss companion, Fred Gilbs, declaring M . (3ibbs and White would be al. | that he had the documents in his pocket Jowed three-quarters of an hour each to to prove his words. He took good care to address the meeting, to be followed | keepsaid documents out of sight. | Fhy | er, (if/he has such a thing)--although he | alternately by supporters of exch eandidate | 4d be not bring them out and expose ---BMr. Gibbs to have the right of a clos'ng | reply. After a few laudatory remarks in fayor of our member and the Dominion Government, the chairman galled upon Mr. Gibbs to speak. We have attended a good many political meetings, but we never before listened "to | an account of five years work where #0 | little was presented. Mr. Gibbs defended | Proceedings of his son Fred, Dingle, Fin- | consequence of a plank on a small bridge | the waste of twelve millions of dollars jn "iere and others, and is net playing be- | crossing Saw Mill Creek, erst of Dunbar- the construction of the Intercolonial Rail- | way, by the assertion that it was the only route which could properly be selected, as | Mr. White there and then? For the sim- | ple reason that the waste paper he had in | his pock<t was bogus, and the prodiction | of them would only sink him, and the | : | party he so contemptibly serves, lower, if | Esq. the supporter of SOrruption; { possible, in the winds of all intelligent AccipENT.--An accident of a ra'her se- men. {If Mr. T. N. Gibbs does not sanction the hind the scenes, secretly aid cowardly en- | couraging those fellows on, why did he not | come forward on Wednesday evening and it was to be vaed for military purposes | wash his hands clear of the matter! He only. He defondvd the abdication of the | should have denounced the scandal, and constitutional functions of Parlianent, in handing over to thirteen men the power to expend thirty million: dollars of public money and fifty million acres of public lands in the construction of .a railway through & forest and rocky wild. He tried to make kis hearers believe that the Treaty. of Washington was negotiated solely in the -interests of Canada; and closed with eulogising himself and asso- ciates for having succeeded in bringing | thive weeks." | showed to the electors that he 'ook no part | in it; instead of keeping silent, thereby | giving his tocls to understand that they | had his conisent,--that they might go on | circulating the report just as long as they | wished. ? i: We quite agree with one of Mr. Gibbs' | leading supporters, that 'it would have | been better for the party had Mr. Dingle | been out on Scugog Island during the past It would have been better Manitoba and British Columbia into the | {°F hem Sueh a man is a disgrace to Confederation. And these four subjects were all Mr. Gibbs could find: heart to speak about Ts hisreword, then, so bad, | that he fears to' touch upon m re than four of the measures he has supported during five years! In respons: to a question segarding the representation of Manitoba, Mr. Gibbs admitted that the had been violated, brit claim it the best that could be dons wider circumstances, Mr. White was then introduced. and announced himself 'as appearing before them as thenominee of aparty, to rej risent principles held, he believed, by a majority of the electors of this riding. He proceed- ed to expose the misdeeds of the Govern: ment which Mr. Gibbs had so slavishly supported, in their dealing with the Pagi- fic Railway, the Election law, the depart ure from the Confederation Act in the ex- tension of the Dominion, the questionable expenditure of £225,000 cone Lie secret service money, the blow at the independence of | Parliament by hiring of a member thereof | at a salary of 8300 pér month, in order to evade the law, which prevented an engage- ment of such member by the year. The time allotted to Mr. White having nearly expired, he wished to refer to a personal matter before sitting down.-- Having been informed that certain parties in Oshawa bad been circulating slander- _ ous and damaging reports regarding him- sélf, he called upon such persons to come forward on the platform, and before that large and respectable audience of their fellow townsmen, and in his presence, state what charges, if "any,. they had to bring against his character n | their hours of labor. any party. \ The Nine-Hour Movement. | At Mr. Gibbs' meeting in the Drill | Shed on Wednesday night last, he had not a word to say in regard to the demand | made by mechanics for a reduction of The question was | asked Mr. Gibbs, if he had advised Mr. | Glen to refuse to comply with the request for ardecrease of the hours of: labor from | ten to nine hours per day. Mr. Gibbs | said he would answer that presently. Mr. { Glen then appeared, and denied .that Mr. Gibbs had ever advised him in any way | regarding the nine-hour movement. - The questicn asked afforded Mr. Gibbs, had he so desired, an .oppertunity to state his views on the questien now most forci- bly engaging the attention of the working men. But he studiously avoided saying one word about the labor movement. Mr. Gibbs, from the coniinencement of the agitation, was a strenuous oppenent of a reduction of the hours of labor--as the working mea of Oshawa well know ; but when an election coutest drew near, and Mr. Gibbs wanted the votes of work- ing wen, he insulted them by granting oNE HOUR OUT OF MIXTY, instead of oné in ten as asked for. The mechanics of Oshawa cannot be hoodwinked by Mr. Gibbs in any such manner. Selfish motives prompt. ed him to drop a crumb : but the device is too thin and fully understood by those sought to be manipulated. E. Tux Oshawa boys beat the Bowmanville boys at a game of Lacresse yesterday "| that hecargies South Ontario in his breech- Charles Tapper. And that in purs said Telegrams in order to secure t said Hon. James McNab, an office in the Do- | Presbyterian Church. The special collec- | | tion will be in aid of the Sabbath School Library. | McNaba son of the saidJames McNab. | | Fy Erectors or South ONTARIO, you will | of the Hon. Charles Tupper in | exercise the patronage of the Dojuinion Govern- soon be called upon to record your votes ment, as to influence the action of, the Local . ~gislature of Nov 8 for or against one of the most corrupt k on of the laws of public morality, and ca'cu- . = ) ated, if unrebuked by Parliament, to inflict deep Governments that ever disgraced Canada. disgrace on the country and ils institutions." ¥ n " vi : ' Let your motto be 'down with corrup- Mr. Gibbs voted with the Governmen® | tion ; " and vote for T. P. White, Esq. |in defeating the above censure, and placed the people's candidate, against T. N.Gibbs, | upon record, as a precedent to be follaw- ed, the monstrous declaration that eorrup- tion should pass unrebuked. Seotia, was 'a flagrant vio- | rious nature happened a few days ago to To'the Editor of the Ontario Reformer : | Mr. Carnegie, his son, and son's wife, in Dear Sir,--Duty to myself and the : ? y : publie compels mq to make a statement | through yaur ecolumns--although it is with a very great deal of reluctance I do | ton, having been broken through. | They | so. | were driving at a brisk pace on to the Hite 4 present ta eo into particulars, but | hride : : will do 80 at some future time. bridge not knowing of 'the plank being | the facts : There is a falschood of no small broken, when the horses suddenly stopped | magnitude going the rounds, with refer- ran back, upsetting the carriage and throw- | ence to the collection of the Village taxes ing the occupants over the edge of the | for 1872, ~ The falsehood referred to has { bank, all of whom 'were more or less se- | een saddled upon two men who profess | ously 'hurt. Br. Carnegie has since to belong to the respectable portion of the . . Carneg ! community--men who have spent over 30 been under the care of Dr. Tucker, and we trust recovering. men are Wm. Glenny and myself. Yoo - Now, sir, as far as [ am concerned, I | feel very anxious that this matter should be .sleared up. I therefore court quick and thorough investigation, 1 beg to en- close you a copy of a letter sent Mr. G. upon the subject, but failed to get a re- sponse. : Correspondence. TARA TAA AAA To the Editor of the Ontario Reformer; Dear Sir --You well deserve the thanks and liberal support of the electurs.of South Ontario for the good work you are doing in behalf of good government--for the ex- posure of Mr. Gibbs' doings in the past, extracted from the journals of Parliament with pertinent remarks thereon, and for your liberal 1sertion of so suuch corres- pondence from the glectors. It is now several weeks since parliament was prorogued, and what has Mr. Gibbs | upon unquestionable authority that yon been doing all this time! He has issued | deny having told me that you had received no address to the electors; he has rever | instructions from Mr. Cowan, the Deputy ealled them together in a public meeting | Reeve of Oshawa, to collect the taxes for for the,purpose of explaining, as best he | the present year. If such is the'case, will can, his cemluct in the past, the measures | you kindly give me such denial in writing he has in his * profound" wisdom, seen fit | over your sigr ature. .to surport or oppose. Is this the proper YoursRespectfully, wey for an honest straightforward candi- J. P. WOOD. date to act towards the electors, who have de entrusted to him their interests for the ¥ -o last five years! Verily, no. But it is To the Bi; Osawa, July 2, 1572. just the way in which & man would act | 1° t ditor of the Outario Reformer; -who_had done wrong, who had deceived | DEAR Sir,--Undcrstanding that Mr. his employers, who had betrayed his trust Gibbs supporters have been endeavoring who had proved unfaithful, and whose [to make capital of my having refused to guilty conscience made him afraid to meet | support T. P. White, Esq., at the ap- his constituents face to face. proaching election, I would take this Since|parliament closed Mr. Gibbs hae | opportunity of stating that my sole reason for declining to do so was because 1 had been wandering about 'the riding in a A clandestine stealthy sort of way, holding | Understood that Mr. White had pot been quite as cordial as he might have been in hole-and-corner meetings here and there, : | in some of which there was said to be | Supporting Messrs. Brown and Farewell. | scarcely an intelligent, influential elector | But since Mr. Gibbs' supporters have de- | scended to circulating s ;andalous and un- | present. At some of those meetings he is " fo said to tell them all sorts of humbug such | truthful reports in regard to Mr. White, I feel it wy duty to the great Reform | a8 *' Scowt's" murder never came before | the house, and ** the Pacific Railroad will Party to do iuy very utmost to secure his not cost the country a dollar," and much | triumphant return. more of the same sort. Why does Mr. Yours truly, R. C. STEELE. Gibbs not issue an address | Why does e not meet his constitpents in a manly, a. Ast ra > ORE ey "ia he | To the Editor of the Ontario Reformes: Dear Sir,--If there is a very hot person straightforwasd manifer! What is he afraid of } Does -he expeot to steal into on earth; it is your saint-like correspond- ent. It is about two o'clock in the morn- Parliament this way? He has boasted ing now, but I can't sleep. I can sweat theugh, and kick the bed-clothes off, and swear just a " leetle,' It was no use to throw the pillows on the floor, nor to lie across the Hed, nor to lie with my head at the foot of it, nor vice-versa, nor to fervent. ly spell " mad" backwards. 80 I crawled Yours respectfully, J. P. WOOD. Osnawa, July 25, 72, Osmawa, July 20th, 1872. MR. GLENNY, Oshawa, Dear Sir, --I am informed | es pocket, and from his conduct seems to i he attempting to carry out the boast to the { letter, Will the electors of South Ontario humbly submit to this? Will they sub- mit to become Mr. Gibbs' humble slaves, and allow themselves to be bought and sold in the same wanner ss he and his minion Service was offered to the said Peter | ** That in the opinion of this Hause the conduct roposinz so to | I am excwvedingly busy, and have no | Here are | years of their lives in the county : these | out of hed and read a few chapters in Job, | | candidates know it. 3 what she thinks of Canadian spirit, by placing a Duffer-in our Gaberaatorial chair, GUIDO. July, Torento, 17, 1872. [The above communication came to hand too late for our last issue.) In the second session (1869), Mr. Gibbs gave his vote directly gud expressly (June 16, 1869) in favor of Le long and worth- | less North Shore route for the Inter- dolonial Railway, in preference to one at gnce cheap, direct and profitable. He also voted (June 16, 1869) in favour of in- i : ah | greasing the subsidy to Nova Seotia, in ais 5 violation of the terns of the Confederation | To the Editor of the Reformer. Act, and. inflicting taxation upon Ontario, | Sir, -- ! as her share of the increased payment, to | The examination for prizes in the Myr- | the amount of 1,100,000. In the same { tle Public School, commenced on Mcnday | session, (June 17, 1869), Mr. Gibbs voted | the 8th of July, and continued four days. | in defence of the hiring of Colonel Grey | | The Public examination took place on | by Sir Juo, A. Macdonald at a salary of | Friday, the 12th, and passed off very cred- | $300 per month, in direct opposition to | Rably, the spirit of the Independence of Parlia- The following is a list of those who ob- ment Act. ! tained prizes in the 3rd, 4th & Oth classes: So, by the end. of the second session, | Mr. Gibba had done his best to aid the {| THikp Crass.--RegapiNe & SPELLING: | (Gavernwent to usurp the control of Par- | { | 1st, Maggie McTaggart; 2nd E. Carmichael Aritumeric: 1st, Wesley Ellis; 20d, | llament over the public expenditure ; to violate the spirit and letter of Jhe Con- | Alcester Hubbell, GEOGRAPHY: lst, federation Act; to revive the abuses by | Stilla Briggs. which Upper Canada had in past tines "een f Grammar: 1st, Stilla Briggs; 2nd, Wil- | robbed and fleeced by Administrations | liam Morrison. | who held office by virtue of Lower Cana- | { Fourth Crass. --GraMMar. lst, Cyn-|dian votes; and to demoralize and corrupt | thia Smith; 2nd, Minnie Stickuef, | the Legislature. | Awmrasenc: 'Ist, Sylvester Hubbell: | | In the third session (1870) Mr. Gibbs 2nd, Francis Briggs. a voted (March 9, 1870) against Mr. Mills' | History: lst, L. A. Williams; 2nd, J. | hi}} to abolish dual representation. He | McWain. ! ie 1 also voted (April 12, 1870) against Sir A. Fourth & Fiera CLASS. --GEOGRAPHY: T. Galt's resolution in favour of constract- 1st, Malissa Bedson; 2nd E. Kelley. > ing the Intercolunial Railway by private | ARITHMETIC: lst, Roby Kelley; 2nd, | 4, tract, thereby getting rid of the patron- Emma Kelley. g in i age, jobbery, corruption, and several { Grammar: 1st, Roby Kelley; 2nd, Mal- | [Fil he of the cost attaching to its con- | lissa Bedson. 4 " _ | struction on the present system. He gave | Four & Fira /Crass. --SPELLING & | Lig (ote in favor of the Great National Dezvations; Ist, R. Kgllay; 2nd, E. Kel- | Grease-Scrap Policy and against Hon, Mr. ey. | Dorion's resolution declaring, (May 5, NarvraL History: 1st, Edward M. | 1870) that, '"before rn ii Williams; 2nd, Lucy Hubbell. . | 1it wasdesirable to enquire into the cavse | Boraxy: 1st, Lucy Hubbell; 2nd, Eliz- | «¢ if the increased expenditure." On May | abeth Derby. { 9, 1870, Mr. Gibbs voted in favour of in- | AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY: lst, E.'M. | flicting a useless, costly, and cumbrous | Williams; 2ud, Francis Briggs. | system pf government on the new Pro- | Cynthia Smith, Eliza Hallett and Emma hy : vince of Manitoba by establishing two | | Wills obtained.the largest number of merit | { o islative Chambers. He also voted | | marks during this term, Eo AN OBSERVER | (May 14 1870) to prevent the new settlers | E. Carmichael; 2nd. | liamentg; and he voted in favour of the | | outrageous grant of 1,400,000 , acres of | land to the half-breeds, under pretence of extinguishing the Indian title. On May 11th he repeated his vote against a resolu- | | tion céndemnatory of the Col. Grey | | scandal. So that at the end of the third | session Mr. Gibbs had sustained the Gov- | ernment in destroying Pavhafuentary [*authority over the public money; in Hoeing Match, A hoeing match, under the auspices of | the Agricultural Society of the township of Pickering, took place on Tuesday, the { 16th inst., on the farm of Mr, John Hamn- | iiton, lot 19, 8th con., Pickering. There | was a large attendance, notwithstanding | that the weather tu: ued out somewhat un- | favorable. In the men's class there were twelve en- violating the Confederation Act ; in taxing | tries: boys 10 {lutario in order to bribe another Pro- | "Th followin were the prizd winners: | Fic; in- corrupting the Legislature ; in Mr We % a It: prize Thompson | Tetarding the settlement of the North- | 2nd: John Cowie 3rd: Tatnes pen west ; in maintaining dual representation; | War Cor Bil Ha y King 6th; Jas pe in wasting millions on the Interco'onial ; F i Sahm i; Joey go "8 | in taxing the first necebsaries of life ; and oo bay McIntosh 1st: Thoias Dow in refusing to curtail an extravagant 2ud; Robt. Ross 8rd; Jas. Ryan 4th; expenditure. es INC 5th; Thas., Ryan 6th; Geo, Feb., 1871) to defend the Government E. Graham and Wm. Burns would have ine if they ant- uikaided prizes, if they had not Sohaupla. | to retain dual representation. On March eallent supper ut Mr Hea The | 27th he voted with the Ministry and Iudues pp Messrs. Win. Scott, Alex. | 23ainst Mr. Blake's Toudlutijus condemn- Waddel and Mr. Brown. § ] * | ing the Governmént fo ; : | Imperial, Government, '-- without first Tee | asking the Parliament. of Canada,--to Ox Sunday,about noon, a man, Charles | alter the terms of the British North Stafford, was found drowned in the | America Act. He also voted in Grand River, near the bridge of the | favor of the terms of union with British Southern line Railroad, about two miles | Columbiay and against every amendment | Cayuga. The body was found lean- | to the Government resolutions. Thus he | er the side of a boat, with head | supported the agreement to give a popula- | and arms in the water, which was only | tion of 10,000 persons a representation of about six inches in depth. Verdict of | three Senators and six members in the jury: "Accidental drowning while in a | House of Commons ; to build the Pacitic state of intoxication." from censure for bribing Col. Grey with | $300 a month : he also voted once more | applying to the ! Railway, (nn plans, survey or estimate | for Mr. Gibbs: To desrade the character of Parliament and to corrupt its members ; To license the most barefaced political immortality in the shape of bribery, as in the Tapper-M:Nab affair. i To prevent a single step being taken in the direction of electoral reform ; : To discourage all attempts to secure | pure and free elections ; To place THIRTY .KILLIONS OF MONEY AND FIFTY MILLIONS OF He wasted twelve millions of the sole benefit of Quebec ia the matter of the Intercolonial Railway in order to have the aid of Quebec to put Ontari down. He is working to cut off the" Pacific Railway from connections with the rail- way system of Ontario, so that the expen. diture of a hundred million dollars of public mpney and lands may inure to the chief benefit of Montreal, and go % put dollars for Messrs. Chisholm and Witton, if they go to Parliament to support Sir John A Macdonald will be helping to put "Ontario down. + tr We ask for no advantages over {he other Provinces, we seck no increased subsidy nor any domineering power. We simply ask our dune rizhts, and our leiti- mate. influence, and those Ontario is determined to obtain in spite of Sir John A. Macdonald, his subsidized allies and his sycophantic snpporters. Are we not iu the right ! --Homilton' Times. T---- © E-- LITERARY NOTICES, . Tae Aveust ALDINE is as good as a run into the country, and we should not be surprised to learn that it had gained | thousands of subscribers among those who are too busy to take a summer jaunt, Per. Lin's illustrations of the Raymondskill, for example, are the finest pieces of rural . | scenzry that we have ever seen in the Al piNe. There are five in all; one full page, representing the Falls, and the others minor falls and sheets of watér, which ang- lers know are peopled with trout, and which they are wild ovér. Another full page drawing is The Old Oaken Bucket, by John 8. Davis, a delicious bit of count- ry life, illus'rating Woodworth's well known poem better than it has ever been done before. Burling's Blue Birds is a dainty bit of nature. Another glimpse of nature--not at all dainty--is Carry's-Old Squaw pounding Cherries, a powerful real- ization of the eondition of woman, among Besides these, we have The Courtship of Miles Standish, or rather the courtship of John Alden, from the poem of that name' a Gipsy girl at her Toilet; The Forester's Happy Family, after Guido Hammer; and a spirited view. of The Min- sfer at Ulm. The Literature of the num- tr is fully up tojts Art, There is a cap- ifal Russian story, Married in a Snow- Storm, from thie Russian of Pushkin, by William Percival; a tonching Spanish story Lalalo, from the Spanish of Fulgioso, by Helen 8. Conant; Worse | than Small-Pox, a bright and luminous American story, by Lucy Ellen Guernsey; a ¢harming descrip- tion of Raymonskill and its environs by the poet Sted i an; A Few Words on Ang- ling, in the same vein, by Henry Richards. In the Woods, a pleasant little essay, by W. Bailey; Beside the Sea, by. Mrs. Mary E. Bradley. Where the ALDINE gets so much good poetry is a mystery which none of our other magazines are able to solve. It never prints a pour one while they | print little else. The subscription price is £5 per annumn, which includes an elegant oil chromo, and the pullishers are James Sutton & Co., 23 Liberty Street, N. Y. Tue Sciexce or Hearrn.-- We have re- | ceived the second number [Augustjof this New Health Monthly. Good as the trst number was, this is far better: among the contents we would note thefirst ofa | series of articles on Popular Pl ys ology; acres | Three Classes of American Girls; £lectro- + OF LAND as a gigantic corruption fund at | Therapeutics, by A. D. Rockwell, M. D. the disposal of the Ministry of the day ; To prevent the murderer of a loyal citszen from being punished ; and, To sanction and support gerrymander- ing and injustice in dealing with the representation of the people! | The Privileges and Penalties of Sex! A practical article on the Use and Care of the Teeth; The Health of Women; Ante- Natal Influences; Way tor use Wheat; Hygienic Bathing; Directions . for Avoid- { ing and the Cure of Summer Complaints; | Sun-stroke; Sea-Sickness; The Bath and WHY WE OPPOSE THE DOMINION | GOVERNMENT. (1) Because they adopted the long and expensive Intercolonial routs at the in- stance of French dictation. | Small Pox; an interesting Department of Agriculture, and Talks with"Correspon- dents. This new Magazine is published at the low and popular price of $2.00 a year. Single numbers, 20 cents. 8. R. ig Publisher, - 389 Broadway, New (ork. : (2)Becanse they demanded and obtained | pr. Mowe on the Use of Fellows' Nypophos- phites. 830,000,000 and 50,000,000 acres of | land, ostensibly for the Pacific Railway, | over the disjosal of which they, and not] Par'iament, have retained absolute con- trol! remacy. (3) Because they have done all in their power to fill the Senate and House of Com- | mons with placemen, thrs destroying the independence of Parliament. (4) Because they have rejected trials of | controverted elections by judges, prefer- | ring the old corrupt systein of trial by | House Committees. | (5) Because they have refused simultane- ous polling over all the Province, prefer- ring for seifish ends to keep the country as long as possible in a state of turmoil. (6) Because (under Cartier's influence) they are hostile to Ontario interests, (7) Recause they sold the fisheries, sur- rendered the St. Lawzence, and abandon- our brave volunteers. (8) They threw away the only advan- tages in return for which Reciprocity might have been ¢btained. (9) Because they permitted a ¢itizen of Ontario to be foully murdered in the North Prrrsesgro, Me., March, 1872. Mz. Jas. Il. FeLLows -- Dear Sir: Dur- ing the past two years I have given your We believe in Parliamentary sup- | Compound Syrup of Hypophosphites a ; | fair though somewhat severe trial in my practice, and am able to speak with confi- dence of its effects in restoring. persons suffering from emaciation and 'the' debil- | ity following Diptheria, it has done won ders. I constantly recommend its use i all affections of the throat and lungs. If. | several cases considered hopeless it~ ha given relief, and the patients are fast rej. | covering; among these are Consumptiv | and old Bronchial subjects, whose diseas have resisted the other mudes of treat ment. For impaired indigestion; and i | fact for debility from any cause, I kno of nothing equal to it. Its direct in | strengthening the nervous system ren- | ders it auitable for the majority of dis- | In the In pvince from voting at the first | ed our just Fenian Raid Claims; thus in- | election§ to the Local and Dominion Par- | sulting the patriotic Canadian feeling of | eases. I am, sir, yours traly. | WM. 8. HOWE, M. D. Heath 18 STRENGTH. -- To prevent or conquer disease is one of the greatest at- | tainments ever aimed at by (man; and west, without taking any step to punisa | the murderers. (10) Because they have squandered a vast sum of the people's money in so-called account. This is not the practice in Eng- land, where every penny of Secret Service expenditure is kept in a book, and audit od every year. 3 (11) Because they hav in five vearsenor- mously increased the public debt and the | expenditures in every department. n 1871 Mr. Gibbs agrin voted (28th| (12) Becanse the excessive representa- | tion given to British Columbia and Manit- oba, considering population, is unjust to Ontario. the City of London ought to have ten | members ! (13) Becanse in the Redistribution of Scats Bill, they violated every principle of honor by carving out constituencies likely to elect Government supporters, thus placing party above fair play and the Bryan's Pulmonic, Wafers will as. sure cure coughs, colds, tickling in the throat and pulinonary complaints, as war and pastilence. will destroy. Severe colds if | not attended to sooner or later lead' to in- | Secret Service, for which they refuse to | curable consumption, and the strength of the strongest soon fails if neglected. The readiest and vest means known for the | cure of these complaints is '* Bryan's Pul- monic Wafers," which have been thorough- ly tried for the last twenty years, and | have never been -known to fail. Singers and public speakers will also derive great benefit from the use of them. Sold by all | wedicing dealers, at 25 cts. per box. At the rate adopted up there, | is what is termed tke "Coming Obituary :"-- Died. in the fifty- fifth pes, of his age, John Smith, hug band of the Hon. Jane Smith, at her residence in Franklin, at six o'clock. - Mr. Tue féllowing | Smith was a meek and quiet husband, interests of the people. London Advertiser. | Those who disaprove of these proceed- ings of the Dominion (Government will nianifest it by voting for Mr. White; only those who approve of the record-of the:Government will be justified in voting Leloved for the graces of a cultivated nature. He excelled in the domestic virtues; as a cook he was surpassed by few, as a nurse he was éqnalled by none. -- Merrimack Journal, - DECIHN In ITarmony on the 2igh inst, Mr.Richard Whit aged 57 years, v The funeral will take place this afternoon, at 3 o'cloek. ; In Oshawa, on the 24th (nst., Mrs, Robt. Furs don, aged. 49 years, The funeral will take place (Lis afternoon ab half-past one, SI GW Sd GENT choose Comme the ter neminal the Ric » candy present to deci confide ing my questiol publie Canada legislati under Govern without opinion I am, of oppos "on the « es of th sented 1 that fray with eled plary pu opportu biased holding ion on of authorit ishment and ths Judges, that résu ecutive sf powers, IWETS § ; fit, co tration ¢ Henee | the expe moneys i without 4 first obtal -eonuecte advanced 'material are engag] suits, anc account tl sess. tile soil, rivers, naf limited ex] cation be it is my fi ergy and directed, tion and g tant wher the first o tent and manufact be such, i aging the soiirces, t necessitie + of the revg ed article produced eountry. useless wi and appiy every proj to our coy The de having the aries, mu hearts and therefore martial spi young me like wéape ment shop ments for that purpy pending make the! T having ref try, I sial an opportu public Mee conclusion that being + ing my pre ests are ins should you dence, and your repre: of my ham + serve the « the other. Ian "Whitevale, Frow Pal successful earth; he is village - and habitants o has reache and, as u £ success. T A ical tor: . Actually en of the stom and is an a ing from d sickheadac) - mms 4 A Chemic: : HE GR WHEEL PHOSPHAT « its perfect rel run down wi and Kidneys Feeble Diges| breaking 4, ually relieves from the red > and restless and general d one com Digestion. al lack energy a themselves t fati, will § L pro vitglized un is harmless is not folic Wheat, Fan, Wheat, Spring Barley, ¥ busi Oats, do Peas, do Potatoes, do Butter, vg. | id Wheat, ¥ busi Barley, do Poas, do Oats, do Rye, do Potatoes, ao Hay, » ton, Apples, ¥ bri, Wheat, ¥ bush Rye, do Barley, do ; Peas, do 7 Oats, Clover Seed; ¥ Timothy Seed, Butter, ws...

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