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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-05-01, Page 3
17�i'343''^Jg-U.r • ONTARIO LEGISLATURE the maintenance of the Toronto Asylum. r The expenditure on publio institutions was yearly inoressing. The Government *— S were constantly planingofficials on the Tile following bills werereada, eeoond. Perwanent staff or creating auuooeeeary time: offices. Respeoting the town of Braoebridge. To authorize the town of Collingwood to igen° certain debentures. To °ems .date the debt of the town of Essen, To 4noolidate the debt of the town of Port Arthur. To amend the Aot to incorporate the Parry Sound Colonization Railway Com. Cfena'ataan`., reee?Fee ISi,".a.n,^l",Y1 r .Seewers; n',7c"s, t, .. To enable the Synod of Huron to oma - date and menage its tenet fund°. Mer Barr moved the seconding reading of hie Bill to amend the 'Assessment Act by apportioning the eeseesment of reel estate between the mortgagee and the mortgagee. He believed snob a measure -would have a beneficial effect upon the country generally { • • 11: Hiffiti i iiibir •r tb in'oin ` e a eeosmenis for looal improvements and drainage. Mr. Hardy -Withdraw. Mr. Meredith eaid that some effort should be made to remove the anomalies of the present law, and he hoped if this Bill were dropped the Government would give- the matter s, attention. Mr. Tragi +r—It's a pretty hardjob. Mr. Mer dish -That's what we' pay you for. Anybody could do the easy jobs. Tho Bill was withdrawn. Mr. Davie moved the second reading of a bill respecting the use of velocipedes on the publio highway. He had recentlyhad the importance ot such legislation urged upon him by a deputation. Mr. Gibson (Hamilton) had received • a deputation of bioyoliste dead against the legislation. - ' -- The bill was allowed to stand. Mr. Meredith moved the second reading of a bill to amend the Judicature Aot. The objeot of the bill was to provide that wherever a person brings an action to reoover damages for personal injuries it should be lawful for the court, at discre- tion, to issue an order . for examination of the person by a medical practitioner.. • Mr. N �; at thought it specially objeo- -tionable at -a- woman- shonld-be-eabjeot-to- thio exit., ination. Mr. Meredith thought the 'committee could settle that. It women olaimed damages they should also stand the exam- ination. . "' The bill was read a second time. Mr.. Awrey moved the eeoond reading of e,-hill-to-reams-thenost-ofeappeals_to--the- Coart of Appeal. The objeot of the bill was much as the words would imply. In many oases the cost for printing exceeded the amount in dispute. He wished to incurs legislation that would provide for lessening the number of oopies of evidenoe required in 'oases of appeal in the Appeal Court. He did not see why it was that 40 copies were required in the Court of Appeal, especially when eo muoh less , euffioed in the Division Court, Queen's Bench and Court of Chancery. He wished to provide that the seine copies might be used in the Appeal Court as had been used in the other courts. The bill was read a second time. Mr. Hardy moved the eeoond reading of e bill respecting liens for labor on logs and timber, and the payment of wages thereon. The purpose of the bill was to/apply to the newer districts of Rainy Rier, Thunder Bay and Algoma, where, owing to the difficulties of lumbering, wages were not regularly received. He was not aware that a necessity existed for any snoh legielation in the older districts. The objeot wee to devise some process, if possible, of obtain- ing the results of the lien. This was a more difficult thing than appeared on the face of it. The proposition was, that for claims of $200 or under sail might ,be brought in the Division Court to enforce the lien. The person desiring to retain .his lien should file a certificate with the officer orthe district court, stating the amount claimed. This should be done in a limited time. Suit could be brought in the or- dinary way, or an attachment could be issued if an affidavit was certified to as to the nature of the debt. Mr. Ross proposed to amend the lith obtuse by providing that where the trustee° of a High School in any city or town notify the County Council that the school. is open to county pupils, the council may appoint three trustees.. Mr. Meredith objected that this would give the county a share in the management of the sohools for whioh the oiiiea or towns provided the rondo. . Under the old law there must be an agreement as to terms of union before the oonntywouldhave repre- senta {on: mg considered the preeent pro ori. tio more reasonable than the old law, as it gave the counties three ont of nine trustees, instead of three out of six as formerly. The, amendment oarried. Mr. Roes said there was a difficulty as to. the election of trustees at the end of the year, and he now proposed to restore the old praotioe. He moved an amendment to that effect. The amendment oarried. Mr. Meredith thought that High eohool boerde ought not to be limited to oharge non-resident pupils fees not greater than the Dost of maintenance at such High schools, as proposed by the hon. Minister of Education. High eohools were eseen- tially for the benefit of the communities in whioh they were erected. 7Alge clan a was oarried in a' alightly amended form. . Mr Waters wanted the bill printed as soon as possible that persons intended might see the full drift of the amendments. Mr. Ross moved the eeoond reading of a bill to consolidate and revise, the lAwere. Renting the Education Department. He proposed adding a clause giving the depart- ment power to refer metiers affeoting Publio, High and Separate Schools for interpretation- to the High Court of Justice. , The bill-reoeived tie second reading. The House wept into committee, and. carried a bill to amend the Aot reepeoting. cemetery oompenies. • Mr. Rose' bill respecting- the profession of Monographers received its eeoond reading without discussion. ABTBIt 'AMISS., The item for maintenance, mounting to $101,816, was carried. Ith. Hardy said that the tare at the asylums was very solid and very plain -too plain. In some of the iustitutions in the United States which he had visited they had more, expensive victuals, snob as puddings, eto. They were, too,fitted up mere elaborately, something like a summer �k1w w r 9 lt�eredii%i wse id to knowit" bursar had baeh dieoharged at the Centre' Prison, Toronto. Mr. Gibson. (Hamilton) explained that the action bad been taken on. account of the bursar using moneys temporarily with- out permission for aocounts.reoeived et the institution. Ho had not been perfectly ao- carate in his 4ealin:e with the funds of the = , e esper-F apeenciaQCneeII6 intent could not be established spinet the gentleman, yet the irregularities that he had been guilty of were such as to necessi- tate a dieoontinuenod of hie services. Mr. alanoy was ot the opinion that the kind of Matti eei?ved at the institutions was too expensive, that the beef was train ex- port cattle, and not batohere' cattle ea wire called for. Mr. Fraser read extraote from the exam ination of the offioiale, in which the superintendent had testified that nothing better than butchers' cattle was weed. The item, amounting to $125,895, was oarried. The items under the head of public in- stitutions, immigration, agrioult'ure, publio buildings and repairs thereto, and public works, were passed, and the committee rose. The following bills were. introdgoed and read a first time : ..To amend the Municipal Aot-Mr. Mo - Kay (Oxford). To amend the Assessment Aol-Mr. Awrey. To amend'the Voters' List Aot-Mr. Tait. Mr. Mowat, in introducing a bill respeot- ing disputes ander the drainage law, eaid it had been suggested that there be ap. pointed-a-epeoial--referee, and -the -Govern matt had' concurred in that suggestion. He would have the powers of a Judge, and would be a salaried offioer with all powers of an arbitrator, with a salary of about $3,000 a year. The bill wad drawn. up on meet thea royal of the'majority of the these lines- ppy Gibson (Huron), Guthrie, Harcourt, Hardy, Mr. Mowat introduced a bill entitled an House, and asked them to vote it down Lockhart, Loughnn, McKay (Orford), McKa to the work they did. The disparity in the incomes which hid been complained of wits in reality an advantage, because jt apportioned the amount of inoome to the amount of labor. To adopt a uniform scale would be highly objectionable and indefensible. The journals whioh had opposed the eyetem were not "fully in- forwed. One. paper had declared that twenty of these officials were reoeiving more than -the Attorney -General. As a matter of foot, there were not a quarter that number. An officer paid by salary would confine himself to office hoar°, but when he was paid by feee • sometimes he wool Orli,, tit e( 'elfta ry r' la ]Ori e-iri���i�iate�l�lii y �ti9Al oai'lti("be no gain to . the Province.. The receipts woald be reduced and the expenditures increased. It was new oomplsined that in many oases the fees charged were too high, and that a change would remedy that. The meaning of that was that the receipts would be reduced. The commutation of the feee of surrogate judges had in most tairmet statatte redsteViork—at amount of fees. Complaint had been made of the income of the registrar in Toronto. Bat three years ago, when there was a Conservative in the office, no complaint was made, and the income then was$9,610. The reoeipte of the (Aloe fluctuated. Dar- ing the first quarter of the present.year they were not halt what they aggregated during the last quarter of last year. He pointed out that the cashiers of the Bank of Commerce and of the Bank of Toronto reoeived $15,000 a year. The manager of the Standard Bank received $12,000, and of the Dominion Bank $11,000. The Ontario Bank ' manager and the manager of the Canada Permanent were paid $10,000. These position° of trust called for proportionate remunera- tion. It was ao in regard to regietrarships, and the beauty of the present system was that under it an offioial was paid in pro- portion to hie reeponeibility. The conola- cion the Government had Dome to as a resultof their experience was that the present system was the more workable of the two. As far as sheriffs were concerned 6 erma i! G. Gloger, Druggist, Watertown, Wis. This is the opinion of a man who keeps a drugv store, sells all medicines, comes in direct contact a• 't ..� •r ,,, , ,. ,.;,r;�',t Pc ,,, ey �+���,.it,�i..••:: v�t�, ., :fir. •,a^�.r��?�!� ...,.. ,. and knows better than anyone else how remedies sell, and what true merit they have. He hears of all the . failures and successes, and can therefore judge : " I know of no medicine for Coughs, Sore Throat, or Hoarseness that had done such ef- Coughs, family as Boschee's Sore Throat, German Syrup. Last winter a lady called Hoarseness, at my store, who was suffering from a very severe cold. She could hardly talk, and I told her about German Syrup and that a few doses would give re- lief; but she had no confidence in patent medicines. I told her to take a bottle, and if the results were not satisfactory I would make no charge for it. A few days after she called and paid for it, saying .that she would never be without it in future as a, few doses had given her relief." Q The Knell of ajlitroken Heart.' •-"41 •Int a shops of t Hamilton, 0., is a crooked locomotive bell that has a history. It was attached to it l000n#otive presided over b, w strong, manly, handsome engineer, whoee great objects ^ or pride and adoration were Aro* awoothoart 'and then: is faithful angina. He loved them both devotedly, though, of course, in quite different wayp. One day at Hamilton tool en the cab of the engine, belle hand ready to move the lever and art the train when he saw it bridal party approaohing. - He glanced at the 'bride ; it was the girl he loved. His dropped --dead. As hefell with/ the b ll rope in his hand he gave the bel a loud ring that oraoked it from top to bottom; and it was found afterward that he had died literally from s broken heart. The bell in the shop at Hamilton is still called "the bell of the broken heart." -St. Louis Republic. s• i being the firel division of this Parliament. Mr. Meredith's amendment to the amend. ment, whioh affirms the salary principle, was lost on a division of 30 yeas and 51 neve, ire follows: the salary system was impracticable. The Yeas -Messrs. Barr, Bush, Campbell (Algoma), Government had had under consideration Clancy, Dunlop, Glendining, Godwin, Ham - the question of taxing the surplus received mell, Hiseott, Herne, McCleary, McColl, Mo - over a reasonable remuneration, and with- Lenaghau, Magwood, Marter, Meacham. Mere - out further announcement he would eat dith, Metpalfe, Misoampbell, Monk, Preston, Reid, -Rorke,-. Smith. -(Promenao),- Tooley,W.hite.- that the matter was still occupying the attention of the Government, and they might submit a measure to the House next session dealing with it. Ae to the. resolu- tion proposed, he . did not think it should Whitney, Willoughby, Woed (Hastings), Wylie Nays -Messrs. Allan, Awrev, Balfour, Baxter, Bishop, Blezard, Bronson, Caldwell, Carpenter, Charlton, Chisholm, Clarke (Wellington), Cle- land, Cenmee, Dack, Davis, Dowling. Dryden, Evanturel, Ferguson, Field, Gibson (Hamilton) Agit-to_detailb from the_Chanee i2ivision To consolidate the debt of the town of (Victoria)MeBechnie, McSenzie, H., McMahon of the High Court one of .the Judges I Milton. rela Mack; Macken e; ©; Moos•°, Mowat--O`Gonvor, thereof. He sad communicated with Sir Respecting the city cif Kingston • Gas and John Thompson, and understood there Electric Light Companies. wbald be no obj ution from that source. To amend the Aot incorporating , the Mr. Wood (li%.etings) moved a resolution College of Ottawa; that in the opiu,on of this Home the eye- The following Private Bills were given a tem of paying provincial offioere by fees is second reading : objeotionable in prinoipie, and that the law To incorporate the. Tilson - Spur Line ought to, be eo amended as to provide for Railway Company. the remuneration of the eheriffe, registrars To amend the Aot incorporating the of deeds, clerks of the peaoe, and county Synod of the.Diooese of Niagara. attorneye by salary instead of by fees, and To provide for the consolidation of the a like change should be spade in the mode debenture debt of the city of London, `and of remunerating all other provinoial offi- for other purposes. °ere now paid by fee° to whom the same To enable the corporation of the city of could be setisfaotorily applied. Hamilton to isene certain debentures, and The subject of the feeeyetem as oom- for otheir .purposes. pared with remuneration by salary` had Dr. Baxter said the subject • had been been disowned a great deal during the past brought before the House in a temperate few months. The system was at; old as the apeeoh, but a good case had not been made offioee for whioh it had been created. It out. It was easy to find fault. When the wae,no plea to urge in behalf of the•syetem late Sandfield Macdonald was Premier of that because it had existed so long it must Ontario the law provided, for the division neoesearily be good. What heunder of counties for registration' purposes, not stood to be the tenor of the pnblio feeling by the will of the House, but by ordet of in the metier was (1) that offioiale the Lieutenant•Governor in Coanoil. -should be fairly and amply paid, for the When the . Liberals oame into power a work done and the responsibilities devolv. reform wee made -a reform whioh was the ing upon them ; (2) that there should be desire of the ,people. Mr. Edward Blake, no distinction in the eateries, exoept in eo when Premier, brought in the law readjust. far as there was a distinotion in the value ing the whole system, and fixing what pro= of the eervioee rendered ; (3) in estimating portion of the fees were retained by the the value of,; each services the previous offioials and what went to the counties, the standing of the offioiale should not be oon- proportions varying a000rding to the eidered, but the service and responsibility, annual totals. It it were found now that of the office ; (4) only persona capable of in some cases the amounts 'retained by discharging the duties should be appointed sheriffs, registrars, or other officers, were to offices. The last clause the hon. gentle- ea°eseive, that could be remedied by an man considered equally as important at, if extension of the prinoiple of the legislation not of greater importance than, the pre- planed upon the statute book by Mr. Blake. vions clauses. No greater wrong could be As for himself, he could vote.00neoien- done to the community than to seek to tionely and with all due regard to his duty underpay those offioiale who were laboring to the Province against the proposal of hie for their daily bread. The man was worthy hon. friend from North Hastings. of his hire, be that what it may. The Mr. Davie moved in amendment the fol- prinoiple of paying offioials in ooneideration lowing resolution : That it isthe opinion of past services was as absurd as it wee of this House : unjaat. Dealing with the system as it 1. That remunerating sheriffs, regietrare. affected county attorney° and clerks of the of deeds, clerks of the peaoe, and county peaoe, the hon. gentleman stated that there attorneye by fees ie in the publio interest, were forty-two snoh divieione in whioh preferable to a system of payment by these offioere were appointed. The receipts salary. ranged from $9,964 ail the total of the eight 2. That placing these officers on salaries lowest -feed offices to $24,062 for the eight would result in a general increase of the ex- bigheet-feed. He toted anomalies in some pease and omit of carrying 012 the necessary of the counties. In one oonnty an offioial business of theee offices. held no loss than four responsible pnblio 3. That it is very probable that the offices, and though his salary was not ex.' salaries to be paid to such offioere end their oessive hie duties meet have been onerous. necessary assistants would considerably While a registrar received $9,000 for doing exceed the total of fees received, and by almost nothing, the Attorney -General was reason thereof the Province would in most, paid $5,000 for his services. Was there any if not in all, oeieee be bdrdened with an justice in that ? increase of expenditure. Mr. Mowat --Tho hon. gentleman thinks 4. That as to regietrare, the result of I should be paid $10,000. I thank him. such a change if maddwonld in Bones in - (Government applanee.) stemma wipe ont, find in others greatly re - Mr. Wood thought it an anomaly that duoe the amounts whioh under the present such permanent offioiale should be paid system are payable to counties out of the larger salaries than Ministere of the Crown, fees received in registry offices.' who were mnoh mare subject to change. 5. That as to sheriffs, the system of pay - He oontended he bad established that the went by salary could not well be adopted, system of payment by fees was 'objeotion- and if adopted the work of these officers able, and while he did not hold the Govern. generally would be apt to be less diligently ment reeponeible for the existence of the performed, and thereby, the interests, not system, he contended that if they did not alone of the general public, bat of enitore, make the change demanded the pnblio litigants, judgment creditors, and others would hold them reoponeible in the future. 'would �nffer and be greatly prejudiced. ,Mr._,1Barcourt.._.moved_ ..the...Honwe.._into_ Com mitteo-ef eH ipT_ — air. Meredith took exception to the iUoreaee in the expenditure required for Mr. Mowat congratulated the hon. gentle- 6. Tat having regard to the pnblio In- man on the fairness with whioh he had tercets, and of persona having to transact presented the case. A very large part. of businese in or through the offing of olerke the feeling upon the subject had' arisen of the pesos and, county attorneye, the from the exaggerations of the preae. The restate would probably be the same', as in aotnal figures varied enormously from the respect of the business to be transacted in salaries it wee generally supposed the sheriff's offioee, and in a somewhat leve registrars received: He did not say the degr0O•--•. ..... ._.. country . would goto destruction if the 7. That having heard the assurance fielar;y eyetem were inntitntod.` Bat at the given. that the Attorney -General purposes Name tinier her pointed out thatthe foe .. before next session to .make official• -enquiry system wee not instituted .by se to the remuneration at present actually this Government. The fee ayetem received by snoh offioere respeotively, and might be so regulated as to produce the se to snoh other matters as, will enable the flame reanite as the salary system. The Government to fairly and folly Consider in only way to proonre a rednotion under the what degree and with respect to what fee eyetem was not by iia abolition. He offices, if any, raid remuneration might be contended that in almost every eeepest the reduced, farther consideration of the tV "I _contended Paton, Porter, Ray side, Robdlard, Ross,. Sharpe, Smith (York), Snider, Sprague, Stratton, Tait, Waters, Wood (Brant) -51, The following pairs had been made :' E. F. Clarke with Mr. Biggar, Mr. Fell with Mr: Garrow, Mr. Hudson with Mr. Gilmour, Mr. H. E. Clarke with Mr. Fraser. The only melhber of the House -who was not paired and did not vote was Mr. Camp- bell, of East Durham, Equal Righter. The amendment by Mr. Davis was oar- ried on the same division reversed. • The House went into committee and oarried the following bills : To amend the aot incorporating the Synod of the Diooese of Niagara -Mr. Harcourt. To incorporate the Tilleon Spur Line Railway Oompeny-Mr. MoKey (Oxford). Respecting the Weston, High Park & Toronto Street Railway Company -Mr. Gilmour. The following- bills were read' a second time: To incorporate the Port Arthur & Fork William Railway Company -Mr. Tait. To incorporate the Mimics Switch Line Railway Company -Mr. Gilmour. To incorporate the Niagara River Rail- way Company -Mr. Tait. The House adjourned at 6 20 p: m. A Traveler Rejoicing. Snmmerside, P." E. I.. Oot. 10, 1888 ; " Having used St. Jacobs Oil for a badly sprained knee, I can testify to ite peculiarly curative properties, as leas than one bottle completely cured the sprain." GEORGE Gime, Traveler for J. O. Ayer & Co . An Important Question. Texas Siftings : Fortune teller -A hand some young man is desperately in love with you. Yon will have three children, two boys and a girl, eo I see in the cards. Young lady -Yee,. bat don't the oarde have. something to say about a wedding ? Blood Will Tell. Of course it will -that is if it is good, healthy blood. Is will glow in the cheek, and tell the story. of .perfeot physical health. If it done not, if the complexion is devoid of oolor, the muscles weak and fiaooid, some- thing is wrong, and something ought to be done about it et once, for in' snob mese de- lays are dangerous. For torpid liver, " biliousness " and the thousand and one ilia to whioh these conditions of the system lead, there is no remedy in the world equal to 1)r. Pierce's Golden Medioal Discovery. Boils, pimples, eruptions, scrofulous sores, ealt•rbeam, and all kindred dilemma are tired by it. An Unkind Remark. Rooheater Herald : Dare. Peterby- Jones' wife ran away last night. Mr. Peterby-Did she, really ? Mrs. Peterby-Suppose I ran away frons you, what would your friend° say? Mr. Peterby-Humph 1•I guess theywonld ask me to set up the wine. -.There are over 16,000 Bands of Hope in the United Kingdom. Behind the Scenes. On the stage the:, tinsel, the glitter, the powder and the paint, show forth the most, but step behind the scone, and yon will. behold the truth. The chorus girls are not all "fanny paints Them," but rather what they paint themselves ; just so with many of the flaming advertisements of so-oalled " oatarrh•cures." Get bask of the scenes, and they ere not cures. The real one, and the only one that is a cure, is Dr. Sage's Catarrh remedy. Lift the curtain, and you will find the naked truth to be, that this remedy is the one that ouree the worst cases of Catarrh in the Head, and no mis- take. It is also a remedy in all catarrhal conditions, such as Catarrhal' Headache, Catarrh of the Throat, eto. Toasting the Gentlemen. The Ladies' Association in Great Britain is relaxing the severity that assooisted women seem to think it incumbent. upon them to assume, and one of their chairmen gave as a toast at a great banquet : "The Gentlemen -Blase 'em 1 They halve our joys, they double our sorrows, they treble our expenses, they quadruple our nares, they excite our magnanimity, they increase our self-reepeot, awaken our enthuaieem, arouse our affections, control Our property -and out-maneenvre na in -everything. This would be a dreary world without them. In faot, I may say, without proepeot of suer 'natal contradiction, that without them this world would soon pine and wither, and the last female would have to put up the shutters. I do not envy her that job." -.Sohn-Qniehly -Eatempo"lzed-Ficus Bags. This is a meaningless sentence, but it contains all the lettere of our alphabet. FiVe of these lettere spell " woman," and large numbers of women . believe in the virtues of Dr. `Pierce's Favorite' ' Presorip- tion-a strictly vegetable compound, for her use only, and an unfailing cure for the many ills that beset her. It recuperates wasted strength, restore° the functions to a normal ' condition, and fits her to bear and rear healthy offspring ; promotes digestion purifies the blood, and gives aotivity to the bowel(' and kidneys. In a word, it is woman's cure and safeguard. Gtuiranteed to give satisfaction, or 'its price ($1.00) re- funded. Not An Important Loss. . London Free Press : Cheppie-I lost my head completely last night. Mand -Indeed ? - I don't notice any dif- ference in you. " Alas, this is certainlya drop too much; . sighed the gentleman who wee suspended at the end of a halter. The St. Clair River is blocked up with -ice. D. 0. 15L18.01 Jidurnattsiq PROMPTLY CURED BY Cures Also: Neuralgia, Lumbago, Sciatica, Sprains, 3rueses,- Burns, Wounds, Swellings, Soreness, Frost bites, Stiffness, AU Aches The Chas, A. Vanier Co.; 'Baltimore, Md. Canadian Depot : Toronto, Out. THE BEST COUGH-1'5EDii:lNE. COLD BY DIttlf.10 tT3 zl r:,::x �,rar,rF 5161217,1r7;:i 4'7'717 314 011SIAVIVM .A,. TO TIIIt: EDITOR Pmtmwrrni lease inform your readers the` t have a positive remear ,A w' T. "5ove named disease. $y itsiimely use thousands of nopm,ess cases Nutve been nermanrns '-'v I snail be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FRET= to any co your reaners'wno uav- ' Gumption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfuik,. T. A. et.O( 0ll.C.- ren west Adelaaide ^t.. •1t,ORONTo. ONTARIO,, • LPr 1 CURE Fi THOUSANDS. OF 110110 GIVEN AWAY YEARLY. When I say Cure 1 do not 5h1 m merely to stop them for a time, and Moe them return again. 1 MEAN A R A D I C A 1, O U R E. I have made the ding of Epilepsy or Palling Sickness a life•long study. I warvtnt my rerna tp ! the' it aid iieatimx daring -rho prevent eesribn 1e ilii - worst Because others have falledis..no-reason.fot nAt 149w recoil" ossye - its 'boiler rye uooessal:y� $- not produce too large incoiUaee. The chief{ -. �•,,".:_ �' �- oslt ()mice. It ccs Ay'd itothing'g4 , 2 trials a ndAt ari11 c a tt - rest' g4nlst� plh Ibli 'Mt+EfiM�' AbE1GiUDt Q`rRr 1f�0 advantage was that it paid men a000rding The House divided -Jot 12;80 p. m., it , 4111100. cel,•