HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-04-29, Page 6'LD.
ffeeitTrevelyan's manly Dentui-,
elation of the Grimes Ear
KA,
• 1511. ItED.1(01f1.1,• BXPLA1,
The British Parliamelitgetaire Like a
„Let if:
Colonel Sausdelsios Talks of ifsr(0011-lieslif
thr
Au I eue.PI3en
. • .
A last (thursday)„night'rr.ritelden cable'
pays: Sir Wm. Lyon Playfa,ir resumed the
debate on the Ceekvion:Bilito.night. While
admitting; the difficulty in certain eases of
inventing convigtione in. Ireland, he said
the facts were not no serious as the ,Gov,
ernment Misled. • _ _ _
ir "George TtelyelYin,Oni Of the linionist
leaders, and formerly Chief Secretary for
• Irelond;,,Ints• written a letter on the Coercion
Bill which is tantamount to, a manifesto
ageinik that measure. He 8%78 that really
the Bili is ohiofly aimed at P01410440 and
editors opposed tothe Government policy,'
said therefore that notorious partisans like
Mr. Relines; the present, Attorney -General
. 'Poland, and . Colonel King-rtarman,
the newly -appointed. Parliamentary Sec:
• retati, for Ireland, are unfit,: to. :1tdminie-
ter the , kW' if ,passed. •,t No.'ft.t,tte
Libetal?!the, says, , "ought to entrust such
powers to them. When Lord Spencer re-
• peatedly refused -to auppreas the League no
'word of remonstrance emanated from, the
•
Liberals. It is inconceivable that a Liberal
can now support a Mesaureenip,ettering the,
Bxeentive to treat Irish Politicians
mon as com-
crimiiiajs. 0,000'briagenten
on one ;occasion disturbed a 'National
.Pm*beAnOtiiii0WW otioIt1eading to
•
bloodshed and necessitating the (falling out
Of the troop to preervo the peace. Col.
,Ring -Harman and Mr. Holmes actively de-
•- fencicx1 • these nnWarrantable preceedings.
. There is not the slightest doubt that *the
event of.A reourtince.' of Auch action ,the• '
OrangeniTh " Would be liable tinder the
clauses:of the .present Bill to punishment as
but- theGovernment has effec-
Biel, provided against this contingency by.
..ptepesingtis eniet that the House'of Lords
• may vete �:ittoolattiatien by the Lord.
• .' Lieutenant:, The:falk,We, iglit tliietetrible
.••• but one-sidettnieastre'tis„•t intended' 0411
' and • will fell uponthe. politicians Of one
• arty alone.„ The meaKre,,Will.be ildiniii-
tittered by thesetilili,"rb00nd all question,
• are actuated by.,•the,sttongest Orange ioym
'pithy, and it no calculated ,to exasperate
• the: rePle'ir4hOteervilit rmY africi
' • Am. cruntestaant IN SCOTLAND.
The language used by 31r. Chamberlain
•. in iopeakitic at in .Ayi has in-
fluenced the Irish against him, and he has
:received numerous letters 'inforniing him
that he will not leave'Scotand alive.. Speak:
ing to an assemblage of 2,500 pelvises ' Mr.
Chamberlain aid the opponents of the
' ' rt .
Crimes Bill have marlin .Libertyto outcry against
the repression of libe
'
what?do
To commit theft; to ruin andustri-
-one • nun, to ontrage women'? (Hisses
, mingled' with cheers:) What are you hiss-
:ing---the crimes Or 'the punishment .
'Urea Man, rising and menacing
oried,•" It is noteheractetistip
• Of ;the Irish to outrage women' An 'attempt
Wainsides to turn'. the man out, but 'Mr.
, Chamberlain cried Out; ;, ti fiesta him
alone." : . 1 • ,
Then- Mt; Chamberlain
• Y,eiftvant.inetanees.or insult being', offered
• , ;, _, Cries dt "Outrage, you said," .• and "Yon
. 1-elanaer the 'tibia:" .: . •
, . •
.. •I' do net. Mean. the greasiest outrage of
all;• ' but personal' violence and insults,
-•,, ,(Hisses and cheerio.) • 'refer - to Cases like
• that. of thrdaPtin fa,*ilv, where • the 'lives
' es the Widow and diinght-eis of the murdered
Nii, were :Made intolerable like thatottlie
' t.ridOW of another. initrdered, man; Byers,
- ..'• who whileAcConipanYing the dead bodyof•s. her hueband-Weekeped: and. howled along
' • the . street (Here the.: speaker was inter.
rnpted-by cries of ttWittch yourself," balks
and general disorder& ' I am relating facts
:to which even my topponents might listen
in silence of hoitiWiehd alterae.:. When I
•, refer, to asisassoinetions 4 min here says,
!','• " Take,cate of fttliteelf.", Has the' 'time.
• • eoine When we: 'dale not disease', peliticat
matters .in -this country without being
, threatened with assassinationt ' (Great
cheeting.),, This ittilie 'spirit of the ,parties'
in. the convention in Chicago: I. am. Sioritr,"
to .know they* Ante? any it wootio,iyes
4;
.,, iii ,Atotinaid,„ k cr4tio of,, ;`,IeheY,are-not•.
• •ScOtolimen,") hat convention, . besides
• being attended ' by delegates honestly, in
, Sympathy with Ireland, had 'delegateso of
' another stansp.'-,-,apOstiesef (*tinge -end niur-
der,- who heve, paid the outrage -monger of
England, Afr,, Redmond, .the ' &Witte: of •
the Irish Parliamentary Party, explicitly
declared before:the convention that it was
' the aim Of that party 1 to 'effect the entire'
. • separation of Ireland from England, and
that their policy, was. to ,niakii the Otete-,
inent Of 'Attend, , by ' England 'inspossilble.
'. This . they epelt to,:effect by 'the most 'ini-.
Metal conepiraay• ever devised in a civilized
•
land—by contending for liberty to 'violate
•• every la* human anddivine. Do you think
it infanious to , restrain these ' men?..
- (Cheetio.) „ 7 Mr,_ Parnell „threatened, in ‘'' the
-7-1rOnee of ' Caimans, tinder the 'specious
gnu*: Of a warning, that. if the ',Coercion
Bill were peened there would be a' tenowal
• Of Outrages; ' dynamite 'explosions and
. , etternpte to assassinate , out statesmen:
This gran Suggestion -May prey° the, death
warrant •soine of us. Cries of. ' "No,'
'44 Shame.") Web!, whet happens to indi-
' viduels its not of intieh consequence., The
' danger hi to the Commonwealth. For the,
..• trot time in English history our foes hate
sympathizers withinosit Ancient fortress.
Their plaienf'atdelt "finds endourageinent
• 'from those who Ought to be. the stitingest
7 defoliate of our citadel. This makes our
task ' rtiote arduous. But we Vill • not
, shrink, tve,will: not abate ene Iiiti.: we 'will,
not yield to throats tremathetever quarter
they come, but ttre will Midelibt to hand
•"' .down unitapitired 0 out"Childien thennity,
h and honor .of the . mighty ,•Enipike.
o -fathers bequeathed to us,
. —,,„..4,,.Mr. Chamberlain's apeech.,:excitee, all
• • . pettiest The Unionists Cons•iderit,a, &Ole..
, .
• ‘.
A
ration; of war to, the knife with the
tionists. . The Gladsionians char
• Chamberlain with slandering and
hie former -colleagues, by. the,. insin
thafthey sympathise ttjth thepetpe
of ontrages 1.0,7,1M1. and. It,,ti,,,assert
during Ids tont through ,Elootian
Chamberlain will be attended by a
. •
7s,s. ARD,K01.378 larl4NATION..
Mr. john Bedmond, * the H
CommonS, :reade a personal expl
with referent* to his speech at the
Convention, ;' He 'Said Mr..Chamber
his speeeli;et rAyi, had represented
saying that the Party were no
ing for tlitireMeval of strieYancee W
what he did say Was that they -we
working solely for the purpose of re
the material grievances of tenants;
obtain peliticaLreforMs also; and f
when he *id that ;the 4government
land by England viagi. iinpOimible, hi
aion wait to the centralized burea
government of Dablinclastle, He b
0 possible that ' settlement co
effected honorable alike to England
go Mt, expression you used." •
vilifying Mr. Healy repeated that Col. Seim
nation* was a liar. A great 'Uproar aroiie. •
traters• The Speaker again palled upon Mr, 11
ed that to withdraw. ' • • •. '
d Mr. Mr. Healy refuted.' • •
private . The Speaker thereupon named. him.
hfr, W ',Smith, First' Lord of the
Treasury, moved that Mr. He.alY be sus,
. • pendect - • • •
ouse of Mr. Redmond jumped. 11P and ellouted,
ahatiOW "1 say he is liar, tom"
C
separa- 1 he oen. (Cheers.). But .1 cannot allots; the
son
.
hioago The House divided on the Motion to Sus -
04i'; in Pend Mr. Healy; and themOtionwasearried
him is bye, vote of 118 to 52. • „ •
t Work-. • when the :':eate Was announced,: Mt.
hereas,, Healy walked out of the House, applauded
re not by all the Parnellites, who stood up waving
Moving. their hats and Panin4g'eheer after chiier4 ,
urther, resume his epeeeh, mterrapted hylotrd
but to Mr. SaundersenVnon attempting -tfi.
of Ire- cries Of " WithdtaW "Withdraw I" •
s elk- Mt. Sexton, interrupting, asked Col:
uetatiy sansdereen whether he (Cel. Sentnderaon)
elieved eersieted in his statement. or Would with-
uld be haw ft, • •
•
the fierce struggle -now beginning. He saw 41; "DIVINE IlIESBAGE.
with sorrow the, tendency. of the
stoniani to adopt and support the 8
methods, , inaugurated by the N
League., Boycotting, formerly•ocei
Ireland, was beginning to be defen
Eneliah PoliticiaPs• (Cries of " Sh
"Yea, shame, I say," exoleimed 'Go
"on those.zen:ervieg at this bar
method of political warfare. There
aniall distaffs*, lietween conn
and apology" • ' and not so
differenee between apology an
vitatitm• The MOO 'pathetic- point
present situation is to have been ohli
abandon theleitder Whorane all adiei
venerated, and even 'denounced no
the policy he pursues, but the in
whereby ho pursues There is
at etake 'the present ,situation tha
simple question of unity and intecr
„the Empire. The moralities. of politi
at etalte4 The crisis is a grave one,
the Separatist party' balling to its a
fierce forces of the revolutionary pa
is the -bounden duty of the Unionistst
• to their aid all these Ordinarily ho
and to Col, :aloof--frOnOlitigar epe
caused a buret of laughter by camp
") of. which the 'member for 'West Beffaet Gladstone to Faust and. Labouchet
.111ephistopheles. • The fanner had inc
a heavy debt by his present escap
Proceeding to defend the policy .o
Government, Goschen said they had c,
stocks a. Bid fop the reform of local go
went in England • and .Scotland
Conceived in no reactionary spirit,
deseiving, the support of his hearers.
Sir William Vernon Harcourt, add
inga meeting of 4,000 persons D
his constituency, to -day, asserted tha
present was the first time. an English
,ernment; had ever propose(' to ma
Coercion Bill perpetual. When the Li
Government proposed a repressive mea
abseph Chamberlain was most energet
insisting that the Bill should tun for
briefest .possible - period.. - -The mee-
unanimously adopted a resolution
testing againsk•gie passage of the.Coer
outezde the door if. t Haw., Noel& _• „
ii.liPaidr*yoSt within an inch of your life." Joseph ;Chamberlain,- upon hie. arrive
, Xlie,expiteinent mu? again:renewed. •Inverness, was greeted with mingled h
Shit t• Thti 141)04et arose and addressed *0 and cheers: ,Iteplying to an address, a
Ou*SO, '00 his voice • Was inaudible above referting.to the daily demoralization
* 414 When quiet had been sontelbat Pifkliament,'he said the acouestiona in
rteretithe Speaker said that Unless Alk. by Major t3aunderson against Irish Nati
=ton wit$Irew his expression he would • 048 were trim.. It was high time That
be cOmpelt to name him., Reappelled opinion **the Kingdom was kn
to the 'Heinle to assist him in his ditty; abent•theliaseenes. Chamberlain's rema
adding that,he was willing NS do anythingWere generally a pepati'tion his preiri
in his power to allay bad feeling. Cheers. sPeeoheS.: • . ; '
The Speaker then pointedly asked Col. • gitrl•SPentier;Who was Lord-Lieuten
the EleiniclerSon whether, he charged 'Mr. Ston lidanit tinderlfr:',:Gliclatorsets'Adinin
oer;•
Site With essiociating witliniurderers. • tratiox4,. in in ,interview Aco.day-'w
Col. .• Saunderson, after several evasive Chatlee'Acignoitne'Canybeare;Radicalme
ber-tifPatliament "lot Cornwell, said
know from tiSpertience, as Viceroy, it
nobodymenld possibly knew better, the
was absolutely. untrue , that any memb
cif :the Irish Parliamentary ;party w
Murderers or the associates of murderers,
as had beencharged by Major: Saunderson
in the•House Of Commene. • '
Herbert Gladstone Sir Lyon Playfair
and Thomas, Power 'O'Connor •addressed
Mass , and overflow Meetings . to protest'
against the• Coercion Bill at Leeds, to -day.
•
Glad- •
inister The'Head or the *connote, saints Proclaims.
a Rove's:Oen rival iteaten.
finatedi°ntalo A Cleveland,. Ohio, dei3'Perch seY°
ded by the Kirtland Conference of the Latter Day
ame.") Saintakresident III:mph Smith made publiO
schen, a revelation, the first that has been vouch -
barons 'aged the Church in. some years. It is in.
is but substance as toilette:
ivance To the Elders of the Church ;
,tnn,ch Thus sayetli the Spirit: It is not yet
.,.1_1 •7 expedient that the quorum Of the twelve
in tat' shall be filled. Nevertheless, separate my
gea t.° servants, Imes W. Gillen, nerinan C.
red, au,__"4 Smith, Joseph Luff and Gower T. Griffiths,
eithenodlYs nnto the office of apostles, that the quorum
may be more perfectly ..prepared ; tot act
nratahr: before r have still other men in my
choice who designated in thiei
itY of time if they still continue faithful unttsse
CB are and in the work' whereunto the3r are now.
When. caned. , .
rtiViliet` Lor beef Gyeed dwehaonhear the vessels of the
in your bodies and in
o call
ming. Ybettereletheinratter--41jetiinrege-farrthamen-teflx-cbeei°S-f -
!ler orhamentatiOn. Avoid the nee Of tobacco, •
armff and be not addicted tq strong drink in any
° _.,te form, that your coninsel to be temperate
nardrre may bo mide effectual bv. your example.
The elders intiet cease to be over careful
f the concerning the return of those who .were
Iv'e,rtha_ne.
dark
ke ofanthde efiaoiuthdy, hudtaywerfeeaorvienrgeerseset.inthtehye
htent should bring in hidden heresiet Let him 11
WaS that partaketh (of the Sacrament) and him
that refrainette cease to contend, with his '
resit-
erbyp brother. ,
Let all strife and contention concerning- r
t the song service cease. '• ' ^
Gov- Until further revelatiOn is received the
he a Saints are to observo the first day Of the
beta' week, Commonly called the Lord's Pay,, as
°PM a day of test and worship.
10 in Prosecute the, missionarY Work in this -
the_ land abroad so far and SO widely As you
ting 1330,y; •
We- Bear the burdens Of the body of which
Lioll theApirit healing from the Lord' in faith • '
-Irelandr antiratrwitirofferett:hy-Bf -
storie!? Bill, (Criee of - " hear.
onenn IfiellETAint Felt IRELAND.
„ • • .,
Balfour, Chief seoreteryfor ire
intimated .in the, House of Common
afternoon that no seaty.vonld be att
to the -office of 'Under Secretary for
hind, Made Or Col. King Harman.
Government were' aware, Mr. • 13
said,. when they appointed the inetim
that the appointment ld be atta
"They had taken.thp hig et 'legal a
and , had been their e
WAS addition *ci is Mr. B
said;the new office did not involve •
acceptance biro, Member of the Hou
Commons the necessity of his tesigniti
seat and recOntesting, it for re-eleo
beaause the Office was not a. place of
er-emolement,intilettlie-Crownt-Mri• ,
stone :said the . precedents required
King, Harman to vacate seat and
raelection. Mr, Gladstone 'field that .
.he reptegented „Oxford' University
accepted for shcirtpetiad place in
Government Without Salary, and under
legal advice ''vacatedhie.seatiend stood for
re-election. ' • • ' •
'Inie Milted Ireland slays. if Irishipen had
•one chance in ton thousand. they would
transfer the coercion debate' from Peale-
ment to the barricades; but, as that chance
does not exist, Irishmen can ,only pet their
teeth end hold their tongues: The Ideate:
• . ,
'mons .ennilltairetals/Y ['Ammon
whole adult population ofIrelimid to .m
one grand historic protest against the e
'
cion, but even.' the • impressivenese.. Of
,iveihr!hedeetirojed. by the 'asiereportin
e Englishpress.• .
A hat (Friday) night's London .
says:' Sir' William • Vernon 'Harcourt;
snming the debate the Coercion, 13i11 ln
the. Hem* Ccramons this afternoon, said
the present alliance between 'the, Liberal('
and Parnellitee was based On the Liberal
recognition of the •' fact, . that the Wisest
policy Iriehaffairs lay inthe acceptance
of !aim° .ferm' of 'Irish government. which
would tend to satisfy:the. Irish people. He,
twitted lord Randolph Churchill and Mr,
Chamberlain withhaving secretly conetilted
Mi: Parnell, seeking to make an allience
with lini for their own purposes. Referring
to the eontipiracy and,Whiteboy clauses of
the proposed Act, Sit William declared
that they sapped . the foundation of all
personal liberty; and would' even 'debar
Irishmen from forming 'business combina-
tions to defend their existing rights. The
spirit in Which. -th'e Government ...weal&
administer the Coercion Act, if ..it were
passed; Was sufficiently' shown in the ftp.
pointment-ol-Colonel-..King:Hafinatittithe
Parlianientary Under -Secretaryship for
By this appointment the Govern -
Mont .liadi, declared • themselves to be the
partisan's of the landlords and determined'
to administer the Bill as theagents of the
landowners in Ireland, thus becoming in-
'etrunients to stimulate the worst passions
of the people and their ,bitterest religiene
prejudices. ..Tho Bill would fail to suppress
the --Irish,(Netionat--Leitgee; 'beet:mitt the'
;people of • Ireland believed in the League
Andtrusted it. . The 'effect of the enforce,
Mont of the Bill Would he ,to make the
Goveritzitent More detested and the Leitgue
More popular than ever. As to the Torv
and Liberal -Union taunts about America
gold 'fostering Irish. discontent., Sit W
Harcourt said ." There are.nene. Who ha
less reason to 'coinplain Of American go
than the Irish landlords, for none get mo
Of, it: They get it through their .• poor te
ants' rent.' The proposal to make the
pernianent• Sir characterized as
breech of. *ilie.lundemental .conditiOns.
the...Union :between Ireland and Great Br
tain. The Governmentptofessedte rove
enee this Union; but attadoing their he
to violate it. ' If the dovetninent earnestl
clashed the Union let •the
abandon • the policy of exasperating tli
Irish peePle and adopt the• policy of, justie
and concilietion. ,„(Cheeze.) . • • .
Col. Saunderson (Conservative) said th
National: League was eupported, maini
across.theAthintio. He did not -Chatgeth
lin•crintinallt dynamitera and' Murderer
gentleinen ,opposite with imbruing their
hinds in blood, but he did charge them With
apeOciatingwith men,whom they .knew to
hitreuiderers, 7 ,
• Mr, Healy rose to a Poietofinder.'•
• The Speaker replied that Col. Satindetstin
,had madetheCravest cheirges,but that these
could be met in debate. He was un-
able to interfere. • • • ' • '
Mr. .H04 teepotided that vtould
say what he thought, of Col. 'Sstunderson
regardless Of consequeiacee.: If ' Col. Saun-
detrain referred to hint he had no hesita-
tion in saying that Cal. Saundetitilt Was
'hat.
This remark was greeted with rousing Pak-.
nellite cheep. • :
The' Speaker celled. upon Mr. Healy to
withdra*, his expression. • •
' •Mr. Healy teplied--"I:iini not entitled to
rise until you sit down,".wheit-the cheering
was tenesved.: ' ;
. The Speaker then,tetairried hist chair:
Mt: Healy again too• k the floor. ,He said:
" am only able to meet 'the charge in ono
Way. If you ride that COL Samiderson was
in ender, myexptession, was eqnally order.
If you ride him eat order, I shell with....
'drew nif expreesiOn•ff' , • ' • ,
• The ,Spestker.-..." That is fiot• SO, 'Aft),
Satindereint inecle 4 Charge. of the 'grated
:painted, ,The eta entirely
whirl:U:1RWL It ifhis prove it if
Viiiiforifieinher of the xecitive Conimittee
• ,(Mt. Sexton) was also a 'naember., (Loud
ories of "Withdraw I ") •
land, • Mr. Sexton -"Did ;i know him to be a
s this mmxleter Did I • ever aloSedite With a
ached -map whom- I knew to be a,mtaderer ? "
Ire- (Cheeks, .and a voice, 44 Withdraw, you inur
_The derer I ') ' • , °
alfoiir Col. Seunderson---" I.said. that Sheridan
bent was on the consmittee, and against hini a true
eked. bill was found for complicity in the Plicenii
dVieci Park murders,. Tho committee =nit have
otio known what kind of a man he was."
alfour Mr. Sexton, springing to his feet,shoutecl;
in Its otii say you are a wilful,*cowardly liar'
se of Then there was another uproar. The
g hie peznellites all rose mid- cheered frantically,
tion, Waving their hats' in the air. As soon as
rad there was a chance to be heard, •
(itlad;- Thfir;-(ihiiitai; again addressing Colonel
mindason, exclaimed; "If I only met you
seek
whoa
,10
1 at
oots
fter
of
ado
on.
the
own
rks
One
ant
is-
ith
m-
ho
nd
t it
ors
ere
thif.1 ititsfretit, Whit% were interrn tiid •byl
g cif
able
re -
cries •• Of ” 'Answer," " "Ansiter 7tikt
Speaker's question
,
" etc.,.,eventnelly:wit,h,,
drew the words he had used., ' ...‘t •
The Speaker then asked ,Mr. Sexton to
withdraw his expression, and 'at' thesame.
tie* added; "1 cannot conceal frommyself
the, fact that the piovocation. hee been very
great." .(Loud cheers.) , ' • '
Mr: Sexton then formally withdrew his
expression. • ,-,_,
Mr, Leslie, member forLaneashire, fink-
gested that Mr. Healy be recalled. '
The Speak% said that nothing, could bp stiEDAP REST.
done in the mdttet• untilthe next sitting.:,
.
Mr. Sexton thereupon gave notice that Bill PaSsed • for the 'Better: ObServanee of
the next sitting Of the House he would move the bey in *ova Scotia:
that the suspension Of Mr. •HealY"bo re.- , A Halifax despetchsays : The "reuse of
vOked. (Cheers.) ' ' i . sem y eat until midnight - Saturday
, • •
Col. Samiderson then resimiedlis speech.' night discussing a• Bill for the better pbsier
ge said that, Mt: Baton was present at the vance of Sunday, in which an intense inter.'
meeting at which Mr •Egan was made Sec- ad hadbeets Manifested by he public for
tetaty of the ,Clan-na,-Gael; which. was -e some days. past • The measure provides
murder Society Of America. • - .• ; generally ,for • • the ' suppitesskin , of
•
Mr. Sexton rose to a ,point of order, and Sunday excursions and trafficking • in
theSpeaketadVised Col., Saunder_e_o_it, 0 viit4.,„ go -Ods, - The-original--fOkin.---in—Whiell
-draw the-effensitii-eipteleati; • •,it . wee intkoduced: • contained a pro.
Another scene of confusion •ensued, Col. vision prehibiting. the operation of street
Saunderscin repeating the words, Where -
railways on Sunday,whiCh,it was cOntedlled,
Upon Afr, 'Sexton shouted, ." The hon. gen'. was the real object Of the Bill, but which
tlemae is again a liar." • several oity clergymen openly 'disapproved
, The' Speaker called upon ;• both risembers of; among the: number being His Grace
thto withdraw their offensive remarks, which Archbishop O'Brien:::----.Thii provision was
ey did: - . ' •.• • • ;:: • . • expunge d by the Committee on Law Amend-
- eel. Satinderson again -regime!' • hie meats and. a Clause inserted especially
speech; and 'charged the Parnoitee •with, exempting street and ferry
tarions.tonnectione-with. Egan, Ford and
ers from the operations of the' Act: When
:It.uhtieironaocifvrisatripseetfh ni`Coulr.agritiinatetistohnci'c'wo302;; :Saturday A etiong;.effort was 'Me& to TO°
-'
it came before the Committee of the•Whol
greeted' with cheers from the: Conservative store the clause providing for the :piosecu_
benches'. ' .. •, - , :'" • .4. tion of Street railway comps:nes- operating
The debate was then adjourned on i Sunday, a:course which Met with the
most ' Vigorous ,opposition;! and; ,the entire
.afternoon ' and evening were .occupied in
discussing the proposed arnendinent. • The
galleries and lobby were pecked; With spec -
titters, and 'the • speeches for and against'
this Amendment were loudly applauded,:
The Bill, as reported up from the Commit.
tee On Law and Am0mIntents, was finally
94013t0d on a vote of 22 to 15, and the !Area
'cars thus empowered to ran, at ell, tiMea
WitliOutinterference. " •
„
33 Mr. Healy .was 'suspended ffir a; week.
m. The Daily News (Liberal), conimentingon
the occurrences in the House of commons,
,will say : The • Speaker deserves the
re greatest' Credit for the courtesy, joiner-
tiality and nice 'sense of honor which
ill marked his demeanor on vot-sr critical
a occasion:" „ • ' '
of A' lest ,'Saturday night's London cable
f: says: , The Marquis of Eartington,:speak-
r: ingetEdinburgh to -night, contended that
at there had been no -change in the political
, situation` since the Gladstone .Government
of 1880435, except an, increase of Irish
e ,reptesentation, which was always known to
O be inevitable and could, be discounted to
justify the Liberals supporting ,sonie of the
e Parnellite tactics which they then opposed.
It had been said that the Unionist policy
was .a negative one. This is denied be-
e cause
ctimstma
posel
pract
party
Irela
tive
what
Ago
it Was
.g£Zu
reVolu
by the
Minot
"The
now be
one w
IA VS
agrari
of the
the Id
of self -
other p
fended a°e
are per
•
and
tinionis
of ell •s
indeed.
and th
r • .
`A I
, Sufferings On the 8en...'
A . St: . John's, Nfld., ‘despatelt setri :
Advices from the west coast give additional
details Of loss of life and property .11). the
severe gale , of Tuesday ,and , Wednesday.
Nothing .has been ,. seen or heard of , the
schooners missing from Bose Blanche h
, though in his opinion would be 'A' 18 supposed they, were engulfed With all
Ite for a'smell intermediate party to their` crews. On Thursday night during
it itself to positive and definite • pro- the dense fog the _schooner Grace 'Carter,
s, itWits a fact 'that they,, through a laden With herrings for Boston, rah ashore
ical•alliance, induced the Conservative m'al. Sandy Point,: St' Geerffe'a Bay, and
AO propose. a remedial measure for .became a ' total wkeelt„ ' The crew were
nd. far in 0; advance of Cortherta- saved with diffioulty. The ilealing schooner
ideas: and;, 'etten in advance of ..t8tine8tienenfiaehidaifrwiviteg. tyheestwetidemeykethd Perrneiweffe•fIrtre
the bulk ettie ;Liberals a irfearwtinygetaorns
Sallee • from '496..0,10er .:13 ell eTirk illier.ing.at.eTisoen ', pirlatterarci; ve2s3sredl
°he pasoitdhseir:ti diemioernecessary.btahdnotuliiypiEtit iitoarrivedpio tyricik,
,itte eetsilteiboisterous weather. • On
tienety.party.tu Ireland, ,supported abandoned. ' Fortimately the ou.vannan
1; proposelt.filtial fgent;X:ii of
2: e 4th r 7sheVerrai.q1 be iil,;edthgng;
1 . e that time . , the tett o. northeast g ii
t ccinflict," the speaker .said 44 was more revolutionary party fts America, was 'neat enough to effect a
be coafronted and . overthrown.
without any shelter.
crew, who were drifting about on the ice
• residue of the
•
ay or the other before the field Would
mg renewed and must be decided in .. ,,Lstike outing°, seeu upside Down. .
7 -
cant ;folks final solution either of • A Paltnyra, N..Y., despatch'says : While
an quesitions, which are ,the real •root the WeStern:4315Y was still clotting le -eight
Irish troubles, or for a concession to with the rays of the sun that had sunk
sh people of those extended . powers 'beneath the horizon, ii. beautiful mirage
government which we, as well as any became Visible to the 4 not* of this city.
ortionof the people of the, kingdoin; Lake Otter*, :which IS ,aix miles distant;
feetly willing to grant Ireland, Scot-: ibse in, mid air and floated in 4 halo of
k England" (Lead cheers) ' , ' . chitiast• Beats isatsing 0 and frO Upon the
hen also Made an address. -Ile de- laiie were plitinly seen, and a narrow strip
e
the. alliance between the Unionists New YerktatishrokehiotiwistehsAuptitdtaingowefhptaitiseos
onservatives as an alliancof ancrisoleted
ta of all shades ao,leet separgaitito earnelnt0 view.
hades, some of whom.Were very black
• He made an appeal.tO the press • Strain* Will have a new comic eptia ready
e country for unstinted, sti Mt ' lOr Prtauction 'nay'
-• `": .:4
I 4 #
•
"
•
or .the use of ;that which wisdom &recto
does not relieve or remeve;And in -cheerful- .
nest; do whatevermaypermitted' you to .
perform, that the blessing of peace_may, bo
"upon all. Amen. ' , , •
"BOBAX...VERCOW•uPP4trilit',"111ANDS1"?
Master Leland Thought HO Mad u Blank
. Cartridge, but it Bobby.
A. Ailadelithia. despatch says: Frank ,
Leland, 12 years 91d, living With his
parents atjenkintoirtn, 'a suburb, went into
the &Ida on Thursday with 'Robbie ,
Printer, years Old, to practice shooting at •
a target with a rifle his ; father hed Just
bought hire. The last: Claridge • only. :
snapped,.. and when 'they pulled it out of
the gun they &mid the' shell was empty.
" a blank," said Master Leland, as
he put it. back in the barrel. , Bobby,
throw yea.' hande, and When I fire
*ere a dead man." • - • .
Young Leland covered his friend With his •
rifle and pulled the trigger.4 There was it`
report and•Poor little Printer . fell to the
ground, exclaiming: , •
" Frank, I'm shot it a blank."
. Frank Leland fell over his body and ;
wept; and then ran to a brook t near hy and
getting some the boy's 'face,
but he had becitane unConscious. The
child was, removed to the inn of his uticle„.
Arthur Johnston, where he 'died Friday
tinting an • operation by Pre. Hera and '
• The cotoner'stUry condemned the prat:tie*, .
Of -allowing children to use firearms and•
•advisedprosecution against Leland:. '
' A WESTERN, CYCLONE. •
Terrible,Haroe Wrought in Ohlound West.,
Virginia — over a lifilpon Dollar,"
, Worth of Property Deetroyed..
A Wheeling (W. Va.) despatch' last (Fri-
day) night says: The first genuine cyclone, •
over witneeeed/in thin 'immediate Vicinity .
.was experienced this after'noon, and. •
Wrought devaetation ^ (iter a sectien of •
country extending from St. Clairsville,:
Ohio, ten intles.west-to point fat. east;;
as this city: Little damage was ,done here. :
The storm Was. first felt • at St, • Clairstille
at 3.15 p.in. It appeated to travelling, .
from the west in the shape of •A. ftinnet--
shaped maim of cloud resembling in appear-
ance dense hlaelc snieke:' •The ',cone was: .
downward, tied.could be plainly traced over • .
its track by tbadestruction it left. ,Houses
were demolished, trees 'snapped off like,
pipestems, horses and cattle prostrated
carried bodily hundreds of yards by the
gale, and the skyWitso darkened with the;
clouds of 'flying debris., The storni and •
its effecte • showed all the distinguishi‘
characteristics' of the Western cycloite
Two patens; are reported ' fate,lly injured.
and four others more or less seriously hart.
The, aggregate lose Will exceed a 'million
dollars. The leas in St. Claitsville alone,
will reach §200,000.
, •
r .
, Latest from the Northoeit.
Mr, Willian Ogilvie, D. L. S. of Ottawa,
arrived in Winnipeg on Monday.* corinee- •
tion With the Yukon .expedition: ./le will *
remain in the Yukon ' country all next ,
winter, but ,,Dr. Dlt*son will return in the'
• Mr. Griffith, Ool, Gilder'S *asioistaiitain
the proposed North Pole eXpedition, has
arrived Overland from Churchill. •
George Chambetlais, formerly a resident
;Dakota, has been' arrested at: the '
instance Of his' first •wife on a charge of
bigamy, having since his desertion marries:17-.1,
a widow,at Parkdale,'Man:, • '
Three private coMpeniest are being incor-::
porated to build a railway to the' boundaty.
One is the Manitoba Central; Which elso-.
provides for an elten8iOn to Portage Ia
Prairie, to Connect with the Manitoba and
Northwestern, Another , is the Winnipeg
and Southern, in Width Hon.. A. :Morris
and Mt. Manning, Of Toronto, are interested, ,
and the third is promoted by the Iludson's
Bay.ltailwaY. All.the companies are Millet' —
obligation to continence work* by Xtily 1st .
eekt and have the road in operation by .
January let 1888 '- •
W. it. Griffith, of Now York, who itecom-
'palsied Col. Gilder milis trip towards the
Pole, and *air lett behind with the Outfit at
FottChnrchill whenGilder returned, arrived
tete last nighttte walked overland froin
Fort Churchill to Norway House, haietando,
Of 500 'Milt*. He has had enough of Arctic•
xploratione, And returns to New.York in a
ay or So.., ,
' Lady Moiedonaldvin rethtn after' the Sea -
Bien and Anperiatend the.etection of a• .. •
.0
ence at 13,
• "__.__
•