HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-06-24, Page 70.0k
DWMTION RARLIMEN'T.
.• ., . • , . . *-:
4.74M-Jeseni-in-PrOP.O:. . 4..bO•1,03914..
4W4f: prebi14W-4(.-Oti *
laciture, hxtpertation and eels of intoxicat-
. hig liquors,. said that fp view. of ,the late
Period. Of the •session and theanxiety of
. ,roeMeors,, to, .get away, he;woold,,to met.
Ile belleVed that the people of the.Domin-
ion:iv:lit 1140,000,000 in intoxicating liquors.
• What remedy could be applied for this
date things?ef-Some people said tha
you °Mud net makes inan sober by Act ef
•. Parliament. The friend. Of prohibition
did net centend that yew:could, bat you
could hy an Aot of Parliament make. it
, more difficult for a man to ,becOmce a
'
drunkard. g?:pohlted out that . the Scott
Act was in fi
orce n 60 comities, in the Po-
• '• Minion, and in some cams ge,Ve .considera-
ble. eatisfection. But it did not go far
• enough. 14 order to be effective the law
should prohibit Manufacture and import -
tion aswell ea sale. He did not thinkthere
was any force. in the contention that Par.;
llia'..ment shenldwait Until the..couotry: was
laipe for a prohibitory law. The law itself
-Visas great educatok, and all Parliament
had- to do was, to see that thelitw was right;
' Mr. Fisher second the resolution. He
said that there had, been for a long time
restrietive legislation of various kinds in
this country, and they -had found that just
" go f4,t° PIS the traffio was restricted, so far
•Weathe evil restricted also. He believeclit
- was the duty of the Legislature to assist
• the 'community in 'fosterine,all that= wee
goal and in removing ever•Ything win&
• Wool& tend to debase it. He obaracterieed
-as ithstird the argurgenitbata prohibitory
• kw wouldinterferewith the liberty of the
. individual, All license laws, hione Bense,
.restrictedthe liberty Of the individual, and
.•the difference hetweeo license laws and
*
prohibitorylaws was one,of degree and not
• one of principle. He warned temperance -
Men &garnet wine and beer amendments,
claiming that their passage would- lead to
frauds and 'adulteration. ' He claimed that
. there was just as much illegal sale of liquor
in. the license counties of Quebec as in the
•,, Scott Act Counties, and. Mr. John J. Mc-
Laren had said the sane thing of the Pro-
*ince of Ontario: -' - ' .
Mr..Girouard did net regard- prohibition'
is a remedy ., for intemperance. He ...13,3.
• '• -lieved that result.could he 'better attained
by the use of beer, ' cider- and - light wipes..
He claimekthat the ociontry was not Yet
riperfor prohibition, because no petitions hi
. • its favor had. been presented, He moved,
-c-'*-the•fellowing amendment': • •
• . This Reuse, while admitting that brandy:gint
whiskey and other-liquormight he prohibited
is of ophiion. that the dealing:1n eider, ale,par-
•) aeoirAnati agazat dubi..tattePoliaht Mae*
Whirl a OexertMnstatmennhaaopinutions.alf ithe
...,4"..kazindat,inverzlIce.46t• •
▪ 111r. Freenia,n spoke at 9' -4-
Pressing riieret that some tieMperenee men
•.,Were soweak-kneed as tO, : to
allow the introduction of *wine andbeek:
He referred to the experience Of ...England
=dee the' beer laty, elaiining that its effect
was to increase:drunkeoness, with ,611 the
• .; accompanying .. Re "did not -went
•-• thein to „bring in their •",dirty beer or
• theirivioe, arid. he, ekpresseil astrong hope
•:,that • this, resolution would he yriteddown,
Mr, Cargill gave hie „experience , -can-
• nention.,•-with-thel3cottLAet4n--trueeTAFfe
. explained that the place in which he ifvcd.
Was very email When hc)ptit fig.mills there,.
• -Customers cerniog to the place stayed
house untii--they.grew too Minterens,
..
when he 'leased a :site • for :Xt :vots.
• •-• !well run .for a. time, but theProprietorgreW
*'fond' „lignOr, :and, the hotel became: a
resort of all the loafers.ef•the piece. •Fie
• (Mr, Cargill) boughtthe party 'outand ran •
thaplace for a time. as a, temper:woe hotel;
•'Whe,n•the Scott ;Act' tirase he
favored though- the 'Scott Act iyati not
necessary, for had the 'Crooks . Act been
. enforced .. woilld • lattYabeen.allthat wae:
riedeesitit.: ' When the Scott' Act was car:
• . tied. •it was not at firet well observed, but
. afteriyards When iniiteclio to take a :cigar
he found aniiiiher 'Of occasions pert:on:lie a
back -room. apparently eejoying.theineelVes,.
drinking ficluore they *tiled •,' bine
, • ribbon beer," ' "short pep:" ' "long tiop,•"
• .44%4 .bint, whieh looked,„•euspiciouely like
: strong liquors .fornierly.-4thowir. by other
names Helelt in a very :sWkWard
, tient-40r henciuld not. but feel that thoUgh,
be littd tilien pert in advocating the ',Seott
,2Aeti, he Wats really a party to its • Vielttitinn;
• Afterward:: 1i-et:Ake:pers.' began 'AO .sell
liquor epenlyover thebar and then, he' felt
• • he. waii...no: more • , blame than othera.
•..HOtel property was depretieted'Very ninth'
and the floott. Act leas :openly, p.nd 0647.
• atantlY . ' • .
A nabla zer: of, private
• •.a.stage.. • ' • • • • • •
Mr Cargi11 resumed the discessiott on
He claimed that the vested
righti hOtellteeperaphoeld he respected,
and ..wesnOpoeed to the Pei:At Ant on that
• -,geoned. :The Scott' Act •Watk injuridus",to
,••the growth' ' • T136 -Government.
"aving ',.adopted .poliey .e cOnij.ging.the
duetries .the country,: he -did' .not..seer
hy they.had striok blow one 'of. the
. oat profitable of industries.: . Con
-
2 -.eluded by Moving the • folioWing aniend-
rdent to the amendment: ; .
inaannteli tho Canada Teintie-ranee Act had.
not, in those .tonntios• in which it' hes been
enforced,. rogulted the promotion,of (Anise
. ' of Temperance, and the general. enforcement' 0.
•the law has net beenattained consequence 0
J'public opinion: amongst a large pnrtion tho
poople.not titling' in favor- 0 the said. there
'fore. the 'Canada Totoperanto Act shoal& be
. •
repealed, • • • ,
, . . ,
•Mr.4Iitinieebn end Mr.• gisher objected
that the ainendment 'viva • Out, -Of, order;
• because it .Was ireelevant to the • Main
• • ,-ittotion,. and becattee it Was!. atteMpt
thisimProveMeot, so, far from being the
reetlite Of prohibitory legislation, was MOSt
'n4Arke'Ll Oottntiee Where the. Of/Ott Aot
was not-in:force;
1.7`14,4444447fg4*741111,01Droteig
fr.9m. the Hanna statistics of Ontario" to
alloW the OM cenneCtienbetWeen &Pankow
neje' and crime. Even in the moral and
welt -ordered city of Toronto there were
23,91.2 commitments during.the last throe
years, and of these over 11,000 were for
drunkenness or for crirnesceminikted wider
:-theinfinence. of liquor. • •
Mr. Mills raised the point -of order that
as Mr. Cargill had ainitice on the paper of
a Bill to repeal the Scott Act, which. the
House had decided should be taken upfor
'second reading on a future day, it was not
in order for the -same member to propose
now that the House' should decide upon
that principle in advance,
The Speaker ruled that: the objection was
not well taken, stating that this was in
accordance with his, general ruling.
Mr. Foster said he spoke lest his silence
should he ,misconstrued. Ho contended
that those who obje_eted to-ProbibitiOnslid.
•not propose tO' do away with restrictions
upon the liquor traffic: Altogether. They
Must look then to some form of license.
But those who fevered- license and gave
091,038to show that the Scott
was not . enfOrced could be met
by those who would,, show, as the
niereber•for Eeet Bride* (Mr, Cargill) had
shown, that license laweVe0 not enforced.
He. Weill& prefer to .have the Scott Act
repealed- altogether Ao having_ wine ' and
beer allowed to be soldunderit, judging of
the results from the experience of England
=deg a similar law of partial
He referred tothe argument frequently
advanced that Prohibition was unsuccess-
ful -in Maine and Kansas, and cited the
'embodiment of the principle in the Maine
Constitution and the Popularity. of Prohi-
bition in Kansas to prove that the people
of *these States, who ought to know their
own binaries:4, 'believed it to be a success.
Mr. Waldie said that the' Scott Act was
at first passed in hip county (Halton) by a
narrovimajority. , In 1883 there was a pro-
posal to repeal the Act. They heard then
all the arguments- against the feasibility of
carrying out the law which they had heard'
to -night, and the result- of the discussion
Was that the Act , Was: confirmed by
majority Of 140. , The Act -was being better
enforced every year; -= '
Mr.- Casey rose m speeds amid cries Of
"12 o'clock" (Thureday being the feast 431
Corpus Christi).- ' •'
Sir John Maodonal413ata-1t : waviltittr
o ear s impo aot disoussion mold
not he finished this evening. . He therefore'
moved that the debate be adjourned -and be.
h Alast ,--nzaaerf • b s-
Carriedi •
. •
‘.41F4313334.4Mo boved -the7HOnse•
into committee to considertheBill creating
the new Department of Trade. and Com -
mercer He said the Cabinethad arrivedat
the conelueion that he rapidlY increasing
trade of the cbuntry dentang&the_creation
Of department speoTilly •oharged with
matters relating to Arade and commerce,
home ancl foreign'. The Ministerof Fininice
had hitherto 'attended to these 'Matter:4.
The work had become too • burdensome *
the Minister, whose special, work is to keep
watch and ward: over the meeipte and dis-
13
411
OLOSUltg AND . EVIOTIONS!
• ,....;
• .
Xlast.- 11,414ir A. . •R ' eAle
!plat The Pelf llfa/f Gayety, 14.4110.1npant
itrade cm the action of filr:'W,, ,I1, Smith,
leader of the Government; on ;giving hotice
that he would to -day move that the com-
mittee name the tiMe. When ' they -would
'report the Irkli Orly:pee Amendment Milt°.
the House, urgett every. Englieh and.. uiah
membee rit Parliament, •who opposes Mr.
Sneith'e proposal, from Mr; Gladstone
downward, to get themselves suppended
rather than tamely acquiescein Mr.f$,mith'e
nionetroupeneroachment on the •liberties of
Parlianient'.
- In the .HM10 of CerareOns WS- evening(
Mr: lamith moved -the remlotion•previously
announced, requeeting. that at 10 p.m, on
the 17th init. the -Chairman --forthwith put
the question Of any iiotiont amendment or
;proposal touching the clause of the Crimes
Billthen underdiscuiiiien thenon the clause
iteelf and finally on each remaining clause. He
said :the.step, wait forced open the -Govern-
ment by coPtinneile, obstruction. It, was
absolutely neceseary. fox. the dignity and
efficiency of the Howie that the deliberate
attempts to prevent, tbe progrese of buSi:
nem: should be defeated, It was now the
fourth mcinth of . the -session and.practfeally
nothing had been -done. • The whole course
*of legialationbad been stopped. The GeV-
etoreent deeired that due' consideration be
-givin to'the ri htf# of th.a MiagritY And re -
and freedom. ached to the institutions Of
1
spect_shewn-: r -the-traditithis-ofliberty
tile eountry. (Derisive ,Parnellite laughter.):
-But --it ---was•-tuidoubtecllitha-luty-Of-the
Government; under Omura:stances without
,a parallel in the history of a Parliament,to
cell upon the House to*, take niessures to
prevent the minority frein getting '• at deft-
anee the.contrelling power of tbe mejority.
It was•iiiipossihle fOr ii Government repre-
senting a majority • to yield to the
Obstruction of the minority.. The, debatee
over the Crimes Billhadbecome 0 travesty,
bringing ridictile; disgrace and contempt
upon Parliament. : Ue appealed to the
House to support. the . Govern:nen* hi try-
ing to 'reetore "Order - in their proceedings.
(Cheers.).• '
: Mr: Gladstone, said that a: longer' notice
ehouldliairebeen given: of this , iiiipertent
motion.- The present state of business and
the- 'entire paralysisof. Parliament;•• had
caused intense :dissatisfaction: throughout.
the country-,-. but: the'. position had. been
brireglitsbont_hY,Alia, Government, them,
selyee. (Cries. of "Hear, : hear.',') They
had been pursuing the false and evil:policy
of COeriiien without. the ,lastificatiOn that
had been pleaded .orr tender -occittsiginiv
,t til-41.1vegisriludtstaleni; . - ,exteages--_ ' anacti;;
AreditiorciimMarlicianentintlat--,condudt-ga
the measore Whit% 'they. had, ;Wider the
name of the Criines Bill, introduced. ' The
measure waidirected .against' combinatiOn
apart from. crime.-- (Hear, hear.). He would
mggest, to the Government that; a• rational
'mode to expedite the Bill would be to Make
it temporary initesid'of permanent and to.•
strik43 out all the provisions touching com-
bination apart: frem, ohne, assuring the
feish tenants Of the same :Protection in,
'respect 16 their land strikes as is given
„English artisans in their labor strikes.
(Cheere_andories_onINO.V. )•,._,.. It. _th e .Govt:
•bursententuorthe .GevernmentTthe debt- '
and the cash assets, etc.. ;The -new depart,
tient, he -stated, MinCided With -the Eng,.
lieh Board :of 'Trade. The new ,Minister,
WOuld have the. duty of 'attending to. the
execution: a laws passed,by'Perliarnenterid.
of •Ordera-ipLCouneil relating • to Matters
connected: With. trade, and ' .coonnerce, and
he, with:: the Minister' of Vinance, 'would
'practically, term the :Treasury ,Board;
In order to • prevent an increase •of the
Cabinet, ilia. Minister Of Trade an Coni.
rneinAwOuld be the head of, liis b•Wil Special.
clepartment.„.and would be .the heed of
:the Customs Iialand Revenue. 'He
Would have a Deputy. Of : 'Trade 'and poin-
-,inercie,:•8114 branehes' would• -bead
ininisterontr011ers whe; 'than& re-•
quired tabe meMbers of Parliament; wonld
not 'hive seats .in the Cabinet: : They would
be .niembers of the Goyeromerit biit-not cif
•e Cabinet,: -.4n
the Plan adopted by Eoglend: Thepermi-_
nent headsof the two. branches would be
first-010as clerks,•OVer where the Deputy of
Trade Commerce Would hitY43 control,
and Weald have salary of 42,800. • The
adjustment Of tariff 'fcr the. development of,'
trade would lie the 'special dutY. of the new
Minister. The revenue side., of the tariff.
irotild „continue to lie the special charge of
the Minister of Finance. He believedthere
would be much greater effidiency and that
without increasing...the-best,- ,
Sir RiCherd Cartwright said he thought
the, revenue Aollecting :branghes should. be
Under' the Minister of . Finance. -He be-
lieired in the plan of political .heads not in
the Cabinet, as it would bee, :good appren-
ticeship for the younger Members Cif the
Commons before becoming Cahniet
ister.Ilaohjected to the salaries of the.
controllers. as We near those of Cabinet
Ministers. • • f • - •• - ,
Hon. Mr; Mitchell Opposed the measure
involVing expense • and ' tending to;
atrengtlidO the MinistrYin the Commons.
' Milsi like Sir Richard Cart:
wright, ',agreed With the Premier that a
Departnient of Tif---adi31,14,141c11.Coinnierce'veas ,
needed, but he Wanted further consiclera'
tion of it left till neXt session. • ,
The Bill passed through ethnniittee; a
new cle.ase being added that the Act. ii net to
Come into effeCt the GoVermir-in-
Council makes the pibelareationi • •
• Mter recess The House passed e ninuber
Of priya,M Bills among them a. Divorde
Bill or the :relief of Marie Louise Noel;
eobetitute one order .for•-• thietlier 'and M. ,whieli Calmed the Mewl ',Call for a 'division
erinnent: rejeOted. that reinedy and ..hadnp
,ether to propose, the Offensive character Of
the piilwouldhe'retainedin'full:fOrce, .He
did opt..wish to- create a difficulty by offer-
ing which he :knew would she
ineffectual. He would therefore content
himself with •protesting against the course
nowpursued.... • , • •
.1144ParnelLeaid he.couldnot understand
the fatuity of the. GOerninerit', on rushing
a .,roe'cl•whiCh' they had
already Seen would leadtothetreatestdia;
order .' • in Ireland. - ,•The • GOvernment
spettlters had h,arped •.on. the thente ob-
Stroetion. .• As: a- Matter ,of fact:the Trieili
members had not lifted aveice against any
measure .,except this „Coercion Bill, which
they Were bOund to resist . to the thettoet.
The :cry .of -ebstreetion . was not genuine
when raised bymen who, did notidgeiratO,
advance: public business. •,..Let thO'Goyerni
133-43-13t7prreetetwitIrthi-3.resitiiiiiiiiess. Of the
natiOn, :instead - Of •..wastinn time over
Crinnis, Bili applied to a nation 'Where,
crime wasadmittedly at a niiniMuin. :.He
conoleded by moving art artiendr,ethit that
._the Hods() decline: to,.sanctiOn 'a resolution
tlie.freedore'ef 'debate and assail...
inight be used hy -a future .GrOveriintent3iais
tathoge rt• eleGd:o14ev:ehtr,:nfl:in:efeila: Governmentnothatrit:ai silt;i13e1Cro: proposaleurlse.)
•;pir William' Vernon Harcourt ...warned
in ,a fort:light, and 7raTillier measures
Might beferced.throtigh in the ,earcie
Intagine,he ptaid, some ,.Government pro-
, Posing' ,a Choi.* 1:Disestabliehment
end urging; that, as, :eVerYthing for end
.against disestablishment had- beensaid
f}tireetlY; the thitA•reo,ilieg ef -the Ain ShPuld
be taken :" this ,ditY,wee10•.. It was .4. don-
servatiVe GO3Peinnieriti In an. insane .passion
kir • Coercion,. that • eat this • 'precedent, in
-abnegation eV every •• principle the Tory
.
party had ever contended for. • • ,
.
Mr, Goschen; • Chancellor , • the
Exohctinci,..cad that the preeeding speaker
might at:1MM the licitaSe, but he•Would nOt•
deceive the eciuntry.. , The Government
had -Made attempt.te Step disc:of:Sion on
lit:important clausesof the Bill."' The
Parliament and the Cotintrk :had had..
tough of this unlimited discussion ..and it
was neCessary now to Put an end to it. •
, Sieverar of the parnellitee:. continued -the
diaChissiOn. , ' • ,•
Mr. Smith :Moved the closure; whieli•Wari
arried byavotf24tb107.'
Mr.Parneljs atherniment*.Was then i.e.,'
eicted by, a vete Of 801.. to
There is a elittoce now et ; discussing the'
original motion:, ' •' . • :.
Afttt
er,' further dieeesiOn, • 111r. ' Smith's
complete motion wee carried., under closure
by a vete of /245 to .98, andel elieers. and
cobnter-cheers. Mr. •Smith then propthed
to postpone further, dieptiOieri of ,the Bill
in committee,
A GoternmentJ3i1i, which will be an ap-
pendiX t� the C,oettlen .Bill, providing for
trial,ef pereons charged With gettVe•offences
. a 'cOnitnisSiOn Of , judges, Will be Am...
mediately•ioirodneed n INirliainerit :and
will 13e ptished thtongh at the seine tittle as
the Coercion Bill., • • • •
When Father Hannon • entered
larenle hoese,'quolivrith had Constable
•Nottonraieed aloft and wee jn the at of
thro*ingliim entOf the' ,witidow:, while it
Slitter of Charity VMS oharung. another
conetablo With Nortonle rificiand bsYouet,
The trowitof peasants *he 'surrounded, the
• brine;On eat Of its:order anOther motion, of to give relief to the conscientiodUseruples
wItiCh. Mr. cattiulad giVen notice.
• Sir John. Macdonald •argued that the
7 amendment 'wasitt order, and Said he Was
sttrprised tO see, hont..gerttlernentrying to
- limit ihe. discussion... The *bole question
wile now. before the Hoiase end they had an
. opportunOy'r to express their preference for
. • any one of the ,varieus " -views held hy the
• people -on this subject, • -,
• -Mr, Mille contended that ilia anie.xidnient
• was not in Order. • , .• ' ,
• The Speaker ruled' that •the amendment:
wad in Order: • .. •, • • - . •
• Mr,,PatterSOn (Eimer) seconded Mi. Car -
',gill's motion, He Chtinted that prohibitory
, :laws ieterfered-with• 0111 rights and tended
'to destroy the. Moral fibre nf the people of
the eominunity in Which -they existed. Ho
• conteridul that there had. 'been' it reat-
Of members opp.ose'd to'Th
. divorce.; • is
-taking place, 'Marie Lbuiee.. Nbel obtained
the desired relief 'vete of 81 to 49. '
John Monteith • also .secured 'relief
"froth the niatrinionial. chains. . •
, The Supreme and Excliequer,Court Act,
with • siitydanses, .Court
, couple: of
hotird hi going through tornmittee: •
On a resOlution. respeoting the 'salary Of
the Minister of Trade arid Commerce, Sir
• john said he had • considered the proposal
Of Sir •Richard.1 Cartwright,' and ° Would
eliange•the th Trade tied Coni
,meree se as to have the Custoniu and tri.
land Revenue placed uetier the Minister of
Flint:nee: •• '
.13tan. Rice, the showinen, •married
Robinson• ; a rich widow, at Schulenberg;
• iniproyerriene'M thadrinking habits b Wei Texas, On Wednesday.. ',Mi.. Rice is over 78
• people of Canitaa late years, and that P years old, and Itia bride 1s45. • -
•
t'•
:
•
•
place ieered at the evictere, wholvat ,iteve;
ral Of the. Peagenta-with.their: betens,
An antLevietie,A,Aemenetration-yrail-hoid-.
Bilii•Iiefei-iid; to -day, apd.s temperarY
•strnirturS=Wati•hulit-Tor-shelteriog-,oymted-
lenitntS:
The Liriletick CorPOrtitten lieVer.eaolveci
to Present. Mr. Wre. 01Beiee. with.ole f;i3e„
dom ,Of the- city.. Deputations of the,
National League -wilt welcome Mr. 0"Bilen
Upon his orrivel,at (4;i0e4fitown. .
A GIDDY MEI. •
Drooped 4rt Melo Attire icomee to Grief'
and the !"elles. Celle., •
A NeW 'kink despatch says pretty
15 -year old ghl named Man:tie, McNamara
is to-dav•eobbfng awayor dear life in jail,
having "lieeo committed for eXannnatien.
yesterday, When the girl was brotight
into court her mother would seemly have
rec,ogni .zed her, as her ' Blender -figure was
encased these garments which custom
and e twhaealaawrrtiagnveerfa44, CAtdetZitphgermaleirseo.
her lather- en - May, 20tb. two:.'weeks
ago, she attended a grammar school. She
invested a portion of . the money in having
:her hair out short and in the purchase of a
new dress and a red jersey. When thAg.irl
was acetified of the -theft she denied it in-
dignantly and eluding her mother's, vigi-
lance ran away. .„ Detective Byrnes' detec-
tives found her yesterday; after a. -long
-chase. She was dressed in male attire,
repreeenting herself as a,cigezette-maker.
A.few-Adayeage-her-repeiyed,a leiter-
from a "Mrs. Wileon,". stating :that the
giddy girl.. had 'committed suipide an& was
--buried m -Greenwood -Cemetery.•
confeesed M writing the note. • • ,
The New British war:Shtp
,A. -London cable . sap; :' • Another large
WAVyessel; the Immortalite,.was. -launched
at Chatham. yesterday., She is, a tviin;
screw and belted steel °miller, and was
cominenced in January, 1886. 13ayiog thus
been leas than eighteen. menthe in reaching
her present state of ' c,theitinctiOn. Her
armor belt.is 10 inches thick. ;She :is. bf
.5,000 tons dieplacement, of ' 8,500 -horse-
poWer and is, expected to steam eighteen
knots. She will carry tWelVe breech-18dd,
ing guns besides an equipment of Norderi
feldt and torpedo:et. .:The,:Immortalite is
the -sister ship of the Australia., the TZJit;
daunted and several Others:. Theceremony.
of christening Wig perforined by Mrs.
Gribana, the wife's:Attie Comptroller. a the
Royal_ i_Navy, who hireeelt preeent
with Prinoe Lehinigen, the Carthnianderan-
Chief of the Nore. As the Yessel was being
launched herancher caught in the' .serie of'
the (AMP .and ' (several •gw,cirlunen,tearrSiilYc
4•02entinfirireisary4FinitAthadeTWOW,*
bleckent lethed. ' • • . :••••`,7".7 •
• sale of a Famous stelllion..'
A London -despatch ilays:, The ,Duke of
• Portland has sold his iambus .Clydesciale
stallion
Broil.; of 4thisville,Wis., thegreat . horse
importers; and he. will be shipped fit:moths:4:
• Clyde, in a few 'days. -This horse hail ;had
a:Somewhat remarkable careek...- He was
'exported to* AineriCa when a yearling, won ,
all the prizes at Chicago and othei show,
Vita: brought back • to :England,, and •Wee
hought,tiesoOnlas.landed -by -the. aloulie -of -
Portland for ' ' *Op the fist
priee,Of the Royal Agricultural Society ' at
• Shrewsbury and Other -honors, _ and was
used with • greet eucc4:4 On His Grace's'
estates in Ayrshire. 0:their:Ogle Keir a.
handsome bay, eight. years , old, and,'wih
the Weight eta; Clydesdale, has 'the action
of a cart-,hOree. •
• A Singular Series of ?iiiiriitigea.
. , , .
'1 A • Jonesboro., Ga., telegram sae:; A.
'singular :series of Marriages had ltirnished
• amusement for. Many of 'the: -people . of
• Payette County' in, the last ' two years.
'There Were five Hamber:boya and the .same
number of Starneagirla. As the 'Hitrober
boys •• began marrying, • Mr.. Starnes'
daughters. in succession, he prciteated, , hitt
in. •vain, the list • Couple eloping • to . be
married here Saturday. ' Mr. . Starnes, . see.:
ing hiniself Pius outwitted, went M the
hensti Of ..--Mrs,-110,7iiiheibie7.'likai.p4.. and
almost by force.put her into his boggy, and,
riding off, to Fayetteville, married her,
'thins • ceniplifing' the circle.' of 'a family
• - Millions of Sharks and Mackeret. . •
A Nerfoilt, deapitCh says: Ca.,
Steelman, of. theschOoner .gusan. B. Ray,
reports that on 28th, while off Cape
Lookout, beim& berth, his vessel ran into
.ttitinarinentie 13613,ocil•of• eharlis_in_seventeen
' airrn-ne of *stet. • Theyrivere " as* thick :ad
they poesiblY could hir.476taye; . and, .the
School • extended as far tie •the eye Could,
reach. `, The schooner sailed through them
for fully anhenr, mailing only about three
Aftergetting. clear of the Shirks she
encotinterecIa shoal of Mackerel and sailed
ihMogh ,themi foe fourhours. • Capt. Steel=
anan'saysleneVer befere saW• mackerel in
-waters !south of 'Body'afelainT. • ' , • .'
...41 •
0 4. .
• rersonai
Cleye141.0 .Plainzlealer : Perhaps the -rea-
soft Of Bouton'il cultured people geieg wild
over Queen Kapielani was because.her ukin
is about the color Of baked beans. • ' '
POplity Attokitey.Generai Johnstonof
Ontario has been • ill; for soineweeki with
rheematic fever. Vesterday he Wtifi able to
leave hie bed, but is/still: very weak. ‘,
There died at Vienna on the 14th nli.;
, ,
aged 72, Alfred Vert Skate,a gentleman of
Scoteli• extraction, who for 25 years has
been a *member of the Austrian Parlittnithit..
Ile, was One of the greeted and wealthiest '
manufacturer:1 of Austria. ; ••
A speed7-Onie of Whooping -cough.
•Molui,, a . Norwegian physician, is
repOrted, to, have been able to 'cute • whoop-
ing -cough by reeene of inhalatione of sul-
phurous aphydride In the first inetande
this was done acciclinitallyle.,-diein
:Meting -.Some rooms, • subsequently , it was
•done 1The hurning six drachms of sulphur
per Cubic metre of Spade ; the .bedding,
etc., being:Well exposed to it infltience:
.After the room, had been Closed for - four
hours; Yentilatioe *as restored, And the
children put -to dieep n thtiehecla impreg-••
Oated With the sulpharotia.vappre, ' In the
morning the cough had ceated.
.A. pansy ltuicheon Was a recent poetical,
social vent 1n Boston, •The rodree were
decorated with smilax and. Pansiee 'each,
••,- • ,
table waS ornamented with• pandierie and
giieste reCeived faVors of pansy fano a4d,
small bunches of the flowers. '
l'Egg 9,1v .ggir0 41:TailPEE.
The BoXi# Big Bugs Nottn, W1,11_1. be Thork.-7,_
: * Bed.X. chle",r-4- eg:-.]4,S,10.17ils:,,,T9,1"-.-A* ,t. •
-•,=-•
. ' t,' g.. • • ,
.. _
X rtOnlOic 'Cage i'S&V In'stip 1
. ue or
Whom arringeinente *wee been made by
the Lord Chamberlain; during the anbilee
are the King of Dentaarlc, the Xing of
Saxony,the King And Qdeco ,of the Bel. -
gains, with their daughter tho Princess
Clementine, and the 'heir -apparent, Prince
Baldwin; the King of the Greeka.. and his
eldest on, the; reigning Duke of Saxe-
Coborg;Gotha ; thaGraini Duke and the
Grand 'Puchesis of Mecklenberg-Strelitz ' -..
,the grand Duke of Hesse-Daimetadti witil
thehereditary Prince and thaPrineesses
Alice and Irene ; the Landerave of HefSgep
the Crown Prince and the Crown Prineelie
of Germany, the -Prince and Princess Wil-
lis:in of Prussia, nd Prince Henry and the
Princess S?o hianna Margaret Of Prussia,
le
the Crow ; since'. of Austria, the Crown ,
Prince of weden; • either PrinceLeopold or ,
T.Aouis of Bavaria ; Don Antonio of Mont,
pensier and his"Wifii; the Infanta Bifilalie-; -
the Duke and Lucliess of Oraganua ; the
Grand Duke and Grand Duchess Sergitis
Alexandrovich 6! Russia; • the Dike of ,
Aosta; the hereditary Prince and Princess
of f3axe-Meiningen; the'Prince William of '
Wurtemberg ;,, . the, Prince Ludwig , of
Baden, the Prince and Pringess Philip of .--r•-••••• .
Saxe-oberg-Getha ; the Prince and Prin- • •
cess Hernutnn of' Hohenlohe-Langenburg ; .
'the prince 'and•Princess of Leiningen;" the
-P r hie e -D erew an go -7 - 0 f - S it iff,- wird -Abu!).
Mejor Hisam of. Persia. .• - '
' The procession on the 21st inst. will. be •
--fit-finiirepielliftia-m-idirepesint-lhan is •
generally expected. The Prince of Wale:: ', I
and -all the male 'members of the Royal '
fam.ilY are to be on horseback, so that •the • .
Queen _will be attended. by a brilliant
cavaleadoof•her relatives: There -int-h-ei
t� bea•yery large military bac:oil; under- '
•the Corairtand a the.: Duke of Cambridge.
It is probable that there. will be seyenteeii
,Of the,Royal carriages in the procession. • •
An immense marquee is to be erected' out-
side the great west door of the •Abbey in
which the Royal procession will be formed,
the personages walking'. in strict order of
precedence up the nave and through; the
choir to their places. ,The definite :cote- ••••• :
reonial has not yet been, settled. , i
A Kansas incident.
As incident ofthe late: Oelona 'M
Kansan tells 'of t•a ball of .wool-tivme.sylieh.
blown against against his house. Striking
upon the end of the tveine, which Was
blown through the weather -boarding and
planteringrthekallotheartined.outsideamtni •
rarreditaggittersteeoPpaliiir.7111160fie,^tA11003
ontehurzsitangcreoldlloorr-.1,-1Ve..7:terer•
ready to vete' Min the iiihimiPionstip,
Missouri is yet to hear from, but we take .
occasion to othigratulate the people of
Kansas in that some one his been able to
break the monopoly hitherto controlled by :
reel estate-ageritq.-Detroit Free Press.
The Det Was' Off.- , . .
Theielephone in. a }Nihon • street . butche• r'
Efin50 rang out vitfiently'yeeterday; and the..
democratic Man'of meat anat./ere:Vit.
that...yon,..butcherr_ceme-Oviii•the.wire.
' up M. No,
Clinton ayentie, a nice roast of beef and, 11.,
'couple ' of . chickens,: and be,sureyou.get, •
them here", early." " " Bet your
tle will." ' " What's . that?' • ' You •
can • just . bet . • 'your -" DO • yen: :
:knew who yeti are talking to,,,,eir ''Mary, '
the. cook, ; ain't you :Mary 2', . ;(‘ NO; sir; I,
ItIn not ; •f llfrs. and. this
is the last order yi.th'IT-" , ".' Souse me: •
mum .. that bet's..off..".Etectec,
- "
TeMperanca lCionatiOn:
: The United Kingdom Allimida: has,
received, through its President; Sir Wilfrid'
Lawson, a donation -of 115,009. • The gener...
ORB donee does not allow his name to be
mentione4. He sends the gift "in memory
of a mother's interest in' -the temperance'
canEie;"'• • •
• . .
•
•
'• The Earl of Aberdeen's Tour.
•
A pan • Francisco telegrabw. says: The -
steamship Alameda, ,. which arrived this ,
morning from Australia; bad on board the
Earl of Aberdeen, ex -Lord Lieutenant of--'
Ireland,- and wife.
, •••
'Ai3Or'. One 'hundred and .fOrty.
dollars are now stored in the sub -treasury- .
_of411A-ljnited States -in New York ,eity.
Leading ithe-icialtiliilibieh-this. treat.;
sure is keptare two steel doers *hieb:haye
Bull an 'appearance of strength that one '
.wOuld think that thousand -ton trip-haM- •
mere couldtnot prevail againgt .then?.. • One • •
of these Vioref is behind theother, and to
reach the vaults it is necessary to pass, •
through both. It is a rttle Which' has neVer
been 'violated that the two doors shall never
be 'opened at the :same time. Even' the '
Secretary of ' the. Treasury, when. he goes
into the Vaults„, must Wait for one of the ,
steel barricades to Awing to. and be bolted',
andlocficed behind hike -before .the other is
opened for, his advance. The roof. Of .the .
sub -treasury has also apparatus for the
placation of the gold and ,silver 'Which are
below. It is armed. With gatling gime and
Mpeating rifles, ,
In Itussia,'On the northern railwayst ,he .•
locomotives, hitherto burning wood or coal, ••
are being adapted •for peat burning, the ,
saving being estimated at some 'fifty per •
cent.' In Many placesthe peat is out by -•
hand mechines,,Init•these, although cheep
end easy -to work, have the ,drawback that: •
the peat cannot be worked below eight,feet,
whereas the peat cutting reachhies.worked
by Steam power peoetrate twenty feet, and
reach, the lower, ' denser layersof peat;
which, owing to 'their superior: qkIil
• command a higher price in the market. •
Sin Gnoeen M. PeriAthee father vide, a
cabinetmaker.' The great car •manufac-
'hirer wag brought -tip to the same trade..
When, hie father died George M. Pullman
for years suppprted ''and educated Ing
:brothers and :esters. -When Success came •
to him, he etill.ti,nii:eci hi. generosity
towards his relatiete.
•Tneuou the 'Thugs of /nab: have been
long exterminated, ' they left -no Vacant'.
chaire. They.hal'm been repla'7' by pro-
teasinnal pOisbners, the- Loriden gtatidard
-says, who operate with a drug extracted
from the -seed of the ahaluira and :nixed,
TheY kill woreert and children,
'whicqi the Thugs would, not do.. .