Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1888-12-07, Page 6lterde ';BRttaea [r:: Illoq Lea ,..� , . _,.. iwd feat (Wedoeeda7) night'e'London cable the continuation of the:,debete previ, oda. to: the taingg'of the, vote on the Aeli- liourne Bill as follows: After Mr.� ,pillon ked spoken, last night on the motion to Introduce the Bill, Major .Sanderson hold the ,floor fora while. Lord ••gartington said' he thought Mr nen p argument was not very ' Cogent _slfainet. the Bill, . but, was very, cogent in ver•• of pperoion, because he not only con. feaaed,.but boasted, that. the Maw of land Ltid been reduced from twenty to fifteen, Tears purobase by a .combination which }+wtdere+d it ten Bible fo :a en t. r ._ t an with safety to takek vaeant.firm. • Mr. Dillon denied that he, need the words •" with' safety." • • Lord . Hartington retorted' that nobody aver followed or. Dillon without >reoeiving A , contradiction.. Mr. Dillon hotly protested. "Gerd Hartington, amid great excitement; resumedhis speech. He, said he had not intended to stake any,impetation;but Mr. .insisted upon exaotneag in reproduc- ing hie arguments which it would be diffi. telt to attain. • He Proceeded to argue' that Mr. Dillon's language justified everythingt • that tbe. Goverment had been forced t do n to in order to upheld the law in Ireland. The 'land purchase and' arrears quotient; were quite distinct: The rejection of the . Bill. would' not facilitat fair dealing with Par-- of toeing to out her throat h ewu rears, the neoeseity fax which 'he ° thought : ink: her for a as been *li- mn, was much overrated, • The Government g - Year. The people in the never refused to deal with the errearegnea- vLion. The delay erose from the difdanity deciding as to. how to deal with the sub= jeot..' The. Ashbourne Aot. had been a most aaooeseful experiment.. `Why abandon it now ? • The experience thug gained without On motion to ge Into oontnittee: on the Mr. Parnell propeeed an amendment giving ;.the °overnment er to•inatruot the Land in Ooenmissionto with ar.rewhen$o!• urged that the feel t s W gredona1 ■iriww *l,r �r stew .v,r- ' - .asithe. n 1',•i. n6 dale q in oonjunbtfonwith th. question of land •pnrohpee. This done, would place the tenant in a position to con tract freely with the landlord,' protect • TROUBLE AMONG SHE -IRT ARN�LL gN'D OHUROHr�L�, Speak :skis '$be 1.rish I:anci PurohaBP Bill,, Eiden Before •the Cglnlnasiou as. to the fa4se• Mr; Sexton. naked whether it was true:, that.• Sven Irish members: were about to be; prosecuted, and. if =so, whether there wise; any relatiott.between •the, peoseoution;and. the delay. in the debate on • the Iriab esti let A leaf, (rhnrsday) ni ht's London . GETTING UP' 'TE' • ti ,i g L do cable TIMES OgPE, he was resumed hi the Commons sa�ye . The debate "onthe, Land Pnr, Bill chase. by Mr. Parnell.. He declared em exchequer against lose, and give the Aeh bourne' a of the best possible (,fiance tows with emootheete. i� tower Mr. Smith oontended that the course which. err. Parnelt, proposed: Would oe he tenant in. 'a. ;diatinotl" than ' before,byredo i worser ars. position a gnizing;'arreara•ae a charge that:might continue to hangaround ie neck. even 'after completing is pp - ,ase., Now, after a oontraot for purohase ad been agreed upon, the arrears *opine pre facto wiped out. • • Mr. Dillon held that the mischief of arrears• 000nrred.,before the agreement, for t eh pro„ hear ... t Mr. Parnell's motion was rejected. by 182 0148. : • • ,.. . to go f th Th policemen but 130 i hand that he .opposed; the bill se he. was ea ti pied th t tinder the A London •Cable says: preeentcroaxnstpnoestt would, be din oa-- --- Y The examination. ,• r that it d to.night 'Nationalist / P.a to .:be. ;Proeeou - phatioally ted 9 believed Murder Verdict. p of, witnesses from, County Kerry wee con - able to tine it into otfeotive operation. Be ..t nee had always „held that the creationof }i- .d at the'. ;flitting of the ParnellCom- peaaant.proprietary was the only mans of �mMr, y nardoay., solving, the land; question. Hie own,Bill Mr, Leonard, agent is the estates of the Earl o! Beninese, said: the League WAR as simply .caked; that Church. ° tenants be active, as e allowed to;acquire land by paying the withvert , meHent 'thoroughly dr Chief Chnroh, .Commission annually for fort - or the statement, o! Mr. the League a Wee ntne,yelare a rent, equal! to 4 per cent. Y Secretary forhIreland, that League' wise on a thing t the past. bilis part . of Kerry the capitalised vela" of. the holdings. That the light' that the Lean was Would have created no risk t th I League m k' p makin hegiter. The Conaervativee• opposed erlat its hottest. The Plan o! Campaign a was wise be our ere ne to ant et. til yo he y Y ve we 000 wo Exo, that proposal, hitt the time llpo'°oerft;l.. Pornierly' a writ could; when t ey would find it needful sheriff with the aid of f t h t would come executed by theh iff THE WurrEcRAPEL 8CABE. Jack; the, nipper Writes a Sauey Lett... -1i a Recent Score. A London cable says The, latest Wh. chapel sensation has been anted down nothing but• the mere ravings of a drunk :woman: after a row with, her lover: woman is even or a lower type than'th who fell prey to Whitechapel murders Her aseooititee pity that she is very some, and :that the man whom;ehe a er-_ m e pohtt Ste- P out of the question oropposed e o do people. IIn til because it would a tenpntshad been t dl w our an red soldi nr er. e: Irish party were required. The members of the Les were' always' ready .and eager: to. assist g in a settlement of the land. uestion• me. every ennday. after attending mase q arrange the .week's. rogramme of . r It pp was oalamny to. say that any one resistance. and intimieiatton. ., make. ' ' The •reed os the'Irtsh•memiiera tried to .. - ease name from l os dial w 11•t , theB' � the year 1881 th r .. odea ' make. :, the goy- but > after the Lea de: was . f en ernment of Ireland. easier: (Cheers.) 'Ort scoffed at. him and 8 formed ,t The the contrary, their opposition to the Bill `•On oroaa-exa . the landlord. ; o8e was due; to ;the, knowledge that it would, mit 80ii tion .the •:witness a cause a foes to the . Exchequer withot. tenants 1880 it was neoeseary to gi r�; effecting its oateneible:•objeot; The Govern- blue. aeatetanoe, as some. of them' w sed went had. not taken tap the land question bene. with hanger. There' were 2 q t e house heard thein- quarreling, end., whei1 the man ran down stairs. and the woman game •to the top of the landing and screamed, " He tried to, , out; my, throat, tollowhitn " three men gave ohase, but'the. fellow got away easily enough. But thepolice Ieiee would inValuable know who. the man is and where he uvea. ba, vis sable: when.Parliament Theyhave been: watching his rl ht all day, aatbarked ona more. ambitious scheme of and when he gets over his fri yang • re- bind purchase. • 'turns home the made a spirited defence of ie y cxpOot to get him. There however, not the slightest aeon to sup- pOse that heist the Whiteohapol fiend. 'The police say that . the woman inflicted the wound` in her throat herself. The injury is very alight.. ' • The really interesting incident of the day is another letter from Jack the Ripper, dated Portsmouth. Here is is , • "Dieere•Boss,-It is _no good for you. to look for me in. London, because. I am not there. Don't trouble yourself about metill ' I retnrn,whioh will' not be very long. I like the work `too well to leave.it long: , :0, that was such a jolly job, the lastone. 'I. htelid plenty of time to do it • properly.. Ha t ha 1 The next lot 1 mean. to do with a ven- geance : to out off' their heads and arms. Yon` think -it a: man- with a' black mous- tache. •Ha 1'' ha 1 • When • I have another yon can catch me. ' 80. good-bye, deer'boes, till I return..-Yonre, "JACK THE Rzpritn." The Ietterie in the same hand as the one received just'. before ;Mary Helly wee. mus-• Me. Morleyspirited . Mr. Dillon against the remarks of Lord $�gton. Be said that Mr. Diuon'a .character stood as high arthat of anyother member of the " House. As fax is •the - taking of-'. vaoant farms was conoerned, Mr. Dillon. 'relied .upon the oreation Of en • esprit du `corps among . the tenants, not upon intimidation.: Mr. ,Morley =_ fully,. .supported -Mr." -Glad-: • ` : intone a contention that . the arrears ones tion was more urgent than. the Ashbourne Bill; which, he said, ought to be postponed. The Government admitted the necessity of a Settlement of thea arvrears question, and having a majority . on both. aides of; the. House they meat be held responsible for not'dealmg with: the ,question. , (Cheese:) HiCilenieti that the .Ashbourne Aot had been enoh a encase as Lord Hartington. :bad asserted. • Among -other reasons in proof whereof ,be spoke, • Mr. Morley aaid that.only-a sixth of the £33,0.00,000needhad. been' expended in the' west of Ireland. He articles quoted toles from 1 the Birmingham Getsette >to show that .the: Chamberlain party ogneidered:that the''extenaien of the Ash • bourne Act would be as dangerous as Mr. • aladetone's scheme,; yet they preferred to support' it rather than to injure' the posi tion ofthe_Government, and this, '---•Mr: Morley exclaims ,..- -i the-party--`ihat Stamps the, Country, eating. that 'a 'great it as a great gall,. and nr• morality Idea a the bottom." (Renewed cheering.) Th apeaker said:, his position _in..referen to the, land purchase scheme 'was . nn changed, buthe did not.want to pnrohae eared: at.any price.. , The Government pr leased to have prepared a oomprehensi • moheme; why not prodnee ii:`? Depen • upon it, he said, if • they; voted ` this five Millions they Would ,never.seetheir schem , but' would vote for an. indefinite :postpone anent of the land settlement question, . in addition -to:- on -an --unsound • fnanoial policy and delay in dealing with the arrears, Mr. Smith, the • Government leader, in defending,. the Government . against the charge of "breaoh•of faith, reminded thethem House that be, in Any last,. informed them that thie Bill' would be. introduced in. the *Moran session, • ` 'the, lioaee then divided, Mr.. G lsdetone's amendment'was rejeoted, 300 to 246 The.I `motion to introduce the Bili wee agreed to The Dnioniste voted solidly with.; the Gov-• ernment. Two Gladetonians, Haldane and Grey, votod;ageinst, the. amendment; and two othere abstained from voting. Lennon, Nov. 21 In the House of Com, mons %his afternoonMr.: Madden,,i3olioitor.., a "`four a d, moved the second g'of the: Irish Land Purchase Bill: • Mr. Lab'onohere: moved that the Bill be M1 rejected. • • He complained of the undue *tete with which the measure wee being -greased forward, and said there wee an ob- • vions desire:on the • part of the Government to: prevent she country' from oonaidering • their proposals: on the question of land par- chase. He' denied that" Parliament held obtained at.the last election any. authority to legielate upon this question, the 'Maumee ''importance of which require's the. special ' sanction of the.conntry. As the, Bin stood it was a gross injustice" npon the British taxpayer. Besides that, it was injurious to Ireland; as it world encourage a .gig' exilic system of absenteeism: ' Until a Home Rule measure was carried nothing ought to. ' be done toward lend. purchase. Sir George Otto Trevelyan, Liberal, warned the House that if it assented to the Bill it would not be able to stop •farther , grants and it would soon be called upon and compelled to edvanee millions. • Among thedangers of the Ashbourne Aot) not the Ieaet was that it,'cominitted the British. taxpayer to a system of landlord purchase which gave no good security for advances and which left the tenant in a position to repndiate.if bad years. rendered him •unable to pay hie instalments. ' On motion of Mr. Parnell,, the debate' , was adjourned: • Mr. Gladstone leaves London on Satire- ' flay for Hawarden. He,will not return *0 • London, during the present session of Par- liiinwne: . , moral gulf divides us t" (•Cheers:)' " Yea e oe; E:pree i , . o A Montreal despatoh 'says : • A shocking ve double.fatality took ,place at. Dorval, fiftee d miles from - the oity,' on - the Grand Trunk e ailway,yesterday,. by' which two young. men, Ulrich Noel, and Philip Cesavant, met" a horrible t bee death. h .Both' m eri who I. 0 were plasterers employed_in�the_ erection of the new station buildingat•Dorval, were walk- ing on : the track in the vicinity of the station when two trains came along behind there, 'one the regular Toronto express and the other • s gravel tram, both bound"west, . but oe different.' tracks. "Seeing. that the men made no attempt to get off the:track, a crowd' of laborers at"the. station:shouted- -to-warn'-them oi their danger, 'but ap- parently owing: to ,the 'noise of. the trains they did 'not hear, and before either; could leave the track the express rnehed.."over thein. Both bodied were , terribly' man- gled; and death in each - inataiice must have been instantaneous. The . remains were gathered. and brought to"the morgue here, where an inquest: w •.be held to. morrow Investigations by the police •show that the., Whiteohapel woman . who reported this morning,that she- bad been . attaoked by.a man, who went to her lodging with her, is a prostitute of . the lowest order. She suffered only a slight abrsasion.of.-the-akin on -her -throat, and the police place no credit' -in-her-story-of an sttsbk" T7They believe she inflicted the :injury, herself while she was A DREADFUL. AC( DENT- • Two Young; b[en Ilatall� :Qruahed jet , as 7 Letinov, N'ov. 23. -,In the Home of 'Com- mons this evening,. Mr. i3rpith moved that the' rale compelling adjournment at mid. •'^ aneoended to ' enable the' Tale "QUEENS OF Tat ROAD." Two Girl Horse Thieves "waif. from Katmai .A. Hutchinson!' Kan., despateh gap: Th two female horse thieveanscapied froth j last, night. The Sheriff of• Hamill County was in Newton, KA114 on oth *minas,- end had left ihe keyri to the ji in a hotel.. Some one got the keys, let sh thieves out and then retiurn•rd •the key It is six weeks since theee daring Queen of the Road" earned extended notoriet ing horses for a year, hainng run off wit thirteen. , The ;girls ere of a dashing type both blondes and handsorne. /de seys eh ie the daughter of a Philadelphiit =Meter and Emma claims to be the dage,hter wholesale clothing dealer in Boston." They stood confinement in the little Western jail with an assumption of " don't , mire' which would halt° done honor to the most hardened frontier horse thief. Row Ile Got Ahead. Editor Society Journal. (te ail on er e. a Mr. Jinke, the directors have Ordered me o reise yoer Belay. Yon bring in more oeiety scandal than all the other reporters Jinks --Thank you. The advance .will handed over to my wife. • It is hers' hy Jinks --She gedretary of the 'ladies' be ri an Ate Capt. Seines Brooks, cOinm'ander cif the hi ems p Arizonadres ()reseed the Atlantic P g n enants on the Reamers estates; T with a'view to helm tenants but at' the hundred of them, thougi. very poor, ha aoltottation of landlords;: who seeing that they could not any Longer maintain their 1850 the,ried to pay thuif h'Sino position wantedto dispose .of ; theirpro. Boil i ]provers had: expeae party at inflated glom.:Sea hear.)Hie bill r the labor now went of hisestates Bill di notoont ' � ;► The Hie. bill fax now ams ain provisions enabling the weekly.' Only -ane ante, to £300om State, • when supplying money, to decide poor tenants h rent was taken from what •tenancies it would be desirable. to Witneae did s they .couldco afford t !re purchase in the publio interest. Th Gov, _ notseekto collect' rent from e, ov. persona -bene with hunger, - and the law"•wa ernment left the landlords to decide. • Con- never enforced: a ainst teem* geated' and . raok,rensed estates' would. not class. • g of this be touched under. the Bill. The ' only way The court adjourned. to make the landlords of- congested estates The clerk of the oommisaio agree, to accept the vain of their n handed. to wee ; . to empower. , the • property Edward Harrington a' summons to 'pay a commission to fine of £500 which the oonrt had imposed pchase at such a price as would upon him for contempt: really Mk. represent the landlords' in- states that he will notpaythe Harrington terests. . Arrears ought to • be .` con- tends to question t 'right rf fine and in- terests. along .,with •rent. reduction. Edon teenforcetit. he rtght'•of the commie. Otherwise the land purchase arrangements • A last .Wednesd ' werefntile.�lio ould not -1' ( meeting night's London Wile --not-like to predict' sate': At the meeting o! the 'Parnell Com- that .tenants might • repudiate bargains made under the measure en the ground that advantrge had been 'taken of their necessities, but the: Bill: would'not. assist that large and permanent .settlement that wag. desirable... Any bargain with. the farmers ought to have a basis that would put repudiation.: out • of they question. (Hear, heir.) The meatier" showed an entire absence of consideration for' the national sentiment, The. 'present system of Government trampled upon the national feeling. . • If. the Government meant to attempt a large scheme of land 'purchase it . thhi s r,ance that the members Would not; be withdrawn. from • their Parliamentary duties until the estimates were settled.. Mr. Smith denied having any knowledge of` the prosecution.' He. certainly desired the members to remain until the estimates • were considered. The Vatican has ordered the.Bisbo of Raphoe te. recall :Father, Mc p McFadden, who ' is at present •le6tnring'in London, to• hire. • pariah duties. A goon is jury at Milton, Connty Cork, has rendered a verdict . against 'Constable Swindel, withal murder stabbed Patrick A mdse, who tetaiot Ahern during•. a oonfiot between the people and the police at that • place., Musical and Dramatic Armes. Mr. Walter Lennox, jun„ representing Mre.:Langtry, is le • town, making arrange-. menta for that lady's appearance here. Hoffman, the boy pianist, has; recovered bis health, but will not reappear in public. for,eome time.: . The ' expectation. that Madame Adeline • Patti wide take the art. of. Juliette ctte inthe•, forthcoming performance of .M. Gennod's Romeo. et Juliette," at the Grand. Opera, ' is causing a great • stir in Paris. Twenty • . • . pounds is 'said to have been offered for en oroheetra stall, and,some enthasiasts•have . subscribed fax the. Whole' year in order to<' obtain the right to be present when Patti - singe. • • , • Sir Arthur Sullivan received a few flays ago a: letter from the Duke of Edinburgh;. - wbo had, by request of the Sultan,!sent .• o several selections of Sir Arthur's operas for the Sultan's band.' It appears` that the, Sultan was 'so pleased • with the mneio that • he asked the Duke of Edinburgh to acquaint . . Sir Arthur with' the lea- that `_.ee he line been • f 'decorated with the Order of the. Medjideh. The Catholic News ie. authority for thin::. little bit, -:of- personal' history regarding• .., Mary 'Anderson :� "Notwithstanding. her - fatiguing ,evening's, work and the oom- partitively late hour at which she is able to ' retire for 'rest she never fails to attend' 5 o'clock mans every: morning.. • She $ees in dress plainer than u • shop girl's; and ern only be distinguished by' . the. rapt earnest. • nese of her devotion. How sweet and pure T' fllily in the dramatio garden ofj. passion owers: I.,. Eugene Ondn, leading tenor of ,the Mo- Caull Company, is composing the boors anew opera. Those wh of numbers already:o have heard•the . finished ' are entheiae,tio over the beauty andgrace of the and tmelodies; , he skill and; originality displa ed in " the settingof the r eneembles•and the orches- • tration. -The highest -priced singer at: the French • Grand Opera is the baritone Lasalle. •He - gets 417.600:.for an engagement of eight months. The contralto, Mme. Richard,. comes next with $10,000. Esoslais tenor. Melohieedeo, baritone ; . Jean de Rake, tenor- •Ed. de ke: Reeks, bees, and Mme:. • Esoelais, soprano, follow in order. Mme Mauri, ;the. daneeuse, gets 68,000. A. curious paper by an English organist • on -4' -Melody in Speech" aeserii thi a cow . sero a perfect fifth- and- octave or tenth - dog barks in a' fifth or, fourth • a bra e ' donkey . _ y in a perfect' octave; a horse -neighs-: in a descent on the chromatic scale. -Each • person has his.fnndamental' key, in which • e . generally . -speaks, -but -Which-41e _ transposes in sympathy ath with often y P .,y other' voices• or when he is excited. The little pianoforte -" prodigy " P gY .Oita' Begner has been epending the last few months at his native town ,of ' Basle, 'dill" gently studying under • Professor Hans Huber, with the object of increasing bis e x rt . 0 of Pclassical ,repertoryerica . l music,; which last season was somewhat' restricted.. -• Last week 'he:gave'a recital at Basle, and fair] astonished 'hie: fellow -townsmen. He is .' expected on this continent next yea . To Buy Canada, : A Detroit , despatch as s ne lis dee p., y An In - Po , e latch to a sensational -even -•--- wise eaeential to establiph in Ireland representative authority. to sot: es:a buffer between the tenants' .and the State The Tenants' would have : their ' 86 and: may :be 101 .membere . of • Parliament. (Parneliite obeers) • f Government • wonid be.' as much dependent the Irish vote. No sane Government• of t self-respecting character would tolerate the • sending of • tax collectors around the cottages with an army and 'a; crowbar brigade to enforce payments If mission to• -day George' Cortin •gave - th'e' details of the murder of hie father. After. the murder the Curtin: family were boy. ootted,and their male servants' were com- pelled to • leave.their : service. On cross examination, Curtin testified that he was.a •member of the League when it was first organized. Hie father was Vice -President of a. branch.,:' Witness had no reason to believe that • the League was implicated in the•' crimes against' his family. Various branches of the League had denounced' the murder of hie .father. Miss Fitzmaurige, another witness, dee posed that in June, 1887, a letter signed by a,.man named' Dowling, Secretary . of a • branch of the. League, was •received by her father, requesting 'him to attend• s meeting. Her father did 'not .go.' After this the people's ;.demeanor toward _her__father- - shake, and he obtained police protection.. -Witness 'gave in detail the facts in mina. a tion with.the;ehooting'e�f her' father while he was on lila; way to attend the Listowel F•air• in January. On' cross-examination h witness e> national, _ sentiment.: w stated that: her father and_unole. tie conciliated- had disegreed`reapeoting the farm on which there would `be nothing to fear from the herfather resided, and the' le influence npon the tot youth 'of she, country with her uncle. She. Pip sided of all the 'Fenian knew the League had York� • propagators doom New been enppressed�in County Kerry. to San Francisco. :It was'.thoee-Who Counsel for the Parnenites ; h exereised'coercion that •fomented die ere rend an tion far more than Roesa:: keds disaffect- article pnbl[ehed, in the Kerry 'Sentinel (Hear, bear.) condemning the murder of. Fitzmaurice, This was not merely an agrarian gnestion ; and regretting that • the Lea ' it was keit up with national aspirations. en ficial -e been If the Governrnent' P suppressed, and that the• beneficial .effects meant' well to ;tenants which; arose from the organization •had been by the 'Bill he -implored them, ter ' insert Iost: suitable provision( dealing with arrears last(Friday)Anight's the tenants' greatest: difficulty • That done'At t ght rLondon cable sate : to - he could'cordially, appreciate the measure, day Inspector of of Polarnell Come testi d and the Legislature would respite ; reward nonce in ten HnggtIIe testified in the conciliation of the people (Che" •- fro outrages. at 'Castle 'Ielsnd,, re) conn y Kerry. Lord•Randolph. ,Churchill said that the emersion ,that •the. Bill was introduced t enable' .landlorde_to-sell-at-in'flated ,:priaee` Wonld:not bearexemination..:. The Parnell_.. ites : know. that inflation _ did not . exist ins Ireland, but very.' Much thereverse. Regarding the national sentiment, he tip. pealed to Mr: Parnell' -to say what room there was for romance in dealing ,with a ,mat'ter of fact, the advance and repayment, of, money. .(Hear, hear) Had Mr. Par- nell any alternative Bill ? Wonl h port -t of 188 Live• eh scheme Mr. the die modifi Lord treated' Ministe a In the coercion (Cheers on the p (Hear, b Bill cert eecetrity tient, be ring whe Bone, . larger heprinai lea o laet ne's Bill helm 6'?: (Mr. Parnell here gave a nevi - eke of his head.) Then, what other ? o Parnell -=I wonld accept the Bill if advantages connected with it were ed. by dealing with." arrears. Randolph, continuing, ' aaid • Ire that after the recent speeches of the era the Government , would bring up arm question early in the future. meantime he could not' ;admit that militated' against land purchase. .) :How could it impede free action art of either •landlord or. tenant ear.). • As a financial operation: the ainly was not • geed enough. The for, advances' was totally ineuffi• t the risk, might be worth Mour- n limited to an advance of ten inil- which would not be tolerable under a �heme. It would never' do to make e the immediate • landlord. of the r tenantry. The present measure would not apply to atom than 25,000 hOld- the State, though Probably it &mid not be safely extended. (Hear, hear.) The Bill pawed the Baena reading by a' vote of 299 to 224. Hr. Parnell has'given notice that he will incive that the Committee on the Ashhourne Bill be empOsvered to instruct ,the Land Commission to deal with arrears when fix. Sir Williem Vernon Harcourt, in the courae of the debate, criticized the Govern- inent's action, and in at:incitation (laid he 13elieved the; Government would find when they had to'render an aCcount of these ad - Venetia to the country thet they had never' made a proposal more damaging er disas- Irons to themselves. ' The Radical° continued the debate, corn - g Mr. Smith to carry a division' by rles Hessen objected to the wit- neste_giving_evidence-e-regarding---iiiattire era he-itind hie personal knowledge. ; • Presiding Justice Hannon eiiid 'he A'''d admitted the reporte made by the pWice at ,ei timee fa What they were worth, , n a 7 he witness, resuming, quoted from ,„, bel statistics which shewed• that from Nevem- 'c"; ber, 1802, to September; 1884, 160 otttragee were committed: ' 4 parier-esys an intinrete friend of Gen. rrison says he; like all Presidents,' relit sire to do something that will give his atinistration'S prominent plate. in the tory of hie country, and he bag reason to, ieye that one of hie first official sate will the negotiation for the annexation of States can and should receive Canada in • hh-Kifdaie-d-to' the United- States by awing Canada's debt. If the territory et be seamed fer that cOnsideration,.. . Harrison Would favor paying a con - table 'bonus. It it; understood he has privately that the eurplute.in the Bury could not he epent in better mier than by beying Canada: He , lily approves sucn a move, and wiil We 0. weed -that -amen' Rohe outrages in ordertnevede the pay ment of rent: He knew of twenty bogus outrages. wae not aware that men had . connived to damage their own property prder to secure compensation teem the Qtiarler &m- elons. He did not think' that all the ont- mese were due to acres !moieties. Some of them were the result of family quartile or of private malice. Hi had ,connected, the pLeezufuelVi. it/,1 in. ghting,. bee. tinge prior to the'existen of 11 Mr.,Heid, one of the counsel for the Par nenitee, esked, "What is your ground for assuming this connection ?" Witness --At every Meeting of the Leagu ce be League Kerry had bee 1 ass cann Gen side said trea nia hear reco ' She Fooled with 'Kerosene. A special froixi Geneva: N. Y., tells the firelhis Morning.' It did urn fast , enough and she poured nerosene oil . CR the s ° scattered the burning oil in every direction. el The husband and th • reii who were 'sleeping in anadjoinieg room, were awak- • that be roistook a window for the door and &shed through 'it, cuttipg himself in a hcirrible manner, The family were filially resorted after heing terribly burned. 'The ' p rlan nearly every man who ha been muideked belonged to either one olds or the other. " Mr. Leckweod, one of the Parnellitee counsel, then asked th wi e toeee how long he had 'been engaged in getting up a case for Sir Henry James,•one of the counsel for the times, objected to the question, where - Sir Charles.. Russell exclaimed warmly : 'y We charge and intend to 'prove thot 'the whole executive authority, mere including the resident ,magietrates, epgaged get- ting tip the Times case.," • The oitnesa then denied that the Times bed employed him. On re -direct exainination by the prOge-, °titian, the witnege mated that no ease of the palice an a real Outrage, It is announced that Metiers. •John O'Connor, Finucane, Sheehy, Mayne, Con. don, Patrick O'Brien and Tanner, all mem. here of the Irieh Nationalist pat th Lieut. -Col. Buller, commandink the 2nd Battalion Rifle Brigade, was fatally injure41, at Woolwich on the ' 8th inst. by stepping' out of a railway carriage- on the line in- stead of on to the platform. Col, Huller served with distinction in the •Zilir and Egyptian ware. • -Coejugal love cannot be preserved 'in . Tinnte,is '▪ raid to be kindred blood in the veins of Jefferson ,Davis •• and ,Gen. Third. son, the new President of the United , Statee, resulting from numerous inter- marriages between the Harriet:1n • and Davie families. • ' Illise Georgia' Devenport,governess to the mule of Commons, will be protiecnted for King ci. Spai▪ n, is a young Irish woman, intimidating renters of °rioted forme.. hirprl to avoid offending 'any political party • In the Roam of Cemmone thie evening in Spain.