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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-06-19, Page 3@aC the ppo m r to the poor settler.. He approved of the Mr. Mglook nailed the attention of the 7ei' gg p tint le ot eeoond homeateede. Scores o! House to the Aot whioh had been intro - been t .ai, .oil. ale _ ass _ , .. , .. . n. ise�fiiid��"�ii� ti93ii'''r�iort'5�'Gi'i iosii ibt ;sra"B.i Aiil:�..u's�Sca'rJiY ��--�t.sp��-ucs. D�t:`use � vuu, been hers. d to fix t� ea oa t!"e space in ocean ing with the Canadian cattle trade. He steamer.. The erinar in was mode by a d t D kot urged that as Canada wee not at preeent Government veterinary inepeotor, who had represented in London, until the agent. power so prevent any vessel from carrying Sir H o g nettle which had insoffioient epeoe for the' p L i t th b i ! general returned from Vienna, Parliament health of the animele. should send someone over to watch the Mr. Haggart, answering Mr. Sproule, g rd g S t!' i Ih course of this legislation whioh was of eo said the Government had•no official infor- ase i it h d ,mach imperianoe to Canada. He suggested minion that the United Stains has d' S h ld that it might be arranged for -the 'British listed a quarantine'for sheep and lambs t �c pl f ti ' iq `; fi y d c w'itlii— eni to cave an omalrl in -Caeada going from Oenada to Buffalo and other M D i h' 1 th d who, by being•looated ata shippin point pointe. h dj t might give oertifioates which would enable Mr. Dewdney, replying to a question by Canadian cattle to be landed in Britain Mr. Coateworth, asid that the Government ppo without examination over there. had made a settlement with the Temper- The House adjourned at 11.20. anoe Colonization Society, by authority of standing, with reluctant feet, an Ori! .,til•Oonnoil of AprilO21st. but D I d t d fh Where womanhood and childhood meet., DOMINION FARLIAMFNT, Mr: Laurier- asked -the Minister- of Justice was prepared to bring down the. papers as to she Washington negotiation.. Sir John Thompson said that permission wag hourly expected from England. It it did not some today he would melt a day's grace. - _.� Sowell;- answering -Dir: MoDisilaa; Mad that raw sugar was not ex -warehoused Without theiltitYfiratbeing paid. -. Elie Hector Langevin, answering Mr. Tarte:l aid there was no record in the de. by Sir John Thompson. ilettlera went into the Northwest Territory between i888 and 188twish the assurance that on coin- aletiogsetteiin improvement' and residing fora certain period on a homestead they would be entitled to take- up - a eeoond homestead. Parliament might, if it con. sidered beet, repeal that law, but Parlia- ment had no right to repeal IYif by so doing vested rights would be interfered with. The_.obligstiona of Parliament_ should be carried out. He was not in fever of a eeoond homeeteeding•policy, but hebelieved that tt4th should be kept with those who Dame into the country while the eeoond ppaartjment of the removal! of Lar. Parity It",.." z., f'01.6.3' - from the chief englneerebip of Q uebeo her. Mr. Trow said the sympathies of Perlia- lior a f M Boswell. went, if with anybody, should be extended Sa art in re ly to Mr . Feather - a appointment o Dawe . and the Washington negotiations were laid on the table. Sir Heotor Langevin, explaining what hast been explained by _ the Minister of Jnetioe earlier in the afternoon, the sr- rangement by whioh the debate on the prohibition resolution had been .postponed, moved the adjournment of the House. Mr, Jamieson Inked a Promise from the Government that the resolution would keep Ita_plaoe on the order. paper notwithstand- ing its being put off. Mr. Laurier remarked to Mr. Jamieson that he did well to look after his resolution, ae from the remarks of the Minister of Juetioe it was revealed that at last the Government hada polioy on this ques- tion. quenoe of the repeal of the eeoond home • .tea law gone o Dakota, Hector Lan even amid- that he had epoken to Mr. Leader a e beginning o the fitting. Although the Indication re- garding it John's con it on were noten serious as theywere now,anda .stab• been agreed that an ad joarnmen eon tike ace a o o oa a i` r. Davin to lose ie pace on a order paper. He would move the si ournmen of the debate, and the Government Would take care that he would have an opportun- ity of renewing his motion when the proper day name. Mr. Davin—Do nn ere an from,e hon. the leader of the Government that the question will stay-st the heart et �hsmer dir Hector Langevin—We will give the hon, gentlemen a chance to discuss the matter. Mr. Laurier said that soaordin to the rule of the Hotta if theadjournment o a debate were carried the motion would go to the bottom of the paper.He wool object to that because he mos anxious a the House should divide on the -question. At the opening of the sitting it Hector Langevin hadtolda onee ofthe con- dition ofSir John, andasked him so coll- een' to an adjournment at 6 0'0100.He would agree to that, ahe was no rev to agree to an adjournment ot the debate. Mr. Davin—I am pledged to divide the House on this question. The speaker put Sir. Heotor Langevin's motion to adjourn the debate, and the Honee divided on the question with the following result : Yeas, 87 ; nays 73. Mr. Laurier asked the Minister of Jul} floe if he was in a position to -day to lay on the table the papers In oonneotion with the Washington negotiations, and Sir John Thompson replied that he expeoted to pre- eent a part of them during the afternoon. society as to receive sores, n o 'Tie a supreme moment'! 'Tie a critical had, not !yet aelested all of them. •They had a - paid the 'Government $100,000, and were period I No maiden ehouldattempt passing this boundary -line without the aid and - no longer indebted to the Government. No Pierce's complaint had been made against assurance of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pres - the Battlement. g oription. Its helpfulness in tiding over the Mr. Davin, in moving that it should be f perils inoident to young womanhood, ie scooted that all settlers who went into the univereally acknowledged 1 No mother can Northwest between June lei, • 1883, and p p d put within the hands of her daughter, any - June 2nd, 1886, ehonld on oompleting their , that t thing that will prove more valuable in improvement® be granted a eeoond home- meeting all her requirements! Dr. Pierce's stead, explained the course he had taken in p g S• g t Favorite Preeorietion is made expreeely for regard to this matter last eeeeion, .and re- the H all diseases peonliar to woman, and is the called the promise made then by Mr. J h k d only\medicine of its kind, Bold through Dewdney shat the question would be laid 1 k druggists, and guaranteed to give ruttier action before the Government for further oon- g h , b * t ready in every ease, or money refunded. sideration. The whole department of the Interior' was made a donkey -engine to the avarice of the Lieut. -Governor of the Northwest Territory. He (Ur. Davin) would not allow the polioy of the Govern- ment i the Northwest to prevail. (Laugh - Ministers might laugh, bat there er_-enough in them or in those eel to prevent him from crashing ter. , —Wag in behind down the r policy. Mr. Speaker—The hon. gentleman is transgressing the rules of the House in using threatening language. Mr. Davin—I did not know that I was infringing the rules of order. I thought I .._•_,_ , wagspeaking_ with great [linearity. He oonoladed by saki g for tie—hailof the polioy of the Government -in -this --matter, whioh he characterized as severe, unjust and ignoble. Mr. Dewdney said that the very unfair attack that Mr. Davin had made on him would justify him in oalling,the attention of the House and the country to the con- duct of the hon. gentleman during the first month of the preeent session. He opposed the extension of the homesteading principle as advooated by Mr. Davin. Mr. Davin, said that Mr. Dewdney now considered these homeeteade when given up to be escheats belonging to the Crown, but it made all the differenoe in the ' world ae to whose oz was gored. - Sir John Thompson said that the die- auseion of a private transaction had noth- ing to do with the question embodied in the resolution, and was, therefore, out of order. The Speaker said that this matter was not pertinent to the dieoneeion. Mr. Darin said that he would bring the metier up again by moving for the papers relating to it. The °ame malioe whioh had been exhibited on a formeroccasion—the same small-minded malice, the same petty malioe—had exuded from the Minleter of the Interior. Mr. Davin—Can it be out of order to sae the word "exude" ? The Speaker—The hon. gentleman mast, see that he has gone too far,. Mr. Davin—To be frank, I do not see that I have. I have had a great deal of ex- terienoe in a Parliament quite as great as his. I do not think any hen. gentleman should be called to order for using the verb " exude." The Speaker—The hon. -. gentleman.. should not make the aoonaation of a charge of malice. Mr. Davin -Then I will say he is aotueted'by Christian' charity— (laughter) — .that he has palpably shown himself to be a gentleman, a truthful gentlemen, so troth- ful ae to cense everybody in the House to open their eyes with astonishment. It he wants any more eulogy he can take it. (Laughter.) The bon. gentleman concluded by urging both sides of the House to sup- , port the motion. Mr. Laurier said the principle involved in she motion was not one of general polioy, but simply that the provisional of the Aot of 1883 ehonld be carried ,out, whioh gave pettier° a eeoond homestead. It was claimed that it would only be fair and just that flume eettlen; who went in between '83 and '86, when the law was altered, should be treated as they had been led to expect they would be treated. What reason could there be in the Hame of jaetioe and common sense why this should not be granted ? Certainly there was no scarcity of land. This affected only a very few. It was better That no man ehonld be able to complain, that -he had been unfairly created. Under, these aironmetanoee he hoped the House would j support the motion, especially as there wee •' no attack upon the general polioy of the Government involved. led Mr. Watson contended that every pledge to settlers ehonld be faithfully. carried oat. Mr. Tiedale hoped Shia matter would be allowed to stand until the Northwest bill was considered.. Sir John Thompson °aid it wee impoeai- bie for the Government to sot upon the motion, whioh for the first time advanced the claims of some eettlere. 'He °aggested that it would be better not to press the motion. In the absence of full evidence thane ewe could not be adjudicated npon. The second homestead polioy wad izndilnbt= only -a bad one. The resolution wotild give second homesteade to those who bad never complied with what the law required to entitle them to *bei right. Mr. Mille Haid that he saw no each objec- tions to the resolution es. those presented The hon. Mini.iter then cieferred to an agreement whioh had been come. to with regard to the resumption of the debate on Mr. Jamieson's prohibition resolution, whioh, according to the order piper' would oome up this evening. -It had been ar- ranged, he said, that this debate be . sus- pended. It was an important subject,. involving . a ohange in the polioy of the Government. The hone of the Premier's illness would result in new advisers of the Crown being called upon, and therefore the debate. ot Shia gneetion had better be ene- pended. ' Mr. Tupper told Mr. Brown, of Monok, that no fishing liminess were issued daring Maroh and April for the Grand River, that an order prohibiting fishing with seines in that river, was sent out on the 23rd of, March last, and it the prohibition were continued until after the close season the fees for licenses would be refunded. Mr. Kirkpatrick obtained an order of the Home for -a return of ail papers in con- nection with the complaints of the high water in the Rideau Canal • between Kingston and Jones' Falls. On a motionmade by Mr. Bowers for papers relating to the snbjeot of the herring fisheries - of the Bay ' of Fundy and its adjaoent waters there arose a debate in whioh members from New Brunswick took part. Messrs. Bowers, Forbes ;and Gill= mor made good speeches, in whioh they oalled the attention of • the. Minister of Marine to the depletion of the herring, fishing grounds, and galled upon him to take measures to prevent the young being destroyed in those waters. They were supported by Messrs. Hazen and Skinner. Mr. Edgar Moved' for a " return of ail correspondence between the Imperial Gov - eminent and the Government of Canada on the eubjeol of the oopyright laws of Can'adei,"and all Doter papers relating there to not already brought down." He asked why the oopyright Aot paeeed by the Cana- dian Parliament in 1889 had not been pro- olaimed. He did not acknowledge that the Parliament, of Canada had not the right to deal with oopyright. He urged that the Government make representations to the Imperial Government whioh would show them that the people and Parliament of Canada were in earnest about Shia matter, and were not prepared to allow the indif- ference whioh had pigeon•hole1 in Downing street all representations with regard to this question during 40 years past to con- tinue. Sir John Thompson said he was oon- vinoed of the fairness of the premien of the Aot of 1889 and the necessity of its proolamation., He atill entertained the views he had expressed as to the right of the Parliament to pass such a law. It was unfortunate that the interests of the English anther° should be . paramount. It other methode failed, he said, then the Houses of the Canadian Parliament would be asked to make an addreet to Her Majesty's Government to ooneent to the proclamation of the Aol of 1889. Mr. Edgar said it Was a most unfortunate condition of affairs for a Canadian Parlia- ment to contemplate, that the intereele of English authors 'ehonld be paramount in *hs Imperial Parliament, and that the rights of Canadians ehonld be denied. 6 ugust Flower', I had been -troubled five -i onfhs with Dyspepsia. The doctors told me it was chronic. I had a fullness after eating and a heavy load in the pit of ray stomach. I suffered frre- quently from a Water Brash of clear matter. Sometimes a deathly Sick- ness at the Stomach would overtake _ Wil-.` �`t lliTtgnig'it-tr`s ' . -ttw" +tz terrible pains of Wind Colic. - At such times I would try tobelch and could not. I was working then for Thomas McHen.--y, Druggist, Cor. Irwin and Western Ave., Allegheny City, Pa., in whose employ I had been for seven years. Finally I used August Flower, and after using just one'bottle for two weeks, was en- tirely relieved of all the trouble. I can now eat things I dared not touch before. I would like to refer you to Mr. McHenry, for whom I worked, who knows all about my condition, and from whom i bought the medi- cine. edicine. I live with my wife and family at 39 James St., Allegheny City, Pa. Signed, JoRN D. Cox. G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A. Queen, Fire -cracker, Small Boy. Winnipeg Free Prue : Her Majesty is responsible . for the .mall boy of the Twenty-fourth, and the email boy of the Twenty-fourth is responsible for more mie• chief than he . can shake a ebb* at. The news columns of the Free Press sell of the burningof-a -terrace, -;the- destruotion-of much property and the nnhousing of eight poor families. These calamities are. to be laid at the door of Her Majesty, for. she it was who stirred up the small boy, and it wee the small boy who set off the fire. oraoket. In other words, this is the Queen who fired the loyalty of the email boy who -fired-the -fire-oraoker-that fired the.�kerrooa.. _Dont's for the Bummer eiri..._.._ Don't .quint—carry a sunshade. Don't wear a red veil it you value your reputation. Don't wear scarlet ohms in the city in daylight. Don't wear a Leghorn hat with a rose garden on the Drown to the opera thie Bummer. Don't fidget.—Mucic and Drama. Norxiuddo a Fellow. Boston Herald : Kate—I'm not going to have Clarence Baehley oall on me any more. He's too- bashful for anything. Della—How is he ? Kate—Why, I asked him how:long his arm was, and he said 32 inches. I then told him that was just the eize of my waist, and he never did anything. Business Men, From close applioation and too little ex eroiee, are especially liable to constipation —ologging .up nature'a great aewera—pro- dnoing headache, biliousness, sluggish oir- oulation and general derangement of the vital organs. A regular movement of the bowels is indiepeneible to perfect health ; to neglect, is to imperil! If constipated Pieroe'e Pleeeant Pellets will onre you. No inter1Arenoe with bneinese. Very modest expenee. Mild in action. yet powerful in cleansing, regulating the etomeah, liver and bowels, oaring conetipation, headache and kindred ailments. Bathing Doat's Don't May in too long. Don't keep your head dry. Don't bathe on a full etomaoh. Don't bathe more than onoo a day. Don't bathe in bigh winds or rain. Don't drink spirits before or after bathing: Don't remain in your bathing snit to " dry off." Don't lose an opportunity of learning to swim.—New York Press. Lovers Who Bad a lalling Ont. Washington Poet : " E4 and Minnie bad another falling out • last week." ' Serious quarrel ? " "No ; hammook." Times Have Changed. Indianapolia journal : Wibble—Well, they'don'1 boil heretic° in oil nowadays. Wabble—No ; they merely rove* them in religions papers. % A Carpet Knight. New York Herald : " Lieutenant Softly ,has never seen powder and smoke." " Oh, yes be bee. When he isn't in the ball -room he is •in the smoking-room—so he known all abotit'em." —Only one person in a thousand dies of Old age. —Some girla aro'so ooneoientionely' op- posed to artificial adornment° that they won't even .make, up the beds.—Elmira Gazette. Mr. Burnham obtained an order for car- —Baron Hirsch is an Austrian by birth, respondence relative to the vacancy caneed but is beet known in France. The founds - in the office of brigade -major for military tion of his fortune was laid as a railway dietriots Nos 3I and 4r through the death oontraotor with the Turkish.Government. of the late Lieut. -Col. Lewis. Mr. Barn. —A Boston speaker made an audience ham fonna fault that *hie position had not laugh with thee been filled. Sir Adolphe Caron replil3d that the God bless our wives ;They all our hives . department were economizing by leaving w itti littlo bees and honey ; unoccupied theme plums, because he was of They mend •onr socks, P- And soothe oar shocks o.pirlioh :that .expensive .eteffe wore not Rot don't they - anent our nionov 2 noes°cry for the e'is olenoy of the foroe: "When I, see all those Indiana Doming A few minutes before 6 o'clock, on the into this oountry," said Willduie, " I am verde from the Speaker, " A message from impreeeed with, one thing. " What is Hie Ezoellenoy the Governor-General, that ? " asked Banker. "That Italy must signed by his own hand," the Hones rose be gelling to bo quite a desirable piano to to he hot and the papers with regard to lire in. Married Over Again. Rev. Mr. Hunter has just returned from Toronto, where he performed a marriage under unusual circumstances. While laborivggn the East during the past .win- ter, among those who Dame forward to the anions Beat were a couple living together as mon and wife, the woman having a hus- band living. They resolved to lead a bet- ter life and separated. Only recently Mr. Hunter received a letter from Toronto, informing him that hie service. were re- quired. The woman had returned to her husband, and --he-was -satisfted_.to..take .-her on Mr. Hunter's word that she had been' converted. Mr. Hunter married the oonple over again, and there was great rejoioing. —St. Thomas Journal. BB MA S TEN ON BUNS. What's What Advertising Makes of . Uuslnees Man. 't There comes a "hurry call" in every man's life. He has the chance to become N min of wealth, of position, of weight in i it he remains the community. If he mines rem . practically o nobody. When the eon macs it le met either with the chariot of anomie or J,y .amb�ii�___to take the poor un- fortunate to the home for the helplees. Just so in trade. The manwho starts - off in business mast either keep in the front , rang of hie calling or be muss drift away } r> to the mlatharanks of the oommonplaceo if hie business evils for dealings with the public, and what business does not ? He can reach that clientele in but one way. and that is by the liberal use of sdvertia- of the hill of prosperity or his business wI push him hard and fast into the bottomless pit of adversity. Drive or be driven. Be meter or slave is the injunction placed upon everyone, and the differenoe between the top and the bottom of the heap is Almost entirely one of wise, persistent and disoreet advertising. Hundrede of inatanoes of auooese met through advertising might be cited'. But it ie not a once -all. It is not possible. except for the briefest period, to push any bogus project through the ase of printers' ink. The fraud bates the very light of a newepeper•man. He bas no use for the public prints. Bo, in seeking a fortune by means of the advertioing space ins news- paper, the first requisite is to have some- thing worth calling the attention of the publio.to. Then go ahead. • It Did Rot Work. " Madame," said the tramp as he doffed the remnant of a Kossuth that might have been with Grant at Vicksburg to the mis- tress of s bones on the outekirte of.Boaton. " I learn from the neighbors Chit you are a theosophist. I am delighted to know it. for I sm one myeelt. It oon not be—yes, it is—we have met before. one ago I stopped at thin very home and asked for eeeietenoe and you gave me an exoellene breakfast. It all flashes upon me now." " Yee," said the lady, smiling. " I seem to remember it, too, but if I'm not mistaken you sawed half a oord of wood for me before you got the breakfast." Then the t burned bie back on the theoeopbist and Went sadly away in search of an Old- fashioned philanthropist. , Praise be to him, whose wondrous skill Sas conguetbd every human And_now alone, as victor, stands —The r Golden' compound ou-bie"hand-i -- Ro spake a man, with tribute crowned. Of Dr. Pierce'. the "world-ionoWned," Whose "Medical Discovery " Had vanquished pain and set him free. One Den but speak in praise of a remedy so effectual and unfailing ae Dr. Pieroe'e Golden Medical Discovery. Acting promptly and thoroughly, it pioducee per- manent oures. Consumption, in its early stages, scrofula, liver and kidney disorders, and all blood diseases, are within the field of its unbounded moons/ A CHINAMAN who travelled in Europe has written an account of hie obeervatione and impressions. Mr. Yuan—for that is the writer's name—was a good deal puzzled by what he evidently regards as our free -and - easy methods of `courtship. • " Besides invitations to dinner," he writes, "there are invitations to tea-parties, ouch as are occasionally given by wealthy merchants or dietingaiehed officials. When the time comes an equal number of men and women assemble, and tea, sugar, milk, bread and the like are set out as aide to conversation. More particularly are there invitations to skip and posture, when the host decides what man, is to be the partner of what woman, and what woman of what man. Then, with both arms grasping. eaoh other, they leave the table in pairs, and leap, skip, posture and prelim. foe their mutual gratification. A man and a woman previously unknown to one another may take part in it. They call this skipping tan.hen (danoing). The reason for this endow prooeeding on the part of European° was well explained by a recent writer in a Chinese illustrated paper, the Hwa Pao. "Western etiquette requiree," he says, " the man in search of a wife to write to the girl's .home and agree upon some time and plane for a skipping matoh" (scilicet, a dance). " The day arrived, ' youth in red and maid in green,' they come by pairs to the brilliant and spaoione hall, where, to the emulous sound of flute and drum, the youth olaeping the maiden's • waist, and the maid -resting npon her partner's shouider, one pair will skip tor - ward, another prance baokward, round mid round the room until, they are forced to stop for want of breath. Atter this they will beoome acquainted "—only after this, observe—" and then by occasional atten- tione over a bottle of wine, or exohange of confidences at the ten table, their inti• maoy will deepen, the maiden's heart be- come filled with love, and they will mate." When Mme. Blavateky' and Col. (Moot* began to preach theosophy in INew Tork in 1875 they could muster hardly halt a dozen adherence. Now .the assertion in made that the movement bee 100,000 followers in''. America. Women in Italy who work in the olive oil presses, carry building material up the terraoee and help in the orchards, receive 20 ['ante a day. Thie is the maximum pay and palls for twelve hours hard labor. At the "Pinafore" Performance. Soeno—Grand Opera House, Hamilton. He (a visitor from abroad)—The per tormance.ie really capital.. Did I under- stand you to say that the oompany is made up entirely .of amateurs ?" . She—Yee; all ezoepting Mr. Warrington. who iv playing Captain Coizora1He's--- from Toronto. -Grip. Her Answer. New York Life : He—I have never yet met the woman l thought I could marry. She -No, they are very hard to please,as a rule. About 460 B. O. the Ionians dint intro- duced the preeent system . of writing from left to right; previous to the above date from right to lett prevailed. D. 0.WLSIS. -91 hewnatis PROMPTLY .CURED, =Cures Also: Neuralgia, Lumbago, Sciatica, Sprains, B ruises, B urns, Wounds, Swellings, Soreness, Frost -bites, Stiffness, All Aches. The Chas. A. Vogler Co., Baltimore, Md. Canadian Depot: ' Toronto, Out. BY Paso's Remedy for Catarrh fa tho Best. Easiest to Use stied Cheapest. Sold by druggists or sent by mall, 50e. r T. :cltlne. warren. Pa.. S. A. SHORNSSHADEROLLERS Beware of Imitations. NOTICE ,tAUTOGGRAPH tee la.ABEk HE GENU'NE R ,��NSdpIPT10�1 S�uR�`` TO THE EDITOR:—Please inform your readers that I have a p• ,.e named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have 1+ •.,a:r be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any or yo, ,. tnption If they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. - Re. " C. Ma Went Adal.isle 8t.. TORONTO. ONTARIO. RE 'Suave them return again. 1 MEAN m RAD1C Lpilopey or Foiling BMCknees, 4 life ion worst cases, iieranse others have failed Imes for a it.reatise and a !Free thrusts- r e vat Office. it costa you nothtitle .r,T tlisB •r tl ?a O** es, len tedYsti I • 3i • r1C •` ':4Q1 f„r tit NSTON, Prop