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Lucknow Sentinel, 1887-05-20, Page 7e.k.„ -er• --notrar., n : . •:,•••••**.;• • it• • ••• • • a •••'• •mtr : •tot.) '7 • ri• 10111.1'0/1/ 14411111:AKENT. - The House went into committee on the , respectingthe representation of the Northwest Territories in the Senate, ' Mr. Kenney resumed the general discus - oil; showing the datelka these Warrants in- correctly shown brthifidocument to lia* been made after Parliament sat; • Mr. Mills said the return was comet at first, but this (intended statement showed on what days the Orders in Council were passed on which the warrants were based. He contended that the issue Of warrants !mon on the recent elections' and denied that after.x,srliamooga met was illegal, and if the he owedhis electiontothefactthat some .HOUSe Was f0-sunotion-fillOh -Safi it might .400 civil servants were coerced into voting as well acknowledge itself • to -be a mere for him. • machine for registering the decrees of the Mr. Jones geAke an 'account of various ,Government. practices resorted to by the Government at Sir John Macdonald read a clause of the „the last elections. He said that minutes of statute to show that if an Order inCetmoil, ,‘ Council promising to.aid various railways on which a warrant was based, was passed 11, -were ditatriOnte(lin bushels through various before Parliament met, the transaction waii countieS. • ' ,• ' ' • ' legal, though the 'warrant was not ' issued The discussion was continned by 'Messrs. until , after Parliament met, The depend. Tupper (Picteu), Jones and Welsh. en& of the memberforBothwellpir. ' Hon, Mr, Voster,:..replying_tO wite_liponanereteehnioality., . •derldn, said that the Act which wrap% Mr. Blake mid the Premier had said one owners of saw mills to keep sawdust out of •point raised on the Opposition' side WAS i streams,: was in, force in every _countran technicality,- On-the-contrary,itwas _a ' Ciitario, but that mill -owners on the Ot- technicality for the Government to pass tawa River were exempted from the law.. pn'the order for the disallowance refs& lutions-being called, ., Mr. Watson said he had recseiVed a corn- 'itniqation from F. W.' Robertson, Chair- ' mac of the Manitoba deputation, -retire- senting that the matter was under the con- Orders in Courted authorizing expenditure just before Parliament met. It simply meant that the Government cheseto esoape, by this Means, the investigation of expendi- tures in the House. It was a prostitutiOnof the powers of 'Government. The claief duty of the House of Commons was to guar the Olio expenditure, and. • that duty The following Bills were inJroancedonna read a first time : — • TO incorporate, the Alberta. & •Hrltish Columbia ° Junction Railway COniPent• Shanly. To amend the Acts incorporating and relating to thel3ritish Canadian Loan4 Inveetnient Company -Mr. Small. ' . To reduce thesteak of the. Ontario& QU'Appalle.Land.Company(liznited),Mr, Sutherland. - To incorporate the HingiStOn-i. Smith's Falls & Ottawa BiIway Company -Mr. • Sir John Macdonald intimated that the estimates would he laid on the table. on Monday next, and the budget speech would he delivered on the following Thursday; on condition that Nr. Watson would postpone the consideration of his reiolutione on dis- Alloykanee,„whipli,mete .13^.6 thefiret order for that day. Sir John Macdonald said that a Memo- randum_hadbeen„handed_ta_him,..signed by More than half the members, asking that the House should adjourn for a week from Wednesday. next. There would be Only two sitting days lost by the proposed adjournment. He merely threw out the suggestion -fe,; --the ..consideration. of.the House.' • Mr. • Cargill introduced a Bill to *petal sideration of the Government, and asking the pomade.. Temperance Act. He stated. • himto allow the :question to stand until could P not be performed offiaiently if it that ;the. 'sentiment in • his' iriding (East Thursday, May 17th. He would do so, if it were tinderstood the. Government might Bruce) was Opposed to the introduction Of was the wish of the Hondo: expend, milliens, of. its own motion, on the' AM, and he was opposed to it himself. • Sir Hector Langevin said there was no services wholly ' without. limit. The He • 13elieved the agricultural community . Objection, and the question was made the expenditure for the Banff ' Springfi. was was in a mat* 'better condition, financially first order Thursday,',Me,y 17t1a.• authorized by Order in ' Conned the' very and otherwise, where the license system , Sir RiChard Cartwright moved for a re- day before the Muse Met, And the prevailed than where the • Scott Apt is in• • torn • showing' the ' amounts: • in- ' detail Governor -General's warrant was .Wissued force, and the loss to the Municipalities of ' expended under warrants froth the Gov, until. the day :after. the House. met. • HQ the revenue formerly derived from that ernor,General in each : year from 1878 to denounced this conduct asunconstitutional source . was very sensibly felt. • ' 1886, both ineffisive. It was • a fixed cOli and a vialatiOn of the rights of the people • The Bill was read a -firsttime. • stitutional principle that Money shoiddnot to have expenditures made only when The following Government Bills Were be expended without the consent Of Parlia- authorised by the' people's representatives,/ read-a-third-time-andtassed-: . ment. The only exception was in cases of °leapt in the came of the. greatest public Act respecting the Banff Natienal•Park- . great urgency which' arose while Perlis- .nrgenpy, '• ' • Mr. White (Cardwell.). , nient was not in session; The House sat The folloviing•PriVate .13ille wore a 7 Act respecting • PnbliO, • .-Stores-Mr. • Miraintillav +=PAPAW 40 Nellioilfg1P- ,i .44. 03 e.:: • . _. ,..__, . _..j.• ' ......,.' -,..,.. on4PPOIL ,..• •• • : -•-7,- ••••-el . 0'.01Booar:dt(tto ''mr:4,0,413esweirtittmitsixatti ...,vairririkgivattrthavoia'ilwotenaiiadiali :=!..a.:0,reallemirgufiriaiiairattitsita9sidh& ^ ample time in which to prepare'lleir esti-: padfla;.aundusg Itialwity; Company.'ilsVfE Northweet gerriteriestn.kti,„*Bonit49,74Rri • Mates. : Besides' that, the estiniatee beth rorteE. . •• • : ' , john Macdonald. • • ' .7 • , for 1880 and 1881 werennusuallY large and To incorporate the, Kincardine 'it Tees- , liberal.- The estimate for 1886 was about Water RailtViiy;Co.,-Mr. McCarthy. ' . The reliN3 on Total Abstinanee. : • , ' : -Ogi 'milliria and for 1887 • about , 34i Baspeotir,ii the Ontario &:Quebed Rail-, +. , itovernnient hid . •..A. Washington' despateh 'says : The fol - •millions. Yet -the Vitiy Company. -Mr. Patterdon (Essex.) , ' lowing' passage ocaurs in the letter of Pore ',taken under governor -General's warrante - , tv ; .. : " .• . - • - • ' $308,748 fOr the few remaining weeks of :Bowe woo rate tne, Brandt,. Sourie & Leo XIII. to-Bislieri:Wand,. of St. Paul Xt. "Above all; we have rejOiced to learn with 1888 and 41,005,589 for' 1887. The House • Or Lake alwaY CionPanY. To incortiorate the Manufacttirers Life what energy and Seal by means of 'Inirioui inveistigete striCtlycatieee' wawa B • „ • , • • . os • Company. --:-Mr, excellent associations,. and especially . 'Would be Wanting „in its duty if it did.32243,t & Accident matt= ro , • • , , • • through the Catholia Abstinence Union, ' led*. the espenditere of • nearly To incorporate the' New Westminster riti combat the destructive vice : of . without its authority; ge referred • ' t9 vezions elpenditires made imder the Southern Bailway Company. -Mr. Chis. perance. Tor 'Wits Well. lInMin to us hoiv' • nom : • ruinous, howdeplorable is the injurY both • To amend' the charter Of :01,e Hamilton, to faith and to nierals that '• is to be feared Guelph di Buffalo Railway Company and it, from, intemperance in drink. Nor can:, we change the nime to • the Hamilton Central sufficiently pritisetheprelates of the tufted Railway Conitiany,4-Mr. McKay: • • ' States, who recently in the Plenary Cenn. To authorise the Grange Trust (limited) oil of Baltimore with weightiest Words con - to wind milts Masson. ' damned. 'this abuse; declaring' it to be a Mr: Edgar4moved the' second reading of perpetualincentive to sin and'a fruitful the Bill respectingthe discharge of insolvent root of all;:evili;Tiriiigifir tha-fa-ffilliff-the debtors Whose *cites have been distributed intemperate into the direst ruin and dravi,ratably among their creditors. . • , • Mg numberless &tile into everlasting per; • • ME Thompson Said it wialffir be' Well .t.O dition. Hence we esteem worthy of ali. allow the Bill to stand, as a Case affecting commendation the ',noble resolve of your the validity of the Ontario 'Aot respecting pions associations, byWhich they ' Pledge the; diettibution • Of insolvent; estates was themselves to abstain totally from all now pending in the courts. •:• - • kinds of intoxicating aril*: Nor can it he. r: The Bill. Was ,ordered t� Stand. , • at all doubted • that this ' determination is ,• ME Charlton moved the''second 'reading the proper and the truly effioisaious remedy of the Bill* emend , the ' Act 'respecting for this very great Mil; • arid.that-so.`nimah. pablid 'morels. ,He proposed. -by this Bill the more strongly' will all be induced to, out this bridle upon appetite byhow much thegreaterare the dignity and influenop Of the& who ge'tliaiXample:•::, * • -* Let pastors, therefore; do their hest to drive the',ptague. of intemperance from the Old of Christ by assiduous preaching and exhor- tation, and to shine before all as models of abstinence,that so many calamities With which this -dee threatens hotli.Oherah. and State*ay by their strenuous endeavors be averted:" ' • warrants,•many of which were:made about 4he time of the kat elections. The seta of ••5118,000, was spent On February let last to pay the award on the •Windsor & Annapolis RailWay.. On January . 25th there was 6 , sum of 0.0,000 for sufferers . by the flood at -Cornwall. The expenditure of ' $46,000 On the Banff Park Was peculiarly unjustifiable, . because there was no pretence of .nrgency in the case of laying out pleasure grounds. ; Then there was $32,000 for . salaries and expenses or the Commissioners on rebel losses. On March llth there was P15,000 for seed grain to settlers in Assiniboia.aud Saskatchewan. , Then, one , of the last • things which should have been paid with . gout authoritY of the House, was the sum of ' $4,000 to pay the St. Catharines Milling ', Company the poste of the suit brought by the Ontario Government against them. t % oreetore the' , - , There weke-very large-expenditureemade duced hy.,oprovisions originallyintro- in Ei"-icifjeatiotion-alit*promicie- ' •on'the Intercolonial Railway, amounting in . all to $600,000: He called particular often - of 'marriager . and thus provide for the . tion to the fad that a large sum hEidbeen •PnadAnIent a any person "43r 13 who seduces a female tinder 21, also to provide :. ,expentied 'by Governer -General's warrant while the -House was liatuallY in session,for the purikihment Of offences against ' • which was distinctly ' Sir Charles Tupper said he was disposed to concur with Sir Richard'Oartwright ,in the principles which he had laid down, • namely; that Governor -General's 'warrants should not be ueed except in cases of great. urgency. In regard to the abnormally large • • -; ; •surcis which had been referred to by the ' hen. gentleman, he admitted that his • col- • league (Mr. Madan) Might have ,inade mistake in his estimates of. the amounts' insane women.. ' • • The till was reacta second time, discus- sion being deferred to the committee, stage. Mr; MoLelan's Billto amend the Act respeeting.puhlic officers was read . a third Mr.'ThoinPson's Bill providing for the marking of public stores and...pwaishinent fOrlargeny thereof .wais _read a second tiMe.. and passed through committee. . The 'louse went into committee on the 'resoltitiona • respeeting the salaries to be Mr: Mitchell said the Government should Paid to offieers'efpenitentiaries, in che,rge see to it that the SMOUnte put in the of the Minister of of- penitentiaries, (Mr. Thompson). Estimates should he more in accord with, The resolutions were considered and. expla, `,What the expenditure ••"would really be. nation% of their purport given, which is Other*ifie the House- would-be-muchousledgenerally to °finalize the .salaries of these in granting money. • ' officers. The resoltitions were adopted and . 4. . Mr. Paterson (Brant) painted to the fact •rePorted: ^ ' • • '. -; that mider the., Governdr-General'iMr. Edgar ..Eifike,d•Hati the GoVernment ant Money had been paid for an Indian expressed its to',Citnitribiitif' a showing that it wafit't Matter' subsidy in aid of the, Pacific • Mail service,. , urgOtiey, but there WM nothing to ; show afr announeed by turd Onslow inthe House • that ' the. Indian. Commission had been of Lords on the '• 29th April • If set, to appointed. '• He' quoted the •Prinie Minis. what anieiint? re the proposed servicete. tee-adorationlast sessidia :after Charges' he 'fortnightly, tri,weekly . or monthly? •.Were triaddagaixifit the. Indian Department What are the .proposed• terminal porta' for •:of gross nialfeasame, • that a commission the , . . ' mould be .appointed to 'exansineinto the Sir .46hii • Macdonald.: --,„The Canadian • ,•*port. • : • ; Government has 'espie,ased' Its Willingness; 'S•ir 4bir Macdonald said the Chargeto ask ' the: GO:Agit:LW Parliamentto con-. inade,agaigst theIndian.Departufent Were, tribute Z15;000 annually, On condition that • :Made by eine not inow a naernber Of the the:British Government 'eontribute enough• When he (Sir Sohn) was not present; additional to Make:: altogether £60,000.:, 'end not heing•ableon his return to give the. That iff now under consideration: It. is; to fads he promnsedtheywocid be looked into 1* hoped that a tri-weeltly, witted Will be ' by a conimission. But after the •seapiOa•lid estish4a4ed47 - The terminal ports are Van. tonna thosecharges' were .fotindatiOnlesa • cower and Hong Kong. .,. • • . ..ata fileeo., and only a statement Of the'facti Tho House went into committee on • . Was necessary,.... That etateinent ws,s printed, Charlton's Bill respecting public •*'itnd;cirdillated on the authority Of the net .clause regarding inettne•Women passed • department; No charges made since the' without amendment. The clause regarding • ' World began were morefalaeandblitrageous fieductien,."4 9,131(411a. Oa se as to: Make :the than those made inthis Catfe, and the..ahatter *ale liable from the age' of Sreaea !6,14 • was danfileto, • • ' • , • protect •illefeMale Up to the saine•age,' ' Sir Richard Cartwright said Mr. Cameron. The Bill thceamended was reported. ' had challenged the Pita. Minister to ia Meei Edgar ilioVecl thasedond reading of hina,". but without any acceptance of the the Bill to previao. fOr the- diseharg0 of 'challenge, and he had repeated his charges,. inisolvent:debtorewhoge estates '.1n1.•Ve been showing that thepretended answer Was •no already 43ifitiihitttid. an:Ong their creditore. answer at all.. , . Mr; Futher.MOVed-aresolutionitholiishin• g Mr, Paterson -said not only had nharges theoftIce Of Deputy Speaker. He Contende•d. • been. made by Mr: Cameron, , but he that, it Wits ntifteeetiati,tY. anathat the GOv- 'Pitt-eke* ;himsclf • had • made • charges 'erninent had itself .6: dititted this by neglect.' ' against' thst/ipartinent; priviing eve* ing to, appoint' a; Deputy Speaker this • One by evidence in the publiC deenmentit of adiaion, although a, rule of the Hetiee re- •' this officers of the Departtnent themselves, quired that he 'should be appointed atter *riling there had been incapacity and .ne- the adoption. the Address m reply to the hioniu4 yam,. ride. 11.161•11.. _Sacrifice_ 9f. Speech 'from the Thieile•-• . • • 'Vent:teed ednireissiOr4thllivi_ Elefi- . • Sir 'Sohn Maedonald Said that the Britiah I tely -tight to look for it. TheFirstTho 1.-4.(ra lomona and he Legislatures of •'llenlete:did not stand in n 0:Nimble:Poet- •Spealtera and trial". 11 •,,,„?1, 'gen, haVing failed V) keep:that PrPtalse., one.. perag "Wotheitlitr. ttatnottiviaithOPlit otlSi, tOl h() FAA:Sea net take OW Tier. tulea of the than . th"la°11g"". b6d6Me 4)rtt g bilge to eat iiPen ettenal • r in Moderiala Said lint if th Member, WOUld bring it. bdWould inienibers • Of :01.4 HOnale, Deputy *hell 6oula fay. diaeriseea . 'inovti- for the. app0100.40A, ..a incet iiim. • , • alter to-faOrrow. •. _ ,•6 After rerearhe . • , " Latest News Notes' 'An effort !shah* made with the Dominion' Government to get another company. of garrison artillery for Toronto. • . , ,Mr. John Kidd, of Mono Mills, is 84 years of age, and ploughed nearly 25 'acres Noxon Brothers, of Ingersoll, propose illurninatkliptheir " agriaulturel,workis with, electricity 'Shortly.", ' „ • 'A petition' against the; return • of Mr. J. N. Platt, M. P. ler. Prince Edward County, Was 'filed at ClegoodeHall ,,yes- '• A. Mr. johns; Of/Owen 'Sound, . has • been missing since the evening of Sir John Mac- donald's meetingthere in November. This mYstery, was cleared, up this. week by his body being found in the river. • The *pert of the mthirear Flood Com- mission was completed on ' Thursday and forwarded to, Ottawa yesterday .afternoon. The commissioners refuse , to ,disclose its character. until the 'clrovernnienthas con- sidered it. • " " . Bradstreet's reports a total of 197 failures throughout the country during the week ending May gth,' against in. for the week previous. Sixteen of the .nubaber Were ,in Ctinada, four less than the preceding week.' At a meeting of the Montreal Citizens' Committee 'yesterday the 'opinion,' was alraost unanimously:expressecl that the city would , pay the. &St Of ,bieiiiscrer for preventing future &oda if the Government Would Eissuine the LEike• St: 'Peter debt'. . teacher's life in Alabama thiispartly described by a committeenian in a letter to an. eastern friend : " She tries' terinalte everything just as, pleasant as she eftne She doesn't mind Work. ' Shetakes the ax ' and cats weed -went to -the woods one evening after Scheel and helped .to saw* off two ditto after, 4 oteioeh. The •peOPle are very' well satisfied With her." ' . • Advices from' Gambia say it la reported the.t the French have „:oceupied after a„.collision tlie Roemboof River be- tween the French troops and Sardemattie, sort •Ofilid late king:- After his defeat Sav deinattie terik refuge in British territory; atid.n timbers of his siibleets are fleeing front thetreneli acroeS the tlYer,.. • new Spy loW enacted in •1011se(111,cnco of tho Schne.ehele affair. T strengthened, aria a. etectiv6 force minx) orgamzed. 'especiattr watch spies. An official .bittgentef)K will t,okfir rob itqwil &Owning over iusuou'iniftibi- talat, instaarofillt"Y 44r*Cbarico ILIPPer said Ile llaa a retett, Hector tangeVin, the inotiOn. WaSt Tint an • Itt. Patetadn-All right.. a • , correeteny erttic-rfiff, tion441-1414-344,400* , • ‘,1 ; ery,inatiniberit* ••••,trite•W`ratair ••., THE CANADIAN MILITIA, General • Middleton Thinhs the Force Should be Reduced and Better Ddiled. In his limit annual report to the,Minister Of Militia, General Middleton says: "Liter' another year's experience" beg leave again to urge the absolute necessity of reducing the etrength of the force. ' It stands now on. paperlincluding the-SchOols of Instrua-- tion) as consisting of 87,346 men. This is really more than the correct strength, as I fear the same rabn, appear int` more' than one. regiinent, but still this is a much greater number of meg than .cao be pro- perly or usefully trained, considering' the money, voted for the purpose." General Middleton believes that in order to -make the whole force . efficient every soldier. should be called out for at least sixteen days year ofhis an he says; can only be .done by redwing the force. , •• • - . Storie of Ye Dogge. . • Le Paris states that •France has con- cluded a defensive alliance with certain other powers and that henceforth France will not be, alon.e in the event of aggression, against her, . to amnia_ The °deed 1,1 WV- -16/ w LITTLE tltwats. LIVER Remit" e euet5 PILLS. -.73 „Eyff.d.E.E. Oepf/TATIONS. :AZEki.171 • ASIX FOE DR. WERCP4 PEXLETB. OR ,EITZLE STIGAR-COATED PILLS. ' Being entirely vegetable, they op- erate Without disturbance to„the system, diet, or occupation. 'nit up Jagless vials; hermeti-' • cally sealed. AlWays fresh and reliable. Aiv- lanativel_ialtersitive, or .Tfurgatives theta little -Pellets give the • most perfect SIOK HEADACHE! Once, in ye very Olden tyme a Merche,ntt fayd tee an Eddytor, "1 dos,n't thynke advertiOng payee.' ii`,rwrigeillet:IpovevttasehpzeciniY:0;lin". Ins;idiayfdy. rEatindrzoorL' "All right.' replied ye Merchantt, "and we will fee." . • • • So ye Eddytor pvtte. in his papyr ."" AXTANTED; " A DOGGE, JOHN '• V V, JONES, 253 Olde St. Now yi hapened that 400! Peple eache .brovglate a 1)ogge, on ye next days there- after, fo that Mifter" Jones (why& was ye Merolyinfit's' nityme) was overrune with Degges.. ' • • . , . “Synce there...ere so manye Dogges," vayd he, ." thynke .1 inyght• • make lome and sm.& Lasoters ondsloves from ,re 406 and Materjones Eikyimed ye 400 Dogges- eache'Dogge." . " • • . • Yepeople tooka ye.:pennis eache for his byfinefif and will give. you -Ei* pilmilO for t:::'1.7,MI:1BNOWPAragEti • • and thereafter added to yt advertising in ye Eddytor's papyy. . , . • Sullivan Haw Had Enough;thire. • TheMissouri Republican says , John".. is going to issue a prockunation soon an- nouncing to all, the .world ,that he has decided to leavi3 'the ring forever. 'He has had enough glory for one inan.4 But Islay foreigner takes a cranky notion that be can lay out the champion he will be accomino. dated; on the condition that he. first whip the next best man in Aineriba. Under no other considerations will Mr. Sullivan con- descend to emerge from his retirement: He intends to make .11. trip &retina the world giving sparking exhibitions, and Will miller Australia about Sept. lst, /taking _Sheedy, La Blanche and Taylor with him. • • . A Venerable " Rebel." , • .' There died. lately at his home in Pelham, Welland County, Mr. Drayton Holcomb, af the patriarchal age bt 95 yearsv-- It was Mr.' Holcomb. Who sheltered Wm. Lyon Mackenzie and Ow him safe over the frontier, When the Government: had set a price of .$50,000 on hie head. ' Buts. Mr: Holcorrib was ono of thenien produced by that stormy time, who ,were above price and whose patriotism'gold could not reach. , 2 theltaW Ciitting Winds ' Qf winter bring to the surface every latent pain.. It is one of the strange , things associated. with our physical well being that the' very air,. without Which We could not exist, As heavily laden, With ' thegerms of disease: ,Rheumatism, neuralgia, lumbago and other complaints ,of a Similar; char-, seterliold revel at this season of. the year amongst human nerves and human musfiles.• There wasa time when fortitude alone could make life tolerable, but now with the advent. of powerful, penetratingand nerve soothing remedies, pain beconies a thing of a monient The best,. the 'nest powerful and most cer- tain pain mire is Poison's NENYILINE.• No- thing equals:. rIgerviline for • • penetrating power. , Nerviline is beyond comparison the • grandest • discovery for, the relief' of , pain offered' to the public. 'briiggists • sell a. ganiple bottle .for 10 cents; large bottles, only 25 cents at any drug store. Prince Frederick Leopold, - grandscin of Emperor was entertained . yester- day -by the Gorman Consul at Chicago, Baron Von Nordentlyoht. The Prince is travelling incognito. . A speeial despatch from Galesburg, Ill., .says .." 4: decided stir was created among railroad men here yesterday morning by the report that Prince Leopold refused to admit the rear brake- naan into car; thus compelling him to ride on the rear platform' from Quiney to this city in a, cold, Wind and rain." • •• • The Cutest Little Things, • " Otte 1" he echoed: "I don't know as the, adjective Would have occurred to me •in just that connection: But you mean that they do theii: work thoroughly, yet make no ,fuss about it, cause no pain ot weakness, and, in short, are everything that a pit ought to be, and nothing that it ought , not, then agree that Piereeoe Pleasant Purgative Pellets are about the attest little things going. ' • ' A rumor, that sittackslof the absurd, is current that the Pope will bestow the fa*. &la Golden Rose upon' .the Queen this Illeadneb.e, • Dizziness, Con:dips. tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacita,and all derangeinenta of the,stom. itch and bowels, are prompt- ly relieved and permanently -cured -by the use of • Dr. • . Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. • In explanation of the remedl power of these Pelleta •over so great a variety,of dideases, it . may truthfullyhe said that their action upon the system Is universal. not a gland or tissue escaping their sanative' influence. Sold by druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the • Chemical Laboratory of Wortm's DOPENBARY litsiness, A58001ATION, Buffalo, N. Y. .. • Is offered by the manufactur- ers of Dr. Sago,s catarrh laemedy, for a case_ of. chronic Nasal Catarrh.which, . they cannot wire. . • , SlIrilitaTONIS 01' CATAltrate-D -keitvi., headache, ebstructiorr :of the naaal passages, discharges falling ,troin :the head into. the throat, sometithes• profuse watery, • andacridiatothers,Abielrotenationktanuceus, - Vorizlent, bloody •and •,petr,fd,,; ••;:theecycslare weak. Watery. xind clear the throat, expeetoration of .offeimive. Airthes3arai-rdearnesiOadkingor.cefigtinglito Matter. together With scabs from Ulcers; the voice is, changed and had a nasal twang; the breath is offensive;_sraelland_titste. are im- : pairedt.there is a sensation of dizziness, with •.' mental depression, a hacking cough and gen-. .• eral debility. Only a few of the above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any ono • case. Thousands of ;cases annually, without •I manifesting half of the above symptoms, re- sult in consumption, and end in tile- grave.. NO disease is oweonunon, more deceptive and Oaznyeeitrsomus.ildo.re leessothlInd:e andrsto understood healing b 'Pbp94 ei ar tn e ' Dr. Sage's 'Catarrh einecy cures the worst cases of Caaarrhy 66 cold In the . Coryza, and Catarrhal Ileadaehe.. 'Sold by druggists everywhere; SO cents. . . Mild, soothing and healing is Dr. age s Catarrh Remedy. •••• -- King Oscar openedthe „Itidedag*of SsVe. den yeaterday., In his speech to the' Devi: ties lie laid stress npon the iieceseity Of repealing the corn duty. • AThrea Vats ago I suffer& greatly with rhetirrtatism ,in my right arra. After trying reniediea that failed, I took McCollum's Ithettnatio Itepellant and was entirely A its In the ileum ot Lora last evening Vis- &mit Orbes,• Secretary of Staid for Irtdia, annatinc&I that Lori Dufferin did net con- •firiii the report that the Khyber Paso had been ,closed by the rebels. Ile added that • the GoVertiliintitkhad lib Makin to helieVe &CM Of the A.mcor ot.A.fgharujik_mi' haa beeii defeat° . ••••' • ..• “ITintold".Agtiiiy Vt*nt Catarrn.r . . , Prof. W. MA.tronin, thci. famous inesmerisk,.. .of Ithciott. Sem° ten yea•rs'ago. 1. suffered untold agony from chrome nasal s, 'catarrh. .My.fainily phyldoitia gate inc up as incurable; and said I must die. My *se Was •• .Suoli. a bad one, that every'day,:towards sun- set: My voice would become so:hoarse I could , barely speak above a:Whisper. In the incirning tny. coughing and blearing. Of • my throat would. almoat strangle inc. • By the use of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, in,Abree Months, I was,amell Miin,,and the euro bas been permanent.' ifcanstantly1Itt*hla THOMAS ..T. llitentan. .090g Pine Street,' St. Louts, ' "I wean gketit.inifferer ' .frota catarrh-forthree years. At times I could hardly' breathe, ' and :was constantly .hawking and spitting, and •for the last eight months. could . not breathe through the nostrils: I • thought nothing nothing could be done for me. ' Look- • wasadvised: to- try- Dr. Sago's Catarrh Catarrh, ,Reinedy, and 1 ain,Ooiv a well min.!. believe. . it to be the only sure remedy for eaterrif'Uow . Mantifeettired, and one. hasonly• 'Sive It ' fair trial° elfperie,nce aatoundMg reatiltaand ' a permanent cure: . • • • , Three 'tattles Care. Catarrh. . ELI ,Ronvrus. Runyan P. 04 Columbia Co., • Pa.; says: daughter had catarrh when she was five" years old, very badly. . I saw Dr. . Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro- • cured a bottle for her, and :Joon, saw that it • helped her ;'• a 'third bottle effected'a *perms, - 'sent cure. She is 1101V eighteen years old and , sound and heiuty.' , , • •'D 141,F'! Pa' 87° " CUR .1„,. _tell ear cure do in:ammo merely to Atop them fora - time and then Dave them return again. mean • radical • " . ewe. I, have made the disease of PITS, EPILEPSY or PULL- ING SIOKNESS• Iltedong study. I wstrant my remedy to cure the worst cases. Because ethers have felled lie reapply kt not now receiving • cure. Send at once for in treatise And a Priteliotthroi nij Infallible remedy. ' Give ' Capri= sad Pottetloc. coct• yen coaling tore tries, and I Will mire Yon. Address DE. et. nor, . • 'Brandi Office; 37 Ionno.lit. Toronto: • • • ,The Blueberry is a_valuable trot, and-Ti-rreirate fruit to grow in the Northern States, where the more • tender varieties winter kills. It IN petfeeny haray. • will stand 40 degrees blow zero.without elbowing any injury to the most tender'buds. Fruit ripens in this , latitude about the first of atily. Color, a hluisli blear, When fully ripened. , savor is equel to trie num! rry, a very' mild, rich stilxicid, pronounced by most.. People delicious.« The fruit la, excellent for pies, or canned for Winter use, It 'grows vary stocky; the shining dark -green lehves and the blue fruit make pleasing dontritst. It tICCMS to flourish in al Vsolls an. is wprolific bearer. One. citizen yldnin by mall, cam • fully packed in all paper, 60 ete.: two, atm.0 by ma% • -si.eut.loo by. etpress, 82,50: 1.000, S15.00. . Adak:. L. Di STAPLES, Portland, Mich. . ,,. hei a k. I ;taco a p4.41tivil r;ltrici(y ;or (1o• 4;a:we dl lieu° ; .6 t itio.tott.. • ' thous:. n'ts of -0010 ot the Worst hind itill of king titiaktrui • 'have boon cured. Indeed,. ao at rung la • My faith In tie • ettlency, that I WC1 mind TWO TIOTT1,1;19 PRE; tertethee .. - . with A y A 1,11A111,n TREATISE on thls 0E4116 10 AV • sull'orer. Give oxpronr and P.A. adtreaL — • ,. , DR, l'. • •, SLOCUM, ' ' ! •• ' ' •• ' ' lirarai Office; 37 !tinge gt,TOraato • • •