arly did not come to-day he would ask Pi day's Mr. Bowell, anawering Mr. MoMillan, said that raw sugar was not ex-warehoused — the duty first being paid. ector » answering Mr. Tarte, said there was no record in the de- tment of the removal of Mr. Perley power to prevent a cattle which had Sete an romeo for the health _— a Me. 6 ale, wald the Citummaated : 0 official Pint mation that the United States has arid lished a quarantine for sheep and lambe going: from Oanada to Buffalo and other Mr ‘Dewan , replying to a Mr. Coats nro — — Dogg overnment had made a set Temper. ance Colonization Beolety, a aainaniie of an ato in-Counoil of April 2let. The society to receive 100,000 scres, ba had oY eed perth all of them. They had paid the G + $100,000, and were no longer indebted re the Government. No serious —" had been made against the settlom Mr. Davin, fn moving that it should be enacted that all settlers who went into the Northwest between Jone 1st, 1883, and June 2od, 1886, should on completin ae improvements be granted a second stead, explained the course he had taken | in ard to this matter last session, and re- the promise made then dl Mr. Dewdney shat the question would be laid the Government for farther oon- gileration. The whole department of the Interior was made a donkey-engine to the avarice the Lieut..Governor of the Northwest Territory. He (Mr. Davin) would not allow the policy of the Govern- ment in the Northwest to prevail. (Laogh. ter. Ministers + laugh, but there was not power enongh in them or in those behind them to prevent him from crashing down their policy. Spee “The hon. gentleman is sing the rules of the Honse in threatening language. oe, Davin—I did not know that - Ri infringing the rules of order. I thou was apeaking with great sinewclty.* ma doveram by - concluded by asking for a change of the/ yr — of the Governmen in this matter, ch he characterized as severe, unjast wad 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 Honse and the country to the oon duot of the hon gentleman during the first fe} ‘Bae month of the present seasion. He oppo the extension of the homesteading principle as advocated by Mr. Davin r. Davin eaid that Mr. Dewdney now considered these eeeeee i image given ap to be escheats belonging to the Orown, but it made all the difference in the world as to whose ox was go Sir John Thompson said that the die- oussion of @ private transaction had not ing to do with the question embodied in the resolution, and was, therefore, out of order. The 8 ome said that this matter was pot pert to the disoussion. Mr. Davin pe! that he would bring the matter up again by moving for the popes relating to it. The same malice which been exhibited on a former pee eee same small-minded malice, the same petty malioe—had exuded from the Minister of the Interior. Mr. Davin—Oan is be out of order to use the word ‘‘exude”’ ? The Speaker—The meg gentleman must ar. see that he has - too Mr. Davino— be frank, I do not see that I have. I have had a great deal of ex- perience in bs Parliament quite as great es . I do not think any hon. gentleman should be called to order for using the verb ** exude.” The Speaker—The hon. gentleman should not make the acousation of a charge of malice. vin—Then [ will say he i actuated by Christian charity— (laughter) — that be has palpably shown himeelf to be a tleman, a trathfal gentleman, so truth- fia to cause everybody in the House to open their eyes with astonishment. If he wante any more eulogy he oan take it. (Laughter.) The hon. gentleman concluded by urging both sides of the Hongs to sup- port the motion. Mr. Laurier said the principle involved in the motion was not one of general polioy, but simply that the provisions of the Act of 1883 should be ora: out, which gave settlers a second homestead. It wasclaimed that it would cate be fair and just that those eettlera who went in between '83 and ‘86, when the lew was altered, should be treated as they had been led to expect they would be treated. bed — could there be inthe name of j common sense why this should ‘not be ger gd ? Pie there soarci' ee This affeated om: , | that faith should be Sir John Thom best, repeal that law, bas Parlia- ment had rd ss to 9g re by so vested ehetecs with. The aes of 7 btu should be out. He was not in favor of a eecond hi quence of the repeal of the second home- stead law gone to Dakota. Bir Hector Langevin said that he ~_ spoken to Mr a at the begin the si the indications a garding Bir John's condition were not then ere now, and it had “theten adjournment sho aié o'alock, they did not want avin to lose his place on the order aper. He would move the adjournment of the debate, and the Government would care that he would have an opportun- ay of oe his motion when the proper Me. Davin—Do I understand from the hon. the leader of the Government that the question will stay at the head of the paper? sie Hector Langevin—We will give the hon, lia a chance to disouss the matte Mr. _— said that according to the Prale of she House if the adjourament of a debate were carried the: motion would go to the bottom of the r. He wontd object to that, because he wag anxious that - | the House should divide on the question. At the opening of the sitting Bir Heotor Langevio had told the House of the con- dition of Sir John, and saked him to oon- sent toan adjournment at 6o'olook. He would agree to that, but he was not ready to agree to an adjournment e the debate. Mr. Davin—I am to divide the House on this — The speaker put Sir Heotor Langevin's motion so adjourn “ie debate, and the House divided on the question with the following result; Yeas, 87; nays 73 rt. Laurier asked the ister Jus- tice if he waz ina position today to lay on the table the papers in connection with the gton oe and Sir John Thompson replied that he expecte a to hg sent a part of them during the after The hon. Minister then ilar eet 6: to an |agreement which had been come to witb regard to the resumption of the debate on - Jamieson’s prohibition resolution, which, according to the order paper, would come up this evening. It had been ar- sia be said, that this debate be sus- - It was an portant subject, raring a change - the policy of the Government. The issue of the Premier's itlpesa would result in new advisers of the rown being called upon, and therefore the pear of this question had better be sas. pende Mr. “Tapper told Mr. Brown, of Monok, that no fishing licenses were issued durin March and April for the Grand River, that an order prohibiting fishing with seines in that river was sent ont on the 28rd of March last, and ‘it the prohibition were continued until after the close season the fees for lioenses would be refunded. Mr. Kirkpatrick obtained an order en the ouse fora retarn of all papers in neotion with the complaints of the big water in the Rideau Oanal betw Kingston and Jones’ Falls. oa motion made by Mr. Bowers for papers relating to the subject of the herring fisheries of the Bay of Fundy and its adjacent waters there arose a debate in which members from New Brunawiok took art. Messrs. owe For and Gill- mor made g ches, io whioh they called the aseetihion of the Minister of Marine to the depletion of the rig fishing grounds, and called upon him take measures to prevent the young tas destroyed in those waters. They were supported by Messrs. Hazen and Skinner. xr. Edgar moved fora “return of all correspondence between the Imperial Gov- ernment and the Government of Canada on the subjact of the oop yright laws of Canada, and all other —— reiating there- to not already brought down.” He as g | Why the Sopyright Act passed by the Oans- dian Parliament in 1889 had not been pro- laimed. He did n not acknowledge that the Parliament of Oanada had not the right to deal with copyright. He urged that the Government meke representations to the Imperial Government which would show them that the people and Parliament of anada were in earnest about this matter, eo and were not prin to allow the indit- ference which pigeon. in Downing street representations regard © Bir John Thompson gaid he was con- vinoed of the fairness of the promises of the Act of 1889 and the sanaaalty of its proclamation. He still entertained ~ views he had expressed as to the right of the Parliament to pasa such alaw. It was unfortunate that the interests of the English authors should be paramount. If other methods failed, was no Houses of the Canadian Parliament would only a very few. waa nether that no{|be asked to ~— .* address to Her man should ae complain that he | Majesty'a Governm consent to ths been ted. Under these | proclamation of the hotof 1889. support the motion, especially as there was no attack upon policy of the Government — Mr. Watson contended that every pledge to settlers ‘should be ae os carried ont. Mr. Tisdale h ald tter wo! eantigitr honrlgaaan the 1 Horakenes bill considered. "Biz John Thompson sald it was ma gr ble for Government sinus ota motion, which for the first time Peake a a Mae eee ye Te ee Ee ye dgar said it was a most unfortunate ment to contemplate, that the interests of a —s should be paramount in the ae pial arliament, and that the rights of Canadians should be denied. Mr. Burnham obtained an order for cor- ald | thas it might be of ee nen 8 Dey on this ques- on. Me. Mulock oalled the attention of the House to the Act which hed been intro- duoed into the Imperial Parliament deal- ing with the Canadian oattle trade. He watoh course of this legislation which was ed - much ee to Canada. He sugge for the oe ieieh Government to oma an Official in Oanada who, by being located ata shipping point rw give certificates which would enable Oanadian cattle to be landed in Britain without examination over there. The House adjoarned at 11 20. Standing. with reluctant feet, Where womanhood and childhood meet. ‘Tis a supreme moment! ‘Tis a critical period! No maiden should attempt passing thie boundary- ag without the aid and assarance of ieréc's Favorite Pres- cription. Ita atatutoeen | ia tiding over the perila incident to young womanhood, is universally acknowledged! No mother oan pos within the hands of ber daughter, any- thing that will prove more valuabie io meeting all her reqairements! Dr. Pierce's avorite Prescription is made expressly a iseases iar to woman, and is t only medicine of its kiod, sold ‘sbrough he said, then the | 5880 in every case, or money refanded. Queen, Fire-cracker, Small Boy. Winnipeg Free Press: Her Majesty is responsible for the semall boy of the Twenty-fourth, and the small boy of the Twenty-fourth is responsible for more mis- chief than he can shake a atiok at. The news or poe of the Free Press sell of the @ terrace, the destruction of mach property and the unhonusing of eight — families. These calamities are to be aid atthe doorof Her Majesty, for she it was who stirred up the small boy, and 4 was the amall boy who set off she fire oracker. In other words, this is the ‘Queen who fired the loyalty of the small boy who fired the fire-cracker that fired the terrace. Cs Dont’s for the Gummer GirL Don't eqaint—carry a sanshade. Don's wear a red veil if you valae your reputation Don's wear scarlet shoes in the city in daylight. Don't wear a Leghorn hat with a rose garden on the crown to the opera this summer. Don't fidget.— Music and Drama. No Kind of a Fellow. Boston Herald: Kate—I'm not going to have Olarenoe Bashley callon me any more. He's too — for anything. Della—How ie he Kate—Why, I pola him how long his arm was, and he eaid 32 inches. I th told him that was jast the size of my waist, and he never did anything. o =) ie Business Men, From olose application and too little ex mer are pot spacer ds aga to conetipation Ogging up ni 8 great sewers—pro- ante hesdache, "Vileemnen sluggish oir- culation and general derangement of the vital organs. A regular movement of — bowels is indispensible to perfect health ; negleot, is to imperil! It sanetigees Pierce's Pleasant Pellets will cure you. No interference with business. Very modeat expense. Mildin action, yes powerful in cleansing, regulating thestomach, liver and bowels, curing constipation, headache and kindred ailments. Bathing Dont’s Don’t stay in too long. Don't keep your head dry. Don't bathe on a full stomach. Don't lowe an opportunity of learning to swim.—New York Press. Lovers Who Sad a Falling Ont. Washington Post: ‘‘Ed and Minnie had another falling - last week.” ‘Berious quarrel?” ‘No; ook." a Times Have Ohanged. Indianapolis Journal : Wibble—Well, they don’t boil heretios in oil nowadays. Wiigiows pore ; ne merely roast in religious a A Oarpet Knight, New York Herald: ‘ Lieutenant Softly never seen powder and smoke.” ** Oh, yeshe has. When he isn't in the ball-room he is in the smoking-room—so he knows all aboust'em.” inne one person in a thousand dies of —Bome girla are so conecientiously op- posed to artificial adornments that o" won't even make up she beds.—Elmira —Baron Hirsch is an Austrian by birth, used | but is beat known in France. The ounda. tion of his fortune was laid as a railway contractor with the Turkish Government. “August: Flower’ I had been troubled five months with Dyspepsia. The doctors told me it waschronic. I hada fullness after eating anda heavy load in the pit of my stomach. I suffered fre- quently from a Water Brash of clear matter. Sometimes a deathly Sick- ness at the Stomach would overtake me. Then again I would@have the terrible pains of Wind Colic. - At such times I would try tobelch and could not. I was working - — for Thomas McHenry, Druggist, Cor. Irwin and Western Ave., gta 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. I live with my wife and family at 39 James St., Allegheny: ae Signed, JoHN D. Cox. G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A. Married Over Again. Rev. Mr. Hunter has just returned from: Toronto, where he performed a marrisge ander unusual circumstances. While laboring in the East during the past win- ter, among those who came a to the anxious seat were a couple living together as man wife, the woman Eos hus- band livin, They ae to lead a bet- fi husband, and he was satisfied to take vw n Mr. Hanter Secty wend that the hed teen padi Mr. Hunter married the couple over again, and there was great rejoicing. —8t. Thomas Journal. him, _— ty iia skill ds Tne ‘Golden’ sa votor ou his hands." Ro spake & man with tribute crowned, orp r. Pivroe’ athe “* word- renowned,” Whose * ‘Medical Discovery Had vangutshed pain ad 2 bet him ja One oan but speak in praise of a remedy so effectual and unfsiling ae Dr. Pieroe’ r) dq ical Discovery. sant promptly and thoroughly, it p oes per- manent cures. Oonsamption, "he ite early atages, sorofala, liver and kidney disorders, and all blood diseases, are within the field of its unbounded success. A Oxnuman who travelled in Europe hag written an account of his observations and impressions. Mr. Yoan—for that is the writer’s name—was 8 good deal puzzled by what he evidently regards as our free-and- easy methods of courtship. ‘ Besides invitations to dinner,” be writes, ‘‘ there are invitations to tea-parties, such as are oocasionally given by wealthy merchants or dist: ed 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 aids 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 arma grasping each other, they leave the table in pairs, and leap, skip, posture and prance for their muésual gratification. A man anda ae previously unkn to one anothe may take part in it. call thi skipping tanshen (dancing). e olor for this curious proceeding on the part of Europeans was well explained by a recent writer in a Ohinese iilastrated paper, the Hwa Pao. ‘* Western — requires,” he says, “ the man in search of a 'e to write to the girl’s home and some oo and place for a skipping match” licet, m dance). “ Kip day ig Don't drink spirits before or after bathing. in natn 1‘ youthin red and maid in green,’ Don’s re in your bathing suit t0/ Wome by pairs to the brilliant and kes hall, where, to the emulous sound of flate and ‘dram, the youth clasping the maiden’s waist, and the m resting upon her partner's shcabler, one pair will skip for- ward, another prance backward, round © round the room until they are f for want of breath. "atter this they become acquainted "'—only after this, oheurrh—* and then by Seunional atten. tions over a bottle of wine, or exchange confidences at the tea table, their inti- macy will deepen, the = era heart be- come filled with love, and they will mate.” My! Mme. Blavatsky and Ool. Oloott preach theosophy in New York in i878 t they roould — hardly half a dozen adherents, the sovecilon is made that the iouk has 100,000 followers in America. Women in Italy who work in the olive oil presses, carry buil: material up the terraces and hein in the orchards, receive 20 centsa day. This is the maximum pay and oalls for twelve hours hard labor. or by the ambulance to take the —— for the that clien pre tbat io by the liberal use of to the a Bo, in waking a fortune by means et the advertising space ina news- the he first requisite is to have _— worth pear the attention of the bifo to. Then go ahead. It Did Bot Work. ‘* Madame,” said the tramp as he doffed the remnant of a Kossuth that might have been wi went sadly away in search of an old, fashioned thropist. eel At the “Pinafore” Performanee, He (a visitor from abroad)— . formance is really capital. Did I under- stand you t> say that the company is up entirely of amate ” She—Yes; all excepting Mr. Warrington, who is playing Oaptain Corcoran. He's from Toronto.—Grip. Hér Answer. New York Life: He—I have never yet met the womanI thought I could marry. — they are very hard to please,as ——— Abont 450 B. ©. the Ionians first intro- duced the present system of writing from left to right; previous to the above date from right to left prevailed. D. O, BL 25. pheumatisy ) 91 PROMPTLY CURED BY or rename Cures Also: = Neuralgia. Zz) Lumbago, i ii Sciatica, Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Wounds, Swellings, i Soreness, Frost-bites, I} Stiffness, (i@ All Aches. The Chas, A. Vogeler 69., Baltimore, Md. Canadian Depot: Toronto, Out. Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh ts the Best, Easiest to Use and Cheapest. id by d>uggists or sent by mall, Sc. F --0coltine, Warren, Pa, 0.5. A. Eft SaHARTSHORN) - | po Tas SURELY TO THE neni ty e named disease. v poy be uum they —_— oe send me by ov hind '88 West Adelaide iorm your readers By ts tinaly was thoustods of fwo hotties of my remedy E& to any of your r * CURT 4 that I have a positive xameey te 3 cases have been * ‘ost Office Address, Reapectinly, T Tih BLoe~i aro. ONTARIO. them return Epitepey +] isagh with this : Bir Adolphe Caron replisd that the They ail our res t were economizing by lea With little bees and honey ; ancoonped shee places, bron He wage They mend our socks opinion that expensive stafis were But don't they our money? necessary for the efficiency of the foroe. OW I all Isalians ing A few thinutes before 6 o'clock, on the | into this country,” Wilkins, “I am words from the Speaker, ‘‘ A mestagefrom | impressed with one What is His Exoellency the Governor-General, | that?" asked Banker: “ Italy must signed by his own hand," the House rose | be getting to be quite a. desirable pines to ite feet and the papers with regard to! live in. | CURE FITS tom eainire OF BOTELES a disease fora