Montreal herald and daily commercial gazette, 23 juillet 1852, vendredi 23 juillet 1852
[" ^ >' \\ vïM ^î\\ Ci.i\\ j jy\\i Jw^V\\,\\VVvC\\ \\i AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.VOLUME XL1V.MONTREAL, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 23, 1S52.NUMBER 124.REMOVALS.WaM\u2019Kl >.Removal.A LAURIE k UU.have REMOVED their \u2022 Wholesale Store to No.2H3 St.Paul Street, a few Doors east of St.Peter Street.June 16.\t92 Removal.THE undersigned has REMOVED to No.87 St.Paul Street, next door to Messrs.HAL-DIM AND & BROTHERS, where he will carry on his business, as hithereto.HYACINTHE BUSSE AU, Leather Merchant, ,\tSt.Paul Street.June 16.\t 92 NOTICE.TYRE, COLQUHOUN & CO.have REMOVED to No.4, Nuns' Buildings, St.Joseph Street.June 15.\t91 JOHN ALLO\u2019S CIIEA1* LEATHER STORE IS RfcMC VE D TO the BUILDING- formerly occupied by the ITALIAN MUSEUM, No.107 Saint Paul Street.June 9.\t86 G.VIRTUE, SON & CO.\u2019S LONDON, PARIS AND NEW YORK Publication Repot, REMOVED To 165, Notre Dame Street\u2014West.J.B.BARRATT, Agent.June 9.86 Removal.THE undersigned has REMOVED his business to the Banking House so long and favorably known and occupied by La Banque du Peuple, an more recently by the Montréal City and V\\7 ANTED\u2014A smart active BOY to carry a » t Round of the Herald.Apply at this Of- 121 lice.July 20.WANTED for a Clothing Establishment, a person to assist and make himself generally useful.Also, a respectable, intelligent BOY, of good address.Enquire of W.SLACK, 28 McGill Street.I July 17.\tTf\u2014119 WANTED\u2014A steady and respectable Man to act as COACHMAN and GROOM.'\t\u2019 at this Office.Ju.y 21.District Savings' Bank, Street.May 10, 1852.in St.François Xavier C.DORWIN.60 Removal.Thomas williams, has removed to No.10 St.Sacrament Street.May 8.59 Removal.MR.F.BENNETT has REMOVED from Saint Urbain Street, to No.26 Saint François Urbain Xavier Street.May 6.57 NOTICE.WE.HOLMES, Esquire, Advocate, has RE-\u2022 MOVED his Office to the Building of Hugh Taylor, Esquire, St.Gabriel Street, facing Little St.James' Street.May 6.\t57 Removal.williamTb.lambe, Advocate, No.49, Little Saint James Street.May 3.54 Removal.C SOLOMON, Furrier, will REMOVE on the \u2022 1st May next, to the Premises presently occupied by Messrs.Campbell & Co., and directly opposite Messrs.Benjamin & Bros., Notre Dame Street.April 27.\t51 Apply 122 TED\u2014A Person to take charge of a ocery Store, at some distance from Montreal.Salary liberal.Apply at the Office of this Paper.July 16\t118 WArNT V » Gru WANTED AT MONK LANDS\u2014A FEMALE COOK and several WAITERS.Applv to S.COM PAIN.July 16.\t118 HOTELS, &lc.W ANTED\u2014A COOK, who nlso understands Washing and Ironing.Apply to W.E.HOLMES, Advocate, 2 St.Gabriel Street.July 16.\t118 WANTED-A GARDENER who thoroughly understands a Green House, &c.\u2014he must be a ! gle man.Apply at this Office.July 7.\t110 WANTEdTmMEDTATELY\u2014Three or four BRASS FINISHERS, a BRASS FOUNDER and a PLUMBER, to whom good wages and constant employment will be given.None need apply except they perfectly understand their busi- jjggg- CHARLES GARTH, No.50 Craig Street.June 1.\t79 To Tanners, Eurniture Makers, Machin-ists &c.A T the UPTON STATION, on the Richmond Railroad, 21< hours from Montreal, an opportunity offers for establishing the above lines of Business.There is a good Water Power at the spot where the Railroad crosses the White River, with a plentiful supply of water all the year round.For particulars, apply to Cart.SKENE, Upton Station.There is a good Saw-Miil 400 yards from the place where the Railroad crosses.Inspection is invited.None need apply, unless prepared with good security for the fulfilment of terms that may be agreed on.May 24.\t72 Monkland Hotel IS NOW OPEN for the reception of Visitors, under the management of S COMPA1N, who is well known here as a man fully qualified to please (.being a good Cook) all those who may feel disposed to patronize his establishment : he will personally devote his time to render everything comfortable.The House has undergone thorough repair, being situated in one of the most salubrious localities, and only a short distance from the city.Families who are desirous of making a selection of Rooms for the Summer Season, would do well to make timely application.Montreal.June 12.\t89 LAMB\u2019S HOTEL, AND BOARDING HOUSE, SAINT JOHN\u2019 STRISKT, UPPER TOWN, QUEBEC.May 21, 1852.\t70 St.Leon Springs- THE undersigned beg?leave to inform his friends and the public generally, that the above Establishment is NOW OPEN and ready for the reception of Visitors.In order to make everything complete, the Subscriber has spared no pains in enlarging the House, Baths, and Embellishments to the place.It is beautifully situated on the Bank of the River du Loup, affording unrivalled facilities for pleasure drives.The TABLE will be served with the very best, as usual, and nothing shall be wanting on the part of the undersigned to merit, more and more, the favor of the travelling community.There will be, on arrival of the Steamers at Three Rivers and River du Loup.CARRIAGES ready to convey passengers to the Springs.GEO.CAMPBELL.St.Leon Springs, ?18th June, 1852.)\t97 LEGAL SALES FOR SALE By Authority of Justice.9, at AUSTRALIA AND THE GOLD REGIONS! The Fast-Sailing, Copper-Fastened, and Coppered SHIP \u201cCONCORDIA\u201d, l,200 tons burthen, Levi Pratt, Esq., Commander, (who is well acquainted w.th the trade,) WILL be despatched from BOSTON on ' MONDAY, AUG.18th, 1852, for SYDNEY, and will carry a limited number of first and second class passengers.This ship is well ventilated, and a most desirable conveyance for persons intending to visit this promising country, where such golden harvests are being reaped by all.She has a full poop, and her state rooms are large arid airy.The between decks are seven feet, and are fitted up in the most comfortable style.An experienced surgeon will be attached to\" the Shit) ; her dietary list will he found liberal and complete ; and every possible comfort provided to make the voyage a pleasant one.It is confidently expected from the superior sailing qualities of this Ship, that she will reach her destination the 1st to 10th of November \u2014 Every information as to Goods best suited to the market (which can be perehased better in Boston than any other port) can be had on application to the owners.GODDARD & PRICHARD, 5 Central Wharf, or THOMAS E.LOVETT, 18 City Wharf.Apply here, where every information can be had, and passages secured at the lowest rates, to SHERLOCK, FOLEY & CO., Agents, 191, St.Paul Street.July 12.\t114 For Port Philip and Sydney, AUSTRALIA.ONLY REGULAR LINE.Steward Wanted.TENDERS for the supply of Board, Domestic Service, and other duties appertaining to the Office of STEWARD in BISHOP\u2019S COLLEGE, LENNOXYILLE, will be received by the undersigned, on or before WEDNESDAY, the 14th of JULY.The service of the house to be rendered by men-servants.Further particulars may be had on application.EDWARD CHAPMAN, _ Secretary Coll.Council.Bishop\u2019s College, June 19, 1852.\tmwf\u2014100 To Blacksmiths.ÂN opportunity offers for establishing a Business at the UPTON STATION of the Richmond Railway.There is as much work as one shop could do, and none yet established, and a village is growing up at the place.For particulars, apply to Capt.SKENE, Upton Station.None need apply unless prepared to establish the Business entirely at their own charge.Enquiry is invited.May 24.\t72 Information Wanted.rpHOMAS THOMAS, about nineteen years ago _L emigrated from Profound, parish of Pound-stock, Cornwall, England, with his wife and two children,and it is believed settled in Upper Canada.Mr Thomas was lame in the left leg.Since 1835 his friends have not heard from him.Any information respecting him or his family, will be thankfully received by his brother, JAMES HENRY THOMAS, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.HJI-Papers in Canada will conféra great favor by noticing the above.June 19.\t95 ROA K\u2019D.&c.Restaurant.AMUEL M'CONKEY begs to inform the Ladies and Gentlemen of Montreal and its vicinity, that he has made alterations on his premises, for the purpose of opening a RESTAURANT on an extensive scale, and that he will in future be always able to serve SOUPS, STEAKS, CHOPS, COFFEE, &c., on the shortest notice.Orders will be received and executed for supplying private parties at their residences.His Cook is an experienced one, having served an apprenticeship to Mr.Tetu\u2014besides, having a thorough knowlege of Confectionary in general.S.M\u2018C.returns his sincere thanks for the patronage he has so long enjoyed ; and assures his friends that every effort will be made to deserve its continuance.May 11.\t61 WILL be Sold on MONDAY, August NINE o\u2019clock, A.M_ at the DOUR of the CHAPEL ofST.ALEXIS, the lands hereafter described, depending on the community of goods, heretofore existing between the lute PIERRE GERMAIN BELISLE, and MARY TERRI AN his widow.1st\u2014A Farm at St.Alexis, Fief Bailleul, of two arpents in front by twenty-one arpents in depth, bounded in front by the Seigniory of St.Sulpice, in rear by the Fief Martel, between Clement Martin and Gabriel Magnan, with an old house and barn.2nd\u2014A Farm in the said Parish, Seigniory of St.Sulpice, containing one arpent and a half in front by thirty arpents more or less in depth, bounded in from by the Fief Bailleul, in rear by the lands of St.Jacques, between J ub\u2019en Poirier and Odilon Poirier, with house and barn.For conditions address the undersigned at St.J.DUFRESNE.N ^ FOR SALE.FOR SALE by the Subscriber\u2014 15(1,000 feet SQUARE PINE 100,000 do FLAT do 3,000 do SQUARE ELM N.B.DESMARTEAU, .\t,\t98, St.Paul Street.April 10.\t44 Montreal, 16th July.r It\u2014ItK' ATTRACTION AT COTE DE NEIGES.Bellevue House AND PLEASURE GROUNDS ARE NOW OPEN to the Travelling community and the Citizens of Montreal and its vicinity, where may be seen many thousands of TULIPS of every hue and rare quality, in full Bloom, with a variety of choice Exotic and other Flowers.REFRESHMENTS, ICE CREAMS, &c., at all times, with CIGARS of the first brand.Two or three Gentlemen can be accommodated with BOARD and LODGING.GOOD STABLING.EDWARD WORTH.Cote de Neiges, ?24th May, 1852.)\t74 FRANKLIN HOUSÉT B Y RYAN & CO.M.P.Board in a French Canadian Family.q-nvo GENTLEMEN can be accommodated in X a Private Canadian Family.Enquire at No 51, Sanguinete Street.May 17.\t66 '(r he.The Beautiful Clipper Ship EFAIMEmcmDAS, White, Master, 1,300 tons burthen, to sail from New York on the 25th July.THIS handsome vessel has extensive accommodations for passengers, very light and airy, well ventilated, and properly adapted for passing through the warm climates.A surgeon and proper attendants will be provided on board.The arrangements for families are superior to those of any vesstl bound to the above ports.For Freight or Passage, applv on board, or to JOHN OGDEN, or R.W.CAMERON, 116, Wall Street, New York, Or, here to\tANDREW SHAW, NEIL McINTOSH, Place d\u2019Armes.July 10.\t113 Security from Fire and Thieves ! jyyJ'RS.STANLEY will have a couple ofRooms acant, after the first of May.Lagauchetiere Street, » 28th April.) 52 Boarding House.MRS.KILLOCH has Vacancies for a few respectable BOARDERS, No.61}£ Craig Street, opposite the Mayor\u2019s residence.June 1.\tTts\u201479 DR* This new and magnificent house, is situated on King and William Streets, and from its close proximity to the Banks, the Post Office and the Wharves, and its neigbboihood to the different Railroad Termini, makes it a desirable Residence for Men of Business, as well as of pleasure.THE FURNITURE is entirely new, and of superior quality.THE TABLE will be at all times supplied with the Choicest Delicacies the markets can afford.HOR&HS and CARRIAGES will he in readiness at the Steamboats and Railway, to carry Passengers to and from the same, free of charge THE HOUSE will be OPENED to the Pablic, on MONDAY, the 10th instant.NOTICE.The Undersigned takes- this opportunity of returning thanks to his numerous Friends, for the patronage bestowed on him during the past three years, and he hopes, by diligent attention to business, to merit a continuance of the same.M.P.RYAN.Montreal, May 6, 1852.\t57 FOR SALE, By Authority of Justice, TO the highest and last bidder, a LOT of .LAND situated to the south of the Concession of Lu Belle Riviere, in the Parish of Ste.Scholastique, forming part ot the lot of land designated as No.804, in the plan and registration of the Seigniory of the Lake of Two Mountains, consisting of two arpents in width upon the front, and retrograding in rear to an acute-angle upon the boundary line with William Snowdon, without any buildings thereon.The conditions will be given at the time of Sale, which will take place on the EIGHTH of AUGUST next, at the Door of the Church of ST.SCHOLASTIQUE.A.B.PAPINEAU, N.P.St.Martin, 23rd June, 1852.\tf\u2014100 SALE OF REAL ESTATE, By Authority of Justice.ON MONDAY, the TWENTY-THIRD of AUGUST next, at the Door of the Parish Church of LONGUEUIL, will be Sold, by Auction, the immoveables hereinafter described, belonging to the succession of CHARLES DUBUC, situated in the Parish of Longueuil\u2014to wit: 1st\u2014A FARM, in the first Concession, upon the River, of three arpents and eight feet in front, by fifty arpents and five perches in one line, and forty-nine arpents and four perches in the other, more or less, bounded to t he northwest by the River, in rear by the lands of Tousst.Jos.Fournier, on one side by those of Pierre Brisset, and on the other by those of Luc Dubuc, partly cultivated and partly in standing wood, with a Stone House, Barn, Stable, and other Buildings thereon erected.2nd\u2014A LOT of LAND, in the place called Le Bassin, of irregular form, comprising six arpents and twenty perches in superficies, more or less, bounded to the north-east by the lands of Tousst.Jos.Fournier and Alexis Dubuc, and elsewhere by those of the said Alexis Dubuc, the heirs of Tousst.Fournier, and the said Tousst.Jos.Fournier, in cultivation.3rd\u2014Another LOT of LAND in the same place, comprising five arpents and ninety-four perches in superficies, more or less, bounded to the north-east by the lands of Alexis Dubuc, aud elsewhere by those of Christophe Fournier, the said A.Dubuc, and Tousst.Jos.Fournier, in cultivation.4th\u2014Lastly, a LOT of LAND in the fourth Concession of the Fief Tremblay, consisting of a half arpent and six feet in front, by twenty-eight arpents in depth, more or less, bounded at the north-west end by the lands of Jacques Bourdon, at the other end by those of François Tremblay, on one side by those of Luc Dubuc, and on the other by those of the heir; ot Tousst.Fournier.The conditions of sale will be announced at the time of adjudication, and may in the meantime be ascertained by application to the under-sigued Notary at Boucherville.LS.LACOSTE, N.P.Boucherville, 22nd June, 1852.\tf\u2014100 Fnr, o a x ^ Field Seeds.by th£ Subscribers\u2014 Timothy Seed\tWebster Wheat Vetches or Tares Horse Beans Ruta Buga\tWhite Agricultural Carrot and English Lawn Grass.\u201e\tBENJ.WORKMAN & CO.March 25\t37 T _ JEWELLERY.I P.BOIVIN has just added to his Stock, a -LJ.great variety of articles of the most fash-Bonahle style,suohas WATCHES, JEWELLERY, SILVER PLATE, PAPIER MACHE, &c.\\ Every thing which can please the most varied \\asies in his branch of trade, is to be found at X\\ ^oivin\u2019s.Orders will be executed with the strictest punctuality, and at the ordinary prices., *12,6^1 Street, corner of Saint Vincent Street, opposite the new Court House.April 29.\t52 HENRY WILSON, BXiAGIS A KB WHÏÆE AT0.7 CHENE VILLE STREET, Is now prepared to make all sorts of SAFES, Railings, grates, locks and keys; PRINTING, SEAL, LITHOGRAPHIC and COPYING PRESSES, &c.&c.AND BELL HANGING.June 16.\t92 GREENE & SONS, 229 SAINT PAUL STREET, MONTREAL.MESSRS.GREENE & SONS take this opportunity of informing their friends and customers, that they have on hand, manufactured for the Spring Trade, an Extensive Assortment of SHU, Fur and Wool llafs, and to which they have much pleasure in soliciting the attention of Eastern and Western Mpr-chants.Messrs.G.& S.feel assured in stating that their long experience enable them to produce an article of superior quality, at a lower price than ever before offered in Canada.The assortment of Wool Hats, Unions, Kossuth, Rowdies, and other Articles appertaining to the trade, will be found complete.GREENE & SONS.Canada Hat and Fur Store, ) 229 St.Paul Street.> Montreal, May 11, 1852.)\t61 J.F.PRINGLE, iiatd vUoiu.'V, &c., CORNWALL, C.W.Noramber 19.\tly\u2014225 FONTAINE\u2019S BALM OF A Thousand Flowers ! t^OR the TOILET, the NURSERY, for BATHING, and many medicinal purposes.Highly perfumed by its own ingredients.Recommended by the faculty of almost every European city, and established under the patronage of every Physician in London and Paris, and thousands of in-lividuals, who make daily use of it in New York, Philadelphia and Boston.It is the greatest luxury a lady or gentleman could wish for the improvement of health, for comfort and personal embellishment, and its delicate, soothing sensation, and the delightful softness it imparts to the complexion.We give a few of the prominent properties of the 3AÏ.BI O?A THOUSAND FIjOWEHS already well established by actual experience.\u2014 First : THIS BALM ERADICATES EVERY DEFECT OF THE COMPLEXION, and establishes in its stead beauty and .health, at the time when both, by the changes of age, or freaks of nature, or disease, have been obscured or undermined\u2014it cleanses the skin, and draws to the surface all impurities, and every species of pimples and blotches : also, removes tan, sunburns, sallowness and freckles, imparting to the skin its original purity and an unsurpassed freshness, rendering it clear, smooth and white.Second : IT PROMOTES THE GROWTH AND INCREASE OF THE HAIR, CAUSING IT TO CURL IN THE MOST NATURAL MANNER; it cleanses the head from dandruff, giving vigor, health and life to the very roots of the hair.\u2014Third : IT IS A SUPERIOR ARTICLE FOR SHA VING, BEING SUPERIOR TO ALL DESCRIPTIONS OF SOAPS, CREAMS, PASTES, &c.As a dentifrice for cleansing the TEETH, it is by far the most medicinal of any compound yet discovered, preventing decay, relieving pain, ulcers and cankers, and renders the teeth white as alabaster.For the Nursery, and for Bathing, for suffering infants, and for adults, to promote sweetness of body, cleanliness, health and strength, and to prevent disease, eruptions, &c., there is no article more suitable than this BALM.It may be used in cold or warm, hard or soft water.CTNONE GENUINE unless SIGNED by the Proprietors, FETRtDGK & CO., Manufacturers and Proprietors.WHOLESALE, AT NO.15, STATE STREET.RETAIL, AT THE CRYSTAL PALACE, 72 and 74, Washington Street, BOSTON.Price 50 cents and $1.00 per Bottle.53\u201cAny person remitting the firm, (post-paid) will receive the aiiticle by return of express ALEX.URQUHART, Great St.James Street, Montreal.August 25, 1851.\tmwfC\u2014151 CROSSE & BLACKWELL\u2019S FX&SSIiie-S & SAUCES, &.C.ORDERS for Shipment by early Fall Vessels, will be received by the Subscriber, up to SATURDAY, the 10th JULY.Priced Catalogues may be had on application ALEX.URQUHART, Medical Hall, Sole Agent for the Canadas.Montreal, June 25, 1852.\t100 THE WESTERN HOUSE, No.32, Me Gill Street, MONTREAL, BY JOHN W.HEWETT.THE Subscriber having re-leased those commodious premises, formerly known as the \u201cOttawa Hotel\u201d, begs leave to inform his friends and the public in general, that no exertion on his part will be wanting to make it comfortable for all who may favor him with their patronage.All Omnibus connected with the House, will be in attendance, on the arrival of Steamboats, and at the Railroad Stations.JOHN W.HEWETT.Montreal, May 4, 1852.\t3m\u201455 The Albion, NO.231 ST.PAUL STREET MONTREAL BY NELSON VOSBURGH.THE Subscriber having leased those commodious premises, (formerly known as FELLERS\u2019 HOTEL, and recently as RYAN\u2019S HOTEL, St.Paul Street,) begs leave to inform his friends and the public in general, that no exertions on his part will be wanting to make it comfortable for all who may favour him with their patronage.The house will be ready for the reception of visitors on and after the 1st day of May next.NELSON VOSBURGH, (Late Western House.) N.B.\u2014Superior Stabling and covered Yard connected with the premises.Montreal, April 22, 1852.\t49 Grant\u2019s Hotel, ST.HENRY STREET.BANKRUPT SALES.0N SALE\u2014 Pale and Dark COGNAC BRANDY, in hhds and qr casks, Free or in Bond, of various brands Very Old do in Bottle Bordeaux V inegar in hhds and qr casks Belmont Candles Tobacco in boxes and halves, 5\u2019s, 8\u2019s and 16's \u2014also\u2014 200 dozen superior Bottled Wines, consisting of Port, Madeira, Sherry and Clarets.C.B.RADENHURST, 10, St.Sacrament Street.Jum 28.\tJ83 FOI SALE BY THE SUBSCRIBERS\u2014 fwankay, Yroung Hyson, Gunpowder, Imperial, Souchong and Oolong Teas, in chests, half chests, boxes and catties Cavmdish, Honey Dew and Plug Tobacco, 5\u2019s, S\u2019s, 16\u2019s and 32\u2019s Doutle Refined Loaf Sugar Briglt Bastard do Lagiayra and St.Domingo Coffee Caraina Rice, in tierces Pateit Sperm Candles Clows, in matts Havatah and Principe Cigars Liveipool Soap Putt; in Bladders and Bulk PateitStamped and Common Wine Bottles T D \"obaceo Pipes Calched Magnesia Carbmate of Soda Sardhes in Oil, Isinglass \u201cMilltr\u2019s\u201d Scotch Pale Ale Wine Corks, assorted qualities Triple Clarified Bordeaux Vinegar, in hhds, tierces and qr casks Cambeton Scotch Whiskey \u201cMartdl\u2019s,\u201d \u201cHennessy\u2019s\u201d and \u201c Rizat\u2019s\u201d Pale and Dark Brandies, vintages of 1849 and 1850, in pipes, hhds and qr crsRs LEMESURIER, ROUTH & CO.July 19.\t112 FOR SALE.THE ONE TRICE SYSTEZVI ! ! ! MORISON, CAMERON & EMPEY HAVE just received direct from London, ex Cuuard Steamer 1; Niagara\u201d, 20 Cases New Summer Goods, containing\u2014 1500 Swiss and Woolverein Bonnets, Fancy & Plain, latest shapes Straw Trimmings, every width and style vVhite and Fancy Bonnet Ribbons, Flowers, &c Barege, Filled, Cashmere and Delaine Lung Shawls, all new styles from a celebrated maker All shades in Brnganzies, Brilliautines.&c Cloths, Cassimeres, Vestings, ,Xc -ALSO- The latest Patterns in Mantles direct from Paris Muslin and Lace Under Sleeves, Collars, Flouncing Spotted ,.nd Worked Muslins, &c 1 Case assorted Parasols, Jtc Sales made for Cash only.Doors close punctually at Eight o\u2019clock.MOEISON, CAMERON k EMPEY, No.202 Notre Dame Street.July 7.\t110 OILS, FISH, Ac.&c.\u2014 !- Pale Seal in bbls and tierces Cod Oil in tierces Dry Codfish, table and small size No.2 Mackerel in bbls and hf bbls 250 Hams \u2014also,\u2014 A very superior lot of DAIRY BUTTER in linnets of 28 lb.JOHN WHYTE, 10}A St.Sacrament Street July 6.\t'\t109 \"C^OR SALE by the Subscribers\u2014 JJ Liverpool Salt, Flue and Coarse Liverpool Soap, \u201cSteele\u2019s\u201d Montreal do and Fancy Soaps Imperial Stout E I Pale Ale Castor Oil in bottles Waterford Blue, in 141b bxs Lescher\u2019s Starch, in hulk and boxes Sperm, Wax, Crystalline and Composite Candles Cotton Wick Batty\u2019s Sauces, Mustard and Marmalade Copperas, Epsom Salts English Writing and Foolscap Papers Do Playing Cards and Address Cards Cassia, Ground Ginger in kegs Teas, Tobacco Pipes And other Articles.A.CUYILLIER & CO.June 28.\t102 FOR SALE.ADOIiTHUS BOURNE Has just received by the Ship \u201cANDROMACHE,\u201d Ninety Crates of Eartlicnvrare, Y/UELL ASSORTED fur the COUNTRY V > TRADE, which he offers at VERY LOW PRICES.They are all ENGLISH MANUFACTURE, and superior in pattern and quality, than any low-priced goods ever offered 4 N.B.\u2014In addition to the above, the Subscriber basa LARGE SIOCK on hand, which he received early in the Spring by the l' ST.LAW-REACE,\u201d \u201cST.A A DREW,1' and \u201cANNE\u201d all of which will be disposed of at Very Low Prices ADOLPHUS BOURNE, 120, St.Paul, and Corner St.Gabriel Street.3-____ _________ 107 CHINA, GLASS, AND EARTHEN AY ARE.WHOLESALE $ RETAIL.THE Subscriber offers for Sale, at VERY LOW PRICES, an Extensive Assortment of GILT and PLAIN KAOLIN, IRONSTONE, TABLE, TEA, BREAKFAST, and TOILET SERVICES, with a great variety of USEFUL and ORNAMENTAL GOODS.CUT AND PRESSED GLASSWARE, FRUIT DISHES, SODA WATER TUMBLERS, BUTTER COOLERS, CRUET STANDS and BOTTLES, &c.200 Crates and Hogsheads Assorted for Country Stores, which can be Sold the Package or packed to order by the ROBERT ANDERSON, 171, St.Paul Street, 97 by Dozen.June 22.FOR SALE- 320 sides SLAUGHTER LEATHER NOAD, YOUNG & CO.July 15.\tr\u2014117 For sale- 60 casks COD OIL July 15.NOAD, YOUNG & CO.r\u2014117 Province of 9 Canada.J In the Court of Bankruptcy, FOR THE DISTRICT OF MOUTRF.aL.In the Matter of WILLIAM BRADBURY\u2014 Bankrupt, and DAVID DAVIDSON, et at\u2014Assignees.HAVING seen the petition and answer of the said Assignees fyled by them in this Matter on the application of the Honorable PETER M-iGlLL, an hypothecary Creditor of said Estate ; it_ is ordered, that the Sale of the said REAL ESTATE, of the said Bankrupt, situate within that portion of the Province of Canada, heretofore called Lower Canada, which has been alreai y advertised for four months in the Canada Guieue, the Montreal Gazette, and La Minerve newspaper?, pursuant to my order, dated the Eleventh day of October, 1849, be Sold in the BANKRUPT COURT, in the COURTHOUSE, in the City ot Montreal, on FRIDAY, the SIXTH day of AUGUST next, at the hour of ELEVEN of the clock in the forenoon, and that notice of such Sale be given by two insertions in the Montreal Gazelle and La Minerve newspapers, previous to the day of such sale, and by such other advertisements and affiches as to the said Assignees may seem advisable to be given.The terms and conditions of sale to be fyled in this Court, at least two weeks previous to such sale.(Signed), CHARLES MONDELET, J.S.C.Montreal, 21st May, 1852.N.B.A description of the property referred to in the above order, is contained in advertisements, in the Canada Gazette of the 13th October 1849, Montreal Gazette of the 16th idem, and La Minerve of the 18th idem.D.DAVIDSON?, .J.YOUNG, ) Assignees.Montreal, 21st June, 1852.\tf\u201496 STEAK SOAP, CANDLE AND LARD OIL MANUFACTORY, INSPECTOR STREET, MONTREAL.THE attention of Merchants, Machinists, and the Trade generally, is invited to the following Articles, manufactured by the Subscribers, viz.: SOARS.Common, Liverpool, Pale Yellow, White, Castile, Crane\u2019s Labor Saving, Chemical Olive, Old Brown and White Windsor, Variegated, Almond, Shaving, Rypopha-gan.And a comnlete assortment of FANCYSOAPS.CANDLES.Belmont Sperm\u2014Superior to any imported.Patent Wax\u2014Economical and free from smoke or smell Patent Refined\u2014Metallic Wicks.Wax Wicks\u2014An excellent article.Tallow Candles.OILS.Improved LARD OIL of the finest, quality, and superior in many respects to either Olive or Sperm Oil.ANTI-CORROSIVE MACHINERY OIL, unequalled by any hitherto used in the Province, the cheapest and best for Railroads, Steamboats, and all kinds of Machinery.\u2014also,\u2014 Sperm, Olive, Solar Sperm, Seal, Whale, Cod, and Tanners\u2019 Oil.The facilities for manufacturing possessed by the Subscribers from recent improvements in their Machinery, c-.imbined with the newest discoveries in the process of Manufacture, enable them to offer superior advantages, both in price and quality to purchasers.JOHN MATHEWSON & SON.May 14\t64 NEW GOODS, Ex Steamer \u201cAmerica\u201d, via Boston.YTYILLIAM BENJAMIN & CO., (late Benja-* * min & Brothers) have just OPENED THREE CASES of NEW GOODS, (in seventeen days from the Manufacturers) consisting of the latest novelties in Rich Cashmere and Barege Long Scarfs ; new Muslin and Jacconet Dresses, with Mantillas and Jackets ; also, a splendid assortment of Needle Works in Chemisettes, Collars, Waistcoats, Handkerchiefs, &c.&c.June 17.\t93 Butter.THE Subscriber has made arrangements that he can be supplied weekly with a superior article of SALT BUTTER, put up expressly for Family use, in jars and small tinnets, varying from 18 to 24 tbs.\u2014also\u2014 On hand\u2014Sugar-cured Hams English and American Cheese Lochfine Herrings \u2014and\u2014 Just Received\u201410 cases of very fine flavoured PALE BRANDY, Hennessey\u2019s brand, six years old, DANL.LANIGAN, Opposite Alexander\u2019s Confectionery, Notre Dame Street.June 21.\t96 For sale\u2014 Carolina Rice, Green and Roasted Coffee Molasses, Muscovado and Crushed Sugar Currants, Primes, Nutmegs,Raisins Brandy, Whiskey, Pipes, Starch Mustard, Marsala Wine, &c.&c.Fresh Teas\u2014Twankays, Hyson, Young Hyson, Imperial, Gunpowder, and Souchong, in all kinds of packages Tobaccos, 5\u2019s, 8\u2019s, 16\u2019s, lbs, NOAD, YOUNG & CO.July 15.\tr\u2014117 to j\\0 1 I OF.THE undersigned have now REMOVED to their Stores, No.5 Little St.Joseph Street, op osite the French Cathedral, where they will continue their Summer and Fall Business.0GILVY, WOOD & CO.July ?.\t105 THE Proprietor of this long-established and well-known HOTEL, begs to remind his Old Friends (for whose past favors he begs to return his thanks,) and the Public generally, that his HOUSE is still OPEN fortheir reception.The extent of his Accommodations is greater than ever, and his zeal in the discharge of his duties to the public no whit abated.The HOUSE is Large, Commodious, well Furnished, and Comfortable ; his TABLE is supplied with the best that the Market affords ; and his STABLES are as good as any in the city CARRIAGES are always in attendanee to CONVEY Passengers to and from the different Railway Stations and Steamboat Landings.Montreal, June 14,1852.\tDC 4m mwf\u201490 CARD.STARK, HILL.AJVD COMPANY, DEBENTURE AND GENERAL CANADIEN FORWARDING AND Commisson Merchants.C.A.STARK,) H.A.HILL, > Ogdensburgh, N.Y.E.SEARS.) Advances made on consignments to Messrs.HILL, SEARS & CO.Boston ; and ALFRED HILL & CO., Liverpool and London.Feb.19.\t22 NOTICE.THE undersigned respectfully inform their friends and the public, that they have commenced business as GENERAL and COMMISSION MERCHANTS, in Goods of all descriptions, British, American and Colonial.Their financial arrangements enable them to make ADVANCES on Consignments, on liberal terms.BRADBURY & CO.Office, No.155 Notre Dame Street.Montreal, June i9, 1852.\t95 CHARLES ST0DDER, Commission Meicliant, 75, Kilby Street, BOSTON, AGENT for the ENAMELLED car linings, CAR DUCK.GUTTA PERCHA PIPE, ffic.&c., offers his services to Canada Merchants to purchase to order, all kinds of New England Manufactures and FOREIGN GOODS, in large or small quantities.Having twenty years experience, and an extensive acquaintance with Manufacturers and Importers, correspondents may rely upon his executing orders at the lowest market prices, from first hands.Foreign Goods purchased in Bond, free of U.S.duties.Particular attention given to the purchase of Railroad Equipment and Car Materials.REFERS TO McLean & Wright, Montreal.McLean, Brainard & Co., Ogdensburgh.Joseph Vila, Boston.A.E.Swasey, Supt.T.R.R., Taunton, Ms.May 4, 1852.\t3m wf\u201455 Champagne, &c.TUST RECEIVED\u2014A fresh supply of J \u201c BOUZY\u201d, (Dinet, Peuvrel A Fils) \u201c GRAND VIN D'AY\u201d same house.For Sale in bond or duty paid.\u2014also\u2014 A complete assortment of WINES, comprising BURGUNDY, BORDEAUX, RHINE and MOSELLE, PORT, SHERRY, MADEIRA, &c.\t&c.&c.G.LaMOTHE, No.11 St.Frs.Xavier Street.June 23.\t98 JPOR SALE\u2014 Hhds \u201c DeKuyper\u2019s\u201d Gin London and Dublin Porter, pints and quarts MORRIS BROTHERS, 13 St.Sacrament Street.July 7.\t110 H7 GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES OF GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, AT 217 WASHINGTON STREET, Boston.THE subscriber wishing to relinquish business, offers the entire stock of Goods consisting of Gold and Silver Watches, all kinds of Gold Jewelry\u2014such as Gold Guard, Fob and Vest Chains, Gold Pencils, Pins, Rings, Ear-rings, Bracelets, Lockets,&c.; fine Silver Spoons and Forks, Plated Cake Baskets, Castors, Tea Sets, Tea Trays, and a variety of Fancy Goods usually kept in a fashionable Jewelry Store, at a great reduction in prices, until August 1st, unless previously disposed of at private sale.The Watches were imported expressly for the regular trade, and Will be warrented good time-keepers.E.CUTLER.April 27.____ SraTf\u201451 WILLIAM J.NEWTON, Custom House Broker, Shipping and Forwarding Agent, Q,UJEB JE C.Transhipment of Goods in transit for Montreal or any Western Port, attended to at moderate chirges.M\u201c.v 13.______ mwf\u201462 FOB SAFE, TN STORE\u2014 L BAR IRON, COMMON ENGLISH AND SCOTCH ; REFINED, ROLLED AND HAMMERED \u201cBANKS'\u201d AND OTHER ENGLISH MAKES ; Swedes ; Common and Refined half round and oval ; \u201c Bradley\u2019s\u201d Charcoal Nail Rods; Hoop and Band Hoop Iron ; Common R G and Russian Sheet do ; Cast, Blister, Shear k Spring Steel ; Canada Plates, Tin Plates, Anvils, Vices, Coil, Trace, Log and Cow Chains ; Cut, Rose, Clasp, Pressed, Horse and Clout Nails ; Spades and Shovels ; Frying Pans : Wire ; Potash Kettles and Coolers ; Sugar Kettles ; Bake Pans Bellied Pots; Sad Irons; Cart and Waggon Boxes ; Plough Castings ; Plough Moulds and Points; Scythes, Sickles and Hooks, Simmon\u2019s and other makes Chopping Axes, Mill, Circular and Crosscut Saws, Sheet and Cake Zinc, Sheet, Bar and Pig Lead, Bar and Block Tin, Shot, Powder, English and German Window Glass Puttv, Cordage, Glue, Borax, Curled Hair and Hair Seating, Tin Foil, Shoe Threads and Twines.\u2014also,\u2014 Ames\u2019 Shovels, Blasting Powder, and Safety Fuse, Octagon Cast Steel, and all the other material used by Railroad Contractors.\u2014and,\u2014 Every description of GERMAN HARDWARE.JOHN HENRY EVANS, May 11.\t61 HATS- Extra Light Ventilating Gossamer Satin Hats.THE Subscriber has just received from London, his usual supply of ELLWOOD & SON\u2019S celebrated VELVET NAPP\u2019D SATIN HATS.GEO.McIVER, 135, Notre Dame Street.Montreal, May 25, 1852.\t_______13 THE Subscribers having erected Works on the Lachine Canal, near St.Gabriel Locks, for the manufacture of AXES and other heavy HEAVY HARDWARE GOODS, are now prepared to supply the 'Trade with a superior quality of warranted Cast Steel, Felling and Scoring AXES, put up in a neat and substantial manner, and of any size required.The various patterns of Axes used in the coun-'try, or made in the United States, can be supplied, and the utmost care will be taken that the quality he such, as to insure satisfaction.SCOTT BROTHERS, St.Gabriel Locks, Lachine Canal.SEJ* Our Manufactory not being conveniently situated to the Business parts of the City, we shall keep a supply of our Goods with Messrs.LeMESURIER, ROUTH & CO., who will effect Sales and take orders on our account.Januaty 17.\tD Cm\u20148 MONTREAL FOUNDRY AND CITY WORKS.THE CASTING and MACHINE BUSINESS usually carried on in the above-named Works, will be CONTINUED.ORDERS for STOVES, AXES and WEIGHING MACHINES are solicited ; they will be well and promptly executed, from the best material ORDERS from Merchants and Mechanics generally, for CAS1-INGS, STOVES, or MACHINES, madefrom their own patterns, will be executed at moderate prices, and their rights of pattern preserved.FANCY CASTING will be neatly done, and Patterns made to order for Customers.WILLIAM RODDEN, Proprietor, William Street, near end of College W all.May 28.\t 16 CLOTHING FOB THE SUMMEB.LAVENDER, Merchant Tailor and General Outfitter, 108, NOTRE DAME STREET, AS JUST RECEIVED his SUMMER GOODS, comprising a well-assorted Stock of CLOTHS, VESTINGS, TROUSER STUFFS, 6tc., of the Best Quality and very Latest Styles, which he will make-up in the best manner, at the lowest prices for Gash.ON HAND: Ready-Made Shooting Coats, Chesterfields, Vests, and a variety of Summer Coats, Cheap for Cash.May 17.\t66 NEW GROCERIES AND American Dry Goods.rpHE undersigned hereby give notice that he J.has REMOVED to those extensive Premises in St.Paul Street, lately occupied by MEAD, BROTHERS k Co., where he will keep a large and varied assortment of GROCERIES of every description, ns well as an extensive assortment of American Manufactured DRY GOODS, which will be Sold to the Trade at low prices.LOUIS MARCHAND.May 1.\t53 JpOR SALE Barrels Muscovado Sugar Hyson and Twankay Teas MORRIS BROTHERS.July 7.\tno For sale Si Soft Shell Almonds in bales Mustard, Pickles and Sauces MORRIS BROTHERS.July 7.\tno HAIBY BFTTEB.THE Subscriber has received a small lot of the SUPERIOR DAIRY BUTTER, made at the Model Farm,.put up in crocks weighing from 15 to 20 lbs.For Sale by T\tNEIL Jl'INTOSH.June Jl,\t83 Blind and placer5laths FENCE BOARDS, 5, 3, 1 For Sale by COLIN CAMPBELL, Brewster\u2019s Basin.July 10.113 GLENFIELD PATENT STARCH.Now Used in the Royal Laundry.THE Subscriber begs respectfully to call the attention of Merchants to the \u201c GLENFIELD PATENT DOUBLE-REFINED POWDER STARCH\u201d, the superiority of which, over every other article of the kind, is now fully proved by the great and increasing demand.Sole Agent for Canada, ALEXANDER WALKER, 226^2, St.Paul Street.July 7.\t'\t3m\u2014110 FOR SALE- 10 hhds BRANDY, (Paleand Brown) \u201cHennessey\u2019s\u201d 5 do HOLLANDS GIN, \u201cPino Apple\u201d brand \u2014also,\u2014 60 qr casks PORT WINE 10 do MADEIRA RYAN, BROTHERS & CO.July 2.\t106 THIS highly celebrated CHAMPAGNE, direct from the Proprietors.\u2014also,\u2014 Hennessy\u2019s and Martell\u2019s BRANDIES of old Vintages\u2014for sale by THOS.KAY & CO.St.Eloi Street.June 16.\t92 FOR Sale by the Subscriber\u2014 750 boxes G S GLASS, 1)6 x 3)6, up to 40 x H.TRUMAN, UNITED STATES & CANADIAN Shipping, Foiwarding, Cv.btom-Eouse, AND General Commission A^ent, ROUSE S ?02X£T, R.V.REPJEltJKN OES.Otis Kimball, Eiq., 10S State Street, Boston.Seymour, Rice it Co., Boston.Hill, Sears & Co., Boston.C.Seymour, Esq, Montreal.A.Guudlack, E.-q, Montreal.J.S.Maynard, E^q, 33, Coentis Slip, N.York.R.J.Cummings, Esq., 167, Broad wav, do.M.Canfield.Esq., Coentis Slip, N.York.A D.Ladd, Esq., 29, Coentis Slip, New York.Stark, Hill & Co., Ogdensburgh, N.Y.Messrs.Travis & Co., Whitehall.Bascom, Vaughan & Co., Whitehall.Messrs.J.C Peirce & Son.St.Johns.G.V.Hoyle, Esq, Rouse\u2019s Poini.Many of the inconveniences and delays^ at this Port, hitherto experienced by Canadian Importers of Merchandise from,, and^ exporters of Produce to the United Slates, wilTbe obviated by arrangements made by this Ag;ncy, which will ensure the safe and speedy transportation of property at all seasons of the year, at uniform and moderate charges.U31* Will attend personally to Debenture and Custom-House Business, pay duties and freight on Property consigned to my care.July 5.\t108 H.THE I.ATE EIRE! PEACOCK, No.963-2 Notre Dame Street, takes this opportunity of informing his friends and the sufferers by the late fire that he has a large Stock of HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, viz : Toilet and Plain Looking Glasses, Clocks of every description, Silver Sp.oons and Forks, with a general assortment of Electro Plate and German Silver do, Tea Setts of every description, Roger\u2019s best Knives and Forks, Plate and Bread Baskets, Knife Boxes, Dish Covers, Candlesticks, Cruet Stands,&C.&c.\u2014also\u2014 The usual assortment of Gold and Silver Watches, Jewellery, and Fancy Goods.Watches, Clocks and Jewellery repaired and cleaned with neatness and at moderate charges.H.PEACOCK, 963-2 Notre Dame Street.July 13.\t115 THE Subscriber begs to acknowledge his thanks to the inhabitants of Montreal and vicinity, for their liberal patronage since his succession to Mr.Rexford\u2019s business, and trusts, from strict and personal attention, to continue to merit that share of public encouragement.He would also respectfully intimate that he is now reetiv-ing a general supply of GENUINE DRUGS and CHEMICALS, PERFUMERY, SCENTED SOAPS, TOOTH and NAIL BRUSHES, COMBS, &c.&c.Prescriptions carefully dispensed.All Preparations in Pharmacy according to the London Pharmacopae.Agent for Merchant's celebrated GARGLING OIL.R.BIRKS, 29, McGill Street.July 8.\tIll BISHOP\u2019S COLLEGE, LENNOXYILLE.TWO EXHIBITIONS, each of £30 Cv.PER ANNUM, from the S.P G, and ONE of £12 10s., given by Subscription of the \u201cAlumni Emeriti\u201d of the College, for Divinity Students, will be awarded by Examination in September next.The Exhibitions are open to competitors between the ages of 11 and 25, who will be required to present Certificates of age, of baptism and confirmation, and of character and religious deportment ; they must also be communicants of the Church.These Exhibitions are tenable for four years ; and being given for such Theological Students as have not the command of sufficient means to provide for their course of preparation for Holy* Orders, they will not be open to the competition of any candidates who are differently circumstanced ; nor yet of any who will not hé ready to afford every reasonable pledge and security for their perseverance in the object for which the assistance is given.Candidates must send in their Certificates to the Bishop of Quebec or Montreal, respectively, on or before August \\t)th.The EXAMINATION will be held at Bishop\u2019s College, on the 1st, 2nd and 3rd days of SEPTEMBER.The following is the list of subjects for examination :\u2014 Latin: Virgil's Eclogues; Terence\u2019s An Iria.Greek : Homer\u2019s Odyssey, 13 1-2-3.Composition : English and Latin Prose.Greek Testament : Gospel of St.Mark.Old Testament, generally, (historically and geographically.Mathematics: Euclid, 13.1-2-3.Algebra: up to Simple Equations.Arithmetic : V ulgar Fractions and Decimals.30 July 1.THOS.WILLIAMS, 10 St.Sacrament Street.105 IPOR Sale by the Subscriber\u2014 20 hhds Raw Linseed Oil 40 do aud qr casks Boiled do THOS.WILLIAMS, 10 St.Sacrament Street.105 July 1.JpOR Sale by the Subscriber\u2014 25 qr casks Olive Oil 20 cases E I Castor Oil THOS.WILLIAMS, 10 St.Sacrament Street, July I.\t105 -200 tons Gartsherrie No.1.THEODORE HART, 65 piG IRON-May 15.SODA ASH, ST.ROLLOX :\u2014120 casks Just Received.For Sale by U.D.WATHUN.May 12.\t62 pOR SALE\u2014 Fine, Superfine, and Extra SuperfineFLOUR Superior Pastry Flour in half barrels for families \u2014also\u2014 100 barrels OATMEAL.JANES & OLIVER.July 28.\t127 JOSEPH N.THOMSON^ TAILOR, 33}£ Great Saint James Street, HAS received his usual SPRING SUPPLY of GOODS, per \u201cCity of Hamilton\u201d.Montreal, May 8.1852.BOILERPLATES, 3-16,1-4, 5-16, 3-8, and 1-2 Inch Sheet Iron, 1,000 bdls, assorted, No 15 to 27 Band and Hoop Iron Canada Plates PHILIP HOLLAND.May 24.\t72 COPPER SHEATHING, for Sale by THEODORE HART.May 15.\t65 -50 tons best Tarred, for Sale.THEODORE HART.65 QORD AGE- SI ay 15.59 100 TONS NAIF HOOFS AJM> SHEETS, For Sale by\t\u201e PHILIP HOLLAND.May 25.\t13 A Ash-Leaved Kidney Potatoes, few bushels of this SUPERIOR EARLY SORT for SEED.WILLIAM LYMAN & CO, Ma; 12.\tM JOSEPH N.THOMSON, TAILOR, HAS REMOVED from No.25 to No.33'^, Great St.James Street, Second House (West) from the Methodist Church.Montreal, April 28.\t51 FOR Sale by the Subscriber\u2014 20 hf barrels Syrup and Liquor Coloring 100 kegs Fresh Malaga Raisins THOS.WILLIAMS, 10 St.Sacrament Street.July L\t105 CORDAGE\u201446 bales, assorted, for Sale by G.D.WATSON.May 28.\t7g Labor Saving Soap, RECEIVING and for Sale\u2014Barton & Stick-ney's (late Barton & Fenn) very Superior and Celebrated SOAP.JOHN M.GILBERT, 31 St.Francois Xavier Street, Agent for Canada.June 15.\tpi RAW AND BOILED Linseed Oil, Tn quarter casks and hogsheads.Genuine White Paint.In firkins and kegs.WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.ramsay & Mcarthur.McGill Street, Montreal.March 20.\t35 ZINC\u201420 casks for Sale by THEODORE HART.Ma; 15.\teg Spring Importations.THE Subscribers are now receiving from Britain, ex \u201c Ottawa,\u201d \u201c Caledonia,\u2019\u2019 \u201c Actæon\u201d, \u201cGreat Britain.\" \u201cCity of Hamilton,\u201d &c., Ac., their usual assortment of STAPLE and FANCY DRY GOODS.\u2014Also, from the American Markets,\u2014 A Large and well-assorted STOCK of BROWN SHEETINGS, \u201cAtlantic,\u201d \u201cAppleton\u201d, and \u201c Amaskeag,\u201d brands.Cotton Yarn Bleached Shirtings Shirting Stripes Ticks Kentucky Jeans Fancy Cassimeres Satinets, &e., Ac.All of which will be offered on reasonable terms.GTLMOUR A CO., 9 St.Sacrament Street.May 10.\t60 RENCH A ENGLISH VALUABLE BOOKS for Sale by the Subscribers\u2014 Biogrphie Universelle Ancienne et Moderne, 52 vols, bound in 26, £18 15s D\u2019Herbelot\u2019s Bibliothèque Orientale, ou Diction-nare Universale, 4 vols, £8 2s 6d Essais De Montaigne, 5 vols, £2 15 Rollin\u2019s Belles Lettres, 2 vols, 4to, 40s Thiers\u2019 Histoire de la Revolution Française 2 vols, 30s Brunet's Manuel du Libraire, 4 vols, 35s Histoire de Fiance, par M M Veliy, Yillaret et Garnier, 12 vols, 4to 36s Marsden\u2019s History of Summatria, illustrated, 30s Norlhcroft\u2019s Parliamentary Chronicle, 3 vols, 8 vo, 30s London Catalogue of Books published from 1814 to 1846, with their size, price and publishers name, 20s Biographica Dramatica, or a Companion to the Play House, by David Erskine Baker, 2 vols, 12s dd D.A J.SADLIER A CO., Corner of Notre Dame and St.Francois Xavier Streets.June 26^______________________ 101 Railroad iron for sale- 360 Tons Flanged T Rails, daily expected per \u201c Recovery\u201d, from Newport.Could be delivered at Quebec, Montreal, or any port in Canada West, if so arranged oefove ship\u2019s arrival.A poly to\tPHILIP HOLLAND.M»| 3L\t72 - Michaelmas term, (the beginning of the 8th year of tlie Institution), commences ou SEPT.4th; on which day the Examination of other Candidates for admission will take place.Gentlemen wishing to enter, are requested to notify the Principal.Bishop\u2019s College, July 6, 1852.\t116 Protection from Lightning.THE Subscribers are now prepared to supply the People of Canada with SPROTT\u2019S PATENT LIGHTNING CONDUCTOR.We have those manfactured by L.Wuicox A Co., Hartford, Ct., and also of our own manufacture, St.Johns, C.E.We have Certificates from Prof.Silhunan, Yale College, Sillaman, Jan., near Louisville, and other scientific gentlemen in the Uujted States and Canada.These Conductors are made of annealed iron, connected by brass joints, zinc protectors, and insulated by glass tubes, surmounted by a brilliant metallic point, with silver-plated magnetic needles at the base.A Model of this Rod may be seen at the City Surveyor\u2019s Office, City Hall.AGENTS WANTED for the Sale of this Rod.Address, A A W.SKEELS, St.Johns, C.E.A.ROUNDS, , General Agent.May 6.\t57 EDWD.LAMONTAGNE, 47 Stone Street, NEW YORK, HAVING just been appointed SOLE AGENT for this Continent of the house LONGUET, PERE ET FILS' COGNAC, is now prepared to receive and execute orders for BRANDIES of different Vintages, equal to those of the must favorably known marks; to be shipped direct from Charente for Montreal and Quebec.The following Brands of CHAMPAGNE, from the house DINET, PEUVREL ET FILS, Avize, are also regularly received by the semi-monthly line of packets from Havre, viz : \u201cBOUZY\u201d\u2014The sale of which Wine in Canada has been exclusively confided to Mr.G.Lamothe, St.François Xavier Street.SÏLLERY-MOUSSEUX, GRAND VIN D'AY, VERZENAY.\u2014ALSO\u2014 CLARETS, BURGUNDIES, Havana and Principe CIGARS retained iu Bond, expressly for the Canadian Market.July 13.\t115 NOTICE.THE undersigned, beg leave to inform their friends and the public generally, that they have opened that New Store, No.27 McGill Street, nearly opposite St.Maurice Street, where they have a large and well selected Stock of FRESH GROCERIES, consisting in part of:\u2014 100 Pipes, Hhds, Casks and Octaves 750 Cases aud Baskets of the finest Wines 350 Packages of Teas, comprising every variety, including the favorite Houqua Mixtures 150 Sacks Finest Roasted and Green Coffees 25 Hhds and Tierces Sugars \u2014also\u2014 Fresh Fruits, Spices, Pickles.Sauces, Chocolates, Oils, Fish, Salt, Flour ; and in short, every article usually found in establishments of the kind.\u2014and,\u2014 A fine assorted Stock for Country Merchants W.PATTON A Co.Remember No.27 McGill Street, nearly opposite St.Maurice Street.Feb.10.\t18 Storage TN the FIRST-CLASS STORE, No.60, Commis* A sioners' Street.OR, THREE UPPER STORIES TO LET, with con* venient access.A.GUNDLACK, No.60, Coiamissionefs\u2019 Street.85 Just 8. / ryr ( / c/fcu\tI ^\t^\u2022 / MONTREAL HERALü/FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1852.jnL COPIES OF THE DAILY HERALD FOB SALE AT MESSRS.WEIR & DUNN\u2019S, Great St.James Street.TO CORRESPONDENTS.S3*TAKE NOTICE.\u2014We take no letters out of the Post Office unless they are prb-paid.DIOGRAM OF THE FIRE.NEW WORKS.Book.of British Sosos: J.B.Barrett, Agent, Noire Dame Street.Contents, of part 18\t\u201c Oh ! would I were but that sweet Linnet\u201d ; 11 When wild wars deti\u2019dly blast was blown\u201d; \u201cNow bar the door\u201d, (fee* &c.Alt singers should subscribe to this work, each song is illustrated with a superb \"wood engraving.Persons who were unable to procure copies of the \u201c Extra Herald,\u201d containing the Plan of the late Fire may have copies of our Weekly Edition, which will contain the Plan, on Saturday Morning, at the Stores of R.Chalmers & Co., and Weir & Dunn\u2019s, Great St.James\u2019 Street, and at the \u201c Herald Office.\u201d RS,WOS FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 23, 1852.THE WEEKLY HERALD FOR Europe, tlie United States and tlie Country WILL BE ISSUESD ON SATURDAY MORNING, AT EIGHT O\u2019CLOCK.To be had at R.Chalmers & Co.\u2019s, and at onr Office ; also, at the Warehouse of Weir & Dunn, Great St.James Street.Colonial Representation in the Imperial Parliament.\u2014Our Canadian \u201c Transcript of the British constitution \u201d, was, apparently, ¦ intended, History of the United States : J.B.Barrett, Agent, Montreal.Part 8 of this work has been received\u2014we are happy to hear that its subscription list is rapidly increasing in this city.The Cyclopedia of Useful Arts : J.B.Bar-rett.Montreal.This is a work which all our Mechanics, Manufacturers and Engineers should possess.It is edited by Charles Tomlinson, with great ability.Mr.B.Dawson, has received the July number of Graham\u2019s Magazine and Godey's.The Weather.\u2014Yesterday, at noon, the Thermometer stood in the shade, at 94 °.The steamer Rowland Hill leaves this evening, at 6 o\u2019clock, for Quebec and Cacouna, being an extra trip.Families intending to visit Murray Bay, River d^Loup, and other celebrated and fashionable salt watering places, should take this opportunity, as on the excursion to the Saguenay; on Monday evening, the steamer may be crowded.It will be seen that she leaves Quebec on Sunday evening, to return to Montreal.COERESPOHDEXCE.For nothing else, but to be mended ; and, among other proposed tinkerings, we find several of our contemporaries edifying their read *rs with réchauffées of old Adam Smith\u2019s pana' cea for Colonial and Mother-Country political antagonism, by admitting the colonies as partners, and giving them a proportionate voice in the national legislature.We need not repeat the countless objections to any such scheme\u2014the insurmountable obstacles in the way of carrying it out\u2014, but the following suggestion of our friend of the Transcript, we most heartily concur in, and we should be glad to see the matter taken-up and discussed, during the approaching session of the legislature.Our contemporary, after stating that, \u201c the more the scheme (representation in the Imperial Parliament) is looked into, the more it seems to us impracticable \u201d, adds There was a time when Governors governed ; now the universally admitted rule is this, that the Governor does not govern, but is himself governed.He is not entitled to protect even his own personal honour.He may promise this today which the plea of altered circumstances may allow him to refuse to-morrow.Let us have an elective governor.He will be our most efficient parliamentary agent.His despatches will command some authority.He will be sure to represent the public opinion of the colony ; and that representation will be, of all others, the most efficient.To the Editor of the Montreal Herald.Sir,\u2014In your report of the proceedings of the Relief Committee of yesterday, ! notice the following statement :\u2014\u201c Arrangements have been made with Messrs.Frothingham and Workman, for the supply, at wholesale prices, of such mechanics\u2019 tools as may be needful, to furnish to journeymen carpenters, shoemakers and others, as may have lost them during the late conflagration the means of resuming their different occupations.\u201d Without intending to cast any blame upon any one who has entered into this arrangement (no doubt with the best intentions), allow me to suggest the propriely of substituting the following plan, viz :\u2014First ascertaining the amount necessary to furnish each mechanic with the tools he may require, and then give them a general order for such amount in tools, which will enable the bearer to procure the tools where he can find them to the best advantage, and such as may bo best adapted to his employment, without confining their choice to any one store.Yours, &c., A Subscriber to the Relief Fund.Montreal, July 22, 1852.The Speakership.\u2014The following very pawky remarks, are from Mr.Beattie\u2019s (\u201c Nothing like leather,\u201d) Toronto Leader :\u2014 The opinion has been expressed that, all things considered, the choice could not fall on a more fitting person than ex-Solicitor General Macdonald.His qualifications for the post are not to be disputed.His position moreover has been regarded as entitling him to the dignity.At the formation of the present Cabinet he was offered a bureau; but not being a mere office seeker, ho declined from, we believe, professional reasons.He has since been unanimously returned to Parliament, and has doubtless assisted, by contributing to the return of others, to augment that reform majority in whose gift the Speakership lies.Personally he is one of the least obnoxious men in either party ; indeed of personal enemies he may be said to have none.\u2014Of course we cannot pretend to know Mr.Macdonald\u2019s feelings on the subject; but this wo do think, should it be apparent that he is the choice of the Reform party\u2014a term synonymous with that of majority \u2014it will be his duty not to decline to serve his country in that capacity.O.K.\u2014The ministry scarcely deserve it at his hands ; but, as their pawky ally says, \u201c all things considered,\u201d our good friend Sandfield (one of the best natured fellows in the world), we think it probable, returning good for evil, will not \u201cdecline to serve his country in that capacity.\u201d Rebuilding on Old Lines.\u2014Our attention has been directed to the fact, that some proprietors in St.Mary Street, are already beginning to build upon the old lines.A by-law was past by the Council the other day to prevent any premises from being rebuilt except upon lines furnished by the Surveyor.We do not know whether it is thought impracticable to take advantage of the present opportunity to widen this important Street ; if not no time shorild be lost, in determining what is to be done and adhering to the rule laid down.The following, accompanying the handsome donation of £25 has been handed to us for publication :\u2014 S New York & Boston, ( July 15, 1852.Messrs.Frothingham A Workman, Montreal.Gentlemen,\u2014Will you please do us the favour to appropriate the inclosed one hundred dollars towards the unfortunate sufferers by the late conflagration in your city.We are, dear Sir, Your most obdt.servants, Naylor & Co.The Hartford Times states that the losses of the Insurance Companies of that city .by the late fire in Montreal are overrated in the Montreal papers.The loss of the Ætna Company, as reported by itself, are $58,000 ; of the Protection Insurance, $10,600 ; and of the Hartford Insurance, $3000.\u2014 The monthly receipts of the first named company from premiums, &c., are stated by the Times at $80,000.Aid to the Sufferers.\u2014We think most of our readers will approve of \u201cA Subscriber to the Relief Fund\u2019s \u201d suggestion in another column.In our yesterday's accnnnt of the proceedings of the Relief Committee, for \u201cJohn A.Radian, Esq., New York, £10,\u201d read John A.F.Radian, Esq., New York, £15.The Following of Christ, by Thos.A.Kem-pis : Sadlier.\u2014This is a little work of devotion, which, as far as we have seen at a glance, contains matter that would be thought highly of by all Christians, Protestant or Catholic.It is, however, a Catholic work, approved by the Primate of Ireland and Archbishop Hughes, and may, probably, in some points, contain doctrinal precepts which would be less appropriate for those not be-.longing to the Catholic Chureh, than the merely practical and devotional portions which we have perused.Essay on the Registry Laws, by John Bonner, Esq.\u2014We have been favored with a copy of this work which we cordially recommend to every man of business or owner of property.\u2014 The knowledge it contains is invaluable to them though we advise none to be their own lawyers\u2019 even with its assistance.The American Celt.\u2014This Journal which attained a considerable circulation, as an Irish and Catholic organ, has been removed from Boston to Buffalo, where it is expected to take the lead in the West in the same line, which it chalked out for itself at Boston.Mr.Sadlier.is the Agent and will receive subscriptions or advertizements- City Police.\u2014Joseph Beaudry was, on Wednesday last, committed for trial, under the warrant of Wm.Ermatinger, Esq., for stealing out of tha dwelling house of Théophile Hurtubise, a farmer residing at Cote des Neiges $105 in gold coin, on the night of the Sth instant.George White, was yesterday committed for trial under the warrant of Wm.Ermatinger, Esq., J.P., for stealing on the same day, in the shop of Thomas Pelton, St Paul Street, one pair of troupers, valued at 20s.To the Editor of the Montreal Herald.Sir,\u2014In your notice, in this morning\u2019s paper, of the fire discovered in our gateway, you say that \u201c there was a great deal of turpentine in the loft above, and in the cellar beneath\u201d.There was but one barrel of spirits of turpentine on the whole premises.1 must also correct another error.\u2014 Mr.Anthony Kerry, on going to bed, saw a light under the gateway, he immediately called another person and they had thrown several buckets of water (which are kept in readiness on the premises) on the fire before Mr.Kirkup\u2019s people, who had been alarmed by the Policeman, arrived at the spot.I mean not to detract from the merits of the Police Serjeant who deserves every praise for his vigilance but simply to state a fact.John Carter.Montreal, July 22, 1852.TO THE FREE AND INDEPENDENT ELECTORS OF THE COUNTY OF TWO MOUN TAINS.Gentlemen,\u2014Many of the most respectable and influential electors of your County, of various origins, addressed me in writing long before well as on the eve of the late election, to induce me to accept the honor of the candidature to represent you in Parliament.I invariably replied to them, that I begged they would excuse me, and lose no time in selecting some other, more competent than T, for the honorable charge.Several of the electors took the trouble of visiting me personally, to urge upon me the acceptance of the candidature, promising their most energetic efforts to secure its success.'To all I replied that I must entreat them to desist ; that the grief and mourning inflicted .by Death upon my family, had borne me down with premature age, more even than all my past toils and troubles.That the sudden change from a sedentary, studious life, to the laborious activity necessary for clearing land and building, which I had undertaken, had weakened my health and necessitated tranquility and repose\u2014that after fifty long years, passed in all the agitations of public lite, more difficult and painful in \u2019Canada than in any other county, on account of its unfortunate exceptional condition as.a.colony\u2019, of its admixture of races, laws, modes of education, and early prejudices too often mutually hostile, I craved a few days of quiet and retreat\u2014of that life passed in the family and in study, which I had always preferred to the excitement of electoral and Parliamentary struggles.In my season of vigour I had sacrificed my tastes as a private man to my duties as a public man, by submitting to the desires of my fellow-citizens in the country, and of my colleagues in Parliament, who, during long.years, applauded my ardent demands on England for equal justice to all Canadians by birth or adoption\u2014equal justice for all origins and creeds\u2014the extension of elective institutions, if not adapted to the social condition of England, at least adapted to that of Canada, the neighbour of the United States of Canada, in a position to see, understand, and love all that their system of legislative and executive powers, state and federal, has developed in the way of morality, public spirit, general education, industry, happiness, and success in all pursuits.The time appeared to me to have come, when the choice of a liberal and devoted young man would be probably more useful to the electors, and certainly more agreeable to me, especially as the general elections have not given to the progressive party any preponderance sufficiently decisive to make me desire to enter the Legislative Assembly.All these reasons ,are good and true after, as they were before my election.In spite of these sincere protestations on my part, you have judged that 1 ought still to aid in preventing the progress of evil, and promoting that of good.With too feeble a hope of success to go with pleasure to the post that you assign meT shall yet endeavor to see if we have anything better to hope from the present Parliament than\u2019from the last.In the latter, the dominant party appeared to believe that its mission was limited to the subaltern and easy part of saying, we to-day enthrone the men in whom we ffiive confidence, with the engagement to examinejnd sustain inflexibly all their decisjqns during a period of four years.\u2022/ Stranger to a great deal of what passed in my absence from the country, I voted for this ministry, saving, however, my independence, andwish-in\u2019g to be able to vote-with them for four years, if in practice, they had been as liberal as they were in their noisy professions; and foreseeing the possibility that I might have to vote against them in four days-, it any .measure of the self-styled liberals appeared to me to be illiberal.\u2014 Their measures often appeared to me to be illiberal, and I voted against them.The last ministry was retrograde, ultra-conservative ; prodigal of the,, public purse ; active in increasing the centralization of power, and the prerogatives of the Grown, because it believed itself in a position to make them profitable to it and to its complacent flatterers.It was the clumsy, but fiery\u2019 persecutor of all opposition, however moderate, whether in Parliament, in the press, or in the public, because some of its members had participated in the agitations of 1837, and because those who had been their antagonists could remind them that they had not always had for England words so gracious, honied and leavened with gratitude, as those they now uttered, since the rapid changes of events had made them Attornies General.indispensible advisers of the Governor and his friends of to-day, instead of his enemies of yesterday.Pin scratches and small raps, which strong men would have allowed to pass unheeded, threw them into paroxysms of exaggerated professions of loyalty, ridiculous from the first in their mouths, and which became crimiminal, when they proceeded to numerous and absurd deprivations in the militia and magistracy of those who had disarmed them in 1837, as well as of many of their own friends, who had remained faithful to principles once common to all.Was it the Governor who demanded this immense holocaust on the altar of their budding loyalty, already\u2019 so extreme the day after its birth ?In this case he w\u2019ould have been faulty, but more excusable than they ; fori newly come from Eurooe, he might not have known how much similar excesses committed in this country had left the citizens struck at, more respected, and influential afterwdrds, than they were before their destitution.Happily this riiinistry has fallen, and is interred without the possibility of resuscitation.It has engraved its condemnation in its indigested enactments, augmenting largely the duties, augmenting still more the ministerial patronage hy many new and useless commissions, expensive and inquisitorial to excess, like that which you have lately\u2019 seen figuring among yourselves.Oh.you who have suffered so much pillage and burning, during the civil war, is it not too evident that the commissioners, these grand friends of the ministers, have been paid largely in ready money, while you, the small, friends of the ministry\u2019, are to be paid meagrely .enough, and that only after twenty years.Thia.ministry lias engraved its condemnation in its distant pilgrimages from oily to city, at ihe-orders of the mob ; in the cowardly persecutions of the signers of the annexation .address,, which matizingin a powerless, but verbose ^proclamation, those who had burned the Parliament House and pursued the Governor General with stones.These lessons ought not to be lost on their successors.In the new ministry, though there remains enough of the old leaven to excite alarm, there are some men of progress who may give occasion to hope for a better future, if they are judiciously and not servilely supported and encouraged.After the ealamities of 1837, it was but too natural that discouragement should for a time take possession of the greater part of the citizens especially during the duration of the exceptional government of the Court Martials and Special Councils\u2014that public life should be given up by many weak and unenlightened individuals, and should be continued only by those who ceased not to love their country before all, and to whom their knowledge had taught this article of political faith, that absolute and arbitrary power always intoxicates those who exercise it, whether confided by commissions to a Sydenham or a Durham, or granted still more surely for four years to a ministry as it was during the last Parliament according to the irrational doctrine then adopted, viz : \u201c that it is necessary to adopt one party or other, always to sustain your own and keep it up during this Parliament : if we are wrong our successors will do better.\u201d The judge who should ascend the tribunal with such sentiments, would be a prevaricator of justice, the scourge of his country; equally so are representatives, judges with a jurisdiction more extensive and more responsible, who avow such pernicious principles, or who, without avowing them, have agreed to act as if they had signed them.This 1 saw and deplored.The return to a Parliamentary regime was effected by an avowed and shameless corrapter, who revealed his turpitudes, his purchases of votes by promises of lucrative places, by violence at elections, and by intimidation in Parliament, and who wrote that if his successors followed his practices and manoeuvres their success would be as great as his own.Since the fatal reunion of the Provinces, the artifice, named art, and the beauty of responsible government, has consisted in,having two parties, nearly in equilibrium, whose richly salaried chiefs, when they carried by assault their places, were bound by every possible sacrifice of patronage to maintain themselves in power, while the chiefs of a systematic and perpetual opposition, were bound to strive to triumph in their turn by giving to their partisans, almost equally numerous, the promise of the same advantages, if they gained over two or three adversaries.Hence what rapid and scandalous movements of the shuttlecock! What intrigues on each side, for supplanting the other ! What concert between adversaries so fiercely opposed to each other, to prevent the birth of a party sufficiently honest to regard only the nature of the propositions debated, and to vote for those w\u2019hiçh appeared to be good, and against those which appeared to be evil, from whatever side they might come.So many purely personal denunciations during more than ten years, between the most influential Parliamentarians, arranged in two rival and inimical camps, have given birth to reflections among the public.Was tbe public interest of any account whatever, in this ardour for supplanting each other ?Had the electors anything to gain or lose, in the triumph of one party, rather than in that of another?Almost nothing.All the ministerial faculties were absorbed by the difficulty of maintaining a slippery position, so that neither one or the other sufficiently forwarded, while in power, the reforms they had promised in opposition.Victors and vanquished of 1837, after the hatreds, angers and vengence of those sad days became calm.Reflection at last came, and when it was asked what the Country had gained by the changes in its political institutions, it became understood that the new legislation by exalting the functionaries too highly abased the representation too low.An instrument docile to the voice of some leaders of the file, it was without any initiative faculty, it it but pleased these leaders to say that the bills introduced by their adversaries related to subjects with which the cabinet was occupied.When it became generally understood, that the Parliament legislated so little and so badly for the public benefit ; that in the midst of the general languor, salaries increased and multiplied in rapid progression, in proportion as each ministerial association acquitted its debts towards those who had assumed to be the intimate Councillors oi its majesty, right-thinking men acquired the conviction that the system misnamed responsible was, as practised a snare and deception, very costly and very deceptive for all alike except the bureaucracy of official parties.Better is sought for.Will it be found ?Yes ; sooner or later ; but it will be found.Scarcely four years ago the whole of the French press was ministerial, personal, lying and salaried.When the ministry had the insolence to say and make others say to the first who spoke of freedom of examination and discussion on public men and public measures: \u201cNo, you shall .not have it ; you wish to bring back 1837 and its disasters ; but we well know how to prevent that, for there is a ministry strong and practical, which watches you and which will if necessary awake the sleeping executioners.\u201d\u2014When they said this, public opinion did not the less awake.More just, more tolerant and more patriotic ideas were produced among enlightened and honest men in all parties, who had been too far estrang-.ed from each other.These men were able to approach each other, to enlighten each other, mutually to excuse each other\u2014to agree that there had been wrongs and errors on all sides, less, said each, on onr side than on yours, but still on all sides.Let us see that we do n6t repeat them.Important questions were examined relative to freedom of commerce, to reciprocity, to freedom of navigation, to the elective principle, to the militia oflicers, and the Legislative Council, the colonization of wild lands\u2014even Annexation to the United States.\u2014 And peaceable and influential men wished andbe-lieved they might be able to obtain that from England by pacific negotiations\u2014by petitions respectful in words, but rich in facts and calculations, proving that the mother country would lose nothing by the change, and that we should gain infinitely.I am one of those who think that a truth gained by all who have examined this important problem under all its divers aspects.Our social condition is very analogous to that of the Americans ; but very different from that of England.Our interests in America are greater and more, numerous than in Europe ; Colonial inferiority neither can nor ought to be endured forever; it has a period indefinite but inevitable, and certain as death for man.And when the questio: is asked\u2014which is best for our descendants?^ strifes and rivalries of thoir dWcTse-ttaLionalrticsr many among you may be Annexationists, many may not be so, and yet you have voted as you have done.You are sufficiently enlightened\u201d to comprehend how many and how great are the advantages of free discussion, such as in Europe, alas ! can now only take place in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland\u2014sufficiently enlightened to tolerate among those whom you believe sincere andin good faith some opinions even opposed to your own\u2014opinions that oiler no charms of profit, but on the contrary the danger of prosecution for those who profess them, and which if ill founded should be refuted, not stifled.You do not require that your representative should have in all points the | same opinions as yourselves, only that he should \\ think with you on the greater number of ques- ! tions of public interest\u2014that he should be in a ! position to appreciate with knowledge the rea- \\ sons of his adversaries, and to explain his own ; ! that his motives of action should be always pure and disinterested, though his votes may not always be conformable to the viewsof every one of ! his electors.You have believed that you would j 9qti, 0f jIav find m me these sentiments, and you have by\t*- your majority honored me with your choice.\u2014 Your conduct then has been particularly liberal towards me, it has been nobly English and I thank you for it.The victors and the vanquished of 1837, have both given me a majority\u2014to me, the man on whom many of his ancient coadjutors have sought to cast the exclusive responsibility of the catastrophes that they provoked, at least as much as he.What are we thence to conclude?That the good sense of the people, its morality, its love of the right and just, have made it discover what there was of cowardice and of ignominious apos-tacy in the colleagues who wished to proscribe thgir ancient chief and friend ; and that the political consistency of a man will, in the' end, be appreciated and respected.This is a lesson too striking not to attract the attention of the enlightened, ardent and patriotic youth, whose time is almost come to enter the! career, whence I must shortly depart.It points out to all, that in public as in private life, honesty Is tlie best policy\u2014an axiom too often forgotten by those, who make it a necessity to live in {he Farliamentary arena, who seek an entrance to i| with;passion, and who only labour for the,gait), the honours and the power.Yes, tbe system of government, wtnen nas prevailed during late years, the temptations offered by corruption and ministerial patronage, have been too strong for feeble virtue, for vain and luxurious men.This election in all its circumstances gives them a serious and useful instruction.This fact consoles me for many sorrows, and is one of the reasons, which forces me, as if against myself, not to refuse so honorably a commission th-it nniifaya ma />-r Cfe.ct I',- ,, -.am with respect,\t' Gentlemen, Your obedient servant, L.J.PAPINIAÜ.HUNGARY.Generals Dembinski and Sczemere write to the Paris Journal des Debats, referring to Gorgey\u2019s book on the Hungarian war, and deny that they offered the crown of Hungary to Russia.Gorgey himself, they say, was the only one by whom the proposal was ever made.Sezemere's letter concludes thus : \u201cTo offer the crown of Hungary to the Russians could only be the work of a man reduced to the last extremities of despair, like M.Kossuth, or of a man destitute of principle, like M.Gorgey.I may add that Count Batthyani had it is true, no confidence in Austria, but in Russia had still less.\u201d RUSSIA.The Emperor was expected at Berlin on the 6th, and on the 14th would leave for St Peters-burgh.The Russian fleet had left Elsinore for the North Sea.CAPE OF GOOD HOPE.The steamship Bosphorus brings advices to the The Kaffir war presents no new features, and seems to be as far from terminating as ever.Gen.Cathcart had established his head quarters at Fort Beaufort, and annonneed to the enemy that no terms would be listened to, but submission or defeat.THE ARMY.or an aggregation to that fine confederacy; there can be no hesitation, in presence of the spectacle afforded by American power, already second to no nation of the civilized world, and which, if it progress for fifty years to come, as it has done dur-ing the past half century, will become the greatest nation of the civilizing Caucasian race.What pigmies will be our descendants by the side of this colossus ! Should we leave them exposed to the dangers of an unequal and impossible struggle, or will it not be better to associate them with a.future so glorious as that which must belong to a State, as large itself as the whole of Europe, to be peopled in a time which will be seen by many of our young men, by more than hfty millions of .enlightened and prosperous inhabitants.a.In these different manifestations born spontaneously from the people, outside of the Parliament ; in these discussions, where honest men of all parties, who formerly never met, but who since have cordially shaken hands ; in these frank, honest and moderate explanations, on such important -points, of which some years earlier the mere mention among the same men would have provoked acts of violence\u2014in all these facts, who does it not discover new democratic tendencies in the people of all origins to whom birth or choice has given Canada fora country\u2014for the land of their affections ?Tbe old and too rancorous parties have approached each other by the mutual exchange of good opinions, which had been too exclusively those of one or the other of them, and by the reciprocal abandonment of ill founded antipathies.What more patent demonstration could have been found than what results from the present election?Alas! But a few years ago, these old parties did more mutual damage than the same divisions in any other county of the Province,_ and yet both by a great and marked majority\u2014such as could not be exceeded \u2014have just in spite of my prayers sent me to the new Parliament.Oh you my well beloved compatriots, who, in the devastation of your property, the sorrows of exile and rigors of imprisonment ; who in the still more profound mourning which has been caused you by the deaths of parents and friends cherished beyond all expression, have known in all their bittterness the evils brought about by intestine dissensions, when despairing to obtain justice by the strongest arguments a people is insensibly drawn, spite of itself; to demand it by the doubtful chance of force\u2014yes you have cruelly suffered, and yet you have in majority voted for him whom old colleagues and co-operators have calumniously represented to you as the sole author of your sufferings.Many of you, who heard me speak, know that, while I said, armed resistance was morally and constitutionally justifiable, if the English Parliament disposed of your property against your will, I added, that such resistance was neither prepared for nor prudent, and that, for the moment, it was .necessary to limit one\u2019s self to the restraining of a criminal government,, keeping just within the outside boundaries of legality^ but not stepping beyond them.Many who did not hear me may have believed the calumny and yet you voted for me.You said, well ! He' has suffered like ourselves he has acted like ourselves.He does not deny us, as we have been denied by many of those who acted like him and with him but with greater violence.He does not profess an ardent gratitude to England; because after we were crushed by arms she has against the known wishes of thé majority, robbed us of a tolerable constitution, to impose upon us one that is unjust and partial.He remains, still, a good Canadian and a good Democrat.For this he formerly had our confidence;' for this he still merits it: let him be our chosen representative.And you fellow-citizens, who preserve, a-sincere attachment to the noble country of your birth, respected fellow citizens of other origins than mine, who by your majority have voted for a did not pass the limits of legality, while! it re- known Annexationist, slfall I thence'cenclude that stricted its administrative judgment to anathe-1 yon approve that article of Ms creed ?Not-at all:' of yfaJjJts\tctj Jcfti Arrival of the America at Halhax.THREE DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE.Halifax Telegraph Office?July 20tb, 9 o\u2019clock, P.M.) The steamship America, from Liverpod 10th instant, arrived here at 8 o\u2019clock this evening.She has 60 passengers, 22 for Boston.The Baltic arrived at Liverpool at 5 ninutes past seven o\u2019clock, on Wednesday, 7th nstant.The anniversary of the 4th was celebrated on board the Baltic in patriotic style.Apart from the results of the Parlianentary elections, now pending in England, the lews is not important.There are, however, minerons items of interest to the public.Cotton unchanged with slack business owing to the elections.Grain markets were dull.\u2014 Moderate business doing in Provisions.Naval stores in fair demand.No sales of lice.In London little doing in Grain.Wheat at Is decline.Sugar\u2014West India quiet.Coffee\u2014Prices barely maintained.Tea languid.Money abundant.American Stocks in fair demand, excepting Railroads.Trade at Jlanches-ter moderately favorable.In France tie same.Weather in England has been fine, aid crops in all parts of Europe remarkably prospjrous.ENGLAND.The Parliamentary elections are occupying the whole share of public attention.Mast of the English Borough Members have been returned, the Counties having yet to elect.The result so far, is not encouraging to the Governnent, but may be better when the Counties have polled.A return in the Daily News of Friday, classifies the Members elected, as 156 Libéras and 80 Derbyites.The Times has 139 Liberals, 58 thorough Ministerialists, and 28 Liberal Conservatives.Among the more noticeable names in the list of members returned, are Lord John Russell and Baron Rothschild for London ; Lord Palmerston, Dr.Layard, (of Nineveh celebrity,) G.F.Muntz, and W.Scholefield, for Birmingham ; T.S.Duncombe, Sir C.Wood, Hon.T.M.Gibson, and John Bright, for Manchester; R, N.Milnes, J.Brotherton, and J.A.Roebuck, for Sheffield; Sir W.Moleeworth, J.L.Ricardo, Sir It.Peel, Hon H.Labouchere, Sir Delacy Evans, Sir.Wm.Clay, and S.Batho, for Tower Hamlets.George Thompson, it will be observed, has lost his election, much dissatisfaction being expressed by his constituency at his desertion of Iiis duties for an entire session, while engaged in agitating in the United States.Turner and McKenzie, the Tory candidates, have gone in for Liverpool, by a large majority, and Hon.S.Watt, Liberal, has succeeded Fear-gns O\u2019Connor, for Northampton.Returns are still coming to hand, but cannot be embraced within the limits of this despatch.The Royal Agricultural Society of England offers a prize of £1000, and the gold medal of the Society, for the discovery of manure equal in fertilizing properties to the Peruvian guano, of which an unlimited supply can be furnished in England at £5: per ton.Another failure is announced in the Flax trade, namely, A.Duncan & Sons, of Dundee ; liabilities £20,000, with small assets.The Brothers Stratford, recently imprisoned in Italy, have arrived at Liverpool.Latest, election returns have been received at Dublin and Wigan.No particulars yet come to hand.FRANCE.Rumors of changesn i the ministry .are again current.Drouyn de Lhuys had, it is said, been offered the Foreign Department, Baroclie the Interior, and Fould the Finance.Lately the minister of Agriculture was instructed to ascertain and report on the statistics of salt used for agricultural purposes.The public have taken the alarm, suspecting the intention of the Government to impose the salt duty.The insurrection in Algeria appears to be suppressed for the present.Changarnier has left Maiines for a short tour in Germany.Lamartine is in Burgundy.The Moniteur contradicts the statement that disaffection has been discovered in one of the regiments of the line.It is reported, both in London and Paris, that Louis Napoleon has informed the British Government that he is prepared to admit certain English staples into France on easy terms, provided the British impost duty on French wines be repealed.Several lamentable cases of hydrophobia are recorded in the Parisian papers, this week.Throughout France, warm weather has succeeded the late heavy rains, and already a rapid improvement has taken place in the crops.Hay prospects are better; Rye cutting has been commenced in the Pas de Calais, and the Wheat harvest, partially, in the South.The condition of the vineyards is less unsatisfactory in the Bordelais than on the Rhone.The price of Wheat and Flour have fallen, in consequence of the the promised abundance.PORTUGAL.The St.Übes salt monopoly may now be fon-' sidered as suppressed, American, English, Eus-sian, and other vessels, are loading upon the s&me terms as Portuguese.SWITZERLAND.The Sonderbund party in Friburg, have appealed to the Federal Council against the measures taken to break up their organization.Should their demand be refused, they threaten to find means of redress other than those provided by the Constitution.The five hundredth anniversity of the admission of the Canton of Zug into the Federation, was celebrated on the 27th ult., with much solemnity.M.Thiers, having quitted Switzerland, has decided to take up his residence temporarily at Piedmont, afterwards at Florence.ITALY.Papal States.-\u2014The Pope has been busied with the religious ceremonies which annually take place on St.John\u2019s Day and succeeding holidays TUSCANY.Letters from Florence state that the Grand Dnke has imposed an extra tax on wine, and all other articles of consumption, except flour, oat meal, and on domestic manufactured goods introduced into the cities of Pisa and Sienna.A decree has just been promulgated at Florence, subjecting to military discipline, young-men who, owing to idle or irregular habits, were a burthen to their families, and dangereus to the public repose.SARDINIA.A decree is published, imposing quarantine on all vessels at Sardinian ports, from New Orleans and Mobile ; the reason assigned being the prevalence of cholera at Louisiana.ITALY.\t- : Many political arrests have taken place within a few days at Milan and Venice.It is said that the arrests were from the trivial circumstance of one of Mazzini\u2019s bank notes having been found by the police, while searching a house in Milan for smuggled goods.PRUSSIA.Agricultural reports speak hopefully of the prospect of the harvest throughout Prussia.\u2022.1 AUSTRIA.The Emperor having completed\"his tour in the Southern Provinces of Hungary, has returned to Buda.A letter from Vienna in the Times, states that' the rumor of a proposed Lombard Loan of 100-000,000 lire is not correct._ ' ict,S77ÿ/\t2 c/iff TRADE AND COMMERCE.Receipts by tbe Champlaiu .t St.Lawrence Railroad* July 21.McLean & Wright, 15 bdls car springs.July 22.J A Converse, 43 bbls tar ; J Knapp, 68 bhds sugar 3 es segara ; C P Ladd, 10 bbls 1 cs polish ; vj bent, 7 bxs veneers 35 mahogany planks 5 bis boards 1 bbl 3 bxs 10 do powders ; J M Papineau, 13 mahog planks 2 bxs veneers 1 bl boards ; W Roccen, 4 stoves 12 pcs ware 1 bx castings ; G iiagar, 2 safes ; C Seymour, 12 bxs ; E Evans, 5 boxes 2 bis ; Hibbard & Co, 1 bale 1 bx 2 bales ; Steamer Fashion, 24 stoves 18 ovens 121 pieces hardware.War Office, June 18.3rd Regiment of Foot.\u2014Lieut.Garnett War-burtun to be Captain, by purchase, vice Richardson, who retires.Ensign Robert Sandford War-burtou to be Lieut, by purchase, vice G.Warbur-ton.16th Foot.\u2014Ensign Francis Retallack to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Singleton, who retires.17th Foot.\u2014Ensign Charles Thomas Castle, from half-pay Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment, to be Ensign, vice Honourable Wm.Henry Herbert, appointed to tbe 43rd Foot.2lsi Foot.\u2014Second Lieutenant Edward Lennox Jervis, to be First Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Wilkinson, who retires.4oth Foot.\u2014Ensign Lewis Trelawny Clark, to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vree Piuchney, who retires.42nd Foot,\u2014Lieutenant Alexander Edgar Mc-(iC^b\u2019r, from the 93id Foot, to be Lieutenant, vice [ylacnisb, who exchanges.43rU Foot.\u2014Lieutenant William Milnes to be Captain, without purchase, vice Gore, killed in action.Ensign Francis George Stapleton to he Lieutenant, without purchase, vice VVrottesjey, killed in action.Ensign Robert William Henry Herbert, from 17ih Foot, to be Ensign, vice Sta-pleion.66th Foot.\u2014Ensign and Adjutant Harry Firth to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Bergeur, who retires.7lst Foot.\u2014Lieutenant James Arthur Gore to be Captain by purchase,vice Ready, promoted.\u2014 Ensign William Johnson to be Lieutenant by purchase, vice Gore.George Campbell, Gent, to be Ensign by purchase, vice Johnson.74th Foot.\u2014Lieutenant Lewis Augustus Bry-don to be Captain, without purchase, vice Patton, prom.75th Foot.\u2014Ensign Campbell Mitchell to be Lieutenant by purchase, vice Baxter, who retires.88lh Foot .'\u2014Lieut.Edward Rowland Forman to be Captiain, by purchase, vice Brooke, who retires.Ensign John Edward Riley, to be Lieut., by purchase, vice Forman.91st Foot.\u2014Ensign George Spaight to he Lieut., by purchase, vice Pickwick, who retires.Alexander Cunningham Bruce, Gent., to be Eusign, vice Spaight.93rd Foot.\u2014Lieut, Wm.Lear Macnish, from the 42nd Foot, to be Lieutenant, vice McGregor, who exchcnges.Captain George Cornwall, from the 95th Foot, to be Captain, vice Selon, who exchanges.95th Foot.\u2014Captain George Selon, from the 93rd Foot, to be Captain, vice Cornwall, who exchanges.Cape Mounted Riflemen.-Richard Rorke, Gent., to be Ensign, without purchase, vice Horace Mus-grave deceased.Memorandum.\u2014The surname of the Ensign appointed to the 34th Regiment of Foot, on 11th June, 1852, is Lawrence, and not Laurence, as stated in the Gazette of that date.War-Office, June 25.3rd Regiment of Dragoon Guards.\u2014Lieutenant Edmund Henry Turton to be Captain, by purchase, vice.Whitby, who retires.Cornet James Winterbottom (R M.) to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Turton.4th Dragoon Guards.\u2014Lieutenant Arthur Mas-terton Robertson to be Captain, by purchase, vice Williams, who retires.Cornet Robert Gunter to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Robertson.11th Light Dragoons.\u2014Lieut.Frederick Henry Sykes to be Captain, by purchase, vice Sandes, who retires.10th Regiment of Foot.\u2014Assistant-Surgeon John Andrew Woolfreyes, from Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment, to be Assistant-Surgeon, vice Jacob, deceased.11th Foot.\u2014Lieutenant Winter Goode to Re Captain, by purchase, vice Conran, who retires.Ensign John Finch, to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Goode.25th Foot.\u2014Ensign Francis Kegan Cox to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Potts, who retires.35ih Foot;\u2014Captain Oliver Nicolls Chatterton, from half-pay unattached, to be Captain, vice Bayly, who exchanges.30lh Foot.\u2014Lieutenant Edward Beauchamp Maunsell, from the 87th Foot, to be Lieut., vice Hardinge, promoted to an Unattached Company, without purchase.40th Foot.\u2014Major Thomas James Valiant, to be Lieut.-Coi., by purchase, vice Stretton, who retires.Captajn Arthur Leslie to be Major, by purchase, vice Valiant.Lieutenant Robert Hare to be Captain, by purchase, vice Leslie.Ensign Chailes Henry Hall to be Lieut., by purchase, vice Hare.41st Foot.\u2014Lieut.Henry Waiter Meredith to be Captain, by purchase, vice Robert Ftuart, who retires.Ensign Frederick Cherburgh Bligh to be Lieut., by purchase, vice Meredith.42ud Foot.\u2014Duncan Macpherson, Gent., to be Ensign, by purchase.Ensign John Drysdale to be Adjutant, vice Pitcairn, promoted.55th.\u2014Ensign William Macdonell to be Lieut, witnout purchase, vice Lloyd, deceased.Geut.Cadet Lea Birch, from the Royal Miiilary College, to be Ensign, without purchase, vice Macdonnell.62nd Foot.\u2014Ensign Charles Cooch to be Lieut, by purchase, vice O\u2019Donnell, who retires.66ih Foot.\u2014Ensign Edward James Storey, to be Lieut, without purchase.72nd Foot.\u2014Ensign John Campbell Stewart to be Lieut, by purchase, vice Andeison, who retires.87th Foot.\u2014Lieutenant George Granville Gower Munro, from haif-pay Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment, to be Lieut, vice Maunsell, appointed to the 39th Foot.93rd Foot.\u2014Lieut.Warner Westenra Carden to be Captain, by purchase, vice Goldie, who retires.Ensign William Turner to be Lieut, by purchase, vice Carden.2nd West India Regiment.\u2014Ensign Lloyd Richter Creak Diouet to be Lieut, without purchase, vice Simmons, whose promotion on the 17th Sept.185!, has been cancelled.3rd West India Regiment.\u2014Lieut H Jones, fm hall-pay 101st Foot, to be Lieut, v Teiry, appt to the 9th Foot.Lieut Henry Jones has been permitted to retire from the Service by the sale of his Commission.St.Helena Regt.\u2014Captain Clifford Felix Henry from half-pay unattached, to be Captain, v Storey, who exchanges ; Lieut Robert Alex Loudon to be Captain by purchase, vice Henry, who retires Ensign William Henry Hole to be Lieut, by pur, vice Loudon; Henry Tayler, Gent, to be Ensign, by pur, vice Hole.Unattached.\u2014Lieut George Horne, from the 15th Light Dragoons, to be Captain, without pui-chase.Brevet.\u2014The undermentioned Cadets of the East India Company\u2019s Service to have the heal and temporary rank of Ensign during the period ot their being placed under the command of Lieut Cohinei Harry D.Jones, of the Royal Engineers at Chatham, for field instructions in the art of Sapping and Mining:\u2014Arthur Moffat Lang, Gent.; Henry Francis Hancock, Gent; Edward Wood Humphry, Gent; John Rivas Monckton, Gent.; Charles Simeon Thomason, Gent; Granville Pul-teney de Palezieux Falconet, Gent; James Murdock Campbell, Gent; Julius George Thos Griffith, Gent.Memorandum.\u2014The Commission ol Assistant Surgeon William George Clarke, of the 35lh Ft., has been antedated to 26th March, 1852.The name of the Ensign removed from the Canadian Rifle Regiment to the 45ih Foot, on the 11th of June, 1852, is \u201c Egan,\u201d and not Eagan.Commissariat.\u2014Assist Commissary General Bndgen, from Van Diemeu's Land, has replaced Assist Com Gen Erskine, at Melbourne.Assist Com General LeMesurier is on leave of absence in Canada, on return from the Coast of Africa.Assist Commissary General Howard, half-pay, died at Port Phillip in February last, in the 63rd year of his.Assist.Com.General Clarke relieved Deputy-Assist Commissary General Skinner in charge of the Commissariat chest at Graham\u2019s Town, on April 30.Deputy Commissary General Rayner sailed in the steamer whicli left Southampton on the 17th instant, for Barbadoes.Office of Ordnance.June 14.Royal Regiment of Artillery.\u2014Second-Captain Frederick Alexander Campbell to be captain, vice Domville, retired upon half-pay ; First-Lieutenant Matthew Bligh Fortle to be second-captain, vice Campbell ; Second-Lieutenant Richard Roynon Jones to be first-lieutenant, vice Forde.June 24.Corps of Royal Engineers.\u2014Second Lieutenant R.Hawthorn, with temporary rank, to be Second Lieut, with permanent rank.Second Lieutenant George Philips, with temporary rank, to be Second Lieutenant with permanent rank.ffotice to Capitalists» ON FRIDAY next, 23rd of July, instant, will be Sold atthe SHERIFF\u2019S OFFICE, at TEN o\u2019clock in the morning, that magnificent PROPERTY, situated in Notre Dame Street, bounded in rear by Tattersalls, in one of the most convenient situations in the city for commerce, whether wholesale or retail.There is a CUT STONE -HOUSE, with very spacious Stone Sheds, Ac., upon the property.July 21.\tu\u2014133 ALBANY MARKET, July 20.Flour\u2014We have no change to note in flour; the demand for the Eastern trade is better owing to a better supply of freights.The home demand is moderate.The sales are 1100 to 1200 bis.Corn meal is in fair demand : sales 200 bags at $1,19 per cwt.Grain\u2014We have no sales of wheat to note today ; last evening a lot of 1000 bush prime Genesee sold at lO^cts.For corn there is a fair demand and quotations are well maintained at 584259c for Western mixed afloat and 504£c for lots at the road ; sales 14,500 bush.Oats are more active and steady ; sales 18,500 bush at 42/Sl43c and including a load last evening at 44c.Feed\u2014Sales 8200 bush at 15c for second quality, 102ra>103c for middlings.BOSTON MARKET, July 20.Cotton\u2014Market firm.Sales limited to small lots at fall prices.Flour M e notice a better feeling in the market, but the prices are without change.Sales of Genesee common brands at $4,25, fancy $4,37>£ i@,450, extra $5r®5,75 ; Michigan and Ohio common $4,18%®4,25, fancy $4,31i^©4,37^, extra $4,75fQ)& jfr bbl, cash.Southern in moderate request at $4,61Jÿra>4,75 ^ bbl, 4 mos.Grain\u2014There is but little Corn in market, and the prices have advanced; sales ot a cargo prime mixed at 65c «ÿ1 bush, cash.No yellow here; it would bring 67c.Steady sales of Northern Oats at 46j^c.Sales of Rye in small lots at 90c, cash.BUFFALO MARKET, JuIt id.Flour\u2014The market is active to-day for good and fancy brands of Ohio and Indiana\"at a range of 3,56493,62)^\u2014the sales foot up about 2900 bbls, among which are 1000 bbls fancy Indiana at 3,62)^ ; and 1300 bbls good to fancy Southern Ohio at\u201c3,56®3,62)£.Wheat is quiet with a moderate demand.The only sales we note are 5300 bush Chicago spring at 53c; and 2500 bush white Ohio at 87c.Corn in good demand and firm.The sales this morning are about 28,000 bush at 45)^®46c, only 5000 bush however, at the lower quotations.\u2014 Some choice samples held firmly at 46)T.Oats steady at 33c, with sales of 5000 bushels.Rye steady.Sales 1800 bush at 61c.NEW BEDFORD OIL MARKET\u2014July 19.Sperm\u2014Market has been quiet since our last, and we hear of no transactions.Whale\u2014There has been some inquiry, and we hear of sales of 200 bbls, perhaps not strictly prime, at 93 ^ gal, and 200 do prime on private terms.Holders generally are firm at 75c.Whalebone is quiet, and we have no sales to report.The Executive Committee of itelicf acknowledges the Receiut o.\u2018,he V V lowing Sums by the himis of j B Bruyere, Esquire :\tor J.B.\t\t\t Edmonstone, Allan & Co.\t£\ts.\td.W & J Smith & Co\t\t\t\t Jos Donegani\t\t\t\t John Pratt & Co\t\t\t\t Moss & Brothers\t\t\t\t Brown ASwan\t\t\t\t C & J Cusack\t\t\t\t W H Hibbard\t\t\t\t Dr McCulloch\t\t\t\t \t\t\t \t\t\t W Darting\t\t\t10\t0 Clark, Darling & Morland.\t\t0\t0 Bernard, Harkin & Co\t\t\t 12\t10\t0 POET OF QUEBEC.ARRIVED\u2014JULY 21.Ship Clutha, Bruce, 14th June, Greenock, cider, general cargo, 162 steerage passengers CLEARED\u2014JULY 20.Brigt Brothers, Bechance, St John\u2019s, Nfld, H J Noad & Co 21.Ship Huron, Ryan, Cork, Gilmour &.Co Bark Canton, Anderson, Bristol, J E Oliver -Andromache, Tate, Liverpool, Symes & Co -Lord Stanley, Paxton, do, Levey & Co \u2014\u2014 Niagara, Parkin, Portrush, LeMesurier & Co Brig Medora, Hedger, Shoreham.do -Lefoton, Rein, London, H S Dalkin -Sun, Watson, St Andrews, Gilmour & Co -Voluna, Mortley, Padstow, do -Thomas, Hargrove, Whitehaven, do -Wellington, Wedgwood, Whitehaven, Symes Sc Co SPECIAL NOTICES.L Marchand.20 R Trudeau.7 John Alio.2 E CTutttle.2 H Samuel.i John Brown.l B Dawson.2 J Thompson.l W C Cogan.i J W Herbert.2 R Sharpleÿ.10 J & D Lewis.io John Levy.2 Jos II Mead.12 S Abbott.i W Ross.\u2014.i Rose k Monk.20 Dr Nelson.7 Hotel-Dieu.20 Wood k Son.j H Lavender.i F Robinson.i Miss May.i A Ronald.i D & W Smith.i Jos Beaudry.5 R Latham.5 E Thompson.5 M Ollendorf.2 H Hat-kin.1 R Hoiland.1 H M Nicolls.1 C Campbell.2 R & A Miller.2 Edwin Clark.i David Fisher.i James Holmes.i M Campbell.i Binmore, Brodie & Co.5 John Turner.i Edwd Pratt.2 Paradis & Frere.2 Robt Noxon.l Samuel Senior.2 Mayer & Brother.1 M Solomon.1 W H F Adams.1 Jas Parkin.1 Cash.1 Messrs Benjamin.25 Brown & Child.10 Houghton & May J Roy.5 Hon Jos Bourret.5 Rev E J Rogers.5 Geo Brown.5 Dr Bibaud.1 W Learmont.1 Capt Maitland.5 M Lamb.1 M E David.12 Dr Fraser.2 Masson, Bruyere, Thomas & Co.200 Jno Collins.2 TRAVELLERS\u2019 LIST.Arrivals at ths St.Lawrence Hall, July 21 \u2014Mr Rutherford ; Mrs Douglas and family, Chambly; Mrs C Davis, New York ; Miss Davis, Miss Crittenden, do ; Miss Perry, do ; Mr A Crittenden, do ; J M Benkam, do ; C P Dickenson, do ; D Harris, Cincinnati ; Mrs A Harris and sister ; J J Powin and lady, Havana; II Woods, jr, and lady, Baltimore ; L L Allen, Middle burg, Vt ; Mrs Lt J Elliot and servt, Miss ; G W Lee and lady, Michigan ; B Blake and lady, Miss ; E D Phyle and lady, New York; H Lindsay, Cornwall; J Lewis, Goderich ; H Norton ; H VirginiacjH A Torrance, Quebec; HL Eldin and lady, Phila; G E Taylor and lady, do ; Dr E Valger, University of Virginia ; T G Thomas, St Johns, Nfld ; S W Thomas, do ; JR Wilson, R C R, St Johns ; C M Dubany, lady and daughter ; Mrs Irvine and daughter.July 22.\u2014S Wygant, N Y : J R Simpson, do; Mr Risby, Niagara ; J H Wylie, Ramsay ; J Fraser and brother, Sherbrooke ; Mr and Mrs.Bond, Mobile; R While, Peterboro; E Fraser and two ladies ; K B Wesson, N Y ; C Widston, Glasgow.Arrivals at Coleman's Montreal House, July 21.\u2014H Allen and lady, Syracuse; J G Wynkoop, do ; S B Miller, Hudson ; G Vi Brainerd, Ogdens-burgh ; A H Brainerd, Laprairie ; L R Sanborne, N Y ; A B Shipley, Phila ; J W McKay, lady and child, N Y ; J M Mngo and lady, Boston ; F L Cushmen, do.July 22.\u2014Mr.McGregor; R Richardson, Que-, bec; G O Brown, Providence ; D Tryon, N York ; S H Randall, Sherbrooke ; J Fadme, Liverpool ; J J Brown, Indiana ; H H Lengstak, Bremen.BIT TBSiBGRAPH.{Reported for the Montreal Herald.') NEW YORK MARKETS, July 22.Ashes less firm ; sales 50 bbls at $5,44495,50 for Pearls ; and $4,75494,81 for Pots.Flour unchanged.Canadian plenty at $4/3) 4,06 ; sales of domestic 7,800 bbls at $4,06494,12 for state.Wheat without much change.Pork better, and demand more active ; sales 800 bbls at $19,50 for Mess ; $17for prime ; 21,50 for Clear.BIRTH.' At Clairevue, on Thursday, the 22nd instant, the wife of W.H.Brehaut, Esquire, of a daughter.MARRIED, In this city, on the 20th instant, by Messire Morin, Curate of St.Hilaire, Phillippe Juchereau Duchesnay, Esq., to Madlle.Margaret Wiison, daughter of the late Joseph Wilson, Esq., of Coteau du Lac, and adopted daughter ot Charles Wilson, Esq.At Halifax, on the 7th instant, by the Rev.Dr.Richey, W.L.Black, Esq., son of the Hon.W.A.Black, to Mary, daughter of Judge Marshall.DIED, At the Cedars, C.E., on Tuesday, the 20th instant, at the residence of her step-father, William Waters, Esq., Miss Mary Matheson, niece of the Hon.R.Matheson, of Perth, C.W., in the 39th year of her age.She was a person of high moral and intellectual worth, and most amiable deportment.and deeply regretted by a numerous circle of friends and acquaintances.THEATRE ROYAL, Cote Street, near Craig Street.OORBYN & BUCKLAND.Lessees & Managers.Mr.GEORGE LEWIS.Stage Manager.THIS EVENING (FRIDAY), JULY 23, Will be performed the Comedy, in 3 Acts, entitled, ¦CHS SEB-IOtFS FABSIÏ.Y ! Immediately after the Comedy, A SONG, by -\t-\t-\t- Miss Gould.To be followed by A DANCE by -\t- Miss Annie Walters.To conclude with the laughable Farce, entitled THE ET0H BOY.PRICES OP ADMISSION.Dress Circle.3s\t9d\tor\t75\tcents.Family Circle.2s\t6d\tor\t50\tcents.Parquet.Is\t3d\tor\t25\tcents.Private Boxes.$5 each.S3*No Gallery.^gti Doors open at a Seven ; Performance to commence at EIGHT, precisely.Seats and Private Boxes may be secured at Herbert\u2019s Music Store, 113 Notre Dame Street, from 10 till 6 P.M., daily.Tickets may\u2019 also be obtained at all the principal Hotels.VIVJIT REGINA.July 23.\t124 HE RAFFLE for the PICTURES OF THÉ LIONS has been POSTPONED until THIS EVENING, at EIGHT o\u2019clock, when it will positively take place at Mr.JOHN ORR S, Great St.James Street.T.C.CARPENDALE.July 23.\t124 TO LET, THE Three-Story BRICK HOUSE and PREMISES, No.44 Craig Street.\u2014 ______ Apply to\t_ BETHUNE & DTJNKIN.July 23.\t_________124 Shop Fixtures, FOR SALE, CHEAP.NEST OF DRAWERS, with Stand, Tea Can-nisters, Counter, &c.Apply at 210 St.Paul Street July 23,\tr\u2014124 0 10 10 10 5 5 10 5 5 10 0 0 10 10 6 5 0 10 0 5 5 5 5 6 5 0 0 0 0 5 5 5 0 10 5 5 5 5 0 5 10 10 5 10 0 5 5 5 5 0 0 12 10 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 10 10 0 10 10 5 Mr Dangerfield.1 John O\u2019Meara.1 F W Torrance.1\t5 A Bancroft.1\t5 Jas Logan.25\t0 Cash.1\t0 Sundry Contributions, in sums under twenty shillings.7\t19\t9 PEESEYE1ÂNCE.Third Annual Pleasure Trip, OF THB ON WEDNESDAY, 28TH JULY.HPHE Steamer will leave theTharf of the Saint A Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad Company, at half-past EIGHT o?clock, A.M., and the Cara will leave the Depot, Longueuil, immediately on the arrival of the Cars from St Hyacinthe, stopping at Belœil goinsr and returning : the Cara will leave St.Hyacinthe at FIVE, P.M., and ar-nve in Montreal at half-past Seven.The Committee have made arrangements for tae pleasure of the Company at St.Hyacinthe, which they hope will give satisfaction to all.By the kindness of\u2014Laframboise, Esq., the company will have the privilege of his grounds.A Band of Music will accompany the party.Gentlemen\u2019s Tickets, 2s 6d : Ladies\u2019 Is 3d, maybe had from A.Savage & Co.and R.Dean, Notre Dame Street ; Wm.Lyman & Co., St, Paul Street ; R.Irwin, McGill Street, and from other members of the Tent.July 20.121 HOTZ&.HELLETN & GUILMIT, PROPRIETORS, ST.GABRIEL STREET.THE undersigned have the honor to announce to the public and to their friends, that they have completed their arrangements by furnishing their Hotel in a new and comfortable style.The House is already advantageously known to travellers and country merchants, and it would be superfluous to enter into long details to prove the excellence of its central position and the comfort of the establishment.The Culinary department has been considerably improved, in such a manner as to make it rival that of the best Hotels in Montreal.The Table will be always furnished with the finest and most delicate dishes.Prices moderate.HELLÜIN & GU1LMIT.July 21.\t122 £684 19 9 Ï3\u201d Incendiarism.\u2014There is no doubt that some of the late fires in this city have been the work ot incendiaries.From facts which have been brought to our notice, we would strongly recommend the numerous parties in this city, who are suffering much uneasiness from a fear of another fearful conflagration, to pay a visit to that romantic and healthy watering place at St.Leon.There, secure from danger, fishing in abundance, boating, pic-nics, the valuable Mineral water, and many other amusements are being and may be enjoyed, and at cheaper rates than those of any other resort on this continent.For further particulars apply to Neil McIntosh, Place d\u2019Armes.ICr\u2019 A Decided Benefit.\u2014There are few gentlemen, who do not suffer from irritation of tbe skin of the face after shaving\u2014and cold weather is a bad aggravation of this evil, as it is apt to promote eruptions on the face.The best preventive is found in the new invention of William Bogle, 277 Washington Street, whose Amole has a soothing tendency and preservative operation on the skin no other soap possesses.It is now highly prized in every variety of climate.Wat.'Lyman & Co., Wholesale Agents for C.E and sold by A.Savage & Co.; Alex.Urquhart\u2019 and S.J.Lyman & Co., Druggists, Montreal.In Quebec, of Joseph Bowles, and Dr.Musson, Druggists.\tmwfC 122 CJ* The Boston Mercantile Journal gives the following notice of the most pppular remedy of the day :\u2014 WILD CHERRY BALSAM.We speak in praise of Wistar\u2019s Balsam ofWild Cherry, because we believe from our own knowledge of the article that it is one of the best in the market for the complaints for which it is recommended.This medicine, coming from such a respectable source, and carefully prepared by an experienced and skilful physician, is received by the public with confidence.Its efficacy has been proved in many obdurate cases of disease, and its fame has rapidly extended.It has been extensively used in every part of the country ; and strong testimony from intelligent and highly respecta-bie persons has been adduced in favor of its merits as a remedy for colds and coughs, affections of the chest, diseased liver, &c.kc.mwf\u2014122 Stn'FBS.EB.S BIT EHE FXRE.THE Executive Committee of the Relief Fund begs leave to appeal to the well known benevolence of the Ladies of Montreal, to aid them in the good work in which it is engaged, by organizing themselves into Associations, for the purpose of collecting, in their several localities, Clothing, whether new or cast-off,and other contributions in kind, whether of Furniture or Provisions, for all which there is a pressing need.\u2014 These contributions will be received and stored to await the urder of the Committee, by MR.MARCHAND, corner of St.Paul and St.Jean Baptiste Streets, who has kindly charged himself with that office, and to whom such contributions may be sent.July 22.\t123 NOTICE, THE CO-PARTNERSHIP, which has heretofore existed between the Undersigned, is now DISSOLVED, and E.BENOIT, Esquire, or EDOUARD BENOIT, are authorized to settle all the debts due to the said Co-Partnership.L.VADEBONCOEUR, E.BENOIT.Montreal, July 20, 1852.\t1m\u2014123 l'ire Englue & Conducting Hose AGENCY OF THE BOSTON BELTING CO.THE Subscribers have in Store, and are constantly receiving, large supplies of VULCANIZED RUBBER HOSE, of all sizes, from to 2)4 inch.The quality of the Hose manufactured by the Boston Belting Co.is admitted, by the best judges, to be superior to all other descriptions.Also, COUPLINGS, BRANCH PIPES, &c., are constantly on hand.HIBBARD & CO., Agents Boston Belting Co.July 23,\t_______124_____ ANTED\u2014TWO JOURNEYMEN, and an APPRENTICE, at the British Trunk Fac-torv, 154 Notre Dame Street.ROBT.DEAN.July 23.__ _\t_\tm\u2014124- WANTED, by a Servant Man\u2014À place as COACHMAN.Apply at this Office.July 23.___________________ 124 WANTED\u2014An experienced BOOKKEEPER, \u2014with a knowledge of the Retail Dry Goods Business, preferable.None need apply without being well recommended, and to give security if required.Apply at the Herald Office.July 23\t124 F ON HAND AND FOR SALE, OR ROOFING PURPOSES\u2014 2000 boxes Canada Plates 1400 do Tinned do 250 do Terne do 2 tons Patent Galvanized Iron for Gutters.ANDERSON, EVANS & CO.July 23.\tlm mwf\u2014124 PRESERVING SUGARS\u2014 London Refined Loaf Do Crushed Dutch do, and Granulated Sugars.F or Sale by R.THOMAS, _ ,\t35, St.James Street.July 23.\t124 PICKLING VINEGAR, a Pure Article, can be had at R.THOMAS\u2019 35, St.James Street.July 23,\t 124 BUTTEES\u2019S Improved Stock-Brick Machine, THE most Simple, Labor-Saving and Complete Machine ip use, is manufactured by the inventor at Buffalo, N.Y., and fnrnishqd at $200, including grinder and full setts of moulds.July 20.\tdu\u2014121 MOUNTAIN HOUSE, ST.HILAIRE.THE undersigned has just opened this House which has been erected by Major Campbell on one of the most delightful sites upon the Belœil Mountain, and is ready to receive casual VISITORS or BOARDERS.PIC-NIC PARTIES who visit the Belœil Lake may be accommodated either in the house or on the grass, if they will send notice a couple of days beforehand.Families residing at the.Mountain House dur-ing the Summer months, will be received on very liberal terms.J.J.HIGGINS.June 26.\tlm W\u2019f\u2014101 WE, the undersigned, having received from the BRITISH AMERICA FIRE AND LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY the amount of our Claims for Loss and Damage by the late Fire, desire to return thanks for the promptitude and liberality with which they have been met.DUNCAN McNAUGHTON, JAMES ILSLEY, SIMS & COLEMAN, ROBERT KIRBY, AUGUSTIN DEMERS, ROBERT EWING, HOOD & THORNE.JOHN HAROLD, ADOLPHE DUMAINE, MRS.CHAS.DUMAINE, THEODORE SAUCIER, JOSEPH VINCENT, MRS.A.McGUIRE.July 22, 1852.\t123 \"~NOTICE.British America Fire and Life Assurance Office, 33 Great St.James Street, 21st July, 1852.PERSONS having CLAIMS against this Institution, for Loss and Damage by the LATE FIRE, are requested to send in their Accounts for payment, without delay, as the Subscriber has occasion to leave Montreal (for a short time) on the business of the Company in the adjacent Provinces.WM.STEWARD, Manager.ASSURANCE continues to be granted at this Office, on good risks, at very moderate rates of Premium.\tb\u2014123 S»ts§oluti®is ©IT Co-Partnei'gliip.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Co-Partner hip heretofore existiug between JAMES SHEPSTONE and JOHN BRINSDEN, of Mont St.Hilaire, was DISSOLVED, by mutual consent, on the sixth day of May, 1852.James Sbepstone remains in the business on the premises, and will receive and liquidate the debts of the Firm.July 22.\tlm\u2014123 Tlie Anglo-American M.B.SOUTHWICK, ) H.W.HITCHCOCK, > Managers.JOHN BRINSDEN, ) ON and after the first day of August, proximo, will be prepared to supply the Trade with the best CORN STARCH, through their Agents at Montreal and Quebec.They will also supply Blue and White CRYSTAL STARCH, equal to any ever offered in Canada.Their CORN STARCH is manufactured with the greatest care, under the superintendence of Mr.Bkissden, the original maker in this countty.HENRY CHAPMAN & CO., Agents.July 22, 1852.\tn\u2014123 LOWER CANADA COLLEGE.THE PUPILS attending the above Institution will resume their Studies, on MONDAY, the 9th AUGUST.There are vacancies for Two Boarders.The Principal has matured a thoroughly practical course of English Composition, Letter Writing and Mercantile Accounts, combined with French, for preparing youths lor business in the ensuing Spring.For the distinguished patronage conferred upon him, during the past five years, (commencing with two pupils, and increasing to nearly one hundred) he most sincerely thanks his fellow-citizens, and will endeavour to secure their confidence and support, by unremitting attention to the mental improvement and moral training of the youths entrusted to his care.S.PHILLIPS, Principal.Secretary Protestant Board for Examining Teachers in the District of Montreal.Saint Urbain Street, ?July 22, 1852.\t)\tDim Cb\u2014123 FOR Sale by the Subscriber\u2014 SUGARS\u2014Refined Loaf Sugar London Crushed do Bright Porto Rico do FRESH TEAS\u2014Twankay, Young and Old Hyson, Gunpowder, Souchong, &c Tobacco, 5\u2019s, 8\u2019s, 10\u2019s, 16\u2019s, 20\u2019s \u201c Hennessey\u2019s\u201d Brandy \u201c DeKuyper\u2019s\u201d Gin \u201c Hibbert\u2019s\u201d Porter Madras Indigo Pepper, Cloves, Cassia, Mace \u201c Wix\u2019s\u201d Mustard, Saltpetre Soap, Starch Belmont and Montreal Candles Tanner\u2019s Oil, &c JOHN MOLSON, Junr, July 22.\t123 FINE MINNOWS for sale at T.J.BOYD\u2019S Gun and Fishing Tackle Warehouse, 103 Notre Dame Street.July 22.\t123 2000 COKE\u2014200 afloat.July 22.chaldrons Best NEWCASTLE, JESSE JOSEPH.r\u2014123 1,000 by July 22.qOlTî BOXES Sheet Iron, for Sale bv THEODORE HART.July 22.CHALDRONS best Newcastle (Grate and Steam) Coals, for Sale THEODORE HART.123 123 250 BOXES I C Tin, Crown Brand, for Sale July 22.Nr\u201c THEODORE HART.123 TEWCASTLE COALS\u2014 500 chaldrons Smiths 250 chaldrons Household Wallsend For Sale JESSE JOSEPH.July 21.\t________ r\u2014123 c ANADA PLATES\u2014 1500 boxes \u201c Glamorgan\u201d JESSE JOSEPH.July 21._________ r\u2014122 Tin plates\u2014 1000 boxes Charcoal and Coke Tin, IC, IX JESSE JOSEPH.July 21.r\u2014122 F Butter.OR SALE by the Subscribers\u2014 70 kegs Best \u201c Perth\u201d BUTTER 'FROTHINGHAM à WORKMAN.July 21.m\u2014122 Canada Plates.FOR SALE by the Subscribers\u2014 2000 boxes'CANADA PLATES, superior quality for covering FROTHINGHAM k WORKMAN.July 21.\tju\u2014122 "]
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