Montreal herald and daily commercial gazette, 19 juillet 1860, jeudi 19 juillet 1860
[" fgowsest $2tCm TO LET, OR FOR SALE.FURNISHED HO\u2019tËL\u2014FOR SALE OR TO BE LET, .Mr.S.GIRALDI, Propietor of the CANADA HOTEL, St.Gabriel Street, who wishes to retire from business, has instructed us to offer for Sale the above well-known and centrally situated House, which is capable of accommodating Two Hundred persons, with all the Furni-ture, &c., &c., complete.Possession can be given immediately.For further particulars, apply to LAMOTHE & McGREGOR, T ,\tNo.192 St.Paul Stret.July 13-__________ 167 TO LET,\t~\t\u2018 .Until the 1st of May next, that comfortable Two-Story BRICK DWELLING HOUSE, situate in Dorchester 37\"\"T\u2014w on?^ \u2022ftt lhe heatl of Campeau Street, (.No.89), with good Yard, Stabling and appendages, now in the occupation of L.Kirkup, Esq., for the sum of jE25.Apply on the Premises, or to Mr.BOVEY, Advocate, 31 Law Chambers, Little St.James Street.July 14-\t168 TO LET, \u201c A COTTAGE AND GARDEN, Situate iu one of the most healthy localities in the City, (St.Catherine Street), opposite the residence of _____ Beniah Gibb, and near the great centre of attraction\u2014the CRYSTAL PALACE.The property is undergoing a thorough repair, and will be ready for occupation in a few days.Rent moderate.For further information, apply to the undersigned.H.MUNRO, No.214 Dorchester Street.July 6.\t161 DESIRABLE VILLA AND GROUNDS TO LET.The Proprietor offers to Let, for a term k of years, that SPLENDID RESIDENCE, formerly occupied by the late Allan McDonell, Esq., delightfully situated on the slope of the Mountain, adjoining the property of William Workman, Esq.The beauty of the locality is well known, and requires no comment.The House has been recently painted and papered throughout.The Proprietor would have no objections to let the House Furnished, from year to year, if desired.The Orchard attached is now in full bearing, and there is an abundance of small fruit, Ac.For particulars, apply at the Office of BOYER & HAWLEY, Commissioners Street.July 5.\t160 TO LET, .FOUR TWO-STORY BRICK HOUSES on St.Joseph, near Guy Street.An ply to J.DOWNEY, At Theodore Hart\u2019s, Esq., St.Sacrament Street.July 7.\tim 162 For Salej A desirable Residence in Simpson Street, off Sherbrooke Street, 104 feet front by 150 in depth, with a substantial Two-Story BRICK iOHSK and Outbuildings, all in good order.$12,000 to LEND on CITY PROPERTY DUNCAN ROBERTSON, Broker.June 19.\t146 TO LET, TWO FIRST CLASS HOUSES, Nos.104 and 106 St.Denis Street.Apply to ,\tEDWD.L.RANSON, No.119 Sanguinet Street.Or\tEDWD.NEIL & CO., 81 St.Francois Xavier Street.June 20.\t141 AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.VOLUME LII.MONTREAL, THUKSDA^lORixiNG, JULY 19, I860.NUMBER 172 BOMB BARGAINS IN NEW CARPETS.Crystal Block CJUtPET IWlilEHOUSE.T HE Subscribers have purchased at Auction a very cheap lot of SCOTCH CARPETS, Well worthy the attention of intending purchasers.NEW DESIGNS IN Brussels, Velvet, and Tapestry, received by every Steamer.Just received, a supply of the Ccreat Eastern Damask, the latest Novelty for CURTAINS and CHAIR COVERINGS.H, BESJMim & CO.June 9.\t138 ANOTHER ARRIVAL FASHIONABLE HATS JOHN HENDERSON & GO., CRYSTAL BLOCK, Notre Dame Street, AVE JUST RECEIVED, direct from Paris, a few cases of the most fashion- H able TO LET, A convenient TWO STORY CUT STONE DWELLING HOUSE, pleasantly situated, No.11 St.Genevieve Street, St.Antoine Suburbs.Apply to TH03.JENKING, 201 Notre Dame Street.May 21.\t121 HOUSE TO LET, A FIRST CLASS HOUSE, No.3 Montmorency Place, St.Catherine Street, West.___ Apply to Box 555, Post Office.llay 21.\t121 TO LET, The First Class New CUT STONE HOUSE, 102 St.Antoine Street, with Water Closets, Hot and Cold Baths, am- Gas in every Room ; with or without Garden.Rent moderate.Apply to No.96 St.Antoine Street.April 5.\t82 CALLENDAR PLACE._ Two Houses to Let, having lately been completely Painted, Papered, and also fitted up with Baths, Water Closets and other conveniences.Apply to 0.TUGGEY, At Messrs.J.& W.Hiltons\u2019.February 8.\t33 v\tTO LET, Possession immediately, ^ The small, compact and well-situated STORE, No.14 St.Peter Street, at present occupied by Stalker, O\u2019Brien _______ k Co.The Office contains a Fire-Proof Safe, and other conveniences.The Fixtures may be had at a bargain.Rent low.Apply to STALKER, O\u2019BRIEN & CO.June 4.\t133 TO RENT, A BRICK SHOP, in the town of Sarnia, well adapted for either Dry Goods or Grocery business.The _______ Shop is 60 feet long by 24 feet wide, with two flats below Shop on front street.For particulars, apply to GEO.DURAND, Toronto.March 26.\t13 A, SILK HATS.Also, a large assortment of FRENCH FELT HATS, of beautifnl texture, which they offer to their Customers at greatly reduced prices.May 12.\t114 WILLIAM EAVES, From Coventry, England, WATCH MANUFACTURER, Importer and Wholesale Dealer in English and French Watches, Watch Tools and Materials, JEWELLERY.SPECTACLES, Plated Ware and Fancy Goods, No.53 ST.Francois Xaxier Street, MONTREAL.May 26.\t6m 126 EACILE Life Insurance Company XxC3Kroo:isr.ESTABLISHED IN 1801.Realized Assets, upwards of.£2,000,000, Annual Income.365,000; Annual report, prospectus ana FORM may be had, or will be sent [post free], on application at this Office.0\u201c Medical Fees and all other Expenses paid by the Company.Medical Referee\u2014R.L.MacDonnell, M.D.AUSTIN OUVILLTER, A SENT, 38 St.Peter Street, Montreal.June 14.\t3m 142 Safety and Premium FIRE-WORKS!!! THE LABORATORIES OP A.LAKERGAN & J.G.HOVEY & Co have been consolidated,\u2014in accordance with which LANERGAN & Co are the Manufacturers, JAS.G.HOVEY & Co.are the General Agents The Boston Fire-work Contract awarded to E J1 JY E SI & J1JV A' CO., For the Celebration m July, 1860, who are prepared, with the great and combined resources of the two establishments, to furnish Committees with Brilliant aud Novel Exhibitions for the reception of XI.XX.XI.THE FRINGE OF WALES.THE MONTREAL DISPLAY of FIREWORKS was furnished by J.G.SI O PE I* »V CO., At the G.T, R.R.Jubilee, in 1856.J.G.HOVEY & Co.have imported the following emSTESB riB.X!-WOB.K§, Small Rockets, Jostic or Slow Match, Double Heads, Pistol and Cannon Crackers, and a new variety called Prince of Wales tracker, the largest in size, and producing the heaviest explosion of any heretofore received from China.Imported exclusively by James G.Hovey & Co.Each box marked J.G.H & Go.All orders addressed to the Sale Depot of the General Agents, JAMES G.HOVEY & CO., NO.149 WASHINGTON STREET, Boston, Mass.Laboratories at East Cambridge, South Reading and Brighton, (Mass).June 30.\tdu tis 156 J OHN GOSNKLL & Co., Perfumers to Her Majesty, invite attention to the superior quality of their Fashionable Perfumery, Splendid assoumenis of the most exquisite Perfumes for the Handkerchief, CELEBRATED TOILET SOAPS, possessing valuable emollient, detergent and cosmetic properties.ELEGANT NOVELTIES for PRESENTS, and TOILET REQUISITES of every description.JOHN GOSNELL & Go\u2019s FASHIONABLE COURT PERFUMES, Patronized by the Royal Family.Queen Victoria\u2019s Bouquet, The Princess Royal\u2019s Bouquet, Frangipanni, Military Bouquet, Jockey Club, Wood Violet, Kiss-me-Quick, Opera Bouquet, Love Charm, New Perfume, Jenny Lind, Spring Flowers, &c.FOUNTAIN PERFUMES for the BALL-ROOM JOHN GOSNELL & Go\u2019s Select PREPARATIONS for the HAIR, Golden Oil, Macassar Oil, Genuine Bear\u2019s Grease, Parisian Cream\u2014Perfumed Oils of various delightful odours\u2014Extra-scented Pomatums, Philocome, &c.OR li Two Powerful Steamers; BEAVER AND MUSKRAT.\u2014Also,\u2014 17 FiRET CLASS BARGES, LYING AT BOUCHERVILLE.For particulars, apply to D.AIKM4N, Contractor\u2019s Office, Point St.Charles.May 26.\t126 FOR SALE, THOSE EXTENSIVE PREMISES, Corner of St.Maurice Street and Longueuil Lane, for the last five years _____ occupied by Cowan & Cross.The property extends also to St.Henry Street.Apply to CROSS & BANCROFT, Or to\tCOWAN & CROSS.February 23.\t46 BRADY\u2019S PUBLISHING HOUSE.JYew Hooks just Issued.ETHEL TREVOR ; or, The Duke\u2019s Victim.By G.W.M.Reynolds.Price 50 cents.FAST LIFE; or, Memoirs of the Marquis of Waterford.Price 25 cents.EXPOSE OF THE SONS OF MALTA.Price 12 cents.THE CHEVALIER D\u2019HARMENTAL.By A.Dumas.Price 50 cents.FENNING\u2019S EVERY MOTHER\u2019S BOOK : Do not let your Child Die.Price 25 cents.iCf Mailed free of postage on receipt of price.THE WELCOME GUEST, a first-class Family Monthly Newspaper, issued at the low rate of Twenty-five Cents a Year.Send for a specimen S^Brady\u2019s Mammoth Catalogue of all the best Books sent free of postage.FREDERIC A.BRADY, Publisher, 24 Ann Street, New York.Agents wanted.March 10,\t6m-60 STORAGE ! JTORAGE ! ! GRANT HALL & Uo.\u2019s Mills and Elevating Warehouse.THE SUBSCRIBERS are now prepared to Receive on Storage, FLOUR and GRAIN, of all descriptions, in their NEW FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE, Canal Basin, at reasonable Rates.Their facilities for DISCHARGING and LOADING VESSELS are such as will insure the greatest despatch.They will also be prepared to GRIND Wheat on commission, on and after the 1st June.GRANT, HALL & CO.May 11.\t113 First Premium Fur Establishment.A.BKAHADÏ, MONTREAL, RESPECTFULLY invites these who are desirous of purchasing CHOICE FURS, to visit his establishment, whore they can see an array of the LATEST FASHIONS and best description.A mere glance at the articles which he has on sale, will be sufficient to convince connoisseurs that they cannot be surpassed in either materials or manufacture.Even the unskilled may safely trust their eyes, his Furs being as good in their quality as hand-Bome in their appearance.But, as there are persons who, distrusting their own judgment, require the attestation of the skilful, he thinks it right to mention that, at the Exhibition held here last autumn, he gained all the prizes [eight in number] offered or superiority in bis line of business,\u2014a success not surprising, considering that he obtained a knowledge of his art in those parts of Europe where it has bsen longest practised and carried to the highest degree of excellence yet reached.October 20.\t250 Dawson\u2019s S^ool Thread IS MANUFACTURED from choicest Sea Island Cotton, 300 yards aud 200 yards, Six-Cord, lengths warranted, in zinc cannisters 100 dozen each, assorted numbers.For Sale, at cost and charges, by WILLIAM HOBBS, Jk., Agent for Canada, 14 Lemoine Street.May 15.\tUS Shiels\u2019 Compound Cougb Lozenges Prepared from the Prescription of the celebrated Dr.Listou, of London, ?R Manufactured bt R.& W.SHSEL3, 41 St.Francois Xavier Street, Montreal, And Sold Wholesale and Retail by all Druggists and Confectioners throughout the Provinces.June 9.\t131 SPRING DRY GOODS.THE subscriber has received his assortment of STAPLE and FANCY DRY GOODS, and SMALL WARES, among which are Summer Prints, Muslins and Bareiges Light Cobourgs, Delaines, Cambleteens and other Dress Stuffs Summer Tweeds, Meltons, Crotons, Pachas and other Coating and Pantaloon Stuffs, Checked and Buff Hollands, Flowers, Feathers, Straw Hats, Clarks' Paisley Threads in full assortment.R.ADAMS, 298 St.Paul Street.\u201e REMOVAL.N.B.\u2014He will remove on 1st May to the modern premises, No.283 St.Paul Street, presently occupied by Messrs.Barber, Kerr & Co., Six Doors Eastward of his present Warehouse.April 13.\t89 chTldiien LÏKÊTHEÏÎ Dr.Churchill\u2019sVermifuge Lozenges v.R.THE ONLY SAFE, EFFICIENT & RELIABLE Remedy for Worms, Prepared with great care by R.& W.Shiels, Medicated Lozenge Manufacturers, Montreal.THEY are well adapted for INFANTS and DELICATE CHILDREN, pleasant to the taste, and may be taken at any time, without inconvenience.No other medicine required, Full directions for use on each box.For Sale, Wholesale and Retail, by all Druggists throughout the Province.Price, 25 cents.June 23.\t150 IStoiRBE & SCOTT TAILORS & OUTFITTERS Opposite St.Lawrence Hall, BEG to intorm their friends and the public that they are now SELLING OFF quantity of READY-MADE CLOTHING, at greatly reduced prices FOR CASH, intending to confine themselves more particularly to ordered work.12 GREAT ST.JAMES STREET.May 24.\t124 KEF1MD SUtiAKS, Refined sugars for preserving\u2014 Loaf, Broken Loaf, Soft Crushed, Ground, Powdered and Yellow.For Sale by GEO.CHILDS, T ,\t281 Notre Dame Street JulY JL__________ __ _______ 165 For Sale X7 ILL A LOTS, at St.Catherines and Cote-V des-Neiges, containing from three to tei rpents.ORCHARD PROPERTY, at St.Catherines containing thirty arpents.THREE-STORY CUT-STONE HOUSE 50 St.Gabriel Street.Terms Liueral.For further particulars, apply to McCULLOUH BROS., 8 Common Street, April 26._____ 100 No.Bordeaux Viaegar.FINEST WHITE WINE VINEGAR, for Pickling.For Sale by GEO.CHILDS July 11'\t165 For Sale, COMMERCIAL BANK STOCK.»\tJ.HEMPSTED, Broker, Union Buildings.Juno 26.\t152 NEW STARCH WORKS ! rglHE CANADA (CORN) STARCH COM-PANY beg to notify the trade that their works at Edwardsburg are now nearly completed, and in a few weeks they will be able to supply the different qualities of Corn Starch at a lower price than they can be imported.They also take this opportunity of stating that they have spared no expense in fitting np the works on the most approved method, and have engaged the services of some of the best Starch Makers from the most extensive Factories in the United States, so that purchasers of Starch are assured that the quality will be equal to any Corn Starch produced on this Continent, and by far superior to any English or Scotch Starch.Sole Agent.ALEXANDER WALKER.St.Peter Street, Montreal.June 12.\t140.Motice.THE undersigned returns his sincere thanks to his friends and the public generally for their kind support while his Store was in Bleury Street, and begs to inform them that he has REMOVED to a more commodious establishment, at the corner of Aylmer and Berthelot Streets, which will be OPENED on MONDAY next, with a choice stock of the best description of Ciroceries and Provisions, and trusts, by strict attention and keeping first class Goods, to merit a continuance of their patronage.23\u201d All Parcels delivered free of charge.JOHN CHARLES.July 9.\t163 ROTiCE, PARTIES supplying any of the ROYAL MAIL THROUGH STEAMERS, viz.: Kingston, Passport, Banshee, Champion and New Era, are hereby notified that NO ACCOUNT will be acknowledged without the written order of the undersigned therefor.ALEX.MILLOY, Agent.Montreal, May 14, 1860.!'(\t115 MOTICB, rjpi HE COPARTNERSHIP heretofore existing between the undersigned, under the name and firm of DUPONT & LEFEBVRE, is DISSOLVED from THIS DAY, by mutual consent, and CHARLES LEFEBVRE is authorized to regulate all the affairs of the said Co-Partnership, with the exception of the DEBTS which have been collected by D.DUPONT.All persons indebted to the said Co-Partnership are therefore requested to make immediate payment, if they would not be prosecuted, without further notice.D.DUPONT CHARLES^LEFEBVRE.Montreal, April 14, 1860.\t92 JOHN GOSNELL & Go\u2019s TREBLE DISTILLED LA VENDER, EXHIBITION LAVENDER TOILET VINEGAR AROMATIC EAU DE COLOGNE, and powerful Floral Essences, are not only highly valued as fashionable Perfumes, but impart health and vigour by their aromatic and therapeutic properties.JOHN GOSNELL & Go\u2019s Real Old Brown Windsor Soap, Brown Windsor for family use, Glycerine, Almond Brown, Elder Flower, Honey Soap, and every other description of Fancy Soap, in squares, tablets, packets, boxes, &c., to suit all classes of purchasers.FOB.FB.ESXStfS'TS, FASHIONABLE PERFUMES in leather cases, in fancy gilt card boxes; miniature bottles in hampers; stone jars; and every novelty of the season.JOHN GOSNELL & Co\u2019s CHX3B.KY TOOTH FASTS*, the best preparation for general use, prevents toothache, and gives fragrance to the breath.INSTANTANEOUS HAIR DYE, warranted to produce any shade of brown or black.This incomparable Dye completely removes every difficulty in dyeing the hair, and restores its natural colour.JO SUV GOSJYEEE A' Co., MANUFACTURING PERFUMERS, &c,, Patentees of The Trichosaron Hair Brush, 12 THREE-KING-COURT, LOMBARD ST., bOBTDOttr.CAUTION.\u2014To avoid counterfeits, observe the name and address, as above.Merchants supplied with J.G.& Go\u2019s.Perfumery, from their Bonded Warehouse, at a considerable saving in duty, &c.June 21.\t3m tis 148 PI\tY\t][\tRl\tpi\tf\tRill\tif\ti\\i \tuJ\t¦ w\tRJ\tEi\t\tunJ\tllfl\t.ii If.GO.& UUIJ Gilders, A.J.PELL Carvers and In calling attention to their Superior Style of Framiug, Beg respectfully to O A TJ T1 X Furaislimg_W areiiause.FUNERALS FURNISHED ÏN BEST STÎTÏÆ» First and Second-Class Hearse*.CHILD\u2019S HEARSE.ZINC AND LEAD COFFINS, Trimmings, &c., &«.FINE GUJLERY.siVAi\u2019E & mm HAYE just received an assortment of very superior Ivory Handled Table and Desert Knives and Carvers Pocket and Pen Knives, Scissors Pocket Fruit Knives, Razors, kc., ko.\u2014and,\u2014 Cases of Pearl Handled Plated Desert Knives and Forks.\u2014also,\u2014 Electro-Plated Forks, Spoons, Ladles, &c., o fine quality, in variety of Patterns.June 20.\t147 GOLDJ»ENS.FINE assortment of GOLD FEN and PENCIL CASKS, with New Pattern of Pens in every stylo.SAVAGE k LYMAN, Cathedral Block, Notre Dame Centre.June 20.\t147 THOR li SPENCE.118 & 120 McGill Street, Corner of Haymarket Square, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Paints, Oils, Glass, Varnishes., Brushes, ARTISTS\u2019 MATERIALS.GLAZIERS\u2019 DIAMONDS, ko., ko.HOUSE.SIGN & DECORATIVE Painters, Manufacturers of every description of STAINED AND OMAffiTAL GLASS, LEAD SASHES, &C.May 14.115 A JUST PUBLISHED.THE PRINCE ROYAL POLKA CHARLES GROBE, With a beautiful Lithograph of the Prince of Wales.Price, colored, 50 cents ; plain, 40 cents.At A.& S.NORDHE1MERS\u2019, 59 Great St.James Street.July 9.\t163 HE SUBSCRIBER OFFERS FOR SALE\u2014 Albertine Coal Oil ALFRED SAVAGE, 22 Lemoine Street, lm 154 10 tierces ! June 28.£6001 OF TRUST FUNDS to LEND, about 1st August, on the security of Real Estate.Apply to D.J.CRAIG, 34 Little St.James Street.July S.\t161 Principe Cigars.1 A A M\u2019 of the above iust received, from Cuba.\u201cLORENZO HORNOSA\u201dBRAND.The undersigned, having been appointed Agent tor the above favorite brand, will dispose of them to the Trade on favorable terms.W.L.MURISON, 18 Lemoine Street.July 3.\t158 G Port Wines, RAHAM & CO\u2019S, iu pipes, hhds and qr-casks, ex \u201c Deolinda,\u201d from Oporto.For Sale by I.BUCHANAN, HARRIS k CO.June 23.\ti5o In Chancery, BETWEEN Thomas Paton,.Plaintiff AND Richard Benner, Michael Wilson Browne, Tho mas Noakes Best, James Coleman, John Masson, William Bellhouse and the Bank of Upper Canada,.Defendants IN pursuance of the Decree in this cause, and with the approbation of the Master of this Court at Hamilton, there will be exposed for Sale, by PUBLIC AUCTION, at the AUCTION ROOMS of THOMAS NOAKES BEST, In the City of Hamilton, Ofl FRIDAY, 20tk of JULY next, At ELEVEN o\u2019clock, A.M., The Steamer \u201c Esiropa/\u2019 Now lying at McKAY\u2019S WHARF, in the CITY OF HAMILTON.She was built in 1854, at a cost of nearly £23,000, and has been run only three seasons.She is about 223 feet long and about 21 feet wide, and with a depth ot hold of 13 feet, and is of 341 tons burthen.The Engine is low pressure and new.She will be sold subject to a reserved bid which is fixed by the said Master.The conditions of sale are the standing conditions of the Court of Chancery, excepting that a deposit of £1000 of the purchase money will be required to bo paid at the time of sale, aud the remainder in 6 half-yearly payments, bearing interest at 6 per cent,, and secured to the satisfaction of the vendor.For further particulars, apply to William Proudfoot, Hamilton, Solicitor for the Plaintiff, at any Branch in Canada of the Bank of British North America, or to Kichard Martin, Esquire, Barrister, Hamilton ; and for leave to inspect the vesssel, apply on board, W.LEGGO, Master.Hamilton, June 26,1860.\t151 MORRIS & LEACH Advocates.OFFICE\u201461 Little St.James Street, MONTREAL.June 23.\tly-249 THE PREVCE OF WALES GALOP.Ï3\u201d Composed and Respectfully Dedicated to H.JR- H- THE PRINCE OF WALES, BY KfiMSiir Pitmen.Superbly illustrated, with a life-like Portrait of El.R.H.Price, 50 cents.Mailed to any address on receipt of this amount, HENRY PRINCE, 145 Notre Dame Street.June 23.\t150 Lubin\u2019s Perfumes.Ess Bouquet,\tBouquet de Caroline, Jockey Club,\t\u201c\tEglantine, Frangipanni,\tn\tMontreal, Patchouly, '\t\u201c\tGrand Trunk Millefleur,\tVerbena, Citronella Rose,\tMusk, Hedyosmia,\tJessamine, Victoria,\tWest End, New Mown Hay,\tQueen of the Alps, Mignonette,\tBouquet de\tRoi, Violette, ko., ko.\u2014also,\u2014 A large and choice assortment of English and French Hair, Nail, Cloth, Tooth, Flesh and Shaving Brushes; Shell, Buffalo aud India Rubber Combs, ko., ko.For Sale by J.GARDNER, Dispensing Chemist, 295 Notre Dame Street.May 2.105 Cushman\u2019s Chemical Food.Afresh supply just received.\u2014ALSO,\u2014 Winchester\u2019s Hypophosphite of Lime and Soda Blanchard\u2019s PUls and Syrup of Iodide of Iron Condy\u2019s Disinfecting Fluid Keating\u2019s Persian Insect Powder Danu\u2019s Chocolate in Powder Taylor\u2019s Cocoa and Chocolate French Chocolate For sale by May 2.JOHN GARDNER, Chemist and Druggist, .295 Notre Dame Street 105 Co-Partnership Notice, THE Undersigned have entered into BUSINESS as DEALERS in Fainls, Oils and Window «lass, PLAIS AND DECORATIVE PAINTERS | AND Glass Stainers.JOHN MoARTHUR, JOHN O.SPENCE.Montreal, May 12, I860.\t115 BUCK LACE SHAWLS, &c.NEW designs in BLACK and WHITE LACE SHAWLS, square and half-square BLACK LACE MANTLES, $2 and upward LACE COLLARS and SLEEVES, from the lowest price to the most expensive.\u2014and,\u2014 A Beautiful Assortment of NEW SEWED MUSLINS, ko., ko., At O.HEALY\u2019S, 219 Notre Dame Street Jane 16.\t144 PALMER IMARBLES.THE UNDERSIGNED having been appointed AGENTS for the Sale of the above PHOTOGRAPHS, bog to inform their Friends and the Pablic that they have received a Consignment, which they will Sell at a small advance on lhe New York prices.Parties wishing to obtain these Splendid Pictures can do so by leaving their orders with us, where a List can be seen of all that are published.C.J.T.ADAMS k CO., No.225 Notre Dame Street.July 12.\t______ 166 CJ.T.ADAMS & Co.in returning thanks to , their Customers for the liberal patronage received by them since their commencement in business, beg to inform them that they continue to do all kinds of GILDING in their line, such as PIER GLASS, MANTLE and PORTRAIT FRAMES, which they will get up in the latest style, and trust by strict attention to business and moderate charges to merit a continuation of their support.O.J.T.A.k Co.have constantly on hand a large assortment of OVAL FRAMES, suitable for Photographs, which they will sell at very low Prices.Parties wishing to have Portraits, &c., framed in Oval Frames, would do well to call and examine their Stock, as they have a lot of new styles which have not been in this city before.Also, on hand, a large assortment of GERMAN GILT MOULDINGS, suitable for Cheap Framing, such as Show Cards, kc.July 12.\t166 Office Desks, Shops Fitted, s, N Y; Mrs J B Budd.Miss Rose do.Mr» Eugene do.Jo»m H do, Philideiphia ; J^is Collin , Miss do, N Y ; C F Fox & wife Portsmouth; VVm L Bones &.1-dy, Mrs M A Rhine-.Miss H A do.H O du, N Y ; E A Bainping, Cum; Rev J Davidso .& lady, Newb >ro; Geo C Jenkins.Balumore ; C Ciowell.St Loui« ; Citas W Yard & wife.Phil; \\lex How^en, ' H do, Nun is town ; J W Kelsev and dau hier.Ueir «ii; Mr and Mrs Kenapt, Lindsay ; Bian-cha'd & ia ly, Min; Mr& Mrs Rielout ch'ld & nurse.Pori Hope; E Keith & wife O R do.Chicago ; G v J \\V Cuu-\u2014mnsha.n an i wife.Misa M ciom iierville, Miss Mary do.N C ; Mrs M A Harrison Pa ; Mr & Mi-s Leanit.Ga ; J S Watkins N C; A C Glenn, Pa ; H B TitamLand and lady, Mi- F P Smith, Tenu; John M Landum, Louisiana; T P V\tClnlten.Texas ; R .1 Nevin, Miss M Johnston, Miss E do S A Kinghun &\u2022 1 'dy.Miss J A Phelps, N Y ; Ur and Mrs .VUckuh , Marylaud ; John G Robinson, Mad E Less- s ,e, New Or cans; J M McGi \u2022 & family, Mississippi ; F C F '»od.Toronto ; W L Wallace, Miss 1 do.Mrs Be i and, N Y; J Livisry, London England; G B Beacale.St Johns N B ; DM Innés.A Dyson, Hamilton ; W J Banes, Toronto ; M Boyd & wife, S M Andrews & wife, Quebec ; G L> V-tnes.Nova Scotian ; Mr Rae, England ; Ch ines H Ryets- n James Sanford, Newark ; a J Grai t, Qu< bee ; .i N Titno.N Y ; Mr T-mridge, Quebec; E Er-menimger St Thomas; J W \\Vest, Lexingiou, Ky; Hy A Snow, independent Boston Fusiliers; Win H Lawrence, do; L Mills, B 'sum; O C Wilson & lady, J E Dewey and sister, N Y; J M Molt, N C.OTTAWA.Dr Hill A son, Ottawa; G H Barnes, St Hyacinthe ; C F Mukleston, Kingston ; D A Murray & lady, Williston ; M IVIiicne.ll, Waierlut ; N Robe'tson.Otiawa; S Ger It, G T A K M; A H Simons, Madrid N Y; WmMaume.Quebec; F Hallandal, Chas Aumond Ottawa; W Lacky, Toronto, T -Vood, Hami ton; Mr A Mrs A W Otis.N Y ; J Lca-ton A lady.Mrs Watson & child, Philadelphia; E Morton son.Boston; R H Hhilips, C C do, Miss do, .viiss Johns, iss rS i bing, Virti id; John McGuire and wife, Fait tax V\t; Jos Clare & wife, G E Brewe'sA wife.Massena; Sam Ca tiling, lady & s n, Philadelphia : H C Durand & lady, C ii.-a o ; J Hill, James Hopper, Maryland ; Miss A Shut-liff, Pa; Geo Crary.N Y, Sam G Davis, Boston; H T Bar-st «w, Alich; James R Perry, Be.ij Godins.Le-vision; S F T rtan, Mich ; is F Ames, Mass ; A W Thompson, Portland; Ld Fairall, W W Sheppard, Lachiue; las Coleman, Du u'as; W vv Fmith, Si Joans ; R White, Liule River ; H F McLachlin.Amprior ; J S Rubidge, River du Loup ; 5\tW Snow, Sian stead ; L Devany and wife, John McKt-own, Hamilton; J S MeCuaig, Quebec; F Pruyn, St Johns.MONTREAL HOUSE.Sam Muir, N Y ; R McGreig, V C R R ; F H Palmer, Cnicago ; Alex Starbuck, Cin ; J Hersen, Lake Superior ; Thos Christie.Hamilton; Mrs Waikiu, Miss Murphy.Trenton; A E Fry, Ogdenshurgh ; W M Johnson & lady.Bahama; L V\\ Smith,'E Y do.Cohoes; Louis Lisley.John do, New York; A Paine, H A Marsh.Ma-s; W s Henderson, W M Martin, Neow York; Ch is T Hubbard, nurse 6\tdaughter.Butlalo ; N Clark A lady.Mass ; Mrs Paterson & daughter, Quebec ; I Dunlop & lady, Rochester , G Hy Lewis A lady, Brooklyn ; Mr- Napper, N Y ; C Rollo, Bu hngtun ; B Vaine, Ogdensburgh ; W N Bease, Wm Biicknell, Philade phii ; D Hanly, Quebec ; John S Lies.D T S Bull, Hartford; D Morgan, Sorel; Jno Wells, Mich; T Brown, Peterboro ; J M Mott, N C ; John O Treabry, Boston; James P Ellis, Trenton; Mrs Alice Loring, Quebec.DONEGANA.Gov Manierve & family, Ch cago; W H Bidwell, N Y; L T Littlefield, S Lafauimem.St Louis; W L Malloy, W A Webb, Cincinnati ; B M Horrell.G D Gillmoie, New Orleans ; A W Kellogg, a C do, New York ; C J Acton, wife A daughter, Cincinnati; Chas B Williams, Philadelphia ; R C Lancing, New York ; «obt Morson, England ; H D Burkett, Charleston; R do.Hartford Ci; C H Buttler.wife and two children, thiladelphia; Mr and Mrs Selh H Grosvenor, Miss C S Wcy, Buffalo; Benjamin Wey, CatskiU; Baron de Rothschild A servant, Pans; G Powdil, Quebec.COSMOPOLITAN.Jnbias Lvon.New York ; C H Ryan, James Sandford.Newark; A Donnelly, Richmond; A W Lellie.New York: H M Carroll, Surnia ; E Mims Rochester ; John P Smith, Kingston : Thos Grant, Michigan ; P Prince, New Yoik ; 8 D vid.London ; Th mas O\u2019Neil Lachine ; Mr Gibb, Bmckville; Wm H Wigman, Port Stanley; Fred Holmes, England.ALBION.C T Casselman, Winchester; Miss M do, Williamsburgh; C J Ho'-grave, W do, Ottawa , Jos S Dunning, Oswego ; W Hanington and lady, N Y; C Burrell, Toronto , Alex McUoneil A lady.Roxborough ; John McGregor, Martin-town; T Best Beauharnois ; J W Stowe, Peterboro; Mrs Barr, Granby.Report of the Inspectors of Prisons, Asy lums &o \u2014The preliminary report of these Inspectors has been before ua tor some days.\u2014 Its opening paragraphs show the wide field through which the investigations of the Commissioners are to extend.They have under their supervision sixty-two jails ; the Provincial Penitentiary ; two Reformatory Prisons ; the Marine Hospital ; five Lunatic Asylums ;\u2014 and the Quarantine Hospital\u2014in all sixty-two institutions, to which may hereafter be added such insti'utions receiving public aid, as His Excellency may please to place on their list \u2014 The Board was constituted on the 28ih December, and the report was dated the 23rd of March.Of course little could be done in the interval.The Commissioners had, however, mapped out the institutions under their care into five divi-suns, each of which is to be twice a year visited by one Inspector, besides the visits prescribed by law for the Oommissioners collectively, or such as the Oommissioners may appoint for themselves to make.The Commissioners have also constituted themselves into four Committees, each charged with one department of the general subject under their j »int care.In order to have some preliminary facts to serve as a basis for future operations they have prepared a series of questions touching upon ihe construction of prisons ; food, hygiene ; cost of maintenance ; sanitary and spiritual condition of the prisoners.These have been submitted to the Sheriff, Ohaplains, and Medical attendants of each Prison in the country.The result leads to the conviction iu the minds of the Inspectors, that bad as they believed our local prisons to be, th-y are far worte than they had imagined.T/iey are unfitted either \u201cto punish, deter, or reform, \u2019 and their defects are to be found in the \u201cdistribution of the buildings; the sanitary arrangements ; the means of reforming\u2014everywhere.\u201d In six of the prisons there is but one officer ; and in twenty-two only two ; so that they can exercise no efficient supervision, and their authority only exists hy the sufferance of the prisoners.This sufferance is not difficult for the prisoners to accord, if as the Inspectors say, these Jails are in spite of their defects, found not to ha unhealthy, and are looked upon by the great maj jrity of their residents, as cheap boarding houses, where they may retire, and repose with the advantages of medical attendance, and the sweet social intercourse of other \u201c prigs/\u2019 at periods when they find that the prosecution of their professions is injuring their health.The prison at present, according to the picture drawn by the Inspectors, is a punishment only to accidental offenders, of previously decent life, or to innocent persons falsely accused.For them it is no doubt a frightful place of suffering.By a table made up from the Sheriffs\u2019 returns, it appears that the total number of prisoners during the year 1859, was in Upper Canada 6,586, and in Lower Canada, 4,545, to which we must add for the Penitentiary from Upper Canada 225, and from Lower Canada 30.Thus there are no less than 11,000 of a prison population, in a population numbering in all less than 3,000,000.The dark shade of tnese sad details is deepened when we find that of the 11,000, no less than 3,503 are women, and no less than 685 are children.These women ate not generally criminal in the strict and technical acceptation ot tiiat word ; but vicious.They are iu fact, prostitutes, who after descending the rapidly inclined plaQ9 of vice tm they make their homes in the fields, commit slight offences to entitle them to gratuitous shelter during the winter.The Inspeetors make a suggestion, which seems to be a valuable one It 13 a grave question whether the prison be the proper place for ihis portion of the dangerous classes, who cannot be reformed by ita ma chinery, and who, in spite of classification, must always form an element of worse corruption wherever they go.We believe that in Ireland there is now some provision for handing them over to a house of detention, rather than of imprisonment, under the direction of ladies, and that this has been attended with the hap.piest results.By some little legislation, a chmge of this kind could be readily introduced n re We are not surprised to find from the report that the officers at the Eeformatory at Peaetaoguishene, who are represented as very efficient, are in great dread of the effect of the addition of a female ward to that establishment.As a proof of the extent to which persona habitually reside in the jails, it is stated that some prisoners have been committed seventy-sir, and one one hundred and siity-three times proving, say the Inspectors, either that he was a fitter resident for some other place than for a prison, or else, that he was not fit for even occasional enlargement.Escapes from our prisons are frequent, owing to their evil construction and small number of attendants ; suicide and lunacy are rare; and the costs are large.The revenues derived from the labour ot prisoners elsewhere than in the Penitentiary amount only to $4931, of which $3821 were realized in Montreal, and the rest in Quebec, while the cost of maintenance for food alone, after deducting the produce of labour, was $112,924, or $123.42 per man per annum.\u2014 This is the cost, as we have said, for food alone, and in badly constructed jails without classification and without provision for moral or religious instruction.In the Kingston Penitentiary, which has many of the advantages the other prisons lack, the cost of maintenance is only per man per annum some $75,85.The Commissioners speak in terms of praise of the new jails now being constructed in Lower Canada, which, say they, though very small, are arranged in a much better manner than those previously built.Of the Keforma-tories, we are informed that the exemplary conduct of the officers at Penetanguishene must tend to work a reform in their juvenile prisoners unless these are more than ordinarily depraved.On the other hand, the want of harmony between the Warden and Ohaplains at Isle aux Noix, is pointed out as a cause of much of the ill success which has notoriously attended that institution.It is very much to be hoped that the harmony and good feeling which appears so happily to exist at Penetan.-guishene, may hereafter be found at the sister Reformatory at Isle aux Noix, and that the bad feeling hitherto noticeable there may no longer obtain ; for it is quite clear if every officer does not conscientiously discharge his allotted duties, but attempts to intrude on those of the other officers, that harmony can never prevail in the institution.It is equally to be hoped that the Rev.Chaplains at Isle aux Noix may merit the high compliments paid to their brothers iu Canada West, without interfering iu the discipline or overstepping their attributes.The statistics in this report show that Upper Canada and the Protestant faith have contributed by much too large a proportion, as compared to their numbers to the prison population.This may, probably, be accounted for to some extent by the fact that the large mass of Lower Canadians, making the balk of the Catholics, are natives of the country, with ail thé advantages that fact necessarily gives them, while the Upper Canadian population is largely composed of immigrants, many of whom have, of coarse, been forced to wander either by habits of criminality already formed, or by poverty, which is so great a temptation to crime.Considering that there are in the Penitentiary 527 Protestants 257 Catholics and 2 Jews, it ; ?eems rather whimsical to regret that there 1 should be thirteen who profess no religion\u2014the religion professed by the others being apparently of very little value to themselves or others.Upon the whole the Board of Inspectors pronounce the condition of our jails to be frightful.But at present they make only two suggestions of reform.First they say that prisoners of different sexes should *ot only be separated iu the same buildings, but should be placed iu separate buildings ; and for vicious, as distinguished from criminal females, they propose the species of detention we have already alluded to.The collocation of the two sexes in the same building, besides the evils, which cannot, in such circumstances, be wholly prevented among the prisoners, imposes on the superior officers the hazardous supervision of subordinates of two sexes, and thus leads to difficulties such as have occurred at Isle aux Noix.Next they would, in order to save expense and promote due classification and discipline, establish a number of central prisons for persons guilty of serious offences, and for those who have been many times in jail.In these they would establish the rules of the Penitentiary, while in the county jails they would confine only persons awaiting a trial, or persons convicted of offences of a light character.The report seems to be drawn up with a great deal of judgment, and if the Inspectors go on io the same spirit much good may he hoped from their labors.The Italian Question.\u2014We copy elsewhere an interesting letter, addressed from Turin to the New York Tribune.If ths writer be correct Bomba junr.will have very short work made of his kingiom.Garibaldi would be too great a man for other great men if he had the chance to capture Naples as he has done Palermo, so Louis Napoleon will do it, or cause it to be doue by some other hand.We shall see.So that the cruel coward goes, it matters little who expels him.The Eclipse.\u2014We need not say that the Eclipse came off yesterday strictly according to programme.There will be no opportuc ity for the ns a of smoked glass for another, such a spectacle for niceteen years to come, when the Eclipse will again happen on the 29th July, and so on with variations of the day, of the month, every nineteenth year, till 2274, when the moon\u2019s shidow will only just touch the North Pole.In 12,492 years, after that no such eclipse will be visible, but at that epoch there will be a repetition of the eclipses beginning at the South Pole and advancing mors northwardly every nineteen years, as the shadow is now doing at each return to the earth's surface.Errattdm.\u2014In describing the watch presented to the Captain of the \" Cambria,\u201d on behalf of the President of the United States, we said its value was $150\u2014it should have been $350.The Common or Free Schools ih Toronto.\u2014 The Toronto Lender has a very interesting article on the Free School system in that city \u2014the system by which ail children are admitted gratuitously to the instruction of the public schools.From this article it appears, first : that, whereas, from 1844 to 1847, under what was called the Tax Bill system, in which the children payed part of the charges, the expenses were not more than £1 14s per head per annum, they have now reached £3 6s.per head per annum.This is only one proof among many of the constant tendency to disproportionate increase of charges as compared to services in all concerns managed by public officers.But another remarkable part of the story is, that in proportion to the population, the sobool attendance has fallen off from about 6 in a hundred of the population in 1847 to about 4 in a hundred iu 1859.The Leader states that the free plan has wholly failed to realize the expectations of those who hoped, by gratuitous instruction, to make the poorer classes come to the school-houses.It says the repugnance of this class to send their children arises from the high standards of clothing,books, &c., requited in the schools, with which the poor cannot comply.The Free Schools are, therefore, used by the children of parents living in two and three-story houses, who can, says the Leader, and ought to pay, for the education of their children, instead of getting the charges borne by taxes paid by their poorer neighbours, who, after all, are not recipients of the benefit, Italian Opera.\u2014Oar readers must bear in mind that this is the last night but one of the admirable Company of Lyric Artists, now performing at the Theatre Royal, and to those who desire to hear the fine music of Yerdi rendered with brilliancy and effect, we would say, do not fail to hear \u201c II Trovatore\u201d to-night.All the Artists, who have already made so favorable an impression in the previous Operas, appear in the principal roles, and in addition, a new Candidate for favour, appears in the person of \"Signora Pollioni,\u201d said to be a Contralto, of great sweetness and power.The enterprising manager deserves the thanks of the play-going community for the rich musical treat he has afforded them, and his efforts to please should be rewardetl by crowded bouses.Editorial Correspondence o| the Montreal Herald.\u201d Halifax, 12th July, 1860.Here I have reached the terminus of my journey on the mainland and shall embark tonight on board the R.M.S.S.(Ounarder) Osprey for St.John, Newfoundland, where the Royal Squadron\u2014a list of which yon will have received long before this can reach you__is expected to arrive about the 24th instant.The Osprey is a beautiful Clyde-built, first class screw steamer, and plies regularly, once a fortnight, from this port to St.John, carrying the mails and leaving immediately on ihe arrival of the Cunard steamer from Boston.The voyage, on an average, occupies about three days and four nights\u2014I expect to reach St.Johns on Monday morning.I promised in my last, from St.John, N.B., to give you a short sketch of what had struck me as most noticeable in that port and city and its neighbourhood ; and so little are these fine, but somewnat neglected, Lower provinces [as we call them] known in Canada, that I take it most of the readers of the Herald will, like myself, be agreeably surprized to find that they possess natural resources and advantages inferior to no portion of the continent, and that, although somewhat slow in improving them, still the progress made by their people, especially within the last few years, is creditable alike to their industry, intelligence and enterprise.The most striking feature of St.John is, undoubtedly, its splendid harbor and the noble river which falls into it.The former, situated in latitude 45-15 North, longitude 66 ° 4 West\u2014is safe aud spacionsj affording anchorage for vessels of the largest class, the depth of water varyiog from ten io sixty fathoms aud the tide rising and falling from 20 to 26 feet, thus affording great facilities for sounding and repairing ships\u2014the buildiugof which is one of the great staples of ita commerce.The city, which stands upon an elevated ridge ot small hills, rising gradually from the harbour on one side and from the bank of the river on the other, with its towers and spires, forts and battlements, has a most imposing effect as seen from the harbor, nor is the visitor disappointed on landing, the streets being wide and generally well laid out, the road-ways in good condition, and the sidewalks clean and boarded.St.John possesses, what Montreal does not, two spacious ornamented public squares, the one called Queen's and the other King\u2019s square, the private residences around whicu bespeak ease and comfort, if not wealth and luxury iu their occupants.There are no public buildings of any striking character, if I except the Roman Catholic Cathedral, which, as is usual with Romanist structures, occupies a prominent site, crowning one of the hills on which the city is built.It is, both ext rnally and internally, a costly and handsome cathedral-like gothic building of large proportions and of the most lasting and substantial material, being built of stone, in a eructform shape, and surmounted by two lofty towers.The river St.John is, next to the St.Lawrence, the noblest river in British North America, being navigable for steamers for about two hundred mites from its mouth, and for smaller craft for nearly two hundred more.It.is crossed by a magnificent suspension bridge, within about a mile of the harbor, where the river narrowe into a gorge or fissure, from 500 to 600 feet in width, bounded by lime stone cliffs of about a hundred feet in height.Through this narrow passage the water rushes with Niagara-like grandeur, at low water falling about twenty feet.The tide, however, rises below the fall, from 22 to 26 feet, and the consequence is that, at each flood tide, during about three quarters of an hour, the troubled waters are stilled, the fall is subdued, aud the river becomes navigable for ships and steamers.The scenery around is grand in the extreme and will amply repay the lover of the picturesque for a longer and more fatiguing journey than I have made to sec it.The Falls and the Suspension bridge of St.John are only inferior in interest and grandeur to those of the Niagara.In these latter days, when the one main occupation of mankind is \" to run to and fro,\u201d a country without railways must take a very humble position among nations.Such, however, is far from being New Brunswick\u2019s case, for in her great provincial work of the European and North American Railway, she possesses a line of road inferior to none on this continent.I am enabled to speak avec connaissance, for, by the obliging attention of the Government Commissioner, and of Mr.Crook-shank, the Secretary of the road, I enjoyed the pleasure and privilege of a special, or Saturday afternoon, as far as Sussex Vale [some forty miles from St.John\u2019s] and back.The road, in every particular, and iu all its incidents aud complements, will compare iavorably with any road on the Continent, not excepting the Grand Trunk, and our journey pissed through one of the most beautiful and picture que as well as fertile vales it has ever been my fortune to see.The country around Sussex Vale reminded mo of the couth of mugiaud\u2014of parts of Kent and Surrey.I shall take some future opportunity of giving a more detailed account of my New Brunswick experiences, but as this is the last opportunity I shall have of writing from the mainland and the Osprey is expected to sail in half-an hour, 1 must bring this epistle to a close.On my journey from St.John\u2019s here\u2014 of which I shall also give the details in a future letter - viz : Annapolis, Kentville, Wolfsville, and Windsor, I have passed through a country which I little expected to see in Nova Scotia, and which for natural fertility, and, in many parts, if not tor scientific, for praiseworthy and intelligent cultivation, is equal to any similar extent of country in Canada.I have been, today, as far as Elmsvale\u2014some 25 miles\u2014on the Truro Railway, attending a \u201c Fancy Fair\u201d in aid of a newly-erected Presbyterian Church.Elmsvale is in Hants County, represented by the Hon.Joseph Howe, who was, of course, among his constituents on this interesting occasion.My trip, however, has occupied the whole day, aud barely leaves me time to pack up my traps and hasten on board.My next will be from St.John's, Newfoundland, and I hope in it to give you all the particulars of tbe Prince\u2019s arrival and reception in that \u201c most ancient and fish-like\u2019\u2019 port.I fear, however, I shall have to be myself the bearer of it to this pRce, for there will be no mail from the island of an earlier date.Fatal Accident at the Wharf.\u2014David Willis, of Greenock, a sailor, aged 28 years, and serving on board the \u201c Wabeno,\u201d of Glasgow, was going ashore on Tuesday, about midnight, with two of his messmates, all under the influence of liquor, when he accidentally fell off the ladder into the water.On one of the other men calling out to him, he said, \u201call right; don\u2019t make a noise.\" As he was a good swimmer, it was supposed by the others that it was all right, nevertheless they immediately gave the alarm ; but the man, by some means, was unable to make use of his skill, and he sank.The body was recovered about half-past two o\u2019clock.The deceased leaves a sister, who drew his monthly note.The Pic-Nic of the St.Patrick\u2019s Society.\u2014 This Fête, by many long and anxiously expected, came off yesterday at Vaudreuil with great éclat.Early iu the morning the sky looked dark and gloomy, but the sun soon came out with overwhelming splendor, aud all forebodings respecting the weather were at once dispelled.Some of the excursionists at first looked a little blue after their constrained early rising and hastily bolted breakfast, but as friend met friend, the scene soon changed to one of general hilarity.A long continuous line of vehicles blocked up the road to the Point St.Charles Station, and long before the time appointed for starting, not a seat was to be had in the carriages prepared fur the reception of the excursionists.More cars had to be procured and tackled on and some delay thereby ensued.Meanwhile the new comers had not ceased to pour in, and at length with 25 cars densely packed, the train was obliged to start, leaving some 300 or 400 behind, who were to follow in the nine o\u2019clock train.When the train had advanced two or three miles on its way, the coupling-tackle broke about the middle, and a number of the cars were left a short distance behind, but the damage was speedily remedied without having given rise to any confusion.Without any further mischance, the train arrived safely at its destination, where it was welcomed by the Prescott Band.The multitude of pleasure-seekers,\u2014in which, as usual, the fair-sex largely predominated, were soon encamped upon the lovely spot selected for the occasion, where, either sitting in groups under the shady trees, or sauntering along the grassy bank of the Ottawa, they contrived to pass the time very agreeably The 8t.Patrick\u2019s Brass Band from Prescott, and Hardy\u2019s and Sullivan s Quadrille Bands being iu attendance danciug was kept up in the shade with great zest during the greater part of the day.Several boats were in readiness, and numbers of the excursionists availed themselves of the opportunity to indulge iu a pleasant sail on the river.About 12 o\u2019clock, began the Lacrosse match between 12 members of the Erina Lacrosse Club of Montreal and 12 Indians from Cangh-nawaga.This manly sport has already been often described in our columns, and want of space prevents ns from doing more at present than merely stating the result.Both parties played with great spirit, but the Indians were evidently superior .__________ They were victorious in the first innings.In the second, the ball was accidentally thrown in by the Indians between their adversaries\u2019 wickets.The whites claimed this as their game.After disputing some time, it was agreed to play another game, which resulted in the complete overthrow of the whites.The gam* lasted some time, and at its close those who had been looking on hastened back to their encampment, fully prepared to attack the well-stored hampers which many had been provident enough to bring along with them, for those who were not so well provided with home comforts, refreshments were to be obtained on the ground.Some desultory attempts were made in the coarse of the day to get up other games, such as running, leaping, boating, Ac., but the result was rather unsatisfactory, aud we do not know that any prizes were awarded.Mr.Murphy, President, and Mr.Wood, Secretary, together with Messrs.Curran, Golovin and other prominent members, were assiduous in their attention to the convenience and comfort of the party.About half-past five o\u2019clock, Ihe first train left Vaudreuil for Montreal, and all who could availed themselves ot this opportunity to return.Another train at half past six conveyed the remainder to town.Altogether the trip was a complete success and the result must be gratifying to the officers of ihe Association.The Eclectic Magazine.\u2014 The Eclectic Magazine for August has come to hand.It contains, besides all the usual selections from the very best English periodicals, monthly and quarterly, two magnificent steel engravings\u2014 the one of Sir Robert Peel, aud the other of our expected visitor, the Prince of Wales.The proprietor in a short notice explains that his late plates\u2014Lord Elgin, and the two in the present number\u2014have been especially intended for the delectation of his Canadian friends, and that lest Lord Elgin might not please sufficiently, he has now given them something about which there can be no dispute.The portraits are accompanied by short biographical notices.The \u201c Albion\u201d Engraving.\u2014Mr.Nimmo, the agent for the \u201c Albion\u201d of New York, has called to present us with a plate of Landseer\u2019s Deer Pass\u2014the subject selected by the proprietors of that paper for their annual presentation plate.St.Leon Springs.\u2014No one can leave the St.Leon Springs, after passing a few days there, without manifesting a desire to return.Notwithstanding the heat of the weather, many visitors have hired apartments, in order to pass the fine season there.The proprietress of the hotel, Mrs.Campbell, spares nothing1 to make it the most fashionable gathering place in Canada, and numerous improvements made there this year leave nothing to be desired.There is a skittle ground, a billiard room and all the other amusements, which can render a country residence agreeable ; and as to the waters, every one knows their qualities.The following is a list of recent arrivals :\u2014 Jamss Irvine, Granby, C E ; Geo Gingras, G Talbot, Mrs S Hough, Miss J.Sinclair, Master P Sinclair, Quebec ; Mrs Clements, Geo Farmer, Ed J Harkins, J C Tousignette, Three Rivers ; M Laurent, Delle Girouard, Master Chas Bell, Miss Clara Bell, Mr and Mrs Gordon, five children and two servants, Miss Bethune, Mdme E B Dnbois and two children, Mdme N Mignault, Montreal ; Jos Laurent, W Clairmont and three ladies, John McKay, Maxime Dufonise, Riviere du Loup; L Hubert, Longueuil.MURDER IN WINDSOR, C.W.Early on Saturday morning the dead body of a man was discovered near the Great Western Railway track, one mile from the Windsor depot.The upper part of his head was blown or broken off, the remaining part of bis face much bruised, and his hat bore marks of blows inflicted ou it when still upon the head of the wearer.The deceased was recognized as a stranger who was first seen in Windsor on Thursday, inquiring tor Sarah Judson, the Pontiac woman whose marriage to a negro in Windsor, some time since, occasioned so much remark at the time, tin Friday night he was in a saloon playing chess with a gentleman, and remained till about midnight.He said he was going over to Detroit.This is the last that was seen of him till his mutilated remains were found.Sarah Judsou, at the inquest, testified to utter ignorance of the deceased.Neither could she cotjecture why he should have inquired for her.A flattened bullet was found in his brain, and not far from where the remains were first seen, a pistol was found concealed in a covered drain.The deceased is represented to have been of gentlemanly address, apparently about thirty years of age, light-haired, and wore a goatee, a black frock-coat with velvet collar, white Marseilles vest, coloured cassimere pants with side stripe, white linen shirt, merino undershirt, prunella gaiters, blue neck-tie, and a high-crowned felt hat composed his dress.The hat bore the imprint of the maker or seller\u2019s name, \u201cJ.H, Knight, Worcester, Mass.\u201d The deceased mentioned that he was a Pole.No money, watch or other valuables were found on hia person.Constable Port returned yesterday morning from Loudon with the man Twiggs alias Welsh, who was supposed to have been the murderer.(July $108 were found on him, which he acknowledges belongs to the Englishman Rule, who was robbed of over six hundred dollars on Saturday morning.He says that Rule gave it to him to keep Rule, on the other hand, swears positively to being robbed of the larger amount, all of which, except six dollars, was taken from a belt which he wore around his waist.It is in testimony that Twiggs crossed the river to Windsor in a small boat on Saturday morning, and that he took the Great Western train at half-past eight.In a payment made either at a public house or at the ticket office he tendered a twenty dollar gold piece, upon which was a stain supposed since to be blood.One of tbe twenty dollar pieces found upon him by officer Port has a not dissimilar stain, but this, it is estimated by Rule, was made by iron.Iu connection with the Pontiac woman, we were told that at one time a German there paid her attentions, but that the father rep Ised him and that h» soon after left for the South.The question naturally suggests itself, is not the deceased the repulsed lover ?Burning of a VilliGz.\u2014Tbe village of St.Eloi, at Riviere du Loup, en bas, has been burnt [7th July,] i-iduding the chapel and about forty bandings.We are sorry to hear that two women and three children were lost in the conflagration.The above misfortune arises from the unusual dryness of the season.The latest news reports the fire to be increasing considerably.Twenty or thirty families in the parish of St.Eloi, in rear of Isle Verte, have already lost their honses, stables, standing grain, cattle, Ac., and are ïoustquendy in a state of great misery.T-Be parishes oi St.Etienne and St.Modeste have also suffered great loss.\u201d\u2014Quebec Chronicle.Rethrn of the Governor General.\u2014 His Excellency the Governor General returned yesterday morning from his fishing excursion in the Lower St.Lawrence.The party had good sport, and have brought with them practical evidence of their success, in the shape of nearly two hundred splendid salmon.We believe His Excellency returns in good health.Ibid.Mr.Lanman.\u2014Mr.Charles Lanman, one of the Editors of that old and most respectable journal\u2014the Washington National Intelligencer is in this city.He is returning from a fishing excursion in the Lower St.Lawrence.\u2014Ibid.Captain Moodie \u2014Capt.Robert Moodie of Toronto was in the city yeste day on his way to the scone of his duties as a Fishery Inspector, in the Lower St.Lawrence____Ibid.A Local Gkikv&nok.\u2014The reason of the continued high price of salmon is accounted for by the fact that one or more Upper Canada fishermen have beet recently in the market there\u2014making wholesale purchases.One well known fisherman from the West yesterday made a very heavy draft-t-causing, we believe an immediate advance of 15 per cent on the price of the stock in hand.The Late Robbery on Board The \u201cNew Era \u2014Information Wanted\u2014We mentioned on Monday that the the Police had arrested two Yankee swell mobsmen suspected of being con cerned in a robbery on Board the steamer \u201cNew Era\u201d on her downward trip from Montreal on Saturday night.On one of these persons has been found a small new black gold mounted opera glass and case of which it is supposed,he possessed himself with while io Montreal last week.Any information concerning the proprie tership of this article will be acceptable to the Chief of Police.\u2014Ibid.Cricket\u2014Sherbrooke vs.Quebec.\u2014The historic Plains of abraham were alive yesterday, bat cricket balls, not cannon shot, were flying about ; and instead of French and English by the thousand,there were but the chosen elevens from the cricket clubs of Sherbrooke aud Quebec.The scores will tell how many runs were obtained and in what manner.We have but few comments of our own to add.On the Sherbrooke side the Capels and Von Iflland shone conspicuous.On that of Quebec, Ross as a bowler (too haid worked.) Garrett as a wicket keeper ; Prior as a lone stop, and Robarts and Kerr as batsmen deserve special notice.Sherbrooke, 1st.Innings.63.2nd.Innings.47.Grand Total.HO Quebec, Total.116 Ibid.A Poor Lord.\u2014Young Lord William Godolphin Osborne, son of the Duke of Leeds, aged twenty-five, married, and described as of \"no trade or profession,\u201d figures iu the London Gazette in a case of insolvency.His debts were only about £1000, and nearly all to money lenders and tailors, The youthful insolvent declared upon oath that his father the Duke of Leeds, only allowed him an income of twelve pounds sterling a year till 1859, and since then, when he got married, not over £200.He got a good deal of sympathy from the Court and others, and the villainons usurers none at all\u2014one \u201cbill\u201d for £50 having bat £ 10s advanced or loaned upon it ; but as it appeared he had got credit by misrepresenting his income,he was condemned to 6 months' imprieonaent for th« fraud.EUROPEAWEWS.THE GALWAY CRACT.REPORT OF THE «TTEB.Since their first report presented to the house your committee haven compelled to resume their inquiries lute matter of the Galway subsidy, in conseice of a document haying been transmitted le chairman, purporting to be a copy of greement for the payment of a large sum oney for procuring that subsidy iu the event.s being obtained.The result of these inqs your committee now lay before the house It appears that iu thenth of March preceding the sailing from Cay(June 19, 1858) of the Indian Emoire, ffirst vessel of the Lever line of packets, MLever became acquainted with Mr.Geo O\u2019Mally Irwin, a member of the Irish baro was a native of the county Galway.Mrvin professed great interest in the success oj.Lever\u2019s undertaking, and on the 19th M1858, Mr.Lever addressed to him a letter, hich, after offering to make him a present :500 on obtaining a specified subsidy from Government and the Midland Great Westernilway of Ireland, for the trial trip of the Ini Empire, he adds\u2014 \u201cI also wi h to say thf you obtain me a subsidy of £150,000 penum for the conveyance of the United Sta mails to and from this country, I will prtt you with a sum of £10,000 in addition.This understandingis subsequently reduced into the form ofsgular agreement, to which Mr.Knox Holmtnember of a firm car-rying on business as pamentary agents in Westminster, was adned as a party jointly with Mr.Irwin.The original of thajeed, executed on the 2nd ot June, 1858, waroduced to the committee.By this deedj.ich is printed in the evidence, Messrs Irwiind Holmes, \u201con the one part, undertake tos their best efforts and to exert all their inflee with their friends and others in order toocure a subsidy from the Government, or ft any persons having the power to obtain orant such subsidy from the Government, in fair of the said John Or-rell Lever, in the mat of his projected undertaking for establishiniteamboat communication between Galwajsd America ; and in the event of such subeidjeing obtained,,, the said J.Orrell Lever on tiother hand undertakes to pay to them, the td George O\u2019Mally Irwin and Thomas Knox Hues, at the time the same is obtained, the fojwing sum or sums of money,\u201d namely, £100 if the subsidy were £172,840, (the amounuticipated, on the same footing with the Cunl contract, if a weekly service were fixed onbr a corresponding proportionate sum if theibsidy weje less or more than that amount.r) sum was to be payable on the joint receipt oiessrs.Irwin and Holmes, and the agreement w to be binding on Mr Lever though heshouatany time \u201c part with or assign his interest, the undertaking to a company or otherwis A corresponding aeement as to the subsidy for the trial trip of tllndian Empire was executed at the same tin Some time after ( Galway contract had been granted, at a y«ly subsidy of $78.000, for a fortnightly servs, Mr.Lever not having made any payment tdessrs.Irwin and Hulmes a suit was instituted fainst him for payment of £5,360, as the (n proportioned to that subsidy under the greement.This action, through originally ned on the sole instructions of Mr.Irwin, t?afterwards authorised by Mr.Holmes.In defence, Mr.Le r put in a plead of fraud, to the effect that he Id been induced to enter into the agreement bfalse and fraudulent representations on the art of the plaintiffs ; and under an order of tî judge a statement of ; \u201cparticulars fraud\u201d vs lodged, setting forth in detail that Messrs, rwin and Holmes had fais ely and franduleily represented themselves to have great influem with members of the G< * vernment and other ersons which would be of service in procuring .he contract, on the faith of which representatra he had undertaken to pay the money stipulted for in the agreement This action was letdown for trial, first, on the 3d February Iasi, md again on the 14th instant, but on boft occasions it was withdrawn, contrary to he remonstrances of Mr.Irwin, by the instructins of Mr.Holmes, on the ground, as stated I?him in his evidence, of anticipated legal diflbuhies, till the Galway packet contract shoul have been approved of by Parliament.The sit is still undischarged A separate action hs been raised by Mr.Irwin individually gainst Mr.Lever, uot founded on the dees of agreement above-mentioned as to procuing a subsidy, (although these were produced at the trial,) but for alleged services iu thf formation of the company.This action ws tried on the 12 th inst., when a verdict of £1,(90 damages was found against Mr.Lever.Your committee have obtained shorthand nobs of the trial, and they d sire to èall the attention of the house to the following observations ot the Lord Chief Baron, before whom It took p aee : \u201c I very much doubt whether any action is maintainable at all, in point of law, in respect of services of this sort; i uo aoi unuoiamau imat is meaur ny a man selling his supposed interest with any member of Parliament, or any member of tbe Government.Iu point of Uw it appears to me to be a temptation to corrupt practices.These very bargains would lead io all possible mischief in public life.\u201d Messrs.Irwin and Brimes deny that any false or fraudulent represauations were made by them to Mr.Lever, sad there seems to your committee no grounc for supposing that any corrupt means were resorted to by them in carrying out their par; of the agreement ; but undoubtedly the largmess of the sum stipulated, together with the act of its payment being made conditional on success, and the nature oi the plea stated in defence, appear to your committee to lead to the faference that the exertion of undue influence could not have been excluded from Mr.Lever\u2019s view when he entered into it.However that may Se, your committee are at all events clearly of opini >n that tbe agreement is in itself deserving af the strongest reprobation ; and that the allowance of such undertakings would present a temptation to corrupt practices aud open adoor to evils most injurious to the public service.THE INSURRECTION IN SICILY.IFrom the Tines Correspondent.'] Palermo, June 23.The morning after the final evacuation of Palermo by the Neapolitans Garibaldi called on the three Admirals, who have all since returned his visit.As for the Sardinian and American Admirals, they had ctlled once or twice before even the evacuation was completed Thus Garibaldi is in regular official communication with the naval commanders of the foreign navies.The Austrian Commodore left the day the Neapolitans departed, and with them went the Austrian Consul and his family.As for the Consuls, they could not hitherto enter into official communication, being act credited to the Neapolitan Government.Bathe Provisional Government has already taken steps to send its representatives both to England and France.The very day the Neapolitans left, the official Gazette contained the nomination of the Principe di San Giuseppe as the representative of Sicily in England.The Prince has been a staunch Liberal all through, and has lived in exile.The next day the Principe San Cataldo was appointed in the same capasity in France.This activity iu the first instance must be naturally very limited.Nonintervention, the principle which all the Powers have recognised as the basis ot the reorganisation of Italy, must be the great object of their mission for the moment.The more they confine their mission to this cardinal point the better they will deserve of their country.Any arrangement, beyond that is premature Not that there is the slight\u2018'8t difference of opinion here about the solation which the Sicilian question ought to take, almost every municipality having already sent iu its adhesion to King Victor Emmanuel ; but wishes of this kind only find a favorable ear when there is something behind to back tfcem up.As everywhere else it Italy, there has been a great change iu Sicily with regard to political ideas.In 1848 there were but iew who could raise themselves above local prejudices.An independent Sicily, under the Prince of Carig-nan, was the last expression of shortsighted policy ; now the conviction has become almost universal among thinking men, that an isolated kingdom of Sicily is a political impossibility, and would lead ultimately back to Bourbon dominion.Nay, the only difference of opinion in this respect is the time, some thinking it necessary to convoke the national representatives immediately, and declare the annexation\u2014decidedly the more practical manner of looking at the thing.I need not say that this is Garibaldi\u2019s opinion, and he expressed it the other day to a deputation to him which came to present an address.In consequence of this declaration on the part of Garibaldi some of the men who had accepted office have resigned.Two days ago the Pretorio issued a proclamation, in which it called upon the citizens to come and help in demolishing the face of the Gastello a Mare looking towards the town This Gastello was from the most ancient times, the Bastile oi Palermo.It was rebuilt and strengthened by Charles V.to curb the turbulent population, and has ever since been used as a citadel and and State prison.It occupies the point of the peninsula which formerly guarded the entrance to both p orts of Palermo.One of the ports having been altogether filled up and the other being considerably injured, it has lost all its importance as a work directed against ships.The face towards the sea,alhough looking old and neglected has however, the advantage of forming as it were a continuasion of the wall of the town.It will be therefore, preserved and stren.a;tbened.The proclamation brought hundreds of volunteer workmen, who assembled in the different quarters of the town, and, provided with crowbars, axes, and spades, went in companies of 50 and more to help in the demolition.Every one of the troops had contrived to get a band of music, aud the work began with cheering and singing.Never did men, women, and children work harder without being paid for it.Not the last among the workmen were the monks of the different religions communities, especially the mendicant friars, Capuchins, to have turned out, and went lustily to work.You eo-iM it was a work of love, or rather of hatred.The whole day the place was crowded with spectators beside, who eucouraged by their ap> lause every successful step in the work of demolition.If this ardour lasts, there will soon be little remaining.June 24.The Meander, a British steamer, has come in from Messina, with a number of passengers.According to their account, the town was a desert, peopled only by soldiers and mob ; all the rest of the population had left.At the very gates of the town the insurrection is in full vigour.In general, the regular mail service has been established all over the country.This was the more wanted, as ever since the beginning of the insurrection the communication was interrupted with the interior.SARDINIA AND NAPLES.[From the Times Correspondent.] Turin, June 30.We have here the text of the King of Naples\u2019s proclamation, dated June 25, and promising a Constitution, a general amnesty, a liberal Ministry, a national fltg, a Viceroyalty for Sicily, and an agreement with Sardinia to promote the common interests of the two Crowns in Italy.The results of this Royal largess were precisely such as might have been anticipated.The police spies and the Lazzaroni shouted for the King ; the Liberals cried, \u201c Viva Garibaldi !\u201d The mob came to blows ; their ensued cavalry charges upon the multitude ; the knocking down of the French Ambassador, Baron Bre-nier, in his carriage, with loaded sticks wielded by the Royal chnmpions ; then arrests, state of siege, the restoration of the reign of terror \u2014all these scenes on the 27th and 28th.On the following day we hear that \u201c order is re established at Naples.\u201d Notwithstanding the growing excitement, and the increasing demoralization of the army, there is here in Turin a general conviction that the Bourbon will be able to keep his seat.It is, indeed, my private impression that an impulse will soon be given by Garibaldi ; but most men about me entertain a different opinion, and think that Garibaldi will not for some time be ready for an attack on the mainland ; and he most impatient blame this Government for the inaction with which they look on a strife the issue ot which is of so great a weight on the general destinies of the country.Without pretending to sit in judgment on the conduct of Count Cavour\u2019s Government, I may well say that they are beset with terrible difficulties; by open hostilities against Naples they would not merely expose themselves to a new war with Austria\u2014a contingency which would give them no cause for alarm\u2014but they might come into collision with the ever unstable will of the French Emperor, who has but too great a variety of means to control them, even without the least show of open opposition.\u2014 Italian nationality must needs reckon on the more or less avowed enmity of Russia and Germany.Were war to break out again on the Mincio, Austria would hardly stand alone, as she was left iu 1859.Count Cavour has received broad hints to that effect from the Russian and Prussian Ministers in Turin.The annexation of Naples or Sicily to the Sardinian Crown, we are assured, would be the signal for the instant removal ot the Russian Legation.\u2014 To what extent Russia and Prussia would make a casus belli of a fusion of the North with the South of Italy, I will not take upon myself to decide.But the union of an Italian Siate of 23,000,000 would be regarded by those North-Eastern Powers as a means to an end\u2014 that end, being the wrenching of Venetia from Austria.Now, the hold of Austria upon Venetia is a matter in which, whether by right or wrong, not only the German Governments, but the German nations declare themselves vitally interested.It is cruel to think upon, but H is a matter of certainty that Verona and Mantua, Trent and Venice, will not become Italian till the flower of the German youth has found its death round the walls aud iu the moats of the quadrilateral fortresses.Such are the obvious consequences of any rash steps Count Uavour may take in this business.Against Austria, Prussia, Germany, and perhaps Russia, Italy can hope for no aid save that of France and, perhaps, England.But Italian patriots have been taught by French newspapers to sneer at the notion of the moral support ot England, so that their real rock of strength is France alone.France, they flatter themaelves, has so tar departed from her original programme as to allow the Italian instinct of annexation to get the better of the French schema of a confederacy.She may, perhaps, rqualiy wink at the annexation of the Two Sicilies.Prussia will not feel inclined to back Austria in any offensive or defensive war till she is completely reassured on the score of France\u2019s designs on the Rhine; nd Russia has such interests in the East as will allow her little leisure to turn her attention to the West.Since France, aud France alone, is the real arbiter of Italian destinies, our speculators continue, what, then, about France Î Why, France will follow about Naples the same course she pursued about Tuscany.Naple a ripe apple, sure to fall into the mouths of those who will wait and gape for it; a gentle eha'^a to the branch may, perhaps, hasten the fall, but the axe should by no means be laid to the root.Leave Garibaldi to choose bis own time and mode of operation ; lend him a little help now and then underhand, taking care that your left hand should know nothing of the doings of your right, and Naples will in due season follow the fortunes of Palermo, and the annexation will be voted on either side of the Straits.Such are supposed to be the views of France, and to these views Count Cavour is thought to shape his policy.The complication of the Papal question does not seem to cause great uneasiness.The Marches and Umbria are iu a state of the wiloest ferment.On the fall of Naples a,l the Roman provinces will surely follow.The Pope, we hear to-day, has been sea ed into the contemplation of some measures of etorm, to be ushered in, like a French coup d\u2019etat, by the publication of a semi-official pamphlet ; but such provisions will at the utmost, aud on tbe principle of pazienza per forza, re couciie to him the population of the capital, that capital which Napoleon still strives to secure to the Pontiff as a Sovereign residence Out of Roma it is uot likely that the Pope within three months will have a span of land to call his own.cilians, because he fears that tho Neapolitans might then be induced to fight for the honor of their particular country, which, until now, held herseit to be better than Sicily, The Emperor of France, too, who has no objection to the annexation of Sicily to King Victor Emanuel\u2019s Italian realm, dislikes that the island should become the center of all the revolutionary forces in Italy, and, under the lead of Garibaldi, increase so much in importance as to become unmanageable by Count Cavour.Accordingly, Sicily is to be left for the Sicilians, and Naples revolutionized without Garibaldi and his\tvolunteers.I do not know that an\texpedition will not be sent to\tNaples as soon as the outbieak has taken place ; at any rate, matters, will be precipitated, thus to preclude Garibaldi from taking the Neapolitan Kingdom too.We nave heard here, in the circles, that Francis II.cannot any longer m-dotain his throne.The unsuccessful mission to France, and the vacillation of the Ministers, have destroyed the last supports of the Bonrbon Monarchy in Southern Italy, and brought about a crisis.The old Ministers, were dismissed, but the new ones, who promised a constitution, amnesty, reforms, and a national Italian foreign policy, are distrusted by the people, and distrust themselves the King, who tries now by sham concessions to conjure the raging storm.They remember the tate ofjPoerio and his friends,who were imprisoned for having trusted King Bomba\u2019s oath, and taken his words in full earnest.Martino, Spinelli, and the other Ministers, wished, therefore, to get some pledges before they could accept office under such critical circumstances, aud insisted upon the exile of the Queen Dowager, the Austriau stepmother of the King, upon a most intimate alliance with Piedmont, and even upon an exchange of the garrisons of Upper and Lower Italy.The King refused this last demand, as also the trial of the former ministers, but on the 26th, he had the constitution proclaimed, after having sent proposals to Tufio about an alliance.Manciti, the Neapolitan martyr, protested yesterday most eloquently iu the Chamber against such an unnatural alliance, and was supported unanimously by the Deputies, while Poerio reminded the Cabinet that the traditions of Neapolitan policy are treason and perjury, and implored Count Cavour not to give King Francis the opportunity of committing the same crimes as his father.To-day tbe Council of Ministers met, and it is satd that it determined neither to reject nor to accept the proposed alliance, but let matters take their coarse, fully aware that the present state of things cannot last at Naples, the moment by one of his comrades, who seized his arm.This man was tried by a Court-martial, aud sentenced to receive fifty lashes, and afterwards to be imprisoned for 2 years._ The sentence was carried into effect, and he is now undergoing the term of his imprisonment.Last Thursday another man of the Canadians nearly murdered a civilian carpenter, who was working in one of the sheds in the camp.After knocking the man down, it is said without any provocation, he kicked the carpenter on the ground with his heavy boots, aud fractured his skull.The trial of this last offender will uot take place until the carpenter, who is yet in a dangerous state, recovers or dies.\u201d Bp SHrgrTrmi) 'ITALY.[From Ihe Times Correspondent.) Turin, July 1.When I expressed the other day the conviction of thoughtful and moderate men here, that it were well if European diplomacy would allow the Sardinian Government to declare war against the Bourbon at Naples in the name of humanity, I was aware that events would soon co ne to prove the wisdom of that sugges tion.It is evident that on the first symptoms of weakness evinced by the Bourbon Government, and on its first intimation of a change of system, the police at Naples has been seized with a panic which led to its self-destruction.Allow me to quote a short narrative in a Neapo litan letter :\u2014 \u201c On tbe 25th the Count of Aquila, together with the Commendatore Spinelli, went to the house of Yentimiglia ; a portfolio was offered to this latter gentleman, and by him declined.The advocate Forsigni equally refused an honour which, under present circumstances, was an ignominy.The Count of Aquila showed telegrams from Paris, purporting that the Emperor Napoleon had brought about an agreement between the House of Savoy and of Bourbon, but no man believed him.He met with repulses everywhere, and Baldacchini also would would not listen to him.The same day, towards evening, policemen and gendarmes in disguise went about shouting for * The King and the Constitution I\u2019 They were received with cudgel strokes by the people, who called out 1 Yiva Garibaldi 1\u2019 On the 26th, at 9 o\u2019clock, the Sovereign decree was published.It was received in silence ; here and there the edict was torn from the walls.On the 27th at 10 o\u2019clock, the constitutional flag waved on the Fort ot St.Elmo, and was saluted with a salvo of ariillsry.The Ministry was formed under the presidency of Spinelli.On the 28th,at 11, there was a demonstration iu Via Toledo, with cries for Garibaldi.The French Minister, iu the hubbub, was struck down by a rap on the head.The crowd proceeded to attack the police offices [commissariati], 12 of which were burnt down, with all their archives.Several police agents were singled out and murdered.On the 29th the tumults were at an end ; the city was declared to be iu a state of siege.On the 30th the reports are that the police is in a state of hopeless confusion, that the town was terrorized, and the citizens were more anxious to provide for their safety, than to criticize the proclamation of Poriici on the articles of the Constitution.\u201c The King is again said to be grievously ill \u2014half killed with fright, no doubt.\u201d No one can read the above without coming to the conclusion that in their first fit of consternation the police only thought of destroying the documents, alive or dead, which could, on the first installation of a representative Government, lay before the world the infamies of their blood-stained administration.They did not wish that the death chambers, with mouldering corpses sliQuld come into light at Naples, as they did at Palermo.Naples presents the strange phenomenon of a country, or at least town, without either Government or anarchy.The King is ill at Portici.[From the Correspondent of the Tribune.] New York Turin, June 30, 1860.I am just going down to Genoa to see the expedition of Col.Oosenz otf.It sails to-morrow night with three ships and about 4,000 picked men.Without consent of Giveroment, such a force could not be either collected, or sent away.Still I am assured that this expedition is to be the last to leave for Sicily.Garibaldi will then have nearly 8,000 Italian volunteers, and this is enough for him to keep the island, to take the last fortresses still in the hands of the Neapolitans, and even to support the insurrection which has broken out iu .\t.\t__________ _______ t*16 Galabrias I bot Count Cavour does not wish Franciscans, &c.Whole monasteries seemed *0 encourage a conquest of Naples by the Si- THE NEW EXPEDITION TO CHINA.The Times correspondent with the new Chinese expedition, under date of Chusan, April 26th, gives some interesting particulars of the movement northward.Nothing but the most vexatious delay marked our progress.An order was promulgated that the troops should land at once, and then came a counter-order.The French seized the opportunity offered by our procrastination and disembarked their marines, who rushed triumphantly with their baggage up the steep, where they safely eneconsed themselves iu our old fortified hospital.They have, as usual, got the start of us.We have taken a gate or two, and they are masters of a fortress.If our soldiers and sailors are somewhat dissatisfied no one can wonder.It is no secret that the French were desirous of occupying Chusan with their own troops.To have permitted them to take and occupy it, if they choose, for good, might have been our wisest policy.Our army might have been better employed, and have an op portunity of winning fresh laurels iu north.Nothing is more striking than the contrast between the inhabitants of the south and north of this vast empire.There can be no doubt but that a hot climate deteriorates gradually the powers of man, both physical and mental.The China rebel is weak and puny compared with the Tartar.Even the inhabitants of this coast aud island worli cat: not be compared with the denizens of Victoria.They are strong and sturdy, with a full muscular development.The majority are tall, and in a manner wonderfully vivacious.Hardship, out door exercise, and simple fare have developed their figure.Opium has not shattered their constitution, nor lent them that intensely apathetic, stupid express! m of countenaoce common to the votaries of the drug.\u2014 With less ingenuity in the arts of peace, they are not less energetic nor fortunate in the arts of war.Thousands combine the trade of fisher and pirate.The smaller junk is the servant of the larger, and the merchantman is the prey of both.Possession is tOe whole and nine tenths of the law in China.The fisherman seldom makes use of the net but sets deep sea Hues, (similar to those employed in the Newfoundland and Mediterranean fisheries,] which are attached to buoys, plainly marked by a rude flag and flagstaff.Every fishing juuk is furnished with two boats, and the fish captured is transferred to one or other of the numerous compartments or tanks into which its deck is divided.Monster codfish and conger eels, which are by no means coarse to my mind, but capital eating, abound.A few days ago we longed for a few fresh fish, and despatched a foraging party in search of them.At the sight of the western Barbarians, looking very ferocious in their long, moustaches, and whiskers, John Chinaman beat a precipitate retreat, lashing the wate r in the national way, alternately with bow and stroke oar.It was a glorious race, and caused great laughter, our jack tars, though compelled to give up the chase, enjoying the fun immensely.The correspondent had explored the town of Tinghae, in Chusan : It is surrounded by a large wall, which you enter by four massive gates, hardly less venerable-looking than those at Winchester.The streets are about two yards in width, and there is an air of poverty about the shops.Tailors abound, and the drapers seem to be in the most fliurishing circumstances.I sat for a few minutes in a barber\u2019s shop, where two haircu tiers were opera lag on two heads.Around the walls of the room hung illustrations from the Illustrated London News and Pictorial Times.A gentleman pays 100, a shop-keeper 30, and a poor man 16 cash for being shaved.The joss-houses are the most interesting sights by far.They are all dark, and many of the horrible gods manufactured of wood, either painted or gilded, are thirty feet or more iu height.The majority are armed with swords or snakes aud look daggers, while others touch the guitar.In the inner court of one b-mple we found some alms-houses full of religious widows, or widows who, not choosing to marry again, have thrown themselves upon their church for support.\u2014 They have had one day\u2019s notice to quit from the engineer department The channel which passes through the town is now covered daily with boats, containing the families frightened away by our approach, with all their household goods and gods.Oo all tbe gates of the town are pasted mandariau proclamations.John Chinaman translates them, \u201cChinamen no kick up a bobbery, Eaglishman no fighty Chinaman.\u201d I called on a Chinese mandarin with some friends a few days ago.Our courier led the way.The drawing-room was poorly furnished.The well-polished chairs looked antique, and the walls were adorned as usual with inscriptions.We were soon surrounded by a retinue ot servants and the mandarin appeared in the midst laughing aud smiling.He then took us across a court-yard to another part of the house, and opening two large doors, we saw a small garden with a little grotto of rockwork, in the centra of which was a small stone chair and table.Before it was a tank full of fish, and at the side was a gallery of pencil sketches, very valuable, no doubt, in the eye of the possessor.Now we sat down, and some cups of tea were brought in, upon which, according to instructions, we stood up and chia-chinned the mandarin, sitting down again when he resumed his seat.We asked for some flowers, beautiful, though scentless, and they were plucked from a tree heavy with blossom.Some were pink aud pale, about the size of magnolias, ethers were deep and bright as pomagrau-ate blossoms.The Chinese are as jealous as all Oriental nations about the privacy of the female members of their household.Siary glasses, however, have given me glimpses of some of the fairest and prettiest faces I ever saw in my life At one of the gates of the city stands a roulette-table hourly thronged by chubby children gambling for lollypops.Not far off a man is preparing §opium, and in yonder dark room three men with ghastly faces, stretched at full-length on couches covered with grass mats, are smoking it.The market is full of live stock.Here are eels, aud there are water snakes looking green and loathsome iu my eyes, but very inviting in those of John Chinaman.The wooden candlesticks in shop windows are curious.They are simply socketless sticks in wooden platters, and when I buy one the shopkeeper hammers a nail into the top, on which I am to drive my cane-wieked wax candles\u201416 for a shilling.The picture fames of carved wood are both pretty aud curious.\u2014 The price which I am asked is $3 a frame, and I know that after a little bargaining I could get three frames for $2.For the last tew nights the marines have been propitiating Joss with guns, gongs, and burning paper, which is dropped out ot the stern of the junk and floated away by the tide.100th Reoiment at Gibraltar.\u2014A private o t the Royal Canadians, named Thomas Wallace, will, early to-morrow morning [8 o\u2019clock] suffer the extreme penalty of the law for having deliberately shot a fellow-soldier of his regiment.When brought before tbe Court-martial Walaee pleaded \u201c Guilty,\u201d avowing at the same time that he committed the deed while in a state of frenzy through hard drink.He is a native ot Canada, and only 24 years of age.The Court sentenced him to be hnug, and the sentence having been approved by His Excellency the Governor, the execution will take place at Windmill-hill, in the presence of the whole garrison, no civilian being allowed to approach the spot.The murder was committed in the afternoon of the I2th instant, at the North Front encampment, where the corps is now stationed.A few days after this unfortu-nate occurrence there happened another also in the same camp, which might, had not the baud of the assassin been stayed have proved equally murderous.One of the men, having a grudge against his sergeant, attempted to ran him through with his fixed bayonst, bat was fortunately cheeked at Something in New York not Unlike a Recent Case in Toronto.\u2014 As an example of the Recorder\u2019s mode of doing business\u2014and it is a case to which we would call Gov.Morgan\u2019s attention\u2014let us state the following particulars : Some mouths ago, a beast iu human shape was arrested for a variety and succession of offences, to which decent language gives no name.His victims were, for the most part, young girls on their return from school.The name of this ruffian was Thomas J.Munday\u2014a Democratic politician, a Democratic ex-member of Assembly, a Democratic ex-candidate for State Senator, and now [under the appointment of Aid.Wm.J.Peck) a Democratic Clerk of a Civil District Court, contestiug his right to au office worth four or live thousand dollars a year.This villain being indicted, the DistrictlAt-torney, about ten or twelve days since, placed the case on the calendar for trial ; thereupon, to his astonishment, the Recorder announced that \u201cMonday\u2019s case was already disposed of\" \u2014the filthy fellow having entered a plea of guilty, which the Recorder had accepted, with out sentencing It is found that the plea bad been so privately made, that the Clerk had no record of it on his books ; and, from that day to this, Thomas J.Munday has been roaming at large ; his plea of \"gui1 ty\" privately accepted by the Recorder, and not one single step taken either to sentence or punish him.\u2014 Tribane.Cost of Civic Entertainment.\u2014 We have endeavored to obiain the items of the bill against the city for the Japanese reception, but the Committee are really ashamed to make them public until they are compelled to do so, aud refuse to show them to any one.At the meeting which they held oa Friday evening, it is said that bills were presented amounting to $125,000, wbt ;h they managed to cut down to $109,000.The Metropolitan Hotel bill is $91,-000.pretty good for two weeks tnard for seventy Japanese, who, when at home, live chiefly on rice, at a cost of less than a dime a day.\u2014 Among the items are 10,000 bottles of champagne.One would suppose that the Japanese not only drank, but took a daily swim iu the sparkling fluid.There are doubtless other items equally extravagant.The sum of $30,-000, which was appropriated for the entertainment of these people, will therefore not cover more than one-fourth of the expense.And all tne good which will accrue from this extrava-gai.ee might have been accomplished in a quiet and unostentatious manner at a tenth of the cost, and with a thousandfold more solid satisfaction to the polished and well-bred strangers for whose entertainment it purports to have been expended.But we don\u2019t believe half of the amount charged has been honestly expended, and, before the Controller pays the bills, we hope to see a rigid investigation of the accounts.\u2014N.Y.Tribune.3Y MONTREAL LINS.Office, fit.Sacrament Street.[Reported for the Montreal Herald.] St John\u2019s, Nfld, June 18.Her Majesty\u2019s Steam gun boat, the \"Flying Fish,\u201d in the advance of the Prince of Walas* squadron, arrived at this port at 11 o\u2019clock today.She left England on the 1st July.The main squadron, would leave Davenport on the 11th.New York, Juoe 18.Over 3,000 persons visited the 1 Great Eastern \u2019 yesterday.The whole number of visits since her arrival is 55,000.Heenan accepts Morrissey\u2019s challenge.«î- i slli,0*ing affray occurred last night at the Malta Saloon, between the United States Deputy Marsha] John Duggan, aud a man named Patsev McDermott.The latter received four pistol shots, but it is believed that he is not fatally wounded.NEW YORK MARKETS\u2014July 18.Flour dull, but prices unchanged ; sales are 9,400 bbla; $5,15®$5,20 tor Snnerfi ic State \u2022 $5,40/®$5,50 for Extra; $5 15®$5,25 for Superfine Western ; $5,30 feb $5,50 tor common to medium Extra Western.Canadian Flour dull and drooping ; $5 10 i@ $5,20 for Superfine; $5,35 i@ $15 j fjr Rye Flour steady, at$3,50(a>$4,20 Wheat firm and quiet ; sales 34 000 bushels; at $1,26J for Chicago Spring; $1,30 for prime Milwaukie Club ; $1,35 tor Winter Bed Western.$1,40®)$1,42[ for white Canadian.Rye quiet at 8WH)83c.Barley Dominai.Oats steady at 38,@41c.Pork quiet and firmer; sales675 bbls ; $18,-50fSi$19;50 tor Mess.Lard firm ; sales 215 bbls, at 13.Money easy and plentiful at unchanged rates.Exchange firmer at 109Ji®110.Stocks continue stronger.FRENCH THE Vi RE.Boiiaveisfure Mall.Managers.MM.V1LBCN & OO Thursday Evening, Juif.19, First representation ot MM.Angler aud Bandeau\u2019s play, iu 4 Acts, entitled Le Rendre de Monsieur foirer» NOTICE.\u2014The Hall is well ventilated, and is one of the coolest places in the City.Prices of Admission.\u2014Premieres, 50 cents ; Secondes, 37] cents ; Galeries latérales, 25 cts.Reserved Seats can be secured at H.Prince\u2019s, Notre Dame Street.Doors open at 7] o\u2019clock ; Curtain to rise at 8i o'clock precisely.July 18.\t171 sîï.13 commerce.Daily kispurl' of the mcntueaL PRODUCE MARKET.Montreal, July 18, 1860.Flour.\u2014Double Extra, $7.00 f® 7.50 ; Extra, $6.25 (d> 6.50; Fancy, $5.75 (5)6.00; No.1, $5.45 (5) 5.60; No.2, $5.25(3)5.35; Fine, $4.40(3)4.90.Bag Flour\u2014Spring Wheat, $3.05 (® 3.10; Scotch, $3 10/5)3.15.Wheat.\u2014Spring, $1.22 (® 1.27], Peas.\u201474(3)77]c per 68 lbs.Pork.\u2014Barrels Mess, $20.00/3)20.50 ; Prime Mess, $13.50/3)14.00 ; Prime, $13.00(5)13.50.Hams, 9 (S) 10c ; Sides, 8 (5)9c ; Shoulders, 7/5>8c.\tv Butter\u2014Common to good, 9(®12[c.Ashes.\u2014Pots, $5.80(3) 5.85 ; Pearls, $5.90 (5)5.95.Oatmeal, $4.45(3)4.55 per 200 lbs.Cur Flodr market has been brisk to-day, and demand good.Prices have advanced a little, with an upward tendency.Holders are not inclined to sell, and ask more money.Wheat in good demand.Other kinds of produce remain about the same.DAVID E.MACLEAN & CO., Commission Merchants, Shippers & Brokers.Grand Trunk Railway* MATTHEWS & MACLEAN\u2019S DAILY PRICES OF UPPER CANADIAN PRODUCE.Toronto.July 17, 1860.Receipts still continue light, bat prices unchanged.Weather warm.Prime Fall Wheat\u2014$1,30(3)1.40.Common to Fair\u2014$1,25(3)1,30.Spring Wheat\u2014$1.10(3)1.17.Barley\u201455c.Oats\u201432c.Peas\u201455(3) 60c.Flour\u2014 Extra Superior.$6.50/36.75.Extra.$6 25/36.35.Fancy.$5.45(35 60.No.1.$5.20(35.25.POÎÎT OF QUEBEC.ARRIVED.-JULY 16.Bark Warburton, Middle, 25th May, Liverpool, M I Willson, ballast Brig Derwent Birkett, 23rd May, Workington, M I Wilson, coal July 17.Ship Allerton, Robson, 21st May, Carthagena, order bricks Brigte Mingan, Joste, 5th July, Mingan, Ross & Co salt One or two other vessels arrived last evening.CLEARED\u2014JULY 17.Baik Koug Oscar, Fengelson, Southampton, G B Symes & Co .Alma, Richards, Swansea, C E Levey & Co .Askar, Nielson, do.M I Wilson .Wm Patton, Newcomb, Liverpool, Ryan Bros k Co -Ellen, Hindon, Grimsby, Benson & Co Schr Sea Flower, Poulin, Caraquette, P V Robin GRAND TRUNK RAILROAD OF CANADA.STATEMENT OF THAFFTC RKOEfPTS.do Do Foreign Do do\tEmigrants.Mails, Express &c.Local Freight and Live Stock.Timber and Lumber, feet.1,463.420 Fire Wood, cords.1,302 Foreign Freight and Live Stock.Total.Week ending July, 9th, 1869.Increase.Do.do.for same period last yi J.a.No.\tAmount,\t 13 385\t181S8\t20 3,359\t^003\t75 684\t1 166\t98 \t2,930\t41 Tons.\t\t 6,826}\t15.212\t58 1.870\t3.685\t15 1 96-6\t1,358\t75 1,390£\t3,358\t55 Miles.\t\t 970\t51.764\t37 880\t39 707\t94 90\t12.046\t43 date.\t51,754\t37 \t39 707\t94 ear.ARD.MAN, Auditor.GREAT western railway.Traffic for the week ending July 13.1860.Passengers.$15,958\t60] Freight and Live Stock.10,474\t85 Mails and Sundries.1,298\t51 $27,731 96] Corresponding week of last year.27,397 91i Increase.$\t334 05[ H.SHACKELL, Auditor.BIRTH, On the 18th instant, Mrs.M.H.Gault, of a daughter.METEOROLOGICAL TABLE.date\tThermo- meter.\t\tBaror 1860.\t7 AM\t3 pm\t7 A.M July 7\t* 64\tX 8T\t29.83 8\t68\t83\t29.72 9\t67\t76\t29 65 10\t57\t66\t29.76 11\t63\t68\t29.88 12\t68\t79\t30,02 13\t63\t85\t29,97 3 P.M 29.88 29.67 29.68 29.75 29,86 29.94 29.83 Weather.\t\tRain in inches\tSnow inches\t 7 A.M\t3 pm.\t10 a.m.\t10\t Fair\tFa\u2019r\t0.00\t0\t00 Cl\u2019dy\tFair\t0 00\t0\t00 Cl\u2019dy\tl hdr\t0.04\t0\t00 O\u2019cst\tOVst\t0 39\t0\too Fair\tCl\u2019dy\t0.15\t0\t00 Fair\tFair\tInapr\t0\too Fair\tFair\t0 00\t0\t00 Mean Temperature, x69.o.Barometer 29.80 inches.Rain fell to the depth of 0.6S inch.mm E0ÏAL Lessee and Manager.Mr.J.W.BUCKLAND.Private Boxes.$5 Dress Circle.$1 j Second Circle, 50 cts.Parquet.37] cts.For Osiiy Two Wights More.Thursday Evening, July 19, First appearance of the celebrated Contralto, SIGNORA POLLIONI, In Verdi\u2019s Grand Opera of Supported by SIGNORA GHIONI, SIG.SBRIGLIA, SIG.ARDAVANI, SIG.MIRANDOLA, SIG.ALFIERt, &c., &c.Effective Chorus and Orchestra.Musical Director.Sig.Francia.Leader of Orchestra.M.Vaillant.NO OPERA WILL BE REPEATED.S3\u2019 Seats can be secured at Herbert\u2019s Music Store, Notre Dame Street, where the Box Book is now open ; and where Books of the Opera, with English and Italian words, can be purchased.Price, 21 cents.Doors open at a quarter to 8 o\u2019clock.Performance to commence at a quarter past eight precisely.July 19,\t172 THE EXPRESS TRAIN TO QUEBEC Leaves pointst.Charles station at ^ OO P.M., and arrives at Quebec at 9 45 P.M.S3\u201d Tourists availing themselves ot the 3 00 P.M.Special Train to view the VICTORIA Bridge return to Point St.Charles in time to proceed to QUEBEC by the EXPRESS TRAIN.W.SHANLY, General Manager.July 2.\t2m 157 COB RED inn JÜ $3.50 PEE GHALBEOM, Delivered FilSE within Ciîy Miaits, ussii farifeer notice» New City Gas Company, July 19, 1860.r 172 TO BUB3CEIBIE3 TO THEJ OITISEHS\u2019 FUM\u2019D, FOR THE RECEPTION OF H.R.H.THE PRINCE OF WALES.Jk S the residences of several of the Subscri-hers to the Citizens\u2019 Fund are either unknown to the Collector, or too far from town to admit of his calling on them, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that, during SATURDAY next, the 21st instant, from TEN io FOUR o\u2019clock, the said Collector, CHRISTOPHER McCORMICK, will be in at'endance at the ST.LAWRENCE HALL, with the view of affording an opportunity to those, who may not previously have paid their Subscriptions, of doing so on the last day when such cau be received.[By order,] ALEX.CLERK, Secretary.Montreal, July 19, 1860.\t172 lELSOI\u2019S MOUUMEfT.THE undersigned invite their fellow-citizens, who are disposed to cootribuie towards the Renovation of the Monument erecied io commemorate the heroic actions of Admiral Lord Nelson, to meet them in the B >AKD OF TRADE ROOM, Merchants\u2019 Exchange, on SATURDAY next, the 21st instant, at Halt-past TWO o\u2019c'ock P.M., for the purpose of deciding on tbe most advisable course to be adopted tor the accomplishment of the obj ct in view.G.MOFFaTT, T.B.ANDERSON, WILLIAM MOLSON, j.g.Mackenzie, JAS LOGAN.Montreal, July 19, 1860\t172 Bailleur du fond for sale of £470 on City Property.Aise, WANTED £750, first mortgage, on City Property.MONEY to INVEST in good Commercial Paper to any amount.Apply to C.J.HOUGHTON.July 19.\tm 172 TO LOVERS OF COLD ROAST BEEF\u2014 LaZENBY\u2019S celebrated PICKLES, just received by LAMPLOUGH & CAMPBELL, Apothecaries\u2019 Hall.Apothecaries\u2019 hall \u2014 congress WATER, direct from Saratoga, just received by LAMPLOUGH & CAMPBELL.a POTHECARIES\u2019HALL\u2014RICH SYRUDS r\\ for making SUMMER DRINKS\u2014Raspberry, Pine Apple, Jargonel Pear, Vauilia, Orange, Lemon, Ginger, Sarsaparilla, Cherry, Peach, Ac.LAMPLOUGH & CAMPBELL, Apothecaries\u2019 Hall.APOTHECARIES\u2019 HALL\u2014One hundred and fifty patterns best LONDON HAIR BRUSHES, always in stock.LAMt-LOUGH & CAMPBELL, Apothecaries\u2019 Hall.July 19.\t172 Fickling Vinegar, Finest English malt vinegar PRESERVING SUGARS of all kinds For Sale at S, ENGLISH & GO\u2019S., 266 Notre Dame Street.July 19.\tl1^ TSVESTPHALIA HAMS W CINCINNATI HAMS and THIN BAOON.For Sale at S.ENGLISH & CO\u2019S., 266 Notre Dame Street.July 19.\t172 Â.*' WANTED, N ASSISTANT BOOK-KEEPER for the DONEGANA HOTEL.Apply immediately to M.M.KEOGH, Book-Keeper, Donegana Hotel.July 19.\t172 SHOP TO LET, gstsæA TO LET, that large and commodious IfrlfTt SHOP, with Cellar and Back Pre-il « à » mises complete, at present oi ettpied FilMxi by A.McGibbon, No.142 Notre Dame Street.Terms low, and possession on 1st of August' Apply to July 19, SAVAGE & LYMAN, Cathedral BO oh.172 "]
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