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Montreal herald and daily commercial gazette
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  • Montreal :Robert Weir,[183-]-1885
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mardi 14 août 1860
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  • Montreal herald (1811)
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  • Montreal daily herald and daily commercial gazette
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Montreal herald and daily commercial gazette, 1860-08-14, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" x.x -\u2019sr 3Si js PRINCES OF WALE OF THE TITLE.After the conquest of the rest of Great Britain by the Saxons, a remnant of the ancient British people escaped to Wales, where they were long governed by monarchs with the title of Princes.A division of the royal dignity arising between several sons led to quarrels, and, as usual, the interference of foreigners\u2014in this case of the English At length the chief authority became settled for a period in a chieftain named Llewellyn, who for some time reigned under the patronage and as the instrument of Edward I.The time at length arrived when Edward, however, wished to exercise his real power more directly.A pretext of quarrel and an invasion followed.The end of the last of the ancient British Princes of Wales is ^thus described by a native Welsh historian In the meantime was the Earl of Gloucester and Sir Edmund Mortimer with an army in South Wales, where were many that served the King, and there fought with the Prince\u2019s friends at Llhandillo Vawhr, and gave them an overthrow, wherein, or.the King\u2019s side, young William de Valence, his cousin-german, and four knights more were slain.And all this while the Prince destroyed the country of Cardigan and all the lands of liees ap Meredith, but afterwards he Prince separated himself from his army with a few, and came to Buehlt, thinking to remain there quietly for awhile ; and by chance, as he came by the water \u2018 ye> there were Edmund Mortimer ana John Gifford with a great num-1)61 of soldiers, and either party were abashed of other.Then the Prince departed from his men, and went to the valley, with his squire alone, to talk with certain lords of the country who had promised to meet him there.\u201c Then some of his men, seeing his enemies come down from the hill, kept the bridge called the Pont Orewyn, and defended the passage manfully, till one declared to the\u2019Englishmen where a ford was, a little beneath, through the which they sent a number of their men with Elias Walwyn, who suddenly fell upon them that defended the bridge, in their backs, and put them to flight.The Prince\u2019s esquire told the Prince, as he stood secretly abiding the coming of such as promised to meet him in a little grove, that he heard a great noise and cry at the bridge ; and the Prince asked whether his men had taken the bridge, and he said, \u2018Yes.\u2019 \u2018 Then,\u2019 said the Prince, \u2018 I pass not, if all the power of England were upon the other clr!o But suddenly, behold the horsemen 1 AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.VOLUME LII side.\u2019 about the grove ; and as he would have escaped to his men they pursued him so hard that one Adam Francton ran him through with a staff ('?), being unarmed, and knew him not.FIRST ENGLISH PRINCE OF WALES.The Welshmen are reported to have longed for a native prince as vicegerent of their royal conqueror, and when the Queen of England gave birth to a prince in Caernarvon Castle, men speedily learned why the place was selected for such an achievement.When the messenger arrived at Rhudlan Castle, where Edward was, and announced that his Queen had given birth to a boy at Caernarvon on the preceding day', Edward made a knight of the messenger, stufted his pouches with gold pieces, and gave him lands to support his new dignity.If the legend be true, they were not very acute Welshmen to be caught in the trap laid for them by the King, who, after receiving from them the expresssion ol their willingness to submit to a prince born within the country, of blameless life and free from prejudices, proceeded to the Queen\u2019s chamber, and, taking the infant prince in his arms, brought him to the Welsh chieftains, claiming their allegiance according to promise.A local tradition states that when Edward approached the Welshmen, \u201c he presented to them his new-born son, exclaiming, in broken Welsh, \u2022' Eick Dyn /\u2019 that is, \u2018 This is your man !\u2019 \u201d Prince Puckler Muskaw believes that these words were subsequently corrupted into Ich Dien, the Prince of Wales\u2019 motto.The christening of the young Prince Edward was of the very gayest.He was held at the font by Anian, Bishop of Bangor.Never had prelate a more royal fee lor performing such an office.The King heaped upon him manors and regalities.At an early period the Prince\u2019s young eyes rested on three marvellously splendid shows \u2014namely, the marriages of his three sisters, Eleanor, Margaret, and J oanna.The little Prince kept house of his own, long before he could have understood the method of its keeping.We hear, not only of his taking a conspicuous part at his sisters\u2019 weddings, showering coin liberally on court-fools accompanying the bridegrooms, but we are told ol the married couples visiting their brother at his separate house at Mortlake.That there was some frolicsomeness on the occasion, will be seen from the account of the visit made by the lady Gloucester.\u201c On both occasions a \u2018 decent company\u2019 of soldiers, ladies, damsels, clerks and squires attended her.Their presence at table nearly doubled bis ordinary expenditure, especially in the article of wine, the usual allowance of twenty-two measures per day being in creased to forty or forty-two.\u201d The Prince\u2019s house had a hard run upon it.When the young Prince or any of his sisters were seriously indisposed, St.Edmund, or some other saint dear to the line of Plantagenet, was appealed to, and the length or weight of the patient in wax-candles was burnt out at the shrine.If the desired result followed, the royal children had their purses filled with gold pieces, which they deposited on the altars of churches, to which they were allowed to pay a visit.The saints, certainly, could not have been so barbarous to the young Prince of Wales as his own doctor was.When the Prince was attacked by small-pox, the learned doctor \u201c ordered the Prince,\u201d such is his own account, \u201c to be enveloped in scarlet cloth, and that his bed and all the furniture of his chamber should be of a bright-red colour ; which practice not only cured him, but prevented him from being marked.\u201d An entry in King Edward\u2019s Household Book records the purchase of a \u201c Primer\u201d for the Prince, when the latter was sixteen years of age.We are not to conclude tnererrom, tnat he only then began to learn to read.We have a proof of the care taken for the education of the heir of England, in the fact of the appointment of an eminent scholar as his Tutor.The King had a poor library, and a meaner wardrobe.Edward\u2019s taste was of a more splendid character with respect to gold and jewels.It would seem that when young Edward made gifts to his sisters, or at the shrines of saints, the liberality was not so extensive as would at first sight appear ; an order upon the goldsmith was all that was necessary, and, in the spirit of the old Welsh law which enacted that the sovereign should, without grumbling, pay the debts of the etheling, Edward Longshanks settled the accounts of Edward of Caernarvon.The servants of his very household were not paid for out of the Prince\u2019s privy purse, but out of that of his much-suffering sire.The horses were provided after the same agreeable fashion.The Prince of Wales while yet in his teens was appointed nominally Regent of the Kingdom while his father made War on France.The people soon after rose against a tax arbitrarily laid on them.Young Edward was then sojourning at Tonbridge (Jastle, but he was brought up to London in order to appease the outraged citizens.The latter confined themselves to one object, their exemption from all taxation, save by their own consent.Nothing less would satisfy them, and they gained their object, it was enacted that, \u201c no tax henceforth be levied or laid in this our realm without the assent of the archbishops, bishops, and other prelates, the earls, barons, knights, burgesses, and otherJreemen of our realm''1 In 1299 King Edward\u2019s marriage with Marguerite of France was negotiated ; and that of Prince Edward, with her niece Isabelle was also in course of arrangement.The prince had been made to sign documents for the securing this marriage ; and he wooed his young bride\u2014then barely five years old\u2014by deputy.Meanwhile this year was in other respects an eventful one to young Edward.It was the year in which Piers de Gaveston first appeared at Court.Prince Edward\u2019s early friend was the son of a gentleman of Gascony, who had performed such welcome service to Edward I., that the King readily agreed to make of the then boy Piers a friend and companion to the Prince of Wales.It is not too much to say, that the bosom friend of the first Prince of Wales led him into evil, laid enmity between him and his father, and finally set the Prince upon a course which tended to the^structienjdike of the Gascon and his pat«F.If he teinpted the Prince into the payrwhich led to their common ruin, he would seem to hare been irfet half way.Knyghton describes the Prince as one whose person exhibited a combination of grace and strength.The canon adds, that young Edward despised the society of nobles, and \u201c stuck to\u201d that of buffoons and minstrels and players, and stable-folk, and labourers, and watermen and sailors, and to people of such low vocations generally.In addition, he was addicted to drinking, and so talkative in his cups, that he betrayed the secrets of his friends.Light of hand as of tongue, he would strike bystanders for slight cause.The Day Book of the Comptroller of the Wardrobe, enables us to learn something of the every-day life of the Prince.On several days he is present in the chapel while the oblations made for the souls of deceased men of note are being divided.On other occasions, he has musical parties.Then, there is an incident which must have made the courtiers hilari-The King, Queen, and Prince, had MONTREAL, TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 14, 1860.NUMBER 194.OUS.each a tailor.John, the King\u2019s tailor, had received what was due to him for making-robes for the King, but the Prince, seeming to think the pay exorbitant, impounded the tailor, and compelled him to make another set of robes for the Prince, out of the allowance made to John by the King ! Some entries show him to have been a frequent writer of letters, fuller proof of which I shall show in a succeeding page.The Prince was extravagant in many of bis pastimes.But the time was now approaching when the Prince was about to assume increase of dignity.Hitherto, he had been styled \u201c Lord Edward,\u201d or \u201c the King\u2019s eldest son.\u201d The same learned writer, Sel-den, states that he was not acquinted with any letters of creation of a Prince of Wales earlier than the document which conferred that title on the Black Prince.But the letters patent for the investiture of Edward of Caernarvon have been since discovered.The deed, which thus confirms the grant of the Principality, goes on to make equal concession of the county of Chester and some places of less note, with all rights and privileges, among which is enumerated that to be derived from wrecks at sea.So that a wreck like that of the \u201cRoyal Charter,\u201d would have been a \u201c God-send\u201d to the Prince of Wales.EDWARD OF CAERNARVON.-THE HISTORY OF A YEAR.As an illustration of some passages in the life of the first Prince of Wales, there is a document in the Rolls House of the greatest value.It is of the year 1304, the Prince of Wales then being twenty years of age, and it contains copies or abstracts of between seven and eight hundred of the Prince\u2019s letters.In the roll the Prince presents himself under various aspects.Frequently exerting himself in providing for old disabled servants, or for particular friends, not at his own cost however, but at that of persons or communities to whom the Prince addresses himself.There was seldom a benefice vacant in the Church, that Edward of Caernarvon did not think of some old retainer of his own who could fill it ; but it is clear that the desires of the Prince of Wales were often entirely disregarded.There was a common and notorious robber at large at this time, named Peter de Weswyk.Whether he had grown weary of his calling, had a sincere desire to reform, or simply had an inclination to save his neck, Peter had applied to the Bishop of Ely, for permission to make his purgation.To this the bishop had assented.But Edward wrote to the Bishop to \u201c hinder his purgation as much as he can.\u201d One might lose oneself in trying to divine what there could have been between a common robber and the Prince of Wales, that should induce the latter to stand between the poor wretch and his purgation.A certain .Berd de Friscombald had made himself so agreeable to the Prince that on Berd falling into trouble in Italy, the Prince felt bound to exert himself for Berd\u2019s rescue.Theprior and monks of the Augustin convent at Florence had stolen Berd\u2019s son, a boy thirteen years old ; and had clothed him in the habit of their order.The Prince of Wales did for the son of his friend Berd, what no Roman Catholic potentate has cared to do for later victims.Edward pointed out the cruelty of stealing the boy, and required that young Bonacors should be restored to his home, that lie might have an opportunity, in the pres ence of his family, of freely stating whether he chooses to remain with them, or to return to the religious brotherhood.I regret that I cannot record the result of Edward\u2019s intercession for the son of Berd.Of letters immediately personal to the Prince, there are many that exhibit him in a remarkably pleasant light.Of what he had, he gave ungrudgingly.Several of these letters denote a love for music.One of the notes treating of this matter would seem to indicate that the young Prince maintained a juvenile band.The Abbot of Shrewsbury retained, in his household, a famous fiddler, whose fame had reached the ears of the Prince\u2019s rhymer.The latter became desirous to learn the art of the fiddle ; and Edward despatched him, with a note to the abbot, begging of him to direct his fiddler to teach the minstrelsy of the crowdy to Richard the Rhymer.On the 22nd of June, a letter betrays one of the weak points in the Prince of Wales, character\u2014his love of finery.He has heard that Marie, Queen of France, and Louis, her son, are coming to England.He must welcome their arrival and escort them.To do this he needs must have good palfreys and fine robes.Accordingly, Walter a correspondent, is directed to purchase\u2019 \u201c two fit and good palfreys, and two saddles, with the best reins kept by Gilbert de Taunton ; and that he purchase the finest cloths he can find in London, for two or three robes, with fur for the same, and to send them to him as soon as he can.\u201d Phe day ot Pentecost, 1306, was loim* remembered in London for its glories and its cost.On the previous first of April, the King, before setting out for Scotland, had summoned all noblemen and gentlemen, bound by fee to take such service, to repair to VVestminster in order that they might receive the honor of knighthood.The\u201d number of recipients was larger than usual, because the Prince of Wales was himself to be received into the order of chivalry.There were so many\u2014that there was no one room in the Palace of Westminster spacious enough to contain them.Recourse was had to the Temple Gardens.Edward and his companions kept their vigils, on the eve of the day of the great ceremony, in the cathedral church at VVestminster.Mr.Planché, A?1 i HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE OF WALES.in his \u201c History of British Costume,\u201d simply records that the young knight-companions generally \u201ccrowded in their glittering dresses the gardens of the Temple, which received much injury in this novel service.\u201d At Westminster, the vigils were of a rather uproarious character.In place of silence or prayer, trumpets were sounded, pipes squeaked forth a treble accompaniment, and unruly shouts now and then ascended to the roof.On the Whit-Sunday, the Prince of Wales was dubbed knight by his father.After which, the Prince proceeded to the abbey to confer knighthood on his riotous companions of the vigils.The struggle through the crowd was so fierce that several knights fainted, and two of them were aetu-\t_____________________ ally killed.The Prince of Wales himself | The Prince of Wales'was 'aiso was so closely surrounded that he was un- ' make oath that he would never loved.\u201c God alive ! were it not that the kingdom might fall into anarchy, I would take care that thou shouldst never come to thy inheritance.\u201d And from these violent words he passed to violent deeds.Seizing the Prince by the head, with both hands\u2019, he tore away his hair by handfuls\u2014\u201cin quantum potuit,\u201d to use the phrase of the chronicler; and forthwith he ordered the Prince to be kept under arrest.Then summoning his Council, and conferring together, they came to a resolution which is explained by what followed.Peter de Gaveston was made to swear that, be the King living or dead, he (Peter) would never accept a gift of lands from the Prince.He was then made to listen to a decree of perpetual exile.obliged to confer on able to use his arms in order to belt the I Gaveston titles and estates, newly-made knights.He was at last compelled to mount on the altar itself, and on that unusual stage he performed the ceremony of making knights of the fainting young nobles who could fight their way to his feet.\t1 The scenes of the Prince\u2019s private life were in strange contrast with the splendour ofthose which marked his appearance in public.Hemingford relates that young Edward had raised De Gaveston from the lowest condition of poverty.To riches, the Prince wished to add honours, and fearing to ask his father, in person, to confer a favour on a friend, he applied to the Kina-\u2019s especial favourite\u2014Walter de Langton, the royal treasurer, whom Edward had elevated to the episcopal bench\u2014to petition for this tavour.The favour was no light one, it was to the effect that young \u201c Perot,\u201d might be exalted to the dignity of Count of Ponthieu' The Bishop of Chester went straGhtway to the King.\u201c My lord,\u201d said he,»0! come here on the part of the lord Prince, and unwillingly enough, as God is my witness.He requires that I should solicit, that the title of Count of Ponthieu should be conferred on the Lord Peter de Gaveston.The \u2019King burst forth into uncontrollable wrath.\u201c And by God,\u201d he exclaimed, \u201c who art thou who darest ask such a thing I Had I not the fear of God, and the remembrance of what you said, that thou art an unwilling agent, thou shouldst not escape rough treatment.But I will see what he has to say who sent thee hither ! And stay thou, meanwhile, where thou art !\u201d Prince Edward speedily obeyed.On seeing him, his father exclaimed, \u201c What business is this that thou hast sent this man upon I\u201d The Prince replied, \u201c To ask, that Lord Peter de Gaveston might be created Count de Ponthieu.\u201d At this, the King became wilder than before, and even flung unsavoury names at the deceased Queen whom he had certainly ^ At length came the period, 1307, when King Edward was arrested by death on his progress to Scotland.His son was summoned to the bedside of his dying father.The young Prince was enjoined to exercise the virtues of mercy, justice, courtesy, and«truth; to have fellowship with the good, and condescension for the lowly ; to love his half-brothers, but especially to love their mother, Queen Marguerite.His heart the King bequeathed to the trusteeship of 140 knights, who should bear it to the Holy Land.\u201c I have provided two and thirty thousand pounds of silver for the support of these knights,\u201d said Edward; and he calmly observed that he trusted eternal damnation would be the award of him who turned this money-legacy from its destined use.The Prince of Wales was, probably, equally uneasy under another portion of the counsel.This related to Gaveston, concerning whom, the Prince was told that, unless he would incur his father\u2019s curse, he should never recall the pernicious favourite.The most terribly circumstantial of all the\" historians who record the incidents of the last scene is Froissart.That picturesque gossiper writes, that the Prince of Wales standing in presence of the King, the latter made him swear that as soon as he should be dead, he would have his body boiled in a large cauldron, until the flesh should be separated from the bones ; that he would have the flesh buried, and the bones preserved \u2022 and that every time the Scots should rebel against him, he should carry against them the bones of his father.The Prince\u2019s debts at his lather\u2019s death, amounted to j628 000 sterling\u2014a sum represented by nearer a half than a quarter of a million of money of the present value.Twenty miserable years with a few brief days of extravagant joy, and a few, very few, of calm felicity, intervened between the accession of the first Prince of Wales to the throne and his death, 1307\u20141327, There was a brilliant marriage with Isabelle ; a prodigality ol luxury with a poor treasury to meet the est, and a revolt of the barons, which soon disersed all thoughts of inglorious ease.Tube the King\u2019s favourite was but to inherit death, though the fate of one brought with it no experience to his successor\u2014Desperser perishing as miserably as Gaveston.Th mil.tary reputation of England was humiliaid at Bannockburn ; famine followed upon defeat; sickness attended famine ; and th< children of Edward were born when partiilar calamity was pressing upon England othe King.The end of all was that dreadfuscene at Berkley Castle, the horrors of uich contrast so strongly with the joyous muts that welcomed Edward\u2019s biith atCaernarvon.Around his cradle, gay andjallant groups of ladies, priests, and nobis ; around his death-bed, a couple of rnunrers and their assistants.Cries of joy haillhis birth ; his own shrieks heralded his den.Thus the lit English Prince of Wales was the first Kg of England who was deposed and muered.EDWARD OF WDSOR, THE SECOND PRINCE OF WALES.^ Edward II, was born at Windsor.Edward II, wathen sorrowing for his favourite Gavesh, who had been executed by the barons aiw weeks previously.The Queen herself nified the auspicious birth in a letter to ti Mayor of London, by her own hand, vtten on the day that the Prince was bon This missive is entrusted to the tailor of her househol The date above given fell on a Saturd\u2019, but the tardy tailor did not reach Londi till the following Tuesday ; and he Ibid, to his chagrin, that the joyous news hai been made known to the mayor and aldeien, by another announcer, on the day prevus.Laggard as he was, it was not thomt convenient to allow a Queen\u2019s messenir to go unrewarded ; and in acknowledgimt thereof, the city authorities presented hi with \u201c xii disterling,\u201d and a silver cupof four ounces.John de Phalaise accept! the present sulkily, and on the Thiirsdajnoriung\u201c returned the gift, because it appeied to him to be too little.\u201d The royal faier soon conferred brilliant gifts upon the ttle Prince.Before the latter was two «ys old, the King formally granted him tl counties of Chester and Flint, reserviu, certain specified manors.He also presentl to the unconscious boy a gift of the castland manor of Holt ; and on the evening (the second day after the Prince\u2019s birth, tl King had signed a deed in which the Priie was styled\u2014\u201c Edward, Earl of Chester,ur dearly-loved son.\u201d It does not appr, however, that the little Earl was baptizetill four days after his birth.Indeed, tre had been some difii-culty in referenceo the name he was to bear, as some of t Queen\u2019s French relations wished him imed Louis.To lay so foreign a name orhe head of a Prince de- scended from Alfred the Great, would have been unkind to the heir, and almost an insult to the nation ; and accordingly that heir was christened by the name of his father and the royal \u201cConfessor.\u201d The list of Godfathers comprises seven persons\u2014three bishops, Richard of Poictiers, John of Bath and VYells, and William of Worcester; one duke, John of Bretagne ; one earl, Aymer de Valence of Pembroke ; and that old knight, Hugh le Despenser.Edward of Windsor grew in strength and beauty.With his brother and sister, Prince Edward was for no considerable period associated ; but, there were appointed certain noble youths as his \u201c companions ;\u201d and in his early boyhood his position with respect to the principality seems to have been marked by the appointment of a young son of a \u201c Sir Griffin of Wales,\u201d to be one of the companions of the youthful Prince.The Prince\u2019s tutor was Richard de Bury, or Aungerville, an excellent divine, an efficient philosopher, a holy and a cheerful-hearted man.Richard was a brilliant wit ; but an indifferent Latinist.His services to Prince Edward, however, gave great satisfaction, and this poor priest rose to be Chancellor of England.To this tutor the tall, well-shaped, stoutly-built Prince of Wales was indebted for his knowledge of Latin, law, history, and divinity\u2014French, Spanish, and German he acquired from other teachers, and altogether, this vivacious and graceful young Prince was exceedingly well informed.Of the amusements of the Prince with his \u201ccompanions,\u201d there is no record except one, in the accounts of \u201cJohn de Crumbewell.\u201d There are two entries only which are connected with my subject.The first runs thus \u201c In support of the leopard of our lord the King, and of his keeper, from the 11th of January, to Easter day following at 3d.per day, 1R.3s.3d.\u201d « The leopard,\u201d was doubtless a spectacle for the young Prince and was, perhaps, a descendant of the family of three leopards sent by the Emperor Frederick to Henry HI., as a living illustration of the English shield of arms.The second entry on the Constable\u2019s Roll shows that the new dignity which now seemed natural to heirs apparent had had its peculiar influences\u2014the lane outside the Tower Gate being called \u201c Petit Wales.\u201d In fetowe\u2019s days, the ruins of stone mansions in Petty Wales testified to the ancient splendour of the locality ; but he is inclined to give credit to a tradition that \u201c this great stone building was sometimes the lodging appointed for the old native Princes of Yales when they repaired to this city.'I he sovereigns and their children were never long in the same place.When Prince Edward was seven years old (1319), and the King was advancing on Berwick, he re- sided with his mother at Brotherton.An attempt was made by Earl Douglas, to carry oft the family, but one of the scouts of the earl haying been captured, and examined by the authorities, the Queen was enabled to carry oft her children in safety.In these flights, the illustrious wayfarers generally sought or constrained the hospitality of the monasteries.If the heads of these had given any offence their liberality was taxed to the utmost.The abbot of Peterborough, was even made for eight weeks the guardian of the Prince, and his two sisters, with their attendants, were quartered on the abbot, causing an outlay ot money which heavily grieved the community.The King of France threatening to seize the English lands in that country unless the King did homage for them, Isabelle set out to negotiate a peace with her brother.It required two months to enable her to brino-about a peace, under condition that Edward should personally render homage for his possessions in France.This conclusion was made on the 31st May ; and, for more than three months that ensued, Edward was for ever preparing to perform the task.At length came that apparently innocent proposal from the Queen, that her son, the 1 rince ot Wales, should repair, as his father s representative, to France, and pay the homage owing by his sire.There were two things of which Edward y ood in dread\u2014his wife\u2019s influence over leir son, and the boy\u2019s being drawn into a marriage distasteful to the King ; and yet he adopted a course which led inevitably to e catastrophe.Jn August he had appoint- rr |le j n!lce t0 exercise royal authority in Jcmgland, during his own absence in France o pay iat hateful personal homage ; but \u2022 D ^ ?1.\u2019 he reroked the appointment, re-p°-\t13 Continental dominions to the Prince,^ resolved to send him, in his him * t vas lalhnginto the net spread for ,1 p n epteinber, the King accompanied Mth him06 t0 ¦D°JVer\u2019 and before Parting into*whF h tLI>reSSed °n the b°I the misery married ^\t^ W°u ld .pluaSe> were he to be Prince \u2019 a§ainst hs father\u2019s sanction.The anv oFeTT wou^ not transgress N\u2019d v11,61' S lnjuticÜ0Ils for any one.\u201d althih'?U n°r fai\u2018 also t0 hi* son, oftheVN™3, nailT Put in possession of the King\u2019s duchy of Aquitaine, not to 7aa ierf10ns\u2019 with°ut his father\u2019s r i ^d thus Edward parted from the boy whom he never beheld again.His own expression that the prince was of \u201c too au ap t0 Y'ide himself,\u201d absolves from guilt the most innocent of usurpers.OAnn near the Crystal Office^ ^ B' PiCkUP\u2019S NeWS Dep0t\u2019 0r at this AuSu3t 9-\ttrs 190 mtettett\t_____ BY JAMES COROQN & CO.THE SUBSCRIBERS WILL BELL ON THURSDAY NEXT, THE 16th AUGUST, AT THEIR STORES, Hhds Bright Muscovado Sugars Puns ) Prime Heavy-Bodied Muscovado Barrels )\tMolasses Barrels Red path\u2019s Syrups Barrels Cod and Seal Oil Bundles Table Codfish Barrels Green do Hhds Leaf Tobacco WITH OTHER GOODS.Particulars hereafter.Sale at TEN o\u2019clock.191\tJAMES GORDON & CO.THIS OMIaY CHANCES TO MEET THE nu no PRiiCl JS IN THE RIVER SAGUENAY ! ! The magnificent Iron Steamer \u201c MAGNET,\u201d Capt.Thos.Howard, WILL LEAVE Gillespie\u2019s Wharf, Quebec* ON TCESD1Y MOKNING, AUGUST 14, AT EIGHT O\u2019CLOCK, TO MEET THE PRINCE OF WALES.IN THE RIVER SAGUENAY.Sÿ\u2019Parties availing themselves of this Excursion can rely on being in the RIVER SAGUENAY at the same time with the PRINCE OF WALES, affording a rare opportunity of viewing the Squadron accompanying His Royal Highness.Such an interesting event as the present may never occur again, and all who can should avail themselves of this opportunity.Such arrangements will be made on board this large and magnificent Steamer, as will afford ample accommodation to all.ALEX.MILLOY.Office, 40 McGill Street, ( Montreal, August 9, 1860.(\t190 auttuots sales.untmn sales.Steamboat Notice.HOYAL MAIL laaOUGB Llli AND Lake Ontario Express Steamers.The Steamer ** KINGSTON\u201d Will leave the Canal Basin, THIS MORNING, at NINE o\u2019clock, FOR KINGSTON And Intermediate Ports.The Steamer ,s PASSPORT\u201d Will leave the Quebec Steamboat Basin, THIS EVENING, at SEVEN o\u2019clock, FOR QUEBEC Running through without stopping.The Steamer \u201c NORTHERNER\u201d Will leave BROCKVILLE, THIS AFTERNOON, on the arrival of the Morning Train of the GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY, FOR TORONTO AND LEWISTON Arriving at Toronto at Six o\u2019clock the following morning.idr\u201d Passengers Dine on Board.OMNIBUSSES will be in attendance to convey Passengers from the Oars to the Boat FREE OF CHARGE.Tickets, available by Boat or Rail, to or from any place on the Route, can be procured at the Office, 40 McGill Street.A.MILLOY, Agent.Royal Mail Through Line Office, ) 40 McGill Street,\t> Montreal, Aug.14, 1860.\t3\t194 For Kingston, Toronto, Hamilton, and Intermediate Ports.THE Propeller AVON, Rad cliff, Master, will leave for the above Ports on WEDNESDAY EVENING, 15th instant, at SIX o\u2019clock.S3- Freight taken at Lowest current Rates.For Freight, apply to McDonald & Co., Agents, Canal Basin.August 14.\t194 STEAMER FOR CHICAGO.CALLING AT AMHERSTBURGH, SANDWICH, WINDSOR, DETROIT, SARNIA, GODERICH, LAKE ERIE and WELLAND CANAL POSTS.THE Steamer WEST will start for the above Ports on WEDNESDAY EVENING, the 15 th instant, at SIX o\u2019clock.For Freight, apply to HENDERSON, HOLCOMB & CO.August 14.\t194 For Toronto, Hamilton and Intermediate Ports, THE Steamer HURON, Taylor, Master, will leave for the above Ports on TUESDAY EVENING, the 14th instant.Goods taken at through rates to all stations on Great Western Railroad, Northern Railroad and Niagara.JAQUES, TRACY & CO., Agents, Canal Wharf.August 13.\t193 STEAMER FOR LAKE ERIE.CLEVELAND, PORT STANLEY, PORT DOVER, PORT BÜRWELL, AND ALL WELLAND CANAL PORTS.THE Steamer GEORGE MOFFATT, Patterson, Master, will leave for the above Ports on TUESDAY, the 14th instant, at TWO o\u2019clock, P.M.For Freight, apply to HENDERSON HOLCOMB & CO., Canal Wharf.August 11.\t 192 S.F, JONES & GO\u2019S.THROUGH FREIGHT LINE, IRONER WANTED.ONE who understands her business tho- Jvhly\u2019-,rd IS- CapabIe cf managing a LAUNDRY, will receive good wages and con stant^employment by applying at the Montreal Augu3t 13~_________ _ m 193 -|2rARD\u2019WARE.\u2014A trustworthy and tho- TRAVELLER.\t\u201cJ former employers.Address W.O BnvVu Post Office, Montreal.\t\u2019 ^ox 473> August 13\u2018\tr 193 COOK WANTED WA CTOOKt0who tthe ^ States, a her business, is a good^aundress^and^3 give Satis,aetory references, as^chUter a'nd StrA^erHLb,:mad0' N° 2 B™ick August 9th 1860.161 THE Steamer RANGER, McDonald, Master, will leave on TUESDAY EVENING, the 14th instant, for TORONTO, HAMILTON AND PORT DAL.HOUSIE, taking FREIGHT for all PLACES WEST tEf- See advertisement in another column.For Freight, apply!to S.F.JONES & CO., 69 Canal Wharf.August 11.\t192 S.F JONES & GO\u2019S.THROUGH FREIGHT LINE BY AULD& CO.Salir of dry goods.THE Subscribers have received instructions to SELL, at their ROOMS, No.317 ST.PAUL STREET, on Wcdacsday next, 15th instant, THH CONTENTS OF Fourteen Bales & Gases NEWLY SIMPORTED SEASONABLE DRY GOODS.\u2014Together with,\u2014 4 cases Fancy Satinetts 3 do Grey\tdo 3 do Black\tdo \u2014Also,\u2014 130 bales Superior Black and White Wadding 58 do do Batting Sale at TWO o\u2019clock precisely.192\tAÜLD & CO.SOFFMTIMIEF OF POLICE, ( MONTREAL, July 24, 1860.Motice.» $ \u2014 ¦¦¦ \u2022 THE Public is hereby notified that a REGISTRY BOOK is NOW OPEN at the Office ot the Chief of Police, City Hall, for persons who may have suitable Apartments, Board, &c., &c., for Visitors during the Visit of the Prince of Wales and Provincial Exhibition.M.J.HAYS, 177\tChief of Police.IDE FELICE HAS NOT COME, BUT r THOMPSON is here, with samples of his « celebrated TO lis ET SOÆPS.The demand for THOMPSON\u2019S WASHING COMPOUND throughout the United States is unprecedented, and only needs to be introduced to public notice in the Provinces to supercede all other Toilet Soaps.It can be had, at wholesale, of Messrs.Foulds & Hodgson, No.216 St.Panl Street; Fitzpatrick & Moore, No.6 Lemoine Street ; Lymans, Glare & Co., No.226 St.Paul Street ; Nelson & Batters, No.19 St.Feter Street ; and, at retail of most Grocers and Fancy Dealers in the city only.ï3\u201dBe sure that the name of J.THOMPSON is on each cake or bar, as none other is genuine.August 11.\t3m 192 JOHN OETMUJ^E, Jr., ACCOUNTANT & GENERAL AGENT, COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS, St.Sacrament Street.LL business in this capacity >111 receive prompt attention, and have quick despatch.Orders for Investments, Purchase and Sale of Securities, Bank and other Stocks, and all other business appertaining to an Agent, duly and carefully attended to.August 11.\t192 ETEiKEK FOB LAKE ERIE.CALLING AT ALL PORTS ON WELLAND CANAL, PORT DOVER, PORT BURWELL.PORT BRUCE, PORT STANLEY AND CLEVELAND.THE Steamer OSHAWA, Johnston, Master, will leave for the above Ports on or about TUESDAY, the 14th instant.For Freight, apply to S, F.JONES & CQ., 59 Canal Wharf.August 10.\t191 PROCESSIONJ1 CHILDREN.ÏHE CITY COUNCIL CELEBRATION COMMITTEE having decided upon orga-ng the CHILDREN of the VARIOUS SCHOOLS in this CITY, so as to INCLUDE THEM in the PROCESSION to take place on the arrival of HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE OF WALES, the Teachers of the different Schools, or other parties interested, are hereby invited to pot themselves in communication with the undersigned, on or before TUESDAY next, the 14th instant, with the view of making the necessary arrangements.It is intended to place the Children on the Haymarket Square and in front of the Court-House, with suitable flags and banners, and to furnish them with instrumental Music, as an accompaniment to singing the National Anthem, &c.[By Order,] CHAS.GLAOKMEYER, City Clerk.City Clerk\u2019s Office,\tl City Hall,\t> Montreal, 9th August, 1860.)\t192 BAST B34S FLAG DEPOT, No.63 IVoti\u2019e Dame Street, O RDERS TAKEN for any description ct FLAGS.Also a large quantity on hand.P.B.BADEAUX, August 11.\t192 Tfie Prince of Waïes or elopes, EMBELLISHED with a beautiful Portrait, and the words, \u201c Welcome to Canada.\u201d Price 25 cents per packet.ALEX.MURRAY, 151 Notre Dame Street, Corner St.Lambert Street.23\u201c The Trade supplied on liberal terms.August 31.\tr 192 THE THE Subscriber is now prepared to execute all kinds of DESIGNS for the ILLUMINATION on the shortest notice and at the lowest possible price.CROWNS, STARS, REFLECTORS, LAMPS &c., &c.Everything warranted to give satisfaction.E.CHANTELOÜP, 85 Craig Street.August 8.\tda 189 FINE ARTS.UST RECEIVED, ex \u201cBohemian,\u201d a splendid collection of ROWNEY\u20193 CHROIO UTHOGMFHS PAS PS T H ^ G S BY THE Most Celebrated Modern Artists, ON VIEW AND FOR SALE, AT Little over the Publishing Price.GEO.HORNE.August 10.\tr 191 LOOK OU T FOE THE GREAT AUCTION SALE OF WATCHES.AND JEWELLERY.Î3\" Particulars in a future advertisement.L.DEVANY, Auctioneer.August 9.\t190 BY JOHN J.ARNTON.Invoice of ENCUL1SH G-ROUEIUGES, ON WEDNESDAY MORNING NEXT, August 16th, the subscriber will sell at Auction, at his Stores, 35 St.Francois Xavier Street ;\u2014 RB § 1 \u20141 -1 & can- 2 3f3>4 5® 7 8f®10 11/77)12 \u20142 13/5)14 \u20142 \u20141 \u2014 2 \u20143 \u20143 case Superfine Mustard-nisters do.\tJo.\t2 ft» do.cases Mixed Spices\u2014] oz.pejits.do.J0-\t1 oz' free of charge, mon ha in ,tair°U3 of\tthe summer Home J the country will find the Richelieu retreat Bap eaSnnt/nd 83 agreeable a place of Ommhn 3 C?n be found in anJ Part °f Canada.Mnnt u®es leaTe the House every morning for Chare \u2019 \u2019 c-,ODn.eoting with the G.T.Railway at men q/m .ûtatl°n! thereby allowing business i**1?11*1 t,me t0 reach Montreal before 9 oaat A îA11',\u2019 3^d, leave for Chambly at half-P .4 0 olock, P,M., as can be seen by the following advertisement.Terms moderate.THOS.HICKEY, June 1.\tProprietor.mH ROYAL f^TTlNE.§ undersigned has established a Line of i\tbetween Chambly and Char- roas btation, in connection with the Grand trunk Railway and the Omnibuses at Point St Charles, leaving Chambly at 6.30 A.M, and liontreal at 4 30 P.M., affording to parties travelling this route, or desirous of taking a pleasure trip to the country, an opportunity, never before enjoyed, of having so cheap a trip\u2014only hait-a-dollar from Montreal to Chambly and faresW*\u201c\u2019 iûcludiDS the Bailway and Omnibus Tickets may bc had at Mr.Bancroft\u2019s City Express Office, Place d\u2019Armes, Montreal, or at the Albion Hotel, St.Paul Street, where the Mail Conductor may be seen, and who will take charge of Baggage and Parcels coming through, and who also will pay every attention to thé comfort of the Passengers.Any Packages or Commissions left at Mr.Bancroft\u2019s for Chambly, or at the Post Office here for Montreal, will be carefully delivered T.DYVYER, At the Richelieu House, kept by Mr.Hickey Chambly, June 1.\t4m 231 donegana hotel SVSOMTREAi™, CANADA GF.POPE takes leave to inform the .public that he has resumed the management of this much favoured Hotel, established by him in 1850.It is now furnished throughout anew, with the most modern and costly furniture, in a style second to no other Hotel on the Continent ; and its pleasant situation in Notre Dame Street, between the Military Parade Ground (Champ de Mars), the Government Garden on the one side, and Dal-housie Square and the Government and Departmental Offices and Public Buildings on the other, renders it a desirable residence both for purposes of pleasure and business travel.The Subscriber, in returning thanks for the unprecedented patronage always conferred on him, begs to assure the publie that he will use every possible exertion to merit a continuance of the favours which it is his nride and pleasure to acknowledge as having been heretofore received from Foreign, American, and Provincial pleasure Travellers, from members of the Government and both Houses of the Legislnture, Military and Departmental Officers, and thé travelling community in general.G F POPE Montreal, 28th May, I860.\t' \u2019 119 ' line quailed STEAMBOAT ABBAJGEIENT.BOWL BAIL TB80M ill, AND Lake Ontario Express Steamers, Forming a Direct Line between Quebec, Montreal, Kingston, Toronto, Niagara and Lewiston.Si ÏÏHR HOTEL.PS1 UB Lachine Railroad Canning, all through Bonaventure do Basin\tdo St.Felix do Bruchési Lane do Eleanor\tdo Kempt (St.Ann\u2019s Ward,)all through Murray, all through Catherine George Prince Queen Barre Barre Lane Aqueduct St.Uolumban do St.Etienne do De la Ferme do do do do do do do do Sale by Authority of Justice.ON TUESDAY, the 14th AUGUST next, at the Church Door of the Parish of STE.ADELE, at ELEY\u2019EN o\u2019clock in the Morning\u2014\u2022 A PIECE OF LAND, making part of the Lot designated as No.11, situated in the 10th Range of the Township of Abercrombie, in the Parish of Ste.A dele, containing four arpents and a-half in front, by the depth which may be found between the cordon of the 11th Range of the said Township, which bounds it at one end, to the north bank of the North River, which bounds it on the other end ; bounded on one side by Lot No.No.10, anu on the other by Lot No.12 ; with a Wooden Barn thereon erected.The said Land ts dependent on the succession of the late Leon Legault dit Delorier.Holloways Pills\u2014Nature\u2019s Great Resto rative\u2014Physical Prostration.\u2014When lassitude or weariness of body is felt without any indication of disease, or the mind depressed and indifferent to external cares, some vital function is deranged.The human system, like any other piece ot mechanism, is subject to certain laws, \u2014 the pendulum of a clock stops and the whole organization is disordered\u2014in like manner when the human stomach or liver becomes affected, we are mentally and physically prostrated.By removing these obstructions, Holloway\u2019s Pills restore the sufferer to the benefit and pleasures of permanent health.For purifying the blood, correcting the foulness of the stomach, and cleansing the secretions of the liver, these famous remedies are the most safe and certain yet discovered.\trDC-187 A RELIABLE COUGH~MÉDICINB.N.H.Downs\u2019 Elixir is the oldest Cough Medicine that has any considerable sale in New England or Canada, It is warranted for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, and all diseases of the Chest and Lungs.Price 25 and 50 cents per bottle.Sold by all Druggists in Canada.See advertisement in another part uf tha paper.Try it and you will always use it.J.M.Henry and Sons, Waterbury, Vermont, and No.30 St.Henry Street, Montreal, general agents.\u201e\tN.H.DOWNS.February 22.__________________DCS-ly-46 IMPORTANT MEDICAL TESTIMONY The following, from Dr.D.Y.Williams, is one of the many thousands of letters received from eminent medical men, testifying to the efficacy of Holloway\u2019s Pills for Liver Complaints and Bilious Disorders :\u2014 Professor Holloway : Deal Sir,\u2014I wish to get some of your medicines.I am a physician, and have an extensive practice.I have tried your Pills, and found them the best Pills I have ever used.They seem to act upon tho Hepatic Ducts of the Liver mildly, but promptly, and more surely than Calomel or Podophyllum, and without debilitating or depleting the system.Hoping to hear from you soon, with a list of prices, I remain, your\u2019s, &c.DANIEL Y.WILLIAMS, M.D., Allisonville, Prince Edward Co., C.W.June 8.\ti37 Best Hair Dye in the JForZd.\u2014This is rather strong language, yet Bogle\u2019s Electric Hair Dye, recently improved] was proven to be so by the udges at the late Mechanics\u2019 Fair, held in Boston, among whom was Dr.Hayes, (the eminent chemist and State assayer,) who awarded it the Prize Medal and Diploma, over the choicest hair dyes on exhibtion from all parts of the Union.Its unparalleled superiority consists in 1st.The ingredients are nourishing to the hair, not destructive, as others are.2d.Does not stain nor hurt tho skin.3d.Is easily applied, and dyes the hair any color required, from a delicate brown to a deep black, so natural as to appear marvelous.Manufactured, sold and applied by Wm.Bogle, 202 Washington St Boston, and may bs had of Druggists every where.\tDc_29 FAKtMSER\u2019S BRITISH A1EEIGU HOTEL, Tl&ree Jêivcrs, C.E.THE Subscriber begs to call the attention of Tourists and the Travelling Public generally to the above Hotel, which is situated on Molson\u2019s Wharf, directly opposite the landing of the Richelieu or Mail Line of Steamers plying between Montreal and Quebec.Though not immense, it is the largest and most commodious in the City, and the only one commanding an extensive and unobstructed view of the river.The charges are moderate.Parties boarding during the Summer months, for comfort and economy, will find this House one of the most pleasant locations on the River St.Lawrence.The Table will be furnished with the best the market affords.The Bar is furnished with the choicest brands of Liquors, Wines, Ales, Porters, &c.The Livery Stable connected with this establishment, and kept by Mr.James Thompson, is furnished with the best of Horses and Carriages, with competent and trusty drivers.Parties visiting Shawentgan Falls, St.Leon Springs, Radnor Forges or other places on business or pleasure, will find him ready at all hours to serve them on reasonable terms.Billiard and other Tables of amusement connected with the Hotel.Trustworthy Porters always iu attendance at the Boats.Feeling grateful for the past encouragement awarded him, he hopes, by his assiduity and diligence in supplying the wants of his customers, to merit a continuance of their support.THOS.G.FARMER.Three-Rivers, June 5, 1860.\t136 ST.DENIS HOTEL, BROADWAY, COR.ELEVENTH STIGSET.S.3iEW YORK.THE Undersigned, having been connected with the St.Nicholas and Fifth Avenue hotels, for the past six years, begs to inform his friends and the public that he has leased the \u201e ST DEM! S\u2019 HOT STL- Broad way, Corner, of Eleventh Street, and having thoroughly repaired, repainted, refurnished, and put the House in complete order, is now ready to accommodate travellers seeking a quiet and retired home.About one-half of the Hotel in arranged in suits of from two to six rooms ; and with the elegant additions on Broadway and Eleventh street, has accommodations for about three hundred and fifty guests.Tfie Hotel is conducted on the European plan.Meals served to order in the dining or in private rooms, as parties may elect.Situated on Broadway, near Union Park, the ST.DENIS HOTEL is one of the most attractive houses in the city ; and the traveller \u2014whether from the Antillies, the Sunny South, or the rolling Prairies of the West, will find here all the comforts of a quiet home.E.E.BALCOM.New York June, 8 1860\t3m-139 THAT IMMENSE HOTEL, newly built by Mr.E.L.PACAUD, from whence may tie enjoyed the magnificent Panorama of the St.Lawrence, has the advantage of being situated n the centre of business and only a few steps rora the Steamboat Landing.The Sitting Rooms ae spacious and decorated with taste.The Chambers are large and newly furnished.The Cuisine will be various and exquisite, and the Cellar furnished with the best Wines and Liquors imported from France.The Service of the House, under the superintendence of the Proprietor, will forestall every wish.F A L L 8 s hawe\u2019nigan.The Proprietor has made arrangements for Extras for the use of visitors desirous of seeing the beautiful Falls of Shawenigan, the St.Leon Springs, and the Forges of Ferment and St.Maurice, every day, and for HALF-PRICE.The undersigned hopes that, with all the elements of success which he can command, and his determination to maintain his establishment on a footing the most comfortable and respectable ; together with the moderation of his charges, he will be favoured with the patronage of the travelling public and of numerous boarders.At the arrival of every Steamboat, attentive Porters will be in atteiidance for the Baeeaee of Travellers.\t88 8 P B.VANASSE, Proprietor.HIVEH STREET v r THREE HIVERS.May 6.\tiqs St.Nicholas Hotel Broadway.Yew-Stork WHEN completed, six years ago, the St.Nicholas was universally pronounced the most magnificent, convenient, and thoroughly organized establishment of the kind on this Continent.What it was then it remains to-day\u2014without a rival in size, in sumptuousness, and in the general elements of comfort and enjoyment.The Hotel has accommodations for 1000 guests, including 100 complete suites of apartments for families.Six hundred persons can be comfortably seated at the tables of its three public dining rooms, and nothing that modern art has devised for the convenience and social gratification of the travelling public has been omitted in its plan, or is neglected in its practical details.The early reputation of the house at home aud abroad, derived from its magnitude, its superb appointments, and its home-like comforts and luxuries, has been enhanced every year by tho unwearied exertions of the proprietors.TREADWELL, WHITCOMB & CO.May 19.\t3m 12o ST Ë YE MB' 11 CTfl BE, [LATE DELMONICO\u2019S,]\t5 23, 23, 25 ansi 27 Broadway, NEW YORK.ÏWKES l TWINES ! J \"TWINES Î l i A.§.M\u2018JLesman REPRESENTS MESSRS.J.& W.STUART, Fishing Twine and Net Manufacturers, Musselburgh, Scotland, who can supply the purest, and cheapest Polish-Rhine Hemp Nets and Twines ever offered in Canada.He is now prepared to receive Fall orders Flour in bags and bris, daily arriving Oatmeal in barrels Barrels Tennent\u2019s Bitter Beer, in pints Consignments of Teas and Tobaccos, sold cheap Round and Split Herrings Liverpool Coarse and Stoved Salt, in bags Leather from different Tanneries constantly on hand YOUNG\u2019S BUILDINGS, 43 and 45 Grey Nun Street, Montreal.May 30.\t129 GEAfGE BïOTMÜBS & GO Glass & Alkali Works, BIRMINGHAM.SHEET, CROHN, PLATE, Coloured Ornamental, and Stained WINDOW GLASS.Orders Received by S.H.THOMPSON, 8 Lemoine Street.Jnne 4.\t285 SÏÜRÂûE !_ST0RâSE ! ! QUANT HALL & Oo.\u2019s Mills and Elevating\u2019 Warehouse.I^HE 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.\tH3 ROOMS, 75 Gents PER DAY.JOHN O\u2019GRADY, Jr., Proprietor.April 2._______78 (.BEAT WESTERN HOTEL CLIFTON, SUSPENSION BRIDGE, CANADA SIDE H.GATRELL & CC Proprietors.ly-135 OF CiNADi, v e.) DR.EATON\u2019S INFANTILE CORDIA.L.It must be obvious to every attentive person yrrU- t \u2022\u201e i j i\tf at i firat diseases of infants arise chiefly For conditions, which will be made known at i from the bowels, and in this connection wo ie time of sale, apply to the undersigned No- ! know of a medicine which can be reHeï upon rv.at his Stuov in ih«\ts-w with perfect confidence in all infantile com- plaints, whatever their nature may be.We Dr\u2019 Eatou\u2019a Infantile Cordial.It con- the\t____j _rr__, \u201e\u201e tary, at his Study in the Village of Ste.Scholastique.AUGUSTUS MACKAY, N.P.Ste.Scholastique, July 23, 1860.mw 117 PublicJNotice, WILL BE SOLD, by Authority of Justice, to the highest bidder, at the Church Door of the Parish of St.Janvier, on MONDAY, the TWENTY-SEVENTH day of the month of AUGUST next, at NINE o\u2019clock in the FORENOON, a LOT of LAND, situated in the Parish of St.Janvier, containing one arpent and one half in front, by sixteen arpents in depth ; bounded in front by the public road, in rear by the land of Cote Ste.Marie, joining on one side Joseph Filiatrault, and on the other side Charles Beauchamp, with a House and other Buildings thereon erected.The said Lot of Land depending of the com-muneaute of EUSTACHE LEDUC and ELEONORE GUNETTE._ _ r , L.PREVOST, N.P.St.Jerome, July 30, I860.m t 188 rel|1evfl^\\0iPia'te,?f aDy kinumn of Messrs; Church & vrZZ;n?atnggàBt3,\u2019 New York> wh0 are sole renowned Dr \u201cr S?le a2ent8 of the world-nreoaratinn f ^n30n 3 Blood Food, which is a luff from défie\" ^ rehef of a11 complaints aris- ILj bee advertisement.OoFOmédenbamaildrUggists\u2019 Armans, Savage* Oo., Wholesale Agents for Canada.August 8.\tVdO-W FOR fSALB BY Anderson, Evans & Evans ST.GABRIEL STREET, \u2018EASE\u2019S\u2019 CELEBRATED PAINTS.XSST ©X&: WHITE\u2014Nos.1, 2, 3 Black, Blue, Green, Yellow Brown, Turkey Umber, Red, Zinc White DS.\u2019ST; White and Red Lead Ochres, Chrome Yellow English and Turkey Umber Sienna English Pink Vandyke Brown Ivory Black, Drop Black Putty, *c., Ac., Ac.\u2014Also,\u2014 AXES (Cast Steel)\u2014Chopping OUT NAILS\u2014assorted sizes G HORSE NAILS GLASGOW IRON\u2014assorted sizes \u2014Together with,\u2014 .GUNPOWDER\u2014\u201cCurtis A Harvey\u2019s\u201d Blasting, FF, FFF, and Canister.Oct.10.\t241 SJOR SALiZ ~\t\u2014\t\u2014- Indigo, Button Blue, Cloves Pepper, Pimento, Cassia Nutmegs, Mustard in jars and lib « [lbs Pressed Smoking Tobacco Playing Cards, Wrapping Paper Rice, Flour Sulphur, Ginger Cream Tartar, Castile Soap Sugar Candy, Olive Oil Cod Oil, Corks, Belmont Candle» London Pickles, Windsor Soap also,\u2014 A general assortment of GROCERIES, consisting in part of Sugars, Molasses, Syrur, Tobaccos, Lead, Wines, Brandy, Gin, Ac.Ac.L.MARCHAND A CO., No.174 St.Paul Street.Oct.6.\t238 Corks.A FULL ASSORTMENT of Wine, Beer, Soda Water and Ginger Beer CORKS, BUNGS, Ac., ex \u201cDeolinda,\u201d from Oporto.For Sale by I.BÜQHANAN, HARRIS & CO.Jbb?23,\t150 Tune 8.Province __\t,_____ District of St.Hyacinthe, SUPERIOR COURT.St.Hyacinthe, on the Twenty-Eighth day of June, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty.Know all men that john fraser, Esquire, Seignior of St.Marc, in the District of Montreal, by his petition fyled in the office of this Court, under the number one hundred aud ninety-five, prays for the sale of a lot of land, under the number seventy-two, situated in the GRAND RANGE, ST.CHARLES, iu the parish of L\u2019ANGE GARDIEN, containing two arpents in breadth by thirty-two arpents in depth, bounded in front by the front road of the said range St.Charles ; in rear by the line of Farnham ; on one side by the lot number seventy-three, on the other side by the lot number seventy-one, on which said lot of land are erected a house, a stable, and other buildings ; which said immoveable is occupied by Mons.Scholgrave, of the, parish of L\u2019Ange Gardien ; which said John Fraser alleges that by an act or obligation, consented by one Zadoek Buck, yeoman of L\u2019Ange Gardien, before Mtres.Brunelle and his colleague notaries at St.Césaire, on the twenty-first day of June\u2019 one thousand eight hundred and fifty-three, an hypothec was created on the immovable herein above described, for the sum of fourteen pounds ten shillings currency, with interest, and that he claims from the actual proprietor of the said immovable, the sum of nineteen pounds ten shillings and three-pence, said currency, dne to him for the amount in capital and interest of the said obligation.Which said John Fraser further alleges that the actual proprietor of the said immovable is unknown and uncertain ; and that since the date of the twenty-first of June, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-three, the said immovable has been consecutively occupied by the said Zadoek Buck, John Bowker of Farnham, Lener Stone, also of Farnham ; and, finally, by the said Mons.Scholgrave.Notice is therefore given to the proprietor of the said immovable and properties, to appear before this Court within two months, to be reckoned from the fourth publication of this present notice, to answer to the demand of the said John Fraser, failing which the Court will order that the said immovable and properties be sold by Sheriff\u2019s sale (décret).L.G.DbLORIMIER, P S 0 July 25\tb-W-177 Province ot?Canada, J District of St.Hyaciuthe.$ SUPERIOR COURT.St.Hyacinthe, on the twenty-eighth day of June, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty.Know all men that john fraser, Esquire, Seignior of St.Marc, in the District of Montreal, by his petition fyled in the office ot this Court, under the number one hundred and ninety-six, prays for the sale of two two immovables and properties situated in this District, to wit ;\u2014Two lots of land, comprising the numbers 70 and 71, situated in the Range St.Charles, in the Parish of L\u2019Ange Gardien, containing each two arpents in breadth, by thirty-two arpents in depth, bounded in front by the road of the said Range, in rear by the Line of Farnham, on one side by the lot of land number sixty nine, and on the other side by the number seventy-two, on which said lots of land are erected a house, a stable, and other buildings; which said immovables and properties are now occupied by Mods.Scholgrave, of theParish ofL\u2019Ange Gardien; which said John Fraser alleges that by an obligation consented by Zaduck Buck, yeoman and sawyer, of the Parish of L\u2019Ange Gardien,at St.Cesaire, on the twenty-third of March, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-three,beforeMtres.Brunelle and his colleague, Notaries, an hypothec was created on the said immovables and properties hereinabove described, for the sum of forty-one pounds thirteen shillings and four pence, current money of this Province, with interest, and that he claims from the actual proprietor of the said immovables the sum of fifty-seven pounds two shillings and elevenpence, said currency, due to him lor the amount iu capital and interests of the said obligation; which said John Fraser further alleges that the actual proprietor ot the said immovables is now unknown and uncertain, and that since the date of the said obligation of the twenty-third of March, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-three, the said two immovables have been consecutively occupied by the said Zaduck Buck, John Bowker, of Farnham, Lener Stone,of Farnham, and, finally, Mons.Scholgrave.Notice is,therefore, given to the proprietor of the said immoveables and properties to appear before tbis Court, within two months, to be reckoned from the fourth publication of this present notice, to answer to the demand of the said John Fraser, failing which, this Court will order that the said immoveables and.properties by sold by Sheriff's Sale (décret.) L.G.DbLORIMIER, P.S.C.This Magnificent Line, composed of the following First Class Steamers ; MTCN [Iron].Capt.\tKelley.T.'f^ÇGRT [Iron].\u201c\tHarbottle, Ï^NSHEE.
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