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Titre :
The Montreal herald
Éditeur :
  • Montreal :The Herald Company,1888-1892
Contenu spécifique :
lundi 2 juillet 1888
Genre spécifique :
  • Journaux
Fréquence :
quotidien
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    Prédécesseur :
  • Montreal daily herald and daily commercial gazette
  • Successeur :
  • Montreal daily herald
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The Montreal herald, 1888-07-02, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" =, - \u2026_ \u2014\u2014 | Portland Cement, Canada Cement, Water Lime, \u2018Whiting, Drain Pipes, Chimney Tops, Vent Lining, Flue Covers, ¥ire Bricks Plaster of Paris, Fire Clay Borax, Roman Cement, China Clay.Bessemer Sted Sofa, Chair and Bed Springs.W.& F.P.CIRRIE & CO\u2019Y, he Ji onireal A Cl: gl BE A 3 VOL.LXXXL\u2014NO.157.NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.ear me SALT ALWAYS ON HARD: ice\u2019s Pure Dairy Salt.Table Sak.Stubbs\u2019 Washington F.¥.Salt.Liverpool Coarse Sait.Lump Rock Salt, for cattle.| FOR SALE BY 'VERRET, STEWART & CO.271 to 275 Commissioners Street.[13 se May 2 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.\"Caledonia Mine COAL AND SCREENINGS ARRIVING WEEKLY, Ex SS.BENHOLM, - - 200 Tons s.INCE, \u201d | ExSS.DANISH PR 903 Tens \u2018 ExSS.WYLO, - J.& R.M IMPORTERS - ols, West India Produce æef Fish, Fish Wines, &c.\u2019 - EXPORTERS jan Produce, Grain, Flour, of Cangé Butter, Cheese, &e., Pork, s Common Street, Montreal.«| Janel {STEWART MONN & C0.% General Comm\u2019ssion Merchants, r FISH, OILS, &o.Steam Refined Seal Oil.Newfoundland Cod Liver Oil.Newfoundland Cod Oil.Gaspe an\u201d Halifax Cod Oil.CE: VERS AND SHIPPERS OF frour, Provisions and Gen\u2019l Produce 22 ST.JOHN STREET\u2019 MONTREA BAIRD, BROWNING & CO., General Commission Merchants, 09 Commisioners St., Montreal.Exporters of Flour, Butter, Cheese, and other Canadiar products.Recelvers o! Fish Oils, Molasses, Sugar, Salt, &c., &c.EX SS.ASSYRIAN, FROM GLASGOW, 80 Cases Fine Old Scotch Whiskey.\u2018We are grepared to give quotations and take orders for Liverpool Coarse Salt, May, June and July shipments, as required.110 ! { FSvdney & Louisburg Coal & R'y Cou LIMITED.\u201cRESERVE\u201d MYNES COLLIERY! Office: 4 Custom House Square.Telephone 638.The Steamer SOUTHWOLD, \u2018 i\u201c HIGHLAND PRINCE, will run weekly in the Company\u2019s service during the present season of navigation, commencing early in May.#ær Orders solicited by the undersigned for fresh-mined Coal, viz.: und, Run of Mines d Sc ings.eres ©.HENSHAW, Agent.CRANE ELEVATOR GO.HYDRAULIC AND STEAM ELEVATORS For Passenger and Freight Service, IN HOTELS, JEFICE BUILDINGS, WAREHOUSES, \u20ac&c., &c.NEW YORK OFFICE CHICAGO OFFICE: and 42 WALL ST.{219 SO, JEFFERSON ST.6 BURES Nervous Prostration, Nervoug UL Headache, Neuralgia, Mervoug i Weakness, Stomach and Liver * Diseases, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, aad all affecticns of the Kidneys, WEAK MERVES .PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND is a Nerve Tonk Which never fails.Conteining Celery and Coca, those wonderful stimulants, it speedily cures ax nervous disorders, RHEUMATISM PAINE'S CELERY CompouND purifles the blood.It drives out the lactic acid, which causes Rheumatism, and restores the blood- making organs to a healthy condition, The true remedy for Rheumatism, KIDNEY COMPLAINTS PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND quickly restores the liver and kidneys \u2018to perfect health, This curative power combined with ity nerve tonics, makes it the best remedy for all kidney complaints, \u2019 YSPEPSIA PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND strengthens the stomach, and quiets the nerves of the diges- .tive organs.This is why it cures even the Worst cases of Dyspepsia, ONSTIPATION PAINE\u2019s CELERY CoOMPOUND is not a Cathaze tic.It is a laxative, giving easy and natural action to the bowels, Regularity surely fols \"lows its use, Recommended by professional and business men.Send for book, Price $1.00, Sold by Druggista, ELLS, RICHARDSON : CO, Prop\u2019s Montreal, Rue \u2014 ME oA a) 1 HAE 5 1 CES 5 Ba Js pees Seis Its superior excetlence proven in millions o homes for more than a quarter of a century} It is used by the United -tates Government, Endorsed by the heads of the Great Universities as the Rtrongest, Purest, and most Healthful.Dr.Price's Cream Baking Powder does net contain Ammonia, Lime or Alum.Sold only in Cans.PRICE BAKING POWDER CO.LMP OHIOAGO.Soa SUMMARY OF NEWS CANADIAN, \u2014Sir Thomas Galt was sworn in on Friday night as Deputy Lieut.-Governor of Ontario.\u2014The Maritime Labor Unions have resolved that the Chinese hands on board the steamer \u201cAlameda\u201d must be replaced hy Europeans, otherwise the steamer will not be allowed to load.\u2014The members of the press gallery of the Quebec Legislature on Friday invited a number of friends to an excursion to Orleans Island on Monday.Invitatioas have also been issued tn the Premier, Opposition leaders, speakers of both Houses and Prince Roland Bonaparte.\u2014The judgment of the Master-in-Ordi- nary in the Central Bank cases yesterday was a great blow to many hopeful share- Lolders.With the exception of soma balf-dozen cases yet to be heard all the claimants for release were placed on the contributories list for double liability, and the Master has direct2d the liquidators to bring in a supplementary list of shareholders.The wrongful practices of the bank were denounced in the strongest possible terms.\u2014In the Court of Appeal on Saturday morning, in the case of Bate vs.the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, judgment was given in favor of the defendants, dismissing the appeal.The action was brought to recover drmages to the amount of $1,077 from the Company.The plainti was travelling on a ticket issued on special reduced rates, said tickets limiting the liability of the Company to $100.The court held the acceptance of such a ticket, even though the purchaser failed to inform himself of its special provisions, relieved the Company from any liability in excess of $100.Judge Burton dissented from his confreres.EUROPEAN.\u2014General Peters, the Czar\u2019s first aide- de-camp, has arrived at Paris on a secret mission.\u2014Advices from South Africa say that all available troons at Natal have been ordered to Zululand.\u2014Important changes are about to be made in the Vatican.Mgr.Galimberti will probably be appointed Papal Secretary of State.It is expected a more conciliatory policy will shortly be adopted.\u2014The Standard, referring to the Panama Canal, says : A year hence its promoters will be a company with a capital of debts amounting to £90,000,000 sterling and no available assets.The scheme is now hopeless unless the French Government comes to the rescue and completes it.\u2014The trial of the libel suit of Mr.Frank Hugh O'Donnell against the London Times will begin to-day.Earl Spencer, Lord Aberdeen, Sir George O.Trevelyan, Mr.Timothy Harrington, Mr.H.Campbell-Bannerman and Herbert Gladstone have been subpœnaed as witnesses.\u2014If the white Pasha, in the Bahr-el- Ghazel Province is Henry M.Stanley, and he intends to relieve the white slaves at Khartoum, the Government will actively agesist him, but if he intends to hold Khartoum and to send from that place a force to Emin Bey it is not probable that the Government will support im.AMERICAN, \u2014F.H.Temple Bellew, of New York, the artist and writer, died to-day.\u2014The three-mile sculling race between Conley, of Boston, and Buckley, of Salem, was won by the latter in 22.25.\u2014The bulletin of the American Iron and Steel Association issued Friday states that the depressed condition of trade which it finds prevailing is due to a hesitation to extond operations pending tariff legislation and the impending threat of free trade.\u201cHeavy importations of manufactured product,\u201d it says, \u201cunder present badly arranged tariff, especially of iron and sleel and textile fabrics, also contribute to the prevailing reaction in business.\u201d \u2014Concerning the reported marriage ot Miss Edith Olive Gwyune, a sister of Mrs.Cornelius Vanderbilt, to William Fearney Gill, a gentleman who shone last winter as an unsuccessful promoter of private theatricals, both parties have admitted that the only ceremony performed was the placing of a ring on Miss Gwynne\u2019s finger by Gill, and his declaration that under the laws of New York State they were man and wife.No witnesses were present.The Vanderbilt family is distressed over this matter.Miss Gwynne\u2019s sister, Miss Cettie Gwynne, declares there has been no marriage.A Fruitless Recommendation.Cricaco, July 1\u2014Tne Trades and Labor Assembly in session on Saturday adopted a resolution recommending ail members of trades unions to totally abstain from beer drinking for one m nth, as a means of coercing he brewers into taking back the men who went oat on strike three months a_o, MONTREAL, MONDAY.JULY, 2.1888.TAFFY GETTING EXCITED.Wants the Welsh Church Disestablished.Getting Ready for the Imperial Visitors.WARM TIMES IN WALES.The Peasantry and Mechanics Refase to Pay Ttthes\u2014\u2018\u2018 Wales for Welshmen * is the Cry Which Has Aroused the People Against England, and May Lead to a Serious Revolt.LoxpoN, June 30.\u2014The situation in Wales is becoming so serious as to cause great fears of an outbreak which will set at defiance all the means of resistance possessed by the civil authorities.The Conservative leaders naturally shrink from incurring the st gma of employing the army to enforce the statutes which the Weish have declared shall never be obeyed, and they feel that they have fallen upon troublcus times.Ireland is tolerably quiet for tha present; the Bcoteh, although exasperated ever the defeat of their Disestablishment bill, will, with true Scottish pertinacity, resort again to a legal attack with renewed vigor, but the Welshman isa wore dangerous and difficult subject to seal with.Taffy is as fiery as his brother of the Emerald Isle and emigration bas not depleted the land of the young and ardente obstinately refuses to pay tithes and he is bound to disregard the game laws and compel their repeal.With fox-hunting broken up in Ireland, Scottish moors as barren of fowls as the Thames of fish, and the Welsh coverts emptied by poachers, the fancy sportsmen of England feel that the bulwarks of the British Constitution are indeed being overthrown.It is hard to determine which the English aristocrat considers the greater sin, a violation of the game laws of his ancestors or a rebellion against the Estab lished Church.Since the repeal in Ireland, Scotland and Wales have naturally felt that a similar relief should be extended to them, and the refusal of the Government to listen to moderate appeals has determined the aggrieved dissenters of Wales to resort to a display of strength, the magnitude of which may deter the authorities from hesitating at any attempt at coercion.The Government officials appreciate the position, but the attitude of the clergy is almost worthy of the middle ages.A wearer of lawn sleeves lately said that the cry of \u201cWales for the Welsn\u201d was hardly less silly than would be an agitation for the repeal of the Norman Conquest.A holder of a fat living near Swansea lays the greater part of the blame for the present state of things to the employers and proprietors, who, he says, have neglected to care for, instruct and on due occasion control those who work for them, whereby animpatience of restraint and discontentment with their condition has sprung up, which has culminated in a \u2018\u201c Latred of the classes above them.\u201d Too high wages, he also considers, is another cause of the Welsh workingman\u2019s unnatural refusal to pay tithes, thereby implying that an improvement in his lodging or diet has rendered him rebellious.But the crowning reason is a c¢harm- ingly English one, and that is that their Celtic blood prevents the noble race of Shenkin from rising to a higher plane of civilization, and appreciating the benefits of the Established Church and the efforts of 1ts ministers for their reclamation.\u2014__, Oppcsition to the French Budget.Paris, July 1.\u2014The Committse of the French Chamber on the budget consists of 22 Opportunists who are adverse to M.Floquet, and 11 others who are opposed to the budget as reported.It 1s therefore safe to say that the budget will be radically changed from its present form.-\u2014 The Imperial Visit.BrruiN, July 1,\u2014Dr.Bergman has handed to Emperor William the report of Emperor Frederick\u2019s illness.Emperor Francis Joseph, of Austria, and the Empress Elizabeth are expected at Gastein in a few days.They will prolong their visit in order to meet Emperor William after his visit to the Czar.\u2014_\u2014 Liberal Gains in Thanet.Lonpox, June 30.\u2014The Parliamentary contest in the Isle of Thanet division yesterday, resulted in the election of Mr.James Lowther, the Conservative candidate.Mr.Lowther received 3,547 votes aud the Hon.Edward Knatchbull-Hugh- essen, the Liberal candidate, 2,889.This seat was made vacant by the death of Colonel King-Harman, late Under-Secre- tary for Ireland.The vote this year in this division represents an increase over the last election of 148 votes for the Government, and an increase of 1,578 votes for the Liberals, thus making a practical victory for the latter, TWO BABIES KILLED.By a Boy Who Says Me Was Tired Taking Care of Them.Lissox, Md., June 30.\u2014On Thursday, A.D.Layton, a farmer Living about four miles from this place, found his two little children on the floor of his home with their throats horribly gashed.A negro boy told Mr.Layton, who was working in a field near by, that he had seen a man hurriedly leave the house, but his story is not believed and he was arrested.One child may live, but tke other cannot survive.The boy afterwards admitted the deed, and explain>d that he was tired of taking care of the babies and did not want to be bothered with them.\u2014\u2014\u2014 BURIED THEIR BOURBON.Revenue Officers Rake up a Fine Fraud in Tennessee.Newrorr, Tenn, June 30.\u2014W.O, Harper's distillery burned yesterday.There were 550 gallons of whiskey not accounted for, which Harper said were burned, but which were found buried in barrels -near Harper's house.Harper claimed the whiskey had been stolen and the distellery set on fire.Revenue officers will arrest Harper and J.W.Boyd, his storekeeper, beside a dozen others.-\u2014\u2014\u2014 Capsized in Charles River.Boston, June 20.\u2014~About 8.30 o'clock last evening, a cance containing J.R.Codwise, of Wellesley Hill, and a young lady, capsized in the Charles River near Riverside, Codwise was drowned, but before sinking he made an effort tn save bis companion, The lady\u2019s screams ate tracted attention and she was rescued by Charles Brown and Albert Randall, who, at the time of the accident were boating a quarter of a mile away.The body of Codwise was recovered an hour later.eo SHE LEFT THE COUNT HER MONEY.He Had Been Her Lover and Illness Prevented Their Marriage.HzLexa, Mon., June 30.\u2014Miss Force, who died of consumption at Oakland, Cal, a few days ago, was a beautiful girl and belonged to a wealthy family in Plainfield, N.J.Travelling in Europe a few years ago she met Count Draike, a Frenchman of the old.They fell in love and their engagement was announced.\u2018When Miss Force returned to America the Count followed her.She loanel him $20,000 to start a sheep ranch in Colorado and he soon lost the money.Then he returned to France, and by lucky spzcu- lation was enabled to return Miss Forca\u2019s money and make her a present of $2), 000.They were never married, owing to Miss Force's sickness.She left a will bequeathing $20,000 to the Count.- Death of Viear-General Conway.Cincaco, July J.\u2014Patrick Conwav Vicar-General of the diocese of North Illinois, died early this morning, after a lingering illness.Bishop Feehan will preach the funeral sermon next Thursday.\u2014 Faial Quarrel Over a Girl.Sr.PAUL, June 30\u2014 At eleven o'clock last night Angel Laport and Pierre Bos- cobel got into an altercation over a pretty Italian girl to whom both were paying attention.Boscobel drew a revoiver.and shot the other man.Laport died in fifteen minutes.Bosbobel is still at large.ce Swarming With Grasshoppers.Sr.Paur, June 30.\u2014The total destruction of crops in this neighborhood is threatened by millions of grasshoppers, which have recently appeared here.Vigorous warfare is ragine against them and many contrivances Ior their capture and destruction by whelesale are in use.A bounty of a dollar a bushel ia flored for the grasshoppers.rer A Crank\u2019s Craving for Notoriety.Burravo, July 1.\u2014Albert W.Flack hag invented a new kind of boat, which, he claims, will go over the falls uninjured.He is going to celebrate the Fourth at Niagara by paddling his own canoe over the American falls, and, being pretty well advertise 1, thousands will flock to the exhibition.He vill start punctually at noon, and ten minutes later the great Republic will have one citizen less.\u2014\u2014e Lieut.Taunt Allowed to Resign.WasmiNGToN, June 30.\u2014The President to-day accepted the resignation of Lieut.Emory H.Taunt, of the navy, to take effect to-morrow.Taunt was convicted by court-martial in November last of absence without leave and flagrant disobedience of orders and sentenced to be | Considerable pressure was- dismissed.brought to bear upon tlio President to prevent his dismissal, and the President finally consented to allow him to resign.\u2014e\u2014\u2014 The Bodies Have Not Been Found.NEwzurG, June 30.\u2014Hiland C.Rose, who did so much towards saving the lives of the party on the naphtha launch Enid at the time of the collision on Wednesday night by clinging to the anchor chains and thus keeping the launch out of the paddle of the Baldwin, offers $200 reward.for the recovery of the body of Mrs.Odell or Miss Miller.Joseph Rose, to whom Miss Miller was betrothed, is still violently insane whenever the effect of the opiates works off.a Propose to Make a Fight, CINCINNATI, June 30.\u2014Two thousand five hundred irou and steel workers of Cincinnati and Newport will quit work tc-night The trouble is caused by the manufacturers refusing to renew the old contract with the Amalgamated Iron Worker's Association at Pittsburg yesterday.The manufacturers want a reduction of 10 per cent.in the puddlers\u2019 wages.The men say they will not submit to this.They say their association is well organized, and declare that they are in a condition to stand a protracted fight.eee It Touches Former Slave Owners Hearts.Kaxsas Crry, June 29.\u2014Some time ago Landon Jobnson, an old negro of Chilli- cothe, Mo., at one time a slave, purchased a lot in the new cemetery at that place, removed to it the remains of his former owner, Mrs.Susan Turner, and placed a handsome monument over the grave.He expressed scrrow at his inability to bring the remains of Mr.Turner from California.Yesterday prominent citizens, many of them ex-slave owners and ex-Confederates, gave the old man a gold- headed cane.CS He Was Tried for Treason, Exrerox, Md., June 30.\u2014Thos.R.Lincoln, who was tried during the war for treason, died here yesterde aged seventy-six vears.Soon after tne war broke out, while on his way South to furnish the Confederacy with ammunition, he was arrested.In his pocket was found a letter addressed to Seff Davis recommending the bearer.This letter was written by Senator Bright, and it was used against the latter with such effect that he was expelled from the Senate.Lincoln was tried but acquitted.He afterwards served the Government, and in 1865 returned to his home, where he has since resided- \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 A New York Burglar Behind the Bars.Boston, June 30.\u2014Michael Hurley, alias \u201c Pugsey \u201d Hurley, alias Riley, was arrested here yesterday on suspicion of being connected with the recent robbery in Attleboro, where the watchman was gagged and the safe blown open.Hurley has a bad record and has just been released after serving a twenty years\u2019 sentence in the New York State Prison for burglary.He wasone of the gang of masked burglars who terrorized the suburbs of New York in 1871, \u201972 and \u201973.He served \u201ctime \u201d until this spring, when he wWas released on account of good behaviour.He was seen by the inspectors carefully studying one of the bank buildings on State street.They followed him to the public gardens and arrested him.In his pocket was a list of several banks and jewellers of Springfield, Mass.The police think he was connected with the Attleboro robbery and will hold him for identification.If he is not identified he will be sent back to New York.Ÿ HIS WIFE BETRAYED HIM, And the Detectives Made Him Disgorge.Consecrating the Bishop of North Carolina.\u2014_\u2014\u2014 Completion of the Free List.THEY FOLLOWED HIS WIEE.Led Them to Her Husband\u2019s Hiding Place.New York, July 1.\u2014Albert E.Krahe, the absconding cashier of Hirsch & Co.who raised a note of the firm from $900 to $3,900 and then skipped out to Canada with the proceeds was brought back to the city to-day by a detective.He was accompanied by his wife who had started out to join him im Canada and bad thus unwittingly put the detective on bis track.$1,100 in cash and a quantity of diamonds purchased witn the stulen money were found upon him.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 CONSECRATION OF A BISHOP.Imposing Ecclesiastical Ceremony in Baltimore.(SPECIAL TO THE HERALD.) Bavridors, Md., July 1.\u2014An imposing ceremony took place at fhe Cathedral here to-day.The Rev.Leo Hard, abbot of St.M :ry\u2019s Abbey, North Carolina, was consecrated Bishop of North Carolina.by Cardinal Gibbons.Among the prominent ecclesiastics present were Bishop Brecker, of Savanah; Bishop Curtis, of Wilmington ; Bishop Kain, of Wheeling ; Bishop Keane, ot Richmond, six mitred abbots and a crowd of the minor clergy of the city and district.The spacious church was crowded to the very doors, and the whole spectacle was a riagnificent one.Bishop Keane, of Richmond, preached the sermon.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 THE U.S.FREE LIST.What Citizens May Buy Without Being Fined by Government.-WASHINGTON, June 24,\u2014The- House completed the free list of the Mills Bill to-day, with the exception of iron and steel, cotton ties or hoops for bailing purposes, not thinner than twenty wire guage, which was passed over by request, pending Mr.McKinley\u2019s absence in Chicago.Flax, hackled, known as dressed line; lieorice juice, China clay or kaoline and marble of all kinds in block, rough or squared, are transferred to the present dutiable list, subject to modication when She \u2018Preached in a further consideration of the I bill.\u201cThe paragraph relating to oils techni- \u2018Teally described as \u201cessential and expressed oils\u201d is stricken from the free list, and whale, seal, salad, olive and neatsfoot oil substituted therefors, Ali- .zonne and other colors of anthracine are added to the paragraph on dyes, as also primuline to the paragraph on waste not especially enumerated or provided for.Dates are retained on the free list, but \u201cplums.and prunes are restored to the pa tiale list.The free list as now agreed on by the House is as follows :\u2014 TIMBER.Timber, bewn and sawed, and timber used for spars and in building wharves and squared or sided.Wood unmanu- factured not specially enumerated or provided for.Sawed boards, planks.deals and all other articles of sawed lumber.Hubs for wheels, posts, last blocks, wagon biocks, oar blocks, gan blocks, heading blocks, and all like blocks or sticks, rough hewn or sawe | only.Staves of wood.Pickets ani palings.Laths, shingles.Clapboards pine or spruce.Logs, Provided that if any export duty is laid upon the above mentioned articles or either of them by any country whence imported all said articles imported from said country shall be suject to duty as now provided by law, Salt, in bags, sacks, barrels or other packages or in bulk, when imported from any country which does not charge an import duty upon salt exported from the United States.° Flax straw.Flax, not backled or dressed.Tow of flax, or hemp.Hemp, manilla and other like substitutes for hemp.Jute butts.Jute.Sun, Sisal grass and other vegetable fibres.Bur- laps, not exceeding sixty inches in width, of flax, jute or hemp, or of which flax, jute or hemp, or either of them, shall be the component material of chief value.Bags of jute for grain, Machinery designed for the conversion of jute or jute butts into cotton bagging, to wit:\u2014 Cards, roving frames, winding frames and softeners, iron or steel sheets, or plates, or taggers iron, coated with tin or lead, or with a mixture of which these metals is a component part, by the dipping or any other process, and commercially known as tin plates, terne plates and taggers tin.WAX AND SOAP.Beeswax.Glycerine, crude, brown or yellow, of the specific gravity of 1.25 or less at a temperature of 60 degrees Fahrenheit, no puritied by refining or distilling.Phosphorus.Soap stocks, fit only for use as such.Soap, hard and soft, all of which are not otherwise specially enumerated or provided for.Sheep dip.Extract of hemlock and other bark used for tanning.Indigo, extracts of and carmined.Iodine, resub- limed.Oil, croton.Hemp seed and rape seed oil.Coitonseed oil.Petroleum, alumina, alum, patent alam, aium substi tute, sulpbat of alumnia and alumineus cake and alum in crystals or ground.All imitations of natural mineral waters and all artificial mineral waters, Baryta, sulphate of, or, barytes, un- manufactured.Boracio acid, borate of lime and borax.Copper, sulphate of, or blue vitriol.Iron, sulphate of, or cop- peras.Potash, crude, carbonate of, or fused and caustic potesh.Chlorate of potath and nitrate of potash, or saltpatre, crude.Sulphate of potesh.Sulphate of soda, known as salt cake, crude or refined, or nitre cake, crude or refined, and Glauber\u2019s salt.Sulphur, refined, in roll.Wood tar.Coal tar, crude.Anitine oil and its homologues.Coal tar, pro luct3 of, such as naphtha, benzine, benzole, dead oil and pitch.Olizarine and other colors of anthracene.All preparations of coal tar, not colors or dyes, and not acids of colors and dyes.Logwood and other dye woods, extracts and decoctions of.Spirits of turpentine.Ochre and ochery earths.Umber and umber earths, sienna and sienna earths, when dry.Whale, seal, salad, olive and neats foot oil.All barks, beans, berries, balsams, buds, bulbs, bulbous roots and ex- cresences, such as nutgalls, fruits, \u2018or metal.SU BSC TION 36.00 PER ANNUM When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, + \u2014 flowers, dried fibres, a8, gums and gum rosing, herbs, eaves, lichens, Diosses, nuts, roots and stens, vegetables, seeds and seeds of morbid growth, wee ls, used expressly for dyeing and dried insects, any of the foregoing which are not edible and not specially enumerated or provided for.All non-dutiable crude minerals, but which have been advanced in value or condition by refining or grinding, or by other process of manufacture not specially enumerated or provided for.All earths or clays unwroght or unmanu- factured.Opium, crude, containing nine per centum and over of morphia, for medinal purposes.Needles, sewing, darning, knitting and all others not specially enumerated or provided for in this act.COPPER AND ORE.Copper, imported in the form of ores, regulus of and black or coarse copper and copper cement, old copper fit only for remanufacture.Antimony as regulus Quicksilver.Chromats or iron or chromicore.Mineral substances in a crude state and metals unwrouænt, not specially enumerated or provided for.Brick, other than fire brick.Veze- tables in their natural state or in salt in brine, not specially enumerated or provided for.Chicory root, ground, burna | or prepared.Acorns and dandeli>n root, raw or prepared, and all other articles used or intended to be used as coffee, or substitutes therafor not specially enumerated or provided for.Cocoa, prepared or manufactured.Dates, currants, zante or otber.Figs, meat, game and poultry, Milk, fresh, Eggs\u2019 yolks.Beans, peas and split peas.Bibles, books and pamphlets printed in other languages than English, and books and pamphlets and all publications of foreign governments, and publications of foreign societies, historical or scientific, printed for gratuitous distriba- tion.Bristles, Bulbs and bulbous roots not medicinal.Feathers of all kinds, crude or not dressed, colored or manufactured.Finishing powder.Graase.Grindstones, finished or unfinished.Furled hair for beds or mattresses.Human hair, raw uncleaned, an@not drawn.Hemp and rape seed and other oil-seeds of like character.Garden seeds.Osier or willow, prepared for basket-maker\u2019s use.Broom- corn.Brush wood.Rags, of whatever material composed.Rattans and reeds, manufactured, but not made up of finished articles.Stones, unwanufactured or undressed, free-stone granite, sandstone and all building or monumental stone.All strings of gut or any other like material.Tallow.Waste.all not specially enumerated or provided for.Primuline.COMPLETING THE FREE LIST.Mr.Lodge, of Massachusetts, moved to strike from the free lists reeds manufactured but not made up into finished articles.He stated that $3,000,000 of capital was engaged in the manufacture of rattan furniture.Mr.Breckinridge, of Arkansas, in opposing the motion, ridiculed and characterized as absurd the statement that there was employed a capital of $3,000, 000 in the manufacture into furniture of 464,000 rattans, which was all that was imported annually, The motion was lost\u201466 to 74.On motion of Mr.Breckinridge, of Arkansas, paintings in oil or water colors and statuary not otherwise provided for were stricken from the free list, Mr.Baker, of New York, moved to add photographic print paper, not albumen- ized or sensitized, to the free list.Lost.Mr, Buchanan, of New Jersey, offered an amendment providing that whenever any of the articles named in the first section (the free list) are imported in vessels of foreign registry they shall pay the duties impcsed by the act of 1883.He argued that this provision would have the effect of building up the American merchant marine.If subjects of foreign governments wanted to avail themselves of the permission to import free int» the United States they should send their goods to vessels of American build, flying the American flag and having American registries.The amendment was ost.Mr.Russell, of Massachusetts, moved to place primuline on the free list.He stated that it was a dye used in the manufacture of cotton goods, and that it was not produced in this country.The motion was agreed to.ce CLEVELAND'S COMPLIMENTS.He Recognizes the Value of Canadians as American Citizens.Nasuva, N.H., June 29.\u2014At the meeting of French Canadian societies here, Major Edmond Mallet, of Washington, read the following letter from President Cleveland :\u2014 Mr.L.P.Lucien, President, General, &c.:3 My DEAR Srr,\u2014At the time the invitation to attend the Canadian National convention on the 28th instant was extended to me, I hoped that my public duties and other contingencies would allow my acceptance.I regret that I am obliged, however, to forego being present on an occassion ofso much pleasure to all who participate.My acquaintance with many of our French Canadian citizens, and my knowledge of their energy and thrift, and the regard they entertain for American citizenship, and their readiness to assume its obligations and avail themselves of its advantages, all combined to make me desire to attend their representation in such an assemblage as is appointed for the 28th instant.Ihope the session will be fully enjoyed and pleasantly remembered.Mrs.Cleveland joins with me in thanks for the kind invitation tendered us, and regrets that it must be declined.Yours very truly, GROVER CLEVELAND.Officers of the convention were elected as follows :\u2014President, N.L.J.Martel, Lewiston ; first vice-president, M.Du- frene, St.Paul ; second vice-president, C.Laurie, Putnam, Conn.; first secretary, E.H.Tardivel, Lewiston; chaplain, M.Buiffone, Centralville, R.I.\u2014\u2014, SHOT BY BURGLARS.A Postmaster Robbed and Almost Kill.ed\u2014Xis Barn Fired.BosycayGeoN, June 30,\u2014About two o\u2019clock tuis morning burglars entered the house of James Leary, the postmaster at Kingswharf, eight miles south of this, and made off with $50 in cash, all being in a sound sleep until a terrible explosion in the neighborhood of his barns awoke the family.Mr.Leary, on looking out, saw his barn on fire.He ran out but was met by two rough-looking customers who fired two shots at him, one taking effect in his leg, and the other passing through his shirt parallel with his heart.The parties made off and are still at large., « pieces.FREAKS OF THE STORM.Lightning Let Moncton.Loose in Manitoba Provincial Elections.es Burglars in the Post Office.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 FREAKS OF LIGHTNING.Damage Done by a Storm at Moncton, N.B.Moxcrox, N.B., July 1.\u2014A thunder storm of unusual intensity visited Monc- ton Friday afternoon.It was of short duration, but the vivid flashes of lightning aud the terrific peais of thunder heard during its continuance made almost everyone believe that it had struck somewLere in their immediate vicinity.Steadman street bears evidence of the damage done by lightninz in the numerus broken windows to be seen on every land.About 1249 there was a peal ot thunder which shook the whole town,.and several reliable witnesses, who were on Steadman street at the time, declare that three balls of fire struck three trees in front of a double house on the westarn ide of the street, occupied by Messrs.Steeves and Gallant, and thers was immediately a great crash of breaking glass in all the Louses in the vicinity, There were six large trees in front of the house, only two elms and a poplar being struck.A couple of birch trees escared damage.The poplar had merely a long strip pulled off, extendinz from the ground to about half the height of the tree ; one of the elins was eatirely stripped of its bark for a considerable distance up, while the other elm was stripped of a slice of wood several inches thick, which was split into numerous slivers several feet in lenzth and scattered in all directions.The large nui- bers of these slivers sticking out from .the tree presented a very unusual appearance.The damage doné by the smashing of windows in the vicinity extended to a large numbar of houses.The number of windows smashed in the\u2019 house in front of which the trees were struck, reaches about 37: Several planks of the sidewalk in front were torn up, about ten feet of picket fance knocked to pieces, and a large stone split in two A piece of wood torn from one of the elm trees was lodzed in another tree on the opposite side of the street.' Mrs.Wortman, ar elderly lady, living in the house in front of which the lightning struck, was thrown violpntly te the floor, but was only slightly.injured; ' Five large plate glass windows in Mr, T, V.Cooke\u2019s residence were destroyed.- Mr.Cooke and family were sitting in the window at the time and felt a shock as though struck in the face.They involuntarily closed their eyes, and\u2019 on looking round again saw the windows broken in all directions anc general havoc among the trees on the opposite side of the street.Several minor adcidefits are reported around town.A man named \u2019 Anshaw, working in the cottan' factory, factory, had his arm paralyzed for a short time, and a Mrs.Poirier, living on Harris avenue, was attacked with giddiness, which lasted for some time.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 FROM THE PRAIRIE CITY.Manitoba Elections\u2014A Favorable Wine ter for Chtile\u2014-Rushing the Rails ways\u2014Local Items\u2014Local Sporting, Winnipeg, July 1.\u2014Although the nom- inatiors take place on Wednesday next, there is a decided lack of interest or enthusiasm manifested by the electors, especially in Winnipeg.The provincial pollce force was disbanded yesterday.Joba White, ex-M.P., who passed through from the West yes\u2018arday, reports the country looking well between here and the Rockies.Grain is growing finely and the hay crop promises well, At the spring round up in the West he learned that the loss of cattle wes only 2 per cent, sheep 4, horses one-half por cent, The first scd of the Manitoba Central Railwey was turned yestarday in a drizzling rain.Officials say the road will be completed on the 1st of Gctober.Track laying of the Red River Valley is progressing at the rate of à mile and a- half per day.Eight miles has baen ironed.Woodbine\u2019s saloon proparty on Main street was sold to Robertson Vankleek at $6.63 per foot.Dean Carmichael and Richard White of the Gazette remained over Sunday here, and leave for the coast to-morrow.A number of desirable immigrants have arrived to settle near Winnipeg.The Winnipeg crews left this morning for the Minnetonka regatta.Burglars entered Preston & Norris\u2019 store during Friday night and secured $25 and some goods.Winnipeg wes beaten by Grand Forks in the second game of baseball yesterday by one run.Winnipeg led from the first, but at the ninth irnings was tied and in the tenth whitewashed, while their opponents scored one run.The deciding game tc-morrow.Clarke, the Northwestern champion, was defeated by Dunbar in a one hundred yards dash for a thousand dollars a side, the victor getting three yards start.A settlement hes been effected by the insurance comphnies with the Call which receives $19,400 and salvage in lieu of $21,400 insurance.It is the intention vf the Methodist Church to erect an Indian industrial school at Norway house with the Dc- minion Government\u2019 assistance.The elections in some districts of the Northwest were held yesterday, but no returns are received from Kananistka or Batoche.In Edmonton, Wilson and Oliver were elected, polling 314 and 298 respectively, to 213 for Cunningham and 116 for Maloney.Clinkskill elected Bat- tleford by 24 over Ciink.Full returns not yet received from Prince Albert.Plaxton, 257; Betts, 246; Hughes, 200.The places to hear from will give Betts and Hughes the majority, and Betts probably, and Hughes possibly, will be elected.Schultze will be sworn in as Governor to-morrow morning, The ceremony will be private.tee Killed Himself for Love.Cmcaco, June 30.\u2014Andrew Kertz, a young butcher, put a bullet In his head ast night in the presence of Alice Rand.Miss Rand refused to become Kertz's wife a month ago, since which time he has repeatedly asked her to reconsider her determination.Last night he called on her, and on being told \u201c You needn\u2019t ask me again,\u201d put à revolver to his head and shot himself dead, 72 \\DE AND COMMERGE.THE HERALD OFFICE, urday Evening, Juue 30, 1888, Financial, There was rather more lifs on the street to-day and banks were more actively employe, thera being two days\u2019 payments to attend to, on account of yesterday\u2019s holiday.But of new business there was a very small amount, and Monday\u2019s holiday will help to keep matters still quieter for some days yet.Rates interest on call loans are unchanged at 33(@4 per cent.on approved collaterals.Commercial paper continues to be discounted at 6(@)8 per cent.In London money is easy at 1 par cent.The Bank of England minimum rate of discount is 2} per cent.Exchange, The demand for sterling is quiet and business was confined to over the counter bills at outside figures.Rates are unchanged since yesterday at 9 5-16@9 7-16 for sterling sixties, 95@9! for demand bills between banks.Over the counter rates are 9} (@93 for sixties, 93@ 10 for demand.Cables steady at 10}@ 103.New York funds at {(@} premium over the counter, #@1-16 discount between banks, and there is a fair business doinz.The following table prepared specially for Tag HERALD by Messrs.W.L.S.Jack eon & Co., 10 Exchange Court, shows today\u2019s rates in detail :\u2014 - June 30.IN NEW YORK.Posted Actual.Sterling 60 Days.4.87 4.87 Sterling Demand.4.84 4.681 Sterling Cables.,.Ceres 89 Sterliug Commercial.\u2026\u2026.£ SDL 4.Sterling Documentary.86 Francs (Paris) Tong., .5.19 Francs (Paris) 8hort.,.5.17 June 59.IN MONTREAL.Between Banks.Counter Buyers.Sellers, Rate.N.Y.Funds.+ dis.@1-16 à Pr.@ Stg.60 days.9 5-1627-16 93@ Do Demand.94%; 910 Do Cables.104@i New York Stock Market.To-day\u2019s market was very quiet and was without any feature of interest.Prices were irregular, but, as a rule, the active stocks opened up firm, in some cases a fraction higher than yesterday\u2019s closing figures, but this advance was goon lost, and at 12 o'clock most securities showed a decline.St.Paul was the most active, with sales of 9,600 shares.Manhattan Elevated advanced 1 point, The day\u2019s trading amounted to 36,300 shares.\u201c The following-show declines, compared with yesterday's closing prices.C.B.& Quincy 1, Canada Southern #, Del, Lackawanna & Western, ex-divi- dend, 24, New England 1%, Jersey Central 4, Lou.& Nashville #, I ake Shore §, Missouri Pacific §, Union Pacific pref.§, North-West 1, Oregon Trans.1, Ontario & Western 3, Reading §, Rock Island #, Richmond Terminal $, St.Paul §, Texas Pacific 4, Union Pacific #4, Western Union #.The following have advanced : Kansas & Texas §, Manhattan Elevated 1 and West Shore bonds |.Pacific Mail and Pullman Car C) show no change.a The following were the fluctuations of prices and sales in New York, Saturday, June 30, as specially reported for las Hzrraup by Macdougall Bros, St.Francois Xavier street :\u2014 æ 3 11 > @ | ax | ! STOCKS.95 æ ë i 5 7 |8|& | \u20ac 2 ald £ 3 _\u2014 ble = Cx OC.B.& Quiney.[113 11123 1123! FN Can, Pac.Railway.55h].cell C.C.&l.css0sca0oca0e- 47 ee N.Y.C ntral Cent.PAC.oviieanians \u2018 Canada Southern.Jen.& Rio Grand.Del.& Hudson.ill.Central .Jersey Central.Kansas & Tex.Lou.& Nash.Lake Shore.Mich.Central.Map.Man.Elev.Missouri Pac.N.Pacifie.Do.pret.North-West Lo.pref.Ohio & Miss.Ohio Cent.frarrfr eee ref css St, Paul & Omaha.K Da, pre 1 Oregon Trans.Ontario & Western Pacitic Mail Pullman Ca Reading .*Rock Island.Rich.Terml St.Paul o.oo, Do.pref.Tex, Pac, New.Union Pacibe.Do.pref.West Shore Bds.Eterling Exchange Money #1ex-div.London Quotations.Canalian Pacific closes the day at 573, compared with 57¢ yesterday, a farther decline of {.Consols were unchanged at 99 9-16 for both money and account.In Paris 4 per cent.rentes opened at S2f 95¢, and closed at 83f.Money in Boston.(Boston Advertiser.) The money market shows little change from day to dav, the movement being still slow.This is shown by the exchanges of the Clearing House, where the 5 7$ averages are ruling cousiderably lower than last year at the corresponding period.But, although the movemeat is not redered conspicuous by any mark -d excitement or activity, toere 18 still a good deal going on, ahthoiwgh it b'in a quiet way.The banks as a rule ars stul able to find employment Fr their fau s and although some poriion of their money may be out at low rates, it is g-n- erally on call.Rates in the general mar- Xet show lit le cuange, their vasc or lhou- ness depending largely upon bio Coudi- tion of the lender.In a gensrdd way ib may be said that on foie lLaus !ney range frem 4 to 53 per-vnt, 5 (ty bauke charging from dd to 02 or Ent, with a preference fur 5 ocre t frost Colopedi +8 + nd other 1 niders 7 reuso i- aliv ve lsaisted wi h 41 4.= above the paper 802 Sateit veut, r ry THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.MONDAY.JULY.2 In manufacturing paper we hear of nothing doing, and rates ars nominal at about 4 per cent.Call loaus still take a wide range, from 2} to 4 per ceni., with to 34 per cent.a fair average for the ordinary borrower.\u2014\u2014o PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Breadstufis.MONTREAL, June 30, 1888.Frotr\u2014Receipts, 250 barrels.The usual Satnrday\u2019s quietness was the tone of today\u2019s flour market.There is more pressure among holders to sell, but very little inducement in the way of prices is offered and dealers only buy from hand to mouth.The sales to-day were in small lots at our quotations, and no transac- actlon were reported on \u2019Change.Stocks in store show adecrease in four of over 5,000 barrels since last week, but there is still an increase of 13,000 harrels compared with the corresponding week of 1887.Wheat shows a decrease of 60,000 bushels, for the week, and 74,000 bushels compared with a year ago.To-day\u2019s receipts of produce\u2014Oats 2,- 900 bushels; flour, 136 brls.; eggs, 45 cases; butter, 20 packages; cheese, 385 boxes; raw hides, 100.STOCKS IN STORE.June 30, June?23, July 2.588, 1888.1857.9 1 \u2018Wheat, bush.206,430 327,778 310,301 Corn, bush.37,763 34,363 1,181 Peas, bush.143,676 169,518 351,059 Oats, bush.,633 55,661 194,27 Barley, bush 1,841 1,941 11,835 Rye, bush.3,010 3,000 16,334 Flour, brls 56,765 62,014 45,133 Oatmeal, bri 745 125 canne Cornmeal, bris.!! We quote as follows : Winter Wheat, patent.,,.Spring W heat, pat.nt Straight Roller Extra.PE Superfine.Strong Bakers\u2019.OATMEAL \u2014 Ordinary brls ,, Do .\u2026.FL70 @ 4.95 Rarrels.s.345 \u2014 3.60 BAZS 00000.cor eee 210 \u2014 2.20 Grain.The market for all grain continues very dull.Stocks of wheat, peas and oats are firmly held, and the offerings are very light.There are no buyers at present prices, and in the present unsatisfactory state of the @arket, No.1 Northern is in few bands, and it is doubtful ifa shipping lot could be bought under 95c per bushel.No.1 Manitoba hard is offered at 98e, No.2 do 95c@96c, Canada spring nominal at 96c, red winter 96c@97e, white winter 97¢@97c, oats 49c@50c per 32 1bs., peas 86c@87c per 66 1bs., barley 50c@60c per bushel, Corn 70c per bushel duty paid.Chicago Grain and Provision Markets, The wheat market continues very weak, though August delivery shows a better feeling at the close than July or September.Corn closes #c@lic lower than yesterday for all options.Oats ara also easier.The provision market shows very little change, but the tendency is towards lower figures.The feeling in pork during the day was weak, but prices reacted 10c per barrel towards the close.Lard declined 23c@5c, and ribs close fairly steady.Mr.E.MeLennan, 22 St.John street, (Western Chambers), reports the Chicago grain and provision markets as follows :\u2014 CHICAGO, June 30.> ow = .Re 23/1 8/8|%) 2% 5 \u20ac a a o> SL g w k S 82 Cs| So |H|S|D|33 ES nt 793| 79H vos msg veil.794| 79H 70k| 7s 79/2220 795 79$| 792) roll ed.ll .a7) an) 474) 483 4ma8 484) an rg) asp 483] 43 485] 48@| 4841100 an 1 sol 201 sop.261 261 ail 2 Be D SI Si SH SH 18 55 [13 524113 525113 40 11350 |.13 62 {13 60° [13 60° [13 50 [1360 |.1.13 724{13 70 {13 70 (13 60 [13 674.121.8 074| 805 8 0711 SO 2H 805 |.August | 8 174] 8 124| 815 8 12H 8 15 .Sepl.| 825 (82248208201.RIB July.7401.740/735|7351.\u2026.August.| 750 \"750° 752 7 59 7 50 PL sept! dre l760 1760717574 760d ll Messrs.A.Geddes & Co., agents in Chicago for Mesers.MacDougall Brothers, send us the following despat :h :\u2014 Cnrcaco, IlL, June 30\u2014Wheat again ruled weak and lower, the pressure seeimn- ingly on the near delivery.Outside ad- vices were favorable to the bull side, cables reporting steady to firm markets abroad.There was a good deal of liquidation in July holdings which gave the markets all around a weakish undertone, but next week we look for a more healthy state of affairs.Wheat closed steady at 793c September, 82}c bid December.Corn weak on holders of July realizing, receipts are light and should shipments continue liberal our stock will soon be down to small proportions again.Sap- tember closed 483c, and provisions easy.Lard we think about low enough 8-20 bid September.Montreal Provisions.Pork, Larp, &c.\u2014There is not much doing in pork, but the market is firm and unchanged, and stocks are light.Lard is more active at 10}¢@10}c, but the other quotations are firm and unaltered as follows: \u2014 Montreal 8.C.porg.Western S.C.C.do 19.59 @ 20.00 18.50 @ !5,75 : Western Mess do.17.59 @ Gu.0u Lard, Wesiern, per ib.«00.103 @ 00.10 Lo.Canadian.'.00.08 2 00.10) Hams, uncovered, per lb.00.12 @ 09,121 Hams, canvassed, per tb.,.,.00.13 @ 00.14 Bams, pie-nic.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.00.09 @ 00.00 Bacon, per ib.00,104 00.114 Ehouldars, perlb.Tallow, perlb.Eggs.Eggs are quiet, and thera is not a great demand., The supply is also light, and our quotations are 144¢ per dozen, Ashes The potash market shows some signs of settling down, under the 1nflu- ence of heavier receipts.Arrivals this month are much in excess of the month of June, 1887, but May receipts were unusually light, the total for the two months falling short of the corresponding period by about 100 barrels.We quote first sorts $4.15 £4.20 per 100 lbs, $3.90 for seconds.Dairy Prodacts.BurTer \u2014The butter market this week has been extremelv dull, no new phase has been devel ped, and there are no siges of improvement.The export trade is lifeless, the shipmems for \u201cthe corresponding week list year were almost three times those of this week.Prices here are s'eady for jobbing lots, \u201cwhich trade alone is Invely.Orders from the Lower Provinces are coming in slowly, and mostly for 1 ww grades.Receipts ! have not been larse.and tha acenmula- tions of stock here are within reasonable \u2018compass.(reamery brings 20c.for | choice, and Eastern Townships dairy 19¢.Western is quoted at 15c.@17c.ec GC.La 2:31 012) à vee iii cireitireiinnnn arias 19 @ 2) Eastern Townships.A3 @ 19 Morrisburg.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.17 @ 19 Western.15 @,17 Crerse.\u2014 Th market continues strengthening and buvers briskly compete for the offerings of fine cheese, and the city market 18 well cleared, up, for all desirable stock.In the country also the offerings are well taken up, and the demand all over for Canadian June make and the prices paid shows the high place it has taken in the foreign markets.On the spot there was not much doing to-day, the transactions were confined to a few small lots which were picked up at various figures, according to quality.The public cable quotes the Liverpool market unchanged at 47 shillings per cwt.We quote prices here firm as follows :\u2014 Finest colored.white.Fine white.Medium The New York Commercial Bulletin of Saturday has the following :\u2014 \u201c The supply of butter has continued rather free the past week, but the proportion of fine to fancy goods has run lighter, owing to so much stock among the current arrivals showing up sour or of a summery character, from effects of the extremely hot weather West last week and the week before, and while there has not been any surplus of the best grades, | and such showing a slight tendency to 1 harden, under grades have been more plentv, and, with holders urging all such quality for sale, not caring to run any risk of accumulation, the feeling has ruled irregular.Many of the best Western creameries arriving have cost high West, and going directly into cold storage.Holders in some instances have been inclined to ask 20c.for favorite marks, but to sell, 194c.is about all that can be depended upon for the best, though the line is fairly firm at that.Next grades under held steadily at 18} (@ 19 c.while lower grades range from 16c.to 18e.State dairy is still being packed iuto firkins and held, so that very few are rcceived here.Western packings are in {fair supply and generally slow sale, though prices show little variation from a week ago.- Cheese has finally secured the reaction threatened during the past two or three weeks, and developed a quick buoyant market, with an advance of § @ fc.per lb.over last Friday.The rapidity of the gain was a little surprising, until it was discovered how scant desirable goods were likely to show up in the arrivals, and then everyone became anxious competitors for what seemed to be left.As near as can be calculated, about 334 per cent.of the export this week will go out on direct shipment of cheese that was expected to come upon the market, which, in conjunction with a large proportion of the engaged lots, promptly \u2018 passed\u201d as soon as shown, left tardy buyers very short commons to select from, and induced not only full bids, but a blindness to imper- lections that was in marked contrast to the complaints when sellers had legs advantage.Indeed, while conditions of stock have really been very fair, there has, undoubtedly, been plenty of it accepted as fancy that with the least power to dictate terms buyers would surely relegate to second place.The potent factor upon which the market has stimulated was the increased and comparatively universal character of the demand from abroad.Whether this was the outcome of an effort to secure supplies against \u201cshort \u201d sales made abroad or the awakening of English operators to the fact that at a 6d cut the consumption bad been 80 liberal as to run stocks low just as the {first harvest demand commences is not quite certain, but probably a combination of both influences has given our market a boom just as the make enters upon the flush.Considerable is said at times about speculation and manipulation, but we fail to discover positive evidence of local move in that direction, though it does look as though some of the primary markets might have been handled for a purpose and possibly the maintenance of extreme rates will not hurt shippers with liberal amounts about arriving out.The really cold weather of the past two days has helped matters somewhat.On heme account trade is fair at full rates.The close finds about everything merchantable well closed out, and the tone firm at 9%c for fancy, the highest established rate for the week.From the present outlook the exports will be some 70,000 to 72,000 boxes, against indicated receipts of80,000 boxes.Canton Cheese Market.(SPECIAL TO TIIE IIERALD.) Caxton, N.Y., June 30.\u2014Offerings today, 6,000 boxes cheese and 900 packages butter.Sales, 1,800 boxes cheese 9ic.; 700 boxes cheese,9 7-1Gc.; 75 boxes cheese, 9 9-16¢.; 600 boxes cheese, large, delivered on contract, 9 7-16c.; 80 boxes cheese, small, delivered on contract, 9 11-16c.; 60 boxes cheese, sage, 10 3-16c.; 50 packages butter at 20ic.; 40 packages butter at 2lc.90 packages butter at 2l}c.Balance cheese sold but terms not reported to secretary.Ogdensburg Cheese Market.[SPECIAL TO THE IERALD.] Ocpexseere, N.Y., June 30.\u2014About 3,490 boxes cheese offered.2,100 sold at 9àc.; 780 at 9$c.; 250 at 9 5-16¢.; 275 at 91e.205¢.offered for creamery butter; none sold yet.Briiish Breadstnffs and Provision Markets.Liverpool, 11.30 a.m\u2014The wheat market is quieter and the demand poor, holders ofler freely.Corn also is quiet and the demand poor.Beerbohm\u2019s cable advices to-day are as follows :\u2014Cargces off coast, wheat cargoes fairly bid for; do.corn, nothing offering.Cargoes on passage and for shipment, wheat, firm but not active; do.corn, hardly any demand.California wheat, off coast, 328 9d to 33s.Liverpool wheat, spot very inactive; corn, do., rather easier.Arrivals of wheat cargoes 10, waiting 18, sold 1.Australian wheat off coast 33s, present months 32s.Liverpool, 2 p.m.\u2014 Bacon, c.c.43s 6d.Prime Western lard, 40s 9d.The following are to-day\u2019s quotations compared with yesterday's : and following June 2).June 30.11 30 a.m, 1L30 a.m.8.d 8.a.8.d.B&B.d.Spring Wheat.6 51® 6 Gy 6 ore 66} Hed Winter.6 Gi\u2014 67% 6 ol\u2014 671 ; 675 8 Gh= 67 9 00\u2014 Un 4 T= 00 510 \u2014~ 00 0 0\u20140800 0 9-00 4 6\u201400 41 6-000 2 6\u2014ugo Cheese.white,new 47 0 \u2014 0 0| 47 0 \u2014 00 0 Cheese, colored.W 0 \u2014 00 6100 0 \u20140)0 \u2014\u2014_ WEEKLY REVIEW OF TH£ HAVANNA MARKET.HAVANNA, June 23.\u2014Sugars\u2014Lighter | receipts from the couutry, the gradual reduction from stocks at all our shipping ports and adverse reports regarding the , best crop in Europe have induced holders here to enhance their pretentions, to such an extent as to render them unacceptable \u2019n most cases.Buyers have ac- : Children Cry for Pitc her's Castoria.; Seven-eights of the total Japanese out- cordingly withdrawn from the market, which closes quiet and rather weaker, owing to last advices from abroad.Sales effected in the course of the week have accordingly been quite limited, comprising only 21,500 bags centrifugals, 96 to 97 test, at 6.133@6.51 rs.at Havana and 6.40 ( 63 rs.on the coast and 3,733 do molasses sugars, 80 test, 5t 4 rs.at Havanna and 4.60 @ 43 rs.on the coast.Prices, though materially unchanged as yet, remain barely supported at following qu tations :\u2014Clayed No.12, current classes, at 6}(@63 rs.; centrifugals, 95to 97 test, in hhds.and bags, at 6@ 6} rs.; molasses sugars, S5 to 90 test, in hhds.and bags, at 4@44 rs; muscova- does, 55 to 90 test, common to fair refining, at 4@4% ra.Honey\u2014Stocks having accumulated somewhat, prices are easier at from 1} to 13 rs.per gall, exclusive of cask.Molasses\u2014The remnants in this market, adding up about 1,00 hhds., mostly of low test, were sold to distillers at $14 per hhd.of 175 galls, and the market is now bare and quiet.Wax\u2014Small supply, which is moderately dealt in at $17(@22 per qtl.for yellow and $30@34 do.for white, all as to class.Rum abundant and rather neclectad at $25@$26 per pipe for 21 proof in chestnut cask ; 550 do.for game in oak do., and $40 do.for 30 grades in the latter packing.Tobacco\u2014 Receipts from the Vuelta Abajo are as yet unimportant, and nothing worthy of mention has been done in this class.Partido leaf is neglected this year, and stocks are fast accumulating, while the active competition prevailing in the country between dealers and speculators for the acquisition of Reme- dios tobacco has allowed growers to exact from them extravagant prices.Cigars\u2014The production is as yet unimportant, owing to the raw condition of the material and the lack of orders from abroad.\u2014N.Y.Journal of Commerce.> BOSTON MARKETS.Bosrox, June 30, 1888.Burrer\u2014A little stronger feeling prevails in the butter market.The receipts are large and are readily taken upon arrival.Prices are unchanged.Choice creameries bave a ready sale at 20c@21c.Western extra fresh firsts 17c @ 18c; Western firsts, 17c@18c ; Western fancy imitation creamery,l8c; Western seconds, 16c@l7e ; Western factory, choice, fresh, 17e; Western fair to good, 16c; Vermont extra creamery, 21lc@22c; Vermont extra firsts, 19¢(@20c; Vermont dairy, good to choice, dSc@19c; fair to good, 17c; Eastern creamery, good to choice, 20c.Low grades of butter as to quality.The above quotations are receivers\u2019 prices for strictly wholesale lots.Jobbing prices 1c@2c higher.Cnerse\u2014The market is very firm, with a quiet demand at quotations.We quote as follows: NewYork extra,9¢; New York firsts, 81c@84c; New York seconds,7c; Vermont extra,9¢; Vermont firsts, 8tc@8ic; Vermont seconds, 7«@ 74e; part skims, 6¢@7c; skims 2c@de; Ohio fiat, extra, 8c@8ic; sage, Jc.Ecas\u2014There is no change to note in the egg market, Eastern are quoted at 17àc@18c.Eastern firsts, 17c; extra Vermont and New Hampshire, 174@ 18c; Northern, 17c; choice Western, 164c@17¢c; choice Michigan, 17c@174c; Nova Scotia, 17c@17ic; New Brunswick, 17¢; P.E.Island, 17c.Jobbing price #c@lc higher.Braxs\u2014The demand is quiet at old prices.Choice domestic pea beans are in small supply.Yellow eyes are plenty and dull.Foreign beans sell at $2.60@ @2.75 for pea, and $2@$2.20_ for medium.We quote choice small New York handpicked pea at $3.05@$3.15 per bush; choice New York large hand-picked pea, 83.10@$3.15 ; choice screened pea, $2.50 @$2.75; hand-picked medium, $2.75@ $2.85; choice screened medium, $2.25) $2.60 ; choice yellow eyes, $2.85@$2.90 ; California beans, §3@$3.10.Can peas, 90c@$1.10 for choice green peas, $1.60(@ $1.70 per bush.for choice West, 90c@ $1.10 for North.Jobbing prices 10c higher.Grass SErns\u2014There is a quiet movement in seeds, with no change to note in prices.Hungarian and millet are having the most demand.Northern timothy is quoted at $3.10@%3.20 ; Western timothy at $3.20@33.30; clover, North, 8c(@8}¢ per lb.; elover, West, 7c@8e ; red top, West, per 50 pound sacks, $2.20(@$2.35 ; Jersey, $2.35@ $2.50 ; millet, $1.40 $1.50 ; golden millet, $1.75@$2.00 ; Hungarian, $1.60@ #1.70.Porarors\u2014The stocks of old potatoes are closing out in a quiet manner, and foreign lots are about out of the market.Southern lots are in fair supply and sell at 53@$8.50 for extras and S2@2.50 per bbl.for medium.We quete: Maine, New Brunewick and Nova Scotia Bur- banks and prolifics, 60c; chenangoes, 45c@50c for bulk from vessel, and 55¢@ 60c in bags frum steamer; Scotch magnums, $1 per 100 lb.bag for good to choice.Hay axp Straw\u2014Receivte of hay are liberal, and a fair demand is noted at prices.Rye straw is quiet and unchanged.We quote choice prime Lay at $18.50@$19.50 ; fancy, 820; fair to good, S16@$18; Eastern fine, $14@$15 ; poor to ordinary hay, $13@315; East swale, §10@&11; rye straw, choice, $25@ £26; oat straw, $10@%11.Pourrry \u2014 The market is dull and steady.Live fowls are selling at 10@101c.Northern fresh killed chickens, choics, 25c; fair to good, 20@25c; Northern fresh killed fowls, 14(@15c; Western iced fowls, 11c(g12c.20020 COMMERCIAL NOTES.A despatch received in this city from London yesterday reports India wheat seriously damaged by drouth.The receipts of iings at the principal interior points yesterday were 36,707, against 40,567 the same day last week and 40,543 the same day last year.It is telegraphed from London that a French copper syndicate has bought for three years the output of two of the leading copper mines in Japan, amounting to put.>0-4\u2014-\u2014 LONDON WOOL SALES.Loxnox, June 28.\u2014The wool sales today opened active, with the competition fairly maintained, Continental buyers taking most of the wool sold.Prices remained stationary, the previous prices being maintained, especially for greasy ccmbing and scoured merinos, although the coarser cress-breds were shade easier.The takings for America thus far have been contined to a few hundred bales of cross-breds.The quantity offered to-day was 11,703 bales.The sales in detail are as follows :\u2014 Victoria \u2014 Sales 3,300 bales ; scourad at 9d 1s 7d do; locks and pieces at 74d@1s 51d; greasy at 5d@1s0}d; do.locks and pieces at 6d@10d.| wan River\u2014Sales 62 bales; scoured at 1s 2d(@1s 3d ; greasy at 71d.New South Wales\u2014Sales 2,000 bales scoured at 9d@1s.81d; do.locks and pieces at 8d(@1s 23d; greasy at61d(@104d; do.locks and pieces at 4d@73d.Queensland\u2014Sales 100 bales; greasy a 6id @ 94d; do locks and pieces at 6d (@ 8 \u20ac \u201cSouth Australia \u2014 Sales 200 bales; scoured at 9d(@1s 5d; do locks and pisces at 7d @ 1s; greasy at 6d (@ 74d.Tasmanta\u2014Sales 100 bales ; scoured at 11d@1s 54d; do.l.cks and pieces at 10d; greasy at 9id.New Zealand\u2014Sales, 75,400 bales ; scoured at 10}d@1s 6d; do.locks and pieces at S}d(@1s 31d; do.greasy at Sd @1s; do.locks and pieces at 4:d(@93d.Natal\u2014Sales, 400 bales; scourad at 73d @1s 31d; greasy at 6}d @ 7d.Total sales, 11,582 bales.PRIZE STUDIES OF TORNADOES.The American Meteorological Journal, desiring to direct the attention of students to tornadoes, in hopes that valuable results may be obtained, offers the following prizes: For the best original essay on tornadoes or degcription of a tornado, $200 will be given.Yor the second best, $50.And among those worthy of spacial mention $50 will be divided.The essays must be sent to either of the editors, Professor Harrington, Astronomical Observatory, Ann Arbor, Michigan, or A.Lawrence Rotch, Blue Hill Meteorological Ubservatory, Read- ville, Mass., U.8.A., before the first day of July, 1889.They must be signed by a nom de plume, and be accompanied by a sealed envelope aldressed with same nom de plume and enclusing the real name and address of the author.Three independent and capable judges will be selected to award the prizes; and the papers receiving them will be the property of the journal offering the prizes.A circular giving fuller details can be obtained by application to Professor Harrington.LADIES GAEMENTS THAT FIT LIKE PAPER ON A WALL.To have one of the latest riding babits made a lady has to mount a theatrical horse and be measured while in precisely the posture she will assume upon a genuine steed.The tailor\u2019s horse has a lady\u2019s saddle strapped upon its back.The lady mounts iv by a little portable 'gut of steps, it being presumed that she may not have yet taken any lessons in mounting a real horse.Being in the seat, she crooks her leit Knee so as to hook it on the bent leather-covered arm of iron projecting there for tbe purpose.Her right leg is then bent in much the same position it would be if she sat in a chair.The tailcr then has a peculiar duty to perform, He must get the measure of the upper part, or torso, of the lady, as if he were going to reproduce her in a plaster cast.After that her right side, from the waist to the knee, must be just as carefully measured, for the idea is to have all that is visible of the lady rider on the side on which the skirts do not fall modeled to the view like a bit of carving, and on the other side to show an equally clearly defined perfect figure, and a skirt not too loose and not too long.In consequence of this necessity, the tailor calls in a lady assistant, and leaves her and the customer on the dummy horse alone together.The measurements are then taken which are to produce a jacket or waist that fits like liquid in a bottle, with the skirt over the projected leg hugging that member down as far as the knee more closely than ivy on a church wall.LIFE IN ALASKA.A Disgusted Iowan Tells a Few Plain Facts About Our Russian Purchase.We were shown by Capt.Carreker an interesting letter from Mr.W.M.Grant, who is the attorney-general of Alaska, with his office at Sitka, Mr.Grant will be remembered as having visited Capt.Carreker here a year or two ago, and was at that time living in Davenport, Iowa.Mr.Grant is by no means favorably impressed with Alaska, and says that he at times wishes he had never heard of Alaska, and that President Cleveland had never heard of him.He says tnat the first political convention ever held in Alaska was the recent convention to select two delegates to the St.Louis convention.We quote from bis letter: \u201cThe Russians here have no occupation, and how they live I cannot sce.They had their Laster a few days ago.They all marched out of the church in abody, car- ryipg aloft a picture of the Virgin Mary, and went all through the town driving the devil out.I fear they missed him.\u201d He says that very few of these Russians talk English, and they do not associate with the Americans.The inhabitants of Sitka have to order everything to be used as food from the United States, and are often out of the necessities of lite.Sitka receives its wail from the United States once a month.There are threa or four little stores in Sitka, but their stocks are small, and principally such articles are kept as are desired for the Indian trade.Beef sells for 25 cents a pound.Oysters are $1 per can, and not often to be had at that price.Skimmed milk sells for 25 cents per quart.There are ten cows in Sitka; there are two turkeys and three geese.There were two hogs.One died at the time a steamer arrived, and some China- wen cleaned it and sold it around town as fresh pork just arrived by steamer.It will be remembered that Sitka is the principal town in Alaska, Mr.Grant\u2019s letter will hardly encourage Georgians to emigrate to Alaska, and may create doubt as to the wisdom of this government in giving Russia $7,000,- 000 for the territory.As tothe last matter we will state that the purchase was a profitabie one, and that it was a good one for the government.\u2014 Tulbotton (G'a.) Era.FASHIONS AND FANCIES.How a Girl Should Walk, Stand and Use Mer Hands.It has become customary to teach the Delsarte system in more than one fashionable school for young ladies recently.And what is the Delsarte system may be asked.It is a system of exprassion that teaches a girl how to walk, how to stand, how to use her hands, how to use her voice.It claims to take a raw, wooden girl, quite without pliancy or grace, and make her, after certain courses of esthetic gymnastics, as flexible and expressive in | gesture, as dignified and easy in pose as you please.When Delsartism was first introduced to Americans through the actor Steele Mackaye it was held to be of service exclusively to his profession.But, Heavens knows, the average girl of society needs to be taught to walk and stand too.Not more than one woman out of one hundred does either gracefully without training.Observe the GIRLS WHO GO LURCHING OR TRUDGING DOWN FIFTH AVENUE any fine day and you will be abundantly assured of the fact.sarte tuition may be advised that to get to walk well the best exercise the Del- sarteans recommend is to parade one's room back and forth with a book on top of one\u2019s head and a tape pinned along the carpet with marks the distance of two of one\u2019s own feet apart one from the other.By keeping to this tape and setting the foot against each mark one gets a straight walk an 1 steps of the proper length.It may be rather tedious exercise, but then everything that is worth acquiring means hard labor.If you stand well, say the De:sarteans, YOUR BODY DESCRIBES THE 1INE OF BEAUTY, i.e., two convex curves united by one concave curve.In other worls, you must rest your weight on one leg, the head being slighdy inclined on that side, while the trunk, to maintain equilibrium, bends in tlh contrary directing.That is the pose of Ye Venus of Milo.A girl who has had the Delsartean training also holds her che well thrown forward instead of having curved-over shoulder blades, a sunken tegt and an attitude that makes the nrddle body undaly prominent.This lastig a sally common failing.Perhaps pretty girls will be induced to guard ageingt it more when they know that in tre Delsarte idea it indicates a lack of refintment and elevation in the thought, a preduninance of the physical over the moral o!mental nature.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Stole a March on Mayor Smith.Curcaco, June 29\u2014A morning pape HOTELS.ST.LAWRENCE HALL 135 to 139 St.Jane; Street, Montreal.; HENRY HOGAN Pronrietor.[HE BES\u201d KNOWN HOTEL IN THE DOMINION, July 25 mws 177 CITY HOTEL.1912 &1914 Notre Dame St,, NONTREAL, P.Q.This house Las been refitted and refurnisheq throughout.Yeated by steam, electric bells hot and cold water, closets, &c., on every flat, $1.60 PER DAY.Porter's \u2018Bus tnd Waggons meet all traing and boats.W.L.CAMERON, Proprietor.May 14 3m 115 ST.LAWRENCE HALL, says that thegfact has just leaked out that Hon.Wiiliam B.Smith, ex-Mayor of the city of Philadelphia, was robbed of his watch and chain and a diamond pin at the Fremont House Sunday morning.While Mr.Smith was taking his bath, and his room-mate was asleep, a thief entered the room and appropriated the articles.The watch was a valuable Lucerne, and the pin was a six carat diamond.The stolen property is valued at about $1.200.ce Quite Correct.\u201cI have used Dr.Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry and found it the bese remedy I ever used for Dyspepsia and all Summer Complaints among childran, and I think no household should be without it.\u201d Mrs.À.Baker, Ingoldsby, Ont.HOUSE BILLS, TO LET, &c.&c.Room To Let.Rooms To Let, Furnished Room To Let, Furnished Rooms To Let, Store To Let.Oflice To Let, House To Let, Shop and Dwelling To Let, Lower Part Of This House To Let.Upper Part Of This House To To Let, In Stock and for Sale at the HERALD OFFICE, No.6 Beaver Hall Hill Montreal.IN USE 100 YEARS SKIN DISEASES are of two kinds; firstly, those which are only skin deep (which are not now to be considered); secondly, those which are caused by a bad state of the blood, and which attack various parts of the body in different ways, Skin disease shows itself in the HEAD, sometimes in the form of Dandruff, which no amount of brushing and combing will get rid of, and sometimes in the form of Scaly Eruptions.In the NECK, by an enlargement of the glands (commonly called Glandular Swellings), which, if unchecked, become very unsightly wounds.In the ARMPITS, and the inside of the ELBOWS, by an inflamed Roughness of the Skin, which is very painful when washed.in the HANDS, by deep Cracks or Fissures, which, it healed for a few days, speedily open again, or by horny-looking patches.In the LEGS, by Hard, Shiny and Inflamed Swollings, or by wounds more or less deep.And on the BODY, in Red Scaly Patches, which as often as rubbed off, form again, or inthe discharge of a thin, watery fluid of a very disagreeable nature.In all these cases the treatment must be twofold.An Ointment is re-uired to relieve Itching, and redicine must be taken o change the state of he Blood, and render it pure.Both these requirements are supplied by Dr.Roberts Celebrated Medicines The OINTMENT called \u201cTHE PCOR MANS FRIEND.\u201d \u2014AND THE- ALTERATIVE PILLS, Called \u201c\u2018 Piluliæ Antiscrofalæ.\u201d These two Medicines have now stood the test.of 100 years\u2019 trial, having been introduced to the public in the latter part of the last century.They may be obtained of all Chemists, or of the Proprietors, BEACH & BARNICOTT, BRIDPORT, DORSET Prices 1s 1id, 28 9d, 11s gd 22s each.Jan.7.ddr eow _ CT en 1a AP ACT AND RELIABLE CURE For Cholera Meorbus, Cholera infantum, Colic, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, and all Summes Cornplainis of Children or Adults.PEILBURN & CO., Proprietors, TORONTO.NT.ENGLISH PRESCRIPTION Asuccessfulmedicine tested over 30 years in thousands of cases.Promptly cures Nervous Prostration, Weaknessof Brain, Spinal Cord, and GenerativeOrgans of either sex, Emissionsand all illscaused by indiscretion orover-exertion.Six packagesis guaranteed to effect a cure whenall other medicines fail.One package $1, six packages $5, by mail.Sold bydruggists.Write for Pamphlet.Address EUREKA CHE3iCAL Co, DETROIT, NT For sale by B.E.Mc GALE, 2123 Notre Dame street, Montreal.mwf DW 121 l'HE GREAT OS Rr KER Girls who have not | the advantage of the high culture Del- | FAYORITE JSENE! A perfect deodorized Oil, for use in Coal Oil + Stoves! Shows a beautiful white light! No .smoke and no disagreeable odorsl THE BEAVER OIL CO.64 COLLEGE STREET, MONTREAL.M 24, 8t Peter Street, Quebnec- CACOUNA.WILL 8PEN JUNE 15th, 1888, For reception of guests.Recent extensive improvements have been made.Fog full information, circulars, etc., address T.D.SHIPMAN, Quebec, PQ, Orto T.MeCAFFREY, Late of St.Louis Hotel, Quebec, Manager, Cacouna, P.May 28 1 T RUSSELL, OTTAWA, The Palace Hotel of Canada, This magnificent new Hotel, fitted up in the most modern style, is now open.The hussell contains accommodations for over FOUR HUNDRED GUENSTS, with passenger and baggage elevators, and commands a splendid view of the city, Parliamentary grounds, river and canal.Vgitors to the Capital having business with \\he Government find it most convenient tostop at the Russell, where they can always mest leading public men.The entire Hctel is supplied with escapes, and in case of fits there would not be any confusion or danget, Every attention paid to guests, KENLEY & ST.JACQUES, ST.LOUIS HOTEL QUEBEC.This hotel, which is unrivalled] for size, style, and locality in Quebec has just been completely transformed and modernized throughout, being refitted with new srsiem of drainage and ventila'ion, passenger cleva~ tor, electric bells and lights, &e.In fac, all that modern ingenuity and practical science can devise to promote the comfort and convenience of guests has been supplied.CHATEAU ST.LOUIS HOTEL CO., Proprietors.SEA BATHING ! INCH-ARRAN HOUSE, DALHOUSIE, BAIE DES CHALEURS,N.BB.THE HEALTHIEST PLACE IN CANADA.This favorite summer resort, on the line of the Intsreolonial railway, opens June 15th, Beautiful scenery, good bathing, boating, fishing and driving, together with a good table and the other comforts of a city hotel.The sanitary arrangements are perfect.Pure walter, thorough drainage, water closets of modern style on each floor, and bathrooms supplied with hot, cold and salt water.Address\u2014 GEO.D.FUCHS, Manager, Dalhousie, N.B., Revere House BOSTON.Near Boston and Maine, Eastern ,Fitchbu and Lowell depots, centres of business an places of amusement.Remodelled, Refurnished, Newly Decorated, and now kept on the EUROPEAN PLAN Rooms areail large and comfortable ; eig gant suites, With baths attached; ample public psriors; gentlemen\u2019s cafe and billiards room added, and first-class in every respect.ROOMS FROM $1.00 A DAY UP.J.F.MERROW & CO, Propietors.Nov.3 6m Tst 262 HOTEL BRUNSWICK Fifth Avenue New York.This most fashionable and centra '=y located notel has been renovated from top to bottom, and i8 now re-opened under management of R H.Soutbgate, upon the American and European plans.This hotel is the favorite resort for Canadians.MITCHELL, KINZLER™ SOUTHGATE, Proprietors, Comfortable Rooms, $2 per day; Board 2.50 per day.$ Oct 9 tf 230 ROSSIN HOUSE ! The Rossin is the largest Hotel in the Province of Ontario, only two blocks from the Union Railway Station, corner of King aad York streets, finest situation in Toronto.Its thoroughly first-class appointments, large corridors, lofty ceilings, spacious, clean and well-ventilated rooms, detached and en suite, polite and attentive employees in every de rtment, together with u , Fake it specis ally attractive to the travelling public.lumbing throughout.Immunity from nob ote sAsses and malaria guaranteed by the most perfect system of ventilatio iraps and thorough plumbing known to ary science.erator running day and night.Hot and Cold baths on each fioor.Electric Bells and Fire Escapes in all the rooms.Toronto Protective Police and Fire Patrol Service on oor.oo Cen graduated according to location of room, and based on a moderate scal \u201d The Rossin enjoys the patronage o the be English and American families.MARK H.IRISH, 288 Proprietors NDACKS\u2014INTERLAKEN HOUSE pis Auger chasm ; house new, modern mprovement s, fronting Auger Lake; finest fishing, boating, splendid scenery.mountain air, extensive pine groves, beautiful drives; table of best; 260 acre farm ; 3 hours ral\u201d Board $7 to $9 week.References: Joha Meagher, Esq., and Saml.Bell, Esq.Address G.B.SHATTUCK, Keeseville, NY.1m 1% WON _ » 1 SI [J As DAILY COMME SCHISM IN THE PARTY.\u2014 Republican Papers Criticising the Platform.\u2014_\u2014_ (OLORADO DENOUNCES THE PLATFORM.(Colorado Springs Gazette, Rep.) The Republican platform is a disap- Fointment.It lacks the ring of the Republican platforms of 1856 and 1360, or even that of 1834, when strong convictions of right nnd wrong prompted every utterance.It has not the sober diznity of statesmanship, but the skilful pleading of a smart attorney.In some parts it is so manifestly unfair and tricky that it is almost an insult to the intelligence of the voters of the couutry.PROTECTION FOR PROTECTION\u2019S SAKE.[N.Y.Evening Post, Ind.Rep.} The frce whiskey plank in the Republican platform serves to show in the most vivid light what the policy of * protection for protection\u2019s sake\u2019 really means.It makes it easy for every voter to understand the difference between the policies advocated by the two parties.I'he Democrats say to the country, * We favor cheaper wool, cheaper salt, cheaper lumber: The Republicans say, \u201cWe favor cheaper whiskey rather than eheaper wool, or salt, or lumber.\u201d # PARTY OF SPECIAL INTERESTS.(The Nation, Ind.) Tn 1856 and 1£60 the Republican party was an organization of unselfish men who appealed to the intelligence of tke nation.In 1588 it has sunk to be a pacty of special interests based upon the selfishness of meu who want to make money or get oilices out of it, and1t goes before the country upon a platform which \u201cinsults the intelligenr® of the people\u201d \u2014to qnte Mr.Depew?\u2019 characterization of Mr.Blaine\u2019s \u2018rebel debe\u201d speeches in 1872\u2014by yelli#g \u201cfree trade, when the Democrats propose to carry out the very policy of lowerinz taxes and reducing \u201cthe surplus which the Republi.caps hemselves advocated in their bes- ter days.IT MEANS FREE WHISKEY.(N.Y.Times, Ind Rep.) The Republicans in the House do not relish being reminded in the course of debate on the tariff bill that the platform of their party commits them to a policy of \u201cfree whiskey\u201d in preference to lower taxes on the necessaries of life.They protest that removing the internal revenue taxes does not mean \u201cfree whiskey.\u201d It nieans the reduction of the cost of that beverage to a mere traction of what it is now ; it means the removal of all national restriction upon its production and sale ; it means making it next to impossible to prevent its illicit and unregulated production; it means that it would be doubly difficult to enforce prohibition in any State or country, and that the effect of licensing sales as a means of restriction would be made nugatory.A HARD BLOW AT HIGH TARIFF.(Philadelphia Telegraph, Rep.) One of the most significant events since the adjournment of the Chicago convention is the final defe tion from the party of the leading Republican newspaper of Rhode Island.Published in the very centre of New England manufacturing industry, at the home of the extremest protectionist views, it squarely takes issue with the party to which it has belonged for a quarter of a century, nt upon personal grounds as to the candidates, but on the great question of tariff reform.This is the point upon which attention must be centred; this is the real and startling significance of this Journalistic defection.It is a bolt from a clear sky; it is a hard blow at the high tariff policy, at a time and in a place There its effect must be most seriously e A SYNONYM FOR HUMBUG.(N.Y.Evening Post, Ind., Rep.) Çû The dismissal of Mr.Seth Low, of Brooklyn, by the Tribune as a \u201cSunday school politician,\u201d because he cannot swallow the Republican platform, is simply a renewal of the war on the *' Pharisees and hypocrites\u201d and \u201c mollycoddles,\u201d which followed the bolt agaiust Blaine in 1884.There is no class which excites so much deadly animosity amon z the Blaineites as men wbu make any pretence of bringing principle to bear on politics.Consequently, the Sunday school, as a place in which the duty of following conscience without regard to consequences is taught, has become a syncnym with them for cant and humbug, and serves as a term of reproach.All the political morality they teach themselves is marked \u201cPrivate\u2014use wisely.\u201d A FRONTIER BEAUTY.Rare Charms Possessed by an Oregon Amazon.Oregon Correspondence San Francisco Chronicie.) .The jar of heavy feet was heard.Some young hores came down a steep hill at full run.Behind was a reckless, rapid rider.The loose stock dashed past.The horse that bore the rider was tossing his head madly and slinging white foam in flakes from his mouth.He was a rearing, restlese, heavy built, regulation bronco, but it was remarked that he was well under control, for he seemed to be fairly lifted from side to side by the reins at the will of the rider, who drew up to our resting place.We started in a way that was not mannerly even in the wilds of Oregon.The rider of the restless pony was a young girl.She waited wilh embarrassment for us to tell our errand.\u201cWho lives here ?\u201d\u2019 we asked.\u201c1 do,\u201d she replied, in a tone that did not make us feel any more at home.\u201cWhose garden is this?\u201d was the next question.\u201cMine.\u201d .After a pause she added, \u201cCan I do anything for you, gentlemen 7\u201d \u201cWell, well, no,\u201d was about the only intelligible answer at command.\u201cWill you come to the house ?\u201d she added.\u201cIt is near dinner time.\u201d As she rode before we looked upon a graceful rider, a well rounded, neat figure, a brunette with the languid beauty so much admired in the Castihan women, clad in coarse, strong, short skirts, below which showed a small boot and a keen bright spur.Mer rich saddle was new and strong and double rigged.Her horse bad not stopped at the gate till she sprang to the round.My companion stepped forward with a Chesterfield bow, but too late to as- gist her.while she led her horse to the stable.When we were within a rod of the door we both started with surprise.À repulsive, sullen, scowling Indian was at each window.We were greatly surprised to learn that our hostess was half-breed.In her features or actions we had observed net one trace of the Indian.Her demeanor was modest, while at the sam time she was fully imbued with the Western liberality that allows noman t pass without an invitation to partake o a meal or a night's lodging.We bad her good by reluctantly and continuel our hunt, thinking \u2018how much more appropriate such grace and such wealth would be in the circles of society than on the back of à broncho.She asked us to go the house | NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.WHAT id AILS YOU?Do you feel dull, languid, low-gpirited, life less, and indescribably miserable, both physically and mentally; experience a sense of fullness or bloating after eating, or of *\u2018gone- ness,\u201d or emptiness of stemach in the morning, tongue coated, biter or bad taste in mouth, irregular appejte, dizziness, frequent headaches, blurred eyesight, * floating specks\u201d before the eyes, nerfous prostration or exe haustion, irritabilÿÿ of temper, hot flushes, alternating wit! chilly sensations, sharp biting, transicnt/ pains here and there, cold feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or disturbed ang unrefreshing sleep, constant, indescribable feeling of dread, or of impending calamit Te ou have al], or any considerable number of these gymptoms, you are suffering from that most common of American maladies\u2014 Bilious Dyspersia, or Torpid Livur, associated with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion.The more complicated your disease has become, the greater the number and diversity of symptoms.Ne matter what stage it has reached, Pr.Picrce\u2019s Golden Medical Discovery will gyddue it, if taken according to directions Or a& rcasonable lengih of time.If not cured, complications multiply and Consump- tio Of the Lungs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease, Ricumatism, Kidney Disease, or other grave maladies are quite liable to set in and, sooner or later, induce a fatal termination.Dr.Pierco\u2019s Golden Medical Digs covery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and through that great blood- purifying organ, cleanses the systein of all blood-taints and im= purities, from whatever cause arising.It is equally efficacious in acting upon the Kidneys, and other excretory organs, cleansing, strengthening, and healing their diseases.an appetizing, restorative tonic, it promotes digestion and nutrition, thereby building up both flesh and sirength.In malarial districts, this wonderful medicine bag gained great gelebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases, Dr.Pierce\u2019s Golden Medical Dise covery CURES ALL HUMORS, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofula.Salt-rheum, \u2018* Fever-sores,\u201d Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, all diseases caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful, purifying, and invigorating medicine, Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under its benign influence.Especially has it mani fested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrofulous Sores and Sweliings, Hip-joint Disease, * White Swellings,\u201d Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands, Send ten cents in stamps for a large Treatise, with colored plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections.\u201cFOR THE BLOOD 18 THE LIFE.\u201d Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr.Pierce\u2019s Golden cdical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyent spirits, vital strength and bodily hcalth will be established, CONSUMPTION, which is Scrofula of the Lungs, is arrested and cured by this remedy, if taken in the earlier stages of the disease.From its marvelous power over this terribly fatal disease, when first offering this now world-famed remedy to the public, Dr.Pierce thought seriously of calling it his ** CONSUMPTION CURE,\u201d but abandoned that name as too restrictive for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative, or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, and nutritive properties, is unequaled, not oo 88 a reme 3 for Consumption, but for Chronic Diseases of the Liver, Blood, and Lungs.For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shorte ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an efficient remedy.Sold by Druggists, at $1.00, or Six Bottles for $5.00.Send ten cents in stamps for Dr.Pierce's book on Consumption, Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St.BUFFALO, N.Ÿ ALES AND LIQUORS.DAWES & CO., BREWERS AND MALTSTERS.INDIA PALE AND XX MILD ALE, EXTRA AND XXX STOUT PORTER, (In wood and bottle.) FAMILIES SUPPLIED.SAND PORTER\u2014Quarts and Pints.OFFICE: 521 ST.JAMES STREET WEST, MONTREAL.74 Orders received by telephone.June 9 Dow\u2019s Brewery, CHABOILLEZ SQUARE.Superior Pale and Brown Malt India Pale and other Ales, Extra Dcuble and Single Stout, in Wood and Bottle.FAMILIES SUPPLIED.The following bottlers only are authorized © use our labels, viz.\" Thos.J.Howard .681 & 683 Dorchester street 0 8 Virtue.«oon 19 Aylmer street Thos.Ferguson.162 St.Elizabeth street Wm, Bishop.15 Visitation street Thos.Kinsella.118 Ottawa street I ORDERS sECEIVED BY TELEPHONE.WILLIAM DOW & CO.Brewers and Maltsters.Feb.23.ly JOHN H.R.MOLSON & BROS.Ale and Porter Brewers, 1006 Notre Dame Street, Montreal, Have always on hand the various kinds of ALX AND PORTER IN WOOD AND BOTTIÆ.Familles regularly supplied.Orders received by felephone.r.Wm.Watson, 314 St._Urbain street bottles our Ales and Porter.He is authorized to use our labels.John Hope & Co.MONTREAL.AGENTS IN CANADA FOR OHN DE KUYPER & SON, Rotterdam\u2019 MARTELL & CO.Cognac.JULES ROBIN & CO., Cognac: MOET & CHANDON, Epernay : DEINHARD & CO.Coblenz.BARTON & GUESTIER, Bordeaux.M.MISA, Xeres de la Frontera.COCKBURN.SMITHES & C0., Oporto, | MULLER & DARTHEZ, Tarragona, RODEL & FILS FRERES, Bordeaux, Æ.& J.BURKE, Dublin, | PATTERSON & HIBBERT, London.| BULLOCH, LADE & C0., Glasgow.| WM.JAMESON & C0.Dublin.CANTRELL & COCHRANE.Dublin \u2014AND\u2014 BOOTH\u2019S OLD TOM GIN, ete.N.B.\u2014ORDERS RECEIVED FROM THE WHOLESALE TRADE ONLY.| December 22 INLAND NAVICATION.chelieu & Ontario Navigation Co.The following steamers call at the usual Intermediate ports :\u2014 0 QUEBEC :\u2014Steamers QUEBEC and MONTREAL leave Montreal daily (Sundays 2xcepted) at, 7 p.m.To TORONTO, until 15th September.\u2014 Leave daily (Sundays excepted) at 9 a.m., from Lachine at 12.30 p.m.from Coteau Landing at 6.30 p.m., on arrival of G, T.5 p.m, rain.To THE SAGUENAY, commencing about 8th May, leaves every Tuesday and Friday at 7.30 a.m.from Quebec, and from 20th June to 15th September four times a week,\u2014Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays.To CORNWALL, steamer BOHEMIAN every Tuesday and Friday at noon.To THREE RIVERS, every Tuesday and Friday at 1.3) p.m.oe CHAMBLY, every Tuesday and Friday atl p.m, To VARENNES, VERCHFRES and BOUT DE LISLE, daily (Sundays excepted), r TERREBONNE.at 3.3); Saturdays, at 30 p.m.To LAPRAIRIF, commencing from 28th May to 27th August.\u2014On Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, leave from Lapralrie at 5.30, 8.00 a.m., 1.30 and 5.30 p.m.From Monreal, at 6.30 a.m., 12 noon, 4 and 6.15 .m.P On Tuesdays and Fridays\u2014From Laprairie, 5a.m., 8am., 10.30 a.m., 1.30 p.m.and 530 p.m.From Montreal, 6 a.m., 9 a.m., 12 noon.4pm.and 6.15 p.m On Sundays and Holydays\u2014From Laprairie 9 a.m., § p.m.From Montreal,2 p.m.and 6 mn.p LONGUEUIL FERAY\u2014From Longueuil, 5 a.m.and every subsequent hour.From Montreal, commence at 5.30 a.m.; last trip, 7.30 p.m.ST.HELEN'S ISLAND FERRY, commencing Sunday.May 20th\u2014Time Table same as last year.EXCURSIONS, commencing Saturday, May 12\u2014By steamer TERREBONNE, every Saturday at 2.30 Dm, for Vercheres, and Sundays at 7 a.m.for Contrecceur, returning same evening at about 8 p.m.For all information apply at Company\u2019s Ticket Offices, 136} St.James street, Windsor Hotel, Balmoral Hotel, Canal Basin, and Richelleu Pier.J.B.LABELLE, General Manager, ALEX.MILIOY Montreal, Manager Western Division.Ottawa River Navigation Co.fA DAILY LINE BETWEEN MONTREAL AND OTTAWA AND CALEDONIA SPRINCS.101:\u20144 Passengers take 7.45 am.Train daily for Lachine, to connect with steamer for Ottawa and intermediate ports.Cheapest and most direct route to the Caledonia Springs.DAY EXCURSIONS to Carillon and back, 81.25.Saturdays, 81.00 SHOOT THE RAPIDS.Take 1.30 p.m.train or 2 p.m.(Satur- 80 days) to St.Anne's.und trip.C.Take 5.00 p.m, train to Lachine.50 ROUNA tFID.0 eenenrarerrrrreasnnias - C, Tickets at Bonaventure Depot, 143 St, James street, Windsor and Balmoral Hotels, and 174 St.James street.MARKET STEA MERS\u2014Steamer Maude, for Brown\u2019s Wharf, &c., Tuesdays and Fridays, 6.30 p.m, Steamer Princess, for Carillon, &e.; steamer Dagmar, for Rigaud &e., Wednesdays and Saturdays, at 6.00 a.m.FOR EXCURSION CHARTER\u2014Steamer Prineess (re-built 1885); steamer Dagmar (re-built 1886, class À 2,) R.W.SHEPHERD, JR., May 2, 1888.Manager.STEAMSHIPS.& Quebec Steamship Co.The S.S.MIRAMICHI, A.BAQUET, Master, having undergone very extensive repairs to hull and machinerv, and fitted with new boilers, all under supervision of the Government Inspectors, is intended to leave Montreal on MONDAY, oth JULY, at 5 P.M.and every alternate Monday during season of navigation for Father Point, Gaspe, Mal Baie, Point St.Peter, Perce, Summerside, Charlottetown and Pictou.Tickets for sale at the principal Railroad, Steamship and Hotel Ticket Offices.For freight and passage, or staterooms, apply to Pry BROCK & CO., Freight and Ticket Agents, 205 Commissioners St., Or to Montreal, A.B, CHAFFEE, jr., Ticket Agent, 266 St.James street, BERMUDA & WEST INDIES ROYAL MAIL LINES OF THE QUEBEC STEAMSHIP CO., Sailing from Pier 47 North River, New York.For Bermuda :\u2014 88.TRINIDAD, Thursday, July 5, at 3 p.m.88.TRINIDAD, Thursday, July 19, at 3 p.m For St.Kitts, Antigua, Dominica, St.Lucia, Barbadoes and Trinidad :\u2014 88.MURIEL, Saturday, June 30th, at 3 p.m, For freight, passage and insurance, apply A.E.OUTERBRIDGE & CO, Agents 51 Broadway, New Yor ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary, Quebec A.B, CHAFFEE, JR., Ticket Agent.266 St.James St_-* Montreal.CanadianPacific STEAMSHIP LINE.One of the Fast Clyde-built Electric- Lighted Steamships Is intended to leave Owen Sound at 3.30 p.mon arrival of Steamship Express,leaving Toronto at 11 a.m.ALBERTA.Saturday ATHABASCA.Wednesday CAMPANA.Monday For Port Arthur direct (calling at Sault Ste.Marie Mich., only), making close connection with the through trains of the Canadian Pacific Railway, for Winnipeg, British Columbia, and all points in the North-West and Pacific Count ; AND ONE OF THE PALACE SIDE-WHEEL ELECTRIC-LIGHTED STEAMERS, CARMONA AND CAMBRIA, Is intended to lave Owen Sound every Tuesday & Friday at 10.30 p.m., on arrival ot Canadian Pacific Railway train leaving Toronto 4.50 p.m.for Rault Ste.Marie, calling at usual intermediate vorts.MACKINAW EXCURSION TRIPS comme nce Tuesday, 8rd Juy, and will continue every Juesday and Friday during July and ugust.A Round T1ip Fare from Tomnto.$16.00 \u201c \u201c Owea sound.$12.00 W.C.VANHORNE, HENRY BEATTY, Vice-President.Man Lake Tram STEAMSHIPS.DoNALDSON LINE.WEEKLY SERVICE \u2014BETW EEN\u2014 MONTREAL and GLASGOW 8.8, Alcides, (steel), 3,400 tons, Capt.Rollo.8.8, Concordia.2,600 \u201c Capt.McLean.8.8.Cynthia.,.2,200 ** Capt.Taylor.S.S.Colina.2,000 ** Capt.Jennings, 8.8.Circe.2,400 * Capt.Crighton The Steamship CIRCE will sail from Montreal for Clasgow ON OR ABOUT THE 12th JULY.Agents\u2014Donaldson Bros., 165 St.Vincen street, Glasgow ; Robert Reford & Co., 23 and 25 St.Sacrament street, Montreal.THOMSON LINE.Montreal and Neweastle-on-Tyne SERVICE, VIA LONDON.Avlona.2,000 tons, Capt.Tait.Barcelona 000 ¢ Capt.Cummings, Dracona (steel).2,000 \u201c Capt- Sangster, Escalona, \u2018\u201c .2,000 \u2018\u201c Capt, Simpson.Fremona, \u2018\u201c .4300 *\u2018 Capt.Anderson.Gerona, * ,.4,600 \u201c Building.The Steamship FREMONA will sail from MONTREAL FOR LONDON ON OR ABOUT THE 2nd JULY.Agents:\u2014Starks & Cairns, Newcastle-on ne; Andrew Low & Son, 27 Leadenhall street, London, E.C,; H.R.James, Queen Square, Bristol ; William Thomson & Sons Dundee, Scotland, and Robert Reford & Co., Montreal, TEMPERLEY LINE.SAILING BETWEEN MONTREAL and LONDON 8.8, Scotland.\u2026\u2026.2,700 tons, Capt.Tod 8.8, Ocean King.2 se wo 8.8.Erl King.2,200 * \u201c Priske The Steamship SCOTLAND will gail from MONTREAL FOR LONDON ON OR ABOUT THE 15th JULY, Agents :\u2014Temperleys, Carter & Darke, 21 Billiter street, London, E.C.; William Ross & Co., 8 East Indta avenue, London, E.C.; Robert Reford & Co., Montreal.All the vessels of the above lines are A 100 highest class at Lloyds, and have been built expressly or this trade, and possess the most improved facilities for carrying Grain, Butter, Cheese and Cattle.Superior accommodation for a limited number of Cabin Passengers.- Through Billsof Lading Granted by any of the above Lines to any point in CANADAor WESTERN STATES And by any of the CANADIAN or WESTERN RAILWAYS to any point in GREAT BRITAIN, IRELAND or PLPE at LOWEST THROUGH RATES.Special attention given to the HANDLING of all PERISHABLE and other cargo.For further particulars apply to ROBT.REFORD & GO., No.25 St.Sacran.ent Street, MONTREAL.FRANCE, CANADA.BOSSIERE LINE.Under Contract with the Dominion Government, SAILING FROM HAVRE FOR MONTREAL EVERY TWENTY DAYS.Steamers of the above Line wil sail as follows :\u2014 88.SULLY, 8,000 tons, 1,500 horse power, leaves Havre 31st March, and Bordeaux Tonnay, Charente, 15th April, for Quebec and ontreal.Men CHATEAU LEOVILLE, 4,500 tons, 1,800 horse-power, will leave Rotterdam 15th April, and Havre 25th April, direct for Montreal.SS.PANAMA, 3,500 tous, 1,000 horse power, will leave Havre on the 10th May.88.HENRI IV., 2,000 tons, 800 horse-power, will leave Havre for Montreal 31st May.Through Bills of Lading granted in Havre, to points East and West in Dominion; in Montreal, to all points in France and Europe.For freight and passage, apply to BOSSIERE FRERES & CIE., Havre; BOSSIERE FRERES & CIE.Montreal, 209 Commissioners street, Harbor Chambers.March 12, 1888.244 ways Set = FURNESS LINE STEAMERS SAILING BETWEEN MONTREAL and LONDON.MONTREAL FOR LONDON.On or Tons._Abont 88, GOTHENBURG .Ceeean 2526 June 12 88.GOVINO .June 24 Through BillsofLading Granted to any point in CANADAor WESTERN STATES And byanyof the CANADIAN or WESTERN RAILWAYS to any point in GREAT BRIT- AJN, IRELAND or EUROPE, at LOWEST THROUGH RAT=&- - \u2014 T Special attention given to the HANDLING of all PERISHABLE and other cargo.All the vessels of the above Line are A 100, highest class at Lloyds, and have been built expressly for this trade, and possess the most improved facilities for carrying Grain, Batter, Cheese and Cattle, Agents :\u2014ADAMSON & RONALDSON, 31 Lead- enhall street, London, E.C.; JOBN GLUYNN & Son, 20 Water street, Liverpool ; C.FURNESS, Newcastle; ANDERSON, MCKENZIE & Co., Montreal.FROM BOSTON.SS.BORDERER .\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.ous June 23 SS.STOCKHOLM CITY.June 29 For particulars apply to ANDERSON, McKENZIE & CO, 227 Commissioners street, Montreal.109 CTA STEAMSHIPS.BEAVER LINE, The Canada Shipping Co.'s IJNE OF STEAMERS BETWEEN L & LIVERPOOL, Comprising the following First-class built, Fall-powered Tes Btearasnipe 0° Lake Ontario, Capt.H.Cam Lake Superior, P Wm.dg Dane ons Lake Huron.\u201c M.L Tranmar,4,100 * Lake Winnipeg,\u201c P,D.Murray, 3,300 * Lake Nepigon, ** F.Carey, 2300 « SUMMER SAILINGS, 1888 Will be as follows :\u2014 FROM LIVERPOOL.Lake Nepigon .+ Friday, Ju Lake Huron.Ww Tune = Lake Ontario.\u201c July 8 Lake Winnipeg.\u201cJuly 13 Lake Superior, .,.July D e Nepigon .\u201c July 77 FROM MONTREAL.Take Winnipeg Tuesday, Jun Lake Superior 4 Ys July 3 Lake Nepigon.\u201c July 10 Lake Huron.\u201c July 17 Lake Ontario .4 July 24 Lake Winnipeg.\u2026 * Juy 31 The steamers connect at Montreal by direct Ru on al ints in Canada, Manitoba, North-West Territories an nited which through tickets are 1ssued.States, to hese Senmers are builtin water-tight com- rtmentshand of 8 stre.orth Atlantic trade.\u2019 ¢\" nein for the In the passenger departments the most perfect provision has been made to ensure the comfort and convenience of all.In the Cabin ths State-rooms are large and airy.The Steerage 1s fitted with the most approved Patent Canvas Berths, and is fully ventilated and heated by steam.An experienced Su n 1s carried by each steamer, also Stewardesses to attend to the wants of females and children.Saloon, $10.$60 and 860; Road n, | an ; und Tri $90 and $110, according to steamer and = commodation.The $40 and $80 rates per 8.8.Lake Nepigon only.Round Trip Tickets, $60.Intermediate, gus Steerage, $20; Round Trip tickets, $40.For freight or other particulars apply: In ouse Belfast, to A.A.WATT, 8 Custom Square ; in Queenstown.{o N.G., SEYMOUR & Co.; in Live 1,toR.Ww.ROBERTS, 21 Water Street; in Quebec, to H.H.SEWELL, 125 Peter Street.ri ener anager 1 Custom House Square, Montreal.June 20 44 GUION LINE.UNITED STATES MAIL STEAMERS SAILING WREKLY BETWEEN New York and Liverpool, Calling at Queenstown.Proposed Sailings from New York.Arizona.Tuesday, May 8, 8.30 p.m Wisconsin .Tuesday, May 15, 7.30 am Nevada.Tuesday, May 22, 2.00 p.m Alaska .0.Tuesday, May 29, 8.00 a.m \u2018Wyomireg.Tuesday, June 5, 2.30 p.m Arizona Tuesday, June 12, 6.30 am Wisconsin Tuesday, June 19, 1.00 p.m evada Tuesday, June 26, 6.30 am Alsska., .Tuesday, July 3, 1.00 p.m Wyomi .Tuesday, July 10, 530a.m tight compartments, and are furnished with every requisite to make the passage across the Atlantic both safe and agreeable, having Bath-reom, Smoking-room, Drawing-room Piano and Library,also, experienced Surgeon, Stewardess and Caterer on each steamer, The State-rooms are all upper deck.thus ensuring those greatest of all luxuries ai sea; perfect ventilation and light.$50,360, $80 and $100, according to location, & , $60, an , according location, &o.Intermediate .0 $30 and Steerage, to or from Montreal.$27 This is & cluss that affords people of moder ate means a respectable way of travelling, Beds, Bedding, ash-basins, &e., together with good food separate Dining-room from either Cabin or Steerage being provided.Pas sage, $30 single ; $60 round trip.tecrage at very Low Rates.- Apply A, M.UNDERHILL & CO.85 Broadway, New York.J.Y.CILMOUR & CO., 854 St.Paul street, or D!BATTERSBY, 174 St.James street.June 8 115 HANSA STEAMSHIP CO.OF HAMBURG, TÆND THE\u2014 WHITE CROSS LINE, OF ANTWERP, Under Contract with the Dominion Government.Steamers of the above Lines will sail ag follows :\u2014 From Hamburg and Antwerp to Montreal Direct.88.FELICIA, from Hamburg, about 23rd une.SS.BAUMWALL, from Antwerp, about 30th June.S88.CREMON, from Hamburg, about 2nd July, and from Antwerp about yth July.SS.WANDRAHM, from Antwerp, about 27th July.From Montreal to Hamburg and Antwerp.S8.FELICIA, for Hamburg, about lith uly.88.BAUMWALL, for Antwerp, about 18th uly.I BS: CREMON, for Hamburg, about 25th uly.Through Bills of Ending granted in Hamburg and Antwerp to points East and est.For rates of freight and other particulars apply to AUGUST BOLTEN, Hamburg, GRISAR & MARSILY, Antwerp, Agents Hansa Steamship Co, STEUNMANN & LUDWIG, Anvwerp, Agents White Cross Line, Or to MUNDERLOH & CO., Montreal, GeneralAcants in Canada MACHINERY FOR SALE, H.P.1 second-band Brown Engine, 45 H, P.1 * # Slide Valve Engine, 40 H.P.1 * « Horizontal Engine, 10 H.P.1 Knowles Fire Pump, capacity 400 gallons ber minute.2 Screw Cutting Lathes, 24 in.swing, 18 ft.ed.PHèsigns and Specifications made for new vessels, the same superintended during construction by an experienced Clyde-trained shipbuilder Appiy to CRIDIFORD & ROBERTSON, D.LORN MacDOUGALL & CO.STOCK BROKERS, LORN 8.MACDOUGALL, MEMBER MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE, MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE BUILDING, 11 & 13 St.Sacrament Street, Buy and sell all securities quoted in Montreal, New York and Boston, nds of all Kinds bought and sold.Bond business especially looked after.Correspondents :\u2014Goodbody, Glyn & Dow, New York ; Blake Bros., Boston.Bond Agents for A.Bossevain & Co., Am sterdam, Holland; Blake, Bossevain & Co.ondon, England.92 GAZETTE.MONDAY.JULY.2 STEAMSHIPS.3 STEAMSHIPS.DOMINION LINE ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS.LIVERPOOL SERVICE.BAILING DATES, FROM FROM MONTREAL.QUEBEC.*Vancouver.Wed., June 13 Thur.,June 14 Toronto.Thur.June 2t| .\u201cees *Sarnia .+.Thur.June 28 Frid., June 29 *Oregon.Wed., July 4) Thur., July 5 Montreal.Thur.July 12] .0.*Vancouver .Wed., July 18 | Tour, July 19 Bristol Service for Avonmouth Dock.Ontario, from Montreal.June 23 Texas, from Montreal, 23rd May.Domirion, from Montreal, 6th June.Cabiu Rares :\u2014 Montreal or Quebec to Liverpool, $50 to $80, according to position of stateroom, with equal saloon privileges; second cabin, $30; steerage outward, or prepaid, $20 *These steamers have Saloon, Niaherovius, Music Room and Bath Room amidships where but little motion is felt, and carry neither cattle nor sheep.Prepaid Intermediate and Steerage Tickets issued at the lowest rates.For freight or passage, apply in Liverpool NN, MAINE & MONTGOMERY, 24 James street ; in London to MCILWRAITH, MCEACH RAN & Co, 5 Fenchurch street; in Quebec, W.M.MACPHERSON, and at Grand Trunk Rail way Offices, or to W.D.O'BRIEN 143 St.James street, DAVID TORRANCE & CO.8 Hospital street, General Agents, Montreal, June 6 278 ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS.FOR QUEENSTOWN AND LIVERPOOL Carrying the United States Mail.ROPOSED SAILING.Ohio .Baturday, May 5, 2.00 p.m City of Berlin.Saturday, May 12, 6.30 a.m City of Chester.Saturday, May 19, 11.00 a.m City of Chicago.8aturday, May 26, 6.30 a.m City of Richmond.Saturday, June 2, 12.30 p.m Ohio .Baturday,Juhe 9, 5.00 p.m City of Berlin.Saturday.June 16, 10.00 a.m City of Chester.Saturday, Jrne23, 5.00 p.m City of Chicago.Saturday, June 30, 11.00 a.m C, of Richmond.Baturday, July 7, 4.00p.m Ohio.Saturday, July 14, 9.W am City of Berlin.Saturday, July 21, 4.00 pm From Inman Pier, foot of Grand street, Jersey City.Steerage at very low rates.Intermediate passage, $30.Round Trip $69.RATES OF PASSAGE\u2014$50, $60, and $100, according to aacommodation, all havin, equal saloon privileges.Children between and 12 years of age, half-fare.Servants, $50.Special Round Trip Tickets at reduced rates.Tickets to London, $7; and Paris $16, and $20 additional, according to route selected.Saloon, Staterooms, Bmoking and Bathrooms amidships, These steamers do not carry Cattle, Sheer or Pigs.For freight or passage spply to PETER WRIGHT & SORE General Agents, No, 1 Broadway, New York; or C.C.MOFAL; .;* St.James street, or J.Y.GILMOUR & CO 854 St Paul Street, Mon eal.July 12 165 CUNARD LINE.LANE ROUTE.New York to Liverpool via Queenstown.FROM PIER 40, N.R., NEW_YORK.FAST EXPRESS MAIL SERVIOE., Aurania.Saturday, June 30, 10.30 a.m.Gallia.«Wednesday, July 4, 1.30 pm .\u2026 Saturday, July 7, 3.30 p.m.Servia Saturday, July 14, 9.00 am.Scythia ednesday, July 18, Noon.Umbria Saturday, July 21, 3.00 p.m Aurania .S0turday, July 28, 9.00 a.m.Gallia.Saturday, Aug.1, Noon.l *Will not carry steerage.RATES OF PASSAGE.Cubin, $60, $80 and $100, according to accommodation.Intermediate passage Steerage Tickets to and from all parts of Europe at very lowest rates.Through Bilis of Lading given for Belfast.Glasgow, Havre, Antwerp and other ports on the Continent, and for Mediterranean ports.For freight and passage apply at_the Company\u2019s office, No.4 Bowling Green, New York, VERNON H.BROWN & CO, General Agents, to THOMAS WILSON, Agent, 17 St.Sacrament street, Or to J.Y.GILMOUR & CO., 854 St.Paul street, - Montreal, a Ea a CALLING AT CORK HARBOR.TRELAND Carrying British and American Mails Provided with every Modern Improvement.NOTICE.\u2014The steamers of this Line take Specified routes, according to the seasons ot the year, which include the Lane routes, recommended by Lieutenant Maury, 8alling between NEW YORK and LIVERPOOL, via Queenstown, are appointed to leave as follows: FROM NEW YORK, 1888.Britannic.Weduesday, July 4, 2.00 p.m.*Celtic.Wednesday, July 11, 6.30 Am.Germanie.rr Wednenday, July 18, 1.00 p.m.* Adriatic .Wednesday, July 25, 6.30 a.m.Britannic.Wednesday, Aug.1,12.30 p.m.*Celtic.Wednesday, Aug.8, 5.30 a.m.Germanic.Wednesday, Aug.15,11.30 a.m, * Adriatic .Wednesday, Aug.22, 5.30 a.m, Britannie .Wednesday, Aug.29,10.30 a.m.*Celtic.Wednesday, &ept.5, 4.0\" p.m.Germanic.Wednesday, Sept.12, 10,00 a.m.*Adriatic.Wednesday, Sept.19, 400 p.m, Britannic .Wednesday, Sept.26, 9.00 a.m.*Celtie .,.Wednesday, Oct.3, 3.00 p.m.> Wednesday, Det.10, 8.30 a m.*Adriatic.Wednesday, Oct.17, 8.30p.m Britannic .Wednesday, Oct.21, 7.380'a.m.Celtic.wm.\u2018Wednesday, Oct.31, 2.00 pon.*These steamers bave superior Second Cabin accommodations.Rate, $30 and $35 to Queenstown or Liverpool CABIN RATES.New York to Liverpool and Queenstown, according to time and location of Berths, $50, ESS $100.Return tickets, $100, $110, \u2019 5 Tickets to London $7 additional, and lowest rates to Paris and the Continent.Children hetween one and twelve years half-price; Infants free.SPECIAL EXTRA STEAMER.Carrying Second Cabin and Steerage Passengers only: Republic, .Saturday, July 21, 3.30 p.m.ot $ Aug.25, 5.00 a.m.Sept 29, 11.00 a.m.Nov.3, 5.00 a.m.Dec.8, 9.00am.Theo whole of the saloon accommodation on this steamer will be given up to passengers at second-class rates.Rates to Queenstown or Liverpool, $35: return ticket, $65.Intending passengers should secu: e tickets in advance.STEERAGE RATES, From Montreal to Liverpool, Londonderry, Queenstown Glasgow, Belfast, London, Bristol, Cardiff, or Glasgow, including Railway Fare to New York, al lowest rates.Passengers booked, via Liverpool, to all parts of Europe at moderate rates.For further information and passage spply to.J.BRUCE ISMAY, 41 Broadway ow York ; or B.J.COCHLIN, Sole Agent 364 St.Paul st., Montreal.\u201c \u201c \u201c« \u201c 0\u201c \u201c ALLAN LINE.Under contract with the Government of Canada and Newi- ndland for the Conveyanceof the CANADIAN and UNITED STATES MAILS 1888-Summer Arrangements.-1888 This Com y's Lines are com, of the following uble-engined, Clyde-built IRON STEAMSBIPS.They are built in watertight compartments, are unsurpassed for strength, «peed and comfort, are fitted up with all the modern tmprovements that practical experience can suggest, and have made the Jastest time on record Vessels, Tonnage.Commanders Acadian.931|Capl.F.McGrath Arsyrian.(Capt.W.8.Main Austrian .Capt.John Bentley Buenos Ayrean.,.4005/Capt.James Scott: Canadian.2906|Capt.John Kerr Cartbaginian 4214(Capt.A.MacNicol Caspian.2728{Capl.Alex.McDougal, Circassian.Lt.R.Barrett, R N.R Corean,.Capt.C.J.Menzies Grecian.erase Capt.C.E.LeGallais Hibernian.,,.2097|Capt John Brown Lucerne.+.,1825/Capt.Nunan Manitoban .+++2875Capt, Dunlop Monte Videan.3500 Building.Nestorian.,.2689 Capt.John France Newfoundland.,, 918/Capt.C.Mylius Norwegian,.3523|Capt.R.Carruthers Nova Écotian.3305 Capt.R.H.Hughes Parisian.5859 /Lt, W.H.Smith, RNB Peruvian .3038|Capt.J.G Step en Phœnician.2425/Capt, D.MeKillop; Polynesian, .3983 Capt.Hugh Wylie Pomerania 4364] Capt.W.Dalziel Prussian.3030|Capt.Jos, Ambury Rosarian.8500 Building.Sardinian.4376, Capt.Joseph Ritchie Sarmatian,.3647|Capt.W.Richardson Scandinavian, 3068 Capt.John Park Fiberian.,,,.53904|Capt.R.P.Moore aldensian,.,.2356/Capt.D.J.James The Steamers of the Liverpool Mail Line Sailing from Liverpool on THURSDAYS and from Montreal at daylight on WEDNES- DAYR, and from Quebec at 9.00 a.m.on THURSDAY\", calling at Lough Foyle to re ceive on board and ia) d Mails and Passengers to and from Ireland and Reotland, are intended to be despatched as under: \u2014 FROM FROM MONTREAL.QUEBEC, Parisian.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.- June June.28 Polynesian .July 11 July 13 Sardinian.July 25 July 26 Parisian.\u2026.\u2026.Aug 1 Aug, 2 Polynesian.\u2026.\u2026Augs 15 Aug.18 fardinian.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.vane Aug.29 Aug.30 Parisian.c.conuu.sept.5 Sept.6 Rates of Passage py steamers of Liverpool Mail Line, from Montreal or Quebec, are :-\u2014 Cabin, $60, $70 and $80 : Intermediate, $30; Steerage, $20.Liverpool Extra Line The steam+rs of the Liverpool Extra Line failing from Liverpool on FRIDAYS, an from Montreal at daylight on THURSDAYS, and from Quebec at 9.00 a.m.on FRIDAYS, calling at Lough Foyle to receive passengers trom Ireland and Scotland on outward voyage, but proceeding to Liverpool direct on homeward voyage, are intended to be 2despatched as under :\u2014 FROM FROM MONTREAL QUEBEC.July 5 July 6 Circassian.Rarmatian July 19 July 20 Circassian .Aug.Aug.10 Sarmatian.Aug.23 Aug.24 Circassian .Sept.13 Sept.14 Rates of Passage by Steamer of Liverpoo.Extra Line, from Montreal or Quebec, are :\u2014 Ca $i0, $60, $70 ; Intermediate, $30 ; Steerage, $20.Liverpool, Queenstown, St.John's, Halifax and Baltimore Mail Service FROM HALIFAX via ST.JOHN'S, N.F,, TQ LIVERPOOL.Peruvian.eve seansas July 9 Caspian .July 23 Nova Scotian Aug.6 Peruvian .Rates of passage from Halifax to 8t.John's, Nfid., and vice versa are : Cabip.+.B20.06 Intermediate, 315.00 | Steërage .\u2026\u2026.$6.00 GLASGOW, QUEBEC & MONTREAL SERVICE FROM MONTREAL TO GLASGOW Grecian .\u2026.\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026.accuse, «# * June3.Corean.sn Loot Juülyl Carthaginian.i\u201c ¢ Julyl Norwegian, eee rereeenss .\u201c ¢ July i Siberian .ccocieienens ss \u201cJuly 2 These steamers do not carry passengers om voyage to Europe.\u2019 LONDON, QUEBEC & MONTREAL SERVICE.FROM MONTREAL TO LONDON ABSYTIAD Lccssossecsensess oc sranc0000 \u2026.June 29 Pomeranian.July 13 Nestorian.oeveiiseerienneriionina.Aug.4 These steamers do not carry passengers on voyage to Europe.THROUGH BILLS OF LADING anted to Liverpooland Glasgow, and at all ontinental Ports, to all points in the United States and Canada, and from all Stations in Canada and the United States to Liverpool and Glasgow Via Boston or Halifax.Connections by the Intercolonial an1 Grand Trunk Raliways, via Halifax ; and by the Central Vermont and Grand Trunk Railways [National Despatch], and by the Boston and Albany, New York Central and Great Wests ern Railways [Merchants\u2019 Despaich}, via Bos« ton, and by Grand Trunk Railway Company.Through Rates and Through Bills of Lading for Fast bound Trafilc can be obtained from any of the Agents of the above-named Rail ways.For Freight, passage and other information apply to JOHN M.CURRIE, 2} Quai d\u2019Orleans, Havre ; ALEXANDER HUNTER, 4 Rue Gluck Paris; AUG.SCHMITZ & Co., nr RICHARD BERNS, Antwerp; RuYs& Co., Rotierdam ; C.BUuGo, Hamburg; Jamks Moss & Co., Bordeaux ; FISCBER & BEHM ER.Schusseikorb No.8 Bremen; CHARLEY & MALCOLM, Beifast, JAMES ScoTT & Co, Queenstown ; MONT.GOMERIE & WOREMAN, 36 Gracechurch street, London: JAMES & ALEX.ALLAN, 70 Grea Clyde Street, Glasgow ; ALLAN BROTHERS James street, Liverpool ; ALLANS, RAE & Co., Quebec ; ALLAN & Co.,112 La Salle street, Chicago; POURLIER, Toronto; THOS.Cook & gon, 261 Broadway, New York; or to G.W.ROBINSON, 136) St.Jumes street, ope posite 8t.Lawrence Hall.H.& A.ALLAN.80 State Street, Boston, and 25Commap Street.Montreal June 22, 1888.150 ASTOR-FLUID Registered\u2014A dellghttully reireshing pre= Atal.C1.101 \u2018le bair.Should be used caily.Keersthe scalp heaithy, prevents ardrufi, premotesthe growib.À perfect Lair dressing toy jemily.25c per bottle.HENRY RB.GRAY, Chemist, 141 St.Lewrence Main Street.REFRIGERATORS ! WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.ALL SIZES AND STYLES, Prices from $7.00 Upwards.CEORCE W.REED, 783 and 785 Craig Street, Montreal.April 28 is , \u2018tre 102 4 The Montreal Herald.PUBLISHED DAILY BY | The EEKALD COMPANY, Limizod \u2014AT\u2014 No.6 Beaver Hall XXill.HON, P.MITCHELL; = = = = = = President Winn.H.WHYTE - Secretary-Treasurer and Business Manager.MoLYNEUX ST.JOHN 25 Business Correspondence should be addressed to THE HERALD COMPANY Limited).All other correspondence to be addressed * The Editor,\u201d MR.M.ST.JOHN.RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION.BY MAIL.INADVANCE, POSTAGE PAIL Dally edition, one year.,.$6.00 Six months.[EE 3.00 Three MONtNS.\u2026.1+00.0100000 wee 1.50 One month.sescncncnnss 50 Weekly edition, one year.1.00 Single COpies.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u20260n.se Specimen Copies sent free.28 Address, THE HERALD COMPANY Limited), MONTREAL.MORNING, JULY 2 MONDAY TIE GAZETTE AND The organ of the Government makes a very feeble attempt to whitewash Me.O'Hara, one of the Customs officials who was terribly scathed by the judgmant of Sir Wiiliam Ritchie in the Ayer case.It endeavors to palliate his remarkable conduct in connection with the seizure wbich led to the prosecution.It is, of course, to be expected that a journal\u2014 * 80 slavish in its support of the Government and everything appertaining thera- to\u2014should extend its support even to the meanest officials in the same employ as itself.However, the Gazette must at least, be consistent with itself; and we would respectfully refer it to its statements with respect to this gentleman whom it now tries to parade before its readers as a paragon of virtue\u2014which statements appeared in the Gazette of Wednesday, the twenty-ninth of June, cighteen hundred and eighty-seven or thereabouts, just one year before the appearance of its whitewash article.The Gazette on that occasion spoke as follows :\u2014* The evidence given on Monday \u201cby Mr.O'Hara, a chief officer in the \u201c Montreal service, wag most painful to \u201clisten to, and severe as were the com- \u201c ments of Chief Justice Ritchie, it can \u201c only be thought that they were thor- * oughly deserved, As an officer of the \u201c Crown, Mr.O'Hara seems ts have con- \u201csidered that he was justified in acts, *\u2018 that, perpetrated by a private individ- \u201cual, would brand him as a dishonest \u201cman.Twice he was.compelled to ad- \u201c mit that his statements in evidence MR.OHARL \u201c were untrue; once he replied in the \u201caffirmative to the direct question \u201cwhether he had proved himself \u201ca liar; twice he confessed to \u201c having led his superior to write \u201ca falsehood in letters bearing on \u201cthe case.* * * Men who act as \u201c Mr.O'Hara has done in his evidence, « are surely unfit to represent the Gov- : \u2018ernment in matters directly affzcting \u201cthe property of a large class of the & people.\u201d It will surely be seen that these ex- ! pressions of our esteemed contemporary vary considerably trom those in the issue \u2018 of the 29th Juge, 1888.The Gazette pretends that Mr.O'Hara only leartded of the alleged undervaluation by the Ayers in the spring of 1883, shortly prior to the seizure, and contradicts the assertion of .Chief Justice Ritchie that O'Hara and another officer of the Customs had gone to Mr.Johnson, Commissioner of Cus- t ms, nearly two years before, telling him that they proposed making the seizure, and after this, waited nsarly two years until they supposed they had ' heaped up a large amount of fines and ' penalties, and then pounced upon the goods of the merchants who have just ' emerged so triumphantly from the actions brought by these Customs officials.Let us see what Mr.Johnson, Commissioner of Customs, a gentleman who, with all his faults, has never had his character smirched by such disgraceful ' transactions as those which have transpired in the Ayer case, has to say on this question.He says in his evidence: # After the decision of the Minister of \u201c Crstoms (December, 1883,) Mr.Am- \u201c brose and Mr.O'Hara came to me at \u201c my office and asked me whether the ¢ decision of the Minister of Customs \u201c debarred the department from taking \u201c any legal action in the matter.I told \u201c them distinctly that so far as the ques- \u201ction of spirits in the matter was con- \u201c cerned it did; that whether or not it \u201cwas a legal bar, it was so equitably.¢ The Minister must abide by his de- \u201c cision.\u201d Question\u2014\u201c Is that so far as it relates to the spirit duties ?\u201d Answer\u2014* They informed me that they had discovered that those articles should have paid duty as sarsaparilla, hair vigor and finished pills, and so forth, and as a consequence had bsen enterad at a very gross undervaluation.They asked me if they might take action in the way of seizure.1 t>ld them as I always do, that I never give instructions with reference to seizure to an officer.They know their duty, and are obliged to do it, but they must take it on their own responsibility,\u201d and although Mr.Johnston would not swear positively to the exact date in his cross-examination, he still adhered to his impression that it was in December, 1583, that O'Hara and Ambrose visited | him.As the seizurcs were only taken in May, 1885, it is quite evident that Messrs.O'Hara and Ambrose were lying in wait for the Ayer Company, and the failure of Mr.Ambrose ta enter the box and contradict Mr.Johnson on this point THE MONTREAL HERALD AND_DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE MONDAY.JULY.2.1888 is adverted to by the Chief-Justice in his sadgment, as absolutely confirminz the Chief-Justice\u2019s interpretation of their doings.| The failure of Mr.O'Hara to produce certain books in his possession upon tha ; order\u201dof the Supreme Court has been se- * verely criticised, and his excuse and that of (his new apologist for this is that he acted under instructions from the Crown counsel.But Mr.O'Hara did not make this pretension in the witness box.The counsel employed by the Crown assumed no such responsibility, and it is not to be supposed that witnesses like O'Hara whose very official life was at stake in the proceedings, would have permitted the long litigation to pass over without placing himself on record as having been justified in his contempt of the order of the Supreme Court by the advice offare.l to him by the Crown Counsel.Although the order for the production of thase .books was served upon Mr.Ryan prior {to the trial, although O'Hara knew of this order, and although he hal the * books hidden away in his private house : in this city, the Ayers were never permitted to examine them until O'Hara ; produced them some days after the pro- ! ceedings in Court had commenced.The present pretention of his orzan is utterly absurd.We have too much respact for ! the counsel employed by the Crown to \u2018 believe without strong evidence that they would advise any officerof the Crown to treat with contempt an order emanating from a Judge of the Suprome Court of Canada.The Gazette carefully avoids any reference to the extraordinary letter, which { Mr.O'Hara admittedly advised his superior Mr.M.P.Ryan, to write, denying all knowledge of informer Underhills address, whilst at the moment of writing Underhill himself was sitting alongside Mr.Ryan and Mr.O'Hara in Mr.Ryan's office in the Custom House in the city of Montreal.The fact is established as clearly as | anything could be established that Mr.O'Hara deliberately and intentionally advised and suggested that Mr.Ryan should write the letter which contained \"an absolute falsehood, and the very fact that Mr.O\u2019'Hara\u2019s organ, the Gazette, fails to offer the slightest excuse for his conduct in this matter, shows the impossi- | bility of defending his conduct.So much for Mr.O'Hara and the Gazette.We are inclined to think that the commercial community of Canada will accept the judgment of the learned Chief Justice and his scathing remarks as jus- | tified by the extraordinary facts, and Mr.O'Hara and his would-be friends have mothing to gain by evoking any further illustrations of his conduct in connection with this case.i MORE MISTAKES.The latest Dominion Government : muddle\u2014the seizure of the American ship Bridgewater at Shelburne last sum- mer\u2014is a matter which should be ventilated, because there seems to be a fair probability of Canada being again compelled by the British Government to back down, pay up, and apologize.This vessel, we believe, was seized by the Customs authorities.The master of the ship remonstrated, and, we believe, cams to Ottawa to present his case, The Government decided against his contention, {and he appealed to the authorities at Washington The vessel was detainel : for nearly three months and was then released.Now it appears that an apolozy and damages are requirad.Ifthe ship was : wrongfully seized, due reparation should made to the injured American.But then the question will come: How came she to be seized?| Was this another case in which Cus- :tom House spies and informers wera to divide with the officials any plunier that could be raked in?We should feel some commiseration for the Minister of Customs, at seeing the mischief that is being done in his name, were it not that he was so obstinate in pushinz the bill through Parliament session .to facilitate the Commission of blunders and iniquities which were bad enough without incraased opportunities for adding to them.Our fisheries back-dowa arose from the feeling that had been created by too much eustoms assistance inthe Fisheries Department, and now we are threatened with another humiliation from much the same source.We do not see how these objectionable avents are to be avoided if subordinate officials and their semi-official allies, ths informers, are permitted to share in the booty that may be derived from seizuras.A seizure may result, in confiscation, fine, &c., in which case they make a hat- ful of myney ; if the seizure is illegal, the country apologises, and the taxpayers pay the damages.What do these officials care about that?They probably are not even dismissed.The Minister at Ottawa has little or no control over these people ; he is almost compalled to \"act upon their report, at least in the first instance, and thus it happens that, as in the Ayer case\u2014Canada is dragged through the mud and heavy expenses are incurred in order that two or three understrappers may have a chance of making a big haul.How long is this state of affairs to be continued?We see that one of the organs of the Government says :\u2014 | Itisthe Customs Department, through the officers in connection with it, that have bsen shown to have been in error.Tu®Government, regarded as the political agent of the country, has had nothing to do with the matter.This is a new doctrine, If the : Government has nothing to do with the * operations of the Department of Customs, | neither can it have with the Department of the Interior.or any other branch of the Cabinet, and as the whole ordering of Dominion affairs is done by the Departments, it follows that the Government has nothing to do with the government of the country.According to this novel theory the Government had nothing ty .of course, be do with the Northwest rebellion ; it was only Sir John Macdonald, Sir David Me- Pherson and Mr.Dewdney; it had nothing to do with the suppression of the rebellion, and the subsequent executions; all that was merely the work of Sir Adolphe Caron and Mr.Thompson.It is strange that a Ministerial organ should publish such fudge, and it may rest well assured that the country will hold Sir John Charles has gone he is practically the Government\u2014{for the freaks of the Cas toms as well as of all other Departments.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 DOMINION DAY.The Dominion attained its majority yesterday.In spite of much that has been done to retard its progress, some advance has been made in the 21 years ; particularly in the annual expenditure, the debt, and the amount of taxation.The expenditure has jumped in round numbers from thirteen million to thirty- Macdonald\u2014for now that Sir.six million; the debt has been increased ! from seventy-five million to about two hundred and fifty million, and the taxation from 15 per cent.to an average of about 35 per cent.But while the expenditure has nearly trebled, the debt more than trebled and the taxation increased about 150 per cent, the population of the country has so clearly but gradually increased that it might have been observed with the naked eye.But we may console ourselves with the reflection that if the Government had not driven the settlers out of Manitoba and the Northwest with their ever-changing land regulations, and apportioning the country to speculative companies, and had not brought on a rebellion and Indian outbreak that scared inlending immigrants into other countries, and had not so burdened the country with taxation and shut up the avenues of trade that native Canadians to the number of a million and a half have emigrated to the States ; if these inconsiderable events had not happened, we should have had a few million more inhabitants than we now have.But we have had only two rebellions, which, comparing the square mileage of Canada with thatof Peru or Bolivia, is not excessive.We have only had one Pacific Scandal, but we still have Sir John Macdonald, so while there is life thers is hope.We have had two Washington treaties, and still retain some rights which other people ought to respect.We should be puzzled to name them, but we presume they are there.We have an Intercolonial road, which we may retain if Mr.Chapleau and Mr.Kamper ara duly watched; also a Canadian Pacific Railway, and a fair chance of having a Pontiac and Pacific the next time Mr.Chapleau goes on strike, or if Mr.Peter White is taken into the Cabinet.We have extended our trade with the Argentine Republic so that it amounted during the last fiscal year to $18, and we ars on the bigh road to success in banishing the shipping of Yankee wheat from Montreal and other canadian ports, The want of space alone prevent our enumerating a number of other like steps in our national and mercantile progress, but we should be remiss were we to omit mentioning that we have developed a system by which all the money that is required for the Tory election fund and the establishment of Tory newspapers can De obtained on requisition trom the Combines, who in their (turn are recompensed from the pocket of t!fe ordinary common Canadian taxpayer.The gystem works like a charm and is unknown in any other portion of the British Empire.THE DIFFERENCL.The proposition to refer the Megantic election case to the Committee of Privileges and Elections is arousing much ia- dignation in the bosoms of the Tory faithful.They are not content, however, to deal with the question on its constitutional merits, but disturb the issue by making false accusations against Mr.Whyte.No reasonable person denies that the court\u2014as courts sometimes do\u2014 made a mistake.The essence of the offence in the payment of mdney is that it should be of corrupt intent, and this is hardly pretended to have been the case by those who are acquainted with the facts in Mr.Whyte\u2019s case.judges decided against Mr.Whyte, and the law provides that in these cases there shall be no appeal to a higher Court.We are not disposed to quarrel with the principle of making an election court a court of final decision\u2014or whatever the technical lerm may be\u2014because the system of multiplying suits and arranging legal tangles, by which lawyers may grow fat, is one of the pests of this country, and, perhaps, more so in Quebec than in any other Province, though all are bad enough.But the Gazette and : States to reconsider their views.But the i cther organs would do.well to remember that while they are abusing Mr.Mercier they are censuring Sir John Macdonald.They should remember the cases of King\u2019s County, PEL, and Queen\u2019s County, N.B.Both of these were sent by Sir John Macdonald to be considered and determined upon by the Committee of Privileges and Elections, the Ministerial organs tell us that such a course is begotten of party necessity, and that it makes the election law a terror only to the Opposition.The Opposition in the Dominion House of Commons hava found that there is a good deal of trath in this remark of the Gazettes.They have been swindled in their representation and outraged in half a dozen ways by Sir John Macdonald and his Tory majority, and when it cannot otherwise be done, it is done through the Committee on Privileges and Llec- tions.No one than the Gazette knows better how this is, and being anxious to take advantage of an accident to persecute Mr.Whyte, our Tory friend, judging although ' | thinks that an Opposition cause has no chance.The difference between tlh2se two gentlemen and their ministries, however, is great Mr.Mercier endeavors at all times to be fair and just even to an opponent ; Sir Jolin Macdonald, on the contrary, is the personification of injustice and double dealing.That, at least, the Gazette mu st allow.And adhitting this, as we feel sure it will\u2014for no sane person denies it \u2014our neighbor will see that it is better to confine itself strictly tothe constitutional issue, and avoid illustrations which are so damaging to its friends.\u2014\u2014\u2014 MORE BORROWING.It would appear that the indebtedness of the country is still to be further increased.The Government have just borrowed | twenty million dollars at 3 1-6 per cent.interest, and they have been vainly attempting to re-lend fourteen millions of this money.They succeeded no further than lending five millions at 1} per cent., thereby make a direct and heavy loss.But the Gazette tells us that \u201c before the * year closes it will in all probability be \u201c proved that Canada can borrow abroad \u201cat 3 per cent.\u201d If itis to be proved wea presume that the loan must at least be asked for.This facility for borrowing is the reason, the Gazette tells us, of the Government's determination to reduce the interest payable to tha psople of Canada for their deposits in the Savings Banks.However justifiable that reduction may be from a financial point of view, the depositors may jastly feel a little sore at all the bunkum that was talked by the Government about the propriety of giving Canadians the advantage over foreigners, etc, etc.They now know how much and how little the Government cared for the humble investor.It was his money they wanted, and they offered the interest they thought necessary to draw it from him.Bafore any more money is borrowed it is to be hoped that the way of using it will be clear to the Finance Minister.Tha spectacle of a Government borrowing money, which they have no use for, at over three per cent, and rushing about the country trying to lend it for anything they can get, and failing in great part to get anything, is not an edifying one.They now have nine millions lying idle; in eight months\u2019 timethe five millions lent to the banks at 1} will be returned, and there is a fair doubt whether even this fourteen millions will be required for leziti- mate purposes.eae.Mr.Hacur's epigrammatic remark that \u201cThe houses which did not fail made no money,\u201d will be accepted by the comic men of the press as an authoritative statement that the way to make money is to fail.Ox page 5 will be found some lengthy extracts from the speech of Mr.David A.Wells on the fisheries question.The speech is a very able exposition of the question, and should give the people of the United States some information on the subject that has been hitherto very carefully kept from them.Tur election of Mr.Edwards for Russell has been protested, and now no one seems inclined to father the proceeding.According to the Ottawa Free Press Mr.Mackintosh, the defeated candidate, disclaims the authorship of the proceedings, and avers that it was done by Senator Clemow to injure Mr.Mackintosh.We are glad to find that some one is ashamed of it.Possipry the slackness in grain shipments from Montreal may induce some who have hitherto set their faces against Unrestricted Reciprocity with the United If vessels for want of grain are compelled to leave this port in ballasttbecause all the grain is going to American ports it may occur to some who favor the Chinese wall policy that circumstances alter cases.It is very mice for the sugar barons and\u2014with a margin\u2014for the cotton Lords, but if for their sakes American grain is to be shut out of Canadian shipping ports the policy may not appear as rose colored as it used to be.\u2014 WHAT OTHERS BAY.(London, Ont., Advertiser.) Sir John is said to have justified his determination to appoint Dewdney to the Ministership of the Interior by saying that there is no member of the party in Parliament fit to take the portfolio.We have been weaned of the habit of taking everything that Sir John says at par, but he may be right.{Toronto News.It is said that a special train over the Michigan Central Railway on Tuesdav made the run from St.Thomas to Windsor, 111 miles, in 1094 minutes.This is the sort of travel that takes a man\u2019s breath away, and if the track is not in good condition or the machinery in good running order, it often takes his life away.(Ottawa Free Fress.) Mr.Dewdney's organexpresses delight at that gentleman\u2019s triumph over those eastern Tories who sought to prevent his appointment, and insists that everybody in the Northwest is likewise delighted.From this it appears that the efforts of certain members of Parliament supporting the Government to prevent Mr.Dewdney\u2019s entrance into the Cabinet have ended in failure.The backstairs influence has been too strong for the men who urge that their wishes should be considered on the score of party services, and Mr.Dewdney has come out \u201con top of the heap.\u201d (Strathroy Age.) On Monday nightlast there was a great migration from this neighborhood for the Western States.A number of families from this town were among the number, and the conductor of the train stated that they would become well acquaintèd by the time Chicago was reached, as nearly all were bound for tbe far West.We may be disloyal for this exposure of the National Policy methods of keeping Canada for the Canadians, but the in- stance we give is only one of a constantly recurring number.which shows that Mr.Mercier by Sir John Macdonald, i While the restrictionist press talks loudly against commercial union and unrestricted reciprocity, the people are quietly expressing their approval of such a measure in the only manner left to them.(Hamilton Times.) Minister Drury admitted, from practical experience, that farming had not been very protitable of late years.But the young men of the country had to do something, and engaging in farming was, he considered, more likely to yield a happy contented life with fair competence than any of the professions.Young men were often attracted by the glamour of city life and reports of large incomes earned by professional men and merchants.But their attention had never been directed to the thousands of doctors and lawyers who failing to gain prominence in their professions, eked out a bare existence.They had not, when reading of fortunes made by merchants, considered the track strewed with ruins of failure.The profession of farming was crowded, but not more than others, The cleverest doctor or the cleverest lawyer was the one that made a success in lite, and 80 would it be with the farmer.\u2014\u2014 \"DIED.PERKINS\u2014At 858 Sherbrooke street, on Sunday morning, lst July, Margaret Mower, widow of the late John A.Perkins, aged 76 years.Funeral from her late residence on Tuesday afternoon, 3rd July, at 2.30 o'clock.Friends will kindly accept this intimation.u-67 BIRTH.DooNER.\u2014On the 25th inst., at 16} Latour street, the wile of James Looner, of a daughter.ul55 The Advertising Department of \u2018\u2018 The Herald\u201d is under charge of Mr.Joseph Mitchell.NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.Canadian Pacific Railway Co.DIVIDEND NOTICE.The half-yearly dividend upon the Capital Stock of this Company, at the rate of three (3) per cent.per annuim, secured under Agreement with the Government of the Dominion of Canada, will be paid on AUGUST 17TH NEXT to Stockholders of record on that date.WARRANTS for this dividend payable at the Agency of the Bank of Montreal, 59 Wall street, New York, will be deliveredon and after AUGUST 17TH, at that Agency to Stock- hcelders who are registered on the Montreal pr New York Registers.WARRANTS of Europcan Shareholders, who are on the London Register, will be payable in Sterling, at the rate of four shillings and one penny half-penny (4s.14d.) per doliar, less Income Tax, at the Bank of Montreal, Abchurch Lane, London, and will be delivered on or about the sume date, at the office of the Company, 88 Cannon stroct, London, England.The Transfer Books of the Company will be closed in London at three o\u2019clock p.m.on FRIDAY, JULY 13TH, and in Montreal and New York at the same hour on THURSDAY, JULY 26111, and will be re-opened at ten o'clock a.m.ou SATURDAY, the 18TH AUGUST NEXT.By order of the Board, CHARLES DRINK WATER, Secretary.OFFICE OF TIE Ear] MONTREAL, July 3rd, 1385.3,10,17,24,51J,7,14A Canada Lite Assurance Co.MONTREAL, June, 1838, Five Per Cent.Loans.SUMS OF $50,000 OR OVER ON FiRST-CLASS SECURITY.186 St.James Street.J.& J.TAYLOR, Toronto Safe Works.We cali the attention of JEWELLERS to our new styles of FIRE and BURGLARPROOF SAFES, specially adapted for their use.Also, a full line of New and Secondhand Fire and Burglar-proof Safes in stock at our MONTREAL OFFICE & WAREROONS : 154 ST.JAMES STREET.W.T.McCLAIN, .Manager.Telephone, 911 C.P.O.Box, 1749.June 28 tf 155 AND COAL COMPANY.Tenders are invited for stores of various kinds required by the Company at Spring Hill Junction, N.S.(on line Intercolonial Railway), during the twelve months commencing August 1st, 1888.Forms of tender with full partieulars can be had on application to C.H.Bowen, General Storekeeper at Spring Hill, N.8., or at the head oftice, Montreal.Tenders endorsed * Tender for Stores\u201d gnd addressed to the undersigned, will be received on or before July 20th.ROBERT COWANS, Vice President.Montreal.155 \u201cFOR SALE.Bonanza property in first class order, in the business heart of the city.Will yield a rental of over ten per cent, on the purchase price, which is $13,900.One-third cash, balance on time.This investment will net 20 per cent.upon the cash paid down.153 wim Box 414, P.O.T w S & E A S E S$ OUTH T Claret from Russia.Claret from California.Hock from California.Canary from Teneriffe, FREDERICK KINGSTON WINE MERCHANT 25 Hosnital Street Montreal.FOR ' Seaside and Country.Note Paper & Envelopes Neatly Boxed or in Pads, VERY CONVENIENT FOR TRAVELLING, From 25 Cents and Upwards.MORTON, PHILLIPS & BULMER, Stationers, Blank Bsok Makers and Printers, 1755 & 1757 NOTRE FAME ST, MONTREAL, June 22 149 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.Carsley\u2019s Advertisement.Monday, July 2nd.1888.LADIES\u2019 LEATHER SATCHELS, LADIES\u2019 LEATHER SATCHRLS LADIES\u2019 LEATHER SATCHELS Good assortment of Black and Colored fSat- chels at x , 8 CARSLEY\u2019S.2, = LADIES LEATHER AND WED BELTS LADIES\u2019 LEATHER ANA WEB BELTS LADIES\u2019 LEATHER AND WEB BELTS Fancy Belts of all kinds, in \u201cBond qualities, from 15c.s.CARSLEY \u2014 FANS FANS FANS FANS FANS FANS FANS FANS FANS New assorted patterns and colors, (rom lic to 35 cach, at S.CARSLEY'S, RIBBONS RIBRONS RIBBONS RIBBONS RIBBONS RIBBONS RIBBONS RIBBONS RISBUNS Good lines of assorted colors, pure silk, also satin 2} inches wide, only 13c, at 8.CARSLEY\u2019S.Parasols, Sunshades and Parachutes of all kinds made to order, repaired and re.covered on shortest time at S.Carsley\u2019s.\u2014 Copied FANCY MOJRE RIBBONS FANCY WMOIRE RIBBONS FANCY MOIRE RIBBONS New assortment of colors just put in stock this weck, at 8 week, & S.CARSLEY'S.MOIRE SASH RIBBONS MOIRE SASH RIBBONS MOIRE SASH RIBBONS Latest shades jast received, at S.CARSLEY'\u2019S.AND FILO-FLOSS AND FILO-FLUSS AND FILO-FLOS3 ROPE ROPE SILK ROPE SILK Full assortment in all shades, warranted to stand exposure to light and unchangeable in washing.All latest colors in stock at 8.CARSLEY\u2019S.SILE ABOUT BEST SPOOL COTTON ABOUT BEST SPOOL COTTON If you want the very best Spool Cotton ask for ~Ctapperton\u2019s and take no other.The name Clapperton & Co.is on every spool.To be had in the leading dry goods houses throughout the Dominion.S.CARSLEY.I beg to announce that I am now established in my new premises.1828 to 1834 Notre Dame St., where I am showing one of the finest assortments of Furniture in Canada.Having sold all my old stock before removing I have ALL NEW STYLES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT, and my prices will be found very low.Call and inspect the stock before purchasing elsewhere.CEORCE STEWA RT.= ARMOUR\u2019S Celebrated Canned Meats No Wholesale Grocery stock i8 now conside ered complete without a full assortment of Armour's Celebrated Canned Meats.Comprising Corned Beef, In 11b., 2 1b., 4 1b., 8 1b., and 14 Ib.Tins.Also Lunch Tongue, Ox \"Tongue, Chipped Dried Beef, Boneless Pig\u2019s feet and fine English Brawn.STOCK HELD BY Caverhill, Hughes & Co., L.Chaput, Fils & Co.George Childs & Co., D.Hatton & Co., Hudon, Hebert & Co., Kinloch, Lindsay & Co., Lockerby Bros., J.A.Mathewson & Co., N.Quintal & Fils, Ransom, Forbes & Co, Tees, Wilson & Co., Turner, Rose & Co., Ward, Carter & Co.Dufresne & Mongenais.Hudon & Orsali, Waolesale Trade Supplied by JAMES ALLEN, 6 St.Nicholas Street.Buy the ARMOUR LARD and ARMOUR ST HAMS and BACON.284 Valuable Lands For Sale in Manitoba.640 Acres of Splendid Prairie Lands Situated on Portage Creek, in the Thirteenth Township in the Sixth Range West of the principal Meridian, about Five Miles North of Portage La Prairie City.The following quarter sections of La dq, viz.\u2014 The Northeast Quarter of Section 18.Southeast Quarter of Section 17.Northwest Quarter of Section 17, Northeast Quarter of Section 5.The above Lands are situated on Portage Creek, and are not surpassed in fertility by any Lands in the North-West.They are dry and in a well settled neighborhood, with good roads, schools, etc., and within five miles of (wo railway stations.Terms of Payment Reasonable.Apply to J.W.JACKSON, Registrar, Portage La Prairie, Man.orat THE HERALD OFFICE.Montreal, May 26, 1888.127 GLEN HOUSE, WHITE MOUNTAINS, NH.Opens June 25th, Closes October Ist Special Rates to Families for Season.The most modern and finest located hotel in the mountains, commanding from its 500 feet of verandas an entire view of the Presi- dental range, perfect system of drainage, numerous springs of pure water, cuisine and service unsurpassed.Telegraph and P.O.in hotel.C.R.MILLIKEN & CO.C.R.MILLIKEN.L.P.ROBERTS, \"BISHOP'S COLLEGE, SCHOOL, Michaelmas Term, begins Sept.1.Full information from Rev, Principal Adams, D.C.L.June 28 155 AMUSEMENTS.SPARROW & JA COBS.THEATRE ROYAL.\u201c LAST WEEK OF THE SEASON.Commencing Monday, July 2, Afternoon and Evening.LILLY CLAY'S COLOSSAL CAIETY CO'Y.25 newspesial features.Grand Minuet De Boulanger.Revels of the Quartier Latin.The Daitty Stephanie Garotte.Parisian Chateau.Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday the sparkling bufesque ou Andron's La Mascotte entitled, \u201cTHE MASH | GOT.\u201d Thursdey, Friday and Saturday the spectacular burlesque of ROBINSON CRUSOE.Price of admission : 10,Wand 30 cents.Reserved seats 10 cents extra.Plan at Prinoeg Music Store.GREAT ATTRACTION DOMINION DAY, UNDER THI; TREES OF THE DE LOTBINIERE HOUSE A First-class Band has been engaged for the occasion and will entertain tourists with sweet music throughout the day.Those who have not yet visited this magnificent Summer Resort, which is nearly surrounded by water, and situated so that the fincst scenery of the St.Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers is in view from the Hotel, cannot have a better chance of doing so than now.In the evening, in a idition to the musie, a MAGNIFICENT DISPLAY OF FIREWORKS \u2018WILL TAKE PLACE.A Special Train will leave VAUDRUEIL AT (I P.M.SHARP, for those wishing to return on that evening.Nothing will be left undone to make the day an enjoyable one, and the management assure all of tleir comfort and enjoyment while there.Ottawa River Navigation Co.DOMINION DAY $2.75-OTTAWA & RETURN-$2.75 and One Fare from local points.Tickets valid to go on 29th and 30th June, return 3rd July.EXCURSION TO CARILLON.$1.00\u2014Str.PRINCE OF WALES-\u201481.00 Delightful trip and \u2018\u201c Home by the Rapids.\u201d Taka 7.45 a m.Train for Lachine.AFTERNOON TRIP\u2014Str.PRINCESS for Lake St.Louis and Down Rapids, leaving Canal Basin 1.39 p.m ; St.Gabriel Locks, 2 bn.Fare oe.Or take 3.2) train to Lachine.\u2018are fie.To St.Anne's\u20141,30 p.m.Train and return by Rapld-, 80 éents, ; SHOOT TETE RAPIDS\u2014Take 5 p.m.train for Lachine.Round trip.5) cents.Tickets :\u2014Bonaventure Depot, 118 and 174 St.James street, Balmoral and Windsor Hotels.R.W.SHHEPITERD, Jr, m 154 Manager.ART ASSOCIATION OF MONTREAL, Phillips\u2019 Square.The Galleries are open daily from 10 a.m to 5 p.m.Members and their families,(raa , Public, 25 cents.; Tuesday and Saturday evenings, 7.30 t0 9.30 .Admission free.A number ot fine Oil Paintings and Water- Color Drawings are placed, for sale, in, 113 smaller Gallery.June 12 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS H.YATES & SONS, HENRY YATES, C.E., Member Xnst.M.E,, London, England.Late Chief Engineer G.T.Ry., Mechanical Engineer Great Western Railway, (and senior partner of the late firm of Yates & Stratford.) HERBERT YATES, C.E, M.L.M.E,, Graduate R.X.E.G., Cooper\u2019s Hill, England, 1880.B.W.YATES, \u2018Civil and Military Engineer, R.M.G., Kingston, Ont.Graduate First« Class, 1881, \u2019 Consulting Engineers (Mechanical and Civil), Draughtsmez, &e., &c.Railway and General Contractors and Railway Supply Agents.Steel Rails, Wrought Beams, @irders, &¢., INSPECTED AND TESTED.Tlans and Estimates of all Kinds Prepared.OFFICES: PETROIT & BRARXNTFORD._ June \u201cwo _- _ du 147 NOTICE.mt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the British & Foreign Marine Ins.Cs.(LIMITED), OF LIVERPOOL; having devosited the sum of one huadred housand dollars in the hands of the Receiver- General of Canada, hasduly reecived alicense 160 carry an the business in Canodaof Iniand Marine Insurance, with chief office at Mount.real.EDWARD L.BOND, Chiet Agent for Canada.lm 134 June § \\ eu çludirg DAVID A, WELL'S SPEECH.An Eminent smecerican Pats the Fisheries Question in nn Fair Light.At a dinner at the Reform Club at New York, Mr.David A.Wells, whose authority in public affairs it is not necessary to dwell upon, made a 8pzech on the fisheries question, from which we make some extracts.He said :\u2014 I may be presumptuous, but it seams to me that this matter has not us yet been presented to tire people of this country in a manner so free from legal technicalities and the language of diplomacy as to admit of a popular understanding and full appreciation of it; and that in default thereof opportunity has been afforded to violent political partizansin the Senate of the United States, and out of the Senate, to indulge in all manner of inisrepresentation and excits a vast amount ot unfair and unwarranted prejudice.In fact, judging from the tone of the press and the utierances in Washington, there would seem t> be but one side to this question.The Dominion authorities and fishermen are \u2018 brutal,\u201d \u201cunred- sonable,\u201d \u201cgrasping.\u201d The Americapsars \u201cgenerous,\u201d ** Jong-suflering,\u201d asking for s'mule right and justice, and wilkng at all times to concede right an: Justice.Lut, gentlemen, there are two Sides to every Cuestion, and there are two sides 10 this, although 1 am afraid it is rather venturesome to stand up ard say it atter tLe action of the Senate of the United Stutes has practically denied it.But I have studied up this qrestion somewhat, aud 1 have even mao?a journey dwn to Newt.undland to ses What I could further learn about it by personal intercourse and observation.And this is the way I Jock at the troublesome business.* * * The people of Newfoundland are, as a whole, wretchedly poor, and they inhabit one of the poorest, most desolate, and unattractive countries on the face of the globe outside of the polar rezions.Thers is not timber enough on the island to puild a good-sized house; its climate is practically eight months winter and four months spring and summer ; its agriculture is limited to potatoes and oats.But the sea to these hardy islanders is their farm, and nature, as if in compensation for denying them every, almost every other bounty and blessing, would seem to have desired to especially favor them in respect to almost the only one industry, that of fishing, that 18 open to them.Here live the fish that constitute a desirable and cheap food for the people of other countries.Here, naturally, come the \u201c capelin,\u201d the \u201cherring,\u201d and the \u201csquid,\u201d which constitute the bait that is essential for successful deep-sea flshing.Here are the only harbors and inlets for shelter and repair, and for renewing supplies of ice and fuel.What more natural than that these Newfoundland people, restricted to one industry as a means of earning their living, should jealosly guard their sole natural privileges, and desire to make the most of them?And why should they not?Has not the great people to the south of them taught them this policy for years by preceptand example ?Is not the whole present tiscal and commercial policy of the United States based on the principle that what we have got we mean to keep exclusively, and what other people have got we mean to get if we can?* * * * x * \u2018Whatever of advantage, therefore, accrues to the people of Newfoundland and the other British maritime provinces in respect to inshore fishing within the three mile line, is shown by so good a title that no administration or court of the United States has ever questioned it.And yet the right has never been acquiesced in by our fishermen; and whenever the British eolonial authorities bave endeavored to prevent or punish trespassing, there have always been men, like Frye and Ingalls, who are ready to denounce such acts as outrages without a shadow of justification, and publie sentiment has so often sympathized with them that the two countries have more than once been brought almost to the verge of war.But so tenacious are we on this side of the line of our fishery privileges that States like Connecticut, Maryland, and Virginia will not allow citizens o other States, or even their own citizens, to capture as much as a single boat-load oi oysters or clams within what are regarded as State territorial water, except in pursuance of State laws for that pur- pcse made and provided.And within the last two years furthermore, and while this fishery trouble upon the eastern shore of the continent has been going on the United States has summarily ssized and condemned vessels on the Pacific for catching seals in open ocean, many miles away from any land, on the assumption that the territorial ownership of Alaska and the \u201cAleutian,\u201d or \u201cSeal,\u201d Islands gives us exclusive jurisdiction and control over all adjacent waters for the pur- pese of making the seal fishery cxclu- sive, irrespective of any three-mile limitation.* * * * * * The next special fishing advantage which Newfoundland enjoys by reason of territorial location and possession is in respect to bait.Into her bays and fiords there come in succession at different periods of the year immense numbers of herring, of a small fish called the \u201ccapeline,\u201d and the \u201csquid.\u201d the use of which as bait has be=n proved by all experience to be essential to successful cod- fishing ; this' fish not biting freely at \u201cgalt\u201d or any other kind of bait.The bait, being captured solely within their bays and harbors and from their shores, is as much under the exclusive control and ownership of the people of Newfoundland as oysters or lobsters taken from the waters of Long Island Sound or Chesapeake Bay, or cotton grown in Alabama, or silver extracted {rom the mountains of Colorado, are under the exclusive control and ownership of the American people.The importance and value of a supply of this fresh bait for successful codfishing has been denied by Mr.Frye and other representatives of the Maine and Massachusetts fishing interest, but the fact that by the Treaty of 1818 the privilege of buying bait as a right was expressly denied to American fishermen, and that the sum of $5,500,000 was paid by the United States under the Treaty of 1870, mainly in consideration of the granting of this right of a free supply during the continuation of the treaty, by the British provinces, shows that such a denial is the merest subterfuge.There is no pretence, moreover, that the fishermen of Newfoundland have any desire to adopt the dog-in-the-manger policy that 1s, neither uus their surplus bait, nor allow others to do so; but, knowing the value of it, feeling that it is their exclusive property, and that it is about the only thing in the nature of property of which they are possessed, they desire, if they part with it, to obtain in return something which seems to them in the nature of a fairequivalent.\"They say t the United States and to American fishermen, If we allow you to come down and occupy our waters and our territory, and freely enjoy every privilege which has come to us through geographical Jocation and territorial possession, in- an unrestricted sup ly of \u201cHE MONTREAL don tD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.bait, in common with wood, water, and facilities for repairs, it is only fair that you should allow us equally free access to your markets for the sale of our tish ; that you will not continue to im- puse a tax that amounts almost to prohibition on the fish that we may bring to you.But this is exactly what the com- aratively small number of persons in fassachusetts and Maine, who represent tl:e Newfoundland fishery interests, and the opponents of the treaty, emphatically refuse to do ; and horein we find the next point 1n this contrpversy which it is desirable that the gmerican people should that is the reason whv nterest are unable te cone ent.In short, it is the tax t a pound on the import of salted apd pickied fish\u2014a tax on the cheap ffod of the masses of the people\u2014 standyin the way of peace and amity.Put gâlt fish on the free list and there will be an end at once and for ever of all digputes and difficulties with our northern neighbors in respect to this wnola fishery business.One would naturally say and think that if two parties to a business transaction found themselves vñable to agree on what terms they of half a ¢ would mutually do business, they would agree to disagree, and let cach other severely alone.We know very well what public opinion anl the law would say if one of the parties should under such circumstances undertaks to compel the other to part with his goods, wares or merchandise against his will, on terms that the former alone should dictate.Public opinion and law would agree that the act was robbery, and those concerned in it would soon find themselves in prison.But as betwean nations the case seems to be different.Doubtless, it Messrs.Frye, Inzalls, Evarts & Co.were interrogated on tins point, they would flatly deny any intention to invade anybody\u2019s rights, But at the same time they endeavor to evade this issue and mystify the American people by asserting that we have been wronged by a denial to our fishing vessels of the right to enter the ports of the British maritime provinces for the purpose of trade, although all provincial vessels are allowed freely to enter American ports for such purposes; and this denial ; has been without doubt popularly regarded by the people of the United States as a most unwarrantable and unfriendly proceeding on the part of Canada, and as fully justifying severe retaliation.But to this it may be first replied, that there is mo more unquestionable attribute of the sovereignty of any country than the right to regulate trade with foreign countries, even to the extent of absolute prohibition ; and if we are in search of practical illustrations of this principle, we need go no further than the practice and | experience of the United States to find them.Thus, no foreigner can coms into any port of the United States to trade vessels, in the sense of making the vessel he desires to sell orexchadge American property.No foreigner in a foreign- built vessel can carry cargo between any two American ports for the purpose of trade except under a penalty of confiscation of both vessel and cargo; and a voyage between San Francisco on the Pacific and any port on the Atlantic, via Cape Horn, or the Cape of Good Hope, or the Isthmus of Panama, is held to be traffic of this character.*¥ * * It is no infraction of international law for a nation to levy export taxes or duties on any product passing out of its territory; and the only reason why the United States has not heretofore levied such duties is that, alone of all nations, such a procedure is forbidden by its Constitution or organic law.If the authorities of the British provinces, therefore, deny to our fishing ves- - sels the privilege of trading in their ports, they are uot only acting strictly within their domain of right and international law, but are doing nothing more unfriendly than the Government of the United States does all the time.But there is something more in this pretence that the people of the United States have been outraged by a denial to their fishing vessels of the right to trade in the ports of Newfoundland.In fact, thera are two very big Africans hidden in this fence.In the first place there is no trade that can be carried on at the out- of-the-way ports of Newfoundland that does not concern fish.There is nothing else to trade for, nothing else that tha pecple who live at these places in Newfoundland have got to trade with.Far- thermore, a fishing vessel is not a trading vessel, is not fitted to trade, and carries nothing of any account to use for trade, except fish.The parading as an outrage that American ishing vessels are prohibited from trading in the ports of Newfoundland, is nothing more or less than an effort to divert attention from and diszuise the fact that the trade in question has relations mainly to the supply of bait.We use the qualifying word \u201cmainly\u201d because there is another very curious feature of interest in connection with this business.As an incident, or rather sequence, of the existing marifime and fiscal policy of the United States, under which its former great mercantile marine has almost vanished from the ocean, and an American sailor is almost a curiosity, it has become exceedingly difficult, or altogether impossible, in recent years, for vessels of the United States prosecuting the Newfoundland Bank fisheries to secure American seamen ; and, if none others were obtainable, nothing is more certain than that this special business, about which all this international difficulty has arisen, would have to be substantially abon- doned.The result, therefore, is that from 50 to 70 per cent.of the crews of New England vessels which fish on the coast of Newfoundland are unnaturalized foreigners\u2014citizens of the British prov- inces\u2014who have no intention of ever becoming naturalized ; who have no interest in our country or its institutions, and who in the event of à war with England would be found in the enemy\u2019s fleet.In further illustration of the extent to which the so-called American industry, which is demanding protection through a continuation of the tariff on salt codfish, even to the ultimatum of war, has become in reality a foreign industry, it may be stated that according to the returns recently made to the Canadian authories, it appears that out of the 145 lives lost from the fleet that sailed from Gloucester, Mass., for the year 1887, far more than a majority werg fishermen from the provinces and sulects of Great Britain.The claim, which was formerly well-founded, that these fisheries are the nurseries for the training of American seamen, is now, therefore, no longer valid ; but under the recent United States statute prohibiting the importation of foreign contract laborers, the manning of New Eag- land fishing vessels in these home ports with imported crews of this character has become a somewhat more difficult matter than it once was; inasmuch as through the representations and protests of the Knights of Labor the Boston Custom-house authorities have interfered to sume extent to prevent it.It is obvious, however, that if these fishing vessels were allowed to enter the ports of the British maritime provinces for purposes other than those allowel under the existing treaty\u2014namelry, for MONDAY.JULY, 2, 1888 shelter, repairs, fuel, and water\u2014and were permiited to buy bait and have free communication with the shore, the law prohibiting the importation of foreign contract labor would be effectually evaded.Ienve another reason why Messrs.Frye and Cu.are so strenuous in dewanding for our tishing vessels the right to trade in the provincial ports, and are so ready to characterize as an outrage the action of the provincial authorities in refusing it.* * Not less singalar and matter of wonderment is the apparent inability of the business men of the United States t) sea that it is impossible to separate a d segregate fishery rights from the great mass of American commercial rights and interests \u2014 agriculture, manufactures, mining, and transportation\u2014which stand to the fermer in tie relation of 99 to 1; and who, at the arbitrary and unjust promptings of capital interest in Gloucester and other New England towns, which dces not represent as many as a hundred small vessels which they cannot man with American crews, whose business, according to all evidence, has not been any more prosperous since the termination of the treaty admitting Canadian fish than it was before, are apparently willing that the United States should suspend all commercial relations with a country that is our third best customer, coming next after Great Britain and Trance, which buys from us every year more than she does from Great Britain ; which paid last year more in duties on anthracite coal exported from the United States than the value of all the fish which the United States imported from all countries ; whose territory is conterminous with our own far more than 3,000 miles, and who, tinally, seem to consider a war with Great Britain a matter of less importance than the reduction of a tariff tax on the imported fish food of the American people.All of which goes to show what an excellent bargain President Cleveland and his commissioners made when they secured the signatures of Mr.Chamberlain and Sir Charles Tupper to the latest Washington treaty.a LOCAL NEWS.;__S.CansLey has the finest assortment of black Chantilly and Spanish lace in the city.| Tue Best CrGar is without doubt the : famous \u201c Otello \u201d cigar.This is the universal opinion.Try it.\u2019 Dysrersra CURED-\u2014In a short time by drinking St.Leon Water.One of the simplest and eflicacious remedies yet known.Head office 54 Victoria square.ÿ BEFORE ORDERING your summer suit : call at Adler\u2019, 47 Beaver Hall Hill, and ; examine his line of summer suitings and ! pantings.Satisfaction and tit guarantsed.Visitors to the city should not fail to \u2018gee the magnificent range of jerseys shown at S.Carslevs.How Wire Your Hanns Ark\u2014 Yes, using Dyers Jelly of Cucumber and Roses makes my skin soft and white.Druggists keep it.W.A.Dyer & Co.,\u201d Montreal.Tite TREASURER of the Protestant House of Industry and Refuge acknowledges, with thanks, a donation of $25 to the funds of the House from St.Martin's Church, per Rev.G.Oshorne Troop, rector.ENJoYMENTS.\u2014ÀA sweet smoke is surely a pleasant enjoyment, and where to get it is the next question.A full and complete stock of Havana and other imported cigars always on hand ; also cigarettes.All brands at E.A.Gerth\u2019s, Queen\u2019s Block, St.Catherine street.FuUNERAL\u2014Sub-Constable McCullougt\u2019s funeral on Saturday was largely attended.The Chief of Police, Sub-Cnief Kehoe, six sergeants and fifty members of the force were present, together with a deputation from the Garrison Artillery, of which deceased was a member, and à large number of citizens.ATTEMPTED SvicIDE\u2014Wm.Granville, aged 30, attempted suicide by jumping into the canal near Lachine on Saturday.He was rescued and brought to No.6 station by a special constable.When arrested he had on no shoes or stockings.He is said to be addicted to drink, and %as probably suffering from an attack of delirium tremens.Orrr.\u2014 Mrs.John A.Perkins died on Sunday morning at the advanced age of 76 veare.Mrs.Perkins was born in Montreal and through her long life was identified in most of the charitable enterprises of this city, the Ladies\u2019 Benevolent Society, the Hervey Institute, and the Industrial Rooms.For sixty years she was a respected member of St.Andrew\u2019s Church.Tne Excursions To-Day.\u2014Dominion Day, which occurred yesterday (Sunday), will be observed to-day with the usual picnics, etc.Among the noticeanle events are the temperance demonstration to Mystic, the St.Jude\u2019s picnic to Cush- ing\u2019s Grove, the hop at Ste.Rose Club House, the St.Patrick\u2019s picnic to St.Rose, the l'orresters\u2019 excursion to Otter- burn, and that of the Oddfellows to Highgate Springs, The event inthe city proper will be the picnic of the Gaile Francaise on the Exhibition ground, for which an extensive programme has been arranged.LooKING INTO THE Crams.\u2014Ald.Wilson.W.Kennedy and the City Surveyor visited William street Saturday to inspect the houses said to have been damaged by raising the sidewalk levels.They also visited Queen street where numerous complaints have been made against Messrs.Ives and Geo.Brush on the score of placing iron and boilers on the footpath.Mr.Brush claimed the right to use the street as & taxpayer in the legitimate exercise of his business, but as a new sidewalk is in process of construction he was informed that the street must be kept clear in future.AN Oun FRIEND GoNE.\u2014Capt.F.Archer, of the steamship Tower Hill, died at sea and was buried 1,681 miles east of Sandy Hook while on a voyage from London to New York on June 2Ist.The cause of death was diphtheria, which developed after leaving England.His wife and | daughter were on board and nursed him.- Mr.Doramus, a passenger, read the burial service.Capt.Archer was well known in Montreal, having commanded the Temperley liners Thames and Ottawa, and the Allan liners Hibernian and Moravian.He took charge of the Tower Hill five years ago.Posr Orrirce Cuances.\u2014The following new postal arrangements come into force on July 1st, with respect to mails for rence.As regards River du Loup en Bas, Cacouna, and Little Metis,the mails will leave daily by the 10.15 p.m.G.T.R.train.For Pointe a Pic, Murray Bay, and Tadousac, the mails will close only on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday at 6 p.m., and be despatched by Richelieu steamers leaving the wharf at 7 pm.Letters mailed after the closing of the mails on those days are sent by Richmond and Quebec mail conductor, whose mail is transferred to the Saugue- , ney steamer at Quebec, RAILWAY CASES.Claims for Compensation Granted.Orrawa, June 30.\u2014In the Exchequer Court this morning Judge Burbidge delivered judgment in claws against Government for expropriations of land for &$t.Charles branch of the Intercolonial Railway, awarding damages as follows: Corporation of Village of Lauzon, $396 ; Jean Vezine, $2,571; Felix Guay, $708; Edmond Samson, $1,620; Benoni Guay, S1,070 : Joseph Yerrie, 32,256; Geo, Perrie, legal representative, $1,6U5; Marcel Perrie, $3,157, widow of Louis Carrier, £642.The compensation money is to be paid to claimants on their delivering a proper acquittance of same.Before the Railway Committee of the Privy Council to-day a lengthy argument took place in connection with the application of the Guelph Junction Railway Company for an order authorizing them to use some property belonging to the Grand Trunk Company.Hon.S.H.Blake appeared for the Grand Trunk and Hon.R.W.Scott for the applicants.The Cominittee decided to send an engineer to report on the dispute before taking action.FROM THE DOMINION CAPITAL, Official (hanges\u2014Arrival of the Kingston Militia Boys.° (SPECIAL TO THE HERALD.) Orrawx, July 1.\u2014Mr.Gordon, who has been appointed to succeed Mr.Forget as Clerk of the Northwest Council, is one of Dewdney\u2019s proteges, and has been only two years in Canada.Mr.Burgess, Deputy Minister of Interior, leaves for legina to-morrow to corsult with Mr.Dewdney, the new Min- ist:r of the Interior, 1n rezard to the general land policy of the Government for the future.The fourteenth battalion of Canadian militia arrived here this morning from Kingston, under command of Lieut.-Col, Henry R.Smith.The regiment marched to eburch this afternoon and will spend Dominion day here.ce TO REPLACE SENATOR FERRIER.Joseph Hickson, Esq., for President, Hop, Henry Steans Director.Acron VALE, Que., July 1.\u2014At a board meeting of the Beauharnois Junction Railway Company, held at the office of the company here to-day, the Hon.Henry Stearns was elected a director, in lace of the late Senator Ferrier, and oseph Hickson, Esq.was elected president of the company, to fill that office rendered vacant by the death of the late Senator Ferrier.Suitable resolutions of condolence with and sympathy for the family of the late Senator Ferrier were unanimously passed.ee HE HAS FASTED FORTY-ONE DAYS.Mr! Zachar Will Take Food, He Says, When He Gets Good and Ready.Racixg, Wis, June 30.\u2014Zachar, the faster, is keeping up his intention of beating the world\u2019s record.He has now been forty-one days without food.He remains in bed most of the time now, sleeping quietly.He is quite thin and looks like a man who has passed through a severe spell of sick- ress.The family states that he still persists in refusing all food offered him.He, spends his mornings in bed, and on pleasant afternoons wraps himself up in a blanket aad goes out in the yard and sits under a tree.He will not take anything, not even his medicine, from any one but bis physician.That Zachar is demented is certain.He is very quiet, and when he talks is rational in hisremarks.He gets a little testy when pressed to eat, and says he knows his own business and when he wants anything he will let them know.How much longer nature will be able to sustain life in this man is a question.The likelihood that he will continue to live for ten or twelve days more is very good, as he has not yet reached the stage of extreme weakness, but retains considerable vitality, The only thing that can be said with a certainty is that Zachar is om his forty- recond day of his self-imposed fast, and is in much better condition than would seem pessible.a WHIPPING THE QUILL DRIVER Description of a Fignt in a Western Sanctuary By the Dcfeated Editor.[From the Virginia Territorial Enterprise .] Wes.George, editor of the Bellevue (Idaho) Herald, had a big fight the other day with a man weighing 240 pounds, and tells all aboutit in his paper the next day.Weg.George is an old Nevada warrior, who weighs about as much as an average Dayton potatoe.George says :\u2014 Yesterday afternoon, about three o'clock, Road Overseer Burch, of Broadford district, entered the Herald office with blood in his eve.Approaching the editors table Mr, Burch laid his left hand on the editor's shoulder.\u201cHowdy do,\u201d spoke the editor, continuing at his work.\u201cSay, Wes.,\u201d\u201d roared out Burch, with a whiskey breath, \u201cwhat did you put that stuff in your pager for?\u201d \u201cBecause you told me most of it, and because I believe the rest,\u201d and the editor continued e: \u2026 \u2018ng up his books.After this low.a lot of dialogue which consistr principaily of dashes and exclamation points, when the editor says: \u201cJust then we whizzed out of our chair, but our coat collar clung to the 240 pound read tax bulldozer's hand with paste-like tenacity.The fight now became fast and furious, and is thus enthusiastically described by the editor :\u2014* As we sailed to the floor, emack ! went Burch\u2019s No.11 (width EE) boot against our noble brow; slap! went his fist over our head.Then there was a double scuffle with Burch to get his boots in our mouth ; the editorial chair broke as we struck it with our flying body.Burch kept kicking and we kept out of his reach as much as possible.\u201d Luckily for Mr.Burch outsiders pre- gently entered the sanctum, who caught him and prevented him from wholly wearing himself out.As it was, for a time it was feared he had melted his feet.The rescue of the fat man is thus graphically explained: \u2014 \u201cBurch was soon caught hold of by his daughter, Mrs.Sutter, who said to the editor, \u2018 You dirty cur, don\u2019t you abuse my pa!\u2019 and her intended slap was warded off.\u201d Cee Origin of Swearing.The brother of the fairy Pari Banou was only thirty inches high.His beard was thirty-two feet long and extended horizontally in front of him as he walked.He invented swearing to express his feelings when poor biscuit were set on his table.His wife could always make biscuit to please him bv using Imperial watering places on the lower St.Law- $500 REWARD ! Cream Tartar Baking Powder.5 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.\u201c MONTREAL WALL PAPER FACTORY.Ÿ LL eH 5 LS 1 {FORMERLY MOLSONS COLLEGE J © Zo COLIN McARTHUR & CO.\u2019 NEW SAMPLES for 1888-9 are XOW OUT and Travellers on the Road.22% The Trade requested to reserve their orders till they see our new goods.15 Voltigeurs Street, Montreal.Samples to the Trade sent on application.THOS.ROBERTSON & CO.MONTREAL; AND GIL ASGOW, IRON, STEFL°AND RIETAL MERCHANTS.Railway Supplies, Plumbers' and Steamfitters\u2019® Supplies.SOLE AGENTS FOR #» COLTNESS,\u201d \u201cDALMELLINGTON.\u201d \u201cGARTSHERRIE,\u201d ¢ EGLINTON,\u201d and ¢ LONSDALD HEMATITE\u201d PIG IRONS, \u201cDALZALL Steel Boiler Plato \u201cSW ANVK'S\u201d Sanitary ppliances.w LUKENS?\u201d Chutreonl Iron Boiler Pinte, | THOS.GLOVER'S\u201d ry Gas Meters Manufacturers of WHOUGIT JRON TUBING, for Gas, Steam eo Water.Also, BOILER TUBES.made from Iron or Steel.gs ox MONTREAL.2 a .NUFACTURERS LLL te _\u2014\u2014_ or CRUSADER, 10 Cus.McINTYRE, SON & CO.DRY GOODS IMPORTERS, SOLE ACENTS IN CANADA FOR Ferd.Rouillon XID GLOVES, Grenoble.Erskine, Beveridge & Co's LINENS, Dunfermline, Jan, 23 HHALTE FOR ALI.Holloway's Pills and Ointment.TERE PILLS Purify the Blood, correct all Disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH, KIDNEYS AND BOWELS.They invigorate and restore to health Debilitated Constitutions, and are invaluable in all Complaints incidental to Females of all ages.For children and the aged they are priceless THE OINTMENT fsan infallible remedy for Baa Logs, Bad Breasts, 01d Wounds, Sores and Ulcers, and is famous for Gout and Rheumatism.For disorders of the Chest it has no equal.For Sore Throats, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, Glandular Swellings, and all Skin Diseases it has norival, and for contracted and stiif joints it acts like a charm.Manufactured only at Thomas HOLLOWAY\u2019S Establishment, 8 OXFORD STREET (late 533 OXFORD STREET,) LONDON, and are sold at 1s.13d., 2s.9d., 4s.6d., 118., 228., and 33s.each Box or Pot, and may be had of all Medicine Vendors throughout the World.$65 Purchasers should look to the Label on the Pots and Boxes.If the address is 533 Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.In consequence of Imitations of THE WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE which are calculated to deceive the Public, Léa and Perrins have to request that Purchasers see that the Label on every botile bears their Signature thus\u2014= : e Lez Arras Come\" Æ without which no bottle of the original WORCESTERSHIRE i SAUCE is genuine.Ask for LEA and PERRINS\u2019 Sauce, and see Name on Wrapper, Label, Bottle and Stopper.Wholesale and for Export by the Proprietors, Worcester; Crosse and Blackwell, London, &*c., &c.; and by Grocers and Oilmen throughout the World.LIEBIG COMPANY'S A EXTRACT MEAT.FINEST AND CHEAPEST MEAT FLAVOURING STOCK FOR SOUPS, MADE DISHES & SAUCES.Cookery Books post free on application.To be had of all Storekecpers, Grocera #,* Ask for the COMPANY\u2019S Extract, and see and chemists.od that it bears Baron Liebig\u2019s Signature g Sole Agents for Canals anf the 4 © ates (wholesale only) C.Dayid & Coin Blue Ink across the Label.9, Fenchurch Avenue, London, England, Ara.WHEREAS the wires of the Bell Telephone Company have been tampered with by parties familiar with line coustruction, and the service of the Company has been thercby impaired, a Reward of $300 will be paid for information leading to the detection and conviction of any person interfering with or injuring the property of the Bell Telephone i Company.C.F.SISE, Vice-Presideut ESTABLISHED 1825- FOR INFANTS, INVALIDS, THE AGED.CHEAPEST.BEST AND à AUCTION SALES.By Benning & Barsalou.HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE.The subscribers will sell on Tuesday, the 3rd July Next, by order of JOHN McD.HAINES, Curator to Estate W.Dodd & Co., at ihe residence of the Insolvents, No.551 Dorchester street, corner of St.Lawrence street, the whole of the Household Furniture, consisting of 1 Piano, Parlor, Dining room and Bedroom Furai- ture, also Kitchen Uteasils, Sale at TEN o\u2018clock.BENNING & BARSALOU, 15 Auctioneers.By James Stewart & Co.VALUABLE PROPERTY ST.CATHERINE STREET.Fine Business Site.The undersigned will ofter the Property known as 2446 St.Catherine Street, AND\u2014 And Lot No.1497 St, Antoine Ward, At their Rooms,1761 Notre Dame Street, On Thursday, the Sth July.The Lot is one of the finest in that rapidly increasing part of the city, measuring 23 x 147 fect, with a substantial Cut-stone Residence, which can be, at a very moderate outlay, made suitable tor commercial purposes.Terms easy.Sale at ELEVEN o'clock.JAMES STEWART & CO., 155 Auctioneers.JAMES STEWART & CO.General Auctioneers 1671 NOTRE DAME STREET, COR.ST.JOHN; Telephone 1857.PROPERTIES FOR SALE CN SHERBROOKE ST, EAST AND WEST, 8.CATHERINE ST., EAST AND WEST, CRESCENT 8T., Above St.Catherine\u201424.9 x 100+ BISHOP ST., Both sides\u201420 x 129 and 24 x 103, ST.JAMES ST.West of Victoria Square\u201445 x 66.ST.ANTOINE ST., Both sides, corner Guy streets ST.LAWRENCE ST., Above Sherbrooke\u201430x1060, with four tenements also 50x100 on Bt.Charles Borrommee street, WILLIAM 8T,, Corner Ottawa street.ST.HUBERT ST., Near Sherbrooke ~24.6 x 150 SUSSEX ST., West side.BUCKINGHAM AVE,, West side\u201425 x 44e ISLAND ST., Point St.Charles\u20141060% 100.COTTAGES ON SHERBROOKE ST., WEST END, DORCHESTER ST., \u2018WEST END.For further particulars apply to JAMES STEWART & CO, 76 781 Notre Dame streat, Paris Green! Paris Green! WARRANTED CHEMICALLY PURE PARIS GREEN, in 50-1b.pails, 100-1b.kegs and 1-1b.boxes, FOR SALE BY WALTER H.COTTINGHAM, 56 ST.PETER STREET MONTREAL.Telephone \"767.June 16 144 Stationers, Grocers, Eic., ete., KEEFP AULD\u2019S FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN: i ENGINE, i5 H.P.Address care MANAGER, HERALD Office, 6 Beaver Hall H IL National Colonization Lotterv.Under the Patronage of Rev.Father Labelle, Established in I8S4, under the Act of Quebec, 62 Viet., Chap.36, for the Benefit of the Diocesan Societies of Colonization of the Province of Quebec.CLASS D.The Fourteenth Monthly Drawing will take place on Wednesday, 1Sth July, 1S88, AT TWO O'CLOCK P.M.PRIZES VALUE, - $60,000 FIRST SERIES.PRIZES VALUE.coiureeruneiaenes $50,000.00 Principal Lot\u20141 Real Estate worth.$5,000.00 LIST OF PRIZES, 1 Real Estate worth.$ 5,000 $35,000 1 Rea! Fstate worih.2.000 - 2,000 10 Building Lots in Montrea 300 £3,000 15 Bedroom or Drawing- il room Suites, choiee.200 3,000 20 do.do.\u2026.100 2,000 100 Gold Watches.50 5,000 1000 Silver Watches.ie 20 20,000 1000 do dO.Le.c00csouse 10 10,000 2147 lots worth., Vascoanenesessaunes $50,000 TICKETS - = $8.00.SECOND SERIES.PRIZES VALUE.covociieaan .$10,000.00 Principal Lot\u20141 Real Estate worth.1,000.00 LIST OF PRIZES: 1 Real Estate worth.$1,020 $1,000 100 Gold Chains worth.40 4,909 1000 Toilet Sets worth.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.5 5,003 1101 lots worth « = = - $10,000 TICKETS - - 25 Conts.i Offers are made to all winners to pay the prizes cash, less à commission of 10 per cent, Winners\u2019 names not published unless spe clally authorized.8.E.LEFEBVRE, Secretary, 19 SL, James street, Montreal SLATIVE JOTTINGS.del Farm \u2014What the Commission s of Mr.Ritchie \u2014 Obstructive acties of the Opposition\u2014Political and Personal.(SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD.) Quesgc, June 30.The House met at one o'clock, but only sixteen members were present in their seats.The Speaker took the chair and read a message from the Council announcing the passing of several bills from the lower House.At this juncture Hon.Mr.Flynn called the Spaaker\u2019s attention to the fact that there was not a quorum of members present.Thereupon the Speaker, Premier and Opposition leader looked round the House surprised, good natured smiles at the same time playing on their faces.A count out took place and the House adjourned until Tuesday morning at 11 o\u2019clock.The Lieutenant-Governor gives a five o'clock tea and reception to His Highness Prince Roland Napoleon Bonaparte on Dominion Day from 4 to 6 p.m, at Spencer Wood.In the evening the Hon.Premier entey- tains the Prince to dinner.Among tha invited guests are Prince Roland, Speaker Marchand, Hon.Mr.Taillon, French Consul Dubail, Father Labelle, M.Paul de Cazes, private secretary Boivin and the Prince\u2019s secretary, M.de Bregonne.\u2018Where the agricultural model farm is to be placed is a question that 18 troubling the minds of the farming members in the House.Each of course has his favorite spot, and each would like to have a model farm in hig own county.This, of course, is impossible, and the general opinion is that the House and cabinet will be guided by the report, au elaborate one, in French, of the commission appointed last year.According to this report the farm of Mr.F.N.Ritchie, at Ste.Anne de la Perade, à couple of hours ride from Quebec, and one from Three Rivers.The report says:\u2014 \u201c It is one of the finest farms which the commission visited in the Province of Quebec situated a few acres from the village, on the Pacific Railway.It borders on the St.Lawrence and it is also watered by one of the branches of the beautiful river St.Ann.The site is cen- tral\u2014a few miles below Three Rivers and about 40 miles above Quebec.The soil as a rule in this parish is of excellent quality, and has the greatest advantages in the culture.The buildings are magnificentlv laid out.The agricultural implements comprise the best.The cattle are incontestably of a superior class.The report of the cleanliness and accommodation of the buildings leaves nothing more to be desired.For the simple and - economizing work in the care of tbe cattle here are the best stalls seen by the commission.In winter all work necessary for the care of the cattle is done without going outside of the building.Everything is marke d with intelligence and good taste and we do not hesitate to say that this system of caring for cattle way serve to be a good guide to those who find themselves obliged to build.It is more comfortable than the ordinary system used by our cultivators, and it is more advantageous.This system commands the highest approbation of all practical men.The buildings cannot be compared with those of the Quelph Farm in point of taste and richness, but they are more accommodating and more simple.Above all it takes less work to keep the cattle in a good edndition.There is steam in each stable, where hot water can be procured for the heating of the fodder and beverage for the cattle.The steam is also used for the thrashing machine and also for a circular saw to cut the firewood and on several other implements of great usefulness.The heard of cattle is the finest that the Commission visited.It comprises 62 head of of cattle, Holstein, Jerseys, Ayrshires, and Canadien, which are crossed.There are 38 milch cows, of which 18 are magnificent Holstein.At the last exhibition at Quebec the Holsteins of Mr.Ritchie carried off the following first prizes: .Bull of four years and more.Bull of three years.Bull of two years.Calf of six months.Calf less than six months.Cows of four years and more.Heifers of one year.Heifers of six months.Heifers of less than six months.10.Herd of Holsteins.Mr.Ritchie's cattle had the same success at the last Provincial Exhibition of Ontario, held at Ottawa.He exhibited nine beasts and obtained seven prizes.This Holstein steer carried off the Jubilee medal, the greatest reward offered \u2014that is to say, he outdid all others.Mr.Ritchie also occupies himself in the raising of horses.His farming is equally good in everything else.In the space of five acres Mr.Ritchie raised two crops, one of hay, the other of buckwheat, which came up successfully.He has the most improved and highly commended agricultural implements.The Commission would have been anxious to visit many other farms in the different parts of the province equal and, perhaps, superior to the one above-men- tioned, but it was impossible, because to visit them would take months.For this reason the Commission thought t wiser to limit their visits to the farms hat were on the route, and to continue the vigiting of the agricultural colleges, which are naturally the principal points to ptudy.\u201d From the above it is easily to be seen hat the Commission found Mr.Ritchie's jarm equal to the wants of a model farm.ast Saturday, on the invitation of Mr.Ritchie, I visited his fine farm, and hough not presuming to be an expert in agriculture or the raising of cattle, was purprised to find such excellence in land nd animals.Tne manor, stock and airy farm is an historical spot, having been long the residence of the Methot hmily, Seigneurs of Ste.Anne.he old manor house, with its strong stove walls, of fortress strength, ptill stands in the most picturesque part of the farm, shaded by grand old butter- puts, elms and maple trees, mixed with hp few towering pines.The St.Lawrence flows to the south of the manor, while p branch of the River St.Anne bounds he farm on the west.Rich meadows with fine clover and timothy are all around, perfuming the air in which are feeding the well fed blood cattle.À better situation for a model farm it would be hard to find in tre Province.The re- ort of the commission is most fair an: impartial and does but justice to Mr.Ritchie's intelligence and good taste, an | credit to the critical knowledge of the members ofthe commission.There are 552 acres, 200 of which remains in a fine maple sugar bush.Fleven calves and two colts were added to the stock this year.The youngsters were strong and healthy, the Holsteins being remarkably well marked and sleek in coat.By the use of the engine power, Mr.Ritchie can do the whole work of this farm with the help of only six males.It must also be remembered that his dairy is as complete as the other deparl- ments, Steam power is used in separat- SWISH LR ing the cream, and in the manufacture of cheese and butter.Everything is well done, and cleanliness is observable in every direction.The farm is à model one, very central, and is a proof that with proper management and a certain degree of intelligence as good results can be obtained from agriculture in this Province as in any other part of the Dominion.The premier gave a dinner to fthe young Liberals of Quebec on Thursday evening.These young politicians all did good work in the general elections for the chief of the National Government.\u2018When the session will come to an end is more than can be now told with any preciseness.The tactics of the opposition the past week have been rather obstructive, lengthy debates taking place on very trifling malters to waste tims.This is hardly fair play, because the Government has been ready on every occasion to meet the demands of the left within reason and fairness.It is to be hoped the opposition will be.more reasonable and show a more manly spirit hereafter and while doing their [ull duty, display less nagging and obstruction to the pushing of business.ro WASHING SHEEP.A correspondent writes to us to say that he bas given up washing sheep long ago.That is good and a great many have done likewise.There is no reason why it should not be given up by everybody.Give it up and see what the result will be.If everybody would give it up, there would certainly be not even the shadow of bad results, for the buyer would sooner or later give up the pretense of thinking washed wool superior to unwashed.To some extent wool sells upon its merit and that ought to be the acknowledged rule of buying.It is all nonsense to say that washed wool, as it is washed, is better than unwashed, and everybody knows it.We presume that it may have once been thought that washing did really improve the fleece, but that was when wool growing received very little intelligent attention.\u2014 Western ural.MR.HAWKE'S LAST DAY IN PRISON.Men cannot be made criminals by placing them within stone walls, or under the guard of iron doors and bars, any more than men can be made moral members of society by simply elevating them to the bench.And now adieu! I must bid good-bye to the room which was formerly occupied by Judge Wetmore, of the Supreme Court of New Brunswick.He occupied it for one month, on being convicted of assault~ ing a man many years his senior, while I have been incarcerated for two months, most people believe, for daring to say a judge was intoxicated upon the bench when he was so.The court, in taking such especial pains to say that this was not the cause of my imprisonment, and then brushing aside the\" charge of intoxication, proved too much, and created by that action a painful conviction in the public mind.The apologists for the judges may say what they will\u2014the public places its own and the true interpretation upon the affair.Time will lodge the disgrace and shame attached to my imprisonment, if there be any, upon my judges and accusers and not with me.\u2014 Moncton Transcript.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 BEGIN ON THE COLT.There is no danger of handling and feeding the colt too early.The handling properly should begin as soon as the colt is dropped.When two months old, halter it and teach it to lead.The earlfer this work is begun after the colt is made docile by handling, the easier it is.As soon as the colt has pecome acquainted with the halter, tie it up and rub and brush it.This must be done gently until the colt is accustomed to it, and will submit quietly to a more vigorous use of the cloth and brush.The thrift of the coltis wonderfully increased by a daily grooming.The extra thrift brings such a good return that the grooming is well paid for.It pays togive the colt meal, waeat, bran and oats, as soon as it will eat them; and if it can get at them it will learn to eat verysoon.A good plan is to put up a box behind or at the side of the dam\u2019s stali, low enough for the colt to reach into it easily.In this put a little bran aud meal each time the dam is fed.The colt will soon learn to eat this, when oats may be added.You can not begin to feed and train the colt too early.\u2014 American Agriculturist.HOW TO DESTROY CHINCH BUGS.A Wisconsin farmer, as reported in the Mankato (Kan.) Review, says his neighbors beat the chinch bugs in this way: \u201cTake one and one-half bushels of lime, pour just enough water on it to slack it into a powder or a fine condition, and then add to it one and one-half bushel of common stock salt, and sow broadcast over the ground just as the small grain is sown, and he says it has never been known to fail He further says if one fears the ravages, that the time to sow the compound is after the crop has been planted and just before it is ready to come up.\u201d At may be added that this preparation is a good fertilizer, so that if it destroys bugs or prevents their ravages, it serves a double purpose.The Chicago Field, speaking on the same subject, says: \u201cThe chinch bug wiil feed upon all grains and grasses, but it is most destructive to wheat, barley, and Indian corn.It has cost the farmers of the United States millions of dollars, and it inflicted great injury upon the crops last season.L.O.Howard, assistant entomologist of the Department of Agriculture, has prepared a paper on the chinch bug plague which the agri culturists of the country, especially those of the Mississippi valley, will read with interest.Among the natural enemies of the insect are the prairie chickens, quail, blackbirds, meadow larks and brown thrushes.In States where the quailis carefully protected the ravages of the chinch bug have not been so great.For this reason the recommendation is made that the close season for quail be extended.Pot hunters may object, but the earnest sportsman will not, because he is a good friend of the farmer.\u2014 Kansas fur- mer.A Ready Recourse.The ravages of Cholera Infantum, Cholera Morbus, Diarrhœa, Dysentery and other summer complaints among children during the hot weather, might be almost totally prevented by'having recourse to nature\u2019s sovereign remedy for all bowel complaints, Dr.Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 To the Deaf.A person cured of Deafness and noises in the head of 23 years\u2019 standing by a simple remedy, will send a description of it FREE to any Person who applies to Nrcxorson, 30 St.John street, Montreal.[MZ LL] [] A LD) A ST.ANN'S SCHUOL.\u2014 Examinations and Prize Distribution.St.Ans School, the training ground of so many of our Irish fellow-citizens, fairly surpassed itself at the prize distribution last Saturday.Never before was the attendance so large, the prizes so numerous and costly, and the programme so varied and well executed.Father Catulle, of St.Ann\u2019s Church, presided, supported by Fathers Strubbe and Caron, Brothers Marcellin and Magk, of St.Marguerite\u2019s School, Commissioner Semple, Dr.Devlin and a larse and fashionable attendance of the ladies of St.Ann\u2019s.The following was the programme :\u2014 1.Chorus, \u201c Give Me My Own xativelzle.\"*.2.Geography, (Europe).\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u202600 2e vence Intermediate, Ist and 2nd Classes .Recitation, * The Shamrock.F.O'Neill .Duet, * A.B.C\u201d Less ae P.McKenna and J.McLean.Mental Arithmetic and Mensaration .Distribution of Prizes .7th, 6th and 5th Classes.Recitation, ** Hom s Memories.\u201d T.Motau.8.Song and Chorus, * Virginia Rose Bud.\u201d.9.Englisn\u2014Analysis, Parsing, Syntax, ste.10.Distribution of Prizes 4th and trd Classes 11.Recitation, \u201cThe Top 0\u2019 the Mo: nin\u201d.\u201ceu A M Dunn.12.Chorus, \u2018The Shepherd Boy\u2019s Song.\u201d 13, Geometry.o.oo iene, 14.Recitation Lena st ace 15.Dialogue, * Retribution.\u201d 0 .16.Chorus, \u2018\u201c Let us Dance on the Sands.\u201d .17.Recitation.secure ceereeal be loon 18.Prizes.«2nd and 1st Classes 19.Address.tii i chide tines canes 20.Cho.us, * O'Donnell Aboo.\u201d.1.242 ., .The choruses were particularly gol, being rendered with a precision tha spoke volumes for the careful trina ww by the music muster.The du-t, A.B.C., by Masters McKenna and McLean was + surprise, little McLean, who tik the first prize for singing, a handsome silver medal presented by Mr.Dan Holland, going through his part with an easy grace that might have caused envy in the beart of a professional.The recitations ard dialogue were well rendered, showing that elscution is not forgotten in the list of accomplishmants taught by the good brothers.The examinations were conducted by Bro.Re- migius and were well adapted to show the thorough nature of the instruction imparted.À few words of plain and practical advice from Father Catulle, an eloquent address appealing to parents to give the young ones a chance by keeping them at school as long as they possisly could, by Dr.Devlin and a business-like, practical speech by Commissioner Semple closed a most enjoyable afternoon.The donors of special prizes were :(\u2014 Mulcair Bros, a fine silver watch (specially manufactured by J.B.Williamson, of Notre Dame street.) Ed.Murphy, four volumes of adventures.O'Flaherty (of Loughman & O\u2019Fla- herty), Cyclopedia.Maxime Fournier, books.Dr.Devlin, Irish literature.Carrol Bros, Irish history.D.Holland, silver medal.Mrs.Penfold, books.The Redemptorist Fathers, books.THE PRIZE LIST.FIRST CLASS.1.T.Mohan, phonography, French, arithmetic, geometry, grammar, reading, mem.lesson, mensuration, algebra, religious instruction, book-keeping, analysis and parsing.2.T.Brennan, pho- nography, arithmetic, algebra, mensuration, book-keeping, mem.lessons, orthography, syntax, analysis and parsing.3.M.Cuddihy, geometry, 2nd section ; pbonography, 2nd section; arithmetic, analysis and parsing, intellectual arithmetic, attendance, linear Drawing, home work, book-keeping and mensuration, 4.C.Bailey, phonography, geometry.2nd section; orthography, religious instruction, syntax, propriety, bookkeeping, reading, composition, mem.lessons.5.P.Heelan, propriety, penmanship, home work, mem.lessons, orthography, attendance and linear drawing.6.Thos.Greene, French, arithmetic, intellectual and written, orthography rea- ing, freehand drawing, penmanship.7.F.O'Neil, penmanship, arithmetic, 2nd section, algebra, 2nd section, reading, French translation, geometry, 2nd section, home exercise.8.John Gillies, propriety, phonography, orthography, syntax, composition, catechism, book keeping.OND CLASS.Patrick McKenna (4,560)\u20141st good conduct, 1st religious instruction, 1st reading, 1st penmanship, 1st application, 1st memory lessons, 2nd geography, 2nd English history, 2nd sacred history, 2nd arithmetic, 3rd drawing, 3rd orthography, 3rd French.Teter McGuire (4,480)\u20141st geography, 1st penmanship, 1st English history, 1st sacred history, 2nd religious instruction, 2nd Canadian history, 2nd arithmetic, 3rd memory lessons, 3rd drawing, 3rd grammar, John Gorman (4,440)\u20141st orthography, 1st geography, 1st attendance, 1st French, 2nd reading, 2nd peamanship, 3rd arithmetic, 3rd sacred history, 3rd application.Edward Collins(4,260)\u2014Istapplication,1st memory lessons, lst geography, 2nd sacred history, 2nd Canadian history, 3rd arithmetic.William Flannery (3,890), 1st good conduct, 1st attendance, 2nd memory lessons, 2nd English history, 3rd penmanship, 5rd orthography.John Boyle (8,600), 1st drawing, 2nd grammar, 2nd penmanship, 2nd Canadian history, 3rd religious instruction, 3rd sacred history.Thomas McArthur (3,550), 1st or= thography, 2nd English grammar, 2ad Canadian history, 2nd application, 3rd 1, memory lessons, 3rd penmanship, 3rd English history.Joseph Ryan (34,100), 1st arithmetic, 1st religious instruction, 2nd English history, 2nd sacred history, 2nd Canadian history, 2nd geography, Thomas Finn (3,290), 1st penmanship, 1st application, 1st attendance, 2nd orthography, 2nd geography, 3rd reading.John Murphy, (3,140), 1st memory les- : sons, 2nd geography, 2nd history, 3rd reading, 3rd orthography.Joseph Con- nor (3,040), 2nd reading, 2nd memory lessons, 2nd application, 2nd attendance, 3rd orthography, 3rd English grammar.Michael Power (29,400), 1st arithmetic, 2nd memory lessons, 2nd orthography, 3rd grammar.Michael Bain (2,930), 2nd religious instruction, 3rd reading, 3rd geography, 3rd memory lessons.Patrick Crowe (2,880), 2nd penmanship, 2nd geography, 2nd English grammar, 3rd drawing, 3rd good conduct.James Burden (2,690), 2nd applicatiof, 2nd religious instruction, 3rd good conduct; ¥red.Hartford (2520), 3rd geography, 3rd reading, 3rd English grammar, 3rd arithmetic; Ovila Gadona, 1st drawing; John Craven (2490); Jno.Mc- Lain (2290); Chas.Rowland (2110); Peter Dwyer (1980); Albert Ward (1920); Robert Cherry (1680); Thos.O'Gara (1439); Michael Holland (1300); Martin Whitty (1300) ; Michael McDermott (1200); THIRD CLASS.Joseph Jones (3919 notes)\u20141st memory lessons, 1st composition, 1st good conduct, 2nd home work, 2nd geography, Children Cry for Pitc her\u2019s Castoria.\u201d 8; JIVLIY h rd grammar, 3rd freehand drawing, Jeremiah leuhy (3316 notes)\u2014lst rel- gious instruction, 2nd geography, 3rd sucred history, 3rd penmanship (1st division), 3rd English grammar, 3rd uistory of Canada.Join Logan (3757 notes)\u2014 1st reading, 3rd relizious instruction, 3rd pe munship (1st division), 3rd composition, 3rd freehand drawing, 3rd good conduct.James Irwin (3597 notes)\u2014Ist good conduct, let Enghsh grammar, 2nd memory lessons, 2ad application, 3rd sacred history.A special prize awarded t> tuis boy for not having even deserved a reprimand during the year.Arthur James Cuddihy (3,475 notes), 2nd compnsition, 2nd pen- mauship, 1st division, 3rd orthography, 3rd howe work, 3rd history of Canada, 3rd sacred history.James Killoran (3,425 notes), 2nd home work, 2nd gram- nar, 3rd geography, orl sacred history, 3rd composition.William Dowd (3,361 notes), Ist penmanship, 1st division, 3rd sacred history, Srd written arithmetic, 1st geography.John M.Trail (3271 notes), 1st ship, 2d div.3d Geography, 3 arithmetic, 3d written arithmetic.John Leahy (3196 notes), 1st history of Canada, 1st sacred history, 2d religious instruction.Joseph Auben (3014), 1st home work, 2d freehand drawing, 2d mental arithmetic.John Hoobin (2911 notes), 1st attendance, 2d application, 3d Reading.Jotin Sullivan (ZU0l) 1st parsing, 3d Orth« graphy, 3d freehand drawing.Francis Driscoll (2855) 2d penmanship, 2nd div.) 3rd history of Canada, 3rd ra- ligious instruction.Charles Charbou neau (2719) 1st written arithmetic, 2nd mental arithmetic, 3rd geography.Arthur Davis (2693) 2nd good conduct, 3rd free-hand, 3rd application.Denis Kodden (2610) 1st good conduct, 2nd parsing.Thomas LE.Stafford (2009) 2nd reading, 3ed written arithmetic.Frank Wall (2417) 1st mental arithmetic, 2nd written arithematic.Charles Finnigan (2312,) 2ad sacred history, 2nd history of Canada.Frank Nolan (2189,) 201 penmanship, (20d division,) 3rd application.(2119 notes,) 1st orthography, 3rd read- enman- mental penmanship, (2nd div.,) 3rd application.Frank Quinn (2051,) 3rd grammar, 3rd application.Alfred Thibaudeau (2015,) 1st free hand drawing.William Chait (1967,) 3rd religious instruction.Patrick Foles (1956,) 3rd good conduct.Edward Moore (1011 notes,) William Ryan (967 notes.) 4TH CLASS.Jas.McCrory, 1st religious instruction, 3.history, C.history, Eng.reading, grammar, composition, attendance, good conduct.Jas.Hart, 1st arithmetic, 20d S.history, Canadian history, lst writing, parsing, geography, arichmetic, attendance.tory, geography, reading, attendance, good conduct.John Doyle, Christian Doctrine, reading, 2nd grammar, good conduct, attendance.John Brennan, reading, orthography, memory lessons, religious instruction and attendance.FIFTH CLASS.1, John O'Neill, 7,715; 2, Thomas Damby, 7,248: 3, Owen Tansey, 6,932; 4, Patrick Neligan, 6,662: 5, Francis Mulcaby, 6540.SIXTH CLASS, Michael Martin Ist, James Cloran 2nd, James Stafford 3rd, Ferdinando Fillion 4th, John Butler 5th.THEIR FIRST DINNER AFTER A WEDDING TOUR.They had just returned from their wedding tour and were to have their first dinner in their own home.* Well, Percy, dear,\u201d she said sweetly after breakfast, ** what shall we have for dinner ?\u201d \u201cOh, anything you like.\u201d \u201cNo, dear; anything you like.\u201d \u201c But I shall like anything you like, my little rosebud.\u201d \u201c And I shall like anything you like, you precious old boy.\u201d \u201cWell, then, what shall we have dear?\u201d \u201c Whatever you want, darling.\u201d \u201cBut I want to please you, lovey.\u201d \u201c And I want to please you, precious.\u201d \u201cYou old darling!\u201d \u201cYou blessed old precious!\u201d \u201c But what shall we have ?\u201d \u201cThat's for you to say.\u201d \u201cNo.for you!\u201d \u201cBut I'm so afraid I'll order something you don\u2019t like.\u201d \u201cI'll like anything you like, darling.\u201d \u201cTruiy, Percy?\u201d \u201c Truly, my darling.\u201d \u201c Because I'd feel so badly Pd just cry if I had anything you didn't like.Do yeu like roast beef ?\u201d \u201cDo you ?\u201d \u201c T asked you first, dearie.\u201d \u201cWhat if [ don't care for it ?\u201d \u201cThen we\u2019ll never have a pound of it in the house.\u201d \u201cYou litt'e darling I\u201d?\u201c Do you like it ?\u201d \u201cDa you 9 \u201c Oh, Percy, you naughty boy! How am I ever to get what you like if you go on like this?And I do want to please you ?l \u201c Please yourself and you'll be sure to please me.\u201d \u201cThen we'll have roast beef ?\u201d \u201cIf you say so, lovey.\u201d \u201cBut I don\u2019t say so.\u201d \u201cIt shall be just as my own little lovey- dovey, lifey-wifey says.\u201d \u201c No : just as my trea ure boy says.\u201d \u201cWhat if [ say heef ?\u201d \u201cThen it shall be beef, too.\u201d \u201cWell, then, we'll have roast beef.\u201d \u201c1 love roast beef.\u201d \u201cSo do I.\u201d \u2018 Oh, I'm so glad.\u201d \u201c So am L.\u201d \u201c You old darling !\u201d \u201cYou precious !\u201d\u2014 Detroit Free Press.ce AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER.We want iive, energetic, agents In every county in the United Statesand Canada tosell a patent article of great merit, ON ITS MERITS An article having a large sale paying over 100 per cent.profit, having no competition and on which the agent 1s protected In the exclusive sale by a deed given for each and every county he may secure from us.With all these advantages to our agents, and the act that it is an article that can be sold to * every house owner, it might not be necessary to make \u201cAN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER\u2019 to secure good agents at once.but we nave concluded to make it to show, not only our conñ- dence in tne merits of our tnvention, but in 1t8 salability by an age nt that will handle it with energy.Our agents now at work are making from $150 tn $300 a month clear, and this fact makesit safe for us to make our offer to all who are u.t of employment.Any agent that will give our business a thirty days\u2019 trial and fail to clear at least $100 in this time, ABOVE ALL EXPENSES, can return all goods unsold to us and we will refund the money paid for them.No such employer of agents ever dared to make such offers.nor would we if we did not know that we have agents now making more than double this amount.Ourlarge descriptive circulars explain our offer fully, and these we wish to send to everyone out of employment who will send us three one cent stamps for postage.Send at once and secure the agency in time for the boom, and go to work on the terms named in our extraordinary offer.Address at once, .NATIONAL NovELTY CO.514 Smithfield St.Pittsburgh, Pa.- A Valuable Discovery, F.P.Tanner, of Neebing, Ont., says he has not only found B.B.B.a sure cure for Dyspepsia, jut he has also found it to be the best me licine for regulating and invigorating the system that he has ever taken.B.B.B.is the great system i regulator.James Kelly | ing.Patrick Rowan (2079 notes) 3rd | Jobn O'Hara, 20d writing, S.his- AZ] SOME WAY WILL BE GIVEN.1f, when we felt the anguish of an aching That knoweth no surcense, We could believe our toriured hearts were breaking, How » weet the sense of peace! LA | To know the soul was surely falling under The burden of its pain\u2014 To know the heartstrings tensely drawn would sunder \u2019 With just another strain! But no; we g0 on, suffering, yet bearing; Tortured, and grieved, aud sad, .And know hearts break not; but in dark despairing That brains sometimes go mad.If I to-night cou'd know that on to-morrow My stricken heart would break, How it would lighten this sore load of sor- row\u2014 How it would ease this ache! I am no saint\u2014I know not much of Heaven Or things men call divine ; But this I know-some way strength will be given To bear this grief of mine.LAYING UNDERDRAINS.I have seen and heard a great deal of what seemed to me foolish advice in regard to putting down draiun, writes a correspondent of the Farmer's Review.It seems to me to be a very plain and com- mon-sense affair, and one that every farmer should be able to perform, and do it without any aid outside of his ordinary farm help.If the land has a moderate fall and a clay, or any other kiné of hard bottom, there surely need be no trouble.We will suppose that there is a rea- sonabl» half and a hard bottom.Begin at the outlet and dig a depth suflicient to make the drain not less than three feet in depth.Our Professor Henry says four feet.That will surely do no harm.Still, mine do splendid work at a depth of about three feet.Select a time when | there will be a little water running in \u2018the bottom of it.Ifit is main, or trunk tile, it should be a few inches lower than the laterals or single tile.As before | stated, dig to the required depth, and make the bottom so smooth that the : water will run in a smooth and even flow through its entire length.The best as well as the easiest way to do this is to have a set of the scoops that are made for this purpose, and are so made that one can stand upon the bank of the drain and do the work.Now take a tile | hook and pick up a tile and lay it in the bottom of the drain, still standing upon the ground outside of the drain.Commence laying the tile at the lower end of the drain, or rather within about four feet from the lower end of it, mak- , ing the end of either stone or wood, as - the tile, if exposed to the open air and the constant freezing aud thawing of our winters, will soon crumble away and ! give more or less trouble.Lay the tile down, having them bear as evenly as possible upon the bottom, and fit the end joints together as closely as can well be done.Pack some of the earth closely around the newly laid tile to keep it in its place and fill it up, and the under- drain is complete.But suppose that one has a level piece of sand and a sandy or quicksand bottom to work in\u2014whatthen ?I have drained a number of acres of just such land, and did it in the following manner: \u2014 I found that I could not have more than one inch fall to the hundred feet in length of the drain without going to heavy expense, and concluded to try it upon that scale.We made a straight edge twelve feet long, and made it as true as possible.We tested it with a common spirit level.The first thing was to get as near a dead level as possible.After that we raised one end of the level one-eighth of an inch and marked the centre of the head in the level.The ground was almost as dry as if it had been baked in an oven.Much of the sub-soil at the depth of three feet was composed largely of quicksand.Hence, as a general rule, we could only dig to its full depth and level off one length, or twelve feet at a time, and we, of course, had to be very careful in laylng the tile to get them exact and true in both their bearings and joints.We put dowu between 7,000 and 8,030 feet in length in this manner before any rain came to start the water in them.I confess that I felt a littie nervous, for fear they would not do all that I hoped for.They all led into trunk drains or tile, and there were nearly or quite thirty of the laterals.Soon after a heavy rain came.It rained hard all night, and the following morning I went out to see how they were working, and was perfectly delighted and charmed with the success of our efforts.The trunk tiles were pouring out large streams of water, and as I walked over the beds there was not a pint of water tn be seen upon any of them.It has been so ever since, Crops grow splendidly where some persons who thought they knew predicted that I could not make them grow at all, or if at all only in a very indifferent sort of a way.My land is all laid off in beds running exactly north and south.The beds are two and one-half rods wide.The alleys between the beds are so arranged that they carry off the surface water as fast as it falls.Underneath each of these alleys is an underdrain, or rather will be when the system is completed, which we hope to about finish this season.The action of growing plants upon underdrained land must be reserved for a future article.I am devoting some study to certain points which I hope by and by to make of some value to your readers, as well as to myself.pe IN THE GRAND STAND.A Few Interesting Points on the National Game, They just filled two nice, shady seats in the grand stand, and it was evidently the first ball game she had seen.With lover like kindness be offered to explain the game to her as it progressed, though she insisted, with that pretty little childlike manner which was so dear to him, that she feared he would find it hard to make her understand on account of her dullness.\u201cNow, if there\u2019s anything you don\u2019t understand, just ask me, won't you, dear ?\u201d he said, as he bought two official score cards, and looked over the array of talent.\u201c All right,\u201d she gurgled.\u201cWhat has that boy got in that sort of a tin basket he is carrying around ?\u201d\u2019 \u201cWhat boy?Oh, yes.He's got \u2018Lemermadenerglassere.\u2019 Hi, boy!\u201d And the boy hied.\u201c Now, you see, dear, the game is about to commence.You see that man standing with the club in his hand, he\u2019s the striker, and the other man in the centre throws a ball to the other man with the mittens on, and the man with the stick tries to strike it as it goes by, and if he hits it he runs\u201d \u2014\u2014 \u201cWhat did that man with every day clothes on jump so for?\u201d \u201cHe's the umpire, and he decides when a ball is fair aud has to\u2019\u2014\u2014 \u201cWhy tne man didn\u2019t hit the ball at all.What did he strike at it for if he couldn\u2019t hit it?\u201d \u201cNever mind, dear.and\u201d \u2018 \u201cWhat made him out ?\u201d See he\u2019s out ONDAY.JULY.2 \u201cBecause the umpire is a great bi »___ \u201c What are those men standing on those satchels for 1\u201d ; \u201cOh, their other clothes are in them, and they are afraid some of the other men will steal them.\u201d ; \u201cOh, see, that poor man fell right down and gotall mussed up.How did it happen ?\u201d \u201c ell, you gee, he tried to steal that other*man\u2019s satchel, but the other man caught him at it.\u201d \u201cDid he want the other clothes ?\u201d \u201c No, that\u2019s the game of it.\u201d \u201c What does that max stand away off by the stove polish Pine aon for 7 a man's \u201c He's the mark.The n with the club tries to strike the ball 8x that it will go and bit him.\u201d .«1 should think it would be &gful hot away out there.\u201d .* Ît is sometimes, when a liner domes along.\u201d \u201c What is a liner, George ?\u201d \\ \u201c He's the man that draws those white lines on the ground.Look out for that foul ball there, dear !\u201d (Shriek.) \u2018Did it hurt you much, dear ?\u201d « ]\u2014]\u2014I\u2014guess not.Is my bonne crooked ?\u201d \u201c That stuffed bird on the side is sort of groggy, and there\u2019s a dent near that blue bow on top, otherwise everything seems to be all right.\u201d ¢ Oh, there comes that boy with that tin basket again.\u201d \u201cEr\u2014wbera?Oh, yes; hi, boy.\u201d \u201cI don\u2019t think ball is a very scientific game, do you, dear; just hitting a ball and then trying to steal each other\u2019s satchels.Shan\u2019tywe go now ?\u201d \u201cYes, I guess so.\u201d And they wandered out just after the first inning, and Dbefors Knockneed O'Finnigan had made his great left handed catch and superb double play.DID THE WIDOW MEAN TO SAY IT?After She Is Acquitted of Arson She Promises Not to Do It Again, NEw York, June 29.\u2014The widow, Lizzie Weisspfennig, in November last roused the double tenement at No.417 East Fifth street by being found early one morning in her rooms bound and gagged, and a fire burning brightly in a heap of rubbish in a corner.She said that two men with long knives had entered her room, tied her up, kindled the fire, and robbed her of $70.The story was not believed, and as she had her furniture insured for $400 she was indicted for arson.The first trial resulted in a disagreement of the jury.Yesterday she was acquitted.\u201cTeli her,\u201d said Judge Cowing to the interpreter, \u201cthat this thing has a very suspicious look and she had better not go around this city getting herself tied up and having her rooms on fire,\u201d \u201cShe says she will never do it again,\u201d said the interpreter.A spontaneous laugh went up from the Court and the, jury which had just acquitted her.Judge Cowing discharged her and she left the court.A DANGEROUS PLAYTHING.A Boy, Amusing Himself With a Rifle, Shoots His Baby Sister, New York, June 29.\u2014Mrs.William Fichells, the wife of à farmer living at Centreville, L.I,, left her eight-year-old son, Willie, and a baby girl fifteen months old, unattended in the dining- room of her house yesterday afternoon.In one corner of the room stood an unloaded rifle with which the boy played for a while.Finally he found a cartridge on the mantel.He inserted it in the rifle and pointing the weapon at his sister he pulled the trigger.The cartridge ex- \u2018ploded, and the bullet passed through the right arm of the baby and entered its abdomen.Thoroughly frightened, the little fellow dropped the gun and hastened to inform his mother.She hurried to the house and found the little one unconscious on the floor, with the blood pouring from the ugly wound.Dr.Hutchinson was immediately summoned, but was unable to extract the bullet.The child will die.Husbands are Valuable.Porr Huroy, Mich., June 29.\u2014In the suit of Alice Potts vs.Emily Willard for $50,000 damages for alienating the affoc- tions of her husband, Lewis Potts, the jury brought in a verdict this morning for $20,000 damages.\u2014_ Lynched the Wrong Man.ALTAMONT, Ill, June 29.\u2014The people here are very indignant over the lynching of William Moore at Charleston, 11l.The facts are that the girl Mary A.Baumgardner, upon whom it is alleged the assault was made, lives some two miles from this place, and is not so very young, being about nineteen or twenty years old, and the people here who know her doubt the truth of her story.It is the general opinion that the people of Mattoon and vicinity were deceived, and in acting bastily have put to death anin- nocent man.\u2014e.Body Servant and Old Master.NaAsHvILLE, Tenn., June 29.\u2014A painting by an old master, measuring twelve by fourteen inches, and representing a Magadalen, has just been discovered here in the possession of an aged negro named Jackson Williams, formerly a body servant in Generat Jackson's family.It is pronounced by local artists, including George W.Chambers, a painter of much talent, who is director of the Nashville School of Fine Arts, to be an undoubted original of the Italian school of the closing, days of the Renalssance, and is believed to be either a Correggio or the work of some one immediately under the master\u2019s influence.The discovery of the painting has caused much of a flutter in local art circles.It hasbeen traced back to the collection of Augustus Earle, painter and companion of President Jackson, who died at the latter's home.\u2014 It Was His Tailor\u2019s Fault.Bosron, June 29.\u2014A singular case of attempted suicide took place in this city a day or two since, that, but for the serious results, would be almost ludicrous.A young man, George G.Gibson by name, was engaged to be married to Miss Lillian Chandler, a niece of Colonel W.H.Long, of Chelsea, and the happy event was to have taken place last Wednesday evening.\u201cThe feast was set, the guests were met,\u201d but the bridegroom did not appear, and after waiting until midnight for the truant, the @mpany took leave of the distracted bride-elect.A search was made for the young man, and yesterday morning he was found in his room, No.19 Wellington street, with a bullet in his head.He was taken to the City Hospital, where an examination proved that the wound, though serious, was not necessarily fatal.It was stated that young Gibson's tailor failed to deliver his wedding suit in time for the ceremony, and Gibson becoming crazed by nervousness attempted his life.Gibson is an electrician, and is in the employ of the Boston Electric Company.- OrrENsIVE breath vanishes with the use of Dr.Sage\u2019s Catarrh Remedy.BARRISTERS, ETC.Maclennan, Liddell & Cline, {Late Maclennan & Macdonald) Barristers, Solicitors, Notarles, &c, CORNWALL, ONT, D.B.MACLENNAN, Q.C., J.W.LIDDELL, H.CLINE.LEITCH & PRINGLE, Barristers, Attorneys-at-Law, Solicitors In Chancery, Notaries Public, &c., CORNWALL, ONT.JAs.LEITCH, R.W.PRINGLE.August 25 Mcintyre, Lewis & Code, BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c.Supreme Court and Departmental Agents, Solicitors for Bank of Montreal, Union Bank of Lower Canada, &c.OTTAWA, ONT.A.F.MCINTYRE, J.TRAVERS LEWIS, R.G.CODE.JAMES DUNNE, ATTORNEY aud COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW 280 BROADWAY, New York City.STAWART BUILDING, Odober, MR.WM, CARTER SMITH, SOLICITOR, &c., 82Collins St.West, Melbourne, Victoria, AUSTRALIA.Commissioner or administering oaths in the Supreme Cour and Exchequer Court of Canada, Parliameitary Apent, Commissioner for taking acknowl&gments, Commissioner for affidavits for New Qouth Wales, Queensland, South Australia, India, Cape of Hope and Fiil SEELY & McMILLAN, Barristers, Attorneys-at-Law, Notaries, &c., SAINT JOHN, 1241y NEW BRUNSWICK.Gibbons McNab & Mulkern, BARRISTERS, ATTORNEYS, &c., OFFICE : Corner Richmond and Corling Streets, LONDON, ONT.GEO, C.GIBBONS, GxE0.MCNABB, P.MULKERN, FRED.F.HARPER.August 9 120 BANKERS & BROKERS.MacDOUGALL BROS., STOCK BROKERS, 69 St.Francois Xavier Street, Buy and Sell all Securities quoted nn Now York Stock Exchange, throughtheir Agents, Messrs.Halsted & McLane.Terms :\u2014Ten percent.margin on the par value.Commission for buying } of one per cont.and same for selling.H.R.HALSTED.H.R.MCLANE.HALSTED & MCcLANE, BANKERS and BROKERS, FOFFICE, 31 BRO DST.NEW YOyK.October 30.1y 80 GRANT & CLOUSTON, Stock Brokers & Financial Agents, 3 HOSPITAL STREET.J.G.GRANT, Member Montreal Stock C.G.CLOUSTON, Exchange.Telephone 1060.P O.Box 74.December 2.289 MacDOUGALL BROS., STOCK BROKERS 69 St.Francois Xavier Street Members Montreal Stock Exchange.Members Chicago Board of Trade.Agents for Alex.Geddes & Co., Chicago.Grain and provisions bought r nd sold for v sharcor on margin.BUSINESS CARDS.J.RIELLE, ILLAND SURVEYOR, ST.JAMES STREET.DR.MAJOR.BPECIALIST TO THE DEPARTMENT FOR DISEASES OF THE NOSE AND THRUAY MONTREAL GENERAL HOSPITAL, 82 UNION AVENUE, MONTREAL Will be absent in Europe until the early part of September.JAMES THOMSON begs to inform his friends and the publie generaily that he has removed to new prem- jses on Guy street, near the corner of St.Antoine street, where he will continue to manufacture first-class Furniture, such &s he has been in the habit of making, and he trusts that by careful attention to his business to merit a continuance of the patronage of his numerous friends.Every attention paid to repairs placed in his hands.ay 15 116 M.NOLAN DE LISLE, REAL ESTATE AGENT, ROOM Ku.23 FRASER BUILDING No.45 St.Sacrament Street.EDGAR JUDGE, \u2018Wholesale Dealer in Flour, Grain and Mill Feed?ST.PAUL STREET, MONTREAL, July 11 ty 314 A LEADING ATTRACTION ON ST.JAMES STREET, FASHIONABLE SUITINGS, OVERCOPTINGS AND TROUSERINGS MADE BY A.M.ALLAN & CO.Our goods are alt now and first-clas Our prices are \u201c\u2018away down « below all competitors.Men of \u201ckeen discernment\u201d aporeciate our correci method of doing business.: Buying for Cash, Selling for Cash, we give Cash Value ! THE LEADING TAILORING EMPORIUM.A.M.ALLAN & CO.218 St.James.THE MONCTON Sugar Refining Company (LIMITED JCHN L.HARRIS, JOBN McKENZIE, President.Secretary.C.P.HARRIS.Treasurer.MONCTON, N.t3.Sampies at 54 St.Francois Xavier Street.JAMES M.MITCH ALL DAVID MITCHELL, March 28 .' k x # - .up and down.MYSTERY OF A HANSOM UAB \u2014 > \u2014\u2014\u2014 AN AUSTRALIAN STORY \u2014 re.\u2014\u2014 CHAPTER XXVL KILSIP HAS A THEORY OF HIS OWN, Mr.Calton sat in his office reading a letter he had just received from Fitzgerald, and it seemed to give him great gatisfaction, judzing from the complacent smile on his face.\u2018I know,\u201d wrote Brian, \u201c fhat now you have taken up the affair, you will not stop until you find everything out, so, as I want the matter to rest as at present, I will anticipate you, and reveal all.You were right in your conjecture that I knew something likely to lead to the detection of Whyte's murderer; but when I tell you my reasons for keeping such a thing secret, I am sure you will not blame me.Mind you, 1 do not say that I know who committed the murder ; but 1 have suspicions\u2014very strong suspicions\u2014and I wish to God Rosanna Moore had died before she told me what she did.However, I will tell vou.all, and leave you to judge ay te whether I was justified in concealiag what I was told.I will call at sour office some time next week, and then vou will know everything that Resanna Moore told me; but once phat you are possessed of the knowledgg\u2019yor Will pity me.\u201d \u201c Most extraordinary,/ mrsed Calton, leaning back in his chair, as he laid down the letter.\u201cI wonder 1° he's going to tell me that he killed \u2018Yhyte atter all, and that Sal Rawlins verjured herself to save him! No, that nonsense or she'd have turned up \u201c% better time, and wouldn\u2019s have risked hig neck up to the last moment, Though I make it a rule xever to be surprised at anything, I expect what Brian Fitzzerald tells me will startle me considerably.I've never met with such an extraordinary case, and from all appearances the end isn\u2019t reached yet.After all,\u201d said Mr.Calton, thoughtfully, \u201c truth is stranger than fiction.\u201d Here a knock came to the door, and in answer to an invitation to enter, it opened, and Kilsip glided into the room.\u201cYou're not engaged, sir ?\u201d\u2019 he said, in a soft, low voice.\u201cOh, dear, no,\u201d answered Calton, carec- lessly ; *\u2018come in\u2014come in!\u201d Kilsip closed the door softly, and gliding along in his usual velvet-footed manner, sat down in a chair near Calton\u2019s, and placing bis hat on the ground, looked keenly at the barrister.\u201cWell, Kilsip,\u201d said Calton, with a yawn, playing with his watch chain, \u201cany good news to tell me ?\u201d \u201cWell, nothing particularly new,\u201d purred tne detzctive, rubbing his hands thgetber.* Nothing new, and nothing true, and no matter,\u201d said Calton, quoting Emerson.\u201cAnd what have you come to see me about?\u201d \u201cThe Hansom Cab Murder,\u201d replied the other quietly.\u201cThe devil!\u201d \u2018crit Calton, startled out of his professional dignity.\u201c And have you found out who did it ?\u201d \u201cNo!\u201d answered Kilsip, rather dismally; \u201cbut I\u2019ve got an idea.\u201d \u201c80 had Gorbv,\u201d retorted Calton, dryly, \u201can idea that ended in smoke.Have vou any practical proofs 2\u201d \u201cNot yet.\u201d \u201cThat means you are going to get some ?\u201d \u201cWell, if possible.\u201d \u201cMuch virtue in \u2018if,\u2019\u201d quoted Calton, picking up a vencil, and scribling idly on his blotting paper.\u201c And to whom does your suspicion point to ?\u201d * Aha !\u201d said Mr.Kilsip, cantiously.\u201cDon\u2019t know him,\u201d answered the other coolly ; \u201cfamily name Humbug, I presume.Bosh! Whom do you suspect?\u201d Kilsip looked around cautiously, as if to make sure they were alone, and then said, in a stage whisper\u2014 \u201cRoger Moreland !\u201d \u201cThat was the young man that gave evidence as to how Whyte got drunk ?\u201d Kilsip nodded.\u201cWell, and how do you connect him with the murder ?\u201d \u201cDo you remember in the evidence given by the cabmen, Royston and Rankin, they both swore that the man who was with Whyte on that night wore a diamond ring on the forefinger of the right hand ?\u201d \u201c What of that?Nearly every second man in Melbourne wears a diamond ring.\u201d \u201c But not on the forefinger of the right hand.\u201d \u201cOh! And Moreland wears a ring in that way ?\u201d \u201c Yes 17 \u201cMerely a coincidence.\u201d Is that all your proof ?\u201d \u201c AMI can obtain at present.\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s very weak,\u201d said Calton, scornfully.\u201cThe weakeat proofs may form a chain to bang a man,\u201d observed Kilsip, sententiously.\u201cMoreland gave his evidence clearly enough,\u201d said Calton, rising and walking \u201cHe met Whyte; they got drunk together.Whyte went out of the hotel, and shortly afterwards More- land followed with the coat, which was left behind by Whyte, and then somebody snatched it from kim.\u201d \u201cAh, did they?\u201d interruvted Kilsip, quickly.\u201cSo Moreland says,\u201d said Calton, stopping short.\u201cI understand; you think Moreland was not so drunk as he says, and after following Whyte ouside, put on his coat, and got into the cab with him.\u201d \u201cThat is my theory.\u201d \u201cIvsingenious enough,\u201d said the barrister; \u201cbut why should Moreland murder Whyte?What motive had he?\u201d \u201cThose papers \u201d \u201cPshaw! another idea of Gorby\u2019s,\u201d said Calton\u2018 angrily.\u201cHow do you know there were any papers ?\u201d The fact is, Calton did not intend Kil- sip to know that Whyte really had papers until he heard what Fitzgerald had to tell him.\u201cAnd another thing,\u201d said Calton, resuming his walk, \u201cif your theory is correct, which I don\u2019t think it is, what became of White's coat?Ilas Moreland got it !\u201d \u201cNo, he has not,\u201d answered the detective, decisively.\u201cYou seem very positive about it,\u201d said the lawyer, after a moment's pause.\u201cDid you ask Moreland about it?\u201d A reproachful look came into Kilsip's white face.\u201c Not quite so green,\u201d he said, forcing a smile.\u201cI thought youd a better opinion of me than that, Mr.Calton, Ask him ?\u2014no.\u201d \u201cThen how did you find out?\u201d .\u201cThe fact is, Moreland is employed as a barman in the Kangaroo Hotel.\u201d \u201c A barman!\u201d echoed Calton; \u201cand he came out here as a gentleman of independent fortune.Why, hang it, man, that in itself is sufficient to prove that he had no motive to murder Whyte.: Moreland pretty well lived on Whyte, so ; what could have induced him to kill his golden goose, and become a barman\u2014 pshaw! ihe idea is absurd.\u201d \u201cwell, you may be right about the matter,\u201d said Kilsip, rather angrily; \u201c and if Gorby makes mistakes I don\u2019t pretend to be infallible.But, at all events, when I saw Moreland in the bar he wore a silver ring on the forafinger of his right hand.\u201d \u201cSilver isn\u2019t a diamond.\u201d \u201cNo; but it shows that was the finger he was accustomed to wear bis ring on, When Isaw that I determined to search his room.I managed to do so while he was out, and found \u201c A mare\u2019s nest?\u201d Kilsip nodded.\u201cAnd so your tle of cards falls to the ground,\u201d sgid Calton, jestingly.\u201cYour idea ips absurd.Moreland no more commited the murder than I did.Why, he was'too drunk on that night to \u201d was a lesser danger to avert a gregter one,\u201d replied Kilsip, coolly.\u201cI am sure that Moreland was not drunk on that night.He only said so to escape awkward questions as to his movements.Depend upon it he knows more than he lets out.\u201d \u201cWell, and how do you intend to set «bout the matter?\u201d \u201cI shall start looking for the coat first.\u201d \u201c Ah! you think he has hidden 1t ?\u201d \u201cI'm sure of it.My theory is this: When Moreland got out of the cab at Powlett Street\u2014\u2014\" \u201cBut he didn\u2019t,\u201d interrupted Calton, angrily.\u201cLet us suppose, for the sake of argument, that he did,\u201d said Kilsip, quietly.\u201c] say when he left the cab he walked up Powlett Street, turned to the left down George Street, and walked back to town through the Fitzroy Gardens, then, knowing thad the coat was noticeable, he threw it away, or hid it, and walked out of the Gardens through the town\u2014\" \u201cIn evening dress more noticeable than coat.\u201d \u201cHe wasn't in evening dress,\u201d said Kilsip quietly.\u201cNo more he was,\u201d observed Calton, eagerly, recalling the evidence at the trial.\u201cAnother blow to your theory.The murderer was in evening dress\u2014the cabman said so.\u201d \u201cYes ; because he bad seen Mr.Fitzgerald in evening dress a few minutes before, and thought that that he was the same man who got into the cab with Whyte.\u201d \u201cWell, what of that ?\u201d \u201cIf you remember the second man had his coat buttoned up.Moreland wore dark trousers\u2014at least, I suppose so\u2014 and, with tke coat buttoned up, it was easy for the cabman to make the mistake, believing, as he did, that it was Mr.Fitzgerald.\u201d \u201cThat sounds thoughtfully.to do ?\u201d \u201cLook for the coat in the Fitzroy Gardens.\u201d \u201cPshaw! a wild goose chase.\u201d \u201cPossibly,\u201d said Kileip, as he arose to 0.better,\u201d said Calton, \u201cAnd what are you going \u201cAnd when shall I see you again?\u201d said Calton.\u201cOh, to-night,\u201d said Kilsip, pausing at the door.\u201cI had nearly forgotten, Mother Guttersnipe wants to see you.\u201d \u201cWhy?Whats up?\u201d \u201cShe\u2019s dying, and wants to tell you some secret.\u201d \u201cResanna Moore, by Jove!\u201d said Cal- ton.She'll tell me something about her.I'll get to the bottom of this yet.All right, I'll be here at eight o\u2019clock.\u201d \u201cVery well, sir!\u201d and the detective glided out.\u201cI wonder if that old devil knows anything ?\u201d said Calton to himself, as he resumed his seat.\u201cShe might have ovep- heard some conversation between Whyte and his mistress, and is going to split.Well, \u2019'm afraid when Fitzgerald does confess 1 will know all about it before- hahd.\u201d (To Br CONTINUED.) FURNYGRAPHS.Teo Small a Capital.Uncle James\u2014And what would you do, Bobby, if I should give you a penny ?Bobby\u2014I couldn*% do very much, uncle, with a penny.: The New First Reader.\u201cIs the boy in the field?\u201d \u201cYes, he is in the field.\u201d \u201cWhat 18 the boy doing in the field ?\u201d \u201cStealing cucumbers.\u201d \u201cDoes the man see him ?\u201d \u201cIe does.\u201d \u201cBut why does he chuckle and grin instead of driviug the boy out?\u201d \u201cHist! He is the man who keeps tlie drug store on the corner !\u201d The Demoralizing Effect of Journalism, \u2014Rev.Mr.Selah (to desk editor of Daily Roarer)\u2014Mr.Seezars, are you goinz to publish my prayer in full ?Desk Editor (indignantly)\u2014In fuil ?\u2014 Well, I guess not.(Changing his tone.) However, we'll dowhat we can for you.By swiping out the flub-dub and guif I guess we'll have room to put in the points.Blobson\u2014I'm going to celebrate my golden wedding next week.Dumpsey\u2014Why, you haven't lived with your second wife long enough for that.Blobson\u2014I know it, but Dm going to add on enough of my first wife's time to fill the bill A fellow can\u2019t afford to hang off indefinitely in such matters.THE MISTRESS BLENHEIM.Mrs, Ifammersiey Weds the Duke of Marlborough in the Mayor\u2019s Office and Sails for England.Mayor Hewitt this afternoon married Mrs.Hammersiey to the Duke of Marlborough.The ceremony took place in the Mayor's office.Mr.Henry Clews acted as best man.The Duke and Duchess will be dined this evening by Mr.and Mrs.Henry Clews.The will gail for Europe to-morrow morning.The ceremony was witnessed byCreigh- ton Webb, Ward McAllister, Miss Mc- Allister, Leonard Jerome, Arthur Leary, Mr.and Mrs.Nicholas Fish, Mrs.Eugene Cruger, Mr.and Mrs.Spedden, Speaker John G.Carlisle, Congressman Jolin G.McMillan of Tennessee, Congressman Timothy J.Campbell, Thomas Costigan and Robert Sewell.The bride was dressed in a brown cloth.travelling dress and light bonnet, profusely trimmed with black beads.Mayor Hewitt, after performing the ceremony, turned to the bride and said that as he bad made her a Duchess he wished fo salute her in the usual way.He then kissed the new made Duchess, There was a curious crowd assembled on Pier 40, North River, this morning, anxious to catch a glimpse of the Duke of Marlborough and the newly made Duchess, his Lride, formerly Mrs.Hammersley.The Aurania, on which the i distinguished couple had engaged passage, was announced to sail at half-past ten a.m.A large number of persons who were not passengers went on board and took positions on the deck as near the cabin gangway as possible.There they stood with craned necks and closely \u201chat.Helooked like an ordinary down \u2018the Captain's cabin, which has bezn as- \u2018Children Crv for Pitc her's Castoria.THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY scanned the faces of all who entered in hope of getting a glimpse of tue Dake and Duchess.Of course, although most of them hu l never seen either of the parties, thsy all could tell a Duke and Duchess a8 sun as soon as they caught a glimpse À them ; but they ware too contideut, for when the distingvnished party marched up the gangway not more than three ersons on board recogn.zel them.Tne uke was dressed in a light checked suit, with cutaway coat and a tall blac town clerk, The Duchess wore the same dress which she appeared before tue Mayor to be married 1n vesterday.The Duke at once escortsd his bride to signed as a private parlor for the party during the voyage.He remained with her only a few minutes, and then started tohave a farewell chat with Leonard Jerome, who, with Mrs.Cruger, cane to see them off.The Duchess occupied herself until the steamer sailed in reading the accounts of her marriage in the morning papers.She seemed entirely satisfied with the extended accounts in all the papers.The Duke walked around the deck smoking a cigarette and chatting with Leonard Jerome.When ths latter bade Lim good-bye, the Duke said, \u201c Ah, remember me to Larry.\u201d Asthe Aurania swung out from tne dock there was a large crowd on the end of the pier who tried to catch a glimpse of the Duchess, but she was unrecogniz- .able amid such a crowd on deck.\u2014\u2014\u2014 PRESERVAIION OF EGGS.At the London Dairy and at the Birmingham Fat Stock Show, during the last two years, prizes have been offered for the best preserved eggs, says an exchange.These, as well as many private tests, have shown that the lime-water system is, all things considered, the best.A pound of lime should be stirred with a gallon of water, and the ezgs, perfectly fresh, immersed therein in barrels or jars.This excludes air and any germs that might cause mildew or mould, and prevents evaporation, so that the contents of the egg are not reduced in bulk.It is important to have a considerable excess of lime to replace any that may bscome carbonated.The vessels containing the eggs should be kept in a cool, well ventilated place.A very successful variation in the process consists in imbedding new-laid eggs, warm from the nest, in a thick paste of lime and water.Ezgs thus pre- prepared for six months could hardly be distinguished from those newly laid.The contents of eggs evaporate rather rapidly through the shell ; and the object of the preserver must be to prevent this evaporation, and at the same time to allow for the expansion and contraction of the natural air-space in the egg due to changes of temperature.The plan of coating the shells with wax or melted NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.DRINE CADBURY\u2019S COCOA, Guaranteed Pure and Soluble.yen Pa A WARMING COMFORTING.All exposed to the inclemencies of the weather\u2014 night and day, and whose occupation entails long intervals between meals, will find nothing so -ati-fying, sustaining, and comfortinsas a cup of Cadbury's A small packet makes fourteen large treakfrs of strong nourishing Cocon.To get the real art cle ba sure tn'ask for Cadburz\u201ds, and refuse ail others, Frank Magor & Co, IMPORTERS, 259 Commissioners St.Montreal, Moxie Nerve Food ! FOR SALE BY THE BOTTLE, DOZEN or GROSS J.A.HARTE, Druggist, GLASGOW DRUG HALL, 1780 NOTRE DAME STREET.2% Telephone 1,130 Aug 8 mwif 78 ELY\u2019S CREAM BALM Eg Gives Relief at once MJ and Cures Cold in Head CATARRH, HAY FEVER.Not a Liquid,Snu À or Powder.Free fromInjurious Drugsand offensive HAY-FEVER À particle is applied into each nostril, and isagreeable.Price 50 cents at Druggists: b mail, registered, &0 ets.Circulars free.EL BROTHERS, 56 Warren street, New York.May 30 mwf DW 129 parafliine fails in the latter particular.Strong brine fails because the contents of eggs preserved in it become much reduced in bulk.\u2014American Stockman.A WHOLESOME STIMULANT.Of hot milk as a stimulant, the Medical Record says :\u2014\u201c Milk heated too much above 100 degrees Fahrenheit loses for a time a degree of its sweetness and density.No one who, fatigued by overexertion of body and mind, has ever experienced the reviving influence of a tumbler of this beverage, heated as hot as it can be sipped, will willingly forego a resort to it because of its being rendered somewhat less acceptable to the palate.The promptness with which its cordial influence is felt 1s indeed surprising.Some portions of it seem to be digested and appropriated almost immediataly, and many who now fancy they need alcoholic stimulants when exhausted by fatigue will find in this simple draught an equivalent that will be abundantly satisfying and more enduring in its effects.\u201cThere is many an ignorant overworked woman who fancies she could not keep up without her beer; she mistakes Its momeutary exhileration for strength, and applies the whip instead of nourishmeut to her poor, exhausted frame.An honest, intelligent physician will tell her that there is more real strength and nourishment in a slice of bread thaæ in a quart of beer ; but if she loves stimulants it would be a piece of very useless information.It is claimed that some of the lady clerks in our own city, and those, too, who are employed in respectable business houses, are in the habit of ordering ale or beer at the restaurants.They probably claim that they are \u2018tired,\u2019 and no one who sees their faithful devotion to customers all day will doubt their assertions.Bus they should not mistake beer for a blessing, or stimulus for strength.A careful exawi- paticn of statistics will prove that men and women who do not drink can endure more hardship and do more work and live longer than their less temperate neighbors.But A man convinced against his will Is of the same opinion still, And woman is wonderfully like him in this respect.\u201cFurthermore, if a woman wants anything, from a California trip to a glass of toddy, you may rest assured that her bealth will demand it, and it sometimes demands it so loud and so long that her friends are glad to yield in time to save their own lives.A tippling woman gets a pain or an ache on a short notice, and if she has a cold or a headache the whisky bas to suffer, and the drug stores in the neighborhood do a thriving business.If her ale disorders her stomach, she depends upon a dose of whisky to correct its effects, and so her morning beer and evening Bourbon do a co-opera- tive business.\u201d A NICE LITTLE ENTREE.I promised you a nice recipe this week.Here it is: Take a pound of spinach and wash it thoroughly in three or four waters, picking off any faded leaves, but no.cutting them.The knife should only be used at the root.Boil the spinach in a little water until it becomes quite tender Fress all the water away from it, aad then chop the leaves very fine.Now chop an onion very smail, fry it in beef drippings till quite done, and then add it to the spinach, stirring them together with a tablespoonful of flour, a littls pepper, and a soupcon of sugar.Take either a small stew pan or frying pan.Put in it a tablespoonful of butter and then put in the spinach, stirring well until it is quite hot.Setit asidein a warm place, where it can not burn (which it will do on the slightest pretext), and set to work to make a savory omelet.When complete, put it in the middle of a hot dish, surround it with the spinach, and garnish with croutons.This makes a nice little entree, and an extremely inexpensive one.\u2014 Madge, in Landon Truth.i PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST, CONTAINS NG ALUM, AMMO\"IIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurious materials, TORONT - E.W.GILLETT, Sa La Man tfrofthe COLUBRATED RO7AT TPASICAFYR VANCOUVER, Pacific Coast Terminus of C P R.A.W.ROSS, | H.T.CEPERLEY Notary Public.g ROSS & CEPERLEY, Real Estate, Insurance and Financial Agents, Our list comprises Business, Residence and Suburban Property.Bargains in Improved Residence Property.Fstates managed for non-residents, Write for one of our Maps and Folders.ROSS & CEPERLEY, PosT-OFFICE BLOCK, { VANCOUVER, B.C.Hastings street.12; 5 GIBB & COMPANY, Having received their SPRING and SUM 1 ER Stock of TAILORING LAD HAGERDASHERY, ALSO PATTERN SUITS FROM POOLE, Invite Inspection.March 17 GOLD BRONZE GAS LAMPS! Gasaliers, Gas Brackets, Electrie Bells and Gas Globes in great variety.All First-class Goods, and at Low Prices, N.B.\u2014Prompt and special attention given to the removal and re-titting of Gas Fixtures, Kitchen Ranges and Lange Boilers, ete., during the moving season.Jr\" Heating of buildings by hot waler a specialiy.E.C.MOUNT & CO., 14 Victoria Square, Gas Fitters and Electrical Bell Hangers Plumbers and Hot Water Fitters Roofers and Sleamiitters Telephone 1265.106 ROYAL YEAST Is Canada\u2019s Tavorite Bread-maker, 10 years in the market without a com-« laint of any kind.The only yeast which Bas stood tho test of time and never made sour, nnwholesome bread.All Grocers sell it.BV.GILLETT.H'f2 Toronto, Om, & Chicago.17 THE ONTARIO BOLT CO'Y.(LIMITED), OF TOWONTO, Manufacture every description of Carriage, Machine, Plow, Tire, Stove and Fancy Bolts, Coach Screws, Bolt Ends and Blank Bolts, Stove, Block, Carriage and Cooper Rivets, Boiler and Bridge Rivets, Rallway and Whart Spikes, Railway, Track and Bridge Bolts, also, Wire Nails, Washers and Drop Forgings.Contractors iron work a specialty.Agents for Province of Quebec, DELORME BROS.Maren COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.MONDAY.JULY.2 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS.| Ir.Lewis is Always Succeessfal.Tue Glory of à Man is in His Stas, | Nerve or Physical Force When Lost Quickly Regained by Consuliing Dr.C.J.LEWIS, WES, after intense study and deep research, has lately discovered new, extraordinary, quick, certain and inexpensive i cure for disease of the Brain and Spinal Cord, Spermatorrheea, Seminal Weakn: ss, Fluid Escapes, linpotency and Deranged functions of the Nervous and Generative Systems.THISNEW AND MARVELLOUS MEDICAL TREATMENT has eured the most desperate forms of nervous disorder in both young and old.To debilitated youth it bestows the vigor of manhood, and in advanced age it establishes the vigor of youth without the possibility of failure.URINARY COMPLAINTS, Acute or Chronic Discharges, Stricture, Retention of Urine, Gravel, Kidney or Bladder Disorders, Syphillis, Secondary Symptoms, Eruptions, Skin Diseases are all absolutely cured without the use of Mcreury, Copabia, or injections.No restriction in diet or hind- rarcrs from business.RECENT CASES CURED IN THREE OR FOUR DAYS.Patients whose ca-es have been negleced, badly treated or pronounced incurable, are particularly invited to visit Dr.Lewis.A writ ten guarantee of cure given to all cases arranged and undertaken.In practice up wards of thirty years.z= Dr.Lewis is frequently consulted by many who have b-en completely discouraged of ever being cured, after having experimetit- ed with various advertised nostrums, electric belts, ete., which invariably do more harm than good.Every phase of disease demands different and sp cial treatment.To those who may have been disappointed, Dr, Lewis would ~ay consult him and he will restore the disappointed one to all the duties of life, whether they be physical or mental, pertaining to married life or single blessedness.Consultation, Medicine, ete, 85.Dr.Lewis is permanently located at 129 FRIENDSHIP STREET, Providence, R.I.Dr.L.will, on full description of cases (with fee enclosed) send a supply of his valuable nudicines, accompanied with instructions «nd advice for the cure of the above distressing complaints, Country Patients Corresponded with until eured.JUST PUBLISHED, FOURTH EDITION \u2014 Medical Minutes with additional colored iltustrations, à PORTRAIT OF THE AU THOR, and a list of #1 eomplaints, ON PRN- \u201cI MOTING DEVELOP- 1 MENT.Also speedy cure of above subjects Sexual Diseases, etc.Price 25 cts.by mail to an address from the author, Dr.C.J.Lewis, 119 HARDWARE J.G.SIBBALD, Importer and Commission Merchant, Steel Rails lron, Metals, &c 0° Agency for Canada for the Marks Auto: matic Car Coupler, Miltimore\u2019s Car Wheel Dressing Machine.146 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.\u201c ROLLED IRON BEAMS AND JOISTS STEEL BEAMS, CHANNELS, &c.STEEL RAILS.FIG IRON, all brands.STEEL & IRON BOILER PLATES, &c.BAR IRON, PLATES, SHEETS.CANADA PLATES AND TIN PLATES, GALVANIZED SHEETS AND ZINC SHEETS.TIN, COPPER, LEAD, SPELTER.PORTLAND CEMENT.CHEMICALS.GEO.DIBLEY & SON, 204 St, James Street, Montreal, __ and London, England.COOPER, FAIRMAN & CO, RAILWAY SUPPLIES, &c.iNGERSOLL ROCK DRILL CO, MANUFACTURERS OF Quarrving and General Mining Machinerv Œ&c.DOMINION WIRE ROPE CO., MANUF.CTURERS OF WIRE ROPE, &c.PLAITED ELBOW CO,, MANUFACTURERS OF One-piece Stove Pipe Elbows.204 St.James Street, (MECHANICS\u2019 INSTITUTE BUILDING.) ___Telephone 20.d a._ E LEONARD & SON, -TRAM ENGINE AND BOILER MANUFACTURERS.Automatic Cut-off Engines for ever - duty., Boiicrs of all Styles and Sizes.Plain Slide Valve Engines.: Wood-Working Machinery.Complete Saw and Planing Mill Outfits.One 60 H.P.Second-hand Automatic Cut-off Engine ; also, 45 H.P.Boiler, and a namber of smaller sizes, for sale chesp.33 NAZARETH STREET, MONTREAL.H.E, PLANT, Write for catalogue.Representative.May 22 trs 122 __TO LET.TO LET.SMALL OFFICE ON FIRST FLOOR STANDARD BUILDING.Apply to W.M.RAMSAY, _May 4 107 FLATS TO LET, SUITABLE FOR LIGHT MANUFACTURING, WITH OR WITHOUT STEAM POWER.ROBT.MITCHELL & CO.Cor.St.Peter and Craiz Streets.March 28 76 TO LET TWO DOUBLE OFFIGES (WITII HEATING) IN NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE INSURANCE BUILDIRG.Apply to THOS.DAVIDSCN, Managing Director Feb.24 Total Risks.Invested Fuuds.\u2014_\u2014\u2014 Total Funds, - .- ASSURANCE COMPANY.(Established 1835.) : : Annual Income.0 ow 4,437,000 Bonuses hitherto distribute ed amount to the large BU OÉ Les 00 caso n corse s0sn00s \u2026 17,000.000 W.M.RAMSAY, Manager.Standard Buildings, Montreal May 19, tf 120 GUARDIAN Fire and Life Assurance Co'v.PAID-UP CAPITAL £1,000,000 stg.$19,500,000.Fire risks written at current rates- ROBT.SIMMS & CO.ad GEO.DENHOLM, Ceneral Agen H.W.RAPHA Tw.SPECIAL AGENT.80 Hospital Street, December 4 2ul The Royal Canadian Fire and Marins Insurance Co.157 St.James Street, Montreal.ANDREW ROBERTSON, ESQ.How.J.R.THIBAUDEAU, HARRY CUTT, President.ARCHD.NICOLL, Secretary, Marino Underwriter, CHEN Go.H.RY, Manager.ane North British and Mercantile FIRE & LIFE ASSURANCE COMP\u201dY, ESTABLISHED 08.\u2014_\u2014\u2014 Head 0co for Canada, Montreal.DIRECTORS GILBERT SCOTT, Esq.Hon.THOMAS RYAN.W.W.OGILVIE, Esq.ARCHIBALD MACNIDER.THOMAS DAVIDSON, managing Director.$3,132,000 | .8500,060 vee 700,600 \u2026.\u2026.517,678 .J.E.DROLET, Agent for City ahd District of Montreal, J 15 ly 236 = en NS TRAINS LEAVE MON A.M.\u2014 I! Fast Express for Bert hlers 8.10 vitle, Toulsvi le, ree Rivers, Ques pec.&c.Sundass runs to Three Rivers only A.M.\u2014li Day Express for St.John\u2019s, 8.45 Farnham, Newport, Mauchesier, Nashua, Boston, Portland, Old Orchard Beach and New England points, via Montreal and Boston Air Line 9 0 A.M\u2014! Fast Express for Lachute, \u2018 Ottawa, &c.9 10 A.M.\u2014| Day Express for Brockville ' Smiths Falls, ngston, Peterboro Toronto, &ec.9 2 5 A.M.\u2014From St.Lambert for Chamb- : ' lv, Richelieu, Marieville, &e.depart- I ing on arrival of Grand Trunk 9.00 a.m.train from Bonaventure Station.2 00 P.M.\u2014From Bonaventure Station for \u2019 Marieville andintermodiate stations.saturdays only.1 30 P.M.\u2014Suburdan \u2018Irain tor St.Therese \u2018 ; and intermediate Stations, Saturdays only.2 00 P.M.\u2014Local Fxpress for St.Johns, \u2019 Farnham, Sutton, Newport, Springfield, &e.Saturdays only.| 3 00 P.M.\u2014Huburban Train for ft, Theresa 14 and intermediate Stations, except Saturdays and Sunday =.3 30 L.M.\u2014ttLocal Express for Three Vs Rivers.Bati-can, Quaboc, do.4 30 P.M.\u2014Local Fixpress for 3t, The:ese, ' Lechute, Bucsingham, Ottawa, &e.h P.M.\u2014Local Express for St.Johns, 1 Farnham, Sutton, Newuort, Saving» field.&c.Except Saturday and Sunday.M.\u2014I,ocal \u2018or Joliette, St.Felix de P Vice-President.5.00 Valois, and all iniermediate Sta- Jons 5.20 &e.5.30 P.M.\u2014From Bonaventure Siaticn for Chambly, Richelieu, Mariovilis P.M.\u2014TFor St.Therese and&t.Jerome, 8t.Lin and St.Eustache Branches.6 2 P.M.\u2014Suburhan train for Ste.Therese \u2019 and intermediate stations.7 5 P.M.\u2014tl Night Express for St.Johns, ® 1 I'arnham, Newport, Concord, Manchester, Nashna, Lowell, RosLan, Portland! Old Orchard Beach, and New England 8 20 P.M.\u2014! Pacific Express for Uniawn, \u2018 Winnipeg, Vancouver, Victora, and all poinis in the North-West and on Pacifie Coast.8 30 P.M-\u2014t || Western Express for Smiths ' Falls, Kiugston, Peicrboro, Toronto, Owen Sound, St.Thomas, London, Detroit, Chicago, aud all points iz Ontario and West« ern States.10 0 P.M.\u2014li Night Express for Thres .Rivers, Quebec, and poinis on the Intercolonial Railway and Lower Provinces.TEL Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company.CANADA BOARD OF DIRECTORS.The HON.HENRY STARNES, chairman.\u2019 EDMOND J.BARBEAU, Esq., Genl.Manager Le Credit Foncier Franco-Canadien.W.J.BUCHANAN Bank of Montreal.Capital.rss.810,000,000 Amount Invested .$ 900,000 ASSEtS .u00000000 «+++.38,9000,000 Mercantile Risks accepted at the lowest current rates.Churches, Dwelling Houses and Farm Pros perties insured at reduced rates G.F.C.SMITH, Chief Agent for the Dominion.Sub-Agents.CYRILLE LAURIN, EKED.OC.HENSHAW, 16 Place d\u2019Armes.4 Custom House Sq Having been appointed Sub-Agent for the above Company for the City of Montreal, I talre the liberty of asking my friends to favor me, with a share of their Insurance Risks, F.C.HENSHAW, 4 Custom House Square.pa Telephone Communication, , Esq., General Manager + Runs Daily, Sundays included.Other tiains week days only.II Parlor and Sleeping Cars on trains to marked.American Customs Officer at station to examine baggage destined for the United Stater.TICKET OFFICES: 266 St.James Street, Windsor and Balmoral Hotels, and Quebes Gate Station, sunc 6 133 .MONTREAL AND OTTAWA Fastest and Shortest Line to Ottawa.SOX.IT through trains between Montreal and Ottawa, lighted by the Electric Light.Magnifcent PULLMAN BUFFET PARLOR CARS Meals served in Parlor Cars on all trains on the European plan.- CHLORODYNE.Dr.J.Collis Browne's Chlorodyne Vice-Chancellor 8ir W.PAGE WooD stated publicly in Court that Dr.J.CCLLIS BROWNE was undeubtedly the inventor of Chiorodyne, that the whole story of the defendant Free- untrue, and he regretted been sworn to.\u2014Times, July man was literall te say that it h o, 1864, Dr.J.Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne Is the best and most certain remedy in coughs, consumption, neuralagig, colds, asthma, rheumatism.&e Dr.J ] \u20ac: Collis Browne's Chlorodyne-The Right Hon.Earl RUSSELL communicated to the College of Physicians and J.T.Davenport Tho ONLY LINE in Canada using ELECTRIC LICHT orn: trains.Trains Leave Bonaventure Depot at 8.50 A.M .for 0 am.4.30 p Maver arriving 12.55 and 8.10 P.M.For tickets, parlor car accommodation, Freight Rates and full information, apply tg Company's Office, 136 St.James St.Tickets and Seats in Parlor Cars can also secured at Windsor and Balmoral Hotel, ticket offices, Bonaventure Depot and 143 Su James Str£e vw that be had received information tothe effect A-E.CAIRNS, PERCY R.TODD, that the only remedy of any service in Geueral Agent, Genl.Pass.Agent, Cholera ras hlorodyne\u2014See Lancet, Decem- Montreal.Ottawa er 166 Dr.J.Collis Browne's (hlorodyne is pres +cribed by scores of orthodox practitioners?Of course it would not be thus singularly popular did it not riupply a want and filla a place.\u201d\u2014 Medical Times, January 12, 1285.Dr.J.Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne is a certain cure for Cholera, Dysentery, Diarrhœa, Colics, &c.Dr.J.Collis Browne's Chlorodyne\u2014Caution \u2014None genuine w.thout the words, * Dr.Jj Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne\u2019 on the stamp.Overwhelming medical testimony accompa, nies each bottle .Sole manufacturer, J.Tj T, 33 street, Bloomsbury, London.Sold in bottles atls 1d DAVENPOR Great Russell 25 9d,48 8d_and Nie.~ THE KEY-TO HEALTH, es Dion Lat ?Unlocks allthe ologged avenues of the Bowels, Kidneys and Liver, carry« ing off gradually without weakening the system, all the impurities and foul humors of the socretions; at the same time Correcting Acidity of the Stomach, curing Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Headaches, Dizziness, Heartburn, Constipation, Dryness of tho Skin, Dropsy, Disnness of Vision, Jaundice, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Fluttering of tho Heart, Nervousness, and General Debility; all thess and many other similar Complaints vield to the happy iniuones oc: ÉHURDOCOK BLCOD EVTIERTE, moe nn =.mot E.J.CHAMBERLIN, General Manager, Ottawa._ December 0 \u2014\u2014__ TRAINS LEAVE MONTREAL, BONAVENTURE STATION.7 A.M\u2014Arriving St.John\u2019s 835 a.m.25 Farnham 9.55 am.Granby 11.20 a.m.\u2018Waterloo 12,40 noon.Granby 130 8.18.A.M.\u2014White Mountain Express, ar- 8.30 riving Wells River 2.23 pa Litton ton 3.37 p.m., Bethlehem 4.25 p.m., Profile House 4.45 p.m., Twin Mountain House 4.16 p.m,, Fabyans 4.28 p.m., Crawford House 5.09 p-m., Summit Mount Washington 6.30 pm, Portland 8 p.m., Old Orchard Beach 8.50 p.m.Buftet Parlor Car to Fabyans.A.M.\u2014Fast train, arriving St.Albans 8,30 10.50 ar, Burlington 5 10 p.m., Montpelier 12.50 p.m., White River Junction 2,65 p.m., Boston via Lowell 7.25 p.m., and New York via Springfield 10 p.m.Pullman New Buffet Parlor Cars to Boston.4 20 P.M.\u2014NEw YORK EXPRESS, DAILY, : SUNDAY INCLUDED, arriving Si.Albang 6.50 p.ra., (Supper); Burlington 8.15 pm: Rutland 10,80 p.m., \u2018Troy 2.00 a.m., Al- i any 2.20 a.m., New York 7.00 a.m.Daily, : Sunday exoeptods prime Worcester 6.40 m.; ston 6.00 a.m., vie Rutlan Cc Falls and Fitchburg, 1nd, Bellows Wagner's new Palace Sleeping Cars Montreal to New York and St.Albans to Boston.5 30 P.M.\u2014Express, arriving Farnham | 7.47 p.m., Granby 7.42 p.m., Waterloo 8.15 p m.8 30 P.M.\u2014 Boston Night Express.DAILY, \u2019 SUNDAY INCLUDWD, arriving St.Albans 10.45 p.m., White River Junction 3.13 a.m., Manchester 6.25 a.m., Nashua 7.00 a.m., Boston via Lowell 8.30 a.m.Daily, Sunday excepted, for Boston via Fitchburg, arriving CANAL CO\u2019S RAILROADS.\u201cIPD.and HH.\u201d TO Saratoga, Troy, Albany, Bostea, New York Philadelphia.AND ALL POINTS SOUTH AND EAST.Quick Time.No Delays.Lake Champlain & George Steamers TRAIN LEAVE MONTREAL 7.25 a.m.\u2014Daily, except Sunday.Drawing?room, Montreal to New York, ariiving ia New York 8.50 p.m.4.50 p.M.\u2014Nizhu Express, Sundays included \u2014Wagner\u2019s Elegant Slieeping Cars run through to New York without change, ar- fving in New York at 7.60 next morninz.#2 This Train makes close counecijon at roy and Albany with Sleeping Car Traiu for Boston, arriving at 9.30 a.m.New York Through Mails and Express carried via this line, Information given, and Tickets sold at Windser and Balmoral Hote!s, all Grand Trunk Offices, and at tho Company's Office.143 St.James Street, Montreal.J.W.BURDICK, CHAS.C.MCFALL General Pass.Act, General Agent.Albany.N Montrea «xX, 9.85 a.m., New York via Northamp:on, Hoiy- oke, Bpringfield and New Haven, 11.40 a.m.This train makes close connection at Nashtia and Winchenden for Worcester, Providence and all points on the New York New England Railroads, Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars to Boston and Springfield, For Tickets, Time-tabies, and all infor- maticn, apply at Windsor and Balmoral Hotels, Grand Trunk Offices, or at the Come pany\u2019s office, 188 St, James Street.A.C.STONEGRAVE, Canadian Passenger Agent, J.W.HOBAXT, 8.W.CUMMINGS, General Manager, General Pass, Agente Montreal, June 27.1887.FOR SALE, SO-GALILON OIL TANKS! Calvanized fron Tanks, Emerald Japanncd, cconontical, ornamental, and indispensable ts setailers of coal oil znd other oils.PRICE, = = = 8&.50.Cali and examine thom at \u2014 THERE \u2014 BEAVER GIL 00S OFFICE, G4 College Street, MONXTRIZAL March 6 ly 536 8 LATING INTELLIGENCE.Field Battery Sports at the Island on Saturday.The Montreal Gun Club Shoot.Great Lacrosse Match at Ottawa To-day.The Junior Shamrocks Beat the St.Lawrence.The Belmonts Beat the Clippers at Baseball.ATHLETICS, The Field Battery Sports.A GOOD GATHERING AND A DEGIDED SUCCESS.The Field Battery held its annual sports Saturday, on the Island.The day was splendid and of course there was a large crowd of spectators.The games were held near the camp under the elms and a better place for sports on a hot ay could not be found.At three o\u2019clock promptly the bell rang for the ames to start when Lt.Col.Stevenson, lt.Col.Lyman, Lt.Col.Caverhill, Ex- Mayor Beaugrand, Capt.Stevenson, Lts.Hooper and Hogan, who were the judges, «ntered the enclosure set apart for the games and the games commenced.Among the gentlemen present was Cap- ain Wulff, an officer of the Prussian egiment of Zeithen Hussars, who seemed o take a great interest in the sports.The captain is on a tour through Canada and the United States.The gallant bat- terymen, conscious that the eyes of their fair ones are on them, resolved to do or die, and in consequence all the gamas were keenly contested and a pleasant afternoon\u2019s sport had.The only drawback was the length of the programme and the unpleasant delays between events.These latter wers in a great measure unavoidable, however.The military sports especially, which are enumerated below, were exceptionally interesting and in themselves alone worth a trip to the island to look at.Below is a detailed statement of the events on the programme :\u2014 The firat event on it was the head and post practice.This is a sport peculiar to military gatherings, the competitors having to slice off a wooden head on a post while riding at full speed, and also run their sabres through a small iron ring.The competitors weat through the exercise in a very credible manner, considering that their animals had little or no training.There were six entries.Two rounds were run which resulted in a tie between Serzt.Lindsay, Lieut.Hogan and trpmpeter Porteous, In the final round these cams out in the following order :\u2014Sergt.Lindsay first, Lt.Hogan second, trumpeter Porteous third.The second event was the time-honored military sport of \u2018 tilting at the ring.\u201d There were six entries, the compstitors coming out as follows :\u2014 Serg.Walker 1st; Trumpeter Porteous 2nd: Lt.Hogan 3rd.Entries were now in order for the wheel race, the different competitors having to run a heavy artillery wheel around the course.Four contestants entered for this but only three succeeded in reaching the finishing spot: \u2014 Drummer Keyworth, 1st; Bombadier Keyworth, 2nd; Gunner Kendle, 3rd.The quarter mile race was next on the programme for which there were four entries, The following were the winners :\u2014J.Owens, 1st, Field Battery ; Holstrod, 2nd, M.G.A.In the obstacle race there wero five entries, Private Holstead, M.G.A.1st; Bombadier Keyworth, F.B., 2nd.The three-legged race, which followed, had only two entries.The Keyworth brothers, F.B., won in a canter.The half-mile race brought out si competitors.Private Moffatt, Vics, wo easily with Private Holsrod, of the Gar rison Artillery, second.In the potato race there were five entries, Private Holstrod, M.G.A., lst; Bomb.Keyworth, F.B., and Owens, F.B, were tied for second place.Ths tie was not run off as each man was given a prize.\u201c To oblige some members of the Montreal Cavalry a special round of head and post practice was given.There were seven entries, with the followinz result : \u2014Sergt.Kendall, F.B., 1st; Sergt.Walker, ¥.B, 2nd; Sergt.Henderson, Cavalry, 3rd.Im this course Sergt.Kendall made an especially good run, carrying off every point.The feature of the afternoon\u2019s sports was a bayonet compefition between a team from the Victoria Rifles and one from the Royal Scots.The Vics were under the command of Lieutenant Bodersley and the Scots under Captain Lydon.There were twelve fyles in each team.Lt.-Col.Lyman and Lt.Hogan were the judges.The compa- tition was gone through in open order at first, and performed so well by both teams that it resulted in a tie.The teams were accordingly orderad to perform the drill in close order, and this resulted in the Scots being declared the winners.In the artillery race the four sub-divi- sions of the battery competed.The race consisted in advancing and retiring at full gallop and firing of four roun is of ammunition each.Sergeant Kendall\u2019s sub-division were the victors.The sports of the day wera concluded with an artillery display.A gun and a detachment of the Scots were posted in the high bushy ground above the camp while another gan and a second detachment of the Scots marched across the field.When they got in line of the enemy\u2019s fire the gun in the bushes opened fire and the fumes of saltpetre were pregnant for several minutes.When the enemy in the bushes openead firs the troops on the low ground formed in line, firel a couple of volleys, after which their gun was supposed to be knocked out by having a wheel broken.The enemy then advanced from the bushes, while the others unlimbered their gun and galloped off for a new wheel.While this was being performed a detachment of the Battery mounted as lancers who had been concealed behind some trees dashed out and decided the fortunes of the day.Sergt.-Major Wallick commanded the attacking force, and Capt, Lydon the defensive one.There was to have been a tug-of-war contest, and Captain Beckingham, Foreman Doolan and a team of firemen were on the grounds, but no other team turned up so there was no pull, CRICKET.WEST EXD C.C, DEFEAT THE CANADA C.C.A match was played on Saturday afternoon between the West End Cricket Club and the Canada Cutlery Company\u2019s Club, on the grounds of the West End Club at Cote St.Antoine, resulting in an easy victory for the home club by 73 THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.MONDAY.JULY.2 runs\u2018 The feature of the afternoon was the brilliant batting of A.Redfern for the home club, his 43 being put together without once giving a chance.Savage and Watts also did good service for their side with 15 and 12 runs respectively.Watts and Walker distinguished themselves with the ball, the cutlery men being unable to do anything with them.It must be said for the cutlery man that they have lost some of their best players of last year throuzh naving gone to the States, and a lot of young blood in consequence being called into requisition.With a little more practice they will give à good account of themselves before the season closes.The West Enders surprised everyone by their excellent all round play, their fielding being sharp and to the point, their batting very fair on the whole, and, and with two such bowlers as Watts and Walker, they will prove dangerous antagonists against any club they may compete with in the future.They play the Ottawas to-day, and a grand match may be looked for.The wicket-keeping of Dewfall for the \u2018West End Club, and Morton for the Cutlery Club, was very fine.The following are the teams and scores :\u2014 WEST END C.C.H.Hutchings, ¢ Goddard, b Kent Angall,b Kent.A.Redfern, b Ib Watts, b Pearson.Miles, ¢ Morton, b Le Savage, c¢ Ibbotson, b Kent.Walker, ¢ Debue, b Ibbotson.Davis, DIDDOLSON.0.008000 0e nc 000 ss Williams, b Pearson.\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026.Dewfall, notout.8.A.Shaw, b Ibbotson .\u2026.EXtras.\u2026.\u2026\u2026\u2026.0.ser snoceuven sas e cc n00000 Runs.& | Ke OONVIG NAS CANADA CUTLERY C.C.Lee, b Walker.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026\u2026.esencenecs anse Morton, b Watts.eae Trevethick,b Watts.Pearson, c Walker b Kent, b Walker.Goddard, b Watts 1bbotson, ¢ Angall, ke Debue, \u20ac Miles, b Watts .Day, b Walker .\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.Cahill, not out .Newton, b Watts.Ce Extras.sensseoon cn 0t ess o0an00 cc 0000008 LACROSSE.THE SHAMROCK V8.OTTAWA MATOH.The match between the Senior Shamrocks and Ottawas is causing a great deal of excitement in lacrosse circles.Oa Saturday evening last at Tansey\u2019s, on Craig street, a lot of betting was done at evens, but towards the close the odds were slightly in favor of the Shamrocks, when it became known that despite sprained legs, Canadien, Ahearn and Tansey would go up with the team.The following will compose the Shamrock team: Messrs.Reddy, Barry, Creagan, Duggan, Brown, Devine, Ahearn, Canadien, Riley, O'Keefe, Ellard and Tansey.As to the referee, that has not been settled yet.a draw was made on Saturday evening, and Messrs.Carruthers, Ross, Mackenzie and Maltby were the names submitted, but as these gentlemen are of town they could not act.A second draw took place yesterday, when Messrs.Davidson (Montreal), Frazer (Brockville), and Young (Cornwall), were chosen.No answer has yet been received as to which of these gentlemen will act, either one of them being acceptable to the Shamrocks.A large contingent will accompany the team this morning to Ottawa.As to the result, the Shamrocks recognize that they will have to play their best to down their doughty antagonists.Mr.Tansey, of the Tansey House, has made arrangements with the Telegraph Company for a special wire at his place, where the result of each game will be telegraphed during the progress of the game.THE JUNIOR BHAMROCKS AND THE BT.REXCE CLUB.A match was played on Saturday afternoon last for the district championship, between the Junior Shamrocks and the St.Lawrence lacrosse clubs, on the grounds of the latter, at Ilochelaza, befora a large number of ladies and gentlemen.The St.Lawrence grounds ara much shorter than the Shamrock grounds, handicapping those fine young lacrosse players to such an extent that many thought the St.Lawrence club would bo the victors; but notwithstaading the great disadvantages they were laboring under, the Junior \"Shamrocks, by soma magaificent all-round play, finally came out the victors by 3 goals to 1.There is very little doubt, julging from Saturday\u2019s play, that the Juniors have a mortgage on the pennant if they only keep up to the form already shown by them this season.The following composed the teams :\u2014 Junior Shamrock.Position.LAW- St.Lawrence.W.J.McKenna.Goal.T.Kelly T.Dwyer.Point.Veteran W.Cook T.Murray.Cover Point.W.McKeown L.Frazer.J.Wilkinson T.Brophy.} Defence Field {.WwW Elliot J.MeVey.R.Hinton T.Moore.J0 Jeu oo.W.Skelly T.McBriarty.Home; .D.Drysdale M.Rowe.\u2026\u2026.H.Mackay M.J.Tansey.Outside Home.W.Kemp T.Cafferty.Inside Home.W.Hinton F.McGuire.Captain.J.Wallis Messrs.P.Rooney and J.II.Campbell officiated as umpires, and Mr.W.J.Mc- Caflery as referee.SUMMARY.1st game, Junior Shamrocks.Time, 30 minutes.2nd game, St.Lawrence.Time, 20 minutes.3rd game, Junior Shamrocks.Time, 10 minutes.4th game, Junior Shamrocks.Time, 1 minute, THE JUNIOR SERIES\u2014BEAVERS AND HAW- THORNES.A match between the Beavers and Hawthornes, of the Junior League series, was played on Saturday afternoon last on the Exhibition grounds.The game was a well-contested one, but the Beavers, by their excellent tsam, succeeded in winning the match by three goals to one.For the Beaver Houston, Howard and Macfarlane played first- clags lacrosse, and, for the Hawthornes, Cassils, Berry and Edgardick did good work.° After the match was ended the Beavers left for Quebec to play the St.Louis Club, of that city.The following composed ihe teams :\u2014 BEAVERS, POSITIONS.HAWTHORNS.Hy.Scanlan.Goal.A.Hamilton VW.Houston.Poiat.H.Cassils R.Jones.Cover Point.,,.K.Buchanan M.Castle, J.Robertson Day, Defence Field.R.Force E.James, W.Barry.E.A.Chaloner.Centre.W.Donahue W.O\u2019Bricn, A.Edgar, W.Barlow, Home Field.F.Crafrern, Geo.Gamble, Geo.Hamilton P.Howards.Outside Home.F.Hebert T.Macfarlane.Inside Home.A.Robartson Ed.McCaffrey.Captain.S.Lichtenhein \u201cMessrs.Finlay and G.Cornell acted as umpires and Mr.A.Shanks as referee.THE GUN.MONTREAL GUN CLUB'S FIRST COMPETITION FOR TIE SILVER ICE PITCHER.The first of three competititions for a beautitul silver ice pitcher, offered by the management of the Montreal Gun Club, was shot for on their grounds at Cote St.Antoine on Saturday afternoon last.There was a large attendance of ladies and gentlemen, but the shooting was not up to the average\u2014in most instances very poor\u2014due to the high and very shifty wind which blew over the traps, completely outwitting many of the crack shots.At the conclusion it was found that Mr.W.L.Cameron headed the list, with four other gentlemen a tie for second place, but there being no second prize it was not necessary to shoot off.The second shoot will take place on Saturday afternoon next, and given favorable weather, some first-class scores may be looked for.After the pitcher shoot several sweepstakes were competed for, Mr.Cameron securing two prizes and Mr.Robertson one.The following gentlemen were selected to represent the club at the Dominion shoot to be held today on their grounds at the tail race :\u2014 Messrs.W.L.Cameron, Ramsay, E.Cowley, W.F.Robertson and Leach.These gentlemen put in some excellent practice during the afternoon.BASEBALL, BELMONTS VS.CLIPPERS.The match of baseball between the Belmonts and Clipperg, on the Shamrock grounds Saturday afternoon, did not end as satisfactorily to the audience as might have been expected, owing to the Clippers not acquiescing in the umpire\u2019s decision on a foul from Collins\u2019 bat.At the time of the disagreement the score stood, Belmonts 14, Clippers 10.On account of their not abiding by his decision Mr.Koesten the umpire, gave the game to the Belmonts with the score 9 to 0.This is according to the rules, should either side refuss to play after five minutes have expired.Both teams, with the exception of a few excusable errors, played a brilliant game, the batteries doing excellent work, 14 striking out through inability to bat.Heflernan for the Belmonts would have been better with more practice.Burns of the Clippers, although not the regular pitcher; did well.The dispute was very unfortunate; still, players should endeavor when playing to confine themselves to a strict interpretation of the rules, which distinctly state that the umpire is sole judge of play, and his decisions are not to be questioned, unless it be an error of the rules, not an error of judgment as in this case, no doubt the umpire was correct in calling it a foul, Whether he was or not the Clippers were bound to accept his decision.It might also be added that no one but the captains of each team have a right at any time to approach or question the umpire\u2019s decisions, let alone abuse him.It 1s a thankless position and clubs should be grateful to have any experienced gentleman aceept the position.FATAL ACCIDENTS.Yesterday afternoon Angel Guibord, a little girl of 12, was playing with her three younger brothers on Western Avenue around a capstan used by the Canadian Pacific Railway for hoisting stones, when a large stone fell, and the arm of the capstan flying around struck the child, injuring her so severely that she died shortly afterward.The coroner holds an inquest this morning.Elizabeth Hughes, a little girl nine years of age, residing with her parents at 118 Murray street, was drowned in the river near the canal at 5 o'clock yeste- day afternoon.She had been playing on an old barge lying there, and, standing on the gunwale, became dizzy, los; her balance, and fell into the river.She called for help and screamed to her little brother that she was drowning, but there Was no one near to help her, and the unfortunate child was lost.The body was recovered by Sergeant Watson, of No.7 Station, at 5.40 p.m., only forty minutes after the girl fell in.The coroner holds an inquest this afternoon at 3 o\u2019clock.ILLUSTRATED LECTURE ON ELECTRICITY.Its Application for the Production of Power, Heat and Light.A Sherbrooke correspondent writes, under date of June 3üth: \u201cAt the instance of the Art Association, Mr.A.J.Corriveau has completed arrangements for a lecture on electricity, which will be given in the Art Hall on Friday evening, July 6th, by Mr.Kimball, one of the electricians of the Royal Electric Company of Montreal.The lecture will demonstrate the powers and capabilities of adaption of thisgiant power.An electri.motor will be put in operation on the platform, attached to some machinery, the power being transmitted from the Magog river water power.An illustration of cooking by electricity will also be given, and diagrams and apparatus shown by a stereopticon.No doubt admission will be eagerly sought, as the information to be gained from a practical electrician cannot fail to be useful, especially at the present time, when this mode of transmitting power, heating and lighting is coming into common use.R W.Heneker, Esq., will preside.CRIMINAL CASES.Diendonne Nantel, arrested for swindling people by representing himself as an agent of Messrs.W.Clendenning & Sons, was sentenced on Saturday morning to 6 month\u2019s imprisonment and a fine of $30 or an additional 6 months.John Kehoe was brought before the court Saturday morning and formally committed to stand his trial before the Court of Queen's Bench in September.Nine more of the Cotean St.Louis quarrymen have been arrested for alleged participation in the recent riot.The alleged New York forger Krah will be brought before the Magistrate today and extradition proceedings commenced.ALMOST DROWNED.At 2.30 p.m.Saturday Constable Fraser of the city police saw a containing three men named Nettleton, upset between the Island and Victoria bridge.He called one of the tugs at the wharves to go their assistance and had, it is claimed, to threaten the officers before they would do so.The men were finally rescued, not, however, before one ot them was nearly drowned.He was unconscious when taken out of the water, and much difficulty was experienced in bringing him tore SUICIDE BY DROWNING.The Coroner held an inquest on Satur day night on the body of Patrick Behan, who threw himself 1n the Elgin Basin in the afternoon.Behan was employed as a laborer on the wharves, and had been in this country about four years.When sober he was hardworking and indus- i trious, but was accustomed to go on periodical sprees, during which he drank i very heavily.On Saturday he ran out of ! a saloon on Common street, down the wharf and jumped overboard.A verdict was rendered of, \u201cSuicide by drowning while under t' e influence of liquor.\u201d Children Cry for Pite her\u2019s Castoria.A LUCKY ESCAPE.A Yacht Capsizes Above the Lachine Rapids\u2014A Hard Struggle to Save its Crew.What might have proved a fatal accident, but was luckily averted by the Caughnawaga boat, occurred at Lachine on Saturday afternoon last.It appears that Mr.Barrett with his two sons and two daughters started in their yacht from Lachine with the intention of camping out scme five miles up the river.After going out a short distance in the river, by some mishap they got out of the channel, into the current.Unfortunately they did not understani the management of the yacht very well, and drifted towards the rapids, nearing which, the chain broke and the yacht capsized.The party held on to the boat, and succeeded in climbing on top of it, and as they luckily drifted against a buoy, the party clung to it.At this juncture the (\u2018anghnawaga boat put out for the scene of the disaster, and after a hard tussle with the current, effected the rescue of the party, not, however, without losing their anchor amongst some rafts floating down.The yacht when left to itself dashed over the rapids and was smashed to pieces,all the stores being completely lost.On the shipwrecked party being brought to the shore, they were at once attended to, and from latest advices all of them are doing well - THE VICS.\u201d TRIP TO TORONTO.They Leave Saturday Evening.A large crowd of peeple assemblel on Saturday evening in the vicinity of th: Vics.Armory to witness the Victoria Rifles march to the Grand Trunk Dapot to proceed by special train to Toronto.The regiment, 360 all told, under th command of Lt.-Col.Henshaw, presentad a fine appearance as, headed by their bicycle corps, with lighted lamps, followed by the Pioneers and the fina band of the regiment they marched through Dorchester street down Windsor street, eliciting many marks of approbation from the large crowds who lined the thoroughfare.On arrival very little time was lost in boarding the cars.On arriving at the Union station, Toronto, they were received by the officers, non- commissioned officers and men of the Q.O.R.They marched up York and along King streets, headed by the Q.9).R.band, to the latter's headquarters in London lane.In the afternoon they formed on Toronto street and marched to the Church of the Redeemer, whera divine service was here.To-day a visit to Niagara by boat is projected, some proceeding thither and others remaininz to do the sights.From 4 p.m.to 6 p.m.the Royal Canadian Yacht Club give them a reception, and at 6.30 the officers dine with these of the Q.0.R.at the Reform Club.They return by train at 9 this evening.en AMUSEMENTS.Theatre Royal, NELSON SPECIALTY COMPANY.The above company closed a fairly successful week\u2019s engagement at the Royal on Saturday night.LILLY CLAY'S GAIETY COMPANY.This afternoon the Lilly Clay Gaiety Company give their first performance at the Theatre Royal, presenting \u201cThe Mash I Got\u201d for the first time in this city.The following is what the New York Herald says of the performance :\u2014 \u201c A good many hundreds of New York's Adams crowded: the comedy, Robinson Crusoe, last evening, and standing room was hard to find even in the aisles.All present were regaled with a remarkably fine and unique performance.They applauded deservedly the pretty poses and graceful dances, and waited expectantly for the burlesque.It came and of course it was musical, and equally, of course, absurd.Jokes of the * Pocahontas,\u201d \u2018Fun in a Greenroom \u201d style are plenti- ul, and the motive of the production\u2014a cross between that of Tennyson\u2019s \u201c Princess\u201d and Solomon\u2019s \u201c Billee Taylor \u201d\u2014 s that lovely women cannot rest content without the men, We have had wild farces and minatrel troupes perennially with a rehash of the same old jokes, but t bas remained for this company to present a series of new and bright witticisms that keep up a continual ripple of laughter.\u201d Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday the sparkling burlesque entitled \u201c The Mask I Got;\u201d Thursday, Friday and Saturday, the spectacular burlesque of * Robinson Crusoe.\u201d TO AND FRO.Mr.I.P.Howe, General Agent of the Lake Shore Railway, with his wife, is stopping at the Balinoral.Mr.W.H.Arnton and lady got back to town last night.They are atthe Windsor.Abel Dallas and wife, Montana; H.H.Wilts, Columbus, Ohio; F.D.Bickley, Rome, N.Y.; Geo.E, Talbot, Francis M.Weld, Boston; F.A.Call, Guelph; W.H.Winnett, London ; J.S.Robertson, L.L.Spence, Toronto; D.H.Laynahan, Duluth ; and F.Cairmon, London, Eng,, are among the late arrivals at the Bal- moral.Among those at the Windsor are :\u2014E.W.Parker, Boston ; J.W.Gibson, V.E.Froude, London, Eng.; Foucher de St.Maurice, Quebec; J.J.Bennett, P.Alder, Oxford, Eng.; E.D.Preston and wife, San Francisco; M.L.Brown and wife, London, Eng.; J.Martland, Upper Canada College, Toronto.oe SATURDAY'S FIRES.At 1253 p.m.Saturday the brigade were called cut to answer an alarm of fire caused by some burning straw, on Lagauchetiere street.At 4.21 a lumber pile opposite 671 St.Denis street was noticed to be on fire.The blaze was extinguished before damage to any considerable extent was done.At 7.12 the men had another run, this time 51 Labelle street, the residence of Mr.J.Gagnon, where a coal oil lamp had exploded.No damage was done.WEATHER REPORT.METEOROLOGICAL QFFICE, } Toronto, July 1,11 p.m.To-night the pressure is comparatively high from the Lake region to the Atlantic, and low over the western part of the continent.In Ontario and Quebec the weather has been fine with temperature between 65 ° and 75°, and in Manitoba and the North-West fine, with temperatures between 75° and 85°.In the Maritime Provinces it has been cool, with rain during the early part of the day.Probabilities, All Canada\u2014Light to moderate winds, generally fair, with a little higher temperatures.CHARMING.\u2014Dyer\u2019s Jelly of Cucumber and Roses is just the thing to take \u2018o the country.It will remove freckles ani sunburn, W.A, Dwyer & Co, MARINE INTELLIGENCE.MOVEMENTS OF STEAMSHIPS, ARRIVED.At Bremen June 29, Saale, from New York.yt Copenhagen June 24, Hekla, from New or 1 At Liverpool, June 29, Texan, from New Or- eans, vat London June 29, Teneirs, from New ork.At Liverpool June 29, Inventor, from New Orleans.Off the Lizard June 29, Wandrahm, from Montreal.At Hong Kong June 26, Abyssinia, from Vancouver.Off Brow Head June 29, Bonnington, from Quebec tor Dublin.Otr the Lizard June 23 (7 p.m.), Greece, from New York for London.At Havana June 23.Saratoga, from New York ; Mexico, from do.Off Prawle Point, June 28, Flachat, from New 0; leans for Havre.At Liverpool June 29, Germanic, from New York ; Wisconsin, for do.Off the Lizard June 29, Aberlady Bay, from Port Royal for an English port.At Thomas June 23, Allisuca, from New York for Rio Janeiro (proceeded) At Hong Kong June 23, City of Peking, from San Francisco via Yokohama.At Liverpool June 29, Michigan, from Boston; Lake Ontario, from Montres.; Ai Queenstown June W (2 a.u.), Scythia, New York for Liverpool (proceeded).Off Dunnet Head June 28, West Cumberland, from Montreal for West Hartlepool.At New York June 29, Cienfuegos, from Clr nfuegos ; Hipparchus, from Rio Janeiro.At Philadelphia June 29, Kong Alf, from Jamaica: Brixham, from do; Latharno, from do.At New York June 29, Willkomen, from Newcasile-on-Tyne; Hipparchus, from Rio Janeiro.At New York June 2, Hammonia, from\u2019 Hamburg; Gallia, from Liverpool; Exeter City, frem Bristol; Lahn, from remsn ; Britannic, from Liverpool; Nasmyth, trom Santos; Wilkomen, from shields.PORT OF MONTREAL.CLEARED.Steamship Irene Morris, 929, A, Halliburton, Sydney, C.B., C.McLean, light.Steamship Lake Superior, 2965, W.Stewart, Liverpool, H.E.Murray, general.Steamship Fremona, 1897, A.Anderson, London, R.Reford & Co., general, Steamship Capulet, 1451, H.H.Ellis, London, Bryant, Powis & Bryant, deals.Bark Marquise of Lorne, 834, George Vick- rey, Buenos Ayres, Kingman, Brown & Co., lumber.Steamship Grassbrook, 1275, S.Schulat, Hamburg via Grimsby, Munderloh & Co., general, NOTFS.The Allan mail steamship Porynesian passed Cape Rosier at 11 à m.on Saturday.The Allan mail steamship Sarmatian, from Quebec for Liverpool, arrived out on Satur- ay.LACHINE CANAL.ARRIVED., Steamer Edmondsley, Pictou, coal.Barge Ned, Ottawa, 273,000 feet lumber.Barge Lew1s, Ottawa, 156,000 feet lumber.Barge Herbert, Oitawa, 186, 00 feet lumber.Barge Donnelly, Ottawa, 158,000 feet lamber.Barge Walcott, Ottawa, 163,000 feet lumber.Barge J.Wilson, Ottawa, 158,000 feet lum- er.Barge Glenevis, Coteau Landing, 3,752 bush.oats, J.D.Esdaile.PORT OF QUEBEC.QUEBEC, June 30.ARRIVED, Bark Gylfe, Tait, Greenock, Ross & Co.Steamship Bratsberg, Neilsen, Sydney for Montreal, coal.Steamship Benholme, Doyle, Glace Bay, for Montreal, coal.Canal boat Mary, Noel, Hoboken, N.J., Bennett & Co., coal.Steamship Thorneholme, Holmes, Sydney for Montreal, coal.Canal boat H.G.Noel, Noel, Hoboken, N.J.Bennet & Co., coal.Canal boat Mabel M., Mochon, Whitehall, G.M.Webster & Co., coal.; CLEARED.a (eamship Polino, Lachance, Cow Bay, Ross Jo Bark Anna, Andersen, Grangemouth, Mc- Arthur Bros.Bark Soderhamn, Maas, London, Dobell, Beckett & Co.Steamship Grecian, Legallals, Glasgow, Allans, Rae & Co.Bark G.M.Cairns, Ileselton, Sunderland, Smith, Wade & Co.Bark Kaja, Christiansen, Great Yarmouth, Dobell, Beckett & Co.NOTES.Steamship Coban will be in dock over two months repairing.Allan Line «teamship Grecian left port for Glasgow at 3 a.m.Ship Lizzie Troop is shipping cargo of lumber for Australia.Tug steamer John A.Macdonald left port to-night for Kingston.Spring fleet of Quebec timber ships are beginning te arrive home, Tug steamer Dauntless was inward at Bie yesterday with a bark in tow.Tug steamer Canada left Nicolet yesterday with raft of saw logs for Montmorency mills.Rteamship Lake Superior, on her outward trip, will ship a quantity of deals at this port Steamship Polino arrived from Montreal at 6.40 a.m., shipped some cargo and proceeded for Sydney.Steamship Wylo arrived from Montreal at 7.30 a.m., shipped some hands and proceeded for Sydney.\u201c Quite a number of vessels have got away to sea within the past two days, with prevailing favorable winds.Seamen continue scarce at this port, and wages rule high, as much as £7 and £8 per month being paid.Coasting steamship Otter left this morning for Esquimaux Point and way ports on her sixth trip this season.« steemships Thorneholme, last midnight; Bratsberg at 8.30 a.m., and Benholme at 3.3) p.m., all proceedzad for Montreal.Steamship Sarnia, from Montreal, which sailed yesterday, is said to have taken coal ballast owing to scarcity of freights.Bark Loyal, Capt.Prus, reported a total loss at Carrol\u2019s Cove in Straits of Belle Isle, was bound to London with a timber cargo by Messrs.Dobell, Beckett & Co.She is thd same vessel that ran down the Traverse light ship last fall and wintered at this port.There are no particulars as to how she went ashore, but the crew are reported on their way up to this port on a schooner.She satled from this port on the 6th inst.QUEBEC, July 1.ARRIVED.Bark Satisfaction, Rimkus, Leith.Ship Parmella, Hegnander, Rio Janeiro.Bark Britannia, Andersen, Buenos Ayres for Montreal, ballast, Steamship Polynesian, Wylie, Liverpool, Allans, & Co.general.Schooper Lizzie Lindsay, J.Howell, Gaspe, for Montreal, sundries.Barkentine Albatross, Richards, Barbadoes for Montreal, molasses.NOTES.Schooner Eugente, for Montreal, is reported in the river at hand.Bark Brittania left for Montreal ai 9 p.m.in tow of tug Champion.Steamship Alive arrived from Montreal at 1 p.m, and préceeded.» The Allan line steamship Assyrian sailed for London at daylight.Barkentine Albatross left for Montreal at 7 a.m.iu tow of tug Florence.Steamship Irene Morris arrived from Montreal at 5 p.m.and proceeded.Steamship Greetlands arrived at Cow Bay Saturday to load coal for Montreal.Tug steamer E.B.Eddy left for Ottawa last evening with a tow of lumber barge.An experiment will probably be made to lift the sunken Traverse light ship this week.Brigantine Lantana arrived from Montreal 7 a.m.yesterday, in tow tug Victoria and anchored.About eighteen vessels are reported to have passed outwards at Bic since Friday with strong west wind Brigantine Rapid, now at Montreal, hag been ordered down to this port to load lumber for South America, On return trip from Montreal tug Florence will bring down bark Gorda from Pierreville, which is loaded ready for sea.\u2018The Donaldson line steamship Alcides ar- rivea from Montreal last evening, snipped eighty standards of deals and sailed for Glasgow at 5 a.m.Mail steamship Polynesian arrived in port at3 p.m.and landed passengers and freight at the breakwater.She leaves for Montreal tomorrow morning.She brought nearly 1,100 passengers.GULF REPORTS.Jane 30-5 p.m.L\u2019ISLET\u2014Cloudy ; west wind; owing bark, 2.30 p.m.RIVER DU Lour-Cloudy ; raining; northeast wind ; foggy ; Druid at wharf.FATHER PoINT\u2014Cloudy; raining; wind ; bark outward 3 p.n.MARTIN RIVER\u2014Clear; east wind ; inwards 2.30 p.m.one two-masted.CAPE MAGDALEN\u2014Cloudy ; calm; outwards 11 a.m.steamship Sarnia.FAME PoiNT\u2014Clear; calm; inward 1.30 p.m.mail boat ; outward 1.3) p.m.steamship Sarnia; inward 1.3) p.m.steamship Orick.CAPE RosIER\u2014Clear ; northwest wiad ; inward 11 a.m.mail steamer ; outward 11 a.m.steamer Thanemore.PoINT MACQUIVEAU\u2014Steamer Admiral, for Gasp, outwards 2.3 p.m.July 1st\u2014-Noon.Florence, east FATHER Point=Clear, ligh, 10 varaih's wind, inward steamship Polynesian.2.30 p.m.steamship, 11 p.m.two barks; outward to-day one bark.; MATANE L1GHT\u2014Clear, cast wind, inward 2.30 p.m.Frigate Erik.MARTIN RIVER\u2014Clecar, calm, inwards 1.30 p.m.steamship Bonavista, 2.30 p.m.steamship Montreal.CAPE RosieR\u2014Clear, northwest wind.CAPE CHATTE LIGUT.-Clear, calm; inward 10 a.m., R.L.M.V.CAPE MAGDALEN\u2014Clear, northwest wind ; inward 9.30 a.1n., steamship Montreal.FAMI: POINT.\u2014Clear, northwest wind; inwards 9 a.m.steamship Montreal.INLAND NAVIGATION.PORT DALHODgIE, ONT., June 3).PASSED yp, Schooner S, Neelon, Kingyon.PASSED on Steam barge Dominion and consort, Fort William to Kingston, wheat; Propeller Celtic and consort, Duluth to Kingston, wheat; schooner Jennie Mathews, Chicago to Klng- ston, corn; schooner Mary Lyon, cago to Oswego; schooner Samana, Saginaw to Os- wego, lumber.Wind southerly, fresh, .PORT DALHOUSIE, Ont, July 1, IN HARBOR\u2014BOUND UP.\u2019 Propeller Waverly, schooner Mystic Siar, IN HARBOR\u2014WIND BOUND.Schooner Samana.Wind easterly; light.PORT COLBORNE, ONT., June 3h PASSED UP.Schooner F.C.Leighton, Oswego to Toledo, coal; W.H.Round, Charlotte to Chicago, coal: 8.Neelon, Kingston to Toledo, light; steamer Cuba, Montreal to Chicago, general cargo ; Hecla, Charlotte to Chicago , coal ; City of Chatham, Toronto to Chatham, light; barges Sherman and Mills, Charlotte to Chicago, coal; yacht Speranza, New York to Toledo, light.PASSED DOWN.Steamer Dominion and consort, Celtic and consort, Tilley and consort, Port Arthur ts Kingston, wheat.Rhoda Emily, Chicago to Kingston, corn; schooner John Wesley, Chicago to Kingston, ¢rrn ; Samana, Saginaw to Oswego, lumber; Mary Lyon, Chicago to Oswego, corn.ARRIVALS, Schooner 8t.Claire, Erie, coal.Wind west, moderating.PORT COLBORNE.Ont., July L.ARRIVED\u2014BOUND DOWN, Steamer B.W.Blanchard, schooner W.!J.Suffel, schooner Erie Wave.Wind northeast; light.KINGSTON, Ont., June 30.NOTES.The schooner Grantham loads iron ore for Cleveland.; The rate on corn from Chicago to Kingston is 4 cents per bushel.The schooner W.R.Taylor cleared to-day for Fairport with a cargo of iron ore.Arrivals, propeller Alma Muaro.Chicago, 8,4C0 bushels corn; schooner B.W.Folger.Oswego, 209 tons coal.Called at Swift's, steamer Passport, Toronto to Montreal ; steamer Algeria, Montreal to Toronto: Alma Munro, Chicago to Montreal ; Ella Ross, Ottawa to Montreal.SAULT STE.MARIE, MICH,, June 39.\u201cUP.Australasia, Erastus Corning, 7 p.m., Wisconsin, 5 a.m., India, 9.10 Chas.J.Sheffield, Gordon, Campbell, 11.30, Keystone, J.G.Master, 12.30 p.m.DOWN.Minneapolis, 8andiego, 8.40 p.m., Wockoken Pelican, 3.40 a.m., Superior, Sanduskey, Fred Mercur.4.45, Winslow, 9.40 M.B.Grover, H.Bent, Reed Case 10.5), Eifin Mire, Wadena, , Mm.Wind north-west, brisk, elea:.SAULT STE MARIE, Mich., July l.PASSED UP New Orleans, 8itks, 8.1) p.m.; G.L.Colwell, D.P.Dobbins.S.B.Pomeroy, 6.20; Canada 10.40; City of Cleveland, Thos.Quayle, Fa- vette, Brown, 12 m.; Colorado,5 #.m.; A.P.Grover, 6.20; Alberta, 11.15; Idaho, 12.5) p.m.; Otego, Montiallo, Montmorency, 2.30.PASSED DOWN.Geo.King, Teutonic, Thos.Gawn, 6.15 p.m.; Rube Richards.May Richards, E.C.Hutchin- 7.30; Spokane, 11.10; Nyack, Onoko, 5.40 a.m.; May Durra, Holsted, Gray Oak, 6; R.P, Ran- ney, Negaunnee, 9; 8.E.Peck, Athabasca, 12,10 p.m.; L.8hickluna,J.G.Worts, 1; Kate Winslow, Seack Chandler, 2: 8, F.Hodge, 2.5); Dean Richmond, Skylark, 6.\u2018Wind\u2014South, light, clear.SPOKEN.Bark Adelheid & Bertha (Br.), Evans, from Brunswick for Montevideo, May 27, lat.6 N., lon.28 W.Bark Shenir (Br.), Stirling, from Portland, 0., or Queenstown, June 5, lat.14 N., lon.35 W.Bark Success, King, from New York for San Francisco, May 22, lat.5 N., lon, 23 W.Bark Hecla (Br.), McDougall, from Shields for Algoa Bay (not ship Hecla, from Cardiff for Acapulco), June 27, lat.58 N., lon.8 W.American ship showing letters K B.S.V.(ship R.D.Rice, Jordan, from Philadelphia for Hiogo).June 3, lat.4.20 S., lon.32.40 W.Bark Deucalion (Br), Baker, from New York for Montevideo, June 24, lat.33.58 N., lon.62.30 (before reported 52.30).MARITIME MISCELLANY.Steamer Bessarabia (Br), at Liverpool from ghatham, N.B., reports June 6, off Banks of ewfoundland, during a dense fog.was in collision with a schooner, and sustained sl ght damage ; damage to schooner believed to be also slight.Steamer Frutera (Br), at Glasgow June 18 from St.John, N.B., had four plates bulged in by collision with bark Chrypolite (Nor), in addition to damage before reported.Afterward tle Frutera lost some deals off deck during heavy weather.Schooner Olivia (Br), from St.John, N.B., for New York, which arrived in Hart Island roads 29th, had cargo of lime on fire for the previous two days; it is pretty well smothered.BosTON, June 29.\u2014Bark Chattanooga, from Mayaguez for Bo ton, asnore near Scituate, has been abandoned, and will probably prove a total loss, together with her cargo.CUXHAVEN, June 13.\u2014sgrig Ievante, (Ger), arrived in the Elbe from Tampico, reports May 22, lat.39 north, lon.40.05 west, passad a black painted wreck, dismasted and apparently waterlogged, which was floating very dangerously for navigation.GLOUCESTER, Mass., June 2).\u2014Schooner Fred P.Frye, which arrived here from New York to-day, reports the loss of her foremast.David Pierce, one of the crew, was killed by the accident.HIGLANDS, N.J., June M.\u2014There is a black and white can buoy adrift off the Highlands.PHILADELPHIA, June 29.\u2014Steamer Brix- (Br), from Port Antonio, reports when sight miles south of the Delaware Capes, morning of 28th inst., the facing of the high pressure gugine broke, rendering the steamer perfectly helpless.She was towed to this port to-day from Rehoboth, where she anchored yester- ay.Schooner Maggie Dalling, from Cardenas, reports June 26, lat.36.40, long.75 west, passed close to a spar, apparently a vessel\u2019s mast, sticking about 16 feet out of the water on a right angle and broken oft at one end.A perpendicular staff extended upon from it with a torn blue flag on it.ROTTERDAM, June 13.\u2014Stea.aer Leerdam {Dutch], from New York, roports Jane 9, lat.44,33, long.39.40, passed the wreck of a large vessel with part of main and mizzen masts standing, but foremast entirely gone ; vessel fas derelict and there was no boat remaining on hoard.81.JoiuN, N.B., June 2.\u2014Thne hull of the schooner John Bird, ashore at Mispec Point, Was sold to-day for $44.The tackle, sails, running and standing gear, anchors, chains, spars, masts, ete., were sold in lots and realized about $1,214.SALEM, June 23.\u2014Schooner Forest Belle k rl, Phipps, from North Salem for St.hn, N.B., grounded on Beverly Bay this forenoon while bound to sea.She did not come off at high water thisafternoon, but will probably float at high tide to-morrow, VANCOUVER, B.C., June 30.\u2014The C.P.extra steamship, Port Adelaide, Cant.West, arrived to-night.She left Hong Koug June Ist, Yokahama l4th.She brings nine passengers and 613 Cninese, chiefly tor man Francisco.She has a full cargo, principally tea.The steamship Batavia sails for Yokahama July 3rd and Zarmbesi probably July 5th.STAMPING AND EMBROIDERY.\u201cYes, Lizzie, I like to do fancy work, but I haven't felt like trying that pattern ~\u2014or anything else\u2014for a week.These awful \u2018dragging.down\u2019 pains are just killing me\u201d! \u201cI know how you feel, and I can tell you where to look for relief.Dr.Pierce\u2019s Favorite Prescription is a certain cure for all those peculiar weaknesses and distressing aliments.Why! it even cured me of prolapsus, and many of lady friends have been cured of various grave maladies peculiar to our sex by this wonderful medicine.\u201d It isthe only medicine sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case, or money refunded.Read guarantee on bottle-wrapper.EE ~The excursion of the memb-rs of \u2018he Quebec Legislature to Lake St, John has been indefinitely postponed, TRE TEMPERANCE MEETING At the Queen\u2019s Hall Last Night The Queen\u2019s Hall was crowded to overflowing last night on the occasion of the Gospel temperance mass meeting in connection with the Prohibition Convention.Rev, Jos.Henderson presided, and on the platform were ex-Mayor Howland and Mr.F.R.Spruce, of Toronto, Rev, Dr.Shaw, Rev.Jas.Fleck; Rev.T.G.Williams, Rev.Mr.Cressy, Grand Knight Templar Buchanag, and a large number of his brethren in uniform.Amongst those present were a large nurgber of the most prominent temperance workers in the city.The proceedings were opened with the usual devotional exercises, after which the chairman, introducing the speakers, said he hoped that something practical would result from the approaching convention, and that a radical policy for the total suppression of the liquor trade by Legislative enactment would be introduced.Ex-Mayor Howland, of Toronto, who was heartily received, said that the tem- verance people, notwithstanding recent Nvèrses, were still in fighting trim.1r opponents thought that they had dom à great thing by defeating the Scott CL m a few counties, but they had nothing to boast of.The temperance people vou go on until they had knocked every\u201d bit lof life out of the saloon element.These had been mistakes mide in the past, and one great one thu the temperance people bad made, wat that they had accepted the average of he community and had not attempted to wise iti.They wanted personal effort to mise the standard of he community.They needeq to fight the enemy all along theline.He rete red to the fact that Montreal had Tro saloons, while Toronto had ouly 150.He only wondered that with all the political influence of the saloon element had there was not more such places.He asked them to think for one moment of the terrible results that flowed from one thousand two hundred and fifty such laces.He wastagainst any compromise.t was a struggle for life and death between the church and the devil.The Church could stop the traffic if it so desired.He referred to the effects on children.The issue had to be faced plainly by the church as the saloon was the headquarters of the enemy, of vice, infidelity and all other evils.Let the Church put her workers in the field and marchdown with money and men against the traffic, and it would soon disappsar.Mr.F.R.Spence, of Toronto, followed in a rousing speech in favor of total abstinence, for the individual and total prohibition for the community.BRIEFLETS.Thirty-four trains at present leave the Dalhousie Square C.P.R.station daily.The Field Battery held its church parade to the Stanley sjgeet church yestar~ day morning.The fresh-air fund concert will take place in the St.George\u2019s school-room on Thursday evening next.It is suggested that the Fire Depart- mene have a big fire parade in August on the Champ de Mars.Dr.Laberge has discoverad enough defects in the Gas Company\u2019s drain on Dalhousie street to order its removal.Yesterday was Choir Sunday at the Church of St.James the Apostle, and a special musical service was largely attended.\u2018 The new pastor of the Mountain Street Methodist Church preached his initial sermon yesterday morning to a large congregation.Since the introduction of street cars at Point St.Charles, the Street Railway Company reports a great improvement in the traflic returns from that route.Licenses were taken out for 782 dogs last months.This is a very small pros portion of the number taken out daring ast year, viz.3,770.The police begin to summon defalters to-day.The interesting ceremony of confirma tion was conferred upon young Sydaey Levine at the Congregation of Shaar Has- homaym, Mec-Gill College Avenue, Satur= day morning, by Rev.Mr.Friedlander.The semi-annual Bar examinations will be held at Three Rivers, on Wednesday next.Candidates can obtain \u2018tickets at reduced rates by applying to the General Secretary, Mr.S.Pagnuelo.Assessors Morin and Thomas have finished work in St.Mary\u2019s and are entering St.James\u2019 Ward.They expect to be occupied about a month in the latter, which is a large and well-built-up ward.The permanent Corporation officers were on Thursday paid for the month of June.It takes about $10,000 to do this.The firemen, policemen and sanitary policemen are paid weekly.The police pay roll amounts to $2,800 per week.St.Louis du Mile End is at work opening out and grading St.Louis street, which.will run from St.Lawrence street, behind the Exhibition Grounds, to the road around the Mountain at Outremont.It is to be ready for vehicles in about one month.The Road Department, in putting a sidewalk along Queen street, where none had ever been, ran foul of a large sa winz machine.As there is no apparent owner the City Surveyor hag ordered the machine to be advertised for sale by public auction.pe WEIGH y= ( ROYAL FSW0e8 Esouutery PURE Absolutel This Powder never varies, purity, strength and wholesomeness.economical than the ordinary kind: and cannot be sold in competition with the multitude of low-test, short-weisht alum 0 phosphate Powders.Sold only in cans, ROYAL AKING POWDER Co., 105 Wall street, N.Y, Pure.More THE HERALD iS printed and published by \u201c THE HERALD COMPANY Hon.Peter Mitchell, President, at_No.Beaver Hall Hill, Moni teal, A marv:l of (Li wile), | ! i ; "]
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