The Montreal herald, 5 octobre 1888, vendredi 5 octobre 1888
[" 20 to 15- ad ol 0, ed nd vO he the à Te- nis- one cal re- ips, ion.du- age, rth.ohn arly L as firm iple 1 fo ny\u2019s \\isg late The and new con- clad com re, 18 avye mail, from ntful rked who ) old 5, and multi + phos ROYAL 1.Y.ed by ted) \"No.6 \u2014 Portland Cement, Canada Cement, Water Lime, Drain Pipes, Chimney Tops, Vent Linings, Flue Covers, Whiting, Fire Bricks, Plaster of Parts, Fire Clay, Bo Roman Cement, Springs.Trax, China Clay.Bessemer Steel Scfa, Chalr and Bed | NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.\"SALT ALWAYS ON HAND: Rice's Pu re Dairy It.+¢ Table Salt.stabbs\u2019 Washington F.F.Salt.Liverpool Coarse Salt.jump Reck Salt, for cattle.FOR SALE BY VERRET, STEWART & CO.271 te 275 Comunissioners Street.ARRIVING DAILY Barrels Fresh Narrows oy: ters Barrels Fresh Malpeque do.NOW LANDING 1-88.Greetlands, $8.Danish Prince, 83.Wylo, 83.Fremona, &c.Bris.& Halves C.B.Herring.Barrels and Halves Labrador Herring.Barrels and Halves Labrador salmon.Bris.& Halves B.C.Salmon.RBdls.Large Dry Gaspe Codfish Kegs and Kitts Loch Fyne Herring.| Cases Canned 88.0.Salmon.Cases Canned PEL Mackerel Cases Canned Lobsters.30.000 Carr's Fire Bricks.Caledonia Mine Coal Screenings.J.& R.NIcLEA, 8 Common Streat.Telephone 866.__ LABRADOR HERRINGS ! UDELL BRAND, Now Landing Ex Schooner ALPINE.QUALITY UNSURPASSED.£2 Apply early, as quantity\"is limited.\u201cER STEWART.MUNN & CO, 22 ST.JOHN STREET.BAIRD, BROWNING & CO., General Commission Merchants, 209 Commissioners St, Montreal.Exporters of Flour, Butter, Cheese, and other Canadian produc > Ni SOA D ENT ph nt tN A ¢& 2 MRS.DART'S TRIPLETS.President Cleveland's Prise for the three best abies at the Aurora County Fair, in 1887, was @iven to these triplets, Mollie, Ida and Ray, Children of Mrs.A.K.Dart, ilamburgh, N.Y.' he writes: © Last August the little ones became Yery sick, and as I could get no other food that would agree with thera, I commenced the use OfLactated Food.It helped them immediately, nd they were soon as well as ever, and I consider it very la ly due to the Food that they Bre 2OW 50 Well\" Cabingt photo.of these triplets sent free to the (NOLES.of any daby born this year Lactated Food Is the best Food for bottle-fed babies.It keeps ' them well, and is better than medicins when they are sick, \u2018THE MOST PALATABLE; - NUTRITIOUS, and .DIGESTIBLE FOOD.EASILY PREPARED.; « At Druggists, 25c., Boc., $1.00.: ' HE BEsT AND Most EcONOMICAL FOOD, so Meals for an Infant for $1.00.2 A valuable pamphlet on \u201cThe Nutrition ® Infants und Tovalidert free on application.7 WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO, MONTREAL, P.Q, VOL.LXXXL\u2014NO.239.NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.1ta superior excellence proven.1n millions of homes for more than a quarter of a century It is used by the United States Government.Endorsed by the heads of the Great Universities as the Strongest, Purest, and most Health ful.Dr.Price\u2019s Cream Baking Powder does not contain Ammonia, Lime or Alum, Sold only in Cans.PRICE BAKING POWDER C0.KEW YORK, OHIOAGO.ST.LOUIS.Dec.13 1yDW 298 SUMMARY OF NEWS.CANADIAN.\u2014Dr.Pelletier, of Levis, has been appointed visiting physician to the immigrants landing at Quebec.\u2014A lad named Landy from Joliette was arrested by the police at Qusbec on Wednesday, for stealing a sum of money from a boarding-house.\u2014DPagsengers arriving by the Grand Trunk Railway train from the West yesterday report the ground covered with three inches of snow in the vicinity ot Methot\u2019s Mills, \u2014The Provincial \u2018Board of Health of Ontario have adopted a complete set of rules for the sanitation of schools, which will be issued by the Education Department for the guidance of school trustees and teachers.\u2014Yesterday afternoon at Levis, a young lad named Pelchat, had one of his legs horribly ¢rushed by a Quebec Central train.The unfortunate boy was indulging in the dangerous practice of endeavoring to steal a short ride by clinging to one of the cars as the train started.He is-not expected to survive.~~General Middleton and staff visited the warship Caroline at Victoria yesterday morning, and the proposed sites of fortifications, in a steam launch.The salute of thirteen guns wus not fired until the General's departure from the ship.At the ninth gun the breech was blown out and struck Thomas Drury, a bluejacket, bloging his right arm off and almost sev@ing his head from the body.Another blue-jacket, named William Langley, was struck and had both feet seriously injured.EUROPEAN.\u2014The Bank of England has advanced its rate of discount.from four per cent.to\u2019 five per cent.\u2014An international congress will be held in Switzerland in 1889 to discuss the suppression ofimmoral literature.\u2014In aspeech at Inverness, on Wednesday, Lord Hartington said he saw no possible chance of à re-union with the Gladstonians.\u2014The Communal Council of Rome yesterday adopted a resolution in approval cf the Emperot\u2019s visit as tending to knit the ties of friendship between Italy and Germany.\u2014The Bechuana chiefs learning that Lord Salisbury intends to annex their territory to Cape Colony, have sent a protest declaring that they will never submit.They desire British protection, but wish to remain separate from Cape Colony.\u2014A rumour wae flying about London yesterday that at an early hour a watchman followed à man and woman into a dark alley in Whitechapel and then gave the alarm, whereupon the man turned and stabbed the watchman with a knife, killing him.Tre police arrived and captured the murderer.No confirmation of thelstory is given at police headquarters.~The Vossiche Zeitung thinks the decree is rather directed against Italians.\u2018While admitting that the decree is a sign of wes kness in the French Government, which gives way to the Chauvinism of the masses, it says \u2018Germany has no right to complain, us the decree simply enacts what has been a long time in force in Germany.\u2014The North German Guzette, referring to the French decree regula:ing immigration, recommends Germans henceforth to avoid living in France.It says: -\u2014Every German who crosses the French frontier will understand that he has removed from culture to barbarism, and he has no right to complain if he comes into disagreeable contact with national customs and instincts.AMERICAN.\u2014\u2014l'rairie fires are raging in various parts of Dakota.\u2014The Georgia State election took place yesterday.The Democratic State ticket had no opposition.\u2014On Wednesday afternoon,in Chicago, a young man named Clark, an employe of the Thomson-Houston Electrie Company, was instantly killed by an electric 8hock from a Wire.~The following notice was issued yesterday at San Francisco by Collecter of Custums Hager: \u201cNo Chinese return certificates will hereafter be issued, and the Chinese bureau will remain closed to the public from this date,\u201d \u2014The conductors and drivers of the North Side, Chicago, will probably have to strike on Saturday to enforce their demand for shorter hours and better pay.President Yerkes says the company is ready to stand on the ground it bas taken.ree Wheat Corners Rob the Poor.WaAsxINGToN, D.C, Oct.4.\u2014The bakers in this city have combined to raise the price of bread from five to six cents a loaf in consequence of the advance in the ! price of 5 heat, WHAT REPUBLICANS WANT Their Tariff Bill At Last Before the Public.Fiendish Murders by a Woman.\u2014_ A Blow at the Sauer Kraut Interest, REPUBLICAN TARIFF BILL.The Republican Mountain Has Been Quaking for Months and Now It Brings Forth a Little Mouse of a Tarifl' 8il1, WasnrneToN, Oct.4.\u2014The Republican tariff bill at last seen the light of day.It was reported by the Finance Committee to the Senate this morning, and Senator Allison gave notice that he will call it up tor debate on Monday.The reports are Leld back until to-morrow in order to #1ve them a chance for more space in the newspapers than if they were made vublic , at the same time with «he bill The measure falls rather tat here.Its main features have already been known and it ig being little discussed even among the politicians.Nobody expects that it will ever be enacted into law.Senator Sherman characterized it truly when he said to-day that it is \u201ca very Conservative bill.\u201d It may be said to be so conservative as to lean over backwards.Its essential provisions, as already set forth in these despatches, are the reductions of sugar, tobacco and alcohol.Senator Sherman stated the figures in his speech to-day as $27,000,000 On sugar, $24,570,- 000 on tobacco, $6,428,000 on alcohol used in the arts, and $S,100- 000 on other articles.These figures differ slightly from those made by other members of the committee, who figure the total reduction made by the bill at $75,000,000.The bill has three merits: 1t is convenient In arrangement and precise in terms; it makes reductions in the revenue which can for the most part be exactly calculated; and it has valuable administrative features.In its classifications and defirations it approaches what its framers design it to be\u2014a model high tariff bill.Senator Sherman tales exception to the provisions regarding alcohol used in the arts, however, and believes that they will lead to frauds on the revenue.The bill has another merit in Republican eyes.Most of its tariff features, except on sugar, conform to the demand of the Chicago platform for \u201csuch revision of the tariff laws as will tend to check imports of such articles as are produced by our people.\u201d The Republican senators have not hesitated to raise the taxes en wool, woollens, hats and many other articles which enter into the daily service of the people, and they have ruthlessly applied the specific system of duties to the cheapest fabrics which go to make the clothing of the poor, thereby enhancing their cost enormously in proportion to that of more valuable fabrics charged the same specific rate.The bill is framad from beginning to end to catch the votes of the protected interests.At the last the commiites even yielded to the demand of the cigar manufacturers that the tax en cigars be rstained, although they have reduced it from £3 to $1.50 par thousand.: A brilliant programme has been outlined for the Republican Senators now that their tariff bill has been reported.It is to shut their mouths, close their eyes and pass the bill next week.A Repab- lican Senator said to-night that his party would be ready to vote when the bil was called up on Monday, and he doubt ed if even Senator Allison wofld take time to say anything.Other le publicans say that there may be speeches in explanation of the bil by Messrs.Allison, Aldrich and a few other Senators, and that then the responsibility of further delay will be thrown upon the Democrats.If this plan can be carried out, all Democratic amendments will be silently voted down,al the bill will pass the Senate by a party vote, and the House will be brought face to face, three weeks before election, with the problem of how to meet the Republican measure.There will be a hasty gathering of Democratic representatives from the four quarters of the Union to make a quoram, and the members of the ways and means committee will have to suddenly cancel campaign engagements to attend to their duties here.It would in a measure retrieve the Republican position to pass a bill and send it over to the House, and there is little doubt that this will be attempted.The plan may fail through the desire of the Senate Democrats to debate the bill, but then they will be charged with having prevented its passage.The fact that Senator Sherman ;made his speech to-day because of his intended absence next week indicates that the Republican Senators are in earnest in this programme and that they have not been advised by Matt Quay in vain.\u2014\u2014e A SHE FIEND.Burns Her Two Step-ehildren to Death.CLEVELAND, Oct.4,\u2014Mrs.Mary Garrett, convicted of burning hertwo idiotic stepchildren to death was sentenced to-day to be hanged on Jan.24, 1889, Motion fora new trial was denied.The crime was most brutal.She shut up two grown up weak-minded step-children in a room, saturated the room with coal oil and setting it on fire, both were burned to death.The condemned woman has « babe eight weeks old, which will accompany her to the penitentiary where she will be hung.gs LATEST THING OUT IN TRUSTS.Farmers in Northwestern Ohio Combine to Secure Five Cents a Head for Cabbage, FrxpLAY, O., Oct.4\u2014The cabbage- growers in the neighbourhood of Weston, \u2018Wood County, who grow large quantities of this vegetable for the Findlay, Toledo and Cleveland markets, have organized a trust which embraces all the large cab- bage-giowers, who refuse to sell that product, which has yielded immensely this year, for less than five cents a head in the field.The trust controls the entire cabbage product of Northwesteru Ohio.\u2014\u2014e\u2014\u2014.Reports Current in Germany that the Kaiser\u2019s Life is Threatened.Laxnon, Oct.4.\u2014South German newspapers report that the German police bave been warned of an anarchist plot against the Emperor William, and that the plans for his journey have been altered in consequence.onireal 7 MONTREAL.FRIDAY.OCTOBER 5.GENUINE MAN AND DOG FIGHT.The Bull Dog Gets the Worst Of It.CoLumeus, Ga, Oct.4.\u2014A negro named Springer, living in the country near here, was attacked by a mad bull doz to-day.The dog jumped at his throat, bat he threw up his arm, which the dog caught, tearing the flesh to the bone.Then followed a fight for life that lasted half an hour, but springer finally choked the dog to death, He is badly torn and hydrophobia is expected.\u2014_\u2014 JACKSONVILLE STILL HOPEFUL.Only One DeathYesterday\u2014223 Patients Discharged Cured.JACKSONVILLE, Oct.3.\u2014The day has been dreadfully warm.The mercury went up to 87 © at noon.This was good weather for convalescents, and fally 225 were discharged to-day, cured.The situation is decidedly more hopeful.The board of health reports 75 new cases of yellow fever for the twenty-four hours ending at 6 p.m.to-day, and only one death.Total number of cases, 2,971 ; stotal deaths, 271.Mr.Martin, editor of the Times-Union.turns ont to be a genuine case of yellow fever, though he is doing well.\u2014 eo \u2014\u2014 A DELIGHTFUL MOUTHFUL.A Town ot Lake Man Deliberately Bites Off a Companion\u2019s Ear.CrrcaGo, Oct, 4\u2014Charles Waring, of No.£16 Root street, is minus an ear, and Steve Murphy is locked up at the Town of Lake Station charged with bitting off the member.The men board at the same house and two weeks ago got into a quarrel at the Stock Yards, where they are employed.Last night the two men met.Murphy seized Waring and 2e- liberately bit the latter's right ear off.Officer Clancy witnessed the crime and immediately arrested the man.Waring was taken home.Dr.Miller was summoned and dressed the wound.o> _ GEORGIA STATE ELECTION.The Democratic Ticket has no Opposi- tion\u2014Sam Small Defeated.ATLANTA, Ga, Oct.4\u2014The Georgia State election took place to-day.A light vote was polled and the Democratic State ticket had no opposition.It is as follows :\u2014Governor, John B.Gordon ; secretary of state, N.C, Barnett; treasurer, R.U.Hardeman; comptroller, MA.Wright; attorney-general, Clifford Anderson.In many counties independent candidates for the Legislature ran, but indications voint to the election of almost all the regulars.In the Atlanta senatorial district, Sam Small, the Prohibitionist, was defeated by F.B.Rica, Democrat, after a hot contest.\u2014 ee THE ASSASSIN STILL FREE.Red Dog, the Murderer of Waln and Strong, Eludes Capture, Rawuiss, Wy.T., Oct.4.\u2014 Red Dog, the supposed murderer of 8S.Morris Waln and C.Livinston Strong, has not been apprehended, and is supposed to have escaped into Montana.Five different men have been arrested on suspicion and released after examination by the criminal authorities.A man answering to the name of D.H.Brazzil is now under arrest, having been apprehended with property in his possession answering the description of Waln\u2019s and Strong\u2019s.He is believed to be innocent of the crime charged, but is held to await further developments, 0e NOT AN AGE OF DICTATORS.Judge Amntheny Decides a Quarrel Bes tween Neighbours.Cmcaco, Oct.4\u2014John Bailey is a wealthy teamster in Hyde Park: Frank A.Putnam is shipping clerk for Keith Bros.The men were neighbours and quarelled.\u2018\u201cDon\u2019t speak to me,\u201d said Bailey one day in 1885.Putnam refused to obey the command, and was knocked down.The quarrel was taken to a Justice of the Pease, and then appealed.Yesterday Judge Anthony heard the case and rendered a judgment.\u201cBailey\u2019s words,\u201d be said, \u201cwere dictatorial, and represent more those of the higher class of ancient times than those of a citizens of a free country.He had no right to command any man not to speak to him, and then beat the citizen who broke his command.It shows that Mr.Bailey is not possessed of all the qualities of a good citizen.The court will find for Mir.Putnam, and assess his damages at $100.\u201d Mr.Bailey's attorney prayed an appeal.\u2014 AMERICAN INTERESTS IN SAMOA.Gormany is Likely to Be Called to Ae- count.WasHINGTON, Oct.4\u2014The \u201cSamoan Question\u201d has reached a point which makes its satisfactory settlement a matter of very great concern to the United Btates, and the most careful attention is now being paid to it by our Government.President Cleveland has recently taken hold of the subject, and there is reason to believe that it will soon be laid before the Cabinet for consideration.The recent course of Germany in seizing and carrying off the Samoan iXing and setting up an insurgent in his place ceriain- ly appears to be in {lazrans violation of tbe agreement beiween that Government and Great Britain and tbe United States, that the autonomy of the Samoan Islands shall not be disturbed.At last accounts the Samoans had revolted against the king set up by the Germaus, and had him and his party cooped up in the capital.It is easy to see that complications more serious than any that have gone before may follow the present situation, and there ig a strong feeling bere that it is time for the United States to take decisive steps towards curbing Germany\u2019s aggressions.The continued independence and neutrality of the Samoan Islands is of high importance to this Government especially, because the islands will lie practically in the track of all vessels using either of the projected isthmian canals.Opinions are divided as to the best course for this Government to adopt, but from what can be learned in State .Department circles, a move of some kind may be expected soon, and it will not be in the direction of consenting to any further aggressive violations of Germany\u2019s agreement.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Majority and Minority Reports.W AsuINGTON, October 4.\u2014 Both majority and minority reports on the Senate tariff bill were submitted to-day.The former reviews the House tariff bill in extenso and charges that it was prepared in the interest of free trade, and if adopted would ruin the interests of the entire country.The minority report defends the House bill, and alleges that even where the Senate substitute makes any reduction, it is in the interest of manufacturers and against the poor.1888.COMPLICATIONS IN CHINA.| The Celestial Government Getting Restless, -\u2014 Dodging the Parnell Enquiry.The \u2018\u2018Times\u201d Reserving Itself for the Edinburgh Trial.Lee ~ \u2014 JOHN BULL'S CHINA SHOP.Serious Complications in the Celestial Outlook.Loxpox, Oct, 4\u2014Private advices from English merchants at Chinese ports show that the traders there do not regard the recent success of the British troops over the Thibetans as conducive to the glory or the interest of the mother country.The disciplined European soldiers have slaughtered a few hundred half-armed barbarians, thereby earning the undying hatred of the remainder of their countrymen, and have also incensed the Chinese by the discomfiture of their dependents.The victors have reported that complete proof has been obtained that hostilities were brought about by the machinations of the Government at Pekin, and the English Cabinet is greatly vexed at the unnecessary disclosure.There is no doubt of the correctness of the accusation, but the proclamation of it was a blunder which will prohably cause the quiet shelving of at least one military dignitary.England wants a great deal of China, and any interruption of the trade between the two countries would bring ruin to many commercial houses in London; close dozens of cotton mills in the North, and bring about a clamour on Parliament that would prove the downfall of the party responsible for it.On the other hand, in case of an opan rupture the Chinese Government would be sustained in their efforts to stop the importation of English goods by the mass of the people whose hate of all foreigners includes, with a special detestation, British subjects, those living at the treaty ports being regarded as representatives of the entire nation.The Chinese have played a cautious game as yet, not feeling sufliciently strong to openly defy the intruders who have coolly walked into and appropriated such territory as suited them at her best harbours, and abused her subjects abroad, but there is an increasing suspicion that the magnates of the Celestial mpire think it is time that China asserted ber rights to be treated with equal terms by the Western Powers.- « The position they have taken in reference to treaty with the United States is a step toward that object, and a complaint is being formulated against the treatment of Chinese subjects in Australia, which will embarrass the home Government greatly.The Celestials have been close students of all improvements in the military art of late years, and if they should resolve upon a policy of isolation they can, while existing without the products of other nations, defy all attempts to penetrate into the interior and by steadfast determination force the negotiation of new treaties._\u2014\u2014 THE PARNELL INQUIRY.Printing Houre Square Decides to Reserve its Forces for Edinburgh.Loxpox, October 4.\u2014It is reported that the Times has resolved that, as it has incurred great expense in bringing witnesses to London to testifv in the O\u2019Donnell trial, and as it is ready to pursue the same course in connection with the trial of Mr.Parnell\u2019s suit against it for libel, which is to be tried in Scotland, it will not incur large expenses in appearing before the Parnell inquiry commission, but will simply supply evidence enough to justify the commission in summoning Mr.Parnell to the witness box and to compel him to show his hand, The Times, it is said, will furnish the comigission with the names of other witnesses to testify.The Parnell indemnity fund has reached the sum of $29,000.FREDERICK'S DIARY.Labouchere Says the Extracts Published are Garbled.Loxpox, Oct.4.\u2014 Emperor Frederick undoubtedly kept a daily journal, and it is now in the possession of his widow.But I fancy that, while a few published extracts are authentic, many others have been interpolated, and that there has been extensive garbling.So the diary may be regarded as not altogether gena- ine.Itisinconceivable that the Emperor could cause a diary to be printed and privately circulated containing so many extracts calculated to seriously prejudice dice the cause of German unity and altogether damaging to German interests.Prince Bismarck is thoroughly justified in prosecuting the persons responsible for the publication, for they bave certainly been guilty of treason to the State, as nothing but mischief could result from the premature appearance of a portion of the late Emperor's diary.It isstill worse to publish extracts cooked up with additions and suppressions, the former being of the most objectionable kind.ce THE EMPERORS AT VIENNA.Mutual Felicitations and Good Will.ViexNa, Oct.4.\u2014The Emperor of Austria entertained Kaiser William at a state dinner this evening, He gave as a toast the health of his distinguished visitor, to which the latter replied in a speech replete with evidences of the most cordial feeling and good will, both on the part of himself and his people towards the Emperor and the Austrian people.He said: \u201cI come, not as a stranger, since I have been the recipient of kindness from my host for many years.I am also fulfilling the sacred injunctions of my grandfather in thus seeking to cullivate friendly relations with Austria.\u201d After this Francis Joseph gave the toast, \u201cThe German Army,\u201d to which the Kaiser replie:l and gave \u201cQur Comrades of the Austrian Army.\u201d There was greatenthusiasm and an unusual amount of good-will exhibited.AN ATLANTIC LINER OVERDUE.The State of Georgia Still Not Reported at Glasgow.Loxpox, Oct.4.\u2014The State line steamer State of Georgia, Captain Moodie, which railed from New York September 20 for Glasgow, has not yet arrived.Much anxiety is felt owing to the non- arrival of the steamer, When she bacam- \u2018When she had C @® \\, she gavo them Castoria, When Baby was aick, we gave her Castorts, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoris, es, bs clung to Castoria, SUBSCRIPTION $6.00 PER % NNUM CHINESE EXCLUSION BILL At Once Put in Force.SAN Francisco, Oct.4\u2014In accordance with instructions from the Treasury, Collector Hager will allow the Chinese on board the steamer City of New York to land, as she arrived before the passage of the act.The Collector will send back those arriving on steamers Belgic and Duke of Westminster, now due.\u2014 HIS CONSCIENCE TROUBLED HIM.He Didu°t Steal Enengh.BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Oct.4.\u2014Frank G.Trion, the defaulting clerk of the City Court, who escaped ard went to London, arrived here to-night and surrendered himself to the authorities.Trion says his conscience would not let him rest and be worked his way from London before the mast in order to get back.His shortage is $20,000.FOLLOWING THE FASHION.Another Respected Resident Gone Wrong.Far River, Mass, Oct.4.\u2014There is another explosion in financial circles bere.Treasurer Albert E.Bosworth, o! the Stafford Mills, one of the oldest residents of the city, fled on Tuesday.It turns out be was entangled w\u2018th Cashier Chapin of the National Union and Union Savings Banks.As director and treasurer of the Beaty Zinc Company he over-issued stock and obtained loans.$25,000 was discounted with Cashier Chapin without the knowledge of the directors of the zinc company or the tank.The Stafford Mill people say Bos: worth had control of half a million of their funds, but are reticent as to loss.\u2014\u2014\u2014 TYPHOID FEVER RAGING IN DULUTH, Over 450 Cases Reported, and the Epidemic Appears to be Growing, Duuury, Minn, Oct.4.\u2014There are over 450 cases of typhoid fever in Duluth, and the epidemic appears to be growing.At St.Luke\u2019s Hospital there are thirty- eight cases, many of them critical, including one of the nurses, and at St.Mary\u2019s there are fifty-eight cases, of which some are serious, while numbers of isolated cases are thickly scattered around the city.A number of deaths bave occurred.The Duluth Chamber of Commerce has requested the immediate presence of Dr.Hewitt of Red Wing in the city to examine the sanitary condition of the city.\u2014_\u2014\u2014 FORGER BEDELL STILL DEFIANT\" His Examination Postponed Till After He Has Testified in a Civil Suit.New York, Oct, 4.\u2014James E.Bedell, who robbed the clients of the law firm of Shipman, Barlow, Larocque & Choate of over a quarter of a million dollars, by means of forged mortgages, was before Judge J.White at the Tombs yesterday morning for examination.He was still unrepresented by counsel, and when interrogated in refererence to it gave his responses in a somewhat defiant and impertinent tone.He did not seem to be much abashed at his position, and conversed cheerfully with his brother, wiio was present at the court room.The examination was adjourned till Oct.10.Wheu the prisoner heard this he said, in sarcastic voice : \u201cAnd so Iam to understand that my examination is adjourned to accommodate the District Attorney.\u201d The case of the Broadway policy-deal- ers, Goss and Emerson, was adjourned to the same day.Lawyer Howe, who has been investigating Bedell\u2019s record, expects to be able to reveal some secret chapters in the forger\u2019s career that will tend to cast considerable light on the true methods by which he disposed of his money.\u2018Warden Osborne, of the Tombs prison, was served yesterday afternoon with a warrant to produce Bedell before Judge Patterson in Bupreme Court, Chambers, Friday morning as a witness on behalf of his late employers, in the suit brought by them against the Bank of New York, to recover the amount of his forgeries which was paid by the bank on the firm\u2019s checks, the endorsements of which were forged by Bedell._\u2014e DEATH ENDS THEIR LOVE DREAM.Miss Roth Expires Suddenly Two Heurs After Her Betrothal.New York, Oct.4\u2014The old, old story which brightens the shadows of human life gladdened on Tuesday only to still forever the heart of à young maiden in this city.Seraphine Roth, of No.306 Fast Fifty-second street, promised on that day to the bride of Louis Lowentbal.They had loved for years, only to be separated when almost united.He 1s a clerk in a downtown clothing store.She was the daughter of a prosperous clothier of New Orleans.Six months ago the girl came to this city to visit her uncle on Fifty- second street and to recover, if possible, health.The acquaintanceship of long standing with young Lowenthal ripened into love, and on Tuesday afternoon they became engaged.The joy was too much for the heart of the delicate girl, for two hours afterwards she was seized with a fainting spell and carried to her room where she died without uttering a word.A messenger bore the cruel tidings to Ler accepted husband and he hastened to his sweethearts home to find the tidings too true.The shock almost prostrated him.Heart disease was the finding of Deputy Coroner Conway in the case of the dead girl.The funeral takes place to-morrow from her uncle's house.ce Disastrous Floods in Western Europe.Paris, October 4\u2014The Rhone has overflowed its banks.Trains on the Geneva and Lyons Railroad have been stopped.Several persons have been drowned at Seyssel.Payerne is flooded.The dikes of the river have broken and the water has burst over the adjacent plains, forming a vast lake.Floods likewise occurred throughout Switzerland, and a number of railways have been damaged te such an extent as to cause interruptions of traffic, Look Out for These Stolen Bounds, Sr.Lours, Oct, 4.\u2014J.W.Coates, Attorney of Platt County, Mo., took $240,000 in new bonds for that county to Jefferson City, Monday, to bave them registered.He placed them in his valise, which was in bis room at the hotel in Jefferson City while he was at dinner, but not out of his sight at any other time.Upon his arrival in St.Louis, where he intended to dispose of the bonds, Mr.Coates discovered that twenty 5 per cent.funding bonds, of the denominations of $1,000 each, were missing, their numbers being from 20 to 29 inclusive, and dated Oct |, 888, \u2014 LIVELY 1%,°S AHEAD.Manitoba Cabinet Brings Suit for Libel.\u2014\u2014 \u2018Free Press\u201d Too Free.The a Little A Libera! Elected by Acclamation at North Lanark, \u2014_\u2014 æ FROM THE PRAIRIE CITY.Action To be Takeu By the Government Against the \u2018*Free Press\u201d\u2014New Railway Station\u2014Bridge Over the Assinj.boine\u2014Loss of a Cargo of Rails.WiIssirEG, October 4.\u2014It is stated authoritatively to-day that the Government will take criminal proceedings against he managers of the Free Press for charg- ng them with boodling.The Northern Pacific Company have concluded the purchase of the Grace Church property at the corner of Water and Main streets, where their offices witl be established until the temporary station is erected.No definite arrangement is yet made regarding the running of trains, but it is expected the regular service will commence by the fifteenth instant.The bridge over the Assiniboine was completed to-day, and only the shortage of rails prevents the road being completed into the city to-moraow.The Canadian Pacific Railway\u2019s reduced rates on grain are on an average 1 cent per hundred pounds ou the branches.Owing to the high figurd paid for wheat this year, it is improbable that there will be any kicking over the rates.\u2018Wheat still commands S1@$1.05.The Official Gazette, issued to-day, proclaims the Northern Pacific act in force.Word has been received by the Railway Commissioner that the schooner Brandon was lost on Lake Superior with eleven hundred tons of rails, valued at four thousand dollars, for the Portage extension.No loss is incurred by the province.Hon.Mr.Greenway is expected back to-morrow night.Marquis of Queensbury has arrived at Calgary.FROM THE DOMINION CAPITAL.Haldimand Election Trial \u2014 Voting Papers Spoilt by the Returning Officer\u2014Mr.Caldwell Returned for North Lanark by Accla.nation\u2014The New Senator\u2014A Deputation from St.Catharines \u2014 The Supreme Court Librarian Suspended.(SPECIAL TO THE HERALD.) Orrawa, Oct.4\u2014 Argument in the Haldimand election appeal was continued in the Supreme Court to-day, by Mr.Aylesworth, who contended that the Judge of Court below erred in refusing to admit the evidence of thirty-six voters who offered to swear that they had marked their ballots for Colter at a particular poll where only twenty-eight bailots were counted for Colter, eight having been spoiled it is alleged by the returning officer after they were marked.Aylesworth contends that though the voters cannot be obliged to state how they mark their ballots yet the Court should bave received testimony voluntarily offered by them, and that eight ballots declared void should be added to the votes of Mr.Colter.Dr.Montague had a majority of ten, but Mr.Aylesworth says, that if eight Oneida township ballots are declared legal, that with the invalidation of other Conservative vetes, the seat should be given to the Liberal candidate.Argument will be continued to-morrow.To-day was nomination day for the Ontario Assembly in North Lanark, and W.C, Caldwell, Liberal, was declared elected by acclamation.The Tories nominated Dr.Preston, of Carleton Place, but he refused to go to the polls.It is rumoured that Mr.R.R.Dobell, lumber merchant of Quebec, a son-in- law of Sir David McPherson, will be called to Senate in place of the late Hon.James G.Ross.A deputation from St.Catharines and Thorold waited upon Sir John McDonald and Mr.Pope to-day, to urge that the watér power on the new Welland Canal be leased for the use ot manufacturers.The ministers promised to consider the request.Mr.Ternent, Librarian of the Supreme Court, has been suspended by order of the Minister of Justice for insubordination, \u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 Bread Not Advaneed in Chieago.Crucaço, Oct.4.\u2014The stories sent out from here early in the week that the bakers bad advanced the price of bread 1 cent a loaf were \u201cfakes,\u201d pure and simple.There has been no general increase of prices for reasons previously explained in these despatches.To-day, for the first time, a few small bakers in the suburbs were reported to have raised the price from 5 to 7 cents a loaf.Their action is not significant, as they were not represented in the boss bakers\u2019 meeting last Saturday night.No action will be taken towards an advance by 95 per cent.of the bakers until the meeting next Saturday night.The biggest bakers are resolutely opposed to any advance for a simple reason: They all laid 1n very heavy stocks of flour before prices in the flour market began to rise.WAsmINGToN, October 4.\u2014The bakers in this city have combined to raise the price of bread from 5 to 6 cents a loaf in consequence of the advance in the price of wheat.\u2014\u2014 Explosion On a Ship at Aspinwall, PANAMA, October 4.\u2014A terrible explosion occurred on board a large iron mud- carrying steamer, the No.1 Chaloupe, at Aspinwall, Sept.18.The steamer had just been repaired at the Panama Railroad shops at Colon, and she started on ber trial trip, having on board, in addition to her crew, Mr.Grover, the Master Mechanic of the Panama Railroad Company, and Hugh Graham, and Andrew Mcintyre, the latter having recently been the Captain of the huge American dredge City of Paris.On board there were eight souls in all, counting six gentlemen and two labourers.Suddenly the safety-valve blew out, and although every effort was made to prevent an explosion, that which followed caused the loss-of six lives, the destruction of the vessel itself, that of another steamer in the vicinity, whilst an iron lighter near by was cut in two as if by a knife, 9 TRADE AND COMMERCE.FINANCIAL \u2014\u2014 TES HERALD OFFI0B.Thursday Evening, Oct.4, 1888, Montreal Stock Market.There was more life in stocks this morning, though there is still no general activity, and in the afternoon there was nothing doing.The tendency was rather weaker, with Gas, Richelieu and Telegraph all a fraction lower.Richelieu was the most active stock, with sales of 525 shares, almost half the day\u2019s trading, and opened weak at 513, selling down to 51}, the most of the trading being at the lower figure.Gas was sold at 209, 125 shares changing hands, being a decline of 1 point.Mont- treal Telegraph also opened easier at 91], but recovered shortly to 911, the closing sales at the latter price; 25 shares Inter- colonial Coal were placed at 45.Bank stocks were dull.Bank of Montreal was firm at 221%, a fractional advance on previous sales.Commerce opened lower at 118}, but recovered immediately to 118} and closed firm.Other banks were inactive, but steady.CanadiandPacific was lower at closes the day weak.The day\u2019s trading amounted to 1,067 shares, compared with 967 yesterday.The following are the sales: \u2014 m= 57}, and MORNING BOARD.60 Bank of Montreal.50 Bank of Commerce.125 4\" 4\u201c .25 Montreal Telegraph Co.100 \u201c IN 50 Rich.& Ont.Nav.Co 475 4\" ce 125 Montreal Gas Co., ex-div.25 Canadian Pacific.at AFTERNOON BOARD.9 Bank of Montreal .25 Intercolonial Coal.The closing figures are as follows, compiled by Messrs.D.L.McDougall & Co., 22 Hospital street :\u2014 at 2213 SE ElE 5 |É:| 2 1E =: - c & = Ÿ : = B= wo STOCKS.æ atl & al Blia) = 3 21:88 e 2 |:2| B @ Siig =| B Bank of Montreal.$ 20015 p.C.Ontario (Fn «| 100 sie 100133p.c.|.508 p,e .5014 p.c.10014 & 2 Bank Jacques Cartier.253 p.c.Merchants Bank.| 100{3ip.c.Bank d'Hochelaga.| 1003 p.c.East\u2019n Townships B'k, 50 sine uebec Bank.| 100;3ip.c.ank Nationale.3013 p.c.Union Bank.603 p.c.Can B\u2019k of Commerce.50(34p.c.Dominion Bank.6506 & 1 Bank of Hamilton.| 1004 p.c.{.Bank Ville Marie.100 }p.e .standard Bank.50 33p.c.|.Federal Bank.«| 1003 p.c.|.Imperial Bank.100 4 p.c.|.MISCELLANEOUS.Intercolonial Coal Co.do nds.Montreal Tel.Co.Dominion Tel.Co.\u2018Western Union Tel Co Rich.& Ont.Nav.Co.Street Railway Co.Montreal Gas Co.New Engld Paper Co.Canada Paper Co.Canada Shipping Co.Dundas Cotton Co.Mont Loan & Mort\u2019gCo Mont Invest & Bldg Co Royal Can.Ins.Co.Montreal Cotton Co.Stormont Cotton Co.Hochelaga Cotton Co.Coaticook Cotton Co.Kingston Cotton Co.Merchants Mig.Co.do bonds.Bell Telephone Co.Guarantee Co.of N.A.Accident InsC.of N.A.Paton Mfg.Co.L.Ch\u2019'n & St Law J\u2019n B.Canada Cent] R'y B.S.St.Paul, M.& M.R\u2019y.Dominion Cattle Co.*Canadian Pacific R.Montreal 7 p, c.stock.Canada N Land Co.Can.Pacific L.G.B.Ont.& Que.R.R.Mont.Corp.7p.c.stoc.*Ex-div.Lundon Quetations.A special to Messrs.L.J.Forget & Co.has the following: Grand Trunk Ist Pref., 683; 2nd do., 48; compared with 683 and 481 yesterday.Canadian Pacific closes } lower at 59}.The Bank of England increased its minimum rate of interest to-day to 5 per cent.Money is firmer and the rate } per cent higher at 44 per cent.Exchange.There was rather more business doing and rates were a shade firmer.The following are to-day\u2019s rates compiled specially for Tue HeraLp by Messrs.W.L.8.Jackson & Co., No.10 Exchange Court :\u2014 Oct, 4 IN NEW YORK, Posted.Actual.Sterling 60 Days.4.84 4.83 a Sterling Demand.4.85; 4.873@ Sterling Cables.\u2014 4.88, Sterling Commercial.\u2014 4.83 Sterling Documentary.\u2014 4.824 Francs (Paris) Long.522! 5.24; Francs (Paris) Short.5.19; 5.21; Oct.4.IN MONTREAL.Between Banks.Ae \u2014 Counter Buyers.Sellers, Rate.N.Y.Funds.1-16dis.@Par + Pr.@} Stg.60days.811-16 } 8i@9} do.Demand.9; @il-16 9108 do.Cables.\u2014 104 New York Stock Market.The market opened a fraction lower on most stocks, but there was a general and gradual recovery during the afternoon, which ran prices up, and at the close the figures were above the opening.The Post's financial article says: During the forenoon the market was dull, but comparatively strong.Early London prices were 4 to ÿ lower, and first prices here were 4 to à lower on all active stocks, but by 11 o\u2019clock the majority had recovered, and a few made some considerable further advances before twelve.After twelve o'clock there was small further advances on the whole list, which leit nearly all active stocks a fraction higher at one o'clock than they closed last night.The advance in the Bank of England rate of discount was larger than was expected, but the effect on the prices of stocks was comparatively small.The following were the fluctuations of prices and gales in New York, Thurs- aay, Oct.4, a8 specially reported for THE MONTmEAL HERALD AND Tsz Hrraun by Macdougall Bros, St.Francois Xavier street :\u2014 | | A218 2208128) 7 SE 5 |y|2| 8 STOCKS.SR|B|7 al: CEE 1 4@I tL o & Quincy ex-aiv.|115 11151 900 \u2018ssl ii 400 111.Central .Jersey Central.Kansas & Tex.Lou.& Nash.Lake Shore.ve Mich.Central 8t.P.M.M Man, Elev.Missouri Pac.DO.Pre.vesivenrss Oregon Trans.,, Ontario & Western Pacific Mail.,.Pullman Car.Reading ex-div Rock Island.Rich.Terml.St.Paul , Do.pref.Tex.Pac., New Union Pacific.Western Union* Sterling Exchange.Se as LL Money.*Ex-dlv ec GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY COMPANY.Return of traffic for week ending 29th September, 1888 : 1888.1887.Passenger train earnings.$163,926 $173,031 Freight train earnings.263,905 281,34) Total .S133831 $BL3T Decrease 1888 $ 20,510 \u2014\u2014>0 COMMERCIAL NOTES.The receipts of wheat at Liverpool the past three days amounted to 405,000 ushels, including 225,000 bushels American.The imports into the United Kingdom during the past week were 3,376,000 bushels of wheat, 752,000 bushels of corn, and 264,000 barrels of flour.The export of wheat and flour from the American Pacific coast to Europe last week was equivalent to 840,000 bushels of wheat, against 300,000 bushels the previous week.A dispatch from a very reliable source states that letters are being received at Minneapolis from all quarters of the Northwest reporting wheat much better than expected.\u2014 THE U.8.METAL MARKET.The copper market remains very strong outside of the Exchange.Consumers are eager buyers of all descriptions of the metal and find it very difii- cult to cover their requirements, except at much enhanced prices.Those not in the pool are obliged to pay from 17.75 to 18 cents for lake ingot copper, and it is understood that 16} has been bid for both Baltimore and Oxford brands.Nothing Was done on \"Change, as both spot and October are held near 18 cents for lake.Owing to a temporary break of 258 in the London tin market a few New York operators began forcing October delivery from 22.95 to 22.85, closing on first call at 22,90 paid and bid.Bubsequently a recovery of 58 per ton having been cabled from London, 22,95 and even 23 cents was bid and refused for October.Spot remains as scarce as ever, and is held at 23} for immediate delivery, while for delivery next week some small lots might have been picked up at 23%.The present stock of tin being smaller than has been known for many years, and the consumption being largely increased it will require very heavy supplies to place this market for spot tin in a comfortable position.Business must naturally be restricted until supplies increase.Lead is a shade lower, three cars of October having been sold at 5.10 cents.It is understood that manufacturers are privately being freely supplied with spot lead at 5.05, while October delivery fetches a premium of 5 points higher.|- This, however, is easily explained by the necessity of some operators to uphold the market on the Exchange.\u2014.Y.Journal of Commerce.\u2014\u2014\u20140-#- COTTON MARKETS.(N.Y.Journal of Commerce.) Cotton was in slightly improved demand and sales, though quotations suffered a little in consequence, as Galveston, Norfolk, Charleston and Augusta were 1-16¢.lower, New Orleans jc.down and less steadiness generaily as the reflection of the several markets.Port receipts to-day were 34,664 bales, against 52,391 bales the same day last year.Foreign exports were 7,372 bales and consolidated stock at the ports 290,623 bales, against 391,979 bales the same Gay last year.Sales at the ports and chief interior towns were 10,368 bales, against receipts of 39,771 bales, and with other details were as follows :\u2014 New York quiet at 10 7-16c.; receipts, \u2014 bales: sales, 475 bales; stock, 75,781 bales.New Orleans easy at 9ic.; receipts,\u2014 10,698 bales : sales, 3,100 bales: stock, 54,- 435 bales.Liverpool opened dull, with prices favouring buyers and sales of 6,000 bales on the basis of 6d.for middling uplands and Orleans.Receipts so far this week 21,000 bales, of which 18,000 bales American, and sales 18,000 bales, of which 13,500 bales American.Futures opened at 1-64d.decline, and ruling quiet closed steady thereat.Bar silver was unchanged in London, or 433d per ounce.Port receipts were 34,644 bales, against 52,391 bales the same day last year.Port receipts this week, 94,707 bales, against 135,295 bales the same time last year.Since September 1 port receipts have been 398,622 bales, against 691,139 bales the same date last year.Exports so far this week 28,466 bales, of which 20,012 bales to Great Britain.Stocks at the shipping ports 290,623 bales, against 348,997 bales the same date last year.Cotton certificates were dealt in to the extent of 75,100.Opening dealings were at a decline of 2, 3, 3, 3, 5 and 4 points for October to March inclusive, followed by a further decline of 3, 2,1, 1,1 and 1 point, then recovering 4, 4, 5, 4, 3 and 4 points, closed at a decline of 1 point on October, November, January, February and March, and 1 point advance on December as compared with yesterday's closing dealings.PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS.Breadstufls, MONTREAL, Oct.4, 1888.Frovr\u2014Receipts, 1,520 barrels.The demand for all grades continues, and prices still tend upwards, with a further advance to-day of 5c@10c per barrel, and buyers taking all desirable offerings at the advance.Among the sales to-day were the following :\u2014400 sacks patent spring at $7; 125 barrels straight roller, $5.75 ; 125 do, $5.70; 100 superfine, $5.10; 200 do, at $5.20; 400 do, $4.85.We quote the market as follows: Winter Wheat, patent.$6.25 @ 6.75 8pring Wheat, patent.025 @ 6.80 Straight Roller.\u2026 560 @ 570 EXtrB.cac sss0cu0 0 .5.20 @ 5.55 Superfine.4.25 @ 4.80 Strong Bakers\u2019 .\u2026 575 @6 00 Ontario bags\u2014extra 240 @ 2.65 City Strong Bakers\u2019 (140-1b.sacks.5.756 @ 6,25 OATMEAL \u2018\u2014 Ordinary brl8 .2\u2026.0000ceuuos @ 5.70 DOr DARE.reer @ 2.60 Granulated, bris.@ 5.75 .DARS.cesc0ccccssousess @ 2.75 Rolled Oats.o.cvaiviiernreianes @ 3.00 CORNMEAL!\u2014 BArrels.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.sa covsesnanance @ 3.50 1-1: J soo secoue 6 oes 160 @ 1.65 Grain.In the present excited state of the wheat market, it is diflicult to quote prices with any chance of exactness.There is no No.1 Northern offering, and no buyers.Millers can only afford to pay $1.20 for No.1 Northern, with the present price of flour.No.1 hard is worth a few cents more, and, of course, a good lot of old, a higher price could be made.Peas are weak at 81c@82e, and oats 35c@37c per 32 Ibs.Chicago Grain and Provision Markets.Wheat opened strong about a cent over the closing prices of yesterday, but this proved to be the highest figures of tne day, the close for October, December and May being 3c@lc below the opening, but still a fraction higher than yesterday.Corn was firm and closes slightly advanced.Provisions were weak.Pork opened at a decline of 25 cents per barrel, and closed about 10 cents higher.Lard closes the day 324c lower for cash, and about steady on options.\u2018W.J.Graham, broker, 92 St.Francois Xavier street, has the following despatch from R.W.Dunham & Co., Chi- cogo :\u2014 ÉrIICAGO, IN, Oct, £\u2014Wheat firm, less active.We think changes favour higher range before it will go materially lower.Corn bullish, mainly on Hautchinson\u2019s attitude.Provisions strong, Talk of a combination to bull January pork.Messrs, A.Geddes & Co.wire the following to Messrs.MacDougall, brokers: Ciucaco, Oct.4\u2014The excitement in wheat seems to be abating, though the market remains in a very sensitive condition, and prices can be easily influenced upward by any prominent buyer.The shortage on foreign account has been much larger than was generally supposed, especially in New York.An opinion as to the near future of prices is of little account.One thing is certain, the short side is yet dangerous even at the big advance.The market closed firm at 1.12} December.Corn unsettled owing to fears of manipulation in November; otherwise prices are high enough.We cannot recommend buying it.Provisions lower, for near deliveries, firm for January, which we consider safe buying on soft spots.Pork, $14.80; lard, Mr.E.McLennan, 22 St.John street (Western Chambers), reports the Chicago grain and provision markets as follows :\u2014 CHICAGO.Oct.4, 1888.-so es - «Summed **48oUSTH *\u201c 959407] - Ju@mor) Lop awn © 18ak 188] Datrv Products.Burrer\u2014There is nothing doing in butter, beyond the usual jobbing trade.Prices are unaltered, a few choice packages being outside figures.Some holders in the country are asking higher rices, but has only the effect of stopping usiness, as dealers cannot afford to pay more.No export enquiry is received.The New York Commercial Bulletin says : The market generally continues to present a quiet appearance, with very little, if any, material change in the general features.Current receipts are lighter, except perbaps in causing receivers of strictly fancy grades to hold a little steadier.State creamery pails are notin large supply so far this week and the favorite marks cleaning up pretty closely to grocers, but they examine stock very closely and the slightest defect causes a rejection, and any surplus left in receivers\u2019 hands is very difficult to clean up, even at liberal concessions.Fancy Western creamery is not stable above 23c and that figure difficult except to a regular trade, and close buyers still claim little difficulty in shading that figure upon the open market Lower grades of fresh and June creamery continue exceedingly dull.State dairy tubs work out when fine at steady prices.Firking very slow.Imitation creamery, Western dairy and factory all continue slow and the tone easy.We quote prices unchanged as follows :\u2014 Creamery 1922 Eastern Townships 17 @ 2) Morrisburg.17 @ 19 Brockville.17 @ 19 WESLErD.Lanses ass sons en amas ane 15 @ I7 Currse.\u2014The Liverpool market is cabled unchanged at 44 shillings per cwt On the spot, there is some business doing.Enquiries for immediate shipment are made, and for August make 8ic@8jc is paid.September make is firmly held, but 9}c@9ÿc is its outside Value at present, and in the face of large stocks of Summer makes in the country, and a light demand from abroad, no improvement can be hoped for.In the United States the home trade is depended upon chiefly to sustain their markets, as exporters are as a body shy of investing at the prices asked.We take the following from the N.Y.Journal of Commerce: § Late-made factory cheese is firmer and higher, but the strength originates with the courtry markets, where an advance has been established, notwithstanding the fact that exporters are buying with great caution.It is thought, Children Crv for Pitc her's Castoria.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE FRIDAY.r OCTOBER.5 however, that the home trade, which is still very good, as reported last week, authorizes the advance.Your combination factory sales were made on Monday, at 9} cents.The position of the butter market ig but little, if any, better than last week, except that there is perhaps a somewhat better demand for best grades of fresh table butter.Receipts are not so heavy but that they could be taken care of if the long lines of held goods were once well out of the way.Fine June creamery butter is being offered at 16 to 18 cents, but it does not find a ready sale.Quotations here are :\u2014 Finest colored Finest White.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026\u2026.rsscssssuers 8,0 9 Fine white A Medium.ssrcencccnennens British Breadstuffs and Provision Markets.Liverpool, 11.30 a.m.\u2014Wheat, firm, demand fair, holders offer sparingly; corn, steady, demand fair.Beerbohm reports\u2014Cargoes off coast : Wheat strong; corn, firmer.Cargoes on passage and for shipment: Wheat, slow at the advance; corn, slightly better.California wheat, off coast, 49s 6d ; promptly to be shipped, 42s 6d; nearly due, 428 6d.Red winter wheat prompt, 38s, present and following month 38s.French country markets, quiet, Liverpool wheat, spot, buyers and sellers apart, tending up; corn, spot, upward tendency.Liverpool standard California wheat, including club wheat, 8s 3d, to 88 2d; fair average red winter wheat, 8s 1d ; white Michigan wheat 8s 13d; red American spring wheat, 8s 7d.Liverpool mixed maize, 4s 101d.Canadian peas, 68 7d.Minneapolis straight flour, 26s 6d.American mixed maize, 24s 3d.Minneapolis first bakers\u2019 flour, 288.Arrivals of wheat, cargoes, 7; waiting, 8; sold, 2.Arrivals of maize, cargoes, seven; waiting, two, Chilian wheat, off coast, 30s 6d; present and following month, 40s 6d.Walla Walla wheat, off coast, 40s ; present and following month, 41s.The following are to-day\u2019s Liverpool quotations compared with yesterday\u2019s : \u2014 Oct.Oct.4, 11.30 am.1L30 .a.ms.d 8 ds.d.#8.d.Spring Wheat.\u2026.710 @ 80 |710@80 Red Winter.710@ 800/710@80W No.1 California.8 2@ 8 518 2@8 3 No.2 California.0 0 @ 0 0{0 0 @0 0 0@ 0 0 810000 73@ 0 016 7090 0 6@0 0/77 6 @00 0 0@0 0/5 0 @00 0 6@0V 0149 6 @0 0 6@(0 0/47 6 @00 0 6@0 0127 6 @00 0 0 @ 44 0 |44 0 @i4 0 0@0 010 0 @0 © \u2014\u2014\u2014 BE EXPORT OF DAIRY PRODUCE.Shipments of dairy produce from Mont real prepared by Messrs.Cunningham & Lemesurier, for the week ending Oct.5th, 1888 :\u2014 e a E \u20ac ££ E 2 3 = = © = \u2014 = SHIP, = = £ = 8 8 FO £ ; # : 5 Per SS.Toronto, \u2019 Liverpool.2,960 3,223 Per SE.Fardinian 1 Liverpool.\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026.2,709 3,544 vous Per SS.Concordia Bristol.135 .\u2026 Per SS.Norwegian : tL Glasgow.1,327 308 fee Totals .coaveerennns 5,821 8,504 308 ., \u2014 Grand totals., 13,918 308 Corresponding period, '87,cheese.Po = Ta ** butter.\u2014\u2014\u20140Æ LONDON WOOL SALES.Loxpox, Oct.2.\u2014There was a large attendance at the wool sales to-day and the market was extremely animated.Greasy wools were keenly competed for, but scoured were in less demand, and faulty were almost 4d easier.The withdrawals of faulty wools have been numerous.There were offered 11,726 bales.Ten thousand bales have been withdrawn to date.Following are details of the day\u2019s sales: \u2014 Victoria\u2014Sales 200 bales; scoured at Sd ; do.locks and pieces at 84d@10:d.New South Wales\u2014Sales 2,600 bales ; scoured at 8id@l1s 5id; do.locks and pieces at 8d(@1s 33d ; greasy at 6id@11d; do.locks and pieces at 3}d@73d.Queensland\u2014Sales 400 bales; scoured at 1s 1d(wls 4d; greasy at 64d@7id; do.locks and pieces at 35d@6d.South Australia\u2014Sales 12 bales; greasy at 7d@7:d.Tasmania\u2014Sales 600 bales; greasy at 63d @11d; do.locks and pieces at 2d@ 7d.New Zealand\u2014Sales 6,900 bales; scoured at 8d@1s 103d; do.locks and pieces at 9d@l1s 6id; greasy at 7d@ls 0id; do.locks and pieces at 5d@9id.Cape of Good Hope and Natal\u2014Sales 1,500 bales; scoured at 9d@1s 61d; greasy at 43d @104d.Italian\u2014Sales, 30 bales; scoured at 1s @1s 14d.see SPECIAL CROP REPORT.Frosts which did more good than harm -\u2014Resymption of corn cribbimg\u2014 Heavy demand for new eora\u2014Good progress with winter wheat seeding \u2014A series of statements from railway agents touching the wheat situation \u2014Misleading newspapdr reports upon the wheat crop.(Special Dispatch to the New York Journal of Commerce ) Circaco, October 2.\u2014The killing frosts during the last days of September were welcome.They came at a time when even the State-planted corn had fully matured, and they helped to dry it out and put it into condition for gathering and moving.The cribbing of corn will be this season resumed.There has already commenced an excellent demand from feeders and stock growers for the new corn.The fall so far was a dry one and the recent frosts are all belping towards an early movement of the new corn crop.The large receipts of corn during September plainly showed that dealers were anxious to get rid of the surplus old crop at a good price and fill up their cribs with the new corn at much lower prices.All things considered, we are making good progress with seeding winter wheat.Its conditions will be watched with the greatest interest, from the fact of the scarcity of good milling wheat all over the wheat belt.A Chicago daily sent out one of its reporters on Saturday to ascertain if there was any real scarcity of wheat along the lines of the railroads tributary to the city.The Chicago and Alton freight agent told the reporter that the local mills would use all the grain near their road, and they will be glad to get grain from other points, for the surrounding country would not furnish them with what they want and for that reason they would not have any to carry to Chicago.The Chicago, Rock, Island and Pacific said that, while their road did not run through a wheat country in mon to good, 12¢ @ 14c; ducks, young, 12¢ l4c.Western iced \u2018\u2014Turkeys, young, 16c @ 18c; old, 1llinois or Iowa, yet they expected to have plenty of wheat along their Kansas line, but the crop was a failure and all | the Kansas wheat will be used for home consumption.The freight agent of the ! Chicago and Northwestern road said the : owners of the Minneapolis mills will secure all the good wheat that can be found.They must have it and will pay as much for it as farmers can get in Chicago.They consider that there will - : sell September and Octaber ti be only half a crop along their line and there will be very little to be shipped into Chicago.The Illinois Central road said -that in southern Illinois, western Kentucky and northwestern Tennessee the winter wheat was an excellent crop, and the elevator at Cairo was full, but that little wheat from that region ever goes into Chicago.They expected from their lines in Northwestern Iowa and Dakota to have had large crops, but the weather was badand the crop was a failure; in many places nothing can be realized.\u2018The result of the thrashing is only chicken feed,\u201d comes from E.J.Jeffrey, general manager of the railroad.He concludes his interview by saying that he knows that the crops in Northern Dakota are very poor, and has understood from the mest reliable authority that many of the elevators in Dakota will be closed because it will not pay to run them.Yet in the face of such statements from men who are more interested in the movement of crops than any other class of individuals in the trade, New York papers continue to mislead their readers by statements to the effect that the damage to the wheat crop has been grossly exaggerated.oa \u2014 SPECIAL IRON REPORTS.(To the N.Y.Journal of Commerce.) Prrrseuru, Oct, 1.\u2014The activity which bas prevailed in iron and steel during the past two or three weeks is subsiding for the time being.Very liftle of the iron has been sold at the advance ruling now.Cold blast charcoal is under inquiry, and is quoted at $18; No.1 foundry is strong st $18; No.2 is quoted at $17; neutral gray forge at $16,50.Good muck bars sell at $29, but they are weakening.Merchant bars at 1.70 to 1.50 cents; plate is at 2.10 to 2.20 cents; groove skelp at 1.80 cents sheared 2 cents.There is a heavy demand for small pipe.Railroad companies having old rails are negotiating for large sales for as early delivery as possible.Bessemer steel billets are active at $28, The merchant steel works are all crowded with business.Advices from further western points indicate considerable activity.Bessamer ore is strong and pointing upward.The machine shop capacity throughout the West is more busily engaged than last spring.Winter prospects are regarded as favourabla.PriLADELPHIA, October 2.\u2014The prevalence of a few rumours to-day, alleging that large transactions are probable in ig iron and new steel and old rails, ends some additional interest to the market.Owing to the fact that most of the crude iron requirements are covered for the next thirty to sixty days, but few large transactions are reported, and quotations are maintained a little higher than they would be if makers were able to take orders for early delivery.There are buyers of steel rails in the market who want large lots, but they are in a position to wait unless concessions are extended.Makers predict stronger prices in thirty days.Old rails wi'l soon arrive in moderate quantities, Bar mills are gaining in orders at 1.80 to 1.90.Nails are weak at $1.80 to $1.90.Western markets are quite active, and a feeling of hopefulness of better demand exists in most markets.Southern pig iron orders are dropping in at full orders.Stocks of all kinds are low west and east, but the idle capacity is equal to any probable demand, \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 BOSTON MARKETS.Boston, Oct, 4, 1888.Burrer\u2014The butter market remains in the same steady position as previously reported.A good demand is noted for choice creameries, and sales are made readily upon arrival.There is a good, fair demand for imitation creameries.Western creameries are quoted at 24c@ 25c; Western extra fresh firsts 21c@22c; Western fancy imitation creamery, 17¢@ 18c; Western seconds, 16c@164c; Western factory, choice, fresh, 18@14}c; Western fair to good, 16c ; Vermont extra creamery, 24(@25c; Vermont extra firsts, 21@22c Vermont dairy, good to choice, 20c@23c ; fair to good, 18c(@19c ; Eastern creamery, good to choice, 20c(@23c.Low grades of butter as to guality.The above quotations are reCbivers\u2019 prices for strictly wholesale lots.Jobbing prices le@2c higher.Cugise\u2014Market firmer.We quote as follows: \u2014New York extra 9c @ 9ic; New York firsts, 8ic @ 9c; New York seconds, 6c@Bc; Vermont extra 9c@9jc; Vermont, Sc@ 8}c; Vermont seconds, 6c@7c; part skims, 4c@6c; Ohio flat, extra, 9¢@9ic; sage, 9}c.Eccs\u2014Supply small.Eastern extras are quoted at 21c@22c; Eastern firsts, 19c; extra Vermont and New Hampshire, 21c@22c ; Northern, 20@2lc; choice Western, 19¢@20c; choice Michigan, 20c @ 21c; Nova Scotin, 20c@20;c; New Brunswick, 20c@203c; P.E.Island, 20c@ 203c.Jobbing price, #c@1c higher.Poraroes\u2014Market well supplied and a good demand is noted at steady prices.We quote as follows: Houlton He- brons, 58c@60c per bush; Houlton rose, 53@55 per bush; Aroostook Hebrons, 55@58c per bush.; Aroostook rose, 55c per bushel ; Vermont rose, 45@48c per bush.; Vermont Hebrons 48c@50c per bush.; Vermont burbanks 48c(@50e per bushel ; New York rose 45c ; Hebrons, 48c@50e per bush; New York bur- banks, 50c per bushel ; Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, $1.50@$1.62} per bbi.SWEET PoTATOES\u2014A Good, fair demand is noted at old quotations.We quote extra Virginia yellow at $1.623@$1.75; medium, $1.25; extra Jersey yellow, $2.00; bulk, $L874@#82 per bbl, Pourrry\u2014There is a good demand at steady prices.We quote as follows :\u2014 Northern and Eastern\u2014Chickens, choice spring, 20c @ 25c per lb.; fair to good, 14c ole fowls, choice, 15c@16c ; com- 12}c; chickens, choice, 15c@l6c ; fair to good, 15c@l4c; fowls, choice, 14c@15c; fair to good, 12c@13c; old cocks, Sc@9c.GamE\u2014Partridges are very plenty and trade is slow at 75c@$L per pair.Hay AND STRAW\u2014 good demand is noted for choice hay at firm and steady prices.Rye straw is firm at old prices.We quote choice prime hay at $18.50@$19.50; fancy, $20; fair\u2018 to good, $16@$18; Eastern fine, $14@$15; poor to ordinary hay, $13@$15; East swale, $10@$ll; rye straw, choice, $15.50@%$16.00; oat straw, $9@ $10.\u2014 \u2014\u2014\u2014 THE CHEESE MARKETS.(SPECIAL TO THE HERALD.) Lisrowzs, Ont, Oct.4\u2014At the cheese fair held here tc-day 23 factories boarded 5,500 boxes colored cheese and 4,700 boxes pale.Thesales were 600 August at 9c, 350 part August and September at 94, 900 part July and August at 8c@9c, 340 at 9c.Factory men not disposed to nearer ready to ship.Seven buyers present.BrocxviLLx, Ont, Oct.4\u2014Few cheèzse \u2018 boarded to-day.About 50 factories contracted at 8c to 9c August and 9c to 9ic for September and October.will be closed out this week.ptember We think ; 7 most factories in this and Perth section | y For THE COTTON MARKETS.(BY CABLE AND WIRE.) Li VERPOOL, October 4\u20141.45 p.m.\u2014There is a fair business for spot.Middling Up- ands, 5 15-16d.; Orleans, same.New York, October 4.\u20141 p.m.\u2014Mar- ket for spot is quiet at 1-16c decline.Middling Uplands, 10 5-16c,; Middling Orleans, 10 7-16c.Futures opened harely steady.October, 9.45¢.; November, 9.56¢.AN ANCIENT CEREMONIAL.\u201cReaders of \u2018Waverly,\u2019\u201d says London Truth \u201cwill remember the account given of the feudal homage which the Baron of Bradwardine rendered to Charles Edward at Pinkie house on the evening of the battle of Preston Pans.Sir Walter Walter Scott would have been inexpressibly delighted 1t he couid have seen the ancient ceremonial which took place in the exhibition at (ilasgow, in connection with the attendance of the Royal Scottish archers.Directly the queen had ascended the dais on which her throne wus placed, the Duke of Buccleuch.the officer in command of the archers, advanced to the steps, made three profdund bows, and presented her majesty with three golden arrows, which were placed on a velvet cashion trimmed with gold.The queen formally accepted the tribute, and then returned the arrows to the custody\u2019 of the duke, according to the custom on such occasion, which dates from a very remote epoch of Scottish history.\u201d DETECIIVES ALL AT SEA.Lots of Theories About Foster Bui Neo Tangible Clues.(New York Times, October 13.) The whereabouts of William R.Foster, jr., ex-attorney for the New York Produce Ixchange and its Gratuity Fund, still remains matter of mystery, gradually deepening.To the trustees of the Gratuity Fund the detectives now declare that they are not looking for the absconder in the direction of Canada at all; but every avenue by which he might escape to any of the Spanish West Indies or to Brazil is being carefully watched.It is represented that the prestige and reputation of Pinkerton\u2019s Detective Agency is at stake in this matter\u2014that there must not be any failure to catch the absconder in this case, for a failure would result in seriously impairing the reputation of the agency.Therefore a large force of the oldest and most experienced detectives on the force hag been set at work upon the case.They have not altogether given up the idea that Foster may still be in hidding somewhere in the city.One of the members of the Exchange said vesterday : \u201cI don\u2019t believe that Bill Foster has left the city at all, and all this talk about his being seen on the road to Canada is pure detective guff.I believe that he is in comfortable hiding in one of his zccustomed resorts up town and every morning reads the stories in the New York papers and enjoys a good laugh over them.There he is likely to remain until the storm blows over or the watch is relaxed, so that he can safely get away to some mnon-extradition country.But of course he stands in constant peril of betrayal, and he is likely to be given up any day to the oflicers of the aw.It was learned yesterday that, directly after his last meeting with some of the trustees a week ago yesterday, when he promised to attend on Thursday to the examination of the mortgages, he proceeded to his barber's, in the neighbourhood of the Exchange, and took away the cup, brushes, razor and other toilet appurtances that were kept there foshim.From this it was argued by some that he had determined to disguise himself as far as possible by removing all superfluous hair from his head and face.But others again declared that his mustache, which was very dear to him, was the only hirsute adornment that could possibly effect any measure of disguise whatever with him, and that he would not part with that until all other resources had failed.The Board of Managers of the Produce Exchange met in the afternoon and, upon receiving the report of the Complaint Committee, expelled Mr.Foster from membership in the Exchange with all the neatness and dispatch of which they were unanimously capable.[Some of the Pinkerton detectivgs above alluded to are said to be in Mon real at the present time\u2014 En.Heraup.] Constipation is nearly always induced by neglecting to keep the bowels regular, and is also a frequent sequel to dyspepsia or indigestion.Regulate the stomach and bowels bylusing Burdock Blood Bitters, which is certain to promptly relieve and ultimately cure the worst cases of constipation.TO LET.TO LET.SMALL OFFICE ON FIRST FLOOR STANDARD BUILDING.Apply to W.M.RAMSAY May 4 so 107 FLATS TO LET, LIGHT MANUFACTURING, WITH OR WITHOUT STEAM POWER.ROBT.MITCHELL & CO.Cor.St.Peter and Craig Streets.March 28 76 TO LET TWO DOUBLE OFFICES (WITH HATING) IH NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE INSURANCE BUILDING.Apply to THOS.DAVI DSON, Fon.4 Managing Director THE GREAT ENGLISH PRESORIPTION © 2 Asuccessful medicine tested over à 30 years in thousands of cases.Promptly cures Nervous Pros- \u20ac tration, eaknessof Brain, Spi- Lea mana Cord, and GenerativeOrgans ofeither sox, Emissionsand all illscaused by indiscretion orover-exertion.Six packagesis guaran- to effect a curewhenall other medicines fail, One package $1, six packages $5, by mail.Sold ists.Write for Pamphlet.Address EURtxA Chemicar Co, DETROIT, MiCH.sale bÿ B.c tre ] Streol, MOTS CU M GALE, AZ No Dune \u2014\u2014\u2014 HOTELS.ST.LAWRENCE HALL 135 to 139 St.James Street, Montreal.HENRY HOGAN Pronrietor, THE BEST KNOWN HOTEL IN THE DOMINION, July 25.mwa 177 THE RUSSELL, The Palace Hotel of Canada, This magnificent new Hotel, fitted up in the most modern style, is now open.The Fussell contains accommodations for over FOUR HUNDRED GUESTS, with passenger and baggage elevators, end commands a splendid view of the city, Parliamentary grounds, river and canal.Visitors to the Capital having business with the Government find it most convenient to stop at the Russell, where they can always meet leading public men.The entire Hotel is supplied with escapes, and In case of fire thers would not be any confusion or danger.Every attention pald to guests.KENLEY & ST.JACQUES, Proprietors.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 system of drainage and ventilation, passenger eleva- {or, electric bells and lights, &e.1n fact, all that modern ingenuity and practical science can devise to promote thecomfort and convenience of guests has been supplied.CHATEAU ST.LOUIS HOTEL CO., Proprietors.HOTEL BRUNSWICK Fifth Avenue New York, This most fashionable and centrally locateq hotel has been renovated from top to bottom, and is now re-opened under management of R.H.Southgate upon the American and European pians.This hotel is the favorite resort for Candians.4 MITCHELL, XINZLER SOUTHGATE, Proprietors, Comfortable Rooms, $2 per day ; Board $2.50 per day: tr )SSIN HOUSE.February The Rossin is the largest Hotel in the Province of Ontario, only two blocks from the Union Railway Station, corner of King and York streets, finest situation in Toronto.Its throughly first-class appointments large cor ridors, lofty ceilings, spacious, clean and well ventilated rooms, detached and en suite polite and attentive employees in every de partment, together with unexcelled cuisine make 1t specially attractive to the travelling ublic.?New plumbing throughout.Immunity from noxious gases and malaria guaranteed by the most perfect system of ventilation, traps and thorough plumbing known to sanitary science.Elevator running day and night.Hot and Cold baths on each floor.Electric Bells and Fire escapes in all the rooms.Toronto Protective Police and Fire Patrol Services on each floor.Prices graduated according to location of room, and based on a moderate scale.The Rossin enjoys the patronage of the best English and American families.MARK H.IRISH.oprietor.DR.FOWLERS pv °EXT:ORE 1 &g WILD?TRAWBERRY a \u201cCURES | AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAIRIS AND FLUXES OF THE BOWELS! iT |S SAFE AND RELIABLE _FAR CHILDREN OR ADULTS.: 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 Te To Let, In Stock and for Sale at the, HERALD OFFICE, ®No.6 Beaver Hall Hill Montreal.CRAND LOTTERY! With the Approval of His Grace the Archbishop of Ottawa, For the re-building of the Church of the Rev.Fathers O.M.I., of Hull, P.Q., destroyed by fire on June the 5th, 1888, together with the Convent, the Reverend Fatheis\u2019 Residence and a large part of tne City of Hull.DRAWING On Wednesday, Oct.17th, 1888, At TWO o'clock p.m., At the Cabinet de Lecture Paroissal, Montreal, Canada.22 Sale of the TICKETS and DRAWING done by the National Colonization Lottery.21490 PRIZES, PRIZES VALUE > - 230,000.00 PRINCIPAL PRIZE 4 One Real Estate worth - 23,000.00 The offer is made to all the winners to pay their prizes cash, less a commission of 10 p.c.LIST OF PRIZES.1 Real Estate worth.$25,000 525,000 1 Real Fstate worth.0.900 10,000 2 Real Estate worth.5,000 10.000 5 Real Estate worth.2,000 10.000 2) Real Estate worth.1,000 20,000 20 Real Estate worth.750 15,000 100 Real Estate worth.50 50403 100 Watches worth.200 20,000 400 Watches worth., 100 40,000 500 Watches worth._ 60 25,000 1000 Toilet Sets worth.2% 25000 1080 oo 2149 Prizes worthi.$250,000 Tickets, 85.00.\u2014 Fifths 81.00.Tickets can be be oblained until 12 o'clock noon on the day ofthe drawing.S.E.LEFEBVRE, Secretary.Cflices: 16 81.JAMES STREET, MONTREAL, CANADA aN WW 2 @ YY A & Forme \u201d= WN om) dn es Ww\" Emme .p= bt Sof pad pid hed WLW ed Sa ah Sart a Cd Cd) i STILL ANOTHER AMERICAN DUCHESS.\u2014- > \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Will Miss Charlotte Zerega Wed the Duke of Newcastle ?A Charming New York Girl Said to Have Won a Titled Englishman.His Illustrious Lineage and Vast Wealth.ec Miss Charlotte B.Zerega, who, it is reported, has won the Duke of Newcastle, has not done so with a bag of ducats.Her fortune may not amount to more than $50,000.As the Duke has a yearly income six times that amount, her tiny fortune did not tempt him.Neither dces he marry for family, for he has enough of bis own, and Miss Zeregs, although she comes of good English and spanish stock, has no noble blood in her veins.She was born in New York in 186$ and was educated at home until she reached the age of twelve, when she was sent to one of the fashionable uptown schools, where she remained until three years ago.She has a sweet mezzo-soprano voice and sings charmingly; she can play both the guitar and piano; she is a graceful dancer and a bright conversu- tionalist, and as the novelists say, \u201cis fitted to grace any station.\u201d \u201cMiss Zerega is a thoroughly good little girl,\u201d said one of her intimate frienda.\u201cShe has never been &nown as a flirt or coquette, although she is vivacious and fond of gayety.She bas a great number of girl friends for a New York society irl.\u201d E Her home, at No.38 West Forty-eighth street, is not at all a stately one.The entrance hall is narrow, and to the left is a pretty little reception-room filled with easy chairs and small tables and a half- dozen fancy lamps.The staircase is between this room and the large drawing- room and the dining-room is still further in the rear.Miss Dottie, as she is called, has her rooms on the third floor.They are furnished in white muslin and pink cretonne, and, while pretty and dJainty, are no more so than those occupied by many a plain country girl of good taste.The family keep up a certain elegance of living even in their small house.They have a footman in full dress to answer the door and wait on the table, a butler, a coachman and three neat maid servants, and they give several handsome entertainments during the winter, when Pinard is called in to set out his best linen and china.Last winter when the Duke was visiting here Mrs.John Zerega, who was the beautiful Miss Berry, gave a handsome pink dinner in his honour.The table was decked with pink roses and lit by pink wax candles, the china was pink and white and the ices and cakes were the same colour.She also gave him several informal luncheons, where he had a chance to meet some of the brightest and prettiest of New York girls.Miss Charlctte, however, seemed to be his favourite, and he paid her rather marked attentions.For the past six or seven years the Zeregas have spent the major portion of tbe Summer at Bolton Priory up in \u2018Westchester, and it was there that Miss Zerega learned to ride.She has a handsome colt and is a daring rider.For two seasons she has been a member of Mrs.John Draper\u2019s riding class, and last Lent in tbe Central Park Riding Academy she won great applause by making her horse waltz and march to music.In appearance she is very attractive, being about tive feet in height, slender and graceful.Her face is full and oval, and her eyes a soft golden-brown, shaded by long lashes; her complexion is cream- white and colorless, except when she is excited; her lips are crimson, and he hair, which comes down to her knee.when unbound, is a bright-golden tint.In the matter of dress, she has excellent taste.One of her prettiest gowns last season Was a rose-pink point d\u2019esprit, trimmed with many rows of narrow pink ribbon; another was of silver tulle, caught up with forget-me-nots.Her arms and throat are very white and shapely, and when she was presented at court last summer she wore a decollete gown of pure white tulle, caught up with clusters of lilies-of-the-valley.She is expected to return home on October 10, and is at present with THE DUKE OF NEWCASTLE.The Duke of Newcastle is not handsome but he is said to be better than most dukes.His mother was Henrietta Adela, the daughter of Henry Thomas Hope Fsq., and a noted beauty-heiress of her day.He was born on September 24, 1864, and is therefore not quite twenty-four years old.He is small and blond, and is slightly lame, but walks without aid of either crutch or cane.He is a staunch supporter of the English Church, and has nine *livings,\u201d or rather churches, for which he has the privilege of selecting clergymen.His estate is Clumber, in Worksop, Notts, and he has also a handsome house in town.He has a brother two years his junior, Lord Henry Francis Hope, who 18 unmarried and lives at Deepde ne, Dorking, His sisters are Lady Beatrice Adeline, the wife of Sir Cecil Lister-Kaye.She is notedly handsome and just twenty-five years old.Lady Emily Augusta Mary is the wife of Prince Alfonso Dorin Pam- philj, Duke of Avigliano, an [Italian prine of high degree.Her home is at the Palace Doria, in Rome.She is also a beauty.The youngest sister, Lady Florence Josephine, is just the age of the Duke\u2019s fiancee, and is not yet married, \u201cLoyalty knows not shame,\u201d is fhe motto of the Duke\u2019s house.His crest is a ducal coronet surrounded by gules and a plume of five ostrich feathers argent, handed in azure, also a peacock with tail outspread.The first Duke of Newcastle was Baron Edward Clinton, who held many high positions, Lord of the Bed Chamber of King, Governor of the Tower, an commander of the fleet and forces sen against France and Scotland in 1570.H was made Earl of Lincoln in 1572.Th» ninth Earl married Catharine, the heiress of the Right Hon.Henry Pelham, in 1768, and from that family inherited the Dukedom of Newcastle, assuming the rame of Pelham by royal license.The present Duke was educated at Eton and Oxford and was considered a brilliant scholar.He has never been in the army on account of his lameness,an he has spent his time since leaving col- Jege in travelling.Last winter he came to New York with his brother, Lord Hope.Mr.Charles Singleton Pelham-Clinton, his cousin, ed 7 pauses JHE ONTREAE HERALD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.FRIDAY.OCTOBER.5.STEAMSHIPS, - DN married Miss Lizzie Zerega, a daught:r of Mr.Louis Zerega, and has lived in New York siuce 1885.The cousin intro- du: ed the Duke to fashionable New York and it was here that be first met Miss Charlotte Zerega, who is a cousin of Mrs.Pelbam-Clinton.Mrs.Jobn Zerega, with her daughter, Miss Charlotte, and Mr.and Mrs, Pel- bam-Clinton, sailed for England last spring.They spent much of their time at the Duke\u2019s estate in Worksop and ara at present visiting there.They expec: to sail for home on October 2 or 3, and the wedding will probably take piace here.The Duke has an immense fortune,and the family jewels which will fall to the Duchess are said to be among the finest in all England.\u2014- -\u2014\u2014 OLD HUTCH.THE GAMBLER.A Description of the Man Who Has Raised the Price of Bread.[Chicago Special to Pittsburg Dispatch.] The man who is responsible for the bi corner in wheat is one of the quaintest, ruggedest, most successful and richest operators on the Chicago Board of Trade.He is worth a round $10,000,000.His name is Benjamin P.Hutchinson, but nobody thinks of calling him anything but \u201cOld Hutch.\u201d He has a rather youthful look and sprightly step, although be is over sixty years old.He is tall, broad-shouldered and stalwart,plain and almost shabby in dress.He is democratic in hig manner, and will stop in the street to talk about the matter with the shabbiest spectator on the open Board.In the summer he wears an old brown straw hat.This he exchanges when the frost comes for a big sombrero, rusty and dusty.Sometimes he refuses to take his bat off in places where the usages of society call for bared heads, and it is even alleged that he usually uses his big hat for a night-cap.His son, Charles Hutchinson, is still a young man.He is worth a million and 18 president of the Board of Trade and at the head of the rich Cotton Exchange Bank.He is also a patron of art and is President of the Chicago Art Institute.But the old man doesn\u2019t believe in art.He even swears at art as he swears at anything else.He was a much disgusted man when he heard that Charley had paid $1,200 for a picture of three or four sheep by Rosa Bonheur.- Like many of the successful business men of Chicago, Hutchinson came from New England.After leaving his bench in Lynn, Mass, he started a dry goods store, but was caught in the panic of 1857 and knocked out, with $75,000 liabilities and small assets.He came immediately to Chicago and began speculating on the Board.In two years he paid off his debt down East, and at the beginning of the war was free from all embarrassment.Ever since he has been growing richer and richer.A He has not been a bold speculater heretofore.He has avoided big deals and corners, and has made it a point to show a profit at the end of each day\u2019s trading.He is a scalper, and no one knows better the value of one-eighth of 1 per cent.multiplied by millions of bushels, quickly turned and on the right side of the ledger.He likes to jump in quick and out the first opportunity, showing a, profit.He hates a loss worse than & poor man does, with all his stake, and has been known to load np with a million of wheat and then close out on a decline of }.He dabbles in real estate on the same plan.He will buy a tract of land for $100,000 and sell it the next day for $101,000 if he can get it.He made so much out of put and call business that the other fellows bad to stop that business.For a viola- ticn of the rule the old man was suspended from the Board for ninety days.Mr.Hutchinson is very secretive.It is said that once be voluntarily sent $20,- 000 to a friend, who was in trouble, out of pure gratitude.The man told about it.This so angered the old man that he has not spoken to him since.Mr.Hutchinson lives in the Century Club, in the fourth-story brownmansion just across from the Board of Trade.As be takes most of his meals there he recognizes the value of economy in every department, and, constituting himself as commissafy-general, he hangs a market basket on his arm and stalks among the commission mrrchants of South Water street.From them he asks and gets bottom figures, for he will stand no trifling, When a huckster tries to get ane other nickel for his potatoes the old man\u2019s face changes to an apopletic hue and he denounces the \u201crobber\u201d on the spot.Prbis Century Club, by the way, is like Mr.Blaine\u2019s Trusts\u2014largely a private affair.The few members on its rolls are choice spirits who are willing to join in a friendly game of whist or poker with Mr.Hutchinson.Mr.Hutchinson\u2019s drink is whiskey.This story is told of him: The Chicago Carpet Company occupies the northeast corner of Monroe street and Wabash avenue.Mr.Hutchinson has a large interest in the firm, and as he likes to inspect his property in his own way and at bis own time he has a key to the store.The show-window is a very elaborate affair.The softest and richest rugs are thrown upen a hard-wood floor; handsome tapestries form a tasteful background, and a couch fit for a queen finishes the picture.One might, so the story goes, \u201c(Old Hutch \u201d \u201chad a jag on,\u201d as they say in the untutored West, and he concluded to go to the store.He looked through the stock to his satisfaction, and then was about to leave when his eye caught the great window.He felt tired, and in an instant after, as he threw himself on the couch, he was fast asleep, and there he was, hat and all, when he was discovered early in the morning.The wheat deal in which \u201cOld Hutch \u201d hasbeen engaged is in many respects the most important operation of his life.It presents him in a new light, and a glimpse of a mew phase of his many- sided characteristics is given.He is not seen this time as a scalper, working for quick and narrow margins.Ile has been master of the situation throughoat, and he knew it.2.Most of Mr.Hutchinson\u2019s money is in tbe shape of quick assets, and when he has bought a large line of stocks he has always paid for it in cash.He has never been a man to attract a loyal and steadfast following, being almost too volatile.While lacking 1n tenacity of purpose, he has more than made up for it in quickness of perception and accuracy of judgment.He has, of course, met with Jossess, but thev have been few and small in comparison with his successes.es A Severe Attack.Miss Bella Elliot, of Pontypool, Ont., writes\u2014\u201c My brother and I were both taken ill with a severe attack of diarrhea.Having tried other remedies, we tried Dr.Fowlers Extract of Wild Strawberry, which gave immediate relief.\u201d -\u2014\u2014 ; Iurorraxt.\u2014The remarkable curative powers of St.Leon Water are becoming of wide repute.Kor paralysis, rheumatism, dyspepsia, billiousness and other chronic diseases, it is-unexcelled Head office, 54 Victoria Square.DIATE CADBURY'S COCOA., Guaranteed Pure and Soluble.RE.CRT., WARMING\u2014COMFORTING.All exposed to the inciemencies of the weather\u2014s aight and day, and whose occupation entails long ine between meals, will ind nothing so satisfying, sustaining, and comfortingas a cup of Cadbury\u2019s Cocoa.A small packet makes fourteen large breakfast cf of strong nourishing Cocoa.\u2018Fo get the real article he sure to ask for Cadbury's, and refuse all others, Frank Magor & Co.IMPORTERS.259 Commissioners St.Montreal 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.and has received the highest class in \u2018 Bureau Veritas,\u201d is intended to leave Montreal on und every aiternate Monday auring seison o navigation for Father Point, Caspe, Mal Bale, Poin 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 gpply to BROCK & CO, Freight and Ticket Agents, 205 Commissioners St., Montreal.A.B.CHAFFEE, jr., Ticket Agent, 266 St.James street, BERMUDA & WEST INDIES ROYAL MAIL LINES OF THE Sailing from Pier 47 Nortu River, New York.For Bermuda :\u2014 SS.TRINIDAD, Oct.11, at 3 p.m.SS.TRINIDAD, Oct.25, at 3 p.m.For &t.Kitts, Antigua, Guadaloupe, Dominica, St.Lucia, Barbadoes and Trinidad :\u2014 $8.MURIEL, Wednesday, Oct.24, at 8 p.m.For freight, passage and insurance, apply to A.E.OUTERBRIDGE & CO., Agents 51 Broadway, New Yor; ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary, Quebec, \u2018A.B, CHAFFEE, JR., Ticket Agent.266 St.James Street, Montreal.CanadianPacific STEAMSHIP LINE.One of the Fast Clyde-built Electric- Lighted Steamships Ig 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.Monda 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 Coast ; AND ONE OF THE PALACE SIDE-WHEEL ELECTRIC-LIGHTED STEAMERS, CARMONA AND CAMBRIA, Is intended to leave Owen Sound every Tuesday & Friday at 10.30 p.m., on arrival of Canadian Pacific Railway train leaving Toronto 4.40 p.m.for Sault Ste.Marie, calling al usval intermediate ports.W.C.VANHORNE, HENRY BEATTY, President, Man.Lake Traffic, Montreal.Toronto.INLAND NAVIGATION.Richelien & Ontario Navigation Co The following steamers call at the usual intermediate ports :\u2014 To QUEBEC :\u2014Steamers QUEBEC and MONTREAL leave Montreal daily (Sundays 2xcepted) at 6 p.m.To TRE SAGUENA Y\u2014Steamer UNION leaves every Tuesday and Friday at 7.30 a.m.from Quebec.To CORNWALL, steamer BOHEMIAN every Tuesday and Friday at noon.To THREE RIVERS, every Tuesday and Friday at 1.39 p.m.To CHAMBLY, every Tuesday and Friday atl p.m, Te VARENNES, VERCHERES and BOUT DE LISLE, daily (Sundays excepted) r TERREBONNE.st 2.30 p.m.ROM LAPRAIRIE.FROM MONTREAL From lst to 20th October\u2014Sundays and Holydays excepted.630am.12.30 pm.7.30 a.m.9.00 a.m 00 am.From 29th October to close of Navigation\u2014 Suadays and Holydays excepted, 7.00 a.m.10.00 a.m.8.00 am.3.00 p.m.LONGUEUIL FER #AY\u2014From Longueuil, 5 a.m.and every subsequent hour.From Montreal, commence at 5.30 a.1n.; last trip, 7.30 pm.| , For all information apply at Company's Ticket Offices, 136) St.James street, Windsor Hotel, Balmoral Hotel, Canal Basin, and Richelleu Pier.ag x \\ 4.00 p.m.J.B.LABELLE, General Manager, ALEX.MILLOY, Montreal.Manager Western Division.Ottawa River Navigation Co.i SRY = DAILY LINE BETW EN MONTREAL AND OTTAWA Passengers take 7.45 a.m, Train daily for Lachine, to connect with steamer for Ottawa and intermediate ports.Go up the Ottawa NOW for AETUMN TINTS.DAY EXCURSIONS te Carillon and back, $1.25.Saturdays, $1.00.N.B.\u2014Daily Steamers will be withdrawn after 13th Oct.Tickets at Bonaventure Depot, 143 St.James street, Windsor and Balmoral Hotels, and 174 St.James street.MARKET STEAMERS\u2014Steamer Maude, for Brown\u2019s Wharf, &e., Tuesdays and Fridays, 6.30 p.m, Steamer Primeess, for Carillon, &e.; steamer Dagmar, for Rigand &e., Wednesdays and Saturdays, at mm.600 a R.W.SHEPHERD, JR., Sept.27, 1888.Manager.| MONDAY, 15th OCTOBER, at 5 P.M.QUEBEC STEAMSHIP CO., DoxaLoson LINE.WEEKLY SERVICE \u2014BETW EEN\u2014 MONTREAL and GLASGOW | B.8 Aleldes, (steel), 8,400 tons, Capt.Rollo.8.8.Concordia.2, ; apt.McLean, R.8.Cynthia.,.2,20 * Capt.Taylor.8.8, Colina.,.2,000 * Capt.Jennings, 8.8, Cires.2400 * Capt.Crighton The Steamship ALCIDES will sail from Montreal for Clasgow ON OR ABOUT THE Sth OCTOBER.Agents\u2014Donaldson Bros, 165 St.Vincent street, Glasgow ; Robert Reford & Co.\u201c tand 25 8t.Sacrament street, Montreal, THOMSON LINE.Montreal and Neweastle-on-Tyne SERVICE, VIA LONDON.Avlona.2,000 tong, Capt.Hawick.Barcelona .2,000 \u201c Capt.Cammings Dracona (steei).2,000 \u201c Capt.Tait.Escalona, * .2,0 *\u2018 Capt.Simpson.Fremona, * 4 * Capt.Anderson.Gerona, \u201c Capt.Sangster.EThe Steamship GERONA will sail from MONTREAL FOR LONDON ON OR ABOUT THE 9th OCTOBER.Agents: \u2014Starks & Calrns, Newcastle-on Tyne ; Andrew Low & Son, 27 Leadenhall street, .~,adon, E.C,; H.R.James, Queen Square, Bristol; Wi liam \u201cThomson & Sons Dundee, Scotland, and Robert Reford & Co., Montreal.MEDITERRANEAN SERVICES.8.Barcelona, Capt.Cummings will load for Halifax, Quebec and Montreal at Patras about 12th Sept.\u201c Denia [a 20 LU LS \u201c Malaga \u201c a7 4 \u201c Cadiz\u201c 0 also \u201c Aimeria \u201c 25% if sufficient cargo offers.S.S.Avlona, Capt.Hawick will load for Quebec and Montreal at Leghorn about20th Sept.Marseilles © : Tarragona \u201c 26% * Denia \u201c 30 +\" Quebec cargo will be landed at Quebec direct from steamers upon arrival, All the vessels of the above [ines are A 100 L highest class at Lloyds, and have been built exvressly [for 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 BillsofLading 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 EUROPE 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.Sacrament Street, MONTREAL.FRANCE, CANADA.BOSSIERE LINE.Under Contract with the Dominion Government, HAVRE and MONTREAL.88.CHATEAU LEOVILLE will leave Montreal for Havre and St.Malo, touching at St.Pierre Miquelon, on the 30th Sept.SS.SULLY will leave Havre for Montreal on the 5th Oct.SS.HENRI IV.will leave Montreal for Havre the Ath Oct.BORDEAUX and MONTREAL.SS.HENRI 1V.will leave Charente, Ton- nay and Bordeaux, on the 25th September for Montreal.88, SULLY will leave Havre for Montreal on the 10th Oct.; Through Bills of Lading given in Havre, to points East and West in Canada; an in Montreal, to all points in France and Europe.For freight and passage rates apply to BOSSIERE FRERES & CIE., Bavre; and 209 Commissioners street, Montrea!.July 24 1888 177 FURNESS AMERS SAILING BETWEEN BOSTON & LONDON.on or About SS.STOCKHOLM CITY.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.Sept, 28 SS.BORDERER.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.cecsau en es Oct 7 Through Billsof Lading Granted to any point in CANAD AorWESTERN STATES And by any of the CANADIAN or WESTERN RAILWAYS to any point in GREAT BRITAIN IRELAND.oF UROPE, at LOWEST HR Ta pectat attention #ven tothe 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, Butter, Cheese and Cattle.Agents :\u2014ADAMSOF & RONALDSON, 84 Lead- enhall street, London, E.C.; JOHN GLYNN & SON, 20 Water street, Liverpool ; C.FURNESS, Newcastle; ANDERSON, MCKENZIE & Co, ontreal.For particulars apply to ANDERSON, McKENZIE & CO, 227 Commissioners street, 109 Moatreal.MACHINERY FOR SALE.1 new Valley Automatic Cut-of Engine; 1 second-hand Brown Engine, 456 H.P.1 & Slide Valve Engine, 40 H.P.1__* « Horizontal Engine, 10 H.P.1 Knowles Fire Pump, capacity 400 gallons per minute.; 2 Serew Cutting Lathes, 24 in.swing, 13 ft.Yeni ns and Specifications made for new vessels.the same superintended during con- etructionby an experlenced Clyde-trained shipbuilder Appiy to PCRIDIFORD & ROBERTSON, STEAMSHIPE.BEAVER LINE.The Canada Shipping Co.'s LINE OF STEAMERS BETWEEN MONTREAL & LIVERPOOL, Comprising the following First-cl built.-powsered Iron Steamani pe 0 Lake Ontario, Capt.H.Campbel Lake Supériôr, + Wm.Sonate\" eo ns Lake Huron.o ML Tranmar 4,100 \u2019\" © Winnipeg .D.M Lake Nepigon, 'w Fl Carey, su a SUMMER SAILINGS, 1888 Will be as follows :\u2014 FROM LIVERPOOL Lake Huron.Lake Ontario.\u201c Seb 14 Lake Winnipeg.\u201c Sept.21 Lake Superior.\u2019\" Sept, 8 Lake Nepigon .,,,, \u201c t.5 Lake Huron.,.\u2018 Oet.13 FROM MONTREAL Lake Superior.s Sept.1 Lake Nepigon.\u201c Sept 1h Lake Huron.hd Sept.25 Jake Ontario.,., Oct.2 Lake Winnipeg.,.6 Oct.9 Lake Superior.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.ed ct.16 O The steamers connect at Montreal by d t rail for all ints in Canada, Minitoba North-West Territories and United States, t.which through tickets are Issued., hese Meamers are builtin water-tight com.and of spec orth Atlantic trade, Co SLreRgtl for the n the passenger departments the most fect provision has been made to ensure Fhe comfort and convenience of all.In tba vabin the State-rooms are largeand airy.The Steerage js Sted puit the most approved Patent 8, an heated by sean.8 y ventilated and n experienced Surgeon is carried by eac steamer, also Stewardesses to attend % the Wants of females and children.RATES OF PASSAGE: Saloon, $40, $50 and $60; Round Trip, $80, 200 and, $110, according to steamer and ac- 2 ation.e and Lake Nepigon only.$40 $80 rates per S.8 Intermediate, $30; Round Trip Tickets, $60.Bteerage, $20; Round Trip tickets, $40.For freight or other particulars apply : In 1fast, A.A.WATT, 8 Custom House Square: in Queenstown N.G.SEYMOUR & Co.; in Liv 1,t0 R.Ww.ROBERTS, 21 Water Street ; in Queb .\u2018 Port in, ec, to H.EH.SEWELL, 125 H.E.MURRAY, General Manager 1 Custom H r June 20 ouse Square, Montreal, a = 2 WHITE STAR LINE \u2014\u2014 CALLING AT CORK HARBOR, IRELAND Carrying British and American Mails Provided with avery Modern Improvement.NOTICE.\u2014The steamers of this Line take ified routes, according to the seasons ot the year, which include the Lane routes, recommended by Lieutenant Maury.Balling between NEW YORK and LIVER L, via Queenstown, are appointed to leave as follows: FROM NEW YORK, 1888 Britannic Wednesday, Aug.29,10.30 a.m.Celtic.Wednesday, sept.5, 4.00 p.m.German Wednesday, Sept.12, 10.00 a.m.* Adriatic Wednesday, Sept.19, 4.00 p.m.Britannic .Wednesday, Sept.26, 9.00 a.m.*Celtic .Wednesday, Oct, 3, 3.00 p.m.Germanic.Wednesday, Oct.10, 8.30 a.m.*Adriatic.Wednesday, Qct, 17, 3.30p.m.Britannic .Wednesday, Oct.24, 7.30 a.m.*Celtic.\u2026.\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026.Wednesday, Oct.81, 2.00 p.m.Germanic.Wednesday, Nov.7, 7.30 a.m, * Adriatic.Wednesday, Nov.14, 2.30 a.m.BBritannic.Wednesday, Nov.21, 6.30 a.m.*Celtic.,.Wednesday, Nov, 28, noon.Germanic.Wednesday, Dec.5, 6.80 a.m.* Adriatic.\u2018Wednesday, Dec.12, 1.00 p.m.Britannie.Wednesday, Dec, 19, 5.00 a.m.*Celtic.Wednesday, Dec.26, 10.30 a.m.*These steamers have superior Second Cabin accommodations.$35to Queenstown or Liverpool CABIN RATES.New York to lave 1 and Queenstown, according to {ime and location of Berths, 350, Shea PE $100.Return tickets, $100, $110, 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, Sept 29, 11.00 a.ms * Nov.3, 5.00a.m.Dec.8, 9.00 a.m.No saloon passengers will be carried on these dates, but second cabin passengers wll be berthed in the saloon sia'e rooms, and have the use of the saloon or saloon deck, but receive the USPAL SECOND CABIN BILL OF FARE, particulars of which can be haa from any agent.SECOND CABIN RATES\u2014Outward.By Republie.By Celtic and À .\u201c $35 ic in largegrooms.30 8 in two-berth room 83 return ticket, $05.Intending passengers should secure tickets in advance, STEERAGE RATES From Montreal to Liverpool, Londonderry, Queenstown Glasgow, Be fash London, Bristol, Cardiff, or Glasgow, including Rallway Fare to New York, at lowest rates.Passengers booked, via Liverpool, to all parts of Europe at moderate rates.For further information and passage apply to.J.BRUCE ISMAY, 41 Broadway: New York ; or B.J.COCHLIN, Sole Agent __364 St.Paul st.Montreal WHITE CROSS LINE, OF ANTWERP, Under Contract with (he Dominion Government.Steamers of the above Lines will sail as follows :\u2014 From Hamburg and Antwerp fo Montreal Direct SS.WANDRAHM .About 20th Sept, SS BREMA .About «8th Sept.88.GRASBROOK About 15th Oct.S8.BAUMWALL .About 25th Oct.From Montreal to Hamburg end Antwerp.S8.CREMON .About 1st Oct.S8.BREMA.ovvunvvennnn About 18th Oct.Through Bills of Lading granted in Hamburg and Antwerp to pointé Easy and est, Wor rates of freight and other particulars apply to AUGUST BOLTEN, Hamburg, GRISAR & MARSILY, Antwerp, Agents Hansa Steamship Co.STEINMANN & LUDWIG, Antwerp, Agents \u2018White Cross Line, Or to MUND H & CO., Montreai, GeneralAgents in Canada D .LORM NacDOUGALL & CO.STOCK BROKERS.LORN 8.MACDOUGALL, MEMBER MONTREAL ST00K EXOHANGE, MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE BUILDING, 11 & 13 St.Sacrament Street Buy and sell all securities quoted in Montreal New York and Boston.nds of all kind, bought and sold, Bond business especially le oorrespondents Goodbody, Glyn & Do orrespondents : y, Glyn Ww New York; Blake Bros., Boston.Bond Agents for A.Bossevain & Co.m A sterdam, Holland; Blake, Bossevain & Co.London, England.82 STEAMSHIPS.DOMINION LINE ROYAL STEAMERS.LIVERPOOL SERVICE.BAILING DATES, FROM FROM MONTREAL.QUEBEC.Toronto «Thur.Oct.4}.2.Sarnia .Thur.Oct.11] Friday,Oct.12 Oregon.Wed.Oct.17 Thur.\u201d Oct.18 ,Montreal\u2026 «.Thur.Oct.25).Vancouver.Wed.Oct.31] Thur, Nov, 1 Bristol Service for Avonmouth Dock.DOMINION, irom Montreal, about 9h Oct.© ARIO, \u201c \u201c 25th Oct.ablu Rates :\u2014Montreal 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, Staterooms.M sie Roo < mand Bath Room amidships ut little motio: carry nejiher pattie: nor sheep, 1s felt, and \u20ac ntermediate an 1sgue at the lowest rates.4 Bicerage Tickets \u2018or fre or passage, apply in Liverpool FLINN, MAINE & MONTGOMERY, 24 James street ; in London to MCILWRAITH, MCEACH EAN So.Fenchurch streot; in Quebec, W.ON, and at Grand way Offices, or to Trunk D.BATTERSBY, 174 St.James street, W.D.O'BHIEN 143 St.James street, DAVID TORRANCE & CO.Ge 25 Hospital street, June 6 neral Agents, Mon al ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS.FOR QUEENSTOWN AND LIVERPOOL Carrying the United States Mail, ROPOSED SAILING.City of Berlin.Saturday.Sept, 29, 11.50 a.m City of Chester .Saturday, Oct.6, 6.00 a.m Clty of Chicago.8aturday, Oct.13, 1200 noon C.of Richmond.Saturday, Oct, 20, 6,00 a.m C.of N.York.Wednesday, Oct, 24, 7.30 a.m City of Berlin.Saturday, Nov.8, 5.40 :1M City of Chester.Saturday.Nov.10.10.30 a.m City of Chicago .Saturday, Nov.17, 5.00 a.m C.of N.York .Wednesday, Nov.2), 6.City of Richmond.Saturday, Dec.1, 3 City of Berlin.Saturday, Dec.8, 9.City of Chester.Saturday, Dec.15, 3.C.of N.York.Wednesday, Der.19, 5.City of Chicago .Saturday.Dec.29, 2.30 p.m From Inman Pier, foot of Grand street, Ser- sey City.Steerage at very low rates.Intermediate passage, $30.Round Trip $60.E\u2014$650, a RATES OF PASSAG , , an $100, according to aacommodation, all having equal saloon privileges, Children between à and 12 vears of age, half-fare, Servants, $50.Special Round Trip Tickets at reduced rates.Tickets to London, $7; and Parls $15, and $20 additional, according to ronte sclestei.Saloon, Staterooms, Smoking and Bathrooms amidships, orpcse steamers do not carry Cattle, Sheer gs.For freight or passage epply to PETER WRIGHT & BONS, Genera Parents, No, 1 Broadway, New York ; or C.C.MoFAL: ; * 8k, James street, or J.Y.C3 RUMOUR ESS en July 1?165 CUNARD LINE.New York to Liverpool via Queenstown.FROM PIER 40, N.E., NEW YORE.FART EXPRESS MAIL SERVIOK, Servia.Sat, Oct.6, 5.30 a.m Bothnia, Wed., Oct.10, 9,00 a.m.Umbria.Sat, Oct.18, noon, Sat.Oct.D, 5.30 a.m Wed, Oct.24, 7.30 a.m.»» Sat, Oct.27,10.0a m, à +.Sat, Nov.3, 3.00 p.m, Bothnia.Wed., Nov.7, 7.00 a.m RATES OF PASSAGE.Cabin, $60, $80 and $100, according to accom modation.Intermediate passage $35.Steerage Tickets to and from all parts of Europe at very lowest rates.Through Bills 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 Come pany\u2019s office, No.4 Bowling Green, New York, VERNON H.BROWN & CO, General Agents, to THOMAS WILSON, Agent, 17 St.Sacrament street, J.Y.GILMOUR & CO., 854 St.Paul street, Montreal, Or to ES GUION LINE.UNITED STATES MAIL STEAMERS SAILING WKEKLY BETWEEN New York and Liverpool, Calling at Queenstown.Proposed Sailings from New York.Nevada.+.Tuesday, Oct.9, 7.30 a.m Alaska .Tuesday, Oct.16, 2.30 p.m Wyomirg Tuesday, Oct.23, 7.00 a.m Arizona 'uesday, Oct.3, Noon.Wisconsi Tuesday, Nov.6, 6.30a.m Nevada.Tuesday, Nov.13, 1.00 p.m Alaska.Tuesday, Nov.20, 5.50 a.m W yomin .Tuesday, Nov.27, 10.30 a.m Arizona.Kuesday, Dec.4, 5.00 a.m Wisconsin.Tuesday, Dec, 11, 11.30 a.m Nevada.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.Tuesday, Dec.18, 4.30 a.m The Alaska will be the Christmas steamer.These steamers are built of Iron in watertight compartments, and are furnished with every requisite to make tne passage across the Atlantic both safe and agreeable, hating Bath-reom, Bmoking-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 at sea; perfect ventilation and light, CABIN PASSAGE, $50, $60, $80 and $100, according to location, &o.Intermediste.,.and Steerage, to or from Montreal.,,.£8 This is a class that affords people of moderate means a respectable way of travelling, Beds, Bedding ash-basins, &c., together with good food, separate Dining-room from either Cabin or Steerage being previded.Passage, $30 single ; $60 round trip.Ee ta Very Low Rates, PP.A.M.UNDERHILL & CO.35 Broadway, New York.J.Y.CILMOUR & CO., 354 St.Paul street, or D.BATTERSBY, .17: July 10 4 St, James stroot.HIND\u2019S HONEY AND ALMOND CREAM, for Chapped Hands, Face and Lips, Rough and Hard Skin, Chafiug, Suuburn, Burns, Realds, ltching, Chilblains, Sore Nipples, * Haug Nails.\u201d and all unpleasant conditions of the Skin of like character.Brittle Nails eoftened in ene night.Price 30 cents per bottle.Seid by Druggists.56 ST.PETER | | 3 STEAMSHIPS.ALLAN LINE Under contract with the Governmen.Canada and Newfni.ndlaud for the Conveyance ofthe CANADIAF and UNITED STATES MAILS 1888-Summer Arrangements.-1888 This Com y\u2019s Lives are com of t tollowin Double-engined.Clyde-built PRON STEAMSHIPS.They are built in waters tight compartments, are unsurpassed for strength, speed and comfort, are led up with all the modern improvements that practical experience can suggest, and have made the fastest time on record Vessels, Tonnage.Commanders «vo 831|Capt.F, McGrath Assyrian.3970|Capt.W.8 Main Austrian ., Capt.John Bentley Buenos A Capt.James Scotte Canadian.Capt.John Kerr ~ Carthaginian, .4214/Capt.A.MacNicol Caspian .-2128|Capt.Alex.McDougal, Circasst 8141.R.Barrett, R.N, R Corean.-8488|Capt.C.J.Menries Grecian,.8613/Capt, C.E.LeGallais Hibernian.2097/Capt.John Brown Lucerne.1825 Cap Nunan Manitoban .\u2026.2975 Capt.Dunlop Monte Videan.3500 Building.Nestorian.2889|Capt.John France Newfoundland.819 Capt.C, Mylius Norwegian.8523 Capt.R.Carruthers N ova Scotian.3306 fopt ES H.Hughes Arisian.-H.Smith, Peruvian.! 1.118088.Capt, 7.G Stephane Pheenician.,.2425|Capt.D, McKillo v Polynesian.3083/Capt.Hugh Wylle pomeranian 4364 Capt.W.Daleisl Rosarian.TT bury sucer, apt.Joseph Ritchie 83647|Capt.W.Richardson Capt.John Park Capt.R.P.Moore Capt.D, J.James The Steamers of the Liverpool Mail Line Sailing from Liverpool on Ri and from Montreal at dayllght on VERDATS DAYS, and from Quebec at 9.00 a.m.on THURSDAY®, callibg at Lough Foyle to re- celve on board and land Mails and Passengers to and from Ireland and Scotland, are intended to be despatched as under :\u2014 FROM FROM MONTREAL.QUEBE6G, 3 Oct.4 gardinian FR sc.Oct.arisian .\u2026.Oet 10 A Polynesian \u2026Oet, 24 oc » Sardinian.Nov.7 Nov.8 Parisiah.Nov.14 Nov.15 Rates of Passage vy steamers of Live 001 Mail Line, from Montreal er Quebec, pal I Cabin, 0 and : Inte i Storage ga) 7 $80 Intermediate, $30 Liverpool Extra Line The steamers of the Liverpool Extra Line sailing from Liverpool on FRIDAYS, and from Montreal at daylight on THURSDAYS, and from Quebec at 9.00 a.m.on FRIDAYS, calling at Lough Foyle to receive passengers from Ireland and Scotland on outward voyage, but proceeding to Liverpool direct on ard voyage, are intende spatched as under :\u2014 d to be.de- Circassian.eee.Le Oct Sarmatian.Nov.1 Nov.2 Circassian.Nov.22 Nov.23 Rates of Passage by Steamer of Li Extra Line, from Montreal or Quebec arbes opin $50, $60, $70; Intermediate, $30; Steers Liverpool, Queenstown, St.John's, Halifax and Baltimore Mail Service, FROM HALIFAX via ST.J OHN\u20198, N.F,, TO ; LIVERPOOL.Peruvian einen [A n00.Monday, Oct.1 Caspian fee arate eiieeeraey Monday, Oct.15 Nova Scotian.Monday, Oct.29 Peruvian.,.,,.Monday, Nov.12 Caspian ., rorsveseniceuc00.Monday, Nov.26 Rates of passage from Halifax to St.John's Nfld., and vice versa are : ® Oabin,.,.$20.\u2019 Intermediaie.a | steerage.56.00 GLASGOW, QUEBEC & MONTREAL SERVICE FROM MONTREAL TO GLASGOW Norwegian.seusscees .Siberian rte, Oct.Hibernian : Corenn 1.- arthagin .Norwegian, Now.* Siberian, .Nov.14 Urecian,,.0.Nov.21 These steamers do not carr rE assen voyage to Europe, yP gers on LONDON, QUEBEC & MONTREAL SERVICE.FROM MONTREAL.TO LONDON Pomeranian .\u2026 Oct.10 Assyriapn.Pomeranian .Nov.17 These steamers do not carr voyage to Europe.¥ passengers on THROUGH BILLS OF LADING anted to Liverpool and Glasgow, a, 1 ontinental Ports, to all pointsin ne Tato States and Canada, and from ail Stations in Canada and the United and Glasgow States 10 Liverpoo Via Boston or Halifax.Connections by the Intercolonial and Gr: Trunk Railways, via Halifax ; and b he Central Vermont and Grand Trunk Railways [National Des atenl, and by the Boston and Albany, New ork Central and Great Western Railways [Merchants\u2019 Despatch via Boa ton, and by Grand Trunk Railway ompanr» Through Rates and Through Bills of Lading for East bound Traffic can be obtained frong any of the Agents of the above-named Raile Ways.For Freight, passage and other inform apply to Joux M.CURRIE, 21 Quai Goran avre ; ALEXANDER HUNTER, 4 Rue Gluck Paris; Ave.SCHMITZ & Co., or RIOHARD BERNS, Antwerp; RUYs & Co., Rotterdam C.Hugo, Hamburg ; JAMES Moss & Co., Bordeaux; FISCHER & BEHMER, Schussetkorp No.8 Bremen; CHARLEY & MALCOLM, Belfast, JAMES SCOTT & Co, Queenstown 3; MONT GOMERIE & WORKMAN, 36 gracechurch street, London; JAMES & ALEX.ALLAN, 70 Great Clyde Street, Glasgow ; ALLAN BROTHERS James street, Liverpool; ALLANS RAE & Co., Quebec ; ALLAN & Co., 112 La Salle street Chicago; .BOURLIER, Toronto; THos.Cook & Sox, 261 Broadway, ew York; or to G.W.ROBINSON, 1381 St.James streat, on.posite St.Tawrence Hall; W.D.O'BRIEN 143 St.James street.H.&A.ALLAN.8 State Street, Boston, and August 6, 1888, mmon Street, Montreal Registered\u2014A delightfully refreshing pre Laiution Jor tbe hair.\u2018Should be used aily, Keeps the scalp healthy, prevents landruft, promotes the growth.perfec hair dressing for family.2c per bottle HENRY R.GRAY, Chemist, 41 8t.Lawrence Main Street BRONZE POWDERS ! WALTER H.COTTINGHAM, i Importer and manufacturer of : Bronze Powders, Metal Leafs and Brocades, Royal Windsor Gilding, Universal Gold Paint, And Bronze Specialties, | .Alarge variety of shades and qualities al- , ways on hand.ST.Telephone 787.BN 182 \u2018Cablegrams as + The Montreal Herald.PUBLISHED DAILY BY The HERALD COMPANY, Limited \u2014AT\u2014 No.HoN.P.MITOHELL = - - - « = President WiLL H.WHYTE - Secretary-Treasurer and Business Manager.MOLYNEUX ST.JOHN - - - - « - Editor ZW Business Correspondence should de addressed to THY, HERALD COMPANY Limited).All other correspondence lo be addressed * The Editor.\u201d MR.M, ST.JOHN, RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION.BY MAIL, INADVANCE.POSTAGE PAIL Daily edition, one year:.$6.00 SIX MONUNS.000000c0c000000s 3.00 Three MONtRS.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.00.1.50 onemonth.s.\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u201cee .0 Weekly edition, one year.1.00 Single CODIES.\u20260.000.sau00000 3c Specimen Copies sent free.FRIDAY MORNING.OCTOBER - eu TO-DAN'S DOINGS.ACADEMY OF Music-Roland Reed in The Woman Hater.\u20148 o\u2019clock, THFATRE RoyAL\u2014Kimball Opera Company in Mikado.by request.\u20142 and 8.PARADLE\u2014GtL Fusileers\u20148 p m.ANNUAL MEETING\u2014Maternity Hospital at 3 p.m, PRESBYTERIAN WUMEN\u2019S MISSIONARY So- ciety\u2014Meeting at 3 p.m., 101 Metcalfe street.SHAKY EXCUSES.It is a pity that in their desire to injure Mr.Mercier, the Tories of Canada are perfectly reckless in their assaults upon this province.The financial ring in London was first set to \u201cbear\u201d Quebec bonds, and the wind mill in Victoria street has ever since been working with sails more or less full to damage the credit cf Quebec.Although agood many people\u2014as represented by a Montreal merchant who recently expressed his opinions of the Gazette's cablegrams in these columns\u2014decline to believe that the alleged cablegrams from London really emanate from that city, but prefer to believe that they are manufactured in Canada, we feel inclined to suppose that they are not altogether \u201cbogus\u201d cablegrams.There is the familiar ring of the Government office in Victoria street about them ; an adulation of Sir Charles Tupper in most of them, which he certainly would not receive spontaneously in Ottawa just now; and generally an official tone which the young man in London who attends to this duty has acquired from official intercourse.We do not, of course, mean to say that the they appear are precisely the same as when sent, nor do we know that they come direct to the newspaper offices which publish them.We do not know how this may be.It is quite possible that they are first sent to Ottawa and edited there tor publication in the organs to which they are forward- ed\u2014not that this either adds to, or detracts from, their value.They are more or less worthless in either case, although, like many other worthless things, they are capable of doing much mischief to the country.The latest of this series of arrows fired at the province of Quebec app2ared in the organs yesterday.It announced a fall in Quebec bonds ; an announcement which was probably prearranged with the jobbers on the exchange, so that the fall should occar just when the Government required it to assist them in their contemplated operation of disallowing the Provincial Legislature\u2019s act for the conversion of the debt.We are told by this precious cablegram, first that Quebec bounds have fallen during the week, and then that the Canadian Gazette \u2014the Canadian Gazette forsooth\u2014says that \u201cthe commonest standard of \u201c morality requires a veto.\u201d This is very much as if the Toronto Empire or the Ottawa Citizen declared that the paramount interests of Canada required the appointment of Mr.Evans\u2014the get-out- of-the-road candidate in Cardwell\u2014as quarantine officer in Alberta, or the gift to Mr.Rykert, of the Cypress Hills tim- ber-limit, and called upon Sir John to pass the order-in-council.The Canadian Gazette may be trusted to récommend the veto of any act whenever Sir John has determined to disallow it Sir John, prompted by Mr.Chapleau, who has been elevated to the leadership ot the French division of the Tory army, has declared war against the Province, and the London brigade have been instructed to operate against us on the London Stock Exchange.The Canadian Gazette is the trumpeter of that brigade and sounds such calls as are directed by the commanding officer.It is a pity that everything done in this direction is so done as to inflict the greatest mischief on the province and the Dominion generally.In determining to disallow the Conversion Act Sir John Macdonald, possibly warned by Sir John Thompson, who as a lawyer was bound to give his chief his opinion\u2014in private\u2014felt that he was about to do an unconstitutional act, and as a means of paving the way for him the Gazette announced that the British North America Act gave the power of disallowance to the Federal Government to be exercised in matters of policy as well as of law.If this were the case, there would, of course, be no necessity for the Provincial Legislatures.If Acts within the jurisdiction given them by the constitution could be disallowed by Sir John Macdonald merely because he thought it politic to do so, the 92nd clause of the British North America Act, with all its 19 sections and sub-sections, is n'eaningless As \u201cthe borrowing of \u201c money on the sole credit of the pro- \u201cvince,\u201d is one of the exclusive powers of the Provincial Legislatures, S Beaver Hall Hill something outside the law is re quired as an excuse for Sir John ; Macdonald\u2019s contemplatad action.The | Montreal Gazette says \u201c policy \u201d warrants it; the London Canadian Gazette is 1n- structed to say that \u201cthe commonest \u201c standard of morality requires it.\u201d That , organ is quite right in speaking of the | \u201c\u201c commonest standard \u201d\u2019 when preaching morality as an incentive for some | political action of Sir John Macdonald; but it will be news to most people to hear j that rights of the provinces, as established by the British North America Act, are to be invaded whenever Sir , John Macdonald's not too high standard of morality prompts him to exercise the veto.Between Sir John\u2019s \u201cpolicy\u201d and Sir John's \u201cstandard of morality\u201d there 'ig not much to choose, but we submit | thatthe jurisdiction of the provincial | legislatnres was not intended to be de- rendent on either.WHO IS TO PAY THE PIPER?; The strike of the Italian railway navvies in Compton having been disposed of, the next burning question to be settled is, who will pay for the luxury of having the troops called out to suppress the emeute ?The cost, it is said, will be in the vicinity of $8,000 to $9,000, and, the troops having been ordered out on the requisition of one of the magistrates of the County, it is assumed that the County is legally liable, and such, itis understood, is the general scope of the law.If the people of Compton refuse to tax themselves to pay the bill, then the Dominion Government may have to invoke the aid of the courts \u2018to compel the municipal authorities to amerce the County.It does not, however, follow that Compton will pay, as some means can probably be found of evading the liability, and Minister Pope will probably be asked to stand between his constituents and danger.Some years ago a strike occurred among Cape Breton miners, which threatened to get beyond the control of the local authorities and a requisition was made by some of the magistrates for military aid, in consequence of which a company ot volunteers was sent down from Halifax.In due time the county was called on to pay the bill, but the County Council politely and peremptorily declined.The militia authorities sued the county and were beaten in the courts, and it is understood the Militia Department had to foot the bill.Perhaps Compton will go and do likewise, co FOOD ¥OR THOUGHT.NEW YORK \u2018\u2018EVENING PosT:'\u2014It is certain that the business of sugar refining is protected by the tariff.But the Tribune tells us that the trust has ordered one of its branches, the Bay State Sugar Refinery, to close and discharge its hands, 130 in number, on the eve of a cold winter.Before the trust was formed, this refinery was accustomed when it closed down, to keep its men on the pay roll at half-time; but now, it is said, \u2018\u2018the 130 men who were summarily deprived of work last Saturday night have no such prospect.\u201d Now, we would like to know what the tariff-wages theory has to say for itself.The Sugar Trust is a tighter and more exclusive kindof a tariff built on the top of another tariff.But where do the wages of the workingman come in?The above contains a kernel, the mental digestion of which should furnish exercise to the thinking powers of the wage-earners of Canada who are employed, at very moderate wages indeed, in protected industries.When overproduction occurs in these industries\u2014a result that may be realized at any time \u2014and employees are put on short time or thrown out of employment altogether for a time, what about the \u201c constant employment and good wages\u201d which Sir John Macdonald assured the people in 1878 would result from the adoption of a high protective tarif?A little solid thinking and investigation of historical facts would probably convince them that the genius of protection is simply this: Whatever becomes of the wage- earner\u2014whether he works and ekes out a living, or goes idle and starves\u2014the protected manufacturers, whose chief aim is to bud into millionaires, must at all hazards be assured of profits on their investments.Better that a thousand working men should starve than that one \u201ccombinester\u201d who contributes to Sir John Macdonald\u2019s election fund should go without his dividend.That 1s what high protection really means.HOW PROTECTION WORKS.The Bay State Sugar Refinery, of Boston, was closed down on Saturday last, and the Continental, of the same city, is also to be shut down\u2014all by order of the Sugar Trust, of which these refineries are members.The object of shutting down is to curtail production, it being feared that over-production would lower prices.The Bay State Refinery employed 150 hands and the Continental 80.These, of course, are all thrown out of employment, and those dependent upon them will have to practise rigid economy till the sugar nabobs are ready to again give them work.In the meantime the protected members of the Sugar Trüst go on pocketing their dividends, without a thought of the idle workmen .and their families who have to face the world\u2019s competition in labour.It is not much wonder that the more intelligent among American workingmen are being aroused against the iniquitous unfairness of a system which taxes the many for the benefit of the few, and are appreciating the hollowness of the protestations made by the favoured class that they want protection for the benefit of Amarican labour.- The heavily subsidized iron masters, cotton lords and sugar refiners of the United States make enormous profits out of consumers by means of the tariff, but no one has ever heard of them giving their employees a ghare in their profits, either by increasing their wages or in any other way.On the contrary they have no hesitation in taking all the tarif will give them, and then cutting down their pay,or throwing them out of employment, as best suits them.Thergis no protection for labour.Will the workingmen of Canada take note of the fact?Ere long, if the protective system is perpetuated in Canada, our workingmen will be compelled to submit to the same experience of reduced pay or temporary - employment a9 their confreres in the United States.Indeed, in some protected industries that undesirable experience may be nearer than they suppose.Atbest workingmen can only gain a temporary advantage from protection ; in the long run they lose heavily by its operation How workingmen can support a system which directly benefits only a privileged class, and offsets any indirect benefit they may receive by increased burdens of taxation, is matter of surprise.They have only to study the question thoroughly, and inform themselves as to its working in other countries, to be convinced that so far as promoting the interests and well-being of the labouring classes is concerned, excessive protective duties are a fraud and a delusion.THE SWINDLED ITALIANS.In regard to the settlement made by the Hereford Railway Company with the striking Italians, it is to be noted that they are merely to be paid for the month of September, and are to lose all the pay due them for the month of August.They may be satisfied with that arrangement simply because they cannot do any better; but the fact still remains that by the action of the defaulting sub-contractors they have been robbed of one month\u2019s pay.The company got the benefit of their work for that month, and justice and equity demand that the men should be paid therefor.Paying them for the month of September is no concession at all, as it is claimed to be by the company\u2019s representative ; it is merely an act of justice, and paying them for the month of August would be no more.The Dominion Government, which pays a cash subsidy to the Hereford Railway Company, having refused to do anything to protect the men, it becomes more than ever the duty of the Government of this province, if they can, to withhold the provincial subsidy until the claims of the swindled labourers have been honestly and equitably settled.ee THE PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST.If Democratic calculations are realized, something of a surprise is in store for American politicians on the 6th of November\u2014nothing less than the capture of New Hampshire by Cleveland and Thurman.The State Las hitherto been Republican, and in all pre-election calculations has been put down as one of the States of the \u201csolid\u201d North certain to be carried by the G.O.P.At the present moment it is conceded to be one of the doubtful States\u2014the Republicans only hope to carry it, while the Democrats are sanguine of wresting it from the former.Three elements combine to make New Hampshire a doubtful State.(1.) The Maine election has disappointed, and to some extent paralyzed, the Republicans.In that State the Republicans made superhuman efforts to keep their majority up to that of 1884, for the purpose of creating a \u201cboom \u201d for Harrison and Morton.Instead of accomplishing that the majority fell off considerably, and now the Republicans realize that there is a good deal of uncertainty about the political situation, which is making itself felt in New Hampshire.(2) Then there is the tariff issue.In 1884 that issue was sprung upon the State by the Republicans in such a way that the Democrats were not able successfully to meet it.In the interim, the discussion of tariff reform has aroused the people of the \u201cgranite\u201d State, and this time the Democrats are * carrying the war into Africa,\u201d with the result that hundreds who voted for Blaine and Logan in 1884 will vote for Cleveland and Thurman and tariff reform in 1888.This time the Republicans are on the defensive on the tariff question.(3).The license and prohibition question will also materially affect the results, The prohibitionists are unusually active; and as the people generally are dissatisfied with operations of the Prohibitory Act, passed by the Republican Legislature, the Democrats will receive many votes of Republicans who prefer a stringent license law to a prohibitory law which is a dead letter ; while the Prohibitionists will take the votes of prohibitionist Republicans who charge their party with bad faith in not making any honest effort to enforce the law which they placed on the Statute Book.These are the principal factors in the political situation which combine to make New Hampshire a doubtful State.True the electorate vote of the State is small and might not affect the final result whatever way it be cast, but ifa life-long Republican State like New Hampshire has to be classed as doubtful, with a bare possibility of its going Democratic, what chance can the Republicans have of carrying even one of the admittedly doubtful States?\u2014such States, for instance, as New York, New Jersey, Indiana and Connecticut.In all these States the \u2018tariff reform issue is strengthening the Democratic party immensely.It is true that individual Democratic protectionists in these and ofher States indicate their intention of opposing Cleveland and Thurman on- the tariff issue; but it is equally true that many Republicans who concede the necessity for tariff reform, including scores of prominent manufacturers, not only express themselves as satisfied with the main features of Cleveland's administration, but indicate their intention of supporting his tariff reform policy by their votes.The influence of such men will be far-reach- +-\u2014 = \u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014 THE MONTREAL IIERALD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE FRIDAY.G.> PIG IRONS.\u2019 SHANKS Sanfiary ppliances.\u201cTHOS.GLOVER'S\u201d ry Gas Meiers Manufacturers of WROUGHT IRON TUBING, for Gas, Stenm e Water.Also, BOILER TUBES.made from Iran or Steel.MCINTYRE, SON & CO.DRY GOODS I\\MPORTERS, SOLE AGENTS IN CANADA FOR Ferd.Rouillon XID GLOVES, Grenoble.Erskine, Beveridge & Cos LINENS, Dunfermline, bears their Signature thus\u2014 Stopper.Wholesale and for Export In consequence of Imitations of THE WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE which ars calculaied to deceîve the Public, Lea and Perrins have to request that Purchasers see that the Label on every boille PA of the original WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE is genuine.Ask for LEA and PERRINS' Sauce, and see Name on Wrapter, Label, Bottle and by the Proprietors, Blackwell, London, &c., &c.; and by Grocers and Oilnen throughout the World.Worcester ; Crosse and Department of Crown Lands.WOODS AND FORESTS.QUEBEC, August 9, 1888.Notice is hereby given that, conformably to the clauses of the Act 38 Victoria, chapter 8 the following timber limits will be offered for sale at public auction in the sales room of the Department of Crown Lands, in this City, on Wednesday, the 17th October next, at 10.30 a.m., subject to the conditions mentioned below, namely\u2019 Upper Ottawa Agency.Square Miles, Limit No, 7, Ist range Block A.« 16} ag i : C16 \u201c \u201c 9, \u2018 294 wow) \u201c 2 \u201c a\" 12, \u201c 87] \u201c \u201c 10, 2nd range 50 of \u201c 11, \u201c 50 \u201c \u201c 12, LL 50 +\u201c [LS Ç Pr \u2018 v F \u2018rd range : x \u201c 44 4, LL .5 + « 5, \u201c .50 © wg \u201c 50 \u201c pu Ty \u201c 59 \u201c 13 8 « .5 \u201c Le 9 .59 Limit No.1, 3rd range Block À.50 2 \u201c 4\u201c > oe 502, River Coulonge.vee Rear River Gatineau.58 Rg +5 \u20ac 6 Calumet Island.vee 3% 9347 Lower Ottawa Agency.Square Miles.Limit L.River Rouge.ieee 25 * Township Beresford.\u2026.& ¢ Township Chertsey,.at Total.\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026\u2026.ve 40 5-6 Chaudiere Agency.Square Miles, Limit Towuship Langevin No.2.38 \u201c & NO.3.100000 + TOtAl.e.ccsc0secr san cac000 67 Montmagny Agency.uare Miles.Limit Township of iBellechasse,.4! 8t.Maurice.Agency.Square Miles, Limit Batiscan No.7 East.\u2026.\u2026.2 Rimouski Agency.Square Miles.Limit Rear River Humqui.8 6 Nemtaye No.2.ve.48! \u201c Rear Awautjish.8 \u2018River Causapscul No, 1 north.6 \u201c Township Saint Denis.15 Ce reer erate rereeans Total 105} Lake St.John Agency.Square iles.\u201c Rear Commissaires South West O.140.0.s00s 20 « Metabetchouan No.37 + Metabetchouan No.142.«\u201c Lake Kiskisuik No.143.« Metabetchouan No.144.ce \u201c Lake Kamamintigougne No.145 36 * N.E.branch of river Ste.Marguerite NO.146.vue.Limit NYE.of river Ste.Marguerite NO 147.s ue se cons a nen vu us eave 89 Township Ducreux No.148.534 « Township Dequen No.149.5 i Township Dequen No.150.Township Dequen No.151 hd River Pikauba No.152.\u2018 Rear river Peribonka Eas 15 5 \u201c Township Boileau No.154.3 6 + No, 155 .13 6 TownshipI\u2019AHemant No.156.16 ** Township Ferland No.157.,.4} \u201c be No.1588.13 Grandville Agency.Square Miles.\u2018\u201c \u201c \u201c \u201c .\u201c D J Square Miles?! Limit River Peribonka No.125.40 \u201c \u201c No.126.eee \u201c \u201c No.127.$ River Mistassini No.128.\u201c River aux Iroquois No.129 ht River Ha! Ha! No.180.6 River Shipshaw No.61.9 « Quiatchouan Fast No.131, 12 of 6 No.182.13 6 « Ouest No.133.13 6 No.134.8 \u201c Rear = No.185.+.16 East NO.137.200 50000000 co.Limit Rear Lac des Commissaires South East No.138.20 ¢ Lac_des __Commissair South West No.139.,.24 Limit No.1, 1st range East Lake Temi- SCOUALA.ives suosa00ss00000u0 « Township of Parke, No.1,.,.24 \u201c \u201c Raudot,.6 a \u201c Demers A, .\u2026.\u2026.B .\u201c \u201c .\u201c \u201c Armand « No.45 River St.Franci \u201c No.46 \u201c \u201c No.47 Black River,.Potals.\u2026.cccunrs 178548 Bonaventure Agency.Square Miles, Limit Tom Ferguson's Brook.is 16 # iver Escuminac.\u2026.Ÿ \u201c len Brook.«# Marchall Br ** River Andre.¢ Townshipof Carleto \u2018Township of Hope South.River Nouvelle No.2 contrer NE oumin 051 NO.3.220.0s0uses 2 \u201c© 6 West Branch.30 « Rear River Nouvelle West.10 es 6 66 East .16 ¢¢ River Maun Fast 2% a \u201c LS Wes 23 20 7-12 Saguenay Agency Square miles.Limit Rear Cailliere.rere \u2026 18 Township Sagard.814 \u201c6 North East of the N, E.Branch of River Ste.Marguerite.15 Limit Tadousac East.5 #_\u2026 River Manitou No.1 Ea SH \u201c 6 ot No.2 East Si \u201c \u201c 6 No.3 East.30 \u201c No.1West.\u2026 8 6 6 \u201cNo.2 West.3) \u201c \u201c \u201c No.3West.,.3 \u201c Township Saguenay East.32 \u2018River Grande 1riuite No.1 East 50 6 6 No.2 East 50 No.1 West 50 Limit River Grande Trinite No.2 ÿ es \u2026\u201c \u201c o \u201c \u201c \u201c Petite Trinite No, 1! East.14 \u201c Petite Trinite No.2 East.14 \u201c Petite Trinite No.1 West 14 sé Petite Trinite No.2 West \u201c River Calumet No.1 East.25 \u2018River Cajumet No.1 West., \u201cTownship Lafleche.ht No.86 Petite Bergeronne West.7 \u201c No.1 East Petite Bergeronne.4 Gaspe Agency.Square Miles.Limit Gaspe Bay South.11 \u2018 Gaspe Bay North.124 \u201c Township Blanchet.9 \u201c River York North.3 \u201c do South.,.6 se 8ydenham Fouth., FN .22 \u201c Township Rameau.\u2026.\u2026.214 # Township Malbaie South.4 Limit River St.John on 1 South.12 6 do do 2 do 10 \u201c RiverSt.John North.14 \u2018River Dartmouth South.24 do North.194 ¢\u201c Rear River Dartmouth Nor 32 Total.evviveevireinnnen.200 5-12 CONDITIONS OF SALE.The above timber !imits at their estimated area, more or less, to be offered at an upset price to be made known on the day of sale.The timber limits to be adjudged to the party bidding the highest amount of bonus, The bonus and first year\u2019s ground rent per square mile, to be paid in each case immediately after the sale.L These timber locations to be subject to the provisionsof all timber regulations now in force and which may beeuacted hereafter.Plans of these timber locations will be open for inspection, in the Department of Crown Lands, in this city, and at the offices of the local agents up to the day of sale.E.E.TACHE, Assistant Commissioner oï Crown Lands.N.B.\u2014Accordirg to law, no newspaper other than those named by Order in Council, re authorized to publish this notice, 199 AD WANTED\u2014For about an hour a day during the winter to attend to the Fur- uacë, &c.Appiy, X.Y.Z.Herald Office.9 AUCTION SALES._ By Denning & Barsalou.INSOLVENT NOTICE.Bankrupt Stock for Sale by Public Auction, In re CAMILE LL.MILETTE, of Richmond, P.Q., General Storekeepor.We have received instructions from the Curator to sell, Ly publie auction, at our rooms, Nos.86 and 88 Si.Peter st.Montreai, On Thursday.11th October, 1888, At ELEVLN o'clock, the following stock, belonging to the abov» cstate, in lots, as follows :\u2014 Stock consisting of Dry Goods, Gents\u2019 Furnishings, Clothings, Boots and shous, ete.\u2019 Tot 1\u2014Goods amounting to.S3N0 00 $3 JT.ot 2\u2014DBuok Debts amounting to.1500 on B31 Ww Terms cash on approved security.; Inventory, list of book debts, and all information ean be obtained trom the undersigned.JORN McD.HAINS, Curator, 43 st, Sacrament street.BENNING & BARSALOU, 256 Auctioneers By Wm.H.Arnton.1 SALE BY Authority of Justice.ESTATE LATE Frederick B.Matthews.ON MONDAY, The 15th day of October, 1888, Hannan's Hotel, LACHINE, On the Arrival of the TWO o\u2019clock Train from Montreal.The [mmoveable Property of the said Estate will be sold to the LAST AND HIGHEST BIDDER, 1st.That certain Island lying at ths foot of the Lachine Rapids, in tle River St, Lawrence, being cadastral No, 4705 of the Parish of Montreal, known as ISLE AU HERON, containing about 180 acres, with the right to fish opposite the said Isle au Heron and the adjacent Islands, and all the rigbts and privileges thereto attached ; and 2nd.That certain Farm, situate on the main land, opposite the said Island, being cadastral No.999 of the Parish of Lachine, containing Six arpents in width in front by about eighteen arpents in depth, with the build+ ings thereon erected.MARLER.McLENNAN & FRY.Notaries, W.H.ARNTON, 253 \u201cAuctioneer.By James Stewart & Co.INSOLVENT NOTICE.In the Matter of JAMES GUEST, ¢ INSOLVENT, \u2014\u2014 The undersigned will sell by Public Auction, at the office of the Curator, Western Chambers, 22 St.John Street, Montreal, on Friday, the 5ih Oetoher Next, AT NOON, the following Assets of this Estate, viz:\u2014 1.The balance of Book Debts remaining uncollected up to the evening of Thursday, 4th October, which will probably amount to over $30,000.Terms Cash.Bidders to deposit accepted cheque for $200 on making bid, List of Debts and full particulars may he obtained at the office-of the Curater, A.F.RIDDELL, Curator.JAMES STEWART & CO., Auctioneers.Montreal, 27th Sept., 1888.12 NEW CHANDELIERS New Automatic Extension, New Polished Gold Bronze, New Patent Burners, New Style Tinted Shades.ALL SIZES, STYLES AND PRICES.$8.50 to $37.50.COLE'S LAMP STORES, 1792 NOTRE DAME & 2392 ST.CATHERINE STS.TO0THPICKS.Double Pointed Wood.Double Pointed Wood Perfumed.BY THE CASE, DOZEN OR PACKAGE, Send for samples and prices.MORTON, PHILLIPS & BULMER, Stationers, Blank Book Makers and Printers, 1755 & [757 NOTRE DAME ST., MONTREAL: Sept.28 CRUSADER CIGARS ! 6 THE DREAM WOMAN BY WILEXE COLLINS, TIIFE THIRD NARRATIVE.XV.The poor fellow was full of forebodings of the fate in store for him on the ominous first of March.He eagerly entreated me to order one of the men-ser- vants to sit up wish him on the birthday morning.In granting his requests, I asked bim totell me on which day of the week his birthday fell.Hereckoned the days on his fingers ; and proved his innocence of all suspicion that it was Lsap Year, by fixing on the twenty-ninth of February, in the full persuasion that it was the first of March.Pledged to try the surgeon\u2019sexperiment, I lefc his error uncorrected, of course.In so doing I took my first step blindfolded toward the last act of the drama of the Hostler\u2019s Dream.The next day brought with it a little domestic difliculty, which indirectly and strangely associated itself with the coming end.My wife receivad a letter, inviting us to assist in celebrating the \u201csilver wedding\u201d of two worthy German neighbours of ours\u2014Mr.and Mrs.Beldheimer.Mr.Beldheimer was a large wine-grower on the banks of the Moselle.His house was situated on the {frontier line of France and Germany and the distance from our Louse was sufficiently considerable to make it necessary for us to sleep under our host's roof.Under these circumstances, if we accepted the invitation, a comparison of dates showed that we would be away from home on the morning of the first of M arch.Mra.Fairbank\u2014holding to her absurd resolution to see with her own eyes what might, or might not, happen to Fraucis Raven on his birthday \u2014flatly declined to leave Maison Rouge.\u201cIt\u2019s easy to send an excuse'\u201d she said, in her offhand manner.1 failed, for my part, to see any easy way out of the difficulty.\u2018The celebration of a \u201c Silver Wedding \u201d in Germany, is the celebration of twenty-five vears of happy married life ; aud the bost\u2019s claim upon the consideration of his friends on such an occasion is something in the nature of aroyal \u201ccommand.\u201d After considerable discussion, finding my wife\u2019s obstinacy invincible, and feeling that the absence of both of us from the festival would certainly offend our friends, I left Mra, Fairbank to make her excuses for herself, and directed her to accept the invitation so far as I was concerned.Inso doing, I took my second step, blindfold, toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler\u2019s Dream.A week elapsed : the last days of February were at hand.Another domestic difficuity happened; and, again, this event also proved to be strangely associated with the coming end.- My head groom at the stables was one Joseph Rigobert.He was an ill-con- ditioned fellow, inordinately vain of his personal appearance, and by no means scrupulous in his conduct with women.His one virtue consisted of his fondness for horses, and in the care he took of the animals in his charge.In a word, he \u2018was too good a groom to be easily replaced, or he would have quitted my service long since.On the occasion of which I am now writing, he was reported to me by my steward as growing idle and disorderly in his habits.The prin- «ciple oflence alleged against him was, that be had been seen that day in the city of Metz, in the company of a woman (supposed to be an English woman), whom he was entertaining at a tavern, when he ought to have been on his way back to Maison Rouge.The man\u2019s defence was that \u201cthe lady\u201d (as he called her) was an Englist?stranger, unacquainted with the ways of the place, and that he had only shown her where she could obtain some refreshments at her own request.I administered the necessary reprimand, without troubling myself to inquire furtber into the matter.In failing to do this I took my third step, blindfold, toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler\u2019s Dream.On the evening of the twenty-eighth, I informed the servants at the stables that one of them must watch through the night by the Englishman's bedside.Joseph Rigobert immediately volunteered for the duty\u2014as a means, no doubt, of wmmng his way back fo my favour, I accepted his proposal.ee That day the surgeon dined witn us.Toward midnight he and I left the moking-room, and repaired to Francis Raven's bed-side.Rigobert was at his post, with no very agreeable expression on his face.The Frenchman and the Englishman had evidently not got on well together, so far.Francis Raven lay helpless on his bed, waiting silently for two in the morning, and the Dream- Woman, * \u201cI have come, Francis, to bid you good night,\u201d I said, cheerfully.\u201cTo-morrow morning I shall lookin at breakfast time, before I leave home on a journey.\u201d \u201cThank you for all your kindness, sir.You will not see me alive to-morrow morning.She will find me this time.Mark my words\u2014she will find me this time.\u201d \u201cMy good fellow! she couldn\u2019t find you in England.How in the world is she to find you in France ?\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s borne in on my mind, sir, that she will find me here.At two in the morning on my birthday I shall see her again, and see her for the last time.\u201d \u201cDo you mean that she will kill you ?\u201d \u2018I mean that, sir, she will kill me\u2014with the knife.\u201d \u201cAnd with Rigobert in the room to protect you 2\u201d \u201cI am a doomed man.couldn\u2019t protect me.\u201d \u201cAnd you wanted somebody to sit up with you?\u201d \u201cMere weakness, sir.I don\u2019t like to be left alone on my death-bed.\u201d I looked af the surgeon.If he had encouraged me, I should certainly, out of sheer compassion, have confessed to Francis Raven the trick that we were playing him.The surgeon held to his experiment; the surgeon's face plainly said\u2014*\" No.\u201d The next day (the twenty-ninth of February) was the day of the \u201cSilver Wedding.\u201d The first thing in the morning, I went to Francis Raven\u2019s room.Rigobert met me at the door.\u201cHow has he passed the night?\u201d I asked.; \u201cSaying his prayers, and looking for ghosts,\u201d Rigobert answered.\u201cA lunatic asylum is the only proper place for him.\u201d I approached the bedside.\u201cWel, Francis, here you are, safe and sound, in gpile of what you said to me last night.\u201d His eyes rested on mine with a vacant, wondering look.\u201cI don\u2019t understand it,\u201d he said.\u201cDid you see anything of your wife when the clock struck two?\u201d Fifty Rigoberts \u201c No, sir.\u201d \u201cDid anything happen ?\u201d \u201c Nothing happened, sir.\u201d \u201c Doesn't this satisfy you that you were wrong His eyes still kept their vacant, wondering look, He only repeated the words = 25 \u2014\u2014 \u2014e\u2014\u2014 THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY C he had spoken already :\u2014* 1 don\u2019t understand it.\u201d I made a last attempt to cheer bim.\u201cCome, come, Francis! keep a good berrt.You will be out ot bed in a fortnight.\u201d Hs shook his head on the pillow.\u201cThere's something wrong,\u201d he said.\u201c1 don\u2019t expect you to believe me, sir.I only say, there\u2019s something wrong\u2014and time will show it.\u201d I left the room.Half an hour later I started for Mr.Beldheimer\u2019s house; leaving the arrangements for the morning of the 1st of March in the hands of the doctor and my wife.AVL The one thing which principally struck me when 1 joined the guests at the « Silver Wedding,\u201d is also the one thing which is necessary to mention here.Oa this joyful occasion a noticeable lady present was out of spirits.The lady was no other than the heroine of the festival, the mistress of the house! In the course of the evening I spoke to Mr.Beldheimer\u2019s eldest son on the subject of his mother.As an old friend of the family, I had a claim on his confidence which the young man willingly recognized.\u201cWe have had a very disagreeable matter to deal with,\u201d he said; \u201cand my mother has not y3t recovered the painful impression left on her mind.Many years since, when my sisters were children, we had an English governess in the house.She left us, as we then understood, to be married.We heard no more of her until a week or ten days since, when my motner received a letter, in which our ex-governess described herself as being 1m a condition of great poverty and distress.After much hesitation she had ventured\u2014at the suggestion of a lady who had been kind to her\u2014to write to her former employers, and to anpeal to their remembrgnce of old times.You know my mother : she is not only the most kind-hearted, but the most innocent of women\u2014it is impossible to persuade her.of the wickedness that there is in this world.She replied «y return of post, inviting the governess to come here and see her, and inclosing the money for her travelling expenses.\u2018When my father came home, and heard what had been done, he wrote at once to his agent in London to make inquiries, inclosing the address on the governess\u2019 letter.Before he could receive the ageut\u2019s reply the governess arrived.She produced the worst possible impression on his mind.The agent's letter, arriving a few days later, confirmed his suspicions.Since we had lost sight of her, the woman bad led a most disreputable life.My father spoke to her privately ; he offered\u2014on condition of her leaving the house\u2014a sum of money to take her back to England.If she refused, the alternative would be an appeal to the authorities, and a public scandal, She accepted the money, and left the house.On her way back to England she appears to have stopped at Metz.You will understand what sort of a woman she is when I tell you that she was seen the other day in a tavern with your handsome groom, Joseph Rigobert.\u201d \u2018While wy informant was relating these circumstances.my memory was at work.I recalled what Francis Raven had vaguely told us of bis wife's experience in former'days, as governess in a German family.A suspicion of the truth suddenly flashed across my mind.\u201cWhat was the womans name?\u2019 I aeked.Mr.Beldheimer's son answered : \u201cAlicia Warlock.\u201d I had but one idea when I heard thatreply\u2014to get back to my house without a moment's needless delay.It was then ten o'clock at night\u2014the last train to Metz had left long since.I arranged with my young friend\u2014after duly informing him of the circumstances\u2014 that 1 should go by the first train in the morning, instead of staying to breakfast with the other guests who slept in the house.At intervals during the night I wondered uneasily how things weze going on at Maison Rouge.Again and again the same question occured to me, on my journey home in the early morning\u2014the morning of the first of March.As the event proved, but one person in my house knew what really happened at the stables on Francis Raven's birthday.Let Joseph Rigobert take my place as naraa- tor, and tell the story of the end to You \u2014as he told it, in times past, to his lawyer and to Me, FOURTH (AND LAST) NARRATIVE, STATEMENT OF JOSEPTI RIGOBERT : ADDRESSED To THE ADVOCATE Wil0 DEFENBEID RIAL, RESPECTED Sir,\u2014On the 27th of February I was gent, on business connected with the stables at Maison Rouge, to the city of Metz.On the public promenade I met a magnificent woman.Complexion, blonde ; nationality, English.We mutually admired each other; we fell into conversation.(She spoke French per- fectly\u2014with the English accent.) I offered refreshment; my proposal was accepted.We had a long snd interesting interview\u2014I discovered that we were made for each other.So far, who is to blame ?Is it my fault that I am a handsome man\u2014universally agreeable, as such to the fair sex?Is it a criminal offence to be accessible to the amiable weakness of love?1 ask again, Who is to blame?Clearly, nature.Not the beautiful lady\u2014 not my humble self.To resume.The most hard-hearted person living will understand that two beings made for each other could not possibly part without an appointment to meet again.I made arrangements for the accommodation of the lady in the village near Maison Rouge.She consented to honour me with her company at supper, in my apartments at the stables, on the night of the twenty-ninth.The time fixed on was the time when the other servants were accustomed to retire\u2014eleven o'clock.\u201d Among the grooms attached to the stables was an Englishman, laid up with a broken leg.His name was Francis.Hig manners were repulsive; he was ignorant of the French language.In the kitchen he went by the nick-name of the \u201cEnglish Bear.\u201d Strange to say, he was a great favorite with my master and my mistress.They even humoured certain superstitious terrors to which this repulsive person was subject \u2014terrors into the nature of which 1, as as an advanced freethinker, never thought it worth my while to inquire.On the evening of the twenty-eight the Englishman, being a prey to the terrors which I have mentioned, requested that one of hig fellow-servants might sit up with him for that night only.The wish that he expressed was backed by Mr.Fairbank\u2019s authority.Having already incurred my master\u2019s displeasure\u2014in what way, a proper sense of my own dignity forbids me to relate\u2014I volunteered to watch by the bedside of the English bear.My object was to satisfy Mr.Fairbank that bore no malice, on my side, after what had occurred HIM AT HIS between us.The wretched Englishman passed a night of delirium.Not understanding his barbarous language, I could only gather from his gestures that he was in deadly fear of some fancied apparition at his bedside.From time to time,when this madman disturbed my slumbers I quieted him by swearing at him.This is the shortest and best way of dealing with persons is his condition.On the morning of the twenty-ninth Mr.Fairbank left us on a journey.Later in the day to my unspeakable disgust, I found that I bad not done with the Englishman vet.In Mr.Fairbaak\u2019s absence, Mrs.Fairbank took an incomprehensible interest in the question of my delirious fellow-servant's repose at night.Again, one or the other of us was to watch at his beeside and report it if anything happened.Expecting my fair friend to supper, it was necessary to make sure that the other servants at the stables would be safe in their beds that night.Accordingly, I volunteered once more to be the man who kept watch.Mrs.Fairbank complimented me on my humanity.I possess great command over my feelings.I accepted the compliment without a blush.Twice, after nightfall, my mistress and the doctor (the last staying in the house in Mr.Fair- bank s absence) came to make inquiries.Once befure the arrival of my fair friend \u2014and once after.On the second occasion (my apartment being next door to the Englishman\u2019s) I was obliged to hide my charming guest in the harness-room.She consented, with angelic resignation, to immolate her dignity to the sorvile necessities of my position.A more amiable woman (so far) I never met with ! After the second visit I was left free.It was then close on midnight.Up to that time, there was nothing in the behaviour of the wad Englishman to reward Mrs.Fairbank and the doctor for presenting themselves at his bedside.He lay half awake, half asleep, with an odd wondering kind of look on his face.My mistress at parting warned me to be particularly watchful of him toward two in the morning.The doctor (in case anything happened) left me a larze band-bell to ring, which could easily be heard at the house.Restored to the society of my fair friend, I spread the supper table.A pate, a sausage, and a few bottles of generous Moselle wine, composed our simple meal.When persons adore each other, the intoxicating illusion of Love transforms the simplest meal into a banquet.With immeasurable capacities for enjoyment, we sat down to table.At the very moment when I placed my facinating companion in a chair, the infamous Englishman in the next room took that occasion, of all others, to become restless and noisy once more.He struck with bis stick on the floor: he cried out, in a delirious access of terror, \u201cRigobert! Rigobert!\u201d The sound of that lamentable voice, suddenly assailing our ears, terrified my fair friend.She lost all her charming colour in an instant.\u201cGood heavens!\u201d she exclaimed.\u201cWho is that in the next room ?\u201d \u201c A mad Englishman.\u201d \u201cAn Englishman ?\u201d \u201cCompose yourself, my angel.quiet him.\u201d The lamentable voice called out to me again, \u201cRigobert! Rigobert ! \u201d My fair friend caught me by the arm.\u201cWho is he?\u201d she cried.\u201cWhat is Lis name ?\u201d Something in her face struck me as she put thai question., A spasm of jealousy shook me to the soul.\u201cYou know him ?\u201d I said.\u201cHis name!\u201d she vehemently repeated ; \u201chis name!\u201d \u201cFrancis,\u201d I answered.\u201cFrancis\u2014 What 2\u201d I shrugged my shoulders.I could neither remember nor pronounce the barbarous English surname.I could only tell her it began with an \u201cR.\u201d She dropped back into the chair.Was she going to faint?No; she re- sovered, aud more than recovered, her lost colour, Her eyes flashed superbly.What did it mean?Profoundly as I understand women in general, I was puzzled by this woman ! \u201cYou know him?\u201d I repeated.She laughed at me.\u201c What nonsanse How should I know him?Go and quiet the wretch,\u201d My looking-zlass was near.One glance at it satisfied me that no woman in her senses could prefer the English, I will man to Me.I recovered me golif-respec ï -respect, I Lastened to the ¥ olishman\u2019s bedside.The mon: Vent I appeared he pointed eager\u2019 ward my?room.He overwhelmed me with a torrent of words in bis own language.I made out, from his gestures and his looks, that he had, in some incomprehensible manner, discovered the presence of my guest; and, stranger still, that he was scared by the idea of a person in my room.I endeavoured to compose him, on the system which I have already mentioned\u2014that is to say, I swore at him in my language.The result not proving satisfactory.I own I shook my fist in his face, and left the bedchamber.Returning to my fair friend, I found her walking backward and forward in a state of excitement wonderful to behold.She tad not waited for me to fill her glags\u2014she had begun the generous Moselle in my absence.I prevailed on her with difficulty to place herself at the table.Nothing would induce her to eat, \u201cMy appetite is gone,\u201d she said.\u201cGive me wine.\u201d The generous Moselle deserves its name \u2014delicate on the palate, with prodigious \u201cbody.\u201d The strength of this fine wine produced no stupefying effect on my remarkable guest.It appeared to strengthen and exhilarate her\u2014noth- ing more.She always spoke in the same low tone, and always, turn the conversation as I might, brought it back with the same dexterity to the subject of the Englishman in the next room.In any other woman this persistency would have offended me.My lovely guest was irre- gistible; I answered her questions with the docility of a child.She possessed all the amusing eccentricity of her nation.When 1 told her of the accident which confined the linglishman to his bed, she sprang to her feet.An extraordipary smile irradiated her countenance.She said, \u201cShow me the horse who broke the Epglishman\u2019s leg! I must see that horse!\u201d I took her to the stables.She kissed the horse\u2014on my word of honor, she kissed the horse! That struck me.I said, \u201c You do know the man; and he bas wronged you in some way.\u201d No! she would not admit it, even then.\u201cI kiss all beautiful animals,\u201d she said.\u201cHaven't I kissed you?\u201d With that charming explanation of her conduct, she ran back up the stairs.I only remained behind to lock the stable door again.When Irejoined her, I made a startling discovery.I caught her coming out of the Englishman\u2019s room.\u201cTI was just going down stairs again to call you,\u201d she said.\u201cThe man in there is getting noisy once more.\u201d The mad Englishman,s voice assailed our ears once again.\u2018\u2018Rigobert! Rigo- bert in .He was a frightful object to look at when 1saw him this time.is eyes Children Cry for Pite her's Castoria.were staring wildly; the perspiration was pouring over his face.In a panicof terror he clasped his hands; he pointed up to heaven.By every sign and gesture that à man can make, he entreated me not to leave him again.I really could not help smiling.The idea of my staying with him, and leaving my fair friend by herself in the next room ! I turned to the door.When the mad wretch saw me leaving him he burst out into a screech of despair\u2014so shrill that I feared it might awaken the sleeping servants.My presence of mind in emergencies is proverbial among those who know me.1 tore open the cupboard in which he kept his linen\u2014seized a handful of his bandkerchiefs\u2014gagged him with one of them, and secured his hands with the others.There was now no danger of his alarming the servants.After tying the last knct, I looked up.The door between the Englishman's room and mine was open.My fair friend was standing on the threshold\u2014 watching hi.as he lay helpless on the bed; watching me as I tied the knot.\u201cWhat are you doing there?\u201d I asked.\u201c Why did you open the door >\u201d She stepped up to me, and whispered ber answer in my ear, with her eyes all the time upon the man on the bed.\u201cI heard him scream.\u201d \u201cWell 27 \u201cI thought you bad killed him,\u201d I drew back from her in horror.The suspicion of me which her words implied was sufiiciently detestable in itself.But her manner when she uttered the words was more revolting still.It so powertully affected me tliat I started back from that beautiful creature, as I might have recoiled from a reptile crawling over my fiesh.Befcre I Lad recovered myself sufficiently toreply, my nerves were assailed by another shock.I suddenly heard my mistress\u2019 voice, calling to me from the stable vard.There was no time to think\u2014there was only time to act.The one thing needed was to keep Mrs.Fairbank from ascending the stairs, and discovering\u2014 not my lady guest only\u2014but the Englishman also, gagged and bound on his bed.Iinstantly burried to the yard.As I ran down the stairs I heard the stable clock strike the quarter to two in the morning.My mistress was eager and agitated.The doctor (in attendance on her) was smiling to himself, like a man amused at his own thoughts.\u201cIs Francis awake or asleep?\u201d Mrs.Fairbank inquired.\u201c He has been a little restless, madam.But Le is now quiet again.If he is not disturbed\u201d (I added those words to prevent ber from ascending the stairs), \u201c he will soon fall off into a quiet sleep.\u201d \u2018Has nothing happened since 1 was here last?\u201d * Nothing, madam.\u201d The doctor lifted his eyebrows with a comical look of distress.\u201cAlas! alas! Mrs.Fairbank!\u201d he said.* Nothing has happened! The days of romance are over!\u201d \u201cIt isnot two o'clock yet,\u201d\u2019 my mistress answered, a little irritably.The smell of the stables was strong on the morning air.She put her handkerchief to her nose and led the way out of the yard by the north entrance\u2014the entrance communicating with the gardens and the house.1 was ordered to follow her, along with the doctor.Once out of the smell of the stables she began to question me again, She was unwilling to believe that nothing had occurred in her absence.I invented the best answers I could think of on the spur of the moment; and the doctor stood by, laughing.So the minutes passed till the clock struck two.Upon that, Mrs.Fairbank announced her intention of personally visiting the Englishman in his room.To my great relief, the doctor interfered to stop Ler from doing this.\u201cYou have heard that Francis is just falling asleep,\u201d he said.\u201cIf you enter his room you may disturb Lim.It is essential to the success of my experiment that he should have a good night's rest, and that he should own it himself, before I tell him the truth.I must request* madamÊ, that you will not disturd the man.Rigobert will ring the alarm bell if anything happens,\u201d _ My mistress was unwilling to vield.For tbe next five minutes, at least, tiers \u2018was & warn discussion between the twe, In the end, Mrs.Fairbank was obliged to give way\u2014for the time.\u201cIn half an hour,\u201d she said, \u201c Francis will either\u2019 be sound asleep, or awake again.In half an hour I shall come back.\u201d She took the doctor's arm.They returned together to the house.Left to myself, with half an hour before me, 1 resolved to take the linglish woman back to the village\u2014then returning to the stables, to remove the gag and the bindings from Francis, and to let him screech to his heart\u2019s content.What would his alarming the whole establishment matter to nié, after I had got rid of the compromising presence of my guest ?Returning to the yard I heard a sound like the creakingof an open door on its hinges.The gate of the north entrance I had just closed with my own hand.I went round to the west entrance, at the back of the stables.It opened on field cressed by two footpaths, in Mr.Fair- bbank\u2019s grounds.The nearest footpath i led to the villaze.The other led to the high road and the river.Arriving at the west entrance I found the door open\u2014swinging to and fro slowly in the fresh morning breeze.! had myself locked and bolted that door after admitting my fair friend at eleven o'clock.A vague dread of something wrong stole its way into my mind.I hurried back to the stables.I looked into my own room.If was empty.I went to the harness-room.Not a sign of the woman wasthere.I returned to my room, and approached the door of the Englishman\u2019s bed-chamber.Was it possible that she had remained there during my absence?An unaccountable reluctance to op2n the door made me hesitate, with my hand on the lock.1 listened.There was not a sound inside.I called softly.There was no answer.1 drew back a step, still hesitating.I noticed something dark, moving slowly in the crevice between bottom of the door and the boarded floor.Snatching up the candle from the table, I held it low, and looked.The dark, slowly-moving object was a stream of blood ! That horrid sight roused me.I opened the door.The Englishman lay on his bed\u2014alone in the room.le was stabbed in two places\u2014in the throat and in the heart.The weapon was left in the second wound.It was a knife of English manufacture, with a handle of bu:k-horn as good as new.1 instantly gave the alarm.Witnesses can speak to what followed.It is monstrous to suppose that I am guilty of the murder.I admit that I am capable of committing follies; but sbrink from the bare idea of a crime.Besides, I had no motive for killing the man.The woman murdered him in my absence.The woman escaped by the west entrance while I was talking to my mistress.I have no more to say.I swear to you what 1 have here written is a true state- OMMERCIAL GAZETTE.YHiiAY.OCTOBER.3./ ~~ ment of all that happened on the morning of the first of March.\" \u201c* Accept, Sir, the assurance of my sentiments of profound gratitude and respect.Joserit RIGOBERT, LAST LINES.\u2014ADDED BY PERCY FAIRBANK, Tried for the murder of Francis Raven, Joseph Rigobert was found Not Guilty; the papers of the assassinated man sented ample evidence of the deadly animosity felt toward him by his wife.The investigations pursued on the morning when the crime was committed showed that the murderess, after leaving the stable, had taken the foot-path which led to the river.The river was dragged \u2014without result.It remains doubtful to this day whether she died by drowning or not.The one thing certain is\u2014that Alicia Warlock was never seen again.So\u2014beginning in mystery, ending in mystery\u2014the Dreamn-Woman passes from your view.Ghost; demon ; or living human creature\u2014say for yourselves which she is.Or, knowing what un- fathomed wonders are around you, what unfathomed wonders are 71 you, let the wise works of the greatest of all poets be explanation enough : \u201c We are such stuff As dreams are made of, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep.\u201d THE END, \u2014 AND NOW COMES GILLETT and says that it is time there was a good Baking Bowder, and that it is Imperial Cream tartar Baking Powder is far superior to all others.NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.WE Neg) Be & rif y : R NS J 2 nN GHAS.CLUTHE'S \"gruroTaiss Children cured in 2 and Adults (at least 80 per ct.in 4 months, without any discomfort to wearer.The most perfect system to secure satisfaction BY MAIL, Every Truss specially made for each case.Orders received by 3 p.m.mailed same day (prepaid and registered).Pad only ONE OUNCE.Pere fect VENTILATION.Warranted for FIVE YEARS, Highest Awards a Centennial and wherever exhibited.100,000 cold.Scnd Ge.Stamp for Illustrated Book; invaluablo information.\u2019 Address; CHAS, CLUTHS, 13 KING STREET West, Valuable Lands For Sale in Manitoba.\u2014_\u2014\u2014 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 quar er sections of La d, viz.'\u2014 The Northeast Quarter of 8ection 18.Southeast Quarter or 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 Langs in the Nortn-West.They are dry and in a ¥ell settled neighborhood, with good roads, schools, ete., and within five miles of (wo railway stations.Terms of Payment Reasonable.Apply 10 J.W.JACKSON, Registrar, Portage La Prairie, Manor at THE HERALD OFFICE.Montreal, May 26 1888 127 wn TE FREEMAN Z====WORM POWDËRS Are pleasant to take.Contain their pun Purgative.Is a safe, sure and effectual destroyer of worins tn Children or Aduitse CHLORODYNE.Dr.J.Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne.Vice-Chancellor sir W.PAGE WooD stated publicly in Court that Dr.J.COLLIS BROWNE was undoubtedly the inventor of Chiorodyne, that the whole story of the defendant Freeman was literally untrue, and he regretted to say that it had been sworr.to.\u2014T'imes.July 3, 1864.Dr.J.Collis Browne's Chlorodyne is the best and most certain remedy in coughs, colus, asthma, consumption, neuralagia, rheumatism, &c Dr.J.Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne\u2014The Right Hon.Earl RUSSFLL communicated to the College of Physicians and J.T.Davenport that he had reccived information to thqeffect that the only remedy of any service in Cholera was Chlorodyne\u2014=See Lancet, December 31, 1864.Dr.J.Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne 18 pree scribed by scores of orthodox practitioners® Of course it would not be thus singularly popular did it not \u201csupply a want and filla place.\u201d\u2014 Medical Times, January 12, 1885.: Dr.J.Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne is & certain cure for Cholera, Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Colics, &c.Dr.J.Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne\u2014Caution \u2014None genuine w.thout the words, \u2018\u2018 Dr.Jj Collis Browne\u2019s Chlorodyne\u201d\u2019 on the stamp, Overwhelming medical testimony accompa, nies each bottle Sole manufacturer, J.T4 DAVENPORT, 33 Great Russell street Bloomsbury, London.Sold in bottles at 1s 1d 28 9d 4s 8d and lls.STEAM ENCINES Enbracing the Leonard Ball Automatic Cut Off.8 horse power to 100, Plain Slide Valve, Heavy Bed, 25 horse power and upwards.Leonard Pattern, Short Port, self contained, 8 horse power to 30, Our Latest Pattern, solid frame, 25 horse power and upwards.Portable Engines, All Sizes, STEEL BOILERS.3 STYLES.40 SIZES.STATIONARY, UPRIGHT, LOCOMOTIVE.From 30 to 50 horse power second-hand engines for sale, with or without boilers.\u2018Alss smaller sizes.E.Leonard & Sons, 33 Nazareth St., Montreal.H.E.Flant, Representative.GOLD BRONZE GAS LAMPS! Gasaliers, Gas Brackets, Electric Bells and Gas Globes in great variety.All First-class Goods, and at Low Prices, N.B\u2014 Prompt and special attention given to the removal and re-fitting of Gas Fixtures, Kitchen Ranges and Range Boilers, etc., dure ing the moving season.258~ Heating of buildings by hot water a specialty.SAW iSiLLS.| 'AYINIHOVI DNIXHOM COOM E.C.MOUNT & CO.18 Victoria Square, Gas Fitters and Electrical Bell Hangers Plumbers and Hot Water Fitters Roofers and Steamfitters, Telephone 265.pre- - BARRISTERS, ETC, INSURANCE.Standard Life ASSURANCE COMPANY.(Established 1820.) Invested Fands.se.Annual Incoime.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.Bonuses hitherto distribut= ed amount to the large SUM OÎ 2110000 000sasessrense000e 17.000.000 Standard Buildings, MontreaL CUARDIAN Fire and Life Assurance Co\u2019y PAID-UP CAPITAL £1.000,000 stg, Total Funds, « .« $19,500,000, Fire risks written at current rates- ROBT.SIMMS & C0.and GEO.DENHOLM, General Acon \u2014{ H.W.RAPHAE., SPECIAL AGENT.% Hospital Street.December 4 201 INSURANCE.FIRE AND LIFE.Special Agent, LONDON ASSURANCE CO.James Henry Stewart, 1761 Notre Dame street.r 219 The Royal Canadian Fire and Marine Insurance o.157 St.James Street, Montreal, Capital.\u2026\u2026.\u2026\u2026.ressecc0 00010000 $500,000 ASSELS.002 000000 + +escssscs000000 700,000 Kmcome, ARSF.0.010500 00e ss 517,878 ANDREW ROBERTSON, EgQ., President, Hon, J.R.THIBAUDEAU, Vice-President HABRY CUTT ARCHD.NICOLL, - sorstary, Marine Underwriter, J scouaeu Gro.H.MCHENRY, Manager.M.J.E.DROLET, Agont for City ahd District of Montreal} une North British and Mercantile FIRE & LIFE ASSURANCE COMP\"Y ESTABLISHED 808, \u2014\u2014O\u2014 Head Office for Canada, Montreal.DIRECTORS GILBERT SCOTT, Esq., | Hox, THOMAS RYAN.i W.W.OGILVIE, Esq.ARCHIBALD MACN.THOMAS DAVIDSON® managin Director, TEI Liverpool & London \u2018& Globe insurance Company.CANADA BOARD OF DIRECTORS, The HON.HENRY BTARNES, chairman, EDMOND J.BARBEAU, Esq., Genl.Manager Le Credit Foncier Franco-Canadien.W.J.BUCHANAN, Esq., General Manager Bank of Montreal.Tapitail.\u2026\u2026.sersressec000ss oor 00.810,000,000 Amount Invested In Oarnada.,.,.8 900,000 AASSOB Loc 20 0000000005 sarsansenss \u2026.633,000,500 Mercantile Risks accepted at the lowes current rates.Churches, Dwelling Houses and Farm Pros perties insured at reduced rates .G.F.C.SMITH, Chie jAzent for the Dowinion Sub-Agents.CYRILLE LAURIN, RED.C.HENSHAW 16 Place d\u2019Armes, 4 Custom House Having been appointed Sub-Agent for above Company for the City of Montrea.\u2019 tuke the liberty of asking my friends to favo meywith a share of their Insurance Risks, F.C.HENSHAW, 4 Custom House Square, B@-Telephone Communication - GILLETTS POWDERED 7.'99 BER CENT PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST.Ready for use in any quantity.For making Soap, Softening Water, Disine fecting, and a hundred other uses.A can equals 20 pounds Sal Soda.I Sold by all Grocers and Druggists, Z.W.GILLETT.«._ \u2018TORONTO AND CHIC 1 CRUSADER CICARS! fe > GIBB & COMPANY, Having received their FALL and WINTER Stock of TAILORING AND HABERDASHERY, ALSO PATTERN SUITS FROM POOLE, Invite Inspection._ August 3L a a ard + We are children who cheerfully Join in the chorus\u201d \u201cUy When BREADMAKYR'S YEAST is the subject before usw Mamma tried ali the rest, «bh , So she knows it\u2019s the best, UN Cause her bread is the whitest, her buns are the lightest, And we eat all the pancukes she dare set before us.| BUY BREADMAKER'S YEAST.PRICE 5 CENTS.THE MONCTON Sugar Refining Company (LIMITED) .JOHN L.HARRIS, JOHN MoKENZIR, i President, See .C.P.HARRIS, Trenamrere = MONCTON, N.B.Bamples at 54 St, Francois Xavier streef.DAVID MITOHELU I , v March 26 AMES NM.WITCHELL FOR SAL AT A BARCAIN: | ENGINE, IS H.P.Address care MANAGER, HERALD Office, Beaver Hall Hill, .Maclennan, Liddell Ciing, {Late Maclennan & Macdonald) Barristers, Soliciters, Notarles, ke, CORNWALL, ONT, NNAN, C.J.W.D.B.MACLEN ob Giiwe, W- Loom, = LEITCH & PRINCLE, Barristers, Attorneys-al-Law, Solicitors in Chap, cery, Notaries Public, &s., CORNWALL, ONT.JAS.LEITCH, B.W.PRINGLE August 25 ° 4 Mcintyre, Lewis & Code, BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &, Supreme Court and Depgrtmental Agents.licitors for Bank of Montreal, Uni Bo of Lower Canada, &c.ons Bank OTTAWA; ONT.» F.MCINTYRE, J.TRAVE A R.G.CODE.RS Lewy \u2014_\u2014\u2014 JAMES DUNNE, ATTORNEY and COUNSELLOR-AT-I, AW 280 BROADWAY, STEWART BUILDING, October.McMILLAN, Barristers, Attorneys-at-Law, Notaries, &c., SAINT J OHI, 1241y NEW BRUNSWICK, Gibbons McNab Mulkern, BARRISTERS, ATTORNEYS, &e,, OFFICE: Corner Richmond and Corling Streets, LONDON, ONT.GEo.C.GIBBONS, GEO.MONAB, P.MULKERN, FRED.F.HARPER, August 9 130 New York City, BANKERS & BROKERS, SPECULATION.Ceo.A.Romer, BANKER AND BROKER, 40 & 42 Broadway and 51 New Street, New York City.Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and * Petroleum BOUGHT, SOLD AND CARRIED ON MARGIN.P.8.~Send for explanatory pamphlet\u2019 Sept.10.ly 217 T.E.CILPIN, Fire [Insurance Broker Room 63 Traders\u2019 Building, CHICAGO.References\u2014Metropolitan National Bank.G.Dun & Co.The Bradstreet Co VANCOUVER Pacific Coast Terminus of C P R A.W.ROSS, | H.T.CEPERLEY Notary Public.ROSS & CEPERLEY, Real Estate, Insurance and Financial Agents, Our list comprises Business, Residence and Suburban Property.Bargains in Pm proved Residence Property, Estates managed for non-residents, \u2018Write for one of our Maps and Folders.ROSS & CEPERLEY, PosT-OFFICE BLOCK, VANCOUVER, B.C.Hastings street.; 1% MacDOUGALL BROS., STOCK BROKERS, 89 8t.Francois Xavier Street, Buyand Sell all Securities quoted an New York 8tock Exchange, throughtheir Agents, Messrs.Balsted & McLane.Terms:\u2014Ten per cent, margin on the par value.Commission for buying } of one per cont, and same for selling.H.R.HALSTED, H.R.MCLANE, HALSTED & MCLANE, BANKERS ad BROKERS, OFFICE, 31 BRO DST.NEW YORK.October 80 1y 8 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 and sold for share or on Margin.1y DR.MAJOR.SPECIALIST TO THE DEPARTMENT FOR DISEASES OF THE NOSE AND THROAT MONTREAL ENERAL HOSPITAL 82 UNION AVENUE, MONTREAL \u2018Will be absent in Europe until the early part of September.M.NOLAN de LISLE, REAL ESTATE AGENT, Room No.23 Fraser Building, T J/.RIELLE, LAND SURVEYOR, ST.JAMES STREET.JAMES THOMSON begs to inform bis friends apd the public generaily that he has removed to new preg ses on Guy street, near the corner Of vl Antoine street, where he will continue manufacture first-class Furniture, such ashe has been in the habit of making, and be trusts that by careful attention to his bus ness to merit a continuance of the patronsg® of his numerous friends, Every attention paid to repairs placed in his bands.8, y M5 Lo EDGAR JUDGE, \u2018Wholesale Dealer In Flour, Grain and Mill Feed\u2019 ST.PAUL STREET, MONTREAL \u2018 Joly 1 __\\y \u2014 FRESH MINED SPRING HILL COAL Screened Steam and slack Arriving Daily and delivered ex cars t?any part of the city.Cumberland Railwa: and Coal Co- CHESTERFIELD CHAMBERS 2 Telephone Call, 964.\u2014 \u2014_\u2014 ttn ea .pui + me oan eA LY A ce te = 4 ses oo, oft edu à \u20ac be ; fron not city Zoe Wh ing; ing San flag Thi Port Pass Son and \u201c mai den of ¢ Bf; ofs far lave Jev.Why dere \u201c ne, \u2018= SWIS LAW ty, aw, ern, &e., ets, ice and operty.nts, rs.Y, , B.C.125 reef, n Now Agents, the par er eont, OLANE: E, ERS, REly 80 S., treet ago.sold for 1y \u2014-\u2014 FOR THROAT Le [REAL ne early \u2014 SLE, T, Es \"REET.et Hi, Ft, ET.ublio sw prom: er of tinue to 1ch ashe , an his busi atronage attention 116: 0175 , Feed! AL 1y 314 \u2014_\u2014 OAL.and Daily ars to \u2018gal (or RS.WHITECHAPEL MURDERS.A Variety of New York Theories About the Outrages.He Must Be a Lunatic.And Dr.Hamilton Thinks He May Live In the Aristocratic West End ce [New York Herald,j And now New York has become a great whispering gallery since the latest news about the Whitechapel butcheries.These awful crimes are becoming the general topic of conversation.You hear it at home, you hear it in the street cars and on the ferryboats.Lawyers, detec: tives, judges and doctors wrangle over \u2018theories.All agree in denouncing the London police, Put who and what is the murderer?Is he an injured man who seeks revenge upon the low women of the slums?Is be a religious fanatic who thinks he has a divine mission to decrease the social evil by slaughcer?Is he a raging madman who chuckles night and day over the details of his bloody deeds?Is he a man who slays his victims under a sudden and uncontrollable homicidal impulse, and is then tortured by remorse till another frenzy drives him forth again to seek blood ?These are the questions that ring in one\u2019s ears almost every hour.The knowledge that the assassin is still at large, and that he may and is almost certain to repeat his crimes, has created a public excitement even in the metropolis of America that is not hard to account for.THE MURDERER IS A LUNATIC.\u201cI can conceive of these crimes being done only by an insane person,\u201d sdid Dr.Allan McLane Hamilton, the well known alienist, \u201cand they were very probably committed by a man belonging to a class of insane persons known as piquers.It is a form of insanity manifested by a variety of impulsive desires to do mischief, such as to destroy property and cut and mutilate., With this condition is associated a homicide tendency and a state of sexual aberration.Isis a form of mental disease that leads to peculiar impulsive acts, such as cutting off women\u2019s bair in the street and throwing vitriol and other destructive substances.The very pleasure of the act is the motive for it.The homicidal acts are nearly always connected with mutilations of the corpse or very dramatic surroundings.There are cases on record where women have been enticed into caves and mutilated in a disgusting way, the same marks being present that are found in the Whiiechapel murders.\u201c Two or three years ago a man named De Bourke ran amuck through Fourteenth street attacking and cutting people.That was a case of the kind I refer to.\u201cThese men are usually sane on all other subjects.They belong to the class of monomaniacs.It is generally a congenital state existing from birth.\u2018They are mentally in some respects like a certain class of depraved men who are shunned by society.\u201d \u201cDo you think, doctor, that these \u2018Whitechapel murders are the result of a desire for revenge on the class to which the victims belonged?\u201d \u201cIdo not.A prominent physician \"advanced that theory to me to-day, but it does not strike me as probable.Assuming the cabled accounts to be trus, there are some things about these murders that indicate the kind of insanity I have mentioned.The regularity of the acts and the peculiarity of the inutil- ation point strongly in this direction.\u201d A MENTAL PORTRAIT OF THE MONSTER.\u201c Assuming the murderer to bb a madman, what is his probable mental con- cition now ?\u201d \u201cOh, he is probably reading the newspaper account of the murders and enjoying it, going all over the crimes again in his imagination.But he may belong to another class of lunatics who have awful spells of remorse, and who only kill when the impulse seizes them.He may suffer great mental anguish.There is another class of lunatice whose lust is excited by the personal peculiarities of their victims who will be seized with a fury on seeing a woman with a peculiar kind of hair or a peculiar figure.In these Whitechapel cases there are strong signs of sexual aberration in the manner of mutilation.I think the murderer will do a great deal more killing.The more be gives way to his passion the more pleasure it is likely to give him, His mental condition at the tim?he sheds his victim\u2019s blood is one of extreme exhilaration.There are authentic instances where this insanity is accompanied by a cannibalistic instinct, where the murder- \u20acr8 drank the blood, These madmen «k&enerally defile the bodies of their victims or commit fancy, picturesque crimes.Sane men are not liable to do such things.\u201d \u201cDoctor, you have spoken as though You assumed the murderer to be a man; might it not have been a woman?\u201d \u201clt is very, very improbable.Women who suffer from the form of insanity that the defilement of these bodies indicates do not\u2018commit homicide ; men who suffer from it do.\u201d DOES HE LIVE IN THE WEST END, \u201cIf youwere looking for the White- chapel butcher what kind of a man would You seek ?\u201d \u201cHe belongs very likely to either one of two classes.He is either a low, coarse sort of idiot or an intensely refined, over- educated man, who has degenerated into a condition of ultra sensuality.He may © 8 common laborer, or may be a man from the west end of London.I should Dot be at all surprised to hear that he is a man living in an aristocratic part of the Wy who secludes himself all day and f0es out at night to gratify his strange and horrible desires.He is likely aman ¥ho is eccentric in his dress or has the lisane physiognomy.Every human be- Ing bas during his or her life some in- Sane or morbid appetite.It may be a 2sh or it may be a permanent disease.bis is Unquestionably au extreme case.\u201d Dr.Hamilton told the Herald re- Porter horrible stories of extraordinary Passions developed by human beings, Some of them still living in New York, and exhibited portrits of them.What 1 fear,\u201d said he, \u201cis that this Mania for butchering may become epi \u2018mic.You know we had an epidemic of clothes tearing 1n Paris, and every one 8 familiar with the frequent epidemics 0! suicide,\u201d D DR, SPITZKA\u2019S THEORY.far \u20ac Edward C.Spitzka, who is known iy and wide as a tireless and advanced je csligator of mental diseases, also be- wres that if the cabled stories of the ltechapel murders are true, the mur- trer is probably a lunatic.t is probably a case of -sexual per- version, what the old French writers called instinctive monomania,\u201d he said.\u201cIf this is so the murderer is just as conning and deliberate in his crimes as an able, sane man would be in doing me- : ritorious acts, or as a forger or awindler would bein perpetrating their lawless deeds.This London murderer shows skill, daring and the power to conceal his identity.It is usually the par.cular thing on which the man lays stress that betrays his insanity, and the fact that this murderer has cut out and taken away the same part of each body shows his mania.Was a young man who had a mania for cuttiug women\u2019s dresses.There was alsoa German professor whose instine- tive perversion led him to throw vitrol on dresses.He derived a pleasure from the act itself.There are several well known cases in which men had an insane passion for throwing down women and taking away their shoes.One of these men used to sit in his room and stroke himself with these shoes.THEY LOVE TO SEE BLOOD RUN, \u201cThe way I account for the White- chapel cases is this: \u2014The two fundamental passions of all animals is the sexual passion and hunger for food.One preserves the species and the other preserves the individual.They are often interwoven.Many persons have a desire to bite those for whom they have an affection.There isa much larger number of persons than you dream of who, if they could take a knife and cut and scarify (not kill) and see the blood run, would experience great delight.In my book on insanity I quote the confession of one of the class of instinctive butchers, who said :\u2014 \u201c1 first opened her chest and divided the fleshy parts of her body with a knife.Then I dressed this person as a butcher dresses cattle avd chopped her body into pieces, so as to get them into a hole which I had dug on the mountain.I can say that while opening the body I felt so ravenous that trembled and cut out and ate a piece.\u2019 \u201cSo far we cannot say that these persons are of unsound mind.It is simply a higher sexual fury.But as soon as it becomes a matter of method and all the intelligent powers become subservient to this elaborate and horrible form of butchery the suspicion is that we have to deal with a very cunning and Jucid madman.\u201d HERE'S A l\u2019LAN 10 CATCH THE ASSASSIN.\u201cHow would you search for the man?\u201d \u201cIf the police of London go to all the dives in the Whitechapel district and find out what men had strange desires they might be able to trace the monster.I think I know another good plan.\u201d \u201cWhat ig it, doctor ?\u201d \u201cI would dress stout hearted men in women\u2019s clothes, providing them with concealed armour to protect the neck and the rest of the body.These men could loiter about so as to invite the approach and attack of the assassin.\u201d \u201cHow do you supposes he manages to cut the throats and mutilate the trunks of these women without covering himself with blood so as to make detection certain ?\u201d \u201cIt could be done by making a sudden pass at the throat from behind, bunt it is avery difficult operation, requiring great practice.This man is probably educated, but I hardly think he is refined.That he knows something about surgery is, I think, pretty certain.The fact that he is able to slay his victims so quickly and effectively and to disembowel them in such a short time points in that direction.Then in all but one case he has removed the same organ from the body and taken it away with him.To find and cut out this organ would be a difficult thing for a layman.The madman has probably put these specimens in alcohol, and is thrilled with pleasure when he gloats over them \u2014or perhaps he has eaten them.\u201d THE COUNTERPART OF JEKYLL AND HYDE.\u201cDo you think he enjoys the notoriety which the newspapers are giving the cases ?\u201d ' \u201c Very likely that does not affect him at all.He enjoys reading the details of the crime and of how the corpses looked, but probably has no law-defying mood.If this man is like the other cases we know of, he will be remarkably careless when brought face to face with the mora enormity of his deeds.He will recognize as an abstract idea that it was not right, but there will be no inward conviction.As a member of society, he may express regret, but his conscience will not trouble him.He will very likely possess in a faint degree the moral qualities of Dr.Jekyll and Mr.Hyde.1 should not be surprised if he was stimulated to commit these crimes by reading Mr.Stevenson's morbid and unhealthy story, which is likely to have a bad effect upon a previously morbid mind.I have had in New York a case of this dual nature and sent him to the asylum.He confessed to me his horrible cravings * When I walk in the street,\u2019 he said, \u2018I feel as if I could cut the flesh of the peo- pleIsee.\u201d He was certainly one of the most singular looking persons I have ever seen.The expression of his countenance was indescribable; in ordinary language it would be spoken of as at once repulsive, comical and weird.This effect was heightened by involuntary grimaces, resembling vacant smiles or sarcastic grins.Occasionally an expres- gion of Satanic cunning would pass over his countenance; in the next moment it would look almost childishly open and appealing.His gait was sliding and swift\u2014he appeared to pass along without steps, and I could not resist the impression that Mr.Stevenson had some such person as my patient in his mmd when he described the repulsive influeing exerted by Mr.Hyde on persons passing him in the street.Once he said :\u2014 \u201cGoing along the street I find that it is such fun to spoil things; people go along imagining that they have good looks and do not think that I have a power to take away their good looks, a power as if I could bite them.\u201d \u201cDo you think the London murderer is à man or à woman ?\u201d Co \u201cThe overwhelming probability is that it is a man.\u201d THERE MAY RE AN EPIDEMIC.\u201cDo you think there is any danger of an epidemic of these butcheries ?\u2019\u2019 \u201cWell, of course the danger exists.The slumbering propensities of such persons are excited by reading of such butcheries.It works upon their imaginations.\u201d ; .\u201c¢\u201cAre the Whitechapel butcheries simply reproductions of the acts of known lunatics 2?\u201d \u201cYes, sir.There are many cases on record.One of the most horrible cases I know of is that of a young couple who were married in Scotland.On the morning after the marriage the bridegroom was seized with the same passion that evidently moved the Whitechapel assassin.He cut open bis bride, tore the intestines out with his teeth, and was found with them wound around his hands.There was great affection existing between them, and the sole cause for the act was the peculiar fury attached to a perversion of the instincts.You know Cc elius Aurelian knew of such cases of Children Crv for Pitc \u2014\u2014\u2014 In Berlin for instance there\u2019 | morbid appetites®n Rome and pronounc- | ALES AND LIQUORS, @ persons insane.\u201d WHEN OVERGRATIFIED HE MAY SUBSIDE \u201c What will be the probable effect of a i continued exemption from detection | upon the brute who is terrorizing White- chapel?Will he grow bolder\u201d \u201cHe may, and yet it is not impossible that this man may suddenly subside and be beard of no more.He may become overgratified.He very likelv has ex- bausted himself till he is capable of no other form of pleasure, and from too great indulgence may become even incapable of that.In Westphalia three or four years ago a man killed thirteen innocent country girls and defiled their , bodies by mutilotion to gratify the same extraordinary passion of fury that has in all likelihood inspired the Whitechape} crimes.They were all stabbed in the back in the same way.lie suddenly ceased, and no one has ever discovered who he was.He was satiated.\u201d LAWYER HOWE THINKS IT IS A LUNATIC.Of all the criminal lawyers in New York who have studied the motives and methods of murderers, William F.Howe is probably the most experienced and astute.He has set up the plea of insanity in homicide cases ten times as often as any other explanation of crime.\u201cI believe that the Whitechapel murderer is a man who bas become insane from brooding over some wrong done to him by one of the class to which his victims belong,\u201d he said.* There are all about these crimes the signs of a madman.All the authorities\u2014Fabret, Es- quirrol, Trousseau, Bucknill and Tuke, Maudsley, Gray, Balfour Brown and the others\u2014will give you just such cases.The New York police could very soon locate this man.\u201d \u201cWhat is my theory ?\u201d said Recorder Smyth.°I have none except that the heads of the London police must be five feet thick all around.The murderer must have been bathed in blood.They cannot for à moment be compared with the New York police.\u201d \u201cMy idea,\u201d said Police Justice White, \u201cis that these crimes are being committed by a maniac.It is impossible that a sane man would kill so many women and mutilate them all ih the same way.But it seems to me that whoever did these murders must have been gory when he left his victims, How it is that the London police don\u2019t track him I can\u2019t understand.Seven such murders in succession would be impossible in this city.Inspector Byrnes would have had the man locked up long ago.All this simply goes to show us what a well policed city wo live in.\u201d Warden Osborne of the Tombs said that from his experience in the Randall's Island Ivsane Asylum and then in the county priscns he wassatisfied that there was in the circumstances of the White- chapel murders evidence that the criminal was a lunatic.Such acts, he said, were never committed by sane men.SOME MEDICAL (RANK.Mr.Robert W, Todd, of No.229 Broadway, who is considered an authority on criminal matters, was inclined to the belief that the Whitechapel murders were committed by some medical crank, whose morbid anatomical ideas had led him to commit these fiendish deeds with the view of increasing his stock of surgical knowledge.\u201cIf this man is sane,\u201d said Mr.W.J.A.Tuller, of No.229 Broadway, \u201che must reveal himself.Sooner or later remorse must overtake him and he will seek to escape mainly from himself, leaving no refuge from confession but suicide, and suicide will no doubt be the confession by which he will idantify himself.\u201d \u201cThe man is unquestionably a lunatic,\u201d said ex-Governor Leon Abbott.\u201cIt seems to me that some lunatic who considers himself wronged by some one uses this means as an indirect revenge upon those whom he thinks have wronged him.\u201d \u201cI can only say of the matter,\u201d said Judge Martin, of the Court of General Sessions, \u201c what, no doubt, most paople say in regard to it, and that is that it is the work of some crank.\u201d Said Assistant District Attorney Semple :\u2014\u201c Some man, evidently the victim of a fanaticism amounting to insanity, bas committed these fiendish assaults, and I think that this theory would be corroborated or supported by the fact that be appears to operate by a system.The difficulty of apprehending this man arises, no doubt, from the fact that his character is such as to place him above suspicion.No criminal would or could do such work, nor could he have escaped detection in such a number of crimes committed within so short a space of time.\u201d à PERITAPS IT 1S A WOMAN, \u201cThis person,\u201d said Mr, À.W.Case, a merchant, of No.194 Duane street, \u201cis always referred to as\u2018 he\u2019 the \u2018man.Is it absolutely impossible that tliese deeds might have Leen committed by a woman\u2019 Some woman, perhaps, with a fancied wrong against her sex seeking this means of revenge.?\u201cI suppose you know,\u201d said Assistant District Attorney Lindsay, \u201cthat in the early part of this century there existed in London a person whom they called \u2018The Terror\u2019 This man, it seems, was the same species of crank as the White- chapel fiend, only net so dangerous.His mania was to cut ladies\u2019 dresses.He would waylay richly dressed women and slash their dresses into shreds, and always managed to make his escape.\u201d District Attorney Tellows looked thoughtful when questioned on the subject, and then he said very earnestly :\u2014 \u201cSuch a state of affairs in New York city would be simply impossible.The first offence miyht have remained undetected, although I scarcely think even that, but in less than a week \"after the second murder the criminal would have been run down.The London police, it seems, have simply held up their hands in horror with each successive murder and simply waited for the next one.This man has always chosen the same class of women for his victims; has probably approached them and led them to some spot suited to his vile purpose.The police know this.Why, then, have they not sent out decoys in each of these districts with instructions to lure the man or to be led to where agents of the police would be in waiting?Why have they not done the thousand and one things that would have at once suggested themselves to the New York police?\u201d \u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 A Good Neighbor.\u201c Late last fall I was laid up in bed three days with a very severe attack of diarrboœa and vomiting.Nothing benefited me until my neighbor, Mrs.Dunning, recommended Dr.Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, and brought me a half bottle, which she had in her house, In three hours the vemiting was stopped and Iwas able to sit up by night.I would not now think of using any other medicine.\u201d Columbus Hopkins, Hamilton, Ont.Ce \u2014\u2014 To Krnser Crus MexsErs.\u2014Secure a Riding Crop out of a large and well selected assortment, at Gertli\u2019s, Queen's Block.her s Castoria.THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY COM | DAWES & CO.BREWERS AND MALTSTERS, INDIA PALE AND XX MILD ALE.EXTRA AND XEX STOUT PORTER, (In wood and bottle.) FAMILIES SUPPLIED, | SAND PORTER-Quarts and Pints.| OFFICE: 521 ST.JAMES STREET WEST MONTREAL.A Orders received by telephone.JOHN H.R.MOLSON & BROS.| Ale and Porter Brewers, |! 1006 Notre Dame Street, Montreal, Have always on hand the various kinds ot ALE AND PORTER IN WOOD ANDIBOTTLE.Families regularly supplied.Orders received by Telephoner.Wm.Watson 313 St.Urbain street, bottles our Ales and Porter.He is authoriz to use our labels John Hope & Co.MONTREAL.AGENTS IN OANADA FCR OHN DE KUYPER & SON, Rotterdam MARTELL & CO.Cognac.TULES ROBIN & CO., Cognac.MOET & CHANDON, Epernay DEINHARD & CO.Coblenz.BARTON & GUESTIER, Bordeaux, M.MISA, Xeres de la Frontera.COCKBURN.SMITHES & CO., Oporto.MULLER & DARTHEZ, Tarragona, RODEL & FILS FRERES, Bordeaux.E.& J.BURKE, Dublin.PATTERSON & HIBBERT, London.BULLOCH, LADE & CO., Glasgow.WM.JAMESON & CO.Dublin.ANTRELL & COCHRANE, Dublin \u2014AND\u2014 BOOTH\u2019S OLD TOM GIN, ete.N.B.\u2014ORDERS RECEIVED FROM THX WHOLESALE TRADE ONLY.December 22 SAINT ALEXIS.A RUSSIAN CLARET.FULL in FLAVOR and BODY MODERATE in PRICE.FREDERICK KINCSTON, WINE MICRCIYANTD, 25 Hospital Street, Montreal.Richelieu Water.The Prince of Table Waters, PURE, SPARKLING, REFRESHING.For sale at the leading Hotels, Clubs, Restaurants and Grocers.J.A.HARTHEH, PROPRIETOR, (780 Notre Dame Street.Z#Æ-\u2014Velephone 1190.wn HERO CIGARS! PUREST, STRONCEST, BEST, CONTAINS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATE or any injurious materials.9 E.W.GILLETT, # TOFONTOONT 8's of the CELEBRATED ROYAL TEAST CAZES.~ wu ENNYROYAL WAFERS, gen Prescription of a physician wha i has a life long experience in treating female diseases.Is monthly with perfect success by over 10,000 ladies.Pleasant, safe, effectual, Ladies ask your drug.ist for Pennyroyal Wafers and ke no substitute, or inclose post age for sealed particulars.Sold by 2 d ste, $1 per box.Addrest ÊHE EUREKA CHEMICAD CO.Demsorr, Mica For sale by B.E.MoGALE, 2123 Notre Dame sireot Montreal.rE Ts DW 10 FOR OCTOBER, 1858, DeLIVERY, MAILS, |CLo \u2018ANG.AM.P.M.9.00 9.00 Ontario & West.Prov.A.M.|, P.M.and States.\u2014 9.00((a) Ontarioand West.States by G.T.R.10.00;Ontario and Western i 1.00] States by C.P.R.fu (c)Ottawaby BR.W.so.Perth and Peterboro .9.15/C.P R.N'th of Ottawa to Pembroke.C.P.R.N'th of Ottawa to Pembroke, Port Arthur, Manitoba, N West Territories & British Columbia dally Sunday excp'd 9.15/Canada Atlantic Ry.10'Alexandria,Glen Rob- 9.00 9.00].|Perth .{.8.00 9.150.3, ertson, breenfield & | Maxvilleby Atlantic Railway .000 FR 7.00|Hudson, Oka, Como, Rigaud, Carillon, P.Fortune .Quebec and Eastern y Provinces.jSorel, Berthier and Batiscan Bridge by BlEAMET.vee.uuu.++.4.15 St.Vincent de P, Joli- ette,Berthier,Sorel,T' Rivers,Que by N.8.R 4.15:St.Vincent D.P Tere- bonne, L'Epiphantie, L'Assomption, Joli- ette,Berthier, Louise- ville, St.Leon Sps.Sorel, Three Rivers, Quebec and Line of | i N.S.Ry.es 4.15) 7.30 fal (b) Quebec, by Ry.7.80(./(b) Eastern Townships, \u2018 Arthabaska and Riv.Ï 9.40.C.P.R.Bordeaux, St.| | \u201c Jerome and St.Lin branches .,.eee '\u2018C.P.R.St.Jerome and i.Bt.Janvier.+.2.45 Laprairie by steamer \u2026.,Laprairie, Hemming- ford, Huntingdon, Dundee, &c., by Ry.}.cases St.Hubert, St.Bruno: | and Si.Bazile .7.80;.'St.Hyacinthe, Sher- | brooke, Coaticooke,| C = 6 lClarenceTitie, Rosa PN 00 10.00 1 | Station,St Athanas veer.Vermont Junction Ry veer.Shefford R.W.Line.|.+ eee s St.Jacques, G.Ligne, | Stotiville, Lacolle.veers 'S-E Ry closed 1 pan, | on Saturdlays.ane.\u2026\u2026.S-E Ry Montreal and | Chambly section.\u2026|.\u2026.\u2026- 7.800.(b) New Brunswick, N | Scotia and P.E.I.,.,|.Newfoundland ,forw\u2019d daily on Halifax.Mails des atched| ! from Halifax for i , Newfoundland on Ist, 15th and 29th Oct.LOCAL MAILS ./Dorval, Valois,Pointe Claire, Cedars and Coteau du Lac .Stanbridge,S Armand, e; ma ar nRwR > E æ + = 8 9.15 Valleyfield .10.30}, ,,., Caughnawaga, Chat- eauguay, Beauhar- MOÏS.s.csccnucnuu0 (Boucherville, Contre- cœur, Varennes, Ver- cheres.rues o0/Cote S Antoine, Notre \u2018@y, Dame de Grace and : Mt.Royal Vale.00'Hochelaga.1 6.15: 8.30 \u201c5.30 Lachine,Cote St, P., B.Bon\u2019etsaftern\u2019n only 8.30! Longueuil .veu Maisonneuve, Longue Pointe, Pt-au-Trem- bles & Charlemagne, 1.00| Longue Pointe.1230: Point St, Charles and St.Gabriel.Sorel by RW .St.Lambert.12.30 St, Eustache.12.30:8t.Laurent, St Mar- An, ÉC.uc0s su.0000 6.80 St.Henri de M.and &t.Cunegonde.Sault-au-Recollet, Bou gie and Pont Viau.5.45/Cutremont.1.15 St.Jean Baptiste de iz al 7 2 ff Bromo Hi EE5H .00| Montreal.Lo .00, Mile End.and Cote St.| Louis morning only .45.Cote St.Louis, Cote Visitation and St.| Leonard, Pt.Maurice UNITED STATES, 80 10.00 New York City and 15 State,and the Southern States.,.5.Troy, Albany, Rouse\u2019s Point.\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.lucces \u2026|Rouse\u2019s Point and Al- 5 bany Postal Car.10.00 Boston, Mass.5 New England 2.30 \u201c g unes -1 = | except Maine.cu.a.Portland, Maine, and | the New England | States,exc\u2019pt Boston,.\u2026.9.00 («) Westsra auu Pa-| ALES.n0n.7.45: 7 00 | fie Stat FX REGISTERED LETTER MAIL for the New England States\u2014for Boston, New York and Southern States\u2014closed, only at 3.20 p.m.and Portland, Me.,7 p.m (a) Postal Car Bags open till 8.15 a.m.and 7.45 p.m.(6) Postal Car Bags open till 9.15 p.m.(c) Postal Car Bags open till 8,20 a.m, GREAT BRITAIN, Se.By Servia, Cunard Line, supplementary, 7 a.m.Friday, October 5, By Germanic, White Star, for Ireland, (b) 7.00 p.m.Monday, October 8.By Aller, N.G.Lloyd Line, 7.00 p.m.Monday, October 8.; By Aller.N.G.Lloyd Line, supplementary, 7 a.m.Tuesday, October 9.By Parisian, Allan Line, (a) 7.30 p.m.Wednesday, October 10.; ; By Umbria, Cunard Line, 3.20 p.m.Friday, October 12.; By Eider, N.G.Lloyd Line, (c) 3.20 p.m.Friday, October 12._.By Alaska, Guion Line, for Ireland, (b) 3.20 Monday, Getober 15.By Ems, N.G.Lloyd, 3.20 p.m.Monday, October 15.; By Saale, N.G.Lloyd Line, 3.20 p.m.Tuesday, October 16.By Adriatic, White Star, 3.20 p.m.Tuesday, October 16.By Oregon, Dominion Line (a) 7.30 p.m Wednesday, October 17.By Fulda, N.G.Lloyd, (c) 7,00 p.m.Thursday, October 18.By Aurania, Cunard, 7.00 p.m.Thursday, October 18.By Aurania, Cunard, supplementary, 7.00 a.m.Friday, October 19.By Britannic, White Star, for Ireland (b), 7.00 p.m.Monday, October 22.By Trave, N.G.Lloyd, 7.00 p.m.Monday, October 22.By Trave, N.G.Lloyd Line, Supplementary, 7.00 a.m.Tuesday, October 23.By Parisian, Allan Line (4), 7.30 p.m.Wed- nes lay, October 24.By Elbe, N.G.Lloyd Line, (¢) 7.00 p.m.Thursday, October 25.By Etruria, Cunard Line, 7.00 p.m.Thursday, October 25.By Etruria, Cupnavd Line, supplementary, 7.00 a.m.Friday, October 26 By Arizona, Guion Line, 3,20 p.m.Monday, October 29.By City of Rome, Anchor for Ireland (b), 3.20 p.m.Tuesday, October 30.By Lahn, N.G.Lloyd Line, 3.20 p.m, Tuesday, October 30.; By Vancouver, Dominion, (a) 7.30 p.m.Wednesday, October 31.PANNE © =Joo=atoo à 8 siksikz gg 9.00 coer for Irgland, (5) (a) Supplementary mail closed at 6 a.m.on Thursday.(b) Also for England and Scotland if specially directed.te) Must be steamer specially directed by this FRANCE.By La Normandie, Gen.Tr.All.Line, 3.20 p.m.Friday.October 12.By La Bourgogne, Gen.Trans.All.Line, 7,00 p.m.Thursday, October 18.By La Champagne, Gen, Tr.All, Line, 7.00 pm Thursday, October 25.Mails leave New York for the following Countries, as follows : For Central America, except Costa Rica and Gautemala, and for the South Pacific Ports via Aspinwall, October 10th and 20th.For Cape Hayti, St.Dominffo and Turk\u2019s Island.October 5rd.For Curacoa and Venezuela; also spec.add.corr.for the U.S.of Col.via Curacoa, October 20th.For the Windward Islands, October 10th and 2ith.For Veru Cruz and Progresso, October 14th and 24th.For Mexican States of Yucatan, Campeche, Tabasco and Chiapos, October 6th, 13th, 20th and 7th.ÿ For the Fabama Islands; also spec.add.corr.for the U.S.of Col., exc; Asp, and Pan., October 9th.POST-OFFICE TIME TABLE, [NEW ADVERTISEMENTS, MERCIAL GAZETTE: FRIDAY.OCTOBER.5.NITHING SYUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS.| Dr.Lowis is Always Successful | The Glory of à Man is in Dis Strength.| Nerve or Physical Force When Lost Quickly Regained by Consnliting Dr.C.J.LEWIS, HO, alter Intense study and deep re- } search, has lately discovered new, ex- | traordinary, quick, certain and inexpensive cure for disease of the Brain and Spinal Cord Spermatorrheea, Seminal Weakness, Fluid Escapes, Impotency and Deranged functions of the Nervous and Generative Systems, THISNEW AND MARVELLOUSMEDICAL | 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 Ce MPLAINTS, Acute or Chronic Discharges, Stricture, Re- teition of Urine, Gravel, Kidney or Bladder Disorders, Syphillis, Secondary Symptoms, Eruptions, Skin Diseases are all absolutely cured without the use of Mercury, Copabia, or injections.No restriction in diet or hindrances from business.RECENT CASES CURED IN THREE OR FOUR DAYS.Patients whose cases have been negleced, badly treated or pronounced incurahle, are particularly invited to visit Dr.Lewis, A written guarantee of cure given to all cases arranged and undertaken.In practice up wards of thirty years.Dr.Lewis is frequently consulted by many who have been completely discouraged of ever being cured, after having experimented with various advertised nostrums, electric belts, etc, which invariably do more harm than good, Every phase of disease demands different and special treatment.To those who may have been disappointed, Dr.Lewis would say 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, etc, $5.Dr.Lewis is permanently located at 120 FRIENDSHIP STREET, Providence, R.L.Dr.L.will, on full description of cases (with fee enclosed), send a supply of his valuable medicines, accompanied with Instructions and advice for the cure of the above distressing complaints.Country Patients Corresponded with until cured, JUST PUBLISHED, FOURTH EDITION Medical Minutes | complaints, ON PRO- | MOTING DEVELOP- oil MENT, Also speedy i cure of above subjects.Sexual Diseases, etc.Price 25 cts.by mail 5] to an address from the llauthor, Dr.C.J.Lewis, 119 HARDWARE AER Ceti ; TRAINS LEAVE MONTREAL AT: A.M.\u2014 || Fast Express { 8.1 ville, Louisvi le, ree Rivers ere vec.&s, Sundays runs to Three Rivers only 8 45 A.M.\u2014ll Day Express for St.John\u2019e, « Farnham, Newport, Manchester Nashua, Boston, Portland and New Englan points via Montreal and B ston Air Line.9 00 A.M\u2014|| Fast Express for Lachute .Ottawa, &c.9 10 A.M.\u20141 Day Express for Brockville 1 8, ngston, Peterboro Torouto, &c.Smiths Fy A.M.\u2014From St.Lambert for Cham 9.25 Iv a} cpelieu, Marieville, &e.depart ug on arrival of Grand Trunk 9.00 am.L from Bonaventure Station, rain 1 3 P.M.\u2014Suburoan \u2018Lratn for St.Therese on and intermediate Stations, Saturdays Fe 3 00 P.M.\u2014Buburt an Train farst, Theresa ' and Intermediate Stations, excejt Saturdays and Sundavs.P.M.\u2014t Local Express for Three 1 Rivers, Batiscan, Quebec, &c.4 30 F.M.\u2014 Local Express for St.Therese a Lachute, Buckingham, Ottawa, &e.5 0 P.M.\u2014Local for Joliette, St.Felix de 3 Avs Valois, and all intermediate Sta P.M.\u2014Local Express for St.Johns 5.10 Nappe Ste Hyacinthe, Sorel, oke, Lake Megantic, Sprinrooke, e Megantic, Sutton, Newport, P.M.\u2014From Bonaventure Station; 5.20 for Chambly, Richelleu, Marieville P.M.\u2014For St.Therese andB8t.Je 5.3 St.Lin and St.Eustache Branches) 6 20 P.M.\u2014Suburban train for Ste.Therese ' and intermediate stations.7 50 P.M.\u2014tll Night Express for St.Johns.hah Nawhoam, Newport, Concord, Mane Chester, Engleno.well, Boston, Portlaudt .M.\u2014!l Pacific Express 8 1 2 0 Winnipeg, Vancouver.Vioton ae all Points in the North-West and on Pacifie 2 P.M\u20141 | Western Express fo 8.30 Falls, Kingston, Peterboro, roro Open Sound, Bt.nas, London, Detroit, an in Chi HH .ue ntario and West :M.\u2014l Night Express for T 10.00 Rivers, Quebec, & all points ou tes Intercolonial Raliway and Lower Provinces, Runs Daily, Sundays included, Other ti fins week days gn ly, unless noted otherwise, ee J marked: .ping Cars on trains se merican Customs Officer at_station to exe amine baggage destined for the United lates.TICKET OFFICES : wi 266 St.James Street, ndsor and Balmoral GateStation, ral Hotels, and Quebeg June 133 J.G.SIBBALD, Importer and Commission Merchant, Steel Rails Iron, Metals, &as {+N Agency for Canada for the Marks Autos matic Car Coupler, Miltimore\u2019s Car Wheel Dressing Machine.146 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, TTITY ROLLED IRON BEAMS AND JOISTS STEEL BEAMS, CHANNELS, &c.STEEL RAILS.PIG IRON, all brands.STEEL & IRON BOILER PLATES, &o.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 &c.DOMINION WIRE ROPE CO, MANUFACTURERS OF WIRE ROPE, &c.PLATED ELBOW CO., MANUFACTURERS OF One-piece Stove Pipe Elbows.204 St.James Street, (MECHANICS\u2019 INSTITUTE BUILDING.) THE ONTARIO BOLT GO, Manufacture every description of Carrisge, Machine, Plow, Tire, Stove and Fancy Bolts, Coach Screws, Bolt Ends and Blank Bolts, Stove, Bfock, Carriage and Cooper Rivets, Boiler and Bridge Rivets, Railway 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.E.LEONARD & SONS, STEAM ENGINE AND BOILER MANUFACTURERS, Automatic Cut-off Engin s for ever duty.Boilers of ali Styles and Sizes.Plain Slide Valve Engines.l Wood-Working Machinery.Complete Saw and Planing Mill Qut- tits.One 60 H.P.Second-hand Automatic Cut-off Engine ; also, 45 H.P.Boiler, and a number of smaller sizes, for sale chenp.: 33 NAZARETH STREET, MONTREAL.H.E, PLANT, \u2018Write for catalogue.Representative.May 22 trs 122 Moxie Nerve Food FOR SALE BY THE BOTTLE.DOZEN or CROSS Je A.HARTE, Druggist, GLASGOW DRUG HALL, For Progresso, Mexico, October 9th, For the Bahama Islands, Jamaios, also for Costa Rica via Port Limon, October Ith, | 1780 NOTRE DAME STREET Telephone 1.150 2 in connection with Grand Trunk Rallwa, MONTREAL AND OTTAWA Soy Hest and Shortest Line to Ottawa.IX» through trains between M and Ottawa, lighied bythe Electric Lente Magnifeent PULLMAN BUFFET PARLOR CARS! Meals served in Parlo the European plan r Cars On all trains on The ONLY LINE In Canada usin ELECTRIC LICHT on trains.sng Trains Leave Bonaventure Depot at 8.50 A.M M.for Alexandria, Valley field arriving 1235 and 8.10 B.A dote, Serpe oF, For ticket 1 ckets, parlor car Accommod Freight Rates and full information.app Company\u2019s Office, 136 St, James St, Tickets and Seats in Parlor Cars can also secured at Windsor and Bal ticket offices, Bonaventure Depot and is se James Street.A.E.CAIRNS, PERCY R.TODD General Agent, Genl.Pass, Agent, Montreal.Ottawa E.J.CHAMBERLIN, General Manager, Ottawa 294 TRAINS LEAVE MONTREAL, BONAVENTURE STATION.7 A.M.\u2014Arriving St.John\u2019s 8.35 a.m, 2b Farnham 9.55 a,m.[ ; Waterloo 12,40 noon, Sait, Granby 11.20 a.m, A.M.\u2014White Mountain Expre: - 8.30 riving Wells River 2.23 par Tittle: 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 5,00 p-m., Summit Mount Washington 6.30 p.m., Portland 8 p.m., Old Orchard Beach 8.30 M.\u2014Fast train, arriving St.Iba 3 10.50 a.m.Burllagton 8 i ans Montpelier 12.50 p.m., White River J unction 2,65 p.m., Boston via Lowell 7.25 p.m., and New York via Springfield 10 pm Pullman New Buffet Parlor Oars to Boston, 4 20 P.M.\u2014NEW YORK Express, DAILY, : SUNDAY INCLUDED, arriving St Albans 6.50 p.m., (Supper); Burlington 8.15 pass Rutland 10.30 p.m., roy 2.00 &.m., Al« any 2.20 a.m., New York 7.00 a.m, Daily, Sund Sxcop ted, arrivin Worcester 8.46 m.; .00 a,.m., vi Falls and Fitehburg.\"via Rutland, Bellowa agner\u2019s new Palace Sleeping Cars Mon! real to New York and St.Albans to Boston.t= 5 30 P.M.\u2014Express, arriving Farnham J on 7,07 p.10, Granby 7.42 p.m., Waterloo P.M.\u2014 Boston Night Express, DAILY, 8.30 SUNDAY INCLUDED, arriving St Albans 10.45 p.m., White River Junction 3.15 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 9.35 a.m., New York via Northampton, Holy= oke, Springfield and New Haven, 11.40 am, This tWuln makes close connection at Nashua | and A pchenden for Worcester, ovi ce and all points on the None ep Rall ees Bovten ant ullman ot Bleep: ars to Boston Springfield.ping and For Tickets, Time-tables, and all infor mation, apply at Windsor and Balmoral Hotels, Grand Trunk Offices, or at the Com» pany\u2019s office, 136 8t.James Street, A.C.STONEGRAVE, Sunda, Canadian Passenger Agent, J.W.HOBART, 8, W.CUMMINGS, General Manager.General Pass, Agent, Montreal, June 25, 1887.Delaware and Hudson CANAL CO\u2019S RAILROADS, sé 1).and FI.\u201d \u2014TO\u2014 Saratoga, Troy, Albany, Boston, New York Philadelphia.AND ALY, POINTS SOUTH AND EAST, Quick Time._ No Delays.Lake Champlain George Steamers) TRAIN LEAVE MONTREAI: 7.25 a.m.\u2014Daily, except Sunday, Drawin room, Montreal to New York, arliving E! New York 8.50 p.m, 4.30 p.m.\u2014Night Express, Sundays included \u2014Wagner's Elegant Sleepin Cars run through to New York without change, are iving in New York at 7.00 next morning.g# This Train makes close connection at Troy and Albany with Sleeping Car Train for Boston arriving at 9.30 a.m.New York Through Mails and Express oars ed via thisline.Information given, and Tickets sold & Windsor and Balmoral Hotels, all Gram Trunk Offices.and at the Company's Offios 143 St, James Street, Montreal.VEEN, OAS Hera .ener ent, Albany, NY, Montreal \u2014\u2014\u2014 = \u20142e \u2014\u2014 8 \u2014 \u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 = pe THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.FRIDAY.OCTOBER.3.SPORTING INTELLIGENCE, The First Day of the Montreal Hunt Club\u2019s Races A Successful Day\u2019s Sport.The Irish Athletes\u2019 Visit to Montreal Delayed.Quoits, Athletic and Other Sporting Notes.THE TURF.THE MONTREAL HUNT CLUB STEEFLECHASE\u2014 FIRST DAY.The first day of the fall meeting of the Montreal Hunt Club came off yesterday afternoon, at Lepine Park.Owing to the extremely cold weather prevailing the attendance was not so large asin previous years, A small number of ladies were present, but these were encased in sealskin sacks and well wrapped up with rugs whils\u2019't seated on the grand stand.\u201cSol\u201d favoured the spectators with a little warmth during the early part of the rac- ng.Towards the close the sky darkened, and just as the last race was completed, a drizzly sleet set in, making the drive home anything but plaasant.The racing as a whole was very uninteresting from a racing point of view.The rain for the past few days having made the track very heavy, in consequence the going was slow.Another thing that retarded anything like good time being made was the zig-zag steeplechase course that was laid out, it being a miracle some accidents have not to be recorded.The last race, a mile and half dash, however, tully made up for any defects in the st eplechasing line.Six horses started ard from the drop of the starter\u2019s flag to the winner passing the judges\u2019 stand it was \u201cnip\u201d and \u201ctuck\u201d as to which horse would be declared the winner, Purse, rid» den with great judgment by \u201c Billy Me- Bride,\u201d the well known jockey, just managing to win on the post by the shortest of noses from Ten Sheal.There is very little doubt that had McBride been on Ten Sheal the horse would have won ezsily.However, the spactators went down to Lepine Park to see honest, square sport, no matter whether the racing was fast or not.This they received, and all wended their way home well pleased with their afternoon\u2019s amusement.The management was all that could be desired.The races were started on time, and the card completed without the least hitch of any kind whatever.The course was admirably kept by mounted huntsmen, a great improvement on former meetings where police have been engaged.Whilst driving to the course a blockade was causad opposite the Hudon Cotton Mill, at Hcchelaga, by a valuable horse, belonging to Miss Allan, shying at a drain in the road, and by some means or other, got his hind legs into it.On cutting the harness he fell to the bottom and was not taken out for nearly three hours, having received very slight injuries.Miss Allan and Mr.Colin Campbell, who was driving, luckily escaped without any injury.The following were the officials of the ay : Judges\u2014John Crawford, Esq., M,F.H,, and Dr.Craik.Starter\u2014Jas.P.Dawes, Esq.Clerk of the Scales\u2014P.D.Ross.Clerk of the Course\u2014E, J.Major, Esq.Hon.Secretaries \u2014J.Alex.L, Strathy, Esq., and Dr.C.McEachran, PIRST RACE\u2014GREEN STEEPLECHASE, For a purse of $200; $150 to first horse ; $50 to second; third horse to save entrance fee.I'or horses that have never won a steeplechase or hurdle race, and that shall have been regularly and fairly hunted during the current season, and bona fide the property of members of the Montreal Hunt, or any other Hunt in the Dominion or the United States, on or be- foie 15th August, 1888.Over about two miles of fair hunting country.Weltar weights for age.Half-breds allowed seven pounds.Entrance, $10.B.J.Coghlin\u2019s b.g.Prince Charlie, 166 Ibs.[3.Penniston].e.u Lennon s0u00c save 1 H.Drysdale\u2019s b.g.Quaker, 149 lbs.[J.Lowe] St.Hilaire led from start to finish and came in the winner by 20 lengths ahead of PrinceCharlie; Quaker third,three lengths behind ; Eunice fourth.The judges d.s- qualified St.Hilaire, his rider having missed taking the last jump.SECOND RACE\u2014IALF-BRED STEEPLECIASE, For a purse of $200 ; $150 to first horse ; $50 to second; third horse to save entrance fee.For half-bred horses bona- Jide the property of Members of the Montreal Hunt, or any other Hunt in the Dominion or the United States, on or before 15th Aug., 1888, and have not started for any race, except a Hunters\u2019 race in 1888, and that shall have been regularly and fairly hunted during the current season.Over the Green Course.Entrance, $10.H.Drysdale\u2019s ch g Echo, 168 1b3,, ($&.Pennis- 1 B.Si losbiinis bs Grattan, 150 1bs., (W.MeBride).\u2026\u2026.tiie sesiens cesce ace 2 Owner*s bl m Estella, 138 1bs AMF.Elliot).3 Time, 5.50.To a good start Penniston at once took Æcho to the front and clearing the first hurdle was three lengths ahead of Estella, with Grattan half length in the rear, this order was maintained until two thirds of the journey had been HANDICAP covered.Just before reaching the fourth hurdle from home, Me- Bride shook Grattan up, and by a bit of very clever manœuverin saved considerable ground which enable him to get within half a length of the leader.\u201cGrattan wins,\u201d \u201c Echo wins,\u201d could be heard all over the stand and paddocks.It certainly looked as if the yormer cry would turn out true.Coming across the grass before taking the last hurdle, McBride called upon Grattan, but the horse could not respond, Echo then came away and passed the winning post an easy winner two lengths ahead of Grattan, Estella came with a wet sail towards the end.Had the distance been fifty yards further the mare would have earned second place.THIRD RACE\u2014 MEMBERS\u2019 PLATE For a piece of plate value $100.\u2014T'or half-bred horses that have never won a steeplechase or hurdle race, and shall have been fairly and regularly hunted with ihe Montreal Hunt by members during the current season.To be ridden by members elected on or before 15th August, 1888.Over green course.Welter weights for age.Entrance, $10.I.Elliot\u2019s b g Sunshine, Jr., 165 lbs (F.Elliot) 1 0 .EB.J.Major's br g Hard Times, 172, (Owner) 2 G.L H.Guy's bg Saxon, 165 (Owuer) .3 ss, Coulson\u2019s b g Roderick Dhu, 165, (J.O'Brien: Jo).ooo veeieeirrennrnriisnonacnns J.R.Rolland\u2019s b g Pathmaster, 163, (J.Rol- JANA) eserves core Loc ea nes on vise ne senc neue 0r0 5 Time, 5.24 1-5.After a short delay Mr.Dawes, the starter, sent them off to a very fair start.They passed the Judges\u2019 stand for the first time in the following order: Roderick Dhu, Hard Times, Pathmaster, Sunshine Jr., Saxon last.The lot cleared the hurdle on the left of the track in Indian file.Crossing the field Sunshine Jr.graduslly gained on her horses.Arriving at the fence at the back of the judges\u2019 stand, Pathmas- ter was the first to take it, and landed over safely but immediately after threw his rider, putting him out of the race.The others kept on in the same order until the second tence from home was cleared, when Elliott called upon Sunshine Jr, the mare answering gamely, lasted just long enough to win by half a length in front of Hard Times, who lost the race owing to the want of judgment shown by the rider.Saxon third, three lengths behind, with Roderick Dhu beaten off, FOURTII RACE\u2014OPEN FLAT RACE 1} MlLEs, A sweepstakes of twenty-five dollars each, halt forfeit, with $150 added, of which $50 to second, third to save his stake.Horses to be declared out by 30th Sept.1888.Light welter weighs.Redbank stables, ch g Purse (late Cata- clysm), 145 1bs., (W.McBride).1 Rockaway stables, b g] Ten Sheal, 133 lbs., (Count Von Proux) .2 Redbank stables, b m Eulidia, 145 Ib JE TU acsemsrastan 00 3 Lachine stables, b g Percy, 138 1bs., (G.Hanna).sesossssse sis 00c0evecc une 4 Wm, Minogue, b g George L., 145 lbs., (MINOZUC).ove iieiterareensnrnnsae Leese 5 F.Roberts, bg Torpedo, 145 lbs,, (Ross) 6 Mr.Dawes once wore\u2019 despatched his charges to an excellent start.The lot being all in a bunch on passing the judges\u2019 stand for the first.time.At the quarter pole Percy held the Jead, with Ten Sheal, Purse, Eulidia, Geo.L., Torpedo, in the order named.Going up the back stretch McBride pulled Purse back to fourth place.At the same time McIsaacs sent Eulidia along at a clipping pace and at the one mile and quarter pole the mare looked all over a winner, but the pace was too hot for her.Seeing this, McBride, who had been laying at her gerths, worked up Parse and quickly passed the mare.Coming around the bend entering the home stretch he caught up to Percy, the pair running into the home stretch neck and neck, with Ten Sheals a length in advance.When well straightened out a desperate race between the trio, Purse just managing to get her head in front of Ten Sheals on the post.Hanua having eased up, Mclsaacs brought Ealidia up under the whip and secured third place by half a length; Geo.L.and Torpedo beaten off.The following are the weights for the open handicap steeplechase for a purse of $300; $250 to first horse; $50 to second; third horse to save entrance fee ; open to all horses; over cup course; entrance $15: Lachine Stables\u2019 b.g.Percy.co.Ls Redbank Stables\u2019 b.m.Meadow Queen.156 F.Elliot\u2019s bk.g.Vigilance \u2026 156 Lachine Stables\u2019 b.m.Skylark.F.Roberts\u2019 b.g.Torped Pools will be sold on Saturday\u2019s races at Ponts Billiard Rooms on Craig street, this evening, at 8 o\u2019clock.LACROSSE.The coming great match between the Cornwall and the Shamrock Lacrosse teams for the championship of Canada is causing quite a stir in lacrosse circles in this city.Several bets have been recorded at 100 to 40 against the Cornwalls taking three straight games; as well as a large amount at evens that the Shamrocks win the match.The attendance is sure to be the largest that has been at these popular grounds during the season, and to avoid a crush at the gates, tickets are on sale at Mr.John Lewis, chemist, Victoria Square, Mr.Con.Maguire, \u201cGoal\u201d Cigar Store, St.James street, and at Messrs.Ronayne DBros., Notre Dame street.l\u2019ools on the match will be sold this evening at Mr.B.Tausey\u2019s, of the jr Tansey House, Craig street, ATHLETICS.LAWRENCE LACRISSE ASSOCLATION FIRST ANNUAL SPORTS, As the time draws near, great interest is being centred in the coming athletic sports of the St.Lawrence Lacrosse Association, which will be brought off tomorrow afternoon at their grounds on De Lorimier avenue, late Colbourne avenue.Numerous entries have been received for the various events to be competed for.The lacrosse matches between the various contesting clubs for the handsome gold medals offered by the Association wiil form no mean attraction to the excellent bill of fare offered.All that is necessary to make it an assured success is that \u201cOld Sol\u201d will kindly condescend to assist this young enterprising Association in their first venture of the kind.THE IRISH ATHLETES DELAYED.A telegram was received in the city this morning from Mr.Cullinan, who has charge of the Irish team of athletes that will visit Montreal, saying that owing to rain stopping them from competing in games at Boston, they will not arrive in this city until Tuesday morning instead of Monday morning as formerly agreed upon.The team will remain in the city until Wednesday evening.The Shamrock Association are making strenuous efforts to give their brethren of the old land a greeting second to none they will receive whilst on this continent.GYMNASTICS.The M.A, A, A.Gymnasium was crowded to excess lastevening to witness the complimentary gymnastic entertain ment given by the members of the gymnasium, The president of the Association, Mr.W.L.Maltby, occupied the chair, and in the interim Dr.J).C.Cameron delivered a short and very interesting address on the advantages to be obtained by the exercise just gone throuzh not only in a physical sense, but also in amoral one.The address was listened to throughout with great attention.The following are the various exercises gone through during the evening: The horizontal bar, German horse, bar bells, light dumb bells, vaulting the parallel bars, rings and trapeze, finishing up with an exhibition of the light Indian clubs by F.A.Rodden.All these exercises gave evidence of the untiring energy displayed by Professor Doig during the time he has had control of the gymnasium.A hearty vote of thanks was passed to Dr.C.Cameron for his address and to Mr.Maltby for presiding, and the entertainment closed.QUOITS.DOMINION QUOITING CLU&, THE ST.The second open and club matches of the Dominion Quoiting Club will be held on their grounds, corner of Atwater Avenue and St.James street, to-morrow afternoon.The club matches commance at 9 am.The open matches commence at 1 o'clock, p.m., first prize $15; second prize, $10; third prize, $5.Entrance fee $1.Entries to close at 12.30 on day of match.The open match promises to be a very interesting one, as entries are expected from various clubs in Quebec and Ontario, so that the Dominion Club will have to be on their metal, if they wish to retain their own prizes.8ST.JEAN BAPTISTE WARD.Nominations for Its Municipal Representation.\u2018That the late chairman of the Board of Health Committee determined to stand again for St.Jean Baptiste ward, the nominations yesterday fully showed.At ten o'clock, when Ald.Martineau ascended the stand, about fifty persons stood shivering around in the cold air, and when he called for nominations, Alderman Villeneuve handed in a papar supporting the retiring Alderman.It was signed by himself, A.Hogue, Pierre Bedard, W.Gravel, L.Lamieux, E.Roy, Ald.V.Grenier and J.Sauterne.As soon as Ald.Martineau had folded it up, Dr.Vecheron handed up a paper proposing ex-Ald.John Lee.The paper was largely signed, not only by the proposers, but by a large number of prominent citizens, among whom were Dr.Bru- nelle, ex-Mayor Cerat of St.Jean Baptiste, ex-Alderman Lamontagne, C.Ger- vais, A.Picard, T.A.Grothe, James Mul- lin, G.Vermette, etc.2 The feature of the nominations was that the candidates were perfectly silent, no speeches being made.It is currently reported that the supporters of Dr.Germain propose to make a political issue of the matter.Mr.Lee\u2019s friends, however, are confident of success, eee MONTREAL INDUSTRIAL ROOMS.The twenty-sixth annual report (last season\u2019s) of the Industrial Rooms of the poor is at hand.The institution seems to be doing a good work, and has afforded relief to many who were in distress, as the following paragraph indicates:\u2014 \u201cVery much distress has been met with during the past long winter, especially among immigrants, who are often ill- clad, the husband being out of employment, and consequently dependent on the earnings of the woman.\u201d The committee in their report further say :\u2014 One hundred and fourteen women have been employed, belonging to the following denominations: Episcopalian, 38; Presbyterian, 33 ; Methodist, 24 ; French Protestant, 10; Baptist, 5; Congregational, 4; and to these $4,385.52 has been expended in payment.Our experienced Superintendent, Mrs.Milne, has charge of the stock at the Industrial Rooms, 659 Dorchester street, and has continually on hand a quantity of both fine and coarse underclothing.For the disposal of our surplus stock, two sales in the rooms of the Natural History Society were, as usual, held during the year; the first on the 8th and 9th of December, realizing $794.48 ; the second, our Annual Bazaar, took place on the 5th and 6th of April, and brought in $2,173.15.At Christmas time we followed the plan adopted two years ago, and provided each of our workers with a Christmas dinner ; also some articles of warm clothing, provided by kind friends; that this good cheer was much appreciated was manifested in the delight of each recipient.The sincere thanks of this committee ars here extended, to the many kind coatributors.The accounts show as follows :\u2014 RECCIPtE.asso asas ee so nas na can $10,259 05 Disbursements «over vieerveenns \u2018 9.999 53 Balance on hand .\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.$ 2952 BAZAAR STATEMENT.Receipts.cu.cas sses se css nec s000 ee $2,245 15 Disbursements .ocoieeenn.70 00 Net receipts.cocvvvnievnnnnns $ 2,175 15 The gratuity fund shows a balance on band of $3.14; and additional donations of $19 are acknowledged.THE CITY FINANCES.A Daily Expenditaré of $10,000\u2014Siate- ment {rom Acting Treasurcr Robb.At the Finance Committee meeting yesterday Comptroller Robb, acting as City Treasurer, submitted a full statement of the city finances.Acting Chairman Rolland presided, and there were present Ald.Farrell, White and Perrault, members of the Committee.After routine, the following was submitted :\u2014 To Ald.Rolland, dcting Chairman Finance Committee, Srr, \u2014At this the first meeting of the committee under your presidency I beg to submit for your information a statement of our finances to the close of the month:\u2014 STERLING EXCHANGE TO BE REMITTED.To meet interest payable in Eng- 0) Temporary bonds, maturing 6th.$25,000 Temporary bonds, maturing 17th.250,000 Temporary bonds, maturing 30th.243,333 TOtAl.01000senecre caso nas cn 000 $947,333 November interest, payable here., $132,667 Grand total.\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026.ouo.csues $1,080,000 The cash on hand to this date is $850,- 000, out of which I shall pay the first two itéms and the balance will remain on special deposit until required.The current disbursements outside of the above special items average about $10,000 per day.Respectfully submitted, W.Rogge, Comptroller, Acting City Treasurer.City Hall, Montreal, Oct.5, 1888.The report was accepted.À report from the Fire Committee asking a grant of $750 to purchase three horses was concurred in; but a report from the same committee for a further sum of $2,600 for the rebuilding of No.9 Station was deferred until next meeting as the committee did not deem it wise to commence such a work so late in the season, Acting Treasurer Robb reported that he had received a communication from Mr.Turner, late secretary-treasurer of the town of St.Gabriel stating that he had collected $630.25 of arrears, but could not collect any more.Ii was ordered that Mr.Turner's connection with the city cease and that he hand over all books in his possession.The meeting adjourned.THE LIEUT.-GOVERNOR'S RECEPTION.\u2018Will the City Hall Wear Flowers for it or Not?The sub-committee to arrange for the reception of the Lieutenant-Governor on his coming visit to Montreal, assembled in the Council ante-room, yesterday afternoon.The principal point was whether there should be decorations or not.Ald.White presided, and there were present City Clerk Glackmeyer and Alds.Pere rault and Conroy.Chairman White first read a draft of the proposed address of welcome, which was approved.City Clerk Glackmeyer announced that His Honour would be in the city Tuesday, whereupon it was de- Children Crv for Pitc her\u2019s Castoria.cided that he should write to Que! ec and ask the Lieutenant-Governer where he wished the address to be pre- se ted, City clerk Glackmeyer, contended that it would look much more official to present the address at the City \u2018Hall than at the Windsor.\u201cIf that is 80,\u201d said Alderman White, \u201cI hops there will be flowers and other decorations, The Council chamber should not present the bare and dreary aspect it presented on the occasion of the Governor-Ge- neral\u2019s reception.\u201d Mr.Glackmeyer did not seem disposed to accede to the suggestion or flowers, and raised various objections.He first said that they could not get them, and when Ald.White said they would buy them from outside parties, answered that there had been no flowers when Lient.-Governor Robitaille was received.Ald.White contended for the flowers, being supported by Ald.Conroy, while Ald.Perrault and the City Clerk thought that since Lieut.-Governor Robitaille had been received without flowers Lieut.Governor Angers should be received in the same manner.Ald.White gaid that in this case he would wait until the full Committee of seven members were present before deciding and issued instructions to call a meeting for to-day.THE COURTS.A MILLION DOLLAR CLAIM.This morning Jugde Loranger had before him the case of the Canada Atlantic and Northwest Railway Co.vs.D.A.Stanton, which is an action for $1,000,000 damages arising out of contract differences.Mr.Stanton\u2019s Counsel, Mr, Nichols, moved to have the plea of the Company set aside because it was irregular, and also contended that his clients were not bound to reply to the plea.The Company\u2019s Counsel protested and the Court took the matter cn delibere, A DESERTED WIFE.Madame Alexandrine Laplante, through Counsel entered an action this morning against her husband, Theodale Garand, farmer, for separation a to bed and board, on the ground of brutality.She was married in 1882 and up to last June they lived happily together, when her husband suddenly changed without any cause and left her, telling her to go to her father\u2019s and he would provide for her and her children.She agreed to this, but he hae not fulfilled the conditions and had further sold his property and deserted her.She also alleges that he has brutally treated her and that it is impossible to live with him.She asks for \u2018an alimentary allowance and the revendication of some property situated in St.Remi, frau- dently disposed of by her husband.SEIZED FOR RENT, The plant, presses, &c., of Le Monde newspaper were seized this morning for rent at the instance of the Congregation Nuns.They claim the Bleue organ is behind months in its obligations.CATPIAS MAINTAINED.This morning, Judge Mathieu gave judgment on the motion to quash the capias recently issued against A.Rolland, trader.The Court maintained the writ, The case of W.E.Elliott, the insolvent oil merchant, also in jail on a capias, was revived this morning when he came up from Payetteville to give evidence anerit his absconding to the United States\u2014on the complaint of his bondsmen.The close confinement is certainly telling on bim and he finds it not as pleasant as managing an opera company.After giving his evidence he returned to jail.AWARDED DAMAGES, For the past few days the action of John Christie, of the G.N.W.Telegraph Company, against his brothers and sisters for damages for false arrest has been trying before Judge Davidson and jury\u2014this afternoon a verdict was given in favour of the plaintiff for $300.MUST FINISH THE RECORDS.Judge Loranger granted arnle this morning to compel the Prothonotary to either find a certain part of the record in the case of Wm.Hodgson vs.F.E.Bussiere, or be imprisoned for contempt of Court.Ata late hour a search was still being made for the missing documents.WHERE IS HICKMAN.Judge Loranger in the case of W.C.Hickman vs.Dame Margaret Blacklock, reserved his decision on the petition of Mr, Walker for Mrs.Blacklock askinz the Court for security of costs as Hickman was a fugitive from justice.SUIT AGAINT A CONVICT, Charles Page, the clever raiser of cheques, and now a convict in St.Vincent de Paul penitentiary, was called this morning in the Enquete Court to give evidence in the suit for $5,000 damages brought against him by Mr.Joseph Duclos, manufacturers\u2019 agent, whom he made his tool in defrauding Messrs.Beauchemin & Valois out of $25,000, Mr.DeMartigny, cashier of the Jacques Cartier Bank, testified that Duclos\u2019 name and standing had suffered considerably from Page\u2019s doings.Mr.Duclos, anticipating a judgement in his favour, has had seized Page\u2019s library, valued at $1,500.POLICE COURT.Judge Dugas sent Thomas Rooney to the penitentiary for two years for stealing from his father, a respectable farmer of Cote St.Louis.Rooney is + bad subject.Lemay and Miron, charged with stealing 45 cents from Mr.Stroud, tea merchant, will be sentenced this morning.John Rowen and Thomas Delisle were both committed for trial to the next Court of Queen\u2019s Bench, charged with burglary.RECORDER\u2019S COURT.Joseph Phoenix, for furious driving on Victoria Square, fined $5 or 15 days.There were 17 other cases of drunks with the usual fine, $5 or one month.ss THE HEREFORD RAILWAY.The recent strike and troubles on the above railway were the subject of much conversation in the hotels last night, as a number of gentlemen from the Townships threw some new light on the matter.The directors of the company are blamed for their negligence and arbitrary manner in their treatment of the Italian labourers.It is said that if they had met the men half-way there would have been no strike and no need of calling out the militia.The cost of paying the soldiers, everyone agreed, should fall on the company as well as the full wages due the labourers, and if the Federal Government failed to do their duty in the matter, Hon, Mr.Mercier's Government, it was felt, would see_that justice was done, at least to the workingmen by keeping back their dues out of the Provincial subsidy.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Mr.Owens, M.P, P.for Argenteuil, arrived in town yesterday afternoon after a two months visit to the Northwest and Vancouver, B, C.He left last evening for Lachute, WIRTER CARNIVAL.The Finance Committed eeting.A meeting of the Finance Committes of the Winter Carnival was held at the Windsor Hotel last night for the purpose of transacting general business, Mr.Tremble presided, there being present Messrs.FE.J.O'Connor, T.Leggatt, N.Michaels, W.Edgar, N.Nolan Delisle, George Swett and others.The subserip- tion list received several additions, but it is yet lacking considerable to make up the total amount of $25,000.THE MAGISTRATES\u2019 COURT.No writs being as yet returnable in the new court, there was no session yesterday.Mr.L O.David, M.P.P., made the first move taking out the two writs.However, in the Circuit Court over 75 writs were taken out.A great many lawyers are in a fog as to whether the Magis- istrates\u2019 Court is legal or not, and hence prefer taking their cases to the Circuit Court, though they at the same time admit, the legal establishing of the new court would remedy the present congestion existing in the trial of certain civil cases.McGILL UNIVERSITY\u2014FACULTY OF LAW.At a meeting of the students of this faculty, held last evening in their new class rooms in the Fraser Institute, the following students were appointed officers for the present session :\u2014President, Mr.Francis Topp, B.A.; vice-president, Mr.Alfred Eugene Harvey ; secretary, Mr.Hatchet.The president, vice-presi- dent and Mr.Charles Austin Barnard, BjA., were appointed a committee to confer with committees from the other faculties to consider some means of bringing the University Gazette more immediately under the control of the students.JUNIOR CONSERVATIVES IN COUNCIL.Last night, on a special and emergent notice, about thirty of the leading lights of the above club met at the St.Lawrence Hall, to consider the ways and means of welcoming home Mr.Robert White, M.P.for Cardwell.Mr.E.J.Bedard, the secretary of the club, was apparently the chief spirit with Mr.J.J.Curran, M.P.After considerable thought and discussion committees were struck to draft an address, see after fireworks, bands and carriages.The newly elected member will be met at the Bonaventure station by the club and escorted in procession to his house, where the address will be read while the band and pyrotechnics are doing the honours outside.It is expected Mr.White will arrive here Monday evening next at 8 p.m.AMUSEMENTS.Academy of Music, ROLAND REED.Another very good house greeted Mr.Reed and his company in the Woman Hater last evening.MISS MAUDE BANKS.The above young actress begins a week\u2019s engagement at the Academy next Monday evening in a role of classic plays.She will be supported by Mr.Ed.J.Buckley, who last year was leading man with Edwin Booth and Lawrence Barrett.The Chicago Inter-Ocean says: \u2014\u201c There is vlenty of room on the stage for such talent as Miss Banks seems to possess.Overrun as we are by mediocrity and vulgarity, the mere hope of checking the retrograde movement of the drama!by the introduction to the theatric profession of modest, pure-minded, sincere, yet gifted and intellectual women, should arouse all that is chivalrous aud helpful in criticism when such aspirants as Maude Banks come under review.There has been nothing meretricious in her methods of courting public favour.There has been no false parade, no clutching after notoriety to \u2018the sacrifice of all that is noble or pure in womau- hood ; but instead, a modest beginning, an earnest, honest effort to overcoma antagonism by proving merit, that has so far been productive of excellent results.Seats for sale at Norlheimer's, \u2018Theatre Royal, THE QUEEN'S LACE HANDKERCHIEF.If any of our theatre-goers have heretofore had a doubt as to the excellent character of the productions given by the Kimball Opera Company, they have but to see this company in the Queen\u2019s Lace Handkerchief to have their doubts dispelled.This opera was produced jn such a manner last night as to win the hearty approbation of the large audience present.The piece is in three acts, the music of which is tuneful and lively, and the plot is just strong enough to make it interesting.Miss Amy Harvey, as the King, and Miss Blanche Chapman as Donna Irene were the favourites, and fairly divided the honours of the occasion, the latter especially singing in a brilliant manner.Miss Annie Lukie did good work in a difficult part.Mr.Harry Rattenberry, as Cervantes, was in good voice and contributed his share to the success of the production.Messrs.Ed.Chapman, George Carr, Harry Winter, J.R.Murchie, and Ed.Everett, as Sancho, Minister of War, Minister of Justice, Minister of Police, and the Dancing Master respectively, were extremely ludicrous, Mr.Ed.Chapman, ag Sancho, being especially good.The costumes were brilliant and varied, and excited the admiration of the audience.The pretty chorus girls looked bewitching.Their marching and mancu- vreing in the Pleturesque garb of the Spanish brigand was a very pretty scene and was loudly applauded.By special request the Mikado will be repeated this afternoon and evening, and all who want to see a good performance should make it a point to attend.The Princess of Trebizonde will be given to-morrow.The attraction next week is Romany Rye, by H.R.Jacob's company, respecting which the Utica, (N.Y.) Herald says : \u201cThe entertainment was good in tone and character and received the hearty approval of the audience.The cast is a long one and some of the parts require excellent talent for proper representation, but good material is plenty in the company, and all were filled satisfactorily.\u201d T0 AND FRO.: Hon.Mr.and Madame Chapleau and Private Secretary Tache are stopping at the Hall.Richelieu Hotel: Chas.T.Doyle, Toronto; John Baker, Gaspe; C.O.Bilodeau, Quebec; J.R.Bruneau, 8.Trudeau, Waman, Wis., Henry O.Guy, Providence, RL; L W.Kepand wife, Brooklyn, N.Y.; H.R.Jacobs, New York.Among the arrivals at the Balmoral are: E.J.Neall and wife Boston; J.Cornent, London, Eng.; J.S.Forsythe, Florida; H.P.Delfield, New York; Rev.J.Cormack, Kingston; 8.B.Trask and wife, New York; J.Turnbull, Belleville; I.W.Simmers, Berlin; J.F.Hall, Boston; Rev.John Macleod, Richmond; W.Douglas, Woodstock; Miss McKay, H.R.Grant, Summerstown.MARINE INTELLIGENCE.MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMERS.ARRIVED, At Boston Oct.3, Buffalo, from Hull, Eng.A: New York, October 8, France, from London, At New York Oct.3, Rhynland, from Ant- werp.At New York Oct.3, Pomona, from Port Maria.At New York Oct.3, State of Indiana, from Glasgow.At New York Oct.3, Barracouta, from St.Kitts, ete.At New York Oct.3, Vertumnus, from St.Ann\u2019s Bay.Atl Antwerp, October 2.New York.At Aspinwall, September 18, Colon, from New York.At Newcastle, E., October 3, Marengo, from New York.At Marinique, October 1, Domingo, from Philadelphia.; At Havre Oct.2, Ardangorm, from Philadelphia for Rouen.At New Orleans, October 3, Buenos Ayrian, from Buenos Ayres.Off Portland Bell, October 3, Colorada, from New York for Hull.Off Frowle Point, October 2, Cynthia, from Glasgow to Montreal.| At Baracoa, October 1, Flamborough, from Guadaloupe, tor New York.; At New York Oct.3, City of Alexandria, from Mexico and Havana.; Off Dunnet Head, October 2, Gothia, from New York tor Copenhagen.At Liverpool, October 2, Lake Nepigon, from Montreal; Montreal, from do.At Newport News, October 3, Scottish Price, from Galveston, for Liverpool.Off Cape Race, September 21, State of Georgia, from New York, for Glasgow.At Philadelphia, October 3, Harold, from Boca del Toro; Laharno, from St.Ann\u2019s Bay, ame At New York, October 3, France, from London; Critie, from Leith; Finance, from South America.At New Orleans, October 1, Francisca, from Cuba; Strabo, from Rio Janeiro; Irthinzton, from Hamburg.Off the Lizard, October 2, Mareca, from Baltimore for Antwerp; 3rd, Milanese, from Boston to London.At New York Oct.3, Unita, from Baracoa, Off Gibraltar Sept.23, Iniziativa, from Palermo for New York.At Swinemunde, October 1, Island, from New York via Christtansand, etc, for Stettin; Sept.3, Balder, from New York via North Sydney for Elsinore.Noordland, from PORT OF MONTREAL.ARRIVALS.Steamship Aline, 1143, R.Forth, Pictou, In- tercolonial Co.coal.Steamship Siberian, 2358, R.8.Moore, Glasgow, H.& A.Allan, general and live stock.Steamship Glendale, 641, W.Dickman, Cow Bay, H.Dobell & Co., coal.Steamship Cynthia, 1409, J.Taylor, Glasgow, R.Reford & Co., general.Steamship Parisian, 322, W.H.Smith, Liverpool, H.& A, Allan, general, Steamship Lake Winnipeg, 2156, P.D.Murray, Liverpool, H.E.Murray, general.Steamship Southwold, 1204, Jos.Press, Sydney, F.C.Henshaw, coal.CLEARED, Steamship Toronto, 2166, J.McAuly, Liverpool, D.Torrance & Co., general.Steamship Aline, 1142, R, Forth, Pictou, In- tercolonial Co., water ballast.Steamship SouthWold, 1204, J.Press, Sydney, C.B., ¥.C.Henshaw, ballast.Steamship Cremon, 1356, J.H.Schwaner, Hamburg via London , Munderloh & Co., general.VESSELS IN PORT, Steamships Lake Ontario, 2923, H.E.Murray.Alcides, 2214, R.Reford & Co.Dominion, 2081, D Torrance & Co.Sarnia, 2421, D.Torrance & Co.Pomeranian, 2831, H.& A.Allan.Aline, 1143, Intercolomial Co.; Siberian, 2558, H.& A.Allen.Glendale, 641, H.Dobell & Co.Cynthia, 1409, R.Reford & Co.Parisian, 3262, H.& A.Allan.Lake Winnipeg, 2156, H.E.Murray.Southwold, 1204, F.C.Henshaw.Ships.Macedon, 1486, W.E.Boyd.Barques.Blanche, 822, Anderson, McKenzie & Co.Gulana, 1265, Kingman, Brown & Co.Venezuela, 983, Kingman, Brown & Ca.Rondo, 762, Anderson, MeKenzie & Co.PORT OF QUEBEC.(Herald Teleyraphie Correspondence.) QUEBEC, Oct.4.ARRIVED.Bark Leonidas Dix, Sunderland, W.H.Crawford & Co., coals etc.Bark Lyna, Wahl, Schwartz, coal.Canal boat.D.C.Bascom, Lewis, Hoboken, Bennett & Co., coal.Canal boat Nathan, Hamel, Hoboken, Bennett & Co., coal.Canal boat A.S.Spears, Dillon, Hoboken, Benneit & Co., coal.Canal boat John H.Adams Scott, Hoboken, Bennett & Co., coal.CLEARED, Steamship Concordia, MeL£gan, Glasgow, Jno Ross & Co.Schooner Marie Delphine, Blouin, St.Pierre Miquelon.master.Schooner Palina, master, Troon, Hansen & Dugal, Shlppegan, NOTES.There are no more sailing vessels open for eharter to arrive here this season, The bark Prince Patrick, previously repori- ed returned to port, having been aground in the Traverse, again proceeded to sea under sail this morning.The Government steam-hip Napoleon III will leave port.in a day or two with supplies for Gulf lighthouses and provision depots, after which she goes to Pictouffor another cargo of coals.The intention of sending a tug to the Gut of Canso to tow up the barkeatine Our Annie, which has been ashore there, has been aban- domed, and the vessel has been ordered to sail up to port.Allan line mail steamship Sardinian sailed for Liverpool at IU a.m.Steamship Dracona will arrive in port about 7 o\u2019clock to-morrow morning.Steamship Ashdene arrived from Sorel at 1.30 p.m.and proceeded.Steamship Danish Prince arrived from Montreal last night and proceeded.Steamships Chateau Leoville at 10.30 a.m.; Toronto at 6 p.m., Concordia at 1.30 p.m.and Oxenholme at 230 p.m.; all arrived from Montreal.The two former proceeded and the two latter anchored to ship deals.Steamship Gerona, reported inward in the river below, ls a new Thomson Line boat, built for the Canadian route.Steamship Norwegian, on her way down from Montreal, anchored for the night at Bat- scan GULF REPORTS.: 3 pan, I\u2019IsLEr\u2014Clear, strong gale, west wind; outwards 1 p.m.Sardinian.RIVIERE DU Lour\u2014 Clear, cold, strong northwest wind.LITTLE METis\u2014Heavy sleet storm, with hurricane from northwest; 1 schooner and 2 bateaux ashore here last night.MARTIN RIVER\u2014Raining,strong gale,northwest wind., FAME PoINT-Clear, strong northeast wind; inward 7 a.m.steamer Zerona or Gerona.CAPE MAGDALEN\u2014(Ther.439); cloudy, strong gale, northwest wind ; inwards 10 a.m.steamer K, T.S.W.; outwards Lake Ontario.CAPE RosIER\u2014Hazy, strong north wind; outwards 3 a.m.Miramichi, INLAND NAVIGATION.PURT COLBORNE, ONT., Oct, 4.ur.Steamer 13, I.Tilley and consorts, Kingston to Cleveland, light.DOWN.Steamers Armenia and consort, Toledo to Kingston, timber; Acadia, Chicago to Montreal, general cargo; schooner Montgomery, Chicago to Oswego, corn, IN HARBOUR TO-NIGUT.Schooners Ross, Caroline March, Ella Mur- ton; steamer Tilley ard consorts.Wind southwest, strong.PORT DALHOUSIE, ONT., Oct.4.up, Steamer Tilley and barges, Kingston to Ashtabula, light; propellor Waverly, Ogden s- burg to Chicago, general cargo.DOWN.Propellor Acadia, Chicago to Montreal.general cargo; steam barges Rhoda, Emily, Chicago to Ogdensburg, corn; Armenia and barge, Toledo to Garden Island, timber.Wind west, light.SAULT STE.MARIE, Mich., Oct.4.UP.p.m., Athabasca, ins- low, Nyack, 1, Montana, P- P.Prett, ra urd, Alpena.Oha, 4.15, R.J.; .M.MeGregor, 5.39.11% BJ.Hackett, W DOWN.Oscoda, Arenac, 10.40 p.m., Aurora, David Dow, 6.39 a.m., C.Tower, jr., Stheria, 7.4), Neosho, Republic, Grace Holland, 9.2, J, Gould, S.C.Baldwin, Dashing Wave, India, Grace Whitney, 10.30, Ira H.Owen, Araxes, L.W.Drake, American Giant.12 noon, China, Certes sienne, 1.40 p.m,, Gladstone, Ahira, Avery 0, 8.J.acoys Camden, 4.50, W.A.ry, H.A.Haw; 6.10.Wind south, Vent and cloudy, John V.Moran, 8 PERSONAL.Colonel Pope, late Town Major of Quebec, is reported dangerously ill at hig residence in the Ancient Capital.Mr, Hector Cameron, Q.C., Toronto and Vice-President of the Temiscouata Railway, is staying at the Windsor, Mr.H.R.Jacobs, of the Jacobs & Sparrow Theatrical Circnit, arrived from New York yesterday morning and is stopping at the Richelieu.Hon.Premier Mercier arrived in town last evening from St.Gabriel de Brandon and Quebec.He will leave this afternoon for New York and return in about a week with Mdme Mercier, who it is reported ig greatly benefitted by the medical treatment she bas received.ST.JAMES STREET.Does Contractor Hutchinson Own Et ?The contractor for the new block going up on the site of the old St.James street church seems to have a conscience imperious to everything as well as a purge that is remarkably lengthy for fines Street Inspector Flynn has time ang again had him up before the Recorder with the result of a small fine of 55,00, Of course this is a mere flea bite, and the use of the whole of St.James street is worth that much per day alone, Indeed it is hinted that Contractor Hutchinson has bought St.James streat for his own particular use and benefit, It certainly looked like it yesterday when he had a gang of men working right in the middle of the street and the entire spacs on on9 side between the car track and the curb taken up with four huge iron beams.A gentleman who lunches at the same restaurant as Mr.Hutchinson, states that that gentleman informed him that he did not care for the fines at all.If this is so there is surely some means at the disposal of the Recorder\u2014who is so severe on a poor woman at times\u2014to make this gentleman have some respect for the rights of pedestrians on St.James street.If the by-laws are no good, why have any by-laws at all.THE DIOCESAN COLLEGE Holds its Convocation and Confers Prizes.The convocation of the Montreal Dig.cesan College was held last night and drew a large attendance of the general public; as well as the students.The Very Rev.the Dean, presided.After prayer, the Rav.Principal Henderson read his report, which showed a marked advance in the College since its commencement, especially since 1878.After he had read out the prize list, the successful students \u2018were called to the platform and presented with their prizes by the Dean.There were remarks from the Rev.Mr.Garrett and the Dean after this, when the gathering dispersed with a hymn and the benediction.The Principal acknowledged the donation of forty-one volumes to the College library by the late Dr.Bray.The prize list was as follows :\u2014Firsts, Scripture history, Capel and Judge ; 39 Articles, Capel ; Inspiration of Scripture, Capel ; sermonic composition, Elliott ; elocution, James: extempore speaking, Judge ; general proficiency, Judge.The above passed.The awards of mention were :\u2014Prayer Book, Capel, Beattie and Wood ; inspiration of Scripture, Capel.Beattie and Wood ; Greek Testament, Capel, Dodd, Beattie and Mitchell ; apologetics, Judge and Wood ; composition, Elliott, Judge, James, Wood, Cole, Capel, Jekyll, Coffin, Blunt, Mitchell, Page and Beattie ; atonement, Beattie ; elocution, James, Elliott, Judge, Jekyll, Blunt ; extempore speaking, Judge, Elliott, Jekyll and Blunt.AFTER W.R- FOSTER, JR.Another of Pinkerton\u2019s sharp detectives hag arrived in the city to hunt up he noted Foster, the absconding mortgage forger of the New York Produce Exchange.The detective is a rather { handsome many with a military air and not the least like a \u201cbobbie\u201d in mufti.He strolled along St.James street yesterday afternoon keeping a sharp eye on those who looked American in cut of dress and general make up.Foster was raced to St.Albans, Vt., where he is known to have been on Saturday, and since then all trace of him was lost.It is now conjectured that he came on to Montreal and reached here on Saturday night and is hiding in or near the city.Again he may have plaved foxey and doubled on the officers.A reward of $250 is offered for information of his whereabouts.Our local detectives are on the watch and all trains coming and going are closely scrutinized.Some of them think Foster reached hers Saturday night, but at once left by the G.T.R.midnight \u2018express for \"Toronto.New York reports say: No further forgeries were discovered yesterday and the bope is growing stronger that the limit has already been ascertained.Levies were made yesterday upon the possible balances.Foster may have in three banks, upon his interest in the Lawyers\u2019 Title Guarantee Company, and upon whatever interest of value he may have had in the several clubs of which he wasa member.With these, all the property of every character of which Foster was known to be possessed, has been seized upon by the officers of the law to answer to the suit of the trustees of the Gratuity Fund, Absolutely Pure.This Powder never varies.A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomeness.More economical than the ordinary kinds, an cannot be sold in competition with the multi tude of low-test, short-weight alum or phos hate Powders.Sold only tn cans, ROYAL BAKING PoWDER Co., 106 Wall street, N.Y.TER HERALD 18 printed and published by \u201cTHE HERALD COMPANY (Limited) Hon.Peter Mitchell, President, at No.Beaver Hall Hill, Montreal."]
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