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Titre :
Montreal daily herald
Éditeur :
  • Montreal :James N. Greenshields,1892-1896
Contenu spécifique :
jeudi 19 janvier 1893
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  • Journaux
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autre
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  • Montreal herald (1888)
  • Successeur :
  • Herald (Montréal, Québec: 1896)
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Montreal daily herald, 1893-01-19, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" EF EDDY°S AD.TO-DAY | 18 A POINTER FOR YOU.regs 20 nun Rk Th FREAD ITT.W | | Montreal Daily Fferald EDDY'S AD.TO-DAY | 18 A POINTER FOR YOU.oe a0 205 ae ve at ae TREAD ITW | es EIGHTY-SIXTH YEAR.NO.16.MONTREAL, THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 19, 1893.\u2014 PRICE TWO CENTS.ABOUT THE HOUSE Some Facts Concerning the Coming Session of Parliament.changes in the Personnel of the Cabinet, Commons and Senate\u2014Some Interesting\u2014 History in Regard to Mr.Edward Farrer The Department of Interlor Report\u2014 Meeting of World\u2019s Falr Commissioners.[Special to The Herald.) Ottawa, Jan, 18.\u2014The third session of the seventh Parliament of Canada meets a week from to-morrow.To-day the list of members showing how the House will stand et the opening, was received from the vrinters.A glance at the list shows that a aumber ot new faces will appear in the House of Commons when it meets a week irom to-morrow.Taking the names alphabetically it is noticed that Louis De Gou- raque Belley succeeds Mr.Savard for Chi- coutimi ; Rathamel Boyd takes the place of R.Watson for Marquette, Man.; John A.Chelsey replaces C.N.Skinner, who was made a judge for St.John, N.B.; W.W.McDonald will sit for East Assiniboia instead of Hon.Edgar Dewdney, who resigned, to become Lieut.-Governor of British Columbia; Dr.S.Lachapelle will represent Hochelaga in place of A.Desjardins, called to the Senate; P.Leclair takes Hon.J.A.Chapleau\u2019s place for Terrebonne, the latter being now Lieut.-Governor of Quebec ; Geo V.Meluerney succeeds Dr.Leger for Kents N.B.; J.Israel Tarte becomes member for L\u2019Islet in place of Mr.L.G.Desjardins, who was appointed to the Quebec Legislature; Mr.Carscallen takes the place of Mr.Bowell f.r North Hastings.This will make nine new members who had not à seat last session.Mr.Tarte represented Montmorency during the previous session.The Government gained a seat in Marquette and lost one in L'Islet.Instead of Kent, N.B., being represented by a Conservative, an Independent Conservative will sit for that constituency.An Independent Conservative has also been returned for St.John, N.B., instead of Mr.Gkinner, Conservative.The others are straight Government candidates.The result of these changes politically would be that the Liberals have lost one straight party man and the Government have got two Independent Conservatives instead of two staunch followers.There is no reason to believe otherwise than that the Independents will vote with the Government, although they were opposed in their election by the machine, COMPOSITION OF THE CABINET, The Cabinet will be composed of 12 members, holding portfolios, instead of 13.Of the Cabinet of last session Hon, John Carl.ing drops his portfolio, although still & member of the Cabinet.The other new Cabinet Ministers are : Hon.Messrs.Angers, Ives and Daly.The under-secretaries, who will appear as such in the House for the first time, are : Messrs.Wood, Wallace and Cur- ran.It is a mistake to give the title \u201cfon.\u201d to these, although The Official Gazette and sume leading newspapers do so.Their positions ave created by statute, and Her Majesty alone can confer titles.Hon.Mackenzie Bowell and Hon.Mr.Angers will sit in the Senate.CHANCES IN THE SENATE.The changes in the Senate since last session are: Dr.John Ferguson, of Welland, who takes the place of the late Senator Plumb ; Alphonse Desjardins, of Delormier, who succeeds Senator Lacoste, who was ap- ointed Chief Justice of the Province of Que- Poe: Thos.A.Bernier, of St.Bouiface, Manitoba, who succeeds the late Senator Girard, and John Nesbit Kirchoffer, of Brandon, a new appointment, owing to the increase of population, as shown by the last census in that province, Hon.Mackenzie Bowell has been called to the Senate to succeed Hou.George Alexander, who has resigned, Mr.Rowell also becomes leader of the House.Hon.A.R.Angers succeeds the late Senator Paquet for the Lavaltrie division of Quebec ; Clarence Primrose replaces the lute Benator Grant, for Pictou, N.S.This will make seven new senators who will be introduced for the first time this session.\"There are still four vacancies\u2014one in Ontario, one.in Quebec, one in Nova Scotia, aud one in New Brunswick.If these vacancies were filled it would be bringing the membership of the Upper House to 51 members.SOME INTERESTING HISTORY.\u201cCanadian,\u201d writing to the Free Press, to-night, in regurd to Sir John Thompson\u2019s epeech in Toronto, says: \u201cIt is evident from Sir John Thompson\u2019s remarks about Fdward Farrer, that the Premier does not know as much as he ought to about his own purty\u2019s history, Let me enlighten him a little.I agree with you that Mr.Farrer has a better right to work for New York papers than Sir John Thompson had to hire himself out to the United States government to work against Canada.But at all events what have the Liberals to do with Mr, Farrer, and why should they worry about him?A few years ago Mr.Farrer was working in New York.The Tory ministers brought him back to Canada to prepare their campaign literature for them, and paid him handsomely for the job.Let Sir Jchn Thompson ask his very loyal colleague, Mr.Bowell, if that is not so, and Mr.Farrer was as ardent an an- nexationist then as he is now.Subsequently Mr.Farrer was made editor of The Winnipeg Times, the Government organ in the Northwest, half his salary being paid by the Tory committee of the C.P.R.company.Afterwards he was brought to Toronto to edit the Government organ there.Why did not the Tory leaders leave Mr.Farrer in the United States when he was there?They are responsible for his presence in Canada to-day, if he is here.\u201d INTERIOR DEPARTMENT REPORT.The annual report of the Department of the Interior for 1892 is in course of preparation.The homestead entries for the year numbered 4948.compared with 2955 during 1891, an increase of 1423.Of those who took up homesteads in Manitoba,the Northwest and British Columbia last year, 2831 entries were made by settlers from the older provinces.Of these, 1621 went from Ontario.There were 513 entries made by parties from the United States.Ninety- two of these were Canadians returning from the United States.The nationalities of the homestenders were: English 603, Scotch 175, Irish 31, French 107, Belgians 53, Italians 5, Germans 95, Austro-Hungarians 136, Russians 242, Mennoites 13, Swedes 50, Danes 13, Icelanders 76, Poles 5, Roum- anians 3, unknown 3.During the year 1632 settlers purchased land from the C.P.R.Of the purchasers 800 were from Ontario and 450 from the United States.Aitogether the C.P.R.sold 87,680 acres of land.WORLD\u2019S FAIR COMMISSIONERS MEET.The Provincial commissioners of the World\u2019s Fair met the Dominion commis- siuners to-day for the purpose of talking over what has already Leen done and what is necessary to do in regard to making the Canadian \u2018exhibit a success, Besides the Dominion representatives, there were is too ill to attend to the duties; N.Awrey, - M.P.P., for Ontario; C.F.Law, British Columbia; and Senator W.D.Perley, Northwest territories.Nova Scotia and Manitoba were not represented, although both provinces intend sending exhibits.The whole discussion this forenoon was in regard to the furnishing and fixing of the offices and rooms of the Canadian pavilion.The offer of the owners of the Remington typewriling machines to place cabinets and typewriters free of charge in all the offices of the building was accepted.On the invitation of Dr.Selwyn the commissioners, at two o\u2019clock, visited the Geological Museum and had a talk over the mineral exhibit.GENERAL CAPITAL NOTES.Invitations were issued to-day from gov- erninent house to the usual state dinner to be given on l'hursday next, opening day.Lady Stanley will give an \u2018\u2018at home\u201d at 9.30 after the dinner.Sir John Thompson and colleagues returned this afternoon from Sherbrooke.A Cabinet Council meeting was then held, lasting until six o'clock.A special session of the county council of Pontiac has beea called for the 20th inst., when the railway bonus difficulty will be discussed and considered.Mr.Dalton McCarthy, Q.C., was to-day asked whether he had Deen retained to appear in the Manitoba schools\u2019 question, when it comes before the Dominion Cabinet on Saturday.Mr.McCarthy replied with a positive \u2018\u2018no, I am not.\u201d Mr.J.C.Forbes, the Canadian arcist, is becoming popular south of the line.Since his return from Europe he has been commissioned to paint the portrait of the president of Princeton College, in preference to all American artists He has also been selected to execute a number of other important limning works in the States.Hon.C.H.Tupper, Minister of Marine and Fisheries, sails on Wednesday next from New York for Eugland per steamship Majestic.He will attend the preliminary meeting of the Behring Sea arbitrators at Paris next month.Ex-Mayor Lucas, of Calgary, has been engaged by the Domimon Government to undertake immigration work.The Manitoba Government at the last moment has declined to send an exhibit to the Canadian section of the World's Fair.Premier Greenway wrote a letter to Acting Commissioner Larke, announcing this sudden move, but .gave no reason for doing so.He added that he intended to rent à building outside the Fair grounds for the Manitoba exhibit.It is probable that Manitoba cattle will alone be shown inside the grounds, Prof.King, of the Interior depurtment, will leave here in April with a surveyors\u2019 party in order to make a preliminary survey of the boundary between British Columbia.and Alaska.The United States Government will also send a surveying party.It is probable that the points there agreed upon will lead to a settlement of the boundary question.MANGLED ALMOST SHAPELESS.Terrible Fate of a Temporary Engineer in Electric Light Works.Utica, N.Y., Jan.18.\u2014Charles Clarke, a lineman employed by the Electric Light company at Oneida, was this forenoon acting as engineer in the absence of the man regularly employed in that capacity.About 11 o'clock Clark was engaged in oiling the engine, when from some cause his foot slipped and he fell against the huge fly wheet of the engine.The wheel wus revolving very rapidly and Clarke, entan~lert in the spokes, and striking against other parts of the machina, was mangled to an almost shapeless mass before the machinery could be stopped.He was 28 years of age, and leaves a wife and one child.DREADFUL SLEIGHING FATALITY.Eight Parsons Instantly Killed While Returning From a Dance.Providence, R.I., Jan.18.\u2014A dreadful accident occurred at a crossing near Lons.dale on the Providence and Worcester Raul- road about half-past one o\u2019clock this morning.A sleighing party from Pawtucket, returning from a dance and supper at Woonsocket, was struck by a locomotive of a freight.train.Eight persons were instantly killed and sixteen injured.Of the injured it is feared eight or ten will die.Among the dead are: Mr.Wilson, of No.51 Central street; Robert Cook, 31 Central street; Henry Draper, Beatty street; Annie Wilson, and Mr.and Mrs.Gowan, Dexter street.The driver of the sleigh and a young lady friend of Miss Wilson, whose names have not yet been learned, were also killed.HEAD NEARLY TORN OFF.Horrible Scene at the Execution of Wm.McEwen at Glasgow.Glasgow, Jan.18.\u2014A horrible scene occurred to-day at the execution of Willium McEwen, for the murder of a woman at West Pollockshiels.McEwen, after committing the crime, had attempted to commit suicide by cutting his throat.It was thought he would die trom the effects of the wound, but the doctors succeeded in saving him for the gallows, although his neck was left in a weak condition.When he was brought out for execution this morning the mark of the self-inflicted wound could plainly be seen.The condemned man was given a drop of seven feet.He walked without apparent fear to the gallows, and the rope was adjusted.When the bolt was drawn the man\u2019s head was nearly torn off, and blood gushed out over his body and the gallows.Death was instantaneous.LITERALLY CHOPPED TO PIECES.Horrible Murder of a Chicago Chinese Laundryman by a Visitor.Chicago, Jan.18.\u2014The horribly chopped body of Jung Din Kan, a Chinese laundryman, was found in his shop this morning.A blood-clotted cleaver, hatchet and dagger, which had been used to slay him, were nearby, while Jung Jack Sin, a chinaman, who arrived here from Kansas City last evening, was cooly washing his hands in the place when the police arrived.He was gore bespattered from head and foot.The fellow's shoes had been removed, and his stockings were literally soaked in blood.He was instantly arrested, bus had the effrontery to deny auy knowledge of the crime, saying he had found the dead body on returning from a restaurant after an hours absence.The victim\u2019s condition showed, Lowever, that the crime had taken place many hours before.It is believed that the Kansas City Chinaman came here specially to kill the Chicago man and that the murderer is a highbinder.Lord Elphinstone Dead.London, Jan.18.\u2014Lord Elphinstone died to-day in Musselburg, Scotland.Davitt For Northwest Cork.London, Jan.8.-~Michael Davitt has consented to stand as a candidate for Northeast Cork, one of the seats to which Wm.O\u2019Brien was elected in July.Davitt\u2019s election is certain, there having been no opposition to the nationalist candidate for several years.Ce Shortly after eight o'clock last evening Sergeant Beauchemin received a telephone message from St.Anne's requesting him to FAILED IN A DUTY.The Provincial Government And The Beauport Asylum Deal.Mr.Tessier, in Calling for All Correspondence Regarding the Valuation of Pro- periy, Shows That the Government Has Been Amiss in Its Duty in the Matter\u2014 Beauharnols Judicial Affairs Shown up [Special to The Herald.] Quebec, Jan.18.\u2014Several brisk debates took place in the Assembly this afternoon giving to the sitting, although a short one, considerable importance.Mr.Casgrain introduced bills to amend the Civil code, the code of civil procedure and the revised statutes regarding non- juridical days to conform with the ecclesiastical decree abolishing the feast of St.Peter and St.Paul, Corpus Christi and the Immaculate Conception.Mr.Turgeon was informed by Mr.Beau- bien that Mr.Monfette, of Nicolet, who so complaisantly resigned in favor of the Minister of Agriculture, had received last summer $434 as inspector of colonization roads in Rimouski, Joliette and Terre- bonne.| At Mr.Cooke\u2019s request it was decided that his resolution for the abolition of the Legislative council would be tuken into consideration on Tuesday next.CONCERNING À MAGISTRATE.Mr.Stephens moved for all correspon- deuce between the Government and district magistrate Garon, of Rimouski, concerning the decision in the Banville-Gauthier case.The facts of the case, as will be rewmnem- bered, were as follows : Constable Banville, the village constable of St.Jerome of Matane, having been named one of the special constables at the polls, was beaten by Gauthier, one of the Conservative workers.Banville carried the matter before magistrate Garon, who, to the general astonishment, bound both men over to keep the peace under pain of one months imprisonment.Mr.Stephens thought that such a decision was worth ÿ of being discussed before the legislature.The case under consideration, he said, was one of the most extraordinary which had ever come under his notice, and since the Government had decided to economise on district magistrates in Montreal, they might, perbaps,think it advisable to do so elsewhere; seeing that the institution in general was not a success, but quite the reverse.Mr.Pinault, of Matane, spoke in favor of Mr.Stephens\u2019 motion and gave as an instance of justice as rendered by Magistrate Garon, instancing the case of the cure of St.Felicite, who was sent to jail in Rimouski because a little pig which had strayed away had been found dead at the foot of a cliff bordering on the cure\u2019s property.The Government made no reply to these statements, but allowed the motion to pass.THE BEAUPORT ASYLUM.Mr.Tessier, of Portnenf, then made his motion for all correspondence regarding the valuation of Beauport asylum.In doing so he expressed the hope that the Government would snow more good will and give more ample details than they had last autuinn, and that there would be found a sufficient number of independent men in the house to force them to do go if otherwise disposed.The government had not obeyed the order of the house issued at last session, instructing them to produce all correspondence between the then Premier de Bonchervilie and the nuns.It was perfectly well known that since that time negotiations had been continued, and that the Grey nuns had offered to take charge of the insane at the rate of $100 a head instead of $132; that, furthermore, they were ready to submit to medical control and build a model asylum according to the most approved plans.Neither Government nor the nuns were bound to buy up the Beauport Asylum, but that the latter were nevertheless ready to do so if so ordered by the Government at the price of $270,000, as valued by the proprietors themselves by a notarial act passed in 1884.They were even ready, he had been told, to go further and pay up to $325,000.Why then did the Government cont:nue to hesitate and temporize in a matter which had now become of great importance and urgency to the province?THE PROVINCIAL SECRETARY'S REPLY.Mr, Pelletier in reply to Mr.Tessier said that the question was rather long to be replied to categorically, but that all the information sought would be found in publio documents to be laid on the table of the House.On the motion also put by Mr.Tessier for correspondence in connection with this asylum question the valuation of the institution and the letters passed between the Government, asylum proprietors and the Grey Nuns, the Hon.Provincial Secretary declared that in the correspondence in his possession there was no letter from the nuns to the Government offering to take charge of the asylum.There may have been private correspondence with Mr.De Boucherville, the ex-premier, but if so it was not official and not to be found on record in his department.The Government had nothing te conceal in the matter and it would be seen that it had done its best to settle this important question, and could not be blamed if it had not as yet succeeded.He had already a return prepared in anticipation of the present motion, but, of course, it only covered the official correspondence in the case.It must be understood that the Government had no control over any letters that may have been exchanged between the nuns and the proprietors of.the asylum.The Government hud received two reports of the arbitrators appointed to value the asylum property, but he wished to make it clear that, though one of the arbitrators had been called a Government arbitrator, he was really the representative of the nuns.He gave the various valuations of the property, which have already been published in The Herald, and which range from $308,000 to $707,000.MR.MARCHAND CRITICIZES.Mr.Marchand pointed out that although the contract with Beauport expired on April 30 next, the Government admitted having done nothing whatever so far towards concluding the negotiations, and was not in a position to submit the new contract tothe Legislature for approval.How then did the Govermment expect, after so much waste of tine, that they would be enabled to prepare a satisfactory contract during the hurry and bustle of the session, especially when none of the important ministerial measures had been brought down ?How could the members be expected to give proper consideration to any contract that might be drafted at the lust moment?The House would be called upon to consider hastily a measure hastily drawn up, and surely the inconvenicnce of such a method had been exemplified strikingly enough on several recent occasions.lt appeared from Mr.Pelietier\u2019s explanation that the Government\u2019s sole aim so far had been to look after the interests of certain of their friends.The nuns bad been called upon to buy up Beauport at a price altogether exorbitant, as it appeared from the value put send out a detective to arrest a nan who present: S.C.Stevenson, representing Que- rec in the place of Hon.J.McIntosh.who had stabbed another in a quarrel.upon it by the proprietors themselves time when all the buildings were new and the contract many years yet to run, He was afraid that the Government was remaining inactive, as if either to force the nuns to purchase the property at the proprietur's price or else to let the time pass by so that the contract would have to he renewed with the latter at their own price.THE PREMIER AND MR.STEPHENS.The Prime minister speaking on the asylum question said the Government had certainly done its best to bring the matter to a successful issue.Not having done so they were continuing the negotiations so as to make the very pest possible bargain, House might rest assured that the interests of the province would be carefully safeguarded by the Government, but he be- ieved that a third asylum was not either desirable or necessary in the province under the existing circumstances.Mr.Stephens characteristically remarked that it was no part of the Government's duty to look after the interests of the asylum proprietors.It looked to him as if the differences in the valuation of the property tended to sHow the existemce of a \u2018\u2018nigger on the fence\u201d somewhere.He said it was not safe to leave the matter drifs along too far or take care of itself, or the government might later find itself taken by the throat.The government was under no obligation to buy the property of the present asylum Bpeople, which might for instance be turned into a summer hotel.The debate was then closed and the motion passed.BEAUHARNOIS JUDICIAL DEFECTS.There was a long discussion on Mr.Stephens\u2019 motion for a statement of the number oË cases instituted in the Circuit aud Superior courts of the district of Beauharnois during the years 1889 to1892.Mr.Stephens complained of the tediousness and expense of litigation in the district of Beauharnois as compared with other districts.No doubt the complaints were in part to be attributed to the defects in the code of procedure; and the high tariff of the bar, which never ought to have been sanctioned, had also something to do with it.But something elso must be wrong also, and the matter should be sifted to the bottom.Mr.Casgrain admitted that the tariff was too high and would have to be modified.He also admitted that the code of civil procedure was not altogether what it ought to be.The Government had been giving this matter its most earnest attention and the work of revision of the code of procedure had been going on since six months, He hoped before the end of the session to be enabled to submit to the House a draft of the labors of the commission.He would not, however, ask the House to adopt it before next session as he wished first to submit it to the bar, the bench and the boards of trade.Mr.Taillon defended Judge Belanger, of Beauharnois district.Mr.Greig and Mr.Bisson continued the discussion./ MEMBERS AFTER INFORMATION.The motion was carried, as were also the following : Mr.Stephens\u2014Correspondence in connection with the granting of a petition of right in favor of the Canada Bank Note Company and Edmond Temple in connection with a contract.Mr.Stephens\u2014Copy of the contract of Phillip Valliere for furniture for the Montreal Court House.Mr.Stephens\u2014Statement of all sums of inoney received from taxes imposed by the Legislature.Mr.Caron\u2014Correspondence upon the subject of the distribution of the monies voted for colonization purposes in the County of Maskinonge.Mr.Gladu\u2014Copy of the orders-in-coun- cil, if any were passed, fixing the commissions to be retained by the various collectors of the Provincial revenue on the direct taxes collected on.Mr.Gladu\u2014Statement of all amounts collected by the various collectors of provincial revenue in each district of the province on successions and transfers of real estate.Mr.Gladu\u2014Statement of the amounts collected as direct taxes on sales, transfers, etc., of real estate, from the 24th of June, 1892, to the 31st December, 1892, The House adjourned at 5.30 p.m.Mr.Biaine\u2019s Unchanged Condition.Washington, Jan.18.\u2014Mr.Blaine has passed an uneventful day, and to-night there is no apparent change in his condition.He is entirely conscious and converses with the members of the family, attendants and hysicians at will, though he is discouraged y : his physicians from any excessive talk.New C.P.R.Elevator for Quebse.Quebec, Jan, 18.\u2014Mr, Shaughnessy, vice- president of the C.P.R., has given instructions to contractors for the construction of a grain elevator with a capacity of about 250,000 bushels which will be commenced with-in a fortnight on the Louise embankment, and the C.P.R.superintendent of elevators, Mr.Davidson, has been summoned here by telegraph.A FATAL COLLISION, A Freight Train Run Into by Another With Disastrous Results.Connellsville, Pa., Jan.18.\u2014A wrcok occurred at Ellerslie station on the east of the Baltimore and Ohio\u2019s Pittsburg division last night in which two men lost their lives.Freight train No.72, eastbound, was standing at Ellerslie when the second section crashed into the rear end.Fireman Isaac Scott and brakeman Houk, both of Connellsville, were crushed to death.Engineer Norris of the second section and three other Americans were badly injured, two of them, it is feared, fatally.A Farmer's Congress.The Provincial Dairy Association, having been asked in consequence of its intimate relations with Agriculture and its Provincial character, to undertake the organization of a Grand Songress of the iarmers of ihe Province, the Executive Committee neld meetings on the 10th and 11th of January at Quebec, Messrs.8.A.Fisher Vice-Pres., and J.C.Chapais, J.de L.Tache, E.A.Barnard, directors, and Castet, Sec.were present.It was decided that the Congress shoud take piace at Quebec on the 24th 23ih and 20vh inst.The General meetings will be held at 10 A.M.and 8 P.M.on the 24th, 8 P.M.the 25th, and 10 A.M.and 2 P.M.the 26th.The six sections of the Congress will meet at 2 P.M.the 24th, and 9 AM.and 2 P.M.the 25:h.All farmers and friends of agriculiure are invited to attend both the general meetings and the sections in which they Are most interested.In these sectional meetings questions of special interest will be persecuted oy voe most competent authorities.We shall shortly publish a full programme of the Congress the great importance of which we trust will attract the notice and attendance of ail who are in anyway connected with or interested in agriculture.Mr.Duff Definitely Retires.Mr.J.M.M.Duff has definitely decided not to be a candidate for aldermanic honors.He explains his position in a lengthy letter in a notarial deed passed in 1884 at a both for the province and the insane.The }- THE EGYPT FUSS.Complete Backdown of the Khedive From His Position.He Will Make No Alteration in His Ministry Hereafter Without Consulting Great Britain\u2014France Feels Kind of Put Out Over the Matter and it is Discussed in the Chamber of Deputies.Cairo, Jan.18.\u2014The flurry in Egyptian political affairs has ended in the complete withdrawal of the Khedive from the position taken by him, and henceforth, unless sons untoward event occurs, Great Britain will have all to say as to who shall fill the Egyptian Cabinet offices.The Khedive today informed Lord Cromer, the British Minister, that he would appoint Riaz Pasha president of the Council of Ministers.Riaz is known to be friendly to British interests.Lord Cromer assented to the appointment, and secured from the Khedive an understanding that hereafter he would make no alteration in the Ministry without consulting Great Britain.DISCUSSED IN THE FRENCH CHAMBERS.Paris, Jan.18.\u2014In the Chamber of Deputies to-day M.Deloncle questioned the Government as to the truth of the report that Great Britain had compelled the Khedive to cancel the appointment of nne of his ministers and what action France intended to take in the matter.Mr.Develle, minister of foreign affairs, replied that it would be difficult at the present time to give particulars regardin the serious events at Cairo.The edive, he added, was acting within his rights when he changed the chief of his Cabinet.The French Government, with the greatest calmness, was inquiring into the matter.M.Develle further said that nothing affecting the independence of Egypt could be a matter of indifference to France.(Cries of \u2018\u2018hear, hear.\u201d) M.Waddington, the representative of France 1n Great Britain, had been instructed to see Lord Rosebery, the British foreign minister, and confer with him on the subject.\u2018The Temps says that the event throws light upon the falseness of British statesmen, the real extent of British pretensions, and the shamelessness of British policy in transforming a provisional protectorate into ure annexation.But, the Temps adds, the British press triumphs too soon.GREAT BRITAIN\u2019S COURSE APPROVED, London, Jan.- 19\u2014Despatches from Berlin, Vienna and Rome show thac the dailies of all three cities approve of Great Britain\u2019s cause in Egypt.The Cairo correspondent of The Times says: Bouillie Bey, the Khedive\u2019s professor in Vienna accompanied him to this city.He had great influence over the Khedive and is supposed to have induced him to appoint Fakir Pasha.He will now be sent on a prolonged leave of absence.THE PANAMA PROSECUTION.Conolusion of the Address of Advocate-Gen- eral Rau Against the Prisoners.Puris, Jan.18.\u2014Advocate-General Rau continued his address to-day against the accused directors of the Panama canal enterprise and their associates.He said that the defendants could not find shelter under the law of prescription, as the offenses charged had been committed within the last three years, although they originated earlier, The issue of the lottery bonds was a swindle, the reports published contained inaccurate figures intended to mislead the public and fraudulent underwriting syndicates were formed, for all of which Ferdinand de Lesseps and the other accused were equally responsible.Eiffel was an accomplice in the frauds, secretly receiving money, knowing well that the money he received was part of the proceeds of the swindle.Eiffel had executed scarcely any portion of the works.He had supplied hardly any materials; he had simply em- blezzed the company\u2019s funds.In conclusion Advocate-General Rau demanded severe punishment for the men, who in order to attract capital had recourse to every kind of trick and fraud.CONDUCTED TO TEE FRONTIER.M.Szelkely, Austrian newspaper correspondent, whose expulsion from France was ordered by the Governmet, was escorted to the frontier by two policemen to-day.Arriving there he was told that he must never return to France again.INTERESTING PANAMA TALK.London, Jan.18.\u2014=The Paris correspondent of The Daily News says that M.Dupuy- Dutemps, despite his protestations in the commission yesterday, did make charges against M.De Cassagnac recently in a let ter to & Toulogn daily, with which he corresponded.One of the accusations was that the person indicated by the initials \u201cPp.C.,\u201d mentioned in M.Flory's report on the Panama accounts, was Paul De Cassagnac.Yesterday M.De Cassagnac admitted receiving 60,000 francs for Panama advertising inserted in the columns of his paper, but contended that this was the amount due him according to his advertising rates and the space occupied by the Panama notices.The same rates, he said, would have been presented to the Bon Marché or any other mercantile concern.Before de Cassagnac left the commission, says The News correspondent, M.Dupuy-Dutemps lost his temper,and ceasing to deny his responsibility for the charges exclaimed : \u201cWell, if P.C.does not stand for Paul de Cassagnac, what does it stand for ?\u201d \u201cIt is not my business to supply you with information,\u201d was M.de Cassagnac\u2019s retort.Charles Lalou, editor of La France and deputy for the Nord, The News correspondent heurs, yesterday challenged Camille Dreyfus to & duel.\u201cThe cordinlity of a chat between M.Bourgeois and M.Rouvier in the Chamber yesterday,\u201d says the correspondent, \u2018* gives color to the rumor that deputies Rouvier, Roche, Arenc and Dugue de La Faconniere and Senator Beral will be whitewashed.For Senator Grevy, who is powerless to help friend or hurt foc, and for Senators Renault and Deves, and deputy Antonin Proust, things will be made hot Interest is centred in the confession of Charles De Lesseps to M.Franqueville.He gave an oral history of the Panama bribery, and implicated more deputies as receivers of regular subsidies from the canal.It is alleged that he gave details of dates and amounts, and that the summonses for the men whom he named have already been issued.M.De Lesseps compared the Panama, offices with the forest of Bondy, into which all the brigands of Paris crowded.*\u201cI'hey were the source of constant terror,\u201d he said.\u201cTheir attitude was, your money or your life.\u201d The case against Herse rests upon M.De Lesseps\u2019 confession, that under the influencé cf an evil stTrestion he gave money to Po ai;De Rein 6.\u2018The Daily «-hronicle\u2019s baris correspondent says that the vague accusations against Baron Mohrenheim, Russian Ambassador, are the outcome of a conspiracy instigated by another ambassador in Paris, , MORE FACTS COME OCT.The first witness before the parliamentary commission of inquiry to-day was M.Ste- in the advertising columns.Reinach\u2019s partner M.Propper.He said Baron de Reinach had left hima list of the persons compromised in the distribution of Panama money.Among the names on the list were Arene, Deves, Grevy, Roche, Dugue de La Fauconniere, Rouvier, Floquet, Proust, Renault, Barbe, Boral and Theve- net.Several of the names were repeated on the list, as the men indicated had received Panama money more than once, The whole list contained the names of more shan 100 deputies who had been beneficiaries of the Panama fund.The sums paid to these men varied between 100U ar 2000 and 300,000 francs each.M.Stephane said that he gave the list to M.Clemenceau, who he thought could make the best use of it.Considerable questioning on the part of Chairman Brisson elicited many additional facts which went to show that M.Stephane had had in his possession a list similar to the one photographed for M.Andrieux.Mr.Stephane was requested w waitin the conunittee room, while M- Clemenceau was being summoned from the Chamber, Five minutes later Clemens ceau arriv.d.Chairman Brisscn repent.d briefly what M.Stephane had said.M, Clemenceau denied emphatically that he had ever received any list of com- Promised deputies from anybody.He had not even heard of such a list from Baron de Reinach or anybody concerned with him in business M.Stephane was then recalled.He repeated his former testimony without variation, directly contradicting everything thas Clemenceau had said.: The Debats says the police have found 300 checks paid by Mr.Arton, the Panama lobbyist and agent of Baron de Reinach, and endorsed by conspicuous men, It is supposed that most of these cheoks were drawn in favor of the 104 deputies among whom M.Andrieux said Arton was commissioned to spend 1,350,000 francs.THE L\u2019ISLET RECOUNT.Mr.Tarte Speaks of the Manoeuvres to Deprive Him of His Seat.[Special to The Heraid.] Quebec, Jan.18.\u2014Mr.Tarte arrived im town, late this afternoon, the C.P.R.having been delayed, owing to an accident to the locomotive To a question concerning the facts of the L'Isloë recount, Mr.Tarte said that Mr.Dionne, the deleated candidate, after having ape plied to Judges Tasault and Andrews for a recount within the legal delay of four days, and after having been refused by them, drove up to St.Mary's, Beauce, where Judge Pelletier happened to be at the time, and obtained a recount from him on Monday, two days after the delay fixed by law had expired.The reasonapt forth by him was that among the persons who voted there were a certain number against whom appeals had been pending since 1891.It will be easily understood that such 4 reason is no reason at all.In any case, the recount bas been granted and will take place.The deputy returning officers had received, they said, orders to refuse ballots toi those who had been appealed against, unless they could swear Yhat their names had actually been omitted on the lists.Mr.Tarte had thus been deprived of 25 votes to which he was entitled, by reason of the refusal of the deputy returning officers to give out ballots, Th's trick was not suf- ficieut to prevent Mr.Tarie\u2019s election and now his opponents have resolved by means of vexatious proceedings to prevent the returning officer, who is an ardent Tory, from proclaiming him elected.Mr.Tarte has retained as his lawyers Messrs.I.X.Lemieux, Chas.Fitzpatrick.Fre.Langelier and Dechene.They will immediately take steps to have their elient\u2019s rights recognized.Mr.Tarte said to your correspondent that the efforts of his opponents were to him rather amusirg than otherwise.He refused to express any opinion upon the conduct of Judge Pelletier, but declared that he had been elected by the majority in {Islet and that nothing that could be done would deprive him, of his seat.The most enlightened Conservatives here disapprove of the eiforts which are being made to deprive Mr.Tarte of his seat.He will be in, à position to give further details on these points to-morrow, but the pubiic might be sure that the most energetic measures would be taken.Attempted Burglary.Mr.W.Beck, 23 Belmont street, was awakened at 2.30 a.m.this morning by a burglar entering his bedroom and proceeding to go through his pants\u2019 pockets and quickly pulling a revolver from underneath his pillow, fired two shots at him, but did not hit him.The intruder quickly decamped, and, although chased, succeeded in making good his escape.Mr.Beck has the consolation of having demolished the glass of two doors in his attempt to capture the burglar.The description of the man exactly tallies with one who called at the house the day previous and asked for something to eat from Mrs.Beck.To-Day\u2019s Amusements, ACADEMY \u201c A Wife's Folly,\u201d 8 p.m, QUEEN'S THEATRE\u2014\u201cEight Bells,\u201d 8 p.m.THEATRE ROYAL\u2014*\u201cA Dark Secret,\u201d 2 and 8 Mm.\u201c SOHMER PARE\u2014Variety entertainment, 3 and 8 p.m.CyCLORAMA\u2014\u2018\u201cCuster\u2019s Last Fight.\" ART GALLERY\u2014Exhibition of paintings.MuszE LA SALLE\u2014Historical exhibition.WINDSOR HaLL\u2014Nordica-Scalchi Concert, 8 p.m.- NATURAL HisTorRY HALL\u2014Lecture on \u201c Israel in Britain,\u201d 8 p.m.SHERBROOKE SYREET CHURCH\u2014Grand Concert, 8 p.m., Y.M.C.A.\u2014Members monthly meeting.MARINE INTELLIGENCE Movements of Ocean Steamships.Arrived at Jan.18 Majestic.Anochoria.From Liverpool .Glasgow TO-DAY'S WEATHLIR.Light Snow Followed by Clearing Weather and Lower Temperature.Toronto, Jan.18.\u2014Since last night the de pression has moved from Lake Superior to the Georgian Bay, and the Texas storin has moved eastward to northern Florida, In the lake region there has been a considerable rise in temperature, with a light fall of snow, and in the St.Lawrence valley and Maritime Prove inces the weather has been fair and cold.The weather is quite mild in Alberta.Minimum and maximum temperatures: Calgary.16, 40 ; Edmonton, 22, 46 ; ince Al.Bort, 12 below, 24; Qu'À polle, 6 below, 22: Winnipos, 14 Below, 8: Toronto, 5, 26: Montreal, 10 below, 2; Quebec, 12 below, 16; Halifax, 6, 24, PROBABILITIES.Lakes\u2014Winds mosily northwest and west, fine and cold.Upper St.Lawrence\u2014Light snow, followed by clearing weather and somewhat lower temperature again, i Lower St.Lav rence\u2014Continued cold, mostly fair, with light local snow.Qulf\u2014Fair, continucd cold.Maritime\u2014Northerly to easterly winds, fair and cold.followed by a fall of snow to-night oe to-morrow.MONTREAL TEMPERATURE.Temperature in the shade by standard thermometer, observed by Hearn & Harrison, opticians and mathematical instrument makers, 1540 and 1642 Notre Dame street : 8 a.m.\u201410; 1 pan.3; 6pm 5; Max.5; Min.\u201418; Mean, \u20149, By standard barometer: 8 a.m., 30.43; 1 p.1n., 30.40; 6 p.m.50.30, phane.a clerk in the service of Baron de \u2014 Signifies below zero. A A AED SE - © \u2014 Adi a \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Logislature of hs 2 MONTREAL DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1893.ee UBLIC NOTICE, ç > y y fT y TALKS ON CHEESE, Saker, L.¥.Selleck, Robt.Armstrong, J.Mr.SCRIBULUS AND THE SUCKING THE MODERN ALADDIN'S LAMP.and not down,\" 1 you're 8 £5 do PUBLIO NOTICE is hereby elvon that À .Hickey, B.Robertson.BABE.Electrical Gonll May be Summoned to do all bodily troubles at teed Province of Quebec at its next session by tp.PRESCOTT COUNTY SOCIETY.\u2014 women 0! Eastern Ontario Dairymen in Session at Kingston, Ont.Successful Opening of Their Fifteenth Session \u2014Cheese Making Discussed by Practical Men and Many Suggestions Thrown Out Aoting on Which the Farmers and Fac- torymen Might Become Better Cheese Makers.[Special to The Herald.) Kingston, Ont., Jan.18 \u2014This morning the fifteenth session of the Eastern Ontario Dairymen\u2019s association was opened in the city hall.Among those present were: W.Eager, Morrisburg; W.Bissell, Algonquin; W.Duff, Inverary; E.Kidd, North Gore; J.McTavish, Mountain; R.G.Murphy, Elgin; J.B.Corlins, Warkworth; R.J.Graham, Belleville; J.W.Whitton, Belle- ville; E.Caswell, London; R.Thompson, Napanee; H.Wade, Toronto; P.R.Daly, Foxboro\u2019; H.Ashley, Belleville; C.C.James, deputy minister of agriculture, Toronto; T.MoGillicuddy, stenographer, Toronto; Prof.Dean, Guelph: Prof.J.A.Ruddick, Woodstock; J.E.Rowlands, Na- Panes; J.Bailey, Belleville; G.G.Publow, erth; W, J.McLeod, Lancaster; D.Der- byahire, Brockville; A.Campbell, Ormond; G.E.Godkin and Major Redmond, Lans- downe; Morden Bird, Campbeliford; W.Campbell, Cannemore; Prof.McEwen, Campbellford.Among the spectators were leading farmers in Frontenac and Adding.ton.he attendance of practical farmers is the best the association ever had.PRESIDENT EAGER\u2019S ADDRESS, President Eager, Morrisburg, delivered an able address expressing the pleasure he felt in meeting with the association in the historical city of Kingston.It was the second occasion on which theassociation met here.When the conference took place here in 1880, people in the surrounding country knew very little of the importance of the association, and the meeting was scarcely recognized by the farming community.Bince that time the cheeso industry has increased very rapidly.He then spoke of the exports of cheese from Montreal in 1892.They had exceeded the previous year by about 360,000 boxes.During 1892 the total amount of cheese shipped to England was 1,651,789, and in 189) 1,352,670 boxes.He pointed out that when the association was first organized they had to depend upon Americans for instructions, but now they did not need help from the United States, MAKING OF GOOD CHEESE.\" Mr.D.Derbyshire congratulated the president upon his address and upon the success which attended his administration of the affairs of the association during the post year.Never in the history of the association have they been able to do as good work in the way of cheese making as to-day.He thon referred to the fact that there was no cheese left over, and the reason was because the cheese was good and this has been the result of the work of the association, and due to the special instructions given by the Ontario Government.No sertion ot the country has inade greater progress in cheese-making than Ontario, and in future they would produce choese that would surprise the world.If they wanted good cheese the patrons must supply d milk.If they did not have good milk, Apollos, if he were alive, could not make good cheese.The result of the application to the Ontario Government for a front for a school of dairying was that an structor in the cheese-making was appointed in the person of Prof.McEwan, and e went about carrying the gospel of cheese- making to those who needed it.PROF.MCEWENS REPORT.Prof.McEwen, in charge of the travelling dairying school during 1892, gavo a full report of his visits, and suid the expenses of his work had been $234.90.During his visits the work was witnessed by 1,500 people.He pointed out that cleanliness was the watchword of successfnl dairymen.During the past year, he was BOTTY to say that a great many dairymen did not know.the meaning of the word in connection with the factories.He deplored the inaccuracy of à great many of the thermometers found in factories.They varied about five degrees.It was imperative to have good thermometers.He favored the idea to have milk for cheese sold according to the Babcock tester.In answer to Mr.Keeley the professor said his work wo 1d be carried out more efficiently nexs year.THE CARE OF MILK.Proof.Dean of the Model Farm at Guelph made a very practical address.He laid great emphasis on the care of milk, stating that if it was improperly cared for, no matter how good tho makers, the cheese would not be good.He advocated the payment for milk by the Babcock test, which was in his opinion the best.He gave illustrations to prove that the new plan was the means of causing patrons to bring good milk to the factories and good cheese was made, He urged pro- pristors of factories to issue pamphlets to patrons entitled \u2018\u201c How to take care of milk.\u201d Prof.McEwen agreed with Prof.Dean\u2019s remarks as to the importance of taking care of milk, and said the man who expected as much for 100 lbs.of bad milk as he did for the same quantity of good milk is dishonest at heart, and the best place to attack him is in his pocket, Mr.Publow said milk should be aired and strained properly, and unless this is done it willnot make good cheese or butter either.The discussion of the care of milk was further continued by Mr.Ruddick and the association adjourned at 12 o'clock to resume at {wo o'clock.ADDRESSES IN THE AFTERNOON.At the afternoon session reports from the following instructors were heard : Westley McLeod, Russell; G.Publow, Ottawa ; À.E ; Rowlands, Napanee; J.Baillie, Belle- ville.Prof.H.H.Dean gave an excellent address on the subject: \u201cEffect of Feed on Milk and Butter.\u201d He explained that such food for cows did not produce the greatest amount of \u2018fat in the milk.By experiments poor rations had as good a fat producing power as the rich.The way to increase the fat in the milk was by breeding good cows and taking proper care of them.J.A.Ruddick, Superintendent of Dairy School work at Woodstock, 1nade a pleasing address, saying better results would occur from heating the milk to a temperature of only 90 degrees., A higher temperature would call for more milk to make cheese and it would be inferior in firmness.Prof.James, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, spoke on the dairy industry in Canada, showing a great progress it made in a few years.Cheese was one of the goods needed in England, and Canadian dairymen should make a determined effort to supply this article in its very best shape.Milk for cheese must be good, and here he gave the dairymen some sound advice as to the means of producing good milk.He showed that while exports of cheese to England bad been increasing, exports from the United States had decreased.With a large local market and an expanding market in the old country the dairymen should do all they can to perfect their cheese industry.DUNDAS COUNTY BOCIETY.Morrisburg, Out., Jan.18.\u2014The annual meeting of the Dundas county agricultural society was held in the Town Hall here today, a large number of representatives from different purts of the county being present.The following officers were clected: Presi.deat, Thomas McDonald; 1st vice-president, M, J.Casselman; 2nd vice-president, Jas Dickey; directors, W.H.Reddick, George Dillon, sr.; A.A.Logan, J.8.Marselis, \u20ac Van leek Hill, Ont, Jan.18.\u2014The annual meeting of the county of Prescott Agricultural Society was hel to-day.The year\u2019s business was very satisfactory.All but one of the old board wore elected, that one refusing to act any longer : Mr.R.Deroy, president; Mr.E.A.Johnson, first vice- president; Mr.Denis Barley, second vice- resident; directors : J.M.Barton, Thos.Bick, G.Mode, G.W.Hamlin, A, Wood, Jas.Gross, Jonathan Gross, D.Campbell, H.Albright; auditors : J.R.McLaurin and W.McAdam; secretary-treasury, Win.Furguson.NORTH LANARK SOCIETY.Almonte, Ont., Jan.18.\u2014The anaual meeting of the North Lanark Agricultural Society was held here to-day.Reports were presented, showing the wonderful success achievedby the society during 1892, In addition to paying prizes, $1,200, and all expenses of management they repaid off over $1,200 of their debts.The officers generously subscribed over $200 at the meeting to-day, toward paying the debt created by the burning of their hall a year ago.Officers elected: Jas.Rosamond, jr., president; Andrew Wilson, first vice-president; D.P.Lynch, M.D., second vice-presidents; James Robertson, treasurer; W.P.Mc- Ewan, secretary; G.Forgie aud W.C.Pollock, auditors; directors, Roht.McKense, E.J.Kennedy, D.Muir, J.W.Willie, J.Steele, Alex.McLean, Isaac Halfpenny, John Forsythe and Alex.Ewan.NORTH LEEDS AND GRANVILLE, Merrickville, Ont., Jan.18-\u2014The annual meeting of the North Leeds and Granville agricultural society, held here to-day, resulted in the election of Benj.Mosher, preai- dent; D.J.Hall, first vice-president ; J.Carson, second vice-president; and J.M.Spicer.M.McRea, D.Read, John Wilson, Wm.Nicholson, W.W.Telford, Timothy Driscoll, Chas.Moir, and RB.P.McMahon directors; auditors, Thos.Culbert and John Johnson; secretury, John Cranston; treasurer, F.A.Tallman.SOUTH LANARK SOCIETY.Perth, Ont., Jan IB8.\u2014The annual meeting of the South Lanark Agricultural Society, was held in the Council Chamber here to-day.The business of last year was read, showing that it was the most successful that thesociety has ever had.The following gentlemen were elected to office : James Shaw, president ; W.B.Hart, 1st vice.resident ; À.Ferrier, 2nd vice-president.Directors : Wm, McGarry, J.P.Melntyre, James Bell, Thos.Hands, W.G.Kees, Jac, Cuthbertson, T.B.Moore, Robert Smith, H.Wilson Reeve of Bathurst, secretary, John C.Campbell ; treasurer, Jamieson ; auditors, James Bell and W.H.Grant.THE MEETING AT RENFREW.Renfrew, Ont., Jan.18.\u2014The annual meeting of the S.A.R.S.was held in the Town Hall here yesterday.Vice-President David Barr in the chair.The report of Robert McLaren Crea, treasurer, showed the receipts of the year\u2019s to be $2,037.07, and the expenditures $255.09, while un: secured claims against the society to the amount of over $300 had been wiped out.The total debt on grounds and buildings now is only $2,520.The following officers were elected for 1893: President, Jas.Cars- well: first vice-president, David Barr; second vice-president, P.Duncan; directors, W.Frood, Geo.B.Cardiff, John Stewart McGregor, McIntyre, Fred.Kosmack, Donald Henderson, W.E.Smallfield, Arch, Smith, A.A.Wright; auditors, P.S.Stewart and Jas.Clark.The next exhibition will be held Sept.19 and 20, 1893.SOUTH LEEDS SOCIETY.Delta, Ont., Jan.18.\u2014South Leeds Agricultural society is in session here.The cll president was reclected; W.N.Bass, first vice-president ; John Cooke, second vice- resident ; Messrs.O.Brown, Geo.Morris, lyre, Jno.Bows, A.Stevens, A D.Delary, C.Brown, T.H.Washburn, directors ; secretary, L.N.Dhelps; treasurer, J.A.Bell, Delta.SOUTH GRENVILLE SOCIETY.Prescott, Ont., Jan.18.\u2014The thirty-fifth annual meeting of the South Grenville Agricultural Society was held here to-day.Officers elected for 1893: J.W.Plumb, resident; L.H.Daniels, vice-president; J.McCarthy, 2nd vice-president; directors, Alvert Whitney, Jas.Cosgrove, J.Raney, J.Jackson, H.Morgan, § H.Leacy, k Wilson, R.S.Troop, ton, BROCKVILLE AGRICULTURAL BOCIETY.Lyn, Ont., Jan.18.\u2014The olection of officers of the Brockville Agricultural society was held at Unionville to-day.They were : President, Fred.L.Moore, Addison ; first vice-president, J.Gilroy, Spring Valley ; second vice-president, John Lorien, Greenbush ; directors, A.Manhard, J.B, Saunders, J.B.Barrie, Wm.Neilson, R.J.Jelly, John Forth, R.Barlow, N.E.Brown and N.H.Beecher.STORMON T DISTRICT SOCIETY.Newington, Ont., Jan.18.\u2014The amual meeting of Stormont electoral district agricultural society was held at McAvoy's hall here to.day.The auditors\u2019 report for the past year was presented and adopted by the meeting, showing the society to be in a very good financial position.The officers for 1893 are as follows; Victor Bagg, Moose Creck, president; John K.McLean, Ber- wick, 1st vice-president; Jas.Martin, New- ington, 2nd vice-presidents.Directors\u2014 Alex.R.McDonald, Alex.Fraser, J.T.Campbell, D.P.McKinnon, Wm.I.Rom- bough, John A.Morgan, Alex.Bole, Edgar Baker; secretary, Hugh McDairmid, Avon- more; treasurer, G.F.Gardin, Newington; auditors, J.McDiarmid, Dr.W.A.Milroy.The annual fall exhibition will be held in this village on the 13th and 14th September next.NORTH RENFREW SOCIETY.Beachburg, Ont., Jan.18.\u2014The annual meeting of the North Renfrew Agricultural society was held here to-day.Wm.Jamie- son was elected president in place of A.Crozier, resigned.The former Board of Directors were re-elected except two, H.McLelland and D.Cameron, Osborne Wright and A.Brown being elected in their place.The auditor's report shows the society in a good financial standing, GLENGARRY AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.Williamstown, Out., Jan.18.\u2014The annual meeting of the Glengarry Agricultural Society took place here to-day.The whole county was well represented and mauy of its best agriculturists were present.The auditor's report showed a very successful season\u2019s business, and after an expenditure in prizes, etc., of nearly $2500, the net balance in the treasurer\u2019s hands is nearly $300.The following are the officers for the ensuing year: Presideut, W.Wightman; 1st vice, J.L.Wilson;2nd vice,D.C.McRae; secretary, G.H.Magillvray ; treasurer, Jno.Simpson; directors for Charlottenburgh, John M.McCallum, Wm.MacPherson, D.B.McLennan, D.McLennan, Jas.Ding- wall; for Kenyon Jas Clark, for Lochiel D.McKaskell, S.S.Millan and A.A.Mc- Kinnon ; auditors, A.J.Grant and Angus McDonald.R.R.Sangeste, who is one of the commissioners for securing cattle for the world\u2019s fair, was present, and read a circular from the American short horn breeders\u2019 association asking for pure bred dairy cattle to be sent to the exposition.It is possible some of our stock breeders will send some, and we may look for Glergarry scoring a point in the contest.When Baby was sick, ws gave her Castoria.When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.When sho became Miss, she clung to Castorig When she bad Children, she gave them Castoria (Adapted from Puck.) \u201cMy dear,\u201d said Mr.Scribulus to his wife, \u201cl want you to let me have the baby for a half-hour or so.\u201d \u201cThe baby!\u201d screamed Mrs.Scribulus in amazement.She had never heard her busband make such a request beiore.\u201cWhat do you want of the baby?\" \u201cNever mind,\u201d said her husband; \u201c1 want him.You ncedn\u2019t be afraid I am going to injure him.I have an affection for my oifspring, if he does cry at night.Hand him over.\u201d Mrs.Scribulus complied, with a face that expressed doubt and anxiety, and her husband bore his first-born oif into his study, iocked the door behind them, and placed the baby in a soft corner on the sois.He was à good baby, and he had his bottle; and he gurgled away contentedly with his toes in the air.Mr.Secribulus lifted several shoels of manuscript from his desk, and addressed the infant: \u201cMy son,\u201d he said; \u201cI am about to read you some extracts from an editorial I have just composed for the Daily Trow- bone.It isa deiense of protection, and [ Want to relieve my mind, as a father, by telling you that I know better, even il I did write it.I wouldn\u2019t dare to say this If you, were a little older, because you wouid betray, me; but yon are only six months old, and I desire to raise the mask of idiocy for one brief woment, that I may feol that my child bas looked upon his lather as he reall: ie, aud not as hard nccessity bas made him appear.\u201cI have said bors,\u201d continued Mr.Scrib- ulus, referring to his manuscript, \u2018\u201c\u2018that the tariff is not a tax.That, my child, is a plain apd simple whopper, too thin to deserve serious consideration.It will not receive serious consideration.[ have written it down here only to give the cue to some brainless demagogue who wiil yell it from a platform some two years hence, to a crowd of men who want ofiices, and don\u2019t} want to be told anything new or anything! true.I have further remarked that if it were a tax the imposition of such a tax on imported necessaries would only result ia the ul- -timate lowering of the cost of the native article \u2018to ¢ho consumer, because the home manufacturer, having his market sale, would be emabied to sell cheap.Here the baby lost bis bottle, and not becoming at once aware of the fact, and finding his mouth at liberty, crowed gayly.\u201cAy,\u201d said his father; \u201claugh! laugh on, innoeent infant! It would make a goat laugh to hear men talk such stuif.And I have gone on to say that the manufacturer, being thus cared Jor, is enabled to pay his employees better wages.Laugh, baby! Ha! Ha! Forty years have I Jived in this world; but if I live yet another forty years, and you another forty years on top of that, we shall not see any employer putting up the price of labor until the honest sons of toil twist hia leg.1 know well that the tariff effects the Workingman only in two ways\u2014it limits his chances employment, and it make-t him pay hall as much again as he ought to for everything he has to buy.\u2019\u2014Here the baby became conscious of the loss of the bottle and set up a wail.His father choked it off by thrusting the nipple into its open mouth., \u201cThe workingman,\u201d be continued, \u201cis underpaid because he listens to fools and demugogues, and overcrowds already ov- vercrowded markets.Your little tum le empty.You want your milk.When your little tum is full, you will thrast away the bottle and let the rest of the milk turn sour.This is nature's great\u2019 law of demand and supply.It applies alike to your little tum and Uo the great big belly of business.This obvious truth I have been compelled to deny in my editorial, for it did not gee with my other remarks, I bave had much to say about the pauper labor of Europe.The pauper iabor of Europe, my son, gets ahout five-sixths of the pay of free American labor, and pays about two-thirds of the prices that American labor pays for the mecessaries of life.By and by the pauper labor of Europe will get the missing sixth of his pay when enough of him has emigrated to this country to crowd our labor market as his has been crowded.Thon free American labor will be looking about for the sixth of his wages that he won't get on pay day.\u201cI have stated in tbis paper,\u201d Mr.Scrib- ulug proceeded, \u201cthat we ought not to admit raw material free, because it is better for us to depend on the home market.I am not, my child, the driveling idiot that I seem to be when you cou- template that statement in \u2018the chilly light of common sense.I Know better.I! know that the bear lives on his own fat during the Winter; but I know that ho does it from necessity; and I know also that there Is no fat on the bear at the end of the winter.I know woll that if we were not acting like & lot of yellow Chinese dwarfs, we could have the trade of the whole world, and give employment to more laborers than we have on hand at! present.If I drivel in thsi way, my son,, it is only because the gewspaper market isg lutted with men who can and will write such nonsense, and because a lot of fat protected gentlemen pay The Trombone to pay me to help them fool the people with taik ol this sort, and I must take the job to keep your bottle full of condensed milk \u2014for which commodity, my iree-born American child, I pay considerably more than I should have; to, if it were not for one of \u2018those very duties which I am struggling so hard and idiotically to maintain.\u201cAh, my thild,\u201d Mr.Seribulus said, with a sigh, \u201cyou will never know what a sacrifice of the gray matter of my brain I have made for you and.your female parent.The people are rapidly becoming enlightened.In their own simple speech, they areg etting \u201con to\u201d us.\u2018When you have arrived at the years of discretion, nobody will dare to trent you with such gammon as this.And if by any strangs chance you should ever see a file of the Trombone you will never attribute these imbecile productions of a tortured brain to the father who taught you the multiplication table and \u2018told you that the earth is round like an orange; or à ball.I may not be there to.Ree the happy day.Long ere that, in all probabiltiy, some citi- sen will have clubbed me over the head for insulting his inteiligence.\u201d\u2019~The baby had finished tho bottle.He had kicked off ome sock, and had most of his bare foot in his mouth.\u201cMy gon,\u201d said Mr.Scribulus, sadly, \u201cin your present posture you remind me strongly of the orator \u2018who founds his eloquence on my editorials.\u201d The Liberal Idea of Tariff Reform, There is one essential difference betwen the Coneervative and the Liberal conception of tariff reform.Mr.Laurier dia- tinctly eaid that while he would pay due regard to existing comditions of industry und employment, he believed in tariff reform moving in the direction of free trade.And the indications in every quarter are that that is the sort o ftarilf reform the country wants.Toronto Globe.Are free from all erude and irritating matter.Concentrated medicine only, Carter's Little Liver Pills.Very small; very eagy to take; no pain; no gtiping; no purging.Try them.the Hard Work.Levis, Jan.14.\u2014There was an interesting and brilliant exhibition held here last night on the occasion of the inauguration of a large isoluted electric light plant in ihe printin establishments of Messrs.Mercier & Co., proprietors of The Quotidien.A large number of prominent citizens of Quebec and Levis were in attendance.The Quebec and Levis Ferry Company had courteously put on a special boat for the evening despite the difficulties of running such a boat across the river at night during winter.A large delegation of Quabac citizers profited by this and crossed over.On arrival at Messrs.Mercier and Company's there were many expressions of delight by the hundreds who were standing on the street in front of the brilliantly illuminated building despite the cold atmosphere.The outside of the two large buildings was beautifully illuminated by several Ward are lamps, burning on the same circuit as the low tension current incandescent lam The guests were courteously receivod by Mr.Mercier and his son and shown through their large estab- Mshinent.The whole of the inside of the establishment was also brilliantly lighted by a large number of incandescent lights.he guests were then taken to view the electric plant.The contractor, Mr.A.J.Corriveau, of Montreal, who had laid the whole of the electrical plant, was found in the dynamo room explaining the different electrical apparatus.The dynamo, which bears the name of \u201cNiagara,\u201d is à compound wound and self-regulating, and of a recent improved type.It is a slow speed machine and runs but half the ordinary speed of other dynamos.It has self-oiling ings sud js placed on a solid cast-iron base, with slides for tightening the belt.lts mechanical construction and finish are of high order, running smoothly and noisolessly.Near the dynamo is a switch-board, with fine instra- ments, such as volt and ampere meters, main and branch double throw night switches, etc.The circuits are divided into three sections, the main, and then separate circuits for turning it on or off the works, stores or private houses.The lights on each flat are also controlled by separate switches.Mr.Corriveau also took the visitors to view a sinall eiectrie motor running & printing press, on which was printed souvenirs of the occasion.That motor was no larger than about one-twentieth part of the size of the printing press, and did the work with perfeot ense.Heating by electricity was also illustrated.A pair of Burton electric radiators were connected to the current, and, to the amazement of many, worked most efficiently.One of the flats was ventilated by a Lundell suspended motor, which kept a coustant current of air passing through the room.A good opportunity to be cooled was afforded by a Deihl Fan Motor, which threw a heavy breeze into one of the stores, After this demonstration of the uses of electricity Mr.Mercier entertained the guests at his private residence, which adjoins his works, and which was a blake of light, and illuminated throughout by electric lights on artistic electroliers of different desigus.A GREAT SHIP CANAL PROJECT.It Would Make New York the Grain Marke; of the World.There is à good deal of talk among shipping men about à decp-waier Canàs Lo counect 1REÆ read jakes wiuh the At- antic ssubvara.God.J.E.Bloom, who has an orice in tne Mills Building, @t- tended & meeting oi the Canal Boaimen wast week.He 18 interested in the pro ject.To a World reporter yesterday he said : \u2018It is eurprising that more interest has not been taken in ine matter, for, in my opinion, the future oi New York city as the greatest grain market of tbe world is involved thergin.4 sepresent no combination and am mereiy interested &s an individual.\u201cThis project comtemplates a twenty- ioot chaunes rom Duiuth, Minn., via the great lakes, mad & proposed ship canal across New York state to the Hudson River and New York City.At present the United Stated Government, through its army ol emgiueers, 18 at work deepening channels from Duluth to Buifalo to a tweuty-loot depta.This will be done within thres ycurs av a cost of $3,250,- 000, Tne imporuvauce thereof will be readily undemmtood, as statistics show that the annual tratiic in tonnage oa the great lakes exceeds wae combined annual tonnage of exporus irom and imports to Liverpoo: ana lonaon.During the past five or six years tnere has been & revolution in the lines oi trafic as regards Chicago aud Duiuch.\u201cThe grains and products were hauled from the West and Northwest to Chicago, but to-day are largely diverted to Duiuth, which 11es about three hundred miles westward irom Chicago.The tonnage of Wheau and flour shipped from Duluth during the past year about equalled tha tirom Chicago.Duluth will hereafter be the shipping port ior the Northwestern States and Lerritories.\u201c The minimum esvimate of such grain and flour may be fixed at 5,000,000 tons in addition vo other products.Estimating a like amount irom Chicago and we have 10,000,000 tons oi breadstuifs, which to-day is marketed through Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City, Boston and Montreai.Through the proposed ship canal this couid all be brought by way of New York, which would then become the grain market of the world.Buyers from everywhere would {lock here and New York would fix the price of wheat aud flour just as Liverpool regulates the cotton makers of the world.But, under the present circumstances, even the comparatively )smail breadstuff business which New York controls to-day is most seriously threatened.The Erie Canal, which did so much to build up the commerce of New York, is rapidly becoming a mere toy.Pracucally speaking, lor twenty-iive years It has been retrograding.Competent United States engineers pronounce the proposed canal ieasible, and say that its cost will be about $123,000,000.The tolls from the ensuing trailie will far more than pay the interest on such a sum besides expenses of operating and repairs.\u201cThree routes have been suggested to be surveyed.\u201cFirst\u2014A ship canal in New York, around Niagra Falig; thence by Lake Ontario to Oswego; thence via Oswego River to the mouth of Oneida River; then up the river to Oneida Lake ; thence across the lake and over the divide to Mohawk River near Ilome; thence down tho Mohawk to the Hudson River.\u20ac \u2018\u2018 Second\u2014By eniarging the Erie Canal.\u201c Third\u2014The °Champlabn\u2019 route-\u2014via the Upper Hudson Valley, Lake Chain- plain and canal along the Canadian iron- \u201ctier to Âhe St.Lawrence River ; thence via Lake Ontario and the Welland Canal.\u201d The Best Thing to De., Sir John Thompson has at last given the public au idea of the tariff policy of his government.ft will adhere to the fundamental priuciple of the N.P., but, likening that policy to & tree, he says the mouidering branches will be removed instead of applying the axe to its root.The intelligent Iarmer who had a tree which after tonrtees years growth produced nothing but mouldering branches would not fritter away his time in the pruning process.He would use the axe \u2018to make room for n tree that would produce something.\u2014Btratford Beacon.A Finnish woman in Minnesota has given birth to six children at one time, The father hopes that this will finish the family.-Texas Siftings, i jerce\u201d ite Pre- cure in Dr.Pierce's Favori scription.That wil bring you fe and certain help.\u201coe a powerful , 88 vel as uterine, tonic and nervine, an it builds up and invigorates M entire female system.Ib regulates and promotes ail the proper functions, improves digestion, enriches the blood, brings refresh ing sleep, and restores bealth strength, For ulcerations, displacements, 0 down sensati periodical pains, sod, ot \u2018female complaints\u201d and weaknesses, vorite Prescription?\u201d is the only guaranteed remedy.If it ever fails to boneflt or cure, you have your money back.I In every case of Catarrh that seems hopeless, you can depend upon Doctor Sage\u2019s Catarrh Remedy for a cure.: t's proprietors are so sure of it thal theyll pay $500 cash for any incurable case.Sold by all druggists.\u2014 BARRISTERS, NOTARIES, Etc.How.Joux 8, Hawi, QC, M.P,P.SELKIRK CROSS, ALBERT BROWN, \u2018W.PRESCOTT SHARP.HALL, CROSS, BROWN & SHARP Kdvocates, Barristers & Solicitors, \u2014\u2014TEMPLE BUILDING\u2014 185 S81.JAMES STREET, - ~ MONTREAL.F.B.Maclennan, Q,C.J.W, Liddle, H.Cline, Maclennan, Liddle & Cling, (Late Maclcnnan & Macdonald) Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, Etc., CORNWALL, Ont.James Leitch.R.W.Pringle Leitch & Pringle, BARRISTERS, Attorneys at Law, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Ete, CORNWALL, Ontario.MARCHAND & BAYNES, NOTARIES & COMMISSIONERS, MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED.STANDARD BUILDING, 157 St.James Street.- - Telophono No.1717 Hon, F.G.MARCHAND, D.JL.M.P.P.O'HarA BAYNE#, B.CO, L Chancery Geo, McNab Blan ™ Éved 3.Hoarpon, Gibbons Melab & Mulkem Barristers, Attorneys, Etc., Office : Corner Richmond & Carling Sts., London, Ont.A.F.McIntyre, Q.C., R.@G.Code J.F Ordo McINTYRE, CODE & ORDR.Barristers, Notaries, Etc.Supreme Court and Departmental Agents, OTTAWA.Ont.GEOFFRION, DORION & ALLAN ADVOCATES, 107 St.James Street, IMPERIAL BUILDING PLACE D'ARMES.N.Greenshieids, 0.C.R.A.E.Greenshields GREENSHIELDS & GREENSHIELDS, ADVOCATES, Barristers, Attorneys, Solicitors, 80.BRITISH EMPIRE BUILDING, 1724 Notre Dame Street.CHAS 8.BURROUGHS.W, HERBERT BURROUGHS.BURROUGHS & BURROUGHS, Barristers and Solicitors, NO.613 AND 614 NEW YORK LIFE, Place d' Armes Square, MONTREAL Telephone - - - 1821 BROKERS, Etc.McDOUGALL BROS, STOCK BROKERS, 69 St.Francois Xavier Street.Member Montreal Stock Exchange, Tembers Chicago Board of Trade, êgents for Alex, Seder & Co, Chica rain an rovisions bought Cash or on Margin, gh and sold for BARLOW & Co., =STOCK BROKERS 78\u2014ST, FRANCOIS XAVIER STREET-T F.W.Barlow, member Montreal Stoc .change.Stocks bought and sold for case Bx margin.JOHN T.SNODGRASS & CO.BROKERS, 232 LA SALLE STREET - CHICAGO.Members of the Produce Exchange.Produce li bought, sold and carried on margins ¥lax a | specialty.= HOTELS, HOTEL BRUNSWICK.MADISON SQUARE, NEW YORK.American and European Plans.Table d\u2019 and Restaurant.Very centralise located and convenient to ail s of amusement, MITCHELL, KINZLER AND SOUTHGATE, ST.LAWRENCE HALL 185 to 139 St, James Street, MONTREAL, Henry Hogan, Proprietor, The best known Hotel in the Dominion, ST.LOUIS HOTEL, THE LEADING HOTEL IN QUEBEC, \u2018WW.G.O'NEILL, Manager, Late of St.Lawrence Hall, Montreal, RIENDEAU'S HOTEL, 5 (Late St, Nicholas Hotel), 8 and 60 Jacques Cartier s £ ; d u .The New Riendeau Hotel is In close Tron imity to the R.and O, Navigati * ers, City Hall and Court House à Co.'s stcam © rooms are large, airy and el nished.08.RIFÊDIE de Drummond County Railway Company, for an Act to amend its charter.granted by d Le.islature of the Province of Quebec, 49 ang Fic.chap.81, and the amendments theretg + and to empower it to extond its line of rellway from St.Leonard in the County of Nicolet, tog point in the County of Levis; and to amalge.mate with other railway companies; or to le, or sell its line of Tollway: and to give TUNNing owers to any other raiiway company over ity fines and to increase its capital stock, and tor other powers and purposes.GREENSHIELDS & GREENSHIELDS, Attorneys ad litem for ; Drummond County Railway Ca Montreal, Dec.9th, 1892.PUBLIC NOTICE.PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that appl cation will be made to the Dominion Pay mont at its next session by the Drummond County Railway Company for an Act to oon.firm their charter, Srapeed, by the Logislatur of the Province of Quebec, 19and 50 Vict., cha 81, and tho amendments thereto, and to amend this charter, and to empower it to extend itg line of railway from St.Leonard, in the count; of Nicolet, to a point on the Intercolonial Rail, way in the County of Levis, and to amalga, mate with other railway companies, or to lea, or sell its line of railway, and to give runyj power to other railway companies over ite ling, and to incroase its capital stock, and for othez purposes and powers, GREENSHIELDS & GREENSHIE], D Attorne 8 5a lism for Ds, rummond Coun ailway Co, Montreal, Dec.9th, 1802 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that the R Fathers, Fathers Franciscans of the O R ance, will apply to the Legislature of the Province of Que oe at its next goseion, for a sat at © trustees 0 eir order w incorporeiine Pis their material needs and ich terest.(Signed) BEAUCHAMP & DORVAL, Attorneys for the Petitioners, Montreal, December 14th, 1802.NOTICE.Nurses\u2019 Directory and Home, 74 Victoria Street, Hospital Trained Nurses for every emergenc Medical, Surgical, Mental, Maternity y Massage, also Nurses specially for fevof ç can be obtained at à moments notice, being résident in the home.NOTICE.Notice is hereby given that James Frederick Doran, of Lachine, in the County of Jacques Cartier, Province of Queboc, oler will apply to the Parliament of Canada, at the next seg.sion thereof, fora Bill of Divorce from his wife, Mary Augusta Wood, lately of Winnipeg, Province ct Manitoba.now of Paris, France, on the grounds of desertion and adultery, Dated at Montreal, in the Province of Que ber, this 18th day of BIT, gov J FRED DORAN, Applicant, NOTICE.To avoid any misunderstanding, the undersigned begs to Inform his clients and others that the offices of H.M.Perrault, Perraalt & Mesnard, and Perrault & Lesa although bearing No.17, Place d\u2019Armes HI, each, are distinct and separate from ono another.froma professional point of viow.H, M.PERRAULT, Architect and Land Surveyor Montreal, May 17.1892.PUBLIC NOTICE.NOTICE is hereby given that the Town Maisonneuve will apply to the Legislature the Province of Quebec at its next session for an act amending the charter of the said town and that the principal amendments will be in connection with the valuation of property the levy of assessments, the loans, the administration of finances, police, elections, Recorder's Court and other matters, Montreal, December 26th, 1893.BEAUCHAMP & DORVA Attorneys for Petitioner KINDERGARTEN \u2014_\u2014\u2014 Froebel\u2019s System and Preparatory School Third Term commences Wednesday, ebruary 1st.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2014 DRAIN PIPES Portland.Roman and Canada Cements, Fire Bricks, Clay.Eto.ALEX BREMNER, 50 Bleury Street, The Canadian Almanac, FOR 1893.46th Year of Publication.Contains, this Year, special Informe ation for Montreal and Province of Quebec Sent by mail at the following prices :\u2014 Paper Covers.200 Clothlimp.\u201c- Full bound in cloth.400 MORTON, PHILLIPS & CO, STATIONERS, Blank Book Makers and Printers, 1785 and 1757 NOTRE DAME STREET, MONTREAL, RICHELIEU \u2014-THE\u2014 Prince of Table Waters For sale at the Clubs, Hotels and leadin grocers.Those who wish for a pure an pleasant table water would do well to give it a trial.Endorsed hy the leading physicians of Montreal.Telephone orders promptly filled.1f your grocer does not keep it, send to J.A.HARTE, 1780 Notre Dame street JOHN OSBORN SON & Co A.LEOFRED {Graduate of Laval and McGill, MINING ENGINEER, Main Office, Quebec.Branch, Montreal, 17 Place d'Armes HI GARTH&CO.MANUFACTURERS, 036 to 542 CRAIG STREET MONTREAL Call and Examine our New and Complete Stockof Gas and Electric CHANDELIERS, BRACKET& PORTABLES, GLOBES: Eto.Etc.LL.\u2014 {1 4 mm eet. -_\u2014 err Ee a ee Pr WIN HONORS BY PERSEVERING WORK.Two Young English Women Whe College Records are Exciting Comment.A youug woman, whose record gives her the proud distinction of having taken higher honors in medicine than any other woman go far, las recently taken a \u2018double first\u201d in the M.B.examinations at London University.She is Miss Louise Aldrich-Blake, ridest daughter of the Rev.F.J.Aldrich- Blake of Welsh Bicknor, Herefordshire.Bhe is a remarkably well-educated young woman, and has been in the first division in svery one of her examinations since the beginning of her career.It is instructive to MISS ALDRICH-BLAKE.know that she has attained these honors, not through the \u2018black coffee and wet towel\u201d method, but by steady, perseverir work, and that she is capable of as good fishing, rowing, and horse managing as she is of study.Another promising young Englishwoman is Miss Charlotte À.Smith, who has just been elected to the association of the British Institute of Public Health, King\u2019s College, London, and is the first woman on re- MISS CHARLOTTE SMITH.cord to whom that honor has been accorded.The daughter of a distinguished Scotch clergyman, she was educated by private tuition and at University College, London.She was at one time a student of the London School of Medicine for women, and gained honors in physiclogy at Edinburg University.} .THE MQTHER OF NAPOLEON.: > Baron Larrey's Interesting Book About an Interesting Famlly.Paris correspondence of the N.Y.World: \u2018Mme.More,\u201d (Napoleon's mother) by Barron Larrey, is the book which attracts most attention this week.Barun Larrey, as son of the great surgeon of Napoleon I., is better prepared than any other to write a history of the mothèn \u2018of the greatest man in modern history, because from his childhood he has collected documents and prepared notes, Besides Baron Larrey has the advantage of having been personally acquainted witl Letitia Rainolino Bonaparte, as in 1834, with his father, Le visited Mmpg Mere in the Palazzo: Rinucini, her home in Rome.Those who are familiar with David's marvellous painting called ** Coronation of Josephine\u2019 remember the astonished triumiphant expression the artist has given to Napoleon\u2019s mother, and certainly her life was once succession of triumphs and astonishments.Marie Letitia Ramolino married Charles Bonaparte at Ajaccio, Corsica, and became the mother of thirteen children; when her husband died, eight of these children were living.An insurrection drove them from their home, and with absolutely mothing, except the clothes they wore.Letitia Donaparte and her children arrived at Mar:eilles.However, she was a brave woman, and Napoleon at St.Helena said, \u201cMy moth cr had & man\u2019s head on a wowan\u2019s body.\u201d Thore who saw their more than modests home at that time could never have dreamed that each member of that family would some day wear a erowng The future Kmpress-mother spun from early dawr, till late at night, while Caroline, the future Queen of Naples, did tlie mar keting: Elisa, the future Queen of Etruria, kept the accounts, and Pauline, who' was to become Princess Borghese, swept and dusted the house.Their destinies were in the hands of a youny man, thin and small, who wus placed near the cannon at ihe siege of Toulon.The port was ceded to the English, but the un- kuown young man recaptured the town amid cries of \u201cVive la Republique; \u201d From that day fortune took him by vhe hand and led Lim from victory to victory, until she placed him on a throne.That young man was the youngest sou oi the widow, who could hardly buy bread for her children.I have counted among my friends ceve- ra! members of the Bonaparte family, and from what I have heard of the astonishment displayed by Napoleon's) mother when she realized the change in her position.She who had lived in a poor cottage had a palace; she who hd always welked found coaches and proud-stepping horses at her disposal; she who had neve known the luxury of a servant was sud- deniy surrounded by chamberlains; she who had been worried about money to buy bread was allowed 1,000,000 irancs & year for her expenses.Is it any wonder that she was astousihed, feared it Was à dream that could not continue ?Pauline, who was the tease of the fami- ily delighted in going about from chop te shop, ordering jewels and gowns in the name of her mother, merely for the pleasure of hearing the Corsican say in her patois, because she .never really learned French : \u201cPauline, do not buy anything more; You spend too much money.\u201d Nothing made Napoleon more furious thal to hear hi: mother's objections to pending money.becau-e he wished every member oi though they hd aiway« Leu accustomied to luxuries.The poor moiher felt that she must economize, and Napoleon said tontinuaily: \u201cSpend; I'll give you a mill- lon to spend.\u201d \u201cIn that care, sire, give me two, for I must save one.\u201d « 4nd When Napoleon was out of hear- \u2018his family to behave as\u2019 3 MONTREAL DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1893.ug «be would explain why whe muet economize, oT must keep something! to buy bread oboe hgs source day.\u201d and ui- ter the battic of Waterloo she went to Rome, awl there, wih the million and Sorted ad saved, Mune.Mere sup- Max.Mere! Une 18s an quecus.Poor the days of hor selene Phrw es Pourvu as er splendor, was, vurvu que eels doure.\u201d (Provided it ast).Bne hadt he preseniiment that the end Must come; she was very fond of her chlidren, and each one weut to her with an account of domestic troubies And What trouble there waa: Napoleon repudiated Jo:ephine, he tried to break the marriage 01 Lucien, he succeeded in rendering null that of Jerome aud Miss Miss Patterson, Louis and Hortense separated three times, aud Pauline was uu- happy with Prince Borghese.The mother would have been distracted with all this had she mot taken retuge in reading.She liked novels and religious books, for Letitia Bonaparte was pious.One day \u201cWhat a family | My son, the Emperor, something exuiaordinary ; be is & war- vel, but the lion has claws and very formidable jaws.He should never be irritated ; Lucien irritates him because of his marriage, and Jerome irritates him.Aud poor Louis is so badly married! And Prince Bo:ghese! Ah! what tears ior me : Do you wisn to know which of my children 1 love the best?The one Who is the most unhappy, the one who most needs my love.\u201d .Aud in the ena the most unhappy of her children was the one who had been the most poweriul.Then came 1814 and the banishment to Elba.A ship oue day was seen approaching the island.Greau was tne curiosity, but all were overjoyed wnen Mme.Mere landed aud piuced her money at the feet of her son.In spite of her age and infirmities she had raved the tempest in order to console her capuive sou and perhaps on- able him co regain nis lost position.Mme.Mere lived to ne more than ninety years oid, but at tne age of eighiy-two cataracis comp etery destroyed her eyesight.In her o:d age her iuvorite o2- cupation was spinning, but cach day ail the important newspapers were read to her, She surrounded nerself with all that belonged to Napoleon; ner breakiast was taken on fle table used by him at Saint Helena, and althougn in her rooms each oi her chiidren was represented by bust or portrait.Napoleon's bust dominated all.As said Mme, Mere * My life ended aiter the death oi the Emperor.Then L renounced everything forever.'\u201d % Mery, who wrote - Napoleon in Egypt,\" said that Mme.Mere reminded him of ** Niobe dying on ner dyiug sons.\u201d And Baron Lure says, - When I saw portraits and busts of her children by all the great artists of the time 1 thought they seem- &l @rouped In advance about Mere to iorm, at ihe supreme hour ol her obse- ljuies, a resuscitated cortege} for this il- tustrious mother of Napoleon.\u201d In her youth Mme.Mere had a cameo pro.Jic\u2014broad, promivent forehead, large eyes, long nose, exqaisitely chiseled lips and a swun-like throat.In her old age her eyes, once black, were gray and opaque, berause of the double cataract, bus ner cheeks had very few wrinkies, and ner lips, although expressing saduess were well sut.Through- wut her life Mme.Mere was in appearance the typica:r Roman Empress, but as shoe liked meither bails nor grand receptions nor music nor the theatres Mme.Mere was decidedly out of place at a gay court like that or Napoleon.Princess Mathilde said once, \u201c Of course I revere Napoleom; had it not been for Napoleom, I might have been selling oranges at Ajaccio.\u201d : I think Mme.Mere would have been a happier woman, wouid have lived a life much more in accordance with her tastes, had she cultivated the vine in her little garden.at Ajaccio and seen her children established near ler in happy homes.is THE *\u201cCARIBOU QUEEN.\u201d A Baronetcy Awalts the Little Son if He Can Be Found.\u201cI remember distinctly many of the exciting scenes in the early Caribou camp.In two ycars from the opening of the camp it dwindled down from a population of 10,000 to less than 1,090 souls, and to-day there is not left in the canyon one of the original inhabitants.After all these years we expect to see those scenes re-enacted this spring in the Kootenay district, which has been found richer than Caribou ever was, and is so situated that the camp has ample transportation facilities.\u201cJam on my way home from a trip to Europe, and in a sojourn in Hampshire, England, my memory of old Caribou days was revived through a story told me by Sir William Heathcote, of Hursley.The Heath- cote estate is one of the most extensive in England.I learned the family history.Young Percy Heathcote sailed for America and finally drifted to California, Wandering aimlessly from one camp to another he gradually lost his identity in the cognomen of * English Percy.\u201d Three years afterwards he appeared in the Caribou camp, in British Columbia, where he struck a paying claim and accumulated a small fortune.About this time he fell in with an old miner from San Francisco, known in camp as \u2018 Old Caribou\u2019 The latter came to the camp with his wife and daughter, about eighteen years of age.8 irhe girl was pointed out by every miner as the \u2018Caribou Queen.\u2019 Young Heathcote fell in love with the mountain wild flower, and they were married.Two vears later old Caribou died.Heathcote left the district with his wife and little son.A few months afterward a letter was received by Sir William announcing his death, and begging the father to find the wife and sou and provide for them.\u201cThe wife probably never knew the true identity of her husband, nor did she realize that her little son would some day be heir to a barohetcy.On the death of the elder son a few years ago the descendant of the fieir to the Heathcote estate.To-day this voung man is living somewhere in the \u2018United States oblivious of his English possessions, and the estate is now in the hands of a distant relative.\u201d \u2014Interview in the Chicago Tribune.Concerning Crinolines.In the fierce newspaper war which has been raging on the other side of the Atlantic anent the reappearance as an article of feminine wearing-apparel of the crinoline and of spring steel hoopskirts, the two terms crinoline and hoopskirts have been used as convertible terms.This is erroneous, as the etymology of \u201c\u2018erinoline\u201d shows.The word literally means stuff made out of horsehair; then, a petticoat made of such material, and, still further extending the word\u2019s signification, a stiff or bulging-out uuderskirt, gallite, a jupon bouffant._ MILADY'S SATIN SLIPPERS.Esthetic Ties with Padlocks, Pearls and Lace Trimming, Every woman who possesses a latent spark of girlhood has a weakness for lancy Foot gear.The weakness may De held in \u201ccheck by \"a small pocketbook, but she is so \u2018| constituted that she.can enjoy looking at younger, who died in this country, became.what she may not buy.She will therefore be interested in these new styles.The sentimental woman, who in times past delighted iu the jingling of bells on her\u2019 toes, may have an ssthetic slipper, witha meaning of its own, to which a padlock is attached.The pearl shoe is a little more simple in construction, and the trimming 1s confined to the toe and instep.Another pretty slipper is composed of white satin, with side pieces of gold embroidery and white bows that have a lining of sunset gold.The slipper is made of delicate satin or kid, with a double frill of soft lace over the instep.A border of gold embroidery ornaments the top and a gold chain laces across the frill in front, terminating in the tiny padlock at the toe.The Cicada in the Firs.Charm of the vibrant white, September sun\u2014 How tower the first to take it, tranced and still ! Their scant ranks crown the pale round asturs hill, And watch, far down, the austere waters run Their circuit thro' the serious marshes dun.NO, bird-call stirs the blue; but strangely ri The blunt faced brown cicada\u2019s wing notes shrill, A wub of silver o'er the silence spun.Ol, zithern-winged musictan, whence it came I wonder, this insistent song of thine! bid cnco the highest string of summer's yre, Snapt on some tense note slender as a flame, Take form again in these vibrations fine ,That o'er the tranquil spheres of noon aspire ?CHARLES G.DD.ROBERTS.The Black Box Murder.BY MAARTEN MAARTENS.No.46 Lovell\u2019s Canadian Series.CHAPTER 1.INTRODUCES THE AUTHOR.If I piv down to-day to write my account oi what is known at Scotland Yard and among tne newspaper people 0a \u2018tho *\u201cBlack-Box Murder,\u201d it is because, trurhiully, after long considera- ton, no man appears to me better qual- liied than 1 to speak upon the subject.L am not in any way alluding to the \u2018iterary point or view; literary capac- {tia 1 mever have possessed, and, therç- foire, Wiseiy, shitil mov seek to acquire.They have nothing in common with the lie I have been lending these last 30 years, except in soatur as I was always wating a little of everything in that \u2018ile, and of nothing too much, so may as well warn every reader, ou this first look for writer's beauties in à record of plain facts, My book will have mo artistic vaiue.It does not pretend to enything oi the kind.It is the story of a bad deed cleverly executed, and cleverly discovered, some men said at the time.: I said a true thing about myself just HOW to start with: \u201cA little of everything and nothing too much,\u201d nor the same thing too long; that has always been the maxim of my life.It is a bad maxim.I have put my hand into a score of moeny bags, and drawn it out again before I had properly closed my lingers over ifthe treasure inside; and there\u2019s many en ungrateful scoundrel at this very moment\u2014sleek-faced and smooth-coated\u2014who has me to\u2019 thank Vor stepping tuo burriedly out of com- Jortable quarters that he could occupy in consequence.Ten years ago I was during some 18 months, In tne employ of a private inquiry office.Never mind how I came here.I had beer a good many things efore then, and I have been a good many things since; but at that time I was a private detective.I was about lorty years old\u2014a little more.I had takeu up the trade under the pressure of adverse circumstances, as a moans of carning an honest penny, at a moment when I was badly in want of that indispensable article.My pennies have always been earned honestly, I am very glad \u2018to say, wnatever various pockets they may have come out of.\u201cAn bonest peuny!\u2019\u2014henven knows the expression is sufficientiy accurate.In all my Tovings I have rarely come across an opportuntiy of camuig au bonest pound.Ten years ago, at any rate, I was working as a privave detective.I liked the work, and I think it suited me.More's the pity that I had to give it up before 1 saw half as much of it as I might have done.But during the brief period of my connection with the office, I ram across=\u2018\u2018stumbled across\u201d were more correct\u2014one great inquiry.which I was enubled to follow up to a satisfactory comclusion.It is of that case that I am now anxious to write the record.Nobody knows much about it except myself.It never reached a court of justice, and the papers referred to it in a fragmentary manner.The facts were not communi- cated\u2014one by one\u2014to eager reporters, as they would have been if Scotland Yard bad managed the business.I shall tell, then, what I know about the \u2018\u201cBlack-Box Murder\u2019 It is years ago since it was committed, and the persons concerned in the tragedy, for whose sak> T have kept silent, are dead or have dropped out of sight.L myself, an n sick man, and a disappointed ons, shunted off the lines before my time\u2014a man with whom the worid has dealt hardly and who, perhaps, has dealt hardly with himself; and I iike.nowadays, to recall that episode out of my life, and I like to talk about old times.and about that time best, so I give my story to the worid.One thing more.It has nothing to do with the story, but it may have something to do with my way of telling it.\"I was a gentleman once\u2014thirty.forty years ago, nt school, aud\u2014aîter- wards.I don\u2019t know whether that sort of thing rubs oif when one\u2019s coat gots shabby.plain CHAPTER II INTRODUCES THE BOX.It was The Gare du Nord in Paris.The mail had just come in from London via Calais\u20146:30 p.m., I think, or there- abouts\u2014and the passengers were hunting up their luggage in the great room with \u2018the horse-shoe stands, where the customary ofiiciai examination takes place, used to take place.I ourht per- page of kne.story, that they must not |.haps ito have expressed it, but 1 dare say that part of the business remains unaltered still.I bad come over on the bout, and, ae I had uno registered baggage, and my little hand valise had been opeued on landing, I was iree to depart in peace.But [ strolled, all the same, into the bare, bustling \u2018Salle des Douanes,\u201d for I had to keep an eye on my \u201cparty \u2019\u2014the people I was watch ing on behalf of the office.I was in attendauce, Unknown and undesired, on a young coupte who innocently believed that they were running away {rom their respective papas.They were very fond and harmless, these young people, and 1 couid eee him eagerly unstrapping her boxes and dropping her keys.1 had an easy time with the lovers, and pleuty of opportunity for looking about me.So I wandered in and out among the axcited irritable groups, in search of something to interest me, and it was out long before my attention was at- \u2018racted by au old lady and her daughter, who stood before a mountain of, a3 yet, yuopened luggage.How well 1 remember first seeing them standing there, and how little I guessed, at the time\u2014but that is an expression I am stealing from some novel I have read, und I have sworn to myself to eschew all pretense at fine writing, for what is the use of mountiug & horse which you know beforehand you can't ride?It ie \u2018true, however, that those two ladies were to play an important, but not the principal, part in the tragedy of which this was tor me, at any Yate, the opening scene.One of them was old, as I have said, at least she seemed fiity or thereabouts; iat, fair, and fussy, with a hot face, an agitated manner and a loud voice.The custom house formalities were evidently a great trouble to her, as they are to a good many people, and she stood there complaining to her daughter and grumbling at her maid, and appealing to the cool,g reen- coated officials in a comical manner.The daughter, a tail, impressive-look ing giri, with & quiet fire in her dui eyes, did mot seem to approve of her mother\u2019s noisy agitation.\u201cHush, mamma,\u201d I heard her whisper repeatedly.\u201cHe will attend to you immediately.It will be all right, you may be pure.\u201d \u201cBut I hope, Edith,\u201d answered the mother excitedly, \u2018that they will not open your tiresome black box.\u201d \u201cIf they ask,\u201d said the daughter unconcernedly, \u201cI shall tell them it contains photohraphic apparatus, that is all.\u201d As she was speaking an official, who had been standing by, magnificently indifferent to Xhe entreaties] from all quarters, condescended to Iurchf lazily in that direction, and was immediately hailed afresh by one of the porters in blue blouses, who had constituted themselves guardians of the Euglish ladies and their plentiful luggage.\u201cHave you anything td declare?\u201d queried the officer ini French.The old lady had Spread out the contents of her travelling' bag on the counter before her.She took upon herseli to answer in voluble English: To be continued.Geography of the Moor.Sir Robert Ball is reported to Lave said, \u2018in his lecture on the moon, that the geography of our satellite was better known oven than that of the earth.There was no single spot on the moon the size of an ordinary parish in England that had not been fuily photographed and observed, Of tqurse tnis remark cam only relate to the side of the moon which is always turned towards us.Nearly oue- half of her surfuce has never been seen \u201cby morial eye, and never will be, unless the lunar globe should be tilted by collision with a comet or some such erratic body.Otherwise it is a fact that photography has done more for the earth\u2019s attendant than jor the earth itself.It is analogous to the further fact that the only things which man can predict with certainty are not those that happen on the sphere he inhabits, but the movements of worlds jimmensiy distant.\u2014London Telegraph.How to Measure a River.Anybody can measure, approximately, the breadth of a river without a surveyor's compass or any mechanical means whatever.The man who desires to make the experiment shouid place himseli at the edge of the stream, then stand perfectly still, face the opposite bank and towor the brim oz his hat until it just cuts the opposite bank.Then let him put both hands under nis chin, to steady his head, and turn slowly round until the bat brim cuts some point on the level ground behind him, Mark the spot where the hat brim cuts the ground, then pace off the distance and iv will be found about the breadth of the river.\u2014St.Louis Globe- Democrat.It is only when they have reached the Browning point that a Boston housewife \u2018will serve baked beans.3 ! $ For Sale at ail Drug Stores.\u2018+ + ALA VILLE DE VERMONT'S OLDEST INHABITANT.Mrs.Wood in Her One Hundred and Seventh Year.Vermont's oldest inhabitant, Mrs.Lucy Whitney Wood, has just attained her 107th year.She was three years old when George Washington was inaugutated President of the United States, and was thirteen years of age when the * Father of His Country \u201d was laid in his final resting place.This venerable woman, whose birthday was celebrated at her home in Barre on Junuary 16.was born January 16, 1786, but she added ten days\u2019 grace to her age since the second century of her life began, and her friends and neighbors humor her in the harmless delusion respecting her birthday.Mrs.Wood is a native of New Hampshire, having been born in Jaffrey.When but seventeen years of age she married a young man named Wood, and the happy couple began married life with the opening of the nineteenth century.Ten children blessed their union, six sons and four daughters, of whom are living three sons and one daughter.She has had 32 grandchildren and as many great-grandchildren.Her husbund died about thirty years ago.BIRTHS.YATES\u2014On the 8th inst., at West Farnham, Mrs, Hiram Yates, of a daughter.JESSIMAN\u2014At 79 Coursol street, Montreal on the 17th inst., the wife of Robt.Jessiman, of & Son.: MARRIAGES.BLACK-HALL\u2014At Sunderland, January 10, by the Rev.G.W.Dewey, Mr.Neil Black, of Toronto, to Miss Ada Hall, of Cresswell, DIXON-GRILLS\u2014At Lindeay, Ont, on the 4th inst, by the Rev.John Power, Wm.Al.ory Dixon, of Manilla, to Miss Christina Grills, of Mariposa.DOUGLAS-McFADZEN\u2014At Stonefield, P.Q., January 4, by the Rev, Mr.Harris, John A.Douglas, of Chatboro, to Annie J., youngest daughter of Wm.McFadzen.DERMETT-FORBES\u2014At_Sarnia, by Rev.John Learoyd, on the 6th January, Cornelius J.Dermett, to Lucinda Forbes.LANG-GIBSON\u2014~At Tavistock, on January 12th, by the Rev.R.Pyke, Mr.Christian Lang, of the Township of Blenheim, to Miss Jane Gibson, daughter of Mr.M.Gibson, agent G.T.R., Tavistock.GRAVEL-PERRAULT\u2014In this city, on the 18th inst.in the private chapel of the Archbishop's Palace, by his Grace Archbishop Fabre, Jules Edouard, youngest son of J.A.Gravel, bookseller, to Marie Agnes Augustine, only daughter of J.B.Perrault, manufacturer.DEATHS.Po BALFOUR\u2014In this city, at the Montreal QGcneral Hospital, January 18th, of pneumonia, Edmond Baltour, aged 30 years.The funeral will take place from thg Montreal General Hospital on Friday, thé 20th instant, at two o'clock, CHRISTIN\u2014At No.215 St.Hubert, on the J&h January, Bertha Florence (Flossie), second daughter of Henri Christin, Funeral from her father's residence, Friday, at 8 a.m.Friends and acquaintances ars respectfully invited to attend.(Detroit papors please copy.) COLLINS\u2014At the Mother House, Monk- lands, on thé 17th inst., Sister St.Michacl the Archangel, of the religious order of the Congregation of Notre Dame, known in the world as Alice Mary Collins, eldest daughter of Thos.C.Collins, of this city.BROWNE\u2014At Halifax, on January 11, Janet Stalker.wife of W.H.Browne, and daughter of the late Jacob Locke, of Lockeport, N.S., aged 29 years.BURCH\u2014At Lachute, on January 7, Mrs.À.B.Burch, aged 65 years.BAMBERGER\u2014At Hamilton, on January 13.Margaret, wife of John Bamberger, aged 61 years.BATEMAN~At Hamilton, on J anuary 14, Maggie, second daughter of P.S.and Nellie Bateman, aged 19 years, TED PET, 1s the most reliable and best in the market.Gives universal satisfaction, Ask your grocer for it and take no substitute, M'LAREN\u2019S COOK'S FRIEND, the only genuine.20600000069 * USE \u2014 FONTAINE\u2019S FACE CREAM 40000000 B.E.McGALE, General Agent.$000300%0000 The Ladies\u2019 Helper-French Pills § For all diseases peculiar to Female Irregularities, § removing all obstructions from whatever cause.Sent by matl on receipt of $3 per box.Address J.E, HAZELTON, s00roege secs, Toromo a - Lt ve Pa - cn DOCTORS, NURSES AND MOTHERS, If you knew what Dr.Kirkwood has invented for your beneflt you would send stamp and address for full information of Dr.Kirkwood\u2019s Scientific Force and Suction Syringe.Please mention this paper.Address Canadian Agency KIRKwooDp HARD RUBBER Co., 6 Lombard St., Toronto Ont.INTREAL GREAT LIQUIDATION SALE ! 23rd January.Having decided to sell all our retail stock by auction, beginning on the 30th of January, our stores will be closed from Monday, the ¥ Profit by the Last Week of this Retail Sale.GREAT ADVANTAGES THIS WEEK ! Four Days of Sale Without Reserve Before the Sale by Auction.Distribution of Toys to all mothers who are accompanied by their children.OUR STORES ARE TO LET.Cie Generale des Bazars Corner of St.Lawrence, St.Catherine and St.L Charles Borromee Streets.CARSLEY'S COLUMN.HEMNANT SALE Remnant Sale, Remnant Sale, THIS WEEK WE THIS WEEK WE THIS WEEK WE THIS WEEK WE THIS WEEK WE THIS WEEK WE ALL THIS WEEK WE ALL THIS WEEK WE ALL THIS WEEK WE ALL THIS WEEK WE ALL ALL ALL ALL ALL ALL OFFER OFFER OFFER OFFER OFFER OFFER OFFER OFFER OFFER OFFER Thousands of Remnants Thousands of Remnants Thousands of Remnants EXTRA CHEAP EXTRA CHEAP EXTRA CHEAP IMPORTANT NOTICE IMPORTANT NOTICE IMPORTANT NOTICE Dress Remnants All Remnants of Dress Goods are placed on centre tables and marked down to clear them this week.S.CARSLEY, § Black Remnants Remnants - of Black.\u2018Goods are marked down to prices-that should sell them all this week.S.CARSLEY, 2 Print Remnants Remnants of Prints reduced in price to sell them all this week.8S.CARSLEY.Sik Remnants Remnants of Silks must be cleared this week.Tlie price should do it.S.CARSLEY.Linen Remnants Hundreds of Remnants of Table Linen and Towelling.They must go this week.The prices are tempting.x S.CARSLEY, Flannel Remnants Hundreds of Remnants of Flannels from 13 to 6 yards long.Special Bargains in these Flannel Remnants all this week.8.CARSLEY, Cotton Remnants Remnants of White and Grey Cotton all extra cheap this week.S.CARSLEY, | Wrapper Remnants A lot of Remnants of Printed Cashe mere Flannels, Beautiful Goods, and must be sold this week.S.CARSLEY.4 = Tweed Remnants Remnants of Tweeds for Men or Boys\u2019 Clothing, all marked down to clearing prices.S.CARSLEY.Carpet.Remnants A whole lot of Remnants of Carpets, Must be sold at once.The low prices must effect a clearance, RIG RIG RIG RIG BY BY BY BY Spells Rigby.It also spells the Best Waterproof Garment in thismarket.The Rigby Garments for both Ladies and Gentlemen are becoming more popular every season, simply because they are the best.S.CARSLEY, 1765, 1767, 1769, 1771, 1773, 1775, 1777, 177\u20ac Notre DAME STREET, A MONTREAL, cistan MONTREAL DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1893.THE HERALD -\u2014\u2014 UNTIL THE \u2014 -Close of Parliament- \u2014 FOR \u2014 ONE DOLLAR The Provincial Legislature is now in session.The Dominion Parlia- liament will open on January 26th.Both sessions promise to be of exceptional interest.At Quebec the tax question, which ig of vital interest to the whole Province, will be dealt with.Important legislation affecting Montreal will also be passed, The prospects are that the forthcoming session of the Dominion Parliament will also be important, It is now fully understood that the revision of the tariff will be undertaken.This being the first session under Sir John Thompson\u2019s premiership, there will be other interesting matters to be dealt with.The best reports of the proceedings at Quebec and at Ottawa will appear in The Herald.They will be absolutely impartial and accurate.The Herald will be represented in both capltals by special correspondents of much parliamentary experience, who will give daily a graphic pen picture of the doings of our legislators.The Daily Herald will be sent until the close of both sessions to any address for the small sum of QNE DOLLAR.Remit at once and thus secure reports of the legislature from the beginning.Tha sooner the subscription .1s made the more value the subscriber will receive for his money.MONTREAL HERALD COMPANY, 4 and 6 Beaver Hall HII, MONTREAL, The Hlontreal Herald.FOUNDED 1808 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, Single Copy: = « « - a DELIVERED BY CARRIER.One Year = « « =o = a 2 cents $6.00 Six Months * « « = = = « 3,00 Three Months « « = « = 1.80 One Month = = = = = .50 Persons desiring THE HERALD served at thelr homes can secure it by postal card request or order through Telephone No.343.Where delivery isirregular, please make immediate complaint to this office.\u2014 THE MONTREAL HERALD CO.4 and 6 Beaver Hall Hill, EDWARD HOLTON, ROBERT MACKAY, President.Vice-President.E.G.O'CONNOR, Sec.-Treasurer, a \u2014\u2014 THURSDAY MORNING, JAN.19.Mr, McShane's Candidacy for the Mayoralty.Some years ago we had in Montreal a man who regarded the mayoralty as a personal belonging.He was his own successor for many years ; but a great uprising of the people finally crushed him.Since that time it has come to be recognized as proper that two years should be as long as any citizen should hold the office of mayor, and that the holders of this position should be alternately French-speaking and English- speaking.The only man who attempted departure from this custom received a mostemphatic rebuke from the electorate, At the present time another attempt js \u2018being made to met aside this custom, which experience has shown to be a wise one.Mayor MoShane, who wag elected by an immense majority two years ago, snd re-elected by acclamation last year, is a candidate for a third term ; and it is necessary for the citizens to consider whether the arguments he adduces in support of his candidature are cogent enough to justify the revival of the old theory, that a man is entitled to hold on Lo themayorality as often as he can be reelected.Particularly is it necessary for the English-speaking seriously consider this question : for once we depart from an understanding, which insures an occasional representative of the English section in the mayor's chair there is nothing but the courtesy.of our French-Canadian friends to prevent a recurrence of a regime similar to the Beaudry one.Mr.McShane bases his claim for reelection on his record.Striking an average there is no doubt that Mr.McShane has surprised.both friends and opponents by his course as the city\u2019s Chief Magistrate.He has been something more than a fairly good mayor.been said of Mr.Beaugrand, Mr.Abbott and Mr.Grenier, yet third terms were not given them ; and we question very much whether the city is inclined to be more generous to Mr.McShane.There is a widespread feeling, which is entirely justified by the circumstances, that Mr.McShane has been fully rewarded for his devotion to the city\u2019s interests.He has had his turn, and should now be content to step aside for some other worthy man.We sympathize entirely with the French-Canadians who think that they should be represented in\u2019 the mayor's chair this year.Mr.Alphonse Desjardins has taken the field against Mr.McShane.If thé cam- | paigh continues on the present lines he | will be the recipient of the support \u2018 of all those who feel that some other man than Mr.McShane should be our next mayor.They will have no other choice.Mr, Desjardins\u2019 qualifications for office will not receive that rigid examination to which all candidates for important public positions should be subiected.He will electors to The same thing could have be the visible head of a principle ; and he will get votes that possibly, in an open contest, would go to some better qualified man.It is not wise that men should be rashly elected.There should be the weighing of candidate against candidate, the careful consideration of their relative qualifications, the judicious summing up, the conscientious vote.All this the candidacy of Mr.McShane forbids, for, while he remains before the public, the opposition to him will not split itself in supporting twe or more candidates.It will, of necessity, combine to forward Mr.Desjardins\u2019 candidature.The course which would be most in the pub lic interest, and, we believe, in his own too, would be for Mr.McShane to retire from the contest, and leave the field clear for other aspirants.Mr.McShane has been badly advised in this mayoralty matter.He cannot afford to encounter defeat.It-would mean the closing of his public career.Few men could survive two overthrows within twelve months.On the other hand, Mr.McShane could retire with honor and dignity.To have filled such a position as the mayaralty of Montreal acceptably and creditably for two years is to have done something which at some future time might be a forcible argument for the conferring of other public honors.But to endeavor to monopolize a public office despite the disapproval of the better class of citizens, and to be beaten in the attempt, would be fatal to any man.Mr.McShane, we know, is confident of success, but even were his return certain he would be doing a wise and politic thing to gracefully retire.He that ruleth his ambition is sometimes greater than he that taketh a city.Such an act would be a compliment to our French-Canadian confreres that they would be sure to appreciate and remember, and it would result in a mayoralty campaign which would turn, not on appeals to prejudices, national antipathies and personalities, but upon broader questions affocting civic policies.Mr.McShane has it in his power to do a wise thing, and we trust that, despite powerfulinfluences working the other way, he will be strong enough to do it.The Premier at Sherbrooke.It may be that the adulation which Sir John Thompson had received at Toronto had turned his head, and that when he rose to address the Conservatives of the Eastern Townships at Sherbrooke he was not himself.It is not probable that the great man is already doddering.Itis more likely that on Tuesday afternoon he had not yet recovered from the exhilaration and fatigues of his enthusiastic receptions in the West.Be the reason what it may, his utterances must have alarmed his audience of admirers.He seemed bent on making capital for his opponents; made lucid exposition of every weakness of his policy, directed the closest scrutiny to those ailments which hitherto his party has tried to cover up, challenged the enemy to fstorm the ramparts at the places where they may be.most easily taken.It is well that the session of Parliament is so near at hand, and that his further declarations of his policy will be made in the cool and quiet air of the chamber, where his blood will not be heated and his reason disturbed by the shouting of the groundlings.For it is too early for this third Sir John to make a failure.He must be saved for the vengeance of the people.While he was telling the Townships what Sir John Macdonald had done for them, and exhorting them to remain true to the theory of British connection above all things, his ponderous periods appear to have lost something of their chill, On the countryside where John Henry Pope, the man whom Sir John Macdonald held in such high favor, was king, these are themes that stir Conservatives, and in his sounding of such party slogans the new Sir John grows more musical daily.But the killing frost fell again when he told his audience that with British connection and the union of the races, protection must stand as one of the three essentials to the welding of the Provinces.Ho nailed the party colors so fast to that rotten mast-head that the colors.must fall when the mast falls.Thereafter all his talk of tariff reform, all his promises of revision along such lines as would confer benefit on the \u2018whole country\u201d were idle.In a single word he dashed to the ground all hope of relief at his hands.He knew and his hearers knew that so long as the principle of protection is maintained in a single item of the tariff, there can be no such thing as tariff reform.He knows that protection cannot operate to the \u2018benefit of the whole country ;\u201d that wherever its ugly head is seen, it stands for the curtailment of the liberties and the cruel oppression of the masses and the aggrandizement and enrichment of some class.The zeal of the Liberal party in wn- earthing evidences of the disastrous operation of this peculiarly outrageous princi ple, was thesubject of a prolonged scolding.Sir John accused The Globe of having sent emissaries into the land to show the people that they were suffering.That is plainly not the object of The Globe's commission.The record of sheriff\u2019s sales does that sorry work.The Globe appears to have been anxious only to set before the people in black and white tho causes which have driven them from the fat lands of the Townships, Ontario and the Maritime Provinces to stake out new claims under the less kindly skies of the neighboring states.It was under this head of exodus that Sir John made his most absurd statements.He admitted that the exodus had been large, but said that the National Policy had reduced and not increased it.He said: The National Policy had given the people a home market.If the policy had not been in existence.and the trend of the exodus been checked, it would have been 50 or 100 per cent greater than it has been.A great deal of capital had been sought to be mite by a oompar- ison of the census of 188i an 11881.That comparison was unfair, because the chumeration was taken under different principles.In the census of 1881 many thousands of people were counted who had been long living in the States, while no less than 77,000 people born in the United States of Canadian parents had been included in the census of 1891.They had got down to hard pan, and now had the ground cleared away for future comparison.Scores of thousands of people had been scored from the lists by this change of method, and all of them had been put down as baving fled from the N.P.This explanation put a different face upon the matter; and hede- fied Mr.Laurier to quote the correct figuresand give the correct explanation.To the judicial mind the creation, rather than the discovery, of precedent is abhorrent, and Sir John must have walked through fire to the repudiation of the figures of a Government of which his is the legitimate successor He would set aside with a wave of the hand the findings of the census of 1881, of which he should be the staunchest defender.To such a violation of the traditions of his judgeship he could have been impelled only by a glaring failure of the records to make good his contentions, The records define the exodus in the clearest possible manner.Between 1871 and 1881, roughly speaking the period of revenue tariff, the increase\u2019 in the population of the country was 689,786 souls or 18.97 per cent.During the same period, according to the figures of the Department of Agriculture, the number of immigrants who settled in the country was 362,893.The figures for the next ten years show a vastly increased volume of immigration and a much smaller percentage of increase.Between 1881 and 1891, the period of protection, the increase in population was 507,867 souls, or 11.74 per cent., while the number of immigrants in the same period was 920,347.These are the figures.Sir John wasplainly between the horns.He must admit that the exodus was due to the National Policy or he must repudiate the census of his predecessors.This head and front of the party of deathless steadfastness to an unalterable policy repudiated his predecessors and repudiated himself in terms that fell not short of simple cowardice.This new Sir John must make a better play of adherence to what have been claimed as Conservative ideals or he will not last, Mr.R.8.White for Collector of Customs.The death of Mr.M.P.Ryan renders vacant one of the most important offices in the gift of the Government.It is desirable in the interests of the commerce of the country that the Collectorship of Customs for the chief port of Canada should be filled by a thoroughly qualified man.In the performance of the duties of the office, questions constantly arise between the importer and the Government, and it is of paramount necessity} that the person filling the office should} enjoy the confidence of the business community.We have considered the names of the different gentlemen mentioned in connection with the appointment, and while, perhaps, =the advice of The Herald may not be valued by the Government at its true worth, still the interests of the business men of the city and the country demand that we should express an opinion, The appointment, as a matter of course, will be a purely political one; and among those whose names are mentioned Mr.Robert 8.White.M.P.for Cardwell, is the one best fitted for the position.His extensive journalistic experience in various editorial capacities on our morning contemporary and his parliamentary training have made him one of the best posted public men in Canada on all matters of trade and commerce.Not only is Mr.White capable, but he possesses to a peculiar degree the good will and the confidence of the busi- men of this city.His nomination would: be well received, and would give ratisfac- tion to all, irrespective of party.The Man Who Should Be Mayor.The man who should be mayor of Montreal for 1893 is Alderman Rolland.No member of the City Council is better known or more respected.He has been a member of the council for many years, and for several years past has been chairman of the Finance Committee, » position that ranks next to that of Mayor in point of importance.Mr.Rolland was regarded as the natural successor to Mr.McShane.He expressed his willingness to run.While absent in London attending to the business of the city a little clique of not over-respected citizens practically forced Mr.Desjardins into the field.Mr.Rolland has been treated shabbily on all sides.Mr.Desjardins has not a qualification which Mr.Rolland does not possess in greater measure, and besides the former is entitled by years of hard work as a member of the council to the honor.Mayor McShane would do a very popular thing if he were to resign in Mr.Rolland\u2019s favor.THB CONSERVATIVE LEADERS should agree as to what the proper attitude is towards the American tariff.Now-a- days we hear on the one hand that the high tariff has reduced the Americans to destitution ; and immediately afterwards (as per Sir John Thompson's speech at Sherbrooke), that it is the American policy of high protection that has tempted thousands of Canadians across the line.Hox.W.B.Ives at the Sherbrooke banquet read letters from cotton manufacturers, stating that without the assistance of the National Policy they could not operate their factories.This is what they said; but what they meant was | that without the National Pol- icy they could not have watered their stock 90 per cent, and still pay handsome dividends.How.TroMAs DALY is not lacking in self-appreciation.He told the Toronto Conservatives that what they wanted was «tg little of the fire and vim that was in him.\u201d Ir Sir Jouw TxomrsoN will continue to talk as he did at Sherbrooke about the National Policy, the Liberals will rejoice to hear of further Conservative banquets.Joux S.D.T., In reply to your question we might say that it is not considered good form to use your hat for a speaking trumpet.POLITICAL NEWS.The Brockville Recorder wants to know why if the Brockville Wringer Works are able to start a branch factory in Morris- town and compete with the Yankee manufacturers for the United States trade, they could not manufacture the goods here and ship them over if we had had reciprocity with the States ?The young Conservatives of Toronto continues to speak freely about the N.P.Discussing a resolution \u2019in favor of tariff reduction Mr.Cross said.\u2018He could offer no better evidence of fhe necessity for the change proposed than the 200.000 em ty houses left in Canada by people who had gone to the States.The customs taxes, he said, were paid, not by the American producer, but by the Canadian consumer.The Conservative party might give kindlier evidence of its sympathy for the farmer than to tax him as it does from the sole of his foot ta the crown of his head.\u201d Dr.W.S.Wilson said: \u201cThe protective tariff is heavier on the poor man than on the rich for this reason : The poor man spends his whole earnings in buying taxed articles, while the rich man spends only a part.The farmers on the other side are poorer than here because the protective tarif there is more oppressive than here.It would be in the interest, not only of the farmer, but of the party, to reduce the customs tax now levied on articles bought by the Canadian consumer.\u201d Kingston Whig : The talk of lopping off the dead branches amounts, therefore, to nothing but little tinkering which is not going to do any general good.Nothing less than a complete tariff reform will meet the requirements of the people, and they will have it sooner or later.London Free Press: The speeches of Ministers at Toronto must satisfy every one that there will be no radical departures in respect of the National Policy during the life of the present administration.Le Canadien : We have at last ministers who dine.Dinner in Niagara, dinner in Toronto, dinner in Sherbrooke.In the last mentioned place they numbered half a dozen last night to rejoice over the entrance of Mr.Ives into the Cabinet.If, after that, the people are not happy they must indeed be very hard to satisfy.Of what could they possibly have to complain ?Who would dare to say that our country is not rich, when champagne flows as freely as the waters of the St Lawrence?True it is that the country districts are becoming depopulated, and that our young men are leaving for the United States, but the large manufacturers remain\u2014that is to say, remain for the ministers.The less \u2018voters there are, the easier it is for a government to make elections.To dine well, to bave in the bank a large corruption fand always ready, to fill the bench with sure and devoted partisans, to steal the elections when they cannot be gained loyally\u2014this is what is called governing ! MADE PRINCES OF THE CHURCH.Different Nationalities Remembered in the Appointment of Cardinals.Cardinal Vaughan was born at Gloucester, England, in 1832, and is the eldest son of the late Lieut.Col.Vaughan, of Courtfield, Herefordshire.He became 8 Roman priest, and toward the close of the year 1871 he visited the United States, accompanying to Maryland a detachment of priests sent from St.Joseph\u2019s Foreign Missionary College, England, ou a special mission to the colored population of America.Cardinal Vaughan was president of St.Joseph\u2019sCollege.He was appointed Bishop of Salford, Eng., and succeeded the late Cardinal Manning as Archbishop of Westminster.He is a Conservative in his political views.His travelling companion to Rome on his present journey is Bishop Clifford, the senior prelate of the English Catholic hierarchy, he having been consecrated Bishop of Clifton as far back as February, 1857.Bishop Clifford was one of the three leaders of the opposition at the Vatican Council.The others were Bishop Strossmayer, of Hungary, and Archbishop Kenrick, of St.Louis, United States, THE TRISH CARDINAL.The Most Rev.Michael Logue, Cardinal Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of all lre- land, was consecrated Bishop of Raphoe July 20, 1879; was appointed coadjutor for Armagh 1887, and succeeded to the See in 1888.He bas.not figured prominently in Irish political affairs, although understood to sympathize with the national cause.OTHER CARDINALS, Other new cardinals included in the fourteen are Mgr.Thomas, Archbishop of Rouen; Mgr.Meignan, Archbishop of Tours, and Mgr.Vaszary, Primate of Hungary and Arch- bishopofGrau.With regard toFrancethe Pope has not only raived the Archbishops of Rouen and Tours to the Cardinalate, in accordance with the proposal of M.Caruot, but confers, it is understood, this distinction upon & third prelate, who, subject to the consent of the French President, will be either Mgr.Perraud, Bishop of Autun, or Mgr.Fava, Bishop of Grenoble, one of these being a reserved cardinal.The elevation of the Prince Archbishop Kopp to the Cardinalate will, it is expected, have some influence upon the course of the clericals on the army bill, Two Corrections.Mr.Wm.Young, of Levis, writes The Herald that the statement that Le Quotidien, of that town, was the first to introduce electric lighting in that town is incorrect.He says: \u201cCurrier, Laine and Co., of this place, have had their shops lighted by electricity since some twelve years.The Thomson-Houston Co.were the firm who supplied the dynamo, etc.Since which time they have applied electricity to the lighting of their premises, as also on board of the steamers under repairs at their wharves.\u201d In the Boston despatch in yesterday\u2019s Herald, giving the details of the coal combine, it was stated that one of the applicants for the charter of \u201cThe Old Provincial Mining and Transportation Company, Limited,\u201d was D.I.Kennedy.The name should have read D.J.Kennelly.TO LET.The handsome store now being erected on Notre Dame Strect\u2014Nos, 1666 and 1668.Can be used for wholesale or retail business.Elevator.Possession before 1st May.Address ESTATE MASSON, 16 13 St.James street.WANTED.An experienced representative for Canada for the sale (on commission), of Brussels, Wil ton and Royal Axminster Carpetings.References required.Apply WOODWARD, GROSYENOR & CO., Ltd.KIDDERMINSTER, ENGLAND.SILKS, WOOLS AND COTTONS TO THE TRADE.The recent advance in Silk, Wool and Cotten has already increased the cost of manul& ; es and is commencing to affect the stocks © Live wholesale trade.In a rising market the ne merchant places his orders early.BY Le your orders with us, at once, for Dress ° > Silks, Woollens, Prints, Cottons, Linens, ar pets, Gent's Furnishings and Smallwares our advantage.pete \u201cprocrastination is the thief of time.ORDERS SOLICITED.FILLING LETTER ORDERS A SPECIALTY.John Macdonald & Co Wellington and Front Steoets B, TORONTO GAME!! Extra Large Wild Turkeys, Choice Quail, Prairie Chiclons, Long Point Ducks, etc., etc, fresh supplies of one and all just in.FRASER, VIGER & CO.English Cure Boneless Breakfast Bacon ENGLISH CURE HAMS, etc., etc, fresh from the smoke house.FRASER, VIGER & CO.Fraser, Viger & Co.'s PURE APPLE CIDER.(Clarified.) The finest made in Canada, 40c per gallon, Pure Apple Cider.Moosewood Bitters.A Cordial Tonic, $1.25 per bottle, $12.50 per case FRASER, VIGER & CO.100 CASES.Genuine Vichy Water.From the Springs owned by the French Government.Vichy Water Celestina, ; Vichy Water Grande Grille, Vichy Water Haute Rive, Vichy Water Hopital.FRASER, VIGER & CO, Fraser, Viger & Co's Teas-Black and Green.Teas to suit the purse and palate of all, English Breakfast Tea.30c per pound.English Breakfast Tea, 35c per pound.English Breakfast Tea, 45¢ per pound.English Breakfast Tea, 60c per pound.English Breakfast T'ea, 75c per pound.English Breakfast Tea, 80c der pound.The Lordly Karavan Tea, the very finest imported, 80c per pound.Fine Japan Tea, 25¢ per pound.Choice Japan Tea, 30c per pound.Very Fine Japan Tea, 40c per pound.Finest Japan Tea, 60c per pound.Finest Formosa Oolong Tea, 75c per pound.Fine Young Hyson Tea, 50c per Ib.Finest Young Hyson Tea, 60c per pound.Fine Gunpowder Tea, 75c Ber pound.Finest Scented Orange Pekoe Tca, 75c per pound.FRASER, VIGER & Co.Fraser, Viger & Co's COFFEES.Breakfast Cream Coffee, 40c per pound.Fine Breakfast Java Coffee, 40c per pound.Finest Mocha Coffee, 45c per pound.The Royal Dutch Coffee, in 2 Ib.tins, prepared by the Beach Process, 9e per tin, FRASER, VIGER & CO, Fraser, Viger & Co.'s PORTS.Cockburn\u2019s and Sande man\u2019s Wines, The Royal Wine £150, Taylor\u2019s, Particular Oldest, - - $250 - .00 \u201cOld Reserve,\u201d £100, #25 Oldest and Choicest, - 2 00 9 50 20 00 \u201cPrivate Stock, \"Tawny Very Old, Delicate, - 175 800 19 00 Extra Particular Old, - 1 50 8 00 17 00 Choice, Old, Delicate, - 125 600 18 00 Very Superior Rich Old ine, - - - - - - 10 450 10 00 Fine Fruity Wine, - - 76 350 8 00 Superior Sound Young ort, - - - - 5 25 600 Tarragona Genuine W'e 35 1 50 4 00 \u201cCommendador\u201d Port, 150 .- 17 00 FRASER, VIGER & C Qo Chyloong's China Ginger, Chow-Chow Crystallized Ginger,Bastiani's Preserved Si pore Whole Pineap tes in tins, eto., now ga in Stock.Fresh Goods.50 Cases Chylçong's Canton Ginger, in large jars.Chyloong\u2019s Canton Ginger, in half jars.Chyloong's Canton Ginger, in quarter jars.Chyloong's Canton Stem Ginger, the very finest, in half jars.ppCByloong's Crystallized Canton Ginger, in 1 .tins, pC byloong\u2019s Crystallized Canton Ginger, in 10 , tins.Chyloong\u2019s Canton Chow-Chow.in h Also Bastianl's Singapore Whole ina Jars.in 3, tins, the very finest goods of the End packed.4% Crystallized Ginger is not onl candy, but also most beneficial to the stoma FRASER, VIGER & CO, BARLEY CRYSTALS.A New Food prepared from the hear Barley Kernel.In 4 lb.tins.40c per tin! he Barley Crystals, for breakfast, t - sert, entirely free from Bran or Hulls, Heb color.delicate and delicious in flavér, Barley Crystals, in 4 pound tins, £0¢ per tin.:0: FRASER, VIGER & Co.IMPORTERS, 199 ST.JAMES STREET.To the Electors of ST.ANTOINE WARD, MONTRBAT, GENTLEMEN, I beg leave to offer you my sincere thanks for considering mo Trorthy to jos nonrty ou as Alderman in the City Council, T would be most happy to serve you in any way that lies in my power, and it appears just now that almost any change in the membership of the Council would be an improvement, But I hold an appointment as Coinimnissioner in Expropriation, and on considering the matter carefull also having taken advice about it, I find that I must give up this appointment in order to be cligible for election as alderman.Fur: her, I have learnod that a very large number of eléc tors who are interested \u2018in the portion of the ward lying south of Dorchester Street, are anxiour to have à representative who lives and has his business among them, and with this object they have united in supporting Mr Richard Costigan, who is well qualified to represent the ward in the City Council, The muneration attached to the position of Commissioner in Expropriation is not so large pe to tempt me to hold on to it if my duty appeared clearly to be the other way; but it scems to me that important intercsts arc involved, which might be imperilled, and the appointment of a new nan, who would haveto > oe a great deal of the work already done Bo a cause considerable extra expense, Ta Iy 1 cannot feel that it would be high foduont- er in Expro- Sive up \u2018the resign my position of Commission, priation, and I must, therefore, prospect of becoming an alderman I remain, Yours respectfully, J.M.M.DUFF, Montreal, 18th January.1893.AMUSEMENTS, TES ACADEMY OF MUSIC.HENRY THoMas, Lessce and Week beginning MON DAY, & First Only matinee Saturda 164 irst appearance in Montre: : \u2018 P ed Artists, of the isting, MRS.POTTER MR.BELLE In the following program : .Wednesday evenings ZOLAS wr ng ESE,\u201d hursday, Friday and Sat ER evenings and Saturday matinee, ra appearance of Mrs.Potter and i un Ban adaptation of Dumas t Har Belly called \u2018* A WIFE\u2019S FOLLY,\" lou, Prices, $1.00, 75c, 50c.Gallery, 25c, Seats now on sale at Nordheïmerg.Norihoiom ACADEMY OF Musig HENRY THOMAS, Lessee and Manag er, One week commencin Jan.23rd, Matinee Saturnday, THE DIGBY BELL COMIC OPER (gy Presenting Harry B.Smith and J wards\u2019 Brilliantly Successful Come Opn, J-U-P-1-T-ER New Sagnificent Produetieumes l COMPANY OF 60 PEOPLE, ~~ INCLUDING \u2014 Miss Bertha Ricci Mrs.Laura Joyce.Miss Josephine Knapp Miss Hilda Hole eu Miss Maud Hollins Mr.H.M.Imano Mr.John Belden Mr.Chas, H.J Mr.Joseph Weisner Mr.E.Forrest Jones ee AND \u2014 Mr.Digby Bell Sole Proprietor and Manager, James H, Palser, Prices, $1.50, $1.00, 75c and 50c.Gallery, Sale of scats open Thursday at Ni ordholmers rite QUEEN'S THEATRE.A ; font thie \u2018 oem \u201c8 BELLY JACK GILMOUR Next yieek sereine Pine (Our Canadian Jack) it duccessul plus ' DARTMOOR\" Seats can be had at Theatre, N.Y.Piano Co, She paxd's Music Store and Hotels.Telephong eu te Coming\u2014PADEREWSKI, the great Pianigt Jan.3 and 31.\u201cPIRATES OF PENZANCE} Feb.1 to 4.THEATRE ROYAL.Week commencing MONDAY, JANUARY 4 Afternoon and Evening, uatic Spectacular Melo-Drama, a DARK SECRET And a strong cast, including the oran Oarsman, WALLACE ROSS, and a Unique Acrobatic Srecialty, the 3 ALBIONS, 5 es ful Scenery, Superb Moonlight Effects, Re Steam Launch, Real Rowing Shells, Real Fi Boats, Real Sail Boats.A Marvellous Effect The Stage covered with a Tank containing Fifty Thousand Gallons of Water, Prices of admission, 10c, 20c and 30c.Resery.ed Scats, 10c extra.Weck following\u2014The Great Indian Princess WINDSOR HALL.- - - .THIS EVENING JANUARY 19th, Operatic -:- Concert \u2014 AND \u2014 3rd Act of Faust \u2014 BY_\u2014 CAMPBELL CAMPANINI DEL PUENTE _ FISCHER LUCKSTONE.PRICES, - $1.00 to $2.5¢ VWINDSOR HALL.FRIDAY, JANUARY 2th.8 P.M.Ap.Sc.Banjo Club, MeGill University, .-\u2014~ ASSISTED BY \u2014 Banjo & Glea Clubs of University of Vermont, In College Songs, Glees, Music and Mirth.S9-COLLEGE MEIN-3& Tickets, 50c and 25c, To be had at Sheppard Music Store.P VW INDSOR HALL.Monday Evening.January 23rd, at Eight O\u2019ciock.GRAND : CONCERT BY THE Ladies Schubert Quartette f Boston), Belle Goldthwaite, Arvilla Forbush, , First Soprano.First Alte.Carrie T.Shephard, Anna L.Whitcombe, Second Soprano.Second Alto.And Miss Ida Florence (of Boston) Reciter Assisted by and under the auspices of Harmony -:- Male -:- Quartette (Of Montreal).Reserved Scats, 75 and 50 Cents.Plan at Geo, J.Sheppard's Musi 3 St.Catherine street.PP usle Store, 2214 AFT ASSOCIATION of MONTREAL PHILLIPS SQUARE.Galleries Open Daily 8 A.M.to DUSK.Admission 25c.SATURDAYS FREE Reading Room open to mombers till p.m a The Canadian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, \"The annual meeting of this society will be held at the office of thy Secretary, Te St.James street, on THURSDAY, the 19th January, ab 3 p.m.The attendance of all interested in the work of the Society is respectfully requested.By order, G.DURNFORD, Secretary.BOOKKEEPER ERE Before opening your Ledger, see the SCHLICHTS STANDARD LEDGER INDEX QUICKEST, SIMPLEST AND EASIEST OF REFERENCE.SEE IT! BUY IT! J.F.WILDMAIN, 1744 Notre Dame Street, Montreal.Bell Telephone 1460.The Sun.During 1893 THE SUN will be of surpassing excellence and will print more news and more pure literature than ever before in its history.\u2014\u2014 The Sunday Sun ls the greatest Sunday Newspapet in the world.Price 5e.à copy.By mall, - - §2 8 yea! Daily, by mail, - - - - $6a yeu Daily and Sunday, by mall, - - $8 a yea! Address THE SUN, New York.Cold Offices Heated.COLE'S Movable Hot Water Heaters $3.50 eacl COLE'S LAMP STORE, 172 NOTRE DAME STREET.Tg ty nt a d' at \u2014; MONTREAL DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1893.5 SPORTING EVENTS.Regulations to Govern the M.A.A.A.Curling Bonspiel, The Crystals Defeat the Victorias\u2014Annual Curling Match Between the Thistle and Caledonia Clubs\u2014The Davis Prize Com- petition\u2014Notes of the Carnival of Sports _-The M.S.C.Open Steeplechase.Below will be found the regulations to govern the curling bonspeil, which the MA.A A.intend holding during their Car- pival of sports teginning on Feb.6.For this competition they have offered four gold medals for first prize, and four watch charms for second prize, to be competed for by ome or more rinks of stone playing curlers, from any club in the world.A curling committee, composed of (Geo.Brush, Canadian Branch of the R.C.C.C.Dr.E B.Ibbotson, Montreal Curling slab.A.Mitchell, Thistle Curling clab.W.P.Scott, Caledonia Curling club.W.B.Hutchison, Heather Curling club.Dixon Anderson, St.Lawrence Curling club.\u2019 Mr.Freeman, M.A.A.A.Curling club.James Paton, M,A.A.A.Curling club.W.8.Weldon, M.A.A.A.Curling club, haa been appointed to attend to all matters connected with this department of the Carnival.; The committee will make all necessary arrangements for the transport of stones and besoms (which should be labeiled with the name of the club), to and from all railroad stations in Montreal.REGULATIONS FOR THR CURLING BONSPIEL.fe , Gloucester, N.J., Jan.18.\u2014The followin, 1.The competitions, as far as possible ni > > £ shall take place on the open air ob of the pil rhe entries for to-morrow\u2019s races at |.2.1t shall be open to the world; and First race\u20144 mile, for maidens: no entrance is required the enter the com- Mori Geneon 15 La ee 1% petitions.Turner.105 3.The committee shall endeavor, as far Second race\u2014] mile, for 3-ycar olde.Sel 8: as possible, that rinks from the same Bunker Hil.112 Moderato.- 169 neighborhood shall not be drawn against Wise oe PE 1% Bete ti 92 one another.4.Each stage of the matches must be | played by the same players and in the same positions.8.The drawing for competitors and ice shall be made by or under the direction of the committee.6.The play shall be governed by the rules of the Royal Caledonia Curling Club, as appearing in the annual of 1892.7.All matters of dispute will be referred to the umpires, whose decision will be final.8.All games shall be composed of 17 ends, and if any of the competing rinks are not ready to play at the hour named for any match, one end shall be counted as played for every ten minutes delay, and the opposing rinks, if ready, shall count one point on the game for each such period of time it is kept waiting.9.The hours of beginning shall be 9.30 a.m., 2 o'clock p.m., and, in the event of indoor play, 7.30 p.m.10.The first competition will begin on Thursday, February 9th, at 9.30 a.m.and 2 p.m.of the same day.Should the weather prove unfavorable, or should the M.A.A A.rink be engaged during the second or other drawings, the matches will be played in the covered rinks of the city, which have been kindly offered for that purpose.11.Copies of the list of the first drawings will be posted in the different curling rinks of the city.12.The committee reserve the.right to make such modifications in the rules as in their opinion the circumstances of special cases may warrant, The above regulations will be laid before the various clubs to-day, and are certain of being accepted.The Davis Prize Competition.The last match in the second drawing was The played last night in the Thistle rink.rinks were as follows : P.W.McHagan F.Robertson G.Heuston Judge lait Robin Adair w.A Mowat Captain Clift\u2014ski i P The Thistle-Calodonia Annual Match.The annual club match between the Thistle aud Caledonia Curling Clubs was begun yesterday afternoon at the Thistle Rink, when two rinks weve played.In the layed at the Caledonia.The result of yesterday\u2019s matches evening two more rinks were Was as follows : AE Ree qe J.F.Mackie LE.him'on the matter of putting up a fake fight g Gosisan er 4: Mcpherson between them.B MeAuliffo.aft ° Lvall vou According to Burge, cAuliffe, after b.Lyall \u20148kip, 7.Geo.8.Br, 19, stating that he did not want to fight because RINE 2.a beaten man was no good in this country, 7 i said : Space À.Wire hal \u201cNow, Dick, you would like to make some J.W.Hughes R.M.Esdailo big money, and you can.We can ake a J.H.Hotchison 18 A.Mitchell kip 16 Match and get a big purse, and you can skip SSP Jnake a small fortune, but I will only make RINK 3.a match on condition that I must Pe the J.B.Young w MoCard winner.You can make more money by it ¥ doth DriCamoton than you can make in & dozen fghta in Eng- W.P.Scott W.Stewart land, and as long as you are uot going to -\u2014skip, 15 \u2014skip, 21 remain in this country, it won't hurt you RINK 4.much.\u201d _.J.Farquharson J.Adair The Press adds that it is stated that the M.McAnulty W.Aird price offered to Burge to agree for McAuliffe J.Simpson W.Cleghorn to win was $25,000, although Burge did not W.H.Boone \u2014ekip, 9 0.Ww.Aer kip ao mention the amount to The Post's inforin- , 3 Two rinks each will be played to-night in The the Thistle and Caledonia rinks match will finish on Friday night.\u2014 THE CARNIVAL.Notes of the Week of Sports.Matters in regard to the M.A.A.A., Carnival of Sports are progressing favorably, and indications point to & great success.The floor committee appointed by the ball committee met Jast night in the Windsor Hotel, and after attending to a few pressing mutters adjourned until Tuesday night.Harry Brophy reported about the concert.to Le held \u2018on Monday, Feb.6, that five chorus had been selected.The next chorus ractice will bs held in the Gymnasium on riday nights Amongst others that will take part in the concert will be Messrs.Sokeski and Hodgson.Active preparations are being made have the torch light procession an unusual succeas.The Ar Artillery, Holly, to take part.week.It is proposed to have on the night of the procession a display from the reservoir and rom top of the mountain.\"Phere will be an impromptu concert held the Club House.after the procession ab All snowshoers in line will be admitted but a small admission will be charged the general public.BASEBALL.Harvard Proposes a Great Scheme.New York, Jan.18\u2014The idea restricting in football teams to undergraduates has generally pleased the colle- giaus.The Pennsylvania boys only have taken exception to it, and that is because their prospects next year will be affected \u20ac membershi pe ; ; Spalding should the osition be incorporated into Mr.Spal , nu : ; the rules of tho Intercollegiate Football As- sheaf of communications from Doren sociation, Harvard men are rticularly tries, voicing the international interest pleased with the plan.might exist.will make it impossible for men whe ar J.5 Archibald\u2014skip le, Montreal Garrison rescent, Emerald, La- chine and Canadian clubs have been invited The Fireworks\u2019 Committee held à meeting yesterday and gave the order for the fireworks to be used during the There will be three bonfires that night, one at the Park They believe that it will tend to elevate college sports, and will entirely do away with any unfairness which arvard bus always posed as the particular upholder of purity in college athletics borh in the field and the track.Accordingly they welcome any plan which Casure to the wearers of the crimson.hey are willing, it can be said, to go a long Way to meet their old rivals so long as they can be assured of fair Iplay.Harvard may not join the Intercollegiate association.hey are not anxious to be in the position that Yale isnow in.If Harvard won the lutercolleginte championship they would, in & true sportsmanlike spirit, be obliged to play any college outside the association which might laÿ cluim to the championship.This is something Harvard would not like.ey do not wish te com any college.polled to play Sut Harvard is willing to do something which will surprise the entire college world.The Cambridge collegians have long shown an antipathy to the Princeton Tiger.They have studiously avoided the animals lair at Old Nassau.Now, however, those who should kuow say that Harvard is perfectly willing to play both Yale and Princeton in both baseball and football.It would then not be necessary for them to enter the Intercollegiate Association, and they would confine themselves exclusively to the two larger colleges.In regard to the football games, the Yale-Harvard game would be played, as in former years, at Springfield.With Princeton, Harvard will played in New York.It is said that Harvard has made up its mind to this plan.J.Walton Greene, a prominent Harvard man, when seen yesterday, agreed that the above was what his college planned to do.George A.Adee, of Yale, said thut he believed this would be the position Harvard would take.TURF.To-Day\u2019s Entries at Gloucester.[Special to The Herald.Selling : Third race\u20146} furlongs.Horimore unes \u2026\u2026.106 G Fourth race, 1 milo.Selling.Raleigh.112 Airshatt.eer 9 Harfybu .10t Pleomar.\u2026 9 .>.104.La Juive, Ally.79 Fifth race, § mile, Selling.Maid of Blarney .107 McKoever.106 Grand Prix.106 Lucre.sans.101 Tradesman.108 Piedmont.100 Sixth race, 4} furlongs.Sclling, _ \" Sierra Nevada.105 P.J.H.105 J.J.Healy.,.103 Rustic.165 Jupiter.105 Atropin.103 To-day's Entries at Guttenburg.{Special to The Herald.l New York, Jan.18.\u2014 The following are the entries for to-morrow\u2019s races at Guttenburg: First race, 1 milo, Selling.Laurcstan 114 .101 113 .101 cee.108 .M ie.105 97 Caraccas.104 Second race, § mile.\u2019 Selling.Red Elm .96 .Miss Olive Lizzie ¥.Bon Voyage.King Leo.Mucilage.Ben March.9 Mayor B.Third race\u20141 mile.Selling.Harry Alarzo.113 Bullfinch.Prince Fortunat Sir George.Allan Bane.Fourth race\u201444 furlongs.Handioap.112 Addie B.A\u2014\u2014\u2014 THE RING.Burge Says McAuliffe Approached Him.ublishes a story in which Dick Burge, the English pugilist, is represented as saying that in his last conference with McAuliffe the latter, who had hn drinking and was very liberal in his cohtidences, approached ant.\u2014 ATHLETIC.International Sports for the World's Fair.New York, Jan.18.\u2014The scheme for an arrived in New York for a conference with the athletic officials here on the subject.He made a glowing report on the harmony and enthusiasm prevailing in Western ath- the latter body will now apply for member- in the A.A.U.They will be em- about to be further strengthened by the al- egiance of the powerful A.C.CL \u201cThis happy outcome of the negotiations intrusted to Mr.Spalding leaves the West a solid unit in favor of the great enterprise on footing of the World's Fair Championship cow- mittee and the Plan and Scope committee it is anticipated that the preliminary arrangements at Chicago will be in shape.slide, one at the top of the mountain and the third at the Athletic Club House.tue ampitheatre will then be ready for inspection.Much progress has already heen be provided for 25,000 people.ing of the entire A.A.U.executive will bandied by a series of sub-committees.along the line.ramme that Mr.Spaldin freres in the Chicago À.110 Early Blossom.103 ., 100 Fidgct \u2026 9 108 April Fool.% Fifth race\u2014# mile.Clark.110 Cadigu, filly.100 Hermine, .110 Fagan.100 Dr.Cosby,.110 Mariella, filly.95 Inspector C.~.106 Blue and White.95 Sixth race\u20146% furlongs.Selling.Woodchopper.111 Panhandle.Belwood.112 Miss Belle Leveller 110 Innivation Fagot.: .109 Extra St, Denis.109 Longard Repeater.108 Boston, Jan.18.\u2014The Post this morning international tournament of amateur sport at the World\u2019s Fair received another fillip yesterday afternoon when A.G.Spalding letic circles.The differences between the Central Association of the A.A.U.and the Western Association have been satisfactorily adjusted, and the clubs constituting shi y.> bodied in the Central Association, which is In consultation with Secretary J.E.Sul- Livan.Mr.Spalding suggested that a meet- be called in about six weeks, by which time erfect Plans of the new grounds and plant, and complete details in relation to made in this direction, and it is estimated that sufficient seating accommodation can Secretary Sullivan.communicated these facts to President Howard Perry Inet night, and thinks it probable that a special meet- called.The secretary also thinks that the voluminous character of the preliminaries requiring attention can be most effectively These could work simultaneously, and insure upiform progress in the details all submitted a formidable forthcoming tournament hasalready aroused.So many ex respondents favor the holding of events not embraced in the A.A.U.pro- and his con- , are serioysly nsidering the feasability of a season\u2019s carnival embracing every conceivable branch appointment by the corporation of Harvard niversity of a graduate treasurer and manager, naming Herbert White, secretary of the Varsity football association.This action is a complete overturning of the method of unorganized management now in use, and will of value in cutting down the expenses of the various teams.The contract, as signed by Mr.White, provides that his duties shall date from July 1, and from that time he will manage entirely the financial part of the athletic teams, being subject to the athletic committes alone.To Juggle Indian Clubs for the Champlon- ship.Troy, N.Y., Jan.18.\u2014Carl Dunlap, of St.Louis, has accepted the challenge of William Stanton, of Troy, to juggle Iudian clubs for the championship of the world and a prize of $2,000 to $5,000.SKATING.Breen Refused to Skate, Minneapolis, Jan.18.\u2014The advertised skating race between Fred Breen, the Canadian, and Harald Hagen, of Norway, did not accur.Breen had lost two races and Inst night departed for tie eust.Hagen left to-night.Donohue Breaks an American Record.Red Bank, N.J., Jan.18.\u2014Three races were skated here to-day.The first race, 440 yards, was won by Howard Mosher, of Storm King, N.Y., in 40 seconds.The second race, 1 mile, was also won by Mosher, time 3 minutes 9 seconds.The third race was won by Joseph F.Donoghue, M.A.C., New York (scratch).His time for the first and second miles, 2.55 and 6.08 1-5,breaks the American record.Fancy Dress Carnival at the M.A.A.A.Tonight.A very large entry list has been received for the first fancy dress carnival, which takes place at the M.A.A.A.rink to-night.Tht rink committee will have the rink illuminated with colored lights, and there will be a display of fireworks.HOCKEY.Crystals Defeat the Victorias.The Crystal hockey team are keeping up a winning record.They first met the Quebec team and defeated it, and last night they won their second match in the series by defeating the Victorias.The match took lace in the Victoria rink and was witnessed y a very large crowd.The match was a good one from beginning to end.The Victorias were weakened by the loss of Barry, Stephens, Drinkwater and Davidsan, but the team that played nevertheless gave the Crystals all they could do to defeat them by a score of three goals to one, The teams were: VICTORIA.CRYSTAL, R.Jones.Collins H.Christie.McDonald W.iPullen.cover pointy.Boone x: Rankin.ees ve Murray .Sanderson.urra, G.Hamilton.Forwards 2sa0cu000e Frown E.Irwin.Ritchie Harry Shaw.\u2026\u2026.umpires.\u2026.\u2026 Scanlan Referee, W, Hodgson.As usual the crowd was kept waiting until almost nine o\u2019clock before the teams condescended to come on the ice.The habit of keeping a crowd waiting a full hour in a cold rink before the game starts is an exceedingly bad one, and should be stopped at once.The Victoria team is a much lighter one.than the Crystal, but it is.one that is a great deal faster.The boys make one great mis.the whole game himself, and combine: play was seldom tried.The Crystals, although not as fast as a team, play mere of a combined game.Irwin, Suunderson or Rankin would make some dashing runs up the ice with the puck, but seldom did they shoot.They would lose it, and nobody being there to help themthe Crystals would carry the puck back and shoot.On the first half the Crystals scored their first game in about three minutes play.No more games were scored in this half, nor was another scored until about ten minutes before time was called.Shot after shot was made on the Victoria goals, but Bob Pullen played a strong game at cover point, and never missed what he went for.Mur- ay for the Crystäls was the dangerous man.He shot dead on the posts every time and was well supported by Brown.Murray scored two goals, Ritchie was fast and reliable.The match was full of offsides, but very little escaped the eagle cye of referce Hodgson.In the second half the play was if anything in favor of the Crystals, but they were unable to score until shortly before time was up when Murray scored a second game for the Crystals.In buta few minutes a scrimmage resulted in front of the Crystals goals and the ball was pushed through; just as time was wp a similar scrimmage resulted in front of the Victoria goals, and the Crystals scored their third game.Jr.Crystals vs.Wanderers.A match was played last evening between these two clubs, and resulted in a victory for the Wanderers by three straight games.The playing on both teams was fast.For the winning side Danford, Winn and Brown, showed up to good advantage, as did also Heugh, MeNeice and Carpenter for the losing team.The teams and their places were as follows : JR.CRYSTALS.\u2018Whilleby.Stephen Hough.Billingsby .McNeice.Donnelly.P.McKenna WANDERERS, .A.Eaves Winnipeg Players Coming East.{Special to The Herald.} Winnipeg, Jan.18.-\u2014The two city hockey teams, Winnipeg's and Victoria's, have decided to combine forces and send a seven East during February.They intend to get on matches with the Ottawa and Montreal clubs.The picked team will make a strong aggregation.THE SNOWSHOE.The M.S.C.Open Steeplechase.Montreal Snowshoe club took place last night from the M.A.A.A.gymnasium to the Athletic Club House.There were four starters, and the result was as follows : 1.Gentleman.2, J.T.Wilson .3.Geo.Ransom .21m.16s 4.Jas.Darling.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.22m.30s The time made was very good for such a dark night.| The officials were: Judges, F.C.A.Me- Indoe, R.Bimmnore, 8.Baylis ; timekeepers, J.G.Ross, I.Rubenstein, James Paton.About fifty members tramped over and a large number drove ont.\u2018The Club House presented a lively scene.The usual enjoyable time was spent.Bishop Moreau, of St.Hyacinthe, celebrated tho seventeenth anuiversary of his },qovery.take, however, as each one attempts to play I: Jones was always to be depended upon: | \u2018The annual open steeplechase of the |.Clan Gordon, on Wednesday next, will take place in the Fraser Hall, not at & Place d\u2019Armes square.His Grace Bishop Lafleche, of Three Rivers, left that city yesterday for Rome.He is accompanied by Rev.Canon Bocket, cure of Ste.Anne de la Perade.Judge Tait yesterday morning disn.issed the opposition in the case of Bertin versus Hetter.The court held that the aliega- tions of the opposition had not been proved.Mr.B.J.Coghlin has been selected to fill the vacancy on the expropriation commission for Palace street, between Cathedral and Windsor, cuused by the death of ex- Ald.Proctor.The tour men, Richer, lapointe, Rous- sceau and Charbonneau, arrested for alleged complicity in stealing oats from Mr.C.Pen.niston, Lachine Road, were committed to the Court of Queen\u2019s Benchby Judge Des- noyers yesterday afternoon.The enquete in the Jos.Paquette & Co.rebbery of 30,0U0 bricks commenced yesterday afternoon in the l\u2019olice Court.The two men who are alleged to hava stolen them are August Bosquet and Michel Lesartan.Enquete in the trial of Osias Baudin for an attempt to murder the young lawyer Jocks of Caughuawauga, at St.Philomene, a month ago, has boen fixed for Tuesday next.An alarm rang about 4.30 yesterday afternoon for the Presbyterian College.The heating apparatus bad set fire to the joist of a door on the third floor of the building in the dormitories.It was put out by a Bab- cock from No, 4 salvage wagon.High Constable Pearcy Carroll, of Mone.on, N.B., who arrested Warn Walker on \" uesday last at Brush\u2019s Corners on a charge forging of notes on the Nova Scotia Bank, will leave for that place with his prisoner to-day.The young man P.De Lorimier, who gave himself up on Tucsday afternoon to High Consiable Bissonnette, and who is charged with a brutal assault ou a Miss Mathieu of Cudicux street, was brought before Judge Desnoyers yesterday afternoon, who fixed the euquete for the 24th inst.Yesterday afternoon Recorder de Mon- tigny sentenced Madame Pilon, ot Dorches- ter atreet east, to eighteen months\u2019 imprisonment for keeping a disorderly house and harboring young girls for immoral purposes.A young girl uamed Milene Faucet, fifteen years of age, found in the house, was allowed to go home with her mother, who promised to look after her in the future.Both Found Guilty of Murder.Word was received in the city by Mr.Chas.Dousct, deputy clerk of the Crown, yesterday morning, that the two Jews, Harris Blank and Issac Rosenswa'g, had been found guilty of murder in the first degree at Towanda, Penusylvania.They were arrested in this city about four months ago, and some six months after their flight from Towanda, in which place they had brutally murdered a peddler, John Marks, whose multilated body they Lid in a trunk ina barn on the wayside.Nearly Starved to Death.One of the two women who were discovered by Sergeant Soulieres in a starving condition on St.Agathe street Tuesday evening was taken to the Notre Dame Hospital yesterday afternoon, The woman is nearly 90 years of age, and on examination was Jfound to be in a most emaciated state and _very little hopes are entertained of her re- The Exodus Continues.Proofs of the exodus continue to accumnu- lite just as rapidly.as the Catholic census of cach parish is taken.The population of the parish of Ste.Victoire d\u2019Arthabaska hay, according to the ecclesinstical census, deereased by 114.souls since 1869.Young, middle-aged or old men suffering from the flects of \u2018clics and excesses, restored to perfect ealth, manhood and vigor, JuD DR GORDONWS REMEDY DOR MEX CREATES New Nerve Force and Powerful \u201cManhood, Cures Lost P , Nosy Dehility, Ni iseases caused by.\u2018Abuse, Over Wok NE ores: obacco, Opium or Stimulants, Lack of Energy, Lost Mem eadache, Wakof Memory, akefuiness, Gleet and Ve Le) A Cure is Guaranteed! Jo ovary one using this Remedy according to direc | money cheerfully and conscientio relaie, PRICE 81.00, 6 PACKAGES 85.002 00 ent by mail to any point in U.S.or Cana 3ecurely sealed, free from duty or Inspection.nada, Write to-day for our Sa ES \\ddress or call on QUEEN MEDICINE CC, NEW YORK LIFE BUILDING, Montreal, Can.Cold Rooms Heated.COLE'S HOT WATER HEATERS $3.50 EACH COLE'S LAMP STORE, 1792 NOTRE DAME STREKT.ELIOCK SCHOOL.1143 DORCHESTER St., Montreal.Directors\u2014Sir J.Hickson, President; R.B, Angus, Bag.Vice-President; R.Mackay, Ksq., VA Ogilvie, Esq., G.W.Stephens, Esq., Rev.J.Williamson, Rector.PRIMARY SCHOOL\u2014For Boys from 8 toll.SECONDARY SCHOOL For 60 boys, graded into 6 classes, number in any class Sein limited to 12.Advanced courses in English, Mathematics, Classics, Modern Languages, etc.; Special preparation for admission to the Arts and Science Faculties of the Universities, the Royal Military College, Kingston, and the Mass.Institute of Technology, Boston, as well as for commercial life, PHYSICAL TRAINING.Hall for Physical Training, Gymnastics, Drill, Ete BOARDING.Superior accommodation for 14 resident pupil, each having separate room, affording to city boys tho advantages of a boarding school with the opportunity of spending two days of every week at home.nesday, Sept.7.J.WILLIAMSON, Rector.Session opened Wed Whe, an Ram Fn mE web fa FES SNS SE Organic Weakness, Falling Memory, Lack of +, Energy, Phyelcal Lecay,gpositively cured by Hazelton®s Vitallzer.Ao \u2018Nervous Debility, Din.R nexs of Sich, 1.088 of bition, Brunted Develon- ment, Loss of Power, Pains in the Back, Night B Emissions, Drain in Urioe, Seminal Losses, Sleep M vs«ness, Aversion to Socirty, Excessive Indul- genes.Addiess, enclosing 8 cert stamp for «rcatise, consecration as bishop on Monday last.A3.E.H'ZEUTON, sos ronge, roronte, ont.J.H.LIEFTINCK.(Sumatra, TOBACCO e of amateur sport.That there will be à F.LierriNck J.Hzn.© J.H.LIEFTINCK & ZOON, -BROKERS.AMSTERDAM.\u2014 HOLLAND.J.H.LIEFTINCK, JR.Borneo, Java) ff Not collegi | - \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2019 the college bo © sod simple to play in Biber] on a surpassing scale is almost BREVITIES.\u2018hat Yale and Princeton have shown a .Etiene Robert, residing on Quesnel street, EE desire to abolish the pernicions habit of C ry ove in Harvard A q Was fined S3 and costs by the recorder for Sing graduates ota o ol aly Lo | St Bora | aréing # Inded tools : : while the season lasted, has given most important move Eu athleties.It isthe The celebration of Burns\u2019 birthday by W nat IS 4 ANN x Castoria is Dr.Samuel Pitcher\u2019s prescription for Infants and Children.It contains neither Opiam, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance.I$ is a harmless substitute for Parcgoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.It is Pleasant.Its guarantoe is thirty years\u2019 use by Millions of Mothers.Castoria dostroys Worms and allays feverishness, Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhea and Wind Colle.Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency.Castorin assimilates the food, rcgulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.Case toria is tho Childron\u2019s Panacea\u2014the Mother's Friend.Castoria.\u201c Catorla is 5p woll adapted to children the I recommend if ag superior toany prescription known to mo.\u201d H A.Ancuer, M D, 111 So.Oxford St, Brooklyn, N.Ÿ © Our physicians ia tho children's depart ment hove spokem highly of their expert enco in their outside practice with Castoria, and although woe only have among eur medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet wo are {ros to confess that the merits of Casteria has wen us to look with Castoria.* Castoria is an excellent mediaine Por ch°t- fren.Mothers have repeatediy told me of its ppod effect upon their children.\u201d Dz.G.0.Ossoop, Lowell, Mass.* Castoria is the best remedy for children of which I am acquainted.Ihope the day lanot far distant when mothers will consider tha real taterest of their children, and use Costoria ja- stead of the various quack nostrums which zre destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby seading Savor upom it.\" them to premature graves.\u201d Ure Hosrrrak AND DisrxwsAnt, Pn.J.F.Epsomuzon, Meur Couwar, Ar Auvxs GC, Surrne, Pres, The Centaur Company, 7! Murray Strost, Now York Oltgn ar SEE pr i \u2014\u2014 MANUFACTURERS OF STEAM AND POWER FOR ALL DUTIES.TORONTO, Ont.SYP ITT OY \u2014 re rep HOTT STMT SATAN ANY | remet [ [HE E.B.EDDY C0, Mammoth Mills, Hull, Que.XOX: Political economy is Domestic economy on a large scale.If you wantto make the latter a success you must furnish your house with a complete supply of EDDY'S PAILS, TUBS, WASHBOARDS, INDURATED FIBRE WARE, MATCHES, ETC.A full supply always on hand, and inspection invited.Montreal Branch, 318 ST.JAMES ST.Telephone No.1619.TR pe AM IIQUEES RU I ITEMS: | AUTISM WHY DO WE ALL WEAR Granby Rubbers BECAUSE THEY ARE HONESTLY MADE.Latest Styles, Beautifully Finished, Perfect Fit, Everybody Wears Them.ALL DEALERS SELL THEM! GRANBY RUBBERS WEAR LIKE IRON.0060000000 00000000000000000000000¢ ARE YOU INTERESTED e À In the Cure for Drunkenness or the Morphine Habit ?Have you a husband, brother, son or friend whois addicted tostrong drink?If so, we can cure him.For fullest information address THO.LINDSAY, Secretary.DOUBLE CHLORIDE OF GOLD CURE CO.16 Hanover Street - - - MONTREAL TELEPHONE 3043.000000000080830000000000000000000000000000000000¢ 0060000000000 004 00 eller lddddddddddod OOP PPPPPPPVVIIIIVIIIIVIIIVIVIIPY Subscribe : to : THE : HERALD | MONTREAL DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1893.pm 6 THE LATE MR.ALLAN'S FUNERAL.Many Citizens Hear Testimony of Respect\u2014 No Will.The funeral of the late Arthur Edward Allan took place yesterday, from the family residence, Ravenscraig.The attendance was a large and representative one.The funeral service was conducted in the drawing room, according to the simple and im- ressive ritual of the Presbyterian church, by the Rev.J.Edgar Hill, pastor of St.Andrew\u2019s church, where the family worship.After several passages of scripture had been read, a touching prayer was offered up, invoking Divine comfort for the bereaved mourners left behind.The solemn service concluded with the Lord\u2019s Prayer, repeated as it could only be on an occasion of deep BOrrow.At the conclusion of the service, the casket, which was literally smothered with flowers, was borne out of the drawing room, to where the conveyance was in waiting to take it to old Mount Royal, its final resting place.It bore the simple inscription, ¢\u2018Arthur E.Allan, died 16th January, 1895, in his 23rd year.\u201d The procession went by way of Pine avenue and up Park avenue to the cemetery.The chief mourners were Messrs.H.Montagu Allan and Alex.Allan, brothers of Heceased; Andrew Allan, uncle of deceased; Dr.Chas.McEachran, Colin Campbell and Major Wilson, brothers-in-law of deceased; Hugh A.Allan, Andrew A.Allan and J.Allan, cousins of deceased; Travers Alan, nephew of deceased, and Captain Benyon and Lieut, Joseph Benyon.There were no pall-bearers.A large number of the employees of the Allan Line were present to show the last mark of respect to the deceased.Among the citizens present were: Mayor McShane, E.H.Twohey, U, S.Collector ot Customs, Lieut.-Col.Stevenson, Lieut.-Col.Bond, Major Ibbotson, Jno.Darling, F.Robertson, L.W.Thom, Rev.Canon Elle- ood, J.H.Wardlow, C.L.Dillon, J.eagher, W.Hope, Geo, Murray, Chas.Ionk, C.E.Howard, Andrew Stewart, C.R.Christie, E.Leprohon, H.8.Holt, E.Stewart, Chas.Lamothe, Capt.Coursol, A.W.Hooper, G.R.Hooper, A.Prevost, Robt.McNaught, H.Joseph, D.D.Mann, G.W.Irving, A.Armour, D.O\u2019Brien, L.H.Gault, P.R.Gault, H.B.Young, J.Alexander Stevenson, Geo.Hannah, athan Kennedy, R.L.Gault, A.S.Swing, S.H.Ewing, H.McDougall, L.H.Patterson, C.L.Thomson, John Ogilvy, Jno.Torrance, B.Murphy, D.Campbell, G.F.Torrance, ¥, W, Henshaw, L.S.Black, Dr.D.McEachran, C.Cassils, C.Handy- side, M.Carroll, H.V.Meredith, H.McKenzie, L.Selby, J.O.Garrel, H.B.Yates, Ed.Black, W.Bremner, Dr.Williams, Allan McKenzie, H.A.Budden, Captain J.G.Shaw, J.B.Patterson, H.G.Fadie, Wm.Ramsay, W.N.Marler, A.S.Ewing, George Hague, N.8.Leslie, C.N.Cussock, W.McIntyre, G.L.Caines, Dr.Morrice, jr., A.B.Evans, C.Sewell, Peers Davidson, F.E.Meredith, W.H.Meredith, R.B.Angus, L.J.Forget, C.Meredith, James Gillespie, W.Miller, G.McDougall, A.A.Hodgson, F.Rolland, \u2018W.A.Murray, J.M.Tarte, J.L.Fletcher, F.Delise, E.W.Riley, A.A.Gordon, Gordon Strathy, T.D.Bell, W.Urquhart, F.L.Hart, R.A.P, Hart, Jno.McDonald, J.J.McGill, Chas.Holland, R.C.Buchanan, Vicomte de la Barthe, A.E.Whitney, A.D.Macadier, J.P.Dawes, and many others.NO WILL LEFT.No will of Mr.Allan has been found, and it is believed that he did not make one.In that case his fortune,amounting to over one million dollars, would revert to his brothers and sisters, who are Alex.Allan, Bryce Allan, H.Montagu Allan, Mrs.Wilson, Quebec; Mrs.Milburn, England; Mrs.Rutledge, Northwest; Mra.Colin Campbell, Mrs.McEachran, Miss Allan, Port Hope, and Mrs, Boswell, England.AN INVESTIGATION, An investigation was held by the Fire Commissioners into the circumstances at- lending the fire, but nothing new was eli.rited.The following was the conclusion they came to : \u2018\u2018 That the fire was caused by the deceased leaving a lighted cigar or cigarette in the pocket of his overcoat, which he threw down in a chair in the front room, and then entered by the hallway into his bedroom.In the meantime the fire smouldered away, and he inhaled that poisonous gas just as he would have inhaled morphine, and the gas generated from it ascended the stairs and made it impossible for any one to come down to render assistance.\u201d IMPORTANT QUESTIONS.An Interesting Day at the Meeting of the Provincial Synod.The synod met yesterday morning at 10 o'clock for continuing the transaction of business, \u2018\u201c\u201cThe consolidation of the Church\u201d was the subject first coming before the meeting.Dr.Davidson in a lengthy address moved the acceptance of the scheme, and Dean Carmichael seconded the motion.The subject was a most important one and occupied nearly two hours in debate.It was finally carried and the Synod adjourned to 1 o'clock p.m.The first subjeot for discussion at the afternoon session was the report of the Executive committee.It occasioned considerable discussion and criticism.Rev.Mr, French and others spoke strongly and at considerable length on the report.Rev.Dean Carmichael made an eloquent speech on \u2018the subject of missions and immigration, and said that he considered that an Episcopal Bureau of Iin.migration would be a great benefit to the church and he hoped that such a bureau would be established before much longer.Several movements of the adoption of reports of committees were made and carried.It was moved by Dr.L.H.Davidson, seconded by the Dean of Montreal : Thatin order tomeet the needs of the constantly arriving immigrants,old and young\u2014 members of the Church of England\u2014and to secure the fall benefit of such immigration to the Church of England in Canada, it is desirable to establish as soon as possible at the port of Montreal a Church of England Home, where the boys and girls, women and men-\u2014members of the Church\u2014coming ont irom the Old Country, and largely from societies of the Mother Church, may be received, and from whence they may be sent forward with proper letters of introduction.That a special committee be appointed to cat in conjunction with the immigration chaplain, and to take such steps as may be possible to carry into effect the foregoing resolution, and to make provision for the coming season\u2019s immigration.That, further, said committee be author.fzed to communicate with the executive committee, or other authority of the several dioceses in this ecclesiastical province, and ascertain whether, in view of the fact that all these dioceses benefit through this immigration, and some to a greater extent even than the diocese of Montreal, assistance may not be given by them in the establishment and maintenance of their Home until such tfme as it become self- supporting.Carried.A number of other motions of less 1m- portance were carried.The annual diocesan missionary meeting was held in the evening.Mr.Duff Definitely Retires.Mr.J.M.M.Duff has definitely decided not to be a candidate for aldermanic honors.He explains his position in a lengthy letter in the advertising columns.Lebrun Said to be in Boston.The missing man, Theo.Chus.Lebrun, residing in Hochelaga, is reported to be in Boston.He had a quarrel with his wife and left the house, telling her he would never come back to her again.He then got drunk and went to the station to go to Boston, but the conductor would not allow him on the train.It is supposed that he left the next day.He has been missing since Friday morning last.THE COMMISSION, Some Interesting Evidence Regarding the Prohibition Question.The Prohibition Commission resumed its sittings yesterday with Sir Joseph Hickson presiding.John A.Watkins, of the Inland Revenue D:partment, was called first.The chief part of his evidence was a statement that leading lithographers kept for sale bogus liquor labels which were placed upon bottles containing inferior liquor.Mr.James Patton, of the General Hospital, thought that the liquor tratlic was altogether evil.Dr.Burgess, superintendent of the Protestant Hospital for the insane, said that during the time he had been connected with the hospital, 377 patients had been admitted and vi these 24 cases had been caused by drink, that is 6.36 per cent of the whole number.No doubt a large number more were indirectly caused by drink.There are 187 patients in the hospital to-day.He believed a law prohibiting the sale of drink, if enforced, would promote the health of people mentally and physically.The insane were recruited largely from the agricultural laboring classes, which he attributed in great measure largely to the lack of education.Mr.Samuel Carsley, president of the Women\u2019s and Children\u2019s Protection society, said that 90 per cent.of the cases which came under their notice was due to intemperance.Though not a total abstainer, he would recommend total prohibition on account of the suffering caused by liquor.He thought such a law could be enforced, but knew of no country where it was in force.He thought that breweries, distilleries, and all others put out of business by a change of law should be reasonably compensated, but not one class in preference to another.Mr.John Dunlop, Q.C., said-that the village of Cote St.Antoine had, in 1877, adopted a prohibitory system which was still in force.As far as he knew, there was no sale of liquor in that municipality, but residents, of course, could import liquor for their own use.He thought the value of property tliere was enhanced by this prohibition.Mr.Louis Chevalier, chief of the provincial revenue police, gave some evidence regarding the matters of inspection, etc.THE GREAT COAL COMBINE.It 1s Proposed to Do Many Things Besides Selling Coal.[From the Boston Herald.} A Herald reporter came across a man yesterday who knows a good deal about the great coal deal, but refyged to be quoted for publication.He bad no direct interest in the scheme, nevertheless he imparted some information of considerable interest.\u201cThe coal mining part of it,\u201d he said, \u2018\u2018is the smallest end of the Lusiness, and will play but a minor part in the projected operation.** The consolidation of a dozen coal mines and their operation, involving as it doesa largely increased output.is a big thing.But the syndicate does not propose to confine its efforts to the coal business, \u201cUnder the charter under which it will work it will take over and operate three railroads in the island of Cape Breton and build and operate a new road from Sydney to Louisburg.\u2018This will connect all the coal mines by rail as well as water, give them connection with the Intercolonial and other Canadian railway systems, and at\u2019Louisburg give them an open shipping port all the year round.\u201cCape Breton is one Ded of mineral wealth, and this company proposes to get hold of that wealth and develop it.The island abounds in iron, copper, gypsum and marble, and the most extensive part of the company\u2019s operations will be in connee- tion with these minerals, It is proposed to Americanize the island, open up its resources, and reap a rich harvest on the investment.\u201d \u2018How much capital will this require?The sum of $17,000,000 has been mentioned.\u201d \u201cWell, that amount is not far wrong.\u201d \u201c\u2018Seventeen millions of Boston capital is a very large sum to invest in a British province,\u201d suggested the reporter.\u2018The whole island of Cape Breton oughu to be purchased for that sum.\u201d \u201cIt is a large sum, but it will not be found any too large when the plans of the company are fully developed.\u201d \u201cWhat will be the name of the company?\u201d \u201cI am not prepared to say, but it will work under a charter with almost unlimited powers and privileges.\u201cWhen the details are made known, which will not be for a few weeks yet, the public will be astounded at the vast extent of the undertaking.\u201d This gentleman refused to give the names of other Bostonians interested in the deal, nor would he say if the stock was to be placed on the market or held by private capitalists.He admitted, however, that the deal had all been arranged, and only awaited the ratification of the Nova Scofta Legislature to go into immediate effect.A great deal of difference of opinion exists on both sides of the line as to whether, under free trade, provincial coal could compete with the American product in the New England market.The conditions to-day are entirely changed from what they were when, under reciprocity, the Nova Scotians marketed 400,000 to 500,000 tons in New England.The railway and other connections between the Atlantic seaboard and the Pennsylvania and Virginia and Maryland coal fields are so perfect to-day that it is hardly conceivable that the American coal men would allow any appreciable portion of their product to be displaced by the provincial article.The late F.H.Odiorne, one of the coal merchants of Boston, made a special study of this question.He argued that the superior quality of the American article, and the low price at which it could be laid down in Boston, would effectually exclude the provincial product.he cost of production is lower in the United States than at the Canadian mines.The freight, he said, of course, forms the most impor tant item ; but when freights are low from Nova Scotia they are equally low, if not lower, from Maryland and Virginia,and the moment the Americans experienced any material competition they would reduce prices and freights to a point where the provincials could not follow, The same views are entertained by experts on the Canadian side of the line, notably by Mr.James R.Lithgow, managing director of the Glace Bay mines, who has long taken the ground that it was now impossible for the Nova Scotia miners to compete in Boston, and therefore they should confine themselves to the home market.Funeral of the Late Dr.LaRocque.The remains of the late Dr.LaRocque were buried in Cote des Neiges Cemetery yesterday morning The pall-bearers were Drs.Hingston, Desroches, Laberge, and Proulx, Principal Archambault, Messrs.James Baylis, Geo.Perry and L.A.Beau- champ.There was a very large attendance of the friends of the deceased gentleman.Illicit Liquor Sellers Punished.Judge Dugas fined Therese de Coutillon $150 and costs or three months, for selling liquor without a license, yesterday inorn- ing.Francis O'Connor, for keeping liquors on his premises, had to pay $50 or three months, Odile Daoust also had to pay $150 and costs or three months for selling without a license.If the goog die young it is very evident that death doth not love a shining mark for very few young people are bald- headed.Honor to whom honor is due.Let it be understood that some book agents are bigrer bores than others.The oil of black birch brings $80 a gallon.In the halcyon days of youth the ordinary black birch used to bring tears.TEE Northwestern Trichloride of Gold Institute LOCATED AT RHINELANDER, WIS, Furnishes an absôdlute cure for Drunkenness, Tobacco, Morphine and kindred habits.Full information, terms and treaties on these diseases furnished on application.pay.\u201d .C.KEITH, M.D., Manager, JOB PRINTING \u201cNo cure no | THE MONTREAL HERALD CO.All DESCRIPTIONS of PRINTING \u2014\u2014 AS \u2014\u2014 Railway Wall Bills, Theatrical Posters, Hand Bills, Dodgers, Circulars, Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Statement Forms, Blank Account Books.RULING end BINDING FOR THE TRADE pe THE HERALD'S BINDERY IS 1 EQUIPPED WITH THE MOST MODERN APPLIANCES AND FACILITIES FOR GOOD AXD RAPID WORK.LUGLING AND BINDING a8 DONE FOR THE PRINTING TRADE ON THT MOST REASONABLE TERMS.PRINTERS WHO HAV NO BINDERY WILL FIND IT TO THEIR ADVANTAGE TO DEAL WITIE THE HERALD.PROMPTNESS THE MONTREAL HERALD COMPANY baving now rcorganized its JOB DEPARTMENT Willendeavor to give perfect satisfaction in the way of rapid work and promptness of delivery.\u2018Thero is room in Montreal for at least one good establishment on the merit alone of quick work and no default on promises.THE MONTREAL HERALD C0., 4 & 6 Beaver Hall Hil, MONTREAL.Federal Telephone Company, Limited TELEPHONE EXCHANGE RATES, Busincss Connections - Residence * Private lines lensed or sold outright.Telephones and Telephonic Apparatus for sale at casonable prices.For further information apply to or address J.E.MACFARLANE, Manager, 11 St, Sacrament Strect.THE LTD COMPANY Importers and Manufacturers 2547, 2553 NOTRE DAME ST., CORNER SEIGNEURS STREET, «1: MONTREAL.TELEPHONE, =~ - - $35 per annum.$25 mn 8025 Drain-PIPES AND Connections all Sizes Best Brands Cement, Calcined and Other Plaster Etc., Etc.Lubricating Hluminating OILS \u201cSUN\u201d Boiler Compound COAL, all Sizes.Plumber\u2019s Supplies, Painters\u2019 Supplies, Mill Supplies.Bullders\u2019 Hardware, Household Hardware, - mi SR EN RATT ; GEORGE GC.MORRISON, ENGINE and BOILER WORKS AND WOODYARD MACHINERY Caroline Street North, Near G.T.R.Traffic Station HAMILTON Ont.Or J Collis Browne's GHLORODYNE THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE Vice-Chancellor Sir W.Page Wood stated.publicly in Court that Dr.J, CoLLis BROWNE was undoubtedly the inventor of Chlorodyne, that the whole story of the defendant Freeman was literally untrue, and he regretted to say that it had been sworn to\u2014Times, July 10, 185 Dr.J.Collis Erowne\u2019s Chlorodyne is the best and most certain remedy in Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Consumption, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, &ec.Dr.J.Collis Browne's Chlorodyne\u2014The Right Hon.Earl Russell, communicated to the College of Physicians and J.T.Davenport that he had reccived inform ation to the effect that the only remedy of any service in Cholera was Chlorodyne \u2014Sce Lancet, December 31, 1864.J.Collis Browne\u201ds Chlorodyne is prescribed by scores of orthodox practitioners.Of course it would not be thus sin- gulany popular did it not \u201csupply a want and gl à place.\u201d\u2014Medical Times, January Dr.J.Collis Browne's Chloradyne is a certain cure for oler: senter Diarrhæœa, Colie, &c.ysentery, £7 Caution\u2014None genuine without the words: \u201cDr.J, Collis Browne's Chlorodyne, on the stamp.Overwhelming medical testimony accompanies each bottle, Sole manufac.urer, J.I.DAVENPORT, 33 Great Russell Dr.8=2fc and Sure, Send de, for \u201c WOMAN'S SAFR GUARD,\u201d Wilcex Specifa Oe., Phila.Pe RAILWAYS, FOR CIVILITY, COMFORT, CHEAPNESS \u2014 TBAVEL BY THE\u2014 WHICH NOW LEAVE MONTREAL AS FOLLOWS: for on S THURSDAYS EW ENGLAND, } and FRIDAYS TORONTO, Detroit, Chicago, The Son, St.Paul MINNEAPOLIS,\u2019 VANCOUVER, & y ÉDESPSEUND,} WEDNESDAYS These cars are intended chiefly for the accommodation of passengers holding second- class tickets, they are complete in their appoint ments, containing separate toilet rooms (with their requisites) for ladies and gentlemen, smoking room and department for cooking; the seals which are elegantly upholster are turned into comfortable beds at night.These cars are in charge of competent porters and accommodation in them can be secured upon payment of a small additional sum on application.TICKET OFFICE: 266 ST.JAMES STREET, AND AT STATIONS, R \u2018 R = 66 iz (| New York and Montreal AIR LINE.SHORTEST LINE -\u2014\u2014 TO \u2014 NEW YORK \u2014 AND TO \u2014\u2014 Saratoga, Troy, Albany, Boston Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington, AND ALL POINTS SOUTH AND EAST QUICK TIME.NO DELAYS.TRAINS LEAVE MONTREAL 8.40 a,m.\u2014Day Express, Daily except Sunday, arriving in New York at 850 p.m.Wagner Buffet Drawing room car Montreal to New York.540 p.m.-Night Express Daily.Wagner's Buffet Vestibule Sleeping ar runs through to New York without change, arriving in New York at 6.45 next morning.£4 These trains make close connection atTroy and Albany with Sleeping Car Train for Boston, arriving at 10.50 a.m.New York Through Mails and Express carried via this line, ; Information given and Tickets sold at the Company's Office.143 St.James street, Montreal.J.W.BURDICK, W.H.HENRY, General Pass.Art.Agent, Albany, N.Y.Montreal ADIRONDACK & ST.LAWRENCE \u2014AND\u2014 NEW YORK CENTRAL LINES.The Only Dining Car Route BETWEEN MONTREAL and NEW YORK, The DINING CAR SERVICE inaugurated on the Adirondack \u201cLimited\u201d enables passengers to procure a superb Table d\u2019'Hote Dinner at a cost of 75c.A decided innovation, already much appreciated by tho higher class of persons who travel between Montreal and New York, A SOLID VESTIBULED TRAIN, made up of Elegant Wagner Palace Sleeping Car, Dinin Car and beautifully upholstered Coaches, wi LEAVE MONTREAL (Bonaventure Station, Grand Trunk Railway), at 4.30 p.m.daily, arriving in New York at the seasonable hour of 7,30 a.m, Close connections at Herkimer for Utica, Rome, Syracuse, Rochester and all interior New York State points, and at New York for Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington and all points south.For Tickets, Time-Tables Wagner Car Accommodations and full information, apply at GTR.Ticket.offices, Windsor Hotel Ticket Office, Balmoral Hotel Ticket Office, or at the Office, No.154 St, James St, Montreal, H.D.CARTER, H.S.PHILPS, Asst, Gen.Pas, Agt.Agent, Herkimer.N.Y.Iontreal.Central Vermont Ralroad IMPORTANT CHANGES IN TRAIN SERVICE.Taking Effect October 2, 1892.Trains Leave Grand Trunk Station as follows For New York.- TUESDAYS - SATURDAYS DELAWARE AND HUDSON Fast train, Via, Rut- land, Troy and Albany,ar New York8.560 p.m: 8.30 a.m.Except Sun.Express via White Je.and Springfield arr.New York.8.30 a.m.Except Sun.10.00pm Fast Night Traln,via 5.30 p.m.\u201cTroy and Albany, Daily.arriving New York.6.45 a.m Night Express via 8.40 p.m.Springfield & New aie Haven arr.New Yk.11.30a.m For Boston.S.50 à m | Day Express via Rut.Ex\u2019pt Sun.{land and Fitchburg | arriving Boston, 7.20pm 8.20 an | Fast train via White Ex'pt Sun, River Jcand Lowell, arriving Boston.7.15 pm 5.50 » m Fast train via Bellows Ex\u2019pt Sun.Falls and Fitchburg, arriving Boston .8.00 am 8.40 bm Night Express via Daily Concord and Lowell, arriving Boston.S8.15am Wagner New Vestibule Buflet Palace Drawing Room and Sleeping Cars on all through trains, For Tickets, Time-tables and all information, apply to the Company's office, 136 St.James streots A.C.STONEGRAVE, Canadian Passenger Agent, S.W.CUMMINGS, F.W.BALDWIN, General Pass.Agent, Gen.Supt.St.Albans, Vt, A.F.MCINTYRE, Advocate, Barrister, Solicitor, Etc.- - - QUEBEC AND ONTARIO - - - Chambers: 806 & 807 New York Lifs Building MONTREAL.| SHIPPING ' HIMBURS-AVERCH PACKET CO.(HANSA LINE) the above Line will sail durin Stones O1 eacon between Hamburg \u201cand Boston.Arrangements have been mato ough the respective Railway Companies ar gd oods to all points in Canada and the ills States.at low rates of freight and throug of Lading.On the opening of Navigation the following à ve y bui well-known Steamers, which ill sail x sly for the Canadian Trade, fosulariy between Hamburg, Antwerp and Montreal, viz.:\u2014 Pickhuben, - - 4.400 tons Stubbenhuk, - - - 4.200 tons .LINE Va - = - 4,200 tons HANSA prt .\u201d.3700 tons SIEAMERS.Wandrahm, - - 3,700 tons Steinhoeft, - - -3,600 tons hurg- , first-class steamers of the Hambu American Packet Co.will be added part ea that a regular service will be main throughout the season 1893.Through bills of lading granted in connection with the Canadian A rican railroads to all princ Polsts in Canada and the Western States.Also in connection with tho anne burg-Caleutta Line to East India Ports vi Suez Canal ; the German-Australian Steams ip Co.to Austrahan Ports; the Deutsche Ley an © Line to Black Sea, Greek and Levantine Por si and the Woermann Line Lo West coast an Southwest Coast of Africa, calling at Madeira and Canary Islands, also Cape of Good Hope, Natal and East Africa in connection with the Union Steamshiv Co.For further particulars apply .to eo izned Genera ents, respecting passage, the SABRE AMERICAN PACKET co., D.CONNELLY, GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT for the Canadian Service, 14 Place d Armes square, Montreal ; regarding freight and other particulars apply to MUNDERLOH & CO., General Agents in Canada, Montreal, 11th January, 1898.CUNARD LINE TANE ROUTE.New York to Liverpool and Queenstown.FAST EXPRESS MAIL SERVICE Gallla.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026vccceeceness Aurania.Etruria.Servia.Gallia .Aurania .Etruria .\u201c Serviw.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.L2.s00ceceeccece0s Mar.RATES OF PASSAGE Cabin, $60 and upwards, according to accommodation.Second cabin, $33.Stecrace tickels 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 Company\u2019s office No, 4 Bowling Green, New York.VERNON H.BROWN & CO, General.Agents, THOMAS WILSON, Agent, 80 St.Francois Xavier streets J.Y.GILMOUR & CO., 354 St.Paul street, Montreal.DOMINION LINE Royal Mail Steamships.LIVERPOOL SERVICE Or to pordand Huta Steamer ortian alifax Vancouver.cour.Thur.Jan 26 Sat.Jan 28 Sarnia.* Feb 9 \u201c Feb.i brador.* 2 « : 25 Le as sail from Portland and Halifax about 1 p.m.of sailing date, aftor arrival of railway connections.WINTER RATES OF PASSAGE: Portland or Halifax to Liverpool or London- derry, first cabin $45 to $70; return $100 to $130, according to steamer and berth; second cabin to Liverpool, Londonderry.Queenstown, Belfast or Glasgow, $30; return, $60.Steerage to Liverpool, London, Londonderry, Queenstown, Belfast or Glasgow, $20, rcturn $40 Special railway rates to and from Port and and Halifax, The saloons are large, airy and amidships.Ladies\u2019 Rooms and Smoking loons have been placed in the most convenient positions ; Promenade Decks are very spacious, and every attention is paid to the comfort of passengers.For further information apply to any agent of the Company or to DAVID TORRANCE & Co.e General Agents, Montreal.BREWERS, ETC.WILLIAM DOW & CO.Brewers and Maisters, CHABOILLEZ SQUARE.India Pale.Pale, XXX and XX ALE, Crown, Extra Double and Single STOUT in Wood and Bottle.FAMILIES SUPPLIED.Bell Telephone 359.Federal 1575 The public are cautioned Apainst dealers who re-use our labels on bottles filled with other ales.The following City Bottlers are alone author zed 10 uso our trade mark labels, viz.: W.BISHOP, No.533 Dorchester streot, T.FERGUSON, No.162 St.F-izabeth street.T.J.HOWARD, No.633 Dorchester street, T.KINSELLA, No.211 St.Antoine strect.J.VIRTUE & SON, No.19 Aylmer street.J.H.R.MOLSON & BROS, Ale and Porter Brewers, Have always on hand the various kinds of ALE AND PORTER IN WOOD AND BOTTLES FAMILIES REGULARLY SUPPLIED.| 1006 NOTRE DAME STREET, MONTREAL STEWART MUNN & CO.MONTREAI.Offers For Sale: MUNN\u2019S LABRADOR HERRINGS aor sis Barrels LARGE SELECTED CODFISH nities ASCs.Hundred EMPLOYERS OF LABOR.Get quotations from London Guaran Accident Co., for Æinployers Labi gnond ance, before taking or renewing your Policy elscwhere, Montreal branch, 130° St, James street.Telephone, 9146.C.H.GWI1LT, Agent.A.IL HUBBARD, General Agent YOURSELF! ÿ Ask your Druggist for a botile of Big G.The only non-porsonous remedy forali Ù ÿ the unnatural discharges nnd private diseases of men and the debilitating weakness peculiar to women.It cures in a few days without the aid or publicity of a doctor.À The Universal American Manufactured by The Evans Chem:cal Co, CINCINNATI, ©.usa \u201cALLAN LINE ROYAI MAT STEAMSHIPS, Proposed Sailings, Subject to Change, 1m Liyerpool, Londonderry, Haut and Portland Service, ox From From F, Liverpool.Steamships.Portiand, Half 29 Dec, Sardinian Jan, y 12 Jan.*Numidian 2 Feb.154 26 Jan *Carthaginian 16 Feb.1g po 9 Feb, *Mongolian 2 Mar, 4 yo 93 Keb.*Numidian 16 Mar.18 Var a Steamers with a * will carry only Cabin py.sengers on their voyages to Europe, we agents are specially advised otherwise, © Rates of first cabin 1892, to Londonderry or or Halifax: .By Steamship Parisian, $50 to $100 single.$10) to $185, return.By steamship Sardinia, Circussian, $30 Lo $60 single; $95 to SI15 = turn.By steamship Mongolian or Nuümidi e $45 and $30 single; $95 and $100 return, an Children 2 to 12 years, half fare; under 3 yearsiree.Second cabin and steerage at low rates.Send for pamphlet of information.assage, Winter seus verpool from Portlan _\u2014 Glasgow, Londonderry ana New York Service.Late Stato Line of Stcamers From new Pier, foot of W 21st St., Now York, Glasgow.Steamships.New York, Dec 23 *Corean.12 Jan Dec 30 State of Nebraska.19 Jan 11.30 a.m, Jan 6 *Norwegian.26 Jan Jan 13 *Siberian .2 ¥eb Jan 20 State of California 9 Feb noon Jan 27 *Pomeranian .16 Feb Feb 3 *Corean.,.23 Feb Feb 10 State of Nebraska.2 Mar 10,39 a.m, And weckly thercafier.Steamers with a * will not carry passe from New York.ngory Diese Liverpool, Queenstown, St.John\u2019s, Halifax and Baitimore Mail Service, Liverpool Hali to Balti- Bain.alex more via Steamships more St, John'y St.John's via N Ft & Hatax Hufax Liver 0 LeerplL pool Dec 2 Mongolian Jan 10 Jani6 Jan 3 Assyrian Jan 24 direct to Liverp] These steamers will only carry cabin pas sengers on voyage to Liverpool.Glasgow, Galway and Phliadelphia Service.From Glasgow From Philadel.to Steamships phia to Glasgow Philadelphia.on or about, 31 Dec *Manitoban 19 Jan 20 Jan *Hibernian 7 Feb 3 Feb *Kestorian 21 l\u2019'eb 17 Feb *Manitoban 7 Mar And fortnightly thereafter.*Via Halifax on voyages from Glasgow.These steamers do nog carry passengers on voyage to Europe.Glasgow, Londonderry, Galway and Boston Service.From From Boston Glasgow Steamships to Glasgow; Lo Boston on or about 23 Dco Peruvian.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.9 Jan 13 Jan Sarmatian .30 Jan 27 Jan Austrian.13 Feb 10 Feb Peruvian .27 Feb 24 Feb Sarnmatian.13 Mar And regularly thereafter.These steamers do not carry passengers oa voyage to Europe.For freight, passage or other information apply to any authorized agent of the line or te H.& A.ALLAN, 92 State street, Boston, 25 Common street, Montreal.INMAN LINE ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS NEW YORK-TO SOUTHAMPTON\u2014 Carrying the United State Mail.PROPOSED SAILINGS: From New York, 0ity of New York.,Sat.Feb 25, 130 p.m City of Chester.Sat.Mar 4, 700 a City of Paris.Sat.Mar 11, 120 noon City of Berlin.\u2026 Sat.Mar 18, 800 a.m City of New York.Sat.Mar 25, 1200 noon Rates of passage, $60 and upward, according to steamer and accommodation, all having equal saloon privileges.Children between 2 and 12 years of age, half fare.Servants, $50.Intermediate passage $40 and $45.Special Round Trip Tickets at Reduced Rates \u2014Stecrage at very Low Rates For freight or passage apply to INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION Co.General Agents, No.6 Bowling Green, New York, or W, H.HENRY, 143 St.James-street, or J.Y.Gilmour & Co., 354 St.Paul Street, Montreal, BEAVER LINE \u2014\u2014\u2014 The Canada Shipping Company\u2019s LINE OF STEAMERS BETWEEN boston and Liverpool Lake Ontario, CaptH.Campbell, 5,300 Tons Lake Superior, \u201c Wm.Stewart 5,000 * Lake Huron, \u201c F, Carey, 4,100 * Lake Winnipeg, \u201c C.F.Herriman 3,500 \u201c Lake Nepigon, \u201c W.H.Taylor2,30 * -SPECIAL NOTICE.For the present the sailings between Livers pool and Bosion have been withdrawn owin to the depressed condition of the freight and passenger business, Rates of Passage, Montreal to Liverpool.Including rail fare to Boston, saloon $47.5 return $92,50; second cabin $30, steerage $2 Rates from Boston, saloon go return $30; se ond cabin $25, steernge $18.30, The saloo rates are for best outside rooms, only two in room.Passengers can obtain through tickets by the Beaver line to and from all pointsin Canada ani Great Britain and Ireland.Through Bills of Lading are granted for freights to and from all points by most direct routes, For freight and other particulars apply:~In Belfast to A.A.WaT, 8 Custom House square: in Queenstown, to N.G.Seymour & Co; in Liverpool to RB, W, ROBERTS, 31 Water streots in Quebec, to H.H.Scwell, 125 Peter street; in Boston, to Æ, A, Anams & Co.116 State-streots H.E.MURRAY, General Manager, Custom House square, Montreal.> THOMAS HOCKING Successor to Charles Childs, MACHINIST, MODEL AND TOOL MAKER 47 William Street, Manufacturer of Cutting Dies of every de scription, Steel Shanks, Gaiter Springs, slove Spring Fasteners, etc., cte.Boot and Shoe Machinery a Specialty Machine Knives Ground by Automatic Process.re THOMAS J.POTTER, Real Estate, Trade Sale and General AUCTIONEER, 201 ST.JAMES STREET.Sales of Real Estate, TRADE SALES OF TEAS, LEMONS AND ORANGES, ETC.AND ALL COMMERCIAL SALES A SPECIAITY- Property bought and sold either at public.of Private sale, THOMAS J, POTTER ~~ \u2019 A ARY 1 9 3.\u2014 \u2014\u2014_\u2014 E, W.WILSO _ \u2018Stock B & 00 from London and rok .ate acti and Pari ae BR er lon o 8 re C E W.SROADWAY, NE 8, totard shi of the Bank of rted that th a N.WwW YO ive p ents fro! rance would e about 1 embers N.Y.Stoc À.A.RK.ly bul ent here here.The on not lows: Oc more.W TE Lith 2 2 Maa | Sr 5 quoi vale 6 fa | ng- Wi paten - sacs 1909 E4 St, Fran \u2019 GE Our Washi a few forei ni only bears St inter ne ales, 3,305 2 ingt raig ts S > 5,000 tres or sold for ap Bond dot tn N ENT, tho repeal of the on od iow Tons a be rollers 5 4x 2 3 eis Xe plus % ; 96,000 spot.abo x PRIVATE W ron margi N.Y * ov come r bill, and A gainst Foporfine 3.66 to 3 No.1 or; No.In ; \u20ac to 80Jc, at about the IRE to N n for » bought er-bough out sooi with thi ne.8.15 375 gay hard orthern, 84}c to ore lows: same.We ~~ New Y.we ght condition i ner or lat is Strong bakers\u2019, } 3 tS 333 B3hc to 82 ee 894c to 83ÿc; , 84ic to B4fc; 8: quote val om ork and C pro can only advi ion in the 1 and an Stro & bakers\u2019, Man.25 to £13 low 82{¢; No.3 sprin Ne.à northern, Duck ues as fol- tify TR 1 hicago, °° rallies © vise purch stock ma né bakore.Man aw wer, closin .spring, 78 rthern, Duc eys.per 1b ; » 1 ascs rket Th ; s', Man., best 4.00 Feb.g steady; N , 78ÿc.Opti uchs, per 1b am Al About 2 nly.on weak spots ere is onl .brands, 4.to 4.20 80jc; M y; No.2 red ptions Chicken - 013 | 2 o'c ts meal nly a mod a 4.35 to À R ; March 81ÿe; , Jan.7980; ° s, per | to 0 14 : oN LOM to sagy L 2 O'clock the m po at prese erate trad -30 ye nominal c; May 838 798; He vee Dor Ib 01210 013 > Feb i | 3 Mess ff on smaller d arket was incli what impr nt, but the d e doing in Barley qui .oi res per pair.0 0 to 1 Mar, Ee RUE bank rs.Lamo ealings inclined Holde oved over emand is Peas quiet.artridges, 0e tool Mar ers and nta se \\ders still di r the ! some- , quiet; por brace Il Mae, Ap 1J bavere and brokers gne, Clarke & which is th 1 differ in their id day or two.Corn dois Canada nomin 0% to 029 D pointm : ceived , 183 S C se e pri ideas of sal ipts, 6 al, 68c to 0 75 R ne pr uction sale of ents To-day.raat ee ne ollewin t.Jamos street, sent, and he Principal active grad rolled, Tot\u2019 Jomo 0 000; exports, 101 (The market oo Ashes.2 re SEER RR ak Sa dé wo Sill he te ai es dior! 3 ager 2500 2e the sam dreeion a i did Tot _ | POWDERED 10096 ® \u2014 street, at 11 o'clock D - - e ear of v : or; No.3, .2 524 1 , the present id yesterd 2e à 3 \u2014_\u2014 10 ESCR Gra quote values bein; to 62 \u20ac 53c; 0 52 teri t we do ssterda 'o%y,8 iy pont of sp iTidends Pa is mero.Heh fi Closing arn Salo being £3, Starch 56 Ct on, tes ic: demand passing either trads o p ym CA raci tchison.rs RE i .53¢; .62je; F i ; ri a LL 3m can.Pace ke closed Jan en ri Am.Co \"Bi si 5 ou.Askd.Sales Standard.por hoo, ber eh Si mixed, Fob.sop May, 5820; pee centres receipts.The in fair,\u201d and abo .! Ci > n.17th , ; 5 == : bag.oll 95 recei ; on fi inquiry u pace.Ry.Hp per pi to Stat.Feb.1.AM: sorti ut 2 $ a 5 sis a The market PE : 3 e a sales, \"45,000 fat 47,000: exports, 8 ing at pou dre morts of pots, whi as present lan .218% to Jearly.oo Ameen.25 1 82 83 2 di >.ith trad : is nomi © er, Ja ures, 59,000 ,000; pots and - 40kc; white a 39ÿc; mixed ite, 413 pots, second rte \u201cu» mono nals 07 umntity.For making ERE D 8) - sho re no ai e cor nothing doi fee, opti o.41} to 46 stern, Sorts to $4 25 M Bold by All poun: ios munir oo = Pacific and DUL \u2026 Re LS sorts or Re a o activity ny hes a Sc to x ap opened firm Shed read PROV .is 2 a .ra re Druggiste.Icholieu Y.: e quote Vv hoe ing Jan.$16.3 ales 41,000 ste ISION son A £0 Bra values as M .$16.35 t ' bags, i NS.tc \u2014_\u2014 the Day\u2019 ere the Fi St mL.arch, £16.25 o $18.65; F nelud- The feeling i M y's T made: RE.horts.\u2026.£16.20: .25 to $16 s Feb., $16.45; SY eeling i ai EETIN ; In o Trading, or pm Moule; swan fem lieu 1 ie 31680 AR pate very strong ane provisions to-day is stl à TREE NGS AND DIVIDENDS.ere was ve ay, Jan.1 15.00 5 o 17ÿc.20.Spot, Ri eff lined, it h gh the Chi VATION : i GC cea 16.50 22.5 ugar, ; y 140 ect o \u2019 ad b ; ica PANY.ALC \u2014 stocks to-dav ry little busin 8 ER REP Le 24 Toro Toronto Mark 2.50 430; co quiet ; standard \u201c \u201d * ues veus our market.Th ut little or go The Board o L CORDAGE co à week, but i as compared 1688 done in SRR \u201corl 75 + Quotations Jan.18 ots.loaf an, onfectioner\u2019s WAT 4 A 4 11-16 to prices y small in cons e demand conti ° this day are ctors of YORK Jan.6 oM- S| rm me de ald) fd 8 GIES Be i EE En RH coi oe 1 ERLE ie dy ; ess pri Com.Lable see 1364 13 400 Wheat, whi 30; extra, | raight rolle | Egg She : aranulated 5pe ; powdered, 3 is ring at quotati of Canada Fet Company INT.on the Con Preforrod.and noon » small advanc y and in one ee Bod 3 gil sell \u2018sl Soro to 626: white, 65c 6Gc $2.60 to er, we , easy, State and E1116 vw be.| a ES oak tions.Western the Company, both pal > Common Stock of \u20ac was or tw Doi Sy) 54H 153 17 894] sou 62¢; red , to 66c ; spri $2.70.stern, best, ?and Penn's .wn under v g, and c estern Com next, at Th le on th tock of » good made.0 cases D ud.1514 153} 70} 18 0|to rec, winter ; spring No.2 south st, 39 ; do., 3Bc to 4de; |, There i r values annot be laid & pany, 133 Fron Ee er otfioe day am, few Taye avons profits taken ds have been he Tod: | 1 i) 1s 14100 Lo 60e; Ko, 1 er, the to G5je ; goose 90 ico ing dg 38e ; lato gathered, 36; hope and elders ae to note i Bi transfer books wii clous Jan: Ps iQ of \"sho go ators are holds d top figures it the last BES o.Kc.a TH i |, 1 hard, 74e to igi?8%: 83 ta 84c¢ ; \u2019 0 Me.» 8le to 32e; altho heard Mera gro asking ote in dressed a rextationm at 5 M, and ry ac à in > :hose ).8.8.\u2026.\u2026.M 56 \u201d 541 6595 P ; No.; .o 3 .c hough ots ct ; prices R.wo ing in again, ding of fer à drcline hat oper- Gen &.Ada] i 8 a 1,8 Peas, No.2, 55¢ hs 1 frosted, 6% to u New York Jan 18 Market.through thas figure chasing hands at $9, Montr Secretary.oy great measure for no doubt accouate Te go- Hocking Valley .ii \u201ciis 2 15 |.ot extra, Spd, Ne 2, ie.Barley, No.uplands, 04 mas tton,spots steady pome v nat Hit = we till loar d al td om Exchan ê $$ } ce, news was bulli e inactivi s ina Louis.& re.| 1: al 8 1134] 1675 ats, No.2 38c to 39c ; No, : ; do.EN .600; J , 93c ; futures y; (Tor Je bine a ices being off rn of ; ro lish, vity.Outsi «Nash et al 3168] Salea\u2014W 3Be 390 No, 3, 330 to 37 March 9.56, April § de faa eh.50.40, oan fol g offered.L A 0 ifax firm, and se .New York taide , 764 30) 1 130% 455 | les\u2014 Winter Cc.7c.89.81 .56, April $0.50 .38, Feb.§9 46, D quote values as f proportionatel ots nnual G \u2014 ia Lo veral A stock .89 af] 76| 76 100 0.3 Mani wheat, outsi .Bl.56, May $9.7 40, ressed hi ollows: y high enera hu ndon spoke of pr received were Mich, © = on 3 81 ti outside, snitoba hard, tL, ontside, at 66; Mover 73, June Sande a er 100 1bs.«The Annual Gene 1 Meeting: ve end lack of re ne ease of from M K.CT pro \u2026 ss ® = Lis side, at 58c.c, and here at re hod oats, New For! ents of Grain and Flour.Western mow yc moss: poe bil.Sina ho card poy © Aseatiation = ofthe Montres 00, should send iu i le invest money Manhattan.déj a 22 De RTE Closing \u2019 out- Flour, b = Rec : I ard.por 16 orl.30.00 @ 16.00 WEDNESD: iat Lbs held a Lin ; ments whi eae] vi 2 nus Prices f Fiour.rls.pts.Sh; Bacon y curod, per lb .22.00 8.00 SDAY on the securities.the directi which Do.pref mt 1 a4 Mess: or Grai jour, sack erpeusess pmnts.Lard ,por lb.\u2026 @ 22.75 YY, 25th \u2014 .Do.pref.\u2026.[ 17 72 1724| 187 rs.Meredi n and P Whey oi 7984 pure Canadian, D 0.01 @ 0.12 for th ~ o'clock instan 16 Pacifi ion of sound PPS Rail \u201cdés 17 }| 15723 openi eredith & O'Bri rovisions Co t, bush lL 10654 1326 Lard, co anading, por 1D.0.10 0.124 m © elcotion noon ts at 12 t to cific wa ; nd Nor.Pac.E.48 181.pening, high Brien .© rn, bush.ee 3 12311 Cann m.refined, De por Ib.0.1@ 0.11 ent, tho of the Commi , rm\u2019 fracti Ce ub: s| 4941.of ghest, low quote the als bush.100 5662 L ed moats, 2 ,ver lb.10 @ 0.10 business.of Re mittee of ipl ctionally y active NT LE : 15750 the Chica est and closi Rye bush.8400 py Guneh to ,215, por doz.o.081@ 0.mmitiee of Mana : : 9 NY.LEZW.i ,bush.os 10160) Ox t.ngue, 11b doz.00.0.09 By ord , and f ge pas prices sh lower, lth » and was LE.& W 1 A go market to-day ug prices Barley, bush 4720 was Be ?nœue, 2 lb.ver per doz.2% a 25 Oo or, or other >| res = hgh nin | 5 re ar Hom 83 1 | ema Gio.mana, n .Y.Su.HEA yg.igh.Io: - our.b erases 2 ei Le .00 3 an ?auswerable for the the weok\u2019s ear he de- North EW Teener Janf 75% wr oe.CLs, Wha busi 5 ow sed at ET RO Jams were \u2014 a 12.50 am eis.} Secretary.lol.opened § high e weakness, I nings was 3 Y.0 ew = Bly ei is) 75 So De \u2026 225000 10272 SoA Jan; $10.85 Ma $18.30 May.F i ork INSUR 5 a ni | FR RE pm gg |B 2 anor _ Do, vee = : h ; 3 c ood on further te strongest feature pt boring 1 i ala Makes.26000 1500 Hoge fo aon on Stock Yards, Ji ESTABLISHE K r 3 \u2026 ! 7 - > , ; ck up to 75 ye orders, sendi of the nil, & Mending.\u201cBEE | | an Flour, bris.2000 yesterday's a's estimated receipts, Ba p 1865.ae Noir S8tinst 734 at the os Mail.July oo Bi (à (st Corn buse me 1 i fa ETES Shae | 088 0 .a g new is se .hag oo lise lives liv si Oats, b - Lr ight mi s, 8,243; re- er SON a he pp he anal si A i |B Bo phe Fi din vr aren ora 0D the buyi meeti > oss lidà5 lio DUSN.neeeeee 28000 2000 -40 to $7.85; 770; heavy shippi NO STR In the buying, ng as Ma.55 i055 lio'ss [10°38 a 6000 Cattle 003 rough d y shippin RTH KE __ re .Tox \u201c : y|10 45 10°55 .Toledo.\u2026 4000 receipt grades, 87.g BRITIS nd rat st of be Lit there TR Rar , | snomms 55 lus (8 BE a los Everpoch, pron on, 400 58 GENERAL INSURANCE BRCK e was abo within was a fai 'enn.Coal.383 3 10§ 1 0 May| 9 vi loa j'a 40° Oata, aah 21000 ows: Po , provisions * CE BR a ra dom ih Ga, Teg in arr Iie Unig piy 0 5 5 8 2 BR Loc a Bo via wo BR 50 bo, She to bse tor sin and Oh ara ENT W x at 152 egraph , nothi Wabasi 41 2125 72 \u201céjeinr \u2014Wheat, G6je ot yo, bush LIL es +420 \u2019 an in owin : in Bell 'I' $, and ph was ng h.23% 413 4 fc Ma ug\u2014Wh ar ois.a.g total g well-kn out ell Le there a fracti Do .23 8 13 7205 y eat, 664 wi 1000 y al Cash Ass own \u2014 changed ph and Royal small ling Wad obret ee \"8 \u201c35 jl Bi 1050 poor Closing Wh , 66gc cash Corn, Bu bush The following are to Markers.his & M ota of a Companies, pa auk stock ns.tric at u * | 3 98y ; 254 600 ., 81§c Mal bg: eat, 79ÿc J ats.bush.32000 compariso o-day\u2019s qu liance.s\u2026\u2026o00s 0.52,00 sales of M cks were qui n- Ex-dividend.tefl 0 | 8853 July.Co rch,83gc May,84 : Jan, Minned Je 73000 ns: otations and Alliance donk \u20ac SAN A .§ 52,000,000 145, erchants at Ser but stead : 53c March; 53 rm, 524c Ja ÿ,84kc June, Wh POLLS.9000 London A: London & Globe.arcs 42,000, .64 y, with Feb, 3950 À to May n, 52ÿcF \u2019 eat, busn.! J Comm ssuranco C Tobe.tons 13.000.000 Money i and Comm LA M »., 80ÿc Ma y.Oats, 38 obo.| Duluth, cereeeen .dl Commerolal Union on.ee 42,000, Money is unch erce at ONTA Toled y., 3830 Jan., 39 th, se mene .à «à Jan.18.ea n 42,000.00 anu co nchan ed 0 edo\u2014Closi , 39c Whoa a.61 « d trish Union and À ,000,000 oa cent.mercial paper caler cent.on call Members N NE CLARKE & CO \u201cSh sue May.Comm and où active, 75 prb creccerees veers 52000 34 8 8 wi au a 00 Eunos Co.and National 2 \"100.000 = Bratt! pet COUDES RERS ee ee ing | ve va or Gia 88 38h A me ion llows : A EAL s- - cash 3 , c May, 76 , 693c c : Ceveeesnennnen - 6 0 @ 0 0 hire.lillie vouves rss & x ; u NEW Y OFFIC ofc J » 768c J ash 22000 2000 1568 48 mostieemmnemeeces 000.000 w 100 Pacific.on 200 Tick ui) RETO 1S St.James street.3146 cash, Se To May, July, Corn, 384s PRODUCE.8 $ a 0 : 5 $ 2 0 2 Thee aos r\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 10.000.000 200% nee 59} 200 Riohglieu.xlecelye deposit sub adstreet (Milla The y - Pets \u2014 3 625 8150 en à (in 0 above enr AT 50006 10 = : ; 5 3 a 3 se 74 for the on daily bal jeet to check M Chicago Mark Th Butter.293 @0 2 30085 0 whee Lines of In great faciliti ,600,000 Bee 1% i Soba 5 felis pide lh a reais \u2018orders p Menaces Bloch OUR oe | Tio fevture of the butte mse EE ERIERRT: pontine à avé connection with criant \u2014 2 Commerce\" 15% Royal Elec.18 |N nected by onds for in g from Me ien received ness displa arket was th 015 ® 0 es Montreal several ree | of 78 M tec.New Y ed by pri vost Over their pri ssrs.Lair ived the look poi played, and at e 6 @0 \u2019 and other .145 orchants .230 ork and Toro vate wire wit private wi nson Bros.& C ook points to hi at present th British W 0 New Y or 225 Cab AFTERNOO 122 164 nto th Chicago, Chicago, Ja ire : e o., the ma higher prices.he out.Messra J.R ine Shiprpents Ver ool Cale nT 150 N BOARD.be said reg n.18.\u2014There i ¢ rket in gen Receipts for that the shipme Parkingto: .d Bi ae pre We sui Dan ea Thre n rey me Cru gel ses ok vr bre i noie dr Beni | enpotrs anon and Globe esars, Moredi |} » + UU hi} sxc » 8.Jackso over, while A nd Berlin wer o-day.BOY Creamery i eep it in a fi + pipes), making 11 ipes (Great Britai ecember Cc NCE C ment street, aredith & O'Brien.St.Sa 15 ge brokers, n & Co., for Liverpool ntwerp was hi e reported and w ery is somewhat i rm (the largest g 114,653 pipes fo in, 2,412 Th anada Bo OMPAN , report closi rien, St.Sa 5 follows: report the eign light, and unchanged.T: higher, with goi e have heard of improved pared wi quantity on r 12 months Ed eo HON.oeard of DI Y ng prices as.cra- : market as hol de nd the princi oronto was \u2018going to th ré o several la 2s vines i ith 89,569 pipes i record), as Ea J.Barbeau NRY STARN Irectors follo olders realizi cipal selli very e America rge lots pipes in 1890 pipes in 1881 , com- F.Gaul 1, ksq, W Es, C .Desert we: by t izing.S lling by ge to 23 n market duri .The shi , and 94 t, Esq.JB hairmag; | on | Je (Pr New vont, Jan 16 maken.an le is go Sig \u201calto Pa ttes Ar dons fred.Ta fifo te put, month Mpments si harry AE ir AT Gui J BE sk.Bid.: \u201cà vs sight.\" 3 AOTUA eclin en th y support à rade is \u20ac ; .In against \u2018otal of 50,048 , butt sséts ov in Can C.M.G.PE | me fu imal [eme of abot, lo per she voi port Lo Bond on es fo exporianced, and far a fn 851, and.soe, MERCANTILE Ris et 534:338:038 .\" m sasrscnce 8 n ow am ses 3 a acce + on itt 2384! 234 Francs donnent :: : st a sumably against mater f er pres also um que ives for baking Te re are Epps\u2019s Cocoa\u2014G Pos \"Church Dating | nosepted ut tne on m 111 | ise 117 \u201c he long.5 4 85 @ rather à the whole, th à siight reac- Roce , and sell at about are \u201cB ratefui and Co tes insured at red Houses or 13 @ ull e ipt 16e y a mf pecial u and on he 1,17 170 bus 618 ue noted the ots depressed het closes Equentt of roll butter are very li hy 174c.the natural the rough knowl ren airéet to the Mont given gee Farm Proy ne E 'Townsh 135 lié 258 M @ to hold la ttwo days , the same a y, stock is fi ight ; con- operatl aws whi edge t ntreal offi applicati 3 ipe iso = ONTREA rge lin ys.Parties as to 19e, sal ; rmly held 3 con ons of digesti ich go o oe.on made ng ueboc : 1684 16 183 RETWEEN t, Jan.18, the mark es were & supposed W , sales being r dat about and b igestion govern th @F UEDOC ou fire 65] 168 NY.Buyers.BANKS.00U cou et, allowing i pparently o e quote val eported at both fig 180 fi y # careful and nutri ° Chiet .F.0.SMITH, Lf gene (ES 134 Steri unds.,.Sellers.NTER rse.g it to take it ut of Crea nes as follows: figures ine properties of applicati ritlon, © Agent for th Sovemaics: i 195 ng 50 days.Par@l-16 Rate.~The trading i s natural T amery, late mak : - Mr.Ei s of well on of the Errpan\" Sub-Age e Dominios.al Hochelaga Ud} 145i 101 .demand.3 @ 7-18 97- 1} @t light both tof in coarse grai Townships dairy, HO cons ntatasarees 21 to with Ppa bas provid ed ell-selected Coton GEORGE He Far cs puise AN i Til is Busi comand BR 6116 90 0 spectre way fa a ote.and Western re and Brockville, I zie which a ay pur breakfast sou, Bpeclal Agent French Loh Deis AL Jaterçolonisi Coal, 1324 \u201cid n docuy sixti arket dull n sympath gy Iu ures were , and in ern roll.es RO et to2lic ills.It is b us many h verage ch Deparim OLE, 3 é al Tai.Co.35 ä Cattle bi es.8 @ and hea ho y with wl a shade lowe Messrs.Hodgson Bros.] 13} : 8 by the judici eavy d ; Cc ent, 4 RC 18 al sl el 5 i ir |i pi spel ihn marked fo butte re Brow Livery ere of as als cout wet] PHŒ ND = ch.& O D 17 153 Mon short 515 full p buyers ; riends utter: inst., has th ool cir- tO ; uilt u ; ution Mont, 8t nt.Nav.Co.1803 180 B ey in London 15 @5 13h § y 50c per bb causing a decli .À TL e followin resist every t p until str may IX Mont.Street ty.= 8 LOS ea re 51%.|B is Ther 1.from yest decline of The sales hav gon dreds of & ok endency to ions enough Insu 1 Dul.8.8, \u2018as 734 73 ate 3 por rent on the b e was some fai erday\u2019s final character, b ve only bee .around ubtle maladi isease.Hu rance .Pu.58 & 4.180 17 Fi reak airl ; i , but cho n a limi us read ies a un- + Dul.85 &A.pid ! Bu) 5 The Bauk of nancial Notes, half the decline by shorts y good buying Fut, & We quote su creamery le ET is à weak ei to attack wher floating Of H Compan Grand ir 1 nciflo ds: a 194 3 3 per cent.Eugland rate of di ket is quite n oe ou & recovered oh about Ct gecording to such at 100s to ya full & fatal rE int.re may horover there CASH C artford, Con y Wabash nk,1ct, pref.6 304 29 Pari ; iscount is parativel and sensiti : e mar- his descriptio reshness; qualiti per fortified wi y keepin, ape man APIT n.bash re 63 6 89 89 aris rentes chan y small ord ive, and c We qu ion sell slowly alities under nour with pure bi g ourselve y AL - $2 *Canad ret TT 12 2% |.at 95.opened a ges.rders m om- ote Irish b yat 75s urished f > lood a s well ia 00 Danton] Coran Go.5 106 iy) 108 Money ! th t 02.874 and closed Messrs: Lam Gand oom | thud 96s, and Duster, Cork seconds, 1208, sed snply with boilia ee arene 1 or nae Branch Heed on 0008 erchants Mig.Co.1074 2 8 n the local recei ontagne, Cla, .5 only in oiling wa axelte Jame ce Domini 8 Mfg.Co.ug 132 108 106 per cent.al market i eceived the f Be rke & Co.Che ® _ JAMES packets b ter or mil s-Street EEL 85 pre ob cre | | ye rs Se Sh EE Cf S| cEmALDE.tant 4 Guaranico Co.of N.\u201cme 12 10 \u201ciss he open mark o 3} per cent.call wire : » Chicago, ove srs.Coun- firm i se situation to-d ge to report \u2019 Eng or - HART, > cloph N.A.; 1 3 1 18to17 et in L rent.Mon : r their pri m in their i 0-day, hol rt in .e Gen ; Royal E phone Co 10 100 40 1.7.16 per ondon is ey private 11 eir ideas of valu ders keepi Cholera Pr A sh eral M Toyal Eovtrio oni] a 38 19 100° French cent.quoted at The grain Je asked for b values with ping The eventative zu Share of your fl anager.Liominion 4 p.c.stock.235 230 165 164 28 ch exchange i owing to li markets all October mak est qualit.llicto k most powerf and Cure.for reliable and re insuran « ip.Stock.10 235 230 -11.ge in London cabl g to liquidation i took & weak t all ofa! ake.Reports Î y September nown are fouud i rful alterativ t prompt wealthy irance is solicited .; : - fo CPR Fox, \"11001 90 | id\" 100 Consolsi closed at es, receipts ove influenced b urn high nencouraging nat rom England The deadliest Sa St.Leon Mi © metals Dy ay, Te i E CPR, Land Grant Se ioë| \u2018ay closed in London ances and more fi r estimates, 8 (owen higher prices and ure and tend t are chronic syphili lood contami neral Water CYRILLE perde es Can Central Gs.sed at 88 fo opened at 07 15 There wi e favorable weat mall clear- gobs that exp a Now York owards destr yphilis, yield t minations, even G.MAI URIN, Cana plain & SL 6 closing at 98 1 r money,and -16 and side ord as à marked ab ather.over for fi porters are payi rk message hyd oyer and microbe 0 this natural ven TLAND SMT Montreal otton Gs M -16 for the opened at 98, 58! ers owing to th sence of ne mark ancy white che paying lle and ydrogen gas : killer.It virus Montreal TH, Domini Cotton de.tl essrs.L.J.F account.s ge of the anti 0 the predicted w out- cl et.The Liver ese for the Engli stantly dest sweeps the s s volume of Agents.Dominion Cotion 8.he following _ orget & Co.| the ge decli i-option bill, a early pas- hanged at 55 pool public nglish extraordi royes all poi ystem and i THE Cotton 85.|'i04 [102 the following special, cab .have received 2 anti-option ill, and to this ca Messe s 6d for both : cable is un- ory saline \u2018alkaline forces Its ST = \u201cx divid s.| 1023 100 i is an à runk firet pref le from Lo: ed | orn was strong al was due.use vice s Hodgson Br grades.away the wate ne alkaline f s.Its| Cor : E LM ond.1023 102 closed at 63}; preference ope ndon : by New Yorke g all day on hea b sof the 7th i ros., Liverpool safer prev ry portion of th orces draw - McQIN Oo i Lond \u2018 00 at 423, and cl ; second prefere ned at 6 The fluctu TS.avy buying een in improved nst.say: Che ol, ad.entation in the e blood.N The Cosiest and Reooll , Messr on Stock Excl opened at 91 osed at 43; Cal ence o 834 A consid ations followed choice goods h ed demand, and ese have orld.i The best si Dial Room.ets St | sÉ 5e Femme gol a Candi Foie 2% deal br ntrn in hons a Sh SA den J PE ass do ui he closin Xavier str: ., stock brokers, Co are ready fo ulated this heat and osing firm at o r cwt., th n an oun to 2.30; ser London g prices of eat, were , MMERC of senti r & sharp rail week, and b to-day fi ur quotatio , the market only % cents, as follows American s cabled T IMERCI AL h ntiment tu y when th oth whit nest Septemb ns, We H : stocks in 0-day\u2019s Reoei * sharply on rns.Provisi e curren} e or colored, 3 1ber-October quote ,.À pis in Mon cominissi stop orders ions decli full cre: ed, 53s 6d to makes H « MIL real.mission h: , and li ec ined am summer: 54s ?YOU ouss, Si LE R Stocks.Ww GT three tim ouses.Ma quidation b 5 scarce at 488 per cwt.; ARE NOT Y \u2019 ga and Wi \u2019 Jan.18.\\Ja: heat.bush LT.R.C.P.R.Total Yes- ering Cp but rallied od york touched $18 to 30a.ET Paper H ndow Sh .700\" .8| The Eggs.anger and ade Paint Atchison 7.17.Jan.16° ie Seer 1367 torday.174 rd was featur Te ocal shorts © strong feeli Decorator, SE Canadian Paco 0 1 am oa 1The, and recoverod close, ribs declined market, sad.us the « continues i AT Graining, G » Giang Canadian Paoifo 3 299 3252 nH oa vering short sal 10c on som eclined | 00d, the , a8 the demand in the egg TO CO E washing, lazing, White- Grand Truni Onble 9 0 fee on any good os fora turn.\\V packers of stock market is pretty continues ve MMENCE THE £, otc., ete rand Trunk lst.= ve \u2026 100 48 rally bog stuff is 8 We thiak and ok.Montreal li y well cleared ry COURSE 0 heme of 8H été 968 64 2709 c is a sale nd high, and we h imed stock i ed up ¥ JAS.WIL do a o .\u201ci 2 1 2004 Mess hicago Notes.° hands to-da e heard of a carl 15 scarce LIAMS I 2 5 Boy Ble os, Stones wid Ol fresh stock Totally sons 320.\u201cStrietly Warehouseman & Commissl on Louisville & Na oo 10% ve 8 \u2018ied Co ng from Mess n received h stained unde y scarce and y 4 PR ssion M } Northez 1e & Nash.4 104 104 CL.43 .over their pri rs.Lamson B eld is about r 80c, where cannot INCEST erchant New horn Pueifio p 4 br 154 Raw Hid 169 8 6 \u201c| Recei r private wire : ros.& 22e to 23c sufficient Lo co as good fall ST ., MONTR onan Central 48 i 75 Raw Hide ico 75 161 gi i197 ceipts to-day w : mand, and Western lim ver wants at ORAGE F \u2014 EAL.Readin and Western.113 15 48 Tobacet ete.cks.15 \u2026.22 contract 34 ere: Wheat the re and sells at ab ed is in fai EVE REE OR Be ange ve 19, 19 116; a CE Le 15 13 oats 100 ; corn, 100 .166 cars; De report below i out 19c to 20 r de- WE ARE RY DESCR IN BOND Union bi Tm 26 20; 194 Bsasoucaues ; 61 .\"a 50 ; cars; cont cars; contra \u2019 En lish mark: a will be s 20c.From GIVING AT VE IPTION OF FOR Wabash acife LUE 824 oo 262 GR us 400 o 5 cattle, 18,000 ract, 28 ; ho ct, 22; in fact ti rket is bare of Canac that the NS, RY MODER GOODS Bank of X agree 43 814 AIN, FLOU vee Estimated .ps, 29,000 ; Mar sere is no re-sel anadian \u20ac \u2014 ATE RA England.\" 2 42 41 R AND le receipts te rket at all re-se ected ges, 7 TES, ee 26 + MEAL orn, 165 cars; pts are : Wh 18 a .In New Y stock on tl 1 1 M ce 254 Montreal Wh 4 000 rs; oats, 100 eat, 175 ca strong one, and ork the si the Zz ! AN ADV There i olesals M Ca cars, and hogs, rs; about 35c t , and best stock i situation _ iN ATISÉ New Y re is but littl Markets.Closing bo ogs, 32,- ket o36c.We is movin, TO ALL \u2014 T PA Messrs.La ork Stocks.grain mark little change to stead g board cable: Li , as follows : quote the sal 0 R .Lamonta rket to-da report in tb 1 y, unchanged; : Liverpool Montreal li : ocal mar- U R R equires ers and brok gne, Clarke & trade is y, end for th e lower; cor ged; futures, dull, spot, West lime .EAD the ; ers, 183 8 Co., bank- confined, abo e present higher n, futures, ) ull, to 3d $C stern limed \u2026- ERS proper received th * t.James s peas \u2019 ut nt gher; Lond , 3d lower; o 3d od fall held ne .021 @ This i S led kno - > treet, and oats.equally bet lower: : on, 123d er; spot, Strict] d stock.01 022 is a ge of h We New Y e following by di , have qui There i ween r; Paris fl lowers Berlin.\u201d 3 y fresh stock 9 @020 grand ow to ork: y direct wire quiry for barley, princi is also a small i 20c lower; A our, 20 to 35e 1 ; Berlin, 1m The Continental Egg con 022 @0 23 opportunity write o The steadi from which ey, principally malti lin-| Primary ntwerp, 23¢ hi ¢ lower; wh England ntinental Esg company, 000 @0 30 pare to pre- ne.eadier t are movin, iting grad mary mark 7 vigher.eat, 3100 and, report gg compan Gri the wo = follow one at 1 .0 g at abou ; es bushels; .et receipts: instant por the mark y, wrimsbv rk.! events to further ome close was the.me are frequent nr von eu In porte, Time bert\u201d The as follows: arket on the Tih TE an we h Consult the undersigned, wh ng to-day w vement at its of 31% ned withi our.els whea els, Ex mately this ng prices wi ake char ave ch , 0 mak of St, Pa y with foreign | at the but fe c to 32.R in| T t; 38,000 barre: .week at po ere realized J.W.SPE go of the w osen to vertisement 68 ad- .Paul and gn houses, b : w transactions i eports sl he Senatori rrelg Fresh he rts of arrival: approxi.S! NCE, of B ork is writin Flowe other Lond , buyers In sym ns in wheat, show the anti-0 orial eaucus h ces n Woi al: horthand \u2019 arker & Mr.§ a busin ; ! .ht r andB Spence\u201d ess and Suga T & Co.lookin on shares, and pathy with advices \u2019 on spot, but V8Y f ption bill shall as decided th Reel about Per lon onto.Dro usiness Sch ces assures Brera nai Fos & Co.ot In Thane keep finn.oes of outside market, Eo race avail soil fève the right of Ke Aus fone 00 of al rte.Drop him a card at rool, To satisfactory results n .; is a .a - + Ent , esp general ve ue the & Co.and 8.wo ee in price, which we ote ne notable 1,043,000; evs available western J desday.Lar ary A string.124 Ios or 120 9% 0d to 9 3d THE H or i the other way Chicago Ca fate.D: No hand Malaka 27 om 30.000 bushels.mr a0 bl i pai wee | GULD ERALD CO ddress S.L.HERMAN she other way und seemed ro path acted Bos, por paid.\u2026 Be @ 5% sata decrense, Selected.1515 s 0d to 135 0d JLB LAC > ' porning.ranning off ed to be for Bons, por sion 26 @ Tio Bee , Beleoted.\u2026 5} 1bs per 120 CK SCC HER gland g off from 4 t sale all Quis port li 84c @ 660 rbohm\u2019s clooted., +1533} Ibs none offer (pa EL ALD O fifty o, was anothe o 1 percent.N' Rye, por bush.0c @7 Cargoes off Report.Reselocted Al perl
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