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Titre :
The daily witness
Ce quotidien montréalais est marqué par la personnalité de son fondateur, John Dougall, convaincu que les peuples anglo-saxons sont investis d'une mission divine.
Éditeur :
  • Montreal :John Dougall,1860-1913
Contenu spécifique :
mercredi 11 juillet 1894
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  • Journaux
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autre
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  • Daily telegraph and daily witness
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The daily witness, 1894-07-11, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" sauce ion Ln.On LA Gra ole se igh: show «= insh>- - | thang Prien\u2019 ss Ir = ave g iplendaid aod tha rpassed inoking I at on: to 1 - Lika -* > Fru apples vhile \u2018- Up à in rh's nle +.bad aboot [ea hier ed To Tl rea by dresse à to Lin of the ~The Latexi MONTREAL, ER RRR WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1894, Last Edition.PRICE ONE CENT.| ed for Anarchy.Then Mr.Debs would Tor SXXV.No.161.rei nt ey EY rn GREAT 4 RULWIT STRIKE.Sympleas Indicate oa ts Collapse is dear At Hand.DS RO REGULARLY.MANY OTHER TRAD SLIOW THEIR SYMPATHY WITH PULLMAN WORKEES.Co .re TO ma \u201cnem .PEACE AT THE STOCKYARDS.-9 Stook Yards.Chicago, July 11.\u2014 : ~ ~'lway blockasie at the Stock Yards :, .-oken very effectively yesterday.T-, were sont out ç \u201c7088 prevalied evervwhore.z here that the backbore of the : is broker.Nothing was done in æaviking houses during the day except moving of meat by reams to the lake 1, where beef is being loaded on boats ¢ - Michigan and Wisconsin.A hundred dressed bee! and provisions shipped by this route during days.The Lake Shere spany re-established its stock yards action yesterday afternoon.Last re: the stock yards distrio from Thir- seat atreoe: Souh to F@anir-seventh \u201crat was practically under martial law.j'o.ice Officer Paui vaiaski, a Bobemian, r parted last evaning \u201chat he had recaived iz.\u2018ormation that the Bohemians had made ->rures to the Pollsh residents in the dis*Tiet nvar the scone of last Saturday's b'oody riot to Jein forces and revenge the shooting of har countryruen by the federal troops.proposition will be rejected as a longstanding and bitter feul exists between =~ two factions, which culroinated in a nm west of the stuck yards three weeks gz\u201d and resulred in the pols residezis.THE MAILS HOVING, Chicago, July 11.\u2014For the first time c= lis beginning of th: grea: strike, *,: vais were mave! yesterday without coeTruplbm in any direction.Ca every =.leaving Chicago trains went out on \"Le and te mails from all over the | suntry arrived according \u2018o schedula.Tasa police suppressed a meeting of Anar- mous \u201cronds of Live been \u2018re past four \u2026 ies in the vicinity of Torty-ninth and \u201conmis streats, where the worst of the rioting has occurred during the present ! population is largely corm- os \u201cGr Fore, douemins and Low Tn ch.PUBLIC OPINION AND PULLMAN.age, July 11.\u2014The refusal of Mr.Tuvan to submit to a committee the | whether or not there were any- tte dispute with his ex-em- ! CL VD \u201c+= 10 ,reses worthy of being submitted do ar- | :ratton has caused the intense feeling: Lai fesiet against him Lis of Lon\u2019 groker In their aûvoca:y of Wr.Puliman's ono Newspapers also that Coan sd fugled oul for tac denucciation of - corporation !n ny Woak language.Jéperc is current faa the directors of tLe ladaæn Palace Car Company are on.Link of revolt over the dictatorial Loy of the president A very close *Ld of Mr.Pullman is quoted as saying hat his present holdings ia the company isETegate less than half a maliton of dol- .ars où: OÙ a twal capital.srtock of $26,- FRIRY\u2019 Le annual meeting of the s'okbolders (2 bur three weeks nff and it is sated rLat a number of large and smaid boiders have combined and are | mu, aiut in Panrnunicacirn wità & great body of their issieintes Ir the purpose of bringing change iu thé head of the cor- solz.y in orler to protect tue fature of this greai property interest.Mi.ETHUKS VIEWS, Clevelani, Ohin.July 11 \u2014Chie?Engineer P.M.Arthur.sveakinge last night of the expected go:-oral sorike of the Huign's of labor, said.\u201cWell, I sup- Pose Mr.Sovereign has the right to order the do it.In that during the past penpie were taxed to feed the pyor and unemployed, it is vroug for auy man, even though he Las the author:ty, tn order out theuseuds of workingmen who have large familie: to support.I would rather receive the coudevnnation of the men for not Order ng a strike strike or he would not of the fac: winter al! of the thoir urmost +; view vim our, and ibken reesive their con- | Jeni Soll.It is not the right time to ; sispesi \u201che work wien the men haved DIS INR ty nil and are entirely satisfied Cloner veri Ni \u2018L:isted eriphotica!iy that 45 1L have beer largely overlooked in \u2018=H0U oË the canses and results, a.snd for which Irebs started.Lo.have beell 2 dipsomaniac, and Less irresponsible, as sone of the but there seems to have been ' tr me ines It is evident to 2 Ftarted out to produce a total Ÿ LUS Ness in all sections of the .Tile trouble with the Pullmen SLT onus oo minor consideration.The 000 EUTe)l wt vus closing all LE Emme uff all fnod suppiy and ail If this had been accom- CN STRIKE, + SALE, Ce Talon.blauad, tis route would have been open- us GO OUT TO | hoods.of.vumolested, an à.The t is generally believed the .dzaïth of three to spread to thou- 2ople that hitherto have etiher ic the middle line or have beea out- have ! than to order Depew, presi- | which .indus- : have had the whole nation of 66,000.000 | people turn to him as the only men who * couid bring relief.His campaign failed * because his forces were not strong enough.« After the strike at Chicago was started, | he proceeded to carry out his plans by , ordering strikes at Buifalo and Pittsburg.|! He knew that those cities were important prints because the food supplies of the eastern and middle states are brought .through Fittsburg and Buffalo from many ! dirert\u2018ons.His failure at these points | marked the failure of the entire strike.\u2018The effect of the strike abroad is im- | portant, continued Mr.Depew, \u2018it will i certainly withhold foreign Investments « from this country.It will Hkewise cause .much wender ard comment over econo- \"mic conditions in a country where one \"man can, by sending a few telegrams, .cause such a paralysis of business as we \"have lately seen, a state of affairs whicn made it necessary for the president to i issue a proclamation which virtually de- | clared an insurrection.The result of the strike will be a to the brother- \u2018fraitomen.TN had Bucoeeded thèse | me would have been destroyed i and ahsorbed] by the American Railway with one man at its head in full + Union, power.\u2019 À TROMISE JGNORED, Duluth, Minn., July 11.\u2014 With the understanding that the trouble at Spooner was at an end traffic was resumed.It was reported last night that Gen.Auer, adjutant-general of Wisconsin, was assured by the strikers that ney would make no demonstration and upon this promise he took Lis departure.The Chicago train was attacked after he left and cut In several places.It is reported that R.W.Wright, a trairman, was assaulted and fatally injured.At Superior there was rioticg last night, and : police protection was necessary.In Duluth switching was resumed in the : Omaha & Northern Pacific varde for the first time since the strike began, and freights were sent out.THE LABOK STRIKE.Chicago, July 11.\u2014The great Chicago Building and Trades Union, last night, passed the following resolutions: Resoived, that it is the advice of this council that the organizatoins out remain out, and the remainder be out not later than Saturday morning: that the council give its fullest support to all organizations affiliated.We request all \"members to keep away from railway pro- ! perty.and if martial law be declared to remain in their homes.This council Is composed of members of 4 the twenty-six affiliated organizations, and is the most powerful single labor body in + Chlcagu.Ameng the unions affiliated wäth it are the carpenters, numbering 5,- 500, and the plumbers, 7,000.According to the resolution, all will lay down thelr tools before Saturday.As yet, the street rallway men are at work, and there is no tie-up of tho means of Urbis ; though # t% ux- pected that the conductors, motormen and drivers will go out on call.The Knights of Labor will stand with the other organizations, and its members, wlio number 10,000 in this city, will go out to a man.At 4 pm.to-day, 4.090 cigarmakers will walk out.Already the tinners, numbering one thousand, are reported out,; 150 bicycle repairers, of Warm, Schuber & Company, did nct return to work this morning; bakers in fifty bakeries refused to work until the boycott is settled, as did i six hundred cabinetmakers, 2,000 horse- snoers.50% iron moulders.150 plate-glass workers, 3.009 structural iron workers.1,500 teamsters, 1.500 carriagemakers and inh printers in A Kellogg & Scn's establishment.The waiters in the botels and restaurants, to tbe number of 3,000, will go out soon, but the hour has not yet been fixed.Whether the strike ts to be a local or a genera' one depends largely upon the .results of the conference of labor leaderm here zo-morrow, which has been called bv President Samuel Gompers, of the American Tnion Federation of Labor.| Minneapoils, Minn., Julr 11\u2014The up Cul & \u2014\u2014 men of the Soo road failed to show up thi morning and ened.Sacramento, Cal., July 11.\u2014The situation here indicates peace.The leaders in tho strike movement were not visible this mormne.The men say the regu- \u201clars vell not be opposed unless they try ; to reve Puilman cars.Sacramento is \u201cWelcr martial law, though thus far it has not altered things in any way.a general tie-up is threet- PRACTICALLY ENDED.Chicago, July 11.\u2014In an official statement the general managers\u2019 association + says ihe railways are handling the usuai ; number of trains and that the strike is | practically ended.Washington, July 11.\u2014General Miles reported, this morning, that everything is \u201cauiet in Chicago.The night passed without incident, and there were onjv a few idle people about the railway yards and the streets of Chicagn, this morning.The ; Cffcials here think the situation 1s more | favorubl> than it has been at any time ; since the strike.| Cleveland, July ; men docided to go I 80 far as 11.\u2014The Erle PRa'lway > tc work, and the strike that road is concerned, is over.Youngstown, O., July 11\u2014Every employee on the street railway went gn strike at midnight.Toledo, July 11.\u2014The Knight's of Labor to-day decided to pay no attention 10 Sovereign's order to go out on strike._\u2014\u2014\u2014 A SUDDEN DEATH.Toronto, July 11.\u2014Charles Burns, a jus- | tice of the peace.was found dead tn bed to-day.The deceased was preminent in local Liberal political circles and was a retired ice dealer.-\u2014 There was a fire yesterday in the rear of 21 Wellington street, Point St.Charies.Four tenements were destroy- i ed.The damage fs estimated at $3,000 by fire aud water.A little civic jubilation has been arranged for to-morrow.Four \u2018corner | stones\u2019 of the incinerator chimney at the (iregory farm are to be laid, the party i leaving the City Hall In cabs at eleven.The stones will bear tna names of the hat AT ei TR, Ward.AGAIN VICTORIOUS.THE \u2018BRITANNIA\u2019 ONCE MORE DEFEATS HER GALLANT RIVAL.\u2014 A WELL CONTESTED) RACE DESCRIBLD.Glasgow, July 11.\u2014The Clyde yachting carnlval was resumed to-day.The course sailed over was in broader water than heretofore, this was ccnsidered by the backers of the centre-boarder as more In her favor.It was a quadrangular course in the Firth of Clyde, sometimes termed the 'Firth of Flukes.\u201d The start was made from a point off Craigmere Pier, in Rothsay Sound, thence the course was almost due south to and around a stake-boat off Mount Stuart, thence to rgs, thencé \u201cnorthward to and around a mark-boat in Wemyss Bay, and across the Firth to the starting point.iwice around.After the second round the yachts were to sail diagonally across the quadrangular course from Rothesay to Largs and return.The total length of the course is about fifty mules.Hach side of the quadrangle is about 4% nautical miles, and the run to and from Largs is a trifle more than six and a halt miles, Before the yachts camd up and hovered back of the starting line the alr was almost breathless.After & while a breeze sprang up out of the south.The Ciyde yachtsmen were confident the \u2018Britannia\u2019 would win, and the Americans were quite as confident in regard to the chances of the Yankee © yacht over the comparatively open covrae.(Over head the day war perfect Hundreds of gaily decked crart churned their way through the Clyde waters.Mr.George Gould, who was on one of the steam yachts remarked that \u2018Britannia\u2019 was a fine boat, but he not despair of winning a victory over ler even over the fluky Clyde course.The skippers of both yachts were not at their helms except in an advisory capacity.Clyde captains steered both bouts.The \u2018Vigilant\u2019 had a crew of fîty men, and tbe \u2018Britannia,\u2019 forty.The preparatory gun set Lhe leaders manouvering for pesition north of the line.The \u2018 Vigilant * got the weather gauge on her cousin and held it.She bounded over the line at 10.21.39, a minute and forty seconds after gun fire.The * Britannia ' was only fifteen secoads astern of her, being 10.31.45.It was a beat down the Firih.Both boats carried olub top sails and large jib topsails.A series of sport tacks were made down the west bank of the Firth.The *\u2018 Vigl- lant\u2019 bundred yards and had the better of the Mayor, chairman of Health, Finance, etc.| 1 ut A A M TEE LES windward work io slightly increasing breeze.The boats headed for ASCOE vil luc port task.Letra.ter.several short tacks the \u2018 Britannta-\"\" bore out to mid channel on the starboard tack.The \u2018 Vigilant' did not follow her, but beaded down the Firth, apparently well to windward.The wind became lighter.pe * Vigilant,\u201d on the port tack pointed in toward the west shore.After standing a while on this leg she went about and headed to the eastward on the starboard tack toward the \u2018 Britannda.\u2019 The Mount Stuart mark was rounded by the \u2018 Vigilan:' at 11.18.20 apd by the \u2018 Britannia ' at 11.20.50.Thus the \u2018 Vigilant' was two and a half minutes ahead.The wind dropped somewhat in the broad reach, with bocins to port, from Mount Stuart, thus to the flag boat at Largs, and the \u2018 Britaunia \u2019 crawled upon her cppunent.The \u2018 Britannia \u2019 her main boom out and prepared to set her spinnaker mark.The \u201c Britannta mark at 11.59.35, and the * Vigilant ' at 11.51.36, just one minute and one seccnd astern.Captain Carter had adopted his tactics of running the Yankee's stern, taking ner wind and drawing siowly ahead.In the Mount Biuart it Was generaily observed that the * Vigilant\u2019 pointed higher than the * Britannia.\u201d but that the Briwisher was smarter.Whoa the breeze was fine the \u2018 Vigilant ' adi 1 1 1 i the ; did | t appeared to be leading by several | i | shoved | fat J i i f i a commanding lead, but when it dropped, sbse fell astorn.Spinnakers were set to port on the run up the channel to We- myss.The ' Vigilant \u2019 pressed the \u2018 Britannia ' bard, notwithstanding the ligh:- ness of wind.Passing Knock Cestle, up tbe four and a half ruile leg, the \u2018Vigilant ' was only twenty-five seconds aster\" of the \u2018' Britannia.\u201d The \u2018 Britannia\u2019 gathered in her spinnaker just before roun.of steamers which will receive the ssosidy of $750,000 to be vYoted to-day Ly tLe House._\u2014\u2014\u2014 pe oe om A WARLIKE ACT.Londen, July 11.\u2014Advices fom T-kio say that the Japunese \u2018suvertivent Los chartered sume s'eumers rei thy Yuzen Kai.ha Company und land à 10,000 troops in Corea, ard a rs body of troops will shortly reinf ree them.The Japanese goverument pos- tively refuses to withdraw Corea except upon Julali's its troups froin owu terIgs.\u2014-_\u2014 \u2014 pe -.- 1 SICILY LIKES Huw Rome, July 11.\u2014In the tions in Mesetna and other places in Sidly ex-Deputy De Felice: end severed other persons recently convict\u2014u ut Palermo of \u201cALS \u2018auuwicimal elec- connection with the Sicillun riots, were returned br large maiorities.The result of the elections will be deciared veil.\u2014\u2014 _ THE WEATHER.(Special to the \"Wire Meteorological Office.Torento, Juiy 1], 11 a.m.\u2014The following ur hee Tanmum temperatures \u2014Caigary.3u; Dhtinford, 04, Medicine hat, 56: Qu'Appellu.4°, Winnipeg, 58; Parry Sound, 58: Torento, 4 Met Tsch, 54: Quebec, 08; Halifax, 08.Probab'ities for the next tweuty-four heurs Vaid mostly south and wast, fine.Liu dev Gedy with a few local thunderstorms.Montreal, Readings by Hearn & Hh: arrison's Stariurd warm, July il Barometer at noon to-dey.24.55.veste rilu 30.05; to-day, temperature.nux, Ti; pal.62; yesterday, max.75, Lill.LO.Ce TS IIS ep 5 ETS \u2014 Jy \u2014 gp wr \u2014weum.EEE CT = a ARON Nr mg RRR re ARR ERS MBE RAR Sa Be eA Me ens EER we © to! BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND ) DEATHS.Notices of births, marriages and deaths must inuari- ably be endorsed with the name and address of the render, or otherwise no netice can be taken of them.Bir:} notices arc inserted for 5c, merriage notices Jor 8c, death notices for 36c prepasd.The an nouncement of funcrai appended death notios, S50 extra; other extension to obituary, such as short sketch of life, two cents per werd extra, except poctry, which is 50 cents per line extra\u2014prepaid.Arnuac subacriders may kave announcements of births, marriages and deaths \u2018without extended obituary or verses; occurring in their immediate families, free of Charge, tn which case name and address of subscribers should be given.BIRTHS.DIDGEON\u2014At 53 Hutchison street, on July 7.1874, a daughter to Mr.and Mrs.John Dudgeon.11 EDMONDSON\u2014In thls city, on July J, 1584, the wife of T.Edmondson, of a daughter.10 McI.CISH.\u2014At 655 St.Denis street, on July ¥, 1894, the wife of W.C, McLeish, of à £on.10 STATON\u2014At \u2018Bona Place.' St.Louis Road, Quebec, on July 6, 1894, the wife of Geo.J.Staton, of a son.11 WEITESIDE\u2014At Little Britain.on July 1, 1894, the wife of R.F.Whiteside, of a daugkter, Anna Florence Cana\u2019da Matilda.11 MARRIED.DAVIS\u2014HARTLEY.\u2014On the 6th jnst., by the Rev.James Watson, of the bride's father, Grenville, Que., the Rev.Ernest A.Davis to Miss M.Hartley.10 HARDISTY\u2014REID.\u2014On June 20, at the residence of the bride's father, by the Rev.Jas.Fleck.B.A., G.W.Hardisty, jr.to Matilda.daughter of James Reid.All of Montreal.10 HYDE\u2014BROWN\u2014At Hamilton, Ont., on the 5th July.1894, at the residence of the bride's brother.by the Rev.Richard Hyde, Alexander Hyde.of Quebec, to Annie C., daughter of the late James Brown, Hamilton, Ont.11 1 JARVIS\u2014KERR.\u2014At Ottawa, Ont., on July 6.by the Rev.Dr.Moore, Mr.James Jarvis to Mrs.H.E.Kerr, both of Ottawa.10 POLLEY\u2014EASTMAN\u2014In North Haverhill, on July 2.1894, by the Rev.Irving C.Brown, Willie F.Polley, of Quebec, Canada, and Mary E.Eastman, of North Haverhill.No cards.11 VINCENT\u2014GRIFFITHS\u2014On Saturday, July ; | CHILDREN'S SUNSHADES REDUCED.7, 1894.by the Rev.Osborne Troop.at St.Martin's Church, James Vincent, to Amy 9 Griffiths.DIED.; CRATHERN\u2014At her father's residence, 32 McGregor street, on the morning of July 4, 1894, Evelyn Maud Crathern, in her 25th vear.beloved daughter of Jas.Crathern.The funeral service will take place at St.George's Church, on Thursday mornin next, the 12th instant, at 9.30 o clock punctuallv.to which friends and acquain- tanres ore respectfully invited.Please omit flowers.9 D'ELISLE\u2014At Portneuf.Que.cn July §, '94, at the age of 11%; mcnths, Joseph Jean Ar- ther, {infant son of Arthur Deligle, Esq.avocate, MP.11 GARDHAM.\u2014At 416 Magdalen street, Point 8+.Charles, on July 3, Mary Coverdale Ward, widow of Thomas Gardham, in her 64th year.Funeral! on Thursday at 2 p.m.to Grace Church and Mount Royal Cemetery.10 HASTINGS\u2014On July 10, 1894, Sarah J.Hastings, mother of S.R.Taylor, aged 77 years.Funeral from 3% Fulium street, on Thursday.July 12.ar 2.30 p.m.Friends and acquaintances are respectfully invited to attend.Vermont papers please copy.11 HOLLINGSWORTH \u2014 At Guelph, Ont.on July T, 1854, John Hollingsworth, of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, aged 55 years.11 MARTIN.\u2014In this city, on the 10th inst.Lieut.-Col.John Martin, in his 68th year.Funeral on Thursday, 12th inst.at 3 o'clock, from his late residence, 31 Belmont street.Friends and acquaintances are invited.Please omit flowers.10 McCOY\u2014On July 4, 1894, at Ayer's Flat, Que.Walter H, son of Mr.John McCoy, agrd 11 years.10 ROBINSON\u2014On July 6.1834, at Ayer's Flat, Que.Flora Blair.wife of Mr.Charles Robinson, ot Ayers Flat, P.Q., aged 36 years.10 Those sending notices for the above column may send with them a list of names af interested friends.Marked copies of the ** Wuness\u201d containing such notice will de sent Sree to any address +4 Canada Montreal excepted.Notices received too late for this column are waualiy placed on the Gth page.Among the many useful articles placed upon the mission yacht \u2018 Sir Donald \u2019 this afternoon was a portable Mason & Hamlin Baby Organ in cak which was purchased at Mr.C.W.Lindsay's warerooms by the ladies\u2019 committee.The instrument is so constructed that it can be packed in an ordinary sized travelling trunk.11 SEALE & SON, FUNERAL DIRECTORS.Cor.Beaver Hall & Dorchester stroew.DIARRHEA, Ox CHOLERA MORBUR, DYSENTERY, TAKE COYERNTON'S AROMATIC BLACKBERRY CA INATIVE.A safe, easy, and =flectua!l cure for both children and adults.Price + 3c.Be sure and get that prepared by .J.COVERNTON & CO, DISPENSING CHEMISTS, Corner of Bleury and Dorchester streets.For sale by all the Jeading Druggists.VACCINE POINTS, Phone 3469.FRESH AND RELIABLE, PHYSICIANS SUPPLIED.J.E.TREMBLE, Famlly Druggist, Cor.St.Catherine and Mouniain streets SOMETHING NEW! ALUMINIM THIMBLES, FOR 15 CENTS.Very Light and Durable.D.BEATTY, Watchmaker and Jeweller, 137 St.Peter street, (opp, \u2018Wituess\u2019 Office ) 10 NR TY at the residence\u2019 M Sau AE HL WN CARSLEY\u2019S COLUMN.GREAT SALE OF SUNSHADES Now golng on A large stock comprising all LATEST NOVELTIES, and every shade in Ladies\u2019 Silk and Lace Trimmed Sunshades, ALL SPECIALLY REDUCED FOR ALL SPECIALLY REDUCED FOR ALL SPECIALLY REDUCED FOR THIS MONTH'S SALE.FRILLED SILK SUNSHADES, $1.18 each FRILLED SILK SUNSHADES, $1.18 each FRILLED SILK SUNSHADES, $1.18 each Notre Dame street, S.CARSLEY, | S.CARSLEY, | Frilled SUNSHADES TRIMMED LACE, $1.90.TRIMMED LACE, $1.90.TRIMMED LACE, $1.90.BLACK FRILLED SUNSHADES, With Insertion Lace, $2.00.With Insertion Lace, $2.00.With Insertion Lace, $2.00.SHOT SILK UMBRELLAS, With Hand-Painted Handles, $2.00.With Hand-Peinted Handles, $2.00.With Hand-Painted Handles, $2.00.| CHILDREN'S SUNSHADES REDUCED.CHILDREN'S SUNSHADES REDUCED.S.CARSLEY, | Notre Dame 8.CARSLEY, street, GREAT Print Sale THOUSANDS OF PIECES THOUSANDS OF PIECES THOUSANDS OF PIECES OF CHOICE PRINTS, OF CHOICE PRINTS, OF CHOICE PRINTS, IN S8TYLISH COLORS, IN STYLISH COLORS, IN STYLISH COLORS, AND PATTERNS AND PATTERNS , AND PATTERNS ALL AT BARGAIN PRICES.ALL AT BARGAIN PRICES.ALL AT BARGAIN PRICES.S.CARSLEY, | S.CARSLEY, | Notre Dame street, Cheap Prints FOR THE JULY SALE.Useful Washing Prints, 4%%c Useful Washing Prints, 4i4c Useful Washing Prints, 4%%c Fast Color Washing Prints, 63%c yard.Fast Color Washing Prints, 61¢c yard.Fast Color Washing Prints, 6c yard.Washing Prints, Special, \u2018Washing Prints, Special, Washing Prints, Special, yard.yard.yard.8c yard.8c yard.8c yard.PRINTS EXTRAORDINARY.PRINTS EXTRAORDINARY.A special lot of extra value Prints in good colors and patterns.July Sale Price, 8%c yard.8.CARSLEY, | Notre Dame S.CARSLEY, | street.\u2014\u2014 SATEENS.FOR JULY\u2019S GREAT SALR.A large lot of Indigo Blue Sateens, in & good variety of Patterns.11%4c yard July Sale Prioe.1144c yard 113%c yard July Sala Price.1114c yard 113%c yard July Sale Price.11%c yard In a good variety of oolor.CHOICE SATEENS.12% c yard July Sale Price 1244c yard 1245c yard July Sale Price 12%c yard 12%c yard July Sale Price 12%c yard CRINKLED ZEPHYRS.ALI.AT SALE PRICES.ALL AT SALE PRICES.ALL AT SALE PRICES.8.CARSLEY, | Notre Dame 8.CARSLEY, | street, S.CARSL NOTRE DAME STREBT.f= GX, THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS.Wenpsrsnay, Jerry 11, tan JOHN MURPHY & COS ADVERTISEMENT.A HOT SPELL Is coming.Ladies will, therefore, fully appreciate the following: Removal Sale Bargains IN PARASOLS AND SINSHADES, ALL PARASOLS, 25 Percent Discount off, ALL SUNSHADES, 25 Percent Discount off.ALL SILK UMBRELI AS, 15 Percent Discount of.R Special Plums! Children's Bateen Parasols from 38c.\u2014\u2014:0:-\u2014 = Children's Shot Silk Parasois from 56c.Ladies\u2019 Ladtes Shot Silk Parasols from $1.60.S: t'en Parasols from 40c.JOHN MORPHY & CO, 1381 and 1788 NOTRE DAME STREET, And 105, 107, 199 and I11 St.Peter st.TERMS CASH AND ONLY ONE PRICE.TELEPHONE, 2193 JAS.A.OGILVY & SONS\u2019 MIDSUMMER garing Sa IS VERY SUCCESSFUL SO FAR.The Sales Each Day Are Away Ahead af Last Year.WE DON'T BOAST OF GREAT CROWDS.WE DON'T EXPECT THAT.There are too many pcople out of towp.The daily sales are far beyond expectation.TO-TTORROW For LACES, FMBROIDERIES, And HANDKERCHIEFS, On Lace Counter there is a lot of all kinds, which are reduced to less than half the original price.All other Laces are reduced in proportion, and we can give you all the newest and leading makes in laces.Usual discount off all goods.IN EMBROIDERIES We have them from % of an inch up to 54 Inches wide, including Insertions and Allover Embroideries.They are all new goods, and we give our usual discount off all goods.AS FOR HANDKERCHIEFS We can give you any kind you ask for, and prices were never so low.10c Dozen\u2014Children\u2019s Cambric chiefs, 10c a dozen, or lc each.30c Dozen\u2014PFancy Cambric Handkerchiefs, 30c a dozen, or two for oc.80c Dozen\u2014White Cambric Handkerchiefs, 30c a dozen, or two for be.b60c Dozen\u2014Large Size Cambric Handkerchiefs, white and colored, 50c a dozen, or dc each.And another Manufacturers\u2019 Lot of All- Linen Hemstitched Handkerchiefs, actually worth $2.40 a dozen.Our Price is $1.49 Doz.or 12¢ Each.All orders by mail receive prompt attention, and samples sent on application.-® JAS.A.OGILVY & SONS.THE FAMILY LINEN AND DRAPERY HOUSE, 202 to 207 ST.ANTOINE STREET.Handker- 144 to 150 Mountain street.TELEPHONE, 58225.Branch:\u2014$T.CATHERINE STREET.Corner Buckingham Avenue Telephone 333.H A Pleasant /Mocker Only is the long cool drink, which, whatever, its ingredients, always creates, as the \u2018 Bkilley\u2019 created in the breast of Qliver Twist, a desire for \u2018more,\u2019 but we have Light Things for the Burning Days which ensure permanent comfort, as, for instance, the Light Silk or Lustre Coat, Light Summer Vest, Light Cambric Shirt, Light Underwear, Light Welght Half Hose, Light Cool Toggery, FOR TOWN AND COUN R.J.TOOK TRY.177 ST.JAMES STREET.W.H.HOPE, IMPORTER OF ALL THE NEWEST ENGRAVINGS AND ETCHINGS.Framing and Mounting Eagravings and other Pictures in a superior manner.I have many subjects suitable for Wedding Presents.housekeeping should see my beautiful stock.A cordial invitation to intending purchasers.TERMS LIBERAL AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.W.H.HOPE, 2255 ST.CATHERINE ST., near Victoria.8.2 Waterloo faste ÆA THE WONDERFIL FLY CATCH, Registered July 10, 1893.ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT.When ordaring your grooeries fi Walter Paul, St Catherine street.or from Fraser Viger, 8t.James street, include a Tin of this wonderful Paste, and make your own sheets.If r grocer bas not a tin, let him order from Mrs.8m he, 52 Craig street.Robt.Neville, Jr., CARPENTER AND BUILDER, Jobbing of All Kinds Promptly Attended to.\\ Estimates given for all classes of work.120}¢ ST.ANTOINE STREET, Telephone No.353.(Near Windsor street.) NEW BANQUET LAMPS.ANOTHER BET OF NICE SAMPLES JUST FROM NEW YORK.$3.30, 85.50.8c.50, $7.50.COLE'S LAMP STORE, 1792 Notre Pame street.11 Pert SIT ON THE STEPS When you can get such nice Verandah Chairs at Lew Prices, At 8.R.PARSONS' Furniture Wareroomas, 1813 and 1815 Notre Dame street.10 New beginners in + BE 11 NOTHER LOT Of those NICE CHAIRS for Country Houses just received, at PABSONS\u2019 Furniture Rooms, 1813 and 1815 Notre Dame street.10 NS.R.DOWN.DOWN.THE INDURATED FIBRE SAN TARY BATH TUB, Copper Liued, ~$30.00=/7/7\u2014\"\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014- FULL SIZE, SIX FOOT.JORDAN & LOCKER, 1749 Notre Dame street.DOWN, GENERAL BAZAAR Bamples of Carpets, 25c each.Marble Table Oilcloth, 25¢ yard.Dutch String Stair Carpet, 16c yard.Sample Shoe Brushes.Sample Hair Brushes.Sample Cloth Brushes.Raw Silk for Curtains, 20c yard.Rutcher Linen, 12c.Towels, 4c, 5c, lbe, 12L4c.Lace Curtains, 8% long, $1.00 pair.White Quilts, Tc up.All-Wool Dress Goods, 10c yard.Shaker Flannel, be yard.White Sheeting, 2 yds wide, 18c.GEORGE H.ROWELL, 1597 Notre Dame street.Between St.Lambert's Hill and Court House.DOWN.RIE [2d hd | Chuiee Groceries and Provisions always on hand.C.E.SOCIETIES Should Watch this Directory.TEMPERANCE GROCERS\u2019 DIRECTORY.WILLIAM W.BREWIS Corner Dorchester and Brunsw lek sts., Gives special attention tn Te \u2018AB.CHAS.HH.BECKEIT, 99] St, Catherine 81, near DeLorimierave.WM.SWIFT, 398 Mount Rayal ave,, corner Drolet st, First-class Groceries, Crockery, &c.Buiter and Coffee a specialty.JOHN SULLIVAN, Corner Milton and DPurocher streets.Choice Tens and Coffees a apecirlty.R.TURN ER, 601 Wellington, cor Magda\u2019 en, 1\".St Charice, Fresh (\u2018reamery Butter, Mi Kan Fgzo reccive 1 daily.THOMAS K.T STONE, 627 Wellington, (or.Fourgeris Pt St t'barles.Choice Groceries und Provisions.JOHN JOHNSTON, Cor, Prince Arthur and St.Hypolite, Has a Choice Lot of New CREAMERY BUTTE R.WILLIAM V.GORDON, 2354 St.Catherine, corner Metcalfe.Fresh High Class Goods constautly arriving.D.STEWART, A Fine Lot of Water Melons._ _ 206 st.Antoine street, _ E CUNNINGH AM, Corner St.\u201cGeorge and Lagauchetiere sts.\u2026 The Pioneer Temperance Grocery, Butter and Teas a specialty.W.J.BROWN 2696 St.Catherine, nenr St.Mark st.Sugar ( Cured Boiled Har.5, on:y Zée per pound 1 BOOTH & BOOTH, 591 81, Urbain, cor.of Cuthbert st, Store w uw be opened on WEDNESDAY, June 13, with à nice Etock of Fresh Croc =ea THOMSON & JOHNSTON, 2450 St.Catherine.cor.Prummond st.English Cured Hams and Bacon See adrt.another col.Che Baily Witness.WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 11.SHIPWRECK A SHOCKING ANT) CANNIBALISM.\u201cTOLY FROM ALA: KA.Washington, July 11.\u2014A horrible story of enforced cannibulizm is seen in a supplementary report made to the Treasury: Captain Healey.of the connection with the rescue of a poriion of the crew of the American schooner \u2018James Allen; Umnak Island, on June 1.Francisco on April 14 and was wrecked off Amelia Island, Alaska, on May 11.Department by steamer °\u2018 Hear,\u201d in There was uo time to provision or water.the boats, as the vesse] sank within twen- The.ty minutes after striking the reefs.crew of forty-nine left in five boats, and æt daybreak the next mornmiug hut thice boats were in sight These made for Amelia Island, where they remained a few days, and then started for Unalaska, a distance of 270 miles.In the passage.one boat was swamped aud four men were drowned; another became so leaky it had to be abandoned.One man on the way.All twenty-six in number, were crowded into one boat.This boat stopped at Umnak Island, where, on the following day, three of the men died from exposure.After several futile attempts.Captain Huntley, with a crew of six left for Unalaska, which they reached on June 12, and the \u2018 Bear\u2019 immediately set out for Umnak Island to rescue the remaining men.The condition in which she found the men is told by Captain Healey, as follows: \u2014 \u2018They were found in a terrible condition; one man, Gideon.had died on June 7, and the rest were in a starving condition.Mussells were scarce and the men had given up hope of being rescued.and were completely demoralized.The body of the man who bad died on June 7 they had eaten.They had even dug up the body of one of those who had died two weeks previously and had pertially consumed it.The trunk lay just outside the hut with the arms and legs cut off, and portions of the meat were in the pot outside the door.As has been sald before.they were completely demoralized.No attempt had been made to hunt or to attract attention from seaward.Not even a mark had been set upon the bluff be- rind them.When found, they lay arcund the fire in a hut, doing -nothing but looking at each other, with the blood of their shipmates on their hands and faces, and bones strewn about them on the floor.Not until the boats land and the door of the house been forced opzn, did they know that help was at hand.\u2019 \u2014 NEWS FROM THE ANTIPODES.(Special to the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Vancouver, July 11.\u2014Advices by the SS.\u2018'Warrimoo\u2019 state that Sir Ceorge Dibbs\u2019s bill providing that New South Wales and Victoria federate, is meeting with wide-spread approval.Debts and assets are to be combined, and the common Parliament is to meet at Erd- aey.suffrage for the united colcnies.The Suva (Fiji) \u2018Times\u2019 devotes several columns to trade between Canada and Fiji.The islands are preparing to make experimental shipments of coffee, cocoa, cinnamon, castor oil, oil cake.cocoanut oll, dyestuffs, ginger and tobacco to this country.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 2 \u2014\u2014 POST OFFICE CLERK SENTENCED.(Special to the \u2018 Witness.\u2019) Peterboro, Ont., July 11.\u2014Thomas W.Tebb, the chief clerk in the post office here, was yesterday convicted of pilfering from the malls and sentenced to three years in the Kingston penitentiary.er SUPERANNUATED.(Special to the \u2018 Witness.\u2019) Kingston, Ont., July 11.\u2014Mr.W.J.Haddigan, for seventeen years in the Cue- tom House, has been superannuated.He was an appointee of the Hon.Alexander MacKenzie.He is sixty-eight years of age and has passed the limit for service and has been retired.from She left Ban \u2018 died : the remaining men.Sir George Dibbs favors {male | re, FADEAIOR COMLATION DELEGATES GATHERIMN, LANDY cig (Special ty 115 V0 Cleveland, (laa, Jay 13 ; Méenhers the great Fier.| tion of the Society of Chr oo for which preparations oo | wav for the Just two ve ns \u20ac the highest hopes have nr \u201cwhere are the autwards | come which the city eue cie { fates who are to conne fr attend the meeting, Gold and vmte, the col Jand Union, are to be wos, Cbreem rom conntiess das churches and public belie Jeaver ealers in connreton: , tienut edors, wesh have + * the Fourthof July crletra ; { Most charting and pair.oo\" | préevallirg eciors are nor ; animate ohieers, The streets oo ning to be filed with mer and +.wear THE DIAMOND-SHAPED RAI\": of the convention, with 11s «| colored ribbon and its tiny reproof well known views ju the 7.Under this halge 1s usua!l'v vor What longer ribbon on whh : the name of the city er mate !r the wearer comes.The numa bons which bear the nan.À monwealtbs than the burlkes- =.creasing hourly.Although yest rilay was the before the convention proper surprisingly large number of Joo rived in the city, seme of vu long before they sequently they were not nes at or dock by thé Terepiign cont co wore forced to care for tn 180100 WEre eNpee LoL oo time.Notably was this the cas + A LALGE DELEGATE N iN who arrived early ia the nor.numberad about tv pundre?wid the deck of the Cleveland ar.Transportation Conipany.A eur.fast ume it had \u2018eel, arraruei Canadian delegation should he |r with irdging places ir.the Dunham avenue IMseiples this they Knew.so ther as ne t starting for the c\u2018hur n.a: 1 21207 were speedily provided fer from Hamilton and its vorimmty à prepared for a geod Uime dur: z ing.Two hunaral and : Canadians armiven =! | steamer Lakeside 7 Tl | trict, while us many 1er à from Toronto an\u201d distri.Several others arrived vo 1H oo \u2018Cleveland\u2019 from lyetrois, in ni.G.H.Porteus aud Mrs WT Ki.Montreal.The Moatr-ai XCCULTF Carn! Tt-lepatic\u2019l pes oe Pa Là reach Clevelaud via Niagara Falls has afternoon.One hundred are expected The strike is interefering with western de gates who are afraid to venture eus - California will send ne delegutes ut u.owing to a combiration of high rates u: strike.To-night the conventinn ii.formally open-d by service 3, su vers.the churches.Among tho sprcarers + be the Rev.W.Patterson.Tr uu, « Canon Richardson, Lendan \u2014_\u2014 ae - SEPARATE SCHOOLS IN THE NOK WEST (Special :v the * Witness.) Ottawa.July 11.\u2014Major Hughes ha emendment to the North-West hill ow! goes further than Mr MceCar hy 's it proposes to do away with sep schools in tte Territories alioge:her bas given notice that he will nove the third reading of \u2018Le bill.Jt woes to recite the a\u2019visabih;y of à ratina tem cf publir schools.as opposed to - arate ur denominatioral schools théolvgy or creed may te taught concludes by proposing 10 amend so 14 by rroviding that * No authority = be ves:ed in the Lieut-nant-Govern.- Counri] or the Legisictive Assenit.y the Territories to pass ordinmpres \u20187 enact laws permitting or authorizing - teaching or the practisiug of any Te: theology or any sectarian forme i educatinnal institution receiving pu suppor! or under publir control and separate or denomination] schools may be established.\u2019 at er .REAL ESTATE COMPARISONS, THE FIRST HALF OF 154 MANY TRANSACTIONS.SHOWS The following statement sh wing aruounis of saies and loans re reed \u201cthe first six menihs oF ea 11 veur tx to 1554 is interesting ad Las Tu | Fixst six Number Al ° nienthe.of sales.PIsny 100K 3 aT $ Tang ule CNC \u2019 1390.1 Jedes 40.0 04 1801.EN £044 IRG?lea Tan a 1993.AA Llve 1454.bis $ 14e 1 The registered sales during the - Maisonneuve, Cole Vio ation \u201c Montreal Annex, Ste.Cunego ont > and Montreal Junction.at: 8150.000, of which St.Henri uni were the largest \u2018nntrfhnt rs There were 125 real cestate \u2018ra:\u2018 the city wards and Cote St Anti ed at the registry off» during the of June, amounting to $44, 41a nd St.Antoine Ward Li $ - St.Ann's Ward ; L ; St.James Ward Lo .15 7 St.Louis Ward oo 7 i St.Lawrence Ward .3 1 St.Mary's Ward 12 ro St.Jean Baptiste W ard.17 Le» St Gabriel Ward .4 1 Hochelaga Ward 1 $ 2 5 St.Denis Ward .11 OE Cote St.Antoine .18 J ; o offer a portion oi our en s all , S18 $70 ee Page 10 for Morning Strike News.) 20° 2 slight change in their office ad- discontinuad for a time, but a hopeful (be Jewellery on satisfactory guarantee f Me in \"Natural Wool Cotion, Lisle Thread and Cashmere, at the sawe on ee \u2014- dress, and instead of requesting the ap- reorganization has mow taken place.The Of ownership.of Merino, , 4 SARICTE, La THE MURDERER PRENDERGAST.plicant to call at room 202, Board of new officers are:\u2014President, Mrs.Ben- | discount.i Men\u2019 AK hj July 11 Trade building, as formerly, he or she is Rett, 195 Maisonneuve street; recording | In addition to the above we purpose to clear out one very fine line of Men's al ay declpned to ale Supreme Court | requested to call at room 203.secretary, Mrs.Morrison, 51 Kent street; | WANT A MEDAL FOR HIM.Imported White Dress Shirts, at Half Price\u2014being short in some sizes.med ee Prend grant a stay in the, gp.firm also has changed its name treasurer, Mrs.Ludington, 722 St.Andre au , 9 o i, A Provdergast, the murderer ot |, (0° ME 50 has changed ts nam gris (Speci to the Witness.) Bargains in Hats and Bonnets fo or Harrison, and he will be hanged Co but it has not hans od its le t Among those who took part in the | Kingston, July 11.\u2014The City Council, on g ID fn) S I I) PAS ° En 2, Friday, unless the governor inter- handwriting or com osition Style O! meeting were Mrs.Williams, Mrs.Leet, | the recommendation of Dr.C.K.Clarke, In order to clear the balance of our TRIMMED MILLINERY, we will offor ; in \u2014__ | Another thi Th i ; Mrs.Radford and Miss Dougall.The superintendent of the Rockwood Asylum.the choice of our entire stock at exactly HALF PRICE.Less J percent extra ord- \u201c© DANK CLERK STEALS $3 ne.the applicant ls re |new union decided to meet in Taylor Lil apply to the Ioyal H Soci ; : D $3,800.| quested t à.th 1 ¢ Church t .Ww apply to e Itoya umane Society for cush.nth 2 ; (a o sen e sma amount o ch nex Tuesday afternoon, to com dal t Mr.W i 5.00 BONNETS for $ 2.28 _ ber bank employee has gone Wrong.| money to the manager of the firm, Mr, Plete its organization.for a medal for Mr.W.G.Fenwick who $ 5.NNETS fo wl 90,55 \u201c - \u2018'estonguay, the paying teller of| A.P.Bing at the Richelieu Hotel.\u2014 gallantly saved a man named Davis from 7.50 BN TS Ir 8.57 8.he Dame street branch of the \u2018The manager formerly put up at the THE WATER COMMITTEE.drowning.Both were inmates of the insane 10.00 BONNETS for 475 ar , 1 Peuple, sree on his Bolicays | Windsor Hotel The Water Committee held thor of it asylum.Davis, with sulcidal intent jumpod 12.00 .BA for 5.70 Qn ~1' .rday.Jun ; is vacatio : >r Committee held another of its NNET Î 00.9 Cale rt the bank officiels are This fakir, whoever he is, should be old-time meetirgs yesterday.The row was into the Lake.Fenwick followed and after a 2-00 BONNETS for ole 50.75 © for his return.and have em- Suppressed, and the quicker the police Over the suspension of certain men py the flerce struggle saved the man.V.VAS or 0) 00 5 La \u2019 ; ; superintendent on acc vi 25.00 BONNETS for 11.88 75.lame | get th hand hi he b ccount of the pipe laying 75.00 © ite~tives to search him up as it get their hands on him the better it will| appropriations becoming exhausted.After \u2014 : : ; ; 13 30 \"77 avovered that he took $3.800 of: be for those people who are out of em-| an hour's talk and a number of motions, A YOUNG LEGISLATOR And all prices not mentioned in same proportion.91.00 a i funds with him.By cheque, ployment and about down to their bot- Some of the members \u2018ate the leek,\u2019 agree- : N.B.\u2014-MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY AND CAREFULLY ATTENDED TO.19.49 Lon ad falsifying of books be bad tom dollar.Even if he does not suc- Ey hat the then remaln suspended until (Speclal to the \u2018Witness.\u2019 ; 9 \u2014 (4 © CV6re u 18 aeralcalions.- Te 18 wor or em.R3.83 ; oser > whereabouts {s a mystery.ceed In capturing much money, he is a Seventeen tenders for supplying coal were Kingston, Ont., July 11.\u2014The youngest GO last 2% however, is fully insured by nuisance, for people do not want to be opened, and the contract awarded to Messrs.member elected for the Ontario Legislature Y 09 - OU CT eae ne ur bothered by a bogus advertiser.L.Cohen & Sons, as follows:\u2014720 tons hard is Mr.W.McLaren, M.P.P., the Patron se- unt «ares Company, who will be the y gu ler by \" *, R 208.Board of Trade building, 1 coal at $6.65: 5,000 tons of Nova Scotia steam lected for East Hastings.He is but twenty- MONTREAL.v Caaionguay's crime.oom .8 bu B.15 at 34.35.and 700 tons of Welsh at $6.35.four vears of age and looks much younger.+ ) e a ie mm mma SAL ae aes em dR RE lr AE Ta ES SE Lai TS En Sn A Sh a UE LS ge Tome TE a SE A LA A a i TY a - = - Ea RS D 3 Lt WEN Ed * » ; oe ie * A A LI ES Pa 3 gS ST = [PN EE SNE 7 ERNE = PC - Epo Re une JER PX NI Pa eo CT ta > YW MT © ae LE Sire THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS.Weekly Calendar, WEDNESDAY, JULY 11.; MONTREAL 3 Rattalion Garrison Artiilery.à ANNUAL INSPECTION.will Parado as follows for Inspection 1.Corrpanites 0 by the Assistant Inspector of Artillery :\u2014 WEDNESDAY, at 8 p.m.No.2 TATESDAY, at 8 p.m.No.3 \" FRIDAY al 8 pg.Tniform- Drill Order.2\u2014The Battalion will Parade on SATURDAY next, Lhe 14th ins: , at 2.30 p.m.sharp, for completion of Annual Inapection.Uniform\u2014Review Order.Brass Band will atttend.In order to draw full pay every man must attend both the Company and Battalion Inspections.S.All ghert Rifles lasued for Annual Target Practice, miwt bu returned by Friday night.By order, H.FEATHERSTONE, Capt., Act-Adjutant.No.1 Companr, w.» 11 ART ASSOCIATION, OF MONTREAL GALLERIES OF PAINTINGS, Etc.to 6 p.m.2c.Open dally 9 a.m.ADMISSION, .HE ACME OF PLEASURE, The trip to Carilion and back, by Palace steamer *Sovereign,\u201d 21.00.If you have nerer been\u2014well:! don't acknowiedge it, but go at ouce.Take 8 am.train for Lachine daily.10 TeTRSDAY, JULY 12.A GRAND ORANGE CELEBRATION WILL BK HELD IN MAXVILLE, ONTARIO, ON JULY 21a The Montreal contingent à mp leave G.T.R.station at 6.46 sharp the morning \u201cof the i2th to take part ir.the celebra- ton.All members wishing to take part in the celebration will ass:smble at G.T R.Station, or at the Hall, 246 St.James street, gt 6 o'clock a.m Ticketscan be had from Members of the Committee or at the station.Tickets.refurn, .- 81.60.GOD SAVE THE QUEEN.10 ICE CREAM SOCIAL AND ENTERTAINMENT, Under the auspices of Perry L.0.B.L.; No.224, IN ORANGE HALL, 5 246 Su.James street.JULY 12th, at 8 p.m, will Tickets = « « + = = « =» = « 25 eents.\u201820D SAVE THE QUEEN.7 ~~» MIZPAH LODGE, SZ No.3,1.0.0.F.The Regular Weckly Meeting of Pf th: Lodge will be held TO-MOR- ROW (Thursday) EVENING, at 3, in wher Lodge Room, the Y M.C.A.Building, Doniinior square.present.By order of the N.E.- C.SPILLETTE, Rec.-Sec.LOYAL MONTREAL LODGE.=> No.3115 I.©.©.F.,, M.U.) Brethren are reminded of the Half Yearly Meeting of the Lodge _ to he held at 1863 Notre Dame street, oo THURSDAY, July 12th, at 7.30 p.m.As matters of great importance are to he considered a full attendance ni members is requested.Election of officers.By order of the N.(3, G.W.HARDISTY, Fin.-Seoy.SATURDAY, JTLY 14.OME! COME! J TO THE Grace Church Sunday-8chool Annual Eicnic.On SATURDAY, JULY 14, 18%, TO INERON ISLAND.Those living in the.clty who have not yet visited this beautiful island, situate: in the middle of Lachine Rapids, should avail themselves of this opportunity.Wellington St.electric cars take you within two minutes\u2019 walk of the boat.Steamer \u2018Ile Heron\u2019 leaves wharf, near Grand Trunk Boat House, at 9.30 am.end 2.15 p.m.TICKETS.25 and 15 cents.Refreshments at city prices.\u2014 \u2014 \u2014_ \u2014\u2014 a r A CONGREGATIONAL PICNIC TO IBERVILLE, Saturday, July 14, 1594, Leavivg Windsor Stetion at 9 am TICKETS, 2c and 5.6 GHFRRIXGHAM PARK.ANNTAL PICNIC \u2014-O0F\u2014 SATURDAY, July 14th, 1894, S-eamer Prince of Wales will leave Canal Basin at 8.30 a.m, and St Gubriel Locks at 9.Tickets, Adults 500 - - - Children 25c.Tea supplied on gronnds fres of charge.Refreshments.Lacrosse matches, games &c., Furure MEETINGS.yoy PICNIC \u2014or\u2014 St.Mark's & Westminster Congregntions GROVE.On SATURDAY, July 21st.STEAMER \u2018TERREBONNE AT CUSHINGS TEL Will leave the fuot of McGill street, at 9 a.m.and n 2 poo.Adnlts, 50 cents, Children, 23 cents.TO READERS GOING OUT OF TOWN.\u2018Witness\u2019 readers going nut of town can ' have the daily ed:tion mailed to them for | 21 25 cents per month.agreed in advising, directing or command- | | ! i fatal.MOUNTAIN ST.METHODIST SUNDAY SCHOOL PACE OS : Every member is requested vo ne .Proposition which is against her histori- 4 :can be convicted and sentenced for con- | the militia or federal troops were called SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Dally Witness, $3.00, Weekly Witness, $1.00 with veductions.to clubs ; Northern Mossonger Boc ; oi les to one address, v2.25 ; 20, 44.40 ; 0.1 ns Great 2 in add 81.04 per annum for post ago on Week itnegs ; 90c on Northern Messenger : $3.80 on Dally îtness.The last edition of tho DAILY WITNESS is de livered in the city every evening of publication at $4.00 per annum.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014s ADVERTISING RATES.DAILY WITNESS Five lines and upwards, 10c per lins.on favorabie terms.WEEKLY WITNESS With la tr or cuts, 200 per line.One-third reduction if set in our usual small advertising typos.Special contract rates The Daily Witness.Contrect WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1894.Would it not be well if a fund were raised by a committee of citizens, whose duties need not bs onerous, to acknowledge efficiency on the part cf policemen?Here is Constable Lauzon, who sprang upon his man in the face of a loaded revol- ver pointed full at him and then overtook him when he ran away.Is such a | man to remain on a level with those who | seek ambush when there is suspicion of | a row and who could not catch a runaway calf ?! \u2014_\u2014\u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2014 The Intercolonial Conference Is probably a fallure so far as the promotion | of protection Three of the eight colonies represented at the Conference voted against the proposition for a preferential tariff arrange ment between Great Britain and the col- ! 1 is concerned.| | | | | onies.They are probably the colonies | which bave lost all belief in protection or whose delegates are free traders.nt is plain that the new Imperial protec- | tionist scheme is by no means universally popular even throughout the self-gov- erning colonies.With three of the most prosperous and powerful of the Australasian colonies against the protectionist - cannot be any hope of Great Britain\u2019s accepting it.If the colonies were united in their demand Great Britain might, as the \u2018Times\u2019 said, feel the pressure sufficiently to consider a scheme, there cal policy as well as against her apparent interests, but with them so equally divided the propoeition is not likely to be even considered.0 Mr.Debs, the president of the Railway Union, who is the chief of the executive which has had the ordering of the strike, has been, with the other members of tho executive, indicted by a grand jury, from a wide country by a United States court, summoned range of binder- ing the execution of khe laws for which they may on conviction be sentenced to from for conspiracy and also for two to six years\u2019 imprisonmrent.The trial and conviction of the anarchist in Chicago shows that if Mr.Debs or his officers have at any time leaders ! Caron.| Greevy, and of Caron and Ross.ing others, whether by word of mouth, by | : writing or by message, to resist the law | or the authorities, prevent workingmen from going about their business or to | injure or destroy property or prevent | railways from carrying the meils or do- irg the business of the government, they spiracy with the mob who have been rioting in Chicago.It is quite possible that Mr.Debs's declaration that in case out there would be civil war is sufii- cient to convict him of beiug an plice accom- in all contests between the soldiery and the mob which have proved It may be that the despatches sent out by him furnish evidence of his having been responsible for the riotous proceedings.The jury must have had some evidence of a pretty strong character before thom when they ordered such an indictment.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 OF COURSE.The evidence of Henry Frigon before tte Public Accounts Committee goes to the bottom probably of the fraud and extravagance in connection with the con- of the Wellington bridges.Frigon was a timekeeper on the works, and he testifies that St.Louis overcharged 3,298 days of carters with double and single teams from March 6 to April 21, 1893.This Is of a plece with the evidence cf Doheny, another timekeeper, to the effect that in laborers\u2019 day work 1,026144 days\u2019 work had been overcharged for the Wellington bridge and 2,251 days on the Grand Trunk Railway bridge.\u2018The evidence of these men is simply confirmatory of what had been revealed struction | in a general way by other evidence long i REESE Rl 2 ago.Neither of these men gave evidence in the ago, which revealed In gross the overcharge which these men now testify to in detail.St.Louls\u2019's record as a city contractor must have suspected that when he was given the contract for supplying labor for the some reason, known Everybody who remembers government bridges there was only to the government or some member of the government, for an appointment which was certain to prove most costly.At the time it was understood that the Public Works Department was mixed up in the\u2019 appointment.St.Louis was said to be a relative of the Minister of Public Borrs, Mr.Ouimet.It was said that tho trou- the whole work and the expo- suro came about from the clashing of the departmonts of Public Works and of Railways and Canals.There were many who believed that the fraud and extravagance would be found to have been brought about by the-very same causes which operated in the case of the Quebec dry dock and barbor work, and that St.Louis would be found to be very much to Mr.Ouimet what MoGreevy had been to Sir Hector Langevin, what Ross had been to Sir Adolphe Frigon's evidence is confirmatory Frigon Ix a relative of ble over and Beemer of these suspicions.| St.Louis, and Frigon testifies that St.Louis | admitted to him that he was overcharging, and that he was doing it in order to secure money for election funds, as well as big .profits for his own pocket, ; and that he had subscribed, through Mr.Emard, Mr.Ouimet's law partner, fifteen hundred dollars for the Vaudreuil election.It is probable enough that , St.Louis will deny having either given i this money or having said that he had i given it, and that Mr.Emard will deny having received it.such transactions can be proved as they | were in the case of Langevin and Mc- But i there is unfortunately little room to | doubt the truth of the story, judging from what has been going on at Ottawa + fer the last thirteen years.The method | alleged to have been employed in this case | ; Of securing election funds is exactly that which has been employed not only in the cases in which Langevin and Caron | were concerned with their jackal contractors and railway promoters, but in the case of the government and the protected manufacturer, who in return for the acorns of protection shaken down to them by the government were expected to prove grateful hogs and subscribe to which they did quite openly in the red parlors at Toronto and the committee rooms at Montreal, never feeling the-disgrace of their actions.They were nakedly corrupt and were not asbamed.tte government election funds, ep ARBITRATION.If the Chicago people know why they are off work and busy destroying property they have not told it, or it has not been reported to us.It may be said that they are sacrificing their daily bread and incurring the risk of bullets cut of sympathy with the people of Pullman, who, owing to the reverses from which the commerce of the country has suffered, largely through bad legislation, have boen curtalled in their daily bread.This theory is hardly sufficient.People will do something for sufferers who are really starving, which is the starving men and women, not alleged of people of Pullman, not their owr, very few would sacrifice a month's pay at a time.Nor is it at all clear thar if the strikers were to stay out of work | for six months and burn down Chicago the people of Pullman would starve any The strikers must hope to obtain something for themselves or they surely would not sacrifice so much or take so great risks as some of them are doing less.in their efforts to destroy the property It is certainly very hard to understand the state of mind of men who, when gatbered in the midst of the desolation of burning property, the tumult of mortal strife and the waste of industry to the extent of a million dollars a day, resent the exercise of power for the restoration of erder and resolve to plunge into the warfare on the side of the rioters.They surely must be looking for some great benefit to arise out of all these agonies which they have so enthusiastically determined to intensify or prolong.Yet no hint of what they hope to gain from striking has reached us except it be the acknowledgment of the principle of arbitration.The refusal of is now the one grievance To obtain arbitration is the one objective point of the aggressive party in the civil war wbich is in progress Even though the strik- of others.arbitration which we hear about.investigation some time It is not often that, but even for ers get nothing but their losses for thelr pains ; even though the Pullman work- the prineiple of arbitration be granted as the outcome of this war and tho workers will go to their machines aud their benches again with the sense that they have not struck in vain.Such at least Is about the meaning of the offer made by Alderman McGillen to Mr.Wickes, of agreement with the commitice oî the Pullinan Company, after seven the great Sunday night This offer appointed by meeting at Uhlich's Hall.that a be consisting of two nominated br the Pull- was \u2018committee\u2019 two by the court, and \u2018to the Pullman Company's state- man Company, a fifth by whether ment that thero was nothing to arbitrate was true and just.\u2019 board of arbitration so described as to these four invesiigate This was simply a leave an opening to those who had utterly refused arbitration to accept it on the score of the change of phrase.It was simply as a proposal of arbitration that the company considered it.Never was a more serious question \u2018set before a business man to decide than was in this form laid by Alderman McGillen, representing the labor men and in a certain measure the citizens, Wickes, who is the active manager of the Pullman Company, Mr.Pullman being apparently superannuated, at least from service as commander at the seat \u2018What the deputation virtually said was: \u2018The board of arbitration which we offer you is practically on your side.Only admit the principle and we are content ; if you do not admit it, for what growing mischief you make before Mr.of war.see yourself responsible, not only a continuance of the present outrageous conditions but the strike of all the labor or- | Banizations now threatened.\u2019 It was a | question of abstract principle presented, as it were, by all laboring men to Shall | quired at the option of his employees, on | pain of throwing the { commotion, to hand \u2018ment of his business all \" employers.an employer bs re- whole country into over the manage- to a committee or | commission fn which than half a voice ?he shall not.Had the law spoken differently it would have been appealed to.The law plainly savs + 1f the law is wrong those who wish it altered have which everyone else has in a free country to have it altered.lass are in the vast majority, and have exactly the same means The working equal votes.They have only to be true to their franchiss to secure any law they want and have it fully tried until they themselves desire its repeal.with the Pullman It was not sim- then, Company was doutle.The question, ply whether arbitration itzelf is a good thing, and whether they should be willing at the request of their own employees to suburit the condition of their business to a practically public investigation and its themselves, bot whether they should al- control to others than { low men who have no business with their | special affaire, and who have constitu- | tional methods in their hands to attain \u2018their ends, to dictate terms to them: and and de- As- | suming Mr, Wickes to be anxiously de- j sirous to do the best he knew for his 1e others on palin of anarchy struction at the hands of mobs.| country and his fellow men, these were | difficult questiong which some good men | might have decided one way and some , Mr.Wickes adhered to the | position already taken by his company, | namely, that it had nothing tqQ arbitrate, another.| or, in other words, that the company was determined to carry on its own business.The Pullman Company had always considered its workmen.It had in this very matter of the reduction of wages had parleys with them and had decided the against with their full eoncurrencs.the basis of this agreement contracts were taken at low prices.Failing these the men would have been dismissed altogether.\u2018When the contracts were taken the men revolted.The revolt took place through outside interference, and now it outside self-consti- tuted authority which demands a share condition of things now revolted On is an in the management of Mr.Pullman's affairs.To refuse was to remit the question of enforced arbitration to the ballot box, where it belongs.To consent was, as it were, to inaugurate a new social regime with the thumb of m'sruls on the throat of public order.What guarantee would there have been that Mr.Pullman's men would Jointly and severally accept the results of arbitration ?None whatever.The Pullman Company would have been bound by the peril of renewing the civil men get nothing this time, at least let ; : Robin Hcod meted appointed he shall have less.\u201ctration under pressure _Wrpxesnar, Jerry 11, his way and do what he Hked.like this would ! Arbi- be very similar to that justice which out in Sherwood forest.SPORTS AND PASTIMES.A TIFF BETWEEN MONTREAL SENIOR AND JUNIOR LATROUSSE TEAMS.PROGRAMME FOR STE.ANNFS RESATTA\u2014 STANSEUHEY WANTS TO PACE GAUDAUR \u2014 CANADIANS AT HISLZY-\u2014-OTHER ITFNS.There is trouble betwern the senior and junior teams of the Montreal Lacrosse Clint, and a special committee appoint d to investigate the matter met last night.The meeling was a private one.and it Is nol known what has been done, hut the report will probably be submitted to the executive this evening.The trouble arises ont of the draft of the seniors upon the juniors for their matches.Traynor, who waz chosen to riny on the senior team at Otiawa past Saturday, fail-d to do so.He had already plaved twice and had he done sn cn that Occasion, he would have been deharred as an interme diate.The juniors appear to have the tig end of the argument, Thev object 15 the best men on their teum being taken as spare men, and after being disqualified ios Juniors, dropped at will from the senior | team.FOOTBALL.THE RUGBY UNION.The Rugby Union of Queter held its adjourned special meeting ut the M AAA rooms last evening, in ordir ro recelve the report of the commitier appointed to révise the constit::tion, and anmrnd the rules of play.Only a few miner rhanges wera adopted.The executive will inret on Saturday to prepare the sh dule, THE 1.07105, The Druid Fontha:l Cin request a full muster of members at the prartire math to-norrow evening.AQUATICS, STE.ANNES REGATTA, À successful meeting is certain at tho fifteenth annual regatta ~f the Ste.Anne's Boating Club, on Satardaxv if the weather be favorable.Entries are already numerous, and mora are expected before the closa of the lists this evening.The programine js: \u2014 \u2014Tracked ranos sailing open canon mailing race.\u2014Green tandem canoe race.4\u2014Single scull skiffs, challenge cup, \u2014Swimming race.190 vards handicap.£-\u2014Cance race, sinz'e paddin, green.T\u2014Carne rare, four paddles.£\u2014Water polo, teams of six.3\u2014Tandem carne race.1M\u2014Boys'\u2019 tandem canoe, 17 yrs.11\u2014Canoe race, single paddle.12\u2014W'ar cano3 rare.The war canoc cially interesting.crews will participate, The prizes ta te awarded are now on exhibition at Wilhari- son's jewellery store, 1741 Notre line at.ane, About hall a THE VALOIS CLUB.The above club will hold its third harni- rap yacht race on Thursday, at v.+4> pr, over the Valois ~ourse.STANSRURY WANTS TO ROW GAUDATUR.New York, July 10 \u2014A long Jotter was received in this city resterday from Jumrz Stansbury, of Australia, who holds the single scull championship of the world.Tha Australian rhamplon carsman males a pra- position which should lead to an international single scull race.and an interesting contest, after the recent unprecedented jper- formance of Jake Gaudaur, ut Austin, Tex, when be rowed three miles with a turn faster than any oasman ever rowed since Bob Chambers first won the championship in England, and Joshua Ward first won the title in this country at Staten Island In 1859.| General tra i | In His letter Stansbury says that if.{and Yai : Temjlars of | + \\ ; \u201ccijient in oan | | | i ! | | i Legislatura nun beln be Lax service he : vices ; ; presents, an i wife T 1879 Sergt.Milligan and Ing a possible in the ne fhres extra for t'a \u201cfe 1.+ three bulls\u2019 ever, Towards the gf 0 and mane mutters hoirdlir.There will not\u2014unless | ing happens\u2014be another gathering + assembled wisdom of Montreal un- *> second Monday in August.\u201c-a Mayor presided.A letter was | ~ + \u2018rom the city attorney to the effect, -~ -s9° there is ro legal obstacle to gran: - tha Burglar Alarm Company's re- ~~: 10 have special wires to the fire > di\" i0DS.Deed ordered in accordance.| A telegram from Ald.Beausoleil was -%3 refusing to serve on that Darling :reet enquiry.Ald.Lefebvre was ap- solnted instead.The $2.000.000 report followed, recom- \"ending that a loan for that amount be ~ade according to the statement anpexed.1.1.Hurteau, seconded by Ald.McBride, mal Îts adoption.«ane here told the Mayor that the \u201cVar: Committee was in session.It is acs.fOr a committee to sit during coun- | ~ zeuTSs.A.tkey do is illegal,\u201d said Ald.Bru- The messenger was accordingly sar Mack to break up their meeting and -g .2 the members, which he did, with ; (osselin's assis'ance.* A3.Hurieau, moving to adopt the re- ~~ declared the present a most advan- -ag> vus tIme So far as the price of money -as concerned.It was needed to cover cn ounts already voted, including the am nd station.Chateau de Ramezay, in- -uerators, Noire Dame west paving, etc.There was also a lot of pipe-laying to av for.Whatever there was of a bal- «=e would be at the council's disposal.11d.Kennedy asked for a more definite -u'ement.Was all the money spent be- + ~shand \u201d As for that Chateau de Rame- 7ay {1 was a fifth wheel to a coach.13.Hurteau replied that the money vas not ail speni, but a good deal had vaoz Voted.112.McBride said that Ald.Hurteau, if =» wisked could tell how every dollar was .be spent.He had the figures.Every- = was above board.Ald.Rainville\u2014If everything is above var], why were not the specific objects \u2018led in the report.(Hear, hear!) Let \u201819 money be applied to paying the city\u2019s .sbis.Instead of the Finance reporting L-w the money was to be spent jt had debts incurred 5 met If \u201cne trok literally what rio:Le had just said, people aberdon their pro- was surely time to © borrowing when the rs and business men be- arr.at the situation.What oi *ryirg to make a Paris fus ns woil ce Ir i ru Lol sdb tawny ir two or three nen revievcd the monetary * the rit, for the past ared himself opposed to money unless Ît was sated heforehand, how it \u201cpent According to his fi- \u201c \u201cal inrurred about $3,000,000 lirics with only this $2,000,000 far as lis experience te naver knew a case | \u2018#48 for which the money were unt stated beforehand.\u201caugie followed over what had se \u2018Grant\u2019 street was ordered to be called \u2018Wolfe,\u201d in future, and \u2018Barlow\u2019 street \u2018Ash avenue.\u201d The proposal to change the name of Pine avenue was voted down, and the Council adjourned until Monday, August 13._\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 A THEATRE BURNED.Brussels, July 11.\u2014The summer palace theatre, recently opened in this city, was burned last night.The fire started after tke performance was over, and the audience had dispersed.The loss is $200,000.\u2014 TO READERS GOING OUT OF TOWN.\u2018Witness\u2019 readcrs going cut of town can have the daily edition mailed to them for 25 cents per month.COMMERCIAL Wrrmues Orricz, Wednesday, July 11, 1894 WHOLESALE PRICES.Beerbohm\u2019s cable advices to-day are as follows:-Cargoes off coast, wheat, firm, maize, nil.Cargoes on passage and for shipment, wheat and maize, firm, but not active.Mark Lane English and foreign wheat, steadier; do., American malze, rising; ex-ship., 19s 6d; do., Danubian maize, turn dearer; do., English and American flour, quiet but steady.Australian wheat, off coast, 23s 3d; do., present and following month, 24s 6d.Weather in England, heavy rain.Liverpool spot wheat, more disposition to buy: do., spot malze, firm but not active; do., No.1 standard California wheat, 48 11%d; do., Walla Walla, 4g 8d; do., American red western winter wheat, 48 Sd; do.American No.2 spring wheat, 4s 11%4; do., No.1 Bombay wheat, 4s 11%d.London Minneapolis straight flour, 15s.Liverpool, Minnesota first bakers\u2019 flour, 15g 64.In Chicago wheat opsned 14 of a cent He could cite hundreds (7) | Per bushel higher at J87¢ to 59c Sept.and 2» of a cent higher at t2lgc Dec., and was later quoted at 5978: Sept.and 62% c Dec.lleceipts, 1,000 bushels and shipments, 75,- 00) bushels.Corn opened 1% of a cent per bushel higher at 42c Sept., and % of à cent higher at 37%c May, and was later quoted at 4l%¢ July and 4llye Sept.Receipts, nil, and shipments, 119,000 bushels.In New York wheat opened 8, of a cent per bushel higher at 627c Sept., and one cent higher at 665c Dec, and was later quoted at 61%4c Aug.62550 Sept., and 66440 Der Receipts, 55.600 bushels, and shipments, 128,569 bushels.Corn opened steady at 47e Aug.and 471yc Sept, and was afterwards quoted at 47%c Aug.and Sept., and 44% ¢ Dac.Receipts.43,625 bushels, and shipments, 80.913 bushels.In Milwaukee wheat was 1% of a cent higher at 42Lec July and 36%c Sept.In Duluth wheat was !; of a cent higher at 62i4c July and 4 of a cent higher at 5914c Sept., Ip Detroit wheat was ls of a cent higher at 57c July and 584,0 Sept.In Toledo wheat was 4 of a cent higher at 563,0 July and 3 of a cent higher at 58440 Sept.and 6144c Dec.In St.Louis wheat was 5% of a cent higher at Bac July and Sept.: In Chicago pork opened steady at $12.70 Sept.und was afterwards quoted at $12.65 Sep.T.ard opened steady at $6.90 Sept, was later quoted at 30.874, Sept.Short ribs opened 214, cents higher at $6.60 Sept., and was later quoted at $6.5714c Sept.Grain\u2014Thero fs little change to note in and This .Aldermen ! Rainville and Penny.| \u2018Superfine .2sasccance0s 2.50 to 2.63 : Extra eee RSS 275 to 2.90 Straight Roller .rene 3.00 to 8.06 Strong Bakers\u2019 (Man.).3.40 to 3.50 market.Business is dull, and prices hold firm.We quabe:\u2014 \u201c Granulated, in bris.$4.35 to $4.50 Granulated, in bags .2.30 to 2.40 Standard, in brls.3.95 to 4.00 Standard, in bags .1.90 to 2.00 THE MONTREAL SE regard to the local grain market.Business 1a dull and prices unchanged.We quote as follows to-day:\u2014-No.1 hard Manitoba, Tuc to 76c; No.2 T0o to T2c; corn, 5be to héc; No.2 oats In store, 41c to 42c; peas in store T0e to Tle: afloat, T%e to T3c; rye, 526 to Bar; barley, for feeding, 42c to 43c: malting, déc to dc; buckwheat, 45c to 48c.Flour\u2014There is a very fair movement IN flour on local account, and considerable enquiry for oxport at prices quoted.We quote: Patent Spring .$3.60 to $3.60 Meal\u2014There ig little change in the oatmeal Feed-\u2014-There is a very fair movement in feed stuffs, and the market rules firm.We quote .\u2014 Bran .ieee $16.00 to $17.00 Shorts 202200100000 cc 00m 15.00 to 19.00 Moullie 242000 0000000 0 20.06 to 21.00 Hog Products\u2014Pork is moving in small lots at firm prices.Smoked meats and lard are In very fair demand.Prices are steady.Wa quote: \u2014 Short cut mess pork.185.00 to $20.00 Hams, city cured, per 1b.00.10 to 00.114 Lard, compound .00.071, to 00.08 Lard, pure .\u2026.00.09%; to 00.10% Bacon- .ivi 00.10 to 09.12 Butter\u2014The market its unchanged.Trading is quiet, but steady, and stocks are not over large.We quote to-day as follows: \u2014 Townships at 18c to 18c; new creamery at 18%4c to 19l4c; dairy at i4c to 1bc.Cheese\u2014There is no change in the cheese market.The buying in the country holds at old figures, and speculators are gathering together large stocks.Cable is unchanged.We quote as follows to-day: \u2014 Colored at 8léc to 9c; white at 83%c to Bic; cable 45s.Eggs\u2014The egg market is steady and unchanged.We quote 10c to 11%c.Ashes.\u2014The markbt is quiet and unchanged.We quote as follows:\u2014First pots, $4.10; seconds, $3.65; pearis, $5.40 to $5.50.RECEIPTS IN MONTREAL.G.T.R.C.PR.C'n'l.T't! Wheat, bush cee .\u2026.215965 21396, y Corn, bush .Cees 370091 37001 Oats, bush .1900 Cee 40 1940 Flour, brie .1225 1336 cee 2561 Ashes, bris ., 2 10 RI 12 Butter, pkgs 416 479 5 909 Cheese, bxs .8199 8742 3411 20352 Eggs, cases 154 108 41 304 Leather, rolls .29 28 Cees 27 Tallow .2 cee 2 TORONTO MARKET.Toronto, July 11.\u2014Market dull all over.Quotations\u2014Straight roller flour, $2.60 to $2.85: extra, $2.50 to $2.60; white wheat, BSc to 5914c; goose, 67c; No.1 hard, 72c; No, 2 hard, \"0c; white wheat on the rorthern, 59c to 59%¢; peas, 56c to 57c; barley No.1, 43c to 54: feed, 3915c to 41140; oats, 35¢c to 36c; corn, Fèc.Sales\u2014Oats outside at 35c; peas outside at 56c.LIVERPOOL MARKET PRICES CURRENT, Liverpool, July 11, 12.30 p.m.\u2014Spring wheat, 43 113d to Bs 0%d.red winter, 48 84 to 4s 9d; No.1 Cola, 48 11%d to bs 0344; corn, 3s 10%d; peas, bs 2d; pork, 68s 94; lard, 36s: tallow, 23s 9d; bacon, heavy, 38s; light, 408; cheese, both, 468.\"Wheat firm; demand poor; holders offer sparingly.Corn firm; demand moderate.LONDON CONSOLS.London.July il, 12.30 p.m.\u2014Consols 101% money and account.CHICAGO LIVE STOCK MARKET.Chicago, July 11\u2014About 1,000 head of cattle were expected to arrive at the Union Stock yards to-day, consigned largely to a packer, Markets nominally unchanged.CHEESE MARKETS.Ingersoll, Ont, July 10.\u2014Offerings to-day.1,640 boxes; 840 Junes, and 800 Julys; 9%4c were bid, but only one, a lot of Junes, 175 boxes, sold at that price; market quiet.Peterboro, Ont., July 10.\u2014At the cheese board to-day about fifty-six hundred boxes of colored cheese were offored, being the last half of June make.Cluxton took on first selection, twenty-three hundred boxes at 9 3-16c; Warrington, of Belleville, eighteen hundred at 9 3-16c, and about three hundred at 9%c; Flavelle took flve hundred in a Lindsay rection at 93gc, and two hundred at Sc.At the close of the board two or three small factories remained unsold.The market was active, and the bidding quick.The buyers present were.\u2014Messrs.Cluxton, Cook, Hodgson, Wrighton, Moore, Fitzgerald and Flavelle.The board adjourned for two weeks.Belleville, Ont., July 10.\u2014At a meeting of the cheese board here to-day there were boarded 12 factories, offering 490 boxes of white, and 295 colored; total, 785 boxes.The fcllowing sales were made:\u201470 white at 9 2-16c, and 80 colored at 9 5-16c; 17 colored at 934c; 75 white at 9 1-16c.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY.Return of traffic earnings from July 1 to July 7:\u2014 2 1894 LL.een eu0e PS $347,000 1893 iii 431,000 Decreases .coveunns veers $84,000 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2018 GULF REPORT.L'Islet, July 11.\u2014Cloudy; east wind.River du Loup, July 11.\u2014Dense fog: calm.Father Point, July 11.\u2014Cloudy; calm; inward at 1 a.m., Dominion.Martin River, July 11.\u2014Dense fog; calm.Cape Magdalen, July 11.\u2014 Cloudy; south wind; inward at 5 a.m., Bona.Fame Point, July 11.\u2014Foggy; calm.Point Macquereau, July 11.\u2014Foggy; southeast wind Nort ore, July 11.\u2014Ralining; light east wind, g: strong to Esquimaux Point, July 11.\u2014QOutward at 6 p.m., Otter.Anticosti, July 11.\u2014Foggy: south-east wind Cape Ray, July 11.\u2014Ralning: north wid.Low Point, July 11.\u2014Foggy; strong northeast wind; inward Turret Bay and Cacouba.ee SHIPPING.New York, July 11.\u2014Arrived SS.Darm- stadt, from Bremen.__ ADVERTISEMENTS.WHOLESALE and RETAIL.40 Different Sizes, \u2014IR\u2014 ASH, PINE & CLASS.All Prices, from 87 upward.A Large and Complete Stock open to your inspection.GEO.W.REED, Manufacturer.783 and 785 Craig street.PRICE, IN WRAPPERS, DAILY WITNESS.ADVERTISEMENTS.ADVERTISEMENTS.\u2014\u2014 nt mal FAIR TREATMENT, LOW PRICES AND EASY TERMS MAKR US KING OF HOMEFURNISHERS.EEE A LEAN MADE PURSE FAT IN TWO WAYS.(a) OUR PRICES FOR EVERYTHING HELP TO THIS END.YOU CAN ALWAYS BUY RIGHT HERE.(b) OUR EASY WAYS OF PAYMENT.DONT NEED TO HAVE A FULL PUBSE ALL AT ONCE WHEN YOU RUY HERE.EVERYTHING CASH OR CREDIT AT LOWEST PRICES.TRE HOME PERFECT.THAT'S OUR EVERYDAY THOUGHT.HOW TO MAKE THE HOME MORE ATTRACTIVE.Kitchen, Dining-room.Farlor, Eedrooms, Whole House.WE SELL EVERYTHING AND FUENIEH ESTIMATES.LOWEST PRICES AND EASY TERMS WITH LARGE STOCKS, KEEP THIS HOUSE BUSY, WHEN OTHERS ARE GROWLING OF DULL TIMES.AMERICAN WRINGER CO, {Successors to Metropolitan Mfg.Co.) 1678 and 1680 NOTRE DAME STREET.T.A.EMMANS, MANAGER.PROF.SAMUEL 8.GRANT, {1st Honors Pupil of Dr.Bucklin, A M.,M.D.,) will be in Daily Attendance from 9 a.m, to 6 p.m.at Our Store on Beaver Hall, to fit persons with spectacles and Eyoglasses, on New and SBoientific Principles.No Extra Charges.HÈNRY GRANT & BON, Opticians, 72 Beaver Mail, corser Dorchester street.MONTREAL WEEKLY *\u2018WITNESSAS SEND A COPY TO FRIENDS ABROAD.FULL PARTICULARS OF THE CHICAGO STRIKE (Illustrated).BETWEEN POLICE STRIKERS.BATTLE AND THE THE FAMOUS YACHT \u2018VALKYRIE\u2019 SUNK BY COLLISION.\u2018BRITANNIA\u2019 DEFEATS THE \u2018VIGILANT.\u2014 GREAT BRITAIN AND THE COLONIES, THE COLONIAL DELEGATES TALK.PROHIBITION CONVENTION AND ITS WORK IN MONTREAL.LORD SALISBURY'S ALIEN BILL CRITICISED.\u2014 BRITISH COLUMBIA GOVERNMENT PARTY WINS, Other Contents\u2014Seventeen-Year Locusts\u2014 Japan and Corea\u2014Mrs, Gordon Balllie\u2014The French-Canadian Question\u2014S8tirring Times in Corea\u2014Dr, Talmage\u2019s First Charge\u2014A Pacific Cable\u2014General Herbert\u2014Ontario Legisla- ture\u2014The Strike\u2014A Humillating Scene\u2014Do- minion Parliament \u2014 A Champion Highland Piper\u2014Cannibalism at Sea\u2014Orangemen Parade in Montreal\u2014Election Frauds\u2014Ontario's Political Position\u2014Agricultural, Legal, Medical, Veterinary, Commercial, and other Departments \u2014 Miss Willard on the Woman Buffrage Question\u2014Sunday-School Lessons\u2014 An Anarchist Plot, and other articles interesting to Canadian and other readers.READY FOR MAIL, FIVE CENTS.WE MAKE A FRIEND IN EVERY BUYER OF \u2014 THE \u2014- COOK'S FRIEND BAKING POWDEIL NEW YORK WEBER PIANOS ~~ ON SALE AT \u2014 C.W.Lindsay\u2019s, 2268 to 2312 ST.CATHERINE BT.NOTARIES AND COMMISSIONERS 11 110 8¢ James street.| « SET CT Sa a ar BSR RR Bo Be ROR gi eer JW mw = orm meee AE GNESI Tate ad: rend es SO PARA SOS ORE AFSSSSOSINSSSSA RARES ES Don\u2019t Wash Without STRACHAN\u2019S GIRONA: ROERRO Poste RAL are IR > Be M- À.À.À. 1.50 | : St.John via Moncton, - - - 8.50 ; Mencton- \u2018- - .- - 8.50 Tickets good to return to arrive at starting point on or belo e August 8th.InSernational Convention Baptist Young People's Union of America.TICKETS WILL BE SoLD To TORONTO & RETURN 5 ] 0.0 00 On July 17th, 18th and 19th, good to return until August 13th.CI1Y TICKET and TELEGRAPH OYFICE, \u2018 129 ST.JAMES ST., Nexi Post Ottice.10 \u201cAMERICA'S CREATEST RAILRCAD.\u201d NEWYORK ENTRAL & HUDSON RIVER R.R.Oflice, 137 St.James street, Montreal, Trains leave Bonaventure station Gi.T Ry: 6.45 a.m.(except Sunday,\u2014Solid trains to New York, via the Adirondacks, with Wagner Buffet Parlor Car.arriving at 9.40 p.m 4.50 p.m.(daily}\u2014So!lid train to New York, with Wagner Buffet sleeper, nrriving at 7.45 a.m.Both trains connect at Utica, with fust trains for Buffalo, Detroit, Chicago and the west GEO.H.DANIELS, H.S.PHILPS, Gen.Pass.Agt., New York, Agent, Montreal.nada OT Lt + vtr 050500 : Professional.YS.MACKAY, B.C.L, NOTARY, COMMISSIONER, d&e., (Formerly of Papineau, Marin, Mackay & Morin,) ROOM 604, New York Life Building, PLACE D'ARMES RQUA | Bell Telephone 9232.Money Loaned un a Estate, | D ENTISTand ORAL SURG EON JAMES A.BAZIN, L.D.S «ar nion Avenue 49.MACLAREN.LEET.SMITH & SMITH, | ADBVRL LTA + FA MEYATELX, dbc., ofr, TTL LT ILLITE, 183 Si.Jumios strived, daantreul.JONS J.MacLANTN, Q.C,, | r.c Sarre, BCL, Come inr Ont 857 P.Lex, B.{ 0 J AL W.SMITH, B.CL.| | and Balmoral Hotels, LOTTETOWN and PICTO .TRAVELLERS GUIDE NHE OTTAWA RIV ER NAVIGATION.MODERN STEEL STEANERS, SOVEREIGN AND EMPRESS, Forming Daily Mall Line betwoen MONTREAL AND OTTAWA, Fares to Ottawa, single, 82.30.Return, $4.00.Do.Round Tytp, Itail and Boats £5.15.STEAMER SOVEREIGN EXCURSIONS, Daily to Oka, Como, Hudson or Carillon, $1.60.Take 8 a.m.train to Lachine.Most Pleasant :nd Direct Route to the Caledonia Springs.SHOOT THE RAPIDS, Take 5.05 p.m.train for Lachine.MARKET LINES, from Cinal Basin, Steamer \u2018Princess\u2019 for Carillom, &e, WEDNESDAY aed SATURDAY, at 6 a.m.Steamer \u2018Maude for Papineauville, Treadwell, Hawkesbury, on TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS, at 6.50c.30 p.m.Tickets at 143 and 184 St.James street.Windsor sud Grand Trunk station.Head Office, 88 Common street.R.VW.SHEPHERD, Telephone 1029.Manager ICHELIEU & ONTARIO NAVIGATION CO.You Are Aware Rate to Murray Bay.Retnrn.$9.60.« ¢ River du Loup, Retura.9.00.6 + Cacoana, Return.9,20.« * Tadousac.EKctaru.10.00.« * Sagnenay, Return.13.00.Steamers for Quebec leave week days at 7 p.m., and \"from Quebec to Saguenay TUESDAY, WEDNES- \" DAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY.GRAND ORCHESTRA On the line between Montreal and Quebec, HEAD BOOKING OFFICE, H.FOSTER CHAFFEE, DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT, 128 St.James street, Telephone 1731.Opposite Post Office.4 UEBEC STEAMSHIP COY.ST.LAWRENCE LINE.The 8S.MIRAMICHI is intended to leave Montreal on JTONDA X.23rd July, at 4 p.m.afterwards on every alternate MONDAY, for FATHER POINT, GASPE, MAL BAY or POINT ST.PETER, PERCE, sc MMERSIDE, CHAR- \u2014 STMMER CRTISES TO NEW YORK.Visiting the SAGUENAY, BAY OF CHALEURS, CHARLOTTETOWN, HALIFAX, YARMOUTH, 8T.JOHN, N.B., and BOSTON.88.ORINOOO, from Quebec, 15th August.For Freight, Passage and Stateroowas, apply to J.6.BROCK, AGENT, 221 Commissioncrs street, Montreal.Or to H.FOSTER CHAFFEE, 128 St.Jumes street, Opposite Post-office.ELAWARE & HUDSON R.R.LAKES CHAMPLAIN AND GEORGE STEAMERS.SHORTEST, QUICKEST AND BEST LINE TO NEW YORK.AND ALL POINTS SOUTH AND EAST.Seleeted by the Government as the Montreal and New York Mail Line.Trains leave Grand Trunk Depot az follows: 7.20 a.m.Day Express Dally, except Sunday, arriving in ew Yon at 845 pm.connecting at Deiaware for Lake George.Wagner Parlor Car to New York.a.m.Limited Daily, except Sunday, arriving in New York at 8 30 p.m., with through Wagner vestibuled drawing-room car to New York.Table d'hote dinner servod in dining car up to 3 p.m.6.10 p-m.\u2014Night Express Daily arriving in New York 6.45 am.WAGNER BUFFET VESTIBULE SLEEPER through to New York.Connections at Troy and Albany for East and West.For Tickets, Time Tables and all information apply to the Company's Office 143 St.James street, MontreaL TELEPHONE 1176.J.W.BURDICK, W.H.HENRY, Gen'l Pass.Agent Agent, Albany, N.Y.Montreal.10 es REDUCTION.TICKETS FROM GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND.£12.00 FROM LONDON, ENG., TO QUEBEC, And from other stations ut equally low rates.CHEAP Apply to D.CONNELLY, General Passenger Agent Hansa Line, 14 Place d' Armes square, Montreal MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS.AM ERICAN LINE NEW YORK\u2014SOUTHAMPTON.Ehortest and Mest Convenient Route to London.No transfer by tender.No tidal delays.Close connection at Southampton for Havre and Paris, by special fast twin-screw Channel steamers.New York.Wed, July 11, 11.00 a m.Paris.22 eee nes Wed., July 18, 11.00 a.m.Chester.Wed., Aug.1, 11.00 a.m.New York.US Wed.Aug.8 11.00am.Rates of passage, 870 and upward, according to stoamer.Intermediate passage, $35 to $60.BPECIAL ROUND TRIP TICKETS AT REDUCED RATES.Stecrage at Very Low Rates.For Freight or Passage apply to INTERNATIONAL NAYIGATION CO, No.6 Bowling Green, New York.W.F.EG&, 129 St.James st, Montreal.W.H.HENRY, 143 St.James sirecet.J.Y.GILMOUR & CO., 354 St.Paul street, Montreai.21 OMINION LINE BOYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS, LIVERPOOL SERVICE.From Montreal, From Quebec, Toronto.July 14, 11 p.m.July 15, 2 pom.Vancouver.July 21, davlight.July 22, 9 am.Oregon.July 28, 11 p.m.July 29, 2 pm.Sarnia.Aug.4 11 pm.Aug.5, 2 p.m.Labrador.Aug.11, daylight Aug.12,9 am.Bristol Service for Avonmouth Dock From Montreal, iy 12 Memphis .Aug.2 July 19 Mexico.,Aug.16 Hamilton .July 20 Dominion .Aug.23 23 Montreal or Quebec, to Liverpool or Londonde First Cabin, $45.00 to $92.00: return, £9 to 8162, according to steamer and berth.Second (Cabin, to Liverpool, Londonderry, Belfast or Glasgow, &30 00; return.361.00.Stecraze, to Liverpool, Londen, Londonderry, Queegpstown, Belfast or Glasgow, $230.00.Puls are furniahe:\\ sLeerage passengors free.ABRADOR and VANCOUVER do not carry cattle.The saloons are large and airy, and amidships.Ladies\u2019 rooms and smoking rooms have been placed in the most convenient positions.Promenade decks are very spacious and every attention is paid to the comfort of passengers.No pasiengers carried on Bristol steamera For further information apply to any agent of the company, Or to DAVID TORRANCE & CO.General Agents, Montreal 17 St.Sacrament street.3 EAVER LINE OF STEAMERS.1894- SUMMER SAILINGS\u2014I894 From From Liverpool.Steamer.Montreal.Wednesday.Sat, June 23.Lake Huron.uly A Sat, June 30.Lake Ontario.\"\u2018 July 18 Sat, July 7.lake Nepigoa.** July 25 Sat, July 14.Lake Superior.* Aug.1 The Lake Nepigon does not carry any saloon pas- sengors, only second cabin and steerage.Kates of passage\u2014Cabin, *$40, $50 ard $60 single : *§80.890 and $110 return.Secend Cabin, 230 eincla and $6J return.Steerage, #2.Bteeruge to Liverpool, London, Glasgow, Bolfast and Londonderry, * $40 single and $80 return cabin rates by Lake Winnipeg only.Through tickets can he obtained by the Beaver Line to and from all points in Canada, United States and Great Britain and Ireland.BE.E.MURRAY, Gen.Manager, BOARD OF TRADE BUILDING, Montreal.21 JUROPE.EUROPE.EUROPE.TICKETS BY ALL LINES.ALLAN, DOMINION, and BEAVER Lines via Montreal.NETHERLANDS, GUION, HAMBURG-AMERI- CAN, WHITE STAR, (UN ARD, INMAN, NORTH- GERMAN LLOYD, GENERAL TRANS-ATLAN- TIC, STATE, ANCHOR and RED STAR Lines, via YO NEW 10x 5 \u2018FLORIDA, WEST INDIES, &c, 42 Call or write for lowest quotations before look- elsewhere.From London to Quebec, only $12.fa n rates, $40 upwards; steerage at lowest rates.end for new pamphlet of rates and sailings or call at my now address, 184 St.James street, opposite Temple Building, City and District Savings bank Building, Montreal.D.BATTERSBY, Agent.Telephone No.150.REFORD AGENCIES.ONALDSON LINE.WEEKLY SERVICE GLASGOW Sails from MONTREAL every TUESDAY MORNING BS.Hestia.3,80 toms.July 24 SS.fritonia._ 2.0.4 ons RE Aus.7 8S.Indrani.3.600 toms.,.Aug.14 BRISTOL * SERV ICE.Safling regularly to Avenmouth Dock.| 88.Alcides.3,500 toms.July 20 88.Warwiok.ees 3,000 tons.Aug.3 83.Concordia ., ns.Aug.17 Glasgow.ol nl IS.ido 3 Bros.Bristol.Donaldson Bros.HOMSON LINE LONDON SERVICE, Salling from Montreal on or about £8.Escalona.2,000 tons.July 10 88.Hwona.4,600 tons.July 17 88.Iona.4,500 tons.July 20 EAST COAST SERVICE.Steamers will be despatched for Aberdeen, Leith, Dundee and News castie-on-Tyne, at intervals, 88.Dracona.for Leith.Julv6 Agents - CAIRNS, YOUNG & \u2018NOBLE, \"Newcastle -0D- tyne; A.Low, Box & CARTER, 27 Leadenhall street, London, E.C.; W.& Boxs, Dundee, Scotland.THOMSON All the vessels of the above Lines are A Je, highest class at Lloyds, and have been built for this trade, and possess the most im rove des for carrying Grain, Butter, Cheese, Eggs and fet ite THROUGH BINLS OF LADING Granted by any of the above Lines to any point in Canada or Western States.d by any of the CANADIAN or WESTERN RATEW YB to any dint in GREAT BRITAIN, IRELAND or EUROPE at LOWEST THROUGH Special attention given to the HANDLING of all PERISHABLE and other car go.cr further particulars apply to ROBT.REFORD co.23 and x St.Sacrament street, Montreal.PERSONAL CHECKS ARE GOOD AT HOME.AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY TRAVELERS\u2019 CHEQUES Afford all facilities of your own bank acconnt anywhere in the world.Paid at face value everywhere.& | LL 4 Lim, ~~ re cire Sa s |, + i t | | te apm = Seaside: akeside-™ Amer a ey Lp wt a SN MAR LNT, TUTTE 3 Coe eer WEDNESDAY, THF FAVORITE SPOT FOR MEALTH AND SPORT.GASPE BASIN, ACHARMING RESORT FOR KPORTEMEN AND PLEASURE SEEKERS.The vicinity affords Beautiful Scenory, fine Seca Bathing and unecxcelled Trout Fishing, alsa three Salmon Pools connected with house.4 - BAKER'S HOTEL (OPENED ON JUNE Ist).80 Jong and favorably known, offers first-class accommodation for tourists, with all the comforts of hume Before making your plans for your summer cuting, be sure to write for terms and other information to BAKER'S HOTEL, Gaspe.Que.11 NOVA SCOTIA Is becoming the popular summer resort of this Continent.Tourists express surprise and delight with the climate, scenery, temperature, etc.Thermometer (at Yarmouth) average 67 in the middle of the day during July and August.The new Grand Hotei opens July 2.Jt will bs the.flnest house in the Maritime provinces.Mr.Charles T.Wilson.late manager of Glen House, White Mountains, wlll conduct it.Send for circulars.Grand Hotel, Yarmouth, N.S.(Only 17 hours from Boston by direct boat).27 RALPHS IN THE ADIRONDACK\u2019S, Delightfully located on Upper Chateaugay Lake.Good trout fishing.Sen for circular.ou J.W.HUMYTON, Proprietor, Lyon Mountain N.YEA VIEW HOUSE, RYE BEACI, N.H.This popular Canadian House will open June 2, for the season of 1894.Address, GEO.G.LOUGEE & CO.Proprietors.~~ HOT DOUGLAS, Champ:sin: Opens JUNE 1.Fishing, hoat- ing, bathing, hunting, driving and walking: four miles to Ausable Chasm; good rigs and careful drivers; good harbors for all sizes yachts: Lakes and Beach and mountain combined ; beautiful for situation: the Joy of all who come.Send for circular.J.L.MOCK, roprietor, Douglas, Essex County, N.Y {UMMER BOARDERS, HIGH FALLS HOUSE.Terms reasonable: full particulars on application.E.D.TRUE, Mofittsville, Clinton Co, NY.DIRONDACKS.\u2014 Ridgewood Villa, Harriettstown, N.Y.Quiet, healthy, leasant home for 15 guests.Charming drives, dry, [a vigorating air.Centrally located anos te hotels.Magnificent mountain scene: $12.Special rates to families.J.J.ITZGERALÉ THE ALGONQUIN, LOWER SARANAC LAKE, May 15th.Illustrated pamphlet on application to HARDING, Proprietor.Opens JOHN (QEASIDE HOUSE, Little Metis.b_) This well known Iotel will be open for Visitors on the 28th of JUNE.Large improvements this year.For particulars apply to VW.ASTLE.Cement, Drain Pipes, &c.QCOTCH DRAIN PIPES, PORTLAND CEMENT, IN BETOCK AND TO ARRIVE, At Lowest Market Prices.\u20140 & F.P.CURRIE & CO, 100 GREY XUN STREFT.w.RAIN PIPES, PORTLAND.ROMAN And CANADA CEMENTS, FIRE BRICKB, CLAY, &c.ALEX.BREMNER, 50 Bieury st.Removal JO TREAL PHOTOGRAPH SUPPLY Will Remove ou MAY 1st to British Empire Building, 1724 NOTRE DAME STREET, (Cor.St.Francois Xavier st.) Telephone 1467.SEND FOR BARGAIN LIST.> Insurance.Royal Insurance Co.LARGEST FIRE OFFICE IN THE WORLD UNLIMITED LIABILITY, ABSOLUTE SECURITY Every description of property insured atmoderate rates of premium, HEAD OFFICE FOR CANADA, ROYAL INSURANCE BUILDING, Montreal, W.TATLEY, Manager.GEO.SIMPSON, Asst.-Manager.E.HURTUBISE, 1 Epecial Agents French ALFRED ST.CYR, J Departments.G.R.ROBERSTON & S8ONS, | Special Agente J SMES ALLIN } English PERCY BR.GAULY Department, on Lake : CA COUNA.- WHERE TO GO DURING THE WARM SEA THE ST.LAWRENCE HALL, CACOLNA, SON WILL BE OPEN FOR THE RECEPTION OF GUESTS ON JUNE l4 Owing tn the increased demands for accomodation at the St Lawrence Had (seaside resorts Us eme 0 the proprictors have found it necessary to advertise the date of opening earlier than heretofore.The Hotel 18 being thorouthly renovated ani ns has besun custornary, the improvements wliach aps Leing made are in keeping with: the reputation of tus favorite Casxdian resort.For information as to rates, ete, address JOSEPH ST.ONGE, Manager, 32 St, Louis street, Quebec, until JUNE 1, and after at Cacouna.Send for Mustrated Pamphlets with diagram of th Hotel.2 BANNER HOUSE, CHATEATUGUAY LAKE, N.Y, A healthy and delightful summer Resart, access from Montreal, WIUh Every convomence comfort, recreation.spor: and rest.For terws cui further particulars address.J.85.KIRBY, Chatcauguay Lake, N.Y.ITTLE CHEBEAGUL Islard.Portland Hartor.Wabl, (otages now oper fora hmited numte.of Gue to seh Board, Orc wall furnist e | Cottage to roan Lo Tuan !y CW, GILBERT.335 Congress 8°.Trani rasy of fu Gr Me 1a SEA DAT HING, bh) Cortage.Peaks lsand.the healttaest Bummer Resorts This commadious Cottage 1s pleasantly cituated away {row nl Lôise.standing high, commending « splendid vies of ay and Tana will be opened for guests on J1 NE 5th, where al; will be done for their pleasure cud \u2018omfort.Rooms bright and airy, all having a view of the sea : smooth beach for bathing.Term& moderat+.Apply Lo Mu.MACDONALD, 147 Metoaife street.After 15th June.Peaks Isian:, Portland, Maine.3u Mount Roval ane af 0, FOR HUDSON! STVMIMER BOARD.FULLER PLACE will oyen for Guests SATURDAY.Zrd.Good Boating, Bathing sul Fishing.For particuiars addre HODGSON BROS.& Co, EVERE HOUSE, » OLD ORCHARD BEACH.Me.Thus Hotel is finely located, and the guests can have à view of the Ocean uusurpassed by any other Huse at Old Orchard, Rooms larce and airy, necroumodates lui Table first-class, Terms $9.00 10 $16.00 per week.L.A.PILL3BURY, Pioprietor Hudson, Que.IN THE WHITE MOUNTAINS, THE PLAISTED HOUSE, Jefferson, N.H.P.H.PLAISTED & SUN, Proprietors.E.1 SUMMEK RESORT.SEASIDE HOTEL, Rustico Beach, Rustico, P.E.L.oy] £=N RTT Beautiful view of the Gulf, surf bathing, shady walks.Terms modernité.Address JOHN NEWSON & Co., Ch.Town, PEL Business Cards.[T MAKES A Bis Differ tno: ON A MAN When he leaves off a shabby worn-out TIE and appears with one of these new light Summer ones that are \u2018all-the-go\u2019 just now, We have all the new shapes, and the styles just now would tempt even the most indifferent to dress.See the New Wide-End Culross Tie.It makes up New Washing Ties.Our variety is so large, and our prices are so cheap, that it is ridiculous for anyone to be without a decent tie just now.Come and see us ,and we will show you the finest stock of TIES IN THE DOMINION.OC ALLAN, MEN'S CLOTHIER, HATTER AXD OUTFITTER, 639 to 661 CRAIG STREET.11 ES AND OTHER S MALL BILLS IN BTOCK \u2018WITNESS PRINTING HOUSE.0 a Roral = into a small knot with wide | ends, and has a beautiful effect.| Jory 113 a ET Nm A £ Lors Ses D Este Ie Fal Ld SIMIAN fd, un 13! ABENAKLS La; LL ABENGHhES SPRING, \u20ac.Opens for the Sencser, date Los Most ir 7 12?us \u20ac Mont | Wan HOY TO GET TD CHEN CH ES oo Tate the Ho en fo : + Herr e ju A ale - DAY and bk I AY SATURMDAL BAC a rt TY MONTY A AT Leavine (2 1 Sb) every ~atardas i 2 noth Ne 2 A ty FH Cound Tip ny Ki oon SLND Fon Cont ate pL BUFUS G.KEMPION.P: 1 1 ON 5 Aa RN] oes b | Susan Ji a+ a Ç - Tr, 4 Sy cs i RUNTREAL Her = ; A ti, co) Slevated IN oo OPIN JUNE Fit.hay Poor aan ad 1 À .Mra.A, B.BL gyre Old Gren Nong A \u201ca \u2018 ! eo \u20ac ba \u2018 que HAW TON 15 A VEAT\" os Nun.ot Hes waler © 8 tooling : : Beard nrc eros ; { PAY.Ka Jen 1% PRIVATE Borat Tee rhs dh Loue Métis 7 \u20ac Cond he ay toms 208 , LAREN | Bee also * Rooms lu Eei,' Réchiv ! - , Page 7.+ ] Housefurnish LES, &c.VW «& .4 T JANES ~Thil i receve ld chon sreortinens of le Porticres, M FAnuth Hove \u2018ust Bordered Chenl New Lace ¢nrwins, White xad \u201c ream, Hrussels and Tapestrs Carpets, Just vLat is Vuttéfto Make your 8e aires uni restful during tte st:ong jean of the cu An inaypecti-noirvtes Prices asl ow ous oo wl | | T = TOWNSHEND | es, EST 24 VEAL PLRE BEDDING PATENTED, | Call or ring up 16 and por roe fool i Mattresses, Pillows, &e Pi 4 Cm sui A | description of Brass end lion Foosirs SLL ! Hair, Moss and We .Mattreases | I LITTLE SI.ANTOINE STRERT, Cor, St James rreet, CDS._ Xo BRANCH STOEL- NARPET LAYING, UPH ! BTEL ING.etc \u2018urpeis Cp Mae at ! Lifted and Bewien, Sha les, Sprig Heuere, \u20ac | plied and put up.Matir#sses cn Le rein | Bar.HERKY HAMMOND, ton 1 065000 « | etreet.1S vears with Thomas *lussen, ba, | ture r- paired.Orders alter ded Ww persuLa.y.| ; Dhove 1745 nc y CONSOLATION Coupon.\u20140-\u2014 WORLE\u2019S FAIR IN WATER COLORS.\u2018DAILY WITNESS! | Cut out three Coupons aud send 10 * Witness CGifice or hana § to auy newsadealer handing the * Witness,\u2019 with 1.60, aud th.eight parts will be sent you a?+ To FTE This is the Last Chance of securing the worl.COUPON FOR PICTURESQUE CAN 34 HOW TO GET IT.i \u2014 61-\u2014 Part No.18.Cut out three \u2018 Daily Vin vi Coupons, and send to\u2019 W quess : A Office with 10c.or hand to ur Ht newsdealer handling the \"VW 1-5 ness.\u2019 r x Send your Name and yp; \"> Address plainly written i iT i Eb CR I ES gist a 7 Ei A pelo gk 3 He \u2018er fe Lis A \u2018oh fan: \u20ac He be TU} \u201cTY cause swees.cou! wi the- Cor + va 1 mT MER EN \u2014 0 >, = = 3 vs ME, Me.Cc .Be ot ireotive ummer y where A se ms * CES yooh Jt ere ICL EX Ca re PT a RY WE > Te ME ELE IRC Mx LY iy ve Le tL Jed \u2018 ES PES EE a Ser aE nT 3 m= - a Te ss xs = y + =pAy, Jury 11, 1894, \u2014 Se | WEDMXG-DRENS, ELIZABETH OLMIS.(Con-luded.) - the box they found a white « pair of white kid slip- | long white gloves, a a! a roil of whiie satin rib- ar of : »~ tock these out and displayed! + after another, Bessie's fingers and more, until at last emply.Then she ran to «ler and threw her arms around wk.father ' I'm so sorry! There a sirg'e thing for vou and mother x.ssed her more than once before \"+ ted \u201cav ara all for us, dear daughter, be- - you are ours.Don't distress your ei, Urselfish heart Mother and I :1 Lave recaived nothing just now ~% wouid glve us truer pieasure than _-=e pretty things for your wedding.ue, let us look at them again.\u2019 She felt more comfortable after this, :t she could not help being sorry that ère was not evem a letter for the ! more was SEP TES ARE pm THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS.Miss Briscoe, fajntly.\u2018Do tell me what to do 7 \u2018Well,\u2019 announced Mrs.Armstrong after a few minutes\u2019 thought, \u2018you must telegraph to Maud that her dress is missent and cannot be found in time.And then 1 will write her precisely how It has happened, and I think I'll enclose Bessie s letter.Maud will manage somehow for the wedding.She is a girl of resources, we all know.This simple dress was just a freak of hers.And 1 know she wen't care really after the first disappointment.I'm not half so much concerned about her as 1 am for Bessie.She must never know the truth of this.If she is one bit like her mother she could never get over having been married in another girl's dress.Maud would call it a \u2018\u2018lark,\u2019 but Bessie is different ; I know from her letters.Wa ladies will pay you for the gown, and then it really will be our gift, you see.And T'll ask Maud to forward her box to Red Valley.\u2019 Miss Briscoe's face brightened at every word of this long speech, and when it was ended she fairly embraced Mrs.Armstrong.\u2018You're a trump! There! I will say it, if I am a blue Presbyterian, and ought not to know what the word means.-hers.she wrote a very pretty letter of thanks +, Ars.Armstrong, telling her how the vam tal gift came just at the right - ant see how you knew,\u201d rhe sald, ré ! wish you could all be here to see me war Mother says I shall be too Ane for s \u2018aurhter of a missionary.and the wife * s \u2018farmer: but I think that nothing can wo Nice for Will's bride.And so 1 yank you again and again, end many, - av times again for your thoughi\\il gener- 5° The dress, and the slippers, and tbe © .z £: me exactly, and I shall wear them sur little church the day after to-mor- \"When Mrs.Armstrong received this ecrmmanication her astonishment knew ++ bounds.\u201cWhat can it mean.?she asked herse \u2018We have sent no wedding-dress to Bessie Forbes ! And she doesn\u2019t say a word about the other things.\u2019 She pondered for some time ower the] rystery, and then ran In to her next- door neighbor, to see if she could explain But this lady was as nodplussed as ste kad been, and at length the two went to the home of a third.\u2018How very strange I\u201d was Mrs.Taylor's comment, when she had read Bessie's lstter and heard what Mrs.Armstrong tal to say.\u2018It must be that some one s\\se has sent Bessie a box, and she thinks 1s from us.You had better undeceive :- at once, Mrs.Armstrong\u201d At this moment Dolly Parker came in, | &.) they told her all about it.\u201chy, I know how it is I\" she declared & once.\u2018Don't you remember that lias Briscoe sald she was going to send l'aud Linler's dress off in the morning, and that she would have ber brother at- a re te How can I ever thank you for arranging it all so beautifully ?\u2018By looking out a Httle closer for that renegade brother of yours next time.Never mind if all our babies are having particular fits,\u2019 laughed Mrs.Armstrong, as she took her leave.The next morning Miss Briscoe heard again from Maud.\u2018Well, of alt things under the sun! How came the Forbes box to be sent to me?Has my box gone to them?Have you all gone daft in Meadowtle!ld, or whit is the .natter?\u2018I feel sure that my dress won't be here in time now, so 1 have been up In ry grandmother's gurret, and have resurrect:d her wedding-govwn, if you please, und you should see me in ft! : \u2018Grandma says it is perfectly absurd \u2018for a girl like me to wear it, but I shall.nevertheless.1 wonder now how I could ever have been enamored of the swaet simplicity of India silk.\u2018I have grandma's slippers, too.They are stiff, and have terrible heels, but I shall marnege somehow.1 have, besides them.her lorg, silk mitts, and & satin bag, like the dress, to carry on my arm.My hair is to be dressed a foot high, if I can make it stay up there, and grandma \u2018s golag t~ let me wear her mother\u2019s great tortoiseshell comb She is as proud as she \u201can be to bave me wear all her things, I can see, though she tries not to show it.And so 1 am not a bit sorry after all, dear Miss Bris- coe, that the other gown has gone off on a little trip of its own.It will get around here after a while, I am sure.\u2018I send you a cheque in this, and beg you not to worry one speck over the :on:re- temps.I am as happy as I can Le, and my Ned is the dearest boy alive.\u2018Affectionately.MAUD.Miss Briscoe promptly returned the cheque, explaining to Maud how the matter had been arranged by the ladies and promising faithfully that such a mistake should never occur again.\u2018nd tc our box at the same time ?1 suppose he exchanged addresses or some- \u2018hing Rob Briscoe never was knôwn toi.aything right.\u2019 \u2019 \u2018wutly, Dolly, gently I\u201d said Mrs.Arm-.STE > true, though; and all this is very \u2018or Bessie Forbes, but only think of Mang with all those tablecloths .woollen stockings ! And no wed- :-gown ! You know she always sends - \u2026 bere to Miss Briscoe for her dresses.I » says Karsas dressmakers are\u2014 Toure a blessed child, Dolly,\u201d broke 1.lirs.Armstrong, \u2018to remember all these hinge so! I'll go right over and see Mer Briscoa.\u2019 Fe found that lady nearly in despair oer 3 letter she had that hour received from Maud, \u201cWhere,\u201d ghe demanded, 1s my wedding- © %.which you promised me faithfully sauiull be here last Saturday?Your letter.\u2018ng you had sent the box, came days Please look it up and telegraph ma.\u2019 \u20181 srppose those wretched express com- iw.ies have miscarried it I\u201d Miss Briscoe ruizarked to her visitor, when she had 1211 her the circumstances.\u2018I think t'ey should be prosecuted \u201d \u2018And I suppose,\u2019 Teplied Mrs.Armstrong, i= a very dignified way.\u2018that the boxes w-re not properly directed, for Bessie Farbas has received the wedding-dress, aud 1 dare say Maud has been the Te- cipient of a quantity of assorted âry goods.1f the letters hadn\u2019t been in the box she might have supposed the things to be a wedding present from the | Brigham Street Society \" | She had begun speaking with a good leal of irritation, for she felt thoroughly | vexed at the carelessness of the affair | \u2018a.eg.Maud received this letter and one from Mrs.Armstrong about the same time.Shih was Swastly inseresteds.and:-gmussd.to think that another girl had been married in her wedding-dress.\u2018And it is that Bessie Forbes I've always heard so much of, Ned I\" she said to her husband.\u2018Tm going to write to her, for I know she fs nice, and \u2018t will be such fun to tell her all abou it\u2019 \u2018I wouldn't, Maud,\u2019 was Ned's reply.\u201cWouldn't you ?Why not ?asked Maud, rather surprised at his remark.\u2018Don\u2019t you think it might make her uncomfortable to find gut that the dress she had been married in and had supposed to be the gift of dear friends belonged to someone else, who\u2014' \u2018Who had to \u2018\u2018rummage\u2019\u201d to find a gown, and then looked better than she ever did before or will again.She\u2014 Bessie, I mean\u2014ought to be proud and happy that she kept the poor, little India silk away from me!\" exclaimed Maud, balf in earnest, half in fun.Then more thoughtfully, she said : \u2018You are right, Ned, about this.I can see by her letter that she is a gentle soul, and I'm sure wu be happier never to know bow muc motion and planning that dress has been the innocent cause of.\u2019 * * .= Ant-so Bessie never did know, as Mrs.Armstrong declared at the outset.Bhe was ths \u2018sweetest bride the sun e'er .shone on,\u2019 In the opinion of everyone who saw her on her wedding-day.And her dress was the admiration and the envy of all her girl friends.She was not wholly bappy about it hergelf until the arrival of the second box, a week or Lit she ended by laughing with much | two after she was settled in her own cosy musemeut at amazement on opening the box.Adiss Briscoe laughed too, but she quickly sobered down and tried to recall the circumstances of the evening in ques- Lon.\u2018I wish Rob were here, but he went to New York vesterdar.remember now | I met Rob on my | «y home and told him what we want-! and as soon as William came they v.:ght the box over.We were just it to mark them\u2014mine and the | Des's\u2014when Annie Wells ran in and ; heir baby was having a spasm, and\u2019 mia said wouldn't 1 please to come | ver.Uf course, 1 did so, only | 5 to explain to Rob about the little «- always put on our box.And se he must have made a mistake #.It's too bad! I wouldn't ~! it Lappen for the world U \u201cree you wouldn't,\u201d assented Mrs.\u201cwg, cordially.\u201cla\u201d can we do about it 7° (= the question.\u201d \" 8#- how the dress can be got- Moot in time possibly, for this \u201centh.and she i8 to be mar- | ne twcntieth wag married yesterday, I wire Maud's dress 7 Lid \"ur of such a queer compli- Let me see\u2014oh, | this world,\u2019 faltered poor the thought of Maud\u2019s home.She and Will happened to be taking tea at \u2018father\u2019s\u2019 the afternoon it was brought out from town by an obliging neighbor.Great, then, was the re- i Joicing over the letters which came \u2018as cold water to a thirsty soul,\u2019 as well as over the more substantial gifts.\u2018There is just one thing about all this, \u2018WHI, that I should like so much to know,\u2019 Bessie remarked, as they drove homeward in the soft, spring twilight.\u2018And whut is that, meine frau ?* asked Will.\u2018How did Mrs.Armstrong know that I was going to be married this month 7 \u2018Ask me something easier, dear, and I'll try to answer you,\u2019 laughed her husband.And she never came any nearer than this to knowing the true stofy of her wedding-dress.\u2014N.Y.\u2018Ledger.\u2019 Am: DAILY STEPS UPWARD.WEDNESDAY, JULY 11.I would be Joyful as my days go by, Counting God's mercies to me.A.D.F.Randolph.The earth, O Lord, is full of Thy mercy.\u2014Ps.cxix., 64.The charities that soothe and heal and bless, Are scattered at the feet of men like flowers.Wordsworth.-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 The most urgent prayer in the New Testament is, \u2018Come, Lord Jesus ; come ouickiy.\u2014\u2018Ram'\u2019s Horn CHILDREN'S CORNER.THE TRAINED NURSE.(\u2018The Pansy.\" (Concluded.) Meantime, Winnie's thoughts had been very busy during this time of responsibility.She had other ambitions than mercly to nurse bodies.Was her dear gray-haired patient a Christian ?This was the question which daily haunted ber.There had been a time when she was in terror lest he might die, and she never know ; now she feared he might get well and go away without her having discovered whether he belonged to Christ.That, to Winnie's mind, was very defective nursing ; yet the doctor had given strict orders that his patient must not be excited in any way.At last the day came when the sick man wanted to be read to, and Winnie was chosen as reader.After reading for an hour in the dally papers, turning to whatever page or column was demanded, Winnie asked : \u2018May I read to you a litile bit out of the bible now, sir ?' He turned a pair of great gray eyes upon her and asked briefly, \u201cWhy 7\u2019 \u2018Why, because you have been sick a long time and must have missed it if you are used to it, and if not\u2019\u2014she stonped, but he was still looking at her.\u2018We!l he said after a minute, \u2018and if not, what then ?\u2018Why.then you have missed it without knowing it, and that is worse.\u2019 He laughed a little over this ; said it was \u2018sharp.\u2019 and after a moment asked if it would give her any pleasure to read to him out of the bible ; if it would, he was willing to listen simply to please her, for she had been a very good friend to him ; iudeed, he did not know what he would have done without her ; but it had been years since he had listened to the bible, except occasionally in church.So the bible readings were commenced, and went on every evening ; Winnie being sometimes stopped abruptly and asked what she thought such a verse meant, and if she knew any people who acted as the bible said they must.It.was this question in some form or other which seemed most to trouble her patient.At last one evening she said : \u2018I know people who try to do as the bible wants them to, but if I didn't know a single person it would make no difference, so long as I knew Jesus.If there was nobody trying to get rich, and yet I knew there was money to be had, I think I should try for it all the same.\u2019 After that he told her again that she was \u2018pretty sharp, and then he lay quite still and seemed to be listening to the bible words.\u2018I will tell you something,\u201d he said to Winnie one morning ; he was looking better than he had before, and Winnie knew that the doctor zalled him almost well ; \u2018something that I think will please ; 4 you : a little maid like you used to love gC iilottstown, PEI, July 9, \u2014 Allan 1 _: : AR > rai : WRT t, 0 pr on, near ere, rays a e read and \u201cstudy \u201cher bible ; she wäk}3 Jde Kiâner Pals saved his lite, and he my little girl.I would not let her read the bible to me, but I made no objection to her reading it herself ; she loved it and tried to live by it.She was all I had ; one day she died.I was angry about it, and said God was cruel to take all I had, and that I would never serve him.I lived without him for years, though I knew it would hurt my little girl if she were here.I got on as best I could until he had pity on me and let me be thrown from a horse in front of a home where was another little woman lke my daughter ; she has | ocaxed me back to life and coaxed me! back to God.I have known how to! serve him ever since I was a child : now I am going to do it; and it is my little trained nurse who has led me.\u2019 \u2018Mother,\u2019 said Winnie, \u2018I do truly think God put the desire to take care of sick people into my heart, so I could work for him in this way.And to think he has given me my first patient.Don't you believe he did it to encourage me in my life-work ?Yes, it is her life~-work.She is a trained nurse now, and people when they have very sick friends say : \u2018Oh, if we , can only get Miss Winifred Holden to | take care of her.\u2019 | I am not sure that Mrs.Holden is even | yet quite reconciled to it ; she very much wanted Winnie to be a lady of leisure, | and live in a grand house, and do good | with her money.\u2018But I brought it on! myself\u2019 she said once, half-laughing.\u2018Winnie says it was a foolish little re-, mark which I made shout a fancy cap Bhe had, which set her heart in that way.It only shows how careful we ! complish sometimes things which we had | no idea of.ought to be of our words.They ac- ADVERTISEMENTS.PBERARD & MAJOR, CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS, 1947 St.Catherine street, Have now in Stock New Styles of CARRIAGES, such es FAMILY ROCKAWAY'S, ROYAL VICTORIAS, SANDRINGHAM'S, KENSING- TON, GODDARD TOP BUGGIES, CONCORDS, and all kinds of Light Vehicles.For Morss TAR PAPER, 25e Package.DELIVERED TO ALL PARTS OF THE CITY TELEPHONE 169, D.DRYSDALE, Hardware, G45 Craig street.EO.MAYBURY, MASTER CARTER, 283 Commissioners street.Bell Tel.2673.AIR BRUSHES CHEAP.We have a lot of Sample BRUSHES, made of Solid Russia Bristle, but of old style patterns; will be sold cheap to cleur them out; & ance Lo get a good Bristle Brush cheap.U LLEY'S BRUSH WORKS, 26 to 78 Victoria Square Carpet Sweepers repaired.Telephone 2740.vears.A splendid cure for Ulcerated Legs, Bad Medicines, &c.AYER\u2019S Hair VIGOR Restores natural color to the hair, and also prevents it falling out.Mrs.H.W.Fenwick, of Digby, N.8., says: \u201cA little more than two years ago sp, MY hair ¥ began *to turn gra \u201c44 and fall da out.Af- ; ter the use of one bottle of Aver\u2019s Hair Vigor my hair was restored to its original color and ceased falling out.An occasional application has since kept the hair in good condition.\u201d \u2014Mrs, H.F.FENWICK, Digby, N.S.Growth of Hair.\u201cFight years ago, I had the vario- loid, and lost my hair, which previously was quite abundant.I tried a variety of preparations, but with- ont beneficial result, till I began to fear I should be permanently bald.About six months ago, my husband brought home a bottle of Ayer\u2019s Hair Vigor, and I began at once to use it.fn a short time, new hair began to appear, and there is now every prospect of as thick a growth of hair as before my illness.\u201d \u2014 Mrs.A.WEBER, Polymnia St., New Orleans, La.AYER'S HAIR VIGOR PREPARED BY DR.J.C.AYER & CO., LOWELL, MASS., U.S.A, Ayer\u2019s Pills cure Sick Headache.A FIER THIRTY YEARS.ALLAN STEWART, OF SPRINGTON, SUFFERS ALL THES TIME \u2014 AT LAST CONFINED TO BED\u2014 STORY OF HIS MAPPY RELEASE FROM FAIN.wants the fact to be known.For thirty vears he has had kidney disease and gravel Hundreds of dollars spent on doctors and medicine failed to do any good.On July 14, last, Mr.Stewart had to take to his bed.and everybody considered his case a hopeless one.He heard of Dodd\u2019s Kidney Pills and began using them.He says he noticed an improvement from the first.and ten boxes cured him.Ie is now free from all rain, and enjoys excellent health.9 (CATERPILLARS ! CATERPILLARS HELLEBORE ! Save your Currants and Gooseberries by using WHITE HELLEBORE.HO! FOR FOREST, STREAM AND LAKE.ASH'BE FOREST FRIEND.\u2014For the Fisherman, Tourist, Botanist and Sojourner in the country, if you wish to escape the annovance of Black lies, Mosquitos, etc., use ASH S FOREST FRIEND.PRICE 25¢ and 30¢ PER BOTTLE.J.A.HARTE, Drugcist, 1780 Notre Dame and 2352 St.Catherine sireels, TELEPHONES, 118) and 3540.REP LION OINTMENT.TESTIMONIAL.June 20, 1884.\u2014To the Red Lion Mfg.Co.: Dear Sir,\u2014] have given your ointment a fair trial, and fing it a first-class ointment for healing cuts, burns or any kind of sores, and can highly recommend it.I remain, respectfully yours, GEORGE H.GRIFFITH, 467 Laval avenue, Montreal.One trial sufficient to prove its worth.Has been in use in the Old Country for over 20 HELLEBORE ! 26 Nreasts, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Scalès, Burns, Abscesses, Sore Eyes, Bad Heads, Scrofulous Sores, and all Cutaneous Eruptions.WHOLESALE AGENTS, KERRY, WAT- SON & CO.Montreal.Mailed from the office of the Red Lion Mfg.Co., 246 St.James street, Montreal.Price 23 cents.Ask your druggist to get it.25 R'CHELIEU, .Pure, Sparkling, Ecfreshing.THE PRINCE OF TABLE WATERS.Recommended by the leading Physicians.For Sale at the Clubs, Hotels, Restaurants, and the leading Grocers.J.A.HART, Druggist, 2780 NOTRE DAME & 2352 ST.CATHERINE ST.Telephones: 1190\u2014 3540.Clothing, &c.WILLIAM CURRIE, MANUFACTURER OF Popular Priced, All Wool, Perfect Fittins, BGYS, YOUTHS and MEN'S CLOTHING.1867 NOTRE DAME STREET.A BERDEEN Temperance Cafe.754 Craig street, few doors west of Victoria ROSE EE RE EN 4 Business Cards.ONLY 25c A BOTTLE.The QUEEN'S HAIR (EI PER is a preparation that restores hair to ils natural color and beauty, arrests falling out, removes dandruff and cures vald- ness.[tis not a dye.Tt stimulates and invigorates the roots, producing a rapid growth, full of life and health.The clear part makes a superior dressing, equal to any 50e or Xl preparation.For sale Ly all Druggists, or at A.D.MANNS, 141 =T.PETER STREET, Directly opposite * Witness Building, is easy of access, and ndmirably lighted.In every way suitable for tlie different branches of their growing business.Orders for Portraits.Giroups, Views, LANTERN SLIDES, Bromide Iiniargements, plan and colored, &c., &c., respectfully solicited.12 1 ~ v ~ \u2018 ra PICTURES ARE CHEAPER PHAN EVER The largest framed Picture for 21.00 in Canada.Twenty-five thousand feet of MOULDING always in stock to select from.6G.WW.WILLNON, Manufacturer of Mouldings andl Frames, 688 Craig street, Montreal.Next door to the 'Witness* Office.SPECIAL PRICES TO THE TRADE.Beware ! O f RSA ev aS TWAS NS as Unscrupulous .Dealers, a Por ayer] Who offer inferior goods stating them to be \u2018just as good as EDDY'S.\u201d There are imitations of but no sab- stitutes for E.B.EDDY'S MATCHES, - BY Ah] a =\u2019 38 NE 5 Cu he A A Let a Foy ti 7 HE i iY \u20ac = a a de \u2014_\u2014 3 9 THEY ARE BEYOND COMPARE, Bf BATH S.CHILDEEN'5 BATH.FOOT BATH.SPONGE BATIL HIP BATH.HOT BATH.TRAVELLING At M.PHILBIN'S, 2231 81.¢(\u2018atherine street.| INOTYPE PRINTING, BATH.For Books, Reports and Pamphlets, *WITANERS® PRINTING BOUSE.JOR WEDDING - AND- BIRTHDAY PRESENTS, Golo WF.BECK, 232 St.Lawren 2 street.SALAD FOWLA, ICE CREAM SEIS LEMONADE and BERRY SEIS CARD Rb EIVERS, ROSE BOWLS, CHINA BUTFEK DIES FANCY CHEESE DIRYMES, BOHEMIAN LASS CASKETS, DINNER, TEA and CHAMBER SET.Also a special line of COLORED (CHAMBER SETS, ut 81.75 per set YW.F.BECK, le 252 St.Liwrence sf.(One door above St.Catherine st) 28 OB PRINTING e Tn all its branches executed with neatness and despatch at the * WITNESS ° PRINTING HOUSE, corner St.Peter and Craig streets 8 Notices.A LL PARTIES Are hereby forbidden from giving my wife, Agnes Lindsay.formerly of Clarence, Ontario, now of Montreui, uny credit on my account, as I will not he responsible for uny debts which the may contract, she having left my bed and hoard.JOHN LINDSAY, Rockland, Clarence.Dated 29th June, 1894.4 Machinery, &c.USE ONLY DODGE ) WOOD-SPLIT PULLEYS All Sizes En Stocky CANADA pa MACHINERY AGENCY, W.H.NOLAN, Manager, 345 St.James street, Montreal.A NDREW YOUNG, À ENGINEER AND MACHINIST, HAS REMOVED TO 11, 13 and 15 Busby Lane.D4HES BROTHERS RELIANCE WORKS, 112 QUEEN STREET, MONTREAL.Manufacturers and builders of Improved Safety Hydranlic, Steam and Hand Elevators.Feed Water Heaters, Oil Extractors and Live Steam Bepurators, etc, ete.Telephone 2114.Tailors, &c.AMUEL GOLTMAN, MERCHANT TAILOR.Spring importations received.a lpspection respect Square.LUNCH SERVED BEPARATELY, or complete dinner, 200; six tickets, $1.3 a x dg pw A Ny ANA étc du vos ?gp 0081 msdte ia pra EN EEE DIRES WB RICE & BENNETTS STUDIO, Corncr Mountain and St, Antoine &trec!s.Interiors, ! J | } ; Extract 9 READABLE PARAGRAPHS THE REUTE, Ethel\u2014'Fiäo's barking has recliy given me an ear-ache.' Cousin Bob\u2014'\u2018Try chloroform.' Ethel \u2014Is that good\u201d Cousin Bob\u2014'T\"ine; saturate a sponge, tia ft \u2018round his ne-k and put tub.\u2019\u2014\u2018Judge.\u2019 im under 8 No Canadian household can afferd to ba without a supply of Hawker's standard remedies.Ask ycur druggist for them.11 NOT ATLONE.Very stout persons mary semetIlmca te noticed glancirg ar other stou* persons w.th a pleased expression that seems tn sav, \"Wr I am not as stcut as that, anvwar.' or, \u2018There is scme one who is quite is stout as I am.\" Evidently it is a consoling thought.The French Marshal Vivonne onze {ndi- cated this feeling in a witty to the kine.Viverne and the Comte d'Auvergne were probably the most gentlemen in the court at the time.reply corpulent \u2018Marshal, you are really getting too fat?said the king.\u2018You ought to take more exercise,\u201d \u2018Your majesty does not know then that I take a great deal of exercise?\u2018No.what do you do?the Comte \u2018| walk around d'Auvergne three times a day.A Grand Success is \u2018Dyer's Digestive Malt All temperance people shou:d avail themselves of this splendid zoni-, being entirely without alcohol.Sold ty all druggists.EXPENSIVE TASTES.Father\u2014\u2018Yes, I admit that vc¢ur lover has a good inrome, but he has very expensive tastes, very.\u201d Daughter\u2014 You amaz~ me.What he ever want that is 80 very expensive?Father\u2014 \"Well, frr one York \u2018Weekly.Co.3 you, thing \u2014New Camping parties find Lyman'\u2019s Fluid Coffee indispensable.11 QUEER TASTE.Farmer Wayback\u2014 \u2018Wall, of all the idiots that artist feller takes th cake Mrs.Warbark\u2014\" \"What's he goin\u2019?Farmer Warbf5\u2014 He's down yonts- ,paiîntin\u2019 a picture of that old tnmhie-dnwn there's a hrard-new barn York \u2018Weekly.\u2019 barn.and hehind him.\" \u2014New right Shiloh's Cure, the great cough and sumption cure, promptiy cures croup, sore throa:, hoarseness, cough and asthma.For t has no rival.Has cured thousands, ard will cure you if taken in time.Sold on a guarantee.DB.E, McGale, agent, 2:23 Noire Dame s:reet.19 cons coughs, whnering consiumtaion VINDICTIVE, Editor\u2014\u2018Here is a srientifr fem.which says that pho*egraphs have heen taken five hundred feet under water.Print it in a ronspicuous plara.\u201d Sub-Editor\u2014 Um\u2014what's the idea?Editor\u2014'1 am in hopes some of these came era flends will try it\u2014New York \"Weekly! No more toothache or headache if you use \u2018Nervol.\" One application eures instant- Iv.25 cents.At all druggists, or John T.Lyons, corner of Craig und Bieurv.19 May B.Willing\u2014'You remember i told vou when vou had a salary of $10.004 a vear I would marry you\u201d Ben A.Fraid «hopelessly)\u2014'Yes.' May B.Willing\u2014'How murh is it now.dear?\u201d Ben A.Fraid (more hepelessly)\u2014'One thousand.\u2019 May B.Will- ing\u2014'I don't suppose the extra cipher is reallv worth bothering about, do you?\u2014Se- lected.A leading druggist in Toronto writes:-\u2014 \u2018Our sale of Dyer\u2019s Digestive Malt Extract ts largely on the increase, and highly spoxen of by our customers.\u201d Sold everywhfre.HAD STUDIED HIS TASTES.Miss DBrightlie\u2014'Oh.Mr.a young lady here to-night I kncw you'll like\" ; Mr.Search\u2014'I feel extremely flattered to find that vou have rade such a close study of my tastes.Please describe hor.\u2019 Miss Brightlie\u2014'She\u2019s worth a million.\u2014 New York \u2018Weekly.\u2019 Search, there's The salmon fishing is very good this season and Lyman's Fluid Coffee has become the flsherman's favorite beverage all aleng the line.11 HE HAD KILLED ENOUGH.Patrick Mooney was one of the best and bravest soldiers in Gen.Meade's army, and it is his delight of a winter or surainer night to tell of his experience towards the close of the third day of Gettysburg.\u2018Faith, I had been peggin\u2019 away at the Rebs all day long, a-loadin\u2019, and a-fi\u2018in\u2019.and a-firin\u2019, and a-loadin\u2019, whin up cums the Gin- eral hirself.He halted his horse an\u2019 stood a-watchin\u2019 me fur a while, an\u2019 finally he ups an\u2019 shouts, \u2018There.Private Mooney, you ully solicite can go to the rear.You've kilt full enough 2226\u2014 St.Catherine street \u2014£226 10 min for wan day!'\u2014\u2018Marper's Bazar\u2019 yn 25S TT XY bi rim A 3 PRA Pa eS AmB æ Ao ace 5m nu 2hr EE Riki Pot Aft ad & PEN 04s ri fo are on-air : ¢ 4. Wer te H © 7 +f à + è ee =\" ms Ins RARY THE BRITISH LIB J APs mt / Ï { i ) THE MONTREAL DAIL WITNESS.WebNESDAY, JULY 11.180g SOVEREIGN ISSUES A MANIFESTO, « PRESIDENT DEBS AND HIS ASSOCIATES INDICTED BY THE GRAND JURY.THE GRAND MASTER WORKMAX'S EDICT.Chiragn, July 10.\u2014The manifesto of General Master Workman Sovereign to the Knights of Labor, issued to-night, is as follows: Chicago, July 10, 1894.The Knights of Labor of Amertca.Greeting \u2014 À crisis has been reached in the affairs of! this nation that endangers the prices of the Republic, Every fibre in our civil structure \\s etrained to ths breaking paict.Th» shadow of factiona! hatred iverors over our fair land with terrible fore- UL.lings.The arrogant lash of superiority is baing applied by the corporations with relentless fury, and the chasm between the 1nasses and the classes is growing deeper and wider with each day.If peace is restored and this nation saved from acts re- qu'sive to tha conscience of Christian people tn-re must be wie?action aud tha* quickly.Sincarely beHevinz that the flames of discord are being purpossly fanned by the raii- way corporations at the risk of the life of the Government, I take the libarty to appeal to you, and through you to the conscience oi tue whole people, imploring you to lay down the implements of toll for a short season.and under the banner of peace, and with a patriotic desira to promote tas pnblio welfare, use the power of your aggregated numbers through peaceeadle assemblages to create a healthy public sentiment in favor of an amlcable settlement of the Issues growing out of the recent strike of ;the Pullman Palace Car employees.and you ars further requested not to rerurn to your usual avocations until a settlement of the pending troubles is made known to you thrrugh some authentjc source.In the present strained relations between corporations and their employees !s Involved a principle near and dear to all true American citizens \u2014the rizht of labor to present its grievances tH ths owners and representatives of corporate capital.The MR.SOVEREIGN.Grand Master Workman of the Knights of Labor.Pullman Palace Car Company refuses to &r- bitrate the difference between itself and = +; Fi 2 ne A cup's court at 4.30 p.m.Very few witnesses were examined.Warrants were at once issued, United States Marshal Arnold personally serving the one for the arrest of Debs.Marshal Arnold found Debs in his room in the Leland Hotel.The labor chief was busily engaged in writing a letter to a friend in Indiana.When Marshal Arnold was admitted, Mr.Debs smiled and surmising the truth asked if Mr.Arnold had a warrant for him.\"You have guessed the truth the first time,\u2019 said the marshal, producing the necessary papers.\u2018I have here a warrant : for your arrest.\u2019 its employees on the ground that the care : were built below const, and, therefore, there - is nothing to arbitrate.But the conclusion of every unprejudiced mind must be, that if such were the facts ît could have nothing : to fear at the hands of an arbitration committee.3ut the Pullman Company goes further in itr autocratic policy than a refusal to ar- bitrat-.It has refused to join with the business men and the Board of Aldermen of Chiearo in a corimittee :o discuss the position as to whether thers fs anything to ar- bitrat+ or not, and behind this autocratic pollcy stands the \u2018senrral Managers\u2019 Asso- clatinn nf the railway corporations, backed by the United States army as the ziders and abettors of this social crime.Buppose the Puilman (\u2018fompany bad invited organized labor to arbitrate, and organized ler had declined and refused to discuss tHe question as to whether there was anything to arbitrate or not, it is needless to say a wave Of popular indignation would obliterate avery labor organization from the country, and no more could be formed dur- : ing the next fifty years.such a poeltion would follow every name connected with organized labor to the grave.The stigme nf : But.In the present crisis.the corporations.: rreated by they are prior to whose wealth has been tare the position that and above their Creator.Like the brigands of old they rob the labor.laboring masses and employ the sword and | bludgeon and set up a throne on the bones of the vanquished, and declare vine right to rule over the remainder of the mankind.Tha Puliman Company claims that.notwithstanding ths wages of lis employees were reduced to tha starvation point, there is nothing to arbitrate because cars have been buiit at a loss, yet ft negler:s to state that the stocks of the ~ompany have been waie-ed thres times over, and that the company has not only been able to pay Its regular dividends on water and all.but that {ts storks have long been and are at the present time at a premium on the stock market.Mr.Pullman cries poverty to his starving employees and then retreats to his princely suininer mansion on Pullipan island in the St.Lawrence river, and then wires the business men of Chicago that he has nothing to arhitrate.Like.Nero he laughs fn luxury while the devoted martyrs burn.If the present strike is lost to labor it will retard the progress of civilization and reduce the posaibiiities of labor to ever emancipate itself from the thraldom of greed.The dignity of labor and all the victories won in ths past are at stake in this con- ; fli-t.1 beseech you to be true to your obligations in this hour of trial.Court the ro- operation of a generous public; stand firin ahd united In ons common cause.and the Victory will be one of peare and prosperity for the faithful.J.B.SOVERLCIGN, Grand Master Workman THE MEN INDICTED BY THE GRAND JURY Chicago, July 10.\u2014The full list of the men indicted by the United States Grand Jury to-day includes: Eugene V.Debs, George W.Seward, Sylvester Keliher, L.W.Rogers, Jamea Murwin, Lloyd Hotch- kiss.A.Paiseybek, H.E.Fin, James Hammond.Willlam Einith, Jobn Wester- brook, Edward O'Nell, Charles Nadlor, John Dnffy, E.Shelby, Fred.Ketcham and John W.Doyle.They are indicted for eonspiracy, which is punishable by a fine of from $1.000 to 310,900.or imprisonment for not more than two years, and also for hindering the execution of the laws of the United States which is a murh more serious offence, puniskable by a fine of from $300 to $5,000, or tmprisonment for not more than six years.The grand jury brought in its repert to Judge Gross- thetr di- : \u2018On what ground,\u2019 asked Mr.Debs.\u2018On the ground of conspiracy.unlawfully inciting riot against the citizens of the state of Illinols, interfering with the mail and on severad other counts of minor importance.\u2019 \u2018Ail right,\u2019 said Mr.Debs; \u2018read them to me, if you please.\u2019 This Marshal Arnold proceeded to do.Mr.Debs listened in silence.His brother was present.At the conclusion of the reading the three proceeded to the gide entrance of the hotel and were driven at once to the office of the District Attorney in the Federal building.A few minutes afterwards Vice-President Howard was also driven up and taken to the office of Mr.Milchrist.At the time the labor leaders were brought in Judge Woods was In chambers and Judge Grosscup soon followed.There was a brief discussion as to the amount of bond that would be satisfactory, and it was finally fixed at 310,000 each, which was soon secured.In the meantime a subpoena was issued for J.G.Halpes, one of Debs\u2019s assis*ants, commanding him to produco all the official correspondence of the A.R.U.Deputy Marshal Waite and Inspector Stewart served the paper.On entering room 423 of the Ashland block, A THRILLING where the office business of the A.R.U.is | titton to congress, preferred in 1819, clear- conducted, the deputy read the subpoena and then the search began.The officers had a mad] sack, and they gathered everything in sight.When Mr.Debs heard of the rald on the correspondence of his office he was wrathy and denounced the affair as a high-handed outrage.- President Debs said to a United Press reporter concerning his arrest: \u2018My arrest will not affect the fight that is now fn progress, and as soon as my ovlleagues and myself ara liberated we will pursue the battle as we have from the first, fear- leesly, but with due respect to the law, I do not see how they can prove any conspiracy to delay the mails on my part.for all my utterances and all my advice have been just in the opposite direction.\u2019 sé i @ fu ae \u2018 LS OFF PULLMAN CAR FROM\": MONON TRAN 1 i | | | | \u2018 | Lu an .+ = AT LIBBY ST VAMUMOND:IAQ LAvaLy RIPINGIMReuCH y Aq A me 7 ; Cu L OF MARSHALS AT HAMMOND - i We iil] J un H n/n py Xi AN 40 H 4 LR 7 JE MAT TRE Gt va 5 1, i\u201c er AAR ae 18\", ax À Tl 17 = \"THE CROWDS ue TE STOCK YARDS INCIDENTS OF THE GREAT RAILWAY STRIKE.THE STRIKE BEGUN.] Chicago, July 10.\u2014Before the order of the Trades Union Committee and manifesto of Grand Master Workman Sovereign were issued, fully thirty unions had given notice that they would strike.Almost the first men reported out were the stage employees, and following these were the carriage and waggon workers, teamsters, bakers, moulders, machinists, brewers, Ironworkers and many others.The news of the arrest of President Eugene Debs and the other officers of the A.R.U., served to increase the feeling to-night among the laboring men amd among others.The laks seamen reported that they would strike at once.The action of Knights of Labor in the Chicago district is said to be unanimous.District Master Workman Lindholm issued a proclamation this evening saying it was the duty of all members of the order in this jurisdiction to carry out the order of the conference, and to see that the fundamental principles of this order are upheld and faithfully carried out.President Gompers has called a meeting of the executive board of the American Federation of Labor for ThursJlay, at the Briggs House, In Chicago, when decisive action by the officers of all the allied trades and labor of- ganizations will be taken.The Illinois Central brakemen and conductors agreed to-night to go out again In a body with the switchmen.LONG BEFORE PULLMAN.DISCOVERY OF A QUAINT MEMORIAL OF BENJAMIN DEARBORX OF BOSTON.The prevailing Pullman troubles impart a special interest to a discovery recently made by a clerk in the archives of 2 \u2014te i ly travelling in this : the House of Representatives at Washington.5 | The discovery is in the nature of a pe- hs\u201d US THE MILITIA FIRING ON THE MOB.ly foreshadowing the modern svstem of sleeping oars.The petition is all the more inteeresting because the power of steam usad in the propulsion of reilway trains at that time was in its infancy and wrapped more or less in vegue mystery.The paper {s as follows: \u2018The memorial of Benjamin Dearborn, of Boston, respectfully represents: That he has devised in theory a mode of propelling wheel carriages {in a manner probably unknown in any country; and has perfectly satisfled his own mind of the practicability of conveying mails and passengers with such celerity.as has never before been accomplished, and in complete security from robberies on the highway., \u2018For obtaining these results he relies oq | & i 1?3 A 74 3 : NE yo PE 7 A q Ah, Ary A4 AR \u20ac wis AH Sep 1X Cire 7 ; i eral carriages propelled by steam on level rail- | ways, and contemplates that they be furnished with accommodations for passengers to take their meals and their rest during the passage, as in a packet; that they be sufilciently high for persons to walk in them without stooping, and so capacious as to accommodate twenty, thirty or more passengers and their baggage.\u2018The inequalities of the earth's surface will require levels of various elevations in the railways, and your memorialist has devised means which he believes will be completely effectual for lifting the carriage by the inherent power of its machinery from one level to another as aleo for the passage of carriages by each other of the same road; and he feels confident that whenever such an establishment shall ba advanced to its most improved state the carriage will move with a rapidity at least equal to a mile in three minutes.\u2018Protection from the attack of assailants will be insured, not only by the celerity of the movement, but by weapons of defence belonging to the carrtage and always kept ready in it, to be wielded by the number of passengers constant- spacious wehicle,- where they would have liberty to stand erect, and to exercise their arms in their own defence.\u2018The practicability of moving steam carriages on the common road was long since advocated in a publication by that ingenious and useful citizen, Oliver Evans; your memorialist therefore does not assume the merit of originating the idea of a steam carriage, but only of modifying the system in such a manner as to produce the results here stated, which could not be effected on a common road.\u2019 In conclusion the memorialist says that if the design can be put into successful operation by the government a great rev- nets > x veau Y 4 IA INCIDENT OF THE CHICAGO STRIKE.enue would eventually be derived from the establishment besides the advantage before enumerated.The memorial was submitted by Benjamin Dearborn, Seven Buildings, 5, city of Washington, Feb.11, 1819.\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014_- _\u2014 MORE TARIFF CHANGES, LIST OF ARTICLES AFFECTED.(Special to the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Ottawa, July 11.\u2014 Mr.Foster gives notice of further tariff rhanges, the most important of which refers to tea, by adding the following to the list of prohibited articles: \u2014 \u2018Tea adulterated with spurious leaf, or with exhaustive leads, which contains so great an adulteration of chemical cr other deleterious substances as to make them unfit for use.\u2019 The other new items are, lamp springs, 10 percent ad valorem; glass bulbs for electric lights, 10 percent; frames, clasps or fixtures for purses or reticules, \u2018 not more than 7 in.in width, when imported by manufacturers of purses, chatelaines or reticuies, for use in their factories, 20 percent; maple sugar, 20 percent; German looking glass, unsilvered, 17% percent; sateens, for use of corset manufacturers, 25 percent.Section 277 of the tariff bill reads as follows: \u2014WTrought iron and steel nuts and washers, iron or steel rivets, bolte with or without threads, nut and boit blanks, less than three-eighths of an inch in diameter, one cent per pound and twenty-five percent ad valorem.one cent per pound and 25 percent.To this is now added the words, \u2018but not less than thirty-five percent.\u2019 The following are additions to the free list:\u2014Qround bogwood and patent prepared dyes.Wire used in the wire grip machine for the manufacture of boots, shoes and leather belting, free, bas added to It the words, \u2018and champion nailing machines.\u2019 Birdskins and skins of animals not native of Canada for taxidermist purposes, not further manufactured than prepared for preservation.Brass and copper wire twisted, free.for use of manufacturers of boots and shoes, has added to it the word \u2018iron.\u2019 1 A COMMONWEAL ARMY DISPERSED.Huntingdon, West Va., July 8.\u2014Kelley's band of Commonwealers, who took possession of the Chesapeake & Ohio freight train in Kentucky last night were stopped as soon as they bad entered West Virginia by two compenies of militia from this city, who surrounded them at three o'clock this morning and kept them In captivity until the arrival of Governor McCorkle in a special train this after- The men were then separated into One was sent into noon.different companies.Ohio and one into Kentucky.The remainder, seventy-two in number, were brought to this city, and will be guarded to-night by the police and eseorted out of the city in the morning.This virtually disposes of the Commonweal army of Kelley._\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 APOSTOLIC SUCESSSION.(To the Editor of the \u201cWitness.\u2019) Str \u2014I have read with much \u2018interest, Mr.Noble's essay on Apostolic succession, but should like, as a (Roman) Catholic, to make one important correction.He states that apostolic succession is \u2019essentfal to the salvation of souls\u2019; that \u2018communion with Christ\u2019 is, without it, an \u2018impossibility.\u201d This, he claims, is the teaching of the Cathelic Church.It may be that of \u2018High' Anglicans, it is not that of the (Roman) Catholic Church.That Church teaches, clearly and unmistakably that for those \u2018outside the Church\u2019 all that is \u2018essential\u2019 to salvation, therefore, to real spiritual (pot sacramental) \u2018communion with Christ,\u2019 is that they shall be baptized \u2018in good faith.\" In other words, a baptized Christian who honestly, sincerely and without doubt, believes in the religion he has learned, who, by the grace of God, lives bis religion, belongs to \u2018the: soul of the Church,\u2019 and possesses all that is \u2018essential\u2019 to salvation.\u201d He is our- side the visible \u2018body of the Church\u2019, but is \u2018in the soul of the Church.\u2019 This, I am convinced, would be confirmed by any bishop or priest, and is very diffcrent to the ordirary Protestant notfon of Catho- Ho teaching.F.W.GREY.St.Lambert, July 9, 1894.P.8.\u2014Mr.Noble's essertion that baptismal regeneration is not taught in the prayerbook is somewhat startling.The words of the office are surely plain enough.\u2018Seeing now that this child is regenerate',\u2014If that is not \u2018baptismal regeneration,\u2019 then words have no meaning.I may add that the \u2018Church of scotland\u2019 referred to In the canon is undoubtedly the Episcopal Church founded LY Laud.\u2014 CT WHAT IT HAS ALL COMF TA We should lke to ask any sii.well-intentioned tariff man wi.could hope, In the existing ot v human nature, for a more con +.periment in protectimm than we 1.We have had thirty years of +.protectionist party, which made : terations in the tariff, tweniy ;i.as it thought proper, and endo highest as well as most carefi |.- 3 tariff ever invented by civ, Could the system be tried unc.r .vorable conditions ?Is it lirs, ever will be tried under coudit., _,- favorable in any civiized coun 7 must be remembered, wu, Ui to be really successful in +1.sense of the term, a tariff mune such plain and unquestional\u2026 as to make the great bulk of +.love it and cling to it.11 1.pend on what the newspapers .- +.turers Or Stump orators say.four ity.It must commend itself to beyond peradventure as the gr.of industrial activity and sucess ple must not only say, \u2018How +.oy are, but \u2018How happy our tariff .us.\u2019 Now let us see where our thir.of teriff have left us.In that +., far from winning over the Whi.>, munity to protection a large and Te ful party bas risen up agains: it succeeded twice in electing a low.or free-trade president and (ui ry both pledged to getting rid of :.7e, tective system, and has fljest +.| with denunciations of this in principle and practice.! But if it has not succeeded 15 x: ig ; over the people Lo its BUüpport erate » bas done something to purify pue life and bring the most inteihgert ne of the country to the work ot aii.tering the government.On the .it has supplied us with a Sena: aL does not contain a single really aro.man, which is iargaly COM posed of oe Honnaires revelling in fortunes f a ous origin, who have had wtiiz à fo night to submit tu the immense DUT.tion of an Individual examina i, as ; whether they have not hewn Fle dat.: In the stock exchange on their on: oo.: lation.In fact, were we ty Judas of .tariff by the condition of Congress, a.should say !t had driven most reals tinguished men out of public 11- i But perhaps if it has not purite: : tes, it bas improved the condition pics aad Le « e.Cat ?\u201c \u2018» d'art us iL Rr Fearn nd SYSTES.hye a2 ; laborer by increasing hie wages an\u201d ; taching him to tbe industral which the tariff fosters.By nu Leal; | It bas filiec ines ; \u201c t has filied the mines and facturies wi hundreds of thousands of baif-csv:.isz | foreigners drawn from the lowes Tug + of Europe, who live in a state of SAVLE and chronic discontent, are not ody «+ terly hostile to their emplovers but + the social organization which Eheoite-.them, and fill the land.month by ment: with strikes.riots, murders.arson, oo.cots, train robberies, obstruction of big.ways, and defiance of the conatitnieu thorities.Well, if it has not contented tbe lat- ing class, perhaps it has reconciled to: farmers, who are after all the bone a.or FSI a.sinew of the country, to the Protect À system, by showing them the factory Lx aide the farm, and the operative consuming greedily at high prices their EzTder- truck and hogs and hominy and whea: | Nothing of the sort.The fermers throug\u2019.out the west and south are not only fu.of exasperation against the people wir lend them money and butd railways *- them, but they have abandoned the An.erican theory of government wholly.as.taken up the modern European or puis: nal one, which expects the government + find a market for the producer, in who prices will be high for those who sel] au\u2019 low for those who buy.and to provid: them with cheap money of high purches ing power\u2014in other words, moner whoo will be easy to get and yet hard to spen\u201d.In short, we do not recall in bume: history an experiment more complete.\u201d tried, and of which the results are plaine\u201d than our protective experiment, exve;\u2018 that of absclute monarchy in France &.it has produced almost as great more.chaos.The country is full of the api.» .clal, anarchical and crazy ideas of i power of government which preceded *- French Revolution, and they have grow: out cf the thirty years of protection a plainly as the French ones grow cut fifty years of lioenticus despotism.ON\" the least diverting part of the prevaise folly ts the high-tariff attempt t5 fas:e the responsibility of it all on the fre- traders, as !f !t was not the function i: tariff to silenoe and rout free-traders *\" the display of its own beneficence.T:- number of theories which in prac: > would make the world bappy, if the wrk ed would only cease from troubling © immense.But how to muzzle the wk.is a chief part of the problem of ref cr \u2014N.Y.\u2018Post,\u2019 June 19, 1894.- -_ - GALL FLIES.One of the most remarkable facts © the history of tha gall fly is, that :° ferent species acting on the same \u2018* produce totally diferent results.Tis one of them puncturing the x gives rise to one of those pretty uv ¥ lke tufts which su frequentiv 2° 7.Another on the same plant pruiuv - 7 growths resembling currants in se =- form.À much greater variety «! 7s is produced on the oak tree.N ! + than fitty species of gall Jy.in!» gaild to produce their particular 77 ! growth upon it.One of the m.at * 7 is that which produces the mar: This gall is produced on the twig: i form of round bodies, soft and g\u2014 =o first, afterward brown and wool._ familiar oak apple is of more i27.\u20ac \u20184 shape, and prettily colored rel uo low like a fruit.Of a similar 2.the marble gall, but gofter, pretty red color where expe-et sun, is the cherry gull.Anoth like gall, small, round and often urf 4° ing in clusters on the male cath:r: St oak, {8 known as the currant aa:l more remarkable, perhaps, ts Le wT choke gall.In this case the gal °- laid its ezg in the centre of na t*.+\" the vegetative growth, though Ji: 7 hgs asserted itself in a symmetrica: © © mer.The oval body in the cw - \u2018taining the egg or grub, is corer- \" \u2018à series of (mbricating or cvrria : 5 scales, so that the whole bears a s°71X °F resemblance to the involucrum cof & (2° tle\u2014\u2018Chambers\u2019's Journal.\u2019 ° wild su WED! THE TIFIEL {ONS (From 1awa, in the ce of 9 s rheert ding of aty.H \u2018Pull uis \u2018! ut it.nts, ° any « ent tl at wa c voic the - | -\u2014 the O but se Mr.F tile to Finns, La Ds 3 poittira: Et mer Moitia- nary, whi gy ine; of mii If du: a for.Uiid- as *5 wari: < 1 beer s- of tha 88, Wa (iv ds- i Mi Doi - of tha hnd at- system mears.pa Wir Aviliz.e [ Taro saveaze Uy Let but tn helte-s montè, 8, tor- f bizh- ted dau- labored the ne an! Kactive ey br- JLB - rden - wheat.rough - ly fui] a2 who ys for @e Am- man- with ping king this- gavesar.Jory ll, 1864, \u2014 \u2014 mb VREMCR TREATY cee © THE HOUSE OF COM- \u201ciA LONG DEBATE., _ + Own Correspondent.) I \u201cy 11 \u2014Mr.Foster reappear- ts vesterdar.after on ab-
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